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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":" \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\n0\nPtrges\u2014Sabscrtbo for ca\nTils News. Per MoHh j|JG\nito If*\ntn\nneMrNnwOsitlfMAds. I\nera Winers. Try Ont, per word |C\nVOL.*\nNELSON  B. C WEDNESDAY   MORNING, SEPTEMBER 22,   IW\n. NO. 112\nDRYLANDS\nMeets With Enthusiastic Reception at Sydney\nREAFFIRMS STATEMENT\nDECLARES THAT COOK'S ESQUIMAUX STATE THAT COOK WAS\nNEVER OUT OP SIOHT OF LAND\n'\u2014COMMANDER BARTLETT'S\nTRIBUTE\nSYDNEY, Sept 21 \u2014 Commander\nPeary will accept no Invitations to receptions and no public honors until the\nquestion of the discovery ot the north\npole haB been decided by scientific authorities. This he made known tonight\nin the following statement which he\ngave out for publication:\n\"Acting upon the advice of general\nThomas H. Hubbard and Herbert L.\nBiidgeman, president and secretary respectively of the Peary Arctic club, I\niwleb. to express my thanks to friends\ntor their kind offers and Invitations,\nand also beg to say that I have decided\nnot to accept any Invitations to receptions or any ovations until the controversy Is settled by competent authorities.\"\nSYDNEY, N.S., Sept 21\u2014Commander\nRobert E. Peary, after a succesful quest\nfor the north pole; sailed Into Sydney\ntoday on board the steamer Roosevelt.\nThe explorer's wife waa the first one\nto greet him as the Roosevelt, after an\n.absence of over a year, steamed Into\nfiydne.y harbor under a brilliant sun and\n-on a cloudless day. The explorer and\nhis ship we're given a hearty marine\nwelcome by the ships in the harbor.\nAt an early hour this morning when\nthe Roosevelt was still edging her way\nalong the Cape Breton coast, the steam\nyacht Sheelah, owned by James Ross,\npresident of the Dominion Coal company, put to sea carrying Mrs. Peary,\nher daughter, Miss Marie, and little\nRobert E. Peary, Jr., and a party of\nfriends altogether to greet the returning explorer.\nThe meeting, between commander\nPeary and his wife took place some\nmiles north of Low Point, the entrance\nto the harbor. The Sheelah ran alongside the Roosevelt and Mrs. Peary called a greeting to her husband while the\nmembers of both the welcoming party\nnnd the crews of both vessels cheered\nloudly. The Roosevelt and the Sheelah then continued on their courses together for Sydney.\nCommander Peary had decorated his\nship tor the occasion and ln addition\nto the flags of, the United States and\nthe dominion of Canada, which were\nflung to the breeze, the Roosevelt Hew\nthe burgee of the New York yacht club\nand the flag of the Peary Arctic club.\nMeanwhile the news spread that the\nRoosevelt was only 20 miles away and\ngroups of people gathered at the waterfront to take part In the welcome. The\nday was perfect and the harbor present.\ned a beautiful spectacle as all manner\nof water craft, yachts, sail boats and\nmotor boats, displaying their colors,\nmade their way down the bay to escort the Roosevelt to her dock. Business ln Sydney came to an end, stores\nclosed, the hotels were emptied of their\nguests and the crowd on the waterfront was augmented rapidly In numbers..\nAs the Sheelah drew alongside the\nRoosevelt out at sea, commander Peary\ncame to the rail and was greatly surprised'to see his wife end children\nwaving their greetings. In reply the\nexplorer waived his slouch hat over\nMb head and called to them to come\non board. A few words of welcome\nwere exchanged while the boat was being lowered. Mrs. Peary, Miss Peary\nand the little boy were rowed over to\nthe Roosevelt In the meantime commander Peary had retired to the cabin.\nMrs. Peary and the children boarded\nthe Roosevelt and made their way\nacross the deck to greet and welcome\nhusband and father in private. The\nSheelah pnt on full steam and returned\nto Sydney while the Roosevelt came\nalong at slower speed.\nThe American flag waving at the\npeak of the main gaff of the Roosevelt\nattracted .much attention. It bore a\ndiagonal white band on which were the\nwords \"North Pole,\" in black letters.\nA correspondent of the Associated\nPress boarded the Roosevelt at North\nSydney and received from commander\nPeary a new version of the dispute, regarding Cook's supplies at Annatok.\nThe explorer's attention was called to\nthe statement received by wireless telegraph from Dr. Frederick A. Cook, on\nboard the steamer Oscar If, declaring\nthat the Eskimos at Annatok Informed\nPeary that Cook waa long since dead.\nPeary was asked It he entertained this\nopinion and said \"No.\" On the contrary\nhe had left supplies at Etah In case, as\nmight well happen, Dr. Cook should\nreturn there from the Ice without food\niiid Incur the risk of serious privation.\nWhen asked If he had any comment\nto make on the statement of Prltchard,\nthe cabin boy on board the Roosevelt,\nthat Dr. Cook had told him he had\nreached the north pole, commander\nPeary replied: '1 have nothing to any\non this subject at this time.\"    '\n\"What about the -story that the two\nEskimos who went north with Cook admitted to you that they were never out\nof sight of land?\" commander Peary\nwaa asked.\n\"In my first message,'.' Peary replied,\n\"I stated that the two Eskimos who\nwent with Cook declared that he was\nnever out of sight of land and that I\nreaffirm and stand by.\"\nThe Roosevelt was greeted by a large\ncrowd and about 2000 school children\nwaving Canadian flags. The police had\nto clear the way for them through the\ncrowds of 10,000 people that filled the\nsquare while they were being driven\nto the hotel. At the hotel commander\nPeary was the sole center of a reception, and standing on the steps1 of his\ncarriage he shook hands with scores\nof people. Mayor Richardson read an\naddress .of welcome from the citizens\nof Sydney congratulating commander\nPeary. The commander replying 'expressed his appreciation of the welcome\nextended him. Eleven times, he said,\nhe had sailed from Sydney for the\nnorth, once he had returned with the\n\"furthest north\" and now he came back\nwith the pole Itself. Three cheers for\ncommander Peary were given. Peary\nproposed three cheers for commander\nBartlett and the crew of the Roosevelt\nand the crowd roared Its approval.\nBartlett called upon to speak, said that\nafter eight years with Peary It gave\nhim great pleasure to say two things,\nfirst that ln following Peary J,e followed a splendid man. and second thut\nPeary had reached the north pole. At\nthe conclusion of the handshaking and\ngreetings commander Peary retired to\nhis room.\nTRAIL GETSWATER RIGHT\nGOVERNMENT AGENT  DECIDES  IN\nFAVOR OF CITY'S RECORD\nMUNICIPALITY   TO   GET   SUPPLY\nFROM CAMBRIDGE CREEK\nAn important water right case was\nheard here yesterday before Harry\n\u25a0Wright, government agent, Involving as\nIt did the right of the city of Trail to\ntake water for city purposes from Cambridge creek, two miles from the city.\nThe city's record was attacked by the\nViolin Power company, which claimed a\nprior location, but after hearing th\u00a9\nevidence Mr. Wright decided in favor\nof the city.\nThe decision Is a most important one\nfor on Friday the people of Trail will\nvote on a bylaw to raise $25,000 to\nbring water into the city from Cam*\nbridge creek for domestic and fire protection purposes;'- Had1 the 'decision\nheen in favor of the company it might\nhave seriously affected the city's plans\nfor securing a water supply, but this\ndifficulty has now been removed. It Is\nthe Intention of the council, If the by*\nlaw passes, to proceed at once with the\nwork and It Is hoped to have the new\nsystem In operation before the snow\nflies. The city at present is served by\na private company, the Trail Waterworks company, tout It is generally felt\nthat the growth of Trail has been such\nthat the present system has outlived\nits usefulness and that the time is,\ntherefore, opportune for the installation\nof a municipal water system, which\n\u25a0shall be in every way modern and capable with extensions from time to time\nof supplying the city for at least many\nyears to come. The main pipes will\nall be eight inches In diameter with the\nlaterals six inches.\nFollowing the city's decision to install\na municipal system, its officials placed\na record on Cambridge creek. The Violin Power company, however, had\nplaced a record on Cambridge creek In\n1903 for the purposes of supplying water for Rossland. The company for\nvarious reasons never made use of this\nrecord but recently disposed of Its Interests to the Church Lumbering company, which has a mill on Cambridge\ncreek. It was the intention to utilize\nthe water of the creek for flumlng\nlumber down. The Church company, it\nwas shown yesterday, had acquired\ntheir rights of the VlolinLake company\nsubsequent to the city of Trail placing\na record on the water and it was also\ncontended the water was to be used tor\na purpose other than that for which\nthe record was originally granted. The\nmatter, therefore, resolved Itself Into a\nquestion of priority of claim as between\nthe city and the Church interests. After\ntaking into consideration all the points\nadvanced by the various Interests represented Mr. Wright decided in favor\nof the city.\nIn the proceedings the jelty of Trail\nwas represented by R. S. Lennie of this\ncity and J. A. Macdonald, K.C. ot Rossland, while C. R, Hamilton, K.C. of\nRossland appeared for Mr. Church and\nthe Violin Lake Power company and A.\nM. Johnson of this city for the Consolidated Mining & Smelting company,\nwhich has water rights in the vicinity.\nJames H. Schofield was also present In\nsupport of the city's application.\n\u25a0 Suit for Slander\nST. JOHN, Sept, 21\u2014James Lowell,\nM.P.P., is suing Dr. H. Gray, a prominent conservative of alrvllle for slander. It Is alleged that during the election campaign Gray said Lowell had\nsold himself to the street railway company. Gray denies thiB and brought\nthe matter before the court.\n0PENSJ0DAY\nNelson's Annual fruit Fair\nis Now Ready\nITS SUCCESS IS ASSURED\nNUMBER OF EXHIBITS 18 LARGEST\nON RECORD\u2014GOOD DISPLAYS\nIN THE MAIN BUILDING-GOOD\nPROGRAM THIS AFTERNOON-\nBASEBALL A FEATURE\n) OPENING OF THE FAIR \u00ab\ni     The formal opening of Nelson's t\n\u25a0 seventh annual fruit fair will take <\n< place at 1 o'clock this afternoon, <\ni James H. Schofield, M. P. P., of- \u25a0\n> ficiatlng,    The complete program <\n1 for the day is: <\n> 8 a. mv\u2014Judging starts. j\n\u2022 1 p. m.\u2014Formal opening. <\n< 2 p. m.\u2014Free exhibition In front >\n\u2022 of the grandstand. \u2022\n\u2022 2:30   p.   m.\u2014The   horse . races i\ni start. i\n\u2022 2:45 p. m.\u2014Baseball game, Net- !\nson vs. Phoenix. <\n8 p. m.\u2014Free exhibition In front i\n< of the grandstand. ' <\nForestry Commission at Coast\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 21 \u2014 Hon. Mr.\n\u25a0Fulton, chairman of the forestry commission returned this morning from the\nInterior. Mr. Goodeve, M.P., has returned from Grand Forks to Rossland\nand A. C. Flumerfelt, the other commissioner, went east to Coleman and\nLethbrldge on private business.\nAt the exhibition building everything\nis in readiness for the opening of the\nseventh annual Nelson Fruit Fair by\nJames H. Schofield, M.P.P. at 1 o'clock\nthis afternoon. The judges wilt commence their duties at 8 o'clock this\nmorning and It is expected that they\nwill have completed their task by about\nno'-m,\nThat the exhibition; will surpass\neverything of Its nature ever attempted\nIn the interior of British Columbia,\nis now assured and judging by the completeness of the various exhibits the\nfair will undoubtedly be a complete\nsuccess in every way.\n' The fruit and mineral displays, of\ncourse, form the most important feature\ntn the exhibition although all the other\nsections will prove most Interesting.\nThe mineral exhibit, which 1b tn\ncharge of W. H. Moore, consists of the\nfinest display of ores of all kinds ever\ngathered together in Kootenay for exhibition purposes and will undoubtedly\nattract much attention. The Sheep\ncreek camp is especially well represented while the board of trade exhibit\nwhich was Bhown at the Canadian National exhibition in Toronto recently\nformB part of the display. The larp;e\npanorama photographs presented to the\nboard by L. A, Campbell, manager of\nthe West Kootenay Power & Light\ncompany, adorn the display. Mineral\nsamples from almost every mine in the\nKootenay are found in the exhibit.\nThe numerous booths are now all\nfitted up and several firms have exercised great Ingenuity in preparing an\nexhibit that would not only asslBt In\nadding to the attractiveness of the fair,\nbut that will undoubtedly have a good\neffect from an advertising standpoint\nThe booths are occupied by the city\nelectrical department, Mason & Risen\nPiano company, Nelson Brewing company, J. S, McGregor, J. Ludwlg, Kootenay Jam company, Dave Small and\ncompany, Canada Drug & Book company, Singer Sewing Machine company,\nNelson Iron Works, E. J. Campbell and\nthe Women's Hospital aid.\nEntries this year are much larger\nthan usual and keen competition will\nreign. The following Is a list of the\nnumber of entries made In each section:\nSection   A, poultry, 109; section   B,\nfruit, 630; section C, vegetables, 209;\nsection D, field produce, 31; section E,\ndairy nroduce, 3; section F, home baking, 152; section G, preserved   fruits,\njams, etc., 80; section I, floral, 83; section J, painting, photo., pyro., 37; sec* i\ntlon K, lace   work,   embroidery,   etc.,'\n126, and section L, work by children j\nunder 17 years, 27, making a total of\n1,450.\nThe baseball game at 2:30,this afternoon between Phoenix and Nelson will\nprobably be a most Interesting game.\nThe following wilt be the lineup of the\nNelson team: Raye, catcher; Nelson,\npitcher; Steel, lb.; Murphy, 2b,; Sturgeon, 3b.; A. Bishop, s.s.; H. Bishop,\nl.r,; Houston, c.f.; Lapolnte, r.f. Newltt,\nBpare. The Phoenix team has been\nstrengthened and interesting ball can\nbe looked for.\nThe foot races are attracting keen\nattention. The following events will\n.be contested: Flve-mlte, 220 yards and\n.100 yards, open to amateurs and professionals.\nThe outside attractions will easily\nequal those of former years and promise to be moat interesting. The following will perform at 2 and 8 p, m.\ndally In front of the grandstand: La\nFoletta, the lady gymnast; McLlnn\nbrothers, watch the Dutchman; Bot-\ntomley troupe, tho world's premier\naerialists, and Leora in his high dive\nand slide for life.\nThere are four district exhibits for\nthe Shaughnessy cup and $60 donated\nby the fair.. The districts are NelBon,\nKaslo, Slocan and Arrow Lakes, while\nthere are two entries for the Johnstone trophy.\nSHIPSJREWS\nVancouver Shipping Master\nRaises Interesting Point\nREFUSES SHIP'S PAPERS\nMU8T HAVE FULL CREW BEFORE\nLEAVING PORT-CANNOT FILL\nROSTER AT SOUND PORTS-\nGRANT TO BURRARD POWER\nCOMPANY\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Sept. 21\u2014Shipping Master Wylle, recently appointed,\nhas raised an Interesting question, the\nsettlement ot which by the Ottawa\nauthorities may put an end to the\nquestion of vessels leaving port to\ntill crews at sound ports, concerning\nwhich much complaint has been made,\nthrough alleged crimping there by certain parties. Wylle this morning refused clearance to the British ship\nCeltic Monarch, bound for Seattle, with\nseven men shorter than the crew, on\nthe ground that a vessel for a foreign\nport must have a full complement. The\ncaptain appealed to Ottawa, but to\nsave delay finally shipped the balance\nof the crew, obtaining (papers. Wylle\nsays he will continue to press the\npoint until Ottawa definitely states\nwhether vessels may leave for sound\nports short-handed, obtaining men\nthere. If Ottawa authorities uphold\nWylie It will mean the resuscitation of\nVancouver as a sailors' headquarters.\nThe Burrard Power company has received a dominion grant of 25,000\nminers' Inches of water on the Llllooet\nriver. The grant was previously made\nby the province, but as the river is In\na railway belt the present grant was\nmade to cover the situation created'by\nthe decision of the privy council on the\ncontrol of the water rights of the district. The company has several offers\nfor rights from power companies and\nthe city has an option for power and\nwater supply purposes. If these are\nnot carried out the Burrard Power\ncompany will develop the rights Independently. \u201e\u201e\n -\u2014i\u2014+\u25a0 fflfr'_*_i _-.-. _\u2022-_-_-\n\u2022 WILL VISIT AINSWORTH CAVE \u2022\n\u2022   \u2022\n\u2022 It has been arranged that Earl \u2022\n\u2022 Grey will visit the famous cave at \u2022\n\u2022 Alnsworth on the way to Nelson \u2022\n\u2022 from Toby creek, where he Is at \u2022\n\u2022 present camping with the count- \u2022\n\u2022 ess and party. His excellency and \u2022\n\u2022 party wilt come by way of Hamll \u2022\n\u2022 creek   to   Kootenay   lake,   from \u2022\n\u2022 where they will take the boat for \u2022\n\u2022 Alnsworth, where they will spend \u2022\n\u2022 Monday next, arriving In  Nelson \u2022\n\u2022 that evening.   The following day \u2022\n\u2022 Earl Grey will address the mem- \u2022\n\u2022 bers of the  Nelson   and  District \u2022\n\u2022 Canadian club at a luncheon to be \u2022\n\u2022 held in the armory. \u2022\nDUTCH TAKE NEW YORK\nForeign   Representatives   for   Hudson-\nFulton Celebration Arrive\nNEW YORK, Sept. 21\u2014The old town\nof New Amsterdam, better known nowadays as New York, was again Invaded\nby the Dutch today. The invaders\nwere the Gedachtenlsvlerlng\u2014in plain\nEnglish the Netherlands Hudson-Fulton commntee--who arrived on the\nliner New Amsterdam, upon the fore-\npeak of which the royal ensign proclaimed that the official representative of Queen Wllhelmina was aboard.\nThere were French Invaders, too, in\nNew York today. Early yesterday\nmorning the three gray-colored battleships which are to represent France\nat the celebration boomed -their crisp\n.salutes to the grim fortresses which\nguard the harbor entrance and passed\nin through The Narrows anchorage,\nbeneath the Riverside drive. A jaunty\nflag on the leading boat announced\nthat a ranking vice admiral was ln\ncommand of the little fleet.