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Stationary\ntemperature.\n---  Sfcfcir.\nVOLUME 7, NUMBER 277.\nNEW  WESTMINSTER, B.C., THURSDAY  MORNING, JANUARY 30,  1913.\nPRICE FIVE\nTURKEY WILL\nREPLY TODAY\nHopes Are Expressed of a\nPeaceful Outcome Even\nYet.\nNot* of Allies Haa Been Received by\nRspreaentatlvee of Ottoman\nEmpire.\nConstantinople, Jan. 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTurkey'*\nreply to the note of the powers will\nbe handed to the Austrian ambassador\ntomorrow.\nThe diplomats here are favorably\nImpressed with the Information that\nthey have received respecting the reply and are sanguine that the Turkish\ncounter proposals will serve as a basis\nfor a settlement or at least permit the\nresumption  of  negotiations.\nTbe only foundation for the report\nthat fighting has occurred at Tcha-\ntalja between the adherents of the\nlate Nazini Pasha and the supporter*\nof tbe Voung Turks Is the arrival in\nConstantinople from the front of several squads of Invalid soldiers Most\nof these aro suffering from fever, exhaustion and frost bites.\nVienna, Jan. 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA dispatch from\nSofia says: \"In accordance with the\ndecision of the government, army\nheadquarters have been ordered to\nterminate the armistice tomorrow.\"\nConstantinope, Jan. 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSaid Pasha,\nformer grand vizier, has been appointed minister and president of the coun\nARMY VETERANS\nOPPOSE RED FLAG\nAnxious to Suppress Flying\nof the Socialist Emblem.\nBoston, Mass.. Jan. 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA little\nparty of grand army veterans climbed\nBeacon Hill today and made \"one more\nstand for the old flag,\" this time to\nprevent what they described aa its\ndesecration.\"\nBills providing that only the Stars\nand Stripes, except In International\ncourtesy, might be displayed In the\nstreets of Massachusetts, are before a\nlegislative committee. All are directed toward the suppression of the red\nbanner, the appearance of which in\nthe streets of Lawrence st the time of\nthe recent strike of mill operatives,\nprovoked an agitation that has spread\nthroughout the state.\nProminent Socialist* defended the\nexhibition of tbe flag of red because\nthat color hapens to be the symbol\nadopted by their political party, but\nwlhhed It understood that their organization did not approve the methods\nof the Industrial Workers of the\nWorld who conducted the Lawrence\nstrike.\nOeorge R. Hosley, department commander cf the Orand Army of the Republic, and Edward Skelton, patriotic\ninstructor of the Grand Army of the\nRepublic, supported the bills.\nRepresentatives of a committee of\ncitizens from Lawrence said the time\nhad come to uphold the American flag\nand compel respect of It.\nProfessor  Mayes  of SVellesley  col-\n__    .   . , -   -^   ,--j. .\" .-ijjb, i 'e8e.  addressed  the committee as a\nell of state, aasumtng the office re- ] lay defender of the red banner. \"There\ncenty vacated by Prince Said Hallm, )\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd no conflict whatever.\" he eald, \"be-\nnow foreign minister. Itw--en the Stars and Stripes and the\nSTOCK BREEDERS' ASSOCIATION\nHOLDS ANNUAL SESSION HERE\nRaisers of Live Stock Have Busy Day in New Westminster\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdVisit Colony Farm and\nAre Shown Over Premises\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAmerican Visitors Greatly impressed With Excellent\nStock Maintained by B. C. Government\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLuncheon at Farm\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMany Interesting\nAddresses Carefully Listened to\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdElect Officers for 1913.\nDO NOT WANT\nQUEBEC PAPER\nAmerican Paper Manufacturers Complain\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIT. S.\nDiscriminated Against.\n\"One of the greatest curses of the' over a year and a half ago. There\nmiddle west Is a big bonanza wheat was a delay In tilling his position, and\ncrop,\" was the strong assertion of Mr. Sangster acted pro tern for some-\nDr. Rutherford, made yesterday at' time until tbe appointment of their\nthe Stockbreeders' Association meet-{good friend Mr. Macdonald. He felt\nIng. \"We persuaded tbe grain grow-ybat having a man with the capacity\ner* to adopt a system of mixed farm- \\ of Mr. Macdonaid their work would\nLmiiIi.ii, Jan. 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA Constantinople\ndespatch to the Post sent by way of\nConstanza says lt Is evident that\nsomething Is happening at Tchatalja,\nas wounded men are arriving from\nthere constantly.\nUnconfirmed reports say that 14,000\nCircassian troops have mutinied and\nrioting nlso Is reported among the\ntroops at the Dardanelles.\nA despatch to the Chronicle from\nConstantinople giving similar reports\nsay* tbat the advance of the army I*\nImpossible, as half of the 60.000 trans\nport animal* are either dead or 111\nfrom lack of proper food. The roads\nare In a deplorable (condition because\nof the heavy rain*.'\nHOBOS ARE NOW\nIN CONVENTION\nred flag because they all must come\nin time to what the red flag stands\nfor. The red flag Is the flag of humanity and the flag of peace.\"\ning wben along came one of those big\nbonanza crops and the whole thing\nwent up in the air and tbey became\nraving lunatics. Land robbers who\ntook everything out of the land and\nput nothing back. Tbat was not farming. The stock breeder was the true\nhusbandman. The sons of Intelligent\nstockbreeders generally remained on\nthe farm.\"\nThis was an Illustration of the contrast   Dr.   Rutherford  drew   between\ngo ahead in 1913. Tbey knew his\nwork in other parts of the government could not have done better ln\nmaking the appointment (Applause.)\nIn 1912 most of the association work\nhad been aimed at tbe transportation\nrates which they had taken up with\nthe C. P. R. and other companies coming Into this province. By paying\nhalf the cost of transportation the\nassociation were enabled to aid tbe\nmembers to get in  registered stock.\npurely    grain    growers   and    mixed jAs a rule most of tbem sent to On-\nFRANCHISE MATTER\nAROUSING INTERtST\nBurnaby Council Will Call In Representative of the Erector*** to Assist In Unravelling Tangle.\nAnnual Meeting Opened in\nNew Orleans Yesterday.\nNew Orleans, La., Jan, 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe annual nationaj habo convention waa\nopened\" here today and the flrst session was devoted almost entirely to\nspeeches denunciatory of present day\nconditions generally. The proceedings were brought to a sudden halt\nand a rather noisy hall silenced this\nafternoon'by the appearance of \"Jesus\nWesley,\" who said he was a member\nof the \"brotherhood of Christ,\" and\nthat be'came from Heaven. He was\ngarbed In long flowing robes of white\nand his hair dangled over hia shoulders. The delegates were vlsably upset but Invited Wesley to speak. Hla\nnddress waa devoted, chiefly to an Invitation to join hla brotherhood.\nPresident Jeff Davis iasued a \"proclamation\" today In which he aald tf\nooal newspapers did not cease rldlonl-\nlng the convention he would exclude\npress representatives from the convention.\nMORAL REFORMERS\nARE SNOWED UNDER\nla Result af Election* In Nelson Yea-\nterday\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAlderman H. Keef*\nle Mayor.\nNelson, Jan, 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNelson municipal\nelections, delayed, through the death\not Alderman P. J. Oleaser, took place\nyesterday. Much Interest waa taken\nin the elections owing to the fact that\nthe Ministerial Association made an\nissue on moral reform and carried on\nh vigorous campaign.\nAlderman II. Keefe, who opposed\nthe Ministerial Association, waa elected mayor by a large majority, the\nlargest ever known In the city' of\nNelson. Mr. Rente's whole anti-mor**\"\nreform slate of aldermen were elected\nby enormous majorities, polling prao-\ntlcally double the votes of the Ministerial Association candidates.\nThe figures tot* mayor are: Mr.\nKeefe, 652; Mr. J. A. Irving, 384; Mr.\nPaul Nlppou, 33. Aldermen elected\nare: West ward\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMessrs. L. A. Austin, Jobn Bell, W. M. Cunltffe, O. Cun-\n' lltte; East ward\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMessrs. Jasfl John-\nftone, A, A. Perrler and Edward Kerr.\nEdmonds, Jan. 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMuch Interest is\nbeing shown throughout tbe municipality as to the coming negotiations\nbetween the council and tbe B. C. K. R.\nwhich tend towards the settlement of\nthe franoblae tangle which has remained in a stagnant state since October, 1911. It was In that month\nthat tbe electorate of Burnaby took\na vote on the 1909 franchise which had\nbeen passed by tbe council without\nfirst receiving the sanction of tbe ratepayers and, although a majority voted\nfor the franchise being given to the\nelectric company, it did not receive\nthe necessary three-fifths majority.\nSince that time the first courts\nwhich have heard the case of the municipality versus tbe B.C.E.R. as to\nquashing the 1909 ' franchise have\nhanded down a decision against Burnaby and before taking the matter to a\nhigher court there appears to be a\ndesire among the electorate, especially In the northern districts, to again\napproach the company and ask what\nterms they will offer If any. In lieu\nof the municipality droplng ita ault\nTo Be Held Friday.\nPublic meetings will be held on\nFriday evening In every ward where\ntwo delegates from each will be appointed to meet the council on Monday, Feb. 3, and discuss the matter\nbefore approaching the B.C.E.R.\nThe Burnaby Public Hall will be\nused by the ratepayers of .Ward Two\nwhile the Foresters' Hall, East Burnaby has been engaged for Ward Three.\nUntil six or eight months ago Burnaby waa fighting side by aide with\nPoint Grey wblch was In the same fix\naa regards a franchise but slnee the\npeople, on a second rote, decided\nto accept the term* of the oompany\ntho residents of Burnaby have felt to\nsome extent the retardment of devel\nopment which It ia believed by some\npeople la caused by the absence of\nlateral electric lines, hence (he pre*\nent discussion.\nSince the mandate of tho people\nwas obtained In October, 1M1, aome\n2600 namea have been' added to the\nvoters' list so that the council before\nproceeding with the Instruction* given\nby the people to take tha cage to the\nprivy council, if necessary, desire another test of the feeling ot the people\nSUFFRAGETTES IN CAMP\nNew Tork, Jan. 19\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTho appearance\nof a group of tents resembling at a\ndistance a Gypsy camp \ufffd\ufffdn the wld\nwinter lawns of Central Park toda>\nwns explained when members of the\n-mfTrn-rette^band that Is to march to\nWashington next month disclosed\nthat they had encamped by way of\nr-ittlng preliminary \"experiences\" be-\nf -re the \"vote's for women'f' tramp Is\nbegun.\nRosatle Jones, commander-in-chief\nof the suffrage army, that marched to\nAlbany lit Deoember with a message\nto Governor Suiter, led ten women\na.'id one man. the latter representing\ntht* commissary* department Into\nCentral park, and tents were pitched\nfor thc\\ women'a occupancy under the\nyellow banner that wavea for the\n\"cause.\" The encampment flies\nenough colors to account for the popular Impression that tbe Oypslea dared\nan Invasion.\nfarmers yesterday morning at the annual convention cf the Stockbreeders'\nAssociation ln the city ball.\nIn former years Victoria was the\nmuster point, but the Importance tt\nNew Westminster as the recognized\nmetropolis of the agricultural and\nstock raising industry of the mainland\nof British Columbia persuaded the\nexecutive that tbe Royal City was the\nproper place for the convention this\nyear. A deciding factor ln tbo decision to meet here was doubtless the\nnow famous Asylum Colony Farm\nwith its celebrated thoroughbred\nhorses. Shire. Clydesdale and Hackney, and Its magnificent herd of pure\nbred rlolsteius, which was visited during the d.iy and where the association\nwas entertained to luncheon by Dr.\nDoherty, superintendent, and his staff\nMr. A. D. Patterson, president ol\nthe association, presided, and was Bup\nported at the opening of the session\nby Dr. 1. C. llutht-rford. of Calgary,\nv. bo ls now head of the c p. R. earl-\ncultural department. Mr. W. B. Scott\ndeputy minister ot agriculture^ warn\nalso present.\nA plnailng feature of the convention was the presence of three agricultural experts of the United State*\ngovernment, who were Introduced to\ntbe meeting by Mr. W. T. Macdonald.\nof the agricultural department, Victoria. These gentlemen were Mr. F.\nH. Scrlbner, U. S. bureau of minimal\nIndustry, Wisconsin; Mr. L. W. Hanson, dairy Inspector, Washington, and\nMr. Hugh van Pelt, formerly state\ndairy export of Iowa.\nMad*  Welcome.\nBefore the subject of stockbreedlng\nwaa  touched upon  Mayor Oray  read\nthe following address of welcome:\nClia'rman and Gentlemen\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nIt ls a great pleasure to me to extend to you a most hearty welcome\nto New Westminster, and I trust thai\nyour del beratlons will be of the most\nbeneficial nature and that your atay\ntarlo, a distance of 2000 miles, for\nregistered stock. If lt were not for\nthe assistance of this association\nthrough the government the cost of\ngetting In registered stock would be\nprohibitive. A great many of them\nwere at a disadvantage in getting in\nstock. They had to take the honesty\nof breeders In Ontario for granted as\nit was too expensive to go that distance for their animals.\nIn the early days Mr. Patterson did\nnot think they got a square deal from\nsome of the Rastern breeders.' At\ntlie present time it has got so that the\nWest is looked to as the place where\nthey want the best and he believed\nthe stockbreeders of the province were\nwilling to pay the price to get the\narti.'le. He hoped and trusted that\ntheir 1913 board of directors would see\nto it, through their association that\nthe registered stock brought Into the\nprovince would be orthodox. He did\nnot believe they could do better work\ntor   their   province   than   Kettlna\nwith each other as to lhe best means\nof encouraging and developing tbe\nbest stock for the farm tbat the \ufffd\ufffduc-\ncess of the country depended to a\nmuch greater degree than to any\nother industry in the country.\nTherefore tbey would realize the\nprivilege he deemed lt of meeting the\nlive stock men, the cream of the different parts of Canada, continued Dr.\nRutherford. They were more advanced In thought, more progressive In\ntheir methods of agriculture and they\nwere better business men as a rule\nthan the farmer, who was not a live\nstock man. They, to a certain extent,\nhad adopted and appreciated the great\nprinciple of co-operation. If farmers\ncould only get together and emulate\ntbe live stock men as to co-operation\nthey would accomplish good work and\nagriculture would take its proper\nplace.\nIntereat* the Boy*.\nAgain in the matter of live stocjc\nIt was of Interest to the boys. Take\na boy brought up on a farm where\nthere was good stock his intelligence\nwas exercised and developed. It was\nentirely different on a purely grain\nfarm In the prairie provinces where\nbis Whole attention was divided between wheat and machinery. One of\ntbe most gratifying things in the live\nstock business was that the sons of\ngood, Intelligent live stock men remained on the farm because tbey realized it was a good and interesting\nbusiness and took all the best tbat\nwas in him. He was Just now engaged\nIn au aggressive campaign throughout\nthe three northwest provinces encouraging animal husbandry. There\nland robbers were making the country a by word and a laughing stock.\nfin onr city will have many pleasantI more  than  they  believed  what they\nrecollections. said.    (Laugbtre.)    Thoughtful  men\nI wish to commend your association realized ihat without agriculture they\ntor the very great assistance given to would have no Canada to speak of; no\nour provincial exhibition, and I air I banks, *i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd) loan - companies and no\nsure that I not only can assure yon on Imanufactures. Agriculture In Canada\nbehalf of our city, but on behalf of j was the whole thing although not gen\nthe directors of the R. A. \ufffd\ufffd\": I. Society\" ^^^^^^^^^^^\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Its*   the 1 tt was no wae try ins to convince these\nbest .lock here. He *vu no QMk\ufffd\ufffd Brain -.rower. It w\\. a .o^ttdnnto\nand the gentleman on hi* right. \"Dr. \\ grow stock. They nU^uMssU\nRutherford, had kindly consented to tvslco, when low price* and bad croc-a\nI till In the time before they left tor the I prevailed, in starting farming on the\nColony  Farm.     (Laughter    and    an-{right road, raising cattle   hi\nWashington, aJn. 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAs the result of complaints against the recent\norder given In Quebec, Canada, purporting to remove all restrictions of\nexport tax from the timber of certain\ncrown lands of that province, President Taft must decide whether wood\npulp and paper made from the tiiri-\nber affected will be entitled to free\nentry Into the United States.\nAccording to representations to this\ngovernment, Quebec's action amounts\nto a discrimination against United\nStates holders of crown lands and to\ngrant the free entry privileges, lt Is\ndeclared, simply would reveal the real\nIntent of the wood pulp and paper\nclause of the Canadian reciprocity\nagreement The state and treasury\ndepartments have investigated the situation and will make a Joint report to\nthe president.\nThe only operative clause of the\nreciprocity act admits free of duty\nall wood cut from lands where exportation is unrestricted and wood pulp\nand paper made from such timber. Its\nprimary purpose, lt ls declared, was\nto obtain from Canada the removal\nof all restrictions upon the exportation of timber Into the United States\nfor manufacture into pulp and paper\nhere.\nComplainants to the government declare that the Canadian government\nhas removed the restrictions on the\ntimber land where the province bas received practical assurances that the\ntimber will not be exported, but only\nthe wood pulp and paper made from it\nin Canada. It also ls alleged that the\nprovince has refused to remove the\nrestrictions from other crown lands\nin the same province controlled by\nUnited States owners.\nUntil the question ls settled by the\npresident, Secretary MacVeagh has Js-\nsued a temporary order for the collection of duty.\nfORIR SENATOR\nPREDICTS ANARCHY\nBailey Says People\nBe Taught to Support\nGovernment.\nWill Have Repetition of Fn\nlutlon in United States If <\nI* Not Made.\nPhiladelphia, Jan. \ufffd\ufffd-'*'A-urcfcy i\ndestruction ot property\nthat which occurred in the\nrevolution will prevail in this,.\nunless the present trend ot politics he\nchecked,\" declared former Senant-\nJoseph W. Bailey, who made the c-ri-\ufffd\ufffd-\ncipal address at the annual h*\"*n-rrf;\nct the Pennsylvania Bankers' finssfiai\ntlon here tonight.\nThe forme.-' senator said the |iu\nent tendency ia to teach the pen ate to\nlook to tbe government for -M-s-p-D-rt\ninstead of teaching then* to \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdvx-pert.\nthe government lie doplored c-xtra-ra-\ngauces of national, state anal asnWlel-\npal governments, and urged hia hear-\n* rs to drive out both the '\nthe \"demagogues,\" who. he\nare supplanting tho '^^^^^^^^^\npower by taking a proper tote-rent im.\npubic affairs.\n\"For years tbe press-sum s\nof ttie 'boss' deterred you\nparticlpaticn in panties which\ngood citizen ought to take.\"\nBailey, \"and now that the 'boon* Is\ndisappearing, the '-JtanagOf-ue' drives\nyou from your proper place in the\ncouncils cf your potty. Inntaosi et\"\npermitting ether the 'bossf or *itri\ufffd\ufffd\ngogue' to drive yoa ont of politic*, itt\nis your duty to drive tliem ont ot\npel.lies and that would be ena-r\nenoligh It yeu lake a proper interuit\n;n pot'tics.\"\nplans-. -Jj^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\nOr. Rutherford Speak*.\nDr. Rutherford expressed the pleasure it gave him to be present, even\nin the capacity of a tiller-In. (Laughter.) He had attended live stock\nmeetings in a great many different\nplaces especially in the Northwest of\nCanada and lt had always been a\nsource of great pleasure to blm to\nmeet with stockmen of any particular\ndlatrlct Tbe reason was not very far'\nto s\ufffd\ufffd*ek. Any thoughtful man realized that In this country, as to most If\nnot all, other countries, the basic factor In the welfare of the community\nwas agriculture.\nThoughtful men realized, continued\ntbe doctor, no matter, what the politicians might say or think, aa they did\nnot always say what they thought any\ncur appreciation for your association's\nkindness and assistance In offering\nfor competition prizes for different\nbreeds of stock.\nI also wish to express our thanks\nto your association with reference to\nstock judging and for your special\nprizes for different classes Of stock.\nYour association Is to be commended lor this excellent work and assistance given, as it has done mucn towards the success ot onr provincial\nexhlb t'on, and I believe that there la\nno better war of Interesting the youtb\non the farm than by giving him a live\nstock education, and I feel there is\nno better place to prove tha anowl-\nedge young men poaaess than at out\nexhibition, under tbe arrangement of\nstock Judging competitions.\nI (Irmly believe that your association\nhas accomplished much for the whole\not British Columbia la the Improvement of live stock.\nAa mayor ot the eity I wlah ta\nthank your aaaoclation for choosing\nthla eity as your meeting place this\nyear; believing that It la on\"rr a matter of a abort time before thla city\nwill bo recognised aa the moat central\nconvenient place for association ineet-\nInga o( thla kind.\nTha president 'returned thanks on\nbehalf of thp aaaoclation tor tho welcome. - They had alwaya found the\nRoyal City in the past welcoming\nstock men In every way and had al\nway* given them credit for any good\nthey had done to the city.\nA vote ot thank* on tha motion   ot\nMr.  Shnpianda. Comox, aeoonded by\nMr. Webb. Chllllwack, waa ordered t\nbe recoruei! ai-d aent to the mayor\nind council for thoir welcome.   *\nMany Delegate* Delayed.\nThe president aald he waa plsseed\nto aee ao many stockmen present  Ht\nhad expected to see more, hut owing |\nto the early hour of tha meeting the\nnon-arrival of the boat aad the eastern train many were prevented fro*\nattending Joat than, but they   would\nerally looked upon Tn that light Again\nthe thoughtful man must realize that\nthe basic strength of agriculture waa\nthe live stock business. A man could\ngo on for years robbing the soil, taking\neverything from it that It had to give\nand giving nothing back. That waa\nnot farming-tid oould only go on for\na certain lergth of time. The only\ntrue husban-imtca waa the live stock\nman and lt - these live stock men\n>n Canada, lu -i'tferent parts of thla*\nprovince, though all sorts of dlscour-\nagementr, C *ap ,-olntmenta and drawbacks wLo had -lauded themselves together, met veiu after year, deliberated and corap^rvt- notes and advised\n-^ssss-Ssv-^ss-ss-syss-ss^s-ss-sss.\n**,*,*.       *.f*. *   at\nPRoartaM for b. c.\nO..IPVMBN-.1-I MEETING\ndoubtless arrive later.   He wae irest\n    jrSKS\nmen to bring their wlvaa, aa many of\n\\f pleased to aee a ladr\nhe thought It waa tha \"\nThe B. ,'. \ufffd\ufffd drymen'a Aaaoclation wli. open rm-'t annual\nmeeting In thi -o-uocll chamber,\nCity Hall tVe morals'-. TK\nsea-noon a ill extend over today\nand Friday. Today* program\nI* aa followa::\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd a-m.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdO.anlug addreas,\nhia worship   the   Mayor; ad-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd dreea, F. J. Bishop, president;\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd business meaMng; eldctlon of\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd offlcera.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Il-M   a.-*..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAddreaa,   \"The\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Dairy aire* Ht*t** Van Pelt.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd formerly loam state dairy, ex-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd part,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 3:30 p.m.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAddre**, \"Forage\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Crops,\" P. H. Moore, Dominion\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Experimental Farm, .tgaael*.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 8:80 pra.-s-Address, \"Improv-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ia* tlw Dairy Bard,\"   F.   H.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 'Mrthner, tLB,.Bureau ef Anl-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd mal  Indaatry, Wisconsin.\nT:3\ufffd\ufffd,p.nv-\ufffd\ufffdAddia>ja, \"UtlUi-\ntog the try-Modacta of the\nDairy,\" 3. tti -Terry, Provincial\nPoultry iMtiwstor.\n8:80 p.m.--Po*r\ufffd\ufffdl\ufffd\ufffdr t\"l*-atrat-\ned addraaa. \"Dairy XmpmMtm,\"\nh. Wi Hanaoti. Deputy Dairy\nand .Wood l***pector, Saattl*.\nWaah\/     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-.  '.\ntbe Htm. Mot ffillaoa, Minister of AaTlenitiire, aad Mr.\nW. B. troott Deputy aBnlaUr\ntbem could give the man* pointer* Is\nstock breeding. ,\nIn regard to the work done In 1812,\ntbe president aald    tbey   had    bee\"\nhandicapped In a way owing to th*,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,^^^^^^^^^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nresignation of their   last   aeeretanr|*> \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\nof AgrlcuRure, are expactad to\nattend aad grre addi-eaees dtir-\nbit tba tm-rajstlo-a.\npoultry,** said Dr. R-rthw-pro^!*''\"\nThen came along one of tho*e\nthings the speaker considered one of\nthe greatest curses of the west a big\nwheat crop. They had persuaded\nthem to adopt a system df mixed\nfarming, and then the whole thing\nwent up in the air. They gave away\ntbelr cattle on any condition and' at\nany price, let their hens rraeve to\ndeath and hypothecated everything\nthey had to Invest ln machinery.\nNext year there waa a comparatively\niviftl mSMH     I\nram km\nCONFERENCES ARE\nmum\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nDiscuss Question of Ferry Service Between Ladner and Woodward's Landing. *\nVictoria, Jan. M.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFurther progress j\nbaa been made toward the establish\nDevote Tin** te Kew\nJersey.\nWill Receive Men Who Cask Hta Oitt.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNot Ready Vet I\nHla Cabinet.\n-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -^   uu   Keen   eumub   wsuis   sjsst  snsssswssnss-\nP\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd!i croS^u>i^ they   J.becarae    ston-''  ment  of a government  owned   ferry\nbroke.    That  happened   twice fn  bis  between    Ladner    and     Woodward's\nexperience In Manitoba.    If they had  fiiough across tho Fi-aser river.\nInvested one fourth of that money to ~-\nTrenton.   NJL.\nlive stock tbey would have been more\nprosperous and comfortable Instead of\nfacing starvation through their foollsb\nand Insane Idea of grain growing\nalone. The stockbreeders could not\nwonder at his appreciation of the live\nstock men and the good work tbey\nwere doing.\nOne word more. Were they doing\nenough ? Dr. Rutherford bad listened\nto intelligent men discussing trivialities or occupied in the little game of\npolitics in the election of executive\nofficers for the coming year. Could\nthey not do a little more, go to a\ngreater extent Into carrying out the\nprinciple of co-operation among their\nagricultural friends. He advocated\nmaking a particular district tbe centre of breeding, a particular strain of\ncattle and perfecting it A number\n<jf farmers cooperating could pay a\nlonger price for an animal of flrat\ncla\ufffd\ufffda quality than an individual. (Loud\nappianae.)   '\nMr. W. T. Macdonald. the secretary-\ntreasurer, then Introduced- Maaara.\nBcribner, van Pott and Hanapa to (be\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****- uloglx-\nmembera of the aaao station, euli\ning their abilities and work aouth of\nthe line.\nOff to Colony Farm.\nTba association then took the train\nfor the Colony Farm. On arrival at\nMount Coquitlam tbey were met by\nDr. Doherty, medical auperintendHat\nand conveyed in aleighi tp tba (arm\nbuilding*!. Hare they spent oter two\nhoars Inspecting tba magnificent bard\ncf pure brad HoUtein cattle, aad no\nleas superb horses whicb ware A eon-\nteased re-relation to the gwtlsxaan\nfrom acroaa tbe line. >\nTba whole^ompany to tbe hnsiber\not \ufffd\ufffd0, divided Into part!**, were ee-ar\nteovsly conducted over the \"\ufffd\ufffd*#\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ndepartments by Dr. Doherty. Mr.'Don-\ncan Montgomery, (arm manager, aid\nMr. Malcolm Stewart.    -\nMr. Stewart wbo it bead of   ttie\nliooulne   department,    exhibited   the\n'splendid animal* whicb have won io\nmany laurels at livery ahow they hsv-i\nbeen* entered at in the bora* ***\ufffd\ufffd*-'\nThere was nothing but \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdrimiMtHot.\nfor (be highly bred atotjk of tbe'ttm,\ntbe pedigree and quality of eadKlsM\nbeing described by Mr Stewart.\nThe trotting ol Brigham Radiant,\nthe great Hackney aire, and tba bewt-\ntitu\\ dancing, atapa of Cralgtoors \\*oyr,\na totely colt rising three years\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd***-\nand a prise winner at Toroaf -\ntbo encomluma of tba spsel\nwere apeclal features of the\nSubaequently u K*\nmad* to an  excelleut\nn across me j-nurer river. ;   ,    ,  wiis^ss.\nOn Monday afternoon Mr. Frank J. Ielcct  wuao*t\nMacKenzie, M.P.P.. introduced a com- jnis confereaaes wftthgenmai\nmittee composed ef Reeve Benson ofjerata generally '\nCouncillors  Klrkland\natdss\nthe Delta and .^^^^^^^^^^\nDennis and Peterson, and Messrs. E.\nC. Hutchinson and H. Hutchinson, to\nthe cabinet and they discussed the\nmatter.\nThe estimated cost of the project\nis as follows:\nNear,, Ladner\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdApproach,.- waiting\nroma, etc., and slip, 810,400.\nWoodward's Landing \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Approach,\nwaiting rooms, store, ttc, and Blip.\n$3300.\nFerry boat. 70 feet loot, 28 feet\nbeam and 4 feet draught, capable of\ncarrying a deckload of 70 tons and SO\npassengers at a speed of .10 mtles an\nhour, fitted complete aa per Canada\nShipping act, $19,000.