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Feb. 5. An important\nmeeting of the opposition leaders was;\nheld today at I.ansdowne house, tho\nresidence of the Marquis of l.aus-\ndowse, at which 19 wero present, in*\neluding Lord I.ansdowne, Austen\nChamberlain anil Robert Cecil, the last\ntwo the only ones who were not members of the Unionist sdailnistrutlon.\nThe Pall Moll Gazette Rays that. the.\nleader-, decided upon the meeting of\nparliament next week to raise the issue r,f Ulster and the necessity of s\ngenrr.-'l electioo in such a way as will\nmark a memorable event in parlia-\ninentir.v procedure and inaugurate im-\nmedir>ie>ly and decisively the great\nStruggle e,f  the session.\nThis is interesting in view of the\ntact that the Pall Mall Gazette is the\noriginator of the scheme that tho organization should continually shout j\n\"Resign, resign\nness Impossible, The Pall Mall Gazette slates that the recent conferences between Premier Asquitb,\nChief Secretary Burrell and John Redmond, produced a scheme of home\nrule without home rule for Ulster as\noutlined hy Sir Bdward Grey. The\nnewspaper adds: \"To such a scheme\nthe *ifp(;mUoii cannot agree in view\nof Bonar Law's promise to the Ulster**\nmm.\"\nEndeavors are being made to Induce\nn geaeral wearing of the Union .Tack\nby spectators at the opening of parliament by the king on Tuesday next.\nOttawa, Feb. 5- The commons had* Hill English had bin trial, was con-\na field d*y for Che oonalderatlon of Ucted .,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ri>Rallud hlB frced all\npublic hills and notions. Two bi Is between 10:30 0,c,)pk veH,,.r(* monv\nwn.rh  have excited some general   Uv Ing \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd , (1,..,Jf.k yeft;ri      ftf&\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nterest were killer) at the second read-1    ........ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nWashington, Feb. ii.    President. Wil-1 a desire to avoid any Ill-feeling  with\nson announced  today  that  he would U5\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd8' Britain,\nendeavor  to have  repealed  at    the'   Th'- PresWenfs announcement grew\nThree Amendments to Railway Act Suggested\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdInclude in New Bill.\nAll   Steamship   Companies   to   Ceme\nUnder Jurisdiction of  Board-\nSettling of Claims.\nOttawa. Keb. 6.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJoseph Armstrong,\nM.P. for East Lambton, has presented\ning stage without the house being divided.    They  were  both  fathered  by\nMr.   Burnham,  Wc-Ht  Peterboro.    One\nwas to abolish  the granting of titles\nto Canadians through the medium of\nrecommendations of the cabinet;  the\notiher   to   provide   tbat   in   provinces' AiiK\\re't\" d\"'ri\nwhere candidate's of the  local  house j\ndo not have to put up a deposit, the!\nsame rule should apply to candidates\nfor federal elections.\nHon. George B, Poster on behalf of'\nthe government refused to be moved\nby  Mr.  Huniham's plea for the aboli-\nHon  of titles.    He preferred  being a :\ndemocrat,   but   titles   were   conferred\nwhich is fairly speedy work even for\nthe special court of assize now sitting\nin the city on the Vancouver island\nstrike cases.\nThe trial of English, who was accused of rioting and of having taken\npart In an unlawful assembly last\nng the Btrike troubles In\nNanaimo, was out of the? ordinary in\nseveral ways. In the first place\nBill's name belies his nationality. He\nis called English, but he's Scotch.\nThat's a fact because he himself admitted il in the witness box yesterday afternoon and Bill wasn't admitting anything that was going   to hurt\nimportant  amendments   to\nt\".ie   railway  act.    It   is   stated   they\nf. >\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   merltous   performance   of   public I ^  \ufffd\ufffd0nUUon  as  \ufffd\ufffd  POaceful  citizen\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd**.  .i...inn in\n... ,     , i and  other duties.\n\"\"' ,:,i:; ll,:,k\" ,,ns       Si,* Wilfrid Uurier, while agreeing\nj with the principle of the bill said the\nmember for Peterboro was going about\n! the matter in the wrong way.   As the\n; irranting cf titles rests with tiie home\n* government, the proper method of pro-\n* cedure would he to send an address to\nj the   imperial  authorities.\nA prolonged discussion was evoked\nby  the  motion  of  Robert  Bickerdike\ni of Montreal for the abolition of capi-\ni tal   punishment.    It  received   support\nand  censure  from  both  sides  of  the\nhoine  hut  it   was  apparent  that the\nthe second place it was the first\ntrial of the Vancouver island, con-\ntlnued-ln-our-next   series   which   the\nout of a  report  that he did not seek\npresent session of congress that pro-  action at the present session.    Sena-\ni vision of the Panama canal act which   tor  O'Gorman  on   leaving   the  White ! to the mini-ater of railways suggestions\nexempts    Ani?ric;ui    coastwise    ships  House yesterday said    he    had    dis- j for  three\nfrom payment cf tolls. I cussed   the    tolls    question    casually\nTin* president believes the Hay- with the president and expressed the\nPauiirefute treaty with Great Britain I view that congress could do little jllav\" been &erced on by the railway\nguarantees equality of treatment to j else at the pres-tnt session besides commission und will be embodied in\nall nations, including thn Unitrd .passing the trust bills and appropria- the new consolidated railway act when\nStates, in the subject of tolls and tliat, tion measures. The president sought \" is brought down by Hon. Frank\nthe United States is in honor bound | to make clear today that this was Cochrane shortly.\nto charge American vessels the same \\ Senator O'Gorman's own impression Tlle first provision is that all aavi-\ntolls it imposes upon those of foreign'of the legislative situation, but that gation companies handling freight and\nnations. The president impressed so far as he was concerned, he earn- operating on Canadian wate?rways\nupon bis callers that   he    would    use  estly hoped for action at the present j s'la\" oa Placed under the jurisdiction\nsession. of the railway commission.    At pres-\nSome Delay Expected enl the only ateamship companies un-\n-.,      ... .  ,,,   , ' . i<ler the control of the board are those\nThe  illness  of  Chairman   Bacon  of\nthe senate foreign relations committee, which is holding up consideration\ncf  the  arbitration   treaties   including\nevery   legitimate   influence   at   his\ndisposal to have the* exemption clause\neliminated from the Panama canal\nact.\nHouse   Will   Concur.\nThis  announcement   was    expected\nb\nadministration leaders at the capi-inne with Great Britain may delay ac-\ni.il.    '1 He  presidents   views   will    be   tion in congress on the toils question.\npresiding Judge has referred to as a earrn el out In the house, according to The president alreadv has communi-\nsmall affair. In the third place Birt H^resentalive eVdamson, chairman of cated bis views on the subject of tolls\nknew his fate shortly after the jury jtlla interstate' and foreign commerce to the committee. There has been\npronounced bis guilty of having taken committee, who said tonight congress no developments on the diplomatic\npart  in   an   unlawful    assembly,    in- | undoubtedly would act quickly    by   a | s*de of the controversy since the last\nnote of Sir Bdward Grey was received\nin 'undoubtedly would act quickly    by\nstead of having to wait in   jail    for | \"straight out repeal.\"\nsentence like the rest of the convicted i Senate May Object.\nstrikers.    !\ufffd\ufffd,  wasn't such a hard    fate!    Net so certain, however, are some\nin  the closing days of the Taft    administration,      Great    Britain    since\na\neither, involving only a lecture from! of the Democratic leaders in the sen-!turn liaB not pressed for a reply,\nthe presiding judge and then dismiss- ata that the president will be sus- .which circumstances generally has\nal from custody. Iu the fourth place talned in his resolve on this question been taken to mean that intimations\nthe irial will go down into history as |which has agitated American relations ,of  some   kind  of   President  Wilson's\nEJECT ALDERMAN\nFROM MEETING\nto Chair and It* Forced\nto Leave.\nconcensus of opinion was opposed to  thc' occasion  en  which a judge from   with  England for several  years    and  friendly  attitude toward  the    British\nthe proposed innovation in the method  tllP ,,H,Klh Sav<J his Unbiassed opinion   has  been a subject    of international  contention has been conveyed to the\nof dealing with those who have been on  %vhat should  happen to  a  lawyer  controversy since the passage of the  t\ufffd\ufffdndon government.\nproven   builty  of   taking  human   life. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdvsno talks too much to the jury. Panama  canal   act   in   1!H2.    Senator!    President  Wilson's  decision  follow-\nMr.   Poster  urged   that  It  would  not] <>n \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Horrible Fate 1 IO Gorman,   chairman    of   the     inter- j ed more than a year of -Study of*   the\nbe wise for parliament to decide, upon1    TllP judicial opinion referred to, as |CCeanic can Is committee,  which had   Hay-Pauncefote   treaty   and   the    de-\nsuch a momentuous cjiange in the sys- rendered    by    the honorable    Justice !charge of the bill  and  who led    the  bates in congress for and against the\ntern as the result of one brief debate  Morrison    yesterday,     runs     tliusly: '-victorious fight in  the senate to    ex-  exemption.    He always has bsen    op-\nin  the house of commons.    The fact \"Gentlemen of the jury, if any of you'etnpt    American    coastwise     vessels  Posed to ship subsidies.\nthat tho practice of hanging murder- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'   go   to   parliament-and   I   hope  from  tolls,  tonight asserted his  pur-j Free Tolls Advocate.\ners was an old one did not prove that  that  some of  you do\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdI    think    you  po8e to stand by his convictions and!    senator O'Gorman who was in'tru\nIt was wrong. should  use  your  strongest  endeavors  flght th(, president's desire. ! mental  in    having    a  free tolls' for\nThese who supported the bill in- towards having legislation put on\neluded Hon. George Graham and Uevi the statute books making it a criminal offence*, punishable with transportation for life, fcr counsel to address n jury moro than once during\nthe course or one trial. Today in this\nlittle case you have bad the law <ex-\nMUST  RETURN THELMA plained to you  four times by counsel\nTO AMERICAN OWNERS  aid you have listened to five different\n . addresses.\"\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJudgment    re-      Counsel for the defence opened the\nof the supreme   le'e-al   tango   yesterday   morning   with\ncourt of llritish  Columbia  and  of the  a few steps in objecting time.    There\nprovincial    court    of appeal    In    'he   was a  panel  of  IL'li  jurors,  the  legal\nchartered or used by railway corporations. Kor instance the Richelieu and\nOntario company operating between\nNiagara and Toronto and which carries large amounts of freight antl fruit\nin the summer, is not under the commission's   jurisdiction.\nA second amendment will provide\nthat power be given the railway commission to adjudicate claims against\nsteamboat, railway and express companies which have not been settled is\nRn days. It is claimed that at present\nshippers often have claims standing\nas long as two, three and five years.\nThe third  important amendment is\nto  the  effect  that where  a  privilege\nhas been given by a railway company\nunder   the   railway   act,   the   railway\ncommission   may  he  given   power   to\norder it extended to shippers ot other\ncommodities.    At present shippers of\nlivestock   can   stop  a  car   in   transit\nand complete the load for a charge ef\n$?\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd for  such stop.    Shippers ot other\ncommodities would have tho commission given power to order such \ufffd\ufffdriv-\nilego to them.\nRefllSeS tO V0te Or Apologize  Thompson.    Hon.   J.  C.   Doherty  de-\nclared himself against the bill and\nadjounted lhe di'la'.e* which is hot\nlikely to te renewed this session,\n**\t\n8400 IN IDLE\nUediclne Hat, Feb. 5. -Alderman Vancouver, Keb. 6\n\\lfl,r n was tonight ejected from the versing the decisions\n.niinc;i   meeting during  a discussion\nof the license bylaw. He refused to\nvote when called upon to do so and ca'o of the American \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdgasoline representative of \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdhe prisoner pointed\nwheat celled upon to apologize to the schooner Tnelma the master of which out, and the defence had only f.->ur\nchair   tc     disrespect,   again   refused.JWSS accused of fishing within the In-  challenges,  twei  for  each  of the   pair\nHe mis given the choice of walking f ter national  three  mile   limit  off the of charges preferred. Now, the. crown,\nout or going in a  policeman's arms,I coast of Vancouver Island on July 24. it it  so desired,    might    comb    that\nnnd chose the former                                1811,   was  handed   down   by   the   su- panel  to  neatly   that   the    jury     box\nThe  resolution   met   with  only  one.  preme court of Canada at Ottawa yes-  would be packed and .\ndissenting   voice.    On   Monday  night  terday, according lo advices received- In  the   Frigid  Zone.\nihe earns  alderman  caused  some  ex- this morning    by    Messrs.    MacNelll, At tills point In the discourse from\ncltement by calling -liar\" every few  Bird, McDonald  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*  Darling,  who had defence counsel his    lordship   inur-\njutee  and today  was pursuing the charge cf the*  appeal.    The  effect of Jen-teel a spoke that  flattened out the\nt?ctlcs                                               the   latest   decision   means  that    the rim e.f the oratorical wheel.\n\" ._JJ _-                , fishing vessel which was declared con- \"It is  utterly  futile.\" said  the  pre-\nifiscntrd for the Mlegrd Infrnct-ons of siding judge,  \"to  wrap  up a  speech\nthe international laws. \ufffd\ufffd ill now be re- for the benefit of the jurors sitting ln\nturned to Captain Carlson, of Seattle, the court room in this manner. What\nj owner and master of tho Tlieima. the law allows to be done is done,\"\nI..   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi Ar  taKmiva     The Thelma was captured near San I   \"But your lordship-,\".counsel for\n*    flTV  flF   Tlllmlilll  Tnan  bv the Canrtlian  fishery cruiser the defence r.r.oe more essayed.\nll   VII I   Ul     lUnUHID JNewlngton, Certain I,-dwell, the com- j    \"I don't wish to hear from you any\n'mander of the patrol  host  declaring further,\" was the frigid line of   con-\n |that 'he fishing r:hoener was Inside versatlou from the bench and the ob-\nI the three siile rone  wtv n    shs was jectlous were formally noted without\n\ufffd\ufffdBto, Feb. 5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDevelopments ef;.|,hted hauling in her reets. 'any added forensic embellishment,\nIke test fortnight  which have to do     B  As Aforesaid.\nwM  llio    unemployed    situation    In                 yy-,1 Cj,| **.,>,. Them. !    The evidence for the   crown    was\nTonaio. *re demonstrstive of the fact\nStat relief can come to tha thouaands\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdf workless m\ufffd\ufffdn and women in the\nAnd  Again, It  May Not. |American ships clause inserted in.the\nOther senators pointed to the recent Democratic national platform, said to-\nacUon  of  the  foreigu  relations cci   night;\nmlttee   in  recommending  the*   Britifch j    \"1  have unalterable conviction U.iat\nf&tni-al  arbitration   treaty  for exten- the Unittd    States   should    maintain I\nsion as au indication thai the senate.her present position   in   this   controls ready to rescind its action on tbe  versy.    The senate's position on the 1\ntolls questions, fear of having to sub*' tolls  question  was  emphatically    mc-1\nmit it  to  arbitration   having delayed   pressed in  1912  when the    act    was\nIts extension by the senate last sum- passed.    Approval was  given  to    ex-\nmer.    Senator  Stone,   who  voted   for  rmption of American coastwise ships!\nthe provision, hies s;<id he would veto   by a \\ote of 47 to 15.\"\nfor  the   repeal,  taking    the    position*     Senator  Hoot  sought   to  have    the\nthat   under  the     treaty     the   United   clause repealed  in  January  1913.\nSlates still has the  right  to levy any;     It   is   probable  the  proposed   repeal j\njtolls il  wishes,  tiie  exemption  should !legislation  will  be?  introduced  in    the\nI be stricken out in deference to inter-j house   by   the  foreign   relations   com\nGUILTY Of MM\nIN EIRSL DEGREE\nHans SchmitJt, Fake Priest,\nConvicted of Killing Anna\nAumuller.\nnational good feeling ami In line with (mlttee\nWlnni'mf,   Feb    J.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe   shippers' sVnig the same lines as that submit-\nsectior* of the I  ard of trade decided ted in the Baird case the day before. ^Gunn Bremner, who won his way to\ntn nCify the customs department t-hat all   the  testimony   dealing   vlth    the\neiky tmly through the resumption of i ,ft n^m-j^r, wculd call for sil pack* hnetling   of non-union   si\ufffd\ufffdn   at   the\nindustrial    activity.      The   establish* : R(fps 8. ^^ customs house lnste-ad of Nanaimo mine and    tbe   stoning   of\nseen* of a roglstratlejn bureau by the | ft(,wpttnr  tbe   government's  propjsl- Itliem and the bouse in which    they\neivie social service commission only ] .jnn t0 jeuVer goods st ths rate of lived, much   to   the   damage of   the\nRADIUM PATIENT\nSUCCUMBS AT LAST\nMAYOR GRAY ASKS\nFOR HOSPITAL GRANT\nRobert G. Bremner, Member\nof Congress Dies After\nFight for Life.\n-Robert j\n=;;-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Victoria,  Feb. 5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMa.vor    A.\nO W. Gray headed a New West*\nC- minster     edeputation     which\n'.':\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd waited  upon  Hon.   Dr.   Young,\n# provincial secretary, this morn-\n=;,- ing, with a request for an In-\n*-'= creased grant to the Royal\n-::= Columbian hospital. The depu-\n:'.'( tation  was introduced    by    T.\n* Gifford, member for New West-\n?.: minster. The grant to the hos-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-::- pitai last year was Jio.ooo.\nHa\nNew   Vork.   Feb.   5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHans   ScbM.'dt\nwas found ftuilty today of the mursler\n' ;:; jin the first degree for killing    Assa\n.,,.  Aumuller,   a   ycimg    woman   lh?   had\n:\ufffd\ufffd: (married through a self-performe-d \ufffd\ufffdvre-\n^imony while acting as * priest at    St.\n*.;;: .'Joseph's church.    The penalty for the\n;;tjcrim* is death tn'the electric chair\n$ a{ Sing Sing prison.    He will be seat-\nfenced next Wednesday. . j\n-.     Schmidt,  whose defence    was    te'i\n=;;-.  sanity, laughed when the verdict \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\n:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd; pronounced.    He had steadfastly \ufffd\ufffdt\ufffd\ufffdv\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^Iclared himself guilty and at  hie tr-\n:;Hfaignment before being  held for ike\nef supreme  court,   pleaded   that   Its   be\n%'-. | punished by death. Later he protaeted\n*.;;:' against    the    insanity    defence    ad-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^Jvanced  by his counsel, and said  U>\n*\ufffd\ufffd night he would not assist tbem ia a\ufffd\ufffdy\nway if they prepared an appeal.\nAs It Should Be.\n\"I wculd rather die tonight than \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\nmorrow,\" he said.   \"It is as K she\ufffd\ufffdW\ntfkd fn providing temporary em\n\ufffd\ufffdJor\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnt.\nThr t'.lrs of the registration bureau i\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdf to   the  present   show   that  tb*re'\n16 cents per package.\nBaltimore,    lid.,    Feb.    a\nRefused Hl\ufffd\ufffd IVIonSy.\nths national house of representatives) I    i^cthbrldge   Feb. 5.-A. Barons,    a\nfrom the Seventh New Jersey district fa,,.vfr   j0iiru<>iD\ufffd\ufffd to ths land dfflcebe and as I wish it.\"\nafter  a  oareer  that  was  as  varied   to '^j^e    pre-emption    payments   of |    This was the second trial and kto\nperhaps, as any ever sketched ln the |C^ liati t,*s mPney refused.   He was Jury was out a few minute* less tfeaa\ncongressional record, died today.  He told that an orde-r had been received five hours.   At the first trial the\nscalps of a couple and the windows ihad bean suffering from sancer    for uot (u    o^c^pt    payments    until    a disagreed.    Alienists for the prose\nof tie above mentioned house. Ifour years and came here    last De- :88ttleui*ent had  been  reached by the tion and defence supplied most s)f\nFor th\ufffd\ufffd defence, the accused took joembe-r to uudergo radium treatment. 'K0VC,-nment  wifri  reference  to    pre-j testimony at both trials,\nthe stand In his own bohalf and re-ialthough he was told there was mil cmptioiis.     It  is  inferred   from   this\nC P. R. ttstion Destroyed.\nEdmonton,    Feb.     -S. -Fire    which _\t\nnet over  MOO  men  idle  in  Toronto.   Dr0K*,  0\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdt at  noon   today   destroyed  lie4 altogether on his own testimony \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd much  hope  of  prolonging    his    life (ll8t tn,, n0minion government Is con\nl.s-sor lenders ssse'rt that this winter tne tntire (- p R, j^pot &t Leduc, Ito (ill tiie bill. The result was ae-\nhs\ufffd\ufffd been mere severe In th? way of g,,^ cultlng off both telegraph and ;riuittal on thfc charge of rioting and\nsices   employment   then  any  se\ufffd\ufffdaaon ' telephone ooramunlcatlon.    The dam-1 Conviction  on  the*, charge of having\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdis**   1907.\n'sge Incurred Is estimated st $5000.\nWould Amend Criminal Cede\nto Restrict Use of Detectaphone\ntikiti part in an unlawful assembly\nfollowed by a lecture from the bench\nand freedom once again.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdn\ufffd\ufffdwa, Feb. fi.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Answers\nSPff's lr> a number of Interesting\nejeetilons during the hour of ths\nrsnttiiie in the house today. Mr.\nB\ufffd\ufffde\ufffd\ufffdaneti (Dcthbrielgel was Isformed\nby th. minister cf trade and com-\nssftrf: that there would be s grain\nnre  elevator  freeied  at Calgary\nCHARGED WITH ATTACKING.\nSETTING DOG ON  BOY.\nCharles   Snsuel,   who   was  accused\ni [of assaulting and doing bodily iisxm\n'tto William Ktsiiedy. the youug son\nwereiduced s bill tn smend the criminal!of Thomoa Kennedy, of Mahony and\ncode. He siplalned that It was a Kennedy, came up in the police court\ndouble bsrrellod measurt>. Inasmuch I yesterday morning and was r-emand-\nas it dealt with the subjects and led for eight days, as the boy wbo ls\namended the erimlnsl code. In regard ; alleged to hav? beou asssultcd Is\nto esch of them. The general purpose still under the elector's care. It Is\nof the bill was to cstend a larger said that some oilier hoys were snow-\nmeasure of protection    to    Canadian  bulling Snazel when the man set    s\nveer,   construction   to start   aa |citizens against indiscriminate use- of : fierce  dog on   young   Kennedy,   who\nsis  the question    of   site    was\nKvte was  told by Dr.  