\nWith the arrival of the Dutch and\nFrench and the incoming throngs of\nless notable visitors by train, by steam-\nBblp and by motor car, even the phlegmatic New Yorker, who is frequently\nthe last to find out that a great event\nIs in his midst, was forced to realize\n.that   the long-heralded HudBon-Fulton\nrush was on. \t\nRAN INTO SCHOOL GIRLS\nRig Dashed Into Party and Serious Injuries are Result\nTORONTO, Sept. 21 \u2014 Driving his\nteam at a sharp clip down Cottingham\nstreet this morning, Arthur Evans, an\nexpressman, dashed into a group of ten\ngirls on the way to school. Ethel Rogers had her left leg and collar bone\nbroken and Leta Cheyne had her left\narm broken, while the other girls were\nseverely cut aud bruised. A warrant is\nout for Evans' arrest.\nLABORS VIEW\nFarmers Only are Needed\nSays Canadian Delegate\nHONEST    EXAGGERATION\nBELIEVE8 DOMINION IS SUFFERING\nFROM EXCE8SIVE .OPTIMISM\nAND TOO MUCH SPECULATON\u2014\nLABOR UNIONS AND CHURCHES\nSHOULD BE CONNECTED\nQUEBEC, Sept. 21 \u2014 The dominion\nTrades and Labor congress this morning got down to work when standing\ncommittees were struck.\nMuch Interest was evinced in the\nreport of W. R. Trotter, Canadian labor representative In Great Britain,\nwith regard to misrepresentations as\nto undesirable immigration coming to\nCanada. After referring ln detail to\nhis mission, Mr. Trotter quoted statistics showing the exact condition of\nBritish immigration, and related how\nthe work and efforts of the Dominion\nTrades and Labor congress were misconstrued in the British Isles. In concluding Mr. Trotter said:\n\"We should like to say with all emphasis possible that there are certain\nclasses which Canada does not want\nand for which she makes no provision.\nThere is, first of all, and pre-eminently\nthe remittance man, men who live on\nremittances from long suffering relatives at home. There is another class,\nin every way respectable, composed of\nprofessional men. and tradesmen for\nwhom there Is no work ln Canada. In\nthe meantime the land Is overflowing\nhlth them. If they are to Immigrate!\nat all it ought to be to other colonies\nwhere their chances of success are\ngreater. Men wanted in Canada are\nmen with some knowledge of agriculture. There are many openings for\nsuch men, but they must be careful.\nCanada is suffering from honeBt exaggeration. It Is suffering, too, from a\nworse evil, from a superabundance of\nreal estate agents and speculators in\nland. It Is, however, so good a country\nthat exaggeration cannot harm It and\nwe who-have land to sell are doing it\nthe best service we can when we tell\nthe truth about It.\"\nAt the termination of Mr. Trotter's\nreport, Rev. Dr. Shearer, secretary of\nthe moral and social reform league of\nthe Presbyterian church of Canada,\ncongratulated the convention on having In their midst the minister of labor and in the course of his speech em.\nphasized the fact that there should be\na clear connection between labor organizations and the church.\nStrike Collapses .\nHALIFAX, Sept. 21\u2014Secretary Mof-\nfatt of the Provincial Workmen'B union\nsayB the strike of the Dominion Coal\ncompany's miners has practically fallen\nthrough and that the company has all\nthe men it needs, IHflH\nGOVERNOR JOHNSON DIES\nPROBABLE  DEMOCRATIC  NOMINEE\nFOR PRESIDENTIAL CONTEST\n\"WE HAVE MADE A BRAVE FIGHT,\"\nHIS LAST WORDS\nROCHESTER, Minn., Sept. 21-Gov.\nJohnson, three times elected governor\nof Minnesota, a candidate tor the democratic nomination for president in\n1908, and looked upon by many\nthroughout the country as the probable\ndemocratic national standard bearer ln\n1812, died at St. Mary's hospital at\n3:25 o'clock this morning, following an\noperation last Wednesday.\nGov. Johnson's life was continually\nin the balance until the end came. At\nhis bedside when the end came was\nMrs. Johnson, Miss Margaret Sullivan,\nher friend; Drs. W. H. and C. H. Mayo,\nDr. C. F. McNiven, Frank A. Day, the\ngovernor's private secretary; Fred B.\nLynch, democratic national committeeman, and the two nurses.\nDr. W. H. Mayo Btated that there\nwas no trace of blood poisoning and\nthat tho immediate cause of death was\nexhaustion and heart failure. Dr.\nCharles Mayo, coming from the governor's room at 3:30 yesterday alter-\nnoon, said that the patient's wonderful\nresistance indicated an almost total\nabstinence from dissipation ln any\nform. \"His vitality is almost that ot\na child,\" said the doctor, \"and this has\nheen the greatest factor in prolonging\nhis existence.\"\nWhen the governor breathed his\nlast Mrs. Johnson, who had been In\nalmost hourly attendance at her husband's bedside and who had borne up\nbravely under the ordeal, totally collapsed and was taken to the Sullivan\nhome.\nGov Johnson was In a semi-conscious state during tho greater part ot\nthe night, but occasionally was\naroused, especially after coughing,\nand would then murmur a few words\nto Mrs. Johnson. At times he seemed\nto wish that the end might come, for\non one occasion ho said; \"My, Uptime drags slowly; I am so uncomfortable.\" The governor lapsed Into\nunconsciousness at 1 o'clock. Towards\nthe end he revived and raised himself\nseveral times to pat his wits on the\ncheek. His last words were: \"Well,\nNora, I'm going; we have made a\nbrave light. ...\nIt has been ordered to send Gov.\nJohnson's body to St. Paul on a special train this atiernoon.   A detail of\nmilitia will meet the cortege at the\nstation here and escort it to the state\ncapltol, where the body will lie ln\n, state all day tomorrow. Funeral services will be held Thursday afternoon\nin the Presbyterian church at St.\nPeter. Gov. Johnson's body will be\nburled beside that of his mother.\nJohn A. Johnson was the flrst nati\nMinnesotan to be chosen governor of\nthe state and of that distinction he\nwas prouder than of any other feature\nof his career. Gov. Johnson was born\n' near St. Peter, Minn., 48 years ago, of\nSwedish parents. His first venture in\npolitics resulted ln defeat for state\nsenator in 1894. Just after he was mar-\n, ried to Miss Eleanor M. Preston, a\nteacher, in 1898, he was again nominated by the democrats for the senate\nand was elected. In 1904 he was nominated for governor by the democratic\nstate convention and was elected. Two\nyears later he was re-elected overwhelmingly. When It was proposed to\nnominate him for a third time the governor declared he would not be a candidate, but he was unanimously nominated and was re-elected by a big majority.\nEberhart Is Governor\nST. PAUL, Sept. 21\u2014Adolph P. Eberhart was sworn in as governor of the\nstate of Minnesota today by chief justice Stark of the supreme court. According to Uie constitution the lieutenant governor becomes governor immediately following the death of a governor, a\nAdolph P. Eberhart was born in Sweden 38 years ago, bat came to Minnesota ln 1881. He first studied for the\n'ministry, but afterwards took up the\nstudy of law and soon built up a large\npractice. 'For many years Mr. Eberhart\nhas been in politics and has worked\nhard for the success of the republican\nparty. In 1902 and 1905 he was elected to the state senate. In 1906 he was\nelected lieutenant governor and returned in 1908. Mr. Eberhart's name originally was Olson, but because in Man-\nkato, where he formerly lived, there\nwere half a dozen of more hy the\nname of Adolph Olson, the future state\nofficial when he was married obtained\nfrom the court permission to take the\nname of Eberhart.\nLlK RATf\n-9.\n\u25a0 location for Disallowance\n**      by Lumbermen\nRAILWAYS'    STATEMENT\nLUMBERMEN'S ASSOCIATION SAYS\nTHE NEW TARIFF INCREASED\nCHARGES \u2014 DEPARTMENT OF\nTRADE AND COMMERCE GIVES\nEARLY  INFORMATION\nGREAT PROPERTY LOSS\nMANY PERSONS KILLED AND MIL-\nMILLION  DOLLAR  DAMAGE\nCOMMUNICATION   WITH   NEW   ORLEANS AT LAST RESUMED\nJACKSON, Miss., Sept. 21\u2014Two persons were killed by falling walls last\nnight as the result of the storm which\nswept over portions of Mississippi yesterday. Hundreds of buildings were unroofed.\nNEW ORLEANS, Sept. 21, via Hat-\ntiesburg, Miss.\u2014The tropical hurricane\nwhich yesterday swept the gulf coast\nof Louisiana aud Mississippi caused the\ndeath of at least five persons and a\nproperty loss of about $1,000,000.\nGALVESTON, Texas, Sept. 21\u2014Reports of a number of deaths in tho\nhurricane on the Louisiana coast reached here today. High waves were reported to be washing into a number of\ncoast settlements. There was no wire\nworking between here and New Orleans. The Texas coast escaped the\nstorm.\nATLANTA, Ga.( Sept. 21\u2014Many of\nthe streets and buildings of Mobile\nwere flooded and the velocity of the\nwind was 50 miles an hour, JJo death\nhad been reported there up to an early\nhour this morning, but it was expected\nwhen -communication was resumed\nthere would be a loss of life as well\nas an enormous property loss. For\nmany miles inland the hurricane was\nfflt and communication was cut off.\nVlekersburg, Natchez and Jackson all\nsuffered more or lesB.\nMOBILE, Ala., Sept. 21 \u2014 After a\nnight of terror during which the West,\nIndian hurricane swept the city with\nunexampled fury and the water covered\nthe docks and backed up in the city\nstreets, tho frenzy of the storm subsided today. While many houses have\nbit-n destroyed no loss of life has been\nreported. The property loss in the city\nwill not exceed $20,000 including the\nshipping ln tho bay.\nNEW ORLEANS, Sept. 21\u2014The first\ncommunication New Orleans had with\nthe outside world since last night was\nobtained at noon today with the telephone to Hattlesburg, The situation\nhere is not serious. Both telegraph\nwires are prostrated and there Is no\nimmediate prospects of their being reestablished.\nOTTAWA, Sept. 21\u2014The application\nof Canadian lumber interests lor disallowance of new rates for lumber on\nrailways was argued before the railway\ncommission today.- Figures as to tbe\neffect of the new schedule of rates\nwere produced by both lumber companies and railway companies. The\nC.'P. R., on receipt of \u00a5026,000 from\nlumber haulage, showed an increased\nrevenue of $24,000, while the G. T. R.\nshowed an increase ln revenue of $14,-\n500 as the result of the new rate. The\ncombined result was an increase of\n3.14 per cent. Tbe railways claimed\nthat if all kinds of lumber traffic were\nconsidered ine net increase of the two\ncompanies waB only 1.08 per cent. The\nC. N. It. .claimed that their receipts\nhad decreased.\nThe Lumbermen's association stated\nthat the new tariff increased charges\nby 149,807 in one year, an average increase of 1.51 per car. it was argued\nthat rates had been reduced where\ntraffic is small and increased where it\nis large. Counsel for tbe railways\nclaimed that the margin upon which\nthey were working wus exceedingly\nnarrow.\nTliis year the department of trade\nand commerce decided on a new departure in the issuance of the annual report of the department in seven small\nblue books instead of one large one.\nIt was thought that by doing this information of Interest to the business\ncommunity could be supplied earlier.\nThat the assumption was correct is\nshown by the issue today, three\npart 2, the part giving details of\nmonths ahead of last year of\nCanada's trade with the. United Kingdom, United States, France and Germany.\n. Imports and exports from tbe four\ncountries mentioned for the year ending March 31 as compared with tho\nprevious 12 months were as follows:'\nImports. 1007-8. 1908-9.\nFrance   $10,251,717   $8,028,806\nGermany          8,250,745     8,661,454\nUnited Kingdom 95,885,887 70,556,738\nUnited States   . 220,791,209 192,6fll,360-\nExports. 1907-8. 1908-9.\nFrance        $1,800,440     3,170,896-\nGermany      2,234,fi07     1,47(1,552\nUnited Kingdom 134,484,15(1 133,745,375\nUnited States   . 113,520.500   92,004,357\nThere will be no public meeting of\nthe imperial West Indies trade commission until Wednesday. Lord Burleigh\nwill arrive in the capital today, bir\nDaniel Morris and Sir John Dickson\nPoynnar met Hon. W. S. Fielding and\nHon. William Paterson In the office of\nthe minister of llnance and discussed\nthe plans of the commission.\nBOMB  EXPLOSION\nWrecked Chinese Restaurant\u2014Prisoner\nCommitted for Trial\nTORONTO, Ont., Sept. 21\u2014William\nSmith, married just six weeks ago, was\ncommitted for trial by Magistrate Den-\nIson this morning on the charge of letting off an explosive in such a manner\nas to endanger life. Private Woodward of the Royal Canadian Dragoons\nand Herbert Wilkinson, recently arrived Englishmen, arraigned with him,\nwere discharged. The charge arose out\nof the explosion ln a Chinese restaurant, on York street, one night -last\nweek of two small bombs, which\nwrecked the interior of the place. Evi-\"\ndence In court today showed that\nWoodward and Wilkinson were Innocent of Intent or action In the matter,\nalthough they had some knowledge of\nwhat Smith was doing.\nApplication for Injunction\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 21\u2014Application for\nan injunction to restrain the street, railway company from erecting poles cm\ncity streets without taking out permits was made this morning by the\ncity of Winnipeg to the court of king's\nbench. This application is framed ln\nsuch a way as to include all the points\nJn dispute between tho city and the\ncompany and thus to raise the whole\nIssue which in one way or another has\noccupied the attention of the courts\nfor some yearB.\nSir Thomas at Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 21\u2014Sir Thomas\nShaughnessy returned here from Victoria this evening and will hold an important conference with local officials\nthis morning.\nCANADA AND THE POLE\nLucien   Wolfe   Thinks  That  Canada's\nClaim is Doubtful\nLONDON, Sept. 21\u2014Lucien Wolfo,\nfellow of the lnstituto of Journalists\nand vice president of the Jewish Historical Society of England, writes in\nthe Times in reference to Canada's\nclaim to the north pole.   He says:\n\"Unfortunately the more existence\nof a hinterland is insufficient claim to\ntitle. Hitherto it has been recognized\nthat hinterlands have become such by\nvirtue either of treaties or formal notifications to interested slates or by\nproclamation of decrees. None of these\nformalities have been complied with\nby Canadians with regard to the pole,\nhence It Is doubtful whether their\nclaim would hold If Peary's annexation\nshould turn out to be properly authorized.\"\nFishermen Get Hard Labor\nGASPE, Sept, 21\u2014Nineteen of the 24\nfishermen arrested some days ago for\ncausing a riot, have been acquitted but\nthe other five alleged to be the principal rioters, were condemned to eleven.\nmonths' hard labor each.\n \u00abhe 9att8 sw*\u00bb\n.WEDNESDAY... SEPTEMBER 22\nOf\niii\nii\nvt-\nti\n\\iv\niii\niii\niii\niii\niii\niii\niii\niii\niii\niii\niii\niii\niii\niii\niii\niii\niii\n\\ii\niii\niii\nDiamonds!   Diamonds!\nBefore we knew that we would be forced to vacate our present premises we purchased heavily in\ndiamonds, cut and uncut. Now diamonds are not hard to move from one store to another, and we could\neasily transfer them to our new one, but we want to transfer them in another way, we want you to carry\nthem away for us, so we have decided to include them with the balance of our immense stock of watches,\nclocks and jewelry, at prices that would tempt a miser. If you will call and inspect our offerings, you will\nquickly become convinced that this is an opportunity ot a lifetime if you are contemplating the purchase of\ndiamonds.\nTUST TO TEMPT YOU\nWe are offering some splendid 14-k. gold rings set with finest cut diamonds at\n$12.00, $15.00, $20.00, $25\nI Call and inspect them.   If they do not suit you, we have rings up to $500 each.\nOne of the Sights of the Fait is oaf Splendid Window Display of Diamond Jewelry\nJ. J. WALKER, m-Baktt Street\nGraduate Optician and Jeweler\niii\n!\u00a3g^0j\u00a3^0\\\\[^g\u00a3\u00a3\u00a3\u00a3\u00a3i*_\\\\_\\\\_\\\\!_^\nST CHARLES\nEVAPORATED\n-   CRBAM\nFor many things in cookery, St. Charles Cream\nis an essential.   It is as good as the best milk\nor cream for any purpose.   For many purposes\nit is much better.   It gives to coffee,\nfor instance, a flavor which even the\nbest of ordinary cream cannot approach, and it aids in bringing out\nthe delicate aroma of chocolate and\ncocoa.  For confection and ice cream\nit is unexcelled.   For invalids and\ninfants it is indispensable. It never\nv       \u25a0 curdles.   It strengthens the strong.\n\u25a0j^    If only pure water is added it will agree with\nthe most delicate stomach.\nSold by best grocers everywhere. 7\nf'at.CHARLES CONDENSING CO. Ingerioll,Ont.\nDISCOURAGED MEN\nIS LIFE WORTH LIVING\nMEN, you become disheartened\nwhen you feel tbe symptoms ot\nNervous Debility ami decline stealing\nupon you. You liaveu't the nerve or\nambition you used to have. You\nfeel you are not the man you ought\nto be. You feel like giflng up lb\ndespair. You get nervous ud weak,\nhave little ambition, pain In the\nback over kidneys, drains at night,\nhollow eyes, tired mornings, prefer\nto be alone, distrustful, variable\nappetite, looseness of hair, poor clr*\nculatlon\u2014 you havo Nervous\nDebility. Our Now Msthod\nTreatment iff your refuge. It\nwill strengthen all weak organs,\nvitalise the nervous system, purify\nthe blood and restore you to a manly condition.\n  Pay When Cured.\nD C 1 ft E D Are you a victim? Have you lost hope* Are you Intending to\nII LRU Ell marryt Has your Wood been diseased; Have you any weakness]1\nOur New Method Treatment will euro you. What It baa done for hundreds of\nothers, It will do for you. CONSULTATION FREE. No matter who has treated\nyou, Write ror an honest opinion Free of Charge. Charges reasonable, BOOKS\nFREE\u2014\"The Qolden Monitor\" (illustrated), on Diseases of lien.\nESTABLISHED 20 YEARS-CURES GUARANTEED. No Tr-tabnaat ssat\nC. O. D. No nanus on bows or onveleiMS. Everything confidential. Question\nlist and cost of Hasno Treatment FREE.\nDmKEMNEDY&KEHHEDY\nCor. Michigan Ave., and Griswold St, Detroit, Mich.