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C. Electric cut-off\nrough this property; streets\nup. Prices from $400 up;\nery easy payments.\nWHITE, 8HILE8 A CO.\nNEW  WESTMINSTER,  B.C., WEDNESDAY   MORNING,  OCTOBER   18,    1911.\nPRICE FIVE CENTS.\nTO DEDICATE Y.M.CA\nCeremony WiU Commence on\nSunday.\nMONDAY ACTUAL OPENING\nNEW COAL SEAM\nON ROUTE OE C.N.R.\nBishop to  Dedicate\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDirectors  Wives\nto Be Hostesaes\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAli Accessories\nPractically Ready.\nThe program of proceedings in con\nnection with the dedication of the\nYoung Men's Christian Association\nbuilding has now been sent out. On\nSunday there wlll be a men's meeting In the gymnaalum. At 3:46 there\nwlll be a religious service at which\nmusic will be a feature, and an address wlll be delivered by Mr, C. IL\nSayer, ot Winnipeg. Monday will bs\na memorable day. On that day thf\nwives of the directors will be the\nhostesses at a reception offered to tbe\nladles of the city and tbe building\nand its equipment will be thrown\nopen to inspection. Refreshments will\nbe served and 'excellent music will\nbe discoursed. At eight o'clock ln\nthe evening the building will be formally opened, Mr. T. J. Trapp, chair\nman of the directors, presiding. Tbe\ndedicatory prayer will be offered by\nhis lordship the bishop of New\nWestminster. Greetings will be ex.\ntended by hls worship, Mayor Lee,\nRev. J. S. Henderson, of the Minis\nterlal association: Professor Hether\nington, of Columbian college, and E.\nW. Keenleyslde, Vancouver Y. M.\nC. A.\nArrangements for the reception on^\nMonday afternoon are entirely left to\ntbe ladles, and the same is true\nregarding a reception to the young\npeople, which Is to be given on Tues\nday evening, committees representative of the various churches co-operat\nlng. On Tuesday evening Mr. G. I.\nSovereign, physical director, who has\ngot his class well in hand, will con\nduct a demonstration in the gymnasium and the swimming pool, which\nwill no doubt be witnessed with great\npleasure by visitors.\nThe directors report that the furniture Is coming to hand dally. The\nbilliard tables arrived yesterday.\nThe board of directors consists of\nthe following gentlemen: T. J. Trapp.\nchairman; J. D- Kennedy, T. If\nSmith, J Carter 8mlth R. Buckland,,\nJ. W. McDonald. W. .1. Gilley, R. F.\nWalker, E. H. Sands and F. O. Can-\nfield. Will Anderson la the general\nsecretary.\nFive Foot Vein Uncovered by Grading\nCrew Near Battle Bluff-\nMany Peter Out.\nKamloogs, Oct. 16.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAs an Indication of the\" mineral wealth which\nmay be disclosed by tbe construction\nof the C. N. R. through the Thompson\nand North Thompson valleys, a flve\nfoot aeam of coal was uncovered to\nday near Battle Bluff tunnel by tbe\ngrading crew.\nThe point where the seam Is un\ncovered Is approximately that Indicated In Dr. Dawson's report covering\nthe seam which was opened up south\nof Kamloops by Major Vaughan some\n20 years ago, and has been traced\nnorthward to Kamloops lake. This ls\na very much more important find, as\nthe deposit ls evidently of commer\ncial proportions and of superior quality.\nShould further Investigation prove\nthe apparent values to be real, tbere\nls no doubt that a first class fleld will\nbe opened up without delay, as thc\nquality of coal needed for the driving\nof the big tunnel would warrant an\nImmediate opening of the fleld.\nFIGHTING STARTED\nImperial     Troops     Massed\nRound Hankow.\nMANY WARSHIPS IN HARBOR\nBritish Admiral   Wlnslce  Arrives  on\nDIspatch.Boat Alacrity\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMay Take\nCommand of Allied Forces.\nCENSUS FIGURES\nSeven   Million   Eighty   One\nThousand.\nNEAR TWO MILLION MORE\nITALIANS SUEFER\nSEVERE REVERSES\nCame  in  Contact  with  Turks  While\nReconnoitring  and  One   Hundred\nWere Killed.\nLondon, Oct. 17.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA despatch to the\nChronicle from Constantinople says:\n\"The Italians are reported to have\nsuffered a serious reverse outside\nTripoli. Reconnoitring, they advanced too far from their base and\ncarte ln contact with Turks, who gave\nbattle and forced the Italians to\nretreat hurriedly, leaving 100 dead on\nthe fleld.\"\nLondon. Oct. 1?.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDespatches from\nRome today say that Italy Is prepar\ning to withdraw a portion of its fleet\nfrom Tripoli with the object of oc\ncupvlng several islands of tho\nGrecian archipelago. The despatches\nadd that an attack on the Dardanelles\nand a bombardment of Smyrna are\ncontemplated.\nTurkey Is expected soon to Issue\nan lrade expelling all Italians from\nthe Ottoman empire.\nMONEY MATTERS\nBAULK HOME RULE\nIrish   Nationalists    and    Government\nDiffer aa to Financial Arrange.\nments.\nLondon, Oct. 17.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSerious differ\nences have arisen between the government and the Irish Nationalists\nover the financial provisions of the\nHome Rule bill. On all other points\nthere ts practical agreement. The\nIrish representation, largely reduced,\nIs to be maintained at Westminster.\nThe Irish government is to have control of police administration on which\nthe Nationalists propose saving $2,\n600,000 annually.\nCAPTURE  BRIGAND.\nSpaniard    of    Many   Adventures    Is\nTaken.\nParis, Oct. 17.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe Spanish brigand Morera, of whom many tales\nof ferocity and daring are told ln\nlonefc- mountain districts of Northern\nPortugal and in the Gallician province of Spain, has been captured by\nPortuguese troops. Morera was the\nold-fashioned  bandit of  romance  liv-\nSg in a cave high ln the mountains.\ne had been a bull fighter of renown\nin Madrid who escaped to the hills\nafter a crime of violence. To there\nhe waa followed by the actress Lola.\nThis was years ago. and since then\nMorera had led a life of desperate\nadventure, marauding in three countries, for sometimes he would penetrate Into Southern France and sack\na village or plunder or burn a chateau. Usually he cperated ln Spain\nand Portugal until his excesses ln one\ncountry became Intolerable. Then he\nwould go Into the other. For some\nmonths he has been devastating the\ndistrict of Valongo, near Oporto.\nLast Friday a detachment of Portuguese troops surprised Morera and\nhls band of sixteen men and pursued\nthem to tbeir cave In the mountains.\nTwo brigands were killed and six\nwounded in the first heavy volley of\nthe troopa. Lola fired her revolver\nwith the utmost coolness, wounding\ntwo soldiers. She, Morera nnd the\nsurvivors were overpowered. In the\ncave a quantity of loot was found\nwhich will be divided among the captors If owners are not found.\nPeking, Oct. 18.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFighting has be\ngun In the neighborhood of Hankow,\nwhere the revolutionists met the Imperial troopa on their way from the\nnorth. There are already several\nthousand of the government troops\nnear Hankow and the troop trains are\ncarrying many more to Hupeb. It ia\nnot thought that when the investment\nof Hankow Is completed that tbe government wlll flght, but that lt wlll de\nmand the surrender of the leaders of\nthe rebels and the payment of ln\ndemnity.\nThere are eight Chinese warships\nln the barbor of Hbnkow and from\nten to twelve foreign war vessels.\nThe British Admiral Winsloe arrived on the dispatch boat Alacrity\nand since he is the ranking officer of\nthe foreign allies he may take command of the forces.\nnunkow, Oct. 17.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe revolutionary determination to end tbe regime\nof official graft was ilearly shown\ntoday by the execution of an officer\nwho had been appointed to collect\nfunds for the rebel cause. He was\ncaught ln an attempt to divert some\nof the money to hTs own pocket and\npromptly beheaded.\nNo trains are leaving the Hankow\nterminal for the north and lt Is uncertain when service will be resumed\nThe tracks have been cleared every\nwhere to accelerate the passage of\ngovernment  troop  trains.\nAre Fighting in Streets.\nBerlin, Oct. 17.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAdvices    received\nat  the  foreign  office from  Hankow\ntoday report that a German force of\nbluejackets reinforced by    local students Have been landed at Kankow\nand are now engaged ln fighting in\nthe streets with a Chinese mob. The\nadmiralty  understands that the Germans ar\ufffd\ufffd_ co-operating lu the international    landing    corps    movement\ncommanded   by   the  Japanese  naval\ncaptain.\nNew  Westminster Takea  a  Jump of\nOver Five Thousand\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAll Figures\nNot In.\nOttawa, Oct 17\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe Dominion\ncensus figures for 1911 were made\npublic today. They show a population\nof about 7,100,000. This wlll be\nslightly Increased when full details\nhave been received. Four electoral\ndistricts have not yet supplied returns, viz.. Cumberland In Nova\nScotia, Regina and Battle Creek ln\nSaskatchewan, and Yale-Cariboo In\nBritish Columbia. These arcs estimated to give a population of 70,000.\nApart from the dlfiETjta not recorded the figures are 7,081,869, as\nagslnst 5,371,316 ln 1901.\nThe population by provinces ls: Al-\nberta\/ 372,919, as against 73,022; British Columbia, 362,768, as against 178,-\n667; Manitoba, 454,691, against 255,-\n211; New Brunswick, 351816, against\n311,120; Nova Scotia. 461,847, against\n459,674; Ontario, 2,619,902, agalnat\n2,182.047; Prtnce Edward Island, 93,-\n722, against 103.259; Quebec. 2,697,-\n000, against 1,648,898; Saskatchewan,\n463,508, against 91,779; Northwest\nTerritories, 10,000, against 20,129;\nYukon, no returns for 1911, against\n27,219 ln 1901.\nThe population of cities compared\nwith 1901, subject to final revision,\nshows as follows:\nCalgary. 43,736, against 4097; Edmonton. 24,882, against 2626; Nanaimo, 8305, against 6130; New Westminster, 13,394, against 6499: Vancouver, 100,333, against 27,010 (?):\nVictoria. 51,620, against 20.860; Montreal, 466,197, against 267,730.\nCHOLERA ADDS TO\nITALY'S TROUBLES\nMob Releases Sufferers Believing the\nGovernment Intended to Poison\nThem.\nRome, Oct. 16.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGrave disorders occurred today at Segnl, a laree town\none hour by rail from Rome. The rioting was caused by measures adopted\nby the municipality to stamp out\ncholera. Believing the government\nIntended to poison quarantined cholera patients, a crowd marched to the\ncity hall and demanded their release\nThe mob broke in the doors seeklnt.\nthe mayor, but falling to find hlm, the\nrioters sacked the building and then\nburned it. A woman seized the municipal flag and cried: \"To the hospital:\nto the hospital; death to the doc\ntors!\" Tbe mob rushed to the hospital. Tbe doora were forced, attendants swept aside and the cholera\npatients were carried to the street\nMeanwhile others broke into a house\nwhere suspects were quarantined\nand took them from the house. A\nprocession was formed and the sick\nwere borne to their homes. Two of\nthe patients, who were at the point\nof death, were passed from one to\nanother, embraced and kissed by\ntheir-half-mad friends. The local authorities appealed to Rome and troop-,\nwere rushed from the capital and\nrestored order.\nSTRIKE SITUATION\nNOT IMPROVED\nORIENTAL DEPTHS\nDifficult  Task  For Counsel\nto Probe.\nOHARM SIN6H THE VICTIM\nMay  Be  Dharm   Singh  the  Burglar;\nEvidence of Prosecution Would\nShow This.\nBOISTEROUS WEATHEfi.\nHalibut Steamer Roman Haa Difficulty\nMaking Catch.\nThe B. C. Packers' steamer Roman\narrived in port yesterday after mak\nlng her aeventeenth trip of the season\nto the halibut banks.    Bhe brought\nDispatch  from   Fernie   Says   Matters\nAre at a Deadlock\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNeither\nSide Gives Way.\nFernie, B.C., Oct. 17.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNegotiation*\nbetween the miners and operators\nseem to be at a standstill again\nNeither operators nor miners have\nany news, of progress in the matter.\nNothing can be learned as to whe\nther th\ufffd\ufffd   operators    are    conferring\nThe fact that lay big ani broad\nover the proceedings In the assize\ncourt all day yesterday, and is not\nunlikely to He over most of today's\nproceedings, Is that the measure to\nwhich the Oriental mind ls not under,\nstood of the Occident is extensive\nenough to bear with eaae the adjustment of the bribery charge against\nthe Jap named Shiva, which was arrived at between counsel and sanctioned by the court on Monday. Yesterday it was the case In which Malk-\nhand, or Mokhund, Singh ani ishea\nSingh are charged with wounding\nDharm Singh with Intent, which took\nup the time of tbe court from 11\no'clock In tbe forenoon till close upon\nsix o'clock in the evening.\nWhat the Jurymen have to do is to\nweigh up two absolutely and flatly\ncontradictory stories and arrive at a\ndecision as to which one of the two-\nis correct. At any time, and in any\ncircumstances, this Is by no mesne\neasy. When the Jury have to deal,\nnot with downright go-the-whole-hog\nwesterners, but with subtile, unde\nmonstrative East Indians, It becomes\na task from which the most intelligent Occidental Juryman may well\nshrink. Some one among the characters created by Rudyard Kipling\nmight possibly perceive the line ot\ntruth lying ln the pool of Oriental\nevasion, but short of some character\nto which imagination gives birth to\nmeet such a situation, the truth lies,\nas some philosopher once said Truth\ndoes, at the bottom of a deep well.\nOn the surface the case has It*\norigin In an affray amon; East Iiv\ndians near the Small & Bucklin mills\nlast August. On the witness stand,\nyesterday, in his evidence in chief,\nDharm told his story glibly. Dharm\nis not a Hindu, but a Buddhist.   On\nLittle Confidence in Troops.\nPeking, Oct. i7.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGeneral Yin\nTchang, minister of w^;. who will\nhave chief command of the government troops, Is a small, thin, queue-\nless Manchu. German and Austrian\nofficers who hold the general'a greatest confidence, report that he has not\nentire faith lfi the Chinese troops.\nAccording to the Chinese people\ngenerally, the Manchus were tolerable\nwhen they protected the country,\nbut are now worthless. The vast\nbody of Chinese sympathize .with the\nrebels und a significant saying with\ntbe soldiers proceeding south Is:\n\"An ordinary\" rebellion would be\nall right, but we must now flght\nagainst our trained brothers.\"\nThe women on seeing their soldier\nrelatives off advise them lf tbere is\ndanger to discard their uniforms and\nwalk back.\nThe situation depends upon money\nand lt is admitted that the ready\nfunds of the Chinese government are\nlow. Further loans by foreign bankers have been refused. If the pay of\nthe troops ls Increased and ls regu-\niK'.j f9rttK\ufffd\ufffdmlnS and \" *%? Eea aro\nwell fed\", they may not desert or rebel.\nupon the situation, and the    miners I*!1* T*.,?n._t50\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd !L\ufffd\ufffdrj\ufffd\ufffdp:Jm*_*'**l_nf!'\nSMStSessr -KW \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd E-ffiS&jAtS u^a*jKW2uar5\nOn her way north to the banks sb\ufffd\ufffdUtam- TW ritXlftUon 8eem8 ^courag\n- -   .1 *g*_**\nexperienced very heavy weaitber\nwhich once mor\ufffd\ufffd demonstrated her\nseagoing qualities. The fishing was\nIntermittent o^ing to the .periodic\ngales which' prevailed, necessitating\ncomplete suspension of fishing operations for several days. At Virago\nSound no less than four Ashing boats\nand the government patrol steamer\nWilliam Jollffe, In addlt'on to the\nfleet of McKenzie tt Mann's whaling\nstation, were at anchor at one time,\nwhich transformed the northern har\nbor for the time being into a mer-\nlontlle port. >\nNothing very unusual was, secured\nthla trip. Better weather wap fex\nperienced on the homeward voyage\nA good view of tbe wrecked steamer\nPrincess Beatrice was tfbtalhed ' ai\nthe Roman passed Noble island on\nher way down. The wrecked vessel\nthen lay head on to the island, but\nseemed ln a very easy position. Apparently the damage is below water.\nShe looks as though she could >e\nhauled off the rocks comparatively\neasily and should not present any\nvery great difficulty to the salvors.\ndead&k tnat aheAd.\nOTwr   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdoothot\nANCIENT STONE.\n,  his ret\n.lhe  *i*\nI he- aa!\nc I beaten\nleeen\nhe- said,  thrown tto\nbeaten on\ntbe ground and\nSultan Would Abdicate.\nConstantinople, Oct. 17\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDisgusted\nwith the outcome of the Trlpolltan\naffair and alarmed at the activity of\nRussia along the boundaries of the\nBalkan states Sultan Mehmed V. Is\nreported today to be making every\neffort to abdicate his throne. It is\nsaid the snltan has frequently expressed a desire to desert the Ottoman ship of late, but has been forced\nto remain on the throne by the cabinet.\nInstructors of Cadeta.\nThe militia orders issued from the\nheadquarters, Ottawa, under date Saturday September 30, are of unusual\npublic interest, containing, as they\ndo the names of Instructors of cadets\nwho have recently received appoint\nments. These are G. H. Bevan-Pritch-\nard, D. A. Boyes, A. C. Bundy, M. H.\nClarke, W. C. Coatham. J. R. Gale\nK. Johnson, H. H. MacKenzie, G. W.\nMacKinnon, V. Z. Manning. A. H.\nMarlon, D. P. McCallum, R. H. Mclnnes. J.R. Pollock, H. C. Robinson,\nE. S. Slme, E. E. Snider S.N.\ngtronle. W. J. Wllbv, R. H. Wilson,\nV Woodworth. The examinations\nwere held at Macaulay Camp, Esqul\nmalt, during the summer vacation.\nChinese Send Large Sum.\nMontreal, Oct. 17.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdChinamen hera\nhave   collected   $17,000    which   has\nbeen sent through the Bank of Hong\nKnnB to aid   the   revolutionists   in I red with the blood of the fish Trom\nChina. 'the wounds Inflicted with his knife-\nSwimmer Fights Sharks.\nGalveston, Tex.. Oct. 17.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe British steamship Nolisement,- Captain B.\nC. Young JuBt in, brings a thrilling\nstory of the rescue of a Danish seaman, Andy Anderson, who was found\nafloat in mid-ocean, 200 miles from\nland, after four hours' battle with\nsharks. Anderson has recovered and\nappears little the worse for his experience, except for the numerous scars\nand wounds on his body.\nAnderson was a fireman on the British steamship Milton, bound for St.\nVincent. At 4 o'clock in the morning\nwhen Just going on watch, a lurch of\nthe vessel threw him into the sea.\nHe carried his knife with htm fortunately and hitting the water, he\ntook off his clothes and prepared to\nkeep afloat aa long as possible. He\nwas not ln the water long when attacked by flsh, and at Intervals of a\nfew minutes he waa engaged ln fighting against death ln two forms-\nsharks and drowning.\nThe Nolisement waa thirty miles\nout of its course when the lookout\nsighted Anderson. A lifeboat was put\nout and the man rescued. He fainted\nwhen taken from the water, but within an hour he had regained consciousness.\nAnderson ls a muscular man, 33\nyears old and an expert swimmer, being able to swim rapidly with both\nteet tied and one arm pjjioned or\nwith both hands tied. He said he\nfound no trouble in keeping afloat,\nand the sharks' attacks spurred him\nto desperation.   At times the sea was\n'      Batt!# Within Few Days.\nSan Francisco, Oct. 17\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Sixty-five\nthousand revolutionist troops have\nbeen ordered from Wu Chang and\nKal Fong to Intercept imperlal sold\nIers en route from Peking to th\ufffd\ufffd\nprovince of Honan, according to a\ncablegram received by the Free Press.\na local newspaper. Twenty thousand\nManchu troops have been sent against\nthe revolutionists from Peking and\nan engagement ls expected within\ntwo days. This engagement Is regarded as being of great importance,\nand If the revolutionists are successful it Is expected that Canton will\nfall shortly afterwards!\nAssistance of Red Cross.\nWashington, Oct. 17.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAs the Red\nCross knows no nationality ln l's\nministrations, it Is expecte.' that the\ninternational association will give\nwhat aid lt can to the Chinese revolu\ntlonlsts in their efforts to organize a\nRed Cross service during the present\nInsurrection. A number of American\nand European medical officers are ln\ncharge and It is believed their services will be available In organizing\nhospital service.\nHold-Up.\nShortly before seven o'clock laat\nnight a man named William Billing-\nham was held up on the Ladner road\nbv two white men snd robbed of the\nsiim of $12. No further details of the\nstory could be ascertained.\nBanks Defrauded.\nPortland, Ore.. Oct. 17.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMany local\nand Seattle banks have been defraud\ned of large sums by means of spurl\nous pay checks. This was discovered\ntoday when some of the checks were\npresented at the National bank for\npayment. It is helieveu ttiat some of\nthe Snokane banks have also been\nvictimized.\nFROM  LONDON TOWN.\nOf     King,    of    Governor    and    of\nSoldier.\nDuring his tenure of the Governor-\nGeneralship of Canada lt is expected\nthat the Duke of Connaught. accompanied by the Duchess and Princess\nPatricia, wlll pay a visit to the Unit\ned States. A cordial invitation has\nbeen sent by President Taft to the\nDuke.\nKing George, early next year, accompanied by Her Majesty, the\nQueen, will pay an official visit ta t-e\nEmperor Franz Joseph of Austria. It\nIs probable, though not certain, that\nthey will afterwards pay a visit to the\nGerman Emperor.\nThe detective staff at Scotland\nYard la more wide'awake than some\npeople Imagine. Already elaborate\nprecautions have been taken for\nlooking after the personal safety, and\nmore especially the belongings, of\nvisitors to the Delhi Durbar. An officer with very wide experience ot\ncosmopolitan criminals has tor many\nmonths past been engaged in organizing a department, the special object, of which is to ensure that the\nmany well-known people who are going to India for this historic event\nshall be safe-guarded as far as ls possible, against the designs ot professional thieves.\nThere are some interesting stor'es\nof Lord Kitchener told in \"Nash's\nMagazine.\" by Mr. Sydney Brooks.\n\"Sunstroke? What the devil does he\nmean by having a Sunstroke?\" ts\ngiven aa the classic instance of Kitchener's attitude towards tbe weaker\nvessels. A favorite captain ot his\nwas once entrusted with an Important commission. Tbere was a delay\nin executing it tbrough hts horse\ncasting a shoe. \"Very sorry,\" was\nKitchener's comment, \"but I cannot\nrest my plan of campaign on a horse's\nshoe or an officer's carelessnee.\" He\nhas a grim, laconic humor. \"Keep\nthe gun.