{"AIPUUID":[{"label":"AIP UUID","value":"1ef94aab-b6cd-4bba-bf87-83ee85d27e43","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP","classmap":"oc:DigitalPreservation","property":"oc:identifierAIP"},"iri":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP","explain":"UBC Open Collections Metadata Components; Local Field; Refers to the Archival Information Package identifier generated by Archivematica. This serves as a link between CONTENTdm and Archivematica."}],"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"label":"Aggregated Source Repository","value":"CONTENTdm","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:dataProvider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who contributes data indirectly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"AlternateTitle":[{"label":"Alternate Title ","value":"[New Westminster Daily News]","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/alternative","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:alternative"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/alternative","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An alternative name for the resource.; Note - the distinction between titles and alternative titles is resource-specific."}],"DateAvailable":[{"label":"Date Available","value":"2015-12-18","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DateIssued":[{"label":"Date Issued","value":"1913-11-07","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"label":"Digital Resource Original Record","value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nwdn\/items\/1.0315938\/source.json","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:aggregatedCHO"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The identifier of the source object, e.g. the Mona Lisa itself. This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" *m****ma\n. _......11\nNews Classified Ads.\nHave  proven their worth by the\nresults   they   produce.     They   fill\nlarge   or   small   wants   at   amall\ncost.\nMttlvr&\nThe Weather.\nN'ew Westminster and  the  lower\nmainland:   Mostly cloudy with rain\ntonight or Saturday.\n*******\n****\nVOLUME 8, NUMBER 205.\n.*.-?\n%\nMACPHERSON MAY\nCONTEST REEVESHIP\nKeeve and Councillor of Burnaby Have Another Verbal Battle.\nMAY SECURE LOAN\nFROM NEW YORK\nFinancial   Situation   Reviewed\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBank\nRefuses  Further Credit to\nMunicipality.\nTO\neiC*\nHJEW WESTMINSTER,  B.C.,  FRIDAY  MORNING, NOVEMBER 7,  1913.\n-iii .   ...  _   \t\nPRICE FIVE CENT*\nIF\nUSE JEWS.\nMa\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_.*\n,g Msn Accused of\nMurder to America.\nOW York. Nov. H.- Philanthropic\nHebtewB here today announced that\nnegotiations have heen made to bring\nMendel HeillsB, the Jew charged with\nritual murder at Kiev, Hussia ,to this\ncountry, In casu he Is acquitted.\nBelllaH Ib very Ignorant, but It Is\nthought he could talk enough to\narouHe the Jews here against the con\ndition*. existing in Russia.\nBelllss, if he comes, will be accompanied by Counsel (Irouseuberg.\nir he ii* sent to Siberia, Grousenberg\nwill lecture throughout America to\npay the money going to support\nlleillBs' destitute ramlly.\nJ ATTEMPT MADETO   ORGANIZATION TO\nASSASSINATE DIAZ:   EIGHT TAMMANY\nRESTRICTED AREA\nIS CLOSED OUT\nNorth Burnaby, Nov. 6. The verbal\nclashes between members or the Burnaby councll changed rrom the muni\nclpal hull'to the Capital lllll school\nbouse last evening when the reeve\nand several or the councillors reviewed the present conditions existing In\ntho municipality. \/\nCouncillor MacpherBon, who, It Ib\nrumored will make the race ror the\nreeveship In January, waa again In a\nrighting mood and arter explaining all\nthe good work he had done In the\ncouncil during the past year, stated\nthat ulnce Klng\ufffd\ufffdway had been built.\nIhe adjacent property had depreciated\nto hair lt\ufffd\ufffd former value.\nReeve McOregor disputed this state\nment and In a fiery but brier reply.\nHtated that \"Councillor Macpherson\nhaa no right to make such raah, rotten and bad statements as the one he\nli.u ju\ufffd\ufffdt  made ubout  Kingsway \"\nThe reeve reviewing the present fl-\n*nanclal i-iiuatlon Htated that the municipality owes lh\ufffd\ufffd Koyal Bank or Canada $600,000 and that the bank had\nretired to extend more credit but lor\nall that the council was optimistic\not the future The municipality owes\nscliool orriclaU $20,000. pollce and\nCivic oofflclals $10,000 and $60,000 han\nmill to be paid on the Kingsway work\nwhile even the councillors were re-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdcelvmg no pay whatever.\nThe reave stated  that  preparations\nwere being  msde tor the flotation ot j\ntreasury   certifies!.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  bearing    6     peri\nrent interest running three yuam and\nIt might be Imperative for one or the I Liberal\ncouncillors   to   visit     the     American\ncities ot Chicago and New Vork ln or\n<lcr to float a portion or thin loan\nCouncillor McDonald also addressed\nthe m-M'tina. paying special attention\nto the work lielng done In North llur\nnaby and how the telephone company\nwas now Installing Instruments In a\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffddistrict which had clamored for thetn\ntor the past three wars.\nInmates of Houses Have Gone Follow.\ning Order of Police Issued on\nTuesday.\nNew Westminster's restricted district must go, or rather has already\ngone. The agitation or the Citizens'\nleague, followed by Mayor (Jray's\nprompt fulfilment or his proposal, and\neiiually prompt action by the police,\nis responsible. Now every dweller o.\nthe houBOs has been told to leave and\nmost  have done so.\nl_aBt Friday two Vancouver deaconesses visited the places, and arter being well received stated the police\ncommission's proposal tbat arter being asked to change their mode of\nlire the girls were to be told to leave\nthe cily. 8ome of Ihem promised to\n\"think It over.\" snd said It they decided to follow the deaconegges' advice tbey would go to a home In Vancouver. This waa reported to the\nmayor. On Tuesday orders were Is-\nsuid lo the police to close the houses.\nAttacked by Party of Mexi-! Democrats Make First Defi-\ncans   in   Havana\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNot\nSeriously Hurt.\nAssailant Badly    Injured   by    Shot-\nNumber of Arrests\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAlleged Insult Cause of Trouble.\nHavana, Nov. 6. --General Felix\nDiaz, who recently escaped from the\nclutches ol I'reBldent Huerta of Mexico\nfollowing the latter's reelection to\nthe presidency, was stabbed here tonight by a young Mexican named\nPedro Guerrero. Diaz was removed to\nthe hospital where he Is resting easy\nand refused to make any Btatement.\nThe attack on Diaz occurred while\nhe was walking on the Malecon, a ts-\nsliii.nable promenade, ln company\nwith a fellow fugitive named Louis\nMalda. He was wounded behind the\near and In the neck, besides receiving\nseveral blows on the head with a cane,\nills assailant  was arrested.\nDiaz and Malda were listening to\nthe band in the Malecon when a group\nof Mexicans, among whom was Guerrero, passed the Diaz party. Diaz is\nsaid to have made an unpleasant remark about the followers or Carranza\nwhereupon Guerrero went to the seawall where another group of Mexicans   were  seated   and  told   them   or\nnite Move to Establish\nAlliance.\nNew Vork. Nov. 6.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe first\ndelinlte move for a permanent organization of Democrats in opposition to\nTammany Hall was made tonight\nwhen the executive committee of the\nanti-Tammany Jeffersonlan Alliance\ndecided to take steps to make the\nalliance a permanent political body.\nThe name of the body probably will\nbe changed.\n. Tlie alliance was formed and the\npresent name adopted merely for the\npurposes of the recent city election.\nKight Independent Democratic organizations united in the movement. The\ncasting of 25,000 votes under its emblem convinced tbe leaders, Chairman\nBert Hanson said, that the party\nshould be continued and enlarged.\nHENNESSY PRESSES\nCHARGES OP GRAFT\nWitness Denies He Supplied\nList of Firms Which Furnished Funds.\nTells of \"Bag < Man\"    for Tammany\nHall in Collections of Contributions In New York.\nNO BOARD OF CONTROL\nVancouver City Council Decide to\nTurn Down Charter Amendment.\nVancouver, Nov. 6.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe charter\namendment to have a board of control\nand eight aldermen for this city was\nrinally turned down today at a meeting or the city council. <\nArguments were brought forward\nthat It had been a great success ln\nToronto. Calgary and Winnipeg, but\nit was stated in reply that lt did not\nwork so successfully there as had\nbeen anticipated. The voting was\nseven to eight against. There was\none absentee.\nCLARKE AND DAVIS\nGUILTY Of MURDER\nNew Vork, Nov. 6.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGeorge H. Mc-\nGulre of Syracuse, denied on the witness stand today that be had furnished John A. Hennessy, former Governor Sulzer's graft Investigator, with\na list of construction firms which had\nbeen \"sand bagged\" into giving campaign contributions to Tammany hall\nas testified by Hennessy last week.\nMcGulre is a brother of James K.\nMcGuIre, former Democratic mayor ol\nSyracuse and with him a partner in\nthe rirm or McGulre and company, engaged   ln   bonding  construction  companies and  in  liability Insurance, appeared as a witness in the John Doe\nproceedings instituted by District Attorney  Whitman  to investigate Hennessy's charges.\nArter  McGulre  had  sworn   he  had\ncan securities   which    have   already  never specified to Hennessy a single\nbeen  cashed   or  discounted  and  the | instance or any construction company\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- ' engaged In state highways or barge\ncanal work having given up campaign\ncontributions, he waB withdrawn from\nthe stand.   Hennessy taking his place,\nParis Banks Puzsled.\nParis,  Nov. 6.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSome cf the Paris\nbanks    are puzzled    over    the    new\nAmerican income tax law.   They sold\nsome $5,000,000 of coupons of Amerl\nopinion is expressed that tbe French I\nbanks may lose tbe 1 per cent. Income\ntax to be collected in  the place   of\nthe alleged  insult.    The entire party i^\"'    Mauy    inquirie8   \"***   been\nthen came back to Diaz and following'\nat   the United States embassy\nhot wordB the attack was made on\nDiaz, during which the police interfered. Some person ln the crowd drew\na revolver and tired, the bullet striking Guerrero. At the hospital it was\nfound that the wounds upon Diaz were\nonly .uperNclal and that the patient\nwas  In  little danger.\naud consulate general here ln regard\nto the new  tax.\n|\nreiterated his statement and added he\n(Continued oi Page Four.)\nHOUSE IS OPENED\nWITH BRILLIANCY\nSecond Seasion of Third  Parliament\nSaskatchewan  Opened  Yesterday by Lieutenant Governor.\nof\nRegina, Nov. \ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWith unusual brilliancy the Becond session or the third\nparliament of Saskatchewan was opened today by Lieutenant Governor\nBrown.\nIn the chamber the guard of honor\nof all the officers of the 95th Saskatchewan Rifles. 16th Light Horse,\n26th battery and of the corps of guards\nIn the city. They were grouped on\neither side of tbe throne.\nOn the floor of the house were seated the judges of the school and district court, their wives, wives of the\nmembers, deputy ministers and of-\nricers of the local regiments. The\nBcene was a striking one, for in addition to those already mentioned, the\nfloor of the house had been opneed\nto over a hundred ladles of Regina\nand other cttiea of the province.   The\nSlayers of Vancouver Constable Will Be Hanged in\nThis City.\n  .-\nBOTH SWEAR OTHER\nCOMMITTED CRIME\n\"Thank   You.\"    Said   Clarke   Wham)\nSentenced\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMother and Sweet.\nheart in Court\nVancouver, Nov. 6\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdClarke and\nDavis, the two men accused of the\nmurder of Police Constable Archibald\non May 28 last, were found guilty\nthis evening at the assizes here and\nwere sentenced to be hanged in hies?\nWestminster on January 15. Each\nman took the witness stand In his\nown defence and accused the other\nof the crime. Their story was sitnl- '\nlar in many respects. Clarke stated\nthat Davis flred the fatal shot after\nthe constable bad taken a jimmy from\nhim, while Davis swore that while\nthe officer wae> searching Clarke, the\nlatter drew his gun and flred three\nshots.\nAsked why sentence of death should\nnot be pronounced on him Clarke\nsaid:   \"Why not, the only thing Is ve\nSIR WILFRID\nWlll BE BUSY\nLeader   Maps  Out  extensive\nProgram  Until the  Reassembling\nef Congress.\nHUERTA f AILS TO\nANSWER WILSON\n| Oltawa. Nov 6. - Sir Wilfrid\n'Laurier. leader uf tho opposition, has\nmapped out    a    Bomnwhat    extensive\nprogram tor lbe time Intervening be\nItwean Hub time and lhe reassembling\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdot congress and Judging by dates ai-\n11 .id.,   set   will   nol   he   idle.\nHc wlll be the Kuesl ot Lieutenant\n[Governor   Langller  ot Quebec  on   the\ni pen ing ot  the  provincial   legislature.\nOO November 16 ho will address the\nJ Young Liberal clubs or Ontario at a\nj banquet   to be held at  brantford and\nHEROIC NURSE.\ngalleries were packed with those who \"*!. n? 8uU,y of the char8e- I am\nwere not fortunate enough to have \ufffd\ufffdntirf,y,\" y\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' merc\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"*' wlu not\nBe\ufffd\ufffdts on the floor of the house. hnd fault with the sentence.\"   \"Thaak\nFollowing the reading of the speech you',he \"^marked   ou   being   sent-\nIfrom the throne, new members were |*nSIS\nintroduced. The premier, Hon. Walter The only tWn\ufffd\ufffd l would Hhe to\nScotCand the attorney general, Hon.j\"*1-\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd**-*- Davis, \"1 was preeent, toft\nA. Turgeon, Introduced Mr. Hall, the had no naLnd la the shooting. 1 bad\nnewl member from Cumberland, while I0*8 misfortune to be preeent.\"\nMr. Malcolm of Hanley. ln succession I Clarke's mother and sweetheart\n.     ,        \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.,,., ito Mc.  MacNeill. was introduced by were iu court at the time and had to\nYeaterday was \"garbage can   day ln the health officials  clean-up cam-  Hon   j   A   Caider \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,,, Hon    w     R   be assisted trom the building at the\npaign.    Inspections  were  almost  totally  confined   to  residences,  and  with | Motherwell. I termination of the trial.\nW. O. Wlllonghby. opposition leader.!  '\t\n\"GARBAGE CAN DAY\"\nIN CLEAN-UP CAMPAIGN!\nJumps in Bay and Saves Insane Survivor ot Vortvrno.\nWashington,   Nov.   6.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMartha   No-\nvlck,  an  immigrant  girl escaped  the,\nterrors ot the burning Volturno only 1 hardly an exception places where the metal garbage can was in evidence\nto tall 111 and become temporarily in-1 were given a clean slate. Some houses had wooden barrels or tubs, but\nsane In the Kllis island hospital where j guch containers are used contrary to the Inspectors' advice and should, they\nshe eluded her nurses and flung her- . .  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* \ufffd\ufffd__.-\ufffd\ufffd_:' Il  ,.. _..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_,._._i _._\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nself into New York bay I \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd b* replaced *l *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd sanlury mctaI covered can'\nThe heroism or a nnrie, Miss Anna I        Better even than huving a garbage can Is to burn the refuse in the stove\nOlsen, who plunged Into tbe warer ar- or .urnace.   This saves work for tba health department and Is even more\nter the Insane woman and after it hard  sanitary than leavin* grrbage to watt the coming of the collector.\nfight brought her ssfely to the dock The west end of the ctty, west ot Twelfth street, was found to be clean.\nwhere garbage had  been  thrown  out loose,  were found.\nwbere both were saved, waa made the\nsubject of an Investigation by Surgeon\nGeneral Blue, of the public health\nservice, with a recommendation that\nMIbb Olscn's bravery be rewarded by\na substantial increase ln pay.\nentered a formal protest against Mr.\nHall taking his  seat.\nHon. Mr. Caider, Messrs. Smith and\nMitchell of the government, and\nMessrs. Willoughby and Donaldson of\ntbe opposition were appointed a com\nmitte to strike the standing commit\ntees.\nllut a few  yards.\nThe metal can was popular.   An hour's survey of Leopold Place brought no Porcuoine  Ont    Mov  \ufffd\ufffd    <!M\ninfringements ot the health bylaw to light.    The places visited were clean L.\ufffd\ufffd0\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,*,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^??*'-O?t-'.'\\0.T- ?.rS*r\nBoy  Hero  Drowned.\nmmm\nmm m\nApparently Intends to Nullify Election and Remain\nin Power.\nNo    New    Developments   Announced\nfrom White House\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCablegram\nto O'Shaughnessy.\nHeld for Theft In Regina.\nMcorhead, Minn.. Nov. 6.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJ. E.\nArmstrong Ih being held at Sauk\nCentre, Minn., on the charge cf stealing an automobile from a garage In\nItegina, Sask., some time Saturday\nnight, lie ls being held pending the\nwill also speak at Hamilton about the jBrr|va| of Canadian authorities.\nsame date.    About   the  middle ot De-  ,\nceiflber   tbe  Liberal  chler  expects to cate  Held Over.\nbe in Toronto where he wilt formally     Whitby, Ont..    Nov.   6.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe   case1\nopen the Ontario club aud address the |BKainst stead    Cable,    of    the    Iron\nmembers,    lie   will also   address the i workers' union, Toronto, in which S|\nUniversity Literary association. true bm  was  returned in connection '\nA   number   of   other   appointments \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdjjj,  t(,e destruction    of    a  Bcaffold\nWashington, Nov. 6. -No new de\nvelopments, good, bud or Indifferent\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nthis waa the word tha'. came from the\nwhin house late today as to the\ngtatUI of the Me-.lean situation, following lhe presentation to Provision-\nnl I'rcBld'tit lluerta or the wish of\nthe l'nited  S'ati\ufffd\ufffds that he resign.\nThose who had uny doubl about the\npress despatches from Mexico City\nilPBorlblng Ihe last representations\nmade to lluerta had the -situation\n-clarified for them to an extent today\nby administration officials. From the\nWhite House ll became known that\nthe views ol the l'nited States on the\nrecent election In Mexico were set\nforth In a cablegram to Nelson\nO'Shaughnessy, the charge d-affalres\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdof the Amerloan embassy at Mexico\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCity.\nThis cablegram contained certain\n\"'Instructions.\" Just what the lnstruc.\ntlons were, no one would divulge, the\nofficials saying they were of a confidential nature. It was recalled that\nwhen the negotiations began with the\nHureta government, there was no\nformal note, but \"Instructions tn .lohn\nLind.\" In Ihls way recognition of tho\nHuerta government through thc technicality was averted.\nFrom the way the Whlto House\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffddiscussed the situation, lt appears\nthat Instructions to Mr. O'Shaugh-\nsNiessy convey the desire of tho United\n.states lo Oenersl Huerta were substantially outlined In despatches from\nMexico City last Monday, although\ntho state department's denial that\nTiny \"ultimatum\" had been aent waa\nregarded by many conversant with\nthe Bituation as Indicating that the\nUnited States government In Its communication to Mr. O'Shaughnessy did\nnot uocesBarlly mean that It had said\nits last word in the parleys.\nit became evident at the White\nHouse that the president considers\nlho elections of October 28 not onlv\nas Invalid aa to the presidency nnd\nror which dates have not been  fixed\nare being considered.\nPRIVATE  BILL.\nWill Press for Legislation Governing\nIncorporated Companies.\nOttawa, Nov. 6.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe private bill\nwhich alma at a revision of the companies act will be Introduced again at\ntlie approaching session of parliament\nby Major Sam Sharpe, M. P. of North\nOntario.\nThe chief object of the bill is to\nsecure a greater measure of publicity\nfor companies Incorporated by the\nDominion department of state. It\ncalls for the publication of an annual\nstatement by all Incorporated com-\npsnles.\nMajor Sharpe Is hopeful thst the\nbill which he has Introduced three\ntimes wlll be made a government\nmeasure at the next session, but If\nit Is not, he proposes to press It on\nthe attention of the house himself.\nrope hy tho use or suphurlc acid. Is\ntemporarily halted. H. H. Dewart,\nK.C, for the detencc, Is ready to go\non, but says thc crown Is held up by\nthe absence of a material witness.\nINCIPIENT RIOT ON\nCOLUMBIA STREET\nney Smith, aged 11. lost his life    in j\nI Edwards lake near here, but rescued L~_        ,\ufffd\ufffd______   no mn\n| Nina Hogg, aged V*. who had broken  Uver  ZuW   ll*00|)S   E-flCamp\nthrough  the  Ice.    Sidney lay  flat on j      . _,'______\nthe ice and- reached    her,    but    sbe       M UldianapollS\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAntlCl-\nstruggled so that    the Ice gave way I\nand both sank.    Others rushed to thel pate MbfC Trouble.\nrescue and Nina was saved. '\nCUT Off FINGERS\nTO OBTAIN RINGS\nOfficial of Mining Company Murdered\nat Instigation cf Constitutionalist\nLeader,\nPolice Officers Attempt to\nQuell Fight and Are\nAttacked.\nINTERIOR OF HOUSE IN FOREIGN QUARTER CONDEMNED\nBY SANITARY  IN8PECTOR.\n(Continued on Page Five.)\nRagle Paaa. Tea., Nov. 1\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWelnger,\nassistant superintendent of the\nPenoles Mining company at Maplml,\nstate of Durango, Mexico, waa robbed nhd then killed at the direction\nor a Constitutionalist leader, according to Information brought to Eagle\nPass toulght by Ernest Miller, an\nofficial of the mining oompany. Miller\nwith other refugees reached the bor-\nder after an overland Journey of IR\ndays. Miller aald that after Welnlger\nh,'d been killed hls Angers were oat\noiT so that the constitutionalist leader\nmight obtain hla rings.\nThe refugees who arrived tonight\nwire escorted to tho boundary hy a\nrel'ef expedition aent to Maplml two\nmonths ago. They were the last of\ntie American residents to quit tha\nni:.ilng settlement.\nOne man ln custody while the ar\nrest or two others is Imminent, was\nthe result of an incipient riot which\ntook place on Alexander street at 11\no'clock last evening and which tor a\ntime looked like a free for all between friends or the fighting parties\nwith the police offlcera battling the\ntwo combined.\nWilliam Porter Is the man under arrest with a charge of disorderly eon-\nduct placed againat him iu the pollce\nblotter, which may be changed to a\ncharge of attempted assaalt on a member of the police force.\nThe police drag net la spread for\nRichard Spring and Harry Mitchell,\nboth well known In the city, the former tor fighting on the puhllc atreet\nand with escaping from custody, while\nMitchell Is wanted on a mora serious\ncharge ot assaulting a peace offloer\nin the performance ot hla duty.\nThe trouble started outside tha Central hotel at 11 o'clock whan Detective Burrows came serosa Bprlng and\nPorter fighting on the pavement. Bar\nrowe held on to Porter, Instructing a\nbystander named William Bailey to\nhold Spring. Harry Mitchell butted\nInto tnt scrap, and although warMt\"\nto keep away, assaulted Bailey from\nthe rear and released Spring. Both\nmen disappeared and although search\nwaa made tor the two men up to aa\nearly hour thla morning no trace\ncould he found ot them. Constable*\nLundl and W. Milne aaaUted ta quelling tha riot Just after Spring aa*\nMitchell had mado their getaway.\nand well kept. Cunningham street yarda with about half a dozen exceptions,\nwere clean, Cevernl manure pllea there must be removed at once. In one\nInstance pecple living near a stable, told of the great number of fllea, which\nthe officers explained originated In the nearby manure heap.\na a * * *\nOne favorite reason given by tenants for til-kept yarda waa that\npeople who lived here before did moat of It\"\n*    *     *    *    *\nPILGRIMS WEiCOHE\nHON. JAMES BRYCE\nLate British Ambassador to\nWashington Guest at London Banquet.\n'the\nMany premises showed signs ot recant eleanlnga. There eeemed to be\nan unuaual buret of effort In thia direction and a common greeting from ua\nman of the houae waa \"come right In, luat happened to be straightening np\na bit today.\" *    .   **.    *    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nResidential dlatricta will be again the object ot *\ufffd\ufffd^\ufffd\ufffd* ****&\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*!\nSanitary Inspectora Pearce and Walmsley and the medical health officer\nexpect to finish their campaign by lata Saturday.\n*    a    *    *    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nFlrat the health offlcera. then the plumbing taapector and fatferdajr the\nbuilding Inspector visited Chinatown, and tha Inspection of each am brin-J\n\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd am***\nThe blnta below ara from tho booklet leaned trom tha tlty hall laat weak.\nThey are every ona worth considering:\n\"Do not place anything in tha garb-aba can hnt kitchen refaea nad alwnya\ndrain all the water trom it before doing as.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDo not keep your can or any other receptacle toajde the MMm: the\ncollectora are forbidden to go tnaMe tor reoeotutaa. inhere Isia tons\ufffd\ufffd tW\nrear ot your premises, place yonr as* near It, and not |Mt wMjjtty htt-\nchen door. By doing thla. you wUl aaaaths scavenger!ixmtmiol ^Vm- ta a\nday. and you will epnaeqosntly get a mora frequent *m* hattar wHBk.\n\"Sncura tha garbage can trom Mag tnrnad \ufffd\ufffdr*t by dogs by drtotog a\nstick through ana handle firmly Into tha ground.