\nROUOH and\nDRESSED\nLUMBER\nDoors, Windows, Mouldings, Shingles, Tamed Works sua Bracket!.   Oom.\n<let. ind np to date stock always on hud.   wdl orders promptly attended to.\nA. Q. UAMBERT t* CO.\nDR. COOK TELLS STORY\nPRESENTS   HIS   SIDE OF CASE ON\nREACHING NEW YORK\nIS WELCOMED AS THE DISCOVERER OF THE NORTH POLE\nNEW YORK, Sept. 21\u2014Dr. Frederick\nA. u>ok was today welcomed to New\nYork as the discoverer of the north\npole. Early this morning he transferred from the steamer Oscar II, on\nwhich he crossed the Atlantic to a tug\non which were his wife and children.\nFrom this again he transferred to the\nsteamer Grand Republic, which conveyed him up the harbor to the dock,\nwhere he landed and forthwith proceeded to the Hotel Waldorf-Astoria,\nwhere he will make his headquarters.\nOn board the Grand Republic he was\nmet by a welcoming committee.\nFrom 5 o'clock this morning the explorer paced the saloon.deck of the\nsteamer, placing his marine glasses to\nhis eyes and watching every tug or\nother vessels which approached the\nOscar II. At last the right one was\ndimly outlined through the mist and\nDr. Cook sprang to the companionway\ndown the ladder before the tug was\nalongside. He made his way across\nthe Intervening stretch of water to the\ntug and dashed up to the hurricane\ndeck, where his wife and children were\nwaiting for him, waving the stars and\nstripes. As he approached she looked\npale, doubtless from excitement, as her\nhusband caught her In his arms and\nembraced her without a single word\npassing between them. Their hearts\nseemed too full for utterance.\nWhile husband and wife greeted\neach other absolute silence prevailed\namong the onlooking passengers. Then\nDr. Cook broke the silence. \"Where\nare the children!\" he asked. His wife\ndid not reply, but led him to the children, a few steps away. He kissed his\neldest daughter and then kissed the\nyoungest one, taking her in his arms\nand raising her to his shoulders. As\nthis greeting, for.which Dr. Cook bad\nso long and patiently waited, was fulfilled, the people broke out Into a roar\nof cheers. Then the words, \"For he\nIs a Jolly good fellow,\" were sung In\nchorus by Dr. Cook's fellow passengers\non the Oscar II as the tug left the .ship.\nThe Oscar II Immediately weighed\nanchor and continued up the river to\nher dock and Dr. Cook was transferred\nto the Grand Republic, which was lying a quarter of a mile away.\nOn board the Grand Republic Dr.\nCook was greeted by the official reception committee and a wreath of\nroses was placed about the explorer's\nnock, standing on the upper deck of\nthe steamer Dr. Cook addressed the\ncommittee and his Wends a\u00bb follows;\n\"To a returning explorer there can\nbe no greater pleasure than the appreciation of his   own   people.   Your\nnumbers and cheers make a demonstration that makes me very happy1\nand should fire the pride of the world.\nI would have preferred to return first\nto American shores, but this pleasure\n,was denied me. Instead I caine to\nDenmark and the result has come to\nyou by wire.\n\"I was the stranger ln a strange\nland, but the Danes with one accord\n.rose up with enthusiasm and they have\nguaranteed to all other nations our\nconquest of the pole. You have come\nforward in numbers with voice of appreciation still more forcibly. I can\nonly say that I accept this honor with\na due appreciation of Its importance.\nI heartily thank you.\"\nDr. Cook is to stay at the Waldorf-\nAstoria hotel. He has decided that,\nowing to the overwhelming demond\nror autographs and autographic photographs, he will make a uniform charge\nof {10 each and he will set aside all\nthe proceeds, to be distributed between\nexplorers and the arctic club, 'to be\nused tor future explorations.\nThe Oscar II lay at anchor oft Fire\nIsland until shortly alter midnight\nwhen she weighed anchor and proceeded to quarantine. There the steamer\nanchored to await the Inspection of\nthe head officer at 6 o'clock. Meantime several tugs, loaded with passengers, hung about the liner. At sunrise\nthe steamer was dressed with fla3S\nand preparations were made to receive\nthe explorer's wife and children, who\n.were coming down ln a tug, and to\nmeet a reception committee of officials\nand friends of Dr. Cook, which went\ndown the harbor on the steamer. Grand\nRepublic. Dr. Cook was standing amid\na group of passengers on the saloon\ndeck when the health officer boarded\nthe ship. The explorer's face was\ntinged with a healthy bronze and his\ndemeanor was modest and unassuming. He answered other questions\nfreely, but declined to discuss the attitude of Commander Peary.\n\"Have you notes 'and data with you?\"\nhe was asked.\n\"Yes.\"\n\"Then what matter does Mr. Whitney held?\"\n\"Mr. Whitney has my Instruments\nand some delicate data. Mr. Whitney\nis a noble gentleman and can be trusted to speak the truth.\"\nWhen asked about the controversy\n.over the discovery of the pole he said:\n\"I have deplored the whole controversy\n>nd feel that nothing should be said\nand will leave the public to Judge. I\nfeel that the Danish people, who have\naccepted me without question and have\ntreated me so liberally,' should be the\nBrat to receive the evidence of my\nwork.\n\"I want to see my wife and family,\nwho. 1 understand will come to us first\nln a revenue boat, and then I don't\ncare what comes.\"\nDr. Cook said that during the tour\nmonths of his stay in Greenland he\nwent over all his notes and data and\ncompleted his book describing his trip\nto the pole.\n\"*When my material has been got together and put In shape It will be submitted in the first Instance to the university of Copenhagen. After that it\nwill be laid before the geographical\nsocieties of the world. I will not con-\nBent to submit fragmentary portions of\nmy observations or of any records to\nanyone. The report and all the data\nconnected with my trip must he examined in their entirety together with\nthe Instruments, some of which I have\nin my possession now, and others of\nwhich are on their way to America at\nthe present moment. These will all be\nproperly controlled and tested before\nsubmission to the scientific foodies.\"\nAsked why he had not immediately\ngiven full details of his achievements\nDr. Cook said:\n\"1 have given to the public a concise account of my journey similar to\nthat always given hy explorers on their\nreturn from any journey ot exploration.\nFor the present no other details are\nnecessary and, as a matter of fact, no\nfurther specific evidences of my claim\nhave been called for from any Bide. It\nhas not been customary hitherto for explorers to make public their full record\nln such haste. Aa a rule scientific societies are not remarkable for their\nrapidity in coming to conclusions and\nthey are usually content to wait till\ncomplete records are compiled.\"\nIn regard to the full recognition of\nhis feat by Denmark, Dr. Cook remarked:\n\"Daagaard Jensen, inspector ot Danish north Greenland, after hearing Ras-\nmussen and talking with governor\nKraul of Upernavlk, who has seen and\nread the entire record, telegraphed to\nthe Danish government at Copenhagen,\nhis assurance of the truth of my declarations and guaranteeing them as authentic. , It Is my Intention to place\nmy flrBt completed record of my polar\njourney at the disposal of the university of Copenhagen.\"\nReferring to Peary, Dr. Cook said:\n\"I have as yet heard nothing but vague\nreports. I prefer for the present to believe that these statements which\nhave been attributed to Peary are incorrect. I am prepared to meet any\ncharges, but I must first iee something\ndefinite. 1 am absolutely certain that\nnone ot the reports that have appeared\nin print come either from my two Eskimos or from Mr. Harry Whitney. Mr.\nWhitney has without amy doubt kept\nhis promlBe to me not to say anything\nabout the expedition and its results,\nand I feel sure ot my Eskimos. Mr.\nWhitney will return to America about\nthe middle of Ootober. He has complete knowledge of all the facts. He Is\nentirely at liberty to make public all\nthat he knows. He is neither bound\nto stand up for me nor for Peary.\"\nIn connection with the proposition\nthat the two Eskimos should be brought\nto America, Dr. Cook said: \"The arrival\nin America of the Eskimos who went\nwith me to the P\u00b0'e depends entirely\nupon the possibility of obtaining a vessel to bring them this year.  Every ef-\nfort has been made to secure one and\nIf It Is at all possible they will foe in\nNew York this year. That they will\ncome Is certain and I Intend to give\nthem a year ln America. They will be\nopen to any kind of examination amd\nwill he ready to reply to any questions.\nRusmussen also will me requested to\ncome over to New York as soon as he\nlands in Denmark.\"\nWith regard to his plans, Dr. Cook\nsaid: \"I intend to stay in New York\nfor the present. There I will complete\nmy work. I shall not make amy arrangements for lectures, and I have not decided whether 1 shall deliver any he-\nfore my work Is done. As to further\nexploration, much will depend on Mrs.\nCook. I shall, however, probably not\ngo again to the north pole, although I\nmay proceed -on a northern expedition\nfor the exploration of the new land we\nsaw on our journey. This Is a task\nwhich must be carried out. Whether I\nshall undertake It or not, will be a question for further consideration. It has\nheen suggested that I go to the south\npole, but I am quite content to leave\nthat to Shackleton and Scott.\"\nDr. Cook asked the Associated Press\nto correct several errors which inadvertently crept into the first report of\nhis discovery.\n\"All my thermometerlcal observations\nwere in Fahrenheit and not centigrade,\"\nDr. Cook gave out the following signed statement today:\n\"When aboard the Oscar III had tho\nmost delightful trip of my life crossing\nthe Atlantic and am glad to see the\nshores of my native land. I have come\ntrom the pole. I have brought my story\nand data with me. The pnhllc has already some record of the trip. In a\nvery short time the narrative vllh al\"\ntho observations will be pnblishod nnd\nplaced before the world for examination.\n\"Jt Is as easy for you as for me to\nunderstand why, under the impulse of\nthe moment, I read off a manuscript\nwhich covers the work of two years.\nAs I have said upon several occasions\nthese charges, accusations and exhibitions of disbelief are baaed upon entire\nIgnorance of the supplementary data\nwhich I have possessed. No one who\nhas spoken or written on the subject\nIn opposition to my claim knows of the\nfacts with which the work ot exploration Is measured. All of the criticisms\nhave been based npon errors In the reproductions of my dispatches or upon\nthe discussion of petty side Issues pre-\n\u25a0 sented hy unfair critic's.\n\"The expedition was private. It was\nstarted out without the usual public\nblow up. John S. Bradley furnished\nthe money and I shaped the destiny of\nthe adventure. For the tlmbe being It\nconcerned us only, but the results were\nso Important that on returning I at\nonce placed before the public a report\ncontaining the main outline of the\nwork, and I have not come home to\nenter Into arguments with one man or\nwith fifty men, but I am here to present a clear record ot a piece of work\nOregon Nursery\nCompany\nFruitgrowers, you can see\nOregon Nursery\nStock\nin the Kootenay District and thousands of young trees hearing their\nfirst crop ot fruit (one year old,\nbudded on three year old root.)No\nbetter system.\nU.SAMMONS, Agent\nWill meet you at the fair or the\nMadden House\n1\nThe \"Canbra\"\nfor Comfort...\nbrill, Ont.\n*t2fM2Sc.yaaeutavl\ntill ibapsln Elk Brutl\nB\u00ab-aei\"DMUm.\" ml\n\u2014s \u25a0\nover which I have a right to display a\ncertain amount of pride. When students study the detailed observations\nand the narrative In Its consecutive order I am certain that in the due course\not events all will be compelled to admit the truth ot my statement.\n\"I am perfectly willing to abide by\ntbe final verdict of this record hy o*m-\npotent judges. That must mo the last\nword In the discussion and that alone\ncan satisfy me and the public\n\"Furthermore, not only will my report be before you in black and white,\nbut I will also bring to America human witnesses to prove that I have\nbeen to the pole,.\n WEDNESDAY...  SEPTEMBER 22\n\u00abtw Softs Slew*.\nMM YHM.B\nW\nOPEN\nSeptember 18th\n9 A.M.\nA GIGANTIC OFFER\nFOR TWELVE DAYS ONLY\nOPEN\nSeptember 18th\n9 A.M.\nRead it Through, Every Wo*d Means Dollars to Yot*\nWe positively must clear out the larger part of our present stock to make room for our extensive stock of Fall and Winter Goods now lying at\nthe depot. Every article in the store has been marked away down to cost, and in many instances below cost, and everything is marked in plain\nfigures. You cannot pick out one article that is not a genuine bargain. Prices were never so low before and may never be so low again. Get in on\nthe ground floor.   Come early and secure the pick of the stock.\nRemember Sale Begins Saturday, September 18,\nAt 9 a.m., and Ends Thursday, September 30, at 6 p.m.\nSamples of What Your Money Will Buy During This Sale\nMens' Fine Shirts\nAt Cost\nOur selection of Shirts\ncomprises all the finest\nmakes, W.G.&R.,Tooke,\nStar, Crescent, and the\nbest English brands.\nRegular 3 00   Now 2 25   Regular 1 75 Now 1 25\n2 50 2 00 1 50 1 15\n2 00 1 35 1 00 75\nGent's Odd Trousers\nHundreds of Sizes and\nPatterns to Choose from.\nReg.\n00\n50\n00\n50\n00\nNow\n50\n75\n50\n00\n75\n3 50\n2 75\nWorking Shirts\nMostly   Imported  English goods which wear like\nReg. 2 00 Now 1 35\n1 50 1 15\n1 25 85\n1 00 75\nMens Suits andOvercoats\nOur offerings in these goods are all\nof the very latest cut and the finest\nmaterial. ^Better outfit for the winter\nnow and save money.\nSUITS\nRegular $30 value, now $24 50\n28\n25\n18\n15\n14\nOVERCOATS\n22 50\n20 00\n13 50\n11 00\n6 50\nCravenette, Reg. $20 now $15 00\n\"  15 \" 12 00\n\"  10 \"  7 50\nAll Our Shoes Go\n. For Cost\nWalkover Shoes\nReg. 6 00   Now 4 50\nInvictus Shoes\nReg. 6 00   Now 4 50\n50\n00\nAstoria Shoes\nReg. 6 00\n5 50\nb 00\n3 75\n3 50\nNow 4 50\n3 75\n3 50\nAll 3 50 and 4 00\nShoes at 2 95\nFancy Vests\nJust what you'll need soon.\nImported knitted vests and\nnumerous choice patterns.\nReg. 7 00 Now 6 00\n6 00 4 50\n5 00 3 50\n4 50 3 00\nCheaper grades $1.50 up.\nHosiery\nValues that will surprise\nyou-                       Ilegulnr Now\nLisle Hose,       35c 25c\nSilk Lisle Hose 75c 40c\nCashmere-Hose 50c 35c\n\"         \"    35c 2\u00b0c\nHeavy Woolen 50c 35c\nUnderwear Practically\nGiven Away\nGold Fleece Underwear, English\nImported goods, per garment    '$3 00\nStanfield's   Unshrinkable,    Pure\nWool, per garment.       1 75\ndo do 1 25\ndo do 1 00\nBalbriggan   Underwear,   regular\n50c per garment, now\t\n25\nHATS\nHARD\nHATS\nSOFT\nPrices Are on the Ground Floor\nChristy's Famous Hats, Derby shape, regular $3.50 -_ _A\nNow $2 50\nFedora Shape, regular $3.50, now     2 50\nStetson's Hats, regular $5.00 and $5.50, now     4 00\nAll Regular $3.00 Hals now     1 50\nCaps in all sizes and shapes regular 75c and $1, now 50\nGent's Furnishings Within\nthe Reach of All\nCollars The Famous W.G.R. collars\nnow 2 for 25c. All other lines same\nprices.\n1 1CS All regular 50c Ties now 35c.\n75c Ties now 50c. $1 Ties now 75c.\nStISpCnderS President Suspenders 75c now 50c. All\nother 75c suspenders now 50c.\nHandkerchiefs Regular ioc\nvalue now 5c.   20c value now\nioc. 30c value now 20c.\nMtiffierS Space forbids a detailed list of prices but\nwe will surprise you on these values.\nYew Mail Orders will be\nas promptly attended to as\ntf yon were here in person.\nJ. A. GILKER\nBake* Street\nNelson, B. C.\nYour Mail Orders will be\nas promptly attended to as\nif yon were here in person.\n mwrauR\nShe jSfmig Slew*\nWEPNE8DAY... SEPTEMBER 22\n \u25a0\u00bb*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0!\u25a0\u2014\nWe Sell\nHigh Class Goods\nAt\nLow Class Prices\nThis applies to all our lines. Our Immense purchases (we 'buy for\nsome thirty general stores and some two hundred and fifty trading\nposts at once) and our system of BUYING FOR CASH enables us to\nsell you a first quality article at prices usually asked for inferior goods.\nLumbermen's and miners' supplies, Hudson's Bay blankets and\nibeddlng, boots and shoes of all styles, tents and oil skin clothing, a\nfull range of m.^. .\u00ab$\u25a0\u201e,, _________         '____,\nNew Up-to-Date Winter Clothing\nand Gents' Furnishings\nFresh and choice Groceries and Provisions, the best which the world\ncan produce. ;\nCome, examine and be convinced that it pays to trade at this\nstore.\nThe Hudson's Bay Stores\n***t*t***\u00bb****\u00bb****u***********tunmntt\u2014n*********\nImperial Bank of Canada\nHEAD OFFICE, TORONTO\nCapital   Authorized    $10,000,000\nCapital  Paid  Up   (5,000,000     Reserve Fund  $6,000,000\nD. R. WILKIE, President HON. ROBT. JAFFRAY, Vice-Pres.\nBRANCHES IN BRITISH COLUMBIA:\nArrowhead, Cranbrook,  Fernle, Golden, Kamloops, Michel, New Michel,\nMoyie,  Nelson,  Revelstoke, Vancouver and Victoria,\nSAVINGS DEPARTMENT\nIntereat allowed on deposits'at current rate from date of deposit\nNELSON BRANCH J. M. LAV, Manager.\nCanadian Bank of Commerce\nHEAD OFFICE, TORONTO ESTABLISHED 1867\nB. E. WALKER, President. Reserve Fund     6,000,000\nALEXANDER  LAIRD, Gen.  Man.       Paid-up  Capital    $10,000,000\nTRAVELLERS' CHEQUES\nThe new Traveller*' cheques recently Issued by this Bank are a\nmost convenient way In which to carry money when travelling. They\nare issued In denominations of $10, $20, $50, $100 and $200 and the exact\namount payable in Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Great\nBritain, Holland, Italy, Norway,.Russia, Sweden and Switzerland Is stated on tbe face of each cheque, while In other countries they are payable\nat current rateB.\nThe cheques and all information regarding them may be obtained\nat every office ot the bank.      ,\nNEL80N BRANCH J. L. BUCHAN, Manager\nBANK OP MONTREAL\n112,100,6*\n(Established 1117)\n\u2022apRal All Peld Up ....114,400,001    Rest  \t\nHEAD OFFICE MONTREAL\nM. He*. Lerd Btntheena end Mernrt Royal, G. C. M. \u2022. Hi\nHen, Sir. George Drummond, K, C. M. Q., President\nMr Edward t. Cleuston, \u25a0art, Vie* President and Gen. Manager,\n\u2022RANCHES IN BRITISH COLUMBIA\nArmstrong, Endsrby, Greenwood,   Kelowne,   NelMH,   New   Denver,\nNleola, New Westminster, Realised,  temmsrlend, Venesever,  Verne*,\nV eterla, Chlllawaok, Homer.\nNELBON BRANCH l_ B. DEVEBER, Manager.\nThe Royal Bank of Canada\nINCORPORATED 1MI.\nCapital    $4,800,000      Reserve    $5,500,000\nTotal Assets  $58,000,000\nA general banking business transacted.   Savings Bank Department\nat all offices.\nSavings Bank Department at all\noffices. Interest allowed on de*\npoBlts of one dollar and upwards\nat highest current rates, com-\n-pounded halt yearly. Money may\nbe withdrawn without delay.\nNelson Branch\nWe receive Accounts of Corporations, firms and individuals on fa-\nvorable terms and shall be pleased'\nto meet or correspond with those\nwho contemplate making changes\nor opening new accounts.\nA, B. NETHERBY, Manager\nMIGHTON & CAVANAUGH\nBROKERS\nH NELBON, b. a \u00ab\">\"\u25a0 11\u00b0\nSubject to Prior Purchase, We Will Buy\n10 Consolidated Smelters   ..188.00\n1 S, A.Scrlp  490.00\n1000 McGIlllvray Creek Coal  29\n1000 Canadian N. W. Oil      20\n100 B. C. Copper    6.60\nSPECIAL\u2014We offer 500 Nugget Gold Mines at 60 cents.        , ,    .... , \u201e,\nVisitors to the Nelson fruit fair, 1909\nBe Sure You Do Not Miss\nThe Exhibit of the\nKootenay Jam Co.\nLtd.\nThe finest of Its kind over shown in Western Canada.\nOn entering the building from Vernon street turn to the right and\ninspect the unique display ot the Celebrated \"KOOTENAY BRAND\"\nJAMS, JELLIES AND CANNED FRUITS, which are spreading the\nname and fame of Kootenay throughout the great west.\nThey are carried On the trains and steamers and are obtainable\nat all the stores. Ask for and Insist upon having them, both at home\nand when travelling.\nWatch This Industry forge Ahead\nPerfect, pure, with freshest flavor,\nFlavor that stands quite alone,\n\"Kootenay Jams are first tn favor,\nWhere the Maple Leaf is grown.\nCANADA'S GREATEST WESTERN SCHOOL\nBUSINESS\nINSTITUTE\nVancouver, E. C.\nThe best equipped, school west of R. J. SPROTT, B. A\u201e Mgr,\"\nToronto. Bend tor catalogue.\nniiin\u00bbnii\u00bb\u00bbm.M\u00bb>w<\u00bb\u00bb4\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb.\u00ab.t.4>\u00ab.\u00bbm\u00ab\u00bbi>it\nSprott-Shaw\nA 'Fair' Opportunity\nFor Fair Visitors\nA special Fair Sale of Fancy China,\nVases, Jardiniera, Toys and Gift Articles.\nIt will be *s in your pocket to visit our store when you are in to\nthe fair.\nReductions of all the way fr om 25 per cent off to half the regular\nmarked prices on our entire stock of the lines enumerated above.\nIs it too soon to talk about Christmas? It's not so very far away,\nnnd this would be a rare opportu nity to save a lot ot money on your\nXmas buying. Z\nAlso let us suggest that while you're In town you come in buy\nthat Phonograph or Graphophone you've been intending to have this\nwinter.\nWe have a full line of Edisons, Columblas and Victors and the\nbiggest stock of both cylinder and disc records in the Interior.\nIt is cheaper to buy these goods from us than to send outside for\nthem, because we sell at the catalogue prices, the same as you have to\npay anywhere in Canada, and you save the freight and express.\nm\nCALL AND SEE US.\n;\nW. O. THOMSON RStf**\nBookaoiler and Stationer\nWixz \u00a7\u00ab*Ub _\\zw**\nPublished at Nelson Every Morning\nExcept Monday, by\nNews Publishing Company, Limited\nW. O. McMORRIS  Manager\nTODAY'S FAIR OPENING\nToday Nelson's annual fair opens.\nPreparations for It have been under\nway for months and It now remains\nwith the people of the city and district to make it a success by extending\nto it their patronage. The value of a\nfair, such as the one that opens ln\nNelson today, to any city or district\ncannot be overestimated, especially In\na country in which agriculture Is just\nIn its Infancy.\nA fair cannot be made a success\nwithout the assistance and co-operation ot the general public. This has\nbeen extended to the Nelson fruit fair\nin growing 'proportions every year\nsince It was organized and the same\nshould hold true this year. The people of Nelson and of the surrounding\ndistrict now have It In their power to\nsay whether this year's fair Is to be\na success of a failure. They can make\nit either by their attendance or non-\nattendance. There should be no doubt\nas to which course they will follow.\nEvery person who can possibly do so\nshould attend the fair at least once\nand oftener If opportunity permits.\nThere will be something fresh to learn\nand something new to see each time.\nLATE GOVERNOR JOHNSON\nThe death of Hon, John A. Johnson,\ngovernor of. Minnesota, which took\nplace early yesterday morning, removes one of tha most striking figures\nfrom American politics. The late Mr.\nJohnson was of the class of men of\nwhom It can be truly said that they\n.made their own way through the\nworld. The son of Swedish Immigrant\nparents, too poor to properly educate\ntheir family, young Johnson was\nturned out In the world at the age of\n12 years to make his own living.\nHis flrst position was In a printing\noffice, and It can be said with authority that the salary a boy of his age\nwould get in such an Institution In\nthose days would not go far toward\nkeeping his young body and soul together. This probably was the reason\nthat at first opportunity he forsook\ntbe printing business to work in a\ndrug store. However, he had caught\nthe newspaper fever and a little later\nhe was to be found back In the printing office. He eventually became\neditor of the paper published in his\nhome town of St. Peter, Minn., and\nthrough this position became a factor\nin the politics of his native state, finally being elected state senator and In\n1904 governor ot the state. He was\nre-elected ln 1006 and 1908, this being\nhis third consecutive term. Had he\nlived it Is unite possible there was\ngreater honor ln store for him, for\nthere was a distinct move on loot to\n'secure him the presidential nomination\non the democratic ticket for the next\nfederal election.\nThe late Gov. Johnson's success\nshould be an Inspiration to the boys\nand young men not only ot the United\nStates but also ot Canada. It shows\nwhat can bo attained, by Industry and\napplication hy any .boy or young man\nso Inclined. There Is no position, however high, In either country that cannot be attained by anyone who has the\nlate Gov. Johnson's ability and has the\nmind to properly apply himself. It\nwould be a good thing for both coun\ntries If the youth of the present day\nwould take lesson by examples ot success such as are afforded by lives ot\nmen like the late Hon. John A. John-\nEDITORIAL  NOTES\nThe big fair Is now on.\nA visit to the fair will give you some\nidea of what the Kootenays can do ln\nthe way of fruit growing.\nThe Winnipeg Tribune says that\ngeography may soon define the north\npole as a body of ice completely surrounded by liars.\nThe people of Nelson extend a\nhearty welcome to the many visitors\nalready ln the city for the, fair and also\nto the others who are coming.\nHORSE RACES FOR FAIR\nTHE8E   PROMISE   TO   BE   ONE   OF\nTHE  FEATURES\nGOOD   PROGRAM   ON   THE   CARDS\nFOR EACH  DAY\nThe horse races promise to be one of\nthe most successful features of the fair.\nThere will be two races today, three\ntomorrow and four the day after. All\nthese will be well contested. In add!,\ntion to the local horses N. 8. McAbee\not Golden, owner of Beaver Dam Lad,\nhas a good horse here. Billy Adams of\nMacleod Is here with Actress and F.\nTatham of the same place with Flfi.\nIn addition a horse is coming in from\nBonner's Ferry and Traffic, a horse\nrecently purchased in Vancouver by a\nFort Steele man, who will take him\nhome after the races, arrived last night.\nAmong the local horses will lie Brodle\n& Ferguson's Wawa, George Ferguson's\nKootenay Belle, the Nelson Transfer\ncompany's Indian Boy, P. Burn's and\ncompany's Moose, Les Steele's Fleeder\nand others.\nThe program for the three days Is as\nfollows:\nToday\nLocal home race, 1-4 mile, 2 In 3,\npurse J75.\nOpen race, 1-2 mile, 2 ln 3, purse $200.\nTomorrow\nOpen pony race, 14 1-2 hands high,\nor under, 1-4 mile heats, 2 ln 3, $150.\nOpen race, 1-2 mile, $150.\nOpen race 3-8 mile heats, 2 in 3,\n$150.\nFriday\nOpen race 1-4 mile dash, $100.\nOpen race, 3-8 mile heats, 2 In 3,\n$150.\nOpen race, 1 mile dash, $150,\nTrot ln harness, open only to delivery\nand dray horses ln Nelson, to be driven\nby owner or regular driver! heats 2 in 3.\npurse $50.\nHarry Wright will act as starter nnd\nthe Judges will be A. McQueen, A. D.\nWheeler of Alnsworth and F. W.\nWalker.\nFarmers Holding Grain\nCALGARY, Alta., Sept. 21\u2014Southern\nAlberta farmers evince no desire to\nrush this year's crop upon the market.\nDespite the fact that high prices are\nbeing paid the major portion of the\ngrain now being threshed is being\nstored in granaries or being held in\nline elevators by farmers. The price\nbeing paid for oats Is 5 cents ln advance of the price offered at this time\nMlnard's Liniment Co., Limited.\nDear Sirs.\u2014I had a Bleeding Tumor on\nmy (ace tor a long time and tried a num-\nher of remedies without any good results.\nI was advised to try MINARD'S LINIMENT, and after using several bottles It\nmade a romnlcte cure, anil It healed all\nup and disappeared altogether.\nDAVID HENDERSON,\nBelleisle Station, icing's Co., N. B.\nSept. 1?. ran.\nFred Irvine & Co.\nSpecials for fair Week\nMillinery, Ladies' Tailor Made\nSuits. Fall and Winter Coats\nLadies' Furs\nFor fair week we are showing another magnificent stock of ladles-\npattern and trimmed hats ln all the very latest styles and shades trom\nbest makers, ,\nLadies' Tailor Made Suits, up-to-date styles.\nNew Fall and Winter Coats\ni '-\nA Fine Stock of Furs In All the\nNew Shapes\nNew woolens, new Waists, new Fancy Wear and Novelties.   We\nInvite Inspection of our stock and prices.\nFred Irvine & Co.\nTales From the Golden West\nWell! Well! Bless our souls,\nThey've discovered two poles;\nNow they'll have to shake dice\nTo decide It.\nThere will be some rare fun\nIf both claim the same one,\nHow, on earth will they ever\nDivide It?\nBut while \"Cook\" and \"Cap Peary\"\nIn lands cold and dreary,\nWere ploughing their ways\nThrough the snow\nWe discovered a fact ' -\nWorth ten dozen poles packed      ,\nAnd we hope all good housekeepers\nKnow that\nGolden West Washing Powder\nCLEAN8ES PURIFIES BEAUTIFIES\nSave Coupons for Premlume\nSPECIAL!\nThree Motor Canoea, 18 to 20 feet, at a special reduction. Prion\nranging from $200 to 1276. Carry eight people, make oyer eight miles\nper hour.   One man can handle easl.y on shore or In a sea.\nLike our well known boats and canoes they are made ot the best\nmaterial money can buy.  Write or call at\nLindsay's Boat House\nWe sell everything which Is good that floats.\nlast year, but agriculturalists, realising\nthat they control the market, ln many\ncases refuse to sell even at this   ad-\nKing Manuel's Betrothal\nLISBON, Sept. 21\u2014Accorlng to the\nlocal newspapers, the engagement of\nKing Manuel to Princess Alexandria,\ndaughter of the duke of Fife, will he\nofficially announced at Windsor castle\non Nov. 16, the king's birthday.\nFir Logs Higher\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 21\u2014Owing to a\ndecrease   in the supply the. price  ot\nfir logs has been stiffening 'during the\npast few weeks according to a statement made today by a lumberman and\nIt Is expected that during the winter\nthere will be a further advance. Fir\nlogs are now quoted at between $7 and\n|0 per thousand feet, which Is an adj\nvance of about $1. \"\nTrainmen Killed\nCANEAN, N. H\u201e Sept. 21\u2014Engineer\n\"John Callahan and Fireman Parmenter\nof the Quebec express, bound from\nQuebec to Boston, were killed near\nhere early today   ,    ,    \u201ea\u00bb   ,t'mi\n -WEDNESDAY... SEPTEMBER 22\ntiThe ftetta itett**\nHOTBL directory\nThe Office BSR\nDrop In and sample the neweet Importation\nKing William IV.\n(v.o.p.) Scotch Whiskey\nThli whiskey la gnaranteed N jean\n-Oil before bottled at Lelth, Scotland.\nKememher we tm nothing tat flu\nVert llquers, wlnee, whiskeys, been\n\u25a0and olgare on the market.\nYOUNO 4 BOYD, Proprletore.\nSilver King Hotel\nBaker Street, Neleon.\n-Regular Boarders, 16.00 per week.\nRatee 11.26 per day.\nBeet 28 Cent Meal In the City.\nWM. NEUENDORF, Prop.\nNelson Hotel Bar\nBaker Street, Nelson, B. C.\nINK AND WARD, Preps.\nTry a \"GIN RICKEY\"\nWade from. California limes, specially\nImported.\nFo.' a cool, satisfying smoke\nTry \"A Savannah\" Cigar\nBartlett House\nO. W. BARTLETT, PROP.\nThe best 11.00 a day house In town.\nA Miner's Rome.\nKootenay Hotel\nMRS. MALLETTE, Proprietress.'\nA home tor everybody.   Every eon\nvenlenoe given to the travelling public\nElectrlo   piano.     Cuisine   unexcelled.\nRatee II per day. J\nSherbrooke House\nNELSON, a O.\nOne minute's walk trom 0. P. R. eta\nHon,   Cuisine unexcelled;   well keatof\naid ventilated.\nBOYER BROS., Proprletore.\nEmpire Hotel\n(Late Buanyslde.)\nBaker Street, Nelaon.\nThe hoese la thoroughly  remodelled\nthroughout.   Clean rooma.\nWeekly Boarders 16.00.\nRatee 11.00 per day aa\nTemperance  house;   home  comforts;\nbest eook In the city.\nMRS. J. E. HARRIS, Proprletreee.\nAthabasca Saloon\nCor, Beker and Kootenay Ste.\nNoted    house for Big Beer,    best\n\u25a0brands of Wlnee and Liquors and Union\nCigars tn stack.\nIVEN8 A PHILBERT, PROPS.\nCLUB HOTEL\nCor. Stanley and 8llica Sts.\nNewly furnished, renovated through-\n-out. The best dollar a day house\nwest of Winnipeg. Big schooner Beer\nor Half and Halt 10c. Special rates to\nsteady hoarders.\nJOHN GRANT, Prop.\nNtLSON CAFE\nLARGE COMMODIOUS   DINING\nROOM\nPROMPT     AND    COURTEOUS\nSERVICE.\nMEALS SERVED AT ALL\nHOURS\n\u25a0LEGANTLY  FURNISHED\nROOMS IN CONNECTION\nA. AUDET, Proprietor\nPhone 276.\nHotel Outlet ____BC*\nGreatly enlarged, new furnishings,\n-modern conveniences .large balconies,\n4aaciog pavilion, new row boats.\nFishing,    Boating,   Bathing,   Sandy\n\u25a0Beach   .The best place to spend your\nvacation.   Write or wire lor roome\na * L. SNOW, PROPS.\nROSSLAND.\nTB> HOFFMAN ANNEX, ROWLAND,\nB. C-Greta * \u25a0alts, Props. Centrellj\nlocated. European and American elan\nOommenlal travellers vrtll and llaht,\ncomfortable sample rooms, a special dining room and excellent aoeommodatlons\nat The Hoffman. Betas, bowline:, alley,\n\"\u2014i Unpen-,\t\nPHOENIX\n\u25a0OTBL MOOKLYN. IWIirflLt O.-\nTbe only ap to date betel taPaoeala,\nMew froei mum \u25a0\u2022J\"*0'--\"\"** \u2022\"\u25a0eM\neaaaeetSa   etaea heat.' Opposite Oreei\nWeeMwrn dspet    Jeans Hireaaa stop\nARROWHEAD.\nTS-ff^t\nMM  e_\\_\\ too.         _\t\nra\u00abM. ram _*eoeery lo Biittea OciV-b-\nHOTIU  .iRROWHldVD-\n-\u2014  to\t\nGRAND PORKS, B.C.\nPROVINCE HOTKIi-Grand ForlU, B. C\nto the newest and beet appointed hotel\nin the Interior ot British Columbia, and\notters to the travelling public the beet\naocommodation obtainable. The bulldlni\nla all newly furnUhed throughout and li\nth* only Art proof hotel ln the city. \u25a0\u25a0\nLaraen, Proprietor. -\nCOMAPLIX\n\u25a0QUEEN'S HOTEL - Comapllt, Crlel\nYoung, Prop. Beet of wines, liquors and\nolgare. Travellers to Fish Creek will\nfind excellent accommodation at this\nhotel. Sample room for commercial\ntravellers Is 16 i 66, one of the lawet\nIn the Kootenays.\nSheep Creek\nMining properties for sale.\nA.   LONQHURST, Salmo, B.C.\nHOTEL ARRIVALS OF A DAY\nCafe Open 6.30 a.m to Midnight\nHUME-MIbs K: Ford, Mrs'; Joss. M'as\n\u25a0E. Joan, Crow's Nest; B. J. Thome, R,\nS. Scott, Toronto; S. Pritchard, Vancouver; Miss A. Kltto, H. R. KItto and hoy,\nCalgary; H. T, Cherry, H. Seaman. Winnipeg; G. Carrutliers, Dryden; D.J. Elmer,\nCranbrook; R, 3. McMahon, Hosmer; R.\nE. Ingtls, H. J.. Inglls, G. C. Heath,\nCrawford Bay; J. D. Kerr, B. A, Smith,\nN. C. R. Merry, G. Hallet. lii-Mlle; Mrs.\nJ. \"W. Reed, Eholt; W. Pardy. T. C. Peck,\nMidway; Mrs, A. T. Garland, c. H. Bonner, W. G. Robb, Kaslo; H, O. Marshall.\nToronto; C. Lewlston and wife, Queen\nmine; J. A. Macdonald. Rossland; J. E.\nWilmot, S. E. Wllmot, Grey'B Creek, Jj\nLabarthe, Trail; J. B. \"Wlnlaw. Wlnlaw;\nD. St, Denis, Slocan; M. McLean. Mew\nDenver; K. Ellis,' Toronto; D.\u00bb J. Mc-\nSweyn, Cranbrook: C. J. Cole, w, Lewis,\nLethbrldge; R, S. Jury. Liverpool; E.\nLemay, Ottawa.\nSTRATHCONA-Mra. M. \"W. Emmons.\nTrout Lake; 8. Dancy and wife. Fergueon\nH. Anderson. J. H. Schofield. O. F.\nWeir, J. D. Anderson, Q. L. Merry, Trail;\nJ. C. McCormfck and wife, C. W. Busk,\nKokanee; A. C, Merrill. Tacoma; XV.\nNelson, D. Jarvls. J. D. Rankin. Vancouver; I,. J. Pierce and wife, Boston; Mrs.\nJ. Cuthbertson, Greenwood; Mrs. K.\nGood, Mrs. Joss. Miss Joss, Crow's Nest;\nT. H. Larke, Seattle; J, Simpson 'and wife\nSpokane; J. Shetland and wife, Bursrh; A.\nJ. Curie, Kaalo; J. Venables, Seattle; D.\nB. Maurice. Toronto; H. R. Sutherland,\nCaurary; Miss Culp, Winnipeg;; E. W.\nWalker. Toronto; Col. nnd Mrs. Soiidit-\nmore, England; T. V. Scudamore, Rock\nCreek. Mrs. J. Anderson, Kaslo; P. A.\nBoeedon, Montreal.\nThe Royal Hotel\nMrs. L. V. Roberts, Proprietress\nCor. Stanley and Silica Sts.\nElectrlo Piano\nFree carriage or bus from all-\nboats and trains.\nRates, $1 and $1.60 per day.\nROYAL\u2014Mrs. A. Prank. G. McLean, p.\nMcKay, Trail; W. Scott, Mrs. J. Peachy,\nBalfour; A. Ancorn. Waneta; G. H. An-\ncorn. Grand Forks; Mra. T. Payne and\ndaughter. Shields; D. M. Hunter, F. A.\nSweet, Saskatoon.\np. P. Poulton, E. Meachum V. M. Sher-\nblno, H. Elklns. J. Lawrie, P. Klve, M.\nMurrlll, P. Lawrie, G. Miller, Phoenix; B.\nPlercy. J. McKay. Vancouver; W. L.\nPayne, ShUds.\nQueen's Hotel\nlAIEft STMET\nA. LAPOINTE, I\nRates $1.50 to $1.0$ \\m tor.\nSpecial rates to elty boardsn.\nQUEENS-Mrs. J. H. Pinchbeck. A.\nStewart. Slocan; C. Harris, J, C. Harris,\nF. W. Brady, New Denver; T. D. Floyd,\nSilverton; A. Groute, Coultee; E. Arnold,\nR. R. Evans, Lethbrldge; D. F. Shober.k,\nR. D. Hardy, Spokane; C. Leoia, Seattle;\nB. FinnlB, Cranbrook; G. E. AhemaUby,\nWillow Spring; J. Peacock and daughter,\nMoyie; B. V. ColcheBter, Kaslo; D. Morgan, N. Truswell, Trail; A. Robinson,\nGrand Forks; W. Dutton, Shoe City; Mrs.