\" be is said to have wired\nto the War Office authorities, who\n' were pressing a certain weapon upon\nbim\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"I can throw stones myself.\"\nBritish  Good-Wii;  Shown for United\nStates Pilgrim Settlers.\nHingham,  Mass.. Oct.  17.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe   Id\nstepping-stone,  which    for  700  years\nstood ln  the public square at Hingham, Eng.,  was    presented    to this\ntown last Monday night on behalf of\nthe people of the English village by\nJames Bryce, the British ambassador\nThe stone Is to be used as the corner\nstone for a bell tower to commemorate the landing here 275 yeara ago\nof a band of pilgrims from' Hingham,\nEng.\nIn making the presentation address, Mr. Bryce said be was glad to\nbe privileged to express on behalf of\nthe people of old Hingham in England, whence came the settlers of the\nnew Hingham here, the sentiment\nwith which they had sent this stone\nfrom tbeir village green to the de-\nscendants of their common Norfolk\nancestors. It spoke not only of its\norigin, but of all the changes that\nhave passed in three hundred years,\nand of the warm goodwill and affection which those of the old town,\nfelt for those of the new town after\nall that lapse of time.\n\"The settlers,\" said Mr. Bryce.\n\"who came from Norfolk to Massachusetts Bay to escape the oppressive rule of King Charles I., and\nArchbishop Laud, brought with them\nideas and beliefs and b,ablts already\ndeeply rooted among the English of\nEast Anglla. one of the most truly\nTeutonic parts of England, the love\nof freedom in the state, the love of\nfreedom In religion, the sense of duty\nto God and, to conscience. And It\nwas on thl foundation of these principles that tbey built up their Institutions here, set up tlieir self-governing\ntowns, legislated In the general court\nof their self-governing colony, constitution of tbeir state and of the fed-\nreal Republic. Tbe history of Amer'-\nlean freedom is a continuation of tbe\nhistory or British freedom, and both\ncountrtea bave alike given an example to the world of what these principles can accomplish.\n\"The friendship of nations is based\non the friendship of Individual, and\nthe power of understanding one another is the greatest help to friendship.\n\"May this stone from the old Norfolk town, which is to be built into\nyour wall here, be an enduring memorial to the friendship of the elder\nHingham .tor tbe daughter Hingham\nhere, and a type ot the friendship of\nOld England for New England, and\nof the British people everywhere for\nthe people of the United States\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe\neldest born and the greatest of all the\nnations tbat.have grown up outelde\ntrnm^\nto tb? tends et l.wntijh\nUnder    cross-examination    by Air.\nRussell, however, Dharm developed a\nprofound reticence which drew trom\nttie interpreter, Mr. Brooks, an   expression of opinion that the witness\nwas hedging.   Counsel for the prisoners fired a number of questions at the\nwitness, which conveyed the suggestion   that   Dharm   had   entered   Mok\nhund's shack and tried to open a box\nwith a hammer.    Dharm repelled the\nsuggestion. He did not know whether\nMokhund had any money or not, he\nsaid.\nConstable Burrows gave evidence\nof having found Dbarm Singh lying\nunconscious on the floor of the shack\nand of having him taken to the hos\npital.\nA number of witnesses were heard\nyesterday, and a few more will be\nheard today, but the case, tn its\nmain features, Is contained in the\nexamination in chief and the cross,\nexamination of Dharm. He says he\nwas beaten on tbe head with a hammer by Ishea, while Mokhund held\nhim; the defence is that he waa\ncaught in the act of breaking open a\nbox in Mokhund's shack, and that hie\nInjuries were to a large extent self-\ninflicted. Also, for the defence there\nls the propensity of the East Indian\ntowards \"malingering,\" to which\ncounsel for the defence referred on\nMonday, in bis cross-examination ol\nDr. McQuarrie.\nIt is probable that further hearing\nof the case wlll occupy the greatet\npart ot today's session ot the court.\nWILL MEET AGAIN\nIN TEN VEARS TIME\nEcwneitleat     Conference     Concluded\nYesterday\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSecretary's  Report\nExcellent.\nToronto, Oct. 17.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe Ecumenical\nconference ended here today to meet\nagain in ten years time. The report\not the secretary showed that the\nmembership. of the Methodist church\nthroughout the world was eight mil\nlion. There are 99,000 churches, 87,\n000 Sunday schools. 885,000 officers\nand teachers, 8,000,000 Sunday school\nscholars and 32,000.000 members and\nadherents. The increase in the past\nfour years ts upwards of four millions.\nEurope\nstock.\"\nfromN our ancient  European\nWhat War Would Cost.\nLondon (. Oct. 17.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe Army and\nNavy Gazette, In the current Issue\nestimates that the cott of a war between Germany and France would be\n$2,800,000,000 for France and $5,500,-\n000,980 tor Germany.\nFuneral Service.\nThe funeral service for the fate\nMrs. Catherine Stover whose remains\nwere brought down from Prince\nRupert on the Camosun last night,\nwill take place at nine o'clock this\nmorning at St. Peter's church, the\nRev. W. P. O'Boyle officiating. Mrs.\nStover was. before her marriage. Miss\nCatherine Qulble, whose family ln\nwell known in New Westmlntes:\nI\n:\nf*\\\n9|\nJi\nWW**\"\n\"\" 'ii'ninnnpsa r      PAGE TWO\nTHE DAILY NEW*.\nWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1911.\nWants\nREID, CURTIS & DORGAN\n706   Columbia   Street.\nWANTED\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBOYS AT ONCE, ROYAL\nCity Cigar Factory, 7:i0 Agnes St.\nWANTED\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA    YOl'NG    MAN WITH\nsome knowledge of this locality as,\ngeneral assistant ln real estate i\noffice. Salary and commission.]\nApply In lirst Instance to Box M. 2U j\nWANTKD\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAT    ONCE.   WAlTUKSS.j\nBohemian cafe.\nTHOROUGHLY MODERN 7-ROOM\nhouse; furnace, full basement, two\nfireplaces: between Third and\nFourth     avenues,     very     central.\nI    Terms $750; cash, $30 a month.\n! \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nTENTH AVENUE. NEAR TWELFTH\nstreet, large lot. $750, $100 cash,\nbalances monthly.\nWIRELESS PHONE\nMAKES STRIDES\nGreat Britain   Making   Many Experiments and Progress Is\nRapid.\nDUBLIN  STREET W'rfST\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd2 LARGE\nlots, $1400, easy terms.\nWANTED \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd A BOY FOR OFFICE.\nCrown Timber & Trading Co., Bru\nnette street, Sapperton.\nDUBLIN\nEighth    and\nside,  $*00,  $\nSTREET   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   BETWEEN\nTenth    streets,\n50 cash.\nFrom all accounts it would appear\nthat wireless telephony is making\nrapid  and astonishing progress.\nIt was only on September 11  tnat\nhigh ! \"The Daily    Chronicle\"    published  a\n  j long and  Interesting  account  of  the\nWANTKD\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWORK OF ANY KIND,\nby the hour or day, by single man,\nnot using lU.uor or tobacco. Box\n100 this office.\nWANTKD\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWORK FOR TWO LIGHT\nexpress and teams. Apply \ufffd\ufffd.\nStephens, Wise road, East Buinaby\nWANTED \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd POSITION AT HOUSE\nwork, washing clothes, etc Address P. O. Box 414, V. M. Naka-\nmura. \t\nWANTED\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA GIRL OR WOMAN\nfor light house work. References\nrequired.    222  Fifth avenue.\nWANTED-GIRL FOR GENERAL\nhousework. Apply 217 Royal avenue\nWANTED\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLOTS AND ACREAGE\nto clear, landscape gardening. Ap\nply J. S. MoKlnley, Edmonds.\nWANTED\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdROOMERS AND BOARD-\ners. Apply Sixth avenue, Burnaby\nEast.\t\nWANTED-A GIRL FOR GENERAL\nHouse work; family of Ave; no children.   Apply 1U2 Fifth avenue.\nWANTED-THE RESIDENTS OF\nNew Westminster and Sapperton to\nknow that I am now operating the\nonly pasteurized bottled milk plant\nin the city, and will be pleased to\ndeliver to any part of the OttJ'and\nSapperton, nine quarts for $1.00.\nPhone your order to R873, or write\nthe Glen Tana Dairy, Queensborough, Lulu Island.\nTORONTO   STREET\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTWO   LARGE | experiments of  the    young  scientist,\nlots. $1250, $500 cash. Mr. H. Grlndell Matthews, in convey-\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 '   I lng his voice over long distances and\nELEVENTH STREET AND FOURTH i through obstacles of rock, brick and\navenue,   132x132,  on   three  streets,' gteel without the aid of wires.\n$4000. |    An account was recently published\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ': from a Ramsgate    correspondent    of\nELEVENTH   STREET\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLOT  66X132.   BOme  experiments  in  what was    de\n$1250. scribed  as    \"marine    wireless    tele-\n132x160    CORNER    ON   TWELFTH\nstreet,   $4000,  $1500  cash.\nLONDON STREET\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCLOSE TO\nTwelfth, large lot upper side, $1100,\none-third   cash.\nFOURTH\navenue,\nranged.\nSTREET\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNEAR       7TH\nlarge lot, $1000, terms ar-\nHOU8ES       ON\ngood   terms   in\ncity.\nEXCEPTIONALLY\nall    parts   of  the\nFRUIT AND CHICKEN RANCHES,\nthe most extensive listing in the\nvalley.\nREID, CURTIS & DORGAN\n706   Columbia   Street.\nNOTICE.\nFOR 8ALE\nFOR   SALE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd600    CHOICE    BUILD-\ning lots In  New Westminster and\nBurnaby.    We will   make    special\nterms and conditions    te    anyone\n,   wishing to select lots for building\npurposes, and  arrange for grading\nstreets, etc.   See   our Westminster\nHeights   addition,    corner     Eighth\navenue and Cumberland, with o|\ufffd\ufffden\nBtreets, water, electric light service,\netc.    As soon as construction    en\nthe new car line begins this    property will double In value immediately.   The Wright Investment Co.,\nLtd., 1116 Dominion TniBt builriins.\nVnncouver,    t',13    Columbia    street,\nNew Westminster.\nTenders will be received by the\nundersigned up to 12 o'clock noon,\nWednesday, October ISth, 1911, for\nthe supply of milk to the Royal Columbian Hospital from 31st October,\n1911. to 31st Mareh, 1912, to be delivered daily in sealed bottles in\nquantities as required. Samples to\nbe delivered at Hospital en morning\nof October ISth, The lowest or any\ntender not necessarily accepted.\nE. S. WITHERS, Secretary.\nRoyal    Columbian    Hospital,    New   this   proved   satisfactory\nWestminster,  B. C.\nVarden No. 19, Sons of Norway,\nmeet ln Eagles hall the first and\nthird Wednesdays of each month at\n8 p.m. Visiting brethren are cordially\ninvited to attend.\nA. KROGSETH,\nPresident.\nJ. J. AUNE,\nFinancial Secretary.\nSPIRITUALIST SERVICE.\nphony\" that have been conducted at\nPegwell Bay by another young scientist, Mr. A. W. Sharman.\nThe claim made by Mr. Sharman is\nthat by means of an apparatus lie\nhas invented he can transmit messages without wires through great\nstretches of chalk cliff and other obstructions, and between ships at sea.\nNow comes th\ufffd\ufffd statement that Mr.\nGrlndell Matthews, experimenting\nnear Cardiff, has transmitted a call\nby his aerophone to Mr. B. C. Hucks,\na Leeds aviator who was in a monoplane at a height of 700 feet.\nA Cardiff correspondent writes:\nExperiments at Cardiff.\nExperiments in wireless telephony\nof far-reaching Importance were successfully carried out on the Ely\nrace course a few miles out of Cardiff, on Saturday afternoon. For the\npast few days, Mr. B. C. Hucks. the\nyoung Leeds airman, has been giving exhibition flights over Cardiff In\nhis Blackburn monoplane, and, by\narrangement with him, .Tr. H. Grlndell\nMatthews, the Bristol engineer, who\nhad Invented the aerophone, visited\nthe courss on Saturday for the purpose of trying Its possibilities when\nup in  mid-air.\nRain fell all through the morning,\nand it was close on 3:30 when the\ndrizzle stopped for about an hour, Mr\nHucks had an ordinary telephone receiving helmet tied round his head\nwhen he entered his monoplane. The\nfirst of the experiments was a ground\ntest without the engine running, and\nA   second\nI test was made with the engine going,\nand this also was successful, despite\nthe noise of the wind and the hum of\nI the motor.\nThe final and important test followed at once. The aviator rose in the\nair, and when at a height of 700 feet,\nMr. Grindell Matthews sought com\nmunlcation with him.\nA Call in the Clouds.\nThe monoplane was going at the\nrate of 55 miles an hour, and was\nmaking across the fields In the direction of St. Pagans, when Mr. ftuckl\nheard   Mr.   Grlndell   Matthew's   vui e\nWOULD IMPROVE\nJUVENILE LAWS\nCase   Should   Be   Entitled \"State for\nJohnny,\" Not \"State Versus\nJohnny.\"\nTO RENT.\nTO      RENT  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ONK\nhousekeeping      room.      Apply    224\nSeventh stieet.\ncalling   \"Hello:     Hello!''   above   the\nA Spiritualist Service  will be held I roar of the wind and cTV groaning of\naX. Mrs.  3.  Ctarke's residence, Inman \\ the motor.\navenue, Central Park, near    Btatlon, \\    Mr. Hucks was not provided with a\nfurnishedi!bnr*rtf e\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^**- at 8 o'clock.    All  transmitter, so that he could not\n,are  welcome. I pi;  to the grounl\nre-\nTO KENT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSEVEN ROOMED COT-\ntage on Queens avenue, near\nQueens park; electric light and gas\nin the house. Possession ^:trd inst.\nApply B. L. G., Dally  News.\nFOK RENT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTWO NICELY FI'UN-\nishod front rooms. 418 Third\navenue.\nFOR  RENT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdONE    FIVE    ROOMED   '\ncottage,   furnished  or    unfurnished, j\nApi ly 239 Sixth avenue.\nVIOLIN\nMr. Holroyd Paull. violin virtuoso\nand teacher, pupil of Prof. Sevcik,\nPrague M. Cesar Thomson, Brussels\nnow receives pupils. Terms and full\nparticulars from Mr. c. W. Openshaw. Room 8 Ellis Block, 552 Columbia street.\nTO LET\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTWO  WELL FURNISHED\nrooms;  modern, heated.    37    Agnes I\nstrict.    Phone L 38.\nFOR     RENT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWELL     FURNISHED\nroom for young gentleman ln refined home; rent $10. Write Box\n11   News office.\nTO RENT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA MODERN SEVEN-\nroom house, bath, toilet, etc. Apply\n1412 Fifth avenue.\nROOMS\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNICELY FURNISHED AND\nvery quiet, clean rooms, with bath,\nby day, week or month; rates very\nreasonable. 17 Begbie street.\nPhone 868. Just opposite sidH of\nKussell hotel.\nTO     RENT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFURNISHED     HOUSE\nto   rent,   31!)   Regina  street,   $22  ;i\nmonth.\nLAND   REGISTRY\nJ.C. REID\nLAND   REGISTRY   EXPERT\nTitles    Examined,    Land  Registry\nTangles Straightened out.\nCurtis  Block\nCity Box 482\nUNITED  BROTHERHOOD\nOF CARPENTERS\nMeet every Monday ln Labor hall.\n8,  p.m.\nF. II. Johnson, business ajtent office. Blair's Cigar store. Office phone\nL 508, Residence phone GOL\nFOK KENT \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd TWO BEDROOMS\nwith sitting room to let io gentlemen only. Breakfast if desired.\nTelephone and modern conveniences, Five minutes from th,\npost office. Terms model ute. En\nquire Phone It 414.\nLOST.\nLOST\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWHITE FOX TERRIER DOO\nbrown spots on face. Answers to\nmime of \"Tiggens.\" Finder please\nreturn to 121 Third street, or\nphone 3(10.\nST. ANN'S\nNEW   WESTMINSTER,   B.C.\nA Boarding and Day School for Young\nGirls.\nThe curriculum includes preparatory, intermediate, grammar and\nacademic, or high school grades.\nPupils prepared for high school en-\nt ranee and provincial teachers examinations. The Commercial Department embraces bookkeeping, shorthand (Isaac Pitman system) and\ntouch typewriting. Music a specialty.\nFor prospectus nnd terms address to\nthe SISTER SUPERIOR.\nLearn\nTo\nDance\nClasses every Monday\nand Wednesday night.\n8 o'l lock, 318 Royal\navenue. Advance 1\nclass and invitation\ndunce in st. Patrick's Hall Friday, (Jet. 27, continuing every Friday. Class at 7:30. Dancing 9\nto 2. C. w. Oienshaw's orchestra,\nPrivate lessons by appointment.\nJ. B. BARNETT, 318 Royal Avenue\nPhone LB7B.\nas lie afterwards\nI told our representative. The wind\nhowled In his ears and the hum of the\nmotor was deafening; but the voice\nwas clear, distinct and loud. To add\nto the disadvantages under which the\nexperiment was conducted, the rain\nhad begun to fall again, and the aviator was half drenched when he subsequently descended. Considering\neverything, the experiments were extremely satisfactory. The rig-up was\nmade in twenty  minutee\nThis is the first aeroplane message\ndelivered by wireless telephony, and\nMr. C. B. Hucks is the first man\noutside the Inventor and his staff to\nuse the aerophone. It will noi he the\nast experiment with the aerophone,\nor Mr. Hucks ancl Mr. Grindell Matthews have practically agreed to\nmeet again at a convenient\ncontinue the tests.\nOn Tuesday Mr. Matthews goes to\nMerthyr to carry out tests In a coal\nmine, and at the end of the week he\nto London on important\nMr. Grlndell Matthews is\nvery proud of Saturday's re-\nhe has been aiming at\nan accomplished fact. With\nproper headgear for the aviatoi\na transmitter, messa res can w tl\n'\"' ri ceived in and delivered f\nair. It Is understood thai\nthews has now (arried\n'ions laid down by\nI previous to Its\nI of the Invention foi\nLondon Chronicle\nOmaha, Neb., Oct. 17.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"To prevent\nchildren from becoming criminals is\nthe best investment a government\ncan make,\" said Mr. William Trant,\npolice magistrate of Regina. Sask.,\nCanada, in an address befoie the\nAmerican Prison Association today.\nHe declared Canada and the United\nStates should co-operate ln creating\nImproved laws for dealing with delinquent JuvenileB.\n\"All taint that attaches to criminal!\nlaw should be temoved ln dealing\nwith offending children,    \" said  Mr.\n\"The child ought not to be 'tried'\nfor anything.    Tbere   should    be no\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdcharging with an offence,' no commit-\nal  no sentence.   As an American pen-\naloglst has said, the great thing to\nrealize Is that the affair ls not tht\nState  versus  Johhny,  but   the   State I\nfor Johnny.    The    probation    offlcer\nshould attend the Juvenile Court not1\nas a prosecutor but to represent the\nInterests   of  the   child.    The    child\nshould he regarded   as a ward  of the\nState, to be cared for by lt, not as an\nenemy of the State to be punished by\nIt.     The supreme question Is: Is the\nparent a fit person to continue as a\nguardian of the child?    If not, what\nought to be done with the child? The\nproceedings, I repeat, are not against\nthe child, but in its behalf.   Instead,\nthererfore,  of trial,  charge,  committal, there should    be   nothing more\nthan an Inquiry into the condition and\nenvironment of the    youngster    and\nthe conduct of its parents. If anyone\nIs on trial In the Juvenile Court, lt ia\nnot Johhny    but    his    parents,  the\ncharge being breach of trust amounting to cruelty.    Tbere should be enforcement   to   the   uttermost  of   the\nparental    obligation.     The    point   I\nwish to emphasize is that instead of\na   trial, the   duty    of   The Juvenile\nCourts should be to find out exactly how the child ls being reared and\ndiscover the best thing to do under\nthe circumstances. Tbe State is a loving, yet prudent mother, cares for her\nweak and erring children and ought\nto see that they are not neglected or\noppressed.    Young delinquents, as a\nrule,  have not strayed.    They  were\nhorn on   the   highway   to ruin, and\nthere they are.    Surely   the hand of\nlove can lead them   into   the right\npath.\"\nChildren Often Need ' l*\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd-*>t y** cannot u too\npurrsttres Injure the boweU snd pave thTTay fcj** \"\" *\" *\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'*\nllU-loag trouble*.   The new\nevaouaatia\n:\\0at\ndoes the work most\neffectively without lrrlutin* the bowels\n\"STST dlscomfor,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \"\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdchlldren ,ike 2- *5\ufffd\ufffd, Z\nOne of the most popular of the NA-DRU-CO prepsratlons.\nlike candy.\n2Sc. aba\nMESH BAGS\n: STERLING Silver, $25.00 to $40.00 each\nGERMAN SUver, $5.00 to $15.00 each\nChild's Puraei, $1.75 and $2,00 each.\nChamberlin\nOfficial Time Inspector for C.P.R. and   B.C.C. R'y\n*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd+**\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd***\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*********+\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd****.***\nTHE\nJEWELER\nSKIN TROUBLES hROW WORSE\ntime to\nproceeds\nbusiness.\nnaturally\nsuits.     What\nis  now\nand\nease\nfrom the\nMr.  Mat-\no ii the cotrdi-\nthe governmenl\nrinhtB\nlhe   natb n.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nHIELB'\nEAUT1FUL\nfi\nIT PAYS TO ADVERTISE\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd IN \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nTHE  DAILY NEWS.\nSPECIAL SALE\nSix lots on First street, each 60x132,\n$000 to $850 each.\nOne lot on Devoy street, $500.\nOne lot on Archer street, $525.\nSeveral lots on Nanaimo street,\n$875.\nOne lot on Sixth street, $1000.\nOne lot on Alherta street, $525.\nOne lot cn Alberta street. $051).\nAlso lots In Sapperton at. $100 cash,\nbalance in monthly payments of small\namounts.\nThe above properties are offered\nnow at special prices as thp owner\nrequires this money for investment in\nlarger holdings in the city,\nJOSEPH TRAVERS\nColor and Beauty of the Hall\nPreserved with a Ham lesS\nRemedy Made from Sage,\nDruggists overywheri\nfact that they nre nel\ntics of sage  fov  ma'.;\n\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\";-'\" ten,\" such  nn\ngrandmothers for pn\nof their hair, v.t-\ntifnl nnd re toi I:\nThe demand fc\nfor this ptirporo\none\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd comment on tin-\nIjng hire., quant!-\n!i B old-fashioned\nwi used by < \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\" the g:-on-tb\n:' K ii fluffy n:il |,cal,\n- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' na I color.\n\" this well-lsnorrn Inl\nhi     bo n po\nPhor.e 703.\n421 Columbia St.