\n,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, \"Paaa a chain or wlra through tho hand* *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *** \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd**.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd***p** H to tha tenon\nhy a tuple and you *t 111 nartr tatt li\n\"Incombustible refui\nanow and they should\nlano.  Do net keep yoi\nduring tha winter and ....   . .\ntlon of eta montha la a taar dayt In theeprtag.\n\"Burn aa much paper, roga. atraw. tto. an poasjhle. snd tokM\ufffd\ufffd tto\ncity's etreett and lanes clean. It thlt tt Impnaathla. Ua It up U msaOm Wt\nplace It la a covered bog nenr tht garbnga oan.\"\nLondon, Nov. 6.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-A large and distinguished gathering welcomed the Rt.\nHon. James Bryce, late British ambassador to Washington, at a dinner\ngiven ia his honor by the Pilgrims tonight The American ambaesador.\nWalter H. Page, read messages from\ntbe president ot the United SUtea.\nJoseph H. Choate. former ambassador\nat London, and others. President Wilson's measage waa aa follows:\n\"Few men have done mora than\nJamea Bryce lfi strengthening the twa\nof friendship and brotherhood which\nunite Kngland tad America and hare\nbeen Ue cauae ot common aaplrntlon\nand high example to Ue whole world.\"\nTho prealdent ot Ue Panama-Pacific\nInternational   exposition. Chariot C.\nMooro. onbltd: \"I attll honattat tho   .\nBritiah and American \ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd^*L*i^\\-*\ufffd\ufffd** *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd!**\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,, _.\ntogether at San Frondee* In lttt.\" Martini Uw\nCity May Be Hacetf Under Control of\nOfficers Today\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWord Expected\nfrom Governor.\nIndianapolis, lnd., Nov. 6.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIndiana's\nentire national guard, consisting of\nmore than 2000 soldiers, is encamped\nin different parts of Indianapolis,\nready for duty in connection with Ua '\nstrike of the employees of the Indianapolis Traction and Terminal\ncompany.\nSpecial trains brought Ue troopa\nwhich detrained in the suburbs, virtually surrounding the town. Great\nsecrecy waa maintained aa to Ua\ncoming of Ue mllltla and tew citlsenn\nknew Uat the troopa had been called\nuntil late tonight Aa Ue trains bringing Ue various detachments arrived\nthey were halted at Ue aubnrbn.\nTroopa wart not sent into the, towm\nuntil a sufficient force had boen aa-\nsembled to preclude Uo possibility\nof a clash wiU tha strikers who\ngathered In Ue downtown streets om\nlearning thnt tha militia hM '\ncalled ont\nTha troopa will remain In\nuntil tomorrow morning.\nOfflcera In charge ot Ut troaun declined to any tonight whether atmet\n~ hgr aoMten.\nMr. ^ryco\nbegan\nbelief\nMl   _\nthat thn\nby a*\nqueation would ba so*** la a manner\nsatlafactory to bott countritt. Thnt\nbelief, ht taM. waa baaed on hla conviction ot tht high rectitude and tlt-\nvatad etaa-eot honor and tatarnntlonal\nto replying to critlt-ama mtdt fe\nConservative praeeef hiesrarkaaa\nbaiandtr.   Ht aasphastsed the\n&U4-_^'Sb\ufffd\ufffdV\nMartial Mw had not bean\ntarty tonight.\ntonight, hot n prtottmntl-aai\ng thn fttty under control tt t%*\ntroopa M expected trom 'IM\ntoft oBoe before mean tan.\nNearly Mt woman, mambara \ufffd\ufffdMkn\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdrm.\n?t__rs\ufffd\ufffd^M\ufffd\ufffd%Nr.\nMutton at tht ttf-fM tn-r ttrtkt-\nqnlln apmttoMtfMi at ths\nft,.:\n to tot emptro nt'\ntond*.  Ht thtn made VdWet\nto thett ig.lhjlt\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  anytnt Ml\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd        .'      *   ***.. a   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\"_'. ***t.****i* :'**-* * ...\nnot hart noticed thaa*. *********\nImportant\ntednjT*\nhla dBfttMMtd ****.\n- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd am**a*% in _____\nanust tew m am*\n*a*tt pcratnt BMduuww\nSmsa****** \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\noMMofhM\nmm\n.;*\namb\naWm''\n?'\nM\n:M\n:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' PAGI TWO\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS.\nFRIDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1113.\n:IUtorj\ufffd\ufffd-\nAa independent mnrnlnp paper devoted to the Inter-eta of Sew Westminster and\nMe Frassr Valley. Published every morning except Sunday by the national Printing\nStat Pabllthing Company, Limited, at S3 McKensle Street. New Westminster, .Iriitsh\nOafomM*. ROBB SUTHERLAND,  Managing  Director.\nAll communications should be addressed to The Nexo Westminster Newt, and not\n9* individual mtmbert ot tht staff. Cheques, drafts, ond money order- should tie made\nable to The National Printing snd Publishing Company, Limited.\nTRLEPUONBS\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBusiness Offioe and -.onager, 98H, Editorial Kooms (all depart -\nits), 111.\nSUBSCRIPTION RAThS\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBy earrler, ti per year, 11 for three month*, 40o per\nassmth.    By mail. $3 per year, 25e per month,\nADVERTISING RATES oh application.\nBOARD Or TRADE\nIS CLAIM\nFRIDAY  MORNING, NOVEMBER 7, 1913.\nBritish   Body    Maintains    Secrecy   on\nApproaching   Maritime\nConference.\nLondon. Nov. 6.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdConsiderable sur-'\nprise is felt that the board of trade\nhaB not yot announced either Its rep-1\nicsentatlves or the agenda for the International maritime conference on ,\n\"Safety at Sea,\" which meets in I.on-\ndon on  November 12th.    This feeling\nis coupled with indignation at th\" of-,\nfieos of the National Sailors' and Klre- \\\nmen's union, whose committee are un-\nable to understand the secrecy which j\nis   being  observed   in   the   matter   by,\nSidney Hnxton and the permanent ofilcials of the board of trade.\nHavelock Wilson, the secretary, declared that he had an impression that\nthe matter was being handled by the\nhoard in the same secret manner as\nthe alteration of Uie scale of freeboard\nlor British ships. Mr. Wilson continued: \"Why this secrecy? I cannot\nunderstand it, aa I should have\nthought that everyone had an Interest\nin greater safety at sea. Certainly\nthe committee of this union, which\nrepresents some ninety thousand men,\nhas a very keen Interest. Yet up to\nthe present time the committee has\nseen no public announcement of the\nappointment of the representatives of\nOreat Britain, who are to sit on this\ninternational  conference.\nIn   reply  to questions  which    were\nTHE HARBOR IMPROVEMENT WORK.\nThere seems to be strained relations existing between\nthe occupiers of waterfront lots and the city council with\nregard to the harbor improvement scheme and all for the\nlack of a little, friendly get-together session.\nNew Westminster wants the harbor improvement\nplan worked out, but at the same time this city does not\ndesire its prosecution in such a manner as to force industries long established here to move to other locations. The\nfirms which are located along the waterfront complain\nof the high rentals to be charged and already a couple of\nthem have intimated that they will pull up stakes and\nmove elsewhere rather than pay. Two others, among the\nlargest and most substantial concerns in the city told\nThe News yesterday that they were seriously considering\ntaking the same step.   Evidently *the situation, if it is al-|g& '^^^UUT'SSjSgg |\nlowed to slide much farther, will reach that stage usually Ifor tllp board ot trade- induced pa.Ha-\nj \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd__    i -i-     i ,i -,i    ji i-i     * ment to believe that an international\ndescribed as critical or acute, but with the proper kind of j mad line committee had been appoint-\nhandling there is no reason why patters should come to ^ tin' .S^att^f ^ m?\nthat pass.  Other problems, considerably more difficult of ,me\" \">\ufffd\ufffd*>\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ton representation on the\n1 ' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd body he rejoined  that  it was only to\nbe  a   committee  of  experts.     II   did,\nhowever, seem remarkable that some\nof the so-called  experts  were  under-\n-p, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      i       \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     _\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   i    i     .i      \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd i       i , ,    writers and shipowners, ond why they\nine main basis trom which both-sides have to work should know more about the load line\nis that of the best interests of the city.   The firms along ^^SS&uSS VwYow^\nappears with regard to the International conference on safety at sea, and\njudging from the Information which is\ncoming from Oermany and the United\nStates, that this body Is to consider\ndeck loads that are carried on ships,\nmanning questions, seamen's agreements, wireless telegraphv* boats, and\nefficient equipment.\nAH these questions are of vital importance to seafaring men. and although Mr. Buxton claims to be democratic he has certainly not gone out\nof his way to enlighten the members\nof the National Sailors' and Firemen's\nunion of the fact that such a conference has been appointed, nor has he\nallowed it to be divulged up to the\npresent time what this body is going\nto talk about, ln all probability the\nshipowners are at any rate well in-\nI formed on the subject, and for all that\nis known the representatives of the\nshipowners, and underwriters, who are\nvery largely shipowners, have been I\npractically appointed.\nHumor and\nPhilosophy\nh, 0 VAC A H M. SMITH\nTWO  OLD   FRIENDS.\nflUIE tuneful tale of Jack and Jill\n-t    Has aerved uh long and well.\nNew grnet-Rtlons come alons\nAnd on It 1..irn to aped.\nTliey get ttie story ot these two\nOf very |Nt| renown.\nWhen they have children of their own\nTo them they hand it down.\nCan you recall\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdlust pause snd think\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nA day so Ions iixo\nThat you were not Informed is to\nThe details of their woe?\nHow after waler up the hill\nThey went and tumbled down;\nHow Jill escaped without s scratch\nTo match Jack's fractured crownT\nJust where they lived we do oot know.\nAs lo their other name\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nIf tt was Johnson, Jones or Brown,\nTo us It's all thi same.\nlf Jack got well we never heard*\nWhit's more, wa never wlll\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd        i\nNor If Jack's father found It bard\nTo pay the doctor'! bill.\nThis simple little Incident\nIs ail wa have been told\nAbout these two that wa hava know*\nSince wa were ona year old.\nThey might hava told ua. anyway.\nIf Jill was sent along\nTo get tha water all alone\nTill Jack sot well and strong.\nHUNTING PARIY\nLOST BY FIRE\nTent Burnt and Gum, Baggage,  Etc.,\nEurn\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWeather Too Warm\nfor Deer.\nsolution, have been met and satisfactorily disposed of in\nthe past.\nthe waterfront necessarily wish to see New Westminster\nprosper because their trade is here. The council stands\nfor the welfare of the city because its members have been\nelected to take care of it. Neither side desires anything to\nhappen which in any way would give this port a setback.\nThey may not see eye-to-eye at present, but negotiations,\nundertaken in a friendly spirit, would be certain to remove the obstacles which now appear to block the path\nof progress.\nThe question seems to be one which claims the immediate attention of the city council.\n\"How  did   ihey   make\nitoue age.\"\n\"How sbould I  know?\"\n\"I suppose the man with tlif\nrocks got the s_lrl.\"\nPenticton,  Nov.  6. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd T.  IC.  Andrews,\nI manager   of   the   Canadian   Hank   of [\nI Commerce,   and   Mrs.   Andrews,   who;\nihave spent three weeks hunting in the,\nI hills up near the bead waler of Shingle ;\ncreek, returned on .Monday ufternoon j\nfrom their trip, bringing In four deer.,\n[Mr,   Andrews   declares   that   the   pre-\n, viiiling   warm   weather  has  not   been |\nconducive  to  good   hunting,  us  deer\nand  other big  game have not  come\n.down to the foot hills bb yet.    II. l.ier\nand ('. J. Klppin, the latter being the\nI manager of the  l'ark  Ranching com.\npany. at Fairvlew, spent a portion of\njthe time with Mr. and Mrs. Audrewa,\n{and  Mr.  Lier assisted the bunk  man\nlln getting three of the deer.   Mrs. An-\njdrews, who Ib a splendid shot herself,\n! brought dowu the fourth.\nNot ull experienced hunters, however, have heen as successful us Mr.\nAndrews. On Krlday last a party of\nlocal sportsmen lost a great portion of\n<thelr personal belongings, some of\ntheir rifles and ammunition and over\nhalf their bedding when their hunting\ntent burned down near Hiram luglee'a.\nThe party, which consisted of the Hev.\n:Mr. Millar. J. II. Mitchell, Charlie\nCurless, Alex. Beatty, Norman IHU\nand Joe Markle, went Into tlie hills on\ni Thursday ai\ufffd\ufffdd camped on Inglee's\nplace. They got one deer. Messrs.\nMillar. Heatty and Hill slept in a ca-\n, bin on this property, but Mitchell. Car-\nless and Markle occupied tho tent,\nwhich was the prop\"rty of Mr. Hill. In\ni the morning, while they were all seated at breakfast in the cabin, they\nheard the crackle of fire, and when\nthey rushed out their tent was in\nflames, large bundles of straw which I\nserved  at  mattresses\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfor these  nlm-j\nrods loved  chrcature comforts burn-!\ning fiercely.    Mr. earless, who lost his\nboots and trousers, was seen afterward\nroaming the woods In search of game !\nclad  ln an overcoat.\nFOR SALE OR LEASE\nROYAL   CAFE\nLease Extremely Moderate.    For\nfurther particulars apply\nDominion  Trust   Company\n606 Columbia Street C. S. Keith, Manager\nWHY BUY FOREIGN CEMENT\nwhen you can get as good, or better, manufactured In B. C, rli.: tho\nthe celebrated \"VANCOUtKK\" Brand, guaranteed to pan Standard\nSpecification! of Americas and Canadian Engineer!' Association\nWe would alio call attention to our Vitrified Bewer Pipe from\n4-ln. to 24-ln. In diameter. This is also made In thla Province and wo\nconsider superior to any Imported article.\nWe also carry a stock ot Crushed Kock. Waabed Oravel, Sand,\nLime, Platter, etc.\nSee Ui before ordering elsewhere\nGILLEY BROS.. LIMITED\nPhonei It and II.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd02 Columbia atreet W.\nFALL GOODS.\nCall and inspect our fall\nlines and new fall styles and\nplace your order now.\nJ. P. GALVIN\nLadies' and Men's Tailor.\n401   Columbia   St.\nBUSINESS DIRECTORY\nENGLISH   LABOR   MEN\nOPPOSED TO MILITANCY\nft CANADIAN PACIfK\nWraiiwayco.\nMUBIC.\nMRB,    C.    a    KISIIKIt,    TEACHER    UK\npianoforte, harmony and singing,    Po-\npit,* lucceMfuty prepared fnr examina-\n!    n.m in ii. a  M. im.i it c. M, Kui tirrna\n;    apply 601 Third avenue.\nIm188  KI.I.a Q  HARDY. TBACHBR OF\nI'lunofoite;   243   Kniiy   St.   New   UVst-\n1     lutnalcr.\nSINGING ANO VOICE PRODUCTION\nMARGARET A. OROVKS, I't. HI. Of\nihe lati Profanes Allan MaobiUi,\nPrloolpal i.f ii,,' Olaigow College ,.,r\nMusic, ami Professor flmnlnnd Hint, of\nIho Glasgow Athenaeum, 1m-ks Io Intl-\ninnl,' lhal ulie will accept I frw pupil*\n111 slnKlnx and voice production. Bx-\ntcnllfi repertoire of high atlll songs.\nInr terms, rail or wrlle lo 11 US Hamilton  Ml**-.-!\nPersistency.\n\"Mrs. Muchuiurrled is making a collect Iou of alimonies, lent she) Sbe\nmust be dreadful mercenary.\"\n\"Oh. no, I don't think tbnt\"\n\"Then why ts she marrying snd divorcing so mucb J I hate to see a woman act that way.\"\n\"She hates to Ue beaten. She start-\ned out In good faith to be happy,\nthough married, nnd she suys she Is\ndetermined to keep oo trying until she\nteaches tbat state.\"\nCommencing  Oct.  20.    Change    of\ntime table, as follows.\n8:00 a m.    for Toronto, Kamloops l.o-1\n-Kor St.  Paul.\n6:2s  pin,-Kor Agasslz.\n8:10 p.m.- Kor Imperial Limited. Mon\ntieal, etc.\nKor rates, reservations\nparticulars apply to\naud    other\nII. W.\nB. CIOUI.ET, Ageot.\nNew Wiitmlniti\nBRODIK, O. P.  A , Vancouver\nThe last message from Mars is to the effect that he\nwill stand for re-election to the Port Coquitlam mayoralty.\nGovernor Glynn of New York has been presented with\na big turnip, but then look at the big lemon Charlie Murphy handd Sulzer, which the latter now is in a position to\nslip back to Charles.\nRECEIVER   REMOVED  AND\nPLACED   UNDER   ARREST\n1\n_ A California inventor has invented a motor-driven,\nreciprocating saw for slicing meats evenly. Now if some\none would invent something like that to do the same thing\nto the prices of meats what a lot of joy it would bring.\nSpokane, Nov. 6.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOeorge B. Wai-\n| lace, who was removed Monday as receiver of the Groff Tailors, incorporated, by Judge E. H. Sullivan, was placed under arrest yesterday afternoon\nby Deputy Sheriff Iver Sorenson after\nS. H. Ansehell, a stockholder, in the\ncompany, had secured a warrant In\nthe court of Justice Kred Witt charging perjury.\nThe receiver was removed   Monday\nby Judge Sullivan, who declared    Ihe\nfinal  account would  not be approved\n| because of gross irregularities In  the\n  | affairs of the firm under the receivership of  Mr.  Wallace.    John   I,.   Wiley\njn     ,.         .                       ,              ,.     .           , was   selected   to   take   charge   of   tbe\nrasting tor stomach trouble is a dangerous proposi- company's affairs,\ntion    An Idaho school teacher who tried the remedy is evmencoA^waUe0w\ufffd\ufffdWeangeme\ndead and the doctor who prescribed the treatment has Dl\ufffd\ufffdy\ufffd\ufffda \ufffd\ufffdf ,h(' Wallace Misfit parlors,\nbeen found guilty of manslaughter. __ fiZffi ^Z**Mt\\\ncompany from his firm and Indicated\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd he had failed to collect accounts.\nAnsehell   charges   that   Wallace   as\n, ! receiver made a false affidavit In Feb-\n, , i*i- , ,    , . . .    ruary.    When  taken   into court  Wai-\ndoe-; much more thinking and much less acting in this ia<* waived a preliminary hearing. Jui-\nMexican problem he's liable to work up a good case of I\"\" -Wi\" rix\"'' h'3 bond at $1'\"00'\nhook worm.\nNow Shi Knew.\n\"I'd like to meet Mudeliue's brother.\"\n\"Wby.   1   didn't   know   she   hud   a\nbrother!\"        ,\n\"H-b-bnbr ;\n\"Did sbe tell' yon so?\"\n\"No\"\n\"Then bow do you know she has?\"\n1     \"Doesn't she wear his neckties, stick-\ni pins aud culT lluks half the time!\"\nExplained.\n\"Mr. (Jreen Is said to be a confirmed\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwearer.\"\n\"Ves; I guess that's no\"\n\"And he was so carefully reared\ntoo \"\n\"But be shares himself.\"\nKnow Something Bettor.\n\"1 can tell wbeu u niau's in lore wltb i\nme.\"\n\"And I ran tell wben i man Isn't In\nlore wltb me.\"\nSeattle, Nov. 6. -Militancy as a\nmethod of obtaining women's suffrage\nand I. W W.-iim as a means of improving the living conditions of thejl:25 p,m\nwage earners are taboo with the British working people. Both were denounced in specific terms by Thomas\nQrenall, J.   P.,  representing the  Mln\n'er?.'   Federation  of  Great  Britain,  at\n.the convention of the American Federation nl Labor,\n\"The British trade unions.' 'he said,\nI\"are absolutely and unqualifiedly opposed lo militancy, ln fact, a very\nstrong non-militant movement has\nheen organized. It is known as the\nWomen's Non-militant association, and\nIb composed of the wives of  Kngiish\n1 union   men   and   the   offlcera   of   the\nI Women's Trade Union league are connected with It The British trade unions are for women's suffrage, but they\ndo not believe it can best be obtained\nj by violence and transgressions of the\nlaw.   The trade unions arc lending all\n; possible   support   to   the   non-militant\niparty and assisting In every possible! \t\nmanner  to  obtain   the  right  of   fran-      COAL MININU riahto of thf Dotnlnloi\nchlse for women. lln  Ma-gllob^ Saskatchewan  and  Albert!\n\"I  have\nAmerican   K\nfind them very much the same as the I term of twenty-one' yvsirs at* an   annua\n'methods  of the   British  trade   unions,   rental of II an aero. Not more than 76li\nwe ,.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd not believe in direct action. OlirhX^'r^ S52ttSf>-\ufffd\ufffd*\nplan  or  procedure   Is  negotiation  and ! by the applicant In poraon to the Attn\nconciliation wherever possible, always I \ufffd\ufffd,r Bub-Agent of ths district In which th\nwith the undemanding that a strike iTn^u^V.mV^.rtnd mu.t b\nAUDITOR   AND   ACCOUNTANT.\nII.   J\nA.    HIIHNB\nAci'iillnlnnl.  Tel.\nBlock.\n.   AUDITOR     AND\n111,   Itoom  I,   Hart\nP. II. Bmlth. w J  Urov\ufffd\ufffd__\nAUDITORS AND ACCOUNTANTS\nWork   undrruk'sn    In    aty    anl    on'ilda\npoint..  jH 1-12    W-Mtmlnator   Tri.t    lilcttf\nHoi   607.\nI'hone   III.     P.   O.\nFRATERNAL\nSYNOl'SIH   OF  COAI.   MINING\nGULATIONS.\nKI\nstudied the methrxVs of the 'ho \\likon Territory, the Northwest lor\ni,-.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi_.,-.,i\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd., \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdr im<nn* _r..i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd r\"ori'M an<1 '\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd portion of the Provlnc\nFederation   of   Labor   and ' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, Britiah Columbia, may be leaned for .\nIf President Woodrow Wilson of the United States\nTry It.\nIf you would lead a nappy life\nAnd have a grand home ne-,1\nJuat I've your money to your wife\nAnd .ne will do the rent.\nmay be resorted to\nresource.\n\"We are absolutely out of snipathy\nwith the 1. W. W.'s who believe in direct action and are opposed to negotiation or concllatlon, which, In our opinion. Is the best and easiest means to\naccomplish the objects of trades unionism.\"\nbut only as a last   described  by  nectlona,  or  legal  eub-dlv;\nI alone of aectlona. Ind In unaurveyed Mi\nritory   the   tract   applied    for    ehall    b\naloked out by the applicant hlmaelf.\nippllca\nhappy\nempty\nAn Italian murderer has been operated on to remove\na revolver bullet which he fired into his cranium in an\nattempt to beat the official executioner to it. If the doctor wins, the patient loses,\nhich he furnished later in the evening. Tin' case will be heard November IS at   10 o'clock\nm.\nCONSUMPTIVES CANNOT\nWORK  IN  RESTAURANTS\nThe nineteen year old girl in Spokane who has three\nhusbands living has made a flying start. If she lives to\nlie-about seventy and keeps up the same gait there won't\nbe many bachelors left to complain of their single cussed ness.\nSince the recent prohibition vote in Oregon, topers\nhave been compelled to carry a directory to guide them to\nthe thirstoriums without getting pinched for breaking the\nlaw.\nThe report that there were to be some ministerial\nchanges at Ottawa has been vigorously denied. Evidently\nthe cabinet maker who started the rumor doesn't belong to the union.\nMayor Gray has fallen in line with the clean-up campaign. He attended the St. Andrew's supper at St. Andrew's church last evening and it is reported that he did\na perfectly healthy job on the abundantly loaded tables.\nSpokane. Nov. 6, Men or women\n] who have tuberculosis or other Infec-\nI tious dlieaiea can no longer be em-\nployed   in  serving foods In  the eating\nhouses of the olty, according to tbe\ndraft of a new rostauani and lunch\ncounter ordinance submitted yester-\njday by hr .1. li. Ondenon, city health\nofficer, by Assistant corporation\nI counsel ESernet K. Sergeant This is\nthe ordinance that was ordered drawn\nby Mayor Hindley recently arter the\nI discussion in tbe city council of the\nquestion ol restaurant and lunch counter  regulations.\nPeraona who may be suspected of\nhaving an Infectious ailment may be\nrequired to submit to a medical examination by the city health officer.\nOther provisions of the ordinance\nrelat\" fj th\" care of kitchens and\ntheir floors, walls and ventilation. Tin\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdans on \"gun boats\" usually gallon\nsize, can no longer he used after opening and all cans are required to be\nemptied whrn opened.\nA license fee of $10 per year will be\nrequired and all places where food is\nsold for consumption on the spot arc\nIncluded within lis pravislonB. Kven\nlunch counters with circuses, the In-\nterstate fair or public gatherings will\nbe required to pay the license fee\nalong with the rest.\n,T. Yankee Doodle went to town\n\"\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd A-riding on a pony.\nW' He stuck a feather in his hat\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdp- And a U. S. customs official took it away from him.\n\/\nFifty Hours He Farted.\nN irth Viiklina, Nov. 6. Fifty hours\nwithout fooi! or sleep, Harry Son)mer-\nvlllc. manaj-er or the Savoy hotel in\nthis city, yesterday morning wandered Into the store in the Nile, In the\nheadwaters of the Tleton basin, and\nlast nlgbt. arrived in North Yakima after making the remainer of his trip by\nstage or NaChSS City and by train to\nthis city, lie became lost In tho hills\non a bunting trip.\nPERT PARAGRAPHS.\nIt   l\ufffd\ufffd  \ufffd\ufffd   poor  outlook   for   n\nnome  when   the   hour snek  ts\naud the last baking or bread burnt lo\na crisp blnckuess\n_\nLearning Dy experience Is very often\nooiti ui pensive und uusatiifaciory.\nIletting ii.imey enough to do aa you\nplease i- n tag order, and vou stiouiil\ntime sis ried your grandfather on the\nJob alujiil  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdevenly nve years ago\nIVheu ii mil it marries nn angel be ;\nihould nnl iiiiiiiuaiii It be Hilda linns'ell j\nexpected tu live iu \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd lurched atuio* |\nphere.\nThe man wlio Is too tnr.v to work\nougiii in tie eieiieii as perpetual vn-e\npresldenl ol  Ibe lake-It eusy socleiy\nIt Is Pellet lo nave no reputation nl !\nall   tlmu  to  nave one  Unit  you  run I\nlose.\nThe man who nnvnys give* his word\nto Ills tneiid* is -.enerallt -adly surprised wben ihey come around saying\ntbat ne (loe.-ii t keep it.\nThp man who spends his pnergtee id\nseeing   thnt   Hip  other   fellow   doemi'1 j\ncheat hlm wlll soon find the oihel  fei\nlow ao fur ahead  lUat there'll be nu\ndanger.\nA thing thnt makes n lot of talk la\nlikely lo prove a good cover undei\nwhich somebody may slip something\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdcross.\nOf cnurup you'll be ndveraply rrltl\n(ised. The onu remedy Is a certain\ndenfiims  thai  you   way  Use ll dux re\nHot-\nTo Improve Grand Forki.\n(iriiiiil Korks, Nov. ii An Institution whicli will be known ns Ihe t'ltl-\n'\/ens' Improvement Association of\nQrand Forks, has been organized. The\nobjects of the association will be to\nmake (Irand Forks a better city, to\nproinot i the cause of temperance, to\nencourage the Observance ot Sunday\nas a day of rest. In accordance with\nthe Lord's Day act, to establish rending rooms and other rooms where tbo\nmi n Of the city may obtain rest and\nrecreation, to take active steps toward\nthe beautifying of tha city und endeavor to secure the best civic ofilcials\npossible. Olllcers were elected and\nthe association starts with good fin-\nanclal support.\nKach application must be occoinponle,\nly a fiw ol II Which wlll be refunded I   I\n(he  rlghla applied for ire nol avalliblt\nbut   not  otherwise.    A   royalty  shall   b  I\npaid on  the merchantable output  of th. *\nmine at lbe rate of five centa per ton.\nTbe   peraon   operating   the   mine   aha)\nr ii rnlnh   the   Aaent   with   awern   return ,\nIdcountlni tor the full quantity of met   '\nibiintiil'i*'  coal   mined and  pay  the  roy   i\nalty   thereon.  If  the coal   mlnlna   rlahb j \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nare not twins operated aueh returns ahouli    9\nbe  rurnlahed at  leaat once a year.\nThe l\ufffd\ufffdaee wlll Include the cenl mlnlni I\nrlghla  only,   but   the  leasee   wlll   Imi   per\nnltl\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   ' -----     ....   . ....\nNTKUNATIONAI, RTKAM   AND OPBR.\nutiiiK   KiiKineers.   Ixwal   141,   meeta   i\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nIjlbor   Temple   every   llrst      and      llilril\nroundly of the montb. It MoLouahlln\npresldenl W. C. Saunders, aeireiary'\nP. O   llox  6-.S. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nNKW WKHTMINBTBn LODOB NO I.\nB. A P. O. of Rika of the I). of C. moei\nthe flrat and third Thursday nt 1 e rn,\nIC. ot P. Hall. BlKhth atres-t. A Weill\nOray, Baa I led Ruler; P. H. Bmllh, Heo-\nretary.\nIL. O. O IL, NO. IM.-aBi'T8 ON\nflrst, second, third and fourth \\v- .piea-\nduy In eaih month at \ufffd\ufffd p. m\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nIn the Uixa. Home. II. J. ly^amy.\ndictator: P. B. Jonea, secreuiry.\nHaadquarteri of   lodge   in   s.-e   Ilouan\n|    corner of Fourth ind Cimarron atreeLn.\nI. O. O. r. AMITT l-OrXIB NO. 17\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe\nreir-ular nwetlni of Amliy Indue. Na\n\ufffd\ufffd.. I. O. O. P.. ll held every Monday\nnl\ufffd\ufffdht at \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd o'clock In Odd Pillows' Hall\ncorner Carnarvon and KlKhlh streeta.\nVlelllna brethern cordially Invited,\ntt A Merrlthew, NO.; II. W. Sanaaler\nV. O.; W. C. Coatham. P. a., record\nlng s.ercturv: J. W. MacDnniM. financial  aecretary.\nmltted   to    purcha\nwhatever   avallabl\nnurture rlrhta may lie considered necea\nsary for the worklna of the mine at th\nrate of IIO an acre.\nPur full Information application ahouli\nbe made to tha Secretary of the Wpart\nment of the Interior. Ottawa, or to an-\nAaent or Soli-Agent of Dominion Landi\nw. w. cortr,\nDeputy Mlnlater of the Interior\nN. B.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdUnatitllorlaed publication of tht\nadvertlaement will not be paid for.\nFUNERAL    DIRECTORS.\nW. E. PAI.KH--Pioneer Puneral Dlrectw\nami Brtbaliner. 112-111 Aanei atreet\nopimeK- Carnetfe Library.\nBOWELL (SUCCESSOR TO CBN-\nter A llniina. Ltd.)\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPuneral directofi\nand embiiiniera. Parlor* 405 Columbia\natreet.   New  Weatmlnater.    I'hone III,\nBOARD  OF  TRADE.\nSeriouely Stabbed.\nSpokane, Nov. II. C. B, llromley, a\nteamiter, who was stabbed in the abdomen In a fight at the Marquis saloon\non Main avenue, Friday night, wus re-\nported to be In a critical condition at\nSacred Heart, hospital last night\nllromley Is now mifferltig wllh peritonitis.     The  knire  pierced   the   walls\nof tbe Intestines and Internal bleeding\nset In.\nWestminster\nTransfer Co.\nilflci  Phom  lit.     Barn  Phom  11\nBigbli ati ait.\nBOARD OP TRADB\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNKW WKSTMIN-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdter Boaid of Trade meeta In tho boar*\nroom. City Hall, aa follows: Third Pri-\nday of ench month . quarterly tneetlna\non Ibe third Friday of February, May.\nAuauat and Novemlmr at > p.m. Annual   meetlnia on the  third   Friday of\nFebruary,   tf   IL   Stuart   Wade.\t\nliny.\nPUBLIC   STENOGRAPHER.\nISPHCIFICATIONB, AilItRBMBNTS OT\ni Sale, li,-,.,ie. Bualneaa I_rtt\ufffd\ufffdra. etc.; *tr-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd culnr work apednllat. All work atrhillp\nI ronndeniini. tt Barry, room 111 Weat-\nmlnater Trust Blk.    Phone 7M.\nHaggagi Delivered Promptly to\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdny pirt of tbe elty.\nLight and Heavy Hauling\nCITV OF NEW WESTMINSTER. \ufffd\ufffdf\nPROFESSIONAL.\nCORB001.D. ORANT A MoCOLL, BAR-\nrloters. Solicitors, etc.. 40 l,ornn Street,\nNiw Weal minster, tl B. Corbould. K.\nC.    J. H. Orant    A. fc. MeColl.\nDakota Danker Dead.\nMinot, N.D., Nov. 6.~Jos. Roach,\npresident of tba Second National\nbank, and one of North Dakota's most\nprominent bankers, died last nlRht,\nfollowing injuries received In u\nrunaway a few days ago.\nNOTICE\nALTERATION OF RUNNING 8CHEDULE  OF   INTERURBAN   LINE\nTO VANCOUVER, VIA CENTRAL   PARK, ANO OF  FRASER   VALLEY DIVISION.\nEFFECTIVE SUNDAY, NOV. 2, 1913.\n(Subject to change without notice)\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd!'   WE8TMIN8TERVANCOUVER (VIA  CENTRAL   PARK.)\nSunday schedule- TralnH leave New Westminster at I), 7, 7:..0, 8,\n8:130 and ft a.m., antl every 20 minutes thereafter until 8:30 p.m.\nArter 8::;o service every .10 minutes wllh last car leaving at midnight.\nWeek day schedule Trains leave New Weitminiter at 5, 5:45, fi,\nfi:in. I!::i0, \ufffd\ufffd:45, 7, 7:15, 7:30, 7:45 and 8 n.m., and every 20 minutes\nuntil 4 p.m.. I'rom 4 p.m. to 8:.-.o p.m. a 15 mlnuto servico will bo\ngiven.   After 8:30 p.m. a 30 minute service with lust car at midnight.\nSaturday service\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEarly morning schedule the sumo as on week-\ndavs. but after 8 a.m., a 15 minute service wlll bc given until midnight.\nFRASER   VALLEY   DIVISION.\nThrough trains for Chilliwack leave New Westminster dally at\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdn..O a.m. und 1:10, 3:35 and 5:45 p.m.. TralnB leave Chllllwack dally\nfor return trip at fi:10 a.m. and 9:30 a.m. anil 1:10 and 6:46 p.m.\nDully Kxpress service to Chllllwack from New Westminster at 9;50\nn.m. and 3:35 p.m.\nBRI1ISH COLUMBIA ELECTRIC RAILWAY COMPANY\nADAM   SMITH JOHNSON,  IIAHttlSTKR-\niil-buv,   Solicitor,   etc.     SoHi'llnr for  tlie\nilank or Vancouver, orricea: Mer-\ncbiinis Bank Building, New Westminster II c. Telephone No. 1070. Cable\nnimroBS \"Johnston.\" Code Weelcrn\nI iilon,\nIV. I'\\ HANSFORD, BARRISTER, SO-\nllcltor, etc., Colllster 111., -k, corner Cnl-\n.iniiiiln umi McKcnile streets, New Weitminiter, II.C. 1\\ O. llox 286. Telephone  ]|f\nWTUTBSIDH,     BDMONDS   A    WHIT\ufffd\ufffd-r_.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIds \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd llarrlatera and Boilcitora, West-\nSiCfS  Ft*, \"\"fa    Columbia  etreet,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd7i.W.\"iltf\"'*_!>'1 H' c'   C111\"\" ****\nWhiten*.-    Western    Unlbn.    P.\nDritwer   8.0.     Telephone   \ufffd\ufffd|     W.\nJ. BTILWIHU. CLOTH. Barrlster-at-laW,\nsolicitor, eta.; oorner Columbia ud\nMcKenih. street* New WeatmlnitW\nD. C.   P. O. Box 111.    Telephone   71*\nJ\ufffd\ufffdPi. \"AMPTON BOLB, BARRIHTI5B,\nS'llP'tor and Notary. Offloea tSSt*\n_'.,.\"i!,,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_,,5-Lo,,,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   ,tr*\ufffd\ufffdt- Now Woatmln-\nMg)UARRU, MARTIN A CAH8ADT,\nBurrlatera and Boilcitora. Ill to 11*\nWeatmlnater frum Block. O. B. Martin. W. O. McQuarrie ind Uaoria u\nCaaiidy. hnbmmm I\n*A***mmu*W'**i*i.*t**i*i*i' mo 11.4 *,, ,****, -^.ab\nFRIDAY, NOVEMBER  7,  1.I..\nTHE NEW VVEfflMINSTER NEW&\nPAGE THREE\nCARTIER'S PLEDGE\nTO MOTHERLAND\nSpec .h    Made   by   Canadian    Patriot {for the\nWhose Centennary li Soon to\nBe Celebrated.\nfreedom of action which '.van\ngiven to ua on that occasion. Whci\nwe liad to consider what would be the\nn iin scntativo      institutions      which\n    ought  to rule the great Dominion  of\n  Canada, we had, as a matter of course,\n_, ... ,    .     , ,   to look  Into the past or the present\n1 n readers of the present the fol- j^tcry of nations which had enjoyed,\nlowing speech delivered by SirQeorg* or were enjoying representative in-\nKtlenno Cartier at the Inaugural din- StltUtloM. We came to the conclu-\nner of tho Hoyal Colonial Institute, \"Ion that a legislative body, to be use-\nheld at Umdon In March, 1869, will j ful. ought to represent the sense of\nprove of more than passing Interest. I rectitude of the nation, but not the\nThe chair waa occupied by Viscount PMlUmS Of the nation (Near, hear).\nBury, the president of the society, and ConMQUMtly we adopted a system\namongst those present on this occa- of representative government which\nsion were the prime minister of Eng- allowed to the representatives elected\nland, I't lion. W. E. (Hailstone. Hon. a certain length of parliamentary\nHeve dy Johnson, the United States I \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd***, in order to achieve great thin. i.\nambaHPador; tho Duke of Manchester, I We did not like that the parliament\nMinimis of Normanby, th\ufffd\ufffd Itt. Hon. larJr trugt should be a mere sped e of\nEarl firunvllle, the Ilt. Hon the Earl I power to last for only one session, and\nof Albemarle, l*rd Alfred Churchill U\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdn to have another election. We\nend many other Illustrious men of the I wanted that there should be a trust,\n<lay, numbering In all two hundred, Iln ord\"r thttt lhe electors themselves\nCartier was at that time in England I should show that lhey had confidence\nnegotiating the purchase of the North1'1 lhogn whom they elected; and then\nwest Territories and his speech at thin that those who were elected should\nbanquet on behalf of \"The Colonial I \"how *n return to those wbo had\nlarliaments of the Empire,\" forms a elected them, the realization of their\npage of history whicb will be read with Promises, made In honor, that they\nkeen pleasure by all true-hearted l'a- wou*** legislate according to the In-\nnadlans. This speech, which has been ter**M and the welfare of the com\nlieretofore unpublished, proves of un- 'munlty at the time.\nusual value as showing vividly the\nsentiments and motive* which actuated the men who guided thc helm of\nstate ln the early days of confederation. Cartier's utterances on this occasion are forcefully eloquent of his\nloyally to the British crown and admiration for Hritish institutions.\nAt tbls time when public Interest is\naroused In the prospective celebration\nof  the   centenary  of  Cartier's   birth,\nMonsieur Qazot, I think, said on\none occasion that \"Common sense\nrules the world In the long run.\" It\nis so, and consequently a parliament\nof small duration, an annual parliament of too short duration, can never\ndo any great work. With regard to\nus, we do not find fault with our\nneighbors. We are good friends with\nour neighbors, and at this festive\nboard,  In  the presence of tbe    Mus\nthis page from the historic past wlll , trlous minister wbo   represents tbat\ndoubtless Inspire tbose In charge of\nIhe movement to greater zeal for the\nfitting celebration of tho great event.\nMy I_ord Bury, my Lords and Gentlemen:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdI must say at the outset\nthat It requires from rae a certain\namount of boldness to address you\nafter the eloquent speeches which have\nbeen made, and particularly ln the\npresence of the premier of England,\nwho stands ln this country not merely as the premier In tbe political world,\nbut who also stands as one of the foremost in eloquence, and as a scholar.\nAs a matter of course, If you expect\nanything eloquent from me, I must\ntell you at once that you will be dls-\ngreat nation (Hear, hear) I am glad\nto have this opportunity of telling\nhim that wltb regard to him, and with\nregard to ourselves, we are as fully\nIn exercise of our freedom as any one\non the earth. Our Dominion, our\nconfederation, Is not formed on the\ndemocratic principle; the representative element is a part of lt. but It Is\nfounded on a monarcbla! basis. Our\nneighbors have their confederation\nbased entirely on the democratic\nprinciple; they bave trted tbe experiment and it Is a great succes; but we\nhave tried our system to some extent,\nand we expect that Its trial wlll result\nInterrogate    ine    ubout    tho    French\nCanadians.     The   shortest    definition\nwill\/:)) I could give (because you muat\nalways  be  brief to  royalty, und  perhaps  to  this  meeting)   was,  that   tbe\nFroi'.-li Canadltna, as well as myself,\nwere      English      speaking      French\n(Cheers).    They appreciate the  work\nand Uie value of Saxon blood;  and  I\ncannot lose sight of the fact that there I\nia   and   idtplxture  Of  Norman   blood ,\nwltb   tbe  best   blood  of  England.    I ]\nmerely  mention  thla  to show  that  I\nam not in any  way wounded by  the j\nadmission, because I  know a little of!\npast   history.     With    regard   to  our- i\naelvca, on    the   other side,    the two\nraces there are Frenchmen and  Englishmen',  we are Frenchmen, and the\nFrenchmen    in    lower   Canada    have\nprover (or rather  Englishmen  speaking French) that we can carry out representative   institutions     It   Is   said,\nby our neighbors opposite here, that\nrepresentative    and    free government I\ncannot bc carried out.    If they looked\nto that French  colony  which    a few-\nyears  ago  number  only  4G.000    and\nwhich   now   numbers   1,000,000,     thev\nwould  see   that  the carrying out  of\nthe representative system has been a |\nsuccess.    I thank you, my lords and\ngentlement.    (Cheers.)\nULSTER SITUATION\nHAS PAPERS GOING\nPress  Cannot   Sum   Up  Conditions\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nParties  Evidently  Prepared to\nGo to Extreme!.\nUmdon, Nov. 6.-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"The political situation has rarely been more Interesting.\"\nThis sentence from the Pall Mall\nGazette commenting on the attitude\nof tbe cabinet towards Ulster and the\nbome rule fairly reflects the state\nof affairs. Vet the newspapers cannot agree as to what ll happening,\nor likely to happen, In retpect of tbe\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffduggested exclusion of Ulster from the\noperation of the bome rule bill. The\nTimes thinks Mr. Churchill spoke on\nbehalf of the rest ot the cabinet. Tbe\nDaily Chronicle and the Morning Post,\non different sides of politics, consider\nthat the cabinet haa decided to treat\nIreland as one and indivisible.\nOn the otber hand, the Dally Mall\nthinks that the Churchill view still\nholds tbe field in the cabinet, while\nthe Westminster Gazette does not be-\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ In thla\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtbat so long as England shall\nappointed.   At all events, I wlll do my ibe England, and so long as England\nutmost and 1 am sure you will excuse I \"hall enjoy  the freedom and  tbe ad-\nmv  shortcomings     My  name Is con- j vantage of a parliament, our political j Heve that the exclusion of Ulster can\nnected  with thla toast aa relating to  gravitation aad our political affectlon.be the compromise which Is to settle\nthe    colonial    parliaments     1   regret j will   always   be   towards   the.   mother Ithe Irish question.    Meantime,    raem-\nverv mucb that the selection fell on j country (Hear, hear).   In   order   thatjbers of parliament are taking np the\nme  to answer for the repreeenlatlve  we may nol lose sight of tbis fact, we\niKHlb-B. as applied and carried out In'have  founded  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd great  empire  which\nthe p\ufffd\ufffdlonles which have the happiness I will extend from the   Atlantic to the\nto be connected with the British em\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   Pacific ocean, we Intend that all that\npire    with the mother country  (Hear. |immense territory shall be well gov\nI'M BACK\nOn the Job\nYes, I'm back on the job to make a final clean-up\nwith this high-grade stock. Mrs. Birtch said, \"Mr.\nLacelle, I want to close the door on Thursday, November 13th for all time. You can go as far as you\nlike in cutting prices, as I don't want one nickel's worth\nof merchandise left on the closing day.\" Well, you\nknow my reputation as a price cutter.   So here goes!\nThe Finishing Prices\nChildren's Hats and Caps at\nHalf-Price\nI-adies' Long Kid Gloves, value*\nto (3.S0, cut to\n$1.75\nPerrin's    Kid    Cloves,    in    all\ncolors  and sizes;     regular    to\n$1.75,  cut  to\n85c\nChildren's School Dresses of\nall colors; values to $5.00, cut\nto\n95c\nAU  Christmas  Novelties at\nHalf-Price\nIlibbons both in silk and satin,\nall colors and sizes; values to\n75c, cut to\nInfants'    Pure     Wool\nvalues to 75c, eut to\nVests;\n35c\nBabies'  White  Dresses;   values\nto $3JSt, cat to\n65c\n15c\nChildren's  Warm  Coats,  made\nof all popnlar cloths\nHalf-Price\nH. T. IACEEIE\nTh* World'i Greateat Prico\nCutter.\nI-adiea* Waists and Blouses, all\ntbe latest ity les; $3.50 values\ncut to\n95c\nLadies' Woollen Gloves; values\nto 65c, cut to\n25c\nqueation In tbe constituencies, and it\nIs not without significance that Edward Ooulding, the Unionist member\nfor  Worcester,  has  publicly  adopted\n ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^  the view  that  \"mucb as they dislike\nheari. With regard to us, when welerned, and governed not merely on altble home rule bill, let tbem be pro-\nformed o'i- ronfederatlon, namely the [selfish principle aa applied to ua, but pared to compromise matters, and say\nDominion of Canada, we were allowed j in order to add to Ibe power and to 'Leave Ulster ont. let her remain un-\nby the .Iberallty of the English par-.the prosperity of the mother country jder Ihe imperial parliament, and try\nliament and the English government ! !H\ufffd\ufffdar. hear). I am lure that-there! your experiments with the real Of I rein hm our brains tn work. In order to will never be any cause of dl.fleaity be-1 land.\"  Of courwe, the suggested bar-\ntweaa England and our friendly neigh- gain satisfies nn Irish Natlonallat. but\nbora on account of ourselves. But It the tone of T. P. O'Connor, speaking\nmatters not; If that unfortunate day at the City l.tbenr! club, waa not oulte\nahall   ever   come,   we ln   Canada  are I so  confident,  although  he  w       \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\nMRS. A. J. BIRTCH\nCUFF BLOCK\nSIXTH AND CLARKSON STS.\npram at our uwn scheme of representation lo the English parliament for\nadoption. The constitution which we\nenjoy was enacted by ua, though lt la\nby vtrtttO cf an Imperial act 1: waa\nnot the InltlVIwi of the Hri11>h piruo-\nment of the Qrittsn nation; are were\nallowed by be liberality of England to\ndo It ourselvot. (Cheers, i We came\nbefore the English -government, wo\n.uir before Ihe Engl lib pnillamrnt.\nwe presented a i}*l \"in which WOI ef\ncourse, a rsymtniil ;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd sy_ti>m; .\"nd\nlt la a great source, I wlll not aay of\npride, but a great aourne of encouragement, to the publlc men who then\ntook -part ln that great schema, t'.i.i:\n:il was adopted by the English government and by the British parliament\nwithout. I may say, a word of alter\njttion   (Hear, hear).  We  feel  Krateful\nready to accept our position (Ffear.\nhear) We will accept the situation\nof the moment. But everyone of us\nwho understands the natural Incllaa-\nl Ion of our nelgbbnra. as well na of\nourselvi>i or of Englishmen, to enjoy\n[\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdare. Is convinced that that unfor-\ntunati' day will not oome. If, bow-\never, it should come, we will be there.\nil\/nini *unl continued cheers, i\nMy lord, I bave heard a great deal\nthis evening with regard to tlte Anglo\nSaxon race. I had the honor to bo\npresented to her majesty wflen sbe\nKrarionsly rave me an invitatfon. ten\nor twelve years ago. to go to Windaor,\nand her majesty was kind enough to\nAre WE Down Hearted?\nTo Those Who Are, Take Advice\nCome out of your trance old man,\nThe world isn't ended yet,\nWhen man has an ugly hand\nHe ought to show nerve, you bet\nInstead of denouncing crimes\nYou ought to be talking bliss;\nFor what brings the panic times?\nWhy, men grouching round like this.\nWEST'S 5,10, 25c STORES, 48 Sixtli St, UptheHHI\n*--a\\\\      As busy as bilious bees,\nThe soreheads claim of ill,\nThey are spreading a rank disease\nThat you ought to help to kill.\nYou ought to be inspiring the folks, .\nNot standing around by jinks\nDispensing your mournful dope.\nCome out of your trance old man,\nAnd gather the plunks galore,\nYou can always get what you want\nIn our cheap and cheerful store.\nWest's  S, 10, 25c Store\nUp the HID, 48 SUth St, MeLeod Block.\nwith the usual anticipation.\n\"T. P.'tT Words.\n\"There would be a settlement unstained by blood,\" said \"T. P..\" \"made\nei'iitri'iia by ccncenslons, and made\nIsitlng by common national consent.\nThe only comic note In the discussions\nthis week- haa been provided by Joseph Devlin, M P., who speaking In\nLancashire, remarked that \"The bome\nrule party stood for progress; the\nIrish queation was not so much a religious as an economic question.\" The\nunconscious humor of this avowal lies\nin the fact that the worst slums and\nfhe most irmferpaid labor In the British Isles were to be found In Dtrbr.it.\nwhich Is exclusively represented by\nNationalists. They never have made\nany single effort so far as the ordinary man can see, to bring about reform In the city, and the Labor members who always vote religiously with\nthe Irish on the question of home\nrule have really themselves this we**\nfelt compelled to make a few acid\ncomments on the state pf affairs which I\nhas been allowed to grow up under Na-'\ntlonallst representation.\nOn the whore, It Is very doubtful\nwhether at present\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdand the qualification Is used advisedly\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe Liberal\nparty leaders will agree to the exclusion of Ulster. Their followers are not\nyet all aready either to recognize the\ngravity of the situation, or to take a\ndecided llne In the direction of generous compromise. It must come sooner or later, since all the talk In the\nworld, all the anticipations and pro-\ntestations that matters wlll ultimately right themselves and leave que\nhappy, united family In Ireland do not\naffect the truth, ai Mr. Churchill himself admitted, that home rule can only\nbe forced on Ulster at the coat of\nbloodshed. Tbe Ulitermen are not\ntalking is big as some people suggest\nAs a matter of fact they are keep ng\nstrict secrecy wltk regard to tbe very\nlarge number of promises of aupport\nthey havo received In case there are\narmed outbreaka of aay kind. It la not\nthe case that people mako then promises wtth no Intention ot every carrying them out.\nThe man with real religious convictions on the one hand, and th* wIlH-\nclans and the military men with bitter\nmemories ot the paat on the other,\nhave very little Intention ot shrinking\nfrom going to extremees, aad accordingly directly the aituatlon becomes\nserious there wlll be a large extalua\nto tbe north of Ireland. Whatever\nhappen! now\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwhether wo have Ul\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdter excluded or whether wa havo her\nretained\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwtll not entirely avert tha\nshedding ot blood. If rte la retained,\nthe long expected wll lhappen: If the\nli excluded there wtll aa certainly be\nNatlonallat reprisals. Only aot ta alt\nprobability on an organised scale, but\naccording to a ay item of mora or leaa\nsecret murder of the typo wltk whieh\nthe record! ot the oountry aro\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtufted.\nSMALLPOX BREAKS\nOUI IN BOUNDARY\nTeamiter Dropa Dead.\nBukre, Idaho, Nor. (.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThomaa BaV\nllvan, aged B0, a teamiter for Eugene\nDay, dropped dead Monday morning.\nMr. Sullivan had been a reatdaat at\nBurke for maay yeara, coming har*\nfrom Montana. Th* body waa removal\nto Wallace until relative* oaa a* located. ..'.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-    l^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nrpldmili  at KtrMiot Following Many\nCases Across tke Border\nLine.\nPenticton. Nov. 6.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe epidemic of\nsmallpox which baa broken out on tbe\nAmerican side of tbe International\nboundary has finally\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdmade Ita way\na-cruss into Canada, and tbere are now\ntwo cases at Keremos, according to\nthe diagnosis made by Dr. R. B. White\nof Penticton on Taeeday. when the\ndoctor quarantined Mr. and Mrs.\nCrooker. Mrs. Crocker is understood\nto be in a convalescent state, but Mr.\nCrooker la as yet in the early stages\nof the disease. A Mias Bromley, nn\n18-year-old daughter of Peter Bromley of Keremeos. who haa been staying with the Crookers, ls also being\nquarantined although as yet she haa\ndeveloped no symptoms of the disease. Tfeo greateat precaution! have\nbeen taken by Dr. White in the prevention of the spreading of thli disease, and the government of British\nColumbia bas met In Dr. Millar from\nVictoria, who takes charge of theae\ncapes. It Is probable that should any\nfurthr\" ortbreak take place that Dr.