\nJ. Halfner, Miss E. Tracy, Vancouver.\nGrand Central Hotel\norrosm post oitim\nAocricn and Eiropeai Hau\nj. a. nicuoa\nGRAND CENTRAL-S. J, Blalock, R.\nMcLeod-, Moyie; J, Covington, J. Myers,\nA. McDougall. Slocan; F. Margram, F,\nSprague, Calgary; J, Morris, Hamilton;\nV.' Mlrche, Frultvale; O. Ostbo, Lethbrldge\nA. Jefferson, J. E. Rice, Creston; J. E.\nMlghton; Varderas; R. Doran. Silver King\nmine; J. Coleman and wife, Ymh'; Mrs.\nK. Good. Mrs. M. Joss, Miss E. Joss, H.\nJosb, Crow's Nest; E. Leuhardt, F. Fal-\nham, W. Murphy, Macleod; D, Haley,\n(Lethbrldge; O. K. Roseburgli, Port HID;\nR. Farnour, Copeland; S. Prltchard, Vancouver; H. Holnberg, E. Stevens. Granite\nmine; D. F. Stolbeck, J. R. Hardle, Alne-\nwortli; A. B. Shannon, Ferndale; M.\nMaddaugh, Grand Forks.\nLikeview Hotel\nton \u00ab'r Hall aad Vernon Btreet\n'    N. MALLETTE, Preprleter.\ni wo blocks from oltr wear*.\nThe beet dollar a day house fa\nNelson.\nAll White Help.\n\u2022 LAKEVIEW\u2014J. C. Brownlee, Cranbrook\na. Macleod, Macleod; G. H. White. J.\nHaggorty, J. Headier, J. Stokes, L. Aac-\nerman, j, Rosen, C. Rankin, H. Frlesen,\nMontreal.\nv    \u2014-       \u25a0 '\nThe Klondyke Hotel\nVERNON 8TRBBT\nHeadquarters for miners,\nmen, logfers and railroad n\n'     Rates: ILM per day at.\nN1LBON ft JOBNION,\nTremont Houss\nBaker St, Nelaoc\nMbIodo & Trofdllua, Prori.\nEuropean Plan, SOo. up\nAnjerioan Plan, $1.26 and |1.H\nMeals, 36a\nSPECIAL KATES PER MONTH\nTREMONT-J. A. Ferguson, Trail; E.\nMobbs, Rapid Creek; D. Larson, Creston;\nW. Davis, Corbin; J, Hyde, Vancouver;\nA.  Thorpe, Lardo;  H. JenBen, Alnsworth;\nKLONDYKE-D. Smith, Fernle; H. R.\nMcDonald, J. C. Jones, Calgary; G.'B.\nWales. Reglna.\nMadden House\nTbo* Madden, Prop.\nWell Famished Room, With Beet\nBeat Baud la the Oltr\nA CeHFOKTABLa i\nMADDEN\u2014H. Mackay. Shields; D. A.\nMcDonnld, Antlgonlsh; C. P. MeDougnll,\nMorrlstown; B. Jackson, Rlondel; c.  B.\nWitter, W. A. Brown. S. T. Hart, Spokane; C. Hamilton, Giand Forks.\nNEI^ON\u2014h. Halge, Slocan; T. E. Bush,\nFrultvale; A. 8. Clute. C. Avray, Marcus;\nJ. Brlckman, L. C. Payette, F. Hannell,\nCreston; D. M. Hurlay, Utlca; A. Smoke,\nCranbrook.\nKOOTBT*AY\u2014J. M. Soney, Edmonton;\nB. Jackson, J. Windross. F. Felice. Rlondel.\nBARTLETT-R. McKie. M. Jones. W.\nHowe, Brandon; F. Harvey, Calgary.\nSHERBROOKE-W. Watklns, R. Dodd,\nJ. Mason, Calgary; E. Howell, Brandon;\nF.  R. Cox. Montreal, \\\nSILVER KING-M. Owens, R. Davison,\nMontreal; J. H. Carter, Mlnneaaolls.\nCLUB\u2014W. G. Burnham, R, Lasalme,\nW. Depew, R. Horrle, C. Austenson, J.\nHedin, C. Hetherlngton, C. H. Bavin.\nRlondel. >':\u25a0_\t\nBASEBALL   RESULTS.\nNational League\nW.     L.      P.O.\nPittsburg   102       36       .739\nChicago    02       45       .672\nNew York   80       63       .602\nCincinnati    68      69      .496\nPhiladelphia  67      71      .486\nSt. Louis   48       85       .361\nBrooklyn  .....     48      86      .368\nBoston    40       89       .310\nFirst game\u2014Pittsburg 2, Boston 0.\nSecond game\u2014Pittsburg 6, Boston 0.\nSt, Louis-New York game postponed\non account of rain.\nChicago-Brooklyn game postponed\non account of rain.\nAmerican League.\nW.     L. P.C.\nDetroit       :  90       61 .638\nPhiladelphia    86      53 .619\nBoston    82       69 .574\nChicago  70      70 .500\nCleveland  68      74 .479\nNew York    66       73 .476\nSt. Louis    60       80 .429\nWashington  40    100 .286\nChicago 0, New York 5.\nCleveland 3, Boston 7.\nPhiladelphia 1, St. Louis 2.\nFirst game\u2014Washington 1, Detroit 3.\nSecond game\u2014Washington 2, Detroit 0.              \t\nEastern League\nW. U. P.C.\nRochester  85 69 .690\nNewark   81 GO .574\nProvidence    77 66 .638\nToronto    75 69 .621\nBuffalo    69 77 .471\nMontreal   64 79 .448\nBaltimore  (...61 79 .436\nJersey City   69 82 .418\nFirst game\u2014Montreal 9, Baltimore 1.\nSecond game\u2014Montreal 4, Baltimore 1.\nToronto 1, Providence 2.\nBuffalo 0, Jersey City 1.\nNorthweetern League\nW. L      P.C.\nSeattle    101 63      .666\nSpokane     92 01      .601\nAberdeen     74 76      .493\nPortland    72 82       .468\nVancouver   67 89      .429\nTacoma  59 103       .362\nVancouver 1, Spokane 7.\nAberdeen 8, Seattle 0.\nPortland 1, Tacoma 5.\nCoast League\nW.     L.      P.C.\nSan Francisco 108      64       .628\nPortland   92      71      .664\nLob Angeles  93      78      .544\nSacramento   81      83      .404\nOakland   72    103      .411\nVernon     62    109      .363\nLos Angeles 0, Portland 4.\nSacramento 4, Vernon 2.\nOakland 2, San Francisco 1.\nGOVERNMENT CONDEMNED\nToronto Methodists Condemn Grant of\nCharter for Racinq\nTORONTO, Sept. 21\u2014The granting\nof a charter to the Metropolitan Racing association was condemned at the\nofficial meeting of the Toronto central\ndistrict ot the Methodlsf church   yes-\nTO INVESTORS\nThere Is no other place in Canada where money can be Invested with safety a\"d \"\"\"i,,* *\u00b0fa,!?.\nsurance of large profits as between Vancouver and Westminster and between the B. c. Electric anu \u00abi> \u00bb\u2022\u25a0\nNorthern and Northern Pacific lines. The distance is only five and three-quarter miles betweeni tne city\nlimits. Along the B. C. Electric line it is now almost one ontlnuons city. Along the Great \"\u00b0\"\u00b0^\u2122\nline the great manufacturing plants are already locating. The Sumner Iron Works and Burton saw woras\nbought property last week Just midway between the cities.\nThe Great Western Power company is placing Its distributing power station at Burnaby lake and\nwithin the next few years along this strip of land thousands of acres must be required by tne loiror\nfive great tranaeontlnental railways coming to Vancouver. There Is no other natural grade to reacn. tne\ncity, they must come by Westminster and Burnaby lake, the manufacturers must be on tne railway ann\ncloBe to the power plant and there will be thousands of them. Seattle has over a thousand aireaay ana\nTacoma four hundred. The Burnaby Addition we are selling occupies the ground where the manufacturing\nmust be done, it lies between the two cities and right In between the different railway and street car lines.\nIt Is actually surrounded and must be the center of a great hustling city ln a few years. No mm \u00bb\u2122*oaB\nestimate what the value of this property will he. Now Is the time to Invest, the price is low and terms easy.\nIn a short time It will be different.\nTO THE MAN WHO LABORS\nWe have given a great deal of study to Investments for wage earners. We see no other hope for\nthem to secure a competence as safely and quickly as by investing a certain amount per month In lots\nbetween these two cities. We know no other place where their money will bring them as large ana certain returns. .\nWe know the fear which prevents many men working on a salary from Investing. They dread the\npossibility o* getting out of work or 111 and not being able to complete their payments, thus losing the\nmoney they have earned by hard work. We wont to assure every man who buys from us,, that no cannot\nlose his money In this way. If misfortune comes we are willing to wait on him without inteiest. We know\nthe lots will be Increasing ln value and If he finds, after a reasonable time that he cannot P\u00b0ss'b J 801 on\nand complete the payments we sell the lots again and retnrn what has been paid, less the Ismall amount\nfor expenses. This very seldom happens. Out of the fonr or five hundred sales made in the last year or\nso, we have had a very email number who have not been able to continue their payments.\nWe have three Investors from Nelson who hnve gone down and made an examination of our property,\nthey have assured their friends that It Is exactly as represented and that they consider It a aweuil Investment. Out of all the people who have taught from us we do not know of one who Is dlssatisiied. We\nwant everyone to know the merits of our property to the fullest extent. They are sure to make.money\nand we will thus add them to onr list of permanent Investors. Be sure and get on our mulling list, we want\nyou to get the next article on \"The Science of Investment.'\nThe Wright Investment Company\n403 Baker Street\nDOCTOR\nADVISED\nOPERATION\nCured by Lydia E. Pink-\nham'sVegetableCompound\nCanifton, Ont\u2014\"I had beena great\nsufferer for five years. One doctor\ntold me It was ulcers of the uterus,\nand another told me it was a fibroid\nK^^^\u2014 tumor. No one\n\u25a0 knows what I suf-\n\u25a0 fered. I would\nBBHBa always be worse\n<iflaBTaTj at certain periods,\n>X Tarsal -1111' never\n*|sli_fj regular, and the\nit W bearing-down\nIpjpfsfj painswereterrible.\n\u25a0 I was very ill in\nUll bed, and the doctor\nH told me I would\nH have to have an\n\u25a0 operation, and\n^^^^that I might die\nduring the operation. I wrote to my\nsister about it and she advised me to\ntake Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable\nCompound. Through personal experience I have found it the best medicine in the world for female troubles,\nfor it has cured me, and I did not have\nto have the operation after all. The\nCompound also helped me while passing through Change of Life.\"\u2014Mrs.\nLktitia Blair, Canifton, Ontario.\nLydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com.\npound, made from roots and herbs,\nhas proved to be the most successful\nremedy for curing the worst forms of\nfemale ills, including displacements,\ninflammation, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, bearing-down feeling, flatulency, indigestion, and nervous prostration. It costs\nbut a trifle to try it, and the result has\nbeen worth millions to sufferingwomen.\nTrunks and Suit Cases\n(New Stock)\n8ELLING   AT   EATON   PRICES\nAlso Boots, Clothing, Carpet Squares\nand Linoleum.\nCome and see for youraelf. First\nchoice is always the best.\nH. Ginsberg\n(SILVER  KING   MIKE)\nHall Street Nelson, B.C.\nterday afternoon. A resolution, which\nwas moved by Rev. W. VH. Hindis and\nseconded by Rev. W. Wilson and carried unanimously, condemned the\ngranting of tlie charter of incorporation by tbe department of the secretary of state at Ottawa to the Metropolitan Racing association and called\nupon the government of Canada to introduce legislation at the next session\nof parliament to prohibit gambling In\nconnection with horse races and also\nthe publication of betting Intelligence.\nThe surviving grandchildren of Robert Fulton, In a letter addressed to Cornelius Vnnderbllt, president of tbe Fulton Monument association, gave their\nsanction today to the removal of Fulton's body from a vault in Trinity\nchurch here to the mausoleum and\nmemorial to be built on the Riversiue\ndrive. The movement,for the Fulton\nmemorial has been under way some\ntime and \u00a540,000 has been subscribed\nto defray tbe cost. In all It is proposed\nto expend $3,000,000 on the structure.\nSamuel L. Clemens (Mark Twain) is\nvice president of the association, while\nothers Identified with the movement include James J. Hill, John D. Archbold,\nJacob Schlff, B. H. Gary, William H.\nCorrle, and others.\nw\nTailored Suits {ot Fall\nAn Authentic Portrayal of Fashionable\nCreations in Exquisite Garments\nfor the Coming Season\n\/\nFor months we've been keeping a\nkeen eye on the productions of the\ngreatest garment manufacturers and\nstyle originators both in this country\nand abroad. Watching for the distinctive, out-of-the-ordinary thoughts which\nspring up among the multitudes of\nhum-drum,, stamped-out designs which;\nmark the average display of ready-to-\nwear suits.\n' Been studying the style effects for\nfall at close range, too. Drinking ln\nDame Fashion's message of what Is to\nrule in women's wearables and guiding\nour selection of suits with first hand\nknowledge of your needs.\nHere is the most marvelously complete and trustworthy showing of women's suits this town has ever seen.\nAn array that is unbounded in Its\nscope, being an accurate picture of the\nMoyen Age and Eighteenth Century\nvogues which are so deservedly popular. Suits that you will want to wear\nat the great Fruit (Fair\u2014and at all other\noccasions during the coming fall sea-\nBon, for they are suits that are correct\nfor every use.\nEvery woman will find in this stock\nher ideal of what tbe new fall ault\nshould be. Not only that but she will\nfind It at a price which will make the\nnew outfit easily achievable.\nPrices $15 to $50\nMEAGHER \u00ae> CO\nFruit Growers' Excursion\nTHE RIVERSIDE NURSERIES OF GRAND FORKS have arranged\nwith the C.P.R. to run an excursion to their nurseries at Grand Fork-s\non Friday, Sept. 24th, leaving Nelson by tbe regular Boundary train at\n9:15 o'clock, gwd to return the following day.\ntf 50 persons or more leave Nelson or any other point, a single fare\n\u25a0will cover the round trip; If 10 or more, a fare and one-third.\nThis is a splendid opportunity for Intending purchasers of nursery\nstock, or any fruit growers to see our extensive nurseries.\nAH arrangements for viewing the nurseries, hotel accommodation,\nand seeing the valley will be made by the management.\nFor further particulars write to V. Dynes of Nelson, or to the Riverside Nurseries, Grand Forks, B.C.   ( !\n- \u2014\n\\\nMV]\n'TO\nV\n1\nivri\np\nmt.\ny\nzi||\n^5tS_----. !3\n$_____\n\u2014m-irixi\nA Large Consignment of\nCarpets and Rugs\nJust Received\nDoift fall to see our IS Rugs, size\n3x3 yards. Tapestry, Bruss Is, Velvet,\nAxmlnsler and Meltons at all prices.\nBlankets!\nBlankets!\nAll Kinds.   Best Values\nEver Shown.   Prices\nfrom\n$2.75\n$1200\nIt will pay you to see our very\nlarge s' ck ot Lace CurtalnB. The\nprices range from 75c. per pair to\n$2o.\nAgents\nMason * Risen Pianos\nOstermoor Mattress   \u25a0\nStandard Fttfnitore Co*\nComplete [House Furnishers\n QDHe Uattjj Hew*\nWEDNESDAY... SEPTEMBER 32\nDollars CominiYoiii^\nGREAT\nEXHIBITION SALE\nOF CLOTHING\nMen's and Boys' Furnishings, Hats\nCaps, and Shoes, at Greatly\nReduced Prices\nSpecial Sale of Men's Suits\nThe very hest quality, none better anywhere usually sold at\nS2S and $30, on sale at $10.00.\nSuits worth S20 and *22.50 for $14.75\n$10.00 and $12.00 Suits for $6.75.\nThe Best In Boys' Clothes\nAt bargain prices.   At prices $2.50, |3, 14, $5, and $6.\nPerfect Fitting Dress Shirts\u2014Values %\\ and $1.25, on sale at\n75 cents.\nMen's Working Shirts\u2014Extra good wearers, worth $1 for 50 cents.\nUnderwear for Fall and Winter Wear\u2014From, the best makers.\nAll wool underwear value $1.25 for 75c. per garment; $1.50 value for\n\u20221.00. ,\nA full range of boy's underwear, all prices.\nIn the government he could not Interfere, excepting by way of suggestion\nto the coal company president.\nREADY TO INVEST\nBut Continental Capitalists Want Some\nAssurance of Security\nWASHINGTON, Sept. 21\u2014Hundreds\nof millions of dollars are In England,\nPrance and Germany awaiting Investment as soon as the investors con be\nassured of absolute federal regulation.\nThis statement was made today by\nCommissioner Franklin Lane of the\ninterstate commerce commission, who\nhas Just returned from a trip of nearly\nthree months ln Europe.\n\"Men of money abroad,\" continued\nCommissioner Lane, \"are satisfied\nthat America Is on the eve of a phenomenal era of prosperity and are\nready to invest their money in any\nstable enterprise in this country, but\nwhat they want Is some assurance\nfrom the government that their investments will be protected in a fair way.\nThey would like to see the capitalization of bur railroads brought under\n.federal legislation, so that a purchaser\nof stock would be assured of getting\nwhat be paid for.\nBENEFITS   MISSIONARIES\nChange of Dynasty in Turkey Brings\nLiberal Treatment\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 21\u2014Rev. Dr. Duval, pastor of Knox Presbyterian church\nhas just returned from a four months'\njourney to Europe, during which time\nhe penetrated the Turkish empire to\nTalas, Asia Minor, to see his daughter,\nMrs. Herbert M. Irwin, wife of Rev.\nH. M. Irwin, missionary at that point.\nThe change of dynasty in Turkey, Dr.\nDuval states, has been of great advantage to th emissionaries. They have\nreceived far more liberal treatment In\nevery way. Tbe new regime has the\nhacking of al) the intelligent and progressive Turks.\nAnti-Semitic Riots\nLONDON, Sept. 21\u2014A special dispatch received from * Kiever, Russia,\nsays that anti-Jewish rioting broke out\nln that city today and as a result 20\npersons have -been killed and several\nhundred Injured, many fatally.\nBUSINESS DIRECTORY\nPAINTIM AND DECORATOR*\nPUBLISHERS AND PRINTERS\nNaweTKiBLJsSSjorcoiiPAjiir^E-\nPubUshers ol Tha Dally News: snbsorio-\nall\nUS\n<u\u00bb.wu.. \u00ab .... .Daily News: suoscnp.\nUon W.W per year Mr earner; IS.*) per yew\nby mall. Commercial Job printing of -\"\nkinds neatly and promptly eseoutsd.\nBaker street; Nelson. B. C. Pnone Ut.\nHAIRDRESSINQ   AND   MANICURING\nlui\u00a3. KATHLBBM NUAH, balrdresslnf\nand manicuring .parlors. Boom H. K. W.\nC. block. _^^\nTKe DAILY NEWS\nri aaaiFiED ADS.\u2014One tent sword.   Six insertions lor the |rtte tl\nC{ourihen peidlnldTMUie.   No d Uken to less then Me.\nTelephone 144      THE DAILY NEWS\nCOLLECTION   AGENCIES.\nW. CUTLBR-CXiLUEUTiUNB OF A_L>\nkiods. Returns promptly made. References given. Olllce 313 Walter itreet*\nNelson, B. C.\nBOOKBINDING AND RULING\nAll kinds of office forms ruled and punch-\ned tor loose leaf binders. The moat complete book- binding equipment in the interior of British Columbia. 218 Baker St.,\nNeleon. B. C, P. O. drawer 11U. Phone lit\nASSAYERS\nvinclal) Metallurgical Chemist. Charges\nOold, Silver. Copper or Lead. II each;\nGold-Silver, |L60: bllver-Letd, U.G0 Zinc,\nM; Bilver-Lead-Zlnc. $3; Oold, Silver-Cop.\n^or Lead. 12.60.  Accurate assays; care-\nsampling, and prompt attention. P.O,\nBos AlllB, Nelaon, B. C.\nTHE W0RKINGMAN8 EMPLOYMENT\nAND REAL ESTATE AGENCY.