{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0317729":{"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP":[{"value":"6ba6cffd-8823-4e26-a647-25d7c44bda39","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/alternative":[{"value":"[New Westminster Daily News]","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2015-12-18","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1912-02-29","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nwdn\/items\/1.0317729\/source.json","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format":[{"value":"application\/pdf","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note":[{"value":" waittPLP*-*\nPORT R*Mif  *N'AWD\nADJOf HE TOWksiTU\n(Lower Office.)\nWHITE, SHILE8 A CO.\n*^r \/^*^\n<\"    I WHITE, BHfLit\nI\n\ufffd\ufffdi      \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdiii,ii>i^iii\nneat!\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd**.\nnu.\nPlKICR-J^'CaW*'\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'w* ' '*\ufffd\ufffdJ>l\" aa^a^'i\" ii********\nlicipal Cas  Plant to Be\nSubject of Bylaw.\nriTlON FOK BIG WORKS\nActivity Foreshadowed for This\nir\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEleven Important By-laws\nWill Be Submitted.\nit the city purchase a gas plant\nL<si'uut\/B   the   moat   important of\neu petitions that are    being   eir-\nLtd  ior  signature at the present\nThese  petitions  usK  that  thu\nac 11 submit eleven by-laws to   the\nBit, und ln them ia foreshadowed\nit work of progress and improve-\nI uui lng the current year.   A civic\niilimt hus heen advocated for somo\nby Mayor Lee, and it looks as if\nluea were about to materialise,\nunit step la thus belli;, taken to\nK into practice.\nhospital building by-law will alsu\n| another of great importance.    Tho\nsstion of a city hospital haB been\nuch lu tho public mind lately and, u.s\n[well known, the provincial govern*\njjent haa promised a grant of $40,000\n;iddltiou    to the    $30,000    already\nmated.    The  proposed   by-law   will\nibe in  the   elty    another   $100,000,\nrhlch, with $;iu,o00 already   in   han.t\njkes a total of $li0:),000 available for\nte   purpose.    Another    $25,000    will\n|rob,ibly be required, and this money\ntrill   be obtained,   it   possible,   from\neiuhhoiiiig   municipalities   that   use\n0e J'.oyal   C'oliiiiiDlau   hospital,   and\nlised by .\"rivate subscription.    Next\npo tho hospital caiues   the   cemetery\nK.tit.on.   A cemetery by-law ia necessary tj enable tho c'.'.y   to  purchase\nIthe site in Bapperton, on Vfhl&h   a Ue-\n[posit i\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd it.--, already been paid.\nTwo park by-laws are asked for, or.a\nfor Improving the present parki and\nthe second for the purchase of    new\npark.-;.   Queensborough, it   la   understood, wants a park, and it is proposed\n|to buy a ne*' park lh Sapperton    aa\nSutline! In   MwShy'd   debate   befoie\nthe rii\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdng,i.   The street Improvements\npt.i^tt&n io jtnQtlier-.'t.f.....tnmt. import-\nraianTli Is probable that the rate-\nkpayers    will show   fthemselves    over-\nl wbclmlugiy in favor of extensive worn\nSalon;; this line.   For a long time thero\nhas been felt the nerd of a building on\nthe exhibition   grounds   adapted   for\nhorse show  or similar purposes, and\nthis matter forms the subject of another Tctition.\nIn i'ddition to these Improvements\nthe following less interesting, perhaps,\nbut n) lee* Important requests are\nmad',.: Water extension and light extension, flre arid police apparatus,'and\nthe i r-j\\ Ipii.u of stare house and\nbuhi;ei a for the city.\nMayor Lee Will Take   Up   Important\nQuestions with Dominion Government\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFiscal Agent.\nMayor Lee has arranged to leave for\nOttawa today. He goes to take up\nmany matters of Interest and importance with the Dominion government.\nTiie harbor schemo will naturally be\ntbe most Important of these from\nmany points of view, but Interest attaches to the question of whether the\ngovernment is willing to beur Its portion of the expense of the permanent\nimprovement of Columbia street east,\npast tke Dominion's property thero.\nThe mayor will also discuss the question of the city hall site, and try to\nmake some arrangement whereby this\nmatter can be handled ln a reasonable\nway. Titles to reserves will bo another subject of negotiation.\nThis year it has been felt in many\n(itiarters that the time has come when\ntlie city of New Westminster should\nappoint Its own fiscal agents. Tbe\nmayor can, of course, make no definite\narrangements to this effect, but while\nhe Is In the east he will not neglect\nthe opportunity of discussing the matter with financiers of high    standing, i\nSITUATIONNowsm grows   ifflRff DOUMUfif\nin British Columbia!\nMiners Are Angry But\nTractable.\nWild  Enthusiasm PrevalM. Qv\ufffd\ufffdr\nture of Ciudad JuahM\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdClash\nwith Cowboys.\nd wltii\nIng o\\ _M\nI\nKl Paso, Texas, Fe&;;88.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWild\nenthusiasm  following\"ttielr taking\ntludad Juarez, the   rebel VaSqulstai\ntoday are massing- in and around the*.\ncaptured city, prepa*jt\ufffd\ufffdfy to a niareE\nagainst Chihuahua, capital of Chihua^\nhua state, whicli  will be    begun this\nevening.\nOenerul Cumpa's victorious rebels\nwere joined hero today by Colonel\nItojas with 800 men, \ufffd\ufffdwelling the in*\"'\nsurreclo army here tofttlly 2000 men.'\nA tense situation prevails lu Ul\nPaso. It ls feared that the rebels may\nat any time cause lnhtflhatlonal cow\nplications by flrln,, strtkjr shots across\nme Uto Grande iino El Paso, or   that\nMayor Lee\"expects'to\"be absent \"for j banrlls of n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdii<fo\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd from their camps;\nPlle ! at Juarez   may   cross  toe   line    and\nhlB ! attac.; the public utility plants here.\/\n' Those aro all well guar<\ufffd\ufffdu by a strong\nabout three weeks altogether,\nestimates will lie introduced in\nabsence, but they were practically\ncompleted yesterday with his co-operx\ntion, and they will probablv be brought\ndown in open council next Monday.\nIMPORTANCE OT CAR\nLINT EMPHASIZED\nAgnes    Street    Ratepayers    Discuss\nMethod of-Proee^ur:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdImprovement: Will Cosi f230fOOtf,\nConsiderable discussion was raised\nat the second meeting ot tm> \/.gnu.,\nbtreel ltatepayeis' .association tnu.\nnight on the Best course to loilow to\nsecure llie improvement of the stieet\nand Uie laying of the , doable trscn\nmon;, it. EWue thirteen ratepayers\ngathered In Jhe city council hall with\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. ,.. joanston in the chafr, and considered a resolution of j. \ufffd\ufffd-. H.au'\nwliich advocated that Immediate steps   Lioq. of the Amerfe\nA\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n:       '       \"\nIN\nIncrease In Estimates of Military   Expenditure Point to Fourrilrtg \ufffd\ufffdf\nAviation School.\nbo taken to carry out. the wldenmg\naud improvements, and that the B. C\nK it. be as'Ked to lay their ralle on\nthe street before It   was paved,   but\nthat the wuneU be asked to\nat once Witk the work ti\nWhat the B. Q.'\ufffd\ufffd. R. rateht do,\nfeeing of the meeting, however,,       ..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.,,,.,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,\nagaltist this inatlon,-which *a*Mallf origtopl oa^\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdiObraVn, and anotfer was pa\ufffd\ufffd*6#ln\nits mid., \"tfifc. **s ra^red fey :H\ufffd\ufffdv.\nA. E. Vert,   and   provided   tBat   the\nmeeting advise the   council   formally\nthat they wished   the   Improvements\nand widening carried   out,   end   the\ndouble track laid, and asutt that the\ncouncil pass thla on to the B. C. E, R.\nit alao authorized the councll tp draw\nup lhe plana-and get out the estimates\nfor the work, al*ays taking- Into consideration tbe double tracks.\nln calling the meeting to order the\npresident said they had come together,\nLondon, Feb. 28.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe estimates -fit tte believed, to make a formal applica-\nexpenullures tor the British \ufffd\ufffdrny for tlon for the Improvements demanded\nthe fiscal >ear of 1912-13, Including i\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd the original petition. Rev. A. B.\nboth effective ani non-eilective ser- ( Vert> however, thought that besides\nvices, aggregate $135,300,000, or an in-   fhi8 they wanted to formulate their In\nforce cf the Texas National G.iurd.\nIhe .situation In Juarez itself seemed somewhat improved today. The\nstreet rtarfl are running again, und a\nn;:mber of An:qricans,. despite warnings, crossed the line \ufffd\ufffdM.visited ihe\ncity on a Ki;:ht-Eeelng tour.\nMassacr: T..-raatene:!.\nMexico City, Feb,.,, 28.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSanchez\nAzeoiiu, Madero's pr.vate.sscretai y, U*\nsued a statement nore toJay, deelaiing\nthat a niassac\/e ot>-Americans |n\nMexico City is i rohabti .Mr American\ntroops <tos3 thy ncr3eK\" '\nRepresentatives of the.various foreign legations immediately conferred\nand planned to unite to d' fend foreign\nresidents In the event ol a crisis.\nThe foreign diplomat* \ufffd\ufffdrefj>uszle\/\na* toawshy the statetOWt WflMMft\nPresident IIadero declares that the\nfall of Juarez is triv^il, \ufffd\ufffdn.'. that\nColonel Villa's foree of federals will\nHiirroand the town and by starvation\nwill force the rebels to come 10 TBlle\ufffd\ufffd\nout of Juarez to \ufffd\ufffdiwbattle.\nCowboys Still Qes^era'.i.\nSan Antonio, F*b. 3S;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHourly   expecting a renewal of the attacks. on\nthem hy Mexican marajrilers, the^Kua-\n[wHjjya on the\nITIillflNS AHE RESUMED\nf iouth Wales  Hot for Strife,\n6fut Executive Favor Milc'sr\nMeasures.\nLondon,   Feb.   28. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd The    British\ninera' federation, after a long and\nstormy ineeting tnis morning, passeu\na resolutljn ^deciding to cont.uue ttiti.\nnegotiations With the owners undei\nthe auspices ot the government, witu\na view to bringing uuo.it -\\ settiemeni\nof the dispute.\nSome of the miners' dolegates are\nbent on war, especially the represei.-\ntan.es of the collieries ln K,.ub\nWales, but th* executive committee\nsucceeded in inducing the meeting to\nmane a tprther*Joit for ;eaee. In an\neaii-l-il statement issued this afternoon, the executive committee cj.i-\nfirmed the decision of the Miners'\nFederation to resume its conferences\nwith the premier.\nThe Miners' Federation also passed\na resolution to permit all the men\nwhose servicer are necessary to keep\nthe coal pits In good working order to\ncontinue work. Thia action has revived the hope that it will not ba\nlong belure .t&e disputants are able to\nmeet in a joint peace conference.\nTher\ufffd\ufffd are upwards of 50,000 m usrs\non Btrike and by midnight tonight\n100,000 will have ceased work.\nAt Home In Aid of Dun::\ufffd\ufffdna!:! Church\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSunday Service* Should Be\nInteresting.\nFor   City   Employees,   As**\nnounces Aid. Dodd.\nNEW FISH KUEE END01SED\nMrs. Cralk,   of 230   Third   avenue, I\nheld an at home   last   evening.   Tno | Trades and Labor Council Holds latei^-\nfunction was a semi-public affair, and\nthe proceeds were in aid of the building     of    the   Dundonuld   Methodist\nSIMPLE PBSECUIE*\nAT BIER OF DUKE\nWindsor. JJB&g., Feb. 28.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFuneral\nServices,Of Ule Simplest form attended\nthe temporary burial In the royal\nvaults here to lay of the Duke of Fife,\nbrother-in-law, pf Ktilg George, who\ndied .1 .Miliary 29, at Assouan, Egypt, as\ntbc i esult of exposure when the steamer L'e'hi was wrecked off. the Moroc-\nn. c\ufffd\ufffda4t4|LjD^.eijj^Br J.3.    .\nKing George* Qu een Mary ami tha\nPrincess Rfiftal i widow of the i>uke of\nFife) and her daughters, some other\nmembers Of the royal iamily and a few\npersonal friends, composed the con:-'rogation. I\nQueen Mother AVextidhdra was unable\nto he -pr^MSrt\/OwInqf to an attaek of\ninfluenza\t\nthSOTf.\nEra&ma\nchurch. Forty or flfty people attended,\naud the program was aB follows:\nVocal solo, Mr. Hoard man; recitation,\nMrs. E. Saunders; vocal solo, Miss\nLorimer; banjo solo, Mr. A. Oxenbary;\ntalk ou Nome, Alasha, MIes Elta Lair;\ninstrumental solo, Miss Cave-Broivne-\nCave; vocal solo, Mrs. Mansfield;\nvocal sblo, Mr. Boardman; recitation,\nMlss A, Tidy; vocal solo, Mr. C.\nBuchanan; mandolin solo, Mrs. David\nson; vocal solo, Mrs. W. T. Ueid;\nviolin solo, Mr. Gray; instrumental\nsolo, Miss Laidlaw.\nThe Dundonald Methodist church\nbuilding will cost about $800, of wh.ch\nsum $5f>0 hus been subscribed. MetnoJ-\nism in N'ew Westminster is up in armB\nto wipe off the balance. A Byrne road\nor Gilley car wlll take worshippers to\nthe church on Sunday. The Queens\nAvenue Methodist Church Epworth\nleague will give a concert in Dundonald church on Monday evening, the\nproceeds of which wl.l go towards wiping off the debt on the building. Prominent among the workers is Mr. T. F.\nPhillips, who was chairman at the at\nhome last evening.\nestina Senlon\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDiscusses Architects' Proposed Bill.\nWOMEN MIX IN\nLAWRENCE RIOTS\nMassachusetts State Militia anJ Police\nDisperss Two Hundre:! and\nFifty Disorderlies.\nbeleaguered Ne'.etfi^MorMs .'cattle\nranch in Mexico, JuatJjfiroas'ftie-.fesa*\nline near Sierra.\"gUOfii?,to*a#rls* desperate,\n, The ranchers, t;\nnumbered, stand'\nand efuse \"ty\ufffd\ufffdlv%\nbandits,, this iW'\nInterment will be in\nfit Mar L3d*e,\nAlderman Dodd was able to announce to the Trades and Labor council laat night thut the wage of $2 for\nsin eight hour day for city employeea\nhad passed the final estimates. The\nannouncement was received with applause. Several other matters of importance were taken up. One of these\nwas the question of the Importation\nby the canneries of fresh salmon\nNaught ln American traps which waa\naffected by a change ln the ordinance\nrecently introduced by J. D. Taylor.\nM. P. Another matter discussed waa\nthe bill which the architects are trying\nto get passed to prevent anyone from\ndrawing plans for a building estimated\nto cum more than $6U0.\nIt was Mr. Turnbull who brought up\nthe question of tbe flsh. He stated\ntbat the canneries had been in the\nhabit of sending over to the other\nside for fresh salmon caught in the:\nAmerican traps, so that they could,\nprevent the Fraser river fishermen\nfrom getting \"fresh'' ln the matter of\nprices. J. D. Taylor had been instrumental ln altering tbis ordinance so\nthat the local fishermen can now ship\nfresh flsh to the other side when better prices prevail south of the line. It\nwas accordingly moved and carried\nthat the Trades and Labor council\nsend a telegram to J. D. Taylor, MP.,.\nheartily endorsing his action.\nSpeaking on the architects' bill.\nMosea B. Cotsworth stated that the\nresult of such a law would be a. greet:\nhardship on workers who wese huilding their own homes. As a safeguard\nagainst this sort of .thins j-he wiggested\nthat the Tiades 4ftd \"DShdr\" council -\nshould keep in touch with tbe member of parliament, so thnt he could\nsend them notice of bills coming before the House. Copies of the Mile\nshould be sent to all public Ubnuie*\nand councils, so tUat they could be\ndiscussed by the people attected.\nD. Cameron then.announced to-tto\nmeeting that the certificate ot *i\ufffd\ufffdw-\ncrease oi $8u0,000 over those of   tho\nyear VJlt-U. ,   r\nThe entire increase In tho estimates\nls due to the proposed expenditure by\nthe government in development of\naviation in the British army, as it Is\nplanned to spend $800,000 on the acquisition of aeroplanes alone.\ntentlons in writing to be submitted to\n| the street railway company thrpugh\nI the elty council.\ni    Mr. Blair then moved his resolution\nI and expressed a wish to get something\nj definite accomplished, which end, he\nthought, would never be attained 'by\nwaiting for the B. C. E. R.   Some con-\nIn a memorandum accompanying tho ' jternatlOn was caused by a sLUsment\nestimates, Viscount Haldane, secretary' tj,at a rongh estimate of the city en-\nof state for war, says that a complete j gineer put the cost of the whole work,\nmilitary aviation school and   all   the\nworkshops necessary to train officer.:\nof both the army and navy wlll    be\nestablished  soon on  Salisbury plain,\nthe great manoeuvring ground of the\narmy.\n, Another Bathtub Murder.\nNew York, Fab, 28.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe hody of\nMrs. Johanna Htuveron, who lived\nalone In an apartment ln Harlem, was\nfound today crammed into a bathtub.\nShe had been murdered list night and\nher tint, tooted. A belt boy in the\napartment was arrested.\nSltilwviri\nbeys Wetq.<C|ltet\ntbere is still und\nHave Cross\nSan Antflnlo, Texas, Feb. \ufffd\ufffdi\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBoW*\nly crossing the boundary, Mexican\nrebels today changed the theatre ot\naction from Mexico to Texas by raid*\ning the Wilson cattle ranch, near\nAlpine, where they sfejlr cattle s\ufffd\ufffdd\nengaged in a battle with the posse of\nAmericans who i>ursue8'*:Wem. The\nmarauders were overtaken and ln the\nfierce flchtlng that followed four Of\nthe invaders were killed and Charles\nTuttle, an American, waa wounded.