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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" THE DAILY NEWS\nVOL.2\nNELSON. B.C.. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3,1903\nA\nFOB TODAY\nAn Impartial Estimate of\nthe Outcome -\nProspects for the Liberals\nDecidedly Bright\n[Special to The Dally News.]\nVancouver, Oct 2.\u2014The Times has\nasked correspondents throughout the\nprovince to send an impartial estimate\nof the probable outcome of tomorrow's\nflght.\nThi rotult is shown in the following.\nIt will te seen from It that the chances\nfor the liberals winning the province\nara exceedingly bright.\nThe field may be classified as follows:\nSuro liberal seats:\u2014Atlin, Albernl,\nCariboo (1), Chliliwack, Columbia, Comox, Cowlchan, Cranbrook, Delta, Yale,\nGretnwuod, Islands, Kamloops, Nelson,\nSaanich, SImilkameen, Vancouver (2),\nVlotorla (2)\u2014total, 20.\nProbable conservative seajts\u2014Dewdney, Vau uver (2), Grand Porks, Llllooet\u20146.\nProbable socialists\u2014Newcastle\u20141.\nProbable labor-liberal\u2014Nanimo and\nSlocan\u20142.\nIn doubt\u2014Cariboo (1), Esquimau,\nFernle, New Westminster, Revelstoke,\nRichmond, Victoria (2), Okanagan,\nRossland, Skeena, Vancouver (1),\nKaslo\u201414.\nOf the foregoing the chances of the\nliberals ore brighter sin Esquimau,\nSlocan, Victoria (2), Rossland, Skeena,\nNanimo, and Kaslo, while they have\na good fighting chance in all the other\nseats. This means that they have a\ngood opportunity of seating 24 or 26\nmembers in the next legislature out of\nthe membership of 42,\nof the 21st, I was accused of inferring\nthat members of the B, of L. E. are opposed to Mr. Caven.\nThe writer seems to have no consideration for the truth, or does not understand common English,\nA short time ago some citizen of\nCranbrook circulated stories tbat the\nB. of L: E. had met and passed resolutions endorsing Mr. Caven and also\nwrote the Moyie Leader that the labor\nunions of Cranbrook had met ln convention, and had not elected a delegate\nbecause Mr. Cavin was acceptable to\nthem; and also wrote on the 19th that\nthe B. of L. E. was represented at this\nconvention.\nThe teachings of the B. of L. E. prevent us from takln., sides as a body\nwith any political party. We were not\nrepresented at the convention, nor were\nesolutions passed or Mr. Caven's name\never mentioned la any meeting of the\nB. of L. B. I was the only authorized\nofficer of the division to reply to those\nfalse and misleading statements.\nThe letter in the last Issue of the\nHerald, headed \"Prom Engineers\" ls a\npolitical hash, bearing the trade mark\nof the writer of the previous articles.\nOnly ten of the names signed are B.'\nof L, E. men, and two of these have no\nvote, it does not represent the majority of the men nor their private conviction.\nNO. 142\n>RS OF THE  CITY OF NELSON\nMARK YOUR BALLOT THUS\nHOUSTON\nJohn Houston of Nelson, Printer.\nTAYLOR\nSidney Stockton Taylor of Nelson,\nBarrister\nX\n***************************\nBOUNDARY QBE SHIPMENTS\nOVER SIXTEEN THOUSAND TONS\nFOR THE WEEK.\nDETAILS OF THE ORE OUTPUT TO\nDATE.\nREVOLUTION IS OVER.\nTurkish Troops Are Said To Be Gaining\nthe Upper Hand.\nSofia, Oct. 2.\u2014According to advices\nreceived here this afternoon, the backbone ot the revolution ln Macedonia\nIs broken. The Turkish troops are\ngaining the upper hand everywhere, several insurgent chiefs have been killed\nor wounded, others are abandoning the\nstruggle, and fleeing to the frontier, the\nrevolutionary bands are sustaining heavy\nlosses, and are seeking refuge in large\nnumbers, and the Turks occupy every\nimportant point along the routes of\ntravel to the frontier.\nFive engagements are reported to have\ntaken place In the vicinity of Kratovoef,\n5,000 Turks being attacked by revolutionary bands, and though many Turks were\nkilled, the Insurgents were completely\nrouted.\nAdvices from the insurgent headquarters assert that 6,000 Turks were\nrouted by 2,000 insurgents tn the Pirin\nmountains after four days' fighting. The\nTurkish losses tn this affair are said\nto have been the heaviest during the\nwhole outbreak. They included three\ncolonels, and many officers of lower\nrank.\nThree batteries of artillery left Sofia\nearly this morning for Haskovo, near\nthe frontier.\nGREAT NORTHERN RAILWAY.\nRe-\nAnnual Report Shows Increased\ncelpts ln all Branches.\nNew York, Oct 2\u2014The annual report\nof the Great Northern Railway for the\nyear ended June 30 last was Issued today.\nThe report of president J. J. Hill says\nthat during the past fiscal year the company has opened for operation six new\nlines, namely, the Dakota and Great\nNorthern Railway, Montana and Great\nNorthern Railway, Washington and\nGreat Northern Railway, Vancouver,\nVictoria, and Eastern Railway, Crow's\nNest Southern Railway, and the Montana\nand Great Northern Railway (Great\nFalls to Sweet Grass, Montana),\nThe tonnage of revenue freight\nhauled during the year increased $3,500,-\n217. The earnings of passenger trains\nincreased 11,181,114.\nPresident Hill also states that there\nhas been no Increase In the authorized\nshare capital of the company, which\nstill remains at (125,000,000.\nWOOLLEN MILLS CLOSED.\nLack of Orders at Peterboro' Affects\nthe Auburn Mills.\nPetersboro', Oct. 2.\u2014The Auburn\nWoollen Mills partially closed down at\nsix tonight. The finishing department\nwill be operated till the work on hand\nls completed. The directors say the\nclosing down ls due to lack of orders,\nand this they attribute to the competition permitted by the preferential tariff. If, however, in the meantime orders come in sufficiently work may be\nresumed, though this will depend.upon\nthe decision of Mr. Kendry, the president, who has not yet arrived ln town.\nCRANBROOK ELECTION.\n[Special to The Dally News.]\nCranbrook, Oct. 2.\u2014In a letter to the\n1 Herald today T. G. GUI explains an at-\n: tack made upon hie former communication regarding the attitude of the B.\nI of L. E. in the Canadian election.\nMr. Gill says: In tha communication\n[Special to The Dally Newa]\nPhoenix, Oct. 2.\u2014Shipments from the\nmines of the Boundary continue to run\nover the 16,000 mark each week, with\na probability of Increasing at no distant date.\nFor the last week the tonnage from\nthe several mines was<ns follows:\nGranby Mines, to Granby Smelter,\n8,803 tons.\nMother Lode Mine, to Greenwood\nSmelter, 2,912 tons.\nSnowshoe, to Sunset Smelter, 2,370\ntons.\nSunset Mine, to Sunset Smelter, 288\ntons,\nMorrison, to Greenwood Smelter, 240\ntons.\nEmma Mine, to Nelson Smelter, 231\ntons.\nOro Denoro, to Sunset Smelter, 594\ntons.\nWinnipeg, to Sunset Smelter, 460\ntons.   .\nAthelstan, to Sunset Smelter, 270\ntons.\nTotal for the last seven days, 16,168\ntons.\nTotal for the year to date from the\nBoundary, 463,818 tons.\nGOSSIP OF GREENWOOD.\n[Special to The Dally News.}\nGreenwood, Oct. 2.\u2014A party of New\nYork capitalists identified with the\nBS. Copper Company is In town, looking over the company's works at this\npoint, and Incidentally examining other\nproperties of the camp.\nRalph Smalles, who spent some weeks\nin Ottawa recently ln the interests of\nthe Midway and Vernon Railway, received the .'gratifying intelligence by\nwire on Thursday evening that a subsidy of 16,400.00 per mile had been\ngranted the enterprise. This railway\nwill open the West Fork country, a\nmost promising 'mining section.\nA large number of the best claims\nof the West Fork is owned by residents of Greenwood, who are congratulating themselves and Mr. Smalles on\nthe fruitful and well-deserved results\nof his work. It ls understood that\nthe matter has passed the railway committee, and will be brought down by\nthe government in a few days.\nL. B. Weneber, the popular manager\nof the Bank of Montreal, ls on the sick\nlist.\nMr. and Mrs. D. S. McRae returned\nfrom an extended honeymoon trip on\nThursday evening.\nWilliam Whyte, Influential ln the\ncouncils of the Canadian Pacific Railway, was a visitor ln Greenwood this\nweek.\nTO BEAT THB RECORD.\nBlnghampton, N.Y., Oct. 2.-Geo. Tom-\nlinson, an amateur aeronaut, and Wm.\nShackford, both of Syracuse, will tomorrow morning ascend from this city\nin. an attempt to beat the American\namateur long distance balloon record.\nFrom the course of the wind, this\nevening Mr. Tomllnson hopes to be able\nto pass over the Hudson river before\nalighting.     This is his flrst ascension.\nSTORMS IN MANITOBA.\n[Speolal to The Daily News.]\n' Winnipeg, Oct. 2.\u2014Very heavy electrical storms, accompanied by   heavy\nrains, are reported from all over the\nprovince tonight.\nJohn Robinson, a farmer living north\nof Sidney, loot his barn, granaries, and\nabout 5,000 bushels of wheat by flre.\nA burning cigar stub caused the blaze.\nMR. JUSTICE KILLAM BANQUETTED\nWinnipeg, Oct 2.\u2014Mr. JUBtice Killam, promoted from the Manitoba\nchief Justiceship to the supreme court\nbench, was tendered a farewell banquet by the Winnipeg judges and members of the provincial bar tonight.\nThe dinner was held at the courthouse, and was a very brilliant affair.\nDOMINION COAL COMPANY.    \u2022\nGlace Bay, C.B., Oct. 2.\u2014The report\nof the Dominion Coal   Company   for\nSeptember shows an Increase of 16,828\nton over August\nVICTORIA WILL GO LIBERAL.\nThe following telegram was\nreceived by the liberal candidate\nin this city late yesterday afternoon:\nVictoria, Oot. 2,1903.\nS. S. Taylor,\nNelson, B.C.\nPor sthe   flrst  time   Victoria\ncity is sure to elect four liberals\nby 300 majority.\nW. E. Dltchburn,\nChairman,   Campaign\nCommittee.\n<.\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666'>\u2666\u2666\u2666\u00bb\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u25a0>\nCANADA'S TRADE REPORT\nGREAT    INDUSTRIAL     ACTIVITY\nEVERYWHERE EVIDENT\nCOUNTRY     IS     PROSPEROUS\nOCEAN   TO OCEAN.\nToronto, Oct. 2.\u2014BrndstreetB* trade report says; Business shows some expansion at Montreal ln heavy and fall and\nwinter goods.\nThe satisfactory crop results have caused Increased demand from country trade\ncentres and the sorting trado Is now In full\nswing.\nThe Jobbers look for a continuance of\nthis demand for the next two monthB.\nPrices aro very firm. The cotton mills\nthiB week advanced the price of sheeting.\nBlankets are In active demand, and the\nmills aro unable to keep up with it, although ln other lines of woollen goods\nthere ls a good deal of complaint from\nmanufacturers about competition, tho\nBritish preferential Injuring the domestic trade. Grain deliveries in Ontario are\nnow larger, nnd the country traders are\nbuying more freely.\nLargo shipments are being made by\nToronto firms. Business with Inland water\npoints Is especially active as it nlways Is\nut this season. Values of all staple coils\naro (Irmly held and not only are there no\nsurplus stocks In manufacturers hands\nbut much complaint ls heard of the shortage of skilled tnbor.\t\nAt Quebec during the past* week business is reported somewhat quiet and collections are only fair. Retailers report\nsales satisfactory and the cooler weather\nhas caused a demand for heavy wear.\nBusiness throughout British Columbia\nIs quite active.. The demand from mining\ncamps has been good, and large shipments\nof cattle from the territories are being\nmade to Dawson. The lumber business\nshows little Improvement, but building operations at the coast cities are active.\nThe wheat crop Is now safe from the\nfrost and good progress has been mado\nthis week with threshing operations. The\nfrost of Soptember 12th resulted In lowering tho average condition of the crop about\none grade. Most of It will be No. 2 Northern.\nTrade at Winnipeg is scarcely as heavy\nas it has been for some months. There\nin difficulty experienced still In securing\nprompt deliveries of goods.\nOttawa wholesale trade Is fairly active.\nThe movement in seasonable lines is large\nand the prospects favorable foe a steady\nIncrease with the progress of the season.\nA steady movement has characterized\nthe wholesale trade at London this week.\nThe Jobbing trade has been kept busy filling orders and have experienced difficulty\nin securing manufactured goods.\nWILL   REORGANIZE\nThe Consolidated Lake Superior Company;?\nNew Plans.\nPhiladelphia, Pa., Oct. 2.\u2014The receiver\nof the Consolidated Lake Superior Company was officially notified by the Imperial Bank of Canada today, that the payment of the wages of the company's workmen at the Soo will be begun tomorrow.\nThe plan of re-organlzatlon of the company was formally announced tonight.\nThis Includes the raising of $3,000,000 by\nmeans of on underwriting, open to all\nstockholders. This sum will repay the\nSpeyer loan, the floating Indebtedness of\nthe company, all expenses of re-organlza-\ntion, and leave about $1,000,000 for working capital ,the underwriters to re-organize a new corporation with $40,000,000 capital, which corporation will take over all\nthe property of the company under proper\nlegal proceedings.\nTho new corporation will Issue $10,000,000\nfirst mortgage bonds of which the underwriters will receive $7,143,000, and which\nbonds it Is proposed shall be Issued by tne\nAlgoma Central & Hudson Bay Railway\ncompany, to be secured also by tho deposit\nof the stocks and bonds of all the subsidiary companies.\nThe unused $2,867,000 of such bonds to\nremain In the treasury for the future use\nof the company.\nTho bonds taken by underwriters are to\nbe offered to all the stockholders at 70.