. I j mill ^ew VOLUME 1. NUMBER 7, NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C., MARCH 12, 1906. 10 CENTS PER WEEK. Coal Miners Say Big Strike Will Occur Before April 1 LOGAN ARRIVES ! AND TALKS ABOUT LIVE STOCK SALE Says Increase of the Dominion Government Grant and a Number of Special Contributions Means a Considerable Addition to the Prize Lists. MINE OWNERS DEFY WORKERS INDlc^ZniiRL, 1HAI HOUSE WILL rw x n m i> a. * i. I*.* w g i PROROGUE TODAY Refuse to Consider a Readjustment of the Wage Scale And Take Firm Stand for the Open Shop���Decision Mr. MacDonaid Mov�� a Resolution 0f censure on the Causes Surprise in the Union Camp-Railway Company Stores Up Coal for Emergency. Government and Straight Party Vote Again Endorses the Kaien Island Deal. here that the Anthracite coal companies will not grant a single demand of the United Mine Workers, is received with surprise and disappointment, Many of the miners declared that F. M. Logan, 11. S. A, department of Many requests have been received agriculture, Victoria, arrived In town fr(,ni buyers as regards the stock en- , ... ,, . , tered for sale, and prices may be ex- today und Is registered .at the (.iiichon ' ' pected to be good. There are already llote1' over sixty entries for tbe auction sale, Mr. Logan is here in connection ;nd M th,. time for receiving entries With the spring stallion show and flrsl has been extended to March 17, many annual British Columbia sab' of the more may be expected. Pure Bred Live Slock association, of Among the contributors up to the which he Is tbe secretary-treasurer, present are W. IT. Ladner and II. M. and which will be held at New West- Vasey, of Ladners; C. Moses, of North minster on March 21 and 22. Saaniciv; G. H. Haalwen, of Duncans; He says that owing to the Dominion T. w. Patterson, of Victoria; s. H. government's grunt being increased. Shannon, of Cloverdale; .loseph Tarn- and total contributions among which boline, of Wesihiuii Island; A. C. may be meutiinied I'. Hums & Co., of Wells ut Son, of Chllllwack; .1. Thump- Vancouver, for $a(i. the prize list will sun and Horatio Webb, of Sanlls, and on the Catawlsss division. Shamokln, Pa., March 12.���News [at the tri-dlatrlct convention to held before April I. New York, March 12.���The propositions Of the I'nited Mine Worker! of America for B readjustment ul thi' wages and conditions in the anthracite coal fields as a whole, have been denied by the committee representing they lliev receive concessions. be. considerably added to. .1 Nl. Steves, nl' Slevestou. quit work on April I, unless th anthracite operators. As a counter proposition, the operators Buggest thai the awards made by the anthra- Company Prepares. (.!le (.,,;il striiie commission on the Mahoney City, Ha_ March 12.���The principle upon which they were estub- Philadelphia and Heading Coal and lished by the commission, and the matron company is storing soft coal at thods established for carrying out Bast Mahoney Juaotion for Its engines their findings and awards, shall be continued for a further term of three years from the 1st of April, 190G. bo ground that anthracite operators stand for the open shop, and again ��� decline tn make an agreement With lhe United Mine Workers of America, The proposition that a uniform scalr of wages be established In the anthracite fields is met by the operators with the reply that this would be im practicable by reason of the varying capacities of the workmen, and the various conditions existing In the re glnn and at the collieries. Have Enough Boards. Vieloria. March 12, 3.30 p. in. The Indications polni to the legists. Hire getting through With the business of the sessinn tonight There is noi much business remaining, und unless something unforeseen occurs, prorogation should take place tonight Upon assembling today. Mr. Mac donald moved the following resolution: This house declares that the order-in-council granting 10,000 acres on Kaien Island Is not in the public shelter behind the female referred to, Mrs. Anderson The resolution was del ���ati',1 by a party vote. Mr. Henderson lias innv 'il a lesollt- tlon against the governm ���in lor not taxing the lands of the C P It . held under the B. C, Southern grant. This Is now under discussion, The operators decline In agree tn Interest" any change in the board of concilia- In support of the resolution, Mr. tlon as established by the anthracite Macdoniilil urged thai the govern- coal strike commission taking 1110,1110111 had not answered the charges Hot Time on Pianos. Kastoti. Pa., March 12, The piano ami organ factory of Ulehr fi Co., was destroyed by Bra last night Two dwellings were alsn destroyed, Tho DEITCIW ARRESTS JAM IMS CARE MAN WITH REVOLVER OF THREE PILGRIMS Loral coal dealers say they have more orders tea delivery by April 1 than they can nil. Unless the operators grant an eight- hour day and other demands, promt* nent members of the miners' union ground that the system proposed by in the minority report, but had taken'loss Is estimated al $76,000. The present agreement terminates the miners would simply involve the March ;(1 of thlH year. creation of a series of minor boards. For Open Shop. whose decisions might he conflicting, Tbe demand of the miners Ihat the operators enter Into an agreement here say that a strike will be declared Willi the union is declined, on the and from which appeals would have to be taken to an arbitrator, thereby creating more delays than now exist. Cigarnwifcer From Blaine, Creates .Some Trouble City Hotels. Wash,, Nkcn j>n ihe rTrarpp Are Given Shelter JOHN HAYS HAMMOND MISFORTUNE VISITS BECOMES THE OWNER THE T1MMS FAMILY C npletes Deal Which Promises to Wife Falls III and Husband Is Victim In ,the City Up. Lock- SNOW PROMISED. John B liein, a clgarmaker ��*/ Riatue, Wash., was arrested Saturday afternoon by Detective Bradshasi < haige.d with carrying concealed weapons He *as released on a uuih bail of S.J'11, which he forfeited by non-ap- ���leutiuiue before Magistrate Corbuulil 1tiln iin th no It "was reported that a man was ���seating mote or less trpuble about bt hotels ot the city, and ujion banc ligation by Detective Bradshaw, the man was found to have in his possee- liitni a decidt'dly wicked forty-frim The man was drinking and cunwisdng, and showed every evidence of being on n protracted spree, and Iot a-alery and the welfare of the citizens In general, it was thought advisable to take lrim in. Tlein stated that he wnrkf-d in duller Meliuios had three guests .Unm Everett es������e���� of Accident Caused By Wild Cat. Sickness, excitement ami mishap r.ll played a part In the fortunes of V. It. Tlnims and wife who reside oil the Hastings road near Burnaby laloi draufic company and Mr. John llu.Vs ' with the result thai while Mrs. TininiB ll'urtui'und of New York were complet- j suffered in a Vancouver hospital Mr. ed on February 2Mb, whereby Mr. Tlnuvis spent all last week with one Hammond became the owner of tin big hydraulic at Bullion. It Is pro anil his head Mr. if his arms useless, bruised and sore. Mrs. Tlnims fell III about a month '���uned Mr. Hammond will have as- aajo inl,| waa taken 10 a hospital' jociated with him the Guggenheim I the Terminal City for treatment Mi nt,'tests, which are closely allied Tlmnis made frequent trips in Ills i.v, ... L-, 1 1 nn ��� _i��� buggv to see his wife. A week ago with he standard Oil people, , 7 v, , , ,, ,, , , ,?, 1 ' last Sunday night When he waa 10- Ono hundred and sixty thousand turning linnie, happy In the knowledge pounds of blasting powder Is being I,llll( his wife was alinnst well euougli , 1, , , ,1 , ,, , Hi be OUt again, he met with a serious lelivered a the mine. Most of which 1, ., , , , , , ,,��� ������,.,v accident in which he was baillv tlsotf -o- FIRE DEPARTMENT CALLED OUT TWICE will lie used in Ihe pit bunk blast; the balance nn the construction of the new witter ditch. Other supplies will no doubt follow noon. Although the Journal has no authoritative information, it understands that Mr. Ilobsnn hopes to complete tho new canal In lime for a I short run In the fall. In any case whether this Is aecoin-i pllshed or not, Bullion will bo the busiest spot In Cariboo this summer. The Lightning Ci.vk Gold Gravels ian.l Drainage oompiny has increased ills holdings by th*! purchase of the Dry Leaves, Sparks and High Wind well known Bonanza claim adjoining Cause Small Blazes in jtlie Wangdam property down stream. Che City. This addition to its holdings on j Lightning creek, gives It one of the .... ,, . . , , , , 1 largest of the deep ground proposl- rhe high wJjids yesterday caused ,. , ,, , ." . lions held DJ any ol ihe companies Report was made to Provincial !the fl,e '>��'l>arUa��mit a couple of runs, j ,n rjwlboo. Constat Spain, who today BerveU which gave tbe.m coiiBlfleralile hard J Manager Keast is reported to be papers on'tii o men for their appear-, work for a timas. Fortunately, how! having good results with sinking the ance In owurt on the morning of Wtefl- ever, the boys wane able to bundle the working shaft, nesday, MiitcIi 11. \ BrldgetenSer Rushton stat-en that had tho.rf laeen anyone on the lirldgi jut Ihat hour last night tbat there flames, which they succeeded In subduing In short oiuler. The first call wus at 10:10 a. m. to would undoubtedly have been n soil- the residence occupied bj Frank Cam- mis acciaetn as the men were uliso- ernn, and owned bj Mrs. Hughes, sit- ualed on Seventh streel, between lutely ri^kloss, driving across tip' bridge at n lull gallop, and utterly Ig- CHANGES HER NAME AND GETS THE CP up. As he was driving down a hill on the Hastings road in the vicinity or Burnaby lake a wild cat sprang out of the bushes nl his horse,, frightening it and causing a runaway) Mr. Tlnims was thrown I'rotn Ids rig and one ot the hind wheels nf tho buggy passed over his head, lu tho fall he also had his lefl wrist dislocated. The horse continued down the hill al a rapid rate and finally brought, up al the gale of the Tlnims residence with the buggy smashed In. many jdaceR. Mr. Tlmnis spent tho night fn agony and did not have surgical attendance till the following day when Ills wife, hearing of tbe accident nnd believing It to be more serious than II was suffered shock which caused a slight relapse. Mr. and Mrs. Tluinis returned to their homo yesterday and both are again almost as well as ever. President Dead. Buenos Ayres, March 12.- Dr. Manuel Quintans, president of the republic, died yesterday. ������ ��� 0 CHAIJNCEH NERVES PUT HIM IN HOSPITAL Queens avenue and Third street, from norlng his cwuunaiul tn slop. The mini were undonlnnrUly under the mSaanceIW*h wlnd '���a'181"' "Palis of liquor, il Is said, else they would have used a1 least some slight judg- The the thai tUts men! in the matter of speed. of one rirf " 'H Hal !'w"h a breach of lhe speed bylaw, \n- blocked one of th�� Oregon Railroad k '""Mlch ,l" he *"���*�� ovf!r tne ,J"�� iHlinul bridge Saturday afternoon at a Navigation company's bunches ������:��������, faater than h walk. It being southeastern Washington. j j,aB frst offence. h1�� worship dealt \e- Al Walla Walla severe oald winds sdtOtly with Fulton, and Imposed a threaten the fruit crop. jftw ,/f *2 and cost*. At North Yakima a bitter wind,' ���1wl P,eaded ^n^- '""' ������<��' j thnt hf was In a hurry to meet the reaching tho proportions of n gale, ^^ Trnn8fer a���(, gRye yery m^ Princess Ena Will Be Victoria Eugene S-mait of Spain at $50,000 a Year. traded the nleghbors' attention who, j upon breaking down the door, found Mrs. Flint left her husband six j |,'i,t,| ,| ,;lc] an(I ,he child barely alive, weeks ago and retained custody of Mm was taken to a hospital whore alio the llltlo girl, who was Ihoir only I diol in a short time. child. Last night, according to his Puhl leTt. a letter slating that ho neighbors, the 111,111 look the child out I killed the child as a punishment��tO lo a thonter. Upon their return about ''Is wife. lamaged several buildings afgregat ing thousands of dollars. Fhrce Right at Home. Tho present, .wind storm is one of tho fiercest and longest over known on tho coast. Mr. Wilson's anemometer on Saturday registered an average yeloclty of wind during the hours of 12 noon and 12 midnight, of 18% miles an hour. The highest voloclty was 22 miles an hour, and the lowest, 13 miles. thought ui the fact that he was drlv ing fasler than the law permits. Crescent Club Winners. Tho result of the handicap toiirnn- monts held In tho rooms of tho Crescent club, so far, are as follows; American billiards, Harry Turnbull, who also achieved first honors in pool, crlbbago, O. Rae. and English billiards, K. H. Thornton. Chimney to Ignite the moss and dry leaves on the roof, causing damage, Mildridi Mllr(,h ^..-Premier ,u���,.,.,, lo the extent of about |la. Fire ball today Officially communicated to the No. 2 responded to this call. cabinet King Alfonso's betrothal to The second alarm was turned In at Princess Ena of llattenbuig, who I o'clock, and came from the residence I hereafter will be officially known as of .Ittines Deiinlson, occupied by T. I Victoria Kiigenlo. Utter the two NelSOB, situated on Princess street, j houses of parliament were notified, between Sixth and Seventh avenues, j The minister of finance will present This fine was Identical with that ofja hill appropriating the sum of $r,d. the Cameron homo, and the damage In loot) annually for the future queen, this case did not exceed $15. The orl-! The date of the marriage has been gin of tho fire was due to the same [definitely set for June 2. cause as In the first Instance. The king of Portugal arrived here In this second flro the party turn- today, ing In the alarm became very excited,, ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ r.ud turned In the alarm to both stations. When the boys from No. 2 station nrrlvod on tho scone, they found the No. 1 hoys ahead of thorn, and assuring themselves of the uhllltv Of tbe No. 1 crew to handle the fire, they returned lv the station. Dcpew Rests In Sanitarium For Ten Days and la Not Missed. New York. March l|,���The) American today is authority for Iho statement that Ihe friends of United States Senator Chauncey M. Depew were am&Zed yesterday to learn that he has been a patient In a Now .lorsey sanitarium during tho Inst ten uays and thai he has been suffering from nervous exhaustion. Inquiry developed the fact that, though the senator was a very sick man when taken to the institution, he has so far recovered that he wlll bo about again in a few days. Morning Blaze. Flro started on tho roof of Magistrate Corboultl's residence at !i o'clock this morning caused by a iipark from the chimney Igniting tho moss and dead leaves, and burning a hole through the roof, nnd a small portion of the wall before tho flames woro sub- Father Gapon9s Enemies Brand Him As a Fakir The whist and Boston pool hnntll-idued by tho firemen from No. 2. caps are not yet deel led, bet will he The damage to the building will not fought out later on .hu neek. J exceed $20. St. Petersburg, March 12.���Father Gapon was arrested today on tho eve of the Inquiry demanded by him Into thi scandal Involved In the charge that his labor organization was sub* sldizol by the government. M. Tlmierlazeff, minister of commerce. In un Interview exonerate I Father CJapon from all blame, declaring that ho Is an idoiilist and a man of force and acquitting Mm of reserving any of the monoy glvon by the i;overnment to M. Matusshonskl, Gallon's former assistant. Nevertheless, his onomle/t Indicate i!wt Gapon arranged the arrest bo- cause he feared the rovol.ittmlsts and desired lo throw dust In the eves of his followers by giving htmioif the npuearaneo of being persecuted by the government. THE DAJL> NE^S aJ-'-PSfc' ��*.��C- ��� LENTEN ITEMS.... iaaa��aaiai ��� ��� ��� Sporting News: I and Comment. : ��� tils* WsHKltitr * MM- T. S. ANNANDALE W^s^ fZ.->r! Grv.ftn. niniiMim��aaaiMiiiuMiiMinM Specialists < EVERYTHING FOR THE OFFICE. ��� . 3��j ��� - Remington Typewriter rhag I rron - r l�� ��� S2S Hasting* Street Vancouver, B. C. a ��� a a a a aaaaa��aaa����aaa����a*aaaaa ��,,����,,����,a,,,,��,a,aaaaaa *srfferr%rf*_o-rsro-o~**f.fS.tt**��-*.*roZ*T*rt \ C. A. WELSH ��� ��� - - ��� - - - ��� ' . . .... - - ... - . . ��� ' ��� ��� . - ��� ��� ' ' - .: - - ... - '-��� ���' ' ' - - - . .- . - ' ... - ��� ��� ��� - ��� ��� . - .- - *s_*Um at* the i - ������ ��� I ��� - ��� Eve ' ig Fresh and LTp-to-Date Give Us a Trial. The People's Grocer J Columbia Street. o-e-fe-O-erro-o-o-jfo-errsffjrjrjs-jrsSjejKe-fsr*^ New Westminster. J ���sWHB*MMBBBMNMMk*MKl!K9Cm ' " : i : Houses and Lots In Every Section of th*> City. �� ��� - : McQUARRIE & CO., S?SSi i a J : . : i oat. i>'r'irt. Advertise in The News " - ��� ��� ��� ��� - ��� ... ��� ��� .... . . . ��� ��� - ��� >ar)i ^oala. ��� ' ��� ��� - . .,����� ��-.i on opened a ��� ��� "tlanre -,) ?tt�� T'.iitu n a;, ns^aeel has .. ��� ��� ��� ��� ���-���. ��� ,f he ^ari c.-,mnut:.��ft. iA to -ae *ame itseif. It j��enis ti me 'hat ih>? schedule -his comma; aea- vin will t��> a il!m onft, an -hera is - IT -- ,*.'.--. JUUIt -.-��� etj .���---���; �� aete Vksssmw. em -* - lot aa 3'ars. ��� '.��� toxin ��� ..-ia-. I ' TjIUT. ��� a ��� - ��� f ie course of his ' ��"as I ���-rpwnse. an> ��� . - I ' .' ��� ... -io ie.1 ie . -.xiJireac'- ��� 3e;i! -wanr.-- B. C. Mills, Timber and Trading Company VANCOUVER AND NEW WESTMLNSTER Vfarrafarrar^i sna dealers n \J K.nas st Lumber. Lath. Shingles, Mouldings. Sash. Dccrv Interior Finish. Turned Work. Etc. Fish and Fruit Boxes. Large Stock Plain and Fancy Giass. FARMERS ATTEiNTION! '_arr.cer A.way* in Stock for Fencing and Draining Royal City Branch, Columbia St., TtMepnone 12. New Westminster -.- '.���'.' ��3. .-- M-���i. s StoMfSKlS "'je; ���u��- oana 3i Mot-'T' -inn- - am iod martaJl ��� ssoansdad ais - 3ian . .���- - ��� n ���m "ii hnnso, Tii" my ant: *' ������-: dm ":��� me aian ired ihota, in.'. -T.r.- nian'a ahdnnn-n. -naitir.j i -roitnd Thirli !<��arh. The ir.v la nSflSCC . Advertise in the News IT PAYS Forty MmertaK,iled. ^enna. VUr'-n t ��� Br he wiilapn*> of 'tie pule- --.ie:n; .n ie -i mine a' Haibl. DlsTrlm of Tar-nsl. eatsrds forty miner? and -,ne ?ne-.neer -* ere Vilied. Electric Railway Service nter -jrsan _ ni?. \ . .r. ; . a.at��� ,n.; | I .-.': B pum, Car�� min.st.-r at Mune mssds -- p.m. Ct/ L.mits Line���Hail lint D .ru ���'��� I" i.m. 'ii ��� ;n ,.m. 2D Wmute 4er- a.m. ana tu p.m. BriUsli Columbia Electric Ry. Co., DA 'ere VOLUME 1, NUMBER 7. NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C., MARCH 12, 1906. I<�� CENTS PER WEEK. Coal Miners Say Big Strike Will Occur Before April 1 LOGAN ARRIVES AND TALKS ABOUT LIVE STOCK SALE MINE OWNERS DEFY WORKERS indications are Says Increase of the Dominion Government Grant and a Number of Special Contributions Means a Considerable Addition to the Prize Lists. Refuse to Consider a Readjustment of the Wage Scale And Take Firm Stand for the Open Shop���Decision Mr. MacDonaid Move, a Resolution of censure THAT HOUSE WILL PROROGUE TODAY Causes Surprise in the Union Camp-Railway Company Stores Up Coal for Emergency. on the Government and Straight Party Vote Again Endorses the Kaien Island Deal. p. M. Logan, B. 8. a_ department ot Many requests have been received '���agriculture, Victoria, anrlved In town fl<��" buyers " regards 'lie Btoek en- , ... _... . tared fur sale, and prions may be ex- today and is registered at the Qulchon pected i" be good, rhere are already "" ' ever sixty entries tor tta auction Sale, Mr. Logan is here In connection ;.n;i M u���, tlrae tor receiving entries with the spring stallion show and Brsl has been extended to March t", many annual British Columbia Bale ol the more mas lie expected. Pure Bred Uve Btodk association, ui Among the contributors up to the which he is tie secretary-treasurer, present are \v. 11. Ladner and h. H. anil which will be held al New West Vssey, of Ladners; C. Moses, of North minster on Match 21 and 22. Saaniok; 0, 11. Batsven, of Duncans; lie says Hint owing to the Dominion T. w. Patterson, ot Victoria; s. II. government'! grant being Increased, shannon, ot Cloverdale; Joseph Tarn- ami total contrtbutions among which bollne, of Wesliaan island; A, ('. may be mentioned P. Hums & Co., of WeBsA Son, ol Chllllwack; .1. Thoiiip- Vancouver, for $riti, the prize list will sun and Horatio'Webb, of Bardls, and be considerably added to. J. W. Steves, ni' Steveston. denote arrests mm takes care m WITH revolver of three pilgrims Shamokin, here thai the nies will not I'a., March IU.���News anthracite coal oompa- grant a single demand th receive concessions. at the til-district convention to be held before April 1, New York, Murch 11���The propositions Of the I'nited Mine Workers of the I nlted Mine Workers, Is re- America for a readjustment ot the , .ived with surprise and disi ,int- ___ ftn(J COI���llli,J,lij ,��� ������. aIl,,n���. ment <-ii��- coal fields as a whole, have I n Many of the miners declared that denied by the committee representing they will dull work on April 1, unless th anthracite operators. As a counter proposition, the operators suggest that the awards made by the authra- Company Prepares. c>te coa] strjUe commission on the Mahoney City, Pa- March 12.��� The principle upon which they were estali- Philadelphia and Reading Coal and lished by the commission, and the me- Iron company Is storing soft coal at thods established for currying out East Mahoney Junction for its engines on the Catawlasa division. ground that anthracite operators! stand for the open shop, and again decline to make an agreement with the United Mine Workers of America The proposition thai a uniform scab' of wages be established In the anthracite fields is met by the operators with the reply that this would be im practicable by reason of the varying capacities of the workmen, and the various conditions existing in the re- glun and at the collieries. Victoria, March 12. 3.80 p. m.��� The Indications point to the legislature getting through With the business of the session tonight. There is not much business remaining, and unless something unforeseen occurs, prorogation should take place tonight. Upon assembling today, Mr. Mac donald moved the following resolution: This house declares thai the order-ln-council granting 10,000 acres on Kaien Island is not in the public Local coal denJiers say they have more orttvrs foi delivery by April 1 than they can fill. Unless the operators gram an eight- hour day and other demands, proini. nent members of the miners' union their findings and awards, shall be continued for a further term of three years from the 1st of April, 1900. Have Enough Boards. The operators decline to agree to Interest." any change in the board of concilia- In support of the resolution. Mr. Hon as established by the anthracite Macdonald urged that the govern- coal strike commission taking the ment had not answered the charges ground that the system proposed by in the minority report, but had taken shelter behind the female referred to, Mrs. Anderson, The resolution ��.is defeated by a party vote. Mr, Henderson lias moved a resolution against the governmenl tor not taxing the lands of the C, P, It., held under the ii. c. Southern grant. is now under discussion, This Hot Time on Pianos. Baston, Pa., March I! The piano and organ factory of lilehr & Co., was destroyed by lire last night. Two dwellings were also destroyed. The loss is estimated at $75,000. The present agreement terminates the miners would simply involve the March 31 of this year. creation of a series of minor boards, For Open Shop. .whose decisions might be conflicting, The demand of the miners that the land from which appeals would have operators enter Into an agreement to be taken to an arbitrator, thereby here S&y that n strike will be declared wllh the union is declined, on the creating more delays than now exist. JOHN HAYS HAMMOND MISFORTUNE VISITS BECOMES THE OWNER THE TIMMS FAMILY C "jar maker From Blaine, Creates Some Trouble Xity Hotels. Was^u Nton ujn the tTiramp Are Given Shelter In in .the City Lock up. _ Completes Deal Which Promises to Wife Falls III and Husband Is Victim , SNOW PROMISED. .l.tibii il Sit-in, a cigariuakei- nvf duller Mcliuies had three guests BJatne.. Wush.. was arrested Saturday ,tP(m, Everett nvlth him over night, the afternoon by Detective Bradshast < banged with carrying concealed weu jimis. He ��as released on a ca-sh ini of Sit', which he forfeited by non-appearance before Magistrate Corbimlil Hills morning:. li whs n ported that a man was ��� willing luor. or less trouble ibiiin tin hotels uf the city, and uimn bfiVSE- IB tipitlam by Detective llradshnw, the tnnin was found to have in his pOBSeS- tiiieii a decidedly wicked forty torn "iThi mini was drinking and oamstSbtg, ,,,, t)l, smri showed every evidence of being brothers men claiming that they were bnoke, but on theli way to work in one of the mills In Vancouver when overtaken by nighi In the city. They first applied for eSOBlter at the prOftftcia] lail, but wen referred to the dty police, whereupon they called o��i Mr. Midlines, who sheltered them over night, and allowed llieni to pn thin moraine The men juwe their names us Geo ,'nd William BHtton, and Thos Mur- fuTt��T two claiming to lit anil the latter a partner of liim in. Fiein. ���on ii protracted spree, and for *��IVr> ltj,elrB, George Brltton gave liis age and the w��mre Ot the citizens in gen- os 82 .������, Wllliani gtated ,���.��� lre y.^ bnfl, it was though! advisable io lake h���| i5f,while Murphy claimed 'his age as 16. The younger Brltton and Mur _ suited that he workf-fl In ,,llv liri. certamly young to be on fhe Blaine, but thought that he woaMMke rnul but they are big strong boys, a change, which he undoubtedly re- fttfd apparently well aide to lata care c-ivcii. although noi In the nay inW-themselves, ���although sufferingUrom which he anticipated. The weapon is k temporary streak of bad luck. Murphy claimed that he wait to Kill in the possession of Chief **1 ?u lice Woiutosh. intends to Make Trouble. Marhlta, March 12.���Slgnor VfThui- eutra, a former minister of luafnie, ��?Hys he intends to publicly denounce In pittliiiment 'the action of Slgnor Meirtet".' iliios hi niaking a seratet treaty -.With Prance, whereby Spain *s fisted Prance in the question of the Mwoitctn bunk and the police of Mitwr ftill in this southern part rly winds, beonm- iUK warmer and unsettled. With snow tonigiit or Tuesday. Lower Mainland���Decreajting .euiiiiorly wiutis, becoming to m- er and uns��"ttled with sno* to- ��� iiiidit or Tiessilay. I !T<;mperatnres at 5 a. m. 