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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":" 2\u00a3T0RIA, 8.\n<?<?<\/\nCLASSIFIED ADS\n'CENT A W^'O\nVOL 9\nDeaths from Fire Not as, Numerous as Reported\nRAINY RIVER IS\nOUT OF DANGER\nEIGHT PAQES-\n60 btNTS A MONTH\nNELSON, B. C.  THURSDAY  MORNING,  OCTOBER  13, 1910\nNO 152\nGovernor of Minnesota Touring Burned Area\u2014Says\nPrices Exorbitant\nWINNIPBO, Oct 12\u2014Governor Eberhart of Minnesota has wired from\nBeaudette to Sanford Evans, thanking\ntbe people of this city for their prompt\nand generous measures of relief on be-'\nhalf of the unfortunate people ln the\nfire stricken districts. He Bald that\n.humanity knew no boundary lines, and\nthat the lesson of the universal brotherhood of mankind was emphasized.\nNe Distress\nRAINY HIVEE, Oot. 12\u2014Distribution\nof rations is now engaging the attention of officials here and with abundant supplies coming in from neighboring cities ln the United States and\nCanada, the work is making good progress. As far as the towns of Beaudette and Spooner are concerned the\nImmediate outlook ls not at all discouraging, but smail holders in the\ncountry districts are In a bad way.*\nThe necessity of providing accommodation, with some sort of furniture and\nbedding for these settlers ls the first\nconsideration.\n, Rainy River Safe\nRAlNr RIVER, Oct. 12\u2014Last night\nContractor Hurst, who has been appointed fire chief, reported the danger\npractically past. Under his direction\nall brush skirting the town haB been\nrased and removed ao that a brisk wind\nwhich developed during the night occasioned no -Teat anxiety. A telegram\nfrom Virginia, Minn., hospital announces the death of the elder Simmons, raising the death list to 29 in\nthis vicinity.\nInternational Question\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 12\u2014What might\nhave developed Into an International\ndifficulty developed this morning when\nthe governor of Minnesota with a de\ntachment of state mllltla arrived at International Palls, Minn., and sought to\ncross the strip of Canadian territory\nInto Beaudette. The authorities would\nnot let armed men \u00abet foot on Canadian soil. Bruce Walker, commissioner\nof Immigration here, was appealed to\nand he ordered the dlBarmlng of the\nmen, which being done, they were\npassed through, entered on the records\nas deputy sheriffs.\nPenny Wise Pound Foolish\nWINNIPBO, Oct. 12\u2014Fourteen thousand dollars la the sum which probably would have averted the forest fires\nln northern Minnesota, which have\ntaken many lives and destroyed millions of dollars of property. It would\nhave taken that amonnt to have maintained the forest rangers in northern\nMinnesota, withdrawn on Sept, 1 because funds for their pay were exhausted.\nArms Sealed\nBEAUDETTE, Minn., Oot. 12\u2014The\nspecial train with Governor Eberhart\non board pulled Into here at 8 o'clock\nthis morning. It was held up at Rainier while Gen. I*. B. Wood billed out\nthe manifests for the provisions and\nsupplies so that they could pass\nthrough Canada. All the arms ot the\nguardsmen of company K (Bemldjl)\nthe Minnesota regiment, wero sealed\nwhile they were taken across the Canadian border to reach this town. The\nrailroad yards at Fort Francis were\nfound to he -badly congested and lt\ntook some time to get the train there.\nReports Exaggerated\nThe governor's staff was unable to\nobtain any definite information of the\nnumber of dead but the concensus of\nopinion ls that tt haa been greatly exaggerated. After talking to a number\not refugees. Governor Eberhart said:\n\"I do not 'believe the dead will number\nmore than 100. Many people reported\n\u2022a having been burned to an unrecognisable maas have turned up safe and\nwound.\"\n- ffrank M, Curtis, one .of the old time\nforest -aa*f*B< says the death list will\nnot exceed-GO and may not go that\nhigh. He la also authority tor the\nstatement that tha strip of country\nburned over, only measures 40 miles\nsquare.\nFamily Turns up\nThe MoComber family of eight\nwhose tragic death was reported on\nMonday morning have been found.\nThey escaped the flame, byt staying\nIn a small creek. \u25a0       '\u25a0 ..-,\u2022 t. -\nGovernor Arrives\nINTERNATIONAL FALLS, Oct. 12\u2014\nGovernor Eberhart' of Minnesota and\n(Continued on Page Four.)\nNEW GOVERNMENT\nIS RECOGNIZED\nPortuguese   Royal   Family  Will  Take\nRefuge In England\u2014General Am.\nnetty le Proclaimed\nLISBON, Portugal, Oct. 12\u2014The provisional government hag received a\ntelegram from tbe president of Switzerland announcing that government's\nrecognition of the Portuguese republic.\nThe British ambassador, Sir Francis\nH, Villers, today handed the premier\na note stating tbat Oreat Britain would\nrecognize the republic as soon as lt\nwas convinced that tbe revolution was\nabsolutely ended and affairs ln a normal state.\nGeneral Amnesty\nThe government has Issued a decree\ngranting general amnesty to all military and naval offenders. The huge\nIron safes containing the treasure of\nthe Qulhas convent which reverts to\nthe government,' have been plated ln\nthe bank of Portugal.\nTaking Inventory\n\u25a0 a commission composed of officials\nof the ministry of finance have been\nappointed to make an Inventory of the\nroyal palaces and to decide what property belongs to the king personally.\nThis commission will also Investigate\nthe outstanding debts of the members\nof the royal family.\nGo to England\nThe royal yacht Victoria and Albert\nsailed today for Gibraltar. King Manuel and the Queen Mother Amelle will\nreturn to Bngland on the yacht.\nWANTS TO FOLLOW\nONTARIO'S EXAMPLE\nEdmonton City Council Urges Provincial Government to Appoint\nPower Commission.\nEDMONTON, Oct. 12\u2014A resolution\ncalling for Immediate action on 'the\npart of the provincial government for\ninvestigation of the power possibilities\nof the water courses of Alberta and the\n'development of bydro electric power by\nthe government for sale to municipalities of\/ the province will be Introduced\nto the olty council on Tuesday next.\nThe resolution calls for the appointment of a committee of experts to undertake the work and embodies a request for the co-operation of all other\nmunicipalities of Alberta in bringing\nthe resolution into effect.\nThe resolution concludes as follows:\nBe It resolved, That in the opinion\nof the council of the ctty of Edmonton the provincial government should\nacquire all necessary waterpower and\ndevelop the same for the benefit of\nvarlouB towns and cities tributary\nthereto and sell hydro electric power\nto such towns and cities as desire the\nsame at lowest possible cost for distribution by said cities and towns, to\nthe citizens thereof. And this council\ndoes hereby, strongly urge the provincial government to pass necessary legislation at the earliest possible date to\ncreate a commission of experts to investigate and where expedient to acquire and develop hydro electric power, with all necessary powers to carry\ninto effect the intention and meaning of\nthis  resolution.\nPROSPECTORS ARE\nSTILL UP IN HILLS\nNumerous Claims    Staked on   Creeks\nSurrounding Kootenay Lake\u2014Several on  Mt.  Donaldson.\nThe activity in claim staking continues unabated, as testified by the certificates of location Issued by Stephen\nH. Hoskins, recorder of the Nelson\nmining district. The following are the\nlatest locations:\nEva, on east side of Salmon river 3\nmiles from Pend d'Oreille river, by\nPhilip White.\nManitoba, on south boundary of\nMolly Gibson group on Kokanee creek,\nby A. Grant,\nJessie, on north Bide of Kokanee\nlake; Annie Bell, on south Bide of\nMolly Gibson group; by R, McLeod.\nMaudie, on eaBt slope of Five Mile\ncreek four   miles   south   of Kootenay\nriver, by Thomas Martin Ivens.\n\u25a0   Evelln,    near    Maudie,    by    Sam\nThomas.\nPaystreak on HaU oreek half mile\nnortheast of Flying Dutchman claim,\nhy Herbert H. Pitts.\nGold King, adjoining Paystreak\nclaim, by Henry Sbonlng.\nLang Fraction, near Wolf creek\nbounded on north by W. R. Claim and\non south by Badger olaim, by the Amalgamated old Mines of Sheep creek.\nConnie Joy, re-location of Margate\nclaim at head of Five Mile creek, by\nMurdoch McLeod.- '\nBags Fraction, on Sheep creek bounded by Marie, Eldorado, and Comstock\nclaims, by G. E. Rowell.\nVancouver, on Donaldson mountain\nadjacent to Bunker Hill claim; Nelson,\nnear Vancouver; Winnipeg on Donaldson mountain near Grade R. claim;\nby J. E. Stickle.