\nWANTED\u2014Teamsters, $50 and board; axe\nmen, }3; brldgemen, (3.10; laborers, J2.B0,\nboard 15,25 a week, free fare, ship dally:\nsawmill laborers, swampers, men to contract to cut logs, setter, men to clear land,\nwaitress, girl to mind baby afternoons,\noffice boy, blacksmith, sawyers and car-\npenters.   W. Parker, 312 Baker Street.\n1 can settle a party on a one-uuarter\nsection of land, \\% miles from railroad\ndepot, Dp\/miles west of Nelson. Lund Is\none-half prairie, good soil and has fine\nspring creek on It. If taken ln a day or\n' two can turn over for (100 per acre. For\nparticulars call at Parker's Employment\noffice, 812 Baker Bt. 132-4\nWANTED\u2014Men and women to learn barber trade ln eight weeks: toola free;\nsecured over 10,000 positions for graduates\nlast year; unable to supply the demand;\ngraduates earn $15 to |3> weekly; Catalogue free. Moler System Colleges. 403\nFront Ave., Spokane   Wash'\nHELP WANTED\nNELSON   EMPLOYMENT  AGENCY\n4. H. LOVE. Manaoar. ,\nWANTED\u2014Sawyers, teamsters, swampers* I\nhoist engineer,, lath men, log car loader*. I\nsawmill laborers, men to cut poles ami I\nposts, machine miners, men to clear land,!\nwaiter, woman cook, waitresses, girls fori\nhousework, *\nFOR 8ALE\n.. HATS OF ALL KINDS ..\nHard and Soft\nThe celebrated Barrlngton Hat,\nregular $3 grade lor $2.25.\nStetson Hats for $3.75,\nGood hats, worth up to $3 for $1.\nThe newest and hest shapes.\nGENT'S FURNISHINGS\nCollars 15c, or 2 for 25c.\nTies, 75c, for 60c.\nTies, 35c. for 25c.\nHandkerchiefs, white or colored,\nfor 5c.\nSOCKS\nAll wool, extra good wearing,\n35c value for 25c, or 5 pairs for\n$1.00.\nCashmere Socks, 25c, fancy\nsocks, 35c, and 50c, lor 25c.\nThe Store Where \"Men Who Know\" Buy Clothes\nBROWN \u00ae> CO. 405 BAKER STREET\nPROFESSIONAL CARDS\nASSAYERS' SUPPLIES\nB. C. ASSAY & CHEMICAL SUPPLY CU.,\nLtd., Vancouver, B.C. Agenta ln British\nColumbia for the Morgan crucible Com-\npany, London, Bnglauii; i\\ W. ilraun,\nLos Angele* and San Francisco; Baker\nand Adamaon'a C.P. Adda and Chtmicala;\nWay's Pocket Smelters. Writ* for information about these \u2022milters, invaluable to tha prospector, aaiayar or miner.\nComplete aaea-r outfits farnlahed at short\nnotice.\nWM. RUTHERFORD, DRUGGIST. Prescriptions carefully filled, only best\nmedluineB used. Largest drug Block.\nFresh stock of Ume juice In 26c, 40c aud\nGOc bottles. Toilet soap, big assortment.\nMew sponges and perfumes. Spraying\nmaterials an below: Insect powder, Red\nMite Killer for poultry houses, Whale\nOil soap. Quassia Chips, Tobacco extract, Bordeaux Mixture and Pails\nGreen.   Mall orders filled promptly.\nWANT&D-EdKermun at once.   Apply by\nwire tn Fernle Lumber Co.,  Fernie, B.\nC. \u25a0 84-tf.\nFOR BALE-aw x 120 feet ground, eaual\nto 8 city lots, facing Hoover street,\ncleared and grubbed, ready for Blow.\n$360 will handle this, balance IBM, your\nown terms.   Address box 296, Nelaon.\nas-tc\nFOR SALE-One pair of blockey heavy L\nset  mares;   would  make a  first  class-1\nranch team; also one single hoise.   Ad-f\ndrees box 572, Nelaon. n-tf. ]\nFOR SALE-ABsay plant, formerly work*'\nUK   OAUtH\u2014ABBay    pi till l,    -.uimioiiji    nu-\u00bb-|\ned by A. L. McKiUpn, for rent or fori\nsale.   Apply J. O. Patenaude. ,n*-** a\n103- tf.;\nWANTED-PLUMS,    all   varieties.     The\nKootenay Jam Co., Ltd., Nelson.    116-tf.\nWANTED-Ladles to do plain and light\nsewing at home, whole or spare time,\ngood pay; woik sent any distance, charges\nprepaid; send stamp for full particulars.\nNational Manufacturing company, Montreal. U8-6W.\nFOR SALE\u2014Peterboro boat, latest design,\nnearly new.   Apply P. O. box 623.    IQi-tf.\nFOR SALE\u2014Chicken ranch for sate, isl\nminutes fiom post office, four lots, com-l\nfortable houses, bearing fruit trees, small!\nfruits, chicken runs and large poultry!\nhouses, 42 by 20. $200 cash, balance month-P\nly payments; price 91600. Taylor & McQuarrle. \u25a0\nWANTED\u201420  good   bricklayers,   80   cents\nper hour.   Apply Carbeck and Jackson,\nFernle, B. C. 120-10\nEGO & HALDANE\nGEORGE C. EGG\nAssociate   Royal   Architectural   Inst\nCanada.   B.C.A.A.\nNelson: Imperial Bank Bldg.  Boi Ml.\nFernle: B. and H. Bldg.   P.O. Box 80\nS. S. FOWLER\nMININQ ENGINEER\nNELSON, B. G.\nLADIES CAN MAKE MONEY\nhy selling to their friends Bwlaa Em-braid-\nerles, trimmngs, blouses, costumes, hand*\nkerchiefs, splendid novelties, offered by\nflrat-clasa Swiss factory. Goods sent by\nreturn, free of charge, no postage nor\nduty, no trouble with customs house. X\npercent commission, payment by reim*\nhurseraent on receipt of goods. Write for\nsamples to Za G. 2187, Rudolf Moose. Bt\nGait, Switzerland.\t\nWANTED-Cord wood, shingle bolt or logging  contract.    Address  XV.   A.,   Daily\nNews. 128-10\nWANTED-Offlce position by comoetent\noffice man, stenographer, book-keeper,\netc. Experienced in railioad. mining and\nlumbering business. At present employed\nbut would like to make change. AddreBB\nG. P., care Dally News. 128-fi\nWANTED\u2014Situation by girl of 19, as general  help ln  household, with  no small\nchildren.   Apply G.W., Dally News.    128-6\nWANTED\u2014To adopt girl, between 12 and\n15 years old, or will give good home in\nplace of minding baby.   Apply Mrs. W.\nRichardson, Gas Works, upstairs.       127-6\nPRIVATE MATERNITY HOME\nNICE   LOCALITY   AND   HOME   COM-\nforts.   For terms and particulars write\nP. O. Box 763, Nelson, B. C.\t\nFOLEY'S\nCANADIAN GIRL\nCHOCOLATES\nlOhocolatea are (or the men to buy and for the girls of all ages\nto enjoy.\nHThe richness, daintiness and variety of forms of chocolates appeal\nto the feminine taste,\n^Foley's \"Canadian Girl\" chocolates are made with one object,\nthat of completely satisfying these judges.\n\"Will you he one of the feminine jury 1\n'iThese are our newest chocolates,   Every box contains a large\nvariety and every individual piece is of purest chocolate\u2014they are\nthe daintiest, most delicious, fullest-flavored chocolates you can buy.\n*]Let us have your verdict.\nSold wherever the best Candies are sold.\nFoley Bros. Larson & Co.\nWINNIPEG VANCOUVER\nWM. S. DREWRY ,\nA. M. Can. Boo. C. E.\nDOMINION AND BRITISH COLUMBIA\nLAND SURVEYOR\nMining Work a Specialty\nOffice: Room 10, K. W. C. Bioek.\nP. O. Box 434.\nBaker St., Nelson. B. 0.\nNEWS OF THE DOMINION\nLONDON, Sept. 21 \u2014 Mrs. Leslie\nScott was formally committed on the\ncharge of murdering Harry Scot at the\npreliminary hearing of the case.\nTORONTO, Sept. 21\u2014Abraham' Cohen, a motroman, was found dead in his\n,hath today with his throat cut and a\npocket knife In his hand. The coroner\nIs Investigating.\nTORONTO, Sept. 21\u2014William 'White,\npresident of the Canadian section ot\nthe British Association for the Advancement of Science, la In the city on his\nreturn from the convention at Winnipeg, lit the course of as interview he\nadvocated the home government train\ning some of the unemployed In Canadian methods of farming In order to\nsolve the settler problem. Canada lias\nno room for Idle men, he said.\nOTTAWA, Sept. 10-The city council\nalmost unanimously passed a bylaw\nsanctioning the purchase of a site in\nthe east end of the city '\" \u00bb \u00abJv.lc'11-\nclnerator plant. The Bite will cost J10,-\n000.\nCORNWALL, Sept. !l-yj'le'\u00bba\nwedding crowd on the O.T.R. station\nplatform. Miss Mcintosh, a\/0\"8'\"\u25a0 \u00ab'\nfte bride, was Jostled and thrown\nacross the rails as a train cam*i thundering along. She was about to toe run\nover when Hugh Klppen, the pianist U>\nthe Bttrland theatre, rushed from the\nfrightened crowd, seised the girl and\nTORONTO, Sept. 21 \u2014 Sir James\nWhitney and his ministers have received Invitations from Hon. Walter Scott,\npremier of Saskatchewan, to attend the\nlaying of the corner stone of the new\nSaskatchewan parliament buildings at\nReglna in October.\nTORONTO, Sept. 21\u2014Wm. Seay, the\nnegro who was sentenced hy justice\nPalkeuhrldge to 20 years imprisonment\nIn Kingston penitentiary for attempted\nmurder, died yesterday. The attempted murder took place on Booth avenue\ntn Rlverdale, and the man fired two\nshots at his wife hut did not Inflict any\ndangerous wounds. Mrs. Seay was the\ndaughter of a rich man ln the southern\nstates and waa apparently well educated and refined. Seay worked as coach,\nman for her father and she married\nhim.\nMONTREAL, Sept. 21\u2014Prince Kuni\nlyoshi, Japanese representative at the\nHudson-Fulton celebration had opportunity today to justify his reputation as\none of the best marksmen tn the Japanese army. The prince, who is a\ncousin of the emperor and a general\nof high standing, spent the morning\nnt target practice with the experts at\nMontlcello gun club. Although using a\nrifle with which he was to a great extent unfamiliar he proved himself the\nequal of the shots ln Sullivan county\nscoring several difficult bullseyes. The\nprince and princess Kuol, with their attendants who arrrlved yesterday at\nMerrywood Park, will leave tomorrow\non a special train for West Point where\nthey are to be the guests of. the government for the day.\nW. J. fl. HOLMES\nCIVIL ENGINEER AND   MINE   SUB,\nT-EYOR, PROVINCIAL LAND\nSURVEYOR, KASLO, B. C.\nTen years' experience lu   the Kootenays.  Honor graduate 1891, Royal Military College of Canada, Kingston.\nFor Sale\nA small block ot land at the head of\nStanley street containing nearly eight\ncity lots, water running through property, easily cleared and free from\nrock.   A snap at $300 cash.\nA five roomed house and one lot ln\nFairvlew, close to oar line, sma.1 cash\npayment down, balance In monthly payments to suit purchaser.\nFull particulars of\nR. J. STEEL,\nHudson's Bay Block\nWANTED\u2014Upholstery work, repairing and\nrenovating of every description, done at\nown or party's residence. Thoroughly experienced. Miss McCall, 712 Stanley St.,\nP. O, Box MS- 129-6\nFOR SALE\u2014For a few days, fine six-l\nroomed house, with or without furnitures\nClose In, no hills to climb, splendid view!\nof lake. Owner willing to sacrifice, leav-r\nIng city. The 'Wright Investment com-L\npany.        127-tf. I\nFOR   SALE\u2014Heavy   Studebaker    trucks,!\nsuitable for logging, freighting or hauli-1\nIng ore,  recently overhauled.    Price $75j\nApply West Transfer. \u00ab*.-\u00ab\u25a0\nFOR SALE\u2014Gasoline launch, 18 footer, i\nhorse   power,    Fairbanks-Morse engine.\nAll in good condition.   $250   Apply J.  H.\nMatheson, 606 Baker St. 130-7\nFOR SALE\u2014A sub-division of excellent\nfruit lan'H ln the famous Kaslo district,\nin 6 or 10 acre blocks. Abundance ol\nwater, dale to railroad and steamboat\nlanding, navigation the entire year, Fine\nhunting, fishing and wonderful scenery.\nDirect from locator to purchaser. See or\nwrite H. XJ. Lindsay, Lindsay Boat House,\nNelson, B, C.\nWANTED\u2014The    Fernle    hospital  Is  prepared  to  receive  applications   for pupil\nnurseB.   Address Miss Kidd. lady sunerln-\ntendent, Fernle, B. C. t9n--\n    ,\u2014 -\u25a0\u2014..\u2014..,-\u25a0]\nPRIVATE SALE  of Household  furniture.\nof six rooms.   Mrs. D. Steel, High Sfc.1\nFairview. \"\u25a0a1-'1'\nFOR SALE-Tralned ox, 1200 pounds,  foil\nsale. Gentle and steady, $90 with harness!\nWorth two horses at that figure, costs lesaf\nto keep than one.   Gurney, Willow Point, \u25a0\nWANTED\u2014Immediately, experienced male\nstenographer.      Apply  Western  Canada\nTimber Co..  Limited, _$_\u2022*\nWANTED\u2014Sm (ill    cabin    or    unfurnished\nroom.   Box W., Daily News. 130-tf.\nWANTED\u2014To rent, modern house, about\nsix rooms.   Address Box It., Dally News.\n130-tf.\nWANTED\u2014Six men tor woods; also coort\nhorseshoer and blacksmith.   J, B. Win-\nlaw, B, C. 131-tf.\nA. L. McOULLOOH\nHYDRAULIC ENGINEER\nPROVINCIAL LAND SURVEYOR\nP. O. Box 41.\nOffice Phone B86; Residence Phone B74\nOffice: Over McDermld & McHardy\nBaker Street     Nelson, B. O.\nWANTED\u2014Situation hy experienced cook\nln  camp   or   mine.    Address   L.,   DaUv\nNews. 131-6\nFOR SALE\u2014Pretty home on lake, With ot\nwithout launch, eight miles from Nelson,\n$250, value of material, cash; balance (II\nper month, or any terms. Chicken rancl\nor small fruit ranch If desired.. Gkirney,\nWillow Point. 131-1\nFOR SALE\u2014Gool general store and stock\nof goods, with Improved fruit ranch, 1(\nrods from C.P.R. station. Four passenger trains daily. For terms and particulars enquire M. A. Bit-man, Thrums,\nB.  C. 131-f\nFOR BALE\u2014Launch  and  boat house,  In\nperfect condition.   Allan Purvis.       \"\u25a0\u2022*-*\nWANTED-Good    cook   (woman),    wants\nposition.    Apply  Queens Hotel,   Nelson,\nB. C. 131-3\nF.C.Green.    F.P.Burden,   A.H.Green\nGreen Brothers & Burden\nCIVIL ENGINEERS\nDominion and British Columbia Land\nSurveyori\nP. O. Box 146 Phone B261\nCor, Victoria and Kootenay 3t\u00bb.\nNELSON. B. O.\nJoy's Cash Grocery\nwill not close during the fair. It is\npossible that you will have visitors\nfrom outside points. You will then\nwant some groceries of extra quality.\nGet them at Joy's\nJoy will be at his store so as to meet\nyou at the door and give you fair prices\nIf you show him the cash.\nApplication for Water Right\nNotice' Is hereby given that I, John\nRenlckcr, of Burton City, in tlie province\nof British Columbia, rancher. Intend, 30\ndays from date hereof, to apply to tbe\nWater Commissioner at Nelson, B. C, for\nthe right to take one (1) cubic foot per\nsecond of water from an unnamed stream,\nthree chains east from the east boundary\nof Sub-lot nine (D), Lot 7542, Group 1,\nKootenay district, for house and irrigation pur&oses, to be used on my land, being Sub-lot nine (9), Lot 7543, Group 1,\nKootenay district, In the province .of British Columbia.\nJOHN REINECKER,\nBurton City, B.C.\nSept. 18. 1909. 130-aOd.\nFOR SALE-Stefart banjo and case, near-l\nly new.   Price |20.   Apply A. B.. DalljJ\nNews, ,m *\nFOR SALE\u2014\"Berlin\" piano, new, Al ordeii\nand tone.   Price and terms reasonable!\nWrite or apply T. S. Lawjpr, Ymir.   131-tf J\nJoy's Cash Grocery\nComer ot Joseph's.* and Kill Streets.\nJoy Will Meet You at the Door\nP. O. Box 637 Telephone 19\nE. 0. BUGS\nB. C. LAND BURVHYOR\nOffice:   Oral- Royal Bank\nP. O. Box 147 Nelson, B. C.\nHARTMAN & BENNETT\nHouse and Sign Painters, Paper\nHangers and Decorators. Shop: Cor.\nner Stanley and Victoria streets, Nelson, B. C. ' \t\nGLACE BAY, Sept. !1-The delegation which waited upon premier Murray\nto ask him to use his !\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb\"\u00ab'<> jf*\nfeet a settlement of _9_V^&__\\^\nsuited ln nothing definite. The tab r-\nview lasted three hours and the whole\nhistory of the strike was gone Into\nand also the causes that led up to\nthe trouble. Mr. Muray \"l?\"00*^ *e\nright ot the men to join the organisation that could do them most good and\nBald that the coal company had also\nthe right to refuse to. \"\"W\u2122.\"\"*\norganization. Citlsens feelttat no thing\nwill come from the talk wi\u00ab> *\u2022 Premier. Mr. Murray practically told the\ndelegation that president ^\u2122_*>\nnothing ln the matter and that being\nPublic Stenographer\n109 Baker Bt. Nelaon. B _ nam a71\nCLEANING AND PRESSINQ\nSuits called for \u00abnd delirered\nA. J. DRISCOLL\nclone 866\u2014Baker street, opposite the\nOnsen's Hotel\t\nWHOLESALE HOUSES\nPRODUCI\ntTAKKIT *, CO., WHOLBSAL1 DIAL.\n\u2022STr Buller. Est.. Cbew. **wdi\u00bb?\"<l\nFruit Houston Moot Josephine street,\nM.lwm. B. C.\nNOTICE\nTO ALL WHOM\" IT MAT CONCERN:\nTake notice  that we,  John Grant and\nJoseph Dearin. ot the City of Nelson, In\ntho  Province ot British Columbia,  hot.l\nkeepers. Intend to apply to the Hoard of\nLicensing  Commissioners of the City of\nNelson,  held  thirty days after the date\nhereof,   at  tho City  ot Nelson,  for  Uie\ntransfer of the hotel  and Manor license\nheld by us with respect to the Club hotel,\nsituate on Lots 21, 23. 23 and 24, Block 14,\nNelson City, to the said John Orant.\nJOHN GRANT,\nJ. DEARIN.\nDated at Nelson B. C, this 31st day of\nAugust, 1909.  116-30\nFOR SALE\u2014Direct from the celebratect\nCrescent Poultry farm of Des MolnesJ\nSown. Now Is your time to secure a]\nwinner. I have 2d Barred Pl:'moui4\nRock Cockerels to choose from, all llnsL\nbred for 15 years. Apply William Stubbs!\nNelson. B. C.  Box 303. 132-19\nFOR SALE\u2014The best trunks and sull\ncases In Nelson will be sold ut Eator\nprices, also clothing, carpet squares am\nlinoleum. Come and see for yourself. Plrs\ncome get first choice. H. Ginsberg (Sllvei\nKing Mike),  Hall  St. 132-\nFOR SALE\u201417-foot  motor  canoe;  speedl\nabout nine miles; reliable, engine.  CheaAr\n'for oulck sale.    Oner leaving..  C. CartJ\nwrlght. Rlondel._B. C.  132-^\nFOR RENT\nFOR RENT\u2014toice  large   front   room \u00bb.\nprivate family; all modern conven.encea\ncentral   location;   no   children.    18   pent\nmonth.  Apply P. O. Boi 495. 41-tfJ\nGROCERIES\na   haodonalo * co.-_jraotJUUJ*\nGrocer, and Provision Vmhuts-lss-\nporters of Teas, Coffees, aploee. Dried\nfruit., Bt.pl. and Fsnoy Groceries, Tobacco., cigar\". Butter, *S\u00abs, Chens and\nPaoklng Bouse Products. Office sad\nwarehouse; corner of Front and Hall\nStreets.   P. O. Box log.  Telephone a.\nLIQUORS\na. nsROUBON * <\u00bb.-wbxmuw^J5\nand Commlssloo . \"\u00bb\u00abd>\u00abts-Iinjport\u00abrs\naad Wholesale Dealers _____*__?___\nand Cigars. Kootenay .agents for Pabsl\nMilwaukee Be.r. Agents for to Brunsj\nwiok-Balke-Collesder Co.. \"llUrd and\nPool Tables and Buppl es, Bar Flatureo,\nCigar Counters, Bowling Alleys, etc.\nPrice, aad speolnoat'ine on appllcaMori.\nOffice and retail department, Vfrnon\nSt.. Nelson, two doom east of postoffcee.\nTelephone 2J0.   P. O. BM W\nFOR RENT\u2014Furnished cottage, 6 rooma.\nboth, 2 lots.    127 per month  including]\nwater.  Tavlor & McQuarrle, Baker St.   \\\n112-tfJI\nFOR  RENT\u2014Furnished   rooms,   808   Vic J\ntorla St. 127-i*\nFOR RENT\u2014Furnished rooms,, over SemaJ\nphore billiard parlors. tflo-J\nFOR  RENT\u2014Rooms,  with  bath.    ApDlyl\n609 Victoria 8t., or next door. 129-tf]\nApplication for Water Right\nNotice Is hereby given that thirty days\nfrom the date hereof I, Anna Amelia Holm\nor Nelson British Columbia, married woman? ntenu to apply to the Oold Commls-\nSon'r Nelion B. CI, for a license of one-\nnuarteV cubic fooi of water per second, to\nta used or, Sub-lot 11 of Lot M. Group 1.