'ten | day were: "Victoria, 28; New Westminster, ; 24. emtewn'mm^mm* > i ��� ������������<�������� DRIVE FURIOUSLY ACROSS THE lv. : icouver Men Find Tone to Pay Toll. No AGREE ON MOROCCO. Algerlcas. March 12. 6 p, ni. ���The French delegates declare ntwy will not accept the foreign control of the Franco-Spanish police for Morocco. The Germans are firm. This makes a momentar> deadlock upon details, but a solution Is considered assured, as the parties are agreed upon the main principle involved. Make Cariboo Busy This Summer. of Accident Caused By Wild Cat. ���o- His Holiness Exchanges Compliments Aitt-esaes Become Tired of Life an id With the Famous /American *tttrmot to Kiummit .���Financier. Suicide St. Paid, Minn., Mawh 12.���Katit, Home, Mandi 12.���The pope received today, in private audhnce, J. Pier- pont Morgan, H it. Hollisw, Mrs. Hoi- Ransoms sosfl Hattie Lotmalne, actres- 11ns, and Minis Ilollins, all of New sei(> arL, ln ^p rlty hosphal In n critl- York. The audience occurred in the pope's library and merely consisted of an ex- lug from a bullet wound au the left, change of compliments, the ncntiff ox-! breaRtj an(, ,hejnUer ,s alljfw|nK from pressing his appreciation of ttftie kind CHILD WINDS BLOW M jMTEJOF OREGON Sncac and Sleet Storm Blocks mail- way Navigathm In South- esattern Wtshington. Pottrastfl, (Dre., March 12.���RerjaoDts to the OncBtinlan from all parts of rhic Pacific nontshtwest lnflloate that district I* in the throes of one with the Standard Oil people. One hundred and sixty thousand pounds of blasting powder is being delivered at the mine, most of which will be used in the pit bank blast; the balance on the construction of the new water ditch. Other supplies will no doubt follow soon. Although the Journal has no authoritative information, it understands that Mr. Hobson hopes to complete the new canal in time for a short run in the fall. In any case whether this is accom-i plished or not. Bullion will be the busiest spot in Cariboo this summer The Lightning Cl.vk Gold Gravels and Drainage eoimnny has increased its holdings by the purchase of the The nici illso omitted the formality IDry Leaves, Sparks and High Wind well known Bonanza claim adjoining POLICE fi��T ON THEIR TRAIL Reckless Ones Are Ordered to Return , and Make Appearance In Court. James Atkinson and Angus McAllister, t*io well known Vancouver citi- j zens, wene guilty of furious and reck-1 less driving across the New Westiuln- ster brid&'e.about 9 o'clock last night, and although Brldgetender Herb Rush- o | ton had ino difficulty in recognizing | the men Bit"was unable to stop them. St. Petersburg, March 12, 7:37 p. m.���The latest reports from Algerlcas are to the effect that an agreement on the question of the Moroccan police is now assured on the basis of the Austrian proposals. According to the Ashcroft Journal Sickness, excitement and mishap of Saturday final arrangements ba> g1 J>"ff* " "'"'I ''' ""' f"r,"��f ot ;V. R. Tlnims and wife who reside on tween the Consolidated Cariboo Hy-.,h<1 Hastings road near Ihirnaby lake), draulic company and Mr. John Hay's' with the result that while Mrs. Tlmnis Hammond of New York were complet- Buttered ln a Vancouver hospital Mr. ed on February 2Sth, whereby Mr. Tlmms spent all last week with one Hammond became the owner of the big hydraulic at Bullion. It is lire- ,, .,.. ���,,-., , , i Mrs. Tiiilins fell 111 about a month sumed Mr. Hammond will have as-, ,lR0 un(1 >WUK taken to a hospital Bociated with him the Guggenheim the Terminal City for treatment, M interests, which are closely allied Tlmms made frequent trips in his buggy of his arms useless , bruised and sore. i Mrs. Timms fell 111 abou ago and .was taken to a I and his head. Mr. FIRE DEPARTMENT CALLED 911 TWICE Cause Small Bla the City. in The high winds yesterday caused of paying toll so great was their haste. The case was reiiorted to the police almost immediately after fhe occurrence, but not before the men had escajied. Report was made to Provincial [lhe flre department a couple of runs, Constable Spain, who today served | which gave them considerable hard Manager Keast is reported to be papers on tiie men for their appear- j work for a time. Fortunately, how- having good results with sinking the ance In court on the morning of Wed- lever, the boys wene able to handle the working shaft nesday, March 11. jflameg Bridge-tender Rushton stales tluit had there "been anyone on the bridge at that hour last night that there would undoubtedly the Wingdam property down stream This addition to its holdings on Lightning crook, gives it one of the largest of the deep ground proposi lions held bj any ol lhe companies In Cariboo. Manager Keast cal condition The former is suffer- which they suoceeded In sub- duing in short order. The first call was at 10:30 a. m. to', have been �� sefi- j the residence occupied by Frank Cam- ous acclaim as the men were abao-' eron, and owned by Mrs. Hughes, sit-, lately recMess, driving across de lwted on SevenUl gtreett between | bridge at a Ttill gallop, and utterly in- _ _. ������.,������ ,, , . ,��� , ___ jUueens avenue and Th rd street. The poring his (wmiiiiiind to stop. The uion j v;ere undonbiK-tlly under the Influence jhieh wlnd caused sparks from the of liquor, it is said, else they would have used at least some slight jitdg- rtiie ment in the matter of speed. rtf It is said that the rig was the pro- Na j, responded to this call. * perty of a loeitl stable, and that fhe CHANGES HER NAME AND GETS THE COIN Princess Ena Will Be Victoria Eugene of Spain at $50,000 a Year, chimney to ignite the moss and dry leaves on the roof, causing damage; Mudrid March 12.-Premier Morett to the extent of about $1.1. Pire hall | today officially communicated to the cabinet King Alfonso's betrothal to Uie worsl Htiiwnis ever experienced it.; '"'"'���' "* " """' ���"���"*'* '"'" luav l,rc| The second alarm was turned ln at IPrincess Ena of Battenburg, who from T6 rae" ^^^ *�� �����k "* their escape , ^^ an<1 came from the residence j hereafter will be officially known to Vancouver on the tram before the March. A anuwfall vtrylng inches at WsHset, IdaJw,-, to three 4n-[>iocal police ooUlll apprehend them. ness ol Mr. Morgan In VlsUJag him ��M POlSOntag. Hnd recalling his vUit of lust May. Both said they were disgusted with The pope blessed some religions! oh- ,. , ,. ._. , , , , .. ., , , . .,, the theatrical business, and It tr. suld, .lects handed to him by Mrs. and Miss Ilollins. i Planned to end their lives. Murders His Daughter In Punishment of Wife Now York, March 12.���Emil Fuhl, a Gorman waiter, took his own life last night and also that of his five- year-old daughter because of griof \ over separation from his wife. Mrs. Fuhl lefl her husband six I weeks ago and retained custody of the little girl, who was their only child Last night, nccordlng to his neighbors, the ni.m took the child out to a theater. Upon their return nbcjii midnight, ho locked her in the same room with himself and broke off a gas fixture. Tho smell of gas about daylight, at- iractol tho nleghbors' attention who, upon breaking down tho door, found Kithl dead and the child barely alive. j of James Dennison, occupied by T. Victoria Eugenie. Later the as two ehes at Hunllngtsmi, Oregon, occurred yesterday. Albany, Oregon, is experiencing a snow nnd sleet storm, which blocked one of the Oregon Railroad k. Navigation company's Jiwnches in southeastern Washington. Rube Fulton Fined. Rube Pulton appeared before Magi* Itmte Corbould 1'h'iB morning charged has ['With a breach of rhe speed bylaw, Inasmuch as he drove over the Lulu island bridge Baturduy ufternoon at a speed faster than a walk. It being a'is hYst offence, his worship dealt le- At Walla Walla severe oald winds threaten the fruit crop. At North Yakima a bitter wind, roachlng the proportions of a gale, damaged several buildings aggregating thousands of dollars. Fhrce Right at Home. Th,i present .wind storm is one of tho fiercest and longest ever known on the coast. Mr. Wilson's anemometer on Saturday registered an average yeloclty of wind during the hours of 12 noon and siientlj- with Fulton, aud imposed a frne of $2 and cost*. Fulturi pleaded guilty, and stated that he was in a hnrry to meet the stenmer Transfer, nnd gave very little (honght to the fact that he was driving faster than the law permits. Cresemnt Club Winners. The result of the handicap tournaments held in the rooms of tho Crescent club, so far, arc as follows; American billiards, Hnrry Turnbull, who She was taken to a hospital where she dlol in a Bhort time. Fuhl left a letter stating that he\r2 midnight, of 18V4 miles an hour, killed tho child ns a punishment-to Tno highest voloclty was 22 miles 'il�� wife. iau hour, and Iho lowest, IS miles. also achieved first honors In pool. enps nre not yet docl led, but will ho fought out later on ihu neek. Nelson, situated on Princess street between Sixth and Seventh avenues. This fine was identical with that of ihe Cameron home, and the damage In this case did not exceed $15. The orl- houses of parliament were notified. The minister of finance will present n bill appropriating the sum of $50,- 000 annually for the future queen. The date of tbe marriage has been gin of the fire was due to the same;definitely set for June 2. cause as in the first Instance. The king of Portugal arrived here In this second lire the party turn-' today, ing ln the alarm became very excited, j _____________________ nnd turned ln the alarm to both stations. When the boys from No. 2 station arrived on the scene, they found the No. 1 boys ahead of them, and assuring themselves of the abllltv of the No. 1 crew to handle the flre, they returned to the station. to see his wife. A week ago last Sunday night when he was returning home, happy in the knowledge that his wife was almost well enough to be out again, he met with a serious accident in which he was badly used up. As he was driving down a hill on the Hastings road in the vicinity of Burnaby lake a wild cat sprang out of the bushes at his horse,, frightening it and causing a runaway. Mr. Timms was thrown from his rig aud one of the hind wheels of the buggy passed over his head. In the fall he also hod his left wrist dislocated. The horse continued down the hill at a rapid rate and finally brought up at the gate of the Timms residence with the buggy smashed in_ many places. Mr. Tlmms spent the night lit agony and did not have surgical attendance till the following day when his w'fe, hearing of tie accident and believing it to be more serious than it was suffered shock which caused a slight relapse. Mr. and Mrs. Timms returned to their home yesterday and both are again almost as well as ever. ���.���o���������. President Dead. Buenos Ayres, March 12.���Dr. Manuel Quinlane, president of the republic, died yesterday. ���o CHAUNCEY'S NERVES PUT HIM IN HOSPITAL Senator Oepew Rests in Sanitarium For Ten Days and Is Not Missed. New York, March 12.���Thta American today is authority for the statement that the friends of United States Senator Chauncey M. Depew were amazed yesterday to learn that he has been a patient in a New Jersey sanitarium during the last ten days and that he has been suffering from nervous exhaustion. i Inquiry developed the fact that, though the senator was a very sick man when taken to the institution, he has so far recovered that he will be about again In a few days. Morning Blaze. Flre started on the roof of Magistrate Corbould's residence at 0 o'clock this morning caused by a spark from Father Gapon9s Enemies Brand Him As a Fakir St. Petersburg, March 12.���Father Capon was arrested today on the eve of the Inquiry demanded by him Into ... , . I tha scandal Involved In the charge tho chlmnev Igniting the moss and ! dead leaves, nnd burning a holo:ll,at his lnbor organization was r.ub- eribhage, G. Rao, and English billiards, I through thn roof, nnd a small portion j sldlzo I by the govornment. B. H. Thornton. of tho wall before the flames wore sub-! M. Timlerlazelr, minister of enm- Tho whist and Boston pool handl- dued by tho Bremen from No. 2. j merce, in an Interview exonerate 1 Tho damage to tho building will not j Father Gapon from nil blame, doclar- exceed $20. i ins I'm* he is an Idealist and a man of force and acquitting him of reserving any of the money given by the ljovornment to M. Matusshonskl, Gallon's former assistant. Nevertheless, his enemies indlcato l'lit Gapon arrrnged tho arrest be- cyuso he feared tho revolutionists and desired to throw dast ln the eyes of his followers by glvinp himself the appearance of being persecuted by the government. THE DAILY NEWS MONDAY, MARCH 12, 1 906 RI!DN MIHNIPHT OH Vancouver firemen quadra goes north duivh lfuumum vjil. have exciting day with strong light MANAGING HUSBANDS. 1i THE LEGISLATURE Members Keep the Business Going Till The First Hour of Sunday Morning���Patent Medicine Bill and Game Amendment Act to Be Sacrificed Victoria. March 10. ��� After the allowed him as soon as the matter Strenuous session of Friday which ex-; was brought to his notice. tended four and a half hours into. tills morning the house mei again al '��� o'clock ibis afternoon and also held Mr, Murphy asked the provincial mother, though less trying, night ses- secretarj the following questions: slon. i. Are Indians allowed to slaughter When the speaker Look Lhe chair al ooet during the dose season.' ���_ p. m business ��s�� commenced 2. is it not the dutj of all provincial promptly, without Ihe usual prayers, constables to enforce the game laws. and Hu discussion and business was nnd hav : inai i Inte esl Ing I hi ougl out lhe No New Game Act. Extinguish Fires In Children's Shelter, Burton Saw Works and Other Places. Fire alarms were ringing continu- oiisl;. in Vancouver yesterday, and the file brigade, polished up by a number of forced runs on Saturday, were right there with the extinguishing apparatus just in time in every case to prevent a serious blaze. The Children's shelter building on Davie street, tho Burton saw works, and residences on Homer and Hamilton streets were attended to one after the other in rapid succession, and the whole damage was light though the excitement was intense. The principal excitement occurred ai n o'clock in the morning when flre broke oul In Lhe roof or the Children's shelter, a building which, by the way, had onl} recently been condemned by the building Inspector as unsafe, The matron and most of Lhe children were at church when the conflagration Btarted, and, the alarm be- they been Instructed to dohng pr0mptli Bent In, the fire lighters su? were unhampered In their work. The .", is it the Intention of Lhe go\ i i iinii'tii at the present Besslon to iiutlding was burned complelely off. irlng down a bill to amend the game Th,, ,. was ,������. ,.,,,,,, in .,���. building rules an orders bj adding the foi act, as promised in the Bpeecb from who was overlooked when the excite Bitting Mt. c, den of Vain ouver Btftrted t Plugs p ilng by moving lo tmend lhe iv-1 blaze was confined to lhe upper Btorj where It originated. The roof of the i nev rule All a] ��� llcatloiiB foi i ii tnges in the municipal clauses act shall require a ibe throne? in.ait commenced, bul was afterwards Hon Mi Fulton replied as follows' accidentally found by a fireman who "I. Undei . "i tlon 1 notice i le u Ij and dial ln< tlj specif! ' Ion ai l rescued it in time erious injury. 189S (as re-enacted b; - si ��� The children wen in save it from all taken careof i i ui obje if ll i llcatlon Such t ice .-h.iii I follows, namely: In tho British Columbia G '.thi' and In one newspapet I -lie. at leasl oni e n week, having a large circulation Lhroughout the province Such notice shall continue In each case for a period of at least six weeks during the Interval of time between the close of Lhe next pn 1 Ing Besslon and thi' consideration of the proposed changes bj the muni tion ' ol tl' " irotectlon act at the general hospital, pending ar- amendment act, 1905), Indians are al- ransements for a new home, which ,,.,,. . will be louiul tor thi'tii today. �� lowed ln unorganized parts ol the Tll��� ���,,, ,lt ,,���, ���,,,.,,,��� Baw worka province to kill deer for their own resulled from the boiler burning out, or their families' use, for food only, One of the walls Btarted to blaze, and "2. Yes. Instructions have been being fanned bj the wind, the flames were making good headwas when the Bent in tii" superintendent of provincial police, bj circular, to all provincial constables. :;. No." Hon. Mr. Pulton moved the third reading of the public schools act. i\gr I. The acl to amend Chapter 18 Of the Men With Grievance Against G. N I rlgade arrived on the Bcene. The other flres wer.', '.ke tin.I n! the Children's Bhelter, cans d by flying sparks from chlmnej i, bul onlj slight damage was done. o EXPRESS DISSATISFACTION. cipal committee, and copies of such ie vised statutes passed through corn- Meet at Hall's Prairie. notice to the clerk of the lions,'. mlttee unopposed. Mr. Murphy asked whether in the The acl to amend th 6 vent of the municipal clauses act inlnal Railway and Ferry act, 1901, now before the house not going providing tor a division of the Great through this session the proposed Northern al Mini lake, passed through amendment would become operative, commtttee. II so, it would be a hardship, as it The Midway and Vernon Railway would require all the work done on Clompany act passed its third read' this act during the session to be gone ing. over again. The royal plate glass bill passed onded by Mr, Garden pointed out that there its third reading. resolved: Serious dissatisfaction with the de- Victoria Ter- fectlve set vices and lack of accomodation at llezeiinere station on the (Ileal Northern Railway, brought to- net her a fairly large number of residents at Hall's Prairie Bchoolhouse in the evening of March 7. Win. Higg was appointed chairman, and .lohn K. MacKenzie secretary, After several had been heard from, it was moved by Albert lianiford, see- ���loseph Charbonneau, and Thai the following commit already a provision in (he act by In adjourned committee on the Van- '"' l)P appointed to draft a resolution could be suspended couver Incorporation amendment act and petition to be presented to the w n s Wl ...il the till' . re ouojjcuuou I wuuvei uitui |n,ileum uiiieiiuiuim mi faJJWpy authorities vi/.' Messrs H during the time the house was In ses- Mr. Garden submitted an amendment Up. Thrift .lames All cox and the sec- liinlling the borrowing for hospital retary. Opposition Scores. ,������ toI ,,, tl!(l ���,���, ������,���m ��� ������������,���,! After a short ivcss tho committee $ii(i,0ini, unless a special reported (he form they had agr I The municipal clauses acl and the Was a public act; there were mans stage, purposes to .1 A. Macdonald thought the prin- by-law Is passed to authorize a larger . , . upon. It was adopted and ordered to pie ol the amendment was objec- amount. The amendment was carried be circulated tor signatures, tionable. The municipal clauses act and the bill passed the committee After further speeches, it was moved by John Pengelly, seconded by ., , ,, , , Mr, Bamford, and unanimously re- municipalities, and to compel men, lhe bill to amend lhe provincial I lyed! That a commilt. f five be all to advertise tho amendments they (lections act and Lhe bill lo amendappointed by the chairman, who shall might from time to lime desire would Ihe water clauses consolidated act do everything ill their power to tor- be u great hardship and would in- passed the third reading. v:"''' Lhe Lransporlalion interests of volve an Immense amount of trouble. The reporl of lhe bill to provide for!,hi's neighborhood and shall have , ' power to call further public meetings li. wits too important a matter to be the establishment of a provincial jf th,. .same shall he deemed necos- deall with In this manner at the end! slock breeders' act passed and Was nary. The following were according- of a Besslon, and was in any event adopted. ly named by the chairman: Messrs. governing principle. The report of the following bills':':;1"';* 'V'T'm''7' 5amtor^' HT' 3 ; Thrift, J. K. MacKenzie and John were adopted: To amend the liquorh?ellgelly. By unanimous resolution, On a division the motion was lost, licence act: to amend chapter IS of the number was afterwards increased opposed to Hu ���of public b'lls. Downs Mr. Williams. the revised statutes; to amend the Jo seven so as to include Messrs and Ernest .loseph Charbonneau lllamll. Resolved that the same committee Mr. Williams moved the following Victoria Terminal Railway act. resolution: ' The bills to incorporate the Life Whereas, owing to economic con- Boat and Life-Saying association of be authorized to secure signatures to ditions. a huge number of lhe citizens British Columbia and to authorize a petition to the public authorities Ot Brtlish Columbia are unable to pro- Victoria to sell certain lands held fori for the appointment of n mail clerk vide for their old age; and park purposes passed their third read- When- i- many workmen are, ings. on the Great Northern Railway trains. Resolved that these minutes bo transmitted to Ihe offices of the Co' through permanent Injury, prevented The act to consolidate and amend| lumbtan and Daily News for publi- from providing for themselves; the municipal clauses act and amend- Therefon be it resolved, That In Ing acts was reported anil adopted the opinion of this house the govern- with amendments. ment Bhould take into consideration the mat ���' Of providing for such poisons. Mr. Si' .i.'.'-r Pooley ruled the motion out ol order as affecting the public revi nues. Such a measure could only be broughl in as a government measure. Mt. Hawthornthwall ��� moved the following i solution s Danger to Health. When the condition pf certain private 'laughter houses in ibis province i- such as i" endangei the health ol ih community: The report of the bill to amend Lhe \ mcouver incorporation acl was adopt ed. The supply bill passed committee but the opposition objected lo lhe third reading and ll was held over 'ill Monday. The patent medicine bill has not yol reached second loading, and will probably not pass this session. The house adjourned al midnight. canon. After thanks voted and tendered In chairman and secretary, the meeting adjourned. KERSHAW REFLECTS. Decides to Give Up Fi6h Comrris- sionership on April 1. Ilellingham, March 11.���T. It. Kershaw last night mailed a letter to Governor Mtead which will doubtless nettle all controversy over the ques- Llon as to when the tenure nf office of .1. L. Rlselaiiil. Mr. Kershaw's ���nccessor as fish cninnilssioi.l'i'. is to begin. in it he nsks the governor to recall Hie commission, which he had lold H,,,]. Mr. Kershaw he would send lo H. A Palrchild tor delivery, which commission was to take effbet Septoni- the opinion ol tins house the go.-ern Harris company and one of Coburg's ber I, and In lieu Lhereof issue one o Poisoned By Powder. Coburg, March LO, -John D, 11 There.ie be it resolved, thai In dick, the local agent foi tha Massey- Powerful Lamp, to Ue Installed on Green Island, Near Port Simpson. The D. (I. S. Quadra sailed on Saturday for Green Island, near Port Simpson, carrying equipment for a light to lie Installed there. The light- bouse was built In knock-down form al the Dominion lighthouse depot at Presoott, Out., ami Bhlpped to Vancouver. The material was transfer red to the vessel on Friday afternoon, mid will be taken direct to Green island. Mr. Gordon Halkel of Present I is In charge of the work of placing the liuht In position. The lantern will burn petroleum vapor, and will throw a light which will be visible for twenty miles. The petroleum is heated, and the vapor arising there- from is burned in an acetylene I,tinier .This light will bo the second largest on the coast, iii" largest being at l.i'iinai'il island. Marine Notes. The C. P, R, -' lamei Tee i, captain Hughes, reached Vancouver at t o'clock Saturday afternoon from nor tinan BrltUh Columbia ports, Thirty- i Ighl pasBengers came soul b on t he steamer and >!> barke l al this pun. The Tees broughl down a amount of freight. Ini luding 10 ions ol halibut from lhe new halibut bnnka near Hartley bay. The Canadian-Australian liner Mlo- wera Ib due in Vancouver from Au. Italia, via Honolulu and Suva on Thursday. The R, M. S. Empn ss of India Is scheduled iii sail from Vancouver for Yokohama and Hong-Kong on March 19th. H. M. s. Shearwater returned to Esquimau on Fri.la,. last from Knight's Inlet, she has been away about a month. LIFELESS RIDERS. li,Hin,,k Incidents Culled Prom n the same principle, though he did not embody It In n paradoxical epigram. For more than forty-eight hours- namely, during Nov. 12 aud 13, 1825���he obstinately refused to be bled, notwithstanding the urgent iiersuaslon to that effect of tils own physician, Jiimes Wellye, nnd of Stoptlngen, the medical attendant of the empress. On tho 11th, toward eveulng, Wallye, finding all persuasion useless, plainly told the czar tlint, having refused the aid of science till It wns too late, he had no resource left tfirt the aid of religion. "And 1 have an Iden that that will prove a broken reed to you," said the blunt physlclnn, a worthy predecessor of Zncharln. "I am afraid that religion will be of little use to the man whose obstinacy In re- (Using all medical aid Is tantamount to suicide." Thirty hours Inter the eldest sou of Paul I. bad breathed his last. ������������������������������������������������������������������������������ ������������������������������������������������������������������������������ ��� Can Arrange ��� Terms Tor You. J THOS. R. PEARSON M3���One hundred and sixi y acres.beauttfuliy situated on the south.an Blope oi ine serpentine Valley; first-class land, fronting on the Clover Valley Road: near I he railroad and river; goon road: land Is very productive; about 60 acres In first-class condition. Good ami convenient buildings. All necessary implements and stock. This is well worth investigation. Price, $90 per acre. 1027 An unusually good buy. One hundred and sixty acres; 60 to 75 acres under tirst-ciass cul livatlon; 9 acres under hops, ail in good shape; iu-roomed dwelling in good condition, barn BOxtoU; hop kiln and bailing room m good condition; the buildings on the plana are worth at least i.i.tioo. Bert and creek runs through t tie? property This is a most desirable farm; from $2,500 to $3,6UU per year can be taken oft it. Price, $000 c ash. ����������������������������� ment Bhou ' ' i,��' Into Immediate con Bideration some method thai will lumodj lilt- condition of affairs. Mr. Hawthornthwaite nald Ihat although be brought forward ibis resolution be did not want to BUggest that all slaughter houses were unsanitary. There were some notable exceptions to public health was serlousds Impaired, toria university, rendered vacant by An invest gallon into Lhe matter In the death of Dr, Badgley, has been the United States had revealed the tilled by the appointment of Rev. fact that many diseases hid been l'rof. Bluett, Ph. I)., of W>esley col- inosi respected citizians, took s head- ."die powder Thursday nighl and ii" I shortly afterwards, it Is believed he was poisoned. Rev. Prof. Bluett Appointed. Toronto. March 10.