R.Md\nmore than a few  ntontiis.\nHe was 39 years old and married,\nbut had no children. Funeral services\nwill be held at Passaic, N. J\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd where\nthe body was taken  tonight.\nBorn In the northernioet county ou\ntho mainland of Scotland, the heritage of bravery handed down by Mr. I\nBremuer's forefathers from their bat-\nties of the sea sustained him {\nthrough many trying experiences as\nteacher, carpenter and electrician,\nsoldier, reporter .editor, publisher and\ncongressman,\nMr.'Bremner was stricke>n with)\ntypiiold fever while a private in a\nNe# Jorsey regiment during tho.\nSpanish-Am-erican war and wus oblig-\ned to return home. He borrowed ;\nmoney, bought Uie Passaic Dally Her-1\n| aid, when it was facing its end, and I\nmade it a profitable ester-prise.\ntn  the  same  spirit  lip  fought    his\nslderiug the matier ejf cancellation of\nprs-emption payments.\nPARCflS POST\nSYSTEM IUKDAY\nw\nfirearms and none the less dangerous I states tbat he had not taken a hand (a!M>s(.  i,attie and  physicians who at-\nemployment of certain  modem    con j in   the  bombardment  rrt  all.    Snnze'l !u.nded him said that only liis indomit- Parcels post system on February 10.\ntrivances whereby  the characters cf followed bis dog to the charge, It !\ufffd\ufffd'aDie wm kept bjir,  alive  for    many j All  the  regulations,  raU  card3,  etc.,\nSben appointments to the outside cus-1 private Individuals as well as tho JuStlsoid, and bent the lad so severely that wee\ufffd\ufffdi9 '   nav0 DPen sent throughout the coun-\ntoiss  service  since  September,   1911,1 secrets of deliberate  meetings  were, he is in be*d with a physician   in at-\najowib- rod 7fiS.    Thero had beon    not exposed to public ottaek. jtendance.\ntrri-t' rs to the inside service exespt Carrying Firearms. \ufffd\ufffdtie other rhargr was called yesterr*\nSfjl\ufffd\ufffdr   proper   examination   had   been      The first clause, Mr.  Vervlllo    ex-'day before Magistrate Edmonds, that\n\ufffd\ufffdiM<\ufffd\ufffdd. I plained, aimed    at    preventing   em-'of a mnn who persisted In taking   a\nft* minister of agriculture Inform-1 ployers cf labor tn person or through  drunken sleep In  the ladies' waiting\ne. Mr,  Kobb  (Huntingdon)  that tho|thclr agents from employing on their room at the P.. C. Electric depot and\nHon. W. T. White Imorcves. ... ...\nAttawn. Feib. 5,-,-The following bul|^bie in starting or operating    the\nletln  was issued today  in rep.ird  to\nthe condition  of  Hon.   W.  T.  White\nA. G. Koelble, of Schmidt's oossmw**!.\nasserted after the verdict that owing\nto    the    former    priest's    persssteat\nsilence conceruing the crime, it sate\nnot  been possible  to  place  all    sbe\nfacts before the jury. He said Scheldt\nwas  not   guilty  of murder,  but  m*4\nihielded a physlciau after the wossSJs's\ndeath.    She  was not  murdered,    the\nlawyer declared.    If the police wtmid\ndisplay  energy,  he  said,   they acrtM\nget at the truth.   The lawyer was) sd>-\ndet-ided   whether  \ufffd\ufffdc   would  take  M\nappeal.    \"Father Schmidt  wil! ns*v\ufffd\ufffdr\ngo to the electric chair,\" he ad<*M.\nCut to Pieces.\nAnsa Aumuller's body was *wi\ufffd\ufffd top\nwith a knife ln Schmidt's flat, on 8es-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdember 2, end the pieces. In ne-veral\nbundles-,  were tossed to the HsAsoa\nriver,   where   most    of    them     were\nfound  before  suspicion  was  dtreeSrd\nagainst Schmidt. The head was sever\nrecovered.   Schmidt in his confession\nsaid he was commande>d  to make    a\n\"sacrifice cf the Aumuller girl's life\nby his patron, St. K'itabeth.\"\nDr. Ernest   A.   Muret.   a   defttlst.\nSchmidt's friend and companion, w*\ufffd\ufffd\ntry and they  ar:  regarded  fts being |was  arrested  shortly  after  the    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nso simple in character as to avoid any ??ert *\ufffd\ufffd plawd In the Tomb* ~*\nPosUI    AuthcrWes    Complete    Final\nArrangements t0 Inaugurate New\nFeature February 10.\nOttawa, Feb. \ufffd\ufffd.*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe post office\nauthorities are oosipltting final ar-\nreengoments frrr the institution of the\nsystem\nTh\ufffd\ufffd postmaster general announces\nthat no special statements will be\nused  for  the  parcels  post.    In    the\nminister of finance, who underwent nn\nwjrmment was considering the con! works or premises any  man or men then gave a police officci a tussel be-1 operation t-n dnf^rs \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-: \"Mr*. White's\nl-Wiistlon this year of the bonus    to bearing flreftrms.   Tho proviso to the fore he was arrested.    He was fined \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd condition is much improved today and,United States this was done at first.\nVUghbred horses. jelause safrguards the watchman wh<   Ave dollars for his jag and fifteen ftrr no complications are looked for.   From I hut  was  abandoned  and  the depart-\nCrlminal Code. .   obstructing un officer In the perform-1 now on he wlll make rapid progress j ment will profit by the. American \ufffd\ufffdx-\nl*r  Vervllle (Maissonneav\ufffd\ufffd)  Intro-1 (Conthmsd en Page Fonr.) anoe of his duty. te recovery. ijerlence.\nraetoii\nsentenced In October to seven years*\nat the federal prison In Atlanta\nbeing convicted of counterfeiting*.\nTo Spend Over $3.000 000.\nBdmontom Feb. 5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd The el'v cm\ntoday  approved the    expenditure.\nJ2.1R4.lffi  for s\ufffd\ufffd-wer extensions\n$1,126,880  for wuter extensions.\n1 t*AO( TWO\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTKK NEWS.\nFRIDAY,  FEBRUARY 6,  1914.\nClark is alive and will be found soon.\nShe did not want to leave Santa\nbura  but   her   friend;*;   Vine\nthat  she   return   to   Spokano   to   her I\nI relative's   promising     her     that   they\nwould  do all that cculd  be done, as I\nInterests nf New Westminster and] they have been doing, to furtrier the I\nArrangements I\nAd ln.lf'pvmle'nt morning paper devoted to tli\nthe Rrnser Vall<*y.    Published every morning exoept Sun-lay l.y the National PrintingI work of locating him\nSlLOSK $50'000\nAND TITLE KING\nnnel Publishing Company, Limit..),\nOehunbia.\nat GJ McKenzie* Street,  N.W Westminster,  Uritish j\nni)iii! SUTHERLAND, Managing Director.\nave been made with the city officials j\nof Bants Barbara to continue the sys-, Manuel    of    Portugal\nAll communiwitieins should he addressed to The New Westminster News, and not tematic search and Mr. Clark's valet, i\nto Individual members of the staff. Cheques, drafts, and money orders should be made\npayable to The National Printing ami Publishing Company, Limited.\ntblkphonks\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBusiness Office and Manager, 698; Editorial Rooms (all departments), 991,\nSUBSCRIPTION RATBS-iBy carrier, $t per year, *1 for three months, 4iic per\nmonth. By moll, $:: tier year. 26a per month.\nADVERTISING HATKS on application:\nFormally    Renounces All Claim to Throne and\nSalary la Cut Off.\nFRIDAY   MORNING,   FEBRUARY  6,   1914.\nWalter Hhiite, is working under their\nsupervision.\nr'ackmail  Letter Was Fake.\n\"We are convinced that the black-\nmall letter waB a fake.    There never\nwas any response to the statment of London, Feb. 5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHx-KIng Mamie\nMrs. Clark asking further particulars  of   Portugal   has   just   lost   $50 000\n|*-&1K8?ftTl miles ,. beingH ,7 W\" '~' ^ ^ ta'\ni patrolled constantly and the fact that \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdday of January this sum was furnish\nthe sea has not cast up the body lends !ed to him from the private purs.i oi\nstrength to our theory that Mr. Clark; King George of Kngland, and at the\nis still alive. People scan tho beach same time;, he lost the title of \"King'\nat every tide and some even searched I in Kngland, also by order of King\nthe shore of the island after the big George. This event was ths formal\nstorm. Fishermem in boats are keep- ,enunciation cf Manuel to all claims\nIng a constant watch.\" to lhe Portuguese throne in favor of\nOn  the  possibility of an accident,  the  Oruganzas,   which   took   place  a\nMr. Jones states that the dock is the fortnight   before    the    marriage   of\nonlyone.givinga full view of the sea,  Mauuel   aml   Prlnoe8S   Augustine    of\nas it extends about 1000 feet into the Hohenzollern at Blmgarengen.\nwater.    There is a guard  rail for a _ . \"\nshort distance only and no lights at I    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,.      Renounces All Claim.\ntt    j       \" e 1V p-       ,     -.      , ,\ufffd\ufffd     ,     ,      all.   A detective working independent*      T.''\ufffd\ufffd tather of the princess  refused\nUnder present conditions Canada, in her efforts to iy had the hat examined  and   the Ipositively to aiiow the marriage of\nconserve the fisheries, is doing all the work, while Ameri- j g-g \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd of the o^jjrttt. jj \ufffd\ufffd**; Jg - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 00f \ufffd\ufffd&\nr\"   ' \" \"  \"        '\"'\" '- \"-      \"\"\"\"\"  \" \"        \"\" \" '\"\"\" us tho Portuguese revolutionists havi\nFerry Train Across Stream. Staged within the last few years, and\ni\ufffd\ufffd     's. A      i.L    TV   a e  *        \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,u e       The party arrived  in Spokane yP8.; Manuel, who had already earned the\nlimit for the U. S. government to sign up the agreement|u.dav just seven days behind time a\ufffd\ufffdi\ufffd\ufffd*opt of King Alfonso 0f Spain b>\nwhich would establish equal protection on both sides of the They^ro^arooned y-Jgi-J ^r^SS^orS KsiWiK\ntime, without newspapers for six days tugal, an<i wn0 ls llc, tm' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdorp llkpd\nand with only telephone and telegraph ; b>' ,,u' royalists on account of his re\ncommunication.    Kven at tho present |fusal  '\" contribute    money    to    the\nTHE U. S. AND FISHERIES.\nIt may be that pressure of other business has prevented the government of the United States giving the fisheries treaty with Canada the attention which that important matter deserves, but, at any rate, the fisheries agreement between the two countries has received but scant\nrecognition at Washington and, if matters jog along as\nthey are at present, it is very likely to lapse\nstreet, where the former now lives.\nTho application to 'nave this Investigation was made by K. A. Armstrong\ni citizen in the v. aid.\nJudge McTavlsh decided that llein\nrichs was not properly qualified, and\nUn retore Dalhousle ward will have an\njthcr election.\nLINER NIAGARA\nMAKES NEW RECORD\ncan fishermen, as well as Canadians, are reaping the bene-! Bh0rt time.\nfit therefrom.   After waiting years, Canada set a time!\ntime the train on which they travelled I royalist cause, readily fell. in with\nhad to be ferried across ono stream. **is prospective father-in-law's desires.\nThey rode in trio superintendent's car,-\"*d a  fortnight  before the  marriage\nborder. That time allowance expires in three weeks and\nso far nothing on the subject has been heard from President Wilson.   .\nThe matter yet may be arranged, but if it is not the\nDominion has Only one COUrse Open tO it.     Canada mUStlfor '6o miles and then caught a train |by  formal contract, resigned all pre\npursue her policy of protecting the fishing industry all!of &W coaches only.    Many bridges.tensions to the throne of Portugal.\nri ,        ,       j j u-j    1.1.    5 u-   u \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd s. and miles of railroad are washed out:    Six  weeks ago at a meeting of all\nalong her borders and bide the time, which is sure to come j and Mr, .inne8 said the fi00ds were the the Braganzas in Vienna, Don Migue\nwhen she will be able to make reciprocal relations on the i worst in the history of the country,    of Braganza-, who is now 6i years of\n. . ., j... \ufffd\ufffd l ,       *. .  i    .1   ,!'S\ufffd\ufffd.    waii    formally  chosen    as  pre-\nAmencan side a condition of some agreement which the CHINESE DANCe may tender, while at the same meeting it\nU. S. government urgently desires. ' take place of tango was decided that it was impossibii\nT, i'i     j _   i. \ufffd\ufffd   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     ,i     .   n J\"        l   j.  i- ,   'or  hlsf  eldest   son,   Don   Miguel,  the\nIt certainly does not seem fair that Canadian hatch-!   London ,,>h 6,_Tne rea, FUCCe8gor husband of the former Anita Stewart\neries should liberate fry for American nets to snare, but,Ito the tango has at last been found t0 succeed to the title because he\nif TWIp Sum fnik tn rrimp in timf>   thf\ufffd\ufffdVP i<5 nnt-ViiniT plop  and officially approved.   It halls from had married an American, nnd nol. a\nii uncie bam ians to come to ume, tneie is notnmg e.se,thP m0Bt unexppcted quarter.   The person of royai biood, nnd the rights\nleft to be done and the day Will dawn When he Will be ask-   Paris academy of dancing masters an- of  the  pretender  should   fall   to  the\ning for a real favor from Jack Canuck, which will be the I10\"\"\"; \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\\tt\ufffd\ufffd?r' dinr i8 falreafdy ^^s'secomf mffiltr\/wh?!. now\ns> i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     . . ., , .,,    being taught.    Thev prophesy for it a  tenaer s Siconu marriage who is now\nlatter S Opportunity tO force him  tO Come  through With | great   success,   for   it   is   everything seven years of age.\nthe right kind of fisheries legislation. i a*t.the tango is not The new dance JZ?,^ h\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd!\"tlo,n;   ,-,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd., t\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nft                                                   \ufffd\ufffd ! *s th.   ta-toa, which has been popular      ' \ufffd\ufffde  reigning    Douses    ot    Europe\n                                                       ! in China since the year 2450 B.C. The  were  informed  of the formal  abdica-\nIf Mary had a little lamb these days it most likely Kte\ufffd\ufffd a (\"-linT? wrrf'' wlVch m?ns Liic'1..t,',,'i>!a,^lu'\/,uul,!lia BI,rr\ufffd\ufffd,,ld,;j.of\n,,,*'.          \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  .      ,     ,.             ,. J                              \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   sweetness nnd  harmony\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1s a slow, his rights to   the Braganzas,    King\nWOUld DC a piece OI Australian mutton. kraceful  measure rull of movements. Georgj, only recently  learned    thesf\n  i .\\l.   I.efort  or  the   Paris  academy   of  facts, and has now stopped  Manuel's\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdr,.           \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      it.  '   a     i        i'    <-i   i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd       i dancing masters, who Is Introducing It,  allowances and ordered that the roya'\nDoinffS in   the   Quebec   legislature are   Commencing; said   it  was  quite  an  easy  dance  to  title be no more given to Manuel \"or\nto strongly resemble the everyday rows that occur in the IeaXn- account of the internal conditions in\nAt   '   n r\\     li \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \"II  ls  0f!f*\ufffd\ufffd>ntially    an    harmonious  Portugal,\nUStrian parliament. I and dignified measure.   The feet move      The   royalists     who     have     giver\n______ in one-two measure and many of the unqualified allegianca to the  Bragan\nTiu^   T>~~i.:~4n~   \ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd^...\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi-   *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdu:.    il \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,-     -C     ,-i   u      graceful tteps seen in thn tango -the  zas do not think revolution  is neces\nThe  PentlCton  growers Want  tO  Ship their fruit  by  balancing en one foot, the slide and sary, but expect the downfall of   th.\ndip, with one knee almost touching republican government ef its top-\nthe ground -are included in this old heaviness within six months. Never\nChinese measure,\" he said. thelcss.  the  plotting  continues,    and\nOne of the greatest charms of this many royalists have resorted to Ixin\ndance is its unbroken twing, keeping don in order to be prepared for any\ntime to a slow, tuneful melody in a eventuality. An important meeting to\nminor key.    Tue ta-tao can never be-  be held    lure    lias    In   n    called foi\npoints\nfor\nMothers\nLittle Over Three Days from Sydney\nto Auckland Snatching Laurels\nfrom 8onoma.    -\nI    Victoria,    Feb.    5. -Several    smart\npassages have been accomplished by\nthe Canadian-Australian liner Niagara\ndespite the  fact that she has  never\nbeen thoroughly tested out since entering the Victoria service, and it was\nnot at all surprising when the huge\nsteamship  reached  port    thta    week\nYour Boy's Room. from    the   Antipodes    with    another\nIf you have two rooms to turn over   speed record nailed to her masthead\nto the boys I think they wlll prefer a I    Captain H. A. Morrlsby, commodore**\nden  and  a  bedroom,  the  latter  fur-   \ufffd\ufffd( ihe Canadian-Australian line,  wu.s\n, .   j     .....     .j     .        \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd highly elated over the recent Derform\nDished  wlh  twin  beds,  two dressers   _\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,.f hlu m_\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdj  ... v,   r,\nauce ot nis command ln establishing\nor high shaving stands and oue big a. new steaming time from Sydney u>\nchiffonier, snld mi interior decorator Auckland during tho run to thta ooast.\nrecently.    The Uen  should contain a      Tne time occupied  by the Niagara\nbroad couch without back, a large ta L^S* ^'ViTf\"]8,\" M* tcIipfM\"\n          ,.         ., tnt record established by the Spret-k-\nble with the shelving beneath parti- ie8 liner Sonoma, from Auckland  to\ntinned   off   for   reading   mutter,   two Sydney   some  years  ago.\nlarge   easy   chairs\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdboys   like   morris '|,h\ufffd\ufffd'   Niagara's   performance,  ta   all\nchairs better than rockers-a bookcase. *\ufffd\ufffd\" niore, creditable when  it ta con-\n,     ,,    .,          ..      ,   . ,            , sldered   that  she   has   not   beem  drv-\npreferably the sectional style, a spleu* (lock,,(t  H|nc()  ()ctolx>r  ,\ufffd\ufffd    JJ\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffdW\ndid rending lani|> and if possible an   t0 contend with unfavorable weather\nopen fireplace, on the  first duy  out from   the Aim\nAs to color schemes, on Uie north   tralian coast.\nwalls use either a golden yellow nnd   J\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* .was    'tlrto   ,MW|'    for    tw'\ufffd\ufffd\n-..i.   .,..,i    .    hours by a dense fog.\nrich   yellow   brown   combination\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe\nKver since the Niagara was launch\nparcel post, so the next thing we hear of probably will be\nrefrigerator mail cars.\nThat Sigmaringen princess who married Manuel of\nPortugal must feel proud of her husband who has been\nturned down by his own family as a poltroon and a coward.\ncome a vulgar exhibition of romping.   February 26.\nCharlie Murphv of Tammanv Hall has been dethron! #?\/7\/^OP\/l^   tOA?1 TI4F\ned, but, like old Bob Fitzsimmons, he refuses to believe]M\\tt^\\^\\^i\\B^u   \\Sl     I I JLi\nthat he is licked.\nyellow iii the bedroom, brown In the lHi from \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd n>de about y, mciulhii\nliving room-or u red combination, ago, the Union company's 18,600-ton\nBrown makes a splendid background liner has been regarded as one of the\nfor college trophies, pennants, banners, fastest and most comfortable vessels\netc.. and sporting prints, while yellow afloat. Although she has been en-\nfor tbe bedroom gives a good reflection gaged In the Canadian-Austrialian ser-\nfor shaving, dressing, etc. vlct- Billc\" Mu*V of last year, the liner\nIf you use red select n warm gera- ,uls,no,t bien fu\"y extended as ionium pink for the bedroom und ror the f.anls lur stfamiiig capabilities  until\nden  \ufffd\ufffd  rich,  deep  red.   which   wlll   be   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ^ffil^T?,*^ r    ,\n, , ,        . Ak i Advantages of Ol   Fue .\nsImply  tt deepening of the geranium :    Tnp Nla(.ara burng 0\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd fu(,,\npink, or dry pinkish terra cotta for tbe great advantage over coal ror steam-\ntieelroom anel n very deep, warm terra ing purpose's has again been demon-\ninllii fur the den And always have a stntted. When she was first built, the\nplain cartridge paper when you can Niagara was littcd with etial burning\nget It in the right shades or a line furnaces, but on her (im visit to this\nsal in stripe paper which ta lu a sort coa8t from Australia these wero re-\ntwo tone effect. moved, and oil burning furnaces were\nir vou use a border select for cither lllted ln thelJ' ')lacP- oil fuel. wl,elv\nthe brown or tern, cotta wall covering u^d fl 8,\"a' ha? ^^ Immeasurably\nOf the den ., hunting or riding or skat- jSpTSS B Tl KtTSS\ningaesign. nid rt.guiting |\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd a Kreat 8avlnK   0)-\nI-or rugs use as many skins as you labor, and greater cleanliness in tho\ncan muster or the imitation rag carpet engine room and stokehold,\nnigs, which clean and shake splendid* j The Niagara has a carrying capacity\nly. Have plain Marseilles or honey* of slightly under 5000 tons of oil,\ncomb counterpanes and uo shams. For which is more than sufficient to carry\nbureau scarfs have plain hemmed ller from Victoria to Auckland and\nstrips of linen. Hoys hate lace rnrlie >s>dney and back to Victoria again,\nlows and ribbon bows Thu  l,<\"'8  iltta>'  wilh  the otherwise\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ...... necessary process of coaling at norts\nI bear some mot her of slender purse   en route ^\nsay   that   this   is   all   right   for   Hie ,        '      8p,endid Daily Run8.\nwoman  who can   furnish  a  suit,  but |    The actual steaming    time    of the\nwhen you have only nn attic room for  Niagara from Sydney to Auckland nn\nthe laddie- whnt IhetiV the  present trip  was  three days one\nAnd nguin I s:iy consult the hoy. hour and 48 minutes. This was taken\nYou'll be surprised at Ills resource* from the time the order of \"full Btoani\nfulness. Here Is what a mother and ahead\" was given rrom the bridge at\nher boy  living In u  small town hnv\ufffd\ufffd   s-vdn<'>'  11<4ads to  the Ume the ci-.ui\ndone:    She told  (Ilu  laddie or firte-en\nwas stopped In Auckland hnrbcr\nIf they pass the literacy test for immigrants in the\nUnited States the well known \"honest Japanese schoolboy\" will have a chance to make good.\nCOURT OF ARCHES\nLondon, Feb. 5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAt a dinner of the  ing his own during an Episcopal vtal-\n    _ Authors'  club   In   London.  Sir   Lewis ] utletn.xThe chancellor excommunicat*\n. , j 0*'bbin, K.C., Dean of the Arches.