The Churches CHURCH OF ‘ENGLAND an aT. PETER'S, HAZELTAN - Y 7 ‘Bondy Services: ‘Morning at 11-o'eloek: Sunday School at 2.40 pimj Native Bervics, 8.80 bam ‘Ryening Servieo,” id Pa mH. 7 NT Rav. i Fret. i : ms sos PRESBYFERIAN CHUGH - obake held ia Sime evening in ‘the at o'cloc Church Koo iiey. D. R. Motpan, yEW TAZELTON. _ BUSINESS He fe New Hazelton Hotel Open for Business. ‘All Furnishings: New. { BUROPEAN PLAN ; d d t i o Rates: - Rooma $1.00 Beds 60¢” “Geo. C Hartley, Proprietor - + New Hazelton * , aa — ant et Rt Sheehan’s New Restaurant . Opposite Union Bank’. Pugsley St. — New Hazelton { = o | Best Meals First-class Service | DOC SHEEHAN Proprietor. . io ri | ! { i ( d ic i Only White Help Employed i { {. ! +) Fe Rha FR dB dP AS Wadd Pd nl tt New Hazelton Contractors : We -will furnish quota- tions on all classes of Buildings, Contract or. Day Labor, Job and Shop . Work, .First-class work- manship| guaranteed. | Call on us before you. let. ‘your ‘work, "Richards & Knight NEW HAZELTON 2 | Do your shopping . at Cohen, f“Zackon & Co.'s’ store -and | SAVE MONEY The Largest and Best, Assorted j Stock of - ff Men’s Furnishings Tn: ‘Northern British Columbia We repair Jewellery. of ¢ every description. - Satisfaction guar- anteed. eo es WATCHES — Mail Orders Sol Solicited. Cohen, Zackon & Co: | New Hazelton + These a are facts: - sar 1. There: will. be ‘only: otie ’ Hazelton.—This is New. Hazelton, neo 2, The decision of Railway Commission is final;—No ; Board of Trade will change it. |: rar 3. The G. T. P. Ry. owns enough townsites now. ~ The, -Government. huilds the roads: ~ nar'4, Yoo teed ‘no bridge for. -a town.—You.need: the people, - ” par B, Mining: and: mineral |: wealth are our greatest agset. New Hazelton: is in center ‘of “it. sar 6. We have’ both “drainage ‘and water here, — No Sjkaena - water needed. ger 7 The railroad, passes “through, -the town. —Not., & nile “from ite "There are many: more. ‘Iti in- ed-in a coming i interior town See G + Arnott a Pioneer . | Ultimate (dried). ; Hydrogen.-- weees : 3.58 GROUNDHD COAL: FIELD OF GREAT | > ERENT AND VAL ~ (Contimned from page 4). ; nual”, for 1912, Their . typical analyses: of anthracite give as follows: - pea oo & Soya avonueag oa, a Fixed Carbon... 92.80 . 90, 50 89,00 Volatile Matter_- 4.80 - 4.90 5.80 1.00, 1,50 2.80 2,70 A. 80 - 1,00 The above i is the view. point of the Welsh coal market, but one not. borne out by the Admiralty reports quoted ‘in’ the Govern- ment Blue Books. Let us look now att the United States Geological Survey ; Report of the U. -8:- fuel- testing plant, 1908, . page 267: spHwNay ‘sojdweg on: co A BOA, 7B, Air-dryingloss. 3.10 2.40 4.10 7.10 Proximate. Moisture .16°2.98 4.80 7.52 ‘Volatile matter 11.06 10,94 -10.12 10,29 Fixee carbon. 67.79 64,14 67,05 65.96 Ash.-._. _.. ~~ 17.64 21.94 18.03 16,23 ‘84° 468° 6465 Ultimate (dried) ; Hydrogen...... 0 -. .. 3.$1 9.347 --S 2. 69,27 69.05 Nitrogen -- 66 .49 Oxygen -- -. 7,50 9.01 Steaming Tests. SO , AL OB, Moisture. ..___, . 4.60 5.02 Volatile matter.. 11,64 11.51 15.52 Fixed carbon.._.. 65.05 46.51' 64.51 18,58 °17.88 14.95 Sulphur... 69 73.45 Calorific values: Calories, 6; 438, 6, 607; B, T. Uz, 11,669, 11,961, 11, 838, _ Finally: let us look at the Can. jadian viewpoint-in the “‘Coal- fields of Manitoba, . Saskatche- wan, Alberta and Eastern British Columbisi,’” by D, B. Dowling, 1909, page 43, In classification of English coal, the ratio between the oxygen and hydro- gen percentages is used, along {with that of total carbon, In Pennaylvapia’ tbe practice has been to arrange the coals in order of fuel ratio; that is the relation between the fixed carbon and the | volatile combustible matter, The split volatile ratio is suggested for Canada, a series of analyses in which. the calorific value of the a coal is also obtainable, ‘have been calculated to enable -the three |. i|| elements—-water, volatile com- busitble and fixed. carbon ¢on- tents—to make a constant qnan- tity. .For Groundhog take An- thracite Creek No, 3 seam, six feet, : Per cent. Extended, Fixed eatbon 86.74 Od > Volatile: matter . 6.98 63 | Water 0.2... 