\n. Badly beaten, the Mexicans crossed\nSELL JUtiiWta\nComptainVef Bus!\n.Plan to HsJf 6fT Un^slrabla\njfelleJtore.\n-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-TifwIWikef  Mas?.?  Feb. iH:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWives\nand. mothers sunered agntn tod iy in\nthe   Lawrence   textl.'e   strike,   when\nTroop B of the state militia, aided by\na force of police, charged 2tni women\nand a score of men who were parading along Essex street.   The   charge\ncame suddenly and without,warning.\n- Although the snijdl army ot strikers\nbroke an*, ran   tor   shelter,   offering.\nnot, the lightest resistance, tha U\ufffd\ufffd*SJ\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 1& \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd?.\ufffd\ufffdLJ\ufffd\ufffd*\ncavalry pursued some of them as far 1 w?^S,'rt*' Lab\ufffd\ufffdr ^\"^JSTTS\nas the common, mocks away from thBf\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdd-\ufffd\ufffdMH> shares had.been *\ufffd\ufffd*.-\ufffd\ufffdha\nsoene of thecriginal charge.V*V\ufffd\ufffdWliPW*. *a\\?2i?3FL,3L S-'W\nwomen   were   knoeked    down, and \\ ^vi\ufffd\ufffd^ if V es \ufffd\ufffd\ntrampled upon by, p^lcemen;\n'\" $!   '\n$#^$M*&\n.. .i>4SKftjmlf''OT*\"jitriiit^|fclitetaAn,\nSwag arrested. As*all the strikers ran\"\nwhen the \"-charge.was slatted and no\/\nwjklstanee iwss offered,' the strikers\nate; at a joss to understand the cause\nior the wonftiiL's arrest.\n, i\nBusiness men of this city have been\npestered lately by irresponsible advertising canvassers, who makto their\n*ppeal in such a *W that fhey ~\ndifficult, to turn Stmt, hht' yet\nnot a sound bunlneise proposition\nsubmit Accordihglyi, there Is drrnove-\nment on foot among certain persons\nconnected with advertising, printing\nand   general   business   to   establish\nttoRK G7aTd:rl,v^7PTntUwhrr; ' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd> \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*, f^S^S^lSSi\nthe water Is shallow and escaped Into fWould lool^njo the claims of all such\nHE FELL THROUGH\nPLATE OLA8S WINDOW\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .-\\^f******9^aM*w \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nMa**m**\n*?*\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'..   .\none. tffce'plttperty had cost only 94Mfe\naad It the company wanted to sell to\nconld find a boyer tomorrow at |t8p*\ncash. The yearly receipts wen to\nthe neighborhood of JS00, and the incidental expenses only about $3***\nleaving a surplus for interest eT son\ufffd\ufffd\nAll money raised in\n|600.\nVancouver, Feb. 28.-?^ShO\ufffd\ufffdly after 0 1 t*o price of the  J>\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffder*\ufffd\ufffdf._.*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,*m,,5f\no'clock last er\ufffd\ufffdUtofe\ufffd\ufffdn jnebrlated man f apent on Unprotfn&thoSnt.ltta*. \ufffd\ufffdM*\nell, UiwiiWh .one pt thi   plat,   glass \/ ^Q^^new toj^tloj*   He SmaBf\nwindows iif the 8&tch Clothing hoiwe.  moved that the cooncIlinstrBrt afl! tto\nProvidwace, which protects foo's   and f delegates to go. back to their union**\nMexico.\nDUMPED AND DYING\nAWAITS HIS TATE\nexpropriation, moving ot buildings,\nwidening and Improvements, at about\n$250,000, of which sum th'e council\ncould not contribute mora than $16,000\nunder the Municipal Clauses act. Several ratepayers, felt that to go ahead\nand Incur this Mg: expense without\nmaking certain' that the car line vyould '\nbe built, would be very fash, *S they Housed in a tent Att th* site of the\ndoubted if they could make Agnes! old Isolation hospital, John Aspgerln,\nstreet a business street without a car   the dying Swede dumped on this side\nJohn Aspgerln Sheltered in Tent Under Health Officers\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThorouph\nInvettigption Demanded.\nwandering s31tcitors( and have some\ntort of certificate to give to those who\nprove thqir bona-flde character. Not\nto possess such endorsement from the\nbureau would be accepted as a proof\nthat the proposition was no good, and\nthose approached wouli have no need\nto bother with it.\nSolicitors of the sort\nadopt, it ls asserted, many schemes\nto extract the shy advertisement from\nthe hardened business man. Very\noften the argument used is that of\nsome charitable or religious cause;\nthis, ln fact, ls one of the most, effec\ndrunkards, saved him from injury, but\nthe window looks tbe worse this morning for a board patch.\nStudents on Strike.\nFort Smlth.'Ark.,   Feb.   28.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThree\nhundred striking students of the University     of   Arkansas   paraded   the\nstreets of Fayetteville last night and\nattended a dance ln defiance of rules,\nto signify their displeasure   at   the\n11 faculty's action ln suspending thirty'\nindicated {alx students, held- responsible for   an\nanonymous publication charging   the\nfaculty with discrimination.\nSir Charles Is Grateful\nLondon, Feb. 28.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSir   Charles Tun-\nHe Will Hang.\nWinnipeg, Feb. 28.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe authorities\nat the provincial Jail this morning say\nthat it ls practically sett ed that Henry\nWilbur Redd, negro, sentenced to\ndeath for the murder of soother negro,\nwill hang at 7 o'ciock, March 1. The\nhangman's Identity is kept secret by\nthe authorities.\nHue. and tbey considered 66 teet a\nsufficient width for a residential\nstreet.\nFather O'Boyle, though a keen supporter of tho Improtements, thought\nlt a- pity to so hastily, especially as\nthe meeting was hardly representative,\nand others thought that a bu6y company such as the B. C. B. R. BhouW\nbo given some time to make up its\nmln<i on the matter. These counsels of\nprecaution ultimately prevailed, and\nthe more mortejate resolution was\npassed as related above. Everv one,\nhowever, was apparently in favor of\nspending the money If only the car\nline was assured.\n JL*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd: ~*n\nHeld Up Bank.\nSan Jose, Call., Feb. '28,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtoTnes A.\nGbata, owtfbr bl [C\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd? Costa \"bank on\nNortb Mir'.ce't str^t, wbb held.up ot 8\no'clpdlt this m^rhlnF Just attt*r \"he had\ntive methods. But, ijina are the man 1 per, who ls still In bed, takes tbe keen-\nthat have no ftandln* in the a.lverUs- eBt lnteresrjin current event* He is\nInt ol thy other world, but who live extremely grateful for the host ol\nfrom hand to mouth   on   the   latest  Canadian enquiries regarding his con-\nand urge their members to take an Interest ln the Labor Temple company:\nThe committee appointed to interview the council on the matter of the\nscale of wages and conditions of labor\nrequired on city contracts had neglected to attend to this duty.\nman Dodd stated that the special i\nmittee of lhe council appointed te t\neider thla matter in accordance witli\nhla resolution of last year bud everything in shape, and was only waiting\nto heur from the Trades and Labor\ncouncil.\nIt wag announced hy Delegates titt-\nshrlst that two   city   employees  h*\ufffd\ufffd\nbeen dismissed under clrcessstaacee\nthat required InvesUgaUosi, and JJto\nmatter waa referred to the grieimnc*\ncommitee.   .AnoWirr '*\"t0ta**iu^*'a^s**.'\nraised   by\" Delegate    fittoef.    *to\nthought that the conduct of tto JRoyaf\nColumbian hospital shoali to lnoto*\nHe cited a case!  Qf   nppsmrtlr\nSteamer li Abandoned.\nPhiladelphia, Pa\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Feb. 23.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe\nsteamer Oold.sboro, which grounded on\nBrandywlne shoals in Delaware bay,\nTuesday, has heen abandoned and\nprobably will go to pieces soon if lt Is\nnot swallowed un fn the treacherous  ..\nsands. Tho Goldsboro is owned by the ! opeteft the bank vah't. and hound aid\nPhiladelphia and Atlantic City Trans- 'gagfired by tWB'iff**. wh-> toat $4000\nporutian company, from the vault, and escaped.\n'I\nof the Una, according to his sworn\naffidavit, by the Sumas hospital authorities, is awaiting further developments concerning bis fate. He Is now\nunder the care of the city health department and will continue so untll\nword ls received from Ottawa with regard to the proper steps to be pursued ln dealing with him, The facts\nof the case have already been telegraphed to the immigration officials\nat the Dominion capital, and Mayor\nLee has also written to the rovernor\nof Washington Asking bim how the\nhospitals of hits state handle these\nmatters.\nAspcerin's temporary dwelling Is\ncomfortably heated With a stove, and\nhe will rtfWilve overy attention demanded by humanity* while in the care\nof the health officers. That, in the\nolrcumtftHhceB, t\\e 'should beikppt here\nnt the publlc expense, h\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdj|ver, untll\nbis death, is not regordddr as,a fair\nproposition and vigorous jlpjiulry mto\nthe facts of tho case is being made by\nthe local immigration department.\nscheme which occura to them whereby\nthey may hope to coax a dollar tor\nsome mad advertising scheme that\nwill certainly never do the advertiser\nany good. Heading off auch men aa\nthese, maintain the promoters of the\nbureau or whatever lt may turn out to\nbe called, will mean a great saving of\ntime and money to every man of bust\nness, the raising of the status of the\nadvertising trade, and 'the increased\nprosperity of those doing a legitimate\nbusiness of this character.\ndition.\nCHINE8E REBEL\nBOOPS MUTINY\nHankow, China, Feb. 28.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^ portion\nof the Republican troops stationed at\nWu Chang revolted last night. Conr\nsiderable flghting took place, but no-\ndetails have reached here regarding\nthe casualties. The city gates have\nbeen closed. The outbreak ls attributed to the dissatisfaction among,\n.the soldiers at not receiving their pay.\nThe foretan gdnboats rtatloned here\nhave b^en ordered to ho'd themselves\nln readiness for eventualities.\nfinance In North Vancouver.\nNorth Vancouver,   Feb. 28.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"While\non my way from San   Francisco   to\nVnncouver I speftt a day   or two   In\nPortland and Seattle.   I was extremely\nsurprised and pleased to   hear   that\nthe topic of conversation ln financial\ncircles was   principally   confined   to\nNorth   Vanoouver   investments     As\nthiB city Is to be my future home, it\nwes a matter of pleasant hearins'i\"\nsaid Mr. J. A. Foster, the manager **t\nthe North Van<iouver branrt. of   thij;\nCanadian Bank'of Commwpfc.' vtrhloji\nopened tor bt^lness on Monday. \"\nrongh words si\nwoman who had\nrecently, and a\nslsl\n- in tpo tosftfed\n--\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdItttMStor, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nRecccrtlstnfj'New ftsjJubllc.\nWashington,   Fei    28.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe. Honse\ncommittee on foreign atthktfl&^rillbly\nrepotted' today the Sulzer resolution,\nwhich in effect would recognize   the\nnew Republic-'fltXblna.   It congrtitu-\nlates the Chlhttee people \"on their ***.\n.sumotlon of the powers dutlf s and ^  r\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdta\ufffd\ufffd by M\ufffd\ufffdto-?\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^t^ the\n'-spoiisiblllties of self-gOTerameat.\"        I Bud hospital.\nand\nvest)\nthei\nthe Ur-...        \t\non\ufffd\ufffd:lW'  the  deia&ites \ufffd\ufffdM$< ***>\natn|Bu*ted io $12 a moath J\ufffd\ufffd* a, nnrto\nwha'had' b\ufffd\ufffdph; there tor tW\ufffd\ufffd yearn.\n, Mgst tf Ito wilons reported wortf >\ngood; tot -Ito printers found baslaeM\nalbw.   W% lv\ufffd\ufffdb*rs TeporteJ twt\ufffd\ufffdtoi\nfair shops, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdpid the grievance cmnsslt\ntee waflwstTucted.to ftxterview WH*>\nker with iegara to. union torhten.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1 r-*f-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nNew Bl^erinttsniefnt\nijtocouvef.^b. ?8.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMiSa TMWst\nWho has been woman euperfnteatost \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nof the -Bntpttoifd ifefn^rtei hospital to\nOntarto tor seventeen or* elghtee\ufffd\ufffd*\nytojts, and daughter otthg lite i\ufffd\ufffdWi\nA. Ttifihie, Southampton; 4*teif1\ufffd\ufffdn, tor\nl\ufffd\ufffdeien    appointed    miperltfianArtrt   of FAOB TWO\nWants\nIVANTED-A WOMAN TO WASH\nclothes. Apply 603 Second street,\ncorner of Fifth avenue.\nWANTKD-A GOOD EXPERIENCED\nsolicitor for grocery business. Ap\nply 444 Sixth street, dkrner of Fifth\navenue.        f\nWANTED\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPARTNER IN PIONEER\nDye works, 55 McKenzie street.\nWill teach him the business. Must\nbe an active man. Small capital required.\nFOR EXCHANGE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA CITY HOUSE\nand lot for 20 acres of excellent\nland on the B. C. E. R. Sherriff,\nRose & Co., 648 Columbia street.\nWANTED\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA CHEAP LOT EITHER\n50 or 66 frontage in Edmonds. What\nhave you to offer. Apply Box 40\nDaily News.\nDON'T BURN\nWaste Paper or Rags.\n#\nPhone 475 and we will collect, free of\ncharge.\nH. P. VIDAL *\\ CO.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nCORPORATION    OF   BURNABY.\nNotice I\nIn consequence of the rapidly Increasing volume ot business, it ls ordered by the council that In future no\napplications, will be considered by tho\nBoard of Works unless such applications are received seven days before\nthe date of meeting on February the\n19th inst., and on every alternate Monday thereafter.\nARTHUR 0. MOORE.\nClerk.\nEdmonds, B. C, Feb. 12, 1912.\nM8itl\n1H5 DAILY NEWS.\nWANTED\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTHE RE8IDENT8 to\nknow that I am now operating the\nonly pasteurized bottled milk plant\nIn the city and will deliver either\npasteurized milk or cream to any\npart of Uke city or district. Milk,\n-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd quarts for $1.00; cream, 30c a\n'<plnt. Phone your order to R873\nor write QJen Tana Dairy, Queens'\nboro, Lulu Island.\nFOR 8ALE\nF*>R SALE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFEW ODD   PIECES   OF\nfurniture.   1108 Eighth avenue.\nFOR SALE \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ONE L O T AT ED\nmonds. Address W. Owners, Box 41\nDaily News office.\nFOR SALE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLOT 26, BLOCK 5, SUB-\ndivislon District Lot 36, Block 5,\nNorth Range 3 West, New Westminster District. As I am leaving\nB. C, I will sell this lot cheap for\ncash. Address A. Wood, P. O- Box\n1900. Vancouver, B. C. \t\nJTOR SALE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA SUBDIVISION OF 50\nlarge lots In city; cleared, level, under cultivation, on carline. Price\n^17,000, small cash payment and\neasy terms. The very bfest buy,\nright here, too. Queensborough\nRealty Co., Ewln avenue.\nLAND   REGISTRY    ACT.\nRe the North Easterly half of Lot\n2, Block 13, in the City of New West\nminster.\nWhereas proof of the loss of Certlflcate of title number 1132F, Issued ln\nthe name of the Westminster Masonic Temple Company, Ltd., has been\nfiled at this office.\nNotice is hereby given that I shall,\nat the expiration of one month from\nthe date of the flrst publication hereof, ln a daily newspaper published In\nthe City of New Westminster, Issue a\nduplicate of the said Certlflcate, unless ln the meantime valid objection\nbe made to me in writing.\nC.  S. KEITH,\nDistrict Registrar of Titles.\nLand P.egl8try  Office, New  Westminster, B. O, Jan. 27, 1912.\nFOR SALE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTHE STEEL MALLEA-\nble Range; Canada's Pride; on\neasy terns. Canada Range Co.,\nMarket Square.\nLAND   REGISTRY   ACT.\n-FOR SALE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAGASSIZ POTATOES\nin large or small quantities at $35\nper ton, or $1.75 per sack; guarantiee every potato sound; free delivery within city; terms cash. Hatt\nCook, 527 Front street, New Westminster.   Phone 550.\nTO RENT.\nTO RENT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHOUSEKEEPING ROOMS\nApply 619 Hamilton street. Phone\n11672.\nRe lots 43, 46, 47, 48, 57, 58 and 61,\n62, 63, 64, 65 of lots 8 and 11 Suburban Block 13, in the City of New\nWestminster.\nWhereas proof of the loss of Certificate of Title Number 1155F, issued in\nthe name of Sarah Ann Douglas, has\nbeen flled in this office.\nNotice is hereby given that I shall,\nat the expiration of one month from\nthe date of the flrst publication hereof, in a daily newspaper published ln\nthe City of New Westminster issue a\nduplicate of the said Certificate, unless in tjie meantime valld objection\nbe made to me Io writing.\nW. S. KEFTH,\nDistrict Registrar of Titles.\nLand ReglEtry Office, New Westmin\nster, B. C. Feb. 16. 1912.\n\"TO    RENT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFURNISHED      HOUSE-\nkeeplng rooms.   224 Seventh street.\nLAND   REGISTRY\nJ. C. REID\nLAND   REGISTRY  EXPERT\nTitles    Examined,    Land Registry\nTangles Straightened out.\nCurtis Block City Box 483\nF. G. GARDINER.\nA. L.\nTO RENT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLIGHT, FURNISHED Ott . ....\nunfurnished,   housekeeping     apart   fl airliner Xr   iwlMfr,<\ufffd\ufffdl\"\nments; steam heated; hot and cod  VJCMU\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCi Ot  1T1C1I-.CI\nwater.   