\nMoose Jaw, on Donaldson mountain\nnear Vancouver claim; Quebec, on Donaldson mountain; Westminster Fraction, on Donaldson mountain between\nW. J. Ryan, Bt Innis and Big Bluff\nclaims; by David Nichols,\nThree Leading Mines Ready\nto Use Them\nDUNDEE INSTALLS\nA WATER POWER\nWilcox Starting New Tunnel\non Fourth of July Vein\n--Reduction Plant\nBELLEVILLE, Oct. 12\u2014A number of\nlaborers who have been working In the\nGrand Trunk shops here, are leaving\nfor the west, where they will engage\nin construction Work on the C.P.R.\nFrom the Tmlr gold camp comes considerable development news of an Important character. The Dundee mine,\nwhich is in close proximity to the\nYankee Girl, and whloh is regarded aa\none of the best properties in the Ymlr\ndistrict, will shortly have the advantage ef water power, which ls being installed to the extent of approximately\n120 horsepower. A five drill compressor will be Installed yet this fall. Tbe\nDundee Is located on Dundee mountain,\nand work Ib being pushed on the long\ncrosscut tunnel, which will give a\ndepth of several hundred feet from the\nupper workings. Tbe property Is under the supervision of Mr. Riley, who\nsome years ago was In charge of the\nAthabasca gold mine, adjacent to Nelson.\nYankee Girl Plans Reduction Plant\nThe new ore Bhoot caught on the\nYankee Girl is showing high values,\nand from development that has already\nbeen done on this new shoot it promises to add materially to the value\nand production of the property. .A\nseven drill compressor was taken out\nto the mine last Thursday, and ls now\nbeing installed, while the water power\nto operate the compressor is nearing\ncompletion. As soon as the plant is\ncompleted, extensive development work\nwill be pushed. The property is shipping on an average a car a day to\nTrail. The ore is high in gold, with\ngood silver and lead values. It Ib the\ncompany's Intention to erect a 100-ton\nreduction plant next spring, and eventually It Is the Intention to erect a\nsmelter.\nThe famous Wilcox mine Ib still making the sample run of ore through its\nmill, to demonstrate the milling properties of the new ore shoot. A. H. Tuttle, head of the operating company,\nwhen In town a few days ago, stated\nthat the 60 days drifting on tbe new\nshoot of the Wilcox vein had been continuously in ore for the entire distance\nof 160 feet, the dimensions of the drift\nat date. Judging from the length of\nthe same shoot in No. 1 level, 169 feet\nabove, the drift should he continuously\nin ore for at least 150 feet further. The\nshoot on both levels runs from 2 to\n4 1-2 feet wide, and the ore 1b first-\nclass free milling ore, carrying quite\na percentage of galena, good gold\nvalues, and fair silver values.\nWilcox's New Tunnel,\nOn the Fourth of July vein, they\ndropped from No. 1 level on the lead,\nand found the shoot after 600 feet of\ntunnel. In the near future Mr. Tuttle\nexpects to start another tunnel on this\nvein which will give a depth of 117\nfeet under No. 2. He will do this by\ncrosscuttlng diagonally from a point\nIn No. 1 Wilcox tunnel 200 feet from\nthe portal, expecting to catch the\nFourth of July lead at 460 feet.\nMr. Tuttle is about to curtail development to quite an extent until he Installs\na five drill compressor. This will be\nready for work in about 60 days. The\nWilcox mine has a past production to\nits credit, of approximately $135,000.\nWILL BUILD NEW\nWELLAND CANAL\nQuicksand    Impediment   to    Proposed\nCut Off\u2014Appropriation Granted\nfor New Canal.\nOTTAWA, Oct 12\u2014That an appropriation for the commencement of the\nconstruction work on a new Welland\ncanal will be made at the forthcoming\nsession is the statement of W. M. Gorman, M.P., who ls here interviewing the\nministers ahout lt. Mr. Gorman says\nhe has had assurances to that effect.\nThe idea was to enlarge the present\ncanal from Port Colborne ten miles and\nthen, construct a cut off. Surveys,\nhowever, have disclosed a dangerous\nbed of quicksand on .the route of the\nout Jiff, and an entirely new canal la\nnow proposed. It would start about\nsix miles west of Port Colborne and\nhave its outlet at the mouth ot the\nJordan river, a distance ot 22 miles.\nSENTENCED TO HANO\nFOR BRUTAL UXORICIDE\nPERTH, Ont, Oct. 12\u2014Rufus Wood-\n\"Mtrk of Smith's Falls, was tried hers\ntoday before Chancellor Boyd and a\njury for the murder ot his wife, Kate,\nln their humble home on Mam street,\nln Smith's Falls ln the early morning\nhour* ot Saturday, April 30. He was\nround guilty of the charge and waa\nsentenced to be hanged at Perth on\nDeo. 14.   The crime waa a brutal one.\nOLD TIMER DIES\nSUDDENLY AT RENATA\nCharles Shannon Found Dead in Cabin\n\u2014Jury Finds Death Occurred\nFroni Natural Causes\nLying In a pool of blood and evident\nly dead for some hours Charles Shannon, one. of the pioneers of the Deer\nPark and Renata settlements, waa\nfound ln big cabin on bis ranch at Renata at 7:30 on Monday morning by\nGerbart Buhler of tbat place.\nJury's Verdict\nDr. W. O, Rose, coroner, *wa\". sum-:\nmoned tram Nelson and held an Inquest on Tuesday. The jury after\nhearing the- testimony of John Waller,\nwho saw the deceased on Sunday at\n10 vim., an \\ Mr. Buhler, who found\nthe 'body, decided that there was no\nevidences of foul play or suicide and\nbrought in a verdict of death from natural . causes. From the condition of\nthe body and the pool of blood in\nwhich it was found it is believed that\ndeath came ai a result of heart d'sease\nThe jury consisted of F. W. Nash,\nforeman, A, M. Frleson, H. F. Leny-\nmann, Abram B. Bornn, Peter H. Siemens and Aaron P. Ahrams.\nThe late Mr, Shannon, who was 55\nyears of age, has resided on his ranch\nat Renata for the past five years and\nbefore that time lived for some years\nat Deer Park. He hailed originally\nfrom Ireland, coming to Canada at a\nvery early age. He was a bachelor\nand as far as lg known his only near\nrelatives, are two unmarried sisters residing In London, Ont,\nFuneral Today\nD. J. Robertson left yesterday in order, to take charge of the funeral\nwhich will take place today at Renata\nKev. Seth Phlllimore of Nakusp, the\nChurch of England missionary, will\nconduct the service,\nVETERANS' BRIGADE\nSTILL GROWING\nNow   Consists   of   Twenty-four   Fully\nOrganized  Companies\u2014Over  Five\nThousand Members.\nWINNIPEG, Man., Oot 12.\u2014The organl-\n.zatlon of the veteran brigade ot Canada\ncontinues apace, there being now 24 fully\norganized companies and 16 in the course\nof formation, several of the companies being double and treble the necessary\nstrength. New companies organized are\nnumber SO at Edmonton, 21 at Yorkton, 22\nat Vancouver and 24 at Victoria. In all\nthere are 5465 members enrolled. President Colonel Scott Is In Calgary organizing the district and Vice-President HUllard\nLeach will address Edmonton veterans on\nSaturday. Brigade orders call for general\nparade for service of all commands on\nffhanksglvlnir or the previous  Sunday.\nSPIRITED BIDDING\nAT THE TAX SALE\nSome Good Prices Realized\u2014Only One\nProperty Remains Unsold\u2014List of\nTransactions.\nGreat Interest was manifested In the tax\nsale of delinquent properties in the Nelson\nassessment district yesterday, conducted by\nStephen II. Hoskins, deputy assessor and\ncollector. There was a good attendance\nof bidders, and though mainly the prices\nrealized were close to the amounts due\nas taxes. In some Instances the bidding\nwas most spirited. The A, C. Dick property, near the Junction of the Kootenay\nand Columbia rivers, was wanted by several parties, but W. B. Farris eventually\ncarried off the prize at 1520, a raise of\n$100 on his chief opoonent. The taxes due\non thlg property amounted only to $35.45.\nMr. Farris also bid ln the O. Munro property at Creston for $205, the taxes due on\nwhich amounted to only $10.60, on behalf\nof the Creston Mercantile company. A\ncouple of properties were bid up high and\nsecured by Percy J. Gleazer, acting for\nJ. It. Hunnex, and In another .case A. G.\n'Lambert was the hero of a spectacular\nbidding contest.\nThe propertied sold are delinquent on\ntaxes due before December 31 ,1909, and\nthe owners may redeem them within two\nyears of the date of the tax sale, together\nwith 12 per cent Interest per annum, and\nsuch other taxes as accrue up to the date\nof redemption.\nOnly one property offered for sale yeBterday was not sold. The following ls a\nlist of the sales, showing the properties,\nthe prices at which they were sold, and\nthe names of the purchasers: ,\nList of Properties Sold.\nLot 1, sub-lot 21, lot 4696, $30, Mrs, Joseph\nBarraclough.\nLot 2, sub-lot 21, lot 4696, $14.54, Percy J.\nGleazer.\nLot 3, sub-lot 21, lot 4696, $14.54. Percy J.\nGleazer.\nSub-lot IS, lot 4692, $12.45, J. R. Hunnex.\nPart of lot 6499, $6.40, by R. S. Lennle.\nPart of lot \u00ab\u00bb, $26,  by W.  Holmes.