8.00 2.8 An anthracite split: volatile ratio is obtainéd’ ‘from above. Will Mr: ‘Dunean: still contend that the Groundhog is not. an| anthracite hard smokeless ‘eoal- field, or that the coal seams ex- posed and proven ‘anthracite on surface will -not. improve. when sink on, as they have in every other. coalfield? -Also no: hand- ‘ipicking on belts or washing tests to eliminate - ash . have © been : carried out on Groundhog coal to comparé with the elaborate pre- parations made for. Welsh- ‘and |: Pennaylvania - ‘before ‘shipment. Mr. ‘Dunéan continies:” “Evi dently extracted from the report of the. engineer,: the expected output of 80,000 ton’,a day is ‘ab- surd,”*. His’ evitionee . Will’ not hold in a court of. law, ; sitnilarly his : tion: of. thie output, ‘0 "-Inot on’ Mr. BS |but to educate others who have | places, © lie gravity of coal not establ bed | F ; and who then sits: ‘down to tal- ad culate without such ‘data some - | faney , problern” trains required; amount of track, ete. It ‘is supposed ‘that: ‘Mr. Dawson: will take exception ts the remark | that the ‘Canadian Pacific. Railway, the Canadian of “humber | of |§ Northern, the Grand Trunk Paci- pa fic ‘and st of the western American lines will all build from seabvard to this coalfield to pro cure this hard smokeless anthra cite coal, which will always dis-|& place oi] as fuel, as has happened all the time:in Pennsylvania with oil and coal torether, on’ ‘locomo- tives and steamers, on the score of repairs, if for nothing else, when these railways can’ each| fe own collieries of their own, - As. to Mr. Duncan's philanthrophy that the guileless public must be protected against such. unbal- anced individuals as the writer, | & the public, themselves are the ee best judges of honest ‘motives. The writer goes into this subject. of the valile of Groundhog coal Boe Dunean’s account, not undergone the hardships and ay strenuous work of opening up | pad far frontier coalfields, and who = want information first hand, without sitting back in an easy |& chair to belittle the exertions of |§ others. Your obedient servant, RONALD C. CAMPBELL-JOHNSON. | * Outlaws Hunted Down ' Omaha, March 28.—The hunt| G3 for three convicts who broke out] of the Nebraska penitentiary last | G3 week after killing three of the| 6A prison officials ended with the| 83 death of two of the convicts” and Se "| the capture of the third. ere posses surrounded. the convicts, - who, armed only with revolvers,’ Two'k were exposed to a cross fire from | &4 the rifles of the officers, - Taylor | G3 was killed by the bullets of tha| G3 when unable to continue the fight, Roy Blunt, a young farmer whom the convicts had compelled to officers after which Dowd, recog-| && nizing the hopelessness of thelB3 situation turned his weapon on |@S° - himself. .Morely was desperate- | @& - ly wounded and surrendered only |B drive’ them in his sleigh, was | @& killed by-a stray bullet fired by | 3 one of the officers, Hundreds Were Killed Hongkong, Mar. 28:— Latest advices from Swatow, which has been the scene of serious fighting during the last. week, say that the German consulate has been bummed. Two gunboats have arrived there, re eo tee) ecm ‘one hg = me eats zm Fee More than 1,500 persons have | Be been killed at Canton and while) Sa conditions are calmer there, the outbreak is expected to be re-|fy newed at any time, a The bandit chief, Luk, address- ing a meeting of merchants, | said that if the people’s army failed to'secure victory over the|§ | government, it would shell Shah | Mee, the foreign quarter, - in| tervention. -Anarchistic Suffragettes . Chicago, Mar, 28:—Bombs may - jorder to bring about foreign in-|§ soon take place of window smash- | § ing bricks in England, ‘Dr. Jessie | fen Murray of London, told. a meet-lBy ing of the Woman's Party here, | ““You'in America do not realize| to what economic straits thelt ‘women of England haye been reduced,’’ she said. ‘We are fighting for life and honor.’ “The men are taking away our means, of ‘living by. legislation. they-\are. robbing our working|& women of the privilege to work : when they are eager and willing |# to. work to ‘support themselves. The. men: are- erying; for their : of actual war, People have asked why we do riot substitute. bombs “Tf our: défnands - are. Boon,” 1 assure ey It has reached the atage | & 4 ; in the official townsite of. New Hazelton. : The Supreme Authority on Railway matters in Canada, - the Doniinion Railway Commission, has decided that the __. Station and Railway Yards Shall be at NEW HAZELTON: "Investments i in Real Estate i in | New Hazelton now are as safe as Vancouver, Winnipeg or Montreal. We have purchased from. Northern. Interior Land Co., Lid., of ' - Prince Rupert, the choicest ‘Lots In Section One You can secure lots i in the ‘ - Business Section “at startling prices if you apply today. _been waiting for a "Settlement of tthe controversy regarding the railroad townsite. . The ; ‘Matter is now, finally, settled for all time. "Hundreds have 7 re I Your Opportunity "has: arrived, Prices. will advance sharply. 7 os now at the beginning and make the big. profits a ‘Joint Owners and | Sole Arents Fort :Georee Townsite | : hove Buln 243 Granville Street, Vancouver, B. C