\"gave! ed the\"\ufffd\ufffdchdeac.on, lint then it appear-\nI OU hear OT SO many freak engagements, marriages an extraordinarily interesting account |ed the chancellor was '.limself under\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnnrl Hivorcps thp\ufffd\ufffd?P Hav^'it'**; a i-plipf tc, rpnrl nf a pmtnlp of Lbf! adventures of the lost or for- excommunication for contempt of his\nana OlVOrceo inest aays HSd lClltl IO reaaOT a COUpie eotten reCc*.-ds of the Court of the superior, the Court or Arches. So the\nthat Went together three Or fOUr years, married and then Arches -the ancient ecclesiastical j chancellors sentence was revoked and\nlivpi-1 tncrpthPT* annthpr thrPP or four VPar<? 'court.    These    records,    which    were i the   archdeacon   was  restored   to  the\nnveu logemer anoiner mree or ioui >ears, ke,pt ta varicus placeB after tbe tire coramunlon of the faUhfll,.  But th(.re\n  of London, were removed in 1865 from wore   endless    subsidiary    conflicts.\nSome neonle annear to he sorp hecause Lord Strath-' st Pa?VB c-ilhedral t0 Lambeth pal- While Dr. Eyre had been sitting in\n, \" P\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPl\ufffd\ufffd apptJcW W UL SOie UCLaUSe l^OlU Oirain- Bce, where they lay buried fry.- nearly ihls consistory court In Wells ceahed-\nCOna ICit no bequests tO Western Canada.    It Was Strath-,-*0 years \"In a deep stratum of Lon- ral excommunicating the archdeacon,\ncona's own monew that was bequeathed and he had a right j I1\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, vdaUiu\ufffd\ufffd o?IhXL\"d th\ufffd\ufffd n'AiuT\" \" r,a'n -by8tander8\"qulte i,s if thpy\nto leave it where he pleased. just heccmc discovered.\nhad laughed.   They were promptly ex\nOn  becoming   Dean   of  tho   Arches, communicated.    A  vergei   who dared\nv. rj     .       , ,-, ,   , .   , , in 1903, Sir Lewis Oil bin did what he J to remove a document from the cush-\nI\\le\\V   Zealand   WantS  Canada S   piscatorial   expert   to'could  to explore  the  room  In  which lion  of  the chancellor's    desk,    eiver\ntell them some fish stories, so it's up to Professor Prince Ith6 ',0f,',,,1ents wtfe k<'pt* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdt it was J which he was wont to contemplate a\n., .   , , i    c i      , o       .,       ,      not until tno summer of last year when I   e.uuboKea and contumacious world,\nto think up some gOOd Ones betore he leaves lor the OO- he was helped by Rev. Claude Jenkins, was also excommunicated.   In the end\n, ,              ,                ,          ,,          , For the first 24 hours the wtather\nJust how mil.-h money she could spend condition  were   anything   but   faror-\non Ills room when they moved Into the  abie,   strong    northeast    winds    and\nnew house   Tho attic wns not plastered, head   seas   Ixing   encountered.     The\nnnd the boy bought plain tan colored   liner,  however,  made  geiod time, and\nbuilding paper to cover celling aud wall at the end of the first eiay had logged\nand make tbe room warmer. 383 miles, at an average speed of over\nThis made a stunning background 17 knots.   The second day she logged\nfor his squirrel skins, high school bun* 4n  mlles.  an(J  on  ll\"'  thlnl  day sl\"\ntiers, fishing outfit nnd all other hovish re''!ed \ufffd\ufffdff 4\ufffd\ufffd2 ni'U>a   ,\ntreasures that would \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdhung.\"         ' I    But for Uie fact that a dense fog\n,,,.,,.                              .    ,. , was encountered when the vessel was\nHe built a cosy corner of old boxes stoamiuK between   the Three   Kings\nand   burlap   bags   which   his   mother and ,.app Marla Van  pieman, a pas\nhelped blm to rip and dye n warm red. gage of under three days would have\nne painted bis own floeu-. and be nnd been recorded.\nhis mother braided rugs at night. The Tho Niagara was logging 18 kuot-s\ngirls gave lilm pillows for liis posy when Bhe encountered the fog bank,\ncorner, and nMor he hud repaired nnd and aB 1t was too thick to discern\npiilnte-d ti huge porch chair thev made lIle liuid' Captain Morrlsby slowed his\nmore pillows for thnt. * ship (Jown and Proceeded very can-\nThat room Is beloved by everv l>ov iti'!llrly'1   . onn     .,                    .\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    The last 200 milts was made at  a\nminion down under.\nWILL  PLAY   FAIR.\nThe  New   York World  restates  the\nPanama tolls dispute in succinct form, i\nTo  begin   wltb   it  says:   \"To  rid  our\nselves of one treaty with Oreat lirit-\nain relative to an Isthmian canal we\naccept another more favorable to us\nin   Its   terms,   which   we   hav<G   since'\nundertaken to violate by ae-t of con-!\ngress.   By the Clayton Bulwer treaty\nOf  1850  we  p'edged  oursedves  Jointly\nwith (Ireiit   Hritain  forever  not   build\na canal or fortify it as a work of out I\nown.     When   Croat  Britain   in   view\nof the changed conditions, cancelled\nthis  agreemi nt  to  facilitate  the  e\\>n*\nntructlon   of  an  exclusive   American\nirsi wa solemnly subscribed ln the\nKNOWS CLARK AND\nI     THINKS HE'S AllVf\nFinancial  Agjnt for  Missing Spckanr.\nMillicnaire  Confident  He  Will\nEs  Found.\nSpokane,  Feb. I\nhis valet to give\nside   deee.r  of  the\n\"Since li.. asked\niii in the key t.o the\nhotel,   ut'trr  seeing\nMrs. ciark iff at tho ih'pot to Santa I tom\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIt  was difficult  to exaggerati\nlibrarian rf Lambeth, that he was able! however, Ur. Eyre's excommunications\nto go through them. They cover a! were all revoked by higher authority\nperiod of i'00 years, from 1060 to 1856; and he was ordered to pay everybody's\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdand provide a set of precedents, about  costs.\n\\ 2000 in number, decided in the prlnci-!  *.\n1 peU   ecclesiastical   ce.urt   in   Kngland.!\nThey fall into three groups- testamen-l MUST OBTAIN PERMISSION\nI tary  nnd   matrimonial   matters;   the\nmorals   and   ccclesiiiFtical   duties   of\nIth\" clci-ny and laity;  and the control\nof church fabrics, officers and endow-\n1 Hi e lit*,\".\nSir Lewis !;:iiel ho wished tei lay\nStreps en the. human rather than on\nthe technical Interest of these 2000\ntales of rea:, life, t ,lei often with a\nparticularity which not even the modern newspaper could safely achieve.\nWlon they considered that they re-\nlatcd f.o people- of every class\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthere\nwas the fash ion eibie divorce case at\ntho top, und the defamation of one\nvillage virago by another at the hot-\nBEFORE  REMOVING  AGENT\nOttawa, Feb, 5, The board of railway commissioners have just issued\nan ord. r of very considerable importunes to the smaller towns of the\nwest, it would appear ihat in their\ndesire fori'moro economical administration of their systems, the Canadian\nPacific, the Canadian Northern, and\nthe Grand Trunk Pacific have been\ncarrying on a process of retrenchment\nand have without notice been removing station agents from many of\ntheBo.\nFollowing the complaints made regarding  this,    Uie    board    yesterday\ncnlty with obaracteristlc directness\nOrea: Britain wishes to arbitrate the\nmatter and a specific treaty with tha1\ncountry wi: h might ere.*miK'l such an\nadjustment of tbe controversy h it\nlong been held by the senate, With to.\nmany senators the question has been\none of negotiation, bluff and force\nWith the president it is one of right\nhonor and  dutv.\"\nTfce writer concludes: \"When a nation Is wrong and knows it is wrong\nIt should have the courage to act ic\neordlngly. When a congress enntro''\ned by Democrats who In other mat\nters have proved to be honest, is re\nspoctfiilly asked to recede f.-om a po\nsltlon Involving monopoly, 6utcid>\nand bad faith, there ought to be no\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLca.-iLX'U.\" i\ned moved  without  the authorization  of\no relatives In th eel?     i-vnXi Z. \ufffd\ufffd\"'   ifel\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* f8\ufffd\ufffdffe^n? if  t0 rM\ufffd\ufffd*ln there'and express business during the year\n.bly go to the Clarko home in   I!iI- ?s   v',rU\"r.u' '\"1 *!** discomfort previous,    It Is  further'ordered that\nin lat en,*        tC \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   rrttfr0,t1ffli,IV0?lr,.,!,tLn8 near by' M ,'\"\ufffd\ufffdul\ufffd\ufffdr Ktali0\" a*ents s'.'all be re-\n,,',,, recuperate,   Theodore     One iliitft that had rather snrprlc\nOark will remain with his motbi r mr ; Vm was \ufffd\ufffdle4\ufffd\ufffdmhe': of cases In which tv -l0A-A\"\niltho recovers her normal condition hersons were cited for d'srespeel   lr-| _\nmd will then return to cont'nue bis    **rrr<--.t behavior, am! so   forth' to\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtinii-s at the eastern unlvors'ty ttatmenorv, commise\n\"These cJSis who knew Mr. Clark Jn-   lis   fttdgca  of  the\non lhe laddie's list of friends, nnd a\ncertain club e.r Isiys and girls nieels\nthere once a week, thus saving maternal parlors.\nOn his bed he has Great Grand\nmother Uurrell's counterpane, crocheted lu red and blue He repainted\nthe bureau nnd made a Ile rnek to\nhang on ono side and u  whisk  broom\nspeed ot over IH knots, which is\nvalent to 21 land mile's.\niqul-\nWOMAN'S FACE CLT FROM\nPICTURE OF MYSTERY COUPLE\nToronto Feb.  5.-If  the  police, can\ndiscover  the   identity  of  the   woman\n.   ,. .whose   face   was  cut   from   a  photo-\nholder on the other from burnt wood 'graph found lfi the room at 10 Mem-\nHe bus a homemade bookcase, and be ulng avenue, where an aged cemple.\nand his chnni are now building some supposed to have been Mr. and Mrs.\nre-al mission furniture to finish off lhe [Richards, of Lake St. Joseph, were\nroom.\n.asphyxiated lust ueek, they believe\nthat they Will have the solution of\nthe mystery which surrounds the\ncase and \ufffd\ufffde> far has baffled tbem\n| Shortly after the two were round,\nthe police, took charge or their effects\nand the bodlc.4 were removed to tin-\nmorgue, Among their possessions\nwas  found a   leather  wall, t  c.are(Vlh\nBirthday Candle Rir g.\nIf ii birthday Is soon coming in yoill\nhousehold, buy one of tbe churmlog\nlittle candle rings lu go around n birth\nday rake. These rings nre made e.f\nwood,    eiiaiiielj.il    white   and   painted\nwith sinall plnkV and blue fiiiwers Tbey   lied up with string and containing\nnn* perforated with sockets for holding will signed by Mr. John Richards,\nmany, small caudles.   They sit securely   larmer In the township of Humph ri\nmi lhe table outside the coke, and there 1'\" tne I'arry Sound district.\nIs no danger <>f burned cloth or scorched cake when tbey nre used, or course\nibey come lu different slze>s nnd cost\naccording to size.\nOne with so many  boles (bat the\nNet Mr   R.ch; rds.\nThe  evidence  or  identity   appeared\nso conclusive to the police? that    an\ninquest  was  considered  unnecessary\nand the bodies were taken to the pri*\n,. ,,   . .mortuary of II, Hanks.   A day after\npossess,,,  of  that  many years I.. ber |the tragedy, a man, who claimed thai\nho had known the Richards family,\nstate<l that there were in Muskoka\nfour sons and one daughter.    He was\nrieti and official)\nir>ti   of   minor\nOTTAWA  SCHOOL TRUSTEE\nOUSTED FROM  SEAT\ntimately fool fiat he :<\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd t tin alive and   wrr -  ,-V,-:i  eTe-rcfsedl ec'tnesiastlcal\n*atu he  Is either, taking  treatment  :srrKrfIcf.icn.    There  w.-.-e  sevhh-.or     Ottawa, Feb :>.-\ntor his   bcaith In scmh scu;he* n snni   efght prricesees; rcntteifed about in \"as nis a public school\narlum or is beln\nsaid Mi*. Jones,\n\"If he lost his life we feel that he\nwas tho victim or foul play and that\n!lit\ufffd\ufffd body was disposed of.    The\nPut out of his scat\n.     ..,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. tiuste-e In the lale\n.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.I for i .ufiom,    many different parts oPBie muniment I. S. nelnrichs received this morning\nroom,   il relating to one gigantic quar-1 at the hands of Judge McTavlsh.\nel between a ce tain ReV. Dr. Ryre.l    Helnrlchs wns elected to represent\nwho was chancellor of Hath and Weils] Dalhousle ward and an act of forget*\nacci- j Rome time in the I8th century, and the  fulness in not appearing In  time    to\nreillt would nt tempt to forget It costs\nfi 75, A group of three small onees\n.usts \ufffd\ufffd.'_'.   ir only purl or the botes are\nneeded to a,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdcommodate the necessary   sent  to  the detectives,  who  In    turn\nnumber of e-niulle^ the candle's ran be   notified  Samuel  S.  Hobinson, of O\"\niirrmigisl symmetrically, sklpjilug one   r\"lfl\" tho attorney who drew up th<\nor two sockets between each two inn-   w111 toxmA among the belongings   of\ndies,  nnd   the  empty   sockets  can   t)(, | tbe dead couple, that his clients were\ncovered with flower beads or boubous \ufffd\ufffd   , ..            <    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  <*        ..     r. mi\n,,,,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,,    .... A   letter  received   from   the  Orlll.a\ndone up in i tt e niotto nuiiers .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd                  ,      . .  , ......  ..\n'                            i \"i\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd lawyer yesterday stated that both Mr.\nand Mrs. Richards wero alive and now\nChildren'*  Luncheon  Dainty. \"vln8 llt I\/!lkt' st* Joseph.\nA favorite luncheon sweet for small\nchildren w|th eliilnty appetites Is made\nfrom a box of nnliunl crackers, one of\nsnltlne^i mill a cntiriil of pure maple\nsirup. Moll In the sirup until It furnw\na sort ball when dropped iii Ice wader\nThen put a Utile on each Sal tine nnel\npr<-\ufffd\ufffds mi animal Into thlstn a standing\nposition, cri'iiiu cheese and marmalade with saltlnes la also a good coinbl\nnation.\nFor Playroom Floor.\ni gextd covering for the nursery playroom floor Is cork carpet,    It Is thick\nand warm. Is wiislmbie and dm^ not\n!       'hn\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd7, \"   \"\ufffd\ufffdJ'\"To  \"rova!*',n at   then  archdeacon or Wells.    The dis*; have his name put on tho assessment\nta,   ^,i   ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.$ p,lt'!i0 01\"nlon \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd PWte originated   in  the  arOhdoacon's ro\ufffd\ufffd lost him his seat.\n;,:iHiidonerl that  thiHiry |failure to pay surfie-Ient iteference to      Instead of Helnrlchs a man named | r,,\ufffd\ufffd\"\"1'l   \ufffd\ufffd'\"'   noise  like hard  boards\nMrs. narK  is confident  that.  Mr.  tho cliancellor's Jurisdlctioa supersed-1 Dunio is assessed at 242 Cambridge  or thin tlnoUuui.\nJ       '\nFERNIE TAKES PRECAUTIONS\nAGAINST SERIOUS FIRES\nNelson. Feb. 6,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-Through thri pro*\ngresslveness of Its citizens and tin*\nfact that, the tiro limits have been e\\\ntended us rapidly as possible, Ferule\nIs now In excellent shape trom a fire*\nproteictlon standpoint, declared Cfhief\nC. McDougall or the brigado in thai\ncity, who. Is in Nelson. .\nIn the business section, said Chief\nMcDougall, so inanv substantial bul.il\nlngs have been constructed since the\ngreat flro of 1908 that there are at\nthe present time ro danger spots sm-li\nas exist ln citien whore whole blockk\nand hulf blocks of wooden buildings!\n.end to increase *ue fire hazard FRIDAY,   FEBRUARY  6,   1914.\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NKWh.\nPAGE THREE\nKk TRIUMPH\" IN TEA QUALITY\nItenance,   fixed   charges,   engineering .lhe floor before the Cohen sare.\nropervision,    collection,    depreciation      \\\\hen   Inspector   Paurot   heard     h\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffduf plant, etc, these items amounting hysterical woman's voice screaming\nto about .;*'. cents per yurd, outside or I\"BurglaiS, cume eieiick,\" with 20 dee-\ni'.ie actual cost of the first pavement tectives he hurried toward the Cohen\nAn thn system is operated, the plant factory, while 2C policemen from the\nis   in   the   position   of   a   contracting  Charles street station surrounded Hie\nGREATtR [VEN\nPURE. CLEANLY PREPARED AND DELICIOUS \ufffd\ufffd\nQLACKl    MIXED     0ip]   F,\"e Samples mailed on enquiry.\nNATURAL GREENJA-dr.es. -salada,\" T.r.nt\ufffd\ufffd.\nTHAN PANAMA,\nTHE DOMINION BANK\nEiH lDMUr.0 II, OU*. ER. 1*1 l\ufffd\ufffd , Pnf_tion4T.\nW. D   MATTKIWC, VICE-eRESICSHT.\nC. A. BOGERT, General Manager.\nIf You Live At A Distance\nfrom this branch of The dominion Eank, take advantage of our\nsyr.tern of Banking Ey Mall, It will save you many trips to tov\/n\nand. at tht same time, give you all of the advantages ol a\nSavings Account.\nDeposits :-.iy be madi a.l cash withdrawn\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIh fact, any\nbanking bu Iness transacted   by mail without trouble cr delay.\nThe manager will r, ve you full particulars ol thta convenient\nway ol Banking ly Mail.\nrMiriSTtn BRANCH !   C. H. MATHEW80N, M.v..\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffduaemaw\/a&exL xnn wrj-spw*. +s;~Mt^-i.'- z:.v*.xu. axi*\ufffd\ufffdv.*\nMAY CONSTRUCT\nCIVIi PAVING PLANT\nVictoria Council Considering Proposal\nto Dd Own Work\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWait for Contractors.\nVictoria, l*'e*b. 5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWhat action the\ncity council win take relative t.i paving ie* '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd question now exercising tii..\n. ngineerlng branch of the city service.\nPending the receipt of a reply from\nihe Canadian Mineral Rubber company, which has been given until the\nend ol the present month to state\nwhat it proposes to do. nothing definite can be dime towards advancing\nthe proposition for a civic-owned plant.\nThe engineer Is now securing Information 'is to the cost or a plant and\nthis Will be ready by the time the re\n].., . f the company is at hand.\nThe council as yet 1ms reached no\ndefinite decision as to the extent to\n* le  ,  the city will go if it decides to\nInstitute  a  paving  plain of  Its own.   what is termed No\nportant one.   if the paving company\nla willing to go ahead and complete\nlis contracts it is hardly probable that'\nany  additional   paving  work   will  bo\ndone this year by the city, as the work ;\nalready  let by contract is about as\nmuch as can be financed this year, i\nAs for the question  of repairs,  the\nwork  already  done  as  well  as  that!\nlet but not* completed is subject to the\ncompany's   guarantee   for  five   years,\nand   must  be  kept   in   shape  by   the\ncompany. |\nWinnipeg's Experiment.\nWinipcg t'day possesses \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdprobably\nthe best civic-own. d paving plant on\nthe continent, Its municipal paving\nh..s been done for nearly 16 years\nand the Bystem involved hud apparently worked to the best advantage.\nThe first asphalt paving there was on\nlhe contract basis and proved unsatis\nfactory. Tin* city purchased the plant.\nof the cnntraotors and proceeded with\nIts own work. At first difficulty was\nexperienced in securing a full supnly\nof material because of the so-culled\nasphalt trust, and the material secur-\n.*il had to be obtained where pi sslble,\nPut the City held to the idea of a municipal owned plant and today can lay\nnil n* 3000 square yards of pavement\nper day. In 1910 the city secured its\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd portable plant, with which is laid\npavement   This\nfirm financed hy the city. The pavement Is inspected su it would be were\na contracting concern laying it. While\nthe initial cost is somewhat higher\nthe results have proved excellent, especially when the question of repairs\nis concerned, this work being done\nmore rapidly and the disputes relative\nto guarantee being eliminated.\nAverage Cost.\nThe average cost to the city per\nyard, on business streets has been\nabout ?il.tir> but on the business streets!\na pavement consists first or three j\nIne-hes of gravel ballast, then six\ninche.'s of concrete base and inch and\na half cf binder course and three\ninches of asphalt wearing surface.\nBroken stone drains every 50 feet are\nalso Included in the cost. The city j\nadvertises every Job us open to com-\npetition, tho engineer putting in a bid\nand so fur the city has always under- j\nbid the contractors. The strictness of i\nthe specifications are such that the'\ncontractors claim they cannot com-'\npete   with  tho city.\nHOGAN, JR., FOND OF\nBEATING UP HOGAN, Sfl.\nOttawa, Feb. 5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOnce again the elfin form ot Gipsy Hogan adorned tin.-\nj prisoner's wicket in the police court\nthis morning, after paying a fine en\nten and two, Hogan was given hi.-i re-\nj lea.*-,.* to allow him to finish out a pipe\ncontract. After the day's toil he once\nmore filled up on the merry mucilage\nand Btarted on his usual house clear.*\nin-   that night.\n\"He earn.' back again Wednesday\nnighl drunk again and after cursing\nand Bwearing, raised a general disturbance,\" stated his father, James\nHogan, to  the magistrate.\n\"i am : .y yer honor,\" wailed Hogan, Junior. \"Shut up.\" commanded\nih.* constable doing sentry duty.\n\"1 think the man is crazy. Couldn't\nyon h.rec him examined?\" asked the\nfather, with a note of appeal, to the\ncourl  clerk.\n\"Crazy like a fox,\" commented one\nof the detectives who was standing\nhard by.\n\"I don't know what is the matter\nwith him. He can't control himself\nat  all,\"  persisted   Hogan,  Kr.\n\"I just was drunk,\" answered the\nprisoner, assuming a penitent air.\n\"You're a bad man and you have a\nvery bad record. 1 will sentence you\nto \"four months,\" rasped the magistrate to Hogan. Jr.\nWhile the latter was being led to\nthe dugout be volleyed a line of profanity at his escort, who was forced to\nsj).*.*il blm on his way bj moral eua-\nslon.\nWhile Hogan i.- wearing the negligee outfit, supplied to the stone cu-.-\n;. rs at bhe rock foundry the rifts in\nhis think tank will be subjected to a\nhigh pressure test to see whether he\nis normal or otherwise.\nbuilding.\nBUSINESS  DIRECTORY\nAUDITOR   AND  ACCOUNTANT.\nI. J. A. IJUHNETT, AUDITOR AND\nAccountant. Telephone KI17. Room\n22 Hart Ulock.\nUNUSUAL  AND  CHIC.\nOriental    Lines    In\nThis New Costume.\nMayors of Ontario Cities Discuss Proposed   Deep  Waterway  for the\nUpper Lakes.\nP. H. Smith. W. J. Grove*.\nAUDITORS AUD ACCOUNTANTS.\nWork  undertaken   is    city   and   outside\npoints.   211-12   Westrtlnster   Trust   BHg.\nPhone  364.     P.  O.  Ilox   607.\nWindsor. Out., Feb. B.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe mavors\ni\nof nearly a dozen cities of Ontario\nmet at the city hall here last week'\nin response to an invitation issued by\nMayor Henry Clay to discuss a plan\nwhich, concisely expressenl, signifies\n\"every lake port a sea port town.\"\nThe derogates who registered  with I\nlhe city clerk are:    Mayor John Allan, j\nHamilton;  t'.  W. Gardner, controller,\nHamilton;   George  McCrae,  mayor of\nI'rescott;   Alderman  J.   P.   Dunne, of |\nPrescott;  Mayor J. B. Dagan, Sarnla; j\nMayor John  McCorvle,   of Chatham; j\nMayor II. Howe,    Walkerville;    Wm. j\nA. Livingston, of    Detroit,    president |\nLake   Carriers'   association;     Mayor]\nOscar B. Marx, Detroit, and Commissioner of  Public   Works   Kenkel,    of j\nDetroit.\nLake Ports as Sea Ports.\nIn  his address,  lending up to    'lie J\nthought  that  the aim  should    be  to\nmake every  lake  pert a  tea  port, J.\nH.  