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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":" 8 Panes-Subscribe for H A \u25a0\nThe News. Per Month -JUC\nt\nVOL 7\nPROVIKOIAL UBMBt.\nNELBON,\nHELP TOM\nLast Decrees of Chinese\nEmperor and Dowager\nWHERE THE DANGER UES\nONLY RESULT OF SUCH ACTION\nWOULD BE TO GIVE SATISFACTION TO THE RIVALS OF BOTH\n, , COUNTRIES-REFORMER'S VIEW\n,'   OF THE SITUATION.\nLONDON, Nov. 11\u2014The Pekln correspondent ot the Times thinks that the\nvaledictory decrees of the emperor and\ndowager empress both powerfully\nstrengthen the movement towardB constitutional reform, All accounts agree\nthat the satisfactory maintenance of order Is due to Yuan-sbt-kal, who has displayed during the crisis statesmanship\nof high order. He Is known to have\nadvocated the selection finally made\nfor the emperor's successor. The tact\nthat prince Chun will be tor 12 years\nvirtually the emperor, the correspondent thinks, cannot weaken the position\nof Yuan-shl-kal, and those whose Influence Is progressive provided he keeps\nIndependent of female influence.\nPEKIN ,Nov. 17\u2014Nothing has developed In Pekln today to substantiate\nthe reports that the emperor ot China\nor the dowager empress was poisoned or\notherwise the victims ot foul play. 'All\nthe foreign legations here agree that\nthe emperor met a natural death, opinion varies, however, regarding the end\not the dowager empress, but all ths deductions in her case are negligible and\nIn no sense related to the sources\nwhence have come the circumstantial\ndetails of the passing away ot their majesties. In view ot the suspicions entertained abroad In this connection, the\nforeign olflce today explained freely\nand at length, the circumstances attending the death ot the empress and Its\nexposition haa been satisfactory to the\npowers friendly to China.\nPBNANO, Straits Settlement, Nov. IT\n\u2014Kang-yu-wel, the head of the Chinese\ntttatm movement throughout the world\nIs at -present at Penang. He Is confined\n(Jo bis bed, however, and today he refused to see an Interviewer who sought\nMs opinion on the present situation in\nChina, on the ground that he was prostrated with grief over the death ot the\nemperor.\nKang-yu-wel was close to the late emperor In 1808 and It wsa through his Inspiration that the many reform edicts of\nthat time were Issued. He barely escaped with hts life trom Pekln when the\nlate empress dowager became aware ot\nthe progressive Influence he was exerting over the emperor. His secretary\nsaid today that Kan-f-yu-wel suspected\nfoul paly at the palace. He considers\nprince Chun, the regent a ressonabe\nman not opposed to reform*) but so long\nas Yuan-shl-kal Is alive the situation\nIn China will be the same as during the\nlast reign and that there will be' no\nchange h> policy.\nOLD TIME PROSPERITY\nsixth floor where It started, but 15000\nworth of tents, blankets, coats and other bedding stored there were ruined.\nThe building itself was damaged at the\nfifth floor which Is used for. offices,\nbeing flooded by water. Fire started In\nthe bedding on the\\ sixth floor from\nSome unknown cause.\ne GREATEST IN HISTORY e\n\u2022   \u2022\n\u2022 WINNIPEG, Nov. 17\u2014R. B. A. a\n\u2022 Leech, inspector of Dominion land f\n\u2022 agencies  stated   today that   the \u2022\n\u2022 rush for homesteals during the tall e\ne of the present year was the great-'*\neest ever witnessed In any country \u2022\n\u2022 ln the world.   There were nearly *\n\u2022 10,000 entries In September and \u2022\n\u2022 halt that number ln October,   in \u2022\n\u2022 the   corresponding -months   last \u2022\n\u2022 year, there were less than   5,000 *\n\u2022 entries. \u2022\nCANADAREADY\nPrepared to Cooperate in\nAtlantic Cable\nLEMIEUX HAS AUTHORITY\nEMPOWERED TO ENTER INTO\nAGREEMENT SIMILAR TO THAT\nREGARDING PACIFIC LINE TO\nAU8TRALIA \u2014 THE PROPOSED\nRATES.\nNew Fernle Stores a Credit to Their\nEnterprising Proprietors.\n(Special to Tlie bally News.*,\nFERNIE, Nov. 17\u2014Several of the\nlocal merchants opened for business in\ntheir new permanent premises on Victoria avenue on Saturday night and\nthe main atreet assumed Its old time\n-Sir of prosperity. The stores are a\ncredit to the enterprise ot the proprietors and are a great Improvement on the\nold structures. For the present they\nrare mostly lighted with gasoline plants\nand the brilliant light at night is a\nboon to those who business calls them\n-out after dark. There Ib no sign yet\n'ot any system of street lighting and.lt\nIs Improbable that any will be Installed\nthte winter, though one is badly needed especially under the condition the\n-streets' are at the.present owing to the\nquantity of material that Is scattered\naround and the number ot excavations\ntbat are. a menace to the safety of\npedestrians.\nMunicipal politics are now engaging\nthe attention of the ratepayers. Serious problems .will confronts the next\n.city council and an effort will be made\nto elect a council which will realise\nthe responsibilities that will attach to\nthe office, and who will deal firmly,\nand ln a business like way with1 the\nImportant measures which are, bound\nto come before them tor deliberation\nand solution. |\nHe Killed Five.\nCHICAGO, Nov. 17\u2014Herman BllUk,,\n'convicted ot tiie murder of five mem-\ntoers ot the Varal family, was sentenced\nby Judge Barnes today to hang on December 11. The fight ot Blllik, and his\n(friends fjor liberty, which carried the\ncase before the United States supreme\ncourt, has attracted attention.\ni Army Supplies Burn.\nNBW YORK, Nov. 17-The big ware-\nhouse used by tie United 8tatsS army\nas a medical supply store room for the\n'department ot the east, on Washington\n.street was serlotsly daaaiM by\"tire\ntoday. ' Tht) fire was confined to' the\nDEDICATES    BARRACKS\nCOMMISSIONER C00MB8 PAYS VISIT TO FERNIE\nOPENS BUILDING ERECTED TO REPLACE ONE DESTROYED\n^(Special to The bally News.)\nFERNIE, Nov. 17\u2014Yesterday was a\nred letter one ln the history ot the\nlocal corps of the Salvation army and\nthe meeting held last night In the splendid hew citadel which has just been\ncompleted was inspiring ln Its enthusiasm, and the large and representative\naudience which braved the elements to\n'bo present showed ln an unmistakable\nmanner the respect In which the army\nis held here. Commissioner Coombs is\nwell known in Fernle and when he arrived, here yesterday to dedicate new\nbarracks he met with a rousing reception. He was accompanied by Mrs.\nCoombs, lieutenant colonel Pugmire,\nstaff captain Morris and major Frank\nMorris, and the local .corps turned out\nln full force to greet them. When his\nworship mayor W. W. Tuttle took the\n\u25a0chair'the commodious building waB taxed to Its capacity and many found\nstanding room only, and they were fully\nrepaid by the excellent and interesting\nprogram that had been prepared.\nThe feature of the evening was commissioner Coombs' lecture entitled \"A\nModem Crusade or the Work of the\nSalvation Army tn Many Lands.\" It\nwas a lecture abounding in striking incidents and fliled with human pathos,\nand was a revelation to many of the\nstupendous work being carried on by\nthia great religious organisation ln\n' every portion ot the globe, and of the\nsacrifices that had and are being made\nby devoted Christians to alleviate suffering and distress and to bring spiritual comfort to the masses. The commissioner's earnest manner and able\naddress created a profound Impression\non hie hearers, who found the lecture\nall too short.\nThe service was Interspersed with\nbeautifully rendered hymns and the\nsinging ot colonel Pugmire, staff captain Morris, and major Morris was\nparticularly effective. Several converts were enlisted during the evening\nand were received with the usual hearty welcome.\n' At the close of the meeting the commissioner and his officers met the members ot the local corps individually and\nspoke words of encouragement and\npraise for the great work tbey were\naccomplishing here. The visitors left\nby the Flyer shortly after midnight tor\nthe east.\nThe new citadel is a handsome building built of concrete and white brick,\nwell ventilated and lighted and capable\not seating two hundred, and the enterprise and self sacrifice ot the corp in\nerecting such an ornamental and commodious structure cannot be too highly\npraised.\nMONToteAiL, Nov. 17\u2014A special London correspondent says:\n\"I am told that Hon. Rodolphe Lemieux has power to''close definite arrangements with the British cabinet to\nlay a government cable' between Great\nBritain and Canada, at the joint expense\nof the British, Canadian, Australian and\nNew Zealand governments. 'Allured'\ncables are thought to be more immediately   practicable than the 'all   red'\n\u2022 NEW ZEALAND ELECTIONS     <\n\u2022   \u2022\n\u2022 (Canadian Associated Press)      e\n\u2022 WELLINGTON, New Zealand, e\ne Nov. 17\u2014The government has been e\ne returned to office. The returns e\ne are incomplete but probably its \u2022\nemajorlty will be reduced. Hon. e\na- Mr. McNab, minister of lands and e\ne agriculture was defeated at the \u2022\ne polls. The result ,of the local op- e\ne tion vote   indicates   that prohlbt- e\n\u2022 tion was carried in several addi-e\ne tional districts. The estimated re- e\ne suits of tbe elections   are as fol- e\n\u2022 lows: Government, 37; opposition, a\na 16; independents. 3; elections in- e\ne complete 18, ln which there will \u2022\nt be second ballots. '\u2022\na - e\n\"The \"basis ot negotiations say that\ncablegrams are to cost five pence a\nword instead of a shilling, press mes-1\nsages being 2 1-2 pence instead of 5\npence. The new Atlantic cable would\nbe managed jointly like jthe Pacific\ncable. Many of its advocates hope.it\nwill mark another step towards ah empire state cable system.\"\n\u2022 8M0KER TO MR. GOODEVE     \u2022\n\u2022 \u25a0 i  .   \u2022\n\u2022 The Nelson Young Conservative \u2022\n.\u2022 club will tender A. S. Goodeve, \u2022\n\u2022 M. P., a smoker In their   rooms, \u2022\n\u2022 K, W. C. Stock tomorrow evening, \u2022\n\u2022 commencing   at   8 o'clock.    Mr. \u2022\n\u2022 Goodeve will address the meeting \u2022\na and a good program of songs wilt \u2022\n\u2022be provided.   All   friends   of   Mr. \u2022\n\u2022 Goodeve and ot the conservative \u2022\n\u2022 . party are Invited to be present,     \u2022\nPAYS RESPECTS TO RICH\nMISSION    . WORKER     DENOUNCE8\nMETHOD OF HELPING POOR\nSAY8\nMODERN       SETTLEMENTS\nBREED SOCIALISM\nCHICAGO, Nov. 17.\u2014The modern social\nsettlement of American cities wus denounced today by the Rev. JameB B. Lurry\n\u25a0df New York, as breeding places of socialism and anarchism. In an address at tne\nCatholic missionary congress, father Curry,\nwho labors among the poor of the famous\nCherry] Hill district, flayed the rich supporters of the social settlement of the\ncrowded city district, declaring many of\nthem go among the- poor as Pharisees\n\u2022and seek to excuse their own shortcomings by their interest in the sufferings\nof their brother. .   ,..        .   *\nThe speaker continuing, asked if any had\nheard of social settlement among the rich\nto teach them the BacrednesB of marriage\nand said a \"champagne debauch Ib as bad\nas one on mixed ale.\" *\nThe speaker in closing, however, admitted\nthat the social settlement purged of what\nhe termed Its abuses and under proper\ncatholic administration would be a good\ndepartment of endeavor for the Catholic\nchurch.\nKAISER YIELDS\nWill Conform to Constitutional Methods\ntit? GIVES HIS PROMISE\nHE DENIES THE CHARGE\nHEAD OF CENTURY COMPANY AND\nKAISER INTERVIEW\nNO MONEY WA8 PAID\nITS SUPPRESSION\nFOR\nC.P.R. MEN ARE KILLED\nENGINEER, FIREMAN AND BRAKE-\nMAN MEET DEATH\nTRAIN RUNS INTO WASHOUT WITH\nDIRE RESULTS\nVANCOUVER, B. O., Nov. 17\u2014Engineer Brown of Kamloops, and Fireman\nRlghter of Vancouver, were killed ln a\nwreck of a freight train which ran Into\na washout near Lytton early this morning. Brakernan Clarence Anderson of\nVancouver, was fatally scalded, dying\n.this afternoon. The engine and three\ncars went over the embankment forty\nfeet to the river.\nRains this week have been, heavy\nand considerable of the embankment\nunderneath the track was washed ont.\nThe first cars of, the train went over\nbut the remainder were held hy the\nautomatic brakes.\nFireman Rlghter was a son of Peter\nIllghter, the man who brought the first\ntrain Into Vancouver, and was to have\nbeen married ln Kamloops at Chrlst-\n\"Letter Telegrams.\"\nPARIS, Nov; 17\u2014The ministry ot\nposts and telegraphs has supplemented\nthe special letter delivery system in\nFrance with .what are termed \"letter,\ntelegrams.\" This new system provides\nttat HUMa may be telegraphed. -between any two points In Franee at\nnight at a cost of one-fifth bf a cent a\nword and that they will he delivered\nthe neat morning.\nNBW YORK, Nov. 17\u2014Frank H.\nScott, president of the Century Publishing company, declared positively today\nthat no money had been paid or was\nto be paid by the German government\nfor the suppression ot Dr. William Bayard Hale's Interview with the kaiser\nwhich had been announced for publication In the Century magazine.\nA cable from Berlin last night stated\nthat a weekly Journal professed to\nhave reliable Information tbat after ne*\ngotlatlons between the German foreign\noffice and the writer of the interview\nthe government had paid Dr. Hale\n160,000.\n\"I have seen all the various articles\npublished about tbis interview,\" saM\nMr. Scott, \"including the one printed\nthis morning. They are all absolutely\nfalse. There is not one word of truth\nln the statement that Dr. Hale or any\none elBe reeclved or Is to receive anyt\n-money for the suppression of the\narticle.\"\nIn a statement today Dr. William\nBayard Hale, writer'of the withdrawn\nCentury magazine article said:\n\"The Welt Am Montage story is\n.false. I have not received one penny\nfrom the German government or from\nanybody connected with the German\ngovernment and I do not expect to\n-receive.a penny. I have had no negotiations of any sort or kind with the\nGerman government or with anybody\nconnected with It The withdrawal of\nthe article was dictated solely by the\n'tact that It would not have been fair to\npublish at this time anything upon\n\u25a0Whloh might now he pleased interpretations which would not have attached\nto It It it Sad been published when\n'vtrltten.* V '\"''.' '\nCHEER AMERICAN FLAG\nPEOPLE CF ST. PIERRE-MIQUELON\nIN UPROAR\nOBJECT TO FRENCH LAW CLOSING\nCLERICAL SCHOOLS\nST. PIERRE, Nov. 17\u20141'he demonstration against the authorities here\nI .which was begun yesterday was con-\n1 tlnued today. The limited police force\nIs unable to maintain order, but thus\ntar no serious damage has been done.\nThe manifestation of the part of the\npopulace Is due largely to the school\nquestion. The people' of St. Pierre demand schools in which religious' instructions are given. Today Ahe administration of the colony'; was waited upon\nby a delegation of taxpayers, all heads\nof families, who strongly set forth the\nviews of the townspeople. The administrator promised to refer the demands\nto the authorities in' Paris by cable\nImmediately and requested the populace\nto be orderly'pending the receipt of a\nreply.  *\nAt one time yesterday the situation\nwas critical. Two schoolmasters were\ntaken into court .charged with violating\nthe laws in'conducting free schools.\nThey were convicted and ordered to\npay a fine of $200 each and the authorities ordered the schools closed. The\naction of the authorities Inflamed the\npopulation, which assembled on the\nstreets and violently denounced the\nFrench government, 'Some one obtained an American flag during the ^height\not the excitement hud with It at their\nhead the townspeople marched to the\ngovernment house where a noisy demonstration was made. The police\nwere unable to maintain order and for\n. several hours 'the manifestations continued on the streets.\n- -\u2022-- t\n(Canadian Associated Press).\nPARIS, Nov. 17\u2014The Temps, referring to the, demonstration in favor\nof the free schools established by clerical party ln St. Plerre-Mlqueion wherein the demonstrators hoisted the United States flag over the' governor's residence, says: \"1'he news Is significant\nbut not unexpected. The abandonment\nof our fishing rights on the French\nshores of Newfoundland struck them a\nblow they will feel for a long time to\nccm6.\">\nST. JOHN'S, Nfld., Nov. 17 \u2014 Despatches from St. Pierre state that tht\nsituation there Is serious. There are\nnoly 30 police on the entire island, the\npopulation of which is about 5000.\nIt is understood here that should vio*\nlence be attempted the British warship\nBrilliant now in St. John's harbor, will\nproceed to the French town. France\nhas no warship nearer St. Pierre than\nBrest or the TWest Indies: The St.\nPierre despatches state that the crowd\nwhich marched to the government house\nyesterday numbered 1000 and that It\nalso visited the United States consul\nand cheered the United States flag. Pla-\ncards bearing the words \"Liberty or\ndeath\" have been posted oh the doors\nof the closed schools by the church\nparty. The belief Is held here that if\nthe French government refuses to reconsider its action the annexation Party\nof St Pierre will lendeavor to Induce\nof St. Pierre will endeavor to induce\nthe United States to purchase the colony. |\nAFTER LONG CONFERENCE WITH\nPRINCE VON BUELOW HE UNDERTAKES   TO LEAVE    D1REC\n* TION OF AFFAIRS WITH THE\nCABINET.\nconstituencies\n(lOl\n\u2022 News Classified Ads.\n\u2022s. Try One. per word\nIc\nNO. 177\nrelchstag, without distinction of party,\nhave since thtlr discussion In the chamber, received an immense quantity of\ncorrespondence from their leading supporters ln tht provinces in approval of\nthe parliaments position and resolutions\nfrom numerous organizations ln their\ncouched ln similar terms,\nsaid ap\nTbe action of the St; Pierre populace\nIn displaying the American flag is\nthought to have been due to a desire to\nemphasize their dissatisfaction with the\naction ot the French government rather\nthan from any organized attempt to\nbring about the annexation of the colony to the United States.\nThe laws which are objectionable to\nthe colonists are those which the French\ngovernment adopted when relations\nwith the Roman Catholic church authorities were severed. The enforcement of\n(these -laws caused demonstrations in\nnumerous French towns and villages.\nIn St. Pierre the population largely sym\npathlze with the clerical party In the old\ncountry.\nWAS KAISER IN DANGER?\nStories of Attempts to Dynamite the\nRoyal Train.\nFRANKFORT-ON-MAIN, Nov. 17,-Ru-\nmors were current here today that an attempt had been made to blow up the train\non whloh emperor William journeyed from\nDonaueshlagen to Berlin. The royal roll-\nway administrative officers here makes\n{mbllc a statement in connection with the\nncldent. According to this statement on\nboth Sunday and Monday, dynamite cartridges were found on the tracks near the\nstation at Muhleim, between Frankfort\nand Manua. The cartridges were not found\non the tracks over whloh the Imperial\ntrain was to pass, hut on the tracks paral-\n- lellnc these.. - \u25a0_\nA. then Occurred In Hessian territory\nthe 'state attorney at Qannstedt had\ncaused an investigation.\nBERLIN, Nov. 17\u2014Forced by the angry tide of popular feeling that swept\nthe empire from end to end, emperor\nWilliam today yielded to the nation\nand promised henceforth to conform\nhimself to constitutional methods of\nconducting the policies of Germany.\nThe climax to the public utterances of\nthe emperor, was reached in an interview which he gave tto an Englishman\nand which was published ln the London\nDaily Telegraph on October 28, As. the\noutcome of this, the whole country was\naroused, the Reichstag endorsing the\nattitude of its most prominent members\nv\/hen they denounced that the sovereign and chancellor von Buelow, while\nhe attempted to smooth away the affair, undertook to communicate to his\nmajesty a straight and unvarnished\nstatement of how the German people\nViewed his Intervention in affairs of\nstate.\nThe interview between the emperor\nand the imperial chancellor took place\nat the new palace at Potsdam this\nmorning and at its conclusion the emperor made a formal promise to his\npeople that he would not tn the future\nact except through the chancellor and\nMb associate ministers. This promise\n'was made public in the Reichsanzeiger,\nthe official gazette of the empire. It\nwas in the form of a .note printed on\nthe front page, where decreeB, the text\not treaties and promulgation of new\nlaws usually appear. It was as follows:\n\"During today's audience graftted to\nthe imperial chancellor, hts majesty the\nemperor and king listened for several\nhours to a report by prince von Buelow,\nthe Imperial chancellor, who described\nthe feeling and its causes, among the\nGerman people in connection with the\n\u25a0article published 'In the Dally Telegraph. He also explained the position\nhe had taken during the course ot the\ndebates and interpellations- on this\nsubject in the Reichstag. His majesty\nthe emperor received the statements\nand explanations with great earnestness and then expressed his will as follows:\n\"Heedless of the agitation and of public criticisms which are regarded by\nhim as incorrect, his majesty perceives\nthat his principal imperial task Is to insure the stability of the policies of the\nempire under the guardianship of constitutional responsibilities. In conformity therewith- his majeBty approves\nthe' chancellor's utterances in the\nReichstag and assured prince von\nBuelow of his continued confidence.\"\nPrince von Buelow had determined\nupon handing ln his resignation it thei\nemperor had not met the country's demands but, as such a situation did not\narise, the audience ended with the emperor saying to the Imperial chancellor\nthat he reposed full confidence In his\nwisdom. It is certain now ln the minds\nof the German people that a great step\nhad been taken toward freer government.\nInterpreted by the events leading up\nto It, the least this declaration ot the\nemperor can mean is that his majesty\npromises to limit hla freedom ot speech\nand obsreve carefully the constitutional\nforms ln taking no initiative without\nthe advice and consent of the prime\nminister. This narrow Interpretation\nIs* strictly a bureaucratic view. A wider\nview aB voiced by the liberal press Is\nthat Germany enters upon a new era of\ngovernment responsible to the people,\nwith the crown and the nation acting\ntogether.\nMutual goodwill prevailed at the audience and the emperor, who displayed a\nmarked degree of condescension, had\nbeen greatly moved by the occurrences\nof recent dayB. The chancellor declared\nthat his general position was contained\nln the manifesto of tbe conservative\nparty which represents the most loyal\nsection of the German people, issued\nNov. 6. This declaration expressed serious concern, \"that not infrequently the\nutterances of his majesty 'brings our\nforeign politics into a difficult situation,\" and aded, \"ln order that the em-\npero'rs reputation may he preserved\nfrom criticism and discussion and the\nGerman empire and people from complications and harm, we express the reverential wish that greater reserve be displayed in future ln making such utterances.