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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":" w\nmi\nCLASSIFIED ADS\n'   I CENT A WORD\niHT PAQES-\n50 CENTS A MONTH\nFOR CONTROL OF\nConference Between Minister\nj and Churches.\nARRANGE GRADUATED\nSCALE OF GRANTS\nContract Provides for Control\nof Staff by Government\n\u2014Medical Inspection\nOTTAWA, Nov. 9\u2014A conference took\nplace in th* office ot Ron. Frank Oliver\n\u2022nperlntsndent general of Indian attain on th. subject of Indian boarding\nschools receiving government aid. Mr.\nOliver had requested the attendance ot\nthose who have the more immediate\ncontrol and direction ot Indian boarding schools throughout Canada and hla\ninvitation met with ready response.\nThere were present representing the\nAnglican church most Rev. 8. P. Mathe-\nson, archbishop ot Rupert'* Land; primate ot all Canada Right Rev. G.\nThorntoe, bishop of Algoma; Right Rev.\nJ. 0. Anderson Chapleau, bishop of\nMoosomln; Archdeacon Time of Calgary, representing the bishop of Calgary; Rev. Archdeacon McKay, Prince\nAlbert, representing the bishop of Saskatchewan.\nRepresenting the Roman Catholic\nchurch: Right Rev. O. Breynat, bishop\not HcKensle river; Right Rev. C.\nCharlebols, Keewatln, representing\nBishop Legal, of St. Albert; Right Rev.\nD. J. Scollard, North Bey, bishop of\nSaulte Ste Marie; Rev. Father Poitrss,\nWinnipeg; Rev. Father Maganan, Winnipeg; Rev. Father Gauvreau, procurator-general, Ottawa; Rev. Father Ga-\nbillon, representing the bishop ot\nPrince Albert and Rev. Charlea Be-\nlanger, Wlkwomlkong.\nRepresenting the Methodlat church:\nRev. Dr. T. B. Shore, superintendent of\nmissions;    Rev. f.T. Fsrjsr,   Brandon,\n\"Man.\"       \t\nRepresenting . .< the -   Presbyterian\nchurch:    Hamilton Ceasele,.K. C, Toronto; Rev. J. H. Tumbull, Ottawa.\nEducation of Indiana.\nThe minuter laid before the delegate*\nhis views on the subject ot the present\nposition ot Indian boarding schools,\ntheir usefulness as a factor ln educating the Indians and the present .unsatisfactory conditions of their relations\nwith the government. He etated that\nwhile ln hia opinion hoarding schools\nsituated on or near the reserve were\ntho more valued factor ln the education\not the Indian, the relation* ot these\nschools with the government had always been Indeterminate. He found\nthat ln some few cases 'the buildings\nhad been erected by the department but\nln a large majority of oases these had\nbeen erected by the churches as missionary enterprises in the early days\nof the country's. settlement and government bad been called upon.from\ntime to time as the need* ot the case\ndemanded to improve these properties,\nto render tne schools more efficient.\nHis present desire was to make an arrangement with the church authorities\nwhereby the whole conduct and management of these school* would be covered by a contract between the government and the churches whereby the\nresponsibilities ot eaoh to the other\nwould be definitely fixed and that the\nfinancial straits In which the churches\nfound themselves owing to the general\nIncreased cost of living and extraordinary demands made upon their fin-\nances on account ot the expansion of\nevangelical work In the western country, owing to Its rapid settlement would\nln a measure be relieved by the government\nAdopt Suggestions.\nA most interesting discussion ln\nwhich the minister's proposal* were\ncarefully considered by the church dignitaries present from various points of\nview, denominational and otherwise,\nand after full consideration and soma\n\u2022light amendment it was unanimously\ndecided to adopt Mr. Oliver's suggestions a* meeting all reasonable demands for the purpose of these schools\n- for several years to come.\nIn Three Divisions.\nSchool* are to be classed geographically ln three divisions, eastern, western and northern, and again into three\nclasses representing their ownership\nand the general character of the buildings In which schools are carried on.\nGrants tor the eastern dlvtaion are to\nbe from $80 to 1100 per capita per annum; In the western division from $100\nto $125, and In the northern division\nthere will be one rate, $126. Grants\nare therefore increased from $60 to $72\non the new scale ot payment. Before\nqualifying for payment under the new\nsystem the school authorities are required to sign a contract with the government. The contraot I* to limit the\nnumber ot pupils ln residence so aa to\nprevent overcrowding; to provide for\nmedical examination ot the children to\nbe admitted; to giv* government con\ntrol of the staff and other conditions\nwhich provide for general improvement. The contract also provides tot\nImprovement* in existing; buildings\nwhich will bring them up to a particular\nstandard.\nVota of Thanks.\nArchbishop Matheson moved a vote\not thanks to Mr, Oliver for the oppor-\ntunlty he had given them for such a\nfree discussion of the whole subject ot\nIndian education and the liberal treat,\nment which had been accorded differ\nent churches with such an open ac\nknowledgement of their efforts to educate and uplift the aborigines in the\ncountry. Archbishop' Mathewn's remarks were concurred ln by all and\nthe meeting closed with a general expression of approval.\nALREADY PROVIDED FOR\nIN CRIMINAL CODE\n(Special, to The Dally Sews.) . >\nVICTORIA, B.C., Nov. 9\u2014In connec-\nton with the suggestion and requests\nfor more drastic rules governing the\nprevention of carrying or having In possession any dangerous weapons contained in the presentment of the Fernie\ngrand Jury, Attorney General Bowser\npoints out that every point of the grievance touched upon I* already provided\nfor ln the criminal code.\nASPHYXIATED BY OAS\nTORONTO, Nov. 9\u2014Joseph Naylor,\nJersey avenue) was overcome by coal\ngas at hie home and found In an unconscious condition laat night. He died\nat the hospital this morning.\nESQUIMAU NOW\nIN CANADA'S HANDS\nSimple Ceremony Attends Tranafer of\nNaval Bate From Great Britain\nto Dominion\n(Special to The Dally New*.)\nVICTORIA, B.C. Nov. 9\u2014Canada took\nover the Esquimau naval base from the\nBritish admiralty today. The ceremony\nwag marked toy Its extreme simplicity,\nconsisting of the lowering of the Union\nJack from the flag pole and the hoisting of another. With the exchange of\nflags guards of honor drawn from\nH.M.C.S. Rainbow representing Canada\nand H.M.S. Sheapwater representing\nGreat Britain, stood present, the bugles\n\u2022blowing the salute at the moment of\nthe transfer of authority. The necessary papers-have already been exchanged between London and Ottawa\nand today's ceremony was of a purely\nformal character. S, J. peebarats, the\ndeputy minister of naval affairs. Admiral Klngsrolll, Commander Roper'\nand Commander Stewart represented\nCanada while the British admiralty was\nrepresented by Commander Vivian of\nH.M.S. Egerl.\nSURVEYORS HAVE\nEXCITING RACE\nStruggle for Grade Along North Sid*\nof Anderson Lake\u2014Saving\nIn Expense.\n(Special to The Daily Newa.)\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Nov. 9\u2014F._W.\nHunt, arrived lu town this morning\nfrom Pemberton Meadows bringing the\nstory of an exciting race in the northern country between engineering parties ot the Grand Trunk Pacific and the\nHowe Sound, Pemberton Valley & Northern railways for prior rights of locating a line over the divide at Summit\nlake in the Lillooet district The latter company Is said to have won the\nrace and secured a strategic position\nfor a good grade along the north side\nof Anderson lake. Construction cost\nof a railway on- this side Is said to be\n$20,000 less per mile than on the opposite shore and there Is room for only\none line oa the north shore. The\nHowe Sound railway has one party In\nthe field ln charge of John D. Nelson,\nwhile the Grand Trunk Pacific haa two\noutflta in the field, one working north\nfrom the lower end of Lillooet lake and\nthe other working west from Lillooet.\nBoth the latter parties are now-about\n36 miles from the divide at Summit\nlake.\nWILL ENDEAVOR TO\nEVADE TIME LIMIT\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Nov.. 9-The\ncongregation of Wesley Methodist\nchurch Is determined not to lose the\nservices of Rev. Robert Mllllken,\nthrough the operation ot the time limit-\nIn. the church next year. The official\nboard haa been asked to consider several schemes for getting around the\nlimit and retain Mr. MiUiken'a services\nfor two years more after which Rev.\nE. Crummle of Grace church, Winnipeg la expected to take charge of the\ncongregation.\nKOOTENAY APPLES START\n' ON  LONG JOURNEY\nVANCOUVER, B>C Nov. S-A car of\nprise winning fruit from the First Canadian Apple show Is. today being aent\nto England tor exhibition purposes by\nthe provincial government. The shipment consists of the mixed car which\nwas shown by the Grand Fork* board,\nand a number . of selections of\nthe smaller exhibits from pox classes\nand district display*.\nVETO ^OHFEREMCE\nIS\nPremier \"Non-Committal  at\nMansion House Banquet\nWILL SUPPRESS\nWELSH LAWLESSNESS\nSir Wilfrid May Not Attend\nImperial Conference\u2014.Sir\nGilbert on Free Trade\nLONDON, Nov. 8\u2014The expectation\nthat tbe prime minister would enlighten\nthe public on the progress of the veto,\nconference in hi* speech at th* lord\nmayor's banquet at Guildhall tonight.\nwas not realised. Mr. Asquint made\nonly a passing reference to the conference, proceedings, which have been\nthe subject ot much speculation owing\nto the tact that results arrived at must\nbe disclosed to parliament, which will\nassembled on Nov. 16. Although the conference will hold one more sitting there\nis hardly the faintest hope for a successful Issue. It Is believed the only\nmatter remaining to he discussed Is\nthe form In which the failure of the\nnegotiations shall be announced.\nEnd Race of Armamente\nAfter assuring the gathering that the\ngovernment will use every force, necessary to put down such lawlessness as Is\n-prevailing in Wales, the premier spoke\nbriefly of foreign relations. It might\nseem Utopian, he said, but he hoped\nthat under the growing pressure of public, opinion political feeling would he\ncome such a* to put an end to the competition in armaments.\nDefends British Army\nLONDON, Nov. 9\u2014At the Mansion\nHouse banquet Sir John French, after a\nrousing .defence of the British army\nagainst the criticism ot Col. Gadke,\nduring which he declared he would confidently and -gladly rely on them to\nmeet force* more numerous than thane,\nselves, referred to * more \"pleasant\nand congenial topic,\" namely, how\nmuch the army appreciated the presence of. the Queens Own Rifles at the\nmanoeuvres and he only repeated the\nheartfelt wish of every soldier ln expressing the earnest hope that such interchange ot troops might become more\nfrequent. Regarding hie visit of Inspection to Canada words failed him to express how highly he esteemed the\nsplendid energy and high Imperial spirit apparent everywhere ln the Canadian\nforces.\nSheriff Johnson ln proposing the Imperial forces, also alluded In most cordial terms to the visit of the Queens\nOwn to the city.\nBusy In Canada\nLEEDS. England, Nov. 9\u2014A prominent Canadian journalist has Informed\nthe Yorkshire Post that Sir Wilfrid\nLaurier Is disinclined to come to the\nnext 'imperial conference. He'ls getting\non In years and during the laat conference he was worried by politicians\non both sides with requests u> speak.\nThese made him very uncomfortable.\nAgain the political situation in Canada\nis developing ln a way which calls for\nthe premier's continued presence there.\nNo Free Trade Here\nMANCHESTER, England, Nov. 9\u2014Sir\nGilbert Parker, M.P. for Gravesond, ln\ntan address here said: \"There.is some\nsilly talk about Canada returning to a\nsystem ot free trade because a handful\nof farmers in the west are dictating not\nfree trade aa we understand It, but a\nrevision of the tariff which will give\nthem as good an advantage as the present tariff gives the manufacturers of\nthe country. That Is a matter of adjustment, but no candidate would agree\nto go Into a constituency In Canada tomorrow offering a system of free Imports as England has It. No government\nwould last one week that would propose\nit. Right well does Sir Wilfrid Lauiftr.\nknow this. His pious reflections oh\nthe subject of free trade have about as\nmuch meaning or force behind them as\nthe sentimental reminiscences ot an\noctogenarian over the days ot his\nyouth.\"  '\nCanada Seventh\nLONDON, Noc. 9\u2014Results In the\ncompetition tor Earl Roberts' trophy\nfor cadets have been published. The\nfirst place is won by the Transvaal\nwith 494 points. Canadians stood seventh with 364 and Prince Edward Island ninth with 829.\nFor Atlantic Traffic\nHOLYHEAD, Wales, Nov. 9\u2014At a\nmeeting of the town council the clerk\nstated that In connection with the all\nred route It is proposed to built a pier\nhere. All traffic from Canada would\noe carried as far as Oalway, Ireland,\nwhence a railway would be built to\nKingstown. It was also contemplated\nto construct a steamer large enough to\n. convey the train from Dublin or Klnga-\ntown to New Holyhead pier to connect\nwith the railway her*.\nNOVEMBER 10, 1910.      \u2022 -.\u2022'\n* Coupon No. 3. *\n*   \u2022\n* Thl* coupon, with one.from- *\ns each of the other Issues of The *\ns Dally News of the week ending, *\na November 13, and 10 centa, en- *\ne titles thai holder  to   a photo- *\n* gravure reproduction of Dendy \u2022\n* Saddler** great picture, \"Darby *\n* and Joan,\" the World'* greatest *\n* artistic conception of domestic \u2022\n* happiness.    The  coupons   ana *\n* money   should be presented   at \u2022\n* The Daily Newaoffice.any time \u00ab\n* attar Sunday next.   It picture* *\n* are to b* mailed 6 centa must bs *\n* added to, cover postage, \u2022\n* \".\"* ' |. ':\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0'. \u2022\n\u2022\u2022\u2022*\u2022\u2022?\u2022\u2022*\u2022*ee**\u2022e**\nFIVE NEW WHALERS\n;   FIR THE PACIFIC\nBfg Fisheries Company Being Pleated\nIn tngland\u2014Wide Extension In\nContemplation\nto Th* Dally News.)\nVICTORIA, B.C., NoT..\u00bb-Capital!sed\nat 12,600,000 the Canadian Northern\nPacific Fisheries Co? Is now being\nfloated In Bngland with the object of\ncarrying out extensive fisheries operations in the waters of British Columbia, The company is controlled by\nMessrs. Mackenzie ft Mann of the Canadian Northern railway who through\ntheir representatives, A. D. McRae and\nCol. A. D. Davidson, recently purchased\nthe entire holdings of the Pacific\nWhaling company at a cost of $1,000,-\n000. The latter company is now In process of reorganization as far aa an extension of operations ia concerned, the\nconsiderable .Increase of capital being\nnecessary to enable the concern to exploit several branches of the fishery\nindustry.. Chief among the schemes of\nextension planned is. the establishment\nof a new whaling station In northern\nBritish Columbia to be ready for operation next spring. This will cost In the\nneighborhood of $120,000.\nFive New Whalers\nTo hunt for whales from this new\nstation and four others already established on the coast, fire new steam\nwhalers have'been ordered from Christiana, NorWaUri Tbree of theae are now\nready and wm sail for Victoria within\nthe next few days; The other two are\nln process of construction and all five,\nwill have reached tuts coast In time\nfor the spring hunting. The names ot\nthese vessels are, as far as known,\nunique tn marine history, the management having christened them respectively Black, White, Green, Brown and\nRed. ,\nFor Halibut Fishing\nNext summer vessels especially\nequipped for engaging in the halibut\nindustry win he brought to the coast\nand this branch of the fisheries Industry will be exploited by Canadians on\na large scale. Numerous other extension schemes are ln contemplation, Including tbe exploiting ot the shark flair\nerles, the Installing of refineries and\nother such enterprises which will not\nalone give employment to a targe number of fishermen but will prove the first\ndirect attempt of. Canadians to take\nadvantage of one of the greatest resources of the most westerly province\nin the Dominion.\nThe planning of this large enterprise\ncontemporaneous with the advent of\nthe Canadian navy 'to these shores\nshould go far towards fulfilling the\nscheme which Earl Orey Is so enthusiastic about, namely the establishment\nof a race of fishermen on the Pacific\ncoast which will provide a nucleus for\nthe Dominion navy. \\\nPUBLIC RIDES ON\nSTREET RAILWAY\nPart of System Was Opsned at Noon\nYesterday\u2014Ceremony Was\n'.'' Very Slmpl* One.\nThe Btreet car service waa opened to\nthe public at noon yesterday by Mayor\nSelous and Miss Grace Maurer. The\nceremony was a simple one, his worship starting one car west while Miss\nMaurer turned the controller ot the\nother as it commenced Its first official\ntrip.\nThe service was continued throughout the day though only the old portion\nof the line waa used. It Is expected\nthat the system will be fully In operation within the next few days when a\nschedule will be arranged.\nIt ie the Intention to run a 20-minuto\nservice, commencing at 6 o'clock ln tho\nmorning and continuing until midnight.\nGIVES ENDOWMENT FOR\nSIX RURAL CHURCHES\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nVANCOUVER, B. C\u201e Nov. 9\u2014W. J.\nWalker of New Westminster haa given\na donation of $50,000 to the Church of\nEngland authorities for the establishment ot six rural churches to Surrey\nmunicipality to which he will add a\nmaintenance fund ot 1600 each annually until the congregations are self-\nsupporting.\nRepublican Majority of Ten\nin Senate.\nSAFE MAJORITY IN\nNATIONAL HOUSE\nDemocrats Will Have Majority\nof Thirty\u2014List of Senators Elected.\nThe political upheaval of Tuesday\nwas followed yesterday by a general\neairey-ef the Held which, disclosed with\ngreater detail and precision Just what\nresults had been accomplished. Latest\ncalculations on the national house has*\ned on complete hut unofficial returns\nshow that the Democrats will have a\nsafe working majority of 30, The out*\ncome of the United States senate la\nnow definitely settled* The Republicans\nare assured of 17 new senators, which\nwith 34 hold over senators gives them\na total of 51. The Democrats are assured of 15 new senators which with\n25 hold-overs gives them a total of 40.\nOne senatorship is still in doubt, Mr.\nCarter in Montana, where there are\nprospects of a tie. These determined\ntotals, however, leave a Republican majority in the senate as follows:\nTotal membership 92, necessary to a\nmajority 47, Republicans 50, Democrats\n40, doubtful 2.\nSenators Elected.\nThe seventeen Republican senators\nconsidered assured are from California,\nConnecticut, Delaware, Massachusetts,\nMinnesota, Michigan, Nevada, North\nDakota (2), Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Iowa, Utah, Vermont, Washington,\nWisconsin and Wyoming.\nThe fifteen Democrat senators considered aaaured are from Florida, Indiana, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Mis*\nsouri, Mississippi; Nebraska, New Jersey, New Yorl, Ohio, Tennessee, Texas,\nVirginia and West Virginia.\nEberhart Sweeps Minnesota.\nMINNEAPOLIS, Nov. 9\u2014Governor O.\nA. Eberhart has swept Minnesota by a\nplurality of over 60,000 and as heard\nfrom he haa carried every county. The\nresult waa in evidence before 10 o'clock\nlast night, after 20 county precincts\nhad reported. From then on it became\nonly a question of majority. The county option strength, expected by the\nDemocrats did not materialize and one\nstrong county option county after another has reported an Eberhart plurality. Even Ottertail and Kandiyohi,\nwhere three-fourths of the voters are\ncounty optlonlsts, have gone for Eberhart. On the other hand, the Democrats knifed Gray in the German communities and old Stearns went Republican on governor for the first time in\nIts history. Scott county is also Republican. -\nSurprise to Republicans.\nMINNEAPOLIS. Nov. 9\u2014Incomplete\nreturns give Eberhart 18,246, Gray 14,-\n005. The country districts will increase\nthe Eberhart lead in Hennepin to over\n5000. This Is a surprise to many Republicans who expected Gray to carry\nthe county but he lost the Democratic\nwards and carried only one ward in the\ncity.\nBurke Reelected.\nFARGO, N. D., Nov. 9\u2014The re-election of Governor Burke, Republican, for\nhis third term seems certain but by reduced majority, compared with two\nyears ago. Johnaon ran well lu the\neastern and northern counties but\nBurke offset his valley gains by sweeping the southern and central counties\nstrong. Returns of the judiciary elec:\nUons are very meagre. \u25a0 Those available show that Flak, Gobs and Burke\nare in the lead.\nWashington Republican.\nSPOKANE, Nov. 9\u2014Washlngton state\nwent Republican by the normal republican majority, probably more than 20,*\n000 for the supreme court justices, who\nwere opposed by nominees Indorsed by\nthe Democrats and named by a nonpartisan convention. All three congressmen are Republicans and are\nelected by majorities so substantial, as\nfar as reported now, that nothing short\nof a miracle can upset the forecast.\nCongressman Humphrey wins in the\nFirst district by thousands, as does\nStanton Warburton ln the Second district, and the majority of La Follette\nIn the Third district will probably be\nlarger than ever given a congressional\ncandidate In the district.\nHawley in Idaho.\nWhen James H. Hawley, Democratic\ncandidate for governor ot Idaho, leaves\nthe six panhandle counties for South\nIdaho he will carry with him a majority over 3. H. Brady, Republican, of\nmore than 2000, and if reports at 2\no'clock Wednesday morning from the\n\u25a0outh. where   Brady Is rated strong,\nCalifornia Republioan.\nSAN FRANCISCO, Cat, Nov. 9\u2014California remains in the Republican column. Hiram W. Johnson has been\nswept into the office of governor by a\nplurality which, estimated on a basis\nof partial returns, may approximate\n50,000. Seemingly he has carried the\nentire Republican state ticket to victory. Returns from 281 precincts out\nof 3159 In the state received up to midnight give the following vote for governor: Johnson, Republican, 17,997;\nBell, Democrat, 13,446. For lieutenant\ngovernor, Wallace, Republican, 18,068;\nSpellacy, Democrat, 12,646.\nOther Returns.\nSPOKANE, Wash., Nov. 9\u2014In California, Hiram W. Johnaon, Republican,\napparently Is elected by from 25,000 to\n50,000.