Dulliie said, in  part:\nThe project Which    we    have ^ now\nunder consideration   is an enterprise\n|with   Infinitely   greater     possibilities\nthan   the   Panama  canal;     it  means\npropose*  to  bring  c-.ir    lake\nFRATERNAL.\nNTRKNATIONAL RTKAM AND OPKFt-\nHihig Engineers, Local 643, meets In\nLabor Temple every Urst and third\nThursday of the month. H. McLaughlin,\npresident: W. C. Saunders, secretary.\nP. O. Box 528.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdrBW WESTMINSTER LODGE, NO 1.\nB ft P. O. or Blk* or the D. of C.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd rneel\nthe first and third Thursday at 8 p. rm..\nK. of P. Hall. Eighth street. A Wells\nGray, Exalted Ruler; P. H. Smith. Secretary.\n.. O, O. M.. NO. 854.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMEETS ON FIRST\nami third Tuesday In each month at 8\np. in. .n the Labor Temple H. J.\nLeamy, dictator; W. J. Groves, secretary.\nI. O. O. F. A MITT LODGB NO. 17\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTh\ufffd\ufffd\nregular meeting of Amity lodge No.\n27. I. O. O. F\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Is held every Monday\nnight ret 8 o'clock In Odd KeJIows' Hall,\ncorner Carnarvon and Eighth streets.\nVisiting brethern cordially Invited.\nR. A. Merrlthew. N.Q. j It. W. Kangmer.\nV. Q.; W. C. Oostham. P. o . recording secretary: J. W. MacDonald, financial secretary.\nthat   we\nports in direct contact with  the\nlanlic ocean;   it means  thai   thi\n'ports  and   exports  of  thi\nAt*\nim-\nFUNERAL   DIRECTORS.\nW. E. FALE8\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPioneer Funeral Dliectos\nand Kmhalmer, S12-I18 A*n;>s street\nopposite Carnegie Library.\nOK TAN DOVETYN AND CLOTH.\nIt ihe Canadian Mineral Rubber com* is a pavement of the type known as\npany di cldea nol to proceed with its asphaltlc or bitumen concrete for the\ncontracts the suggestion may be made residential  streets     The  cost  of  the\ni *,,*,*  the  work be given to tli\" VVors- paving done on  the business  stri'ets\nv Ick   Paving   company,   providing   It there Is considerably higher than that\nII   undertake it at  the same  pric. charged here, but asphalt costs more\nThe question of money Is also an Im- and liberal charges are made for main-\nFOILED A HOBBERY.\nTelephone Call Prevents Yeggmen\nfrom Getting Loot.\nNee*. York. Feb. .\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd A telephone* oeill\nfrcm an unidentified woman early today foiled a $1000 sat't* robbery at\nC. Cohen's paper box factory. The\nyeggmen got away. The police round\na complete kit of burglars' tools ein.\nChinese lines have been exploited in\nevening wraps for several seasons, and\noriental effects both in materials and\ntrimmings have received a perfect sartorial ovati.iu from the feminine public, but this year tbe silhouette designed from Chluese costumes is new\nin the dress world.\nThe chic little three piece costume\npictured is of such n genre. The material used is tan wool for the skirt and\nthe same shade in iluvetvn tor the little mandarin Jacket, which lias a sash\nof silk worked with metal threads\nfinished with bauds or fur. The ens*\ntuiue is original and smart in lhe extreme.\ncontinent\nwill    be    Teceived at and  forwarded\nfrom what are now inland pcrts and\nbe   delivered   at   destination   without\nbreaking bulk.    It will bring    to   the\n; individual    citizens    of    the    central,\nwestern and northwestern sections of\n'the United  States aud Canada direct\nbenefits of almost incalculable  value.\n; It means a reduction In  the cost cf\nliving lo each and every citizen, as it\nwill Inevitably result in the lowering\nof rail rates.\nThe report   of the commission appointed by the United States government to investigate    the lakes-to-the-\ngulf canal project shows conclusively\nthat it  is  impracticable  as    a    deep\nwaterway to the sea, and it is evident,\nthat the drainage canal will never be\nrequired as the first link in a canal\nTrom the lakes to the Gulf or Mexico.\nGorgian Bay Canal.\nThe cost of the Georgian bay canal\nwould be enormous, and even if constructed  it  would  not  be.  used commercially by the class of vessels for\nwhich  it  is  designed.    Delays  would\nbe inevitable in connection with transportation    by    that route, and there\nwould always be grave danger of disaster from the possible destruction of\nthe reservoirs  which would    be    re-\nquired to hold the artificial supply cf\nwater which would be necessary  tor\nthe operation cf the canal.\nA Natural Artery.\nThe  St.   Lawrence  river    forms    a\nnatural artery from  the lakes to the\noc:an,  and   by   taking    advantage  of\nit we secure a deep   waterway    with\n8. BOWKLL (8UCCES80II TO CEN-\nter ft Manna. Ltd.)\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFuneral directors\nand einhnlmers. Parlora 405 Columbia\nstreet.    New   Westminster.    Phone   811.\nBOARD   OF  TRADE.\nBOaRD OF TRADE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd NEW WKSTMXN-\nster Board of Trade meets In the boar*s3\nroom, City Hall, as follows: Third Friday of each month; quarterly meeting\non the third Friday of February, May.\nAugust and November at 8 p.m. Annual meetings on the third Friday ot\nFebruary. C. H. Smart Wade, secre-\ntary.\nPUBLIC   STENOGRAPHER.\nSPECIFICATIONS, AGREEMENTS OF\nSale, Deeds, Business Letters, etc.; circular work specialist All work strictly\nconfidential. H. Barry, room 418 Westminster Trust Blk.   Phone 702.\nPROFESSIONAL.\nCORBOULD GRANT ft HcCOLL., DAR-\nHaters, Solicitors, etc. 40 Ixirne Street,\nNew Westminster. Q. E. Corbould,* K.\nC.    J. R. Grant    A. B. McColl.\nADAM SMITH JOHNSTON BARRISTKR-\nat-laW, Solicitor, etc Solictor for the\nBank of Vancouver. Offices: Merchants Bank Building. New Westminster. B.C. Telephone No. 1070. Cable\naddress \"Johnston.\" Code Western\nOnion.\nJie Case oi\nARSmitfiJWilei:\nAB. SMITH has a dry \ufffd\ufffdoods store in a certain Canadian City. He docs a good business, but wants\n* to do more. He believes that Advertising in his local newspaper is the\nway to get more business. So he advertises-every now and then.\nThis is where our friend Smith is wrong\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdin advertising every now and\nthen. He should advertise regularly\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdas frequently as his local newspaper\nis published.\nSmith says he wants to advertise regularly, but he can't always find the time\nto prepare advertisements, which is true, for he is his own buyer, sales-\nmanager, director of slore service, credit man and half-a-dozen other things.\nWhat Smith should do is this: If he is located in one of the smaller cities, in\nwhich there arc no advertising agencies giving a local copy service, and he\nhas no one among his own staff qualified by instinct or experience to\nwrite the daily announcements, he should go to the publisher of the newspaper in which he means to advertise, requesting his help. In nine cases\nout of ten, the publisher, through his advertising manager, will be only too\nglad to give Smith the assistance desired.\nIf Smith is located in one of the larger cities he should secure the services\nof a recognized advertising agency which will take over the work of preparing his advertisements.\nIn this way Smith can be sure of having his advertisements prepared regularly and intelligently, with no more trouble to him than the supplying of\nthe information required by the writer of the advertisements.\nSo Smith can do more business, and more business means a larger income\nfor himself, to soy nothing of other gains ihat go hand in hand with the\ndoing of bigger business.\nWill Man Dispose and Woman Propose?\n.Liver in st.i. i.liu in it dreadful discussion is I'lijrinu, liee-.'iiisc wuineii Wish\nto he Riven the vinlit to propose, a,\nBtnU'ineiit nf l'r. I'unl 8. Hunter of\nthe Wisconsin In.mil e.f health to the\neffect that vroniHii i-i prior in man after\nnil seems tu (jive, the much Bought\nprivilege to the woman If l\ufffd\ufffdr. Hunter's statement Is scion tl Hen ily correct\nns he says it Is, woman eslsted on this\nenrth ages before num. live* lived In\ntbe garden of Rilen ;i great many .ve-urs\nbefore Adam appeared, nml therefore\nwomen eiin reverse the old situation,\nfor trouble only begun when iiinii was\nliuiile*.\n\"The femnle ses cxisti-il nlmie on\n(liis earth for ages,\" says Dr. Hunter.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWhen the male came he cftnie us tin\nDffshoot of the female, ami. although\nthe minimum of canal mileage   and I . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd '\nthe ;ereatest stretch    of free-running | vvhitehide,\nwater,  and  we  must all admit    that\nthese    are    two essential  necessities\nfor a channel of commerce that is to j\nbe of service    to    the  people.    This i\nroute presents the only feasible plan i\nby   which   we   can  ever  hope  to   cb-\\\ntaiu  a  waterway  capable    cf  taking i\ncare of the immense  volume of traf I\ntic which wiil move to and from the\nocean when the work  is compli; ei\nThe  reconstruction    of the  Weiia'eu \\\ncanal,  which    is tho most  expensive I J.  P.  Hampton\npart  of  the*   work,   is  already  tinder\nway,   and     the  money    that   ie-   being\nspent en  the new   UYIiand canal  will\nbe   wasted   unless   it   is   followed   by\nthe development of the St.  Lawrence\nAt  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd o'clock an  informal  reception\nwas  held,  at  which  Mayor Clay,  assisted  by  the    members of the city *\ncouncil,   welcomed   th?   visitors    and j\nextended   the*  hospitality  of the city. |\nLater the entire party were taken in\na special car    to Wolfe's,    a    famous\nroadhouse up the river, where dinner\nW. P. HANSFORD, BARRISTER, Solicitor, etc., ColUster Block, corner Columbia una McKensle streets, N.*\\v Westminster. B.C. P. O. Box :S5. Telephone 344.\nEDMONtetS * WHITH-\nstle \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Barristers and Solicitors, Wee;,\nminster Trust Blk., Columbia street.\nNew Westminster, B. C. Cable aiMie-ss\n\"Whiteside.\" Western Uhlcn. P. O.\nDrawer 200. Telephone 48. W. J.\nWliiteslrle. K. C.: 11. L. Edir.o-e io, Ll\nWhiteside.\nSTILWELL CLUTE.   Barrtater-at-lkw.\nsollel'.or. etc.; comer CViumtUet spi\nMcKenzie streets. New Wostmtnstbf,\nB. C.   P. O. Box 112.    Telephone   Hv.\nBOLE. BAHRISTEa,\nSolicitor and Notary. Otflcea Hurt\nbltxile, 28 Lome street. N*rw Westminster, B. C\nMVgtJ.ARRIK.     HAKTIN      *     CABBAD1.\nBarristers   and   Solicitor**.    (-.5   to   SJr\nWestminster  Trust   Block.    G.   E.   .\\4ur-\ntin,   V,*.   a.   lfcQuarrle    ami   George   I\nCassadr.\nfor ages the great processes of life\n, had gone on without him, he began tn was Berv*ed.\nclaim priority for himself ns suoli lis he '              The. Night Conference.\n- developed a physique strong enough to The rjoiiforence? proper    was\nI force bis demand.    lie has been tell- in the city hall at night, takitu\n! Ing these stories about himself ami his form  of a  mass  meeting, which\ngreat superiority until today, but now largely  attended,\nscience can disprove Ills claim.\" Mayor     lay,    who    occupied\n'ei..........      '......,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,iu\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd nhn.,, chair, explained ln a few  words\nheld\nthe\nwas\nthe\nThe average person wonders about \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ~r^l^er\\nT*^\ufffd\ufffdi^\ntho future stand of science tow aid lnaugurate a movement for a through\nwoman's right to propose. If woman walcnvay f,.om ocean to ocean. With\nis man's superior (as she undoubtedly   the uew Welland canal built so that\nit may be deepened to 35 feet to ac\nSYNOPSIS  OF COAL   MINING\nGULATJONS\nKT\n3\n9\nThis man Smith\ufffd\ufffd\ufffddo you know him?\nAre YOU Smith?\nIf you are doing a local Wines* talk over your Advertising problems wilh the Advertising Department nf this newspaper.\nIf vou are doing a provincial or national 1 usineis it would be well for you to have\nthe counsel and assistance of a gocd advertising agency. A list of these will be furnished, without cost or obligation, by the Secretary of Canadian Press Association,\nRoom 503, Lumsden Building, Toronto.\nI\nP)\nIs or is ueiti she should certainly mau\nage her owu matrimonial ventures.   A\n! great   many   women   would   propose\nI more gracefully  nnd  more discreetly\n' than some men. but the sad things that\n! may   happen   to   the   Impressionable\nweaker sex (In the light of the new\ndiscovery!   when  they  are  unable   to\nforbid a  lady to marry  them can  lie\npictured.    It Is consoling tu think that\nthe peior abstracted scientists will  he\nle-iist able to resist tho danger Ihat\nihey have brought ti|\">\" themselves.\nesJ\n3\nHigh Collars.\nHltfh collars, if tight, do more lo Induce n double chin than anything else,\nmid. moreover, by pressing the tlesti\nunderneath the chin back against the\nthroat they cause the two front neck\ncords to become unduly prominent i ud\nstringy looking, which is unite as deplorable us the double chin This cat! |\nbe nvolilt-d by baring the collar of a I\ntleslble material, such us a \ufffd\ufffdood quality of net. nnd boning It po that it\nflares a little nt the upper and lower\nedges, which is best necomplislieil by\nrunning the net through the lingers to\nstretch It. \t\nOdds and Ends.\nir your milkman brings you warm\nmilk make It hot for blm.\nA Hy In tbe milk often means a mem\nhwr of the family In the grave.\nHave an expert examine the drains\nIt will cost li'ss than a ease of typhoid.\nWhen you see a child looking like\niu angel do not kiss It: yon might\nmake a real anirel out or It There are\nill sorts of cerms In \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd k'ss.\nIf you let the child have measles\nwhen he Is young ynu may save n\ndoctor'* bill biter on. hut V\"U may\nHave to pay the undertaker now.\ncommodate ocean-going ships, and\nthe deepening of certain parts of the\nS' Lawrence river, the hardest part\no, the work will have been done, he\nsaid.\nHowever, before such a waterway\ncould be completed millions of cubic\nyards of stone and earth must be\nremoved from bottoms of channels\nthat connect the great lakes. The\nplan is. said Mayor Clay, to have the\nchannels made sufficiently deep to\npermit ocean-going bv.ats to come\nfrom the Atlantic coast up throuj-.li\nthe lakes, or vice-versa, and in order\nto attain sufficient depth to permit\nthe former class of craft to navigate the lakes, many channels would\nhave to be dredged and otehrwise im\nproved.\nCHILD EATS TABLETS\nAND DIES IN GREAT AGONY\nBrantford,   Ont.,   Feb.    5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThree\nhours nfte.r he had taken au overdose;\nof a pate nt laxative, Lorne, the   two\nyear old  sou of En.est S. and  Mrs.\nMlnshoJl, of Mount Pleasant, died in\nconvulsions,  suffering   intense  agony.\nThe   Mlnshalls   have   for   some   time\nre-side'el  at   Hanelagh  and  had    jus;\nmoved to the back street of    Mourn\nPleasant, consequently things were in\na  disordered  condition    around    the\nhouse.     About    2  o'clock    yesterrta;\nafternoon the little fellow  went into\na spare bedroom where the medicine\n.had been placed, and got hold cf the\nbox,  and  started  to  eat  the tablets\nwhich are much like candies.    After\npartaking of a number, he cam3 out\niof the  room,  and  waa seen  by    his\nj mother, who took two of the pills out\niof his mouth, not knowing that   he\n'had   taken others.    As the  pills are\n{mild  ones,  the  parents  thought    nc\n; more  of It at the  time,  but  the iad\nMock violently ill ar.d at 5 o'clock died\njin convulsions,\nCOAL UININQ rurhta of the Dominica\nIn Manitoba. Saskatchewan and Alberta\nthe Yukon Territory, the Northwest Territories and In a portion of the Provinc*\nof British Columbia, may be teswd for \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nterm of twenty-one years at an annua,\nrental of 11 an acre. Not more than S6(f\nacres wlll be leased to one ui.pil.Nirw-\nAppllcatlen tor a lease must be ms.ds\nby the applicant In person to the Ac.nt\nor Sub-Agent of the district tn whlcii tb*\neights applied tor are situated.\nIn surveyed territory the land must he\ndescribed by sections, or legal sub-divisions of sections, Sod In umnirveyeO territory the tract applied for ehsll bs\nstaked out by the applicant himself.\nEach application must be accompani*.*\nby a fee of tt which will be refunded If\nthe rights applied for are not svallabie.\nbut not otherwise. A royalty shall be\npaid on tbe merchantable output nf tb*\nmine at tbe rate of five cents per ton.\nThe person operating tbe mine stall\nfurnish tbe Agent with sworn retvn-s\naccounting for the full quantity of mer\nchanlable coal mined and i\ufffd\ufffdy the rv\/-\nllty thereon. If the coal mining rttft>t*\nire not being operated such returns snout*\nt>e furnished at leae\ufffd\ufffdt once a year.\nThe lease will Include tbe coal mining\nrights only, but Uie leasee will be permitted to purchase whatever available\nsurface rights may be considered necue-\niiary for the working of the mine at tb*\nrate of J10 an acre.\nKor full Information anpllcatle>n should\nDe made to the Secretary of the fepaii.\nment ot the Interior, Ottawa, or le an*\ntgent or Sub-Agent ot Dominion Laoda.\nW. W. CORt,\nDeputy Minister ot the Interior..\nN. B\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Unauthorised publication of this\ntdvartlsement will not be paid for\nNew Wellington\nCOAL\nJOSEPH MAYERS\nOffice, SS4  Front Street,\nFoot of Sixth  Street.\nP. O. Box 345. Phone 105.\nVICTORIAN ORDER OF NURSES.\nMISS E. DOWNHAM\nResidence T. W. C. A        Phone 1324.\nMATERNITY. SURGICAL AND\nVIEOICA1. CXK.SS   a-rv-.-.        ,\n,\n\\    'I r   s.s.0   s.our\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWrf.\nFRIDAY,   FEBRUARY  6,  1914.\nJAMS\nWe offer Robertson's Jams in\ntins at  a  reduced   price.\nStrawberry. Raspberry. Black\nCurrant, Gooseberry, Plum,\netc., in 4 Ib. tins 65c; in\nglass,   1s.   25c.\nBuchanan'8     Red     Gooseberry\nJam. 4 lb. tins 65c.\nBmpress   .lams,   assorted,  4   lb.\ntins, 75c;   in glass,  ls 25c.\nKootenay     Brand     Strawberry\nJam, 2 lb. tins 35c.\nClimax   Drand   Compound   Jam,\nin 5 lb. tins. Strawberry and   E\nRaspberry, per tin 55c.\nApricot, Plum, Blaokberry, etc.,\nper tin 50c.\nModel Grocery\nMATHESON A JACOBSON.\nJOS S'.tli St. Phone 10012.\nEast Burnaby Branch, Second\nSt. and Fifteenth Ave. Ed-\nMonds Branch, Gray Block.\nPhone 1111L.\nBONDS and\nMORTGAGES\nTaxes are a superior lion upon all mortgaged property. Heal\nestate may be sold for taxes,\nleaving the careless holder of a\nbond ami mortgage with no security. Insurance may be allowed to lapse; thfcn, Bhould a\nfire occur the mortgage holder\nhas only the bare ground security. Methodical attention\nabsolutely averts these dangers.\nThe maker of the mortgage\nmay default in his interest payments. Here again experience,\nand skill are needed to properly\nconduct a foreclosure. Much\nmoney lias heen lost anil many\ntitles have been impaired\nthrough luck of skill and ev*\nperience in such matters.\nYou cannot afford to be without our services, an interview\nwill c.est you nothing.\nDominion Trust\nCompany.\nHip  IVrpt'liial Tnislce.\n()!lic..s \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Vancouver, Victoria,\nNew Westminster, Nanaimo,\nCalgary, Regina, Winnipeg,\nMontreal, Cbarlottetown, London, ICug.;  Antwerp, Belgium.\nNew Westminster\nBranch.\nBOfi   Columbia   Street.\nC   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>   KEITH, Ma>-\ufffd\ufffd'oer,\nLocal News\n\ufffd\ufffdocia\nland P\nersona\nNew  Dcg Tags.\nThe*   1914   dog   tags   have   been   received at the city hail and all owners\nof canines are being notified to take\nout same.\nBuy your wines and liquors from\nthe old reliable Freeman's lieiuor\nstore.    Family  trade a specialty.\n(2887)\n1 $500.00 REWARD IN MURDER CASE-\nSEERESS FINDS EVIDENCE 0E TERRIBLE CRIME\nYou score every time you take\nhome a box of Hill's Saturday Special\nChocolates. (2916)\nWeather Today.\nThe weather for New Westminster\nand the lower mainland during the\nnext 24 hours will be light to moderate\nwinds, mostly easterly and southerly;\ncloudy with rain or sleet.\nCoal ! Coal ! Coal I Large shipment best Nicola coal just in. Just\nthe thing for cold weather. Westminster Coal Co., Phone 880, B. C. Trans-\nThe dance to be given by the\nKnights of Columbus in St. Patrick's\nhall this evening, in suppoet of the\nChildren's Aid society, promises to bo\nthe social event if the season. A\nlarge number of people from the sur-\nroundlng district have promised to at-; By Occult Means, Finds Evidence that\ntend.\nAt a meeting held at the home of\nMr. and Mrs. Walke-r, North road, Burquitlam, last evening, it was decided\nto give a whist drive and dance on\nWednesday evening, Feb. 11, the proceeds to be handed over to the Women's Institute of the Burquitlam Agricultural society. The entertainment\nwill take place in the Agricultural\nhall.\nA very  enjoyable  whist  drive  and\n'lance was held at rhe home of Mr. and\nand there found revcii Written (locu-\nmLilts which when produced as evl-\ndeuca were very damaging against\nJohn Wilson, her husband, and lie is\nnow serving life sentence for wife*\nmurder  In   the  Indiana  state   prison.\n  jThis is only one case in which Mine.\nTangley   had   figured,  and   she offers\nAfter a search for three mouths by jthe above  stated amount to any one\ndetectives from Chicago,  Indianapolis! who  will  disprove her statements  in\nConvicts John   Wilson  cf Wife\nMurder\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdApoears Here\nNext  Week.\nand Cincinnati who were employed on\nthe case where e\\Irs. Maud Wll-.on\nwas found  murdered at Connersville,\nthe case. This wonderful woman is\nappearing here all next week with\nthe   Tangley   stock   company   at   tlu\nROARED  SEA  DITTY\nFROM   FLAGPOLE  TOP\nSeattle, Feb. 6.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAdown th\" light\n[ breezes which held the city almost\n[becalmed  last  night  there  floated   to\nthe ears of Patrolman J. D. MoLen-\ni nan the* notes of a ringing bas3 voice\ni raised in song. Somewhere in the\n' murk  nnd  mystery  cf  the    night.    :i\nheart   of  oak  was   roaring  forth    u\nreal iiee*p-sea chanty cencerning    the,\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdflay ot Blscay-O.\"\nPatrolman McLennan cast    bis eve\naloft.\nFrom high abow him came the\nI voice and the lynx-eyed policeman\n; discerned a dark form reaching fur\n;the ball at the top of the flag staff\nwhich surmounts the Right hotel, 7B\ufffd\ufffd\nFirst  avenue.    The   patrolman  went\naloft.\n,     ,        .,        Indiana, no evidence    was    produced iopera   house,    commencing    Monday, I    George Wier, 34 years   old, of   the\nMrs. Cowan. Austin mad, Burquitlam  against her husband, and  he  was al-: Februarv 9.    Monday, night a society  ?*a\"far|n* P*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd********-***. 'cIune BtOUtly to\n'\"      '    ' '\"lowed   a   new trial,   awaiting   new comedy drama, \"The Divorce Cure,\" \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *\"\"* b}*\ufffd\ufffd ab<\";? McLennan ahead\nevidence,    it was then that Mr. John Swill   be  presented.    A   play    dealing iaad d(;nwi lhe POl'ceman to get lilm\nport dock.\n(2909)\nNorth Arm Harbor.\nThe annual meeting cf Ward One\nRatepayers' association, Burnaby, will\nbe held at Highland Park this evening. Mr. Vogel, secretary to the North\nFraser harbor commission, is scheduled to address the meeting.\non Tuesday evening, some 16 couples\nbeing In attendance. The prize winners were Mrs. T. Dobson and F.d-\nward Hassall, the consolation trophies\nbeing awarded to Miss H. Bishop and\nj. Cobban.