Apply room 9, K. of P. hall, i                          M. 8. A.\ncorner Agnes and Eighth streets.      |                      ARCHITECTS\nmmgam j WESTMINSTER TRUST      BLOCK.\n\"Phone  661. Box 772\nJtfUD, CURTIS & DORGAN\n706   Columbia   Street.\nCity Property and Farm Lands.\nEDMONDS\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd86x198 feet, on Vancouver road, right at station. $2300;\none-tliir.l cash.\nNEW WESTMIN8TER. B. C\nD. McAulay\n\\,\n\/EDMONDS\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLot all cleared, 74x135\napproximate, very close to station.\nS120D; one-third cash.\nEDMONDS\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOn Burford road, near\nOxford road, few 33x112 foot lots.\n*360; $50 cash, $10 monthly.\nEDMONDS\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOn Henry street, near\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEighth street or Douglas road, close\nto Edmonds road car. $550 each;\none-quarter cash, balance monthly.\nTel. 761.\nARCHITECT\nCor. 6th and Columbia\nCONDON STREET, CITY\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd50x132 foot\nlot, four lots from Twelfth street,\nupper side.   $1200; one-third cash.\nFOURTH AVENUE, CITY\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCorner\nEleventh street, 132x131' feet, streets\non three sides. $4500; terni3 arranged. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nWestminster\nTransfer Co.\nOffice Phone 185.      Barn Phone  137\nBegbie Street.\nBaggage Delivered Promptly to\nany part of the city.\nLight and Heavy Hauling\nOfataOl\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdT****  0*rt\ufffd\ufffdr* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nCITY OF NEW WESTMINSTER. B.C\nBalkans Likely to be\n8CENE  OF  SKIRMISHING\nVienna, Feb. 28.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThat tbe breaking up of winter means serious trouble\nln the Balkans Is firmly believed here.\nThis ls really the Berlous side of the\nHalo-Turkish war.\nCampaigning is Impossible ln the\nBalkans In the winter, and this alone\nhas prevented an outbreak before this\nwhich may well set all Europe aflame.\nThe flrst outbreak ot trouble is anticipated on the side of Northern Albania, the usual period for the renewal\nof disturbance in this country being\nnow only a few weks off. Notwithstanding the severe cold, the bands ln\nNorthern Albania, increase from day to\nday, and conflicts with the troopB\nhave already occurred In the district\nbetween Ipek and Mitrovvitza.\nIn connection with the prospect ot\ncoming trouble in Albania, the attitude of Montenegro suggests many\nmisgivings here. King Nicholas bas\nneglected no means of retaining his\nInfluence Wtth the Mallsseorl, who\nhave been provided with fresh supplies of arms from over the Montenegrin frontier, while Montenegrin\nagents are stated to be active ln every\npart of northern Albania.\nNick with Ausrla-Hungary.\nIt ls now universally believed that\nKing Nicholas has cast in his lot .vith\nAustria-Hungary, and that Montenegro can rio longer be reckoned on to\njoin In opposing a prospective Austrian advance Into the sanjak of Novl-\nbazar. lt is certain that Kussia largely forfeited her Influence at Cettlngne\nby withdrawing last year the subvention she had hitherto accorded Montenegro, and the little state, unable to\nexist on Its own resources and burdened with the expenses incurred during the last Albania revolt, has been\ncompelled to seek financial aid from\nVienna.\nWhether the loan recently obtained\nfrom Austrian financiers on remarkably favorable terms involves indefinite\npolitical obligations, is unknown, but\nit probably does.\nThe anxieties of the situation are\nincreased by the attitude of Bulgaria.\nFor some time past King Feruinand\nhas been believed to pursue an Aus-\ntrophle policy. During the crisis of\n1908-09 Bulgaria acted loyally towards\nServla and refused, it is believed, certain tempting offers at a moment when\nwar with the dual monarchy seemed\nimminent. But Austrian Influence is\nnow generally supposed to be predominant at Sofia.\nProspect of Success Slender.\nIt is feared ln Servla that, should\nAustria take advantage ot the t'Ou-\nbled situation in Turuey to make \ufffd\ufffd\nforward movement In the spring, Sev-\nvia wiil find herself practically isolated and deprived of tne aid of her natural allies in the Ualkans. The pros-\npoet of succor from any of tne great^\npowers is equally slender.\nWhile Italy Is engaged in war and\nthe powers of the triple entente are\nabsorbed by problems in Asia and Africa, Austria has ner hands free and\nneeds only the assent of Germany to\nan aggressive movement in the Balkan\npeninsula.\nThe land  apparently  Met, open, for\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdj Turkey, it ls tnought, would scarcely\nMERCER! icsist an Austrian advance in view of\n' ttie danger of a simultaneous attack\non the i-irt of Bulgaria and Greece.\nThe best hope for the situation\nwould seem to be in the unwillingness\nof Germany to risk a further decline\nof her waning influence in Constantinople and in the well-known dlscllna-\ntion of the Emperor Francis Joseph to\nembark in a policy of adventure.\nThe highly onfeiu.'.l will of bachelor\nUmll von Buzonly, brother of a Hungarian deputy, has excited interest. Ue\nwaa 65, detested women, and was on\nhad terms with all relatives. Although\nthe owner of a great dei I of land, he\nlived so frugally that he did not spend\nthe tenth part of his income. In his\nwill he bequeathed all his real and\npersonal property to his twelve\ndraught horses.\nTHUR8DAY, FEBRUARY 29, 1912.\n.1\nPAY CASH. IT WILL PAY YOtJ\nTHURSDAY\nSPECIALS\nRoyal Household Elour, per sack - $1.80\nNo. 1. Russet Apples, per box - $1.90\nNo. 1. Eating Apples, Black Twigs $2.35\nNo. 1. Eating Apples, Spys - $3.00\nW. & C. English Vinegar - - 20c\n2 Laundry Starch        - - 25c\nChoice Marmalade, large glasses - 15c\nNo. 1. Red Salmon, 3 tins for      -     25c\nDelicatessen Department\nHeinz Queen Olives, per pint - 35c\nHeinz Dill Pickles, per dozen - 25c\nSauer Kraut, 3 lbs. for      - - 25c\nNo. 1. Salt Herring, per dozen - 60c\nThe Public Supply Stores\nL. L. ADAMS.\nCASH GROCERS\n33 8th Street      \"THE WHITE FRONT\"\nR. G. SMITH.\nPhone 2\nDON'T PULL OUT\nA Few Applications of a Simple\nRemedy WHI Bring Back\nthe Natural Color,\nSURREY FARMS\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOn B. C. Electric\neipht milrs out in Surrey, at $100 an\nacre, ib the cheapest land in B. C.\nREID, CURTIS & DORGAN\n706 Columbia Street.\nTO   CANADIAN    ARCHITECTS:\nCompetition for new 1'niversity\nhuildinRs to he erected at Point Grey,\nnear Vancouver, British Columbia.\nThe Governmenl of British Columbia invite competitive plana for the\ngeneral scheme and design for the\ni\ufffd\ufffdroposed new University, locetlipr\nwith more detailei planB for the buildings to lie erected first ut an estimated cost  of 11,500,000,\nPrizes of $10,000 will be given fnr\nihe most successful designs submit ted.\nParticulars of the competition and\nplan of site may be obtained on request from the undersigned.\nThe designs to be sent in by July 51,\n1912, addressed to\nTHK MINISTER OF EDUCATION,\nParliament  Buildings,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.victoria, British Columhla.\nIt it part of my professional\nservice to show women how\nto correctly wear their corset*\nLet me select and fit, in the te.\nelusion of your home, that comfortable, classy, perfect garment\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\\ Spirella Corset\nNo other is so\nflexible, yet permanently shape-\nretaining as\nSpirella\nBoning\nLight, cool, aani-\ntary.comfortable.\nGuaranteed for\none year against\nrust or breakage.\nMy personal\nservices are free.\n1 guarantees perfect fitting, modish\nSpirella Corset.\nAn appointment with\nme placet no obligation\non you\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdis arranged lo\nyoui convenience.\nPost card or phona\ncalf will brine ma.\n'Phone 981\nReiad lh\ufffd\ufffd SpfrelU a4v\ufffd\ufffdrtIwRi\ufffd\ufffdntfl In T*dt\ufffd\ufffd\nJournal, Deltrwator, l>-M,:tn-r. Nt-w Idea nnd\nMrs. L. McLeod\nOffice Hours 1 to 6 p.m.\n625 Columbia St.,  New  Westminster.\nSwans  Preserve  Vounn.\nThat swans possess some power of\nreasoning seems to tie proved by the\nfollowing story, which is t dd by  11.\nO. Hutcnlnson, in Country  Life.\nHe says: On a certjin pond a pair\nof these birds have for two successive\nyears hatched out a pair ol cygnets,\nonly to find the young, Huffy things\nuevoured long betore they came to\nthe properly leathered age I \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd one or\nother of the large pine whii :,.. ,| |n\ntho pond. The last spring the s.vans\nmade their nest in the usual , e,\nhatched out their cygnets as bi ire,\nbut as soon as the cygnets *ere\nhatched disappeared from the pond altogether, parents, babies and all.\nThere i.s another   ponu, or lake, ai\nI a distance of a mile and a hail\ni Irom the  first, and on  this  lake th<\n: swans were founJ  to be  with   their\nyoung ones.   The puzzle was to ki ow\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd how   they   got   there.      Tht lr   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   ug\n! were so pinioned that they could not\nfly, and there were souk- verj tiff\nand close fences between the one pond\nand the other.\nSubsequently a countryman said he\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdhitd seen one of them walking ovei\n'the flelds that lie bstween the ponds,\nHe had noticed nothing more than the\nI old swan walking, but there is little\ni doubt that had he been nearer or\nI looked closer he would lune seen that\nj it was carrying a cygnet, or the pair\nI of them on his back. Almost certainly the birds had walked and carrli d\n1 their young with them from thc one\ni pond to the other.\nHow they got through the fences is\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd still unexplained, nor it is understood\nI how they knew the second pond to\nj be there, since it does not seem that\nI they had ever visited lt before. But\n; their wisdom and enterprise, wliich\n| were :;o highly commendable, were\nJustified by the results.\nThey reared their cygnets success-\ni fully In this other pond wherein there\n1 were no pike, a fact which wo might\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd almost  fancy  the   swans,  with   their\n\"l'uil out one gray hair and a dozen\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- i ta \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd it3 place\" is an old saying,\nv : i i i-i, to a great extent, true, if no\nst' : staked to stop the cause. When\ngray irs appear it is a sign that Nature i,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd<.\"].. assistance. It is Nature's\ncall fur help., Gray hair, dull, lifeless\nhair, or h; ir that 13 falling out, is not\nnecensari'y a sign of advancing age, for\nthere ar \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd thousands of elderly people\nwith perfect) heads of hair without a\nsingle streak of gray.\n; When gray hairs come, or when the\n! hair seems to be lifeless or dead, some\n\ufffd\ufffd>od, reliable hair-restoring treatment\nshould be resorted to at once. Specialists say that ono of the best preparations to use is the old-fashioned \"sage\ntea\" which our grandparents used. The\nb\"st preparation of this kind is Wyeth's\nSage and Sulphur Hair Remedy, a preparation of domestic sage and sulphur,\nscientifically compounded with later discovered hair tonics and stimulants, the\nwhole mixture being carefully balanced\nand tested by experts.\nWyeth's Sage and Sulphur is clean and\nwholesome and perfectly .harmless. It\nrefreshes dry, parched hair, removes\ndandruff ;.nd gradually restores faded\nor (rray hair to its natural color.\nDon't delay another minute. Start\nU ing Wyeth a Sajjo and Sulphur at\nonce and see what a difference a few\ndays' treatment will make in your hair.\nThis  preparation   is  offered to the\npublic' at fifty  cents  u bottle, and is\nI recommended and sold by ali druggists.\nSpecial Agent, D. S. Curtis.\nTRY\nTRY\nTRY\nOn Chong Co.\nMerchant Tailors\nLadies' and Gentlemen's Suit Made-\nto-Order at reasonable prices.   Spring\nGoods just   arrived.    First-Class   Fit\nsupernatural cleverness, had ascertained before they made their difficult\ntranelt\nand  Work  Guaranteed.\nGOLD DUST will\nsterilize   your kitchen   things and\nmake them wholesome and sanitary\nSoap only cleans; GOLD DUST cleans an\nsterilizes.\nSoap washes over the surface, leaving a grea\nfilm behind it;GOLD DUST digs deep after ger\nand impurities, and insures purity and safety.\nSoap needs muscle help (as an exerciser, in\nfine); GOLD DUST does all the hard part of tmv,\nwork without your assistance, leaving you to taHkm\\\nyour exercise in a more enjoyable manner.\nGOLD DUST is a good, honest, vegetable oil\nsoap, to which is added other purifying materials\nin just the right pro- V.I\/\/\nportions to cleanse ^^W#\neasily, vigorously,^\nand without harm to\nfabric, utensil' or\nhands.\n\"Let the GOLD\nDUST Twins do\nyour work.\"\nMade by THE  N.   K.   FAIftBANK  COMPANY\nMakers of FAIRY SOAP, the oval cake.\nr\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdra\nON GHONG CO.\nMerchant Tailors\n24 Mclnnis St., City.\nST.CHARLES EVAPORATED CREAM\nThe Golden Cow is the trade mark of the St. Charlea Condensing Compaay.\nThis sien on a can of Evaporated Cream stanos for purity and quality.\nThere is no other cream just like St. Charles Cream. It combines at a\nlow price the highest quality and the greatest purity, the finest flavor and\nthe Neatest power of nutrition. For infants and growing children, for\nmirsSg mothers and invalids it is * necessity. For the strong and well it\nis a luxury. It is equal to the best of ordinary cream for all purposes. For\nrLnv purposes it is Infinitely supsrior. In using St. Charles Crtam, whether\nfor MantTfor invalids, or in ordinary cookery, you take tto chatters.\nHindwiw booklet of valuabl. taiormation to moth.ra \ufffd\ufffdnd numei \ufffd\ufffdnt ft ts upon .pplictton.\nSold by 'Bart Grocer* EsJtrytttAtra\nST. CHARLES CONDENSING COMPANY     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      n     InQrsoll. On^\nfl\n\\ I\nTHUR8DAY, FEBRUARY 29, 1912.\nTHE DAILY  NEWS.\nPAGE THRKB\nfurniture-Dry Goods\nLEES  LIMITED\nfurniture-Dry Goods\nYou May Tra\nto the  Limit\nNo restrictions but one, and that is--bring the cash with you.   We are asked repeatedly if we limit quantities with these remarkably low\nprices; we answer \"No.\"   We have stock for all; even some of our competitors are availing- themselves of this remarkable opportunitv\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nthey are welcome.   CASH WITH ORDER.\nWhy Not Furnish Your Den Now?\n$40.00 Easy Chairs now  $30.00\n$30.00 Easy Chairs now $22.50\n$20.00 Easy Chairs now   $15.00\n$16.00 Easy Chairs now   $12.00\nCarpets, Curtains, Draperies.   Did you ever hear of such a thing ?\ncent, off on all these lines as well.   Get your pick early.\n25\nper\nDesks and Office Supplies\nMaybe you will decide to get that new Desk or File right now, when you sec what a very little money\nwill do.   25 per cent, off any you may select.\nTake which you like, and we shall still smile and look pleasant, for you know 25 per cent, on the low\nprices we make on office supplies stands to pay us a liberal loss\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdbut we advertise a straight discount\nof Twenty-Five  Per Cent, all through the house\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdand no limit\nAll Leather Goods at 25 per cent, discount.\nFollow the Crowds They Lead Straight to the Great 25 per cent. Reduction Sale at\ni\n\/\nColumbia street\nfEEMIIMIHD\nNew Westminster, B. C.\nM| \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdw\nNOVELS AND   CRIME.\nof\nParisian   Police   Attribute   Wave\nhODbery and Murder to Fiction.\nParis, Keb. 28.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJesse James was a\n\"piker\" compared to some of the criminals France has de\\ elope:l in the last\nfew riiomhs, who individually and In\nbands have been \"pulling off\" pretty\nnearly a \"stunt\" a day recently.\nCl imlnologist are Inclined to belleve\nthat American \"literature\" of the\nblood and thunder weekly variety is\np:irtially responsible. The kiosks of\nevery town in France are pasted full\nof the Nick Carter, Buffalo Bill, Jesse\nJames and similar \"novels.\"\nA few weeks ago a bank messenger\nwas walking in Rue Ordener. It was\nabout 9 a. in. The street was wide\nand well sprinkled with people. Suddenly a high powered automobile dre.v\nuy at the curb and out stepted a\nyounj* man, perhaps 21 or 'i'l years of\na^e.wlicr, in two steps, placed himself\ndirectly in front of the messenger.\n'   Bang!\nAs a Mood and thunder would say.\nThe uressenger fell in his trackB. The\nhighwayman stopped, took the mes-\nseii( er s wallet and jumped back into\nthe automobile. The chauffeur c'^anecl\naway followed by sc,eraj people at a\nr,m- in 5 Jltty itr.other bandit hid\nclimbed out tip on the running board\nof tho   machine, and, In   true   Jesse\nright and\ntlie police, his suspicions were aroused. I\nWhen the police   an Ived the   man I\nhad gone, but lie was soon found *t\ntho   railway  station   in   the waiting\nroom.   He was captured after a fierce\nhand-to-hand struggle.     He gave his I\nname as Oscar WiU, a Canadian, but:\nlt was found that his real name was I\nworn out by hardship and work.\nHas Reached Perfect Ferlod.