4 =~ A * '~ \ — |b i % OIROULATION s x in’) NORTHERN ex “ary — mOLUMBIA Prince Rupert Friday, © a.m Princess Beatrice. . Friday, noon z > > . Formerly The Prince Rupert Optimist iL. IV, NO. 3% PRINCE RUPERT, B. C., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 43, 1913 o. : ones oven eae SCOTT'S LAST WORK IS MESSAGE TO THE PUBL RULES OF CIVILIZED WARFARE IGNORED BY MEXICAN REBELS—PEACE ENVOY FIRED PORTE DESIRES PEACE BUT EVERE FIGHTING IN GALLIPOLI PENINSULA — PORTE STRIVES TO*CONCLUDE A REASONABLE PEACE BASIS il to The Daily News ly note to the Powers nt op . . oF intinople, Feb 12th ks Grand Viste aes thee ghting was continued i fh iti , wi ( poli Peninsula toda ne the val the extent of the losses has P strive to eonelude a iscertained eas peace basis ESSAGE TO THE PUBLIC WAS SCOTT'S LAST WORK LL WRITTEN RECORDS OF THE PARTY, EVEN TO PRIVATE DIARY, HAVE BEEN BROUGHT TO CIVILIZATION— BODIES LEFT IN MANTLE OF WHITE. s al to The Daily News a been brought back, accord- stchurch, N. Z Feb. 12 ne Commander Evans, but it a Nova. the vessel which| Was thought better leave then th last vear to bring| im the mantle of white, where Captain Seott and his party hey bravely worked and 50 irctic explorers, has art ie cally died re She has broughi tten record of the part Bert Kergin of Stewart, brother their private diaries f Dr. W. T. Kere ef this t Seott kept a daily wd i arrived his 1 e fr the March 24th, spending he|head of the canal and will leave writing a message morrow the Prince Rupert bhi The bodies could r Vaneouver. i ROVINCIAL GOVERNMENT PROPOSES AID TO RAILWAYS ILL GUARANTEE BONDS OF THE CANADIAN NORTHERN TO COVER TERMINALS AT VANCOUVER, WESTMINSTER AND PORT MANN a, Feb, 12——The present | proposes in the case of the Can- f the Provincial Legis- | ®4!@! Northern to guarantee the , os aie EE: neipal and interest on the bonds f the mpany to covel railway legislation I the cost of terminals at Port Premier MeBride presented) Mann, Westminster and Vancou- short bills providing for a) ver and other work her provincial aid to enable —_——___—__- -——_——= Canadian Northern and the Miss” Gleasol having leased fic and Great Eastern rail-|/the Burritt residence has re- s lo carry their respective | modelled it and Ww open it as ertakings to a speedy and jan up date boarding house sessful consummation. In the A limited 1 ber f beautifully f the Pacific and Great) furnished ! s with large Clo- tern the premier said that/sets are now for rent Rates for was necessitated owing to|reom ol board or both can be general tightness of the mo-|had by applying at 435 4th Ave market The government! Phone 171 35-37-39 AREWELL LAST NIGHT FOR YOR PATTULLO OCCUPIED CHAIR AND EXPRESSED REGRET OF CITIZENS AT DEPARTURE OF CAPT. AND MRS. TUTTE. st have been most pleas lowed by prayel! the secular part to Captain and Mrs. Tutte of|of the evening's entertainme nt Salvation Army to see such |»egan with an overture by Grays ree and representative g@ath well known orchestra Miss K assembled in the citadel|Gray, the talented young musi evening to take part in the|©!@n next obliged with a cornet MW ¢ concert on their behalf.| 80, which was well received ” Pattullo occupied the | Mrs Fred Button in a vor al solo Yr and amongst those helping|W@s 8 atly enjoyed Phe Band} entertainment were to be of Love girls, mm a wonderfully ed most of the leading ama-| Clever exhibition of dumbbell talent of the city eta ening with a hymn, ‘fol-| Continued on Page 4 — So tate fll TO THE PUBLIC We have this day inaugurated @ Taxicab Service in the olty with rates . cower than taxioab rates in Vancouver. As @ special inducement we of- etanioae &® + Peduetion over our own tariff. By buying $6.00 worth of com= sas lokets we give $5.76 in fares. if the public appreciation and ‘age is such that we are able we shall submit @ much reduced terift * very early date Our care are on cali 24 hours « day and a@ call at 36 will bring » o#" your door within 40 minutes We offer ep eclal rat nen, hd hotel service ates for dances, to professional me fer ambulance A Taxicab Bervice with “Service @ Motto UNION TRANSFER & STORAGE CO., L RR HE TD. FIGHTING IS CONTINUED SALVATION ARMY CAPTAIN LOCAL ODD FELLOWS 'Give Farewell Luncheon for Capt. Tutte Prior to His Depart- ure for Lethbridge. As Putte, local Army, ; departure the eave for Bro officer of the the Salvation