LanoesT CIRCULATION ww THe CITY AND NORTHERN BRITISH COLUMBIA THE DAILY NE NEXT MAILS From South Prince George. .Wednesday, © am, Venture Thoreday, p.m. LLL, — s ee « —- ——_—$——__— —__—__—_—— -— — L, IV, NO. 888% « PRINCE RUPERT, B,. G., TUESDAY, JUNE 17, 1913. —_—_— a ee — WIND AND HAIL STORMS PLAYING HAVOC IN EAST == — —_—— PRICE FIVE CENTS HUNDRED BODIES TAKEN FROM EARTHQUAKE RUINS—ANOTHER OUTRAGE BY THE MILITANTS ANTS HURRICANES AND FIERCE HAIL STORMS DO IMMENSE DAMAGE ove MAN KILLED AT MONTREAL—ROOF OF DOMINION BUILD- (NG BLOWN OFF AT THREE RIVERS—sRITISH BATTLESHIP DRIVEN AGROUND. fhe sewer amendment bylaw was considered last evening when The Daily News by { dous cyclone end el the coune il went into eommittee . : ' i of the whole on its third reading u j e 17 During |" ‘ »bliterated, many |],,, , p : build : 3 + webhal The clause which was the sub ‘ - j ‘ veste a - neg entire wreckKe ae én , a N f life has been reported ject of most discussion was that a om oa , . hs ’ which ruled that temporary - ag : a ver Plyt i le find 04 drains or sewers should be main ‘ ashe lo ' ne e 3 i oF ; ' nr a - Dut ' sat “ete the tained by the individuals who put he body o arold ! mz ihe st “ : : : ; it . | vears Of age, was|Dattleship Magnificent was driven them in and that the expense of . , ' rt ; vr nd off Per Point. Ther any improvements ordered by the cebris ore vee ee “leity engineer should be borne by half hour, but in that/'s "0 danger and she will prob- ; i the owners of such sewers. siderable damage.|@bly float at high tide . a" f such sewer : ’ yea, Alderman Bulleek Webster d by one of the le ssired to know’ whether this torms of recent AERONAUT AFLOAT , sLorm fi at ut clause would be retroactive in were driven to fect. He did not think it fair ife the | Two Racing Aviators from Paris|‘ : ss of life on th eanas Up in English that those who had installed sew- en reported Atoen ‘ 9 ers at their own expense should ty.9 - then be required to pay rentals ers, Que., June 17 of $5 and more for their use i military ec 4 Special to The Daily News f $5 and more 7 , se iilittary camp were P Alderman MeCaffery agreod lay with the worst London, June 17—Two aero-lihat the case seemed hard and m in years and more|hauts, who were participating IM) .,iq that he had at first viewed it {f the camp was levy he long distance balloon racelin the same light as Alderman wn power lines were from Paris, were vesterday {ullock-Webster The burden of There can be no|picked up by a tug twenty-tWolaintaining the sewers could not, » days Che roof of|miles north of Ventnor, on the|poweyer. fairly be laid on the building was blown | south coast of the Isle of Wight ans aoa of ce who derived iny buildings suffered| They were clinging to the wreck], benefit from their use. And f their collapsed balloon and/arier all these private sewers were nearly exhausted emptied into the trunk sewers, Sask.. June 17 This a which were the property of the is a few miles from $4.50 Wicker chairs and rock-|e;ty v vas yesterday visited ers at G. D. Tite's June prices. With little further discussion MUST HAVE THAT CUP REET OF BIG BOATS FOR PACIFIC PORTS Duke of Westminster Will Again for Polo Trophy Try Grand Trunk Pacific to Have Line Ny from Here Running to Cali- | fornian Ports. The Duke backed the its trip just start West 16 who w York, June f Westminster Kngel here ed his ¢ chester sh polo team on says he has only lift the und take it to Eng all the English as to the pos challenge. A hints at the pos a challenge from Ger- Phe receipts at last matches ed States ¢ ampaign to up rhis land was players would say Pactile ports B sibility of another 1 and Calil 1a It}, abi despatch isibility of mans ited that upon comy transcontine ui rail Rupert, a line of nce week's amounted to eame $201,000. iriental pr and "*s Will be pul on Bril sound ana bia Puget COLD STORAGE MASCOT Black Bear Captured in the Wilds of Queen Charlotte. from. Prince Rupert Victoria to Cah