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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":" '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'I\nNews Classified Ads.\nHave proven thetr worth by the ,\nresults   they    produce.     Tbey   fill\nlarge   or   small    wants   at   small\ncost.\n-.-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd - retir-\nMvtoB\nThe Weather.\nNew Westminster aBti~tiie~l\ufffd\ufffdwer\nmainland: Light to moderate wfnijs,:\ngenerally fair with stationar\/ ttt\nhigher ternperat-ure.\n-\ni     I\"\nVOLUME 8,  NUMBER  210.\n'. _\nNEW  WESTMINSTER,  B.C., THURSDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 13, 1913\n^\nPRICE FIVECBNT8\nLOOKING m SUCCESSOR\nTO PRESIDENT HUERTA\nWashington Government Has Secured Moral Support of\nthe World Powers in Effort to Untanifle Mexican Affairs\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPersonal Representative of President Wilson\nConfers with Constitutionalist Chief and Cabinet.\nCHINESE SENATE\nWlll DISAPPEAR\nPRICES CONTINUE\nON UPWARD TREND\nSTORAGE COMPANY\nCONSIDERS OFFER\nWashington, Nov. 12. Secretary\nIlryan announced toduy that a statement would be Issued within a few\ndays setting forth the policy of the\nI'll,ted Stales towards  Mexico.\n| war-worn  republic  and  her  relations\nwith her northern neighbor.\nInto a little room of the tiny aduana\nOT customs house In which Oeneral\n.Carranza has established his \"ad In-\n'terlni\" capital, the American emissary\nYuan Shi Kai to Summon Administrative Council\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPresent House Is\nUnwleldly.\nI'ekin, Nov. 12. ['resident Yuan\nShi Kai intends to summon an administrative council, which In addition to\ntransacting state affairs, will draft\nregulations governing the new parliament. The new council will number\n71 members, consisting of the cabinet\nofficers and others appropriated hy the\npresident and the provincial governors,  who  have  already   been  appoint-\nStatistics Gathered at Ottawa Show Cost of Living Is Increasing.\nHeavy Exports to United    States\nLive Stock and Dairy Produce\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nAffect of American Tariff.\nof\nCity  Council   Makes Ressonable  Proposition\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNow up to B. C. Packers' Association.\nAFTERMATH OF THE\nTHREE DA YS STORM\nWhether or uot lhe statement will\nbe In the form of a communication to\ncongress by President Wilson has not\nbeen disclosed, but some of the diplomats here believe thai course will be\nfollowed. The statement has been\nunder consideration lor several days\nSecretary ilryan In his conference\nwith members of the diplomatic corps\nIiub made U plain that the statement\nwould define clearly the attitude of\ntbe United States. frankly\nThe pronouncement, lt Is thought j '\nnot only wlll reiterate the views that\nthe l'nited States can never recog\nHire a government established by arbitrary force, but will give Its reasons\nfor refusing to recogni\/.e any lets of\nthe new congreBB either as to the validity of loans or conceBslons and\npoint out the Bteps necessary to a so-\n* lution of the problem\nIt was apparent that developments\nin various foreign capitals hrought\nencouragement today to administration officials. There wub a feeling\namong ihem that Cue desire of the\nl'nited States to prevent Interference\nbv ihe powers was virtually accomplished.\nNations Concur.\nPremier Aatiultlm' speech explaining thai Oreat llritain wished to do\nnothing that was unfriendly lo the\nl'nited States, semi-official assertions\nfrom llerlin that no financial assistance would be given by tlermany to\nlluerta. a definite undent-Landing with\nKrance that nothing would be done I\nby thai country to embarrass the pro j\ncesses which the t'nlted States has Be.\nlected to solve Ihe Mexican situation,\nassurances from the Japanese ambassador lhat the sending of the armed\ncruiser lzumo to Mexican waters was\nfor   no   polltlr.il   purpose,   but   merely\nto extend protection to Japanese subjects if necessary -all tended to confirm the belief here that the Washing-\nIon government finally had secured the\nmoral support Of the other world powers In Its efforts to unravel the Mexican tangle It Is nlso felt lhat from\nDO part of Kurope will lluernt receive\nTinanelal assistance.\nThe fear reflectly-r\"hi some of the\ndispatches from abroiul that  the over-\nihrnw of Huerta might produce a state\nof anarchy In Mexico City unless a\nstrong substitute were provided Inline\ndtniely agrees with the polnl of view\nof many senators who have teen discussing   that   phase   of   the   situation i\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwith President Wilson. The Washing-1\nton administration has taken cognlz-.\nant e of this eventuality and If lluerta\nretires In accordance with the program desired here, it ls said, there;\nneed be little fear of any physical dls-i\nturbauces In Mexico City.\nWho Will Succeed Him?\nIn the plan of the l'nited States to\nafford   lluerta   every   opportunity   lo\nretire peaceably there Is a desire for,\na   definite   understanding   alBO  ss   to |\nwho  the  succeeding   president   would\nbe.     Tbe   Culled     States     recognizes\nthat the provisional success r must be\nacceptable to the Constitutionalists If\nthe latter are to stop fljshting.    Close\nobservers of the sltuu'lon pointed out'\nthat the l'nited States was In a better I\npoullon t'day to bring about an under *\nstnndlnv;   hetweei   the   Constitutionalists   und   lhe   authorities   al   Mexico!\nCity Ihan has been possible since the]\nUnited States first Interposed lis good!\noffices to solve the situation.\nHale Meets Carrsnxs.\nThe  conference  today   at   Nogales. j\nSonora between William 'Bayard Hale'\nwas ushered to meet the chiefs of the\nrebellion against lluerta. Carranza\nund bis entire cabinet were there, and\nwllh thern llaie conferred, exchanged\nviews and impressions and conferred\nfrom noon until the shadows grew\nlong and enveloped the twin towns of\nNogales, U.S.A. and Nogales. Kepub-\nlica de   Mexico.\ned by him.\nYuan Shi Kai considers the present\nhouse of representatives is unwleldly and desires Its reduction to 301\nmembers. The original number of\nrepresentatives was ..Sti. The powers\nof the parliament will also be materially curtailed and the senate will\ndisappear, giving place to the administrative council, which will be the permanent body.\nThis program was announced today\nand it probably will be carried out If\n| the opponents of the president are not\nable to bring about Its modification.\nOttawa,    Nov.\nI gathered by    the\n12.-The\nlabor   department\nSalvation or Destruction.\nBoth towns unanimously decided the     1\ufffd\ufffd  lhe  meantime  the  remnant  of\nconference   was   the  most   portentous, Parliament is permitted    to    continue\nevenl iii their history.    Their peoples   holding informal meetings, but can do\nbelieve\nmaking history\ncome depended\ntory  or  defeat\nthat In fact It was I\nand that on its out-'\nfate not merely victor  a   single   political I\nno business,  because of a  lack of  a\ncjuorum.\nparty of Mexico, but possibly peace or\nwar for two countries, and probably\nHie salvation or destruction of a nation.\nThe Conference was held amid the\nsimplest surroundings There were no\nj uniforms, no ceremony. Hale, accom-\npanted by American Consul Frederick\niS'.mpich, entered the customs house\niand they were ushered into the tiny\nroom There they found strulght back\nchairs lining the wall. The only decoration was a glided cost of arms of\nthe republic of Mexico. This hung\nover the place reserved for General\nCarranza. Hale, dressed In travelling!\ntweeds, was surrounded hy Mexicans\nIn sombre black and grays Ygnacio\nHonlllaa, nn American university alu-\ninnlus. and Carranta's minister of\ncommunications, was the official Interpreter for the American representative and Oeneral Carranxe.\nBonlllas took President Wilson's\n| proposition from Hale and ln Spanish\nj interpreted  it to tho rebel leader.\nDuring the time the men were tn\nconference a number of anxious Mexl-\n', cans paced the patio of the customs\nhouse Across the boundary nn the\nAmerican side of lhe street dividing\nthe two towns, there were Beveral\nhundred American refugees from\nMexico, wlio eagerly awaited news\nfrom the conference chamber, believ\nill);\nlefl\nIS BUSINESS EOR\nPERMANENT EXPERTS\nMunicipal     Administration     Nct    for\nPoliticians Placed in Temporary\nControl Says Soeaker.\nToronto, Nov. 12.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA factor In re-1\ncent municipal advance, said Clinton\nBogert WoodruU. of Philadelphia, tonight In his annual review before the\nNational Municipal league, la the\nrealization that municipal administration la a business tor permanent ex-\nperls and not for politicians placed ln\ntemporary control of our cities by the\nfortunes of the ballot Mr. Woodruff\nis secretary of tbe league, which began here tonight its nineteenth annual meeting.\nThe \"city  manager''  plan, he  said.\nis an evolution of the Oalveston idea., , .        .\nIn  short  It  constitutes a natural Bad|OISK.   ______!!-_\naffective    solution    of   governmental\nforms under American conditions.\nRegarding public control of    public\nthat   safety   of   their   possessions : utililits.  Mr. Woodruff said: .\nin Mexico when they took the ad-1    \"The question Is not shall thero bc \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_'.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    '_..    \ufffd\ufffd.\"\nshow that Canada is maintaining its\nreputation for high prices. The Index number, which shows as accurately aB can be done, the relative change\nin the cost of living Is nearly one\npoint higher for the month of October than for September.\nThe Index number for October. 1912,\nwas 135. for September, 1913. it was\n136, while for last month the figures\nJust compiled show that it was 136.8.\nThis iB a very unusual increase for\none month except for January, which\nIs largely a price setting month. The\nreports from different parts of the\ncountry show that the retail prices of\nmeats, eggs, milk and butter are all\nhigher. Evaporated apples and coal\nare also among the commodities that\nare Btiil going up.\nWholesale prlceB are also higher\nfor com, peas. Ontario barley, hay\nand bran. Cattle and beef were also\nwell up as well as dairy products,\nexcept cheese. Kresh Canadian fruits\nand potatoes commanded higher\nprices.\nSome Lower.\nSome of the wholesale prices, however, were lower, including wheat,\nflax, western oats and barley, hog and\nhog products. Imported fruits, beans.\nopinions and canned vegetables. There\nl were lower retail prices also for pota-\nonions and canned vegetables. There\niwere lower retail prices also for pota-\nI toes as the crop came on the market\nand for beans, flour, rolled oats and\nsugar.\n| While the substantial rise In the\n| general average of prices for the\nmonth is apt to be attributed largely\nto the heavy exports to the United\nStates of live stock. di\ufffd\ufffd-y products,\netc.. tt is really difficult to read In\ndetail as yet the effect of the American tariff. In some articles which\nwere reported as being exported largely across the line   there   have   been\nWhat is likely to be the climax of an\nardent endeavor to retain the Columbia Cold Storage company lu thiB city-\ntakes place today when W. H. Barker,\nmanager of the B. C. Packers' will\nbe told the city's proposition to accommodate the cold storage company\non the local waterfront. Oeorge Cas\n'sady, manager here, will explain the\noffer to the general manager follow-\nstatistics jing an all-day session yesterday of the\ncity council, the manufacturers' committee, and  Mr. Cassady.\nOne clause of the offer ia known to\nbe satisfactory to Mr. Cassady. That\nis the offer of a waterfront site at the\nfoot of Tenth street, near the Royal\nCity Mills. The remainder of the offer will be made public only after Mr. lgai(1\nBarker decides upon it.\nup in Lake Huron Still\nUnidentified.\nFreighter Lying Bottomside0,h\ufffd\ufffd'r  scanners  there.    It  was  quite\npossible for the boat to hit the rockn\n'ana bounce off to sink in hundreds of\nfeet or water, but It is hard to believe\nlhat no lifeboats, buoys or other float-\nlug material could be left. The I_ea-\ntield Is one of four \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd similar ships\nbrought out from England by fr. H.\nClcrgue, of Soo, ln 1802, tho others\nbeing the Palikl. the Ano aad Monk-\nsha-.cu The Ano and Monkshaveu\nhave both been lost jiut outside\nThunder cape, while frying to make\nthis port loaded with steel rails.\nlf the Lealleld has gone down in\nlhe same vicinity then only the Pallkt\nof the original quartette remains.\" The\ni-eafield's captain is Chas. F. Baker\nand the engineer A. Kerr.\nNumber of Hunters Reported Lost on\nLake Michigan\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdConditio!* Im.\nprove in Cleveland.\nPort Huron, Mich., Nov. 12.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAfter\nworking desperately since this morning In an unsuccessful attempt to\npositively identify the derelict freighter which lies bottomside up in\nstormy i_ake Huron, eight miles northeast of here, marine men returned to\nPort Huron tonight. MoBt of them\nthey\nwere convinced that the\nThis offer is considered a fair onei1*0\"1.'? |he -Packet freighter Regina.\nby the city but whether the same ap-i ta,)ti}!n 0eor-\ufffd\ufffde Plough, of the Lake-\nplies to the B. C. Packers'remains to' i5w \"fe 8avlng station; Captain\nbe seen. Certainly that concern is 15\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdf\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdps\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_'!; ~ the- ****>**-**. \ufffd\ufffdug\nconsidering it seriously for the contract for the Steveston plant is being\nSearch for Distressed Vessels.\nSault Ste. Marie, Mich., Nov. 12.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nThe revenue cutter Tuscarora paaaed\nup  the Soo searching for distressed\nsteamers.\nwithheld   until   the\nIs passed  upon.\ncity's   proposition\nLADY   STRATHCONA   DEAD.\nLondon, Nov. 12 Lady Strathcona,\nwife of Baron Strathcona and Mount\nRoyal, high commissioner for Canads,\ndied today. She was the daughter of\n.the late Richard Hardisty of Canada.\nComet to America.\nDublin, Nov.' 12.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe secretary of\nthe Irish department of agriculture.\nT. H. Gill, left today for the United\nStateB. He will endeavor to induce\nthe American government to remove\nthe embargo on Irish potatoes.\nmm m\nDO HER DUTY\nSport and Captain Carmine, of the\nrevenue cutter Morrell, all said today\nthat the wrecked boat resembled the\nRegina bo closely that they were convinced the latter must be the victim\nof the strange accident. The Reglna's\nbeam is 43 feet. Captain Plough\nmeasured the overturned boat and\nsaid her beam was slightly more than\n42 feet.\nThe wreckage from the Regina\nwashed ashore yesterday, including a\nlifeboat which contained two bodies\nof sailors positively identified as members of the crew of the Regina. indicated that the freighter was wrecked iu the vicinity where the overturned vessel was found.\nLittle credence is given here to the\nreport from Goderich, Ont., that the\nbodies found on the shore of Lake\nHuron below Grand Bend were sailors\non the steamer Chas. 9. Price, reported lost. The Price may have sunk,\nmarine men admit, but H is belleveq\nCovers for a Thousand.\nBuenos Ayres, Nov. 12.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCol. Roosevelt was the guest of honor at a Big\nbanquet at the Colon theatre tonight,\nat which covers were laid for more\nthan 1000. In the afternoon be witnessed a review ot troops at Campo\nMayo. He was present at the military\nclub on the occasion of the presentation of a statue of General Sheridan.\nGOVERNMENT DEPOT\nEOR LIQUOR SUPPLY\nCommission Will Advocate Establishment of Norwegian System  in\nQuebec.\nglna.    They  were found not a great | he in the hands ot the members\ndistance from where the Regina vic-ith\ufffd\ufffd   legislature  in  two  weeks,   \"\nThis, however, may simply be due\nto the  flooding of Ihe market owing\nto export movement and high prices\nexpected.    If this Is the correct    ex-\nproves    the   more\n\"A\" the ; clearly the    extent\ni movement and may\n'\" me.    llut no word as to what Presl-1 ally conceded lhat public utilities and^Pf'ff lha\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdn wh,e\" ,he \"^P0\"*^\ndent   Wilson   had   proposed   lo   Car-  ehu,. _,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdr,,,,. ih.__, -r\ufffd\ufffd m,,r,ir.in\ufffd\ufffdi mm. i*-\"- '\ufffd\ufffd relieved, and the supplies    In\nvice of  President Wilson  to get out i public control or none.\nof the country, depended on the out .form ol that control.    I\nbut as\nIs now gener-\nof    the    general\npresage   higher\npropored\nr.-inza through Hale, or what the rebel\nleaders t'lcught of the proposal, was\nallowed   to  leak out.\nHale went direct from the conference house to the American side and\nentered into communication with\nWashington\nLOCAL LABOR MEN\nTO TAKE ACTION\nCriticize  Heavy  Sentences\nGiven Nanaimo Strikers\nby Judge Howay.\nMass Meeting to Prepare Petition\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIn.\nvestigate Conditions at Provln.\nclal Jail.\nantl General Carranza and thu mem-1 Condemnation of what they termed\nhers of lne Constitutionalist cabinet.  ... .\nopens the wny for a direct line of com- j *' n' ****** and iaVB*t' sentences,\ninunlcatton between the Constitution- handed out lo miners convicted in tbe\nallsts and the Mexico City authorities. Vancouver -island strike trouhle, by\nPeace commissions  have  endeavored I hlg honor   Jud      \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd , ,   d\nin vain heretofore to establish a llnei, , ,     '      :    _    .\nof diplomatic parley between the two i b>' several speakers at the Trades and\nHitler. 11 Jibor   council   meeetlng   held   last\nOne of the difficulties hitherto on- evening and to this end a mass meet-\nchief among these are municipal utlli-,., ,       . ,    .     ,    ,,     .\nties must be carefully supervised and ! \">e, c\ufffd\ufffduntrv are 'ound to be ***** de\"\ncoittrolled so that the rights of    the P,I*,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdK4__   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd___.__._   ,k     ________\ufffd\ufffd   _-__.\ncommunities and of the users may be) October showed the highest price\natlcoustely protected.' That is \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.un|.'ever paid for jute-the highest for cot\ncipal advance.\nOttawa Paper Says Government Will Fulfill Imperial Obligations.\nAction to Be Taken Wlll Not Be Made\nKnown  Until  Return  of  Prime\nMinister.\nQuebec,    Nov.    12.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe provincial\nthe bodies are of the crew of the Res I liquor commission's report which will\not\nla\nUrns, found in the row boat, were 1 announced will advocate the Introduc-\nwashed ashore. It was also learned |tlon of the Norwegian system of gov-\nthat one of the sailors, whose clothes fnment depots for the supply ot\ncontained a letter addressed \"Ca-r\ufffd\ufffd4u*\"52_? to de\"ere-\nsteamer Chas. Price,\" formerly work- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* de*J!ottV the reports urges,\ned on the Price, but later Joined Osm ,g?*_ **&\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd! \ufffd\ufffdL?!nt \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffdVSS\nRegina crew *        *n<1 the. dealer should pay in a per-\nDiver Willing.\nWhen the relief fleet steamed out\nto the floating wreck this morning a\ndiver was taken along.    A gale was\ncentage of his profits to the government.\nIn addition to the suggestion -hat\nthe bar ahould be gradually abolished,\nthe report, it ls believed, will recrun-\nton since 1911. Textiles have gone up\nas a result, steel, quick silver, sliver\nand tin were lower as well as rope,\n'and raw rubber, but brooms were\nmuch higher.\nMr. Woodrull spoke of recent experiments In selling municipal bonds\n\"over the counter\" as evidence of In-\noreaaed Interest by citizens in municipal management.\nThe commission form of city government, he continued, although flrst\ntried only 13 years ago, has lost Its\nnovelty as an experiment, and the\nidea has gained In popularity with remarkable rapidity.\n\"NonpartlsaiiBlnp.\" he asserted,\n\"has been the aim of the newer forms\nof government, lt has been promoted\nby ignoring party designations on the\nballot and eliminating the party ticket\nand  the machinery  by which it has $#$4$$4#g\ufffd\ufffd$$$$4t\nU. S. Minister to Siam.\nWashington. Nov. 12.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAlex. Sweek,\nof Portland, Ore., has been selected\nby President Wilson to be minister to\n81am. He was formerly a member of\nthe Oregon state senate, being president ot that body at one time. Secretary Lane has been urging Mr. Sweek's\nappointment and Secretary Bryan recommended him for the post today.\nbeen  Drought forth. <\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\"Municipal home rule has been mak- U\nlng great gains within the last few \\m-\nyearB. Non-partisanship the direct I g\nelection of federal senators and munl-l^\ncipal home rule, all represent muni-13,\ncipal advance of the most effective\nkind, iu thst they place municipal\naffairs purely on their own basis.\"\nTWO HUNDRED REPORTED\nKILLED BY EXPLOSION\ncountered In attempting to get the two\naides to the point of discussing an armistice haB been the difficulty of tele-\ngraphlo communication. With the\nUnited States as a medium of commu-\nIng will be called for some evening\nuf next week when different speakers\nwill be present to protest against\nsuch Judicial action and Initiate   a\nnlcatlon It Is thought possible that' potition throughout the provlnoe which\nCarraiu.a might ndlcate who would be when glgned wl\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ^ tcrv\/sTiMia to\nacceptable to him as a successor to:tllo mln,Bter of Ju8t|ce at olU|wlu\nHuerta If the latter finally yielded to: lyi,-CKI,te Dodd brought up the mailer on behalf of the Street Railway-\nmen's union, stating that It was impossible for Now Westminster labor\nmen to remain quiet when similar action Is being taken In different parts\nof tho province.\nDelegate tlrant, In support ot the\nmass meeting project, charged that\nthe evidence againat the convicted\nmen had been manufactured out of\nwhole cloth and that the men had\npleadeil guilty on the advice ot their\ncounsel on the strength of what waa\nsupposed to have been a promise from\nthe prosecution that the sentoncea\nwould he light.\nDelegate Cameron In speaking to.\nthe motion to hold a mass meeting\nmentioned tho Interview obtained by\nThe News with Judge Howay ln ra\nthe persuasion of some of his friends\nand retired. Word reached Washington today that officials close to Huerta\nwere urging him to retire. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nConferred with Cabinet.\nNogales, Sonora, Nov. 12.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCrossing\na narrow little atreet from the United\nStates Into Mexico, William Haynrd\nHale, personal representative of ProBl-\ndent Wilson, met the Constitutionalist\nchief, Oeneral Venustlano Carranza\naud his cabinet, and presented to them\na definite; proposal from the American government.\nWhat that propoaal was ,the American diplomatic agent declined to say.\nThe Mexican revolutionary leaders\nalso were silent, but to those who have\nbeen anxiously awaiting the development of the American policy with regard to Mexico, It wha fraught with\npossibilities tor the destinies ot the\n(Continued 00 Page Viva.)\nInvitation te\nOttawa, Nov. 12.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe minister of\nmllltla has Invited Sir William irishman, professor of pathology at the\nKoyal Army Medical college, I-ondon,\nand honorary physician to the king,\nto come to Canada and deliver an address before the aaaoclation of medical offlcera' meeting In Pebruary next\nSir William ls the greateat authority\non*- antt-typhold Inocculatlon. It la\nunderstood he will give an address\nalso at Toronto and Montreal.\nI Ima. Peru. Nov. 12\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOfficial\ntelegrams report a continuance\nol thc earthquake In the provlnoe of Aymareas, in the department of Apuramlttc. The\ncity ot Challhuanca, with a\npopulation of nearly 4000, capital of the province. Is reported\nto be in mlns.\nA private telegram says that\nthe deaths number more than\n200.\nApuramltic haa a population\nof nearly 200,000. It is composed ot provinces of Aden-cay,\nAymareaa, Anta and Cotanam-\nbaa, and a portion of Ayacucho.\na###\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdt\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nOttawa. Nov. 12\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNot until the return to Ottawa of the prime minister\nwill It be definitely determined what\naction will be taken at the next session of parliament on the question of\nCanadian participation In naval defence, declares the Evening Citiz-.n,\n-which goes on to say:\n\"The question has been before the\ncjibinet and ll is understood that the\niim.1 decision on tbe matter rests with\nthc premier.\n\"There is but one opinion among the\ngovernment and its supporters of thc\nurgent need of Canada making a start\ntowards helping the mother country,\ntbe line favored being that of iast\niTssIon, pending the formation of a\npermanent policy. The obstacle, however, is the Liberal Benate. There\nrpoears to be no change in the sentiment of that body on the question and\nLiberal senators who have been to\nOttawa of late havc openly stated that\nany naval bill ot the character of that\nproposed laat session will meet a similar fate.     '\n\"Under the circumstances there is,\namong some on the government ride,\na question aa to the wisdom of reintroducing the bttl, but that thia action\nmay he taken la not improbabb.. lt\nit ahould be, the bill may be the aame\naa before, or It may produce tho same\neffect while being varied in form.\n\"Ia any event, It la the firm I'tteit-\ntlon ot the government to fulfill Ite\nImperial obligations aad the three\ndreadnoughts that hava heen accelerated by tha admiralty te replace taoae\npropoaed by the Canadian government, will on completion, probably he\npaid for by Canada, assuming that by\nthat time the hostile majority In tha\naeaate la overcosse..\n\"Tha Leurl\ufffd\ufffdr naval aet la not likely\nto be repealed nntll ther* la a mean-\nnre to replace it\"\nblowing across Lake Huron and waves i nd the ^po^ent of two commia-\nwere dashing ten feet over the dere- glon8 one at Qnebec ,_,, _e other ,t\nlict. but the diver urged the captain \\ Montreal\n,to allow hi mto attempt to climb j' ^.