\nwith a stock bonus of 30 per cent. The\nstock th the new company will be offered\nto each stockholder, upon making a cash\npayment at reasonable times, of $3 per\nshare for the old stock surrendered to the\nunderwriters. One share of the stock In\nthe new company will bo given for two\nshares of preferred stock of the old company and one share of new stock for four\nshares of common stock of the old company.\nTHE AMERICAN NEGRO.\nTo Raise $200,000,000 in Aid of the Colored\nPopulation.\nNow York, Oct. 2.\u2014The Commercial\nAmerican Negro National convention which\nclosed In Brooklyn today, decided to name\ntho new organization the African Negro\nCo-operative and  Industrial association.\nThe convention decided to raise a fund\nof $200,000,000 to aid negroes in tho United\nStntes.\n(The idea Is to tnx tho ten million negroes\nIn the United Stntes forty-one cents a\nmonth, which would create a fund of $50,-\n000,000 In ono year or $200,000,000 In four\n\"ears. The Interest on this sum, it wns\nsuggested, could be used for the establishment of factories and the organization\nof other business tnterprises.\nTHE CBISIS\nINLONDON\nHr. Balfour Has Failed to\nSatisfy Either Party\nDisappointment Impressed\non all Sides\nLondon, Oct. 2.\u2014It ls evident that\nMr. Balfour's speech has quite failed to\nsatisfy the press of either party.\nThe burden of all the editorial comment this morning is that ln spite of\nthe enthusiasm evoked at Sheffield the\nspeech leaves the question exactly where\nIt was left by the premier's recent\npamphlet.\nThe greatest disappointment is expressed on all sides at his failure to\ntouch on the cabinet crisis or explain\nthe outlines of his prepared policy.\nThe conservative organs like the\nStandard and the Morning Post coincide with the view that Mr. Balfour's\nposition ls impossible, and that while\nMr. Chamberlain has adopted a leaderlike standpoint, Mr. Balfour has no defined policy.\nAsked to elucidate certain points in\nhis speech today, Mr, Balfour told a\nreporter that the statement that Mr.\nChamberlain's opinion did not differ\nfrom his own, did not refer to the fiscal\nproblem, but merely to the reason which\nInduced Mr. Chamberluin to resign. He\nadmitted that ho and Mr. Chamberlain\nwere agreed ln principle on the fiscal\nproblem, and added: \"Mr. Chamberlain\nrecognizes that the country is not prepared to discuss the taxation of food,\nbut he tells me that he is bound with\nthe colonies, and will therefore act as\na missionary as regards the food question.\"\nLord Milner has gone . abroad, but\nwill return to London in the middle of\nOctober before starting for South Africa.\nIt Is understood that Mr. Balfour has\ncompleted his cabinet, and the names\nof the new ministers will be announced\non Monday.\n+\n+\n*\n*\n+\n+\n*\n+\n*\n*\n*\n+\n*\n*\n****\nVANCOUVER   ISLAND   SAFE.\n**+*44**4****+H*A*********\n+\n*\n+\n+\n+\n*\n*\n+\n+\n+\n+\n*\nThe following wire was received by S. S. Taylor last\nevening:\nNanaimo, B.C., Oct. 2.\nS. S. Taylor, Nelson B.C.\n\u2022 Vancouver Island is safe for\na liberal majority. We also\nlook for victory In the upper\ncountry.\nW. Sloan,\nliberal organizer.\n!\"\u00bb\u2666\u00bb\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u00ab\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u00ab\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\ndone ta Hie interest of British Columbia,\nand that If McBrlde and bis government\nare returned to power, prosperity, both\ncommercial and llnanelal, would result\nthereform.\nSir Charles evidently did not know what\nCharles Wilson had said, which waa unfortunate for him. Mr. Wilson said that\nthey had not had time to formulate a\npolicy. Joe Martin had had a policy, and\nthe people had turned him down, and they\ndid not propose to put forwsu-d one until\nafter they were elected.\nSir Charles next turned his attention to\nsocialism, and said he did not know anything about It. The trip through Ferguson and Trout Lake had been an education\nto him, ax It was to most coast politicians,\nbut altes, hearing the socialists he came to\nthe conclusion that their theories and\ntenets would cause confusion, Intimidate\ncapital and leavo us In worse shape financially than we were now.\nHe did not attempt to explain the Seattle\nrulway policy escapade, nor did he attempt\nto outline the McBride policy, but recommended Mr. Green as a proper man to\nrepresent the peopta again, saying \"Don't\nJudge, him by wharhe has done, nor the\nMcBrlde faction for .what they have done,\nbut Judge them at the end of the next four\nyears on the policy they will carry out,\"\nbut as he did not enunciate that policy the\nelectors were left In the dark.      .     \u2022\nMr. Green followed with a few remarks\nagainst the local paper, the Kootenalan,\nbut admitted that some of his votes were\nmistakes, and the government were now\naware of them.\nThe meeting closed at 10.16 p. m. with\nthree cheers for Tupper, Green and the\nladles.\nThe feeling of the meeting was friendly\nto Tupper as a pleasant speaker, but dead\nagainst him In his advocacy of the lost\ncause of R. P. Green.\nTHB SOO SITUATION.\nJAPAN HAS OCCUPIED KOREA\nTROOPS ARE OSTENSIBLY TO GUARD\nTELEGRAPH   LINES.\nINTENTION   IS   PROBABLY   TO   OFFSET   RUSSIA  IN   MANCHURIA.\nFROM TEMPLEMAN.\nThe senator sent S. S. Taylor  *\nthe  following wire last night:\nOttawa. Oct 2.\nS.  S.  Taylor, Nelson.\nYou have our best wishes.\nTupper's statement that sir\nWilfrid is indifferent to liberal\nsuccess is only a Tupperlan untruth. Pleased to hear prospects are bright everywhere.\nW. Templeman.\nHOME  FROM THE SOO.\nToronto Volunteers Get Back from the\nSeat of the Late Trouble.\n[Special to Tlio Daily Newa.]\nToronto,  Oct.   2.\u2014The 275 members\nof the Q.O.R. Highlanders and Grenadier regiments,  who left  Sfault\nMarie    yesterday, arrived home\nmorning at 8 a,m.\nThey made no complaint against the\nfood supplies, having been fed! frequently enough, but they did complain\nof lack of room in the tram,\nImmediately on tlielr arrival the\ntroops were formed up and marched to\nthe Armory,  where they    were\nSte.\nthis\ndis-\nNO GRAIN BLOCKADE.'\nD. D. Mann Says Railways Can Handle\nall Grain Offering.\n[Special to The Dally News.]\nWinnipeg, Oct 2.\u2014D. D. Mann, who\nIs president of tho Canadian Northern,\nbefore leaving for tho    eftst    today,\nsaid:   \" I  am  quite satisfied  that we\ncan handle the crop without the slightest possibility of a grain blockade. Up\nto the 1st of October we have moved\na million and a half bushels of new\nwheat, or over  half a  million  more\nthan for the corresponding time last\nMETHODIST MISSIONS.\nToronto, Oct. 2\u2014The annual meeting\nof the Methodist mission board is being\nheld here. Tho report of the general\nsecretary shows that the total subscriptions to the fund for the year amounted\nto $330,247, an increase of $23,918 over\nthe previous year, and the highest\namount collected from missions in any\nyear in the history of tht church.\nLondon, Oct. 2.\u2014A despatch to the Dally\nMail from Kobe, Japan, dated October 1st\nsays that Japanese troops left Dari a few\ndays ago for Korea and more troops are\nexpected to embark at Kamtsu. Great\nactivity prevails at Kokura, the headquarters of the twelfth division of the Japanese army and also on Kiushlu railway. A\nstanding squadron is at Mutum.ii.Lo, on\nthe Korean coast,\nThe Hong Kong correspondent of the\nDally Mall learns that ten thousand Chinese laborers1 are building barracks at Port\nArthur for 60,00 additional Russian\ntroops' and that feverish haste Is being\ndisplayed in railway construction.\nThe Dally Moll considers the dispatch\nof Japanese troops to Korea a grave move\non the part of Japan. The troops are intended to guard her telegraph lines, but\nit means the occupation of Korea, which\nJapan will probably refuse to evacuate till\nRussia evacuates Manchuria.\nBaron Hayashl ,the Japanese minister\nhere, has no news of the movements of\nJapanese troops to Korea, announced from\nParis yesterday. In an interview this\nmorning he said: \"From published accounts I am certain that any movements\nof- troops are only the routine .relief of\nthe Japanese forces guarding the tele-\ngraph lines from Fusan to Seoul and\nChemulpho.\" The minister added that he\nstill bellved Russia Intended to keep her\npromise to evacuate Manchuria on October 1st. Prltchard Morgan, consul general\nof Korea in London, also has no Information on the subject.\nParis, Oct. 2.\u2014Information received here\nthrough official sources at St. Petersburg,\nshows that tho explanation given of the\nJapanese moving troops at Korea In calculated to remove suspicion concerning her\nintentions. Japan explains that the movement has no connection with differences\nbetweon Japan nnd any other power.\nWashington, Oct. 2.\u2014The state department has been informed that premie\nChlng has determined to refuse to consent to any terms proposed by Russia for\na postponement of tho evacuation of Manchuria which might be injurious to\nChinese sovereignty rights or the rights\nof other nations. China Insists that Russia having given pledge to move out of\nManchuria on or before October sho should\nkeep her agreement without the imposition\nof further demands.\nMORE ABOUT MACEDONIA.\nRevolutionary Committeo Reports Massacre of a Whole Town.\nSofia, Oct. 2.\u2014The Macedonian revolutionary headquarters assert they have positive\ninformation that the whole Christian population of the town of Mahonla (Razolog),\nprovince of Zeres, was massacred on\nSeptember 28th, with the exception of ton\nmen who escaped with the news.\nAccording to the fugitives when the gen-\noral rising was declared In the Raxolog\ndistrict on Sunday, the Turkish troops lu\ntho Plrin mountains hurried to Mahonin\nand surrounded the town, rendering escape of Christians Impossible. Tho Bulgarian population was prepared to Join in\ntho rising. Desperate lighting occurred\nin the streets, bombs nnd dynamite being\nused. After live or six hours fighting the\nTurks gained the upper hand, proceeded\nto- mnssacre every Bulaglan and Christian thoy encountered.\nThero is no official confirmation of the\nabove report.\nGETTING DOWN TO WORK.\n\"Venezuelan Arbitration Tribunal Meets at\nTho Hague.\nThe Hague, Oct. 2.\u2014The flrst Besslon of\nthe tribunal appointed to arbitrate the\nquestion -of tho priority of the claims\nagainBt Vonezuela, of Great Britain .Germany and Italy, over those of the other\nclaimants was held today. The question\nas to the language which the proceeding\nshould be conducted in was discussed.\nGreat Britain and Germany claimed thnt\nthe memorial of the claims should be in\nEnglish though tho pleadings might be tn\nother languages, with the permission of\nthe court. A decision In this matter will\nbe announced today.\nAn answer to Walne McVengh's request\nfor Venezuela to be allowed to commence\nhor case at once will also be given. Great\nBritain opposes Mr. McVeagh's application.\nIT DID NOT GO DOWN.\nSir Charles Tupper's Advocacy of R.  F.\nGreen Was a Fnllure.\n[Special to The Daily News.]\nKaBlo, Oct. 2,-Slr Charles H. Tupper.\naddressed a meeting of citizens at Knslo\nInst night in the Intereshts nnd in aid of\ntho candidature of R. F. Greon.\nThe gallant knight commenced with a\nspeech to tho ladles nnd complimented\nthem on tho Interest they took in provincial politics. His next effort was directed to the KalSO fight nnd Its being carried on against his cnndldato and by the\nlocal paper against himself nnd the const\npoliticians, nnd asked why Mr. Galllher\nhad been brought in, forgetting thnt Mr.\nGalllher Is a Kootenny man. Sir Chnrlos\nthen went on to sny that the McBrlde\ngovernment have a platform and policy\nand hftvn outlined four ywrs work to he\nMatters Are   Quiet  Once   More\u2014Clergue\nWill Oppose Legal Proceedings.\nSault Ste Marie, Ont., Oct. 2.\u2014The Soo\nhas resumed Its normal aspect.\nAt noon the regulars left, and mow the\nonly militia on duty are twenty men of\nthe 97th Soo   regiment.    The  authorities\nfigure on withdrawing tho militia tomor- i t\u2122,,.,^ ftllf Mn \u201e\u201e\u201e.   .       '    _,-^r\t\nrow,  Saturday.    The special  police Jmve    Ppured out his vast store of filthy epf\nSWAN SOI\nHis Opinion of the Nelson\nMiners' Union\nYmir Spinx Breaks Silence\nbut Says Nothing\nJohn Houston lost night addressed\na meeting of his own supporters ln the\nOpera House. The meeting was admittedly an afterthought, and forced on\nhim by the exposure of his method*\nat the liberal rally on the previous\nevening. Houston, secure ln the\nknowledge that no time remained ln\nwhich any falsehoods he might choose\nto utter might be exposed, launched\nout openly along the lines on which\nhis supporters have been carrying on\nhis campaign of late, and indulged ln\nabuse to his hearts content\nLike an extinct volcano, vomiting\nmud and ashes, with an ease which\nshowed that the speech of the blackguard and the thug was his natural\ntongue, the    conservative     candidate\nbeen discharged.\nToronto, Oct. 2.\u2014F| H. Clergue left on\nthe midnight train for the Soo, personally\nto appear in opposition to tho motion of\nJames BVeknell, K.C., asking for the\nturning ovor of tho Consolidated Lake\nSuperior properties to tho Speyer syndicate. Mr. Clergue declined to say what\ncourse he Intended to follow, but it Is\napparent that having won out ln tho matter of securing payment of the claims for\nwages, he felt himself In a much better\nposition to oppose the foreclosure proceedings.