\nLot 7681, $6.40, E, C. Wragge.\nLot 7780, $26, J. R. Hunnex.\nLot 7878, $22, Ralph Shirley.\nLot 7983, $25, J. R.  Hunnex.\nBlock 16, lot 96, $7, E. C. Wragge.\nPart of lot 197, $5, G. A. Hunter.\nBlock 5? A, lot 304, R. S. Lennle.\nBlock 64 A, lot 304, fl. M. Brydges.\nBlock 66 A, lot 301, R. G. Lennle.\nBlook 243, Lot 301, $10,  Percy J. Gleazer.\nBlook 12,  lot 2548,  $30,   J.   R   Hunnex.\nA. C. Dick, lot 919, ISM, W. B. Farris.\nBlock 3, lot 6306, 166, A. G. Lambert.\nEast half block 4, lot 812, $205, Creston\nMercantile company.\nPart of block 18, lot 801, $75, J. R. Hun-\nNortheast quarter blook 31,  lot 892, $50,\nJ. R; Hunnex.\nSections 2-11, township 13, lot 1296, $14.54,\nE. C. Wragge.\ni That part of the west half, east half\nand northeast half of section 23 outside\nrlght-of-wav and lands told to G. and W.\nRuth, township HA, lot UN, $55.61, J. R.\nIn section 21, township 17, lot 1243, $4.65,\nS. P. Tuck. ,\nIn sections 27 and 28, township 17, lot\n1242, 215, 8. P. Tuok,\nIn sections 23, 27-29; 32-36, township 31,\nlot 1243, $293.43, J.-B, Hunnex.\nMELBOURNE), Oct li\u2014The federal\nparliament unanimously passed bills\nthrough all stages making for a permanent white Australia, and providing\nsugar bounties.\nONE QF GREAT\nOF\nEastern Canada Admires British Columbia's Premier\nCOLONEL HUGHES\nVISITS VANCOUVER\nFinds  Protective  Sentiment\nGrowing in West\u2014Conservative Party Full of Vim\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 12\u2014Col, Sam\nHughes, M.P. for Victoria and Hallbur-\nton, arrived in the city today after a\nleisurely trip across the Dominion.\nConcerning the outlook for the Conservative party he spoke as follows:\n\"In all my political experience I\nnever saw a more wideawake spirit\namong the rank and file than exists today. There is great unanimity as to\nthe wisdom and timeliness of waging\nan aggressive and honest campaign\n^gainst the party in power at Ottawa.\nTribute to McBride.\n\"He paid a high tribute to the effective work already accomplished in two\ndistinct spheres by Premier McBride\nin British Columbia and Premier Roblin in Manitoba. He added that Mr.\n'McBride is beginning to be regarded\nin eastern Canada aB one of the great\nmen of the Dominion. The premier's\nnroadmindedne8S ln according such\ngenerous treatment to Str Wilfrid\nLaurler during t\/e latter's recent visit\nto British Columbia had created a very\nfavorable impression everywhere.\nTariff Sentiment Growing.\n\"On the tariff question Col. Hughes\nVentured the follolwng opinions:\n^'Throughout the west I found growing\nsentiment for proper protection both\nfor working classes as well as for\nmanufacturers, but above all for people\nof Canada generally. By 'proper protection' I mean a tariff designed to\npreserve the home market for ourselves without permitting manufacturers to unduly combine to enhance\nprices. I would do justice to Canadian\nmanufacturers and the Canadian artisan as against his foreign competitors.\nThe Preference.\n\"I would go a step farther than the\npreferential treatment accorded Great\nBritain by the present Liberal government. Its policy is an appeal to selfish\nInterests and has not the enduring\ncharacter of boarder treatment based\non sentimental considerations. We\nshould enter into a full partnership\nwith the mother country and create a\ngreat central parliament where every\ncomponent part of the British empire\nwould he represented and where imperial matters could be disposed of.\nAt the same time I would preserve for\neach colony its own distinct autonomy\nwith- absolute freedom on its own local\naffairs.\"\nPREFERENCE  BETWEEN WE3T\nINDIES AND CANADA\nLONDON, Oct. 12\u2014ChaIrman Brode\nHoare at the half yearly meeting of\nthe Coonia bank emphasized the difficulties in the way of preference between tbe West Indies and Canada and\nsaid If the Islands granted a preference to Canada they could hardly deny\nit to Britain, Mr. Hoare expressed disapproval of the discontinuance of tbe\ntrans-Atlantic mall service and -ppeal-\ned to the shareholders and the press\nto urge its continuance.\nOLD VICTORIA\nSTREET BRIDGE GOES\nForce of Thre\u00bb of City Men at Work\nPreparing for Filling of\nHollow\nThe city engineer's department has\na force of men at work taking down\nthe old bridge on Victoria street, near\nWard street, and preparations are being made to fill ln the hollow beneath.\nThe contract for the filling has been\nawarded to John Burns & Son who\nare taking the soil from Ed. Kerr's\nproperty on Victoria street for the purpose. The work will be completed\nwithin tbe next four weeks. Between\n2000 and 2500 cubic yards of soli will\nbe used in making the fill and the\ncost will be about 11000.\nWhile this work Is being carried out\nthe alleys between Victoria and Silica\nstreets and Ward and Josephine streets\nwill be closed to traffic.\nAnother gang of elty men are constructing two Mocks of new sidewalk\non Front street, near tbe hospital.\nLLOYD-QROROI   ADVOCATES\nIMPIHIAL PARLIAMENT\n. LONDON, Oct,il2\u2014A statement by\na trustworthy authority Is that Lloyd-\nOeorge ha* become an Imperial federations, having espoused the cause of\nan Imperial parliament at Westminster\nwith provlncm logMatnres ln the British Isles.\nMASKED MEN SHOOT\nUP COLORADO TOWN\nDynamite Bank and Terrorize Citizens\nSafe Is too Strong and Bandits\nDepart\nSTERLING, Colo., Oct. 12\u2014lFour\nmasked men, heavily armed rode into\nProctor, Colo., 17 mtle9 north of here\ntoday, shot up the town, dynamited the\nstate bank of Proctor and escaped after a running fight with citizens. They\ngot no money. The first Intimation of\ntbe bandits' presence ln Proctor was\ngiven by an explosion of dynamite' that\npartly wrecked the hank. For an hour\nthereafter .every man iwho ventured\ninto main street was shot at by one of\ntwo bandits who stood on the corner\nThe other two worked steadily trying\nto drill the Inner door of the safe hut\nfinally gave lt up and the four mounted and rode towards Sterling shooting\nup the town as they left.\nTRANSCONTINENTAL   COMMISSION\nVISITING. WINNIPEG\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 12\u2014Members of\nthe National Transcontinental railway\ncommission have arrived here after\ntheir first trip of Inspection over the\nnew line from Port William. They\nmade an official Inspection of the road\nand were highly pleased with the progress of the work so far. They were\nmost enthusiastic in their expressions\nof appreciation and even prophesied\ndouble tracking of the road before long.\nTbe party was accompanied during the\nlatter part of the trip by a number of\nprominent men from all parts of Manitoba.\nRESOLUTIONS FOR\nASSOCIATED BOARDS\nLocal   Board of Trade  Will  Endeavor\nto Prepare Statements as Early\nas Possible\nAnyone In the district wishing to\ni have any matter bearing upon the de-\nvelopment of Southeastern British Columbia brought to the attention of the\nassociated boards of trade at the annual meeting, which will he held at\nCreston on the second Wednesday after the opening of the provincial parliament, is invited to forward copies\nof his resolution to the Nelson board\nof trade as soon as possible.\nThere are several subjects which the\nlocal board will probably bring before\nthe meeting of the associated boards.\nAmong these will be that of the opening up of the Columbia river to naviga^\ntion and the Improvement of transportation facilities as regards wagon roads\nin the district.\nIt is the Intention of the local hoard\nto prepare such resolutions as they\nmay decide to make as completely as\npossible and their efforts In this direction will be greatly facilitated If\npersons interested in bringing forward\nresolutions will send statements of\ntheir cases to the secretary, E. K. Beeston witliln the next few weeks.\nRiver Boats Requisitioned by\nFrench Government    v\nMANY OUTRAGES ON\nWESTERN SYSTEM\nTrains Derailed, Track and\nSignals Destroyed-Premier\nDenounces Railway Strike\nPARIS, Oct. 12.\u2014The strike of the railway men, which threatens to spread\ntiirough France, waa denounced today by\nPremier Brand aa \"an Insurrection built\nupon criminal foundations.\" The premier\nsaid the strike wan called while negotiations were going on through himself and\nthe minister of public works for an adjustment of grievances and he promised\nthat the instigators of the strike would be\ncriminally prosecuted. f\nFood for Paris.\nThe river Seine, which In January\nthreatened to destroy Paris, now looms\nup in the role ot saviour. The government has made arrangements to rush food\nsupplies to Paris from tne sea, requisitioning ah tugs, boats and barges to meet\nthe crisis brought about by the stopping\nof the railway service, and ease the iood\nmarket, whlcn is already hard.