���TWe chair of .laiing from April I. Mr. Kershaw returned Friday night from Olvnipia, where he had In ��� -n in conference with the governor, who expressed his Intention to adhere to ids purposta of continu' ig Mr. Kit- haw In office until September i If he so desired. Since returning home Mr. Ker- baw, after reflection, wrote tho gov- rule under which the|mental and moral phylosophy in VIc-|ornor as above, saving in brief tIS-it he doubted very much whether it would be to the best Inttu-ests of lhe early, the Industry or Ilie governor for him to remain In office for three months or six months, under exist- Spread by conditions existing in lege. Winnipeg, a former graduate of i ing ctrcumstano slaughter houses. Mr. Hawthornthwaltfi read an open letter from a resident of Greenwood, detailing ,. most horrible condition of affairs, diseased hog.-, having been killed, dressed and sold for local consumption. He thought ihat enough had been >..id to show that a menace to public health existed, and until a more perfect system of Inspection was adopted the danger would not be removed. Hon. Mr. Tatlow said there was no doubt this motion should pass, and he begged to assure the house that( Hie department would do Its utmost to enforce Its provisions. J. R. Brown wished to say that no' blame whatever attached to Dr. Fagan. who had been most indefatigable in the discharge of his duties, and who bad done all that the law Victoria university. and that therein!'.' he would turn the office over to ������������������������������������������������������������������������������ RILEY FOR SENATE. | his successor April | was reached after Rlseland, 1. The decision talk wifli Mr. Ottawa, March 12.���Of the British Columbia seven only Messrs, Ross, Macphereon, Gai- liher and Kennedy have arrived. Mr. Riley Is on deck. His commission tis senator will be Issued this week, when he takes his seat. Ralph Smith is expected to be here today. William Sloan had to leave the train at Calgary owing to the illness of his wife, who was with him. ���������������������������������������������������������������������������; SATISFIES PACKERS. Alaska Salmon Men Have Further Conference at Washington. Washington, March 10.���A long ��� conference was held today between representatives of the Alaska salmon I puckers and officials of the depnit- j ment of commerce and labor in rt>- lgard to the provisions of the bill to I regulate the Alaska fisheries. The members of the house committee ou territories had agreed to accept any bill which the packers and the depart ment may agree upon. The packers are satisfied that the outcome will he entirely satisfactory to them. The revised draft of the bill J JI which it is proposed to enact will he w] submitted to the committee next week. "Blie Mlnl��lrr-�� Tnrtnn. Every chin of Scottish highbinders had Its own tartnn, or striped colored cloth, of which the kilt and plaid were made. It Is not so well known, however, that the clergy of the highbinders down to a recent date used a tartan for their weekday dress. The tnrtnn of the clergy, as It was called, yvns a sober cloth of white, black and gray stripes. Ministers who did not care to dou the kilt almost nlwnys wore the pluhl or mantle of this material. In the eighteenth century when the high- landers seldom went unarmed It was the custom of some clergymen to wear swords even at church and to tie accompanied by n gillie, or servant, carrying a bow and sheath of arrows. Nothing could better Illustrate the disturbed state of those times than this practice on the part of the men who were pre-eminently preachers of peace and universal good will. -Scotsman. An Artlata' rurndlao. Capri, beautiful In Itself as a winter resort, offi-.'s an irresistible invitation to artists, since it has au iuu where any one, by painting a picture ou tin wall, can get free board. To the lovely island of Capri, v��lth lis perennial summer, it-i blue grotto und its lemon groves, went some tlfty years ago an anlst aluiu.sl ou tbe Verge of ruin. Hi opened an inn and died rich. Iu his will, leaving the inn to his heirs, he marie these conditions: "The charge per day, two bottles of retl Cnprl wine included, is never to be more than li francs. If any artist Is loo poor to pay he shall paint, a picture qpon some wall space, receiving all the accommodations accorded to those paying tho highest price, if any German artist shall come to the Iuu he shall be accommodated and shall receive tho amount Of his fare to Oermany upon his promise nuver to return to Italy." The inn is Conducted today on these conditions, Its walls are covered with pal&ttngs. 'Phone 101 Reichenbach Company Limited Wholesale and Retail Butchers For your next order of meat. Columbia Street Old li.Kll.li retire. Halfpence and farthings were not coined In Kngland tiefore the time of Edward I., and until they were the penny, which was then made of silver, was Issued deeply Indented with a cross In order that It might be broken Into two pieces for Ini If pennies or Into four things, or farthings. The sliver penny was the first coin of the Anglo- Saxons struck In England. In 1072 an authorised coinage of copper pennies, halfpennies nnd farthings wns established. Silver farthings ceased to be coined under Kilward VI. and silver halfpennies under the commouvrealth. Natural l.linlrtM. Interesting experiments have been made to test the power of root penetration ln various soils. An excavation was made some six feet In depth, so- as to leave a vertical wall of soil. Against this a Jet of water wns played from n garden sprinkler until tbe earth was washed away and the roots of growing plants were laid bare. Roots thus exposed In a fleld of rye and In one of benns and ln n bed of garden pens and all tbe appearance of n matted felt of white fibers, which spread downward about four feet. Similar inspection of rooti; of wheat showed that in seven months they hud reached a depth of Hire* ie-et and a half. The root fibers of both malre and clover have been traced to a depth of ten feet lo a light, rich, sandy soli. Carruthers Manufacturing Corny, j Manufacturers of ' Show Cases, Store Fittings and Bar Fixtures The Carruthers Manufacturing Co. | I VANCOUVER, B. C. Hor.elm. rarrlnivea In 104a. In one of the letters of Oral I'atln, written ln 1046, the learned bibliophile ssyn: "It Is true that there Is here au Englishman, the son of a Frenchman, who proposes to make carriages that will roll from Paris to Fontalne- bleu without horses ln a dny. The new machine Is preparing ln the Temple. If It should succeed there will be a great saving of bay and oats, which are at present extremely costly." Royal City Fish Co. Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Fresh and Frozen Fish Ciame In Season We deliver to all parts of the City. Telephone 40. P.O.Box 72. Front Street, Next Daily New: New Wettminster. B. C. MONDAY, MARCH 12, 1906 THE DAILY NEWS Right Up to the Minute For First-class Job Printing in All its Branches Give Us a Trial DINGLE & GALBRAITH Recommended by The Daily News Front and Sixth Streets ....CALL ON.... T.A.Muir&Co. PHARMACEUTICAL CHEMISTS for PURE DRUGS and CHEMICALS Prescriptions a Specialty. Ellard Block, New Westminster, - - - B. C. Just Arrived ihlpment of Racyclc SELECTS VICTORIA AS STARTING PLACE Large shipment ol Capt. .Hill Mikkelsen Tells tends to Do In Waters. What He Arctic In- Perfect Bicycles Call and look over me purchasing elsewhere. .in.���!. before ALEX. SPECK Columbia St. Sign, Man on Wheel. Shingle and Saw Mill Machinery The Schaake Machine Works, Ltd., New Westminster, B. C. Do you need a Set of Teeth? We guarantee to fit you or Refund Your Money Read Wky Our Pay P M rices ore GREAT NORTHERN RAILWAY Beginning, February 15th, 1906 Through Tourist Sleepers Every Day in the Year Between Seattle and Chicago VIA THE - Great Northern Railway '77ie Comfortable Way" Route of the Famous Oriental Limited For detailed Information, rates, etc., call on or address F. C. GRIFFIN, New Westminster, B. C A Full Set of Teeth $5.00 Gold Fillings $1.00 Bridge Work, per tooth $5.00 Gold Crowns $5.00 Silver Fillings 50c Platina Fillings $1.00 Victoria, March it. EJnar Mlkkel i 'ii. the noted Antic explorer, who beads the Anglo-American polar ex Iltlon, is in Victoria, negotiating im the purchase of oi f the ��� ii..mn is of the sealing flee! for the voyage of exploration in the Arctic, on which he in company with Mr. Lefflngwell, a geologist ot Knoxvllle, Illinois, nnd nine or ten others, Including some ".dentists, will atari toon from Victoria with tin1 object, im of finding the north pole, but of locating a large Island, the existence of which Is indicated, in tile opinion of Captain Mikkelsen and other bclentists, by the tides, currents und ether conditions In the llcu'ifoit les of the Arctic ocean Captain Mikkelsen said: "1 shall outfit and start from Victoria on my Arctic expedition. This is the logical, and. lo my mind, the best place lo start from. 1 have been looking over schooners elsewhere, and since niv arrival have been negotlal inn for tb.e purchase of one of (lie beating schooners in ibis city, al though nothing definite has been done. The object of ibis trip will be Arctic waters whh b land al Ihe clue of tho shelf If fur, ther land exists, "The funds for the exploration have .���'���ii raised mostly by subscription, my partner, Mr, Lefflngwell, being .i 11 mi i Ibutor, 1 still nc..I about |' sir Edward Markham of the Royal . ,ii sot i' i ..!!���! Mi'' lini hesa ol Bedford have given mi Bistance in England, nnd man; con trlbutors have given monej foi the purpose in 'in' United States, Tho tiip is under the auspices or both the Royal Geographical society and tic American c.ool phli ot letj. 'lie funds now at my disposal will in in. the trip, but another Ji.' would be verj useful in providing further ne cessltles. As for the seamen, ll is expected that 1 will gel some volunteers in Victoria, and l would be glad if anj seamen who would ni<" to make the voyage would apply to me at the llriard hotel for berths. "It Is our Intention, if the Bealing schooner for which 1 am now no gotiating enn lie secured, to atari from Victoria before many months and proceed through Behring straits into the Arctic, skirting the coast line until we reach Cape Bathurst, whence we will voyage across to Hanks Island nnd skirt the coast lo the northwest polni of the island. Where we will make a station and the sell-j ooner will he placed in quarters while parlies are organised to do scientific work, which will occupv al couple of years. The vessel will re I main meanwhile at Cape Kellett. One party win no over to Prince Patrick island to make some geographical ami enthnological explorations. This trip will be made in lhe spring of I 1907, and besides Investigating the native tribes and learning what call be learned concerning them and their mode of life und Investigating the lis ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ sources of lhe Islands, in furs ot the fourth i have made to otherwise, a search along the edge of I have made two lhe continental shelf will be made so R0SSI.A1 RUMORS Al ORE SKEWS Important Strike in the Le Rci Reported���Copper Business Improves. Rosslaml March 10 Thi were rurthet Btrong run ors of a ii ihe Le K"i, but il ��� ... ment, when seen, manift ��� mc retli em e Still ib.' Information t omes from i acb an ������ i ��� ii ,,i there Is everj 'but n verj important an- uounci ment mil bi made v. ithin the next few days "i one ot the bees, and largest strikes that has been made In the 1.,' Itoi The I,.' itui So 2 is engaged in de- veloplng what is probably th" longest ore-shoot in British Columbia on the ."ii foot level ih'' ore-shoot is 1.2U0 !'��� in length, and with the exception ot about iuu feet, which is compara- tlvelj barren, is high-grade ore, which will easily avesage 110 to the ton. nnd ill placet It runs as high as $275 to the ton. As soon as the drift along this shoot is completed, prospecting will he commenced above and tieiow tn determine its dimensions In these directions, it is estimated by conservative mining men that ihe Le Itoi No. 2 should milk" a profit lilts year of :it least half u million dollars The following ii" Hi" shipments for I he week: Tons. a,7S0 2,800 580 100 a 7.260 Lost Teeth Restored by Artificial Substitutes. Bridge Work is the most durable of all Dental Work. Our Bridge Work is 22k. Guaranteed for 10 years. All Our Work Guaranteed for 10 Years With a Protective Guarantee. The Boston Dentists, Ltd. Hours 9 a. m. to 8 p. m. Remember the Place 4()7 Hastings St. West, Vancouver. area saufort Til" cur- conditions FIRE DESTROYS EYESORE. Houses in Restricted District of Na- kusp are Burned Down. Nakusp, March 10.���During a raging wind-storm this evening, three houses of the prohibited district un Main street, were binned to the trips to Greenland farther north and accompanied ihe Baldwin polar expedition on board the Eagle in 1900. making my lirsl Arctic trip when but 17 years of age���is to find land north of Alaska or the Canadian northwest. There are certain conditions which indicate the presence of a large ot undiscovered land in the li Sea, islands or something, , rents, Udet, and general I indicate land. "It is my intention to make sound 1 ings through the ice, going from a depot in which the schooner will anchor off the northwest of Hanks I Island to 150 west and ,6.80 north, taking provisions for 140 days���the calculations for this day have been 1 made with thoroughness���and these soundings will clearly Indicate whether it will be necessary to pro- ' ceed farther north In search of the land which 1 firmly believe exlsis in I the Beaufort sea. If I do not find it I shall be considerably surprised, though of course there is nothing certain In this world but death and j taxes. "Scientists who have investigated She reports of CondlljifaJ in that locality are all of the opinion Unit 1 Khali be successful in locating the land which 1 seek. 1 will make soundings, anyhow, until I conic to continental ledge, and the depth' w|ll that the shore line may be correctly mapped. Then too, our scientists will engage In hydrographlc work, which will doubtless lie of much Interest to geographers. "While the schooler Is at the station at Oape Kellett, at the northwest corner of Hanks Island, It is also our intention to send a party to fe discover, if possible, the ship investigator and what remains there of the expedition of Captain McClUre, This expedition, which went north in 1860, explored the northwest passage and its shore line from 1 Mr. 1 lo 1ST,:!. Captain MoClure was sent north after Franklin lost his life, and his vessel. the Investigator, was lost, and with it considerable valuable data regarding his Investigations." o ' Centre star Le Hoi.. .. Le itoi No Jumbo.. .. Total. Total for the yi 59.41B INDIAN AGENT EXCITED. Offi from this house most of the furniture Was rescued. It was only through the strenuous. efforts Of a large volunteer brigade Hie edge of lhe thai the surrounding buildings, par-; If I go over the edge ^^^ ticularly Abrlel's hall and the gov- at once indicate whether further land ernment office were saved. (,xis(3 there ()l. nol Th,,��� The loss sustained hv the Revel-j . ��� ,i i i���..���uiv stoke and local Owners is not gre;'!""!""",n ,llL' Bearon '" Il'at l0CaUt> Threatens to Call for Troops If ciats Do Not Perform Duty. North Yakima, March 10.���Agent Jay Lynch, of the Yakima reservation, Is much worked up over the way the local authorities handle the Indian murder cases on the reservation". Recently an Indian woman and her child were found murdered alone in a house. The sheriff and prosecuting attorney were notified, but neither of these officials went to the trouble to Investigate the matter, stating that there was no use. as a conviction could not be secured with Indian testimony. Mr. Lynch charges the murder of Mrs. Buchanan, a few days ago, to Willie Btamlll. The agent says he will soon have enough testimony to convict the Siwash. He threatens, If Kelson, March 10 \ heavj mi put of ore is maintained over the whole district and there me Immediate prospects of a still farther Increase in tonnage. The Hall Mines smelter and the plant at I'ilto Hay are finishing the new Improvements. A notice- iilile feature of last week was tho largelj increasing shipments from the copper mine in Nelson district, the Eureka. Total shipments for the week were 88,360 tons, made up oi 18,000 tons from the Boundary, ten shippers, of which the chief are the Urtinliy, Mother Lode, Btemwlnder, Sunset, Ore Denoro, Emma and Rawhide tl 6,670 from Russhiiiil, four shippers, Centre Star, l.e Rol, l,e Itoi 2, and Jumbo, nnd 1.I1S0 from Shiran and Koolenay. 1t> shippers, the chief bo. Ing St. Eugene. Sullivan and North Star of East Kootenay and Hunter V, Arlington, Eureka, Black Prince and Ymlr of the district nearer to Nelson. The total shipments for the year are :inS,22R tons. The various smelters received ore a' follows: Cranhy, 1X,s:t9 tons; Trail, 7,fil0; Dominion Copper, riTififi; H. C. Copper, :!,K6:t; Hall Mines, lis?; .-.larysvllle, 500. LAYING RAILS TO NICOLA. Contractor for C. P. R. Says Trains Will be Running by May 1. if the com< oust met ing P it. from SBterday in thai the Urn- .lames A. Macdonell, i tract ing firm which is i lhe Nicola branch of the C Spence's Bridge, spent Vancouver, lie slati ground, as the i pipe. Only one .'Stilt was of n defective I and the town is r.d Of a decided eye occupied, sore from its verj centre ������ abandon the searcn In and follow the edge of the continental shelf, for there Is a tendency to raise I shall the local Officers do not look after Ihe reservation belter, lo call for troops and run the reservation under martial law. ..A and rock work is about completed, and rail laying will now be commenced in earnest. Sonic rails have already been laid, and It Is expected that trains will lie running 0V8 new line by May 1. the SUBSCRIBE - NOW- FOR THE DAILY NEWS The Paper for New Westminster, First, Last and All the Time. All the News Both Local and Abroad. Delivered to Your Home Every Week Day Evening for 10 Cents Per Week A CHANCE FOR THE BOYS! To the Route Boy Securing the Most New Subscribers During the Month of March An Eegant Raincoat and Cap will be Presented. To the News Boy Selling the Most Papers���Daily News���a Similar Present will be Given. THE D-VIL> NEW* iusjt v u* s- _ ��� ' hev tel .-v 7'iu- t: ' " - - ami 7-m. v inrui ,.m nip- i.nv.-a-l ;. *����*'"��- l '���'['::-. ,. :i : "-a ��i...i.��,: :>: . = - Fa ���. 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" Bfj ni ue ii-iui- v-ii-i ������.i -'n v.u, msi tend u ui Bnnasan BbD d ..nun Bai i. -' /'aw- aaanmatnm ii Ba man* "���-""��� anal in* an dSsanffc B* ���crlie-i li tUM-ii:i '. i"'it JUS 3. Bn tin ��.";i">; ���or���.-".'::.M'ii u m u-'.U- ���a. nun s Urn a i *u.-��� Tie S u��- !ll"r��l V tU t Vlirue'l Sag m i "������ ��� Lnu.iii -we a i "nlc- ���: a :i" .JU"��� ti !-.i-'- i ��� uoituii' :n'��� a aso i sj iraanan mctnel vtt i uaiilaiii ea. Sorb ri intii" ?~nftsBdF; T. ?r-inmngnuTr?e��i THfl -matr-nr-nti ui Hnnu-ni-oa uuiiir- ��� t.nnurc.-.nns ante! atena nt )�� ���v ::e ai�� Bai mine mur vm in-i. :ur ~ manna u tin-nip mates toa '.��� 'ir~-i harh a Hhitum! ��� urns uiu a He un omrr i ���iii -i. Unm, ;i�����-,r r���titt, *v,uiv T��� r�����ro in In."iiiw. '.i.-u��� H"fflis o la���������! pjmnibSaJ mum uumu.s vtu v inner���u nuniTc uuui- b dtes ti in u-* acn r-na umr *ni~ nu-s. i ninu-iii��v -tta m comma u tns. 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Bell I ��� '-'iiru��� fcCBB WllfUllihl T1i- tl-H^-lle't ni nu true: - but "���n BwtSMi - ������ i Z'upa'uuv bht- ran view axn mu i��^a (mr a xtn ������'������ " T'��""^ aa . "'tt"���"~. a nn : BRnttJ Mian; Vlen I UT mil"'���." ~B ?"-n ti ninrr"'��� "- -:>��� eBnGS d! '-.i-���tmr sDms vwjs mule 0 mail'- ai ��� "..: r ruir "������ mUt le nuw : :: -" - '"'" : �� im Igntii rn v . ai-'illiT-"l:i .1 | ' ' : iuu a - ��� : -. ��� : nn : of jss ""t .-.i rnuua 0 ui v-;ti tin .. .': ��� "I ti tie mm a :-��� ' -lictiu lmiH. ~"\v htmsstkt ie��� :.~i m (rrth i ;:;'- htm ������-:..-i. ��flilii an :���- l;::-t. "miu if nond n- m���.iai d I Qanui -aunmr u ue i.u. inn Ilni uiu inner iuu sue man suni "anno-'-i iion-Hii a Bur. ~ie tmadbiaa nsa nnue o- nermuuo DC i.l ���r ���til. loisui" '.jrmia. i BaaSsO uis wnitti TneiH" vrrt Tie ^it{!V'- ilrwr- ��� ! - a : mil "-ti tail - ������: ��� tie ' - ir-�� ��� - ::if- ni"i; - ' DO . ' - ; : ���IX' - ��� v-ii-'j iuu'. Jt- \ ~ ���nu m rn in- ��� tsm ��������������� ir itoj ::" -mull. : i.. ���������-.. ��� - v-. n- I'vi ��� at i!tie !5iln!i inuuuim i�� ue ;rftilinis. ��� 7-TniM- ni-iii.s u imig.- a to le'UI ir K>iv-'-l uni tn- 'iuu o- i. i cm ir iil'-'-r vi- HH"">- s\vmm . ���'������ nnue mm "U-Mer "tiuu tun. U'.'.": ,iii-re"ii im."'i HMD ���ic-i-i i.l ii���.in "in lo? -iintiMiiiir. ii : v-iuite'i our rail t ltultnv "illller ������ inner im-i vth ".liiinoni mn .."l--'!'-t V!ll ,l'��! BjUmSS ""ll""' i..ni" "in i to ::n- ""le iu- ISmni viu UTHeUl"l n Ue Il.ipl U '.le-ins ii i irmu num. t.iimr -un iiunii tmu U9B '.a.ni'. wsmagb "imii���uni-t i i��;ti��r iuuu u ��'lll"l 1 leu "illlll in 11,1(1. .1 ~~ r. Ur-ivon -minr-ic't-i ui BSHIIIilMI Imi! n�� neiUH n vTir'l i tm urr-niiii viu uie a -uivaiiui n�� leu ���anttaa ii SHE -iiiu-"ii rnmnluu i mm t-Ui I .A.r ry U-Illl-rn. ii-nn. m^u '������ n t.iiilinutsi iiiv::'i tie "iu rii Bb ausni���uitl ���iii'.u��� -'1111111-11"i-t i BBJBi II Vl.liU I milO II- TlTH "HUU IH 1K1U uiu in a�� tiTii mu m��� mil liiumn n v-in 'i in mim.-, -is viu attSsriW nr ti'iiiini: i leu. Bi bub nab eio ^n* iiniiutuiturna tilum nut leuiw tie t~m. iuuu"!-; m tin itmnnruH tt JUr-inm. ���!,..- aaan tuiu��ii-i ti tie iimr if a ir-.u -annul! n-���- he humuiu-- rf u�� niiiiiKiti! uiu- in- uu tnaa feme vm mo'-uiiH. iii'.r.iii *��.niu "ii. mini! l vbihi'u "" vttl TJ1- iil'.-.'.'J lb v'l lu llli'^t. V '. ��,,li;". '"n: "������turn! ���*-���* GH!e\ Bros. Coal. Li^-.-e.. Br::a.. Sa3ci. Cem-ent Fine Bock- Fire Clay arrd C.rtii>r.>ec RocJi. ""- "- ' i. --'v������������ -i pa " ��� ..ie ii "��� "i -lauu .' "i:ti 'rr'L--'. 7~iiir firv;1. *<:'* V soimnMBr J.... *loiln -i FASHION * evrz. *^i��< a*-.; _.-..->���!-"�� STABLES Chance s _j.it��r y'M it .* u:��:��a: i rf.t -UlUUI X.1M 5 -lp. \V. LYLE &. CO. *{srn!i!S".J.r rti'Tii i i -:��� I i ".I.-il ". - ". - . ' ��� ' Farms to Rec; - - . ma a ioh ��� ['-��� "... " ' : .-'��� s "i." - tc vm -ii��-. '-nrm (.-������it obi tin,���w .1 oul- D " ' nnii'..... -' t��� '--uiu, -rene'.uiier uui" Irnn " ui Bn> ii.il���' to lav, 'i ���� a in uiu !'������SS '��� S! .1- -"i-u ant no'.i saalt ie'n- as? Dflii "Aost nuBiir-uu. uiu en:; ��� i."'.i- ii 3i-t::-i BBBBBassf s iinov-i ti n- ie-tti��na. totem T rants a nun lu -., a.mumr TOssj irmir tumpi fert Br a T-ruic,<' nut "-"-ou Hniuwn "he vuct ii Ue Horn umn. uir v- ��� Unn ���-lit mn viu " ��� v to r��\ ���'���:.. ' t -' tl;: B9B9 miu?' i Bte ������ 'oa m mi nii^- I..--' si tmnii n tin "- -.-,���,- t ...ij - On lnmnr-iii '������ ��� till"!. Tl' z ��� "i l to mm-' ��� n "f:..iu ant fita-sf it "?���"- ie;.' -11 teatd ..im-i uir nemiu-i- DBa :��� ih .am n Uaft��� '" i -ii "������- ii"- v ��� ��� tan :..������������ ��� i mast n lu.io.. mil "tiH'ii .v i'l'iim.' iiuiiii- . "'���'����� tie nils, mu BE it' mu <-iUitie^ " i .' l ii' ii'.'."li-r-. ' ���liiin ���illlie''- vm va !"������'. un- i.--,:'iter alii, iwu u ul. bun) 'tnnuii aim- i BUtm tin- Bu* niin- -m fi mat t vm la vnu ma ��afl a litirlua. "-"ou iem- hu--- tins warn ktenasatee "'��� ;.n-iuill Unnnana ���HaaHtnif ���!������ I ' ��������� h tthr lit! ai..:.j i 1... . Ill' .. ��� ni. turn imaimn ir ran -���--' Ziin : ��� asm : : tl 1 1-' ' "��� T.'.U ' I "ill�����1U:: Ue "" T. ' "'. !.-��� ' IH ..���i-i un m i --.iftnuiiii" ���'��� ������ ui to fan : - nu oi" list ' uiu. viell tot r" ir'HC Bill 11111- ii���m a mangle v ��������� llnnninarii i lew leMl tnmi Ue U'.llil. HUB l'"'l!ir v . - , -. ��� mur. v -l i, -"l -.,. am, ��� ��� ,un!ii"i~i ij iiimir !:;.r in lum ... u-ii: ������! i.m i Ul-ov-l n ... i hum. mil .:������ i���--ni vm a num..-- ��� a ��� u art i' nmua ' ��� FARM '���.WlTl.Ml.^l. : !;;:���::.-u Kqnmj "niine vin kbsb "- ", ��� - T- nui'U u io"" .!iu'r--i i ������nv'ii-i atunS mn u 3ii!H(iii Bb rifin ui - "Tn -rni iiuiiiuM* vi 'tin huh���ta* a it"-- ' a- a i;..r mrnu *' vnu Uh ot eniiMi���unwi t��iij- ���-"..re. ffitti r i.l ��' In- l'-t,ii'in. Tie ..-"-ll.ll- "" i"".n aule-i a ::������ migantt ���ini��� v a��� ii Hiiiiie ir mr-i�� iuu ����� ...::. . " t mm i nc unn-'ii���i 0 b :. t it u' tar. lirri:-. ~~lr -i--��� - mil -i ue'ii mu aiftiii-'ii-i to wrti i."-tlli" i. na tu- ul :..., ue"" v������.-. v ,1-1 ngton tiiui ���" "��� i." iuk ...;.: ��� . '-n-s liruni!'*-! iiwiiiiritui o ..I vm v-.itiu ie-- - to lenuins. onl be mrtl v "ii ��� v n-i mu v���sHBd Ui- ic'tii: - vtnsn -"���"��� He" mil���u"��i a I'liiilc. ~ie tarn aas na umnriMt uuut Inn tote T���u���-i nsuiti-i ul ���>- "��� ""'lira, - n :������-. mm bai a Ba attnrB 0 Qa "i���iiiem D tnronil tin leauuia ham tie 71111111'. mr a ���.in. inn Uh ���tnii-iiiiis bantjIBSSanJaSI liHianieii���t. mule uUer I'tnillllle lUWIITilt- nulla; Ui"l- lilies. r*iM "n.