\n. In Wyoming the election of Qarey,\nDemocrat, for governor, is claimed by\n4000.\nIn Oklahoma both aides are claiming\nthe governorship.\nIn Minnesota, the entire Republican\nstate ticket, headed by Governor Eberhart, was elected..\nIn South Dakota the re-election of\nGovernor Vesaey, Republican, Is probable.\nIn Kansas Governor Stubbi, Republican, Is re-elected.\nIn North Dakota early returns showed Johnson, Republican, leading Governor Burke, Democrat\nTexas elected O. B. Colqult governor\nand the entire Democratic Btate ticket.\nRAILROAD COMING\nTO SALMON VALLEY\nRich Diifrlet Will be Opened up by the\nIdaho and Washington Northern\n\u2014Builds Next Year.\n\"The announcement in dispatches\nthat the Idaho & Washington Northern\nrailway will build north the coming\nyear is certainly the news of the hour\nfor southern British Columbia,\" said J.\nA. Nowell of St. Paul, head of the company that is colonizing the Salmon\nriver valley, last night \"The system\nat present extends to Metalline, 11\nmiles from the International boundary.\nThere Is of course only one way the\nrailway can come north, and that is\nthrough the Salmon river valley as far\nas Salmo, thence down the Beaver valley to the city ot Trail. The Idaho &\nWashington. Northern. Is reputed tp\nhave the best line, with the easiest\ngrades, in the mountains, and being associated with the Chicago, Milwaukee\nft St Paul railway, a railway that has\nfine traditions among the continental\nlines, It may be accepted that business\nis meant Incidentally, this will make\nthe shortest line between Spokane and\nNelson.\nSplendid Territory.\n\"A magnificent district is awaiting\nthe development that the Idaho ft\nWashington Northern will bring. Consider first the mining. There are the\nmines that have been opened and are\nbeing opened on Sheep creek, with the\nmany promising prospects on Lost,\nSouth Fork and Boundary creeks. A\ngreat business will be brought to the\nTrail smelter, and a great impetus will\nbe given to mining In the district.\n\"It Is estimated that there la one\nbillion feet of timber tributary to the\nnew townsite of Salmon Rapids, embracing the standing timber on Lost,\nSwift, Brushy Mountain, South Fork\nand Boundary creeks, and the main\nSalmon river. An Iowa syndicate that\nowns large limits on Swift creek and\nBrushy Mountain will develop them as\nsoon as the railway reaches them. The\nSalmon River Lumber company, consisting of Minneapolis interests, is now\npreparing to put In a mill at Erie, and\nour own mill at Salmon Rapids Is now\nIn operation.\n\"Between Salmo and the border there\nis 10,000 acres of land suitable for\ngrowing fruit,.and 25,000 acres suited\nto ranching and grazing.\n\"In all theae directions it Is reasonable to expect a large and immediate\ndevelopment following the advent of\nthe Idaho ft Washington Northern.\"\nR0CKSLIDES OCCUR\nEAST OF GQB3EN\nVANCOUVER, B.C., Nov 9\u2014A rock\nand land slide on the main line of the\nCanadian Pacific two miles east of\nGolden ln the Rockies occurred yesterday afternoon, as a result of which several hundred passengers, both east and\nwest bound are effectually tied up for\nan Indefinite period ranging from 12 to\n14 hours. This interference with the\ntrain schedules would not have been so\ngreat were it not for the fact that two\nslides occurred ln practically the same\nplace within a few hours. The second\ncame just about the time a large gang\nof laborers were finishing clearing\naway the first.   Nobody waa Injured.\nRESIGNS YALE SEAT\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nVICTORIA, B.C., Nov. 9\u2014Premier\nMcBrlde today forwarded to Speaker\nBberts his resignation of his seat in the\nlegislature for Yale and a writ will be\nissued for a bye-election, the dates ot\nnomination and election In connection\nwith which will be made public in the\ncourse of the ensuing few days.\nOF\nReport of Alberta Great Waterways Commission.\n\/\nFACTS SUSPICIOUS\nSAY TWO JUDGES!\nThird Gives Verdict of Inno-I\nm cence\u2014Cross May Enter\nCabinet.\nEDMONTON, Alt*., NOT. 9\u2014The re- I\nport of the royal commission appointed I\nto   Investigate   the Alberta ft Great\nWaterways railway deal will be laid I\non th* table at the opening of the tegis-\nlature tomorrow.   The contents of ths I\nreport have not been allowed to reach, I\nthe public before being presented to f\nthe legislature and will   be   brought\ndown ln the sealed envelope In which It |\nwaa presented to the lieutenant governor.\nJudges Divided\nIt is learned that two of the Judges I\ndeclare an absence of wrong doing and\nthe third a verdict of absolute Innocence. That is, all three judges report\nthat -no case of wrong doing has been\nmade out against any member of the\nRutherford government or legislature.\nTwo of the Judges also cite certain\npoints ln the evidence submitted to\nthem which they suggest might lead to\na suspicion of wrong doing. The third\nJudge declares that ln hia opinion these\nvery points are evidence of the fact\nthat any wrong doing was Impossible.\nThe judges who composed the royal\ncommission were Chief Justice Harvey,\nJustice Beck and Justice Scott.\nCross May Come Back\nIt was rumored that Hon. C. Cross,\nattorney general in the Rutherford government and who resigned when the\nWaterways Investigation waa Introduced, win be asked by Premier SIfton to\nenter his cabinet.\nMlchener Is Leader\nEDMONTON, Alta., Nov. 9\u2014After\n-months of endeavor at 1 o'clock thl*\nafternoon the Conservatives of Alberta\nln convention assembled unanimously\nselected E. M. Mlchener, M.P.P., Independent of Red Deer, as their lender.\nPART OF CLAIMS TO\nBE PAID IN FULL\nBoard of Valuation Fix Price of Midway A Vernon Right of\nWay\n(Special to The Dally News,)\nVICTORIA, B.C., Nov. 9\u2014The board\nof valuators appointed to decide .-upon'\nan equitable sum for which the Kettle .\nValley Railway company should \"purchase the old Midway & Vernon right\nof way, has decided upon a figure ln the\nneighborhood of $62,000. It is stated on\nauthoritative information that the\namount of the award will be forthcoming within ten days time. The valuators hope to be in a position to make\npayments In the matter of various\nclaims for wages and supplies Incurred\nby the defunct railway company and\nassumed by the Kettle Valley road,\nsometime between now and the end of\nthe present month. The claims for labor and accounts of that description,\nso far aa they appertain to the ten mile\nright of way between Midway and Rock\nCreek are likely to Ibe paid in full. This\nwas the portion of the road with which\nthe board of valuators could deal.Other\nclaims in connection with that portion\nof the road, will, It Is stated, receive\nsubstantial consideration.\nThe board of valuators was composed\nof Judge Forin of Nelson, R. P. Green\nof Victoria, representing the provincial\ngovernment, and L. M. Rice of Seattle,\nwho represented the Kettle River railway.\nINCOMING SETTLERS LOOK\nTO BRITISH COLUMBIA\n(Special to The Dally Newa.)\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Nov. 9\u2014Com-\nmlsatoner Coombs and Col. Lamb of the\nSalvation army passed through the city\ntoday en route for Victoria where they\nwill inspect army work and the settlements on French creek founded last\nyear as well as Interview the provincial authorities on Immigration plana.\nCol. Lamb sayB the prospects of British\nColumbia are now being regarded very;\nfavorably by Incoming settlers.\nCHILD BURNED TO DEATH.\nHOLLAND, Man., Nov. 9\u2014Returning\nfrom milking last night, Mrs. Frank\nKergan found the clothes of her three-\nyear-old daughter in flames and despite\nprompt medical attention, the child\ndied within a few hours. A spark from\nthe stove Is believed to have Ignited\nthe child's garments. No inquest tf>\nnecessary.\n PAGE TWO\nmm.\nTHURSDAY NOVIMBER 10\nNelson Opera House\nFRIDAY\nNovember 11\nGibson & Bradfield present the great Hoyt Theatre Comedy Success\n\"A Bachelor's Honeymoon\"\nWith a metropolitan cast and elaborate stage settings\nSeats on sale at Poole Drug Co. Prices 50c, 75c, $1.00\nFIRST CANADIAN NATIONAL APPLE SHOW\nNOTES BY J. T.  BEALBY\nThOBe who have had the opportunity\n* to visit this show and were also present at the big show in Spokane ln the\nlate fall of 1909 are unanimous In declaring that both lor the number of the\nexhibits and the quality, appearance\nand color of the fruit shown the Vancouver display surpassed that made at\n. the American city a year ago. Tho\nmost striking exhllblt at Vancouver was\n\" undoubtedly the carload of Jonathan\napples put up by the Kelowna board\n\"of trade. It was indeed a magnlflcenl\nBight, a sight not readily to.be .forgot-\n. jten, to behold a' sloping bank 18 feet\nJilgh, reaching from floor to celling, of\napples all of one uniform color; all\npacked exactly alike and all heaving\nabundant evidence of high and skilful\ncultivation. Mr. Van Deman, the. Am-\n\u2022erlcan expert authority on apples, declared in very emphattc terms that he\nwas unable to;flnd language adequate\nto express his admiration of the superb 'beauty and quality of the exhibit.\nWhilst this carload excited universal\nadmiration, there were others which\nfell but little short of the Bame high\nstandard of excellence, notably a mixed car from Summerland and another\nfrom Vernon and yet a third from Grand\nPorks. The Coldstream Estate also put\nup a fine car of mlxeg apples, though\nNorthern Sp!es predominated. Two\ncarloads, one. ot Grimes' Golden and\none of Spitzenberg, staged by the Sawyer Land company of Yakima, Wash.,\n\u25a0were remarkable for the evenness of\nthe packing and the wonderful even-\n\u2022 ness of the grading.    Vancouver  ls-\nland put up a fine carload of Kings,\nwhich the manager ot the exhibit stated he had gathered together from a\nhost of growers all over the island and\nhad had considerable difficulty in making up a full number of boxes. Altogether eleven carloads were entered\nfor competition, of which British Col-\niimlMa produced six.\nIn the competition for the champion\nblue ribbon of the show, British Columbia carloads; it Is very gratifying to\nknow, were placed first and second\nnamely, the Kelowna car of Jonathans\nfirst and a fine mixed' carload of four\nor five of the best varieties from Summerland, took second honors. Except\nfor one carload of Yellow Newtons from\nithe other side of the boundary,.which\nwere shipped to the coming Spokane\nshow, all the carloads, ten, were sold\nIn Vancouver, at, I understand, good\nprices.\nKootenay Triumphant\nPassing from the big carload competitions to those of smaller size, <we enter the arena In which West Kootenay\ncame into triumphant prominence.\nFrom her achievements in these fields\nIt Is not rash to foresee that-when her\narea of bearing orchard land has Increased to even as many thousands of\nacres as it Is now hundreds, and when\nit will still lag far behind the total\nacreage ot orchards bearing ln the\nOkanagan valley, West Kootenay will\n\u2022he able to hold her own on any field\nof contest for honors as an apple grow-\nIng community.   Relatively to her area\nRemedies are Needed\nWere we perfect, which we are not, medicines would\nnot olten be needed. But nince our systems have become weakened, impaired sod. broken down through\nIndiscretion! which have fone on from the early ages,\nthrough counties* fenerations, remedies ttrt needed to\naid Nature in correcting our inherited and otherwise\nacquired weaknesses. To reaoh the seat of Honacb\nweakness and consequent digestive troubles, there is\nMthinl to good as Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, a glyceric compound, extracted from native medicinal roots\u2014sold for over forty years with great satisfaction to atl users. For\nWeak Stomach, Biliousness, Liver Complaint, Pain in the Stomach after eating.\nHeartburn, Bad Breath, Belching of food. Chronic Diarrhea and ether Intestinal\nDerangements, the \"Discovery'* it a time-proven and most efficient remedy.\nThe genuine haa on ita\noutside  wrapper the\nSignature\n\"Yon can't afford to accept a scent nostrum as a substitute lor this notvako\nbolic, medicine of known composition, not even though the urgent dealer nitty\nthereby make a little bigger profit.\nDr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets regulate and Invigorate stomaoh, liver and\nbowels.   Sugar-coated, tiny granules, easy to take as candy.  _\n^S^wa,\nand relatively to the number of her\nentries in the box contests, West Kootenay has brought home, I believe, a\nhigher percentage of prizes than any\nother district in British Columbia. In\ncertain varieties, more particularly the\nGravenstelns, Ontario, Blenheim Orange and Alexandra, West Kootenay\nexhibitors virtually swept the boards.\nMessrs. Doyle & Macdonell of 8-Mile\nwon the first prize for 10 boxes of\nGrayenstelns, with an exhibit distinguished for the uniformly good color\nand excellent grading and packing. In\nthe single box competition J. T. Bealby\ncame first out of 23 competitors, heating two entries from Nova Scotia. In\nthe Alexander class J. T, Bealby and\nJaines Johnstone were a- long way\nahead of their competitors and were\nthe only two placed. J. T. Bealby also\nwon first . prize for Alexanders on\nplates. In Ontarlos Doyle & Macdonell\nX T. Bealby and W. Rutherford, all\nWest Arm grower's, were placed in th\u00b0\norder named and ihren or four other\nboxes from the West Arm ran close up\nto the winners. In Blenheim Orange\nJ. T. Bealby won first for five boxes\nfirst for one box and firBt and second\nfor plates.\nWest Kootenay also came prominently forward In Yellow Bell Flower. Wagner, King, Snow, McMahon White,\nCanada Red and Crab apples. Doyle &\nMacdonell, James Johnstone, Appleton\nBros, of Proctor, James Spiers of KsbIo\nand J. T. Bealby were the prlncipa1\nwinners In these classes. In some of\nthe contests for single boxes the competition was remarkably keen, the\nnumber of entries running up'to 20, 30\nand even 40. The judges were com-\nmendably thorough in their methods,\ntaking every box to pieces which they\ndeemed worthy of consideration. It Is\nsafe to say that no box which stood\nsuccessfully their searching investigation. In which fully one half of all the\napples In the box were unwrapped and\nIndividually examined, fell very far\nshort of perfection, both as to, grading,\nuniformity of size, good color and good\npacking. The blue ribfoon for the best\npacked box of apples, packed commercially, every apple wrapped and the\nboxes nailed down for the Judges themselves to open anywhere they chose,\nalso comes to West Kootenay, the\nproud winner In a strong class ot 23\nentries, which embraced packs by experts from the Okanagan and the other\nside of the boundary, being W. J.\nCockle of Kaslo.\nGolden Russet\nThe West Kootenay Golden Russet\nmaintained its reputation successfully\nby winning third prize In a keen contest for three boxes ot the most perfect\napples and by gaining a diploma (no\nprize was offered) for Mr. Fauquier\nof the Needles, A box of Hyslop Crabs\npacked by J. Percy Hayley excited a\ngood deal of admiring comment Th*\nbox has been sent to London, England\nalong with the West Kootenay ship-\nNOTICE!\nWe ore ottering this week Men's and Boy's Wool Gloves and Mitts, silk lined, wool lined and uniined\nJress Gloves, also Men's Working Gloves, Gauntlets and Mitts lined and uniined, suitable for railroad men,\nllremen, lumbermen and laborers.   Prices quoted (below:\nPerrin's\nLownde's\nDent's\nDress\nGloves\nUniined\nSilk Lined\nWool Lined\nH.B.K.\nErbe's\nBig Four\nWorking\nGloves\nMitts and\nGauntlets\nUniined and\nWool Lined\nMEN'S WOOL  MITTS  AND GLOVES\nRegular 25c\u201e sale price  20c.\nRegular 50c, sale price  35c.\nRegular 65c. and 75c., sale price,.BOc.\nRegular $1 and $1.25, sale price... .75c.\nMen's Leather Gloves, Gauntlets and\nMitts, Uniined and Wool Lined\nRegular 60c., Sale price $ .40\nRegular 75c,, sale price 5d >\nRegular $1, sale price     .76\nRegular $1.25 and $1.50, sale price 1,00\nRegular $1.76 and 2.00, sale price 1.26\nRegular 2.25 and $2.50, sale price 1.75\nEngineers* and Firemen's Gloves\nand Mitts   1.26\nment for exhibition at the Royal Horti\ncultural society's colonial exhibition to\nbe held at Westminster on Dec 3-5\nnext.\nGreat praise Is due to the manager\nand the promoters of the First Canadian National Apple show for getting together and staging in. such an admirable manner what may truly be described as the grandest display of apples\nwhich haa yet been seen nn this or\nany other continent. Alihouph a certain amount of indecision marked the\nframing of the schedule ol competitions\nand although a- greater degree of firmness in the stagihg'and control of the\nexhibits might have been displayed,\nstill these detects are more or less in\ncldentai to an undertaking of this magnitude at the first attempt. On-the\nother hand nothing could exceed the\ncourtesy and attention of. the officials\nall round and great praise is due for\nthe really magnificent, not to say lavish appointments or the great show.\nThose who were privileged to witness\nit will not readily forget the superb\npictures of the queen of British Columbia fruits when staged In her royal\nmajesty and beauty at Vancouver in\nthe fall of 1910.\nThe full awards In the plate exhibits\nhad not heen announced when I left\nVancouver, but West Kootenay scores,\nI understand, a commendable propor-\ntion of wins, the names of the successful exhibitors Including, in addition\nto names already mentioned, those ot\n,T. J. Campbell, W. Buggins. H, A.\nCoomber and two br three others.\nSee our window of Men's Blue and Black Suits.\nWallace's Genuine Closing Out  Sale\n506 Biker Stmt Mm. B. C.\nMYSTERIOUS DEATHS DUE\nTO CONTAMINATED MILK\nEDMONTON, Alta., Nov. 9\u2014Nine hot-\ntie fed Infants, in charge of the children's home, have succumbed In the last\nsix weeks to a mysterious malady in\nepidemic form which has been hitherto unknown In the province. The disease has baffled diagnosis, following\nnumerous conferences between leading\nphysicians and after three post mortem\nexaminations. At first it was thought\nto be a form of infantile paralysis because of the terrible suddenness with\nwhich the victims were swept away.\nThe children attacked began to fail\nand death ensued in 48 hours but post\n-mortem s Indicated rather gast.ro .intestinal trouble due to drinking contaminated milk.\nDOCTOR FINED\nNATURALISTS EAT\nTHEIR SPECIMENS\nPrivations of Party in Northern Canada\n\u2014Lunch on Snowshoe Thongs and\nLeather\nOTTAWA, Nov; 9\u2014Director R. W.\nBrock of the geological survey has received a letter and some geological\nsamples from D. E. Stetfansson, a representative of the department and of\nthe American Museum of Natural History, who with Lieut Anderson, M.D.\nof the United States army is in the\nnorthernmost wilds of Canada. Tbe Stetfansson party was reduced to utmost\n<pnvations at Cape Lyons last winter,\nhaving to subsist during that period\non snowshoe thongs and leather and\neating their zoological specimens. Dr.\nAnderson and two aborigines had pneumonia and ten dogs perished from prl-\nva'lon. The party will winter on Covo-\nnatlon Gulf, returning next fall after\nthree yeirs exile. \u25a0 The missive was\nbrought out by Eskimos.\nMAKES GOOD START\nIN Y. M. C. A. CAMPAIGN\nNearly Quarter of Million Dollars Co*\nleeted in First Day In Vancouver\n\u2014Makes Record.\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Nov. 9\u2014Vancouver's half million dollar Y. M. C. A.\ncampaign struck a lively pace since being launched at Monday night's, banquet. The collection of funds was commenced on Tuesday morning and by\nnight the officials announced that they\nhad collected $240,000 ln cash and notes\nor within $10,000 ot halt the amount\nthey have set out to collect In the five\ndays' campaign which will close on\nSaturday night. The most remarkable\nfeature of the surprising result of the\n12 hours effort of the campaign leaders\nand lieutenants is the amazing work of\nthe local young men's committee. Officials announce tbat this committee\nhas collected $180,000 of the $240,000\nand thereby set a new world's record\nin a Y, M. C. A. fund raising campaign.\nThe previous best record was that of\nthe Toronto young men's committee in\nthe recent campaign which raised $85,-\n000 in a period ot ten days. Vancouver's hustling young men's committee\nnumbers 300.\nNORTH PORTAL, Sask., Nov. 9\u2014A.\nJ. Somers, M.D., of South Portal, was\nfined $30 and* costs for practicing and\nassuming the title of doctor on the Canadian side of the boundary, he not being registered as a physician in Saskatchewan. The charge was laid by a\nrepresentative ot the medical council\nbefore W. A. Neil, J.P.\nfllOROF\nYEARS\nGROWTH\nRemoved by Lydia E. Pink*\nham's Vegetable Compound\n\u25a0Winnipeg, Man.\u2014\" Eleven wars ago\nI went to the Victoria Hospital, Montreal, suffering with a growth In the\nuterus. The doctors said ft was a tumor,\nand could not be removed, as it would\nmuselnstantdeath.\nThey found that\nother organs were\naffected and said\nI could not live\nmore than six\nmonths in the condition I waa in.\nAfter I came.home\nI saw your advertisement ln the\npaper and con.\nmenced taking Ly.\nilia E. Vinkhairi Wcmtable Compound.\nI took It constantly for two yean, and\nstill take it at times, and both my husband and myself claim that it was the\nmeans of saving my life.' I highly\nrecommend It to sufferlngworaen.\"\u2014\nMrs. OtiTLLA Bradley, 284 Johnson\nAve., Winnipeg, Manitoba.\nOne of the greatest triumphs of\nLydia E. IHnkham's Vegetable Com-\nSound is the conquering of woman's\nread enemy\u2014tumor. If you have\nmysterious pains, iiiilumraation, ulceration or displacement, don't wait for\ntime to confirm your.fears and go\nthrough the horrors of a hospital operation, but try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound at once.'\nFor thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham's\nVegetable Compound, madefromroots\nanaherbs.hasbeenthestandardramedy.\nfor female Ills.\nChamberlain's Cough Remedy has become famous tor Its cures ol coughs, colds,\nsroup and influenza. Try It when in need.