\nKootenay district, being tor.domestic and\nagricultural purposes, ,1110 point of dlver-\n\"-S-T-t-f*HXber. 1009.\nI^'ed the 17m om        LIA HQLM\nI IIMMXMW. N\"\"0- B- C-\nMINERS' FURNISHINGS\ncSnowas* \u00ab'?\u201e?'& S2\nWarehouse cornw of Front and Hausta\nP. O. Boi 1M6.   Telephone 88.\nNOTICE\nNotice Is hereby given that the Cornora-\ntlon of the City of Nelson has already\nconstructed cement sidewalks or Intends,\nforthwith to proceed with the construction\nof cement sidewalks on Front, Wara,\nVernon Hnll, Baker, Victoria, Silica, Carbonate, Josephine and Btanley streets,\nNelBon, B. C., opposite Blocks one (l>.\ntwo (2), three (8), four (1), seven (7), nine\n(\u00bb), ten (10), twelve (12), thirteen (13), sixteen (16). seventeen (17), twenty-six OS), .\ntwenty-seven (27), twenty-nine (29). thirty ,\n(30), thirty-one (31), thirty-five (SS), forty-\nfour (11), sixty-one.(O), sixty-two (62),\nsixty-six (66), seventy-ono (71), ninety-two\n(92), ond nlney-three (93), and that It is\nthe Intention to have the coBt of such sidewalks proportionately borne by the owners\not property fronting on auch sidewalks,\nand to obtain the requisite money therefor\nby the Issue of \"Local Improvement pe-\nbentures.\"\nNotice Is also hereby given that assessment will bo mode against such-property\nso benefitted by such proposed sidewalks.\nIn order to meet the principal and Interest\nof BUCh debentures and If any owner or\nowners desire to object to the proposed\nsidewalk or any portion thereof the requisite objection or objections snou d no\nBlgned with tho undersigned within fifteen\n(15) days from the first Insertion of 'his\nnotice in The Dally News. \u201e.,..\u201e\nDated at Nelson, B. C, Sept..16, ITO-\nW. E. WABBON,\n128-6. City Clerk.\nFOR RENT\u2014Small comfortable house Witt\ngarden, close in. Modern house, good\nlocality Unfurnished rooms tor bouse-\nkeeping. Suite of rooms suitable for of\nflees. Brydges, Blakemore ft Cameron\nLtd. 129-tf.\nFOR  RENT-Furnl\u00abhed  room,  607 Silica]\nSt. 131-6;\nLOST\nMININQ MACHINERY\nWASHINGTON MACHlNBRl ft SUPPLY\nco^\u00ab\u00able\u00ab in Bsjlnes. Band and CU>\n\u2022olu^wiiUI* Atkins* Saws, Wood and\nSon* IS^MirS^'SKol \u00ab\u00a3\nLOST---OiiBttfEero^\nJosephine and post office, gold wlRh-J\nbone broooh set with pearls. Flndei\npleaae leave at Dally News office.     126-ttJ\n MISCELLANEOUS\t\nRANCHERS\u2014it* you need any money wlthl\nwhich to improve your farm, write usM\nBrydges,  Blakemore   &   Cameron,  Ltd.J\nNelson, B. C. \u25a0\"\u00bb-\u00bb\niVUss*:arahMcConnon\n1b prepared to take a te4 more pupils on\npianoforte, and wishes to announce that\nshe has started a class in painting. Instruction will he given at hotii flower\nand landscape painting. Terms moderate.   612 Hill street.\nWater Licence\nTake notice that I, F. E. Collins, miner!\nof Salmo, B. C,, Intend to apply to th<r\nAssistant Commissioner of Lands and\nWorks, at Nelson, li. C, for a license tt]\ntake water from Wolfe Lake, for mining!\nand milling purposes, to be used on tha\nQolden Gate Group of claims,' '\nF. B. COLLINS.     _\nSalmo, B\u201e C, Sept. IB, 1908,       19-g-0Mw|\n\u2014 -j|0TJQ\u00a3\n1 Notice Is hereby given that, according tol\na' resolution passed at the laBt annual\ngeneral meeting of the company, the anf\nnual general meeting of the Eva Goi-f\nMines, Limited, will be held at the com-L\npany's office, K. W. C. block, N\u00ablsonl\nB. C, on Tuesday the 6th October. 10091\nat 3.80 n.m. \u25a0\nV By order,\n* VT. C, BAYLY,\nSecretary.\nSeptember 2L 1900. U1-)\n w\nWEDNESDAY... SEPTEMBER 22\n6tte StoKB %im*.\nOp\nKootenay Coffee Co.\ndsalsrs Is all tradea and Tart-\naUaact\nTeas and Coffee\nRoutars ol iiih grade oottoe.\nTh* best In these household In*\nDries at moderate prices.\nFresh roasted coffee at lb* to\n10c per lb.\nTeas, all grade* and \u00bbarleUes,\nat II to 16c per lb.\nPure ground and whole spice*.\nBaking powder, cocoa, cream tartar, baking soda flawing \u2022attracts.\nKootenay Coffee Co.\n305 Baker Street\nbest hquippbd UNDBRTAKINU\nAND HMBALMINO PAM.OB8 IN THH\nKOOTENAY.\nW. J. BOYLB, CNDBRTARBB.\nNlfht Pbon. at. Day Phone H.\nStandard Furniture Co.\nNELSON, B. C.\nCarpet Cleaning\nBeating carpets br hand spoils the texture and does not remove the dirt\nOur up-to-date Steam Cleaning Process\nremoves all the impurities and restores the\ngoods to original colors.     _*_^L\nlOe PBR SQUARE YARD.\nWork called for and delivered promptly.\nClothes of all-kinds cleaned, renovated,\ndyed and repaired. _*__,__\nOents' Suits cleaned and pressed, 75c to\nLadles' Skirts cleaned, $1.00; dyed, 93-00.\nGloves cleaned, 25o to 60c.    .: _       _\n.'.'.'\u25a0 Special Rates for  Hotels, Restaurants\nand Steamers.    _______\nNelson Steam Laundry\n___&\u2122\"*?SS3S:*-.\nWest Kootenay Butcher Co\nO. O. PETERS, Man.\nOnr stock ot tre*h and salted meat*\nle unsurpassed tn the city. Give as\n\u2022 trial order, It will be followed bj\nothers. Fish twice a week trom the\ncoast\t\nKoatenay Lake General Hospital\nMaternity Branch\nPatients are now recel\u00bbed at the tallowing rates: .\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab.\nPriTate ward patients, week ... .120.00\nBeml-prWate ward patients, week $15.00\nAddress applications to matron at\nhospital.       ^^^___\nItooms in Private families\nFor fair Visitors\nAny lady wishing to make a little\npin money nert week can easily do so\nT>y renting spare rooms to fair visitors.\nThose desiring rooms in private families will naturally look through The\nTJally NewB classified advertising\n\u2022columns for this information.\nIt will only cost you a cent\na word an issue.. If you cannot\nsend your advertisement to the\noffice, phone 144\n-Coal Mining by\nCorrespondence\nStudents prepared for the annual examinations. We can make s\u00bbu competent however neglected your education\nmay be. Our wide practical experience\n'has taught us exactly what the miner\nneeds, and the quickest and hest way\nKit Imparting It to htm. Technical formula omitted as far as possible; when\nIntroduced its derivation' Is fully explained. Personal attention elven to\n\u25a0each student   Write for syllabus.\nThe Western Cotrespondence School\n910 Pender W., Vancouver, B.C.\nJOHN CUNLIFFE, M.E., Principal\n.     LADIES!\nTo win the prls^ In the bread baking\n'contest ln the coming\nEXHIBITION\nyou must bake It In one t,t our famous\nSunbeam or Silver Queen Ranges\nE. K. STRACHAN, Plumber, Etc.\n313 Baker Street Nelson, B.C.\nJOHN BURNS\nCONTRACTOR AND BUILDER\nSash, Door and Office   Pitting\nFactory.  Brick and Urn* for sal*\nOffice and Factory\nCsrbonste Street,      Nelson, B. C\nLargs    quantities  of   shaving*,\nsuitable for stable bedding can b*\nhad for hauling away,\nThe Glad Hand\nand a cordial welcome la extended to each and every visitor during\nfair week .\nAt the Popular Store\nOur store Is at your service.\nLeave your parcels here.\nHave your parcels sent here.\nMeet your friends here.\nPhone your friends from here.\nDuring Fair Daya we will be open from 7:30 a.m. to 12 p.m.\nWe Are Showing\nsome exceptional values this week, Including '\nHand Bags\nToilet Soaps\n.\nand numerous   other equally useful articles tn order to make room for\nour fall goods.\nStep ln and Get Acquainted\nIt you have not dealt here before it will pay you to do so.\nIf you don't receive satisfaction we're here to give it to you.\nOUR MOTTO IS: ATTENTION, ACCURACY, PURITY.\nWe are Nelson's Leading Druggists\nphone us Write Us Call on Us\n, You will find us\nAlways at Your Service\nPrescription Specialists Mall Order Specialists\n[ The Drug Buyer's Friend\nPoole Drug Co. Ltd.\nBaker Street Nelson, B. C.\nWE NEVER SLEEP\nI\n1\n%\nnmnon\n.I __ _[tl____m\n\\~\u2014tS________\\\n\u25a0HP\"'\"\"\"\/:\"1\nfew\nii IF\n%\n&\naijiiii\n\u25a0t____l__,\u00b0_-l____\nWhat About Meat\nFor Dinner?\nWe can supply you with Beef, Mutton, Veal and Lamb fresh from our\nNelson abbatoir where it Is taken care\nof by capable hands and up to date\nmethods, which gives It that nice,\njuicy tenderness that only carefully\nhandled meat can have. Where can\nyou do better.\nP. Burns & Co.\n\u00ab., IKIIIIIIIIIIIUIiUJ ' MMIIMMMM\nAN ECONOMICAL TEA\nTea selling at See or SOc a pound Is not really cheap, but I* extravagantly dear. -\nBecause so much ot It Is usually required that the cost per cup Is\nactually more thai If a good tea like Blue Ribbon were used,\nA pound of Bin* Ribbon Tea will make 250 cups ot good rich tea,\nso, even at SOc a' pound you would get tour or Ave cups for on* cent\nNot a very dear drink, la Ut\nAnd as tor flavor, there I* simply to oon\u00bb\u00bb-l\u00ab<n between Blae Ribbon and the \"cheap\" tea*.\nJust try \u2022 pound, and see.\n_^\\\\\\__\\\nSUN FIRE\nThe oldest Insurance Office In the world\nroundid a.d. 1710 ,   bi-centena1y 1b10\nHome Office \u25a0 London. England i\nCanadian Branch. Sua Bulldlnd. Toronto, H. M. Blackburn, Maaagsr.\nBRYDQES, BLAKEMORE A CAMERON, NELSON AGENTS\nMETALS\n6.6214\n6.8IH\ni.w     88.00\n.0314      .0*\nM_     M\nNew York, Sept. zl.-Sllver, 5X14; Standard Cooper, 12.C0 to 12.10, easy.\nLondon, Sept. 21.\u2014Silver. 23%; Lead, \u00a312\nis. ed.       ,   :_ i\nSept. 21.\u2014Closing Quotations on the New\nYork curb and Spokane exchange, reported by Highton k Cavanaugh.\nBid. Asked.\nB. C. Copper \t\nCan. Con. Smelters...\nCopper King \t\nLucky Jim  \u2022\nNew Republic \t\nGertie \t\nGranby\t\nHecla\t\nInternational C. & C.\nIdaho Smelter  0514\nKendall  50\nLucky Calumet 0514\nMlsBOula Copper   02\nMonitor  28\nNabob   : 0314\nOom Paul  0314\nReindeer   0514\nRambler Cariboo  07\nRex   0714\nSnowshoe  0614\nSnowstorm    1.42\nStewart  50\nTamarack & Chesapeake ...    .50\n. .07\n. .02\n. 00.00\n. 3.00\n.70\n.10\n.0214'\n100.00\n4.00\n.80\n.05%\n.85\n.0614\n.0214\n.06\n.05%\n.1014\n.0814\n.0714\n1.45\n.6214\n.6014\nStill Newer Styles\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\nTho Canadian Order of Foresters meet\nthin evening in the K. of P. hall.\nMaple Leaf Camp. Royal Neighbors or\nAmerica, meet this evening In Fraternity\nhall.\nBorn, to the wife of ThomaB McAs-\ntocker, Robson. atreet, on the 18th inst..\na daughter.\nThe United Brotheihood of Carpenters\nand joiners meet this evening in Miners-\nUnion hall.\nBorn, Sept. 21 at the residence ot Nurse\nQuinlan, Hall Mines road, lo the wife of\nI. XV. Ford, Proctor, a son.\nThe Arcade, Nelson's pioneer picture\nbIiow puts on nn entire change of program\ntoday at 2.30 and 7.15 p. m. The urogram\nIs a very strong one, as follows: \"Mishaps\nof a Bashful Man,\" \"Soul Kiss,\" \"Dearly\nipald for a Kiss,\" \"Noctural Thieves\" and\n\"Mr. Boozer Gets a Fright.\" Miss Mackenzie will Bing \"Rainbow,\" lllustiated\nwith colored -slides.\n\"The Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition at\nSeattle\" is the special Mm to he shown\nat the Empire theatre during Fair days,\nand no doubt those who have had the\nopportunity of visiting Seattle to visit the\nFair there will avail themselves of this\nopportunity of seeing the pictures. Another splendid film 1b \"The Moonstone.\"\nand one that will Interest all; \"The Mis-\nhop of a Bashful Man\" provides comedy\ntor the program.\nThe Eclipse Laundry can positively not\ntake In any more work for this week.\n132-1\nSuiti and\nOvercoat*\n$15 to $35\nWe never rest on laurels won,\nhowever much they may be\ndeserved.\nWe are constantly striving to\nbetter the service that we offer\nthose who appreciate the finest\nin hand tailored garments.\nHave you seen\nthe new Fit-\nReform creations\nin Fall Suits and\nOvercoats?     ,\nA big dance will be given In Lindsay's\npavilion every evening during the [air.\nDancing will be continued from 9 p.m. to\n2 a.m. and Wilkinson's six piece orchestra will fumiBh the best of music.\nAre you Interested In a business course\nin stenography and typewriting. If so apply at once for particulars as to a class\nthat Is being organized for this purpose.\nCall or address Mrs. D. P. Patenaude, 302\nCarbonate St., Nelson, B. C. 128-tf.\nH\". Ginsberg (popularly known us S'lver\nKing Mike), the Hall street new and second hand dealer, announces that he'is now\nin better shape than ever to supply the\nwants of -he public. For the past month\nhe has been handicapped by the laying of\nu new cemen'- sidewalk In front of lilts\n\u25a0property and now that It Is completed he\nIs determined to offer all goods at prices\nthat will move them quickly so as to\nmake up for tho dull period while the\nsidewalk work was In progress. Bargains\nIn all goods can be hud for the asking,\n132-tf.\nLIST IS STILL GROWING\nDONATIONS' TO    NELSON     FRUIT\nFAIR BEING MADE GENEROUSLY\nWILL   NOT  BE   CLOSED   FOR   FEW\nDAYS YET\nThe following additional subscriptions to\nthe Nelson fruit fair have been made: T.\nJ. Scanlan, J5; Ward & Hermansun. fi;\nKootenay Steam Laundry, |10; W. W.\nHarris, (5; S. M. Brydges, |fl; The Enfield\ncompany, $10; J. XV. Gallagher. $2; Mrs.\nJ. E. HarriB, |3; City Transfer company,\n15; W, R. Haldane, $5; J, H. Fox. ?5;\nLennie & Wragge, $10; F. E. Morrison, ti;\nDrs. Rise & Hartin, $5; Davenport cafe,\nlo; Mlghton & Cavanaugh, $5; Choc-uettc\nBros., $10; H. A. Matthew, $5; C. H, Bean,\n15; Mason & Rlscli Piano company, $20;\nPlther & Loiser. $2B; E. Kerr, $10; H. J.\nWitton, $5) J. A. Montgomery, $2; .). C.\nThelin, $5; West Kootenay Butche:- company, $5; Green Bros. & Burden. *)5; XV.\nA. Thurman, $5; Kootenay .lam company,\nV>. and Nelson Iron Works, $11.\nThe list will remain open for a few days\nlonger nnd It is hoped that every assistance will he given to the collectors. Hotel\nGlad To Show You, Sir!\nWe don't care whether you are ready\nto buy your fall Bult now or not, we\nwant our splendid clothes to have a\nchance to make an Impression on your\nmind. They'll certainly d0 their work\nwell if you will stop In for a look at\nthe choice new fall and winter models.\nWe like to have callers come In and\nget acquainted with \"what's new.\"\nWe'll not urge you to buy, for this la\nnot a store that \"annoys.\" Showing is\nproof positive and so we say again\n\"We'll be glad to show you, air.\"\nI\n\u00bb i\nm :\nEMORY  &  WALLEY\nNelson.  E C.\nlists are being circulated und will be\nllshed shortly.\nLYCEUM   CONCERT CO.\nWhat Lethbrldge Herald Says of\nThem\nThe concert given by the Lyceum Concert company in the Taber opera houao\non Monday night was u grand success and\nmet with a very large and appreciative\naudience, suys the Lethbrldge Herald.\nManager May can be congratulated nu\nhis company as well us on the part he\ntakes In tbe program. After the o:*eiii:'g\npiece \"Medley Overture, Miss Clark rendered \"Cemena'1 with splendid effect. Her\nheuutlful voice rose.und soared, comDlete-\nly electrifying her audience. Miss Slmm\nsung In her usual beautiful style. In her\n(rendering of the \"EmcKantress\" her rich\nmiiBlcal voice showed up splendldli* and\nwon great appluuse. The violin solos bv\nMr. Lay ton were greatly appreciated and\nshowed skill and ability. Mr. Coope-'s\nbaritone sola brought down the house.\nHis   songs   just suited   his   big   hentiMful\nvo'ce. The quartettes by Misses Clark\nand Slmm and Messrs. Layton und Cooper\nwere most artistically und perfectly rendered, us were also the duets by Missus\nChirk and slmm, and Messrs. Ely ii-ttl\nCooper, Each number brought forth\nrounds of appluuse and encoies. Mr. Ely.\nus accompanist, was as usual master of\nthe art. They left Taber with a very urgent\ninvitation to  return azain.\nTlie company will appear In the Nelson\nopera house tomorrow mul Friday evenings. \t\nSeparation Agreement\nNEW YORK, Sept. 21\u2014W. K. Vander.\nbllt, Jr., donor of the Vanderbilt cup\nfor automobile races, with his wife, formerly Miss Virginia Fair of San Francisco, have Bigned a separation agreement, according to an afternoon paper.\nRainier Beer is the Beit Beer.\nMlnard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia.\nARCADE\nTHE PIONEER SHOW\nTONIQHT AT 7:\u00ab\nMishaps of a Bashful Hsu. A\nsplendid comic.\nSoul Kiss.\nNocturnal Thieves.\nDearly Paid for Kiss.\nMiss Mackenile will sing the illustrated song, \"Rainbow.\"\nMatinee Today Commencing 2:30\nRemember, free drawing tickets\ntonight\nCan You Drive a Nail?\nWe have hit it on the head with\nthe\nTOM WATTS CIGAR\nwhich, la gaining in popularity\nevery day. Try one and be convinced that our claim Is based on\nmerit.\nBe sure you ask the clerk for\nyour gold watch coupon.\nThe Queen Cigar Store\nBUSH BROS:, Props.\nMOTOR BOAT SUPPLIES\nThe largest and best assortment In\nIhe interior of B. C.\nDry batteries, lubricating oils and\ngreases, spark colls, spark plugs, magnetos, primary and secondary cable,\nheadlights, life buoys and fenders,\nsteering wheels, deck fittings, gasoline\nfittings, carburetters, anchors, tiller\nrope, switches, horns and whistles,\ncotton waste, carbide, bilge pumpi,\nvolt and ammeeters, storage batteries,\nreverse gears, propeller wheels, and\neverything used on a motor boat.\nMall orders promptly atended to.\nPrices right Agents for Barber\nEngines.\nE. D. MESSENGER CO.\n606 Stanley Street P. O. BoBx 173\n\"Wensleydale\"\nPure Cream Butter\nFresh twice a week.   To be had\nonly at.\nHudson's Bay Stores\nNelson, B. C.\nWatch and\nJewelry Repairing\nThat we are turning out work to the\nentire satisfaction of our customers is\nproved by the dally increase in the\nnumber of repairs we execute. If\nyou have not had satisfaction in the\npast, try us and we guarantee you wll.\nhave in the future.\nAll work promptly executed at moderate prices. Out of town work a\nspecialty.\nE. \u00a3. ROBINSON\nWatchmaker and Jeweler\n417 1-2 Baker Street.     NELSON. B.O,\nOpposite Silver King Hotel\nWhy PaylRent?  Own Your Own Home\n$400 Cash\nCash and balance on terms will\npurchase five-roomed house and\ntwo lots on Ward Street. House\nmodern in every respecf. Garden\nin splendid shape, with bearing\nfruit trees.   Price $2000.\nFor Quick Sale\nA Snap\nA five-roomed house with two lots.\nGarden In Bood shape, with fruit\ntrees bearing. Price $1400. Terms\n$400 down and balance on monthly\npayments if desired.\n$1100 cash will buy a four-roomed\nhouse and  two lots  on Victoria\nStreet.  