\nTotal cost between banks, $38,700.\nTo work ln widening, dyke from\nLadner to proposed ferry approach,\n$1300. .\nTo work ln Improving Fraaer avenue for heavy traffic, $30,770.\nThla estimate is tor a completed,\nfirst class ferry scheme. By forming\npart of the Ladner approach with a\ndredge dyke and by reducing the ca-\n\"paclty aad.apeed of-the ferry boat lt\nwill ba possible to Install a fairly good-\nferry equipment for about $30,000.\nAs the matter standa now Hon. T.\nTaylor, mtntater of public works, will\nlook-Into tba Question of detail, coats,\netc Premier McBrlde is said to look\nfavorably upon the project and Ja the\nevent of a declalon to establish the\nferry, work will be Started ehrty Ml\nApril, lt ls stated.\nWRECKED tTEAMIR l\ufffd\ufffd I\nGOING TO FltCtS FAST\ncles\" which have been 1\nsince he returned trom\nwere  at\nMarch 4. be wUl devote\nentire time to hia dnttoa as\nof New Jersey.\nTha prcildosxefact aald ht\nplan to sae any members of\nbetween now and Oka end \ufffd\ufffdf\nas governcs*. bet tbat. ef\nwould receive those who\non questions that might\nthe IntervaL^\nThe governor'a etstasa*\nthe Inquiry aa to whether ho\nup his mind aa to the pei\n^tmWmWmWm*\n\"Ot course there am an ft-ct-ates* -par\"\nhe said.   \"I am stUl tryisax ba\nmind open.\"   Asked tt   \"^\ntlons were still\nplied: ''They are not\nare Juet dtrxzUng -*o-av _^^^^_^^_\nIncidentally Mr. Wis***-* laiaabisl tfa->\nfact that he waa teeUs* oetaf tb* tsjsst\nto pick a man as a*cnU-ry of Iks gsas-\nposed labor <\"     ^^^^^^^^^^^\n\"Evsryhody\ntbo bill n\ncreating ai *sl\nsaid the\nFor tbe flrat\nof tbe state tbo\nsat today with mm\nWilaou watched \ufffd\ufffdto\nWtlllem Hag-hss to I\nwas\npurveyed by Messrs. CMMMd Z   .,  ,\nto wblch a moat attentive eta*   of\nwaiter* added seat.    ^M\nAt tbe eloee   president\n(Continued ot* Pags Four.)\nSan Iranctaco, Jan. 3*.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTwenty\nmembers ot tka craw of tbs steam\nlumber schooner Samoa, whloh went\non t-ee.rock* off Point Rayss ta *)\ndeaaa :M early yeatsi-day, arrived In\nPort tbls aftorftson.. aM unharmed ty\ntheir perilou* adventure. .They ware\ntaken from tbs attended veeeel one\nat a time oh a breaches buoy line 800\nfeat longs .attar the Samoa began,\npounding to pieces\nCafsmln T. P. H. Wbitelaw, tbe\nwrecker wbo bas take* charge of tbs\n*hlp and Ita oargp. telaphoaad tp tbe\nMsrchaata beltoags-^teaMht that tht\nSamoa was breaking up rapidly anfl\ntbat there was scant hope ot saving\nsven tbs lumber.\nWaahlnateaV Jan. n-Tka kotue\nDsdostad wltlioert svmeadxaent late today the Joint ros-olsttsn approving\nataao of tbs r\ufffd\ufffdna aria} oommlsaloa*'\nlor a **jmm mamortal bt tbl. eity,\nto tba m*mrs <*m\nTbs reeolntkra\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdate snd i\ndost tot bis atgtutors.\n\"I never saw tt\ntor sleeted\nHe extended\nI pei-'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'in to\nsent tbs followtag\nMead, William \"\nelected U. *V\ntoday after \ufffd\ufffd kassj\n\"My   bcartiaat\nm daiigWad thai \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nmately     ^v^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd STtwy wsjfl\t\nJames M. Mtta'.a!\nOnion of Aiaarltsa, Wjutf\nelect -today to appabMC\nCtoorfla, awesldssa of\ntlon, as *\ufffd\ufffdcretory of\nMr. Wilson aatd\n\"-opted oo Invlt-Uioaa\nMarch I and Mat\nhad ma-iy offers ot\nvarious states.   Hs\ntbs,lease oaths\ned at Monetae-     __\nhs wosid give tt \ufffd\ufffdj\ufffd\ufffd bat\nretain legal       -'\"\"^\n-U\n Sk.\ufffd\ufffdaiWni*C *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdjv\" mm?         ,\nhh\\XmTilipi1*TZ svelte hot. m ttotUSSS\ntaw goes to tbs prssi- sains, north of ts\"tasjt\ufffd\ufffd.   aWWtjSr\ni\n1\nI\nit\nl!\nmen smm-wfy PAGE TWO\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS.\nTHURSDAY, JANUARY 30, .Mi\n  III\n$l&to&\nAn independent morning paper devoted to tha intereat* of Hem Westminster and\nthe Fraser Valley. Published every morning except Sunday by the National Printing\nsus-d Publishing Company, Limited, at (3 stcKemie Street, New Westminster, British\nColuml.i**- ROBB SUTHERLAND, Sliumgtsg Director.\nAll communication* should be addressed to The New Westminster News, and not\ndo Individual members of the staff. Cheque*, draft* and money orders should be made\nanwaoale to The Notional Printing and Publishing Company, Limited.\nTELEPHONES\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Business Office and Manager, S9*; Editorial Rooms (all depart-\nass-mis). SSI.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATBS\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBy carrier, tl per pear, il for .three months, 40c per\nsjao'il*. By mail, 13 per year, 2*0 per monta.\nADVERTISING  RATES on application.\nTO CORRESPONDENTS\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNo letter* will be published In The News except ovar\nthr wrtter's signature. The editor reserves the right to refuse the publication of any\nTHURSDAY  MORNING, JANUARY *), 1913.\nrepresenting Vermont, and Roger\nGriswold, Federalist, of Connecticut,\nwere the principals. After a wordy\ndebate, in which parliamentary language wan conspicuously absent, the\ngentleman from Vermont expectorated lh the fact of tbe gentleman from\nConnecticut.\nMr. Griswold resented the Insult\nwith a cane, and Mr. Lyon replied\nwith a pair of fire-tonga, which happened to be convenient. The latter\nwould seem to be the more formidable\nweapon, but it did not prove so in\nthia case, and after a short knock-\n(l.wn afld-drag-cut combat Lyon went\nto tho floor for the count, and the\ntriumphant    Griswold    dragged    him\n1891 became instructor at the Univer\nsity of -California. As editor of the\nLark, In San Francisco, he began to\nmake a noise in the literary world.\nSince then\" he has lived ln New\nYork, Boston, London, San Francisco,\nand points east and south, and bat.\ngathered much moss In the Intervale\nof doing a rolling-stone stunt. In\nother figures the purple cow has given much milk, and Gelete ls an ungrateful wretch to \"trun\" her about\nand tell her never to darken hla doo.*\nagain. But alas, pcets 'were ever flcl:\nle.\nTHE ARMOR OF CO-OPERATION.\nCo-operation is a word which has been in men's\nmouths frequently of late and it is therefore of great interest to us in Westminster and particularly in the valley\nto note some of the results that have been achieved by it.\nThese were evident in the speeches at the gathering of the\nstock breeders yesterday, and we believe that the dairy\nconvention of today and tomorrow will tell the same story.\nThe stock of the province has been immeasurably improved by the banding together of men whose vocations\nwere similar, while the association has helped its individual members not only by affording means of interchange\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdof views, but by financially assisting the importation of\nthe best stock obtainable\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdstock which to most breeders\n(acting on their own would have been inaccessible. ,\nDr. Rutherford laid stress on the value of agriculture\nto the state, and equal stress upon the value of stockbreed-\ning to agriculture. His assertions that each is the basic\nfactor of the other are well worthy the consideration of\nall. This earnest student of everything appertaining to\nagriculture is pointing the way for the alleviation of many\nof the ills of the Fraser valley, even under present conditions, when he states that just as the stockbreeders come\ntogether so should the farmers. .,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    , ,    ,, ,    ,    ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-,.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\nmu j     e        s, -. . ,   \"l.ar    uttered  by   McLaurln,  answer-\nlhe need of unity among farmers, fruitgrowers and led with a right upper-cut to the face\nall followers of pursuits allied to the soil was perhaps itrom Tillman.  Mcuurin covered up,\n       s    ,, ._, j ,v . ,i i- ht       r>s i     ii.Td then sent a straight jab to Till-\nnever better evidenced than at the meeting on May 31 last man's nose. -The Human pitchfork-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdof representatives from all the Fraser valley which was\nconvened by our own Board of Trade.\nIt is all very well to cry \"Back to the Land.\" The\nquestion before all thinking people today is how to tackle\nthe problem. Co-operation is the shining armor first to be\nput on.  The sword and the plumes will come later.\nCrown Prince Boris, who, if he outlives his royal papa, will become tho\naround the hall by his heels until thejk'ng of Bulgaria and Taar of all the\nperformance was stopped by other; Bulgers, will celebrate his nineteenth\nnien-brrj, who held that matters had b:raiday today. The Bulgarian heir\ngone far enough. | accompanied  Taar  Ferdinand  on  hia\n\"Scenes of wild confusion\" hav- recent pleasure trip into Turkey, and\nmarked all parliamentary asaemblages | at a safe distance, witnessed the mill-\nIn England, not long ago, after a i tary maneuvers,\nheated session, a Mr.  McNeill,  M.P., |    He is the son\nFEARS TRAPS Will\nPUT TND TO SALMON\nProfessor McMurrich Makes Interesting Announcements   Before   Con-\neervation    Committee.\nof the second wlfo\nof the Bulgarian ruler, who was formerly Princess Eleonore of Reuss-\nKostrltz, the king's first spouse having died without issue. The Crown\nPrince has one brother anil two sisters. The youngest of the latter,\nPrincess Nadejda, Is also the recipient of congratulations today, on her\nfourteenth birthday.\nso far forgot himself as to throw a\nh ok at Winston Churchill, firBt lord\nof the admiralty. The first cable reports of thla tucldent described tho\nvolume as a heavy one, hurled with\ncrushing force directly Into the face\ncf the admiralty lord. In later reports\nthe missive has dwindled into a\nsmall pamphlet.\nSlaps ou the wrists have been exchanged by French deputies, with re- Victor Henri Rochefort, the grand\nsultant scenes of \"Indescribable con- old man of French journalism, was\nfusion,\" and the Insults have been bom In the city of Light eighty-three\nwiped cut in bloodless duels. Ottawa years ago today. Last month the bril\nhas had its personal encounters be- uant old man had all Paris laughing\ntween law makers, and even the stol- over his satirical illusions to tbe\nid calm of the Herman Reichstag haa squabble over the throne of Albania,\nbeen assaulted by pestiferous Social-j \"The Adventures of My Life.\" an an-\nists. Yet none of these parliaments tcbiography, la one of Rochefort's\ncan offer the spectator anything re-1 greatest literary achievements.\nWE HAVE\nINDUSTRIAL SITES.\nBUSINESS PROPERTY.\nRESIDENTIAL PROPERTY.\nDAIRY, POULTRY AND FRUIT-FARMS.\nSEE US.\nsombllng the thrills afforded by witnessing a combat between the solons\nof the United States congress.\nAlthough Griswold and Lyon were\nthe first to settle their grievances by\npublic combat, they were by no means\ntho last. The \"ink battle\" between\nSenator Bailey of Texas, ana Senator\nBeverldge, of Indlanna, ln 1902. was\none ot the mildest of these incidents.\nEarlier in the aame year Senators\nTillman and McLaurln. of South Carolina, engaged in one of the most sensational bouts ever \"pulled off\" in\nWashington,    lt began with the word\nIn It he tells how his criticisms of\nthe government forty yeara ago le.i\nto hia transportation to the iena' settlement of New Cain,'-a, iis.'d hov\nhe confounded his in \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd I**-) liV escaping on an American vessel\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd OUR    POET'S   CORNER.        \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n****************\nTHF*  SLAVES OF THE  STRAP.\nThe Commission of Conservation,\nwhich met in Ottawa last week,\nheard two reports on Wednesday afternoon, after which followed a most\nInteresting and original lecture by\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdProf. J. P. McMurrich, director of the\nanatomical department of the University of Toronto.\nUr. Mc.Murrlch's theme was \"The\nSalmon Fisheries of British Columbia.\" Upon the salmon Dr. McMurrich\nIb an authority, having made some original discoveries thereon. For Instance, for a long time, lt was not\nknown why every fourth year there\nwas an extra good run of salmon, and\nthen for three years poorer ones. j\nBy means of examing the scales of\nthe sockeye, Dr. Bdfjprrij* discover. f n\n?ou \"y a B'thus \"expiaininft^extra     Hi.  political  career  has  not ^r,\njour yearn, um\ufffd\ufffd     ' The  free Ironi vicissitudes, for he fell loul\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd&'and '\ufffd\ufffd-\"\" salmon each ! of the Tariff Reformers, and lost hi.\nliv   nnlv a counle of years ! 8(,,,t aB \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdember '*>' Greenw.ch at tbe\nfin these Dr McMurrich is now ex-11906 election. He now represents Ol-\nperimenting and examining and fresh (or.i University but as he .till relight is found almost monthly on an lu-, fuses to walk the main plank in-the\n'   Unionist policy, vis.,  Tanfl  Reform,\nhis relations with members of the Opposition are not distinguished by their\ncordiality.\nLord Hugh Cecil compete, with Mr.\nBritish Canadian Securities, Ltd.\n602 COLUMBIA STREET, CITY.\nCECIL IS HYSTERICAL\nExcitable Conservative Lord I. Striking Figure In British Commons.\nLord Hugh Cecil wss the recipient\nof many congratulations on celebrating his forty-third birthday. He hM\nbeen living the .strenuous life ct lata,\ntor many political measures in whiok\nhe takes the keenest interest have\nbeen  to  the fore,  and he  doe.  not\nBUSINESS DIRECTORY\nlight .= .-..  -\ndustrv that amounts to a score of millions' of dollars in Canada each\nyear.\nThe conservation element of-the lecture was most valuable. Dr. McMurrich pointed out that south of Van\ncouver Island at the present time a\ngreat many salmon traps were set.\nAlong the line of these tnfps the fish\nflock In from the ocean in millions,\nheading for the spawning grounds of\nthe Fraser River.\nAs a result many fith never   reach\nKt-ir Hardie for the distinction of be-\nin,' the worst,dressed man in tho\nHouse. In fact, he appears to delight\nin hia sh.bbiness. It is related that\nbeing on one occasion invited to a\npolitical party hi. hostess was so\nashamed uf '.-ia appearano- that she\nkept him in an ante-room until the\ncountered with hla left, but\n;\\nd  tliey  went to a clinch\nmissed.\nThe as-\n(Wltll Apologies to lludyard Kipling)\nIf you can hold your strap when those\nabout you\nAre dropping theirs\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdand bumping in\nto you.\nIf you can let a man conductor rou!\nyou\nI the spawning grounds and these traps more important of her guests had de-\ni lion\" are responsible for and explain ! parted. There is a .train ol ascetl-\n;the decreased salmon runs on the Fra- ciam running through hi. character,\nI Ber. These traps are in that disputed, 'and he ha. the temperament of a true\nur r.^tlur piorly govtrmd piere of sea1 vlBionary.    He   is   recognized  as  the\n**._.    .. > .    ,u..    l.-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdn,|..r.      linn     min    IS        -        - -\niust about the boundary line, and it\nwas suggested that an understanding\n-hould be reached at once with the\nli. S. authorities, or the salmon In the\ntant    scrgeantat-arma    sougnt    to  And grin, as those you liked tlie whole   Fraser will soon become so depleted\nALL ARE EQUAL.\ni.\nbreak the clinch, and got a stiff one\nin the face from Tillman. Time. Senatorial Interference put an end to the\nbattle.\nIn the early days of the American\nrepublic, revolvers often figured in\nc-ngrcsslnnul disputes. Congressman\nCilley waa shot and killed in a duel\nby Representative Graves In 18SS.\nSenator Focte, Henry Wise of Virgin-\nThere may be winterconditions in the Arena building * ^ST^Sffi^rt\ntout it is about time that the youthful element of Westmin-1 leagues, Baniett, of Georgia, and\nster left off throwing lumps of slushy snow Some ladies &^W\ufffd\ufffd; ZS* *\nnave already complained to the chief of police of the an- representatives back in was.\nnovance to them and their children. 1 -\nWe would draw attention to the fact that the persecu-\\* ******:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,\ntion of Chinese by boys ahould be repressed also.  The yel- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd first things. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nlow man at present has a right to be here, however much'* \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\nwe may wish that he was not, and has the same claim upon I      San Francisco-. Beginning.\nthe protection of the law as any other citizen. The first settlement on the site ot\nSan   Francisco\nthing, too\nIf you can wait\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdand not get tired of\nwaiting.\nIf you can  praise  lhe Tramway day\nand night\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n[if you can learn  to    exercise    each\nmorning\nBy   rushing    vainly     after    crowded\n\"Trams.\"\nAnd   think in   time   to  listen   to  the\nwarning\nThat   bids  you   settle   those  uncalled\nfor  \ufffd\ufffd\nLABOR LEGISLATION.\nIt would be a great pity if the re-\n,ceat regrettable disclosures with    regard to organized labor In the States\nshould   retard   the   progress   of  genuine reform.    Wo In Canada aro very\nmuch concerned  In  thc question, be-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdcause we are ail very sensitive to any\natmosphere of unrest  in a  neighboring  country,   and   (bat   sensitiveness\nis increased by the close relations established through international trade\nsTinlnna.\nIf the very real grievances which\nharass and embitter labor In the\nStates are not removed, the habit ot\njsmteat will be developed to a point\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdet great danger. That is, ln fact, tne\nsway revolutions come about, and the\nsr-rganized terror which hus recently\nbeen revealed, extending from New\n\"York to San Francisco, is, in many respects, perilously symptomatic of re-\n-volution.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdH will not do for the people of the\nSlates to imagine that because tne\nafacNaraniii* and others are abominable criminals, their cause was also\n-abominable. Although organised labor is under a cloud, it haa In the past\nbeen a very powerful and necessary\ninstrument of civilization.\nWe In Canada have profited ln many\n-ways by the economic history of the\nStates. There the growth was so\nrapid that prophlcies had become vivid realities before the country could\nrealize the warning they contained.\nComplicated problems- one after another, were thrown up by life, and legislation could not possibly control\nthem. Tho Industrial life of the country became, and a largo portion of it\nstill Is, chaos.\n.For that result it Is difficult and\nunnecessary in apportion the I.lame.\nThere had never been anything like\nthe United States In fore; there were\nno models for this tremendous experiment in political and industrial democracy. The very success of the country, its abundant Vitality, was the\n-worst enemy to Its Industrial peace.\nIf there be one thing more than an-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdother that assures the destiny of\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCanada, il is (lie lessons she may\nlearn from the Industrial history of\nthe States. Wa do not want, and we\nawe not likely to allow here, the eon\n-dittons of chihl ami woman labor tha1\nv-xtst in parts of the States. We have\nfa many wn-ys taken time hy thc forelock, but we musl not relax our vigilance. We do not want to see such\nsBOBdltions thnt woold make It neces-\nr.arv for a labor leader to demand\nmoth elementary justice as was demanded the other dnv in New York.\nOrr 1 -Ull \" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ' 1 ' op pace with\nsocr ei\\ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -'ii.- Montreal Star.\nwas a  mission established in 1776 by Francisco Palon and\nproposed  impcj-latioii  of agricultural j Benito Cambon, two friars, and known\nworkera as the Mission Oo'.ores.\nThe Canadian Pacific Itailway Com-1 Gradually a village grew up about\npany is doing everything that by the the mission, and the. little community\nmeans of liberal policy can be done j cf pioneers was known as Yerba Buen\nto attract farm settlers iu the coun-1 until, sixty-six years ago today, th\ntry- No wholesale Importation of any j alcalde officially changed the nam'\nSlav of Latin peoples should be com-1 to San Francisco. During that year\nmeneed by any Canadian Interest i the first Bchool was opened, the flrat\nwithout the giving of some surety that i hotel was built, and a survey nf the\nIf you can bang upon a crowded rail\ning-\n*inO help to push the women off the\nend.\nAnd If, when you're pushed off, with\nout bewailing,\nI'pon  your head   you  cheerfully  de.\ncend.\nlt you can learn to do nil these things ,\nover.\nDay     after    day\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwithout    becoming\nrude,\nYour bed won't be a little bed of clo\nver\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nBut then\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe chances are you won'l\nget sued.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMontreal  Herald\nthey will not congregate ln the foreign colonies of the cities, to drag\ndown our standards of life.\nIf it is proposed to select such immigration for permanent settlement\nupon the land, or only to recruit tho\nranks of railway navvies in the west\nsufficiently to ensure that public development may not be unduly retard\ntown was made by Jasper O'Farrell.\nTwo yearB after the b'lt-t of Man\nFrancisco the ruBh of '49 Increased\nIts population ten-fold.\nThe first steamship of th? Pacific\nMall arrived in 1849, anr <u tne i-am*.\nyear the Oregon brought the first United States mall and the first postmaster,   John  W.   Geary.    The   first\ned by a shortage of unskilled labor, | steamship between San Francisco and\nwell and gooi. But tt ere must be ! Sacremento began plying In that year\ncare taken that the new class of en- and the city had Its first great fire\nouraged Immigration does not drift Geary, the first postmaster, became\ninto the cities to further aggravate I the first mayor following the Incor\nevils coasequent upon the preBence ;Poratlon of the city ln 1S50. The first\nof rowdy foreign element..\nCanada wants particularly more\nsettlers for (he land, more real developers of mg-rlcillture, and the rail\nway companies have a most direct\nInterest,    the Canadian  Pacific chlet\nlot thf famous vigilance committees\n1 began Its work in 1851. The first\nI panic afflicted the city ln 1856.\nI Tho year 1860 was a notable one\nfor the Golden Gate City, for ln that\nyear the first pony  express arrived,\nthe city was connected with New\nYork by telegraph. San Francisco's\ngreat exposition wa. held In 18*14,\nbut It wn3 a small affair compared\nwith the great show which San Fran-\n, c sco Is preparing to hold to commemorate the Inaugural of the Puna\nma Canal.     .\namong them, 1* directing their ener\" j nine day. from  St. Joseph,  Mo., and\nby along; this line.\nThe United States has, after many\nyears of experience with low class\nEuropean iimnignilinn. decided to\nerect a fence against tire worst types\nof  IL\nA bill rial passed fhe 1 louse of lie-\npresentalivt-s to apply the Illiteracy\ntest bars such people from lhe United States, will Ihey not turn northward lo Canada? If evidence accumulates Ihat they will, this country\nwin have to consider how far It Is\nwining to in- permanently saddled\nwith what Is admittedly a low class,\nundesiralilc immigration. If Canada\nIs to remain predominantly British,\nor Anglo-Saxon. It cannot afford to repeal the mlBtake of Ihe United States\nduring lhe jast hair century.\nIt would lie better to grow more\nslowlv. with a higher type of people.\nrecruited chiefly rrom Northern V.nr-\ni-pe and thn Anglo-Saxon stock.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nToronto Mail and Empire.\n-JSSS\t\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIMIGRATION    FROM    SOUTHERN\nEUROPE.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd It may perhaps be taken for grant-\nsrss that the Berlin despatch stating\nthat the Canadian Pacific Railway\n-Cs-smpany ls arranging to bring out\nto Canada each month 20,000 Am\nServian., Montenegrins,, and\nSouthern Europeans refers to a bitUe.\n****************\nm \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd        e\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd SCRAP   BOOK   FOR   TODAY.    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd e\n****************\nAnniversary  of   First   Fight   Between\nPugilistic Solons.\nWhen  law-breakers don    the    war\npaint nnd go ofl  the reservation, all\ntraditions  r.f   parliamentary   decorum\nind   senatorial   dignity   are   shelved,\nand the les-.T.-.Til  ro.:*,h house would\n| shoe It the atvaslblllttes pf n profession-\n'r.l prizefighter.    Such \"ructions\" navt\nbeen nuilWIUUI in the congress of the\nUnited  States, and  American  legislators,  although   they   have   Miff   competition  In   London,  Paris and other\ncapitals, aro probably entitled to tho\nchampionship.\nIt was 115 years ago today, on Jan.\nJO, 17M, that members of the house\nof  -eyies-ratalves  staged   their  first\nJlalivrw  Lyon,  a   Democrat,\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*\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *\n|0   THE    HUMAN    PROCESSION.   <\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ni \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd (By O. Terence.) \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nI* 4\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nGelett  Burgess,  Author cf \"Red and\nBlue Bovine,\" Is 47 Today.\nPltrplei   says  the  dictionary,   I.\n! much admired color composed of red\nand blue blended;  also,  purple, v. I.\ni I'd b. c. me purple;  as, he fairly pur\n'pled with rage.\" And \"purple v. I.\" I.\nUiu \"phenomenon to bu observed when\nanybudv introduces Gelete Burgess as\nthe author of \"The Purple Cow.\"\nMr. Burgess, wbo originally had\nFrank as a front name, but lost it.\nwhs born In Boston forty-seven years\nago today, and attained International\nfame by a poetical declaration that\nhe had never observed u bovine of\npurple hue, but Ihat, in the last an\nnlysis, he would rather see than be\none. Since that time he has written\nmuch verse, many short stories, sev-\ni nil novels and a number of plays, but\nhc continues to bo known aa tho au\nthor of\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdbut, come, let's have a heart\nOn the subject of the rod-andblue-\nblended-bovlne, Mr. Burgess feelln**l\\\nconfesses:\nAh. ycB. I wrote the \"Purple Cow\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nI'm sorry, now, I wrote It!\nBut I can tell you, anyhow,\nI'll kill you if you ipiole It!\nMassachusetts  Tech   was   Mr.   Burgos.' alma mater, and he wa. destln\ned  for an  honest and  useful career\nas a draughtsman.    For three years\nhe was employed In that capacity by\nthe Southern Pacific railroad, and In\nas to render the big   fishing   plants\nuseless!\nAn Interesting report of the after\nnoon was that given by Mr. M. J. Pat-\nton on the \"Press   and   Co-operating\nOrganizations,\"   of   the   Conservation\nCommission.   Mr. Patton reported that\nIhe  work of the Conservation   Commission is regard to the publicity end,\nwas divided Into three phases:   First,\ntlie issuing of reports ln pamphlet and\nhook form, embodying the results   of\nInvestigations carried on by the staff\nif the commission; second, the issuing\nof the periodical \"Conservation\" to the\nnewspapers  of  Canada;    and,   hiBtly,\nthe providing of speakers to addreBH\npublic meetings on topics relating to\nthe conservation of natural resources.\nIn    all, over    a dozen    publications\nI were issued bv th\ufffd\ufffd commission. These\n\"t-i'hd over 97,000 copies of reports\nIn all.   There is some talk of extend-\nIng in size the regular publication of\nthe commission issued to newspapers\nand public men.\nAlready this publication is quite an\ninteresting and valuable one, and In\nIts proposed extended form would\ncover much ground.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd! HEREDITY OF  SEX.\n* _\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd,   _.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   ,\ufffd\ufffd, * IColor   Blindness    Descends to    Male\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd THIS  DAY   IN *\\        From  Female or Vice Ver.a.\n# CANADIAN i-iibTUKY. \ufffd\ufffd |,on,ioni jan. 29--Lecturing at thi\n*..*.+,+,+,*,+,*,*******'' Royal Institute tonight on \"Heredity\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*****\"***\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*!of  Sex,\"   Professor   Batesou    related\nsome curious facts which have   been\nJANUARY  THIRTIETH.\nThe \"Incoming of the first Baldwin\nIsafontalne ministry\" has been dea\ncrlbed as \"an epoch inakug date in\nthe constitutional history of Canada,\"\nfor It was the first Canadian cabinet\nin which the principle of \"colonial\nself-government was embodied.\"\nBut, when Robert Baldwin, after\naccepting office, went back to his constituents at Hastings for re-election,\nhs opponent, made a desperate fight.\nSpeeches began at half past ten and\nlasted till three ln the alternoon. Hal-\nwin, though at limes he Bhowed a rare\npower of presenting a case clearly,\nwas hardly an eloquent speaker, and\non this occasion incessant talking\nprevented his getting a hearins.\nF'nally. a number of shantymen,\narmed v lth bludgeons and f re arma\nsome terrorizing voters on one Bide,\nsome on the other, turned tho proceed\nings Into a riot, and Ihe upshot of II\nnil was that Mr. Balwin wa. defeated\nIn return however, for hi. good of\nflees to an earlier election in perauad\nng the constituent. Ot the Fourth\nII d ng of York to clrel the French-\nCanadian  leader,   l.a'onUiIno,  several\nf hU friends from Lower Canada of\ntared h'tn their BenD.    Accepting the\n.ffer of Mr. Borne, he was duly elect\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdd fir Illmouskl on Jan. ;!0, 1843.\nEX-EMPRESS    EUGENIE.\ndiscovered as a result of examining\nseveral generations of a family in\nwiiich color blindness uppeared.\nA colorblind woman, he said, II\nvery rarely found and she always is a\ndaughter of a color-blind man. Her\nBons and daughters would be normal,\nher son's family would he normal, but\nIf her daughter and sonB, they would\nbe found to be normal and color blind\nIn equal numbers.\nA curloiiB anomaly with reference to\ncolor blindness appeared in twins.