\n..t tl\nmanufacturer h\"< v., \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.. .,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,.\nof the fnct nnd has placed on the i-.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nnn Ideal \"sago ten,\" containini. . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd; j,\na valuable remedy for rtnn'lruff '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nseal] nehes nnd lrrltatlon<!\nwyeth's Sage and Snlphnr Hair Roi\nThe manufacturers or this remoJ\nauthorize drnjjgljits to Boll it under im \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nantee thnt the money will be refnndi l l\nit f:iils to do esrietly as represented,\nThis prenavntion (a offerer] to t'i\npublic nt fifty rents n bottle, and I\nrecommended an ! .<\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd!'. by all drngglsti\nEczema, Psoriasis, and other skin\ntroubles are caused by myriads of\ngerms at work ln tbe skin. Unless\nthese germs are promptly destroyed\nthey rapidly multiply, gnawing tbeir\nway deep into the sensitive tissue.\nThis is what causes that awful itch,\nand what seemed a mere rash mav\ngrow worse and develop into a loathsome and torturing skin disease with\nIts years and years of misery.\nDon't take any chances ! Destroy\nthe germs at the beginning of the\ntrouble with that soothing and cleansing wash, the D. D. D. Prescription\nfor Eczema.\nWe have had experience with\nmany remedies for skin trouble but\nhave never\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnever seen such remarkable cures as those from D. D. D.\nPrescription. Instant relief from the\nvery flr\ufffd\ufffdt application.\nIf you have skin trouble of any\nkind, we certainly advise you to drop\nIn and Investigate the merits of D. D.\nD. or why not drop a line to the D.\nD. D. Laboratories, Dept. N. N., 49\nCol borne St., Toronto.\nWe know that D. D. D. will help\nvou.   F. J. MacKenzie, Columbia St.\nB.C. Mills\nTimber  and Trading\nCo.\nManufacturers and Dealers In All Kinds of\ntV.B^S* ililS' 8HIN0LE\ufffd\ufffd- SASH,   DOORS,  INTERIOR  FINISH,\nTURNED WORK, FISH BOXES     LARGE    STOCK    PLAIN    AND\nFANCY QLASS.\nRoyal City Planing Mills Branch\nTelephone 1! New Weetmlneter\nBox   13'\nW. R. QILLEY, Phone 122. q. E. QILLEY, Phone 291.\ni Phones, Office 15 and 1\ufffd\ufffd.\nGilley Bros. Ltd.\nCOLUMBIA STREET WEST.\nWholesale and Retail Dealers In Coal\nCEMENT, LIME. SEWER PIPE, DRAIN TILE, CRUSHED ROCK,\nWASHED QRAVEL AND CLEAN SAND, PRESSED BRICK AND\nFIRE BRICK.\nPhone 699.\nP. O. Box 601.\nSnider & Brethour\nGeneral Contractors\nWestminster Tmst Building.\nBrunette Saw Mills Company, Ltd.\nNew Westminster, B. C.\nAre well stocked up with all kinds and grades of\nLUMBER FOR MOUSE BUILDING\nA specially large stock ol Laths, Shingles and\nNo. 2 Common Boards and Dimension.\nNow is the time to build for sale or rent while price* are low\nWk\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**+\nt\ufffd\ufffd\ni For Choice Beef, Mutton\nPork or Veal\nGO TO\nI P. BURNS & CO.\n645 Columbia St.\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****\nLULU  ISLAND\n10 Acres on\n!!\ufffd\ufffd<!\n(WITHIN CITY)\nEwen Avenue, close to new school.\n$1,700 Per Acre\nCash $4,000, balance over 5 years.\nAlso 21 Acres on Ewen Avenue (practically adjoining\nabove property.)\nPrice $20,000\nCash $3,000, balance over 4 years.\t\nSherriff, Rose& Co.\nPhone 832\nGENERAL AGENTS\n648 Columbia St.      New\ninster\nte WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1911.\nTHE DAILY NEWS.\n*\nWHAT BECOMES\nPAGE THREE\nMOVING PICTURES\nOF EX-CONVICTS\nRecords   of   Prisons   Prove Question\nIs   Difficult       to\nAnswer.\nIN THE MAKING\nWhat becomes of the ex-convlcts,\nthe man who was yesterday clad In a\ncheckered suit and referred to by bis\nnumber and wbo this morning steps\nthrough the gates of St. Vincent de\nPaul penitentiary branded for life as\nan ex-convlct, but free to go wbere-\never he may choose?\nTo most prisoners, the day to\nwhich they have looked forjvard ever\nsince they were sentenced is equally\nas lonely as that on which they were\nfirst placed In the institution, and\nwhen finally they are turned through\nthe big gates at Rack River they are\nstrangers to the world, and many, lf\ngiven the opportunity, would return\nagain rather than face the world and\nthe dishonor which they have br\/ught\nupon themselves. There are others\nagain who have spent their idle moments ln prison planning some big\nrobbery, or other crime and who long\nfor the day when they will be free\nIn order that they may complete the\narangements for their crime.\nWhen an accused person is sentenced to a term in the penitentiary\nhe ls driven to St. Vincent de Paul.\nOn entering the prison, he Is taken\nbefore the warden, where he Is questioned as to former occupation, name\nand address of near .relatives, after\nwhich he ls handed over to one of\nthe guards who conducts him to a\nhuge shower bath, in which ue Is required to remain for ten or fifteen\nminutes. When they return from the\nbath they find every stitch of clothes\nwhich they wore en entering the prison missing and in their place is a\nbrand new outfit, every garment of\nwhich bears a number and by that\nnumber the prisoner will ?>fe known\nduring bis entire stay Inside the\n-prison walls.\nOnce numbered and clad ln the\nregulation prison garb, the convict becomes a regular cog tn the machinery of the prison and can expect little diversion until the expiration of\nhis sentence. In most penitentiaries\nthe convict is allowed to choose his\nown line of work, and lf desirous of\nlearning a trade is given ample opportunity to fit himself for a position\nbefore he leaves the Institution.\nWhen the long expected day on\nwhich a prisoner is to he released arrives, he Is brought before the warden onoe again and after receiving\ngood advice, the prisoner is provided\nwith a new outfit of clothes. Inquiry\nas to the old ones, brines out the fact\nthat they were burned on the day the\npris'oner entered the institution, and\nthat the wearing apparel of every\nprisoner ls treated in a like manner.\nThis Is found necessary as lt would\nbe impossible to ftnd room for so\nmany clothes, and after finding room\nfor them they could not be kept clean.\nBesides a new outfit of clothing\nthe prisoner ls given a railroad tlck?t\nSo any place be may desire within\nthe limits of the province in which\nhe has been Imprisoned, as wtl as a\nsum of money, never les sthan $5 and\nseldom exceeding $15.\nOnoe clad In the clothes of a free\ncitizen again and witti the ticket and\nthe cash allowance tucked away safely ln an Inside pocket, the prisoner Is\nconducted to the big gates of the\ninstitution through which he is\nconducted by a guard, who does not\ntake his eye off the prisoner until he\nIb safely placed on a train.\nA few prisoners leave the country\nimmediately after their discharge and\nstart life anew under more favorable\ncircumstances, but the rank and file\nof ex-convicts are dumped back ln the\ncities and town from which they\nwere sentenced and ln many cases\ntbey become regular frequenters for\nthe remainder of their lives.\nLowest   Price    Is   $400   and\nFrom     That     Up     to\nThousands.\nRanges\nMany\nMOSQUITO    BUZZES\nBECAUSE   HE'S   DRUNK\nChicago, Oct. 17.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe aggravating\nbuzzing of the pestiferous mosquito\nIs at least accounted for.\n\"The insect sucks the sugar out of\nthe blood. The yeast substances in\nhis body transform the sugar into alcohol, and a large quantity of the\nbeverage ln bis system has the same\ninfluence on his organism that it has\non the organism of the man who\ndiinks whlBky\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnamely, makes him\nvery happy, and he exuberates by\nbuzzing. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nThis statement was made by Professor P. Under of the Royal Agricultural College, Berlin, at the Congress\nHotel. Dr. Under ls here at the Invitation of the International Brewers' congress, which meets in Chicago. Professor Under Is an authority\non fermentation and its effects, having studied It for twenty-flve years.\nThat the drinking of alcohol ls not\nnecessary in order to exist, but It ls\nnecessary In order to live, Ib another\nof Professor Linder's beliefs.\nDr. Under will give a public address for the brewers on \"The Omnipresence of Alcohol.\" Dr. Under\nsays that alt bodies contain a certain\namount of alcohol, formed from the\naction of the yeast of the blood on the\nsugar we eat. Alcohol, according to\nProfessor Under, In not poisonous,\nbut necessary to the body for heat\nand energy. Sometimes this natural\nalcohol Is insufficient and then lt ls\nnecessary to imbibe an adltlonal supply.\nAnyway. Professor Under believes\nthat the taking of alcohol in moderate quqtHUies ls beneficial.\nJust what a gigantic business the\nmoving picture drama has become is\nhard to realize without a minute\nstudy. The preliminary steps, before\nthe film is ready for the public, arj\nmany. A visit to the plant of a big\nfirm will soon show juBt what the\nnickels and dimes of the public make\npossible. A large square block in\none suburb is devoted to the production of pictures and keeps 200 men\nand women regularly employed and\nturns out on an average of five finished films a week.\nThe public has but a faint idea of\nthe wonderful amount of detail that\nls necessary before a picture or even\na sitting is ready.\nThere are employed over fifty actors and actresses and they are, by\nno means discards of the legitimate\ntheatre. Very clever people only are\nengaged, whose experience has been\nvaried and thorough. When two or\nthree receive as much as $100 a week\nlt may readily be Imagined that It Is\nnot a question of Just posing for a\npicture.\nThe claim Is made that no film ls\nturned out at less than $400 cost, and\nthat big war scenes and like group\npictures cost thousands of dollars,\nbefore they are ready for the publlc.\nThe recent drowning of a leading\nactor of one of the moving picture\ncompanies shows that these actors\noften have other than a life of ease.\nIt appears that requests for positions\nare so heavy that the company throws\nmost of them in the waste basket.\nThose who are accepted fill out\nblanks that they are healthy, can\nride, swim. etc.\nTo prepare for a picture the company employs a staff of carpenters,\npanler mache experts, upholsterers,\npainters, etc., each having a fully\nequipped shop. When everything ls\nready for a picture the scene ls rehearsed by the company several\ntimes before the plate ls exposed. It\nmay appear easy to walk around and\ngesticulate a part without saying a\nword.\nYet none of the actors can impart\nthe meaning of the picture without\naudibly speaking their lines. To the\nextent that every move must perfectly convey the intent is the moving\nricture actor called upon to be cleverer than the actor who appears ln a\ntheatre. He has no words to help\nhim Impress his meaning on the audience. Even more than the actor Is\nthe moving picture player painted\nand powdered. He has to be, in order\nto show his features on the film.\nAfter the scene has been photographed and developed it goes\nthrough a half a dozen processes before It Ib ready for the brokers who\nsell the rights to the theatre proprietors. It Is touched up, retouched,\nclipped and trimmed before It is\nfinally declared satisfactory. In spite\nof this, however, the company can\nturn out five films a week. It is a\nhustling little city from early morning until very late, often half the\nnight. Men are running around in\nthis or that uniform or regalia. A\ncowboy may be Joking with a Beau\nBrummel. or a soldier with a bandit.\nScenes are strewn about in profusion. At one end ls painted a brick\nwall of a prison, used to depict the\nescape of a convict. Across the way\nIs being enacted a barroom scene,\nwth its culminating shooting. Ten\nfeet from\/this ls a big water tank, so\nframed as to look like a beautiful\nlake. The whole forms an everchang-\nIng picture book.\nProbably the most Interesting department Is the manuscript section.\nHundreds of picture stories are sent\nto the readers who pass on them. If\naccepted they are edited and reread.\nThen they are sent to the director.\nTheae manuscripts are all written out\nJust as If they were for the legitimate\nstage. Many of them are from Europe, and are written In all languages.\nNaturally more than half of the manuscripts are thrown away as useless.\nThe pictures are sent to all parts\nof the world, and many films are prepared with this object. Thus there\nIs a sign posted prominently ordering\nall kissing on the forehead or cheek\nonly, as osculating on the mouth Is\nnot publicly exhibited in Spain, Italy\nand other countries.\nAt an ordinary establishment\neverything that ts needed ls manufactured except the film. Even the\nphotographic machines are made\nthere. Great quantities of tlie film\nare used. A trip was organized in\none place recently for a play with\nscenery and the operator took along\n12,000 feet of celluloid ribbon.\nBUSINESS DIRECTORY\ny\nCANADIAN PACIFIC\nB.C. Coast Service\nPROM VANCOUVER.\nI. O. O. P. AMITY LOtfGE NO. 27.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nThe regular meetings of thla lodge\nare held in Odd Fellows' Hall, corner Carnarvon and Eighth streets.\nevery Monday evening at 8 o'clock.\nVisiting  brethren  cordially   invited j FOR VICTORIA.\nto attend.    C. J. Purvis, N.G.;   W. 110:00 a.m Daily, except Tuesday\nC. Coatham, P. G.    recording    secre-il:00 p.m    Daily\ntary,  R. Purdy, financial secretary.! For Seattle.\nDressmaking\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi\nSTENOGRAPHY    Sl   TYPEWRITING\nMISS M. BROTEN. public stenographer; specifications, business letters, etc.; circular work taken\nPhone 415. Rear of Major and\nSavage's offlce. Columbia St.\nFI8H   AND  GAME.\nAYLING & SWAIN, PISH, FHUIT,\nOame, Vegetables, etc. Dean Block\nnext to Bank ot MontreaL\nAUDITOR AND ACCOUNTANT.\nH. J. A. BURNETT. AUDITOR AND\nAccountant Tel. R 128. Room.\nTrapp block.\nPROFESSIONAL.\nJ. STILWELL CLUTE, harrleter-at-\nlaw, solicitor, etc; corner Columbia\nand McKenzie streets, New West\nminster, B. C. P. O. Box 112. Tele\nphone 710.\nWADE, WHEALLER, McQUARRlE S\nMARTIN\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBarristers snd Solicitors\nWestminster offices, Rooms 7 and 1\nOulchon block, corner Columbia anc\nMcKenzie streets; Vancouver *t\nflees, Williams building, 41 Qras\nTills street F. C. Wade, K. C.\nA. Whealler, W. O. McQuarrie. Q. E\nMartin.\nJ. P. HAMPTON BOLE, BARRISTER,\nsolicitor and notary, S10 Columbia\nstreet.   Over C. P. R. Telegraph.\n110:00 a.m  Dally\n11:00 p.m  Dally\nFor Nanaimo.\n2:00 p.m Dally\nFor Nanaimo, Union, Comox.\n2:00 p.m   Tuesdays\n9:00 a.m.  ..Thursdays and Saturdays\nFor Prince Rupert and Alaska.\n11:00 p.m Oct. 14, 21, 24 anl 31\nFor Queen Charlotte Islands.\nSS. Princess Beatrice.\n11:00 p.m Oct. 5, IS\nFor Hardy Bay and Rivers Inlet.\n8;30 a.m  Wednesdays\nGulf Islands.\nLv. Vancouver  7:00 a.m. Fridays\nUpper Fraser River Route.\nLeave Westminster 8:00 a.m. Monday.\nWednesday, Friday.\nLeave   Chilliwack,   7:00   a.m.   Tuesday,  Thursday,  Saturday.\nFor other sailings and rates apply\nto\nto BD. OOULET.\nAgent, New Westminster.\nH. W. BRODIE,\nO. P. A.. Vsneouvsr\nTailor Suits. Evening Dresses, aU\nbeautiful patterns, Just received from\nParis.\nPerfect fit guaranteed.    See\nMrs. Gaultier\nLavery Block.\nPALMER\nGASOLINE ENGINES\n\ufffd\ufffdtt to 16 H. P.\nS and 4 Cycle.\nLocal Agents\nWestminster Iron Works\nPhone S3.\nTenth   St,  Nsw  Wettmintter.\nWARD    OF    TRADB\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNEW WKST\nminster Board ol Trade meets in tfl*\nboard room. City Hall, as follows\nThird Thursday   of   each    montn,\nquarterly    meeting    on  the    uuro\nTt\/ursday of February, May, August\nand November, at n p.m.     Annual\nmeetings on the third Thursuay on\nFebruary.    New  memoera  may   b\ufffd\ufffd\nproposed and elected at any montn\nly or   quarterly    meetuig.      0. tt\nStuart-Wade, secretary.\nPacific\nCoast\nFleet\nCanadian Northern Steamships, Lt J.\nT^EROYAUJNE\nMONTREAI QUEBEC.\nTO BRI8TOL, ENGLAND\nShortest Route to London on 12,000\nTon Floating Palaces.\nNext  Sellings from   Montreal:\nROYAL GEORGE  OCT. 18\nROYAL EDWARD  NOV. 1\nROYAL GEORGE  NOV. 15\nXmas Sailing from Halifax.\nROYAL   EDWARD NOV.  tt\nROYAL  GEORGE DEC.  13\nRatea ef Passage:\n1st Clsss, 992.50, and upwards.\n2nd Claas, 963.75, and upwards.\n3rd Class, Bristol or London, $32.50.\nFurther Information from Ed Goulet. C. P. R. Agent, or write\nA. H. Davis, General Agent\n272 Main St., Winnipeg.\nPhone R672. 619 Hamilton St\nd. Mcelroy\nChimney Sweeping,\nEavetrough Cleaning,\nSewer Connecting,\nCesspools, Septic Tanks, Etc.\nTha\nRoyal Bank if Canada\nCapital paid up $8,200,000\nReserve        6.900,000\nThe Bank bas 176 branches,\nextending ln Canada from the\nAtlantic to the Pacific; In Cuba,\nthroughout the Island, also in\nPorto Rico, Trinidad, Bahamas,\nNEW YORK and LONDON,\nENGLAND.\nDrafts issued without delay\non all the principal Towns and\nCities ta the World.\nThese  excellent   connections\nafford every banking facility.\n.Naw Weatminater Branch,\nLAWFORD RICHARDSON, Mgr.\nWestminster\nTransfer Co.\n)\ufffd\ufffdce 'Pbone ilk      Barn   Phone Ut\nBegbie Street.\nBaggage   deuverau    promptly     .a\naay part of Ue eity\nlight and Heavy Hauling\nOFFICE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTPAM DEPOT\nCITY OF NEW WESTMINSTER. B.C\nSole agent for\nHire's Root Beer\nMineral Wateri,   Aerated Water*\n-    Manufactured by\nJ. HENLEY\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C.\nTelephone R 118  Office: Princess St\nChoice Beef, Mutton,\nLamb, Poik and Veal\nAT THE\nCentral Meat Market\nBOWELL A ODDY\nCorner Eighth St. and Fifth Avenue.\nPHONE 370.\nNEW    WESTMINSTER\n8ERVICE\nMAIL\nDOCK AT JOHNSON'S WHARF,\nFOOT OF COLUMBIA AVE.\n^CANADIAN PACIFIC\nW RAILWAY CO.\n88.\nPRINCE  RUPERT AND PRINCE\nGEORGE\nLeave   Vancouver   at   12   midnight\nevery    Monday   and    Thursday   for\nPrince Rupert.\nHomesick Simian Refusea Food.\nNew York, Oct. 16.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMme. Nlngo\nIs suffering from nostalgia and such\nls her condition that she will not\nleave her bed. Bhe will not eat and\nthere is a far away look in her eyes\nas she longs for darkest Africa. Curator Ditmars has assigned a night\nand day nurse, and Dr; Reed Blair Is\non constant duty.'\nCurator Ditmars thinks Mme. Nln-\ngo Is a prize and he Is doing all ln hU\npower to entertain her, but she only\ngroans and peeps out at him from her\nbed. Then she closes her eyes and\ngroans more.\nMme. Nlngo bears the distinction of\nbeing the only gorilla ever brought\nto the Zoological Park in the Bronx\nalive. Sixty of her brothers and\nsisters have left Africa and started\nfor New York but homesickness or\nseasickness killed them all. One gorilla did land well and happy and Is\nstill living, but the Zoological Society\nof New York has no claim on this\none.\nMme. Nlngo apparently was doing\nwell until a pang   of   homesickness\ncame over her and she decided   to\nstarve herself to death.\nPILE8 CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS. I    Plalntaln   stalk   is   considered   a\nYnnr drueelst will refund money if Uwat delicacy  for gorillas,  and the\npJ\/ToiNTMENT falls to cure \"any! Botanical Gardens provided some of\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdr nrhine  Hiinrt    meedins   or this for Mme. Nlngo, but she would\ndie.\nChannel Time Cut\nLondon, Oct. 16.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFrance and England are now but one four's Journey\napart between the ports of Dover\nand Calais, since the new service\nthat was recently started with a new\nturbine steamer.\nrime Tlm*\not of\nArrival: Closing\n10.00\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdUnited States via C. P. R.\n'  (daily except Sunday) .23:0b\n7:40\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdVancouver via B. C. E. R.\n(dally except Sunday)4 . 8:0t\n12:00\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Vancouver via. B. C. E. K.\n(dally   except   Sunday). .at: 11\n7:40\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdVancouver via B. C. Is. R.\n(daily except Sunday)..16:0(\n8:00\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdVictoHa via B. C. E. R.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd (dally except Sunday).. 8:00\n.3:00\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdVictoria via B. C. E.  R.\n(daily exoept Sunday). 11 :H\n7:30\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdUnited states via G. N. R.\n(dally except Sunday).. 9.46\n16:16\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdUnited States via G. N. W.\n(daily except Sunday)..16:00\n10:18\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAll points east and Europe   (dally)  8:30\nJ2:30\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAll peints east and Europe   (dally)    14:00\n10:18\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSapperton and Fraaer\nMills (dally except\nSunday)       8:30\niO.OO\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSapperton and Fraser\nmills (dally except\nSunday)      14:00\n10:48\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCoquitlam   (daily except\nSunday)       8:30\n3:00\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCentral Park and Edmonds (dsily except\nSunday)       11.18\n1400\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEast Burnaby (dally ox-\nSunday)  18:30\n.0:00\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTlmberland (Tuesday nnd\nFriday)    13:30\n10:30\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBarnston Islands arrives\nTuesday, Thursday and\nSaturday, and leaves\nMonday, Wednesday\nand  Friday    14:30\n10:00\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLadner. Port Guichon,\nWestham Island, Bun\nVilla  13:30\n.0:00\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAnnieville.   Sunbury (dally\nexcept Sunday)    13:30\n.0:00\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWoodwards (Tuesday,\nThursday and Saturday)    13:30\n10:60\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdVancouver, Piper's Siding via O. N. R.\n(dally except Sunday)..14:2d\n11:30\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCloverdale and Port Kells\nvia O.  N. R.  (dally ex-\n(dally except Sunday).14:00\n11:30\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdClayton (Tuesday, Tnursday. Friday aad Bat-\nday       14:00\n11:30\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTynehead   (Tuesday   nnd\nFriday)       14:00\n1:30\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBurnaby Lake (dally except Sunday * 16:00\n10:00\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAbbotsford. Matsqui, Huntington, etc. (dally except Sunday)    23:00\n16:16\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCrescent, White Rock and\nBlaine (daily except\nSunday) 9:46\n16:15\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHall's Prairie, Fern Rids*\nnnd Hazlemere (Tueeday, Thursday and Saturday  9:45\n11:20\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdChilliwack, Milner. Mt.