\nDAY'S DOINGS AT OTTAWA\nFUNERAL   OP   LATE   MEMBER   FOR\nEAST BRUCE.\nTHE    HOUSE   MAY    ADJOURN\nWEEK'S TIME.\nOttawa, Oct. 2.\u2014Parliament may prorogue a week from tomorrow, but as yet\nno definite understanding has been arrived\nat\nA good mnny members consider that they\nhave spent too long a time hore already\nand have gone home to stay. ,1\u2014-\nA bill will be laid before parliament this\nsession to re-organize the marine and\npublic works departments whereby the\nformer will have control of the hydro-\ngraphic survey, dredging operations, und\nof the harbor commissions fn various parts\nof the dominion.\nThe houso delayed opening today till\nnoon, to allow the members to attend the\nfuneral of the late. member for East\nBruce.\nBefore tho orders of the day were taken\nup sir Wilfrid Laurier paid a graceful\ntribute to Mr. Cargtll, and voted the condolence of both sides of parliament, with\ntho bereaved wife and family.\nR. L. Borden, on behnlf of the opposition thanked the premier for his tribute\nof respect, and nlso spoko feelingly of the\nloss sustained by conservatives in the\ndeath of Mr. Cargill.\nSeveral petitions were read against the\ntranscontinental railway. A petition from\nSt. Theodore d'Acton, Bagot county, was\nalso read declaring that no one wns given\npermission to sign a petition from that\nplace against the new railway.\n'An order-in-councll hns been passed,\nwithdrawing the order of December last,\nwhich prohibited tho Importation of cnttle,\nsheep or swine from New England states,\nwhere the foot and mouth disease prevailed. The government is satisfied that the\ndisease Is now stumped out.\nTho funornl of the late Henry Cargill.\nM.P., who died suddenly In tho house Inst\nnight took place to the Union station this\nmorning, from whence the body wfll be\ntaken lo Cargill, Ontario, the homo of the\ndeceased, for Interment. The funeral was\nattended by a large number of members\nof  pnrllnmcnt.\nFire this morning destroyed the largo\nfactory of the Eclipse Offlce Furniture\ncompany on Albert street. Loss Jt!O,0W, Insurance   about   $40,000.\nROOSEVELT IS FIRM\nWashington, D. C, Oct. 2.\u2014A good deal\nof pressure has been brought to bear on\npresident Roosevelt to Induce him not to\ncall congress (n extraordinary session In\nNovember, but to all who interviewed him,\ntho president said that the American government ls committed to tho provision that\ntho Cuban reciprocity treaty be made effective nt tho earliest possible'date, and\nho regarded It as a matter of good faith\nthat the United States should keep its\nword.\nHe has declined, therefore, to consider\nany proposition looking to the abandonment of tlio Idea of an extraordinary session.\nKELLIE   WlLh   WIN.\n[Special to The Dally News.]\nRevelstoke, Oct. 2.\u2014Nearly four hundred\nvoters turned out to tho liberal meeting\nheld in tho opera house Inst night. J. M.\nKellie, tho liberal candldnte. captured tha\nvast audience In a stirring speech which\nwas throughout punctuated with cheers\nand  applause.\nThomas Taylor the conservative candidate mndo a very poor showing on the\n\u25a0platform.\nIt I\u00bb estimated here thnt Kellie win poll\nas mnny votes In fills riding ns tho conservative nnd socialist candidates oomblnw.\nTho local liberals nre naturally jubilant\nover llie party's prospects.\nTHE DAILY WRECK.\nBeowewa, Nevada, Oct. 2.\u2014A disastrous\nhead-on collision occurred Inst night nn\ntho Salt Lnko division nf the Southern\nPacific at this station. Tlio first section\nof tho Atlnntic express from San Francisco collided with a freight train. One\npassenger wns killed and twenty persons\nInjured.\nTRADE IS BETTER.\nNow York, Oct. 2.\u2014The failures ln Canada for tiie past nlno months are soven\nper cent fewer thnn a year ago and tho\nclearings nre 6.8 per cent larger.\nFor the w,eek, the failures numbered 10\nas against H in this w\u00abek a year ago.\nthets on the men who oppose him. He\ncalled Mr* Taylor a \"Iny,\" and the\nmen of the Nelson's Miners' Union\n\"skulking hypocrites and. dirty cowards,\" and the secretary of the union\nalso came In for a fair share of this\nCaliban's tongue lashing.\nThe cause of this attack on the\nMiners' Union was the resolution passed\nby that body endorsing the liberal candidate. This was done some weeks\nago, and the resolution was published\nin the Dally News over the signature\nof Frank Philips, the secretary. All\nthe facts ln connection with the resolution were known to the conservative\ncandidate at the time, but he made no\ncomment then, preferring to wait until\nhis untrue version of the affair could\nnot be contradicted.\nThat time came last night, and the\nopportunity was certainly well Improved. It was amusing to watch Wm\ncough and choke and stutter as he\nraked heaven and hell and the dictionary   for words to express his rage.\nMr. Houston spoke for about an hour.,\nand although    he Indulged largely in\npersonal abuse he devoted a good part\nof his time to various points In the\ncampaign.     Taking   up   Mr. Taylor's\nchallenge that the conservative party\nhas never done anything for labor, he\ncynically remarked  that  \"no political\nparty ever lies awake nights thinking\nhow to help labor except Just    before\nelection times.     I am something of a\npolitician, and  I   know.\"      Following\non this statement he announced that\nhe would get three union votes to the\nliberal candidate's one, and then passed\nquickly on to the slander of the union\nabove quoted.\nEarly In his speech Mr, Houston announced that he would justify    every\nvote he cast at Victoria during the past\nthree years.     He stood by the position\nhe had taken as to hfs {250 tax ou labor unions In British Columbia.      He\nthought  his resolution a proper one.\nWhen he came to discuss his vote to\nIncrease  the head tax  from  three to\nfive dollars he gave an excellent example of the cuttle    fish trick.     He\nasked if there was any working man\nwho was unwilling to pay two dollarB\nmore to support schools and hospitals,\nand waxed very indignant at any such\nsuggestion.     Mr. Houston did not say\nthat this tax would be used for the\npurposes named, nor did he explain why\nthe money was not raised ln some other\nway.    He simply raised a cloud ot words,\nand got away to safer toptaa,    Betore\ndoing bo, however, he announced that\nthere was no discrimination about the\nhead tax; It was perfectly just and fair\nto all.    The millionaire mlneowner and\nthe three dollar a day laborer, each paid\nexactly the same tax.     Nothing could\nbe much, more equal than    that, Mr.\nHouston thought.\nThe speaker referred to his own record at Victoria, and claimed it entitled him to support now. Economy\nIn* public expenditure was necessary,\nand determined men who would work\nfor their country's good and not give\nway to every demand made by their\nfriends, as the governments In the past\nhad done to the ruin of the province^\nAt the conclusion  of Mr.   Houston s\nspeech a surprise was sprung on\nthe\naSencc\"ln\"the'sliape of a speech from\nHarry Wright, conservative candidate\nin Ymlr, who was introduced by chairman Irvine as being \"a little bashful\nand no speaker.\"\nIn spite of this Wright spoke for\nten minutes without showing any signs\nof nervousness. He said he was going\nto \"get even\" with a few stories in,\ncirculation about himself. He would\nexplain why he waa| 'throwing up a\n$1,400 job for a chance at an $800 one.\nThen he began to tell a few campaign\nstories about Parr himself, and forgot\nthe promised explanation.\nThe usual cheers were given before\nthe meeting broke up,\nTHE PAPAL DELEGATE.\nVictoria, Oct. 2.\u2014His excellency Mgr.\nDonato Sbarettl, papal delegate, arrived from Ottawa tonight to instal\narchbishop Orth, who was some months\nago made archbishop of Vancouver\nIsland, when the diocese was separated\nfrom that of Oregon.\n 1\nTHE DAILY NEWS: SATUKDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1903\nf.^ff\nHUDSON'S BAY\nCOMPANY.\nINCORPORXTBD   J670.\nTo Our Patrons and Customers:\nPlease note that on account of\nthe election our Wine and Liquor\nDepartment wilLbe closed all day\non Saturday next, as required by\nstatute. .s&kaT**\n'%\u25a0\u25a0,\u25a0'  \u2022\nThe Hudson's Bag Stores\nThe Canadian Bank of Commerce!\nWith whloh li Amalgamated\nThe Bank of British Columbia\nBBAD OFFICE-TORONTO.\n\u2022a Fund,  ts,000,sm\ntag l78,,00O,0OO\n_B. a. WiMMj OansM luuar.\nPalsJ up Cagftal, 18.700,000.   Be,\nAggregate Re.ourcei Bxci\n\u2022OH. QaW.   A. COX PraaWent\nSavings Bank Department   \u00b0T*--?^.^w?**,toT-'\nNelson Branch. bbvci mutijcoti, mw*.\nWE CARRY A COMPLETE STOCK OF\nPipe and Pipe Fittings\n1-8 TO 8 INOH, ALSO PIPE TOOLS\nRubber and Leather Belting, Packing, Mill Board, Mill Hose and all\nMiD Supplies, Wagon Material, Hardwood Lumber, Corrugated Iron,\nCement, Fire Brick, Fire Clay, Steel, Iron, Steel Plates, Coal, Mining\nRails, Ore Can, Paints, Oil, Glass. A full line of Shelf Goods and\nTarden Tool* _______________\nAGENTS:  GIANT POWDER OO.\nOANTON DRILL STEEL\nH. BYERS & CO.\n NELSON AND SANDON\nWe expect to\nreceive a\nstraight car o(\nPreserving Peaches   .^^\nCrawford Freestone Peaches\ndireot from Wenatchee on today's train from tbe south.\nBook your orders early aa the bulk of tbe oar ls sold to arrive.\nJ. Y. GRIFFIN * CO., Limited\nP. BURNS & CO\nWHOLESALE AND RETAIL\nMEAT MERCHANTS\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPublished at Nelson every morning, except\nMonday, by\nP. 3. DEAND.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATE8:\nDally, per month, by carrier I AS\nDally, per month, by mall    60\nDally, per year, by carrier 7 00\nDally, Par year, by mail 6 00\nDally, per year, foreign 8 00\nTHU WEEKLY NEWS:\nWeekly, per half year H 25\nWeekly, per year a 00\nWeekly, per year, foreign SOO\nSubscription! invariably In advance,\nADVERTISING RATES:\nDisplay Advertisement, ti par Inch per\nmonth; Display Advertisements, 25 cents\nper Inch each insertion less than a month;\nLocals, 10 cents per Una each Insertion;\nClassified Advertisements 1 cent per word\neach Insertion; Wholesale Cards, 12.60 per\nmonths; Society Cards, 12.60 per month.\nLONDON AGENCY:\nThe Dally News ls on file at the offices\nof B. & J. Hardy A Co., Advertising and\nPress Agents, SO Fleet Street, London,\nE. C, England.\nLIBERAL CANDIDATES.\nNelson:\nS. S. TAYLOR, K.C.\nYmlr:\nALFRED PARR.\nKaslo:\nJOHN L. RETALLACK.\nRossland:\nJAMBS A. MACDONALD.\nGreenwood:\nJ. R. BROWN.\nGrand Forks:\nW. H. P. CLEMENT.\nFernle:\nE. C. SMITH.\nCranbrook:\nDa j. a king.\nRevelstoke:\nJ. M. KELLIE.\nTHB DAY OP BATTLE.\nHEAD OFFICE NELSON   B\n\"r3nCh TtrefF0rnkRT'andrl Tran-   ~\u00ab\u2122< \u00bb*\u00bb<>. S.ndn\u00bb\nnte-armaa-La        '   N^   DenVef   and   S'<**\u00b0   &*>\nAll IH News iii The News\nAll but tbe shouting ls over, and the\nflrst .party, election campaign in British Columbia is now ended.\nIt is vitally important to get out and\nrecord the Nelson vote today. Not\nonly should Mr. Taylor be elected, but\nhis majority should be of a size that\nwill duly emphasize the local situation.\nHis opponents are lighting with unwonted vigor, and declaring that their\nnominee must win, although they signally fail to give any reason for their\nhope of victory. Strong unionist appeals have been made to help out the\nunder-dog in the fight, and no stone\nhas been left unturned to prevent Mr.\nTaylor's majority reaching too high a\nfigure. It is desirable, therefore, that\nall Mr. Taylor's supporters should\nrally to the polls early today, and get\ntheir votes recorded,\nThe local' situation has grown steadily in the liberal candidate's favor ever\nsince he secured the party nomination\nthree months ago. All the public meetings held here have admittedly improved Mr. Taylor's standing with the\nelectors, and a close canvass has disclosed beyond question tho fact that he\npossesses the confidence of a large majority of those who will vote today.\nHis opponents, whllo admitting rather\ngrudgingly that Mr. Taylor was winning all along the line straight through\nthe campaign just closed, have declared\ntime and again that their candidate had\nseveral cards yet to play, and that before election day several things would\nhappen which would effectually settle\nMr. Taylor and his laudable desire to\nproperly represent this constituency at\nVictoria.\nAs day after day passed without any\nappearance of the convincing proofs referred to, the electors fell back on the\nworn out cry against the legal profession and other foolish arguments with\nwhich the campaign opened, and which\nihelpedl rather than hurt tbe liberal\ncandidate, and election day finds Mr.\nTaylor's political opponents without\nany of the promised developments,\nfighting a despairing battle, with merely\nthe hot air assertion that \"wo must\ndown Taylor.\"\nTbe liberal candidate has conducted\na fair, clean-cut campaign, and\nhonestly deserves a rousing majority..\nHe challenged his opponent early to a\npublic meeting in the contest, and met\nand vanquished him directly after the\nlatter was officially ln tho fleld. He\nhas worked to win from the day he received the liberal nomination, but his\nfight has been an open and a fair one,\nand the only cries that have halfheartedly been raised against him speak\neloquently as to his personal standing\nIn the community whoso votes he Is\nasking today.