\" 11\nPrince von Buelow bore, he said, the\nmandate ot the rulers of Bavaria, Wurt-\nemherg, Saxony and Baden, the tour\nmost prominent states in the empire\noutside of Prussia, to communicate to\nhla majesty their collective hope that\nhe would be more retlcient In the future.\nThe chancellor submitted an authorisation from the Prusalaii cabinet to express their agreement with him as mln-\nleter ana president of the council. He\nrepresented also the members oi the\nThe feeling ot the country\npeared well night unanimous.\nThe emperor frequently Interrupted\nprince von Buelow with questions, supplementing the information he had received from Other sources hy the chancellor's replies. His majesty was surprised, even astonished, by the assemblage ot facts Indicating the aspirations\nand demands;of the people. The chancellor thought that the people should\ninvariably influence the acts of the sovereign,\nThe empenv accepted prince von Buelow's views fully and agreed to the publication of ail. assurance to this effect.\nThe chancellor did not ask that the emperor should issue a decree or any formally signed statement, but desired him\nto approve the text of the Reichsanzeiger note, which the emperor did.\nWithin half an hour of the chancellor's return lo Berlin bulletins, Issued\ngratis by the evening papers reporting\na favorable issue of the meeting between\nthe emperor and prince, were eagerly\nsnatched by an anxious public, who in\nthe first moment \u00abof joyful surprise\nscarcely conceived the importance of the\nannnouncement to themselves and the\nempire.\nThe whole nation had awaited with\nbreathless suspense the word from the\npalace which would decide whether\nprince von Buelow 'would resign office and the reign of personal policy\ncontinue or whether the chancellor\nwould remain and the desire ot the people bi fulfilled, that the.nation as well\nas the emperor would have the word ln\ndeciding the policies of the country.\nWith the exception of the Tageblatt\nwhich closely confines its remarks, a\nfew of the evening papers In Berlin\ncomment upon the audience and Its result. The National Zletung, however,\nproclaims thrj Incident as a new era of\nthe representative Institutions.\nIt says: \"May this fresh epoch of German Imperial history whose national\ndays are Nov. 10 and Nov, 17, continue\nto progress quietly and peacefully with-\nuot violent upheavals.\nThe chancellor, von Buelow, has fulfilled one pnrt of the task which the nation demanded of him. Full and lasting\nsatisfaction Will reign when men and\ngovernment Pursue the same lines of\npolicy to a realization of the constitutional Idea. We shall be able to see\nfrom the steps the ; chancellor ijtalces\nwhether the occurrences whloh have\ncreated so much damage will, ln future,\nhave as full and fruitful effect, and\nin what manner.\nSAYSMI5TAKE\nYorkshire Post on Abrogating Treaty\nNOTHING TO BE GAINED\nLONDON TIMES CORRESPONDENT\nSAYS EVERYTHING WILL BE\nALL RIGHT IF ADMINISTRATOR AVOIDS FEMALE INFLUENCES.\n\"BA1\nRKIS IS V\nWILLIN.\"\n(Canadian Associated Press)\nLONDON, Nov. 17\u2014Editorially the\nYorkshire Post of Leeds, reterrrlng to\nthe commercial treaty of France and\nCanada, says: \"The suggestion has been\nmade that Canada abrogate the existing treaty of 1893 which was to have\nbeen superseded by one recently rejected by France, and that this will leave\nthe dominion free to Impose retaliatory\ntariffs on France. It Is much to toe hoped that no such course will be entered\nupon as it would be unfortunate from\nevery point of view and would give nothing but satisfaction to the rivals of\nFrance ln Canada and of Canada in\nFrance.\"\nThe British Columbia Canning company's profits for the year just closed.\nwere \u00a36371, which allowed for the annual dividend of 2 1-2 per cent, with a\nbonus of 2 1-2 Per cent. There was\n\u00a32902 carried forward.\nC. R. Devlin was seen In the lobby of\nthe house of commons last night\nSAYS IT'S MOST UNFAIR\nBritish Paper on Canadian Steel Rail\nCompetition.\n(Canadian Attoctatert Press.)\nLONDON, Nov. 17\u2014The Financial\nTimes says the recent orders obtained\nby the Dominion Steel company in India and Australia are a shock for the\nBritish manufacturers whose grievance\nis that the company \"enjoys such government tariff assistance that its competition Is most unfair.\" It has more\nfacilities for dumping than any other\nconcern in the Anglo-Saxon world. It\nwill he Interesting to have a fair comparison of the prices charged the L. T.\nIt. and. those for colonial orders just\nobtained.\n\u2022 FORT WORTH, Tex., Nov. 17\u2014 \u2022\n\u2022 A special! dispatch from San An- \u2022\n\u2022 tonlo says: \u2022\n\u2022 \"If the j party so demands, and \u2022\n\u2022 conditions arise to warrant It, I \u2022\n\u2022 will be a candidate for the presl- \u2022\n\u2022 dericy   four   years   hence,\"   said t\n\u2022 William a. Bryan, as he started \u2022\n\u2022 on a ducl| hunt. \u2022\nVICTORIA TUG  IS LOST\nGoes on Rock on the Way to Vancouver.\nNov. 17\u2014The tug Owen\nowned by Greer & Newton,\nwas sunk this afternoon at Cowichan\ngap while lowing a scow load of coal\nffbm Ladysmlth to Vancouver. The\nin command of captain Mc-\nwith a crew of five men,\nthe tug's boat and landed\nat Cowichan gap from where they\nsent news'of the disaster. Particulars\nof the accident are meagre. The Owen\nrock at Cowichan gap, and\nquickly  and    sank.     The\nVICTORIA\nof this city,\nOwen was\nKillop who,\nescaped In\nstruck\nfilled very   .\nscow and tie load of coal are saved\nand moored at the gap, J, H. Greer,\nleft for the jcene tonight on the steamer\nMaude, of he B. C. Salvage company,\nwhich was dispatched to endeavor- tb\nrecover the sunken tug. The Owen\nwas formerly She tug Marlon of Seattle, She w is bought by Mr. Greer last\n\u25a0night and brought to Victoria,\nWANTED  TO  KILL SOMEONE\nEvidence Regarding Man Who Attempted  Heney's Life.\nSAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 17\u2014In an effort to establish more clearly the motive of Morris Haas, ifi'ho shot prosecutor Heney, the police have renewed\ntheir'examination of Mrs. Cohen, the\nneighbor whom to Haas confided his\nintention of killing the o*fticer who had\nexposed h s criminal record. Mrs.\nCohen stated that Haas had several\ntimes threatened suicide and' announced that Miej woiild take another life\nwhen he killed himself. On one occasion he declared, she said, that ho was\ngoing tot kill his wife and their four\nchildren.   [\nEarly today Mr. Heney was resting\neasily. During the night he rested easily and his pulse, respiration and .temperature'were about normal.\nAbsorbs Another Bank,\nTORONTO, Nov. 17\u2014It is announced\nthat the Standard bank of Canada Ib\nabout to absorb the Western bank of\nCanada with headquarters at Oshawa.\nThe authorized capital of the Western\nbank Ib $1000,000, and of this $765,000\nhas been subscribed. It has a rest account of lfJOO.000.\nLabor Leaders at Dinner.\nWASHINGTON, D. C, Nov. 17\u2014Members of the cabinet and justices of the\nsupreme court sat down tonight with\nlabor leaders from various sections of\nthe United States at a dinner given by\npresident Roosevelt at the White House\nto a number of personal friends am*|\nmany closely Identified with the movement for better labor conditions in the\ncommunity. The occasion was one of\nthe most interesting events that has\noccurred at the White House in months.\nC. P. R. After Big Liner.\nVICTORIA, B. C, Nov. 17\u2014A rumor\nwas current today that the C. P. R. was\nnegotiating for the purchase of the big\nHill liner Minnesota for use under the\nC. P. R, flag In the trans-Pacific trade.\nThe report came from a recent arrival\nfrom Seattle who Is said to have been\ninformed to that effect from officials\nof the Great Northern Steamship company. Nothing could be learned here\nwith regard to the rumor.\nCivil Service Examinations.\nOTTAWA, Nov. 17\u2014The annual civil\nservice examinations are in progress\nin the principal cities of the Dominion\ntoday. The number of those who have\nsignified intention of writing this year\nIs about the same as last year. Appointments to the inside service are\nto be based on competitive examinations and the examinations in progress\nthis week aro the preliminary establishment of a new order.\n-Roosevelt's Modest Statement.\nATLANTA, Go., Nov. 17\u2014\"If I had\nheen a candidate for president this time\nI would have carried Georgia and broken the 'solid south',\" were the words\ntoday attributed to president Roosevelt, by commissioner of agriculture\nHudson of Georgia, who returned from\nWashington. He went to Washington\nto consult with the president about the\ncountry life.\n^Methodist Appointments.\nTORONTO, Nov. 17\u2014Rev. Dr. A. C.\nCrews, general secretary of Sunday\nschools and Epworth leagues, is to succeed the late Rev. Dr. Wllthow, as editor of publications of the Methodist\nchurch in Canada. Rev. Dr. Crews will\nbe succeeded by Rev. S. T. Bartlett,\nSaskville, N. B., the present assistant\nsecretary. The appointments will be\nmade on Thursday.\nDr, Rutherford In Rome.\nROME, Nov. 17\u2014Dr. J. Q. Rutherford,\nDominion live stock superintendent, has\narrived to represent Canada at the\nmeetings of the International Institute\nof Agriculture which opened here today,\nC. P. R. Earnings.        '\nMONTREAL, Nov. 17\u2014The C. P. R.\ntraffic earnings for the   week   ending\nNovember 14, showed an   Increase  ot\n\u2022 995,000.\n nun Twe\n\u00a9he \u00a7atl0 llenw.\nWEDNESDAY ... NOVEMBER 18\n\u25a0ro\ni\n$\n#\n$\ni\n1\nFred Irvine & Co.\nLadies' Tailor-Made Costumes,\nWinter Coats and Skirts\nWe have Just received another shipment ot very nattle tailor-made\naolta Tery latest atyles aid colors; then suits are well tailored and the price,\nare exceedingly low (or them. ,\nAnother lot of those swell style ot Ladles' Long Costs, tailor-made.\nA fine lot ot Ladles' Tailor-made Skirts.\nNo two garments same style nor color and as these are all so good style\nand Talue.   We anticipate these will go Quickly.\nSee Our Nqsv Tailored Shirt Waists\nto\nto\nto\nmost Instantly killed today on the fair\ngrounds track, here. Leon Barrows,\nwho was fn the car with Strieker, was\nseriously though, not fatally injured.\nAt 8 o'clock last night Lewis Strange\nand Bmile Strieker began the effort to\nlower the record, Strange being relieved by Strieker at 12:43 this morning. Strieker began making terrific\nspeed. almost immediately. The track\nwas poorly lighted and when the. oar\ndashed around the curve at the west\nend of the track one tire exploded followed quickly by the explosion ot a\nBecond tire. In an instant the car was\na wreck. .\nDorando In New York,\nNHlW YORK, Nov. 17\u2014Dorando\ni,Pietrl, the. Italian runner who crossed\n\/ the tape, in the Marathon race at the\nOlympic games ln London ahead of J.\nJ Hays the American contestant who\nwas afterward declared winner owing\nto the disqualification of the Italian,\narrived here today on the steamer\nKron Prinzesslh Cectle, and will attempt to wrest-the Marathon honors\nfrom Hays ln a specially arranged race.\nThe race will take place In Madison\nSquare on Thanksgiving eve and it\nwill he, over the same distance as the\nMarathon, 26 miles 385 yards. Dorando\nwas accompanied by his brother Ulplno\nwho has heen acting as trainer.\nPUN MISSIONARY MOVE\nROMAN CATHOLICS ORGANIZE SO-\nCIETV FOR WORK IN WEST\nWILL DEVOTE ENERGIES TO WORK\nIN PROVINCE DISTRICTS\nFred Irvine & Co.\n\u00a7\nIf You've Been Using j\n\"Cheap\" Tea\nThe rich, full flavor of Blue Ribbon Tea will be a delightful surprise\nto you.\nNo 25c or 30c tea has a flavor to compare with It. The choice\nleaf used in blending Blue Ribbon Tea costs too much to sell at any\nsuch price.\nAnd as so much less Is required to the cup, BLUE RIBBON TEA is\nREALLY THE MOST ECONOMICAL, as well as tbe best\nA pound ot Blue Ribbon will\nmake over 200 cups, rich and,\nstrong, so it costs less than l-4c\nper cup.\nJust try a pound of Blue Ribbon and Judge it for yourself.\n>tMII'H*m\u00abMllttlM*IMM4IMIMIMIMMHIIMI*\u00ab*|-.l\nI\nThis  Newspaper Alms to  Reader\nReal Service to YOU\nT F BY some persistency in giving advice, this newspaper can con-\n*\u25a0 vlnce every merchant of the wisdom of telling YOU all of hia\nstore news tbat is Important\u2014of using enough space ln which to do\nit, and ot telling as much of his store hews in every issue as you\nwould be Interested in knowing\u2014audit, at the risk of over-iter tion, CHs -newspaper should convince\nyou that this same store news is ot real, live, palpitating importance\nto YOU, as fully worthy sf J\u00abu attention as politics, or base ball, or\ncrowned heads, or elopements, murders, riots, fashions or functions\nof the rich\u2014and\u2014\nIf it should follow that th merchants should prosper In exact\nratio to their energy In advertfeing and that YOU should thrive ln\nproportion to your intelligent ln SPENDING YOUR INCOME\u2014then\nthis newspaper will feel tbat t haa accomplished so real a publlo\nservice that this city will be a still better place In which to live and\nto do buslnessl\nI\nINTERNATIONAL EVENTS\nAMERICAN ATHLETES MAKE WAR\nWITH BRITISHERS\nUPHOLD   PRESIDENT   SULLIVAN'S\nPOSITION\nNEW YORK, Nov. 17\u2014The Ataateur\nAthletic union of the United States\nheld Its annual meeting yesterday and\ntook notion that will have an important\nbearing on the holding of future inter-\natlonal athletic events. It again elected as Its president James B. Sullivan\nthe United States commisisoner who\nhad charge of the vletortoai delegation\njftf America* athletes at the Olympic\n-^e^e^e^e^e^e^\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014a^\u2014\u2014\ngames in London last summer.\nIn accepting the office Mr. Sullivan\nsaid he consented to serve a third time\nin the presidency only because his retirement might be construed abroad\non an admission on the part of the American Olympic committe that his acts\nas United States commissioner had not\nreceived the sanction of the A, A. U.\nof the United States, The union not only unanimously re-elected Sullivan, rescinding Its rule against a third term\nto do so, but by resolution upheld him\nin the course he pursued during the\nprogress of the games In London when\nfrequent disputes arose between the\nAmerican athletes and the commllttee\nIn charge of the events at Shepherd's\nBush.\n'   -Since the conclusion of the Olympic\ngsmes recently and the return of the\nofficials and athletes   to   the   United\nStates there has been a bitter feeling\nexisting between the   American   and\nBritish athletic associations. This practically culminated today by the adoption of resolutions which being about\nthe reverse of all ties of friendly competition between these bodies.'  There\nnever was a binding agreement between\nAmerica and Great Britain in athletics,\nbut today's action of the A. A. U. officials is sufficiently drastic to insure fair\ntreatment for American athletes In all\nfuture    international    contests.     The\nsense of the meeting of delegates today was that   unless   the   American\nAthletic union haB a share in the management of such meets, none   of the\nregistered amateur athletes from the\nUnited States should be permitted   to\ncompete in them.  The union's endorse*\nment of president Sullivan's act as a\ncommissioner carried with it approval\nof hla action in the case   of J. C. Carpenter of Cornell university, and was\ntantamount to a refusal to   take   any\ncognizance whatever of the British association's disqualification of that athlete.   The action of the British aSBocifr\ntion in disqualifying   Carpenter,   was\ndwelt upon during the greater part of\nthe discussion of International athletic\ncontests, and after a long conference, a\ncommittee of five, with power to add\nto its number, was appointed to look\nout In future for tha Interests of American atheltes whenever they were entered In events to be decided outside\nof the United States.   This committee\nIs made up as follows:   James E. Sullivan, New York; Bartlow S. Weeks,\nNew York A. C; Gustavus   T. KIrby,\nchairman of the advisory committee of\nthe Intercollege   Athletic   association.\nEverett C. Brown, Chicago; and Jos. B.\nMcCabe, Boston.   This committee will\nact in conjunction with similar   committees from other nations but tbe Americans will insist that none of the A.A.\nU. registered athletes can compete in\nthe department of sports of which the\nA. A. U. claims jurisdiction.   \"Unless\nsuch meeting and    the   management\nthereof are, approved by the A. A. U.\"\nPresident Sullivan's addreBB, which\nWas of consdcrable length, dealt, especially with the features of the Olympic\ncompetition which have attracted American attention and criticism. Upon\nhis suggestions, in this address, was\nbased the later action of tbe meeting\non International athletic matters. \"In\ngeneral,\" said Mr. Sullivan, summing\nup his comment on the Olympic games,\n\"we do not feel, that'the management\nof the games was what It should have\nbeen, we feel confident that If we are\nto have future International competitions some definite plan must be adopted whereby each country that enters\n& team, shall have a voice In the management. We protested only when It\nwas necessary to secure what we considered athletic fair play.\"\nThe national junior and senior championship meetings will take place ln\nSeattle, Wash., next year tn connection\nwitb the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific exposition. _\nKetchell and Papke.\nSAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 17\u2014Stanley\nKetchell and BUI Papke whose match\nfor the night of November 25 before\nJack Bleason's club was declared off\nlast week, have been matched by James\nCoffroth to fight twenty rounds on the\nafternoon of Thanksgiving day, November 26. Tbe men are to weigh 168\npounds at 11:30 a. m. on tbe day of the\ncontest. Jack Welch has been selected\nas referee,\nRecord Ireaker Killed.\nBIRMINGHAM, Alt., Nor. 17-WhHe\nmaking more thin sixty miles an hour\nIn an effort to lower the 34 hour automobile record, Bmile Strieker, wu al-'\nTORONTO, Nov. 17\u2014The city of Toronto Is to be the centre of another\ngreat church society having under its\nspecial care the home missions of\nCanada. Already headquarters for\nthe missionary societies of the various\nProtestant churches are found In Toronto; this time tt is the Catholic\nchurch that moves. Tbe new conditions which a; great west, rapidly filling with European Catholics of all the\nnations and an immense Influx of\nthose already submitted to the influence of the English language, coming\nfrom the United States and the older\nprovinces of Canada presents,, call Imperatively for a complete organization\nwithin the church, which, like those\nof the Presbyterian, Methodist, Angli-\n- can and Baptist churches, will stretch\nfrom end to end of the Dominion and\nconserve the best missionary interests\nin It.\nThis society, which Is known as\ntbe Catholic Church Extension so-\ncety of Canada, was organized during\nthe past summer and held Its first executive meeting in September, it is\nmodelled for the most part after the\nUnited States society of the same\nname\u2014an Institution which has done\nmarvelB in a short time\u2014except In\nthis, that the one established here Is\npurely and simply Canadian, and as\npatriotic as It is religious.\nSimply, ihe objects of the new so-\n'clety may thuB be stated: To foster\nand extend the Catholic faith In Canada by cultivating a missionary spirit\nin the clergy and people, by founding\na college for the education of missionaries, by the building and equipping of chapels In pioneer districts, by\ncontributing to the support of poor\nmissions, by the circulation of good\nliterature and by everything else proper to the main purpose of the society.\n\u2022 The means of support, as with all\nsuch institutions, will be the voluntary contributions of the people, individually or In association, and already those blessed with plenty of the\nworld's goodB, we are informed, are\ncontributing munificently to the good\nwork. The missionary spirit in recent\nyearB has been strong in1 all the Protestant communities of the country,\nand a revival is now being preached\nby them, whloh contemplates the\nraising ot an Immense fund to bring\nall tbe peoples . of the world within\nthe Gospel's light in this twentieth\ncentury. \"Convert the world to God\nIn the twentieth century\" Is their cry,\nand it is certainly as noble a one as\never fired Crusaders of old to heroic\nexertion. The Catholics of Canada,\nonce so noted for missionary endeavor, wtll also imbibe this new enthusiasm through the medium of the\nnew society and the result can not fall\nto strengthen greatly the struggling\npioneer communities and signally uplift Canadian civilization.\nCatholic Extension has purchased\nfrom the owner, G. P. Magahn, Esq.,\nthe plant, asets, title and goodwill\nof the Catholic Register newspaper,\nand will henceforth carry on Its business and issue Its matter from the\noffices at 119 Wellington street west\nIt' Is the Intention of the society and\nIts chairman, archbishop McEvay,\nof Toronto, to continue the publication of the paper and to make it the\nbest, most authoritative and widely\ncirculated of the English Catholic\nJournals of Canada. Its message will\nbe truly Catholic and national, serving the confederation from end to end.\nItVis to be carefully .and efficiently\nedted, conducted on thorough business lines and made a distinctive force\nlu the church and state of the coun-\nMore proof that Lydia- E. Plnk-\nham*BVepetable Compound cures\nsick women.\n'Miss M. Ii. Morin, 385 Ontario St,\nMontreal, writes to Mrs. Pinkham:\n\" I was in very poor health and doctored for months, receiving very little\nbenefit 1 had lost mil ambition-, was\nnervous, and subject to dizzy spelte and\npainful periods each month.\n\"A friend suggested Lydia E.Pinkham's Vegetable Compound as the\nproper medicine for me. I procured a\nbottle of this remedy and began taking, and before it was finished, I felt\n'so much better that I continued its use\nand gave it a thorough test, with the\nresult 1 am to-day well and a much\nhealthier girl than I waa three years\nago. I have no more painful periods,\ndizziness or nervous troubles,\"\nFACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.\nFor thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made\nfrom roots and herbs, has been the\nstandard remedy for female ills,\nand has positively cured thousands of\nwomen who have been troubled with\ndisplacements, inflammation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, irregularities,\nperiodic pains, backache, that bear-\ning-dofn feeling, flatuleney^ndiges-\ntion, dizziness ornervous prostration.\nWhydbntyoutrylt!\nMrs. Pinkham invites all sick\nwomen to write her for advice.\nShe has guided thousands to\nhealth.  Address, Lynn, Mass.