\nIt contains no harmful substance and always gives prompt relief Bold by sli\ndruggists and dealers. '\nCONSTRUCTION CAMP SCENE\nOF SHOOTING AFFRAY\nDELORAINB, Man., Nov. 9\u2014A shooting affray occurred this evening in the\nGreat Northern construction camp to\nthe southeast of the town. Foreman\nG. Wright, whose home Is south of .Bota-\nsevaln,-was shot hy a man named Mc-\nIntyre, one of several men who had\nbeen disputing with .Wright concerning\nwages. Wright came to town for treatment, his escape being marvellous, tho\nbullet having entered near his nose\nand travelling round the hack of his\nhead, but the wound Is not serious.\nNo arrest has heen made and owing\nto tbe proximity of the boundary Mc-\nIntyre has probably crossed Into the\nUnited States.\nDRAGGED TO DEATH\nHIGH RIVER, Alta.. Nov; 9\u2014While\nriding across country a few miles north\not High River this afternoon. Robert\nTracey, a prominent contractor of this\ntown, iwas thrown from Wb horse and\nkilled from injuries received toy being\ndragged In bis stirrup. Deceased was\nformerly of St. Mary's Ont. He leaves\na wife and family who reside here.\nGOVERNMENT MAY CONSTRUCT\nDRYDOCK AT LEVIS\nST. JOHN, Nov. 9rrAn Ottawa dispatch to tbe Telegram says that if private companies will not undertake the\nwork of the construction of the drydock\nat Levis and St John under the provisions of. tho act relating thereto.tbe\ngovernment will probably construct\nthem as government works needed ln\nconnection with the navy.\nPeople Who Work\nIndoors With Their Hands\nSeamstresses, watch-makers, artists, draughtsmen, and many others,\ncannot properly handle their tools\nwith cold, stiff hands. Many a lost\nhour or two on cold winter mornings results from the delayed heat\nof furnace or stove.\nThe Perfection Oil Heater in\na few minutes gives the tempera;\nturethat assures the worker warm\nhands and pliable muscles..' The\n>ERFECTIO]\nSmokcle*)*        *\nOIL Ht\/VTM!\nAbobfet) Mtofctm mtf eiorfes*\nquickly gives heat, and with one filling ot the font burns steadily for nine hows,\nwithout smoke or smell. Has \u2022otomatte.lockino; flame \u2022Dreader which\nprevents the wick from being turned high enough to smoke, snd is easy to remove\nand drop bsck so the wick can be quickly cleaned.\nIt has a damper top and a cool hsndle. Indicator always shows the amount\not oil In tbe font. The Bller-csp does not need to be screwed down; tt Is put In\nlike a cork In a bottle, and ia sttsched to the font by a chain, and cannot get lost.\nThe burner body or gsllery cannot become wedged, because of a new device\nIn construction, snd consequently, It can always be easily unscrewed in an\nInstant lor rewieking. The Perfection Is finished in Japan or nickel, ia strong,\ndurable, well-made, built for service, and yet light and ornamental\n\u00a3\nDnltrs BMryuhm.  If not at yours, uriitjor Aicrfr^ ttftafer\nhlhuuartit agency oftkt\nThe Imperial Oil Company*\nUmHad.\n\u00a3\nSCOTCHMEN ASKED\nTO GATHER MONDAY\nProposal     Submitted   to    Resuscitate\nBranch of St. Andrew's Society\nIn Nelson.\nA movement Is on foot to resuscitate\nthe Nelson branch of St. Andrew's society, and a number of leading citizens\nwho have been members of other\nbranches, or of the branch that formerly existed here, are combining In calling a meeting   of   Scotchmen at the\nboard of trade rooms next Monday\nnight at 8 o'clock, for the purpose ot\nconsidering this matter. It Is considered tbat a very strong branch could,\nbe formed here.\nAlong with the main proposition will\nbe considered the advisability of celebrating St. Andrews day In Nelson ln\nappropriate style, with the customary\nbanquet and fraternal toasts.\nHoarseness Id a child subject to croup\nIs a sura indication of the approach of\ntho disease. If Chamberlain's Cough Remedy Is gives at once or even after th*\ncroupy cough has appeared, It will prevent\nthe attack. Contains no poison. Bold by\nall rlruggirts end dealers\nCONTRACTOR SHOT.\nDELORAINg, Man., Nov. 9\u2014George\nWright, contractor on the Canadian\nNorthern construction was shot and\nseriously wounded by J. Mclntyre, one\not his workmen last night The men\nhad had some words after Mclntyre,\nhad been paid off and he pulled a re*\nvolver, tiring Instantly. The bullet\nstruck Wright ln the nose and lodged\nln the back of his head. The affair took\nplaoe at a camp a tew miles south and\nthe wounded man was hurried here\nwhere he now lies ln a weak \u2022tate. Mclntyre decided at first to come to town\nand give himself up but changed hla\nmind and escaped on a freight train.\nThese lids are Made to Last\nand stay flat\u2014no bulging in the centre, no warping,\nno cracking; because they are extra heavy and made\nfrom the finest metal. Your kettles and .pots will\nalways set level and get every particle of heat all over\nthe bottoms. Not for a tittle while, but {or years.\nAnd every detail of construction is of equal goodness\nfrom end to end of a\nKOOTENAY\n,Steel Range\nwith more exclusive improvements for your benefit,\nthan you'll find on any other range at the price. We\nwant to prove this to you before you buy. The nearest\nMcClary Agent will quickly convince you that every -\nclaim for the Kootenay is built on the solid foundation\not merit. Write the nearest McClary branch for full\ninformation and booklet. n\nM^Claiy's\nLoosen,   Tonato,   Mootml.   Whuuptg,   Vsoeoanr,   It John, IA*   Haalttos,   Cdguj\nFor Sale by Wood-Vallance Hardware Co, Ltd.\n . THURSDAY .\nNOVEMBER 10\n%ht Bail? ftttDS,\nM\u00bb THRU\nHo!   All Ye\nWho Labor\nAre joo noting the signs of tbe times! Do tou realise that this, the land which should be yours, 1b\n\u2022bout to be Invaded by a great boat of people from every nation, and every clime, who will compete\nwith yon ln the labor market, ln tbe mines and forests and orchards, on the railways, in the mills, and ln\neverycalHng.\nDo yon realise tbat your salvation lies in securing as much as possible of the land which will sustain\nthe oomtag population and on which they will be glad to labor.\nDo yon realise that the amount of good land ts not large, tbat ln a few years It will be more prised\nthan gold? Not an acre of it will command leas than 1100 to 1200. Today we can sell you 40 acres of\nthe best In the province for only |BO0; |S0 down and $20 per month,\nWhen lumbering Is over, the mines are dug ont; when labor difficulties come, lucky is the man who can\nhike to the land.   Don't watt   Every day It is getting dearer, and your chances slimmer.\nA post carl will bring yon full particulars.\nThe Wright Investment Co. Ltd.\nNELSON,   B.C.\nSPORTING    NEWS\nSTORM OF PROTEST\nGREETS PROPOSAL\nHockey Stars Say Will Not Stand for\n9400   Limit\u2014\"Ridiculous\"   Says\nErnie Russell.\nMONTREAL, Nov. 9\u2014Tne proposed\n\u2022salary limit In hockey la bound to create trouble apparently and the most\ncelebrated hockey players of the world\nAre already up In arms against It.\nThey consider that it will be fhe\nsource of all sorts of abuses, that the\nreal stars of the hockey world will\nnot allow their Income to be cut down\nand that If they accept the reduced\nsalaries proposed they will simply make\na pretence.\nTtoy do not hesitate to openly admit that they will get the money somehow.\nErnie Russell Speaks\nErnie Russell, when asked what he\nthought of the idea, said: \"It is rldlcu-\nIoub and the real good players will\nnever stand for it When a man plays\nthe fast and dangerous game we do,\nand la able to draw the thousands that\nwe draw, he will have to be paid! for\nit, or they will have to do with the\nplayers who will not he able .to draw\nthe crowd.\"\nRiley Hern's View\nRiley Hern, just returned to Montreal\nfrom a holiday trip In the United\nStates, when seen at his St. Catherine\nstreet store, said: \"They are foolish,\nand the measure, if carried, will cause\nal] sorts of albuses thus far unknown.\nMen will pretend to accept the small\nsalaries offered and the clubs will pretend to pay them and then give one\nanother the double cross and some\nprivate person Interested ln the fortunes of. the club will present the players with a sum of money as great again\nas the supposed salary, the money presumably being a token of his personal\nesteem, but really coming out of the\nclub's exchequer.\n\"Hockey playerB who attract thousands are worth a certain salary and\nthey will have to get it some way or\nanother or they won't play.\nWhat Others Say\nOTTAWA, Nov. &\u2014That the attempt\nto curb the salaries of the National\nleague hockey stars, by putting a specified limit upon the weekly stipends of\nthe men would cause an eruption ln\nCanadian sporting circles was the opinion of Percy Lesueur, the well known\nOttawa goal tender, who leaves the\nmiddle of the month to coach the Columbia hookey seven. The possibility\nof an outlaw league being formed and\nsigning up all the craci-s who refused\nto play for tbe smaller offers of the\nNational league clubs, was mentioned\nand if the thing comes to a head, tho\nOttawa net guardian was of the opinion that the lowering of the salaries\nwould mean the death of hockey as a\nnational sport.\n\"I don't think the players as a whole\nwould for one minute, stand for the\nlowering of their salaries and it Is Inconceivable that,a hockey star who\ndrew $1500 last season wiould stand for\na reduction to $400 or $500 to-play this\nwinter. The suggestion to put a limit\not $4000 upon the clubs would never\nwork out and there is not a doubt but\nthat the players would band together\nand organize another league.\nSuggests Reasonable Limit\n\"I am heartily in favor of the salary\nlimit within reason and would suggest\nthat the National league put a clause\nIn the constitution which prevents\nclubs from paying out more than $7000\nfor men during the season. That, to\nmy mind, would give every man or\nregular about $1000 for the year's work\nwhile the Introduction of the transfer\nor sale clauses would also help along\nthe exchange of players, which though\npermissible now, is carried through by\nmutual agreement.\"\nMr. Lesueur in outlining the outlaw\nleague plan, stated that he considered\nthe drawing attraction of some of the\nstars in his estimation, Fred Taylor,\nthe Patrick, brothers, Bruce Stuart,\nErnie Russell, Pud Glass, Art Ross and\nseveral of the higher, priced men were\nnames that draw a crowd in themselves\nand he thought that the men ought to\nget paid according to their worth. He\ndid not think that the National league\ncould secure an agreement with any of\nthe big rinks to bar the outlaw teams\nfrom playing on indoor rinks but on the\ncontrary stated that the owners of the\nbigger structures would seriously feel\nthe effects of the barring of the stars\nend that the latter would easily secure accommodation.\nBruce Stuart, Dubble Kerr, Marty\nWalsh, Fred Bake and the renowned\nCyclone Taylor did not go Into details\nover the proposed salary limit (but\nfrom private sources it Is gleaned that\nthe above hockeyists would never stand\nfor a $400 salary. Taylor got many and\nmany times this amount last season\nand the Listowell speed merchant Is\n*2\nADVANCE\nVICTOR RECORDS\n(NOW ON SAL*)   FOR   DECEMBER   (NOW ON SALE)\nHere are some attractive numbers from the new list:\nSTANDARD RECORDS\ntu,k \u00aba\n\u00ab7W-\"Nlght Brlnta tha Star* and Too.\"\nXmas Solo br Onr> M. Curt.\nvm\u2014\"War That Bubsjr Shop Chord.\"\nB1B> Murray and Quartet\nM Inch DOUBLI-PAC1D RECORDS\n(\"Pratty Black-Eyed Susan\"\nM71W Pryor's Band\n(\" Yocatana Mas\" Coffins and Harlan\nRID SEAL RECORDS\nNew MELBA Records\nSmateen splendid selections by the world's\nQueen of Bong,\n\u20223.00 each\nPURPLE LABEL\nNew LAUDER Records\n\u2666MM \u2014 \"Quean   Among  th* Heather.\"\nMfM\u2014\"A Trip to Innrary.\"\n10 Inch, 90c. each\n'jMmauWmw^ ..dsfsa&u,\ni^-i\u00bb\u00bbflSfi:uiWLMS\u00bb*tP,;\nHear these records at tha nearest dealer's. Writ* (or free catalogue of our 3,Mt records.\nBerliner Gram-o-phone Company Limited   -  Montreal\nSOLD M V. 8. A. BY VICTOR TALKING MACHINE CO.\nStable\u2022*. 7\n<Uftw.ct ssjtem.\nA lfyoarbedste3dhuthc\"IdMl\"Giur-\nX emu. on th.foott.il. yon banbougtit\nM        wisdr.   For \"Idol'' Ucul bed. an\n\u25a0        made to Misty, not mmlv to ndl\n(JO  Von cannot ki  the difference be\n^enmunur   tween one metal bed and another\u2014\nexcept m externals.   Nor need yon\nsee. if you look for the \"Ideal\" Guar.\na eajne. .\" \"> pnt on beds yon can\nB safely buy with eyes diet.\naJP\nBasapaBase\nlooking for a bigger bunch of the coin\nthe coming season.\nMAY SUTTON WILL\nHIS TO ENGLAND AGAIN\nNEW YORK, Nov. &\u2014MIbs May Sutton and Miss Hazel Hotchklss are going\nto Europe thla winter for the purpose\nof playing in some of the big tournaments on covered courts on the continent and in England. Miss Hotchklss\n1b the 'present American champion at\nwomen's singles and has never been\nabroad though more than once It had\nbeen reported that she intended to try\nfor the women's singles at Wimbledon.\nMiss Sutton is ex-American and ex-\nEnglish champion and Is remarkable as\nthe only American to soore at Wimbledon. When she played ln England a\nfew years ago she created a sensation\nand showed that she was In a class by\nherself, if tne two California girls\nmake the journey some good sport is\npromised as England now boasts of an\nexceptionally fine player in Mrs Lambert Chambers. This season she went\nthrough without a single defeat.\nNIGHT GYM CLASS\nFOR BUSINESS MEN\nt8peoial   Meeting   of Those   Interested\nTomorrow Night\u2014Literary and\nDebating Society.\nThe success which has attended the\nvarious {jyiiiiiuHiuiu classes at the Y.M.\nC.a. lias led to tlie proposal tor a special\nbusiness' men's citisa, to have Its class\nwork in the evening. The present business\nmen's class meets on Monday, Wednesday\n.and Friday afternoons from 6 to tf o'clock,\nand its enrollment has steadily risen until\nit Btands at it>. (Experience has shown,\nhowever, that the hour Is. not convenient\nfor merchants, wliile, on tlie other hand,\nit seems particularly to suit the professional man, who is predominant in the composition of the class. It is now suggested\nto call the present afternoon class \"the\nprofessional men's class,\" and to arrange\nan evening cla> at an hour and on nights\nconvenient particularly to the merchants.\nA meeting of all Interested in the formation of this special business men's class\nwill be held at the \"Y\" tomorrow night\nat 8 o'clock, when the matter of hours and\nnights will be considered.\nThirty Debaters Ready.\nThe proposed literary and debating society Is well on Its way to a successful\ninauguration and some 30 names are already listed for membership. It Is proposed that the first meeting for general\ndiscussion and outlining of a program\nshall be held in the building next Wednesday evening, and will Anderson, the general secretary, with some willing helpers,\nIs hoping to give the boys a little supper\non that occasion, to give the society a good\nstart off. Further particulars will be an*\n' n&unced later. In the meantime, alt \"Y\"\nmembers and others who are not members\nof the Institution are Invited to take an\nInterest In this scheme, and it is also\nhoped that there will be further names\nadded to the membership, so as to provide a good working majority for the\nmeetings, which will be held periodically\nin the house.\nThe Bpacious reception hall of the building\npresents an animated sight each evening,\nthere being continual movement inwards\nand outwards. Any stranger ln town is\nasked to come up and spend an hour or\nso, and a hearty welcome will ' be accorded.\nStrenuous games of basket-ball are\ntaking place each evening of the young\nmen's class nights, and the boys are getting into good shape and there Is plenty\nof excitement while the game lasts.\nNext Sunday afternoon the Y.M.C.A.\nbible class, under the leadership of Judge\nForln, will meet as usual at 4 o'clock.\nThe committee state that there Is plenty\nof room for new members, and that everyone coming Is assured of a welcome.\nThe First Aid class meets In regular\nsession tonight at 3.30 o'clock, when Dr.\nL. E. Borden will lecture.\nBASEBALL MAGNATES ARE\nWORRIED OVER DEAL\nNEW YORK, Nov. 9\u2014It is hinted\naround National league headquarters\nthat pressure would Ibe brought to bear\nupon. President Fogle of the Philadelphia National team and Garry Herrmann, president of the Cincinnati club,\nto have them settle their dispute over\nthe exchange of players out of court.\nIt is feared that if the case ts taken\nto court the validity of tlie reserve\nclause In all players contracts may be\nattacked and declared illegal, which\nwould be a body blow to the major\nleague,\nS Rather than run the risk every effort\nwill be made to force the disputants to\ncom\u00a9 to a speedy agreement. Fogel\nstill Insists that he was no party to\nthe trade put through by Manager Doo-\nin of the Quakers whereby Grant, Bates,\nMcQuillen and Moren were given for\nLobert; Paskert, Beefoe and Rowan. If\nhe can prove this experts on baseball\ndeclare Hermann has no leg to stand\non In his attempt to force the consummation of the trade.\nThomas Lynch, president of the National league, still believes that Herrmann would not have gone to the limit\nof signing up McQuillen and Bates, two\nof the men In the trade, unless he\nknew that the negotiations between\nManager Dooin and Griffith were conducted legally. The whole deal Is\nrapidly assuming the proportions of an\nugly muss and the baseball powers will\nlikely step ln at an early date.\nZBYSCO COULDNT THROW\nSWI88 DERIAZ\nDerlaz, the Swiss wrestler easily won\nthe handicap match against Zbyeco, the\nPole at Montreal last week.\nZbysco had agreed to throw his opponent three times in an hour, but in\nthis he failed badly, not being able to\neven put Derlaz's shoulders to the mat\nonce.\nThe Pole was away off condition. Instead of the 236 pounds that he should\nweigh in condition, he scaled 2150 last\nnight and had quite evidently not recovered from the effects of the sea\nvoyage.\nONTARIO PRO. HOCKEY\nLEAGUE BEING FORMED\nOUBLPH, Ont., Nov. S.-Tho Ontario\nprofessional hockey league with an eastern\nand western division Is being organized.\nThe well fouiiiled report states that there\nare to be two divisions with four teams\nln each.\nThe western Ontario division plans to\nhave Guelph, Uerlln, Waterloo and Brant-\nford; and the eastern to include Peterboro,\nBelleville, Picton and -Port Hope. Organization of this league is said to be already\nwell under way and arrangements for a\nmeeting to elect officers are being made.\nThe championship can 'be decided by the\nwinners of the two divisions playing off.\nIn Guelph the rink company will finance\nthe team, with Jimmy Cookman acting as\nmanager,\nTHOSE RENO PICTURES.\nFollowing the example set by a number\nof cities -in the -United States, Regina\nwould not stand for the pictures of the\nJeffries-Johnson fight Wherefore all this\nfuss? Winnipeg saw the Alms long ago\nand nasBed judgment upon them. They\nwere good, ami there was nothing degrading . about tliem, nothing that would inspire anyone who saw them to brutal\ndeeds; ln fact, many said they were tame\nand were not worth the 60 cents charged\nfor admission. They were shown in other\ncities and race riots did not follow, and\nyet the thrlvln<* olty of flaskatchewan\njumps upon the moving picture man, and\nafter three rounds had been run off refuses to allow him permission to complete\nthe roll. It Is understood that the films\ncannot be nhown anywhere ln Saskatchewan, aa action was taken by the Royal\nNorth-West Mounted Police on behalf of\ntho attornev general.\nAM\n121\n127\n\u2014The Pacific\nPORTLAND WINS PACIFIC\nCOAST PENNANT\nStanding of Six  Teams\u2014Manager  Mc-\nCredie Gets Credit of Win\nfor Rose City.\nWon     Lost     Pet.\nPortland  117 S3        .582\nOakland   119 101 .643\nSan Francisco  116        101        .61S\nVernon  113\nLos Angeles    101\nSacramento  83\nPORTLAND, Ore., Nov. !\nCoast Baseball League season came to a\nfinish on Sunday with Portland winner\nof the championship. The Honor' was settled on Saturn\"\u2014- when Portland won Its\ngame und Oakland dropped a double-\nheader. The best club won the flag, that\nis conceded by all coast fans.\nMcCredie lias gathered around him a\nbunch of men tbat seemed to be anxious\nto win every game, and this fighting spirit\nhas had much to do with the success of\nthe Beavers. The greater part of this\nsuccess, however, has been due to the uniform good work of the pitchers, for it\nmust be admitted that In Krapp, Gregg,\nGarrett and Sleen, McCredie has four\ndingers hard to beat, while Seaton has\nheld up his end.\nCURLERS TO MEET.\nGeorge A. Hunter, secretary of the\nBritish Columbia Curling association, lias\nsent out notices to all the members of that\norganization calling a meeting to he held\nhere on Dec. 7 to decide upon the location\nof the next annual bonspiel.\nThis event took place Inst year in Nelson\nand the previous year It was held in\nRosBland. The chances of Cranbrook for\nlanding the big show this season are therefor considered good.\nHIGHEST BUILDING  IN  CANADA\nSELLS  FOR  MILLION\n{Special to The Daily News.)\nVANCOUVER, B. C\u201e Nov. (I\u2014The\n14-storey block of the Dominion Trust\ncompany nt Cambie and Hastings\nstreets, the highest-building ln the Dominion, was today Bold on option to an\nold country syndicate for approximately\n$1,000,000. Manager Arnold said that\nthe company behind the deal had been\nnegotiating for the property for some\ntime and that the directorate authorized\nthe transaction by cable yesterday. The\nsale is said to be in line with the policy\nof the company not to hold real estate.\nWILL MOVE SPEECH\nOTTAWA, Nov. 9\u2014Hall B. McGIvern.\nEnglish speaking representative for\nOttawa will move the address in reply\nto the speech from the throne when\nthe house meets. Ernest Lapointe*\nmemiber for Kamournska will second\nthe address In French.\nDR. BRYCE RESIGNS\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 9\u2014Rev. W. A. Maclean of St. Giles church was tonight\nelected moderator of the Winnipeg\nPresbytery and Rev. H. J. Robertson\nwas elected convener of the home missions committee in place ot Rev. Dr.\nBryce, who resigned owing to pressure\nof other duties.\nCOUGHED ALL NIGHT\nTill This Recipe Wat Tried\u2014Cure Followed in Five Minutes\nA prominent medical man, who suffered\nwith a severe cough and cold on the\nlungs, often bo|ng kept awake all night,\nand weakened by loss of sleep, finally\ndiscovered a simple formula which will\ncure any cough In Ave hours by the clock.\nIt Is a laxative tonlo cough syrup which\ncan be made at homo by anyone nnd the\nformula la here given for the benefit of\nthose who pass sleepless nights in painful\nparoxysms. Those who have tried it say\nIt is magical, and beats any high-priced,\nslow-acting cou~\u00bbi   medicine over sold.