a token of esteem commanding of about to ior Lethbridge, Order of Odd farewell luncheon corps is take his Alta., who local | | a : jlodge room Tuesday on evening \ large number of nembers were p jing resent and an enjoyable even- was spent Several f of the thei their high brother best wishes fleld those who McKinley, Fisher in lodge ¢ xpressed re- ;eret esteem his departure, for him Odd Fellow for his al as a and thei: his new success ilk { i Among Brothers 1k, Phillips, Bro. Tutte, thanked the many kindnesses to of the expressions Prince labo! ‘ spoke were and brief inenmibers Kellar | Douglas a jaddress for their while a him resident and of city for their warm regret Is leaving HON. G E. FOSTER — LEAVES FOR THE COAST couver Before the Boat Sails. 10 left Hon for Feb George Ollawa it the west }on | | Foster, who | train, the will spend early sup before sailing February 19th to take on the Imperial Trade ommission, which enquiring into conditions throughout the Mr. Foster to couple of meetings, one Vancouver, other Victoria, and he will be the guest of the Vancouver Board f Trade at luncheon. He falso accepted an invitation to ad- dress the Canadian Club of Van- He has several other in- vilations, but will be unable to them. Mr. Foster will spend a couple months in Australia, and on home expects to visit and Japan. He denies, however, that he armed with authority to negotiate trade treaties with these countries, al- morning of busy days .on for Aus- a co it | Lhe coast | on | tralia his place { is trade Empire expecis address a political in in a has couver accept I his way China is though he proposes to get into touch with general conditions of itrade as it affeets or is likely to jaffect Canada. MRS. SCOTT ON OCEAN |Sailed from San Francisco on | Wednesday for New Zealand. San Franeisco, Feb. 12. Mrs. Robert F. Seott suiled from here 1 Wednesday last on the liner \orangi for New Zealand, hoping join her husband there, The \orangi is due at Tahiti on Feb- ary 47th, and at Sydney on Mareh 3rd, touching also at iRaritango and Wellington, N. 2 | Mrs. George Eckerman, wife of Georet Eekerman, for three vears manager of Lynch Bros,’ jdepartmental store, leaves on the ip Rupert tomorrow morn line for Ban Diego, California iMr. Eckerman, who is leaving the | sers ce of Lyneh Bros, at the ex piration of the present month, Ww proceed at onee to join his \ u that city, where they in end to make their future home M Eekerman, who is one of the ght young business men of Kupert, will, together with his wife, be greatly missed by a iree number of intimate friends ind acquaintances ror sale by MeCaffery & Gib. bons, two ten acre tracts ai Ter- race £550.00 each on good terms. 56.40 HONOR A BROTHER Fellows | in their! | member 8] tu-| the | CO-OPERATIVE BANKS —§ NEARLY A DOZEN TO ASSIST FARMERS MILLIONAIRES Resolution Introduced in Dom- City of Toronto Boasts of Ten inion House Urging Estab- Men Worth More Than lishment of System of a Million Dollars. Co-Operative Banks for Farmers According to a recent issue of the Toronto Star, the wealthiest Special to The Daily News. Ottawa, Feb. 42 etter Sole men in the leading Ontario eity | hen Conservative member for | are as follows: Sir William Mac- Portage la Prairie, Man ntro-| kenzie, $15,000,000; J. C, Eaton, duced a resolution in the House | #12,000,000; Senator Cox, $5,- }today which will meet with the 000,000; Sir Edmund Osler, $4,- favor of the finance minister.|000,000; Cawthra Mulock, $4,- The resolution urged the estab- | 000,000; I R. Wood, 83,500,000; lishment of co-operative banks| W G. Gooderham, %3,000,000; iIthroughout the agricultural dis- | Si Henry Pellat, $3,000,000; tricts of Ganada, such banks be-|Sir Donald Mann, $3,000,000; J ing for the particular purpose! W. Flavell, $2000,000, of aiding in agricultural devel-} opment by making loans to far Mrs. ©. L. Munroe. wife of C. L. | mers on their stock and crops.) Munroe, returned to the city yes- — resolution was adopted terday after a visit extending as oe far east as Edmonton Mrs WORK PROGRESSING Dineen, the former's mother, ac- companied her daughter upon AT ALIFORD BAY her return and will remain in- definitely with her. Mr. Munroe | Me. gp was detained in the south on | Seventy Dwellings for Fishermen j,).cjnucs, Are Now Being hae STEEL BUILT COACHES get eee, con gly oo SAVED MANY LIVES } I