is will be direct ect at the British Co rminals with ¢ nental The ves and fitted|cold appointed] Queen Charlotte Islands week be- fore and brought back with him a black bear that he had cap- The has quite a pet the On Sunday he and a branch broke. The was that “Teddy” had a and injured his shoulder brought him to town yes- and Dr the veterin- surgeon, the little ind ana Walter of the over at Nimrod engineer hat Clayton, mighty chief works anadian lines. storage was Vill be speedy irge and well accommodations? to into ' senger expected - mopetition last entel the pas - svrying trade during the cisco and San Diego ex : been adopted as animal and has of climbed tured alive since been mascot s every reason Lo antic! pale Lt only a ide through the Par also a remarkable local exehange on the} Walter oast itself Business | terday Coast is in embryo have development, but the inflow oOfla plant great tree ama} result but im bie fall Cade, eile lary treated cities miade re- | maseot the | is @& great commeretal) Hays Cove Water Supply. a8 hardly beeome «¢ j —— f itself The Pacific} \ letter from residents of Hays : iles will profit by grealer|Creek Cove was received by the mn, politically andleouneil last night complaining ally They are closely | f the irregularity of the water the eharacter and qual-|supply in that district, It was citizenship and supple-|stated that the water was fre- each other in natural re ma eut off for a day without Los Angeles Tribune tice Alderman Maitland, dis- - leussing the letter, said that this Cabinet Minister Coming Here.|ofien happened two or three - ltimes a week Ihe letter will be ~pecial to The Daily News l further considered by the works ‘!. John, N, B,, June 17 Hon | committee. 0. Hazen is making a short | ; his home here prepara Strawberries the Very Thing. paying a visit to the Pa Che Ladies’ Aid of the Metho Coast in July During the|dist Chureh are giving @ straw i tour he says he will visit |berry juneheon in the Hart Bloeh Hupert, : lteday in aid of their chureh, The a ~- luneh is excellent and will be Boore Money. jserved all afternoon, and if the , 'wo Indians who were af-|supplies hold out, after the the | before Magistrate Carss{atre this evening i4y on the charge of drunk ee vere today found guilty Por furniture, carpets and lin- ed. Dan Cookson had tololeums, inspeet the Geo. D. Tite's "") 910 and Lazarus Gray $) stock for quality 128-1f PRIVATE SEWERS AND | acts That Private Drains Are | Wholly at Owner’s Expense. | the clauses were hderpted and the bylav’ passed. DOCTOR WRIGHT FETED BY TORONTO COUNCIL He Is Presented with a Gold Watch and Debenham Given a Diamond Pin. Special to The Daily News. Toronto, June 17 Dr. Wright, who was attached to the ill fated Seott Antarctic expedition, reached here from Prince Rupert on Sunday and was yesterday given a hearty reception by the city council, the Canadian Club and several other organizations. He was presented with a gold watch and an illuminated address, and to his companion on the ex- pedition, Mr. Debenham, an ad- dress was also presented, to- gether with a diamond pin. ONE MORE OUTRAGE Militants Mutilate Three Hun- dred Valuable Volumes in College Special to The Daily News. June 1i7—lIt is a what the suffragette outrages will take next. Following the contemptuous shower of inno- cent flour en the heads of Inem- bers of parliament as they were seated ins the House of Commons Cambridge, public wonder form militant comes the news that yesterday three hundred valuable volumes in the library of St. John’s col- lege, were found to have been horribly mutilated by suffrag- etles, Treaty Extension with Norway. Special to The Daily News. Washington, June 17-——-Secre- tary of State Bryan and the Nor- Minister signed tension of another five the arbitration treaty the United States and yesterday. an exX- years to between Norway werlan RAILWAYS FOR ALASKA Federal Government to Issue 40 Millions in Bonds for Them. The Daily News