--i. T^ii miitu nm i nratni?! vn -- ir -ml. UK iltftB-mt" tuns v-tti tin mmn tun. T t a tnllm; mn niui ti nu��� in. t oils tin ii��C. nun viu uiiku bur tiur-i s lic'ir- ii turn. - i-ttuiBiiii iiiuiH li-iilMn. V'i;- �� tin BSD nu-iin n Hi- nc'-ir- BwarjMB ne pi-' t imtanul s --i. *"m "iiv n teft k nu-nu vttl -iur>. "lis �� vrr".mr>r vtinv s iwnnr n- ���"���liinin a ir-. ���'������les. "ti- aansal it mi"'���in In- n tin mu' mu no n tin n-uf In VlrttB in. ��� 7lr . �����-him. ,.sr*y-:*r. .a ss-t-am iv 'iuinii����-i o ih tie nuw lterru uinui-t nen.' mm m ami inui nnmnnr Ot Bn mr. "nil B��BD| iuw mu tmn "iimaw u antBB u pan ate vll aiu-iiuiai- vtanstms T'lu iui P'-n bnm Brims n Un nuitt-r n Itaxri ���BBaaaan t.i >**������'������ imu!r Vtuimiic Cli:it��ir *��� "nca dii-T'tr AJ^ntii } yt _x~utii. r srsaroiu *:yt Z-ctxiu. x���joj ?Jst T:rj 1>���-*a.-t Zjrvi.i ��� BBSttta V/iiltt*-. Imuiii-t Zms. 5v'*-.dtiit Zna. "u-xu- JCrtu '""uiu.". jnuri: Scr-iuj j��! '/tar tin =im:ii i.-mt: u I. i. wh-1 ininiii'.Ki run rap hwii Brackman-Ker Milfaf Co.. Iii ~"i�� . nnr. \-rni "m ���anninan��r CATALOGUE OF Sutton's Seeds VEOCTABEES :,<��� ���'. I " - 'i > �� ��� - " �� ii i r. un ' " - :.tei' - jm :il l '��� ' " " HU a 'v ' ' ' v - lit ' < team :. i ��� . i " : i - " -. : : '��� .:-''' - - a ��� * * 11 tl �� t H N * �� It M H �� �� �� M : H H �� ti H tl �� '.'X Yrjssf > : : . ': '. -1 . 1 :���- - " . ' ���!. I! ". I :.* -'i,'.._.��i i. ii. . - . ��� .��-! ,l.je,i 1 SELEP : ���: - : . - 0.1 i :.- = -:- ��� . ii ..��� a Bu ni ��� '������ il BE :��� ��,�� ��-*s; : i. i ; .: .i : Sit II :. ��� r.. .1. - . T .1, V I .,(!,!.). Bn ,.t - Bui Stl .1 : .:. 1 rill in. i n. | nl - c i ���' ���unuil -���II 't I . .: KI , ,!;-,;���, I i ..ma ��� r.u a , Sm >ui tin i \ ri- ��... - n i 5 ��� "i Baiunfl ��� . c. i i rm , mamwtoW -������ "ii,."- r^u in i ii in .hit B a i '..:,,���. v :.��-'.:i��.�� -. hi r I su. viml. J' '"'111 I :iUl|-|"0'i .'!-|in;.( ,"|���|' i'U Ul 1 :.l -I"- 1 .. j nt ill. riirnll i V'lil'i ri nie I I-- ������ ' ti ��� Bltttm i :,;i-n:ii rvi'iu. T LOWERS ' . :��� : - . . r . : E3 . Hi .. 7.. - ��� ' ��� - ��� ��� . ��� - . . ' �� w.-.���. ���'':i:n' Su n mt ' , Su ii ��� ' ��� '������ -1 '���.'il.l" Sit it ��� ������':��� ; -- n,���".; -.i ,1 ��� ":��� a l tenimruilut, ;:i ;.n , ��� tJTfli - - ..i.-:-to' A :ei. I ' T : - , i :'.l.l r . ."ni.l. in a i r Vf" Rl I ''in !"���:���, ii. su in - munn :.:i,-imi;:!. SU n ��� TI ' * -.! ".:. SU il ��� >C'l "'!' r>- i lllnw ��� ��� ������na ! SU ill ��� ���-";" ' . \-"'vi, n nmll tetml "i ftimi rin in ��� i ���'��� . >t .'el, "mi- vi'!'i. rilll ill ��� 'e.'Miu. il ���ii.-l. SU .1 i Ti,r ' "���" l,i:' ll. V.sou. ii.e'ie Sn an i ���"' i . Suit Hi vm- im .a , .".ii.i BmrtH 1C BradjwfrKer JV S'VNi, ���,),���t57v/;:\5TA *nu a t.-trrmu. .ua-.il/tifti.-Mtt, 'tmati .-ti tnm ml -������ .,,-,���->'"���"' IHO.��� AY, MARCH 12, 1906 THE DAILY NEWS Cut Prices... SERMONS IN CITY CHURCHES To Introduce Stransky's Agateware ��K!^ 50 Per Cent See Display and Prices in Window Kirk's Hardware. Rev. J. S. Henderson Addresses the Soldier Boys���Rev. Principal Sipprell Preaches Special Sermon in Queen's Avenue Methodist Church���Rev. T. Wardlaw Taylor M. A., Ph. D., and Rev. M. L. Rugg D. D., Expound The Gospel. j 1'MACK ATS Books, Stationery, Fancy Goods, Small Wares, Etc. t Thousands of writing pads from. Hundreds of papeteries, dozens of We raise the quality of our stock. stock. Over 50 kinds to select kinds. We hold the prices down. J. J. MACKAY & CO., Wholesale and retail. '��$- L/OiumDia btreet. I * 1 W. E. FALES I ;���; Furniture Dealer, Upholsterer, Etc. ;���; fy px Wall Paper, Linoleum, Oilcoths, Carpets, Perambulators, Etc., Carpets Sewn and Laid. Undertaking in all its branches promptly attended to. Picture Framing. ST. ANDREWS. St. Andrew's church was full to tbe doors lust evening. A and B coiit- i panies of the D. C. O. it. attended the service and the Rev. Mr. Henderson took for his text: "The Glory of Young Men in Their Strength." Prov. 20:29, and spoke as follows. it is wonderful bow many nt the heroes of the Bible were young men, ii is unquestionably the young man's book, lis greatest storj Is the storj ot ii young man. A young man who came so near to us tbat we call him brother; who puts within reach of every young man undreamed grandeur and dignity ol character and .if", and possibilities unlimited. This is one of the many beautiful things said In the Bible of young mi n The wise man i.; pointing oul that just ns the different seasons of tl> eai have l beii peculiar beaut y and glory so the different periods of :i life have each their Bpei tal charm. To old age belongs reflection, meditation and wii.dom. To youth, ��� nergy, robustness and activity. Young life, except It be abnormal, Is the time of activity. The blood dances to lively measures, the limbs , re elastic, the Intellect is nimble, the affections strong. "The glory of young nun is their Btrength." Men look with admiration and awe upon great power wherever seen lower forces into sympathy and vice. It should lie consecrated. It Is not tne man who fires at the whole target hut the man who aims at the hull's eye that wins tbe prize. The wise gardner does not suffer the sap to ne diverted with a thousand channels merely to develop a myriad of profitless 'wins, he prunes the off-shoots and leaves the vital pieces to be ab borbed bj a few vigorous fruit beat ser-1 stands in the light must show him- self u man. Struggle, service, sacrifice, toll are words to he known and understood in every path of achievement whether It runs on earth or heads at last to heaven. The victories of the Cross, two thousand years ago or ioda> have meaning only for him who in spirit stands beside thai cross and sees those victories there. There are all grades and Carpet Arriving 100 pieces of Carpet, just received ex. Blue Funnel liner. Tapestry, Brussels, Wilton and Axniinst.-r. Come and get first choice. A splendid sort ment. line of good as- LEE'S FURNITURE EMPORIUM, 236 to 242 Columbia and 229 to 241 Front Streets. Uupont Block, For the Week... Taylor's Toilet Soaps ing branches. So the one prudence of (lasses of Christians in this day as in life is concent rat ion. The meat men Christ's day. Peter was a Christian ami women who Btand out in the the moment be decided to follow "\ pages of history are those who said Christ, bul when the testing tlmt 0 like Paul "This one thing l do." came and the faith of n was weal. li should be consecrated. There la he gave it all up and said I go aflsh n0 grander sight in historj than that Ing, when he should have Btarted i of Jesus consecrating himself to his revival to Inspire the flagging zeal o refused to assumi and went back tt A large shipment just opened out. See our window Note These Prices displa} 5c per Box Pearl Toilet Soap 10c per Box ���Palm Toilet Snap 15c per Box Sweet Violet. White Carnation, 25c per Box Valley Violet, l.a Prance ll clover. Oatmeal, VeBta Violet, etc. 25c per dozen Old Brown Windsor. June H ���tel Sweel mission on the banks of tin- Jordan. All life hs Tune more acred, more noble since l hal hour, .'\!.ike the most of ii young friends. i on i u and then you will con- t ol ai1". consecrate. Q. o AVENUE METHODIST. (Rev. Principal Sipprell, of Columbian College, special Speakei. I Text: "If we wall, in the light as he is in the liuht." 1. There are great types of lit" in every nation. Politicians, financiers, Who business men. Bcfkolars Christians, large There his comrades, he any responsibility ^^^^^^^^^^^ the old life and the former bome, bul when Christ had finished his work and persuaded Peter to come Into the light as He was in the light, Pete] was enabled to inspire others with the vision of the inheritance. Incorruptible, and undeflled, reserved In heaven lor those who are kept by the powei of God through faith unto salvation. The Prodigal Son was alright as ,i prodigal, but it was all wrong to remain a prodigal. Having left his sinful ways it was for biia now to prove himself a man. Even the rich young man who had GEO. ADAMS. FRESH GROCERIES We aim to keep our stock quire for Immediate sale. We hav Evaporated Prunes Evaporated Apricots �� Try a pound of our Fresh Try a pound of Maravella 35c or ;! His. for $l.uu Fresh never buying more than we re e nice fresh Evaporated Apples Evaporated Peaches Ground Coffee al 10c Ib. Ten al 46c lh.. or our Special Tea at . Columbia Street. - Telephone 176. $ >tco>::o::cc>>>>>)>>io>:>"��:>:>>>:>>>:>:>>>>x<'��)>>;>>>>i I PLACE YOUR ORDERS IN TOWN S. J. DAVISON ESTABLISHED 1895 Manufacturer of Harness and Saddlery Front St. next Daily News New Westminster, - B. C. Repairing of all descriptions. T. J. Trapp & Co, Ltd. j thai has stood In one of our targe The,.e are p^mclaus, financiers, i foundries and watched those knives , kept, the law was good In that he had , a u business men and I linsiians whose . ��� , _��� ���.������������ , .. , , ,, , cut bars of iron four and five inches 'tone no wrong, bnt he might be in I.lick, us easy as a grocer cuts cheese. cause we wo,lM "'" advocate and thai case and he an inline, empty- is tin! Impressed with the tremendous whose methods we would not follow, headed sissy of an individual. We power behind them Who that has '"his is IU)t because politics or busi-1 are to be men, manly men, resolute Eeen ,),,, volume of water that !"'ss '"' Christianity are not good injmen, men of determination, both as tumbles over the precipice at Niagara, themselves bul because the many of|to denouncing sin and as to doing or thai lias followed the trail of the ''"' modern representatives of the: some good In this world, and to be fierce storm thai hurled the giants same present such a distorted view such we must leave the verge of shad- Of the fores! into confusion, lias not "f principles that the good hardly 0W8 and walk in the light as He is in been impressed with the power of j preponderates over that which in the light. il lements. i!"'m we mu8t reject. And how is He in the light, in thai Hut there are few sights so Impres- 2. All Christians and many who do He did no sin, and He lived lo please slve as lining manhood in its youth- not espouse the cause of Christ walk Him who sent Him to redeem the fnl power and vigor of faculty, eager in the light. They can hardly do world, and to keep from sin and to lor the Btruggle of life, anxious to otherwise in a land flooded with the .please God is the only path for the try Its mettle against the world; light of Christian civilization. Moral- man who desires to he one of God's conscious of its strength, looking out ly, physically, intellectually, spiritual- own. upon the future bright with hope and ly, there are many who excel, who ��� 1 prospect, a future iii which fancy are not in our chinches aud who do WEST END PRESBYTERIAN. paints bright plotures and rears its noi name the name of Jesus. It should fRev -\ lowering castles. not be. The Christian man ought to This sirength which is their |)(> a better man morally and Spirit- strength is partly physical. The ually, for be claims to follow a diviner princes of Mldian looking at the ideal and to be moved by a diviner Stalwart form of young Gideon said: Impulse. It is an unpleasant reflection on the church of Jesus Christ that the man on the outside can say and truthfully, I am as good as he, Why is it? It is because many professing Christians do the things the man of the street ot The City Grocery, Telephone 97. ... ADAMS & DEANS. P������������������ , , Out of Uie Ordinal) Our Lines of.... M. A., Ph. "As ii man Is so is lib AS a man is physically strength. A strong strength." so is his frame and com- Headquarters for Farming Implements and Machinery Complete line of Carriages and Farm Wagons. Hardware, Stoves and Ranges. Auction Sale every Friday at the Market Square. T. J. TRAPP & CO., Ltd., COLUMBIA STREET, NEW WESTMINSTER, B. C. fg&K*Z\V cJtatral tt. Sin is the struggle for supremacy between animal forces I uover come- and higher spiritual powers. Paul j The shadowed way ls the easy way- Bald "I keep my body under." The j because It is the lazy way. It is easier passions down stairs must be subor-S| lo linger In the valleys than to climb dinated to the people up stairs. The! the hills but we see no vision there, problem of life Is for the upper man | Easter to linger ln the shadows than ' to educate, control, transmit the'o come Into the light for he who slon, that metaphor is continued from the exodus to the captivity. As Israel was chosen of God and divided _^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ from the nations. Christians are cull- never adequately typify its el of Him an'l sot apart unto a excellence. It was by spiritual separation, As Israel entered into a covenant of obedience al tbe foot of Sinai, Christians have entered into a new covenant at Mount Calvary, and find it to lie, even as ilie old, "unto obedience." Strangers .md pilgrims, enduring, for a season, in heaviness through manifold temptations, the trial of their faith, the wilderness of the wanderings is still round about them, and its burdens lie heavily upon them. Born to troiir ble as the sparks fly upward, none of of men Is exempt from the common lot. Sickness und sorrow. I bereavement and death fall upon all i alike. But those who would follow I Christ must submit to many afhMc- jtions peculiarly their own. Day by 1 day they must encounter a thousand I influences warring against their i highest interests, and. In addition toil"��� a~��� -- -������ r; ",���._... in the ordinary sorrows of life, the Ug���* g*a weak^Ihtsuope burden of that ceaseless conflict ; 1 ou 1 of tr 11. inoi ��� weighs upon their spirits. But even tor I �� a UWng nopB. "���* ,��� the wilderness with its tempta-Uwfr ��opposed to *J^��*JJ55 tlons and trials, they are abundant- ot th W�����^ '" , ,f Each v|c. lv blessed. Ever at the close of the: in the present "'�� . (h fl , toilsome day's march they can lift up j tory gained is a pledge of tbe nna. their eyes to the far-off hills of the promised land, and the light which sweat was as It were great Of blood falling to the '���I tike 22; ll. heme was Introduced with "reserved in heaven." under the loving guardianship of God Himself. Nor is that all. A whole generation of Israel turned back at Kadesh Barnea and died in the wilderness. This Inheritance is for those "who are kept by the power of God." Persevering "through faith" not one pilgrim shall fall by the way. The s.ure hoi la of unfailing blessedness should irradiate the life of every Christian. But, while the goal may be certain, it Is afar off, and the distant ot his agony and his drops ground. The iiieiiie ...... lhe remark, that the important!; of the events before and after those of ilcthseinane have often caudad little attention to be paid to that great act in the world's redemption. A drama ln which the chief actor had to combat the powers of tevtl and of darkness. The necessity for the suffering of Christ was then shown. Calvary was the closing act of the atonement, but had there Vt^en no Gethsemane there could have been no Calvary. The strength to suffer on thtj cross was gained at Gethsemane. The audience were reminded that 11 had their Calvaries, their suffer- prospect of even the id tbe msiani'iiu mm mo,. v.�� , .... gitaatest good I mg to bear, and that they were only ' ��� strength gained in secret the bathes Its distant peaks Illumines their hearts with hope. No matter what may be our lot, triumph, for it Is won by the power of the new life Ingotten by the spirit of God. Born again, the Christian walks, as a beloved child, ln the comfort of the Father, and, be- ���" the No matter what may be our lot. 'f',0|.iinK the "abundant mercy," the we are God's children, it is glorious: ' re,���n klndrl3ss. which sought with untold blessings. Even while! fouml hlm, has continually the world may pity or desnlse us, our at the contem and found him, has springing up In his heart this hope which can surmount every trial, it is Indeed a hope which "maketh not ! I oshamed" because the love of God is ln our hearts by which ls given the unto fVitiqn of the great and certstin mercies God has prepared for us. As a freo gift, of Jthe divine powt��r the 1 Inheritance is ours. As each Israelite j JJ?,3a j"""011," found his Inheritance or portion lu j Ho,,y ^host the material rest of Canaan, so fnr'us- ns, all God's promises culminate In! Well might tho Apostle crv 'he celestial blesWSwrt "nf "a sah'-i- "Blessed be the God and Father q| tlon prepared to be revealed' in the j our Lord Jeans Christ," and well may last time." To that day of final Vic-1 we, with quickening love and kind lorri�� by praver. The speaker pointed out that the sweat of blood plainlv proved that .he suffering of the redeemer blagan long before the crucifixion. Gethsemane was the place ot mlental agony. Then from the fact the suffering of the Saviour, both mental and physical, was the means of accomplishing the great salvation, was unveiled the principle that all success has to be bought with the expenditure of life. That It was useless for the ir.iar- c.hant to expect his business to prosper unless he put himself in to It. Some churches who have had everything ln th'alr favor, such as wealth, honor, organization, have failed to reach dying souls, because the members had not put their laf% into the work, they had niaver known the agony ot a Gethsemane. THE DAILY NEWS MONDAY", MARCH ,?, tiot THE DAILY NEWS l'liblislieJ by The Daily News Pub-1 lishiiig Co lpany. Limited, at their offices co: ier of Sixth and Front Streets, Ne v Westminster, B. C. Editor a.id Mgr Edward D. Sawyer rV VERY ANCIENT ART Jol��t Prefeaarf.H."Kwtimnttmmiai| 117961 constructed an apparatus adapt- THE MAKING OF ARTIFICIAL MEMBERS OF THE HUMAN BODY. Advertising Rates. Transient display advertising. 10 cents per li. e (nonparlel) 12 lines to the inch. Five cents per line for subsequent insertions. Reading n dices, bold face type, 20 cents per lin", brevier or nonpariel, 10 cents per line For time contracts, special positions, appl] to advertising manager. Notices of births, marriages or deaths, 50c, Wants, for sales, lost or found, rooms to let. etc., one cent per word. No advertisement taken for less than 25 cents. Patent or proprietary medicine advertisements inserted at rate of 50 cents per inch tier issue (display) or if reading notices, 25 cents per line per Issue. No deviation from this rate for teim contracts. Telephones. business office 22 Manager's residence 251 Vm MONDAY. MARCH 12. 1906. LESSON AND MORAL. A le86 in that once might have l n le,lined al leisure is now being learned iindei painful pressure in the Aged an Infirm newspaper simp of New Westminster. There Is a moral to the lesson which runs as follows; "WHEN YOU HAPPEN TO CONTROL THE ONLY AIR GUo. IN A COMMUNITY. DON'T USE MUD BALLS FOP. YOUR AMMUNITION." If Thomas Clifford, 61 P. P. tor New Westminster, anticipated thai the provincial legislature would be prorogued last Saturday night, as Unreliable Re port sa\s be did, bis estimation of the calibre of the stalwarts of tho opposition must have gone up a little in the last forty-eight hours. The weather man at Victoria who encouraged us last Sat urday to talk about the summer game of lacrosse when he ought to have known that tile elements were more favorable to the game of ice hockey, was not beard from as early as usual today. Like the local M. P. P., he may have been anticipating. 11 the prevailing wind fails to sweep the dry leaves off the roof of your house use a broom. Don't have the firemen trying to get busy in too many plac6s at the same time us was the case in Vancouver yesterday. tVoo- [ tations to protect them from thoir ene-1 uiles. A naturalist cites an example ot tbla. He had fired at a South American beron which was stealing through some! rushes, but on coming to the place could see nothing of tbe bird. He was on the point of turning away when a strange sight met his -yea. This ls how be describes tbe scene: There stood my heron on a reed no | more than eight Inches from my knees and on a level with them. The body was erect, and the point of the tall touched the reed grasped by his feet, i The lonsr, tapering neck was held stiff, straight and vertical, and the bead and bealt, instead of being carried oblique \ ly. were also pointing up. From his feet to Hie tip of bis beak there wns mil a perceptible curve or inequality, but whole was the figure tbe exact Counterpart���of a straight, tapering rush. the loose plumage being arranged to till nil inequalities, The wings, pressed In- : to the hollow sides, made it impossible to see where the body ended and the neck began or to distinguish head from neck or beak from bead. Tills was a front view, and the entire under snr- j face of the bird was thus displayed, all of a uniform dull yellow. Not a move ment did tbe bird make I placed my hand on tbe point of his beak and forced tbe bead down till it touched tho back. When I withdrew my hand up flew the head like a steel spring to its first position. 1 repeated the experiment several times, with the same re-I suit, the very eyes of the bird appear ing all the time perfectly Immovable. But bow chanced It that while walking round the bird through the rushes I bad not seen his striped back and broad colored sides? Thinking thus, I j stepped round to get a side view, when nil I could see was the rushlike front ' of the bird. His motions on the perch as be turned slowly or quickly round, still keeping the edge of the bladelike body before inc. corresponded so exactly with my own that I almost doubted if I hud moved at all. After watching the bird Unis for some time I took him forcibly from Uie rush and perched him on my hand, when he flew away to some dry grass fifty or sixty yards distant. Here he again practiced his mimetic tricks so ably that I groped about for a quarter of an hour before finding him. 1 was amazed that a crea- ture apparently so frail should tie able to keep the body rigid so long. Coal, Lime, Brick, Sand, Cement, Fire Brick, Fire Clay and Crushed Rock. Also agents B. C. Pottery Co. sewer pipe, etc. Local agents Vancouver Portland Cement Co. Office, Front Street, New Westminster, B.C., Near C.P.R. Depot I 'Phone l-b Business Chances We have listed with us for quick sale, one good paying hotel, showing a profit of from $6,- 000 to $8,000 per year; likewise a blacksmith business, restaurant and I general store business. \ We can demonstrate j to you that there is money being made in each business. Farms to Rent We have two good farms to rent. One on the Delta, the other in Surrey. Particulars at our office. r ASH ION reed, Sale and Livery STABLES Latest Styles in Rubber Tired Hacks and Rigs. W. LYLE & CO. PROPRIETORS. Cor. 8th and Carnarvon Sts. Phone ir>0. Westminster Iron Works GENERAL MACHINE AMI L.V.ilNE WORK. SHIP 8MITH1NO, iit'.iiiiii'. and STRUCTURAL IRON WORK, Ornamental iron work, including Fences, i lates, Fire Escapes, etc. Mail orders ami correspondence touted. JOHN REID, BEQ31E S l Ki-.i-.t. New Westminster. I'. O, til. Westminster Transfer Co. Office���Trarn Depot Columbia St. Baggage delivered pari of the city. promptly to any Office 'Phone is., Barn I'none 1. For Sale Half Carload, No. 1 feed J. H. Todd lienler in Delta Council Meets. Ladner, March 10.���The Delta council met in the council chamber on Sat urday, March :'.. with the reeve, W. H. Ladner, In the chair, and Conns. dibble, Davie. Paterson. Huff, and ffimbree present. Communications were received and dealt with as follows: Prom Alex Stewart, assistant chief engineer ot the O. N. It., re gravel supply, Conns. Embree and Huff were appointed a committe to make arrangements with the company; From W. T. Stein & Co., Chartered | acountantB, re appointment of auditor. Received and clerk to reply. From Dr, A. A. Kins:. M. II. 0, Receive.! and Dr, King reappointed M. 11. O. at salary of $10(1 per annum. A petition was received from E, A. Greame and others asking for a r I to be gazetted on Annacis island. Received and laid over tor consideration. The temporary loan by-law was passed . finallj reconsidered, V. Martinollch'a tender of ft3c per yard tor the deliver] oi gravel was ,'iCCept e The clerk was aull orized to call lor tendt i B tor t tearing one acre of the cemetery grounds Tenders to be in by the next meeting, The assessor was ordered to commence the assessment on March 6th and the roll to be returned to council on April 14. The following accounts were passed and cheques issued. Iir. King. $75; Delta Times. $10.25; W, E. Pales, $12.",ii; Royal Columbian Hospital, $64; Geo. Ormlston, $65; .1. Scoopa- nich. $12; .). Jordan, $1.50; A. Barber, $38; Wharton & Colllson, $15.75; Mrs. Feiiion. $10! mnskrat account, $50. The reeve, finance committee and clerk were authorized to sign a promissory not for $2,000. The council I hen adjourned to meet again on Saturday, March 21, at 2 p. m. o Relief for Sufferers. Rome. March 10.