Putnam, engineers in the employ of the B, ©, Fisheries ements ir 4 whieh Sir George Dough. Cars ef Chicago Express on the I ty Grimsby, England, is the Cc. P. R. Ditched Near d, arrived in the city yester London. ida neg the Prince John ee lf \liford Bay and are regis- London, Ont Feb. 44 Mod- { the Windsor Hotel. They | ern coaches and steel construe- [have been bus engaged for the | tion probably saved the lives of a ist seven months in erecting a amu, at suonte crow snk. se fertilizer plant for the company : : : : iwhich is jus completed In | Sengers of the Canadian Pacific | speaking of the work that has} ®*press No, 18, at North Newbury, I been already accomplished and thirty-seven miles west of Lon- lthat is in contemplation, Messrs don, When the entire (rain was |Messidat and Putnam are author- hurled into the diteh while trav- ity for the statement that besides |@!!ne at fifty miles an hour the fertilizing pliant they were F. J. Huggitt, of Bala, Mus- engaged upon he company has koka, the most seriously injured erected a cannery and over sev.|'% now at Bt. Joseph's Hospital enty dwelling houses for the | Suffering from cuts about the fishermen recently arrived from | head and face and shock sus- the British Isles on the two | tained when he was catapulted two steam trawlers, the Canada|through a window in the day and Triumph. Messrs. Messidat coach. He recovered conscious and Putnam wil! leave immedi-|@ess I the ditch shortly afte! ately to report at the headquar- | Ward and was given IERPOrAEy | ters of the company in Victoria, | 888istance by” the passengers | ie j}pending the arrival of Dr. H. A Stevenson and Dr. Thomps WELL KNOWN PRINTER who proceeded, to the scene f Rs city with the auxiliary w DEAD AT VANCOUVE' within a few minutes after th: |} wreck was reported Was at One Time Proprietor of} Three express and bageas the Atlin Claim and Later Ran cars following the engine wer Paper at Port Essington. hurled to the north side of the ltrack and into the ditch sixty Vancouver, Feb. 10.—W. J./ feet away. A second class coach MacKay, proneel printer and! turned at right angles, complete newspaperman of Vancouver and) |y blocking the line, while the the northwest, passed away at) following first class coach als: the general hospital yesterday) resisted the inelination to tele from cancer of the stomach. The| scope, and came almost broad deceased had been afflicted for) side against it, several. months with the malady | and for nearly two months had} OPPOSED TO EUGENICS in Nova | Utah Socialists Seek Another been a hospital patient. Mr. MacKay was born Scotia and while still a child ac-?f Remedy for Human Ills. companied his parents to Buenos | ae Ayres. Later the family went to Salt Lake City Feb. 412 Providence, R. 1, where MacKay Physical defects and crippled learned the printing business, then going to San Francisco, In souls” cannot be overcome by 4882 MacKay came to Victoria} barring the unfit for marriage and later to Vancouver During /|according to Ogden Socialists the past” twenty-five years he|Copies of resolutions declaring spent a large part of his time in|that “erime is the product of and about Vancouver, He was al|wrong and perverted economic one time proprietor of the Atlin/ conditions and protesting Claim and later established alagaints the bill that provides for newspaper at Port Essington.ja board of eugenics to control Mr.:MacKay spent some time in| marriages, were received by all Mexico between 1890 and 1895.; members of the Ut h Legislature He was a fine, genial fellow and expressions of regret at his un timely death are general all over British Golumbia today. The body is at Green & Merk. ley’s undertaking establishment and may be shipped east for in- terment today, The Socialists promise a hard fight against the on the ground that it is not the basic remedy for elevating the race, fheasure Workmen have started grading near the residence of Mr. W. ©, ¢ Mehan ‘preparatory to the struction of the overhead bridge to the G. T, P, wharf. - — _ TD con Loyal Order of Moose. A regular meeting will be held in the K. of P. Hall Thursday, the 13th inst., at 8 o'clock, 36.37 J. D. MEIKLE, Beey, Pantorium Pioneer Phone 4. Cleaners, 1, | it | | /ONLY SIXTE SUFFER MARCH ON TRAMP | Special to The Daily News. Metuchen, N. J., Feb. 12 suffragettes of two hundred who started from Newark