\nAny attempted stampede of tho voters from the liberal cause today will\nfall. Every opportunity has been\ngiven for the fullest discussion of all\nthe questions at issue, and an eleventh\nhour appeal should not deceive any one.\nVote, and voto early, today, for S. S.\nTaylor, and good government.\nSunlight\nSoap\nREDUCES\nEXPENSE\n$5,000 Reward rMI^\nLimited, Toronto, to any person who\ncan prove that this soap contains\nany form of adulteration whatsoever,\nor contains any injurious chemicals.\nAsk for the Octagon Bar. ass\nto tho important and interesting study\nof nature. The nature study movement\nis growing apace, and from being a\nsort of secondary affair has risen to a\nregularly recognised part of the school\ncurriculum. It has the advantage of\nat once Interesting the pupil in the\nvery commonest things of his or her\nenvironment, and since the keeping ot\ninterest alive ls one of the prime essentials of proper education, If nature\nstudy has this most commendable feature, and It is well known that It does\npossses it, it cannot hut have a directly favorable effect upon mental development and training.\nProfessor Bailey, of Corney University, writing to the New York Evening Post, declares that the crux of the\nwhole subject of education lies In the\nconception of what education ls, and\npoints out that It has come to be associated with certain subjects, but the\nold Ideas as to what these supposedly\nnecessary subjects achieve have given\nplace to the opinion that anything may\nbe a means to education tn the sense\nof mental development. ' \\\nWe are much in the habit, he says,\nof speaking of certain subjects as leading to 'culture,' but this is really all\nfictitious, for 'culture ls the product\nonly of efficient teaching, whatever the\nsubject matter may be. What a man\nis is more important than what he\nknows. Anything that appeals to a\nman's mind is capable ot drawing out\nand training a man's mind; and is there\nany subject that does not appeal to\nsomo man's mind? The subject may\nbe Sanscrit, literature, hydraulics, physics, electricity, or agriculture\u2014all may\nbe made the means whereby some men\nand women are educated.\nFundamentally, nature study ls seeing what one looks at and drawing\nproper conclusions from what one sees,\nand thereby the learner comes into personal relation and sympathy with the\nobject. It Is!not the teaching of science\u2014not the systematic pursuit of a\nlogical body of principles. Its object\nls to broaden the child's horizon, not,\nprimarily, to teach him how to widen\nthe boundaries of human knowledge.\nIt Is not the teaching of botany or entomology or geology, but of plants, in-\nseots, and fields. But many persons\nwho are teaching under the name ot\nnature study are merely teaching and\ninterpreting elementary science.\nAgain, nature study Is studying\nthings and the reason of things. It\nis not reading from nature books. A\nchild was asked If she had ever seen\nthe great dipper. 'Oh, yes,' she replied, 'I saw it ln my geography.' This\nis better than not to have seen it at\nall; but the proper place to have seen\nit is ln the heavens. Nature readers\nmay be of the greatest use if they are\nmade Incidental and secondary features\nof the instruction; but, however good\nthey may be, their Influence ls pernicious if they are made primary agents.\nThe child should flrst see the thing.\nIt should then reason about the thing.\nHaving a concrete Impression, it may\nthen go to the book to widen its knowledge and sympathies.\nNature study is not merely teaching\nthis or that. It ls not merely the adding of more 'work' or of another 'exercise' or 'period' to the school. To lead\nthe child to seo and to know the\nthings with which he comes dally Into\ncontact ls nature study. It will at\nonco be seen, therefore, that nature\nstudy is an attitude and a point of view,\nnot a method or a system. The methods will be as various as the teachers.\nHere and there it will be over-exploited\nand overmethodized; now and then the\nname will be dropped, and persons will\nsay {hat the subject ls dead or is passing away, but the essence of It can\nnever pass away, because It ls fundamental to the best living.\nEDITORIAL NOTES.\ndldate, brighter. The question is now\none of majority. Conservatives in the\nriding feel that after the exposures in\nconnection with the Columbia and\nWestern Land subsidy matter that it\nwould be to the enduring disgrace of\nthe constituency to return Mr. Eberts.\nThis, coupled with the personal popularity of Mr. Tanner In the riding,\nmakes the flght a comparatively easy\none.\nThe greatest successes in the electrical transmission of water power\nhave been made In the United States,\n43 companies, having a total capacity\nof 177,300 horse power, transmit power\nover a line distance of 1,549 miles, on\nan average 26 miles, with a voltage\nwhich ranges from 10,000 to 60,000 volts.\nThe maximum distance over which\npower ls transmitted ls from Colgate\nto San Francisco, 220 miles, with a loss\nof 25 per cent. At Colgate the body\nof water is small, but the fall is 1,500\nfeet \u2014\nTORY BOASTINGS.\nThe tory party never entered a political flght in Canada yet that it was\nnot absolutely sure of winning. In\n1896 sir Charles Tupper was going to\ndo more than win a mere ordinary victory suoh as would satisfy the lust of\npower of the commonplace party hack.\nThe conservative leader of that day\nbragged that he was about to sweep\nthe liberals from the face of the Dominion. He had bis great broom\nready on the coast of Prince Edward\nIsland, and he was going to plunge\nright across the continent with It, and\ndump every miserable Grit candidate\ninto the Pacific. In 1900 he was, If\npossible, more optimistic. Sir Wjl-\nfrld Laurier had beeu found out ln lils\nsins and his government ln Its iniquities. The flrst victory waB a fluke,\nand It could not possibly be repeated.\nTbe broom was laid aside, but a mighty\ntidal wave was erecting Itself, and it\nboded ill for the liberal party. The\n'\"wave\" eventuated all right, but it\nswept the wrong, way, and landed the\nconservative party in the Atlantic instead ot the liberals ln the Pacific.\nWorse than all else, tha majority of\nthe leaders and of the loudest boasters\nwere engulfed and have not been able\nto get their heads above the angry\nwaters since. Most of them have been\ntoo much depressed ln spirits to try.\nMr. Foster made one desperate essay,\nand was thrown down with a duller\nthud than before. So we submit It ls\nno new thing for conservatives to make\ntheir boasts of what they are going to\ndo.\u2014Victoria Times.\nMETAL MARKET SITUATION.\nWhile silver hiss not passed the 60\ncent, mark yet, it has remained very\nsteadily over 69, and| at about ithe\nhigh increase recently made. The\nEngineering and Miniug Journal of\nNew York, in Its last review of the\nmarket situation, says:\nBusiness in most lines has boen\nrather quiet this week, and prices show\ntew changes.\nSliver continues rf.eady. \u2022 The shipments from London thus far this year\nshow quite an improvement as compared\nwith 1902, owing chiefly to the greater\ndemand from the Straits Settlements,\nwhere the silver is used mostly for\nmaking payments in the tin trade.\nIndia is slowly recouping Its loss in\nthe Importation of the white metal,\nand lately some large orders have been\nfilled for that territory.\nCopper has been pretty dull this\nweek, although first hands have been\nfree sellers on rather small orders.\nPrices are easier. Abroad, speculators\nhave been hampered somewhat by\ndearer money and political disturbances.\nExports, from this country havo been\non a slightly larger scale this week,\nwhile Imports are less frequent, although fair quantities of the red metal\nhave arrived, chiefly from Great Britain, and another cargo of Tilt Cove\nore is reported at Now York.\nLead is doing a moderate business\nat last week's advance ln price. Production of late has boen on a good\nscale.\nSpelter feels the slackening of demand from galvanizers, but there ls\nno change in prices, which are considerably better than a year ago.\nPAINB'S CELERY WOUND\nGives New Life, Health and\nVigor to Tired, Weak and\nDiscouraged Women   : :   :\nCures  Functional   Irregularities.\nMakes Sick People Well.\nBIG SLOGAN MINING DEAL\nCRIPPLE     STICK    IS     BONDED     BY\nENGLISH CAPITALISTS.\nOTHER   MINING   ITEMS   PROM   THE\nSLOCAN  DISTRICT.\nWork has been resumed at the Wakefield.\nTlio annual meeting of tlio Arlington\nwill bo held at Slocan next week.\nOperations have ceased on the Republic.\nThe tools und supplies have been brought\ndown and stored In the city .\nWhat ls known as tho west vein on the\nOttawa, discovered while driving the crosscut, is turning out a bonanza. It has been\ndrifted on for 35 feet und the oro now being taken out Is exceedingly rich. Native\nsilver is plastered all over It, together\nwith grey copper and copper pyrites. An\nimprovement is ulso being shown on the\neast vein.\nThe Enterprise sent out another 40 tons\nof ore during the week to tho Trail smelter.\nThirty-five men are employed ut tho mine\nand they are breaking down largo quantities of ore, making it tho principal shipper. Next week Uie lessees of the Cripple\nStick will make a small shipment, It being tho initial effort.\nThe llrst mining deal In the division in\nu year has Just been consummated here,\nwhereby ttie Cripple Stick and Cripple\nStick fraction, situated on the north side\nof Springer creek, were bonded hy English capital, represented by Frederick\nStock, of Nelson. The Stick Is owned\nby Dan Nicholl, R. A, Brudslmw, and\nHoward Guest; while tbe fraction staked\nI last week, Is owned by Geo. Nlchol. The\ndeal Is a working bond, running a year,\nthe stipulation being that a certain num-\nbor of shifts must ho put In each month.\nWork on the property commences at onco\nand will bo maintained all winter, the\nfirst step bolng the erection of camp\nbuildings. The Cripple Stick has had its\nlead traced the full length of the ctuim,\nIt showing In a number of places a ten-\nInch paystreak, carrying exceptional values In gold and silver. Of luto the property has been worked under lease held\nby Geo. Nlchol and S, Clough ,who took\nout several tons of rich oro. Mr. Stock\npurposes taking up his residence here for\nthe winter.\u2014Slocnn Drill.\nAPPLES\nBOTH EATING\nANDOOOKINC\nWhen you want a physic thnt ib mild\nand gentle, easy to take and certain to\nact, always use Chamberlain's Stomach and\nLiver Tablets. For salo by all druggists\nund deulers.\nAsk for CASCADE Beer.\nTHE LIZARD  LIGHT.\nLondon, Oct. 2.\u2014A single electric light;\nsaid to be the most powerful ln the world,\nwhich exhibits a Dash every live seconds,\nhas been substituted for tho double fixed\nlight at Lizard point.\t\nA LACK OF HARMONY.\nMusicians at Berlin Kick Up All Kinds\nof Trouble.\nBerlin, Oct. 2.\u2014Frau Gadskl refused to\nsing at the Wagner banquet last night,\nbecause It was given in the winter garden\nmusic hall, which contains the largest\naccommodation in Berlin. She snld she\nhad never sung In a music hall and would\nnever do so but she attended the banquet.   Her name was on tho program.\nEdgar Stittman Kelly, who was to have\nrepresented* tho United Stales has withdrawn from the International concert becauso tbe orchestra has been unable to\nlearn tho Chinese airs from his opera,\n\"Alladin\" and is likely to break down.\nSir Alcxnnder MacKenzie, the representative of Great Britufn, and the Norwegian,\nGrieg,  hnve  also withdrawn.\nKokanee GreeK Haqch,\nO. W. BUSK, Prop.\nOffice and depot Baker street\nPHONB 213.    NBLSON\nGoats\nI\nBest British ralncoatlngs tailored to\nyour order. Also a full lino of fall suitings\nand overcoats.\nCall and make a selection.\nJ. Smallwood\nMerchant Tailor\nWARD STREET, NELSON,  B.   C.\nOUR FT.illNITURH) ^LOOMS yP\nclearly and temptingly.  Thom of ordinary\ndiscernment can see that this li not ordinary furniture, although tbe price seems\nto be about the same.\nBut the value la different   Thle\nFURNITURE\nwill be still beautiful and yet In active Mr-\nvice when the other kind, hai Joined the\ngreat army ot \"has-beens.\"\nMuch to adnjire In thla line of\nWOOD ROCKERS\nbesides  the   handsome   design  and line\nfinish.   The prices are attractive.\nD. McARTHuR & Co.\nFurniture Dealers and Undertaken\nTHB STUDY OF NATURE..\nA con ui durable amount of attontion\nla  being paid  iu  our public schools\nAfter a tour of the mainland, the\nrejected conservative leader, hon. Chas.\nWilson, K.C., says the McBride government is going to \"sweep the province.\"\nThere ls reason to believe, however,\nthat a sufflcient number of liberals will\nbe left to form a very strong government It was bo in the last two dominion elections after sir Charles Tupper had done sweeping. The tories\nare merely talking to stimulate fast\nebbing hope.\nRAN A NAIL THROUGH HIS HAND.\nWhllo opening a box, J .('. Mount, of\nThreo Mile Bay ,N. Y\u201e ran a tenpenny\nnail through the fleshy part of his hund.\n\"I thought at once of all the pain nnd\nsoreness this would cause mo,\" ho says,\n\"and Immediately applied Chamberlain's\nPain Balm and occasionally afterwards.\nTo my surprise It removed nil pain and\nsoreness and tho injured parts were soon\nhealed.\" For sale by all druggists and\ndealers.\nIn Saanich electoral district there is\nno hope of D. M, Eberts heing returned,\nsays a correspondent of the Victoria\nTimes. Every day makes the prospects of Henry Tanner, tho liberal can-\n\u2022 HAPPY  HUNTING   GROUNDS.\nCzar's Jolly Time When Out For Sport-\nIs Surrounded By Guards.