\nThey were Birhj, exactly alike in appearance, hpt one was color blind and\nthe other was not.\nNo explanation of this exception has\nbecn found. Professor Batesou said\nthere Ib a popular belief that sons In\ncertain respects took after mothers\nand daughters after fathers. Within a\nreasonable range of speculation, thiB\nIb bo, he .aid.\nchief apologist and defender ot the\nChurch of Kngland in the House ot\nCommons, and is in great lavor with\nthe Anglican bishops.\nAs a speaker he is full ol mannerism-. In last, hi. matter is a ileal\nbetter than hi. manner. An incisive\nthinker, he i. also a very clever\nphrasemaker, and is as ready to nt-\ntack member, of hi. own party as\nRadical.. Mr. Balfour, when Prime\nMinister, lound this tendency to in-\niuborilination in hi. cousin very trying, snd more than once severely\nsnubbed him. But Lord Hugh refused to ba crushed. He once jeered st\nthe \"urbane effrontery\" ol his relative and leader, and on another occa-\nsi n he referred to one oi Mr. Cham-\nbcr'.ain's Tariff Reform arguments as\n\"a bold lid for the unanimous .up-\nport ol the Hr-e Marines.\" But\nI.',rd Hunh weakens his position in\nthe House and amongst hi. own party\nby his excitable temper. He flies\nirto passions, shakes himse'.l like a\nI n-ed, and gives every evidence ol by-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd steria whenever one ot his articles ol\ni taith is attacked. And the House of\ni Commons has ever b.\ufffd\ufffdvn averse to\nhysteria.\nA Gigantic   Robbery.\nA   remarkable   theft   of   $50,000   in\ncold coin from a consignment of 11.-\n000,000 despatched from tlie Hank ol\nRnglaPd t<> the ofiices oi ths Credit\nl.yonnain   at   Alexandria.   Egypt,   is\n| b-v.vildering   to  th-   police.\nThe crime is believed to have been\nI nrricd out by a (.'Aug of international\n| 'hieves, to whom information i>! the-\nintended consignment leaked out by\nI < nv unknown means. It is not yet\nI :rown at what point en tcute the\nmoney wss stolen.\nWhen the casos were opened at Alex.\nandria, the heavy seals put on at\nLondon  were  apparently  intact.\nThe whole $1,000,000 was first puck-\n-xl in strong hags, each containing\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd15 000, and five bags were placed in\neach c.-x*. There were, therefor--.\n:<,rty ca.-.es, aiwl eight sell, were pine\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdd on each co.-e. The entire work wa<\narefully superintended bv represen-\n'atives of both hanks, and the cases\nvore fina'.ly handed over to Uie repre-\nlentatlves of the Credit Lyon-atus,\nThe   spere   was   despatched   from\nth\" Bans oi England on Nov. 12.\nWhen the boxes were opened, instead of the gold, the off) ;rs lound\n'-ad. Police Inquiries lead to the bell f that the s-lbitltution ti-ok place on\nlhe   train   journey   Ir ween   Bremen\nPUBLIC   STENOGRAPHER.\nSiM'-'Iflcatlons, asTMments of sale dseds.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffduMlns-M letters, etc.; circular work Tpi-\nclalist. All work strictly confidential. Tt\nBarry, ropm til Westminster Trust Bill.\nFRATERNAL.\nL. O. O II., NO. 854\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMEKTS ON first,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdm -.---nd and third Wednesdays in men\nmonth Is K. of p. HaU at S p.m. ItT\nU-amr. dictator; J. H. Price, seoreury.\nI. O. O. P. AMITY LODGE NO. 17\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTh.\nrcjrular meeting of Amity lodae No.\n27. I. OO. K.. Is held everyaorrday\nnight at t o'clock In Odd Fellows' Halt\n*?*\"** Carnarvon and Eighth streets!\nvisiting brethem cordially Invited.\nC. B. 8ry\ufffd\ufffd-n, 1M. O.; R. A. Merrlthew.\nV. O.; W. C.\nlug secretary;\nclal secretary.\nA. Merrlthew,\nCoatham. p. u . r-scord-\nH.  W. Baiicster,  tinan-\nFUNERAL   DIRECTORS.\nCENTER a HANNA. LTD.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFuneral\ndirectors and embalmere. Parlors 406\nColumbia street. New Westminster.\nPhone 9D3.\nW. B. FAJ.ES\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Pioneer Funeral Director\nand Embalmer, 612 618 Agnes street,\nopposite Carnegie Library.\nPROFESSIONAL.\nADAM SMITH JOHNSTON, Burrlsler-at-\nl-aw. -Solicitor. Etc bb'l Colt-mbla\nstreet. New We-rUnlnster, B.C. Tels*.\nphone 1.70. Cable address\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdton.\" Code, Western Union.\nRooms \ufffd\ufffd and 7 Ellis Illock.\n'John\nOKI\ntoes.\n1. 8TILWELL CLUTE. Barrlster-at-law,\nsolicitor, etc.: oorner Columbia and\nMcKenile . streets. New Westminster,\nB.  C.    P.  O.  Box  HX.     Telephone   7te.\nI    P    HAMPTON    BOLE,    BARRISTER,\nsolicitor    and    notary.    610    Columbia\nstreet.    Over C. P. R. Telegraph.\nMct-UARRIS*. MARTIN * CA88ADT,\nBarristers snd Solicitors. Rooms 7 and\n\ufffd\ufffd. Qulchon block. New Westininsx r.\nU E. Martin. W. Q. Mc-quurrie and\nOeorge l\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. Cas-sady.\nWHITESIDE A EDMONDS \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd BsrMslers\nnnd Solicitors. Westminster Trust Dlk\nColumbia street. New Westminster. Re'\nCable address \"Whiteside,\" Western\nl-nlon. P. O. Drawer 2\ufffd\ufffd0. Tilmssi,.\nt-i.    W. J.  Whiteside.   11.    L.   Edmonds.\nAUDITOR   AND   ACCOUNTANT.\nII. J. A. BURNETT.\nAccountant. Tele. 11\nBlock.\nAUDITOR    AND\n121.    Room Traps,\nBOARD  OF  TRADE.\nBOARD OK TRADE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNEW WE8TMIN-\nster ttoaril of Trade n,i'cis In the board\nluoni. Cily Hall, as follows: Third Friday of each month; quarterly meeting\non the third Friday of February, May.\nAugust and November at S p.m. Annual meetings on the third Friday of\nFebruary. S. H. Stuart Wade, pecre-\ntury.\ns-ssss\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd s\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdsssss-sssjss-\nClark-Fraser Realty Co.\nFormerly at 610 Columbia Bt., now at\n607 Front St.    Phone H 1031.\nNew  Westminster,   B.C.\nReal Estate and Buslneaa Chances.\nAcreage  and  Choice  Fruit  Lands a\nSpecialty.\nsynopsis op coal mining\noulationb;\nBJD-\nMay   Sell   Jewels   to   Recover   the\nThrone. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nPari., Jan. 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThc .ale of jewels\nof an alleged \"Turkish princess\" commenced today In the George Pettlt gallery. Tho collection ls valued at\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd600,000 anil la one of the large.t auction sales of pearls and diamonds ever\nheld In Pari..\nJewelers,     dealers      In    precious\ntones,     amateurs,    collectors     and I\nrnwdH of society people thronged the j\nhall.    Tho collection comprises   alto- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ngather 7:1 pieces. The total of today's\nBe.Rlon realized $370,376.   A magnificent necklace of four ropes of  pearls\nwaa anid for $241,000.\nIt !h said, on questionable authority,\nV'wi ver. that the \"Madame X\" to\nwhom the catalogue attributes the\ni.wuer: htp of tho collection, and whom\nthe public has construed Into a \"Turkish princess,\" ts none other than ex-\nEtnpreB. Eugenie.\nThis may explain the great beauty\nof the collection. The statement Is\nmade that the former empress is selling her jewels In order to get money\nfor Prinee Victor Bon&parto, who aspire, to the throne of Trance.\nNORA CLINTON\nIn 'The Vorsatlles\" at the Opera House Tonight,\nCOAL MINING rlirhts ef ths Dotalaleas\nla Manitoba, Hoskatchewan an* AltertA,\nthe Yukon Territory, the Northweet Territories and in a portion of tbe Pisilsse\nof British Columbia, may be Is-ased fer a\nterm of twenty-one yeara at an asssisl\nrental of II an acre. Net more than 1M\ufffd\ufffd\nticma will be leased to one applleaat. .  *.\nApplication for a lease mast be MM\nhy Ihe applleaat In pni-Mn to Uie Aaent\nor Sub-Agent of the dlstriet In Whieh tha\nright* applied for are situated.\nIn surveyed territory the lane muat he\ndracrluM by sections, or legal sub-dlvl-\nslons of sections, and In un-survcyest territory the tract applied for -shall *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nslaked out by the applicant himself.\nKarli application must be ai-cunswMH-si\nhy u fee of |S which will be ratastoed It\nih,< rights applied for are not avallsvW*.\nhut not otherwise. A royalty -mall he\npulil on the merchantable output of the\nailne nt the rate of five cents per ton. ,\nThe person operating the mine shall\n-iiriitah the Agent wllh sworn reluma\niccotintitig for the full t-uantlly of mer-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi inl'le eoal  mined and pay lhe re*f\ufffd\ufffd\nilly thereon, ir ihe coal mlalng HSThU\nire not lielng operated suet, returns-ri-OMla\n'\" iiiiniHi'i'ii at least us-see a year.\niiie 1,'iinc will Ini'lutio the cmU mlnlSkt\nIxhti only, hut tho leas..* will be psr-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 'I lo purchase whatever avallBswa\naiifuee rights may he ei-naMer-Ml nscssa-\nuiry for ihs. working est the mine at th*-\nale of im an sera.\nFor   full   liirnrninllon apfsllcatlon  BhOUhl\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd made to the Secrs-tory of the Depsvttv.\n'\"'in  of the Interior. '     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nAgent  or  Sllll-Agel\nDeputy .\nN. B.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdUnauthu.\nadvertisement win\npaid (err.\nFor Rent\n7-t-oomed house, fully modern\nwit* furnaee and kitchen, ranie,\nll'inleiiiii and bllnila. Lease lt\ninquired, 125.00 per month.\nS room limine, one block from\ncar, $16.00 per month.\nr. room   house,  modem,   wit*\nbasement, (20.00\nWarner, Bangs & Co.\nPhone 1024.\nColdicutt Blk.     Eaat Bu\ni '\"\"'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHW.illiJ*-\nTHURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 1913.\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS.\nPAGE THREE\nWhat Dairy\nmen Have\nDone and Are Doing\nAmongst those who were in attendance at the meeting, held last week\nin Woodstock, Ontario, of the Western Dairymen's association was the\nveteran cheese maker, Mr. J. A.\nCrawford, of London. Mr. Crawford\nis one who is Intensely interested In\nthe subject of dairying. There ls perhaps no man better acquainted wllb\nthe history of the cheese Industry tn\nthe county of Oxford than Mr. Crawford. He has an extensive fund of\nInformation In regard to the beginning of the Industry, and the price o!\ncheese, and Its fluctuations during all\nthese years.\nHe stated that It waa In the early\nseventies that cheese reached its very\nhighest price, but on the average, he\naald, the year 1912 saw the highest\nprices yet attained for cheese. The\nfollowing are some facta ln regard to\nthe Industry and to the Dairymen's\nassociations, gathered from an Interview .with Mr. Crawford:\nOxford has the honor of being the\nbanner county of Canada In the dairy\n. industry. It was lu Oxford county tbe\ncheese factory system was first introduced, and lt was In Oxford thai\nthe cheeso Industry was first placed {\non a scientific basis.\nOxford Showed Way.\nOxford also had the honor of organizing the Dairymen's Association\nand making a success of It.\nIt was thirty of Oxford's Influential\nmen, engaged ln the cheese Industry,\n. who met In the town hall of Ingersoll, en the 9th of July, 1867, and discussed the advisability of forming the\nDairymen's Association and decided\nto hold a meeting of every person interested in the cheese industry in\nCanada, at the town hall of lngersol\nfor the purpose of organizing such\nan association.\nTbe first regular meeting of the association was held on the 31st of\nJuly, and tbe first day of August,\n1867.\nOxford cheese was the first dices*\nof Canada shipped to England, and\nwas shipped by Harvey Farrlngton In\n1864.\nIn the early days of cheese-making\nIn Canada, there were a number of\nlarge cheese made that were considered among the wonders of the age.\nOne notable cheese made by James\nHarris & Co.. in 1866. weighed 7003\npounds, and was shown at Saratoga,\nNew York state farm, Toronto, Hamilton, Kingston and London. It was\nafterwards sent'to England.\nOver the  Rockies.\nto make ilumlnatlng gas a.i Fort Wll-1 by J. Bruce Walker, Commissioner of\nHam.    In  the same city tendera arc ; Immigration here,\ntuked for an $80,000 armory.   A five |    Through the agency of this, \"vast\ndeck  passenger  lake  steamer  which [ army   of immigrant  emiBsarleB,\" anil\nwas launched there, to carry 700 passengers, makes lis first trip In June.\ncf the dairy industry and mixed farming, which Is rapidly forging to the\nforefront among the farmers of the\nprovince, no doubt largely as a result\nof a campaign initiated by the government to advance the livestock and\ndairy interests.\nThe da'rymen's conventions, thougs\"\nsmaller than other conventions held\nIn the province, have been always\nmarked by the enthusiasm of all those\nu attendance, and it ia expected that\nat this year's convention there will b?\na large attendance from-many pointb\nthroughout tbe province.\nThe Program.\nAn excellent program has been prepared for the two days, commencing\nat ten o'clock ou the firBt day with\nthe registration of delegates. Among\nthe names of tbose wbo will deliver\naddresses on subjects of Interest to\ndairymen will be noticed those of the\nleading agricultural and dairymen In\nthe province, and also that of O. H.\nllarr, chief of tbe dairy division of\nthe department of agriculture at Ottawa. The meeting place for the\nwhole of the convention will be the\nagricultural college of tbe provincial\nuniversity. The program ls as follows:\nWedneaday,  February 5th.\n10.oo\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdRegistration of delegates.\n10.30\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTht- Farmer's Duty In Promoting the Dairy Industry, W. Newman, Lornevllle, Ont.\n11.15\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMore Haste, Less Speed, A\nF. Mantle, deputy minister of agriculture.\nAppointing  committees.\n2.00\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAddress of ' welcome, President  Murray.\nAcknowledgements, J. E. Frith,\nMooaomln; W. C. Paynter, Tantalllon.\n3.00\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGovernment's Attitude to\nDa'rylng, Hon. W. It. Motherwell.\nin ulster of agriculture.\n400\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGrading Cream, 1912, W. A.\nWilson, dairy commissioner.\nThursday, February 6th.\n10.00\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe Care of Cream for But\ntcrmaklng, O. H. Barr, chief of the\nd-ilry  division, Ottawa, Ont.\n11.00\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe Dairy Herd, Dean Rutherford.\n2.0U\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFeed for Dairy Cows, Profes\n- sor  Bracken.\n3.00\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdReport of resolution committee.\nOn Wednesday evening there will\nbe an evening session tn the theatre\nThe speakers are Professor Oliver\nand Hon. George Langley.\nThe Dairyi-en's convention is not\nthe only  gathering that will  attract\nQUCB*:C..\nLast year tbe'C. P. R. hauled more\ngi-aln than any other road in America.\nSidney Simmons, a nine-year-old\nMontreal boy was burned to death ln\nhis father's home.\nThe new bridge'over the river St.\nLawrence between the Highlands sra-\nt'on and Caughnawaga, erected by\nthe Canadian Pacific railway, Is now\nopen and the double tracks are ln\noperation.\nC. F. C. Smith, formerly Canadian\nmanager 9f the Liverpool and London\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.ml Globo Insurance company, died\nin Montreal aged 88 years, lie re\nired from the Insurance company af\nter 58 years' service.\nthrough the redoubled efforts of tbe\nDepartment of Immigration, Mr. Walker expects to see all records for immigration eclipsed this year.\nLOWER   PROVINCE3.\nTbe 13 cadets Just graduated from\nthe  naval  college are to be trained\non board H.M.S. Berwick.\nThe plant of the Moncton, N. B.\nTimes was gutted by fire and much\nit the machinery and stock destroy\nd with loss of 810,000.\nIn connection with, tbe big scheme\nfor the enlargement of the harbor ot\n3t. John, N. B., lt Is stated that Mesa\n.-3 Cammell, Laird A Company have\ndecided to lay down a plant tor the\nconstruction of the largest war and\nmerchant ships. Similar facilities are\nalso to be provided by a British syndicate at Sydney, Cape Breton.\nDRUNK ON CjSOjTE.\nThe fourth annual convention of the j agricultural men to Saskatoon during\nSaskatchewan dairymen, which is to th*- first week In February.\nbe held at Saskatoon on the 5th and The annual convention of thc Sank\n6th of February, promises from all: atchewan agricultural society Is be\npresent indications to be the most sue Ing held there from February 4th tc\ncessful yet held, both In point of the 7th inclusive; also the annual pri,\nnumber of the delegates who attend, jvincial Seed fair, and the annual show\nand lu the ever-Increasing interest i r the Saskatchewan poultry assocla-\nand enthusiasm for the development j tlon.\nNEWS AND NOTES\nFROM BACK EAST\nEASTERN  ONTARIO. . I consideration for the prisoners.\nDespondent over  the  loss  of   his I    The discovery of a dead body of a\ntye-slght  Kllas 8. Smith, aged 48, an | baby la the room of their servant gin\n-nipr-iyco of the Prudentlaljnauranoe ' '-** - \" \"* *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\"\ncompany, ~**~  '\"  \"'\"\ntawa.\ncommitted   lulclde  at  Ot-\nPrayers for the speedy recovery or\nher royal hlghnesa the Ducheaa of\nConnaught who la getting better rapidly, were aald tn all the Roman\nCatholic chnrchee of Ottawa.\nThe Alma Mater society- of Queen's\nuniversity, Kingston,; passed a resolution putting Itself on record a* being opposed to Its members wearing\nevening dress at university social\nfunctions.\nThe cabinet decided to commute to\nlite Imprisonment tbe sentence of Hen\nrl Regard of Bertrand, to have been\nhanged at Calgary. Bvldence of the\nman's Insanity waa produced.\nFire destroyed the atone barns and\nstables owned by Mrs. McMahon and\noperated by Wm. Ore, at Belleville.\nFive horses, including one stallion\nvalued at $1900, were got ont just In\ntime.\nGunner J. H. Davie of B Battery,\nR. C. H. A., an Englishman, aged 84.\nyeara, is dead In the Station hospital, Kingston. He enlisted six months\nago, baring served ta tbe Imperial\narmy and risen to tbe rank of sergeant-major.\nGovernor Sulser, ot New York, haa\ndeclared the ltoenie granting the Long\n- Sault Development oompany power to\noperate at the Long Sault rapid* near\n. Cornwall la Invalid and that the water power belongs to tbo people. The\ngranting of aueh rights haa been bitterly taught by Canada.\nWESTERN ONTARIO.\nC. J. Winlo of the Toronto Globe\neditorial staff, died attar a long III-\nsurprised a Toronto family.\nThn customs returns for London-\nhave attained the $l,'ii>0,0U0 mark for\nthe elapsed portion of the fiscal year.\nMrs. A. H. Foe of Strathroy succumbed to burn* aha received from s\nlamp explosion when she fell on the\nstairs.\nIsaac Laufer, 20, of Berlin, waa ta\nken from a Grand Trunk train Ih\nWindsor and ls being held oh a charge\nof theft\nL. S. Levee, T&rooto, former mem\nbur of the sohool board, was fined\n1300 snd his son $200 tar circulating\nImmoral literature.\nOwen Sound bonded warehouse of-\nf.clals and Berlin shippers have been\nsnmn-oued for alleged '--each of lew\nIn Importing whiskey labeled aa pick-\nlea.   - .  .\",\nCaptain T. Davis, of the steamei\nScott eh Hero, haa been appointed tc\nthe captaincy ot the Mara, the large*\nboat ot the Canada Inter-Lake Steam\nship Co.\nThe Brantford Cordage Co.. the last\nI of the strictly Canadian hinder twtnt\nmanufacturing concerns in the Do\nmla.on, hsd a close call trom being\nentirely wiped out by a disastrous\nfire.\nThree Western Ontario editors. W.\nS. D'ngraan, of the Stratford Herald\nA Reminiscence of th* South African\nWar.\nI acquired the abominable habit\nwhilst serving as a private in the\nSouth African war, says a writer in\nLondon Ideas. The company in which\nI was occupied a block-house, and\nthe awful monotony of the life drove\nmany ot the weaker soldiers to drink,\nand even worse things.\nWhen all the drink was gene, and\nthe bad food became unbearable several of my companions took to drugging themselves with the cordite from\nthe cartridges supplied to them, and\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffditer a while I followed suit, first of\nall from curiosity, but later because'\nof my inability to conquer the depraved  taste  I acquired.\nCordite is composed of gun-cotton,\nnitres-glycerine, and a small quantity\noi vaseline. The nitre-glycerine given\nit a sweet and rather pleasant taste,\nbut a very small allowance produce!\ns violent headache. The first mouthful I swallowed laid me up for several hours with a splitting head ami\na terrible pain in my back, and I\nswore off cordite for some days.\nThen the agony of having neither\ndrink nor tobacco to soothe my nerves\ngot the upper hand of my resolution,\nsnd I started to chew the explosive\nagain, taking s very small quantity\nat first, and gradually increasing the\ndose.\nI still experienced violent headaches, but \"alts-r a whil* th* cordite\nhad a similar effect to alcohol. AI\nsmall quantity was av-tVcient to make I\nme drunk, and the headache did not 1\ntrouble me until several hours slier-\nwords ss is the case alter a heavy\ndrinking  bout.\nThen the cordite began to effect my\nrest, and I experienced the most horrible dreams that nearly drove me\ninsane. I made a determined effort\nto conquer my passion of the explosive as I was the only man who could\nnot do without it, but the long, weary\ndays alwaya got the upper hand of\nmy resolution, and usually long before\nnightfall I had succumbed to tbo\ntemptation that lay in my cartridge\nbelt.\nMy dream* were alwaya about the\nwar in which we were engaged. I used\nto see England detested by her enemies and the wholes*!* slaughter of\nthe British army. Sometimes I would\npicture myself csptured by the Boers\nand put to the most fiendish tortures,\nsnd would wake up trembling in every\nlimb, with the per*pir\ufffd\ufffdsion runnin-r\noff me in stresms.\nOn one occasion.I dreamt that tb*\nblock-house wss surtouatded by a vast\narnty ot Boon,, who captured it after\na terrible stru'.'ele, and brought out\n(.he survivors to be burned ut the\nstake. J saw myself, with savers'.\ncompanions, tied to posts amidst a\nmass of brushwood, and could almost\nieel the awful heat oi the advancing\nflames.\n> Sam* .\"Barrl*>l*m*.\"\n\"It .is not worn ?n who are terrible\nbut a woman.   Here ia a clear case\nin which the nut ia greater than the\nwhole.\"\n\"Tb dislike our admirers is to b-\nsevore on ourselves, and i* therefore\nnot common.\"\n\"A man'*, second childhood begins\nwhen a woman gets hold ol him.\n\"It a woman haa only one talent.\nW.VBurgeyne of the St. Ja'J-wlneiH ********** ** * peiP\ufffd\ufffdjraae. om#\n-     -    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd-.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd r, . ,i,Vi\ufffd\ufffdi*i\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.I rer of ths eye, ot a taste   tn dres*.\nBLACX ROD.\nHa Ic One of the Most Interesting\nMen In Oltawi.\nHa was u typical country postnia*\nter, a veteran who joyed to tell yuu\nthat he owed his appointment \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>>\n\"John A.\" Ha ccmbined his . fficiai\nduti'.-? with those ot conducting a gon-\nerol etsir', where everyone within a\nradius of live miles or so \"jot credit, '\nand where, six evenings iu every\nweek, the male citizenhood ot tne\nvillage gathered, with corn-cob pipe.-,\nto discuss the doings of the community and determine affairs of -tat*, \"foe\nopening of Parliament was always a\/\ufffd\ufffd\nannual theme lor much illuniiiutiii-*\ninterchange.\nThere wss som.-tliing fascinatingly\nmediaeval and mysterious lor the,\nfunction-try known as the (ientleina't\nUsher ot the Black Rod. Tliey spoke\nof him with awe; they regarded lniu\nas a wonderlul reincarnation of tht*\ns'rang\" specie* of tutelary genii moat\no! tiiem had read about in the Arabian\nNights. They dweit upon his raiment\nand his procedure. He waa attired\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nso the papers said\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdin a Fuuntleroy\nsuit of rich, black velvet, with be-\nribboned bows on his breeches and\nsilver buckles on bis shoes. An elaborate lace jabot\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdat least that wa-.\nwhat the missus called it\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdadorned\nhis bosom, and in his white-gloved\nhands he carried the magic Black\nRod from which he derived his name.\nHis visit to the Commons was heralded by the time-honored three\nknocks. He made his entrance with\nthree magnificent bows, triumphs ef\nmathematical calculation and Del-\nsarte accomplishment; and his exit\nwith three more, all in sequence and\nequally rjrfeet and precise. \"Yes,\"\nput in the bearded Sandy, a canny\nand characteristically material Scot,\nas he borrowed a bit more tobacco,\n\"he makes six bows a year and gets\n$.'1,500 for it, which, st $583 a bow.\nisn't bad, is it?\"\nOne day the old postmaster visited\ntbe city to make his autumn purchase of merchandise. He was standing in the railway -office, discussing\nfreight rates, when he was accosted\nby a commercial traveler who had\nmore than once visited the country\nstore and been permitted to join in\nthe nightly discussions. He led th?\nveteran over to a large illustration\nof camp life which adorned the wail.\nIt showed three men disembarkin,-\nfrom a canoe. He pointed to one of\nthem, a rou^h-looking individual\nwith an uncouth slouch hat, a coarse\ncamping outfit, big heavy boots and\na browned, unsiiaved countenance.\n\"That,\" said he, \"is the Gentleman\nUsher of the Black Rod.\" The old\npostmaster all but gasped at the sacrilege  of the  revelation.\nBut the traveler was right.   Captain\nErnest   John   Chambers,   Gentleman\nUsher   of   the   B'.ack   Rod.   when  he\ndoffs  his  Habiliment  of   office,  is  litterateur,   ftoldier   aod   aportan-ai-,   and\nhan established hia title clear lo all.\n1 He has ot uece-ssity to be an athlete\n1 since    how    otherwise    could   he    go\nthrough the wonderful contortion* ot\nthose   nix. kwwjsi-     But   he. is   more\nHc is a young Englishman, a native\nof Staffordshire, who came to Canada\nin his early youth and took up the\ncalling  of  journalism.    He  waa   for\ntwo years the editor oi the first daily\nnewspaper in the then Northwest Territories.    And he bas been connected\nwith the militia since he was fifteen\nyears old.   He  was press eon-espon\ndent during the Northwest cempaigi\nof  1888.  and uprformed  military service voluntarily.    He wa* present at\nthe engagements  at Fish  Creek and\nBatoche,   and   participated   in   the\noperations  against   Big  Bear*  band\nof Indian*, receiving both medal and\nclasp-'for- ms aer-rioea.   He i*. more\nover, the author of some twenty-five\npublications, chiefly military history,\nbooks of reference and volumes of M**\ngraphy, and is a regular contributor\nto various magaaines.\nIt isn't those bows that a grateful\ncountry pavs him for\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnot much. It\nisn't tor sitting ajphinx-jike in the\nrted Chamber, tirelessly following the\ntedious debate ot the Senate, for, like\nthe unfortunate Speaker, be doesn't\neven get a chance to s'.eep or play\nsolitaire. Hi* duties sre infinitely\nmore arduous and exacting. H*\n\"run*\" the social show. And just\nthink tor a moment what would happen to Canadian democracy, not to\nmention the whole Britiah constitution, if, perchance, .through some ter\nrib'.e oversight or accident, the wits\"\nof a deputy wss permitted to take\nprecedence st some of the myrisi\nstate functions over the ambition*\nbetter hall of a Cabinet Minister.-\nH. W. Anderson in Canadian Conrwi\nft\nWhile ta tbe throe* of ba sptlsptlc\ntit Harry Bax, of Toronto, choked to\ndeath.\nChristopher J, Winder, Toronto,\nerased with drink, attempted ta commit suicide.\nMra. Robert Reddttt, mother of Rev\nJ. J. Reddltt Toronto, died at Newmarket.\nW. B. Harvey, a well known high\nschool teacher, latarly at Burk'a Falls\ndied, aged TS.\nCaptain Mclnnee, a promlaent navigator of the lake* for half a century\ndied at Orlllla.\nJohn Emery, a Taraouth tanner,\nexpired suddenly while laughing aad\ntalking wltb Wanda.\n< Mra. John ORetltot BrMtford, waa\nfatally talttrad by Wttag oa a chair\nwhile putting up eawtatas.\nOntario butter brings a higher price\nIn \"Toronto (bttaMsw Zealand butter\n-Joes in Vancouver.\nDr.* .7. T. Gllmour, warden ot tbe\nCentra! priaon,,ni|vde a plea tor more\nStandard, and Phil Boyer of ths Ridge\ntown Dominion, are aenate posetblll\nOca.\nMl** McSwayne, daugbtor ot tho\nlate Judge McSwayne, ot LlntWy. xn I\na graduate of Boston generid hospital, baa been appointed assi-nn-it superintendent of the Berlin-Wat-rloo\nhospital.\nIn an Investigation at At-vo-M Into\nthe burning of th-- DoncgV ciiots*\nWeber admitted living. a.< re ,:iiJ,\nIn a Joke, offr>-* 1 tr. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd l*. \ufffd\ufffdnv 'Its*\nnant to burn thn btrihi.-.a\nAfter pleading sjurity fan! Mrt ft I'\na charge of ohtalui j-, rr> in v \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd * i.itai\npretences and being given until thla\nmonth to make restitution, Harold B.\nMcKee waa aentenced to six months\nlmprlaonment In Toronto.\nHenrv Frank, who ta alleged to\nhave left Toronto when tbe firm ot\nP. \"B. Frank A company, wholesale\nboot and ahoe dealer* failed with liabilities of $240,000 and assets of $30,-\n000 or more, was arrested In New\nYork.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdhe lays it out st usury.\n\"There are tome women who can\nlaugh without looking inane, and\nthere ars others who-can weep and\nbe allowed to live; but newer waa a\nwoman who could do either that did\nnot continue doing it in and out ot\netason.\".\n\"A woman can put more meaning\nInto a note ot exclamation than a\nman can pack in a sentence.\"\n\"A woman'* that deliberate aet i*\nto make Iter husband helpless. There\nsre tew men happily married win\ncan knock tn a nail.\"\n\"The language ot love ia in twe\nsexes\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtor the woman supcrletiTfs,\nlor the maa diminutives.'*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe J.\nM. Baltic Calendar, .\"\nMinion* for Missions-.\nNew York, Jan. tf.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe largest am-\ngle bequest for foreign missions la\ndlsclored ta -the will filed here yesterday of the eetate ot Robert- Arthtng-\nton, who died In Bngtand. Mr. Arth-\nlngton left an estate ot $5,000,000 and\not this amount he gave $4,600,000 to be\ndevoted to. carrying, the gospel to\nevery heathen tribe on earth.\nKidnapping M.P.'s.