\nMix in a bottle one-half ounce fluid wild\ncherry bark, one .ounce compound essence\ncardtol and three ounces syrup white\npine compound. Take twenty drops every\nhalf hour for four hours. Then take one-\nlialf to one teaspoonful three or four,\ntimes a dnv. Give ohlldren less according\nto age, This will tone . up and rid the\nsystem of deep-seated coughs every time.\nFred Irvine & Co.\nSome Special Bargains in\nLadies' Ready-to-wear Suits\nLadies Fall and Winter Coats\nChildren's Winter Coats, Millinery\nLadies' Furs\nWe are selling balance ladle a' suits at greatly reduced prices. All\nladles' coats at reduced [rices. Ladles' trimmed and pattern hats\nselling now at bargains.\nOrders taken In Millinery Department at a liberal reduction.\nWe Invite inspection of our ladles' furs which, having purchased\nthem early, gives us a great advantage for this season and we are\nselling them at bargain prices.\nFred Irvine & Co.\nA. G.LAMBERT & CO.\nManufacturer* of and dealers In\nROUGH AND\nDRESSED....\nLUMBER\nShingles, Lath, Sashes, Doors, Mouldings, Etc.\nAlso exclusive agents for the celebrate d Manitoba   Gypsum   Co.'s   Hardwall\nand Wood Fibre Plaster.   A gents for Nelson   Brick   Co.\nTelephone 82. Nelson, B. c. p. 0. Box 1066.\nA SNAP\nYou will never get such a chance for a close in house.   Call.\nDON'T WAIT\nTill you grow old but buy one o f our Ready Made Ranches.   Six sold\nthis month.   Get busy.\n25 PER CENT\nOnly $6000 of that 25 per cent stock left.   Now or never.\nSAVE MONEY\nBuy a motor boat now for v astly less than in the spring.   Great\nBargains,\nMAKE MONEY\nThose Iota on the car line w 111 be worth 60 per cent more to tba\nspring.\nWolverton & Company, Ltd.     419 1-2 Baker Street\nTo Consumers of Coal and Wood\nThe undersigned beg to notify the public that:\nOn after the lat November, 1910 orders for coal and wood will only\nbe executed when accompanied by CA8H. This course has been rendered imperative owing to the fact that freight rates have been increased and that we pay in advance f.r all fuel (Including freight.)\nWe find that we must either adopt the Cash System or Raise the\nprice of fuel\u2014tbe latter course we are reluctant to pursue. Cash\nmust be deposited In the office before the orders will be filled.\nThanking our patrons for past favors and trusting for continuance\nof friendly relations.   We are yo urs obediently.\nKootenay Ice & Fuel Co.\nWest Transfer Co.\nNelson, B.C., Noy. 1,1910.\n PAGE FOUR\n%ht Baity fitM,\nTHURSDAY\nNOVEMBER 10\nChe Bailg jtetog.\n| Published  at Nelson Every Morning\nExcept Monday, iby\n'News Uubiishlng Company, Limited\n| W. 0. FOSTER  Manager.\nTHURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10\nTHE   FLAG OF THE  EMPIRE\nFor some time we have been familiar\nwith proposals to remodel the British\nconstitution, once supposed to he an in-\nTaluahle heritage Irom past ages. The\nHouse of Lords is to be abolished or reduced to impotence, the Acts of Union\nare to he cast overboard and separate\nnational legislatures created for Eng-\nj [land, Ireland, Scotland and Wales so as\n\u2022to have \"Home Rule all round.\" The\nsocial life of rural England Is to be\nrevolutionized. The King Is to he\nknown hy the new-fangled title of\n\"Emperor\" of the British.\" Now the\n.Union Jack is to go; a \"flag for the\nempire'' is to he decided upon by the\nimperial conference next summer.\nEverything that has Its roots in the im-\nanemorlal past Is to be torn up and discarded.\n1    These tasks are faced by the innovators with a cheerfulness and readiness almost appalling to those of us\nwho are of a more conservative tern-\n- perament.   \"Of old things, all are over\nold,\" they seem to think.   They would\n: create a new heaven and a new earth;\n' they are quite willing to undertake to\ndo the creating, and still more willing\n.   to do the preliminary levelling of the\nground.   Mr. Joe Martin should be delighted; there may be a Httle slowness.\nhe may loose confidence from time to\ntime in his leaders, hut on the whole\n, he must feel that It Is good to be alive.\nThe old things, to he sure, were once\nnew; some of them were new not so\nlong ago.   it is not much more than a\nhundred years since the   then   newfangled Union Jack .became the flag of\nthe then new-fangled \"United Kingdom\nof Great Britain and Ireland.\"   It was\nonly a century or so before that when\nthe ancient \"Kingdom of England\" became merged in the \"Kingdom of Great\nBritain.\" There had been kings ot England for a thousand years, but our forefathers of the days ot Queen Anne do\nnot seem to have made much ado about\nabandoning that historic designation,\nor about discarding the \"red cross of\nSt. George\" for the new flag of the\nunion. It Is only about a hundred years\nsince the Invention of the steam engine\nand of manufacturing machinery, transformed the social life of the England\nof that time.   A nation which has endured for more than a thousand years\nhas witnessed a good many changes\nand will probably witness many more.\nEach proposed change must 'be decided on Ita own merits. Needless or frivolous    change    is    undesirable,    but\nchanges for the better, It they really\nare so, must be made If there Is to be\nany   progress   or   improvement.   Too\nmany or too revolutionary innovations\ncarry with them the penalty of disorganization and frequently of reaction.\nBut there need be no fear that all those\nthat are proposed will    actually    be\nmade.   The King's title will probably\nremain; he is not likely to be designated emperor of the  British.    The\nUnion Jack we shall probably have with\nus |or some time.   In it we have a flag\nof the empire already; and it is good\nenough for most of us.   As it is composed  of emblems representing England,  Ireland and Scotland,  so there\nmay eventualy be added to It emblems\nrepresenting other countries in the empire.   But the time tor that ia probably\nOjiitant( if, Indeed, it ever comes.\n,    \"FIGHTING  AGAINST  NATURE\"\nThe Toronto Globe says that those\nwho are opposed to reciprocity with\nthe United States are \"fighting against\nnature.\"   The Globe neglects to say\nwhether this applies only to those who\nare opposed to a limited measure of\nreciprocity or also to those who are opposed to unrestricted reciprocity. The\npoint is of interest because the Globe\nasserts that it Is not In favor of mire-\nsricted reciprocity, and one would like\nto know whether It considers that in\ntaking this stand It is fighting against\nnature. If not will the Globe explain\nhow we can be ln harmony with nature\nin opposing reciprocity ln some things\nwhile we must be fighting nature it we\noppose reciprocity in other things?\nAnd what does the Globe mean when\nIt speaks of fighting against nature?\nWhen the farmer weeds his land he is\nfighting against nature In one sense\nIs that what the Globe means?. It so,\ndoes it think that we should not try to\nfight against nature? Or does H mean\nthat nature has implanted In man a\ntendency to trade \u2022 along the lines of\nleast geographical resistance, and that\nwhen we cause trade to flow along\nother lines we are fighting against human nature? if so, does it think that\nthis is the only tendency implanted in\nman\u2014that nature has not Implanted\nthe Instinct of national self-preservation as well as of Individual self-preservation?\nSuppose tbat nature prompts man to\ndevelop his national lite, and also\nprompts him to trade along the lines\nof least geographical resistance. Suppose further that these instincts or\ntendencies conflict ln some given case,\nand that the former of the two Is the\nstronger. Who is fighting against nature\u2014the man who Is on the side ot\nthe stronger and more fundamental Instinct or the man who Is on the side of\nthe weaker and more artificial ten*\ndency?\nIt's Time to be Getting Your\nChristmas Presents Made Up\nHandsome presents at very moderate cost, <*n be made up in\nBurnt Wood Work, Brass Work and China Painting.\nWe carry a very fine assortment ot articles in all these lines, and\na complete stock ot all the necessary outfits and materials.\nOutfits for Burnt Wood Work at ?3.25 and up.\nOutfits tor Brass Work at 7K and up.\nFree Instruction given In Burnt Work and\nSee our window display.\nWork.\nW. G. THOMSON\nBookseller and Stationer      Phone 34       Nelson, B. C.\n(Diamond Electric\nWater Heater\nwill heat water for shaving, hot\nwater bag, medicinal purposes,\nboiling eggs, lisht cooking. In\ndisnenslble for the nursery\nPrice $3\nSimply attach to ordinary lamp\nsocket.\nWESTERN CANADA'S GREATEST  SCHOOL\nVancouver, B. C.\nR. J. SPROTT, B.A.,\njs. Manager.\nBusiness Institute   send for catalogue.\nBest equipped school west of Toronto.     Ten chances tor every student\nSprott-Shaw\nJ.H.RINGROSE\nPhone A227\nP.O. Box 155\nElectrical Supplies\nStanley St. Nelson, B.C\nthe Best Land Bay in Kootenay\n100 acres as level as the ball grounds and aa good as a home\ngarden plot; easily cleared, pie nty of water, On railway and price\nonly |to per acre.   If Interested call at our office.\nHunter & Annable\nEDITORIAL NOTE\nThe Fruit Magazine, the editor ot\nwhich is Mr. Maxwell Smith, the organizer of the National Apple show,\nhas \u25a0 a capital number for November.\nFirst place is given to an article by\nPremier McBrlde on \"The Fruit Industry in British Columbia.\" Mr. McBrlde\nsays:\n\"While all the fruit districts of Canada have made encouraging growth in\nthe last decade, none has made so rapid and substantial a progress as those\nof British Columbia.   While the census\nof 1901 shows that all the fruit in British Columbia was then grown on about\n6000 acres of land, of which the apple\noccupied two-thirds, the total area devoted to fruit is today probably ln the\nneighborhood of .100,000 acres, though\naccurate figures are not yet to hand.\nTbis Industry has created large and\nprosperous communities throughout the\nprovince, and the great success which\nhas attended the exhibits of fruit in\nthe prairie provinces, the east and th*\nold country proves   the   magnificent\nquality of the orchard products of British Columbia.   Many parts, as in the\nOkanagan, which were only a few years\nago devoted to cattle ranges, and in\nthe Kootenay country, where the land\nwas at one time only thought fit for\nmining, have been devoted to fruit culture with splendid success.   The shipments of fruit for this year will total\nfu.iy three times those of any previous\nyear.   As an outlet for our fruit, the\nprairie provinces furnish a ready market which can absorb many times the\npresent supply of fruit,   I (believe that\nwhereas the value of the fruit was in\n1902 not quite $400,000, tbis year it is\nestimated It will amount to the splendid\nsum of about $2,000,000, an eloquent\nproof of tbe growth ol the industry.\"\nMlnard's Liniment Co., Limited.\nGentlemen,\u2014I have used MINARD'S\nLINIMENT on my vessel and ln my family\nfor years, and for the every day ills and\naccidents ot life I consider it has no equal.\nI would not start on a voyage without\nIt, \\t tt cost a dallar a bottle.\nCAPT. F. R. DESJARDIN,\nBohr.  \"Storke,\"  St Andre,  Kamouraska.\nDYNAMITERS GET\nTWO YEARS IN PEN\n\t\nJudge Forln   Delivered   Sentence Yes*\nterday\u2014History of Crime\u2014An.\nother Similar Case In Nelson.\nEugene Martlneau and Charles Morrison, the dynamiters, safecrackers,\nhousebreakers, robbers of shacks, and\nall-round crooks were yesterday morning sentenced by his honor, Judge\nForln to serve two years in the provincial penitentiary. The men pleaded\nguilty to tour charges, breaking into\nthe a P. R. office at Trail, breaking\ninto the Yale-Columbia company's store\nat Westley, robbing a shack near Blueberry creek and robbing a second shack\nnear the Nelson gasworks. They were\nsentenced to two years on each of these\nfour charges, the terms to run concurrently.\nAdmit Another Crime.\nWhen his honor read the tour charges\nagainst the robbers he questioned them\nregarding the theft of a watch and\nchain and a pair of cuff links stolen\nfrom the residence of J. C. Cadzow at\nHarrop some time between Oct 16 and\nOct 22. The chain and cuff links were\nfound among the great quantity tit loot\nfound by Provincial Constable Wight*\nman in the possession of the accused\nat the time ot arrest Morrison told\nhis honor that he had thrown the watch ,\naway. After giving the men a very\nsevere warning his honor then deliver- |\ned sentence aa above.\nNow that Martlneau and Morrison\nhave been convicted of the long list ot\ncrimes with which they' were charged\nit is possible to reconstruct to a large\nextent the movements of the two criminals during the time that they were\nin the Nelson district\nMade Nelson Base.\nIt is known that they were here during the fair at the end of September\nand from that time until on or about\nOct. 16, when they raided Mr. Cadzow's\nhouse at Harrop and stole the watch\nand chain and cuff links. On Oct 17\nthey broke into James Robusto's shack\nnear the gas works. During this time\nthey lived ln a small shack near the\nsmelter and apparently used this place\nas a base for their nefarious operations.\nThey went to Trail on the night of Oct\n18 and early on the morning of Oct. 23\nbroke Into the agent's office, dynamited\nthe safe and stole about $26 and a\nSmith & Wesson revolver, which by\nmeans of Its number was identified ln\ncourt and proved one of the strongest\npoints in the   evidence   against   the\nmonlco restaurant. He heard movements inside and decided that the best\nway In which to catch the intruder was\nto go Into the alley behind the building and await the thief.\nAfter a few moment's wait in the\ndarkness a man appeared through the\nback door. In one arm he had a cash\nregister and in the other hand was a .44\ncolt. Letting the burglar pass in front\nof him Constable Wlghtman attacked\nhim from behind and succeeded in putting on the handcuffs before McGovern had an opportunity to use his\ngun.\nQuick Justice.\nMcGovern was caught at 3 a. m. At\n10 o'clock the same morning he was\nbrought before Police Magistrate E. A.\nCrease and sentenced to seven years ln\nthe New Westminster criminal emporium. By 9 o'clock the night ot 'the\nsame day the burglar, in charge of Constable Wightman, was on his way to\nthe coast\nThe Murray case occurred in August a' few years later. One Saturday\nnight an Italian was held up at the\npoint ot a gun near the Grand Central\nhotel and his pay check for a considerable amount taken from him. The\ncheck was not cashed until three days\nlater when the police immediately got\non the track ot Murray who had presented it at the bank. It was found that\nthe highwayman had flown to Spokane,\nConstable Wightman went in pursuit\nand succeeded ln having Murray arrested in the Inland Empire city within three hours after his arrival there.\nBrought before Magistrate Crease this\ncriminal was also sent down for seven\nyears.\nB. C. Hair Goods\n509 Georgia St., Masonic Tempts\nVancouver, B.C\nLadies and Gentlemen\u2014I wish to announce that I hare received my new\n16 page catalogue and price list (or\nthe latest.style ln hair goods as (ol\nlowing: Wigs, toupee, transformation,\npompadours, switches, putts and curls,\nwhich I will mall tree to you It you\nwrite for one. Remember you can gel\nmy hair goods for less money and hotter quality than anywhere else. Why\ncan you buy for less money? Because\nI make a specialty In manufacturing\nonly. ^___\nFree Hap of Port Mann\nTha new Can.' N. Ry Townsite.\nWith list of our special anapa.\nIt G. Morrison 4 Co.\n538 Hastings St, W., Vancouver,\nTEN YEARS AGO\nExtracts From The Nelson Daily Tribune of Nov. 10, 1900\nThe dam of the electric light reservoir is nearly completed. There has\nbeen more or less leakage but it Is Ibe-\nlleved that a substantial piece of work\nhas been done,\nDonald Guthrie, chief of the fire department at Rossland, haa matched\nAndy King of Spokane to fight Jack\nO'Brien, a lightweight pugilist from\nChicago, on Nov. 15.\nD. J. Dewar has disposed of lot 3,\nblock 16, to H, Ross, the consideration\nbeing 11600.\nS, S. Taylor, Q.C., leaves today to\nJoin A. U Sifton, M.L.A. of Calgary,\non a stumping tour through East Kootenay ln the interests of Candidate Gal-\nliber.\nNotice oTNeeting\nThe annual meeting of the Nelson\nAgricultural & Industrial association\nwill be held at the City Hall on Friday.\n11th day o( November at 8 p.m.\nJ. E ANNABLE       0. HORSTEAD,\nPresident -      ',.  Secretary\nImperial Bank of Canada\nHEAD OFFICE: TORONTO.\nCapital Authorlled $10,000,000\nCapital Subscribed % 5,575,000\nCapital Paid Up 15,330,000       Reserve  Fund  .. .15,330,000\nD. R WILKIE, President.   HON ROBERT    JAFFRAY,    Vice-President\nBRANCHES IN BRITISH COLUMBIA:\nArrowhead, Chsie, Cranbrook, penile, Golden, Kamloops, Michel, New\nMichel, Moyle, Nelaon Rev<lstoke, Vancouver and Victoria\nSAVINGS DEPARTMENT\nIrterest allowed on deposits at currant rate from date of deposit.\nNELSON BRANCH   \u2022     \u2022'\u25a0 . J. M. LAY, Manager.\nThe Canadian Bank of Commerce\n  .nnnis         UiHnjWI\nPAID UP CAPITAL... .\u00bb10,000,000       RESERVE .......\nDRAFTS ON  FOREIGN COUNTRIES\nArrangements hare recently Men   completed   under   which   the\nbranches of this bank are ablo to Issue Drafts oa the principal point*\nin the following countries: ' iflaaaS^safaesasasaPaeaBV\nFinland .-Ireland\nFormosa Italy\nFranc. Japan\ntVoh Cochln-Chlnn lava\nAutrlTHuniary\nB.lglura\nBrastl\nBulgaria\n!.ylon\nCeyL.\nChina\nCrete\nDenmark\nEgypt\nFaroe Islands\nNo Dslay In Issuing.\nNELSON BRANCH\nGermany\nGreat Britain\nGreece\nHolland\nIceland\nIndia\n.m.m\nManchuria\nIlnlco\nNorway\nPsrsla\nFhllllpine\nBoumanla\nRussia\nBervla\n81am\nSouth Africa\nStraits SatUemsat\nSweden\nSwltserland\nTurk.y\nWest IndUe\nsnd elsewhere.\nname hh \u00ab\u2022-,..\u00ab\u00bb\u00bb.\nFull Particulars on Application\nJ. L. BUCHAN, Manager\nBank of Montreal\nCapital All Paid Up..\nEstablished  817\n...\u202214,400,000        Rest       $12,000,001\nHEAD OFFICE: MONTREAL\nRt Hon. Lord Strathcona and M ount Royal, Q.C.M.O., Hon. President.\nR.  B. Angus, President\nSir Edward S. Cloustan, Bart, Vice-President and Gen. Manager.\nBRANCHES IN BRITISH COLUMBIA:\nArmstrong, Chllllwack, Cloverdale,  Enderby,  Greenwood,  Hoamer,\nKelowna, Merrltt, Nelson, New Denver, Nicola, New Westmlnstsr, Pen-\ntlcton, Prlnca Rupert, Rossland, S'mmerland, Vancouver, Vernon, Victoria\nNELSON BRANCH U.B. DEVEBER, Manager\nNelson Boat & Launch\nCo., Ltd.\nBuy your boats and canoes now.\nPrices now very low and stock\nonly used one season.\nThe Royal Bank of Canada\n,.$5,000,000\n^ Mncorporatod 1868\nCapital Paid Up\t\nReserve and Undivided Prof lu \t\nTotal Asssta 67,000,000\nHEAD OFFICE: MONTREAL\nH. 8. HOLT, Presldsnt. E. L. PEASE, Vice* asldsnt and Gen. Manager\nOne hundred and fifteen Branches In Canada and Newfoundland.\nEleven Agencies In Cuba: Nassau, Bahamae; San Juan, Porto Rico;\nNew York City, 68 William Street\nBusiness accounts curled upon favorable terms. Barings department\nat all branches.  Correapondenoe solicited.\nNELSON BRANCH A. B. NETHERBY, Manager.\nJust Received\nOne Car Flour\nTwo Cars Ashcroft Potatoes\nExpected in a Few Days\nOne Car Canned Vegetables\nOne Car Canned Fruit\nOne Car Cream\nImporting in large quantities and. Paying cash, thereby securing\nextraordinary discounts, enables Us to offer first class goods at remarkably low prices.\nThe Hudson's Bay Stores\nm.i...  p r\nBaker Stmt\nHtlMB,\nmen.\nFrom Trail they returned to Nelson,\nwalking to Blueberry creek, where they\nrobbed William Hayes' place of a quantity of clothing and then   taking   the\ntrain from Castlegar.   While in Nelson\non this occasion they slept ln various\nplaces and stayed here until Oct 28\nwhen they once again took tbe train\nwest and went to Westley.     Dropping\noff there they awaited their opportunity and then burglarized   the lumber\ncompany's store.   Afterwards they fled\nup Shields creek and were captured,\nwhile hiding ln a cave, out of which\nthey had made an improvised shelter,\nand were captured by Provincial Constable Wlghtman and John Whitehead.\nWightman's Chief Successes.\n\"Constable Wightman,\" observed W.\nR. Jarvis, warden of the provincial Jail,\nyesterday \"seems   to   have   a happy\nfaculty of landing much wanted criminals.   It was this officer who arrested\nMcGovern, who was sentenced to seven\nyears tn the penitentiary for burglary\nand Kenneth Murray, who held up an\nItalian here and was also sent down for I\nseven years.\"\nHad Heavy Gun.\nThe operations   of   McGovern were\nsimilar in many respects to those of\nMartlneau and Morrison who have just\nbeen sentenced.    During   August and\nSeptember of 1904 when Mr. Jarvis was\nchief of police in Nelson, there occurred\na number of thefts from houses and for\nsome time the perpetrator could not he\nlocated.    The residences  ot  the late\nCharles H. Ink, M. R. McQuarrle, Byron\nBharpe and Leslie Hill, among others,\nwere all robbed at various times during this period.     In the majority of\ncases the thief contented himself with\ntaking goods from the downstair rooms,\noccasionally doing so in the daytime.\nThen Jlcxkowtcs's   store In Falrvlew\nwas one night broken Into and an attempt was made to blow up the sate.\nFinally on the night of October 3, Constable Wlghtman   was   passing along\nBaker street when   he   noticed that\nsomething was wrong in the old Del*\nTHI8 DATE IN HISTORY\n1674\u2014Major Edmund Andros became governor of New York.\n1091\u2014Philip Ludwell became governor of\nSouth Carolina.\n1775\u2014Ham pden-Sldney   college opened.\n1757\u2014Sclilller,   the   famouB  German poet,\nborn at Marba.cn.   Pled at Weimar, May 9.\n1777\u2014British   began   an   attack  on  fort\nMimtn.\n1799-Bonaparte declared  First Consul.\n1812\u2014The Americans attacked Kingston,\nOnt.\n1825-Commodore Thomas Macdonough,\nthe \"hero of Lake Champlaln\" died in\nPortsmouth, N, H. Born in Newcastle\ncounty,   Delaware,  Dec,  23, 1783.\n1872\u2014The great fire ln Boston got under\ncontrol, after having burned over an area\nof aw acres.\n1881-Cases against tho Star Route principals dismissed.\n1891\u2014FirBt world's convention of the W.\nC.T.U. opened In Boston,\nDon't Put It\nSickness It usually\ncaused by the accumulation of waste\nmatter and impurities\nwithin the body.