\nLehman, AldergroTO, Otter, Shortreed, Upper\nSumas, Surrey Centro,\nCloverdale, Langley\nPrairie, Murrayville,\nStrawberry Hill, South\nWeatmlnster, Clover _\nValley, Coghlan, Sardis. Majuba Hill, Rand,\nvia B. C. E. R. (dally\nexcept Sunday)     9:00\n16:60\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdChilliwack,      Cloverdale\nand Abbotsford via B.\nC. E. R. (dally except\n1 Sunday) 18:00\n88. PRINCE RUPERT AND PRINCE\n-     GEORGE\nLeave   Vancouver   at   12    midnight\nevery Tuesday and Saturday for Victoria and Seattle.\nAdditional Excursions\nto Eastern Points\nNEW WESTMINSTER LAND DISTRICT-Dlstrict of New Westminster.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTake notice that John Gould, of\nVancouver, B.C., occupation broker,\nintends to apply for permission La\npurchase the following described\nlands: Commencing at a post planted at a point on the westerly shore of\nGreen lake, which point is situate\nabout 60 chains southwesterly from\nthe northerly end of the said Green\nlake; theace west 40 chains, thence\nsouth 40 ehains, thence east 40\nchains more or less, to the shore of\nGreen lake, thence northerly following the shore ot Green lake to the\npoint   ef   commencement,   containini. IBoston, Mass 110.00\nior   rort  Simpson,  fori  Nelson  anau6Q aciMmmar leaa. IWashington, D.C 107.60\nT*X*T\ufffd\ufffd*7&.^l!J*Zy?ms&\\     ~ '^ -ZjW-gffSWV^S^\nDated August 2t?m~ \"\"^tuTU,.* tatormatto* *8*\/%~*\n88. PRINCE JOHN\nLeaves    Prince    Rupert Wednesdays!\nfor Port  Simpson, Port  Nelson and 1\nTickets on sale September 25th,\nOctober 2nd, 6th. Return limit 2\ufffd\ufffd\ndays from date of sale. October 17th,\n18th, l&th. Return limit November\n15th.\nWinnipeg, Man $ 60.00\nMinneapolis, Mln     60.00\nSt. Paul, Minn     60.00\nChicago, 111     72.50\nMilwaukee, Wig     71.50\nToronto, Ont     91.60\nMontreal,  Que 105 0 j\nNew York. N.Y  108.50\nCharlotte City, Skidegate, Pacotl\nLockport, Jedway, Ikeda and Rose\nHarbor.\nGRAND TRUNK PACIFIC RAILWAY\nfor points between Prince Rupert and\nVanarsdel, connects with SS. \"Prince\nRupert\" and \"Prince George,\" both\nnorth and southbound.\t\nGRAND TRUNK RAILWAY SY8TEM\n(The Double Track Route.)\nThrough tickets from Vancouver to\nall points east of Chicago   in Canada | MMete ef title number 7721F, Issue!\nand the United States.\nStandard     and   Tourist    Sleepers.\nMeals a-la-carte. '\nLAND REGISTRY ACT.\nRe the fractional northwest quarter\nof sectlen 7, township 11 (121\nacres), Langley Farm, part of lot 3,\nsubdivision of lots 21 and 22, group\n2. New Westminster district.\nWhereas proof of the  loss of cer\n*-*ftm\nED.\nOOULET, Agent.\nNew Westmli -<w.\nOr H. W. Brodie, G.P.A., Vancouver\nTICKET8 TO AND FROM EUROPE\nH. G. SMITH, C. P. * T. A.\nPhone Seymour 7100.\nL. V. DRUCE, Commercial Agent.\nPhone Seymour 3060.\n627  Granville  Street,  Vancouver.\nIT PAY8 TO ADVERTI8E\nIN THE\nDAILY  NEWS\nTHE\nBankofToronto\nNEW BANKING\nACCOUNTS\nMany People who have\nnever oefore been in a\nposition to do so, may\nnow be ready to\ufffd\ufffdopen a\nbank account.\nThe Bank of Toronto\noffers to all such people\nthe facilities of their\nlarge and strong banking organization.\nInterest is paid on Savings\nBalaaces^half-yearly.\nBusiness (Accounts   opened\non favorable terms.\nINCORPORATED^ 855\nASSETS $48,000,000\nNEW WESTMINSTER,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdRANCH\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIS Columbia Street\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. C\nln the name of Colon    McLeod,   bas\nbeen filed ln this office.\nNotice ls hereby given that I shall,\nat the expiration of one month from\nthe data ef the flrst publication hereof, In a daily newspaper published ln\nthe city ef New Westminster, Issue a\nduplicate of the said certificate, unless ln tha meantime valid objection\nbe made to me ln writing.\nC. S. KEITH,\nDistrict Registrar of Titles.\nLand Registry Office. New West\nminster. B:C. July 11. 1911.\nr\nLAND  REGI8TRY ACT.\nRe lots 2, 3, 4 and 9, block 2, lots 1,\n2, 3, 4. 5, 6, 7 and 12, block 3, lotB\n1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8 and 10, block 4, of\nsection 30, block 5 north, range 2\nwest, In the District of New Westminster, Map 454.\nWhereas proof of the loss of certificate  of  title  number  1725 P.,  Issued\nIn the name of Aulay Morrison, has\nbeen flled in this office.\nNotice ls hereby given that 1 shall,\nat the expiration of one month from\ntbe date of the flrst publication hereof, In a daily newspaper published ln\nthe City of New Westminster, Issue a\nduplicate of tbe said certlflcate, un\nless In the meantime valid objection\nbe made to me ln writing.\nC. S. KEITH,\nDistrict Registrar of Titles.\nLand Registry Ofllce, New Westminster, B.C., October 7, 1911.\nJ. Newsome & Sons\nPainters, Paperhangers\nand Decorators\nEstimates Glvsn.\n214 Sixth Avenue. Phone 567\nNEW WESTMINSTER S.C.\nPhone 388.\nP. O. Box 667.\nJACKSON PRINTING CO.\nFine Office Stationery\nJob Printing of Every\nDescription \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Butter\nWrappers a Specialty\nMarket Square, New Westminster.\nCOAL\nNew\nWellington\nJOSEPH MAYERS\nPhone 106.    P. O. Box 346.\nOffice, Front St, Foot of Sixth.\nlOo-piflf\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -^<. *f\nMartin-Senour\n1004 Pure Paint\nwhich we caeraatee so be Pare\nWhile haal. Pare Oxide of Use, eat\nPare Uaeeed oil, with of eoerae the\naocooaary oolorint incrddlenta aad\narrets. Mow to b* entirely trathtnl,\ntbay de aake a tew dariuehades\naaeuutbt prodoced tram lea*\nudilH. Oome l> the etore aad we\nwill shew thea lo roe-bet eveir\nether oolor t***aattr*lj end aba*,\nlately 100 per eeatFare Fatal,\nend act a *rop ef adatteialtoa et\neabetttatloa le abed l\ufffd\ufffd.\nWe recommend thli exeeUeaS\nbread to ell oar friend* end eoatossr\nem. Another good point la that two\nsallona ot thla paint coram ae ama\napace ae these salloai ef (he ailed\nT. J. Trapp & Co.\nNEW WESTMIN8TER.\nnsr\n***** -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\nTHE DAILY NEW*\nWEDNE8DAY, OCTOBER 1S, 1911.\nPACE FOUR\nthe Daily News\nPublished by The Dally News Publishing Company. Limited, at theirofflces\nearner   of   McKenzie   and   Victoria\nStreets.\nE. A. Paige Managing Director\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJB -jCMMl*--*'\nWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1911.\nIMPERTINENCE    NOT     IMPERIAL\nI8M.\nIt ls a curious fact that those who\nmost loudly proclaim the gospel of\nImperial unity are those who assert\nthat such a thing as unity of the\nBritish Empire does not exist.\nCanadians cannot have forgotten,\nsays the Ottawa Free Press, that Mr\nJoseph Chamberlain, the F\ufffd\ufffdW of\nall Imperialists, saw fit t(> pay the\nDominion the dubious compliment of\nassuming that tbe granting of a preference by Britons was the price demanded by Canada for .remaining\nwithin the Empire, and regardless of\nthe fact that such an argument was a\nreflection upon the loyalty of Cana-\ndians it was used with painful iteration on the platforms of the Tariff\nReform Leaguers.\nThe recent election campaign showed that those who arrogate to them-\neelves in Canada the title of Imperialists are not above insinuating\nthat their countrymen would VW\ntheir connection with the Bniplto $\ufffd\ufffdr\na mess of pottage, and now \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd#jtfe\nRight Hon. Walter Longj > dfed-ln-\nthe-wool Imperialist, with the statement that the self-government enjoyed by Canada is virtual separation\nfrom the Empire.\n\"Couldn't Canada tomorrow,,, if Bhe\nchose to do so, throw off the British\nflag\"\" he asks.   Of course she could,\njust as Britain herself could become\na republic tomorrow if she chose to.\nThis same Mr. Long would be greatly\nhorrified at the very suggestion that\nthe people of the motherland   were\ncapable under any circumstances   of\ncasting their loyalty to the winds, but\nbe apparently sees no harm in sip-\nposing that Canadians might be guilty\nof such a treasonable act.\nIt is this kind of stupid talk that\nmars the name of Imperialism, and\nits stupidity is all the more flagrant\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwhen we remember that it was only\nthe other day that the Right. Hon. A\n3, Balfour held up Canada to tbe rest\nof the. Kmpire as a noble example of\nsacrifice on behalf of tbe Hag.\nBaking Powder^\n^AbsolutelyPure\n'*.\nWhere the finest biscuit,\ncake, hot-breads, crusts\nor-puddings are required\nRoyal is indispensable.\nRoyal is equally valuable\nin the preparation of plain,\nsubstantial, everyday\nfoods; for all occasions.\nThe only baking powd\ufffd\ufffdr *\ufffd\ufffd**\nfrom RoyalGrapeCream otTartar\nCorners\nNo Alum\nNo Lime Phosphates\nwho has\nThes* fhe men together have walked\nneariv a million miles.\nTrack Inspection is reduced o an\nexact science on the Pennsyl ania. A\nnatrolman registers In the tower w\nfhe end of his beat the hog^and m n-\nute of his arrival: departs .on his\noumey and registers, &%&*\nhe tower at the other end. He car\nrles a registering clOcK hy wnicn\nhis trips can be checked^t.o the minute His route usually covers four\nSm. bSt is iess than WJUMf \ufffd\ufffd\nstretches where special ^gggg\nis needed. At night the inspector\nhis only the light of Ujrtan erMo\nwork bv, but he must see that everv\nfrog, switch and signal is in good order.\nFED    ON\nJOHNSON'S '\nFAVORITE\nDISH\nLICHFIELD, Eng., Oct,; 17.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLichfield, the birthplace of Dfc Johnston\nlust celebrated 20L\ufffd\ufffdnd - anniversary\nof the birth of its most illustrious\ncitizen, and .Tohnstonian scholars and\nadmirers bave been gathered in the\nancient city to take parfiU the commemorative proceedings.\nU the old    house    in    St.  Mary s\nthe\nranged for him, and led across the\nl'nited States to San Francisco. From\nthere he worked his passage Uo Honolulu, and thence to Brisbane, in\nQueensland. Captain Seaton has a\nvery high opinion of the Australians\np.nd their country. \"It's the best\ncountry in the world,\" he remarked.\n\"Any man who wants to work can\nearn $2.50 a day or more, and the\npeople are always ready to help you\non a bit.\" He was very successful as\na lecturer there, and made enough\nmoney to carry him through his Asiatic journey.\nUev. Dr. A. Wallace-Williamson, minister of St. diles' Cathedral, Edin-\nburgh, and Chaplain to the King in\nScotland, declared the   'Jraj-y open.\n(t comprises ahout l,9f' volumes,\nwas formed hy the la' Rev. Peter\nHaye-Hunter of Edin' ,-gh. and his\nheen presented tn the i irthplace by\nhis widow. Among its rarest treasures are first editions if the Diction-\nary, the \"Adventurer\" \"ilamhle;'\"\n\"Kaselas,\" and the poetical w^rks and\nlolitleal  tracts.\nThe annual Johnson supper wss\nheld in the oil George flotel. The\n\"coarse\" fan- beloved by .bonson\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nbeefsteak pudding with kidneys, oysters and mushrooms, baun.:h ol mutton, apple pie wltl cream and toasted cheese\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwas served and then the\nold ale and punch were brought in to\nthe guests and each a ohuretuvarden\npipe and a dish of tobacco.\nMost of the speakers of the; subsequent panegyrics cf the Doctor were\nScotsmen. It. was against their nation that Johnson directed so much\nhumorous satire.\nPHINCE   AND   LADIES.\nSquare  where Johnson was born\nWkVW   wYieu  we tlTvd  one  ot  tta  cMel \\ CommUVee  accepted on \\>ehf.\\t  ot tbe\n<B.T>o\ufffd\ufffdv\\e\ufffd\ufffd ao W\\i\ufffd\ufffd4 lo V\\ve VeacMnRR OT\\c^y ,^e Haye-Hunter Library, and\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMalory as to imagine tbat self gov-' the president of the Johnson Society\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdernment spells separation and disruption ? Far from being an argument\nagainst Home Utile for Ireland, as\nMr. Long represents it to be, tho case\nof Canada and the other self-governing Dominions is one in its favor.\nCanada's experience has proven, ns\nSouth Africa is also proviirr. ttfai\nthere is no better guarantee of peaca\ncontentment, and prosperity to a c tun-\ntry thi'.n the ri.Mit. to govern its o,vn\naffairs, anl  it  is an  insult  to the In\ntelllgence  to assume thai  the same\nright    would    in  their    case convert\nthem into a nation of traitors.\nWhat   the    Irish    people  know    us\n\"Castle rule\" i.s but another name for\nthe Downing Street rule   from which\nCanada  Buffered    in    the    past.,  and\nwhich, presumably, Mr, Long   would\nwish to see restored.    If    ever    there\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwas ;i time when Canada's relations\nwith the motherland ware strained it\nwas when the paternalism of the C6I\noniiil  Office beld  sway,    S If government  has not  only  made  for material\ni '   >\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  i, but iias   strengthened   the\n1 '    thi : bind the Dominion   to tin\nEmpire   and there ia no reason    to\nthai   Lhe  results  would    be\nti lent iii the i asa of Ireland,\nTalk of treason and of separation I\nii it calculated to i remote that bar\nmony umong the component parts ol\nthe Empire which la the ea ance ol\nImperial unity, especially when n\ncomes from those who make a boast\nof their own loyalty, it is nol lm-\npi rl&lism, out impertinence.\nSOME   WALKER.\nOld Track .Walker. .Has. .Huge\nRecord\t\nNew York, Oct. 17\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGeorge A.\nflurns, the oldest track-walker in\npoint of service on the Pennsylvania\nRailroad, will soon have completed a\nwalk of 17K.000 miles in the pei form\nance of his duties. He has just put\nhis 177,'.illOth mile behind him. In\nkeeping vigil over the track placed in\nliis care, he has walked the equivalent\nof seven and one-third times around\nthe world ln the last thirty-five years.\nJourneying four timea a day between\nGreensburg, Pa.. and Youngwood\nYard, a distance of 3.63 miles, he has\nInspected 5,725,800 splice plates on\nhalf that  many  rail  joints.\nOther Pennsylvania track watchmen who have distance records are\nWilliam Young of Franklin, Pa., with\n164,144 miles in twenty-two years and\neight months; Dennis Walters. Nor-\nristown, Pa., with U.1,624 miles in\ntwenty-three years and four months,\nand   .Julius   Hejn  of   Edgewood,   Md.,\nPekin  and  the   Moon\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWa ks  Around\nthe World.\nThere is much pertuioitlon in the\nOi inian   Royal   family   circle   at     the\npresent time   over the escapades   of\nPrince   Adalbert,   tbe     Kaiser's   third\nson.  This young man is. it is s iid. un\nisuaily susoepttble to female beauty,\nand bus fallen Ln love with a Marten-\nbad lady renowned for her good looks.\nii\ufffd\ufffd.- is so infatuated thai be tins   ar\nranged to pay a visli to le-r parent',\nshortly.    Humor bus it  that tbe Kair,\ner will nip the affair ln tho bud by\nordering the young man to Join a\nwarship which is shortly to sail on a\nprolonged   voyage,\nFrom Peking it Is announced that |\nthe Chinese government is about to\ndrop the troublesome rnocn from its\ncalendar, and follow the practice of\nWestern nations In using only the\nsun. The present Chinese year began\ncm January 30, and Is the year 48 of\nthe 7'ith cycle, a cycle consisting ot\nsixty years, and the first year of the\nfirst cycle occurring B. C. L't;:i7. Put\nowing to tlie use of tlie moon the\nnumber of days in the year varies\nconsiderably. Ordinarily there are\ntwelve lunations or months, but once\nin thirty lunations a thirteenth lunation is added to the year, as a result\nof which the year can be as short as\n354 days, or as long as \"S4 days. The\nmonths are more regular than our\nown, alternating between twenty-nine\nand thirty days. The Chinese year\ncompletely fails to keep the seasons\nwithin proper bounds.\nCaptain tl. M. Beaten, the American, who is walking around the world\nfor a wager of $35,000, is at present In\nEdinburgh, and has been relating\nsome of his experiences. He left\nNew York on April 9, 1908, and has\ncompleted 33,700 miles of liis tour.\nThe   route   he  lias   ta  take   was   ar-\nHad Many Rolls.\nXew York, Octo. 17.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdClosing time\nhad come and Rudolph Kerstlng, the\namiable Arctic explorer, who ta treasurer of the Seamen's Church Institute, which conducts a bank for mariners, was checking up his accounts.\nDown tbe aisle there came a soft\nOriental tread and ln front of tbe\ncashier's window stood a dark-\nskinned, brown-eyed Cingalese. A\nleather hued hand slid a small cylinder of bills under the wicket, the\nsame bundle being reefed with a\nhemp gasket.\n\"Quite some roll that, my friend.\"\nremarked Mr. Kerstlng. \"You come\nrtone too soon. I was Just closing.\nThis is the last money I take In today.\"\nDeftly tb\" cashier nndH the bills\nnnd rounte; out ten of the one dollar\ndenomina'i tl..\n\"Ten. that fight?\" he Inquired\n\"So. Sahib.\" was the reply of the\nCingalese ?ailor man. \"I have more*.\"\nOut of some hidden lazarette the\nson of the Seven Seas hoisted another roll. That too. when unfurled was\nfound to contain ten crinky one dollar bills.\n\"Vou said rro-o, Sahib,\" continued\nthe Oriental wavfarer. And yet there\nis more. Shall I not give all at\nonce?\"\n\"You should keep your monev together, my friend.\" replied Mr. Kerst-\ning. \"Come, bring it all out and be\nMulck.    1 must catch a train.\"\nInto a canvas bag which was hung\nby his side went the long, slim hands\nof the depositor, and when they were\nlifted out again like the bucket of a\ndredge there were as many more little rolls as he could hold. Again and\nagain he dived, each time bringing\nup yet more bundles. Some men\nhave large rolls. This son of the\nOrient boasted an even hundred of\nthem. Kach. tightly tied, held ten\none dollar hills\nThe hoard represented the savings\nof several years of hard work on\nboard Hritish tramp steamships in all\nparts of the globe, lt hud grown too\nbulky for Its owner, and he had taken\nit to this sailors' bunk, at 1 State\nstreet, wliich is known from sen to\nsea.\nN'o,  Mr. Kerstlng did  not catch hll j\ntrain.\nDouble corner on Fourteenth street\n132x132, splendid view. For quick\nsale, $3000; One-half cash, balance\n6, 12 and 18 months. (60)\nDouble corner on Eighth avenue,\n100x132, splendid view, $1750; One-\nthird cash; balance 6 and 12 months\n(No. 76)\nDouble corner on Twelfth street,\nsize 97x132 feet. Price $4000; One-\nthird caah, balance 6, 12 and 18\nmonths.    (No. 108)\nOne cleared lot, all ln fruit, on\nSeventh avenue, very near Twelfth\nstreet; stable on lot; Price $2100;\nOne-quarter cash, balance 6, 12 and\n18 montha.    (No. 114)\nDouble corner on Henley street\n107x132, all cleared, facing south,\nsmall house and barn on property.\nPrice $2700; One-quarter cash, balance 6, 12 and 18 months.   (No. 20)\nOPEN 7 TO 9 TONIGHT.\nPeoples Trust Co\n431 Columbia\ntelephone 669.\nCOUGH TIME!\nAnd Here We Are Wilh\nAll Sorts of Cough and\nCold Cures. We Also\nHave a Fine Display of\nHOT WATER BOTTIES\nNO OLD STOCK\nG. S. Davies\nYOUR PRESCRIPTION\nDRUGGIST\nCliff\nBlock\nNsw  Westminster.\nPhone 40\nB.C.\nF. G. GARDINER.\n,f\nA. L. MERCER\nGardiner & Mercer\nM. 8. A.\nARCHITECTS\nWKSTMINSTKK     TitUST      BLOCK.\nPhone  661. Box 772\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C\nFOR SALE\nExtra large lot on Tenth street, between Queens avenue and\nThird avenue. Price $2000; one-third cash, balance 6, 12 and 18\nmonths.\nOne lot on Columbia street east, 45x115 with lane at rear. Price\n$1150;  one-third cash, balance G, 12 and 18 months.   This is a snap.\nIf you are looking for a country home with 4V4 acres of land,\nhere ls your chance. Splendid modern house, also chicken house,\nbarn and root house, close to train on River road, Surrey. Price\n$5000; one-quarter cash, balance 6, 12, 18 and 24 months. Don't mlss\nthis chance.\nMcGill & Coon\nPhone 1004.\nREAL   ESTATE   AGENTS.\nRoom 5, Bank of Cemmsrce Building.\nNOTICE!\nGeorge Adams, late proprietor of\nthe Public Supply Stores, Columbia street, New Westminster, hereby\nrequests that all accounts owing to\nhim be paid as early aa possible, at\nhis new offices ln the Odd Fellows'\nblock, 716 Carnarvon atreet, New\nWeetmlneter. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nWEST END\nWe have a choice selection of lots ln the West End. Propositions\nthat will Interest both builders and bome seekers.\nSAPPERTON\nFor the man with a little money our lots in Sapperton at $375\nwill aurely appeal.   Excellent view, city water, etc.\nNATIONAL FINANCE COMPANY, LIMITED.\n521 Columbia Street.\nPhone 515.\nA New Lumber Yard\nCOME TO US FOR\nLumber,   Mouldings,   Laths   and   Shingles\n..   OUR STOCK IS LARGE  AND COMPLETE.\nCROWN TIMBER AND TRADING CO., LTD.\nPHONE  904.\n(Old Glase Works Factory.\nSAPPERTON.\nwhite star :;;:r\ufffd\ufffdSERVicE-iARC[STs'\/:^scwnoA\nSAILINGS  FROM   MONTREAL AND QUEBEC TO LIVERPOOL\n\"Uiireirtlc\" SKSLUpfeT Z\ufffd\ufffdc.,'.'-\n\"\"ASS. \"Teutonic\" sKS? \"Canada\"N0V4-\nLuxurloua Twin\nAnd Trlpls Scrsw\nDEC. 2.\nCHRISTMAS 8AILING8:\n..^,,-h   Me    and   Halifax to Liverpool.\nTEUTONIC\" DEC. 14.\nrom'suCTlt'h Tarring orchestra.' First, second and third c a,s\npassengerscarrled:__ < \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nwssss r c*^*^;y^z'^ririA\"^.\nr\nHarmless, Old-Fashioned Remedy Brings Back Color to Gray\nHair and Makes It Grow.\nHow many old-fashioned remedies are\nheing used, which goes to show thai  it |\nis hard to Improve some of our grandmothers' old-time, tried remedies. For in-\n'tance, tor keeping the ball1 dark, soft and\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,'lnssy nothing equals our grandmothers' |\n\"aage tea.\"   Although, by the addition of ,\nsulphur nnd other Ingredients, this old-\nfashioned brew has been made more cf- ,\nfectivc as  u  scalp  tonic  and  color  re-\nutorer.\nNowadays, when our hair comes out or\nci'ts faded oi- gray, Instead of going to\nthe garden or garret for herbs nnd\nmaking the \"tea\" ourselves, we simply\ngo to the nearest drug store nnd ask for\nn bottle of Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur\nHnir Remedy.\nDruggists nre authorised to sell it\nunder guarantee thnt the money will !\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nrefunded if it fails to do exactly ns represented.\nTiiis preparation is offered to tho\npuhlle nt fifty cents n bottle, and is\nrecommended and sold by all druggists.\nWe have BUYERS for all good INSIDE\nPROPERTY.   List Yours With\nUs At Once.\nMotherwell  & Darling\nMERCHANTS BANK BUILDING\nPhone 591\nNew Westminster\nfi\nm\ufffd\ufffd ,,   s0i*m*\nWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1911.\nTHE DAILY NEWS.\nPAOT flYM,\nSCORE TWO TO ONE\nBy Favor of Walloper Baker\nAthletics Win.