\nHere is an insight Into the gamp ol\npractical   politics   some   year*   ago\ngranted the public by ope who played\nit tor halt a century, and who had\nexperienced  about every variety  ol\nfortune on the carda.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd When'Sir Richard Cartwrjght snter-\ned the Parliament of United Canals\ncontending  parties   were   to  nearly\nevenly  balanced .thst practically    -\ndeadlock prevailed.   Describing cot\ndition*  in   ta*   House  Sir  Richard\nwrites in hia recently publiahtd Rem-\nniscencee: \"We were almost man hi\nman tor meet of that period (Itm-M I\nNo one oould absent himeelt without a\npair, and ptiring waa extremely hard\nto get.   1 hays known ease* wher->\nthe House wa* kept in session for\ntwenty-tour and aometimen lory-tight\nhour* to enable a alngle individual\nmember to be present.   Jbere were\ntonie curious attempts, at kidnapping\nindividual membsra, and on one oo\ncasK-q Mr. BandttBd Macdonald want\nthe Jsttgth. of declaring, .wttlt closed\ndoors tbstril he \ufffd\ufffdmw \ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffdoo to believe\ntbat-sany toofa tttak had been practiced he would refute to recognise any\nvote et 'wdMT ot eonlWeace unlets it\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd&&tZm.**XU? \"^\"^\nNEW ONTARIO.\nTbo elevator owned by the Ute A,\nB. Fenton, Fort William, was bought\nby A. F, Ony and associates,\nFort William started a campaign\nto \"have MOO houses -erected next\nspring, to provide accommodation tor\ntbb clty'a population of woiain-g mso.\nThe C. P. R. Is tnetall'tng a plant\nMANY\nIMMIGRANT   EMIMARIM.\nggsa*jeaa^**jB*JB*xa| .\nHeme\n1t,2M Western Canadlana\nta Europe ts -tyMM-O,.,      \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nWinnipeg, Jan. ,\ufffd\ufffd.-Wsatsrn Cans\n\ufffd\ufffdtwyj-r\ufffd\ufffdw\ufffd\ufffd*K\ncrossed tbs, Atlantic f\"\" **-\"\"-\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd **\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*****\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nand Kuropi this lsst]\t\naccording to official figures compiled\nlot the    .\t\nInert-aes **>\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *}*****\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ^ _\\,\nScientific\nSelling\n\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwife*\nThe commercial world is alive to tke possibilities of\nscientific manufacturing. Great striates are being made\nin the application of a set of principles so sincere and simple that their talue is not open to doubt. Scientific management is opening the way for greater efficiency and\ngreater economy in production.\nThe production ef an article, however, is but one of\nthe processes through which it must go, and the giant task\nis today and always has been to find the best method of\ndistributing what is produced.\nDistribution frequently costs more than production.\nDollars will go further in their purchasing power and\nstandards of living will be generally enhanced in just the\nproportion that distribution is simplified and economized.\nStudents of economic conditions are convinced that\nthe American system of selling has been extremely wasteful and manufacturers in many lines are now earnestly\nconsidering cot only what they may do to organize their\nproduction on the most scientific basis, but also how they\nmay lessen the cost of selling and thereby make a greater\nprofit, or give the consumer the advantage of a better article for the same money or the same article for less\nmoney.\nIntelligent advertising is a powerful aid in the solution of this vexatious problem.\nIt requires effort to sell goods and salesmen must be\npaid for making this effort. A merchant buys goods to\nsell them. He is interested in profit and retailing has\nlong since reached the point where quick sales with small\nprofits are more highly regarded than slow sales with\nlarge profits. *   .\nThe merchant realizes that well-advertised goods are\npartially sold and that his trade, although the profit per\nsale may be slightly less, is certain to be more brisk on\ngoods of this character.\nThe salesman who can offer to his trade a line of merchandise which is widely known and for which there exists a favorable prejudice can sell his wares with less effort than if he were handling an unknown article.\nThe tnia-auf ncturer who ts Daying, -salesmen for making a snVwn ettort obvioutAy htw to -prnw V-aa* p-r\\-ee tor Veens\neffort.     And this condition does nssA -wos-k against the\nsalesman.     He can cover more te-rritor-f, get a better\nheating and in the long ran main more money.\nThe scientific ideal endorses a straight line as the\nshortest distance between two points.\nIf a railroad is to be constructed from one city to another the engineering ideal is an air Sue; but, of course,\ngrades must be leveled, streams crossed, other towns\ntaken into consideration, and a practical building of the\nroad means a departure from the ideaL\nIn merchandising we have a paraDef*-e\ufffd\ufffdse\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe man\nwho makes something and the man trio wants something.\nThe selling ideal is a straight route timm tmrn of these ami:\nto the other.    But there are jobbers, retailers, competitors and market conditions to be eamrideied and in practical selling all these elements must be given due atten--\ntion.\nAdvertising, however, provides a short route by which*\nthe man who makes something may tall about it to the\nman who wants such an article, and if enough persons are\ntold and taught, they will mate their desires felt through\nthe retailer and the jobber. Thn *uaiurfacturer^thenjjets\nhis reward because he has hia mark on his foods and he-\nalone can supply them.\nHis salesmen find'it less dHikutt to sell the goods and  .\nthrough this process, wisely conceived and courageously\nconducted, many a business is bringing about a much more\nwholesome condition in its selling.\nBusiness men are learning that it ia better and cheaper and economically more sound to get the bujk of trade\n\/ in ft given Une by identifying; tliek mprrhaadirve and creatine for it a wide demand. L\nIt is not illegal or Illegitimate to raise a business beyond the pate of competition by such methods and approach to ft monopoly can frequently be Wit along these\nOnes.\nIf the man at the head of ntd. a I\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdis>m aeea with a\nclear vision and does not unwisely take toe gnat advantage of the position thus secured, the people at large will\nbe the direct beneficiaries of Ms setoff Mg fastnesses\nwin-be spared from penudous \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdshalatlsn and an of the\nadvantages of great production and mhillftc distribution may be reaBaed.\nIt aptwars reaswuMe to us that -Hie largest, oldest\nand mostJOghly organised *^rtferfa*lmesMte fee worid\nIs probahly In a superior position to fundsh coonsel and\nassistance to fetidness men who sre confronted with such\nDroblems.   ||bs>\ufffd\ufffdaO^\nspif*Mtt*ly successful in developtoga freqoenUy from\nemail beginnings, some vety large ssrm^ing aceounto\nwith manufacturers of staple coaotodnos and corpora-\nMm^X*ta^tamSh%ri'^C THE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS.\nTHURSDAY, JANUARY 30, fill   I\nShdi Breeders\nAssociation Holds\nAnnual Session Hire\n(Continued from rage one)\nsent the stereoptlcon, round 'districts\n10 or 15 miles from the railroad, de-\np.cting different conditions ln farm\nme, from cattle breeding to barn cons'run-lion.\nMr. I). R. MacKenzie, secretary and\nmanager lo tho It. A. & i. Society, said\nhe was no stockbreeder, but he looked\nat <he industry from tbe exhibition\nor demonstration point of view. He\nfelt their success depended a great\ndeal upon the stockbreeders. They\nhad every reason to feel proud of\ntheir fanners and stockbreeders.\nThe Old Warhcrse.\nThe   chairman   then   called   upon\ntheir \"Old Warliorse,\" Mr. T. J. Trapp.\nMr. Trapp, who was received with\napplause, praised    Dr.    Doherty    not\nst-allcd upon all to drink to tlie health\nat Dr. Doherty and his officials' on the\nfarm.\nTbe toast was honored by    singing\n-\"They are jolly good fellows.\"\nUr. Doherty acknowledged the toast .\nand said on behalf of his oo-workers only for his services to stockbreedlng\non tho colony Kami that he was ex- but for his general humanity to the\ntremeJy pleased to have tho oppor- unfortunates under his care. He was\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.unity of welcoming the members or.greatly pleased to see their eoushu\nsuch an important organization as tlie pit-sent from across that Imaginary\nStoesshs-eedera' \"Association of B. p.       li-ie and desired   them   to   make   it\nBacked by soil and climatic eond!- known that Dr. Doherty or his asslst-(\ntk-ns and  their heroic    efforts,    Dr. ants  were always ready and willing*\nUoh-Tty saw no   reason   why   B. C I to show the stock on the Colony farm\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdshould  not be ono of    thu    greatest to visitors,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdstock countries ln the world.   He said     A few years ago,  said Mr. Trapp,\ngreatest notwithstanding the fact thai\nbe bad Scotsmen by his side. He\ntb-wisi'd the gathering on behalf of\nMr- Montgomery and Mr. Malcolm\nStptvarl, as well as Mr. Charles\nllol-ne, now ln the hospital, one of\nthe finest men in government employ-\nsm.nl He hoped they felt repaid tor\nahmhnhjt out and If they desired to obtain any of thc stock from the farm\nthere would soon be another bargain\nsale when they would have the opportunity.    (Applause.!\nWas an Education.\nBlr. W. E. Scott,'deputy minister of\n-a-;r,culture, said be voiced the senti-1T\nrariits of every one   when    he   said!\ntheir visit  today  waB  an   education.\nthe land they saw around them in a\ncultivated condition was a swamp and\na great many people thought nothing\ncould be done with it. He might mention Incidentally that hc had been\ntold that their first hay crop averaged over four tons an acre, good\ntimpothv u' J clover. He wondered\nwhat it wi iiid be when the land was\nln a better ttate of cultivation.\nTlie asso. ihtion then adjourned and\nreturned to New Westminster where\nthey reassembled In the city hall.\nAddresses were given by Mr. G. S.\nHarris on \"Swine Management\" and\nthe \"Form Horse\" by Dr. 8. F.\nTiltnie. Both were lucid snd educative, and each gentleman received a\nvote of thanks.\nln  the  business  meeting that    fel-\nislands, and the lower mainland.\n\"In v:ew cf the great value of tha\narable land In this district and of the\ncomparative limited areas of good\nland, whatever stock we keep has got\nto be the very best,\" the doctor affirmed. \"British Columbia ls alreadj\nknown as uie country that wantB the\nbest stock. She is known as a buyer\nof good stock and the reputation\ngained in this manner has not tuffer-\ned In any way by the action of the\ngovernment in importing the celebrated stock on the Colony farm, Co-\niiultlam.\"\nBest Display in Canada.\nIn referring to the Colony farm\nstock Dr. Rutherford sa'd: \"No othor\nprovince In tht Dominion has now or\nevor %as had, and I may say never\nwill have, such a masnificent display\nas we saw at Coc-ultlam to-lay. lt\nSf.il show the people the right way to\ngo into the business.\n\"Tho breeders In the East,\" the\nspeaker went on, \"have lost a greut\n(teal In falling to recognize the British\nColombia market for good stock. In\nstead, they have built up a trade with\nthe .United States. 1 look upon B. C.\nfW.iue coming nursery ot pure Btock\nof. the.Dominion.\"\nIn offering suggestions as to th\ufffd\ufffd*\nklud of horse that should be bred ln\nthis, district. Dr. Rutherford stated\nthccc-ulno wns a creature of environment.. The wiry, all muscle Arab\nhorse was the native of tho desert,\nthe rugged little pony the product of\nWales, the Shetland Islands, and\nthe draft horse of low countries. Thus\nhe selected the low country of the\ncoast ns an Ideal place for breeding\ndraft It i-ses. The advantages for\ntrcecii-.R.the heavy horse in this coun\ntry were unsurpassed in the worlil\nand with the judiciouB breeding of\nClydeBdales and    Shires    the    B. C.\nPRESIDENT TAFT\nIS OPPOSED TO DILI\nVigorously   Attacks   Democratic   Proposal to Give Philippines Freedom In  Eight Years.\nWashington, Jan. 29\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'-resident\nTaft, In his farewell speech to the\nOhio Society of Washington tonight,\nvigorously attack-d the bill now pending In congress proposing autonomy\nand Independence In eight years for\nthe Philippines.\n\"Is lt possible,\" asked the president,\n\"that the Democratic party is going to\nreverse the policy thnt has vindicated\nItself by ten years' experience merely\nfor the purpose of conforming to the\ncobwebbed planks of forgotten platforms Will they not, before they take\nsuch an irretrievable step obtain reliable information as to the conditions\nthat obtain ln the islands This issue\nhas been relegated to the Umbo of free\nsilver or the narrow doctrine of states\nrepresentatives. Those who continue\nto give out their lucubrations on the\nPhilippines are now Icsb than those\nwho expect to attend the next inaugural    ball.\"\nThey all knew what the government\nam* heen doing during the past few*lowed    ^    followlng   officers were  draft horse could be produced\nyears for the benefit of the m\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^n elected:  Honorary president, Lieuten-1    \"We hear today that the draft horse\n-unfit In providing the healthy outdoor | ant    GoTernor    PaterBOn;    honorary )9 doomed,\" Dr. Rutherford said,   re-\nsewrase on the   farm.    Many    cures vlce.pre3*(-enti Dr. Tolmie;  president,  ferring to the great    fear   of   many\nbad becn effected ln tti!3 way.    inau-|A    n   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,,,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.nr->iildBnts     ShrooAom   \"nnd thnt\nsiiticn look at thc value lo the prov-\nTREE OBSTRUCTED\nVIEW Of STREET\nI A. D.  Paterson;   vice-presidents,    S.   breeders, \"and that the gasoline en\n-- ...     ;Smith and W. E. Scott, deputy mln-;g|ne has sounded its death knell,    i\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\"ice by the providing of the m.-t Ciaaa^        cf agrl(,u*'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdre;   board of direc- don't believe lt.    1 have seen many\n'tors: Vancouver Island, Messrs. Shop-j engines Invented and expect to see n\n,  ,   ,,, !lanil, Sang3ter   and   Had wen;   lower good many  more, but our days  will\nindnstry  round  the  centres  or  popu- |mn)n]and  Me8S1.9, Davie, Shannon and  have long passed their allotted  span\nlat,on in this country  was tne pr ^ |Webb.   u      r country,  Messrs. Jack-  before the draft horse disappears.    I\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdcf  land,  declared   Mr.   Bco't.     >'\ufffd\ufffd '.<-1 son   0, areenwood, and Redman,    of don't think any engine will take    the\n-stock they bad seen that day.\nWhat militated against    the\nBtOClt\nwas the pr_\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nScott. These\nthat might be devoted to stock\nraisins were in the hands of speculators and subdivided, it was justified\nto a. certain extent, but In eonie parts\n-nf the country it was going too far.\nSn the natural course of events It\nmust stop.\nKtor somi- time, Mr. Scott continued,\nthoir association had  no one at    the\nKnmloops.\nThe following resolutions were passed: \"That this association refuse to\nrefund half transportation charges on\npure bred cattle imported into the\nprovince unless the same are accom-\nfrom    the\nplace of the drafl horse in a thousand\nlines of Industries. At any rate I am\nnot going to worry about It.\n\"The draft horse,\" advanced the\nvisitor, \"is the most profitable the\nfarmer.! can breed. The two year old\ncolts can be pet to work to earn thei'\npunii-d   by   a   certificate   .iu.,.    ..,<=.\nhealth department animals branch of j feed    and    even    If    they do run    up\n,i     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd :\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,i\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd., n   the  Dominion  government or the B. iiigeinst   a   barb  wire fence  they  are\nliclm-md six months ago the*  induced jc,   ve(prjnary    lllapt,ctori    that    they'always  saleable.\"\nhave been subjected to tlie tuberculin j    As far as cattle were concerned the I\ntest within six months from date    of. doctor recomemnded  Shorthorn dairy |\nMr. Macdonald to come over and  he \\\n-a good Canadian again,    ill him  the)\ntiad one who would look closely after\n-after   their   interests   and   help     the\nIndustry or B. C.   This country\ni going to prodiK-r more largely in\nthe near future.   They had a vast ter J\nrftoi-j- in Northern B. CL, particularly\nin the Skeena and Naas river basins\n.and the  Nation lake  country.    Then\nWif-i of Former Senator Has It Cut\nDown In Spite of Objections cf\nthe Police.\n! shipment.\"      Moved    by    S.    Smith, land Ayrshire stock for the coast. Tl\"\nseconded by H. Webb. ] highly   specialized   cow   was   not   the\n\"That the meeting recommend the!most profitable animal in view cf the\ndirectors to tako up the matter of a  high land values of the district.    No\nseed corn competition and offer prizes   matter what    the    breed    was. good\nat the next convention.\" animals shoul-i be given the fli'3t con-\n\"Tliat  the matter of publishing    a , s!d<-rat'on    and    the    star    boarders\nbooklet en the live stock Industrv and  eliminated.      The    breeding   animals\nI cf directors  for  favorable consideration.\"\n\"That in view of the fact that\n! g' vernment    received    as    high\nare  breeding.\nstock expert, \"try to    eliminate    the\nsensi less  slaughter  of  young    nelfer\n-.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd> Vs- -rat-see. tar On, <\nthe\nas\niu-\na-r.  Bco-A ei-are-m-A t-.\\\ufffd\ufffd  a\ufffd\ufffdpvecla-\\\ufffd\ufffdE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\"uV tor animals slaughtered    tor\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOn. ot %    isoil    -.teHs-ii    day    ^ t-itortoto-\ufffd\ufffd be  \ufffd\ufffdIk4 to |IW tor\n^ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd<*\ufffd\ufffd. s>T ttus-Mis. -\ufffd\ufffd->.\ufffd\ufffd oenam \\ Krailed animal and \"S300 tor a register- 'Watery.     The   Argentina\nI* d-Te. lo Yir. -Young, who so Wnilly ar-\\e'l beaat.\" i legislation    prohibiting    the    recklessl\n  \\klllHS   of   female  calls   under   sever\nNIGHT &ESSION. *    lyi-dr'ji cf age.    1 have figures here to\nThe evening    seasion    was   oneneil 1-*\ufffd\ufffdw    *rora    *--'    the   cattle breeding\nI with   n  highly\nWashington, Jan. 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDefiyng    thc\npolice, Mrs. John H. Henderson, wife\nof former Senator John U. Henderson,\nof   Missouri,  had   two  laborers   from\nthe Henderson estate cut down a large\ntruo   on   a public   thoroughfare   last\nnight because It obstructed her view\nof the   street.   Colonel   Truman   H\nLauaham, superintendent of parkings\nfor the district, said tonight the mat-\nter had been placed in the hands of\nthe police for action.\nMrs. Henderson, who stood by hold- i\nj ing a lantern    while    her   workmen\noperated, declared that    for   several\nmontha Bhe had requested the authori-'\nties to look after the offending tree,!\n{but that they had paid little attention\nto the matter.\n\"Last night,\" she continued, \"with\ntwo of my laborers I wept to the\nstreet corner to clear rubbish left ou\nthe sidewalk. While there I determined to finish the whole job. I ordered the tree sawed down and my\nInstructions  were   followed\n\"THE   VERSnTILES.\"\nF. Qtuart-Whytc's company of old\ncountry Pierrots. \"The Versatiles,\"\nwill be Lhe offering al the Opera House\ntomorrow evening.\nThis clever \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd combination of old\ncountry players are on their first Canadian tour. They have had several\nsuccessful seasons In Yuncouvor, at\nEnglish Day, but have always conu\nfrom and returned directly te tile old\ncountry.\nTills Beason in response to the re-.\nquests of several prominent theatrical\nmalingers throughout Canada, Mr.\nWhyte has enlarged and strengthened his company for a road tour before departing to London for their\nseason there, which has been postponed until February for this -Beason.\nIn uddltion to the Pierrot show,\nwhich occupies the first fifty minutes\nof the evening's entertainment, thc\ncompany nre presenting a brilliant\nlittle musical comedy, entitled, \"In\nthe Camp Fire's-Olow,\" the action of\nwhich ls laid in Western Canada.. Tho\ncompany carry a bcauliful setting for\nthis piece, which was taken from\nphotographs of the Peace river coun\ntry.\n^Ll^Vh^IZt?^ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* directory be left with the board -should be of sound stock.\n?\"\"''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ^lL^\"lZ\\s,A^neo?allvlrf directors  for  favorable consldern-      \"No matter what kind of stock you\ntea,i^rr-irrnftWe'y'i\"\"\"'\" !<-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd<\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*&\ufffd\ufffd.*' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nar-R raising stock at the present time,\nand that was who.   stock^as going . iu-.   for a rcsiBlered    cow    Ule    in-! calfa, tor. thanks to carelesBiicas    ln I     she    declared    her    wllllngneaa\n\"        \"*'-  ' ' '-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' '\"'       *    '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'''this regard in the paat. the world    in I stand the consequence** nt her act\n' 'lielng the greatest cattle shortage ln I\nThe   Argentina   haa   passed (\n\\ ed beast\n-ranKs-si  s-vi-jytMT-j; far  tlvrlr   \\ inil   to\n1 the farm.    Their    slock    aaaoclation\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffds-ra-t accomplishing    H*.\\cnd'.d    result\nana there was an Increased interest\nto\ncri-atefl in stock raising by their efforts.    (Applause.)\nMr. van Pott, as a monfber ot the\nI,ive St'-ck Improvement Association,\nsaid be had   occasion   to   cross    th\nlectin'\nI lad \ufffd\ufffd\nseasion   was   opened.\nInstructive   illustrated  countries of the world that the world\non animal parasites by Dr. S.\nUs face to face with the most serious\nof    AguBsiz.    Tlie    speaker\nbeef scarcity il has ever seen and ex-\nmentioned briefly  the various animal iP->'\"ii.ccd men  In  the business have\npests such as moaqultos, ticks. wrnbl.>ifx1nr''8SP,d  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"-\".  \ufffd\ufffdP''',on ,lhat,   \" w\\_,  ,.H ,.,   ,    ,      , \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 0      ,\nflies, lice and insects which are some Itake M k'!'st tc\" -\"-*rB for tne world   0ld Stu-l-'nt** o1 Ya-\ufffd\ufffd Ch*'* Retiring\nMMI SOT GOOD\nW TO PRESIDENT\nNORDICA   STILL  STUDYING.\nM'stress of song, applauded by t>\\\"\ncontinents and admittedly the great\nest Wagnerian singer In the world\nMme. Lillian Nnrdica Bays she Ib still\nBtudying. During her recent trip\nabroad Nordlca Journeyed to Pail\nfor the special purpose of studying\nwith Jean de Res\/.ke, \"one never can\nlearn anything.\" she Bald.\nStudents whose minds run to graduation should ponder over this remark.\n\"Believe in your own powers, be pat-\nlent and work, always work.\" is an\nepitome ot Lillian Nordica'B belief\nand tbe secret of her success, for In\naddition to her wonderful voice and\nr.ieat beauty, she was fortunate\nenough to possess the Indomitable\nw 11 and perseverence of her New\nEngland ancestors.\nMme. N-irdlca bas always been an\nndcfatigable worker and no task,\nhowever ardous or difficult, can daunt\nher; even during her strenuous concert tours Bhe still works and Btudles.\nThere Is a piano in her private car\nand Nordica practices from three to\nfour hours daily with her accompanist. \"Success means eternal work.\neternal duty and eternal sacrifice\" Is\na favorite maxim of the diva.\nJames Terry White ln his \"Essays\non  Character Development\" tells the\nfollowing  story  apropOB  of perseverance.    \"A  young girl  sat  singing at\nthe   piano.     'Sing  tt  again'   Bald   th<\nsinging   teacher,   and   the   tired   girl\nsang   it  again   and again      'But  you\ndo not Blng It properly and i question\nIf you will ever make a gnat singer.'\nBut   the  little girl  tried  '.:ard  and\npractised the next day and the next\nthe next week and ths  i-xX the next\nyear and the next.   One da., she stood\nbefore five thousand men and women,\nand she sang until she seemed to take\nthem out of themselves nnJ tn carry\nthem  up Into the cloud3 o.' enchantment,  over seas of  mel'uy, lnlv  nn\necstasy   of   delight,   until   the  people,\nwept  from   the excess  of thetr  emotions.   That girl was Lillia i Nordica \"\nThe   date   of   tho   foil  c-.-ucrt\nhere ls tomorrow e* \"iii l;.\nFOR RENT\nUPPER FLAT OF NEWS BUILDING.\nCorner of McKenzie and Victoria atreets, suitable\nfor storage, light manufacturing, club room* or\nrooming house. Will gjve two years' lease. Apply\nto Manager The New Westminster News.\nThe Popular Shoe Store\nOpen Eveninga Till 9 O'clock 641 Front Street\nOUT OF THE HIGH RENTAL DISTRICT\nCHEAPER THAN OTHER FIRM'S 8ALE  PRICE8.\nLadies' Storm Rubber Foothold*.   Reg. 75c.\nAll Size* 35c.\nGents' Neverslip Rubbers, Reg. $1.25. All Sizes 45c.\nLadies' City Gum Boots $2.45\nMen's Gum Boots $2.85\nSole agents for Westminster for the famous K Boots.    Depot for\nLeckle's Boots snd Ahren's School Shoes.\nA  $20,000  Stock %o Select Trom\nThe Bank of Vancouver\nA general banking business transacted, drafts aod letters uf oredlt\nsold payable In all parts of tbe world.   Savlnsja bank department at\nall branches.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd SPECIAL ATTENTION PAID TO \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nBANKING-BY MAIL\nMew Weatminstcr Branch, Cor. 8th and Columbia Streets\nO. D. WIL80N, Manager.\n.Stales from coast to coast und from j times found in the hinod of the quad-'. t0Jlatc'1 ul).\n'Cat-ads lo trie gulf, yet no place had\nirapreasRd him like the Colony farm\nr-B\"rora the standpoint of practicability.\n;They might listen to many excellent\naAIres-sf-s and lectures, but  tliey dlo>\njsot accomplish as much as ocular i\"Live Stock on the Kami\n--demonstration. They were more like- |nK his remarks he mentioned that\n*f to Ulre boras useful facts rrom the I conditions differed so much from the\nlattr-r. lie thought their high priced , lalries In Hrltish Columbia that he\nland wan no adverse circumstance and\nrupeds,    and    sketched the    systems |    Tlle speaker declared he had little\nused to exterminate tliein occasion to mention the value of rais\nUr. J. 0. Biithc-ford.    of    Calgary.   \"\"* \"\ufffd\ufffd8S-    The  Northwest  had   been\nwho was tlie next speaker, delivered |BUirerln<**  from  a Kreat <-1-\ufffd\ufffdrl\ufffd\ufffd'\"t*    Of\na most    comprehensive   address   on'p     *\nIn open\ninstanced Denmark and thc Channel\nsntanrtfi as examples of successfu1\nfarming, whore prices ruled from\n^1000 to S16D0 an acre and where they\ntiad to import food for their cattle.\nTbe .farmers in those parts lived\n>ss--U and competed with them I Amerl-\n-ca-sst In the world'B markets. He saw\nai great ruture for 11. C. with ita cli-\n'mai-E advantages and soil fertility.\ntic never seen liner llolsteln cattle\nChan be. had that day. He knew of\nno section where farming was con-\nninrird under more favorable condi-\ntirn-i with assistance from thc local\n.sso-rernment\n. Di. Kutherford, on rising was greet-\naa* *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd the singing of \"He's a Jolly\ndid not feel the same conlldence In\n(MHcussing his subject here as In the\nHast. His great ambition was to become a Uritish Columbia farmer. He\nhad purchased some property down nt\nChilliwack and intended ultimately to\nsettle there.\n'i he lecturer touched upon thc fact\nHull he had been engaged in preach-\nin-, the doctrine of mixed farming and\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd he development of the live stock Industry in Canada for thirty years. He\nski lehed briefly the movement of thc\nf ntre or wheat growing districts lu\nNorth America from the Eastern\nStates lo the Canadian Northwest. He\nquestioned what the Northwest would\n*trnw when II was impossible to cul-\nllvate wheat nny longer on account of\nthe   rsjckl-'ss   systems   of  agriculture\nf*.ood Fellow.\"    He thanked them for\ntits \ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd-eption and added his quota Of]which had ruined the wheat growing\n. apta-er'iation to the Btaff of the Colon)\nIvv-s-i fir their   roorlcsy   and   hospl-\nMr. Scrlbner, referring to the found\nfast of a herd,  advised  his audience I\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdj-tro-a-t-Iy against baaing It on a poor;\nfoandsVt*\ufffd\ufffdn.    It look so long to wlpa\nsnut.    lie spoke at length In favor of\nsEO-o-reratlcin among farmers nnd ailvo-,\nc.-lUm aneclalliaUon In tbe various de\nparb-irnts of stock ralsliiK. dairy rat\ntsn-Sar -dairy business anil beef cattle\nfor fc*MT.    He abhorred the dual pur\nj-oee animal.\n-Slad Government Understands.\n, Tlr. Tdmie said il was pleasant    to |\n' Sa-so-sr Ihe ifov\ufffd\ufffdmnm\ufffd\ufffd'nl ri-alh-ed the Im-\nace of encouraj-inK  mixed farm-\nIn this province.  The government\nI'.-Jxcfeded all expectation in   this\nOnly first class animals were\nsa4 as was shown by  the  Bplemlld\nat their last sale  when   they\ni -records.   Dr. Rutherford was at\nof a s'.inllar scheme for the\nTolmie emphasized the import\nbut this condition was now being overcome by the increased home\nproduction. Three years from now\nthe western provinces would have a\nsurplus of pigs for export. As to the\nclass of pigs most suitable for raising, the speaker recommended thi.\nlong-Bided animal. True this class\ncost considerable to feed, but when\nthey got fat they were sure money\nmakers. The long-sided pig was the\nonly grade suitable for the British\nmarket and since li. C. did not have\nthe long railroad haul, but could ship\ndirect to Liverpool and London from\nher own ports there was all the more\nreason why she should produce thin\nclass.\nThe Packing Houses.\nDr.' Rutherford dwelt briefly on the\ntniqilil'ea ot the beef packing concerns and demopstrttted how they In\ncreased and reduced the production ol\npork at will. He advised the stock\nbreeders of the province to form co\noperative circles, and eliminate the\nmiddle man. Thus they could have ;\nsteady flow of their products to thi\nright market and secure proper prices\nThe doctor also saw no reason why\nthe breeders of the district shonli-\nnet    establish    their    own    packing\nproclivities of some of the eastern\nStates In tho United States. He had\nnot succeeded In discovering a corn\ner m.ii\/.e that would be satisfactory.