\nRev. James Reid, Salmon Arm, and\nhis brother, John Reid, a successful\nfarmer of Yorkton, Sask., are spending\na few days-with Mrs. James Reid's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. L. Williams,\nColumbia street, Sapperton.\nFawcett,  editor of the  \"Connersville | with the troubles of a Jealous wife,, |do,wn:    McLennan  pondered.    He  re-\nMrs. L. IS. Twiss, city manager\nSpirella Go. has moved from 237 Sixth\nstreet to 2 17 Third street, and will be\nnt home Wednesday afternoon of each\nweek to show and explain the merits\nof Spin Ua corsets. Phone 67S for appointments. (2900)\nAuto 5410 had an exciting experience last evening about 5:30 when being driven up McKenzie street from\nFront street It came In contact with\ntho belt line B. C. E. R. car. Little\ndamage was done to either vehicle\nalthough ih\" auto veered completely\naround, reaely to descened the grade\nw'.iich  It  has just made.\nExaminer,\" and Earl Williams, of the ; from the pen of William C.illett, who calIcd a11 ,nat he had read and npai(1\n\"Times Star\" office, called upon Mm*, lis also the   author of \"Held   by tha|fj^I.H'f-\"* that gave uu\nPearl Tangley, a seeress who was up-  Enemy,\"    \"The    Gilded    Fool\"    and   \"'\"\"\"\"\t\npeering at a local t hcatro there, and others.    A  complete  change  of  pro-\nshe took them to an old rubbish pile|gram nightly wlll be given.       (0000)\nstrike in 1906 the veteran broke into | Death of Rev. Wm. Hogan.\n.    ,    ,    ,      ,,      ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      I prominence when he attempted to set i    Prince  Rupert,   B.C.,   Feb.   5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdRev. I \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdintil  sober,\nMr. and Mrs. Jack Corder. Mrs. Ceo. i flre t0 a strcet car     Following this William Hogan, one of the best known j\"1- \"l ^a^eM I was a squirrel clinih\ninspiration.\n\"All hands on deck!\" he bellowed.\n\"Man the ladle; heave in the grog I\"\nWith a smart \"Aye, ayo, sir,\" Wler\nslid down tho pole. At the police .station, where he was booked to \"hold\nthe adventurer remark\nCorder and Arthur Heathorn returned\nlast night from Victoria where they\nwere called on account of the very\nsudden and unexpected death of Mr.\n('order's father, T. N. Corder. Geo.\nand W. J. Corder of Oakland. Cal., are\nexpected to return to New Westminster at the end of the week accompanied by their mother.\nThe young ladies of Columbian college will receive the young men from\ni to C o'clock this afternoon.\nnotable event in Dick's quaint career,\nlie was adjudged insane and placed in\nthe asylum, where he passed the remainder of his days.\nSTATES  ADOPT  NEW\nEXPRESS RATE PLAN\nAnglican missionaries In the we-Bt,\ndied at Masset on Sunday. Deceased\nwas born in Ireland 60 years ago,\ncoming to British Columbia in 1893,\nlaboring lirst at Metlacatlah, then at\nPort Simpson and Masset, for ten\nyears bejng stationed at Port Simpson.\ning after a nut.'\nFor all building supplies and fuel\noil apply to the B. C. Transport Co.,\nLtd., 505 Westminster Trust building.\nOffice phone 826, wharf phone 880.\n(2890)\nTwc Turbans to Appear.\nTwo more wearers of the turban\ngave trouble to the police last night,\nboth being placed in custody. These,\ntogether with one lone member of the\ngarden variety of drunks, constitute\nthe proceedings on the agenda for\nMagistrate Edmonds this morning.\nWOUEDAMENDCRIMINAE\nCODE TO RESTRICT USE\nOf DETECTAPHONE\n(Continued from page ono)\nMoney to lean on first mortgages.\nImproved city and farm property. 9\nper cent. Alfred W. Mcl.eod.      (2889)\nSkating on Lake.\nSkating   will   be   possible   on   Burnaby  lake by Saturday or Sunday  if\nthe present weather continues.   A considerable  coating  of  ice  now  covers\nhas a license to carry arms as provided for by Sec. 118 of the criminal\ncode.\nMr.  Verville  took a  concrete case\ninstancing the riots and bloodshed In\nBuckingham a few years ago.\nThe Detectaphone.\nIn explaining the second clause of\nthe bill the member for Maisson-\nneauve said that it dealt with the detectaphone, a new contrivance whereby conversations cr deliberations may\nbe overheard and made public afterwards. Unless legally restricted in\nits use, it would be a menace to\nsociety, no man being safe, no family\nsecure, no organized body safeguarded while such means of detections\nand revelations were in existence.\nThe first subsection dealt with th;\nuse of such contrivances for the purpose of injuring the character of any\nperson or disclosing the tli liberations\nNew York, Feb. 5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe new system\ncf interstate express rates, 16 per\ncent, lower than those formerly pr-e-\nvailing, are now effective under orders issued by the inter-state commerce commission. On the same\nbasis of decrease in rates the states\nof iMaine, Vermont, Connecticut,\nPennsylvania, Delaware, West Virginia, Kentucky, Ohio, New Jersey,\nIllinois and Louisiana are putting\ninto fore: a new system cf interstate   express   business.\nThe new inter-state rates are based\nupon a block system, the country being divided into 826 blocks formed by\ntho intersections of the meridians of\nlongitude  and   parallels     of   latitude. ,\nThe   first  and  second  class  charges officers  place\nare based upen rates per 100 pounds, j $12,000,000,\nThe  third  class  rates are  one    cent   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\nfor  each   two  ounces   not   to   exceed !\nfirst class  rates.\nOHIO WANTS $12,000,000\nTAXES FROM  OIL  KING\nCleveland, Ohio, Feb. 5,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDeputy\nstate taxation officers for Cuyahoga\ncounty went to the home of John D.\nRockefeller, on Fort hill, East Cleveland, today, and filed a written demand on him that he pay taxes on hiB\npersonal property, estimated at 4H00,-\nOOO.OuO, into the treasury of tills\ncounty.\nThey claim that under the Warnes\ntax law Rockefeller, by residing in\nthe county for the greater part of the\npreceding twelve months, has made\nhimself liable to taxation here. Th-\nRockefeller'B  tax    at\nOPERA MOUSE\nWeek  commencing  Feb. 9,  1914.\nTANGLEY STOCK CO.\nIn repertoire of plays giving a complete change cf program and featuring\nPearl Tangley\nSEERESS.\nas an extra added attraction. Com\"\nask he? any question. Her advice is\nfree.\nPrices: 15c, 25c, and 35c.\nSeat   sale  at  box    office    Monday\nmorning.    Phone 961.\nSWITCHES FROM\n.50\nHIGH  SCHOOL STUDENTS\nSERENADE  NEWLYWEDS\nCcntralia, Feb. 5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJ. M. Layliue.\nsuperintendent of Centralla schools,\nWith his bride, Mrs. Alice E. Hill, of\nOlympia, was serenaded last nigh? by\nmore than 100 local high school students with a band. Mr. and Mrs. Layliue were then taken to the high\nschool, where Mr. Layhtie delivered\nan address to the students, after\nwhich the newlyweds were placed in\na buggy  and  drawn  by  higli    school\nthe  lake  and   another  frost  such   as of any body.    To explain the sub-sec- I pupils   through   the  business   section\nWednesday  night's  will   probably  be\nsufficient to allow general skating.\nInsure in the Royal, the world's\nlargest fire company. Agent, Alfred\nW. Mcl.eod, the Insurance Man.\n12908)\n'History\nby  Rev.\nScries cf Lectures\nA series of lectures on the\nof  Religion\"   is  to  be  given\nDr. Crummp, pastor of Wesley Methodist church. Vancouver at Columbian\ncollege, commencing at 3:30 p.m. on\nTuesday,  Feb. 10,  twice a  week, and\ncontinuing for five weeks.    On Thursday.   Feb.   19.  at  3:30   p.m.   Kev.   Dr.\nChown. general superintendent of the\nMethodist church in Canada, will begin a series of lectures on  sociology.\nInsure with Alfred W   Mcl.eod. the\nInsurance    man.    All  kinds    written ]\nHundreds of millions to pay  losses.\n(L-S89H\nTopping On* on  2ail.\nFor the- purpose of looking up eer-\ntaln legal points advanced by Ailam S.\nIbhnstcn, as counrel feir Joseph Topping,  the  case against the  latter tn\nho   Burnaby   police  courl   yesterday\nmorning waa remanded by Magistrate\nBeatty  until  Wednesday  morning of\nI next week.   Evidence was given that\nthe sum in arri ars, whic-'ri the accused  is charged  with misappropriating.\nI h-is since been paid over t,. Councll-\nI lor J. C. Allen, the owner of the property in dispute,    Miss Mllliken, who\npurchased   a   lot   from   the   accused,\n| gave evidence at the h*:i-i'ig yesterday to the effect that  tho prisoner's\nj wife had offered her $300 as Bettle-\n| ment if the would not appear against\nI', piling.    ,\\  remand until next  Wed-\ntion, Mr. Verville asked the house to\nsuppose that a Masonic ledpe or even\nin the privy council over which the\npremier presides, such an instrument\nwere made use of where would be the\nsecrets so jealously guarded from\nthose who have no right to chtaiu\nthem.\nPublication of Records.\nIn sub-section two, the bill dealt\nwith the publication cf the records of\nthe detectaphoncs or similar instruments. The bill left to the attorney\ngeneral of the provinres the power\nto accord the necessary permit allowing sue'.i publication and he be-\nc-ame the judge as to whether or not\nsuch publication was i.i tho general\ninterest cf the public.\n.Mr. Verville stated that he did not\nwish to interfere in any way with the\nIcj Itimate prevention of the punishment of crimes when the detectaphone\nwas used by lawfully authorized persons for the purpose of doing so and\nIn the t.iird sub-section it was clearly slated that nothing in the second\nTsection should be held 1\ufffd\ufffd prevent or\n| restrict the* use of the detectaphone\nor other like contrivances in the de-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd tection of crime cr rfrtud.      . -~\nTwo policemen attempted to arrest\nseveral of the students, but desisted\nat the solicitation cf the school\nsuperintendent.\nDead  for  Fortnight.\nLondon, Feb. 5\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIt was stuteel by a\ndoctor at a coroner's inquiry at West\nHam that Sarah Ann Beecham. aged\n71, had probably been lying dead in her\nheel for a fortnight without the knowl*\n! edge of  relatives  living  in  the same\n, house.     Her  daughter   said   she   last\nI F.iw her mother about a fortnight ago.\n\"She was asleep,\" she said, \"when  I\n! went into her room.   The coroner asked if she didn't go to her again and\n, Bhe   replied:    \"About   a   week   after-\ni wards   I   went   In   anil   she   was   still\nj asleep.\"    \"Still asleep?    How do you\ni know she was not dead?\"    \"I do not\nknow.\"    When iliel the die?\"    i don't\n: know.\"\nSEVERE GOLD ON LUNGS AND\nCHEST QUICKLY RELIEVED\nby Na-Dru-Co Syrup of Linseed,\nLicorice and Chlorodyno\nMr. J. Seward, Bromptonville, Que.,\nwrites :\n\"Two weeks ago I took a severe col.l\nwhich settled on my lungs and my chest\nwas very sore, breathing tight and severe\nbacking cough. I was feeling miserable.\nI bought a bottle of Na-Dru-Co Syrup of\nLinseed, Lie-otice and Chloroelyne anel\nafter a few eloses 1 felt great relief ituel I\nwent into a Sound sleep, a thing I was\nnot able to ilo for some nights. Next\nday 1 was able to lie around again, and\nbefore completing the bottle, felt as well\nas ever. It is a fine cough anel cold\ncure.\"\nNa-Dru Co Syrup of Linseed, Licorice\nanel Chloroelyne relieves the irritation\nand \"stuffed-tip\" feeling in the sifrpassages, soothes the tickling which makes\nyou cough, loosens the phlegm and\ndrives out the cold before it gtts troublesome.\nIn 25c and 50c bottles, at your\nDruggist's National Drugaud Chemical\nCo. of Canada, Limited. 322\nLADIES come and see our work.\nBring us your combings and we will\nmake them up any way required.\nThe Wig Makers\n108 and 103 McLeod Block,\nCorner   Columbia   and   Sixth   Streets.\nENOS   FRUIT\nSALT\nREDUCED TO\n75c.\nCURTIS\nREXALL\nDRUG\nSTORE\nGOOD   EATS   AT   THE\nGpencer   Su-.ceer's   Nixon.\nOttawa.   Feb.   5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGeorge   Spencer,\nwho has  been  ;iHsie*;ant chief operat- j\ning officer at Winnipeg, has succeeded I\nA. J. Nixon as chief operating officer I\nto the railway commission at Ottawa\nCentral  th\ufffd\ufffdpot.\n:. Know?*! cia\". a \"\"\"I\nDIES  IN  HAMILTON  ASYLUM\nHamilton, Ont., Feb. f\nnounci mi nt of the elreit'i\nPirn at the asylum for\nlu re will rw.tl! to many Hamlltonlana\nthe eccentrioitioa of this eld veteran,\nwho for many years was a familiar\nflguri en the Btree s ef this city. Tire !\ndi ( east ,l wan In his 7*>tli year, and\ndeath followed an nitark of apoplexy\nwith which li.* was stricken several\ndays ago, Hamilton has had many\nunique  characters,  b, t    none    mere\nThat  Tenmcrance  Trouble.\n8t.  Cathjrincs, Ont.,  Feb.  6.- Tha'\ndeclarations frcm 20 persons who vot-\nrr* act a:\nbooth    In\nThe    an-\ncf  Richard led in favor of Va:: ti*:rp>>re!\nthe   insane i i.;.   p.   Sculrburs'.'s   polling\nDOMINION TRUST BLOCK\nilrid*;. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\n:r .\ni*.\nly, will be pre\nsented by the prosecution when Soult-\nhuret appears before the magistrate\nat Brldgobu'.-g Saturday morning, is\nthe statement made by ,1 loading te n-\npei wee worker heir'. Coulthurst was\nt-.* have been arraigned today hut\ncounsel for the temperance forces wait\nunable to come and a postponement\nBOILERS   Riveted Steel Pipes\n       BURN OIL     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nTANKS\nVULCAN  IRON WORKS. LTD.\nMixed   I'i< i,1-....  I. ge  Bottles 25c\nChow Chow, large bottli 8  \t\nStenh  n's   Pane}   Sevect   Tickles,  a\nchoice    line   or   small    tender\npickles   per  bottle    35c\nBweei Gnu itinB, pei  bottle   25o\nSweet, c   , rkins   in bulk; 2 dozen, ,25c\nDill   Pickles, per dozen    20c\nOlue   1 .1 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     und   Knider'a   Catsup,\n1\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   bi Uie    .'.30c I\nMonarch  Cstfup,  bottle    25;\nLibby's    Choli *     Pineapple,    p\"r\nCn     25c.   and   35c I\nCanned   Pears,   Peaches,  Strawberries,   I,a.-*, I    r'u   . etc.\nChoice   Navel   Oranges,   20  for  25c;\n. .25c, 33c, sed  50c.  doercn.\nI croons,  per i!< to.ii    23c, |\nCrape* Fruit, 3 for  25c\nThe Min.*r,il Heave Rented \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- Ih r sure and eafe cure fir throat,\nstomach and lung heaves and al! pulmonary and wind diseases in\nir-rees.    Sold en its merits,    P,*icc*i:   Small   tiee  $1.25;   Ijrge   si:e,\ne3 75\nSATISFACTION   13   OUR   AIM.\nDean's Grocery\n-ne 3^8. j Colf.muia Healing Fcwdcr fcr  ulcerated  ami  raw  son\n~jiumw\ufffd\ufffd tafe\ufffd\ufffdt.      a     chafing, outs, etc.   Acts like magic  on  Baddle    ami    collo\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdurr Slock\nRead - The - News\nColumbia Healing Fcwdcr fcr ulcerated anil raw cores, burns,\nar     n*-Hs.\nPrices:   25c,  03c,  end   $1.03.\nNOW IS THE TIME TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE EXCEPTIONAL VALUES\nWE ARE OFFERING\nDENNY & ROSS\nT. J. TRAPP & CO.\nNew   Westminster.        Phone  69.\nThe Big Furniture Store\nOne Block up Sixth Street from the P. O.\nPhone 588\nieaeacac\nSiV.Z.IUA.ljmL.JL-'MlL.LJl\n. FRIDAY,  FEBRUARY 6,  1914.\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   .   PAGE nvsj\nHOCKEY       RUGBY       SOCCER\nSTORT\nBASKETBALL      BOXING\nSPORT CHATTER\n(Uy the  Potter.)\nK. of C. AND CIRCLE F\nTO ENTER CITY BASEBALL\nDopestera Got Busy Yesterday Afternoon\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNew Amateur League\nMooted.\nAlthough the opening of the baseball\nseason is several weeks away, the\nbug got working overtime yesterday\nwith the result that a prediction to\nthe effect that baseball wlll be much\nstronger tiian ever In the Hoyal City\nthis earning summer, Ib not far off\nthe  mark.\nThe American game made its way\nto the front rank last summer due no\ndoUbt tn a deflection In the ranks of\nlacrosse magnates and this headway\nIb considered sufficient to place* the\n, ity un the map when Inter-clty games\na ith Vancouver and Washington nines\na .)  considered.\nTwo new teams are likely in the\n, Ity league, these being Fraser Mills\n,iikI the Knights of Columbus. The\nCircle F crowd are intent and eager\nto pluce a team In the league providing; their application for a franchise\nis granted anil there should be little\ndifficulty In this line. The French\nlUnudiiin colony at the big ihIIIb stick\ntogether with the clannish spirit and\nv. Ith ie baseball team invading New\nWestminster every week the attendance  will   be   materially   Increased.\nlhe rumor published in The News\nseveral weeks ago that the Knights\nol Columbus were planning to orga-i-\n.. u team Is fast taking root. Tommy\nWalsh, last yr-ar with the Balmorals,\nbeing   at   the   head   of  affairs.     The\nKnights  are  entering  into  the  Bplrlt\ntin*   game   and   have   promised   a\n.-tJiora of financial and moral support   with   the   evident   intention   of\n;>yiiiii   the   pennant.\nSbehjld the Fraser Mills scheme go\nti'irough It will mean considerable\nwork for Manager Graham of the\nMoowe who has won the championship\ntwo successive years solely through\nthe assistance of players from the\nmlllB.\nNew League.\nTogether with the talk of reorganizing the city league cotneB the story\nthat a slmon pure amateur league will\nbe formed. This organization will\nlikely come under the wing of the local\namateur union, very few of the play*\ne'rs In last year's league preferring\nto take out an amateur card as thla\nwould practically prevent them from\nplaying with teams other than In Van\ncouver. which taken on the whole, are\nnot lu Westminster's class: This\ndoes not necessarily imply that the old\nleague will be of the Beml-pro order,\nwith the kale dished out here and\n(here. City league baseball has not\nyet come to the stage where salaries\near. le paid cr even retainers, which\ndoes away with the Idle rumors that\nnearly every player on the teams Is\na professional. The league magnates\narc determined to give the Westminster public the be-st they know how.\nTeams like Blaine, Sumas and Bel-\nllugham will he brought here this\nsummer, which were the local association to Join the B. C. A. A. U. such\nattractions would be impossible to\nstage.\nThe' Patricks are reported to be after  Jerr>   ('oughlan,  a  speedy   rover,]\nwith Ingersol) 0. H. A. team and last\nyear with Peterboro.\nJoe Corman ol  the Victoria Times,\nquoted  Jchnny   Howard   with  the  re-1\nmark   that   the   latter   together   with j\ntwo other Salmon Belly lacrosse players, are willing to make Victoria their\nhome this Bummer.   Joe sure has got J\nthe bug.\nPete Muldoon, trainer of the Van-'\ncouver hockey club, has got really\npeeved at all the publicity given the]\nVictoria-WestminBter ladles ' hockey\ngame. Yesterday he started out to\nround up a team to represent Vancouver and threatens they can lick anything In sight.\nthe present cold weather. Manager\nQrant is ail prepared for a straggle\nalthough another week would ghre\nhim plenty cf time to bolster up several of the players who plainly showed signs of Saturday's gam** at the\nPort  City.\nManager Crawford's \"Cyclones,\" representing Cunningham's hardware*\n.'.tore, defeated the Westminster Woodworking company's septette at the rink\nlast night, the final score being 5-2.\nThe victors came back with great\nspeed, following their defeat at the\nhands of T. J. Trapp and company,\nand leel in the scoring from the first\nface-off. Featuring for the hardware\nboys were Follis and McDonald,\nwhile liollielay, Main and Bud Gordon\nwere the shining lights for the band-\nsaw  artists. I\nll\nBranch Hockey, the new manager of\nthe St. Louis Americans, refuses to\nplay ball on Sunday, a clause In hiB j\ncontract stipulating that he does not\nhave to don the uniform on that day.\nFrom past records we are not aware\nthat the Browue ever played baseball;\non any of the other six days.\nA threat hy Kiviat and Kolehmalnen, j\nthe two suspended amateurs, to take\ntheh- case before the supreme court\nJudge, soon compe-lied the N.Y.A.A.U.\nto rescind its previous decision. Tho\npair were accused of fixing a race\nwhen both tied at the tape.\nUnless   a  complete  change    take.-s\n| place In the temperature the chances\ni of Coquitlam, and the Hovers clashing\non   Moody   I'ark  Saturday  afternoon\nj appear   mighty   slim      although    the\nofficial announcement will    not    be\n] known until late Friday night or Sat-\ni unlay morning.    It was expected that\n'he blanket of snow would have disappeared   by  thiB  time  but   weather\nI bulletins   indicate   a   continuance   of\nThe opening series of the House\nBasketball league at the Y. M. C. A.\nwas played last nigh:, the trophy In\ncompetition being the Pacific Canadian shield. Art Dawe's aggregation\ntriumphed over G. Whlttaker'a ejuln-\ntette by a score of 22-2, while C. Warwick's crew nosed out a 2-0 11ctory\nover T. Aunandale and his team.\nCOLUMBIAS COMING\nCrack   Vancouver Team  Will  Tackle\nBsavers at Ring Tonight\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdExhibition   Game.\nAn Interesting struggle is likely  to\nIm   waged   at   the   rink   tells  evening\nwhen the Vancouver Columbiaa stack\nup against the Beavers ln a friendly I\ngame.    This will be the first appear-,\nance of  the Columbias on  local  ice,\nand  critics  in   Vancouver are of the j\nopinion that they are even faster than\n(Continued on Page Eight.)\nWESTMINSTER TRUST\nLIMITED\n;.:\". HEAP.OFFICE- JJEW WESTMINSTER.B.C.\n:J.J.Jones. MAN-DIR. J.A.Rennie. 5ECY-TRES\nNine - Roomed,   Beautifully\nFurnished House\nFive bedrooms, on Sixth Street, between Third\nAve. and Queen's Ave., $30 per month.\nAlso modern 3-roomed suites, steam hea,t; close\nto Columbia Street.\nSafe Deposit Boxes for rent at moderate prices.\nAPPLY RENTING DEPARTMENT.\n!\nForty-three thousand people witnessed the English cup replay at Sheffield yesterday, when the Wednesdays\ndetested Wolverhampton Wanderers\n1-0. Four persons were seriously injured   when   a   wall   collapsed,   1'e.ers,\nthe Wolverhampton custodian fainting\n:et the spectacle, and did not resume\nplaying. Neither team scored following   the   accident.\nJunior Gymnasium Exhibition\nand International\nBASKET  BALL   MATCH\nBELLINGHAM vs. WESTMINSTER.\nTONIGHT AT 8 O'CLOCK.\nAt Y. M. C. A. Tickets, 15c, 25c,. 35c.\n~\nUNION\nHOUSE \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdALL   WHITE\nTHE\nSTRAND\nCAFE\nWHY NOT TRY OUR SUNDAY\nDINNER?\nOPPOSITE C.\nP. R. DEPOT.\nIT'S  DIFFERENT.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nOrder Your Suit at\nTHE AMERICAN LADIES'\nTAILORS\nWe guarantee satisfaction.\nWO  Clarkson   St. Collister   Black.\nSA TURD A Y SPECIALS\nj  |\n,,,       .   -.     ;...       ..\nFashion Craft and Society Brand Hand-Tailored Suits.\nRegular $25.00, $30.00 and $35.00 Values. Saturday\nYour Choice for\nThis Means any Suit in the Shop.\n*        -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nA\n. MILLS\n& Co.\nOVERCOATS\nAny Overcoat in the Shop, Burberry's Excepted,\nSaturday Only, for\n15.00 PAGt    Sl\ufffd\ufffd\nTIIE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS.\nFRIDAY,   FEBHUARV  6,   1914.\nClassified Advertising\nGAS OVLN tXPLODES\nTHE NORSEMEN.\nFIVE\nOREGON DRY ELECTIONS UPHELD  purpose  of giving  legal  color  to  the\n    proceeding.    It  is a  foregone eonolu\nThe Most Romantic Figures In His. Court Rules Towns Adopting Prohibi- sion that the council will approve of\ntory Were the Old Vikings. I .   tion  Did  So  Lerjally. anything  which Yuan Shi Kai  recom\nAGENCIES.