{"@context":{"@language":"en","AIPUUID":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","AlternateTitle":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/alternative","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","Series":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AIPUUID":[{"@value":"e92ec7cd-2e27-4b04-9285-bec360c99b49","@language":"en"}],"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"AlternateTitle":[{"@value":"[New Westminster Daily News]","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2015-12-08","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1914-03-10","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nwdn\/items\/1.0315680\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" \"\nHjettrsi\nVolume 9, Nm*\"' jr 5.\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C., TUESDAY MORNING, MARCH 10,1914.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdm\nf Price Five Cents,\nopiion*^ Kan from Bin dead TOTAL\nIS ASQUITtrS OfffR TO ULSTER QVf DTHipjy\nPremier's Announcement on Home Rule Question Made\nBefore Largest Attendance in House for Years\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCounties Could Vote Themselves Out of Operation of New\nMeasure Before First Meeting of Irish Parliament.\nLIBERAL CAMPAIGN FUND\nj    SWELLED BY MONEY\nPAID \"LABORERS\"\nFiremen   Continue  Search\nfor Bodies in Ruins of St.\nLouis Building.\nTrent Valley Canal Investigation Report Tabled in House\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBank Managers Sign Payroll as Hired Help.\nLondon  March. 9.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPremier Aflqulth I tlon to which  Ulster objected could\nlaid before the house of commons to-   *>* ';\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\"\ufffd\ufffd;\ufffd\ufffd f,'rc,;\ufffd\ufffd','ti11 \" h'f \"*?\nI sanctioned by the Hrltish parliament,\ndav    his   proposed    concessions    to .\n'    K The  Happy  Medium.\nUlster in regard to its position under|    \"Anctner BUgK(.K irjn considered was\nlhe  lriBb   home   rule   bill.    The*    an-| the inclusion of the whole of Ireland\nnouncement, which bad  been so long I in  ibe  bill  for  legislative and execu-\nand anxiously awaited,' was to the\n< ffect that before the bill became\noperative a poll should be taken of\nthe-   parliamentary   electors   of   each\ntive purposes, but giving to the Ulster\ncounties the option of removing\nthemselves for a time. But any sort\ntf   exclusion   would   Involve   serious\nSEVEN RECOVERED;\nMANY MISSING\nDlffculty   in   Identifying  Charred   Re\nmains of Victims of Worst\nHolocaust in Years.\nOttawa, March 0 -The full report I acuities due to the fact that, until the\ncf the investigation by T. H. Howard \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd present accountant took office there\nEerguson Into the affairs of the I was no office system in existente,\nTrent Valley canal at Peterboro was | practically no pretence made of scru-\ntabled in the house today. ' titiizing  accounts,   time  slips  or  pay\nSupe rinlendent    Mcf'lellan    of   the | Bheets.    No proper cash account and\ncounty to decide whether there BhouldIadministrative and financial difficul-\nlie* an exclusion of the Ulster counties ties. However, 1 believed that the\nfrom the provisions of the bill for a Unionists would believe in some form\nperiod of six years from the lirst | of provisional exclusion a medium\nmeeting of the new Irish parliament between the surrender of their prln-\nIf the majority of the voters were In ciplts and the application of fore\nfavor of the scheme the county would\nautomatically be   excluded    for   the\nprescribed period.\nNot Running Away.\nBefore an attendance even bigger\nthan that which listened to the- Introduction ol the Irish home rule bill.\nPn mier Asijuith began his statement.\nHe prefaced his    speech    with    tin*\nTrent Valley canal, admitted that\nsums of money which ought to have\nb^cn remitted to Ottawa went to the\nLiberal campaign fund. According\nto   Mr.   Ferguson's   report.   McC'lellan\na woeful lack of record of any kind\nin connection with the business of the\noffice.\nHopelessly  Incompetent.\nRemarking on  the condition of af-\nIS EVIDENCE\nOF MURDER\nBones of Hindu Found in\nAshes\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFoul  Play  Is\nSuspected.\nPOLICE HUNT FOR\nTWO SUSPECTS\nbare majority for exclusion .would ex-\nj elude the county  for a term of    six\ndl c laratlon     that    \"the    government ! years from the date of the mreting of\nmakes tiie suggestions today  not  be- j the   first   Irish   legislature.     The   ex-\nfenauae it Is running    away    from    the I eluded counties  would continue their\nSt.  Uiuis, March 9.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThat  from  30\nj to 35 giusts of the Missouri Athletic\nI club  perished  in  the  flames that de-\n: stroyed   the   building   early   today   is I\n.      .      . ithe  belief of officers of the club to-\nl lie governments plan is to allow  U[gYn\nthe,   ulster   counties   to   determine     Sf,w,n DodiP8 nav<> DPen recovered\nwhether they should be excluded. We L^ f,,jm   ,3 to oa occupallts of    the\npropose   hat any coun y of Ulster be t rtruclure Btill are ilnuccounted for. At\nallowed  to take  a pol 1 of its  parlia- . guIiUown t0Ilight \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,,.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd continued to\nmetiliiry electors for this purpose be- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,      bodies  in the smouldering\nlore the bill comes into operation. A\nI state>d in his evidence that when he ] fairs under Superintendent McC'lellan\nj went to Peterboro to take charge of j the commissioner says: \"He haB not\nthe canal lie was told by Hon. J. R. j only practiced deception and dis-\nStratton that there should be an elec- \\ honesty himself, but has condoned it\ntion fund of from $0000 to $7000 a and winked at ethers and has proven\nyear from the canal office and that i himself hopelessly incompetent for\nhe proct-eded on that basis. j the position he holds.\nPadded Pay Rolls. \"As the Inquiry proceeda deceptions\nThe    methods    cf    diverting    the j are   unearthed  and  it  is  shown  that\nmoney    was    numerous.    Tho    most J bankers,   lawyers,   doctors,    dentists,\ncommon was by padded pay rolls.\nUpon the pay lists of the canal during the last five years appear the\nnames of grocers, lawyers, livery men.\nhotedkeepers, photographers, telephone employees and even two bank\nmanagers, all classed as laborers and\npaid regularly from Ottawa. They\nwere never In the employ of the government and the money that was paid\nostensibly to them went elsewhere.\nundertakers, barbers, merchants\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdalmost every class of business and profession is represented on his pay\nsheets. He confessed to such methods\nbeing an ordinary practice in the office over   which   he   nominally    pre-\nRobbery It Believed to Be Motive for\nCrime\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWhite  Man and  Hindu\nDisappear.\nThe discovery of what have every\nappearance of human bones, and which\nare said to be the remains of a Hindu\nwho disappeared over two weeks ago\nand the disappearance of a white man\nand a Hindu suspected of murdering\nthe missing Hindu, haB created no\nlittle excitement in the vicinity of Aldergrove.   The police of Matsqui mu-\norlgtnal hill, but merely to allow the\nbill to start with tbe greate-st prospect of success.\"    He continued:\n\"While there is a possibility of\nacute dissatisfaction and civil strife\nin I'Uler. yet if the bill should be\nshipwrecked or postponed, the- out\nlook iB equally formidable.\nStill  Convinced.\n\"Supporters of the* bill are aB con*\nvluced  today as ever of the  Bound-\nrepresentation in the imperial parliament and tiie Irish executive would\nhave no control over them.\n\"Other d'-tails involved in this plan\nare to be announced later in a state\npaper.\"\nSir Edward Surrenders.\n!     Sir Kdward  Carson,  leader of    the\nUlster  Unionists in the fight  against\nhome  rule,  surrendered today  to  the\nI militant  suffrage ttcs   who  had    been\nness of its principles and machinery. | laying siege to his residence for sev-\nThey regard it as a sincere and con-|eral days, They had announced that\nBid era te attempt to place the Irish they were determined to see him and\ngovernment on n solid foundation obtain from him a promise of woman\nwithout Injustice or hardship to any suffrage' In case the north of Ireland\nClass. should  receive a  government   of    its\n'The negotiations for a compromise own.\nlat-- autumn failed to result cvetn in ; Sir Kdward has been 111, but had re-\nan approach to an agreement, but [covered suff.ciently today to attend\nmade al] realize more than ever the I parliament. Katber than rusk bodily\ndifficulties eif the situation To me^t I injury at the hand* of the nuffrngette\nUlster's diffii-ultl.es we tried to de-! pickets he Bent out word at noon that\nvise home rule within home rule, but I he would receive the deputation be-\nthat proposition did not commend it ' fore leaving lor the house of com-\nseif cither to the Nationalists or the , racms.\nUnionists of iri'innd. John E   Redmond, leader   of   tlu>\n\"By such a scheme Ulster would I Irish Nationalist parly, held a meet-\nhave been exempted from the admin* ! ing of Ills supporters in the house of\nistrr.t-ve and executive authority < f | commons today, The proceedings\nthe  Dublin  government while  legit-la    wire strictly  private.\nPAYING PLANS      CLEMENT CASE IN\nEOR BARNET ROAD    SUPREME COURT\nBurnaby Engineer to Estimate Cost\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGovernment\nWill Help.\nJudge of Supreme Court of\nB. C. Appeals Recent\nJudgment.\nruins under the glare of searchlights.\nFire    Chief    Swingley    cxpecs    lo\npump the  water from  the blackened '\npit before morning revealing the   full\nextent of the tragedy.\nWhile the search    for    the    bodies |\ncontinued today 14 persons who wero\ninjured In the fire were under treat-\nnie nt at hospitals.\nMuch difficulty was experienced in\ntrying to Identify the recovered bodies\nand  some  were identified  under two\ncr three different names.\nThe   blaze  was  the   fourth  serious\nfire in the down town district  of St.\nLouis in eight days and the most serious as to fatalities of any fire In the\ncity's history. This blaze, which startled at 1:50 a.m. Monday, wrecked the\nI seven story building occupied jointly\ni by the Missouri Athletic club and the\n| Boatmen's bank, caused a property\n* loss estimated at $46ti,000.\nCause a Mystery.\nThe cause of the fire still  was    a\nmystery   tonight.     Reports   that     the\nblaze was accompanic d by a terrific\n'explosion Indicating tha' the flrr* wa*\ndue to efforts of bank robbers trying\nto dynamite the Boatmen's t>3nk were\nunconfirmed. Reports of explosions\n| were denied by ihe night watchman\nj cf the bank.\nIn the vaults of the Boatmen's bank\n| which occupied part of the first floor.\nwere more than $1,800,000 in currency\nand  more  than $20,000  in coin.    The\nvaults were unharnii d by the fire,\ni the bank officials reported,   and    the\nmoney is Intact.\nThe  bank, one of the oldest in  St.\nLouis, opened at the usual hour this   toria because thev are against the gov\nmorning in temporary quarters a few   emment  yesterday  was remanded to\nli looks nwny\nAbout 100 Guests iJail   for   sentence   by   the   honorable\nThe number    of    guests    who    had | Justice   Morrison,   after  having   been\nrooms in  the club house, either  per-   convicted on the charge of taking part\nmanently or for the night, was about | in an unlawful assembly at Nanaimo\n1.I0     Many of these    escaped,    some ! \ufffd\ufffdn August 12th last during bhe strike\nChecked out before the tire, others, it j troubles   tier.*\nis thought,  were not  in  tbe  building\nsides. So far as superintending the nicipality and the provincial authori-\ncanal and sure-guarding the public is ;tles are working on the case and at\nconcerned, it Ib amply proved that 1 Present are seeking information as to\nthere has been no serious attempt to \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe whereabouts of the Hindu and the\ndo so.    McClellan seems to have   en-!wnile  man  who    have    mysteriously\nMr. Ferguson states that in at-1 gaged himself largely with matters i disappeared and whose movements\ntempting to widen the field of inquiry, I cf political patronage and pleasure i \"\/laute,tQ81UBpi^i>Il0l\"rl.ng;.Lhe laflJew\nhe   found  almost  insurmountable dif-' seeking jaunts at the public expense.\" '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\"\"\" ''\"'\"   -***-\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*  *'*-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  - '\nJOHN PLACE M.P.P. !\nIS SENT TO IAIL\nHalf of Opposition in Provincial   House   Under\nLock and Key.\nFound   Guilty   of  Taking   Part In   an\nUnlawful Assembly and demanded for Sentence.\nCAPTURE MILITANT I\nATTER BATTLE\nHalf of the opposition in the provincial legislature is in jail, or. in\nother words, John  Place, M.P.I'., one\ndays they were seen in the neighborhood of Aldergrove.\nDetails Not Learned.\nWhile the full details of the affair\nare as  yet unknown,  it appears that\na  Hindu  employed  at  the  Fernridge\nLumber company's plant at Fernridge\nwas  lost  sight of a  few  weeks  ago.\nFriends of the man in this city sought\nthe  services of the  provincial police\nwho directed them to the Matstjui authorities.    Following a search, a discovery was made on Sunday of some\nbones   lying  among  the  asheB  of  a\nwood fireTiear the shack in which the\nj missing  Hindu lived,   -The supposed\nj murdered man, whose name oould not\nj be learned, was known to have had\n] about $600 in cash on his person about\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd the time he dropped out of sight nnd\n______ j this leads  the police   to  believe  that\nI robbery was tlm -motive for the crime.\nPolice Met with Clubs When Platform j    Of  the two men  whom  the  police\nEmmeline Pankhurst Once\nMore in the Toils\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWomen Hurt.\nIs Stormed\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSeveral Bombs\nExploded.\nare seeking, one is a. Hindu who stayed with the murdered man and who\ndisappeared on Thursday last This\nman was the owner of five acres of\ncleared land in -the vicinity worth over\n$1000, which he sold last week to the\nengineer of the lumber company for\n$500 cash.    A    full description    was\nRurnaby residents In attendance at\nlast night's council meeting listened to\nam ther wordy battle, the fight being\nprecipitated by Councillor Fau-Vel in\nconnection witli Dae proposed reduction of the police force.\nBeaten  out   4-8   in   the   committee1\nrnom   the   previous   week,   Councillor\nFau-Vel and his two supporters, Councillors MacDonald and    Rose,    made\ntheir lael ifgltt when it was seen that'\nilu* pel,re committee's repori was on\nthe point of adoption,    Last   night's!\nbattle told the same old stor>, three\nagalnsl   three,   with    Reeve    Fraser:\nwielding the big stick and f'tat sound\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ncil in the neighborhood of the reductionists.\nStrenuous Opposition,\nThe opposition fought hard, however. Councillor Fal-Vel was armed\nwith legal Information which he figured would declare the previous\nweek's work ultra vires and When that\nwas Ignored ex-Councillor Macpherson,\nt'.ie stormy petrel of the lOLi council,\nacting the part of \"Custer's Last\nStand,'1 had a lively debate with the\nreeve as to what a municipal council\nshould and should not do and retired\nwithout any relief except to the extent that the police report was adopted. 4-:i.\nIt is quite possiTilo thnt the end is\nnot yet as regards the alleged flaw-\nin the proceedings, for although Councillor Fau-Vel's contention that a tie\nvote in the committee stage must always be taken in the negative, was\nnot adopted, the opinion of the niunllc\npal solicitor might lie sounded on the\nmatter this week, together with some\ndeep delving Into the municipal act\nwhich the provincial legislature is BUp-\npored   to  have   torn   to   pie-res   at   the\nlast BOSBion,\nThe usual formality of putting the\namendment which called for a week's\ndelay, was gone through, tho three, n*\nductionists having tin* support of\niteeee* Fraser who also supported the\noriginal motion, All this action was\ntaken in the face of a strong letter\nfrom the Hurnaby Lake Progress club\nprotesting against a police\" reduction\nand giving praise to Chief Parkinson's\nwork during the past two years.\nTrouble Is looming up in the nego-\nGlasgow, March 9.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMrs.  Emmeline\nI Pankhurst, leader of the militant suf*\nj fragettes,  was arrested  tonight at a I forwarded to all points yesterday and\nsuffragette  meeting  in   St.  Andrew's ia dragnet was spread for the suspect\nof the two members entitled to sit at  hall, after a fierce    fight    with    the j so that his arrest is expected at anytime left hand of the speaker at Vic- j police in which a    score    of    women j moment. The other suspect is a young\nwere hurt and several constable. i man of Aldergrove who was working\nMrs. Pankhurst had just declared j at the lumber mill until the middle\nthat women had as ample justification ] of last week when he suddenly quit,\nfor fighting for their rigliti today as leaving instructions to turn his pay-\nman ever had in the history of the\nworld, when a force of police with\niheir clubs drawn, dashed Into the\nhall. In anticipation of trouble the\nsuffragettes had stretched a net\nwork of barbed wire across the plat-\nThe   M.P.P.   was  in-\nI dieted ou two counts, that on which he\nover to his father.\nThe supposed murdered man is believed to have a member of one of the\ntwo factions among the Hindus of this\nsection as the latter when asked yesterday, while having knowledge of the\nwhen the blaze broke out, some were  wa8 fmjnd guilty and the morei serious form    Tllev were concealed by floral  affair refused to discuss the details.\n...,.,      nf      .i\/iln,,i lit i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd       'itt.it-     Hnlirio-'ilill',!    ! \" . I\nOttawa, March 9*. In the supreme\ncourt this afternoon the first case to\ncome up waa Clement vs. the king,\nan appeal from a judgment of the exchequer court. T'.ie* question for decision Is as to the right of the appellant, a judge of the supreme court of\nBritish Columbia, while holding court\nin Vancouver, to charge the per diem\nallowance given by statute to a judge\nperforming his duties at a place other\nthan which he reside i.\nThe* appellant contends that his\nresidence is at Grand Forks, B.C.,\nabout 700 miles from Vancouver where\nlie bas bull! a bouse, although he occupies It only occasionally and has a\nrented house in Vancouver, where' he\nlives most of the time with his family.\nThe case originated In an Information by the attorney general for Canada charging that the appellant had\nreceived a large sum -over $4^00 -by\nfalse and fraudulent representation\nthat his residence was at Grand Forks\nand claiming a return of t he amount\nOji tlte trial evidenced showed that\nthe appellant resided mainly in Vancouver although he kept liis house in\nGrand Forks in charge of a caretaker.\nThe exchequer court judge held\nthat his resilience was at Vancouver\nand tJhat he had fraudulently obtained\nthe allowance while holding court\nthere and at Victoria, by charging for\nhis allowance as if he had been residing at Grand  Forks.\nShepley, K.C, Lafleur, K.c, and R.\nN. Tllley appeared for the appellant,\nFarquhar and McLennan for the respondent.\ninjured in leaving the blazing structure aud the rest .ire listed among\nthe dead or unaccounted for.\nThe fire, which was discovered by\na woman who was waiting in the club\nlobby for her escort, swept rapidly\nthrough the building. When the first\nlire cempany arrived the building was\na ma s of flames.    Men In their night\none of rioting,  but after deliberating j d60oraUons    and    proved    effjcacious\nfor an hour the jury in the case re- wlth the aid of mascuUne supporter* I *\nturned a verdict of guilty on the mlaor j of th(? suffragCUes, UB,ng newer pots, j *\ncharge only. t chairs  and   anything  they   could   lay I*\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-'? # X\n** $\nIsrael   Rubinowitz,   acting   for   the\ntheir hands on as missiles in holding\nprisoner, aaked his lordship to passim-1 back ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd        \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdce for a few  minulea\nmediate sentence, or else to remand '\nthe provincial member and allow him\nout on his own recognizance, but the\nould not see his way\nSENATOR PLEADS FOR\nARMED INTERVENTION\nclothes were jumping.^m the-in- gj-\ufffd\ufffd J**^ ^  hp\nX e^riJS  ^nT\\eT'bt\\^ \ufffd\ufffd* discriminate in favor of the\n.   ,      ... ...a...    ,.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    ii,,.   prisoner.    And so John Place, M.P.P.,\ncated; ethers were standing on   the  \\ \ufffd\ufffd\nwindow  sills calling    h>r    WfinAL J^   convicted   and   held   over\nothers were clambering down escapes. ,f      aentellce\nTltlrty-eight     guests    on   the    fifth ; ^\nfloor were awakened by Mr  and Mres.\nHe bert   Magill.  who  n fused  to  leave\ntic-ally the same as that produced  in\nthe   rest   of   the   riot   number    three1\neases,  except  that    more    particular]\nstress  was   laid  on   the  part the  ac* i\ncused  had  played  in  the  proceedings |\nof the afternoon during which Booth\nand  Bridges were assaulted.    Several I\nwitnesses  told  of the  member advis-!\ni ing the strikers to turn a deaf ear to\nthe  mine owners'   proposal  for a  24-\nI hour  armistice,  stating that the  pro-\nI position   wns   made only  to  pull  the\nj wool over the miners' eyes and to gain\nI time for the arrival of the militia and\n'. the epecial police\nI\n(Continued on Page Four.)\nJapan Reduces Naval Estimates.\nTokyo, Japan. March 9, -A reccm\nmendation to reduce the Japanese\nnaval estimates by the sum ot $20,-\n(1110,11110 waa carried bj the budget\ncommittee of the upper house of par-\nliani.nt loday. This was done In spite\nof the protest Of the premier, who\nexpressed the opinion that such a\ndiminution  would    seriously    hamper\nthe building until they hud given the\nalarm to all within reacli. Mr. Magill\nwas bouse manager of ihe club. Mrs.\nMagill was seriously burned.\nDramatic Escapes.\nDramatic escapes were numerous.\nOne cf the most spectacular was that\nof twelve or thirteen men who de^-\nsc'iided from a fifth floor window to\nthe roof of an adjoining four storey\nbuilding by means of an improvised\nrope made out of two sheets. One\nguest escaped    by    leaping    ever    a\nchasm  ten  feet wide  and  six  Btoriee ,     BevmK* tlle aUeg0,i verbai Scenting\ndeep to the roof of an adjoining build* | tQ piot   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  WM  not charRod that  thl,\ninB- _ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ...      .,    | accused had  taken  an active part in\nWhile tho firemen were lighting the\nblaze from the Fourth street side, the\nwall facing that street collapsed\nfrom the fourth floor up. The firemen fell back rapidly against the wall\nof a building across the street and\nescaped the falling bricks by only two\nor three feet.\nOne fireman was hit and suffered a\nbroken leg.\nStill Smoking.\nLate   trday  the   smoke  and   flames\nwere  pouring  from   the  basement  of\nthe   building   into  which  debris  had\nfallen.\nSections of the cast wall fell from\ntime to time throughout the clay, fur\nFinally wben the police stormed IO\nthe platform a number of women pro- ' -:':\nduoed clubs from under their cloaks v=\nand used them vigorously against the : ''.',-\nattacking party. I:\";\nIn the midst of the-\" fighting several *\nblank cartridge pistols were fired and -:,;\nseveral Bombs exploded. Frightened ' '',':\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nby the detonations many women Ut\nfainted. ;V*\nThe polic seized Mrs. Pankhurst, U*\ndra ged her off the platform and | *e\nthr* ugh th * hall to the street. Here Hi*\na desperate effort was made to res-' ::\ncue her as the police forced her into jo\na taxicab and drove away to ther\"\npolic3 station. j ti\neither the riot or the attendant as-\ni saulta.\nATTEMPTS TO END\nLIFE WITH KNIFE\nGerman Military Bill.