\nThe slate of North Ilaknln. declar\ned Ihe speaker, lost f*70,0ll0,00n in\nsoil  value after last year's crop had;houses\nbeen grown through careless culllvn j While a certain amount of knowl\nlion,   He recommended that the same I edge\"   was   necessary,   tho   speake:\ncare that is taken by the farmers Of Ithought that she-p raising would bf\nthe old country with the soil he adopt-1 a profitable Industry in the coast\noil on the prairies iu order that the i With a little application the farmer?\nlead might produce for hundreds ofjcovld become fully conversant with\nyears and provide tor future ger.era , ihe ways cf raising the animals\ntlons. ISheep were very useful for cleaning\nIn      this    country,    continued    Dr.; weeds,    and    In  fact    were worth \ufffd\ufffdj\nPresident\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWill Be Member of\nFaculty.\nRutherford, despite the limited area\navailable -for cultivation of wheat\nmany were neglecting the cardinal\nlaws-af-farming In regard to proper\ncrnslderation of tho soli. He classed\nIhe soil of British Columbia as being\nthe richest and finest ln Canada,\nwhile the climate was better than In\nany other province In the Dominion.\n\"The fertile lands of B. C.,\" the\ni lecturer declared, \"must be taken care\nof .mixed farming nnd  deplored j of  for   the   benefit  or  future  genera\nfact that from $14,000000 to $15.-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd tlons.    lt Is about  time sound  prln-\nof a-rrlciiUvn-al    produce    waslclples of agriculture were adopted ln\nannually-   5000 bend cf cat this country.   We must have thorough\nyWmttWmrMX.   In from    Alberta,   86,000 cultivation and Intelligent rotation of\n* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi fiotn across the border, dressed the crops.\"\ni of mutton fro:n Australia, and Referring to his theme of the even-\nfrom Kansas.    The government h -   '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-   Rutherford stated that    one\nssmiT'f aot sp-md to-- .u \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'.,    r\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>  i.r feature of the British farms were thn\n' sar-s-aS-sT too much intelligence In    ex- great  herds  of  live  stock   kept    on\njasssslllssi.   the agricultural   possibilities them,    The  old  couutry   farmer had\nest this province. f.uiml there was nothing paid so well\niO'i Mr. Hanson   also   emphasized   the ns   keeping   as   many   hoofs   on . the\ntsti\ufffd\ufffds*st -ralae of an object lesson such farm as lt would sustain.    He would\n- as* * \"risH to this Colony farm afford- not, declared the Bpeaker, make any\n^sjet ssa against lectures  and  the  ills- recommendations as  to the kind  of\n'SUmstfatm ot literature.   The literature, live stock suitable fnr upper It. ('., as\n\ufffd\ufffd&smf wal-sabto literature,   was   Ihrust conditions there were Kiinllar to those\ni.*\\*m**i ****. one in ten read the pamptl-   in   Alberta.     He   would   i fine  hlm-\n_ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,        -    .     1Ul aepaj-jjuont now self to the coast district, the adjacent\noats In this regard.\n\"We have not half enough In the\ncountry.\" declnred the speaker In\nconcluding, \"and a handsome protlt\ncan be made from a small flock.\"\nMr. Thomas Cunningham, provincial\nfruit inapt ctor^was next called upon\nand gn\\\" a short account of the efforts tn exterminate fruit pests In\nthW pro \/ nee. He read a resolution\nphased oj several up-country boards\nof trade urging upon the government\nthe necessity of passing nn act pro\nhrbltlng the Import-itl-vi of pest Infected fruit. California has already\nan aet along this line.\nAt Mr. Cunningham's request the\nrevolution was endorsed hy the con\nventlon.\nBefore the convention adjourned an\nInvltat'on from the Vancouver Kx\nh bltlon Association to hold next\nyear's convention In Vancouver was\nread and referred to the directors for\naction.\nTha directors will also deal with the\nmatter of remitting part of the transportation charges on breed stock\nfrom Washington and Oregon. Thla\nia already done when Btock in shipped\nfrom Eastern Canada to here.\nWashington, Jan. 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe-* local\nYale alumni association at Its annual\nbanquet tonight greeted and bade\nfarewell to President Taft. A long\ncheer, with \"Taft, Taft,\" at the end\nwelcomed the president to the banquet\nhall and the strains of the \"Boola\nSong\" and \"Here's to Good Old Yale,\nDrink Her Down,\" with other college\nsongs, rang out during the evening.\nThe president declared that when\nnext he met with tho Washington\nYale alumni \\{ would be as \"a member\nof the faculty committee to tell of the\nneeds of the university.\" Whether\nthe faculty at Yale would treat him aB\na freshman, he said he did not know.\nHe spoke In a Jovial mood and of his\ncoming duties as Kent professor of\nlaw at Yale, said he was doubtful as\nto what he was to do, but that It\nmeant something to have been on the\nbench long enough to have acquired\nthe reputation of knowfng all about\nlaw.\n\"But It Ib a different matter,\" hc\nadded, \"when yiu have to be examln\ned every day ty a lot of bright young\nstudents. Ir you can restrain their\ncuriosity sufficiently, the position may\nbe  fairly  satisfactory.\"\nHe then launched into an attack on\nsome of tho modern profmsors of political economy \"whose heads are in the\nclouds, and who have lost all sense\nor proportion as to what is valuable\nto present civilization and what we\nmutt anchor to 1 wunt to help bring\nthe students of one university to realize what ll means to be an American\nnow and what benefits this country\nwith Its constitution gives us. I think\nwe are enjoying many brneflts without realizing how much of self-sacrifice lt took to bring them about.\"\nNe Partiality.\nRnrber-ntiHt will you ham on j-oul\nhair?\ncustomer -lion'l net funny. I've got\nmore tlnin one liulr.\nHai-her-Ho I ue*. I'nrdon me. I\nmeant what you yuu bave un botb.--\nIlrooklyu I.lie.\nW. R. OILLEV, Phene tt>2. O. E. OhIlEV, Phone Ml.\nPhones, Off lew IS ana IS.\nGilley Bros. Ltd.\nCOLUMBIA  STREET WEST.\nWe have a limited stock of COMOX COAL\nwhich we can recommend for Steam and\nFurnace use, which we will sell for cash only\nHARRY TIDY, Manager.\nThursday, January 30th\n\"The Musical Event\nde Luxe\"\nIn their recent road\nSuccess\n\"In the Camp-Fire's\nApe Owe 'Em.\nWhen fur slews can sill leer I'm\nTent rye tomb acne ihep-e e'en Ink Lear,\nYouin Inked  wood  Putt  oee  weigh stlnff\nthyme;\nt'se th, \"it's Imp lean nn scents shear!\"\n(iimiiio atlnr: Anim lies align!\nNiiihmi mire lender verse says knot-*\nPnrk rip tick iwi real Ike nun-*.\nIluw Aaron weal, -temesnrs allot.\n-Century,\nIs  al\nAlv\/ays Hope.\n\"I   hear   your   mother In laer\ndeath's door\"\n\"Yes.   1 hope ther pull bar throogk.--\n-Tenkera State-smart.\nGlow\"\nNew Songs,  Costumes\nand Scenery.\nPrices: Night 25c. to $1.\nMatinee, 25c. and 50c.\nSeats now selling at\nBox Office.\nRoyal City Decorating Co-\nWall Paper, Burlaps and Paints.  Paper Hanging our\nSpecialty.  Work guaranteed.\nChaa. Mannering     34 B-gbi- street.     Phon. s\ufffd\ufffd3.    Ed. AUcock\nJ. H. Todd's Music House\n419 Columbia  Street, New Westminster.\nGERHARD HEINTZMAN  AND DOMINION  PIANOS AND ORGANS.\nVICTOR   AND   EDISON   PHONOGRAPHS.\nSinpcr  Sewing   Machines.    Small   Musical Goods of all  Kinds. PHONE I\nProgram for Wednesday and\nThursday.\nTHE\nGdlson\nELDORADO LODE\nDrama.\nVita graph\nTHE HAND BAG\nComedy.\nKnlem\nTHE  USURER\nA story b-in.il on an actual Incident In real lite.\n0.  Melles\nHER GREAT CHARM\nComing Friday and Saturday\nTHB WIVES OF JAME8TOWN\nA Kalem Two-Reel Feature.\nGood Buys in City\nWith Easy Terms\nSix roomed house on Alberta Street, Sapperton, close to Columbia\nStreet.   Trice $2800; $500 cash, balance $26 per month.\nSix roomed house, new, on Eighth Avenue, close to Sixth StreA\ncar line. Kull sited basement, furnace, fireplace, and laundry tuba.\nPrice $3TOO; $800 caBh, balance arranged.\nThree roomed house on Dublin Street, close to Twelfth Street ear\nl.ne.    Large lot In fruit.   Chicken house and runs.   Price $1800- one- J\nquarter cash, balance 6, 12 and 18 months.\nFive roomed bungalow on Hamilton Street, modern, furnace, llrtv\nplaoe, laundry tuba, electric light fixtures, cement walks. Prlee\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdiovn, $S0o cash, balance arranged over two years.\nThe PeoplesTrustCoJl?\n451 Columbia Street        Phene 669\n\ufffd\ufffd THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 1913.\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS.\nPACK FIVE\nSKATERS REVELLING\nAT IHE ARENA RINK\nBig Crowd on  Hand  Last Evening-\nPerfect Ice and Good Music Went\nHand in Hand.\nWhoever had the Idea that Ice skating would not be popular in this city\n-should bave been at the rink last evening when a crowd ot several hundred\n-enjoyed themselves to their heart's\ncontent for two full hours ami, a half.\nThe Ice waB In almost perfect condition all the spots which were slushy\nthe evening previous having received\na hard coating and although rough in\nplace, the wear and tear later iu the\nevening had rubbed off the bad .pot.\nso that there was little fear of being\ntripped up In any corner ot the huge\nenclosure.\nThey were there In all sizes, ln all\nages; some armed with the latest designs of steel, while others trusted\nto the old fashioned blades and the\nway the latter were generaly handled\ndemonstrated  the  fact that  It's  the\nANOTHER   HOLDOUT\nShafer Refuses to Sign Contract With\nNew York Giants.\nLos Angeles, Jan. 29.-*-l''or the second time within a month, Arthur Rhaf-\ner, utility lnflelder of the New York\nQiants, mailed today an unsigned contract to Manager McGraw. Tbe contract is .aid to have provided a larger\nIncrease In .alary than the first one.\nBhafer reiterated today his determination to quit baseball.\nPROS AND AMATEURS\nIN NEXT OLYMPIAD\ntook on Willie Ritchie for the same\ndistance at San Francisco, and again\nlost. Not long ago Jack met Jake\nAhem, of Albany, at Brooklyn, and\nat many stages cf the game wa. outclassed,\nBrltton was very disappointing in\nthis bout, but,it cannot be denied that\nhe i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd a claB.y man when he ls Just\nright An Ultchle defeated Brltton,\nPackey ought to prove his class,\"\niguinat .lack Hrltlon before demand\nIng a match with the American light-\nvelgbt champion. Anyway, both Brit\nton and Mcl'arland belong In the\nWelterweight division. A light between them would tickle the fan., and\nwould doubtless be a paying proposition to the promoter. Brltton ha.\nlately been fighting In New Orleans,\nwhere he ls Immensely popular.\nToday I. an Important anniversary\nin the pugilistic career of Frankle\nNell. Eight years ago today that\nclever boxer knocked out Fighting\nDick Hyland In the 16th round at Ban\nFrancisco. Three years later to a day,\nIn thc same city, he met Abe Attell,\nand the little Hebrew stopped him ln\nthe hoodoo 13th round.\nLondon   Harriers  and   Sporting\nHints at Statu, of So-called\nAmateurs.\nLlfo\nLondon, Jan. 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAt tbe annual dinner tonight of the South London Har-\nrleni' club. President iWllls, who ssld\nthat ths* club was the pioneer in International\"'athletics, made tbe startling\nproposal that the next Olympic games\nwould,be open both to amateurs and\nu   tne   lact   mai   u n   uie | ..\ufffd\ufffd,-.- -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nperson), not the .kates that get there i profesklbnalsJ' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nwith the graceful stunts. I J^thotrt any  direct    reference    to\nJust to help things along the Arena! Thorpe he contended that the line be-\nofflr-ials had the band on the Job dls- tween professionals and amateurs was\ncoursing all the Intent hits in two-1UM sharply drawn in other countries\nstep and waltz music and the skaters'than In England, and. therefore Lng-\ncertalnly enjoyed- going round the I ***** *a\ufffd\ufffd not ln the same position to\nlr(,na compete as other countries. He argued\n' liuring the afternoon session were'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd<\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd until the Olympic game, were\nto hc Been many who were Just learn-; thrown open to the professional, and\ning the first rudiments of the sport,! the best athletes any country was able\nussisled by the attendants it will not | *? Produce were brought together,\ntake them long before they can hold\nVanderbllt Cup Race.\nSavannah, (la., Jan. 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIt was announced tonight that the Vanderbllt\ncup, Wlddeman trophy and Savannah\ntrophy automobile contests would\ntake place here Nov. 24. The Grand\nPrize race will be run Nov. 27. It\nwas also decided to shorten the 17\nmile course to eight and a half mtles.\nDETROIT NEWS IS\nSORE AT T.\nHas an Article on Noah Every Month\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPokes   Fun  at  Him.\nThe Detroit News likes to poke fun\nat Tommy Burns. The following Ib\nthe latent contribution:\nEvery now and then there thunders\nout of Calgary, Can., an announcement to the effect that Tommy Burns\nIb going to clean up the present heavyweight crop and reclaim the title.\nThe latest of these told ub that Tommy  was to get 130,000   for   messing j\nBombardier Wells.\nAll of this has made excellent reading, and has prevented the volatile\nsporting public from forgetting Tommy in his ardent worship \"of new and\nstrange idols. In other words, they\nhave nerved their purpose.\nTommy Is making so much money\nthat he Ilnds it necessary to bale hie\ncurrency the same as the farmers do\nhay. He bas two sources of income\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\none a haberdashery emporium and the\nother a fight establishment. He i.\nmaking money with both hands, and\nsocking it Into real estate. There\nseems to be not one chance ln a thousand that he will again pull on a padded mitt for commercial purposes.\n1913 Sporting Annual Out\nT. S. Andrew. Sporting Annual Re\ncord Book for 1913 is now out, con\ntaining records of noted fighters, trot\nting, pacing, running, bowling, athletic,\nbaseball, automobile, aeroplane, etc.\nThe book contain, many fine Illustration, of tlie world's prominent fight\ners, and all the up to date record.. It\nis the leading Sporting Annual of thc\ncountry. Copies can be had for 12\ncents by addressing Andrews & Messier, the publishers, 34 Sentinel building, Milwaukee, Wis.\ntheir own with many on tbe rink.\nAt times last evening several showed a tendency to do the Norval Baptle\nstunt in speed but thlB will be out out\ntoday as lt Is manifestly unfair to a\nlarge majority of the patrons.\nThe management are considering\nthe question of opening on Saturday\nmornings which would give the youngsters a chance to break into the game\nand it is altogether possible that they\nwill do BO.\n(HAS. MURPHY SEES\nERROR OF WAYS\nwere\nEngland's position as the premier ath\nletic country of tbe world would\nnever again be attained\nSporting Life commenting on the\nThorpe incident, completely exonerates the Amateur Athletic union of\ntbe United States and thinks Its ample\napology should be accepted in the\nspirit In which It was offered. It adds,\nhowever, that it Is high time for the\ninternational Olympic committee to\nendeavor to evolve a code of honor ior\nthe amateur, as there are many competitors, not American only, whose\nstatus will not bear a strong light\nMOOSE HOCKEY TEAM\nSHOW SOME CLASS\nstreet,   several   blocks   north  of  the\nplace where the body was found.\nThe finding of the watch caused the\npolice to believe that Elinger had committed suicide and they eald he had\nspent the missing money before going  to  the  waterfront.\nSUFFRAGETTES SEND\nBURNING PACKAGES\nPostofflce Authorities Get Unpleasant\nSurprise on Opening Msil\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMilitants Quieter Last Night\nLondon, Jan. 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe suffragettes\nresumed thetr window smashing and\npost box outrages on a small scale\ntonight, but their endeavors were sufficient to maintain a state of nervous\napprehension among tbe shopkeepers\nand the large forces of police and private watchmen guarding the streets\nand  buildings.\nThe windows In some of the government offices .'.and the offices ot the\nHamburg-American Packet company\nwere broken. A few arrests were made.\nMany package. Bave been found ln\ntbe various postofflees, which on being\nopened buret Into fame.. Some of\nthem were addressed to Premier Asqulth and' Chancellor Lloyd George.\n-FOR RENT\nStore  on  Clarkson  Street, between  McKenzle and  6th Street, hot\nwater heating.    Rent $20 per month.\nStore In  the\nconvenience.\nWestminster Trust  Block\nRent |50 per month.\non Clarkson  Street,  every\nOffice in the T. H. Smith Block, Columbia Street, hot water heating.   Rent $15 per month.\nFULL PARTICULARS ON APPLICATION.\nWESTMINSTER TRUST, LIMITED\nJ. J. JONE8, Managing Director.\nHead Office: 28 Lome, Street,     Naw Westminster.\nAmateur Hockey Players Out for the\nFirst Time Last Evening at the\nArena.\nTODAY IN PUGILISTIC\nANNALS.\n\"Water Wagon\" Clause  Not Inserted\nin Cub Contrscts for This Coming Season'.\nChicago, Jan. 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdContrary to the\nstatement made lost fall by Charles W.\nMurphy, president of the Chicago Nationals, contracts tent bis players this\nyear do net contain a \"water wagon\"\nclause.\nThis became known today when one\nof the members of the team exhibited\nhis contract. ' No mention of drinking\nwas made In the document.\n. It was. Murphy's declaration that!\n-drinking cost the National league the\npennant last year that precipitated the\ncontroversy between Frank Chance\nand the president of the club. He said\nat that time that he would enforce a\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n1896\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPedler Palmer nnd Georga\nDixon fought a six round draw\nat New York. j\n1899\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-Terry McGovern knocked out\nCasper Leon In the 12th round\nat Broolyn.\n190}\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTommy Ryan knocked out Martin Judge .|n the fourth round\nat  Minneapolis.\n1902\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJack'Root won on a foul, from\nGeorge Gardner In the seventh\nround at San Francisco..\n1905\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFrankle Neil knocked out Dick\nHyland In the 16th round at\nSan Francisco.\n11107\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSam    Longford   defeated   Kid\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 8PORT COMMENT. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd (By the  Potter.) \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nLike the \"Last call for dinner\" stuff\nthat la handed out every day by the\ncolored attendant, on the transcon\ntiner-tal trains 1. the lattest attempt\nof the B. C. A. A., and especially Mr\nDavid Lelth, to bring into the \"slmot\npure\" fo d once more the wandering\natMetes who fell into bad ways and\nhave ni.itd thlnf*. with the so-called\npriicislonal bunch.\nTiii.Be players who are at the present lime under tbe ban have until\nnext Jua? to apply for reinstatement\nwhen the annual meeting will be held,\nand until then no further application-,\nwilt be entertained.\nSoccer fans in this city will remember but a few months ago of a declaration by the head official, of the amateur union oiatlng that under no clr-\n, cunistancLo \"> culd any more players\nwho have bei i, with the Senior District l.e-it-ue be welcomed back Into\nt*e a-nalour fold. Since that time\nseveral denlB have been put through\nby that uotiv which have caused\nIf the other five teams connected\nwith the Westminster Amateur Hockey league uncork as much speed as\ndid the Moose outfit last evening, the\npublic will be served with an excellent brand of hockey during the short\ntime the league has at itB disposal.\nAlthough many, in fact all of the players, were out for the first time this\nseason with the stick and many of\nthem had not used tbe steel once thi.\nyear_they al hit a fast clip during the\nhour allotted them following the evening skating session.\nNatty uniforms and good hockey do\nnot always go together but from all\nappearances the Mose will be right\non the Job when the championehip of\nthe city is at stake next Wednesday\nevening.\nThree teams will be on the Ice this\nevening, the Moose, Beavers and the\nBurnaby aggregation having made preparations for workouts at different\nhours between 5 and 7 and 10:30 and\n11:30 o'clock.\nINTEsRURBAN TRAMS\nCARS LEAVE B. C. ELECTRIC TERMINAL, COLUMBIA ST.\nBilliard  Game  Tonight\nTHE NAVAL LORDS.\nMen Who Make Britannia l.'.litr..s ot\nthe Seas.    '\nStick close to your desk, snd never\ngo to sea,\nAnd  you  all  may  be  ruleri  ol  the\nQueen'. Navee.\nThe merry tines of the late Sir\nW. S. Gilbert in \"The Yeomen pf\nthe Guard\" are not without punt;\nfor the First Lord of the Admiralty,\ntile man who lnn practically supreme\ncontrol ot naval affairs. Is nhv.y; u\nCabinet Minister, who has achieve 1\nhis position with pen and speech, ani\nwho probably doesn't know'the'difference between a cruiser and a battleship.\nOf course, he is assisted in his work\nby experts. He may be termed the\niigure-head of the Board of Admiralty,\nwinch consists ot what are known a.\nsix Lords Commissioners\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtwo Civi.\nor Political Lords and four Naval ur\nSea Lords. It is the latter, ol course,\nwho form practically the advisory\nboard to the First Lord. The First\nNaval Lord, ior instance, who is always au admiral of high rank and\ngeneral experience, practically UU*\nthe position of Commander-in-chief of\nthe navy. He is the chief naval adviser of the First Lord,# and is especially responsible for the orgar-ixation\nand distribution ol the fleet for war\nThe Second Naval Lord is responsible\nfor matters appeitaiuing lo the personnel of the fleet.\nThe Comptroller ot the navy ia the\nNaval Lord charged wiUv the super-\nFor Vancouver, via Central Park\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAt 5:00 and 6:46 a.m., and every\n15 minutes until 9 p.m. From 9\np.m. until midnight half hourly service.\nSundays\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAt 6:00, 7:00, 7:30,\n8:00 and 8:30 a.m., week day service prevailing thereafter.\n. For Vancouver via Burnaby\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAt\n5:45, 6:45 and 8:00 a.m. with hourly service thereafter until 10:00\np.m., and late car at 11:30 p.m.\nSundays\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFirst car at 8:00 a.m.,\nwith week day service thereafter.\nFor Vancouver vis Eburne\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAt\n7:00 a.m. and hourly until 11:00\np.m.\nSunday\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFirst car at 8:00 a.m.,\nregular week day service thereafter.\n(Connection with cars to Staves-\nton and other points on Lulu la-\nland is made at Eburne.\nFor Chilliwack and Points In\nSouth Fraser Valley\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAt 9:30 a.m.,\n1:20 p.m. and 6:10 p.m.\nFor Huntingdon and Way Points\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAt 4:05 p.m.\nBRITISH COLUMBIA ELECTRIC RAILWAY COMPANY.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nHassam Paving Co., of B. C, Limited'\nLayers of Hassam Compressed Concrete (Patented)\n- ENGINEERING CONTRACTORS\nESTIMATES and DESIGNS FURNISHED\nl-Vs-ft*\nSS. \"PRINCE RUPERT\"\n3,500 tons, 7,000 horse-power\nSailing Every Monday (12 Midnight)\n I for Prince Rupert.\nConnecting with Grand Trunk Pacific Railway for points east   ot\nPrince Rupert.\nConnecting with S.S. \"PRINCE   JOHN\"   on   certain   dates   fer\nStewart. Granby Bay, Massett sad other Queen Charlotte Island points\nSATURDAYS   (12  Midnight)   for VICTORIA and SEATTLE.\nS.S. \"PRINCE ALBERT\" for Prince Rupert and way ports, 3rd, 13th\nand 23rd of each month.\nAlthough practically out ot the mn-l TUion ot tho vho\\a 0l the mate-Mi ot\\l\nnlng for the championship of the Inter-1 the navy, including the coi-sttUctlon.ll\ncity billiard league, the Royals are by 1 repair, armament, general equipment, \\1\n--- .     S _\ufffd\ufffd       .......    eVilr.    It,   'IJhs,    ftPT. 1SI\nThrough tickets to all Eastern destinations and to Europe,\nchoice ot rati and ocean lines.\nTour\nWilliams' '-in ,-six rounds at\nRochester.   , .\n1008- Abe Attell knoeked out Frankle\nNeil In the 13th round at San.\nFrancisco.      ' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>\n1909-Willie Lewis knocked out Charley Hickman tn the first round\nat Parle. ^^\nprohibition rule this year without re-, . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\t\ngard to 'the records of the players of i1909\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOwen Moran and Tommy Mur-\n-,     ..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_,'i phy long-it ten round draw at\nhla elub. Chance always declared\nthat there was no truth ln Murphy's\nstatements that his players drank.\n*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  ; 1      ic        \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd OVER THE FOUL LINE.       \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffda*\nSome hodoo must have got Into the\nFront Street alley artists last evening\nwhen tbey met the Club team on the\nlatter.alltys for with the exception of\n' Fierce, nit a clngle man got over the\n-too mark. .J. C. Chamberlain, with\nS04 to hla credit took high' total, Sloan\ncoming through with high score, 181.\nThe following la a list of casualties:\n138\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 454\n168\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 504\n160\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 423\n170\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 493\n148\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 476\n2349\n. 8 Ttl.\n75\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 335\n112\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 401\n109\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 384\n118\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 398\n112\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd384\n626\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1902\nThe q\",u')\n1\n1\n...173\n143\n169\n...132\n141\n...146\n169\n111\n146\nFront St.\n1\n,a\n....122\n188\n....163\n136\n....184\n141\n....142\n138\n.....127\n146\n-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJ\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd**.         '\n678\n698\nNew York.\n1909\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdKnockout Brown defeated   Arthur Connely In six rounds at\nNew York.\n1910\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJohnny,-Coulon'knocked    out\nEarl Denning In ninth round at\nNew Orleans.\n1911\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPackey   McFarland   and   Jack\nBritten fought eight round draw\nat Memphis. .   .\n1911\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAle Attell and Tommy KII-\nbane fought four rounds at\nCleveland, Attell breaking' hla\narm*, j: I\n1911\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOus Christie outpointed Chicago Knockout Brown   Ih   eight\nrounds at Milwaukee.\n1911\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJem Drlseoll knocked oat Spike\nRobaon   In   seventh   round   at\nLondon; winning   the   English\nfeatherweight championship.\n1911\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMonte Attell    outpointed   Phil\nMcGovern   ln   ten   rounds   at\nNow York.\n1911\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOrovcr Hayes and George Alger\nfought 13 round draw at Boston\n*****0**OhO*****\n* *\n* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd SPORTObRAPHY. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd (By .\"OraTy.\") \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd**--*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n* Now on Flnel Round. ^\nSan Dliigo, Cal. Jan, 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe flnanY\nin the Coronado golf tournament will\nbe played tomorrow, with Nelson Bar\nher, Jr., matched with Percy Thompson tn the championship fight, and K.\nG. Snowdon, the Canadian polo play-.\ner. and W. J. lngelow paired In the\nsecond flight. The finals will go 36\nholes. Barker today defeated A. B.\nDaniels two up and one; Thompson\n-defeated George Sturglss four up and\nfive; Snowdon defeated Wlnshlp tlve\ntip and four, and Bngelow won-from\nH. O Gray, two up aad one\n> .-.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd - -\nWho la Thla Guy\nNew York. Jan. 3\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdYoung Bhagrue\n. nt this olty tonight outfought Leach\n-Cross, the local lightweight In seven\n-out of ten rounds at Madison Squire\n-Harden. Near 'the end ot tke fourth\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdround, Cross, after apparently tiring,\n-suddenly sent Bhagrue down tor the\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdcount of three with a right to the Jaw,\nwhen the bell ended the round.\nBrltton-McFarlknd Match We*aM\nTlekle the Fane.\nTwo yews ago today, oh January\n30,1911, Packey MoPattaad  and Jaek\nBrltton mingled In a Matr-at Memphis.\nThe stoclsyartadfcss\\fJe\ufffd\ufffd axpected an\neasy victor*-' otef' MM,' hat; much\nto hie snt-prlee, Bftttjoti fought htm to\na standstill, -and Packey waa lucky to\nget a draw at the end of the eighth\nround. Ever since then the false\nhave been clamoring for a . return\nmatch, and It la now-,.possible that\nBrltton and McFarland will soon be\nse< n In the same ring.\n'T n-.li Tlan\" Mornan. Brltton's manager, Insist* thai Packey \"Is -\ufffd\ufffdtraiu.\nand points iu tne tact that of late\nMcFarland haa been meeting only the\neasy marks. Brltton, whose real name\nIs William J trealln, la a vety uneven performer.' At tlmee he shows\nreal championship elaaa, add In other\nbouts he looks Uka a \"rank amateur,\"\nA tew montha after hla tight with McFarland Britton went to the Pacific\ncoast and waa whipped by Jerry Mur\nphy In four iwsh. A -ao-ath later he\nlittle comment among the fans of this\ncity.