\nVienna, Oct. 2.\u2014A despatch from Muerz-\nsteg, Syria, says the precautionary measures taken for the safety of the cznr wero\nlargely extended today. Tho special reason for this has not transpired but fresh\ndotachmonts of gendarmes havo beon\nordered to the hunting districts whero nil\ntho movements of unauthorized porsons aro\nprohibited during the times tho czar and\nemperor Frnncls Joseph are hunting.\nSpecial additional precautions havo been\ntaken to gunrd the spot occupied by tho\nczar during the chamois drives.\nDOWNES'    HOTEL,   CRANBROOK.\nNew, up-to-date sample rooms.\nThe best hotel In Midway fs Crowell's.\nAS ALL THE\nOTHER\nSALOONS ARE\nOLOSED\nON ELECTION\nDAY THE\nCLUB HOTEL\nSTILL WILL\nPUT UP\nTHE BIG\nSCHOONER\nFOR 10 CENTS\nA PEW\nTIPS ON\nTEA\n%% CBNTB Will buy ONB POUND\nof pure, clean, fine flavor** CBT-\nLON-INDIAN   TEA\n10 CENTS wIU buy one poind\nStandard breakfast BLACK\nTEA Purchase\u2122 of ten pouada or\nmore, will receive one pound extra,\nfor each ten pounds purchased.\nEqual to an allowance of TEN\nPER CENT DISCOUNT, OP these\nextremely low prlcee.\nPrlcee on our   regular   Knee of\nCHOICE TEA. Kto, Kc, 40t, tfo, Ho,\nand 60o per pound for Black, Grew\nand Blended.\nTelephono 171 r. D. Boa Ul\nKOOTENAY COFFEE CO.\nFOR SALE\n10 LOTS\nIn the new townslte of\nPOPLAR\nRight In tho business center.   For price\nand location see\nR. J. Steel\nNOTICE\nH. Johnson begs to notify tho public]\nthat he has opened a restaurant to fad\ncalled the\nROSEMONT\nCAFE\nIn the Carney block,\nAthabasca aaloon.\nMeals served at all\nand night.\nA call solicited.\nnext   door   to\nhours.   Open\nH. D. ASHCROI\nMINERS' LIVERY AND FEED BTABL.I\nTeaming and Packing done. Saddll\nHomes for Hire. Hacks and buggies ol\ncall day and night. Stables on Stanlel\nstreet, between Silica and Carbonat<|\nTelephone 67.   P. O. Box 158, Nelson, BX\nAFTER 7.30 P.M.\nNURSE\nNURSE\u2014Open to make engagements; maL\nternity cases;  do not mind light workl\nCommunicate to A. B., News Offloe, NeaT\nsea. \u00bb\u2022 *\u2022\n TKE DAILY NEWS: SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1908\nCRANBROOK BUSINESS DIRECTORY\nLEADING BUSINESS FIRMS\nBOABD 07 TBADE\nHOSPITAL\nW. F. OURD. Secretary.\nST. EUGENE, (Sisters of Charity).\nBAKERIES\nLEGAL FIBMS\nCRANBROOK  BAKERT,  A   Chartrand,\nCITT BAKERT, C. W. Wilson, Phone H,\nE. H. THOMPSON.\nP. 0. Box 116.\nMEAT MABKETS\nOONPEOTIOHEBfl\nP. BURNS ft CO., P. 0. Box 8, Phono 10,\n0. P. TISDALB, Phone 66.\nKARRIS ft JOLIFFB.\nDBA! AHD EXPBE8S\nMEROHAKT TAILOBS\nPBRRT ft FITZOERAIiD.\nMcSWETN ft GRIFFITH, P. 0. Box 66.\nDBEBSMAKIKO\nMISS A k CARDIFF.\nFOuTOBT\nTHO STEEL AND IRON WORKS.\nGBOOEES\nO. T. ROGERS, Phone 23, P. O. Box 84.\nKING MERCANTILE CO., Phone 8, P. O.\nBox 3.\nHOTELS\nCRANHifooK, James Ryan, Proprietor.\nDOWNES' COSMOPOLITAN.\nWENTWORTH, Rollins ft Dickinson, Proprietors.\nCANADIAN, G, Brault, Proprietor.\nJEWELEBS\nPHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS\nDR. 3. H. KING, Phone a, P. O. Box 28.\nDR. F. W. GREEN, Phone 2, P. O. Box \u00bb\nPHOTOQBAPHEBS\nOne Can of\nVictor\nEvaporated Cream\nwill tell the story better than\nmany words.\nVictor Cream is fully\nequal to the richest fluid\ncream.\nNo other brand compares\nwith it for all household\npurposes. It is simply the\npurest of Jersey Cream with\nthe water evaporated.\nUN b, ChirlilUtnn CgssJanut lllk\nft., Chirlattitowsi, M.I,\nPREST PHOTO CO, P. O. Box 125.\nBEAL ESTATE AND IUSUBANOE\nBEALE ft ELWELL.\nUNDEBTAEEB8 AND EMBALHEBS\nCHAS. CAMPBELL, Phone 46.\nTHE   MACCONNELL   FURNITURE   ft\nUNDERTAKINGS COMPANY.\nW. F. TATE, P. O. Box 106.\nW. H. WILSON.\nWHOLESALE LIQUOBS\nMcDERMOT ft BOWNBSS, P. 0. Box 17,\nPhone 17.\nFERNIE BUSINESS DIRECTORY\nLEADING BUSINESS FIEMS.\nBoots and Shoes.\nH. A   8ENKBEIL.\nBreweries.\nFORT STEELE BREWING CO.\nDry Goods and Groceries.\nCHARLES RICHARDS.    P.  0.  Box 245.\nCROW'S NEST TRADING CO.\nCigar Factories.\nCROW'S  NEST CIGAR  FACTORY.\nDrugs and Stationery.\nFERNIE DRUG STORE.   N. E. Suddaby.\nA W. BLEASDALB.   Box 203.\nHotels.\nDentists.\nDR.  BARBER.   Opposite Royal Hotel.\nLegal\nROSS ft ALEXANDER.\nMerchant Tailors.\nF. J. MITCHELL.\nMillinery and Fancy Goods.\nMRS. E. TODD. Box 328.\nHeal Estate and Insurance.\nCREB & HUTCHISON, P.O. Drawer 17.\nF. J. WATSON.   P. O. Box 2S6.\nRestaurants.\nALBERTA HOTEL. J. L. Gates, Prop.\nVICTORIA HOTEL.\nFERNIE. S. Manalinn, Prop.\nQUEEN'S HOTEL, Choncttc A Ross.\nMUSKOKA HOTEL'S\/ Bulko, Prop.\nT. H. ELLIOTT.   Opposite rear of Depot\nUNION   RESTAURANT.    Geo.   K.   Ichl-\nkawo, Prop.\nWatchmakers.\nC. H. DEMAUREZ.\nCholera Infantum\nThere is no dinger whatever from this disease when\ntaken in time and properly treated.   AH that ii neceisary\nis to give\nChimberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy\nafter each operation of the bowels more than natural and then\ncastor oil to cleanse the system. It is safe and sure. When\nreduced with water and sweetened it is pleasant to take.\nBALFOUR ON FREE TRADE\nOPINIONS OF ENGLISH   PRESS ON\nPREMIER'S POLICY.\nHOW THE BRITISH PARTIES   ARE\nDIVIDING  UP.\nIll View ot the (act that Mr. Balfour's\ngreat speech at Sheffield on October\n1st waa practically a repetition of the\nviews already expressed by the British\npremier ln his recent free trade pamphlet, the opinions of the London press\non the.latter will be of Interest, and\nextracts from some of the principal\nones are appended:\nThe Times:\u2014It ls clear from the fact\nthat Mr. Balfour has chosen the present\nmoment to make a public declaration of\nhis opinions on the most vital issues\nof economic principles underlying the\npolicy advocated by Mr. Chamberlain\nthat he, at all events, is not waiting\nto see \"how the cat will jump,\" and\nthat his active sympathies are with that\npolicy. . . Upon the principles vindicated and placed on record ln this remarkable paper, Mr. Balfour has taken\nhis stand, and, whether or not he has\nconvinced all the members of his administration, It is hardly possible to\nsuppose that lie will not meet parliament and defend them in tne house of\ncommons. . . . Even should rumor\nprove to be justified, and one or more\nmembers ot the Cabinet feel unable to\nfollow the prime minister and Mr.\nChamberlain upon this question, there\nwould, we venture confidently to predict, be no question either of the resignation of the government or of an\nimmediate appeal to the country. The\nvacant places would doubtless be filled\nup, and the government would await\nthe reassembling of parliament ready\nto face any hostile action that might be\ntaken there. No legislation initiating\na new fiscal policy could, however, be\nundertaken until after an appeal had\nbeen made to the country. Even apart\nfrom the pledge that has been given on\nthat point, such a course would be inadmissible. . . \"I hold myself,\" Mr.\nBalfour said ln his concluding words,\n\"to be ln harmony with the true spirit\nof free trade when I plead for freedom\nto negotiate that freedom of exchange\nmay be Increaesd.\"     That is the first\npoint on which every intelligent and\npatriotic citizen should endeavor to\nmake up his mind, without regard to\nphrases or shibboleths.\nThe Standard:\u2014\" The chief of the\ngovernment . . . has manifestly passed\nthe stage of an open mind and the\nplatform of inquiry, to a fixed belief\nthat the principle of a tariff framed\nonly for revenue must no longer dominate our policy. A scheme of potential retaliation ls, then, we take it, the\ncardinal idea in the mind ot Mr. Balfour, and we can only regret that he\nhas at present failed to support it by\nany effort to show how threats of reprisals or the actual execution of them,\ncould be rendered effective.\nThe Morning Post:\u2014It Is quite evident\ntha,t Mr. Balfour believes that we\nshould get rid of the obligation to provide the world with a free market, and\ntake measures for establishing a system of reciprocity. His pamphlet will\nbe very helpful to the Inquirer in these\nmatters, not as defining a precise solution, nor because it touches the problem\nof imperial federation, but because it\nsets out certain problems nakedly and\nin the cold light of reason, and these\nproblems cannot safely be shirked nor\nbelittled.\nThe Dally Telegraph:\u2014Translated\nfrom the language of technical emono-\nmics Into that of practical politics, Mr.\nBalfoura conclusion may be summed\nup tn one word, retaliation. He claims\nfor the British government the right\nto say to foreign powers, \"If you exclude the products of our industry\nfrom your markets, we will refuse admittance to your products.\" This\nenunciation of policy does not go so\nfnr as the tariff reformers would like.\nBut It marks a new departure, and ls\nbound to have a decisive Influence upon\nthe situation at home. In effect, it Is\na repudiation! of unqualified1 Cobden-\nlsm. ... In any case thla historical\npamphlet marks a complete breach\nwith Cobdenlsm. It snuffs out the\nshibboleths of the Manchester school.\nNo doubt, Its publication will Involve\nthe resignation of those colleagues of\nthe prime minister who have taken the\noath of allegiance to sir Michael Hicks-\nBeach.\nThe Dally Chronicle:\u2014The nation\nhas an imperative right to demand\nfrom the government what Its attitude\nas a government Is to Mr. Chamberlain's scheme, and to Insist that minis\nters shall not be allowed to make pronouncements in opposition to that attitude without resigning office. . . A\nmore remarkable document was, we\nshould think, never furnished by a\nprime lmtns,lster Ito his colleagues1 to\ninform them on a practical question.\n. . . But one fact definitely emerges\nfrom its obscure theorising. Mr. Balfour advocates retaliatory duties, aa\nthe only means by which we can enlarge our markets or preserve those\nwhich we now enjoy. . . Economic history demonstrates beyond dispute that\nthe only effect of retaliation ls to provoke reprisals, and the nation which\nembarks oh a course of retaliatory measures must lay its account to have tariffs steadily raised against it all\nround. Would the nation be -wise to\nplace such a dangerous weapon In the\nhamlB of ministers, and could It look\nwith any confidence on the results that\nwould ensue from retaliatory powers\nbeing wielded by such a minister as\nlord Lansdowne?\nThe Daily News:\u2014Mr. Balfour talks\nas if we alone could use a big revolver. Is he not aware that Britain's\nexports to Germany and German exports to England balance each other?\nIf we can put an import duty on American corn, cannot America retort with\nan export duty on American cotton?\nAnd what becomes of Lancashire then?\nTo the country the premier's declaration is a call to arms. The issue at\nthe next election is no longer ln doubt.\nThe food of the people ls in danger.\nAt any moment we may be called upon\nto pronounce a verdict upon this last\nbetrayal of the ex-Radical leader. We\ndo not fear the result. We bolleve\nthat the verdict of Barnard Castle and\nof Argyllshire will be the verdict ot\nthe whole country.\nThe Morning Advertisers-Mr. Balfour\nhas come down on the right side. . \u25a0 .\nAt length, after mature consideration,\nthe \u25a0 premier reveals to the world his\nbelief in Mr. Chamberlain's proposals.\nThe Dally Mall:\u2014The intentions of\nthe government are now clear. Food\ntaxes no longer cumber their progress,\nand after these months of uncertainty\nthe real issue la laid before the electors of the United Kingdom\u2014Will they\nor will they not submit any longer to\nbe deprived of the only weapon with\nwhich a nation can hold Its own ln the\ncommercial arena?.\nMarvellous Results '\nFROM ONE BOTTLE OF.\nDR. PETTINGILL'S\nKidney-Wort Tablets\nThe properties and virtues of Dr. Pet-\nMngiU'a Kidney-Wort Tablets are so effective in invigorating tho entire excretory\nsystem, nnd in relieving the strain on the\nkidneys .that diseases of these organs have\nbeen checked In thousands of cases when\nmen and women had given up all hope of\ncure.\nIf your kidneys have become disordered\nnnd weakened, and not doing the work\nthat nature Intended them to do, make\nuse of Kidney-Wort Tablets at once and\navoid the perils of Bright's disease and\ndiabetes. One bottle Is guaranteed to bring\nprompt relief. AH Druggists sell them at\nGO cents per bottle or six bottles for -fJ.BO.\nCASCADE Beer brewed from mountain\nstreams.\nLEGISLATURE TO MEET.\nWinnipeg, Oct. 1.\u2014The Northwest legislative assembly will meet on the 27th at\nReglna, for the despatch of business.\nTbo land sales for the month of September in the land department of the Canadian Paclllc railway were 60,441 acres for\n$268.758.,\nA REMARKABLE RECORD.\nChamberlain's Cough Remedy has a remarkable record. It hns been in use for\nover thirty years, during which time many\nmllion bottles have been sola and used. It\nhas long been tbe standard and main reliance In the treatment of croup in thousands of homes, yet during all this time\nno case has ever been reported to the manufacturers In which It failed to effect a\ncure. When given as soon as the child\nbecomes hoarse or *oven as soon as the\ncroupy cough appears, It will prevent the\nattack. It ls pleasant to take, many chlldron like it. It contains no opium or other\nharmful substance aud may bo given as\nconfidently to a baby as to an adult. \u25a0 Por\ns:il* by ull druggists and dealers.\nCASCADE-the Beer without a Peer.\nHOME  ONCE   MORE.\nPlymouth, England, Oct. I.