\nWill Not Join Colors.\nThe Eastern and the Paris, Lyons and\nMediterranean railways have not yet responded to the call to strike and Uie government has induced some of those employed on the northern road to return to\ntneir nosltions. Nevertheless, the Northern and Western roads are prostrated. The\ncall to the colors has been ignored by the\nlarge mujority and at mass meetings held\ntoday tha strikers reiterated their determination nut to respond to the call.\nStrikers Outrages.\nMuch destruction has been wrought on\nthe western system, where the strikers\nand their supporters have held up and\nderailed trains, blocked tracks, destroyed\nsignals, rlnned up rails and cut telephone\nand telegraph wires. The government has\nordered the arrest of a score of strike\nleaders and instructions have been Issued\nto the troops to use severe measures\nwherever the occasion requires. Thousands\nof persons living in the suburbs, but who\nare employed in Paris, massed this evening\naround the stations. These they found\nclosed and silent with soldiers' camps jn\nfront. Then with true Parisian gayety\nthey laughingly set out to walk home perhaps a distance of five or ten miles, or\nstormed the tramways, cabs, automobiles\nand other conveyances,\nTravellers Stalled.\nThe loss to commerce is already tremendous. Scores of trains have been\nstalled along tho roads, many of these\ncarrying food supplies which even now\nhave become unfit for use. The passengers on tho steamship Oceanic, who touk\nthe train at Cherbourg for Paris, are\nblocked at Suntes sur Seine, about 86 miles\nfrom  Paris.\nKILLED BY FALLING TREE.\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nCOLEMAN,  Oct.  12\u2014Gilbert   Brath-\nwaite waB killed in the woods near here\nthis mornfng by the falling of a tree.\nDeceased came from London, Eng.\nREGISTRATION WAS\nHEAVY YESTERDAY\nForty-six  Citizens  Qualified  as  Voters\nin  January  Elections\u2014Four\nMore Licensees.\nForty-two citizens registered at the city\nhall yesterday as householders and four\nas licensees. The latter were: Robert\nAndrews, E. G. Smythe, S. J. Kennedy,\nAnton Pfeiffer.\nThose making declarations that tbey\nwere qualified to vote as householders, by\nvirtue of being of the full age of 21 years,\nBritish subjects, residents of a house or\nother dwelling or part of one ln Nelson\nsince January 1 last and having paid all\ntaxes due from them to the city were:\nT. H. Gordon, A. W. Denman, W. H. Mc-\nPherso-- Thomas Peterkln, G. E, Trainor,\nJ. W. Holmes, Lauclilin McKinnon, Ulye-\nses S. dit Blondin, W. M. De Cow, A. W.\nD. Parsons, H. A. Fox, H. J. \"Wilton, G.\nO. M. Fox, XV. A. Ebbs, R. L. Douglas,\nWilliam Talt, Daniel MoKay, V. C. Beach,\n8. P. Tuck, August Loellmer, J. W. Mulholland, J. 3. Mackay, Thomas Hagan,\nAndrew Life, J. A. Armstrong, Gt R.\nKeefe, Otto Falk, Daniel McKlerman,\nRoch La Palme, R. W. Markham, J. B.\nBaxter, J. N. Hammond, . J. McDonell,\nJohn Murphy, Daniel Johnson, Maude\nMoore, Violet Swain, \\V. T. Fotherlngham,\nJohn Teague, George Lapolnt.\nFRACTURE OF SKULL\nRE8ULT OF HOLDUP\nVanoouver Again Scene of Outrages\u2014\nVictim Found Unconscious With\nPockets Rifled\n(Special to The Dally News)\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 12\u2014Two holdups\noccurred In the city last night one of\nwhich may have fatal consequences.\nHarry Roberts, a young man who arrived from Victoria yesterday after-\nnon was found in an alley In a central\ndistrict in an unconscious condition,\nwith his pocket8 vit\\ei. On removal\nto the hospital he was found to he suffering from fracture of the skull at\nthe base and now lies in a critical condition, The other case was of a Bailor\nnamed Roberts who was attacked by\ntwo strangers with whom he had been\ndrinking. The man retained partial\nconsciousness and made such struggles\nthat his assailants fled (before going\nthrough his pockets.\nNO RACIAL STRUGGLE TWIXT\nENGLAND  AND   IRELAND\nT. P. O'Connor Speaks to Weil Attended Meeting in Winnipeg\u2014Common\nCause Against  Peers.\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 12\u2014T. P. O'Connor,\nM. P., received considerable financial\naid from a well attended meeting last\nnight. Mr. O'Connor assured his audience that there is no racial struggle\nbetween Ireland and England nor\nwould he be in such a racial straggle.\nDemocratic forces of England and Ireland were leagued against the house\nof peers. What the Irish wanted was\nthe application of Canadian principles\nto British laws and such autonomy as\nCanada Is so marvelous an exponent\nof. If home rule were granted to Ireland, the Irish would continue to govern it as it is now governed.\nSASKATCHEWAN   HOTELMEN j\nSUBSCRIBE CAMPAIGN  FUND\nREGINA, Oct. 12\u2014The hotelmen of\nSaskatchewan, reinforced by some\nscore or more from Winnipeg, who\nreached the city in a special car here\nhave been in session throughout the\nday. While the meetings held have\nbeen private and no information has\nbeen handed out to the press, it ls understood that the gathering was to perfect arrangements in connection with\nthe campaign which is to be waged\nfrom now on until Dcember 12, to\ncounteract the local option movement.\nA large campaign fund has been subscribed and the necessary steps will be '\ntaken to complete the organization\nthroughout the province In the hotel\nInterests.\nED1TOR8 SQUABBLE\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 12\u2014Mayor Taylor proprietor of the Dally World has\ninstituted a writ to be issued for |60,-\n000 damages against -W. G\/'Nichol, proprietor of the1'bally Province. The\naction Is brought because of an alleged libelous statement In the editorial\ncolumns of the latter publication in\nwhich a charge of graft is Intimated,\nagainst the plaintiff.\nCATHOLICS PROTE8T\n: ROME, Oot. 12\u2014The Catholic press\nprotests against the decision of the\nItalian cabinet denying the expelled\nPortuguese orders the right to settle\nln Italy. The papers say that while It\nmay give satisfaction to the extreme\nparties, this action was unnecessary.\n Mil TWO   t-\u00bb*\nCfc Ball? $th)*.\nTHURSDAY OCTOBER 18\nto\nto\nto\nto\nto\nto\nto\nto\nto\nTo All Whom ThisMay Concern\nWallace's Big Clearance sale has been a great success and is still on the move. People who have\npurchased goods here have gone away perfectly satisfied with our great bargains and have appreciated our\nhonorable and straightforward way of carrying on our sale.   A few quotations of our specials.\nMen's Wool Tweed Pants\nBlack, Navy, and Fancy Worsteds, also\nBlack and Navy Serges\nRegular J1.60, sale price  $1.00\nRegular J1.75 and 12. sale price.. 1.25\nOiegular *2.50, sale price  1.75\nRegular *3 and (3.50, sale price.. 2.25\nRegular M, sale price   2.75\nHegular J4.50 and $5, sale price.. 3.50\nHegular $6.60, sale price   5.00\nMen's Khaki Riding Pants and\nHunting Coats\nRegular $2,25, sale price  $1.75\nRegular $3 and $3.50, sale price.. 2.25\nRegular $3.75, sale price   2.50\nRegular $4. sale price   2.75\nBoys' Knee Pants\nRegular 75c, ssle price $ .50\nKegular $1, sale price  75\nHegular $1.25 and $1.50, sale price 1.00\nRegular $1.75 and $2, sale price.. 1.25\nPertins' Lowndes' Dent's Dress\nGloves.   Unlined, Silk Lined,\nWool Lined.   H. B. K\u201e Etbe's\nBfg Four Working Gloves,\nMitts and Gauntlets. Unlined and Wool Lined.\nMen's and Boys' Gloves\nRegular 50c, land 65c, sale price..$ .40\nRegular 75c, sale price 50\nHegular $1, sale price  \" 75\nRegular $1.25, sale price   1.00\n\u25a0Regular $1.75 and $2, sale price.. 1.25\nKegular $2.25 and $2.60. sale price 1.75\nRegular 15o. Canvas, 3 for 25\nMen's Mackinaw Pants\nLONG AND KNEE LENGTH\nRegular $350, sale price  $2.50\ni\nixfc\nfijb\n\u00a7\nWallace's Retiring From Business Clearance Sale\n506 Baker Street\nijjii\n\u2022%\nj.-#\"\n8P0RTING NEWS\nschooTreld\nday tomorrow\nLong Program of Athletic Events Promised for Big Meet at Recreation\nGrounds\nThe annual field meet ot the public\nand high schools will take place at the\nrecreation grounds tomorrow. The\nyouthful athletes have been practising\nenergetically in anticipation of this\nevent for several weeks and a program\nof sports has been arranged which will\noccupy practically the whole day.\nThe program will include foot races,\nboth of the serious and comic variety,\nfootball matches and a number of other\nathletic events which give promise or\nproviding a  highly interesting  meet.