\nBerlin, March 9.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA new military\nbill, new in preparation, will appropriate $125,000,000 for the re-arming\nof the German artillery, according to\na Munich dispatch.\nWashington. March 9.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe\nMexican lid was lifted in the\nsenate today when Senator\nFall, of New Mexico, a Republican, urged armed intervention for the protection of\nAmericans and other foreigners iu the stricken republic.\nSenator Fall in relating incidents of outrages to Americans in Mexico held the senate\nnnd the crowded gallery for\nover two hours. He assailed\nthe policy of the administration as Inadequate, declaring\nPresident Wilson knew nothing ot the real conditions aud\nhad been mistaken in every\nact cf his administration towards Mexico.\nHe pleaded for intervention\nin order to avoid inevitable\nwar.\n-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd; v\ni* t;- *\nROUT ARMY OF UNEMPLOYED\nWITH HOSE AND PICK HANDLES\nForcibly    Ejected   from    Sacramento,\nNow  Nursing   Brused   Heads\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nCcld and Hungry.\nSacramento, Cal., March 9,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Buffer-\nther Increasing the difficulty of\nlite nn ii   in   getting   the   blaze*\ncontrol,\nThousands of    spectators    i\nthe si reels leading    to    the\nbuilding. Hundreds visited the\nIn an attempt to Identify bodi\nA case of attempted suicide occurred at Port Coiiuitlam yesterday when\nJohn Floyd, said to be from Ltichine, t In ; from bruised heads   and   empty\nQue., cut his throat with a pocketknlte stomachs, 1000 members of the un-\ntho | while sitting  in  the  ladies' waiting employed who have been camped   in\nunder  room of the C, I'. R. depot. After com- Sacramento for two days are Bulking\n'mining the injuries to himself Floyd | in  the*ir \"tents\" tonight on    the    far\nowded\nu ruing\noorgue\nB.\nBury Sir George Ross Tociy.\nToronto,  March  9.    The*  funeral of\nstaggered on to the Dewdney Trunk\nroad where '.lis condition was seen by\na bystander and he was rushed to the\nhospital, Little hope is held out for\nFloyd's recovery.\nThe man  is n stranger in  Port Co-\nside of the Sacramento river, whither\nj they were driven today by Sacra-\n1 minto city and county Officers,\nN'ol all are nursing Injuries, but all\nare hungry.\nMost   of  them   are  cold   from     Ilia\nthe national defence*. Today's pro-1 the late Sir George W. Boss on Tues\nposed reduction was In addition to u eii. morning will be private and will\n$11,000,000 curtailment of the naval be held from the family resin nee at\nesstlm.ites by the lower house. Iii Ellmsley Place.\ncuiltlam and whit little is known of drenching given them by the fire hose\nhim was gathered bj the police after used In routing them from iheir city\nhe had committed the serious act. He I camp.\nappears to be between 26 and 30 years I They are swearing vengeance on\not age. Sacramento because of  the  forcible\nejection, but as thei- entrance to this,\ncity is guarded by several hundred\narmed deputies and officers and the\n, town of HrodericTt, adross the river,\nI is equally as well guarded, their pro-\ni pc seel activities may be curbed.\nThe employed were driven off   'he\n' Southern Pacific's lot early tills afternoon   by  deputy   sheriffs armed  with\nj pick handles and by the police.   They\nat   first   refused   to   go,   but   several\nI strong streams of water played upon\nthem by firemen started them on the\nrun toward Second street.\nHand to  Hand  Fight.\nAt the Second Street fence they resisted and  in the  hand to hand fight.\nthat followed many heads were cracked open by clubbing and the ri r-\nwere sent  bleeding anil CUrBing on  to\n1 Front   street.     Several   were   clubbed\nhard enough to necessitatis in-ntt\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\\\n(Continued oa Page Four.) PHE TWO\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS.\nTUESDAY, MARCH  10, 1914\nHetasi\nAn inelepcnde-nt morning paper devoti'J li the lnli-ristii of Nrw Westminster anil\nth* Prajser Valley.    Putilisli.il every morning ***cfr.i Sumtay by lhe National Printing j\nuid Publishing Company, Limited, ut S3 McKenxie street,. New Westminster.  British j\nColumbia. KOBE SUTHERLAND, Managing Director. |\nAU communications should be addressed to The New Westminster News, and not i\nto Individual membe'ru of the staff. Cheques, drafts, and money orders should be made i\npayable to The National Printing and Publishing Company, Limited.\nTELEPHONES\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBusiness Office and Manager. 9UI*; Editorial Rooms (all depart-1\nment*), SHI.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdRy carrier, 14 per year, |1 for three months, 40c per\nmonth. By mall. *3 per year. 25c per month.\nADVERTISING  RATES on application.\nTUESDAY MORNING, MARCH 10, 1914.\nMORE TANGLED THAN EVER.\nThe Mexican situation was tangled badly enough after the murder of Benton, but it has remained for an\nAmerican official and a state governor at that to give it\nthe twist which puts it in a class with the famous Chinese\npuzzle.\nFollowing the killing of a British subject by the Mexican rebel leader Villa, came the most dispassionate kind\nof announcement from Sir Edward Grey in the imperial\nparliament to the effect that Great Britain did not intend\nto embarrass the United States by demanding action under that country's self-assumed responsibilities of the\nMunroe doctrine. Accordingly, the Benton murder has\ngone uninvestigated, except by an irresponsible Mexican\ncommission, and the dead man's body, in the face of requests from Britain and the United States, has been withheld by Villa and Carranza. On the other hand the body\nof an American killed by the Mexican federals under similar circumstances has been the occasion of a raid into\nMexican territory, if not ordered, at least countenanced\nby the governor of the state of Texas, and the dead man's\nbody brought back to American soil.\nWhile this action was undoubtedly taken without authority from Washington, still it had the backing of the\nstate governor and President Wilson is placed in the peculiar position of having either to reprimand the daring\nTexas executive for an act which morally is right, though\ndiplomatically wrong, or else undertake to recover the\nbody of the murdered Britisher in similar fashion\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthat\nis by force.\nWhile insisting on the recognition of the Munroe doctrine by foreign powers as it applies to outside intervention on the American continent, the Americans cannot repudiate the responsibilities such a stand entails and, morally at least, they are held to count for the lives of the\nsubjects of other governments on Mexican soil.\nat Kikuyu shall be formally handled,\nand he presses for such decision\nthereupon as shall make clear to him\nhis own position in relation to the\nneighboring diocese and to the \"Eecle-\nsia of Anglican*' as a whole.\"\nNo Proceedings; for Heresy.\nThte archbishop goes on to say that\nhe is unhesitatingly of    opinion that\nthe inquiry should  not take the suggested  form  of  proceedings    against\n, the  bishops for heresy  and    schism. |\n\"The bishop of Uganda has made     it\nclear  that the assent  given  by  himself and others to the suggestions for\na federation was altogether subject to\nthe approval of the authorities being\nobtained after their full consideration\nof  the  proposed   scheme.    With    regard to that proposed federation and\nto the possible repetition hereafter of\nwhnt has been described as the 'open\ncommunion' which followed    the conference, he holds himself bound, while\nhe retains Ills position as a diocesan\nbishop of our church, to conform his\ncourse of action to such direction as\nmay be given him by his metropolitan\nor by his metropolitan acting in conjunction with other metropolitans and\nbishops holding positions of authority\nin the church, should it appear on Inquiry  that anything  which  has  been\ndone  contravenes  the  true  laws  and\nprinciples of the Church of Kngland.\"\nQuestions  fcr  Committee.\nThe archbishop continues: \"Happily\nthere is within our church an elected , .\nbody of bishops which does seem to | Ju^\"\npossess exceptional  qualifications for\ntho task.\"    He goes on to refer to the\ncentral consultative committee which\nwas   reconstructed   by   resolutions   of\nthe fifth Lambeth conference In lilOS.\nand  at  the  present  time  consists  of\nthe following  bishops.  14   in  number\n(the church  in  America does  not at\npresent   send   the   four   members     to\nwhich it is entitled):  The archbishop\na consultative body. But definite and\npractical counsel upon the particular\npoints raised will. 1 am sure, be forthcoming without delay. To push such\nquestions aside or indefinitely to postpone their consideration is not ouly\nundesirable and unfair\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdit is impossible.\"\nCANADA'S DEATH TOLL.\nOver Twelve Hundred Workmen Killed at Work.\nThe toll of death from Industrial\naccidents throughout Canada during\ntbe year 1912, as shown in a report\nJust published, cost the lives of no\nless than 1,220 workmen,.while 5,780\nreceived serious injuries. Thus 7,000\nworkers in Canada's industrial army\nmet with fatal or serious accidents\nwhile in the discharge of their duty\nduring the twelve months.\nAn analysis of the record of accidents, as made by the Labor Department .shows that the railway ervices\nand the metal trades are by far the\nmost hazardous employments.\nOn Canadian steam railways 332\nemployes were killed during the\nyear, and 1,831 were injured, a somewhat startling total. In addition to\ntbat there were 152 men killed in\nrailway construction work, and 111\ninjured. In the metal trails 103\nmen were killed and 1,326 were injured.\n1 Navigation is comparatively a safe\nrailing. The total number of fatali-\ntic. among those employed in navigation was 69, and non-fatal accidents\ntotalled only 62.\nIn the building trades tho fatal accidents totalled 90, and non-fatal accidents 298.    The   collapse   of scaf- !\nfolds,  etc.,   a  preventible  cause,  ac- I\n      counted for 71  of the   accidents   to j\nof Canterbury,  the bishop of E~xetei\\ j wor,UIien in the building trades.\nBishop   Hyle   (dean  of Westminster)',       'n railway service collisions cans-\nirchbishop of York, the archbishop   Pd *r,r' deaths and  174 non-fatal  In- !\ntiie primus (the bishop of   Juries to railwi\n'In June, 1913, ,-i conference of missionaries working   in    British    East\nAfrica  was  held  in   Kikuyu.  and  the\nresolutions of conference embodied a\n'proposed scheme cf federation of missionary societies with a view to ultimate   unlan  of  the  native  churches.'\nThe bishop of Uganda as chairman of\nthe conference has explained in a published  pamphlet that 'nothing has as\nyet been settled.'   'From the first.' he\n_^^_______ says, 'it has been  clearly  understood\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd < tbat  none  of  the  signatories   (of the\nBryan, Uncle Sam's secretary of state, is going to proposed scheme) claimed\nmake r<r official trip to Chile this year, that is, he will\"0 ,\"\"*\nA scientist tells us of some green sunsets he saw in\nEngland.   Now if that had taken place in Ireland .\nWith the passing%of the rainy season, watch everybody perk up and tell everybody else that times are better.\nthe      __\nof Armagh  _ \t\nBrechin), the archbishop of Ruperts\nland, the archbishop of Sydney. Bishop\nWallis (formerly bishop of Wellington, N'ew Zealand), the archbishop of\nthe West Indies, the bishop of Winchester, Hishop Copleston (formerly\nmetropolitan of India), the bishop of\nSt. Albans, the bishop of Gibraltar,\nThe next meeting of the consultative committee will take place in July\nof the present year, and the archbishop proposes to lay before it for consideration and advice certain questions in the following form, and he will\nhe prepared to accompany his own\nstatement by any written or printed\ncommunication which  may for   that\n y  men.    There  were\n91 killed and 104 injured through\nbeing run over by trains or locomotives. Derailments caused 25 de-atbs\nand  115 non-fatal accidents.\nDynamite explosions killed 50 men\nand seriously Injured 4 7 others employed in railway ^ nstructlon, while\n19 were killed and 2S injured\nthroi uh falling material.\nThe list of fatalities and serious\ninjuries among public employes indicates that he duly of keeping th,1\npeace, f.ghling tires, etc., is attended\nwith considered risk of life and limb\nFifteen public employes were killed\nand 2fili seriously injured while on\nduty.    Four were fatally shot whil\npurpose be placed in his hands by any ! making an arresi.    One lireman w   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nof the three bishops concerned: \" I killed and  21  were injured by being\nI.\n_ -      v r         \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd f     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd - -am\nmake the trip if his Chautauqua engagements permit.\nAn Oregon police officer who was caught imbibing\nprune brandy probably wiK be charged by his chief with\nbeing full of prunes.\nThere's only one drawback to the coming of spring.\nIt's liable to bring up another crop of poets along with the\ncrocuses.\nA girl went to a masquerade ball in Chicago last week\nas Mother Eve. Since then dance censors have been appointed in the Windy City.\nRuby Pearl McKee is the name of a lady from whom her\nhusband secured a divorce in Los Angeles the other day,\nand hubby seems to be really glad to part with his matrimonial jewelry.\nIf Montreal gets as many new papers as there are\nrumors of sheets about to start, there'll be more reading\nit in the ^ \"\nfield.\n^^^^^^^^^^ any power\nThe utmost that lias been\nthrown  from  lire apparatus,  and  27\nwere injured through collisions with\nstreet  cars,  etc*.    Curiously  enough\nI tW3 accidents ar\" put down to \"froz-\nt en   while  fighting  tires.\"\nStreet cleaners, '-ho to the casual\nobserver,  always seem  to  be  in   imminent peril of sudden death, appar-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ently bear charmed lives.   In the list\nj of accidents to public employes only\nj two are ascribed to the running down\nj of  street  cleaners  by  slreet  ears  or\nvehicles.\nTho  Labor   Department   doe\"\ufffd\ufffd    not\n| claim to have secured a complete list\nof all industrial incidents during the\n(k\nermany has bought another British coal mine, but\nEngland has a chance to get even by going across the\nwater and picking off a couple of the FatherlandVlead-\n-  _ i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ie missionaries in conference to In*\nVasible proposals In the direction of\nunited action. No church and no soci\nty stands committed. The whole\nscheme is still sub judice, In accord\nnice with this the hishop has formally\nsubmitted to me as his metropolitan\nthe draft scheme. Some of its administrative provisions relate specially to the work of missionary societies\nas such, and have a technical charac-\n.i..- necessitating their careful consideration by the authorities of the different missionary societies to which\nthe signatories belong as well as by-\nothers.\n\"I desire to obtain the advice of the\nlonaultative body upon a larger ques-\nlon, namely, do the provisions of the\nproposed scheme contravene any principles of church order, the observance\nof which Is obligatory upon the bish-\n>ps, the clergy, and the lay workers of\nthe Church  of England  at home and\nxbroad?   If so, in what particuiais?\nII.\n\"At the close of the conference the\nbishop of  Mombasa,  assisted  by  the\nhi: no of Uganda, celebrated the holy\n  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -    f, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd communion according  to    the    order\nmatter in the Canadian metropolis than hav in a farmer's \\ prescribed in the Book of  common\n, , ' - Prayer,   The service was attended by\na large number of missionaries who\nhad taken part In the conference, and\nmany of those who communicated\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd!\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd!\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd not members of the Church of\nEngland and had not been episcopal!}-\nconfirmed. All, however, had taken\nas the basis of possible federation 'the\n-el acceptance of the holy Scriptures -is our supreme rule of faith and\nnractice and of the Apostles' and Nl-\ncene creeds as a general expression\nof fundamental Christian belief.'\n\"I de-sire to ask whether, due consideration being given to prece-dent\nand to all the circumstances of the\ncase*, the action of the bishops who\narranged and conducted the admittedly abnormal service in question was,\nn tin* opinion of the consultative body,\nconsistent or Inconsistent with principles accepted by the Church of England \"\nThe archbishop states: \"It is upon\nthese questions that I shall now request the advice of the consultative\nbody, having ln view the exercise of\nmy grave responsibilities as metropol\nitan.\"\nIn conclusion, the archbishop says\nthat the practical questions which\nhave heen brought to au issue are not\nwholly novel in character, nor were\n'Hey only applicable to Bast Africa.\nThey have already on more than one\noccasion come before him in regard to\nmissionary work in China, Japan,\nWest, Africa and elsewhere. Such\nnuostlons call Imperatively for pat tent\nthought and definite answer.\n\"In the consideration of them,\" the\nirchblshop concludes, \"n-oints '\"->v nK\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdinusly\nro\ndone has been to submit to the au- I vear- but ,he rwrt is as thorough\nr.borUles concemeel what seemeel to] aQd accurate bb a careful tabulation\n^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^^^^^^^^^^^^ ol   press   reports     ud   of   Provincial\nGovernment statistics will allow.\nOntario Aids I'ur Farming.\nThe fur farming Industry is iStriving in Ontario at such a rate* that\ndemands made upon the officials of\nAlgonquin I'ark for animals for\nbreeding purposes cannot be* supplied.\nAt the last session of the Legislature It arranged ihat animals migbt\nbe procured from the park by parties\nwho wished   them,  at  these    prices:\nBeaver $60, mink  (35,  marten  $80,\nj and   fisher   $126    to    $180.     All    of\nthese furs have a high market value, i\nt and   the growing  demand   for   them\nI had  increased  the  price  to  such  an\ni extent that some farmers can realize\n| more  from  fur  than  from   beef  and\n| cow hides,  butter and  eggs.\nThe Ontario Government bas given   every    assistance    to    the    new '\nphase  of  fur  farming,   by   capturing\nanimals in  the Government park \"at j\nAlgonquin and selling them.    In one j\nyear the amount realized  from  this\nSource was about $15,000. Tbe park :\nhas been tit    limes   ho   over-run   by i\nsome of these fur-hearing creatures,!\nthat shooting them to thin them out1\nhas been resorted to,    The pells al- j\nways bring a  high price.\nmg breweries.\nAs a perfect example of the irony of fate, take the\ncase of the chap who leaves booze alone three years to\nshow his girl he can do without it and then gets married\na month before the town goes dry.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtanks Behind llin.\nAttorney-General of\nKikuyu Controversy to\nGo to General Committee\nThe decision of tbe archbishop of\nCanterbury relative to trie Kikuyu\ncontroversy is to submit the subject\nin July to the central consultative\ncommittee established by the Lambeth\nconference, composed of fourteen\nhome unci colonial bishops, In the\nform of tin* following questions:\n1. Do the provision of the prop is\ned scheme* contravene any principles\nof church order the observance of\nwhich is obligatory ?\n2. In regard to the communion service, whlc.i closed the conference and\nat which many of the communicants\nhe received a lette-r from the bishop\nof Zanzibar accusing the bishop of\nMombasa and the bishop of Uganda\nof prorogating heresy anel committing schism, and imploring the archbishop to obtain from them a recantation, or, failing that, to appoint s\nday and place In which the bishops\nof Mombasa and Uganda might meet\nthese charges. On the arrival of the\nbishop if Uganda in England in November the archbishop obtained Prom\nkiim the facts contained in the bishop\nI cf Uganda's published memorandum,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffddated December 2, The archbishop\nwere not members of the church of I continues:\nEngland, was the* action of the- bishops \"1 have iijw seen the bishop of Zan-\nof Uganda anel Mombasa consistent i zlOai who arrived In England on\nwith  the  principles accepted  hy  fee | February 6. and bave ascertained from\nWanted lh\nHon. J. .1. I-eiy\t\nOntario, has been ko'-ed upon as one\nof the wl!s ci'' the Cabinet, but this\ndoes not mean \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd at he is not capable\nof a mild Joke at times, Shortly before   tbe  last   provincial   election,   be\nmot Wm. Banks, Br., the present thea-\nirical censor of Toronto, and in the\ncourse of conversation asked if there\nwas anything new in local Liberal\ncircles,\n\"Nothing that I know of,\" answered tbe genial Banks, \"except tbat the\nboys are urging me to come out\nagainst you  in South Toronto.\"\n\"Good!\" exclaimed Mr. Foy.\n\"These eleclljns are getting to I e\nsuch expensive affairs that there i\nnothing 1 would like better than to\nhave, the Banks behind me in this\ncontest.\"\nAn Unshakable Witness.\nA I^ondon lawyer, who has been\nprominent in both municipal and fraternal circles, boasts of being a self-\nmade man, and confirms bis claim\nby lapsing occasionally into atrocious Infractions of the rules of grammar. One day in police court he began his cross-examination of a witness with tho3e woids: \"Then you\nwas walking down the street when\nyou Been the defendant,  waa you.\"\nThe witness, who happened to be a\npublic school    principal,    paused    as\ncziT^JiZilTw,,ich can Fr \"Tf,,,,e riuri \"rrH\nvrece for er*,i*4,.n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.,t .,,,.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*.' '., flection, and then ejaculated solemn\n>>:';:ve;i\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdpi^\n,m I       1 were!\nChurch of England?\nIn his statement the primate says:\n\"With i-'ie opinions and comments\nwi'-lcli have found expression  in published  pamphlets and     In  the    press,\nI have no official concern.    But I am,\nhim that., while he dues not withdraw\nHie charges of heresy and schism\nwlrc'i he has marie against the bishops of Mombasa and Uganda, he has\nno wish to press them if tiie results\nbe   desires   to   attain   can   lie   arrived\nI \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd TT. v.n. ^\nas metropolitan of the dioceses In the!at In another way, either by adequati\neastern part of Central Africa, Closely | conference   or   by    the    direction   ol\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdooncemevl with certain things which\nhave been officially said ami done.\"\nHe explains that on October 21, 1913, j\n  n\nchurch authority, He- does not definitely desire thai the questions raised\nby the action of the bishops and others\nCOLUMBIA     STREET.\nEW   WESTMINSTER\nGirls'   classes,   Tuesday  1:20   p.m.;\nAdult  Classes,  Thursday,  10:,'tl)  a.m.;\nSewing  classes,   Thursday,   1:20   pm\nBoarding and room rates reasonable\nMeals served to ladies einrf gentlemen\nSpecial dinner Fridays. 11:30 to 1:30\nFor  particulars  call  pbone  13-*i.\nSchool Population of (Jucbcr.\nQuebec province is full of children.\nThis year, according to Government\ni figures, 370,200 children attended\n: the Carbolic schools and  52,400  the\nProtestant schools. There are no\nj \"public\" schools so called lu that\nI province. A school re;IU alion jf\n! 422,615 out of .: total population of\n2,000.000 seems to bt pretty fair.- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n1 Canadian Courier.\n3AS PIPE THUG FAILS\nTO   GET   VICTIM'S   MONEY\nSpokane, March 9. Using a -gas\npipe as a weapon a thug made* a murderous attack on lxiuis Kreger. uged\n60 In a hallway of the X-ray hotel,\nRiverside avenue, lit K o'clock last\nnight. Oared by a blow which lacerated his scalp Kreger braced himself\nagainst the wall In an effort to keep\nfrom falling. The assailant hastily\nfelt in Kreger's coat and vest pockets\nand ran from the place. At police\nheadquarti'rs Kreger surrendered $420\nto the officers for safe keeping. In\nhis eagerness the robber had missed\nthe money which was in an inside\npocket.