\u2014Sir Thomas\nUpton's  steam  yacht Erin which  sailed\nfrom   New  York,  September  21st,  passed\nthe Lizard bound east today.\nOWES HIS LIFE TO A NEIGHBOR'S\nKINDNESS.\nMr. D. P. Daugherty, well known\nthroughout. Mercer and Sumner counties,\nW. Va., most likely owes his life to the\nkindness of a neighbor. He was nlmost\nhopelessly afflicted with diarrhoea; was\nattended by two physicians who gave him\nlittle, If any, relief, when a neighbor learning of his serious condition, brought him\na bottle of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera,\nand Diarrhoea Remedy, which cured him\nIh less than twenty-four hours. Por sale\nby nil druggists nnd dealers .\nCASCADE Beer gives you vim.\nAROITND CAMBORNE MINES.\nThe Eva stampmill Is completed and the\nstamps all ready to fall as soon ns the\nwater power Is turned on. Somo piping\nhas yet to be laid to the flume, however,\nbefore this can he done, and the Inclement\nweather of the past three weeks Ib re-\nsponslbls for tha fact that Eva ore ls not\nyet being, treated at the mill. All the\noutside work ln the camp has been held\nback because of the heavy and continuous\nrain which has been and fa falling now.\nThis ls the ralnest season ever known here.\nThe Ophlr-Lade sfampmill should be In\ncommission, In a few days, and It seems\nas if the two Pool creek mills will simultaneously start the roar of grinding and\npounding golden rock, which will from\nthen on sound as sweet music ln the ears\nof Cambornites. A runaway car on the\nOphlr-Lade tram was an incident yesterday. No great damage was done as fortunately an empty car at tho lower terminal acted as a buffer.\nPipe for the Camborne water supply\nsystem Is on the ground but ditching for\nthe mains has not yet commenced and\ncannot begin until tbe weather clears up,\nas It Is lmposible to do outdoor work under the continuous downpour of rain whloh\nhas fallen here for nearly a month. Work\nat the reservoir has also stopped for the\nsame cause.\nLifebuoy Go\u00bbp\u2014disinfectant\u2014\u00ab\u25a0 strongly\nnoomniended by the medical pnrfesiion u\na safeguard against infeutious disease*.     ,,\nHE LEARNED A GREAT TRUTH.\nIt Is said of John Wesley -that he once\nsaid to Mistress Wesley: \"Why do you\ntell that child the same thing over nnd\nover again?\" \"John Wesley, because once\ntelling is not enough.\" It Is for this same\nreason that you are told again and again\nthat Chamberlain's Cough Remedy cures\ncolds and grip; that it counteracts any\ntendency of these diseases to result In\npneumonia, and that It Is pleasant and\nsafe to take. For sale by all druggists\nand dealers.\nCASCADE-the beer without k peer.\nBOSTON'S   BRITISH   GUESTS.\nBoston, Mass., Oct. 2.\u2014For the first time\nIn many years the flag of England, guarded by British muskets was borne through\nthe streets of Boston today by the Honorable Artillery company of this city.\nLanding at -Charleston almost on the\nvery spot where their ancestors started on\ntheir memorable attack on Bunker Hill,\n128 years ago, tbe red coats of the 20th\nCentury marched from their steamer ,tho\nMayflower, over the bridge to Boston, and\nthen through the streets resplendent with\nTalking to Pussy About\nDIAMOND DYES.\n\"Mamma and I have just dyed\ntwo faded dresses and a jacket with\nDiamond Dyes, and they look as\ngood as new. Mamma says the\nDiamond Dyes are always^reliable\nand true.\"\nIMCORfOBSSTtO TORONTO  S>* J. A. BOYD,\n1868.       __ __m _ PmteiothT.\n\u00ab\nCOLLEGE STREET.\n^\nDr.  Edward Fisher, Musical  Director.\nThe best equipment and  facilities,  and\nstrongest faculty In Canada.\nA thorough, artistic and finished\nMUSICAL EDUCATION.\nLocal  center   examinations    held  every\nsummer ln Manitoba, N. W. T. and British Columbia.\nSchool of Literature and Expression.\nMrs. Inez Nicholson-Cutter,  Principal\nFull Faculty.   All Branches Taught\nCALENDARS AND SYLLABUS FREE\nWhen writing,  please   mention   Nelson\nDally News.\nChadbourn & McLaren\nREAL ESTATE\nIN8URANCE AND MINES\nSAMPLING AGENT8\nOre skipped to Nelson will be careful!,\nlooked after. NELSON, B.0\nA. G. GAMBLE\nTurner-Boeckh Block,\nWARD STREET. NBLSON,  B.C.\nMrs. Winter, holding certificates from\nthe Royal Academy of Music of London,\nEngland, for plnnoforte playing and singing, and pass nnd honor certificates from\nTrinity college fur theory and scholarship from the London conBcrvatorlo for\npianoforte and singing, will tnke In pupils\nfor singing and piano. Address, Nelion\npostefflcs.\nAmerican and British flags to-ihe hotels\nwhich will be their homes during their\nvisit. For Ave days they will be entertained, then, after a week's tour to include New York, Washington, Niagara\nFalls and Canada, they will return to\nEngland.\nProvidence, R. I., Oct. 2.\u2014Elaborate\npreparations have been made In military\ncircles here ln anticipation of the visit\ntomorrow of the Honorable Artillery company of London, and the name-sake organisation of Boston. Both companies will\nbe the guests f the First Light Infantry of\nthis city. A squad from the Marine artillery will flre a salute of 21 guns as a welcome to the British visitors and the line of\nmarch through the city will be lavishly\ndecorated in their honor. State and city\nofficials will review the paraders from the\ncity hall. The chief feature of (he day,\naside from the parade, will be a Rhode\nIsland shore dinner at Crescent park.\nSIR THOMAS SMILED.\nHe Won't Be Sir Michael's Successor\u2014No\nOne Under Consideration.\nChicago, Oct. 2.\u2014Sir Thomas Lipton\nsmiled when told that senator Kearns\nhad mentioned the baronet as being an\nideal successor to sir Michael Herbert.\nHe said:\n\"I must say that I am not a statesman\nand there ls no possibility In the world of\nmy representing Great Britain at Washington.\nSir Thomas expects to leave Chicago for\nNew York today.\nLondon, Oct. 2.\u2014The Associated Press\nIs In a position to state that the foreign\noffice has not yet considered the question\nof a successor to sir Michael Herbert, as\nBritish ambassador at Washington, and\nwill not consider it for some time to come.\nCASCADE Beer-full of life and vigor,\nDOWNES' HOTBL. CRANBROOK.\nNew, up-to-date sample room*\nF. a GRBBN.    F. B. CLBHENTi.\nGREEN\" & CLEMENTS\nCWI stmsfiseere  ui  Provincial fcaaf\nP. 0. Box 1\u00ab.\n| Oor. Kootmar ant Victor* Its. K\u00abltm\nJOHN McLATOHIE.\nMammir and pbotingzaa\nhAMD mnvmi,\nMauoN, b. u\nWHOLE8ALE HOU8E8.\nPRODUCB.\nITARKBY A CO., WHOLBBALB DBAfe.\nete tn Batter, Bggs, Cheese, Product and\nFruit Houston Block, Josephine Btreet,\nKelson, B. a\nABRATBD AND MINERAL WATBR8.\nNELSON SODA WATER FACTORT-lt\nM. Cummins, Lessos Every known variety of soft drinks. P. O. Box 88, telephono No. 81, Hoover street, Nelson. Bottlers of the famous St Leon Hot lertaga\nMineral Water.\nWEST KOOTENAY\nBfTCHERCO.\n* EC. TRAYES,\nMANAGES\nFRESH\nAND\nSALTED\nHAKDWAHB.\nMcLACHLAN BROS. \u2014 WHOLESALB\nHardware Merchant* Logging ui\nWll Supplies, stores, Tinware, Agateware, Iron, Pipe., ind Mining Supplies.\nPrompt attention to mailed order*.\nGBOC1KIBB.\nA.MACDONALD A CO., WHOLESALE\nGrocer, and Provision Merchants,\u2014Importer, of Term, Coffee., Sptoet, Dried\nFruits, Staple and Fancy Groceries, To-\nbaoeoa, Cigars, Butter, Eggs, Cheese and\nPacking Houm Product* Office and\nWarehouse, comer of Front and Ball\nstreets.   P. O. Box 641 Telepkone tl\nNelson Electric\nTramway (tompany\nLimited\nNELSON, B.C.\nN. B. T. CO, TIMETABLE.\nSTANLEY STREET-\n145     7.40     8.20 a.m.\n8.00     1.40   10.20\nEvery 40 minutes until 10.81 p.m.\nBOGUSTOWN-\n7.90     8.00     8.40     9.20 a.m.\n10.00  .10.40   U.20\nEvery 40 minute, until 10.40 p.m.\nREAL     ESTATE\u2014Lota.      Warehouse*.\nOffices.   Apply A. V, MASON, Man. Seo.\nThe Car Barn. Phone 162B.\nTICKETS\nto u. points\nEast and West\nCAMP   AND   MINERS'   FURNISHINGS\nMEATS\nWHOLESALE AND RETAIL'\nOrders by mail receive careful and prompt attention\nFISH AND POULTRY\n.   IN SEASON\nK.  W, C. BLOCK, WARD STREET,\nNELSON.  B.  C.\nTHE\nNELSON\nHOUSE\nTHE ONLY\nEUROPEAN\nHOTEL IN\nTHE CITY\nCentrally\nLocated\nACCOMMODATION\nUP-TO-DATE\nBRIGHT   AND   WELL   VENTILATED ROOMS.\nThe meals served in the Cats\nsecond to none.\nBar In connection with  all the\nchoicest wines, liquors and cigars.\nBus meets all trains and boats.\nA. MACDONALD & CO., WHOLESALE\nJobbers In Blankets,. Underwear.. Mitts,\nGloves, Boots, Rubbers, Overalls, Jumpers, Mackinaw, Oilskin Clothing;, Camp\naad Miners' Sundries. Offlce and Ware,\nhouse, cornel of Front and Hall streets.\nP. a Box, 641   Telepkone tt.\nWANTED\nNELSON    EMPLOYMENT^   AGENCY.-\ni Wanted\u2014Two men to cut wood for mine,\nMiners.     Sawyers.     Swampers.     Second\nCook.    Teamster.    Deeklmnds.\nWomna Cook wants situation.\nWANTED-Two pair No.  1  log makers,\nfirst class bUBhmen, none others wanted.\nWages $3.00 per day.   Board 11 per day.\nExtra for keeping saw!   J-. B. Winlaw.\nWANTED\u2014A first-class baker;  must be\ngood    on  pasterles.    Apply   Cranbrook\nbakery, Cranbrook, B. C.\nWANTED\u2014At Kootenay    lake    General\nHospital, a probationer nurse; for form\nof application apply to the Secretary.\nWANTED\u2014A competent concentrator\nforeman who can take care ot machinery\nSix months steady employment to capable\nman. Address Minnesota Silver Co., Sandon,  B.C.  P. J.  Hickey, Manager.\nWANTED\u2014At once,  two   reliable   boys?\nApply Electric Despatch Message Ofllce.\nWANTED\u2014Applications    for position    of\ncaretaker of Success Club, fully stating\n(terms, etc., will bo accepted until 5th\nOctober. Addresa Secretary, Success\nClub.\nMcLeod Hotel\nCORNER FIR BTREET AND\nSECOND AVBNUM.\nYMIR, B. c.\nCentrally   located,   moot   Mi   refurnished throughout.\nAll modern improvements;\nSample rooms ln connection,\nTka only first-class hotel ln TrnM.\n~   RATES FROM tl.M UP.\nFINLAY McLEOD, Proprietor.\nMadden House \u25a0*\"\u201e\u25a0*\nDo you need a comfortable horns? It so\ntry the Madden House. Well furnished\nrooms, lighted by electricity; first class\nboard. Ia the bar you will And all the\nbest domestlo and Imported liquors and\ncigars.\nTHOMAS MADDBN, Proprtstor.\nGRAND CENTRAL HOTEL\nOpposite Court House aid new Postofllce.\nBest 26o meal ln town. European and\nAmerican plan. Only white labor employed.   First class bar.\nTHOMAS *  ERICKSON. PROPS.\nTREMONT   HOUSE\nEUROPEAN AND AMERICAN PLAN\nHEALS So ROOMS FROM So TO O.N\nMALONE A TRBOILLUB, Preerleton\nBtker 8tra.t. Nsleaa.\nNelson Steam Laundry\nWork done by hand or machine. Dyeing and Cleaning done. Flannels, Blankets., Curtains, Etc., a specialty. Goods\ndelivered on short notice.\nWhite Labor Only. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Offlco Baker Street opposite\nQueen's Hotel.   Telephone 148B.\nPAUL  NIPOU,\nPROPRIETOR AND MANAGER,\nWANTED\u2014Position   as   working   housekeeper or cook in a mesB.   Thoroughly\nexperienced, out of town no objection.  Apply L. M., The Dally News.\nWANTED-Two    Engineers    with   B.   O.\ncertificates and ono planer man.    Stale\nwnges.   Apply to East Kootenay Lumber\nCo.,   Ltd.,   Cranbrook,  B.C.\nFOR SALE\nFOR SALE\u2014Two Locomotive boilers on\nskids, 60 h.p., complete with mountings\nand In good working order. Manufactured\nby the James Cooper Manufacturing Co.\nWill be sold at a bargain. The Hall Mining and Smelting Company, Limited, Nelson, B. C.\nOLD CURIOSITY SHOP-lf you want to\nbuy or sell anything go to the Old Curiosity Shop.   Always in stock a full lino\nof Crockery,  Furniture and Glassware,\nFOR   SALE\u2014Cheap one 18   h. p.   double\ncylinder   hoisting]   engine,   (LIdgerwood\nType)   with   ropo  sheave    wheel.      Apply\nRrriflln-Jackson Co.,  Rossland,  B.  C.\nPIANO TUNING\nPIANO TUNER-A plasties! piano tuner,\nMr. James R. Mult, employed by the\nMason & Risch Plant Co., will attend to\nall orders left at Moriav A Co\/a. He la a\nresident of Nelaon.\nMUSIC LE8SON8\nF. J. PAINTON, piano.-Royal Conservatory ot Lelpsla, Method after Bruno\nZwlntcher, alto McDonald Smith's system,\n\"Prom brain to keyboard,\" \"The most\nstriking siisoovery of tka present generatloa\nfor practical musicians.\"\u2014Musleal Newa\nComplete course 110. Corner Hall and\nSilica street\nKOOTENAY    RAILWAY    AND    NAVIGATION COMPANY, LIMITED.\nOPERATING\nINTERNATIONAL   NAVIGATION   AND\nTRADING COMPANY, LIMITED.\nKASLO 4 SLOCAN RAILWAY.\n9.00 a.m. Lv..KASLO...Ar. 3.15 p.m.\n1.00 p.m.Lv.SANDON.Ar. 11.25    a.m.\n(DAILY)\nINTERNATIONAL   NAVIGATION   AND\nTRADING COMPANY, LIMITED.\nKASLO-NELIsON   ROUTE.\nBOO a.m. Lv...NBLSON..Ar. 7.16 p.m.\n8.40 u.iss. Ar...KA3I.O..Lv. 1.35 p.m.\nTuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays the\nsteamer runs through from Nelson to\nLardo and return.\nTickets sold to all parts of the United\nStates ansl Canada via Great Northern and\nO. R. ft N. Company's lines.\nFor further particulate call on or ad*\ndress.\n.   ROBERT IRVING, Manager, Kaslo.\nG. K. TACKABURY, Agent, Nelson\nsTU\nSHORT LDW\n\u00ab\u2022\nBT. PAUL,   DULUTH,   MINNEAPOLIS,\nCHICAGO, AND ALL POINTS BAST\nSBATTLB, TACOMA, VICTORIA\nPORTLAND AND ALL\nPACIFIC COAST POINTS\nThrough Palace and Tourist Sleepers,\nDialog and Buffet Smoking Library Car*.\n2-FA8T TRAINS DAILY-1\nFor ratal, folders and full lnforoatfea\nregarding   trips, call on or  address any\nagent a F. * N. Railway.\nA.  B.  C.  DBNNISTON\nO. W. P. A., Besttle, Was*\nH. BRANDT,\nC. P. ft T. A.,   til W. Rrrerstd* AT*.,\nSpokane, Waah.\nCANADIAN\nPacific\nRAILWAY\nWORLD'S SCENIC ROUTE\nDirect line.   Lowest rates.