\n\"The answer to this question, however, is simple. The woman of 40\nhas reached the perfect period of her\nlife, when her very maturity and the\ninherent love in her heart cries for\nchildren upon which to expand itself.\nConsequently  she has   children, and\nJoseph Itenard, knownto thepolice a.3 | nas many ot them and iB very happy\nthe pal of Garnler and Courrouy, two\nof the Rue Ordener suspects still at\nliberty.\nMeunwhile the train from which the\nbandits had leaped arrived at Etam- j\npes.   A man, traveling first-class, but\nwho tried to pass the gate with a sec-\nond-cl-jss ticket, was stopped and ques-\nLloned.   His reply was   hl\ufffd\ufffd revolver '\nWhipping it out, he committed suicide ]\non tho spot.   This man is supposed to\nbe the author of the Chaius tragedy,\nwhere, a   few days before, a wealthy\nland owner, Emil Demungeon, and his\nservant were brained   with a   hatchet\nthen robbed.\nAGE AND HANDSOMENESS.\nM\t\nDr.  La'.de   of   New. York,   Considers\nWoman Finest at Forty.\nN'ew York. Feb. -S.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGirls\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdyou coquettish, winsome maids ol 18\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdguard\nI the laurels ot beauty which have b.en\njaccoided you without question by the\nJames  fashion,  wa? firing\nleft into the ranks of the   pursuers.\nSoon these dropped off.   The outlaws\nnude    their    getaway    with    several\nthousand francs.\nCaahier  Loses $30,000.\nThree weeks later the Cashier of a\t\ncelluloid factory, Jules Gouy-1'aillier, j who has mude the beauties of woman-\nwalKod out of the Societe Geneiale I hood one of her life studies\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdshe holds\nBank carrying in his inside overcoat j a physician'sdegree and bears the\npocket the sum of 150,000\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd$30,000\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd [ title of \"doctor\nall in Bank of France bank noteB.\nThu   time   was   between   9   and   10\no'clotii in the morning, the place Just\nit idlers of verse and   painters Oi pictures since time began.\nThere is a darkening haze overspreading your rose-colored norteon,\ninto which man has so persistently\nsought to intrude since man first met\nmal I, for If the words o; a   woman\noff the boulevar Is in the heart of Paris,    feo secure did Jules teel that ho\nlooked  neither to the  right  nor left.\nSuddenly he felt something like a red-\nhot sword shoot thiough his eyes, and\nai second later he was sent rolling in\nthe ratter\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdminus his $:!0,000. A high-1\nwayman had simply blinded him with !\nred  popper, taken   his   money, then I\nknocked him down with his ftst.\n1 hat same morning bej,an the chase\nof what Is believed to be the Rue Ordener band of bandits.\nAn employe\ufffd\ufffd at the railway depot\nat Orleans, in making his rounds, saw\na shaft of light coming from an Inner\noffice. As it was about 3 a. m. ho\nknew robbers were at work. Softly ho\ntiptoed away and told the night station master. The two gathered all the\navailable nlgbt force for a combined\nattack. They had not long to wait,\nfor tn a few minutes two men csme\nout. Soolng their road cut off, they\nwhipped out automatic revolvers and\nbegan firing as they ran. A \"washer\"\nemployer at the Station fell, shot\nthrough the leg, and the station mas- j\nter himself received a bullet in the\nthigh.    The robbers escaped. j\nTwo policemen learning in which direction they went, followed to Les Au-\nbrais on bicycles. There they found\nthat two men answering the descriptions had taken the train for Paris.\nTelegrams were sent to Augervllle and\nEtampes, the flrst and second stops\nafter Les Aubrais, so when the train\npulled into the former place gendarmes were waiting on the platform.\nThe robbers saw them first, however,\nand Continental trains having side\ndoors on either side of the coaches,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdcan be taken as fact\nthen the time of beauty in favor ot\nthe comely matron of forty has at-\nrived. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nFor all this, and much more, too,\nDr. Cecelle Lande, of 180 Claremont\navenue, today ls the learned authority\nWith ttie same fell swoop with\nwhich Dr. Lande knocks the crown\nof Venus from the heads of the blithesome maid of IS he snatches the\nsceptro of womanly perfection which\nhas so long been held without question   by   the   full-bloomed woman   o!\n30. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd wii'i'iiHSEJ\nWoman at 40 Most Handsome\nAccording to the idea promulgated\nby Dr. Lande to the woman or 40\ntne woman whose lap has necome fitted to the nestling form of many chit\nuren oo, ne la the happiness of penect\nmatrimonial serenity\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdbelongs the\nright to be called the handsomest type\noi womanhood.\nIn drawing his comparison Pr.\nLande reters to the Princess Henry oi\ni-iess as the acknowledged \"perfeel\ntype\" of womanly beauty of Kurope.\n\"The beauty of the Princess Henry\nof Pless is wondertul,\" declared Dr.\nLande, \"and I will not hesitate to say\nnut iacre are many women here in\nNew York of years equal to hers who\nare also equally as handsome.\n\"In former years the woman of 30\nwas said to be the most perfect type\nof matured womanly beauty. But since\nthose days we have learned new Ideas\nof hygiene and new ways of preserving and caring for our. physical selves,\nand the age limit of woman's most\nbeautiful period has bounded from 30\nto 40 years.\n\"Tho majority of women of 40 have\nchildren, aud can any one picture a\nmore beautiful thing than a well-cared\n\"On the other hand, the girl who\nmarrjes when all girls are 'giddy' does\nnot want to be burdened with the\ncares of motherhood. She does not\nwant to be held down by chi drcn. She\nwants pretty gowns and pleasure and\nexcitement. She hasn't reached the\nwomanly age, and, as a result, she will\n;'o anything or retort to any means to\nl.eep a..ray the children. The result is\nhard-faced women of So, whosa coun-\ntances are lined with the unmistakable evidence of their folly.\n\"But the woman who marries at 40\nand boars the children God gives her\nis the ideal woman. She has accomplished the greatest mission and only\nhapi iness can be her portion.. On lb**\nother hand, tto worn.in who has not\naccomplished anything, has not been\na mother, or has not devoted her life\nto professional and educational work\nis a failure, and do not make the mis-\nfake of failing to see that the world\nlooks upon her as such.\n\"Yes. the Princess Henry of P'.esi\nis a beautiful woman, and there   are\nmany thousands like her.    I know a\nfew nnd I know that they are lea'tl-\nful  because -they  are   happy  in    th^j\nknowledge of a life well spent.\"\nPrincess Pless a Beauty.\nFor flve years Princess   Henry of j\nPleas has been termed by all the most I\nbeautiful woman in Kurope.    Few, it'.\nany. will admit that her mother, 'Mrs.\nWilliam Cornwnllis Wesl, whose beauty held reign in the Courtvif St. James\ntor many years, was more gracious or\nlaacinaiing.    Piobably iu  all  Europe\nthere is no woman whose beauty has\nbeen so much written about and discussed in court aud other circles as\nthat of Princess Pless.\nPrincess Pless before her marriage\nto the Prince in London, December 8,\n1881, was Miss Mary Theresia Olivia\nCornwallis-West. No woman in England was so much sought by members\nof the royal blood as Mlss West.\nHer suitors were numbered by the\nscore: her position at court assured\nand her beauty was the talk of England.\n. Princess Pless is not quite 40. She\nwas born at Ruthlln Castle, the family\nseat of the Wests, in June, 1873.\nPrincess Pless Is typical of the English beauty. She is tall and slender\nexceptionally graceful in all her movements, witb exceedingly fair complexion, violet blue eyes and possessing an\nabundance of fair hair.\nTbey have three children, all boys,\nthe eldest of whom will succeed to the\ntitle of the prince. The boys, like\ntheir mother, are experts at practically\nall outdoor sports, and spend much\ntime in the open.\nCITY OF NEW WESTMINSTER.\n*\nAll accounts against the Corporation must be at the City Hall not later\nthan the 5th of each month for the\nprevious month's accounts, in order\nthat they may be paid on or about thc\n20th, otherwise they will la^ over till\nthe \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfollowing  month.\nW. A. DUNCAN.\nCity Clerk.\nNew Westminster, Feb. 22. 1912.\nREMOVAL NOTICE\nD. V. Lewthwaite\nCABINET  MAKER AND\nUPHOLSTERER.\nNew Westminster, B.\nWorkshop 611  Victoria Street.\n(Over Daily News.)\nC.\nDo Not Waste Money\nSave a little systematically, for lt la tbe stuff that tha foundations ot wealth and happiness are built of.\nMoney may be uaed in two waya; to   spend   for   what   ll\nneeded now aud to Invest for what shall be needed in the In*\nture.   Money cannot be Invested until lt is flrat saved.\nPROTECT YOUR FUTURE WITH A 8AVING8 ACCOUNT.\nThe Bank of Vancouver\nAuthorized Capital, $2,000,000.     Columbia, corner Eighth street.\nAfcl. DEWAR, General Manager D. R. DONLEY, Local Manager.\nfe\nhas been opened at Phillip^ Store. They\nare the 20th Century kind, the ones that\nare shape-retaining and properly made in\nthe correct style for the Spring of 1912\nfor mother of many children? Surely\nthey escaped by leaping from the op- such a woman is more beautiful and\nposite doors, fleeing across the tracks, more inspiring than any young un\nwith the gendarmes after them. Offl- j married woman of thirty. I have a\ncer Dormoy, ln advance of the others, | great numher of women friends who\nwas gaining on the outlaws when one , are over 40, and among them I  can\nDormoy   number the most handsome women 1\nh'8 , have ever seen.\n\"The woman of 40 is more . Interesting to men than the dainty little\ngirl of 18, with her frills and follies.\nShe ls, by virtue of her womanliness\nand her maturity, far more able to\nhold a man's attention and affection.\nThe girl of 18, perhaps will fascinate\na man for a little while, but he soon\nbecomes accustomed to her coquetry,\nand the little things which at first appeared so cunning, and the substantial\nolement ln his heart will cry out for\nthe woman of maturity, Judgment and\nwisdom, and, consequently, he casts\nabout for older women to be hla\nfriends, companions, wife.\n\"The only exception to this rule\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nand I need not be trite enough to repeat the maxim about exceptions\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdis\nthe poor working girls who work in\nthe stores and factories. They go out.\ninto drttdsery of the world when the\"\nare children, and when the time of\nwoman's full bloom comes they are\nof tliem turned  and   fired\nfell \ufffd\ufffdJead  with a bullet through\nheart. j\nThe robbers separated now and for\na time wore, lost track of. The Etam-!\npes police sent a posse to help in the {\nman hunt and soon one of the men i\nwas located. After a long chase he'\nwas hemmed in, up a blind alley, a i\nhigh steel fence barring his route. I\nThief Prefers 8ulclde. !\n\"Think you've got me, don't you?\" I\nhe shouted, as the officers came up.\n\"Well, you  haven't;  you've only got I\nmy body!\" With that, he shot himself through the head.\nHis companion In the meantime was\nmakin-- for Ectrechy. He had thrown\nhis pursuers completely off the scent.\nHo continued boidily Into town and\nthere seated himself upon the terrace\nof a cafe, with a crowd of other drinkers, and had refreshments. But he\nwas nervous. Continually his regard\nwas sweeping the approaches and this\ncaused the cafe proprietor to Inform\nImmense.\nShe\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWhat flne large eyes Edith's\nhusband has! \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nHe\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdI never noticed it. You must\nhave been present, when he received\nher dressmaker's bill.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBoston Transcript.\nA bite of this and a taste of that, all day\nlong, dulls the appetite and weakens the\ndigestion.\nRestore your stomach to healthy vigor\nby taking a Na-Dru-Co Dyspepsia Tablet\nafter each meal\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdandcutout the \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdpteclnj\"-\nNa-Dru-Co Dyspepsia Tablets\nare the best friends for sufferers from\nindigestion and dyspepsia. 50c. a Box\nat your Druggist's. Made by the\nNational Drug and Chemical Co. of\nCanada, Limited.\n149\nIt will be a pleasure .for us to show you this beautiful\nassortment of clothing in all new shades, such as light\nand dark shades in Browns, Greys, and many other\nappealing patterns\nJ2U.00 to $35.00\nJ. PHILLIPS\n**\nTHE WARDROBE CLOTHIER\n671 Columbia Street\nNew Westminster\n^^^^^^^i^ P4QB TOOK\nTHE DAILY NEWS.\nThe Daily News\nNMWtitfWifa Dally Neva Publish-\nl\ufffd\ufffdC Coaapany, Limited, at their offices.\nMcKenzie\nBtreets.\nand   Victoria\nG. Locfcle Brown Manager\nTHURSDAY, FEBRUARY 29, 1912.\n.EFFECT OF PANAMA\nON   STEAMER   ROUTES\nForecasts of the changes likely to\nbe effected in existing steamship\nroutes by the opening of the Panama\nCanal make interesting reading, now\nthat the great waterway 13 rapidly\nnearing completion. Steamers en\nroute from European ports to Vancouver will take the Panama route, thus\nsaving 6200 '\ufffd\ufffdea, miles, as compared\nwith the route via\"the Straits of Magellan. Steamships from Montreal to\nSydney will also use the canal, saving\n2738 sea miles.\nIt Is uncertain whether freighters\nfrom Europe to Valparaiso will take\nthe canal route, which would save only\n2100 sea miles, but passenger steamers will doubtless prefer the shortet\nroute, and will serve the east coast\nof South America by means of auxiliary ships sailing   from West  Indian\nports.\nBetween    Europe  and Japan    the\nroute via the Suez Canal will still be\npreferred,   as   at   present,   since   the\nPanama route  would  be  1000  miles\n,   longer;  but between New York   and\n\ufffd\ufffd Igaoble desire to be not only supreme   9hanghai the  Panama route will  be\n* Ib political affairs in the province, hut   chosen  th,ls saving 1400 sea miles.\nBetween Europe and Australia the\npresent route is only 800 miles longer than will be that via Panama; pos-\nTHUR8DAY, FEBRUARY M, 1912.\nINVADING POPULAR RIGHTS.\nDiscussing 'the impending general\nelections, we remarked yesterday that\ntl*e*isaplvfag,.0f the provincial parliament and tlie -precipitating of a general election at a Juncture when\nneither necessity nor reason for so\ndoing eiiated, cannot be construed as\nanything else than a confession of\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdweakness on the part of the McBride\nadministration, or as a yielding to an\nto arrogate to themselves absolute\npowers of unquestioned dictatorship.\nHowever strong political convictions\nor party prejudices may be, no reasonable man, surveying the political field\nla British Columbia, with due regard\nto the law Which governs the life of\nparliaments, will contend that any necessity tor a general election and the\nsibly not enough to cause the abandonment of the former.\nAside from the consideration of distances, the journey via Panama obviates the usually rough and stormy\nrounding of Cape Horn, and this fact\nwill considerably affect the passenger\nroutes.   Steps are already being taken\nexpense which' A general election en-i to prepare   for   redistribution   of the\ntaila exist* In tte political situation   coal trade that will result from the\nlaua **\"\"*        W v   '   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.   .      Koo_ I change of route above referred to. .\ntoday.   The election which has been .     Br*igh  flrms  are   rep0rted   to be\nfixed to take, place on March 28 is an negotiating fo coal stations at Nu'ut-\nelectton for party purposes simply | )0fa, the capital of the Friendly 1s-\nand solely. The leader of a political hindsand also at Pltcalrn and Fanning\nparty Is justified in bringing on a genial election if he has In contemplation the carrying out of large undertakings which he Is confident will\nwin popular approval and for the\ncarrying out of whicl: he believes the\nmajority at hia command in the House j few days ag0    fhe animal was caught\nto be inadequate;   out no reasons or ! in one of McCord's traps and the trap-\n^rruses of thia character can be urged ' per fired a shot, killing, as he thought,\nerases ot una caaracier can oe    e He       roached u at c!ose\noa behalf of the election now pending   n^ when ^ cougar   whleh   hafj\nin British Columbia.   The Tory party | been \"piaying 'possum,\"    leaped    rer\nis omnipotent  in  the  House.      The   him. As the trapper was too near it to\nIslands.\nTRAPPER   AND   COUGAR\nIN    FIGHT   TO   DSVTH\nBaker, Ore., Feb. 28.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJim McCord,\na trapper on Sutton Creek, near here,\nhad a hard flght with a big cougar a\n(ROTGMr\nBaking Powder\n^AbsolutelyPure\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, every-day\nfoods, for all occasions.\nThe only baking powder made\nfrom Royal Grape Cream of Tartar\nLook   Here  for   Snaps\nFIVE LOTS near Eighth avenue,\nall cleared; ?300 each. One lot\nwith house $500. These lots can\nbe bought separately for one-\nthird cash, balance C, 12 and 18\nmonths.\nABOUT EIGHT ACRES near\nChilliwack. The owner will take\ncity property for the same.