\nThe police suspect that Kreger's as\nsailant knew he was possessctd of the\nmoney, but had not observed closely\nthe pocket in which he deposited It\nHe made no attempt to explore pockets other than those on the upper outside part of the coat and vest. He\nBaid he called at the request of a\nwoman who asked him to aid in tho\nsale of a rooming  bouse.\nKreger accumulated his money\nwhile employed as au engineer at the\nold Sacred Heart hospital. He uaie|\nhe kept It on his person because In*\nwas afraid of banks, but it developeii\nunder the questioning of Capt. Hern\ndon that he could not sign hig name*\nand feared he might have trouble ut\ntimes In Issuing checks. He agreed\nthat It would better for him to change\nthe  place of deposit.\nThe Bank of Vancouver\nHEAD   OFFICE:   VANCOUVER,   B.C.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdranches Throughout the Province of British Columbia.\nSavings Department at all Branches Deposits of One Dollar aod\nupwards received and interest at tho highest currant, rate paid or\ncredited half yearly. f\nA GENERAL  BANKING  BUSINESS TRANSACTED.\nDrafts and Travellers' Cheques sold, payable In all parts of tha\nworld.\nCHAS. G. PENNOCK, General Manager.\nNew   Westminster   Branch: A. W. BLACK, Managar.\nFRASER VALLEY LINE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdB. C. flfCTRIC\nSATURDAY  EVENING SHOPPERS'   SPECIAL.\nAt the request of residents of the western section of the South\nFraser valley the experiment Is being tried of the qperation of a\nShoppers' Special from Jardine and way points between that station\nand New Westminster on Saturday evenings. This special win run\ndirect through to Vancouver and make the return trip the same night\nTHIS SPECIAL  WILL   RUN  ON   SATURDAY,   MARCH   7.\nThe Question as to tin- service ou future Saturdays depends on\nthe support of residents of the section.\nSCHEDULE:\nWestbound Leave Jardine, 6:06 p.m., arrive New Westminster\n7:nn p.m.;   arrive  Vancouver 7:*!fi p.m.\nKastbound Leave Vancouver (Garrall St.) 11:25 p.m. Leave\nNew Westminster 12:16 a.m.; arrive Jardine l a.m.\nWeek-end rates will be granted for the \"Special\" but such tickets are good only for the date* of issue. Passengers will also be\ncarried on regular tickets on the usual arrangement for return passage. B\nURI1ISH COLUMBIA ELECTRIC RAILWAY COMPANY j\nG. LT. P. STEAMSHIPS Grand Trunk Pacif\nEvery Monday at 12 midnight\nto   I'rince   Rupert   and   Granby\nBay.\nEvery Thursday   at   l-   midnight to i'rince Rupert.\nEvery .Saturday at IJ midnight  to  Victoria and Seattle.\nThursday, Man-it la, at 12\nmidnight To Skiclegate. Paoofl,\nLockport, Ikeda, Queen Char\nlotte City, etc,\n.Monday,   March   9,   at   12   mill-\ntn Massett and Stewart.\n__\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-----\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.     1C\nPassenger trains leave rrino\nRupert, Wednesdays and Saturdays at 10 a.m. for Terrrte,\nHazelton and Smithers. Mixed\nservice beyond to Hose Lake\nstage to Fort Fraser.\nDaily passenger trains le-i>e>\nEdmonton 10:46 p.m. arrive Mc*\nllrlele l:5.r) p.m. Mixed train.e\nei I'rince (ieorge Mondays,\nWednesdays and  Fridays.\nTRUHK\nWe represent all Trans-Atlantic Steamship lines.\nThromjh tickets via any line to Chicago\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGrand\nTrunk beyond-Let us submit an itinerary for your\nconsideration.\nW. E. Duperow, G AP D. H. G. 8mith, C.P. A T.A.\n527  Granville   St..   Vancouver. Phone  Sey.  8134.\nBUILDERS AND CONTRACTORS.\nOur Interior Finish Is manufactured from timber specially select\ned for Flat Grain.\nWe are also specializing In Fir Doors with Veneered Panels.\nwhich are better In construction, more beautiful and no more expensive than  the old  solid  raised panel doors.\nGet our prices before placing your orders.\nii\nTHE FRASER RIVER MILLS\"\n(CANADIAN WESTERN LUMBER CO., LTD.)\nLocal Sales Department, Phone 890.\nGILLEY BROS., LIMITED\nPhones 15 and 11. M)2 Columbia Street VV\nWholesale and retail dealers In the famous Comox steam and\nfurnace coal. A ton of this coal will, without doubt, boil more water\nthan any other coal on  the  market.\nWe also have a limited supply of Old Wellington (Ladysmithi\ncoal for stove and grate.\nWe carry a good stock of building material, Including Vancouver\nbrand of Portland Cement. This cement ls being used by the Dominion and Provincial Governments and all the large corporations\nand contractors in the province. It Is ground very fine and Is very\nuniform. Hard wall plaster, lime, sand, gravel, crushed r ick, vitrified\nsewer pipe, drain tile, common and pressed brick, fire clay and fire\nbrick.\nA DOLLAR Spent at home reacts in its\nbenefits with unceasing general profit. Sent out of town it's life is ended.\nKept with the home merchants it is a\nmessenger of continuous benefit. Business men should awake to the importance of keeping this dollar at home and\nmake a bid for it by judicious advertising.\nE. H. BOCKUN, N. BKARD8LEB,       W. W. H. BUCKLIN,\nPras. a <d Oaal  Mgr. Vics-t'rasldaui. Im. aad Traas.\nSMALL-BUCKLIN LUMBER CO., Ltd.\nMANUFACTURERS OP\nFir, Cedar  and  Spruce\nPhones No. 7 and 177. TUESDAY,  MARCH  10,  1314.\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS.\nPAGE THREE\nbusiness directory v^s GANADIAN GIRL ,DAMESA~ \"UGHTERS;.. VICTORIA PUPILS\nAUDITOR   AND   ACCOUNTANT.\nII    .1     A.    BURNETT.   AUDITOR    AN1>\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd I'liuiitani.     Telephone   11417.     Boon\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:s   Hart   Hlcick.\nP. H. Smith. W. J. QroTea\nAUDITORS AND ACCOUNTANTS.\nWork   undertaken    11    city    and    outside\npoints.   211-12   Westminster   Trust   Bids\nPbone  l\ufffd\ufffd4.    P.   O.   Ilox  (S7.\nFRATERNAL.\nNBW   WBBTMIN8TBB    LODOB    NO    3.\nV.   P. O. E. of I). ('., me**t thi* firm anel\nthird Friday at s p.m., i^it>oi  Temple,\nSeventh nnd Itoyiil avenue. A. Wills\nclr.-iy.  Kxalteel  Ruler;  1'. H. Smith Si e-\nii'tury.\nL.O.O.M..   NO   854\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMKKTS   ON   FIRST\nnml third Tuesday In each month at \ufffd\ufffd\np.m. In tin* Labor Temple. David\nBoyle,   Dictator;   \\V.   J.  Grove-*,   Secre- ]\ntary.\n1 O. O. V. AMITY LODGE NO. 17\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTHK\niKtfular meeiina ul Aialiy luelge \/x.\n17. I. O. O. P.. ta held every Bonds\nnight at I o'clock In Odd Fellows' Hal.\ncorner Carnarvon and Btghth street*,\nVlsl'lng brethern oordlally Invited\nR t.. Merrlthew, N.O.: H. w. Sangatai\nT. a.; W. C. Coatham, P. O.. record\nIng secretary: J. W. MacDonald. flnan\nc.i\ufffd\ufffdl secretary.\nFUNERAL    DIRECTORS.\nw i*;. FALES\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPioneer Funeral Director\n;\"nl Embalmer, B12-618 Agnes street,\nupposite Carneati -  Library.\nRAID  BFLTOS    HOT   Sl'LTAX   Of\n.MtiUdtto ON THROVE.\nPhoebe Cmizius. the tirst wniii.-in to\nbe admitted to the liar iu this country\nSlid nine |\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>Iilll:tI   .lull  fauii'Us. Ik  iiiiw.\n  In ber uld age. .said tei lee destitute.\nMuie. Alice Ilese li.unps. ti well known\ntiter  Kiglit   Month*   Spent   on   the! French   sportswoman,   celebrated   ber\nStall    ut    Stanley    Barracks   He| eighty-fourth birthday by tukiug part\n10 GROW FLOWERS\nleuiiiil  Life Toil Tame and Went   in u luwu tenuis, u golf and il croquet\nlo     learn     Aviation\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Has    Now nintcb at Le Touepiet.\nMarried  MIsh  M-uiiie Babiu   and     Mrs. Elizabeth Armstrong Heed. moth-\nWill  Live In  Kngland. j *r of I1\"*** late novelist.  Myrtle Heed.\n; has for many years been considered un\nKaid Belton, the man who ma'e a ; authority on Persian and Hindu litsr-\nBultan   and won the title of \"King  ulure aud boldl| \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,   un,       dist,nct|on\nllVmmmjZjS b^    SSSmll     ^^J^__*__^__Z____\n-be bas married a cnarmlng Cana\nbaa been accepted  by the Pbilosopb-\nVictoria, March 9.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdH. 15. MacLean,\nprincipal   of  the  Oeorge  Jay   school,\nis  now  putting  into actual  form  an\nexcellent   scheme   in   the   laying  out\nj of  a  school   garden   and   plant  house\n1 for  his   pupils  in   a   portion  of    the\n, grounds attached to   the   George Jay j\n! school.\nMr. MacLean has had four years'\nj experience in the training of children\ntawa. The wedding took place oa I Mrs. Amelia Fowler, under whose in horticultural science in the east,\nNov 3, in Llveipool. Miss Babin ls direction tbe nuvy\"9 battleflags and but this is the first attempt that has\ngirted with a beautiful soprano voice,' trophies are being restored, took up i ever been made in this direction in\nand had achievod no little cucce-n aa tbe study of scientific embroidery j Victoria. The education department\na musician. I wuen a giri ns \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  pagtime and later   a,1(1 thl' board ot trustees are backing I\nKaid Belton was for eight months \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd adopted ,t ns a profe38|on.    St,e be-   Ule Plan both financially and    other-\nlast year attached   to   the   staff   of   _\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- ; wise.    The  school  warden  covers  an\nStanley Barrack.-, Toronto, but found \ufffd\ufffd\" *er work at Annapolis taat year\nthe life rather loo tame, and went to \ufffd\ufffdnd u aMl8ted b' 8everal 8Core \ufffd\ufffd,f\nChicago to lear  aviation. I needlewomen.   Mra. Fowler la a reai-\n\"The kaid, or In other words the i dent of Boston,\ncommander-in-chief,  for that  ip  the\ndian girT. Mlg.-t Mamie\"BablnT of Ot- | k'al \ufffd\ufffdoclety of Urent Britain.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd i\nBOWBLL    (SUCCESSOR   TO   CBN-\nler A  Hanna,   L,ld.j,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdKucifrai  ulreciui\nand embalmers.    Parlors 405  Column!\nstreei,    New   Westminster.    Phone   III\nBOARD   OF  TRADE.\nlOARD OF TRADE- -NBW WESTMIN-\nIter Board o( Truae meets In the bum\nII.OI11, City Hall, as folic,vet Tblrd Fri\nday of each month; quarterly mee<1nj\non tbe third Friday of February, Ma;\nAugust and November st 8 p.m. An\nnual meetlnKS on the third Friday o\nFebruary. C. H. Stuart Wade, seers\ntary.\nEnglish meaning of the title he gained In Morocco, is r sturdy English\nofficer who won his commission j\nSouth Africa for gallantry in the\nfield at the age of nineteen, was appi inted commander of the Sultan of\nMorocco's army a. 25, ard waged\nwar against Abdel Aziz and i it bim\nto flight while still lit.le more than a\nboy.\nThe kaid Is a Cumtrian win from\nhis  earliest  yearB\nCurrent Comment.\nIt's a wise currency bill tbat knows\nIts own father.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdColumbia State.\nEqual suffrage prevails lu Mexico to\na large extent. Tbe women ore not\npermitted to vote, and tbe men are\nafraid to.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdKansas City Journal.\nIn France there is out- saloon to ev-\narea of about 113 by 50 feet, and is\ndivided up into '20 vegetable plots of\nS by 13 feet, and 10 flower plots\nmeasuring 8 by 4V2 feeet each. A fence\nwill be placed around these plots, and\nbord rs perennials planted. Adjoining the school garden is a plant\nhouse. A portion of this building ls\narranged with benches down each\nside for demonstration purposes.\nPlant History.\nThe children will be taught the\nrompl'\"i- life history of the plants.\nThey will be given the seeds, which\nthey will lir.u sow in the plant house,\ntransfer to the cold frame and then\ntransfer Into the garden, each year\nobtaining the seeds from their own\nplants. The house is built on such a\nscale that    it will hold,    during   the\nPROFESSIONAL.\nCORBOULD. GRANT A McCOtL,. BAB\nrimers. Solicitors, etc. 40 I.ome Street\nNVvc Westminster. O. E. Corbould, K\nC,    J. R. Orant.    A.  B. McColl.\nAl'AM SMITH JOHNSTON BARRISTER\n.it-lit*. Solicitor, etc. Solicitor for the\nHunk of \\ ancouver. Offices: Mer\nChants Hank Bulletin!,\". New* Westrnlns\n(\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdr. II.C. Telephone No. 1070. ('ntil<\naddress     \"Johnston.\"     Code     Westerr\n\\    t'rilnn.\nW    F    HANSFORD,   BARRISTER,   SO\nHr-itur. etc., Colliater Block, corner Col\numbla aim McKenxie streets, Ne*w Went\nminster. IJ.C. P. O. Box H85. Tele\npbone 344.\nWmTBSIDE, EDMONDS e. WHITE\nnil* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Barristers and Solicitors, West\nminster Tru.ii Bike., Columbia street\nNew *A*entminster, B. C. Cable addrese\nWhiteside.\" Western Union. P. 0\nDrawer 200. Telephone (I. W. J\nWhiteside, K. C.; H. U Edmonds. I\nWhiteside.\n.1 .STILWELL CL.UTB. Berrister-at-la*\nsolicitor, etc.; corner Columbia am\nMi-Keiiile streets. New Westmlnstei\nH   C.   P. O.  Box  111.    Telephone   711\nJ \ufffd\ufffd' HAMPTON BOLE. BARRISTER\nSolicitor and Notary. Offices Har\nMuck. 2* Lorne street. New Westmle\nsler. B. O.\nM.QUAKR1K. MARTIN A CA8SADT\nBarristers and Bollcltor*. 6116 10 tl'\nWestminster Trust Block, (i. E. Mai\n11-1.   V.   O.   McQuarrie   end   Oeorge   t\n\"hiuhcIv.\nad an ambition ery eighty-two Inhabitants. Nearing\nfor a life of adventure. He was only the point where every householder ts\nseventeen when be became a trooper b!s own bartender.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNew Vork Ameri-\nin th- Westmoreland anj Cumbe.Iand   can.\nYeomanry, but before* long be was |n  crcating  tiie  puckerless   persltu- j winter months, not only all the plants\ncommanding officer and rose to the \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd)on tUe American I'omologlcal society belonging to the George Jay school, 1\nrank of captain. It was the Boer to Rotating tbe Juvenile privilege of but will be able to store the plants!\nWar which led him to join the yeo- - J practical Joke   f\"r the \"bole of the schools in    the I\nmaury, and with it be saw active Ber-   \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\" ',,,   \"j\" JUIlc   p*lv\n^^^ I on Iiuiocence.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNew \ufffd\ufffdork World. L   \/.;\nI    'ihe plots In the school garden will\nbe worked entirely    by the children.\nFor this year there will be'only one\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^   I class cf 20 under the direction of Mr. j\nUtilize  your  spare   moments.     One i H. !).  MacLean.    The class will    be\ncan accomplish much In this way while   composed of at least one pupil from!\nFlippant Flings.\ndummy at bridge.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPittsburgh I'ost.\n\"What,\" asks Jane Addams. \"could\nbe sillier than n derby bat?\" Ofttimes.\nJane, tbe man under It\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPhiladelphia\n1 Inquirer.\n' , Maybe people would have more faltb\n\\ in tbe weather bureau It It wore long\n; white whiskers und smoked a coru-\n' cob pipe.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdexchange.\nA New Vork farmer raised a turnip\nI thut weighed eight pounds; otherwise\n* it Is understood lie is all right good to\nhis family, etc.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdToledo lliude.\nThe Cookbook.\nWhen\nBusiness\nBooms\neach    division.    The membership    is\n1 quite voluntary,  and  up to the pres-\n,ent time more than 350 children have\n! expressed  the desire  to join.    Selections  will  be  made  for  the class of\n1 these who deserve a reward for gen-\n, eral proficiency.    Individual vegetable\nplots will be supplie d for each pupil,\nj and will be labelled,  whilst two will\nco-operate in one flower bed.\nStatement to Be Kept.\nEvery child will keep a diary and a\nfinancial statement. The time devoted\nto the    work will    include occasional\nperiods of school time, but mostly recess  periods,  the  noon  hour,  before '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nand after school hours and on Saturdays,    The children will be supplied,\n... . ,    . . 1 free of charge,    with    all    vegetable\nAdd a  teaspoemrul of culd water to \\ se(?ds   and  ^  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd__  gep(ls  may  bfi ,\n1 Ibe   white   of   nu   egg   to   wbip   more | (,bta*.ned   from   thp   plaut   house   at\nHARD TIMES! A prominent advertiser who spends a fortune every\nyear in publicity has established a\nsignificant rule. Whenever he notices a slowing up of business he increases\nhis advertising. This is the reason: \"When\nbusiness is booming it is unnecessary to\nfight for it\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdit comes of itself; but when\nbusiness is slow I insist on having my share\nof it, and the easiest way to get it is by calling attention to my goods. I do not wait for\nhard times. I scent them in the distance,\nand before anybody else gets busy I make\nmy contracts for advertising on a big scale\nand get my orders in before my competitors\nknow what I am doing.\" The logic and common sense of the attitude of this gentleman\naccount in large part for the remarkable\nsuccess he has achieved\nAdvertise in\nThe New Westminster News\nKAlli  IIH.TCIN.\nvice in South Africa. Six months\nafter he bad returned to England\ntrouble arose in Morocco. The information was scanty - just hut there\nwas a revolt against the then reign-\nlnK  Sultan \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd but   i    was  enoush   for\nyoung Helton. Off he rushed without : The addition eif ti little andu mixed\nu moment's delay to 8 shipping oflite 1 vvith. \ufffd\ufffd. teaspoonful uf corn stnrch to\nand booked to Tangier, pr.ee aboard I ,,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. ,.,.,..,,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd |\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,f()re |M)\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdrinB ., ,,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd a,e\nship be began to think things out and tonintn mixture will prevent curdling\ndeeded  thai  h*s  busine-s in life w.~.s 1       ..          .,        . .\n. . 1 . . u 1. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .,,.,.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 1 in the uiaking of criiiined toiiiuto soup\nto get into touch right away with the ' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  '\nyuor who wanted to be *be new Sul- j  '\nIan and  organize  his army for hlji. |                     Short   StOHBS.\nAt Tangier his difficulties began.  The\t\neiiiic-kiy.   This increases tbe quality u\ufffd\ufffd I half the cataY0gUe,i price, 'it is hoped\nwell. I by this means to encourage a love of\nThe secret of flaky pie crust is the j gardening in the rising generation.\nuse of hot  water mot  bollingi  rather I     For this general nature study work\nthan cold In mixing tbe dougb.    If thi*   Mr. MacLean proposes to give instruc* j\nsuggestion  is  followed  the crust   will ' *-lol:*  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>  every branch of horticulture,\nalways be flaky, tender and crisp. i including the  raising of  plants  from ;\n' setd, construction of plant house and\nmany  other  details  of this  most   in- !\nforesting hobby.\nADVERTISE IN THE DAILY NEWS\nSYNOPSIS   OF   COAL  MINING   HI\nQULATIONS.\nCOAL MININU rights of the DomlnK*\ntn M'i'ilicibH. Saskatchewan anil Alberti\nthn y-.iknn Territory, the Nortbwen Tei\nrimrls iired In a portion of the Provlnc\nof Hilt mil Columbia, may be leased for 1\nterm of twenty-one years st an anniii\nrental of II an acre. Not more than 251\n\ufffd\ufffdrr\ufffd\ufffdn will be leased lo one apiillcun-t.\nA|,|i!li 1 tlon for a lease must lie read\nby the inuilleant In person to the Aa-c\nor Bub-Agent of the district In which tb\nrlKhts ii||ilii'il for are sttuated.\nIn surveyed territory the land must b\ndescribed by sections, or legal sub-dlr'\nsIohh of sections, and In unsurveyed tei\nrltory the tract applied for snail b\nMakeil nut hy the applicant hlmxelf.\nKnch application must be accompsnle*\nly a fee of Id which will be refunded I\nthe rlRlils applied for are not available\nbul not otherwise. A royalty shall b\npaid on the merchantable output of th\nmlie at the rate of five cents per ton.\nThe person operating the mine shs\nfurnish the Agent with sworn return\naocountlng for the full quantity of mei\ncharitable coal mined and pay tlm ro}\nally thereon. If tbe coal mining right\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHie not being operated such returns shoul\nbe   f irnisusu  nt   least once  a  year.\nThe li line wlll Include the coal ralnln\nrlKlna only, bul the lessee wlll be pei\nmlti *,l to purchase whatever h*.attain\nSurface rights may be considered necei\naarjt for the working of the mine at th\nrate of  III)  an  acre\nfur full Information application shoul\ntie tun.le Io the Beteretsr\/ of the Depar\nment of Uie Interior. Ottawa, or to an\nAgent  or  Sub-Agent of  Dominion  Land*\nw. w. ronr.\nDeputy   Minister  of  the   Interloi\nN    B.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdUnauthorised publication of the\nadvertisement  wlll not be paid for\nre'gnlng Sultan, Abdul Aziz, had re\ntired to Fez, but the pretender, Muiai\nllalid, was in southern Morocco. Belton quickly discovered that he could , , .* -. .\nnot reach his ol jectlve in the oruin- j twenty-six years old Until thnt time\nary way, because the life of no Chris- ' \"' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\"*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd fotir-flftb* of bis earnings must\ntian   was   safe*   in   the   interior,   and ' *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\" to 01* parents\nHere were no caravans to convy him. ;     Artillery officers of the United Stale-\nChafing   under   all   this   the   Kng-    iirniy have succeeded in directing the\nII hinan   hit   en   a  desperate  remedy, i fire of coast defense guns from  p<iiiil>\npretending that  he was going to see ' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,, f.r ,n\\-,.,,t ns ..jgltt miles\na   bull   fight,   and   taking   lhe   wrong ;     ,. ,v ^        ,\nli at.   At I.arairliH be bribed a Jew    1 -\ndress him as a  Moorish woman, and\nThe Sa barn desert i* three times ns j\n, large as the Mediterranean sea.\nA  Russian is not of age until he Is |\nNew Wellington\nCOAL\nJOSEPH MAYERS\nOffice,  554 Front Street,\nFoot of Sixth Street.\nP O. Box 345. Phone 105.\nWestminster\nTransfer Co.\nOffice Phone 185.       Barn Phone 137.\nBegbie Street.\nBaggage Delivered Promptly to\nAny Part of the City.\nLight and Heavy Hauling\nCITY OF NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C\nthus got through 10 lh\" headquarters I\nof the pretender. Quite coolly the\nEnglishman announced ihat he want- ,\ned to see llalid, and though sentries\nbarred his way he eventually fou:.d\nhimself In a squa.e whir the new j\nSultan's troops were drawn up In the\npresence Of the Sultan and his court. !\nHe told llatid thai he was willing to\norganize Ilis army. Four days later\nbe was given the c-iance cl showing\nwhat be could do with the troops,\nnml bo we\"l did he manage them that\nbe soon found himself with an army\nof-1 hilly th 0:1 sand at his command\nln August, 100H, i.elton, who bas\nbeen described a* a king-maker, de-\nf'tited \\ btl 111 Aziz, and llalid was pro-\nt-lalnvil Sultan. For all these services Dei ton received no monetary reward. His subsequent history Is:\nDriven ou, of Morocco by the jealousies of the Fre'ucb; crossed to Canada I\nIn the hope of leading the rebels In\nNicaragua; joined tbe r.th princess |\nI oulse Dragoon Guards al Ottawa:\nppent some months as an officer attached to t'.ie Itoyai Canadian Dragoons at Stanley Harrarks, Toronto;\nbegan hia career at Chicago as an\naviator, fell out of his machine and\nreceived all sorts of injuries; met\nMme. llabin, a French-Canadian\nsinger.\nAt his little bouse at VVavertree he\nPaid to an Interviewer: \"I've never\nmade any monej. It Is about time I\nstarted. 1 suppose 1 am settling\ndown in (lie paper and pulp trade,\naid we i.re building mills in Canada.\"\nHe thinks his last adventure beats\nuny he has bad.\nOn their return from their honeymoon, tbey will reside at Uowthorne\nHall, C.arth Drive, Mossley Hill,\nLiverpool, Kngland.\nbing together, tbe civilized world luse*-\none and one-quarter tenix uf gnlel and\neighty-eight tons of silver In a year\nTrain and Track.\nIt Is expen-ted that the Ornnil Trunk\nPticitic railway will be llnisbed by neil\nMay.