\nMANN CUP TRUSTEES\nDISALLOW VANCOUVER PROTEST\nAdmit   Heal   and   Mara   Played   With\nPro  Team   But  Find  They  Re-\n\u2022 ceived no Pay\nA meeting of the Mann cup trustees\nwas held ln Toronto last week to consider the protest of the Vancouver lacrosse club against the Young Toronto lacrosse club for playing Andrew\nMara and George E. Heal in the first\ngame for the D. D. Mann Gold Cup on\nOct. 1, also the question as to the amateur standing of Frank M. Burns who\nplayed for Vancouver ln the first game\nfor the Mann cup on Oct. 1. The trustees considered the affidavits of Andrew Mara and George E. Heal and also\nheard the evidence of Mr. Heal and\nthe arguments of James Flndlay of\nVancouver and E. Knott for the Young\nTorontos. The trustees also beard the\naffidavit of F. M. Burns.\nFred Killer and John R. Robinson,\nthe trustees, make the following decis-\nions: ''WMMJ\n\"The trustees find that F. M. Burns\ndid play with or against professionals\n\u25a0wnen he played In an exhibition game\nfor Revelstoke against Regina in May,\n1909, but unreservedly accept his statement that he neither received nor expected money for hiB servicea in this\nor any other game In which he took\n\u2022part and that his amateurism Is beyond question.\n\"The trustees find that George E.\nHeal and Andrew Mara played -with or\nagalnBt professionals for the senior Torontos in 1905 without receiving or expecting to receive money for their services.\n\"The trustees further find that.the\nC.A.A.U. accepted the said Andrew\nMara as an amateur and eligible on the\nCanadian Olympic lacrosse team to\nEngland in 1908. The trustees further\nfind that the said George E. Heal played football as an amateur within the\nO.R.F.U. and hockey in the O.H.A. as\nan amateur, both organizations in affiliation with the C.A.A.U.\n\"The trustees therefore are hound to\ndisallow the protest of the Vancouver\nlacrosse club in so far as that protest\neffects the amateur status of George\nE Heal and Andrew Mara.\nThe Eton club has decided not to\nplay for the trophy and the final game\nwill take place on Saturday at tho\nBeach between the Young Torontos\nand Maitlands. The Vancouver team\nieave for home tonight.\nFOUL BLOW COSTS\nJIMMY REAGAN  FIQHT\nOODEN, TJtah. Oct. 12\u2014Gene McGovern of Milwaukee, won the decision\nin 11 rounds here over Jimmy Reagan\nof San Francisco. The fight was\nscheduled to go 20 rounds but -was concluded by a decision on a foul in the\nllth round when McGovern received a\nMow that sent him to the floor. Two\nphysicians, after an examination declared he had been struck In the groin.\nReferee Painter gave the decision to\nMcOovern on a foul, declaring all bets\noff.\nBRANTFORD MAY BE\nOUT OF PRO. HOCKEY\n' BRANTFORD, Oct. 12\u2014Professional\nhockey players have already commenced enquiring for places on the Brant-\nford pro-hockey team this winter but\nAbe chances are that Brantford will not\n(have a team. For three winters successively the club bad a heavy deficit\nand unless a better league than the\ntrolley circuit can be organized this\ncity js out of pro-hockey for good. An\norganization with Toronto is the only\nproposition local supporters will consider,\nDANNY MAHER TO RETIRE\nI NEW YORK, Oct. 12\u2014The announcement Is made from Hartford. Conn.,\nthat Danny Maher, the American jockey riding in England, has written to\nhis mother that he expects to quit the\nturf this year, and is no surprise to\nNew York followers of the race game.\nMaher glve9 as his reason that his\nweight Is too great. He now tips the\nscales at 128 pounds. It has been intimated that Maher has been preparing\nfor a long while to quit the track. Maher expects to buy an estate and settle down to a life of ease as a country\ngentleman in Tlpperary. It Is said\nMaher is now worth $1,000,000.\nBWANA TUMBO TAKES\nTRIP   IN   AEROPLANE\nST. LOUTS. Oct. 12\u2014Col. Roosevelt\nwent up with Aviator Hoxacy at 4 p.m.\nyesterday and made three laps of the\nfield. He was In the air three mlnute3\nand twenty seconds.\nALL STARS DEFEAT\nPHILLIES IN FIRST GAME\nPHILADELPHIA, Oct. 12\u2014The All\nStar aggregation yesterday afternoon\ndefeated the Philadelphia Americans\nIn the first of five exhibition games\n\u2022by the score of 8*3. Bender, Plank and\nCoombs pitched three innings each\nagainst the All Stars and were hit hard\nThe batting work of the champions\nthroughout was very poor. Johnson\nheld the Philadelphia team down to\nfive hits.\nCZAREWITCH   WON   BY  VERNEY\nLONDON, Oct. 12\u2014The Czarewltch\nwas won today by Verney, 7 to 1; Admiral Togo, 50 to 1, was second and\nColumbia, 100 to 9, was third.\nThe also rans were: Bronzlno, Jure\nGem, Declare, Dibs, Lages, Elizabeth,\nMagic, Old China, Chestnut, Demosthenes, Rock Lane, Eaton Lad, Specifi-\ncal. Storm Finch, Bachelor, Chance and\nTlrlpapa.\nSPORflNG SPOTLIGHTS\nThe rugby football season In Nelson,\nopens on Saturday next when a practice game will take place at the recreation grounds at 3 o'clock. The same\nafternoon a meeting at which officers\nof the club will be elected for the season will take place ln the grand stand.\nAs already stated arrangements have\nibeen practically completed for a Kootenay rugby team to meet the Vancouver and Victoria aggregations at the\ncoast some time in November. Rugby\nPlayers residing outBlde the city who\nwould like to be members of the team\nwhich is to represent the Kootenays at\nthe coast are Invited to send in particulars of their records, etc., to the\n\u25a0porting editor of The Dally News who\nwill forward them to the proper quarter, a cordial invitation is extended\nto all player8 of the great game,\nwhether res-dents of NelBon or not, to\ntake part in the practice on Saturday\nand during the rest of the season.\nCol. Roosevelt on Wednesday made a\nthree minute and twenty second trip\nin an aeroplane at St. Louis. This is\nnot the first time that the gallant\nroughrider has keen up in the air; although it is probably the first occasion\nupon wnlch he has, been there of his\nown free will. It's pretty good advertising, anyway,\nWith the wily Evers out of the game\nby an unfortunate accident the chances\nof the Athletics to win the world'B\nseries are improved about 10 per cent.\nIt was just about that 10 per cent\nthat the Cubs needed. Evers i3 a big\nloss in himself but the breaking up\nof a remarkable Infield is where the\ngreat trouble for the Athletics lies.\nThe decision to play continuous ball\nat Portland next season includes a\nteam for the Nothwestern. To make\nIt a six team league, as was determined by the club owners, one more team\nis required. The Victoria fans are\ntherefore discussing the possibility of\nthe capital possessing a professional\nbaseball team next year. Their chief\nrival will he Everett, which has certain geographical advantages of which\nthe British Columbia city is unable to\nboast.\nA total of 233 clubs are enrolled in\nthe amateur cup competition of the\nEnglish football association. The preliminary rounds will be played on Oct.\n8 and 22.\nPrevious to the Jeffrles Johnson fight\nthe 8tars were consulted and the zodiacal signs pointed to a victory for\nthe white man. It is hardly necessary\nto comment that the astronomers made\na poor guess. Annie Eva Fay, the\nmind reader Is now on deck with a pre\ndiction on the outcome of the battle\n\u2022between the Cubs and Athletics. According to Annie's dope there 1B nothing to It but the Athletics. In Pittsburg recently the mind reader stood\nupon the stage blindfolded. She called\nout the name of J. L. Kelly, and the\nrespondent wanted to know who was\ngoing to win the world's championship.\n\"I see Philadelphia\u2014yes, Burely Philadelphia will defeat Chicago.\" Annie\nTmay make good in her guess, but *\nMln-frl'i Liniment for tale everywhere\nNERVOUS PROSTRATION\nIndigestion Causes It\u2014Ml-o-na Will\nCure It.\nIf you have Indigestion, you don't set\nall the nutriment out of your food that you\nshould.\nTour worn out atomaoh passes the food\non without extracting enough nutritious\nsubstance to supply the blood and nerves.\nAnd If the nerves are not supplied with\nnourishment, they begin to rebel. They\nkick up a great disturbance. They make\nyou irritable and cranky, you worry about\ntrifles, and you cannot sleep soundly at\nnight, you have bad dreams, and you get\nup tired ln the morning.\nTry Mi-o-na tablets, the money bacK\ncure. Ml-o-na will cure your nervousness\nby driving out the cause. Ml-o-na will\ngive you relief the first hour. It will cure\nacute, cases In a few days, and chronlo\ncases in a few weeks.\nBelching of gas, heartburn, sour taste\not food, waterbrash, foul breath and other\ndyspeptic symptoms vanitm before the\nmighty power of Ml-o-na.\nTry Mi-o-na. The Poole Drug company\nsell It and wilt refund your money if It\ndoesn't cure, and only 50 cents a large box.