^ commission will have a pro-\ndown the side of the vessel's bow to | po8it;0n connected with it, whose\nascertain her name. The men in jduty wU( be ,0 inspect liquors sold tu\ncommand considered the plan fool- prevent adulteration by mixing,\nhardy and refused to allow the direr Rura] hotels will be constantly unto leave the tug. They promised to der supervision aad should the set\ngive him a chance tomorrow, provld-1 be violated the license is liable to be\ncancelled. The grocers' liquor license\nwill obligate the holder to divide his\nsale of groceries and liquor into two\ned the lake is not so rough\nA report this afternoon from Port\nFrank, Ont., stated that eight more\nfrozen bodies were washed ashore tn\na lifeboat there today. Wires are\ndown and the Identity of the lifeboat\ncculd not be learned.\nHunters Missing.\nDetroit, Mich.. Nov. 12.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNo more\nwrecks or vessels In distress were reported today from polnta on I_-_ke St.\nClair and along the Detroit river. A\nnumber ot hunters believed to bave\nbeen on these waters in open boats\nwhen the blizzard swept Michigan\nSunday, are still missing.\nH. It. Welsb. a Pontiac automobile\nmanufacturer and his bunting companion, Creston Strong, of Pontiac,\nare amapg the men reported unheard\nfrom. They lett Pontiac Saturday for\nStrawberry laiand, in St. Clair river,\non a duck hunting trip. They took\nwith them a amall canoe, an oil stove\nand provisions for one day.\nseparate departments.\nma\nin Cleveland.\nCleveland, Ohio, Nov. 12.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe work\not restoring Cleveland to normal order\nproceeded rapidly today. Supplies of\ncoal and tood began to come tn and\nInconveniences due to the recent Mix-\naxrd rapidly ware eliminated.\nElectric light service to many parte\not the city whieh have heen dark tor\nthree nights waa partially restored today. Almost all the street ean ara\nrunning and dellverlee of tha anudl\namount of mall whieh haa reached tka\ncity wu begnn today.\nTha menace of tka telelea and\nmound nf snow which ta-Mwa all tka\ndowntown bulldiags onnasd I****** te\nbe stationed along tho atrsete te\nwam the people to keen oni near the\new*.  Boy ecaute aft\ufffd\ufffdt te tkle war*.\nAn attempt wtU be a\nttte\nSA YS MONEY SPENT ON PANAMA MIGHT\n-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Cant ml    __\nHAVE BEEN BETTER SP.ENT ON ROADSti.p^Hn515\"S\nManchester, N. H.. Nov. It\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe\nlabor and money spent on .the Panama\ncanal might have been uaed te better\npurpose, on the highways ot thla oountry, Oliver Wilson, ot Illinois, master\nof the National Orang*, told the dale-\ngates to the national convention to\ntbe patrons of the husbandry In hla\nannual report today.\n\"The building of tha Panama canal\nls a national project of which mi\nAmericana are proud, yat tho nana\nambunt of labor and money aaent on\nour highways at home vnuld efeat\nbenefits nearer and probably mon lne\nportent to our own peopje,\" he anid.\nMuster Wilson declared that the\nfederal government sMoat Ignored\nlha queation   of   tmnaporlaUon   be\ntween tha country Home and tka nil-\nroad, the farm and the hue-mean can-\ntn except to give advice o% road construction.\nThe   national   gnnga,\"  h*\n\"1 beMeve any nml WaSit ayatem\nshould make tt eaaqf nn*'ante lhr ft\nfarmer te horn* money to buy dr\nImprove *to tend <#: equlpnoM te,\noperate tie same      -\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdihia latenat ahould to avaflahte ter\ntha farmer who deetrea It.\nThe eo-callod rani oredlt aotemla-\nIM mteaben \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd***.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *m[,*h*r;t*l*>\nshould   urge   the   employment   of reeeotntlnn   of   agrieuKan,   oaMa-\nPriaoaan In preparation of t**a ma- na**!? in aaa ejrpaot b\ufffd\ufffdt llttlu*,   If\nterlal and In actual nnd wort, under any l|\ufffd\ufffdaH tran Ite *ef*tt\ntins honor system.\"\nMr. Wile*  alas  eubmttted Mean\nf\"om the stowpotat ot the tamer n-\nlis* rani credits, aaytng\nbeen test at Ansae\nahtpgda-g tea* ken te\nBaaa. tko lha *aai \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd st il\nft Mil\nUte*\nPREDICTS NATION\nWIDE PROHIBITION\nKansas Governor Says Congress Will Pat Ban on\nLiquor Traffic.\nProsperity   of  North   Dakota. Vwdw\nProhibition ttsigi\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtesmasotft   *\nPetition to Oovernment\nletting ttt* ttsxt-\naonVwSlt*\nColumbus, O-, Nov. JJ.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdRredlctln-g\nthat a reaolotlon prohibiting t*\ufffd\ufffd truffle tn Intox-tiatiag have ' --\nUnited Statea anj nil,\nder lta JuriedletiM i .\nadopted by oongreea aid thriagpf\nthnt \"If I ate -manor ef -WaaaSs t\nwill oonvan* tk* WaJ-astm\nof ntttylag tea amaadn*\n**\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd'rf   - - .        -\nleague tato aa s_N\ufffd\ufffd*r <*\nQavmuar !__ M. Hasan r\nk-^sanaStMSTtTi-\nISriLVtetetaii-a\nnXte- awtaateteat teak\n___(_____fe   ___k_k*_M-i   __M r ^__________l________-___________   ______   '\n\"' iKr \" \"'\nwMISP\n*' -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd A ;\nMA\n' ft\/.\n%'i PAGE TWO\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS.\nTHURSDAY, NOVEMBER  13, 191$.\nrM-w&\ndoubt that the discovery of Captain\nAmundsen's triumph in reaching the\npole first depresseed the entire party\nto such an extent thst 11 must be\nreckoned as B part cause of the disaster. A typical entry Ib: \"The Norwegian forestalled us. It is a terrible\ndisappointment. I am very sorry for\nmy loyal companions. We must has\nten home With nil the speed we can\ncompass. All tiie day dreams must\ngo. lt will be a wearisome return. We\nmust turn our hack now on the goal of\nour ambition and must face onr 800\nmiles of solid, dragging -a desperate\n.struggle.   1 wonder if we can do it.\"\nTliis  is  the  first  note  of despond-\niency.    Thereafter they lire fairly fre-\ni iliient.   For nearly a month hefore the\nlend   the despondency  is almost  unrelieved.   Although be kept the knowledge to himself, ii seems evident that\nCaptain    Scott    knew  that    all  were\n| doomed.    Dr.  Atkinson's    report eon-\n.   , eludes:    \"I bid a final farewell to the\nWhats the matter with Oak Bay?   Its all right.        resting place or three hemes, there\nIf there's one municipality in this favored land of Lt^oiTch^\"bodu^\"\nours that's entitled to throw out its municipal chest and with the most fitting tomb  in  the\n! world above them.\"\nAn *t*As*tnd*nt monilsr esper dec-ofed to th* inter *sts of New Weslmlnsler and\ntee Fraser Vslle-i. Published every mom ini except ftundnv Iiii the National Printing\nas* Publishing Company, Limited, at 63 lie Kent I* atreet. New Westminster, British\nOoJamMa. ROBB SUTHERLAND, Managing Director.\nAU _ommunl_\ufffd\ufffdfton_ should oe addressed to The New Wcilminster Sew-, and nol\nts individual menders of th* staff. Cheques, drafts, and mimcy orders should be made\nskis to The National Printing and Putlishtna Companv, Limited.\nTELEPHONES- Business office and Manager, 999; Kdltorial Rooms (ail depart-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ),  991.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBy earner. 14 per gear, tl for three months, 40o per\nnth.    By mail, IS per year, 26c per month.\nADVERTISING BATES on application.\nTHURSDAY MORNING,  NOVEMBER  13, 1913.\nON GETTING THE STRINGENCY'S GOAT.\ntilt its municipal nose that municipality is Oak Bay, over\non the island called Vancouver.\nRight at a time when everv other city and rural coun- IID FAD TDII AfftD\ncil this side of the Rockies is twistilig the tail of the finan- Ul 'vn \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,l,t m v\ufffd\ufffd\ncial tiger in the hope that he will let out a few golden\nnotes, along capers Oak Bay to the front of the stage,\nsidles into the spot light and, without so much as an explanation, announces that arrangements have been concluded with one of the banks for the financing of the municipality. Going even that far was presumptuous enough,\nbut Oak Bay travels the limit and, on top of the \"arrangement for financing\" announcement, it takes pleasure in informing Oak Bay ratepayers in particular and a bunch of\nenvious other municipalities in general that sewer and\nwaterloan bylaws are to be voted on next Saturday and\nthey amount to the trifling total of nearly two hundred\nthousand dollars.\nTwo hundred thousand dollars! If some of the councils\nin this last great west were asked to put a couple of bylaws\nlike that at this stage of the game, they'd telescope into\ntheir boots and die a lingering death with bunions on the\nbrain | chose to be tried before a judge.\nT' _.__-_  t   i*      i i    i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Boyd   pleaded    not    guilty     when\nIn some way or another Oak Bay has succeeded in get-!brought before Judge ufontatne, ami\nting the goat belonging to that old man of the sea, Mister waived the \"'adlng ot thp <lisP\ufffd\ufffdBlti\ufffd\ufffd\"\nF. Stringency, and for that righteous feat Oik Bay is entitled to a bot-and-cold-water, bathroom-attached apartment in the hall of fame.\nBut behind it all there's a something that is sufficient\nexcuse for the poor harried member of the city or municipal council to wave his feet and jump for joy. If Oak Bay\ncan \"arrange for financing,\" it won't be long till other\nplaces on this particular section of the map can do the\nsame. If others can do it, then Westminster can do it and\nif Westminster can do it; Oh Joy, Oh happiness.\nWith apologies to Oak Bay, it might be remarked that\nthat municipality is the straw which shows in which direction the wind sets and the straw shows that the wind has\nshifted to that point from which there will soon start to\ncome tangible proof of better times and looser money.\nTHEfT Of SHARES\nAlfred   Boyd  Committed   in   Montreal\non Charge of Getting Away\nWith Stock.\nMontreal, Nov. 12.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAlfred James\nBoyd, accused of the theft of 98 shares\nof Dominion Glass Company,- Limited,\nstock, valued at $9,800. appeared for\nvoluntary statement and was committed to stand trial. A few moments\nlater he was brought hefore Judge\nBazin to take his option of a trial by\na judge or before a jury.\nThe date set was for the 18th and he\nLatest orders from the headquarters for women's\nstyles call for men's vests with stand-up linen collars. That\noutfit on the upper reaches Would look cute over a silhouette skirt.\nThe population of Greenland has increased more rapidly in the last ten years than in-any similar former period. Perhaps that's where all the lost Arctic explorers are\nsettling on the quiet.\nA lighthouse on the Isle of Wight has been equipped\nwith a fifteen million candle power lamp, probably to keep\nsome of the larger ocean greyhounds from running into\nit and shoving the little bit of land clear off the map.\nThe politicians' union should run Secretary of Labor\nWilson of the United States out of the business'and brand\nJudge Lafontalne read the law to\nhim in relation to procedure in the\ncase, and explained that what he now\"\nsaid would be taken down in evidence\nand used against him at hls trial, and\nthe usual warning to expect no promise or favor from his Btatement.\nN. K. l.aflamme rose to his feet and\noffered to put in his rebuttal, but was\ninformed by the court that it was too\nlate, as the time had gone by for\nthat, since the prisoner stood committed.\nLawyers for the defence argued that\neven after the answers of the accused\nhad been taken arguments could be\nproduced at voluntary statement proceedings, and In this particular case\nthe defense understood they were to\nbo heard after the evidence of the\nprocedlngs had  been   transcribed.\nJude Lafontalne said that while\nhe was averse to doing this he would\ncall the prisoner back, and ordered\nDeputy High Constable Sullivan to\nproduce Boyd.\nWhatever was intended to be shown\nbe the defence failed to materialize,\nand when asked by Judge Lafontalne\nwhat it was the defence wished to establish, Mr. l.aflamme replied, \"1 have\nnothing to say.\"\nBoyd was Immediately ordered back\nto his cell committed  for trial.\nWoman's World\nFirst   Lawyer   of   Fsir\nSex In Criminal Court.\nNORTHERNERS IN\nBIG CONCLAVE\nHISS A-IT  WHEN.\nMiss Amy Wren, lawyer and suffragist, of New York city has the distinction of being the first woman lawyer\nwho ever appeared in the criminal\nbranch uf the United States district\ncourt of the district of N'ew York.\nShe went before l'nited States Commissioner Shields recently ns counsel\nfor a Chinese who wns charged with\nmanufacturing opium.\nWANT U. S. BREEDERS TO\nEXHIBIT AT  NELSON\nTalk about coming down in the world! From dreadnoughts, the British government has stooped to consider\nthe building of a motor boat reserve for service in case\nof war.\nSpokane. Nov. 12.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAn effort is lie\ning made by poultrymen In the Koo-1\ntenay district In British Columbia lo\nInduce Inland empire breeders to exhibit their birds at the semi-annual I\nshow to he held December '.', and 4 at j\nNelson, B. ('., under the auspices of\nthe West Kootenay Poultry and Pel ;\nStock___-__ociation. H\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdH. Currie, fnt-4\nmer Nolson newspaper man. who Is |\nIn the city, yesterday took the matter I\nup with offlcerB of the local associa-j\nHon.\n'The  poultry  Industry   is  assuming |\nimportant proportions In the Kootenay\nregion, and there la a promising field |\nthere for local breeders to dispose of\ntheir pure-bred  stock,\" said   Mr.  Cur!\nrie, who Is chairman of the premium\ncommittee for the Nelson show, yes-j\nterday.   \"We prefer to obtain our new j\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdslock from the inland empire breeders\n, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd t       ii      i . i ,  j rather  than   send  east,   provided   we\nmm a scab.   He uoesn t emplov a press agent and refuses!''\"1 get satisfactory birds, and for this\nto hand out typewritten interviews.   Wonder what he S^StiSSiS\" ni*w*m *S'l Ihem\nan opportunity lo display their fowlB\nto a great many poultrymen. who. In\nturn, win be enabled to Judge of the\nquality of their stuff.\n\"We anticipate there wlll he be-\ntween 600 and 700 birds on display at\nNelson, the best of whieh will he ex\nhlblted later at the provincial poultry\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdhow at Qrand Porks, December 9 to\n12, Inclusive, and the choice of the\nprb'- winners at both will be brought\nto the Bpokane show, December 'i'i to\n'i'i.   in addition there will be a great\nmany Koloenay fanciers who will send\ngen\ufffd\ufffd:ral exhiliilH to the .Spokane meet.\"\nEnnui; That's Punishment,\nNo greater punishment than ennui?\nThat Is what Huth Helen Davis,\ntranslator of 'The Daughter of Heaven,\" says. She bas done some very\nclever work In French translation and\nhas enjoyed every minute of it. Her\ntheory Is as follows:\n\"Dullness ls the burden of the rich.\nLack of contrast is their stumbling\nblock to enjoyment 1 know uo greater punishment thnt ennui.\n\"Restlessness and the constant search\nfor novelty Is a cruel master    There is\nI nothing   enviable   In   this   world   hut\nI Self development, self knowledge.    Its\n> beginning and ending ls concentration,\n\"No one ever need be dull In this\nworld. No one need to be lastingly\ndowncast Just think of all the things\nin the world that are to he done and\nthe different ways there are to do\nthem.\n\"The simplest tasU can be made the\nbeginning nt a study. The most ordinary talent, If focused and concentrated, can bc made a means to renl\nachievement, which Is only another\nname for Joy and contentment\n\"It Is odd how blind ninny wealthy\npersons are to the fact that work is\nthe greatest s.-itlsller In the world,\n\"Happiness Is rlieap. Any one enn\nbave it wbo will concent rale. Self\ndevelopment, built on concentration, is\nthe very finest game on earth.\n\"If those who are on the verge of\nsomething desperate would ouly step\non a railroad train, for instance, nnd\ngo to some Btrange place, no matter\nwhere, ami follow up some work stilted to their ability, however bumble,\nthere would be fewer suicides.\"\nArctic Brotherhood Grand Camp Meets\nfor Last Time on the\nOutside.\nSeattle, Nov. 12   Foregathered from\nlall parts of Alaska from ICiatia, the\n'northernmost gold camp In the world;\n;from Nome, from the upper it-aches of\n, the Koyukuk. from Dawson, from i'alr-\n| banks, from Itampart, from Council,\nfrom Circle City, from Skagway, from\neverywhere  In  the great    territory,\n\"where northern lights rome down o'\nnights to dance on tho houseless\nsnow\" a bund of about fifty fortune\nhunters met at the Arctic club yesterday morning for the annual grand\ncamp meeting of tiie Arctic Brotherhood, One of them. Tom Dwyer, came\nfrom Australia, others from South\nAmerica, anil still others had not seen\nI civilization  for twenty years.\n\"We needed a pair of blinders to get\nsome of them up to the meeting,\" snld\n(Irand Arctic llocorder Keller. \"They\nare a little automobile shy so far, hut\nare gradually becoming t rained to the\nunusual sights and sounds of ix liig\ncity.\"\ni \"I lost my hearings In them canyons,\" explained a grizzled, hard-Jaw\ned veteran from itampart City. He referred to the walls of buildings on the\ni streets,   as  an   excuse   for   hls   being\nilate.\nThis probably will be the last meet\n|ing in the United States of this notable  organisation\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdan   order   that   wa.\ufffd\ufffd\n! formed ln the wild and woolly days of\nithe Dawson stampede, where thousands of pioneers dragged their bleeding feet across the forbidding mountain passes to reach the Klilorado that\n| lay on the other side.    The \"outside\"\n; was chosen as a meeting place for\nthe  grand  camp because  lt  Is  easier\nI for some of the pioneers to come to\nSeattle  than  to go  to -other  parts of\n'Alaska than those in wlllch they live.\nIn the past few years, however, with\nnew trails and roatls and better travtl-\nIng enccominodations these conditions\n! have changed, and It Is probable that\nthe next meeting place of the grand\ncamp will be at Skagway. the point at\nwhich the order was first founded\nMany of the delegates expressed\nthemselves as being In favor of a\npermanent meeting place In Alaaka.\nThe  camp   was   formally   organized\n; late yeseterday afternoon and the\nbusiness of the meetings will be transacted within the next three days, after which many of the adventurers will\nagain vanish Into thn wilderness to be\nheard of no more, perhaps, for several\nyear.'.\nThf re are still many delegates to ar-\nrrlve, but it Is expected that many of\nthem wll Isciiw up today and tomorrow.\nFOR SALE OR LEASE\nROYAL   CAPE\nLease Extremely Moderate.    For\nfurther particulars apply\nDominion  Trust   Company\n606 Columbia Street\nC. S. Keith, Manager\nWHY BUY POREIGN CEMENT\nwhen you can get ea good, or better, manufactured In B. C, vis.: the\nthe celebrated \"VANCOU\\ Bit\" Brand, guaranteed to paaa Standard\nSpecifications of American  and Canadian Engineers' Association.\nWe would also call attention to our Vltrliled Bewer i'lpe from\n4 In to 'ii In In diameter. This Is also made In this Province and we\nconsider superior to any imported article.\nWe also carry a stock of Crushed Rock, Waabed Oravel, Sand.\nMme, Plaster, etc.\nSee us before ordering elsewhere.\nGILLEY BROS.. LIMITED\nPhonee 15 and 16.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd02 Columbia Street vv.\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\nMUSIC.\nMil.-!      0\nplanofon\nMUTT  AND JEFF  IN\nDISGUISE AS CHINESE\nThe tall and short of the Chinese\nIempire appeared In the Union station\ni this morning and e ausetl a lot of\namusement, Wong Ow Wing, 6 feet\n2 Inches, and Wong Tim, 4 feet 10\ninches, called at the Dominion Imml-\ngratlen ojee to get their new certlf\nicates of naturalization and he registered again, lloth sons of the Orient\naro In the laundry business In Call\nl\"\"\"i lh'*v g< t off the train antl\nMrode into Superintendent Hlrmlng\nham'K office the staff nearly collapsed\ni with nervous prostration. The hlg\n; fellow led the way with the little one\ntripping along In tho rear.\nACANADIAN PACIfK\nWrahwayco.\nWhen you take your\nEastern Trip\nyou may as well travel in comfort\nand at minimum cost. We can prove\nthis.   Call on\nI. OOUI.BT, Agent.\nNew Weitmlnste\nII. W. UIIODIB, (1. P. A.. Vancouver\nthinks he was elected for.\nMinenapolis hotelkeepers are fining to charge for\nbread and butter to get at the man who buys a bowl of\nsoup and eats all the bread on the table to fill out his meal.\nProbably they don't charge enough for the soup.\nMAKE OUR BOY A\nSTRENUOUS MAN\nCaptain  Scott's Last Message to  His\nWife\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCommander Knew All\nWere Doomed.\nLondon, Eng., Nov. 12.--\"Make our\nboy interested in natural history if\nyou can. It is better than games.\nKeep hlm in the open air. Above all,\nyou must guard him against Indolence,\nMake him a strsnuous man. The great\nOod has called me. Take comfort in\nthat 1 die In peace with the. world and\nmyself, and not afraid.\"\nThis wns lhe last message Captain\nScott, the heroic Antarctic explorer,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdsent to his wife, now Lady Scott. The\nmessage Is quoted In \"Captain Scott's\nList Expedition,\" published here In\ntwo large volumes. The letter to hiB\nwife was probably written in .March,\n1912, when he faced death in the blizzard-swept waste nnd wrote in IiIb\ndiary:\n\"Tho end cannpt be far. It seems a\npity, but I do not-.thlnk I csn write\nmore Kor God's sa'... look after our\npeople.\"\ntici.it, next to the billiards nnd the\nphenomenal)) low temperatures on the\nHarrier, ascribed  the  disaster  mainly\nto   the   astonishing   failure     or     the\nstrongest man In the party. Petty Officer Evans, a physical  giant.\nSuggestg Suicide.\nOn March 11 Scott wrote: \"Oates is\nvery near the end, one feels. What\nwe or he wlll tio, Ood only knows. We\ndiscussed the matter after breakfast.\nHe is a brave fellow and understands\nthe situation, but hn practically asked\nfor advice. Nothing could be salt! but\nto urge him to march as long as he\ncould. I practically ordered Wilson to\nhand over the means to us of ending\nour troubles, so that any one of us\n| may know how to do so. Wilson had\nno choice between doing so and our\nransacking Ills medicine case. We have\nthirty opium tabloids apiece, and Wil\nson Is left wtth the tube of morphine.\"\nThis tragic decision was revoked for\nIn the last entry hut one In the diary\nScott wrote: \"We must he near the\nend. I have decided It shall be natural. We shall march for the depot\nwith or without our effects antl die in\nonr tracks.\"\nThe diary adds: \"Oates' last\nthoughts were of his mother, but Immediately herorc leaving he took pride\nIn thinking that his regiment would\nbe pleased at the bold way he met\ndeath. We all hope to meet the end\nIn a similar spirit, and assuredly the\nend Is not far.\"\nAmudnsen's Success Depressed Them.\nA perusal of the diaries leaves no\nWould Woman Be Less Quarrelsome?\nir men Indulged in the unsportsmanlike luetics employed by women iu the\nsocial and organisation pinif they\nwould not only lose nil chance nt tbo\ncoveted ofllce. but they would probably be well beaten up for their actions. The woman Is cruel, discourteous nnd unfair to her sisters because\nShe knows another woman will not\nstrike her.   It would be so nnfominlnel\nHave you ever listened while the\nWomen and girls of a household re-\nlii-tited the tale of lhelr experiences at\nthe Indies' Aid sui-lety. tlle Whist\neliili, the Altar guild, the Lunch club?\nIio vou hour how* many aprons were\nliinde for the next snle. what (Inesse\nwas displayed In playing n certain\nlul ltd at bridge, bow the guild bus decided to redecorate the chancel or the\nlatest discoveries In domestic science\nniinle hv the young cooks, says the\nPictorial Ilevlew.\nNot nt all. The Immlng rjliesttnn In\nalmost every case Is the Inefficiency nf\nsome officers or the unwarranted power wielded by others.   Consider bow\nliinnv good movements have heen\nlaunched In your town, only In die nn\nuntimely death because the organizers\nfell  to i|Unrrellng among themselves\n8TNOP81B  OR  COAL  MININO\n0UI.ATION8.\nRl\nFISHER.   TEACHER   ul-*\"\nharmony \ufffd\ufffdn'i sIikiuk.    Pe-\nnils \ufffd\ufffd\ufffduocssafiUy prepared  inr examine*\nHon In It   A   M   uii,l ll. C. M.  I'or i. inm\napply BO J Tlilrit avenue\n.MRS   ELLA  C   HARDT, TEACHER OF\"\nl'liiii..r,,ii...   Jill   Kiuty   BU,   N.w   West\"\nminster,\nSINGING AND VOICE PRODUCTION\nMAIlclARKT    A.    QR0VB8,    PUPIL    OK\nihr lata Professor Allan -Isobath,\nPrincipal or the Qlaagow College ,,f\nMusic and Professor Qrosaland llli\ufffd\ufffd'. of\nttm Qlaagow Athenaeum, begs to luti-\nmats tlmt she win accept *. r. m pupil*\nin \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdInslBg and voice production. !\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd<\ntemilvi' repertoire nf hitch rlux \ufffd\ufffd., ,k\ufffd\ufffd.\nFor terms, call or writ., to U0I Hamilton streel.\nAUDITOR   AND   ACCOUNTANT.\nH.   J.   A.    HHRNETT.    AUDITOR      AND\nAccountant  ivi. it. uj, u,._m :, Hart\nBloc*.\nP. H. Bmlth W   J   llrovea\nAUDITORS AND ACCOUNTANTS.\nWork   undertiili-n    In    city    and    outside\npoints.   211-12   Westminster   Trust   Uhlg.\nPhons Ilt.    I>   o.   Roi   507\nFRATERNAL\nINTERNATIONAL STEAM ANH OPBR-\nating   Engineers,   Locul   tu    meets  In\nl\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdib,\ufffd\ufffdr   Temple   everv   flrsl     nntl     \"nnl\nThursday <>f Ihs inonth   n  MoLaugiilln,\npresident \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   w. c.  Humidor*,    soore-ut.\nP. O   Hox III,\nNEW WESTMINSTER LODOB Ni \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd I\nII * P. O. ot Klks of the D. of tt,\nthe rirst and third Thursday ul l*i. : ,\nK. of P. Hall. Eighth atreet. A IV i\n(Irny. Exalted Ruler; P. H. Smith. Bee\nretary.\nTOWNS  SPRING   UP\nALONG NORTH  THOMPSON\nOhase, B. V... Nov, l'_ -The Cana-\ndian Northern railway has laid steel\nup to 86 miles north of Kamloops on\nlho North Thompson river. Grading\nis going on for 1H0 miles north. The\nNorthern Construction company, who\nhave the contract, have from 1,200 tn\n1,600 uon In their employ, antl they\nrun a mixed train from Kamloops\ntwice a wick carrying passengers and\nfreight\nThere   are    several     goods    towns\nspringing up along  the  line.    One is\nHarrier River, where the Anglo-Saxon\nInvestment company have ..,'100 acres\nwhich  they are clearing and  putting\nInto orchard.   The next town ls Mount\nOlio.      It la sixty miles north of Kam-\n! loops, is an old trailing poBt, and with\nthe coining or the  railway   will  make\na  gtrotl  town.    It  already  has a  llrst\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdlass   wster  works  and  electric  light!\nplant.    Tliere Is a sawmill here which I\nruns tlay antl  night to meet building]\nrequirements.   The town Is located In\na good farming section. At Tete Juane\nCaChe, wbere the Canadian  Northern\nmeets Ihe llrnntl  Trunk  Paciric. Is a'\ncosmopolitan lown In which everything\nis open and the provincial police bave\nno sinecure.