\nDr. Morse's\nIndian\nRoot Pills,\nenable the bowels, the\nkidneys, thelungs and\ndie pores of the skin\nto throw off these\nimpurities. Thusthey\nprevent or cure dis-\ni. i*\n25c a bos.\nNo age la now exempt from the use of glasses they are placed on a child\nthat Is little more than able to walk, as well as on the aged patriarch who\nfinds them Indispensable to his happiness and comfort. Indeed It is an indisputable fact that every person who Urea to reach the age of fifty br more\nrequires glasses At some period of his Ufa, either for reading or distance.\nTo many persons they are an absolute necessity at all ages, while those\npersons whose eyes are perfect require them for reading In: middle life on\naccount of the changes wrought In their eyea by age. It la the near sighted\nIndividual that can read small print wl thout glasses, but the tact remains thai\nhe requlrea glasses to make hia sight perfect for distance. Persons with\nweak eyea and some who were never conscious of any detect in their eight\nare enabled hy carefully adjusted glasses to see Is a manner they sever before thought possible. Others who ware compelled to abandon their chosen\ncallings on account of had sight are sent by the oculist or hy the optometrist\nhack to work with eyes practically as good and In some cases better than ever.\nEven cross eyes aore eyes and some affections of the lids can be cured by\nthe proper adaptation of glaaaes.\nJ. J. WALKER\nGraduate Optician and Jeweler\n403 Baker St.\n THURSDAY ..... NOVEMBER 10\nHOTEL ARRIVALS OF A DAY\nThe Hume\nHUMTE-Mr, and Mrb. Cyril Harrison,\nMolly Gibson Landing; John B. Wlnlaw,\nN. Wlnlaw, Wlnlaw; Miss AgnesB Qomm,\nSavannah; A. B. Buckworth, Paul Victor\nLoth, Ymlr- H. F. Imhalt, C. A. Kyes,\nMarcus, Wash.: J. P. Briton, O. W.\nFletcher and wife, Spokane; J. A. Nowell,\nSt. Paul; Mr. and Mrs. H. Davidson, D.\nN. Root, Toronto; A. C, Mesker, Midway;\nT. W. Hayes. Q. A. Annable, O. W. Ross,\nMoose Jaw; J. G. Whitmore, F. (W Anderson, Toronto; C. H. Abbott, F. A. Shaw,\nWinnipeg: C. H. FltiHerbert, B. I>. Wilson\nW. J. McManus, John Beohter, Vancouver\nW. BuBtin and wife, Salmo; J. W. Am-\nfcer** Victoria: J. A. Kinney, Rossland;\nG. M. Benney, Creston; J. Archer, Eng-\nSTRATHCONA-C. J. Westhead, 18-Mlle;\nU M. (Webb, England; D. T. Fraser,\nNakusp.\nQueen's Hotel\nBaker Btreet\nA. LAPOINTE, Proprietor\n.Rates: fl.M to U.OO par day.\nHeal Tickets, |7.00 per week.\nBusiness men's lunch, lie.\nQUEENS-C. Woodmen, V. Daty, olty;\nD S^oesTcrannrooa: J. Fyfe, Nakusp;\nW. Stevenson, Prootor; J. Williams, Edge-\nwood. .\nMadden House\nThoa. Madden, Prop.. Baker Bt\nWall tarnished rooms with bath\nBeat Board In the City .\nA Comfortable Home\nMADDEN-E. Hall, Castlegar: r. Vane,\nArrowhead; A. CouKs, ThrumBj J. Mo-\nBonald.. Kooh: A. O'Neill, Ymlr; W.-BUMT\nHedlcaf Lake; B. chartus, Fisherman: M.\nMenaghar.sTsghumj     __      r\nLake view Hotel\nCorner Hall and Vernon Streets\nB. U GRIFFITH, Prep.\nTwo Hooks from olty wharf.\nThe best dollar a day host* Is\nNelson.\nAll White Help\nLAKEVDBW\u2014I. Woglney, O. Borden,\nEd. Oreen, A. Orothe, A. Johnson, Slocan;\nJ. Anderson, M. Desne, Salmo.\nGrand Central Hotel\nOPPOSITE POSTOFFICE\nAmerican and European Plans.\nH. H. PITTS, Proprietor.\nGRAND CBNTBAL-C. Nordman, Mrs.\nNordman, Sandon' Ed. Farlane, Brie: W.\nKudt.'arMnwoodi H. Mast\u2122, Wardnor\nW. Terrell, A. Sparks, Calaary; J. Boll,\nCalifornia.\nTremont House\nBaker Bt, Nelaon.\nRANSOME     *     CAMPBELL,\nProprietors.\nEuropean Plan, Wo. up .,\nAmerican Plan, |1.16 and ILM\nHeals, He.\nSpecial Rates par Month.\nTBEMONT-B. Dougan, W-Creek: W.\nShaw, J. Gibson, Sheep Crook; P. Strutor,\nJ. Smith, Edmonton.\nKlondyke Hotel\nHead       tn for minora, smel-\ntarmes, loners, railroad man.'\nRates: 11.00 par Say up.\nNELSON * JOHNSON, Propa.\nSIUVER KINO-W. Spratt, Dawson: P.\nNeuendorf, J. Davis, J. Woblott, Mrs.\nAtson, Toledo; A. Booth, Lardo; W>\nTerrell, A. Sparks, Calgary.\nROYAI\/-T. Alison, A, Webster, olty; T.\nSeward, T. Sutherland, Grand Forks; W.\nWensUvley, W. Perkins, Crescent Valley.\n8HERBR0OKBW. Scanlon, J. Alrdlr,\nolty; T, Rutherford, F. Tolraen, J. Mo-\nLaughltn, Rossland.\nKOOTENAiT\u2014I. Young, olty; J. Polek,\nH. Cranberv, Fernie; a. Francis., Moose\nJaw,    . -\u25a0\u25a0\nBest on the\nContinent\nThat Is what authorities say\nregarding the medicinal qualities of tho waters at Halcyon\nHot Springs.\nThe sanitarium Is now under\nsaw -management and has been\nremodelled from top to bottom\nand now offers every facility\nfor the comfort and convenience ot patrons.\nRates 111 and 111 per week\nor II per day and upwards.\nHalcyon Hot Springs\nSanitarium\nWM. BOVD, Proprietor\nHalcyon, Arrow Lakes, B. C.\nNelson Cafe\nLargo and Commodious Dining\nRoom\nPrompt and Courteous Service,\nMeal* Served at all Horn*\nElegantly furnished roomn In ,\nconnection; |1 a day and if\nA. AUDET, Proprietor\nNELSON\u2014W.- Smith, C. Mespen A. Clute\nMarcus; R. Noble, Fernie; A. Henderson,\nE. Erlckson, Phoenix.\nCLUB\u2014H. Sandls, Castlegar; R, Purely,\nWlnlaw; J. McKinnon, Stlverton; H. Beck,\nSlocan.\nBARTLETT-J. Bpratt, Tmlr; J. Cart-\nwright, C. Whltehouse, England.\nKLONDYKE-E. Romberg, A. Dlluch, P.\nMitchell, Taghum.\nXmas Excursions\nto Europe\nIn connection with\nCuiiiu Nwtkera Steuukiaj, linited\n\"The Royal Line\"\nTickets on sale dally, Nov. 11 to Dec.\n81.  Five months return limit\nXMAS SAILINGS\nFrom Montreal\nRoyal Edward ..- Nov. 10\nRoyal George  Nov. 19\nFrom Halifax\nRoyal Edward  Deo.  7\nRoyal George  , Dec. 14\nRoyal Edward  Dec 28\nAnd Fortnightly thereafter.\nMost Direct Route to Bristol, London\nand the Continent\nTickets and reservations from H. W.\nEdwards, city Ticket Agent, Can. Pac.\nRy. H. E. Douglas, C.T.A., G.N. Ry.,\nNelson, B.C.\nNelaon, B.C.. IW. Raymond, Joint\nTicket Agent C.P.R. and G.N.R., Nelson\ns Station   Open evenings.\nTELLS OF PROGRESS\nON TOURIST HOTEL\nC, W. Sharp of Winnipeg, who has the\ncontract for the erection of the new\nC.P.'R. tourist hotel at Balfour, was in\nthe city yesterday after spending a few\ndays at the Narrows. \"I have given instructions for the forwarding Immediately\nof 1,000,000 feet of lumber to the site of\nthe new building,\" said Mr. Sharpe, \"and\nthe construction of the framework will be\nproceeded with at once.\"\nMr. Sharpe's superintendent Is at present\nat Balfour and. will carry out this part\nof the work. The masonry and concrete\nwork is being done by John Burns & Son,\nwho have had a large force of men on the\nscene for some weeks.\n\"All going well,\" said Mr. Sharpe on\nbeing asked as to when the hotel would be\ncompleted, \" we shall have everything In\nreadiness for the furnishing of the structure by May 1.\"\nMr. Sharpe left on \/the afternoon boat\nfor Balfour and will return to Winnipeg\ntoday. He expects to spend a few weeks\nIn Nelson, together with Mrs. Sharpe, this\nWinter.\nFURTHER LIST OF\nHONORS AT BIG SHOW\nWeit Kootenay   Apple   Gained Many\nHonors In Single Box and\nPlate Exhibit!.\n\"Although the West Kootenay district\nln the heavier competitions at the National\nApple show at Vancouver showed that It\nis comparatively In Its Infancy ln regard\nto fruit growing yet a great- deal ot satisfaction mav be derived from a perusal of\nthe list of prizes awarded for single boxen\nand plate exhibits,\" Bald a Nelson visitor\nto 'the big show yesterday. \"West Kootenay had to compete with a number of\nthe older and more fully developed orchards, such aa those of Wenatchee and\nthe Okanagan, and a glance at the prize\nlist will show that if the prizes gained\nby Wenatchee and Okanagan are taken\nout -West Kootenay has more than a fair\nproportion of the remaining honors.\"\nPrizee In Box Exhibit*.\nContinuing, the critic pointed out that\nWest Kootenay' had gained the following\nprizes in single box exhibits:\nSnow\u20141, J. Rooke, Grand Forks; 3,\nJames Johnstone,  Nelson.\nBlenheim\u20141,  J.  T.  Bealby,  Nelson.\nRussets\u2014F. G. Fauquier, Arrow lakes.\nStark\u2014C. M. Tripp, West Kootenay.\nWagners-O. B. Appleton, West Arm; 3,\nJ. Rooke, Grand Forks.\nAlexanders\u20141, J. T. Bealby, Nelson; 2,\nJames Johnstone, Nelson.\nOntarlos\u20141, Doyle & McDonald, Nelson;\n2, J. T. Bealbv Nelson; 3, W. Rutherford,\nNelson.\nCanada Red\u20142, Doyle & McDonald, Nelson.\nYellow Bellflower\u20141, Doyle & McDonald,\nWillow Point\nBlue Pearmain\u20141, J. D. Honsberger,\nGrand Forks.\nNorthern Spy\u20142, J. D. Honsberger, Grand\nForks.\nGravensteln\u20141; J, T. Bealby, Nelson.\nGrimes Golden-3, J. T. Bealby, Nelson.\nMcMahon White\u20141, Doyle & McDonald,\nWillow Point.\nHyslop Crab-1, J. T. Bealby, Nelson.\nIn Plate Displays.\nThe following West Kootenay growers\ngained prizes in the pate displays:\nAlexanders\u20142,  H. A. Coomoer, ijoswell,\nBailey Sweet\u20142, W. Rutherford, Nelson.\nBaxter\u20141, J. W. MoGulre, West Kootenay; 2, E. J. W. Watson, West Kootenay.\nCabaahis\u2014l, J. J.- Campbell, Nelaon; 2,\nJ. Hyslop, West Kootenay,\nCranberry-2, H. W. Collins, Grand\nForks,\nBlack Twigg-1, L. Lawson, Grand Forks\n2, J. dtooke. Grand Forks,\nBlenheims\u20142, J.  T.  Bealby, Nelson,\nGravenstelns\u20141, J, T. Bealby, Nelson.\nGldeon-1, W. J. BuggiQB, West Kootenay,\nGolden Russet\u20142, F. G. Fauquier, Arrow\nlakes.\nMcMahon\u20141, James Johnstone, Nelson.\nRed Cheek Pippin\u20142, James Johnstone,\nNelson.\nWallbrldge-iVJ. T. Bealby, Nelson.\nWealthy\u20141,  W.  Rutherford, Nelson.\n6t. Lawrence\u20141, J. L. Fink, West Kootenay,\nWinterstein-1, W. J. Bugglns, West\nKootenay .\nTallman\u20142, H, C. Tomllnson, Weat\nKootenay.\nRoxbury Russet\u20141, D. C. McGregor,\nNelson.\nOntarlo-2, J. W. McGulre, West Kootenay.\nGrimes Golden\u20141, R. Gasklll, West\nKootenay.\n. American Pippin\u20141, Stocks ft Jackson,\nWest Kootenay,\nGeneral Grant\u20141, J. T. Bealby, Nelson.\nOther Local Winners.\nFor the three best boxes displayed J, T.\nBealby took third prize, and In the section\nfor home made products Mrs. W, Rutherford gained second honors. The same\ncompetitor took first prize for apple relish\nand first prize for the best display of apple\nproducts. First prize for beet shipping\npack was carried olT by'1!, W. Cockle ot\nKaslo.\nMlnard's Liniment Cures Garget In Cows.\nHOW CHRONIC COUGHS.\nAre Being Cured by Vinol\u2014An Account\nof One Case,\nNew Haven, Conn.\u2014\"I was troubled with\na most persistent chronic cough for a long\ntime and had tried so many remedies\nand prescriptions without benefit that X\nmust say that I had little confidence, but\nI made up my mind to give it a fair trial.\nBefore 1 finished my first bottle of Vinol\nI commenced to notice an Improvement\nin my general condition. After taking the\nsecond bottle, my cough left me, and I\nmuBt say I never felt better ln my life,\u2014\nall due to the use of Vinol, I can also\nrecommend Vinol to anyone in a run down\ncondition as the best possible remedy.\"\n(Name furnished on request.)\nIt Is the combined action of the medicinal elements ot the cods' livers aided\nby the blood-making and strength-creating\nproperties of tonic iron which makes Vinol\nso efficient In curing chronic coughs, colds\nand bronchitis\u2014at the same time building\nup the weakened, run-down system. Vinol\ncontains no oil and tastes good.\nTry a bottle of Vinol with the understanding that your money will be returned\nif It does not help you. W. (Rutherford,\ndruggist. Nelson.\nuiniuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin\n\"THE MATURITY OF AGE\"\nAGE does not always mean improvement In a whisky\nany more than It does in the Incorrigibly bad boy.\nNew whisky, like a young boy, must possess tho\nelements of matured goodness.\nCORBY'S\nSpecial Selected\"\nRye Whisky\nis made by a process which yields up the\ngoodness of the richest grain in absolute\npurity.\nStorage for years In charred oak casks\ndevelops its Inherent qualities to a rare\ndegree of excellence. The smooth flavor\nand tempting aroma are not often equalled.\nOn sale by all first-class hotels, catcs and\nliquor atorcs,\nH. Corby Distillery Company     \"\nHaadOfricas: Montreal. \"Cert\/, of Corbyvllls for Over Helf-a-Csntury\"\nA factor\nfcr pure food\nfedaiing aU state\nand aalional food laws\nDtPJlCEfc\nb^ngpdIvder\nNo Alum\u2014No Phosphates\nBe on your guard.  Atom Powders may be known by their\nprice\u2014to or JSe. a lb*\nor one cent an\nST. JOHN HAS\nGREAT APPLE SHOW\nNew Brunswick Competitor of Famous\nAnnapolis Valley\u2014Access to\nBritish Marketf.\nST. JOHN, N. B.f Nov. 9\u2014The apple\nIs king in St John thla week and everybody Is talking of the great future of\nNew Brunswick as an apple producing\nprovince. The Annapolis valley, in Nova Scotia, has long been famous, but\nthe apple show In St. John! this week\nIntroduces a new and great competitor,\nfor it Is claimed there is more good\norchard land in New Brunswick than\nin Nova Scotia.\nThis is the first real apple show ever\nheld in the Province. Tbe provincial\ngovernment co-operated with the New\nBrunswick Fruit Growers' association,\nand the federal department ot agriculture sent sample boxes of Nova Scotia, Ontario and BrltiBh Columbia apples for purposes of comparison, and\nthere were also some apples from Oregon, packed in the most approved Pacific coast fashion. The show was opened on Thanksgiving day ln a large\nrink and was a veritable revelation to\nthe people, who had no idea that New\nBrunswick produced such fruit from\nits own orchards.\nOrchard Opportunities.\nHere is the Dally Telegraph's report\nof what Prof. Macoun, Dominion horticulturist, who certainly ought to be an\nauthority, Bald at the opening of the\napple show. For years he had felt that\nthe people of New Brunswick did not\nhalf appreciate their opportunities in\nthe line of apple culture. There were\nmany valleys ln^this province which\ncould produce fruit aa good as any in\nthe Dominion. There was one advantage which the New Brunswick orohard-\nist had over the Annapolis valley, that\nwas In the higher color of the fruit It\nhad taken many years to establish the\nfruit industry ln Nova Scotia, but he\nfelt such could be established here in\nmuch shorter time. Nova Scotia had\nquality, but New Brunswick apples had\nboth quality and beauty. Another great\nadvantage the New Brunswick orchard-\nlst had was the ready access he .possessed to the markets of England and\nEurope, Land was also cheap and the\nkind of apples that could be grown\nhere would sell on their appearance.\nThe fruit also lent itself to box packing, which was the most popular way\not putting up apples. He mentioned\nthe Mackintosh Red, Fameuse, the Dudley, and the Wealthy as being varieties\nsuitable to grow here. There was the\nadvantage ln planting the Wealthy that\nthe trees would yield in three or four\nyears.\nMore than 25 different; kinds of apples, Including all the famous varieties,\nwere shown at this exhibition, which\n1b expected to give a great impetus to\ntho cultivation of orchards in New\nBrunswick. There are already quite a\nnumber of. illustration orchards ln the\nprovince, planted by the government,\nand the province has a horticultural expert whose attention Is directed wholly\nto fruit culture. A large portion ot the\nexhibit at this show will be Bent to\nLondon, to the Colonial fruit fair.\nNew Sugar Refinery.\nPlans for the great sugar refinery at\nthe mouth of the harbor have been filed\nwith the city council. There was some\ndoubt whether this Industry would materialize, but the site has been secured\nand now the plans are filed. They\nprovide for a plant that would cost\nnearly $2,000,000. The concern is called the Atlantic Sugar Refining company, and It has a year ln which to begin building operations, but it is expected they will be begun at an early\ndate.\nBoring tests are being made on the\nsite of the first two wharves to be built\nat St John harbor east (known as\nOourtenay bay), to provide shipping\nfacilities for the Grand Trunk Pacific\nrailway. On the west side of the harbor the work will soon be begun on the\nwarehouses for the new wharf completed there this year.\nThere Is an active movement ln real\nestate ln the vicinity of St John harbor east, as a result ot projected large\ndevelopment.\nFrank Sawera, accountant ln the\nBank ot Montreal branch at Guelph,\nhas been transferred to Newmarket.\nB. D. Tassie of Toronto takes his\nplace.\nRepairs to \"Grumpy\" Spring, the\nNew Westminster lacrosse player,\nafter (he last Minto Cup match included dental attentions to the amount\not |76.\nRED CROSS MAN\nCOMES TO GRIEF\nPeter Bahr Escaped    From Asylum\u2014\n\u25a0 Has Extraordinary Hallucinations\n\u2014Will Be Deported.\nLaboring under the delusion tbat he\nhad been a general In the German\narmy, that he was employed by King\nGeorge the Fifth, that he held frequent\ncommunication with the president of\nthe United States by means of a wireless telephone, and that he was a member of the Red Cross society, Peter\nBahr, a short and thickset man. speaking with a strong German accent and\nwearing on his right arm the insignia\nof the Red Cross society, is now in the\ncity lock-up awaiting the arrival of Emigration Officer O'Neil of Waneta, who\nwill take him to the border and there\ndeliver him to an attendant from the\nEastern Washington Hospital tor the\nInsane, at Medical Lake, Wash., from\nwhere he escaped on July 24.\nWore Red Cross.\nBahr has been in Nelson some two\nmonths and by reason of his habit of\nwalking around on the main streets\nwith a large red cross badge on his arm\naroused a more than passing Interest.\nWhen questioned he Invariably stated\nthat he was \"a member ot the International Red Cross society\" and that his\nmission in life was to walk around the\nstreet and render assistance to any\nsick or injured person who might be In\nneed of it.\nOn one occasion he appeared at the\nteller's window in the Bank of Montreal\nand presented a check for $12.50 drawn\non King George the Fifth. Lately he\nhas been spending most of his time at\nthe abattoir of P. Burns & Co., although not employed there.\nWrites Letter to Asylum.\nHe apparently adopted the name of\n\"Angarlous,\" thus signing himself in\na letter addressed from Nelson to an\nattendant at the Medical Lake asylum.\nIt was by this means that he was located by the authorities. On the envelope covering this letter were the\nwords In the left hand corner \"Return\nto Angarlous.\"\nWhen taken In charge by the police\nyesterday he was found to be In the\npossession of a number of pieces of\nscrap paper, the majority of which were\nmade out tn the form ot accounts, presumably to be forwarded to King\nGeorge for payment as each was addressed to \"His Majesty of Britain,\"\nwith details as to number of meals,\n.etc., purchased in Nelson.\nThe check presented at the Bank of\nMontreal was also written on a piece\nof rough paper and read as follows:\n\"The International Tribunal at The\nHague. By Grace and Allowance of\nHis Majesty of Great Britain. Please\npay the sum of $12.50.\" It was signed\nwith three crosses over the words \"International Red Cross.\"\nFASHIONS AND FADS\nThe rage for Persian and Paisley effects\nhas now found its way to bedroom slippers, which are now made ln Persian\noaahmere.\nShort black kid gloves are stitched with\nwhite silk and nlshed at the wrist with\na band of tiny white kid. The glovo Is\nfastened with one rather large white\npearl button.\nThere Is a vogue of lining coats and\njacketB with plain or ring dotted satins or\nsoft Bilks In a contrasting shade. Flowered\nor brocaded silks are now in favor this\nseason for linings.\nFor mornlns frocks silk warp Henrietta\ncombined with English waterproof crepe\nIs greatly used.\t\nNERVOUS PROSTRATION\nIndigestion Causes It\u2014Ml-o-na Will\nCur* It\nIf you have Indigestion, you don't get\nall the nutriment out of your food that you\nshould.\nVour worn out stomach passes the food\non without extracting enough nutritious\nsubstance to supply the blood and nerves.\nAnd If the nerves are not supplied with\nnourishment, they begin to rebel. They\nkick up a great disturbance. They make\nyou Irritable and cranky, you worry about\ntrifles, and you cannot sleep soundly at\nnight, you have bad dreams, and you get\nup tired in the morning.\nTry Ml-o-na tablets, the money back\ncure. Ml-o-na will oura your nervousness\nby driving out the cause. Ml-o-na will\ngive you relief the first hour. It will cure\nacute cuses in a few days, and chronic\noases ln a few weeks.\nBelching of gas, heartburn, sour taste\nof food, waterbrash, foul breath and other\ndyspeptic symptoms vanish before the\nmighty power of Mi-o-na.\nTry Ml-o-na. The Poole Drug company\nsell It and will refund your money If It\ndoesn't cure, and only DO cents a large box.\nmb\nPAGE FIVE\nWhy Not Plan to Inspect\nOur Exhibit of Fun Today?\nComplete Assortments of Muffs and Neckpieces Make the Visit Productive\nof Great Pleasure\nWe've brought our display of furs to\nan' earlier completion than usual this\nseason for furs are of such great promise that should everyone wait until the\n\"eleventh hour\" it would be practically\nImpossible to serve everyone satisfactorily, so we urge your early attendance as a safeguard against last minute worries and consequent dissatisfaction.\nThe woman who is not already the\npossessor of a handsome muff or neckpiece will surely want one this season\nfor all present Indications point to a\npronounced popularity for serviceable\nfurs. In the single pieces and sets\nas well as muffs the larger shaipes seem\nto prevail. But there are really too\nmany models to be justly told of. We\nare positive you'll find something much\nto your liking. \t\nAll Prices from\n$10 to $250\nBargains in Children's Dresses\nWe have some odd sizes in Children's Dresses that we will clear\nout cheap.   Come and see them.\nMeagher & Co.\nEagle Block Nelson, B. C.\nVacuum Cleaning\nOrders token for removing dust from carpets, mattresses, upholstered furniture, walls, ceilings, etc., by a new and up-to-date vacuum cleaner. The\ncheapest, moat convenient and sanitary process known. Estimates given on\nall lines of sWtrlcal work.   Orders promptly attended to.  Prices right\nJ.H.Matheson - Electrical Supplies\nPhone 346\n606 Baker Street\nCanadian General Electric\nCompany, Limited     Rossland, B.C.\nCarry the largest stock of electrical apparatus\nand supplies in the interior of B.C. Inquiries solicited.