\nTHIRD HARD FOUGHT BATTLE\nGiantajGet Away with One and Hold\nIt to Ninth, But Phillys Come\nBack.\nNew York, Oct. 17.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe third\ngame in the championship series be\ntween the Giants and the Philadelphia\nAthletics was played here today,\nwhen Frank Baker's war club did the\ntrick again, and the Athletics won by\na score of 3 to 2. It was an eleven\nInnings contest and was probably the\nmost bitterly contested battle in any\nof the world's series seen in recent\nyears.\nThe turn in the tide came in the\nninth. Mathewson, almost Invincible,\nhad blanked the Athletics through\neight desperate Innings. One run by\nthe Giants in the third made it look\nlike a sure thing. Hope had almost\ndeserted the Phlladelphlans when\nBakir came up in the ninth. One\nlucky swat drove tbe leather into the\nright field seats for a bome run, and\nthe score was equal and the battle\non again.\nIn the eleventh Herzog, In a last\n\"Iron Jack\" Coombs pitched masterly\nball. Neither team could score. In\nthe eleventh Eddie Collins piked out\na. single to centre. Once again Baker\nwas there, and before the scoreboard\nmarks went up both players had\ncrossed the pan.\nIn t he eleventh Herzog, ln a last\nrally, doubled for the Giants. Then\nBecker, the former Boston home-run\nhitter, went In to bat for Matty. He\ndelivered and, partly owing to a\nfumble by Collins, Herzog crossed\nthe plate. Becker, too eager, was out\nstealing second, and the game was\ndone.\nThe only regrettable feature of the\ngame was when Baker, whose bat has\nwon two games of the series, was\nspiked by Snodgrass. The crowd,\nstrongly New York ln sympathy\nthough it was, hisse.i the splker and\neheered Baker as he trotted back to\nthird.\nScores:\nNew York.\nAB. R.   IB.\nfrom R. H. Cllburn, 312 Water street, |\nVancouver. I\nTradition ought to go for something\nin  ye anclente  and  honorable game |\nof gowff, and that being so, there is {\nevery  reason why British    Columbia\nshould make an excellent showing on\nthe  greens  and  golf  courses  of  the\nVfeat.    In the Northwest tournament\nat Seattle, which was played on the\nlinks  of  the Puget    Sound  Club on\nSaturday, Seattle came out the win-',\nner.    Five clubs entered the competi-1\ntion.    Vancouver emerged third,    being beaten by  Seattle and  Portland,\nand beating Tacoma and Everett.\nGOLD FROM SEA WATER.\nBevore, lf. ..\nDoyle, 2b. ...\nSnedcrass, cf.\nMurray, rf. ..\nMgrklfi. lb, .\nfferzbg, :;b. ..\nFletcher, ss. .\nMeye s, c.\nMathewson, p\nBecker*   ...   ,\no\n0\n0\n0\n0\n1\n0\n1\n0\n0\nPO.\n0\n4\n3\n2\n11\n3\n3\"\n5\n, V\n0\nA.\n0\n5\n0\n0\n1\n3\n3\n3\n3\n0\nE.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd e\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd BOWLING. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n****************\nThe game of bowls ls a fascinating\nsport. To tbe Britisher it is rich in\nhistoric associations, though to him\nbowling, as a rule, means a green turf\nmown and rolled smooth as a billiard\ntable. It recalls the days of the\nGreat Elizabeth, and a certain game\nat which the adventurous gentlemen\nsailors who then and afterward\nsinged the King of Spain's beard,\ntrundled bowls In apparent unconcern\nwhile the great Armada came into\nview on adjacent waters.\nAlley bowling, which ls the form\nof the sport best known ln the west,\noffers a complex study to the beginner. Many, in tbeir first game, bave\nthe luck which sometimes attends\nbeginners in everything, and then, in\nfuture attempts, wonder why the\nsame success does not attend their\nefforts.\nThe advice of the veteran ls, practice, practice, practice. Luck certain\nIy cuts a large figure in the game, *>ut\nnothing short of skill wlll hang up\nbig scores. It will take weeks and\nweeks of practice to enable the player\nto pick up spares as well as to make\nbig strikes.\nIt ls a comparatively easy matter\nto knock down all the pins with tbe\nfirst ball, but when one faces a spare\nlt ls quite different. Very often what\nis known as the \"back kick\" ls nothing more than one pin skidding off\nthe alley and then back again, and\ncatching the piece ot wood that seems\ndetermined to stick. On other occasions a single pin wlll roll about the\nalley and Its course will, as likely\nas not, take it to the only other pin\nleft standing. If there ls enough\nmomentum with the pin that is roiling the player usually chalks up a\nBtrike. In this case be considers that\nhe has made a lucky hit, and sucb\nhits are by no means uncommon.\nIt takes a long time to master a\ngood delivery, for even with old\ntimers balls display a cantankerous\ndisposition to reverse at an inoppor\ntune juncture. Often a playpr has\nstarted to his seat, thinking he has a\nspare \"nailed to the floor,\" only to\nsee the ball take an eccentric curve\nand miss the pin, or pins, altogether,\nSeldom does one see two players with\nexactly the same style of delivery, in\nbowling, as ln most other things, each\nplayer has a style, or bas one or two\nmannerisms distinctly his own.\nChemist Saya He Can Also Make the\nOcean Yield  Potash.\nOskar Nagel, research chemist,\nchemical engineer and author, announces he has perfected a process\nwhereby he wlll extract gol 1 and kali\n(potash) from the ocean at a remarkably low cost. Dr. Nagel will give\nhis first demonstration of his process\nbefore the New York section of the\nAmerican Chemical Society. He has\nappeared before the leading chemical\nsocieties of the world. His paper\non \"The Recovery of Metals from Extremely Dilute Solutions\" wlll be accompanied by a demonstration scheduled to begin at 3 p.m., to permit of\nits completion In six hours, and in\ntime for the members of the society\nto see the result of the new process.\nDr. Nagel purposes to market gold\nunder his new process at $3 an ounce.\nThe metal now costs $20.67 an ounce.\nIn the same way he wlll produce\npotash at $3.15 a ton that costs $8.50\nto Import from Germany. The producing plants projected by the discoverer will be modern, anff although\nDr. Nagel has no patent on his process he withholds from the publlc the\none Item of Information with regard\nto the temperature of the weak solution of iron sulphate he will employ.\n\"The Germans have a monopoly In\npotash,\" Dr. Nagel said. \"This government bas had Its experts In the\nUnited States geological survey at\nwork for many years in search of\nkali-bearing lands, but without success. The only source for this metal\nis the soil of Strasburg, Germany,\nwhich thus far has been productive.\nIt was tbis metal about whicli Germany and the United States engaged\nln a wordy controversy several I\nmonths ago, and after which the price\nof potash for Importation into this\ncountry was left at $8.50 a ton. I\nbelieve there almost was talk of war\nabout the subject.\n\"Sea water Is the basic principle of\nkali and chemists have found the sea\nwater. In ages when the water was\nreceding from the earth, carried\naway the kali and deposited it in the\nocean. There have been many attempts to extract these metals, but\nnone of these efforts met with success, principally due to the methods\nemployed and the great cost of these\nmethods. Ramsey tried it among\nmany others, and he gave it up. My\nexperiments have carried me over a\nperiod of two years, and now I am\nprepared to announce my process ln\npart.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNew York Press.\nders on the lightest style of musical\ncomedy. Well-known characters are\nthere more or less as Dickens described them and as Crulkshank drew\nthem, but they are much lighter\nhearted than tradition supposes them\nto be. Indeed, the England of Dick-1\nens is made to look as gay as lt ls\nin \"Tom Jones.\nTwo acts of this light treatment ot\na serious foreign author rather unset-'\ntied the first night pudienoe, ^,ut\nwhen it was quite certain that the au |\nthors were not intending the play to\nbe taken very seriously all joined in I\nthe fun. and there waa nothing but\napproving laughter right to the end.\nln the first act, at Mr. Pickwick's\nroom in London, Pickwick, Winkle, I\nSnodgrass and Tupman are planning\nto go to Rochester. Mrs. Bardell Is'\npersuaded by Dodson and Fogg to\nfollow the party with the Intention\nof inveigling Pickwick Into a marriage proposal. Two months later the\nBull at Rochester (Act II.) is the\nscene of all kinds of startling adventures in which Sam Weller and Jingle play a great part. Pickwick escapes the danger of a duel, but comes\nupon the greater peril of Mrs. Bardell.\nThe two speak at cross-purposes, and,\nthinking that Pickwick has proposed,\nor rather that he haa accepted her\nproposal, Mrs. Bardell faints with excitement.\nThe party moves on to Mr. War-\ndie's Manor Farm (Act IV.) for some\nChristmas shooting and for Yuletide\nrevels, while tbe solicitors prepare\nfor the great trial of Bardell v. Pickwick which comes on ln the Court of\nCommon Pleas. Pickwick loses his\naction, but not his philosophic dignity.\nHe decides to accept the hardship of\nhalf-crown dinners at the Fleet prison rather than pay an unjust award.\nBut the play ends like the traditional\nfairy tale, and there is music and\ndancing and the sound of wedding\nbells within the walls of the Fleet\nprison. (Act V.) when the curtain\ngoes down for the last time. The\nBcenery is quite effectively English,\nthe costumes are pleasing, an.l, considering the number of characters,\nthe acting ls very good on tbe whole.\nPICKWICK\nHAS\nDELIGHTED\nPARIS\n32\n.)\n4\n83\n20\n6\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBatted for Mathews\non\nn ninth.\nPhiladelphia.\nAH.\nn.\nIB.\nPO.\nA.\nE\nLord,  lf 5\n0\n0\n5\n0\n0\nOldring,   cf.   ..  5\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\nCollins, 2b.   ...  5\nl\n2\n5\n8\n1\nBaker,   2b.   ...  5\n2\n2\n2\n1\n0\nMurphy,   if.   . .  B\n0\n0\n2\n0\nQ\nDavis, lb 4\n0\n2\n10\n0\n0\nBarry,  bs 3\n0\n2\n1\n4\n0\nLapp, c 4\n0\n1\n8\n5\n(\nCoombs, p.   ... 4\n0\n0\n0\n1\n0\nBowlers will be interested in tbe\nannouncement that Joe West, the\nchampion ten pin bowler of the world,\nls about to undertake a tour of the\nwest. He will give exhibitions during his trip, taking on singles. The\nconditions under which be wlll play\nare: 1. He will roll any man an\nexhibition or match game of five or\nmore games. 2. Wlll roll one or mor?\nexhibition games. 3. He will put on\nsingles in the afternoon against all\ncomers and relays for the benefit of\nthose who are unable to witness his\nperformance ip the evening. The date\nwhen the champion will reach British\nColumbia has not yet been announced.\nParis, Oct.  17.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe  small  theatre\nknown as the Athenee gave the first\nperformance of \"Monsieur r'ekwick,\"\na very broad adaptation   of Dickens'\nbook, written ln five acts, b- M. Duval and Robert Charvey.   M. Duval Is\nthe well-known translates v hose versions of Shaespeare have I' id much\nsuccess in the past few year', and M.\nCharvey,   as. co-author   of  \"Mile  Jo-\nsette ma Femme,\" the most successful play of Its kind of the past ten\nyears is another popular playwright.\nWriting together,   however, the two I\nauthors have produced a work quite I\nforeign  to the    accustomed  stvle  of\neither of them.   Dickens, who hitherto .has j>e\ufffd\ufffdn   treat ed k\ufffd\ufffdo   serUmehr  ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, ,ln..*\ufffd\ufffdn teya\nFrance.   Is  here invdked   fbr  cojjabo-   W>ttle costs\nration in a burlespe, which often bor-   (Latin for sage)\ni)   33    14     1\n40     3   ^^^^^^^\nScore by innings:\nNew York  ..0 010000000 1\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd2\nHits   ..    ..0 0 20000001 1\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd4\nPhiladelphia 0000000010 2\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd3\nHits   ..   ..0 011100210 3\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd8\nSummary\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdStolen bases, Collins,\nBarry, Murray; sacrifice hits, Barry;\ntwo-base hits, Barry, Herzog; home\nruns, Baker; bases on balU oil\nCoombs 2; struck out by Coombs 7.\nby Mathewson 3; Double plays. Doyle\nto Fletcher. Umpires\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDineen and\nKlein, Connolly and Brennan.\n* *\nSPORT   NOTES.\nTonight the following team goes to\nVancouver to do battle on the Pender\nalleys In the ' lnter-citv comoetition:\nDill, Latham, Ralph Wilson\nO'Connor and Walsh.\nPike,\nMakes Hair Grow.\nRyall has an invlgorator that wll!\ngrow hair or money back.\nThe time to take care of your hair\nis when you have hair to take care of.\nIf your hair is getting thin, gradually falling out, lt cannot be long before tbe spot appears.\nThe greatest remedy to stop the\nhair from falling ls SALVIA, the\nGreat American Hair Grower, first\ndiscovered ln England. SALVIA furnishes nourishment to the hair roots\nand acts so quickly that people are\namazed.\nAnd   remember,   it   destroys   the\nDandruff germ, the    little    pest that ill\nsaps the life that should  go to the ] ||\n; hair from the roots.\nSALVIA Is sold by Ryall under all\npositive guarantee to cure Dandruff, 11\nstop Falling Hair and Itching  ScaU>\nwwn>]> b&ok.    A. larsa.'\nror\ufffd\ufffd \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMjVW\nIs on every bottle\n\"TIONO\"\nTo Business or Picnic Parties:\nPatronize thc \"Tiono\"\nLarge and commodious, carrying one to twenty\nwith comfort.   Apply to Alex Speck, on boat at\nBegbie street slip, or 'phone L. 558.\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\nIn preparation for tbe game with\nVancouver Thistles, at Vancouver on\nSa.unlny, the Rovers had a practice\ngame at Moody park last night.\nTonight at eight o'clock the New\nWestminster football team will OMt\nat Bert Lindsay's store on Tentli\nSrerttO select the tea^the^o\nbetween the City and East Burnany\nteams on Saturday.\nCon\nJones, of Vancouver, has en-\nuon  juuod,  *,.\ntered the Held of sport promoting in\nearnest.    The lacrosse world ls not\nto be permitted to absorb his energies\nLU   lie   yar. ....-*     .\ncompletely and exclusively\nassumed charge of the Vancouver\nteam in the British Columbia League\ngames and has prepared the schedule\nfor the season, which opens on Saturday, Ooctober 28, with a game at\nNanaimo, between Nanaimo and\nCumberland. The season will close\non April 13, next year.\nH. W. Stevenson, the great billiard\nplayer, is now In British Columbia.\nOn board the Zealandia. Mr. Stec-\nenson arrived at Victoria yesterday\nmorning. Tonight he gives an exhibition game ln the Vancouver Club\nand tomorrow night he wlll play a\nmatch with a British Columbia cueist\nat Mclntyre's parlors on Seymour\nstreet. Seymour street ls the first\natreet east of Granvills, and Mclntyre's parlors are situated in the 500\nblock, which Ib just south of Pender\netreet. Tickets for admission to the\nmatch ot Thursday night can be had\nYOUR FEET\nshould.receive as much attention, and\nshould be clothed as well as any part of\nyour body. You owe it to yourself to\ntreat them well YOUR HEALTH DEMANDS IT. The healthy hose for you is\nnot the \"all wool,\" but the PweWoolHose\nwhich we can show you in Fast Black\nCashmere and Worsteds at 25c,  35c 50c\nFOR TENDER FEET\nwe have a splendid CUSHION SOLE half hose, that means solid comfort to the\nman with tender feet.   Best grade Pure Wool Cashmere at 60c pair.\nDR. JAEGERS\nspells the purest in pure wool. We stock Jaegers Half Hose in plain Blacks and\nFancies at 50c to $1.00, including Dr. Jaegers Pure Wool Heather.\nFANCY HALF HOSE\nis a department in itself, and requires extra good taste in the selection of these.\nOur range includes everything that is-new in Color and Design in Men's Hosiery.\nWe can show you The Cream of the Trade in men's Plain Blacks, Heathers,\nFancv, and Silk Hosiery.   See Our Window for just men's half hose.\nWte do Insurance Business in all its Branches.\nE - LIFE - ACCIDENT\nInsurance Is a valuable asset at all times as well as   a welcome\nprotection in times of need. >\nX'l%tect yourself, your wife and family and your business by Injuring now.\n\"\\   Call and discuss the matter with us.\nThe Westminster Trust and Stfe Deposit Co.,ltd.\n28 Lorh\nJ. J. JONES, Mgr.-Dlr.\ne Street New Westminster\nWH\n*-. a.    i i       \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      '\nDo Not Waste Money\na********\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd****-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd**\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd**-* mm   BwW    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd        \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^mmm\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^asmmmss\n8ave a little ayatatnatlcally, for It la,thn stuff that th* foun-\n- Nations of wealth and happiness are built of.\nMoney may be used ln two ways; to spend for what is\n' needed now and to invest for what shall bo needed ln tho future.   Money cannot be Invested until tt ls lint saved.\nPROTECT YOUR FUTURE WITH A SAVINGS ACCOUNT.\n\\33jfi. Bank of Vancouver\n\"' Authorised Capital, 12,000,000.    Columbia, corner Eighth atreet\nA. U DEWAR, General Manager D. R. DONLEY. Local Manager.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdVl'..'' \"\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-         '\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd        .1 ft -.      \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd - ;\nWe have\n*-i\nTo Purchase\nApproved\nAgreements\nof Sale\nijbti** * irsKOi*s?-s*rMft*sf..,\nWHICH  A-RE \/aftiT\nSale\n.io-,;.:: I\nMOTtTGAGEV\nPROMPT ATTENTION\nDow,Fraser8Co.,ltd.\nTk.RA.Li   &STA.TE Af*fT>\nFl\"RE MJtfSUTtAJafCE\n* VEIL CE\/HT. if*TRUEST Off -DETOSITS.\nSVBJECT TO CHEQUE\nCHR7HTEH MOJWTHLV\nTen Room\nModern Bungalow\n\\   Concrete basement, furnace, on lot\n\\  noli.\n52x154. situated on Fifth street, near\nSixth avenue,   one  block   from   car.\nThis ie one of the best finished houses\nin town.   The owner leaves   for   the\neast ln a few days, and is prepared to\nsell this   furnished    (which   ls   the\nbest money can buy), or unfurnished.\nWth furniture, WO\nOn Easy Terms;\n||, balancespread over\nthree years\nNew  Westminster  City  Specialist.\nMcQuarrie Bros.\n317-321 Cambie St.\nVancouver, B.C.\nPhone 696.\n622 Columbia atreet\nBURN OIL\nThe Western Steam\nand Oil Plants Ltd.\n210 Carter-Cotton Blk.\nPhone Seymour 7676.\nor Phone 324,\nNew Westminster.\nThe\nOr. Jaegeri <\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\/ E.BrOWIJ &.\nWoolens\n6,18 COLUMBIA.%SK\nWotia\nSpecialists\nCANADIAN BANK\nOF COMMERCE\nmmmmmmmsmmsammi^mmsmmss^mm_wmmmsmsi*mmmmsmmss\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdmmimf^ammsssm\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdmm\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwsamm\nAre open for business in\ntheir new building, 544\nCOLUMBIA STREET\n1\nww^WB PAGE SOL\n1HL DAILY   iNLWh.\nWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1911.\nBY-LAW   NO\ni\nA By-law to Authorize the Execution of an Agreement with the British Columbia Electric Railway Company,\nLimited, for an Electric Railway System in the District of Burnaby.   .\nWHEREAS on or about the thlr\nteenth day of October 1909. the Municipal Council of the Corporation or\nthe District of Burnaby finally passed\na certain by-law numbered 31. and\nknown as the Burnaby Electric Tram-\nway Bv-law. 1909, the said by-law being a bv-law authorizing the Keeve\nand Clerk of the said Corporation on\nbehalf of the said Corporation to\nafgn. execute and affix the corporate\nBeal to and give delivery to the British Columbia Electric Railway Company. Limited, of an Agreement between the Corporation of the District\no7 Burnaby and the said Company for\nIbe construction ot \ufffd\ufffd 4\ufffd\ufffd*to t*sm-\nway system  in the District of Bur-\nUIAND WHEREAS ln pursuance of\nthe authority conferred by the said\nbv-law the said Agreement was executed on behalf of the said Corporation and delivered to the said Company on or about the 14th day of Oc-\nt0AND WHEREAS the said Company\nin pursuance of tbe terms of the said\nAgreement caused some seven anl\none-half miles of electric tramway to\nbe constructed through the DiBtri t\nof Burnaby, which tramway has been\nIn operation for some time past;\nAND WHEREAS in the o-nion of\nt*e present municipal council of the\nsaid Corporation the said Agreement\nand Bylaw authorizing the execution\nof same are invalid by reason of\nsame not bavlng been submitted for\napproval to the electors of the District of Burnaby prior to the final\npassage of said by-law and the- execution of the said Agreement;\nAND WHEREAS the said Company\nis of the opinion that it was unnecessary to submit the said By-law and\nAgreement for the approval of the\nelectors of the District of Burnaby\nprior to the final passage of said bylaw and execution of said Agreement,\nand that the said by-law and Agreement are valid:\nAND WHEREAS the said Corporation has commence^ .litigation against\nthe said Company to test the validity\nof the said by-law and Agreement;\nAND WHEREAS the said Corporation has requested the sa:d Company to construct further railway\nlines in the District of Burnaby under the terms of the said Agreement\nwhich the said Company had declined\nto do owing to the contention of the\nCouncil of the said Corpbratiori that\nthe sail By-law and Agreement are\ninvalid;\nAND WHEREAS with a view to\navoiding litigation and unfriendly\nfeeling between tbe said Corporation\nand the said Company and ensuring\ntlie construction ot further railway\nlines in the District of Burnaby the\npresent Municipal Council of the said\nCorporation   has   (suggested    to    the\nwith its successors and assigns is\nhereinafter   called   \"the  company\"\nOF THE SECOND PART.\nWHEREAS the Council of the Corporation has requested the Company\nto conattrudt and operate certain\nelectric street railways within the\nDistrict of Buinaby, and the Company\nhas expressed its willingness to do\nso on the terms and conditions hereinafter stated; .\nAND WHEREAS the elec ors of\nthe District of Burnaby have assented to the execution of this Agreement.