\nimm-c-m)\nCURES CATARRH, ASTHMA,\n>*---*^ Cns* Ctiffe astf Colds, at\nSMSkfr fast*.   SoU mi awuite\/l (w\nIBB.POOLE DRUG COMPANY AND W.\nRUTHERFORD, NELSON, B, O.\nVICTIM BLINDED\nAND TORTURED\nFace of Revelstoke Black Hand Victim\nto be Examined by Ottawa\nAnalyst.\nOTTAWA,. Oct. 12\u2014Dr. Fagan, provincial health officer, at Vancouver, today performed a strange mission when\nin the course of his attendance upon\nthe federal provincial health conference\nhe handed to Dr. iUcGlll, chief analyst\nof the Dominion, part of tbe face of\na man who had been killed near Revelstoke, marked by Borne acid which it\nbas so.far been impossible to designate. The victim was\"an Italian who\nhad assumed the name of Frank\nJullen. He is believed to have been\nkilled by the black hand. The body\nwas found in a Bwamp, partially decomposed but the face bore marks\nwhich indicated that tbe victim was\nfirst blinded and then tortured. It is\nbelieved that if tbe character of the\nacid can he ascertained, some trace\nmay be had ot the murderers.\nAddress on Pure Water.\nOTTAWA, Oct. 12~The first session\nof the Dominion public health conference at which were present federal and\nprovincial public health authorities and\nthe members, of the committee on- public health of the commission of conservation was held here this morning.\nAfter a few introductory remarks, by\nHon. Clifford Sifton, chairman of the\ncommission, an address on pure water\nand the pollution of waterways, wbb delivered by Dr. C. A. Hodges, medical\nadviser to the public health committee\nof the conservation commission.\nCHARGE DISMISSED.\nBROCKVILLE, Oct. 12 \u2014 Judge\nReilly, of Cornwall today dismissed the\ncharge against Charles Landon, of putting poison in the tea of his employer\nThomas Sheridan, several times ln May\nand June last. Provincial analyst Prof.\nEllis testified to finding seven grains\nof choride of zinc in the tea submitted\nhim and that the same \"proportion in\nthree pints of tea would be 140 grains,\nwhereof 90 would be fatal. Major\nPower partner of the Sherldans Bald\nthere was no recent cause of irritation\nbetween the men.\nOPENING   GREAT  POWER  SYSTEM.\nBERLIN, Ont., Oct. 12.\u2014After years of\nthe hardest kind of work, in the face of\nalmost insurmountable obstacles, the project of supplying Canadian cities with\nelectrical energy generated at Niagara\nFalls became an accomplished fact today.\nWith ceremonies befitting the importance\nof the occasion the first hydro-electric\npower to be delivered In Ontario by the\nHydro-Electrio Power commission was officially turned on this afternoon. The\nceremony took place In the Auditorium,\nwhich was handsomely decorated with designs Illuminated (by the people's power.\nSir James Whitney presided and tho.Hon.\nAdam Eeek and other public men of\nprominence delivered addresses.\nMUNICIPAL ENGINEERS MEET\nERIE, Pa., Oct. 12.\u2014The annual convention of the American Society of Municipal\nImprovements began here today with\nmany notahle delegates present. The\nchief features of the opening session wero\nan address of welcome by Mayor Llebel\nand the annual address of the president\nof tbe society, Julian Kendrlck of Blr-\nmtnnlinm., Ala, The sessions will continue\nuntil Saturday. Special attention Is to be\ngiven in the papers and discussions to\nmatters relating to sanitation, water supply and sewage disposal.\nCONTEMPT OF COURT.\nNEW YORK, Oct. 12\u2014Christopher\nColumbus Wilson, president of the\nUnited Wireless Qo against which proceedings were instituted recently by\nthe federal government on a charge of\nusing tbe mails to defraud, was adjudged in contempt of court by Judge Hand\nin the United States circuit court today\nfor refusing to produce the books of\nthe company before the federal grand\njury.\nTEN  YEARS AND LASHES\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Oct. 12.\u2014Ten yeara\nand ten lashes was the sentence imposed\nby Judge Mclnnls this afternoon on Herbert Helll-vell of Tacoma, a young man\ncharged with assaulting 9-year-old Glenn\nWaters. It was stipulated that the lashes\nwero to be given during the first 20 days\nof imprisonment.\nTHE FIRST CURRENT\nBERLIN, Ont., Oot. 12.\u2014In the presence\nof a large and enthusiastic assemblage\nhere Premier Whitney, Ontario, pressed a\nbutton at 3 o\"c!ock, firing the first hydroelectric current from Niagara Falls. The\noccas'nn was made one of great rejoicing,\ndelegates from cities along the line\nof the hydro-electric lines being represented.\nGAS, INDIGESTION\nAND DYSPEPSIA GO\nOut-of-order Stomachs Feel  Fine Five\nMinutes After Taking a Little Diapepsin.\nThe question as to how long you are\ngoing to continue a sufferer from indigestion, Dyspepsia or out-or-order Stomaoh is merely a matter of how soon you\nbegin taking Rome Diapepsin.\nIf your Stomach ia lacking tn digestive\npower, why not help the stomach to do\nIts work, not with drastic drugs, but a\nre-enforcement of digestive agents, such\nas are naturally at work In the stomaoh.\nPeople with weak Stomachs should take\na little Diapepsin occasionally, and there\nwill be no more Indigestion, no feeling\nlike a lump of lead ln the stomach, no\nheartburn, Sour risings, Gas on Stomach\nor Belching of undigested food, Headaches,\nDizziness or Sick tomach, and, besides,\nwhat you cat will not ferment and poison\nyour breath with nauseous odors,. All\nthese symptoms resulting from a sour, out-\nof-order stomach and dyspepsia are generally relieved In five minutes after taking a little 'Diapepsin.\nGo to your druggist and get a 60-cent\nease of Pape's Diapepsin now, and you will\nalways go to the table with a hearty ap-\nKtlte, and what you eat will taste good,\ncause your stomach and Intestines will\nbBe clean and fresh, and you will know\nthere are not going to be any more bad\nnights and miserable days for you. They\nfreshen you and make yon feel like life U\nworth living. '    *\"\nHOUSEHOLD NOTES\nA good cut of meat should he finegrained, streaked with white looking fat\nand bright red ln color. Unless there\nls an abundance of fat the meat Is apt\nto be tough.\nPeach skins may be as easily removed as tomato skins if tbe fruit is\nplunged for an instant into boiling\nwater. If left in longer it will impair\nthe flavor of the fruit.\nChamois bottles may he easily\ncleaned by dipping them up and down\nln tepid water to which a little ammonia has been added. They should be\nwiped dry with a clean cloth.\nKeeping vegetables in the cooking\nwater after they are done spoils both\nthe look and the taste. After pouring\nthe water off return to the fire for a\nmoment to dry before Berving.\nTo set delicate colors in hand embroidered handkerchiefs, soak them before washing for 10 minutes In a pail\nof water into which a dessertspoonful\nof turpentine has heen stirred.\nA quickly-prepared sandwich is\nmade hy pulping a banana and adding\nenongh lemon juice to give it the requisite piquancy. Spread on thin slices of\nbrown bread and serve at once.\nWhen using raUlns for spice cake,\ntry boiling the fruit for 20 minutes,\nand substitute the liquor in which they\nare cooked for part of the milk or molasses. The result will be most satisfactory.\nWater in which potatoes have been\nboiled with their jackets on 1b excellent\nfor cleaning silver. Simply immerse\nthe Bilver ln the hot water for a few\nminutes, then wash in soapy water and\npolish with a soft cloth.\nTo make a delicious breakfast dish,\npit a dozen large plums, put a blanched\nalmond in each, dip in olive oil and\ntoaBt on a broiler until they are fairly\nsoft. Then wrapt them in thin slices of\nbacon and grill on the coals.\nFASHIONS AND FADS\nThe newest lace is known aB ma-\nline lace.\nThe new metal laces are moBt attractive.\nA few hobble skirts remain, but the\nfashion Is dead.\nThe tortise shell button seft with\njewels Is exquisite.\nOne cannot but be impressed by the\nextravagance in buttons.\nBlack silk crochet buttons are splendid for fur or cloth coats.\nA decidedly new thing among the\nlace veils is the filet mesh.\nMetallic ribbons are to be had in\nany number of Persian weaves.\nOne of the new motor veils is of\nchiffon, with a dotted satin edge.\nTbe plain undroped skirt is out of\nstyle except for tailor suits where it\nrules.\nStockings beaded across the instep\nand up the ankles are perhaps the\nmost novel.\nWide velvet ribbon, lined with satin\nand bordered with, zibeline is used for\nscarfs.\nThe checkerboard Persian chiffon Is\none of the smartest materials brought\nout for some time.\nAll black hats are seen In satin, velvet, brocade, velours, beaver, beaver\ncloth.\nThe distinctive feature of the new\nlaces Is the combination in one design\nof several sized meshes.