\nThe Coming Maude.\nMaude Muller nne Any. eating fudge.\nLooked up nnd naw the county Judge\nMaude was a pretty girl, all right,\nllin honor fell In low nt sight.\nAntl when nhout a month hnd fled\nMauds promised thnt the Judge she'd wed\nThen o'er the Judge's pathway cnm.\nA wealthy, proud nnd stately dame.\nThe ludKe ihen for ambition's sake\nPoor tittlo Mau'lti resolved to shake\nAn anient suffragette wss Mnude,\nChairwoman of the county board.\n\"I'll   get   square.\"   Mnude  said,   \"wllhnul\nfall.\"\nBo told her party her sad tale.\nJudge had elected heen In fnll*.\nIn sprlnx they voted hls recall\nThe hsiiKhtv dame refused to wed\n\"You nro no longer Indue.\" she said.\nThis lesson snd h\ufffd\ufffd lenrnrd, you bet:\n\"Don'l monkey with n sutTrnRetleV\n-Tom vv. Jackson In Judge\nOvercome by Coal Gas.\nLondon, Ont., Nov. 12.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMrs. JnmeB\nHrler, and her daughter Urace, of\nWestminster township, are In such\ncritical condition rrom the effects of\ncritical condition from the effects of\ncoal gas that they may not recover.\nDoth were found unconscious today.\nAre you one of those to whom\nevery meal Is another iource ot\nsulfering ?\nNa-Dru-Co Dyspepsia Tablets\nwill help your disordered stomach to\ndijje't any reasonable meats, and will\nsoon restore It to such perfect con-\nd.tion that you'll never feel that you\nhave a stomach. Take one after\neach meal. 50c. a Box at your\nDruggist's. Mnde by the National\nDrug and Chemical Co, of Canada,\nLi;:.itcd. ige\nCOAL MININU rtglita of the Dominic\nIti Manitoba. Saskatchewan and Alberts\nthe Yukon Territory, the Northwest Tet\nrltorles and In n portion of the i'rovlno.\nof British Columbia, may be leaaed for i\nterm of twenty-one yeara at an annua\nrental of 11 an acre. Not more than 'ti,*\nacrea wtll be leaaed to one applicant.\nApplication for a leaae muat be mad\nby the applicant In peraon to the A\ufffd\ufffd*n\nor Bub-Asent of the district tn which lb\nrlghte applied for are situated.\nIn surveyed territory the land muat b\ndescribed by aectlgna, or legal aub-dlr\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdlone of aectlona, and In unaurveyed let\nritory the tract applied for shall b\nslaked out by Uie applicant himself.\nEach application must be accompanle\nby a fee uf IS Whieh wlll be refunded I\nthe righta applied for are not avalltibb\nbut not otherwise. A royalty shall b\npaid on the merchantable output of tb\nmine nt the rate of five oenta per ton.\nThe person operating tlie mine shal\nfurnish the Aaent with sworn return\naccount lne fur the full quantity of mer\nctuii,tnhi\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd coal mined and pay the roy\nalty thereon. If the eoal mining right,\nate not being operated aueh returns shouh\nbe  furnished at least once a  year.\nThe lease wlll Include the cent mlnltit\nrights only, but the leasee will he per\nmltted to purchase whatever availabl-\nsurface rights may be considered neces\naury for the working of Uie mine at Un\nrate of 110 an acre.\nKor full Information sl plication ahouk\nbe made to the Secretary of the Depart\nment of the Interior, Ottawa, or to an)\nAgent or Hub-Agent of Dominion Lands\nW. W. COBT,\nDeputy Minister of the Interior.\nN. B \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Unauthorised publication of thl\nadvertisement wlll not be paid for.\nt. 1) O M , NO. \ufffd\ufffd1\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMEKT8 O I\nflrst. si-cond. third and fourth Wednes-\nrtny In inch month nt a p. ni..\nIn the MtKiea Home H. J. Ijenmy.\ndictator; P. BL Jones. secretary.\nHeadquarters of itxty, ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd gee House.\ncorner of Fourth and .__.ni trvou streets.\n. O. O r. A MITT LODOR NO 17\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe\nregulur meeting of An,Ity Indue No.\n17, I O O. *\".. la held everv Mnndav\nnight at 8 o'clock In Odd Fallows' Hall.\ncorner Carnarvon and Klghth slreets\n\\ Isitlng brethrrn cordially Invited\nll. A Merrlthew. NO. ; 'I W. 8;lngsler\nV. O.I W. C. Ooetham, P. O. reeorei\nIng secretary' J. W. MacDonnld. financial  secretary.\n** O   Box U Daily Newa Bldg\nJ.  T.  BURNETT'S  PRINT  SHOP\nJOB   PRINTING\nof all kinds.\nI'rlces right.   Hstlsfsetloo guaranteed\nH McKensle Bt.\nFUNERAL   OIReCTOHS.\n,~. E FALER-~riona\ufffd\ufffdr Tui-ral Dlrectat\nnnd E'-'halmer, 111 IIS ignea sl-eat\nnpposL- t'arnegie Library.\nIg. TIOWBI.L IRIJCCEHWm TO CHN-\nj Ier A Hanna. Ltd.)\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFun-rtl direr-tors\ni and eint.nlmers Parlors 40K Columbia\n|    street.    New  Westminster.    Phone till.\nBOARD  OF  TFIADK.\nHOARD OK TRADB\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd NK1W WB8TMIN-\nster Hoard of Trade n* eta In the hoard\nroom. City Hall, aa follow* Third IW-\nday of each inonth; ipinrtniy meo-tlns\non lbe third Friday nf February, Hay,\nAnimal and November st 8 B n. Annual meetings nn the third Friday of\nFebruary. C. M. Stuart Wada.\ntaiy\nWettmintter\nTransfer Co.\n3fflcs Phene IU.     Barn Phone II'\nBegble Street.\nHerniate Delivered Promptly te\nany part or tbe elty.\nlight and Heavy Hauling\nCITV OF NEW WESTMINSTER, BC\nPUBLIC   8TENOGRAPHER.\nHI'KCIFICaTIONS. AGREEMENTS O*\nSalt. Deeds. Business letters, etc.; dr-\ncular work specialist. All work atrlotlr\nconfidential. If. Barry, room 411 Weal-\nmlnater Truat Blk.   Phone in.\nNOTICE\nALTERATION OF RUNNING SCHEDULE  OF  INTERURBAN   LINE\nTO VANCOUVER, VIA CENTRAL  PARK,  ANO OF  FRASER   VALLEY DIVISION.\nEFFECTIVE SUNDAY, NOV. 2, 1913.\n(Subject to change without notlcs)\n,f 1* WESTMINSTER-VANCOUVER (VIA  CENTRAL  PARK.)\nSunday schedule* -Trains leave Now Westminster at 6, 7, 7:30, 8,\nft:30 and 9 a.m., and every 20 minutes thereafter until 8:30 p.m.\nAfter 8:30 service every 30 minutes wltb last car leaving at midnight.\nWeek day schedule\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTrains leave New Westminster at 6, 6:45, 6,\nC: 15, 6:30, 6:45, 7, 7:15, 7:30, 7:45 and 8 a.m., and every 20 minutes\nuntil 4 p.m.. From 4 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. a 15 mlnuto service will be\ngiven.   After 8:30 p.m. a 30 mlnuto service with Inst car at midnight.\nSaturday Bervlce\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEarly morning schedule tho same as on week-\nd.-tvH. but nfter 8 a.m., a 15 minute service wlll be given until midnight.\nFRA8ER   VALLEY   DIVISION.\nThrough trains for Chilliwack leave New Westminster dally nt\nIt 30 a.m. and 1:10, 3:35 and 5:45 p.m.. Trains leave Chllllwack dally\nfor return trip at 6:10 a.m. and 9:30 a.m. and 1:10 and 5:46 p.m.\nDully Express service to Chllllwack from New Westminster at 9:50\na.m. and 3:35 p.m.\nBRI1ISH COLUMBIA ELECTRIC RAILWAY COMPANY\nPROFESSIONAL.\nCORBOULD. ORANT A McCOLL. BAR-\nrInters. Solicitors, ete. 40 Lorne Street.\nNew Westminster. O. B. Corbould, K.\nC.    J. R. Oram.    A. B   McColL\nADAM SMITH JOHNHON. IIAltlUSTErt-\nut-law, Hollcltor, elc. Hollcltor for th<-\nIlunk ot Vanoouver. orriccs: Mer\nchonla Hank Building. New Westminster. H.C. Telephone No. 1070. Qible\naddress \"Johnston.\" Code Westcri*\nUnion.\n'\nW.   V.   HANSFORD.   BARRISTER,   HO-\nllcltor. etc., Colllster Block, corner Columbia anu McKensle streets, New Weatmlnater, B.C. P. O. Bos 3S5. Telephone 844.\nWHITESIDE, KDMONDS ft WHIT*\nside \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Barristers sad Solicitors, Westminster Trust Blk., Columbia streeL\nNti* Westminster, B. C. Cable address.\n\"WhlteshlB.\" Western Union. P. Oi\nDrawer 10*. Telephone tl. W. Jl.\nWhiteside, X. O. H. L. Edmonds, D.\nWhlteelde.\nJ. BTII.WELL CLUTB. Barrtater-at-lew,\nsolicitor, ate; oorner Columbia so#\nMcKensle streets, New Westminster.\na C.   P. O. Has 111.    Telephone   71\ufffd\ufffd.\n1. P. HAMPTON BOLE. BArtRIBTE*.\nHollcltor and Notary. Offices Hart\nblock, J\ufffd\ufffd Lorne strsst Nsw Wsatmla-\nstsr, B. C.\nMcgUARROB. MARTIN * CA8SADT,\nBarristers snd Solicitors. I0f to \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIt-\nWestminster Trust Block. O. B. Martin. W. O. MsQuarrts   and Oeorgs U HMH\nTHURSDAY, NOVEMBER  13, 1913.\nTHE MW WESTMINSTER NKK\/&\n*AG_JTHREt\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      .   *  .r       i.r\n\ufffd\ufffd\nSAYS HIS SPIRIT\nTALKS TO HER\nStead's Daughter Claims Father, Who\nWent Down on Titanic, Communicates With Her.\nLondon, Nov. II, Is the spirit ol\nWilliam T. Stead, the celebrated Lon\ndon editor and rctormer, who perished\nwhen   th-  Titanic  was  sunk. Sending\nmessages to his daughter, Bstellal\nMis Sii ad declares that to be a\nfact a real manifestation of the existence of another world. Stead, It\nwill be remembered, for years made\nIn I hotel Walker met a man whom he\nballed Immediately as the man who\nhud won the $X0,000. This man's name\nwas Dixon, he said.\nln tx lest or two, Dixon proved thai\nIio could double the money of bis\ntwo friends by going to a racing poolroom In .South St. I'aul and betting\nfor them.\nThe two Insisted on being taken\nto the poolroom and allowed to bet.\nDnlph had phenomenal luck. He\nwon $K0u and finally drew on his home\nbank for 110,00 to make a big plunge.\nThe cashier of the place (the poolroom seemed to be an established Institution with blackboards, call boys,\nclerks and attendants) declared he\nwould have to have the draft o. k'd.\nbut cnutloni'd him to keep still about\nIt. Dolph mentioned his luck to a\nfriend, who took the case to the police. The man Dixon was arrested In\nMinneapolis today, and Dolph Is held\nas a witness. He still has tbe $800\nhe won.\nstudy of this profound problem of life\nbeyond thc grave. He often declared\nthat tie had been In communication\nwith the spirits of departed friends.\nNow, Ills daughter declares, lie Is himself communicating with his lovbd one.\nAnd In his messages Htead tells of\nhls death in the great Titanic disaster, of hls final moments on earth and\nhls mental and bodily feelings In lhat\nsupreme moment when life was u mat\nter of expiring minutes and eternity\n\ufffd\ufffdas just beyond.\n'My father,\" she says, \"still lives.\nHe send! me personal messages that\naro absolutely convincing. I have\neven seen him In a form more ethereal\nand beautiful than his earthly body,\nAntl 1 have talked with him face to\nfact.\n\"Three weeks after he passed over,\"\nshe continued, \"the first message\ncame. 1 was resting In the twilight,\nwith my mind at ease. And suddenly\nI was conscious of father's voice.\nEnters ths \"Fuller Life.\"\n\" All that I have told you is true,'\nhe said 'I have entered into the fuller life.1\n\"Iif came again often, and told me\nmany tli-.nits about hls last hours and\nhis present existence, some of wlllch\nare hard to repeat.\"\nAnd Ihen Miss Stead described the\nTitanic disaster, as related by a victim  from beyond his watery grave.\n\"Father said he was In his state\nroom when he waa startled by a sudden shock and an outcry antl a scurrying of feet. Ile rushed out to the\ndeck and found a scene of confusion\nwhich turned to terror as the vessel\nstarted io sink and the lifeboats were\nlaunched.\n\"I askiil him whether he was frlght-\n-ftned, and he said: 'No. Fear is lor\nunbelievers.    My faith kept me calm'\n\"Finally   he  started   down   Into  the\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdcabin     Tlnn came a sudden blow on\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd the head, and he passed at once to the\naplrlt  land.''\n\"Why. of all the victims, has your\nfather  alone come  back?\"\nI do not grant that.\" sbe aifswered\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdquickly \"Many of those souls may\nmave sent back messages Many mor*\nmay have tried lo reach the conscious-\nne\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd of relatives and friends, and\nfailed.\nWere Always Chums.\n\"Father and I were always very\nclose The bond between our minds\nmade telepathic communication between us common during his lite. What\nla more natural than that his thought\nshould reach me afterward If his pet-\nsonnllty survives?\"\n\"And are you sure that there Is no\nBelt-delusion about all this?\"\nMiss Stead smiled \"They call me s\nnormal, sensible stri.\" she answered\n\"Ami 1 have Studied psychic matters.\nNow  consider these two facts:\n\"First. I never get such a mesaaae\n\ufffd\ufffd \\rcpt when I am In sound health He*\noe.uly 1 was 111, ns a result of bver-imi,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwork OD tny JK-Bk, \"i-i'rsonai and Splr !\nItintl lti'ininiscencj'8 of My Father'\nDuring that Illness I go no messatccs\nThere is nothing morbid or patholog\nlral aboul my experiences.\n\"Second, the messages are their\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdown prooj. Father speaks or things\nthat nouotly knows except us two. You\naay that mlchl possibly be ielf-SUggCS-\ntlon    tny   subconscious mind  nt  work\nbut the new- facts that father adds\nto the old. things that I could not possibly tbava known until he told me\ns-llnch the proof.\n\"And to mn the strongest proof of\nnil Is Just this\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthat at such times I\ntee] and know the actual presence of\nmy faiher.\"\nBODY FOUND OF OLD LADY\nDROWNED LAST MAY\nAshcroft, Nov. 12,-The body of\nMrs. Adam Voung, who disappeared\nso mysteriously from her bome near\nVenabies Valley, ahout twelve miles\nwest of here, last May, has been found\nhy her husband, about 60 Oyards upstream from the house In whlifl] he\nlived. The body had drifted beneath a\nlog and was completely submerged.\nThe position of the body explains the\nfailure of the search parties to locate\nit at the time of her disappearance. It\nIs generally supposed that the old lady\ncommitted sulslile while temporarily\ndemented.\nOn the 21st of May last Mrs. Young\ndisappeared from her home at a very\nearly hour In the morning. As she had\nbeen accustomed to taking early morning walks for the benefit of her health,\nnothing was suspected on this particular morning until she failed to make\nju appearance within a reasonable\ntime. The alarm was given and\nposies were sent out In every direction. The search waB continued for\nmore thnn a week, hut no trace of the\nmissing lady was found. The country In that vicinity Is very hilly and\nll thickly wooded, and could not be\n\"overed to any satisfaction.\nNO wonder HT\nWAS PROSPEROUS\nKauders Looked Affluent After Cashing Big Bogus Cheque\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCaught\nIn Seattle.\nMABEL'SCHITCHAT\nWe're Going Some In Stationery\nStyles This Autumn.\nSCARLET PAPER, YELLOW INK.\nA Silence Luncheon Actually Enjoyed\nby Twelve Women\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHssps ef Fun\nUntil Unexpected Quest Arrived and\nComplicated Matters s Trifle.\nDear K.sii\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Talk nbout freak fashion-.\nlu clothes, wby, they're sanenesa itself\ncompared to tbe latest atrocities In stationery! To besr out tbls statement. I\nwish you could behold a tetter I've just\nreceived from Paris, written by a tremendously smart girt -wbo ls always to\nbo depended upon for being in tbo\nswim\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtbat Is, ln the fashion \"know.\"\n1 realise, dear, that it bus not been\nso very many years Blnce we were\ntaught no \"real lady\" ever used anything eccentric in writing materials.\nNowadays things are different, perhaps\nnot so much bere as serosa the wuter.\nYou should see thu very latest in\nFrench stationery. My letter from\n\"dear Parte\" would make you shudder wltb horror. It ls penned with\norange Ink ou purple paper, und the\nenvelope Is lined with orange. Orange\nInk and purple paper\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthink of it!\nMy fair correspondent tells me tbat\nsome people affect white iuk on pale\nblue paper. Imagine how difficult It\nmust be to read an epistle constructed\nby such means. Scarlet paper and yellow ink is another stationery monstrosity In each aud every case, of\ncourse, the envelope lining und tbe\nscaling wax match the Ink.\nI do wish. Klsii dear, you could have\nbeen one of a luncheon party 1 gave\nInst week to Natalie S.. Wbo ls to be\nmarried to one of Dick's best friends\nIn a few duys. It was a \"silence party.\" uud I Invited twelve of the young\nmarried set to meet the bride to lie.\nantl I nsked einh of the twelve to\nbring witli ihem two of their best reel-\nlaw; also a great fund of silence nud a\nemnll supply or isuinies.\nWhen my guests arrived I told them\nto tin all their talking before luncheon.\nbecause It wus planned tu tilt tbe meal\nlit complete silence and whoever broke\nUi I rule would be lined n penny.\nI didn't gu tu any great bother about\ndei'nrutlnu   the   table\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdsimply   used   a\nsmooth white cloth with as much of It\nvisible  ns   possible.     When   the  girls\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ere seated I let escape a mechanical\nmouse  which  I   lind  concealed   under\none   hand.    There   was   a   chorus   of\nshrieks   and   laughter   aa   tbe   mouse\nglided across the tabic, and a box was\npassed for the pennies.\n|     As  soon   as  order   was   restored   It\nI looked ss though luncheon waa going\nto lie served to nnly half the guests,\npassed-empty plates to\nsome of tbem. and to others were aerv-\nScattle.  Nov.  12. -Accused of peculations   amounting   to  approximately\n14.000,    Sidney   T.   Kauders,  of   New\nYork,   Milwaukee   and   Los   Angeles,\nwas arrested at the Seattle Hotel yeaterday  afternoon  and  Is held  at the\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIty  jail on  an open charge pendingi*\"*\"\"\"''\nt:ie arrival of an officer from Mllwau    ,,,r \",e '\"'\"\"\nkee.     According    to    teleragphic  ad , .,.,,,. ......\nvices  Kauders  will  be  prosecuted  on ;-***- artificial fruit, eggs nnd the like.\n\ufffd\ufffd charge of obtaining money    under'     Under thc table I   had  fastened  a\nfalse pretenses, the specific charge be-i loud goug tbat 1 rsnf violently, osteu-\nmg the cashing of a worthless check' slbly to summon tbe maid, but really\nor   .1.5-0  at   the   American   Kxpresi.to startle tbe girls Into breaking the\nsilence.     For  fifteen  minutes everything was done to surprise a laugh or\nONE MUNICIPALITY THAT\nCAN GET THE MONEY\nVictoria, Nov. 1-.-- Tho Oak Bay\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdrotmcll at their meeting Inst nisht\npassed the sewer lonu bv law for $150,-\nOOO und tho water v vies by-lnw tor\n-$15,000 threugh their tlnal stages, and\ntbeie will he voted on by the ratepayers on this cfitnln-: Saturday.\nThe general works committee reported that arrangements had been\nin lived nt with the Merchants' Bank\nof Canada for the financing of the municipality, so that lt Is hoped no more\nworkmen wlll have to be laid off or\nwork still further curtailed.\ncompany's Chicago office. April 10,\nlitis. Other fradulent operations are\ncharged to the prisoner.\nTo city detectives yesterday afternoon, fololwing his nrrest. Kauders\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\".pressed a willingness to return and\nstand trial At the lime he wss taken\nInto  etistory  at  the  Seattle  hotel by\nDl tectlve  I.\nwas employed ns\nfirm of O. Newman *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Co.. of l<os An\n-ties,  manufacturers and distributors;\nif picture   postcards.   Kauders came'\nio Seattle  from  Portland highly rec-1\nmimendeil.    lie Is about 116 years old,\nwell  groomed and  bears the appearance of an affluent business man.\nPrior to entering the employ of the\nl.os Angeles company. Kauders is said\nto have been employed ss traveling\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtalesman for a New York Jewelry\nhouse. Ile is ssld to be well known\namong commercial travelers throughout the United States.\nTho American Kxprers company offered a reward of $200 tor tiie arrest\nof Kauders subsequent to the alleged\n\"raudulent operation at Chicago April\n10. The salesman was traced to Spittle by letters sent by friends In tbe\nlittldle west to Kauders ln care of a\nman ln Seattle.\nChief of Police J. T. Jansen, of Milwaukee, wired Chief ot Police Bannlck\ntoday that Detective Maloney of the\nVViscnnii'n metropolis, left Milwaukee\nlasi night to bring Kauders back for\ntrial.\nBIG SWINDLE\nDID NOT WORK\n-,\nVictim Codes Out Ahead and Confidence Man le In the\nJug.\nMinneapolis, Nov. 1J.-A 110,000\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdswindle In which the conspirators\nstaged an entire racing poolroom, with\njit least a doxen characters, acting the\nparts as iu a play, was brought to\nlight today.\nJohn Dolph, a retired farmer of\nMinot, N. D., is the map who was\ncnmpetely vtcltlmlsed by the Bwlnd-\nlers. HI* money was saved by the\ntimely Interference ot a friend.\nDolph came to St. Pant recently for\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd sightseeing trip. After aeversi lone-\neome daya there he ran across a\nstranger tn his hotel, the Sherman\nliouse. The stranger waa affable and\npleasant. He gave hie name as L, 8,\nWalker, aad said he was from Denver.\nTho men spent two dsys together. At\none time Walker told Poiph of h\ufffd\ufffdHH|\nseen a inan win $80,000 on a horse\nrace In Denver some daya before.\nOne day the two went to South Bt.\nJPaol to   sae tbe stook ysrde. There\nexclamation, nntl tben the ban was\nlifted, nutl a nice little meal was glv\ncn to the Jolly bum h.\nThe place cards, which also served\ne- favors, were printed mottoes prals\n11 Smith. Kauders i lug silence uud hud tbe guests' names\na salesman by the! -written on the margins. The fines\nwere used lu buy n cookbook for Ibe\nhonored guest nntl also it leather covered Issik. Into which were pasted tbe\nrecdies brought liy thc guests.\nWe hml heaps of fun. nnd tbe only\ntiling lbat marred the serenity of the\noccasion -tliat is. for me\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwns ihe uu-\next>ecicd presence of a \"brought.\" A\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"brought\" is n friend of a friend who\ncullies in nt tbe appointed luncheon,\ndinner or whatever the festivity msy\ntie. at the lust minute. \/\nMnry B. played tbls nice little surprise ou me nt the party last week.\nPhe enme In smiling, dragging a reluctant girl wltb her. aud held out her\nhand to me. saying rather foolishly:\n\"My dear Mabel, I am sure you are\ndelighted to bave me bring my friend\nMiss X. to luncbeou. Sbe dropped in\nsuddenly from Chicago Just as 1 wae\nstarting this afternoon.\"\nWbst could 1 do but greet tbem wltb\nthe smile of a Cheshire cat snd tell\nMiss Chicago how charmed I waa to\nhave her Join tbe little party, all the\nwhile making a mental calculation as\ntu Imw on enrth I waa to shift the table nnd accommodate the odd numlier? Only tbe highest Intellects can\nrise above the mtst tbat surrounds a\n\"brought\" and my personality. I admit, wm not strong enough to over\nrome a prejudice against tbut girl's\nexistence Just tben.\nIn Juetlce to \"brought*\" 1 wtll say\nthat, as \ufffd\ufffd rule, they sre only too willing to avail themselves of Solomon's\nadmonition:\n\"Withdrew thy foot from thy neigh-\nKir's house lest he wesry of thee snd\nso hate thee,\"\nS|iesklng of Invitations reminds me\nef something I read recently Hi tbls\nconnection ahout Oeorge Bernard\nShaw. who. you know, dislikes to bs\ns guest at promiscuous feasts.\nLady Randolph Churchill, not being\nswnre of this peculiarity, ssked blm te\ndinner. By way of reply O. It & sen*\ntbe following telegram:\nCertainly not.   Why should I\nto break tha habit Of \ufffd\ufffd 9feUme newt\nTbe witty hostess rase ts Mw\nsins by sending this wires\nKnew nethlns about yeer habits. Bops\nthey are w\ufffd\ufffdt ae bed ee yeer msaaera,\nMy manners la.dtscMS.ag tay\nPERT PARAGRAPHS.\nThe less said sbout s man's clumsier tbe better It la.\nLife Is worth living lo any\nwbo has the price of a new bst of\neredit st tbe department store.\nA girl who paints well msy bs bom\ufffd\ufffd\nly, but It Is ber own fault If sbe Is.\nTbe great majority of tb* pay as yos\ngo set sre of tbe stay st bome vsrlety.\nThe Don't Worry club Is tbe greeteet\ndispenser of worrlmeot to those people counseled with Its members on\nrecord. Tbe humane society sbould\nInvestigate tbem sod order tbeir sav\npresslon ss s public nuisance.\nWarmed over affection Is sbout St\npleasant to Its recipient ss s second\nbsnd bstb woold be.\nTbe msn wbo complains ibat be Indt\ntemptstlon too strong for hlm Is seldom willing to Uke s tonic.\nWben s msn Is polite to Ms wife Iks\nneighbors msy be surprised, Mt It is\nnothing to tbs shock tbat tbs woman\ngot*.\nDoing ss yon pleas* sound* fssetnst-\nlng, bnt It doesn't tats into account\ntbs bUI for dsmsges.\nWhen father ts tn s bsd hnmsr It k\ns sign tbst mother Isn't going ts ash\nhim for money tbst day.\nsre ss hsd ss tb* great Ba-gHsbstM^\nyon, ****. *-\\ pardon yaar aU\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdB|_U\nbnt\nchum.\nA new Psrlslsn fantasy Is kslr ribbon* for men. Thl* Is tk* rssult dl\ntke Argentine Invasion. MM\ntbeir bslr brushed straight back aad\nalso much lonier, snd this ossMs tbs\n'nppearanos et tbs ribbons, tk* Style\nibelng called a la\nNew\nPennants\nARE HERE\nA new shipment of Pennants has been received\nat THE NEWS Office, including \"Canada,\"\n\"Quebec\" and \"Manitoba.\"\nTHE FOLLOWING ARE NOW IN STOCK\nNew Westminster\nCanada Manitoba\nQuebec McGill\nPRICE REDUCED\nBring three-coupons clippedimniTHE NEWS\nand 20c for any one of the pennants, or send\n25c if to be mailed. You will want one of\neach of these pennants if you see them.\nPennant Coupon\n.*\"*''  '..'\"*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*',\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .*-..\ufffd\ufffd*'?...\" _.\nBring three of these coupon* sad\nend receive one pf the beautifol W\ufffd\ufffd\na subscribertaring 40 cents for one inen\nnent Address *K mjfcil orders to -th*\nte. extra for \ufffd\ufffdeffing.\noents to tH\nw______>.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfs-wmm,\nMfipMlP\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJ'L  ;!\"**\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\ufffdi*slidfe*is t-Pii'saagB\n,'   ' -?   *   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n*-'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>;\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd&      M   .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     *n J,\nW\ufffd\ufffdBm\n,S'*,\ufffd\ufffd;,*\ufffd\ufffdt,'.-S;o\n(\/'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:\n'.*%\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd&\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n:''\"*V<f%*'f   'i&jgf*krh\n -I*      *e-*\"*l *-} \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd . *-.\n> '-v| *'l. mia^a H&i-Mvt^' ** .   '    *\nV- '      *^t_ rf*$*-J :'M^\ufffd\ufffd^\ufffd\ufffd>'''*^y,\"-,.'''*K*'*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi\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'V:s>i:i--j__i..*__rjjV-*ji..*. -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   \"',A -.\/>_.__i\ufffd\ufffdt,i.-t_t*\ufffd\ufffd_i:*.