\nNOW JHEREFORE THIS AGREB-\nMENT WITNESSETH AS FOL-\nLOWS:\n1. The Corporation in consideration of the premises and of the Company agreelhg to perform and observe the covenants hereinafter contained hereby grants unto the Company Its successors and assigns the\nright, full permission and authorit\/\nto construct, complete, equip, main-\ntain\\and operate from the date of the\nexecution and delivery hereof for tlie\nperiod of thirty-eight years and for\nany   renewal   thereof   that   may  be\nof a permanent character (the question of what Is replacing a street by\none of a permanent character to be\nleft to the decision of the Council\nwhich shall be final) be constructed\nin such temporary manner as may\nbe approved by tlie Council or some\nperson appointed by the Council,\nprovided no unnecessary obstacle U\noffered to ordinary traffic during or\nafter construction. When, however,\nthe roadbed on such streets is constructed by the Corporation on a solid\nand permanent basis, then the Company shall at the same time construct\na thoroughly good and substantial\nStreet Railway to the satisfaction of\nthe Council of the Corporation or any\nperson appointed by the Council, both\nas to grades, location, width and\ndepth of rail and mode of construction. But when the Council shall so\ndecide to change the roadbed from a\ntemporary to a permanent one of any\nstreet on which the Company's track\nis laid, it shall give to the Company\nat least nine months, prior notice in\nwriting of Its Intention to do so, provided that in all macadamized or\ngravelled streets a track constructed\nwith  \"tee\"  rails  weighing   not   less\ntrack electric street railway or tram\nway, with ali necessary switches\nturn-outs and spur tracks and other\nrequisite appliances in connection\ntherewith, upon and over all or any\nof the streets within the District of\nBurnaby insofar as the Councll of the\nsaid Corporation can legally grant\nthe same, but neither this clause nor\nanything in this Agreement shall\ngive or be construed as giving to the\nCompany the power of engaging ln\nany other business than that of con\nstructing and operating electric railways within the said District, the intention being that this Agreement\nshall confer on the Company the\nright to use the said streets and no\ndther interest therein ln manner\naforesaid, so long as and provided\nthe Company observes the covenants\nand conditions herein contained.\n2. The Company in consideration\nof the premises and the grant of tbe\nright to use the streets as afore\nsaid hereby covenants, promises and\nagrees with the Corporation that it\nI will fulfil all the conditions, regula-\nI tlons and undertakings hereinafter\ncontained by the Company to be observed and performed.\n3. The Company covenants and\nagrees subject to the terms and conditions hereinafter set forth to construct or cause to be constructs the\nfollowing lines of electirc railway,\nnamely:\nLINE \"A.\"   From  the easterly ter'\nminus of the Company's railway   on\nHastings  Street  in  tbe  City  ot Vancouver, easterly  along  said * Hastings\nStreet   and   Barnet   Road   for  a dls\nMM* Company that it should agree to Wance of two miles,\nconstruct  auch  further  railway   Vines 1     WNE \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdB.\"__pTom tbe northeasterly\nconditional   -upon    a mat   ^\"\"\"\"lltemlnm ot th\ufffd\ufffd Compmy't i\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdw\ufffd\ufffdj on\n\ufffd\ufffdal4        t,on>\ufffd\ufffdt\ufffd\ufffdUon icolumWa Street In  tbe  City   ot   New\ngranted hereafter a single or double  than  fifty-six  pounds  per yard shall\nbe considered permanent construe\ntlon until the streets are paved as\nhereinafter provided, but If any such\nstreets ls to be block-paved, asphalted\nor laid down with a pavement of a\nsimilar character, then the Company\nmay be required to remove the track\nfirst laid down and replace lt with 9\ntrack suitable to the new pavement\nto the satisfaction of the Council of\nsaid Corporation or to some person\nappointed by the Council for this pur-\noose, and ln that case the track first\nlaid down shall be considered a temporary one only, but the Company\nshall only once be called upon to re\nmove a temporary track and replace\nit with a permanent one.\n8. The Company shall maintain\nits tteB, stringers and rails in a state\nof thorough repair and shall for that\npurpose remove, renew and replace\nthe  same  as  circumstances  may  re\nbetween\ntbe\nana tbe said Company regar.lln;\nelectric railway construction ln tbe\nDistrict of Burnaby, together Witb \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\nbv-law authorizing the execution\nthereof, being submitted for approval\nto the eletcors of the District of Burnaby. and if approved being finally\npassed and executed on behalf of tlie\nCorporation, which suggestion has\nbeen accepted by the said Company:\nAND WHEREAS in accordance\nwith the said suggestion of the Corporation a new Agreement has beeu\nprepared between the said Corporation and the said Company for the\nconstruction of electric, railways in\nthe Distiict of Burnaby, which new\nAgreement is hereto annexed;\nBE IT ENACTED by the Reeve and\nCouncil of the Corporation of the District of Uurnaby in council assembled\nas follows:\n1. Authority is given hereby to\nthe Reeve and Clerk of the said Corporation to sign and execute and affix the corporate seal to and give delivery to the British Columbia Electric Railway Company, Limited,\ntherein   named   of  an    Indenture   of\ninemn   nanei    .,.   au   mu=   v.  beiUon. epidemic,  fire, storm or te\nAgreement between the Corpo ation \ufffd\ufffd u\nand   the   British    Co umhia    Klectm ,\nRailway Company, Limited, to con\nstruct and oi-erate an electric railway\nsystem within the District of Burnaby, all to the extent, on the lermn\nand in the manner set forth in the\nBald Agreement wliich ii hereto annexed and forms part of this By-law\nas if embodied therein, and that all\nas the act and deed of the said Corporation.\n2, Tills By-law shall nol go into\neffect until it has been submitted for\napproval to the electors of tha District of Burnaby, who are entitled to\nvote upon a by-law to contract a\ndcht.and has received the assent of\nnot less than three-fifths in number\nof the electors who shall vote upon\ntills try.law.\n3, This by-law may he cited as\nthe \"Uurnaby Electric Railway Bylaw, 1911.\"\nDone   and   passed   in   open   council\nthis-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd(lay   of ,1911.\nReceived the assent of ttie electors  of   tlie   District   of   Burnaby  on\nthe   day of  . 1911.\nReconsidered and finally passed the\n day of  . 191L.\nARTICLES  OF AGREEMENT made\nln duplicate this   day of  in\nthe year of our Lord, one thousand\nnine hundred and eleven,\nBETWEEN\nTIIE    CORPORATION     OF    THE\nDISTRICT   OF   BURNABY,   in   the\nProvince of British Columbia, here-\nlnaftei    called   \"the   Corporation,\"\nOF THE FIRST PART,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAND\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nTill': BRITISH COLUMBIA ELECTRIC RAILWAY COMPANY, LIMITED, (FOREIGN), being a com\npany incorporated under the Com-\npan.'< Act 1863 and 1893, having\ntte . .ii-t'K situate in ;'.4 Nicholas\nLaw Lombard Street, in tlie Citv\nof London, England, being duly licensed to carry on business in the\nprovince   of   British   Columbia,   who\nWestminster, northeasterly alon\nsaid Columbia Street and th\ufffd\ufffd Nortli\nRoad for a distance of one mile, and\nto continue the same to the junction\nof the Clark Road so soon as settle\nment warrants.\nAnd the Company will commence\nthe construction of said Line A\"\nwithin one month from the date of\nthis agreement, and will fully com\nplete, equip and operate the same\nwithin eleven months from the dat*\nof this Agreement; and wlll commence construction of the said Line\n|\"B\" within one month after the com\npletion of conctruction of a high leve'\nbridge suitable to street railway\ntraffic, over the Brunette River and\nthe granting of any necessary permission from the City of New Westmin\nster to construct the said Line \"B\"\nalong Columbia Street, and will fully\ncomplete, equip and operate same\nwithin six months from the commencement of construction of the\nsaid Line \"B,\" but in cace the said\nwork of construction shall be pre\nvented  or  delayed   by  reason  of  re\nm\nlike\nhe\nCompany, the time for completion\nshall he extended for eo long as the\nwork shall have been so delayed or\nprevented, the length of such extension to be mutually agreed mon be\ntween the Company anl the Corporation.\n4. The Tracks of th\" said street\nrailway shall he of a gang- of four\nfeet eight and a half inches, the rail:*\nand construction to be to the reason\naide satisfaction of the Council of the\nCorporation. Tiie tracks shall con\nform to the grades of the streets as\ndefined hy the Council and the whole\ntracks shall be constructed to reasonable satisfaction of the Council bul\nthe Council's approval shall not be\nunreasonably withheld.\n5. The location of the line of railway on any of the streets shall not\nbe mad\ufffd\ufffd hy the Company until the\nplans thereof showing tbe proposod\nposition of the rails, the style of the\nrail to be used and the other worki\non such streets have been submitted\nto and approved of by resolution of\nthe Council of the Corporation, which\napproval shali not be unreasonably\nwithheld.\n6. Before breaking up, opening nr\ninterfering with any part of said\nstreets for the purpose of constructing said works tbe Company shall\ngive to the Clerk of the Council for\nthe time being ten days' notice in\nwriting of its intention to do so, and\nno more than fifteen hundred lineal\nfeet on any one street shall tie broken\nup or opened at any one time unless\nquire, and as tbe Council of the Corporation shall direct, and shall maintain and keep the roadbed in the case\nof permanent \"track under the rails\nand eight inches on either side of\neach\" rail, and in the case-\ufffd\ufffdof a temporary track between the rails and\nto a width of eight inches on the outside of each rail in as good a state\nof repair as the remainder of the\nstreet may be. And in the event of\nthe Company making any repairs or\nalteration to the tracks, ties, stringers or rails, it shall replace the portion of the street disturbed for the\npurpose of such repairs or alterations\nin as good order and condition as the\nrest of the street without unnecessary delay.\n9.   The Corporation shall have the\nright   to   take   up   and    replace    the\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Btreein traversed by tbe \ufffd\ufffda>d Hallway lines or any ot them either for\nthe purpose of altering the grades\nthereof, constructing, improving or\nreplacing or repairing the streets,\nsewers, drains, conduits or water\npipes or of laying down or repairing\nwater or gas pipes or sewers and for\nall other purposes within the power,\nprovince or privileges of the Corporation or the Council thereof, without\nJbeing liable to the Company for any\ncompensation or damage that may\nhe occasioned to the working of the\nRailway or the works connected\ntherewith, but in such event no unnecessary or undue delay or hindrance shall be caused to the operation of the track and in the event\nof the Corporation extrc'sing such\nright, it shall without unneresserv\ndelay replace the track at Its own\nproper costs and expenses, provided\nalways that the rights hereby graat-\ned shall be subject to any exis'lag\nrights, statutory or otherwise, or that\nmay here after be granted to any per\nlaid on any streets or road where a\nsingle track is flrst laid, plans shall\nbe submitted to the Council for it3\napproval before the work Is commenced, but such approval shall not\nbe unreasonably withheld.\n14. The Company sliall have the\nright to make and enforce regulations\nand rules for tlie proper collection of\nfares nnd for the conduct of passengers on its cars.\n15. The  Company  shall  have   the\nright   to   charge   and    collect    from\nevery   person   on   or   after    entering\nany of its cars for the purpose of riding any  distance  within the  District\nof Burnaby a sum not to exceed five\ncents  for any  distance within  three\nmiles from the western boundary of\nthe  Corporation,  and   for  each   two\nmiles or part thereof ridden  beyond\nthe  said  three   miles  the  Company\nshall heve the right to collect an ad\ndltional  five   cents.    Provided   that\nresidents of or settlers In the   said\nDistrict of  Burnaby  shall   be   given\nspecial rates which shall not exceed\nthe rates charged to settlers on the\nWestminster-Vancouver       Interurban\nline for proportionate distances, and\nwith such similar transfer privileges\nas  settlers  on  the  Westminster-Vancouver    Interurban    line    may    have\nfrom time to time, provided, however,\nthat in the event of the City of Vancouver    purchasing    the    Company's\nrailway   system   within  the   present\nlimits of the City of Vancouver the\nCompany   wlll     exchange    transfers\nwith the   City upon   such   equitable\nbasis as may be mutually agreed upon\nbetween the City and the Company.\n16. The Company shall carry Infants In arms free and shall carry\nchildren under the age of twelve\nyears at the rate of two children for\none regular fare and shall issue to\nschool children attending the public\nschools in the said District tickets at\nthe rate not to exceed 25 cents for\nten fares within tbe District of Burnaby, but such tickets shall only be\nused and entitle such school children\nto travel on the railway between the\nhours of 8 a. m. and 5 p. m. and shall\nnot   be  available   on   Saturdays  and\nSundays, and other school holidays.\n17. The Company shall grant free\ntransportation over its system within\nthe District of Burnaby to the Reeve\nand Councillors of the District and to\nthe Clerk of the Council. Engineer,\nMedical Health Officer and Constables of the District and  Province.\n18. The Company shall be liable\nfor and shall at all times indemnify\nand save harmless the Corporation\nfrom and against ail damages arising out of the construction of operat\ning of its Railways within the Municipality.\n19. The Company shall not by\nany of its works, interfere with the\npublic right of travelling on or using\nhighways, streets, bridges, watercourses or navigable waters, and the\nCompany shall not erect any pole\nhigher than one hundred and fifty\nfeet above the surface of the street\nnor fix any wires less than eighteen\nfeet above the surface of tho street,\nand the poles shall he as nearly as\npossible straight and perpendicular,\nand the Company shall not place or\npermit any advertising signs to be\nplaced thereon, and provide! that\nafter the opening up of the street for\nthe construction of.any of the works\nof the Company and the erection of\npoles or for carrying the wires underground, the surface of the street shall\nin all cases be restored to the satisfaction of the Council by and at the\nexpense of the Company, and provided further tbat whenever in case\nof fire It becomes necessary for its\nextinction or the preservation of property that the wires sliall he cut, the\ncutting under such cireumstances of\nany of the wires of the Company under the direction of the Chief Engineer or other officer In charge of the\nFire   Brigade   shall   not   entitle   tho\nson or persons or body corporate to   Company   to   demand   or   claim  coin-\nopen or take up said streets of said\nCorporation or any of thera, but in\nthe event of the Corporation granting\nsuch right to any person or person*\nor hody corporate it shall make it a\ncondition of such grant that the\ngrantee shall without delay replace\nthe track and make good to the Company any damage thereto at such\ngrantee's own costs.\nlfl. The speed of the cars shall no'\nexceed twenty-flve miles an hour, pro\nvided that the said speed shall, if required by resolution of the Council\nof said Corporation he reduced to \ufffd\ufffd\nrate of speed not exceeding ten milps\nper hour on business streets and flf\n'een miles an hour on residential\nstreets.\n11. The Company will caiiBe rnrs\nto be run at intervals of not more\nthan an hour hetween seven a. ni\nand eleven p. m. each ^ny OTceptln-\nSunday on which day the Company\nshall not he obliged to run the car*\nearlier than eight a. m. provided\nhowever, that the Company shall, if\nrequired to do sn by resolution o?\nthe Council of tbe Corporation, hav\ning regard to what the demand fer\ntraffic accommodation justifies, cause\ncars to he run on each of Bald lines\nat such more frequent intervals than\nin this clause provided and between\nthe hours of 6: SO a. m., and midnixht\nof each day excepting Sunday, pro\nvlded, however, tbat in no case shall\nears he required to run between midnight and 6:30 a. m. But nothing in\nthis clause is intended to prevent the\nCompany from running its cars at any\nOther time or as often as it mav see\nfit.\n12. In the event, of any other lines\nbeing built hy the Company during\nthe term of this Agreement, the fre\nlermisslon BO to  do shall  have been j nuoncy   of   service   over   such    lines\nshall from time to time he determined by nn Agreement between tho\nCorporation and the Company, and\nIn case the Corporation and the Company shall ho unable to agree upon\nthe same thc question shall he referred to arbitration as hereinafter provided.\n13.   In the event of a second track\n'..hen by the Council. And when tho\nwork thereon shall have been com-\nmenced It shall he proceeded with\nwithout intermission and as rapidly\nas the same can be carried on with\ndue regard to tlie proper and efficient\nconstruction of the same.\n7. The tracks of the said Railway shall until the temporary roadbed of tlie streets ls replaced by cne\npensation for any unavoidable damage that might be so incurred, and all\nproperty so injured shall he restored\nto its former condition so soon thereafter as reasonably can he done at tho\nexpense of the Corporation.\n20. The Company ahall place and\ncontinue on said Railway tracks good\nand sufficient passenger cars for the\nconvenience and comfort of passen\ngers. Each car shall be numbers;! on\nthe outside and inclde and passengers\nonly shall he carried ln such cars.\n21. The Company may also operate freight cars for the transportation of express and freight in the\nsaid  District  of  Uurnaby.\n22. The Company shall not be obliged to carry in passenger cars any\npackages or baggage exceeding in\nweight 25 lbs. for any one passenger,\nand It may refuse to allow passengers\nto bring with them on board Its pas\nsenger cars any package of whatsoever nature that would cause inconvenience to other passengers or occupy space destined for the accommo\ndation of passengers, or soil or damage the clothing of passengers or the\nCompanys' property and lt may make\nand enforce such regulations as to\npackages and baggage as it may\ndeem necessary.\n23. The Corporation and the Company shall make By-laws and regulations prohibiting spitting on the Company's   Cars   under  proper  penalties\n24. The cars of the Company shall\nbe entitled to the uninterrupted right\nof way on the tracks of lhe said railways. All vehicles, however, may\ntravel on. along or across the said\ntracks, but any vehicles, horses, bicycles, man or foot passengers upon\nthe track shall turn out at the approach of any car. bo as to leave tho\ntrack clear for the passing of the\ncar, provided this shall not he taken\nto affect or restrict any legal rights\nthe Company may have against, any\npersons so travelling along or across\nthe said trnckfl. But in rase Of lire,\nthe hose of the Flre Brigade, if laid\nacross the tracks on tlie said streets. |\nshall not lie interfered with by tho\nCompany  and  the  cars  of  the  Com\nbeing required by the Company to be pany   on   the   said   streets   shall   be\nstopped to allow the passage of all\nfire engines, fire brigades and appliances.\n25. Tlie said street cars shall stop\nat crossings when leaving or receiving passengers In such position as\nmay be mutually agreed upon between the Council of the Corporation\nand the Company, and no cars shall\nbe left standing on the street at any\ntime unless receiving or leaving passengers or waiting at a terminus provided the location of such terminus\nshall be first assented to by the Counctl.\n26. The cars after dark on the\nsaid streets shall be provided with\nlights both front and rear; and such\nother signal shall be attached to the\ncars as safety ln operation may from\ntime to time require.\n27. The Company shall employ\ncareful, sober, well-behaved and prudent conductors and drivers on their\ncars, and It shall be the duty of sucb\nconductors and drivers as far as prac-\nticable to keep vigilant watch for all\nteams, carriages or persons on foot,\nbicycles or horseback, either on the\ntrack or moving towards it. and on\nthe flrst appearance of danger the car\nshall be stopped ln the shortest possible space of time.\n28. The conductors on said cars\nshall announce to the passengers the\nnames of the streets and public\nsquares as the cars reach them.\n29. ln the event of the Corporation or any person or persons or body\nor bodies corporate proposing or being desirous of constructing a stieet\nrailway or street railways on any of\nthe streets or roads within the District of Burnaby other than those\nupon which the Company shall have\nconstructed a street railway or have\na street railway ln course of construction la accordance with the provisions herein contained, tbe Company\nshall be requested ln writing to build\nsuch desired or proposed railway and\noperate the same upon the terms and\nconditions ln this Agreement con\ntained, and the Company shall, within sixty (60) days thereafter notify\nthe Corporation whether It is willing\nto build and operate auch street rail\nway nnd ln the event of the Company refusing or neglecting within\nsixty (60) days from such request to\nsignify its willingness to build and\noperate such railway, or ln the event\nof the Company neglecting or refusing to commence the building of such\nrailway within six months after ex\nplratlon of the aald sixty (60) days\nor to complete same within twelve\n(12) mon tha from the date when it\nsignified its willingness to build and\noperate such railway, the Corporation shall then have the right to construct and operate so much of the\ndesired line or lines as shall not\nhave been constructed by the Company, or grant to any person or persons or body corporate the right to\nbuild and operate same or otherwise\nas the Corporstlon may deem advisable, provided that the Company shall\nhave a further and other option or\noptions to conatruct and operate said\ndesired line or lines unless the construction of same has been com-\nraSired within a period of six months\nafter the Company's refusal or neglect to construct, and thereafter continuously prosecuted In a bona fide\nmanner, and ln such case all the\nCompany's powers over such streets\nshall be ln force aa lf there had\nbeen no such refusal or neglect.\n80. During the time of the construction of a railway and laying the\nrails or thereafter during the repairing of same, a free psseage for vehicles over a sufficient portion ef the\nstreets and crossing* shall be main\ntained. and Immediately after tbe\nsaid rails have been laid or repairs\nclone the surface of the etreets shall\nbe placed in a condition aa nearly as\npossible similar to tbat in which they\nwere before the commencement of\nthe work of coastraction or repairs.\n31.