\nWanted at Once\nTIMBER LIMITS\u2014A full description of a few really good limits,' near to main lakes and easy\nto get .at. . Cruisers report must\naccompany particulars, and owner\n. be prepared to give a guarantee ot\nQuantity and quality. Only the\nbest,wanted.\nR. J. Steel\nH. J. WILTON, Tailor\nLadl**' and Gent.* Clothes Cleaned,\nRepaired and Pressed.\n\u2022ATISPACTION GUARANTEED\nClothes Called for and Delivered.\nWW JoaepMn. St, Opposite Men-\nkattan Hotel, Nelion, B. 0.\nNOTICE\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that under\nprovisions of the railway act of Canada\n.the Canadain Pacific Railway Company\nWlU proceed on November 21st, 1908, at ten\no'clock ln the forenoon to dispose of to the\nhighest bidder some twenty-seven carloads\nof ore and twenty-three carloads of coko\nnow held in cars on our track at Boundary\nFalls,\n(Sisned) D .C. COLEMAN,\nSuperintendent C.P.R.\nDUed Nelson, Nov. U 1808. \u25a0 \u25a0\nCompanies' Act, 1897.\nNOTICB Is hereby given tbat Hush a\nStevenson of Ainaworth, in the province\nof British. Columbia, has been appointed the\nnew attorney of tho Highlander Wll and\nMining; Company, ln the place of Henry\nIf. Stevenson.\nDated at Victoria, thia 12th day of November, A.D.. 1908,\n8. T. WOOTTON.\nRegistrar of Joint Stock Compan'eo.\ntry.\nAs will be remarked, the officiality\nof extension comprehends the headsmen ot Canadian Catholicity, lay as\nwell as cleric, and these names should\nand undoubtedly will, lmmedlatetly Inspire the greatest respect and confidence everywhere: Patron, his excellency most rev. D. Bharretti- D. D.,\napostolic delegate;, board of governors,\nmost rev. P. P. McKrsy, D. D., arch-\nbishop of Toronto, chairman; most\nrev. L. N. Begin, D, D., archbishop ot\nQuebec, right rev. J, C. McDonald,\nbishop of CharloUetown, right hon. Sir\nCharles Fltspatrtok, K. C. H. O., chief\nwmmm\nLight **\u00a3wuTiFuuy\nCRISP *\n- DAINTY\nAn every day luxury,- They are\nprime for use yvitn 5oup,iemp-\nring wifh chccse.and always-'\nan acceptable afterfhoughf buffered; ShghMy browned in the\noven, fhen served hot f hey are\nM,ttiN Vancouver\n|W\u2022U,  RAM5AYS CRACKERS\nbeing made ar home are always frdii\nAb places them in a preferred class with 8\nWestern people.You know Hie effecisi\nof allowing B&cuits Id stand km\n%*>4mmm1\u00ae\n\u25a0We Par Special Attantioa to Hall (Men\nGround Bone\nThe cheapest and best egg producing\nfood on the market Doubles the profit   Five cents per pound, fresh dally,\nWont Kooteoav Butcher Co,\nmssssssattscesaotes\nWHEN IN\nSPOKANE\natop at. the Hotel Raymond, the\nmost centrally located hotsl Iii'\n\u2022pekane. Rates moderate. Buse\nmeats all train*.\nLIQUOR LICENSE ACT, 1900.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that one month\nafter date I intend to apply to the Superintendent of Provincial Police tor a renewal of the License now held by tne) la\nrespect of the   Grove Hotel,   situate   la\nFalrview In the Tmlr Ucenalnsr District.\n\u25a0WiI.IJ.IAlI 008NEU.\nDated this *flet day of October,\ntf EU.\nIKS.\nNotice; of Application for Renewal of\nLiquor Licence.. ,\nNOTICE) Is hereby given that I. Jaa, It.\nHunnex of Erie, B.C., .intend to apply to\ntho Superintendent of Provincial Police at\nthe expiration of one month from date\nhereof for a renewal of my retail liquor license for the premises known aa the Mersey hotel, Erie, B.C.\nJAS. B. HUNNBX.\nNov. 10, 1108. 17J-U\nNotice of Application for Renewal of\nLiquor Licence.\nNOTICB le hereby given that I, Alex Mac-\nKaraen of Brie, B.C., Intend to apply to\nthe Superintendent of Provincial Police for\na renewal of the license held by me for\nthe premises known ae the Brie hotel, Brie;\nB.C.\nDated Nov. 10, rag.\nALEX. KAICKASSEN.\n1B-M\nNotice of Application for Renewal of\nLiquor Licence.\nNOTICE! Is hereby given, that, one month\nafter date I Intend to apply to the Superintendent of Province! Police for a renewal\nof the license now held -by me for the pre*\nmlses known ae the Fort Sheppard hotel at\nWaneta.\nFRED ADIE.\nDated Nov. 3. 1806. lSMO\njustice ot Canada; hon.- Alex. Tas-\ncbereau, D. C. L\u201e minister ot public\nworks, Quebec; hon. Mr. Justice Beck,\nJudge ot the' supreme court of Alberta; prealdent and managing governor; rev. A. E. Burke, D. D\u201e LU D.;\nvice president right rev. J.A. Archambault, D. D\u201e bishop of Jollette; secretary, rev. J. T. Kldd, D. D\u201e Toronto.\nThe society starts oft with a splendid\nhoard and excellent officials; it has\na great and Important' work to do,\nnot alone tor the Catholic church, but\nfor Canada, and every one regardless\nof religious affiliation will wlBh 't\n'every success.\nOld Country Football.\nLONDONo, Noy, 16\u2014The only southern league football   game   yesterday\nwas: Brentford 0, Eieter 2,\nCarpet Cleaning\nBeating carpets by hand spoils ths texture, and does not remove the dirt.\nOur up-to-dato Steam Cleaning Process\nremoves all the Impurities and restores\nthe goods to original colors.\n10c PER SQUARE YARD.\nWork called for and delivered promptly.\nClothes of all kinds cleaned, renovated.\ndyed and repaired.\nGent's Suit* cleaned and pressed, 75c to\n12.00; dyed, -13.00.\nLadles' Skirts cleaned, $1.00; dyed, $3.00.\nGloves cleaned,  25c  to 00c.\nSpecial Rates for Hotels, Restaurants,\nand Steamers. \u25a0\nNebon Steam Laundry\n'801-003 Vernon Street. '\nTelephone 1\u00ab.     p. N1POU, Prop.\nNotice of Application for Renewal of\nLiquor Licence\nNOTICE to hereby given that I, Edith R\nGille, Tmlr, B. c, intend to apply to\nthe Superintendent of Provincial Police, et\nthe expiration of ono month from the date\nhereof, for a renewal of my retell liquor\nlicense- for the premises known aa the\nVancouver Hotel, at Ymlr, B. C.\nDated Ymlr, B. C, Oct. 30, 1908.     \u00ab3-ft\nEDITH B. OIUM ~\nNotice of Application for Renewal of j\nLiquor Licence\nNOTICE Is hereby given that I, MIchull\nTalt, of Ymlr, D. C, intend to apply to\nthe superintendent of Provincial Police at\nthe expiration of one month from the date\nhereof, for a renewal of my retail liquor\nlicense for the premises known ae the\nPalace Hotel, Situated at Ymlr, <8. C.\nMICHELL TAIT.\nDated at Tmlr, B. C\u201e Oct, M, 1806.    103-30\nNotice of Application for Renewal of ]\nLiquor Licence\nNOTICE Is hereby  given   that I,   J. B.\nBremner, or Ymlr, B. C, Intend to apply\nto the Superintendent of Provincial Police\nat the expiration of one month from the\ndata hereof, for a renewal of my retail\nliquor license for the premises known -si I\nthe Ymlr, Hotel, situate at Ymlr. B. C,'\nJ. B. BREMNER- .   ,\nDated at Ymlr, B. C, Oct. 21, 1908.    163-9)\nNotice of Application for Renewal of ]\nLiquor Licence .\n-NOTICE is hereby given that I, E. BL\nMcArthur of Salmo, B.C., -Intend to apply\nto the Superintendent of Provincial Police\nat the expiration of one month from date\nhereof, for a renewal of my retail liquor '\nlicense \u25a0 tor the premises known as the\nNorthern Hotel, Salmo, B. C.\nE. E. McARTHUR,\nSalmo, B.C.\nDated at Salmo, B.C., Dot. 28, 1908. IfiMO j\nHow to Cure a uoia.\nBe as careful ae rou can you will occasionally take cold, and when you do, get a\nmedicine of -known ability, one that has an\n-established reputation and that le certain\nto offset a quick cure. Sueh a medicine Is\nChamberlain's Couch Remedy. It bee gained a world witfe reputation by IU remarkable cures of thll mon common ailment\nand can always be depended upon. It acts\non nature's plan, relb-yes tt *\n    KT\nexpectoration, owns tbe seerstlone and\nnature In teetering the syetsm\t\ncondition. During th* many r<\n'- \"*\u2014\u00bb;\u00bb.     \"\t\nth* lung*, aide\n, __jr.tlon\u00ab and aide\nsystsm to a healthy\nnany yean In win*\ni we turn ynt to\nIt has been hi aaasral \u2022*\u25a0> w. '\nleant et a Uncle ease of sold _   \u2014\neonclujlv*ly that K to a \u00ab*rtajn pry\n. x-luelvelr\not that-\nAtlantic S. S. Sailings\nAXAjAN linb-\ntiratnpaln, St. John to Llvevrpoot..,.Deo 13\nCors. can, St John to Liverpool Dec 18\nDOMINION LZNa-*\nDominion, St. John to Liverpool....Nov, S\nCanada, St. John to Liverpool Deo. 13\nCANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY LINS-\nLaAce Erie, St. John to Liverpool....Dec 5\nEmp. of Ireland, St. John-Liverpool, Dec. 11\nWHITE STAR LINE-\nArabic, New York to Liverpool Deo. 18\nCeltic New York to Liverpool ...Dec.19\nATLANTIC TRANSPORT Ufflt-\nMlnnehaha, New York to London..Deo. 13\nMinneapolis, NewYorlt to London. .Dec. IB\nAliSRlCAN LIN lO-\nSt  Louis. New York-Southampton, Dec 13\nPhiladelphia, New York to Southampton..\n.1 Dec *Vt\nntBNCH LINE\u2014\nChicago. New York to Harve Dec. 13\n<La Bretagne, New York to Harve, .Dec. 17\nROD aTAR UN\u00bb- ^      \u201e\nSamland, New Yorit to Antwerp....-Pea 9\nFinland, New York to Antwerp....Dec 16\nIt yo* an Ding to Europe call -or \u00abftM\nne tot particulars.\nAU continental rates -and eelltajw OB -ftp\noUoatkm. If you are pontemplsBnf tafc.\nMl tafermatloa promptly.\nW. H. DBA.CON.\nC. P. *., Nelecm.\nyon '\nH. K. TAIT,\nden. Ant Wlnnlpea\nNotice of Application for Renewal of |\nLfoujor Licence\nNOTICB Is hereby given that I, Wm. Gray,\nof Salmo, B. C, Intend to apply to the .\nBuperlntenednt of Provincial Police at th*\nexpiration of on* month from the data\nhereof, for a renewal of my retail liquor\nlicense for the premises known aa the Sal-\nmo Hotel, situated at Salmo, B. C. I\nDated at Salmo, B. O, Oct. 24, IM. lO-M j\nWM.  GRAY.\nNotice of Application for Renewal of,\nLiquor License\nNOTICE IS   HEREBY  OIVBN   that      I, I\nJohn Breau, of Ymlr, B. C, Intend to ap- I\nply to the Superintendent   of Proi-lncl*-! (\nPolice at the expiration of one month from\ndate hereof, for a renewal of my retail\nliquor license for the premises known as\nthe Cosmopolitan Hotel, situate at Ymlr,\nB. C.\nJOHN BRHAU.\n. Tmlr, B. O.\nDated at Ymlr, B. C\u201e Oet. a, MW.\nNotice of Application for Renewal at\nLiquor Lllcenae.\nNOTICB Is hereby given that I, Samuel'\nMiliar of Ymlr, B.C., Intend to apply te\nthe Superintendent of Provinolal Police ot\nthe expiration of en* month from the date\nhereof, for a renewal of my retail lienor\nlicense for the pr*mls*s known .aa \"\nMiller Hotel, situate at Ymlr, B.C.\nDated, at Ymlr, B.C., Ost. 11, im.\nih-\u00bb       hampml mium\nNotice of Application for Renewal of\nLiquor Llc.no*.\nNOTICB is hereby giv-an that I, Petsr\nJohnson of Slocan Junction. B.C., Intend\nto apply to the Sup.rint.nd.nt of Provincial Police, at the expiration ef one month\nfrom tbe date hereof, for a renewal of my\nretail liquor liens, for th. premises known\na* th* Kootenay Falls Hotel, situate at\nSlocan Junction, B.C.\n. Dated, Slocan Junction, Oct 23, IM.\nlH-\u00bb PETBR JOHNSON.\nKootenay Like General Hospital\nMaternity Branch\nPatients are now received at tba following ratea:\nPrivate Ward patients, week... .180.00\nSemi-private Ward patients, week I1&M\nAddress application* to matron   at\nhospital. \u25a0;*.'\nlast Hot Lunch at the Athabaaoa.\nNotloa for Transfer of Liquor License. ]\nTAKB NOTICB that I Intend to apply to\nthe License Commissioners of the City\nof NelBon at their next meeting for leave I\nto transfer my liquor license held In con- l\nnectlon with the premise, known aa th*\n\"Office Saloon,\" situate on Ward atreet In\nthe City of Nelaon, to. Jams*, Young and\nWilliam Boyd.     '\nDated the Uth October, !\u2022\u00bb_\u201e\u201e\u201e.\u201e\nlto-n w. R. THOMSON.\nNotion of Application for Renswal cf j\nLiquor Llcenae. .\nNOTICB Is hereby given that I, Gilbert T.\n. Snow of Procter, B.C., Intend (\u2022 apply, to\nth* Superintendent ot Provinolal Police at\nthe expiration of one month fr*m th* tarn\nhereof, for a renewal et my retail Uqoar\nlicense fee the premlaee known a* the Ota-,\nlei hotel, altual.d at PrMtu-. BC '\nDated atTProoter, B.C., Oet. M, !\u00bb\u2022(_,-_\n__________________\\______\nVOIGICULTURI\nii\n \/\nWEDNE8DAY ... NOVEMBER 18\n\u00a9he \u00a7 aUjj^Staw.\n\u2014\u25a0\u2014\u25a0\u2014\u25a0\u25a0\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014^-TfT^-f-T.\nti-s\nMM THREE.\nWHEN DRINKING BEER\nQuality and Purity are Pre-Eminently Important.\nFamous A   R   Q  St, Louis\nm\nBOHEMIAN BEER\nihont Ita entire process of hewing and bottling, comes in contact only with copper, tin lined and enameled surfaces. It la brewed in\nscrupulously clean copper vessels, then piped through block tin pipes to enameled steel tanks wliere it ia aged and lagered for at least six\nmonths; then piped again through block tin pipes to air-tight bottling machines, where it is filled off into thoroughly cleansed and\nsterilised bottles.   We at* onlylhe Flsesl find* ol IMPORTED BOHESUN HOPS., Abwlulely Frn From AdultinuiH and Pmervallra.\nAMERICAN  BREWING CO.,  St. Louis, U, S. k.\nTHE HUDSON'S BAY COMPANY, Distributors, Nelson, B. C.\nBattled Quit al Ike Brewery aa ft -ugET\nCombination Salts\ntbat are knitted to fit\nKnit-to-fit Undergarments\nare not cut out of the woven\ncloth (like a dress). Each suit\nis knitted individually, so that\nthere are no seams to ravel and\nno uncomfortable bunching\nover the Mps.\nGo'wns-St perfectly over\nthe perfect 'fitting Kuit-to-\niit Combination Suits;\nThis Trademark guarantees the\nquality of every garment\nIf yonr dealer does not handle\nKnit-to-fit in all weights, sizes\naud fabrics-write us for catalogue\nTEE EiTMO-FiT MAMTACTUtUNG CO.\n\u25a0m Mpuaavii snmz.\n.mimiu.\nJOHN  BURNS\nOONTRAOTOR AND BUILDER\nCfcbinet and Turned Work, Offici Fittings, Sash and\nDoors.   BRICK AND LIMB FOR SALE\nEstimates Cheerfully Given\nOffice and Factory: Carbonate Street, Nelson, B. C.\nCOMMENT ON ELECTIONS\n!,l BRITISH COLUMBIA'S   PAPERS  ON\nTHURSDAY'S RESULTS\ni...... :..\u201e:.\u2014\n| VIEW MATTERS FROM MANY  DIFFERENT STANDPOINTS\nThe following are the comments ot\nthe leading BrltlBh Columbia newspapers on the results ot the elections in\nKootenay and Yale-Cariboo:\n(Vancouver Newa-Advertiser.)\n(The deterred elections for the seats\nln Kootenay and Yale-Cariboo ln the\ndominion house of commons, which took\nplace yesterday, resulted in both oases\nin magnificent victories for the conservative candidates. Although the returnB\nst the time of writing are not entirely\ncomplete .especially In the case of Yale-\nCariboo, as they have not been received from a few polling places distant\ntrom telegraph lines, the majorities tor\nboth Mr. Burrell and Mr, Goodeve are so\nlarge that there can be no doubt as to\nthe result. According to the summary\not the general results received from\nNelson, Mr, Goodeve's majority in Kootenay will be over 900. while In Yale-\nGflriboo Mr. Burrell haa been elected\nover Mr. Ross by a majority ot something Over 760 votes. These magnificent majorities will be a surprise both\nto conservatives and liberals. Both the\nconservatives have larger majorities\nthan those secured by the liberal candidates at the last general election, Confident aa the conservatives were that\nthe time was running ln 'their favor,\nthey could scarcely have anticipated\ninch a favoring popular breeze as has\nt carried their barques Into the havens of\ni electoral   success  which  the  returns\nIndicate,\nNOr must these successes be gauged\nmerely by the size ot the majorities\n\u2014magnificent as they are. The circumstances surrounding the contests;\nthe apparently unfavorable conditions\nagainst which the conservatives had to\ncontend and the advantages which their\nopponents enjoyed, must alll he taken\nInto consideration in summing up the slg\nnlflcance of the action taken yesterday\nby the voters ln the larger parts of the\nprovince. Immense as are the areas\nover which the battle raged, diverse\nas are the Industrial and social features\nto be found In the Immense regions com\nprised within the boundaries of the two\nKootenays and of Yale, Cariboo, Llllooet, an analysis ot the returns ot\nthe numerous polling places discloses\nan extraordinary unanimity ln the views\nof the people throughout the country.\nThe coast districts, the chief commercial\nand Industrial centers have expressed\nan opinion unfavorable to the present\nliberal federal administration and now\ncome the people of the Interior with a\ndeclaration even more emphatic that\nIt Is time for a change.\nThe electors of both these important\nconstituencies deserve especial recognition hy the people elsewhere for the\nmanner In which they have resisted\nalike the threats and blandishments of\nwhich the liberal candidates and their\nworkers had been able to lavish. Appeals were made to their Belt Interest\nand cupidity on the ground that sir Wilfrid Laurier being again returned to\npower they had everything to gain by\nelecting, supporters of his admlnistra-\nI tion. There was no hesitation on the\npart. of the liberal candidates themselves In using these Ignoble arguments\nor of hinting at the punishment whloh\nwould be meted out should they disregard these appeals and venture tare-\nturn tho opposition candidates.   Even a\ncabinet minister, a colleague Of sir Wilfrid Laurier, Mr. Oliver, the minister\nof the interior, was not ashamed to use\nsuch arguments and In language that\ndiffered only ln words and not ln sentiment from a notorious utterance by a\nliberal leader ln Ontario some years ago,\nhe hinted that the return ot Messrs Roes\nand Curtis would ensure to the People\nof Kootenay and Yale-Oarl.boo the\n\"warm sympathy\" of the authorities at\nOttawa, the election of Messrs, Goodeve\nand Burrell 'would Imply only \"cold\nJustice\" being what their constituents\nmight expect to receive at the hands\nof a liberal administration. But the\nminers of Kootenay, the farmers Of\nthe Okanagan* and the ranchers of Carl-\nboo and Llllooet have shown themselves\nto he men to spurn such base and sordid appeals, and that as far as the\npower rested with them they stood for\nhonest and clean administration, and\nan end of the abominations that have\nsurrounded the liberal government and\ndisgraced public life In Canada.\nIt Is Interesting to note that while\nMr. Goodeve secured a good majority ln\nhis own town of Rossland, Mr. Ross was\nbeaten by Mr, Burrell in Greenwood.\n\u25a0   (Vancouver *W*orla\\>\nIt were folly to attempt to minimize\nthe results of the polling ln Kootenay\nand Yale-Cariboo. The conservatives\nof British Columbia have scored a victory which would have been notable\nhad it occurred synchronously with the\nother elections, but which, won In the\nface ot sweeping government-'successes\nelsewhere In the country, 'ts simply\nastounding. The liberals of the province will do well not to waste any\ntime in attempting to argue away the\nsignificance of the pluralities which the\nconservative candidates have received\nat almost every polling place ln the interior constituencies, for It cannot be\nargued away. The defeat of .liberalism\nln British Columbia Is a fact susceptible\nof explanation, but not ot any modification In the least worth the trouble of\nmaking.\nAs we have pointed out before as far\nas British Columbia was concerned the\nissues Of the general election were two:\nthe general record of the government\nand the special question of oriental labor. As regards the first we -see no\nreason why the the verdict of British\nColumbia should be any different from\nthat of any other part of Canada, and\nwe decline to believe that It was different. As regards the second, while we\nthought at the time, and still think,\nthat the results on the coast were largely brought about by a feeling that the\ngovernment had not gone as far as it\nshould have done in the matter of the\nexclusion of orientals, we doubt that\nthis operated In the upper country to\nanything like the extent it operated\ndown here. Why then did a government\nwith all the prestige of the 26th day of\nOctober, meet with so emphatic a ne-\ngative in eastern British Columbia?\nThe time has come for plain speaking.\nThe naked truth is that ln British Columbia the liberal party has for years\nbeen badly led and badly organized, and\nunless the men who have governed '\ncouncils of late are superseded by the\nmen o fenergy and Initiative who have\nbeen held In leash, tt will continue to\nmeet with defeat and disaster whenever\nit takes the field'. Happily there are\nsome signs that the rank and fie are\nrealizing the facts of the situation and\ntbe necessity of a change. There was\na new spirit abroad both at the meeting\nof the Young Liberals on Tuesday evening and the Senior Liberals last evening. It was a spirit of enthusiastic looking forward beyond this day of present\ndefeat to the day of future victory, a\nspirit of confidence In the party and the\nadvocacy of the prlnclnlm for whlpti It\n1\nLa-Grippe Arrested and Consumption\nPrevented\nMr. 6. D. Colwell of Walherville, Oat,, and employed by the Canadian Bridge Co.,\nWaltenrille, aays i \"When I began using PSYCHINE In October, 1908,1 wu all run\ndown and bordering on consumption. I .could not sleep night*. I had night sweats\nfrequently and coughed the greater part of the night,  f was vert weak and nervous.\n... , \u201e    _ j*\nPsychine worked marvels and madoVnew man ofme and I have been in good health\natom. Since then I have used PSYCHINB each winter for U Grippe, and it has put me\n*Wf)snotfBh_ I am now In the beat of health, ajthou-jhra*\/ work la hard, and I lite\nAFTER EFFECTS OF LAGRIPPE\nThe.after effect* oILaCrippe are often worse than the disease Itself. PSY-\ni, that la.one of the worst fffeca after LaGrippe,\nirepkna ffwUh boondlnjr health alio\u2122*the body. PSYCHINB I* *old\"br\nID druolaa and dealer* at SOc and 11.00 bofda. See ipedal free Trial ofler.\nniAt. umitut\n\u2022 DaT.A,a***a*,\n\u2014\\STn**i\nM!NI\n'Ifflnfr-ffSR, *\"**''\n    ' \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\"\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\nstands. The liberals of Vancouver, In\nfact have risen to the occasion even\nwhile the ballots of Kootenay and Yale-\nCariboo are telling the last chapter ot\nthe story of the slipping of a province\nthrough the fingers of the inept. It Is\nnow for them to take the lead ln the\nwork of reconstruction whloh must be\ncarried out within the party as the most\nessential preliminary of active and successful work outside.\n(Victoria Colonist)\nThe election of,Messrs. Burrell and\nGoodeve yesterday was an event of unusual significance. Four years ago British Columbia sent, seven representatives to the house of commons to support the Laurier ministry. This year\nit sends two, one of whom, Mr. Sloan,\nwas elected by acclamation, no one caring to oppose him. in a constituency\nlarger than some -of the eastern pro.\nvinces and one that he had carefully\nnursed ever since he represented It, and\nthe other Mr. Smith, who did not receive\na majority of the votes cast, there be-'\nIng three candidates in the field. This\nIs a great change from those days of\nfour years ago, when the hopes of the\nliberals ran high as victory after victory was announced, and a condition\nof things was created of which the logical outcome was the retirement of Mr.