\nMillar wilt order the quarantine of the\nentire community tn which the dlseaae\nIs manifest. V\nSmallpox epidemic li at the preeent\ntime ln the following Washington\ntowns: Oro villi, tout cases; Motion,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtx casee and Loomls, ten cases. All\ncases have been Isolated aad rigorous\nquarantine Is being kept by the author\"\nItlei and all ipreadlng, It la hoped, wilt\nbe stamped out\nSerious compllcatloni very often no-\ncompany imallpox, but Dr. Whtta\nitate* that the preeent epidemic ta\na very mild type of tho disease. There\nhave beon no deaths reported In tht*\nconnection a* yot attll It would be\nwell that due precaution by vaccination, etc, ahould b* taken by\npeoplo In th* district\nSAYS HIR HUSBAND     I\t\nMBTINOBO TO BB CRAZY\nDavenport, Wash., Nov. \ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA divorce ault In which Mr*. Julia A.\nRhead* of Sprague la plaintiff and\nOeorge W. Rhoads, a promlaent tarmor\nof Qoldendale, Klickitat count* la defendant waa tiled ln Davenport Monday. Hearing waa let tor Novombar\n11. In tho oomplalat Mr*. Rhoed* **ya\nthe ooupl* war* married la January.\nUll. llv* ehildton, of whieh three ar*\nmlaor. being the mult of th* uataa,\nSh* allag** that beginning wtth\nthn* year* ago lh* huabaad b**aa_*\nabusive aad erual. pr*t*odlag Ma mt\ni hmaaMT. faring om of whiff he oa*\nri*d a loaded *ua to th*tr badraoa,,\nJudg* MoCro*k*y haa aunwd a ra-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtraining order prevwUagthe tat* -at\ncoamanltyaryrty valued at \"\" *ja\nattorney Maa. |7\ufffd\ufffd suit MM*\nallaxn* |\nThe PRICE of HOMAGE\nONCE when King Edward VH. paid a visit to Sheffield,\nall the fires in factories and plants were allowed to\ndie out. Not a wheel in Sheffield turned for twenty*\nfour hours. ft The primary object of this was to lift the\npall of smoke that hovers over that wonderful steel-producing city, and to ensure, as far as man was able, a bright day\nan' a blue sky for an auspicious occasion. Clt was\nShefft d's expression uf respect.\nBI7T the action was unique\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdit was unprecedented\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdit\nwas unthought of that those hundreds of nudity\nfurnaces, raging night and day, and thoae seething\nboilers, with quivering valves, should ever be allowed to\ncool. ft This extingtushing of fires tort Sheffield hundreds\nof thousands of dollars\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe priee of the effort to get bade\nagain to high-power efficiency.\n'V\nSOME businessmen in Canada pay an unwitting homage,\na    * si  * 1_ '   a.  * ^_\ufffd\ufffd-_a**___.* _kl   _______\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_ \"a_f________\nnot to ar king, but to a superstition\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe superstition\nthat hot weather jusUfies'letting the fires ol business\nenergy go out Tliey stop Advertising in the SiunHcr\nmonths. By paying homage to tttttititM, cniieaiy **t*h****t*\nturn* they have allowed Summer to become their \"dull\"\nseason, ft You know how dull & can be when you dont\nadvertise. Do you know how brisk it can Ke nude hy\nAdvertfctngP Do you realise how much momentum yen\niMw.kmintheSunutterthatmurtberecabedintheFkUr\nDONT IBT YOUB ADVERTISING RHS8 PIE\nOUT TEQS SUMMEIL\n- f 'V,\/i\nm,.\niirW.*\nHh\niM,\n>*iut*H    :\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:\ufffd\ufffd'\"'i!.\nat (MM. I\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnr i\ni\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdiasi\nn.raXm^fUSttitXr-i-.\n.-jprr\": f   \ufffd\ufffdAGE FOUR\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS.\nFRIDAY, NOVEMBER  7, HIT.\nFresli Water and SaltP0RI ^m\nTresh W ater and oalt        ^ .....^\nWESTMINSTER PORT\nBLASTING KIllS\nMILLIONS OE FISH\nPACIFIC COAST\n:\nTerrible   Havoc   Among   Sockeyes   in\nColumbia  River\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWill Be\nShortage.\nAdditional Locals\nExpected   that  Three   Aldermen\nRetire, While Two May Seek\nRe-election.\nWill\nARREST GALICIAN\nAETER YEAR'S SEARCH\nPort Coiiuitlam, Nov   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd',    The latest\nlevelopment In the local civic politl-\nproprlutlon had boen out orr fay the ub\nBambly.   This waa lu September laat,\narter the governor's Impeiioliiiiont.\nProduced Telegram.\niii'iiiii'Hsv. in support of hla version,\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^  pniduced a telegram lie received  on\nMoose Jaw Police Grab Man on Main,Oct. 27 last rrom Syracuse, which he\naald he believed had been aent to Iii sti\nable the latter to pursue IiIh lnvestl-iwhich Muck had not accounted tor\ngatioiiB into tho Btate highway depart- and that lie went to Buffalo and did\nment, atter the governor's special up-1 uot make those churgea.\n\"HcniicsM then said to me lie had\nbeen inld such and such u company\nhad made mich and such a cnmilliii\nlion and aHked me about it I told\nhim that I had no specific knowledge\nol any contributions.\"\nStreet After  Exciting  Chase-\nJumped Bail.\nby McOulrei^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\nIt waa signed \"M,\" and appealed In\nHennessy  to  make  u  speech  against\n--^j-^j-^j-^H          William   II.   Kelly,   Democratic  leader\nI or Onundago county, iu order Id gain\nMoose  Jaw,   Nov.  G.    Alter  search-J votes  ror tho  Progressiva  ticket,\nlng lor him for over a year, Detective |    Everett Fowler or Kingston, N.Y., Ib\nBarclay   Stewart,  or  the   local   police jthe man Whom Hennessy testified Mo-\nforce,    arrested    Pete    Mnrtlnuk.    a [Quire had told hlm was the \"bag man\nWashington, Nov. 6- Railroad blasting operations on a tributary of the\nColumbia river, In Washington, having killed more than ono million salmon and prevented the spawning Of\nbetween two and three billion sockeye\nsalmon eggs, the department of commerce, announced that the fish-loving |\nAmerican publlc might expect a decided shortage in Its favorite article\nof food three to five years hence. ThP\ndepartment pronounceB the slaughter\nof the fish to be a \"catastrophe\nChange  Church  Charges.\nTwo   changes   in   tin-   Presbyterian.\neliurch circles effect in\ufffd\ufffd llurnaby were|\ni consummated    I     I   mfit liiK  of  the H situaiion  ls that  two of lhe pres  ...._, \t\nWestminster Presbytery held In \ufffd\ufffdw,\"Lnj members of the aldermanlc board IQallclan, this afternoon after an ex-[for Tammany Hall in the collection or\ncouver on Wednesday evening     Hev.   irltlni chase 'contributions.\n,A.  O'linnnel!    B.A.  is  transfer\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd!    0 and possibly    a    third^ will'goffer Cl ^ <*JJ^ MarUnuk WM      MtOulra   denied   he   had   sen,   any\nthe Oordon church at Edmonds and themselves ror re-election in January I   \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\"\"\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   - s ____. __,  .   ..\nI wlll be Inducted on Tueeray evening, noxl    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*?*,*, two who will retire   are\n18.    Kev   Dr,  McLean, pastor of |mmnm John  p,  ,_allRan und  A.  R.\n\"The effects of  this dataatrophe,\"|\ufffd\ufffdt aja'pittriverl Port Coquitlam. lt\nit declared, \"will bc   seen    three    to'\nlive years    hence,    when    tiy    1918\nprogeny  come  back to  the  river    to\ntly>    1\n^^^^^^^^^^        river\nspawn.   How serious the outcome will\nbe can only bo surmised,\nHenderson Presl'J terian church. West. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\nHurnaby. lias been transferred to SI. .Millard and the possible is Alderman\nPaul's ohurch, Victoria, although thek _.. Welcher. Although no final au-\nmemberi ol the rormer ch,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*,*i. made a ,lom,cl,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdu_Ilt h\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd bean lllad\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd either\natrong proles,  agalMI  the change.       j,.   |g  p,.actlcalI..  ,.,.,.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.   ^th.*  rp.\n: mainlng   two   aldermen,   It.   0,   Galer\nThe  ice Will be In tine shape by 3  .ind g  g   Morgttn> wlM be ln the neld\no'clock Saturday afternoon.        i'i'.Ui) :HRa*n.\n' A  desire  to  devote  greater  atten-\nNew Power Station. .,ion ^ hl_ prlvalp t,usjm,B8 prompted\nThe   \\.esern   Canada   Power  com- U,    ieeit*oi,  o{ Alderman   Millard  to\npany Is building a new power station ; gu,p flown   wh|k, (he .^ QM ,.e jn .\ntends   making   an   extended   tour   of j\ncommitted to stand trial on a charge \ufffd\ufffd'lch telegram to Hennessy. He said\nof aggravated assault, .but jumped, Ja had talked with IiIb brother and\nbail and disappeared. :fre,\"iB  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd HjnnSSBjr  testified  and\nShortly afterwards ha caused oon. *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-***. ho had no such InJormatlgn\nsiderable trouble among the foreign \" \"'\"messy had given out In his les\nelement   in  the  city,   bul   the  pollce   \"'non).\nMcGulre admitted   that   he  had  col-\nWltnaaa, \"Ho hud no right to swear\nme and I did not huve to tell him. I\nwasn't going lo get lulo trouble up lu\nKrlii   county.\"\n\"llut you knew HcmicSBy wus the\ngovernor's in.estlgiitor and you hail\ngiven hlin 13600 to help out,\" commented the district attorney. According rn Hennessy, McGulre was one or\nlected contributions In 1910 and lllll I several Including Jacob II Schlff ami\nfrom aeveral contractors for the I Ueorge W. Perkins, who had omtrl\nDemocratic  state committee. I billed  funds lo help along lhe (Over\n\"Vou falsified   to   Mr.    Hennessy nor'a invasttotlon.\nwhen you said you knew of no eonlrl- |     Tlle bearing will  be continued nexl\ntuitions?\" asked the dlstrlcl  attorney. I Tuesday  when  Mrtliilre again  will  be\n\"1 was not under oath,\" replied tlie [called as a with***\nwere unable to gel him. This afternoon he appeared ou one of tbe main\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtreati and after a hot chuse wan\ncaptured. He will come up in the\npolico court in the morning\nwill be equipped with t\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdhsformers ofjN     Zea|aud     d Australla nexl\ntho finaoitv of 1000 k lowatts anrt  is,    ...       ,     ...     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    ...    ,      ...   *\nbeing built for the purpose of reliov    ?> ' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* it Impossible for Alderman\nlng  .be old  station  In  the  centre of i folln *' ,Lan,Ran ,0 Beek  re*\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'    Mr,\nPort  Coqultlam  of the heavy  load   It', l-angan is at present In the east and,\nThe livelihood of thousands of per-  now has to bear on account of a great ;wl\"    not    be    \"ack   untl1    parl-v    ,n |\nsons In  Washington  and  British  Co-  increase   In   the   power  consumed   In | January, but he confided to a few ot\nlumbia depends on the annual run of jthe  city  during  the  past  year.    The\"1'\nthe sea fish whicli return year by year I pumping   stations   located   along   the  away that this year would be his\nto tlie same  spawning ground.    This  dyke which borders the iPtt river, re- ',ln tlle council for a period at least,\nmakes the matter one of even greater  cently  converted  from steam  Will  be'     Alderman    I). E. Welcher   has    ex-\neconomic importance. supplied   with' electrical  power   from i pressed a desire to retire, hut owing\nHocks    dislodged by    the    blasting I tho new station. j to persistent requests from his friends\nblocked the stream and   caused    the   Ito enter next January's campaign he\ndeath of the ascending fish. Owing  to  the  ice  not  being  ready! has   resolved   to   think   matters   over\n  jthe official opening ofthe ice rink has j before making any definite announce-\nTWELVE SETS OF CANVAS I been  postponed  until  Saturday  after-' ment.\nUSED BY BIG SAILER   noon at 3 o'clock. 12374) j     The  question  as  to  who  will  otter\n    I themselves  for  the  vacant chairs  is\nSeattle.  Nov.  6.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOne  hundred  and Consider Constitution. ! causing much  speculation.    W.  I).   P.\ntwenty-seven tlaiys from Newcastle-on-1     The     recently    organized     Central | Godwin.   W.   A.   Thursb'y   ami   W,   A.\nSECURED MONEY BY\nPROMISES TO MARRY\nMet Hennessy.\n\"Then why d-ld you give the governor 12500?\" asked Mr. Whitmau.\n\"I hated to see u good business administration go to smash. There was\nu great governor alone ln the executive mansion without friends and he\nwas about to be tried by the court of\nImpeachment and 1 was Borry for him.\nj He Bald he needed the money badly |\nand that It was a case of dire necessity.\"\nThe witness admitted that he had\njmet Hennessy In I'tlca on Sept. 12 at\ni the request of Sulzer.\n  I    \"HenneBsy told me,\" he said, \"that\n,   e*,nn.ia  i,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfr,.o ho went i ~' .. . .,  Sulzer had directed him to take part\npersonal  friends  before he \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd< ' Woman   0peratcd   Fake   Matrimonial  ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   the  r,ertlo(,-alk.  p-llIla-v   ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'  ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nBureau  and   Investment   Scheme,     ! Krle   county   and   that   the   governor j\nBureau anu  in. wanted  him  to charge    Norman    El\nin   Many  Cities.                     j Mack with falling lo account for campaign    contributions.    The    governor\n                                promised him, he suld. lo give names;\n,  ' , .i._Jof those who had made contributions\nKansas City. Nov. 6,    A tale cf the |\nTELEPHONE No. 20 H.\nWALK A BLOCK AND SAVE A DOLLAR.\nTHE POPULAR   SHOE   STORE\n641 Front Street.    Out of the High Rent Dittrict.\n$30,000 Stock to Select From.\nOpen   Evenings  Till   9  o'Clock.\nEVENING'S SPECIAL\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOENT8   13.50 BOX KIP   BOOTS FOR $1.50\nK.  H. BUCKUN, N. BEARDBUM.       W. P. U. BUCKUN,\nPres. aad Ooal. Mgr.      Vice-President lae. and Traaa.\nSMALL-BUCKLIN LUMBER CO., Ud.\nMANUFACTURERS OP\nFir, Cedar  and  Spruce\nPhones No. 7 snd 177.\nTyne the bin French full rigged ship ', Ratepayers'    association   met   at   Ed-I Keith  ar?\nHoche,  arrived   ai  Seattle  yesterday \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd monds   last  night   when   every   ward ; aspirants,\nwith a cargo of fire brick,  fire clay, i was    represented    but  ward  3.    The!\npig   iron,   calcium   and   general   mer-j entire  evening   was  spent  In   consid-;\nchandlBB,   which  is  now  discharging; ering  and  adopting    u    constitution'\nat   lier   12.     On   finishing   uploading  which  was largely formed on  that of'\nshe will be shifted to Tacoma to take: the    Vancouver    Central  Ratepayers'\non a full cargo of wheal for the I'nitel j association.   It was decided to not lim-\nKingilom,   under  charter  to   Balfour-jit representation lo wards but to give\nGuthrie    Co. | representation   to   each   properly   or-\nCapt. B. P. Le Bras, master of the ganized ratepayers' asosciation. The\nbig square rigger, reports a rather j association will meet on the first and\ntempestuous voyage. On July 16 the; third Tuesday of each month, except\nHoche had her royal top gallant mast j June, July, August and September. An\ncarried away In a driving gale. All (effort will be made to secure the Ed-\ntold,   the   shap   had   iwelw   sets   ot. monds municipal hall committee room\nas a  place of  meeting.    Peter Blair\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdpresided.\namong  those  suggested as\nWOUID INCREASE\nTEACHERS' SALARIES\nsails torn to shreds during the long\nvoyago At almost the end of her\nvo'-.ipe, southeast gales drove her\naway from the entrance to San de\nFuca and she was four days off Cape\nFlattery.\nEnjoyed to the Full.\nAt, St. Andrew's Presbyterian church\nlast  night  the  Ladies'    Aid    of\nSecretary   of   Port   Coquitlam   School\nBoard Makes Recommendation\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nMatter Laid Over.\n[successful  opi ration   throughout    the1\n.central west and a number of southern cities, (rom H\"1-! to 1910, of matri-1\n. menial bureaus mul  take business In-\nvestment schemes was   told   In   the\nfederal court  here    todaj    by    Mrs. .\nLeon Aldeii, c;i 'rial, under the luiine\nof \"Mrs. Anna ii. Taylor,\" for using\nthe malls to defraud.   The woman Is |\nspecifically charged  with having defrauded \\V. I-'. Rlsdon, of Turkic. Mo., j\nB.  I', tiny, of l.anesviilc. Texas,    and\nO, J. Doll, of  Yale. Okla.\nThe  three   un n   mentioned  as    vie- I\ntims in the present Indictments, it Is\nj said,   were   induced   lo   invest     their;\nI money  in  business  schemes  Mrs.  Al-\n* den was promoting.\nThey testified she made them litem- j\nises  of   marriage.     Scores  i f   lettert\nthat are alleged  to have passed    be-\nI tween the woman und her victims In ;\nth'* present case were read    Guy was |\n; the heaviest contributor. He testified\nhe gave Mrs. AUIen $1500, part of\nwhich   was  In  lie inveati d  In  a  paint ;\nIt has become such a rare occur-ichurph served dinner to all comers\nrence for a big steel sailing ship to i.Needless to say the comers were suf\ncome to this port that much interest jficient .to  more  than   till   the  school\nAt the meeting oi  the  Port, t'ogultj\ntin-lam school board held r'\" Wednesday j business.    Rlsdon  and   Doll  declared\nevening   Secretary   W.   D.   P.  Oodwln   they  gave  Mrs.  Alien  mon-y  fnr in-\nrecommended   the\nr  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd!,_., i vestment in her electric vibrator busl\npaying   of  higher  negg\nhas been taken in the Hoclje by local j room aitf thfe fare, thei handiwork \"of '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd salaries to teachers in the city, A1', testified thev were engaged to\nshipping men. and quite a number Ithe best cooks in these parts, enjoved ; schools, particularly these who had | Mrs. Aldi n. who was known to tnem\ngathered off Pier 1- to meet her. She to the full, with accent on the full. !ci,aree of the primary classes. Ow- as \"Mrs. Taylor.\" Rlsi.on aad uuy\nwas built in  Names in  .H01. is 276.0 I After dinner a program was given. W. j.       . ' ,_\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.    \"f   fh(,  vear  the   ar,>  r,T   y(ws  \ufffd\ufffd'd lb    1,\"u',d\nfeet   long,   40.3   feel   beam   and   -2.5 |J, Whiteside, was chairman and those IlnK  ,0  t\"e   lateness  ol   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \ufffd\ufffd i years younger.\nwho assisted were W. M. MeCloy, Mr. board was unable to make any raai- , Mrs A|dpn 0n,.:r,i,i- acquainted w'.b\nOraham, solos; Miss Cave-Brown-C'ave foal alterations to its policy of school (h(? lnRn thr0URh Idvi rilscments ror\nan Instrumental solo;  Mrs. Renshaw. I administration  and   decided  to  refer a bu,iine8ii partner1.\nfeet deep.     ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\nTIDE  TABLE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFRA6ER. RIVER.\nFor the Week Ending Sunday. Nov. 9.\nnext    year's\nThe testimony ef  Mrs.  Alden  fix<d\nWestminster.\nSand 1\neads.\nTime.\nHigh.\nLow.\nHigh. Low.\nTime. lit.\nTime.\nlit.\n11:10   5:40\n10:10 -3.8\n2:14\n0.8\n20:00 17:15\n19:02 10.6\n10:14\n10.2\n12:05   6:15\n11:05 13.5\n3:01\n1.8\n20:40 111-15\n19:41    S.7\n18:12\n9.6\n12:55    6:55\n11:56 13.3\n3:50\n2.1'\n22:35 20:50\n21:36   8.7\n19:30\n8.7\n13.45    8:00\n12:43 13.0\n4   14\n1.0\n21:45\n23:42    8.2\n20:16\n7.6\n0:40    8\t\n13.21 12.7\n5:44\n5.1\n14:20 22:26\n20:42\n6.6\n2:20    8:311\n1:21    8.6\n6:46\n6.0\n14:55 23:15\n13:53 12.4\n21:04\n5.6\n3:45   9:30\n2:15   9.2\n7:47\n6.7\n15:20 23:53\n14:21  122\n21:25\n4.7\nMrs.  Alderdlce, solos;   Peter  Peebles, j the  recommendation to\nrecitation, \"Tam O' Shanter.\" board. ,     I the places and '.dates of the operations\n  Mr.   tlodwin   made   the   suggestion  ()f  htf_  ma,r-mcnjai   agencies  as  fol-\nTwo  skating sessions cn  Saturday, ' while   reporting   on   the   recent   con-   ,Qwa,    i.-,.,t smith. I!m4;  Dallas, Tex..\n3  p.m.  and  8  p.m.    Full   band  in  at- > vention of the Ii. C. School Trustees   _m, Kallsas ('itv   i;,o.-,;    Denver   and\n0.S   tendance  and  two  instructors  paying i association   whicli   he   attended   as   u|KansaH   city,   1906;    Houston,. Texas,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   '  special attention to beginners.  12374) I delegate   and   where  he  collected     a '-popeka,   Kansas,   and   Omaha.   Neb..\n  number cf new  ideas on  school    ad-   lq0-.   ne.iiimout. Texas.  1008;  Shrove-\nBank Clearings. ministration,    lie also  suggested   the   port   la   1&u,d: Kansas City, Memphis\nHank clearings for the week ending ; raising   of   l'ort     Coquitlam     schools       . 'Sl   i,ou|g, liiin.\n8.7 iyesterday  were  $599,841. : from a rural to a proper city standard |    T|lM operttt|0na  In  Kansas City  rn-\nby having them along the latest    ap-1 ault(.d   in   the   indictment   on   whieh\n\ufffd\ufffdocia\n1 and P\nersona\nproved city lines.\nTWO  CANDIDATES.\nSatisfactory progress is being made\nby William Howay, father of bis\nhonor Judge Iloway, who had the\nmisfortune to break a leg through\nfalling late Tuesday evening. Mr.\nHoway  is  resting easy  at  St.  Mary's\nBIG VESSEL SINKS\nIN CURLING HARBOR\nCouncillors   Atkins   and   Martin   Will\nContest Coquitlam  Reeveship.\nPre-election   excitement    in   Coqult-\nhospital.        \t\nAmong the new guests at the Wind\nsor are Chas. J. Fentir. Kamloops:   I\nlam    municipality    jumped    another| Owen,   Albion;   Wm.   Smedley,   Portl\nnotch yi  terday when It became known Haney, and R. Sharp, Alert Hay.\nthat councillor H. .1. C. Atkins would !     T   sh_nIlon ()f gt H,m0   wag _\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_\nthe new arrivals at the  Premier  yes\nterdar,\nMr. and Mrs. Donald McLean, cf\nPort Ccqultlam, visited New Westminster   in   their   auto   yesterday.     Mrs\nCre** ;f 14 Narrowly  Escape Death\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nShip Was  Fishery  Refrigerator\nand Cost $y30,000.\nrun for reeve against Councillor E\n.-. artln Alreadj tha cohorts of the\ntwo candidal \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd are marshaling for the\nap-jjroachlng campaign .\".nd a Iteen contest at tl\"* polls - expi eti i\nSince Keeve  Barth   \".ill retire from\nshe now is brihg tried.\nP. W. [tenter, a post office inspector at S'.. Louis, testified Mrs. Alien\nbad told him she had ui'ed the name\n\"Kannie K. Morton\" In St. I-cuis:\n\"Louise C. Davis\" In Memphis, and\n\"Jessie c. Halliday\" In Omaha.\nMrs. Alden could  reim-mber few of\nthe    names    under\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwhich    she    had\n! passed.\nEleven  Days  in  a Cave.\nPort Arthur. Nov. 6.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTo die a few\ni hours aftir 1 \"ing found after 11 days\n! absence   waa   the   fate   of   Mike   Mc-\n] Donald, a Canadian Northern railway \\i\njemplovec,   this  morning.    McDonald I\noffice and go to Vancouver, both cun-  Thomas Mars, also of Port Coiiuitlam.\ndldates will  be on something like an ' was a  visitor  in  town  yesterday,\nequal  footing,\ni.igiiiiig wil ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\nIn     irrey A. <;. Martin, uow chair\nman of the board of Bchool  trustees\n| was discovered in a cave in a  w\nCurling, Nfld., Nov. 6.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe steamer pne(i condition by search parties\nAlcona, a floating refrigerator for thel  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nGloucester boats' engaged  in  the herring  fisheries on   this  coast, sank   In\nCurling harbor today after it had been\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^   swepi by flames for 18 hours    All the\n_     It is likely  thai  cam'      T   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd 0f Toronto, wiib among the   crew of 11 were saved though several\npaigntng will start before many weeks. I business visitors to the city yesterdav.   were thrown i:,t\" the water when t.ie\nA. Houston, of Chicago, registered at|\ufffd\ufffdtaamer went down\nhas been asked lo stand for the\"reevS the RuB8< :l y' M,,r,J;l>''\noflfce    His thi   matter Is      R- F. Dudley, of Fernle, grand maa-\nnol yel madi   knowi       ...   Sullivan   ter   Ior   British    Columbia    of    the\nhas made no ent ol Lis in    1. O. n  P., who is at present Raiting\ntenl  ii    at 1 ig eli   tlons        Ithe coast  lodges, will be In the olty\ni n  Monday, Nov.  17    On that  date\nUnknown Killed at Brandon. ****** rit>' lo\"^ No, \" wi\", V\". m**'\nBmndon.No,   *     '..   .,   (own man, ;\"r>  <\ufffd\ufffdremonles and spec al drills,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwith i,.  blng on       pi    Dn to Identify Archdeacon I'ugh, or Lyiti a, pioneer\nhim, wa           : undti   i bean of the mlEsltjaary  of the  cariboo   country,\ngrain In tin        p   i:   wreck near b n- win, has been on a visit to the coast\nFriday night   The vlc-tiin was thoughl\nTh Alcona was valued at $100,000\nand was owned by the Qroton Pew\nfisheries company of Gloucester, and\nwas partly Insured. The refrigerator\nship had Just been put In order for\nthis season's fishing, about t*i begin,\nand it will require much lima before\nanother boat can ba Secured tq take its\n| place,\nHENNESSY PRESSES\nCHARGES Of GRAfT\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Continued trom rage One i\nto be steal ng a i\nclllea, was in tbe city for a few hours\n.yee'.erday   visiting   old   friends   prior\nWe Have for Sale\nA   choice   shipT.ent   cf   Jonathan\nApples  Bt  $200 Per  Box.\nWe    aivirio    buying   early    as   our\nstock Is limit* .i\nto his return for the interior again.\nMrs. Hamilton Hogg, 1007 Dublin\nStreet, will receive on the Hrst Friday\nof each month.\nMrs. S. E. Edwards, 1013 Hamilton\nstreet, will receive on Friday, Nov. 7.\nAPPEAL EOR KELP\n!     WAS UNANSWERED\ncould prove\nHennoi *\nIn Hi\" lattei\non Sep\" ml\nor firms h\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   by others.\n.;i!d be had met McGulre\nroom In a hotel i'i Utica\np HI.    II\" produced n llsl\naid  MoOulre had  mimed\nWEDDING BELLS\nBi si ie  ni \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,*, stock, 4 Ibs.\n 25:\nrib. tin\nFancy Whit\nfor  ]\nSplit !'\".\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \t\nSago\t\nTapioca  \t\nEnglish Lentils    \t\nNew Flgi;. per Ib   ..    .\nNew Dates, per lb.  . .