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIn case the Company shall fail\nto operate any portion or the whole\nof its line for the period of six (6)\nmonths or shall do or omit to do anything, the doing or omission of which\nunder the provisions of this Agreement causes the forfeiture of the\nrights hertby conferred upon the\nCompany, the Company shall forfeit\nnil prlveliges. franchises and rights\nwhich It shall acquire or which are\nconferred upon It under the provisions of this Agreement over such portion of Its railways on which default\nhas been made, and the same shall\nthereupon become and bo vested in\nthe Corporation at a valuation to be\ndetermined upon by arbitration; or\nat the option of the Council of ssld\nCorporation the Company shall remove Its rails from said track or por\ntlon of said track, and place the paving of such street ln a condition similar to that tn whicb the remainder of\nsuch street may then be, provided\nthis clause shall only apply to wilful\ndefault of the Company.\n32. At the expiration of the term\nof thirty-eight years granted by this\nAgreement the Corporation may. upon giving at least twelve (12) months\nwritten notice prior to the expiration\nof said terms of IU intention to do so,\nassume tbe ownership of all the railway lines belonging to tho Company\nwithin the present limits of the Corporation, together with all the real\nand personal property of the Company actually used, in use or to be\nused exclusively ln the operation of\nthe railway lines snd plant within\nthe limit aforsesald, upon payment\nbeing made to the Company by the\nCorporation of the value there of,\nsuch value to be mtitally agreed upon between the Corporation and the\nCompany, or In case of a failure to\nagree, then such value shall be determined by arbitration in the following manner:\nThe arbitrators shall fix the then\nmarket value of sli the lands so to be\ntaken over exclusive of any improvements, machinery and buildings\nthereon, and to the aum \ufffd\ufffdo found\nshall be added the value of the improvement, machinery, buildings and\npersonal property including th<\ufffd\ufffd\ncosts of construction of the said railway lines and of installing all the\nplant and machinery and deducting\ntherefrom a reasonable sum to lie determined by the arbitrates for depreciation thereof; but such price or\nvalue shall not include any payment\nfor any franchise, for the right of\nrunning or goodwill. The Corporation shall have eight months after\nthe value Is finally determined on to-\ncomplete the purchase; provided\nhowever, that untll the purchase Is\ncomplete the Company shall be entitled to retain possession of the said\nrailway lines and property and to\noperate same and to retain all the\nprofits derived therefrom.\n33. The covenants, conditions, regulations and undertakings to be observed and performed by the Company and the privileges given to the\nCorporation !n this Agreement shall\nbe deemed to refer to and be applicable only to electric street railways\nor tramways herein constructed by\nthe Company upon streets within the\nDistrict of Burnaby under the terms\nof this Agreement, and shall ln no\nwise be deemed to refer to or be applicable to any part of the Company's\nWestminster-Vancouver Interurban\ntramway or any electric street railway or- tramway which the Company\nmay conatruct on landa acquired by\nthe Company In the District of Burnaby or to any of the property of the\nCompany used or to be used in connection therewith.\n34. In th* event of the Corporation falling to exercise the right to\nassume the ownership of said railway aad plant, as provided ln paragraph 32 hereof, then this Agreement\nshall continue for further periods of\nten (10) years each on the terms\nand conditions herein contained, and\nthe Corporation shall have a similar\nright to purchase at the end of each\nperiod ef tea (10) years and to operate tho railway or cause it to be\noperated, and the said purchase to be\nin the manner and on the terms set\nout la Section 32.\n35. If at aay time hereafter any\ndisputes, difference or question shall\narise betweea the said parties hereto, their respective successors or assigns or aay of them, touching the\nconstruction, meaning or effect of\nthese presents, or any clause or thing\nherein contained, or the rights and\nliabilities of tho said parties respectively or their successors and assigns,\nthen every such dispute, difference,\ndecision or question shall be referred\nto arbitration.\n36. Wheaerer under the terms of\nthis Agreement any matter, dispute,\ndiffereaee or question is to be referred te arbitration or whenever under\nthe terma of agreement any matters\nor things are to be mutually agreed\nupon between the Company and the\nCorporation and tbey are unable to\nagree, the same shall be referred\" to\nthe decision of two arbitrators\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdone\nto be selected by each of the parties\nand to an umpire who shall he selected by the arbitrators before entering upon their duties, the award of\nthe majority of whom shall be binding on all parties and shall be arbitrated under and according to the\nprevlsleas of the \"Arbitration Act\"\nbeing Chapter nine ot the Revised\nStatutes of British Columbia, any\namendment thereof or any act of the\nLegislature of the Province of British Columbia for the time being ln\nforce in British Columbia relating to\narbitration and the conduct   thereof.\n37. Any notice to be given under\nthis Agreement hy the Company shall\nbe deemed sufficiently given ami\nserved lf delivered at the office of\nthe Corporation and any notice to be\ngiven by the Corporation to the Company ahall be deemed sufficiently\ngiven and served lf addressed to the\nGeneral Manager of the Company,\nVancouver, B. C, and forwarded by\nregistered letter.\n38. Whenever under this Agreement the word \"street or \"streets'*\noccurs the same shall be taken to include road or highway, or roads or\nhighways.\n39. Nothing in this Agreement\ncontained ahall be deemed to confer\nor be construed as conferring any exclusive rights or powers on or to the\nsaid Company.\nIt is agreed by and between the\nparties hereto that the Agreement\nbetween the Corporation and the\nCompany dated the 14th day of October, 1909. regarding tramway construction ln the District of Burnaby -\nshall be null and void as from the\ndate ot the execution of this Agreement.\nIN WITNESS WHEREOF the parties  hereto   have   hereunto   caused\nthese presents to be executed.\nThe Common Seal of the\nCorporation  of  the  DlBtrict   of    Burnaby    waa\nhereunto   affixed  ln the\npresence   of\ufffd\ufffd-\nTnke notice that the above ls a.\ntrue copy of th* proposed by-law upon which the tou of tho Munlcipa ity\nwill be Uken on Saturday, the 21st.\nday of Oetoh*r, 1911, betwern 9\no'clock a. \ufffd\ufffd. until 7 o'clock p.m. at\nthe polling places:\nThe Municipal Hall, Edmonds.\nAgricultural Hall, Contra! Park.\nLake View School, Burnaby Lake.\nMrs.   Cobban's  house, Burquitlam-\nDundonald School, Fraser Arm.\nDuthie School, Duthie.\nO. H. Leefs store, Bast Burnabr-\nMr. Jas. Herd's office, Hasting*\nStreet East. '\nPublic notice is hereby given that\nthe vote of the electors of the Dls-\ntrlct of Burnaby win bo taken on th*\nabove mentioned by-law at the time\nand place above mentioned, and that\nA   O. Moore has own appointed r\ufffd\ufffd\ntiirntag officer * **\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd th0 *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd rf\nsSS electors, with the usual powers\nlB bToKDBR OF THE COUNCIL,\nj. w. WEART, Reeve.\nW. GRIFFITHS, Clerk.\nEdmonds, ft. C, Oct. 10, 1ML WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1911.\nTHE DAILY NEWS.\nPAOB BBVEN.\nA Few Facts About Matches\nThe Canadian people burn up a small fortune In the shape of\nmatches every day in the year. They are the most important article\nof consumption in the world today. Many people do not use the telephone, telegraph, electric light, typewriter and the automobile, etc.\nMany people do not use tobacco, coffee, Postum, grape nuts, condensed milk, etc., but all peoples today use matches. The savage\nno longer resorts to rubbing sticks together to produce a flame. When\na match is once used it is worthless and another has to be made to\ntake Its place.\nPossibly not one person in a thousand ever stopped to think\nabout how they were made, o. of the enormous consumption of thiB\narticle of manufacture.\nStatistics tell us that we ln the United States spend over $30,-\n000,000 annually for matciies. The first friction match was invented\nln 1827.\nThe Trust, ln their last official statement, reported a net profit\nof over $11,000,000 for the past flve years. We know that one man\nbegan by whittling the wooden splints out and dipping them by hand\nand then peddling them on the streets of New York City and that\nhe is rated at $75,000,000 and his brother at $50,000,000, made out of\nthe match business. Also that another man made enough money\nout of the business in a few years to buy one of the largest railroads\nin America.\nAccording to the U. B. Monthly Consular and Trade Reports for\nJune, 1010, Consul General A. Gaulln, of France, in making his annual report for 1908, summarized the French match Industry as\nfollows:\n\"Total receipts during that year, $7,817,230; an Increase of $235,-\n155 over 1907.    The net profits amounted to $5,884,615.\"\nThis enormous profit was accomplished In face of the fact that\nthe French use a very antiquated and, therefore, expensive process.\nThere are two processes of manufacturing matches in the United\nStates, the GERMAN PROCESS and the BEECHER PROCESS. The\nBeecher Process ls used by the Trust and several Independent companies, as the patents have expired. The German Process is used\nby tbe Illinois Match Co., of Joliet, III.; the Indiana Match Co., of\nCrawfordsville, Ind.; ln fact, about 80 per cent, of all matches manufactured ln the world are made by this process. One of the most\nserious objections to the Beecher Process ls the fact that it ls limited\nsolely and absolutely to soft, straight, grained WHITE CORK\nPINE for Its supply of raw material for match sticks, which is found\nin such limited quantities and at SUCH PROHIBITIVE PRICES that\nthe manufactures' future under this process is extremely uncertain.\nThe machines are expensive to install and expensive to operate.\nThey require the attention of expert help, and so delicate are some\nof the parts of tbe match cutter, that even a pin knot or an uneven\ncharacter of the wood will put the expensive machine out of commission for hours.\nThe German system is the oldest and ls ln general use throughout Europe and America. The most serious objection to this process is the increasing labor cost, which ls the largest element in the\ncost of finished match under this process. This process requires between tbe log-yard and warehouse, 14 different operations by as\nmany gangs of workmen, six of which are attended by enormous\nwaste. The difference in the added labor coBt of the German Process over that of the Beecher Process ls equalized, however, by the\nsaving brought about by the use of cheap  raw  material,  such    as\nCottonwood, Llnwood, Spruce,  etc.,   which  may  be  obtained  for  a\ntraction of the cost of White Cork Pine.\nMillions of dollars in money have been spent in trying to perfect\na machine that would cut match sticks from this cheap wood and at\nthe same time eliminate the great amount of expense of hand labor\nheretofore necessary. The match manufacturer equippel with such\na machine would be in a position to manufacture matches for at least\none-third less than under any other process, and, therefore, drive\nall competitors out of the field.\nMr. W. H. Parker, who is tie Superintendent of the Paciflc Coast\nMatch Co., and for nineteen years an experienced match maker, was\none of the many Inventors to work alone this line. After a great\nmany years of patient toil, and at enormous expense to himself and\nfriends, he finally succeeded ln PERFECTING a match cutter that Is\nadapted to the use of any kind of timber that will make matches,\nsuch as fir, spruce, hemlock, basswood, aspen, llnwood, poplar, alder,\netc., which can be obtained at a fraction ot the cost of white cork\npine, and performs the work tutomatically, which has heretofore\nbeen largely done by hand, thereby meeting every requirement of the\nmatch manufacturer. To give an Idea of the originality of our\nmachine, it might be of interest to you to know that our patents were\npassed upon by the United States Patent Office, and completed within two weeks, without a SINGLE REFERENCE to any other patent\never granted. ,\nCOMPARATIVE STATEMENT.\nPaciflc Coast The Eddie\nMatch  Co. System.\nCost ot match cutter       $250.00 $16,000.00\nCapacity, per minute   4 to 6000 4000\nWeight        600 lbs. 15 tons.\nLength      6 feet 125 feet\nttaw material for stick  Hemlock, Spruce, White\nFir, Alder, etc. Cork Pine\nCost of raw material per M         $10.00 $75.00\nLoss in reduction to match sticks\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.     3 p.c. 12 p.c.\nImperfect matches produced ln manufacturing    % of 1 p.c. 4   p.c.\nLoss from fire ln process         3 p.c. 8 p.c.\nLabor required to operate    each machine               1 6\nCost of labor per diem        $1.50                  . $18.00\nPower to operate each machine      M h.p. 5 h.p.\nSystem of packing matches  Machinery By Hand\nLabor to box car matches           20 150\nCost per car to box ..,      $20.00 $150.00\nSaving ln packing car     $130.00 \t\nThese Patents are owned and controlled by the Dominion Match\nCompany, Limited, with head offices at 6 and 7 Canadian Bank of\nCommerce Building. New Westminster, B.C. A large, fireproof plant\nwfll soon be ln operation on the Fcaser river., where the raw material\ncan be floated to within 25 feet of the saws, and where deep water\nvessels can be loaded with the finished article for any part of the\nworld; with a side tree': into the factory where cars can be loaded\nfor Interior shipment.\nDO YOU KNOW.\nThat the Match Tr*\ufffd\ufffdt was capitalized in the beginning for $6.-\n000,000, and, from their reports, has paid to its stockholders approximately $35,000,000 ln dividends?\nThat the Dunlop Tire Co. was capitalized for $112,000 and after\npaying $3,290,575 in dividends and premiums, sold out two years\nafter the organization for $1^000,000, and a little later for $25,000,-\n000 ?\nThat $3000 Invested ln Prudential Life Insurance stock became\nworth, In seven years, $329,363.60 ?\nThat the capitalization of the American Tobacco Co. is $500,000,-\n000 and that during the year 1910 they paid 40 per cent, on that\nenormous capitalization ?\nThat the Consolidated Tobacco Co. was capitalized for $30,000,000\nin 1902 and that they paid 20 per cent, during that year, notwithstanding the fact they had a bonded indebtedness of $156,593,400  ?\nThat the Continental Tobacco Co. is capitalized for $100,000,000 ?\nThat the Union Typewriter Co. for $20,000,000 ?\ncapitalized for $1,500,000, and in that year they earned $4,527,530, or\n302 per cent., yet they paid to depositors 4 per cent.?\nThat the firm manufacturing Grape Nuts paid 75 per cent, on its\ncapitalization in 1896 and after greatly Increasing the capitalization\npaid 24 per cent. In 1905 on $5,000,000 ?\nThat the Otis Elevator Co. is capitalized for $13,000,000 ?\nThat the Union Typewriter for $20,000,000 ?\nThat Borden's Condensed Milk Co. for $250,000,000 ?\nAnd so we might go on and fill page after page with the marvelous records of fortunes built upon the co-operative use of capital\nin the advancement of the ideas of men like Morse, Edison, Bell,\nBrush, Bennett, Faraday, Tesla, Howe, Mergenthaler, McCormick,\nBessemer, Fulton, Kramer, Pullman, Corliss, Stephens and numerous\nothers.\nIt has been truly said that more money has been lost by the\ntimidity of men In not grasping opportunities when presented, than\nin bad speculation. Another great truth Is that \"One good investment  la  worth  a lifetime  of labor.\"\nAny man the age of 40 years can recite numerous Instances of\nfortunes he could have made had he accepted the opportunity when\npresented. ,\nWe are presenting an opportunity to you now for the first time\nof getting into one of the most profitable industries in the world today, with possibilities of exceedingly large dividends only limited\nby the capacity. . i\nThis is not a speculation, but an investment of your capital In\nan established business.\nYou must act at once if you wish to secure a block of this stock\nab the present price, $5.00 (par value, $10.00), for the enthusiasm\nshown by the men with money to invest proves to us that the\nlimited amount of stock at (tbis price will be exhausted before this\ncoming Saturday.\nSend in your order at once to C. L. Godding, Fiscal Agent for the\nDominion Match Company, Rooms 6 and 7, Canadian Bank of Commerce Building. Terms are one-fifth cash, one-fifth per month, given,\nwith no interest on deferred payments.\nI\nI\nDOMINION MA TCH COMPANY, LIMITED.\nROY THOMPSON, Sec.-Treasurer C. L. GODDING, Fiscal Agent\nRooms 6 and 7 Canadian Bank of Commerce Building New Westminster, B. C.\nGEORGE V. ENVOY\nHAS SEEN SERVICE\n'Duke    of    Connaught    In    Command\nat Tel-el-Kehr\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOther\nStories.\nThe Duke of Connaught. Canada's\nnew Governor-General, was bred up\na soldier, Just as King George was\nbred up a sailor. And His Royal\nHighness has not contented himself\nwith being a parade soldier merely.\nHe has shared the toll and dangers\nof the field with the other officers\nand men. His military studies began\nat the age of nine, under Captain\nElphlnstone, later Sir Howard Elphln-\nstone, of the Koyal Engineers, and\nfrom the day he Joined his regiment\nhe worked at his profession as a serious and pructlcal soldier. The record of his services is ln itself a\nproof. He passed through every\nbranch of the army, from sapper to\ngunner, from infantry to cavalry. He\ncommanded the guards at Tel-el-Kebir\nln the soudan campaign of 1882, nnd\nshared with the Duke of Cambridge\nthe distinction of a royal prince who\nbad been under fire. Twice he has\nheld a command in India, twice in\nEngland, and once in Ireland. Perhaps the severest test ot his military\ncapacity was made ln India, where\nhe remained for six years. The first\nthree vears were spent ln Bengal\nwith tlie rank of major-general and\nthe last three years In command of\nthe Bombay army. Only a man who\nis a born soldier and a hard and\nconscientious worker can corporal a\ngreat Indian military district. The\nDuke of Connaught in those years\nestablished his military reputation\non a firm basis and confirmed the\nimpression which the people had already formed of his earnestness and\ncapacity.\nThose who imagine that no disabilities attach to royalty know nothing of the Duke of Connaught's bitter\ndlsanpolntment when he was forbidden \"to share with his comrades the\nrisks ot war in South Africa. But\nQueen Victoria wns adamant, and\nTier widowed daughter, Prindess Henry of Battenberg, was at hand to re\nmind her that death knocks at the\ndoer of the palace as well as at the\ndoor of the cottage.\nSome years after the battle of Tel-\nel-Keblr, a report was circulated that\nin order to keep tbe prince out of\ndanger, General Wolseley, the English commander-in-chief, had ordered\nhlm to the rear, during the assault\nupon the fortified lines of the Egyptian rebels. This precaution was said\nto have been taken ln obedience to\nInstructions received from London,\nwhere there was some anxiety as to\nthe personal safety of His Royal\nHighness. The story, however, was |\ndenied, both by Mr. Childers, who j\nwas then ln the war office and by\nLord Wolesley, who declared emphatically that the Duke \"took his\nchances like everyone else: I had no\nbetter brigade under my command\nthan his,\" added tlie general.\nNew Governor's Family.\nIn 1879 the Duke of Connaught was\nmarried to Princess Louise Margaret of Prussia, then a pirl of nineteen.\nThe Duchess is the Kaiser's second\ncousin, being a daughter of the late\nPrince Frederick Charles. better\nknown by the soubriquet of \"tbe red\nprince,\" who served with much distinction as the commander of a German army corps during the war with\nFrance in 1870 and 1871.\nThe three children of the Duke and\nDuchess of Connaught have Inherited\nthe popularity of their parents. The\neldest, Princess Margaret Victoria,\nwho was born in 1882, ls married to\nGustavus Adolpbus, Crown Prince of\nSweden and Duke of gcandinavia. In\ndue course she will become Queen\nof Sweden, and her children will alt\nupon the historic throne of Gustavus.\nSweden will thus be ono of tbe seven European kingdoms to be ruled by\ndescendants of Queen Victoria. The\nother six being Germany, Russia\nSpain. Norway. Greece and Bulgaria.\nHis Royal Highness' youngest daughter is Princess Patricia, and his son\nPrince Arthur, who passed through\nCanada some five or six weeks ago\non his way from Japan, whither he\nhad gone by command of King Edward to invest thr> Mikado with the\norder of the Garter.\nRenounced  a  Throne.\nSome years  p.go when the  rrnnd-;\nducal  throne    of    Saxe-Coburg-Gotha,\nbecame vacant, the succession passed\nto the Duke of Connaught, but he re-1\nnounced  his right to lt    The next\nheir was his son, the young Prince\nArthur, but after living in Saxe-Co-\nburg for a short time, the English\nlad found the iron rigidity and the\nexacting etiquette of a small German\ncourt to be not at all to his taste.\nHe therefore abandoned his claims\nto  the  German  principality.\nThe new Governor-General is a\nsplendid sportsman. Nothing gives\nbim greater pleasure than a visit to\nthe wilds In search of adventure, and\nhis delight, as well as his success,\nis shared by the Duchess of Connaught, who ls a keen sportswoman\nand a splendid shot.\nThe Duke and the Reporter.\nThe Duke of Connaught his provided plenty of material for the ane-\ncdotlst. Some of the stories that\nhave been printed about His Royal\nHighness follow.\nThe Duke was conducting some army manoeuvres on the east coast,\nand some fifty or sixty London Journalists were. instructed by their respective editors to attend the proceedings and not to lose sight of the\nRoyal Commander.\nToward evening the party reached\na small village, and the rumor went\nround that the Duke Intended to put\nup there for the night. This rumor\ncaused great consternation among the\nassembled pressmen, for it meant\nthat fifty men would be obliged to\nput up with hopelessly Inadequate\naccommodation.\nThe Journalists held an impromptu\nmeeting, and one man was deputed\nto ascertain the Duke's Intentions.\nHe found His Royal Highness attended by an equerry, watching a number\nof fatigue parties erecting tents.\n\"Can you tell me lf the Duke of\nConnaught intends to stay here tonight?\" the pressman asked ot the\nequerry, apologizing for the Intrusion.\nThe equerry turned upon him like\na released whirlwind. \"How on earth\ndo I know?\" he snapped. \"Do you\nthink 1 am the Duke's press agent?\"\nThe Duke of Connaught', who had\noverheard his equerry's replv, turned\nat once. \"What's that? What's that?\"\nhe asked, looking at the Journalist\nMilth enquiring eye.\n\"1 was asking your Royal wifchness'\nequerry whether you Intended staying here tonight,\" answered the\npressman, who by the way, ia now a\nshining editorial light of Fleet street\n\"If bo, It wlll mean that fifty or sixty\nmen will have to find accommodation.