\nTha government of New South Wales\nhas placed orders for eighty new loco\nmotives for the state railways\nAn tifetylene thi nil I lathi litis been in\nvented for railroad trussing gates\nwhich is ignited liy a pilot light as s\ngate is lowered.\nAll  \\\\ diveirk employed  In  tbe con\nStl'llCtlotl  nf  i'OlIlltg stock  fur   l.eeticliin'*.\nunderground railways Is rendered 11011\ninlliiinmalile by a chemical process\nH\" Knew.\n\"1 wish you'd put a new glass In\nmy right front lamp. A follow backed into me to-day.\"\n\"Sure thing. I'll fix It, The fellow\nyou ran Into wns just here to have\nbis tail lump fixed.'\nGood Advice.\nKeep  your   fears   to   yourself,  but\nihare   vour   courage   witli   others.\nRead The News\nP.O. Box ** Dally News Bldg\nJ.  T.   BURNETT'8  PRINT  SHOP\nJOB   PRINTING\nof all  kinds.\nPrices right.   Satisfaction guaranteed\n59 McKanals 81\nFacts From France.\nParis has meire than ftO.otlO retired\nemployees on its municipal pension\nrolls\nFrance Is popaldprlnii \" commission\ntee make u study of Hie low liinti rale\neef the country.\nVenl retails nt 3.* cents 11 pound i'<\nI'rniiie, beef at .'il cents, mutton nnd\npcirk. 'Jii Canned meats are becoming\nmure popular.\nTo decrease the number uf accidents\n11 French city Is building a street With\nseparate roadway for eiu-h kind of\ntraffic-motor, horse and foot.\nIndustrial Ittms.\nAustrian suit mines employ 7.000\nminers.\nlite petroleum industry of tbe Unit\n1\"* States has more than trebled lu\nlive years\nFighty per cent of cotton cloth in\nthe Hnltnl States Is made In six states\nn  New   Knghind und the south\nI u proportion to the number of men\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdinplnyed there nil- more fatal nee I\n'etits in the metal mines of the I'nited\nitiltl'R than In die cnill mines, ai-cord\nUK tei government statistic**\nFound Dead in Room.\nWinnipeg, March 8, Murdoch McLeod, aged 45, was found di ad Saturday night in -a room at the rear of\nthe bar of the Queim's hotel. He had\nbeen drinking during the day. The j\ndoctor declared his death was due to\nheart failure'. Ile was a married man\nWith a family. I\n\/\/ yen are doing A local business\ntalk over your advertising problems with the Advertising Department of this newspaper.\nIf you are doing a provincial or\nnational business it would be well\nfor you to have the counsel and\nassintancu oi \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd good advertising\nagency. A list of these will he\nfurnished, without cost or obligation, by the Secretary of Canadian Cress Association 1 Room\nSG.e, Lanisdea Iluiiuing,Toronto.\nThe Poor Man's\nUniversity\n\"ONESknows more about motor\ncars than any other man I\nknow,\"  said   a man   to his\nfriend.   \" He has obtained his\nknowledge chiefly from motor car advertise*\nments,   and   the   catalogues   and   booklets\ncirculated through them.''\n\" All I know about photography,\" declared a well-\nknown amateur, \" I have learned from the men who\nadvertise cameras, plates, papers and films.\"\nAdvertisements have been\nwell called \"The Poor Man's\nUniversity,\" but other than\npoor men have been schooled\nthereby.\nMuch of what the average individual knows concerning personal and domestic hygiene, modern\noffice methods, books and authors, electricity, precious stones, investments, and almost everything else,\nhe has learned from advertisements.\nAdvertisements have stimulated our intelligence,\nadded enormouslv to our knowledge, and given us\naspirations wV h have raised us to higher levels of\nthinking and l.\ufffd\ufffd.ing. Advertising is indeed \"The\nPoor Man's University.\" PAGE  FOUR\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWi\nTUESDAY.  MARCH   10,  1914.\nBrooms\nBrushes\nOur stock includes many\nthings that t'.ie wife needs about\nti'Je house.\nBrooms,   light    30c.\nAnd ranging in weight to 65=.\nScrub Brushes ..15c, 20c, 25c.\nShoe  Brushes   .  25c.  30c,  35c\nDaubers,   each     15c.\nStove'Brushes  ...,20c and 25c\nBlack  Lead  Dauber*    10c.\nNail  Brushes,  3  for   10c\nDish   Washers        10c\nWire   Sink   Brushes     15c\nKnife Cleaners   20c\nWash  Boards. Glass, Brass.\nand Enamel   50c\nWash Boards, zinc    25c\nWash Tubs, Galvanized Iron,\nKtbre anil Wooden; fails, Galvanized Iron, Fibre and Wooden.\nClothes Baskets. ClOthes Lines,\nClothes Pius. Mops, etc.\nModel Grocery\nMATHESON AJACObSON.\nLocal News\nOrder New Uniforms.\nA contract for tne supply of :\nfor the firemen and 14 for the\nI Korea at a tost of $M4 each was\n1 secretary This wil! probably be ac-\n[ complisicd later in the with. Dr.\n1 Robinson, in his reply lo tie- petition.\nI stated that the K<*Iiruary grant would\nIbe forwarded Within the- next few\n(days although  this  well  likely  be dis-\n- jjyjtii i trlbuted by the new school board to\npolice j ,Jl' electeed on Saturday.\naward- j\nI\ned  to J.\nmeeting\nN   Aitchison\nlast night.\nat  the council\nIce Carnival Wednesday. S o'clock.\nSix fancy prizes.. Special music Admission 50c. (3063)\nAgricultural Meeting.\nThe* re*gular meeting of the hoard of\ndirectors of the Central I'ark Agricultural aSMiciation and farmers' institute will be held on Friday evening\nin  tbe Agricultural  hall.\na time* worked on Tuxeda island at the\nMarble* Bay hotel. The coinmunica\ntion received yesterday came from\nPortsmouth. Kngland. and stated that\nMurfett was at oue time stationed on\nH.M.c.s Rainbow.\n\ufffd\ufffdocia\n1 and P\nersona\nSTEAMER TRAVELS\nCARIBOO ROAD\nson suth St.\nEast   Burnaby\nPhone 1001 2.\nBranch, Second\nSt. and Fifteenth Ave. Ed\nMonds Branch, Gray Block.\nPhone 1111L.\nUse Public Library.\nDuring  February the  books loaned\nfrom  the public library  totalled 2642. i\nwhile  the  net  number  of  readers  is j\n1546.\nIce Carnival Wednesday. 8 o'clock.\nSix fancy prizes. Special music Admission 50c (3063)\nInsure  in  the    Royal,  the   world's\nlargest  lire company.    Agent,  Alfred\nW.  McLeod, the insurance\nMan.\n(3009)\nSapperton   Sewer\nCleaning up Chinatown.\nA meeting with the owners of the\ndilapidated buildings in the lower end\nof the city and the council will be held\non March 30 for the purpose of arranging  life  terms  on   the  buildings.\nWe Have\nMoney\nto Loan\nOn\nFirst\nMortgages\nProperty must be well improved and worth at least double the\namount of the loan.\nFor full particulars call at our\noffice and  let  us quote you.\nMrs. L. B. Twias, city manager\nSpirella Co., has moved from 221 Sixth\nstreet to 237 Third streei, and will be\nat home Wednesday afternoon of each\nweek to show and explain the merits\nof Spirella corsets. Phone 61H for appointments, (S068)\nRifle Men to Meet.\nNew Westminster Civilian It If It* association   will  hold   its  annual   meeting   in   the  board  of  trade  rooms on\nMarch 21.\nWe serve light  lunches,\nGrant's Bakery, 737 Columbia St.\n(2996)\nScheme.\nWork on the (lien Itrook sewer will | well\nwe started in the near future and preparations are being made so that no\ntime will be lost once actual construction is commenced. At the meeting\nof the city council last night it was\ndecided to call for tenders for the\nsupply of material required in addition\nto the material the government will\nsupply for the work on the sewer\nthrough the penitentiary grounds.\nAnnual meeting of Liberals of New-\nWestminster city will be held in Odd\nFellows' hall on Tuesday evening\nnext, March 10th, for election of officers, etc. The delegates to the Victoria convention will give their report. All voters opposed to the\npresent administraiion invited.\n(3040)\nClean Bill cf Health.\nDuring February in New- Westminster   the   only   infectious   diseases   reported was one case of mumps.\nSocialist Meetings.\nThe Socialist candidates running\nfor election for the Hurnaby school\nboard will hold a meeting In the Gil-\nmore avenue school. Vancouver\nHeights, this evening. On Thursday\nevening the scene changes to the Edmonds street school, Edmonds, while\nthe campaign will close* on Friday with\na meeting to be heiei iii ti'.ie Kingsway\nWest school, West Burnaby.\nHockey\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdArena tonight, 8:30 sharp.\nProvincial championship, Columbias\n(Vancouver) vs. Fraser Mills. Admission  50c. (3052)\n*\nDominion Trust\nCompany.\nThe Perpetual Trustee.\n4\nPer Cent on\nits\nNew Westminster\nlira rich.\nC. s\n606  Columbia   Street.\nKEITH,  Mai-aH\".\nNew Postoffice.\nThe federal postal authorities\nBelected a site offered by K. I). Irvine\nof Port Coquitlam for the proposed\nnew postoffice in that city. A sum of\n$35,000 is available for the postoffice\nto be erected, an appropriation of $15.-\n000 being made in 1913 and another of\n$2u,con  this year.\nBrass bed, spring and Rest more\nmattress, everything new, only $24.00\ncomplete. For three days only at the\nWestminster Furniture Store, corner\nFourth and Columbia str:*ets.    13049)\nSabbath  Observance\nThe tegular educational meeting of\ntin* W. C. T.  I'. will take place this\n| afternoon in St. Stephen's Presbyter-\n! tan church.   A discussion on the topic\nI of Sabbath observance will fake place\nwith   Mrs.   W,   I).   Reid   leading.\nFred Davis will sell by public auction   (absolutely without  reserve)   the\nhouse-bold furniture and effects of Mr,\nI A. Allam, on th'* premises   at    HOG\nI Edinboro street,  on  Tuesday.  March\nj 10th.  al  2 n.m. sharp.    The  furniture\ni.i  all  of  the  highest   grade   and  all j\nmarly   new  and   will  include   in. iitai j\nof, fine Malleable seel range, Wilton\ni and velvet pile carpets, beds, springs\nand    Restmore    mattresses,    rockers\nand chairs, very line dining table and\n] leather upholstered chairs, handsome\ni flat  ton  solid  i ak  desk  and    swivel\nchair,  Morris chairs, child's  crib and ,\nmattress,  grass chairs,  pictures,  etc..\netc.     Every   article   must   go  us  Mr.\nV1!*!*!   Is  leaving   New   Westminster\nfor the east.   floods on \\ic*w moraine\nc f s lie. (3057) j\nSerier ot   Lectures.\nRe v.  ().   M.  Sanford   wll]   deliver  a ;\nseries of lectures cm \"Religious Pedagogy;\" commencing this sftemenh tit:\n2:30.     The   lectures   which     will     be\ngiven in Tuesday and Thursday after-1\nn ii ins are open to the public.\nMoney  to loan  on   trrst  mortgages, t\nimproved  oitv  and   farm   property   fl\nper cent. Alfred W. McLeod.     (3009)\nCetremony of Confirmatirn\nT ie Rip I Rev. A. !\". DoPencier\nll h ., \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd New Westmlntscr, performed tiie eeremonj of confirmation at\nSt. Stephen's church. Burquitlam on j\nSunday e\\ i ning, In the pre tence of a\nfull congn \ufffd\ufffd il * ii Tin* si rvlce ivas\nchoral and the b1 shop's .- ph n lid address was listened Lo with rani al\ntentlon. There were ten candidates\npresent,*i!.\nGold  Re-Elected.\nSouth Vancouver. March ft.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAt the\nspecial election held here today Councillor  Edward  Gold  who  recently  resigned   and   who  offered   himself  for\nj re-election   was   victorious,   defeating\nlave j ills opponent by 2iifi votes.    Only 474\nvotes  were  polled.     It  is   stated  that\nsteps will again be taken to have Mr.\nGold unseated.\n.Mrs. Edwin H. Johnston will not receive*  today.\nThe following are registered at the\nSavoy hotel: W. K. McNeil, Cedro\nWooley; J. Mcl'haden, Nanaimo; T.\nH. Ward. Everett; E. Laird, G. A.\nMoore. W. Thomas, Walter Banner.\nNanaimo.\nMadanu N. B. Gauvreau was yesterday elected president of the New Westminster Anti-Tuberculosis society at a\nattended meeting held at the\nhome of Mrs. G. D. Brymner, First\nstreet. On Mrs. Brymner, the host\nof the day, was couferred the honor\nof Peine appointed honorary president.\nOther officers selected were: Mrs. A.\nJ. 11:11, first vice-president; Mrs. A.\nF. Cotton, second vice-president; Mrs.\nA. W. Gray, secretary, and Mrs. J.\nQracey, treasurer. As the executive\ncommittee for the society representatives of the different churches In the\ncity were elected. The reports of last\nyear's officers noted gratifying progress. The next meeting will be held\nat the home of Madame Gauvreau.\nQueen's avenue. Monday next at 3\no'clock.\nM-s. M. S. Rennie of Sapperton, has\nleft by way of Seattle and Spokane\nlor the upper country where she will\ninterest the residents of the various\ninterior towns in the aims of the True\nBlues, of which she is provincial organizer. During her stay ln the upper country Mrs. Rennie will visit\nVernon, Armtsrong, Merritt, Kam-\nlooiis and Neluon and will also pay a\nvisit to Alberta. She expects to be\naway about four weeks.\nCraft Travels Overland to Enter Service of Mining Company on\nQuesnel  Lake.\nAshcroft. March 9.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe unique project of taking a vessel from the coast\noverland to Quesnel lake, in the interior of tbe Cariboo district, has just\nbeen accomplished. To the efforts\nof William Carse of Vancouver belongs tiie honor tor it is the first\nsteamer over the famous Cariboo trail.\nFrom the coa.st to Ashcroft by rail\nover the C. P. R. was but a pleasure\njaunt, lt was the haul from Ashcroft\nto Quesnel Forks that the real task\nbegan and would have proven a barrier to anyone save William Parker,\nand had not his long years of experience In carrying freight over this\nworld-famed trail stood him in good\nstead, the journey, even then might\nhave been abandoned. With only six\nmiles separating tbem from their goal\nthe remainder of the journey to Quesnel lake was easily accomplished.\nThe presence of the steamer on the\nlake will prove of great value to timber lease holders and lumbermen who\nmust, according to the provincial government, have their leases surveyed\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdby the end of 1014    But for Mr. Carse\nrveylng the\ncarried   on   under\nThree Missing.\nA lookout is being maintained by\n: the local police for Richard Lund who\n* disappeared from his home in Van-\ni couver on Thursday last. When last\n: seen he was wearing a black coat and\ni is of fair complexion. His home is on\nI Bermuda street. Vancouver\".. No in-\n! formation has been received by the\nj local police as to the whereabouts of\ni Nicholas F. Besler, who disappeared\ni from this city on Feb. 23. The local\nj police have also been requested to\n' search for Arthur Murfett, an Eng\ni lishman, who was last heard of in\nj New Westminster on April 28, 1013.\n; Murfett  was a cook's helper and  for\nCounterfeiter Sentenced.\nBarrie, Ont., March 9,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.lames\nO'Neill, whose arrest for passing\ncounterfeit bills led to the round up\nof the counterfeiters at Lindsay was\ntoday sentenced to two and a half\nyears. The others were last week at\nLindsay given five years each. O'Neill\nwho has but one arm. has a wife and\nfive children and a largely signed\npetit'on asked the magistrate to allow suspended sentence.\nsuch  a  task  as  su\nwould bave to be\ngreat   difficulties,\nThe little steamer, a 45-footer w-ith\na 9 foot beam, was built and fitted up\nin Vancouver and will be used in eon-\nnection with the Hemlock Creek Mining company of which Mr. Carse is the\nhead.\n; in  Sacramento and  100 in   Itreidirick\n1 The sheriff and diatrtel  attorney of\n; Vclo are in charge of the force iu\nYolo county.\nAmong those arrested today afte-r\nthe}   bad refused  to accept  transpor\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd tat ie n  to the    bay   were:    \"General\"\n! Charles T. Kelley and Edward\n(\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdRoughneck\") Teasdale. Te-asUab*\nwas arris.ed several times in San\nFrancisco. Neither resisted arrest.\nMilitary Aid Asked.\nVolo county citizens requested Governor  Johnson   informally   late   today\nI to call out the militia to aid the authorities in preserving order. The\ngovernor replied that the MQUMt\nmust come  from  the  proper  authori\n| ties and that lt must be fully ^stali\nlished to his satisfaction ihat the\nmilitia was needed to preserve lives\nand  property.\nA census of the remnants of the\narmy driven across the river from\nSacramento established the fact that\nout of the estimated 1600 men encamped here early in the day less\nthan 600 were driven into Volo\ncounty. The remainder, with the exception of about 50 that have been\narrested, are at large in the city.\nSheriff Ahern and Chief of Police-\nJohnson issued u call to citizens tonight for volunteers us deputy\nsheriffs. The streets of the city will\nbe patrolled by a00 special deputizeel\ncitizens in addition to the regular\npolice force.\nA cordon of special state police waa\nthrown about the stale capital building and grounds today anel entrance\nto the state bouse could be gained\nonly by front doors. Two watchmen\nstood  at  the door of Governor John\nease's | Hon*s office ami two more guarded th.-\nstate' treasury, which contains more\nthan $2,i)0n,OO0.\nOrders were issued by the sheriffs\noffice t\" merchants to remove fire\narms from display windows.\nANYONE\n<4   CAN\nis\njj\n\ufffd\ufffdTHEIR CLOTHES\nWITH\nC A WELSH\n1Y0U\nlThe Dye that colors ANY KIND(\nof Cloth Perfectly, with tho\nSAME DYE.\nNo Chance of Mi\ufffd\ufffdtaken.   CK-an anel Simple.\n] i\\m- yi.ur I\ufffd\ufffdr-'ci;i*.l nr Healer, Send for Hook l<v\nTli* Jobufcon-RjcharoAon Co. Limm-d. Momti *l\nLIMITED.\nThe People's Grocer\nPHONES:\nCity Store    '.. .193 and  443\nSapperton   Branch    373\nWest  End  Branch    650\nTHREE\nBIG   STORES\nPLENTY.\nOF\nTry our 'ea. ce\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdrant's Baki rj.\nff\"\n737\nand iii*-f.\nColumbia SI\n(2990\nTo\nI*-.\nPorkA4eans\nSPECIAL FOR THIS WEEK\nPay Teachers.\nUowlng ti petition senl lo Dr\nAlex Robinson, superintend nl of education for the province, b> the itu\nnaiby teachers, the January grant Is\nnow in the bands of Comptroller Griffiths ami will i e distributed to tlu*\nteachers when the necessary requisition is made out by the i chool board\nQuaker Brand, 1  lb, tills at 4 tins for\n25c;   large 3  Ib.  tins, 2 for 25c.\nHerring in Tomato  Sauce, 3 tins 25c.\nWorcester Sauce, Muttons Brand, reg.\n20c*.   bottle.     Special   2  for  25c.\nII. I'  Sauce  Special per bottle . .20c.\nCanned Pineapple, :i tins for  25c.\nMinced Clams, per tin   \t\nFresh Garden Seeds now   li\nOnion   Se ts,   per   lb\t\nShallotts,   per  lb\t\nSATISFACTION   IS  OUR  AIM.\nDean's Grocery\nVICTORIAN  ORDER   OF   NURSES.\nMISS E. D0WNHAM\nResidence:   Room  118  .Mcl.eod Hlock.\nPhone 489 L.\nM4TFRMTV    SURGICAL   AND\nr.-.EDICAL CASES ATTENDED.\nCan any Good Thing\nCome out of Mexico?\nWell now we have to n Imit\nthat they have* given us some\nec ry good things to eat. i 'on*\nslder the delicious M xican Tamale; also the Enchiladas. I h \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nhave that hoi si i hern I mg\nthat makes eating th un a joy.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdlust try a tin of eii In t ai\nfor yourself hov, good i .*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd are,\nTamales, per tin 20c. 2 fcr 35c.\nChill Concarne, tin 20c, 2 for 35c\nEnchiladas, tin 20c, 2 for 33c.\nDON'T  FORGET\n* n :\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd sale of Pure Engl sh\n(\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnt       Raspbi i .'        i ,\nDamson  Plum and fire\nRegular 7.0c. and 85c     nil\np r tin 60c\nSTALLWERCK'S COCOA\nMilk Cocoa aud Dutch I 'roci\nHealthful and nourishing\nC. A. WELSH\nLIMITED.\nROUT ARMY Of UNEMPLOYED WITH HOSE\nAND PICK HANDLES\n(Continued from page onei\nin the county hospital, but their in*\n'juries  did  not   extend  beyond   that.\nIn passing Second street they attacked the street cars, throwing\nrocks aud sticks through the windows.\nThe passengers took refuge on tin;\ncar floors. A rock was thrown through\n.in* wind shield ol Dr. John Griffiths'\nI automobile bitting him In the mouth.\nRaid  Saloon.\nTin* army was shunted down Front\nbtreet \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd() the M street bridge. One\nhundred broke luo.-e and raided and\nwti deed a saloon en route. They\nfinally were guided over tiie' M Btreet\nbridge und into Vein county.\nAppeals tn Governor Hiram W,\nJohnson to call out the militia were\nunsuccessful, the governor placing\neverything In the hands of Adjutant\nGeneral Ethan Allen Forbes, who was\nconstantly on the scene of action. At\nthe governor's request, 600 men were\ndeputized   late  today,  40(1  to  do  duty\nC. P. R. MAY MOVE\nHEADQUARTERS FROM HERE\nThere  is  a  report  current  in   i'ort\n; Coquitlam    that    In    June with the\nchange   from   the   winter   to   summer\nsclie clules  the  terminal  of   the  Westminster branch  line of the c.  P   it.\nwill be changed from this city to Port\nCoquitlam.    The    projected    change\nwill mean that t'.ie place of residence\nof at least 16 men whose duties appertain  directly   Io  tiie operation  of\nthe trains will be changed from New\ni Westminster to  Port Coquitlam and\n' that New Westminster will no longer\n1 be the terminal centre for the trains\ni and engines plying on the Westminster route.\nThe local terminal was established' *\nin 1886 and has been in operation ever\nsince.     Both    passenger   and    freight\nengines have been  housed  jit  t'.ie*\nglne house iii tills city since\nall car repairing on the\ngaged cm the WestmlnBter\nbeen done locally.\nthen\ncars\nrun\nen\nand\nen-\nhas\nServe No Useful  Purpose.\nI.e ndi.it, .March 9,    The view of    the\nBritish  government   Is  that   it   would\ns rve no usi ful purpose to make representations io the government at\nWashington regarding the recognition\nof Oeneral Hue i-t.-i as provisb ual\npresident of Mexico. This announce-\n\"H ni was made today by Pram Is\nDyke Acland, parliamentary end\nsi cretary of state for foreign\nIn answering a question in th\nnf commons.\nr\niffail \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-.\nbo u se\nHow do\nyou do\neach bake day.\nDo you get perfect bread with\nevery batch ?\nNo question\nabout it if you\nuse MY flour.\nThey   test\ntt O Y A L,\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 YOUR GROCER\n0)\nVANCOUVER. NEW WESTMINSTER\nVancouver Milling I Grain Co., Ltd.\nLOSE\nKLil\nTIME\nOUR GARDEN SEEDS\nLawn Grass, Onion Setts\nNOW IN STOCK\nColumbia Street\nAT RYALL'S.\n(Druggist and Optician) Phone 57\n. i . \/thin\nwalls and\nThis is the Brighten tip time or the year when you tvanl\nlooking new and clean. Are you going to freshen up tin\nfloors ol your home?    If you are   ito us,\nALAFeASTlNE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA   cold   water paint that comes In over 20 dif\nCerent Bhudcs.   Easy to pul on iand  for  piaster walls lias no equal,\nNEW TONE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'1 his is a flat finish oil paint for plaster or wo\nmurr  Block\nPhone 3U6.\n*.' ei I i\nwell\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdihl\ufffd\ufffd   Vi***!.\nc     New\n.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdmil  Ctlll\nStain,   V;\nno  comes\nivnslieil,\nIsh   and   V.\nin a number of  boautlful    tints,\nce i * ra\nihe. floors\nAt-k  for\nu coloi' canl\n(515 -\nTHE LEADING HARDWARE STORE.\nT. J. TRAPP & CO.\nNew   Wostmlnste*.\nPhone 69.\nARE YOUR INTERESTS FULLY PROTECTED\nIN CASE OF DEATH?\nif noi\nSOLIO\nv policy In the NORTH\nAS  THE   CONTINENT.\nAMERICAN   LIFE   will   do   It.\nThe policyholders' company,\ni'-trrict7-.-'ai'*i\nWHITE, SHILES & CO. (Agents)\n746Columbia St.     312-315 Westminster Trust Bldg.\nPhone 85R.\nPhone 85L.\nEnrsHB\ufffd\ufffdwmz9uir.m\nPAVING PIANS\nFOR BARNET ROAD\n(Continued from page onn>\nnations between the council and the\nTl. c. K. if. in connection with the\npnsent shelter at Highland Park June\ntion. Residents complain tbat tie*\nshelter is no shelter at all on a rainy\nnight. Councillors residing in North\nBurnaby ami Central Park fully agreed\nwith the* residents to the end that\nCouncillor Fau-Vel as the head of the\ntransportation committee took the\nmutter In hand. A letter was read\nfrom Interurban Manager Purvis last\n| night which stated that it was not iliet\npolicy of the company to enclose the\nshelters bul that bhe roof would be\nextended to shield off a few more of\nthe raindrops, Councillo Pau-Vel\nclaimed the* company was exadlng the\nque-tion and asked for further time.\nIt was grunted.\nEarnet   Road   Proposal.\nA    battle    between  the  north  and\n| smith lonki d Imminent following the\nreport made by Councillor Pau-Vel as\nto the visit to victoria by delegations\nBrom Burnaby, Porl Moody, Coquitlam\nand Port Coquitlam regarding the pro\nnosed Improvement to the Barnel road.\nThe report stated that the government\nwas quite willing to assist in financing t'li* work which must be of a per\nmanent character but that the munn i-\ni palities Interested must tirst take thn\n! Initiative.