\nChoice Grapes   \t\ntihrystallzed Ginger   In\ndainty delicacy, per tin 25;\nFancy New Zealand Butter 2 Ibs. 75c\nKastern  Butter    3  Ibs. $1.00\nFine Kastern Select Egg;, per doz 40.\nWo servo you  well and solicit    n\ntii.il order.\nDean's Grocery\nPhone S8(.\nBurr Block\nGirl  Alive.Under  Wreckage for  Half\nr.n Hour\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNo Effort Made to\nSave Her.\nLAIDLAW-M'NIVENj\t\nYesterday evening at the residence! Mocse Jaw, Nov. B - Tlir Investfga-\n4 Ibs. 25:;of Mr .,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,] MrK peter Blrrell the mnr tlon into the C, I'. It. wreck here on\n4 lbs. 25s i pi.,,,.,, was celebrated of Miss Kan* Monday was continued today. G. VV.\n4 Ibs. 25c Elisabeth Laidlaw- ami .lohn MoNlven Cashl a, one of the first to reach the\n3 Ibs. 25;   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdf   Vancouver.    The   bride  was   given   sei no of the wreck stated that  Lillian\n 15c j away by her father and ihe ceremony   Waterman,   lhe  dead   girl  was  alive\n 10s performed by Rev. J, S, Henderson In   undi\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd th\" wreckage for over half an\n2 Ibs. 25; i the presence of only immediate rela-|hour afier the  wreck und    that    al\nto blm \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd * v.ing mude contributions\nThe list *.v 11 wrlt'\";i on the Bl Ltlot\nery of the li 'el and Hennessy s*_iil In*\nhad tal :; down in the presence of\nMoGulrc.\nTo Defeat  Murphy.\n\"MoOulre wanted me to defeat Mur-\nIphy,\"   said   Hennessy,   \"and   nald   he\nI wante i these revelations made,    Bul\n[he sati! be did not. want It. known he\n(had told me anything on account, of\njthe affiliations of his brother.\"\nDlstrlr-l   Attorney   Whitman  elicited\nfrom   Me'lu ire  tiiat  his  concern   had\ndone a large business in  bonding the\nI contracts   of   construction   flrma   en-\ngag'd In thc state highway and barge\ncanal   work   and   that   McGulre,   after\nhaving given (600 to Sulzir as a cam-1\n|paign contribution had at Sulzer'a re-\nI quest given $ir,i'(l to Hennessy to en-\ntlvefl. After ;, wedding tour of thel though ahe was moaning and Implor-\nPacific coast Mr, and Mrs. MeNIven ! lng l:r|p, no effort was made to re\nwiii reside In Polnl Grey, jmovc the   .cbtis and asa'st her.\n  !    Tomorrow  the  crews of all  trains\nOBITUARY. Using  the  switch   In  the evening  and\n  morning preceding lne accident will\nCAI Hit -The sad news of the death | he called In order to settle the qtiM-\nof his lather. Robert Galer, of Wags- tlon as to the disappearance of the\nford. Suffolk, Bngland, has just been lock. No witness has yet been called\nreceived by Alderman it. C, Galer, of outside tho train crew, who stated\nPort Coqultlam.    Deceased    was    64 j definitely the position of th\" freight\nyears of ago and had been 111 for t\nnasi  three  years     Death  was cn: :-'d\nColumbia Street, i Iron: the effects uf a paralytic stroke.\na^dMiS8Cave-Brownc-t&ve\nI..It.AM .   A.II 0 M\nlEMQERS OF THE INCORPORATED\nSOCIETY  OF   MUSICIANS.\nLessons In  Pianoforte,  Violin, -ting\nng,  Voice    Production,    i henry     (III\n:lass or priwuei*, i. Harmony. Counter\npoint. Musical I'oni) and  History.\nPupils prepared   lor   the   examlna\nlions of lbe AsHocritid Bonrd or    the\nHoyal   Academy  of   Music  and   Uoyal\n^^^_^^^^_^_^^^^_^^^^_^_ College or Music.    Also    Professional\nengine at the lime or the crash.    All ' Diplomas, 'leacher or  Performer.\ntbe Injured are doing well and eeveral     For terms, etc., apply Gl  Dufferin\ni ure now  ub'.- to walk aruutid.\nitieot.   Phot.i! 411 It.\nFriday and Saturday Specials\nLast Friday and Saturday we offered special bargains\nin some of our best lines of Footwear. The public\nwere not slow in taking advantage of our offerings,\nas our store was crowded both days.\nTHESE ARE THE LINES\nWE OFFER FOR NEXT FRIDAY AND SATURDAY\nRegular    Friday and\nPrice        Saturday\n120 pairs Men's Dark Tan Waterproof Boots $7.00 $4.85\n86 pairs Men's Velour Calf Waterproof Boots  6.00 3.85\n48 pairs Men's Box Calf Goodyear Welts  5.50 3.65\n% pairs Men's Waterproof Heavy Boots    t.00 2.85\n78 pairs Men's Waterproof Hi Cut Boots  6.00 3.65\n120 pairs Ladies' Hi Cut Gun Metal Button Boots  5.00 3.65\n62 pairs Hi Cut Gun Metal Button Boots   4.50 3.25\n26 pairs Ladies' Box Calf Lace Boots  4.00 2.65\n46 pairs Ladies' English Slippers  1.50 .\"5\n82 pairs Storm Rubbers 75 .25\n46 pairs Misses' Hi Cut Gun Metal Button Boots                 4.00 2.85\nRemember These Prices Are for CASH ONLY\nW. E.\nTHE\n711 Columbia Street\nSINCLAIR\nSHOE MAN\nWettmintter Trust Block\nHigh Cost in House-Furnishing\nIs a Thing of the Past\nBetter Prices and Better Service Than You can get in This City or Vancouver.\nSOME BARGAINS FOR MARKET DAY\nWhite Enamel Beds, with spring and Banitury cotton top mattremes complete for\nBrail Bed, Hprlnn und all  wool liiattresH for\t\nfIhlffoiiicr in Qolden Ouk   \t\nChiffonier   In  Solid   (ioldon  flak     \t\nChiffonier  In  Solid   Fumed   Oak\t\nBxtenilou Talilen In Qolden Oak   \t\nBreakfast Table*, with date Leg  \t\nKitchen Tables \t\nSet of Solid Oak  IiIhith  \t\nSolid   Oak   Extension   Table\t\nKitchen   Rockers  with  aruia   \t\nNurse Rookeri\t\n1 [mir heavy Portiere, brown nr green \t\nBLANKETS  AND QUILTS ALL AT QEUNINE CUT  PRICES.\n$7.25\nS21.00\n$14.00\n$17.50\n$16.50\n$9.25\n54.25\n$2.50\n$19.75\n$12.75\n$2.25\n{7.50\n5.\n75\nDENNY  &   ROSS\nThc Big Furniture Store Sixth and Carnarvon Sts.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ni \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*.*. ...... i***mu***Wt*-m\n. .,..%.... \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -. .\nFRIDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1913.\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS.\n_ . pace riva\nEVERYTHING IN SPORT\nHOCKEY - RUGBY - SOCCER - BASKETBALL - BOWLING - BOXING\nSKATERS DISAPPOINTED\nAT ARENA LAST EVENING\nIni, mM'BiliiiK, gymnastics and hand-,\nball. It was fell ut the meeting thut '\nthe union was trying to control too '\nmany branches ,,t sport and lhal In\nthe United Btates no attempt Is I\nmade to govern hockey, root ball, bas\"\nball and such  team competitions.\nDelay in Making Perfect Sheet Causes\nPostponement of Official Opining\nto   Saturday   Afternoon.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdlint when everything wai consld\nerod la fine ihape for the official open\nIna of the bin Ice rink, the general\npublic was doomed to disappointment\ncompany who had been using every |\neffort to have everything ready for]\nIhe opening, but a ten hour stoppage '\nof the machinery on Monday dereutcd I\ntbelr aim. Th\ufffd\ufffd break In the median! |\ncal department allowed wbat little Ice I\nhad been formed to soften from\nWhlCh it never recovered until Wed-1\nnoiday. I\nThe Ice will probably be In perfect j\nshape this evening but the company j\nare not going to take any chancel in I\nBASKETBALL TONIGHT\nSCOIT SENT UP\nFOR THREE VEARS\nTwo  Games   Scheduled It Columbian\nCollege\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCollege vs. Hustlers and\nAdanacs vs. Crescents.\nDeprived    Specimen    Get!    Deierved\nPenalty\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPodeiu the  Vig ind\nSome Othln.\nlie probably would be abBi-nt for sev- !\nenl days.\nOnly Speculation.\nMexico City, Nov. 6,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPrevented by\nthe most Unpenetrable reserve displayed at the national palace from\nlearning more of Prealdent Huerta's\nIntention regarding bis answer lo the*\nAmerican demands, the Mexican people an- Indulging In speculation as to\nthe llnul outcome.\nAs a Bi-ijiiel to (leneral Huerta's da\nori'i' yesterday making bank notes\nlegal tender, foreign residents and\nMexicans alike have been ransacking\nthe lown for silver money, but ut the\nbanks It was with difficulty that\nchange could be procurred for notes\nof more thun live pesos Business men\nare alarmed, fearing tbut there will\nbe so great a shortage of metal currency soon that It will Interfere seriously with the transaction of business. |\nlast evening. _ It was found'that while | disappointing' the publlcTaiid \"therefore\nthe Ice was In fair shape, the Arena\ncompany did not feel like allowing the\nskaters on the Ice until a perfect\nsheet could b\ufffd\ufffd si-cured and for that\nreason the opening was postponed until Saturday afternoon at - o'clock.\nSeveral hundred skaters were ready\nto make the Jaunt to Queen's park In\nthe hopes of trying their blades for\nthe first lime this season when the\nreport spread that the Ice was not\nready aud though every effort was\nmade, to circulate the news, more than\n200 wended tlieir way tii the park.\nNo  one   was\naccount of tb\npostponed the opening until Saturday\nafternoon whin It Is expected that record crowds will fill the arena both\nal the aft. rnoon and evening sessions\nThroughout the whole of yesterday\na man was on duty In the rink sprinkling a sheet of water which was rapidly congealed Into Ice but In some\nplaces the ruts caused by the pipes\nwin- still showing.\nI.aft night's postponement means a\nbig losa to the company who were\nconfident ot a big opening crowd but\nrather   than   accept   gate   money   and\nmore  exasperated   on |allow patrons on the poor Ice, It was\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd delay than Manager Kd j deemed  bitter to wait until .Saturday\nSavage and thc directors of the Arena'afiernoon.\nAMATEUR HOCKEY     BIG SMOKE THROUGH\nChangci Yet to Be Mide In Schedule\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDouble   Headen  on  Tuesday\nNights it Arena,\nTuesday evening, Dooember 2. win j\nSea the Wisiminster amateur hockey\nlearns get awa> for tin- season of\n1912-14, thin being arranged at a\nmeeting held on Wednesday evening\nThe early start, and therefore nn\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdparly closing, will give the winning\nteam a chance to challenge for lhi\nSavage trophy which was placed up\nfor r. unpctltion during the summer by\nMr. Savage, ot Vancouver Viclmin.\nVancouver and Westminster teams\nare expected to compete for this sti-\nverwarv, which will be emblematic\nof thc amateur championship of the\nprovince.\nDouble header games w III be play.\nvti every Tuesday except when such\ndates i-1'u.h with the profess,ona]\ns'-liidule Ibis will apply on lb cm\nI ( 9 when Uie liiKt pro game Is\nscheduled on thu local rink between\nthe Hoyals and Victoria and again on\nFebruary 3.\nTb-e lenta'ive schedule, which will\nnecessarily have to be changed In\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdorder to conform with the priili sslon\nnl games IB as follows, the first learn\nmentioned In each game being lbe\nhome team.\nDec.  -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- llcavrri vs.  Moose;   I'raser\nMills vs. Bapperton,\nDee. it Sapperton vs. Heavers;\nMoosb  vs.   Fraser- Mills.\n1K>C. 1\ufffd\ufffd Moose vs. Sapperton;\nKruner Mills vs   Heavers.\nDec. ii Sapperton vs. Kraser Mills;\nMoose vs   Heavers.\nDec ;ID Kraser Mills vs. Moose,\nBeavers vs.  Sapperton.\nJan. 6-Beavers vs. Fraser Mills;\nSapperton   vs.   Moose.\nJan. 13- Kraser Mills vs. Sapperton;\nHeavers vs. Moose.\nJan. 20 Moose vs. I'raser Mills;\n8npperton vb. Heavers\nJan.  27 -Kraser  Mills vs.  Heavers;\nMocee vs. Bapperton,\nKeb. 8--Moos* vs. Heavers; Sapper-\nIon vs. I'raser Mills.\nFeb. 10\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdlleavers vs. Sapperton;\nKraser Mills vs. Moose.\nFob. 17- Sapperton vs. Moose; lleavers vs.  Kraser Mills.\nJack Johnson at End of Hn String\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nPelkey.8mith Bout May Clear\nthe Air.\nColumbian college gym wlll   be thc\nj scene or tiie  basketball  games    thin\n[evening   when   the   Cresceuts   oppose I\nthe Adanacs    In the   opening    game,,\nwhile the HuBtlera and Columbian ecl-1\n1 lege  take  part   In  tbe  second  of    a\nj double header.\n|    This wlll be the first time that the\nwinter sport  haa  been  Btaged   ln  the\nI college gym    this   season    and    the\n'student body have made big plans In\nithe way of noise and enthusiasm.        I\nOr   the   two   games   the   ''rescents;\n'should be able to maintain their pres-\nnil   lead   against    the    former    high\nschool   hoys,   although   tlui   result   of\nIthe   College-Hustler   encounter   will\nprobably   remain   In  doubt  up   to  the,\n| last  minute of play.\nKar the Adanacs tlie following  Will\nitakc the floor:  Cunningham and Cur-;\n1 tlB;   Sutherland: Cook    and    Uobson,;\nITlielr Opponent!  will have llle  follow. ;\nlng:    i'entlar d  and   Rogers;   Btorme;\n; Dougherty and MacDonald.\nThe Hustlers will consist of the\nI five Sangsters and the lineup for the\n{college team Is: Martinson and\n[Raley;  Moore;  Smith and Manson.\nLew Scott, alias Frank Wilson,\nfound guilty under tbe morality laws\nIn the pollce court on Wednesday,\ncame up for sentence yesterday morning before ,\\1 agist rate Edmonds and I\nwas sent to the penitentiary to serve\na term of three years.\nScott  was given an opportunity  to\nproduce  evidence  as  to hiB previous\ngood character, bul waB unable to do j\nso.    HIb brother-in-law ln North Van-\nCOUVer refused to come and testify tn I\nhis favor, saying that Scott  was \"no\nBlew Away $120 Worth of Soil.\nAbilene, Kan., Nov, t. John Dolan.\nla farmer living near here, estimated\nI that a July wind blew from his farm\nsoil worth $120. In a petition filed\nIn the district court here today, he\nasserted that fires caused by sparks\nfrom a railroad engine burned all the\nstubble from a tract of bis land, leaving It unprotected. When the winds\ncame, the loose soli was blown away.\nTender! for Elevator.\nOttawa,  Nov   6.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTbe    department\nOf trade and commerce  haa received\nten tenders of the plant of the term- i\ninal   elevator to  be  erected   at  Port \\\nNelson.   They have been aent to the ;\ngrain   commission   at   Fort   William.\nWhen a choice is made by  the com- :\nmissloners. tenders   for   construction |\ngood\" and deserved all that was com-i*\"1 be =alled;   The elevator will have\nlng to him a caPacit>' of one and a half million\nFailing    witnesses,    thc    convicted |buBtl<-''8'\nman   asked   the   magistrate   to  all' 'a -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\nhim  out  on   suspended  sentence,  but\nthe court  considered  the offence too |\nserious and sentenced him to u three\nyear term.\nI'odesta Eugenia has a distinct diB\nlike for anything that looks, listen?\nor smells like work. He is there when\nWILLS DRAWN\nFREE OF CHARGE\nCapital  Subscribed $500,000-30   Capital   Paid up $44\ufffd\ufffd,667.78\nReserve Fund $200,000.00.\nTo every one making a\nage  their  estate,  the  above\nwlll and appointing an executor to man\nfigures have a deep meaning.\nThey prove that In addition to careful management, experience\nand knowledge of values, thla Company offera a financial standing\nand responsibility that private executors cannot give.\nOur charges for handling -.states are never aon and are often\nless than those allowed to a private executor. Wben you ean secure\nso many advantages without additional coat by appointing thla Company to act aa your executor, you sbould gtve the matter careful\nconsideration and consult witb us.\nFull Particulars on Application\nWESTMINSTER TRUST, LIMITED\nHEAD OFFICE: NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C.\nJ. J. JONES, Managing Director.\nJ. A. RENNIE, Secretary-Treasurer.\nBOILERS\nRiveted Steel Plpea\nBURN OIL\nTANKS\nThe time appears to be approach- j\ning when John Arthur Johnson Is to\nBake his retirement frcm the prize\nring, BSver since the big negro was I\narreated in Chicago on a charge of\nwhite slavery, public opinion has been\nturning against him with tlle result\nthat the Brst good heavy weight who\nmeets Johnson wlll beat hlm lo a\nfruz\/.le\nIti ports   frnm   I'aris   Indicate   that\niJohnson   welglu  280   pounds  and  actually     waddles.     Hll    finances    ure\ngrowing slimmer every day and Is no\n* longer   able   to  command   big   money\nlln the tnuhic halls.\nDeoember  'i  In  San   Francisco  will\nsettle the difference between uunboat\nSmith   and   Arthur   Pelkey  and   which\never   wins   this   battle   will   bn   In\n'line   po.iltlon   to   make   good\nlor the world's title.\nBOWLING.\nHouse  League Standing.\nP,    W. L.\nMarshall    9      7 2\nMcGill    9      6 3\nBurnett 9    6 3\nI'lke    9     4 5\nSloan    9     4 6\nWalters    9      0 9\nRUGBY UNMP\nit comes to asking lor a handout, but\nmanual lubor I May the spirits of\nthe 1. Vi. W. forbid. Nix for Poddy.\n.Yesterday the magistrate looked bim\nj over and decided to let hun get out\nof town ir he would get- He said he\nwould and it is presumed thut he has\n:got.\nTwo Visitors.\nYou  know,  it's awtully  disappoint-1\n; ing  when   you  travel  a long  way   to\ndo something  in  particular and then'\ni get  your  attention  drawn  in another\n1 direction.    Tbat'B what occurred to a\nPet I MIsBion    City    man    on  Wednesday\n.777! night,   after tv*   had   arrived  here  to\n666  transact some business.   In some way\n. 666 ', or another he got on the wrong side\n-444 ; of the swing doors of a Juicery  and\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ttt jthe cheeBe waa ofl. In came the booze\n,000 iand out  flew the  particular business\nidea   and   yesterday   the   man\nMission  was in the drunk row\nMATING       VULCAN IRON WORKS, LTD.\nP. O.  BOX 442\nTELEPHONE  S24\n2    Reel Imp Feature    2\nROYAL TH\n,  Today Only\n':'\nVICTORIAN ORDER OF NURSES.\nMISS L DOWNHAM\nPhone 1324.\nclaim !\nRepr-eientative Teim  Will  Oppose V\nC. A. at Queens Park Saturday  Afternoon.\nM.\nSPORT CHATTER\n(Hy tho Potter.l\n'spun  hiB  yarn and  was permitted   to\ndepart  to transact his bit.\n|    All the way Iroin Armstrong, II. C.\ncame  Kred Thompson  and when    he\nstruck   this   metropolitan   centre     he\nwas  so  overjoyed   that  he   proceeded\nIImmediately   to   celebrate   tne   event.\n{The firework! went up most all night\n: Wednesday and the charred remnants l\n'came down  in  the  police court   dock,\n| yesterday   morning.     1'red   was  kept'\n| till  the afternoon till  he could  sober\nup  and   then   was  turned   loose   with\nnn Injunction lo cease bis endeavors\n. to make this a dry town.\ni    Seven  celestial  hopheads  failed  to\n'cover   their   ball   money   with   their\nbodies and it was ordered forfeited.\nfrom I ^^^^^^^^^^^^^\nHei Residence Y. W. C. A.\nFollowing   the  defeat  of Tammany I\nHail,    one    would    think    that     the\namateur  hockey    league    would    get\naway from secret caucus stunts.\nIS ROCHON THROUGH ?\nReport from  Eait  Stitei New West-\nminitir Defence Stir It Through\nwith the Qame.\nVancouver amateur hockey teams\nI will likely get one evening a week In\norder to pull off double headers. This\nIb In line with tbe proposition be\n'tween the local league and the arena\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdcompany.\nThat was a great day In Coffeyvllle.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Kansas,    when   Walter   Johnson   ar-\nIrivid   there   la\ufffd\ufffdt   week   in   company\nI with the \"round    the    world   troop.\"\nj Coffeyvllle la the native haunt of the\nbig    smoke    from    Washington    and\nwhen he went    In and    opposed    the\nOlants   all the banks closed, not be\ncause   hold-ups   were   feared, ,but   so\ntlmt the financiers could get out and\nsee   the  great  men   of  the  country.\nEven  the  postmaster    received    permission  from Washington to suspend\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdhe  reading of postcards, close    the\nCfflee,  and   go out  and  mingle  wltb\n*\\i\\  rejoicing populace.\nHilly I'ltzgerald Is married. The\nft.ir.ous Fitz. who since tbe winter of\n,'>1- has been pounding dough for\nl'a Fitzgerald In SI. Catherines, wai\ntrimed to Miss J. Adele Sheehan this\nwiek\nAccording lo a report from the east\n(Ieorge Kochon, Uie star defence man\nof the New Westminster hockey team,\nwlll not don a suit again. Just what\ntruth there Is to tills can be placed\non reserve, for recent advices from\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdileorge himself to other members of\nthe team Kochon will again be teen\nwearing a New Westminster uniform\nthis winter assisting the Royals In\ntholr flght for the Paterson cup.\nAlthough ouly a young fellow,\nRochon wai ono of the players whp\nAlmost disrupted the Saskatchewan\nAmateur Hockey league early laat\nwinter by playing with Swift Current\nafter having played professional\nhockey with Port Arthur the winter\nbefore,\nRochon wis a member of the Edmonton team tn the Western Canada\nBaseball league last eummer.\n'After making eueh a success ai an\nathlete the eastern report ti hardly\ncorrect, although one never knowi\nwhat will happen in this hunt for\nmaterial by the professional clubs.\nGlinti Upiet White Sex.\nnonglai, Arli., Nov. 6.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdln a game\nfeatured by errors and home rune,\nthe New York Olants defeated the\nChicago Whlto Sox here today 14\nto 5. Rath, Chaie, Evtmi, Magee and\nDevlin made home rum. The score:\nR.*\nChicago ,.?.' .5\nNew York 14\nBatteries:      beverem   and\nSchalk; Willie and Meyeri.\nPractically all the regulars will be\nout with the rugby teum on Saturday\nafiernoon ai Queens park when tho\nVancouver Y. M. G A. fifteen will be\nthe visitors. Smith, the Columbian\ncollege star, will be seen at full back\nwhile Ihe three-quarter line will be\nlooked after by Haley, nitchburn,\nWilcox and Ford. Dart and Davidson,\nwho have all shown themselves capable of getting the ball out of the\nscrum, while Stevenson. Dlggs. Whittaker, Hart, McDonald, Ruddock.\nKvar.s and Andrew should about bold\ntheir own on the forward line. Dun-\nranson and DavlB are held as reserves.\t\nJust who will be referee Is yet to,thc vice-presidency, but aa alio to the\nbe settled, the choice lying between j elect iou of the congress. Despatches\nA. B. F. Lloyd and Tlm Mahony.        i today say that General Huerta would\n  convene  the  newly  elected  congress\nHooiieri Go to Battle. land abide by their declilon as to tbe\nDlcomington, lnd., Nov. 6.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Indiana j legality of the elections. This was\nuniversity's football squad, composed | looked upon generally here as an In-\nof -5 meu, departed tonight for lowa | tenlion on the part ef General Huerta\nCity, where thc Hooslers will play the ] to have the election nullified while he\nlowa university team Saturday. Cap-  ' *\" '- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\"-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-.\ntain Davis, who was Injured In    the\nMATERNITY, SURGICAL AND\nMEDICAL CASES ATTENDED.\nMISS A. MILL\nDRESSMAKING\nFancy and Evening Dresses\na Specialty.\nRoom 14, Smith Block.\n12262)\nHUERTA fAHS TO\nANSWER WILSON\n'Continued from page oae)\nSADIE FRASER\nMus. Bac.\nSinging, Piano,  Theory.\nFor Terms and Hours Apply at\nStudio, 1011 Hamilton Street.   Phene .\n1319 R. (2243)1\nChicago\nday.\ngame,  will not play   Satur\nBookiee Fined.\nToronto. Nov. 6.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHandbook men\ngathered In yesterday by the pollce\nwere today brought before the magistrate aud lined all the way from $10\nto $60 each, the total amounting to\n$11.5.\ncontinued in power Indefinitely.\nLind Leaves Suddenly.\nVera Cruz. Mex., Nov. *.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJohn\nUnd, President Wilson's personal representative, accompanied by Captain\nW. A. Burnslde, military attache ot\ntlie American embassy in Mexico City,\ndeparted suddenly at 7:30 o'clock tonight, travelling In the direction ot\nMexico City. Mr. I.ind declined to reveal the object of his visit   He said\nRoyal Intelligence Bureau\n415 Weitminiter Truit Building.\nJ. M. GAWA, Mgr.\nExclusive agent for H. Ohashl &\nCo., New York, manufacturers of\nTypewriter Backing Sheets. Carbon\nPapers, Ribbons, etc. Mai) address.\nDrawer  110   New   Westminster.\nWhat with the harbor Improvements, the further\nDEVELOPMENT OF\nthe fliherlei and\nAitchison's\nLadies' Tailoring Branch\nsurely Weitminiter ia coming to\nher own.\nJ.N. AITCMISON\nTaller te Ladlee and Gentlemen.\nWeetmlneter Truet Block.\nMILLINERY'.\nMILLINERY.\nCommencing TODAY, (Nov. 7) we\nare putting on sale the whole of\nour stock of Millinery at\nHALF PRICE\nThe season has only jnst opened, yet we are making this offer\non account of the present \"DEPRESSION.** Our stock ia treab and\nthoroughly up to date, and consists of\nFelt* Velours* Beaver, Plush\nand Velvet Shapes\nBOTH TRIMMED AND UNTRIMMED\nRemember by purchasing NOW you lave 50e. oa every Dollar.\n\"BETTER TIMES ARE COMINO.\"\nMISS G. A. DAVEY\n'i\nMILLINERY SPECIALIST.\nCarnarvon St, Oppocit* Hotel Rueaell\nWeatmluUr. B-&.\nADVERTISE IN THE DAILY NEWS\nH.\nS     4\n17 n\nDaly,\nSi. Catherines' lacrosse team has\nbecn Invited to play Cornell university at Ithaca, N. Y.. on April 11, of\n1914. The team Intends to accept\nand also visit Chicago before the O.\nA. L. A. opens.\nThe Quebec Hockey club appears\nto have tho leait difficulty among the\nN. H. A. clubs In signing up their\nmen. Practically the whole team la\nitgned up at the present time,'while\nthey have secured some promising\nmaterial from amateur clubs.\nAccording to a Montreal report,\nDidier Pltre Is a bad actor In the N.\nH. A. clubs and for thli reason want\nto get blm palmed off on the Patricki.\nTbat $2200 eut In ulary which Pltre\ngot handed hlm thli fall li enough to\nmake anybody Inoculate with a\ngrouch.\nBobby Oenge, who came out to the\ncoaat witb Ueorge Rochon last winter\nand made good wltb Victoria, Is now\non hli way to the coait from Fort\nWilliam, Ont. Oenge will probably\nAll a permanent berth on the Senators- line-up thil winter, taking the\nplace Ot Ooldte Prodgers, who Is back\nwith hll old team In Quebec.\nAt the annual meeting of the Quebec amateur body held In Montreal\nlaat week a reiolution waa passed\nWhich wlll be -submitted to the annual\nmeeting of the O. A. A. V. whloh\nwould confine the jurisdiction of the\nunion to track and field sports, box-\nWeek End Specials at thp Fit RiteClothing Parlors\nFIT-RITE SUITS AND OVERCOATS\nRegular Values to $25.00.   Week-End special  --\/'*H $i7.Wt\nThese Garments sre of this season's make and are ap to the adnata in style, flt and finish.\nSPECIALS  FOR  THEyiMm&^y^^;\nLadies Tyrolean Norfolk Suits \"Water-proofed,\" just the thing for akatb^ o\ufffd\ufffdfc a fcw saita Irft\nRegular $25.00, week-end special .......