\"\n\"Since you are interested, I'll tell\nyou with pleasure,\" said the Duke. I\nam not staying here.\" Then, with\nknitted brows and angry eye, he\nturned upon his equerry: \"And\nthere's no reason why that question\nshould not have been answered civilly. Please report yourself to me immediately on  reaching Chatham.\"\nAdventures Afloat.\nOn one occasion, while travelling ln\nIndia, his Royal Highness planned to\nbreak his Journey at Port Said with\nthe idea of a trip to the Pyramids.\nThe captain of the P. & O. boat had\nbeen told of the Duke's coming, and,\nas a special mark of honor, had all\nhis officers drawn up to welcome his\ndistinguished passenger.\nPresently a man-o'-war's boat came\nalongside and the port captain of the\nguardship accompanied, by two gentlemen in plain clothes, ran up the\nladder. The P. & O. captain, who\nwas acquainted with the naval commander, greeted him effusively, ignoring his companion, who walked j\nsimilingly on.\nAfter a few preliminaries, the captain ventured to his navul friend: \"1\nwonder when the Duke wlll arrive;\nwe've been waiting for him some\ntime?\"\nThe \"naval man lifted his eyebrows\nln astonishment.   \"The Duke is here,\" I\nhe answered.   \"He and his secretary\nwere on my boat,\" j\nFor a moment the   P.    & O. man\nlooked as if he wanted his ship's deck\nto open and    swallw    him,  but the\nDuke of Connaught coming on deck, I\nsoon put the man he was to travel\nwith at ease ln his own genial way.\n|    The Duke's    unostentatious   entry'\nwas responsible yet for another mistake.    The chief steward was accost-,\ned  by  a    gentleman    who enquired\nI when dinner would be served, adding i\nhe was very hungry.. i\nI    \"We'll be later   than    usual    this\n! evening, sir,\" said the steward, \"for\nI the Duke of Cnnaught ts behind time |\nin coming aboard, and we've been or-[\ni dered not to serve dinner untll he ls\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nj quite ready.'\n1 'Serve lt right away, then,\" said\nj tho gentleman, \"because I'm quite\n; ready.\" And the steward realized\nthat he was talking to the royal passenger.\nI The Confused Subaltern.\nA strict disciplinarian and a diligent offlcer, the Duke of Connaught\nhas always commanded the respect of\nhis soldiers, while hts good nature\nand sense of humor have not failed\nto win their affection. Only of a\ncommander with these human qualities could be told this anecdote for\nwhich bis Royal Highness ls the authority.\"\nA young subaltern putting a company of infantry through their drill\nmanaged to get them into a terrible\nmuddle. The Duke, who was watching tbe effort, called the sugaltern to\nhim and asked, \"Have you any Idea\nwhat your men are supposed to be\ndoing?\" The boy saluted and replied,\nwith a confiding smile, \" Not the\nSlightest,  sir.    Have  you?\"\nThere is also the story that illustrates both his humor and one of the\ndifficulties of his position. It is related that at a reception at the\nHorse Guards tbe Duke asked an officer who had been presented what\nhe wanted. \"Nothing, thank you, sir.\"\nwas the molest renly. \"My dear sir,\"\nexclaimed his Royal Highness, shaking the astonished officer vigorously\nby the hand, \"I am really glad to\nmeet you. It ls a long time since\nI met an army offlcer who wanted\nnothing.\"\nWonderful   Memory.\nThe long and unfailing attention to\ndetail which has been such a prominent characteristic with the Duke\nhas endowed him with a mind of remarkable clearness. Once during tlie\nmanoeuvres on Salisbury Plain, the\ncorrespondent of a London newspaper\nhad been to the Duke getting some\nparticulars of the disposition of the\nNorthern army, of which his Royal\nHighness ww in command. \"Well,\"\nsaid the newspaper man afterwards,\n\"they can say what they like about\npeople getting the cre.llt for the suggestions of others, but. look here,''\npointing to some voluminous notes,\n\"this is what the Duke has Just given\noff to me from his own head without\na scrap of paper, as I'm a sober man,\nor a word from a living soul.\" And\nhe exhibited a list showing the precise dispositions of every fraction of\nthe Duke's extended command during the hostilities which had Just\nceased for that day. t\nA Real Democrat. I\nEvidences of his  Royal Highness',\ndemocratic spirit were noticed by hls j\nfellow passengers on the trip across'\nthe Atlantic.   He dined ln the publlc\nsaloon and good natute:Tly posed for.\namateur kodak fiends who were eager 1\nfor snapshots of him.   A story told ot\nhim many years ago when he was\nquite a young officer shows that this\ndemocratic spirit has long been with\nhim. The Duke was marching one\n<Iay toward Aldershot with his battalion of the Rifle Brigade. The general in command of the district sent\ndown a horse to meet him ln order\nthat His Royal Highness might ride\nto camp, as the march had been a\nlong and tiring one. His Royal\nHighness, however, at once declined\nto avail himself of the tempting but\nirregular offer, saying that as he was\na company officer, it was his duty to\nmarch Into camp with bis men:\nHIS ONE AMBITION.\nWhat Oliver, Herford   Would Choose\nto Do.\nA certainly extremely serious minded lady novelist, at a dinner the other\nnight, happened to sit next to Oliver\nHerford, the humorist and librettist,\nwho is never serious minded even for\na moment, except when he is endeavoring to become a playwright. The\nauthoress, who was disposed to be\nboth kind and yet a trifle patronizing,\nfinally remarked:\n\"Doesn't your work ever grow irksome to you, Mr. Herford^ I should\nthink, you would grow tired of making, a specialty of laughter. \ufffd\ufffd You have\na fine mind, a nimble wit, and then,\ntoo, you are so very, very erudite. Tell\nine, don't you sometimes think that\nyou have a higher mission than to\namuse people? Doesn't your soul at\ntimes yearn to accomplish something\non a higher plane, something with\nreal dignity, a real 'uplift' attached,\nsomething over the heads of your\nlaughter-loving public, perhaps which\nwould lift you if only Just a little\nabove the common run?\"\n\"Indeed,. I have,\" said Herford\nhumbly.\n\"Ah! I felt sure you must have an\noccasional longing for higher things.\nTell me what is the goal ot your\nlife's ambition?\" . .    .   ..     *\n\"Well, to tell you the truth,\" re-\npiled Mr. Herford, \"ever since I was\na mere child, all through my boyhood\nand until today,! have been trying to\nsummon up courage to do just one\nthin*. .    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n^Yes! Yes!\" crtea the \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd authoress,\nresting her head on her hand and\ngazing at hlm soulfully with a your-\nstory-interests-me look in her eves\n\"Tell me more.\"\n\"I have always had,\" seid Oliver, \"*\nwild longing to throw an egg Into aa\nelectric fan.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdChicago Tribune. ws\nWP^^^^\n\/\n\/\nPAGE EIGHT     r*\"~ *T \" *' \"'\nTHE DAILY NEWS.\nWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1911,\n' I\nS (  m\n\ufffd\ufffdT\ufffd\ufffdHE very fact that there aro\nA more Great Majestic Malleable end Charcots Iron Ranges\nsold than any other range on the\nmarket, is proof positive that it is j\nthe best.\nDon't You Want the Best?\nThe Great Majestic Range lasts\nthree t.mes as long as a cheap\nrange, bnt It doesn't cost th&e\ntimes as much.\nANDERSON ft LUSBY .\nmy    ,.*\nfjjELLo\nThe fishing steamer Roman, of the\nB. C. Packers' association,, arrived\nfrom the fishing banks yesterday\nmorning with a catch of 55*000 pounds\nof halibut. *t *\ufffd\ufffd\n.... Lai\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd |\nMake that vacant lot of yours a\nrevenue producer. We furnish the\nmoney t o build. National Finance\nCo., Ltd., 521 Columbia street\nWun Lung, a Chinaman, was sent-\nenced in the police court yesterday\nto three months' imprisonment for\nstealing a quantity of brass, the property of the B. C. E. R. company.\nTake the steamer Transfer for    a\nround trip Saturday afternoon. Leaves\nBlackman-Ker wharf at 2 o'clock. **\n**     I\n1 The choir of St. Andrews church\nIn tbe county court James Black wm meet for practice tonight t ed-\nwas sentenced to six months* im- nesday) instead of as usual on Thurs-\nprisonment for breaking into a hotel day. The practice wlll be held at\nat Mission. Tbe prisoner said he had eight o'clock, Mr. Openshaw organist,\nfallen  through   the    windows   when\ndrunk. i    Make that vacant lot of yours    a\nrevenue  producer.    We  furnish    the\nWith   the   completion   of the-new  money   to   build.    National Financ-\nwater main from the city  reservoir  Co., Ltd., 521 Columbia street.\nthe residents of Queensborough, Lulu\nisland, have now an adequate i water Oliver Prevost, liberated on his\nsupply for fire protection, domestic 0wn recognizances to come up for\nsupply and Industrial purposes. | trial at the assize court on a charge\nI of theft, failed to put In an appear-\nMayor John A. Lee returned to the  ance when the case was called, and\nclty   wn   Monday   evening, after his  a bench warrant was issued for his\nvisit to the eastern provinces.    The arrest,\nmayor seems to have combined busi\nnesa, munlclval and commercial, with\npleasure .vhile on his trip east. He\nreturns better pleased with New\nWestminster than ever.\nOne of the recommendations made\nby the board of works and adopted\nGossip has lt that there was a raco\nthat was almost neck and neck for\nthe purchase of the Independent mills.\nThe purchaser put up $500 deposit.\nTwenty minutes too laje arrived another intending purchaser prepared\nto double the amount paid on deposit\nAre you an average business   man   of   intelligence ?\nYou're the man I'm looking\nfor.   How about that matter\nof insurance ? Can you guar:\nantee that you are not going\nto die within the next ten\ndays ?     Accidents   happen*\nAre    you    insured    against \ufffd\ufffd,,,_.,..\ufffd\ufffd\n.       , . . *        \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd I is  placed    at    $210 000\ndeath and  accident 7     Better I thousand  dollars, 10 per cent, of the\n.*'.   i     .. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .1 purchase price   was paid over fn    21\nthink it over,   insurance \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd | aoiiar bnis of $1000 each as deposit.\nmy exclusive business.\nby tbe city councll on Monday.,night, i Or, at least, so runs the story,\nwas that two men with \"handipick-up I\ncarts\"    be   employed   on    Columbia      Miss    Cave-Browne-Cave,   L.R.A.M..\nstreet during the day to clean up re-  A.R.C.M., silver medallist, member of\nfuse, and that two carts of the description Indicated be purchased for\nthe purpose. .\nTT\ufffd\ufffde sale of the Schaake property,\nreported some time ago in the Daily\nNews, is stated by the People's Trust\ncompany to have been completed on\nSaturday evening. It was purchased\nby a Regina agent for eastern capitalists, whose intentions with regard to\nthe property are not stated. The price\nTwenty-one\nthe Incorporated Society of Musicians\n(successor to Mrs. Reginald Doddi.\nwill begin ber class for pianoforte,\nj violin, singing, theory, harmony,\ncounterpoint, musical form and history, on or about October 20, 1911. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\nI\nI Mr. T. H. McCormick Is exhibiting\ngreat interest in the native-born\nthese days. Since Friday last Mr.\nMcCormick has been wearing becomingly the dignity of fatherhood, on\naccount of a bouncing baby boy the\nstork brought to the household on\nthe day mentioned.   Mother and child\nAlfred W. McLeod\nOTIKSg^\nUSE OF ANAESTHETICS.\n657 CoVumbla St.,\nnon* Vi.\nU**h  Westminster\nTHE PRICE\nIs     an     important   consideration\nwhen purchasing clothing, and in\nthis regard I\ncan give you as per\nfect satisfaction as anyone.\nCome and inspect my lines\nmaterials which make up into\nof\nHas    Given    Surgery    Much    Wider\nScope.\nLondon, Oct. 17.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThere are few, if\nany,   branches ot    the    healing   art\nwhich  are today more  Important  in\nregard Xo public health than that concerned  with    tbe   administration  of\nanaesthetic  drills.   The ever-lnciteals-\nin.K scope of modern surgery- has re\"\nsuited in a corresijonding growth in\nthe work of those whose special duty\nit is to abolish pain during operations,\nso much so that every large hospital\nnowadays finds it necessary to have\nnot only a staff cf expert anaesthetists who visit it daily,   but   one   or\nmore resident    officers    specially appointed for a like purpose.   Of course.\nincreasing attention that is now\nj are doing well.\nA meeting of the committee of the\nChoral society will be held in St.\nGeorge's hall at nine o'clock this\nevening. The society committee consists of Mrs. W. T. Reid, Mrs. F.\nBroad, Mr. Chllber, Mr. II. C. Chamberlin, Mr. McNess. Canon d'Easum\n(chairman), and Mr. H. A. Wilson\n(secretary).\nTHE middle of October practically\nopens up the fur wearing season, and there is every reason for\nmaking selections early. The cold\nweather reminds the careful dresser\nthat even the most elaborate fall\ncostume will look still more attractive with well chosen furs.\nIndividual requirements can be\nbest met now, while our stock is at\nits highest point of usefulness to the\ncustomer, in point of variety and exclusive styles.\nWe welcome comparison.\nGrey Squirrel Sets $15 to $45\nElectric Seal Sets $45 to $125\nMink Sets $75 to $200 . >\nBlack Fox Sets $50 to $125\nSuperb Fashions in\nHigh Class Suits\nNo matter how enthusiastically and carefully one may have\n\"shopped around,\" there remains a refreshingly new viewpoint of\nautumn fashions to be seen at Smith's. These better class suits are\nshown in strictly and semi tailored styles. No two are alike; many\nfashionable shades and navy and black. In Tweeds, Broadcloths\nand Worsteds.\nPrice $35.00 to $75.00\n$25 to $50\nyou\nTliey will assuredly give\nperfect satisfaction in every respect\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfit, workmanship, material;\nand furthermore, remember thai\nevery garment bears the Union\nLabel.\nGALVIN\nLADIES AND MEN'S\nTAILOR\n46 Lome Street, New Westminster.\nthe\nSeely's\nInvisible Cream\nWITH PROXIDE\nWhitens the Skin\nAND\nInsures Good Complexion\nS DRUG STORE\nDeane Block.   441 Columbia St\nNew Westminster. B.C.\ngiven to the care of the mouth, which\ndemands  the  removal    of  every  decayed tooth that cannot be preserved\nis responsible for a considerable number    of    anaesthetic    administrations\nwhicb occur at   the   Hospitals every\nweek;  under such circumstance*) the\ncomparatively mild    anaethetic . substance known  familiarly as ''g\ufffd\ufffds\" is\nused, but apart from this there is a\nsteady increase to be noted in the recorded administrations    of    powerful\ndrugs such as chloroform and ether.\nAttended With Danger.\nYet it is well known that the production of anaesthesia by strong compounds  is  still    attended  with  some I\ndanger, the progress   of    the anaes-1\nthetist's art not having so far achtev-1\ned the idea of absolute safety.   True,\nit  is   at  the  present  time  that;   for\nevery unfortunate fatality that occurs I\nmany   thousands  of  successful   cases i\nare  recorded;   and that even of the1\n\"accidents\" a considerable proportion \\\nhave been due as much to the feeble i\ncondition of the patient or the shock j\nof the operation as to the drug used.\nStill, there is just sufficient   margin t\nof  uncertainty  to make  people  anx-j\nious about taking an anaethetic, and i\nso at times preventing them from, re-i\nceiving the benefits of modern operative skill even when urgently needed,\nand it is this margin which a band of\nkeen  investigators is endeavoring to\nabolish.\nIn the absence of serious constitutional disease, there is probably less\ndanger for the average individual\nwho takes an anaesthetic than there j\nis when he crosses a busy street. The |\ndifference is that in crossing a Btreet I\none takes full personal responsibility i\nfor getting safely to the other side;\nbut In undergoing a period of induced\nunconsciousness, accompanied by\neven a slight risk, the responsibility\nhas to be transferred to someone\nelse. Those specialists who are concerned with the development of an-\naethetlcs will not be satisfied until\nthey can say to a patient confronted\nwith a serious operation. \"We can\nguarantee you freedom from all disk\ndue to the anaesthetic.\" It may be\nit.any yearB before such an ideal is\nleached, hut certainly the rapid prog-\nress of tills branch during recent\nI years seems to point to the fact that\nlit will be reached, and probably with-\nj in the experience of this generation\nIn this country considerable impel\nus has been given to tho development\nof scientific anaethi'Sia by a committee appointed by the British. Medical\nAsociution, which from time to time\nreports on thc results of its inquiries and experiments.\nCost of Living in Japan.\nEvery Item of our everyday life is\nas costly In Japan as in Europe or\nAmerica. A respectable looking\nthree-storey bouse can be rented in\nLondon at \ufffd\ufffd30 a year, while the\nsame money can rent only a wretched\ncottage In Tokio. Bread, meat, milk,\nelectricity, gas, perhaps with the exception of eggs, nothing is cheaper in\nJapan. It costs far more to run a\nhouse in Tokio than in London. Then\nwhy are the wages and salaries lower\nin our country. Because of misuse of\n* labor and overabundance of .laborers.\n| What the Europeans move with the\nI derrick we let men and women carry\non their shoulders; so necessarily a\ngreat number of them must be paid\nfor.\nBank of Montreal\nESTABLISHED 1817.\nCAPITAL       \ufffd\ufffd14,400,000.00\nRESERVE    '.2,000,000.00\nBranches throughout Canada end\nNewfoundland, and ln London, Eng\nland, Naw Tork, Chicago and Spokane,\nO.S.A., and Mexico City. A general\nbanking business transacted. Let\nIers ot Credit lasued, available with\ncorrespondents In all parts of tk\ufffd\ufffd\nworld.\nSavings Bank Dspsrtment\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Deposits\nreceived In sums of fl and upward,\nand interest alio wet at 3 por eent W\nannum  (present rate).\nTotal  Assets over $186,000,000.00\nNEW WESTMINSTER BRANCH,\nO. D. BRYMNER. Manager.\nImproved\nRanch\n(898)\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Thirty-five and ono-lialf acres In one of the most fertile\nsections of the Fraser Valley. Twelve acres cleared and the balance\nis very easy clearing. Buildings comprise seven roomed house tn\ngood condition, also small barn and a poultry house. Pure spring\nwater piped to buildings. The soil ls a very rich loam and ls particularly suited to gardening and fruit growing.\nThis place has sufficient cleared land to give anyone A good\nstart and out of the profits of fruit, vegetables and poultry would\npay for Itself in a few years. I\nWATER FRONTAGE\nThree acres in city limits with 260 feet waterfrontage.   $25,000;\none-quarter cash, balance 6, 12 and 18 months.\nMcBRIDE & CLARKE\nPhone 929. Room 16, Collister Bleck.\n**********\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd***\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd**\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd***\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd**\nEYE  COMFORT\nIs obtainable through the aid of    erfect  fitting glasses.    Our\ntacles and lenses are guaranteed perfect ln fit and focus.\nspec-\nRyall's Drug Store\nEYES TESTED BY OPTICIAN.\nf>HONE 67 WESTMINSTER TRUST BLOCK.\nCALL AND SEE THE LATEST  IN TORIC BIFOCALS.\nPublic school only half a mile;\nmiles.\nB. C. Electric line two and a half\n$2500 Cash\nE. H. BUCKLIN,\nPres. end Oenl. Mgr.\nN. BEARDSLEB,\nVice-President\nW. ft H. BUCKLIN,\nSec. and Trees.\nSMALL-BUCKLIN\n.     -     LUMBER CO, LTD.     , ,,\nManufacturers end Wholesale Dealera In\nPlr. Cedar and Spruce Lumber\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd   *-****'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd___..     ...    il-..    ra__.__.____.     *S...IMt~~.   U*\ufffd\ufffd\nPhones Na. 7 and 177.\n**********\nShingles, Sash, Doors, Mouldings, tte.\nFirst payment wlll secure this, balance to arrange.   For full particulars as to price and location see\nEstablished   1891,   Incorporated   1905.\nOt\nF.J.flartXCo,Ltd.\nNew Westminster\nHead Office, New Westminster.      Branches at Vancouver    Victoria,\nChilliwack and Aldergrove, B.C.\nINTERURBAN TRAMS\nWestminster branch. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Cara\nleave for Vancouver at 6, 6:w\na.m. and every 16 minutes\nthereafter until 11 p.m. *****\ncar 12 p.m. Sunday leaves at\n6, 7, 8 a.m. and every 15 mm*\nutes thereafter.\nLulu Island bransh.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCars\nleave for Vancouver every hour\nfrom 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. connecting at Eburne for Steveston.\nBurnaby line\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCars leave tot\nVancouver every hour from t.\na.m. to 10 p.m. j\nFraser Valley line. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Cart\nleave for ClTTlHwack \"n,l 7Vt\npoints at 9:30 a.m., 1:20, 4:06\nand 6:35 p.m. --\ufffd\ufffd..\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd,\ufffd\ufffd\nBRITISH C0UJMIA ELECTRIC RAILWAT COMMHT\nEXCURSION Tfl\nCHILUWACK\nThe B. C. E. R. Co. offers reduced rates of a fare and a\nthird for week end trips to all\n. polnta on its Fraser Valley\nline.\nTickets will be on sale on\nSaturday and Sunday, good for\nreturn until Monday.\nMAKE YOUR  PLANS TO\nTAKE THIS ENJOYABLE \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nTRIP.","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"New Westminster (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"The_Daily_News_1911-10-18","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0317575","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.206667","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-122.910556","@language":"en"}],"Notes":[{"@value":"Titled The Daily News from 1906-03-06 to 1912-04-24; Westminster Daily News from 1912-04-25 to 1912-12-04; and The New Westminster News from 1912-12-05 to 1914-09-04.<br><br>Published by The Daily News Publishing Company, Limited from 1903-03-06 to 1912-04-24; and The National Printing and Publishing Co., Ltd. from 1912-04-25 to 1914-09-04.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"New Westminster, B.C. : The Daily News Publishing Company, Limited","@language":"en"}],"Rights":[{"@value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Digitization Centre: http:\/\/digitize.library.ubc.ca\/","@language":"en"}],"Series":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1911-10-18 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1911-10-18 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Daily News","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0317575"}