Excellent location.   See u\nfor terms if desired.\n$200 Cash\nAnd balance on terms will buy a\nfour- roomed house and four lots in\nFairview suitable for a small garden\nor chicken raising. Balarfce on\nterms.   Price $1600.\nWill buy (subject to confirmation)\n1-5 S. A. Warrants $490; looo to\n5ooo Yale-Kootenay Ice .o9j4.\n\u00a3. B. McDERMID\nChartered Accountant\nand Financial Agent\nNelson, B. C.\n 1MMT\n\\tllt\u00a7Crti$_\\t*V**\nWEDNESDAY... SEPTEMBER tl\nSnaps In Fruit Lands\nand City Property\nWe have investments to suit\nevery pocket. Fruit lands from $10\nan acre up. Bargains in city lots.\nWrite or call and see us for par.\nticulars.\nH. E. Cfoasdaile & Co.\nMOVING FURNITURE\nWe have tlie hest of equipment\nfor moving safeB, pianos and furniture.\nGOOD COAL AND WOOD\nCity Transfer Co.\nPhone 179 P.O. Box 94\nTHE\nEMPIRE\nWednesday and Thursday.\nSPECIAL PROGRAM\nMishaps of a Bashful Man.\nThe  Moonstone.\nThe Alaska-Yukon Exposition\nat Seattle.\n7:00 OPEN   7:00\nAdults, 15c; Children, 10c.\nMatinee at 2:30\nNelson Opera House\nTwo Rights-Thursday and Friday\nSeptember 23 and 24\nLyceum\nConcert Company\nSoprano Miss Mattie Clark\nContralto Miss Cissie Simm\nBaritone Mr.  Harold Cooper\nHumorist Mr. Dawson  May\nSolo Violin   Mr. Ernest F. Layton\nSolo Pianist and Accompanist\nMr. Albert Ely, A.R.C.O.\ntn a refined program of excep-\nltlonol merit.\nEVERY NUMBER A FEATURE.\nPRICES:   5Uc, 75c, $1.00\nSale at opera house Wednesday.\nComing Sept. 28th, San  Francisco Opera Co.\nOur\nOut-of-Town\nFriends\nare Invited to make our store their\nheadquarters during tbe fair.\nCome and see us.\nC. A. Benedict\nGrocer\nCor. Josephine and Silica. Phone 7\nNELSON, B. C\nWest Block\nWe have for rent ,iwo brick\nstores in this block. Size\n32x19 feet each. For particulars apply to.      >\nH. & N. BIRD\nNelson, B. C.\nrsssssssassesw\nWS1IWOT\u00bb\u00bbWWBS\u00bbW\u00ab*sS***aSils5*,\u00ab\u00bbS**\u00bbg,ii\nStoves - Ranges - Heaters\nJust Arrived TWO  CARLOADS Just Arrived\nThis year we have taken special patoB in the selection ot our Stoves\nand Ranges ana we feel confident that we have the finest display ever\nshown ln the Kootenays at prices never before heard of. Call in and\naUow us to show you some of our new lines, they are beauties; every\none guaranteed.\nRANGES HEATERS ..\nRound Oak Chief, Base Burners\nRegal Stewart Round Oak Heaters\nOxford Chancellor Stewart Heaters.\n\u2022   We have Stoves to suit all requirements.\nThe J. H. Ashdown Hardware\nCo., Ltd.\nNelson Branch      .*.     Nelson, B. C.\nWHOLESALE RETAIL\nieaeaMMSssse*\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\nJ. B. Wlnlaw came In lust evening from\nWinlaw.\nC. H. Bonner and XV, G. Robl> of Kaslo\nare at tha Hume. \/\nTlie temperature yesterday vailed between 40 and GO clegr-st*.\nA. Goldsmith came In last evening a-..*\nregistered at the Hume.\nJ. A. Macdonald, M.P.P., of Rossland;\nwaB a visitor to the city yesterday.\n\u00bb. St. Denis of Slocan City reached the\ncity last evening by the Slocan train\n\"Born, on September' 18, to the wife of\nThoroaa White, Alrey ranch, a daughter.\nC, LewlBton. manager of the Queen |\nmine, and Mrs. Lewlston are c\/icsw at;\nthe Hum\", j\nt>. P. Kane, postmaster oi Kaslo, ac- '\ncompanled by Mrs. Kane, Ib a guest at\nthe Hume.\nHaflB Jensen, foreman of the Highland.\nBuckeye mine at Alnsworth. reached the\ncity last evening.\nSir John Eardley Wilmot of Qucen'B Bay,\nand hlB brother. S. Eardley Wilmot, are\nguests at the Hume.\nAll union barber Bhopfl In this city will\ncloae at noon tomorrow and remain closed\nuntil Friday morning.\nJulea Labarthe, manager of the Consolidated Mining and Smelting company\u00bb\namelter at Trail, (lfl a visitor to the city.\nA. Corbett. of the Btaft* of the Great\nNorthern city office, leaves this morning\nto Bpend a few days visltlns friend** In\nBpokano,\nMrB. Deed of Eholt, wife of Jerry Reed,\nC, P. R. conductor, reached the city by\nthe Boundary train last evening and Is\nregistered at the Hume,\nW. R. Haldane. general freight agent of\nthe C. P. R.. left hy the Boundary t-uln\nyesterday morning for a flying visit to\nGreenwood. Mr. Haldane will return to\nthe city this evening.\nReV. A. J. Belton, pastor of the MeMio-\nclit-t church at Finch, Ont., wbb a guess\nat the Strathcona on Monday and left yesterday morning for Grand Forks to visit\ntlla brother, O. R. Belton, editor of Hie\nQlniette. Rev. Mr. Belton has mam*\nfriends throughout the west. He la greatly Impruaed with Kootenay's splendid\nscenery and expressed surprise at having\nheard ao comparatively little about It. He I\nIs enroute to Vancouver and Victoria on\na pleasure trip,\nAllan Purvis, divisional superintendent\nof the C.P.R.. has written Constable Jensen of the provincial police thanking lilm\nfor having saved the large C.P.R. bridge\nfrom, destruction by fire on Sept. 16 .\nThe public dinner to be given at tho\nHume school grounds on Saturday, Oct. 2,\npromises to a complete succesB. The Dro>\nceeds are to be devoted to the providing\nof a piano and library for the school.\nTomorrow and Friday evenings thi\nEagles are giving a dance in their hall\non encli evening, commencing at 9 p.m.\nThe Eagles orchestra will play -the latest\nmusical numbers and a good time is assured to all.   Supper will be served.\nThe Fraternal Order of Eagles held a\nverv successful session last night. Several\ncandidates were initiated into the mvster-\nies of Eagledom, and afterwards a social\nevening was spent. The principal entertainers were H. Earle, Mr. lDupont ar.5\nthe Eagle orcheBtra.\nDave Martello waB brought Into tin!\nHome hospital yesterday suffering from a\ncompound fracture of his right leg an\u00bb\ninjuries to his head and face sustained by\nfalling 20 feet from a bridge nt Shields.\nHis wounds were attended to by Drs.\n(Rose & Hartln and he was last evening\nresting easily.\nWord has beeii received from Fred. J.\nSquires from Glencoe, Ontario, saying that\nhe and his mother arrived at that place\nsafely from Nelson. Mrs. Marion Saulres\nwas one of Nelson'B oldest old timers and\nher many friends here will be oleaaed to\nknow that the long Journey to her former\nhome has not resulted in any 111 effacts.\nThe Kaslo district Horticultural nnd\nFruitgrowers' association have written the\nsecretary of the Canadian club stating\nthat they will be pleased to allow \u25a0.hem\nthe use of the district exhibit nfter it has\nappeared at the Nelson fair, to decorate\ntlie tables at the luncheon In honor o\u00bb\nEarl Grey which 1b to be held In 'ho\narmory on Tuesday next, Sept, 28,\nR, fi, ScDtt returned last evening aftec\na vlatt to Toronto, Montreal alid Ottawft\nand other points, including Edmonton and\nCalgary. Mf. Scott says that the Kootenay exhibit at Toronto, arranged by tha\nNelson board of trade, was the bos', ever\nput on by ahy part of BritlBh Columbia\n\u2022and was greatly admired. In addition,\nJ. fi. Annable, who was In charge of *ha\nfruit section, was able to answer all Inquiries with information acquired at first\nhand, and Mr. Gaide was In the same\nposition as regards the mineral display.\nReturning by way of Calgary, Mr. flcci.1\nfound that many who had Intended visiting Nelson on an excursion thnt was bu-\nIng arranged bad been prevented from doing so, but oulte a large number was **a-\nking advantage ot the low rate that -ha\nC. P, R. was uttering. Some of these\nwere here already and others would come\nwithin Hie next day or so.\nThe Cabinet\nCigar Store\nWholesale\nand total\nG.fc MATTHEW, Pro*.\nThe Women's HosplfiuAiti^octetyare\noffering for sale at the fair which ooens\ntoday a cook book, the receipts in which'\n.have been tried and found successful by\nthe members of that organization and\n.other women living in Nelson. The book\nwas compiled by Mr. J. L. Buchan and\nMrs. A. h. McCulloch from the recipes\nsent to them by tlie memberB of the Women's Hospital Aid and others. This\nbook may be secured for what Ib reallv a\nnominal price at the electric booth baini\nconducted by the members of the aid.\nAa usual the members of the Women's\nHospital Aid Boclety will have a booth at\nthe fair, where they will serve luncheon,\ndinner and afternoon tea, The members o-\nthe aid are under heave expense for thw\nright to eater at the fair and they .bespeak\nthe patronage of the public fn making\ntheir venture a success this year, as I*\nalways has been in the past. Mra. E. TV.\nWlddowson wilt be in charge today and\nMlsa Patrick will preside over the ice\ncream and candy counter. The lading will\nalso serve tea and coffee In the city's\nelectrical booth, that privilege having been\nextended to them. Mra. J. E. Taylor Will\nbe in charge of this booth today.\nMrs. C. B.* McAllister of Needles is\nthe guest of Mrs. W. W. Bradley,\nWilkinson's orchestra haB been engaged to play at the Hume hotel each\nevening during the fair.\nJ. E. Annable and A. C. Garde returned by the Crow steamer last evening from Toronto where they had\ncharge of the Kootenay exhibit at the\nCanadian National exhibition. Messrs.\nAnnable and Garde state that the exhibit was a winner from start to finish\nand that from an advertising standpoint\nit worked wonders,\nThe following program will be rendered by the orchestra at.the Bugle\nband dance, to be given tonight ln the\narmory: Waltz, \"Are You Sincere?\";\ntwo-step, \"Peter Piper\"; waltz, \"Roses\nBring Dreams of You\"; two-step, \"La*\nLa-La\"; three-step, \"Birds of Love\";\nlancers, \"Skylark\"; schottlsche, \"Hey!\nMister Joshua\"; two-step, \"Southern\nBeauties\"; waltz, \"The Wedding of\nSandy McNab\"; two-step, \"Teddy\nBear\"; three-step, \"Sunflower; French\nRead This\nYou are looking \"or a comfortable home and something that will\ngive you a nice Income beside*.\nHERE IT IS\nA four roomed house, full basement, city water, four lots, fruit\ntrees bearing, smal. frail, vegetables and large poultry house\n42x20,\nA GENUINE SNAP\nPrice $1600, and only 1200 cash\ndown, balance monthly.\n160 pure bred poultry also for\nHUGH W.ROBERTSON\nWardStreet        N*\". B.C\nRINGS\n- It Is the quality of any Ingredient that makes happiness.   This applies to all things, but more especially to love and rings.\nReal pure love will invariably bring a token, generally a ring.\nThis is our part> we have learned by years of experience to make\nthe ring that has lasting quality as well as fascinating beauty and we\ncan almost guarantee both will wear as long it not longer than the\nformer. to-s^a**.***;'*?..*.-   \u25a0*.-       -..J\nOur stock is equal to any possible test it might be put.   Try it\nJ. O. PATENAUDE\nRing maker to YOU, the King of her heart.\nMANUPA\u00abniMN\u00ab JIWILIR, WATOHMAKM AND OPTICIAN.\n\\\nm*wm**mmm**m*mm*\u2014m*m**M**\u2014^\nAsk for a ticket for frse Shines\nRoyal\nSpecial\nShoes\nFor Men\nFind favor with the critical\ndresser. One pair sells another. \u201e   \u25a0___,\u00a3\nMade Honestly.\nMade to Fit\nMade to Please the Eye.\n$5.00 and $5,50\nThe Royal\nShoe Store\nMall    orders    receive    our\nprompt and careful attention.\n\u25a0WANTED\u2014Messenger boy.   Apply Great\nNorthern Telegraph office,  city.\nminuet; extra supper dances; waltz,\n\"Make a Noise Like a Hoop and Roll\nAway\"; two-step, \"She's My Daisy\";\nthree-step, \"Josette\"; two-step, \"Pass\nthe Possum\"; schottlsche, \"Cuddle Up\na Little Closer\"; lancers, \"Mikado\";\nwaltz, \"Dear Old Dear\"; two-step,\n\"How Would You Like to Love Me?\";\nwaltz, \"Daisies Won't Tell\"; schottlsche, \"Hello, Mister Moon Man\"; two-\nstep, \"Hang Out the Front Door, Rey\";\nwaltz, \"Home, Sweet Home\".\nWILL START SHIPPING\nBell Rose Mine at Erie Only Awaiting\nComing of Snow\nAnother mine ln the Erie camp will\nsoon be on the shipping list It is the\nBell Rose, owned by Alex Goyette and\nJohn A, Qutnlan. This mine which Is\nlocated about six and a half miles trom\nBrie Is probably the hest developed\nprospect In Erie camp.. The owners\nhave done some 800 feet of development\nwork on it, the lead being 60 feet wide.\nThe ore runs about 14 In gold, 47 ozs.\nln silver and 7 per cent copper.\nAlex Goyette, one ot the partners ln\nthe mine, Is at present In Nelson buying supplies for the winter. He says\nthat the property Is showing up better\nthe more work that is done on It and\nthat as soon as the snow comes the\nproperty will commence shipping. This\nhas been Impossible until recently but\nthe government has put ln a road a\nmile and a half from the main road to\ntap this and other properties and as a\nresult he expects to see considerable\nactivity in the Immediate vicinity of\nhis property. _*\t\nTaft at Des Moines\nDBS MOINES, Sept. 20 \u2014 President\nTaft spent a little more than four hours\nft Des Moines today and during that\ntime breakfasted with United States\nsenator Cummlngs, one of the \"insurgent\" leaders ln congress, reviewed an\nImposing parade of nearly 5000 federal\ntroops engaged In a military tournament here, and made an open air address to an Immense crowd gathered\ntrom all the surrounding country in\nwhich he discussed In detail the\nchanges he will recommend to congress,\nto the interstate commerce and antitrust laws. The president left here at\n*flAf\u00bb.\nOld Curiosity Shop\nFor the cold weather that Is coming\nlarge stock of heaters, new and second\nhand, from $2 up. Don't miss this opportunity.\nFine range ot Dinner Ssts at $10. A\nsnap,\nJosephine Street\nWe Have It\nWe can quote you the best\nprices on Chlnaware ln the city.\nBesides we carry a most eitt_i-\n\u25a0lve stock of second hand articles\not all descriptions.\nIf you want anything come In\nand look over our stock.\nChina Hall\nMUNRO & NELSON\nWe Have\nJust* Received\na shipment of tanglefoot, so if the\nflies are annoying you just phone\nus. And don't forget that we can\nsupply you with anything in the\nway of fancy groceries.\nOur Phone number is 223.\nStewart <& Co.\nH It's from Stewart's It's good.\nFOR IMPERIAL DEFENCE\nAUSTRALIA TO HAVE MILITIA AND\nCITIZEN SOLDIERY\nMILITARY PLANS IN ADDITION TO\nNAVAL SCHEME\n(Canadian Associated Press.)\n.MELBOURNE, Australia, Tuesday,\nSept. 21\u2014Minister ot Defense Cook\ntoday moved the second reading ot the\ndefense bill ln the house of representatives, giving effect to the decisions of\nthe imperial defense conference. He\nsaid that ln addition to the anticipated\nnaval proposals the scheme would\neventually give a force of 280,000 well-\ntrained soldiers, with a second line of\n116,000. A compact expeditionary force\nwould be provided for oversea Bervlce.\nThe estimated total cost would be\n\u00a32,500,000 annually. All military\nforces would be interchangeable with\nthe forces of other states ot the empire. Compulsion would at first be limited to closely populated areas.\nLONDON, Sept. 21\u2014According to\nthe Times dispatch, under the Australian defense scheme the added\ntraining will commence In 1911 and the\noltlzens' training ln 1912. When the\nscheme Is ln full working order It is\nestimated It will provide 40,000 Junior\ncadets, 76,000 senior cadets, 65,000 citizens soldiers under 21 and a militia ot\n250,000 will thenceforth be recruited\nonly from fully trained men. It is\nhoped after 1916 Australia will have a\nflrst line of 50,000 men ready to go\nanywhere, a second . line of 50,000\nready to act as garrisons and a third\nline of 140,000 composed partly ut men\nWho have haa citizen training add\npartly ol reservists of aider training.\nParticular people always ask for\n\"B.&K.\"\nBreakfast Cereals\n. Boiled Oats, Oatmeal, Rolled Wheat,\nWheat Flakes, OaverhU's Barley\nFlakes, Etc.\nThe Brackman-Ker\nCo., Ltd.\nMoney Savers for Fair Buyers\nRoyal Household  Flour  $2.00\nEvaporated Cream, 2 for 25\nRelnd Milk. 15c, 7 for   1.00\nEclipse Soap, 6 for 25\nToilet Soap, & for  25\nBell Blend Tea, 3 lbs, for  1.00\nSweet Black Grapes, basket  1.60\nItalian Prune, crate  1.00\n(Fancy Bed Plums, crate  1.25\nFlemish Beauty Pears, per lb. 10\nGreen Peppers   lb. 26c. box 1.60\nCantelopes  each 10c and  .12-\u00a3-\nStore open every day during the Fair.\nBELL TRADING CO\nBaker Street, Nelson, B. C.\nDo something that was never done before\nTHERMOS BOTTLE\nI keep contents Ice cold for   72 hours.   Keeps contents red hot for\n36 hours,\nI Just the thin gfor Picnics\n1 pint size, black $3.50     1 quart, black  5,00\n1 pint size, nickel   5.00     1 quart, nickel   7.50\nMall orders promptly filled.\n*\u00b0*6** Nelson Hardware Co. Baker st\nHAMILTON\nWINN IKS\nWe have just received a large shipment ot\nCalcutta Ore Sacks\nand can fill promptly all orders.\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co., Limited\nNELSON. B. C.\nWholesale\nRetail\nT010NTC\nAt the Store of Quality\nWholesale and Retail Grocers\nBest Goods and\nBest Prices\nPrompt Delivery\nRoyal Household Flours-Purity Flour.\n6-Roses Flour, 60 lb. sack for |2.05\nSt. Charles Cream, 2 cans for 25\nRoyal Crown Soap, Eclipse Soap,\nand Golden West Soap, S bars.. .25\nJelly Powders, any kind, packet..  '.10\nTo visitors at the fair: We Invite you\nto our store. To leave your grips and\nmake yourself at home.\nP.O.Box54    A. S. HorSWiU    Phone 10\nM\n1\nr \u25a0\nambsmLt&mars,\nA Message\nTo Mars\nSome day we maybe able to communicate with the planets, hut\nmeanwhile we must be content with sending message, to. each-other.\nWe suggest that the next written message you send to your friend\nhe\nOn Paper Made by Eaton, Crane & Pike\nThey make the best writing paper In the world. Their Highland\nLinen tor Instance, Is even more popular today than It waa five yearn\nago, and at that time more ot tt had been sold than any other paper.\nBesides Highland Linen there are many other. Eaton, Crane A Pike\npapers.' Some costing more and some less, and all of high quality and\ncorrect style, will you not let us show you our line of these' celebrated papers?\nCanada Drug & Book Co., Ltd. *\u00ab_m\nNelson's leading Pharmit,\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_1909_09_22","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\/1.0383799","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":"1909-09-22 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":"1909-09-22 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":""}]}