\nOne of these which stands out tn\nprominence wat. the case of a well\nknown soccer player who performed\nw.th thc Thistles of the Senior\nLeague. The V. A. C. soccer team\nwere after bis services and partially\nbta'ned a promise from him that in\nthe event o' his being reinstated, he\nwould turn tut with the Winged V\noutfit. Thi strings were pulled to advantage, the player waa reinstated\napd just because he bad taken up his\nresidence in New Westminster he refused to j>lay for the Vancouver team\nbut cast In' his lot with one of the\ncity teams. Whst was the resnlt ?\nTbe machinery was again placed In\nmotion, the case was referred to the\nWestminster branch ot the B. C. A. A.\nU. in order that they might perhaps\nfind new evidence that would cause\n'he expulsion of this player, truly a\ndignified way of doing bualness, especially in the Vancouver end of the\ndral.\nAnd who la back of tbls deal to re\nnstate these players.   No other per\nson than-Mr. David Lelth, who under\nsome pretext   or   other   manages to\n(hoodwink    the    Vancouver    amateur\nofficials by being   president   of   the\nSenior Amateur Soccer League and at\nthe  same t me  accepting hard  cash\nfor handling games In a league which\nis regarded as a professional body by\ntho same B. C. A. A- IJ.   Just where\n(hey get the word amateur associated\nwith Mr. Keith has been and always\nwill be a pussie to Weatmlnater fans\nWe also read-in a Vancouver paper\nthat at the meeting ot the provincial\nboard of the B. C. A. A. IT. held In\ntbe Terminal City last Saturday that\none of the Westminster delegates opposed the motl*<n to allow the applications ot the outlaw players to be received.   By al: accounts he ia In 'the\nsame position as Mr. Keith In as fsr\nas amateur spjtU are concerned and\nfor the reason that   he   received   a\nunique' dlsDensatlon from the union to\nbe allowed a membership ticket with\nthat bodv It soems strange that be.\nthese all parsons, should oppose the\nreinstatements.\ni   Vt-haa been stated frettnentlv during\n^rM^ftsJkt two yeara la thla city that\nHeff-re hranehlng out the B. C..A. A.\n, Tl. should clean their own house.  The\n| American Athletic Aaaoclation la following up the, Thorpe -ease.   Let the\n\ufffd\ufffd. C. A. A. U. 4o their #\ufffd\ufffdrt, not only\n'n this city, biit in the -whole pro*-\n'nee. where they claim '(H-to have\n\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnntrol over. every kind of aport tn\nthe amateur line.\n, league, ine -uiymi are uy i ,-,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd..,  -\nno means  disheartened and  promise I aad upkeep ot every ship in 'U-a ser-11\n- .    i_,._    n. .. _-M tespon-(jbJe\"ui\";.t.t)>**ii\nadministration ot the dockyard* and\nto wipe the boards with the Labor)\nTemple five when the latter arrive at\neht Royal pool room tonight. Pye,\nwho has played a steady game-durlng\nthe present season for the locals ls\naway in Victoria and his place will be\ntaken by Mansfield, the East Burnaby\nartist. Coldicutt, Grant. Reid and\nDouglas will comprise the rest of tbe\naggregation. The proceedings will\ncommence at 8 o'clock.\nSEVEN MAN HOCKEY\nREIGNS IN N. H. A.\nWanderers  Defeat Tecumsehs While\nOttawas Lose - to Quebec\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOld\nStyle from Now on.\nPosition of the N. H. A. Clubs.\nGoals\nw.\nL.\n-F.\nA\n..\". 7\n3\n48\n38\n... 7\n3\n66\n39\n... 1\n4\n47\n42\n:.U\n. *\n34\n43\n7\n41\n48\n... i\n7\n41\n58\nvice.\nBARRIEAU OETS DRAW,\nWITH SEATTLE BOXER.\nSeattle, Jan. 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdErnie Bart-teen Of\n\\ ante uver, fought a tour round' draw\nwith Valae. a Seattle boy. thla evening before one of the largest eniwd\"-\nthat bas packed the sporting ctuVa\nheadquarters thla season. The former\namateur ot B. C. had the) better Of the\nargument In the tlrst twenronnda but\nValae came back with a -rush ia tha\nlaat two rounds, taking aB kinda Of\npunishment while at the same U*ne\ngettlag la aomn \ufffd\ufffd>\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>--\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd MoifflJ\nverdict wai a popular one.   .\nCanadiens ...\nWanderers' ..\nQuebec ....\nTecumsehs ..\nOttawa ......\nTorontos . M\nWanderers Down Indiana.\nMontreal.'. Jan.- '29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe six man\nhockey game passed-out of existence\nthis evening when the Wanderers defeated the Tecumsehs, of Toronto,\ns.x goals to two. it was the finest\ngame-of tho season, the Wanderers\ntaking the lead In the first period and\nwere never headed:until the closing\nminutes'-of play, when the Indiana\nahowed \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd thetr old- time aplrit, scoring\ntheir two goala.   ' ,\nThe heavy strain of the overtime\ngames, plainly showed on the Indiana\nand wtththa exception of tha Mao-\nnamare bothers nonp of the vlaltora\nshowed up to advantage.\nThe.display of -the Wanderers waa\nthe Ui-'ejt-ihbw--,--''\"'*- ***\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\nm ***r~\nOtiftfr*\",tts&L\ned to break jtftW\ntheir own lee\nQuebec tuned tbl\t\ndt-flre goala to three.\nThe. Ice wae in perfect condition\nand for tho full sixty minutes of ptay\nboth -teams bit a fast ellp. Only two\nmajor fouls were handed out, but the\nstrenuous checking would have invoked more penalties had the eld\nrulee beea In ****dTmmm\\^^^^^^\nMoran and Mummery\nthe vlaltora.\nHe 19 also responsible, tor ..th-*- \\]\n..........istratiiiii ot the dockyards and 1\nfor the c-m-itructiur. of ships and machinery by contractors, and in the\ufffd\ufffd'-\nuiati-uis he '.as the assistance, .and\nadvice oi the Director of Naval Construction, the Engineer-in-chief of the\nnavy, and tlie Director of dockyards\nThe Junior Navel Lurd deals with\ntransport, coaling, matters relating to\npay,-pensions, and medals, naval-prisons, and collisions. .;     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nThe arrangement uf tbe department,*\nof the Navy Board appointed to take\nup the duties of the Lord High-. Admiral was somewhat dil'crent: from\nthst which exists at the present time\nin connection with the Bosrd of Admiralty, hut the system of administration was practically the snnie. The\nBoard of Admiralty ss it works to-day\nwas really established in 1832 by Sir\nJames Graham. -   '  *\nThe First Lord ol the Admiralty receives^ salary o! $22,500 a year, together with a house, while tha First\nSea Lord receives, in addition to nsv.\nsi half-pay, $7,500 a year with a\nhouse. Similar salaries are' paid to\nthe Second Sea Lord-and Junior 8es\nLord, while the Comptroller ef'the\nnavy receives $8,500 a year.\nH. Q. SMITH. C P. tk T.\nPhone Seymour 7100.\nA. W. IB. DOT-BROW. Q. A. V. T>.\nVANCOUVER, mjC.     5S7 Granville hM***.\nIf you read THE NEWS you get all the news.\ni!-5fi2! PHONE 890\nCOlTllwtlVnJ   r-OR PRICES ON l~\nLumber .Lath and Sliingles\n\"THE FRASER RIVER MILLS''\n(CANADIAN WESTERN LUMBER CO, LTD.)\ntabled\n-starred tor\nSUICIDE ON   MURDER?\nQUESTION BOTHERS POLICE\nSeattle, -fan. \ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWhether Si-neat\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd A Bllnger, whose body mm found bs\nthe Bay hy flshermea today, was hilled by i-okbon or sMasasMtes) aadcMe la\nthe question the police are trying to\neaawer.\nWben EUnger's body waa found hla\nwatch and a smell aum Of money be\nbad. when laat aeon, waa mleslug but\nHI,,      ISU,I,W     T-,-\t\nApart trom the First Lord,,Uie,B'ir-'t\nNaval Lord is the most important of\nfioer oi the Bosrd of Admirslt^v )'.\nseems to be unquestioned thst Sir\nJames- Graham was right in. de^crili-\ning the Senior Naval Lord af ''if**\ntirst naval adviser.\" It might.be men\ntioned that, in addition to gKiiersi\ndirection and supervision. in aonuec*-\ntion with the efficiency nf the ,|iavy.\nthe First Lord of the Admiralty hs.\nspecial chsrge ot promotioui Slid r**-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnovels from' the service, end sll matters relating to honors and rewards.\nas well as ths appointment ot lurther\nofficers, captains, and other officers ol\nthe higher ranks. .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,. ...\nUnder the Naval Lords and .'other\nmembers ol the board, the. several\nbranches ot administration are co*i-\nduois-d by permanent officers. \/ .\n*~r~    ~r-~  no m\n**!'YV,'\nTheir Joint ef Bests,\nDuring the Kimberley siege W colonel In charge of the mess use might\naddressed  this  little  speech to his\nfellow officers: \"Gentlemen, I am sor.\nry to say we were only able to *raw 1\nhall our ration ia beef to-days 'iSMe \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nJoint I am earring ta beet; *h,^*^*i\ner end of the table the joints\nIf any one would like to try I\nparbsps he will carve it for Jumsea.\nNo one eared to try the hoeeei i h\ne-fjsr. so it omd*tid*ojkm*am\nbe content w\ufffd\ufffd*h halt rlUcsia'raf \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nand the other Joint* was Mb seeersly\nalone.  After dinner wm ovar, \ufffd\ufffd*ne of\nthe ordetttes confessed that I he Aad\n\" the be*l was\nARENA\n-Ice Skating\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nTwo Sessions Daily\nADMISSION\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nAfternoon Session: Children 18c., Adult* 25c.\nEvenings: Everybody 40c.\nRICHARDSON & HUMPHRIES\nMEN'S OUtFlTTBRS.\n709 Columbia St. Wcatntinster Tnui Bldg.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJ:. i'1\nr\n\ufffd\ufffdiJSg| T L^orJ^e^JFo^\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBl \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   , |Bl|||l     ,|||,  ||      ii ISSSSSMSSW^ii\nmisplaced the Joints, and I\nstill intact.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAnswers.\nlilAI\nthe' watch wM~touhd tonight, tying 1\non a pter at the foot at TJMvet-eity j\nA Radium Safe.     '*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\",\nTo keep radittbX ema--JfM^y>Bi\nhold that metal haa a leedlndnt\nthree JeeV thick inside sttot Whtk w\nthd mmZmi****,. ,   ;    '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n*mhmth*\ufffd\ufffdsT*1** '*****'\n0? BIG FEATURES\nI\n1\nLeon Wadele\nIMPERSONATOR OF THE \"FAIR SEX-\n<1\nReno, Vail and Reno\nSIN-MRS,  DANCERS;*AND COMEDIANS.\nPHOTO PLAYS3\nDo toll bu where **\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd put\nii   ii    i pdssMtissaMtoWMNBsWs. MsaNstassslMsW    |\n0\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS\nTHURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 1S1X\nPAGE  SIX\nQUITE THE  LATEST.\nEmbossed Velvet Gowns\nPopular     This    8eason.\nRATE8.\nClassified\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOne cent per word per\nday; 4c per word per week; 15c per\nmonth; 6,000 words, to be used aa rehired wittln one year trom date ot\ncontract, $25.00.\nBirth or Marriage Notices 50c.\nDeath Notice 50c or with Funeral Notice $1.00. Card of Thanks 60c per\ninch.\nTO     RENT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFURNISHED     HOUSE-\nkeeplng room.;.   1020 Thl'd avenue.\n(586)\nFOR RENT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA TWO ROOM FURN-\nlshed flat, private bath, gas, electricity, hot aud cold water; also\nsingle rooms reasonable rates. Stirling block, corner Royal avenue and\nTenth Btreet.   Phone 499. (580)\nWANTED\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMISCELLANEOUS.\nWANTED\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA OlUL FOR GENERAL\nhousework.   Apply 422 Third street.\n(585)\nWANTED--YARD FOREMAN WHO\ncan tally lumber. Walsh Sash and\nDoor Co.\nFURNISHED II OUSEKEliPING\nsuit, ground floor; bath, phone\netc., at 224 Seventh street.\n(540)\n(677)\nWANTED-RESPECTAU1.E YOUNG\nUtdy as waitress, experienced or\napprentice \ufffd\ufffda*n\ufffd\ufffdle $^\ufffd\ufffdtwsjd>. apply at Dunsmulr Cafe.  Eighth St.\nFURNISHED   HOUSE   TO   RENT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdI\nThree rooms, pantry, closet,   bath, <\netc.   Close to Central school\nquire at 224 Seventh street.\nEn-\n(535)\nTO RENT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSUITE OF THREE\nrooms. Apply at Coldicutt block,\nSixth street and Thirteenth avenue,\nEast Burnaby. (532)\nTO RENT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdROOMS, FURNISHED OR\nunfurnished; modern conveniences\nat 1316 Cariboo street. \"\"\"*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n< ORDWOOD FOR SALE 530 TENTH\nstreet.\n(582)\nFOR SALE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA NEW MODERN\nhouse on lot 66x119, at Edmonds, or\nwould exchange for vacant property.\nApply Owner, J. Bone, Colonial Pool\nHall, or Box 797. (575)\nSEE THE EVOLUTION OF A COOK\nStove.   Canada's   Pride   Malleable\nRanges $1.00 down, $1.00 per week.\nCanada Range Co., Market square.\n(399)\nLOST\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdON SUNDAY. JANUARY 26\na gold fob with monogram T. F.\nFinder please return to this office\nand receive rewsrd. (574)\nMISCELLANEOUS.\nMATERNITY NURSE, ENGLISH\ncertificate, disengaged April. Dea-\ncock, Box 36, Edmonds. (555)\nFOR RENT.\nThree and four roomed suites with\nbath, steam heat, $25 and $30 per\nmonth unfurnished; one furnished $35.\nBradley Apartments,\n1218 Fifth Avenue. Phone 750.\n(425)\nTO RHNT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFURNISHED HOUSE\nkeeping rooms, hot and cold water.\nApply room 9, Knlgbts of Pythiaa\nhall, corner Eighth street and Agnes\nstreet. (398)\nTO RENT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTWO LARGE AND TWO\nsmall rooms over the News office\nSuitable for club or light manutac\nturlng purposes. Will lease for two\nor three year term, singly or en bloc\nApply to Manager the News.\nMENDING MATTING.\nWhen\nDarn\na   Worn   Place   Appears\nWith Strands of Raffia.\n'Muttlug Ih mull nn iiuhumly thing\nto   work   with!\"   exclaimed   n   young\nbouKekee|ier wbo was trylijg lo uieml\n! a hole that had been worn through the\nmalting on I he'fiedVooui floor.\n\"It's Impossible to sew lt, aud If I\ntack n patch over tbls hole lt will look\nuntidy and will he kicked up at the\nedges In a few days anyway.\"\nThut ls partly true.   Matting Is illlll-\n; cult to work with, and tacked on putch-\nI cs are uunlgbtly, but it can be sewed If\nyou go about the sewing properly und\nuse ratlin Instead of thread.\nRatlin ran be bought by the bank ln\n| colors tbat correspond with tbe colors\nIn the matting or lu \"nstnral\" color,\nwblch matches the groundwork lu nearly all the mattings lt costs but s few\ncents nnd will wear as long as tbe matting Itself.\nWhen a. worn place or hole appears\nIn tbe matting tt ran be darned with\nthread, or strands or raffia. Use a long\ndarning needle .having aa elongated\neye and work tbe strands of ruffin In\nand out of the matting, tbe same as\nyou would If you were darning a hole\nor torn place In any other material.\nWhen patching cut a piece of matting several Inches larger thsn tbe hole\nItself, taking csre to match the figure\nIn tbe patch wltb that ln tbe matting\non Ihe floor; tben lay the patc% under\nGREAT INTEREST IN\nFORESTRY OT B. C.\nPrincipal Source    of   Timber Within\nEmpire\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWhat India's Enlighten Policy Has Done.\nVictoria, B. C, Jan. 30.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA letter\nhas been received at the forest branch\nfrom a noted professor In the University of Edinburgh, Scotland, who Ib\ndeslriouB of having a full set of photographs and lantern slides to illustrate a course oi lectures ln forest\nadministration In the principal countries of the world.\nThe young men ln Europe who are\ngoing Into forestry work aro becoming  deeply  Interested  In  tbe  development of  forest  policy  in  Canada,\nand ln particular ln British Columbia,\nwhich contains half the timber ln th--\nwhole Dominion.    There Is no doubt\nthat within a short time this province\nw.ll be the principal source of timber within the empire, and as protective and other measures are advanced\nthe system ot administration will partake of tbe thoroughness seen ln India, where, since the inauguration of\n*-~    Sir    Dietrich\nIreland, 291,304; United Kingdom,\n984,976.\nNet output per person employed\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nEngland and Wales, \ufffd\ufffd101; Scotland.\n\ufffd\ufffd98; Ireland. \ufffd\ufffd78; United Kingdom\n\ufffd\ufffd102.\nHorse power of englneB and factories, mines, etc.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd(About one-quarter\nIs used in the production of electricity\nfor power and lighting)\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEngland and\nWales, 9,097,860 h.p.; Scotland, 1,397,-\n733 b.p.; Ireland, 259,407 h.p.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdUnited\nKingdom,  10,766.009 h.p.\nTo the sum of $3,560,000,000 shown\nabove as the value of net output may\nbe added $250,000,000 ln respect of\nabout 1,000,000 to 1,250,000 persons\nwhose occupations came within the\nBcope ot the census, but about whom\nreturns were not furnished.\nTbls is the first time in our commercial history that such particulars\nhave been available and their Importance and value is unquestionable.\nBank of Montreal\nESTABLISHED 1817.\nCAPITAL (Pald-Up) ....$16,000,000.00\nRESERVE   $15,000,000.00'\nBranches throughout Canada and\nNewfoundland, and in London. England, New York, Chicago and Spokane\nU.S.A., and Mexico City. A general\nbanking business transacted. Letters-\nof Credit lBsued, available with correspondents lu all parts of the world.\nSavings Bank Department\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDeposits-\nreceived In sums ot $1 and upward,\nand Interest allowed at 3 per cent, per'\nannum (present rate).\nTotal Assets over $186,000,000.00.\nNEW WESTMINSTER BRANCH,\nG. D. I1RVMNER, Manager:\nEASTERN WRITER HITS\nAT NEW RUGBY UNION\nToronto Sore-Head Saya   Westerners\nWllI Never Be Missed\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMaybe.\nCANADIAN PACIFIC\nB.C Coast Service\nthe hole nnd darn Ihe worn edges of the forest service by Sir Dieincn\ntbe matting down to lt, weaving the Brandis, a marvellous system has\nraffia ln nnd#out, over and under, using made tree crop production an advanc-\ncolors where colors In the figure in lbs  ed science.\n---  -_.,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi  minred i    There was expended  ln  India last\nNEWS    CLASSIFIED    ADS\nseller and buyer together.\nBRING\nCORPORATION OF BURNABY\nA public meeting will be held\nthe Foresters' hall, East Uurnaby\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdrld-iy  ervenlug next,\nCORPORATION OF BURNABY.\nEngineering Department.\nTenders for Tools and Supplies.\nSealed Tenders endorsed Tools and\nSupplies will. be received by tbe undersigned up to 12 noon on Monday,\nFebruary 3rd, 1913.\nCopy of specifications and form of\ntender can be had on application at\nthe Engineer's Office.\nTenders will not be considered unless made out on the forms supplied\nand must be accompanied by a marked  cheque for Oue  Hundred Dollars\n($100.00).\nW. GRIFFITHS,\" Comptroller.\nMunicipal Hall, Edmonds, B. C,\nJanuary 21st, 1913.\n(650)\nCANADIAN\nNORTHERN\nRAILWAY.\nPACIFIC\nluivi a   .,,iv. v.  .......\nmatting demand and  natural  colored\nr.'illia on tbe groundwork.\nyear about $5,000,000, but thlB was returned with $3,000,000 profit.   The ex\nDBAPKD VliLVKT  OOSTCHB,\nI'nilinsstil velvet In one tone colorings la. a favorite fabric for divc-iy\ngowns Ibis seuxoii. Some women object to this very expensive material\non act-oiiut of Us resemlilaiire to fur\nnlture coverings, but In soft tones\ntbe new embossed velvets nre lovely.\nThe gown of figured velvet seen In\ntbe Illustration ts of n dull, old blue\nshade, further beautified with old luce\nand handsome skunk fur.\nThe band of pelt just above the\nbem makes tbe iiurrowuws ot tbe\nskirt all the more apparent.\nAFTERNOON GOWNS.\nIf neatly done this Is a successful lB\" \"';'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \"'\"' \ufffd\ufffd-         -    ,,. ,   ,, ,\nway of mending matting.    After tbe ' P?n<-lture >\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd{ ye\"1\" 1  *  h ^\"\"V\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   ,    ,i  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   V ., , ,,,   bla on  provincial  forests  was about\nwork Is finished the worn place will  $2SOi000jV0T one eighteenth of the sum\nnot lie at all noticeable. | 8pent ln -ndla   whUe th\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd retun-.s to\nRaffia ts the best thing to use when   the   crown   were   $2,800,000.     British\nsewlug strips or breudtlw of malting j Columbla'B forests are likely to pro\n\"\"'\"  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-   eu.   ,niiiinu\ufffd\ufffd   annual   revenue,\nPursuant to Section 7, of the Brit\nIsh Columbia Railway  Act,  1911, no-\n---itlce is hereby  given that   there   hae\n  _ J-muKi-y 81,    atl>,(.un deposited with thn Registrar lu\nS o'clock, to appoint    t*\ufffd\ufffdo    delegates I-sjew   Westminster,  plan,   pro'-ile    ana\nfrom -wan! Uiroe to act on transporta-l-nooii 0t Reference ot the location ot\ntlon committee    now    being    formed Whe  Canadian  Northern  Pacific  Rall-\ntrom all parts    ot    the    municipality. I way, mileage 5 to 15, Lulu Island, ap-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdn-ilB committee to meet the Council \\ proved by the MlnlBter ol Railways of\nto  discuss, transportation question In I British  Columbia unu\nBurnaby and decide what action shall 1\nbe taken V-i regard to H. C. Electric'\nHallway    franchise   now   before   the\ncourt.\nAll ratepayers requested to attend.\nT. D. COLDICUTT,\n(584) Councillor for Ward Three.\ntogether. Lay tbe two breadths together aB you would wben sewing carpet and sew orer and over wltb n firm\nbut not too tight stitch. When the\nbreadths are opened out flat tbe stitches\nwill look like a portion of the\" woven\nmaterial.\nINVESTORS' INVESTMENT CO.\nCurtis Block, New Westminster, B.C.\nTelephone 295. P. O. Box 777.\n$3800 <*ssh buys two full sized lots,\neach 60x132, two house; one four\nrooms, one eight rooms; semi-modern. $4000 on terms. This Is one\nof the biggest snaps in the city.\nS2800 huys six roomed house in\nWest End! Lot 50x150; all cleared.\nOue-quarter cash.    Terms.    No. 75.\n$1250   hnys   small,    all    plastered\nhouse, large cleared lot in East\nBurnaby, on Eleventh avenue. $350\ncash. $10 per month. Renting $10\nper month.    No. 37.\n$4000 huys good eight roomed\nhouse near Sixth Btreet car line\nand Fourth avenuo; excellent condition.    Terms to suit.    No. 72.\n$10,000 \ufffd\ufffd\"d $9000 respectively\nwill buy two of the choicest modern houses on Third avenue. Fine\nlota and generous terms. No. 66\nand No. 73.\nINVESTORS'   INVESTMENT CO.\nFire, Accident, Plate Glass, Automobile, Burglary, Employer's\nLiability Insurance.\n      (469)\nT. H. WHITE.\nCh'.ef Engineer.\nLAND REGISTRY ACT.\nRe Lots 4, 5, 7 (except the south\nwesterly 32 feet by 54 V* feet of said\nlot 7) of portion of lots 1, 2 and 0\nand a portion ot 20 foot by 106 fuel\nmarked \"Lane,\" of Lot 5, Block 34.\nMap 904, in the City of New Westminster.\nWhereas proof of the loss of Certlfl\ncate of Title Number 12868 F. lBsued\nin the name of Robert Lennie, has\nbeen filed In this office.\nNotice Ib hereby given that I Bhall\nat the expiration of one month from\nthe date of the first publication horeof\nln a dally newspaper published in the\nCity of New Westminster, issue a\nduplicate of the said Certificate, unless In the meantime valid objection\nbe made to mo ln writing.\nC. S. KEITH,\nDistrict Registrar of Titles.\nLand Registry Office,\nNew   Westminster,   B.C.,   January\n3, 1903. (407)\nAbsinth Velvet Bridge Costumes Are\nSmart This Season.\nA peculiar greeul-.li or yellow shade,\nnot olive und uot tan, ls now  much\nfancied   for- formal   afternoon   frocks\nfor bridge, reception or luncheon wear\nA costume of this sort bas Just been\nfinished for a bride of November.   Absinth chiffon velvet Is the material, ami\nthe suit includes a gracefully draped\nskirt nnd tbe most coi-uetltsb ot coats,\nabort enough nt the trout to reveal Uie\nblack sutln druped girdle, but tnlllng\nat the back tn long tails to tbe knee\nThese tails slope gradually  from the\ndouble   breasted   froul   and   give  thc\ncoat n grncefui cutaway effect viewed\nfrom lhe side.    Knorrninis revers of the\nvelvet are gathered nt the top Into a\nturnover   Robespierre  collar  of   black\nvelvet nud hang lo Ibe waist line over\nthe coat front.   The revers and collar\nopeu In ii deep V, the coat fastening in\ndouble breasted fusblon with two black\nvelvet buttons Just at the top of lhe\ngirdle.    Within the V or the openlnu' Is\na Utile vest or chemisette of very fine\nmachine embroidery insertion mill pin\ntucked lawn,  \/shove Ibis ilaint.v i-heml\nsette Is ii high slock *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd', *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ;-crt. Iluy\nbow of changeable green anil gold silk\nseparating the two. This bow of green-\ngold  silk  seems  to  be a  culminating\nspot  of color  In  Ibe greenish  yellow\nabsinth tone.\nThe skirt bas a wide front and back\npanels, hanging perfectly straight. Ihe\nsides lielng caught up below Ibe hips\ninto a soft transverse drapery.\nNEW SANDWICH  FOR TEA.\nIt  Is  Made  ef Ground  Almonds  and\nMinced Eggs.\nAmerica bas the best oysters and\nsalads of any country lu the world.\nMrs. Lily Hnxworth Wallace, the English cooking expert, told tbe women\nat tbe pure food show cooking lesson !\ntbe otber morning.\n\"The best way to cook an oystpr.\"\nsaid Mrs. Wallace, \"ls not to cook It\nat all. There is an English saying.\n'The more you do to an oyster the\nmore It will do to you.' That means\nthnt the more you cook It the less\nnourishment you get\"\nBut she gave tbem recipes to cook\nthe best oyster In the world, tbe American oyster. If they were not content to'\neat It raw. Tbe American salad ls the\nbest lu Hie world. Mrs. Wallace suys.\nbecause America has Ibe greatest va-\nduce   6VS   millions   \t\naccording to Dr. Benedict of the for\nest branch.\nThe realization of the Importance\nof British Columbia forests to the Brit\nIsh Empire is spreading through all\nthe Homeland and the colonies, and\nargurs well for future prosperity of\nthis province.\nBURGLARS ABANDON\nSAFE CRACKING KIT\nAmerican Light Fingered Gentry Surprised in London\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdScrub Woman Makes Find.\nLondon, Jan. 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSome burglars,\nwho, from the elaborate outfit they\nleft behind, the police surmise to have\nb=*en Americans, spent an unprofitable week-end at the St. Andrews\nHouse in Holborn, where the pearl\n. . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd       \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ... . , merchant,   Mr.  Rubin,    haB    $400,000\nrlety   of   rrnlts.  vegetables  nnd  other | worlh of gems \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd hla offlce Bafe\nproducts of the garden nml Held.    Sbe |     Tlle   Hcrub  woman,      when    golns\ngave the  women  a  recipe  fnr  a  uew (about  her  work  this morning,\nsunilwlcb Unit a number of them said . the window pane cut out.    A\ne going to try Immediately for j investigation  revealed  the fact    that\nscattered about the room where   the\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ safe was situated was a complete ar-\nnnd ground  for the egg nnd nlmoii-l i senal of burglar's tools.    A hole had\nbeen drilled In the safe, but nothing\nThe stand taken at the annual meeting of the Western Canada Rugby\nUnion, held ln Regina two weeks ago,\nwben it decided to break away from\nthe Canadian Rugby Football Union,\nseems to have agitated the easterners\nsome what and the remarks by the\nsport critics of the \"cent belt\" are\nslightly amusing to westerners wbo\nknow the capabilities of these nearsighted ink-slingers.\nThe following screed ls from tbe\npen of C. H. Good, of the Toronto\nNews, who spends one-bait of his\ntime knocking Manager Nicholson of\nthe Toronto Tecumsehs, and the remainder   ln   sneering   at   everything\nwestern.\nThe Toronto wiseacre says: \"The\narrogant attitude assumed by the\nWestern Rugby Association is amusing, to Bay the least. Because the\nC. R. F. U. would not accede to the demands of the flatant far-west association In reganl to the adoption of the\nsnap buck sys^iu, the W. R. IT. say\nihat thev will i-ntore 'the self-appoint\nea eastern au'.h'irr-ies' and go ahead\ncu their own look. All this U very\nrich when It Is considered thai they\nhave only been playing the .lij-fkm\ngame two years in the west, and that\nthe body was only an honorary member of the C. R. f. U. Many of the\nplayers on the Regina. Winnipeg a>i(*\nStates college men. and naturally they\nwould rather play a \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdune to '.heir liking than the 3crimm*i--'> style.\"\nMr. Good's statements are too petty\nto bother answering with the exception of correcting the one in which he\nclaims rugby bas been played for only\ntwo years In the west. He ts just\nfour years out ln his calculations, but\nthat ls close for a man who ls slow to\nrealize that many of the eastern stars\nwill bo gamboling on western gridirons wben the 1913 season starts.\nLeaves Vanoouver for Victoria 10 a. in.,\n2 p. m. and 11:4*>.\nLeave* Vancouver for Seattle 10 a bv\nund 11 p. in.\nLeaves Vancouver for Nanalmo 3 p. m.\nLeaves Vancouver for Prince Rupert\nand Northern Points   10 p. m.   Wt-dn-*---\nLeavea Vanoouver every Wednesday al\n16 p. in\nfound\nA further\nDREDGING.\nWHEN IN NEED OF HELP\nPHONE   R 1031.\nCLARK-FRASER\nEmployment Agency\nPrompt attention given to orders.\n607 Front St., New Westminster, B.C.\nExtension of Time.\n\"Notice ia hereby given that the\ntime for reception of tenders for\nDredging at False Greek, Vancouver,\nB. C, is extended to Monday, February 17, 1913.\nBy order\nR. C. DESROCHER'-i,\nSecretary\nDepartment of Public Works,\nOttawa, January 18, 1913. (534)\nTOOL AND CIGARS.\n.King's Hotel Pool Room\n||l Best Pool Tables In the city. Fine\nline of Cigars and Tobacco. Sporting\nevents bulletined.\n'    X G. BEATON. Proprietor.\n<1_L_ L    ...\nWell Built Modern\n5-Roomed Bungalow\n. Just ofT Sixth Street car lifie, with\n.J-ot water heat. $3150.00; $1000.00\ncash, balance to arrange.\nT. D. COLDICUTT\nColdicutt Block, Fourth Avenue\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPhone 719. East Burnaby, B.C.\nHOTEL FRASER\nEighty Rooms, New snd Modern.\nThe most comfortable rooms In the\ncity. Hot and cold water and stean*\nradiator ln each. Bar and flrst clast\ncate run in connection.\nTH08. WITHYMAN, Prop.\nCor. Front and Begble St.    Phone 18f\nWomen and the Ballot.