\nTn Councillor Rose, tin* guardUm uf\nthe war chest, such a suggestion us\nthrown oul by Hun. Thomas Taylor\nsmelt very much like the spending of\nmoney, a commodity that Burflahy to\n'all reports is decidedly lacking at the\npresent time,    He asked for ,*i point of\ni Information,   Ko did Councillor Bevan.\nCouncillor MacDonald explained the\n\\ obji ct was to have a 16 foot hard pave-\n! ment road wii.ii no curbing nr guttering, It was not to be on the expensive\n| scale* of Kingsway nnd he nioveel  Unit\nthe engnleer be Instructed to go ahead\nI and prepare plans to be presented to\n: the Victoria authorities.\nCouncillor Rose  was still as much\nMn the dnrk as to the financial aspeel\nof the project until it  wns explained\nj ihat   the   work   was   covered   by   the\n*500,  blanket bylaw ratified liy thn\npeople last summer, the bonds nf\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdiii' i are still unsold. This is the\nBame half million dollar bylaw which\nv v. c. Macpherson, councilor during\n1913, fought bo hard to bave quaahetl.\nThe evidence last night showed thai\nii still lived, so Engineer Macpherson\nwas in* tructed to go ahead and pre\npare plans for the paving,\nA letter was received from the Central Piirh Ratepayers' executive ask\nIng Uhat tin* council take a definite\nstand as to the right of Herbert\nilu: ins   to   hold   the   clu'il   position   ul\nmunicipal wiring inspector and school\ntrustee.   The letter suggested that the\ncouncil   bad   heen   evasive   ,*md   uu.-,iit\nIsfactory in its reply Inst week. Reevo\nPraser iti disposing of it by the filing\nroute,  tciuk  strung  exception  to  the\ntone of the communication, TUESDAY,  MARCH   10,  1914.\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS.\nPAGE  FIVE\nHOCKEY       RUGBY      SOCCER\nSPORT\nBASKETBALL      BOXING\nICE CARNIVAL\nFraser  Mills Hockey Club Will  Stage\nAttraction  at  Rink  Wednesday\nEvening\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGood Prizes.\nCIRCLE F VS COLUMBIAS\nPLAY AT ARENA TONIGHT\nFirst of Home and Home Games for Provincial Amateur\nHockey Championship\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBig Crowd Coming from Mill-\nside\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOfficials to Be Appointed Today.\nAnaiigem<*nts wen- eomple*ted yesterday for the staging of an ice carnival at the Arena on Wednesday\nunder the auspices of the Kraser Mills\nHockey club. The officers of the organization, learning that the rink ; tentlon of the other members to\nwculd b\ufffd\ufffd kept open one more week article,\nin order to stage the provincial ama\nteur championship hockey game be\ntween New Westminster and Vancou\nver, made an offer to the rink man\nagenient, which was accepted.    Hand\nostensibly  actional,  should    actuaii-.-\ngive a truthful   picture cf life  about\n; her ao she saw it.\nAfter a week of hard work the mas.\nU rpi. ce* was lin'shed. The editor trap\ndtlighted with it. It was published\nunder the title, -The Perfect Truth\na Story of Heal Uf,*\" and, at Dolly**\nrequest, the name of the author was\nemitted On tho afternoon of the\npublication of the story, the Ladies'\ni Home Sewing (iuild was engaged in\nits customary routine of languid\nn edlework and somnolent gossip.\nOne of the members began to read\n* \"The Pert ct Truth,\" but stopped with\na gasp of surprise, and called the at-\nthe\nWESTMINSTER TRUST\nLIMITED\nHEAD OFFICE- NEW WESTMINSTER.BC\nIn graphic, pitiless bits of description, the essential characteristics of\neach of the members of the Indies'\nGuild were set forth so plainly, that\nthere was no possibility of mistaking\nsome prizes have been donated and \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd their several identities Dolly had I\nwill go to the winners of the vanou* Use-*d the pen cf a satirist with telling\nclasses, while the ice engineer prom-j effect. The meeting of the Indies'\nlses an   excellent  sheet  to  skate  on   Gnu,] ended in a furore of confusion\nthat evening.\nThis will be the last big event at\nthe Arena this winter. A large number of Vancouver people will probably be over thai night adorned in\ncostume, so that if the honors are lo\nFraser Mills vs. Columbias, Vancou-   Kriday   night can   be  reckoned   with,\nver, at the arena tonight, 8:30 o'clock I <-'vt*\" though the score might be close.\nsharp, in the first game for the Savage cup, emblematic of the provincial\namateur hockey championship. Arrangements for this contest were\nmade yesterday afternoon by the officials of the local and Vancouver\nleagues following the inability of the\nVancouver team to stage the first\nname on Terminal City ice.\nTills is the first provincial amateur\nme of its kind in which a Westminster team has been mixed up and although the lime allowed ilu* fans to\nprepare for same is short, a big crowd\nla fully expected when the farce-off is\nnie'tli*.\nThe Circle I*' hoys have ln*e*n keeping in training following the elimination of the Beavers from the city\nchamp, mship and there are* many in\nUie city who are confident of the tlm-\nber cats piling up a comfortable lead\nin order that   the Vancouver game of\nRamsay, playing ooverpoint for the\nColumbias, will he the player who will |\nrequire careful  watching  in  tonight's\ngames,  tills  star having been  selected I\nas the    best    in    Montreal    amateur\ncircles two years ago.   Ramsay plays;\nan Individual garni', however, and his |\nmovements should  be more than offset if Doc    Scent's    seven    only    get\nworking with  the combination  brand.\nThe officials have; yet to be appointed, bin little difficulty is expected along this line.' when President\nLynch and the Vancouver executive\nget together.\nHere is bow the teams will line-up:\nMrs. Broome, ihe hostess of the after-\nnoon,    who    had    been    particularly\nscored    by    the    anonymous    author. !\nrushed  to the  newspaper office  and\ndemanded the name of her defamer. !\nL The editor refused to (rive her the de- [\nbe kept  in the city the  Westminster j 8|red   Information,   but   a   note   from I\nskaters will have to dress in the best > Dolly on Hobby's desk made all things I\npossible   manner.    Costumed   skaters ( clear  to    Mrs    Broome     With    the\nwill have the ice until 9.30 o'clock, spreading of   the   news,   the storm\nafter  which the  rink  will  be thrown   centre shifted to Dollv's heme   While\nopen  to  everybody.\nBIG SIX LACROSSE\nKraser Mills,\ni Dunbar   Goal\nKnlghi\nLi tt   . . .\nJefford\nPoint\nCo\\ er\nRover\nHox     Centre\nScott ...\nSanderson\nLeft   .\nMight\nColumbias.\n. . . .Maclaren\n....  (irisdale\n  Ramsay\n   Cede\n  Christie\n   I) rrick\n... Mcintosh\nL. A. Will Be Like N. H. A. Taking\nIn Ottawa and Quebec, Is Latest\nYarn frcm   Montreal.\nindignant citizens waited on Mr. Des\n| moiid. and threatened    to    withdraw\ntheir accounts rrom his hank, ihe infuriated  wives fill\"d   Mrs.  Desmond's\nears   with   their  complaints.    Dolly's\nI father commanded her   to   stop    the\nStory and make a public apology, but\nDolly,  for the  firs:   time in  her life.\nrefused   to comply   with  her  parents'\nwishes.     With   the   fifty   dollars   her\nstory had brought in, she left for the '\ncity to earn her own living.   W'e Bhall\ndiscover lain- what happened to her\ni there.\nJ.J.Jones. MANDIR,\nJ.A.Rennie.SECY-TRES\nMONEY TO LOAN\n-on-\nInside City Property\nFROM $500 UP\nAgreements for sale purchased at reasonable\nrates and terms.\nSafe deposit boxes to rent from $2.50 per year\nup.\nMontreal, March 9.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe very latest ,\nInformation about lacrosse for next ,\nseason comes down to an unofficial\nannouncement that the Big Kour will\nbe constituted exactly as the National Hockey association is now, that,\nls, providing the apparent willingness\nof Ottawa financiers to put up the\nnecessary money holds gocd.\nIn this plan, Shamrocks, Montreal\nand Cornwall arc; entirely eliminated,\nand the* make up of the senior prol'es-\nAT THE OPERA HOUSB.\nSPORT CHATTER\n(By the  Potter.)\nemit.    The    training  trip  Impresses.\nequally, but in directly different man-!\nner.   To the \"busher\" it means   another step toward the end.   The trip I\nis new mill  wonderful to one and old '\nSo icy was the water in the    tank\nused  In  the diving  act at the  opera I\nhouse last night that two of the girls\ntaking  part  fainted  in  their dressing !\nrooms at thesjonclusion of the act and\na doctor was   called.   At   the   last\nmoment the heating apparatus cf the -\nlarge t ink was pu: out of commission j\nand  for that  reason   Ihe  act had   to ,\nsional  lacrosse body  is to be:   Cana- I he shortened.    It is being repaired at\nBOILERS   Riveted Steel Pipes       TANKS\n       BURIN OIL     \t\nVULCAN IRON WORKS, LTD.\nt>.   O.   BOX   442\nTELEPHONE   124\ndit-ns, Nationals, Quebec, Toronto, Te-\ncumsebs and Capitals.\nGeorge    Kennedy    announci's    that\nthis  year the  Irish  will  be    dropped\n-nice, however, and everything will be\nin shape for tonight.\nOf the other acts on the bill, Rogue\nEastern sporting enthusiasts had\nbetter go light in betting on the* N.\nll. A. teams to win the series planned for New Vork beginning Saturday nighl. Manager Frank Patrick,\nwiio has entered a team In the contest, bas a bunch of stick artists the\nc c|ual of which cannot be touched in\nthe oast today. Together with the\nVancouver players Patrick has throe*\n*-t;u* w- itminster men in Tobin, Oatman and Lehman, and coast I,ins are\nef the opinion thai the hulk of tbe\n$5000 put up by tha promoters *-**iil\nbe el vlded among the coast men, The\nWandi rers of Montreal and the Que\nine* aggregation are no mean teams\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ven though tin :\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd did lose oul In the\nN li a race and Gotham fans will\nhave a great opportunity of witness\ning some real Canadian hocki y before\nthe series is ended, The Vancou er-\nwestmliiBtcr players will have the\nadvantage ol playing on artificial Ice,\nthe St. Nicholas rink being about the\nin si In thr- count ry.\nYounasters and  Veterans.\nToot '  Te III !\nThey'n iii ' The ball players are\nmi their wav i Ither going or gone\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdei warmer clinics and sunnier skies\nto thaw  oul tin* kinks of winter\nFrom all parts they gather aboard\nthe* \"rattlers\" going south and sou'*\nwest, where the village ground keeper\nis busy preparing ground for their\noutdoor practice and the hotel chef\nis preparing food for their indoor\npractice.\nBustling aboard you will Bee tbem,\nVuii can't miss them -just follow the\npoint of the youngster's eye who\nstands agape looking on. You can'l\nin.ss  them   tin*  veteran  and  tin*  re\n; ne boresome to the other. The j frcni the name of liis team, and it will\nycungster anticipates the man to simply the Canadiens, and their\ndreads, What may be tbe beginning colors will be '-Orange, Blanc et\nfor one may be the ending for    the Bleu.\"\nother. \"\t\nOb !   the  training    trip    is    more\n!i iman\nthe  training    trip    is\nthan  the bugs  imagine.\nTEAMS AMALGAMATE\nNOT QUITE READY\nCity and Burnaby Join Forces\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThree\nGames  Scheduled   for  Saturday\nAftcrncon.\nBellingham   Will     Drop    Nothwestern\nLeague  Bug\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHad  Visions of\nVictoria   Franchise.\ne;tty  soccer\nam ai gam a*\nteams\nes ,\ufffd\ufffdnish\nAltnougt\nAt a meeting   of   ths\nleague  held  last   night   th\ntlon of the City and Burnaby\nwas announced, the Combine\niug the Beason t,s one team. Although\nlb\" Bankers fought lined to garner\ntwo points against tha Hovers for the\nfailure of the kitten to tie-id a te*am\nmi Saturday, the delegates voted the\nproposition down, it was pointed out\nthat the financial students failed to\nheld a team on Moody park that after.\nnoon and the secretary of the Bankers\nhad notified the referee that morning\nnot to make arrangements to be on\nhand  as  the  game   w::s  off.\nStrong criticism was levelled\naieainst the Hankers in writing the\nMainland Football association over\nthe heads of tin* city league officials\nrequesting the points,\nThe game's for Saturday are as follows:\nHankers  vs.   Hovers.  Moody  park.\nCity vs. II. C, E, It.. .Meiody park.\nSapperton vs. Burquitlam, Sappe r-\nton park.\nBellingham,  March  9, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Negotiations j\nfor tli** sale of the  Victoria franchise!\nof the  Northwestern  Baseball  league *\nto Bellingham in* u have beett\"8tartedn\nbut owing to a disagreement   as    to:\nterms  it  is not likely that the deal\nWill go through,    Norman Cruikshank,\nwho In id a conference with Victoria\nstockholders at Seattle yesterday, ex-'\npressed  the  opinion today  that    the\nnegotiations would  hi* dropped.\nAllan Cup Games.\nWinnipeg, March 9. -The Monarchs\nhave decided to accept Trustee Nor-\ntliey's ruling and will take the ice\nagainst Kenora for the Allan cup I\nWithout Dick Irvln, The games will\ntake place here* Tuesday and Thursday.\nRiflemen to OrganiTe.\nThe annual meeting of the New\nWestminster Civilian Rifle association\nwill be held on Saturday. March 21.\nAn effort is being made to enroll new\nmembers in order to make :, better\nshowing at tin* annual provincial rifle\nmeet.\nUnion House.\nWhite Help.\nt\nHOTEL  PRASER\nWe use Local produce only.   First Class Cafe.\nReasonable Rates.\nCor. Front and Begbie Sts.\nAMERICAN LADIES'  TAILORS\ninvite the ladies of this city  to   inspect  their   spring  stock  of  the\nlatest  fabrics  and   styles.    Special price for two weeks only $2h and\n$4\".    We guarantee perfect fit.\nCorner Clarkson and Mackenzie Sts.\nDIVING  GIRLS.\nTwo of the  DeYoung Sisters, appearing  at   the  opera   house  tills   week\nin a diving and swimming act.\nFancy Dress Carnival\nARENA, WEDNESDAY EVENING\nAuspices of Fraser Mills Hockey Club.\nHandsome Prizes Regular Skating from 9:30.\nAdmission 50c. Full Band.\nAt the Theatres\nRogues   and    Kinone,   comedy\nmd\nTHE   PKRFECT TRUTH.\nThe\nse rii s\ntlie.ilr\nim nt\nother\nWetite\nfirst\nwill  be\ne today\nbeing \"\nfe a.un\n.11   Will\n1   \"Ii\nBee\n.   the\nThe\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  for\ni,\"   a\noily\nti\ntill'\nPerfe\ntod,\ndeli\nOPERA HOUSE\nGrand Opening of  Class  *A\" Vaudeville\nCOMMENCING MONDAY, MARCH 9th, 1914.\nMatinees Wednesday and Saturday.    Complete change of program on\nMondays and  Thursdays.\nPROGRAM\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSPECIAL   ATTRACTIONS.\nTiie Diving De Young Sisters & Co.\nA Spectacular Aquatic Novelty.\nNEPTUNE'S DAUGHTER\nROQUES  &  FINONE\nComedy and Novelty Musical\nArtists.\nCOOK &  HAMILTON\nComedy singing and Talking act,\nentitled \"The Ai.ti?5s and\nTHE   HORTONS\nIn    Pleasing    Singing,   Talking\"\nand Dancing Act.\nthe Reporter.\"\nConcert by Rushton's Orchestra.\nCECIL   ENGEL\nMale  Impersonations.\nEvening'' Prices:   15c,  25c,  35c.\nAll   Seats   Reserved.\nft    Reels of up to date Mo*    ft\nC             tlon  Pictures.              Cm\nMatinee Prices:   10c and 25c\nI novelty musical artists, brought    the\nhouse to their feet with music rang-\ni Ing from grand opera to rag time.\nArthur  Du  Mais showed himself to\nbe a monologist of rare ability and re-\nlf the  Dailies\"   ceived  laugh after    laugh    with    his\nthe    Edison    clever told stories.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd cil' tilts install     .Miss Cecil Kng, l in male inipersona-\nBCI  Truth.\"  An    tionS   was  given   a   big  reception   and\nis   \"When   a ; for a while had the house guessing.\nghtful   stor>   of .     The  Mortons in  their comedy  siug-\n  ing and dancing net are very graceful\n; and are above the average,\nTwo reels of pictures close an excellent show and one that will no\nih ubt  be  liberally  patronized.\nEoiso_n Til\nProgram Today\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSpecial Feature\n\"Dolly of the Dailies\"\n\"THE PERrECT TRUTH\"\nThe first cf a New Edison  Photoplay\nSeiies   Featuring   Mary   Fuller   as* a\nNewspaper  Reporter.\nCinesKliene  Feature\nCOUNCIL ADOPTS REPORT\nOF   BOARD  OF  WORKS\nenl\ntin*\nto\n1! '.'. lis-\nvery hi-s'i\nand .-'.illy\nust  's  JTn\nHox office at theatre open trom 10:30 a.m.    Vou cm reserve seats\nby phone mil.\nMARY   FULLER\nAppearing   al   lhe    Edison    in *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n|  serial Story \"Dolly of the Dalli*\nia  man, a girl.  Uie goddess of eh\nI and the greal Italian lottery,\nThe  following in purl   is  tin*\nIof \"The Perefeot Truth\":\nThe day after Dolly Desmond\nstartled the community with th\ncelletice of her graduation ore\nHobby North. H reporter on the*\npaper, suggested that It would\ngood idea for her to write Btorli B\ntilings   for his  paper.    Holly  wai\n'lighted  witli  tbe  itb'il, nnel  startc\nonce*  to   put   it   Into offset,    She\n, cided lo write n story, which, alth\nnew\nnice\ntory\nmei\neX-\nion.\nical\nlie a\nand\nci i'.i nt\ni   lie-\ni ugh\nThe following report of the boarel of\nworks was adopted nt the council\nmeeting last night:\nThai the request of Frederick Bade\nto have Antes steeet cleared to Tenth\navenue, he granted provided he '-uitls*\nPlete the .loard of works that suffie*'\nImprovements are to be made to\nproperty benefitted by the work\nwarrant an expenditure of $800. the\nestimated cost of the work.\nThat a fence be construct\",! on both\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi'i: e. of finite! street, where the (It eat\nN etiie rn   spur  enters   '.tie\nti'iery, a.-, the roadway '*.\nI md  ha now at this p i.n;\nI dungeons.   The estimated .\nThat the decking of the Olenbrootc\nbrigde on Columbia street be reil iwed\nas it is getting very much wi,,i In\nplaces and not 'safe for the heavy\ntraffic which passes over it I..-timated cost $40.\nThat tin* devil strip be planked ;u\nbetween the tracks of the C.P.U. and\nIt. c. E, K. on Columbia Btreet west\nat an estimated 0081 Of $110.\nThat the city engineer be Instructed to write the Coquitlam municipal\ncouncil asking them to meet the board\nof works at - o'clock on Friday next,\nthe 13th inst.. with reference' to Ilie\nBrunette river bridge on Brunette\nstreet\nThat light improvements he made\non Blackman street, as five residents\ntire-   living   there   a!   present   and   the\nstreet is almost Impassable,\nWhen a Woman Wills\n\\:i absorbing highly sensational drama in two puts.\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'       \" .\nBuster's Little Game\nWestern   Corned).\nComing\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThursday and Friday\n\"Thor, Lord of the Jungle\"\nSelig Wild Animal Drama in Three Parts.\nROYAL THEATRE\nCOMING  TOMORROW\nIN THE BISHOP'S CARRIAGE\nTWO DAYS ONLY\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWEDNESDAY AND\nTHURSDAY OF THIS WEEK.\n\"In Tho Bishop's Carriage\" is one of the\nstrongest plays ever produced in motion pictures\nand vvas made under the personal direction of\nDaniel Frohman. PAGE   SIX\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS.\nTUESDAY.   MARCH   10,  1914.\nClassified Advertising\nAGENCIES\nCLASSIFIED ADS WILL BE RE-\nceived for The News at the following places: F. T. Hill's drug store,\n\ufffd\ufffd28 Columbia street; A. Sprice,\nQueensborough, Lulu Island; Mrs.\nE. Larden, Highland I'ark; .Mrs. V.\nLewis, Alta Vista.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd rat\ufffd\ufffds. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nClassified\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOne cent per word    per\nday;  4c per word per week;   15c per;\nmonth; 5000 words, to be used as re- i\nquired within one year from date    of\ncontract., $25.00.\nFOR SALE\n< UNION I,\n<SeI>4\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdVANTED- MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED BY MARRIED MAN. Position as bookkeeper or ether clerical\nwork.    i*. O.   Box 4S7  City.    (1060)\nwanted\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTWO STOCK OUTTERS,\nthree door patchers, two sash machine men and four boys. Superior\nSash and Door Co., 226 Fourteenth\nstreet. (3030)\nWANTED TWO MEN FOK THE\ngeneral office to commence work\nat once. Salary to commence $60\ntier month, Applications in writ\ning io he addressed to the Municipal clerk. Edmonds. H. C, and to\ntie in his hands on cr before noon\ni ti  Friday,  .March  13th   Inst,\n(3061)\nFOR SALE CHEAT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd240 BOO CYP-\nress incubator, almost new. Suite\nD Sterling  block 13059)\nFOR      SALE-BIFF      ORPINGTON ! \"\"\"'^arin\neggs  $1.50  per  eetting of  15  eggs. '\nApply 1110 Eighth avenue.      (3053)\nFOR SALE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPIANO, CHEAP. AP\nply Box 303P. News Office      (MU)\nFOR SALE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPOOL ROOM AND\nbaths; cheap. Sickness the cause.\nEvers,  Edmonds,  B.C. (3305)\nFOR SALE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTWO CHOICE LOTS\nat Maple Beach Park, Boundary-\nBay.    Apply Box 999 News office.\nPRACTICALLY TWO ACRES WITH\nin eight minutes walk of Edmonds.\nfSQOO. Half acre cle>ared, sidewalk.\nlight and water lo place. Suite D.\nSterling  block. (3059)\nFOB SALE-FOOT POWER MOR-\nUsing machine. For particulars apply at The News office\nFOR SALE- TWO CIRCULAR SAWS\nand saw table completes.   Apply at\nThe News office.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nMUNICIPAL  SCHOOL   DISTRICT OF\nBURNABY\nIncluding District Lot 172, Group One.\nPCBIAC NOTJe-i: is berets* given to th* |\nElectors \"l  tin* School  District of Bur- I\nniihy  th.it   I  require th.* presence of the\nnUd   Kli i-toi-s  .it   Uu*  Municipal   Hall  on I\nWEDNESDAY, MARCH 11, 1914\nat 12 o'clock noon.\nfor   Ihe   purpes\"   ef   e'leriinK   persons   to\nsi-rve cm tin* itiiarii nf School Trustees of!\nBurnaby in pursuance of nn order of the i\nthe Council  of  I'ublli* Instruc- i\n. ..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd K date* of February :17th. 1914,\n'which order in part recites as follows:\n\"Tin* Honorable tin* Council of rublic\nInstruction has declare! Invalid the eloe-\nlinn of the four trustees 'uld In your\nmunicipality in January last. The* resignation of tie* fifth anil remaining member\nof the board has also been accepted The\nHonorable the* Council has ruled that tin-\n\"Ihcr elect ion for the choice of live trustees be held in Burnaby Municipality on\nSaturday, lhe* Uth of March next, and\nthat nt this election tlio three candidates\nre ci Iving the tiighi st number of votes shall\nIn* declared elected for two years or until\nJanuary, 191\ufffd\ufffdi, and the two candidates receiving the next highest number of votes\nshall be declared elected for one year or\nuntil January.  1!\ufffd\ufffd15.\"\nThe mode nf nomination of Candidal\nshall tip as follows: Th-^^^^^^^^^^^\nlie nominated in writing, the writing shall\ntw* subscribed by two voters ef the\nDistrict as Proposer and Seconder, nnd\nshall be delivered to the Returning Offloer at any time between the date of\ntt'.is notice and S o'clock p.m. on the day\not nomination, and in the event of a poll\nbeing necessary such  poll  will  be opened\nDEPORTEES ARE\nFLAMING \"REDS\"\nliiM-DluGINU.\nSomething   About   the   Men   Premier j\nBotha Sent Out of South\nAfrica.\nOREGON ELECTRIC\nBOOSTS PAY ROll\nThe I-ondon Chroniclo publishes\nbrief sketches of the careers of the\nlabor leaders whose deportation from\nSouth Africa roused such a storm in\ntnglaud ses well as in the Union.\nSnys lhe Chronicle in 'his connection:\nTlui. rights as ii dividual! :'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* one\nthing which nay bring them sympathy, hut it Is ccl'uiful if the Labor\nparty will associate themselves with\ntheir opinions. The deporteel m*'u are\nCandidate's shall la|| Syndicalists. \"Jim\" Larkin is ai\nSchool j mild type* compared with most of j\nthem.\nAll the deported nine seem to have\nWhat a Life of liberty 1- Like In |\nManiilaiiiL\nOf ail the many jobs I have had\nthe only one 1 leally liked was gu i-\ndigging, says a writer in London Answers. That was a jolly time! Few\nhave heard of gum-digging, and no\nwonder, for New Zealand is far away,\nand there is no other place on the\nglobe where 'ium-diggin^ is done.\nTbe gum comes from a magnificent\ntree called tbe kauri. This tree is now\npretty scarce, but agis ago immense   \t\nforests must have covered most of, Portland, Om., March ft.--James J.