June 17 The United States senate committee has provided for forty million dollars of bonds to build railways in Alaska, following the report of the experts that went into the question & vear ago. Special to Washington, PUBLIC EXPENDITURE |Sewer Bylaw Passed Which En- BASEBALL. Northwestern League. Seattle 6, Tacoma 2 Vancouver 7, Victoria 2 Spokane 2, Portland 2 National League. Boston 6, Pittsburg 5 New York 4, Cincinnati 2. Philadelphia 3, Chicago 13. Brooklyn 40, St. Louis 5. American League. Detroit 5, New York 3 St. Louis 2, Boston 3 Cleveland 2, Philadelphia 3. Chicago 4, Washington 1 “HOBOES’ CONVENTION” Sparkling Comedy at the West- holme Theatre Last Night. There Rupert Rich their stay acquainted surprised s in Prince Frank during become are no hoboe and the visiting Comedy Company here, having with and somewhat at this fact, thought it a good piece of business to show Prince Rupert people what a hobo is and what the word means. So they put on at the Westholme last night a piece called “Hoboes’ Convention,” in which Ira Robert- son and Herb Bell played the parts of two hoboes as if to the manor born But to eall it a convention was somewhat of a misnomer, for certainly Miss Edith Wilma, in the modish cos- tume of a chatelaine, could scarcely be ciassed as a country tramp except by stretching the imagination to the extent of its resilianency. The who flitted in and out, in a different and more and abbreviated costume. they were in character senting the sunshine in which the hobo loves to bask, and the warble of the birds in the over- hanging branches. Several of chorus giris each time engaging But as repre- 4 saitie With ihe the songs were very catchy, and these, with the funny anties of the hoboes themselves, made a merry night of it. As for the plot, if there was one, no one could keep track of it because the continued bursts of laughter from the audience smashed the continuity of his thought. The comic opera tonight is “The Man from Klondike.” MORE BOMB THROWING Los Angeles Has a Second Visi- tation of Destruction. (Special to The Daily News.) Los Angeles, June 16,—Two young Italians were terribly bur- ned and mangled by a bomb which they hurled under the porch of a dwelling house early this morning. The house was wrecked and it is believed the sleeping inmates were killed, The bomb exploded as soon as it struck and the two dynamite men were so close to it that they received the full foree of the ex- plosion. They were taken to the hospital. EMPRESS THEATRE CROWDED Wonderful Films of Napoleon's Retreat Again Shown Tonight. wonderful films historical retreat made from Mos- direful sufferings of his men among the desert wastes of snow and ice, was an attraction that few who have read history and especially those students with particular opinions on the career of Napoleon—could resist, The consequence was that the Empress Theatre was crowded last night and will prob ably be again tonight. In these thrilling films the Empress Com pany have a far better drawing ecard than the celebrated dramas in which Sarah Bernhardt was the central figure, as proven by the very large and appreciative audience of last wight. Those really depicting the that Napoleon cow, and the Pantorium Pieneer Gleaners, Phone 4, RAILS WILL REACH FORT GEORGE IN FALL Gap of Only ‘Hundred Miles Be. tween There and Tete Jaune Cache Now. Vancouver seme 12.—The Van- couver office e of Messrs. Foley, Welch & Stewart, railway con- tractors, has been advised that railhead on the cifie Railway is sixty miles west of Tete Jaune Cache, and that the tracks will reach the second crossing of the Fraser; forty miles farther west, by the end of this month. This will leave a gap of only 100 miles separating that place and Fort George. However, all of the grading of this last sec- tion is far advanced, leading to the belief that the tracks will reach Fort George late this com- ing autumn. Grand Trunk Pa- now at a point FOUR NUNS INJURED RIDING JOY WAGON Three Were Killed During Motorcycle Races Held at Oakland on Monday. Special to The Daily News. Fresno, Cal., June 17.