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd LAgfJIPlED ADS WILL BE UE-\neelved for The News at the following places: F. T. Hill's drug store,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd28 Columbia street; A. Sprice,\nQueensborough, Lulu Island; Mrs.\nB. Lardeu, Highland Park; Mrs. V.\nLewis, Alta Vista.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ev a >\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd**<\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd RATES *\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nClassified\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOne eenl per word pe\nttj; 4c per word per week; tf><- pe\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdmonth; 5 (inn woids. to be used as rr*\nquired within one year from date ..\nlortract,  125.00.\nFOR  \ufffd\ufffdAl E\nHAVE AGREEMENT FOR $6ft5. $300\nIiaiel in. fcr sale at pood discount.\nCurtis  &   Dorgan. (211061\nPRACTICALLY TWO ACRKS WITH-\nin eight minutes walk of Edmonds,\n$3000, Half acre cleared, sidewalk.\nlight and water to place. I!ox 287S,\nNews office.\ni _____\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\t\nFOR SALE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd8BLL TOUR PROP\nerty through an ad. In this column.\nFOR SALE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd$1.00 DOWN. $1.00 PER\nweek. Canada'B Pride Malleable\nRanges: every one guaranteed. Mnr\nkei square. <2S84i\nPerhaps the most romantic figures\nIn history, at least to tho boys and\ngirls who love adventure and daring ^j0\"*  '\" ,s?\"   al\">p;ll\"(1  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   on\ndeeds,   are   the   Vikings.    Centuries dry<-it>   elections  held   in  the  slate\n\ufffd\ufffd .    r.11    Vnii'.n h:r    1    lout      ,,,,\nPortland,    Feb.   5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe    supremalmends.   When this final step is com-\neonrt of Orofion has handed down ele-  pleted, opponents of Yuan assert, the\n_BjPSfe*v\n,      .   vM   U     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ......        j\n'M.N\\3P. effl*1t*-B|-t> \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdVANTED- WISCELLA -\"     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nWANTED \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd HOI :-'!\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:!!.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.,I> FURNI\nture' in large or small quantities;\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdhighest price**; paid. Auction Bales\ncouducti a. H. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd)\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd lluasi :\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd K'ng\nhotel block, Columbia s reet, Phone\n881, -2&32)\nWANTED HOI 3EHOLD FURNI-\nture, er stocks In trade, in lai - or\nsmall quantities, bighi ;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd: pric i*:' 'i\nnr rr d Davis i 111 bi i! your goods\nbj public auction with guarantei a\nresul -. or uo c imniti sion charged,\ntho export on furniture bi tore\nyou gi i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' r'our goi .!\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*. away. Addn bs\nFred Davis, 548 Columbia street,\nNew Westmlus'ti r, (2898)\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOWNERS OF IMPROVED AND UN-\nImproved properties anywhere are\n,,;*, ed to communicate with us al\n< ncc. We must have* at li ast 1000\nnew listings for our Eastern and\nOld Country clients before March 1\nit st prices si euivl for choice prop-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd rl,. b Wri'ie lotl i; , Clarkson,\nli, pt, .1-2, 907 Lindsay building,\nWinnipeg. *'-'s'!'*>\nCOLLECTIONS.\nIAD IHCIITS CO I,I,111'TED EVERY*\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdehere No collection, no charge\nsmeric.au Vancouver Mercantile Ap\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnev S'16 HhKllngs Htreet west, \\'an\nc luver. (2886)\nAUCTION SAl tS\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd t'ltxiri its, btoreSjtocks AND\ni.n in sal.**- coiieliicled. Furnlltiri\nbought for cash P li Drown, 1\"\nBegbie si reel. New Westminster\n(2885)\nNOTICE.\nTo the Board   of   License   Commls-\nslonei a of Surrey, B.C.\nNotice is hereby given that I intend\nto apply :ii the next meeting of the\nBoard of License Commissioners for\nthe District of Surrey, for a license to\nBell lieiuors by retail on tbe premises\nknown as the St. Leonard hotel, situate on lot:-, numbered from l to 12.\nS.W. corner Section fi, Township T, in\nthe District e-*f Surrey, B.C.\nRICHARD ASBECK,\n2?46 Applicant.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-.)   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,\nTO RENT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSUITE OF NICELY FUR-\nnisli.il housekeeping rooms, furnace\nheat, 37 Agm a street. Telephone\n638 L, (2908)\nFURNISHED HOUSE TO RENT, AP-\nply 309 Pine street.   Phone 953 L.\n(2904)\nFOR RENT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHOUSE AND ACRE OF\nland in CoqultjfLm. Apply Mr. Gale,\nSterling Hotel (2879)\nBOARD AND ROOM, 625 SIXTH ST.\nHol water hi at, pleasant rooms,\nborne comforts.    Moderate rates,\n(2877)\nFOK RENT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIF YOU HAVE ROOMS\nire rent try an ad. In ! li is column,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFURNISHED COMPLETE, HOUSE\nkeeping rooms. Jlu am! $15 per\nmonth at 22*1 St'\\e\".ith street. (2883)\nLAND   REGISTRY   ACT.\nRf  Blocks ,\"., 17, 19, 20 and the north\nhalf of Dock 21, beings parts   of\nSection 33, Block 1 north, Range? 1\neast    (otherwise    the     southwest\nquarter of Section 5, Township 7),\nNew  Westminster District.\nWhereas  proof of the loss of Certificate of Title Number 327F, Issued\nin tho name of Charles A. Loom is has\nbeen tiled In this office.\nNotice i.;i hereby given that I shall,\nat the expiration of one month from\ntha date of the lirst publication hereof, in a daily newspaper published in\nthe City of New Westminster, issue a\nduplicate of the said Certificate, unless In the meantime valid objection\nbe made to me in writing.\n.1. ('. QWYNN,\nDistrict Registrar of Tii les.\nLand Registry Office,\nNew Westminster, B.C., January 28,\n1914. (2807)\nTwo    Men, Two  Women    and    Baby\nHurt\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdStcrc Front Blown Out\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nBuilding  Rocked.\nSpokane.  Teh.  5. -Tiie* explosion of j\ngas In an oven at N1815 Monrcc street i\nlate  yesterday  afternoon   tossed  two\nmen, two  women and  a  baby about, |\nblew out   the  glass front of the confectionery store, and caused the occupants  of  the   Monroe  apartments,  in\nWhich the store is situated, to hasten\nto the street.\nA. B. Williams, a linker of Hillyard,\nBuffered minor lacerations of the facv\nand a  hand.\n.Mrs. .1. J. .larvis, th:' owner, standing near the front of the; store, was\nshocked almost to the point of collapse.\ntias had just been turned on by an\nemployee of the gas company and tlie*\nthree burners had been lighted but a\nfew minutes when the explosion came,\naccording to A. B, Williams, th,*\nbaker. Mrs. ,i. F. Black and baby boy\nof Monroe street were thrown agalnsl\na table. 1'. S. Hoffman, a patron,\nstanding in the front of tiie s'.ore, was\nraised from  tile floor, lie' stated.\nOccupants of nearby stores and\napartments felt the floors raise and\nthe building rock. Pedestrians saw\nglass shooting out from tli,- windows\nto tiie street, Not ,-i pane in the front\nremained in place\nMrs. Jarvis had just bought tii*\nstore io engage in tin* candy an!\nbakery bustness, and the baker was\nstarting the oven for the firs', time'\nsince the gas was turned off several\ndays ago. The chief loss seemed to\nbo the destruction of glass, which is\nestimated to have a value of $2ihi. Tiu*\nproperty is owned by J.  W. Sreene,\nC. (!. Allenbach, manager of the\nbusiness department or the Gas company, says that the explosion wa?\ncaused by lighting the burner when\nthe oven was filled with gas. The lire,\nmatch failed to ignite the gas bul\nlhe flow was not turned off pending\nthe second attempt at lighting.\nhave passed since the appearance of\non  November 3 last, under the local\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'republic\" of China will be nothing\nbut a name.\nToday's mandate declarres that tho\nan unknown ship at sea was the sig- \ufffd\ufffdPtio\" law. declaring that the elec- district councils interfere with the\nl.al for terrified prayer by priests and tio\"a were vali(l anu* as a result the administration and that the council-\npeople, the burdt l of which was, towns affected are dry under the vote lors Intrigue with the rebelH.\n\"Save us, O Lord, from the rage of cast \ufffd\ufffdl the election named. j\nthe Norsemen.\" Hut even to this day The cities involved arc: Salem,\nthe word Viking has power to thrill Oregon City, Stayton. Springfield,\nsuch as few other words possess. Oresham and  Hillsboro.    As all    the\nNorway ls the real home of tbe VI- questions raised were covered in th.\nkings, for, from the fabled t'me when HiliBboro appeal, the court wrote the\nOJin. their god, led his followers out controlling opinion in that case. Thee\nof Asia and settled with them ln court also upheld the right of the\nNorway, such an unreasoning love of Salem council to prohibit the licens\nfreedom Influenced the fierce Norse- Ing of saloons.\nTURKEY AT THE  EXPOSITION\nr-.eu that not one of them was willing\nto be ruled and all wanted to rule,\n'.'hus It came about that the country\nwas divided into very small portions,\na id over each portion ruled a petty\nlord, known as r, jarl or earl. These\nlittle  domains  naturally\nYUAN SHI  KAI   REVOKES\nCHINESE DISTRICT COUNCILS\nLast Acceptance Makes Total of 32\nNations to Come.\nSan Francisco, Feb. 5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWiUi the\nformal acceptance of Turkey to participate in the Panama-Pacific exposition, the. total number of foreign\nnations to b.* represented In San\nFrancisco  in  1915  is  32.\nA telegram was received today by\nthe exposition officials announcing\nthat the state department at Washington was in receipt of a letter from\nthe ambassador at Constantinople,\ntransmitting a note from the- Turkish\nminister of foreign affairs lo the\neffect  that the imperial Turkish pov-\nPeking, Feb. 5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAll the distriet\nquarrelled councils in the provinces of China\ncontinually, and so things were tn a have been dissolved by Yuan Shi Kai.\nsad plight until Harold, th3 Fair- This dictatorial action is regarded\nLaired, upon the death of his father, here as another important step to\nwas proclaimed King. The lad was ward the suppression of all semblance ornmeiit bad accepted the president'*\nonl yten years old at the time, but tin1 of popular government in China. invitation   to  participate   in   tho    ex-\nNorsemc matured early, and so Iti    The nnni move |\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd tlif\ufffd\ufffd direction   it position.\nwas not very long before he fell In is sa|,i   w|i]  De tlll, _iBper8ai \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd I        \t\nprovincial assemblies.   A mandate to \"\nthis effect is being prepared by Yuan\nShi Kai.\nTlii-e will  be submitted to th    administrative council in Peking for tin*\nEX-CONGRESSMAN  AND\nBROTHER CONFESS SMUGGLING\nPUBLIC NOTICE.\ng>\nm New Westminster, B.C.\nV, dwelling houses, all modern, in\nTine locations, close ln mi good streets.\nAlso one store on Columbia St., and\ntwo on Sixth St.\nApply to Cunningham Hardware\nor to Jas. Cunningham.\nVttl C   h     COLU\ns . tl .\\!.r\\.  fj E W\nMBIA     STREET,\nWESTMINSTER\nGirls' classes, Tuesday 7;30 pin.;\nAdult classes, Thursday, 10:30 a.m.;\nSewing  classes,   Thursday,   1:2H   p.m.\nBoarding and room rates reasonable\nMeals served to ladles and gentlemen\nrBpecial dinner Fridays, 11:30 to 1:30\nFor  particulars  call  phone  l:'.24.\nHEE CHUNG\nMERCHANT   TAILOR.\nNew Imported Fall Suitings now on\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffddisplay.    See them.    Perfect fit and\nworkmanship guaranteed.   Prices from i\n18 00 up.    701 Front Stree'\n ]\n^CANADIAN PACIfK\nW RAILWAY CO.    j\nWhen going on a long journey if\non our railway there will bo no an\nnoyance ol transfer noi delay-\nToronto Express leaves at..7:60 a.m\nSt. Paul train leaves at 1:25 p m\nImperial Limited leaves ,-it. X:lu p.m\nFor rate and reservations apply to\nE.  GOULET.\nAgent.\nOr li. W. BltODIE, Q, P. A , Vancouver\nHaving  local, d  several    groups    cf\nmineral  claims through  Burnaby  and\nCoquitlam and  having  applted  und r\nihe provisions of sections  14 and 40\nof tiie*    ii. c. Mineral    Act    for   the\n're-cording of same,    Mr,  F, ('. Catnp-\ni bell, mining recorder for New West-\nIminater district, heis re-fused to record\nthe  said   claims  subj cl   to   the  provisions of Section  li of the said Act.\nTins  matter shall  1*  taken  up with\nthe authorities   al  Victoria,   and    if\nfound necessary al  Ottawa.\nPending the settlement of this matter we wish to warn all whom it may\nconcern  that it  is a criminal offence\nin disturb or  remove any  legal post\n\"tertiel  by  the  undersigned  to mark\nthe location or boundaries of the said\nmineral claims,\nI Signed |\nJoseph '\/.. Lajole, Lajole Falls, B.C.\nRay O. Smith, Vancouver, 13.C,\nEmerson M. Bailey, North Vancouver, B.C.\nAiphonse    Beaubien,    Malllardvllle,\nB, C.\nGeorge Corriveau, Vancouver,  II. C.\n(2S99)\nNew York, Feb. 5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLucius >\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'. Lil\ntauer, form; r congressman, and Wil\nliain LIttauer, his brother, both of\nGloversville, N.V., pleaded guilty today in federal district court hero to\nconspiracy t-j .smuggle jewelry Into\nthis country. Sentence w\ufffd\ufffds suspended.\nUnited States District Attorney\nMarshall urged the court to inflict\nlhe full  penalty of tbe  law.\n\"The evidence established,\" he said,\n\"that William LIttauer bought this\ntiara in Venice and that Lucius !,it-\ntauer brought It Into tin* United\nSlates through this port clandestinely,\nEven had he desired to bring it in\nfree of duty as an antique, he knew\nit should have been declared.\n\"1 submit to the court thai these\ndefendants are guilty of smuggling. !'\nhas been the oustem here to admin\nister lave taps In the, Bhape of pun\nIshment to smugglers bi\" the t*pe and\nstanding ot these tv.o defendants. I\ntruet that there will be no -love t . :\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd '\nadministered in this case.\n\"A fine spectacle we have here of\nem ex-meml er of congr ss, who In\nhis publir* life was a continual and\nactive advocate i f the high tariff,\nseeking to evade the tariff laws for\ngain. Ex-Congressman LIttauer is *i\nbeneficiary of the tariff laws. The\nfact should be taken into considi ration.\"\nCounsel for tho Littauers said the\ndefendants had regarded the jewels\nas antiques and not dutiable. It was\npointed out that they hud been intended ns gifts and not for commercial purposes,\nlove with (Jyda, the beautiful daughter of a petty king ruling over a\nneighboring land. He sent an ambassador to ask bor hand In mar-\nllage, as was the custom of the time; I\nbut t.'yda, who evidently was very j\nambitious indeed, cent back a nies-.\ngage saying that she would become\nKing Harold's wife only wben lie had\nconquered all of Norway and bent It]\nto bis rule as King Erik bad conquered Sweden. As soon as Harold\nhad received his message he took a\nsolemn oath uol to cut his beautiful\nhair until he won (l.vda for a bride on\nher own conditions.\nTrue to bis word, lie conquered\nNorway, and. as a consequence, Oyda\nbecame bis bride.\nUp to the time of the wedding\nfeast he bad been known as \"The\nFrowsy Haired\"; but afterward bu\nwas called all over bis conquered\nkingdom, Harold Haarfelger, which\nmeans the fair-hatred.\nIt was vttb tho reign of Harold tl;*?\nFair-Haired that the Viking age began.\nAlthough Harold had conquered\nNorway, he had by no mollis subdued\nthee fierce love tor freedom in tha\nhearts of his sui rects. Those who\nhad ruled over petty kingdoms refus-\nel to be subject to the rule of auy\nman, and so they sailed away and\nbecame sea robbers, or Vikings.\nRead The News\nWestminster\nTransfer Co.\nmica   Prion*   ItB.       Barn   Prion*   117\nlegbls \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtreet.\nCIVIL   WAR   VETERAN\nPASSES AWAY  IN  TORONTO I\nToronto. Feb. 5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTheodore  L. Joy.,\nAmerican Civil War veteran, and well\nknonw resident of West Toronto, died\nearly this morning at  his home on\n, Pacific avenue, aged K2 years.    Death ,\n- rrame following a year's Illness.\nMr,  Joy  was born  In Ohio, and hei\n: fought for the north in the American j\nI I ivil Weir.    When peace, was declared j\nhe   moved   to  Smlthfleld,   Ont.,  later'\nI moving to  Peterboro, where  he lived ;\n! Tor about 20 years, and up to tho time\nof  ills  death   belonged   to  the   Peter-1\nj horo Masonic lodge.\nHagKSKS Deliver**: Promptly t*\nany part of the city.\nLight and Heavy Hauling\n<~!TY OP  NEW  WESTMINSTER. B.C\n' ^ UMiilAN I'AUHl\nB. C. COAST SS. SERVICE\nFrom Vancouver for VictoilJ.\n30.00 a m Dally\n2.0C   pm Daily\nJl:4o   p.m Daily\nFrom Vancouver for Seattle.\n10:00 a.m Dallj\n11:00  p.m !> i.i.\nSteamer leaves at  l!.t.> p.m, on\nSaturdays,\nFrom  Vancouver  lor  Nanaimo.\n? .*;..   p.m       li.illj\nExcept  Sunday.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNsnslmo,  Union  Cay and  Comox.\n9:00 a.in Wednesday and Frldaj\nVancouver,  Union  Bay,  Pu-.vtM   River\n11:45 a.m Every other Salurdaj\nFor Prince  Rupert and Alaska.\n11:00 p.m Feb. 14 and 2\ufffd\ufffd\nPrince Rupert and Granby Bay.\nH'tOO p.m Wednesdayi\n7:00 a.m. Tuesdays nnd Fridays for\nVictoria, calling at points In the\nOulf Islands.\nFor Oulf Island Points.\nWV. QOULET, A srent. Ncw  Westmlnitar\nAL W. BIIODIB, U. P. A.. Vancouver.\n\ufffd\ufffda MissCave-Brownc-Cave\nL.lt.A.M.,  A K.C.M\n.1EM3ERS OF THE INCORPORATED\nSOCIETY  OF MUSICIAN6.\nLessons In Pianoforte, Violin, Sing\nng, Ve;ice Production, Theory (iu\n8lass or privately), Harmony, Counter*\niioint. Musical Form and Histery.\nPupils prepared for the cxamtna\n'Ions of the Associated Hoard of the\nItoyai Academy of Music and Itoya\nCollege of Music. Also Professions'\nDiplomas, Toni her or Performer\nFor terms, etc, apply ni Dtifferli\n*troei.   phone tun\nHERBERT R VIDAL ICO.\nFor nursing mothers\nNa-Dru-Co Laxatives\noffer the important advantage that they do not disturb\nthe rest of the system or\naffect the child.\n25c. a box at your\nDruggist's.\nNational Drug and Chemical Ca.\nof Canada, Limited.      t 75\nMUNICIPALITY OF LANGLEY.\nWANTRD    11     r*     |,ANT)\nenpnbie ..f rlolnn onslni >\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nplications,   \ufffd\ufffdiHi   stilt, in* nt\nrequired,  wlll  be  i*,.**l\\\".i\nnturday,   the.   1 ith  Inst .\nfrom  whom partici\nnn \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   hi   had.\nIt    V   PAVNB,\nI. in*.ic>    Muntolpnl   Clerk,\nMurrnyvllle,   13\ni:*.**.l,\nlutles\n1013)\nSCFIVKVOH,\nn; v.,irk \\\\i-\nis in salary\n* to noon or\n,- the unelor-\nini   rogarellns\no^5U\nVOTl 'E I -  HBflEBV 1SJVBN thnl   I   \".iii\nnl  tin   'i* xl  1 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd llni, ol  Hi*   llynnl r.f |J\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd nslllR i-.ii.i*    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd! ,.i**r** 1 pi.lv  f,,r n  Irana-\n1 i* ,.r 111.'  WI ol, -. ile  Uciun    1. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd line from\nnr mists ei'ii.'l > ,111 1,,,. Sine * *t 1.\n\",!'*.-:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. Twrntv-fmir I'.'li, In thr i':*.* nf\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,.- v.'* \"it\" fr, 1 1 1. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* H\". \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *i 17),\n111 *.*''   \"G,\"   ii* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,.> \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   Sf.'i   * * ,''i n'.iii   -;..,.,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd J'ti I 1 I.KSI 1:.   1:    HALS'US.\nDated,  riril  February,   1P1-I.\nSTORAG\nNOT1CB IS IIKI'.KI'.V GIVBN thnt t will\nni ih\" next meeting of t!\" 11,,,r.t of Licensing Commissioner apply f*.r ,1 trnns-\nf.*i   ni  Hi.*  bottle  license  for  the sup. ..f\nI ll.|i'or by retail from tho premises situate\non 1-ot Nino (0), Bloclt Twenty-fuur 1.'I 1\ntn lie- City of New Westminster, lo Lot\nSeven   iti,  tllnrle \"Cl,\"  number  ^'*:<  Col-\n1111 il.iii street.\n! f291(D l.Ksi.ll*-.  E.   HAINIiS,\n1    l idled, i'.nl February,  11)14.\nHfcAD   OFFICE:    VANCOUVER.   B C.\nBranchea  Throughout  the   Province   of   Brltlah  Columbia.\nSavlnga Department at ull Branches Deposits of Ona Dollar and\nupwards received aud Interest at tiie hlHbent current rate paid or\ncredited half ) early.\nA   GENERAL   BANKING   BUSINESS  TRANSACTED.\nOraftc and Travellers' Cheques told, payable In all parts of the\nworln.\nCHAS. G.  PENNOCK,  General  Manager.\nWeetmlnster   Branch: \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd A. W.  BLACK.  Manager.\nlusBkwiiwa\nNe\n:   BDCKLIN,\nrea   etd ileal   Mgr.\nHICAHD3LEH.\nv S; i.l'1 ciidtnt.\nW. F. H. BUCKLIN\nBee. end Trsaa\nd\nAnatomy of a Violin.\nTaken to piece a violin wool\nfo md lo consist of the following!\nparts: Hack, two pieces; belly, two;\ncoins and blocks, cix; Sides, (iv.*; side:\nlinings, twelve; bar, one; purtlings,\ntwenty-four; neck, one; finger board\none; nut, one; bridge, one*; tailboard\none*; button for tallboird, oni*; string\nft * tailboard, one, guard for string,\none; sound post, one; strings, four;\npeek's, four; total, sixty-nine. Thrci\nkinds of wood are used\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdmaple, pine\nand ebony. Maple Is used for the bat k\ntli.* neck, tbe side pieces and then\nbridge. Pine ic used for the be'ly, ll.'\nbur, the coins and block*.', the side linings and the sounding post. 1\nIs iie-\"d for the finger board,\nand   other  parts.\nSMALL-BUM LUMBER C0.,M\nMANUFACTURERS  OF\nirlr9 Cedar  and  Spruce\nPhonea No. 7 and 87\/.\nN O\ntail hi\nMadcap Princesses.\nThe three princesses al   Ihe courl\nof  Louis XIV. delighted  In  practical]\nlokes and    were   for   e ver   In  sonii\nscrape or other.  One night at Trian 1 i\nthey procured a petard and explodi\nii beneath the window of monsii ui 1\nbedchamber.   Once   when   the eoui '\nwas at Marly the* odor of ail exi 1 e .\niiuily pungent tobacco was wal     i 1\nthe king's nostrils as be was on th\npoint of retiring to rest, whii li, upo \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ninquiry being made, was found Lo pro\nceed from tho apartments of Mme. d\nChartres,  where she  and   her sisteti\nwere  smoking  pipes   borrowed   fr*...\nthe Swiss guard.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFrom 11. Noel \\\\ 11*\nliams'  \"A   ltose of  Savoy.\"\n\\ Chinese Joke.\nThis is a sample of tho jok?s tb 3\nlike in China:\nA courier, bearing importrnl die*\npatches, was givn a liors\" and told\nto make all possible speed towai 1\nhis destination. ?ome time ufterwarej\nhe was found in the road, walking an,i\npushing his horse before lilm.\n\"Why In tbe world aro you doing\nthat?\"  he  was  asked.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOh,\" be said. \"I reQected, and I\ncame to the conclusion that we shou'ei\nmake more speed on six feet than v.s\npossibly cculd 01 four.