\nCLEANING AND PRESSING\nSuits Called for and Delivered\nA. J. DRISCOLL\nPNie 865\u2014 Baker Street, opposite tht\nQueens Hotel\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nMaternity Branch\nPatients are now received at the following rates:\nPrivate ward patients, week $20.00\nSemi-private ward patients, week 15.00\nAddress applications to mat-on at\nhospital. \t\nBaker Street Buys\n110,000\u2014Income Is 12 per cent net, and can foe handled for quarter cash,\nbalance 1, 2, and 3 year a,\n110,000\u2014Will pay 10 per cent net, and In first class position. Rents are\nlow and can be raised to pay 12 per cent,\n|16,O0O\u2014You Till net 11 1-2 per cent on this one and It Is a cheap buy.\nInvestigate these,* You wl'l make some money. You will never buy\ncheaper In Nelson.\nMcQuarrie & Robertson\n410 WARD ST.\nNELSON, B.C.\n_____\n tht Satis jtoDB.\nTHURSDAY  NOVEMBER 10\n$39.00 Each\nTou can buy is lots within a mile\nof postoffice.   Tbe lots are cleared, on\na good graded street, residences   on\n,       both sides; city water.\nTerms $5.50 a Lot Cash\nbalance arranged on easy terms.\nSecure  them  now,  they will make\nyou money.\nA Snap\nFor the Nan Who Grabs It\nFirst\n4 lots, every Inch good and under\ncultivation.\n4-roomed cottage, city water, chick*\nen house; situated on oar line within\n1-2 mile ol postoffice. No hills to\nclimb.\nPrice $325 per Lot\nwith the bouse and improvements\nthrown in. Terms $75.00 a lot cash,\nbalance in 6, 12 and 18 months.\nThe Western Canada Investment Co.\nP. O. Box 1042 Baker Street Nelson, B. C.\nAgenti tot the Ideally btate J Edgew)ti Sub-Division.   The Sab-Di?iiiin with AO the Canveaientes ui Nitud'Advutiges\nBaker Street\nProperty\n45 feet frontage with frame buildings, i! I si\n$84 per foot\nCement sidewalk.\nLOCAL MARKBTS\nNJ3LSON, Nov. S.\nFOODSTUFF.\nLake of Woods, per bug  |-w\nRoyal Household  *\u2122\nPurity Flour   , \"Si\nGold Drop  Flour   i'SJ\nRobin Hood Flour  *'w\nDAIRY   PRODUCE.\nButter, creamery,  per lb Sfii\nButter, bulk,  per lb \u00ab&*<*\nButter, dairy, per lb. .. *J\nCheese. Canadian, per lb \u00bb\nCheese, Swiss, per lb *?\nEggs, fresh, per doz. J\u2122\nEggs, case, per doz \u00b0\u00b0\nVEGETABLES.\nNew potatoes, per lb \"-'*\nCabbage,  per ID . \u2122\nTomatoes, fresh, per lb \u2122\nDry Onions, per lb w\nFRUITS.\nOranges, per doz 3mp0\nBananas, per doz w*\u2122\nLemons, per doz \u201e\nApples, per lb. ;   ;\u2122\nHoney, comb, per lb j\u00a3\nHoney, 1-lb. '\"M  \u00b0\"\nMEAT. .._,\u201e,,\nBeef,  wholesale    \u2122'\u00bb\nPork,  wholesale   jjgg*\nMutton, wholesale  IU'J{'\nVeal, wholesale  \u25a0   ;\"\nPork, retail    |g\nMuton, retail  \"\u00bbj\"\nVeal,   retail    \"9**\nHams, retail  \u00a3g\u00a3\nBacon, retail  \u00a3\/\u00ab\u00a3\nLard,   retail    *$\u00bb\nFowl,  retail   ^\"^\nChickens, retail  *M\nSausages, retail  \u2022\u25a0\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022 l0^18\nVANCOUVER  STOCK MARKET\nReported hy Mighton & Cavanaugh.\nBid Asked\nAlberta Coal & Coke  %  M %   .WA\nInternational   Clal & Coke.,     .05 \u25a0\u00bb\u00bb\nGreat   West   Permanent   ....121.00 126.0)\nNugget   Gold   Mines    93 l.w\nRed  Cliff  Mining Co      .73 .74\nB   C. Permanent Loan As...128.00 ....\nAmerican-Canadian Oil        .10 .10*\nB.   C.  Copper Co    0.60 l.f>\nDiamond  Vale  Coal  & Coke    .09 .11\nNicola Valley Coal & Coke..     .65 .W\nRambler  Cariboo    27 .WA\nRoyal   Collieries    2a% _n .*\nSouth   African   Scrip    710.00 <2u.(j0\nMETAL MARKETS\nNEW YORK. Nov. 9.-Silver, 55%; standard copper, 12.45 A 12.55; easy.\nLONDON, Nov. 9.\u2014Silver, 25 13-10; lead,\n\u00a313 3s 9d.     \t\nGRAIN  MARKETS\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 9.\u2014Liverpool cables\ncame % to hi lower. There was an enormous Increase In European and world's\nvisible, and the foreign crop summary was\ngenerally favorable to winter seeding and\ngrowing crops. Local markets opened\nfractionally higher tor Nov. and Dec,\nand M. lower for May. There was a good\ndemand for all grades of wheat, early in\nthe morning, but later demand was for\nmore lower grades. Export houses were\nbuyers but only one load booked to Antwerp could bo located. All bids were out\nof line though bids on contracts were reported only from H to % away. The close\nshowed a gain of % toH for the morning.\nNo. 1 Nov. was selling at % under tlie\noption. No. 2 at 3% under, No, 3 Northern\nnt 0 under, and No, 6 wheat 19% under.\nThe American markets were moderately\nactive and showed relatively the same\ngain as our own. The corn market was\nweaker In face of anticipated bearish gov-\nFactory and\nWarehouse Sites\nSeveral good locations facing\nRailway. . il ^....iiA\neminent reports, which, when posted shortly after 12.30, showed 119,006,000 of old corn\non the farmers' hands.\nWinnipeg markets; wheat, Nov. 90% to\n90%; Dec., SO',4 to B9&; May, 93% to 94%.\nOats, Nov., 34i' to U%; Dec, 3t% to 34%;\nMay, 38% to 38%. ,\nFlax.  Nov.,  close, 2.45;  Dec,  close,  2.38.\nCash prices; wheat. No. 1 Northern, close,\n91%: No. 2 Nor., close, 87%; No. 3 Nor.,\nclose, 84%: No. 4, close, 82; No. 5, close,  A.\nOats, No. 2 W.. close, 3414; No. i W.,\nclose, 32.\nExtra feed, close, 33%.\nBarley,  No. 3,  close, 40; No. 4,  close, 39.\nFlax.   Nov.,  close, 2.43;  Dec,  close,  2.42.\nAmerican-Chicago, Dec., 8S% to 88%.\nMay. W. to 94%: July, 02% to 92%.\nMinneapolis, Dec, 99% to 99%; May, 1.04%\nto 1.01. \t\nRoyal Hotel, here'B your home for the\nwinter.   Best board In the city. lw\nMlnard's Liniment Cures Distemper.\nNOTICE.\nIn tlie matter of an application for the\nIssue uf a duplicate CisrUticate of Title\nto an undivided one-half ot lot numbered\n3007,  Group 1,   Kootenay district.\nNotice Is hereby given tbat It is my\nintention to Isuiue at the expiration of one\nmonth after the first publication hereof a\nduplicate of the Certillcate of Title to the\nabove mentioned lu' tlie name of Burt\nCrego, which Certificate is dated the 28th\nAugust,  1907,  and  numbered 7414A.\nSAML. R. ROE,\nDistrict Registrar.\nLand Registry Office, Nelson, B.C.\n7th November, A.D., 1910. 10-11-10-4\nNOTICE OF  APPLICATION  FOR  RENEWAL OF LIQUOR LICENSE.\nNotice Is hereby given that on the first\nday of-December next application will be\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial\nPolice for renewal of the hotel license to\nsell liquor by reetail In the hotel known\nas the Miller Hotel, situate at Ymir In the\nProvince of British Columbia.\nDated this eighteenth day of October,\n1910.\nWILLIAM DOWLING,   Applicant.\nTake notice that the undersigned, The\nAstley-Elfoid Boat Company, Limited, intends to apply to tho Registrar of Joint\nStock Companies for permission to change\nIts name to \"Nelson Boat and Launch\nCompany, Limited.\" \"\nDated the 6th day of November, A.D.,\n1910.\nTHE    ASTLEY-ELFORD    BOAT    COMPANY,  LIMITED.\nLESLIE CRAUFURD, President,\n C. A. HASTINGS, Secretary.\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION  FOR RE.\nNEWAL OF LIQUOR LICENSE.\nNotice is hereby given that, on the first\nday of December next, application will be\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial\nPolice for renewal of the hotel license to\nsell liquor by retail ln the hotel known as\nthe Cosmopolitan Hotel, situate at Ymlr,\nln the Province of British Columbia.\nDated   this   lath  day of October,  1910.\nJOHN BREAU, Applicant.\n10-10-10-30d\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION  FOR  RE-\nNEWAL OF LIQUOR LICENSE.\nNotice Is hereby given that on the first\nday of December next, application will be\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial\nPolice for renewal of the hotel license to\nsell liquor by retail ln the hotel known aa\nthe Ymlr Hotel, situate at Ymlr, in the\nProvince of British Columbia.\nDated  this  15th  day of October,  1910.\nJ. B. BREMNER, Applicant.\nHMO-10-30d\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION  FOR RE-\nNEWAL OF LIQUOR LICENSE.\nNotice Is hereby giveit that, on the first\nday of December next, application will be\nmade to' the Superintendent of Provincial\nPolice for renewal of the hotel license to\nsell liquor by retail in the hotel known as\nthe Outlet Hotel, situate at Proctor, ln\nthe Province of British Columbia.\nDated this 15th day of October,  1910.\nQ.   & T.   SNOW,   Applicants.\n16-10-10-Md\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION  FOR  RE-\nNEWAL OF LIQUOR  LICENSE.\nNotice Is bereby given that on the first\nday of December next, application will be\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial\nPolice for a renewal of the hotel license\nto sell liquor by retail, ln the hotel known\nas the Erie Hotel, situate at Erie In the\nProvince of British Columbia.\nDated this 15th day of October, 1910.\nJAMES J. HICKEY, Applicant.\n18-10-10-30d\nMORTGAGE SALE\nUnder and b\" virtue of the powers contained in a certain mortgage, which will\nbe produced at the time of sale, there\nwill be offered for sale by public auction\nby Messrs. Charles A. Waterman & Co., at\nthe Strathcona Hotel, Nelaon, B. C, on\nSaturday, the 20th day of November, 1910,\nat the hour of 12 o'clock noon, tho following property: .\nAll and singular those certain parcels\nor tracts of land and premises situate,\nlying and being In the City of Nelson In\nthe Province of British Columbia and being composed of lots numbered sixteen\n{16) and seventeen (17), both in block forty-four -C (44-C), according to the official\nplan or survey of the town of Nelson,\nFor terms and conditions of sale apply to\nE. A.  CREASE,\nSolicitor for the Mortgagee.,\nDated at Nelson, B, C, this 26th day of\nOctober,  1910,\nNOTICE OF  APPLICATION  FOR  RENEWAL OF LIQUOR LICENSE.\nNotice Is hereby given that, on the first\nday of December next, application will be\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial\nPolice for a renewal of the hotel license\nto sell liquor by retail in the hotel known\nas tho Salmo Hotel, situate at Salmo, in\nthe Province of British Columbia.\nDated this 14th day of October, 1910.\n\" \"\"   ~   \\ppllcan\n14-10-10-30d\nBusiness Directory\nAUCTIONEERS\nW. CUTLER, LICENSED AUCTIONEER,\nBox 474,\nPUBLISHERS AND  PRINTER8\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LTD.-\nPublishers of The Daily News; subscription |6 per year by carrier; |5 per year\nby mall. Commercial Job printing of all\nkinds neatly and promptly executed. 216\nBaiter street, Nelson, B. C, Phone 144.\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR  RENEWAL OF LIQUOR L1CEN8E\nNotice Is hereby given that on the first\nday of December next application will be\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial\nPolice for renewal of the hotel license to\nsell liquor by retail In the hotel known\nas the Northern Hotel, situate at Salmo,\nIn the province of BrlUsh Columbia.\nDated this 15th day of October, 1910.\nB. E. McARTHUR, Applicant.\n18.10-10-80*\nHAIRDRES8ING   AND   MANICURING\nMME. KATHLEEN NOAH, \"haIRDRES^\ning and manicuring parlors. Room 38,\nK  .W.  C.  block.\nW. CUTLER, COLLECTIONS OP ALL\nkinds, special attention given to rent\ncollections; books kept; prompt returns.\nOffice 313 Baker street.\nBOOKBINDING AND RULING\nSliiws'pljBLism\nAll kinds of office forms ruled and punched for loose leaf binders. The most complete book binding equipment in the interior of British Columbia. 216 Baker\nstreet. Nelson, B. C\u201e P.O. drawer 1119,\nPhone 144,\nAPPLICATION   FOR   RENEWAL   OF\nLIQUOR  LICENCE..\nNotice Is hereby given that, on the first\nday of December next, application will be\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial\nPolice for renewal of the hotel license to\nsell liquor by retail In the hotel known as\nthe Palace Hotel, situate at Ymlr, In ths\nProvince of British Columbia,\nDated this 18th day of October, 1910.\nJONES & WALKER, Applicant.\nCONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS\nJOHN   BURNS-SASH   DOOR  AND  OF-\nflee Fitting Factory. Brick and Lime\nfor sale. Office and factory; Carbonate\nstreet, Nelson, B. C. Large quantity of\nshavings, suitable for stable bedding, can\nbe bad for hauling away.\nCARPENTERS AND BUILDERS\nDOUCETTE AND LAWSON-ALL KINDS\nof jobbing and bench work done promptly\nand well. Order your storm sash and\ndoor now. Workshop behind Bosnian's\n\u25a0tore, Stanley street.  P. O. Box 166.\n141-tf.\nFURNITURE MAKER\nM. HAWRYCZ & CO.-WE MAKE TO OR-\nder Mission Furniture, Clothes Cabinets, Cosy Corners. Couches, Settees.\nPianos tuned, repaired and polished. Expert, staining, varnishing and polishing.\nTelephone orders promptly attended to.\nShop: 417 Hnll St.   Tel.   438.\nPRIVATE MATERNITY  HOME\nNICE LOCALITY AND HOME COM-\nfortB. For terms and particulars write\nP. O. Box 763, Nelson, B. C.\nMRS. KENNY will be pleased to receive\nmaternity patients at her home. Excellent testimonials. 221 Observatory street.\nP. O. Box 173, telephone A54.\nMUSIC,\nWHEN HXVlNoTY^U^PlANO'TUNEfi,\"\nhave it done by reliable men, backed by\na reliable firm. Messrs. Win. and A, R.\nKllby, the autliorii.cn tuners of the Mason\n&, Risen Co., for li. C, are now residents\nof this town and are open to take orders,\nwhich, If left at the Mason & Risch\nagency office, or at S0G Stanley street,\nwill be promptly attended to.\nLEWIS ROBERTS (T. C. D.), (ORGANIST\nMethodist church). Pupils instructed on\nthe plnno or organ. Theory and Harmony, Advanced Technique. Apply Y. M.\nC. A. or phone 42. 170-26\nSINGING  AND  VOICE   PRODUCTION\nH. TREBY HEAIiE IS NOW PREPAHED\nto give tuiton ln above.   For particulars\napply H. Treby Heale, care Dally News.\n149-26\nHOUSE AND SIGN  PAINTERS\nHARTMANN & BENNETT, HOUSE AND\nsign painter? iaper hangers and decorators. Shop: Stanley street, next door\nto B. C. Telephone office, Nelson, B. C.\nASSAYERS\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, ASSAXER (PRO-\nvlnclal) Metallurgical Chemist Charges:\nCold, Silver, Copper or Lead $1 each;\nGold-Silver $1.50; Silver-Lead M.50; Zinc\n(2; Silver-Lead-Zinc S3; Gold, Silver-\nCopper or Lead, $2,50. Accurate assays;\ncareful sampling and prompt attention.\nP. O. Box AUOS, Nelson, B. C. ,\nASSAYERS' SUPPLIES\nTHE B. C. ASSAY AND CHEMICAL\nSUPPLY COMPANY, LIMITED, Vancouver, B. C, Assayers' Supplies,\nChemical and Physical Apparatus, Balances and Weights of precision, etc.,\nSole Agents In British Columbia for the\nMorgan Crucible Company London, England; F. W. Braun, Los Angeles; the'\nUraun-Knecht-Heimann Company; San\nFrancisco; the J. T, Baker Chemical company's Analyzed C. P. Acids and Chemicals; Way's Pocket Smelters; write for\npamphlet describing these smelters. Complete assay outfits furnlBhed at short\nnotice.\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION  FOR  RENEWAL OF LIQUOR LICENSE.\nNotice 1b hereby given that on the first\nday of December next, application will be\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial\nPolice for renewal of the hotel license to\nsell liquor by retail in the hotel known as\nthe Fort Sheppard Hotel, situated at\nWaneta ln the Province of British Columbia.\nDated this 14th day of October, 1910.\n\u25a0-\u25a0---  -\" \"   plican .\n5-10-10-30d\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION  FOR  RE-\nNEWAL OF LIQUOR LICENSE\nNotice Is hereby given that on the first\nday of December next application will be\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial\npolice for renewal ot the hotel license to\nsell liquor by retail In the hotel known as\nthe Vancouver Hotel situated at Ymlr, in\ntbe Province of British Columbia.\nDated this litli day of October, 1910.\nE. E. GILLE, Applicant.\nYm Ir, B. C. October 17. 1910.\nAPPLICATION   FOR   RENEWAL   OF\nLIQUOR  LICEN8E.\nNotice Is hereby given that, on the first\nday of December next, application will be\nmade to the Superintendent of. Provincial\nPolice for the transfer of the license for\nthe sale of liquor by retail In and upon\nthe premises known as tbe Castlegar Hotel, Bltuate at Castlegar, British Columbia,\nfrom Elenor Gage to W. H. Gage of British Columbia.\nDated this 12th day of Ootober, 1910.\nELENOR GAGE, Holder of License.\nWhen In Need\nPhone, day 85, night 283.\nSTANDARD   FURNITURE   COMPANY'S\nUNDERTAKING PAlRLORS,    m\u201e\u201e\n308 Baker St. R. S. BBERTON\nFuneral Director and Embalmer.\nThe best equipped undertaking parlors In\nthe Kootenays, with experienced attendance available at all hours.\nNOTICE      OF      APPLICATION      OF\nTRANSFER   OF   LIQUOR   LICENSE.\nNotles Is hereby glren that on the first\nday of December next application will be\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial\nPolice for tho tninafer of ths license for\nthe sale of liquor by retail In and upon the\npremises known as ths Vancouver Hotel,\nsituated at Tmlr, British Colombia, from\nB. B. Gllle to James U. Ollle, ot British\nColumbia. \u00bb\nE. E. QILI.E. Holder of Lloense.\nJAMES M. oili.e, Applicant for Transfer.\nTmlr, B. c. Oetobtr 17. la*\nStandard Furniture Co.\nNELSON, B. C.\nPOM SALE\nFOB SALE\u2014The largest assortment ot\nfruit lands on the borders of Kootenay\nLake; this district la far famed for the\nbest production of fruit in the world. The\nclimate the most moderate In Canada. The\nlake proper 1b 80 miles long and 8 to 7\nmiles wide, and waa never known to\nfreese over. I can sell you from io acres\nup, Improved or unimproved. -For further\nparticulars see or write H. L. Lindsay.\nOffice Griffin Block.    Box 84,  Nelson,\nFOR BALE\u2014Few small tracts of the best\nland, i miles on wagen road, west from\nNelson; school on land.   A. J. Lavlolette,\npostoffice Nelson. 108-tf\nFOR   BALiSr-Fine   new   \"Outer\"   sugar\nsacks, largo  sis*.   Ths Kootenay Jam\nCoy, Ltd., Nelson. ltt-tf\nFOR BALE-Gasollne launch It feet long,\nsix-horse motor,   boat  house and site;\nnew this season;   price 8660 cash;   9600\nterms.   Apply Box 618, Nelson, B. C.\n-187-18\nFOR SALE\u2014Fair steers,   partly   broken.\nH. Anderson, Slocan Junction, B. C.\nFOR SALE\u2014One range with tank In connection, nearly new.   For further information call at 306 Carbonate street.     172-26\nFOR SALE\u2014Bargain, at price of wild land,\n220 acres, partly Improved; 6-room houae;\n100 trees, two and three year. On main\nlake. Steamer landlne. Chattels Included.\nAddress \"Hlllrlse,\" Dally News. 172-6\nFOR SALE\u2014As a going concern, the\nCanadian Temperance Hotel, Fernie, B.C.\nAccommodation for 60 boarders. House\nalways full. Boarders pay $25 to 127 per\nmonth. Terms, (2,000 cash, balance on easy\nterms. Good reason for selling. A snap\nfor one who knows the business. Apply\nto Frank Chardon, Fernie, B.C. 172-6\n\u2022 WANT AD. RATES. \u2022\n\u2022 . - \u2022\n\u2022 Rates for   Want   Ads. In Th* \u2022\n\u2022 Dally News are ai follows: One \u2022\n\u2022 cent per word per Insertion or *\n\u2022 four cents per word per week or \u2022\n\u2022 fifteen   cents   per   word   per \u2022\n\u2022 month. \u2022\n\u2022 in the case of persons not hav- \u2022\n\u2022 Ing a regular monthly account \u2022\n\u2022 with The Newa, cash must   a* \u2022\n\u2022 company the order.   No depar- j \u2022\n\u2022 ture   from  this   rule   will   be. a\n\u2022 made.   Want Ads.   phoned   to \u2022\n\u2022 the office are accepted only un- \u2022\n\u2022 der the above conditions. \u2022\n\u2022 Copy for Want Ads. should bs \u2022\n\u2022 . delivered to   Tha   Daily Newa \u2022\ne office either   personally or by \u2022\n\u2022 letter to make osrtain ot correot \u2022\n\u2022 Insertion!. \u2022\nHELP WANTED\nNELSON EMPLOYMENT AGENCY\nC. F. Hutten. Manager\nWANTED-TIe   makers,   swampers,   sawyers,  hookmen, teamsters,   sawmlli  laborers, railroad   laborers   (for   sawmill),\nbushmen, axemen, chambermaid,\nbushmen,  axemen,  chambermaid,   HELP\nOF    ALL    KINDS    PROMPTLY    FURNISHED. \u2022\nTHE WORKINGMEN'S EMPLOYMENT\nWANTED\u2014Yardmen; teamster; awamper;\nmen to elear land; waitress and chambermaid, same hotel, 830 each; another waitress, same town, $30; girls for family work.\nW. Parker, 312 Baker street   Phone 283.\nB.C. UNITED AGENCIES, 218 Baker St\nAuctioneers Real Estate\nEmployment Agents.\nBox 232. Phone 391.\nWANTED-Tlemakers; swampers; 75 bushmen; good wages, 76c day board;  axemen; railway laborers (free pass); blacksmith; waitress.\nFOR SALE\u2014At cost, timber license; close\nto Lardo river.   First class timber. Box\n133 Grenfell, Sask. 172-8\nFOR SALE\u2014Good  baled hay      Write to\nO. W. Hembllng, Dldsbury, Alta.    173-26\nFOR SALE-23* chickens, of which 70 are\none year old hens, good ones; about 70\npullets, SO or 33 of each of Barred Rocks\nand Rose Comb Rhode Isalnd Reds; also\nseveral fine cockerels. Apply N. Hoover,\ngeneral delivery. 174-6\nFOR SALE\u2014A few choice S. C. White\nLeghorns and White Wyandotte cockerels,\nfrom very heavy laying strain. All April\nhatch. Fine vigorous birds. T, H. Wilson,\nSilverton,  B.C. 171-6\nFOR   SALE-Smoll     range;     only    used\nthree months; nearly new.   Apply In the\nmorning. 519 Silica street. 175-6\nFOR SALE\u2014We have for sale, near Nelson, one  practically  unused  Studcbaker\nwagon, 1% tire.   Apply Porto-Rico Lumber\nCo., Moyle. B.C. 176-18\nFOR SALE\u2014Pure    bred    Buff   Orpington\ncockerels, from prize stock; May hatched.\nApply B. K. Devine, Tarry's, B.C.       176-6-\nFOR SALE\u2014TJjoroughbred game fowls.\nOne cock, 3 hens (early birds), $10.\nQualities have been proved In the ring\nand on the table. Fit to adorn any gentleman's estate or kitchen. Apply to T. Gl.\nProctor. 176-tf.\nFOR RENT\nFOR    RENT-Cottage.\nGosnell, brewery.\nApply    William\n101-tf.\nTO   LET\u2014Two   nicely   furnished   rooms.\nApply 607 Carbonate. .\nFOR RENT\u2014Furnished rooms and board;\ntable boarders also.   Apply 719 Josephine\nstreet. 166-tf\nFOR RENT\u2014Furnished  room.    711 Silica\nstreet. 167-12\nFOR RENT\u2014Furnished  room  with  bath.\n214 Victoria street 170-26\nTO    RENT\u2014New     seven-roomed   house;\nbathroom; corner Silica and Falls;  one\ntenant or two; 320 per month.   Apply 111\nSilica.\nFOR RENT OR SALE\u2014House, all modern\nconveniences.   Anply 612 Carbonate St.\n173-6\nFOR RENT\u2014Five   roomed   cottage,  and\nlarge  garden;   |12  per  month.    Address\nbox 474. 174-6\nFOR RENT\u2014Large, nicely furnished room.\nApply in morning, 619 Silica street.    176-6\nFOR RENT\u2014Furnished    rooms   for light\nhousekeeping.   Phone A114. 175-8\nFOR RENT-tFurnlshed  room and board.\n408 Victoria street. 176-6\nLOST\u2014Bunch of keys, on key-ring.\nMoffatt, Alan block.\nF. C.\n176-2\nAPPLICATION   FOR   RENEWAL   OF\nLIQUOR  LICEN8E.