\nthe northern part of the North Island. ) Hill, owner of the Oregon Electric and\nThese forests were swtpt away by tire. United Railways, has made happy\nand to-day the landscape is mostly nis conductors and brakemen by\nlow brown Bills with occasional i announcing an increase in wages said\nswamps. j to be the most liberal in railroad his-\nGum burns very easily, but such as ] tory on the Pacific coast.    The new\nwas covered by the dank forest debris | scale  became  effective  March  1.\nHill Employees Get Most Liberal Advances Ever Know\/i on the\nCoast.\nescaped the fire. Hardened and pre-\nse-ved through uncountable ages,\nthis Ib the gum th; digger seeks today.\nBy simply paying 5s. a year you\nmay wander and dig where you like\nover enormous areas of Governmeat\nlands.\nAll yo<i require is a spear to locate\nthe gum, a spade to dig lt, anC a hag\nhabitually used the language of revo-1 to put it in.   When you get home at\nKOIt\nerty\nSALE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSELL\nthrough an ad\nYOUR      PROP\nin this column\nFOR SALE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJl.tip DOWN. H.OO TER\nweek. Canada's Pride Malleable\nRanges: every one guaranteed Mar\nkit square. (3010)\nWANTED \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  HOUSEHOLD    FURNI-\nture  in large    or  small  quantities;\nhighest  prices  paid.    Auction  sales '\nconducted.     H.   J.   Russell.     King's j\nhotel block, Columbia street. Phone i\n881, (3012)\n 1\nWANTED \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd HOUSEHOLD    FURNI-\nture, or stocks in trade, in large or\nsmall quantities, highest price paid.\nOr Fred Davis will sell your goods\nby public auction with guaranteed\nresults, or no commission charged,\nSee the expert on furniture before\nyou give your goods away. Address\nFred Davis. 548 Columbia street.\nNew Westminster. (HOlli\nCOLLECTIONS\nBAD DEBTS COLLECTED EVERY-\nwhere. No collection, no charge\nAmerican-Vancouver Mercantile Ag\neney, 336 Hastings street west. Van\ncouver. (3011)\nAUCTION SALES.\nFURNITURE, STORE STOCKS AND\ntarm sales conducted. Furniture\nbought tor cash. P. It. Brown, 17\nBeghie street, New Westminster.\n(3013)\nSATURDAY,   MARCH   14,   1914\nat 9 a.m. and close at 7 p.m.\nAT\nMunicipal   Hall.   Edmonds.\nHamilton   Roal  School,  Burquitlam.\nBarnet  Hall.  Barnet.\nMr.   Topping's   Store,   13th   Avenue.\nE.  Burnaby.\nBurnaby Lake Store, Burnaby Lake.\nKingsway  West School, McKay.\nMethodist Hall, Boundary and Pan*\nctcra.  North  Burnaby.\nSocial Club Room, Capitol Hill.\nSchou   Street   School,   Broadview.\nNelson Avenue School, Alta Vista.\nSperling  Avenue School,  Lakemere.\nRiverway East School, South Burnaby.\nI Any person being a male British subject, and having been for the three months\n; next preceding the day of his nomination\ntin* registered owner, in tin* Land Registry cii'tic*'*. ot land or real property situate within the Municipality of the assessed\nvalue, on the* last Muuii'iptst or Provincial\nof two hundred\nTO RENT\nCHICKEN\nFOR RENT -- SMALL  \t\nranch,  two    acres    In    cultivation. !*'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   1914,  for\ntwo roomed house,    small    orchard   \"Ota April 1\nc raspberries      and      strawberries),\nthree  dozen  good  laying  liens  for\nsale.    Apply to    M.    Huntley    uiii!-\nquarter   mile    south    < f    Kennedy\nstation on Scott road. (3052)\nAssessment roll, ef two hundred and fifty\ndollars or moro over and above any registered judgment or charge; or being a\niie,tn* ste*.icier, lessee from the Ct*\"\\vn. or\npre-cjuptoij who has resided within the\nMunicipality for the spar* of one* year or\nmore Immediately preceding^ the day of\nnomination, und is assessed for five hundred dollars or more on the last Munleipal\no:* Provincial assessmc nt roll ever and\nabove any registered judgment or charge;\nor being n homesteader, lessee from the\nCrown, hi* pre-emptor who lias resided\nwithin the Municipality for a period of one\n^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^m^m^m^m\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd year  Immediately  preceding  tin*  nomina-\nTnnrfr.ro    will    K,      ..    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi,-    A    U        ll,        ,, tiotl.     .Hill     during     the     I*' Ilia I tlliei*     of     Kal'l\nTenders will be received by the un-|yenr has b,,,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. 0wncr \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdf Sili,i iand. of\nwhleh he formerly was a homesteader,\nlessee from the Crown, or pre-emptor, and\nis assessed for five hundred dollars or\nmore on the last Municipal or Provincial\nassessment roll over and above any registered judgment or charge, and being\notherwise qualified by ihis Act to vote at\nan election of school trustees tn th** Bnld\nschool district, shall be eligible to be elected or tn serve as a school trustee in such\nROYAL     COLUMBIAN     HOSPITAL.\nTENDERS   FOR   SUPPLIES.\ndersigned,\nplies.\"   up\nmarked \"Tenders for Sup-\nto  ti  p.m. Tuesday,  March\nsupplying this hospital\n1911, to March 31, 1915,\nfollowing articles:\ni white and brow n I,\nFOR RENT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBEDROOMS OR FTJRN-\nished housekeeping rooms, 420 St.\nOeorge street.       \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd (3032)\nFOR RENT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIF YOU HAVE ROOMS\nto rent try an ad. in this column.\nLOCT AND FOUND.\nLOST\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWIRE HAIRED TERRIER\npup. Return to -Us First street\nand receive  reward. (\"OTio)\nXave-Browne-Cave\nMrs.\nand Miss     ^^^^^^^^^^^\nL.R.A.M., A.R.C.M.\nVEM3ERS OF THE INCORPORATED\nSOCIETY  OF  MUSICIANS.\nLessons In Pianoforte, Violin, Sing\n1ng, Voice Production, The-ory (it,\nclass or privately), Harmony, Counter\npoint. Musical  Form and History.\nPupils prepared for the examlna\ntions of the Associated Hoard of the-\nRoyal Academy of Music and Reiytr\nCollege of Music. Also Professional\nDiplomas,  Teacher or  Performer.\nFor terms, etc., apply fil Dufferlt\nStreet.    Phone 411 K\nwith the\nBread\t\nMeats.\nFish.\nMille    (per gallon)  and cream   t per\npint i.\npint).  In  soiled  bottles.    Samples  tc\nbe submitted.\nDrugs.\nGroceries.\nWood, slabs,  (per cord).\nCoal   (lump and  washed  nut),    anthracite   (Jump   and   nut,   in   carload\nlots), af per ton.\nj     Funerals.\nDetailed     lists  of  drugs,  groceries.\n! moats and  fish   may  be obtained    at\nthe    hospital.    The    lowest   or   any\ntender not necessarily accepted.\nE, S. WITHERS.\nSecretary.\nj Royal Columbian Hospital, New Westminster,  B.C. C!046>\nnl  district.\nit Edmonds, this\ndistrict municipality schi\nGiven under my hand\n3rd day of Mnrch,  19] I,\nARTHUR (I.  MOORE,\n(3127) Returning Officer\nHOSPITAL   FOR   THE   INSANE,\nESSONDALE.\nTENDERS\nlutionaries, but that In itself is not\npeculiar to Syndicalists In South Africa; only they were prepared for action, and the records of some of them\nsuggest that the Union government\nlicit* justified in fearing the worst.\nJames T. Bain.\nT>:e oldest and perhaps the chief\nof the deported men is Mr. ,T. H. Bain,\nI secretary of the Transvall Federation\nof Trades.   He was a member of the\nI Johannesburg town council.\nMr, Bain has had a picluresqup ca-\n! reer.    Before the war he was a inetu-\n| ber of President Kruger'a secret, service, his main business being to move\nagainst the miners as a spy on the\nl:ilanders. He became a burgher\nii ii .I fought in the war; was taken\npri: oner and deported to Ceylon.\nFrom Ceylon he went to Colore1 do\neitiu ti'ok part In the violent agitation\nwhich led up to tiie strike at the gold-\nfeds. Tals lasted from lf\ufffd\ufffdf'2 to 1904.\nand was only nu; down by the Intervention of tho federal government\nanil the exhaustion of the resources\nof the* Wertern I tilon of Mine's, of\nwhich  Mr.  Bain   ,vas a leading  m >ra-\nDuring that sir ike many outrages\nwore committed, a great deal of prop-\ntrty was destroy ro by dynamite, and\nitru.y lives were lust. Thirty people\nwere killed in an outrage in Idaho\nalone.\nMr. Bain, who is regarded, as an\nextreme Syndicalist, returned from\nColorado to the Transvall. where he\n'.ias since been one of the leading men\namong  the  Syndicalists.\nHcssel Jakob Pcutsma.\nDr. II. .1. Poutsnia, who wns secretary of the Amalgamated Society of\nRailway Servants and Harbor Board\nEmployees, is a revolutionary Socialist Syndicalist, nil the more dangerous because he is clever as a writer\nand p. doctor,\nHe is a Dutchman, and In 1892,\nwhen a member of the revolutionary\norganization In Friesland, was sentenced to 18 months' imprisonment.\nHe began life as a carpenter In Sneek.\nand afterwards started the Snooker\nCourant. He soon became a Socialist of a-.revolutionary type.\nIle lived for a number of\nAmsterdam, where he was we\n:is the editor of an anarchist\nlentiy Socialist journal called\nTimes.    Tin* paper attracted\nnight you scrape an*-' assort it accord-1\ning to size and quality. The whole |\nbusiness can be learnt in a day or two.\nAfter that it is all a matter of Iucl.\nPerhaps you will beg'n lo think\nthere is nothing ro very enjoyable\nin all that. Put re ally th -re is. Iu\ndigging you enjoy the \"xcitement of\nAt present conductors on tfhe passenger trains on these lines received\nfrom $105 to $151 a month. Begin\nning March 1 they will draw not less\nthan $163 and possibly $202.60 per\nmonth. Brakemen now earn from $75\nto $110 per month, but after the first\nof the month their minimum will he\n$92.50, while the maximum will b.\n$106 While this maximum is $4 lower than the scale now in effect, h is\nsaid that the minimum scale is tiie\none that affects all the brakemen anel\nhence the increase is regarded as\nvery substantial.\nOn freight trains the existing Bcale\nis for conductors $:i.f>0 for ten hours;\nfcr brakemen, $2.tin. The new scale\nwill   be.   for   conductors  on   through\nyears  in\n11 known\nand vio\nthe New\ntiie   tos-\ntile police attention, and is now nonexistent.\nOn two occasions he came\nH%*\nHOSPITAL FOR THE INSANE, NEW\nWESTMINSTER.\nTENDERS     in     duplicate,     endorsed I\n\"Hospital   for  the  Insane,\"  for  the j\nsupply of clothing, dry goods, tailor's1\n| fittings, hoots and shoes, shoemaker's\nfittings,    meat,    fish, groceries, coal, .\nI mattresses and bedding, fodder, drugs,\netCT,   for  use~of  the  said   institution,\nNltv*   cm, I and  the  furnishing of  funerals,  from\nL'.VL.CltJ,-\/.f I thp   l8t  \"f  April   next   to  the  -'.1st  of\nMarch, 1915, will be received by the\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that  I ivill\nat the next  meeting of the Hoard of Ll-\naslng e-'iniiflissiiiiii-rs apply  r,ir a  transfer of the wnoiesale Liquor License frc\ntiie   premises   situate   on   No\nBlock   Twenty-four   (24),   In\nNew   Westminster,   to   Lot     .     \t\nBlue*!*;   \"li.\"   nii:nl\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>r c'oliiinliia   si 1I I   \\\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_\ufffd\ufffd\ufffda_\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\ufffdmmmm\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdm\nj.'in Leslie I*;   HAINES,     Honorable  the   Provincial    Secretary\nDated, 3rd  February.  1914 until    noun    on    Saturday,    the    llth\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -^-  proximo,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.Lists of the* articles required can he*\nNOTICE is hereby given that i will geen at the Hospital, at  which place\n.  ! SiS'commES ;::;~ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;'*' K &\ufffd\ufffd.:' samples ,-;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, also be inspected.\nIcr <.f the  bottle  license  for  the sal\" ofl     All  supplies  to  be delivered at\nin    duplicate,     endorsed\n\"Hospital for the Insane,\" for the\nsupply of clothing, dry goods, tailor's\nfittings, boots and shoes, shoemaker's\nfittings, meat, fish, groceries, coal,\nmattresses and bedding, fodder, drugs.\netc., for use of the said Institution,\nand the furnishing of funerals, from\nthe 1st of April next, to the 31st eif\nMarch, 1915, will he received by the\nHonorable the Provincial Secretary\nuntil noon on Saturday, the 14th\nproximo.\nLists of the articles required can be\nseen at the* Hospital, at which place\nsamples can also be Inspected.\nAll supplies to be delivered at the\nhospital without extra charge.\nTwo sufficient  sureties for t.he due I when\nfulfilment of each contract will be: re-\nguired.\nTenders will not be considered unless  made  out on  the forms,  which\n**an   he  obtained   from   tiie   Bursar  of\nthe   Hospital   or  Lhe  undersigned,\nA. CAMPBELL REDDIE,\nDeputy  Provincial  Secretary.\nProvincial Secretary.s Office, 26th\nFebruary, 1914, (3008) !\nInto con-! boring diggers, b\ufffd\ufffd< this was a court\nfltet wi'.'i the law. In IS!).0, he was' e8V like'y to happen any day of tin\nsentenced to 18 months' imprisonment! wct'k.\n\"for inciting persons to commit  pun-'  \"\t\nIshaible   acts.\"     Afterwards   be     was\nsentenced   lo   three   weeks'   imprisonment   for  inciting   to  disorder.     His i\nhealth   breaking  down,  he  was  liber- j\ngambling without incurrin \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd the sin. j freights. $4.2*4 for tern hours; 'brake*\nAnd then to work for yourself when\nyou like, where you like, and how\nyou like is delightful beyond belief.\nAlso yo ' are free tc live as yo.ir fancy turns, and to have as many friends\nas you wish or\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdas few.\nMy own choice was a beaut if ul tent\npitched within a stone's throw of a\nlovely inlet at the foot of a high,\nsteep, fcrest-clad bill. I may not\npause to describe the exquisite de-\nlails of m.v dwelling, Suffice that it\nv.-as an artist's dream of light, loveliness, sweetness, and convenience.\nA spring of crystal water bubbled !\nat the door.    Magnificent   big   trees i\ngrew  on  every   hanel,   bursting    into\nclouds of snow, or gold, or crimson,\naccording to their species or the sea- j\nson of the year.\nThen there was my Utile nailing\nI cat. snow white with green relief. It\nlay on the soft sand in the shadow\ne\" the \"Christinas\" tree af lhe ebb\nor danced to the dimples on the wat-:\ner when the tide was in.\nThe waters of tho inlet swarmi'd\nwith lish of the most delicious varie- ;\ntics, and the ease with which they j\nmight be caught is seen in the fact\nthat when 1 fancied a fish for tea \"T\nbreakfast I would stand on the rocks\nwith my line and. to save the trouble\nof cutting up, thro,** hack the fish as\nthey came until I hooked one not. only\nof a favorite sort, bul also of a isize\nto fit my frying pan. Of course for\nsport I used to go out in my boat.\nI was fairly lucky at digging, averaging 7s. 6d. fot every day I worked.\nBut I didn't work every day. About\ntwenty days a month were plenty fcr\ntne. The* other days were given \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdo\npleasure or repose. Kxtra hot days\n1 would lie in my hammock, swung\nbetween two enormous trees, reading\nor drowsing, or go for an occasional\nswim.\nDuring most of th-> year the rlimat\"\nis delirious. Pyjamas rolled up to the\nknee make an deal costume, bur a\nbathing suit is just as good. Of\ncourse, you don't go to work in these.\nOn Sundays I would receive visitors\no.  pay visits to the camps of ne-igh-\nmen, $2.'.m for ten hours. On local\nfreights the new scale will bo for\nconductors, $404 for ten hours, anel\nfor brakemen. $l!.10.\nWork train conductors will be paid\nas follows under Bhe new agreement:\nConductors, $4.:{.ri for ten hours;\nbrakemen, $2.96; yard service conductors and brakemen will receive $4\nand $3.70, respectively, for ten hours.\nAt present their pay Is $3.60 and $2.IK).\nAll freight and yard service is on\nthe ]ft0 mil\"s or less basis, time coin-\nputecl continuous from time of duty\nuntil finally released at the end of the\nday.\nThe new rates, it was explained, aro\nthe Btandard steam rates for Hill lines\nin this territory. The increase will\naffect approximately 126 men, all of\nwhom formerly were engaged in the\nsystem steam se rvice.\nNegotiations for the increase have\nbeen undi\" way since February is,\nwhen a committee composed of H. M.\nConradt, chairman; B, E. Kllingson\nsecretary, and H. E, Williams, vice\nc tairiiian of tin* Order eif Railroad\nConductors, and M. i'ugh, chairman;\nK. Vounger, secretary, and H. C.\nDesch, vice-chairman of the Brother-\nhood of Railway Trainmen, took the\nmatter up with Hill officials.\nt*\nMnn  Shrank\nliqner bv i\non Lol  Min*\nin tho City\n\ufffd\ufffdeven   (7),\nUmbla   stre-et.\ni e.it\" i\nDan .1. Srd\ntall from the premises situate\n' '.\". Ulock T\\v, nty-fiiur (24)\n\"f Now   Westminster, to  Lot\nHlock   \"O,\"   iKunliep- SOS  Cob\nLESLIE E\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdlini.iry.   1814.\nHAINES\nLAND    REGISTRY    ACT.\nIti   part of Lot   167, (iroup 2,  and  of i\nthp northeast portion of the north\neats Quarter of Section  3,  Town-1\nship 2, in    the    District    of    New\nWestminster\nWhen as proof of the loss of Certificate of Title Number 4311F, issued\nIn the name of John Allen Wilson, has\nbeen filed in this office'.\nNotice is hereby given that I shall,\nat the expiration of one month from\nthe date of the first publication hereof, in a daily newspaper published in\nthe City of New Westminster. iBsne\nB duplicate of the said Certiflcat , un\nless in the meantime valid objection\nbe made to me in writing.\nJ, C, OWYNN,\nDistrict Registrar of Titles.\nLand  Registry Office,\nNew Westminster, B.C., January \"v\nIff] 4. (2986)\n'\"CITY  OF  NEW  WESTMINSTER.\nhospital  without extra charge.\nTwo sufficient, sureties for the due]\nfulfilment c,f each contract will in  re\nquired,\nTenders will nol be considered un\nless made oul  on  the forms, which\ncan la* obtained from the Bursar of\nthe   Hospital   or   tbe   undersigned.\nA. CAMPBELL REDDIE,\nDeputy   Provincial   Secretary\nProvincial S<*cretary,s office*, 2Dth\nFebruary, 1914. (3007)\nNOTICE    OF    ASSIGNMENT.\nCreditors Trust  Deeds  Act.\nCANADIAN PACIFIC\nHoucs   Nu-nberm***.\nTo facilitate prompt delivery of\nmail matter, all houses in the City\nshoul l in* numberi d.\nUpon application ut the Ai iesse r's\nOffice in the City Hall, the proper\nnumbers can be ascertained, and the\nfigures should be procured and affix\ned to the homes by the owners en*\noccupants.\nW, A.  DUNCAN, City Clerk.\nCity Hall, March 7, 1914, (3048)\nB. C. COAST SS. SERVICE\nFrom Vancouver for Victoria.\neU:()0 a.m\t\n2:00   p.m Daily\n'1:45   p.m Dally\nFrom Vancouver for Seattle.\n\"100 a.m Daily\n11 00 p in Dally j\nSti ,iini*r leaves at 11:46 p.m. on\nSaturdays.\nFrom  Vancouver  for   Nanaimo.\n\\00   p ra Daily :\nExcept   Sunday.\nNinaimo,   Union   Day  and   Comox.\n9:00 a.m   ....Wednesday and Friday\nuncouver,   Union   Bay,   Powell   River\n11:45 a.in Every other Saturday\nFor  Prince   Rupert and  Alaska.\n11 \"n p in Feb. 14 and 28|^B,\nPrince  Rupert and Granby Bay.\n11 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd no  p.m Wednesdayi\n7.00  a.m.   Tuesdays  and   Fridays   for\nVictoria,  calling  at points   in   the\nOulf  Islands.\nFor Gulf Island Points.\nBD.  (jOULBT.  .Merit,  New  Weetmlnetei\nd. W. BRODIB, U. P. A.. Vancouver.\nNcii-p-t: !- HEREBY e'lVKN thnl Westminster Wood work Ing Company, Limited\nii Lulu I 'land Iii Ilu ('It* nl .'*.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *e We st-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdniii-it\"!. in tin Pmvlne f lintl-li Columbia, a woodworking cnmpiiny. has hy\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,,.i ,t,|.,i tie, .:-11e day \"i February,\nV,D, 1914, anstlgnetl to me, John Oraham,\n,i thi city eif New Westminster, I'rovlnc\"\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd if Hrltish Columbtn, accountant, in trust\nfot the benefit nl .ill Its creditors, nil its\nreal nut personal property, credits nnd effects which may I\"* seize,1 or sold nr at-\nt icte il uiul'1 execution \"i the lOvieiitinn\nAct or attachment.\n.\\ihl   further   tnkn   notice   that   all   per-\n' sons linvink claims agalnsl  the said com-\n[iiiiiv   ari    required   t\"   deilvn*    th*    nm'\nluly verified to me at  my office, City of\nV,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   Westminster,  e I   before   the    I4t!i\nday of March. A.D. It'll, after which date\ntin* sahl Assignee wlll proceed t\" distribute\ntie- proceeds ol tho saiil estate, having\nregard only to such claims as have been\ndulj   fried  with  him.\nA  meeting of the creditors \"t  tho said\n. Westminster Woodworking Comnnny, l.im-\nDallj I Ited, will l\ufffd\ufffd   hi'M .it the   office   nl Cnrbni'ld,\ncirant   &   McCnll,    tfi   Lorne   street,   N'ew\n'V, stp'lnstei.   It.i'.   cm   Monday,   thn   Kith\ndny e.f Marc]., aii   1014, ill the   hour of\ni  nviiiet'   In  th,   afternoon,  foi   th>* giving\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd it   directions   with   reference   lo   tl\nposal nf tie* estate,\nDnted  this  28th d\nIt'll. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\t\nJOIIX  ORAHAM,   Abs\ni :;n| ti i New  Weatmln\nI'Vbn\nilis-\nA.D.\nated. and sailed for South Africa, j\nHere he tried to start a bank, with :\nbankruptcy as the result.\nOn tbe Boer war breaking out. I'outs-\nma   joined   the   Irish   brigade*     under\nOeneral De Wet, and    fought against!\nlhe British forces.\nAt the end of the war lie received\na special address of thanks from Gen-\ni ral De Wet. He accompanied ex-\nI'resident Steyn to Europe, but in a\nshort time returned to South Africa,\nhas played many parts. He.\nwas one of the chief leaders in the\nrailway strike last July.\nGeo. Wm. Mason.\nDescribed In reports from   Pretoria\nas tbe most Inflammatory of all the\/\nSyndicalist   orators.    One  of  liis  recent utterances In Johannesburg was I\n\"To   hell   with   flag,   king   and   coun-;\ntr;'.'\nArchibald   Crawford.\nKit'\" -i   as  a   wild   Syndicalist,   and\nI lias   iieiii   ,i   frequenl   contributor  to\nthe Soc illsl  press.    He toured Aus-\n,    *|i:*' -ei America In 1911 addressing!\nSocialist  meetings.\nRobert E. Waterston.\n;    Secretary or the South African Labor party and a member of the town\ncouncil  of Johannesburg.    He  is an\nAustralian  by  birth   and  is about  '.',!) '\nyears   of  age.     It   was   he   who    an- i\nnouhced at Bloemfonteln that the La-!\nbor   party   had   already   formed   their j\nown govern ment.\nDavid  McKerrell.\nA  Durham miner who lias been for\nmany years in South Africa, and has\nlived under tho republic.\nWm. Livingstone.\nStated   lo   lie   a   revolutionary   extremist and to have advocated public\nviolence.\nWilliam   H,  Morgan.\nIt the central organizer of the Transvall  Miners' association.\nAndrew Watson.\nPresident of the trades federation,\nwhich controls all trade unions In\nSouth Africa. A Scotsman, be is a\nsplendid organizer, and an adept In\nthe* rough oratory of the Rand.\nTwenty  Inches,\nAlbert    Mills,    an     Englishman,;\nknown as the \"Brittle man of Birmingham,\"   has    literal!      shrunk    in,\ndeath.    For 26 years ' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd; suffered from !\nan  obscure  disease  wblc'j  caused    a\nshrinkage of bodily stature and made\nliitti   the ob.lect  of study   by  medical\nmen from all over the world.\nThe chief sympiotn was the disappearance of linn* from the body,\nleaving the jones soft and misshapen, lt became Impossible for him to\nmove, and for over fourteen years In\nhad been confined io 'lis b3d.\nBefore his illness he was f> feet x\nInch in height, but he gradually\nshrank until at the time nf his death\nhe was under , fee, blgh, having\nthus lost 2d inches in 2ti years,\nMills was an engraver and the first\nInlimatlon of the disease was a stiffening of the muscles which prevented him using his arms freely. After\na time this condition extended to his\nlegs.\nAT 60 ENJOYING\nPERFECT HEALTH\nBecause He Takes GIN PILLS\nA prciminent Consulting Engineer of\nN*w York City, thus heartily endorses\nGIN PILLS :\n29 Broadway, New York.\n\"f bought some of your GIN PII.LS\nat Victoria, B.C., last September. Your\nremedy I find, at bo years of age, to give\nperfect relief from the Kidney and\nliladder Troubles incident to one of my\nage. I urgently recommend GIN TILLS\nto friends as being the one thing that\ndoes ine good.\"     E. G. WOODFORD.\nMy the time a man or woman is bo,\nthe Kidneys and Madder need a little\nhelp to krep in pood working order.