\"\nMouth American Oil Birds.\nOne of the miraal curiosities t.i\nPoulh Amerhan is the \"oil bird,\" 01\nquacharo, ll breeds in roeky caves or\nthe mainland, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd I one of Its favoriif\nhaunts Is the ii-lau.l of Trinidad, li\nlays its eggs In a nest made of nitiel\nand the yoina birds are prodlsioiisl.,\nfat The natives melt the fat dOWU\nin clay pots and produce from It a\nkind of butter. The caves Inhabited\nby the birds un usually accessing\noiily from Hie sea, and the hunting ol\nthem Is sometimes an exciting sport\nItnw nml Boll. I Milk.\nHaw milk and boiled milk are ve.j\n1 different roods. The casein of ruw\nI milk, unless modified so that il will\nI not form bard and large curds, OlTeri\n: serious difficulties In digestion thai\nI are not present lit boiled milk.\nAcre Font of Water.\nAn \"acre fool\" of water is equlvei\nloot to 43,.'i60 cubic feet and Ib the\nquantity required to cover an acre t.i:\nthe depth of one foot. The term ! =\ncommonly used tn connection witi.\nsiorage   for   irrigatlo. .\nSwlngins Electric Lights.\nLlectrlc lights suspended by the\nfamiliar twlBted cord can be protected\nngatnBt injurious vibrations by honk\nIng the ends of a spiral spring Inu\nthe cord, slacked for a short distaii \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nto permit Ibis to be done.\nliOve'i Song.\nLove': song, Is all the sweeter if n\nman Is 1 bin      reach the high notes cl\nthe wage rcale.\nWEEK   DAY   SERVICE   First   car  leaves\n5:30 a.m., wilh hourly service throughout day\neii.   To accomm 'date ilie \"rush hour\" t.ii!'r;c ::-\nWestminster at 8 a.m. and 5 p.m., thes    spociu\nfor the return trip one hour later,\nSUNDAY\n., with hou\nbom\nSERVICE    I\"\ni'i   t  car leav ps  New\nIlu ,. after until 11:30\nWestminster\np.m.\nat 8:30\nammirsts^s ;y mans;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdragsw 'rare en\nG. IT. P. STEAMSHIPS\nEvery Monday at 1- midnight\nto Prince Rupert and Granby\nUny.\nEvery Thursday at 1\" midnight  to  Prince  Rupert.\nEvery Saturday at 12 midnight to Victoria and Seattle.\nThursday, Feb. 5, at 12 midnight to Skidegate. Ikeda, Queen\nCharlotte City, etc.\nMonday. Feb, 9, at 12 midnight\nto M'assett and Stewart.\nW.   E.  Duperow,  G A.P.O.     H. G.\n527   Granville   St.,   Vancouver.\nSmith, C.P.  & T.A.\nPhone  Sey. 8134.\nBUILDERS AND CONTRACTORS.\nOur Interior Finish Is manufactured from timber specially selected for Flat Grain.\nWe aro also specializing In Fir Doors with Veneered Punels,\nwhich arc better in construction, more beautiful and no more ox\npensive than  the old  solid raised panel doors.\nGet our prices before placing your orders.\n\"THE FRASER R1VEr1\\\/1ILLS\"\n, CANADIAN  WESTERN  LUMBER  CO.,  LTD.)\nLocal Sales Department, Phone 890.\n*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd> O   Box 14 Dally News Bldrj\nJ.  T.   Bim.METT'S  PRINT  8HOP\nJOB   PRINTING\nof all kinds.\nPtl'dS right    Rstlsfacllon cuaranteed\n60 McKenzie 8t\nGILLEY BROS., LIMITED\nPhonra 16 sr.el  te 002 Columbia Btreet W.\nWholesale nnd retail dealers ln the famous Comox steam and\nfurnace coal. A ton of this coal wlll, without doubt, boil more water\nthan  any other coal on  the market.\nWe also have a limited supply or Old Wellington (Ladysmith)\ncoal for Stove and grate.\nWe carry a good stork of building material, Including Vancouver\nbrand of Portland Cement. This cement i-i being u.seel by thi! l>o*\nminion and Provincial Governments nnd nil the larpe corporations\nand contractors in the. province. It is ground very fine and is very\nuniform. Hard wall plaster, lime, sand, gravel, crushed rock, vitrified\nsewer pipe, drain tile, common and pressed brick, fire clay and fire\nbrick. ,,*,v*^\nAlteraiion cf Schedule en Interurban Line between\nNew Westminster and Vancouver via Burnaby Lake\nEFFECTIVE   MONDAY,   JAN.   19.     SUBJECT   TO   CHANGE\nWITHOUT   NOTICE.\nfn and after Monday, January 19, an alteration will he mail.* In\nthe schedule of the \"Burnaby Lake\" interurban llne whereby the cars\nwill hereafter leave either terminus at \"half past the hour\" Instead\ni [ on the even hemr as formerly. The new schedule will operate as\nfollow s:\nNew   Wi .tniiiister  at\n*;:,:, . .r   .til :30\ni irs leave New\nleaving  Vancouver\nimiliSH LCtlioUJ.A ELECTRIC iiAIi.WAY COMPANY\nGrand Trunk Pacific\nPassenger trains leave Prince\nRupert, Wednesdays and Saturdays at 10 aim. for Terr.i-:*.),\nHazelton and Sniithers. Mixed\nservice beyond to Roso Lake\nStage to Fort Fraser,\nGRAND   TRUNK   RAILWAY.\nDouble trac, fast trains, modern\nequipment, through service chi*\nohbo to .Montreal, Ileiston anel\nNew York,\nWe represent all Trans-Atlantic Steamship lines.\nThrough tickets via any llne to Chicago\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGrand\nTrunk beyond\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLet us submit an itinerary for your\nconsideration. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY  6, 1914.\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS.\n\ufffd\ufffdto(  seven\nWhen Run Down\nin physical condition it ia usually because the action of the\norgans of digestion has become irregular or defective.\nThen there is need for a safe and speedy medicine to relieve\nthe ills which occasionally depress even the brightest and\nstrongest The one remedy you may take and feel safe with is\nBEECHAM'S PILLS\n(Tho Large.! Sale of Any Mcdicin. In ilie World)\nThe first do3e givci speedy relief in sick-headache, biliousness, constipation, lack of appetite, heartburn, dyspepsia,\nand lasting improvement follows the timely use of this favorite and reliable home remedy. You will become healthier\nand stronger, and more cheerful if you let Beecham's Pilb\nPick You Up\nDir.cl.oo.wllh .vary Iv,, point Iba way to hullo and are e.peei.lly T.lo.hl. to wamaa.\nI rcpnreJ only I \/ rhooi.. Boccham. St. Mel.,,-., l-.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,<*i*.hire. V.ntl.iio. ^^\nJold everywhere la (..null and U. S. America,    ln boic. 2S cent.\ntillty of  Staaf and  some of the sup-   this sentiment that made Baron Honde\npored republicans is a question. Tbat such a favorite, and it is on this ae-\n| there is a rival to Gustav with a very ! count   that   the   Conservative   party,\nj strong  following  in   the Conservative ; which   might   naturally   be   expected\npatty and supported generally hy the   to be a defender of the monarchy, ls\ni aristocracy of the cojntry was proved | listlesB and cold toward (lustav. From\nThrone of Sweden\nHangs in the Balance\nsome ten years ago. Baron Honde, a\nlineal descendant of tho old Scandinavian kings, and a man of great\nwealth and prestige abroad, was at\nthe head of a conspiracy that threatened to remove King Oscar from the\nI throne. Though a member of the an-\n\\ icent aristocracy, Uaron Bonde was\nla radical In politics, and thus might\nI have counted upon tho support of\ntwo parties In the house. However,\nihe movement or tronsplracy that aimed at placing him upon the throne of\nSweden was Ill-timed. Tho trouble\nwith Norway and the subsequent division of the dual monarchy drew attention in other directions, and the\nplot failed. Whether Bonde waa the\noriginator of the conspiracy or whether his name was used without his\nauthority Is a matter upon which\nSwedes differ.\nAn Unpopular King.\nWhile King (iustav if a faithful and\ni conscientious monarch, he lacks the\n' elements of popularity. I'. is said\nI that he takes a German rather than\n| a Scandinavian view of his position\n; aud of affairs generally. He is more\n| than suspected of bnlug of milltaris*\n| inclinations.   What is called personal\nthe Socialists, of course, he can expect no support, and the- Liberals are\nie'd by a man who ls reputed to be\nhis enemy. So It would not be at all\nstartling to read in the papers some\nmorning that over night Sweden has\nbi en declared a republic.\nStructed,\" said Magistrate Kingsford\n\"and I Impose a fine of $25 to cover\nthe two charges; and if the premises\nare net cleaned to the satisfaction of\nthe Inspector la a week he can lay\nanother charge. I hope there, will be\nno  more  obstruction.\"\nMACKENZIE FATHERS\nItfW DENIAL ACT\nSHOOK HER HAND\nBUT NO PET NAME\nHucband   Threatened   Health   Officer\nand Pays Fine in Court for Obstructing.\nToronto Feb. 5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"On his first visit\nhe entered without knocking and walked into the kitchen, frightened me.\nIle said 'It's all right child' then he\nsat dowu for half au hour. When he\nwub leaving he Bhook hands with me\nand wished me all kinds of luck.\"\nMrs. Leonard Parker, Mutton street,\nwas referring to Inspector Conroy of\nThat Norway will become a republic when the present king and Iub son\ndies is no news, but It had been supposed that Sweden would stand fast\nin her monarchical form of government. It appears, however, that Ous\nuv Is no more popular lit Sweden than\nis Haakon, and especially his English wife, in Norway, and that the\nnational legislature is not unlikely ut\nany time In the near future to pronounce in favor of a republic. The\nreasons for this are personal rather\nthan political. Sweden is a democratic country, its kind has few prerogatives that might be exercised to\nthe disadvantage of the nation, and\npractically any laws that the people\ndesire they can make. The fact that\nmore than one-quarter of the members in the lower house are Socialists is un Indication that the people\nfreely express their wlsJies at the\npolls.    Hut King (lustav appears to be\nSwedish parliament. Ther- are the\n60 Socialists mentioned. 100 Liberals\nand 70 Conservatives. The Socialists\nvote with the Liberals, and consequently the government ls Liberal.\nIts leader is Staaf, who is known to\n1 e on terms of enmity with the king,\nnot because Staaf is particularly opposed to the monarchy or to the king,\nbut because he believes that it the\npopular thing, Staaf being a thorough\nopportunist. Last summer when the\nking .*.as ill the government attempt\ned to disregard the constitutional provision that the crown prince shall be\nregent. A sensational quarrel was\nthe result, and the prime minister had\nto recede from his position, which\nwas. In fact. Indefensible, and assumed only because he believed that It\nwould he a popular thing to show enmity to the monarchy Had the king's\nillnet-si   not   been   of   so   alarming   a\nmagnetism he Ib absolutely devoid of.\nj He has neither the prand manner of\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd the  Kaiser  nor  the  geniality  of  the\nI late King F.dward. Lacking theBe por-\n* soral charms that have made many a. ,,     ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   ,,,,..,\n,i , , i      \ufffd\ufffd.    ti      the  medical health department when\nWorthless sovereign popular, he lacks: *^\nI also the record that might appeal tojshe BP\ufffd\ufffdko as above to Magistrate\n]the patriotism of his people. Hy high! Kingsford in the police court. Her\ni and   low   he   Is   blam-d,  jointly   with I ),U8band was on trial charged with ob-\nhis late father, for the loss of Norway, ami the Swedes feel this loss almost as keenly as tlm French feel the\nloss of Alsace-Lorraine. It is said\nthat Osc:ir showed too much weakness\nand the then crown prince too much\nstrength. It was the place of the\ncrown prince to bo conciliatory, and\nthe king to be firm, but the positions were reversed, with the result\nthat Norway was lost. That the Norwegians had little idea of complete\nseparation Is proved by the fact that\nthey offered to accept .any of Oscar's\nsons as king, an offer that was proud-\nIj  refused.\nOne of the Bernadottes.\nThere is also against the king the\nstructing a sanitary officer in the performance of IiIb duty and also with\nkeeping the Huron street premises in\naa  unsanitary condition.\nUnreciprocated Wishes.\nThe health officer denied calling\nthe lady a \"child\" but admitted shaking hands with her and extending\ngood wishes. His complaint was that\nwhen he went to Parker's house again\nto make an investigation Parker then\nthreatened to punch his head and also\nto shoot him, and incidentally shoot\neverybody in the health department.\nThis was doubtless due to what Mrs.\nParke..- had said of the former visit.\nOwing to the unfriendly attitude displayed toward him Conroy took a po-\nHumor and\nH*   Philosophy\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdr OVMCA\/t M. SMITH\nTHEJECRET.      w\nT^EtPING at It brings success.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   That's the secret, tut 1 uuess\nThat It matters nulit a lot,\nWhile you keep the matter hot,\nWSal II Is, my ?<>n. that you\nSlick to like a hunk ot glue\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nWhat It Is yoei pleli and choose\nNever from your mind to lose.\nIt you stick both night and day\nTo a scheme thut doesn't pay,\nHanging on \ufffd\ufffd Ith all your skill\nThough the Way is all uphill,\nNever letting griw the moss\nWhile you ligure up the loss\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nYou will soon be busted flat\nSticking to a thing like il.at.\nIf you stick serenely to\nAny cause that la not true.\nCaring not lr> list to ihnse\nWho its error might disclose,\nIte-lng stubb'.rn iu.= t to prove\nThat you cannet lorwaru move,\nVou will never srln, I tear.\nThough consistent year cy year.\nPick a prnlecl that will pay.\nThen unwearied by It stay.\nI'lclt a cause tnal's lust e'nd right\nAnd for it wltn vigor fight.\nKeeping at It unngs success,\nBut before we go In press\nHay we L.eg nl you to pick\n(something good lo whlcn to slick.\nMijht Take It Literally.\ncharacter, it is altogether likely that\ngrowing more unpoiiular every day. I at that time there might have been a ; of foreign stock that never sank its\nHe; has no following Kven the na* strong move to abolish the crown. j rootB deep into the country of his\ntive ariistocracy would fail to support ; A Rival for the Crown. j adoption, and the Swedish aristocracy,\nthe* throne If it were assailed. I     Whether   a   rival   claimant   to   the   though democratic  In many respects.\nThere  aro  three    parties    in    the I throne  is at  the bottom  of  the  hos-j has  an   intense  pride cf  race.    It  is\nfact that he is. after all, the descend\nant of one of Napoleon's generals, Her-1 liceman with him on his third visit\nnadotte, who was the son of a peasant, \"I admitted him on his second call.\"\nand throat upon the throne of Norway j said Mr. Parker in his defence, \"I\nand Sweden against the will of a con- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd told him that the next time he came\nepiered   pe-ople.    The present king  is | to   my   house  that  he   should   knock\nand   If  my  house  was  unsanitary  he\nshould not sit in the kitchen for half\nan  hour. He then told  me he  would\ncome as often as he wished.\"\n\"I   am  satisfied  the  men  were  ob-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd**\ufffd\ufffdSV*r\ufffd\ufffd\"v\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\npj-1 Dentists Seek Power to Prohibit Employment of Unregistered Practitioners\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSuggest Fine.\nVictoria, Feb, G\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Suppcrtlng the\nbill to amend the dentistry aot i\/it.ro\nduced several days ago in the legislature by F. J. MacKenzie, of Daltu.\n'a delegation of the dental profession\n,from Vancouver and Victoria waited\nion Sir Richard  McBride Tuesday.\nAmong those who were present at\nthe conference were the following\nmembers of the dental council of\nBritish Columbia: Dr. Mlnogue, Dr.\nBrighouse, Dr. McSween (New Weat-\n|minster), and the following practising\n,dentists from Vancouver: Dr. Spencer, Dr. Currie, Dr. Black and Dr.\nThompson. The delegates from Vancouver island Included Dr. Griffiths.\nDr. Burgess, Dr. Henderson, Dr.\nProcter, Dr. Harper, Dr. Lewis Hall\nand Dr. Tanner.\n| C. F. Davie, who introduced the\ndelegates, stated that the objects *cf\nthe bill \"were to prohibit tho employment of unqualified men or Use\noperating of men under contract by\n| qualified dentists.\" He said that the\nexisting act did not preclude men\n; trom practising dentistry who had\npassed the necessary examinations\nand had not appeared before the government hoard.\n1 Dr. Minogue explained that a man\nemploying unregistered men under\nI tiie present act was exempt from\nprosecution unless he had made a\n| written contract with his assistant,\naccording to the decision recently\nhanded down by the judges of the\ncourt. He said it was difficult to\nprove the existence of such a written\ncontract; and he urged that the present act should bo enforced in order\nto prevent such an anomaly.\nIt waa urged that the penalty for\npracticing without a license should bs\nincreased until the maximum fine was\n| $400, or three months' imprisonment.\nDelegates also pointed out the present difficulty of getting evidence.\nThey were forced to employ people*\nto visit the unqualified dentists in\norder to secure a case against them.\nThe delegates urged that all premises should be open to access by government inspectors at all times, and\nthat if tliiu -was done It would 01081?\n\"John, yon shouldn't have told blm    \"*l \ufffd\ufffd u\"\ufffd\ufffd w<18 \"u,,c ,l wuu'a \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \"f\n'\"'   ','       \ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd the   doors   against   many   unqualified\nto dreip In any time,\nWhy not, my dear? He Is au old\nfrieDrt. That was no more than simple hospitality.'\nmen.\nSir Richard McBride. in thanking\nthe delegation for their visit, said\nthat the provisions of the act would\nIt Is Service That Backs Up\nAdvertising M<>st Successfully\nBut he bas Just bought a uew By  have the  most  careful  consideration\nlog machine.\"\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1.;\nof the executive, and that the professional men affected would be given\na full opportunity of airing their\nviews before the bill passed to It*\nthird reading.\nIn a very real sense every business is a\npublic service enterprise. A man who supplies commodities to a community, whether\nthat community is a neighborhood, a city, or\nthe whole country, prospers only in so far\nas he subserves the interests of his patrons.\nThis sounds elementary, but an amazing\nnumber of men are ignoring this doctrine\nin actual practice.\nIn the past few years the public has\nbeen swinging to this view of not only\nlarge enterprises, like railroads and public\nutility corporations, but of smaller institutions! The merchant, large or small, who\ndoes not sense the full meaning of this\nchanged viewpoint is doing himself serious\ninjustice and is \"in\" for many a harassing\nexperience.\nThat the more progressive business\nmen everywhere are becoming more fully\naware of their public service functions is\nshown by such phrases as these which are\noccurring in greater and greater numbers\nin advertisements: \"Our store is your\nstore.\" \"We pay the. clerks for your service.\" It is only by fully satisfying you that\nthey can satisfy us.\"\nMany a business that is selling excellent\ngoods and observing all the conventional\nrules of good merchandising is falling short\nof its greatest success just because the directing intelligence fails to comprehend this\nprofoundly significant fact of business as a\npublic service. Regarding the public as a\nbody that exists for his convenience, the\nmanager keys his whole enterprise accordingly. Some day he wakes up to the sorrowful fact that for some reason or other he is\n\"out of tune.\"\nA vivid understanding of his true position as a director of a Public Service Enterprise will enable anyone who is now groping\nfor the mysterious reason which will explain\nhis lack of complete success to clarify his\nproblem, will energize the business anew\nand will raise unsatisfatcory service\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdand\nperhaps goods\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd that lose buyers into satisfactory service that keeps buyers and adds\nto them still others.\nAdvertising that is reinforced by a\ndynamic policy of public service is unassailable. It is practically competition proof,\ngiven a measure of experience and judgment in direction.\nPleating the Kiddias,\n\"1 am so wurrle-d.\" ' \\f\n\"West's tbe matter?\"\t\n\"I am afraid Ueorgle will go skating. |\nI  promised blm  I'd take him to the   HER0 OF ROMANCE GUEST\nmatinee It be would keep off tbe Ice.\"   I AT GOVERNMENT HOUSE\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'l did bettei than tbat with my boy.\" > \t\n\"What did you do':\" |    Ottawa, Feb. 5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe second son or\n\"I'romlsed Him I  wouldn't take blm   the Earl of Antrim, Hon. Angus Mc-\nto tbe dentist tt he wouldn't go skat- BonneU, who for some weeks has been\n, (a guest at Government house of their\n1 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Royal Highnesses, the Duke and the-\n_.    _       -iiattatS; I Duchess ot ConnauRht.  was secretly\nThe True Condit.sn. marrled on December 13 at Evanston.\n\"1 suppose that you like those tbat   1U   ^ the daughl\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdr 0, Henry Arthur\nhave done a lot fot you.\" | jonegi trae famous English playwright.\nOh. yes, but I can't say that l like | her full name being Ethelwyn Sylvia\ntbem as well as some other folks.\"\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWhat other folks, tor instance?\"\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThose J HiiDb I msy be able to induce lo do u lot mete lor me.'\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS\nArthur Jones, she being an actress, at\npresent appearing in Chicago.\nThe  news only  leaked out yesterday at Government House and much\n  surprise was expressed at It    Mr. Me-\n. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. \". \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Donnell is thirty-one yearSW agw and\nSupprtiseJ virtn , hag  fof Fomp yearg bepn operating a\n\"TTby tin* uilario.is laughter; fru\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  r..n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdh  ln  Br(t|sn Columbia near\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdL IH le .uusbt bis thuuit) III Ilie door J ya,.-.. ..,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd..     m*ss Arthur Jones at thu*\nsml made il lew remarks.\" | ,.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,, 0f i,Pr marriage was playing in a\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBut that bMppened an bonr ago.''       Chicago theatre and    the   ceremony\n-Sure, but I di.in t dare laugb uutll j took place very quietly In All Souls\"\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdaf tei be bad left tbe bouse.'\nAftar Lenej Practice.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdShe iu taking lung e-ir.auie.-J.\niii** third wile.'\n\"Others ail divorcedV\n\" I es.'\n\"He ought to know bow\nwlte by Cils time.\"\nDreadful. <*\n\"It wn* .juKe a tragedy.\"\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWhat?\"\n\"til-i baby born in tbat lainily, and\nit is tongue tied.\"\n! church,  Evans-ton.    After  staying    *\ni few weeks in (\\iieago with his bride.\nHon. Mr. McDonnell came on to Ot-\n\ufffd\ufffdJhe Is tawa l0 sta-v at Government House for\nI a while, where he is a great favorite.\nI Being a nephew of the late C.overnor-\ni General Earl (irey. he visited here of-\nI ten during the former's regime aud of-\n}it * i ten passed through on the way to tha\n| seat of his family. In County Antrim.\ni Ireland.\nIt Is expected within a few days that\nI Hon. Mr.  