���Premier Sonninn today Introduced a bill in the chamber' of deputies for an appropriation of I 11,200,000 for the sufferers from the j earthquake in Calabria, thus completing measures looking to regeneration in lhe south, which are without pre-1 cedent since the kingdom of the twoi Sicilies joined united Italy. A pe- tltlon was made to parliament by; women for the right of suffrage. This ! Is the eighth time a like petition has. been presented. hips to the ankles and as tight fitting as a pair of knit drawers. They were few of them acquired celebrity by their j usually of tare* different colors-Mack Brcerhe*. PaattalOOnfl Hml Trouper.. ��2^^^TtK2W| Half Carload, No. 1 feed Pianos, Organs, Uzed men of the east long ages before or seed oats shipped from Piano Players, a single page of the Now Testament ->. ��� o l <- l was written, having been quite com-, MOOSejaW. samples LO De Columbia Gramaphones and Kecords, mon among the Modes nnd Persians, geeil at this office 01' at H. the Phrygians, the Gaels and the Teu-' _ T,. , , TT , 0, tons. Breeches were very "brief ar- T. Kirk S Hardware Store. tides of apparel, scarcely covering the hilis Iu the majority of instances and never reaching nearer than six inches of the kuee. "Pantalooos" were exaggerated forms of stocking, reaching from the JJja^g fa ReaSOIl Zithers, etc. J. ft. TODD, Burr Block. Peter Warren. Pull Columbia BBreet. write for nrlces. skill, notably Lorratn, a French lock smith whose work was largely direct-1 ed by the great Pare. Father Sebas- j Man. a Carmelite monk, later produced Of sheet tin a clumsy arm which by means of sundry springs was capable of certain articulations. Bailiff, a me- chanic, also made movable arms, pat- terned largely after those of Father | Sebastian. It Is recorded that Duke Christian von Braunschweig wore an artificial hand in 10'2'2. Peter Lowe In bis "Discourses of tbe Whole Art of Chirurgery," 1634, shows several forms of artificial legs that were used in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, and many others nre found In the works of Ambrolse Pare. These ie,*-- were made of wood nnd attached '���: straps. in the works Of Ambrolse Pare there is a chapter dealing with "the means and manner to repair or supply natural or accidental defects or wants In man's body." He describes the use of artiti eial eyes and also artificial noses. lie mentions a method for making an artificial tongue to help those who cannot speak by reason of its loss and also gives a drawing of this Instrument and n full description of how- ii should be fixed In the mouth, lie also gives an account of making an artificial palate from a plate of gold or stiver, which, he states, should lie little bigger than the cavity itself. Falclnelll, a surgeon of Florence in ii.i'.i. mentions the use of "artificial eyes of sliver and of gold and of cry-; tal painted lu various colors" and also artificial ears made of the same metals. which were painted the color of flesh and fixed by means of strings to the head or sewed luto the skin by means of gold or silver wire. Silver noses. ! etc., were made even earlier than that. The Dutch surgeon Verdyu (ltitW) constructed an artificial leg consisting of a wooden foot and a hollow copper cylinder lined wllh chamois and strengthened with steel splints. There i wns a binge joint at the knee. The apparatus was attached to the thigh by means of a broad band. About the same time (1602) Lams weenie constructed a leather hand In which a pen could be held. In 1755 H. Rnvaton constructed an Hrtificlal limb by means of which a cavalryman was able to continue his fleld service. In 1761 Laurent supplied a mau with a ;.��.r or ��mniini arum, mria vr^r.j.i of Edinburgh toward the end of the eighteenth century constructed a tiaac In which a knife or fork could be held and on the first and second fingers of which an apparatus was attached for holding a pen. He also made legs for amputations above and below tbe knee, modeled on the apparatus of Ravaton. They were fastened to the body by a strap running over the shoulder of tha opposite side. Only the knee joint was movable. Addison, London, made a wooden '"ot with to" lolu'iS us well as ankle at the hips, red from hip to knee and blue to the termination at the ankle. They came in vogue during the fint half of the fifteenth century at Venice and were worn by the devotees of the piitrou saint. Pantaloon. Such garments were always called pantalinl by the Italians. Trousers," the only proper wnrd to tbe I express the existing styles lu "pants," followed closely after tbe "knee breeches" of the Revolutionary period, being first worn in England at Oxford and Cambridge in 1B12. The latest Mitchell's tastnon plates- have arrived. So have our spring stocK ot high- class suitings. Also worsteds, serges, broadcloth and fancy trouserings. In fact we can supply all your sartorial wants. J. N. Aitchisonr Columbia Street. 10 ACRES ON FT. MOODY ROAD, BURNABY Good Land $eoo.oo AEAVHITE, 260Co,umbia St. Hbrnnes From Scott nnd Other*. In spite of Scott's popularity few1 people rememlier that from "Old Mor- tallty" we have "A sea of upturned , faces," and Byron Is never thanked for "Flesh and blood can't liear Hr."l The "Most humorous and least exem- plary of British parsons" Is known to have thought "They order things better in France" and "God tempers the! wind to the sboru lamb," but we set-! dom credit him with "I saw the Iron i enter luto his soul." Yet that keen biiage of grief, so often on our lips, | may also be found In the "Sentimental | BlenniiiK the Hirer. In the little Balkan state of Hon i mania it has been the custom from; I time immemorial for towns by the 1 river Danube to keep the Christmaf feast by a peculiar1 ceremony called, "blessing the river." This used to be carried out on a scaffolding erected onl the frozen river, but owing to an accident, when the Ice broke, and huu I dreds of people were drowned, it Is uow held upon the bank. The people wear turbans of colored paper and carry long, white wands. Some are dress-' ed to represent Biblical characters The service, conducted by priests, lasts about half an hour, uiul then the Ice IB broken and a small wooden cross Then pe tple y river after this em supposed to be assured of great good luck for the coming year. Journey." Cowper is comparatively i little read, the immortal "John Gilpin" thrown Into the water always excepted. Therefore we may rush Into tin be forgiven if the source of "Hand i blem, 1 : -,������:������-, .���.!-. ...... and glove" or "Her dear o0n friends" has slipped our memories. The same may be said of Rogers' "To know her was to love her," Congreve's 'Married In haste and repent at leisure," I'ar- quhar's "Over the hills and far away" and Routhey's "March of intellect." Sir Philip Sidney, who was pod. philosopher and, best of all, hero, should share a better fate. How many can tell that it was he who first said In English, "Ood helps those who helps themsel��e3?"���Cornhlll Magazine. FOHtponed. A bashful young couple who were evidently very much ln love entered a crowded street car ln Boston the other day. "Do you suppose we can squeeze In here';" ho asked, looking doubtfully at her blushing face. "Don't you think, dear, we had better wait until we get home?" was the ow, embarrassed reply.���Life. The Pall of the llennlnN. The liennins or headdresses worn by '��� ladles of the fifteenth century were in shape of horns and so lung that a woman's face appeared to be in tbe center of her figure, 'fhe clergy condemned them and threatened the wearers with perdition, butt for all that they j were worn higher than ever. At lust ! a strolling evangelist at Paris promised I absolution to alt who would destroy the bennlns, and the mob went to work i nnd wrecked the headdresses when- j ever they appeared In public. Tile heu- nlns were trampled under foot ami | their wearers insulted all over Paris. Scores of lives were lost in. the efforts of the cavaliers to defend the bennlns from the rabble, but In vain, and, the enormous headdresses disappeared, some other feminine absurdity taking their place, FARM SEEDS The Clock. The clock has a strange way of telling different tales with the same face. If It ls telling one man to hurry up, It tells the next man who looks that there Is plenty of time.���Atcblson Globe. Realism, Why ls the cow purple ln t*e picture? Because tbe girl's parasol ls red. Tbe cow. In fact, ls purple With rage. This ls precisely what Is meant by realism In nrt.���Puck. The secret of success lies tn tho man ��nd not ln the stuff he works on.���Tor- rey. A I'reeUe AunH. "Lawyers are supposed to be tbe most literal minded men," said an eminent member of the bar, "but every i now aud then counsel In course of pvae-1 I tlce will encounter witnesses who can j j give them point* ln the matter of Uternl ��� answers. An Irishman was called to1 1 testify In a damage suit, arising out of | the death of a man 'at the hands of a ; bull,' so to speak. I " 'Are we to understand, sir,' nsWed 1 the prosecuting attorney, 'that the deceased, Patrick Flannlgan, was your father?' " 'He was till the bull killed him,' was the reply ot the wary witness." Timothy Extra Cleaned Clover, Red Clover, Mammoth Clover, White Clover, Alsyke Clover, Alfalfa Rye Grass, Perennial Rye Grass, Italian j Red Top �� Orchard Grass ! Rape Seed, Dwarf Essex ' Vetches Millet, Golden Oats, Swedish Oats, Tartar King Wheat, Island Spring Barley, 2-Rowed Barley, 6-Rowed All Selected & Tested Last year the Finest Crops in It. C. were produced from our seed Brackman-Ker Milling Co., Ltd. The Front New Westminster. B.-K. 850 F. I. Hart ft CO., Ltd. I Ught and Heavy Hauling Setdmtn by Royal Warrant to His Majesty King Edward VII CATALOGUE OF Sutton's Seeds Ready for Your Selection; VEGETABEES GARDEN PEAS Sutton's Km best Marrow. Sution's Hoiinlitnl. Sutton's Improved wngMader. Sutton's selected American Wonder. Sutton's Earliest nine. Sutton's Melbourne Favorite* Button's Dwarl Marrow. Sutton's Plentiful. Button's Btar ol Australia. Sution's PnllfiC Marrow. Button's Abundance. GAKUtN btANb Button's Improved V\ mus ir Button's Green Windsor. Button's Proline Longpod. Button's Favorite hi ai let, Sution's Ulant W ttite. Button's Selected I anadlan Wonder. Button's Negro. ASHAHAUUb Button's I'.i lee'iloli. GAKUtN bttl Sutton's DI i ited. sui ton a Uto Suiton's VIat,. t Favorite. Button's SiUer. or Bea Kale. licit. Button s sptnacn Beet, or Perpetual Snuiacn. BOKECULt. OK KALt. Sution's Extra Curled bcotch. Sutton b Improved Brancning. BRUSSEL'3 SPROUTS. Button's l-.Miii'iiion. Sutton b Matchless. GAKUtN CAUbMUt. . Sutton's Earliest. Sutton's Imperial. Sutton's Favorite. Sutton'a Maincrop. Sutton's ited rtcaimg. Suiton's Dwarf Green Curled Savoy, Sutton's Late iiruniiiead Savoy, Sutton s Chinese I auDage CAPSICUM AND CHILI. Sutton's Mixed Capsicum. S'liion's Mixed Chill. CELERY. Sutton's Ivory While. Sutton's Perfei ibui Pink. CRESS. Sution's Selected i'laln. Button's Selected curled. CARROT Sution's Early Gem. Sutton'B K.ir'y Short Horn. Button's Favorite. Suiton's New Red Lati mediate S itton's Scarlet Intermediate. CAULIFLOWER Suttonis k i : \\ ah hi Sutton'a Earl) Loudon. Sutton'a Autumn Mammoth. Sutton's r..it" Giant CUCUMBER Button's Telegraph. Sutton's Market Button's Prolific EH ns* ENDIVE Simon's Extaa Green Cut led, GOURD, OR PJVtPKIN Sitton's Mixed. Hubbard's Sipish. LEEK Sutton'a improved Musselburgh MUSTARD Sution's Selected W'liite. rtti, ton's Selected Brown. HrERB SEEDS, FTC. Marjoram, lfbt. Bag& Savory, Summer. Thyme, Common, Tobacco. PARSLEC Suttonis Imperial cmled. COS LETTUCE Sutton's ah Heart. Sutton'B Giant Whi'o. Button's Black-seeded Hath. CABBAGE LETTUCE Sutton's Al. Sutton's AU-the-Yetr Round. PARSLIV Sutton's Student. Sutton's Hollow Cr >wn. MELON Sutton's Matchless fleshed. Sutton's Water v i varieties, Button's Preserving Melon. VEGETABLE MARROW, Sution's Long Cream. Suttbn'a Long Greei. Sip ton s White Bush. Button's I'inest Mix I. ONION Sut ions Improved Reading. Button's Long keeping, Sutton'a Giant Rocci, Sui b Bllvei Sivin. While Spanish. Brown Spanish. Brown Qlobe, RADISH Sutton's Early Bcnri Sutton's Curly Whit . Suttou's Mixed Turnip. Satton's French Br ��� ikfast Sutton's .Mixed Oval or olive. Su1 ion's Long Scat I it, Suttoa's Long Hose. Suttufi's Snallots. SEA KALE SUGA RCORN Sui ion's Early Dwarf. SPINACH Sutton's Selected Round. Boston's Selected Prl-Jklv. TOMATO Sutton's Premier, Button's Invincible. Sutton's Yellow. GARDEN TURNIP Sutton's Early Snowball. St'tion's Improved Orange Jeiiy Sutton's All-theYeai-Ilo'ind. ' Sutton's White Stone. Green-top White. Sutton's Garden Swede. Mlxe Ro All FLOWERS Aster, Sutton's Dwarf Bedder p���r,> White. Aster, Sutton's Dwarf Bedder Bern let. ' Aster, Button's Dwarf Bedder, Rose Aster, Suttou's Dwarf Bedder l!b���. Aster, Sutton's Dwarf Bedder,' Mlied Aster, Sutton's Comet, Mixed.' Aster, Suttou's Giant French Aster. Suttou's Tall, Mixed Airociininni. Button's Sing igeratum, Button'i Dwarf, Blue Agrostamma C ironaria, Button looted, Mixed. Uyssiiin, Button's Swet t, White Anemone, Button's Brilliant, Mi ��� Antirrhinum, Sutton's Tall, Mt. . Antirrhinum, Button - Da Agullegla, Sutton's Beiei ie i Arabia, Button's White Alpine Auricula. Sutton s Murder, Mixed BUlsam, Sutton's Double, Mixed Balsam; Button's Improved Mon , Begonia, Button's Flbrou MJxt il t lai I t, . Button's l. ii ���' ... | ilei ' . ' . . SUt on's [luii;.: i I . ��� ��� ��� Bul ������ loldeii Cantt , i lolls, Sutl .: ��� iiowi red*, Mix>',i. C i'iiiii ��� Large Boa i ift, Sutton Crli | S ttton's u bl ��� s ��� Sutton a M i ��� Carnation, SUt I m's i ii Mixed. Chrysanthemum Su ton's V ii ii.11. 1 sanilii mum, Suiton's M:\ ennlat. Clarkia, Sutton's Pink Clarkia, Sutton'a White. Clarkia, Sutton's Mixed C . .is Flaii'iiiulii. Convolvulus] But - H Ing. Colvolvulusi Sutton's Dwarf, M Cockscomb, Sncui's Crlm ���. Coreopsis, Sip ion's Dwm i '��� In on Coreopsis, Button's Dwarf, Mixed Crniinv er, s ttton'a nine. Cowslip, Suiton's Mix"d English. Cormea Blplnnata, Button' Mixci Dahlia, Button's Single, Mixed Dahlia, Sutton a Double, Mixed s itton' - Double, M. cod Delphinium, BUI ton's Lai flon i ��� Mixed, Dlanthus, Button's BHTHa I Mixed. Dlanthus, suit.m's Brllll i I Dou Mixed. 1 , icholtzla, Button'. S n ���'��� "i �� i...iiisehnity.ia Button's Single, Foxglove, Sutton's Mixed English, i lalilardla, BUI ton's Lars, lov Blngle, Mixed. Godetla, Button' - Bbarli I lui ��� n Golden Feather. Sutton' ileliihi'. sum. Sutton .. G ilellotro] e, Button's Large flos MiXeil. Hollyhock Holly In,. It ilom Bl ��� . Mixed. Jacobea, Suiton's Don''!''. Mixed Lantana Hybridoi Sutton'B Fit MiX.'d. Larkspur, Sution's Dwarf. Mixed Larkspur, .Sutton's Tall, Mixi-d Lavender, Button's Swee*. '.mum, (Filixi, Button's Crimson 1/Otiella, Sutton's COmpStet, Blue Lobelia, Slit tun's Compact. Whiti' Lobelia, Sutton's Spread"! tg, nine Love-lies-bleeding, Button's Rod-no*' sred, Lupin, Sutton's Annual. Mixed. Lupin, Sutton's Perennial, Mixed Maize, SUttOn'S Strfii��d. Mallow. Stilton's Large Pink. Marvel of Peru, Sutton's Brlnt-fl0�� ered, Mixed. Michaelmas Daisy, Sutton's Hybrid Marigold. Sutton.- Miniiuure French. Mmnotielle, Sbttim's Giant. Mignonette, Button's Swe ' - enl ' Mignonette, Button's Cloth il Go i Mlgnonettei Sottas'! Spiral. Mimiiliis, Button's Giant Mixed Musi;, .sut11.ns. Selected. Myosotis, Button b Perfei tlon Myoaotl i, Suttoa's Bedding sui ton's Douiii ���. Mixed Sution's B1niT.Ii HI ted Button's Lsrge-fowete ocarlet- in, mixed Nasturtium, Thumbs. Nasi ni Hum, Nasturtium. Nasi nil nun, Queen. Nasturtium, Nasturtium. >r Pie st rumosa, Nemesis Netliesia, Mixed NotllOj i Tl. Blue, Nicotian, AfBnli. Button Sutton's Kin-; i Button's Dwarl Velio*. Sin urns Dwarl Mixed Sutton's Tall, Fal Suit.m's Tall I rims"!'. Button's Tall rtlxed Stuuon's '���!" Dwarf, Btrumosa, Sutton Button's Lai '' ''''' . t ! Nlgella Pansy, Pan: J , Pansy, Pant). Passion Sutton'a Double Dw sftittoa'B Giant, V\ Sutton's Sutton'. Sutton't Flower, Giant, Vei pe, tec . ������ Mixed Bedding. M Button's Blu Sutton's arlel Turnip. Turnip, Passion FIok Perllta, Sutton's Selected. Bron ��� Petunia. Sutton's Blngle, Mixed. 1 hlux. Drum., Sutton's Largt Scarlet. Phlox Drum., Sutton's l.:u-" ' MXwil. Polyanthus, Sution's Giant, Mixed Polyanthus, Sutton's Giant, White V'I Sutton's tiiani. �� "'" Largc-Boweree, Portulaca, Mixed. Poppy, Suiton's Double Giant, Mixeo. Poppy, Sutton's Selected Shlrlej Puppy, Sutton's 'celt.ml. Mixed. Primrose, Buttons Brilliant, Mi*���. Ranunculus, Sutt.vD'sGlant Fro"1'.' Ilhudanthe, Sut tun's Large-floweret Mixed. Rlclniis (Castor-oil I'i..nti. Giant. ent-si' 'ited Button's Rocket, Sutton's c,,--'-��� Uiidbeeklu, Sutton'i; Guidon Suns' 8alplBlossls,8utton's Giant, M"""1' Salvia, Sutton's Scarlet. Scabious (German), Buttons urn, Lowered, Mixed. . Sensitive Plant.Sutton's SelSCtea. Stock, Ten-week, Sution's Giant feet Ion. ,, ���,���. Stock, Sutton's Giant English btoun ton, Mixed. Sllene.Sutton's Pink. Sunflower, Suiton's Giant Single- At Brackman-Ker Milling Co. ^ FRONT ST., NEW WESTMINSTER Please cat f Ai. oat for ���f'"n" And at various sub-agencies. k*~~ ll. K. fl8 ...AY, MARCH 12, 1906 THE DAILY NEWS Cut Prices... SERMONS IN CITY CHURCHES To Introduce ^rariQlsTU^Q AcrafAWAi*** ^ev# ^ ^' Henderson Addresses the Soldier Boys���Rev. ^.Idllotvy o/lgdlCWdlc Principal Sipprell Preaches Special Sermon in Queen's 50 Per Cent. We Will Reduce the Prices See Display and Prices in Window Kirk's Hardware. MACKAYS i Avenue Methodist Church���Rev. T. Wardlaw Taylor M. A., Ph. D., and Rev. M. L. Rugg D. D., Expound 'he Gospel. 1 Carpet Arriving 100 pieces of Carpet, just received ex. nine Funnel liner. Tapestry, Brussels, Wilton and Axminster. Come and get first choice. A splendid line of good assortment. lower forces into sympathy and service. il should be consecrated. It is not tne man who lires at the whole target but the man who aims at the bull's eye that wins the prize. The wise gardner does not suffer the sap to ne diverted with a thousand chan-. Books, Stationery, Fancy Goods, Small Wares, Etc. Thousands ot writ Dads in from. Hundreds of par les. d We raise the qu y of c J. J. Wholesale and retail stock. Over 50 kinds to select tns of kinds. jtock. We hold tbe prices down. MACKAY & CO., _Jb Columbia Street. W!K*>::��:>::*>:��;>:>;>:>:x:*>:*>:>��>i>:*>��>;i >;>:>:>:>:>:>:>:>;>:>;>:>:>;>:>:>;>:��.*;eS*��;^ W. E. FALES ���J ;���' X Furniture Dealer, Upholsterer, Etc. | Wall Paper, Linoleum, Oilcoths, Carpets, Perambulators, Etc., Carpets Sewn and Laid. 5��{ Undertaking in all its branches promptly attended to. ;���' _��� Picture Framing. ijj % Columbia Street. - Telephone 176. | *' ST. ANDREWS. St. Andrew's church was full to the doors last evening. A and 13 eon* '< panics of lhe IJ. C. O. R. attended the service and the Rev. Mr. Henderson took for Ids text: "The Glory of Young .Men in Their Strength." Prov. 20:29, ami spoke as follows. It is wonderful how many jif the heroes of the Bible were young men. li is unquestionably the young man's book, lis greatest Btorj Is the story oi a young man. A young man who CI so near to ns that we Call hini brother; who puts within reach of every young man undreamed of grandeur and dignity of character and .ire, and possibilities unlimited. This is one of ih inj beautiful Uiin-s said in the Bible of young men. The wise man la pointing oul that just as the different Beasons of tl> .'���ear have their peculiar beauty and glory bo the different periods of human life have each their special charm. To old age belongs reflection, meditation and whilom. To youth, energy, robustness and activity. 5foung life, exeei,i it be abnormal, 9 the time of activity. The blood Hues io lively measures, the limbs re elastic, the intellect is nimble, the affections strong. "The glory of young men is their strength." Men look with admiration and awe upon every nation great power wherever seen. Who business men, scholars Christians. thai has stood in one of our large Ther. ar9 poUtlelan8i financiers, foundries and watched those knives .���..., , . , , ��� . ��� business men and Christians whose cut bars of Iron four and five inches thick, as easy as a grocer cuts cheese, cause we would not advocate and is not impressed with the tremendous whose methods we would not follow. power behind them. Who thai has ���a is not because politics or busi- ;pen the volume of water stands in the light must show him- J belt a man. ' Struggle, service, sacrifice, toil are ��� words to be known and understood in \ every path of achievement whether it runs on earth or heads at last lo heaven. The victories of the Cross, two thou- LEE'S FURNITURE EMPORIUM, 236 to 242 Columbia and 229 to 241 Front Streets, Uupont Block, nels merely to develop a myriad ot pro- sand years ago or today have mean- fltless twigs, he prunes the offslmots Ing only for him who in spirit stands ami leaves the vital pieces to be ah- beside that cross and sees those vie soriied by a few vigorous fruit bear- torles there. There are all grades and Ing branches. So the one prudence of classes of Christians In this day as In lite is concentration. The great men Christ's day. Peter was a christian ami women who stand oul In the the moment be decided to follow panes of history are those who said Christ, but when the testing time like Paul "This one thing l do." came and the faith of men wns weak, li should be consecrated. There ls he gave It all up and said I go aflsh- no : Milder skin in bistor> than that Ing, when he should have Btarted a of lesus consecrating himself to ids revival to inspire the flagging zeal of life's mission on the banks of the his comrades, be refused in assume .Ionian. All life liar- become more any responsibility and went back to sin iei. more noble .-ince thai hour, ihe oh] life and ihe former home, but Make the most of ii young friends, when Chrlsl had finished his work Consecrati���and then you will con- and persuaded Peter to come into the i ol and consecrate. light as He was in the light, Peter was enabled lo inspire others with the Qc ��� .o AVENUE METHODIST. visi"" "f the inheritance, incorrupti- . ,, , , , ble, and undeflled, reserved in heaven (Rev. Principal Sipprell. ol Columbian ^ Q__ ^ m ]>y ^ power College, Special Speaker.) _ ^ ^^ t__ ^ salv;i,.in Text: "If we walk in the light as n���, t'ro,liSal Son was alright as a he is iu tht? light." prodigal, but it was all wrong to re- 1. There are great types of life In main a prodigal. Having left his Politicians, financiers isinful wa-vs �� was for lliu�� For the Week... Taylor's Toilet Soaps a large shipment just opened out. See our window display. Note These Prices 5c per Box���Pearl Toilet Soap 10c per Box ��� Palm Toilet Snap. 15c per Box Sweet Violet, While Carnation, June R ��� 25c per Box -Valley Violet, i,a France Rose, C tlon Petel Sti I'lover. Oatmeal, Vesta Violet, etc. 25c per dozen���Old Brown Windsor. GEO. ADAMS. ��� r��� tumbles over the pr PLACE YOUR ORDERS IN TOWN S. J. DAVISON ESTABLISHED 1895 Manufacturer of Harness and Saddlery Front St. next Daily News New Westminster, - B. C. Repairing of all descriptions. ^^^ now t o prove himself a man. Even the rich young man who had kept the law was good in that be had done no wrong, but he might be ln that case and be an inane, empty- headed sissy of an Individual. We |are to be men. manly men, resolute ot water thai !u'ss '"' Christianity are not good in; men, men of determination, both as imes iim un- reclpice at Niagara themselves but because the many of, to denouncing sin and as to doing or that has followed the trail of the tlle modern representatives of the1 some good in this world, and to tie fierce storm that hurled the giants same present such a distorted view j such we must leave the verge of shad- of the forest into confusion, has not of principles that (he good hardly ;ows and walk in the light as He Is in been impressed with the power of Preponderates over that which in the light. the elements, lh,'m wt> must rc>'""' An|1 how is He in the light. In that Bul there are few sights so lmpres- -. All Christians and many who do He did no sin, and He lived to please sive as young manhood In its youth- not espouse the cause of Christ walk Him who sent Him to redeem the Ini power and vigor of faculty, eager in the light. They can hardly do! world, and to keep from sin and to tor the Btruggle Of life, anxious to otherwise ill a land flooded with the J please God Is the only path for the try its mettle against the world; Unlit of Christian civilization. Moral-, man who desires to be one of God's conscious of its strength, looking out ly, physically, intellectually, spirltual- upon the future bright with hope and ly, there are many who excel, who prospect, a future tn which fancy are not in our churches and who do paints bright pictures and rears Its not name the name of Jesus. It should towering castles. not be. The Christian man ought to This Btrength which is their be a better man morally and spirit- strength is partly physical. The ually, for he claims to follow a divine princes of Midian looking at the ideal and to be moved by italwart form of young Gideon said: impulse. It is an unpleasant reflection on the1 church of Jesus Christ that the man FRESH GROCERIES We aim to keep our stock Fresh never buying more than we require for immediate sale. We have nice fresh Evaporated Prunes Evaporated Apples Evaporated Apricots , Evaporated Peaches Try a pound of our Fresh Ground Coffee at 4"c lb. Try a pound of Maravella Tea at 45c lb., or our Special Tea at 35c or 3 lbs. for $1.00 The City Grocery, Telephone 97. .... ADAMS & DEANS. P���������i��������� i n Out of the Ordinary Our Lines of.... own. WEST END PRESBYTERIAN. i Rev T. Wadlaw Taylor, M. A., Ph. D��� minister.) .1 Peter I, 3-5:���"Blessed be The God .. ., j and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, | which according to his abundant i T. J. Trapp & Co, Ltd; j ri Headquarters for Farming Implements and Machinery Complete line of Carriages and Farm Wagons, Hardware, Stoves and Han ges. Auction Sale every Friday at the Market Square. T. J. TRAPP & CO., Ltd., COLUMBIA STREET, NEW WESTMINSTER, B. C. 5^>::.>xc.>>>::.>:>;>��>��^^^ The Leading Jeweler Everything In the Jewelery Line Watches, Diamonds, Rings, Etc. Cut Glass and Ebony Goods Suitable tor all occasions. W. C. CHAMBERLIN, c?.'?.'"f��,M .�����-?: Mutual Life Assurance Co. of Canada Amount of Policies now ln force exceeds J44,UOU,000.00 Amount of Assets, legitimate and solid, now exceeds l��,OUU,000.00 is a company of policy-holders, by policy-holders, tor policy- "As a man Is so is his strength." As a man is physically so Is his strength. A strong frame aud commanding presence ranked higher among the ancients than in our day. But it counts still. Other things being equal a man's productive value is to be estimated mathematically upon the basis of physique. "Horn weak and nerveless he likes to be carried . and so Impedes life's onward march. rSorn vigorous and rugged he helps to clear the way for tii? onward march." These bodies are wonderful mar chines; if wisely managed capable of ureal achievements. We may not be iilile to add a cubit to our stature, but we can do much to promote health, strengthen muscle and limb and give dignity to personal presence. This Btrength which is their glory ts partly mental. As a man is Intel- i lectually, so is his strength. The greatest wastes of life are through ignorance. Failure is want of knowledge. Success is knowing how. Bacon said "Knowledge Is power." Hut ions; before he said It tl wiser than he said "If the iron be blunt, and he do not whet the edge, then must be put to mure strength, bin wisdom Is profitable to direct." stone hatchet and a lively hope, by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, to an ln- on the outside can say and truthfully, herftance incorruptible, and undeflled, 1 am as good as he. Why is it? It pml that fadeth not awaVp reserved is because many professing Christians ; ln heaven for do the things the man of the street or ! ln the woman of society does; things not, s necessarily sinful but things that man- \ \iiSt time. you, who are kept bfr power of God through faith unto salvation, ready to be revealed in the Ifest no line of demarcation between him who knows Jesus and him who knows him not that are "Sojourners scattered abroad," ' was the apostolic description of the There are things j 6ariy church, and, after the lapse of questionable if not sinful. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ the centuries, Christians are still the and the -worldly minded man himself same, Pilgrims seeking an abiding adjudged that type of religion a , city afar and receiving, in an iniper- sickly specimen, and in no feet communion one with another, finds amusement in cards, dancing and 1 only partial sympathy and support. theater-going. They may not destroy To the Apostles the Christian church it, but the professing Christian is one is the true Israel of God, inheriting who proclaims himself as aiming to; the promises and maintaining the make manhood and where he is found [hope rejected by the Jewish nation. doing aught else, he falsifies his claim. In a great sustained metaphor Peter The world would be saved from sin! applies to that church all the history more rapidly if those in our churches ��� of the chosen people. Throughout the would all walk whore they should entire epistle, in allusion after allu- walk, -In the light as he is In the Mon, that metaphor is continued ,,���.]lt'.. from the exodus to the captivity. As , ,. .,, ,��� ...i.l,.i, i Israel was chosen of God and divided 3, The measure ot light in which M , ���,_, r ,..,,.1. ,,'lrom the nations, Christians are call- tread is due to the amount I wisn to e 1 ol Him and sot apart unto a '"'p;ul spiritual separation. As Israel enter- God cannot make n man of me un-l . |nt(j & C0Yvmn, ,,f obadlenca al the foot of Sinai, Christians hav Soft Felt Hats Are out of the Ordinary. New Colors and New Shapes. All the Best Makers. A Specialty of Young Men's Shapes. PRICES��$2.00, $2.50 and $3.00 "pMliips The Cash Clothier and eternal peace man of uie unless I let Him. The responsibility of manhood rests with me. noi with God. I may skirt the shore or ride the high Thli holders. OUR motto: Possible Outlay. l ne larges t amount of Assurance for the Least S. W. BODLEY, District Manager. New Westminster, ti. C. 'Phone 85. We Have Listed With Us Two Fine Ranches. The day ot ��� . blunt axe is past, in every calling: so,,s of Ufl> an(j He %viu ������, interfere. ��� the demand is 'dr! mon/of .intelligence Mfm, ������,,, 1(,(Illv ,,.lV(. ,������ ,, chl.lst. and brains. So yon need to improve lanised respectability and they linn- |your minds, have sour eyes unci ears|Klne ,hey have ,, religious experience open, year wits awake, nmlce companions of the best books, books that make you think, widen tbe range of your vision, broaden your sympathies. Read and think. Think and read, This strength which is their glory Is lari ��ly moral and spiritual than anything else character mines your power for conquering life's difficulties and aconiplishiiig gootl. This will be the gunge of your personal force iu the world. Without moral back bone you might as well be a jelly fish for any solid good you will do. This strength which Is your glory should he controlled. Youth is impatient of restraint, but the pathwayi to greatness lies along this line. You|8lruBB,e' "Flsht tho KOod flKht' i cannot command until vou first learn |Hlm thnt overcometh" are the t to obey. When power becomes ror,ls ot Hlm who 'Promises to men :ered Into a new covenant at Mount Calvary, und find it to be, even as the old, "unto Obedience." Strangers and pilgrims, enduring, for a season, in heaviness through manifold temptations, the trial of their faith, the wilderness of the 'wanderings is still lotind about them, and its burdens lie heavily upon them. Born to trout ble as the sparks fly upward, none of ^^^^^^^^ men Is exempt from .nev I ino common lot. Sickness and sorrow, bereavement and death fall upon all alike. Rut those who would follow j Christ must submit to many afBic- t^ in the light dons peculiarly their own. Day by day they must encounter a thousand influences warring against their highest interests, and, in addition to and If the ordinary sorrows of life, tl��,e the light is in the darkness, how ! burden of that ceaseless conflict looks forward. Then shall we know complete deliverance from moral and physical evil and the perfect satis- taction of a soul at rest In Its predestined home. But (even while the Apostle speaks of that inheritance, he is conscious that Canaan could never adequately typify its supreme excellence. It was by an Insecure tenure Israel held the land, defiling it by gross impurity, and exporloiuy ing continually disappointment. This inheritance is "Incorruptible," l>ver- lasting, "undeflled," without any Main of sin, and "unfading," never wearying or disappointing. Morels absolutely secure, it. is everything I ling enthusiasm, join in his raptur ous doxology. God Hlmstslf has "called us out nf darkness into His marvellous light" that we might then "show forth His praises." At t I'Venin oi his igony BAPTIST. .0 Olivet Baptist church last Dr. Rugg took for the basis remarks: "And being in an ifiony he prayed moi|3 earnestly; nnd his sweat was as it were great drops of blood falling to the ground."���Luke 22; 44. The theme was Introduced with the remark, that the Importance of the events before am! after those of flethsemane have often cauded little tentlon to be paid to that great act They abate not their society balls, llieir card parties, their social excesses, however strongly the church I may call them to the front rank of j the children of 'duty. They walk in the light " Ul lean hardly walk elsewhere unless they More, g0 t0 the restricted districts of our deter-! c|tyi but the>. 6o nof wan, as He is in the light There is a light in a man | may be the light of darkness. over It .��� _ "reserved in heaven," under the lov ing guardianship of God Himself. 'in'Vhe"worid's redemption. \V"'JSJh,,1t, "'\A,Wh,0lt' PTffl A drama in which the chief actor of Israel turned back at . Kadesh|had to eombat the powers of tevll and of darkness. The necessity for the suffering of Christ was then shown turned Barnes and died This Inheritance are kept by the which great is that darkness. 4. Why do not men walk In the light? It is because they are unwilling to face the struggle Involved. God knows no way of salvation except by ________ ^^^^^^ To Him that overcometh" are the watch Could be rented with privilege of buying. Near the best shipping port in the country. 1���160 acres, 35 acres seeded; 6 room house, barn 34x34 stable, fine well and creek, 1 mile from school, lots of fruit. Could be bought for $2600, $500, balance arranged, or would rent $50 and taxes for the first year. 2���15 acres, 10 acres cultivated, best soil, 7 room house, large barn 52x34, 1-2 mile from station, good orchard, woodshed, stable with 8 stalls. $3,000, $500 cash, balance arranged, or would rent for $200 with the use of 2 cows, horse and buggy. McLEOD, MARK & CO., Real Estate and Insurance, ffiffit No, No. master and goes out uecoiueai from beneath Ration ��nd life eternal. Win or die. Come into the light or back at Kadesh in Ihe wilderness. is for those "who ��.. ...... .. power of God." Persevering "through faith" not toe cSvarTVaT"the'cJoalng act ot the pilgrim shall fall by the way. The; n ���,��� h.u, there ��� no sure ho,e of "nailing blessedness( there could have been should irradiate the life of everyL. M The Btrengtll to 8ufler on nustian. thta cross was gained at Gethsemane. But, while the goal may be cer- The audience were reminded that tain, It is afar off, and the distant till had their Calvaries, their sufter- prospect of even the giteatest good | ing to bear, and that they were only may be but a weak support The speaker pointed out that the -,.��� ln the hour ot trial." Not' so with this hope weighs upon their spirits. But even I tor it is "a living hope." Living not ���, Uie wilderness, with its tempta- merely as, opposed to ^Wag*** tions and trials, they are abundant- ol the world but as roo, ��� , lv blessed. Ever at the close of the to U>e present M*��g����� B��n fl���� toilsome day's march they can ..ft ap Jgg^g"* % J, ^o'fb,�� the "power their eyes to the far-off hills of the, o{ ajj '_ew ���fe , ,3gotten by the promised land, and the light which Mt of Go(j. Born again, the bathes Its distant peaks illumines j ^hr,gtInn wniks, as a beloved child, in (heir hearts with hone. |he comfort 0f the Father, and, be- No matter what may be our lot. If i ] ol(i|ng tj,e "abundant mercy," the we are God's children, It is glorious, ROverelKn Mndriass. which sought with untold blessings. Kven while __., ,���.��� the world may pity or desnlse us, OUT _ ^^ ��� ron^nl" which can surmount every trial. It and cert!*in|l8 ,n(Ieed a hope whlch "maketh not has continually Iwavs "' "i . T une worm iiiaj inv ��> '"�����"""��� --��� ��� I snrlneing up in his heart this hope ,. [sooner or later we fall back into the l )lKlrtg should exult at the contem-1 H��**W -�� ���cngthl , , .. . .,���.��������� _a _���.. m,���fl-��� ���f fh�� irri Ihe hand of wise control It ls always destructive. Know your strength I ���""""" " - ������- ,..c....o ��� V\\ caatral it. Sin is the struggle!sh,ldows from whlch I)erhaps we "W ftaMw of , *�� K''e�� �� , , . i never come mercies God has prenaret Cor supremacy between animal loroes L free gift* bf Jthe divine powi��r ine i -iri- , , and higher spiritual powers. Paul | The shadowed way Is the easy way.kn_fMta_ee is ours. As each Israelite!^ *b���oatd said "I keep my body under." The because It is the lazy way. It is easier found his Inheritance or portion ln uisslons down stairs must be suborol lo linger In the valleys than to climb the material rest of Canaan, so for The! lhe '"!!s 1"1' Wl< ��ee n0 vlslon there1"", all Gods promises clrulnato IH lIHieew a uw|n ........ n shamed because the love of God is In our hearts by the which Is given unto 1 for us. As powii-r the Holy Ghost Well might the Apostle crv us. all Gods promises wimiuu- *", "Ripsspd be the God and Father 'H dlna.ed to the people up stairs. ThelUie mus dui wi h. w ��� ^ll'j'he celestial blos-'��� "I _"a sal^- ��*������ ���gu!) chrlgt'. and well may r ^rcontro; "JEL ^1^^^ V^ wSB W^A ^fina? ��l�� -h ,,���ken,ng .ove and kind- In sweat of blood plalnlv proved that he suffering of the redeemer fctegan long before the crucifixion. Gethsemane was the place of mental agony. Then from the fact tho suffering of the Saviour, both mental and physical, was the means of accomplishing the great salvation, was unveiled the principle that all success has to be bought with the expenditure of life. That It was useless for the merchant to expect his business to prosper unless he put himself ln to It. Some churches who have had everything ln their favor, such as wealth, honor, organization, have failed to reach dying souls, because the members had not put their 1W% into the work, they had ntever known the agony ot a Gethsemane. THE DAILY NEWS MONDAY, MARCH 12, 1905 : Sporting News i and Comment. w ��� ������������������������������������������������������������������������������ At Victoria on Saturday tho senior team defeated the Vancouver team ai hockey by 4 goals to 1. At the iirockion Point athletic (.rounds Saturday ilie Queen's College Junior! niei and defeated lhe Vancouver College juniors In rugby football by 2�� points to 3. In Association football at Westli.-im Island Saturday afternoon the Vancouver ciiy 1 < 11111 defeated ihe Island boys by one goal, It being Ihe only point made throughout the entire game. By winning this game lhe city learn qualified for the final in the competition now going on. The Celtic and Shamrock football teams met at Brockton Point Saturday afternoon in a closely contested game -which resulted In victory for ihe former by the score of two goals to nil This victory places the Celtics in the finals for the Empire Charily cup over which competition has been very keen. Tonight at S:;iO the Vancouver Rowing club will hold It's annual meeting and election of officers for lhe ensuing year. Plans for the coming season will also be discussed. Through n typographical error In Saturday's issue of The News it was stated that the New Westminster Lacrosse team made the famous eastern trip in the year 1901, whereas the trip was made in 1900, and wasn't 11 a shock to the eastern sports? WANTS MONEY BACK. Secretary of Seattle Lacrosse Team Complains About Matt Barr. Secretary Kennedy of the Seattle Lacrosse team In a letter to Secretary Ryall of the locals registers 11 kick .'.gainst the management of the league, inasmuch as the Seattle club has never had refunded the $100 forfeit put up by It at the beginning of the past season. When thr schedule for 19fl5 Was arranged, all of the clubs entering in the rare posted a forfeit of $100 for their appearance in all games, the amount to be refunded at the end of tbe season. As is well known Ihe Seattle team failed to make expenses last year, and some time ago asked for the refund of their forfeit money through the secretary of the association, Matt. Barr of Vancouver. Failing to elicit response from Barr. Secretary Kennedy wrote to President Hooper of Victoria, before whom he laid the case. Some time later he received word from Mr. Hooper to lhe effect thai the secretary at Vancouver hid been instructed to refund th" money; Kennedy claims that he has written to Secretary Barr of Vancouver repeatedly bill that he has failed up lo dale to get an answer one way or the other from him. These statements were made in a iriendly letter to Mr. Ryall, who corresponds occasionally with Mr. Kennedy. If the matter is not adjusted ai an early date It will be brought up ���I the annua) meeting of the association which will he held in April. No charges are made against Secretary Barr, ihe letter being more in the nature of a complaint as to negligence on tiie part of the secietary in ignoring the repeated letters from the southern city. Swanson and the Jap. Great interest is being taken by Vancouver sports in the coining return wrestling match between Sinclair Swanson of Naiiaiino, and Mat- snda of Vancouver In the Vancouver opera house on the night of March '21. Malsuda it Is said has made a hit with several Vancouver business men who are] willing t,o baolc their man to the extent of $1,000 so firm are they in lite belief Ihiil he is a winner. In addition to ihe side bet, tine entire gate receipts after deducting expenses will go to the winner, thus making ihe bout worth while to the 1 otitestants. Both men are well known as adepts at the art. and ii is only reasonable to predict a bumper house on the night of the bout. It is quite probable that a goodly sprinkling of x��� Westminster sports \"lll journey to the Terminal City tn witness the contest, as the game 'is very popular here. He spoils are willing to hack him lather heavily considering that he is something of a, youngster at the game as yet. However, the boy is nervy, and has made a splendid re-' (ord in California this winter, and will certainly give a good account of liniselt against lhe more experienced lighters even if he should not win the liatih . >��elson Takes No Chances. Philadelphia March 10.���"Tberte is too much al stake- for me," said Battling Nelson today, when it was Intimated thai he should ease up in ills work. :is he is undei the weight neclassary for him to make for his fighi here with McGovern next week. "We received an offer from New York yesterday of $1,000 for next Thursday. Friday and Saturday providing 1 knocked out Terry Mr- 'lovern. and there are more offers on top of lti.it. 1 guess Terry has rocetv- ed son.'' of the same kind, so that we loth have lots to win or lose In lhe battle." Another large crowd visited the I raining quarters at iSsSingtOn today, nnd watched Nelson go through his gyin. work. For three-quarters of an hour hi? went through one exercise alter another and after the finish although in a perspiration, he showed no signs of being tired and his wind was nearly as good as when he started. He took on threle sparring partners. In each bout there wns considerable wrestling. When he got close to an opponent, Nelson boiled blS head against his man and played for the body. Difference of OpinTon. New York, March 10.���Eddie Han- Ion, who fought both McGovern and Nelson, picks the former to win and tells his reasons why. Eddie fought McGovern In Philadelphia, and lost In the fourth round after putting Terry flat on his back In the same round. Haiilon rushed in wildly and was battered to the floor when the referee, stopped it. In San Francisco more than a year ago Eddie lost to Nelson after nine rounds of hard fighting. The referee also stopped this fight as I]anion was helpless, **.! >#l ^Ny-A NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS. Sealed tenders, addressed to the undersigned, marked on the envelope, "Tenders tor Construction," will be received at the office of the Commls- sioners of the Transcoiilinental __\ way a! Ottawa, until twelve o'c'ock pounds shall be collected on the grqss noon on .Monday, the 12th day of1 March, 1906, for the work required for ihe const met ion, in accordance made and publishing notices in the Yukon Official Gazette. Petroleum���All unappropiated Dominion Lands in Manitoba, the Northwest Territories and within tin- Yukon Territory, arc open in prospecting for petroleum, and the minister may reserve for an individual or company having machinery on the land tn be prospected, an area ni 1020 acres for Such peri.nl as he may decide, the with the plans, profiles and specifications of said Commissioners for Hie following sections of ih" Transcontinental Railway, the said work to be complete,! on or before lhe first day of September, 1907, viz.: Ill District "i\" Prom a point designated on tile plans of ihe said Commissioners at or rear Ihe Co ' of Winnipeg, i<, a point known as Peninsula Crossing, nea' Ihe jur.ct.on point of the Fort William brain li of the Grand Trunk Railway, a distance of about 215 miles. I2l District "B." Krom it polni designated on the plan.' of the laid Commissioners at the north end of the Quebec Bridge a.id Hallway 1 un- pany's bridge in tin vicinity o 'he City of Quebec, to a point neat La Tuque, a distance of a.'out 150 piLes. I?,) A steel yiaduci about 3,0iui feet long across the Care Rouge vilhy, tn said District "B, in the vi. nily of tho City of Quel,"', the win 1. to be performed In accordance with 'he General Specifications of the CcyitulB- sinners of the Trim.continental -1; 1- way. and the Gcnev.i Specificii 'on for steel bridges ail', .'inducts of 1 lie Department ot iiail viiys and Ca.'.ls of Canada, 1905. Plans, profiles and specifications may be seen in tht' ofiice of the Chief Engineer of the Commissioner;, at Ottawa, also in the office of the His- irict Engineer at Kenora, Ontario, for lhe section of District "F." anil for the section of District "B," in the office of the District Engineer at Quebec. Persons tendering are notified that Synopsis of Regulations for Disposal of Minerals on Dominion Lands in Manitoba, the Northwest Territories and the Yukon Territory. COAL���Coal lands may be purchased nt $10 per acre for -nil tit ami $jo for anthracite. Not more than 320 acres can be acquired by one length'of which shall not exceed three times tbe breadth. Should the prospector discover oil in paying quantities, and satisfactorily establish such discovery, an area noi exceeding 640 acres, including the oil well, will be Sold t" the prnspeet'ir at the rate I panics holding free miners' certificates $1 an acre, and the remainder "i the may obtain entry for a mining loca- tract reserved, namely, [280 aires. tion. will be sold at the rate of $.1 an acre, A free miner's certificate is granted subject tn royalty at such rate as may individual or company. Royalty at the rate of ten cents per ton nf -ooo output. QUARTZ���Persons years and over ami j' of eighteen int stock com- Great Northern Ry. Time Table THE COMFORTABLE WAY V. W. & Y. RY. Daily I NEW 1 mill Leave WESTMINSTER Arrive 20ain!Blaliie, Belling :'.:- bar or bench, the former being 100 ments as to residence may he sa feet long and extending between high by such person residing with the fa- and low water mark. The latter in- ther or mother. eludes bar diggings, but extends back (3) If the settler lias bis permanent to the base of the hill or bank, not residence upon farming land owned exceeding 1000 feet. Where steam by him in the vicinity of his home- power is used claims 200 feet wide stead, the requirement? as to residence may be obtained. may be satisfied by residence upon Dredging in the Rivers nf Manitoba the said land. and the N. W. T., excepting the Yu t'i'sfieti Also to BUFFALO. NEW YORK and PHILADELPHIA, via Niagara Falls. For Time Tables, etc., address GEO. W. VAUX, Assistant Geh'l Passenger and Ticket Agent, Hi") Adams St., Chicago, 111. else. This conspiracy gag will not down with any man who saw the big fellow falling all over himself for twenty rounds. He says it was a tour- handed deal to roll him, Marvin should count again; there was only one hand really concerned In his undoing, and that is the one Tommy Burns usually wears on the end of Cheques deposited a contract with the said Commission- Pugs Menace Ballard. Seattle ring followers are in a tremor of excKeml nl over the action of the city council of Ballard their stand regarding the lighting came In that city which is a suburb of Seattle, and quite near the big city which forbids tbe game. Recently ihe Ballard council passed a law permitting the establishment of a pavilion" and "auditorium" with- cut first investigating the real object of the promoters of the enterprise, which wlun too late was discovered to be preliminary steps to the starting of the fighting game In the little city. Immediately after the ptermlf ���was granted the town was flooded With tin horn gamblers nnd cheap sports, and now tha rltlzenF declare that they will not stand foi il. t 1 haiV put the proposition in" exter lnlnation up to the city fathers. Certain ni'tiibi is ot the council are authority foi- the statement that lhe motion will be rescinded, whil'e others lay that they will stand pal. If the motion is rescinded 11 will be a severe blow to Senile pugdom which has be'eii longing foi- another taste of the game al home, and If present Conditions remain unchanged after the coming meeting of the council the sports wlll Il> In tin' seventh heaven of delight. If the new "Ballard Club" Is permitted to exist afler Ihe coming council meeting the fight promoters will ���tart the ball rolling with a mill be twoen Harry or "Kid" Kranl and Jack O'Keefo or Willie Fitzgerald some time next month. Krant Is a clever and willing youngster, claim- bis lefl ami. Tommy Ryan came around to the office the other night and the young man was wild ns a wolf over Marvin's aspersions. Here Is Ryan's statemenl: 'Well what d'ye think of that big lump of Herkimer going back there and saying that 1 handed It to him 1111 here? Win didn't he have sense enough to tell 'em he was sick'.' That's the best tiling a man can Bay when he puts up such a rotten fight as he did that night' Then he's got some Bort of an alibi a' thai, for didn't he fight like a sick man? Never saw such 11 poor exhibition in my life He fought like a blind apple woman! "Now. Han Bays I didn't work with him. lie's right; I only had ihe cloves nn ;i few Utiles while he was training. I found that be knew it all couldn't teach him anything. He used tn Bay to lt:e: "Never mind about this clever business, Ryan. I can'l box worth a cent, but I tight all right, Vim leave it to me.' When I saw Ihat I couldn't leach In him anything I quit trying. During Hie fighi 1 tiled to tell hlin lo rip that right uppercttt in when Burns dove into him. He'd do it once, maybe), and then forget all about It. T|i��; res! of the time he was walking around the ring with his anus spread out like a man shooting chickens. "Now. I'll tell you what I'll do. I'll bet I can lick this big dub of ;ti Hart ami I won't weigh more than 160, U that's the best he can do. I'll flck him land I'Jl go further than that���I'll knock him oul inside of twenty rounds. That's what I think of him! The idea of ii im trying to take Jeffries' place! 1 don't wonder Hu- 1.0s Angeles people hollered. I'd holier myself, only I was In his noi and I Couldn't." ers and to furnish the approved security within ten days after the acceptance of the tender, lhe said cheque shall be forfeited to the commissioners as liquidated damages for such refusal or failure, and all contract rights acquired by the acceptance of the tender shall be forfeited, by parties whose lenders nre rejected will be returned within ten flays after the signing of tbe contract. Attention is called to the following clause In the form of contract: "All mechanics, laborers or other persons who perform labor for the purposes of the construction of the works hereby contracted for shall be paid such wages as are generally accepted as current for competent workmen in the district in which the work Is being performed-, and, if there is no current rate in such dlstricl. then .1 fair and reasonable rate; and, in the event of a dispute arising as io what is the current or a fair and reasonable rate, it shall be determined by tin' Commissioners, whose do cislon shall lie final.' "This agreement is subject to the regulations now in force, or which may at any time hereafter be in force during the construction of the works hereby contracted for: made undo.' the authority of the Department if Labor, and which are or shall be ap plleable to such works." "The contractor shall In coin lion with Hie whole of the said work, as fir as practicable, use only materia! machinery, plant, supplies and rolling siock manufactured or produced In Canada, provided the same can hi' obtained as cheaply and upon us goo 1 terms In Canada as elsewhere, hav 1 ig regard to quality aid price." The contractor shall conform to lhe Fire Regulations adopted by tile Commissioners, and also to the Laws and Regulations respecting fin's in the different provinces wherein the work is being performed. The light is reserved to reject any 01 all tenders. By kon Territory���A free miner may obtain only two leases of five miles each for a term of twenty years, renewable in the discretion of the Minister of the Interior. The lessee's right is confined to the submerged beds or bars of the river below any low water mark, and subject to the rights of all persons who have, or who may receive entries for bar diggings or bench claims, except on the Saskatchewan River, where the lessee can dredge to high-water mark on each alternative leasehold. 