—yYes- terday the Mother Superior of a girls’ academy here and three Sisters hurt when an auto in which they were riding turned turtle. At Oakland three were the motoreyecle races Two of the victims were riders and the other a piri spectaior of the coi- lision, At Portland a when his motorcycle with a street car. were killed in man was killed ce llided CROP OUTLOOK “EXCELLENT Every Indication of a Bumper Harvest this Autumn Special to The Daily News. Winnipeg, June 17—-The grain along the line of the Canadian Northern is in a very advanced state and the prospects for a bumper crop are excellent. Moose Jaw, June 17—-The crop in this district is as far advan- ced as it Was last year in July. It was raining last night and that was just what was wanted. EARTHQUAKE FATALITIES One Hundred Deac Dead Dug from Ruined Homes at Tirovani Special to The Daily News. Sofia, June 147—An earth- quake visited Tirovani on Sat- urday, demolishing most of the homes and other buildings. Up to this morning there had been dug out of the ruins no less than one hundred dead, while the hos- pitals are crowded with injured. Bone Groken. , Collar Louis Lando, of Lando & Com- pany'’s clothing store on Second avenue, was brought to the hos- pital about 11 o'clock last night with a collar bone broken by a fall which he sustained in at- tempting to stop the runaway horse of Isador Director, He is reported to have spent a comfort- able night and to be progressing favorably, Curacoa Expected Tomorrow. The Curacoa of Seattle will put in here her way north with a general cargo tomorrow evening, probably about 9 o'clock, The Curacoa is usually employed on in supplying the canneries along the Alaskan coast, Burial ‘Ground fer Jews. A request from the Jewish community of this eity for twenty-two lots in the cemetery was granted last night by the city council, The weather report at 5 o clock this morning read: Barometer, 30,151; maximum temperature, 64; minimum temperature, 52 “OLE CROSBY'S HEAD FALLS BY CITY ENGINEER'S GUILLOTINE oe CITY COUNCIL VOTES To ¢ GIVE RETIRING OFFICER TESTI- MONIAL OF EFFICIENCY—WORD SPARRING BETWEEN ALDERMEN. There was some excitement at the city council meeting last evening when Alderman MeCaf- fery and Alderman Bullock- Webster locked horns over the question of granting a request for a month's salary in lieu of holidays to Mr. Ole Crosby, of the waterworks department, who, it transpired, has received notice to quilt from the city engineer. Alderman Bullock - Webster said that similar requests had been granted to other members of the department last year and he thought it only fair that Mr. Crosby should get the same treat- ment. He moved that the request be granted. The amendment was lost and Alderman Bullock-Webster’s mo- tion was carried. Alderman Bullock - Webster further wanted to give Mr. Cros- by a testimonial to the effect that the council did not consider him in any way responsible for the freezing of the water pipes. He desired to make it clear that no investigation had been made into that freezing of the water pipes. The members of the committee might be blamed for not having the treneh backfilled, but the truth was that there was no money for the purpose. Yet un- doubtedly much money might Alderman MeCaffery thought|have been saved if the pipe had that this was making too free|been drained. The cause of the with other people’s money. He|non-drainage of the pipe had moved an amendment that the}|never been clearly shown and letter be filed. therefore he did not want it to Acting Mayor Sutherland re-!be east on Mr. Crosby's shoul- minded the aldermen that Mr.