\nGIN PILLS are what they need. GIN\nI'I LLS keep the urine neutral, prevent\ncolds settling on the kidneys or bladder\nand waul off Rheumatic attacks.\nRemember, every box of GIN PILLS\nis snld wilh a positive guarantee lo give\nperfect satisfaction or your money\npromptly refunded.\n.Vic. a box,6 for $2 50. Sample freeif\nyou write National Drug anel Chemical\nCo. of Canada, Limited, Toronto.    17O\n^CANADIAN PACIFIC\nW RAILWAY CO.\nB.C.\nIndian Regiment of Mutiny Days,\nThe days when the Fast India Company held sway in India, ar\" recalled\nI bv  the trannfor of  tho  127th  Que n\nI Mary's  Own   Baluchi   Light  Infantry\n' from   room'  lo Karachi.   This Is tie\n'old  27i h  Bombr.y  Light Infanirv of\n1 th** Honorable East India Company's\n.service. It was raised in the year 1K44\nanel since Ihen has done good servl e\nI In many parts of tho Indian\njits lirst gnat campaign was in th\n! Indian Mutiny day of 18,'i7-G9, when\nj It won great '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdonors in the siege and\ncapture  of  Delhi   and  various  oth r\noperations in t*~ose C isperate times.\nThe  27th was in  reserve during the\nact pul assault  of the place, nnd  had\na loss of fiO killed and wounded before the I'nlou Jack waved over the\ncaptured  fortress of the  Moguls.\nWhen going on a long journey if\nni our railway there will be no annoyance of transfer nor delay.\nI'oronto Express leaves at. .7:60 a.m.\nSt. Haul train leaves at 1:26 p in.\nImperial Limited  leaves tit s.10 p.m.\nFor rato and  reservations apply  to\nE. GOULET,\nAgent,\nOr II. W. BRODIB, fl. P. A., Vancouver\nMUNICIPALITY   OF\nNOTICE.\nBURNABY.\nTbe statutory mooting of the Board\nof License Commissioners will be held\nat the Municipal Hall on Wednesday,\nmplre. i March  llth, 1914, at  10 o'clock ln the\n' forenoon.\nARTHUR O. MOORB,\nCleark to the  Board of  License Commissioners.\nEdmonds, B.C., Feb. 26, 1914. CI004)\nCITY  OF   NEW  WESTMINSTER.\nCourt  of   Revision,  1914.\nNOTICE   Is   hereby   \ufffd\ufffdi*.*r*n   thnt   the   first\nmeeting  oi   the  Court   nf   Revision   for\nAssessment   Ro\/I ,,1  the Cltv \"i Now\ntmltist. r will I\"* In Id In tin   1 'Its   Hall,\nNew    Westminster,    B.C.    mi    Thursdiu\nApril   IB,   1914,   nt   10  a m.      ' 11    ippenli\nagainst the Assessmenl  must  be   In writing, and delivered t\" the Assessment Com\nmi:.-!\"' ' r    at     li.'ft    ten    clays    pi' 'i ills    t,*i\ntin* stttiin,' ef the said Court nf Revision,\n1 lull 'I  .it   New  Wi i later,   B.C.,  tins\nend dny  of  Mnrch.   1914,\nW.  A.   DUNCAN,\n(3021 1 'Cltj  Clerk.\nThe Best Corrective\nand preventive of the numerous\nailments caused by defective\nor irregular action of the organs of digestion\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi3 found\nin the safe, speedy, certain\nand time-tested home remedy\nFor   Professional   Women.\nA club for professional women ls\nthe latest project in London, and a\nl.een supporter of the movement is\nQueen Maty, who considers that il\nIs quite time a meeting-place w.-is\nprovided in London for young and\nlonely women who start a professional career in the capital without\nfriends or Introductions. By meant\nof such a club ibey may at least\neeicape the utter drearitmss and\nloneliness of London lodgings on\nSaturdays and Sundays. Ii Is stated\nthai already more than Bvo hundred\napplications for membersjfip bav\nbeen  reeelvod.\nLAND REGISTRY ACT.\nRe the Northwest quarter of Section\n14, Township 7, New Westminster\nDistrict.\nA Certificate of indefeasible Title\nto the above property will be Issued\nto James E. Oulnt t on the 21st day\nof March, 1914, unless In the meantime a valid objection thereto be made\nto me i:i writing by 11 person or persons claiming an estate or Interest\ntherein, or In any part thereof,\nJ. C OWYNN,\nDistrict Registrar of Titles.\nLand  Registry Office,\nA'ostmiiister, nc. February\n191*1.\nNew\nIBth,\nHEE CHUNG\n1 MERCHANT   TAILOR.\nSpring   Suitings   just   arrived.    Sec*\nthem.    Perfect  fit.    and  workmanship\nguaranteed,    Prices    from fis.oo up\n1 701 Front Street.\nTin* person or pet suns having In\ntheir custody or possession tho following Title lieicls relating lo tho snid\nproperty arc renuested to deliver the>\nsame to the undersigned:\n1. Crown iraiit to Jason Samuel\nLevis, dated lhe 16th June, 1803,\n2. Conveyance from Jason Samuel\nLewis lo Liiutie Jane Lewis, dated\nHie* (lilt July, 1901.\nJ   C   OWYNN,\n(1951) District Registrar. TUESDAY, MARCH  10. 1914.\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS.\nPAGE SEYEN\nSTOCKS\nOrders in Stocks. Bonds, Grain^TToH^SSHor cash or\nou margin in Montreal, New  York and  Chicago\nDirect private wire to Montreal  and  New  York\nSUTHERLAND & ARDAGH\nTelephone 817.\nStock Brokers.\n316-317 Westminster Trust Building.\nIt  K.  &  T. Com 1C%\nN. Y. -Central    Bfl\nNor. H.   Went 102\nNorthern  Pacific    110*14\nBenn HO7*\nBeading   Com 163 %\nBock Island        4%\nSt.   Paul      9S'4\nSo.  Pacific      03%\nUn. Pac. Com Vt>6Vt\nU. S. Steel Com 63%\nU. 8. Rubber Com 60%\nUtah    52%\nWestinghouse      71\n17\n102\nllu%\n111\n162%\n4-J4\nOHVi\n03 >,4\n156%\n63%\n61\n53%\n74\nLOCAL AND FOREIGN\n MARKETS \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nBULLS CHANGE\nMARKET DIRECTION\nminutes. The rest of the list went\noff fractionally iu sympathy. West-\niiighoust gained 3 points.\nBUSINESS LIGHT\nAT MONTREAL\nPrices on  Upward Trend But Proves\nOnly Temporary\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdChes. 6\\ Ohio\nFalls Off at Close.\nNew York, March 0. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Bullish\ntrader.) succeeded in (hanging the\ndirection of the market today from\ntiie course? followed lale last week,\nnut progress upward was only temporary. Tbe strong showing made by\nSt. PhuI and some of the* < astern rail\nroad share*\"; pulled  up the:  whole list.\nThe upturn was facilitated by the\nsusjiension of liquidation in Cbese-\njieake A Ohio. Baltimore & Ohio and\nether stocks whose weakness recently\nbaa been unsettling. Trading was\nactive on the upward swing, and the\nmarket made good headway until the\ncoalers began to develop weakness.\nKe*ading and Lehigh in particular\nnire bold heavily, the latter reacting\nthree points.    As these slocks sagged\nthe whole market gradually fell back.\nSI. Paul and New Haven lost their\npains and at noon the average was\nunder last week's close. Bonds were\nheavy.\nLiquidation nf the various Rock\nJc\ufffd\ufffde,nd bonds was on a large scale.\n'Hie collaterals fell l't. re fundings\n:', and the debenture's 4'2 points.\nPrices drifted Idly in mid-afternoon\nbut the Undertone grew steadily\ntinner.\nThe market closed easy, Cliesa\nI cake & Ohio fell swiftly in last few\nSUMMARY.\nMetropolitan Tobacco is negotiating\nwith    department   of   Jujule-je    In endeavor to avoid further litigation,\nindependent tobacco manufacturers\n| seek  passage of Underwood antl-cou-\n! pon bill providing for tax on coupons\nissued by I'nited Cigar stores.\nCopper    producers    figures    today.\nSupreme' court meets at noon.\nAmi ricnii    (Jas   company    increase\ncapital from $7,600,000 to $15,000,000.\ni'ost office department issues statea-\n| meat that government ownership   of\ntelegraphs and telephones cannot yet\nI be  regarded  an  administration    proposition.\nTolls repeal measure will  be called\nup in the* house' in ten days.\nAmerican stocks  in  London  off  \\-t\n,to  Vi.\nNEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE.\nI Prices Fall Off   from    Half   to    One\nPoint with no Features of\nInterest.\nUi loss of 1 point. Canadian Pa\"ifi-\n'ut 2i)l was 1 point lower. Mun'rial\nPower at 225 showed a decline of %\nof a point Hichelieu & Ontario at\n104% was 1)4 points lower, and\nlaurentide ISC1** was off V2 point\nfioin the final figures of last we?ek.\nDominion H.eel held steady around\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdiOVi as did also Toronto Railway\naround  141.\nStocks were not offered in any\nquantities of consequence and at the\nexisting prices offerings were fairly\nwell absorbed. The market was quiet\nat the close with the undertone\nsteady.\nGross earnings of Illinois Traction\nin January an announced by the company on Saturday were $717,079, an\nincrease of $49,247. Net earnings\nafter all expenses and taxes were\n$306,865. un increase of $28,830, or\nS.38 per cent.\nIllinois Traction common was called for the first time on the Montreal\nstock exchange Saturday and sold in\none lot at 681 Vi.\niQnebee Ry 15\nit. & o. Nay. Co 105\nTextile 84\nToronto Ry 141\nTucketl's Tobacco      41\n15\n104%\n84\n139%\n41\nTHE FATEFUL THIRTEEN.\n(A Song of III Omen.)\n\"It is the Ancient Mariner,\nAnd he stoppeth one of three.\"\nroom   we   found   circulars   indicating\nthat she is a public entertainer.\"\nAt  the  county   jail   attendants   ue-\nI lieved they detected Lie odor of whis-\nt key v, ieii the woman was brought In.\nMr. C,i,eti said she obtained no liquor\nfrom the hotel while she was a guest.\nAN EXPERT GEOLOGIST.\nMONTREAL STOCK MARKET.\nMontreal, March 9.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBusiness was\nlight on the exchange today with\nprices at the opening slightly under\nthose of Saturday's closing and as\nthe day progres.-ied there was no\nnews of a stimulating character to\ntake the market out of the rut Into\nwhich It has fallen during the past\nfi'w days. Prices generally were\nfrom Vi to i point lower with no feature of interest.\nBrazilian Tract ions closed  at  S3%,\n(Quotations furnished over private\nwire of Sutherland &. Ardagh.)\nRuling quotations on tbe Montreal\nstock market yesterday were:\nOpen. Close\nBrazil   83Vi     83%\nCanadian  Pacific    207%    207\nDom. Iron tk. Steel Corp..  30%     20%\n111. Traction    68\nLaurentide 186\nMontreal Power   225%\nNova Scotia Steel      75\nOttawa Power   150\n68\n185%\n225\nll>\/4\n150\n(Quotations ftirnis\nVate   wire  of  Suthet\nThe following are\ntations,\nAm.  Can\t\nAmal.  Copper   \t\nAm. Car Foundry\nAmerican  Smelting\nAm. Tel. eii Tel.  . . .\n' Anaconda   \t\nAtchison Cc m\t\nBait.  *  Ohio Com.\n! B. It. T. ex div.  ...\nI dies.   &  Ohio   \t\nCanadian  Pacific  ..\nErie Com\t\nGreat Northern Pfd.\nLehigh   \t\nMex.   Petroleum   . . .\nI Mo.   Pacific   \t\nhed over the pri\nand & Ardagh)\nyesterday's  quo-\nOpen.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 20%\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 73%\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 50%\n.  67 V4\n120%\n. 36%\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 96%\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *7%\n- 92%\n. 63%\n. 207 %\n.   2X',4\n.127\n.145\n. 05\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 24%\nClose.\n29%\n73\n49%\n66%\n121\n85\n9G\n88%\n52%\n207\n28%\n126%\n146%\n66 Vi\n24%\nPhone 826 or 880\n For Prices on\t\nSand,    Brick,        Plaster,\nLime,    Cement,    Crushed Rock,\nSand and Gravel\nPrompt Service to any Part of the\n City\t\nB. C. Transport Co.\nWANT ADS.\nare small and inexpensive,\nbut they bring big returns\nwhen they are printed in\nTHE NEWS.\nIF YOU HAVE\nused Want Ads. in The News, you do.\nnot need to be told how well they do\nthe work.\nIF YOU HAVE NOT\nused  them, you should immediately\ntry them, and see for yourself.\nNow listen, merrie gentlemen,\nAnd gentle dames and fair,\nj While 1 tell a tale your cheeks to pale\nAnd eke to blanch your hair;\n: To haunt your dreams while the night-\nowl Bcreams\n1    And the spooks come out to play\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n| 'Tis a tale of fate which my lips relate;\nI    So list what I have to say.\nI\nIn my days of youth  1 scoffe<],  forsooth,\nAt omens great and small;\n\"They are naught but chaff,\" waa my\njeering  laugh,\n\"A fig for your fancies all!\"\nBut there came a time w'aen I learned\nmy crime.\nAnd the Mishcaief was to pajr,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n'Tig a gruesome thing my Muse shall\nsing;\nBut list what I have to say.\nNow It came to pass, when I was a\nlass,\nAnd my years were ten and three,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nNow pray to your saint if your heart\nbe faint,\nBut fix your eyes on me\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nIn the 13th moon \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdlet nobody swoon-\nAnd eke on the 13th day.\nI was bidden    to grub at   a Thirteen\nClub.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nNow list what I have to say.\nI put on my 13 button gloves.\nAnd my 13 butte^n waist,\nAnd  my boots likewise, with 13 eyes\nAnd 13 hooks were laced.\nAnd I plaited  my hair in 13 locks,\nAnd never a hair astray.\nAnd I wore my 13 dollar hat\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nNow list what I Irave to say.\nTben I looked in the mirror 13 times,\nAnd  each  with  a different pose;\nA,nd I sang a song of 13 rhymes\nOf a man with 13 woes.\nAnd I kissed my mother 13 smacks.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n1 did  it just for play.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nTill   she   drove   ine   away   with    13\ntt hacks.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nNow list what I have to say.\n: T'.iere were 13 crows upon 13 posts,\n!     And they sat not without caws;\nBut with 13 stones into 13 ghosts\nI changed those 13 daws.\nj And I boarded a Number 13 car.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n'Twas 13 bloeks away.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n| lt was 13 minutes to 13th Street\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nNow list what 1 have to say.\nIt   was  13th   Street,   1313,\nAnd In Koom 13 as well;\nAnd  the  board   was  decked  with   13\nplantr\nWith 13 kinds of smell.\nAnd we sat us along just 13 strong,\nWith merry jests and gay;\nAnd I chose me there the 13th chair.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nNow list what 1 have to say.\nj Toere were 13 kinds of fish and flesh.\nThe best that coin could buy.\nThere were 13 sorts of fruit and cakes\nAntl   13   style*   ol    pie.\nAnd I said to myself, \"When the sun\ndoth shine\nIs the time to make your hay.\"\nAnd    I    ate    all    those    13    courses\nthrough.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nNow list what I have to say.\nThat night 1 was smote by a bad attack\nOe 13 divers ills,\nAnd   they called   in   13 doctors\nWith  13 kinds ol pills.\nAnd they worked at me 13 hours.\nAnd  13 week.**:  I  lay;\nAnd  it  cost  Pa   13   guineas.-\nNow list what I have to say.\nI\nIf ever you're bid to a Thirteen Feast,\nAnd it fall In your 13th year.\nIn a Room Thirteen und 13th Street,\nWith 13 kinds of cheer.\nAnd 13 guests sit round the board,\nAnd 13 crows on the way:\nGo   light,   my   friend,   on   the   13th\ncourse!\nNow that's what I had to say.\nW. O. Mill r. One of the Most Eminent In the Dominion.\nMr. Willet (Ireen Miller. Provincial\nGeologist of Ontario, wbo was recently honored by being tendered a public dinner at Toronto, which was attended by maty leading men from\nall parts of Canada, is one of the most\neminent of th\ufffd\ufffd practical geologists of\nCam da. He has, been prominent ia\nexploration work in the coal mines ot\nth- Canadian Atlantic coast, tbe silver mines of Ontario, and the gold\nmines of the Biitisl Columbia Kootenay. Mr. Miller graduated from Toronto University and accepted a position as assistant in field geology in\nthe Canadian geological survey, and\nlater accepted a position as lecturer\nIr geology and petrography, at\nQueen's University. Later ' a was promoted to a professorship and, eleven\nyears ago, was appointed provincial\ngeologist and inspector of mines fo*\nOntario. He had already, while at\nQueen's, done useful geological work\nfor the provincial geological department, in charge of Eastern Ontario\nfield work for tbe Bureau of Mines.\nMr. Miller's success has been due\nto his efforts to make bis geological\ninvestigations of practical value to\nprospectors and miners, holding tbat\ntbe geologist is merely the scientific\nexplorer and guide for the prospector\nand miner. He was born in the\nTownship of North Walsingham,\nCounty of Norfolk, and educated at\nPort Rowan High School, before going to Toronto University, where he\ntook his B. A. with first class honors\nin natural science, and later his M.A.\nSubsequently he studied at the Universities of Chloago, Harvard 'and\nHeidelberg, Queen's University,\nKingston conferred upon him the\nhonorary degree of LL.D. He is also\nan F.R.S.G. and an honorary member\nof tbe Institute of Mining and Metallurgy. He was president of the Canadian Mining Institute for two years\nand a delegate to the International\nGeological Congress at Mexico. He is\nthe author of Minerals and How They\nOccur,\" and of papers on geological\nand mining subjects in several periodicals and in the annual reports of\nthe Bureau of Mines. He was appointed a governor of Kingston\nSchool of Mining three years ago.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nChesterfield  in  Montreal  Star,\n(Written on an unlucky day. Read\nat the Social Evening of the Arlma\nConference, June,  1913.)\nCanadian Peaches.\nLarge    consignments    of   Ontario\npi aches have again been made to th!\nBritish markats tsH year.    The favorable reception accorded to Ontario*\nfruit has created considerable  interest among the peach-growers in tha\nprovince, and tie export trade bear?\nevery sign of reaching large proportions.    Maturing as it does about October,   the   Ontario   crop  reaches  tc\nGreat  Britain  in  between  the South\nAfrican,   English   and   French   peacb\nseasons.      So   tar  t.s  Ontario  Im   concerned   this  expert    traded    is  an  ex-\nextremely  important  factor.     In  tbe\nearly days, when there was only the\nlocal market to supply, the area set\nto   peaches    was   restricted.    Later,\nwhen the ma-ketn of the west were\nopened, th-i supply was fund insufficient, with  the  rciul*.  .hat   fur'her\nlands were put under crop.   At one\ntime it w&s commrnly supposed that\nthe lands on which peaches could be\nprofitably raised were confined to the*\nNiagara  distric',  and  thi  land   bordering the lakes.    When a few years\nago the first shipments were made to\nG-eat Britain, the growers found they\ncould   make   far  larger   profits,   antl\neach successive years there has beeei.\n. ruE'  to join this profitable businecs.\nTbe experimenters goc ro work, anil-\nfound  out  that   many  areas   which*\nwere not consider d suitable for tha\no itivations of  peaches have  turnred\nout  to   be  satisfy tory  in  every   respect.    There is every prospect that\nthe peach  area will  be  very  much,\nwidened in the fiuure.\nHAD LITTLE  FAITH\nIN SWEEPSTAKE TICKET\nVictoria, March 9. -After having Inflicted a slight knife wound on liis\nneck in an effort to do away with\nhimself, Thomas Robertson threw\nhimself into the Millstream creek,\nnear Parsons bridge. The opportune\npresence \"f J, Price, of the Six Mile\nhouse, undoubtedly saved the man's\nlife, Mr. Price pulled Robertson ou:\nof the water and I lien notified the\nprovincial police department Constable It. Owens went out to the hotel\nand brought Robertson Into the city\nlock-up, where he will be retained\npending an Itmstigution into his actions.\nRobertson at flr,st claimed he had\nslipped and fallen upon his knife, but\nafterwards admitted he had attempted to do away with himself, asserting\nhe was out of work and despondent.\nAt Uie police station he was stripped\nof his water-soaked garnfents and\nrollid In warm blankets. All he possessed was the knife and a sweepstake ticket, the number of which, he\nconfessed, he did not look upon as\nlikely to prove lucky.\nRECITED SHAKESPEARE ALL\nOVER SPOKANE HOTEL\nt  1\nSpokane, March 9 -Shakespeare recited at all times of the day and night\nby a woman guest no matter In what\npart of the hotel \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdhe happened to be\nwas too much for Jake GOetz, one of\nt.'.te proprietor of the Coeur d'Alene\nhotel, and be caused Madame S. Forrester, the alleged offender, to be\ntaken into custody by officers from the\nsheriff' ifflce. she is thought to be\ninsane.\n\"Mrs. Funeste- came to the hotel\nthree days ago and registered from\nCoeur d'Alene, Idaho.\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'aid Mr. Goetz\nlast night \"1 noticed that she acted\npeculiarly and I called on the county\nfor help. One of the county doctors\nvisited lie: and expressed the belief\nthat she was deranged and at his suggestion  she  was  taken  into custody. |\nWest's First Flax Factory.\nThe appalling \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* aste of valuable\nflax fibre each year is emphasize! in\nthe statement tbat, ln 1913, ibe flax\nfields of the Wett havi produced over\ntwo million tons of flax straw, repre-\nset.ting four hundred thousaud tons\nof fibre, and that all of this* wealth\nof raw mat rial Is now in ashes and\nscattered to the four corners of those;\nbroad western plains.\nThere is, however, one little spot\non the plains w\" ere flax straw is uot\nregarded as rubbish, to be ourr.ed and\ngot rid of as sj_n as tbe harvest is\nover, fcway southwept of Saskatoon,\non the Gocse Lake branch of tbe\nCanadian Nor'iiein, t_t the bright little town of I'.osetown, flax straw is\nbeing used for purposes of manufacture lu the first flax factory to be\nestibllshed anywtiere in Western Canada.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNorman Lambert in .ndJ3trial\nCanada.\nThe Freshman's Krror.\nAlexander Gram Brown, B.A., M.A.\n(Oxon), is a lecturer In Ancient and\nModern History in University College, Toronto. Tbere Is a department\nof the University Building known aa\nthe Hlstorica' Seminary, where matters historical I.old sway. Here. Mr.\nBrown bad an amusing experience\none day. He was wulklud down the\nhall, being du * a a lecture, when he\nwas accosted by a freshman, thut :\n\"1 say, old fellow, can you tell me*\nwhere the historical cemetery 13'\nt'cjiuf' old tombstono is jolng to lecture to us.\" Ope-I- \ufffd\ufffd, r* door. Mr.\nBrown remarked, \"Why, j hs, 1 am\nthe lecturer,  just  walk  In.\"\nBiggest   In  lhe-  World.\nThe dry dock which is to be built\nat Quebec for the Dominion Government by a Montreal firm will, when\ncompleted, be the largest structure\nof its kind In the world, It is to be\n1,150 feet long and 137 feet wide.\nor 100 feet longer and 17 feet wider\nthan the Gladstone Pock, which wiui\nopened by King George at Lherpool.\n('itniida's   Water  1 om er.\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Canada's water power is estimated\nSo rar as I know the woman has no ' lU H.000,000 horsepower, equal to\nrelatives in this vicinity, 1 know but1'111 annual production of 3ti.700.llUU*\nlittle about her. If she had anv friends1 ,(ins \"f ('0lll; onl*-' 1.01 ti.f\ufffd\ufffd21 horse-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.islt  her J  do  not   know   it.'   In   her   Power ha8 been developed. Pc--.CE  EIGHT\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS.\nTUESDAY,  MARCH   10,  1914.\nINFERIOR GRAVEL\nHAS BEEN USED\nIn   Future   Filling   for   Harbor   Work\nMusi  Be up to Specifications\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nContract   Awarded.\nThe recommendation of the harbor\ncommittee at the c.mncil meeting last\nnight that a contract*.lie awarded for\nthe supply of some* gravel for tbe\nharbor fill occasioned some discussion\non the class of material that has been\nsupplied iu the past, and was indicative of the purpose of the new com-\nTO THE\niitittie   to see that the city gets all it\npays for.\nWhen the recommendation was read\nAlderman   Goulet,   a   member   cf   the\nharbor committee, stated that the sup-\nply in the past had not been sat:.-' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd..*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n, tory anil  Alderman  Ann-indale, chair\n1 man of the committee was also of the\nj opinion that there was good cause for\ncomplaint    Alderman  Annandale said\nthat he had pointed out to tie harbor\nengineer that the gravel being used,\n1 was not of lie* best, but in  this  the\n| engineer did not agree and said it was\nI the  best  for the  purpose.    The engi-'\n; neer admitted, however, ihat in some \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n: cases the supply was not up to speci- I\n; fieations. Some of the gravel had been :\n' rejected,   said   Alderman    Annandale\n| but  some had been used of which 50\n, per cent was soil.\nT'-,e contract was awarded  but  the\nsupply must be according to specifica-\n, tions and will be rejected if not satis- ]\n,factory.\nThe following contracts were award-'\nI enl: The B. C. Transport Co., Ltd., to ]\nsupply gravel and boulder stone f.o.b.