$1&50  I .    LadfcaTyiaWmGblS     .      ,    V\nLadiee' Tyrolean Vasts. I Regular 1M*>iL***4^\nRegular $3.50, week-end special -. .:-..., .12,50  | Regular $25.00,\nWE GUARANTEE SATISF\nRICHARDSON &\n709 Columbia Street   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\".\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdm:*im&i\nHH\n\/\ni\nI\n__\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_,\n'><'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:<\n... . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd**\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi. ml  ste\nm\nV    --,    \"   V'   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'   -I\nn**fS*'  '\n|    tf---\ufffd\ufffd-- *aqb sra\nTIIE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS.\nFRIDAY,  NOVEMBEA 7,  IH3.\nI Classified Advertising\nWASHINGTON FRUIT\nACREAGE 281,947\nAGENCIES.\n8SIFIED AUS WIIJ- BS KB-\n\ufffd\ufffdeieed for Tne Newa at the follow-\nt_M_ places: F. T. Hill's druK itore,\n\ufffd\ufffdM Coltiinbla street; A. Sprice.\nQuernsboroiiKli. I-ulu Island; Mrs.\nR lju-den, Highland l*ark; Mrs. V.\nIjcwIs, Alta Vista.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd RATES. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd#\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nClassified\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOne cent per word per\n*af tt per word per weak; Ue per\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdruth; i.HOO wordi, to bo asm* as re-\nma'-r---t' \ufffd\ufffdtuv;lu oue year (rom   date of\nwatrect, $2-5.00.\nWANTED\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMISCELLANEOUS.\nitOAItl) AND ROOM ItEQU-KKD BT\nyoui-K maa In private bouse (no\nmidday meal), near Saj-prrUm car\nline. Reply stating terms to Box\n2M& Nows office. <!365.\nWANTBD\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPARTNER I'OR CHiCK-\ncn ranch; a going concern near\ncity. Muat bave $300 to $600 An-\nplj Box 2345 Newe ofttcei.     C2M5.\nWANTED\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDAILT HOUSEWORK OR\ngeneral servant.   Bessie   Cox,   Co-\n\ufffd\ufffdiultlam, B.C. <\ufffd\ufffd54)\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWANTED \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd HOUBMHOl-D PORNf-\ntare In large or email quantities for\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdpot cash. Will give fnll valae or\nnili sell your household -goods and\neffects by auction. WIU gaarantee\nto realize value or no eommlselon\ncharged. 11. J. Russell, Westminster\nAuction HoOs-a., Kinf'a.Mtcl btock,\nColumbia street. <2334)\nTO RENT.\nTO RKNT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTHREE ROOMED COT-\nUge. furnished, at 220 Seventh\nstreet. Inquire at 224 Seventh\natreet. (2360)\n**OR RENT \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd COMFORT ABI.E\nhousekeeping and bedrooms, 420 St.\nGeorge street. (2347)\nFOR SALE\nFOB    SAM*.   SIX    ROOMED    NKW\nliouse    opposite     U.   C.   Rolf  links, j\nAustin road; $10\ufffd\ufffd cash, $15 month-1\nly.     Apply  Kitves,  H.  C,  Oolf club. I\nC_:!ti7\ufffd\ufffd\nSpring    Planting   of    1913    Increases\nArea in State in Substantial\nWay.\nPACIFIC COAST\nWILL BT FLOODED\nFOR SAI.K- $40\nbelt $8. Apply\nofflee.\nEH-BCTRO-VlOOJt\nBox    -351     News\n(.3511\nOlympla, Nov. ti.-Statistics compiled by the state department of agriculture show that the spring planting\nof 1913 has so extended the planted\narea   in   the  state  that   more  than  a\nMillions Will Come After Opening of\nPanama Canal\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWhat Wlll Bc\nDone With Them?\nKOR BALE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEIGHT ROOMED MOD\nern  house, Sixth street    car    line\nclose In.    Apply    Box    2346    News j quarter of a million acres nre now In\nof ice- \\ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd***\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*> j Iruit trees.\n~\"\"\"\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\"~'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     Kecorded plantings bring the total\nKOR    SALE \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  FIVE    PAS9ENOER  fruit tree acreage to ..S1..47,  with    a\nauto in lirst class miming ordet, probability that tour nuriortei hot re-\nextra tires, etc. Trade as first pay- ... \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ... . . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,,.__\nment on small liouse, modern. Box P\ufffd\ufffdrtta\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd> \ufffd\ufffd*<\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd** total consider-\nI ably. Of the total acreage ^30,706 acres\n2348 News office.\n(2348)I\nFOR      SALE \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd HOUSE      PARTLY\nfinished, and large cleared lot, Ed-\nI are In apples, 12,925 acres being plant-\nled to this fruit last spring.\nWhile   Yukima  county   atlll   Is  the\nTacoma, Nov. 6.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"Two hundred and\nfifty union men from states west of\nthe Mississippi and I'auadlan provinces weet of Winnipeg, representing\nstate federations of labor, city central\nlabor councils and local unions of all\nthn trades, will be in attendance upon\nthe Western Uibor Immigration conference for a two-day session In the\nLabor Temple, Seattle, opening tomorrow at 10 a. ni.,\" snld Charles\nPerry Taylor thla morning.\n\"These union labor men of the west\nare profoundly Impressed with the Industrial problems consequent upon the\nNOME AGAIN IS\nON ITS FEET\nHas Recovered From Recent Disaster\nFurther Assistance  Is\nNot Needed.\nand\nSeattle, Nov. fi. Noinoltei who suf\nfercd lo.s In lust month's storm are In\nno further need of outside aid, according to passengers who arrived on lhe\nSenator this morning.\nNome is ngnln on Its feet and apparently ns prosperous iib ever, say\nofficers of the Senator. A majority of\nthe business houses have moved to vacant structures In other portions of the\ntown and with things again normal\ncitizens are manifesting more interest In tho new strike some distance\nback of St. Michael than In the storm.\nOld timers are preparing to gn to the\ngreat Influx of population lhat may be t ne)v   Melds.    Reports     from    Dawson\nexpected on the Pacific Const during\nmonds. Clear deed.   Cheap for cash, leBdlnf ffpU county of the statPi |e\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdd-  the first few yeara following the open\nApply owner, (ieorge Warne, Eighteenth avenue, Edmonds. (2324)\nFOR    SALE \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd SAW    TABLE    AND\nsaws, foot power mortising machine,\ngrindstone.   Box 2222 News office.\n(2222)\ning all competitors both in total acreage and number of plantings this\nspring, Okanogan nnd (Irant counties\nare showing remarkable increases In\nthe number of trees planted and bid\nfair to be close competitors of Yakima before long.\n____-_-_________---\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd I Berry Butlneu Growing.\nACREAGE NEAR NEWTON, JUST 8 j    Eaatern    Washington,    lt    appears\nfrom the records of plantings, also is\nmiles out, less than 30 mlnutea' ride\non B. C. Electric from New Westminster; soil excellent, bottom or\nupland aa desired; tram frontage\n$150 an acre and remainder just\nhack of frontage lots $100 and $125.\nTerms quarter cash, two years for\nbalance. ThiB Is a sacrifice; estate\nto be cleaned up at once. Sole\nagents, Curtis & Dorgan, New Westminster.   Phone 466.   No trades.\n(2331)\nFOR SALE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd$1.00 DOWN, $1.00 PER\nweek, Canada's Pride Malleable\nRanges; every one guaranteed. Market square. (2335)\nROYAL COLUMBIAN HOSPITAL\nTO RBNT \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd SUITE OF NICELY\nfurnished housekeeping roome, 37\nAgnus street.    Telephone $38 !_.\n(2350)\nFURNISHED AND UNFURNISHED\napartments to rent, right on car line,\nsteam heated, hot and eoM wator,\ngas ranges, electric light, separate\nbath to every suite, moms are bright,\ncheerful, clean and sanitary and rent\nis very reasonable including gas and\nlights. Also single rooma, both\nfurnished and unfurnished. Apply\nMrs. Mandville, suite 1, second\nfloor. Mandville apartments, corner\nSixth avenue and Twelfth street\ni'lni'i)\nTenders, sealed and marked \"Tend-!\nera for Property,' are invited for the j\n(purchase of Lots 3, I and 17, Block 6,1\niSuburban Block 4, New Westminster]\nCity, and will be received by thc\nundersigned not later than 6 p.m., I\nSaturday, November 8th, 1918. These\nlots are splendidly situated on the\nhill above Richmond street at Sapperton.\nTh-e directors are desirous cf realizing this property in order to provide\nfunds towards equipping the new hospital.\nE. S. WITHERS,\nSecretary.\nRoval Columbian Hospital, New Westminster, H.C. (2340)\ngoing into the berry business to a\nconsiderable extent, and the plantings\nof plums and prunes last spring in\nsome of the eaot side counties give\npromise that they may be seeking to\ntake honors in these fruits away from\nClarke county.\nOkanogan county purchased more\nplum and prune trees than the prune\ndistricts of the southwest, with Kerry\ncounty second. The bulk of the apricot shipments went to Chelan, Okanogan and Grant counties, in the order\nnamed.\nYakima and Spokane counties were\nthe heaviest purchasers of strawberry i\nplants for spring planting, while\nWhatcom and Skagit counties led In\nthe purchase of bush berries. On the\nwhole, fruit tree plantings of last\nspring were rather less than those of\n1912.\nPlantings by Counties.\nKollowing Is a segregation by counties  of  apple  trees  sold   for   spring\ning of the Panama canal. Immigration\nnml other authorities have estimated\nthe Increase of population that may\nbe expected In California, Oregon anil\nWnBhlngton within two years after\nthe canal opens at from 5,000,000 to\n20,000,000 people. Even if the lower\nfigure be the maximum this influx will\nbring serious problems to labor, for\ntwo-thirds of our Immigrants now\ncome from the Mediterranean shores,\nwhereas prior to 1855 two-thirds came\nfrom the countries of the north and\nwest of Europe.\n\"The better elements of our Immigration have always come from the\nnorth and west of Europe, hence the\nclass if Immigration received In thc\npast, quarter-century has not improved. Regardless of whence the 5.000,-\n000 may come, their arrlvdl in two\nyears in these three states means serious Industrial problems. These Immigrants will have little capital and\nwlll be obliged to seek employment.\nThey will he compelled to crowd Into\nour industries already well supplied\nwith labor, and may also be expeoted\nwere that the last boat down the Vu\nkon bore sixty-live stampeders for the\nstrike from the Interior.\nNome citizens have little or no hope\nthat Lane and his power schooner,\n.Polar Bear, or any of the other small\ncraft known to be In the Arctic, will\nget out before spring. No anxiety is\nfelt, however, as all were well provisioned.\nThe Senator left Nome October 25.\nAt that time the steamship Corwln.\nwhich, during the summer, operated\nfrom Nome to Kotzebue Sound points,\nwas expected to leave for Seattle October 28 with Seventy-five passengers\nand the United States revenue cutter\nBoar lay In the roadstead awaiting\nthe arrival of the liner Victoria before\nleaving for Seattle with fifty destitute.'.. *\nCaptain Cann described tho voyage\njotlth ns a \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdsuccession of gales.\nThe Senator brought 242 passengers.\nIncluding (lus Dorgen. a Nome merchant and his family; George MoLood,\na mining man from the \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCandle creek\ndistrict, and K K. Powell, one of the\nbiggest dredge operators of the Nome\nterritory. The Senator brought aB rar-\nto create new  and  inslenslfy  present j go a  small   shipment of gold bullion,\nsocial   problems  In   Pacific  coast  cil-j furs. Ivories and miscellaneous freight.\nlea. \t\n\"The information we have received |\nshows that hundreds of thousands of | Boy Charged With Shooting.\n, instalment-plan tickets have been sold !    H.-catur. III.. Nov. I     I'l-irenc Kul\nin European  ports by many of    the\nI steamship companies which expect tol\nFURNISHED   COMPLETE,    HOUSE\nkeeping rooms. $10   and   $15   per\nnv?\ufffd\ufffdth at 224 Seventh street. (2J.TI)\nLIQUOR  LICENSE   NOTICE.\nplanting:\nAdams       1.106 engage In passenger traffic via I'ana\nAsotin            85 ma.   One report gives 125.000 of such j\nHenton         3,111 j tickets  sold  to  Seattle and  Portland.\nChehalls           789 j Another mention of 40,fi0(i Hollanders\nChelan       59,222 ' destined   for   Seattle.    Other   reports '\nClallam i         46' give equally large numbers headed for '\nClarke        1,675 |California ports.\nColumbia        814      \"A  few  hope  the  Immigrant!   may\nCowlitz            850  be induced io become farmers, to set-\n| Douglas       27.712 'tie on and improve the logged-off lands\nI Kerry        4,077 |Or go upon  Die  irrigation projects of\nFranklin           1601 eastern  Washington,    Consider  for a\n| Garfield         84 '\nCrant    181,281\nIsland            625\nJefferson         47\nKing         2.H9H\nKitsap            422\nDecatur, III\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Nov. 6.\nIer, of Mattoon. 11 years old, has been\narrested on a charge of attempted murder followolng the shooting of a companion several days ago.\nMANY  JURORS  CALLED\nEUT  FEW ARE CHOSEN\nA images, was the first case called.\nThe  ties  which  have bound  Clarlf\nLong and  l.ulu M.  Long as husband\nDavenport,   Wash.,   Nov.     6.    Om   and wl.'\" since their marrlago in 1895\nman had heart trouble, several of Ihem   were  loi.'ay  severed   by  Judgo  It.   L.\n.aid they couldn't hear well, a few McCf\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdkeji **\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*>**. f,,r *?**'*{?,&\n' , , , , ,.,' , Sessions. Tlie suit wub brought by Ihe\nmore showed doctors oertlfloatei to j,ugbwid| who alleged desertion since\nprove they were unfit for Jury dut;,! idiii; ()n the part of his wife, who round one man told the Judge that h'. | sides, with their 14-year-old child, near\nhad too much work awaiting at bome\nto do Jury duty In Judge Met'rnskey'\ncourt Monday, when 30 prospective\nJurors anembled for the beginning Ofl\t\nStaba Friend;  Kills Himself.\nPortland.     Ore.,     Nov.    6.    A.     T\niiaviiinii. Okanogan county.\nj   The child will remain In tba custody\nOf tli\" mother.\nthe November term of court. Sonu\nexcuses were honored and some were\nnot, but when court was called to\norder there were but 21) men for jury\nduty from 69 mimes drawn at two different datei, The case of lloiithluB\nversiiB   the   (Ireat   Northern   railroad,\nHarm's, a grocer, toduy shut aad killed himself while brooding over his\nnet tn stubbing u friend at a card\ncard game.\nThe Evening Luxury\nII\nSALADA\nI!\nm\nCEYLON TEA\nAnticipated with delight by all who use it\nLEAD PACKETS ONLY. BLACK, MIXED OR GREEN.\nAT ALL GROCERS.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMiaMT AW ABB-IT. LOlla.   IMA.\nBIG STEAMERS\nDROWN ClAMS\nWhen Run Down\nin physical condition it is usually because the action of the\norgans of digestion has become irregular or defective.\nThen there is need for a safe and speedy medicine to relieve\ntho ills which occasionally depress even the brightest and\nstrongest The one remedy you may take and feel safe with is\nBEECHAM'S PILLS\n(TH. latsast Sala at An. M*dkia. la 0*. WorW)\nThe first dose givc.i 3pccdy relief in sick-headache, biliousness, constipation, lack of appetite, heartburn, dyspepsia,\nand lasting improvement follows the timely use of this favorite and reliable home remedy. You will become healthier\nand stronger, and more cheerful if you let Beecham's PiUa\nPick You Up\nDirtct...r;* wiih \ufffd\ufffd*>ery boa point the ***** tr* Smith tnd art *\ufffd\ufffdpr\ufffd\ufffdi\ufffd\ufffdIW valwabU lo n ita\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\nI'fcpiir\ufffd\ufffdd only _\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\/  I hnmat Btrrham, Sl. Hrltna, l_anc*\ufffd\ufffdhtrt. f-nglaml.\nSold fvcrywlicre in Canada and I'. S. America      In txnn, TS cents.\nLOST ANO FOUND.\nI_OST\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*5 REWAHD. BKAVKR UOA\non Kingsway or in New Westminster, l-ost Wednesday, October 2S.\nCam News office. (2371)\nCOLLECTIONS.\nBAD DEBTS COLLECTED EVERY-\narhere. No collection, bo clia.r^:.\n..fc-jMfrican-Vancouver liereaatlin- Agency, t*li Haitlngi i treet west. Van\nixKivfT, nc. inrit\nAUCTION SALES.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHIRN-TURB, STORE STOCKS ANO\nfarm sales conducted. Furniture\nbought for cash. P. B. Iirown, 17\nbeg-Wie streeti New Westminster.\nLAND REGISTRY ACT.\nNOTICEI IS HEREBY lilVKN lhal I lnlond lit   tin- n,*xt  merlin-**!  nf the  Hoard\nof  License  I'omnilsslnnori-,  to  apply  for a\ntransfer from myself,  Charlea Schwahn.\nJohn K. MacKenile mid nm<*e Loop, of\ntin* retail Honor license of the Colonial\nhotel in thlB elty.\nCHARLES  SCHWAHN,\nl :3fi:) Applicant.\nNew Westminster.  n.C'..  Nov.  6th,  191-\nmomeni the equipment, or rather, lack\nOl   equipment,  of  these    immigrant? iThali Why the Bivalves Are Becom-\nLand  costs  moMy,  which   few  Immigrants have.    Farming is differently\nKittitas     3,580\nKlickitat     17,408\nLewis      1.531\nLincoln     3,104\nMason     238\nOkanogan   113,428\nI'acific    7B8\n  2,450\nRe  t-ot :..  ot Blocks 148 and  l.'.t,\nt.ol 91, Group 1, Map 1157, in  thc\nDisirict of New Westminster.\nWhereas proof of the toss of Cortifi\ncate of Title Numlier 'il*?.F.. iatiupd in\nthe name of Harry Cline.   baa    been\ntiled in this office.\nNotice Is hereby given that I shall,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd it Um> expiration of one mouth from\nthe date of the Orat publication hereof,\nfn a daily newspaper published r\ufffd\ufffd the\nCity of New Westminster. Issue a\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd duplicate of the said Certificate, nu-\ni less in the meantime valid objection\nVlee made to me In wriling.\nJ. C. GWYNN,\nIDlstrlct Registrar or Titles.\nLend Registry Office,\nNew Westminster, B.C., October B,\n19U. 12226)\nAUCTION SALE\nI have been instructed by Mrs. N.\nJohnson to Bell hy public auction\nlabsolutely without reserve) on the\npremises,\n317 Fifth Avenue,\non Tues., Nov.  11,\nAt 1:30 p.m.\n(sharp, the valuable and nearly nev.\ncontents   of   her  well   appointed   resi-\nJdence.     As   Mrs.  Johnson   is   leaving\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdshortly for the old oountry every\narticle offered must be sold regardless of price offered, this is an exceptions, opportunity   to    acquire    high\nIclass furniture at your   own\nThe parlor\nPend  Oreille   \t\nPierce     3,236\nSan Juan    90\nSkagit     892\nSkamania     2.141\nSnohomish     2.141\nSpokane     51.210\nStevens    52,866\nThurston     1,536\nWakkiakum    34\nWalla Walla    2,030\nWhatcom     3,379\nWhitman     5,896\nYakima     163,182\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdUnclassified      64.057\nUducted In Kurope than in America.\nThe Immigrant must flrst find a way\nto earn a living, while he masters the\nlanguage. The hope that he will turn\nto  farming,  under the circumstances,\nlis   probably   vain.     He  will   look  for\nj work    So would any one similarly situated.\n\"Many   prominent  authorities   have\nI been Invited to address our delegates.\nll\nTotnl 710,876\n\"Principally 'Yakima    ;in<_\ncounties.\nRossiand Growing.\nXi-hort.    Nov.    6.-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSuch\nchange ha6 been wrought in\n'luring  the last five years,\nPresident Samuel (lompers and Secretary Frank Morrison, of the American\nfederation of l.abor. President A. P.\nMarsh, of the Washington State Fed\ncratlon of Labor, President Holton (if\nthe Seattle Central Labor Council,\nSecretary of Labor William H. Wilson, Commissioner-General of Labor\nAnton Caminetti, Delegate W. H. Trotter of the Canadian Labor Congress\nImmigration Inspector Turner of Everett, and many other eminent labor\nand immigration authorities are\namong lhe number.\n\"Our president, E. ,1. Stack, of Portland,  Ore.,  who  Is  secretary  of  the\n\"Benton; Ojejjon   l.ederatlon  of  Labor,   Is  ex\n, '! pected to arjiyy this evening,    forty\nor fifty c-onferei-CV delegates are already ln the city.\"\n|    Mr. Taylor is also secretary Ol\" the\n\"ashington   State   Federation   of   Labor anil a native of Washington.  Ile\nprinter by trade and president of\ning    Scarce\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNeed    Breakwater to Protect Them.\na great\nIlossland\nmany\nbuildings have been improved and oc-lhls  Typographical   Union  In  Tacoma.\n0^ iiu pai mr contains china cabinet and\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdmahogany rockers. Axminster rugs.\npiano and\na three piece parlor sei in\nmahogany frames, upholstered in best\nsilk and cosi a shori time ago $140,\ncentre tables, pictures, laet curtains,\netc.; dining room contains in part\nhandsome fumed i.uk sei ol pedestal\nextension table, buffett, six leather\nseat chuirs, cabinet ami pedestal and\ncoat $346, also liquer case, crusts,\nsilverware, porcelain dinner Bervlce,\nbronzes, linen, etc , etc . den furniture, combination Becretary, large\nquantity of valuable books, Empire\ntypewriter, pictures, beater, etc., etc ;\nbedroom contains very large and\nheavy bums bpdl, springs and Hest-'\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdmon* mattreseei, Circassian walnut\ndressers, commodes and chiffoniers,\nruga, curtains, etc.; kitchen\nMalleable range, large quantity of\npreserves, tallies, chairs, etc.; also\n-___. I gard en   tools,  lawn   mower,  etc.;   one\nHe thc Southeast Quarter of Section 'nv,' passenger Studebaker automobile, j\n25, Township 8, Id the District of [Don't forgel tha date and time, Tues- \\\nHew Westminster. ,d;>y, November 11, 1913, at 1:30 p.m. I\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWfcereu proof of the loaa of Oct- Hharp.   open for Inspection on Mon\ntttecte   of  Title   Number   1S1C4F,  4\ufffd\ufffd- 'lay, November 10, 1913, and on morn\nHoed in lhe name of James C Korlong  ing of sale\ncupled and the city thas been placed\non such a substantial basis of prosper-1\nprices. | ity that T. H. Waters, of the Nelson I\ncontracting firm of Waters & Pascne. I\nwan astonished when he visited Ihei\ngolden city on Thursday for the first j\ntime since 1908. This Hrm is making\narrangement! to open a branch at ]\nRossiand, as It believes that  there Is i\nHe began his career in life as an 8\nyear-old newspaper carrier In old Tacoma in 187B, and feels tliat he is a\npioneer. Mr. Taylor has always been\na prominent union labor man, and is\nwell known among organized labor In\nWashington, Oregon and Idaho.\nsufficient building work to be secured\nin lhat city to justify the step.\nRECKLESS AUTO DRIVERS\nWILL  EE   RUN   DOWN\nCITY  OF  NEW  WESTMINSTER.\nVoten'  Lilt.\ngiven that a Court\nHouseholder!\nNotice is hereby\nOl Revision on above Hat will be held\non Saturday, the 15th day of November, al 10 o'clock in the forenoon, in\nthe ('ouncil Chamber, City Hall, New\nWeatmlnater,\nW, A   DUNCAN. City Clerk.\ncontains,City Hall, November 6, 1913.      (2368)\nLAND   REGISTRY  ACT.\n*aad Charles Hummel haa been filed fn\nAfele office.\nNotice is hereby given that I shall,\nsat the expiration of one month from\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthr dale of tbe drat publication hereof, in a dally newspaper publMhed in\n-_*__\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- Ctty of New Westminster, issue\n.*% dn-fflioate of the said certificate, milea* in the meantime valid objection\nA* made to me in writing.\nJ. C. GWYNN.\n.District Registrar ot Titles.\nl_and Tteglstry Office,\nNew 'Westminster, B.C., OetobCT 1\ufffd\ufffd,\nUM. <\ufffd\ufffd6\ufffd\ufffd*\nHEE CHUNG\nFRED  DAVIS.  Auctioneer.\nMERCHANT T-Ut-OR\nNew Imported TaD \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd**__* *\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n'.splay.    See them,    fmtlntl Bt\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .'il.niansblp guaranteed.\nSU 00 up.   701 Front Mn\nr on\nand\nWESTMINSTER\nIRON   WORKS.\nTetophonei: Office 53, Reildence   .2'.\nJOHN IIE1D. Proprietor.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd8CNERAL   MACHINE   WORK.\nENGINEERING  AND\nBLACKSMITHING.\nAgents      Palmer      Hros.'    fissollie\nengines.   Marine   Engines   anil   Ante\n-mobile Repairs.\nOffice and Works: Tenth St.\nP.O. Bok 474.    New Weitminiter, B.C\nSubscribe for\nTbe^Daily News\nCANADIAN PACIFIC\nCOAST SS. SERVICE\nFrom Vancouver for Victoria.\n10:00 a.m Dally\n2:00   pin Dally\n11:45   pin Dally\nFrom Vancouver for Seattle.\n10:00 a.m Daily\nll:u0 a.m Dally\nFrom  Vancouver for  Nanalmo.\n3:00   p m Dally\nNanaimo, Union Bay and Comox.\n0:00 a m.  ...  Wednesday and Friday\nVancouver,  Union Bay, Powell  River.\n11:46  u.m Every Saturday\nFor Prince Rupert and  Alaska.\n11:00 p.m Every Saturday\nPrince Rupert, Granby Bay and Skeena\nRiver Pointe.\n11:00 p.m WadncBdays\nFor Gulf lalind Pointi.\nj7:00 in. Tuesdays for Victoria.    Call\nin? at points in the Ouir Ialands.\nJED. OOULKT, A,ent. New Westmlnater\nH. W. BnODlB, a. P. A- Vancouver.\nBeattle, Nov. 6 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \"Reekie-is automobile drlveft are to be th\" special quarry of police officers, according to an\nannouncement made ni headquarters\nthis morning. During the past month\nthe niiiuhdr of persons killed and In-\nJured, in auto mishaps, due In many\nInstances to reckless driving, has been\nso large that tbe police have decided\nto proceed with unusual vigor against\nail speed offenders.\nThe man who waa struck by an automobile at Occidental avenue near\nMain street Monday night by a taxi\ncab died at the elty hospital laat nighl\nwithout recovering consciousness.\nShortly before his death he called for\n\"Charles Sand;:,\" whose Identity Is not\nknown to the police, but whom the\nnurse In charge said was a man who\nbrought some flowers to the afflicted\nman. W. fi. Hriggs, driver of the taxi-\ncab, is held at the city Jail on an open\ncharge. He was hurrying to catch a\ntrain al the King street passenger station when the accident, occurred and\nhad two Insane patients in his machine.