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd._.'\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^4'-..>:-^Sl,\ufffd\ufffdPr**?'-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*-*      '    -V.   i-xj -4.]\ni.    ,.\n:tfjf-M .. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nfife*\ni\n*xx^*v.\n____._.:_.'_! PAGE FOUR\nTOE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS\nTHURSDAY, NOVEMBER  13, 1913.\nF...l,Wat..andSalt\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdKmH\nWESTMINSTER PORT\nPACIFIC COAST\nMUCH BAD WEATHER    \"COQUIIIAH\" MAY\nAdditional Locals\nAT HALIBUT BANKS\nBE SCHOONER'S NAME\nAlameda    Reports\nEngland  Fish Company\nPoor Catches.\nGreat    Gale\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNew\nReports\nA I.. I lager, manager of the New\nBngland Flsh company, in Vanoouver,\nhaH received word tliat ihe halibut\nsteamers Manhattan and Kingfisher\nbave encountered very bad weather\nup north. Both vessels have bailed\nand reported no flsh, and lhey have\nbeen forced lo ro Into Ketchikan to\nreplenish stores. Tlie steamers are\nnow out Dearly a month. The Flamingo is in port today wiib 65.0(1(1\npounds of halibut\nLight  Catches.\nKetchikan, Nov. Ii. -The halibut\nschooner Alameda, Captain Steve\nBelts, in port from the westward, reports heavy weather and a very light\n-catch of lish. During a severe gale\nthe Alameda was driven ashore at\nPoint Marsh, but fortunately the gale\nspent its force hefore Uie vessel sustained serious damage.\nAfter getting the Alameda off the\nport beach, she was headed for this\nporl, but while rounding Cape Chacon\nanother severe gale was encountered.\nDuring this storm William Selig, a\ncousin of the vessel's master, was\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdcarried overboard by a huge sea. One\nof the Alameda's boats also was\nswept away, and Sellg was able to\ncling to it until Ihe schooner waB\nturned about and lie was taken\naboard.\nCaptain Sellg reports unusually bad\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdweather off the fishing banks, and\nmany of the smaller vessels have\nl)cen compelled to seek shelter.\nMan  Unheard of for Forty-five YearsltlUR.(\nDies Leaving $1,000,000\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Went to        N,'tt\nAustralia.\nNew Toll Line.\nArrangements  are   being\nthe  construction   of  a  new\nmade\nlong\nSocial and P\nersonal\nVessel Being Built at Coquitlam Ship.\nyards Is Ready for Spars\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nLaunching New Years.\n\"Coqultlam.\" This Is to be the\nname of the 200-foot schooner now\nbeing built nt the shipyards of tlie\nFort Cc quitlam Shipbuilding company,\naccording to latest advices. The\nlaunching is slated for the first week\nln tbe new year.\nPractically all work on the hull is\ncompleted now. The last caulking\nand minor jobs are being done awaiting the arrival of the big spars from\nVictoria. No mill In' this district was\nable to handle the big sticks, it fs\nsaid. They are taken out from Vancouver island aud as soon\nllvered will be put ln place.\nA new set of flags is being arranged for tiie schooner which will\nbe the first of a fleet to run In lumber carrying trade between here and\nPanama.\nfor\ndls-\nloll line between Vancouver and\nWeatmlnster which will necessitate   tiie   B.   C,   Telephone   company\nerecting a new  pole line on  some of\ntlle   elty   streets.     Following   several\ninterruptions to the long distance service   the   company   wlll   bring   In   an\nopen construction Service down Klghth\nstreet,  across  AgneB   Btreet   to  Sixth\nstreet,  and  thence  Into the office on\nClarkson   Btreet   in   a   specially   con-\n, Htructed  cable  for  toll  service.    l'er-\nyear ago,  when & j miaslon for such work has been grant\nstated  that  a  Hoc-i ,,(1 by t|K, cltJ, counc|i.\nMrs. ic. ii. Savage will receive for\nthi' llrst time alnce her marrluge ut\nhei' home, 502 First street, from 4 to ti\ntoday.\nWEDDING BELLS\nCUNNINGHAM\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTALBOT.\n10. I. Cantell, of this city, has accepted a position us teacher in the\nIndian school at l.ytlon and will\nleave at the end ol this month to take\nover his new duties.\nCharolettown, t'.E.l., Nov. 12 - Forty-\nfive years ago Hector Campbell, of\nSummerside, I'.K.l . went to Australia.\nHis relatives heard nothing of him\nfrom that time and had practically for\ngotten him until\nnewspaper  report\ntor Campbell  said  to  be a native of\nI'rlnce   Kdward   Island,   had   died   in\nAustralia, worth nearly a million dol-1\nlars.\nInquiries were instituted but nothing definite could be learned until Saturday night last, when Itonald Campbell, of Summerside, received a letter\nfrom a bank in Australia suiting that\nHector Campbell died four years ago,\nlhat he was unmarried and very wealthy, being one ot Iho largest sheep\nranch owners In  thnt country.\nShould Mr. Campbell's claim be established, which seems nulte probable,   the   estate   will   be  divided   be-\nSkatlng sessions at the Arena every\nafternoon and evening. Afternoon between 3:30 and 5:30 o'clock. Evening\nhours 8:15 to 10:30 o'clock. Bsnd in\nattendance every evening. (2395)\nW.\n!     The regular meeting of tlle Worn\n] Kducational  club  V, ill  lu- held ut\nhomo of    MrB. T.  II. Meredith,\nFifth   avenue   this   evening.     Hev.\nj. Slpprell. un., of Vancouver, will\ndeliver an address on \"Higher Education In Other Lands.\"\nK.    .1.  Uinge,    of    I'ortland,    Is    a\nguest at the Hussell hotel.\nThoinns Henry Talbot, of tills city,\nand Miss Frances Wlllard Cunning\nham, ulso nt tlie city, were united in\nmarriage yesterday morning by Rev,\nYV. W. Abbott ut lhe home of James\nCunningham, Third avenue. Krne.\nWeedeu acted us best man  und  Miss\nLaura Irene Moore ub bridesmaid. The\nj bride und groom left for Victoria and\nI points otl tlie coast and will return to\n'\" H | New  Westminster where lhey  wlll re-\n\"10lsldo.   The large number of guests and\n''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"'Ithe costly presents Indicate the\n;esteem In which they were hold\nEffORT TO PREVENT\nWATERING STOCKS\nCapitalization  of  Companies\nSubject  of   Discussion  at\nSession of House.\nWill   Be\nNext.\ngreal\nOBITUARY.\nJ. 0. Wright, of Montreal, Is staying\nat the Hussell.\nOet your skutes sharpened at Oeo.\nSpeck's. 626 Columbia street.     (1858)\nFerocious Deer.\nHugh  Gunn of the  waterworks department lias a  good  feeling towards\nanimals  but  following  his  experience\nUcCRIMMON In the general hospital, Vancouver, the death occurred\non Tuesday night of Fred MeCriiniuon\nfrom (he effects of au electric shock\nI sustained while working for Hie West\nS. V. Armstrong, of San  Francisco, jern   1'owor  company   on   October  _7.\nDeceaBed was well known in Langley\nand was married to the eldest daughter of R. T. F. (iraiiRt-r, formerl) of\nNew Westminster and now of tlie\nland registry office Vancouver Tha\nlate Mr. McCrimmon lived at 16-10\nMarwood stroet.\nde- Hy. the family of Hlaine Campbell of\nWellington. I'.E.I., and three slaters\nwho are at present in the United\nStates.\nINSTALL TANKS OF SAMSON\nAT PORT COQUITLAM TODAY\nPurley's Rough Pasaaoe.\nThe Hritish steamer Hurley, which\nmade two or three trips to Vancouver\nwith rails from New Vork, had a\nrough passage across the Atlantic last\nmonth while steaming from Tampa\nto Antwerp. The skipper writes to\nfriends on the coast tbat the Purle.y\nwaB damaged by very severe weather.\nIsabel Browne Ready.\nThe Russian barque Isabel Browne.\nin Vancouver. Captain Erickson. lias\nordered her tug for Thursday morning, and the l.orne will come up to\ntake the barque's hawser and give her\nnu offing on her long voyage to Cape\nTown with lumber. The schooner\nMindoro Bnlshed loading lumber for\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSuva yesterday.\ni tween  Ronald Campbell  and his fain-1 yesterday at Queen's  Hark  when   Mr.\n(iiinn was Imprisoned In the meter\nhouse for nearly half an hour by a\nbig buck deer, his fondness for the\n\"dear\" kind has changed considerably.\nThe deer has shown warlike signs for\nsome little time, even killing two\nfawns earlier In tho week, and with\nthis In mind, Mr. Gunn was in no\nhurry to get outside his stockade un-\ntill the animal had retired to another\npart of the field.\nWork will be commenced today on\nthe Installation of twelve tanks on the\nnew Samson now in the shipyards nt\nl'ort Coiiuitlam. Four of these will\nbe placed forward for oil, for the new\nsnagpuller is an tyl burner, and eight\naft as water tankR.\nThe deck planking Is all laid now\nand the main housework will come\nafter the tanks are in. The deck is\nnow being caulked. After the housework is up the sheer legs wlll be\nraised, according to Government\nspector D. W. Cross.\ni ' Resolution of  Aioroval.\nRegina, Nov. 12.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdS. J. Latta, Liberal member for Last Mountain, gave\nnotice in the legislature today that on\nFriday he will submit a resolution,\nthat ln view of the request made to\nthe Dominion government at the last\nsession for increased compensation\nfor loss of live stock, under the animals contagious act. and In view uf\nthe consequent action of the Dominion government in granting the in-1\ncrease, a resolution of approval should : Millinery Sale,\nbe passed by the present legislature, price at Misa Hav\nThe sitting was a very quiet one. On\nD. J. Wylie's motion, the debate on\nthe election of I). A. Hall, of Cumberland, was adjourned until Monday.\nSkating boots and skates for ladles\nand gentlemen at Geo. It. Speck's. 626\nColumbia Btreet.\nlors, Carnarvon stri\nUussell.\nAll\n.y's\n(2352)\nha:.,    at half\nMillinery   Par\nopposite Hotel\n(2407)\nIn-\niFOSTER  AND  PELLETIER\nON  THEIR  WAY  HOME\nPARCELS POST\nBY JANUARY 1\nBIG  SCHOONER   WILL\nCIRCLE THE GLOBE\nPostofflce Department Will   Issue Order at First of Year\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPreparing\nRate Schedule.\nVictoria. Nov. 12.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOn her coming\nvoyage from this coast the five-masted American schooner lnca, Captain\nR. P. Rasmussen, will completely circle the globe. The big windjammer is\nexpected to arrive here today from\nEagle Harbor. Puget Sound, where she\nhas been overhauling. After completing with a full cargo of Hritish Columbia luhiuber at the Inner harbor\nmills of the Canadian Puget Sound\nLumber company, the lnca will sail\naround Cape Horn to Capetown. Bouth\nAfrica, and following' the delivery of\nlier cargo will continue her voyage\nacross the Indian ocean to Australia,\nwhere she will load at Newcastle for\nPuget Sound.\nOfficials of the Canadian l'uget\nSound Lumber company were advised yesterday by Captain Rasmussen\nthat the overhauling of his vessel was\nabout complete anil that his arrival\ncould be looked for any any time within the next day or two. She will get\naway toward the latter part\nmonth for South Africa.\nThe lnca will be the last windjammer to loud offshore cargo at the inner harbor mills this year. Th\" only\nother sailing vessel that has loaded\ninside this season Is the American\nbarkentine Alta. Captain Thornagel,\nwhich is now on passage from this\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdport to Capetown by way of Cape\nHorn.\nOttawa, Nov. 11.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEverything is in\nreadiness for the bringing into force\nof the parcels post. The postofflce\ndepartment has engaged during the\ngreater part of the summer and fall in\ngathering datu and information upon\nwhich they could work out a scheme\nthat would be just and equitable to\nall concerned and yet could be operated without too great a deficit on the\npart of the government.\nThe big mutter to be decided upon\nnow is the rates. It is not necessary\nto introduce a bill in parliament to\nbring the parcels post into effect. Last\nyear the postmaster general was given\npower and all that is required Is a\ndepartmental order from him.\nThis order, it was learned today will\nb\" Issued Jan. 1. The rates are expected to be slightly higher than those\nwhich prevail In the United States.\nNew Vork. Nov. 12\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHon. Geo. E.\nFoster and Hon. L. P. Pelletler, with\nW. J. Gerald, president of the Canadian club of Ottawa who were here\nlast night as the guests of the Canadian club of this city, left tonight otl\ntheir return trip home. With Mr. Pelletier were his nephew and partner,\nElzear Baillargeon, of Quebec and\nMrs.  Halllargeoti.\nDuring the afternoon today the Canadian   guests,   with   Lord   Campden\nof the Hritish embassy at Washington,\nland Lady Campden were the guests of\nA.   P.  Gardner.  Becond  vice-president,\nof the Canadian club on a motor trip  -V,_-y     ,   ,,, ....    . ,    .\nto  the   Sleepy   Hollow   club.  40   miles|8'1B and   10:3\ufffd\ufffd c\"=lock\nup the Hudson, where the party took!\nlunch.\nMay Make T'tensions.\nPlans for the extension of the plant\nare now being considered by the management of tlie Vulcan Iron Works\nand it is understood lhat (Igures on\nthe cost of the improvements are being obtained from local contractors\nFor some time the plant has been\nworking overtime every evening und\non Saturday afternoons. This fact Is\na good indication of the stability of\nNew Westminster as a business centre, for many linns In Vancouver in\nthe same line cf business, it is under\nstood, ure working short shifts.\n'\nwas among those who registered at\nthe Russell yesterday.\nH. Neville Wright, of Victoria, is al\nvisitor in the cily.\nMrB.   Harold   Van   Matte's  post-nuptial reception  was a bright event    of.\nTuesday ufternoon  in  Vuncouver, the .\nbride receiving    a large    number   of\ncallers In her attractive apartment In\nthe Stadacona.    She waB   wearing   a\ngraceful  gown  of  crepe  de  chine  In I\nemerald green tones, and her mother.\nMrs, Florence, who assisted her In the'\ngreeting    of    guests,    was     wearing\nmauve    charmeuse.      Vellow    brown\nchrysanthemums were used throughout the rooms and the tea table wus\npresided over by Mrs. Emery Jones,\nof New Westminster, and Mrs. Dahlen *\nduring the lirst hour, and Mrs. D.\nF. Glass and Miss Wlnnlfred Perkins\nfor the Becond. Miss Grace- Bye and\nMiss Jean Perkins assisted In serving.\nThe annual social of the Women's\nInstitute of Port Coqultlam. held last\nevening In the agricultural hall, proved a success well up to anticipations.\nThere was a large attendance and the\nevening was pleasantly spent with\nmusic, supper and speeches. The interior of the agricultural hall was\neffectively decora'ed with flowers and\nl.airs, autumn tints predominating.\nWEAKNES8   FOR   RACE  TRACK\nWAS  CAUSE   OF   DOWNFALL.\nToronto,  Ont.,   Nov.   11.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Following ,\na series of forgeries as an  employee\nof the  Musspy-llarrls    company    and I\nfrom whom he wsb able to steal $27,-\nooo, James II. Denison, a bookkeeper,\nwiib sent to the Kingston penitentiary\ntoday by Judge Morgan. Prisoner admitted a weakness for the race track\nas the cause of the theft.\nIt was alleged his first venture wns\nthe raising of the figures on money\norders,; then he began to forge names\nlie had been a bookkeeper with the\ncompany 19 years and bad charge of a\nledger and the expense books.\nOttawa, Nov\" 12.   The Question of\nthe capitalisation of companies Is to\nform a subject of discussion and Quite\nprobably of legislation ut tlle next\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdesslon   ot   parliament\nMajor Sharpe, MP., Intends lo Introduce the question anyway, but hi.'\nIb prepared  to  make  way  for a gov\nernment measure if, as has been sug\ngeated, one is forthcoming, in a tin\ntatlVS way thlB has bi*on under consideration and It Is understood ion-\nslderable data with reference to exl.'.\nlng Iswb on the subject have b\"i n\ncollected.\nIn the discussion of the subject i'i\nparliament emphasis has been laid on\nthe necssslty of curbing the tendency\nof reckless over -capitalisation and ol\"\nwatering stocks. At the same time it\nis not desired to adopt any lohems\nso drastic in Its character as to ,\ufffd\ufffdr\ufffd\ufffd\nvent proper Industrial expansion or I >\ni tort a disturbing Influence upon tlie\nsii nation\nWhole Town T.hakcn.\nBelle Valley, Ohio, Nm. 12 This\nlittle mining town was rocked tcday\nby a 1,-Title explosion of dust In the\nImperial mini ef the O'Qara Coal company, of Chicago, fine miner was bad\nly bullied about the [ace and arms\nand about eight oilur miners had\nnam w escapes They were working\nnear the scene of the explosion ami\ngroped then way through darkness for\nan hour before they made lhelr\nescape\nTen  musical\nevening\nselections at\nBetween   thc\nthe  rink\nhour\ufffd\ufffd  of\n(2395)\nJURY   DISAGREES.\nNo\nAttorney Fined $2000.\nChicago,   Nov.   12.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Attorney   Daniel\niDonahoe, charged  with conspiracy to\nIdefame Clarence S. Funk, former general  manager   of   tiie    International\nHarvester company, was found guilty\ntonight   and   lined   $2000.     Detective\nIsaac   Stlefel     tried     on     the     same\nof next charge    of    conspiracy  was      found\nnot  guilty.\nVerdict in Trial of Man Charged\nWith Triple  Murder.\nVancouver. Nov. 12. -After five\nhours' deliberation, the jury ln thc\ntrial of George Wilson, charged with\nthe* murder nf three Kimsquit Indians\nin September, could not agree on a!\nverdict tonight.\nThev did  not  return  to court  until)\nafter 10 o'clock tonight when the fore-1\nman   announced   that   they  could   not\nagree.   -The  trial  of  Stikine  Joe.   hisi\neontpanlnn   for the murder of Watchy\nGus, will   lie   commenced   tomorrow\nmorning.\nFor all building supplies and fuel\noil apply to the H. C. Transport Co.,\nLtd., 505 Westminster Trust building.\nOffice phone ___,  wharf phone 1480.\n(2228)\nChange  Route  of  Read.\nThe divefsi^n tf thc Pitt rive\npoint  -Allele\nTIDE   TABLE--FRASER   RIVER.\nFor the Week Ending Sunday, Nov. 16.\nBroke Water Intake.\nPort Arthur, Nov. 12.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd lu enterine\ndrydock today the steamer l',. H.\nCrowe dragged anchor which caught\nthe ctty intake pipe 1400 feet from\nthe shore and pulled the whole section out. As It means the city get,\nwater from near shore Instead of far\noul. a warning has been Issued to boll\nall water while repairs are being made.\nBrinqs News of Tynhoon.\nWashington. Nov. 12, News or a\ngreat typhoon wlllch swe;.t the Island\nof Guam ami threw the collier Ajax\nashore, came lo the navy department\ntoday In a report from I leutenanl\nCommander Alfred w. Hinds, governor of the island, and commandant of\nthe naval station tliere. (ine Amerl\nean was drowned. Hospital Steward\nGeorge M. Nicholson, who was i.e-;\nnsliore with a rescuo party from th\"\nAjax.\nr rO&q\nat the point -Allele it cuts through a\nportion t f the Essondale asylum\nground, is planned by the provincial\nworks department, The read at present deviates fret 1 a point on the western limits of Ihe asylum grounds for\na distance if about a quarter of a\nmile tc, the c. I'. K. depot at Esson\ndale cutting off one corner of the\nI grounds. The diversion wiii consist\nJof constructing the road parallel with\niand Immediately adjoining the C P.\nJR. tracks which constitute the bound\nary line between the asylum grounds\nand the Colony farm.\n10\n11\n13\n14\n15\nWestminster,\nTime.\nHigh   Low.\n16\n4 40\n15:46\n5:30\nlfi: 10\n6:15\n16:30\n6:55\n16:50\n7:40\n17:10\n8:20\n17:20\n9:05\n10:10\n0:15\n10:50\n1:00\n11:40\n1:45\n12:10\n2 80\n12:55\n2:00\n18:80\n2:35\nSand 11\nHigh.\nTime. HI.\n3:43 10.1\n14:46 12.0\n4:29 10.9\n1S: 09  11 8\n:18 11.\ufffd\ufffd; 10\n18:00 14:20\n15:20\n5:66\n15:50\n6:38\n16:11\n7:21\n16:32\n8:07\n16:68\n11.6\n12.1\n11.6\n12.6\n11.6\nads.\nLow.\nTime. Ht\nR:42\n'Jl: .7\n9:32\n22:12\n18\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd11\n02\n12\n46\ntr,\nEstablish Precedent.\nVancouver. Nov. 12. An unusual\nprecedent was set in the court of ap\npeals here today when ihe court reversed Its decision given yesterday in\nan arbitration case and again beard\nths matter. On the previous dav a\nman named J. P. Hogg had been non\nsuited. 'loday he again came to the\nONE THOUSAND SURGEONS ''\"'\"\"'   ;\"\"1   convinced   the judges   thai\nWILL   RECEIVE   FELLOWSHIPS   \"'\"v   *vere  wr\"\"K.  with   \"le exception\n, . Ot Mr   Justice .Martin.    Pinal decision\nChicago, Nov. 12. -one thousand of w,',s r\"s,'rvei'\ntlie hading surgeons of the continent\nwill      rec. ive      fellowships      tOHIOITOW\nGROCERY SALE\nStill\nBl 8  n.*.\npr grassing.    Come and\nWe can save you money.\nods delivered ti any part of\nRobson Grocery\nCorner   th St. and 5th Ave.\nPhone 404.\nIn Order to Extend the\nUse of\nElectricity\nFOR COOKING AND\nHEATING PURPOSES\nWe offer our Customers\nthe Following\nPRIZES\nABSOLUTELY FREE\n1      Copper\nHeater.\nNickel      Klectric\n1\nPot\nKI   l'erco    Klectric    Coffee\n12.8 12:21 10.3\n11.8\n13.1 0:21\n11.8 12:18\n1.0\nTree Demonstration\nOF\nEdward's Soups\nCall in our store at once and try\nthese delicious samples. Our demon\netrator will be pleased to show you\n.how simple they are to prepare. Sold\nIn three flavors -Tomato, Vegetable\nAnd Brawn Bout at, por packet   ..6c.\n8PECIAL.\nCanned Pees, per can  10c\nClub Sauce, reg. 25c, at   2 for 35c\nWorcestershire  Sauce,  large  bottles;\nat  .::   2 for 25c\nMaqperel is Tomato Sauce; :! tins 25c\nWB SERVE YOU WELl-.\nDean's Grocery\nnight ut tbe   opening   lore   of   the\nAmerican college of surgeons. Clad\nin robes of scarlet and dark blue thl\nSmall army of medical men. chosen\nbecause of high ..landing it, \"eir profession, will appear before Dr .1 M,\nT, Finney, ol Baltimore, nrsi president of iiie college, who wlll confer\nthe degrees.\nIt is planned to make the college\nmean to America what the Royal coi-\nlege ot Burgeons means to Bngland,\nand Sir Rickman .1. Uodlee, president\nof the Kngiish society, will present a\nmemorial from the board of counsellors of the organization wblch he\nheads.\nMiners Out on Bill.\nVancouver, N'ov 12 Nearly all tlie\nminers who have applied for bail pending their trial on charges connected\nwith the strike riots al Ladysmlth and\nK.tension are now out on ball nr will\nb\" as soon  as tiie necessary  formall-\nIties have been complied with. Chief\nJustice Hunter today stated in regard\n(to John Place, member of the provincial assembly, tliat so far as he could\n.-ee tliere WHS no eviiteiice on which a\nJury could convict him.\nTake Possession of Books,\nl.os Angeles, Nov. 12.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe federal\ngrand jury took possession today of\nthe books of the l.os Angeles Investment company, showing the administration liy the recently deposed officers, of assets valued at aboul fi'),-\noou.oon. At (lie same time dissatisfied stockholders, according to statements issued by their legal representatives, determined to institute suits\nto recover from lh\" rormer officers of\nthe concern 821,000 shares of Btock,\nand also to have a reci .ver appointed\nAlleqes He Is Canadian.\nSalem. Ore.. Nov. 11. Alleging tint\nJ. II. 1.linden, who was elected mayor\nof Woodburn at, the recent election Is\nnoi a citizen or the United States, P\n,A. Livesley of that city todav riled a\ncomplaint in the circuit court here asking that. I.anden be deposed and Lives\nby declan d mayor. Tlie two were opponents at lhe recent election. I.anden winning. Livesley alleged thnt\nI.anden was born In Ontario, and that\nhe has never taken out naturallzat\npaper*..\nMrs.\nand Miss\n' 1.\n\/IEMBERSj 1\nSOCIE\nLessons 1\ning,  Voice\nclass or pri*.\npoint,  Musi'\nPupllB pri\ntlons or the\nHoyal  Acad\nCollege or\nDiplomas, Ti\nFor   terms\nStreet   Phoi\n(ave-Browne-tave\nA.M .  A It C M.\nIP THE INCORPORATED\n: I  OF  MUSICIANS.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   I'iiinofort\".   Violin, Sing \\\n'reduction,    Theory    tin\n\ufffd\ufffdl\\ I, Harmony, Counter*\n*   Conn nnd History,\npared    for    the    cxumliia\nAssociated Doard of   tbs I\ny  of   Music  and   Royal\n1 KI Tebailo Klectric Tea Pot.\n1  slx-lb.  Hot  Point Iron.\n1 Utility Outfit, a complete\nKlectric   Stove   and   Ironer.\nAll can bo used from the ordinary lamp socket. On view\nIn our window.\nTickets given with esch $1.00\npurchase. To be drawn for\nDecember 31st, 1913.\nBrown & Son\n620 Columbia 8t.\nNew  Westminster\nE. H. BUCKUN,\nPree. ssd Oeal.\nUs*.\nN.  HRAHD8LKB,\nVlrel'iesldent.\nW. r. H. BOCKLIN,\nBee. and Tress.\nSMALL-BUCKLIN LUMBER CO., Ltd.\nMANUFACTURERS OF\nFir, Cedar and   Spruce\nPhones No. T and S77.\nThat   for Cold  Weather   there  Is\nNothing Quite so Good as Our\nSpecial Hot-Water Bottle\n2  YEARS GUARANTEE\nAT RYALL'S.\n701 Columbia Street    (Druggist and Optician) Phone 57\nSIXTCCN   CHOICEST  VIEW   LOTS\nIn the West End.   Corner 7th Ave. and 20th St. Half\nblock from Vancouver car.\nFROM $800 UP.\nTerms $100 down and $100 every four months.\nWHITE, SHILES & CO.\n716 Columbia St.      312-315 Westminster Trust Bldg.\nPhone 85R. Phone 85L.\nBOILERS\nRiveted Steel Pipes\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      BURN OIL     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nTANKS\nVULCAN  IRON WORKS, LTD.\nP. O. BOX 44?\nTELEPHONE 3_<\nTELEPHONE No. 20 H.\nWALK A BLOCK ANI) SAVE A DOLLAR.\nTHE POPULAR   SHOE   STORE\n641 Front Street.     Out of the High  Rent District.\n$30,000 Stock to Select From.\nOpen   Evenings   Till   9  o'clock.\nEVENING'S  SPECIAI GENTS   $3.50  BOX   KIP   BOOTS   FOR  $1.00.\nM.\nBio.   Also   Professional\nchar or Performer,\netc.  ripply  51   DuBerln\n-til It.\nlen\nNothing Definite Yet.\nOttawa, Nov. 12.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe objeotora to\ntlir-  Ottawa  Electric    Hallway    com\npany's double the fare on Its branch\nlines have noi yet formulated an\ntn  take  over  tbescompany   from   the| Plication   to  the  railroad\nfinanciers who were called  In  to at\nsume charge of its affairs\nap\ncommission\nis\nBurr Block\nColumWs Strsst\nAnti-Clgarctte  Campaign.\nRegina,    Nov.    12. -a     campaign\nagainst the sale of cigarettes and 10-\nbacco to boys under 16 years of age\nI was Inaugurated ihia morning by the\npolice when Maurice Aaron was fined\n|$1 and costs for selling HRarcites to\nthree boys, aged 11, 13 and IB years.\nTwo otlur men, proprietors of another\nStore  were fined a like amount.\nAt the commissions' offices it \ufffd\ufffd.\nlearned today thai no definite appli\ntlon had been received\nRoyal Intelligence Bureau\n415 Westminster Trust Building.\nJ.  M. GAWA,  Mgr.\nExclusive agent ror 11 Obashl &\nCo., New Y'rk, manufacturers of\nTypewriter Hacking Sheets. Carbon\nPapers, Klbb' ns, elc. M\/lH address\nDrawer   110   New   Westminster.\nWill   Be\nBrantford,  Nov.\nwas   round   guilty\nthe Jury of having\nHanged.\nli-'. lames Taylor\nthis afternoon hy\nmurdered  Charlie\nDawson, 13 years old. on tho Blossom\n.road, a mile rrom Cainsvllle, and four\n; mile_  trom  Brantford, after committing a  unspeakable crime upon  him.\n1 He will be hanged on Krlday, Jan. 23.