\nNotice Is hereby gtven that, on the first\nday of December next, application will be\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial\nPolice for renewal of the hotel llconse to\nsell liquor by retail ln the hotel known as\nthe Castlegar Hotel, situate at Castlegar,\nln the Province of British Columbia.\nDated this Uth day of October, 1910.\nw   H. OAGE, Applicant\n13-10-10-4W\nWANTED\u2014MISCELLANEOUS\nMOLER SYSTEM OF BARBER COL-\nlegea will open one of their famous\nBchools In Calgaiy, Alberta, November\n21at We teach . the barber trade and\nguarantee positions; wages 818 to 130 per\nweek. A reduction will be given students\njoining on opening day, Full particulars\nfree. Write for special offer. Moler\nBarber   college,   Spokane,   Wash.\nDollar Doubters\nreal SsHsr Saukler*.   |n ah**\n\u2022mall east ky Mimg.ua te your\nOne cent per word, irovr e*nts per word\nper week, when cash accompanies the\norder.\nWANTBD-By Foote ft Pradolini, Revtl-\nstoke, plasterers at once. 138-tf\nWANTED\u2014To   purchase   house   ot   about\nsix   rooms;   small   cash   payment,   balance  monthly.    Please  give particulars\nto P. O. Box 966.\nWANTED-APPLES & CRAB APPLES.\n,The Kootenay Jam Company, Ltd.., Nelaon. 153-tf\nWANTED \u2014 Anyone   wanting   first-class\ncarpenters, communicate with The United\nBrotherhood, Box 302, 16Mf\nWANTED\u2014At once, experienced waitress.\nApply Queen b Hotel.\nWANTED-Work   of any  kind,    teaming\npreferred, by young man 22 years old.\nJ. A. M. 170-6\nWANTED-Posltion as engineer or electrician. Used to installing air compressors and electrical machinery; 3rd\nclass. B.C. papers. Apply J. T., The Dally\nNewB. 17M\nWANTED-Work,   by   the   day   of   hour.\nApply O. K., Nelson News. 172-6\nWANTED\u201420-foot     Peterborough     canoe\nlaunch, or boat for fitting.   Perfect Spot\ncash.   Box 170, Robson.\nWANTED-Housework or cooking by the\nhour or day.   Apply X., Nelson News.\n174-6\njramDiRfccroRr\nSILVER KING HOTEL\nBaker Btreet Nelson* B. C.\nRegular boarders, $6 per week\nRates: 81.25 per day.\nBeat 26 Cent Meal ln the City\nNEL80N HOTEL BAR\nBaker Street Nelaon, B. C.\nINK ft WARD, Props.\nTry a \"GIN RICKEY\"\nMade, from   California   Limes,   specially\nImported\nFor a cool, satisfying smoke\nTry a Savannah Cigar\nWANTED\u2014To   rent piano.   No  children.\nWrite to drawer HOP. NelBon. 174-6\nWANTED-Sltuatlon as engineer and mechanic; 3rd class papera; mine or sawmill.   Box 693, P. P., Nelson. 174-6\nWANTED\u2014Team, about 2600 to 2900 pounds;\nyoung mares If possible.   D, F, P., Bra-\nplre Hotel.       \u25a0  1&-*\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR RE-\nNCWAL OF LIQUOR LICENSE.\nNotice Is hereby given that, on the first\nday of December next, application will be\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial\nPolice for renewal of the hotel license to\nsell liquor by retail In the hotel known as\nthe Mersey Hotel, situate at Erie, in the\nProvince of British Columbia.\nDated this 15th day of October, 1910.\nAUGUST OLAF HAQLUND, Applicant.\n16-10-10-30d\nNOTICE      OF      APPLICATION      OF\nTRANSFER OF RETAIL\nLIQUOR LICEN8E.\nNotice Is hereby given that 30 days after\ndate, application will be made to the\nSuperintendent of Provincial Police for the\ntransfer of the license for the sale of\nliquor by retail in and upon the premises\nknown as the Erie Hotel, situate at Erie,\nBrltlBh Columbia, from Jaa. J. Hlokey to\nA. A. MeArthur, of British Columbia.\nDated this 6th day of November, 1910.\nJ AS J. HICKEY,\nHolder of License.\nA. A. McARTHUR,\nApplicant for Transfer.\nWANTED\u2014At once, to rent small cottage,\nclose In.' Address P. O. Box 367.        175-2\nWANTED-J?osltion.    Good   woman  cook\nwants to cook for crew of men.   Apply\nMiss Anderson, care Dally News. 176-2\nWANTED\u2014Lady    wishes \u25a0 employment as\nseamstress, by the. day.\" Address M. H.\nDaily News.  MH\nLIVE STOCK\nFOR SALE\u2014Cayuses   broken   to   saddle\nand    harness.       Apply    H.    Mawdsley,\nCrawford Bay, B. C.\nrasiey,\n161-10\nTHE ROYAL HOTEL\nMrs, L. V. Robsrts, Proprietress\nCor. Stanley and Silica Sts ..\nRates 11.00 and $1.60 per day\nKOOTENAY HOTEL\nMra. Mellette, Proprietress\nA home for everybody.   Every con*\nvenlenc\u00a9 given to tbe travelling public.\nElectric   piano.   Cuisine   unexcelled.\nRateB II per day.\nSHERBROOKE HOUSE\nNelaon, B.C.\nOne minute's walk from C.P.R. station.   Cuisine unexcelled; well heated\nand ventilated.\n\u25a0oyer \u25a0ros., Proprietors\nEMPIRE  TEMPERANCE  HOTEL\n(Under entire new management)\n\u25a0aker St, Nelson, IX.\nThe house  thoroughly  remodelled\nthroughout.   Clean rooms, home comforts. Rate* $1 per day up.  Best cook\nin the city.\nJ. Openshaw, Prop. -'\nBARTLETT  HOUSE\nQ. W. Bartlett, Prop.\nThe best $1.00 a day house In town.\nA mlner'fl home.\nHOTEL CASTLEGAR\nCastlegar Junction\nAll modern.    Good picnic ground^\nThe Nelson-Rossland train stops here\nfor luncheon,\nW. H. Gage, Prop.\n(Formerly C.P.R. Agent)\nROSSLAND\nTHE HOFFMAN ANNEX, ROSSLAND,\nB. C.-Green & Smith, Props. Centrally\nlocated. -European and American plan.\nCommercial travellers will find light,\ncomfortable sample rooms, a Bpeclal din*\n' Ing room and excellent accommodations\nat the Hoffman. Baths, bowling alley,\nsteam laundry.\nPHOENIX\nHOTEL BROOKLYN, PHOENIX, B. C-\nThe only up-to-date hotel in Phoenix.\nNew from cellar to roof. Beat sample\nrooms ln the Boundary. Bath room to\nconnection. Steam heat Opposite Great\nNorthern depot.   James Marshall, Prop.\nARROWHEAD\nTHE UNION HOTEL, ARROWHEAD.-\nSpecial attention given to commercial\nnun and tourists. First class sample\nrooms. Finest scenery In British Columbia, overlooking Upper Arrow lake. W.\nJ. Llghtburne, proprietor.\nGRAND FORKS, B. C.\nPROVINCE HOTEL, GRAND FORKS.\nB.C.\u2014Is the newest and best appointed\nhotel ln the interior of British Columbia\nand offers to the travelling public the\nbest accommodation obtainable. The\nbuilding 1b alt newly furnished throughout and is the only fire proof hotel ln\ntho city.   E. Larsen, proprietor.\nYMIR\nYMIR HOTEL, YMIR, B.C.-MOST MOD-\nera and up-to-date hotel to Ymir\u2014locate*\ndirectly   opposite   depot\u2014best   accommodation possible\u2014Dining room In connec-\ntion.  J. B. Bremner, proprietor.\nPRODUCE\nSTARKEY & CO., WHOLESALE DEAL-\ners in Butter. Eggs, Cheese, Produce and\nFruit. Houston Block, Josephine street,\nNelson, B. C.\t\nGROCERIE8\nA. MACDONALD & GO.-WHOLESALB\nGrocers and Provision Merchants\u2014Importers of Teas, Coffees, Spices, Dried\nFruits, Staple and Fancy Groceries, Tobaccos, Cigars, Butter, Eggs, Cheese and\nPacking House Products. Office and\nwarehouse corner of Front and Hall\nstreets.   P. O. Box 1095.   Telephone 28.\nMINERS' FURNISHINGS\nA. MACDONALD ft CO.-WHOLESALE\nJobbers ln Blankets, Underwear, Mitts,\nGloves, Boots, Rubbers, Overalls, Jumpers and Miners' Sundries. Office and\nwarehouse, corner of Front and Hall\nstreets.   P. O. Box 1096.   Telephone a.\nMINING MACHINERY \u25a0\u25a0\nWASHINGTON MACHINERY & SUPPLY\nCo.\u2014Dealers in Engines, Band and Circular sawmills. Atkins' Saws, Wood and\nIron Pulleys, Leyner Compressors and\nDrills, Pumps and Hoists. Prompt attention. Reasonable prices. Courteous\ntreatment.   Spokane,  Wash.\nFOR SALE\u2014Three Sable Collie pup bitches.\nOffers.  D. Leslie, Laurier Wash.        172*8\nWANTED\u2014Early   hatched   pullets,    any\nbreed.   P. O. box 274.        173-8\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION  FOR  RENEWAL OF LIQUOR LICENSE\nNotice Is hereby given that, on the first\nday of December next, applloatlon will be\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial\nPolice for renewal of the hotel license..to\nsell liquor by retell ln the hotel known\nas the Grove Hotel, situate at Falrvlew,\nIn' the electoral district of Ymlr, ln the\nProvince of British Columbia.\nDated this 17th day of October, 1910.\nWILLIAM GOSNELL, A^UgJL-\nNOTICE\nTake notice that we, J. J. Malone and\nA Tregillus, intend to apply to the Board\nof Licensing commissioners of the Ctty of\nNelson at the next meeting held, thirty\ndays after tbe date hereof for the transfer to F. E. Ransome and A. Campbell of\nNelson, British Columbia, of the Hotel\nLicense now held by us for the Tremont\nHotel situated in said city and being on\nlots fix '\"' seven (7) and eight (8) in\nblock six (6) of the said City of Nelson.\nDated at Nelson this fith day of October,\n1910.\nMALONE A TREGILLUS.\nAPPLICATION FOR RENEWAL OF RETAIL LIQUOR LICENSE.\nNotice Is hereby given that, on the first\nday of December next, application will\nbe made to the Superintendent of Provincial Police for a renewal of the hotel license to sell liquor by retail In the hotel\nknown as the Edgewood Hotel, situate at\nEdgewood, B. C, in the Province of British Columbia.\nDated this 11.    day of October, 1910.\nW. A, CALDER, Applicant.\n tHM0-md\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR RENEWAL OP LIQUOR LICENSE.\nNotloe Is hereby given that, on the first\nday of December next, application will be\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial\nPolice for renewal of the hotel license to\nsell llnuor by retail in the hotel known aa\nthe Kokitenay Falls Hotel, situate at Bio-\ncan Junction, In the Province of British\nColumbia.\nDated this Uth dav of October, 1910.\nJOHN W. MOORS, Applicant^\n\\d   \u201e 18-10-10-IOd\n THURSDAY  NOVEMBER 10\n\u20acfie Bail?? $eto\u00ab.\nMH-\nPAGE SEVEN\nI Excel in\nGroceries\nis something I want you all to know.\nThere 1b one sure and best test\u2014try me.\nMy stock is composed of the\nChoicest and Best\nfood nroducts that money Is able to buy.\nYour order will be filled exactly as you\nexpected it. \u25a0\nTrading with me Is a pleasure. To you,\nbecause you will be satisfied; to me, because I have gained another customer.\nYou will find that the quality of goods\nla all that I claim for them.\nJoy's Cash Grocery\nCorner of Josephine and Mill Streets\nP. O. Box -637 Telephone 19\nA Rare Chance\nTo secure a six roomed house close\nto Baiter street for only $1400. House\ncontains, sitting room, dining room,\nkitchen and hall downstairs; three bedrooms, bath room and trunk room up\nstairs. This offer only holds good for\n\u2022 a limited time. To seoure It as this\n: figure requires quick action. Full particulars of\nR. J. Steel\nHudson's Bay Block\nWe attend to 7*rar\nPLUMBING\npromptly and well.\nB.C. Plumbing & Heating Co.\nVictoria Street, near Opera House\nTelephone 181\nFor Sale at a Bargain\nOne One Horsepower Rotor\nOne Half Horsepower Motor\nCan bo Inspected at any time.\nApply\nTHE DAILY NEWS  Nelaon, B.C.\nHade In British Columbia ..\nRubber Stamps\nSeals, Stencils, Dog Tags,\nBrass Signs, Steel Stamps\nVANCOUVER STENCIL A SEAL CO\nP.O. Box 793, Vsncouver, B.C.\nCarpet Cleaning\n10c. PER SQUARB YARD\nWork called for and deliovred  promptly.\nClothes of all kinds cleaned, renovated,\ndyed and repaired. ,-: .-\u25a0.. :\nQen't Sulta Cleaned and Pressed, 76\u00a9 to\n12' dyed, S3.\nLadles' Skirts Cleaned, tt; dyed, 13.\nGloves Cleaned, 25c to 50.\nBpeclal rates for hotels, restaurants and\nsteamers.\nFamily and plain washing; manglng\nwork, 25c dozen; rough dry, 36c dozen.\nNelson Steam Laundry\n601-603 VBRNbN STREET.\nTelephone 1\u00ab. PAUL NIPOU, Prop.\nPROFKSIONAl^A^\nF. c. Qreen P. P. Burden A. H. Qreen\nQREEN   BROTHERS A BURDEN\nCivil Engineer,\nDominion and BrlUsh Columbia Land\nSurveyors.\nP.O. Box 1082 Phone B264\n518 Ward Si, Nelson, B.C. ..\nA   R.  HEYLAND,  C.E.\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\n. Twelve years In the Kootenay\nBox 475 . Kaslo, West Kootenay\nA   L. MCCULLOCH\nHydraulic Engineer\nProvincial Land Surveyor\nP. O. Box 41\nOffice Phone B86; residence phor.e B74\nOJHce: Over McDermid & McHardy\nBaker SL, Nelson, B.C.\nPIANO  INSTRUCTION\nMr. I. O. Johnson ot the Arcade Is\nprepared to accept a limited number of\npupils for tuition on the above Instrument. For terms apply P.6. box 348, or\nat 211 Silica street.\nPhone B3B2 Box 835\nWATERS * PASCOE\nCarpenters and Builders\nConcrete, brick and stone work. Shop\nnext City Hall.\nBuy the\nLeakproof\nHot Water\nBottle\nGuaranteed for Two Years\nSold Only by Is\nThree-Quart, $2.50\nTwo-Quart, $2.25\nThree-Quart, Combination, $3.75\nTwo-Quart, Combination, $3.50\nMailed to any address for lOc. extra.   You have only to wait but\none mail; we never disappoint\nDon't be misled\u2014the Leakproof le made for us and sold only by us.\nPoole Drug Co'y\nUNITED\nPhone 25 Day or Night. Post Oftice Box SOS\nCor. Baker and Josephine Streets\nNELSON'S LEADING DRUGGISTS\nWe Are Ready to Cut\nyou off exactly the quantity of\nmeat you require. We do not ask\nor expect you to take a pound\nor bo more because of unskilled\nor too skillful cutting. But our\nmeats are so choice tbat even if\nwe did cut over your order you'd\nbe glad of it when you came to\ntaste the meat,\nP. Burns & Co. Ltd.\nGREAT ACTIVITY\nIN LUMBER CAMPS\nHundreds of Men Will be Employed In\nVicinity of Creston\u2014starts\n.    Double Shift.\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nCRESTON, B. C, Nov. D\u2014Lost Monday morning the Canyon City Lumber\ncompany saw mill at Canyon City started to operate double shifts by the aid\nof electric light, as a modern electric\nlight plant has just been installed in\nthe mill. The dynamo of this plant is\ncapable of producing 500 lti-candle\npower lights, which will be ample to\nprovide electric light for many of the\nresidents of Canyon City in addition to\nlighting the mill.\nCanyon City is now going ahead by\nleaps and hounds and if the present\nprogressive rate is kept up it will only\nbe the matter of a short time till that\nindustrious settlement will have nearly\nall tbe conveniences that are enjoyed\nby a modern city.\nCreston Wants Sewers,\nA mass meeting of the citizens has\nbeen oalled for Wednesday evening in\nthe Mercantile hall, to consider the advisability of proceeding under the Sewerage act of British Columbia of 1910\nand Installing a sewerage system in\nCreston. There Is a strong feeling\namong the business men here In favor\nof this movement\nMrs. Sarklsslan, wife of tbe Rev. S.\nH. Sarklsslan, arrived in town last\nSaturday from her former home in\nSaskatchewan. Mrs. Sarklsslan sayB\nthat when she left the prairie provinces snow ahd cold prevailed.\nDeer meat is quite plentiful in Creston and almost every day this choice\nmeat.Is offered for sale.\nMiss Margaret Moore and Miss Ople\nwere hostesses at a smart party given\nlast Friday evening at Douglas' villa.\nOn this occasion cards and dancing as\nwell as various amusing games were\nindulged In during the evening when\ndainty refreshments were partaken of.\nThe chaperons were Mrs. R. J. Long\nand Mrs. George Young. The invited\nguests were the Misses Johnson, Mc-\nBaln, Huscroft, Hood, Learny and How-\narth, while the gentlemen were Messrs.\nJackson, Scruton, R. S. Gibbs, E, C.\nGibbs, McBain, Murdock and Callander,\nLuke and Baston, R. O. B. FitzGerald,\nCharles Scutllffe and Capt. A. S. FitzGerald. As entertainers both tbe young\nhostesses proved themselves fully\nequal to the occasion.\nEmploy. Two Hundred.\nThere will he great activity in the\nvarious camps around here this winter. It Is Btated that the Yale-Columbia Lumber company will operate their\ncamps all winter full blast employing\nabout 100 men within a few miles of\nCreston, while the Huscroft Bros, will\nopen their camp again this winter and\nemploy some 30 men. In addition to\nthis the Canyon City Lumber company\nwill run their mill double shifts this\nwinter and will employ some B0 men,\nbesides these works tt is stated that\nseveral other new camps will open up\nthis fall near Creston so that Judging\nfrom present appearances there wilt\nbe several hundred men employed In\nthe timber and saw milt Industry in and\naround Creston this winter. These people will all make Creston their supply\ntown and will come here also to spend\ntheir money.\nArchdeacon Beer of Kaslo, arrived\nhere last Saturday and on Sunday last\npreached In the English church. He\nreturned west on Monday'B train. During, his short slay here he was the\nguest of Rev. P. C. Hayraan.\nGeorge Mead left for Nelson on Monday. It seems that while painting his\nhouse his eyes became affected wltb\nthe turpentine and he has gone to the\ninland city for treatment.\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\n(Additional local news notes on page 8.)\nThe regular monthly meeting of the board\nof trade will be held in the board\nrooms this evening ~* 8.30.\nWilliam Elford wishes to inform hia\npatrons that he is not connected with the\nNelson Boat & Launch Co., formerly\nknown as the Autley-Elford Boat company.\nThere will be a dance In the Eagles' hall\ntonight under the auspices of the F.O.K\nWilkinson's orchestra will supply the\nmusic.\nAnother land deal of considerable importance haB just been completed at Mirror\nLake, whereby A. Milton of that place has\npurchased what was formerly known as\nthe Kootenay Valley nurseries. It Is Mr.\nMllton'B Intention to clear and plant In\nthe sprlnif about one-half of the tract\nInto orchard. This property adjoins hla\npresent home and will make one of the\nmost deallrable fruit ranches at Mirror\nLake,\nAnglers have only opportunity to get In\na few more licks at the trout this year.\nThe season closes next Tuesday, Nov. -16.\nMonday will accordingly be the last legal\nday for taking fish.\nThe regular session of the. board of trade\nat 8.30 o'clock tonight will be one of the\nmost Important of the year, in view particularly of the resolutions which-It Is de\nsired to send up to the Associated Boards\nof Trade of Eastern British Columbia. The\nmeeting will be held at the regular hour,\n8.30 o'clock.\nELFORD'S   BOATHOUSE.\nFoot of Josephine St, Phone A148.\nFast launches for hire and sale. Warm\ncovered launch ready day or night for\nservice. Boats raised and Btored for\nwinter. Repairing and painting. Honeat\nwork at an honeat price,\nI am not connected with any local boat\ncombine.   W.   Elford, Prop.,   Box 963.\n17C-13\nWILL ARRANGE DEFICIT\nON  NATIONAL APPLE 8HOW\nVANCOUVER, B.C., Nov, 9\u2014Promoters of the recent apple show expect\nthat the financial end of the affair\nwill be satisfactorily settled through\nthe grants by the provincial auhorities\nand he Grand Trunk Pacific and Canadian Northern railways. The total expenses of the show were about 140,000\nThe gate receipts were $10,000, subscriptions by Vancouver counoll and\ntltlzens 121,000. With incidental receipts and outside subscriptions the\ntotal receipts were $36,000.\t\nSometimes people do, and suffer,\nbecause the stomaoh balks.\nAte Unwisely?\nrelieve the discomfort at once, and help digest the overload.  The lover of good\nthings may feel quite safe with a box of NA-DRU-CO Dyspepsia Tablets at hand.\nSOo. a box.   If your druggist has not stocked them yet send 50o. and we\nwill mall them, 34\nNation*! DfnmJ Okw1c\u00abI C*. *l. Cm\u00abU,Um1uJ.      .     \u25a0      .      .      MontrMl.\nOFFICIALS MEET AT\nKOOTENAY LANDING\nWill Look Into Matter of Coal Chutes\nat That Point, and A'so Barge\nService\u2014Ducks in Danger\nCapt. J. C. Gore, superintendent of the\nlake and river service; W, O. Miller, divisional superintendent; W. Main, district\nmaster mechanic, and R. Barker, chief\ntrain diapatclier, all C.P..R, local officials,\nleft yesterday afternoon in Superintendent Miller's private car for Kootenay\nLanding, where they will study traffic conditions in general, and will also consult\nwith the western division officials respecting the buildimr of coal Bhutes at Kootenay Landing for the coaling of the lake\nsteamers running into that port. The\ntransfer barge service will also be looked\nInto, and tho lalte and rail connections\ngenerally Investigated with a view to a\nquicker and more economical service.\nCapt, Gore was seen boarding tlie car\nwith all the impedimenta of a hunter, and\nit was thought that posBlbly he was going\nto give the ducks a good time around\nthe Kootenay 'Landing  flats.\nGOVERNMENT BEGIN!, ERECTION\nOF TEMPORARY BUILDINGS\nAccommodation of Patients and Guards\nof Brandon Asylum\u2014Another Patient Recaptured\n. BRANDON, Man., Nov. 9\u2014Provincial\ngovernment employees have commenced the work of erecting temporary\nbuildings near the site of the burned\nasylum for tho accommodation of patients and guards who are to ibe housed there during the period of threshing\noperations on the asylum farm. Corrals are also being built near the winter fair buildings in the centre of the\ncity where the jmtlents are now housed\nThese corrals give the patients au opportunity for exercise.*\nOne Still Missing\nBRANDON, Man., Nov. 9\u2014Wilkinson,\na patient who escaped from the asylcm\nduring the fire last Friday evening,\nhas been captured near here. Only one.\na Gallclan, Is now missing.\nKOOTENAY MEMBER\nLEAVES FOR OTTAWA\nA. S. Goodeve Says Spokane Is Taking\nRenewed Interest in Mining North\nof' Boundary.\n(Special to The Dnlly News.)\nROSSLAND, B.-C, Nov. 9\u2014A. S.\nGoodeve, M. P., returned to Rossland at\nthe latter end of last week from the\ncoast where lie. has been taking part\nln the deliberations of the Forestry\ncommission, of which he Is a member.\nThe commission, said Mr. Goodeve,\nIn an Interview, hag completed its work\nand its report will' probably be handed\nIn In the course ot a few days. Until\nIt has been given to the government\nnothing can, obviously, be made public,\nbut the commission has endeavored to\nmake It as full as possible, covering .ill\nthe points submitted to It.\nThe member for Kootenay returned\nhome by way of Spokane, and he met\na number of mining men who were Inquiring with regard to the revival in\nthe Kootenay country. Amongst others\nhe came up on the train with Mr. Fer-\nrler and Mr. Kehoe, both formerly of\nRossland, and connected with the old\nWar Eagle company. They were going\non to Nelson to look over some mining\nInterests there. They asked particularly in regard to Rossland and expressed\nthemselves as satisfied that the camp\nwould yet come into its own. Mr. Fer-\nrler Bald he had always felt that somewhere in the south belt good properties\nwould he proved. He thought it was\nunfortunate in the early days pf the\ncamp that there were not men who\nwere more familiar with mining and\nwith sufficient experience and capital\nto have developed more systematically\nthe various claims taken up. However,\nlike others whom Mr. Goodeve met, he\nthought there would probably be a\nrevival in the industry and that capital\nwhich, during the past few years lad\nbeen locked up in other enterpriser,\nwould now seek an outlet In mining\nFrom the expressed opinion of various\npeople whom he met Mr. Gondce was\nsatisfied that all that was hVia'ftrv in\norder for Rossland to share ;.i tlito \u2022\u00bb-\nvlval and get a portion of the capital\nthat 1b bound to be so invest3-1 was it\nthorough advertising of the u.Birlct. It\nwas certain that no other lo-ie miner\nIn tbe province had been so long and\nso steadily producing as those In this\ncamp.