\nTempleman from the senate, the appointment of Mr. Riley to that body\nand the entry of the first named gentleman into the commons, with a seat ln\nthe cabinet The change Is so remarkable,that It calls for more careful consideration than can be given it this\nmorning. The result ot the elections ot\nyesterday means the complete collapse\nof the liberal party In British Columbia. We have not the least desire to\nexult over the political downfall of any\nman, bkt it seems as It there must be\nsomething exceedingly deficient in the\nleadership that made possible so remarkable a reversal of the verdict, of\nthe British Columbia constituencies. We\ndo not think the house will be much\nthe poorer for the absence of Mr. Duncan Ross, and It will certainly be the\ngainer for the presence of Mr. Burrell.\nDisinterested men will concede that m-\nGoodeve, though In opposition will be\na more useful member than Mr. Curtis\non the government side. The Colonist\nextends its hearty congratulations to\ntho successful candidates.\n(Victoria Dally Times.)\nThe Times Is dlsapolnted, but not,\nfrankly speaking, greatly surprised at\nthe results of the elections held yesterday in the constituencies of Yale-Cariboo and Kootenay, It was quite apparent train the vote in the coast constituencies of the province that the majority\nof the electors hsd made up their minds\nto give emphatic expression to their\nviews upon the question ot Asiatic exclusion. The imagination of the people\nhad been Inflamed In the first Instance by the great influx ot Japanese\nunder the notorious Gotoh contract,\ndrawn up by a member of the McBrlde\ngovernment. Notwithstanding the circumstances of that incnrslon, other\nmembers of the government primarily\nresponsible for It did not hesitate to fan\nthe flames and keep them blazing for\ntheir own political purposes. The Laurier government, although It has been\ngenerally condemned ln this province,\nstemmed that invasion and settled the\ngeneral question of Asiatic Immigration\nin a manner stamped as statesmanlike\nand satisfactory by national and Imperial authorities. It could not have been\ndisposed of in any other manner without lmpenliiing the cordial relations\nbetween Japan and Great Britain and\nsacrificing at the same time the commercial interests of Canada and particularly the commercial future of British Columbia.\nBut Unfortunately the majority ot the\npeople of British Columbia are in no\nmood at present to consider the matter\ncalmly and dispassionately. They have\nbeen stirred up by demagogues who\nwould have heen better employed In discharging the duties.entrusted to their\ncare by the electors of the province.\nWhen the forces of passion and unreason set In motion by premier McBrlde\nand his political comrades ln arms have\nsubsided and sane judgment once more\nassumes Its sway, we are convinced\nsome one will be held to account for\nrecent. occurrences, when the public\nrealise that practically all the time of\nthe provincial ministers Is employed In\njunketing through the country at their\nexpense for the purpose of stirring up\nstrife against other provinces ot Canada\nIn setting forces In motion which may\nultimately have the effect of Imperilling\nthe aflat Canadian confadwatlon, (II\ntor. the purpose of promoting the ambitions of a man popesslnt no other BOtaN\noverweening ambition and a certain\ncapacity for organization, ho one will\nenvy that Individual when the day of\nreckoning comes.\nIn the meantime we believe the electors on the coast and ln the Interior\nhave made a grave error of judgment\nWe think the Laurier government and\nthe candidates of that government on\nthe records were deserving of the confidence ot the public. \"British Columbia\nwas in a state of Industrial and commercial 'lethargy until the present government stimulated the latent life in it\nby the construction of the necessary\nrailways and by other processes of encouragement. The government lives,\nhowever, and will continue to do its\nduty by the province notwithstanding\nthe general Verdict of condemnation.\nBy the end of the term of the present\nparliament the fires of incendiarism\nkindled by Hon. Richard McBrlde will\nbe as dead as his political future ought\nto be If the people of British Columbia\nare capable of distinguishing between\ntrue patriotism and mere demagoguery.\n(Vancouver Province.)\nThe defeat ot Mr. Smith Curtis In\nKootenay and Mr. Duncan Ross In Yale-\nCariboo Is an emphatic answer by British Columbia to the whine of other rejected liberals that this province would\nregret any display of antagonism to a\ngovernment which bas been re-established ln power with such' a decided majority as Bir Wilfrid Laurier again en\njoys. Despite full knowledge of the\nstrength of the administration these two\nconstituencies have declared deliberately that they will not sacrifice principle,\nthat they will not sell their franchise to\nsecure the immediate (advantages* fjo\n\u2022lavishly promised them by the ministerial candidates.\nBy the election of Mr. Burrell and\nMr. Goodeve these two constituencies\nhave taken their stand definitely, with\nthe three large and important ridings of\nthe coast, In opposition to the policy ot\nthe federal premier towards this pro-\nlnce. The result is a declaration by\nthem on the questions of oriental Immigration, better terms and the security\nof our provincial resources against tbe\nencroachments of the dominion power.\nBut it is more than tbat. It is an un-\nmlstakeable expression ot dissatisfaction with the mal-administratlon of the\ncountry's affairs during the past five\nyears, of disapproval of the corruption\nwhich affects every branch of the public service; of dissent from the practice\nby which the resources of Canada have\nbeen siezed and administered for the\npersonal advantage and benefit of the\nmembers of one party.\nI It is Impossible to mistake tbe meaning of this conservative victory ln these\ntwo British Columbia constituencies.\nThe election was a free and fair one,\napart from the bids which the government candidates were able to offer the\npublic for support\u2014offers which were\nbacked up by the endorsement of ministers of the crown. It was a fair election and the representatives of the administration were defeated. The government and the liberal machine at Ottawa were apparently satisfied that the\nelectors would be oppressed by a feeling that It waa useless for them to oppose such a majority as was given sir\nWilfrid. Laurier by the country at large,\nOn the 26th of October and would offel\nno serious opposition to the ministerial\nnominees. NO large expenditure of\nmoney therefore was deemed necessary\nto retain these seats and the liberal can-\ndiadtes, with the Immense advantages\nthey enjoyed, by the triumph of their\nparty, were regarded aB certain of election. In both ridings. In both ridings\ncubstantlal; In Kootenay It had been\nsubstatulal; in Kootenay it had been\nvery large. The result of yesterday in\nthe light of all these facts, was extremely gratifying. In spite of the most\nprodigal ''[promises of government recognition made by the liberal standard-\nbearers nnd backed by members of the\ncabinet, the electors reversed the former majorities and elected the opposition candidates by unprecedented majorities. The voice of the people of\nKootenay and Yale-Cariboo express tho\ntrue feeling of the Canadian people ln\nevery province of the confederation except Quebec\u2014a feeling which was deadened by the artful application of a golden drug.\nWe have no doubt that many liberals\nln and out of parliament who are not\nresidents of Yale-Cariboo will agree*\nwith the conservatives that Mr. Duncan\nRoss has got his deserts. The libera]\nmembers of parliament, especially, will\nfeel a sense of relief. They regarded Mr.\nROss as a man who was too observant\nof his neighbors' personal actions. They\nfelt a sense of restraint when In hla\ncompany, such as men experience when\n-Snd to\nE. CRIZZBLLB, Florist\nNelson, B, C.  For Choice\nChrysanthemums\nand Carnations\nAlio\nPalms, Ferns and Flowering   Plants.\nArtistic Floral Designs of any description made up.\nClark's Seedling\nStrawberry Plants\nDo you want to grow strawberries\nfor profit? Do you want to grow a\nberTy that will stand up under long\ndistance shipments and go Into the\nmarkets solid, firm and in good salable\ncondition?\nIf you do, then plant the Clark's\nseedling, as It Is the berry and THB\nONLY BERRY that has proven itself\npossessed of these qualities. \u2022\nI have over one million of the choicest plants to offer and am booking orders for spring planting.\nPrice in thousand lots or more $2.50,\nf.o.b. care Hood River, Ore, Less than\none thousand 75c per hundred.\nA. WHITEHEAD .*. Hood River, Ore.\nThe F.Cellner Electric co.\nELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS\nOlflce\u2014Cor. Josephine and Victoria,\nPhone A. 89.\nArmature Winding and Electrical\nRepairs. light and Power Plants\nInstalled Complete, also Telephones,\nHotel Annunciators, Electric Signs,\nAutomatic Fire Alarms, Rouse\nWiring, and The Apple Automatic\nSparker.\nPrompt Service and Special Attention given to all work.\nBoots and Shoes\nFull line of men's and   boys'   hand\nmade miners' and loggers' hoots.\nRepairing promptly attended to.\nC. Romano\n310   Baker  Street    310\nGas Heaters\nIt is getting cold of a night now,\nwhy not get a small heater to\nwarm up the cold rooma in the\nhouse, the children will appreciate It on bath nights.\nEasily moved from one room to\nanother when you want It. Prices\n\u00bb3, $4.75 and   $7.50\nTS* Nelson Coke & Gas Co\n'Phone 37\nHugh W. Robertson\nRoom 2, Alan block, Nelson, B. C.\nTelephone A86 Box 534\nHOUSES AND LOTS in all parte\nof the city for sale.   List your\nproperty with me.\nINSURANCE of all kinds placed\nat cheapest rates.     Fire insurance a specialty.\nMONEY LOANED   on   improved\nand unimproved city property.\nIf you own lots you can borrow\nmoney to build a house.\nMONEY INVESTED In first class\n* stocks.\nBank ot Vancouver shares sell\nfor ?110 monthly payments. Will\nbe pleased to furnish particulars\nor information wanted on any of\nthe above on application.\nserved through a knot hole or a crack\nIn a wall. The opposition and the country, Including his own constituency, had\na more substantial grievance against\nhim. He was not an Intelligent or a\nuseful member of parliament. He possessed no public spirit and he misrepresented to the country the wishes of his\nriding and hts province. His speeches\ndn the house show that he was not\ntruthful In his'utterances and that he\nwas prepared to sacrifice his constituents and the interests of British Columbia to serve party ends and personal\nalms. And with very mediocre ability\nhe possessed a species of cunning which\nmade him dangerous to the real welfare\nof the public. Such a man It Ib manifest, ought not to be ln parliament, and\nhe will not be there again. The constituency of Tale-Cariboo has said so.\n. The new members of these two British Columbia ridings are men of far\nmore than the average ability and they\nwill bring strength to the opposition in\nparliament and will fittingly ^present\n\"The picture without a flicker\" ,\nEmpire\nMoving\nPicture\nTheatre\nOpen\nTo-Night\nOwing to being unable to\ncomplete our arrangements\nand chiefly on account of wet\npaint, we regretfully had to\ndecide not to open last night.\nWe will, however, be ready to\nwelcome the people of Nelson\ntonight and we feel sure that\nalthough we had to disappoint\nyou last night, this will not\nmilitate against your turning\nup in large numbers to our\nopening tonight. This extra delay has given us a better opportunity to get things In shape\nand we will be able to give\nour patrons full value for their\nmoney,\nWe Have Installed\nthe Famoss\nKino-drome\nMachine\n(The picture without a flicker)\nThis machine compiles fully\nwith the fire regulations which\ntogether with the asbestos\nlined\nFire-Protected\nOperating Booth\nabsolutely prevents the possibility of accident by fire. The\nhouse is also heated by radiators and not stoves.\nThe Kmodrone\nMachine\nIs included as a high class act\nIn the entire Orpheum circuit\nof the United States under\ncontract for 75 years. This\nmachine Is not on the market\nand cannot be bought which\nfact speaks for Itself.\nPerformance\nContinuous\n7 to 10:30\nEach .entertainment one\nhour long.\nGood Moste   *\nIllustrated Songs\nADMISSION:\nAdults  15c\nChildren  10c\nNOTE ADDRESS: Alan block,\nBaker Street.\n\"The picture without a flicker\"\n MOI POUR.\nWEDNESDAY ... NOVEMBER IS\n*j*************************************************^***j_\nAre You Interested In Colli Weather?\nHudson's Bay Blankets\nOur reputation for high quality and good value Is easily explained\nby the following:\nHudson's bay blankets, plain colors, red, blue and white\u2014\n3 1-2 ponlts, weight 10 lbs., per pair  W.00    '\n4 points, weight 12 lbs., per pair     W.OO   \u25a0 >\nEnglish White Witney Blankets   f\nExtra quality 60 by 80, per pair :...,... \u00bb5.60\nExtra quality 64 by 84, per pair  .... W-W\n; |    Extra quality special, 64 by 84 per pair W.00    \u25a0 .\nGrey Canadian Blankets\n' i    in all weights and sizes at very low prices.\nWadded and eiderdown comforters, from 12 up to $12.50\nMACKINAW  COATS,      MACKINAW PANTS,     MACKINAW SHIRTS.\nLumbermen's and miners' rubbers and\nEverything in Clothing and Footwear\nrequired for mines and camps.\nThe Hudson's Bay Stores\nStanley ond Baker Sts., Nelson\n,*+****************************************************\nImperial Bank of Canada\nHEAD OFFICE TORONTO\nCaplUI Authorised \u00bb10,000,00l\nCaplUI Patd Up    W,99O,0O0 I   Rest   14,990,000\nD. R. WILKIE, President.      \\   HON. ROBT. JAFFRAY, Vlce-Prea.\nBRANCHES IN BRITISH COLUMBIA\nArrowhead, Cranbrook, Golden, Michel, Nelaon,  Revelstoke,  Vancouver,\nVictoria, Kamloops. j\nSAVINGS DEPARTMENT\nInterest allowed on depoalU f torn daU of deposit and credited quarterly.\nNELSON BRANCH J. M. LAY, Managsr.\nGanadian Bank of Commerce\nCapital Paid Up 110,000,000     Rest 15,000,1m\nHEAD OFFICE TORONTO\nB. E. WALKER, President ALEX. LAIRD, General Manager\nBranchea Throughout Canada and In the United SUtes and England\nA general banking bualneaa transacted.. Accounts may ba opensd and\nconducted by mall with all branches of this bank.\nSAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT\nDeposits of |1 and upwards received, Interest allowed at current rates\nand paid quarterly.. The depositor Is subject  to no delay whatever In\ntha withdrawal of the whole or any portion of tha deposit\nJ. L. BUCHAN, Manager NELSON BRANCH\nBANK OP MONTREAL\n(Errtahllahad 1817)\nCaplUI All Paid Up ....114,400,000     Rest   111,0\nHEAD OFFICE MONTREAL\nAt Hon. Lard Strathcona and M ount Royal, O. C. M. \u00ab. Hon. Presldsnt\nHen. Sir. George Drummond, K. C. M. 0., President\nB. S. Clauatcn, Vice-President anil General Manager\nBRANCHES IN BRITISH COLUMBIA\nArmstrong, Enderby, Greenwood,   Kelowna,   Nslson,   New  Denver,\n' Nicola, New Westminster, Rossland,  Summerland, Vancouver,  Vernen,\nVictoria, Chlllawaek, Hosmer.\nNELSON BRANCH L. B. DEVEBER, Manager.\nThe Royal Bank of Canada\nINCORPORATED 1801.\nCaplUI Paid Up  \u00bb3,\u00aboo,ooo\nReserve Fund  14390,000 -~-~r-\nToUl AsaaU  t4\u00ab,800,00S\nHEAD OFFICE MONTREAL. |\nBranchea In Canada extending I  A  general   banking   buslnasa\nfrom the Pacific to tha Atlantic. |   transacted,\n' SAVINGS BANK DEPOSITS.\nRaaelved In sums of II and upwarda.   Interest credited thereon quarterly\nat current rate.   Depositors are subject to  no delay whatever  In tha\nwithdrawal of the whole or any portion of the amounU deposited.\n0. A. SPINK, Manager. NELSON, B. C. BRANCH\nWe Will Buy, Subject to Confirmation\nio- ioo B. C. Copper.      7.25\nio-   50 Consolidated Smelters     73.00\n500-5000 Canadian Go'd .Fields 03yi\n5-   20 Granby  100 00\n,500-2000 International Coal. *.      .rjoJ-J\n1000.2000 Rambler Cariboo 17\nPlease use the wires.\nMIGHTON & CAVANAUGH\nBB-TWCDQ\nThe Nelson City\nLand and Improvement Co*\nHas the choicest building sites at Bogustown; this Is the finest residential property. In the city; buy now as prices will be raised Jan. 1st\nPrices from $100 to $200 per lot,- one-third cash, balance In six and\ntwelve monthB.   We are sole agents.\nProcter. & Blackwood\nWard  Street\nNelaon, B. C.\n*H**MIII*MSHIMSIWtMM*\u00bb*\u00bbl*t\u00abMII\u00abMIIMI*HHt\u00ab\nIIIIHIimMltllHIIKimilllllllltlllllllllllllltllll\nGALT  GOAL\nBURNS ALL NIGHT\nMines: Lethbrldge, Alta. W. P. T1ERNEY\nGeneral sales agent, Nelson, B. C.\nIIIMIIIIHIH tin Illlllimill'l'\t\nXlMS\nCards\nand\nCalendars\nIt you are sending any to distant\nparts It Is not to soon to be making\nyour selection.\nYou can do it so much more com*\nfortably too, than by waiting till tha\nrush, and you have the complete line\nto select from.\nOur line this year far surpasses anything we have ever shown. It includes\na large selection of the Raphael Tuck\nlines, world famed for beauty and high\nartistic merit.\nCHRISTMAS SEALS In holly and mistletoe and Santa Claus\ndesigns tor Christmas parcels, letters, etc., are a feature of our line\nthis year they come 50 In a package tor 10c a package.\nAlso holly tags at 10c and 20c for package of 10. . \u2022\nW. Q- THOMSON\nBookseller and Stationer\nPhone 34.\nNelaon, B. C.\nA druggist can obtain an Imitation of\nMINARD'S UNIMENT from' a Toronto\nhouse at a very low price, and have It labeled his own product.\nThis greasy Imitation Is tho poorest ono\nwe havl yet seen ot tho many that every\nTom. Dick and Harry has tried to Intro-\ndABk tor MINARD'S and you will get.lt.\n\u00a9tie \u00a7aW& StettH^\nnciuhsd at Nelson Brerj Marabou\nExcept Monday, by\nNewa Publishing Company, Limited\n*. O. HoMOBRIS \u2014 Xamset\nB. C. FRUIT LANDS\nAlthough the announcement ot their\nreal valu? has been a trifle long delayed, British Columbia fruit lands are\nfast coming into general public notice\noutside of the province and outside ot\nthe dominion. Speakers at Public functions nowadays when referring to the\npotentialities of this province are careful to Include fruit growing along with\nminerals, lumber and the fisheries and\nthe province Is getting the benefit of\nbeing known abroad aB a trult raising\ncountry, a distinction that attracts the\nattention ot an exceedingly desirable\nclass of investors and settlers.\nIn his speech at Vancouver the other\nday James J. Hill laid special stress on\nthe fruit raising possibilities ot B.q.\nand presided a prosperous future for\nthe industry in the near future.\nTho announcement published yesterday that the Belgo-Canadian Fruit Land\ncompany had been formed lo Antwerp\nto do business in this province Is only\none of many Indications that the Interest taken in fruit ranching hereabouts\nis tar reaching.\nThe Industry ln the Kootenays from\na commercial standpoint Is, of course,\nstill ln Its Infancy and to advance It\nrapidly the co-operation ot all concerned Is essential. Local ranchers will\nbear out the statement that last year's\nexperiences were not satisfactory so tar\nas the marketing of the trult was concerned snd ln some other details. Without enquiring too closely Into the cause\nof the failure last season, It seems clear\nthat the trait (rowers must act together\nit they desire to nap the full benefit\not their labors. Blade handed efforts\nmay occasionally ha successful bat If\nth\u00bb fruit Is to be packed, transported\nJa- _.. .   ..._ \u201e\u201e. -.\u2014 ...-\npromptly .active co-operation through a\nwell managed association is necessary.\nAs to whether such an association\nshould be wholly a Provincial one, or\nwhether Kootenay ranchers could obtain better results by acting as an independent body, no opinion is now expressed, hut it is obvious that the time\nfor making the necessary arrangements\nfor next year is during the winter\nmonths and it Ib to be hoped that before next spring Kootenay ranchers will\nhave again fully discussed the difficulties to be encountered and have arrived\nat a satisfactory understanding. It is\nhighly |u the interests of the whole\ncommunity that trult raising in Kootenay should succeed commercially and\nthe trult growers are assured of sympathetic assistance from every quarter\nto aid them In obtaining the desired end.\nEDITORIAL NOTE3.\nMr. Lemieux has apparently been successful on his present semi-official visit\nto England. The postmaster general\nsaid at a private dinner party last week\nin London that he looked upon cheap\ncommunication by post, wire or cable\nas the lntelllectnal bonds ot the British\nempire and that he would be satlstied\nwith an All Red cable ana a substantial reduction ot existing rates. Although the cable companies have affected to regard with scorn Hennlker\nHeaton's penny-a-word cable scheme,'\nyet according to the despatch from London published. this morning, the rate\nhas been, cut In half for newspapers and\ncut more than in half for the general\npublic ,a fairly clear Intimation that\nthe companies interested have deemed\nIt the part of wisdom to meet Mr. Beaton's penny-a-word scheme with a substantial reduction ot existing rates, ln\nthe hope no doubt ot at all events post\nponlng the still cheaper rate proposed.\nThe move is all very well as a first step\nln the right direction but the rates\nmust be cut considerably lower yet before the public gets fair play in the\nmatter. When all the facts ln regard\nto the cable monopoly are known, the\ndemand tor a rate something near the\npenny-a-word scale will, become Insistent and will possibly be granted.\nIt Is a matter ot regret that the city\nauthorities were unable to provide ac-\noommodatlou for the Nelaon library and\ntree reading room ln the new city hall.\nThe present -jua-rters of the library\nleave much to ho desired and ln addition\nthe board haa, to Pay rent for the premises used, an expenditure that It was\nhoped could be avoided by the transfer..\nOf the library to the new city hall building. The library and the board of di-\n\u2022Ja^(((J|d^loMi^ahoM\u00ab\nROLLER RINK a**^\nNovember 17 and 18.\nWell Known.\nClark's\nWell Known\nMoving Pictures and\nVaudeville Company\n.   \\ With Illustrated Songs.\nShow Rons Three Hours\nADMISSION:Children 15c; adults 25c. Follow the crowd to the rink.\nShow starts at 7:30, city time. Oet there ln time and bring your\nchildren.   Laugh from start to finish.\nure ot public support and It Is to be hoped that the entertainment to be given\nln aid ot the institution on next Friday\nevening In the roller rink will be generally patronised by the public. A\ncouple of years ago there waa an undoubtedly strong local feeling against\napplying for a grant from the Carnegie\nlibrary tund and that feeling probably\nexists as strongly as ever, but the fact\nthat ln deference to the\" prejudice' referred to, no application was made to\nthe Carnegie trustees, is all the greater\nreason why the public should on every\nreasonable opportunity come to the aid\nof the library and assist ln maintaining\nits eftlcleny.\nApart from the emigration work of\nthe Salvation army which has aroused\nhostility in some quarters, it Ib quite\nimpossible to regard unmoved the very\nexcellent work accomplished by the or-\nganizatiojo in other dljfeottons. Col.