\n'..'bat   wllh  the harbor  Improve-\nmania, the further\nDEVELOPMENT OF\ntba   fisheries  and\nAitchison's\nLadies' Tailoring Branch\nsurely Westminster is coming to\nher own.\nJ.N. AITCI1ISON\nTailor to Ladles and Gentlemen.\nWeitminiter Truat Block.\nARE YOU BLIND?\n^\ufffd\ufffd^Z_________Z\ufffd\ufffd-______        *__!_!!_-!!!__\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ^________\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd___\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   \ufffd\ufffd-_________________-__-_________m^HiH^a\ufffd\ufffdM^i^aa^a''____-_-__________--_>\nIf You Are We Can Open Your Eyes\nto Hula tbe\nfuel, that you can buy from un\nlow price we sell at. for cash.\ncheaper than from anyone else,   facts prove cases, and our proof\nDONT PASS THIS UP\nBrass Beds, regular $18.00.   Special $14.00\nBrass  Bed, Bprlng and  Mattress.    Special    S20.00\nSolid Oak  Extension  Table,  0 ft.    Special    $12.78\nGolden Oak Extension Table, fl rt.   Special $9.25\nQoldi n Oak  Extension Table, 8 ft.    Special    $10.50\nSolid Oak  Library Table.    Special    $11.78\nllest  Hocking  Chair on  earili.    Special    $2.25\nCocoa Door Mats.   Special  60*.\nKitchen   Cabinet  complete.     Special    $11.80\nBedroom Tables, Qolden Ouk.   Special SS.4B\nParlor Tables, Solid Oak.    Special   $3.45\nChina Cabinets, In Solid Qolden Oak.    Itegular $32.00    Special   $24.00\nDENNY   &   ROSS\nThe Bis: Furniture Store\nSixth and Carnarvon Sts. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER  13, 1913.\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS.\n_. , paoi nvi\nEVERYTHING IN SPORT\nHOCKEY - RUGBY - SOCCER - BASKETBALL - BOWLING - BOXING\nARE AFTER ROCHON\nall accounts to be a particularly unenviable one.    According to the Scottish\nReferee, be is liable to be struck ofl\nlhe SKA. list on the moBt trivial pretext. \"No English referee,\" the Journal says, \"would stand half the abUSS\nihls Scottish confrere does either from\n! piayara or officials.\n\"Some playsrs1 language on the field\nIs tbe reverse of tbe drawing room\ntype. Still the referee Ih afraid to act,\nbecause he knows that If he cautions\n'nud admoniibis a playi r for abusing\nhim tben off the list he goes and the\nI player   gets   bolder   and   bolder   until\n: he In unbearable.\"\nThe whole business ot rcfereelng In\nScotland seems. Indeed, to be ln a glorious muddle.    In another part of the\ni same Journal we read that \" it is alleged lhat certain referees neglect to\nreport players guilty of rough play, the\n; officials   unduly  shielding   themselves\n: from the discharge of this Importani\nduty by the fact that lhey are not on\ngone out of existence, his term of\noffice would automatically expire. It\nwas discovered however, that Mr.\nCameron had alfiliated with tbe Be\ntall Clerks' association anil the hi en-\ntary was instructed to cast one rots\nfor President CamsKfl'l re-election to\nolllce.\nA committee composed of Delegates\nCameron, t.lbb. Grant, l.ugrin and\nTaylor was appointed to look after\nthe details connected with the reception of delegates to the annual convention of the Ii. C. Federation tf\nLabor, which will bo held in New\nWestminster some time lu January,\n1914.\nAt tke Tkeatres\ni tbe association's list.\nOttawas Anxious to Secure New Weatmlnater Star\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMay Mean Work\nfor   Commission.\nTrouhle will come In the case of\nfleorge Itochon. tbe star point man\nwith New Westminster last season,\nunless the N.11.A, teams call off their\nmove which Is to secure Kochon for\nIhe Ottawas Iteports from ths east\nto hand yesterday Indicate that\nPercy l.esueur, manager, coach and\ngoalti ml of the Capitals expects to\nland Rochon to take the place ot Trad\nLake, wbo has been sold to the Ontario*\nIt this report Is correct and It ls no j\nIlci-<1 lhat all the eastern papers used\nths story, then the N. II. A. is going'\nclose towards breaking the agreement!\nbetween the Pacific league and the\neastern organization which leaves all\nof last year's players the property ofj\nthe same clubs unless traded.\nNew Westminster Is anxious to get\nKochon  wbo, on  account of his spec :\ntaculur rushes, gained a name of the\nBlOSt   ftarlSSS   player   In   Ihe   league.'\nWork   Is   expected   any   moment   by'\nManager  Savage   from   Swift  Current!\nwhere   Kochon   Is   supposed   to   be   In'\nbusiness   and   In   the   meantime   the i\neastern  clubs  will   receive  tlle bands-\nOff sign both by Westminster and the;\nPatricks.\nThere Is practically no chance for,\nthe Port William star to break Into I\namateur hockey, again, for he nl(;h !\ndisrupted  the  Saskatchewan  amateur,,,,,.   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    _ ,\nleague  last   winter  before signing  up  ,..,.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,.,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,, l\nwith  the   Royals.     The  N.   II    A.   will' * \"' *\nhave to turn over the player to the\nCoast league |f he desires to play at\nall\nCATTLE OF WATERLOO AT\nROYALY THEATRE TODAY\nbarm.    Thonias, who    is a  man  well !\nup In years, resented ths charge and\nasked for a couple of days to line np\nhis defence. Ills request was granted. ,\nWILL MEET AGAIN\nBilliard Players Will Organize League\non  Friday Evenlnp\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSir. Teamj\nReady.\nAithOUgb little business was trans-\nactid at the Initial mee:ing of billiard\nplayers In the city held St the Club\nalleys last evening, six teams Intimated their Intentions Of Joining '.he\nnew organization which will be ef-\nlected   at  a  gathering  to   be   held   in\n      on     Prlday\nevening at 8 o'clock.\nOn that evening Ihe names of the\nI various players must be handed lu so\nithat  the system ul handicapping can\nThe Battle of Waterloo, a wonderful film In four reels, packod the\nKoyal theatre at' every performance j\nyesterday It Is one of the greatest\nfeature films ever shown In New\nWestminster with the exception of |\n\"Our   Empire   Navy\"   pictures   which j \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nwere  shown   at   tbe   Koyal   last   fall.]\n'Ihese pictures will be shown at every ; Representative\nperformance today and will  undoubtedly attract  large crowds.\nPete   Murphy   Ib  also  appearing  at\nevery   performance   this     week     aud !\nconsequently the program Is an extra\nstrong one.\nMotion   picture  dancing   lessons  Is,\nthe  latest  and  It remained   for  Manager  Kerr, of the  Edison  theatre, to!\nsecure the exclusive right to stage a I\nthree  reel  film  showing   Wallace  Mc I\nVIOLATION OE\nBLUE SKY LAW\nY.W.C.A. MAKES\nSPLENDID PROGRESS\nIs Now   on    Paying    Basis\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPlan\nServe Midday Luncheon\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMeeting Yesterday.\nto\ncf    Vancouver    Company   Arreated   in   Portland\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nReleased on f1000  Bail.\nPortland, Ore., Nov. 12.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdL. R. Kay-\nlor and A. I). Raker were arrested today on charges of violating the provisions of the Oregon blue skv law.\nThe men were released on $10u0 bail.\nFollowing   these  arrests   will  come\nJoan Sawyir. New I the \"first' crfmtaaf prosecutions under (discussed and disposed of\nCutcheon and Mlsa\t\nVcrk s famous dancers, In the Tango, jthe new act. The men are charged\nTurkey Trot and Hesitation Waltz. with offering stocks for sale contrary-\nEach of tbese three dances are mar- j to the word of the act, which provides\nvrls of beauty and grace and are re-1 that It Is unlawful to deal In stocks or\ngorded as being topnotchers among securities of any company unless a\nthe  Kalem   Ellin company's   work.       i permit is first secured from the state\nThe Tango. Turkey Trot and Heal- corporation department,\ntatlcn Waltz are llrst shown as danced j Kaylor represents ln this city the\nby the patroriB of one of New York'B I Capital Security Company, a Deia-\nmost famous cabarets. Later, Mr. Mo- ware corporation, while Baker has\nCutoheon and Miss Sawyer lake the handled the stocks of the National\nfloor and show their method. To bst- Mercsnttle company, Ltd.. of Vancou-\nter Illustrate the sleps.  the  pictures. I v,'r'  Iu'     Both  these  companies are\nThe Y. W. C. A., established In this,\ncity some months ago, is now on a\npaying basis, the report of the treasurer received at the meeting of the\ndirectors yesterday showing for the\nsecond consecutive time a balance ou j\nthe right side.\nThe meeting which was held in the\nassembly   room   of   the   association I\nbuilding was  we'l    attended    and    a\nnumber of  important    matters    were\nit   Intervals,  show    Just     the    lower\nlimbs.\n,    Manager Kerr has arranged to show\nIthis film for one day only, beginning\ntins afternoon.\ni \t\nQUEEN OF BONBON LAND\nTO BE HERE NEXT WEEK\nforeign corporations transacting biipi\nness In this state, it is charged, contrary lo the general corporation law\nwhich provides for the licensing of foreign corporations.\nDATES SET FOR\nCOUNTY COURT CASES\nIt was decided after some c_nsidtra-\ni tlon to spread out a little ln the din-\nlug room and arrangements will be\n; made so that gentlemen aB well as\nladies can obtain lunch. Special ef.\nI forts will be made on market day to\n| accommodate many cf the visitors\n! who come to the city oa that day.\nThe association expressed approval\n'of the appointment of Mrs. M. R.\ni Patchell as police matron and ap:\n' pointed her travelling aid secretary\nfor the Y. W. C. A. Mrs. Patchell\n; spoke for a few minutes and outlined\nher duties.\nIt was arranged also to hold a\n! rumage sale towards the end of this\nI month and a cookery sale on the Sat-\n] urday  preceding Christmas Day.\nWILLS DRAWN\nFREE OF CHARGE\nCapital  Subscribed $500,000:00    Capital   Paid up *449,M7.7*\nReserve Fund $200,000.00.\nTo every one making a will and appointing an executor to\nage  their estate,  the above  figures have a deep  meaning.\nThey prove that In addition to careful management, experience\nand knowledge of values, this Company offers a financial standing\nand responsibility that private executors cannot give.\nOur charges for handling Estates are never more and are often\nless than those allowed to a private executor. When you can aecare\nso many advantages without additional cost by appointing tbla Cam-\npany  to act as your executor,  you sbould  gtve  the matter  carefal\nconsideration and consult with us.\nFull Particulars on Application\nWESTMINSTER TRUST, LIMITED\nHEAD OFFICE:  NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C.\nJ. J. JONES, Managing Director.\nJ. A. RENNIE, Secretary-Treasurer.\n! be gone into.\nREEEREES TO STRIKE j JOHNSON A HOLD-OUT\n-.,        ,        .   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,.._ ,|    The following list    of    cases    have\nThursday   and   Friday evenings    of down  for  hearing    in    the\n.next week    wll    see   the    reopening f\n.f the opera bouse. Ihe. first time for1\ns considerable period\nCOME TO THE ROYAL MERCANTILE CO.'S.\nFurniture Exchange\nin 61 Sixth street for real bargains In all kinds of furniture and furnishings.    Picture Framing, Upholstering, Furniture Repairing, etc.\nTry us for Window Shades.\nRoyal Mercantile Co.\nFURNITURE EXCHANGE.\n'\nScottish   Officials   Likely   to   Present\nUltimatum to L. F. A.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTo Import\nStrikebreakers.\nBig\nlx>ndon, Nov 12.- A general strike\nOf referees Is threatened and expect\ned   In  Scotland\nThe knights of the whistle are In\ni Sadly earnest according to the Scottish Uefere\ufffd\ufffd. A meeting of the asso\nelation hus been called and the probability is itint a resolution win be\npassed authorising the despatch of an\nultimatum to the Scottish Football SS\nsoclstloR.\nThi S V A . however, are prepared\nfor all eventualities, lf the expected\nulrlkr coines \"'r English referees will\nl>A Imported wholesale into Scotland to\nact  as emergency  officials.\nThe dllgmntled referees Include all\nthe best men of their craft In Scut-\nland. Their association has a membership of ahout 260, of whom nearly\n100 reside lu Glasgow,\nIt Is eald that tho sympathy of the\nfoot ball going public Is entirely with\nlhe referees. The lot of the average\nHcottlsh   referee   would   appear,\n********\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*********m********mm~^^^.\nfrom I a\nMoose  Fails  to Come   to  Terms\nwith  Local  Marinate*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWants\nHigher  Pay.\nErnie Johnsi n  Is a real hold-out\nj The Big Moose has baulked at the\nterms offered him by the N'ew Wfst\nminster management and unless some\nmore collateral appears lu the olTlie*!\nEmu.- Johnsou    will    stay out of the\n; game snd watch tlw other fellows try\n[and   capture   the   I'aterson   cup.\nI Johnson and .Manager Savage got\ntogether   in   B   confab  yesterday,   but\ni after a Ojopalderable length of argument the two appeared to be as far\napart as ir they had not meL so that\nI further meeting! w ill bc necessary If\nthe star cover point is    to    be    seen\n'careening down lbe ice this winter.\n| This makes two players. Itochon\nand Johnson, who nre outside the\nfold and with the first practice called\n! for next week artlm has to be taken\nj by the local management to round out\nteam.\nOoldie Prodgers, the \"bear-cat.'' with\nVictoria last season, has taken over a\nbig cigar and billiard establishment\nIn Quebec, where be will play hockey\nwith tiio Stanley cuppers.\nHigh  shoes for baseball will come\nThey aro still fighting lacrosse battles In the easl. At a meeting of the\nN. 1.. IT. delegates beld recently ln\nMontreal a decision was reached to\nhave the championship of t'.ie league\nput over until next aummer. The\nM. A   A. which tied with Cornwall for\nHlgn  snoes tor nu\ufffd\ufffd.ii  -\ufffd\ufffd; -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-; ,hc  rhamp|on,hlp.  voted  against  thc\ntoto fashion |\ufffd\ufffdttt \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>\ufffd\ufffd fh\ufffd\ufffdh    mSJ SSwSK lay the matter over until\nnumerous    accidents    whicn_   major i i(iw\nleague players have sustained during\nthe past summer in tho way of sprained ankles The low shoe came Into\nvogue when players arrived at the conclusion Hint the high topB prevented\napeed In base running.\nHarry Scott, the  l'ort Arthur boy,\nwho  was   the   lending  goal-getter   In\n1914. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\nI Joe Bayley and Frank Barrleau Is\n| thc latest talk for a 15-round go at\n|Steve8ton. With his heavy punch. Rar-\n' rleaii should be able to stow uway the\n1 Victoria boy Insld-u of six rounds.\nThe annual  row  between  Stanford\nuniversity and the I'nlverslty of Call-\nthe Mnrltlme league for two years, has  y1\"'*   ,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    _.__.__    _,.    ,\nthla winter and every player will huve\nto ahow the goods before making the\nteam.\nIt acorns only fitting that the Stan-\nlay cup should represent the world'a\nchampionship ln professional hockey.\nA movement la on foot among the\nN. H. A. clubs to havo tbe trusteea of\nthe cup put It up for competition esch\nBeason between the pick of the eaat\nsnd weat.\nThe Ottawas are after Art Throop,\n-who wag released by one of the Toronto teams this fall to go to New\nWestminster. They sre offering s\ntrade for the atsr forward.\nTho Victoria. team will be completed by the end of the week when\nTommy Dunderdale snd Morria ars\nexpected to arrive.\nNew Westminster billiard players\nare now regretting tbelr action In\nwithdrawing from the Vancouver\nleague, tt Is possible, however, thst\nseveral Vancouver teams will be over\nthis wlnter< to elsah with ths Roysls.\ni\nCreacenta ahould have a hard time\ndefeating the .Tigers st the Y.M.C.A.\nbasketball court Friday evening. The\nArtanaca snd Columbia college win\nfurnish the other gnme of the double\nheader.\nbooh. I\nHeinle Zimmerman, the hard hitting\nthird sacker of the Chicago Cubs, has\nbeen canned from the Players' Fraternity on account ot non-payment of\ndues. Several men were behind ln\ntheir subs, early In the seaaon but\nthe majority of them have alnce paid\nup. Heinle shows no Inclination to\nget back Into the fold.\nRill Rodgers looks to be the one\nbeat bet with the Sapperton-Whlte\nRock aggregation thla winter. The\nway the big alx-footer sailed through\nthe bunch at tbe Initial practice added\npep to the other players.\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^ This Is to ac\ncommodate the show to be given on\nthese dates In behalf of the Royal\nColumbian hospital, \"The Queen of\nBonbon Land.\"\nAlthough this presentation Is to be\nby amateurs, It will unquestionably\nreceive a gorgeous production and tne\nstory Indicates that it is worth it.\nIt is an allegorical fantasy In two\nrevues and four spectacles. In the\nggrdens of llona Is gathered at dawn\na large concourse of her friends about\nto assist at her wedding. Her Intended is Percy Broadway, but he\nproves most Insincere and, meeting\nFain bette. a vagrant. fallB in love\nwith her. llona has secretly exhibited\nto her friends the beautiful lift like\nstatin cf Zorilda, Persian oueen of\nancient Bonbon 1-antL' A hidden tab-\nI\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd! la discovered by Fnnchette and\nthis proves to be the key to Zerilda's\nexistence, which Is used to bring her\nback to lite As the reincarnation becomes complete, astonishment, per-\nplSSity and odd situations are manifested.\nZorilda Is greatly attracted ti Fan-\nehetta and llona Is angered to see her\nstntue alive, maligns them and declares h\"r own royal position. Spectacle II is a street. Introducing Angelina aud Maggie, who, having come\nto town to see the sights, meet the\nqueen, who In turn recognizes In\nHappy Hooligan her ancient King\nHavabnn. Spectacle C discloses the\nwitches assisting llona to establish\nnet royal position, and tho Oeorge M\nCohan all star company with musical\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdpeclaltles. The second revue Is the\nJubilee reception In honor of their\nroyal majesties, and In quick succession a conclave of merry entertainers\nkeep affairs lively with fun and\nmusic.\nSpain to Participate.\nMadrid, Nov. 12\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe Spanish cabinet tonight decided to appoint a ministerial commission to arrange for the\nadequate    participation    of  Spain   in\n. F. C. Lane, a jury i ,he  Panama exposition  In  San  Fran-\nHardware   Co.    vs. i cIsco  in  1915.\nNov. 19\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIteid \\\ntrial; Abbotsford\nHutton. ^L^^^^^^^^^^\nNov. 20-Burton Co. vs. Chilliwack\nTrustees et al; Fraser Valley Investment Co. ve. Koo Kurn el al; Johnson\nTemperature Co vs. Chilliwack Trustees; Taylor Forbes vs. Chilliwack\nTrustees.\nNov.    21\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHenry    Kells    vs.    Great\nNorthern    Railway   Co.;    Modlin    vs. i\nDodds;     Hutchinson    vs.    Campbell;\nDavles vs. Seabrook.\nNov.  22- Halifax  vs.   Fitzgerald\nNov. 22 Is a Saturday, but his honor I\nIs anxious to dispose of the civil cases\nbefore the opining of the assizes on i\nthe following Monday.\nLOCAL LABOR MEN\nTO TAKE ACTION\nI Continued irom rage One.)\nTODAY   ONLY\nMAX ALIAS IIM,\nMIKE AND TOM\nWhat Fell Out In Police Court Yester.\nday\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA rich Collection ef Saleable\nArticles.\nIf Max Muller, alias James Collins,\nalias Crandall, ia a burglar, aa the\ninformation says he la, then he la a\ngentleman of elegant discrimination,\nor tbe pile of goods collected at the\npollen station and put down against\nhim as having been stolen, la nc\nmeans of arriving at a conclusion.\nJamea, or Max. If he prefers thst j\nhandle, who appeared In the police\ncourt yesterday, ta ssld to hsve annexed from the residence of Mra.\nSnider. Third svenue, a bunch of\narticles like unto a miniature depart-1\nment store stock. There wss s hand\nbag and a carving set, a kodak and a\nsilk underveat, s autt length of cloth\nand a watch, a cash bos, a watch,\nstick pins, rings and other ictaa too\nnumerous to mention.\nOut of thia conglomeration the\npollce expect tn get a conviction\nagainat the lad with ths several\naliases when hla case comes up for\nhesrlng on Friday. Meanwhile he la\nheld In the provincial Jail where he\nts doing three montha for a stealing\nJob In Vancouver.\nMike Kelly, hailing frcm Pompeii,\nor was lt Cork, admitted with tears\nIn his voice snd a cotton wadding\nfeeling tn tho back of hia throat that\nhe had been drunk on Tuesday evening. As Mike ls s new arrival and\nas this wss his flrst offence* Magistrate Edmonds ellowed him to pursue\nhis way.\nThomas isblater, said ths Informs-\nThe 1913 Y. M. C. A. hockey septette Ib pretty well split up thla winter. Dunford, H. C. Whittaker and\nGuy Whittaker have signed with Ssp-\nperton; Knight Is with the Circle V;\nHugh Cunningham hss signed with\nthe Moose, while Stacey and F. B.\nCunningham wlll be wearing ths\niBesver uniforms. Aa aoon sa the tesms\nget down to sctlon, the managers of\ntho stronger aggregations might do\nwell to release any spsre material In\norder to make the race moro Intereat-\nlng. Practically every one Interested\nIn the league appears to realise that\nunleaa the four teams   sre   evenly\nmatched publlc Interest will be at low .    ._ ._,_., ..__...  __..      .  ,\nebb wtth a consequent loss In gate re- tlon, bad assaulted hla daughter Mar-\ncelpts. garet,' causing hsr grlevtous   bodily\nspect  to the Nanalmo trouble, which\nwas a thing unheard of before.\nDelegate Knudsen stated that the\nworkers ougfit to bear such action In\nmind when the next provincial election approaches and thus defeat any\nmember of the house whose sympathies are towarda    the    \"capitalistic\nCriticize Jail Authorities.\nDelegate Dodd also, brought charges\nagainst tbe methods employed at the\nNew Westminster provincial jail\nwhere he claimed that men awaiting\ntrial were being served wltb the\naame food aa that given to tbe vilest\ncriminal.\nA committee composed of Delegates\nDodd. Grant and Maiden will attempt\nto Investigate further on the matter\nand seek redress if possible.\nPrealdent Cameron cauaed a mild\nsensation when he Informed the delegates that aa the Teamsters' union, of\nwhich he waa   a member,   had   now\nTHE LAST TIME OF\nThe\nBattle\nof\nWaterloo\nThe\n4    BIG   REELS\nGreatest   Picture\nFilmed.\n4\nEver\nPETER   MURPHY\nSinge at Every Performance.\nAll Seats\nChildren  .\n.10c.\n. Se.\nHow do\nVou do\neach bake day.\nDo you get perfect bread with\nevery batch ?\nNo question\nabout it if you\nuse MY flour.\nThey   test\nROYAL,\nSTANDARD\nover at the mill\nby actual bread\nmaking with\nvarious wheat\nsamples. Only\ngrain that\nmakes delicious\nbread is purchased. That's\nwhy ROYAL\nSTANDARD\nis so uniform.\nASK YOUI CMCa\n(O\nVancouver Milling & Grain Co., lid.\nVANCOUVER.NEW WESTM-NSTEK.NANAIMO. VtCTOWA\nRICHARDSON & HUMPHRIES.\nMEN'S OUTFITTERS.\n709 Columbia Sti Westminster Trust Bldg.\nBIG  SPECIAL  TODAY\n*'i&*i\nIN THMI PART*.\nLet Me Teach  You How to Qtince\n....'. .Be s perfect dsneer.   Mam tbs corrsct way ot dancing the f erttey Trot. Taago aad tks Hsritatfea Waha.   irr 'mm*' MsFTslHsM\nand Miss Joan Sawyer, the senSetlons ot ths Hew Torit Thsstre Rtof Qardsa ami inatraators to ito \"Toss Haa-bad\" wfl\ufffd\ufffd,\ufffd\ufffdssc* ys* '\nTHE TANGO, TURKEY TROT* AND HESITATION ffiiggfc\nThe Kalem Motion Picture Danelas Lessons tsach thsM pnptitar deanae atop by sts*.\non* seeing thsso piotwrss csa, with a little practise, become a graceful darner.\nThe Motion Picture Dancing Lsssons ara eepaelatly Intended far those Motile who do aet\ntlon Walts properly, and tor othera whs say thoy \"jost eaat leant.*.\nMr. McCutcheon sad Mias Sawyer chergatMtor a single Jnsaoa la aay ene ef these daaece-e lessow\ni' in this feature.   All three daaeea ara taqghi yoa far tte jrtae of aa adatastoa. Thsy ara mum\\* aad i\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdM aa stasia sad ttuasaak. that a>w\ufffd\ufffd\n,'*\". * '^^   ^^^^*^' ^S**r^*-mmt***^*-S**w**^^^* *im*******t*~i'WV^nt'-\ntslnel\t\nInstructors teach you.'\nMs** \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd trnjamtrntw*^\nJU-GM^fXHs; CQiWSI-***\nBy AUcs WHHas\ufffd\ufffda.-;Csisdy.\n*,   ..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd**:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd!    Iff 'n*w**'***\"\t\n.SLEUTHS UN*4\n!.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd)\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n:-mi\ufffd\ufffd. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *,iV.*g, *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n-\nJ\nft-\n.;-;7*\ufffd\ufffd'*\nWitt::\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\".   *\n..*M\n_____H_\niw,\npi \t\nTBE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS.\nTHURSDAY, NOVEMSeft 13, W*.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdftxats tti*\nClassified Advertising\n-\\SIDELIGHTS ON THIRTY-THIRD\nAGENCIES.\nd9Ut__SlKIK!\ufffd\ufffd    ADS   WILL\n^___\ufffd\ufffdved for Tne News at Uie follow-\n\ufffd\ufffd**\ufffd\ufffd:   k.t. HllTs drug store.\nS-5 or^ml.ia slreei; A. bpnee.\n^ns^rough. \ufffd\ufffdJ\"\ufffd\ufffd lalaad: Mrs.\n|tl.\ufffd\ufffdr<\ufffd\ufffd<>n. Hlgblsad l'\ufffd\ufffdrk; Mrs. V\nI_f.*'iii. Alta Vista.\nUS    KE-\nFOR BALE\nFOIt BALE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdALL OR PABT OF\nfurniture of six-room house to rent.\nApply   -5   Duffirin     street,    phone\nimn. \ufffd\ufffdS384>\nCONVENTION OF LABOR LEADERS\nNOW IN SESSION IN SEATTLE\nMitchell,   ss\nRichard Loewi\nThe reading\nreport ol the\ned hefore the\nued   liy   First\nand\nCuu Ute -1 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\na*-******* \t\ncent per word pur\n._ week; ISc per\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdaanth; ti.'ir.n words, to be used ag re-\nm*atr**i \ufffd\ufffd*!ii in one year\nt-mtt****.  $.5.00.\nPOS BALIS\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBIGHT ROOMED MOD-\nem  hcuse,  Sixth  street    car    line,\nclose\noffice.\nApply    Hox 2389\nNews\n(2389)\nYoung Lady Worth Millions, representing Waitresses,\nTells of her Experiences\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdItalian Count Leads Hod\nI night work in pest offices to handling\nI only flrat and second-class mail mat-\nIte.'.\nPOR   SALE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSELL\nerty through an ad.\nYOUR    PROP-\nin this column.\ntrom   date o(\nmUTBD    POSITION   HY   STEADY\n% \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,* young \".an; usedtolnsldi\nfor a   boy of    U\nKOI SON HOME PHONOGRAPH\nwllh 80 records, cost $1-0, will sell\nsame for $\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdS. As good as new,\nvery little used. Apply A. M\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 4^1\nWestminster Trust building. (2893)\nCarriers' Delegation\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFight Expected to Develop Over'struggle is on\nNewsboys Union\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdU. S. Cabinet Minister Labels Capital and Labor as Partners.