\nGood Properties Left.\nHe noticed an interview in one of the\npapers with Volney Willlnms.m who\nformerly operated in Rossland, and Mio\nfirst interested the Gooderhain-Glaok--\nstock people tn the camp and sold tlitm\nthe old Crown Point mine, in whi.i.i he\nstated that he bad been going over his\nold grounds, as he was satisfied there\nwas as good or even better property\nto be picked up In this district, at more\nreasonable prices than in the nev, er\nand much boomed districts. This ov:n-\nlon was rapidly gaining ground and\nMr. Goodeve had no doubt there would\nbe an abundance of capital offering to\ndevelop all mines of merit In Kt-ot-\nenay. It was very necessary therefore\nthat they avoided past mistakes, rnd\nwere careful not to' over-estimate\nvalues or make claims that could not\nbe substantiated. There were plenty\nof properties that had sufficient merit\nto warrant the expenditure of money\nfor their development without any undue exaggeration and he further suggested the necessity of owners of properties being reasonable In their demands for cash payments. The time\nhad passed when men would make substantial payments until they had demonstrated the value of the property.\nWas at Apple Show.\nMr. Goodeve visited the first Canadian Apple show at Vancouver, being\npresent at the opening addresses by the\nmayor of Vancouver, Premier McBrlde,\nAttorney General Bowser, and others.\nHe heard Prof. Van Deman, the greatest American apple expert, who was\nthe principal judge make the statement\nthat it was the best display he had\never seen gathered together. Everything was splendidly carried out, continued Mr, Goodeve and West Kootenay was to be heartily congratulated.\nMr. Goodeve leaves on Friday for Ottawa, as the federal parliament opens\non November 11. He expects to stay\nover at Winnipeg to meet the central\ncommittee of the Selkirk Qeutennial\nexposition.\nNO DYSPEPSIA OR\nSTOMACH DISTRESS\nSettles Your Out-of-order Stomach and\nEnds All Indigestion Five\nMinutes Later.\nThere would not be a case of Indigestion\nhere If readers who are subject to Stomach\ntrouble knew the tremendous anti-ferment\nand digestive virtue contained in Dlapepsln, This harmless preparation will digest a heavy meal without the slightest\nfuss or discomfort, and relieve the sourest, acid stomach in five minutes, besides\novercoming all foul, nauseous odors from\ntho breath.\nAsk your pharmacist to show you tho\nformula, plainly printed on each w-cent\ncase of Pape's Dlapepsln, then you will\nreadily understand why this promptly\ncures indigestion and removes such symptoms as Heartburn, a feeling like a lump\nof lead ln the stomach, Belching ot Uas\nand EructatlonB of undigested food, water\nbrash, Nausea, Headache, Biliousness and\nmany other bad symptoms; and, besides,\nyou will not need laxatives to keep your\nstomach,   liver and  intestines   clean    and\nIf vonr Stomach Is sour and full of gas,\nor your food doesn't digest, and your\nmeals don't seem to fit, why not get a\nSO-cent case from your drugglBt and make\nlifo worth living? Absolute relief from\nStomaoh misery and perfect digestion ot\nanything you eat Is sure to follow five\nminutes after, and, besides, one case is\nsufficient to cure a whole family of such\ntrouble.\nSurely, a harmless, inexpensive preparation like Dlapepsln,\/ which will always,\neither at daytime or during night, relieve\nyour Btomaoh misery and digest your\nmeals, is about as bandy and valuable a\nthing as you could have In tbe house.\nIt wilt pay ihe\nkep an eje on our\nwe're always the first\ntions.\no\nv\n\u00a3\nR\nC\nO\nA\nT\nS\nman that dresses well to\nToggery Department, for\nto'show any late product\n' Overcoats, i just   twice\n\u2022\"\u2022\u25a0asses. \"\nthe range we have'ever\nshown.\nWe're sure that you\ncan find here, sir, \"just\nyour overcoat,\" whether\nyour taste be quiet or\nbreezy.\nIf you are particular\nabout your overcoat come\nto the store that sells the\nbest overcoats made.\nOvercoats\nin all the correct models, In Ker\nseys,\nOxfords and    GrayB\nmix-\ntures\nin aU the weaves that look\nwell\nat\n$15,\n$16.50, $18,\nto $25\n$20\nTHE HUB\nFurnishing House\nEmory &WaIley\nAPPLE SHOWS\nThe Great Northern Railway will make special fares for the following apple shows\nCanadian National Apple Show\nVANCOUVER, B.C., OCT. 31 TO  NOV. 5.\nTickets on sale Oct. 2S to Nov. 2 Inclusive. Final return limit\nNov. 0.\nFare Nelson to Vancouver and Return, $18.10\nFor bona fide exhibitors or persons who are to act as Judges,\ntickets will be sold Oct. 21 to O ct. 29 Inclusive, good returning until\nNov. 12.\nGood connections are made at Spokane. Wash., for Vancouver.\nThird Annual National Apple Show\nSPOKANE, WASH., NOV. 14 TO   19   1910.\nTickets on sale November 12  to 18 inclusive.    Final return limit\nNov. 24.\nFare Nelson to Spokane, Wash., and Return, $8.80\nFor further Information call or write.\nW.  E.  KETCHUM,\nCity Ticket Agent, Nelson, B.C.\nThere la generally a cold spot in\nevery home\u2014it may be a room or passage which the heat from the furnace\nor stove does not reach.\nTo place another coal stove with all\nits accompanying nuisances is out of\nthe question; where and what is the\nremedy? Has it ever occurred to you\nthat the temperature of that x\u00bbld spot\ncan be immediately raised by the use\nof a small gas heater. No dirt, no\ntrouble, one match and a scratch and\nbehold comfort reigns supreme.\nJust think it over and then tell your\ntrouble to the gas man.\nM. Hawrycz & Co\nLadies and Gentlemen\u2014We do\npacking of furniture and pianos,\nfirst class, and we make kitchen\ntables at very low prices.\nCall at 417 1-2 Hall St. or tele,\nphone  438.\nWe Will Buy\n1 South African Warrant ... .$710.00\n2000 Rambler  2S\n2000 Royal Collieries 25\n10 Granby     Offer\n100 Western Coal & Coke ....     1.30\nWe Will Sell\n6 Great West Permanent. .$127.50\n1600 ITcGlllIvray 2414\n308 Kootenay Jam Co      1.00\n2 Nelson Skating Rink  Bid\nE. B.  McDermid\nBaker Street Nelson, B. C.\n \u2022ppp\nPAGE EIGHT\ntht Bail? Jlrtw\nTHURSDAY .\nNOVEMBER 10\nRead This\nFor sale cheap\nCar Line Lots\nAll Cleared\nPrice now only $200 per lot.\nEasy terms on application.\nCnasiule, Miwfcley & IVy\nBox 626 Nelaon, B. C.\n\"Unequalled for General Uee\"\nW. P. TIERNEY, General Sales Agent\nNelaon, B.C.\nCan shipped to all railway points.\nChest\nProtectors\nRed Felt, Chamois Lined,\n60c., 60c., 75c. and $1 eaoh.\nRed Felt, Cfcamois Unfed,\n85c, $1.50, $1.75 and $2.25 each.\nChamois Vests, $2 each\nOur Wild Cherry, Spruce and\n\u25a0 Tar Cough Syrup will relieve\nthat cough.\nMall orders filled promptly.\nWm. Rutherford\nDruggist      Nelson, B.C.\nNelson Opera House\nOne Night Only\nMONDAY, NOVEMBER Uth\nThe Royal Welsh\nLadies* Choir\nMADAM HUGHES-THOMAS\nConductor\n25 LADIES 25\nfrom the Land of Song\nPrloes $1.50, $1, 75c., and 50c.\nSale at Pool Drug Wednesday.\nTONIGHT\nA White Lie\nGirls of the Ghetto.\nThe Duel.\nCattle Show.\nChildren 10c, Adults 15e.\nStock Fish\nGenuine Norwegian\n20c per lb.\nBuy early, allow time for preparation.\nC. A. BENEDICT\nGrocer\nKELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\n(Additional local newa notes on page 7.)\nlira. J. B. Annable will receive ln honor\nof her daughter Pauline this afternoon\nand evening.\nJohn B. Wlnlaw, the well known lumberman of Wlnlaw, is a guest at the Hume.\nL. K. Larson, of the Standard 'Furniture\ncompany, returned last night from a Ave\nweeks' trip that embraced New York, Toronto, Chicago, Minneapolis and St, Paul.\nJ. Fagan and J. McDonald, charged ln\n(he city pollco court under the vagrancy\nact, were yesterday morning taken to the\n' international boundary line by Emigration\nOfficer O'Neil of Waneta. They are being\ndeported  aa   undesirables.\nThe Ladled Aid of 9t. Paul's Presbyterian church are making arrangements\n(or a pie social to be held on Friday, Nov.\n18, and are Inviting the co-operation of all\nfriends.\nA meeting for women wilt be held tomorrow at 3.30 p.m. In the parlors of St.\nPaul's Presbyterian church, at which Rev.\nDr. Patterson will give an address on\n\"Lines of Christian Service.\" All women\nare  Invited. \t\nThere was a gratifying attendance at\nthe evangcllntic meeting in the Presbyterian church yesterday evening in spite\nof the very unfavorable weather. Rev,\nW. PatterBdn's address on \"FltnesB for\nChristian Service\" made a deep Impression.\nThe children's meeting In the afternoon\nwas well attended. At both the afternoon\nand evening meetings Prof. Weavers\nmusical ability waa manifested,  both in\nPersonal Christmas Cards\nThat la Christmas cards with your\ngreetings and your name printed on\nthem. The News haa a nloe line of\ntheae In neat designs, whloh they\nare printing aa desired at reasonable\nprices. Now la your time to put\nyour order In before the nub, com-\nmencea. Samples may be seen at\nThe Newa office.\nThe News Publishing Co.,\nLimited\nNelaon, B. C.\nUS Baker Street.\nFOR SALE\nA comfortable residence In a\ngood position close to the center of city. Contains four bedrooms and. bath room, dining\nroom, parlor, kitchen, pantry,\nbasement, open fire place and\nelectric light. Price 12625.\nTerms halt cash, balance to\narrange, or (2525 cash.\nH.&M. BIRD\nNelson, B.C\nAuction\nNever mind going to the auction; we are closing out our complete\nstock of hardware, all new goods, at greatly reduced prices. The\nwhole stock must be cleared out at once.\nRanges, Heating Stoves, Carpenters' Tools,\nBuilders'Hardware and Household Specialties\nDon't forget we bare the finest line of stoves ln the city; ask your\nneighbor,\nRemember, 10 per cent off for cash.\nJ. H. Ashdown Hardware Co.,\nLimited Nelson Branch\nPotatoes\nWe have just unloaded a car of Ashcroft   Potatoes.    They are\nextra fine stock.  We would advise you to lay ln your winter supply.\nJ. A. IRVING & Co.\nTHE GREAT SUPPLY HOUSE\nPHONE 161\nsolo singing and ln eliciting song from the\nchoir and audience. Dr. Patterson expressed himself as especially well pleased\nwith the intelligent answers of the boys\nand girls to questions on scripture Btories,\nand with their orderly behaviour. Such\na compliment from a visitor reflects credit\non the work of both public school and\nSunday school teachers.\nThe closing service of the series of evening evangelistic meetings in iSt. Paul's\nPresbyterian church will be held tonight,\ncommencing at 8 o'clock. The address will\nbe given by Rev. Dr. Patterson, and Prof.\nWeaver will sing and conduct. This last\nopportunity of hearing these able men\nshould not be missed. A long time may\nelapse before they again visit  Nelson.\nThe members of the (L.O.T.M. are requested to meet In tlie K. of P. hall at\n3 o'clock this afternoon.\nDavid S. Hogan wHteB from Fort Du\nPont, Delaware City, to the chief of police\nasking for information concerning I-eonard\nB -Hogan, who was at one time In Nelson.\nThe police state that the man referred\nto lived here for some time, engaging in\nthe shoemaking business, but that he lett\nNelson fully five years ago.\nA. B. Bremner, proprietor of the Sheep\nCreek hotel. Is In the city.\nThe regular meeting of Pythian SlBters\nwill be held ln the K. of JP. hall this evening at 8 o'clock sharp. All officers and\nmembers are requested to attend as there\nwill be Initiation, followed by a social evening.\nArrangements are all completed fpr the\ndance whloh is to be held tonight in the\nEagles hall, under the auspices of the\nEagles. Dancing will commence at J\no'clock, Wilkinson's orchestra in attendance.\nA Vancouver resident sojourning In the\ncity for n few days remarked yesterday\nevening that the combination of a misty\nrain, the rumbling of street cars, and the\nsiren whistles of the incoming steamers,\nmade him feel quite \"at home.\nA meeting of the South African Veterans' association will be held In the Boy\nScouts club-room, K.W.C. block, tomorrow evening at 8.80 o'cock. William\nHolmes, the secretary, will be glad to receive the names ot any persons who are\neither In possession of war medals, or\nhave completed 10 years' Bervlce with the\ncolors. As there la Important business to\ntransact, members and intending members\nare asked to make a special effort to be\npresent.\nAid. Rutherford haa in his store window\nthree first prize ribbons, two seconds, and\na third, which ho won at the National\nApple show at Vancouver.\n3. W. Amhery of Victoria, British Columbia manager for Hiram Walker &\nBoob, arrived in the olty last night from\nFernie, and Is a guest at the Hume.\nC. Nowlman, accompanied by Mra. Nord-j\nman, reached the city last evening from'\nSandon, where he, has been employed for\nsome months at the Eureka mine. \u00bbr.\nNordman is returning to Moyle to assume\nthe duties of foreman for the Consolidated\ncompany at the St. Eugene mine, taking\nthe place of Harry Gamble, who is transferred to the Sullivan mine at Kimberley.\nThe difference of cipher In the reference\nto the Kilo gold mine on Lemon creek\nconsiderably reduced the tonnage of ore\nspoken of as blocked out. The estimate\nmade by the engineer is 20,000 blocked out\nin the workings, whloh Include altogether\nover 2,000 feet of tunnel work and raises.\nThe monthly session of the University\nclub will be held on Saturday night at 8\no'clock, In the board room of the public\nschool building. The customary invitation\nIs extended to friends of the club to be\npresent and take part In the discussions.\nAt the Theatres.\nOne of the most remarkable exhibitions\nof choral singing ever heard in the city\nwas given last night by the Royal Welsh\nLadles' Choir at the Windsor Hall before\nan excellent audience, which, while by no\nmeans so large as the concert merited,\ndisplayed an enthusiastic appreciation\nwhich steadily Increased as the urogram\nproceeded, says the Western Mall ln re-,\nferrlng to the choir, which will appear at\nthe Nelson opera house on Monday, Nov.\n14. Various singing organizations from the\nold country have visited Canada In recent\nyears, but the Welsh ladies easily excelled\nany of them, not merely In the perfection\nof their chorus singing, but in their solo\nwork as well. The choir In the ensemble\nwork sang with the precise perfection of\nan organ under a master's touch, every\nsection nicely balanced, and the voices\ncarefully selected so that they blended as\nthough all \"art of the same Instrument.\nNOVEMBER\nThe Topaz\nNonth\nWe bare a good selection of tine Golden and Spanish Tops* t moderate prloes, Our best specimens average from $3 to 110. We have a\ntow gams In our windows.\nPrepare for Winter Reading\nYes, winter will soon be here with Its long erenlngs and doubtless\nyou are planning to do a lot ot reading. How about your eyes? Don't\nwait until midwinter, but prepare for tbe strain that la sure to come.\nWe are Eye Specialists and de our work upon scientific principles.\nJ    fa    D.,>\u00ab\u00abi.J> MANUFACTURING JEWELLER\n. vs. t aicnaUQc    watchmaker and optician\nDry Foot\nFootwear\nThat Is what you want Just\nnow. That Is what we offer\nyou.\nWAftRPROOF\nSHOES!\nNothing But the Beit\nTHE ROYAL\nFOOTWEAR   SPECIALISTS\nR. ANDREW Prop.\nAt the same time they sang with a verve\nand abandon rarely heard, evidently enjoying the singing us much as the audience\ndelighted In listening to it. In fact, although there are only twenty voices in\nthe chorus, they produced a volume of\nsound that fairly made the hall ring. The\nsopranos were particularly fine, with the\nbright, clear voices that are seldom heard\napart from the old country choirs, while\nthey were balanced by an exceptional collection of contraltos,;\nSome delightful subjects were shown at\nthe Gem theatre last, evening, which .will\nalso be repeated at tonight's performance.\nAmong them were, \"Annie,\" a good Imp\nfeature; \"For a Western Girl,\" one of\nthose fine .Bison cowboy pictures; \"A Well\nGamed Meal,\" and a most laughable Item\nln \"A True Likeness Guaranteed.\"\nThe bill at the Empire theatre this evening is a strong one. \"Girls of the Ghetto,\"\na fine Tanhouser mibject. Others are, \"The\nDuel,\" \"A White Eta,\" \"At the'Cattle\nShow.\"\nMATRIMONIAL.\nThe Church of Mary Immaculate was\nA Few of Our Listings\nCarbonate St.\u2014A well built, neat eight roomed house with four bedrooms.   Two good lots,   Easy terms.   Price 14500.\nStanley 8t.\u2014Five roomed house and .two lots, planted with fruit\ntrees, with good woodshed and chicken run on tho premises. Small\ncash payment and balance monthly payments.   Price 11600.\nObservatory 8t,\u2014Six roomed house and two lots. House contains\nhot water furnace and all modern conveniences. Terms very easy.\nPrice $2400.\nEdgewood Ave.\u2014Three room cottage In good location with garden.\nTerms that win appeal to anyone looking for a borne which can be\nhad for paying rent,  price $800.\nCall and let us show you some ot our other listings. We have\nthem to suit almost all requirements.\nE. B. McDermid\n' Baker Street\nNelson, B.C\nHeintz Sweet Mixed\nPICKLES\n60c. per quart\nSweet  Gherkins\n50c. per quart\nPHONE 223\nStewart & Co.\nIf It's from Stewart's it's good.\nPOND'S\nBe sure and send In your order at\nonce for wild hay, first-class for\nfeeding cattle. To people on the lake\nbetween Kootenay Landing and Nelson wanting a quantity, kindly advise me at once, as this hay will be >\nbrought in on a barge and we can\ndeliver whatever is required wben we\ncome through. We also have In\natock a lot of alfalfa hay. Kindly\norder your winter supply at once before hay goes up In price.\nS. P. Pond & Co.\nFront St.\nNelson, B.C.\nPhone 238\nYou Are Invited\nTo drop Into our parlors and\n. have afternoon tea   A nice cup\nof tea and some of our delicious\ncake Is Just the thing you need\nthese autumn afternoons.\nWe also serve hot drinks of\nvarious kinds.\nChoqtiette Bros.\nBaker Street\nPhone 268\nthe scene of a pretty wedding at 8\nO'clock yesterday morning, when, In the\npresence of a large number of friends,\nAngus Seymour MacAulay and Miss Ida\nlullen exchanged vows at the altar, the\nceremony being performed by Rev.\nFather Althott. Tho groom was supported by bis brother, Archibald MacAulay, and the bride by Miss Mary\nBlnish. The ceremony was followed by\na wedding breakfast at the Hume, at\nwhich Immediate friends of the contracting parties were guests. The\nhappy couple left by the forenoon train\nfor Rossland, en route to Spokane, The\npopular young couple will return to\nNelson next week to take up their residence.\nMlnard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria.\nAPPLY FOR NEW TRIAL\nFOR GUNNER ALLEN\nraw-lnt to Th. Ds'ly News.)\nVANCOUVER, B.C., Nov. 9\u2014An application1 to the department of justice\nat Ottawa Is being made for a new\ntrial for Gunner Allen, who was convicted at the last assises here of the\nwilful murder of Capt. Peter Hlllston\nfor whloh crime he Is now under sentence ot death, the execution being\nfixed tor Deo. 2. The ground taken\nby Mr. Savle In bis application for' a\nnew trial Is tbat certain evidence was\nImproperly read at tbe trial, which,\nalthough not admitted by tbe Judge,\nwas nevertheless heard iby the Juryjl\nwhich may very possibly have been influenced thereby.\nMlnard's Liniment for sal* everywhere.\n\"B&K; Goods\nB oVK Rolled Oats, Diamond Roll 4\nOat, (premium), B * K Oatmeal, BOS\nand 10c, 8 1 K Wheat Flakes, to and\n60s, Canadian Whe-t Flakea (premium), B * K Rolled Wheat, \u2022 lb.\nsicks, Caverhlll'a Barley Flakes, .is\nand 3s, B * K Peameal In 10a, At all\n\u2022racers.\nThe Brackman-Ker\nHilling Co. limited\nKarnak Brass\nWe bare Just opened op so methfcn* saw ana novel ln tbe line ot\nKarnak Brass.   Just the thing tor Wedding, Birthday or  Xmas Gifts.\nComprising Fern ifots, Jard mures, Vasts, Tobacco Jars, Smokers'\nSett, Desk Sate, Crumb Trays, Hat Pin Ho'dere, Card Receivers, Nap-\n.kin Rings, Cleckst.Candelabras, Msn Creaks, Casserole anal. Pudding\nDishes, etc\nSee our line ot Oak and Tilt Tea Tray*.\nAll toe latest novelties.  Come and look over our stock.\nNELSON HARDWARE CO.\nPhone 15. 602 Baker Street\nNew\nNew\nCalifornia Walnuts\n30c Pound\nSmyrna Figs\n25c Pound Sweet Apple Cider 25c Bottle\nTHE BELL TRADING CO.T\nThe Up-to-date Grocers. Baker Street.\nHAMILTON WINNIPEG\n\u25a0\u2014\u2014 Just received another carload of \u2014\u2014\nWOVALOID\nRUBBER ROOFING-\nWe guarantee every square of It. and the pHoe is lower than any otner\nhigh class rooting.'   Also plain Building and Tar Paper always ln stock.\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co. Ltd.\nWholesale and Retail\nTORONTO\nNelaon B. C.\nVANCOUVER\nTHE STORE OF QUALITY\nWHOLESALE AND RETAIL\nSPECIAL PRICES FOR CA8H BUYERS.\nCheese, very finest, per lb $.18\nBreakfast  Bacon, per lb 26\nFinest  Hams,  per lb 14\nEkes. 3 dozen for 1,00\nCarnation Wheat  Flakes,  pkg 46\nDr. Price's B'kg Powder, 12-08. tin  .40\nFinest  Rice, 4 lbs.  for 25\nSago.  S  lbs.  for       .16\nTapioca, 3 lbs. for ,  .25\nMOTTO:   SAVE\nHour, any kind, for.... .....SI.*)\nChoice Creamery Butter, lb SS ,\nChoice Creamery Solids for tt t* 31\nFinest Seeded Raisins, per lb. pkg .10\nBaking Soda,  Mb.  pkg for..\nCowens' Cocoa,  14-lb. tin..\nTomatoes, per tin \u2022\u2022 ..\u00bb..,.... .**\u25a0\nOld  Dutch Cleanser tin . \u00bb\nColdyka Baking Powder, 1 lb 25\nSOME MONET.\nftp-Bom A.S.Horswill TelePhonel\u00b0\n1\n\u00a3&\u00a3\u00bb\nIf\nr\ni\nIfUi\nSp\nTjggg*\nAre You Interested?\nIn the matter ot writing paper, it so we would be pleased to have\nyou come In and look over our lines, aa we consider our paper and our\nprices the best ln B.C.\nCanada Drag & Book Co. Ltd.\nNelson's Kodak Supply House. Box 502\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_1910_11_10","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\/1.0383460","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":"1910-11-10 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":"1910-11-10 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":""}]}