\nAbraham l.evy, 1036 Jackson street,\nwas struck by an automobile at Eleventh avenue nnd .lackson street last,\nnight and sustained Injuries from\nwhich he may not recover. The car\nwas driven hy Orville ('. Hatch. 1428\nNinth avenue wept, and according lo\nwitnesses, carried no lights. Hatch,\nIn reporting the accident at police\nheadquarters, asserted he did, but\nfour witnesses contra'1' ted him. Levy\nhas a fractured skull, a broken collar\nbone and a fractured hip.\nEduiKird de Regardo, a waiter on the\nBteamehlp Spokane, was struck hy an\nautomobile at First avenue nnd Cherry\nslreet last night and wiih painfully injured. Ile is at the Paolflc hospital.\nThe, machine was driven by Oeorge\niAd.iniK, 2017 Seventh avenue. I\nSeattle, Nov. 6. -That the l'uget\nSound clam, who, In his humble way,\ndid more to cheer and sustain the\nearly pioneers of thla neck of the\nwoods than did even benevolent old\nChief Seattle, or his daughter, I'rin-\ncrs Angellne, whose warning saved\nthe infant city when the hostile redskins planned to wipe it off the map,\nis going the way of t'ie Siwashes and\ndisappearing before the advance of\neivflizatioo is thc conclusion reached\nby J. II. Deer. Shelton oyster mag\ntiate, who for thirty years has made it\nbis business to study .hell flsh.\nEverybody knows that the clam Is\nfast becoming a luxury instead of a\ncheap nnd stable article of diet In\nl'uget Sound cities and towns, and\nthe market fisherman wandering along\nthe  clam  flats,  spado  and  bucket  in\nihand, generaly is accused of being\nthe agent of extinction. w'roog, f):iy\ufffd\ufffd\nMr, Deer, positively. Tiie big passen-\n**nr steamboats that ply the Sound\nnight and day ln those modern times\nare the real culprits, he declares, anil\ntbo public-spirited Individual who\nwould play tlie 1'inchot role on behalf\njof the clam must begin his conserving\nby moving to restrict the size and\nspeed of the l'uget Sound water craft\nThe man with the -spade might dig\non happily and profitably for years,\nsays Mr Deer, without, affecting ln\nthe least the visible supply of clams,\nbut the bivalves that give the world\nits most precious lesson in the beauties of golden silence and relax Into\nhappy garrulity only at high tide, according to popular tradition, cannot\nlive and prosper on beaches where the\nwash from big, fast steamships bents\nIncessantly, and to this facl, and not\nto the activity of the markel clam dig\nger, Is due the rapid dwindling of the\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnee happy clam family.\nWuh Cuts Off Air.\nThe wash from the Steamships, explains   Mr.  Deer,  fills   with  siiud   llie\nboles by which the clam, securely bidden in tbo mud flats, communicates\nwith tiie outer world, and sooner or\nlater causes Its death. This Is the\nreason, says Mr. fleer, that the remote\nbeaches where few ever go to dig are\ndepopulated of clama nowadays, with\nthe result, that foraging parties for\npicnic crowds return minus chowder\nmaterial, and report turning up\ncountless empty shells but not a Bin-\nSle live clam.\nAs proof of the correctness of hls\ntheory, Mr. Deer points out that on\nHood canal and remote arms of the\nSound, where only small boats of the\nkind that were In general use twenty\nyears or bo ago, are Been, clams In\nplenty are still to be found, In spite\nBplte of constant digging on the part\nof the dwellers In those fortunate\nplacea.\nTho remedy? Sure, Mr. Deer has\none to Biiggest. The owner of the\nclam flat, or busy old Uncle Sam.\nor the sovereign, state of Washington\nmust build breakwaters In front, of desirable clam beds to prevent the wash\nnf the steamships from Htrlklug the\nshore; then all will be well again.\nMr. Deer brings a message of good\ncheer for bon vIvantB who dote on\nthe native, Otherwise Olympla, oyster.\nThe highly flavored little chaps are\nflolng to bn cheaper some day, hn\nsays; at least they are going to be\nmore plentiful, and If thn hon vlvanta\ndo not IncreaBC In greater proportion,\nprices wlll actually fall, tariff or no\ntarlfi. i\nTHE DOMINION BANK\nUN IOMUNO S. OIL-IN, M P , MlllOf HT\nC. A. BOGERT, General Manager.\nD  MtTTHIW.. viCI.millOtST,\nCapital Paid Up\nReserve Fund \ufffd\ufffdnd Undivided Profits\nJS.400.000.00\n7.i00.000.00\nYou Can Start a Savings Account\nwith $1.00. It lj nol necessary (or you to wait until you hsve i\nlarge sun of money In order to start s Savlncs Account with this\nBank. An account can be opened with $1.00 and more on whicb\nInterest Is compounded twice i year.\nNEW WE8TMIN3TER 8HANCH :   a H. MATHEWSON,  Manager,\nlVSTt*\n33 Hours to Prince Rupert\nDOUBLE WEEKLY SERVICE\nMONDAYS-12 midnight for Prince Rupert, Stewart.\nTUESDAYS-  12 midnight for Victoria and Seattle.\nTHURSDAYS\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd18  midnight for I'rlnce Hupert, Granby Bay.\nSATURDAYS\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd13  midnight for Victoria and Seattle.\nFRIDAYS\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd12 midnight, Oct. ..1st,   Nov.   14-28,   for   Queen   Charlotte\nIslands (Direct Service.)\nMONDAYS\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd12 midnight, Nov. 319 for Manet, via I'rlnce Rupert.\nMondays and Thursdays BteamerB  make close connect iou at  I'rlnce\nRupert with (irand Trunk Pacific trains for Terrace, New lliirel-\nton and Smithers;  mixed aervlce  from  SmlihciB  to  Hose   I.nke\n(Mile S00.)\nTickets to all points east and to   Kurope.    Any   rail   and  steamship\nline.\nII. O. SMITH, C. P. & T. A.\n627 Granville Street, Vancouver.\nW.  E.  D1IPEROW, 0.  A   P.   D.\n1 bone Private Exchange 8134\nBUILDERS AND CONTRACTORS.\nOur Interior Finish is manufactured from timber specially select\ncd for Flat drain.\nWe are alio ipeclalUIng In Fir Doora with Veneered Panela,\nwhich are better In construction, more beautiful and no more expensive than the old solid railed panel doora.\nGet nur prlcea before placing your orderi.\n\"THE FRASER RIVER MILLS\"\n(CANADIAN WESTERN LUMBER CO., LTD.)\nLocal Sales Department, Phone 890.\nThe Bank of Vancouver\nHEAD  OFFICE:   VANCOUVER,   B.C.\nBrinchu Throughout the Province of British Columbia.\nSivlngi Department at all Hranchea Depoilta of One Dollar and\nupwards received and Interest at the blgbeat current rate paid or\ncredited bait yearly.\nA OENERAL BANKING BUSINESS TRANSACTED.\nDraft! and Traveller!' Chequei aeld, payable in all parte ot tk*\nworld.\nCHAS. O. PBNNOCK, General Manager.\nNew   Weetmlneter  Branch: A. W. BLACK, Manager. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMNMRBMM\n<M^ *\n-i: - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\"';\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nFRIDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1913.\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS.\nCRESTON SHIPPING\nMANY FRUIT CARS\nYoung Dlitrlct Showing Up Well According to Heivy Grower\nThere.\nHevelhtohe, Nov. I]. Hob I.iimont,\nthe largest Individual owner of fruit\nlands la the t'reston district, one one\nof the most profreulve of the old\ntimers of Die Kootemiy. imssed tiiroiiKh\nRevelstoke lust Wednesday on his way\nlinmi, frotii VlotOlia, where he was at\ntending the provincial school trustees\nconvention\nMr. I-union t, who owni 1,200 acreB\nof choice fruit lands In tlie Creston\niliitrlcl, haa this year planted 2.snu\nfruit trees on his lands. These fruit\ntrees are composed of Delicious, Mcintosh Reds and Warner apples. Tbe De\nllclona ipple li tho highest priced ap\npie In the valley.\nShipped Over 30 Cara.\nThla year hai been a banner year\nfor the Creston district, over thirty\ncara of the luscious fruit being shipped\nto Alberta markets Aiiioiik the principal shippers aro Htoek & Jackson,\nPrank Rose. W. K. Iirown, the Dow\nHros and others Mr. Lament saya\nthat some of the old orchards this sea-\naon yielded _. to IIO boxes of apples\nto the tree, while the younger trees\naveraged six to eight boxes.\nOne of the oldest fruit buyers of\nNew Tork has recently Bent an order\nto tbe provincial minister of agriculture ifor 55 c.irloads of non Irrigated\napples The minister of agriculture\nreferred the order to Creston, but as\nmost of the orchards are young, the\norder could not be filled.\nSeveral   of   Calgary's   millionaires\nhave   recently   become  Interested     In\nCreston fruit landa and much good to\nthe district la expected to result from\nI this fact\nNo Winter Killed Trees.\nIn   the  Creston   district   the   winter\n|kllli'd frull trees nre unknown, this Is\nowing to the fact  that the climate Is\npf an even temperature and the cold-\nbst  weather |eldotB exceeds zero,\nMr. l.amot'i .-iys tbut any man who\niplles hlmii' If enn make a great sue-\ness of fruit  growing at Creston. Im-\n;lne   young   orchards   10   years   old\nBorn  the   average  yield   Is,   say.   15\nboxes of  apples  at    $1 50     per    box\nI tne-ins }I2.60 per tree and 60 trees per\nacre, means nearly $1,300 per acre.\nMr. I.amont says that land values\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdt Creaton will Increase rapidly as\ntbe shipping from that point Increases,\ni-and near Creston which can be obtained at from $100 to $.00 per acre.\nIn a few years wlll be worth $500 an\nacre.\nMr. Lament is a big man wllh big\nholdings and big Ideas. His estimated\nInterests are Creston now are worth\nprobably \ufffd\ufffd] 50,000 These. In the nat-\nuarl course of oventB. In three yenrs'\ntime should be worth a quarter of a\nmillion.\nALL CALGARY 8CHOOLS\nARE TO HAVE RINKS\nCiigsrv, Nov \ufffd\ufffd. The playgrounds\ncommittee of the school board composed of J T. Macdonald. R V. Taylor.\nJ. A Smith, assistant superintendent\nof schools, aud 11. McClelland, super\nintendent of school buildings, have decided that all schools In the elty having eight rooms, and over are to have\ntwo skating rinks, a hockey rink for\nthe boys and a skating rink for the\ngirls. Workmen have^ been engaged\nnoon tbls work for tbe paat two\" weeks\nand It ls expected that the rinks wlll\nbe completed by the middle of the\npresent month.\nAlthough In former years some of\ntbe schools had one rink each, this ls\nthe flrst time that two rinks have\nbeen built for schools with eight\nrooms or more tha nthat amount In\nprevious years also there was no supervision of the rinks, but tills year\nH. C, Flood, physical Instructor and\nteacher of swlicmlngfl will have the\ncharge of the.r. rinki with the assistance of tho asslsi...:it principals. The\nrinks will be kept for the exclusive\nuse of the pupils at the different\nschools and people not connected with\nthe schools will not be allowed to use\nthe rinks as was the case In previous\nyears.\nYAKIMA VALLEV HOPS\nNEARLY SOLD OUT\nNorth Yakima. Wash.. Nov. 6 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nThere are only 4.751 bales of hops lefl\nunsold ln the Yakima valley, an unusually low number for this time of\nthe year, according to McNeff of Me-\nNeff brothers, and the price wlll go\nto 2R cents a pound before tho end of\nthe week, It Is believed.\nMr. McNeff yesterday bought 300\nbale* from the Moxce oompany, 173\nbalea from Pollock & Harvey, and 80\nbales from Dave Harvey, all at 22\n-gents a pound, and 255 bales from\n-dealers at 23 centa.\nThe 4.751 bales remaining unao^l are\nlo tbe handa of growers In varloui\nparts of tbe valley. The greater portion Is In tbe handa of Moxee growera, a number of whom hold leveral\nbundred balea each.\nNEW TWIST TO\nNEAR EAST TANGLE\nof the papers In ull countries are as\nseiting that Turkey and (Jreece have\nboth left to the powers in accordance\nwith the lutter's wish the adjudication\nof the future ownership of all the\nAegean Islands. Neither of them [insincere, nor are the powers, and therein lies the seed of grave development,\ni'urkji y at the present lllll\" does not\nwant the Issue raised ut all, because\nlbe feels that she will get very little\nIf the powers adjudicate, while (iroece\nIntend! to stick lo all tlie Islands she\nha:i seized and only to refer to the\npowan the future of the ones now\nOccupied by Italy. The powers on\nlhelr p.irt although they have not yet\nOBlClally admitted have no Intention\nttt ilee'illng the fate of the Islands now\noccupied liy (Jreece. Tliey regard lhelr\n'ite a*, decided, niul will iiiii. Interest\nthemselves any more In the matter.\nDn Ih\ufffd\ufffd other hand, tliey do claim to\nsettle the future of the Islands now\noccupied by Italy, whercaB lhe Turks\nregards these islands as specially excluded from tho consideration of the\npowers by vlrute of the treaty of Lausanne uuder whicli at the end of the\nwar fti Tripoli they ought to return to\nthe porte. Nor iIoob anyone think that\nItaly la Intending to act with perfect\nstraightforwardness, hut wishes to retain poiteiilon of Rhodes and Stum\npale.\nFor the Children\nMother's  Little  Helper\nla    a     Sunehine    Girl.\nNo Trace of Slayer.\nKpokane, Nov. 6. - No trace of l\/oule\nJoshua, the Indian wanted In connee\nlibn with thc William Iloyd killing, was\nfound 'yeaterday by the local officials\nThe last time Joshua was seen he was\naccompanied by hls wife und was on\nhis way to Stevens county. All sheriffs have been wired a description.\nSecret of \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Sign Painter.\nSign paloteri do not uiually achieve\nfame, but tbere wai one In tbe laat\ncentury wbo did achieve a curiously\nloug lived bit of work. Tbls was the\nman wbo painted a station sl^n at\nHarpers Ferry, shortly ifter the completion of tbe railway Hue to that\npoint The sign Is lu possession of a\nwestern society of engineers.\nFor a long time the society endeavor\ned to ascertain who mixed tlie paint\nand applied It to the sign, wblcb was\nplaced In position at tbo Harpers\nFerry station about forty years ago.\nBummer's heat nud winter's storms Id ]\nno wny dimmed the luster of the paint\nused to make the words \"Harpers\nKerry.\" They stand out ss boldly\nas tlie day they were formed by the\npainter's brush. The wood around the\nletters hns been worn about a sll-\nteenth of sn Inch by sand beaten\nagainst It by (force winds, but tbe letters have withstood tbe elements. It\nis asserted that no patot manufactured nowadays Is equal In durability\nto that which wai applied to tbe old\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIgn.\nKor a long time, but without success,\nthe society tried to learn tbe Identity\nof tbla bumble artist\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHuston I'osL\ns-\ufffd\ufffd\non\ntfjl\nB&J\nxU\n\\\\\\IlW\nW\nimi\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffdBm\n;\n^^*\ni\"\n*\/,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  *           .,    '\n:\ufffd\ufffd..'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd --.\n'v'J. 1\"  >   _'.____'\n*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd%\nS-ttSsBLi\nMutlirr'-. little helper, btmy ull the day.\nWishing up tlie iIii-Ih-h putting ihem\nsway,\ntiiiHtliiif out the parlor, brualilni down the\nMalr.\nKsiplna ihlnga in order, ahe la everywhere.\nSouthing now ihe baby when Its toothlea\nhurt,\nKeepi-iK little Rlvier from playing in the\nillrl.\nMakli.K pence among Ihem when lhe chll-\ndren fmw n,\ni:\ufffd\ufffd-ltlng lea for mother whan Ihe goea to\nlow n\nMother's   Utile  helper,  may  ahe  year  to\nyear\nLearn  new  wave of  helping,  learn  new\nwuyB io cheer,\nBrlnilni Mullen nnd iladneaa id every one\nfile IttioWM.\nScattering  the  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdunahina  everywhere  aha\ngoea.\nHer Angel Child.\nMother's darling, nged four, was not\nto be like otber hoys and learn to use\nnaugbty aud slangy words. Ue wns not\nallowed io piny wllb tbe older boya In\ntbe neighborhood for fear hla sensitive\nculture might be shocked at the language they used. One day while\nmother was busy ba slipped over Into\nlbe next afreet and played for half\nan hour wllb a crowd of older boys.\nIn lhat half hour be took a complete\ncourse In modern language.\nOn his return mother said:\n\"Wbere Iiiih my precious been*\"\n\"You should worry and get a wrinkle.\" he cheerfully replied.\n\"Ileare^t. tell mother where yon\nlearned such horrible language.'\" moth\nCT exclaimed.\n\"Aw. good night shift.\" came sweetly from the eupid bow mouth.\nTben mother commenced to weep, for\nabe realized tbnt ber angel rbild waa\nJust a boy after sll.-Kansas City Star.\nTHE NORSEMEN.\nThe Most Itomantic Figures fn Ills,\ntory Were the Old Vikings.\nPerhaps the most romantic figures\nIn history, at least to the boys and\ngirlB who love alventure and daring\ndeeds, are tbe Vikings. Centuries\nhave passed since the appearance of\nan unknown ship at sea was the signal for tertilied prayer by prieatl and\npeople, tbe burdr i of which was,\n\"Save us, O Lord, from the rage of\ntbe Norsemen.\" llut even lo this day\ntbe word Viking baa power to thrill\nsuch as few otber words possess.\nNorway is tho real home of tbe Vikings, for, from the fabled t'me wben\no.lin. their god, led his followers out\nof Asia and settled wltb them in\nNorway, sucb an unreasoning love of\nfreedom Influenced the fierce Norsemen tbat not one of them was willing\nto be ruled and all wanted to rule,\nThus It came about tbat tbe country\nwas divided Into very amall portions,\nand over eaeb portion ruled a petty\nlord, known aa r. Jarl or earl. These\nlittle domalna naturally quarrelled\ncontinually, and io things were In a\naad plight until Harold, th. Falr-\nI.aired, upon tbe death of bla father,\nwaa proclaimed Ring. The lad wai\nonl yten yeara old at tbe time, but tbe\nNor-emc. matured early, and ao It\nwaa oot very long before be fell in\nlove wltb Gyda. tbe beautiful daughter of a petty king ruling over a\nneighboring land. He aent an am-\nbaiaador to aak ber band ln marriage, aa waa tbe custom of tbe time;\nbut Uyda, wbo evidently waa very\nambitious indeed, sent back a message saying tbat sbe would become\nKing Harold'a wife only wben be had\nconquered all of Norway and bent It\nlo bis rule as King Erik bad conquered Sweden. Aa aoon as Harold\nhad received hii menage he took a\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdolemn oatb not to cut hla beautiful\nbalr until he won Gyda for a bride oo\nber own condition!.\nTrue to bil word, be conquered\nNorway, and, aa a conaequeuce, Gyda\nbecame bli bride.\nUp to tbe time of tbe wedding\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd feast be had been known aa \"The\n| Frowsy Hatred\"; but afterward be\ni waa called all over bla conquered\n: kingdom, Harold Haarfelger, wblcb\n' means the fair-haired.\nlt was wltb tbe reign of Harold tbe\n* Fair-Haired tbat tbe Viking age be-\nI gan.\nAlthough   Harold   bad   conquered\ni Norway, be bad by no m-yws subdued\nI tbe fierce love tor freedom   In   tbe\nj hearts of  bla sut.'ects.    Tbose  wbo\nhad ruled over petty kingdoms refuted to be subject to tbe rule ot any\n| man, and  ao  tbey  sailed  away  and\nbecame aea robbers, or Vikings.\nAnatomy of a Violin.\nTaken to plecri a violin would be\nfoind to consist of tbe following\nparts: Back, two pieces; belly, two;\ncoins and bloc ke. its; ildei, five; lide\nlinings, twelve; bar, one; purdings\ntwenty-four; neck, one; Anger board,\none; nut. one; bridge, one; tailboard.\nI one; button for tailboard, one; string\nter tailboard, one. guard tor atrlng,\nOnly a few Left\nAnd They Are\n[Fast\nBRING THREE COUPONS\nAnd 25c to the News Office\nLooks  Like  Trouble  In  Putur*  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ntween Turkey and Orotee Over\nAegean laiand*.\ntandon. Nov. \ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe situation In\nthe near eaat ia developing In a very\ncurious fashion, and makes one think\nthat after all unless the tenlton between Turkey and Greece la very care-\nhilly handled there may -sooner or later be serious trouble. It will not\ncome over either tb* queitloni of th*\ndisposal of tre religious foundation! In\ntbe conquered territory or over the\ncltlr.ensMp of Ottoman Greeks hither\nto resident In Turkey, wbo bave alwaya been regarded as Turklih subject*. It wtll arise over the future of\nthe Aegean Islands\nAt tbe preaent moment the majority\nBatthyany'a Black Pearl.\nThere is n curious story of the precious lilink pearl which Count l\/ruls\nHiitteyan... tlie Hungarian revolution\n1st, wore In his aearfpln. Sentenced to\ndeath ror Ida part In tbe rising of 1H4U.\nhe gave the wnrfpln to the valet who\nattended hlm In prison. The valet be- :\nquenthi'il It In his son. and the son de-'\nelded to sell It It wus taken to Humi-\npest I\" be valued, and tbere exhibited\nIn a Jeweler's ihup window. Crowds\nassembled to stare at It and the suspicions of the Austrian police were\naroused They Instituted a rigorous\ntminiry snd discovered, to tbeir amsae-\nment. tbnt the |iearl had been stolen\nrrom the crown of Kngland ir-0 years\nbefore. The llrltlsb government\nbought It hack, lint no one lias been\nable lo discover by wbat means It bad\npassed Into Ibe poaaesatou uf tbe list-\ntbyany family.\nThi Sublime Porti,\n\"Sublime porte.\" frequently used te\ndenote the government of tbe Turkish\nempire or the country Itself, Is derived from the French and means lofty\ngate. It bad Its origin In.lb* gateway\nof tbe uuter court ef tbe seraglio at\nConstantinople, from wblcb Justice\nwa* supposed to be aduiluUtered.\nCauldnt Help It.\nTape, did you ask mamma to marry\nto*?\"\n\"To*. *on.H\n\"Became yoa loved barr\n\"No. became I knew ibe woold\nmarry m* whether t asked her to or\nMf-Hooiwo I'mt\nWhen Vanilla Cams From.\nThe history of vanilla la closely as-\nMiiLitwl wltb tbat uf covim and chocolate, fur rant.Ua tame  wltb  cocoa to\nKurope.     In  fact,  tbese  three highly\nlinportsut product* of New Spain were! one; sound poit. one; atrlnga. four\nIntroduced Into Kurope Uy Spaniards.' pegs, tour; total, sixty-nine. Thret\nIn llie year I .\"ill) cucou waa Qn<t drunk| kinds of wood are uaed\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdmaple, pine\nat tbe court la Madrid, nud wltb choc-1 and ebony. Maple is uaed for tbe back,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdiltitc. also a Mesleun product wsa' ,be Deck- the *1'*e Ptoce* and tbe\nquickly adopted. I bridge.  Pine ls used for the belly, thf\n,,, cominerelsl reason. ,h. method; \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd %\ufffd\ufffd**> \"fJSKM? \"SSS\nof manufacturing chocolate was kept   |8 U8ed for the finger board, tailboard\na strict sei ret. niul It waa  made al-   and  otber  parti,\nmost exclusively In Mexico     In some *\nmanner, however, tbe carefully guard- Madcap Prince****.\ncd secret reached Spain, and io IMS] The three prlncenei at the courl\nthe tlrst cliui-olate factory wai ea- of Louia XIV. delighted In practical\ntabllsbed nt llireelom. Jokei and   were   for   ever   In aome\nIn   the   production   of  a   delicately   acrape or other. One nlgbt at Trianon\n' tbey procured a petard and exploded\ntt beneath the window of monsieur-,\nbedchamber.   Once   wben   the court\nwaa at Marly th* odor of an exceed\ningly pungent tobacco waa wafted to\ntbe king's nostrils aa he waa on tbe\npoint ot retiring to reet, wblch, upon\nInquiry being made, waa found to pro\nceed from tbe apartmenta of Mme. d<\nCbartrea,  wbere she and  ber aiatet\nwere smoking pipes borrowed from\ntbe Swlaa guard.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFrom H. Noel Wll\nllama' \"A Roae ot Savoy.\"\nflavored chovolnte vanilla la a neces-\nsiin. ami we may therefore conclude\nthat tbe drst introduction Into Europe\nof vnullia for commercial purpose!\ndales back to about I MO.\nRiddles.\nWbat Is tbnt wblcb flies high, flies\nlow, baa no feet, and yet wears shoes?\nDust\nWby Is an egg too lightly boiled like\none tmlted too uiucb? Because it Is\nb anl ly done.\nWhat Is that wblch has neither flesh\nnor boue nnd yet baa four fingers and\na thumb?   A glove.\nWhy ls tbe sun like a good loaft\nBeen use It's light wben It rises.\nWhy Is a butcher's cart like hla stocking? Because be carries bis calves\nthere.\nWbat ta tbe best way to keep water\nnut of your bouse? Don't pay tbe water tax.\nWben does a man bave to keep bl*\nword?   Wben no on* will tak* It\nFruity.\nArtist (ingrllyt-Ko; I tell yon t dont\nwant a model. I only paint (lowers\nind fruit Model (aweetlyi-That'a all\nright Every one aaya I'm a peech.-\nCortwll Widow.\nOn th* Way.\nIll* man wbo alts around waiting fot\nsomebody *lw to discover and develop\nbi* ability ta inre sooner or later to become > Wearisome grumblir.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdChlcag*\nlUcord-Harald.\nPlninslil.\nHit; Kakkw-Ar* yoa going to taki\na eoarw to a buslnn* coliige?   lln,\nBocfear-Yia: I want to fled oot how\nto got mor* money out of JacL-Jodg*\nIndian Laborar'a Sang.\nIn India wuen drawing water from\nthe wells tbe man tn charge of tbo\noperation Invariably encourages tbe\nbullocks with a cheery singsong nt\ntbe critical moment when they ar*\nraising the heavy leather pouch of\nwater from the well, and If he wai to\nremain silent tbe Indian bnllocl}, wbo\nIs- a strong conservative, would certainly refuse to start. A aong-ewhtv-h\nthe men sing when they are making\nmortar rnns something like this: \"Ob.\nbullock, what a work yon ar* doing,\ngoing round and round making mortar\nfor tbe masons! ob. bullock, go faster,\ngo faster!\" Tbe masons will cry out:\n\"Oh. bullocks, for mor* mortar, mora\nmortar.   So go faster, go faster.\"\nAn Amsdete.\nA mouae being chised by a eat to\nMr. Joe'i brewery fell Into \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd vat of\nbeer. Tb* cat iprang to tbe edge at\nthe vat aod Oiled, \"Aba. Mra. Mouae. j\nyou bad bettor bav* let no *at ytm\nthan to drawn.\"\n\"re*.\" replied tb* motto*, \"tt fa*\nwlll aav* m* fram tbt* yoo may eat\nme.\"\nTh* cat went to tb* edg* of th*\ntank and extended bl* paw, and lb*\nmouse landed and ran hastily Into bla\nhoi*.\n\"Com* ont\" demanded th* angry\neat \"Redeem yonr promts* aod let\nme devour yon.\"\n\"Ob. no,\" aald th* moo**; \"when I\nmad* It I waa In Uqaor.\"\nWould R*fu** Homo Rul*. -\nLondon, Nov. 8.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJoseph Deatlln,\nbead of tbe Ancient Order ot Hibernian!, -peaking last night aald: \"We\nwould rafu** bom* nil* tomorrow It\nUlater or any portion of Uliter war*\ncut off from tbe reit of Ireland.\"\nA Chinese Joke.\nTbU U a sample of tbe jokei tbey\nlike ln China:\nA courier, bearing Import! nt dispatcher, waa given a borse and told\nto make all possible speed toward\nhla destination. Some time afterward\nhe waa found In the road, walking anii\npushing hU borse before blm.\n\"Why In the world are you doing\ntbkt?\" hs waa asked.\n\"Ob,\" be iald, \"I reflected, and I\ncame to the conclusion that we ihoulo\nmake more apeed on six feet than wi\npossibly could or four.