\nFugmire who was ln the city on Sunday last with commissioner Coombs,\ngave some idea of the magnitude of the\narmy's campaign along a single line,\nwhen he stated that 22.000 Prisoners ln\nCanada were Interviewed the past yeat\nby himself and his assistants and that ot\n1000 discharged prisoners met by the\narmy, no 'ess than 750 had been provided with employment. So long as the\nSalvation army is able to accomplish\nwork of the sort referred to, it will receive public sympathy and support.\nThe leading man ln China during the\npresent crisis rejoices ln the name of\nYuan-Shl-Kal, and the Pekln correspondent of the London Times, ln giving him\na good character as a statesman, adds\nthat his chief stumbling block is the female Influence at court which may be\nused to mar his plaits tor the betteh\ngovernment of the Chinese. It would\nseem to be a case for the Lonon suffragettes. When they get out ot prison\nthey should go to Pekln and train up\nYuan-Shl-Kal in the way he should go.\nThey alone may be able to overcome\nthe influence feared by the Thunderer's\nChinese correspondent.\nAs a result of the Interview at P\u00b0ts-\ndam yesterday with ohancellor von Buelow,-the emperor of Germany will in\nfuture become \"William the Silent\" so\nfas as his intervention in' foreign af\nfairs ot state Is concerned. According\nto the story, told ln cabled despatches\npublished this morning the emperor\ngave his unqualified assent to the promise asked of him by the chancellor.\nThe king's nephew has evidently learned wisdom of late, probably from the\nastute prince with whom he was shooting pheasants all last week. The emperor Willi doubtless choose some other\nmethod than the one he recently used\nwhen next he tries to demonstrate his\nfriendliness for Great Britain and his\nintense desire to follow tn the footsteps\nof hla uncle, as the .\u2022peacemaker of\nEurope.\nIS VICTIMIZED\nMounted Policeman Robbed In Utah by\nThieves* Friends.\nSALT LAKU, Uttab, Nov. 17\u2014Becoming the victim of * thief while engaged\nin pursuing one was the experience that\nbefell sergeant major T. O. Jones of\nthe Canadian Northwest Mounted Police yesterday, while he was en route\nto Salt Lake. Upon reaching his hotel,\nhere, he discovered that his valise had\nbeen tampered with and a wallet containing his Identiflcatiton papers, warrants and about $175 tn currency had\nbeen stolen. Sergt. Jones is convinced\nthat the thief ot his papers and money\nwas the work of friends of the gang of\nthieves he is now running down.\nis \u25a0\nWinnipeg--Deaths.\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 17\u2014Mrs. Lawlor,\nwife of the late captain Pat Lawlor, of\nthe provincial Jail, died this morning.\n\"Admiral\" Brow'n, the well known\nsleeping .car conductor running between\nWinnipeg and St. Paul, died today.\nMurderer Is Sane.\nMONTREAL, Nov. 17\u2014John- Dllton,\nalias James Smith, the book agent accused of the murder of constable O'Shea\nand of wounding chief Carpenter and\nconstable Foucault last April was declared Bane by a jury in the court of\nking's bench today.\nMinard's Liniment Curea Colds, Etc.\nCOMMUNICATIONS\nLetters to The Dally News on ourrent\ntopics are cordially Invited, subject te the\nfollowing terma:\nThe letters must be plainly written (typewritten preferred) on one aide ot tbe writing paper only, ot reasonable lencth and\nmust be signed by the writer for publication. \u25a0\nTbe Dally News Is not responsible for\nthe views expressed by correspondents.\nTo the Editor ot The Dally NewS:\nSIB: PS,\nIt Is not generally understood that the\nemergency exits nnr structures used lor\nmoving picture exhibitions, are located at\nthe end of buildings, alongside the screens\non which the pictures are thrown. The\nreason for this is that the only danger Is\nfrom the films igniting ln* the operating\nroom, which la usually located over the\nmain entrance. Should the Alms take Are,\nthe audience would be expected to quietly\nwalk towards the rear end of the buildings\nnow In use. where proper doors have been\nplaced, over which red lights will remain\nburning during performances. Considering\nthat we now have three moving picture\nmachines operating in the city, it would be'\nwise tor all persons to remember that the\nonly danger Is; from panic and tt Is to tw\nboned that patrons will quietly leave any\nbuilding, should trouble arise, by the exit\nopposite to the end of the building where\nentrance. doora stand. All buildings used\nare on Baker street, and It would be well\nto remember that the emergency exits are\naway from Baker street. The exhibitor*\nare-all carrying out Instructions, and dan-\nrger has been minimised: but It would be\nwell for any audience to avoid creating a\npanic.\n\u25a0 THOMAS DEASY.\nNelson. November 17th, 1908.'\nBLIGHT CORKECTION.\nI would like to makela slight alteration\nlas?night! (council proceedings\nJWttbi reference to' the epiir traok at\nMiles Ferry you quote me as Baying that\nL5f\u00bbu,S*P t0 attain any satlSraction\nfrom Mr. Coleman, c. P. B. superintendent.\nI have forgotten my exact words, but they\n\u2022JSliS Ke \"\"??' ,h,lvMr* CoUman-bS\nreferred the matter to his engineering department, whose report had not yet come\nto hand. I may eay that I have received\nfv.iIX,.-0?\"?-!-' and assistance from Mr.\nS?\u2122 \u00a3.'\" the, '\"\u2022\"\"\u2022sms of transportation\nto our power plant: and have no doubt that 1\nMr. Coleman is taking tho neoesifi? steS\n(OTthe installation ot a side-track at MllS '\nThanking you tor your valuable apace:\nJ. C. DUFRESNE,\nNOT WITH GREAT BRITAIN\nOntario Medical Council Opposes Exchange of Certificates.\nTORONTO, Nov. 17-A special meet-l\ning ot the Ontario medical council open-1\ned here today.. It was recommended!\nby the education committee that the!\nstandard ot matriculation be raised 25|\nper cent and to Include bacteriology inl\nthe curriculum. The committee alsol\nadvised reciprocity In registration wlthl\ntho other provinces, but not with Oreatl\nBritain on the ground chiefly that the|\nprofession was over-crowded. The Report is under discussion.\nNew Railway Line.\n- BUFFALO, N. Y\u201e Nov. 17\u2014The Buf-I\nfalo,   Lookport & Rochester   railwayf\nwhich has been operating for the lai\ntwo months between Lockport and All\nblon was opened for through servica\nover Its entire length between Lockport\nand Rochester today.   A large crowd]\nwelcomed the arrival of the first cai|\nat Lockport this morning.    The new\nroad will make connection at Lockport!\nwithin a tew weeks, with Buffalo by the]\nInternational trolley line.\nGO A L\nICE, COKE\nand WOOD\nHi Ski H gtsct att Os nether rwpttr tto Well mem Mil com\n| lhe Kootenay Ice 4 Fuel Co. Nx8o%&iVd\nPrepare for Christmas\nOur Christmas goods aro arriving\ndally and we already have an immense\nstock ot Christmas goods in our Show\ncases, V7e wish especially to call your\nattention to the fact that you can buy.\nyour Christmas presents now. at prices\nmuch below what you will have to pay\nlater on and you have the first choice\nfrom our stock.\n6\n-S\nI\nProtect\nYour Eyes\nThlB is the time of the year when\nyour eyes require the most careful attention. If you consult a competent op-\n' ttclan now it may mean all the differ-\nonce between years of comfort and\nagony. We are prepared to give you\nthe benefit ot the most expert optical\nwork to he had la the city.\nWatch\nRepairing\nIf your watch or clock Is ont of repair bring It to us and be assured that\nIt will be given expert attention and\nwill ln future give you entire satisfaction. We make a specialty of this class\nof work.\nJ. J. Walker40IMtcrSt\nGraduate Optician and Jeweler\n WEPNE8DAY ... NOVEMBER. 18\nS1\n-^eSfGopxf\nu?i\nBke \u00a9aUg $UttJ\u00bb.\ni   page five\nHOTEL ARRIVALS OF A DAY\nHJIJMB-J. Keen, J. E. Archer, Kaslo; Q.\n]?. Fry. Montreal: C.<P. Burgess, Kokanee;\nij. Simon, W. Adams, C. Longhurat, Vancouver; H. A. Coomber, B. Ooomber, Boa-\nwell; J. B. Wlnlaw, Wlnlaw; H. Miller, H.\nE. Lash, Toronto; W. Ranklna, Cranbrook;\nF. N. Dodd, Spokane; W. fl. Walsh, London; A. W. Jarls, Enderby; B. W. Ruff,\nRowland; G. A. iHarrla, K. C. Macdonald,\nVernon; T, Peck, Midway; D. Ross, Greenwood.\nSTRATHCONA-A, Founder, Kaslo; A.\n' D. Wheeler and wife, Alnsworth; E. H.\n\u25a0Goodwin, Vancouver; F. T, Kelly, Sandon.\nTHE QUEEN'S\n\u25a0un mm\n*    A. LAPOINTE, Proprietor\nLarge   Ui comfortable   bedrooms.    Rates  |2,60 to 15.00\n-per week.\nEuropean Plan.\nQUfEEN'S-R. N. Brassey, B. H. Fox,\nR. Clark and wife, Harrop: H. Craig, Winnipeg; J. M. Cameron and wife, Westley;\nR. Stuart, D. Smith, Rossland .\nThe Klondyke Hotel\nVERNON STREET\nHeadquarters for miners, emitter-\nmen, loggers and railroad aura\nRates; I1.00 per day np.\nNELSON ft JOHNSON, Propi.\nKLONDYKE-M. Trysland, Milestone; A.\nSandgren, Helena; J. W. Johnson, Queen\nVictoria Mine; J. Walton), Hosmer; E.\nPenler, Cranbrook.\nTremont House\nBaker St., Nelson\nllalone ts TrejUlus, Prow,\nBonpean Plan, SOe. np\nAmerican Plan, 11.36 and IU\u00ab\nMeeli, JSo,\nSPECIAL RATES PSR MONTH\nTREMONT\u2014J. Richardson, Grays Creek;\n. J. Carr, E. G. McArthur, Salmo; J. Ser-\neon, Kitchener; 0. B. White, Rossland.\nGrand Central Hotel\nOPFOStTE POST OFTICC\nAmrlcaa aid Eiropni mil\nj. ik reiciso*\nGRAND CENTRAL-M.   MoPherson,   3.\nMcGrade. Vancouver; W. W. Stickler, H.\nTlerney, Spokane; 0. U Prosser, Coeurd\n'Aleno; C. Ehler, W. H. Brotbwlck, RosB-\n' land; T. McLean, Greenwood.\nMadden House\nThon. lfadden, Prop,\nWell Furnished Rooms With Balk\nBest Board In the our\n4 OOKOORTABU BOMB\nMADDEN\u2014P. T. Benson, Slocan; J. Hay-\nton, Queen's Bay; . Brown, Spokane.\nSHERBROKE-A. Maycotte, Greenwood;\nH. Sturgeon, Blngvllle; T. H. Gobble, P.\nRaney, Vernon. .\nROYAL-A. Roberts, Moyle; H. Hill, Wilton, Queen's Bay; R. Brawn, Spokane.\nSILVER KINGvE. Wraith; J, McLeod,\nNew York! W. A. McDonald, N. Nelson, T.\nP. Crackwell, H^RIchardson, Vancouver;\nR. Riley, Phoenix.\nBARTLETT-J. Cocftshut, Seattle'; W.\nCanning, Brandon; R. Carpenter, .Greenwood; w. Moore, Vancouver,\nNELSON\u2014A. Erlckson, Northport: W. B.\nWilliam, Calgary; J. Wood, N. F. Bollard,\nF.  King, Marcus.      .\nLABEVIEW-R. H. Robinson, teth-\nbrldge; G. Anderton, Fernle; J. Olson,\n. Cranbrook.\nKOOTBNAY-F. Thorpe, J. Collotte,\nCreston; E. Mercler, J. Morrison, Fernie;\nS. Young, J. Purdy, Cranbrook; T. Jones,\nCalgary: J. H. Wylle, Revelstoke: G. Simons, Spokane; J, -R, Day, E. Vaughan,\nPhoenix; J. L. Oabourne and wife, Vancouver.\nNEW RINK AT FERNIE\nSteps Have Been Taken for Erection\nof One.\nPBRNIB, Not. 11\u20143. D. Quail open-\ned his new hardware  store   Saturday\nevening.   It is one ot the finest buildings In town, being of concrete. At a\nmeeting of shareholders of the Fernle\nRink company, to decide on building a\nrink to replace the one destroyed  by\nfire, It waa decided   to rebuild   and\n.  aeveral sites were; suggested and a committee appointed to select the meat desirable.   It Is expected the new rink\nNEWS OF THEDM1&N\nQUEBEC, Nov. It\u2014The employees of\nthe Quebec and Lake St. John railway were awarded a slight increase In\npay by the board of conciliation, appointed under the Lemieux act.\nHALIFAX, Nov 17-^The master builders ot Halifax yesterday decided that\nfor the ensuing year they-would maintain a nine hour day.* They say they\nare determined to stick by on'e another.\nTORONTO, Nov. 17-^Thomas Lawless\not thia city has been appointed supreme\ntreasurer and a member of the executive -council of the Independent Order\nof Foresters, to succeed the late Harry\nCollins. . i   ,'iu.,t\nBRQCKVIU\/B, Nov. 17 \u2014 In the\ncounty court today -fudge Macdonald\nsentenced Stewart Gray of Ottawa and\nChas, Campbell, alias Charles Dorrin-J-\nton ot Toronto, to six and seven years\nin the penitentiary respectively at hard\nlabor for recent burglaries committed\nhere.\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 17\u2014Action was filed thlf morning for $60,000 damages and\nresultant costs' by the Vulcan Iron\nworks of this city against the unions\nwhich ordered the strike in their plant\nln March, 1906, and a perpetual injunction was applied for against picketing\nthe Vulcan plant and an interim Injunction was granted. There are 91 defendants In. the eult, amongst them being the International Brotherhood of\nMachinists, all the local iron working\nunions and some 80 Individuals.\nCALGARY, Nov. *17-Lord Northcote,\nwho has been governor general of the\ncommonwealth of Australia, and lady\nNorthcote and party, arrived in Calgary yesterday. During the morning\nthe party spent three hours driving\naround the city and district. Before\ndeparting for the east In their private\ncar the visitors expressed surprise at\nthe wonderful development of Calgary\nand were, particularly Impressed with\nthe vast possibilities of the future.\nCAOLABY, Nov. 17\u2014Rev. Father C.\nM .VanAken of Akenstad, Alta., general\nagent of the Canadian Pacific Irrigation\nand Colonization company tor Holland,\nIb on his way to that country via Montreal where he will attend the American Catholic missionary congress. Father VanAken has been very successful ln\nbringing ont farmers from Holland and\nestablished the Dutch colony called Akenstad In the CP.R. Irrigation block,\neast of here. He will return to Calgary\nIn the spring and expects to bring a\nlarge party of Hollanders.\nCALOARY, Nov. 17\u2014A large party of\nprospective land buyers arrived yesterday from North Dakota, having been\nbrought in hy the Interstate Land Co.\nof Minot, N.D. The land under consideration Is that of the C.P.R, Irrigation and Colonisation company. They\nwere tsken In charge by the sales agent\nof. ths company and yesterday looked\nover the company's Irrigated lands near\nGleichen. Another large party has also\narrived here from Butte, brought by\nMessrs. O'Neill and Bllnn, land agents\nof the company.\nSASKATOON, Nov. 17\u2014Political rumors have been rife of late. A few days\nago it was said that Archie MaoNab\nwould ertire from the city Beat in favor of Hon. J. A. Calder, and that W.\nC. Sutherland was slated for the senate, his.county seat to.be contested by\nJ. A. Aiken of the Daily Phoenix. Such\nrumors have been very persistent and,\nwhile it Is felt that they may not be\ncorrect, It Is the impression that some\nchanges are eminent. Now It is currently reported that MaoNab will take tha\nportfolio of railways and telephones.\nMacNab smiles and says little. The report is unconfirmed bo far,\nWINNIPEO, Nov. 17\u2014The only possible stePB that the Manitoba government can take with reference to the\nrecent coal oil'explosions which have\ncaused so many deaths lately have been\ntaken by Hon. Colin H. Campbell, attorney general, when he telegraphed\nthis morning to the minister of inland\nrevenue offering assistance and co-operation In ascertaining who the guilty\nparties are, and in having them pun-'\nIshed. Until an answer Is received from\nOttawa, the contlnuande of the investl\nRation by the provincial government is\nat a standstill,\nWINNPIEG, Nov. 17\u2014The mysteify\nsurrounding the death of Katie Poison,\nwho died, as the result of injuries received by being knocked down by a rig\non Edmonton street on Tuesday night,\nNov. 3, has been solved. The local authorities have telegraphed to Toronto\n.ordering the arrest 0t one Hallett who\nIs said to have been the driver of the\nrig. Before leaving he sold his horse\nand rig, explaining to the purchaser\nthat \/he had got into trouble and had\nto leave town. He waa traced to Toronto and this morning Instructions were\nwired to have him arrested at once.\nHallett will hs brought baok to Winnipeg as soon as the arrest takes place.\nIt ts said that he was Intoxicated When\nhe drove over the girl.\nHELD FOR MURDER\nThree Men Unde**, Arrest In Saskatchewan Town.\n'. WINNIPEG, Nov. 17\u2014A coroner's\njury empanelled to enquire into Frank\nNadon's death at Paynton, Sask., early\nyesterday morning, brought In. a verdict of wilful murder against Amedee\nTetreault, who arrived ln Canada recently from Bridgeport, Neb. The story\ntold by witnesses at the inquest was\nthat Tetreault was celebrating hla arrival In Canada and In these celebrations whisky played a meet important\n-part. When drink was fnrnlshed,\\the\ninevitable free fight started, Tetreault,\nWilliam Cavlre   and  Augustine   Roy\nLater Mrs. Tetreault admitted him\nand the. fight was renewed with fatal\neffect, for Nadon. As a result ot the\nInquest Caviare and Roy are being\nheld On a murder charge, ln addition to\nTetreault,. the jury having brought In a\nverdict to this effect. The three will\nreceive their preliminary hearing this\nweek at Lashburn, Sask.\nNadon and Tetreault are both former\nresidents of Quebec, although they recently came to Saskatchewan from Ne-\nbraska.\nBody Found Frozen.\nPITTSBURG, Pa\u201e Nov. 17\u2014Mystery\nsurrounds the death of Harry E. Mo-\nCullough, treasurer ot the Union Auction company, whose body, frozen stiff,\nwaa found yesterday en a road leading,\nfrom Meddlx Run, Penna., ln a thick\nwood. A friend believes McCullough,\nwho was on a hunting expedition, may\nhave frozen to death after having eaten\nsomething poisonous at the hunting\ncamp. The authorities are investigating. McCullough was 33 years ot age\naid married.\nchains In a 8.W. direction from lot 5800\nand marked \"Francis Davison's N.W. corner post, thence 30 chains south; thence 80\nchains east; thence 20 chains north; thence\n20 chains west to point of commencement,\ncontaining 160 acres, more or less,\nFRANCIS DAVISON,\nHirem B. Landis, Agent.\nDated Nov. 2, '1008.\nNELSON   LAND   DISTBICT,   DISTRICT\n\u25a0   OF WEST KOOTENAY\nTAKE NOTICE that Joseph Davison ot\nCastlegar, B.C., occupation, telegrapher.\nIntends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nN.E. corner of lot 8219 and marked \"Joseph\nDavison's S.E. corner post\" thence to chains\nnorth; thence 40 chains west; thence 40\nchains south; thenoe 40 chains east to point\nof commencement, contalnng 160 acres more\nor 1\n,      Hiram B. Landis, Agent.\nDated Nov.' 2, IMS.\nJOSEPH DAVISON,\nBest Hot Lunch at the Athabasca.\nWhen the oven of a range\nfails you, you might aB well be\nwithout the range.\nThe oven of the OXFORD\nCHANCELLOR Is a master-\npiece. It is as nearly perfection aa ah oven can be. The\nheating is eveit from side to\nside and from back to front.\nTop, back and front are of\nuniform thickness and asbestos lined.\n<\nA perforated loose steel hot\ntorn Is placed above the sheet.\nIron bottom. This assures a\nlevel surface.\nThe Oxford\nfor Bale bv\nChancellor   Is\nJ. H. Ashdown\nHardware Co.\nFour Good\nWood  Lathers\nWanted at once. Apply to\nW. G. Gillett, contractor,\nNelson, B.C.\nLAND NOTICES\nNELSON   LAND  DISTRICT,   DISTRICT\nOP WEST KOOTENAY.\nTake notice that I, Lome Stewart, of\nNelson, B. C, occupation clerk, Intends to\napply for permission to purchase the following described lands:\nCommencing, at a post planted at the N.\nW. comer of lot 229, thence south 40 chains\nto the S. W. corner of said lot, thence\nwest 40 chains, thence north 40 chains,\nthence east 40 chains, to -point of commencement, containing 160 acres more or\nless. LORNE STEWART,\nMIKE EGAN. Agent.\nAuguit 10, J9ML  12-8-08-M\nINEL80N   LAND  DISTRICT,   DISTRICT\nOF WEST KOOTENAY,\nTAKE NOTICE that Humes M. Hodson\nof Salmo, B. C, occupation farmer, intends\nto apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:\nCommencing at a post planted about 30\n-chains west of N. E. corner of J. 8. Griffin's preemption and running 40 chains\nnorth; thence 40 chains west; thence -40\nchains couth; thence 40 chains east to place\nof -commencement.\nJAMES If. HODSON.\nDated November 7th, 1908. ltMl-ew.\nNELSON   LAND  DISTRICT,   DISTRICT\n07 WEBT KOOTENAY\nTAKB NOTICB that Prahols Davison ot\nCastlegar, B.C., occupation, taletnptwr.\nIntends to apply for pstmlsthm to pur-chaw\nthe following dNcribed lands;\nNELSON    DISTRICT,    DISTRICT*    OP\nWEST  KOOTENAY.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, J. R.  Hunex,  of\nErie, B.C., occupation, pharmacist, Intend to apply for permission to purchase.\nthe following described lands:\nCommencing at a post planted about 600\nfeet north of the International boundary\nline and adjoining Lot 9056, on the weat,\nthence north 60 chains; thence west 20\nchains; thence south 80 chains; thence east\n20 chains to point of commencement, containing 160 acres mora, or leas.\nJ. R. HUNNEK,\nWm. Connolly Agent.\nOct. 10,1908. ' 1G7-S0d-W\nNELSON  LAND  DISTRICT,   DISTRICT\nOF WEST KOOTENAY.\nTAKE NOTICB that James Finch of Cres\ncent valley, occupation, rancher. Intends\nio apply for permission '      \u2014\nfollowing described lands;\n, rancher,\nto Jpirchi\niase the\nCommencing at a post planted on the\nwest bank of tha Slocan river, near the\nN.E. corner post of Lot No. 6451, thence\nwest 23 chains to the easterly boundary of\nLot 7361; thence north to the Slocan river;\nthence southeasterly along the bank of\nthe said river to point of commencement,\nbeing about 40 acres more or leas\nJAMES FINCH.\nDated Oct 1. IMS. 8-W-BOd.\nTAKE NOTICB that I, Frank F. Siemens\nof Renata, in the Province of British\nColumbia, Intend, to apply for permission\nto purchase the fallowing de-scrlbed land:\nCommencing at a post planted alongside\npost on the southeast corner <of Lot 621\u00bb\nGroup One, running 20 chains south; thence\n40 chains east; thence 46.6 chains north;\nthence -20 chains west; thence 26.6 chains\nsouth; thenoe 80 chains west to point of\ncommencement, and containing 136 acres\nmore or less.\nDated September 28th, 1903.\n6-6-60d       FRANK F. SIEMENS, Locator.\nNBLSON   LAND   DISTRICT,   DISTRICT\nOF WEST KOOTENAY.\nTAKB notice that I, BdwaM Stickle, of\n,   Brie, B. C, occupation miner, Intend to\napply -for permission -to purchase the following described lands:\nCommencing at a post planted about two\nmiles from the mouth of Wilson Creek, and\nbbout 600 feet south of the south bank:\nthence North 19 chains; thence West \u25a0\nchains; thence south 10 cains; thence Bast\nSO chains to point of commencement, containing 1C0 acres more cr less.\t\nEDWARD STICKLE,\nWll   CONNOLLY.   Affent\nDated September 10th .1906.\n*\nLadies' Winter Coats\nWhen we gave the order forth; se coats we telt quite sure that the ladies\nof Nelson would appreciate the beautiful selection we are going to offer them\nand the many pleased customers who visited us yesterday confirmed the\naccuracy of our judgment.\nThs New Empire effect was much admired, tats model bas\nthe dlrectoire sleeve which is now so much the vogue' in New\nYork. It Is beautifully trimmed with satln( and is slso satin\nlined. In black or brown cloth it bas a very dressy appearance\nand at the price asked is a bargain (33.50\nThe seml-fittlng In black, navy and green, also received their\nshare of attention. These are very artistically trimmed with\nbraid and buttons, and ln Kersey, Broadcloth or Cheviot make as\npretty ah outdoor coat as one could wish for, and their wearing\nqualities are unexcelled. We have these at prices ranging from\n112.60 to  $30.00\nThe tight fitting models ln black and navy blue cloth are as\nbecoming as they are serviceable, these are trimmed with braid\nand buttons tin such a way that the garment has a most pleasing\neffect, and are the cheapes t coats on offer quality considered,\nat  J20.00\nWe shall be pleased If you will call in and look them over.