\nONE LOT all cleared, with three\nroom house, on Fourth street,\nfor ?1200; $500 cash, balance 0,\n12 and 18 months.\nONE LOT on Fifth street, close\nto Seventh avenue, all cleared.\nPrice $1200; one-third cash, balance G, 12 and 18 months.\nPhone 1004.\nMcGILL & COON\nRoom 5, Bank of Commerce Building.\nNo Alum\nA New Lumber Yard\nCOMB TO UB FOR\nLumber,   Mouldings,   Laths   and   Shingles\nOUR  STOCK IS LARGE AND COMPLETE.\nCROWN TIMBER AND TRADING CO., LTD.\nPHONE  904. (Old  Glass  Works  Factory. SAPPERTON.\nuse his rifle, he had a hard struggle\nuntil he was able to reach a revolver\nin his holster, and with this he dispatched the big cat.\nMAN PLEADS GUILTY\nTO   MURDERING WIFE\nvoters' list on which this election will\ntake place is the same antiquated, inaccurate, unrepresentative list as that\noa which last election took place. Politically, the only thing which makes\nchange possible ls that the party machine has been strengthened in the Tacoma, Feb. 28\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEnding the short\nfew constituencies in which at last, est murder case in the history'of the\nelection it proved unequal to return- j county, Willis Brown pleade.l guilty\n^Uot.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd at   4:20  yesterday   afternoon   to   the\ning the party candidates. ) murder of Ms wlfe and Jack ^ 1|g01l\nAbsolute monarchy is dead; the di-j ue wjh be sentenced this morning.\nvine right of kings to rule is quoted j Brown was willing to plead guilty\nonly to 1, laughed at; but in the dem-, ^^^^^^^\nocratic west, in liberty-loving Britisn i eMary and the man maintained that\nColumbia, the party in power alms at he w\"anted to get things settled as\nuncontrolled, uncrltlcized. abBotute quickly as possible. He was allowed\niictatorehip Will British Columbia I to plead guilty of murder in the sec-\n* .     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 1ond degree.\nstand lor It. j     The  whoie  matter took up but  ftf-\nTae wit ot Mr. Bowser Is not subtle   teen minutes.    His plea of guilty fol-\ner polished.    His platform utterances   lowed the crime by but a little over\naie vulgar and shoddy.   U* the elec-   sixteen hours.\t\ntons  contrast   his   banal   Jokes\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdsave j Chinese in New Zealand.\nthe mark!\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwith this dignified deliver-, New Zealand found not long ago\naace ot Mt. Brewster, the solitary L,ib- \\ that the Chinese were doing a very\neral in the House, and then determine ! larSe proportion of the laundry work\nwho they will vote for- I alld had tl,rown out ot emPlo>'mcnt the\nwno ine.y win \\oie ior. (women workers in some of the laun\n\"Perhaps the   premier wished   that   dries.   In New Zealand a Laundry Is a\nneither   a   Liberal   nor   a   Socialist   factory within the meaning of the fac-\nwhirlpool of sudden wealth and prosperity that hit Berlin a few years ago.\nIn a capital, brilliant court life has\nmuch to do with prosperity and social\nlife and activity. Fran\/. Joseph is\na lonely old man.\nFerdinand, heir to the throne, is not\nvery fond of societyand functions. He\nmarried beneath his rank and, conse-\n| quently, his wife is not regarded as\nhis equal. They have lived quietly\nand retired. She cannot be and has\nnot attempted to he first lady of the\nland. There has been little need of\nnew gowns and jewels for court functions. This has had u dampening effect upon the various grades and degrees of social order.\n\"The Berlinese have lost their heads\nas a result of their tremendous pros-\nperty in the last few years,\" declare\nthe Viennese. \"We keep on in our\nown more quiet and more natural\nway.\"\nVienna has not been hit by tho\nwave of prosperity and sudden wealth\nthat has swept over Berlin. In fact,\nit seems to have passed over the Austrian capital and touched at Budapest.\nThe capital of Hungary has had, a remarkable growth in the last few years\nand much of Vienna's former gayety\nhas transferred itself to Budapect\nBuilding operations in Vienna have virtually been at a standstill for somt\nand, as a consequence, rents are tremendous and the need of dwellings'in\nthis city of 2,000,000 people has become so urgent that the city authorities are taking measures to help erect\nbuildings for the poorer classes. This\ntogether with the general rise in tht\ncost of living, keenly felt in this coun\ntry of low wages, and a \"dead court\nlife.\" have been the wet blanket that\nis extinguishing the gayety of Vienna\nKor, after all, it takes money to puy\nthe fiddler.\nVienna is still, and long will remain\nthe city of magnificent theatres, of\nwonderful acting and of sweet, dreamy\nmusical productions. It is an advance\npost near the Occidental-Oriental frontier\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe capital of twenty-six nationalities\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwith   a very Interesting   and\nWalker Bros. & Wilkie\nRooms 5 and 6, B. C. Electric Railway  Depot.\nPhone 1105.\nSAPPERTON\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEight roomed house on Columbia street for $3500:\n$2000 cash, balance to arrange.\nLANGLEY PRAIRIE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdClose to B. C. E. station, within fifty minutes'\nride of city\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFORTY ACRES; thirty ready for plow, six slashed,\nfour standing alder; fenced. $275 per \"acre; onethlrd cash, balance to arrange.\nExclusive Sales\ncharming cosmopolitan life. It still\nhas its quarters where life is by no\nmeans dull. But Vienna's fame rests\nupon its gayety in the higher circles\nof society and the Viennese have the\nhope that when Ferdinand mounts the\nthrone the merry days wlll return.\nE. H. BUCKLIN, N. BEARDSLEE.\nPres. and Geni. Mgr.      Vice-President\nW. F. H. BUCKLIN,\nSec. and Treas.\nSMALL-BUCKLIN\nLUMBER CO. LTD.\nManufacturers  and   Wholesale Dealera In\nFir, Cedar and  Spruce Lumber\nPhonea No. 7 and 877.   Shingles, Sash,  Doors,  Mouldings, Etc.\nMY CLIENTS ARE MY FRIENDS\nshould te e'.ec\ufffd\ufffded, but if he came back\nwtth ao  entirely  one-sided house  it\ntories act, so it occurred to a lawmaker .that he could settle the diffi\nculty of this Chinese competition by\nwould be a sorry day for the province. | a neat amendment ln the interpreta-\n\"11 wa* Impossible for people who   tion clause   of   the   act   above   men-\n-drew up hills to see things from the ! ^oned     An   amendment  was,   there-\n__.   ,,-_    ._, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   . .,.,,      .   I fore,   drafted   and   printed   and   sent\nauam, viewpoint as members sitting ln   with the ,)tm08t 8ermuEne8B and       \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nopposition In the House, and without   faith to the crown law office for con-\ncriticism legislation must be loose.        sideration.   It contained a provision ln\n\"With a full treasury, with a  cam-   these words:   \"For the purpose of this\npalgn fund that would no doubt reach ! ^L'^Jl^\/JV h'\" 5 ,Ch1\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd...\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,.,..       sha\" be deemed to be a girl under 18\nlarge figures after all this legislation   year3 of age.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLondon Standard.\nwith an old voters' list that must be\nabout 40 per,cetit wrong, with a civil\nservice the best organized for party\npurposes to be found anywhere, up\nagainst them, it might bring about\nsuch a result as his honorable friend\nmi^ht wish.\n\"Everything   that   could   be    dine\nBERLIN OUTSTRIPS\nVIENNA'S   GREATNESS\nBerlin. Feb. 28.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"Gay Vienna,\" ol\ntinming glasses, beautitul women and\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdjtterry Vtrldow\" fame, is raiiui> disappearing, oiuy here and there is stin\na trace of the life that has made the\ncity world-famous. \"Gay Vienna\" lias\nagainst the candidate who would op- becomo a misnomer. Its gayety is\npose them on Uie hustings they would ci'''tl1 wb*n compared to that ol Ber-\n<to    Yet it was evident that the want   \".\" au<1 '.ariB and 0,ll>' beautiful opei\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffduas and sensuouB dreamy music ol\nFran\/. Lehar is keeping this lame\naliw;. Tho streets ai. night, formers\npresenting a lively, animated ptctuie\nof cosmopolitan lite, are almost d\ufffd\ufffd-\nserted by IU o'clock, in shari) contrn.ni\nat the end of the session it was impos-   lo ^ose of Berlin. contrast\nsihie that ho could    criticize them aa j     To ono who has not been lu Vienna\nthey should lie criticized.'* f\ufffd\ufffdr some years, the change is surprls-\n<*t criticism  was  a curse of  legislation\n\"tat hls own  part, with throe sittings 0 day and a rush of legislation\nNo matter how much one may bo\nbverte to muck-raking, or to tho imputing of unworthy motives, it is lin\ning. There are still the cafes wiiero\npeople enjoy themselves as only the\nViennese can, but there is a lack of\nthe   former  zest,   bubbling   vivacity.\npossible, in the circumstances, to \\ Bpontaneousness and enthusiasm.\nrtodK<; th,. question, For what purpose M**\ufffd\ufffdure is at a low ebb when compared to years gone by.   The cafe fre-\ndoeK the administration seek to eliminate opposition and criticism? By\ncalling the election on an effete and\nnotoriously Incomplete voters' Ust, the\ngovernment deprives thousands of\nmen who arc good citizens of British\nColumbia of a vote in determining\nwhich  party  and  what persons  shall\nquenters and the Viennese are still\nfond of spending the evenings In tho\ncafes, but they depart early and few\ncafes keep open all night.\nPossibly it may be attributed in patt\nto the fact that gayety in Vienna ls\nnot staged for the particular beneflt of\nthe tourists, as in the case in some\nof the   other continental cities,      Al\nKov\ufffd\ufffd-.n Ihe political  destinies of the   though one of the most interesting of\n1 European cil ies, it is a little off the\nprovince. It is thc veriest travesty of\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdcoiiMtimUonal government, to say\nnothing of democratic methods. By\ntaking a poll on the old voters' lists,\nthe McBride government is not seeking to ascertain the feeling and opinion of the people of British Columbia.\nbeaten tourist path\nTwo reasons are given by the Viennese for the dying-out of \"Gay Vienna.\" First, the fact that there has\nbeen uo court life to spoall of since thc\ndeath of Km press Elizabeth by assassination in 1897, and Becond, that Vienna hit: aol  been   touched   bv the\nKERR\nWill\nMake\nYou Rich\nYou do not need to go hunting\nfor evidence that the man who\ninvests in Westminster property\nis getting  rich.    The facta are\nFORCED upon you every    day.\nCity property is    rushlBg    your\nneighbor to independence today.\nWhere are you ?\nListen while I tell you something.   The men v ho mak\ufffd\ufffd a bualneas of real estate are\ni uying In Westminster today;   They are not sreculating on the outalde.   Home Is tho\nplace where they plant their dollars.\nThese\nAre\nAll\nNew\nListings\nLots\nI Sold\nTwo\nHouses\nYesterday\nTHIS PROFIT 18 IN SIGHT.\nLot on Dublin street, near\nTenth street, facing south, good\nview, lane, etc.; adjoining lots\nheld at $1000 and up. Price only\n$900; terms to arrange.\nTHIS IS EASY TO BUY.\nLarge lot on Tenth avenue,\nbetween Tenth an I Henley Sts.,\nlano at rear. Price $900; terms,\n$150 canh, balance $25 per\nmonth,\nbeautiful view from\nhere:.\nLot on north side of Hamilton\nstreet, dose to Fourteenth\nstreet., with magnificent view.\nPrice $945; terms, one-third\ncash, C, 12 and IS mpnths.\nA BIG LOT.\nLarge lot on north side of\nEdlnborough street, near to\nTenth street, lane. etc. Prlce\n$900; terms, one-fourth cash,\nbalance t\\, ]u and 18 months.\nAnd how they grow I Ask your friend what ha\nwants for that lot he bought last year or last month.\nChances are he won't aell at all. In any case he\nknows enough to get a fat profit on his Investment.\nYou have the greitest chance In the world today to\nsupplement your means by judicious Investment In\ncity property.\nWestminster is on the eve\nof great things: The Harbor Scheme, New Railways, New Tramlines, Industrial Expansion.\nStir yourself a little. Help yourielf to the good\nthings I here offer you.\nHouses\nSOMETHING GOOD.\nOwner needs the money: He's\ngiving away   $800   becauae   he\nmuat have CA8H.\nNaw alx roomed house, tho*\noughly modern, cement foundation, basement, cement floor,\netc; lot 66x132 feet, to atreet\nat rear, lot all In lawn, cement\nwalks, etc. On Fifth avenue,\nnear Third atreet. Price 84200;\nterma, $3400 cash, balance eaay.\nValue of lot $2500. Value of\nhouse $2500.\nHERE'S A NICE HOME.\nNew seven roomed house near\nFifth avenue and 'Twelfth\nstreet; cement foundation, basement, cement floor, lauadry\ntubs, etc.; best of plumbing,\nbeamed celling, panelled walls,\nleaded glass windows, etc.; flne\nview, 33-foot street at rear.\nPrice $4600; $1000 cash, balance\neasy,\nIN HANDY LOCATION.\nNew seven roomed house on\nSeventh avenue, near Tenth\nstreet; full sized cement base-\n. ment, cement floor, walkR, etc.\nHouse thoroughly modern; one\nblock to car, school, etc. WW\n$4000; one-fourth cash, balance\neasy.\nA REVENUE PRODUCER.\nFine new six roomed modern\nhouse, one-half block from car,\nnear school, etc. magnificent\nview; cement foundation, full\nsized basement, etc. Rents for\n$25 per month. A snap. Price\nonly $2600; one-fourth cash, balance over two years.\nW. J. KERR, LTD.\n614 Columbia St., New Westminster. 'Phones 170-173 THUR8DAY, FEBRUARY 29, 1912.\n\\ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nTHtDAlLY  NEW!\nLOCAL FIGHTERS\nWEHE OUTCLASSED\nV. A. C. Won All    But One    Fiaht\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nSnowball O'Connor Beat Hatch\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nFreddie Welsh in Ring.\nThere is no doubt about it. Tho V.\nA. U outclassed the local men at the\njjoxms and wrostilng tournament hclil\n,.#t His: urmoury lasi nignt. Westminster only won a single event, when\nSnowball O'Connor out-wreBtled\nHatch, Several plucky fights, however,\nwere put up, and the wrestling bout\nbetween Jack Talt and F. Smitn was\n-closely contested, while Pte. Home\n.stood up to Jackson, of the V. A. C.\nIor tour rounds, the judges disagreeing after the schedule three rounds\nhad been fought.\nAn unfortunate case of the Judges\ndisagreeing occurred ln thg liglit \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdbetween Fitzgerald aud Bert Hughes, of\nthe V. A. 0. Fitzgerald put up a\nplucky light for three rounds an^ took\na lot of punishment. A fourth round\nwas called for, and Hughes had tho\nmisfortune to fracture the 104th man's\nJaw, thus summarily ending the light.\nA mild sensation was caused during\nthe evening by the appearance of\nFreddie Welsh, the famous English\nlightweight, in the ring. Chet Mclntyre was over with the Vancouver\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdboys, while Fred Lynch refereed, and\nthe judges were Johnny Lees and J.\nJ. Daily. Tim Mahoney held the\nwatch. A fair crowd was In attendance.\nThe light between Pte. Home, of the\n101th, and Jackson was fairly even,\nbut from the exhibition he gave last\nnight it does uot seem that Home\nwould have had any chance against\nErnie Barrleu, whose place Jackson\nwas taking. In fact, It came rather as\na surprise to some of the audience\nwhen the Judges gave contradictory\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffddecisions after the llrst three rounds\nand Fred Lynch did not have much\ndifficulty in giving the decision to the\nVancouver man. Stanley Ketchell and\nMorley, both from the Terminal City,\nknocked out Beeson and Postlethwaite\nvery early ln their respective battles,\nwhich were very one-sided.\nThe following were the results:\nWre3t!ing, Snowball O'Connor, 104th,\nbeat V. Hatch, of the V. A. C: F.\nSmith, V. A. C, beat Jack Tait, 101th.\nBoxing: Bert Hughes, V. A. C, beat\nPte. Fitzgerald, 104th; Monty, ot Co-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdquitlam, beat Mitchell, 104th; Jackson,\nV. A. C, beat Pte. Home, 104th; Stanley Ketchell beat Pte. lleeson, 104th,\nand Morley, V. A. C, beat Postleth-\nwaits, 104th.\nwoman places her right hafld over his\nleft hand.\nCan you account for this mysterious behavior of the wedding ring?\nBlew   Factory   Down.\nGoodertch, Ont. Feb. 28.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe roof\nand walls of the wheelrlght company's factory were blown down ln a\ngale last night and one man fatally\nInjured, while forty others had narrow escapes.   The loss is $60,000.\nNew Skate Record.\nRock Island, IU., Feb. 28.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWhat is\nclaimed to be a new world's record for\ntwo miles on roller skates was made\nhere last night by Louis Uradbury, the\nMissouri champion, He covered tho\ndistance ln five minutes, fifty seconds.\npage wm\n*..\nTHE\n$152-eSUITS SATISFY\n751   COLUMBIA   STREET\nDesirable Lots HRftOi\nHAMILTON STREET-\n-Nlce building lot, full alze; pj-fee^ $lt(io!\nTENTH AVENUE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNear cut-off survey line, double dorter;\nDOUBLE CORNER on the hill, near   Twelfth   street\n127x145; price $1375.\n$1350.\ncar,, line; size\nWedding   Ring   Mystery.\nThis ls tho mystery of the wedding\n*-mrhtg::'-vC**TT(m *olveir?'BSks th\ufffd\ufffdr Chl-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdcago Tribune. Nobody as yet has\nbeen able to account for Its strange\nconvolutions, but maybe you will be\nmore clever.