today to tramp to Washington but sixteen finished the first day’s march. ‘AMERICAN SUFFRAGETTES FROM COLD FEET EN OUT OF TWO HUNDRED FINISH FIRST DAY'S TO WASHINGTON. The intensely cold weather which prevails proved too strenuous for them, J. D. Sword, a well known ex- pert mining man, is registered at the Central Hotel. STREETS OF MEXICO CITY A REGULAR BATTLEFIELD ALL RULES OF CIVILIZED WARFARE 1QGNORED SY REBEL FORCES — FOREIGN DIPLOMATS ARRANGE ARM- ISTICE BUT REBELS FIRE ON ENVOY Special to The Daily News. Mexico City, Feb. 12—From| the early hours of the morning the sharp crack of rifles and crash of cannon has been heard in all quarters of the city almost without cessation. The diplo-{ matic representatives of four foreign powers protested this afternoon and an armistice was finally arranged so that an en- voy from the government could] ‘enter the rebel lines and confer with General Diaz. This envoy was fired upon by the troops. General Diaz today shelled the very heart of the business dis- triet in an effort to silence the government forces. The move- jnents of the opposing forces are creating terrible havoc, Ail rules of civilized warfare are being violated. The number of killed and injured cannot be ascer- tained. EE MEMBERS OF CONGRESS WILL WALK IN SUFFRAGIST PARADE WILL FOLLOW BANNER INSCRI BED “WOMEN HELPED ELECT THESE MEN’—ORIGINAL AMERICAN SUFFRAG- IST EXPECTED. Washington, Feb. 10,—Carried captive behind a banner inscribed Women Helped Elect These Men, members of Congress from those states having suffrage will march in the suffragist pa- on March 3rd. It was an- nounced at national suffragist headquarters that at Jeast forty senators and representatives would be in the procession. All who desire to take part, however, cordially invited to do in rade are so, i letter of invitation sent them by the suffragists. The letter, in part, reads: A large LOCAL BAR number of senators and representatives have already informally signified their inten- tion of participating in the pro- cession, and it is hoped that all will do so, either by walking or riding in the automobiles that will be provided. We trust that you will consent to aid the woman suffrage movement in this way.” It was announced that Dawn Mist, daughter of Chief Three Bears, of the Glacier, National Park Indians, would ride beside Miss Inez Milholland of New York, the leader of the parade, as a representative of the “orig- inal” American suffragist. ASSOCIATION WANT ADMIRALTY COURT STEPS ARE BEING TAKEN TOWARD APPOINTMENT OF LO- CAL REGISTRAR FOR SUCH COURT—THE NAME OF Owing to the rapid increase in| shipping at the port of Prince Rupert, steps are being taken by the Bar Association of the city to urge the appointment of a lo cal registrar of the Admiralty ;}Court for Prinee Rupert The |} }Admiralty is a branch of the iExchequer Court, a Dominion jeourt with headquarters at Ot. | tawa The Dominion is divided | into admiralty districts and a local judge is appointed for each ldistrict |} At the present time the whole of British Columbia is in one dis. trict, over which Mr. Justice Martin presides. By ot lithe appointment of Mr. Justice reason | Martin toe the Court of Appeals of ithe provinee, and owing to his duties as Judge in Admiralty in the southern end of the province, is practically impossible that ihe hold admiralty court in Prince Rupert For that reason, it urged by the members of the bar that a local judge of the Admir- ally Court for the northern end of the. papvinee, with head. is quarters at Prince Rupert, should be appointed, and the name of His Honor Judge Young, the resi- dent Gounty Court judge, is sug- gested in that connection. The creation of the Prince Ru- pert registry of this court and the appointment of a local judge to preside in admiralty would mark distinet step forward in the progress of the community and it would be a matter of the very igreatest convenience to all those a connected with shipping. The authorities suculd lose no time in aceeding to this request, Mr. F. W. Hart begs te an. nounce that his store in the Hart Block, 3rd Ave., will be closed until his return from Victoria, in a week ten days’ time. The key of the store has been left with the Mack Realty Co. 2B8tf ol Miss Fisher entertained a number of her friends last even. ing at her home, at the eorner of Second avenue and Ninth street,