\nMEAGHER & CO.\nBaker Street   \/       Nelson, B. C.\nf\ntatning 80 acres, more or less.\nD. McCUAIG.\nOct. 20, 1908.\nDied, at 12.30 this morning, Morris Joi-\nNEIjSON   LAND   DISTRICT,   DISTRICT\nOF WEST KOOTENAY.\nTAKE NOTICB that I Sidney Leary,  of\nBurton City, occupation rancher, Intend\nto apply for permission to purchase the following described landsv\nCommencing at a post planted alongside\nof a poet marked Lot 4272 up Mosquito\nCreok on the West Boundary of Lot 870,\nnear S. W. Corner and running South 160\nchains; West 40 chains; thence North 160\nchains; thence oast 40 chains, V\nCHARLES SIDNEY LEARY.\nDated 8th day of August, 1908. 6-9-8.\nTAKE NOTICE that t, Abram Henry\nLocppky of the City of Altona, In the province of Manitoba, intend to apply for\npermission tp* purchase the following -described land: \u25a0 \u25a0\nCommencing at a post planted on the\nwest boundary of Lot 1272, Ql (about five\nmiles from Arrow luke, on Mosquito\ncreek) and 21 chains 73 Units south of the\nnorthwest corner of said lot, running thence\nwest 80 chains; thence south \u00a30 chains;\nthurice east 80 chains; thence north 80\nchains to place of commencement, and containing 640 acres, more or lens.\nABRAM HENRY 1.0EPPKY, Locator.\n6-10-60d       CHARLES MARSHALL, Agent.\nDated September 7th, 1308.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, Peter Bergman of\nthe town of Plum Coulee, in the province\not Manitoba, intend to apply for iwimiesion\nto purchase the following described land:\nCommencing at a post planted at tha\nnortheaat corner of Abram Henry Loop-\npky's application to purchase and running\nthence west 80 chains; thence north 80\nchains; thence east 4P chains; -thence\nsouth 8 chains 25 links; thence east \u00ab\nchains; thence south 71 chains 75 links te\npoint ot commencement, and containing\n607 acres, more or less.\nDated September 7th, 1MJ.\n-  PETER BERGMAN. Locator.\n6___\\       CHARLES MARSHALL, Agent\nNBLflON   LAND DISTRICT,   DISTRICT\nOF WEST KOOTENAY.\nTAKB* NOTICE that Fraak F.  Siemens,\nof Renata, B.C., occupation, rancher. Intends to apply for permission to purchase\nthe following described land:\nCommencing- at a post planted about\ntwenty feet from the middle fork of Dog\ncreek about six miles- from the Arrow\nlakes, marked \"Frank F. Batmen's N.E.\ncorner,\" thence south 30 chain; thence\neast 20 chains; thence north 20 chains to\nthe point of commencement and containing\nforty (40) mm ma^Jg_ ^^^\nAaent for FRANK SIEMENS.\nDated Mth iayot September, UM.\nNBLSON   LAND  DISTRICT.   DISTRICT\nOF WEST KOOTENAY.\nTAKE NOTICE that I. W. S. Clarlc, farmer, of the city of Brandon, In the province of Manitoba, Intend to apply for permission to purchase tlie following described land:\nCommencing: at a post planted on  the\nnorthwest corner of the location ot Maria\nFrtesen, which corner Is 80 chains north\nof the south west corner of the said Maria\nFrlesen's  location  post,i and  which   last\nmentioned post Is 120 chains ln an easterly\ndirection from where Little Coyuse creek\ncrosses the eastern boundary line of block\nGS17, thence north 40 chains:  thence east\n40 chains; thenoe south 40 chains: thence\nwest 40 chains to tbe point of commencement, and containing lfi\" acres more or less.\nW. S. CLARK. Locator.\nF. F. Siemens, Agent.\nDated Oct. St. 1808.          12-ll-Sw\nNBLSON   LAND  DISTRICT,   DISTRICT\nOF WEBT KOOTENAY.\nTAKE NOTICB that I, Nellie Stewart, ot\nNelson, B.C., occupation, married woman, intend to apply for permission to\npurchase the following described lands:\nCommencing at a post planted about 10\nchains west of the N.E. 'corner of Lot TtU.\nthence west 40 chains; thence north 40\nchains: thence eaBt 40 chains; thence south\n40 chains, to point of commencement, containing 160 acres, more or less.\nNELLIE -STEWART,\nMitchell Talt, Agent\nOct. U, 1908.\t\nNELSON LAND DISTRICT, DISTRICT\nOF WEST KOOTENAY.\nTAKE NOTICB that I, D. McCusig,\nof Nelson, B. C, occupation, rancher,\nIntends to apply for permission to purchase the.following described lands:\nCommencing at a. post planted at the\n8. W. corner of lot 1848, thenoe north\n40 chains, thence treat: 10 chains,\nthence sonth 40 chains, thence eaat 80\nNELSON   LAND   DISTRICT,   DISTRICT\nOF WEST KOOTENAY.\nTAKE NOTICB that H. S. Young, of Seattle, Wash.,  occupation, clerk,  Intends\nto apply for permission to purchase the\nfollowing described lands:\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nN.W. corner of Marlon Isabella Crease's\napplication to purchase, thence east 80\nchains: thence north 40 chains; thenco west\n80 chains', thence south 40 chains, to point\nof commencement, containing 320 acres,\nmore or less.\nH. S. YOUNG,\nMitchell Talt, Agent\n\u2022 Oct. 12, 1008.  \u25a0\nNELSON   LAND   DISTRICT,   DISTRICT\nOF WEST KOOTENAY.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, J. E. Hutton, of\nToronto, Ont., occupation, traveller, intend to apply for permission to purchase\nthe following described lands:\nCommencing at a post planted about 40\nchains north of the S.W. corner of Lot 3115.\nthence west 80 chains; thence north 40\nchains; thence east 80 chains; thence soutb\n40 chains, to point of commencement, containing 320 acres more or less.\nJ. E. BUTTON,\nMitchell Talt, Agent\nOct. 12, 1008. \t\nNOTICE.\nIN THE MATTER of nn application for\nthe Issue ot duplicate certificates of tltlo\ntor Lots 8 nnd 9, Block 22, Addition A, Nelson City (Map 3101 and of Lot 1. Block 1\u00bb,\nHumes Addition, Nelson City (Map 2S4U).\nNotice Is hereby given that It is my Intention to issue at the expiration of one\nmonth after the first publication hereof\nduplicates ot tho Certificates of Title to\nthe above mentioned lands ln tho name ot\nPeter Wilson which Certificates ore dated\nthe lah of Fabruary, 1900, nnd the 14th of\nApril,  ISO),    respectively,    and    numbered\n**>*\u25a0 in,i 3311A- H. F. MACLEOD. .\nDistrict Registrar.\nLand Registry Office, Nelson, B. C.\nNovember 11, 1008. \"3-M\nCERTIFICATE    OF   IMPROVEMENTS-\nNOTICE.\nKlruna, Klruna Fraction end Buttertly\nFraction mineral claims, situate In the\nNelson mining division of West Aootcnny\n\"where   located: \u2022 Adjoining    the   Queen\nVictoria mineral claim, near Btasley sia-\n'\"\u2022Fake notice that I. Wm. 3. Drewry, aot-\nInir aa airent for J. P. Swedberg, free miner* \"e?fficate No., B1B614, intend, sixty\ndays fromithe date hereof, to apply to tlie\nmlMngTcorder for aetljse^oti-pme-\nmoots for the purpose of obtaining a crown\ngrant ot cach.of the above claims.\nAnd furtfier take notice that action, un-\ns \u00a3K ss assrsw:\n\"A this 12th day of Au^^T*\nNOTICE\nCERTIFICATE OF IMPROVEMENTS.\nNOTICE.\nJoint Fractional and, St. Eugene Fractional mineral claims, situate in the Nelson\nmining division of West Kootenay dlstrlot\nWner- located:   On Fawn creek.\nTike notice that I, F. C. Oreen. acting\nas agent ifor Eriest Latudlppe, free miners' certificate No. B3666. Intend, alxtx dsys\nfrom date hereof, to applJ>to the mining\nreoorled for certificates of Improvements,\nfor the purpose of obtaining crown grants\nof the above claims.\nAnd further take notice that action, un-\nstatement of the approximate number of\nder section 87. must be commenced before\nthe Issuance of such certificate of Improve-\nDated this fourteenth day ot \u25a0September,\nA   T)  IMS. 9-24-Wd\np. c. OREBN. Nelion. B. C.\nNOTICE\nCERTIFICATE OP IMPROVEMENTS.\nJoint and Double Joint   Mineral Claims,\nsituate In the Nelson Mining Division of\nWest Kootenay District.   Where located\n\u2014on Fowiv Creek.\nTAKB NOTICB that I, P. C. Oreen, acting\nas agent for Joseph Edgar Read, P. M.\nC. B. 7654; Napoleon Gagnon, F. M. C,, B.\n7641: Ned Roy. F. M. c, B. 16,436: and John\nPepptorpwo Miner's 'certificate No. B.\nU,S\u00bb, Intend, sixty sdys from dabs hereof,\nto apply to the Mining Recorder tor Certificates of Improvements, for the purpose\nof obtaining Crown Grants of ths above\nAn?'further take notice that action, under section SI. muat be commenced before\nttSESufi-Mof   such Oertmcatee of Im.\nDated this 14th day of 8ept\u00abmher, A. n.\nAt the Store of Quality\n- \u2014  \u25a0    a ______\nA Carload of Very Fine Apples\nSee them, try them, and buy them, they are right.    A few   hoj.es  of\nWealthy apples to clear at per box       81.15\nA. S. HORSW1LL\nPhone 10\n!&t*s\u00ab*\u00aessstot*!ess&$s^^\nYtw Want the BEST\nThen Bay\nIn an\nOld, Tried\nAnd Well-\nImproved\nDistrict\nCome\nAnd See\nMirror Lake\nHas Proved\nWhat Others\nAre\nOa'y Trying\nSeeing\nIs\nBelieving\nThe Best Land iot Ftuit Is at\nMirror Lake\nTRANSPORTATION\u2014 Pour boats dally to Kaslo and Nelson.\nORCHARDS\u2014Young or ln bearing.\n^LAND\u2014Cleared or uncleared.\n^\u00abOIL\u2014The beat\nWATER\u2014Abundance for all purposes framed over the land.\nOnly 2 1-2 miles from Kaslo which again this year twice\nCaptor ed* tbe District Ptfce Cup\nfrom the rest of Kootenay\nNo Summer Frosts at Mirror Lake\nUp to date, October 24, our Tomato, Potato, Pumpkin and Grape\nvines are still uninjured by frost.\nPrices Reasonable\nRaw lands on Kootenay lake, subdivided, with lake frontage, on actually existing roads; with good transportation, at 110 per acre up,\n1 COME SEE AND BE SATISFIED.\nK. K. Bjerkness or E. Norman\n.CmrBtkcrlWv-J\n t   MM SIX\n\u00a9he $}ottg Iteim\nWEDNESDAY .\nNOVEMBER 18\nFOR RENT\nEight-roomed cottage, modem conveniences and two lots,\ncultivated; splendid lawn; $20.00 per month, including water.\nSix-roomed house, modei-a conveniences;\nmonth Including water.\nclose in,   $18.00   per\nSee TOYE, TAYLOR & McQUARME\nRol Estate '-' Nelson, B.C.\nBE UP-TO-DATE\nUp-to-date boats \u00bbt upWate prices are only posalble by the use ol\nnp-to-dato  machinery by up-to-date men.\nWe employ none but the bee men in Uie country and a complete\nootfltcVflret class machinery will be Installed ln onr new factory  ln a\n'\"ot\/hoata are not racing machines but our guarantees as to speed\nwe becked with good hard cash all the aame.\nThe Smalley engine, are guwanteed to develops morepowe: per\n\u25a0nit of fuel consumption than any other engine on the market. So mwn\n*\" AM U^ are not expensive en-glnes either.   Now Is the time to\norder If you would be sure of qulok delivery.\nPoultry-\nCHICKENS AND FOWL from Kootetnay ranches received fresh, killed\n,    dally\nArriving for Christmas\nour customary supplies of Turkeys, Geese and Ducks.\n*\u00bb.   BURNS 6b\nNEL80N, B. C.\nOO. JLimited\nAND BRANCHES\nThe Suit of a Gentleman\nMust reveal quality.  The quiet, unobtrusive character ot a \"correct\"\n-suit bespeaks good breeding and wins favor for the wearer.\nSOVEREIGN BRAND CLOTHING\ncarries the hall marks ot quality and gives more  general  satisfaction\nthan any other.\nAsk for a SOVEREIGN Suit\nThe W. E. Sanford Mfg. Co., Ltd.\nHAMILTON, ONT.\nWINNIPEG, MAN.\nChrysanthemums   Carnations * Cut Flowers\nFlowering Plants and Ferns\nAlways ready at J. T. Bealbya glass houses.   Phone A277, Nelson,\nB. C.   Box 897.\nLOCAL TRUST COMPANY\nGRAND\nFORKS PEOPLE NOW\nCURE ONE\nSUV    OUT     BRTI8H     AMERICAN\nBRANCH\u2014OTHER DEALS\n(\u25a0pedal to Tht Solly Neve.)\nGRAND FORKS, Nov. 17-A deal has\njust been completed whereby local cltl-\n. seni will, about the first of the coming\nmonth, take over the general banking\n'and Investment business formerly eon*\n- d\u00bbete4 by the British American Trait\npany, which has been incorporated under the laws of British Columbia as the\nBoundary Investment and Trust company, will continue the former business\non an Increased scale, and with a local\nboard of directors. Mayor Frlpp, who\nIs manager of the company, states that\nit haB long been his ambittton to see\na strong local company in Grand Forks,\nend that he Is highly pleased over the\nfact, that, after a long series of negotiations, the efforts to secure tbe control of the old company have at last\nbeen successful. The company will\npursue an energetic policy in all matters appertaining to the welfare of tbe\ncity aad vattsr, tod cannot fail to\nprove a b-saofletal factor In  business\ncircles of the community. The new\ncompany will take over the business\non December 1.\nAnother deal of considerable lrn*\nportance is the sale of the Winnipeg\nhotel to S. J. Miller of Victoria. W.\nBonthron and W. McNee, the owners ot\nthe property, a little over a year ago\nleased the hotel to John Webster, who\nran the business until about a month\nago, when he was succeeded by P. McNee. The Winnipeg is one of the best\nhotels in the city and It is stated that\nthe new owner, who will take Immediate possession, will at once have the\npremises extensively enlarged, conducting the hotel on strictly first class\nlines.\nKlohey Hasegawa, a mining engineer\nof Tokio, is in the Boundary, Inspecting the mining operations as carried\non In this district Mr. Hasegawa is\nconnected with Furukawa Mining company, one of the largest mining corporations in Japan, and will spend several\nmonths in this section, visiting all the\nmining camps of the Interior of British\nColumbia, He is making his headquarters at the hotel -Colin.\nA change has taken place in the management of P. Burns' meat market in\nthis city. Jeff Hammar, who has for\nsome years been at the head of the\nlocal establishment has resigned and\n-Geo. Gowland of Kaslo has taken up\nthe duties of manager. Mr. Gowland\nhas moved his family to this city and\nhas taken up his residence In the McDonald house on Winnipeg avenue. Mr.\nHammar will continue to remain with\nP. Burns '& Co., but at present\ndoes not know to what point he will\nbo transferred.\nH. B. Cannon returned to this city on\nFriday from Moresby island, eighty\nmiles west of Prince Rupert, where he\nU Interested with other Grand Forks\ncitizens In eight mineral clalims, located by Frank Fritz of this city some few\nmonths ago. Mr. Cannon received some\nsamples from the claims a few weeks\nago, and so good were they, that he decided to investigate the claims for himself and so well satisfied Is he with\nwhat he saw that he Is returning to the\ncoast for the purpose of starting men to\ndo development work on the claims.\nHe expects to return to this city in a\nfew weeks,\nThe Great Northern railway Is building a new spur at the Granby smelter\nln this city. The spur will be located\nnorth of the present tracks, and will be\nused for the purpose of storing coke.\n\u2022Mr. Mclntyre of Phoenix has the contract for the grading work. A new\nwagon road will have to be built also\nby the railway company, as in the building of the spur the road now in use\nwill be rendered useless.\nHarmopy lodge, A. F. and A. M., will\nhold their annual \"At Home\" In the\npoera house'on the evening of November 26.\nRev. F. W. Auvache is away attending the Baptist convention which Is being held at Vancouver, B. C. In consequence of this no service was held\nin the Baptist church Sunday morning\nbut the evening service was taken by\nC. V. Hall of this city.\nMiss Ethel McLaren of Carson Is at\npresent in Spokane visiting her sister,\nMrs. H. N. Galer.\nsix steam trawlers of the North sea\ntype and the expenditure of half a\nmillion dollars in equipment generally,\nwill be established next summer by\nthe Canadian Pacific Trading and Development company. Robert Burton of\nLondon, England, representative ot a\ngroup of London financiers Interested\nin the project,\" who has been perfecting\narrangements since July last, has arrived trom the'Queen Chartotte islands\nby the steamer Amur. The intention\nis to ship salmon whole in cold storage'\nfor sale' as fresh fish and for smoking.\nThe trawlers will be used in the halibut,\nherring, cod and other deep sea fisheries, and North sea fishermen will be\nbrought out to man them.\nPetroleum In Southern Alberta.\nPlncher Creek, Alberta, -Oct. 10,\u2014Considerable excitement 1ms been caused here\nby the discovery that Dr. I. C. White,\nthe great American gas and oil geologist,\nlocated in October ot last year a great oil\nreservoir on the anticlinal ridge passing\nthrough this town and extending from the\nsouth fork ot the Old Man River at the\nnorthwest, to the Waterton River, southeast of here. Dr. White was engaged by\none of the oil companies operating ln this\nvicinity, and, although it was known that\nhe had reported that gas would certainly\nibe found near here, the (act that the pros-\n. pects for oil were equally good was suppressed) by the directors of the company\nand held secret, even from their shareholders, and a Becond report, referring only\nto gas, was made public. The company In\nthe meantime has secured leases covering\nall minerals, which will Include gas and oil\nover about 15,000 acres. The information aa\nto the rjeal conditions has only now leaked\nout through the company above referred to\nhaving Just let a contract to a Pennsylvania firm of oil-well drillers to sing a number of wellB. They are now placing four\noil well-drilling .figs on their ltfties here.\nSouthern Alberta may soon be ln the throes\nofi a 'big oil -boom. Lands are reported to\nhave already advanced considerably ln this\nvicinity,\nTHE SLEEPING SICKNESS\nWHICH MEAN8 DEATH\nHow many readers have heard of this\nterrible disease? It prevails in that faraway country\u2014Africa\u2014especially the Congo district It Is caused by the bite of the\ntsetse fly. When it bites a person, the\nsleeping symptoms begin and -finally the\nsufferer Bleeps until death occurs.\nSilver King Hotel\nBaker Sreet, Nelson.\nRegular Boarders, |6.00 per Week,\nRates, $1.25 and 11.50 per Day.\nBest 25 Cent Meal In the City.\n(On City Time.)\nD. McRAE, Prop.\nContrast this with the peaceful, balmy\nBleep of health. Is there anything more\nwearing than to He awake at night, tossing\nabout, nervous, with -cold feet, hot head\nand mercy knows what else? Short of letting the tsetse fly -bite us we would do almost anything for relief. How can we pre\nvept it? Mr. George Hayes, of Union City,\nPa., writes; \"I had lost my appetite, was\nall run down, could not sleep nlghta. I had\ntried everything without relief. Vinol was\nrecommended, and to my surprise, it helped\nme at once; gave me a splendid appetite,\nand now I sleep soundly.\"\nWhat Vinol did for Mr. Hayes* it will do\nfor every run-down, nervous and over-\nWorked person who cannot sleep.\nVinol is sold in Nelson by Wm. Rutherford, Druggist.\nHow to Treat a Sprain.\nSprains, swellings and lameness are\npromptly relieved by Chamberlain's Pain\nBalm. This liniment reduce* inflammation\nand Boritnssa so that a sprain may be\ncured in about one-third the time required\nby th* usual treatment. For sals by Ml\ndruggists and dealers.\nBest Hot Lunch at the Athabasca.\nCures   Diphtheria,\nTKe DAILY NEWS\n\u2022UNIFIED ADS.\u2014One eat * word.  Hx Insertions lor th* wtlm el\ntour when pall In ad-ranee. Ne id taken tot leu tlm 26c.\nTelephone 144    THE DAILY NEWS\nBUSINESS DIRECTORY\nPAINTERS AND DECORATOR!\nTHOMPSON    ft   DOUQLAS-HOUM   ana\nSign Pointer., Paper Hansen and Decorators, Shop Sit Ward Street, Retain,\nB. O. -    '\u25a0      \u25a0'     \u25a0 -\nMlnanP.  Liniment\nPROFESSIONAL CARDS\nS. S. FOWLEB\nMINING BNOlNBKt\nNBLSON, B. a\nCOLLECTION AGENCIES\nW. CUILOB-CollecUona ol aU kind*, Daturas promptly made.  Reference, alvea.\nOfUce, 813 Baker atreet, Nelion. B. C.\nFROVINCUU. COLLECTION BHRVICB-\nUcMorrls ft Horstead, Mars. No charges\nunless collection, made. Correspondent* In\nall roarta ot Canada and United Stater*.\nBank reference, fianerttan Bank of Coqi-\nmeroe. \t\nHELP'WANTED\nNELSON  EMPLOYMENT AQENCY\nJ. H. LOVE, Manager,\n!WANTET>-ahWle '.sawyer,   tie makers, <\nport makers, millwright.\nTHE WORKWOMAN'* EMPLOYMENT\nAND REAL. ESTATE AQENCY.\nWAN11EI*\u2014Shingle sawyer; waitress, 135; '\ncook' tor family, 135; housekeeper,  140; i\ngirls for families, nurse girls,  W. PAR-.)\nip*JK, 313 Baker Btreet. Phone 288L-\nWANTED- MISCELLANEOUS\nPUBLISHERS AND PRINTERS\nWM. 8. DREWRT\nA. IL Cas. Soc. C. U\nDOMINION AND   BRITISH  COLUMBIA LAND SURVBYOR\nMining Work a Specialty.\nOffice: Room 10, K. W. 0. Block, P. a\nBox\u00bb8t\nSt Nelion, B. a\nNelson Hotel Bar\nBAKER ST., NELSON.\nFirst Shipment of Lime,,\nBut Appointed In the City.\nFlneat Liquors and Cl-jare.\nINK A WARD, Proprietor*\n'        Try a \"Bin Ricky.\"\nBartlett House\nO. W. BABTLBTT, PROP.\nTie best Si a day house In\ntown.     A    Miner*.  Heme.\nKootenay Hotel\nMRS. MALLETTE, Proprietress.\nA borne for everybody.   Every convenience given to tlie travelling public.\nElectric   piano.     Cuisine   unexcelled\nRates $1 per day.\nDrawings and Specifications\n1 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0j. %\nPrepared Cor Patents. Etc, antl Patent\nRlghti secured.  Apply to\nQ. O. MACKAY\nP. O. Box 876 Nelson, B. a\nMechanical and Structural Work Designed and Supervised.\nNEWS PUBLIBHINO. COMPANY, LTD.-\nPubllshers et The Daily News; subscription KOI per year by carrier; $6,w per yeas\nby mall. Commercial Job printing of all\nkind* neatly and promptly executed. M9%\n^jbookbijmj^^\nnbtto'publTb^^\nAll kinds ol office form ruled and punched tor loose lest binders. The most complete book- binding equipment In the interior of BrltlBh Columbia. 219 Baker St,\nNelson, B. C, P. O. drawer Ills. Phone 141\nWANTED\u2014First-cFaae lady law stenogra- I\npher.  Address B. p., Dally News.   16\u00bb4f |\n10,W\u00bb POSITIONS FOR OUR GRADUATES\nlast year. Men and women to learn -bar- J\nber trade in eight weeks; tools free; more 1\nposltioni than we ran supply; graduates I\nearn 118 to 126 wee'ily. Catalogue free* (\nHoler System Colleges, 401   Front  Ave.. ]\nBr*-*. Iran->\nWANTED-A good insurance solicitor s\u00bb ]\nwork on commission. Apply room t, Alan 1\nblock, or box 631 MJ-tf I\nWANTED\u2014Assayer for small mine. A 1\nyoung man who la willing to keep books I\neta preferred. State age training and ]\nwages expected. To a suitable party this la\na good place.  Apply \"Assayer,\" The Daily\nNewa office.\nThe Daily I\n171-6\nAUCTIONEERS\ncbuSTaTwat^^\nJACOB GRI3KN ft CO., Auctioneers; appraisers; valuators; general and commission agents. Cash \u2022 advanced on consignments. Apply to P. O. Box 233. Nelson,\nB, C.\nW. J. H. HOLMES\nCIVIL ENGINEER AND MINB 80B-\nVMOR, PROVINCIAL LAND\nSURVBYOR, KASLO, B. O.\nTa Tsara* experience In tha Koetr*-\n\u25a0aya. Honor graduate, 1891, Boysl W1V-\ntaty Oolleie ot Canada. Klnnton.\nShcrbrookc House\nNELSON, B. C.\nOn. minute's walk trom C. P. R, eta-\ntt.a.   Cuisine unexcelled':   well heated\nand ventilated.\nDOYISR BROS.. Proprietors,\nLakcview Hotel\nCorner Hall and Vernon Streets.\nN. MALLBTTB, Proprietor.,\nTwo blocks from dtj* wharf.     Tbe\nbast dollar a day house In Nelaon,\nALL WHITE HELP.\nMURPHY & FISHER\nOTTAWA\nBarrtetan, Solicltora, ate.\nParliamentary, Departmental ant Pateit\nOffice Agent, practice baton Ball.\nway Commission.\nHON. CHAS MURPHY, U. P.\nHAROLD FISHffik\nHAIRDRESSINQ  AND  MANICURINQ\ntOSB. KATHLEBM NOAH, halrdreselng\narid manicuring parlors. Boom *8, K. W.\nO. block.\nJWJRSIN-1^\nMUKBINQ\u2014Mrs. Thos. Parker, experienced\nnurse. Vlotoria Block. Phon. set,    ati.