\nProfessor Vaudell Ueiiili-i'\ufffd\ufffdoii of Yale\nuniversity strongly approves uf worn\nan sulTruge. but not until tlie \"short\nballot\" ls adopted. With the present\nlong and complicated one It Is verj\niliflleiilt, be says, fur men to vote in\ntelllgeutly. and it would be Impossible\nfor women. The professor put It more\npolitely than this, but be win uot so\ncrowded for spiiif. The statement Is-\nwell iiiitlieiKleiiteil Hint tn California\nand those otber states where wonu-ii\nvote many of tbem bave to Instruct\ntlie men of their families, ns Ihey have\nmore leisure, mid ilielr clubs me pink\nIng a thorough study of polllieiil ,|iies\nMulls and I'Siiiliilntti- In Oakland s\nfather ami son. prominent lui-aiiies.\nmen. brought linilla a sflUlple ballot\nfor Ibe wife ami daughter to murk fin\nHiPlli. Mini while tliey were lining II\nthe cook eiiiiie lu with another whiet\nher brother, a pnlli-einaii, bail sent bei\nto Hi op for blm.\nthey were \t\nafternoon ten.\nTwo ounces of almonds are salted\nsandwich nnd passed through ths\ufffd\ufffd meat\nChopper. Two finely minced hnnl\nhulled eggs, blended wltb two tabic\nspoonfuls of butter, nre added and the\nwhole Is seasoned and spread between\niblu slices of bread.\nAfternoon Bridge Gown.\nTobacco brown chiffon with a panel\nuf white sutln on which Is trimming ot\nbrown soutache In button effect forms\nwas missing.\nThe material left In the room and\nweighing several half tons, included\ntwenty cylinders of oxygen and acetylene, and also blowpipes, drills etc\nThe articles were valued at $300. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nA safemaker described the collection of tools as the finest he had ever\nFor Veterans of Civil War.\nWashington, Jan. 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe Town-\nsend Bill, to place on tbe retired list |\nof the army all surviving Union officers In the Civil War, at three-fourths\nof the pay they were receivlug when\nmustered out, will be considered tomorrow by the senate military affairs\ncommittee. Friends of thu measure\nhope to have It ordered favorably reported by the committee.\nChilliwack Service\nl>aves Westminster  t  a.  m.  Monday.\nWedneaday and Friday.\n-, Leaves  Chllllwack   7    a.   m.   Tuesday.\nThursday and Saturday.\nBD. OOULBT, Agent. New Westminster.\nH. W. BROUIB, O. P. A.. Vancouver.\nNAMAN PACIfK\nRAILWAY CO.\nAROUND THE WORLD BY\nCANADIAN PACIFIC\nEMPRESS OF   RUSSIA\n16,850 Tons  Register .'\n34,000 Tons Displacement\nEMPRESS   OF   ASIA.\n16,850 Tons Register.\n34,000 Tons Displacement.\nThese new  palatial liners will leavs\nSouthampton on April  1st and   May\n27th respectively   for   Vancouver   via.\nthe Sues Canal, calling at   Gibraltar,\nMonaco or Ville Franche, Port   Said,\nColombo,    Singapore,    Hong      Kong,\nShanghai,  Maji Nagasaki,  Kobe   and\nYokohama.\nAround the World Tickets From Vancouver, $539.10.\nChoice cf Atlantic steamships from St.\nJohn, Montreal, Quebec. Halifax, Portland, Boston or New York.\nPassengers will have the opportunity of taking many side trips during\nthe Empresses' stay at the principal\nports. Time of voyage from Southampton to Vancouver about two-\nmonths. Full particulars, rates, etc..\non application to\nBD. OOULET, Agent\nNew Westminster\nOr H. W. Brodle, O.P.A, Vancouver\ncloth\nFhone R524\n619 Hamilton St\nd. Mcelroy\nChimney Sweeping,\nEavetrough Cleaning,\nSewer Connecting,\nCesspools. Septic Tanks  Etc.\nSUITS\nfor Ladies and Men\nGALVIN\nTHE TAILOR\n46  Lorne Street, New Westminster\nGirls Should Have Professions.\nMWs Laura Urn lie Hill or the I'ul\nv-.r-.ltj* of the South, st Srwiiiiee.\nleiui., says: \"Kvery girl, rich or poor\niiii-iN a skilled occupation carried to\nn self snpiKirtltig imlnt. r\ufffd\ufffdbe Heeils II\nfor Insurance against rerer-.es* for ber\nmentality, which reacts better toward\nconcrete alms; for her sense of re\nspouslhlllty lo society nr ethical de\nvelo-'iueiil and for Ihe Joy wlildi only\ni-iimi-M from constructive activities\nHome making should lie among tbe\nparamount activities.\"\nIn Quebec.\nIt In snld that there In no married\nwoman's property act lu Quebec. If s\nwoman marries without a contract\nand tbls often happens, ber husband\nnuns all she lias, all sbe earns anil all\nshe may Inherit.\nNot a Real \"Raphael.\"\nI,ondon, Jan. 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe Times Bays\nthat the supposed Raphael's \"Holy\nFamily,\" formerly belonging to Count\nVat nil In ot Pesaro. It adds that, although certainly a good picture, lt Is\nmuch Inferior tn many respects to the\noriginal ln Madrid.\nseen.\nThe burglars erected a wax\ntent in the room under which they\nworked, thus making tt Impossible\nfor detection on the outside of the\nplace by the light and electric battery\nthey had brought with them. It ts\nbelieved they were disturbed anyhow.\nAt last reports the police had no clue\nto the men.\nMODERN DOOMSDAY\nBOOH NOW ISSUED\nSole agent for\nHire's Root  Beer\nMineral Waters,   Aerated Water*\nManufactured by\nJ. HENLEY\nNEW WESTMINSTER.  S. C.\nsleshone B  111   Office:  Princess itv\nStatistics    of    Britain's     Production\nReach Overwhelming  Proportions\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nValuable   Data   Now  Available.\nA bite of thla and a taste of that, all day\nIon-*, dulls the appetite and weakens lhe\ndigestion.\nRestore your stomach to healthy vigor\nby lakln-r a Na-Dru-Co Dyspepsia Tablet\nalter eaoh meal\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdandcut out Ihe 'plecla*-*.\nNa-Dru-Co Dysp jpsia Tablets\nsre the best Iriends for sufferers from\nln<\ufffd\ufffdl--estlon and dyspepsia. 50c. a Bos\nat your Druggist's. Made by ths\nNations! Drug and Chemical Co. el\nCanada, Limited.\nWestminster\nTransfer Co.\nOffice Phone  185.      Barn Phene UT\"\nBegble atreet.\nBaggage Delivers* Promptly to\nany part of the city.\n[}%\\d and Heavy Hauling;\nCITY Of NEW Wt      MINSTER. B.C\nii hows- eairro* uto waira satih.\nthe simple but effective costume pictured here. Tbe arrangement ot. Ihe\ntwo color bell nnd tbe double flounce\not chiffon are notable.\nPreparing Gowns For the Dyers-\nOld and faded or soiled gowns If rip\nbed np entirely before sending to the\ndyers in flat pieces may be very Inexpensively freshened, and when ent nil\nover again nnd made up Into a new\ntown will bear no resemblance what\never to a made over costume.\nCatholicism In New World.\nSan Juan, Porto Rico, Jan. 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCardinal Parley, of New York, and Archbishop Blenk, of New Orleans, will\ntake part here next month In the celebration of the 400th anniversary of\nthe creation of the first Catholic dlo-\n|cese ln tbe new world.     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nLondon, Jan. 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThere has lust\nbeen it-sued a 1000-page blue book\nwhich Is the rcBult of the Census of\nProduction Act, of 1906, in England.\nThe delay In IU Issue Is pardonable,\nconsidering the enormous bulk of the\nstatistics that had to be collated, the\nfact tbat the machinery set up tor\ntheir collection was new and the circumstance that several powerful trade\nInterests were opposed to the innovation.\nFor the purposes of the enquiry the\ntrades ot the country have been classed ln the following groups:\nMines and quarries; iron, steel, engineering and shipbuilding: metal\ntrades, other than iron and steel; textile, colthtng, food, drink and tobacco;\nchemical and allied trades; paper,\nprinting, stationery and allied trades;\nleather, canvas and India rubber; timber, clay, stone and building; miscellaneous, and public utility services.\nIn summary form the results of the\ncensus are shown as follows:\nGross output (selling value or value\nof work done)\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEngland and Wales,\n$7,450,000; Scotland, $1,040,000,000;\nIreland. $215,000,000; United KIumIohi,\n$5,140,000,000.\nWork given out (amount paid to other firms)\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEngland and Vales, $95,-\n060,000; Scotland, $25,00',000; Ireland, $5,000,000; United Kingdom,\n$125,000,000.\nNet output (excess of gross output\nover cost of materials and amount\npaid to other firms)\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEngland and\nWales, $8,016,000,000; Scotland, $430,-\n000,000; Ireland, $115,000,000; United\nKingdom, $3,530,000,000.\nPersons employed (except outworkers, average number)\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEngland and\nWales,  6,808,269;   Scotland,   885,403;\nWESTMINSTER DAILY NEWS\nCLASSIFIED ADVERTISMENTS\nBRING  QUICK   RESULTS\nBilliards and Pool\nBiggest and best line of Pipes.\nCigars and Smoking requisites\nWholesale and retail.\nJ. L. Duncan, Ltd.\nSOB Columbia St.\nD. McAulay\nTel. 724.\nARCHITECT\nCor. Sixth and Columbia.\nSubscribers\nwho do not receive\n8 a.m. abould\nThe Newa before*\nIt's the Work.\nUse Your Phone\nNEW METHOD CLEANERS\nWE CLEAN CLEAN\nLADIES' WORK OUR SPECIALTY.\n628 Clarkson Street. Phone 490\nl''or   Bxccl-'nc-1   In    Shaving,   tfaircuttina\nand Hh-tmr-ooln*-: give the\nEXCELSIOR BARBER SHOP\n35  Eighth  St.    David  Boyle,  Prop.\nit ti-lul.    Four skilled workmen.    Our system   of   IreatlllK   tlie   scalp   for    dnii'lriiff }\nnnd fulling hair cannot be Improved upon.\nTry It.\n'\"lux- Mnssaglng a speciality.\nP.O. Box 34. Dally News Bldg.\nJ. T. BURNETT'S PRINT 8HOP\n.JOB   PRINTING\nor all kinds.\nPrices light.   Satisfaction guaranteed\n59 MeKenzle SL\nTELEPHONE 999\nand make complaint. Only In thla way\nmay an efficient delivery be maintained.\nSecond Hand Store\nJ. Q. SMITH.\nBuy and sell new and   second   hand?\ngoods of all kinds.   Tools especially.\nM Holn-ies Street. Phone I00\ufffd\ufffd\nHEECHUNG\nMerchant\nTailor\nIMPORTER OF WOOLEN GOODS\nAND TRIMMINGS. LOWEST PRICES\nPERFECT FIT GUARANTEED.\n701   Front Street,  New Westminster. THURSDAY, JANUARY SO, 1913.\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS.\nPAGE  SEVEN\nFRECKLES\nG\ufffd\ufffdna\ufffd\ufffd Sftirafttai--\nHome dookh. Never bought U* nook lu\nme life or anything else of much account, for that matter. Ob, ain't I\n-glad I didn't wests me money! I'll\nsurely be tin ring enough to get a few\nLet me see.\"\n-OPYRIGHT. 1904. BY OOUBUOAV  PAGI\na- co.\n(continuum\nAIkiiiI tlie bridge spanning Sleepy\nSnake creek tbe swule sprcud wide,\nthe timber largely dropped nwsy, nod\nwillows, rushes, marsh grass snd\nsplendid wild flowers grew abundant-\nly. I.n7.y big black water anukes, for\nwblcb tbe creek was named, sunned on\ntht bushes, wild ducks and grebe chattered, cranes and herons fished, and\nmuskrats plowed Ibe bank In queer,\nrolling furrows, it waa always a place\nfull of Interest to Freckles.\nFreckles struck slowly Into Ibe putb\nlending from tbe bridge to tbe line.\nIt wus tbe one spot at whicb be might\nrclai bis vigilance. Tbe greatest timber thief tbe swamp hsd ever known\nwould not bsve attempted to enter It\nby tbe month of tbe creek on account\n[of tbe water and because tbere was\nno protection from surrounding trees.\nUe w.is swishing tbe rank grass wltb\nhis cudgel aud thinking of the shade\nthe denser swamp afforded wben be\nsuddenly dodged sldewlae. Tbe cudgel whistled sharply through ihe air\nand Freckles sprang back.\nOut of tbe clear sky above blm, first\nlevel wltb bis face, tben skimming,\n|s-llpplng, tilting, whirling uutll It lit\nquill down In tbe path In front of\nblm, came a glossy, iridescent big\nlihick feather. As lt struck tbo\nground Freckles snatched It np sud\nwltb an almost continuous movement\n'faced tbe sky. Tbere was not a tree\nof any alze ln a large open space.\nFrom tbe clear sky It bad fallen, snd\nFreckles, gazing eagerly Into the arch\nof June blue wltb a few laiy elonds\nfloating far np In ibe sea of ether,\nhsd neither mind nor knowledge to\ndream of a bird hanging ns If frozen\ntbere. He turned the big quill qties-\ntlonlngly, nnd sgaln bis swed eyes\nawept tbe sky.\n\"A feather dropped from beaveni\"\nhe breathed reverently. \"Are tbe holy\nangels molting? But, no; tf tbey were\nlt would be wblte. Maybe all the an-\ngels are not for being wblte. What It\nthe angels of Uod are wblte and those\nof tbe devil ure black? Bnt a black\none has no business up there. Maybe\nsome poor black angel ta so tired of being punished It's for slipping up to the\ngates, beating IU wings trying \"\"\"\"\nmake tbe Master bear!\"\nCHAPTER  IV.\nrnECKl.ES'  WORLD Of  l-1-O-.tIRr..\nItECKI.ES had walked Ibe tlm\nber line tea months. His puy\nwas S'.'M a montb, and his\nboard cost JS That left J'J'.-\na month, nnd tbe $J was more limn\nbis clothing had cost him. At ibe vers\nleast be bad $200 In the bank.\n\"I'll be having s book about sll thr\nbirds,   trees,   flowers,  buttertlles-snd\nFBI\nE\"\ntbem thick unoin* the lumber ramps\nof Georgia, but I never beard of sny\nthis fur north before. They must be\nBtrays. You have perfectly described\nour nearest equivalent to n bramb ut\nthese birds called lu Europe 1'baraob's\nchickens.\"\n\"He was loving cer so.\" said Free\ntiles In ii hu-lii'il voice. Freckle* lift\ncd bis brave, steady eyes to the boss.\n\"If niijbody luved me like that. Mr\nMcLean, 1 wouldn't be spending anytime caring bow tliey looked or\nmoved All I'd lie thinking uf was\nbow tbey felt toward me. If tbey will\nslay I'll be caring as much for tUeui\nus nn.v chickens I have.\"\nTbe face of McLean was a study.\n\"And  now,   Freckles,  what  bas  been\nYOUNG AT SEVENTY.\nThs Most Valuable Period cf a Man's\nLife.\nDr. Earl Bsrnes caused consider,\nable comment in a recent lecture in\nLondon by quoting figures which show\nthat the period of greatest productivity of a man's life lies in the (decade between his sixtieth and Ins\nseventieth year.\n\"At first thought,\" said Dr. Barnes,\n\"one would be inclined  to disbelieve\nI this, but the investigation which ended in the publishing of the statistics\nwas carried to such a length that its\ni outcome must be given consideration.\n| The   beginning  ol   the   investigation\nI was made in an attempt to disprove\nthe much misunderstood so-called Os-\nMUST STOP LEAKS\n-     IN VITAL STREAM\nthe trouble ull spring?   You have done] jer  theory,  which  by  the  way,   Dr.\nOf  Immigration to  Oversea   States\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ne\nWhat Britain Is Paying for\ns\nForeign Produce.\nMontreal, Jan. 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHon. George B.\nFoster, minister of trade and commerce, addressed the Montreal Canad-\ndlan Club last week on the work of\nthe  royal  commission   as  to the re-\nths sna oLnrran on its s-iarp, boous\nSUI.\nyes, by gummy. I'll be having one\nabout the frogs\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIf It takes every cent\nI have,\" he promised himself.\nFreckles fell Into <t rapid pace, for\nbe bad lost time lbat morulog. and as\nbe rounded tbe last curve be waa si\nmost running.\nTben. wavering, dickering, darting\nbere and tlitre over Ibe sweet marsh\ngrass, came s great black shsdow. Ue\nhad seen some owls and hawks of the\nswsmp that be thought could be\nclassed as large birds, but never anything like this, for six feet It spread IU\ngreat shining wings. Ita big. strong\nfeet could be seen drawn up among its\nfeathers. Tbe sun glinted on Its sharp,\nhooked beak, lt lit ee a low tree, and\na second later Freckles saw another\nshadow sweep tbe grass.\nThey were evidently mates, for with\nqueer rolling  hop  the  flrst comer\nsnivel cd bis bronze wings, sidled op\nto the new arrival and gave her a silly\nI llt-le peck on ber wing.   Tben he co-\nyour work as faithfully as nny one\ncould ask, but 1 can't belp seeing tbat\nthere ls something wrong. Are you\ntired of your }oh't\"\n\"I love It\" answered Freckles. \"It\nwill almost break me heart wben the\ngang begins tearing up Ibe swamp\nand scaring away me chickens.\"\n\"Tben what ta tbe matter?'' Insisted\nMcLean.\n\"1 tblnk. air. It's been books. Being\namong these beautiful things every\nday, 1 got so anxious like to be knowing and naming tbem tbat it got to\neating Into me snd went and made me\nnear sick wben I was well as I could\nbe. Of course I learned to read, write\nand figure aome at school, bnt there\nwas nothing there nor In sny of the\ncity that 1 ever got to see (but would\nmake a fellow even be dreaming of\nsucb interesting things ss there are\nhere. I've seen Ibe parks, but tbey\nain't even beginning to be lu lt with\nLImberlost It's sll new and strange\nto me. 1 don't know a thing about\nany of IL. Tbe bullfrog told me to\n'find out,' plain ss day, and books arc\nthe only -way. ain't they?\"\n\"Of course,\" said McLean, astonished\nfit himself for bis heartfelt relief. He\nhod not guessed until thst minute\nwbnt lt would bave meant to him t<\nhave Freckles give up. \"You know\nenough to study out what you want\nyourself If you hnve tbe books, don't\nyour   .\n\"I em pretty sure I do,\" said Freckles. \"I learned all I'd tbe cbance al\nIn Ihe borne, and me schooling wut\ngood as far ss It went Wouldn't let\nyou go past fourteen, you know. I\nalways did me scms perfect, and I\nloved me history books. 1 never conld\nget me grammar to suit them. Tbey\nsaid lt was just burn lu me to go\nwrong talking, but 1 could knock them\nall out singing. 1 was alwaya teadci\nIn tbe home, snd once one of the superintendents gave me car fare and let\nme go Into thc city and sing ln a boys'\nchoir. The master eald I'd tbe awateat\nvoice of them all until It got rough-\nlike, and tben be made me quit for\nawhile, bnt be said It would be coming\nback by now, and I'm rallly thinking\nIt is, sir, for I've tried about the line\na bit ot late.\nOsier says was only a banquet joke\n\"Thc attempt to show the fallacy\nof the statement made by Dr. paler\nwas taken up by Dr. William A. N\nDorland, himself a physician and\nauthor of some reputation.\n\"He selected the names ot four\nhundred of the most noted men of all\ntimes from sll lines of activities;\nstatesmen, painters, warriors, poets,\nwriters ol history, fiction, and other\nprose productions. Opposite each\nname was placed the name of the\ngreatest work of his lifetime; his\ngreatest picture, greatest battle, greatest poem or book; whatever the greatest thing he had done in his lifetime\nmight be.\n\"This.list was then submitted to a\nconsiderable number of competent\ncritics for suggestions. The list wae\nrevised and re-revised. Names were\nadded, names were dropped; the list\nwas thoroughly gone over time and\nagain, until the majority opinion was\nthat the list as it stood represented\nthe lour hundred greatest men of the\nworld's history.\n\"When the list was completed to\nthe satisfaction of the critics, Dr. Dor-\nland appended to the list of the\nachievements of the men, the age at\nwhich the deed was accomplished\nThe list was arranged according to decades of age, and the result was\nstartling.\n\"It was found that the decade ol\nyears between sixty and seventy contained t>3 per cent, ot the world's\ngreatest achievements. Between tlie\nages of seventy and eighty, 23 per\ncent, of tlie achievements fell; and\nin Ute yearB after tihe eightieth, 6 pet\ncent.\n\"In other words. 64 per cent, of the\ngreat things of the world have been\naccomplished by me' who had passed\ntheir sixtieth year; the greatest percentage, 35 per cent., being in the\nsixth decade.\n\"The figures lor the other periodi\nof life are interesting. Between the\nfiftieth and sixtieth years are found\n25 per cent., between forty and fifty.\n10 per cent. These all totalled together, leave the almost negligible quantity of 1 per cent, to be attributed to\nthe period below the age ot forty.\nsources and trade of the British Empire.\n\"One of the most important questions with wblch the commission has\nto deal ls that of migration,\" said Mr.\nFoster. \"The question of migration\nfrom tbe United Kingdom into the\ndifferent parts of the empire, and in\nparticular to the overseas dominions,\nIs one worthy of no little attention.\nJust the mention of the subject, and\nto think what ls going on here, Is\nsufficient to show what an important\nquestion this is.\n\"For years and years a streak of\nprecious British blood was constantly\npouring out from the United Kingdom, and at first just a small part\not lt was bound for other parts of the\nempire. In latter years the streak\nhas directed itself more satisfactorily, and at the present time not more\nthan forty per cent of the British outflow Is lost to the British empire, but\nthat forty per cent is still lost to tbe\nEmpire, and that is just about forty\nper cent too much.\n\"This ls something that must be\nremedied by our statesmen and must\nbe attended to at once.\"\nTlie  commission  has also  to look\nlut55*the natural resources of the over;\nseas dominions, both as to the question of present conditions and what\nthey are capable of\"doi*ig-ln the future.\n\"The commission will also have to\ninquire Into the food requirements\nand the natural resources for manufacturing.\n\"Britain imports $340,000,000 worth\nof cotton each year from foreign coun\ntries. Who knows but that in time\nIt may be possible to satisfy the cotton manufacturers from within the\nEmpire. Britain today imports $290,-\nOOO.OUO worth of wheat and flour from\nforeign countries. It is possible that\nthere is within the Empire sufficient\nland to supply this demand.\n\"What ia it that is aimed at? It ls\nto give the people of this Empire a\nphotograph of the Empire of which\nthey form a part.\"\n.FOREiGftt-fr-ts Barred.\nOnly\nto   Do\nEnglish-Speaking    Men\nSnow Cleaning.\nToronto, Jan. 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"That work such\nas snow cleaning, etc., be given only to\nEnglish-speaking men, and that no\nforeigners be employed unless no Eng-\nglish-speaklng men can be found.\"\nThe above notice of motion by Alderman Bobbins, waB adopted at the\nmeeting of the Board-of Control.\nKING   WILL  INSPECT\nNEW ZEALAND'S GIFT\nLondon, Jan. 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdKing George has\nsignified his intention of Inspecting\nthe new. battle cruiser \"New Zealand''\ncontributed by that Dominion. -This\nvessel leaves Portsmouth on a 40,-\n000 mile cruise on Feb. 6, spending\nthree months in New Zealand wateru\nand returning home via Vancouver.\nt. h. Mccormick\nREAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE\nPhone 927.     Suit 19, B. C. E. R. Depot, New Westminster B. C.\nE. H. BUCKUN.\nFree, and Genl Mgr.\nN. BEARDSLEH,\nVlce-Prealdent\nW. r. H. BUCKUN.\nBee. a*td Traaa.\nSMALL-BUCKL1N LUMBER C0.y Lid.\nMANUFACTURERS OF\nFir, Cedar and Spruce\nPhones No. 7 and 877.\nAgsln and again Frecklee searched ! qa,,^-,,, aja^ \ufffd\ufffdWsy and ogled ber.\nStayed With Dying Master.\nAn instance of a dog's fidelity was\n, given at an inquest held at Kornsey,\n~mn\"'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1 tiiii   ._      ._ ..I England,   the   other   day,   on   Louis\n\"Tbat and me chickens haa been alt 1 BageL aged 18, ot Nelson toad. Stroud\nthe company I'v* been having, end It    Green.   A neighbor said that on Sun-\nwill  be all 1*11 want tt I can  have \\ day, during the absence ol his people\n| books and  leant  tba real  names ot I trom home, Baget suddenly became ill\nthings,  where  they come  from aod\nIbe sky. bnt there waa no answering \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd n# mt4 bM \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,,- aoa WMO,--a iron. *.,,-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd       .\ngleam ot golden gates, no form of sail- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd her a rew stepa, awkwardly ambled I wnjr \"**' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *arb >ntere-\"tlng things.\nIng bird.   Then be went slowly on bis i back .aa __, *-*. . ,\ufffd\ufffd* of him on   lr*' bre* freMlnI \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd to be abut up\n-    ---   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,^\ufffd\ufffd \"^ j here among all theee wondera and not\n^r\\*^a,uid**t*r*^***nvt***.  U*\\ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*>\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ******  I wanted to eek you\nI * J. J?^^5^    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    ^LsS   ! wo\" *\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd booka woold cost ne and\nspread hi. wings sod alowly and eoftly ! \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      .A M \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,,,     ,^      <ijM. ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ^\nwaved tbem precisely, aa   t he were ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, ^   J^    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd JgJ , JJ\nfanning  bla  charmer,   which  indeed , \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ^\nway. turning the feather over end\nwondering about It It waa a wUg\nVulll eighteen Inches tn length, with a\nbig, heavy spine, gray at the baaa,\n-shading to Jet black at the Up. and It\ncaught Ibe play ot the sun's rays In\nslanting gleams ot green and brume.\nAgain Freckles' \"old -nan ot the sen\"\naat sullen and heavy oa bis shoulders\nand weighted blm down until bla step\nlagged and bla heart ached.\n\"Where did It came trom? What\nta Itt Oh. how I wlab 1 knew!\" he\nkept repeating.\nBefore him spread a great green\npool. Sited with rotting lege and\nleavea. bordered with delicate ferns\nand grasses, among which lifted tbe\ncreamy splkaa ot the arrow!\"- .vd, the\nbine of water hyacinth aad tba dell-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdcate yellow ot tha Jewel Aewer. Aa\nFreckles leaned, handling the feather\nand staring Drat at It aad then Into\nthe depths of the pool, be once more\ngave voice to hla 'old query. \"I wonder what It ur\nStraight serosa from him. couched\ntn the moasei of a soggy old log. a big\ngreen bullfrog, with palpitant throat\nand batting eyea, lifted his bead aad\nbellowed In answer, *Tlu' dout Oa'\ndoutr\n\"Wba-whafa thetr stammered\nFreckles, almost ton asm-h taken aback\nto speak, \"l-l know yon are only a\nbullfrog; but, be Jabera, tbat sounded mightily ilka speech. Wouldn't you\n-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdlease to be aay lag It overt\"\nTbe bullfrog cuddled contentedly la\ntbe ooie. Then suddenly bo lifted hla\nvoice and, Ilka an Imperative drum-\nbeat, rolled It again, \"Fin' dout, Ba'\ndout. On' doutr\nFrecklee bad tba enewef.\nLike tbe llgbtnluge flaab, something\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdseemed to soap In hla brain. Tbere\nwaa a wavering Sane before bla eyea.\nTben his mind cleared, bla bead lift-\n-ed In a new poise, bla shoulders squar-\n-ed, and his spina straightened. The\n-agony waa over. Hie soul Boated tree.\nFrecklee came Into hla birthright.\n\"Before <!od, 1 wllll\"  Be uttered the\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdoath so Impreaalvely tbat the record\ntug angel never winced aa ba poated It\ntip In tbe prayer column. '\nFrecklea aet bla bat.over the top ot\n. -one of tbe locust poata need between\ntrees lo hold up tbe wire aad faetened\nthe fwither securely la Ibe hand. Tben\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdte started down ibe lion. talk-lag to\nlilmseir ae men that bar* worked long\n-nluua alwaya fail Into the habit of do\nIng.\n\"What a fool I haTe haenr be mat-\ntered. \"Of course that's what 1 have\nto do There wouldn't likely anybody\nte doing It for ma. Of course I can:\nWhat am I a man fort If 1 was *\nfour fooled thing af the swsmp maybe\nl couldn't, bnt a man ean do anything\nIf he's the grit ta stork bard enough\naud stick at It. llr. McLean ia alwaya\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdeying, and here** ihe way I aaa to do\nIt He aald, too, tbat there were peo-\n.-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnHhUi*  in  tbe\nwaa tbe result he accompllsbed. Tben\nbe hobbled op to .hla bombardment\none* more. He faced her equarely\nthla time and turned hla bead from\naide to aide wltb queer little Jerks and\nIndiscriminate packings at her wings\nand head. She yawned and sbofled\naway Indifferently. Freckles reached\nop, pulled Ihe quill from hla bat and,\nlooking from If to the Wide, nodded lo\nsettled conviction.\nWith a ravishing awagger. half lifted wings aad deep, guttural hissing lhe\nlover came on again., He suddenly lift-\ned hie body, bnt tb* otber bird coolly\nrocked forward est the limb, gilded\ngracefully beneath blm and alowly\nsailed off Into Ibe Umbertoat\nFrecklea hurried down tb* trail, and\nwhen ha neared Ib* path to th* clear\nIng and aaw the baaa sitting motlon\nleaa un the mare that waa tbe pride of\nhla heart tbe boy broke Into a run.\n\"Oh. Mr. Ilclseaa.\" b* cried. \"I hope\nI haven't kept yon waiting very long)\nAnd tbe ana la getting ao hot! 1 hare\nbeen ao alow tbl* mornlugl I conld\nhave gone faster, only there were ao\nmany tblnga to keep ea*. and I didn't\nknew you would be ber*. I'll hurry\nafter thla. I've ae-r-Jr bed lo be giving\n.eicosea before. Tbe Uo* wasn't down,\nand tbere wast.', a algn of trouble. It\nwaa other tblnga tbat were making\nto* late.\"\nThla Hotbed. panUwtrtalkattTe lad\nwaa not tbe name creator* that had\neougbt Mm to daapalr and bitterness.\nWith an eloquence of wblcb ho never\ndreamed frecklea told hla atory. He\ntalked with aueh enthusiasm that McLean never took bla eyee from bis\ntar* nor shifted In tbe aaddle until\nbe dseriibed tb* atrange bird lover,\naad then the boas aaddenly bent over\ntbe pommel and laughed wltb bin.\n\"They're back there in the middle\not tbe awaap bow,\" aald Frecklea\n\"Do you suppose tbere la any chance\nof tbem staying with as* cbk-kenal-\nIt they do itey-fl t* about thf queer\neat 1 har* But 1 tell you. air, I am\ngetting some plumb good ones. There's\na new kind orer at the mouth of ibe\ncreek that asee Ita wings like feet\nnnd walka on ell foara. It travels like\na thrashing machine. There'e another, tall as me waist wltb a bill a foot\nlong, a neck Beat two. not ibe thick\nnana or me wrist aad an elegant color\nHe's aome blue and gray, touched np\nwltb black, while and brown. The\nvoice of blm Is aurb tbat If he'd be go\nIng np and standing by a tree and\nsawing at It a few tlmee he cq\ufffd\ufffdM oe\ncutting It square off. I don't know\nbut il would be a good Idea to try\nblm on tbe gang, otr.\"\nMcl.esn laughed.   \"Those must be\n  sot-. -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-, ,,     _ , blue berime, Frecklea.\" he aald.   \"And\n||iie that toew *T*rythlng to the.\ufffd\ufffd doesn't eeem poasible, bat your atory\n-\ufffd\ufffdwamp. Ot eoura* tbey have[Wtmm of \ufffd\ufffd,, b!f a,,.-,, MMa so-,.*, me gen-\nt-eofcs. Tba thing t*Mt* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ulae Mack ratter*--. Tbey era com-\nis to trait mm*-* tu&.te.bj\ufffd\ufffdtM m\ufffd\ufffd mon enoueb ta ^ ^^   lT- ^\nFrei-kle* handed np his account book,\nand Ibe Ikm-* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdturtles! It. sra.velt.\n-. s o x*a ^u.u.'iuv'i.j\nDYNAMITE FARMING.\nInteresting Experiments Are New Be*\nIng Carried en In the West.