\"\nSouth American Oil Blrda.\nOne of tb* in I mal curiosities ol\nSouth American U the \"oil bird,\" ol\nquacharo. tl breeds In rocky cavea ot\ntbe mainland, and one of It* favoritt\nhaunts la tbe island of Trinidad. It\nlaya ita egga in a neat mad* of mud\nand tb* young bird* ar* prodigiously\ntat. Th* natlv** melt tb* fat Cowa]\nIn clay pou aad produc* from tt \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\nkind of butter. Th* cav*a Inhabited\nby th* bird* ar* uiually aecenlbU\nonly trom tbe tea, and th* hunting ol\ntbem la sometlmea aa exciting aport\nKaw aad Boiled Milk.\nRaw milk aad boiled milk ar* v*ryJ\ndifferent food*. Tb* caa*ln ot raul\nmilk, iintee* modified ao that tt will\nnot torm bard aad larg* curdi, off\ufffd\ufffdti\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdertoua dlfflcultle* In dig**Uon thai\nan not pr\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdent In boiled milk.\nAcr* Voot ot Water.\nAn \"aero faot\" ot water la equivalent to 4S.M0 cubic f**t and to tbt\nquantity required to cover an aero to\ntbe depth of on* toot. Tho term it\ncommonly uied tn connection wltb\natoraga tor irrigation.\nSwta-gtag Electric Ughto.\nElectric light* n*p*nd*d by ths\nfamiliar twtotod cord can bo protected\nagainat Injurious vibratloa* by hook\nIng th* ond* ot a aplral earing uu\nth* cord, *laok*d far a chart dUtaato\nto'permit \"tbto ta badoa*.\ntt**m\t\nUva'r *ong, I* all th* aataator If ill\nmaa la ible'., raaeh th* high notea ol\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nUo wag* tcalt.\nDrydon OotTlK-F C-Thtee .trap,\npara, Hugh NUhotota. Jam** Batftae\naad a man naamdJtffo a\ufffd\ufffd#UaU-f,\nUe, whloh la fNMh*rooa.\nAND RECEIVE\nA Handsome\nPennant\n;\n]\nIN\nTHRff\nCOLORS\nSIZf\n15 fry 36\nmats\nI\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*' x.\n'mimifiit, if.'-'K-'i\/A.\nf-n-mt.       \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     >''*\"   >\ufffd\ufffd\"\"*\"        ;        -    t\n1*1    \/-\ufffd\ufffd    -\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*.*   n* **'Jf***  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*.<-\n' r 'V1      ''   I ,**'* .'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*      titt-tr\nCyU*-*f^MWiwSl*m\niSil\nPennant\nim- *\nm-i\\\nBring three of tJww\n*nd \ufffd\ufffdc\ufffd\ufffdiT\ufffd\ufffd ome of the t\n\ufffd\ufffd Wtacrihwr bring 40 **ms*% fa\nmat Address m mail order*\nBcejtrtfotrmafflnf.  ,     f^vj\n; ,i ?*s*''\n*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>,'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n.   .     'r    ....\n. S\ni ' i i\ufffd\ufffd\" ft\n,___\ufffd\ufffd_____;\n\"    '   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   *\nUi *ftQE \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdte\ufffd\ufffdT.\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS.\nFRIDAY,  NOVEMBER 7.  1\ufffd\ufffd13.\nInspect  the\nModel\nAnd you will find a neat and\nwell kept grocery, with a slock\nthat will aupply any ami all of\nyour wants.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDellclOUS\" Apples about the\nlatest in apple line     3 Ib6. 25:\n(.rapes     2 Ibv 2Sc\nflorid* Grapefruit 2 for 'lie\nJacob's Hi.siis high grade Imparled biscuits   11! varktiea, all\nal. per Ib 25:\n(\"lark's Boupa, per tin   10e\nlaical rule Honey, per Jar. .25c\nCorn Flakes, 3 packages for 25c\nStrictly Fresh Kggs, dos. ..SOt\nImported Macaroni, thn highest\nquality, per package .... .ISc\nlloinz Vinegar, linest table\nvinegar ou the market, malt,\nWhite wine and cidar, bottle 10s\nModel Grocery\nMATHESON *\\ JACOBSON.\n308 Sixth St. Phone 1001-2.\nBumaby Branch:\n2nd St. and 15th Ave.\nLocal News\nWill Hold Social  Evening.\nThe second annual social evening of\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe l'ort Coquitlam Women's institute\nI will  be. held  In  the agricultural  hall,\nl'ort poqultlam*  nn  tlie evening of\nWednesday, Nov.  11! al  8 o'clock.\nHave you Heen    the    $150   diamond\nring Gilford is Kiting uv.uy'.'    (.2870)\nPURCHASE\nAGREEMENTS\n} FOR SALE\nCall at our office with your\nagreements and\nlet us quote you.\nDominion Trust\nCompany.\nThe Perpetual Trustee.\nPaid   Up Capital  and\n.Surplus $ \ufffd\ufffd800,000\n\/Meet* 19.73,918.93\nTrm tee-ships  Under\nAdmlnlatratlon over   6,000,000\nTrustee fur Bondholders over   25.000,000\nC S. KEITH, Manager.\nOffices  Vancouver,     Victoria,\nNew Westminttter, Nanaimo,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtlalgary. Itegina, Winnipeg,\nMontreal, Charlottetown, I\/on-\ndon, Bug.; Antwerp, Belgium.\nNew Westminster\nBranch.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd606  Columbia  Street.\nOpen   Satuiday   Evenings   from\n7 to 9.\nArrange  Bazaar.\nUnder the auspices of the Women's\nauxiliary of st.  Barnabas, a baaaar I\nwill Iio held on tho evening of Dec. 3\nln the chi rch. Arrangement's for the\nentertainment are now being made\nand the features will include a Japanese cafe and fairy grotto.\nOet your Bkutes shurpened at Geo.\nSpeck's, 626 Columbia atreet.     (23531\nCoquitlam Slectlona.\nCouncillor It. .1. C. Atkins and former\nCouncillor Marmont are mentioned as\ncandidates for the reeveship of Coqultlam municipality at the elections\nin January. Neither men have yet\nmade uny announcement. Mr. Marmont opposed Iteeve Harth during the\nlast elections.\nWith every $2 purchase you get a\nchance on the $150 diamond ring. T.\nGilford, tho jeweler, (3870)\nPitt Ferry Service.\nKor the benefit of constant travellers from one side of the river to the\nother the l'itt river ferry, l'ort Coqultlam, will shortly operate on a\nschedule. At the present time the\nferry operates only when it is necessary. The schedule is now being prepared and will be announced later.\nPor plumbing, heating and sheet\nmetal work consult Merrlthew & Ram-\naay. Eighth and Carnarvon streets.\nPhone 586. 12363)\nSmall Flre.\nA small fire occurred In the basement of a house near thc corner of\nRoyal avenue and Tenth street yesterday afternoon. The flre department\nwas called and little difficulty was experienced in extinguishing the flames.\nNo serious loss was caused.\nExpert skate sharpening and rivet-\ning at Oscar Swanson's. 18 Begble\nstreet. (2369)\nFour Room Bungalow.\nA permit for a substantial four-\nroomed bungalow to be erected on\nHarvey street was issued to A. F,\nYork at the building inspector's office yesterday. The home will cost\n$1000.\nC. A. Welsh\nLIMITED.\nThe People's Grocer\nPHONES:\nCity Store   193 and 443\nSapperton   Branch    373\nWest End Branch   650\nTHREE BIG STORES\nOF PLENTY.\nWE KNOW\nThat a grocery solicitor Is\nsome times a necessity. But\nwe also feel that a personal\nvisit to our stores would please\nyou better. We have three fine\nstoreB and have many articles\non our shelves that is nearly\nimpossible to tell you of\nthrough  the medium of an ad.\nWhen you want cornmeal In\nsmall quantities we have It in\npackages at 15c each.\nC. A. WELSH\nLIMITED.\ncontractors for tho work, have all their\ndredging complement on the scene of\noperations and .preparations are being\nmade for a start on Monday. The apparatus with which thc work will be |\nconducted consists of the dredge Rob-\nEon, a pile driver and a scow. Twenty\nmen are at present engaged In get\nting things in readineSB for the start.\nFor all building supplies and fuel\noil apply to the B. C. Transport Co..\nLtd., BOS Westminster Trust building.\nOlllce phone 826, wharf phone 880.\n(233S)\nPermit for Factory Building._\nAn early star! of operations on the\nplant of the Grins el Flove company\nis expected as a permit for the buildings was taken out at the engineer's\noffice at l'ort Coquitlam yesterday,\njTho factory will be located on Wllaon road, near the Coquitlam river,\nlt will cover an area measuring 64x30\nfeet and will be two storeys in height.\nThe cost is approximated at $5000\nFred Davis will sell by public auction (absolutely without reserve) on\nthe premises of Mrs. Johnson at 317\nFifth avenue, the contents of her well\nappointed residence, on Tuesday next.\nNovember 11, 1914, at 1:80 p.m. sharp.\nThis will be a sale of great importance as Mrs. Johnson is leaving New\nWestminster for the Old Country, and\nevery article must, be sold regardless]\n'of price offered. Tlie furniture is all!\nof the highest class and nearly new\nand will be on view Monday, November 10, 1918, and morning of sale.\n123571\nBig reductions In millinery all this\nmonth at Silvester &  .Macdonald.\ni2371)\nPurchase Lanter.-is.\nThe Coquitlam council !'..;- ordered\nthe purchase of several laut* rns for\nuee by the municipal fire department\nwhich is under the direction of Chief\n:if Police Pare.\nExtend Service.\nPlans for the extension of the B. C.\nTelephone company's system in Port\nCoquitlam havi. bren filed at the en-\nglneer's office in ihat. city. The plans\nprovide for tho Installation of 75 new\npoles in several of the thickly settled\nportions if \":\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Hi*. A bout 50 applications fur telephone service will be\nfilled when the i xtenslon of the facHI\nties is comp eted\nA home run with a Ij\"\\- of Hill's\n\"Saturda;. Special\" will win for you\nevery time (2366)\nExhibit in Saskatoon,\nc. ll. S. Wade yesterday dispatched\na varied line of bottled fruit and vegetable exhibits  gathered  from  the dlf*\n'print ranches of the Fraser valley for\nexhibit In a private land office in Saskatoon.    The feature of the exhibit is\nla   bottle  of  scarlet   runner  beans  14\nI Inches long, grown In South Westmin-\n* ster.     The   other   produce   has   heen\ngathered     from     Surrey.   Burquitlam,\nI Maple  Ridge,   Langley,   Mission.   Port\n| Hammond. Abbotsford. Chllllwack and\nI thu cltv.\nMoney to loan on first mortgages\nI improved city and farm property\n19 per cent. Alfred W. Mcl.eod.    (2337)\nInsure with Alfred W. MeLeod. the\nInsurance man. All kinds written.\nHundreds of millions to pay loflses.\n(2337)\nMud   Scraper.\nA valuable acquisition to the street\ncleaning apparatus of the eity board\nOf  works department  has just  been\nmade by  the Importation direct from\n[England     of    a     horse   drawn   mud I\nBcraper.   The machine cost $200 and I\nwas manufactured by  llamhaker audi\ncompany of London, -.ng.  Tin* Bcraper\nv.hich will be drawn liy one horse, will\ni,'- used for keeping the macadamized I\n' mads In the elty free from mud during i\nthe winter months. A local hard- J\nware  Arm  acted as agents    fur    tin'.\n* English concern.\nSmart\n.gn t's,\nbats     for   skating,   at\n59  Sixth street. (!\nMrs,\n372)\nStart  Work   Monday.\nThe dredging of the mouth of the\nunobstructed ._^__^__^__^__^__^__^__m\nentrance lo the harbor of Port Coqult- skat]ng boots a\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdd gkatea for ,adtea\nla , ,, i be Btarted earlj nexl week. and genUemen ai Geo, ft. Sp,ck's. m\nThl    I... ....    |... \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.   r,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdp,ny,   the (:ot\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdn,llla \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,,,.,.,, (2r,2l\nSPECIALS\nCoast Sealed Oysters\nPer Pint    -    -    -    -    -    50c\nPer Quart    -    -    -    - $1.00\nCrescent Oysters\nPer Dozen     -   -    -   -   35c\nW.J.RUSE\niSocceeeor to Ayling S\\ Swain.)\n447 Columbia St. Phone 98\nARE  YOU  INTERESTED\nIN HEATING STOVES?\nIf vou are, and desire to save money on your fuel bill this winter,\ndun I  buy  until  you have seen  what we have to offer.\nUsing a \"Howard Overdraft Heater.\" burning wood or eoal means\na Bavlng  ni you of 20 per cent, of the colt of your fuel  bill.\nWe have also a large range of Oak, Airtight and Fireplace Stoves\nat prices which mean money in your pocket by buying from us.\nQUALITY  HIGH\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPRICE   LOW.\nT. J. TRAPP & CO.\nNew   Westminster.\nPlume  69.\nHOT WATER BOMS\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSBS\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd********m\t\n5 YEAR GUARANTEE\nPigs $1.00 Each\nCURTIS\nREXALL\nDRUG\nSTORE\nShort Term Loans\nWE HAVE CLIENTS WHO WILL MAKE SHORT\nTERM LOANS EOR A PERIOD NOT EXCEEDING\nONE YEAR ON RE AT, ESTATE SECURITY OR PURCHASE AGREEMENTS OE SALE.   APPLY\nF. J. HART & CO., LTD.\nWe\n^^^^^^     Established 1M1. ^^^^^^^^\nFlre, Life, Accident, Employer!'   Liability,   Automobile   and\nMarino Insuranee,\nSTAMPED TEA APRONS, 50c\nSome pretty patterns nre now\nshow  In our Art Neeilleivorli !)(>\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\npartment;    White   Muslin Tea\nAprons, stamped In eyelet lie-\nslgnss for Working, These nre\nalways aoceptable for Christmas\nsifts, and while the assortment\nIs so fresh and new It is n good\nopportunity for yuu to make\nyuur selection. I'rice, each 804\nlhe New Westminster\nAND FRASER VALLEY\nDepartment   Store\nCHILDREN'S     SCHOOL      UMBRELLAS.\nJust Arrived, at 75c and $1.00.\nA good assortment of strong,\nhanl-wearing 1'inlircllaa, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdspecially   uiuilii fur  Ihn children   lo\ntake   to   school;   extra strong\nsticks, frallies nnd handles that\nwill stuiid all kinds of rough\nusage, and lhe covers nre made\nor extra strong cotton tbut win\nshed the heaviest shower. These\nyou will find of excellent value\nat 75e to Sl.OO\nINTEREST GROWS APACE IN\nOur Big Opening Sale\nmerchandise in every department, with the McAllisters' guarantee behind every transaction. We wish\nto invite everyone to our new big store. You are at perfect liberty to walk around any of our selling\nfloors, price and examine the goods, without any obligation to purchase. These special prices offer you\nmany savings in your purchases during this- big opening sale.\nSWEATER   COATS   FOR\nSKATING.\nNow that the skating season\nhas opened, Sweater t'oats are\nright In line. The most essential\nthing in your skating outfit after getting good skates Is a good\nsweater coat. We are offering\nsome special bargains in this\nline for this week end. We\nhave, without a doubt, the largest range of sweaters in the\ncity, so come and see ours before\nbuying,\nAt $2.45 -This assortment includes values up to $3.-$, and\nthey come in red. blue, gray,\nslate and brown; al lsizes. All on\nsale at   $2.4*\nAt $3.95\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThis lot comes in\nslate, gray, blue, red. brown, tan.\nkhaki and combinations of these\ncolors. These are our regular\n15.00 line, and we have nil sizes\nfrom 34 to 4\".   All on sale\nst    $3.95\nAt $4.95\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThere are Just twenty-\nfive coats in this special offering. They have large roll collars,\nand are a real heavy, all-wool,\nkitted coat, Colors are gray, cardinal, navy, red, green, white\nand brown; al Isizes. These are\nretgular $6 00 coats.   All on sale\nat    $4.\"\nAt $5.50\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThis lot is our regular I5.7.\"i line, and we have col\nors ln gray, tan, and navy. They\nare extra heavy, all-wool coals. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nwith larg\" roll collars. All on\nsalt'   at    S5.50\nThe Opening Sale Prices on\nthe Furniture Floor that\nWell Merit Your Attention\nA few special lines gathered at random from the selling floor:\n$31.50 Golden Oak Extension Table for $25.75    A heavy base Pedestal\nExtension   Table,   bright   golden   oak,     actual     value    $31.60.     Kale\nPr^o   $2$. 75\n$32.50 Golden Oak Buffet, $27.25 A pretty, medium alzed buffet,\nwith leaded glass door and bevel mirror back; actual value $32 50.\nSale   prico    S27.28\n$39.50 Golden Oak Den Set. $35.00 This is a beautiful set, made\nfrom selected wood with padded leather seats; 5 small am! one arm\nchair;  actual value, $89.60,    Sale price   $35,00\n$9.50 Golden Oak Centre Table for $7.50 \\ pretty re itre table for the\nparlor, made from selected wood; actual value $9.60  Sale prl<*> $7.50\n$58.50 Golden Oak China Cabinet, $47.50\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA golden oak cblna cabinet\nwi'h round glass sides and mirror back; a specially good design;\nactual value, $68.60.    Sale price $47.50\n$25.00 Golden Oak Dresser for $19.75\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMade In the princess style\nwllh large bevel mirror This Is a very handsome piece of furnllure;\nactual  value $25.On     Sale price $19.75\n$35.00 Fran Bed for $29.75 A good brass bed with massive round\nframe and upright posts; actual value $86.00    Sale priee       $29.75\nELECTRICAL   DEPARTMENT\nEL  COOKO.\nThis is the new Klectric Fire-\nless Cooker; operates from any\nelectric, light socket.\nRoasts, bakes, bolls, steams\nand stews atld costs no more to\noperate than a llotpolnt Klectric\niron. 'i\nfall and see thla wonderful\nnew invention now being demon\nstrati-d In our Klectrlcal Department on the second floor. McAllister's   price    $35.00\nAll kinds of KlectrlclTotpoInt\nIrons. Toasters, etc.. In slock at\nthe lowest rush store prices\nSutln Underskirts In black or\ncolors, cut In the new style for\nthe shaped skirts, finished plain,\nwith fancy niching On sale\nspecial   at       $1.9$\nSPECIAL   SALE   OF   SILK\nUNDERSKIRTS.\nSatin Underskirts, cut lull with\ndeep ni'i'tirdi-iin plaited flounce,\nIn a variety of colors, also ln\nblack,    worth   $3 95.     On     sale\nspecial  at    $2.50\nWe have also just received a\npretty assortment of all silk mse-\naallne, taffeta and satin t'lider-\nsklrts. In a vurley of the new\nnnd pretty designs, In plain,\ntucked and aocordeOD plaited\nstyles.    These are In self eolont\nand  pretty  color comblnatiena,\nSpecial priced to sell\nfor ...        $3.95 to $5.50\nCocoa Door\nMats for\nMuddy Days\nTwo special values\nin Cocoa Door Mats of\nthe better kind. Thick\nheavy brush that will\ngive almost unlimited\nwear, and in ample\nsizes to insure protection for the interior of\nyour bome,\nI'lan Cocoa Mats. size\nl>ix30 .inches; special\na;. e'K'li .... $]..50\nKancy Bordered Cocoa\nMats; size 20x33 ins.;\nat.  each    $1.75\nSPECIAL   NOTICE\nIn the interests of this business wc must positively state that thc\nfirm of McAllisters, Limited, is now in no way connected with\nthe late business of Messrs. Lees, Limited.\nThc premises, stock, fixtures and equipment have been purchased outright by McAllisters, Limited, from Messrs. I>ecs, Limited, and this business is now owned and operated solely by McAllisters, Limited.\nIn purchasing this business Messrs. McAllisters, Limited did\nnot purchase the accounts and hook debts of Messrs. Lees, Limited, and have nothing whatever to do with same, and we are not\nnow collecting, nor have we anything to do with thc collection\nof Lees, Limited, accounts, nor are they payahie to us at our office\nMcAllisters, limited.\nA very Special\nValue in Wool\nEiderdowns\nAt this season of the\nyear most    ladles    are\nthinking of getting   a\nDressing down. and\nthis Wool Eiderdown\nconnot be surpassed for\nwearing and comfort.\nWe have a special shipment of 27 Indies wide,\nIII pink, blue, red or\ngray: reg. C5c. MoAI-\nlleter'a special price,\nyard     5QC\nREAD EVERY ITEM ABOUT THIS BIG SALE OF LADIES' READY-TO-WEAR\n$1.25 BLACK SATEEN UNDERSKIRTS, 75c.\nA very Special purchase of Black Sateen Underskirts, Just to hand fur\nthis :.ale. These skirts are made or best quality Kngllsli Bateen, cut in\ntie* new style with shaped flounce with four rows of five links, ami\ndust frill; all sizes. These are good value al $1.25, but at this sale\nspecial  at    75C\n$1.95   BLACK   SATEEN   UNDERSKIRTS  FOR  $1.25.\nNev  stlyle, soft silk finished Underskirts, mude with shaped top. and\ndeep knee length, accordeon plaited frill.   These skirts are up to the\nminute In  style, am! are excellent,  value  at  $1.96,    Bpeclal  fur this\n*al<3  $1.25\nA  RANGE  OF  SERGE  AND CLOTH  DRESSES;   VALUES TO $15.00\nFOR  $'..95.\nOri uped togi  !n r for Ible sale are a number of pretty one-pieee dresses.\ni  i s in serges, poplins, etc., many Stylishly trimmed With silk. These\ndresaes come In an assortment of si7.es, and are all pretty, new Fall\nDresses; regular values as high us $15 uu. Kor this sale, special\nat    $9.9$\nGREAT COAT BARGAINS AT $13.75; VALUES AS HIGH AS $23.50.\nNever was a better opportunity offered for selecting a warm Kail or\nWinter Coat, In thiB lot we huve on snle at $13.78 are coats In tweeds,\n1,'iiicle cloths, und the new coatings. New garments for this Kail sun-\nSon. Many of them are handsomely trimmed and the variety of styles\nand colorings is so broad that every one can lie gutted in this sale. If\nyou are thinking of a new Pall coat, you cannot do better than get In\nearly to our Ladles' Ready-to-Wear Department and get. the first se\nlet tion  of this  very  special  bargain;   regular  values $2.1.511   All  one\npries    $13.7$\nA   RANGE  OF  TRAVELLER'S  SAMPLE  FURS  AT  $5.95.\nA traveller left us his sample range of furs at a very special discount,\ntn lie doted out during this sale. These are In BXCOSS to our usual\nslock and we recognize the price Is the best means of passing them\nalong. We specially recommend you If you are needing a fur for this\nFall or Winter to get right busy and see Ihls range. There are Mink,\nMarmots, Imitation Kox, White and (iray Furs, and lots of other kinds\nfeu you to pick from. To facilitate selling we have grouped them all\nat one priee, $6.96 for each fur, he It a collar, throw or muff. These\nwlll be on sale on the first floor In our Ready-to Wear Departmenl.\nThe price we are selling them at in no way represents the value, but\nyou can choose ihem at this sale at  $5.9$\nBIG THIRSTY BATH TOWEL8\nat 50c per pair.\nBoth in wliite and colored Turk\nIsh Bath Towels, we are specializing al 60c a pair, to give, abso-\nlulely the very best, value that\ncan he obtained In the market,\nloday. These Towels you will\nfind big. thick and will dry\nWell, and they can be thoroughly recommended for good hard\nwear. McAllister's special value  ut.  pair SOt\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*arVS^tpl\n****** V*_3\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd r**%*i\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdif**\nTHE HOME OF THE UTILITY  HOUSE  DRESSES.\nCLEANING   UP   THE   LADIES'   WAIST   DEPARTMENT;    VALUE9\nTO $6.00 FOR $3.75.\n(In going through our waist stuck we have set aside a number of lines\nIn silk, net, and lingerie waists. Of these there is only one of a else,\nbut they are all new, fresh, clean waists for lhe present season's wear.\nThey have all veen grouped together Into one big lot and will be found\non table in our Ready-tn-Weiir Department. Vou can pick any waist on\nthis table;  regular as high as $6.00 for  $3.7$\nBUY A NEW UTILITY HOUSE DRESS AT $1.75.\nHave you seen the new utility garment? It slips on and off like a\ndoubleT)rcastod coat, and two buttons put It In readiness. The wearer\ncan dress lo receive company in exactly nine seconds, and when proper!.-, fastened no under garments are visible. It comes In many\nStyles and materials. Let us demonstrate these lo you in our Heady\nlii-Wear Department onthe flrsl floor.   They ure on sale at. ..  $1.7$\nSALE OF EVENING COATS AT $17.50.\nSome very pretty evening coats tire on sale In our Ladies' Roady-to-\nWear Department. Thesi \"-\" made In fine quality bro'i lciotli, lu all\ncolors, many prettily trimmed In embroidered silks and silk lined. A\nnumber Of these have been group d together for a special price and\neach and every garment In the selection wlll be a real bargain. If you\nare needing an evening ooaj this will be an Ideal time to make choice.\nSpecial for  $17.50\nSALE  OF  WOMEN'8  FALL  UNDERWEAR  FOR  4Sc A  GARMENT.\nWomen's warm, ribbed Winter Underwear, In both white and natural,\nvests and drawers These garments nre well shaped and made In\nample sizes und would readily sell for 66c a garment. During this sale\nyou can get your winter underwear In any size. Actuul value 65c a\ngarment    Bale price, a garment    454\nREGULAR   $1.75   WOMEN'S   FLANNELETTE   NIGHTGOWN8\nFOR  $1.46.\nSoft White Flannelette Nightgowns, made from the best quality Kngiish flannelette, daintily  trimmed, full und long, and made In all sizes.\nThese nightgowns were bought to sell In the regular way at $1.75 nach.\nDuring this sale, special price   $1.4$\n$7.50 AND $9.50 TAILORED DRE8S SKIRTS, $5,78.\nOne of the best bargains In thiB sale Ib this lot of Tailored Dress Skirts.\nMany of them are made In good quality mannish serge, others ln smart\ntweeds and gray wool coatings. These skirts were made from the ends\nof cloth from one of the best ladles' suit manufacturers In Canada, and\nto use up these pieces or cloth left over, he gave us a very special\nprice. Many of them are worth $7.50, and some even as high as $9,60.\nThere is an assortment of all sizes and there ls a large variety of\nstyles. Each nnd every skirt Is a real bargain, and they all go on sale\nat one price.    Kach    $5.75\nSteel Folding Davenport Couches,  fully  upholdstered;   regular\n$23.50, for $15.00\nFRAMED PICTURES.\nWe are cloning out about 60\nFramed PIctnroB, miltablo for\nDen, Dining Room or Parlor.\nThoBO will bo marked about\nhalf the usual prices.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"New Westminster (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"The_New_Westminster_News_1913-11-07","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0315938","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.206667","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-122.910556","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"Titled The Daily News from 1906-03-06 to 1912-04-24; Westminster Daily News from 1912-04-25 to 1912-12-04; and The New Westminster News from 1912-12-05 to 1914-09-04.<br><br>Published by The Daily News Publishing Company, Limited from 1903-03-06 to 1912-04-24; and The National Printing and Publishing Co., Ltd. from 1912-04-25 to 1914-09-04.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"New Westminster, B.C. : The National Printing and Publishing Co., Ltd","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Digitization Centre: http:\/\/digitize.library.ubc.ca\/","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"Series":[{"label":"Series","value":"BC Historical Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","classmap":"oc:PublicationDescription","property":"dcterms:isPartOf"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1913-11-07 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1913-11-07 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The New Westminster News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}