\nASSAYERS\nMX W. WIDOOWSON. ASSATBIt (PRO-\nrloclal, atetalturgloal Chemist Cbsraes:\nGold, Surer, copper or Lead. II each;\nQold-SllTer, tuoi (JUyer-Lead, U.M Zlne,\nli; Bllver-Lead-Elae, \u00bb; Sold, SUrei-cop.\npar or Lead, U.U. Accurate aasays: careful sampUoji sad prompt attention. P.O.\nWANTED-Partr with HEW to engage In I\npoultry business.   Apply \u2022&,   this  ot- I\nBee.         MM I\nfirot-class   cook   desires    situation,\ncamp or boarding   house;   experienced;'\nlarge or smalt   crew.    Address   Hobley, J\nKaslo, B. C.\n173-4\nWANTBD-Ladlea to do plain   and   light\nsewing at home, whole or spare   time;\ngood pay; work sent any distance; charges 1\npaid.   Send stamp or full particulars. Na- |\ntlonal Manqfacturlng Company, Montreal.\nWANTED-Flrst-class cook desires situa-\ntun; good experience, camp or hotel; can\ntake full charge or housekeeper.   Apply\nA. P., Dally News 176*\nWANTED\u2014A young girl to look after three I\nchildren  after school  hours. Apply 718 I\nSilica street.  , tf.|\nFOR RENT\nFOR RENT-Small house.\nBrewery\nApply Nelson I\nA. L. MoOULLOOH\nHYDRAULIC HNOINBER\nPROVINCIAL LAND SURVEYOR\nP. O. Box U.        i\nOdea Phon. B86. Resldenc. Phon. B74.\nOfftee: Onr McDermld and McHardy.\nBaker Street Nelson, a a\nV. O. Gre.lL t. P. Bardu. A. H. Oreen.\nGreen Brothers ic Borden\nCIVIL ENGINEERS\nDominion and British Columbia Land\nSurveyor!\nP. 0. Boi 145 Phoie B1M\nDor. Victoria and Kootenay Bts.\nNBLSON. B. a\nASSAYERS' SUPPLIES.\na -C. ASSAY A CUBOalCAL SUPPLY CO.,\nLtd., Vaneourer, s.c.. Agents in British\n, Columbia tot the Morgan cruelbls Company, London, nns-Traaa; a*. W. Brew,\nLos AnsjelM and. Ban naaeiscoj Bake.\nand Adamssn's C.P. AsMe and chtr-aloalsj\nWay's Pocket Smelter* Write for Information about these sr-Mtterr*, lnralu-\nable to tbe pceepecrnr, sesayer or mines.\nCompute assay outfit, furnished at sowt\nWHOLESALE HOUSES\nPRODUCE.\nSTAKKBY * CO., ITHOLBSALa DUAL-\nere In Butter, Bus, Cheese, Produce and\n\u25a0fruit. HouatonTUc * '\t\npTclaon, B. O.\nSlock, Josephine street.\nGROCERIES.,\nMACDONALD * .TO^WHOLEI-asJUa\n'Grocers   and  Provision\nporters of V\n Merchants\u2014im*\n^::\u00ab\u00ab?\u00bbis!\u00abr(a.^\n aad\nFruit., Staple and Fancy Groceries, '\nbaocos, Cigars. Butter, Eggs, cheese i\nPacking. Bouse   Products-    otflce   l\nwarehouse,   corner   ot  front and Mail\nStreets   P. O. Box lite.   Telephone a.\nSunnysidc Hotel\nBaker Street, Nelaon,\nThe bonne is thoroughly' remodelled\nthroughout.   Clean room..\nWeekly Boarders 16.00.\nRates (1.00 per day np.\nTemperance  house;   home  comforts;\nbest cook In the olty.\nMRS. J. E. HARRIS. Proprletreea.\nThe Royal Hotel\nMra. L. V. Roberts, Proprietress.\nCor. Stanley and Silica Sta.\nFlneat 26c meal In the Kootenay.\nRegular Boarders ft per Week.\nRates, $1.00 and $1.60 per day.\nWILL EXPLOIT FISHERIES\nLondon Company to Operate on Pacific\nCoast.\nVICTORIA, Nov. 17\u2014A tubing buel-\nreeB involving a fleet of half a dozen\nsmall fishing steamers, a fast steel\nsteamer of tbe size and style of tbe\nsteamer Amur of the C. P. R. to collect\nfish from the itatlona to be established\nat Prince Rupert, Graham and Moresby Islands, Observatory Inlet aid other\npoint, trom the Niaa to tha \u00abagt matt\nof Vancouver Island, a flmt tt tit* tt\nAthabasca Saloon\n\u2014AND\u2014\nShort Order Lunch Counter\nBest Wines and Liquors in stock.\nIVENS A PHILBERT, Proprietor.\nBOTBL BROOKLYN, PHOBBDC, B. C.-\nThe only up to date hotel In Phoenix.\nNew trom cellar to roof Beet .ample\nrooms ln the Boundary. Bath room bt\nconnection, steam heat. Opposite Great\nNorthern depot    James MMhell, prop.\nMoEAT & RAHAL\nBene Shoeing, Carriage Work and Oea.\nera! Blaokamlthlng.\nP. O. Boi IM.\nward Knot,\n-telephone AIM.\nNelson B. a\nMISS C E. ANTHONY\nPUBLIC STENOGRAPHER\nHum. Hotel\nHorns: 1.30 to 12, 2 to 5.\nKOEBEL & BELL\nDIAMOND DRILL CONTRACTORS\nHand power machine lor prospecting.\nBox 7$, Boaaland or Salmo, B, C\n0LBAN1NO AND PRISSINO\nSuits Called tor ail Dattvaral,\nA J. DRISCOLL\nPhone S6S.\u2014Baker Bt OpposlU\nHotel\nLIQUORS.\nA FERGUSON * CO.-WHOLESALB\nand Commlseion Merchants\u2014Importers\nand Wholesale Dealers in Wines; Liquors\nand Cigars. Kootenay agents for Pabst\nMilwaukee Beer, Agents tor the Bruns-\nWlok-Balke-Collender Co., Billiard and\nPoole Tables and Supplies, Bar Fixtures,\nCigar Counters, Bowling Alleys, ete.\nPrices and speclflcatlona on application.\nOtflce and retail department, Vernon\nSt, Nelson, two doors.east of pcstol&M.\nTsUphone MO. P. O, Boa IMP.\t\ny LET\u2014Three nice rooms. Apply Mra. I\nHeaton, (a Victoria street, opposite city I\n\u2014 MM!   '\nFOR BENT\u2014Deniable office--. Corner and\nadjoining room on second stery. Can he\nrented separately or together, App.y\nWood-Vallance Block., ltf-tl\nFOR RBNT-Comfortably furnlehed room\nIn private family, all modem conveniences, central locality, $7 per month.  Apply ^OJoxMS^^ ISl-tf\nFOR RENT\u2014Basement in Alan Block now\noccupied by Dally News printing plant. Will\nlet storage space. Apply for terms, etc., to\nR W. Hulbert, Liberal olllco. UHt\nFOR RENT\u2014Nicely furntehM rooms withI\nt-aih. a* Victoria street. 170-aJ\nFOR RENT\u2014Housekeeping rooms.   Apply I\n607 Silica street 173-12t\nMODERN a-roomed bouse for rent; 2 blocks I\nfrom Baker Btreet PROCTOR ft BLACK- I\nWOOD, Agents. 173-tf   |\nFOR RENT\u2014Front room,\nley street.\nApply eta stan-\nlffit\nTO LET\u2014Furnished front 109m. 60S Car-]\nbonate street 176-s. |\nFOB RENT\u2014Nicely furnished housekeep-1\nlnj iiomB.  Apply Carney Block, Baker 1\nstreet \u25a0\u25a0 117-21\nTO RENT\u2014Front room 10 well furnished\nprivate home, use of bath, with or without board. Apply 718 Park street, corner of\nSilica. , 177-2\nMINERS' FURNlSHINOS.\nL MACDONALD * C0..-WHOLB8ALB\nJobbers ln Blankets, Underwear, Mltta,\nGloves, Boots, Rubbers, Overalls, Jump-\nerrs, Maoklnaws and Oilskin Clothing,\nCamp and Miners' Sundries. Otflce and\nWarehouse owner of Front and Hall Sta.\nP. O. Box met, Telephone \u25a0\u25a0\nMINING   MACHINERY\nWASHINGTON MACHINERY A BBPPL1\nCo-Deal.\u2122 in Engines, Band and Circular Sawmills, .AtkUrr1 fain. Wood and\nf Sana, wood\nOnapseasors\noular Sawmills, \u2014 _ ...\nIm  Pulleys, Aener ._^\u2014\nDrills, Pumps and Hoists.   Prompt\ntentlon.    steasooable prioes.    Oonrteous\ntreatment Spokane, wsgrra        \t\n_**************************,\nARROWHEAD.\nTHB UNION HOTBL, ARROWHBAD-\nSpedra attention given to eommercla)\nmen and tourists. Flnt class sample\nrooms. Finest scenery ln British Colum.\nMa, overlooking upper Arrow lake. W.\n3. Lllhtbune, proprietor.\t\nNELSON CAFE\nPIRST CUSS MEALS\nFURNISHED ROOMS IN CON.\nNBCTION\nOPEN DAY AND NIQHT\nFIRST CLASS LUNCH PROM\n12 NOtfN TO 2 P. M.\nPHONE S\u00bb\nA. AUDIT, PROP.\nJOSEPH MACLENNAN\nTEACHER OF PIANO AND EliOCUTION\nPiano pupil of Duoharrae ft Antonlne,\nMontreal; EloouUon pupil of E. Keyofl. B.\nfi. Bhoemakor \u2022chool, PhlladelphU. Normal graduate.\n\u25a0WEDNESDAYS AND BATUBDATB\nWill call at private houiw by appointment\nuntil opening of itudlo.\nAddnM P. O. GENERAL DELIVERY\nJOHN KAY & SONS\nBOILER 8BTTBRB\nFURNACE Ud\nOVEN BUILDBR8\nKatlmate.  Given on All Kinds ot\nMaeonry Work. '\nP. O. Box \u00ab\u25a0 Nelaoii, a q\n1     h. a BU0K\nB. a LAND SURVETOR\n1 onrios-oTBR b6yal bans\nP. 0. B01W Nahw B. a\nCHAS. MOORE, C E.\n\u25a0. e. Und Survey-ar\nAR0HITIOT\nw* wf^^^^^^ aw*. Vs\nSNltOUb 1WW FOB UU\n\u2022aiODDR oLainoi nn\nyANOMFTW, M. &\nno tatt ot tmabmo, tbo \u2022\"\u2022\not -atalnment -snd tbo toit ***\nretail*, wnte tor oaUlo\u2014fc\nj     E. J. \u2022TOOTT. B.A.. MM**\nFOR 8ALE\nFOR SALE\u2014Leader Double Opposed Gasoline Engines. They have given the leajt\ntrouble of any engine on Kootenay lake\nand they have 26 per cent more efficiency\nthan any two-cycle engine on the\nmarket; alio have 10 per cent, more efficiency than any other upright four-tffcle\nengine. They are non-vlbrattng. Buy *\nLeader engine and you will always wear\na smile. We are sole agents for British\nColumbia. LINDSAY'S BOAT HOWE, foot\nJosephine street, Nelson, B. C.    __W*_\nFOR BALE\u2014Hotel for sale cheap, or trade 1\ntor land. Apply B, Iffller. Ymlr. B.C. 1\" \" '\nFOR BALB-Several blocks of cliolee -fruit\nlands, very easy to clear, In Kaalo die- \u25a0\ntrlot, on Kootenay lake. Lake froniege antl I\nbench lands: prices ranging from 99 -to $30 I\nper acre. Greatest snap7ever offered In \u25a0\nfruit lands ln this famous fruit district.\nFor further particulars apply at Llndeay'e\nboat bouse, foot of Josephine street, Nel- I\nson, B. a   UMI |\n\"FOB aALB-Two desirable building Iota,\nj6,ir     \u25a0      \u2014-  *\u25a0-\"'-\nGood\nttxlM eaeh, fronttng on Gore street, cheap,, ,\nApply H.J., Dally News. 1C8-1S I\nFOR SALE-One work ox, very heavy and\nstrong; works well single or double, tlflft;\none ranch horse 14,8 hands, can be Been at\nBast Duntulnv Landing, Willow Point P. O.\nJ. J. Campbell, ,     MStf\nFOR SALB-Well eatablished saloon busl-\nness, bar fixtures, full supply of stock,,\ngood paying business In first-class running\nCondition. Apply Manhattan ealoon, Nelson. B. C. 174-6t\nFOR    TENDERS.\nADVKR'TlwlM-Sn\t\n* Tenders addressed %o the undersigned\nwill be received by tho City of Fernle up\nto IS o'clock noOn on thte nrst day of December, 1906, for the Installation of a aw\nhorse power gas plant producer plant on\non the condition that a satisfactory arrangement will be made by the tenderer\nwith the Crow's Nest Pass Electric Light\nand Powe-er Company for the purchase of\ntheir machinery now on hand.\nA. A. SHARLBY,\n' Acting Clty,CJwk,n \u201e\n\u2022      Fernle, B. C.\nPHYSICAL CULTURI.\nRan*\nBULL Terrier pups for sale on exchange\nfor Black Minorca or Barred rock pullets. -\nR, M. REID, Creston, B. C.\nFOR SALE-'-Good Singer Sewing Machine,\n615.Carbonate street, cheep. 17S8t\nFOR SALE\u20149-room  residence with  three\nlots comer Mines Road   and Kootenay\nstreet.   Prices and terms reasonable.   Apply to owner.  R. M. MACDONALD.     176-6\nFOR SALE\u2014Three ten acre blocks at the\nmouth of Gray Creek, Crawford Bay. Apply to owner, R. Robinson, Box 8*9, Nelson,,\nFOR SALE\u2014Self feeder heating etove In I\ngood condition. 809 Vernon street. \u25a0  176-6]\nFOR SALE\u2014Well bred young pigs seven I\nweeks old,  55,00 each.  Apply to A.  T. I\nDavis, Harrop P: P., West Arm.       177-6 |\nFOR BALE-Lady's fur coat  (coon).  Z.,\nDally News. \u20221Tr-*\nMM* I\nFOR SALE?\u201430 young pigs three months j\nold, $6.00 each for quick Sale.  Apply to I\nW. G. Davis, Harrop, B. C, West Arm. J\nMISCELLANEOUS\nCATARRH,    ASTHMA,    HAY   FEVER- j\nFree treatment to first applicants suffering from any of the above afflictions by 1\nnew and most successful discovery.  Ap-\nyly_H._g.. Pel-far Newa.  -\u25a0\"\" 177-6 1\n (\u25a0Bsavi\n42r\n--.\u2014T-ir-T\u2014,-\u201e-\ntiovf\n' WEDNESDAY .\nNOVEMBER 18\nffita fPatlij llm>&\nMOI SEVIN\nCranberries\n15c per. lb.; 7-1b. for$1\n-AT\u2014\nJoy's Cash fipoeapy\nCorner of Josephine and Mill Streets.\nPhonal! I P.O. Box 617\nFrom Bt. John, N.B. From Liverpool\nNov1, 27......Empress of Britain......Nov. 13\nDec. S ....Lake Erie., Nov. 18\nDec. 11 Empress of Ireland Nov. 27\nDec. X......EmpreBs of Britain -Dec. 11\nIM.\nJan.   2 Lake Manitoba.........Dec. 16\nJan.   8 (Empress of Ireland.. ....Dec.25\n1109\nfan. 22..,..Corsica* (Allan line) Jan.  8\n(Chartered by C.P.R)\nJan. 29 Empress of Britain......Jan. IB\nFor turther Infematlee regardinc fates,\n\u2022Utea of selllnie, ete., -apply\nW. H. DEACON. C.P.Ay Nelson, B. 0.\n9. McL BROWN, Q.A.P., Montreal, P.Q.\n~=\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nCfiristmas Excursions\nNelson to any point In Ontario land\nQuebec west of Montreal and return\n$80.25\nThree Months'Limit\n\/Tickets on sale dally December 1 to\nDecember 31.\nCorresponding low. rates to maritime\n>rovlnces.\nXmas Ocean Rates\nNelson to Liverpool or London and\neturn 1143.75 to 1360 according to ship\nnd accommodation cbosen.\nfive Months'Limit\nTickets on sale dally November 21\n\u00bb December 31.\nDally standard and tourist sleepers,\neservatlons made, on application.\nFor rates and other particulars call\n* write,. (\nJ. B. PROCTOR, D. P. A, Calgary\nW. H. DEACON, 0. P. A\u201e Nelson\nWe Cannot\nOffer You\nAny shopworn, laat year's goods hr   THE XMAS  HOLIDAY TRADE\nOur selections comprize the most up-to-date new goods. Our\nprices are bated on giving us a living profit We give you the benefit\nof selecting from goods you have not heretofore seen\u2014\nPresents for Ladies\nPresents for Gentlemen\nPresents for Boys & Girls\nPresents for Baby\nPresents for Everybody\nYou can aare time and worry by coming here first\u2014\nDrop In\nHave a look over the pretty things.\nIt's a Pleasure to Serve You and\nSuggest a Present\nNelson's Leading Druggists\nPoole Drug Co, Ltd.\n,, Corner Baker and Josephine Street*\nWe Lead\n\/\nOthers Follow\nMattress Factory:\nBatablUhed   In   1888\nI Victoria Street.       .\nTelephones. Day, 292; night, 142; residence. 167.\nMarshall\nSanitary\n$24.00\nOur own elastic felt full\nsize\t\nRugs and squares, all sires\nand prices. Iron beds aud\nsprings ln good selection.\nPicture -framing a specialty.\nOstermoor\n$15.00\nSmaller sizes\u2014\n4  feet   116.00\n8 feet, 6 inches $14.00\n3 feet  $13.00\n2 feet 6 Inches $12.00\nD. J. ROBERTSON\n301 & 303 Baker Street, Nelson\nELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\nNov. \u00bb, will be St. Andrew's\nJ. Lalnr Stocks left yesterday mornlnr\nr a tour months trip to Scotland.\n__j Busy-Bees of the HMhodist church\n111 meet tomorrow night In the school\noin, at eight o'clock, All member, ana\nI young ladles Interested are urged to ba\npresent as It Is aelslred to get under way\nthe season's work. . ,\nNelson branch, (H, United Brotherhood of\nCarpenters, will meet tonight ln Miners'\nUnion holl.\n<B. 3. .Campbell, formerly of Winnipeg,\nhas purohrued the property andl reel-fence\nof n. 3. Aorsgor at IU Baker street, and\nIntends to have the -f-Mnls-ft remodelled\nat once for the purpose of opening a flrst\nSuss studio and photo and art gallery. Mr.\nampbell, who, with hla wife and family,\nle'stopping at the Strathccona, Intends taking up Ms residence In Nelson.\n' Next Sunday will be the name day ot St.\nCecilia, the patron saint of music.\nThS Older of Owls will meat In Fraternity\nhall tomorrow evening.\nAnyone having apple, for display at th.\nrkane Apple Show, will do well to notify\nR. Maclean, who has been anointed hy\nthe Nelaon Agricultural and Industrial as-\nsoclatton to make up an erthlblt npnsent-\nMETALS\nNew York, Nov. 17.\u2014Silver, 50VJ; Copper,\nMH to UM.\nLondon, Nov. 17.\u2014Silver 23 3-16: TJead,\n\u00a313 sl2 d6.\nNov. 17.\u2014Closing quotations on tlie New\nTork curb and Spokane exchange, reported by Mighton and Cavanaugh\nBid    Asked\nAlberta Coat  , .- $ ... \u25a0 t ...\nB. C, Copper.    7.50      7.75\nCharles  Dickens     ,\t\nCan. Con.  Smelters..... 7:1.00     80.00\nCopper King Ql%       .__%\nDominion Copper Uj'-i      i.u)\nGalbralth Coal\t\nGertie    .... 02%        .03\"i\nGranby 100.00\nHe'cla    3.00      4.00\nInternational Coal 02%        .66\nKendall    1.40      1.55\nMlaBoula Copper....   ;    .01*14\nNabob 03%       .0314\nOom Paul 04%        .06\nPanhandle 04%        .MM\nRambler Cariboo.. ;...  '  .017       .KM\n\u00a3\u00ab\"\u25a0\u2022  m     .h\nSnowshoe ' 06fc        .OSM\nSnowstorm    l.GS      1,73\nSullivan  nt\nSullivan BoitU  >\t\nStewart     .go       .go\nTamarack-Chesapeake .. v>.    .60       .85\n>8I>\u25a05IS',! COPPBB WJOTATIOrffl\n(Reptrted by lteD-wmlfaii-i MeHarto)\nGranby mM   1W;OT\nDominion Copper     1.00      1.13%\nDominion Copper     i;po      1.12%\n!n8'<.thJJ Kootenay   apple   product. Plate\nfruit, five of each variety, is required.\nNelson Lodge No. B9, I.O.G.T., will meet\nthis evening in K.'of p' hall.\nRoyal Arch Chapter, G. R. C, will hold\nthe r monthly lodge meeting fn Masonic\nhall tonight.\nSnow on Monday and rain yesterday\nmade things decidedly unpleasant for those\nwho had to be out of doors.\nBeginning with next Sunday the train\nfrom the Boundary and the coast will arrive at Nelson at 10 p. m. Instead of 10:55\np. m.   .\nThe provincial convention of school trustees opens today at Revelstoke. Trustees\nR. G. Joy and William Irvine arc representing Nelson.\nThe Churchman's club will meet In the\nparish hall of St. Saviour's church this\nevening. It will be ladles night, and cards\nwill be Indulged In.\nThe Nelson curling club will hold Its\nannual meting at tho Hume hotel tonight\nwhen officers for the ensuing year will be\nelected and arrangements made with regard to the coming season.\nThe Library board dance on Friday evening next In the Alice roller ring promises\nto bo a great sucess. Last year this proved\nto be one of the events of the season and\nnext Friday evening promises to be equally\n\u2022popular. An especially good supper is beting provided by the ladies and the music\nIs to be furnished by Wilkinson's orchestra\nTickets may be obtained at Rutherford's\ndrug store, or from tho Poole Drug company or the Canada Book und Drug company, or any member of the committee.\nEAT THE FOOD YOU LIKE\nTHOUGH FIRST GET DIGESTIVE ORGANS IN CONDITION\nDIAPEPSIN   WLL   FOREVER   CURE\nYOU OF STOMACH TROUBLE\nJ\u00a3u ca.\u00ab ea.t - \"\u2022y-Mw your stomach\ncraves without fear of a case of Indigestion\nor dyspepsia, or that your food will ferment\nor sour on your stomach if you wilUake\nDiapepsln after eating.\nYour meals will taste good, and anything\nyou eat will be digested; nothing can ferment or turn into acid'or poison or stomach\ngus, which causes Belching, Dizziness, a\nfeeling of fullness after eating. Nausea,\nIndigestion (like a lump of lead In the\nstomach), Biliousness, Heartburn, Water\nbrash, Pain in stomach nnd Intestines or\nother symptoms.\nHeadaches from the stomach are absolutely unknown where this effective remedy is used. Diapepsln really does all the\nwork of a healthy stomach. It digests\nyour meals when your stomach can't. Each\ntrlangule will digest all the food you can\neat and leave nothing to ferment or sour.\nGet a large 60 cent case of Pape's Diapepsln from your druggist und start taking\ntoday and by tomorrow you will actually\nbrag about your healthy, strong stomuch,\nfor you can eat anything and everything\nyou want without the slightest discomfort\nor misery, and evory particle of impurity\nand gas that is In your stomach and Intestines Is going to be carried away without the use of laxatives or any other assistance, _\nPRAIRIE CR0P3\nManager   of   Ogilvie Company   Gives\nEstimate.\n\"It Is well within thte limit to soy that\nthe money value of the various agricultural products of the three western provinces of the dominion will reach the splendid sum of $125,000,000,\" sold Mr. F. W.\nThompson,   vice-president   of   the   Ogilvie\n\u2014Ate you entirely satisfied with the clothes you are now\nwearing, sir?\n\u2014Do you know anything about the merits and good\nqualities of the clothes we sell ?\n\u2014How much time do you spend thinking about your\nclothes ?\n\u2014\"The way to be well dressed is to wear clothes you\ndon't have to think about.\nThe Best $18,00, $20.00, and $25.00 Suits that are\nMade\nThe Best $15.00, $18.00, and $20.00 Overcoats the\nPrice Can Bay\nThe Best $3.50, $5.00, and $6.00 Trousers to be had\n\u2014Throw the burden of the clothes question on us.\n\u2014If you'll do this, you'll wear the right sort of clothes,\nand you'll not pay too mnch for them.\n\u2014Our good clothes don't cost you a penny more than\nthe other kind.\n\u2014They cost you less in the end.\n\u2014Will you take a look at our clothes ?\nEmory & Walley\nThe Home of Good Clothes\nFlour Mills Co., Ltd.. to the Star today.\nMr. Thompson has just returned from an\nextended trip to western Canada and\nspeaks in glowing terms of the prospects\nin that part of the Dominion..\n\"I have always been Interested ln tho\nwest as a wheat producing factor,\"said Mr.\nThompson, \"and today am more optimistic\nthan ever. The country has produced a\nsplendid crop, and the high prices obtained\nfor\" the- products are proving extremely\nremunerative to the agrfcultulal communities.\n\"I was particularly Impressed ho added,\nby' a statement made to me\" by a man who\nhad carried on farming for twenty-seven\nyears within a radius of twenty-five miles\nof the city of Winnipeg. He said that In\nthese twenty-seven years he had secured\nno less than twenty-six successful crops\nand as I know him to bo a very reliable\nman, I think I am quite Justified in saying\nthat there are very few other countries\nIn the world, if any at nil, possessing such\na record for successive good crops.\n\"Business ln the west Is gradually resuming Its normal condition, for when we\ncan accurately measuro the crop returns.\nIt Is quite easy to figure out that with the\nprosperity of the west assured, the same\nnappy condition of things, both commercially and financially, will naturally radiate throughout the rest of the Dominion.\nWhile one does not wish to be credited\nwith making a cast iron estimate of the\n(year's value as a  whole,  I  do not think\nthat J125.000.0fl0 is by any means nnd extravagant figure. This claim is justified\nby the leading bankers of the west} so It\ngoes without saying that the distribution\nof so much will bring about conditions\nwhich, as far as the welfare of Canada is\nconcerned, cannot very well bo overestimated.\n\"Tile railways are certainly moving the\ncrop very rapidly at the present time, vet\nnotwithstanding this activity there will bo\nenough grain in the country following tlie\nclose of navigation to keep the roads employed till practically tlie next crop Is In\nsight.\nPETITION DENIED\nPatrick Must Finish His Days in the\nPenitentiary.\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 17\u2014The petition of Albert T. Patrick, the New\nYork lawyer, who is serving a life sentence in the state prison of Sing Sing,\nN. Y., on the charge of having murdered the millionaire William M. Rice,\nfor a writ of habeas corpus was denied\nby the supreme court of tbe United\nStates today. Patrick charged that the\ncase against htm was a conspiracy and\nKootenay Coffee Co.\nDealer. In aU grade* and varieties ot\nTEAS AND COFFEE\nBoutera of high grade ooHea.\nThe beat In these household lux-\nrales at moderate prices.\nFresh roasted ootte* at Mo to\nWo per lb.\nTeas, all grades aad Tarletles,\nat 12.00 to 26c per lb.\nFan ground and whole spices.\nBaldag powder, cocoa, cream Tai*.\ntar, baking soda, flavoring extracts.\nKootenay Coffee Co.\n306 Baker Street\nJ\n1ENRYS4-,\nNow ready for  fall   trade:\n90,000 Peach, Apricot, Neo\ntarines, Cherry, Plum, Prune\nPear   and    Apple\u2014In    all\nleading varieties.\n10,000 small fruits\n10,00 ornamental trees ln all\nleading varieties tor B. C.\nStrictly home grown without\nIrrigation and not subject tg\ndamage    from   fumigation.\nStock ot bulbs on hand from\nJapan, France and Holland.