'Ihc lessee shall have a dredge in operation within nne season from the date of the lease for each five miles but where a person or company lias obtained more than one lease one dredge for each fifteen miles or fraction thereof is sufficient. Rental, $10 per annum for each mile of river proximo, leased. Royalty at the rate of two and a half per cent, collected on the output after it exceeds $10,000. Dredging in the Yukon Territory��� Six leases of five miles each may be granted to a free miner for a term of 20 years; also renewable. The lessee's right is confined to the submerged bar or bars in the river below low water mark, that boun- Six months' notice in writing should be given to the Commissioner of Dominion Lands at Ottawa of intention to apply for patent. w, w. Deputy Minister of the WHEN GOING EAST ASK Till". TICKET AGENT To SEND YOU OVER CORY. Interior. Department of Militia and Defence. New Westminster, B. C, Rifle Range. NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS. SEALED TENDERS, marked on the envelope "Tender for Construction of Rifle Range, New Westminster," addressed to the secretary of the Militia Council, Headquarters, Ottawa, will lie received until noon, tho 15th April foi- the construction of a rifle range at New Westminster, B. C. Plans and specifications may be seen and full information obtained at the offices of the district officer commanding, Victoria; Lieut-Col. J. C. Whyte, New Westminster, B. C��� and the director of engineer services, militia headquarters .Ottawa. Tenders must be made on a form supplied by the department and ac- dary to be fixed by its position on the ^^^^___^^^^^_^^_^^_^^^__ 1st day of August in the year of the companled by nn accepted cheque on date of the lease. a Canadian chartered hank for 10 per The lessee shall have one dredge cent of the amount of the tender, pay- in operation within two years from able to the order of the Honorable the the date of the lease, and one dredge Minister of Militia and Defence, for each five miles within six years The ,ie,mrtment does not bind Itself from such date. Rental $100 per mile |n accept the j0we8, m any (cn(]er for lirst year and $10 per mile for each cor order, . E. RYAN. Secretary, Injured By Car. Montioal, March 10. .lames Corcoran. 15 lens nf age. managter of the New England Shoe company al Si. Catherine street, was Btruck and seriously Injured by a car of tbja Park and Island Railway company al Montreal west last night. lie was trying to cross tWa tracks ahead of the car. The Commissioners of the Transcontinental Railway, Ottawa, Sth February. 1906. Principal of Toronto. March Ing SeattlV' aa his home, and the Seat- la1��3 Dr. Sheraton. Wycliffe. 10.���Rev, T. R. O'.Meara, rector of Trinity college, has accepted the prliicipalship of Wycliffe college, In succession of the Belyea & Co. General Hauling and Delivery. Heavy Hauling uur sperallly. Wood and Coal Dealers Columbia St., below Tram Office. Telephone IbO. subsequent year. Royalty same as placer mining. riaccr mining in the Yukon Territory���Creek, gulch, river nnd hill claims shall not exceed 250 feet in length, measured on lhe base line or general direction of the creek or gulch, the width being from 1000 I" 2000 feci. All other placer claims shall be 250 feel square. Claims are marked by two legal posts, "tic at each end, bearing notices. Entry must be obtained within ten days ii the claim is within ten miles of the mining recorder's office, ( hie extra day allowed for each additional ten miles or fraction. 'flic person or company staking a claim must hold a free miner's certificate. 'l'lie discoverer of a new mine is entitled to a claim "f 1000 feet in length, nand if the party consists of two, 1500 feet altogether, on the output on which im royalty shall be charged tin* rest of the party ordinary claims only. Entry fee $10. Royalty at the rate of two and one-half per cent, on the value of the gold shipped from the Yukon Territory to be paid to ihc i "iiipin iller, Nn free miner Shall receive li grunt nf nnue than nne mining claim mi each separate river, creek or gulch, but the -anie miner may hold any number of claims by purchase, and free miners may work their claims in partnership by filing notice and paying fee of $2. A claim may be abandoned and another obtained on I the same creek, gulch or river, by giving notice and paying a fee. Work must be done on a claim each year lo the value of at least $-'00. I.. F. PINAULT, Colonel. Deputy Minister of Militia and Defence. Department, of Militia and Defence, Ottawa, February 11, 1906. "The Milwaukee" "The Pioneer Limited" St. Paul to Chicago, "Short Line" Omaha lo Chicago, "South West Limited" Kansas City to Chicago. No trains in the service on any railroad in the world that equal in equipment that of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway. They own and operate their own sleeping nnd dining cars on alll their trains and give their patrons an excellence of service not obtainable elsewhere. Berths nn their sleepers arc longer, higher and wider than in similar cars on any other line. Tli'ey protect their trains by the Block System. Connection made with all transcontinental lines in Union Depots. "THE NORTHWESTERN LINE" Eight Trains Every Day in the Year BETWEEN Minneapolis, St. Paul and Chicago THE TRAIN OF FAME THE NORTH WESTERN, LTD. Embodies the newest aand best ideas for COMFORT, CONVENIENCE. and LUXURY. It is lighted with both electricity and gas;, the most brilliantly illuminated train in tin- world. The equipment consists of private compartment ears, standard 16 section sleepers, luxurious dining car, reclining chair cars (seats free), modern day coaches and buffet, library and smoking car-. For Time Tables, Folders, or any further information call on or write F. W. PARKER, GENERAL AGENT, 7-0 Second Avenue, Seattle, Wash Spokane Falls & Northern Ry. Co. Nelson & ft. Sheppard Ry. Co. Red Mountain Ry. Co. The only all rail route between all points cast, west and BOUth tn Ross- land. Nelson and intermediate point-. connecting at Spokane with the Great Northern, Northern Pacific and O. R. & N. Co. Connects at Rossland with the Canadian Pacific Railway for Boundary Creek point-. Connects at Meyers Falls with stage daily for Republic, Buffet service op trains between Spokane and Nelson. Effective Sunday, November to, root. Day Train Arrive .. Spokane ... .7.15 p.m. . .Rossland ... .4.10 p.m. Canadian Pacific Railway Co. British Columbia Coast Line Service. TIME TABLE (Subject lo change without notice.) VICTORIA-SKA 1 ILK Id 11 1 1 Princi ss Ilea'rice Daily Leaves Pint Townsend vt p. m. Leaves Victoria '.) p.m. Arrive Seal lie .", a.111. Leave Seattle ',i.:ai a.m. Arrive Port Towsend 12.311 n Arrive Victoria 3.30 p.111. VANCOUVER-VICTORIA ton ; 1 S. s. Princess Victoria. Dally. Leave Vancouver 1 p. m. Leave Victoria t :'.. in. VICTORIA-NEW wi.si.vii.nm \-,\, Itoi I'K S'l'lt. riiAK.ur.u. Leaves Victoria, 1 11. in., Tuei 1 and Fridays. Leaves Now Westminster, , a. m Wednesdays and Saturdays. Calling at Maynean q Bteveston, VANCOrVF.H-NANAlMO Hi 11 1 1 S.S. Joan leaves .Nanaimo nam except Saturday and Sunday, at 7 am, Saturday X a. In. Leaves Vancouver dally, except Saturday and Sunday, at 1.116 p.m. Saturday 2.30 p. in. WESTCOAST ROUTE. S. S. Queen City. Leave Victoria 11 p. m. 1st, 10th and 20th of each month for Ahousett and way points. Leave Victoria 10th of each month for Quatslno and way points. Leave Victoria 20th of each month for Cape Scott anil way points Including Quatslno. LOWER FRASER RIVER ROUTE. Steamer Transfer. Leaves New Westminster 1 day. Additional trip leaves New West- minster 5 a, m. Sunday. Leavs Steveston Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Sab Urday 7 a. m. Friday li a. m. Ail- illtional trip Sa unlay 5 p. in. UPPER l-'KASKK RIVER ROUTE, Steamer Beaver. Leave New Westminster X a. tn. Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. Leave Chllllwack 7 a. 111. Tuesdays, Thursdays anil Sat 1 days, culling at landing between New Westmln 'r and Chllllwack. NORTHERN It C ROUTE. S. S. Tees. Leaves Vancouver at - p. m. 2nd and lt'ith of each month calling *.'. Skldegule on first trip and Bella COO" la on second trip. Times on arrivals and departure are approximate. For Tickets, reservations anil information call on or address: ,1. W. TROUP, General Superintendent, Victoria. E. .1. COYLE, Asst. Gen. Pass Agent, Vancouver. W. II. GARDINER, Gen. Agent, Freight Dept., New Westminster, ED. QOULBT, Agent, New Westminster. Canadian Pacific Railway Company] Atlantic Express leaves uaity at 16.40; has first-class sleopera and diners. Tourists cars tor Toronto every Monday and Friday; tor Montreal cvei', Wednesday and Saturn.1, . Seattle train leaves daily al > '���'���"��� For further particulars apply to ED. coiLi-.i. (1. I'. K. Agent. New WestD ni"'' ". or E. J. COYLE, Assistant General Passemger Agent, Vancouver. I .cave g.20 a in. 12.25 p.m. 9.40 a 111. Trains & Steamers C. P. It. MAIN LINK Leave New Westminster 15.40 daily. Arrive New Westminster 11.35 daily. C. P. It. MISSION HRANCH. Lv. New West. . 8.80; ar. Seattle 16.60, Lv. Seattle 10; ar. New West. 18.40. C. P. It. WKSTH. JUNCTION. Lv. New West. 10.36 and 17.35. Ar .New West. !i.:i.", and 18.40. C. P. It. MILLSIDE SPECIAL. Lv. New Westminster f,.:i(l a. 111. CHEAT NORTHERN RAILWAY. Lv. N, W. 8.20 a.m.; ar. Seattle 4 p.m. Lv. N. W. 4.36 I'.in.; ar. Seattle lb p.m. Lv. Seattle 8.30 a.m.; ar. N. w. ;: p.m. Lv. Seattle 1.:'" p.m.; ar. N. W. 9.SB p.111. V., W. k Y.���VANCOUVER. Lv. N. W. :: p.m. and 9.35 p.m. Lv. Vancouver 8.35 a.m��� and 1 ]'���'"��� C. N, R, POUT OUK iN Lv. N. W. 0.20 a.::!., ar, lulchon 2.20 11.111. l.v. Guichon ".in 1.11..; . r. N. W. I'.:::, p.m. Mondays only. Ii. c. ELECTRIC I,v. Now Wesl. nnd hourly until I I hourly between 12.1 VKIi. ��� , 60 8 with half- :iii; 0.30 p.m. VANi 50 1 p.ni ... .Nelson b.45 p. II. A. JACKSON. General Passenger Agent; Northern Pacific! t,������ II. s 1,14 Third St. ROW.!'., General Agent, mr Alder, Portland, Or. TAKE The White Pass and Yukon Route for CONRAD, CARCROSS. ATI.IN, WHITE HORSE, DAWSON and FAIRBANKS. Daily trains (except pean points. Sunday) carrying passengers, mail, Spec|a| Reduced Three Transcontinental Trains Daily Travel on the Famous "NORTH COAST LIMITED" Electric-lighted train. Low Hates. Quick Time. Excellent Service. New York, Chicago, Toronto, St. Paul AND ALL POINTS EAST Stcamshir Tickets on sale to all Euro- express and freight connect with A certificate that work has been j stages at Carcross and White Horse, done must be obtained each year; if i maintaining a through winter service. not, the claim shall be deemed to be abandoned, anad open to occupation and entry by a free miner. The boundaries of a claim may be defined absolutely by having a survey For information apply to J. H. ROGF.RS, Traffic Manager, Maekinnon Bldg., iL^ Vancouver, B. C. Rates Round Trip Rates to Southern California. For full informtion call on or write C. E. LANG, General Agent, 430 Hastings St., Vancouver, B. C. A. D. CHARLTON, Portland, Ore. A. G. P. A. Saturday half-hourly noon i> 11 I'"1- Sunday hourly 8 a.m. to 11 i,1M-; with half-hourly bet noon and 7 vm- Lv. Vancouver same time throughout. Fraser River and^Gulf IT RIVER, Heaver��� From N. W Mon. Wed. Frid. 8 a.m. From C.ivk. Tu., Th., Sat., 7 "ra' Ramona��� From N. W. Tn., Th., Sat. S a.m. From Chwk. Sun., Wed., Fri., 7 a.m. Favorite- Prom N. w. dally, ex. Sun., 2.15 p.m- From Ml. Lehman, 7 a.m. DOWN RIVER. Transfer��� From N. W. dally, ex. Sun., 2 p.m. Add. trip, Monday, ."> a.m. B>om Steveston. 7 a.m. (Fri. 6 W-' Add. trip Saturday, 5 p.m. VICTORIA AND ISLANDS. City of Nanaimo��� From N. W. Sunday 7 a.m. From Victoria Sal urday 7 a.m. Mail Service Close. Received. Sent He. via SiimaslO.OOp.m. 6.46 I1 ���'" Sap'n & Mlllsldc.lO.OOp.m. I'.ir.p.i'' Vancouver 10.00 p.m. H.00 a.m. Cloverdale, Illalne, Seattle, etc.. .. 8.45a.m. 8.30p.O- Van. & Cent. Pnrk...10.30 n.m. ";!>������"��� Victoria 10.30 a.m. 10.00 a.m. East Burnaby.. .. 1.15p.m. 1 1 ���'''���"'' Steveston, etc.... 1.30p.m. lO'SO*���' East, via C.P.R... 3.00 p.m. 12.00 m Sap.. Mill, Coq'm.. 3.00 p.m. 12.00 m Van. t Burnaby.. 3.30 p.m. 6.00 !>��������. M- MARCH 12, 1900 JHE DAILY NEWS SECRET SOCIETIES UNION LODGE. NO. 9, A. F. A A. M. ���The regular meeting of this is held on the First Wednesday in each month, at 8 o'clock p, m., ln the Masonic Temple. Sojourning brethren are cordially Invited to attend. Dr. W. A. DeWolf Smith, Watch CLOTHES IN KOREA. EGYPTIAN CIVILIZATION. Secretary. KING SOLOMON LODGE. NO. 17, A. F. & A. M.���Regular communications of this lodge are held on the second Tuesday in each month in Masonic Temple, at 8 p. m. Visiting brethren are cordially Invited to uttend. D. W. Gilchrist, Sec. ROYAL CITY PRECEPTORY. No. 459 R. B. K. of I., meets second and fourth Friday of each month, at 8 p. m., in Orange ball, corner of Royal avenue and John street. Sojourning Sir Knights cordially invited to attend. W. K. Dunlop, W. P.; K. K. Matthias. Reg. LOYAL ORANGE LODGE, NO. 1150 ���Meets In Orange hall first and third Friday in each month al v p. m. Visiting brethren are cordially invited to attend. K. K Matthias. W. M.; .1. Humphries, Rec, Sec. I. 0. O. F.���AMITY LODGE. No. 27��� The regular meetings of this lodge are held ln Oddfellows' hall, Columbia stn e . everj Mondaj evening, Visiting lit'"'. ��� :, it dially invited to attend. S, 3 May, N Q : W. K <'n.lib.mi. Rei 9 ��� New Westminster Boom! A. O. U. W.���FRASER LODGE No. 3 ���Meetings thi first and third Tui - day in each month. Visiting brethren i ondtally Invited to attend Lodge m. A. 0, I". W. ball, Odd fellows' block. Clai I m ��� et, c. li'it AcfDrJIim In Hi, ( ���i. ���.!,,, ��� nd >I>1 the VVe��lh��-r. A characteristic of the Koreans which has helped to their undoing ts a nation was the fact that they were guided whoHy by pri dent When a new situation presented they did not cope with It ln the light of the day they were living, but were guided en tlrely by the old saws and the ancient maxims of wise men who had been dead u thousand years or so. \ strik lug illustration of this national trnit was furnished in the matter of theli wearing apparel, which was changed according to an ancient calendar and without any regard to the temperature of the day. Korea is a land of great extremal of heat and cold, and the man who draft ��M the calendar by which all clothing ls changed, ihough a Chinese sage, it is said,was not a sue,, -. aa I weather prophet, unless, as sonic maintain, tie climate In the course of the hundred! 0( years which have elapsed has cluing ed. When the calendar announces new iii"_-ins the period of greatest cold tin conservative Korean, although the ah inui be soft and balm] pad* onl bit while garments whh all or seven thicknesses of cotton wadding, until the thin man becomes n in man and the StOUl party swells up to such ener mous size as to block up the street* when l.e walks, or, rather, ro bi 0 id Again, though spring and early sum mi; maj bai e i ome and Uie beat pre vailing be almost tropli nl the Ko swelters about In Iii- n i It in perspiring venerntlou of I - beredl t.-ry calcndai Nefl 5 TREACHEROUS RIVER BEDS. S, Corrif in, recorder; master workman. Louis Witt, FOSE OF COLUMBIA LODGE No. 115. SONS OF ENGLAND. B. 8.��� Red Rose Degree meets Second and Fourth Weibi isdaj of each month. in k of P, il.ill. Columbia St.. at S p. in.. White Ruse Degree, Fourth Wednesday in each month, same time and place. Visiting Brethren cordially invited. B. It. Stinch- comb., Pies.. IL Disney, Secretary. Other Cities Have Grown, Why not We? 11, i COURT BRUNETTE. No. 4099. I.O.F. ���Meets the Fourth Friday In the month at X o'clock. In the small hall. Oddfellows' block. Visiting brethren are cordially invited to attend. .1. B. Rtishton. C. It.; F, P, Maxwll, R. S. COURT ROYAL COLUMBIA, No. 8808. A. O. F.���The regular meetings of this Ixidgo are held on the Second and Fourth Tuesdays of each month at S p. m. In lhe Oddfellows' Hall. Visiting Brethren are cordlaly invited to attend. E. C. Firth, C. IL; F. P. Maxwell, See. Patronize the merchants ot the ROYAL CITY . . . . THE ROYAL TEMPLARS OF TEMPERANCE meet every Wednesday at 8 o'clock p. in., in Oddfellows' Hall, Columbia street. Visiting Brethren are cordially invited to attend. J. S. ltiyson, S. C; N. R. Brown, Rec. Sec. SONS OF SCOTLAND BENEFIT ASSOCIATION, LORD OF THE ISLES CAMP, 191.���Meets on the First and Third Tuesday of every month 'n K. of P. Hall. .lohn McNiven, Chief; J. .1. Forrester, Rec. Sec. BOARD OF TRADE.���New Westminster Board of Trade meets ln the Board Room, City Hall, as follows: Second Wednesday of each month. Quarterly meetings on the second Wednesday of February, May, August and November, at S p. m. Annual meetings on the second Wednesday of February. New members may be proposed and elected at any monthly or quarterly meeting. A. B. White, Sec. "It." naturally follows!!! What??? ; Satisfaction, of course, to every man I Who smokes the B. C. and Old Sport Cigars Manufactured by lhe II. C. Cigar | Factory, New Westminster, B. C. All i flrsl class dealers handle these brands, Still Doing Business at the Old Stand. W. McRAE, Merchant Tailor ,/i.^!^RM^IXSSs~mS8t Keep Our _* rf! MONEY At Home A ttomeataader-a nmiii When tn In ll'i- ilniel. s��� ml*. 'I'be 'im.. ei -" w a: on. co ' < ere i and travel worn. Is always picturesque The traveling bome loi a family and .���i.l llieir worldly goods, from furultun tu poultry. Is sttll a familiar Bight "i we.tern roads. The spun nf dtssutls ts, ti hi aud longing for newer fields il,.it lurks under Hint broad brimmed hit is a spark of the same flre that tins been ihe theme of our history. By some stream under th" cottonwoods ot an evening you may BomeUmes see tins half gypsy, nnd the lire, with Its ac compnnylng smell of bacon and beans or the sung and accordion, will suggest as you drive by why the roving has always its fascinations. There are, however, the long dusty days of travel nnd sore backed horses, Uie occasional swollen funis, and always present, though seldom encoum tered, are the quicksands of the dry bottom streams. They are inilistln gutobable and silent. The shallow ribbons of water flow over them as over all the rest of tbe river bed. lint once fairly in their grasp there Is a remorseless, certain Rottllng. which a struggle 'inly hastens and which ends Pi an ever lasting disappearance. Cattle and horses nre caught 111 It oftenest, anil. If seen In time, can lie pulled out with u rope and horse, but into its hungry maw have gone horses, wagons and nii-n. and even a locomotive, going through a bridge, has been known to disappear lu this bottomless mystery.��� Allen True ln Outing. It�� Origin llnr of thr 1 ��..,!,,.i !:���!��- mas of tbf World. The origin of Egyptian civil (tloi has bi-eii tbe enigma of Uie world foi the jiast twenty-five centime*. Pre sentlng no historic or even myth fancy, it appears before the we once as a highly civilized and organ;, community centuries before Moses waa a boy. I'pnn tins (Object Kenan says "Egypt has no archaic epoch, but sud nVnlj takes Its place ln ">���* world In al! its matchless magnificence, without fa ther and wlihout mother and as clear apart from all evolution as if It bad dropped from tbe unknown heavens.' Would not an explanation at least feasl ble tic found In the hypothesis that 11 received Its civilization from som# Bouree no longer existing? Menes, tha first historic figure In its long line ol dynnstli-s, the outlines of whose per sonnllty loom up waverlngly hulefliiitt but grandly Impressive against lhe dee) mythic background of prehistoric storj at least 4fioii B. c., conceived and ex cent iii enterprises extorting the warm est admiration from the best engineers of the twentieth century Did he not alter the course of the Nile by vast embankments to gain stable founds turns other than lo shifting sands fot Ins sacred city of Memphis and een uruet the artificial lake of .\!""Hs. -it*'. miles iii circumference aud 380 feel deep, as a reservoir tor the waters of the Nile? Look, too, at tbe colossal achieve nieiiis of his successors In architecture, sculpture, engineering, astronomical, political, medical, s.n-ial nnd military ce, to say nothing of navigation and theology, Witness the ruins of the Labyrinth recorded by Herodotus, wiii. ii bad 8,000 chambers, half of them : bove ground and half below, a com bination ot courts, chambers, eolon i..ei' -. statues und pyramids. Witness ihe wonders of the magnificent temple .,f Kiiiiiak. which still awakens our admiration, a temple, as Denon says. wherein tbe cathedral of Notre Dame tn Paris could be set Inside one of its balls and yet not touch the walls. Wit ness the Sublime pyramids originally uullt In honor of the sun god lla and for use as astronomical observatories, the splendors of Memphis, Thebes and HeUopoIla, of the sphinx and the.obe llsks, the statuary and the numerous temples with Uie ruins of which the land ls still filled.- Exchange. YOllNIi FIELD'S LIFE GETS SHIM 1DVICF IS All MONOTONOUS FDOM HM MM.WD While Other Boys Play Marbles Thi, Woman Financier Tells How Sh Heir to $200,000,000 Plays Succeeds In eusines, on Not At All. Wall Street. New York, March 9.���Guarded day n.i night, deprived of the sports m " Bl':,spinK underwriting syndicates ���.'-'- ��� ���--"-���- -.-���- I*"11 Predaton financiers, ������-- * has displayed rem business. Seated al he, de I fCf' tW�� PlUCky little ��,������,���, ���,., 1'"' |s onlj slight!} tinged with spenda hei time 1 ",|s l"'1 "me dlsi u linn ,,1.1,1 "- notation. ..: -";: ;" tnd u,e financing *--..- Religious mo lines, on tin prayer walls books and ���loyal (InmMera, The fascination which games of chance have exercised ever gentle and simple Is well illustrated In the description by Stow of the entertainment gWen by Henry Plcnrd, mayor of London, In l.'l.'i, when the kings of France and Scotland, being prisoners In England, and tbe king of Cyprus ou a visit tu Edward III., the mayor "kept his! tin It against all comers that were willing to play at dice and hazard. The Lady Margaret, his wife, did keepe her chamber to the same Intent." The mayor, having won BO marks from the king Of Cyprus, returned him the money, saying, "My lord and king, be not nggrieved, for I covet not your gold, but your play."���Chambers' Journal. BOOST FOR A WHOLESALE HOUSE A Divided Sentiment. Little Agues ls twelve years old. Ste L�� a poetess. She has. maybe, a sense, of humor and, positively, she did not like her stepmother, (lu the latter's birthday the youthful rhymer put forth all her powers to please tbe lady who bad usurped her own mother's place. The quatrain run as follows: I thank you fnr your kindness, I thnnk you for your love And hope find wlll reward you lly I 0 Ti: you ubove. Her stepmother hardly knew whether this was to be taken prematurely or UOt. She supposed not.���New York Press. CATCHING TURTLES. Methoda V.ra >>> Ihc riikinra mt the Tropica. Turtles arc always captured ut night and usually on moonlight ones. This Is the time they go on the shere to lay their eggs. They select a smooth, sandy beach, dig holes In the sand, de jioslt their eggs there and leave them to be batched by the heat of the sand. When tbe turtles are ou shore fur this purpose hunters come upon them, and they are easily overtaken, for turtles are slow movers. The hunters have not a very strenuous undertaking. All that ls necessary to be dune Is to turn the turtles on their hacks and leave them until the next day, when they are removed. Another more curious way of catch- tug turtles Is by fishing by the rrinoru. a llsh found In the tropical waters. The popular name of tills llsh and the oue by which Uvo children of those countries call them Is the sucking fish, This name Is given to Uiem ou account of a disk on their beads, by which they can attach themselves to any smooth surface, like the side of a shark, a ship or the shell of a turtle. This dlak ls like the soft leather "suckers" that are popular with schoolboys. When this flsh has once attached himself to any- Uilng you can pull him to pieces rather Uian force him to release Ida bold. Turtle hunters go in boats and carry several of these remoras In tubs. When they see a turtle and get near him Uie sucker Is sent after hlin. He Is held by the ring on bis tall, which In turn Is attached by a stout cord. Soon the fish Is securely fnstcned to tbe shell of the turtle, and turtle and flsh are hauled Into the boat together. Once In the air Uie remora loosens bis bold and ls dropped back Into the tub to rest until another turtle Is Sighted.���Washington Star. Columbia Street. Full line of English, HCOtOO and Irish tweeds and worsteds always ln stock Spring stock now in. Make your selection. H. M0REY & CO. Booksellers, Stationers, Printers. WE MAKE RUBBER STAMPS WHOLESALE AND RETAIL [217-219 Columbia Street, New Westminster, B. C. f. IN. Draper B. C. Land Surveyor Urd Block. Htv, Westminster, B.C. BOOST Unities in ll,.' Sea. I'iglils between sharks and porpoises are said to be common In the waters around tbe Florida keys, and the flsh eruieu thereabout declare that the por- pulse always wins and sends the shark. I which usually begins t)_- tight, scurry ipg away. The shark has ��o turn on Us Side to bite, and the nimble porpoise ������nsll.v keeps out of reach of Its snap ping Jaws and then Jumps In nnd deals the shark tremendous slaps with its tall. tlovern Tnnrself. Men nnd women often say they can't govern themselves. That Is simply admitting they have defects of ebnracter which nre their masters. They ought to make effort and see If they are,not mistaken. The worst effects of hick of self control are on the health. It allows every kind of bad habit lu eating, drinking, dressing and sleeping to gain possession of the person, and the result Is a weak Instead of a strong character.