| ders. Crosby's diseharge had _ been Alderman MeCaffery declared made, he understood, on the/that he was tired of hearing old ground of insubordination. matter raked up. If Alderman Alderman Bullock - Webster|Bullock-Webster wanted to do pointed out that Mr. Crosby had been for nearly four years in the service of the mlunicipality and had been generally esteemed as an official that did his full duty. He thought it only fair that the city should give him fair play now that he was leaving. that he could hire a public hall for the purpose. Alderman Bullock - Webster's motion was carried in the amended form that Mr. Crosby should be given a letter of rec- ommendation on the seore of his efficiency. HINDUS APPEALING TO THE GOVERNMENT Petition Minister Rogers to Keep LAST OF SWIFT SAILER Brings One Back to Days of Real Sea Romance. There is an air of romance His Pledge Admitting their about the ship America, which Wives and Children came to port yesterday in the humble capacity of a freighter. Vancouver, June 17 — “We, Hindustanis of Canada assem- bled in Mass meeting at O’Brien Hall, Vancouver, B.C., June 45, request the Dominion Govern- ment of Canada that the promise given to our delegates of Dec- ember 15th, 1941, by the then Minister of the Interior, Robert Rogers, to the effect that the families of Hindustanis domicil- ed here shall be admitted into Canada, be given effect to in a suitable manner without further delay. “We further request that the Secretary of State for India and the Colonies be advised of the decision of the Dominion Gov- ernment as to their intention in this most vital question of our civil life in this country, affeet- ing us as British subjects and as men.” This resolution was carried at a thronged meeting of Hindus held on Sunday. A_ resolution also carried asking for contin- ued co-operation “in this most vital question affecting oursel- She was built in Maine and was formerly a three masted sailing vessel, remarkable for her speed. She made at one time, indeed, a record voyage between the Cali- fornian and Chinese coasts. Now the old boat, which has breasted the seas in all parts of the world, is spending her later days carrying coal and lumber up and down the British Columbia coast. The long lines on which she is built and the figurehead of Columbia at her bow are alpne reminiscent of her youth. GIVE YOUR SYMPATHY TO THE SWELTERING In Big Cities of United States People Are Dying Under the Ravages of Heat. Chicago, Junge 17.—Three per- sons are dead and a score pros- trated as a result of the terrific heat wave here during the last : ae a ves, our homes and our little eee ee. bea yry: &. ones, which is a standing dis- eae - ; “na as tne { grace to India, Canada, Great Sais ota a the aan Among Britain and to the British Em- the tenements today the ther- pire ae a whole. mometer reached 95 and three THAT BASEBA additional vietims are reported, T Lt GAME In Wisconsin five persons were In Mil.) Prince Rupert Selecting a Team deaths. to Beat Hazelton’s Best. 4 V. A. Cole, of Cole's Cigar Store, received a wire at noon today to say the baseballers at Hazelton had arranged for rigs to take the Prince Rupert team on Dominion killed by the heat wave. waukee there were two TRANSPORTATION MEN ARRIVE TOMORROW Pullen, John president of the Canadian Express Co.; N. J, Ross,|Day from New Hazelton to Old superintendent, and W. EB. Du-|Hazelton. The fare for the ex- perow, general agent for the G,|cursion, including the bus drive, T. P. passenger department, will arrive in the city tomorrow morning on the steamer Prince George. Mr. Pullen will remain will be $5.30, Mr. Cole was in conference yesterday with two members of the Hazelton baseball committee, in the city Wednesday and go on| Messrs. Mosely and Jack Me- to Stewart Thursday morning.|Dennell, whe came here to make Mr. Ross and Mr. Duperow intend|the final arrangements for the as Hazelton. Read Jabour Bros.’ advertise- going as far mateh. It is expeeted that the names of the players for this town will soon be ready for pub- lication, ment, page 2. tf alli at. al ae ; 3 J é 4 : t i PI ' A 1 a : 4 ; aN wt ; | i if £ | sea a rine sot porerecseeyrose mercer oe Big