\nWhat    makes    the   wedding    ring\niSWlllg?\nWhy does it swing one way for a\nman and quite another way for a woman?\nIt is the difference ln what wise\nmen call \"aura?\" And a well Known\nLondon doctor has recently demonstrated that the aura of the male\n-and female differ widely.\nWedding rings often make the people who wear them, and even other\npersons, behave In the most unac-\n-countable manner, but few of us have\never seen a wedding ring itself indulge In mysterious performances.\nAnd this is not a trick. Remember\nIhat.\nIt ls a scientific experiment, illustrating laws of physics, physiology or\npsychology.\nThis ls the way to go about lt:\nTake a silver fork and place It before you on a polished wooden table.\nThe fork should be at right angles\nfrom your body, with the handle nearest you.\nSeat yourself at the table. Tie a\npieoe of ligJit string, about 15 Inches\nin length to a plain gold wedding\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdring. After the wedding ring has been\nlied to the extreme end of the string,\nwrap the other end of the string three\ntimes around the flrst Joint of the\nfirst finger on the right hand.\nHold the string ln place around the\nfirst finger with the ball of the thumb\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdof the same hand. Place your right\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdelbow on the table beside the fork,\nwith the forearm in a vertical position, and permit your hand to drop at\n.a right angle from the wrist. 'This allows the string with the wodding ring\nattached to hang directly over the\nfork.\nThe ring must be suspended about\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdone-quarter of an Inch above the fork,\nand as nearly as possible at Its centre.\nPlace your left hand, flat and palm\nWhen Georgb V. Dines.\nKing George b 1-rtnch cuef uirivet\nat tue p.n.i..' at -..hie11 his master is\nresident at auout it u i.iocn, uiiu\nlorthwitb receives irom tne masiei\nof the household the muiius tnat havt\nbeen selected for tue ua>. Thereupon\ntne cuef gives the iitcessary orciert\nior provisions and remains in his kitchen until luncheon has been berveu.\nHe is then at liberty to uepaii for a\nshort period, returning at u o'clock,\nwhen he undertake* tne preparation\nof tne royal dinner. \\v hen uns hab\nbeen accomplished he presents a ba.\nfor the day's expenses and receives a\ncheque for the amount from the treasurer. This completes the che. s wo.k\nlor the day, says Harper s Weekly.\nBut whKe he has been at worn In\nthe kitchen he has cone much. A\nreally wonderful process ot preparation has been carried out. When the\nking and queen, together with such\nother personages as may at the time\nbe with them, are ready for dinner,\nthe scene In the kitchen is one of per-\nlect order and discipline. Everything\nis in its proper place, and while the\ntold dishes wllich were prepared during the morning stand waiting to be\nserved such other items of the menu\nas are to be served hot are ready to\ntiie second. The royal chef walks\naround and superintends, but his assistants are so well drilled In their respective duties that he seldom needs\nto give an order, though here and\nthere he offers a suggestion for the\nperfection of some dainty.\nOutside the door of the dining-room\ntheie is an apartment where the final\ntouches are given to the delicate and\ncostly preparations. At Buckingham\npalace It contains a table upon which\nthe dishes rest in readiness for their\ndistribution to the tahle attendants.\nThe man who wields authority here Is\nclad in immaculate evening dress and\nwears white gloves, and ln a voice\nthat Is barely raised above a whisper\nhe gives the minutest directions as to\nwhat 13 to be done with each particular item of the menu from the moment\nwhen it leaves the anterooms and\npasses finally from his care.\nRelays of men and women bearers\nconvey all the dishes from the kitchen\nto the anteroom. The passages from\nthe kitchen are long, with some awkward corners here and there, and In\norder to prevent collisions in the\nhurry of the work an ingenious arrangement of mirrors has been effected at these comers, so that the\nbearers may see whether the road ls\nclear for them.\nYOUR\nPRESCRIPTIONS\nGet the utmost care ir handed In to\nour dispensers. Our checking system\nmakes it practically Impossible to\nmake a mistake.\nWe put in exactly what is ordered,\nand charge a fair price for these ingredients.\nYou know it Is absolutely safe If dispensed at\nDavies' Pharmacy\nYOUR PRESCRIPTION\nDRUGGIST\nPhone 40. Cliff Block.\nJ| ffte Westminster Trust and S^ife Deposit Co.,\ufffd\ufffdW.\nJ. J. JONES, WIgr.-Dfr.\n28 Lorne Sireet New Westminster\nAL. W. GILLIS. manager.\nA  Modern Guise.\nA stitch in time saves embarrassment.\nAn unwise son maketh a mad father.\nAll things come to him who waits\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nat least verbally.\nTis more blessed to give than receive\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdslams.\nA rolling stone gathers momentum.\nBy their boots ye shall know them.\nWhen in Rome order spaghetti.\nThe pay's the thing.\nThe paths of glory lead but to the\nsociety editor.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJudge.\nFor Value Received.\nLiveryman (to rider)\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHere, what's\nthis? Half a dollar? Why, you've bey.i\nout two hours.\nRider\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSo I may have; but I've only\nheen on the brute's -back about 10 minutes.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFllegonde Blaetter.\nA Great Man.\n\"Ever read Victor Hugo's description of the battle of Waterloo?\"\n\"You bet. That fellow put some enthusiasm Into his work. Were he\nalive today, he'd make a crackerjacit\nbaseball writer.\"\nHard to Get Into Jail.\nTbere was a queer old specimen ot\nhumanity brought to the Cuyahoga\ncounty Jail. He had been convicted ot\nthe crime of Cruelty to animals, and\nthere was no doubt ln anybody's mind\nthat he richly deserved the penalty Inflicted. It u the custom to examine\nprisoners, however, before tbey are assigned to their cells. When this old\nreprobate was brought up t^e Interrogation went thua:\nWtiat ls your name7\"     \\t\nA\nBndd Dobbs.'\" jO    1\n\"What is your age?\"      .!'*' I\n\"Sixty-eight\"\n\"What is your religion?'\n\"Great snaftes!   Does a man hafter  ,       .      .,    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *h\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .,_\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;,,,.\nit n_\ufffd\ufffd__ t\ufffd\ufffd#\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd ,1, , ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd u*~. \ufffd\ufffd_\ufffd\ufffd-.   laundry, the cooking, tne sewing\ngit religion before they 11 let him Inter i th_ hl\/'dTed ^ one things I t\ndownward, upon the table beside thei. .   .    ...    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*_\ufffd\ufffd,  r>w-.i\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. .* t\ufffd\ufffdi, <\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nfork.   Do your best to keep your hand |\ufffd\ufffd&\ufffd\ufffd *\"\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffdwntyr-Ctowtan* Plain\nsteady, and thus prevent tho string,\nWoodstock, Ont., Girl  Receives Kais-\nir-i-Hind   Medal.\nMiss F. Isabelle Hatch, a Woodstock, Ont., girl, has charge of a leper\ncolony at Ramachandrapuran, some\n400 miles from Madras, InAa, between\nthe mountains and the sfacoastr on\nthfi : Godavari River. Every seywt\nyears she gets a furlough and revisits\nher birthplace in Canada. ,\nThis year the Governor-General oi\nIndia bestowed upon Miss Hatch the\nKaisir-i-Hind silver medal in recognition \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd of her many years of work\namong the outcast lepers oi the Te-\nluga district, which comprises some\n30,000,000 people. Just before she sailed she was presented with a solid gold\nmedal bearing on one side the inscription \"F. I. Hatch, 189&-1911,\" and\non the obverse, \"From the Public of\nRamachandrapuran.\"\nMiss Hatch had been ior many years\nin India when a visitor called attention to her native servant, who had\nbeen in her employ two years. She\nimmediately took him to a physician,\nwho diagnosed hls case as leprosy.\"\nWhen question, he admitted that his\nmother and sister had led pariah\nlives for years because of the disease,\nsnd finally had drowned themselves\nto escape further ravage.\nThat was the start of the leper colony at Ramachandrapuran. Mist\nHatch had no jnoney\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnothing but an\nabiding faith. Bit by bit the way\nopened. Land was given her, and\nhelpers came.' Much of the actual\nwork and supervising she herself did.\nThere now are several good buildings\nerected by people who desired to help\nin tbe work. The women's building\nb the gift of a woman who desired a\nmemorial to her husband and could\nthink of nothing more suitable than\nthis home for those who are doom'jd\nto go abrut crying \"Unclean, unclean.\"\n\"I would not have you think that\nlife is all gloomy at tho colony,\" said\nMisa Hatch.\nThe church is open for services each\nand every diy, and there these unfortunate poopie may meet and talk of\nthe things which interest them. I find\nemployment for each one who is able\nto work. Some have garden pilots\nwhich they cultivate; the men can\nalways finds something to do around\nthe buildings, and the women have\ntheir household tasks just the same\nas  do other  women.- There  is   the\nand\ntry to\nwith its attached wedding ring, from\nswinging. In spite of your efforts you\nwill find that the wedding ring moves.\nIf a man Is holding the string the\nwedding ring will commence slowly to\nDealer.\nthe hundred and one things\nteach them.\"\nA Gentle Reminder.\nNeighbor-Bel io, Jenkins!   How am\nyou?   Haven't seen you ln tbe garden\nfor, quite a time, and you never come\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdway back and forth along the fork. J and see the wife and me now.   Why\nIf a woman holds the string the ring\nsways across the fork. With some\npeople the movement is light, while\nwith others it ls marked, but at all\ntimes It Ib unmistakable.\nNow here's the most curious part:\nIf a woman Is holding the string when\nthe movement across the fork bas\nonce been firmly established, let a\nman place his rl<rht hand firmly upon\nher left hand, which rests tioon the\ntable. The ring will be seen slowly to\nstop its cross movement, and after a\nfew moments the motion Will be reversed. The ring will swing the\nlength of the fork. A similar change\nof movement will occur In the event\nof a man holding the string while a\nIs itt Jenkins-Well, the fact is, old\nchap, that It's not through 111 will or\nbad feeling or anything Uke tbat, yoa\nknow; only yoa and Mrs. Possmbre\nhave borrowed ae many thing* from\nme tbat when I see* your place it\nmakes me feel quite homesick.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLondon Answers.\nArt and Science.\n\"What a beautiful picture of an an*\ngelP said tb\ufffd\ufffd lady wbo was visiting\ntbe art gallery.\n\"Yes,\" replied the aviation enthusiast, \"bat between you and me those\nwings  ar^p't   practical.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWashington\nWon by Hie Wit\nOn one occasion a dress rehearsal at\nHis Majesty's theater was prolonged\ntill tbe small hours of tbe morning.\nThe company grew very weary, particularly a gentleman wbo bad been\nwith Sir Herbert Tree ln a good many\nproductions, but who bad never attained to more tban a very tiny part\nWhen the time came to rehearse bis\nfew lines be was so tired tbat bis voice\nwas anything but distinct\n\"What's the matter. Mr. Z.T asked Sir Herbert ln his most sarcastic\ntpnea. \"Are you saving your voice for\nthe rehearsal?\"\n\"No, Sir Herbert,\" was the retort:\n\"I've never been able to save anything\nunder your management\"\nSir Herbert, an exceedingly witty\nman himself, was so pleased with the\nretort that the salary of the small part\nman was raised.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLondon M. A. P.\nLABORS FoFlEPERsT\nNEW SHOW TODAY.\nEvery Act a Fisatur;.\nThe Americanized Chinee\nDoranto\nDelineator of Dragonlstlc Music.\nThe Summers\nSinging and Talking Act, Late\nof Sullivan-Considine Circuit.\nWill Lockrane\nScotch Comic.\nLouise Byrd\nSinging \"Baboon Baby Dance.\"\nDavies\nTea Rooms\nOpen for business\nFebruary 29th\nEighth street, next door\nto Bank of Vancouver\nLiglit Refreshments\nAfternoon Teas\na Slpe-ialty\n3\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNEW PHOTO PLAYS\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd3.\n10c\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdADMISSION\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd20c.\nCHILDREN HALF PRICE.\n'\"\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 of Laths, Shingles and\nNo. 2,Common Boards and Dimension.\n\" \"\"\" ' -  ' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   - - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   '  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nNew is the time to build for sale or rent while price* are low\nFOR CHOICE\nFISH\nOYSTERS\nCHICKENS\nLAMB\nBEEF\nMUTTON\nGO TO\nP.  BURNS' MARKET\nFOR THE HIGHEST QUALITY MEATS\nin.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    .\n(   n\n.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Mj      J'\ufffd\ufffd\nI\nfiom -i.iri'\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd: :\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\n-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  I\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n29TH OF FEBRUARY\nExtra\n5Pl LtiL\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   i      !\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nLL'I AJ   ...\nToday will be your last chance to Retire\nClothing and Men's Wear at the following\ngreatly reduced prices:\nSUIT values to $15.00 for $7.50\nSUIT valuta 'c $20.00 for $12.00\nSUIT vr h es (c $25.00 for $lS.OO\nSUIT vAzd ts $35.00 for $20.00\nHATS vJ\ntLes to $3.50 for $1.75\nSHIRTS values to $1.50 fot $1.00\nSHIRTS values to $2.00 for $1.25\nToday is the Last Day of our Cleans\nSale\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCome Early\n.1!' !'*,    l.-M\n, ilimm\ni i >\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ni.    .. <:.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    :,;i,f*\n*,   *.*\np Mi-Mfew\nI)  \\U:\n*\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd in ii i lii I    I,\nA. S. Mills &Co.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi-\nSMART APPAREL FOR  THE  YOUNGER  MEN,   !6  TO\n517 Columbia Street\ndlHtpi .\n60\n.. wKBk . PAGE SIX.\nIHt DAILY  NEWS.\nTHURSDAY, FEBRUARY 29, 1912'.\nDry Goods, Draperies, Rugs, Etc., Bought for 50 Cents\nTo Be Closed Out at Gordon's Recent Quarters, Cliff Block At Once\nSale Opens\nAY  MORNING  at  Nine  O'clock\nIn addition to Gordon's Stock on hand when his doors were closed, we\nhave also secured several thousand dollars' worth of New Goods In\ntransit, bought by him for the spring trade at a liberal discount.\nThese new goods will be included In the sale at about one-half the\nprice usually obtained for like merchandise.\nHigh Grade Goods\nMost of you know of the high standard of the Gordon Stock\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnot the\nkind usually found on bargain counters. Every Item in the store is\nthe choicest of its kind, selected with care, well bought, and is in\nevery way dependable. At Gordon's regular prices you alwry: received good value. Now you have an opportunity to buy these goods\nat from one-third to one-half.\n\\JM& Pl*^B1&*ic!:\ufffd\ufffd3& ^^tffcB B ^at P\"ces f\ufffd\ufffdr ^e merchandise will be lower than Westminster people have ever known.\nww W \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd I vl I li^^ N %&%& t^ masterful method of merchandising that will be employed will compel the patronage\nof all classes of this community. We realize that it is no inconsiderable task to fully and completely carry out the plan which we have\nconceived for the disposal of this magnificent stock. However, every nook and corner of this establishment is permeated with that fine\nwestern spirit which knows no failure, and which by its very enthusiasm spells success before it starts. You will find further unfolding of\nour plans and practical demonstration of our earnestness if you will read our ' \"ads\" in the daily papers.\nATTEND THE SALE OPENING DAY, FRIDAY\"\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd36\nCLIFF BLOCK\nTHE MAN WHO SAVES YOU MONEY\nSIXTH STREET, Near Columbia\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd$08 t.yr tt.W)rV?&f*i7-m$WW^^?^m^^Ff*I%^v^*^^H^^^^^^^!5^^^\n:*7T*S,'^**5;i-v\nInstant Relief from Eczema\nVou can stop that awful Itch from\neczema and other Bkln troubles in two\nseconds.\nSeems too good to be true\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdbut it is\ntrue, and we vouch for it.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJust a lew drops of the simple,\ncooling wash, the D. D. D. Pie3crlptlon\nfor eczema, and the itch stops instantly.\nNow if you have tried a great many\ncures for eczema and have been dis\nappointed, do not make the mistake\nof refusing to try tkis soothing wash,\nAll other druggists keep this U. D. D.