-Home Notes. ALL THE TIME Worst Ever. "Yes, Indeed; he's the homeliest man In public life today. Haven't you ever Been him?" "No, but I've seen caricatures of him." "Oh. they flatter hlin You should pee him." ��� Catholic Standard and ''lines. A Groat Deteetlre. "You say he hnB grown whiskers ���Ince last you saw him?" "Ye��." "How did you recognize him?" "By my umbrella." Milwaukee Sen- .���Inel. H�����*��U. Wees tela to lam-, bat she to of colossal sUitra, and sometimes, while her a���ord to not yet unsheathed, she stretches oat her huge left arm and grasps her victim. The mighty band to Invisible, bat the victim totters under the dire clutch.- (le >rge Eliot. Don't Knack I T-raet I pon HIM. "How did1 stupid old Boresomc ever get e reputation for wit?" "He was once Interviewed by n brll llant young reporter." ��� MinncLpolh .Ton���;at. She Could T. II. Wife-John, you've been drinking. Oh. I can tell. Husband Well, don't do It, in'denr. LefSb keep It a family sbecret. Philadelphia Ledger. We know the truth, not only by the reason but by the heart.���Pascal. H.-.1 in Battle, Heil has always been 11 favorite military color. Its employment dates from the time ot Lyciirgus, the Spartan, who commanded bis army to be arrayed in red tunics In order that new recruits might not be dismayed at the sight of blood. Hi vlrst use In the British army dates from bri20, when the yeomen of tbe guard were dressed In red. which boys delight, with no com panions of his own ape. Marshall Held. BOH in his thirteenth vear andla l.e,,- to a fortune of $200.000, I, is / com polled to lead ai the Beard col lage at Lake���ood, x. .1.. a life of seclusion almost as strict in its dall] regime as that of a Capuchin monk. The two recreations allowed him ���urn are a horseback ride and a walk end these are tak. n under the 1 yea Of his tutor, a Chicago " ��� -sin. and David w beeler, a muscular groom. in wide contrast to the almosl prison-like existence of young Field .in> is nnu receiving an education ihat will lib him to handle the mil lions lefl !���' his grandfather, is the can " ��� ������ life of young Fov It 1 v., C01 mlck, onlj grandson of .lohn 11 I'.m kefelli 1 Tht la 1 is living with his fathei al a tune] in Lake wood, while his mother attends the cence ol her little daughter Mm iei al the Rockefeller honn Ko , \\ .-si Plftj foui Ui Btreet, New Vm k. 1 oung MiCormlck Is heir to even v . .;ili than the boj who �� f! ie the Field fortune, but few re are placed around him. Al d onlj bj a governess, till of ii plays at the lake In the Band with other boj b, He can les a pocket ful of marbles, and his cheerfulness ami demoni racj have made him one nl the most popular boys al Lake wood, Tints on the stage of this resort is afforded the remarkable spectacle of two boys, I101I1 heirs to vast wealth, each ih" verj antlpode of the other in disposition and character, and each receiving a course of training exact- Ij opposite to thai of the other. in bis appearance as well a his bearing young Field shows a marked difference to the sunny faced Fowler McCormlck. The former Is short and stocky. He tins Bquare shoulders and he Btands perfect!} si might as he has been trained to do, lie has a Bquare, rather high forehead, gray, thoughtful eyes, a firmly set mouth, an almost square chin. in everj way he strongly resembles his grandfather, ami. child though he Is. there are ii seriousness and an air nf reserve that heighten the likeness The face of this child appears lo 1 Hint to the determiued man of business which he is to be. lOven now his face does not show the light' iieaitedness of boyhood, bul rather the thoughtful lines of maturity. He does not make the least effort to see Ills one time companion. Fowler Mccormick, though he lives not three blocks away. Young McCormlck Is slender, blue eyed and dimpled. He Is always laughing, brim full of good humor and good fellowship. Young Field begins his studies under his tutor every morning promptly al i* o'clock In the school room of the Beard cottage. At 10..1(1 recess is announced and In company with his tutor and the groom the heir takes his horseback ride. He rides between his escorts and he has been taught to place his hum! before his face If any snapshot pho togfapher tries to take his picture. The groom hns also had strict In- itructlons regarding tilts, and so far no photographer has suceeded in getting 11 picture nf the hoy. Fowler McCormlck, on the other hand, grins good-naturedly whenever an amateur or a tourist tries to snapshot him. and he never tries to evade the camera, The ride ends al noon, and after lunch the boy must devote himself to his studies from 1 to 8 p. ill. Then he goes out for a walk, guarded as before. He speaks lo no 0110. Hoys sonietlines look at hlin as he passes, Int none are allowed to address I1I111. Indeed, his austere, almost repellent, manner, does noi Invite It. Once a week Marshall Field goes to New York to see his mother. He Is acompanled on these nips by George Lowe, the 11111 lot-, and the ever- I resent groom. His sister, little Gwendolyn Field. Is being guarded almost as closely ns her. brother. She Is always under the eyes of two nurses. Mrs, Marshall Field, mother of these two children, rarely appears and there Is no entertaining ut Beard collage. II Is really a mansion ofI twenty rooms standing at Fourth Lumberman Wants street and Private way 0 V " .elation: ndiCi Mrs. J. predatory Alden ,;:nl'"''i' " 1 "i the i ;-'ment firm that hears he,- nam��� financial success '" '" -alned in Wall streel by godlj IJf'"6s8 methoda conducted through '^""^ Glance She say, she ,3 b> ���� 'Pint of her dead .ufand' *"" founded the business Bne conducts. . ' n'';" ' ' - In the won,,," ., , -; - ! ' " ere there are '��� - ' stianand godlj ,,. "',XS:"' erwlse she added where would 1 M" Garlord has achieved the dl�� ''"'���""" ,>r "'"^ on th, manage- """"1"1 '" I : forty which 00- he third �� ' "' ' ��� ��� ' 1 belief that ral million ��� "'US In till' Ii,,;,; , ���I foi 1 (strict ��� partner, Mr. scrip- only one-quar- that is enough. per- it her day one for f3,000,000 $2,000,000. Lord has are posted 1 restame,-L .,���,i �� hed��S."3 :' m"K|~ \';- everj morning after 1 arrive 1,1 ihie city," .sal,, Mra ,;l,ln;i|'n'| Tl* ��� fmoment8 '�� "1,1 Trinity " ' '>���, Thai was a c���ston] ,)f ��� Rand's, who was one ot ,!������ ���, t Bodly men thai lived Before ItZ -'���' business hen. we have a ,������-m- " tlnS m the office 1 havea^ood main young men here ,��� ���,��������� f" eachlng the bu.lnes. , cnuL' ��J services, assisted by my 1'b'tcher. "We earn ,���, ,.ur work her,, cording to the teaching ���f tn0 lures. Even if I make ler of one per ci And '"'xl'ioss Is , ��� every purl ���f the country It I fectly wonderful. Only th tWO loans came in and another for "'. ,",|.l,"v,l',"'" Lord has educated ''"' In all this. 1 know He is helping '""��� and Ihe mnnev I make will go to ,h" Lord. I null want to provide for my grandchildren. All the rest will go to charily and ihe missions" Mrs. 0,,v|,,r,| nB8 w |���8llUl(ei| suits against two accident Insurance companies for the payment ���r Buma Which she cairns are due her through her husband's death, which resulted from physical injuries due t��� ��� ril|| j V'len Gaylord was for nearly forty years a conspicuous figure in Wail Street. He was or striking presence and had a multitude of friends He died In 11)04 at his home In Boonton, X. .1.. at the age of 68, leaving his business affairs In a rather complicated state. His widow's suit against the Aetna Life Insurance company, accident department ls [low being beard before Judge Dugro, in the supreme court. Mrs. Oayldrd maintains In tier suit thai mi agent of the company induced her husband to sign R release for $911 shortly prior to his death. She asks for lhe recovery of $11,11111). "We were married for twentv-fotir years,' said Mrs. Gaylord, "and all ihai time I was my husband's con- I'danl. He always told me about his transactions, and that Is how I came t" learn the details of the bond business. "When he died he said ho woutM not lie parted from me for long. And now, whenever I tun In doubt about anything I seek my guidance and advice from him. Yes. I am convinced that I can commune with hlin In spirit, although I am not a Spiritualist." Mrs. Gnylord's home Is near Boon- ton, X. J., where her residence, Kohliiiinr, is situated on 11 mountain overlooking the town. She Is a Swiss by birth anil tells a romantic story of her first meet lug with her hus- banii. she was first Introduced In this country by Mrs. Paran Stevens and met Mr. Gaylord at 11 niiistrnle given by Gen. and Mrs. Hancock at Governor's Island. SUGGESTS SUBSIDY. Ilenemttlnnces. Fogg-1 told Hass what yon said��� that he reminded you of 11 giraffe be- ! cause he held his bead so high. Fender- I son���And what did he say? Fogg-He i said you reminded him of an ass. Ken- derson���Because why? Fogg���Because i ���y. *"* MaSsh" said. The GoMa- Created Wren. The golden crested wren ls the smallest not only of British but of all Ku- ropeaa birds. Its average weight Is only about eight grains troy. The length of tbe feathers Is about three and a half inches and the stretch of the wings about five Inches, but when the feathers are taken off fhe length of the body does not exceed one Inch. A Poor Trade. "yes," said the African chieftain pleasantly, "I gave eight niiilej for r.iv wife, nnd I must suy that I got badly bunko*.'." ���_��� EARL GREY ENTERTAINS. Hib Less Color of Military Uniform at Second Drawing-room. Ottawa, March 12.���The second drawing-room under the Furl Grey regime took place Saturday night and was fully as brilliant ns any which have preceded. There were certain departures from old regulations. Accordingly this year it was determined to withdraw the general Invitation to the Ottuwa officers nnd detail only 11 certain number to be present. The result was to a certain extent the ���ithdrawnl of the color which usually formed such a striking contrast to the beautiful dresses of the ladles Nevertheless everything passed off in a most acceptable manner. Their excellencies were surrounded by a brilliant staff, and the scene In the senate was a most striking and beau t If ul one. Mining Institute Officers. Quebec, March 10.���At a meeting of the Canadian Mining Institute yesterday the following officers were elected: President, G. R. Smith, M. P. P.; vice-presidents, Dr. Adams, Montreal, Major Leckle, Temagami, Out., Frederick Keffer, Greenwood, B. C, 3. Herrlck DUggan, Sydnby, C. B.; treasurer, J. Stevenson lirown, Montreal; secretary, H. Mortimer Lamb, Montreal. Assistance for Ships Sailing Around the Horn. Washington, March ID���David _. Skinner, the representative of the Pu- get Bound lumber Interests at. the conference of the National Lumbermen's association, had a talk wtlh some members of the merchant marine commission today In regard to the effect of the proposed subsidy law on the lumber industry of the Pacific northwest. He advanced the suggestion that the coasting vessels engaged in the traffic between the Pacific and Atlantic coasts by way of Cape Horn should be sulisbll'/.ed. Mr.) Skinner thinks that In case these vessels were not Included the vessels now engaged in the coastwise trade would, after the passage of the bill, leave for the purpose of engaging In transoceanic business and the lumber trade would suffer. -o- Nomlnates Moderator. Coburg, March 10.���The Presbytery of Peterboro has nominated Dr. Toni3nce. of St. Paul's church, Peterboro, as Its candidate for moderator of the general assembly. ���, 0 Settlers Order Freight Cars. Toronto, March 10.���Orders have hdan placed with the C. P. R. and O. T. P. by settlers going to the Northwest for a thousand freight cars to be supplied during the next week. The number of horses which will Lij taken ls close upon 3,500. THE DAILY NEWS MONDAY, MARCH 12, 1906 LENTEN ITEMS.... 1. Finnan Haddie, per pound 10c 2. Codfiish, per pound 8 and 10c 3. Kippers, 3 for 25c 4. Mackerel, No. 1, per kit $2.00 5. Fresh Herring, 41b. tins for 25c 0. Ocean Haddie and Kippered Herring, in large oval tins, 2 for 25c 7. Two tins of the best Clams, for 25c Local News Briefly Told T. S. ANNAINDALE West End Grocery OUR GROCER. D. VV. Gilchrist, rVlgr. A. HARMDAN J. 5. UKYSON Hardman & Bryson ����--��^^���'^^^��������*~SBis��a���a_iaj��^^*^��^��� ���> �������� m.^a�� ssmsttw ���*>���** ������ asfs+smm* Practical Sanitarians Complete line of Granite, Alum inum and Tlnwares. Estimates lurnlsned on all Classes of Plumbing Work. Columbia Street 823 Granville Street NEW WB-TMlMBTl-K VANCOUVER Sole Agents Monarch Ranges. The Canadian General Electric Co., Ltd. Head Offices. Toronto Factories: Toronto and Peterboro Electric Apparatus for all Purposes Dynamos, Motors, Steam Turbines, Meters, Transformers, Lamps, Wires, Etc. Also the Canada Foundry Co., Limited, "Canada" Air Compressors, "Canada" Water Tube Boilers, "Canada" Rock Crushers, "Canada"' Return Tubular Boilers, "Canada" Steam and Power Pumps. Head Offices for British Columbia: 527-529 Granville St., Vancouver, Also Victoria, Rossland and Calgary. The Port Guichon boat the Eva, will go into drydock today for repairs. Mrs. P. Shirley, of Ladners, was a passenger to Chllllwack this morning. R. Francis returned on the Heaver this morning to his home at Chilli- wack. .lack Lousier, the well known cannery man, was in town on Saturday, looking up old friends, K. C.ibbiiigs, of Vancouver, was a passenger to Chilliwack Ibis morning on the Beaver. There was a carload of potatoes shipped from the market to the Okan- agan on Saturday. Aleck Crookshank was a passenger lo chllllwack on Saturday nn ihe Ramona, and look wllh him to his ranch a handsome team of horses. Sheriff Armstrong returned to the city last night from a trip to Seattle, wtiere he spent nearly a week on departmental business. Mrs. W. D. Purdy, of this city, left for Chllllwack on the Beaver this morning on a visit to friends at that point. Rev. P. H. McEwen returned home to Vancouver today after conducting anniversary services in the Ladner Baptist church yesterday, T. W. Patterson, of the Inverholme Stock farm at Ludner's Landing, shipped 395 sacks of oats to \V. 11. McGaw at Vernon on Saturday. The Hon. \V. Norman Bole returned make a passage of tbe gulf till lhe wind storm subsided. .1. Brewster, of Ladners, came in on the Transfer ibis forenoon and returned in ihe afternoon. \V. l.yall, of W'esibiini Island, was a visitor in the city today and returned home un the Transfer. II. W. Turiibull, of ihe firm of Mc- Innes ii Kerr, left for Langley on the Favorite ibis afternoon. W. C. Lawrence, of Vancouver, representing tbe Brunette Hosiery Co., of Mitchell, (int., u,r. a passenger in Ladners on the Transfer this afternoon. Messrs. Gilley Bros.' tug Flyer came In on Saturday from their Pill river Quarries with a scowload of rodk, which Is to be taken on to Ladners today. W. R. Gilley will accompany Ihe boat on her down river trip. The ladner people are making great Improvements on their roads, and In places where a, couple of years ago a vehicle would sink to the axles, there is now a good macadamized highway. ������������������ Polish Your Furniture wllh Johnson's Prepared Win It lire- serves und brings nut natural beauty of the wood. It produces a rich, artistic flnish. to whirr, ilin und dust will not adhere. Just try ll ami you wlll see how ttiut'h better It is thuu uuy oilier polish. Johnson's Prepared Wax ll "A Complete FinlBh anil Polish for All Wood." Use It on your floors and woodwork, too. Johnson's Powdered Wai In for all dancing floors. , You can get Johnson a tree book, The Proper Treatment tor Floora. Woodwork and Furniture " and Vheae preparatlona ot Anderson & Lusby Columbia Street New Westminster 1A Correctly Attired Woman \ ��� w Nothing makes a woman appear more correctly dressed than ;, 1 i perfect-fitting pallor-made Suit I see You can always tell a well made and dressy suit It. such is the charming appearance and perfect-fitting quail when vim Bn ��� f : ties of our new Spring Costumes. We have the beat selected stock on the coast. ^ ��� Three Special Values j At $16.50, $21.50, $25. Large range of Misses' Suits; prices $9.00 to $12.75. ...JUST ARRIVED... Special selection of LADIES' JACKETS In the new fawn covert ��� cloths; prices $6.75 to $16.50. * W. S. COLLISTER 6r CO. S Vancouver Girls Win. The Vancouver college girls defeated the Royal City high school team at hockey Saturday afternoon at the park, by a score of 2 goals to u. Total Wreck. San Francisco, March 12.���Advlci Overcoat Sale on steamer Beaver Saturday after- to the Merchants Exchange say that noon and held supreme and county the seumer Transport is ashore near court chambers this forenoon. Port Angeles. ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� ! FRITH & FRITH I Limited. Office Supply Specialists EVERYTHING FOR THE OFFICE. Sole Dealers | Remington Typewriter Typewriter Supplies Typewriters Repaired Typewriting Adding Machines "Ibirrough's" Office Desks and Furniture Safes Loose-Leaf Ledgers Office Stationery Elliott Addressing Machines :: 625 Hastings Street Vancouver, B. C t ����������������������������� I C. A. WELSH ft & S V V V V * V V V V * V V Everything Fresh and Up-to-Date. Give Us a Trial. The People's Grocer The arrivals at the Guichon hotel today were: J. C. Hoover, Toronto; C. H. Eraser. Winnipeg, and F. M. Logan, of Victoria. R. Averil. manager of the New Westminster cannery, left on Sunday for a week's holiday. He intends to visit relatives ln the Sound cities. The high winds of the past twenty- four hours have broken the telephone connection between here and Millside. The repair gang is busy repairing the break. Please don't forget the special gospel meetings each nigbt this week, at 8 p. m., at the new Gospel hall, corner Sixth avenue and Ninth street. Come. No collection. A carload of farm Implements were unloaded at T. .1. Trapp & Co'.s warehouse this morning. They were shipped direct from Frost & Woods' factories. The Royal City mills will ship tomorrow a triple car of heavy timber to the east. Also one car of bridge timber and a box car of factory lumber to the Northwest today. Rev. Thomas Crosby, of Chilliwack, arrived in the city today. He will lecture tonight in Sapperton Methodist church, and tomorrow night in the West End Methodist church. J. B. Kennedy, M. P., having had such good success with his cedar and blackthorn hedges at his residence at Sapperton, has now had a laurel hedge planted. H. Neville Smith, provincial surveyor, was a passenger to Pitt Meadows this morning. He took with him a party to conduct a survey in that district. W. Kealey, of this city, who ls engaged on the government works at I-ingley, was a passenger up river on the Beaver this morning, and will not return until the end of the week. J. Farmer returned today on the Beaver to his home at Sumas mountain. Sumas mountain is a sparsely settled district near Claybourne, at which point Mr. Farmer is engaged In the fireclay works. C. Quesnell came In from Chllllwack on the Beaver Saturday .afternoon, and brought with him a choice bunch of fourteen cows, which he is taking up to his rancho at Lumby in the Ok- cnagan district. In the editorial offices of The Daily- News is a beautiful spray of plum blossoms, which was brought in on the Heaver from C. Smith's ranch at Dewdney. The new Emerson drydock has been kept very busy this season, and has done more work than in all previous seasons put together. Quite a niimi r of steamboats are still awaiting She will probably be a total wreck. Her crew has been saved. -Our Entire Stock of- MA,_ goes overboard. George Hawey Takes a Plunge Into the Fraser. ���While making a landing on the down trip yesterday, the steamer Ramona struck a snag, throwing the mate, George Harvey, Into the water, from which he was rescued by one of Ihe deck hands. Harvey was stand' ing on the outer edge of the deck at the time, and the contact with the snag threw him several feet out into the water. He was wearing a heavy ulster, and was unable to swim at all with it, and but for the timely aid of the deckhand, Dunsey by name, he' would undoubtedly have been drowned. SETTLER BURNED OUT. 100--OVERCOATS--100 To be Sold Before This Cold Snap Lets Up. We are determined to make them go if CUT PRICES WILL DO IT 50 to 25 Per Cent Off Regular Price. THINK OF IT! $8, $10, $12 and $15 Overcoats Actually GOING AT HALF PRICE! It won't pay you to go shivering for a single day when you can get stylish Overcoats at such ridiculously low prices. COME EARLY AND SECURE YOUR CHOICE Fire Destroys a Home on the South Site of River. A settler on the other side of the river lost his home and household el-1 fects by fire yesterday afternoon. Flre , started In the bush, and being coaxed along by the high winds, the flames j reached the little house which was devoid of protection of any kind, burning it In a very few minutes. The lancher and bis family were obliged to seek shelter with the neighbors over night, from whom they were also obliged to borrow necessary articles of wearing apparel. H. L Columbia Street The Cash Clothier WANTED���Strong steady boy to learn bollermaklng. Vulcan Boiler Wks., Front street. Burnaby Municipality PUBLIC NOTICE7. During the time of raaltin* tho assessment the ofiice will be closed each Tuesday, Thursi.iv and Friday, from aFeb. 20 to March. 22, both In- c'usive. B. G. WALKER. 0 M. C. Burnaby Municipality. *i Columbia Street. New Westminster. �� '���'��� v _��� it | V Houses and Lots In Every Section of the City. $ 8 | I V One acre, rive acre and ten acre blocks in cltv and suburban fi '���! districts. '} V _ V Farm lards ot an Kinds a nd descriptions located within 60 S !���' miles of the civ. fi V 'i V Bee us before going elsewhere We can soil as low if not lower y [���J than any other Real Estate Dealer. fi Send for list 'ot houses, lot I and tarins Tenders are called for 300 cubic yards of broken rock for Hastings j road, near Royal Oak road. Also for widening Hastings road on (the north side of Johnson road, in I two sections of 10 chains each. Specifications of the above works can be seen at Mr. Charles F. Sprott's house, Burnaby Lake and at the Municipal hall. Tenders to be in by March 17th by noon. B. G. WALKER. C. M. C. g McQUARRIE & CO., 189 Columbia Street, M NEW WESTMINSTER, B. C. $ Advertise in The News I heir turn. The sneamer Belle brought in two tine seven-swifter booms of logs for the Royal City mills yesterday morning. She just managed to get Into the river In time to avoid the fierce wind which has been raging for the last 4K hours. The A. II. C. Packers' fleet of steamboats, the Phoenix, Ihe Reliance and the Nora, have all now been released from the Emerson drydock, and Will sail for their respective fields of operations -n the course of a few days. Arthur Claxton, of Barrle, arrived in the city yesterday. Mr. Claxton Is on a business tour ln the west. Me is a guest ut Columbian college, and ���.t tho same time ls visiting bin sister. Miss M. E. Claxton, musical Instructor at tho college. Capt, Myers who Is bringing a scow loadel with 260 Ions of coal for tht! Now Westminster gas works, from Tacomti, telephoned Mr. Brown the. manager that he was storm st lycl nt Anacortes, und would not attempt to Notice of Meeting To W. II. Keary, Esq., mayor: We, the undersigned citizens of New Westminster, hereby request that, you will call a public meeting for the purpose of considering the advisability of forming science classes In connection with the board of education, South Kensington, England. Waller R. Gilley. T. S. Annandale. I'. Bowlor. j. W. Croighton. John Peck. P. Maxwell. F. w. Howay. p. Peebles, W. L. Johnson. T. J. Trapp. Henry Schaake. T). C. Patterson. John C. nigliy. J H. Watson. Peter Gray. ]�� .8. Curtis. J. s. Henderson. W, E. Brown. In accordance with the above requisition, I hereby call a meeting of tho ratepayers for the purpose stated; said meeting to bo held In the council chr��"iber on Tuesday, the lath Inat, at 8 p. m. W. H. KEARY, Mayor. City hull, March 8, 1906. Choice Residence Buy with 132 feet frontage on ALBERT CRESCENT Superb outlook and good soil for garden. Improvements and all for Only $1,600 If you want it, better speak quickly. Matins, Coulthard & Co. Financial, Insurance & Real Estate Agents. Tel. 106. Columbia St. B. C. Monumental Works JAMES McKAY, Proprietor. importer and manufacturer of Marble and Granite Monuments, Headstones, Tablets, Tombstones, Etc. B. C. Mills* Timber and Trading Company VANCOUVER AND NEW WESTMINSTER Manufacturers and Dealers in AU Kinds of Lumber, Lath, Shingles, Mouldings, Sash, Doors, Interior Finish, Turned Work, Etc. Fish and Fruit Boxes. Large Stock Plain and Fancy Glass. FARMERS ATTENTION! Lumber Always in Stock for Fencing and Draining. Royal City Branch, Columbia St., Telephone 12. New Westminster. Write for prices. New Westminster, B. C. Announcement For First Class Repair Work Give Me a Trial. WATCHES, CLOCKS ....ANr.... JEWELLERY Any make or design I can repair it anil make it |rood us new. Horace Dorer, \ Kate of Trnrey's. Columbia Street, Next Tram OfTicc I Advertise in the News IT PAYS Electric Railway Service; InterurUan Line. Cars for Vancouver and way stations at 6.1)1) anil ti.tit) n.m,. untl every hour thereafter between x a.in. ami n p.m. Half hour cars irom lism. to 7 p.m. Cars leave Vancouver tor Westminster nt same nours. Last car Saturday at 11 p.m. city Limits Line���service nom 8.i i a.ie to iti.au p.m. 20 b'inute ilrrvice���NO transfer. iti weiii \'i and 2 and b and 7. 30 Minute Service during ro- ,, malnder of day. Transfer at f Leopold Place. Sunday Service notiny netweon ,, 8 a.m. and lu p.m. ��� > City and Sapperton. ��� ��� Sapperton Line���lb Minute Snr- ,, vice, except between in and ii 2, anil 5 and I, during which ] | hours tho service will bo ,, half-hourly, Sunday Service liiilf-nourly be twoen 8 a.m. and IV p.m. British Columbia Electric Ry. Co., ltd. j; ���������^������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������^,