\nFOR\nnot.   OF   NLWSEOYS\nFOR SALE \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd HOUSE PARTLY\nfinished, und large cleared lot, Edmonds. Clear deed. Cheap for cash.\nApply owner, (ieorge Warne, Eighteenth avenue, Edmonds. |2',V_4)\na******* -also\n24(>S NMri olllci\nHox\nWANTED HOUSEHOLD    FUHNI-\nx*n~ in large or small quantities for\nSS \ufffd\ufffdsh. Will give full value or\n\\Wm 6*11 your household goods and\nXc\ufffd\ufffd b> auction. Will guars nee\nto realize value or no commission\nS\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdU II. J. Russell. Weatmlnster\n235 House. Kiug-a hotel block\nO .um'.s; '  street. i-.-*>\nSeattle, Nov. li.'. -A crowded tenement instead of a trip abroad; the\nwretched of the earth Instead of her\nown kind, for associates; working in\na restaurant Instead of dining In a\nhotel; patrolling the snowy streets in\nthe winter dawn instead of luxurious\nslumbo after a night of revelry -such\nis the choice of one woman.\nMillionaire    waitress,    daughter\nIn    Italian,\nlatter being\nv.as obliged to Uo this\nKrench and Herman, the\nused largely by the Jews.\n\"1 knew enough Italian to travel\nwith,\" she paid, \"but I found It very\ndifferent when 1 had to introduce such\n[words as 'strike' and 'factory.' How-\n| ever, I learned these words and got\nI along all right.\"\nstarting\nTracj\nof\none\nof the oldest California families.\nACREAGE NEAR NEWTON, JUST 8j\nmiles out, less than 30 minutes' r'.dn\non B. 0, Electric from New Westminster; soil excellent, bottom or\nupland as desired; tram frontage striker, author, globe-trotter, suffra-\n$150 an acre and remainder just Uc Miss JIaude Younger has bur-\nback of frontage lots $100 and $125.    ,  ,   . .. .  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   ,\nTerms quarter cash, two years for rlcd   from   ,he  allurements  of  Paris\nbalance.   This is a sacrifice; estate\nto be    cleaned    up at once.    Sole\nagents, CurtlB & Dorgan, New Westminster.   Phone 4.t>.   No trades.\n(2331)\nWhether control of tin* Newsboys'\nunion shall be vested In Ihe American\nFederation Of Labor, In the International Pressmen's union, or In the Typographical union, making either of\nlatter two a practically unbeatable\ncombination, so far as newspapers are\nconcerned, will he determined by the|n_,. |,-r.in|( x Nosi\nconvention of the federation al pres- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,.,.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Ho* j,. c_-\nent   meeting In Seattle. ^^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nThe question will probably he laid\nhefore the delegates on appeal, by\n(ieorge L. Berry head of the pressmen.\nj who has labored for some time to no-\nIquire the desired jurisdiction for his\norganization.     During     the    Chicago\n*y*OR HUNT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBRIGHT OUTSIDE OF-\nijc-es and rooms in the Tine new\n-tlc-<en<l building. Sixth and Carnarvon -streets, from $7 per month up;\n-ocluding beat, light and \" ~\noold waler iu every\nroom 111.\nhot   and\nFOR SALE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd$1.00 DOWN, $1.00 PER\nweek, Canada's Pride Malleable\nRanges; every one guaranteed. Mar\nket square. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd--.-...\n(2336)\nLOST ANO FOUND.\nroom.\nApply\n(2379)\n.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ! LOST\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdON COLUMBIA STREET.    A\nBWl RENT-IK YOU HAVE ROOMS\ntn rent try an ad. in this column.\nrCRNISHED COMPLETE, HOUSE\nkveping roonia. $10 and $15 per\nmonth at 224 Seventh street. (3333)\ndiamond stick pin; $10 reward will\nbe paid to finder if returned to J. A.\nDadds, 714 Columbia street.    (2404)\nTI.K STERLING BI-OCK\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCORNEK\nKoyal avenue and Tenth street.\nMeals 25c or 21 (or $5.00; three-\nroom furnished suite, $16 per\nr-wmtta; single rooma from $1.75 a\nvt-e-ek ap. it.'M)\nLEFT  IN  FASHION  LIVERY  SEPT. I\n1 black mare, unless called fur    in\nthree days from date, Nov. 10, will\nbe sold to pay expenses. Bell, ingle I\n& Cj.\n(2390)\nPCRNITCRE, STORE STOCKS AND\n-term   sales   conducted.     Furniture .Dated this 10th day of Novemb.r\nbought (or cash.    P.  ll.  Drown, 17\nBegbie street, New Westminster,\nLIQUOR   LICENSE   NOTICE.\nNotice is hereby given that I intend\nto apply at the next sitting of thc\nBoard of License Commissioners for\nthe City of New Westminster for a\nbottle license and a wholesale license\nfor the sale of liquors in and upon\nthe premises siluated upon Lot 9. ct\nCity Block 24. in the said City of New\nWestminster, B.C.\nL, E. HAINES.\n__\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_       1!l1\n400)\n(J\n(2336)\nhv\ntfoiM*'. llimk*. nn B.C. and (.allfurnl\nra. pimin'T. Canadian Camp Life. 2ml efll-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.i-iiMi; Among tin- Peoples of B. C.; in the\nfc-U-lih-MS Wiih ; Nun, or Pioneer Woiram\nmatt Kin -lln' set! of rive for n.m\nmis: prr copy lill Jan. Ilth. \"\nK_ Hffrrim*;. 1117 Hamilton\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdW-siMminKi'T, B.O.. or any\n*-iiin>*.     Discount lu Uie trade.\nA-idrers.1   1'.\nSt,     Now\nof    (lie   bOOU\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'!\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd)\nAUCTION SALE\nSAO I.R1ITS COI.LKCTED -EVERY\nwhere. No collection, uo charge\nABM'-rJca-iVaucouver Mercantile Ag\neacy, 316 Hastings atreet west.\nC-TUSf--. D.C. '\nVan-\n(2332)\ntStttM OF NEW WESTMINSTER.\nHouseholders' Voters\" List.\nNotice ia hereby given that a Court\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdof Hevtsi.m ou above list will be held\non Saturday, the 15th daty of Novoni-\ntw-rr, at JO o'clock in the forenoon, fn\nttie Council Chamber, (\"ily Hall, New\nWe.Uiufnater\nW.  A. DUNCAN, City Clerk.\nCity Hal!, November 6, 1913.      (2368)\nOn Thursday next, November 13.\n1913, I will sell by public auction\n(absolutely without reserve), the\nfurniture and effects of Mr. A. Ingles'\nwell appointed residence, on the premises at\n504 Agnes St., at 1.30 p. m.\nSharp.\nSale will comprise in part cf very\nfine cottage pianoforte, solid quarter\n.sawed oak dining room suite, Circas-\nj sian walnut bedroom BUlta Of chiffon\nier, dresser, etc., that cost $3fj'i. .Malleable range, iron and brass bedsteads\nsprings and mattresses, large quantity\nof silverware, crockery and kitchen\nutensils, etc., etc. Everything musl\ngo.   Ti rms cash.\nattend the convention of the American\nFederation of l.abor, now  in session\nhere.\nThe Waitress' union ls the only woman's club Miss Younger haB ever\njoined, and the Trades I'nion league\nthe only federation; and Bhe is proud\nof it. The one way to help tlie working girl is to assist the unions, Miss\nYounger  reiterates  over  and  over.\n\"I suppose women's clubs and associated charities are well enough,\"\nshe said this morning, \"but the former\nare factional and th-\"1 hitler are more\nbeneficial to the settlement workers\nthan the ones they are trying to help.\nThis is the chief good that comes\nfrom settlement work; it gives us\nsome idea of conditions. 'But the only i\nreal benefit for the laborer must come\nthrough the unions.\nLabor Movement Most Vital.\n\"The labor movement and the worn-\nan movement are the two interests of'\nmy life; but the labor movement is\nthe most vital. Suffrage will help\nworking women because their votes\nWill count, for something.'but trades\nunions will help them more. If any\nwoman relly wants to help mpre unfortunate women, she will not join a\nclub nor a charitable organization; she\n[Will work with the trades unions.\"\nA number of years ago Miss Younger had got as far as New York on a\ntrip around the world, when she he-\ncar-io interested In settlement work.\n\"Just as a fad, 1 suppose.\" she said.\nShe intended to stay in it a week or\nso. She stayed five years. She came\nhack to San Francisco and\nwaitress in a restaurant on her own\nproperty. She kept a notebook of her\nexperiences and afterward published\nthem in serial form in McClure's Magazine. The work attracted much attention, for never before had a bona\nfide account of the daily trials of the\nwaitress been give nto the world.\nMiss Younger was elected president of\nthe largest organization of the kind\nin America, Seattle, under the leadership uf Miss Alice Lord, holding second  place.\nMiss Younger laughed this morning\nwhen she told of being arrested as a\nstrikir in New York -and cried when\nshe told oftiie sufferings of the girls.\nIt WSB the strike of the white goods\nworkers in New York last winter and\nthis woman of independent means,\nproperty owner in San Francisco,\ndaughter of a proud house, arose every\nmorning at 4::'.0 o'clock to serve on\npicket duty.\nSpeaks in Many Languages.\nDuring the strike Miss  Younger addressed meetings in the afti'i-noon. She\nMiss   Younger   was   again\nfor Europe when Ihe strike broke out. j neV_,pa\"pcrlockout in 1912, thu press\nShe stayed  to assist   or a few  days, mM   ,,.,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,,,,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   _B   newsboys   to   aid\nand   week   after   week   the     strikers  toem   and  expended  $27,000  In  bone\nwould b, g her to stay a few days long-, f\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   alrectly t0 thern.\ner.    In spite of this and former like,    Th(, m(m, wi\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd be oppt)Sr(1 ,,y l(,ad.\nexperiences    she   sas   sandwiched   In   ,       officials of the typographical  and\nseven trips to Europe    She spent thoLjso in the sterootypers' unions   '\nlast summer in the Balkans, and as she ibpen comemlfl(1 by th\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdm ln lh\n^^~    not\nshould not be chur-\nand the charms of the Balkan hills to | ^Jj \"ot!t\"ot  tlie' war zone, enjoyed  alj;hat the newsboys nr* merchants\npeaceful  vacation.\nNOELEMAN AT HEAD OF\nHOD CARRIERS'  UNION\nD'Alessandro.\nartisans.\ntered as\nand hen\na trade union\nLAND REGISTRY ACT.\nFRED DAVIS\nAuctioneer.\nParticulars   at   Russell's Westmin-\nter Auction  House, Columbia street.\n(2403)\n'Re Lot ii. of Blocks  148 and  149, of\nE-o* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd)**. Oioup 1, Map 1757, in the\nIMS tl 111 of New Westminster.\nWkaeoas proof of the loso of Cert ifl\nmmtmrnt lute Number 21331., Issued In\nttsm name of Harry Cline,   haa   been\niiii-i in this office.\nNotice Is hereby given that I sliall.\nmt tlie -aspiration of one month from\ntlu* ditte of the first publication hereof,\nin it daiiv newspaper published in the\nCity nt Nc*- Westminster. Issue a\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdS-x-nx-en.tr: of the said Certificate, UB\"\nIt-am in ihe meantime valid objection\nSir ruad-e In me ln writing.\n3. C. GWYNN,\n'District Registrar of Titles.\nl-.-1\/vt iiegistry Office,\nHam Vii-niminster, H.C., October !).\ntail. (2226)\nLIQUOR  LICEN8E  NOTICE.\n-HfllUB IS KV.UKHY (-IVKN (bat I in-\n-e_-,T ;u the n*-xi mieiiiiK of the Board\n*** r.m-*-n*e Cnmmtaslondn to ann-ty for a\ntj-ci-v...-- tr-.-*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ttiyitelf, (-tiar-li-M tVli-wi-itili,\nt\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd SA- K. M.-wKensle and Bnfba l^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*n. of\nth* c\ufffd\ufffdn;,ii liquor llcensr of the Colonial\nVx.tx.ei f,tx tliir. <-ilv.\nCIIAKLKS   -SCHWAIIN*\ncant\nW.-rtrrrSfurt'T,  H.O\nCANADIAN PACIFIC\nCOAST SS. SERVICE\nFamous\nSkin Soap\nFree!\n.Dallj\n.Daily\n.Dally\nAppllennt.\nNov. illi.  1\ufffd\ufffd1\"\nFrom Vancouver fo.- Victoria.\n00 a iu\t\n^:H(i   p in\t\n11:46  p.m\t\nFrom Vancouver for Seattle.\n10:00 a.m Da I)\n11:00 a in    Daily\nFrom   Vancouver  for   Nanaimo.\n3:00   p.m Dallj\nNanaimo,  Union  Bay and  Comcx.\n8:00 n.m Wednesday and Friday\nVancouver,  Union  Bay,  Powell   River.\n11:46  a.m Kvery  Saturday\nFor Prince  Rupert and Alaska.\n11:00 p.m Kvery Saturday\nPrince Rupert, Granby Bay and Skeena\nRiver Points.\n11:00 p.m Wednesdays\nFor Gulf Island Points.\n7:00 an. Tuesdays for Victoria,   Call\nin? at points in the Gulf Islands.\nED. GOItl.RT,   Agent,  New  WeatmliMter\nH. W. BTtDDHC. O. P. A.. Vancouver\nAtw.1111. ly frn\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdti '-.1 cent rnke of D. D. I). 1\nSkin s-i-p, wiih tlie pnrciiaM of a full \ufffd\ufffd.-*,- t>\ufffd\ufffdt-\ntle of I). D. D. Pre-oriptlon fnr EcMina -fnr 15\npears Uie standard nkni remedy. Relief Slur.\nii.ind \/mm this lirst bottle or ymir money refunded,   I). I). I). Skin Soap, purest and bland*\n-t nt skin S'uiti*. .sii'iuiii always be used in\niniiiiiitii.il v.nu l> li. 1). Praacrtptlon, the\n-'-.iii ins, beal Ini lotion. We h:iv_ mado fie\ufffd\ufffdt\nfriend-of moro than one fitmllyby recommend-\ninjr tin m'i f:,mi,ni producti mul ire want yot* lo\nIry Hi in imw on the HWiftl iiffir. 'Ihli ii iin-\nmediate, Vmi une-t t.riiiK thi- .nl with ynu.\ntv in- today.\nI'nilii-ii' T, Hill, Druggist, Columbia\nStreet, Ni \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*.-. Westminster.\nCavalier Domlnlck\ngeneral president of th\" international\nHod Carries' and liuildiriR Laborers'\nI'nion of America, and the delegate of\nthat organization to the convention of\ntlie American Federation of Labor, Is\na sure enough Italian count. Although\nCavalier Is the prefix which is officially attached to his name, it means the\nsnme thing as count, and it Is as\nCount D'Alessandro that he Is known\ngeneraly among his many acquaintances In the labor world.\nUnlike many Italian counts, the object of Count D'Alessandro in coming\nto America was not to acquire a for-\nttife by contracting matrimony    with |\nsome American heiress. Hathcr. Count I\nD'Alessandro sought to travel the road ;\nto success over the hod carriers' route.\nEighteen  years  ago  lie  landed    in\nHoston along with other Italian imini-\ngrouts.    He was not then a count and\nhad  no idea  'hat  he  would  ever  become one, yet  he acquired tbat title\n.and  has  medals  and     credentials  to\nprovn it.\nAfter  a   few   years  of  life   in   this\ncountry. Count D'Alessandro    became\nfamiliar   with   American   labor   riuidl-\nitions  and   a  staunch  believer  in  the\nj value of organization of laborers.    Hei\n'became  auili.ited   with   the  organiza-1\ntlon of his trade and  grew  to be an\nbecame a i influential   member  of  his  ulon.    As |\nhis conceptions of the value of united\naction grew, he also became familiar!\nwith   those   conditions  of   labor,   par-1\nticularly among his own countrymen, i\nwhich in liis opinion fell far below the i\nstandard of the ideal.\nAt tliat time the pardons system\nexisted among Italian laborers in\nBoston. Under this system tlmini-\ngrants from Italy were bound to a\ncontractor and forced to pay heavy\ntribute because he obtained work for\nthern when they came to America. The\nIgnorant immigrant, i ager to get a job\nland unfamiliar with conditions, was\nvictimized and forced to labor under\nconditions no better and often worse\nthnn those he had lert Italy to es-\ncap *.\nCount  D'Alessandro set aboul.  finding mean.-* to remedy these conditions.\nIThrough   his   connection   with   organ-\ni ized labor he began a determined fight\nupon the padrone system.\nThis fight he began in iOfil and It\nhaa resulted ln the practical abolishment of tlie system In Iloston. Labor\nleaders In other cities took up the\nfight with Ihe result that contract labor among Italian worknyn h:is been\nlargi ly eliminated.\nIn recognition of his services to the\nItalian people In America. Kjng Victor Iinmaniiel of Italy bestowed upon\nD'Alessandro  the  title  of    Cavalier.\nHedalS also were given him by the\n.kin-? and by several labor organizations In Italy and the 1'nited States.\nIn eighteen yeaTB Count D'Alessan-\ndro has not returned to the Innd or his\nnativity. He hns remained in tliis\n[country and is now head of th\" International organization of his trade lhis in touch with liin r movements and\n'' I * '* li Brit ra and Is himself one of\ntbi learli rn rf thi uni in moi emenl\nthc r.i. . ! States.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdgeant-at-arr\ni messenger.\nthe summery of the\ni xecutlve council, start-\nlunch hour, waa contin\nylee-Presidellt     .Illllli'S\nDuncan, and  upon  its completion  llie\nvarious Items referred to In the report\nwere assigned to their proper eomnilt\ntees, together with several letters\nwhich were read liefore the convention and which required oommlttee action.\nThe complete list of committee appointments follows:\nCommittee on Rules and Order of\nBuslnOM\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdT. A Hiekert. Sam Hriggs.\n.f. I). Cannon, .lohn Sullivan, T. T.\nCsrey, M. .1 Cohan, J, M. Tobln. O. M.\nPartelow, .lohn O, Owen, II. P, Corcoran, David King, .lames J. Doyle, W. J.\nBrennan, David Holts, .les. D. Andrea.\nCommittee <>n Report of Executive\nCouncil -T.   W.     McCullough.    Krank\nDuffy, .lames Wilson, W, ll. Mahon, ('.\nL.   lllaine,   Hugh   Stevenson,     T.     V.\nO'Connor,  Win.  (Jri-en,    Thomes    TF.\nMarlin  Lawlor. Thomas  Kesr-\nug. .lere L   Bul-\n^^^^^^^^^    I   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   Itowe\nCommittee on    Resolutions   .lames\nDuncan, John P. Krey, (i. W. Perkins,\nI?.   A.   Larger,   Edmund   K.   Ward.  .Io- |\nseph   N.   Wl her.   .lohn   A.   Vull,   1.   A. ,\nFranklin, Matt Comerford, M. K. Hyan. I\nC.  P. Pahey, .lames T.  Moriarity.    A  j\nMcAndrew,   Henry   I'.ngaske.   William;\nI'mstadter, Samuel  (lompers.\n(Committee  on   Laws    lohn   II.  Len-'\nncn. Daniel .1. Tobln. Rnady KenehSU,\nThomas Ituinsey, Charles 1'. Ford, Patrick  Klynn,  (Ieorge  W.  Brlggs. T.  J.'\nDolan. Thomas F. Flaherty, S. K. lleb-\n\"lu,s j berllng, James W. Kline. A. IV Sovev.\nPaBt ! William J. Kelly, M. T. Mulcahy, Car\nret ]\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'. Burns.\nCommittee on Organization Thom\nas L. Hughes, Prank Knrrington. Jo\nseph Proebstle, Frank A. Scovy. John\nJ. Harry, Sanltago Igleslas, James\nO'Connor, Walter Mitchell. J. Gold-\nstone, \\bniham Rosenberg, T, M. Daly.\nJohn T. Taggart. Fred C. Wheeler,\nThomas J. Curtis, John J. Fenton.\nCommittee on Labels -John W.\nHays. Michael F. Oreen. A. A. Myrup.\nJohn A. Dyche, W. E. Klapetzky, ... M.\nHariies. Owen Miller, Victor Altman,,\nWilliam Kearney, Manuel Koveleskl.\n' I.ouis Kemper, F. J. Klernan. Max\nZuckerfflaU, E. J. Urals. John M. (Hills-\n.pie.\nCommittee on  Adjustment        John\nMitchell, John Holden. Matthew Woll. .\nDavid A. Carey, Hugh J. Conway, Hugh\n' Fruyne.   E.   Lewis     Evans.     Edward '\n' Flore. Kd    Anderson.   Qeorge    Leary,\n| William Taber. II. C. Shalvoy. John I). I\nDulea,   Charles   Anderson,    John     T.\n'Smith.\nCommittee on Local and Federated\nBodies If. li. 1'erham. Charles II.\nMoyer, James .!. McAndrews, r. .1\n: Flannery, Frank Gugenback. Joseph F.\nWinkler. I'., ti. Moser. Charles J. Haw\nley. Marlin B. Goellnltz. John H. (ial\nlasher. T J Harvey. William F. Kra-\nmer, P. i). Glynn, Harry Cook, s. B.\nO'Brien\nCommittee on Education    Joaeph  F.\nValentine,  James  l.  Qernon,  A.  m.\nSchwartz, John H. Walker William A\nNeer, James J. Sweeney, Fred W. Suitor.      William      Chrlstmiin.    Germane\n  . Quinn. N. F. Olfford, Arthur Davis,  A\nthan BOO couples on the I\"    Lowe,   Bdward   I.   Hannah,  J.   F\nHannahan, Thomas J, Williams, Frank\nA.  Tvletuioe,    Frank    M.\nVoung,\nMed rath,     1\nJoseph\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,ma nl\nFeeney,  O.    \t\nCommittee on Finance J. C. Shan-\nI'Ssy. Duncan McDonald, J. M. O'SIon\nnor, (i  ll. Wright, Q, W. Print J- w-\nMorton,   Lester   Wolif,   J    II.   Brown,\nlames  M. Sweeney,  Kdmond  Kalelg-h,\nThumts   Harrison,   M.\nHoffman,   I   J.     ^^^^^^^^^^^\nXurkguui .'.\nCommittee  on   Ways  and   Means\n'J. C. Skemp, F   P.  I.amoreltux.\niQrtmshSW, Morris Brown, W. I).\nAdam   Sliaiiky,   M.   J    Mctiuire,\n. Pots, S. J. McCormick, ('.\n| Jacob   Fischer,t  Thomas\n| UYsley Uussell, W.       \t\n! Moore.\nI     Cotnlmttes  on   Shorter   Workday--\nPaul     Sch.-irreiilierg\nThomas   Kennedsy,\nP.  Marsh. W   It   Bla-\nBesttle,\nWilliam\nFrank\n('lurk.\nJ   II.\nA. Guntlier,\nS      Farrell.\nVim Horn, John\nLABOR AND CAPITAL\nARE SIMPLY PARTNERS\nThe\nboth-\n\"l.abor and capital are partners.\"\nsaid Secretary of Labor Wilson, nd-\n! dressing an assemblage of about it.0'10\n'persons at the tTnlverslt) of Washington yesterday morning. \"They must\nwork together to obtain the best result:.\n\"The great questions loday In the\nlabor world are production and distri\ntuition, With the aid of modern ma-\n! chinery the question of production lias\nbeen solved to 8 large extent.\nI question Of distribution is still\n1 eriiiiv us.\n\"The laborer is entitled lo an equit-\niable share of the things lie produces,\n' This is what all persons Interested In\n! labor conditions are now Beeklng to at-\n! tain.\n\"Strlkrs  are   miniature  wars.     Hut\nthe   world  hasn't  been  able  to  eliminate war yet. so it is only natural that i\nwe have strikes.\"\nThe  meeting  was presided over by\nDean  Arthur S.  Daggett, of tre  University  of  Washington, and   was  at-!\ntended   by   many   besides    university I\nstudents.\n9C0 COUPLES ON  FLOOR\nAT TEAMSTERS' BALL\nI'hll  II    Mueller.\nVan  Dinner, R. 1^^^^^^^\nlock. P. it. Stewart. Samuel\nT. J. Morrin. A. O. Wharton,\nToms. 1''  K. Mackie. Charles L   Miller,\nDennis Murphy.\nCommittee on I'roposod Amendments to state Constitutions- M M.\nDonohgue  Charles ('\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Shay,   C.    I.\n[Shamp, Thomas Wright. U>:i Ds Yar-\n* lniiiid, V. T. Evans, H. D RrlbhS, N.\n,11.   Klrkpatrlck.   B.   M.   Long,   C,   B.\nWard. Joseph Dennis. Carl Iti-rgstrom.\n111. O. Alexander, J. J. Fnrnan, K.  U,\nWarr.\nCommittee a. f. or I.. OBee Building   George   I..   Berry,   Wllllsm   O.\nJones Max S. Hayes, ('. E .liiines, W.\nI, Cooke, Fred Harper. Alexander Ironside.-J. II. Etc bison. W, B. Jones. j\ufffd\ufffd,\nW Bueklev, T. II. Bolton. Frank l.a\nBrash. II M. Munn. I. W. Butler, T 11.\nBurchatd.\nCommittee, on Departments Charles\nH. Mover, Joe W. Birnes. (' (I lhi*\nlander, Fred W. Bills Joseph P Valentine, James A, Short. John II l.etmon,\nHenry Koch, J. M Gavlak. J N Daw\n|son, J. H. McVety, Joseph Oherfell,\nU A. Grace. William Knerr, II Put-\ntrlch.\nCommittee on Inlernallon.il Relations G W, Perkins, c i. Blaine,\nLouis Kemper Daniel J. Tobin. James\nDuncan, B. a. Larger, John H   Walk\ner. James O'Connell, Max S. Hayes,\nJohn l'. Prey, T. V, O'Connor, Thomas\nF. Tracy. George |.. Berry, W. B. Kla-\nj pelsky, James Wilson.\nKilled at Coal Creek.\nFernie. Nov. l'_ A distressing accident occurred at Coal creek on Mon\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd day night last. A car broke away on\nthe Incline from the boiler liouse to\nthe ash pile. Descending with considerable force, it struck Constantino\nI Iliibbore, who was killed, Snd J H.\nSterling, who had both legs broken\nIn\nFEDERAL   EMPLO\/EES TO\nDISCUSS ORGANIZATION\nWith  more        ____________________________\nfloor during the time that dancing was\nthe order. Teamsters'  Union,  No.   171\ngave  Its  fifth  annual  ball  at   Dream\nland pavilion last night. The\na   benefit   affair   and   its   big   success j\nwas largely due to the fact  tbat the\nproceed! were to go to a fund to aid\nthe members of the organization now\non  strike.\nIt had been expected that Samuel j\nGompers. president of the American I\nFederation of Labor, would be present i\nto lead the grand march with Mrs.\nGompers, but before the dancing be- j\ngan Daniel J. Tobln, president of tho\nInternational Brotherhood of Team ;\nsters,  mounted the musicians' stand\nand explained that Mr. Gompers, under\n:his  physician's orders, could  not at-\n: tend\nPresident Tl !>in made a few general\nremarks nn the conditions of 'he\nteamsters' union, then announced\nthat ThomaB L. Hughes, secretory-\ntreasurer Of the International brotherhood, would lead tiie grand march\nSecretary Frank Morrison und oth \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nhtigh officials of the American Federation attended the ball.\nA feature of the bull was a mars\nthon twosti'if for a prize of $10.    The\nI winners were Hus Crawford and Mrs.\n* Ji in.elle  Smith.\nI\nHOME  FOR  FEDERATION\nIN   WASHINGTON   SOUGHT\nConstruction of a suitable ofllce\nbuilding for headquarters of the American Federation of l.abor al Washing\nton,. D. O.i will be one of the chief\nmatters to be considered at the present convention connected with the bus-\nin\"*-*-, side of the organization. Thai\nactual -.wirk may lie started during\nthe coming ysar is the desire of the\nexecutive ( iuil of the federation.\nDuring the past yiar various prop\nertles and sld:. were examined bul\nnone of them wero found satisfactory\nfrom a financial itandpolnL\nPrye, W. W. Waters.\nCommittee   on   Suite   Organizational\nJohn It   Alpine. Frank Btitterworth. [\nball WSs|W..J,  Cooke.   Myer   Hoseriherg.   I).   F.\nFeatherston.  Walter V   I'rice.  Hubert\ns. Marshall, Thomas Van Lear, Oeorge\nI'. I.istman, Robert H. Campbell, C. L.\nVan Horn. John T. Foster. Maier\nSchwartz. James T, Patterson, A. 11.\nKempton.\nCommittee on Boycotts --D. A.\nHayes, A. .1. Kugler. Tlm Henity. Mar-\naaret C. Daley W 11. Ilemsell, B. F.\nLamb, James l.i nnon, William McEwen, Fred I'riulhome, (i. E. Soyster,\nJohn Donlln. It P. I.els. Thomas\nSlatterly, J. J. Morris, M. T. Burton.\nCommittte on Building Trades\n.lumen A. Short, P. J. MeNiilty. P. II.\nMcCarthy, Qeorge Hedrlck, William J.\nMcSorley, John J. Hlnes, D. D'Ales-\nstndro, E. .1. V'llivcrn. Charles M.\nRan, William  II   Johnstone, James (!.\nAT 60 ENJOYING\nPERFECT HEALTH\nBecause Hi Takes OIN PILLS\nA prominrnt Consulting Engineer cf\nN-w York City, thus heartily -endorses\nGIN PILLS :\n_9 Broadway, New Vork.\n\"I bought some of vour C.IS PILLS\nat Victoria, B.C., last beptetnl <-r. Yot*\nremedy I find, at 6o years ol age, to give\nperfect relief from tbe Kidney nnd\nllladder Troubles incident to one of my\ns^e. I urgently recommend GIN 1'ILI.S\nto friends as being the one thing that\ndoes me good.\" E. O. WOODFORD,\nDy the time a mnn or woman is 6o,\nthe Kidneys and Bladder need a little\nhelp to keep in good working order.\nGIN PILLS are what thry need. GIN\nPILLS keep the urine neutral, prevent\ncolds settling on the kidneys or bladder\nsnd ward ofTRIieumiitic attac k^\nRemember, every b,,x of GIN PILLS\nis sold with a positive guarantee to give\nperfect   satisfaction   or    your   money\npromptly refunded.\nx,k. a 1kjje,6 for fi 50,   Sample free it\nj you write National Drugs nd Chemical\n!  to. of Canada, Limited, Tonmlo.    i;b\n33 Hours to Prince Rupert\nDOUBLE WEEKLY SERVICE\nuriNTUiVS-12 midnight for Prince Rupert. StewarL\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdrvi\"DAYI* -18 midnight tor Victoria and Besttle.\nTHDRSDAT8-U midnight for I'rlnce Rupert, flrnnby\nS \\TlUtDAYS -12  midnight  for Victoria and Seattle.\nFHIDAVS  -12 midnight, Oct. -1st.   Nov.   14-28.   for   Queen   Charlotte\nIslands (Direct Service.)