\nLong coat sweaters in white or grey\nwith high V necks are excellent for\ngolfing or walking.\nAll the satins and silks most used\nare very soft and clinging, even though\nthe quality may be heavy.\nConspicuous among new designs in\nchiffon Is the black striping introduced on a two colored black ground.\nMore dress bats are in all blacks or\nwhites and black with a touch of metal\nor color than in any other shade.\nA Larger Warming Goset\nthan ever, in the Kootenay Steel Range, because the\nimprovement in the operation of the door adds nearly\nfive hundred cubic inches to its capacity. Bvery inch\ninside can be used\u2014and you can always depend upon it\nfor keeping your food piping hot while you wait for some\nspecial dish to finish cooking. Made of heavy polished\nsheet steel, durable and easily cleaned. Besides this\nimportant feature, there are many exclusive advantages\nfor you in the\nKOOTENAY\n, steel Ran^e\nand the nearest McClary agent will point them out to\nyou. He will show you why your money will be best\nspent for a Kootenay. Write today to the nearest\nMcClary branch for Kootenay booklet. t3\n\u25a0Mraary'Si\n!T.B.i   H\u00abmiltoo    CalgMT\nLondon,   Toronto*    Montreal.    WlMlwtr,    Vancouver,   St. John, 1\nFor Sale by Wood-Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd,\nA.   a.    LAMBERT   &   CO.\nManufacturers of and dealers In\nLUMBER gS^S\"\"\nShingles, L,atH, Sashes, Doors,\nMouldings, Etc,\nAlso exclusive agents for the celebrate d Manitoba   Gypsum   Co.'s   HardwaU\nand Wood Fibre Plaster.   Agents for Nelson   Brick   Co.\nTelephone 82. Nelson,  B. C. p. o. Box 1066.\nBIG INCREASE IN CAPITAL\nSALT LAKE CITY, Utah, Oct. 12.-When\nthe stock holders of the Oregon Short Line\nRailroad company hold their annual meeting\" here tomorrow they will approve the\nproposition of the directors to Increase the\ncapital stock of the company from $60,-\n000,000 to $100,000,000. It ia not proposed to\nissue atiy of the new stock in the near\nfuture, but to hold lt for emergency purposes. The expectation is that within Uie\nnext year or two the money will be used\nfor new construction on the Oregon Short\nLine, which road Is under the control of\nthe Union Pacific.\nSERVE  OUTSIDE  COMMONWEALTH\nMELBOURNE, Australia, Oct. 12\u2014\nThe naval defense bill Introduced to\nthe senate today contains the same\ncompulsory provisions as applied by the\ndefence bill in regard to military service. The permanent forces are liable\nto serve outside the commonwealth.\nFLORIDA  HARDWARE DEALERS\nJACKSONVILLE, Fla., Oct. 12.-The Re-\ntall Hardware Dealers' association of\nFlorida met In annual convention here to\nday with many prominent representatives\nof the trade in attendance from all over\ntho state. B. F. Watts of Leeaburg presided at the opening session this morning,\nMILLIONAIRE'S  SON  SENTENCED\nNEW YORK, Oct. 12\u2014Harold Decker\n20 years old, said to be the son of a\nChicago millionaire, was sentenced to\nSing Sing today for from 12 yearB to\nfive years. He was charged with having abducted Florence Rlchter, a young\nBrooklyn girl, whom he took to Rochester.\nCHANGES IN OFFICIALS OF\nHUDSON'S BAY COMPANY\nWINNIPEG, Man., Oct. 12.-C. C. Chip-\nman, chief commissioner of the Hudson's\nBay company, announced this morning\nchanges In the direction of the company\nby which he himself will have charge of\nthe land department. Herbert Burbldga\nwill be the newly created sales shops\ncommissioner and Chief Factor Hal] tho\nnewly created fur trades commissioner.\nMlnir*.'--  Liniment Cur\u00aba Colds, Et*\n-r\nTntTBest Baker\n* in Canada\nA. \u00bbood oven is the housekeeper's delight.  A\npoor one is the despair of her life.   That's why\n\u25a0< v, we want to tell you about this Chancellor.\nM[, \\ ; ___._aa__ma_       A special divided flue makes\nLthe   oven  a   perfect  baker.\nfThere is not  a range in   the\ncountry can beat it.\nBaking day instead of being a\ntrial and a disappointment is a pleasure,\nsatisfaction.\nCome in the store when you're down\ni and let us explain to you just how this flue distributes\nthe heat evenly over the whole oVen.   Bakes in front just as\nwell as back\u2014under crust as well as uppec\nJheGURNtJOXFORDSmLTOp-\nmeans a marked saving in fuel, and better baking results. The\nChancellor not dnly does its work better but at less cost than\nother ranges.\nWe can demonstrate to you the whole superior Chancellor principle of economy\nand elticiency in ten minutes.\nIsn't it worth that much of your time right now ?\nThe Chancellor is made for either coal or wood. Other Gurney-Oxford designs\nof every sort, for every purpose and all kinds of fuel, on display on our floor.\nSpecial demonstration, now.\nE. K. STRACHAN\nBaker Street Nelson, B.C.\n\u00ab\u00bb\u00bb\n THURSDAY .......  OCTOBER 19\n~ht Bail? j&etosi,\nr\u00bbAGE THREE\n^\nColombia Gardens\nWe can offer for a short time, ten tracts, from 12 to 14\nacres, also 30 acres of orchard, just coming into bearing.\nThe property is situited on the bank of the Columbia\nriver at Waneta. There is a daily train service, each way\nfrom Nelson and Spokane. Express rales on fruit to the\nNorthwest are the same as from other points in the Kootenays. Fifteen tracts are already under cultivation. There\nis a school, post office, express office and hotel, good roads\nto every tract, and an abundant supply of water under high\npressure.\nThe soil is claimed to be equally as good as the famous\nWenatchee or H*od River land, and the clearing is\nvery light. Potatoes and other vegetables come in earlier than elsewhere. No more desirable place for making\na fortune in fruit grqwing can be found in the province.\nCall or write us for prices and terms.\nThe Wright Investment Co., Ltd.\nNELSON,  B.C.\ni-.\u00a7^\u00a7\u00a7\u00a73^\u00a9^\u00a38\u00a7\u00a7!\u00a7g\u00a3Si\u00a7!\u00a7;\u00a7;\u00a7;\u00a7\u00a7;\u00a7>\u00a7\u00a7^\nPRIZE WINNERS AT\nARROW UKES FRUIT F,\n'First Annual Fair Unbounded Success\u2014Splendid Testimony\nto Productiveness of Fertile District\u2014Monument to\nWork of Thomas Abriel, the President and Man-*\nager, and Other Officers\u2014Visitors Pleased\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nNAKUSP, B. C, Oot. li-Tha first\nArrow Lakes Fruit (air ls now a matter\not past hlutorv. but Its unbounded success\nhas bo encouraged the populace that\ngreat things in the way of fruit, vegetable\nand miscellaneous competition may be\nexpected in the next and future years. The\none verdict is contained In just two\nwords \"simply wonderful.\" Yet, there\nwere so many growers who took apparently no interest in the exhibition just\nover, that if they had actually competed\nit would have been difficult to have found\nroom for their wares. These must be considered In the future, as well as the ever-\nincreasing new settlers continually arriving along tho lakes. There ls now a new\nimpetus not only'to the grower, but to\nthe investor and the land speculator to\nacquire land with the assurance that they\ncan grow the finest fruit and garden\ntruck to be found anywhere In this fair\nprovince. The investor will likewise know\nthat any land he holds will be of immense\nvalue In a short time to come, just as soon\nas the settler produces in his immediate\nlocality.\nA pleasing feature of the attendance at\nthis fair was the surprise, expressed by the\nmany passengers who were in town that\n?. comparatively new country could show\nhe excellent quality here exhibited. Two\nclerical gentlemen, brothers, named Macdonald, high in rank of the Roman Catholic churoh, took a great Interest in the\ndisplays and remarked that they were\nsimply astounded at what they saw for\nthe first time. They were en route south.\nThe management of the fair entertained\nthe passengers and their entrance fees\nwere refunded after they left the building,\n'much to the satisfaction of the visitors,\nthough several nrotested and considered\nthey had had their money's worth.   .\nThe occasion of the year olosed with a'\n;grand ball at the opera house when there\nwas a very large attendance. The Bradford orchestra rendered the music and a\nmost enjoyable time was-spent until away\ninto the morning.\ni The Decorations.\n' The following features of the fair deserve\nspecial notice. The decorations under the\n.tastful sunervlslon of W. Herrldge were\nmuch admired. Dramatic scenes, loaned\nby the Nakusp Dramatic society, were\n\/hung along the walls at varying distances,\n\u2022here and there, and throughout the huge\nibuilding were suspended flags and bunting, dotted among which were many-colored Chinese lanterns. The outside was\n;aIso In gala dress.