\nPrescription\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdgo to them If you can't\ncome to us\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdbut lf yoj come to ou.\nstove, we can tellSyou all about D. IJ.\n1). Prescription an.i how it curea\neczema, or you can get a free trial\nbottle by writing D.D.D. Laboratories,\n4li Colborne St., Toronto. F. J. MacKenzie, Druggist.\n1 imber\nB.C. Mills\nand  Trading\nCo.\nManufacturers ana Dealers In AH Kinds of\nLUMEBR, LATH, SHINGLES, SASH,   DOOR8,   INTERIOR   FINI8H,\nTUNNED WORK,  FISH  BOXES     LARGE    8TOCK     PLAIN    ANO\nFANCY GLASS.\n5fc 'Royal City Planing^i'ls Brarc't\nTeleohone  12 New Weatmlnster  {\ufffd\ufffd\/ t\nBox   137\nJ\nH tiH\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdin\n*rks shellye\nknow them\"\nOn the merit of their performances alone are\nwe willing to have them judged. Simplicity of\nconstruction combined with a skill in manufacture, which is the inheritance of generations, make\nRICHEST   BRITISH   1-EER\nWbUS   i,OUI_TY   GIRL\nLondon, Feb. 2b.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe marriage of\nj Lord nowaid de \\Valden, one oi the\nI richest peera in the Lnited Kingdom,\n' toon piace yesterday afternoon. The\nbriue was Miss Margherita van uaalto,\n\\i_ weat by society girt, who had not\npassed her 2lst birthday, Ihe format\nnotice of the date of the marriage\nwas made public simultaneously with\ntbe weddins, and when the reporters\nand the photographers arrived on the\nscene they round that tho ceremony\nwas already in progress. The reason\nfor the sudden preparations for the\nmarriage was kept from the newspapers, and every etfort was made to\navoid publicity, so far as the press\nwas concerned.\nAfter the performance of the ceremony the bride departed from the\nscene amidst a patty of friends, and\nthe bridegroom, while giving out the\nstatement that he had called for his\nautomobile, called a taxicab and escaped by a hack way.\nLord de Walden is one of tjie most\nunique characters in England. While\nhe has an income which is estimated\nat $6,000,000 annually, he is ranked\nas a liadicai In politics, with demo-'\n(\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdratio tendencies. Much of his great\nwealth is Invested In the business district of London and in the residential\ndistricts In the West Knd. He has\nbeen for a long time associated with\nthe musical ami artistic circles of tlie\ncity, and is one of the most prominent\nsubscribers to the Hammerstcin Opera\nFund.\nBesides hls connection as a subscriber with the HammerSteln oter.t\nHouse here, Lord de Walden has written an opera entitled \"The Children\nof Don Opolbrook,\" which will lie pro-\nduced here the coming s.nnmer.\n11in lordship Is handsome, popular\nand easy In liis manners. Taken ali\nIn all. he Is regarded as ono of the\ngreatest catches from a matrimonial\nstandpoint in tlie society ol London.\ndown the corners and keep 'em open,\nsee?\"\n\"Quite an Idea,*' agreed the Judge.\n\"But what do ; ou Italians do to keep\ntheir lips from growing together?\"\n\"Oh dat's tunny,\" laughed Rosa.\n\"Dat's a Joke. The baby he cries with\nhis mouth too much, or we'd hang earrings there, too. Maybe sometime\nbaby he cry with his ears and then we\nthrow away hoops altogether.\"\nAn attache of the court hereupon\nstuffed his handkerchief ln his mouth,\nbut despite this precaution he led the\nlaugh in which the court joined.\nSarah  Is Not Afraid.\nParis, Feb. 28.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMadame Sarah\nBernhardt, the famous actress, has received a letter from an astronomer\nannouncing her approaching death.\nShe has but a short time longer to\nlive, the note declared. The actres?\ntakes no stock ln the thing und is\nunafraid.\nmm\nmm\nTake Notice\nAll Grand Trunk Pacific Steamers now dock\nat the NEW GRAND TRUNK PACIFIC\nWHARF, foot of Main street, Vancouver.\nMONDAYS NORTH\nSATURDAYS .SOUTH\nIt Pays to Advertise in the Daily News\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdmmrmommate\ni\ngood time keepers and\nconsequently comfortable watches to carry.    ^^\nTheir efficiency is assured by a guarantee which enables\nthc owner to have any constructional defect remedied free of\ncharge by the nearest agent in any part of thc world.   They\nnre not m,-\ufffd\ufffdde in craves which canrot be fully guaranteed,\n-.. a\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd a\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ray\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd a asm nmaaammmmst\nEARRINGS WORN TO\nKEEP  EARS  OPEN\nKansas City, Feb. 28.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWhy do Italians wear earrings ? Style, you say,\nNot a bit of it. Listen to the explan.\nation given by Rosa Bruno. IB years\nold. to Judge K. B. Porterfleld in the\nJuvenile court. The Judge wanted to\nknow why an Infant in the arms of\n,T; s. Pasqualo Bruno, Rosa's met fur.\nworo two liig gold hoops v,h!c-;i dangled alinosi to Its shoulders, and Rosa\nreplied:\n\"(Js Italians, you know, wc arc (Iif-\nl>rcnt from you people. We don t believe In our babies' ears sto;i] Ing np,\nSo v.e put in the bit; earrings to pu*.l\nImportant to Grocers and Consumers!\n' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' ri \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd!    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ni' i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdiiimti.  i m\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd........^^^.,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,__.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,._...__\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd rnm r--f-t-m m*mmtm^^a*^am l\nThe absolute purity and healthfulness of\nBAKER'S COCOA\nand CHOCOLATE\nare guaranteed under the pure food laws of\nCanada. Made by a perfect mechanical\nprocess, they are unequaled for delicacy of\nflavor and food value.\nThe New  Mills at Montreal are now in operation and for the convenience of the\nCanadian trade we have established Distributing Points at\nMontreal, Winnipeg, Vancouver\nWALTER BAKER & CO. LIMITED\nESTABLISHED 1780 DORCHESTER, MASS.\nCanadian Milia at  1000 ALBERT STREET, MONTREAL\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdawmi *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd a*w*j\/a\\*a*w*aassm*mswsm swasBmasmmumssstmamsssst\n.vmwjsrinacj-astuw THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 29', 1912.\nI Don't Want To Marry You\nSung by GRACE LARUE with SAM BERNARD in\nSAM S. and LEE SHUBERT'S production\n\/'NEARLY A HERO\"\nTHE DAILY\nAllegretto.\nWords and Music by ED. B. CLAYPOLE\nr*   it\nI\n9V\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd]m\n3T\n**=&\n7* fc\n>\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdr\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtazzfc:\n1.1       real-ly   can-not    set-tie down to     save my bless-ed      life      To       be   on-like all\n8.1     friend of mine who owned a  bunk de - part-ed from this    life,      I      went and asked his\nba\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_v \ufffd\ufffd _fi_\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdq\ufffd\ufffd tr r^_g_#_.y #.._\n=t\noth \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd er fgirls has    boon my   aim and   8trif>,\nwid - ow   to    be \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd come my    lov - lng    wife.\nA       nice youiijjman   he    called on   me   far\nShe     prom - ised   the would   mar - ry   me,    s\ndoor,\ncent,\nAnd    this     is    whst     I      Paid, when    he     pro*posed   lo      wed-.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nAnd    this     is   what    I     said, when   she    pro-posed   to     wed-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nJn\nBEFItAIN.\nm%mm^\n3m\n*=*\n::_*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdr^r\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>. jt\nUst\nI     will    al \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .ways   love      but\nyouj\nI      just   like   your   com - pa - ny,\nl>r^ m\n**************** _\ufffd\ufffd      JK-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^4^\t\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffds\nthree lon? months or    more,\ndis \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd moml rinij    I      sent.\nBut\nBut\n\"vaTZ.\nm\n?\"\n-**-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffds-\nwlien   lie    menlioneil    mar-riage, why,    I     point-ed    to    the\nwhen they   set - tied     np    the   will,   the    did not   get    a\nCop\/right, mcmviii. by THE TREBL'HS PUB. Co., Inc., 1416 Broadway, New Vork.    EDWARD LASKA, General Manage*\nPerforming Rights Reserved.       Publishers of ail SHUBERT Musical Attractions.        International Copyright Secured.     .\nPublished by MURRAY MUSIC Co., New York.    Used by permission. Xo. 90.\nI Don't Want To Marry You.\nAo. y0.\nBUSINESS DIRECTORY\nNEW    WESTMINSTER    MAIL\nFRATERNAL,\nO. O. F. AMITY LODGE NO. 17\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nThe regular meeting of Amity lodge\nNo. 27, 1. O. O. F.. is held every Mon\nday n!e.ht at 8 o'clock in Odd Fellows hall, corner Carnarvon and\nEighth street. Visiting brethern\ncordially invited. H. W. Harrison,\nN. G; C. B. Bryson, V. G.; James\nFerguson, p. G., recording secretary; R. B. Purdy, financial secretary.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTENOGRAPHY    *    TYPEWRITING\nMISS M. BROTErt, public stenographer; specifications, business letters, etc.; circular work taken.\nPhone 4IS. Rear of Major and\nSavane's ofllce. Columbia St\nAUDITOR ANO ACCOUNTANT.\nH. J. A. BURNETT. AUDITOR AND\nAccountant. Tel. R 128. Room.\nTrapp block.\nPROFESSIONAL.\nJOHNSTON A JACKSON, barristers-\nnt-law, solicitors, etc. Offices, Rooms\nr> and 7 Ellis block, Columbia street\nCuble Address- \"Stonack.\" Code:\nWeBtern Union. Telephone, 1070.\nAdum Smith Johnston und Frank\nAlexander Jackson.\nWHITESIDE & EDMONDS\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBarristers nnd Soilcltois, Westminster\nTniBt block, Columbia streel, New\nWestminster, B.C.. Cable address\n\"Whiteside,\" Western I'nion. P.O.\nDrawer 200. Telephono <W. W. J.\nWhiteside. H. L. Edmonds.\nJ. P. HAMPTON HOLE, HAIUU8TKK,\nsolicitor and notary, 010 Columbia\nBtreet.   Over C. P. U. Telegraph.\nWADE. WHEALLER, McQUARRlE &\nMARTIN\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBarristers and Solicitors\nWestminster offlces, Rooms 7 and 8\nOulcbon block, corner Columbia and\nMcKenzie streets; Vancouver offlces, Williams building. 41 Gran\nvllle street. F. C. Wade. K. C;\nA. Whealler, W. G. McQuarrie, G. E\nMartin, Geo. CaBsady.\nJ. STILWELL CLUTE, barrister-at-\nlaw, solicitor, etc; corner Columbia\nand McKenzie streets, New West\nminster, B. C.   P. O. Hox 112.   Tele\nphone 710.\nJIM Hi) OF 1'KADK\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd NEW WEST\nminster Board of Trade meets in tn(\nbom-d room. City Hall, an follows\nThird Thursday of eacb month;\nquarterly meeting on tlie tniro\nThursday of February, May, August\nand November, at n p.m. Annual\nmeetings on the thin Thursday 01\nFebruary. New memftun may be\n>proposed and elected at any month\nly or quarterly mneti.ig. CJ H\nStuart-Yi'ade. secretary.\nArrival: Closing:\n10:50\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdVancouver  via  G.   N.  R.\n 23:00\n7:40\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdVancouver via B. C. E. R.\n(daily except Sunday). 11:15\n12:00\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdVancouver via. B. C. E. R.\n(dally except Sunday). 16:00\n18:00\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdVancouver via B. C. E. R.\n(dally except Sunday).20:30\n7:40\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdVictoria via B. C. E. R.\n(dally except Sunday).11.16\n10:50\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdVictoria via G. N. R.\n(daily except Sunday). 11:15\n7:30\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdUnited States via O. N. R.\n(dally except Sunday).. 9.46\n16:16\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdUnited States via G. N. R.\n(dally except Sunday)..16:00\n11:40\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAll points east and Europe    (dally) 8:15\n22:43\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAll points east and Europe (dally)   13:16\n11:40\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSapperton    and    Fraser\nMills      (dally     except\nSuuday)   *:16\n18:10\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSapperton    and    Fraser\nmills      (dally     except\nSunday)     - 14:00\n11:40\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCoquitlam      (daily    except  Sunday)     8:15\n12:00\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCentral Park, McKay and\nEdmonds (dally except\nSunday)       11.16\n14:00\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEast Burnaby (dally except Sunday   14:30\n10:00\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTlmberland (Tuesday and\nFriday)    13:30',\n10:30\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBarnston Islands arrives\nTuesday, Thursday and\nSaturday, and leaves\nMondav,      Wednesday\nand   Friday    H:00\ntl: on\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLadner. Port Oulchon.\nWestham   Island,  Bun\nVilla  13:30\n10:00\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAnnieville   and   Sunbury\n(dally  except  Sunday). 13:30\n0:00\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWoodwards iTuenrio*\nThursday and S\ufffd\ufffdtm\nday)    13:30\n16:45\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdVancouver,   Piper's    Siding     via     U.     N\n(dally except Sundnv\n15:50\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdClovordale and Port Kells\n*ia G.  N.   R.   (dally  ex\ncept  Sunday) 14:On\n11:20\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdClayton  (Tuesday, Thursday,   Friday    mid\nday      \t\n11:20\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTynehead   (Tuesday   and\nFriday)         14 \ufffd\ufffdi\n7:40\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBurnaby Lake (dally except Sunday   . .     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n18:10\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAbbotsfoM. Um-or Sutis,\nMatsqui, Huntingdon,\netc. (dally except Sunday) 23:00\n16:16\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCrescent, White Rock and\nHlaine 1 dally except\nSunday) t*:41\n(6:16\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHall's Prairie, Fern Ridge\nand Hazlemere (Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday   9:4R\n11:20\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdChilliwack, Milner. Mt.\nLehman, *. ldergrove, Otter, Shortreed, Surrey\nCentre,Cloverdale,Lang-\nley Prairie. Murray vllle,\nStrawberry Hill, South\nWestminster, Clover\nValley, Coghlan. Sardis. Sperling Station,\nBradner, Bellerose, via\nB. C. E. R. (dally except Sunday)   9:00\n11:20\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdRand, Majuba Hill via\nB. C. E. R. (Monday\nWednesday and Friday        9:00\n30:30\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdChilliwack via B. C. E. R.\n(daily except Sunday). 17.30\n11:20\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAbbotsford, Huntingdon,\nria B. C. E. R. (dally\nexcept Sunday)  17:30\n16:60\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCloverdale   via   B.C.E.R.\n(dally except Sunday).17:30\n12:00\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFraser Arm   23:00\nCANADIAN PAH\nB.C. Coast Service\nPALMER\nGASOLINE ENGINES\nSH to 26 H. P.\n2 and 4 Cycle.\nLocal Agents\nWestminster Iron Works\nPhons  63.\nTsnth  St.,  New  Wsstmlnstsr.\nSole agent for\nHire's Root 8eer\nMineral Waters,   Aerated Waters\nManufacture  bv\n. HENLEY\nEW   WE8TMINSTER. B. C.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi\ufffd\ufffdDhor>e R  118   Ofllce:   Princess 8.\n.   PROM VANCOUVER.\nFor   Victoria.\n10:00 A .M Daily except Tuesday\n1:00 P. M Dally\n12:00 Midnight Saturday Only\nPor Nanaimo.\n2 p.m Dally except Sunday\nFor Seattle.\n10:00 A. II Dally\n11:00 P. M Daily\nPor Prince Rupert and  Alaska\n11 P.M March 9th, 19th, and 29th\nFor Queen Charlotte Islands.\n11 P.M March 2nd, 16th and 30th\nPor Hardy Bay.\n8.30 A. M Thursday\nFor  Upper  Fraser  River Points.\nSteamer Beaver.\nLeaves New Westminster, 8:00 a.m.,\nMonday, Wednesday and Friday.\nLeaves  Chilliwack,  7:00  a.m.,  Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday.\nFor Gulf Islands Points.\n7:00 A. M. Friday for Victoria, calling at Galiano, Mayne, Id., Hope Bay,\nPort Washington. Ganges Hr.. Gulcli\neon Cove, Beaver Point, Fulford and\nSidney Id. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nto ED. GOULET,\nAgent, New Westminster.\nH. W. BRODIE,\nO. P   A.. Vancouver\nJ. Newsome & Sons!\nPainters, Paperhangers\nand Decorators\nEstlmatea Given.\n214 Sixth Avenue. Phone 567\nNEW WESTMINSTER B.C.\nPhone 388.\nP. O. Box 557.\nJACKSON PRINTING CO.\nFine Office Stationery\nJob Printing of Every\nDescription \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Butter\nWrappers a Specialty\nMarket Square, New Westminster. |\nChoice Beef, Mutton,\nLamb, Pork and Veal\nAT THE\nCentral Meat Market\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOWELL A OODY\nCorner  Eighth St and Fifth Avsnue.\nPHONE 370.\nBank of Montreal\nESTABLISHED 1817.\n;APITAL  (Pald-Up)   ...$15,413,000.00\nRESERVE   $15,000,000.