\nalongside quay at 38 cents per ton.\nGilley Bros., Ud.. to supply quarried\nrock f.o.b. alongside quay at 65 cents\nper ton.\ning from the way I feel this morning,'\nI  guiss I am guilty.\"\n\"Have' you ever been here before?\" I\nqueried  Magistrate Bdmonde.\n\"No sir:   it's my first attempt,\" re-'\nplied Tom and he was allowed to go. I\nRomeo Cervanz who hails from '\n1'eirt Mann over tbe river, also was up\non a booze charge and Romeo also ad- :\nmitted his fault. As be hasn't been\nin court for nine or ten months, Ro-\nmeo was turned loose and told to go\nback to tho C.N.R. town.\nlinger   Kim,   who   has   been   absent\nfront the list for nearly a year, pleaded  that  when   he  got   into  congenial\ncompany he couldn't resist the call of j\nthe wild ill t'ne Shape of whiskey, all of I\nwhich accounted for his being in the !\ndock   yesterday.     Roger   was   told   to I\nlearn how to say no and was allowed\nto meander once more.\nBob Connor had  had  a good  load |\nwithout an excuse, but he had the advantage of never having been in court\nbefore,   so   his   worship  gave  him   a\nchance  with   the  rest.\nfACTURER\nSEEK ASSISTANCE\nTOR IRON MINES\nINVESTIGATE MANNER OF\nRECOVERING VERGARA'S BODY\nProduction of Ore Has Fallen off Since\nBounty on  Pig  Iron   Expired\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nHouse to Discuss.\nIn view of the industrial development in\nGreater Vancouver, actual and in prospect, and\nto the fact that in the\npast many \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdmanufacturing plants have been\nlost to the community\nowing to the exorbitant\nprices demanded for\nland, your careful attention, is invited to the\nfollowing:\nThe Coquitlam Terminal Company have for\nsale to bona fide business concerns, manufacturing sites, all clear\nand level, with trackage\nand ample waterfront-j\nage at from twelve hun- j\ndred and fifty dollars\nper acre, also home sites j\nfor employees at extremely low rates, with\nexcellent school facilities, pity w\ufffd\ufffdter, electric\nlight, etc. Address enquiries to\nCOQUITLAM\nTERMINAL\nCO., LTD.\nGranville Street,\nVancouver. B.C.\nToo Late to Classify\nWit.I.   PAT   C.vsil   FOR   NKW   WEST-1\nminster   property\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdClient     has     reined j\ndwelling   at   Cedar   ('ullage;   mortgage |\ni-'iil*.   encumbrance.    Will  exchange and\nji;iy  cash  fur any difference     Investigate ai once.\nOttawa, March 9.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA deputation\nfrom the associated boards of Ontario\nheaded by J. W. Curran of the Daily-\nStar, Satilt Ste.  Marie; James Lyons,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nMayor of Steclton; Cyril Young of\nNorth Hay are here to interview the\ngovernment with regard to the iron\nmines situation. The associated boards\npassed a resolution at a conference\nheld two weeks ago asking the government to give such aid to the production of ore in Canada as would\nput this important iiidust.-y^on its feet.\nIt is claimed fiat since 1910 when\nthe bounty on pig iron expired, the\nmining of ore in Canada had receded\nalmost to the vanishing point. In 1913\nthere was only one ton of Canadian\nmateria! used tn Canadian blast furnaces out of every twenty-two and a\nhalf tons of the total amount used. The\nreason the government is asked to\ngive aid is to help defray the cost of\nsolving the low grade ore proposition\nin Canada. There are practically no\nhigh grade iron ores in Canada, By\na curious freak of nature tie ores on\nthe south fliore of lake Superior are\nbiigh grade, while those to the north\nare high in sulphur, phosphorus and\nother impurities, whio'i make it necessary that these ores should be treated\nbefore they can be used in the blast\nfurnace.\nThe Algoma Steel Corporation has\nspent enormous sums in endeavoring\nto solve the problems involved. It is\nclaimed, however, that the government must do this work just as it has\ndeveloped agriculture for instance.\nThe* delegation say that aid is wanted\nto help in taking of iron ore out of the\nground In Canada instead of sending\nmillions of dollars to the United States\nfor it. As an instance the Algoma\nSteel Corporation, they say. bought\n$2,000,000 worth in 1913 and expect to\nbuy twice as much shortly. As every\nton or ore raised from the ground\ncost $2 in labor, the proper encorage-\nment of iron mining, they say, is a\nmost attractive idea from the labor\nstandpoint. There an* immense bodies\nof iron ore in Ontario and Quebec and\nthe development of the industry will\nmean much to the citizens of Montreal, Ottawa and Toronto. Practically\nevery dollar spent in the districts referred   to would  go  to  these cities.\n.). .1. Carrick, M.l'., will introduce\nthe BUhject in the house on Tuesday\nwhen tin* house is in supply. He has\nthe promise of a good deal of support\nfrom both sides of the louse. The government is sympathetic but docs not\n[eel like taking action without going\n| into the sii!jje*(-t  more fully.\nWashington, March 9.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTwo departments of the United States government aro engaged In seeking information as to the circumstances under\nwhich the body of Clemente Vergara,\nan American horse dealer, supposed\ntc have been killed by Mexican federal soldiers near Hidalgo, Mexico, was\nfound early Sunday on the American\nisde of the Rio Grande.\nA telegram to the state departmentII\ntoday from American Consul Garrett |]\nat Nuevo Laredo, Mexico, informed the\ndepartment that the body had been\nfound and that details would be reported by mail. No mention was made\nof reports that Texas Rangers crossed\nthe border Saturday night and brought\nthe body back, reporting their action\nto Governor Colquitt. The slow process did not satisfy Secretary Bryan\nwho promptly wired tiie consul to\nmake his report by telegraph and this\nis now being awaited.\nPARCELS POST\nA GREAT BOON\nFOR SALE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDON'T FAIL TO SEE THIS\nbeautiful new home, six rooms, thoroughly   modern;   let,   50x133   tc   lane,\ngarage   at   rear.    Situate  Dublin  sti t,\nnear  Twelfth,     win   sacrifice   fei-   less\nthan coat.    Easy terms.\nFOR BALE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBEAUTIFUL NEW BPNO-\nnlow, 7 munis, thoroughly modern;\ni.,* Iwood \"Oalt\" floors; let 52x1211 feel\nto bunt; garage at rear, Sltunte Regime\nyi*-.. i ;et Second. Price SlTim. Small\nci.it! payment, balm jasy.\nFOR    SA1.K \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd FIVE    ACRE    IMPROVED\ni I i* k* ti   ranch,  ;'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  miles fiiiiii   town.   Ilu*\nroom   i!v.' llni!,.   K.M.ei   well   nt   wntiT,\nchicken   runs  and  \"tier  mv   buildings.\nA  snar at  (2100.    K.i.-i*.  terms.    It  \ufffd\ufffdill\nI'.I,      VOU     t'l    See     this     lli'fllle     lull     liny\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd laewherc.\nrule   SALE    FIFTH    VVENITE   SNAP\nLarge (Sleatvd lot  betwee.n Und and  Srd\ni-tn*!,**.    Il.iiitj, 6nlj   *e- sii.  li.il.in.*'*\n* any,\nI'H: EXCHANGE SIX ROOM THOR-\nnughly modern dwedilug; large I\"'. 7th\nAvenue, neiir lith sir-it. Mortgage only\nencumbrance, Wilt uxeeh mie equity fcer\n.\ufffd\ufffdmall ranch ot ftoeSd building l\"i What\nhave- you tei offer?\nRegisters Earthquake,\nCleveland.    Ohio,     March     9.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe\nseismograph at  the    observatory    at\nSt. Ignatius college here recorded an\nearthquake   today,     which      Father\nI Odenbach says   apparently    was   .ti\n! Japan,  India  or China.    The  disturbance b-gan at 124a a.m,  and la-t.ii\nuntil -' a.m.   There was a recurrence\n' at   ,ri  :i tu.   which  continued   until    6\na.m.\nFilP RENT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWH1 HAVE SEVERAL\nbungalows and dwellings f,,r rent. Call\nri ml   see  mu*   lift   heron    you   locate.\nEastman and Co.\nPhoha  st-:.\nr 'il   Westminster  Trust   Building.\nLadies!\nPer tine week only this offer Stands. I\nIf you have only enough combings Lo .\nmake a 2-etera switch bring them\ndown to us and we will add enough\nhair to make tin* extra stem free, or If\nyour hair ie; shorl we ivlll add some\nlong hair free, liy this offer you can\nget a beautiful 3-stetn switch for $3.00 '\nIHE WIG MAKERS\n107-108   McLeod   Block\nNew Westminster.\nEva Booth Recovers.\nToronto, March 9, Miss Eva Booth,\ndaughter of the famous Salvation\nArmy founder, and commander of tho\ntinny In the I'nited States, arrived in\nToronto this morning to res; henself\nfor the activities which have been\nplanned for her short slay here. Miss\nHi'Olh has been III and hist tiighl al\nDetroit was her lirst. appearance on\nthe  public  pla'form  in   four  weeks.\nMONDAY   MORNING  SLEEP\nPROVES  REAL  EXPENSIVE\nA Monday morning Bleep may be\n,i good thing, hut sometimes it comes\nrather expensive, which same was the\nexperience yesterday morning of five\norientals who were down ln the police\nbooks as having had something to elo\nwith an opium joint which was raided\non Sunday night. T%elr legal repre\nsentative '.wis mi hand when th\"lr\nnames were called, but the Quintette\ndid not ''.mu up at court and their\nbail money was,forfeited, $130 In all,\nLung Chee, the alleged keeper of the\njoint was mil On 't'l'1 hail and the rest\nor $20 each.\nliy the same token Wong Lee saved\n$10 lie did not put up any ball when\narrested and when hia case was heard\nyesterday lie was fined $m. if he\ncan't raise the ten bones he goes to\nthe cooler tor 16 clays, whloli would\nbe a further saving to Wong at the\ngovernment's expense.\nA   Good   Guesser,\nSaid his worship to Tom Matthew:\n\"Vou are changed with being drunk cm\nn public Btreet, Are you j.:uilty or not,\nguilty?\"\nSaid Tom to the court: \"Well, judg*\nAlthough Vie compilation of the full\nlist is as yet. Incomplete, merchants\nanel others of the city who are taking\nadvantage ot the new parcels post, system recently inaugurated by the Canadian post, office department, will be\nable by studying the following list to\nget acquainted witli the places included in the twenty mile radius from New\nWestminster. This area allows a\ncheaper scale of charges for parcels\nup lo 11 pounds and. according to Assistant Postmaster Lord. is being\ntaken advantage of in greatpr measure than ever by the progressive firms\nof the city. Many of the places mentioned in Vv.e attached list do not enjoy the convenience of an express office and therefore the parcels post system is proving a great boon to the\nresidents who can now have parcels\nde'Ilvered right to their door.\nMr. Lord said that, to the postoffice\nstaff the many and varied articles being sent through the mails was a revelation. Meat and fish, ordered by\nmail or telephone are being sent out\nhy the morning delivery Lo the outlying districts in time for the mid-day\nmeal.\nHere is the 21-mile radius list corrected to March fi:\nAlta   Vista,   Albion.   Ardley.\nBurrard Inlet, Barnet, Burnaby Lake\nBaruston Island, Burquitlam. Buena\nVista. Britcola. Boundary Bay.\nCoquitlam, Cloverdale, Crescent, Col-\nlingwood Hast. CollingWOOd West,\nCentral Park, Clayton, Capllano, Capitol Hill. Cedar Cottage.\nEdmonds, Kast Burnaby, Karl's road.\nKliurne,  Eburne station.\nFernridge. Fraser Arm, Fraser\nMills.\nGrimmett\nHammond, Haney. Hazehnere,\nHall's  Prairie, Holly-burn.\nJardine,   Jubilee,   Jones'   road.\nKeri.sdab .\nLadner, Lozells, Langley. Langley\nPrairie,  Lochdale,  Lulu  Island, Lynn\n('feel;.\nMaple Ridge, Malllardvllle, Murray-\nville,  Milner,  McKay.\nNorth Vancouver, Nicomekl, .North\nArm,  North   Lonsdale.\nOakalla.\nRural Route No l Port Moody,\nPort Kells. Port Coquitlam, Port Mann,\nPitt River, Pitt Meadows, Port Qui-\nchon, Point Orey, Port Hammond,\nI'ort Haney.\nSmith Westminster, Sullivan station,\nSteveston, Surrej Centre?, Sperling,\nSmith Vancouver, South Hill, Siuugh*\nnessy Heights, S luth I'\";' .Mann,\nStrawberry Hill\nV'ancofiver, Vancouvi r Heights VI-\ncosa,  View   Hill\nWestham   inland,  White  Hock.\nWE PACK.\nSHIP\nAND\nPREPAY\nFREIGHT\nCHARGES\nThe New Westminster\nAND FRASER VALLEY\nDepartment   Store\nTELEPHONE NO. 73.\nWE PACK,\nSHIP\nAND\nPREPAY\nFREIGHT\nCHARGES\nSpecials in Boys' Wear\nWe have just received a new lot of Hats for boys;\nin the popular telescope style; all sizes; in fine\nblack felt and rough finish felt; colors \ufffd\ufffd4 ftR\nbrown and gray.   All at  *** \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdw\nAlso a range of Boys' Skull Caps; in different brown\nand gray tweeds; also plain navy ORft\nfor    fcWW\nA strong Worsted Wool Jersey; in navy, with red\nstriped collar and cuffs. Just the thing for good, hard\nwear, and yet they are very neat. For all sizes of\nhoys from 3 to IG years of age, and varying in price\naccording to size, from tf 4   CA\n90c to *\ufffd\ufffd I \ufffd\ufffdWU\nFine Elastic Knit Jerseys; button on the shoulder;\nfor children from 1 to 6 years of age; in gray, red,\nnavy and brown.    Prices, according to     G4   O^m\nsize, from 75c to *w 1 mWm\nSome very fine Cashmere Jerseys for boys or girls;\nfrom about 4 to 10 years of age; in red. brown and\nnavy; some button at the shoulder; others without\nbuttons.    Prices are 9_0 f\\t\\\n$1.75 and 4}mma\\t*J\nGuaranteed Springs\nDouble Weave Spring; cable edge; 9.0 OR\nguaranteed  vermin  prooi.    Special    \ufffd\ufffd&\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nSingle Weave Spring; cable edge; with three string\ncable supports; guaranteed absolutely 9.0 7K\nvermin proof.    Special   *y\ufffd\ufffdi. I w\nDouble Weave Spring; with double rope edge; vermin proof; \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdguaranteed. 91A Rt\\\nSpecial   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdV*\ufffd\ufffdwU\nSolid Oak Kxtension Tables; in golden or fumed\nfinish; 44-inch round top; six feel extension;\npedestal base.    Special 94 A   Rft\nI'riee   9I1.0U\nBasement Specials That\nOffer Money-Saving\nOpportunities\nNew  Adjustable Self  Wringer  Mops, TRtt\nHotel   Hope  Mops, ARft\nHotel Mop Sticks; Rflft\nHull  Dog  Mop  Wringers; t9**_   -am\neach  4}C.I0\nO-Cedar Polishing Mops; t_A    Rft\neach 91 iQU\nO-Cedar Polishing Oil, at 25c, 50, ft* A    t%m\nand    9 I .CO\nPure Bristle English Sweeping Brooms;   C*A   Rft\neach  e? | .OU\nThe   Eclipse   Washing   .Machine, CIA  Kfl\nChild's Oblong  Enamel  Baths;   each       9iO  OC\nJ1.5C. $1.75 and   4jC.C0\nJapanned   Covered  Chamber   Pails;   each       ~fRaa\n65c.  and \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. . .   I OC\n\"The  Handy\"  Dwarf  Wash   Boards; A m\neach       I OC\nGem Food Choppers; the best made; at     _*0  OC\n$1.50, $1.75 and    4tC.C0\nMilk Strainer Pails; each at 65c _%Rat,\nand   OOC\nPure Bristle Hand Srubs; Aft-.\neauh    4UC\nNai! Scrubs; Rat\neach    OC\nThe Universal Bread  Mixer;  each CO  7C\n$2.25   and     4)Cu f O\nToilet Paper; rolls or flat; \ufffd\ufffd_\neach     OC\nWire Soap Dishes; A R-.\neach     1 OC\nGarden Trowels; 4 Ra.\neach         IOC\nJapanese Matting Rugs\nA most useful and economical floor covering; in\ngreat demand for bedrooms and parlors. It is easily\nkept clean, and wears well. The designs and colorings are very attractive:\nSize  27x54.    Price    20c\nSize 36x72.    Price   35c\nSize 6-9x9 feet.    Price   $1.35\nSize 9x9 feet.    Price  $1.95\nJapanese Matting\nA fine quality of Matting; one yard wide; very suitable for halls and bedrooms. It can be used on\neither side, as the patterns are woven right through;\ncolors red and green; on fawn ground; one Ol\"l#*\nyard wide.    Per yard   .-.   ..:. i fcUC\nChina Matting\nA splendid floor covering for kitchens and bedrooms\nand camp floors; sanitary and very dur- i Al _\nable; one yard wide.    Per yard      Ib^C\nSpecial Clearing Prices on\nBroken Lines in Table\nLinens\nExceptional value in Pure Irish Linen Table Damask; unbleached; in heavy weave. Thp kind that\nwears for years and looks better each time it is washed. In choice floral designs; seventy inches wide;\nregular $l.uu  value.    Monday ZfmWft\nper yard    Ivy\nExtra heavy weave Irish Union I'lib kin be-' Damask;\nserviceable for kitchen use: pretty floral effects; 60\ninches wide.    Monday, CC*\ufffd\ufffd\nper yard  OOC\nBleached Irie'i I'nion Damnsk Table Cloth; size 60x\n114; ln effective designs ot\" leaf end berry; regular\n90c value.   To clear at, *gg_\neach   OOC\nlied Bordered (ilass Towels; hemmed ready for use;\nsize 20x28; a great snap.    Per Efla*\nhalf dozen OUC\nWhite IInek;'.back Holier Towels; eighteen inches\nwide and two and one half yards in each       Cft**\ntowel;   ready for use.    Each   OUC\nTeddy Bear Blankets; nine only left. They are very\nslightly soiled' so they must be cleared. Regular\nprice $1.26.    To be cleared  Monday, 7C#%\nat, each    fOC\nOdd lines in Wash Fabrics, comprising Cotton Crepes\nFoulards, Dress Linens, Mercerized liepps and Suitings, etc.; in various colors; values to 35c      4 Ra%\na yard. Monday, pit- yard     I OC\nLinen Stair Qrugg1 I, in natural linen shade and\ngray; effective floral antl leaf designs; IK inches\nwide; a splendid covering for your better carpet;\nwashes well and  looks well;   regular value    Ot\\ft\n25c.    Monday, per yard hUC\nCrash   Roller Toweling;   IS  inches  wide. 1 ftcM\nIvvtra Special value at. per yard    IUU\n88-lneh Sheeting; fully bleached; a splendid   CAa\nwearing grade.    Per yard    OUC\nBrown Dress Holland;  32-Inch wide;  close    ORft\nweave.    Per yard    COC\nFine grade Dotted Swiss Muslin; regu 4 ft 1 ft\nlar ICic yard.    Special, per yard    I C _ C\nEvery Day Something New\nin Draperies and Hangings\nIt pays to spend a little time in making your\nselection of Curtains and Curtain materials. Ner.l'a-\ning. at so littLe expense, adds more to the charm\noi the home.\nVoiles, Scrims and Nets are most popular for\nwindow drapes this season, and our stock of these\nis most complete.\nSee  the new   patterns, colors  and  shadow  effects\nbefore you commence the spring cleaning.\nShades   to   suit,   nil   requirements.     Prices   to   suit\naU puraeB' Per 20c to 60c\nyard\nPICTORIAL\nREVIEW\nPATTERNS.\nSW\nSHOP IN NEW WESTMINSTER\nieis\n\\*\n_\\\/m\/\/ec\nAND SHOP AT McALLISTERS.\nPICTORIAL\nREVIEW\nPATTERNS.\nTIME   TABtE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFRASER RIVER.\nFor Week   Ending Sunday. March\nWestminster, Sand lie acts.\nTime. High             Low,\nHigh.    Low. Time   HI Time.\nti      5:80 11:10 4:30 12.3 9:49\n15:20 14:22  11.u 21:36\nin    5 :*50   0:50 4:52 12.5 10:30\n16:30 12:00 15:31  11.3 22 21\n11 6:16    1:35 5:14 12.6 11:10\n17:86 12:56 16:33 11.7 23:05\n12 6:*36    2:10 5:37 12.8 11:60\n18:26 14:00 17:34 12.0 23 48\n18    7:06    2:35 6:04 12.9 12 31\n19:36 15:2:. 18:36 12.2\nII 7:35 3:00 6:35 12 :c 0 32\n20:40 16:18 19:30 12.2 13:14\n15 8:06 3:05 7:07 12.9 1:19\n21:45 17:06 20:4ei 12.1 14:00\n15.\nI It.\n8.8\n1.6\n7.8\n1.8\n6.8\n2.4\n5.0\n8.3\n3.8\n4.6\n2.8\n6.0\n2.1\nSTRICT B. C. LAWS\nSAVE WOMAN'S LIFE\nEnraged     American     Husband  Would\nHave  Killed Wife  Had  He   Not\nFeared British Justice.\nSpokane,   March  9,    Kenwood   men\n' and women made up   a    good    i Ized\naudience   In Judge   J,   Stanley Web\nBier's court Saturday afternoon when\nthe divorce case of William Gibson\nagainst Carrie Gibson was on trial.\nSkeleton's from the families of the\ntwo north side homes were rattled before the coun  and spectators.\nGibson charges Ilis wife with a\nstatutory offence and with desertion.\nThe husband, a plumber, wees In court\nwith a long array of wilnesBes to\nshow that, he was a good provider for\nhis family and a good husband. The\ndefendant, sustained liy her 17 year\nold son and her aged father, was\nthem to show that lhe defendant was\nnot good to her, that she had work\ncil in laundries to contribute to tho\nfamily support, that her father had\nBent money to help build the home in\nKenwood, and that the son, beginning\nnl. tho age of 14, had given weekly\nMinis out Of bis wages to bis father.\nMrs. IC. Epperly, wife of a former\nconfectioner on Monroe street, near\nBroadway, testified that she had\nfound a picture of Mrs. (Ilbson In ber\nluiaband's satchel; that she and her\nhusband had quarrelled because or\nlhi' picture and that he |e*ft her. She*\ntestified she* went to Ilie Inline of her\nhusband's parents and there saw nn-\nother picture of her husband and Mrs.\nfiil>.-on taken together, Mrs. Epperly,\nin cross-examination said that she\nI'nd her husband had engaged in a\nlawsuit and that sin* got a $2000 judgment from him and would have got\nmore if she couldi 'kat. her husband\nhael got away with $10,000 of her\nmoney.\n(leorgee   Gibson,   son   of  the   couple,\nte stltled that the father told him\nwhen his mother wets In llritlsh Columbia after the alleged desertion\nthat were It not for the laws of Uritish Columbia he would go up there\nand shoot her.\nThe case   is   to  be  resumed  tnmor-\nFATAL ROW OVER A\n' CAN OP SARDINES\nGardiner, Mont, March 9.* Infuriated because Walter Semple, a bartender of Gardiner, charged them 25\ncents a can for sardlner. Ole A. Ilal-\nverson and (ieorge A. Ilasley, members of troop P. stationed al Fort\nYellowstone, stabbed anel slashed\nSemple in a dozen places. Sample\ndied later,\nMori' than 100 Infuriated citizens attempted to take the prisoners away\nfrom Deputy Sheriff Welcome of Park\ncounty after he hud arrested the men\nbut he saved them by his coolness In\nremarking, \"If you had caught them\nbefore  I  did   I   would  have  nothing  to\nBay,    l arrested  them and  they are\nmine.\"\nIt is alleged that three soldiers en-\n. tared the saloon at 10 o'clock, the bartender lolling them that the place was\nClosed, but agreed to serve I hem sardines alter they said they were hungry. After eating the fond. It la said\nthey started the trouble when Semple\ncharged them 2d cents for the snr\ndines. It was also alleged that llalsey\npushed the' bartender from tlm place'\nand as lie wan passing the door he wns\nstabbed In the baek Ile was cut\nfrom the e*ar to the eye, both sides\nof his tiroat wore slashed and lie was\nstabbed in othe-r places.\nTHE WORLD'S WORK DEPENDS\nON THE WORLD'S DIGESTION\nProm the captain of industry to the\nhod carrier\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfrom milady iu the auto to\nthe woman with the scrubbing brush\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nthe accomplishments of every one of us\ndepend absolutely on lhe accomplishments of our stomachs. Backed by a\npood digestion, a mnn can give the best\nthat is iu him. When his stomach fails,\nhe becomes a weakling.\nTo this loss of power no one need\nsubmit. Right habits of eating,\ndrinking, sleeping and exercise, aided\nby Na-I)ru-Co Dyspepsia Tablets, will\nrestore and maintain the full efficiency\nof tbe human mind nnd body.\nNt-Dru-Co Dyspepsia Tablets contain\nthe active principles needed for the\ndigestion of every kind of food. They\ngo to the assistance of the weakened\nStomach, and enable the sufferer, right\nfrom the start, to assimilate aud get the\nbenefit of the food eaten. With this\nassistance, the digestive organs regain\ntheir tone, and soon the useof the tablets\nis no longer necessary.\nIf your stomach is not working properly, try Na-Dru-Co Dyspepsia Tablets.\n5'ic nt your druggist's. National Drug\nanel Chemical Co. oi Canada, Liniitetl,\nMontreal. I4t","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"New Westminster (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"The_New_Westminster_News_1914-03-10","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0315680","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.206667","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-122.910556","@language":"en"}],"Notes":[{"@value":"Titled The Daily News from 1906-03-06 to 1912-04-24; Westminster Daily News from 1912-04-25 to 1912-12-04; and The New Westminster News from 1912-12-05 to 1914-09-04.<br><br>Published by The Daily News Publishing Company, Limited from 1903-03-06 to 1912-04-24; and The National Printing and Publishing Co., Ltd. from 1912-04-25 to 1914-09-04.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"New Westminster, B.C. : The Daily News Publishing Company, Limited","@language":"en"}],"Rights":[{"@value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Digitization Centre: http:\/\/digitize.library.ubc.ca\/","@language":"en"}],"Series":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1914-03-10 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1914-03-10 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The New Westminster News","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0315680"}