McDonnell  will    leave    for\nChicago and take his bride either   to\nEngland or to his -ranch  In    British\nColumbia.\nHad to Be Going.\nThey are not oeerlnyeu lo leise\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nlou nolle e how tr.cy naw auU hem\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nBijI In their act Hit Manchus clinose\nThe only co.irsa that's Ittt toi it.nu.\nPERT PARAGRAPHS.\nXt> man Is its good as he thinks bs\nts nor ns bud as tie would like to be.\nWe are a long time learning tbe art\nof living sud ncmetlmes miss it altogether, but dyiug just seems to couie\nnaturally.\nHope springs eternal. It Is true, but\nsometimes it falls to score a good record.\nThe world Is always looking fur\nsomething to laugb uL That's wby it\nnotices n lot ot us.\nA lover bas the sympathy of most\npeople. Tbey all know what Is coming to him.\nThe devil li often blacker than tic I.*\nPainted, especially wbeu uc paints red.\n\\ou can't help everybody, but then\nthe fellow who Is -striking ton for a\nlenutt dnesu't want you to do that.\nIt Is o good thing to forgive your\nenemies, but don t let that give tbeu\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi chance to get you agalu.\nAlways work for a good cause, but\ndon't let It work you.\nTbe mnn who puts bis pride In bis\npocket often (beers It up by soon after\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdlipping a bit ot colu Id with It\nThe man wbo Is long on pstlroce\nJtlier ban all he wants or nothing\nGODV OF BABE IS\nFOUND IN A TRUNK\nToronto, Feb. 5.-~Dr. Gilmour opened an inquest last night on the body\nof a newly born baby found in a trunk\nin a room occupied by Mrs. Spence.\nat a house in Mimlco. The inquest\nwas adjourned until Feb. 16.\nMrs. Spence is a widow, 29 years of\nnpe. She lives with her sister-in-law\nand it is said\" that on Wednesday she\nappeared to be unwell and on being\nquestioned said fiat she had given\nbirth to a child and had put the body\niu a trunk. The Infant was taken\nfrom the trunk 24 hours after it wast\nplaced  there.\nThe Inquest Is expected to show\nwhether the child was alive when born.\nThe case was reported to the county\nauthorities.\nMrs. Spence Is now In a private hospital and Dr. Gilmour says sh\ufffd\ufffd is in\na serious condition. A port mortem\nexamination will be held on the hedy\nand this will reveal the cause of\ndeath.    .\nARCTIC  EXPEDITION\nWITH   PASSENGERS\nCapt. Munn Will Book Them at $1003\nPer Capita.\nToronto, Feb. 5.- A naval Arctic ex\npcditlon on which he offers to take\nr\/assengers at the price of about $10u\ufffd\ufffd\nper capita la planned hy Capt. .lenry\nToko Munn, who is well known in a*\nnumber of Canadian cities. His pro-\n|e>cted Itinerary Includes a visit to a\nmysterious tribe of Eskimos ruryor yet\nseen hy white man. It Is prob,U>r<-\nthat the Dominion government will bo\nasked to assist the project by a money\ngrant.\n\"I am going to Scotland shortly to\ncomplete arrangements and to look\nover several vessels,\" said the captain. He added that more than hair\nthe passenger list for the trip bus al\nready teen filled.\nI\ni PAC\"*:   EIGHT\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS.\nFRIDAY,   FEBRUARY \ufffd\ufffd,  1914.\nSPORTS\nlOlUlbM COMING\n'ontinned from Page Five.)\nthe Rowing club, Uie probable champions, g \ufffd\ufffd .\nManager llolb' will trot out the\nsame team as performed service for\nthe l!< avers this season although he\nis likely to give the younger Cunningham boy a fair trial lu order to he\n'prepared for Tiieselay's game against\nFraser Mills. Ted Sutherland is also\ngetting back into condition and may\nposBfl lv set into the fray for one\nperiod. In Sutherland, Cunningham\nand Wright the Heavers have three\nexcellent spare men, capable of putting up a good argument when necessary.\nTonight's game will start at 8:15.\nskaters being allowed on the ice at\n9:15 o'clock.. No matter which, team\nwins the city league championship\ngame at the rink next Tuesday, every\nHub in the circuit will combine in\ngiving their support to do\nwinners when-they go after the Savage trophy, -Xest-erday i'resident F.\nI Lynch and Secretary Andrew got\nin toutfn witli Uowan Macgowan. the\nlocal trustee of the sup, ami requested th-.i arrangements be made to allow New Wentuiiusu'r to challenge\nfor tin- troj.i.v against the wlrnera\nof the Vancouver league.\nat night Whether Vancouver will hit\na winning Mreak again tonight remains  to  be see n.\nA strong delegation intends accompanying the Royals to the Burrard city\nfe.r t'.ie purpose of assisting in every\nway a possible victory. Every meni-\nhejr of the itoyai liuei-up-is in the best\nof shape, not a man getting any bumps\nworth speaking of in Tuesday's game.\nWestminster has to .win to keep in\ntbe running for the championship and\nlhe players are determined to do their\nnan in keeping the Fraser city in the\nlimelight.\nHugh Lehman will probably retain\nthe same formation as featured Tuesday's game. Ran McDonald taking the\ncentre position from Mallen, who will\ngo on the left boards. Eddie Oatman\non the right wing gives the Royals a\npowerful trio in the way of attach\nand if Tobin, Johnson and Rochon can\noffer any good sized assistance in the\nway of protection to Lehman, a Westminster victory  will be in order.\nShould the Royals repeat in tonight's game, Victoria will take the\nlead in the race together with having\nthe advantage of playing on their own\nIce next Tuesday after a good long\nrest.\nArrangements were completed yesterday by Manager Savage of the\narena to have bulletin reports of tho\nVancouver game announced at tiie\nrink during the progress of tho ami*\nii ur contest The News will also rr-\nreive bulletins as to the results by\nperiods,\nMIEN CUP GAMES\nON VANCOUVER ICE\ni\nCrucial Game Pttws\ufffd\ufffdn thf Royals and\nTerminals Causing  Much\nInterest,\nflr.vi-.'s v.i:.'i their hacks to the wall\nthe Royals are nicely to bit a considerable clip in Vuiii'ouier this evening\nwhen they tackle the Terminals for\nilie second time this week. Following\na lone winning, streak the Terminals\nstruck lhe breakers U) this city last\nTui sd iy and gpl a taste for the* fi:. t\ni i.,. on li cal Ice of a g iod old unadulterated lii'l.iii'.;.\nPi i- to coming to this city the Terminals were called uii.'ii to cinch the\nchampionship hands down but tbe\nprevious defeat banded out by Vancouver has com\/psUed, the supporters\nof the Millionaires to figure that the\nconsecutive victory stuff was working\non the men, just like Rube Marquard's\nstring  of   victories  kept   him  awake\nMonarchs Now Tied With Victorias in\nWinnipeg Amateur Race\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMade\nGreat  Finish.\nWinnipeg,  Feb.  5.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTho    Monarchs j\njumped   to even  terms  with .the  Vic* j\nti rias Tor the leadership of the Win*\nnlpeg  amateur  hockey   league   Allen \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ncup race, bj defeating the Victorias\nat   the   Auditorium   tonigiit.   by   the j\nscore or 0 :i after a fast game of hoc-)\nkey.   The contest was a thriller from j\nstart to finish with the Monarchs having tho best of Ihe play, but the Vic-,\ntOrlas holding on like grim death to;\navert  defeat and  it  was only  in  the\nlast   i*\".   minutes   tbat  the   Monarchs\nunpaged   to   assert   their   supremacy,\nand lake the game.\nStanding or Teams.\nW. L*.\nMonarchs   3 2\nVictorias  3 2\nWinnipegs   1 3\nGoals\nV. A.\n29   22\n26 24\n1*    25\nAt the Theatres\nAT THE EDISON.\n\"The Wreck,\" a story told In a\nthrilling manner by pictures, is the\nchief attraction at the* Edison for today, it is a railroad story and in\nbrief is as follows:\nCarlyle,    the    railroad    president,\nvisits his old friend, Hamiltcn, and U\nso    impressed    with    Richard,    the\nfriend's  son,  that  ho offers  him    an\nopening in the railroad business. Carlyle  notes the  marked  difference between  him,  a  fine,  manly  young  fellow, and  Herbert,  his    cssTn    son,    a\nlui'er-do-wtll   at   college.    Herbert   is\nin delrt and writes home for money.\nThe railroad president refuses his request.    In desperation the boy writes\nto  Genevieve,    his attractive    young I\nstepmother.    She confides in Richard.\nHerbert calls  home secretly  and  his j\nstepmother promises to help him. Car* I\nlyle, comes lu  and   sternly  demands I\nto known lo whom she was talking.\nShe cannot tell him,\nA(.note arrives for Genevieve.    She |\ntells Carlyle It is from a girl.    It  is |\nfrom   Herbert,   who   wishes  to   meet j\nRichard   that   evening   to   get   the\nmoney.    Genevieve gees  to acquaint\nRichard   of   the   appointment   and   is '\nfollowed  by  her    husband.    He    witnesses  the meeting  and  hears  Gene\nVieve say, \"On   the  bridge tonight  at\neight.\"    Carlyle meets Richard at the\nbridge, seizes him by the throat, and\npushes him    into    the    water.    John\nSquires, a surly, cowardly bully, who\nhas  been discharged from    the    railroad, sees the deed. As Carlyle sneaks\nback Squires insolently steps out and '\npoints   meaningly toward    the    lake.\nCarlyle   is   forced   to   re-employ   him \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\non   the  railrtad.     Herbert   coming to,\nni' et  Richard, sees his father. When\nquestioned   lie  tells  the  truth  about\nthe appointment.    Carlyle can hardly ,\nbear the weight of his sorrow.\nCarlyle goes west, away from the\nscene of his crime. Hi3 son Herbnrt\naccompanies blm, Engineer SquireB,\ndriving ths westbound express, standi\nintoxicated, swaying from side to side'\nin the eab. Squires attacks the fire\nman and tries to throw him from the\nwindow. While this is happening, tho\ntrain tears on toward a runaway en\ngine several miles down ths track. In\nthe head-on collision which follows,\nthe cars are thrown from the track\nand splintered Into pieces; clinched\nlocomotives earc demolished, belching\nfire and steam, passengers are hurled\nfrom seats and crushed in debris.\nCarlyle searches for his son. He\n(mils him among the dead. liaising\nhis eyes heavenward, his epression\ntells he realizes tbat liis punishment\nis the retributive justice', \"A life for\na life.\"\nSpecial Program For Today\nVitagraph Special Feature\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHarry Morcy\nand Anita Stewart in\nSpecial Feature in 3 Parts\nCarlyle's horrible jealousy and vengeance is expiated in the death\ncf his son, who is killed in a terrible railroad wreck, for which his\ncrime is answerable.\nSONG BY MR. P. J. MURPHY.\nEdison   Photoplay\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBarry   O.'Moore in the Drama\nON THE GREAT STEEL BEAM\nOne of the most sensational scenes ever attempted. Shows a\nman hanging by his hands from a swinging beam seven stories\nabove the ground.\nVitagraph Comedy\nLillian Walker, WaTlie Van and\nFlora Finch in\nCutey's Vacation\nAnxious to be a hero, he rushes into the smoke-filied building\nsn<l rescues the wrong woman. The laughs that grr.*t him add to\nhis chagrin.\nTONIGHT!\nFriday, Saturday and Saturday Matinee.\nouse\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdZ*B4\nCOLONIAL COMPANY\nPresenting the Farce Comedy with Music, Entitled\n\"My Uncle from New York\"\nComplete in Two Acts\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBy Request\n6--TANG0 DANCERS-6\nPrices: 15c, 25c, 35c Phone 961.\n\"MY UNCLE FROM NEW YORK\"\nCOLONIALS' BEST OFFERING\nHarry L. Sione's Colonial company's\nconception of the musical farce\ncomedy entitled \"My Uncle from New-\nYork,\" was displayed last evening a'\nthe opera house to a large audience,\nThe comedy work of Raymond Bell\nand Dave Caston v.as well received\nand kept the audience in one continual laugh from start to finish. Clo\nTiger and Arline McDonagh are de-\nBervlng great credit in their supper)\nU!3 ab.iity i'j making the corned v\nsituations go with the dash and vim\nI which furnished a round cf pleasure\nnot soon to be forgotten, Cln-id.*\nOrchard  ar, the*  uncle had no trouble\n' In holding up his end as a good-, kind\nuncle, who takes things just as they\n: happen to come and, of course, i-i of\nla forgiving nature.    The chorus girls\n| loi.i^i d    their   prettiest   and   danced\n, their  b'*st.\n\"My Uncle from New York\" will\ncontinue tonigiit and Saturday with a\n|special Saturday matinee for ladies\nand children.\nFAMOUSE SEERRESS IS\nCOMING   HERE   NEXT   WEEK\nThe    skeptics    who    have    forever :\nlaughed at the powers of mental tele \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nj palhy or thought transferrence being .\nj used   for   solving   mure!, r   mysteries i\niand   tlie   like   will   have  an  excellent ]\n! . ppcrtunlty    to    witness  one  of  the\nj greatest  demonstrations    along    that\nI line ever seen  here.    Some time ago\nI Mme.   I'earl   Tangle y,   seeress.   ment- |\nj aliet en*   whatever  you   care  to  torm :\nI her, succeeded in locating seven writ-\nten documents, which when produced;\nas evidence against John   Wilson    at;\nConnersville,   Indiana,   convicted   him*\nof the murder cf his wife.    This rase\nis extremely important, because of the I\nfact that  suspicion  fell npem   Wilson,'\njBtill  all  efforts    of    detectives    from i\ni Chicago.   Indianapolis   and  Cincinnati!\n; failed to revenl scything after s thri*e :\nmonths search. It was then Ihat Mme.\niT\ufffd\ufffdngl;y,   who   was   appearing    st    a\nleeal   thfstr*.  In    Connersville,    was\n.celled upon to try her powers in thp\nI ess*.     This   famous   woman   appear*\n.lure all ne\ufffd\ufffdt  week with the Tangley\n'stock company at th\ufffd\ufffd opera hcusj and\nwill answer any  questions that anyone  wishes  to  r.*lt.    If  you   wan'   to\nknow of your pait, present cr future\nsimply  write your questions at  home\non nny pnp<*r. take tt  to thn theatre\nand   she   will   1 < 11   you   all.   t-U   you\nyour  name  without  even  aeelng    the\npapers upon which you have written.\n[This srems like a very forccable te?'\nand many will ta',-e advantage of it.\nThe   Tangley   stock   company   will\nrhanqe their program nightly, opetiin*\n(Monday night In \"Tb' Divorce Cure.\"\nI  society drama    from    the p'n    of\nj William Oillett,\nMOVING\nPICTURES\nTicntinuous from 2 to 11 p.m.\n10c-c\\tlSeats-10c\nSee\nOur\nWindow\nfor a showing of J\nNew Enirolderlesi\nand Valenciennes <\nI.aces. Something)\nfor   every   need.\nlhe New Westminsterrus'\n\\ArriVed\n AND FRASER VALLEY\t\nDepartment   Store\nTELEPHONE NO. 73.\nNew cottom crepe*\nlu plain shades\nof blue, green and\npink; also striped\neffects. Price\nper\nyard\n25c\nBuy House Furnishings Now\nWinter will scon be over.  With spring come the usual demands for new Furni-\n-ture, Carpets, Linoleums, Electrical Goods, Curtains and Kitchen Utensils.   A\n\\isit to this store will convince you that we are in a position to supply your*\nevery need at prices which will secure a nd hold your patronage.\nHn-\nde-\nFebruary Furniture\nSale\nSURFACE  OAK   DRESSER, $6.90.\nA   well   made   nnd   neatly   finished   Dresser,   has\nthree  large drawers  and   Uritish   bevel   plate   mirror.   This is a rare bargain and is usually sold at\n$10.25.\nCOMBINATION   SURFACE   OAK   DRESSER,   $7.75.\nIs fitted wit i cne long drawer and one extra deep\ndrawer and swing-to doer cupboard. A regular $1:1.50\nvalue.\nQUARTER CUT OAK DRESSER, $14 50.\nA Dresser of superior quality in quarter cut oak.\ngolden finish; has two top drawers and two long\ndrawers; has a large bevel plate mirror of British\nmanufacture. This is the best value we are offering\nin the dresse lrinc and is sold by other dealers for\n$24.0p.\nQUARTER CUT OAK  BED, $24.00.\nThis is a  solid  oak  Bed  in  golden  finish  and  in\nthe ,1-foct size only.    A very handsome piee*\" of furniture  iu  Old  Colonial  design.    Regular  priee*  was\n$39.80,\nWHITE   ENAMEL   IRON   BEDS,  $2.25.\nThe best bed value ever offered;  with brass trim-\nniiiu-s;   all  sizes;   good  condition.    Regular  $3.75.\nLIBRARY  TABLES.\nIn solid oak, fumed or golden finish; medium sizes;\nmodern styles.\nSEA  GRASS CHAIRS.    $3.90.\nOnly Half a Dozen Left.\nHALL STANDS, $11\/00.\nIn   solid   oak.   golden   finish;   cupboard,   seat   anil\nmirror.    A $15.50 value.\nSOLID OAK   EXTENSION  TABLE, $15.25.\nSix-foot Extension Table; in stolid oak; fumed\nish: octngon shaped pedestal; round top: a neat\nBign and the beet value ever offered. We can supply this in golden or early English if desired. A\nregular $21.00 value.\nSET   OF   SOLID   OAK   CHA-RS,   $16 25.\nConsists Of one *\\rm Chair and five Small Chairs;\nIn fumed oak finish; with genuine leather pid seats;\nth:* best srlirl oak chair en the market for t.h\" money.\nCi-unl  price* Is  $21.00.\nSOLID   OAK   BUFFET,   $17.50.\nIn fumed finished st'lid oak, with one large linen\ndrawer, two cutlery drawers and  double door cupboard; has genuine British bevel plate mirror and is\nwell finished.    The regular price, on this is $22.60.\nMORRIS  CHAIR   FOR  $10.50.\nIn  fumed  cr golden  finished solid  oak  frame and\nloose velour cushions.    The old price was $15.00.\nSPECIAL   VALUE.\nBrass  Bed.  Spring and  Sanitary  Cotton   Felt   Mattress;   all   guaranteed.    Complete\nfor   \t\nKITCHEN  CUPBOARD  FOR $9.25.\nIn  golden  oak  finish;   is  36  inches  wide and   11\ninches deep;  has double glass doors in top \"ection,\nand  two drawers and  l.'.rgc cupboard  below.  This\nIs a regular $12.50 value.\nCOMPLETE   KITCHEN   CAB-NET   FOR   $9.25.\nFitted with two bins and two drawers, and has\nglass door China cabinot In upper seclion; comes\nin  golden  or natural  finish.\nKITCHEN  QUEEN  FOR $3.85.\nFitted with two bins and two drawers.   This Is the\nmost, useful piece of kitchen furniture made, and is\nan extra good value.\nDROP-LEAF   TABLE   FOR   $4 00.\nStrong. wH-seesoned fir Table In golden or early\nEnglish finish; with square top\nKITCHEN TABLES FOR $1.78.\nSprue* Top; size of table Is 30x48 inches; same\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdiz\ufffd\ufffd. with drawers, $2.00.\nFebruary Carpet\nSale\nHEARTH   BUGS.\n* splendid Hug with an excellent appearance, and\nsoft to the tread. They are of good wearing quality\nand very suitable for bedrsoms or parlors; size 27\nby 54 Inches. Regular $1.26.\n8*1*   Price   \t\nAXMINSTER  RUGS.\nA v*ry heavy Axmlnster Rng with  fringed ends, in\ntriors nf fawns, reds and greens.    This Is a  rich-\nlooking rur and may be usexi with good effooMn nny\ni com.   Size 27 hy 1*54 Inches. Reg. $8.25,\nBa>   Prire   \t\n$21.75\nFebruaiy House Furnishing Sale\nThese Prices on Household Necessities Should Bring\nCrowds of Economical Buyers.\nSelf-Wringing  Mops;   regular 60c, for   40c\nDustlesa Oil Mops, each   $1.50\nSpring Mop Sticks;   regular 25c;   each 15e\nKnitted Mop Cloths;  large size;  reg. 20c. each..15c.\nIibre  Scrubs;   each    10c,  15c and 25c\nNail   Scrubs;    each     5c\nCorn   Brooms;   regular  60c  values,  each 40c\nLong Handled Hair Brooms;  reg. $1.00 for 75c\nRegular  $1.50  inr    96e\nRegular  $1.75 for    $1,25\nRegular $2-.2B for   $1.50\nBannister Brushes; each \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd25c, 35c, 50c and 75c\nGalvanized    Garbage   Cans;    tight   covers;    each.\nWire Carpet  Heaters;   regular 25c;   each 20c\nMagic Furniture Polish;  \"5c size at two for...25c\nMagic  Furniture   Polish;  EOo size;   each 35c\nBrass Wash Boards; 50c value for  40c\nGalvanized   Heavy  Bottom  Wash  Tubs;   four sizes;\nat    65e. 85c, $1 00 and $1.25\nStraight Galvanized Pails; each ..25c, 35c and 45c\nAdjustable  Folding  Irouing  Boards;   on  stand;   reg.\nfor    $1.50 and  $1 75\n$2.26 for   $1,75\nFour-fold Clothes Dryers; regular $2.25, for..$1.75\nOalvanlzed Wash Boilers; No. s or 9: each ....$1.45\nCopper  Bottom  Wash  Boilers;   reg. $1.75 and $2.00.\nfor    $1.00 and $1.25\nJaipanned  Dustpans.    Regular 20c, each 10c\nJapanned Fire .Shovels.   Regular 15c, each 10c\n10-quart   Retlnned  Dlshpans, each 35c\nJapanned  Flour  Tins.    25-lb;   size $1.25\n60-lb,   size     ji.fif)\n100 lh.  size    $2.25\nJapanned Bread Tins, each..$1.00, $1.25, $1.93, $1.75\nWire Waste Piper baskets. Hegular 60e., each 45c.\nUniversal Bread Mixers, each 4-loaf. $2.25; 8 loaf $2 75\nFebruary Electrical\nFixture Sale\nThe February House Furnishing Sale in the F>c\ntrr.il Depart ment will prove a boon 10 those desirous\ne.f having installed in i.cir ne*w homes the latest,\nand. at t'.ie same, time, the most moderately priced\nChandelier's procurable. Below we* offer a few sug*\ngestlons from cur beautiful slock of Electrical ( i;:::i\ndeliers:\nA five light fixture In antique brass Ith cast trass\nband, holding a moonstone ;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .- c bawl and fe-ur en-\ntle.'sed shades to match; regula $60. if AC rttfl\nSale   Price           $43.UU\nA four-light fix:;.'\", ir. ivory finish, with moonstone\n\ufffd\ufffd.uj.*> n.Kiues; conventional di signs; CQC f\\t\\\nrwgu.ar  $40.00.    Sale  Price ^UDiUU\nA sclid, polished, cast brass, five-light fixture, with\nsatin finish shades; a really beautiful piece of work\nmanship;  regular $45.00. CUE firt\nSale   Price    elVWiUU\nFive-light fixture; finished in v erdem, with frosted\nlanterns;  regular $;;5.00.    Sale QLOR f\\l\\\nA beautiful five-light fixtures in oak, with leaded\namber glass shades; regular $25.*0. C*f Q rtrt\nSale Price  \ufffd\ufffd!> I *3>.UU\nFive-light brush brass fixture; with cut star shades;\nKar.,17:B0-..8ale $f5.00\nFour-light Mission style fixture; in Thiteh brass, with\nfrosted shades; regular $16.00. C l>fl flA\nSale   Prloe    **? PU.UU\nThree-ltght Rngllsh deslga; silver CIO Eft\nfinished; regular $18.50.   Sale Price. ..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd** \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd%*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd#\nAad many others st lr\ufffd\ufffdw\ufffd\ufffdr figures, too sinneirous\nto mention.\nNothing Is Mors Suitable in a Dining Room than a\nWell Chosen Dome. We have Several in Various\nColors and Designs. We Call Ycur Attention Se\nJust a Few of Them:\n$1.00\nl.srge   Leaded   Class   Dome;   in\nreally a beauty; regular $25.fin.\nSaie Price \t\ngreen  and  nmhfr:\n$22.50\nFour-light Porno;  with leaded amber glass;  In semi-\nIndiree't  style;   regular  price  $30.00.\nt ale   Price   \t\n$17.00\nAnother Dome, with tendril glass;  in green, red and\n$\ufffd\ufffd.50 Sr:.rfW,nr.m.. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd $15.00\nWILTON  RUGS.\nThi\ufffd\ufffd ernellent quality, eniorins snd.d^c^n nf th#r\ufffd\ufffdi\nrus* gives them admittance to -every well furnished\nhome.\nR're  27  Inchfs  by 54  inches.  Regular\n$6.7*.  Pal* Price   \t\nDome;  hand  pi.ntcl on f'loisonne glnne;  with solid\nhrass chain.    Just one left.  Hegular\n?2\ufffd\ufffd,00.    Rale  Price   \t\n$9.50\nSize S6 Inches by 63 inches.\n$8.76.     Ssle   Price   \t\ntegnla\n$5.25\n$7.75\nWe\nPrepay\nthe\nFreight\n^B 1\nSHOP IN NEW WESTMINSTER\n**        ***%e*m-~jZ 1\ufffd\ufffd Limifat\nAND SHOP AT McALLISTERS\nl&tS\nWe\nPrepay\nthe\nFreight\n'[her**** who cannot affrtr-d high-priced fixtures or fl\ndnm^a shouMI not fail to inspect our show roomt}, as I\nwa have fixtures from $1.00 up and Domes fresj $5.81\nup.   Our aim is to plcane you all.","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"New Westminster (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"The_New_Westminster_News_1914-02-06","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0315701","@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":"1914-02-06 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1914-02-06 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\/1.0315701"}