\nIn Western Canada, where one ot\nthe greatest difficulties with which\nsettlers have to contend ts thc clearing oi the land ol trees before plowing and sowing can be begun, the use\nof explosives, chiefly dynamite, has\nbeen tried tor this purpose with considerable success. Ii waa only recent-\nly, however, at the annual plowing\nmatch and live stock ahow ot the\nRochester and Oravesend Agricultures! Association, thst farmers in England had an opportunity of judging\nthe efficacy ol this agricultural inn v\nvation. A series of demonstration with\nexplosives in clearing uncultivated\nland was given, which included tha\nbreaking up of tree stumps, to show\nhow quickly the work oould be done\nwith powerful explosives.\nThe charges used for a stump seven\nfeet in diemeter consisted of a central one of 10 pounds and five ot one\npound each ot gelignite, fired by electricity. Tbe result was entirely successful, the great mass ot wood being\nthrown clean out of the ground and\nbroken in a way that made remevat\neasy. .\nThe use nl explosives tor p-eparin-t\nthe ground for tree planting was also\ndemonstrated. A bole' about three\n(eel desp was made, and a charge ol\neight ounces ot cheddite inserted, Ignition being effected by en ordinary\nfuse. The explosion loosened th-*\nstrong soil lying on chalk to a depth\not 3 feet 6 inches, and to about the\nsame extent in diameter. It Is claim*\ned tor the system that, besides saving\nlabor and expediting tike work, it provides a better rooting area for young\ntress. It has been proved that t'uit\ntrees planted in this v.-ey have taken\nroot more quickly and made mure\nrapid growth than those planted in\nthe usual manner. The cost ot the\noperation   ii  from  9 to IS  centa a\nand two visitors who had called summoned assistance from neighbors.\nWhen the witness arrived he found\nBaget breathing very hard, and apparently unconscious. A dog was lying\non him. The animal began to whine\nand bark, and would not let the witness approach. The witness went out\nto call a doctor, and then went back\nto see if he could get the dog away\nand give assistance to Sestet. He\nwas, however, unable to dislodge the\nanimal until the doctor arrived. It\nwas stated that Saget died while ber\ning medically examined.\" -Heart fail,\nure was the cause assigned, and the\njury returned a verdiei oi nature)\ndeath.\nDainty Young Men.\nThe young man \"about town\" in\nLondon is industriously cultivating\nthe sc<l\ufffd\ufffd>whi\ufffd\ufffdkeT and doing hia utmost to tie a atoek-t'e. As a general\nrule he me*.* with email sucoe&s in\neitHy-r ol these efforts, but ao long ai\nhe'U in the swim, which is imitation\noi the early Victorian period, he is\nsupremely satisfied.    .\nIn addition to this tad ior imitation century-old customs m-m are cultivating  \"beauty  doctors.\"    One  oil\nthesi \"dootors\" said, according to s\nLondon newspaper: '\n\"Men come to be manicured and\ngenerally beautified, and th-.-y 'all\nwant advice aa to how-they may best\n\ufffd\ufffd reserve a youthful appearance'.\nlany of my men clients will ait tot\nover au hour having their nails polished and their hands massaged.\n\"They wi'.l buy aity kind ol powdet\nI core to raoonunend ior the face,\nany lotion lor Ute skin, and any\nremedy for tile hair.1'' f   ..\nWhen Oiektr-s Bought Oaa|\nCoal waa \"up' ia March, 18\ufffd\ufffd,\nwhen Dickens waa in the, neighborhood of Exeter arranging tor the comfort oTnis parents in a cottage he had\nprovided tot them. \"Coals sre deai\njtist now\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdS3 shillings a ton,\" be\nwrote to Mitton. Boy labor, however,\nwas not, for be goes on: \"Tbey found\nme a boy to go two aailes but and back\nagain to order eotoe (coals) this\nmorning. I was debating in my mind\nwbether I should give him 18 pence\nor two shillings when Hie (a* was\nannounced \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd twopence.\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd London\nChronicle.\nBright Newsboy's Idea.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- .    uto \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \ufffd\ufffdnnjs..s.-    An English newsboy   haa   showed\ntree, and\" one min can prepare l-jr \ufffd\ufffdmt be baa }uat ae much, ingenuity\n,u     I aa moat youtoe and maybe more.   It\n-   \"-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd    j-j^U! . ..M   Iw-nsjju\n3\nsixteen trees au hour.\nExperiments carrieu -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd., ..\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,, ,llr _,.,,, ........ ,\nlines tor loosening the soil heve pro*-*.. *0- which he waa able to reach papers\n**----- -' \ufffd\ufffd  ~^s-,llus\ufffd\ufffdaa     a  Ion*\nExperiments carried out on them' wasTe\"wt.o deeigned!\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd rack, by means\nlines ior loosviisus -.\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- r---    vi s\ufffd\ufffdsss\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd T^rzn^i^M     x   Inn*\ned very effective. i\\ur-ounee ehergee to euatometa en W*\ufffd\ufffd,***' * ,0*\ufffd\ufffd\noi gelignite were :.e\ufffd\ufffdled in Mee pole,has a \"^-\"J*.w*Jf ,'\"B^\nm-X with th. crowbar 3 tact U-*-K'\ufffd\ufffd0\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* **\"?. Jh sfiLS^heb!\nend the cos\nand drops\nto raise ...\ufffd\ufffd ........ ... _ ,\t\nfive feet to 7 teet around the ceiitw gp hia group ot\nof  concussion  several  inches above Vomer make* hia\nthe ordinaiy level, and vwhen dug; the prioetato the box.\nthd subsoil wee wra to be cracked '\nand bteken.  It la believed thbt the \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\t\n*w****m?m^tXp$\naging growth and reducing the \ufffd\ufffdH*'S_ SJSai w'\"\ufffd\ufffd\"r \"\"\"* ^-JSr\not injury from drouf-ht.  The eest ot tor selling\nthe operation is estimated at W.50 JJ\nper acre, but it would be required \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nonly once ip ten. or twelve years.      \\$h*A\nYou Are On the Bench\nYOU\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe Public\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdare the judge. On your good opinion and your good word depends the success of the advertised article. For no amount of advertising will induce\nyou to buy a second time what you do not like. No advertising will offset the bad effect of a dissatisfied buyer.\nThat is why advertisers must and do maintain the\nquality of their goods.\nAdvertisers reallie tbat to turn, tbelr ,    Mo msumtsveturee can aitor-a to wa-'\noutlay tor -Utv.rtt.ina Into profit ^\\*J^^JSm'm?**^\ufffd\ufffd?l%\nmust give good value. i-^^- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^-^ ^t ^ ^\nThey are not looking tor one-ttme^^^   xm*toeeAr-to   go   back\nsales. First sales. In most cases, would\nnot pay for the advertising.\nTo be successful, they must make\nsteady customers. So, quality is being put in to hold the trade that advertising produces.\nThus, to be sure of quality, one naturally turns to goods tbat are advertised.   And Isn't ft* only reasonable?\nThe day ts pasatng wben you ask\nfor a pint ot pickles. You name the\nbrand.\nYou don't ask for Rolled Oats. You\nname the brand you prefer.\nThe unknown article may be good,\nbut you are not ao sure of tt aa you\nare of the advertised article, which\nbears tbe sail of quality\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* well\nknown maker's trade name.\nTO MANUFACTURER^.\nYou who make good goods and do not advertise\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdshow\nyour confidence in your product\nAdvertise it\nLet the public know that you stand back of your goods\nto maintain their high quality.\nMake your trade name the recognized standard in your\nline.\nAdvice regarding your advertising problems la available through any\nrecognised Canadian advertising agency, or the .Secretary ef the Canadian Press Aaaoclation, Room SOS Lumaden Building, Toronto. Enquiry Invol-s-as n* obligation en your part\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdao write. If Interested.\n*\\T(\\W T CAN WklTE PHOTO PLAYS AND\nI VJVS  EARN $25 OR MORE WEEKLY\nWcWffl Show Y\ufffd\ufffdi How i\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdff\nI\n25\n. If you bav* Waae-4f *f*u ean\nPositively no experience or literary  ,^,^^^^^^\nTb* deasand far -\"hatof-laya la practically aailmited. The big film mam\nand earth** m tbelr\" attoatfU to get Mwogb goad ptato to Wt**'- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*- \ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\nferrtug fie* and mora, lot -dags* eeenarioe, or written Maaa.\nthe .s-Mrffr *t tola lancinating n\ufffd\ufffdw proteaaton.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Ho flt^jwvKfcr \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd wtrtSfc*,, S>*\ngoad Plata to ******** ever Increnstng\n*f**t\n^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^w-SfeUsSSS^^*\nNAT. LtJBIN. **2l^^m\\r^^***^w\\4MwmllW*^m^ **** ******* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*^mmWm.\nuhotoplaye to tbem.   W* want ****** wnwra ana w\ufffd\ufffdm \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* *  m ..     -_ _,.A\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnM\n\"*E\ufffd\ufffdm aa-me, pbato\ufffd\ufffdtaya w*im\ufffd\ufffd by ^to wb* -nev****** tav^ton^ *>***\ufffd\ufffd#\ufffd\ufffd**\ufffd\ufffd**' .\n^sTa. tor y*\ufffd\ufffd. Uj*M**m tntnk ot only on* good Ida* **re*ry\nTOO WW, W.f^^^l^\ufffd\ufffdARE^ *0WL\nW*ere\nPerhaps\nwrite K out\nhnd   win\nfor rum copy op\nFREE ff.3!^^ fuv^tfc*.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd f\\'*W*V*mm**M*f :..m*m*f^\n^j*i*M^'*^^m\\wmmmmmmm\nNATIONAL AUTHORS'\nwrap*?\nv>,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdsssssssssssss\ufffd\ufffdsssssssssssssssfsfssm\nii \ufffd\ufffd;aiiji||ahi-ii[ WAGE EIGHT\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS.\nTHURSDAY, JANUARY 30, HIS..\nWILL   PAY\nLISTEN!\nHere is a suggest\ufffd\ufffdj6h\nfor a Dainty Salad:\nHead Lettuce, per head IO:\nIsobster, per can ..20c, 90c, 45c\nGerman Salad Onions; something new   and   extraordinary;\nper bottle -. , .aOe\nMin-ce-the Lobster and add a\nfew\" onions to each portion,\nptacltig: Same in the hollow, lettuce and cover with Mrs. \"Porter's Salad   Dressing   at,   per\nbottle .,, 15c and 25c\nYou. will find this very dainty\nand appetizing.\n!    SPECIALS\nCabbage, per lb *Vz\"\nSweet Spuds, per lb Se\nCaiuiific-wer, per head .40o\n. Celery, per head \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' J \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd**\nParagon Pickles, 40 oa.\nquality, per bottle\t\nbottles,\n 25c\nCatsup,\nbottle .\nNo.   1   quality,\nper\n.20:\nCoffee, our regular 3 for a $100,\nat, per lb 30c\n3 lbs. Sprtngbank Butter . .$1.00\nLarge cans Salmon, 2 cans 25a\nwhole Chicken\nLalrd'i\neach .\nin cane,\n.  ...45e\nCorn on Cob, per can 50:\nTHE\nPublic Supply Stores\n'M L. ADAMS       S. K. BR1003\nPHONE 2.\nExclusive meeting of the Local\nCouncil of Women will be held tomorrow afternoon at 3 o'clock ln St.\nStephens church.\nSkates sharpened and' set at Geo.\nII. Speck's, 626 Columbia St.      (3951\nThe city directors of the Royal Agricultural and Industrial society will\nmeet in the Board* of Trade rooms use\nmorrow afternoon at 4 o'clock. Several business matters will be attended\nto.\nDick J. Lawrence, teacher of banjo,\nmandolin and guitar.   Telephone 694.\n(559)\nA. Hardman, the cake man. Get\ngood bread. Eighth Street Bakery.\nTelephone 281. (394)\nMr. M. M. McLean of Mission City,\nwas in the city yesterday. Mr. McLean is promineiity connnected with\nthe Nlcomen Island dyking and reclamation scheme.\nThe city treasurer reminds wa,*or\nconsumers who are not using meters\nthat in order to save rebate rates for\nfirst three months of the year must\nbe paid before 5 p.m. Friday, 31st\nInst (560)\nRev. A. S. Lewis, the recently appointed pastor of the Olivet Baptist\nchurch is expected to arrive\" from\nNova Scotia today. He will assume\nhis new duties on Feb. 1.\nA branch of the Union Bank of Can\nada was opened for business or\nSaturday, January 4, In the premlBu.\nrecently vacated by W. E. Sinclair\n611 Columbia street. (38?)\nDo you know we have a first cla3s\nbarber shop and pool room in the\nSapperton hotel, corner of Brunette\nand Columbia streets. Hands &\nTyler, proprietors. (583)\nMessrs. Gardner & Mercer, architects are preparing plans for the remodelling and alterations to the Gul-\nchon block at the corner of McKenzle\nand Columbia streets. The alterations\nconsist chiefly of extending the the\nPat Burns premises to the rear of\nthe building and a change of the front\nof the Annandale supply Company's\nstore.    Work will be started shortly.\nfeet and will- be two and a half stories\nhigh. JJ, will contain six stores on\nthe ground floor facing Sixth and Carnarvon streets and 50 modern apartment rooms above.\nThs. .residence already on the Bite\nwill Be'tbm down in two weekB' time.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdr-SfftaJJ |Will move to a house he ia\nhaving 'built at the corner of Queen's\navenuoj {urid Eighth street. Messrs.\nGardner and Mercer are the architects.\nMr.' Ai W. MeLeod who is erecting the\nnew building, is away on a vacation\ntrip tid 'California but will be home\nshortly to supervise the construction.\nJUDGE  HOWAY  PRESIDENT\nArt, ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHistorical and Scientific Assc-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' - fiatlon Elects Officers.\nHis Hbnor Judge Howay ot this city\nwas -ba? -Tuesday evening re-elected\npresided' of the Art, Historical and\nScientific Association of Vancouver\nat the 13th annual meeting of tbat\nbody. The other officers elected were:\nMrs. H. A. Mellon, first vice-president;\nMr. W.-R. Macway Smith, second vice-\npresident; Mr. Will Ferris, secretary\nand curator; Mrs. Whitehead, treasurer. The new board of directors consist*,of the following: Mr. Jonathan\nRogers, Mrs. Jonathan Rogers, Mr.\nCampbell Johnston, Mr. W. P. Collins,\nProfessor Odium, Mr. Kyle, Mrs. Mc-\nNaughton Manson, Miss Sutherland,\nMrs. McCauley, Mr. R. Waller, Mrs.\nMcGilllvray. F. N. Gllles, Mr. I, Ru-\nbinowitz, Mrs. A. L. Qulssel, Rev. Dr.\nMcLaren, Mr. T. W. Fripp and Mr.\nEwing Buchan.\nThe membership of the association\nls now 130 as compared with 90 last\nyear. The Vancouver council haB\nmade a donation t\" $2500 to this body.\nPASS ON  1913 ESTIMATES.\nSchool Trustees Meet Tonight\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWant\nBylaw Put Up.\nThe board of school trustees will\nmeet this evening to pass finally on\nthe 1913 estimates which have been\nprepared by the various committees.\nIt Is expected that the board will\nrequire less money this year than in\n1912, owing to the fact that the cost\nof construction of all the new schools,\nincluding the Duke of Connaught high\nschool was arranged for last year.\nIt IB not Improbable that the trustees will request that a money bylaw\ncovering 'the cost of construction of\na school similar to the Lord Lister\nwhich It is proposed to erect in the\nWest End, be placed before the ratepayers.\n*****************\n* *\\\n* COLUMBIAN COLLEGE NOTES *\n* *\\\nColumbians enjoyed to the full the\nice ukating in the Arnea yesterday afternoon, when a large party went over\nto resume old habits acquired In the\nEast and elsewhere.\nThe Y.W.C.A. was addressed by Dr.\nEva Taylor yesterday evening and the\nsubject chosen dealt with the weaving\nof our lives into the web of life. It\nwas shown that each thread is important, and each bears a different purpose in the forming of the whole pattern. MIbb Lanning preBided at the\npiano and Miss Wheeler read the\nminutes.\nThe.Y.M.C.A. waB addressed by Mr.\nF. Canfield on the subject of the\nchoice of a vocation. Principal Heath-\nerlngton occupied the chair In the absence of Mr. Wheeler.\nMiss Daisy Fleishman from Vancouver, visited hir sister at the colege\nyeBterday.\nLECTURE ON CHURCH\nHISTORY MOST INTERESTING\nFURNITURE\nDRY GOODS\nLEES LIMITED\nDRY GOODS\nFURNITURE\nThe Rev. Owen Bulkeley's lecture\nin St. George's hall last night on\n\"Church History,\" drew a large and\ndeeply interested audience.\nMr. Bulkeley'B subjects was the\n\"Early British Church,\" as It existed\nfrom the dawn of Christianity and\nthis be traced by word and picture,\nby tradition, history and Holy Scripture down to the coming of St. Augus-\ntln in 697, explaining its connection\nwith churches at Jerusalem, Antloch\nand EpheBus.\nMr. Bulkeley's pictures and facts\nare the result of 50 years research In\nhis family, only ten of which, however,\nhave been given by Mr. Bulkeley himself.\nThe next lecture Is to be given on\nFeb. 12 and will treat of the \"Conversion of Saxon England.\"\nTO FACE TRIAL ON CHARGE\nOF STEALING CHEESE\nNEW MUNICIPAL ACT WILL\nHELP  LOCAL   IMPROVEMENTS\nAll the reserved seats for the\nNordica concert that were not called\nfor by 6 o'clock last evening have\nbeen returned to the rack and will be\nsold to first comers at the office of\nthe manager. 739 Columbia street.\nThere are about 60 good seats left\nand no telephone order will\ncelved.\nEx-Mayer Lee returned yesterday\nmorning from Victoria where he, as\npresident of the Union of B. C. Municipalities, had been interviewing the\ngovernment with reference to matters\naffecting municipalities in general,\nand more particularly, in referencu\nto the new Municipal Act.\nThe assurance of    the    government\nwas -.forthcoming that this    new    act\n..would not be put Into force until   it\nbe    re- lhad boen submitted to the union.\ntool) \\    The local improvement sections ot\n'\"\n        Ithe -act  will   be   brought   Into   effect\nAll ratepayers ot Ward 2. Burnaby.! this year, aud under tliem conditions\nare requested to attend a meeting to I under which this class of work will\nbe held In tho Burnaby public hall, 1 be rriade more workable, especially In\nEdmonds, on Thursday. January 30, at Ub faf'Ss rural municipalities are at-\n8 p.m., tor the purpose of appointing Ifected.\ntwo  delef-atea to    confer    with    thai    Mayor   1 eo  Broke  last  evening  b<\ncouncil   regarding   the   disposition   of I f Ti>   *nfi   Clillliwnck   board   of   trad\nthe  B.  C,  E.  R. franchise.    A.  Mac-   at the annual banquet of that body.\npherson. (579) |\t\nEdmonds, Jan. 29.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAn unusual case\nwas heard In police court this morning before Mr. B. O. Walker. J. P.,\nwhen John and James Gillls, brothers.\nresiding in Edmonds, were charged\nwith the theft of a cheese which had\ndropped from one of the sleighs of\nMr. G. H. Leaf, of East Burnaby.\nIt was brought out in the evidence\nthat the two men picked up th-?\nchees*- and carted it to their home.\nAlthough seen In the act Ihey denied\nany knowledge of the affair, but the\nsearch discovered the cheese in their\nhome.\nMr. Walker, after hearing the evidence, committed the accused for\ntrial.\nAccording to the police, no confession was obtained from the two men,\na3 was incorrectly reported ln an\nevening paper.\nJames    Eastertirool*.    r.f    Edmonds,\nwas fined %t> and costs for leaving    a 1\nhorse  and   sleigh   unattended   on  the \\\npublic Btreet.\nOBITUARY.\na\nFive Great Floors Filled With the Most\nComplete Assortments of Home\nFurnishings to be had in B.C.\nWe have trained men to hang your shades and curtains; men to lay your carpets and linoleums; men to repair and re polish your fine furniture; men to make\nanything you need in upholstered chairs, couches, cushions. A most complete\nelectrical department, competent to care for any contract they are favored with.'\nIf you need quick service, Phone 73. s<$^^J*^&s*\ufffd\ufffdirWti \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nLEES LIMITED\nWF FURNISH YOUR HOME COMPLETE.\nI\n1 TUBMAN   FAMILY  WILL\nLEAVE FOR OLD COUNTRY.\nWhat happened?\nWhy, the law stepped\nin, sold the property\nand divided the proceeds.\nA spendthrift to\nwhom he had meant to\nleave a small income, got\"\nhis share in a lump sum.\nA wealthy relative to\nwhom he had meant to\nleave nothing got a\nshare he did not need.\nThe real beneficiaries\nhe had meant to provide\nfor got sadly reduced\nshares, and were left\nwithout the protection\nof a capable and experienced executor.\nHave your will drawn\nafter consulting the officers of this Company.\nDominion Trust\nlany, Ltd.\nPaid Up Capital and Surplus $2,500,000.00\nCHAGALIS\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSavls Chdgalls, aged\n23 years, a native of Greece, passed\nawav at the Roval Columbian hospit il\non Tuesday.   The deceased had reslil-\nThe Hotel Dominion, a fire-proof\nbuilding, is thoroughly equipped with\nmodern Improvements, Including elevator. Moderate rates by day or\nweek. Corner of Columbia and Sixth\nstreet. (038)\nC. N. R. WILL SOON START\nWORK AT PORT MANN\nNews Makes an Error.\nIn the report of the case of White\nvs. Dawson and Lew reported in the\nIssue of yesterday It was inadvertently\nstated that the defending counsel was\nhavily scored by Judge Howay for putting leading questions while examining in chief, lt should have been\nplaintiffs' counsel and not Mr. Ed\nmonds who was the defendant's counsel.\nFire In'Jap Rooming House,\nAnother Jap rooming house In Sap-\npertoikscaiight fire yesterday morning\nbut theSiazc was extinguished with\nlittle difficulty by the firemen from\nthe district and No. 1 hall. The build-\nin*- Is located on Columbia street. The\ninterior and furniture of one room\nwhere the blaze origlnuted, was hadly\nBcorrhed. About $100 damage was\ndone.\nA Serious Mistake.\nWhen Interviewed last night, Mr. J.\nJ. Jones, managing director of the\nWestminster Trust Company emphatically denied the report that appeared\nlu the six o'clock edition of the Ilrltlsh\nColumbian last night to the effect that\nhla company had asigned, for the purpose of reconstruction, to the'Overseus\nSecurities Company, Ltd., of Vancou\nver. He declares that a mistake of a\nmost serious nature has been made lu\nthe report and Intimated that he will\nconsult the firms solicitors to sec\nwhat steps could be taken In the matter.\nComp.\nThis Week Wc Change\nOur Location\n\" But Not Our Policy.\nWe will continue to give\nyou better Drug Store\nService than you ever\nhad before.\nAfter Feb. 1st we will\nbe located at\n628 Columbia Street.\nFREDEWC T. HILL\n(Successor tirF. J. MacKenzie.)\nChemist, and Druggist Phone 66.\nDominion Trust Building.\nNew Westminster, B.C.\nGOVERNMENT  PRINT8\nAUTOMOBILE  NUMBER8.\nThe numbers of motor cars, the II-\ncenHes of which have heen renewed\nfor 1913, arc at the provincial police\noffice. The government has adopted\na new system with regard to the numbers. During previous years automobile owners were allowed to hav-e them\nmade for themselves with the result|\nthat tho plates which bore the numbers were of all sorts and sl7.es.\nIn order to have the numbers all in\nuniform shape the government has\ntliia ye'ir had the number plates printed themselves. The plates are of blue\nenamel, about a foot long and eight\nInches wide, with letters and words\nB.C. prominently printed In white.\nCONTRACT IS AWARDED.\nFor Erection of MeLeod Building\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\nPrice  Is $29,000.\nMessrs. Ailklnson und Dill, contrac\ntors, were yesterday awarded the com\ntract for the MeLeod building to be\nerected at the comer of Carnnrvon\nand Sixth streets. The price of the\nbuilding as far as construction is concerned  will  be $29,000.\nAs was previously stated In The\nNews, the building will be erected on\nthe site and lot occupied at present\nby Dr. Hall's residence. The new I\nstructure  will  cover an  area  66x1321\nInteresting developments connected\nwith Port Mann and the work of the\nCanadian Northern railway through\nthis district is likely to be brought\nto light before another month has\ngone by.\nYesterday morning Mr. John Montgomery, who has been sent out from\nToronto to superintend the building\noperations of the railway company at\nPort RTann. arrived in this city and\nvisited the townstte later in the day\nin order to get a lay of the laud before\ndeoldlng on the sites of the different\nbuildings and arranging for securing\nmaterial.\nMr. Montgomery has received Instructions to get through with the preliminaries ns fast as he can in order\nto start actual operations by March 1.\nAccording to the visitor, the different buildings to be erected will be as\nfollows:\nFifteen stall of what will later be\nenlarged to a 42-stall roundhouse; a\nrepair shop; coaling station; ell etor\nage house and a general storehouse\nfor fraln equipment. The bull-lings\nSxre to be done in tho most modern\nand permanent construction. The repair1 shop will be 150 feet wide and\n300 feel long, with room left for doubling the length. With the repair shop\nwill be a complete foundry, blacksmith\nshop\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJn fact all the outfit needed\nto repair engines, freight cars and\npassenger coaches.\nTh\ufffd\ufffd machinery for the shops Is now\nbeing iniiinifartured In the Bast, nnd\nwill be hero to be Installed when the\nbuildings nre  ready this summer.\n'    NOTICE.\nWe will net be responsive for any\ndfrtilB Inclined by Solbarg llros., man\nagers of the Fraaer cafe, after this\ndate.\n(Signed) T. W1THYMAN.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ot; V. JOIIDAN.\nJanuary 2*1, 1013. (576)\nMrs. Thomas Tubman, who recently\nlost her husband, leaveB tor her old\nhome in  Ireland  with her four little\ned here for about two weeks.    Mr. W. ; children, this morning.\nB. Kales, undertaker, is arranging the i    The  circumstances connected   with\nfuneral.       \"** I her bereavement and the straightened\n * * situation of the family, prompted sev-\nCase Is Dismissed. j eral citizens to come to her aid and\nIn the civil court yesterday an ac-, with tho sum collected together with\ntion by Perchenbaeh & Co., against ' assistance from her home, she was\nMrs. C, S. Corrlgan for *fi5 for goods enabled to buy her passage and that\nsold and delivered, was dismissed with of her children for her home land. Mrs.\ncosts.    Several other cases were ad- \\ Tubman expressed her thanks to The\nJourncd.\nSmith Is Guilty.\nCharles Smith, the colored youth\nfrom Chilliwack. charged with abducting Clara Ulrich and Mamie Aim-ley,\nhalfbreed Indian girls, from th-ir parents was found guilty yesterday by\nJudge Howay. Sentence was deferred\nuntjl Friday.\nWhy the Medals\nThe sight of a large number of stalwart men with bronze decorations bn\ntheir left breasts yesterday caused a\nflutter of excitement amongBt non-\nmilitary citizens. \"For valor,\" \"Victoria crosfes,\" were whispered. \"For\nvalor he hanged,\" swore ctoe ex-trooper\n\"for pigs you mean. It Is the Stockbreeders' association meeting.\"\nNews for starting a relief fund.\nMrs.    Tubman's    father   sent\n\ufffd\ufffd60.\nher\nForty   years   In   use,   20   years  the j\nStandard, prescribed and recommend-1\ned by physicians.    For Women's Ail-\nment!,  Dr.   Martel's  Female  Pills, at'\nyour druggist.\n\"HOME, SWEET HOME\"\nHow pood It Bounds, lt haa a fttlng\nthough If the rent is too high. Why\nnot\nQUIT PAYING RENT\nand buy a home of us. Apply the\nrent you now pay to help buy the\nhome. We can make the payments\neasy and you will be saving money instead of helping the other fellow to do\nso.   Call and talk It over with us.\nWHITE, SHILES & CO.\n312-15  Westminster Trust  Block,\nsnd 746 Columbia St\nNew Westminster, B.C.\nsfA    ******* LADIES'\nM.I J TAILORED\nT f.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd M-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\" SUITS\nCLEANED and PRES8ED\nLadles' and   Cents' Suits  dyed \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\n    ..88.00\nOvercoats Cleaned and Pressed\n $1.60\nNow Velvet Collar 75s\nWe do repairs at a small additional charge.\nROYAL CITY DYERS\nand CLEANERS\n345 Columbia St.      Phone R27S\n'GET THE HABIT\"\n20 PER CENT\nELECTRICAL   FIXTURES,\nShades, Reading Lamps, etc\nWEBER & DAY\nPhone 636\n63 Sixth Street\nEVIDENCE LOTS\nReduction on all lines.\n(except Craiiiuplioues and Records)\nduring the remainder of this\nmonth.\nThis is a bona fide offer\nand it will pay you to investigate.\nTHE FAIR\nThese are all In good locations snd are  good\nthey can be bought for now.\ninvestments  at   the   prices\nmt*^M\nWUIKMEN IN EVERY TRADE\nfeel the need of Glasses today when\nEYESTRAIN Is ths rule and n\ufffd\ufffdt the\nexception.\nWorkmen who would have reliable\nhelp for their eyes should call on\nRYALL\nDruggist and Optician\n701   Columbia  Street Phone 57\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*--*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nBOILERS\nIf you want Reliati'ity, Silenca\\\nEconomy, Satisfaction and Freedom from Trouble\nThe \"YAI.E\" will meet\nyour requirements.\nAdapted for tbe Fishing Trsde.\n-YALE\"\n5 H.P. MARINE GASOLINE\nENGINE.\n         Made In New Westminster,\nThe Schaake Machine Works\nHeaps  Engineering  Co.,    Ltd., New Westminster.\n'_*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi I-'\nRiveted Steel Pipes\nM     BURN OIL    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nTANKS\nVULCAN IRON WORKS, LTD.\nP. O. BOX 442\nTELEPHONE  324\n1359\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd FIFTH  STREET    near Eighth\navenue; 50x138 to lane; a good buy\nst $1,000; one-third cash.\n1196\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSEVENTH   AVENUE   near 4th\nstreet, two lots; upper side; 60x130\nall cleared and graded; prloe $1275\neaoh.\n1397\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdM FOOT LOT corner of Sixth\navenue and Ash atreet; price $4000\non essy terms.\n1393\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdKNOX STREET, 8APPERTON\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd6 foot lot ln good location; Just oft\nColumbia street; price $1200 on\neasy terms.\n1398\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd5 LOTS ON TWELFTH AVE.,\nnear Slath atreet car Uae; 60x150\neaoh; some are cleared; atreet Is\ngraded; price $3000 on good terms\nF. J. HART & CO., LTD.\n640 Columbia  Street\nPhone 453]\nESTABLISHED 1891.\nWe write Fire, Life, Accident, Employers' Liability, Automobile\nMarine Insurance.\nand\n1 THE DOMINION BANK\nSir Edmund D. Osier, H.P., President. W. D. Matthews, Vice-President.\n0. A. Bo-pert, Oeneral Manager.\nHead Office Toronto, Ont.\nCAPITAL \"S^MD-UP\nRESKRVH KtlND ..\nTOTALASSISTS ...\n.1 6,000,000\n. 6,000,000\n. 75,000,000\nA branch ot thla Bank haa been established In New Westminster\nat the cornet- of Columbia and Sixth Streets, opposite the Post Office.\nA Oeneral Banking Bualneaa Transacted.\n0. H. MATHEWSON, Manager.","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"New Westminster (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"The_New_Westminster_News_1913-01-30","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0315761","@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 National Printing and Publishing Co., Ltd","@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":"1913-01-30 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1913-01-30 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\/1.0315761"}