<W\nBranches throughout Canada rnd\nNewfoundland, and In London, Eng\nland, Naw Vork, Chicago and Spokane,\nO.S.A., and Mexico City. A general\nbasking business transacted. Let\nters of Credit issued, available wltt\ncorrespondents in all parts of thf\nvorld.\nSavings Bank Dipartmeni\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDeposlu\nreceived In sums of fl and upward\nand interest ailowe 1 at 8 per cent pei\nannum (present rate).\nTotal  Assets over 8186.000,000.00\nNEW WE8TMIN8TER BRANCH,\nG. D. BRYMNER. Manager.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCANADIAN PACIFIC\n^   RAHMUfl,\n3-DAILY TRAINS-3\nToronto Express leaves at 8:50\nChicago Express leaves at   13:50\nImperial Limited Leaves at ....19:49\nThrough   Pullman    Tourist    and\nDiners.   For Reservations and ratea\napply to\nED. GOULET, Agent\nNew Westminster\nOr \ufffd\ufffd. w. Brodie, O.P.A.. Vancouver.\nI '\nWf WANT YOUR ORDER\nCASH IF YOU CAN.\nCREDIT IF YOU CAN'T.\nWe have no hot air to peddle;\nJust legitimate tailoring.\n'\nJ. N. AITCHLSON\nj   MERCHANT TAILOR\n38 Begbie Street.\nCOAL\nINew\nWellington\nJOSEPH MAYERS\nPhone 105.     P O. Box S45.\nOffice. Front Ot.   Foot of Sixth.\nThe\nRoyal Bank of Canada\nCapital .paid up..'... .$6,200,000\nReserve ...7.200,000\nThe Bank has over 200\nbranches, extending in Canada\nfrom the Atlantic to the PacUic,\nin Cuba throughout the Island;\nalso in Porto Rico, Bahamas.\nBarbados, Jamaica. Trinidad,\nNew York and London,, Eng.\nDrafts issued without delay\non all the principal towns and\ncities.ln the world. These ex-\ncelent connections afford every\nbankine facility.\nNew Westminster Branch,\nLawford  Richardson, Mgr.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nThe Continuous\nGrowth of a Bank\nCAN MEAN BOT ONE THINS\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTHAT T4HE 8ERVICE IT\nRENDERS^ ITS CUSTOMERS\nMAKES\" FOR PERMANENT\nBUSINESS RELATIONS.\nTHE\nBank of Toronto\nWITH MORE THAN 55 YEARS\nOF CONTINUOUS GROWTH\nANO SATISFACTORY SERVICE, INVITES\nSAVINGS AND\nBUSINESS ACCOUNTS\nCAPITAL $4,600,000\nRE8T $5,600,000\nNEW WE8TMINSTER,    8  G\nBRANCH\nJ. GRACEY, MANAGER.\nmto \" 'W\"Mimnp.\nTAOK OQHT\nn\niTHE DAILY NEWS.\nTHURSDAY, FEBRUARY 29, 1912*.\nIn\n4j^   ICiTY News!\nV      1 STOCK OF Mr. Richard Fraser, of Moodyvllh\nV        I 8TOCI\nTree Prune rs\nand Tree\nSpray sold by\nANDERSON & LUSBY\n634 Columbia St.     PHone 22-23\nMr. Richard Fraser, of Moody vllle,\nwas in the city yesterday. Ho was a\nvisitor at the Hotel Russell.\nEighth street Bakery, fresh crumpets dally.   A, H#;dman. Phone JL.159.\nThe regular monthly meeting of llis\nWoman's Auxiliary of St. B.irnnbas\nchurch will be hcl,' this afternoon.\nnot ask how you are going to do It.\nYou may do lt ih business, In the law,\nln medicine, in the ministry, in teaching,  In literature.    But   this   ls   the\nuuestloh:   What are you going to give\npersonally to mako the human lite of\nIthe place'where you   do   your work\n| purer, stronger, blighter, better and\nI moro   worth   living?    That   will   be\nyour best  warfare against  vice and\ncrime.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHenry Van Dyke.\nfOT<tJJ>\n\/vr\/T-\/=rir>\nWORKERS REFUTE\nQUEBEC BRIDGE CHARGES\nThe Transfer resumes her\nrun on M*roh tha (Ust.\nregular\nIco cream   on\nnext train office.\nhand    Ira A. Held,\nHione olo.       **\nMM Expert\niPt Advice\nYOU CAN'T AFFORD TO TAKE\nANYTHING LESS THAN EXPERT\nADVICE IN THE MATTER OF INSURANCE. ; $\ufffd\ufffd$ NEVER KNOW\nUNTIL THE LOSS HAS OCCURRED\nWHETHER jAfoyjl . POLICY IS\nWORTH ANYTHING OR NOT.\nWHEN YOU GO Tp AN EXPERT\nYOU ARE CERTAIN OF GETTING\nTHE BEST INSURANCE. THAT I\ufffd\ufffd\nMY BUSINESS.. I*AM A SPECIALIST IN IT. THEREFORE IT WILL\nPAY YOU TO COME TO ME,\nAlfred W: McLecd\nINSURANCE\nPhon* Si.\n657 Columbia St.,\nNew Weatminater.\nMra. W. J. McKay will receive for\nthe flrst time since her marriage at\nher home, 1030 Leith street, cn Friday, March 1, an;l on the fl-Bi a i'.day\nof each month thereafter.\nDr. H. Hope,'eye specialist, can\nbe consulted daily from 9:30 a.m. to 5\np.m., at 657 Columbia street, over\nCurtis' Drug Store, or by Phoae i95:. *\nMr. and Mrs. Annan:lalo are busy\ncompleting their prepar.itiuns for thj\nextended trip they have planned ln the\nold country. They will probably leave\nsome time during March, and they will\nbe away for several months.\nWe give you money to build your\nhome, meet payments or ray mor-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdguges. You repay ln monthly payments under $10. The Universal Home\nSeem ity Co.. Ltd. Offices in the Peoples Trust offices. Open evenings until 9 o'clock. **\nJ. E. Rice, ln company with hia\nbrother, D. H. Rice, of Vancouver, L\nvisiting this city on a business trip.\nMr. J. E. Rice is managing director oi\nthe Ontario and the Western Canada\nInsurance companies at Calgary, and\nis looking over thc local Held.\nHumorous and instructive lecture\n8a \"Cite ana Opportunities,\" by Dr\nGeorge P. Bible, (Ader j.h\ufffd\ufffd SJ&&22 -\nQueen* Avenue Mnwd'iili W9IU8, Fll\nday evening, March l, at \ufffd\ufffd O'tlOak, Pr.\nHible ii a lecturer Of marked ability\nAhd as sa entertainer Is uneciualled.\nCoire and spend an enjoyable evening. **\nA new branch office wlll thort'y be\nopened in Nanaimo bj the Universal\nHome Securities Co.. Ltd , tho heaii\noffice of which is located in this city.\nThe office hns been put in charge oi\nMr. Wellborn, and will open for business in two or three days.\nNew York, Feb. 28,-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIn a letter Issued today, addressed \"To Whom It\nMay Concern,\" the District Council of\nHouseSmlths- and Bridgemen of New\nYork iind vicinity assert that tho \"accusations against our organization in\nreference to the Quebec bridge accident are absolutely unfounded, inasmuch as the job going on at that time\nwas wholly a union job.\"\nThe letter ls over the name of\nCharles William Ludwlg, secretary of\nthe organization, and that so far as\nlearned all the men employed as ironworkers Who lost their lives in the\naccident were union men.\nTO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY.\nTake LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine\nTablets. Druggists refund money if\nit fails to cure. E. W. GROVES signature is on each '\ufffd\ufffdox.   25c.\nMiss Cave-Browne-Cave\nL. R. A. M.       A. R. C. M.\nMember of the Incorporated  Society\nof Musicians  (England).\n(Successor to Mrs. Reginald Dodd.)\nTeacher of Pianoforte, Violin,\nSinging, Theory, Harmony,\nCounterpoint and Musical\nForm. j\nLESSONS BY CORRESPONDENCE\ni\nFor terms, etc., apply   51    Dufferln\nStreet, New Westminster. Phene R411.\nSEASONABLE\nittr^ray\n\ufffd\ufffd\nNext Sunday morning the service at\nDuniouald church win bo conducted\nby the Rev. Mr. Roberts, president ot\nthe B. C. conference. The choir will\nbe assisted by members of Ce Q.e n\nAvenue and other church choirs. Rev. j\nC. W. Broun will take tha evcnlnp\nservice.\nWhat Is life without gooJ eyesight, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nann Low many people arc su;'ierin^ to i\ndoy tr.\"j1Yi headaches caused by flefeC-\nlVre- visftem.    Why not have your eyes j\nt*at\ufffd\ufffdd  >y   a graduate   optician;   have\nyour glasses made to suit your sight.\nand   rellev*  yourselt   of  thoae   heart- ,\nacYiea.    Satisfaction euaranteed by W. \\\nGilford,  graduate    optician.      Optical\nvaTlors      ln     T.     Glffoid'B      Jqwelry\nStore. *\ufffd\ufffd\nChoice Building  Lots\nCorner Fourth avenue and Seventh\nstreet, all cleared. Some fruit\ntrees. Each lot 40 (oot frontage on\nSeventh sireet, and running back\n120 feet to lane.\nPrice $2,C00 each\nj One-quarter cash. balartcS <t, 12 and\nIS month*.\n1\ni\nThe Season's Newest\nDress Fabrics\nAWAIT YOUR INSPECTION\nIn Cottons, Silks, and Wool Goods\nThe Exquisite Colorings, the Beautiful\nWeaves and the Remarkable Variety\nMake a Visit to This Display of the\nUtmost Interest and Pleasure.\nThe Dress Goods Department is transformed into one beautiful bower or\nspring; the elaborato showing of spring dress fabrics that ever called for\nrecognition in this department. Here are displayed those smart whipcords\nand tweeds that promise to become so popular this season. In the tweeds\nare seen a wonderful array of shades and effects, in both English and\nScotch; and what could be more lovely than those soft smart looking homespuns, particularly In such delightful shades of tans, greys and browns.\nHere in un array of surpassing variety are the favorite of all spring\nweaves\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe worsteds. They're shown in many a pleasing offect, mostly\nstripes. Other popular weaves are plain and fancy worsteds and the beautiful broadcloths. Perhaps the most impressive feature of the whole display\nis the immense variety of new cotton fabrics; a variety that's almost bewitching. The showing of new silks also holds a high place, particularly\nthe new Foularda. In 2<i and 42 Inch widths. A beautiful Jacquard silk is\nshown in a dozen new shades, with i retty designs, the width is 26 Inches\nand price 50c per yard.\ntl'b a showing of UfiUBUbl beauty and of interest to everyone, whether or\nnot the immediate purchase of a new suit or dress is intended, and a cordial invitation is extended to visit this display.\nSPRING FASHIONS   EXEMPLIFIED  IN  CHARMING\nNEW SUITS JUST PASSED INTO STOCK\nA creat collection -at Kev* Spring Suits will for the first time be publicly\ndisplayed today fa our |{\ufffd\ufffd?,sly-towear Section. They illustrate most\neffectively thf; t'Juvrhiin- ttft&ons that are to prevail during lhe coming\nseason, ab froffi that point of view alone tbe exhibit will be worth a special\nvisit to Be\ufffd\ufffd3, The suits are in the newest spring styles, both as regards the\nf'jdgns and materials, the latter showing a wide variety of dainty patterns.\nTo understand ho# good our values are you must see these suits and note\nthe. rrices.\n$18.50, $20.00, $25.00, $30.00, $35.00 end up.\nMajor &Savrf\"RNITyKE\n\" *\"* It Unncht   nml   Sold\nS50 COLUMBIA STREET V\nUoucht anil Sold.\nHiRheKt   Pilce Given.\nSulphur, B\\#e Stone, Lye,\" Ar-\n'' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' I   .!-.;'l'\"\nsenate of Lead-\nelse in this line. Any Quantity\nALSO\nFRESH SEEDS\nNOW IN\nand anything iPHY8lCAL culture\nJ i>l DUTY OF EVERYONE\nB. & M.\nSpecials\nCurtis Drug Store\nFor\nPHOTO GOOD8\nSPECTACLE8\nSEElb'g\nPhone 43;  L. D. 71:  Ret. 72.\nNew    Westmlniter,    B    C.\nPhone R672.\n619 Hamilton St.\nd. Mcelroy\nChimney   Sweeping,\nEavetrouflh Cleanlno,\nSewer Connecting,\nCesspool*. Septic Tanks, Etc.\nDr. J. Brown, ef New York, one of   Fresh Oolichans    3  lbs. for 25c\nFresh Cod (half or whole), per lb. . .8c\nFrozen Salmon (half or whole), lb. 6c\nB. & M. Brand  Kippered Salmon,\npor lb 15c\nSmoked Halibut, per lb 15c\nLoggles Finnan Haddles 2 lbs. for 25c\nTALCUM POWDER\nThere are many kinds.\nWE HAVE THE BEST.\nAlso the latest.   Try\nMULFORD'S FLESH & WHITE\nExquisite Odor.\nSEE 'OUR  WINDOW\n<\nrtstn\nMtitR'S DRUG STORE\nDispensing Chemists, Tt-.\ni '-..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd..- Hlock     \ufffd\ufffd41. Columbia Bt\nM\ufffd\ufffd!<T Wnatmft)\ufffd\ufffd'.e>   hc\ntho phytlcal department e.vpe.u oi t.ie\niu..ein.*uoaal committee ot the Y. M.\nU a., is s^euding two or three days in\n.New \\ves,.minfeur and Vancouver tuia\nvniaiA. i.ast eseuiug he met the gymnasium leaders corm of the local V. M.\nC. A, and gave them an inspiring talK\nupon the \\a.ioas aspects ot tue ph)#l-\nC.J uei.artment worx, lie mentioned,\niu optaing, that the Y. JU. C. A. was\npiaotJcaiiy the lirst organization to\nrecognize the value ana imporiance oi\nphysical development, iu conjunction\nwith the mental una moral upbuildin0\nof men. lhe i.lea of the Y. M, C. A.\nphytlcal director of touay was not to\nproduce h lew expert gymnasts, or\nathletes, but to give the average man\nthe rihysical training necessary to\nenabie aim to develop and use all his\nother capabilities to tneir lui.est extent\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdto make him an all-round, capable man. This work was important\nto our cities and towns from the eo>\nDOtnic Standpoint, as investigation\nshowed that poverty, squalor aud\ncrime were almost luvariaoly tlie lesult of ill-health, uHd as ill-health was\nlargely due to the neglect oi tne phybi-\ncal boJy, sickness resulted in a man's\nearning powers being Impaired, which,\nIn turn, resulted in poverty, which frequently le.l to temptation and crime.\nUn tlie other hand the possession ot\nfull physical vigor resulted in a man\nfeeling and being competent and tit to\nundertake and carry out a manj part\nin life. The Y. M. c. a. gymnasium\nand Its leaders corps, Dr. Brown said,\ncould be made, and should be, a factor\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd in the life of every city possessing aa\nassociation. In Calgary, for instance,\n' the members of the leaders' corps act-\nled as voluntary instructors in the pub-\n| lie school gymnasiums; in Toronto tho\nY. M. C. A. had given free instruction\niu swimming to the boys and younjj\nmen in the city, the association giving\ntho free use of its tank, at certain\ntimes, for Ibis work. It is probnb\nthat, aa a rosult of Dr. Brown's visit,\nthe local Y. M. C. A. will take up th\nmatter of organizing free stimmin\nclasses for the young men and b^ivs o.\nthis city.\n537 Front St   -   Phone 301\nAuction SaSes\nConducted on Commission.\nJoseph Travers\nAuctioneer and Beal Estate Agent.\n421 Columbia St.\nBRITISH COLUMDIA\nGold Souvenir Jewelry\nSes    XA'inaow  Display\nCHAMBERLIN  JC\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCR\nOfficial Time Inspector ,or C. P. R. and B. C. Electric Railway.\nW. R. QILLEY, Phone 122. Q. E. QILLEY, Phone 281.\nPhonea, Offtee 15 and H.\nGilley Bros. Ltd.\nCOLUMBIA STREET WE8T.\nWholesale and Retail Dealers In Coal\nCEMENT, LIME, SEWER PIPE, DRAIN TILE, CRUSHED ROCK,\nWASHED GRAVEL AND CLEAN SAND, PRESSED BRICK AND\nFIRE BRICK.\nWe have 660 feet on the main\nchannel side of Lulu Island and\nwithin the city limits. The pro-\nD')sed harbor improvements will\nmake this the centre of industrial\nnvity.    ivor full particulars call\nphone\nTree Sprays\nLime and Sulphur      Quassia Chips\nWhale Oil Soap, Arsenate of Lead, Etc.\nAT\nRYALL'S DRUG STORE\n'PHONE 67\nEYES TE8TED BY OPTICIAN.\nWESTMINSTER TRUST BLOCK.\nINTERURBAN TRAMS\nAdvice Bet'.er Than Dollar-.\nWhat   are  you   going   lo   do,   my\nbrother men, for this higher si 'e of\nhuman life?    Whm contributions ar\"\nyou going to make nf your strenpi\nyour time, your Influence, your mme\nyourself   tr make  a   dejner, fuller\nhappier,   lnrf.'o-,  noVor  life  possible\nfor sonic of our fellow men?      1 do,\nEstablished   1891,   Incorporated   1905.\n. .!\ufffd\ufffd! Ut'\n,pkhiu\n0\ufffd\ufffdice,   New\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd w VVc*r-imirthte.tr\nveatmlnoter       liranches at Vancouver\n\"MMiwack and Alderprove, B.C..\nVictor! i\nWestminster Branch. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Cars\nleave B. C. B. R. Co. station for\nVancouver at 5:00, 5:45 and\nfi:45 a.m. and every 15 minutes\nthereafter until 10:00 p.m. After 10.00 p.m. half hourly service until midnight.\nSunday Service.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCars leavo\nfor Vancouver at 6:00, 7:00,\n8:00, 8:30, fl:00 and 9:30 a.m.\nIteRiilar week day service prevailing thereafter.\nFreight Service.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCars leave\nNew Westminster for Vancouver at 7:20, 11:20, 12:20' and\n15:20.\nBurnaby Branch\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCars leave\nn .C. B. H. Co. station for Vancouver at 5:45, (5:45 and 8:00\na.m., with hourly service thereafter until 10 p. m. and late car\nat 11:30 p. m.\nafter and late car at 11:30 p.m.\nleaves at 8:00 a.m. Regular\nweek day service thereafter.\nFreight Service.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLeave New\nWestminster for Vancouver at\n8:20.\nLulu Island BrancH;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd(To\nVancouver via Eburne)\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCars\nleave B. C. B. R. Co. station at\n7:00 a.m. and hourly thereafter\nuntil 11:00 p.m.\nSunday Service.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFirst car\nleaves at 8:00 a.m. Regular\nweek day service thereafter.\nFreight Service.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdI^eave New\nWestminster for Van. at 10:00.\nFraser Valley Branch.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Cars\nleave B. C. E. R. Co. station\nfor Chilliwack and way points\nat 9,!81 a.m., 1:20 and 6:10. For\nHuntingdon a\ufffd\ufffdd way points at\n4:05 p.m.\nBRITISH COLUMBIA ELECTRIC RAILWAY COMPANY.","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"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.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"New Westminster (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"The_Daily_News_1912-02-29","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0317729","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.206667","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-122.910556","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"New Westminster, B.C. : The Daily News Publishing Company, Limited","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/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\/","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"The Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}