\nMONDAY*    12 midnight, Nov. 310  Tor Massel, via\nMondays  and  Thursdays  steamers  make close\nnm ,    with drand Trunk I'acific trains for Terrace, N-\n[0n and  Smithers;   mixed  service  from   Smllhcr*   to   Rl\n(Mile 800.)\nTickets to all points east and to   Europe\nline.\nHay.\nPrince  Rl\nconnection  at\npi rt\nPrince\nHanoi'\nl.nke\nAny   rail   and   steamship\nII. 0. SMITH, C. P. & T. A.\n627 Grunvllle Street, Vancouver.\nW.  E.  DIIPEHOW,  (J.   A    P,   ll\n1 hone Private Exchange 8184\nWATER ACT.\nLIQUOR   LICENSE   NOTICE.\nNotice Is hereby given thai I  intend\nto apply at the next    Bitlinj.    of Iho\n! Licensing  Hoard  for the Cily or New\nWestminster for a  renewal of license\njto sell  liquors by retail on  the premises known  as  the  Royal  City  Hotel,\n! situated at corner of Customs  House\nI Square and  Columbia Street, in    the\nsaid City of New  Wesiminster.\nE. FALCII.\nNew Westminster, Nov. 8, 1918.\n(2398)\nHEE CHUNG\nUBRCHANT TAILOR\nSie-w IsBirx-irted Kail Suitings now on\na*titi*Aay.    rtt-e them.    Perfect  fit   and\n-tsrortana-Bafairi guaranteed. Prices from\n\ufffd\ufffdl\ufffd\ufffd.w\ufffd\ufffd am.   70! Front Street.\nWESTMINSTER\nIRON   WORKS.\nTliJ.ll     Office S3. Residence 42*9.\nJOHN Rf-ID, Proprietor.\nGCMCftAt. MACHINE WORK,\nCNOINCCH4NO ANO\nflLACKMUTHtNO.\nA\ufffd\ufffdei\ufffd\ufffdts    Palmer    Bn*:  Cesollse\nIS.**?***. Marine BD-fluea A** Auto-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>'.\ufffd\ufffd Repairs.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.iur.* and Works: Tetith *t\ni\ufffd\ufffd o. unt 474.   Mew WislsslMlsr,\nNotice of Application for the Approval\nof Works.\nTake notice lhat John William Wise\nand Kdmond Thompson will apply to\nthe Comptroller of Water Rights for\nthe approval of the plans of the workc\nto be constructed for the utilization of\nthe waler from Allen or Osprey creek\nwhich the applicant Is. by Water l'er\nin it No. 138, authorized to take, store.\nsnd use for Industrial purposes.\nThe plans and particulars required\nby subsection (1) of section 7h of tin\n\"Water Act\" as amended have been\nfiled with the Comptroller of Water\nRights at Victoria and with the Water\nRecorder at New Westminster.\nObjections to the application may be\nliled with the Comptrollc.r of Wnter\nRights, Parliament Buildings, Victoria.\nDated at New Wesiminster, II.C,\nthla 30th day of September, 191 ?,.\n.fOHN WILLIAM WISE.\n(2282) EDMOND THOMPSON.\nLAND   REGISTRY   ACT.\nIto the Southeast Quarter of Seotloi\n2a, Township 8, In the District   ol\nNew* Westminster.\nWhereas proof of the loss of Cer\ntiflcate of Title Number 121(14 K, in\nsued In the name of James C. KoiIodl\nand Charles Hummel has been filed In\ntbls office.\nNotice Is hereby given that I shall\nat the expiration of one month from\nthe date of the llrst publication here\nof, in a daily newspaper published In\ntho City of New Westminster, IsBiie\na duplicate of the said certificate, nn-\nlesH In the meantime valid objection\nbe made to me In writing.\n,1. C. OWYNN,\nDistrict IleglBtrar of Titles.\nLand Registry Office,\nNew Westminster, B.C., October 18.\n1913. (2263)\nFederal civil service employed In\nSeattle .*\"*d other parte of the north;\nwesl will hold a mass meeting in thla\ncity Friday evening in connection wiih\nthe convention of the American Fed-\nleratlon of Labor. Large representations from the l'uget Sound navy vard\nwlll be | ^^^^^^^^^^\nthe ground work for a more definite\nbond of association and co-operation\nwill be formed.\nThomaa E. Flaherty, secretary of the\nNational Association of Postofflce\nclerks, and a delegate to the convention, wil Idellver an address, and other speakers will be Henry Weiss, Immigration service, Seattle; T. D. Alns-\nworth, i'* init.rai.inii Inspector, California; T. W McCullough, delegate, typographical union, and Oeorge T. McNft-\nmara.   The place of holding the meet-:\nling will be Announced later.\nSix  different  resolutions  affecting\ngovernment employees wero IntrodUC\ned  last  night  before  the    federation\nconvention   and   referred     to    proper |\ncommittees for action.    Chief among\nthem   were  protests  against   the  pro- \\\nDosed re-opening of postofflces on Sun-j\ndays, and the reduction of letter tales\nfrom two cents to one cent.\nOther   resolutions   brought   forward\nby Delegate Flaherty endorsed    a hill j\npending   before  congress   lo   Increase I\nthe salaries of carriers and clerks In |\n-1EK\nCNDORSEMENT OF\nMOTHERS' DAY PLAN\nApproval and endorsement of the annual commemoration of Mothers' Day,\ni.n the second Sunday of May of each\n  yiar,  will  I sought from the Ameri-\nsent, and It Is possible that can Federation of Labor at Its convention meeting now in Seattle. Ilepre*\nsentatlvea of the movement have already approached the executive council and requested their co-opera Hon on\ntlm ground that the anniversary was n\ndecided Influence towards the uplift\nof citizenship In general.\nEffort, wlll be made to have the convention declare Itself In favor of affiliated organizations and their memberships unserving tin day officially\nand in a body. The custom of wearing a White rarnatlon ns a boutonniero\nprevails on Mothers' Day.\nBUILDERS AND CONTRACTORS.\nOur Interior Finish Is manufactured from timber specially select-\ned for Flat Oraln.\nWo ure also specializing in Kir Doors  with\nwhich urn better ln construction,   more  beautiful\npensive than the old solid raised panel doors.\nOet our prices before placing your orders.\nVeneered    Panels,\nand  no  more  ex-\nA. F. L.\nCOMMITTEES\nPICKED  EY CONVENTION\nAppointment and confirmation of\nthe various commllttu'H wns the principal work of the A. f. of L. 'convention nfter II convened. President lioin-\npers asked nnd received tin npproval\nof the convention to the appointment\nof n number of additional committees\non ways and means, finance, proposed\nstale constitution  amendments,  A.   F.\n\"THE FRASER RIVER MILLS\n(CANADIAN WESTERN LUMBER CO., LTD.'\nLocal Sales Department, Phone 890\nft\nflrsl-clnss offices to a maximum of tl,-;   , .    _,m_\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,.,,,,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd., i\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,..-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-u\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi\n400; 8 movement for the retire,,,,,,, of \\\ufffd\ufffd[-h \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdc\" 1,l\"\"ilnK nmI lnt'\"'nallonBl\nsuperannuated   government  ompoveos       President   (lompnrs nl   Ihe  opening\non pension:  a bill before congress to    , \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd H,,flH,(\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,  announr0(, the appoint-j\ncompensate   fed,,*,,    employees     who,   \ufffd\ufffd    t ()f (, , w   ,,-,_\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd a\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdslsl\ufffd\ufffdit\nhad been injured while in government HCCretary 0,  tht. convention;   BJ.   H.\nservice,  and    a    movement    limiting.\nThe Bank of Vancouver\nHEAD   OFFICE:   VANCOUVER,   B.C.\nBranches Throughout tha Province of Britiah Columbia.\nSavings Department al all Branches Deposits of One Dollar and\nupwards received and Interest st the highest current rale paid or\ncredited half yearly.\nA OENERAL BANKING BUSINESS TRANSACTED.\nDrafts snd Travellers' Cheques sold, payable In all parts of the\nCHAS. O. PENNOCK, Oeneral Msnsgsr.\nNew   Westminster   Oranch: A. W. BLACK, Manager.\n*-____Bi___________'-^^aaBBsaaaBasBKBsaiHBHi^BBSBHSanBBiiBaMai'a'-^anBSBs THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1913.\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS.\nMontreal Phones Burned Out.        j\nMoiitr.ai, ;-,ov.  13,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA three minute\nlire salted by a fuse blowing out iu\nUiu    Hell    telephone    exchange    this!\nmorning, burned out tiie cily and long I\ndisUnct- switchboards   und    left    the'\nbusnn!,..  -,i:i.iim  of  the city  without\nphone.,.\nThe Diamond j\nBlock     II\nA  Cssc of Too  Strong  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\"Detective Instinct\"\nBy CLARISSA MACKIE\n\\*t***A*tr*\\\nIt bsppened In Chicago.\nTbe Diamond block stands on a corner formed by two principal thorough\nfares, a lull building with buff stone\nwalls rising above tbe crowded streeta\nuntil tbe upper floors sre a blur to tbs\neye below.\nUp on the twentieth floor are tbe\noffices of John Diamond, owner of tbls\nbuilding nud many others of the same\nkind In the big metropolis. Many uud !\nvaried are tbe Interests of tbls rich i\nman and the transaction of his uffalr.*.\nrequires tbe reservation of the entire\ntwentieth floor for bis oftl.es.\nAll day  long dozens of clerks pore !\nover ledgers, typewriters snd adding\nmachines.\nMr. Din mond was seldom seen about\ntbe building. Most of bis business\nwas transacted through competent executives, of whom Henry Hobinson\nwas the chief. The lUiii.-iunds lived\nIn a inngi illieiit bouse on tbe lake\nfront sml went In for society. Helen\nDiamond, the beuutlful daughter uf\nthe lulitliinllli.iiulre. bad drifted\nthrough   tbe offices  once or twice  to\nbuilding,   where  every  foot  of  room\nwas valuable?\nTbut was the mystery, and George\nIirown resolved to solve It\nAt noon, us he nulled for the elevu\n(or, be saw tiie roof of tbe ascending\ncur stop Just below his floor level, mid\nbe distinctly beard Mr. HoIiImhoii -\nvoice. When Ibe elevator reached the\ntwentieth lloor It wus empty.\n\"I tlnn ght Mr. Itoblnsou wns on I incur,\" su'd Iirown curiously.\nTbe middle aged operator shook his\nbend negatively.\nHenry Hobinson. the manager of tbe\nDiamond Interests, was u martinet In\ndiscipline. Oeorge Hrown despised\nblm accordingly und knew with unerring certainty thut be could hll Hub-\nbison's Job with one band tied behind\ntilm.\nIirown argued thus: Henry Robin-\nsou had supervised tbe building of the\nDiamond block\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd whut more natural I\nthuu be sbo,.ld connive to have one of\ntlie floors sealed t<> public knowledge,\nyen. even tbe knowledge of bis guile\nless employer, nnd use it to bis own\niiilviiutiige. What sort of work was\ncurried on secretly there? George\nBrown bnd lt ail figured out to a\nuleety; counterfeiting, of course.\nHobinson. tbe counterfeiter! What\ns morsel for tbe amateur detective to\nroll under bis tongue.\nBut Oeorge Hrown wanted to be\nvery sure that he wus right before\nspringing his Information npon tbe unsuspecting John Diamond, Just nt this\ntime Mr. Diamond wns in the west\nSo i.eorge Hrown entered tbe tall.\nbuilding across the street and surveyed the Diamond block from the out- i\nside aud sliulied the Diamond block\nfrom su upper flour whose windows\n'were on u level with the windows of\nthe mysterious unnumbered floor of\nthe Diamond bluck\nCounting carefully be found the!\nnineteenth floor, guld lettered win\ndow. of lbs Dover lustiruiice company\nquite distinct\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtben nt,other set of windows unlettered, closely curtniiied.\nthen above them the wire screened\nwindows uf the Diamond offices,\nknown us the twentieth floor.\nAt  Inst be decided to consult n de-\ntectlre.\nRo one evening nt 0 O'clock Ibe elevator curried up tlve passengers-\nOeorge Brown. Allen, the detective,\nuud two p\"lli emeu In plain clothes nud\ns reporter from the Dully Disbup. for\nBrown did not wuut his triumph to\npush uunolieed.\nWhen tbey had risen several stories\nAllen placed his band on the arm of\nthe elevator uiuti end showed a revolver '\n\"You are my prisoner.\" he said coolly. \"Now. my man. no fuss. Just\nstop nt that iiiinuuilK-red floor between\nthe nineteenth and twentieth.\"\nWblte uf face und wltb muttered\nprotests the mnn brought the ear to a\nStandstill before that mysterious, un\nnumbered splice that hud attracted tbe\nattention of keen young Brown. In-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd trad of opening tbe usual door, the\nman turned and slid buck a door lo\ntk* rear of the elevator, disclosing u\ncerrespuiidlng doorway In tbe wall.\nTbut wus the entrance to the uu\nmini!.enl! floor\nGeorge llrowu wns a tremble with\nexultation\nSEATTLE  ABAND0N8\nPORT TERMINAL SCHEME\nSeattle, Nov. 12.- Por the time being, at least, the port commission has\ngiven up its tentative plan for the organization of a terminal railroad. A\nstudy of the scheme showed that it\nj would cost more money than the port\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd district could hope to raise within a\nI reasonable length of time for such a\npurpose.\nIf the plan for au exchange of land\nI with Uie (ireat Northern railroad on\nthe Salmon bay waterway and\nSmith's cove goes through the port\ndistrict may fall heir to a short piece\nof railroad, but this probubly wtll be\noperated by one of the existing lines\nund would not be a port district burden.\nI The terminal railway scheme, that\nonce threatened to come up this year,\nwas dropped from the port diBtrtct\nhearing this afternoon when a hearing wan held on projects that tiie commissioners Intend to submit on December 0 for popular approval.\nI'lans which the port commission\nwants ratified Include the creation of\nDistricts 'i and 10, wblch Include, respectively, Lakes Union and Washington; a {360.000 bond Issue to build a\nflve\ufffd\ufffdtory, concrete building In the\nrear of the Central waterfront district\ndock at the foot of Bell street, and\nwhich is planned to be a cold Btorage\nwarehouse; a $176,000 bond issue lo\nbuild a bulkhead aeross thc head of\nthe Smith cove waterway at Fifteenth\navenue northwest and Emerson street,\nto fill In the port district land behind\nIt and lo build a 1.000-foot dock extending into the Salmon bay waterway. A port district fresh water dock\nInside the locks, ls sought In this\nscheme.\nTHIRST TOO GREAT, SO\nTHEY QUIT PAVING\nMontreal, Nov. Vi. About ten  men\nemployed by the firm of Quinlun &\nRobortSOn, for the paving of Ihe road\nat tlie corner of Notre Dame street\nand Cote St. Haul road, went out on\nstrike yesterday afternoon.\nThe trouble occurred shortly after\nthree o'clock, when two of the pavers\ndeciding that their thirst was of more\nimportance than the paving of the\nroad, put down their tools and went\nto a nearby saloon.\nOn Ihelr return the superintendent\ngave orders to Mr Hover, the foreman, to have them discharged. They\nwero paid off. and told to go, but this\ndid not end the matter, as the remaining pavers, seeing their fellow work\nmen discharged, also took up their belongings and quit work.\nUp to the present time no workmen\nhast; becn found to continue the pav\ning.\nYOU NEVER HAD\nA BUYING\nOPPORTUNITY\nLIKE THIS BEFORE\nFales' Retiring,  from   the   Furniture   Business  Gives\nYou the Opportunity to Save About One-Half\non Your Christmas Gifts\nBut you must be quick. You will be surprised to know that about\none-half of the stock is sold. A sale of Furniture, Carpets and Rugs\nof this quality and dependability at such sensationally low prices is\nwithout precedent in this section. We doubt if ever again you wilt\nhave the pleasure of sharing in such another merchandising event of\nthis importance. Every article is offered at a substantial price reduction. Thirty years of clean business in New Westminster is a record\nthat inspires confidence. A walk through our stores will convince\nyou more than pages of advertising:. GOODS SOLD FOR CASH\nONLY.   BARGAINS FOR EVERYBODY.\nW. E. FALES, Opp. Carnegie library, lhe Iver Smith Sales Co. in Charge\nI\nFIRST MOVE LIES\nWITH THE CHURCH\nME\n\"wh\ufffd\ufffdt norai this meu* f\" in. demand-Co.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdee her father, and ber mining and go\nIng bud biased u trail uf Ure lu the\nbeart of lii-nrge Brown, the new-rat\n\ufffd\ufffd'lerk on tlie fun*.\nIt wus ii singular fart that Mr Hla\noiontl's rnre Units to bis odlcex were\niuvarlulii) ou the eve of his departure\nfor Colurudii and Arizona, where he\nbud extensive mining interests.\nIt was liiiiiiitliutel)' after one or\nthese [lerlndl.-Mi visits of John Diamond tbnt .voting Ueorge Iirown. tbe\nnew ammiituut. did \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd bit of detective\nwork tbnt brought hlm to tbe personal\nnotlre ot Uie great John Diamond\nblm self.\nVoung Brown waa I slim, dapper\nyouth, wbo did not bate himself hi the\nleast and who waa lot In lore wltb\nwork of uny aort \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd rend detective\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtorles and knew positively tbnt be\nwna one of the ihnsen few. He possessed the \"detective Instinct.\" He believed hluistMf quite fascinating enough\nto win bis employer's daughter, Helen\nDiamond, flattering himself that Iw\nWaa rnpuhle of becoming general niau-\nag-jr of tbe whole business and ao\nwonld lie nn iicceplabla son-in-law.\nOne morning young Brown entered\ntbo elevator ond wna aped up aloft\nwllh olber workera. Tbe car Hopped\nkt the eighteenth floor to let off pas-\n*tsitgt*rs snd agnlii at th* nineteenth to\ndrop Trow bridge, who worked In tbe\nDover Insurance nfflcta. Hp It abot to\nIbv twentieth floor, wbere Brown got\nofr with n pineal-ad frown marring bis\nitweuiiou* brow.\nI'he empty ear dropped down and ns\ntl went h* wiucbed It Intently. Then\nhn walked to n not her elevator and rode\nd-iwo to the ground ffoor, counting\nw^b loor aa bo passed. Wben br\n.wain mounted to tite twentieth floor\ntiter* was a Strang* light In hla cyan\na id excitement tinglingevery nerve of\nbn sensitive tram*,\nHa wu on lb* v*rge of \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd mystery.\nIm fotvlng pf wblcb would plac* blm\nla tba limelight of publicity and bring\nflown upon bla talented boad th* eternal approval aad friendship of John\nDiamond\nOver bla ledger Brawn pondered th*\nfacta aa be bnd atumbled npon tbem\nBetween tbe\ufffd\ufffdnln*te*uth and twentieth\ndoon of th* Diamond block tb*r* wm\nan expanse of wblte wall quit* unaccounted for-wby, tbat blank wall wna\ntbe height of any of th* other floors\nIn tbe building and yet thaw appeared\nno door to mar lta aurfac*. Tbtatevu-\ntora wer* of. apeclal construction, wltb\nwalla of aolld metal plate* and a-grilled door, aad tbe paaalng of tbl* Dfteen f**t of tnnacconnted tor apae*\nmlgbt bt quite unnoticed un!**a on*\nwa* *barp ***** bnd abarp eared; Uka\nyoung Brown. Why thould thara b*\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd watte mt mot ia thla gr*at\nWhile attending the purity congrpss | threatened at Its most vital point by\nln Minneapolis last week as a dele-1 an evil that purity legislation seeks\ngate trom Winnipeg, Rev. ('has. Vi. to eradicate \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd an evil that threatens\nGordon (Ualph Connor) contrlbnt-wl j the physical life stream of the people\nthe following Interesting editorial to iand that disintegrates lis moral fl-\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^      the  Minneapolis Daily News: lbe.-.\n^^^^^^B i    \"No   great    reforms in matters   of.    \"Th* statistics presented at the pur-\nThe flvo entered Ihe door and found purity, or Indeed In nny matter, would jty congress now in seasion are ao\nthemselves at ome lu n narrow pin* ever be consummated by legislation startling!)' appalling as to arrest the\naagewny,   softly   lighted   and   thickly alone, or by moral suasion alone. ! attention and awaken the concern of\ncarpeted Aa tbey (Mated from oo* lux- \"It la only by the co-operation of the; congress Itself. Impurity in the na-\nuriuusly furnished room to another \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'<\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd represented In the church and tlon has assumed such proportions\nBrown pictured  the downfall or .,,1\" \ufffd\ufffdh* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd that reforms-can be brought .'that  the necessity  for  legislation  to\nxiil' v nitM^WtonWaWnrtrtoold l50,rt- Each htt8 ,u 8<>para\"' fuac'| \"<*l with this takes precedence over\nguilty iii.uig.r wlun Ills set ret should ,,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd an(, eBch ,,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd own m(,thod of operJalI other How insignificant in combe disclosed to umuiona. 'ntlon.   The church as part of ita func- parleon are such questions as the tar-\nHuiKlKome library,  luxurious smok |t|on. furnishes the nation with Ideals iff and currency.\nIu\ufffd\ufffd room, billbtrd room nud then the j and Inspiration.   The church ta the In-1    ..u lg true tor inMance that as stat-\nnuuuiiir of voices from nn adjoining istlgatlon  of truth,  ultimate truth.  Inie(j bj. ft recognized medical authority\nruinn brought the five to a alundstill regard to things spiritual and moral. ;ln  tIle  United  Statea.  In one  single\nbefore n closed door. |Thl* Is not to say the church has nev- year Jn the c)ty o( Njw york 240,000\nThen wiib one movement the five \ufffd\ufffd'hold as true what was false but the roen are infected by diseases conse-\npiiNhed Into a small, lighted study Jhrlstlan church was constituted by iquRnt upon vlcfli and the8e men unlro.\nwhere sn.  Bold,,,,,.,, th. manager. U .!? &u,?!.r.* *J^\n, ..-    _         ...    . h    ...     of Truth,' and truth It the faith of the\nIntimate Kiuversutlou witb\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJohn Din   c|,ur<.h\nmond himself: |    \"The preacher is the prophet. He Is\nof their diseases wherever they    go.\nSurely this calls for legislation.\n\"The point of departure ln all re-\nThe  millionaire sprang to  bis  feet !the W of Vl. people, 'in.'trocted by ].    \"*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd] \"Ji-' _?u^!^U_3 S*ff* E*.\nind stared angrily at the Invaders.       .history, with his eye upon his world, if?\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   '\ufffd\ufffd  *** \"\"*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffde2LS'ffE^l* T.\n ____   _,_ _   ._.,_    ...   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd._   a*, l-.-i   vi.   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi.i\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_  -.i\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd~_j   k__.-..._.  u.ithia task the church resolutely set It-\nand\nWhat   doc.   thl.   uieanr   be  de- iand  hi.   vision  clearedJ^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd8  \"? j .elf.    Every church should have IU\nB\"\"\"Jl'\ufffd\ufffd m\ufffd\ufffd.J i.J? \ufffd\ufffd%.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdv~.T Li! -,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd department of social  aervice.  and  It\nTbe detective. Allen, waa quite on   \ufffd\ufffd<*\ufffd\ufffd 8'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- *\ufffd\ufffd dJ,\"\ufffd\ufffde\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ** \"ft **\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ' should be the duty of that department\nwilling to .bare the honor alone.    Oe l^JS, P\/inC_.?Ie* ?f J^LSj ,V\ufffd\ufffd,lS ito get at the facts,\ngrasped Ueo*, Brown h,1 bis coat e* ^ %?__\\^\ufffd\ufffd$t t\ufffd\ufffd^Vt&     \"The tecond step to tb. publication\nlur snd pusbed blm to the front.    In jmake for rlghteou.ne*. or unrlghtous-1 J'JheJ**fu- tht,1D*^   ,,aW\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   b^ut*,\npli'tiin-KiiU*  words  be explained  tbejnMa.   ]t' lri hu' bus'inesa, primarily \"to jfacti' th*1 pure-minded men and gen-\naltuutlon. [utter theae principle, to the people.'tie-hearted women ahould be shocked\nAnd, this young plnhead\"-he ended and hia further business to awoken In\nIn 11 gusp of mge as be shook Ueorge\nBrown ns a terrier shake* n rat\nMr. I Mu mond was smiling austerely\n\"(ientleiiien,\" be ssld st last,\nprivate suit of rooms It tbe only rvf-\ntig* or 11 um n weary of tbe noise aud\nclatter of the world and tbe hollow\nthing called -society.-' Here I can hide\nfor weeks nt a tint*, absorbed In my\nbooks and In my experimental work\nIn the laboratory yonder. Now tbnt\nyou hnve spied me out I can no longer\nremain unless I have your word of\nhonor that my secret shall remain unpublished \"\nFreely they gave tb* promlte. ill\nttve Ueorge Brown, wbo wit too\ncrushed for utterance. H* merely nod\ndrd bl. bead In a broken hearted way\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnd waa glad tbat he knew of another\nJob thnt be mlgbt have for tbe taking.\na job where tbere wtt to much work\nto be done tbnt ther* wtt no time for\nthe development of tbe datertlv* In\ntimet\nBut the reporter of tb* Dally Dlthop\nyielded to temptation oa* day ami\npublished tb* whole ttory. tnd to tbe\nend of It ba appended tb* announce\nment of th* engagement of Miss Helen\nDiamond to Henry Roblnton. general\nm.nnger of tbe Diamond Interests.\nAnd Ueorge Brown, sticking mnnfui\nly to his new Job. smiled bitterly wben\nhe read the announcement tnd tank\nto hit breast th* on* crumb of consols\ntlon It afforded blm.\nHe bad been right In hit argument\nthat a millionaire's daughter sometimes\nmart-tea bar father*! g*n*ral manager\nHiding Hll Character.\n\"Perklnt believe* that a mau'i\ncharacter can be determined by hla\nhandwriting.\" \"1 don't remember\nfeeing any of Perklnt' handwriting.\"\n\"No, Perklnt alwayi ute* a typewriter.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCleveland Plain Dealer.\nhis people the desire for righteousness\nwhich li the presage of triumph.\n\"In proportion to the truth of the\nthis! Preacher's message\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfor the preacher,\nbeing human. It exposed to human\nfratllty and Imperfection\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdin proportion of the truth of hla message and\nthe conaclence of the people responds\nIn approval, and to public opinion It\nmade.\n\"Thl. truth li the foundation of the\nchurch\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdto tee tnd to announce to\nthe people the Ideal, and to awaken\nIn their heart, the decision for It from\nw-Mch issues the publlc opinion demanding righteousness. Without thlt.\nlegislation It vanity and deception, for\nleglilttlon without the ture tnd .olid\nbatlt of public opinion it tn evil of\nempty form, but It undermine* in the\nheart of the people thtt reverence for\nlaw which It at the foundation of all\npublic morality. Once public opinion It\nmade, however, we enter Into tha region ot law.\n\"Legltlatlon U the registration of\npubllc opinion. The taw thould register the high water mark of tha people', demand for rlghteousneas. It\nihould crystallise the opinion of the\nhett people In the community, which\nU the opinion o fthe majority of people wben at their belt. Laggard legit-\ntatlon that fall* far ln th* rear of the\npeople's will It practically useless, for\nwhat everyone approve* trequlres no\ntaw to enforce, and the taw that doei\nnot lead fall* ln on* ot the general\nfunction! of taw, namely, that of education.