\nBee supplies, spray pumps,\nseeds, etc\n140 Page Catalogue Free\nOffice, Greenhouses and\nSeedhouse: 3010 Westminster    Road,    VANCOUVER\n\u25a0\u2666NURSERIES\nurged that in commuting the sentence\nof death whic hthe court Imposed, to\none of life imprisonment, governor Hig-\ngins had resorted to a more cruel method of punishment. He asked to be released from prison on the theory that\nthe whole proceeding had been unconstitutional and invalid. The decision of\nthe court was announced by chief justice Puller.\nDon't wait until necessity drives you to\nmake a shopping trip. Read the ads. all\nthe time, and visit tlie stores when your\nmoney will accomplish most.\nTake a look at the C. P. R. ad. and then\nmake up your mind to take a trip buck\noust 177-3\nR O. Windsor, piano tuner and regulator, who has been well known to the people of Nelson and vicinity for several\nyears, Is in town. Leave orders at Canada\nDrug and Book Co. 170-tC\nBest Hot Lunch at the Athabasca.\nClark's Moving Pictures audi Vaudeville\nCompany, Alice roller rink tonight. Follow the crowd.   Admission IB and 25 cents.\nDon't miss Clark's show tonight,  roller\nrink,   Admission 15 and 13 cents.\nPeople will certainly get their money's\nworth at the rink tonight Throe hours\nshow for IE nnd 25 cents.\nJ. H. Thomas, tuner for the Mason and\nRisch Piano Company will 'be in town for a\nfew days. Any order left at the Standard\nFurniture Company will receive prompt attention. \u25a0  176-6.\nIf you can add to competency and honesty\nenterprise In want advertising, you can\nfind worlc. _\nMdm. H. Groome has opened dressmaking\"\nparlors at room \u00abA, Aberdeen block. Your\npatronage Is solicited. 172-6\nThe merchants know that It would be a\nwaste of money to print an ad. which you\ncould not afford to read.\nFor Sale\n$450 CASH and balance $500\non terms will buy a five roomed\ncomfortable home in Fairview.\nGood Cellar. This is a good\nbuy.\nSeven roomed house in excellent condition on High Street.\nFive Lots. $3,800. $1,200 cash\nand balance on terms. \u201e\nfor Rent\nWe have two large well furnished houses for rent for four\nor five months from Dec. 1st.\nWe Will Buy\n3 South African Warrants at\n$375.00 each.\nMcDERMID *% McHARDY, Nelson, B. C\n MM\u00bb EIQHT\n\u00a9lu gaily |le\u00ab\u00bb#.\nWEDNESDAY ... NOVEMBER 18\nFOR SALE\n\u25a0Aim square miles timber, tea-\nOf accessible, on good drivable\nstream, an- logs, poles and tie,\nte    S1260.00\nAcreage blocks, 10 minutes walk\ntrom town, good land, don to\nHome addition. Price 1400.00 per\nacre, 1-8 cash, balance ln 0 and 12\nmonths.\nLand lor sale In different parts\nol tbe district at reasonable prices.\nH. \u00a3. Croosdoile\n(8b Co.\nfnjerty\nFOR CROW'S  NEST  OR OALT\nCoal and Good Wood\ntry the\ni in uu    i      i iii m  mi     i   sjaj\nCity Transfer\nIU Baker St Phone IT*.\nNELSON NEWS Of THE DAY\nDuncan Robs, ex M. P., Is registered at\nthe Hume.\nThe monthly meeting of the Board of\nTrade will ba held in the secretary* offlce\nat the foot of Ward street tomorrow evening at 8 p. m., city time*\nGeorge Horatead has moved from 502 Sll*\nlea street to the house formerly occupied\ntoy A. E. Eakrigge on the corner of Josephine and Robson streets.\nW, Wyilie JohnBon, formerly well known\nIn Rossland, but now residing in Vancouver, was a visitor at the Hume yesterday\nand. was welcomed by a number of old\nfriends.\nThe management of the Arcade theatre\nannounce that commencing today they will\nchow Wednesday and Thursday in Kaalo\nFriday and Saturday, Monday and Tuesday of each week ln Nelson.\nThe secretary of the board of trade continues to receive large numbers ot enquiries from all sorts of places in the\nUnited States and Europe with regard to\n*rult lands in the Kootenays.\nWilliam Ward and Archie Bishop secured a nice bag of wild fowl yesterday on\nKootenay lake which are on exhibition In\nToye to Go's window. They Include a 9\npound Canada wild goose, 3 bluebllla and\n2 widgeon. In all 9 duck and a goose were\nbagged.\nThe Headquurtera association of the 102nd\nregiment have elected the following officers: Hon. president. Col. Holmes, D. O.\nC; hon. vice-presidents, Lt. Col. Holmes,\nO. C, and major Lome Stewart; president,\nBgt Pearcy; vice-president. Sgt. Cheyne;\nsecretary-treausrer, Col. Bgt. Teaguej auditor, Sgt. Clayton; executive, committee,\nSgt. Major -Keith, Lance.-Corp, Ball, Sgt.\nMcKay, and privates Pool, Waters and\nJohnson....\nrl The portion of the cemetery reserved for\nthte use of the Anglican churchla In very\n\u25a0bad shape at present The entire available space is now occupied, the remainder\nnot being fit to use for burial purposes until the -bush Is cleared off and the ground\nlevelled and divided Into plots. The facts\nhave been brought to the attention of the\nvestry of St. Saviour's church with a view\nof having the matter attended to. Until lt\nIs done It will be impossible for people to\nvet new plots In this portiori of the cemetery.\nThe Young People's society in connection\nwith St. Paul's church held their monthly\nliterary meeting last night, which proved\nt6 be a very entertanilng and interesting\nevent. The topic chosen was \"An Evening\nwith Tennyson,\" Miss M. McVicar leading\nthe meeting. The discussion of great\npoems of the bard of Empire proved most\nInstructive and enjoyable. Next week,\nhis honor judge Forin will deliver a tec-\ntour on his recent trip to the Old Country\nIllustrated with lantern views, to to which\nfurther notice will be made, \u25a0 .      ,   \u25a0,\nThe Empire Moving Picture theatre was\nopened to the public last night and made a\ndecided hit, the place being crowded to the\ndoors by appreciative audiences. The lllni\nsubjects were first class throughout and\nprofessor Melancon presided at the piano\nmost acceptably. There will he* a matinee\nfrom 2 to &:\u2022\u00a3) this afternoon and an evening performance from 7 to 1-0:30, at which,\nthe film subjects Will be \"Quack Doctor,\"\n\"The Stag Hunt\/' \"Female Spy\" and \"A\nSquare Deal.\" The illustrated song will\nlie \"Every Day is Sunshine when the Heart\nHeat* True.\" Tbe stand Is at the old Dally\nNews offlce on Baker street.\nThe committee In charge of the dance to\nbe given at the Alice roller rink Friday\nevening In aid of the library, announce that\nIt will be a programme dance. The dancing will start at 9 o'clock city time sharp, i\nThe -committee In charge Is as follows:\nRev. J. T. -.Ferguson, president; E. A.\nCrease, vice-president; Dr. Rose, treasurer;\nMrs. A. L. McCulioch, secretary and Mrs.\nE. C. Arthur. Mrs. W. W. Beer, Mrs: R,\nM. Macdonald, Mrs. M. M, Cummins, Mrs.\nW. Blackwood, Mrs. W. S. Rlblet, Mrs. B.\nC. Travis, J. L. Buchan, Fred Starkey,\n-Ueorge Playle, B. F. Qtgot and J, O, Patenaude.\nClark'e moving pictures at the roller rink\nlast night went off extremely welt and will\n'be repeated tonight at 8 p. m., city time,\n\u25a0harp. The moving pictures, illustrated\nmelodies and vaudeville were all of them\nup-to-date. The program consisted of four\nfilms \"Blue Bonnet\" which shows the\ngood wortrof the Salvation Army, \"Jerusalem\", \"The Money Lender\" and \"Stud-\nants Jokes;\" two Illustrated songs -by Miss\n-Seott, \"Don't Leave the -Old Folks\" and\n\"Follow the Crowd on Sunday.\" Then\nwen also three good aoecltltttS;' The Mn\u00ab\nprogram will be repeated tonight and rto-nld\nLaugh, and the world\nlaughs with you;\nEat onions, and you\nweep alone\nYou will not, however, have, any\ncause to grieve if you purchase\none ot our Hobberlin or Progress\nSuits.\nTbe bouse ot Hobberlin are ln\na class by themselves ln Style\nand Qet-up tbat few merchant\ntailors can equal.\nThe Progress brand ot Clothing\nis one of the best ready-to-wear\nmake, at the price, ln tbe market\ntoday, which retains Its shape\nand Is atyllah and durable.\nJ. H. Wallace\nSole Agent, Nelson, B. C.\n$700 Cash\nAnd the balance on easy terms\nwill purchase .a six-roomed\nbouse on Silica street.\nThe house contains two bed\nrooms, dining i room, parlor,\nkitchen and batb room. Electric light and lull   plumbing.\nPrice ,\n.    \u2022   I\n$1300\nTwo Cottages\nFor Rent\nat til and 122 per month.\nH. &M. BIRD\nNelson, B. C.\n\/ _\n10 Per Cent Reduction\nOur Hue ot heating stoves is complete: \u25a0 The famous alr-tlght,\nround oak, bonny oak, Stewart oak, Stewart hot blast, prise base\nburner, box stoves, air-tight beaters ln cast tops and plain; all sizes\nfrom 20 to 36 Inches. We have the heater to till your requirements\nany size or pattern. Remember we are ottering a reduction ot 10\nper cent tills week on all heating stoves.\nThe J. H. Ashdown Hardware\nCo., Ltd.\nNelson Branch      .\\     Nelson, B. C.\nWHOLESALE\nRETAIL\nbe well patronised. This ehow will be at\nKaslo next Monday and will return to Nelson on Tuesday and Wednesday of next\nweek.    \u2014\u2014*\nBorn on Nov. 18th, to the wife of A. C.\nFraser, Baker street, a daughter.\nBorn on November 17th, to the wife of\nCharles F. James, Stanley street, a daughter.\nDr. Arhur has received instructions to\nexamine all applicants for admission to the\n\u00ab6lvll service who may present themselves;\n\u25a0but, so far, none have come forward. To-,\nmorrow will be the last day for doing bo. '\nThe opening dance of the season at the\nKootenay hotel on Vernon street last night\nproved most successful, and future events\nof a similar nature will be looked forward\nto with pleasure by the guests of tlie hotel\nand their friends.\nA resident of the city was up In the police court yesterday morning for^refUBlng\nto pay his road tax. After the court had\nexpounded the law In that case made and\nprovided, thte man came to thte conclusion\nthat discretion waB the better part of valor\nand paid up. i.,\u201e  -\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\u2022,*\u25a0*\nKwong Wing Chong, the .proprietor of the\nChinese fancy goods store, on being asked\nby a reporter of The Dally News yesterday,\nstated that It was not the Intention of the\nChinamen in Nelson to observe a day of\nmourning for the late emperor Kuang Hsu.\nJ. E. Procter, formerly a well known\nNelsonlte, agent of the. C. P. R. with headquarters at Calgary, Is1 In the city on 'business and paid a vlBit to the Daily News\nofflce yeBterday. M. Procter registered at\nthe Strathcona. He is receiving a warm\nwelcome from his many friends.\nArthur Hlcklmg a well known English investor In the Kootenays, who for the past\ntwelve years has passed each summer ln\nthe district, returning to the old country in\nthe fall, was at the Hume laat evening and\nleaves for Montreal on his way home this\nmorning. Mr. Hlcktlng says that Rossland\nIs looking better today than at any time\nsince the depression started there and he\nlooks for a good season for the Golden City\nnext summer, as well as for the Kootenays generally.*\u25a0\nTlie contract for the excavating and levelling of the site for the Kootenay Jam company's factory at the foot of Josephine\nstreet lias now been let and the work will\nbe proceeded frHh at once. Tho secretary-\ntreasurer of the company. B. H. Fox,\nleaves tomorrow morning for England\nIn order to arrange for the issue of the\ncompany's prospectus. He anticipates returning to Nelson by the middle of January.\nThe funeral of the late Capt. John Paterson will take place from the parlors of the\nStandard Furniture company tomorrow\nafternoon. Rev. J. T. Ferguson will hold\nthe services at the parlors at 2:30 p. m., af-\ntor which the remains will be conveyed to\ntlie cemetery. A cablegram from relatives\nIn Scotland was received by chief Devitt\nyesterday asking that the remains bo\nburied here. Capt. Paterson'a will has been\nfound and It is understood that his estate'\nwhich is a substantial one. Is bequeathed\nto a married niece in Scotland. The National Trust company of Toronto is named\nas executors. -*,.\n\"It (\u25a0 belter to imoke here than\nhereafter. f\nFor ft good smoke.    .\nTry on El Bravo\nTwo for 26c; 3 tor 60c; 26c each;\n\u00bb for  01.00\nCabinet Cigar Store\nWholeasle and retail.\nai.j^TTHf^.js^y... ,\nLOVE HELD RESPONSIBLE\nGIVEN A8 ONE CAU8E OP RAILWAY\nWRECKS\nGAMBLING   AND  AUTOMATIC   SIGNALS ALSO BLAMED\nNEW YORK, Nov. 17.-L.ove, gambling\nand improvements In automatic safety devices and signals were acme of the things\nheld responsible for many railroad accidents by speakers of the 80th annual meet-\nof the New York and New England association of railway surgeons today. Dr.\nCorwin of Pueblo, told of a young engineer\nwho, through jealously, neglected his work\nwith the result that his train waB wrecked.\nHe told of another engineer who, while\nworrying over the fact that the night before he had gambled away his pay cheque,\nran his train Into an excursion train. The\nspeaker denied that railroads overworked\ntheir men by deliberate choice and that it\nwould be decidedly false economy for them\nto do bo.\n\"Sometimes drink Is mistaken for brain\nfag and over work\" says he, \"The public\nhas a right to demand from the railway\nsystem that employees be given sufficient\nrest but that does not go far enough. The\nemployees should take rest during the time\nallotted to them but when they do not,\nwhat then The employee who uses his\nrecreation for gambling, drinking and \u2022\nsmoking to access ia no more able for work\nthan Is the man who bas been on duty 18\nor 20 hours.\" A change of the signal\nsystems now in use by railways was advocated ln a paper by professor Geo. M.\nStratton, of the university of California.\n\"'One hundred persona may bo killed in\nan accident due to color blindness of the\npresent engineer\" declared the professor\n\"and it Ib time that a change for better\nsafety be made. The examination of all\nemployees sight should be mercilessly conducted.\"\nThe United States navy system of signaling by night lights was urged for adoption\nby professor -Stratton. In the address by\nDr. Shillings, president of the association,\nhe advised medical men connected with\nrailways not to ride on passes given In\npaym\u00abnt for their services. Dr. SUUinga\nsaid that surgeons should avoid contract\nservice with railways unless they received\nenough salary to devot call their time to\nthe work.\nIS FIRST AMERICAN LORD\nVIRGINIAN    ESTABLISHES - RIGHT\nTO BRITISH TITLE\nMATTER DECIDED BY COMMITTEE\nOF UPPER HOUSE\nliONDON, Nov, 17.\u2014The committee on\nprivileges of the house of lords today declared the right to Albert Kerby Fairfax,\nwho Is a native of Virginia, and who has\nbeen described as the only American bearing an English title, to the rank and title\nof lord Fairfax of Cameron in the Scottish\npeerage.\nTha committee heard evidence on this\nmatter for two hours. Lord Fairfax's attorney presented the Fairfax family bible\nand such documentary evidence to prove\ntils client's descent. The attorney general\nfor the government and the lord advocate\nof Scotland declared themselves satisfied a*\nregarding the validity of the claim and\nlord Alveretone, lord chief justice, pronounced thte decision, of the .court.\nJu-tt to be Left Alone.\nPARIS. Nov. 17.-Prince and princess\nHelle de Bagan, the latter, of whom was\nMiss Anna Gould, of Nee wYork, ware seen\nIn their residence In the Avenue Du Bols\nBoulogne today and authorised the denial\nin most emphatic fashion of the reports\nrecently current in Paris and America that\nthey intended to separate. They intimated\ntbat these tips have been spread by Count\nDe Castellane, who they say wa\u00bb doing\neverything possible to make their life un-\newnrortafte. \"We are hep-pr*' aald Uw\nprincess \"and all we ask is to be 1* alone.\"\njteffMMfHl\nJewelry and-\nWatch Repairing\nWe would advise our patrons to hare their Jewelry, watch and\nclock repairing attended to early to avoid a very likely rush this year.\nWe can give you better attention tbis month than later.' Any clock\nwill be called for at your bouse, repaired and returned ln good order.\nYour old jewelry may be refashioned into new designs at a low  Cost.\nOnr Christmas stock is better ln selection and quality and lower\nln price than ever before and we hope' to see many wise purchasers\nthis month.\nExceptional value In Out Glass, China, and Electric Reading Lamps.\nJ.O.PATENAUDE\nMANUFACTURING JEWELER, WATCHMAKER AND OPTICIAN.\nBaker Street\nNelson, 8. C.\neastern\nMoney Makers for Wise Ones\nDouble bouse close ln, pays over 10 per cent, price. $1100; only 1300\ncash.\n97 acres with railway and steamer service; 75 per cent food; station; post office; **>re at your gate; some Improvements, $2(00; small\ncash payment. \\    ,\nWOLVERTON A CO., Baker Street \"\nThe Society Woman\nwho always appreciates smart\ndress footwear will find our\nnew models for the coming\nseason the handsomest and\nchoicest creations she has\never seen. ,\nPumps, straps or tie slip-\n\u25a0 pers, pink, blue, white, green,\nred, brown or black $2.50\nto  ,  W.00\n, THB ROYAL,\nShoe Specialists.\nBIGGEST RINK IN B. C.\nCONTRACT IS LET FOR THE NEW\nBUILDING\nWILL BE ALL READY FOR PLAY ON\nCHRISTMAS DAY\nThe contract for., the new hockey\nrink haB been'awarded to W. O. Gillett\non plans prepared by architect Carrie,\nand the work, ot construction Is to be\ncompleted by .December 20.\nFive tenders were put in, ot which\nMr. Qlllett's was the lowest\n' The new rink Is to be built on the\nHall mines road back of the car barns\nand the ice surface is to be 180 feet\nlong by 80 feet wide, which will he the\nlargest ln the province. The building,\nwhich can, of course, he utilized for\nother Purposes than hockey, will have\na board floor and there will be galleries around the sides and a large grand\nstand at the end so as to accommodate\nthe crowds, which wilt undoubtedly be\nIn attendance at the more important\nhockey matches. The excavation for\nthe rink Is practically completed and\neverything will be done to have tiie\nwork of construction proceed as rapid-\nly as possible so as to have lt available for use as soon as the weather Is\ncold enough to make Ice.\nThe cost of the building and land\nwill be $16,000 and a Joint stock com-\npaay bas been formed with a capital\nof $20,000 for the purpose of handling,\nthe project, the stock being divided Into\n200 shares of $10 each.\nDp to the, present $11,700 worth ot\nstock hit been subscribed, and the directors have felt themselves Justified I\nCut Class\nWe an showing a special Una of Uu\nrichest of cuttings ln Bon Bona, Sugar*\nind Creams, Berry Dlshss, Vases, Etc\nFROM $2.00 TO 110.00\nOLD CURIOSITY SHOP\nJossnhlno Btreet,\n'\"'\"iiii ii\nv ,.\nWe have Just placed In stock\nan assortment of lovely\nUmbrellas\nfor\nChristmas\nPresents\nAIbo, hand painted china.  Call   '\nand Inspect our goods,\nR.H. Ewert\nJewel** ud Htngrever\n\u00bb i ,,\u00bb\nChina Hall\nCan Soppy You\nWa taft \u25a0 large and failed\natock of China, Glassware, Lamp\nGoods, Toilet Ware, Jardtaeres,\n\u2022to. to choose from and bur prices\nare the lowest in the clV.   .\nWe offer Special Bargains bt\nSecond Hand Goods of (very description. Come la and inspect\nonr stock.\nMonro & Nelson\nPhone A. 2(1.        p. O. Box 60S.\nin going ahead with the work ot construction, as they feel confident tbat\nthere will be more than sufficient people ot nubile spirit In the city to ensure\nthe taking up of the balance of $3,300\not stock which Is needed to bring the\namount ot the subscriptions up to the\ncost of the building.\n..Between now and December 20, the\ndate fixed for the finishing ot the rink,\nsteps will be taken to' get together as\ngood a hockey team as possible with\na view to challenging for the Stanley\ncup. As far as local hockey Is concerned, it Is probable that there will be\na Nelaon team, an Eagles' team and\npossibly also a Bank team, although'\nthe last Is problematical. At any\nrate there will be two local teams to\nIndulge ln friendly rivalry and matches\nwill no doubt be arranged with outside\ntowns. * ln this connection tt may ba\n'mentioned that a new rink Is also be*\nIng built In Uoyle and that town* la\nAttention\nand good feed are necessary at\nseason ot the year, If you are \u25a0 '\nget eggs.\nWe have good wheat, and lots i\nalso barley, oats and groats; and i\noverlook the good results obti\nfrom the use of beef- scraps, en\nbone, crushed shells, etc.\nThe Brackman-Ker\nMilling Co.,\nOn Our\nFamous\nTartan\nGoods\nNew Prices\nTomatoes, 3 for..\t\nSugar corn, a for ........\nEarly June peas, 2 for ...\nCanadian' petit pols. 3 for '.\nGolden wax beans. 2 tor .\".'\nGreen refugee beans, 2 for ,\nTartan tomatoes are packed in the new gold lined sanitary can.\n.No soldering used at all.  Warranted free from add poisoning.\nBELL TRADING CO.\n\u25a0\u2122mxM*tamsmsyatttmtm\\y mvm',<*,'.vm\u00bb.im\nmttmmmm\nDid You  Say\nyou *ere going trapping thia winter?   it so, are you well   aupplted \u25a0\nwith? p\n\u2014=Game Trapse-\nWe have a large stock on hand, including the Victor, H. ft N. and.\nNew Lance, guns, rifles, ammunition and hunting knives   ln   endless\nvariety.  Get our prices.\nNELSON HARDWARE Co.\nBo* 011 602 Baker Street NELSON, B.C.\n\u25a0       ;       S\nVmmmtttmttttmttttttimrtnmtM)tM*timmtsemsttttmtmttmtm^\nfire Sale of Stoves\nOur salvage sale of stoves and ranges continues at the Exhibition B\nlag daring rebuilding ot our warehous and though we have samples of i\nly all onr lines on sale, we Invite- Intending purchasers to make their s\ntlens early. *'\nThese Goods Wert Not Damaged by Ure, Though\nSnghtfy Injured by Water\nbnt since thoroughly cleaned and polUhed and are being sold away b\ncoat\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd, Nelson\nIt May Seem Early to Talk of\nChristmas Gif I\nBut there is a reason why we are showing CHRISTMAS GOOD\nnow. We are crowded for room\u2014and aa an Inducement to those wbi\nwill select their gifts during NOVEMBER, we are offering a discount I\nIjpptf yp4| j^jfll^nt..; cm\nall purchases ot leather goods, chlnaware,   pictures,   bric-a.brao\nrancy.goods generally.   We will store your purchases for yon,\nChristmas cards for foreign mailing now open.\nCanada Drug & Book Co., Ltd.\nPhawSl\nforming an aggregation ot puck-chasers that promises to be formidable.\nRailway Trouble Patched Up.\nDENVER, Cola, Nov, 17\u2014At today's\nsession ot the convention ot the American Federation ot Labor, the commit,\ntee on adjustment reported tbat a\ncompromise had been reached ln the\ncontroveny\/i>etween tho Freight Hand,\nlera union ud ' the Brotherhood ot\nRailway Clerks. TUs pWipltted actton\non tha application of the railway clerks\nfor a charter to tha federation and tbe\nexecutive counell wai Instructed to is\nsue a charter at once with i\nmittee recommended that effort\nmade to bring all the railway bn\nhoods underThe banner ot the .'\ncan Federation ot Labor.\nOl.n Campbell'a \u2022udcaaaer\nWINNIPEG, Nov. M\u2014The b:\ntion tor the local legislature wi\nlu Gilbert Plalna today and Mat\nthe return ot Duncan Cameron,\nvatlve, by a majority at M0. !\ntion waa caused by tht roe'\nBlen Campbell, who ran to 1\ntht dominion house and wai i\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_1908_11_18","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\/1.0383031","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. : News Publishing Co.","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":"1908-11-18 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":"1908-11-18 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":""}]}