\nEast\nWinnipeg\nToronto.\nOttawa.\nMontreal.\nNew York,'\nWest\nVancouver.\nVictoria.\nSeattle.\nPortland.\nSan Francisco.\nvia Soo Pacific Line, St. Paul\nChicago and all U. S. points.\nS. S. SERVICE FROM\nVAOffOUTER\nto\nAlaska,  Japan, China, Hawal, Australia.\nSettlers' Rates Westbound, sold daily\ntill November 30.\nThrough  bookings  to England  and\nthe Continent via all S.S. lines.\nFor time tables, rates and Information, apply to local agents, or write\nE.   J.   COYLE.   Vancouver.\n XJ3.  CARTER. Nelson.\nAtlantic S.S. Sailings\nC. P. R. ATLANTIC S.S. LINE.\n(From MontrenU\nMount Temple.OctH L.   CliamplaJn.Oct.22\nALLAN LINE\n(From Montreal.)\nTunisian   ....Oct.   10 Parisian  Oct 17\nDOMINION LINE.\n(From Montreal.)\nDominion ....Oct. 10 Kensington ..Oct 17\n(From Boston)\nMayflower ....Oot 8 Columbus   ..Oct   le\nAMERICAN  UNR\nNew York ....Oct 7 Philadelphia .Oot It\nRED STAR UND.\nFinland  Oct. 10 Vadtrland ...Oct 17\nCUNARD  LINE.\nIvernla   Oct. 0 Ultonla  Oct 17\nALLAN  STATE LINB\nNumlttian  Oct. 1 Mongolian ....Oct. 8\nWHITE   STAR  LINB\nCeltic  Oct. 2 Oceanic    Oct  7\nFRENCH  LINB.\nLa Touralne .Oct. 8 La Savole ....Oot 15\nLa Touralne ..Sept lOLa Savole ...Sept 17\nContinental   Sailings  of North Gorman\nLloyd, H. A. P. and Italian lines on application.   Lowest rates on all noes.\nJ. S. CARTER,     W. P. F. CUMMINS,\nD.P.A., Nelion.      Gen. Agt\u201e Winnipeg.\nSPOKANE  FALLS A NORTHERN  RY.\nLOW RATES TO  THE COAST\nand Return\nNEW     WESTMINSTER     EXHIBITION\nSoiling Dates, Sept. \u00bb, 2?, 28, 29.\nRoturn Limit October litis.\nFrom Nelson, 110.55; Grnnd Forks,. 218.25;\nYmlr, 2K.55; Sansloss, (10.55; Rossland, 217.20;\nKaslo, 216.55.\nTickets will be extended eight stays for\nthoso purchasing round trip tickets, Now\nWestminister to Victoria account exhibition\nOCTOBER sith to 10th.\nPassengers leaving Nelson 7.20 a.m. arrive\nNew Westminster 4 p.m. next day.\nBuffet and  Sleeping  Car  service  from\nNorthport.\nH. A. JACKSON. Gen. P. A. Spokane,\nQ. K. TACKAUIIBY. City Agent___m\nFOR SALE.\nTwenty-seven thousand three hundred\nfeet of best patent Improved crucible steel\nwire rope, one Inch diameter, 6na Manila\n\u00ab\u00b0re Lang lay. Thla rope was Imported\nunder specially favorable opportunities In\na car lot and aa It ls not now required. It\nwill be sold at a sacrifice. \"\"\"\"\"\"s \"\nHALL MINING ft SMELTING CO., LTD.\nNelson, I*  g.. Jurfc 20<h, 1M\nBILVBR KINO MIKE\nWill par the highest cash price for an\nkinds of second hand goods. Will buy or\nsell anything from an anchor to a needle.\nFurniture, Stoves, Carpets, Cooking Utensils bought In household quantities. Also\noast off clothing. Cal] and ses me or\nwrite. Address silver King Mike Box Ml\nBall Street, Nelson, s. a\n THE DAILY NEWS: SATUKDAY. OOTOBEK 3, 1903\n\u00abt\u00bbt\u00bb\u00bbM\u00bb I ,\n!' <\n; We have always on hand ;\na very complete stock ;\nof j\nLATEST\ni    COPYRIGHT    \u2022\nNOVELS\n!   NEW PUBLICATIONS COMING  <\nALONG DAILY ',\ni MORLEY6Co. ji\n!    BOOKSELLERS ft STATIONERS\nNELSON, B. O.\n****************\nAll _-,*   AND WOOD OF ALL\nHAITI KINDS.\nllHL I \u2022   ***** *>* \u00b0*m%\nOH AI \u2022 W. P. Tlerney\nLllJAL* Telephono HI.\n\"\"\"\u25a0S  BrtwrJtrest.\nP8I0B OF METALS.\nNew York. Oct. 2.\u2014Bar silver 59 3-4; electrolytic copper 13 1-1; amalgamated copper 42 1-4.\nLondon, Oct. 2.\u2014Lead \u00a311.\nNELSON'S NEWS OF THE DAY\nA. F. Rosenberger, of the Calumet &\nB. C. Gold Mines, who has been spending\nthe last few days ln the city -eaves for\nClUcago and the east tomorrow morning.\nThe saws at the Kootenay River Lumber company's nrfil were started to work\ncutting logs yesterday, to complete the\ntesting of the machinery. Steady work\nwiii bo started within a day or two.\nTeamsters-have had a busier summer and\nfall In Nelson than has been the case for\nmany years. At most of the offices and\nstands orders are piled up a couple of days\nahead, desplt that all available horses\nare in commission.\nThe polling place for the Hume Addition,\nBogustown, and Falrview, will be ln the\nstore of Charles JlsckowiU, Falrview.\nThe polls will be open for voting at 8 a.m.,\nand close at 5 p.m. sharp. J. A. Kelly\nwiii be deputy returning officer.\nIt was suggested yesterday that It would\nbe a good move to take off the canvas\nroof of the fair- building and preserve it\ntill next year, as if left up- where it fs it\nwill he useless by spring. There Is nothing\nin the Interior of the building that would\nBuffer much from exposure to the elements\nat present,\nA heavy squall ot wind swept across the\ncity yesterday from the west, accompanied\nby rain, and several small boats which\nwere out on the lake at the time bad a\nhard time to reach the snore. On the\nmain lake the storm was vory severe, and\ngave the steamers some trouble trying\nto moke headway against it.\nBegging cripples have again commenced\nto drift through the city, two having arrived In Nelson this week. Evidently they\nlearned early of the welcome they\nwere likely to receive, so confined their\nappeals to the outer fringes of the suburbs, and got out within a day.\nexecellent size and quality, despite the wet\nsummer.\nThe Woman's Hosptlal Aid society will\nmeet on Monday, October 6th at 3 o'clock\nln the afternoon in tho Presbyterian\nschool room.\nA fisherman who tried small minnows,\nand files and other artificlul bait without\nmuch success at Kootenay Crossing this\nweek, tried tho experiment of cutting up\none small fish he had caught, In strips\nabout four inches long, and -placing a\npiece on the heaviest hook ho had with\nhim. Then he made a cast into the swift\nwater Just below the bridge, und a minute\nlater hauled out a three pounder. In\ntwo hours he took half a dozen more large\ntrout an* boiives he has solved the problem of a suitable bait for the rapids.\nTHE VOTE TODAY.\nThe Court House Is the Only Polling Plaeo\nOpens at 9 a.m. Closes at 7.80 p.m.\nReturning officer Robert Renwick has\ncompleted all arrangements for taking the\nvote today for the Nelson city riding, at\ntho court house.\nThe jury room, judges' chamber, and\ncourt room have all been partitioned off\nfor the occasion by white cotton and lumber walls. The whole has been divided\ninto four sections (each of which are subdivided again into two or three polling\nbooths. Over the entrance to each of\ntho main divisions ls an inscription telling which letters in the alphabet are\ncovered there. The usual placards and\nnotices of Instructions to voters are posted\nup in conspicuous places in. each section.\n' There will be but one polling booth for\nthe whole city. \u25a0\nIn Nelson and all other incorporated\ncities throughout the province the polling\nwill commence at 9 o'clock ln the morning\nand the polls will close at 7.30 ln the evening. .\nln all other ridings tbe voting will be\nfrom 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.\nFrom all indications the vote cast here\nwill be a large one, and the same is expected to. be the case through the province.\nAs ln other elections, all saloons and\nbar rooms will be closed while the polls\nare opened, and special arrangements are\nbeing made this year to see that this luw\nls fully obeyed today.\nOf the 970 odd votes registered, It is expected that fully ,600 will be recorded today. It Is stated that some of the voters\nhave taken a trip out of town to avoid\nexercising their franchise, but on the\nother hand many returned to the city\nyesterday from the hills and from outside\ntowns so that a heavy vote may be\nlooked for.\nA TRIBUTE TO HERBERT.\nThe Lardeau steamer yesterday took up\na number of passengers from this city\nbound north, mostly for Trout Lake and\nFerguson, and Camborne. The freight\nshipments wero not quite as heavy aa\nthose taken up on Wednesday, although a\nlarge amount of general supplies wero\nsent out\nLetter From Ambassador Choate to Lord\nLansdowne.\nLondon, Oct. 2.\u2014The foreign office has\ngiven out the following letter from United\nStates ambassador Choate:\nThe American Embassy. London, Oct.\n2, 1803.\nDear lord Lansdowne,\u2014I have heard\nfrom the president and secretary of state,\nwho desire me to express to you their\ngreat personal grief at the loss of sir\nMichael Herbert. For many \/bars thoy\nhad both enjoyed close and intimate friendship and fully appreciated and admired\nhis great ability, his exalted character\nand his charming personal qualities winch\nmade him very dear to them, so that the\nwholly, unexpected tidings of his death,\ncame as a great shock to them.\nTheir official relations with him as ambassador more than realized the high expectations with which they had welcomed\nhim ln that \"capacity. Thoy know his\nbrief official career had been marked by\ngreat service to both countries ,and promoted amicable relations between them,\nand I am to assure you of their very great\ndisappointment, and that of the people of\nthe United States at its sad and sudden\ntermination.\nBelieve me, most truly yours,\nJOSEPH B.  CHOATE.\nTHB YMIR ELECTION.\nThe body of W. Lewis, the unfortunate\nman who committed suicide last week near\nFive Mile, was buried yesterday morning\nat the city cemetery by the provincial\nauthorities. None of the societies to\nwhich the deceased claimed to belong\nknew anything of him .and no relatives\nwere discovered. The funeral was from\nthe undertaking parlors of D. McArthur\n& Co,\nJ. McGulre, who was charged with having committed aggravated assault at a\nBaker street hotel on Wednesday night,\ncame up yesterday before police magistrate\nCrease for sentence. Only one of the men\nwho had been mauled by McGulre appeared as a witness. McGulre was given a\nsentence of one day's imprisonment and a\nfine of $50, or In default of payment of the\nlatter, three months Imprisonment. As\nhe was unable to pay the fine he was forwarded on to tho jail,\nA Japanese named Mori was brought up\nyesterday before tho stipendiary magistrate charged with assaulting Ernest Profit, a section foreman of an extra Kantr\nworking near Beasley. The case was remanded tili today. A. M. Johnson appeared to look after the interests of the\nrailway company. According to tho stories told by some of the participants it appears that the gang is composed of Japanese, who resented tho management of the\nforeman, and finally chased him into tho\nriver with shovels.\nThe severe frosts which have been experienced several nights this weeks do\nnot seem to have Injured the roses or\nother blossoms in the gardens of the city\nalthough the leaves on the alders and willows have turned yellow and are falling\nrapidly. Prophecies as to it being 'an\nearly and severe winter or the reverse are\nnow ln order, although the unaccountable\nweather of the past summer has scared\nmost of the amateur weather pr< .diets in\nto quietness. Gardeners both amauur and\nprofessional are now digging their potatoes\nand other root crops, and storing them.\nThe potatoes raised here this year are of\nAn Interesting Letter on Behalf of Harry\nWright.\u2014\"Help  Me  Out.\"\n* A. E. Campbell, of Trail .wires The Doily\nNews   the   appended   Information   which\nwill be of Interest to Ymir voters.\nThe following letter was received by\nJames Dawson, of Trail, and ls now In my\npossession.\n\"Nelson, Sept. 2i.: Friend Dawson,\u2014I\nknow you would do me a favor personally\nfor old times sake. Now, Jim, while you\nare a liberal, you can do me a favor by\nvoting for Harry Wright.- Ho is being attacked by Parr and tho Rossland Miner,\nwho say he is a mere puppet of mine.\nWright is a decent young fellow, who is\npopular because he has always been willing to oblige people who had business at\nthe mining recorder's office. So, Jim, lay\naside politics and voto to help me out.\nYours truly,   (Sgd.) JOHN HOUSTON.\"\nYMIR VOTERS TAKE NOTE.\nResidents of Hume Addition, Falrview\nand Bogustown Vote at Falrview.\nNotwithstanding the ample notice which\nhas been given, some of the residents of\nthe Hume Addition, Bogustown and Fair-\nview, all of whom vote In the Ymir district, appear to think that they will vote\ntoday at the court house, because they\nregistered there. All these votes must be\nrecorded at the store of Charles Jisckow-\nitz, ln Falrview, and must be ln before 6\no'clock in the evening.\nA NOTED CRIMINAL.\nArrest of a Mall Robber at Denver-\nCharged With Many CrimeB.\nNow York, Oct. 2.\u2014Word was received\nin this city tonight that F. H. Crosby,\nalias a. E. Bell, alias Hammond, alias\nCrawford,had boen arrested in Denver,\naccused of stealing a mail pouch containing $500,000 worth of negotiable bank\npaper at Philadelphia, on the night of\nSeptember 8th, and with several other\ncrimes, including swindling and forgery.\nA BOUNDARY ESTIMATE.\nVictoria, Oct. 2.-A special to the Times\nfrom Greenwood says: The coast consor-\nvatlvo papers are attempting to instill\nsome courage into the disheartened tories\nby boasting of the success of their candidates fn the interior. Their prophesies\nare amusing to disinterested men having\nan Intimate knowledge of tho situation\nTwelve Kootenay-Boundary districts, Including Slmllknmeen, will not return more\nthan two conservative candidates. The\ndefeated will include ministers Green'and\nGoodeve.\nIn Rossland, Macdonald, liberal, will bo\nreturned by a large majority.   The flght In\nA Choice\nShipment\nof Fresh\nCreamery\nButter\nJust to Hand\nPacked in Wax-Lined Packages.\nfili lb. Boxos 25 cts.\n28 lb. Boxes    26 cts.\n14 1b. Boxes    ; 27 cts.