\n\"It It here the legislator needi both\nvlilon and courage. Hlevated by the\nvote, ot the people to a point of eminence, from tbl. vantage ground he It\ntbl* to dltcovtr tha lln* of advauce, a\ndiscovery not yet tatsi* by the majority ot thos* who have placed him In\nhli position. H* taket hit courage in\nhand and propoaet bit taw, and th* taw\ncontinually summon* th* peoplo to\nteal* tho height and mak* tha\nvance.,\n\"Democracy   in   thia   oountry   it\nInto horror, into indignation and Into\nactivity.\n\"Thia Indignant horror will force\npubllc opinion to regltter Itself to leg-\nUlatlon. and with the cooperating\nforcee of moral abhorrence and legal\nactivity, the evil will be practically\neradicated. The tint move ilea with\nthe church.\"\nDOGS ON THB BOUND\nMUBT WEAR MUZZLIB\nSeattle, Nov. It.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSeattle and Tacoma doga mutt b* muttled, held In\nleash or chained on the premises ot\nthe owner., according to an edict thU\nmorning from Dr. H. T. Cravat, veterinarian of tho dapartmeat ot agriculture of th* atate of Waahlngton.\nAnd thia ta view of the tact that\ntha municipal altenltta of tha local\ncity council decided othcrwlte yeaterday afternoon by a vote of & to I. Bat\nthe mutate order will ataad. tor it waa\napproved by Governor ffrnaat Utter,\nthe .Ute hoard ot health and the department ot agriculture in Joint se*-\ntlon. Tha ruling applita to all don ln\nKing and Plarce conntita, and th* cH-\ntt* ar* not excepted.\nPretty tough on Pldo, OM Dob Tray,\nand othert ot th* apaclaa. Became\ntola* bourgeolae canine* are aald to he\naffected with rable*. th* arliUwate Of\nthe rac* front the pedigreed dachehuad\nto the friendly Bt Bernard mutt b*\nkept In leash, tied tn tho back yard or\nadorned with an *qnlp.M*t r***\ufffd\ufffdb-\nUng m catch*rt math.   ,\nLocal doglhncier* dontf tak* p***p\nto tho moanr*. Numerooa inforwtt\ncomptelate Mv* tlr\ufffd\ufffdady b**a r*gt\ufffd\ufffd\nured agalatt the action of th* agricultural hUUnalth d*part\ufffd\ufffd*ata ot tho\ntlateS^^^^^^\"^^\"\"\"\"\"\"\napp*\ufffd\ufffdr*\narf.-nn* c\/.\nday* tn Ml It the penalty\nfor vIotaftM of tha wdw.\nirai a-_a#*aiu a*panm*nta w taei\nii Bttt \ufffd\ufffd th* pr**eat nompt It]\nor* that tht *dict wO litand. Al\nof tWmrm than W* mt nladtjrl\nThe Straight Line\nin Creating Jkmmd\n\"A Straight Line is the\nShortest Distance between Two Points**\nWhatever troubles old Euclid gave us in our schooldays\nhis axioms were simple enough. In our business fain\n\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd to-day we show a lively appreciation of the truth of this-\naxiom in cutting out supeniuous efforts\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdin the asvingaL\ntime and labor.\nv In ttutmimt goods the straight line is \"efficiewry.\" ft ia\ndie shortest distance between raw material md aWihed\nproduct. ,\nIn Selling Goods, the straight line is\nNewspaper Advertising.\nIt isihe shortest distance between the seflsraadtUbnysB.\nSome manufacturers are apptyiag the strsigbt Mae hi %%%%\nmMttg of their \ufffd\ufffd>ods, but oegUcting it in thn \ufffd\ufffdM\ufffd\ufffd nf\nthem.\" Some nave no Kneof oommuntnfien wMhthei\nsumer at all\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdmany let thdr messa|e meendsn nlengl\npaths of ''ohance aoqaaimanoeehip   tm'*' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd******-*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nmgit along the straigtt line ofNe\n' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdpi*_W^rW(WB(^M*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     \".%***<*.-*^^tt*\\9t\\*-w*9^tm-***\\_9  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1^ ^w-*^^ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdw^^^t.^'W^'.\ntho two points of MSuppfyM\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ' VfMaM\nlNBMW_|tl\n^mSa\\\\a\\W     WMl       \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd***%      iK\nm.*m*htm+*^_\n_^_^_^_^_^     ^^    _^_.    ^^m^_b_____^__.   *m\njBPrP^W*1 *t*\ufffd\ufffd*^ * t \\Tf^P**jT*^*r-Wi, ^^^^^^T*r*aWnti\nT'-kit^tm-mm\ntill  Ct- -i- '   V , j '\nm.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd: ii*\n*a**9*mmsusmmmm*smmmmmsi\n':  .-   H_fi_____[\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 skmgstwwmmt&z\nmk*m&m-H.m*mm   '\n3Pa|)er\n^rt^M\n-___\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHhn\nm\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'i\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdurns'\nM\n'\n' *\",'.'; r**.GZ  CtGHT.\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS.\nTHURSDAY, NOVEMBER  13, 1913.\nDelicious\ni\nThis apjili- la ahout the last\nWort in the apple line. A fine,\nlarge apple, suitable' for baking\nand for table use. Ii lias a de-\nBeioos flavor, ss the nam* im-\npfttm\nIf \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ou are fond ot apples you\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdsnnot .i;ii. any mistake order-\nfnx, a box of iii we.\n-fa-Box $2.15\nOr  :.  Hi.-,,  lor    25\nWe also have a pood assort-\nnw-nl of appli s, heavy pack, at\npvr ti_i?. $175.\nModel Grocery\ntHATHESON t JACOBSON.\nJOS Sw-ih St. Phone 1001-2.\nBurnaby Branch:\n2nd St. and 15th Ave.\nLocal News|\nDaughters cf England.\nThe   Daughters   ol   Bngland   will\niiK'i't  in  tin' Odd  Fellows'  hall  mis\nevening at 8 o'clock.\nThe Westminster branch of Needle-\nworker*' tiiiild ut Canada will hold ils\nannual meeting al the bome of Mrs.\nBeatty, 11- Beventh Btreet, Wednesday, November 19, at ll o'clock. The j\ndirectors will please notify tbeir member*. (_;S97)\nC. A. Welsh\nLIMITED.\n1\nWe Have\nMoney to\nLoan on\nFirst\nMortgages\nProperty must be well\nimproved and worth at\nleast double the amount\nof the loan.\nFor full particldars\ncall at our office and let\nus know what you require.\nDominion Trust\nCompany.\nTlie Perpetual Trustee.\nt'aid   Up Capital  and\nSurplus $ 2,800,000\nAesets   4,973,983.95\nT r u s teesblps Under\nAdministration over 6,000,000\nTi-iihii'o     tor     Uond-\nholders over   25,000,000\nC.-8. KEITH, Manager.\nOffices \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Vancouver, Victoria,\nMpw Weatmlnster, Nanaimo,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCalgary. Itegina, Winnipeg,\nMontreal, Charlottetown, Lon-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdUrn. Kng ; Antwerp, Belgium.\nNow Westminster\nBranch.\n036  Columbia   Street.\nOpen   Saturday   Evenings   from\n7  to  9.\nBurnaby School Board.\nDie Burnaby school bonrd will hold\ntheir regular mooting In the offices of\nthe board at West llurnaby this evening.\nHave you neen   the   $150\nring Olfford is giving away\ndiamond\n12370)\nRatepayers' Meeting.\nThe regular meeting ot Ward One\nRatepayers' association will be held\nin Johnson's hall. Highland Park, on\nFriday evening, when a justice of the\npeace will be In attendance for the\npurpose of adding names to the\nmunicipal voters' list.\nFred Davis will sell by public auction on Thursday next. November 13.\nnt 1:30 p.m., sharp, thn contents of\nthe well appointed residence cf Mr.\nA. Ingles, 504 Agnes street. Mr.\nIngles is leaving tor California and\nevery article will be sold absolutely\nwithout reserve. The sale will include\nsome very fine Wilton, Axminster and\nBrussels carpets, pianoforte, also very\nline bedroom suite of Circassian Walnut and cost, only a short time ago,\n$360; dining room suite of solid quarter sawed golden oak. Malleable range,\nutensils, etc., etc. Thursday, at 1:30\np.m. at above address. (2402)\nLadies' and gents' suits cleaned-and |\npressed $1.25; suit pressed 50e. Westminster  Chemical  Cleaners  &  Dyers,\n612    Carnarvon    street.    Phone    484.\nJohn Kindal, prop. (2406)\nThe People's Grocer\nPHONES:\nCity Store    193 and  443\nSapperton   Branch    373\nWest End Branch   650\nTHREE BIG STORES\nOF PLENTY.\nPotato Meal\nHave you tried making it into\npuddings, soups, etc.? It is\nvery good besides being beneficial.    Sells, per pkg. 15c.\nMaggi Soups\nA Roup powder of excellent\nquality, quick to make. Conies\nin several kindB and sell for 5c.\nBoiled Cider\nFor your\nYou should\nnow.    Cider.\nChristmas cakes.\nbe making them\nper bottle 30c.\nNice   Hothouse   Lettuce,\nbunch 5c;   3 for 10c.\nper\nC. A. WELSH\nLIMITED.\nBring the Children\nTOYLAND\nReady for Young and Old\nlhe New Westminster\nAND FRASER VALLEY\nDepartment   Store\nBring the Children\nTOW\nHeady for Young and Old\nInsure with Alfred W. MeLeod. the\ninsurance man. All kinds written.\nHundreds of millions to pay losses.\n(233T) |\nTAKE FULL ADVANTAGE OF THE\nOPENING SALE PRICES IN\nALL  DEPARTMENTS\n**\nNew Yard Ennines.\nTwo high potliter switch engines\nhave arrived at thc C. P. It. terminal\nyards. l'ort Coqultlam, direct trom\nihe company's shops at Angus. The\nengines will be used for sorting car_\nIn the yards.\nTwo competent instructors in attendance at the rink every afternoon\nand evening. Admission 25 cents afternoons, 40 cents evenings. (2395)\nTemperance Demonstration.\nMans for the city wide temperance\ndemonstration proposed by the W. C.\nT. LI. will be laid at a joint meeting\nof tlte Citizens' league and the \\V. C\nT. U.. in the Y. M. C. A., this evening\nat S o'clock. What form the demon\nstratum should take, whether it\nshould be in the way of a banquet or\na grand rally or both wlll be decided\nat the meeting this evening. The date\nfor the event will also be selected.\nCovered metal garbage cans, as required by Board of Health regulations\nall sizes. Merrlthew & Ramsay, corner Carnarvon and Klghth  streets.\n(2392)\nTake notice of the change of hours\nfor skating at the ice rink. The place\nis getting more popular than ever.\n(2395)\nNew G. N.  R. Depot.\nTenders for excavation work on the\nnew Great Northern railway depot e-''\\^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_--\nbeing called for and the contract will' Made Hjm p      |t\nprobably be let in tiie immediate; R(,cal]sp he retated t0 pav hu ,2\nfuture. Local contractors will prob- _oad ,..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd J[)hn MU-,.-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd a we\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd kn<,wn\nably be given the work on the   new contractor of Port Coiiuitlam.\nbuilding.    The dirt    will    be    hauled arralgned  before the police mag-\nawa)   and   deposited  at  the   foot  of , _  ,_D.__._._   _,__. ___________\nEighth street.\nYou can pass in a crowd if you wear\nGeorge's Corn and Bunion Shields.\nMade to fit any corn or bunion. For\nsale only by Hill's Drug Store. (2398)\nistrate in that city yesterd; y morn\nIng and ordered to pay his tax and\nin addition $2.50 as the costs of the\ncourt case. The beak's instruction.*.\nwere immediately carried cut by\nMitchell.\nWill Hold Annual Banquet.\nInvitations are being sent ou' by\nthe committee in charge of the second annual Hurnaby municipal staff\nbanquet, which will he held in the\nllurnaby public hall on Saturday evening. November ii. The catering will\nbe given by the Ilurnabv branch of\nthe Victorian Order of  Nurses.\nWith every $2 purchase you get a\nchance on the $150 diamond ring. T.\nBlftord, the jeweler. (S370)\nRepair  Residences.\nA  permit  was    taken    out    M    'he\nhulldlng   inspector's   office   yesterday\nI for additions   to   the liouse   of P. C.\n| Campbell, on Seventh stree!. The ad-\nfdltlona wlll cosi $1000. On Tuesday\na permit was taken out for repairs to\ni.i house owned by 11. A Eastman, on\nIccbi'vg street, to cosi $860.\nExpert skate sharpening and rivet-\ninn at Oscar Swansoon's, 13 Begble\nitreet. (2309)\nThere will be a n'\"i ling of the\nmember;,    ol    tbe    Political    Equal I tv\nleague on P*rlday at '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd o'clock, at 301\nWeBtmlnster Trust block. All members are requested t'i attend.     (2406)\n1 For plumbing, heatlns: and sheet\nmetal work consult Merrlthew & rt.im\nsay. Eighth and Carnarvon streets\nPhone 586. (23C3)\nMoney to loan on first mortgages\nImproved city and farm propertv. 9\nper cent.  Alfred  W,  Mcl.eod     12337)\nSale cf Work.\nThe Onward Bible class of the Sixth\nAvenue Methodist church will hold a\nsale of work In the church on the\nafiernoon and evening of Thursday.\nDecember 4.\nFor Sale -Complete restaurant set\nincluding one large range, tables,\nchairs, dishes, etc., for sale verv\ncheap. Royal Mercantile Co., fi] Slx'h\nstreet. (2381)\nInjured His ?pine.\nWilliam Sommervllle, a workman\non lhe new .lames Park school. Pnrt\nCoqultlam, fell ,0 feet from the Btnglne\nof that building yesterday and though\nIn. landed squarely on his feel r\ncelved such a nasty jar that he had\nto be removed to his home. He became unconscious on his way home.\nIt is believed thai liis spine was\nsprained by the fall.\nSPECIALS\nCoast Sealed Oysters\nPer Pint 50c\nPer Quart   ...   - $1.00\nCrescent Oysters\nPer Dozen     ...    -   35c\nW.J.RUSE\nISuccessor to Ayling A Swain.)\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*S? Columbia St. Phone 98.\nWays and Means\nTo Lessen the Labour  of House-\ncleaning and Housekeeping\non of Joy Mops, with bottle of nil         $2.00\nHlSBOll'B   Carpet   Sweepers    $3.00  and  up\nEnglish   Hair   Brooms    $1.00 and up\nPolishing cloths, for silver, ete 25c.\nAlso a full line of Pastes, Polishes, Oils and Waxes for Furniture,\nl-'li ors. etc.\nT. J. TRAPP & CO.\nNi w  Weslmlnsli r.        Phone  59.\nOpening Sale Prices on the Better\nFurniture\n1 China Cabinet; Fumed Oak finish; fifi inches high and 40 inches\nwide, with two mirrors 10x32 inches; splendid finish. Sale\nPri\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    $38.50\n1 Beautiful Buffet; quartered Golden Oak; 68 inches high and 48\nInches wide with large china closet on top and leaded glass doors.\nAlso with British bevel mirror, 8x40 inches and plain British mirror. 10x40 Inches.    Special priced at $65.00\n1 Beautiful)' finished Quartered Fumed Oak Buffet, with large bevel\nplate mirror, ono large linen drawer, large china space and top\ndrawer divided  Into  three  spaces.    Special $45.00\n1 China Cabinet, selected Quartered Oak; fifi inches high and 32\nInches wido. with plain Brltlslrrors 8x24 inches and 10x24\ninches, and British Level mirror on top, 6x30 Inches, also bent\nglass   ends   and   door.     Price    $58.50\n1 Beautiful Golden Oak Chin 1 Cabinet, 72 inches high and 49\ninches wide, witli two plain Liritish mirrors, 10x40 Inches, also with\nbent glass ends and  large drawer in base.   Special price .  $57.50\n1 China Cabinet of Quartered Fumed Oak. 5S inches high and 31\nInches wide, with plain British mirrors 8x24 inches and 10x24\ninches.    A  bargain  at    $31.50\n1 Solid Mahogany China Cabinet. GO inches high and -11 inches wide,\nwith bent glass doors and two mirrors, 10x34 inches. Beautiful finish.    Special  at    $47.50\n1 Solid Oak Sideboard. 48 inches wide, with large Hritish bevel plats\nmirror.   I\ufffd\ufffdx32   inches;   regular   $75.00.     Special    $45.00\n1 Large Gulden Oak finish Buffet, with bevel mirror, 12x3fi; regular\n$20.00.   To clear  $11.50\nMISS A. MILL\nDRESSMAKING\nFancy and Evening Dresses\na Specialty.\nRoom 14, Smith Block\nI22ti2l\nsadie fraser   Short Term Loans\nMus. Bac.\nSinging.  Piano,  Th\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd7;\n.      ,     _,,      Th.orv !       WE HAVE CLIENTS WHO WILE MAKE SHORT\n^r^ffirJKS-i aVp^-v a,    iTEKM L0ANS   FOE  A   PERIOD NOT EXCEEDING\n*_*_, 1011 Hamilton ttroot.  ^\ufffd\ufffd\"M0KtE YEAR ON REAL ESTATE SECURITY OR PUR-\n131,R' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\",ril-\"E AGREEMENTS OF SALE.   APPLY\n\"\ufffd\ufffdE MWifflSJ F. J. HART  & CO., LTD.\nmuw  **'    \"             _     '  .... Established 1191.\nHMhlence Y. W. C. A\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ^...ff0\"* \"**' Wo write Firs, Life, Accident, Employes'   Liability,  Automobile  and\nMATERNITY. SURGICAL AND *                                    Marlrf,  |n,urlnot\n.MEDICAL CASES ATTENDED.\nDONT MISS THE\nSpecial Sale 40-Inch Sills and Satins\nReg. $1.25 and $1.50 a Yard, for\n98c Yard\nGOODS SUITABLE  FOR  EVENING  WEAR  AT SACRIFICE  PRICES\nFOrt  A  LRESS.\nWe have just unpacked a shipment ol new oriental Satins; *w Inohes\nwiile and In u wide range of colors. This is a material that Is very\nmuch in demand this season; has a bright finish of a sofi lemur*\ndrapes bnaullfuly and makes effective gowns. The colors are seal\nbrown, pale blue, pink, white, reseda, cardinal, golden brown, cream.\nold rose, gray, cerise, etc.; this is regular    fl.60 and $1.86 per yard\nSpecial offer for three davs at, per yard 98-C\nBe Sure and see thit very Special Line.\nFIVE BIG VALUES IN BLANKETS\ntie It a single pair of Blankets or to tnrnlsb an hotel or rooming\nhouse complete, we have the blankets right here in stock in this\nstore blanket values that can't be equalled in the Praser Valley today. We are specializing these five extra KOOd vaiueB, and if cold\nnights are troubling you, Ihls special sale will lie a good opportunity\nto buy right at ro-ck bottom prices.\nBLANKETS.\nQOOtl heavy White Blankets, Bize 60x80     53.7*1*!\nKine   Wool   Blankets:   size  80x80 $4.25\nThe same quality, slxe i*\\\\nt ami heavier weight, al         12.5$\nHeavy (Iray Blanken. X pounds; size fi4xS4, at     JIS.**^\nHeavy Cray Blankets, all wool; size 88x82, at S5.95\nNew Fall Hats\nfor Men\nMen's Stiff Hats in all lhe new\nStyles fur fall wear; rightly-\npriced at  $2.50\nThe. \"Victor'    'and    \"Kenmore\"\nmakes  of Soft  Hats,    in    ail\nshades and Btyles. priced\nrrom    $2.50 -o $4.00\nAustrian Velour Hats, in shades\nof brown, green and black.\nSpecially  priced  at      S5.00\nA big clear up of odd lines of\nSoft Hats, in good shades and\nstyles. These are from onr\nhighe.r priced hats; values\n$3.5\".   Bargain  price. $1.50\nFor the Ladies\nIn the many new arrivals of\nnew goods on the main floor are\na fine assortment of Scarfa.\nThe mw* woollen Scarf or Muffler,   in   white  and     cardinal.\nThe  correct  scarf  for   motoring or driving.    Some  In  the\nBoft ice wool effect. These are\nat.   B    very reasonable    price.\nsuited to the economic buyer;\neach    45C  t\ufffd\ufffd     1.00\nDainty Kvening Scarfs, in a\nchoice assortment of patterns\nanil rotor's .two and nrm tv-rtf\nyards long; colors pale blue,\nWith white, while with color,\nhlnck and silver. Just a few,\nand no two alike. I'rice,\neach        Sl.OO\nSilk Knitted Scarfs. In fine ice\nwool Very dainty designs,\nwhite and purple, white with\nblue, and white With pink and\ngrei    flowery shadow effects;\nat. 'ach    $1.75\nRibbon for the economical\nbuyer who makes up pretty\nChristmas novelties. Now is\nyour i.me to ylsll our Ribbon Department We nn* selling for today's special:\nKim'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Silk mni setiii Btripped\nand spiiitiii Ribbons; from\nth ee to five Inchea \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd> Ide; ex-\ncelli 'it quel tj: valuer to D5o\na , b rd, While the) last, selling\nat, per ynrd    25c\nCome curly and si cure yenr\nChoice.\nDm u i ns and your choice in\ndainty Handkerchiefs Plain\nhemstitched linen handkerchiefs, with li.'iiiddrawn corners, innl designs.    Each\n!'.      50c\nis'\"- tur * Sl.OO\nKile* i ..vn hemstitched Handker-\nchli is, wllh pretty embroidered Initial in corner, any initial\nyou wish. A special bargain\nJUSI    while    thoy    last,    three\nfor\n50e\nBungalow Nets,\nScrims, Muslins\nTake advantage of our opening sale to supply yourself with\nSOtne of the in at imd dainty patterns we are showing in lliinga-\nlow N'i ts. Displayed In the Drap\ncry section you will find a selection fif nets in white, ivory and\nOCTO, all lit prlCOfl that are many\nCents per yard below the real\nvalue oT  these goods.\nBern Bungalow Nat; regular _r>c.\nKor two days, yard..      X9t\nMuslin, dotted or figured red;\nri gulur  -Or;   yard 23c\nMadras Miitilln in creain or ecru;\nregular STic;  at    29C\nTwo pretty lai'i'y patterns; goon\nvalue at lhe regular price, .fie\nyard On sale for the next two\ndays  at,  per  yard 39C\nabsence of dust\nPhone our Carpet\nto make an appoint\nit noes away with all\na carpet. We do not\nvacuum  (leaner;   It  is\nThings You Should Know About Our Business\nAbout Our Window Shades.\nLet us figure on your Window Shades; we can save\nynu money In tliis section. We carry an Immense .dock,\nrunning Into thousands of ready made window shades of\nall kinds and sizes, and besides this we have ,i competent staff always here to make up and execute your\nspecial orders. lie it a cottage or mansion we will givo\nyou an estimate free of charge and help you in choosing\ntho   most   suitable   shades.\nMcAllisters limitho.\nToyland Is Open Now.\nBring the children and come and see the n \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd toys;\nbrighter and prettier than ever for this Christmas. All\nkinds of new toys are out for this Beason Ihen we\nwant you to get acquainted with our big doll family.\nYi.u will meet lots of your friends in Toyland ut McAllisters  during  the coming   weeks.\nLet us Send a Vacuum Cleaner to\nClean Your Carpets.\nWe ran send our Vacuum Cleaner and thoroughly\nfree your carpet from any dust and dirt fur a very small\ncost. Nothing ri ally repays no well as the vacuum cleaning on a carpet It wlll make your carp i last twice aB\nlong and you will be surprised at thc\nin your room for a long time after.\nDepartment for our charges and\nment for cleaning, and remember\nthe bother of lifting and relaying\ndisarrange any house to use the\nquick and  mire  in  Its work\nMcAllisters, limited.\nA Word About the Carpet Room and\nRe-laying.\nOften In the home the carpel gets baillv worn In\none place, at the Ttoor or near the table. We keep a\nstaff of competent carpet layers, who will call at anytime and give you an estimate on taking up anrt remaking and relaying your carpel fur a small cost. We\ncan make a carpet that now looks badly worn appear\nalmost as good as new. Now Is the time when most\npeople wish to fix the home for the coming holiday\nseason. We can give you an estimate anil execute your\norders quickly and nt a very moderate charge Ring\nup our Carpel Department and wo will send a man to\nestimate for you  free of any cost.\nAbout Electric Lighting, Etc.\nUnder the strici supervision of an experienced manager our Electric Lighting and Fixture Department Is\nalways at your service. We can install and light your\nhome complete. Our prices aire absolutely the lowest\nconsistent with the best workmanship and our now electrical room on the second floor gives you an Immense\nselection of every kind of fixture to choose from. Then\nwe carry a full line of all electric heaters, cookers, irons\nand all kinds of electric labor-savers lu the home. These\naro bl lng demonstrated dally In this department and a\npio.'isiini und profitable 1\" minutes can often be spent\nlearning all about these widely advertised articles and\ngitllng nur lowest cash  store prices on these.\nPortieres and Curtain Hangers.\nWe make Portieres and Curtain Hangings to fit any\nreum, hall or window A full stock of suitable materials\nin Tapestlres, Velours. Art Serges, Repps, etc., are here\nto select from and we carry every kind and size of braHS\nltting and attachment In stock. We make and hang portieres and curtains complete to fit any window or nook for\nprnctlraly the same price as you would puy for ready made\ngoods. Visit our House Furnishing Section and talk your\nrequirements over. Competent help will advise you and\ngive ynu any estimate free of charge.\nAbout Our Upholstering Department.\nA word In season about our Upholstering Department.\nThis store Is equipped with a ttrlctly up-to-date upholstering department. We ran make old rurnlture look like now\nfor a very moderate cost. If you are considering renovating anything In your home, phone this store and we wlll\nKeiid ami give you an estimate on the cost and submit you\nsamples of tapestlres, etc. Many a now despised piece of\nfurniture cnuld lie made u thing of beauty and usefulness\nfor a few dollars well spent In fresh coverings, etc. Kstl\nmates of all kindB submitted free.\nAND LAST OF ALL, DON'T FAIL TO READ OUR ADVERTISEMENT EVERY DAY OR YOU WILL\nPAY MORE FOR YOUR GOODS.\nr&... ^^        *?-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-s*        * Limitec\nTHE HOME OF THE UTILITY  HOUSE  DRESSES.\nIb Our China\nDepartment\nRight along side of the Toy\nDepartment you will find our\nrearranged and greatly en\nlarged China Section. Dots of\nnew stock has been arriving in\nthis department anil is now\ntastefully arranged on the display tables, all ready for your\nchoosing. You will find a\nnumber of specially grouped\ntables of one price, ranging\nfrom 10c to $1.-5 Just brimful\nof useful und pretty articles for\nthe home. We have also \ufffd\ufffd\nlarge assortment of stock pat\nterns in dinner and tea sets a'\nvery special prices We are spe\nClallxlng three of our bitter\nsets:\nCold I.lne and Mine Hand, 97-\nplece Dinner Beta, the well-\nknown and universal pattern\nthat Is bo often admired, Our\nprice for this set is $19,00\nAnother pretty set in Rose Bud\nChina with Cold Lines, full 97-\nplece set.   Our s|M\ufffd\ufffdcial\nPrice    S28.00\nLots of other sits to choose from\nat Opening Sale I'rlces.\nOdd Cups mul Saucers of all\nkinds shapes and sizes, from\nthe hard-wearing and \"Cannot\nBreak\" kind to thi fine hand\npainted china An Immense\nselection.    I'rlces  from\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdach lOe to si.so\nThe Big Sale of\nTungsten and Carbon Lamps is Still on\nNow   is  the  time   lo  get  your\nwinter supply.     More  light  and\nless    current    consumption    at\ngreatly reduced  prices\nWire-drawn     Tungsten   I.imps;\n15, ... and -in watts, each.40$\nCarbon Lamps, ull sizes, from _\nto 16 candiepower, each.  20\ufffd\ufffd\n3-* Candiepower, each 254\nCall and Inspect\nOur Fur Stock\nWe have a good assortment\nof Natural Mink, Natural Sable,\nHudson Seal, Mink Marmot.\nPersian Lamb and Natural\nRaoCOOn, and our prices are\nreasonable.\nSPECIAL  SALE OF FURS.\nIlluck  Belgian  Hair Stole, large\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdshawl collar:    finished    with\ntails In  front;   regular    $H 7f>.\nSalo price   $5.95\nBlack Belgian  Har<>    Mull   to\nmatch. In large flat pillow, finished with two heads nnd\ntails;     regular    $7.50.       Hale\nPrlc\"   $5.95\nAn assortment of Fancy Mink\nMarmot styles;  values lo $10.\nHale   prico    $5.95\nOray Squirrel Scarfs at $7.50\nMuffs to match  In  pillow style\n<*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-    $12.50\nFancy near Seal Sets, with Imitation chinchilla trimming,\nstole is in straight Mart stylo,\nwith largo pillow muff to\nmatch;  per set $15.00\nWhite Thibet for misses; large\nstole in shawl collar effect,\nwith long ends In front; extra\nlarge pillow muff to match.\nSpecial, set $19.50\nA good assortment of Children's\nFurs lu Imitation    Chinchilla,\nImitation  lOrmlne,   White Thibet.    Prices 1\nf\">m           $4.50 to $7.50\nOur Coats Still Continue to Sell","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. 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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. 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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. 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