\nThe quality of this consignment ls Gilt\nEdge, and the advice to our patrons is to\nbuy ahead of their requirements.\nT. S. McPherson\nTelephone call No. 10.\nKatso is between Retallack, liberal, and\nShannon, socialist. Kellie will win In Revelstoke, Taylor In Nelson ond Parr in\nYmir.\nIn Cranbrook bets are offered that Covin,\nconservative, will lose his deposit.\nSmith will win In Fernle.\nIn Grand Forks, Clement Is putting up\na hard fight, with chances of success.\nBrown Ib an easy victor in Greenwood,\nhis only aggressive opponent being Mills,\nsocialist.\nMcLean will beat Shatford almost two\nto one in SImilkameen, while Davidson,\nlabor-liberal, will bo an easy winner over\nHunter, conservative, ln Slocan.\n'Tho probabilities are that the conservatives will not win a seat In the interior,\nand It ls certain they cannot win more\nthan two.\nHOTEL ARRIVALS.\nHume\u2014J. Mi Cameron, Rossland; F. O.\nSheppVrd, San Francisco; Miss Hughes,\nDenver; H. L. Sheppard. Spokane; G. Mc-\nVay, Vancouver; Hi Roy- Stovel ,Porto\nRico; W. H. Fortler, Spokane; A. A. Scott,\nCedar Creek; B. G. Walker, Toronto; W.\nE. Worden and wife, Calgary; R. Raas-\nkllly, Calumet, Mich.; H. C. Allen, port-\nland; R. H. Anderson, Rqssland.\nTHE STRATHCONA\n(FORMERLY HOTEL PHAIR.)\nStrathcona\u2014W. B. Fernle, Vancouver.;\nR. T. Lowory, Poplar; W. A. Boultbee,\nVancouver; J. C. Tucker, Now York; H.\nW. Smith, Spokane; A. Ci McArthur, Rossland; A. V. Rowan, Jno. H. Tapley, Fred-\nerickton; Mrs. J. J. White, Greenwood;\nJnmes H. Ellis, Westley,\nGrand Central-B. Morland, D. M. Jackson; E. Bedford, J. Kilmer, Lethbridge;\nN. Brossoau, A. D. Wightman, Edge-\nwood; F. Carabin, Poplar; M. Oliver, Juno\nmine; J. H. Graham, Phoenix; E. E.\nHendricks, Fernle; Geo. Shleis, Prince Albert; M. H. Elliott ,Moyle; S. Beyn, H.\nA. Carney, Miss S. Carney, Ymir; E. Mus-\nson, Slocan; A. Andorson, Northport; S.\nPalmer,  Vancouver.\nNolson\u2014Jack Thompson, Northport;\nHarry StephenBon, Butte; Charles Smyth,\nNorthport; J. E. GUlman, Waneta; C. R.\nBlack, Miss Mackenzie, Spokane; A H.\nTuttlo, W. T. Lemon, Ymlr.\nTremont\u2014R. McCormack, A. Jeffrey, j.\nChlpman, 49 creek; John Miles, Grand\nForks; D. Coutts, Calgary; J. C. Bar-\nmnrcle, Wakefield, Eng.; W. Moody, Red-\nhill, Eng.; A. Stewart, 49 creek; Fred Roy,\nYmir; H. L. Calhoun, Jno. Condon, Erie;\nChas. Barber, Spokane.\nBartlett-Will GUlman .Victoria; Alt. s.\nBrown .Spokane; Thos. Burt. England;\nWill Ward, Montana; F. Bennman, Sandon; J. Gowley, Slocan.\nWAS A NOBLE CHARACTER.\nThe Hague, Oct. 2.-Unitcd Statds minister Bowen, of counsel for Venezuela, and\nthe United States, before The Hague tribunal, on hearing of tho death of ambassador Herbert who was so intimately associated with him in thes negotiations leading to the present arbitration, said:\n'Sir Michael Herbert was a diplomat of\ngroat ability, and a gentleman of remarkably noble character. Ho worked\nto promote peace and friendship between\nGreat Britain and the United jjtatgj and\nBljustgetup |\nTAKE NO CHANCES   #\nIV\nPunctuality is one  of the  best Tp\nbsuiness characteristics. uf\nA man who Is. late in the morn- \u2022\u00bb;\nIng ls less valuable than one who \\gf\nwho  Is  always  on   time.    These *v_\npleasant autumn mornings .its so U\/\nvery easy  to  oversleep.    One  of .___,\nthese persistent alarm clocks will w\nget you up on time.   You may de- jii\npend on it. w\nPatenaude jjj\ntil\nI\nin\nBros.\nWatchmakers\nBULBS\nCanada Drug & Book Go.\nCalla Lillies\nHyacinths\nNarcissus\nJonquils\nCrccus, Etc\nSmall stock-going fast\nNEW GOODS\nARRIVING   DAILY\nIn our stock you will find all the latest\nnovelties, and silver pated ware, cut glass\nand jewelry at very low prices. Fine\nwatch repairing a specialty. Mall orders\npromptly attended to. Engraving done\nfree of charge.\nJ. J. Walker $&\nenjoyed  the  affection and admiration  of\nall who knew him.\"\nWEEKLY BANK CLEARINGS.\nMontreal, Oct. 2.\u2014The following nra\nsome of the weekly clearings as compiled\nby Bradstreets for the week ending October\n1st, with percentages of increase and de-\ncrcao as compared with the corresponding week lost year: Montreal {20,097,708,\ndecrease 15.3; Toronto $14,629,774, decrease\n12.9; Winnipeg $4,691,061, decrease 6.9; Hall-\nfax ?1,C30,282, decrease 8.1; Ottawa |1,429,-\n098, decrease 31.2; Vancouver, B. C. Jlt619,3W,\nIncrease 26.5; Quebec $1,229,530, decrease\n31.6; Hamilton $772,148, decrease 22.7; St.\nJohn N.B. $965,007. Increase 14.4; Victoria\n$512,815, decrease 4.6; London, Ont. $791,116,\nIncrease 6.8.\nWANTED TO COME HOME.\nMalone, N. Y., Oct. 2.\u2014A bull moose was\nskilled ln tho town of Wertville, a few\nmiles north of Malone today, having been\nmistaken for a deer. Tho animal hnd\ndoubtless left tho Adriondacks in nn endeavor to reach Its old haunts in tho Canadian woods.\nPRAISE FOB GIROUARD.\nKingston, Ont., Oct. 2.\u2014Sir Ian Hamilton,\nwho Is visiting here styles sir Percy\nGlrouard, the young French Canadian engineer, the \"sir William Van Hnrne of\nSouth Africa,\" and a credit to the Royal\nMilitary college here.\n' -\nTHOSE WHO FIGHT TODAY.\nList of Victors and Victims In Today's\nGreat Battle.\nThere are 34 constituencies In British,\ntn British Co}umbia, returnng 42 members.\nVancouver is entitled to five members, Victoria to four, and Cariboo to two, all the*\nothers return one member each.\nThe following Is the revised list to date\nof tho candidates offering ln each constituency.\nAlbernl-W. W. B. Mclnnes, liberal; R.\nJ. Hickey, conservative; Q. Taylor socialist.\nAtlin-John KIrkland, liberal; H. E.\n-Young, conservative.\nCariboo\u2014H. Jones, J. Murphy, liberals;\nS. A, Rogers,  W. Adams, conservateves,\nChilllwack-C. W. Munro, liberal; J. L.\nAtkinson, conservative.\nColumbia\u2014W. C. Wells, liberal, by acclamation.\nComox\u2014F. McB.. Young, libernl; R.\nGrant, conservative; D. Halliday, socialist. !\nCowichan\u2014J. N. Evans, liberal; E. M.\nSkinner, conservative.\nCranbrook\u2014Dr. j, H. King, liberal; T.\nCaven, conservative.\nDelta\u2014John Oliver, liberal; W. H. Lod-\nner, conservative.\nDewdney\u2014w. Forrester, liberal; R. McBride, conservative.\nEssulmalt\u2014John Jardine, liberal; C. E.\nPooley,  conservative.   **\nFernle\u2014E. C. Smith, liberal; W. R. Ross,\nconservative; J. R. McPherson, socialist.\nGrand Forks\u2014W. H. P. Clement, liberal;\nJ. A. Fraser, conservative; J. Riordan, socialist.\nGreenwood\u2014J. R. Brown, liberal; 3. E.\nSpankle, conservative; E. Mills, socialist.\nIslands\u2014T. W. Paterson, liberal; H. W.\nBullock, corisorvativo,\nKamloops\u2014F, J. Deane, liberal; F. J.\nFulton, conservative.\nKaslo-J. L. Retallack, liberal; R. F.\nGreen, conservative; S. Shannon, socialist.\nLlllooet\u2014A. Macdonald, conservative, by\nacclamation.\nNana lino\u2014Harry Sheppard, labor-liberal;\nE. Quennoll,  conservative;   J,  H.   Haw-\nthronthwalte, socialist.\nNolson\u2014a. a. Taylor, liberal; John Houb-\nton,  conservative. ->\nNewcastle\u2014D. W. Murray,* liberal, A.\nBryden, conservative; P. Williams, socialist.\nNew Westminster\u2014W. H. Keary, liberal;\nT. Gifford conservative,\nOkanagan\u2014W. J. Sterling, liberal; P.\nEllison, conservative.\nRevelstoke\u2014J. M. Kellie, liberal; T. Taylor, conservative; J. Bennett, socialist.\nRichmond\u2014J. C. Brown, liberal; F.\nCarter-Cotton, conservative\nRossland\u2014J. A. Macdonald, liberal; A.\nS. Goodeve, conservative.\nSaanich\u2014H. Tanner, liberal; D. M. Eberts, conservative.\nSImilkameen\u2014W. A. McLean, liberal;\nL .W. Shatford, conservative.\nSkeena\u2014P. Herman, liberal; C. W. D.\nClifford, conservative.\nSlocan\u2014W. Davidson, labor; W. Hunter,\nconservative.\nVancouver\u2014Joseph Martin, T. S. Baxter,\nJ. D. Turnbull, C. R. Monck, J. C.'Bry-\nden-Jack, liberals; Charles Wilson, R. G.\nTattow, J. F. Garden, W. J. Bowser, A.\nH. Macgowan, conservatives; A. G. Perry,\nF. Williams, J. McLaren, labor; J. Mortimer, A. Stebblngs, W. Griffiths, socialists.\nVictoria\u2014R. L. Drury, W. G. Cameron,\nRichard Hall, J. D. McNiven, liberal; O.\nHayward, A. E. MePhllllps, H. V. Hol-\nmcken, J. Hunter, conservative; J. Walters, socialist.\nYale\u2014S. Honderson, liberal; Thomas\nMacmanamon, conservative.\nYmir\u2014Alfred Parr, liberal; H. Wright,\nconservative.\nTO INSURE GOOD HEALTH\nEat Bread Made From\nB&KWholeWheat Flour\nMechanics, Farmers, Sportsmen I\nTo heal and soften the skin nnd remove\ngrease, oil and rust stains, paint and earth, etc.\nuse The \"Master Mechanic's\" Tar Soap.\nAlbert Toilet Soap Co., Wf rs.\nDOWNES'    HOTEU    CRANBROOK.\nNew. up-to-date sample rooms.\nss 3\nI Better Secure Your Plums for Can-1\n| ning Now at |\n1 BELL TRADING CO. I\ntZ PHONB 60 POR PROMPT DELIVERY. 3\n=SEE=\nMcLACHLAN\nBROS.\nBefore getting your Heating\nStoves. We have the most up-\nto-date and Improved Heating Stoves out. No trouble\nto show you the good points\nMcLachlan   Bros.\n$1\nFOR PIPES\nTHEY ARE WORTH SI GO\nTHEY WILL  SUIT YOU\nTHURMAN\nTOBACCONIST\nH.&M. BIRD\nREAL ESTATt\nAND INSURANCE Aft NTS\nWe beg to Inform our Clients .that we\nhave moved our offices and are now doing\nbusiness next to Emory & Walley's store\non north side of Baker street.\nLADIES'\nFELT\nSLIPPERS\nJUST\nARRIVED\nSpecial lines of   children's,   boys'   and\nmisses shoes for bad weather.\nHighest grade of Canadian and American\nRubbers.\nFRED L. IRWIN\nELECTORS OF THE YMIR DISTRICT\nMARK YOUR BAD OT THUS\nPARR\nAlfred Parr of Ymir, Miner\nWRIGHT\nHarry Wright of Nelson, Clerk\nX\nSilver King Hotel\nUadar OU Management\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\nI\nWATCHES\n,inmya}thlm'E,gln' Hamilton, and high-grade Sarins Watches are in\nw\u00bb .?\u00bb; ,ThOT6ver watches are Bold. That's one of the reasons why\nall nr*iL. ?-lul4 keep them' t00' ln larBe Quantities, ready to flu\ntho flSK ft.,& mo?Bnt'B notlce' B\u00abllless we \"e no\"'\"\"? agents for\nas you would^wL^nd'mad9 S014 aa8es' *\u2022 tandsome art creations\nSKtS^afi14 ln appU,ue'bM \"\"\"\"\u2022h,Bh\nDon't you think your watch business would be safe In our hands?\n^i\/\u00bb\u00ab\/u\/\u00bbi\/i4\/^ur^a-v4r^^2a\/^^\u00bbfc^^^a<\u00bbt-\u00bbi\/ii\/i<\/\u00bbt^ if you wish to buy or _.*\nI EWERT BROS.     \"       |\nI    Nolson, Rosstad, Tr.U Jeweler, and Engraver.   |\nMining Stocks\nCall on us\n. B. A. Lamed, stenographer, office Room\n10, K. W. C. Block; telephone AIM. All\nkinds of correspondence and mlmeographic\nwork exeouted.\nShorthand and Business School, Victoria\nstreet, opposite City Library. All branches of Business Education taught thoroughly. Custom Typewriting, best work\nln the City.   M. L. Rattray.\nMadam Grapho accurately tells your\ncharacter and disposition from handwriting. From the hand she can tell you what\nailments you are liablo to suffer from and\nin many instances can state what occupation you ought to follow. Mrs; Riley's\nBoarding Houso, above Opera House.\nLithia carbonate is strongly recommended for thoso having a gouty tendency and\nIs especially valuable In preventing the\ndeposits of salts of uric acid In the bladder, kidney or joints. It Is best given in\nsoda water. Every small bottle of Thorpe's\nLithia Water contains five grains of lithia\ncarbonate.\nMcDermid & flcHardy\nBrokers, Nelson, B. C.\nAuction Sale 1\nOP HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE.\nTUESDAY, OCTOBER Oth, nt 2 P, M.\nActing under Instructions from Mrs.\nRobert Hoy, wo will offer for sale- by auction at her residence on Latimer and\nFalls streots( nsljoinlng the electrical substation), all of lier household furniture,\nconsisting of a McLaren's Kootenay Range,\nSideboard, Extension Table, Centre Tables,\nBed Lounge, Uodroom Set, Dishes, Kitchen Utensils, Etc., Etc.\nGoods on view morning of sole.\nTERMS CASH.\nRATES 8! PER DAY AND UP\nR. Reisterer & Co.\nBrewers of Fin. Lagar,\nBwuj Porter.\nDROP IN AND SEE Ul.\nLatimer Street   -   -   -   Nelion B. C.\nWALDORF HOTEL\nYMIR, B. 0.\nQ. S. COLEMAN . . . Proprietor.\nHeadquarters for Mining and Commercial Men. Moat comfortable hotel\nin the District Sample room ln connection.   Everything Bret-clam\nBARTLETT  HOUSE\nFormerly Clark. Housa.\nThe belt 8 per day houie In Nelion.\nNone but whit, help employ*!,   Th. bar\nth. but\nQ. W BARTLETT   -  Prop.\nSiniflfl!!!!!!!!!!!!?!!!!!!!!!!!!?!!?!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!?^!?!!?!!!!^\nC. A. Waterman & Co.\nAUOTKPNBIRI.\nSTAPLES\nOur Staples are well worth your inspection:\nSpecial Value in New Stripe Flannelettes, at 10c, 12 l-2c,\n15c, 18c, 20c. per yard.\nWhite, Cream,  Pink, Blue, Flannelettes, at 12 l-2c, 15c, 18c,\n\u2014      20c per yard.\n~ Flaneletto Sheeting, two yards wide, at 46c per yard,\n~ Grey Union Flannels, at 20c per yard.\n~ Grey Wool Flannels, at 30c. and 40c. per yard.\n~ Navy Blue Flannel,   extra special, at 40c. and 45c per yard.\n~ Fancy Flannelettes (or Waists and Dressing Sacks.\nr pur Staples are all A One, and the assortment, with qualities\nZ     considered,, are cheap.\nI KERR 6 \u20ac0.\nI.U.UIU.U..U.i.U..lii...iiiiUl.U\nii\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3J\nzs\\\n I..HU. \u25a0\u25a0\n.'<   I.   M     '.'\u25a0\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1903_10_03","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0381419","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : F.J. Deane","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1903-10-03 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1903-10-03 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}