\n;; The Nakusp Ladies' Institute had a\nJresttng booth at the farther end with\ncomfortable chairs and lounges, adding\n. jmuch to the enjoyment of the tired visl-\n: tors.\nI Mr. Munro of the Nakusp Trading company had a selling space on behalf of\nthe management and did a good trade.\n{ The display of Indian relics of local\nhistory by Walter Scott attracted much\nattention. Among +hem were many arrow\nheads hammers, etc. of the stone age,\nwhich were found alongside one of the\n['sidewalks of Nakusp some three years\n!\u25a0!\u00bb\u25a0\nThe fancy work of Miss Elva B. Abriel\nof Nova Scotia, non-competitive, were\nbeautiful works of art, as was also the\nJialnting of Miss Mary Whlteman of Scot-\nand, and of Mr. Cannock of this town.\nThe work of others were none the less\nexcellent, the onlv marvel being that such\na collection could possibly be gotten to-\n\" gether In Nakusp.\nThe Home Ranohe of ths president waB\na leader ln the variety and quality of both\nfruit and vegetables, and took a large\nnumber Of prises. Box lake produce was\nnot behind, and Its potatoes had no equal\nat any fair the judges had attended.\nMr. Fauquier of the Needles has packed\nhis apples and will make a display at the\nCanadian Apple show at Vanoouver.\nThe good feeling ln existence among exhibitors from all points was manifest, all\nexpressing the fairness of the judges' verdicts In all  cases.    Mr. Cockle of Kaslo\n, was In fine humor and with the president\nr and vice-president kept everybody In fine\n' spirits. ,\nThe president and manager, Thomas\nAbriel, snd the secretary. Mr. Vestrup,\nworked hud all day and managed things\nto perfection. Not a hitch occurred, and\n'the system adopted was the most up-to-\ndate one.\nThe Arrow Lakes Fruit fair has had\nthis effect on the people, it has without\nexception made them enthusiastic as to\nthe future of the district, and all rightly\nexclaim, \"Bring In the settlers;\" \"Look\nout for tho Arrow lakes apples,\" and\n\"Watch Nakusp grow.\"\nThe following is a list of prize-winners:\nAPPLES.\nYellow Newton\u2014First H. C. Thomllnson.\nNorthern Spy\u2014First Abrams, second F.\nQ. Fauquier.\nWagner\u2014First F.' G. Fauquier, second\nC. B. Hambllng.\nJonathan\u2014First F. G. Fauquier, second\nNash,\nGlravenstein\u2014First F. G. Fauquier, second C. R. Hamilton.\nMcintosh Red\u2014First J. L. Funk, second\nShiell Brothers.\nGrimes Golden\u2014First Shiell Brothers.\nRhode Island Greening\u2014First J. L. Funk,\nsecond Siemens.\nOntario-First H. C. Thomllnson, second F. G. Fauquier.\nWealthy\u2014First B. Parkinson, second J.\nC. Harris.\nBaldwin\u2014First F. L. Funk, second F. G.\nFauquier.\nKing\u2014First Shiell Brothers.\nBen Davis-First H. C. Thomllnson, second F. G. Fauquier.\nGolden Russet\u2014First J. L. Funk, second\nShiell Brothers.\nYellow Transparent\u2014First F. G, Fauquier.\nLawrences-First J. L, Funk, second\nShlet! Brothers.\nTwent- Ounce Pippin-First H. C. Thom-\nHnPon,\nKlswlck Coddling\u2014First C. B. Hambllng,\nsecond F. G. Fauquier.\nSnow\u2014First Shiell Brothers.\nWolf River\u2014First Shiell Brothers.\nPewankle\u2014First J. L. Funk, second\nShiell Brothera.\nWallbrldge\u2014FirBt Shiell Brothers.\nAnv other variety\u2014First F. G. Fauquier,\nsecond Nash.\nBest collection\u2014First F, Gi Fauquier,\nsecond H. C. Thomllnson.\nBest packed box\u2014First J. C. Harris,\nsecond' B.  Parkinson.\nCRAB  APPLES.\nTranscendent\u2014Second Shiell Brothera.\nHyslon\u2014First Shiell Brothers, second\nGraham.\nGeneral Grant\u2014Second F. G. Fauquier.\nAny other variety\u2014First H. C. Thomllnson.\nBest 'collection in boxes\u2014First Shiell\nBrothera.\nPEARS.\nFlemish Beauty\u2014FirBt J. L. Funk.\nHowell-Flrst J. L. Funk, second Shiell\nBrothers.\nBuerre dl Augon\u2014First H. C. Thomllnson.\nWinter Nelles\u2014First J. L. Funk, second\nF. G. Fauquier.\nAny other variety\u2014First Shiell Brothers.\nPLUMS.\nLombard\u2014First Graham.\nYellow Ege\u2014First T. Anthony, second H.\nC. Thomllnson.\nItalian\u2014First F. G.  Fauquier.\nGRAPES.   .\nCampbell's\u2014First   Graham.\nAny other\u2014First H. C. Thomllnson.\nPOULTRY,\nBarred Rock C. & H.\u2014First R. H. Baird,\nsecond T. Ruahton. .\nWhite Rock C. & F.-Flrst G. H. Gardner.   ,\nW'-andotte\u2014First J. C. Harris, second F.\nW. Crowell.\nM'norCB\u2014First Mrs. Sutherland.\nWhite Leghorn C. & H,-First C. Herri*! tre.\nWhite Leghorn C. & P.\u2014First T. Rush-\nton. .\nRuff Leghorn-First Miss B. Abrlfet.\nPair Geese\u2014First T. Rushton.\nBest chicks\u2014First Charles Karaton, second R. H. Baird. '\nRweenstakoa\u2014First R. H. Baird.\nHens* eggs, brown\u2014First F. W. Crowell,\naecond C. HerrWee. *\nDresaed, four\u2014First C. Herrldge.\nVfDGHTABLEB.\nPotatoea, Early White\u2014Seoond G. H.\nGardner. .\u25a0 - ,*_.,\nPotatoes, Early Bose-Flrtt 0. H. Gard\nner, second Sam Henry.\nPotatoes,   Burbank\u2014First   B.   Parkinson.\nPotatoes,   largest\u2014First   Thomas   Miller,\nsecond C. L. Welns.\nPotatoes,  three   best   varieties\u2014First  C.\nB. Hambllng, second G. H. Gardner.\nPotatoes, at*\" other\u2014First B. Parkinson,\nsecond G. L. Hammond.\nTurnips\u2014First B. Parkinson, second Sam\nHenry.\nCarrots\u2014First     B,     Parkinson,     second\nThomas Miller.\nParsnips\u2014First     Smith,     second     Sam\nHenry.\nSummer cabbage\u2014First C. B. Hambllng,\nsecond B. Parkinson,\nWinter cabbage\u2014First G, L. Hammond,\nsecond C. B. Hambllng.\nRed cabbage\u2014First G. L, Hammond.\nCauliflower\u2014First Sam Henry, second B.\nParkinson.\nYellow  Onions\u2014First   Sam   Henry,   second G. L. Hammond.\nPeas\u2014First J. C. Harris.\nLong beets\u2014First Thomas Miller.\nGlobe   beets\u2014First   Smith,   second   Sam\nHenry.\nCelery\u2014First Sam Henry, second G. L.\nHammond.\nLettuce\u2014First Thomas Miller.\nRadish\u2014First B.  Parkinson, second Sam\nHenry.\nSquash,   heaviest\u2014First B.  Parkinson.\nVegetable marrow\u2014Firat G. H. Gardner,\nsecond G. L. Hammond.\nTomato, smooth\u2014First H. C. Thomllnson,\nsecond Mr. Kodrrerson.\nTomato,   ribbed\u2014First  J.   H.   Stevenson,\nsecond Gl L. Hammond.\nCucumber\u2014Second B.   Parkinson.\nCitron-First W. P. Ratzlaff, second A.\nE. Keffer.\nPepper\u2014First G. L. Hammond.\nBest  collection\u2014First   G.   L.   Hammond,\nsecond B. Parkinson.\nFIELD PRODUCE.\nTurnips\u2014First J. J.  Fleming,  second B.\nParkinson.\nCarrots\u2014First B. Parkinson.\nDAIRY  PRODUCE.\nHoney In section\u2014First R. H. Baird.\nHOME BAKING.\nWhite bread\u2014First   Mrs.   Carlson,   second Mrs. Rodgerson,\nBrown bread\u2014First Mrs. Rodgerson, second Mrs. Anthony.\nBuns-First  Mrs.  McKltrlck.\nTea biscuits\u2014First Mrs. Baird.\nFruit cake\u2014First Mrs. Herrldge, second\nMrs, Carlson.\nJelly  coke\u2014First  Mrs, Anthony,   second\nMrs. Baird.\nCandy\u2014Seoond Mrs, Anthony,\nPRESERVED  FRUIT.\nCollection small fruit\u2014Second J. H. Stevenson.\nCollection large fruit\u2014First J. H. Steven-\nsou, second Mrs. Quance,\nJellies\u2014First T. Anthony, second Smith.\nSweet  pickles\u2014First   Mrs.   Quance,   second J. H, Stevenson.\nSour nlokles\u2014First J. H. Stevenson, second Mrs, Shiell.\nHUNTER TROPHY.\nFor the best dlsnlay of general farm\nproduce, consisting of dressed meat, fruit,\nvegetables, butter, cheese, milk, cream,\nwheat, poultry, etc.\u2014Middlemas Brothers,\nRock Island ranche.\nThis was one of the  grandest displays\never  exhibited within   the province,    and\nwas the admiration of  alt beholders.\nFLORAL.\nAstors\u2014Second Mrs. Vestrup.\nCarnations\u2014Second J.  F. Chandler.\nDahlias-Second C. B. Hambllng. ,\nGeraniums\u2014Second L.  J. Edwards.\nMignonette\u2014Second C.   B. Hambllng.\nPansles\u2014First   C.  B.   Hambllng,   second\nJ. F. Chandler.\nRoses\u2014Second C. B. Chandler.\nSweet Peas\u2014Second C. B. Hambllng.\nTable bouquet\u2014Second J. F. Chandler.\nFuchias\u2014Second J. Wagstaff.\nThree  house  plants\u2014First A.   Herrldge.\nNEEDLE, FANCY WORK AND PAINTINGS.\nTable centrepiece\u2014First Mrs. Mills, second Mrs. L. J, Edwards.\nCollar of lace\u2014Second Mrs. C. Herrldge.\nDrawn  thread   work\u2014First Miss  Abriel,\nsecond Mrs. Crowell.\nCrochet work\u2014First Mrs. Cannock, second Mrs. Talbot.\nMonogram\u2014First Mrs.   McKltrlck.\nFive o'clock  tea  cloth\u2014First   Mrs.   McKltrlck.\n. Tray cloth\u2014Second Miss B. Abriel.\nSofa cushion\u2014First Mrs. McKltrlck, Becond Mrs. Carlson.\nPin cushion\u2014First Mrs.  Crowell, second\nMrs. McKltrlck.\nUnderwear\u2014First Mrs.  Herrldge,  second\nMrs. Talbot.\nSlippers\u2014Second  Mrs,   McKltrlck.\nPatched quilt\u2014First Miss B. Abriel.\nOil  painting\u2014First 3.  P.  Cannock,  second Mrs. W. J. Williams.\nOthers-First Mrs. Vestrup, second Mrs,\nVestrup.\nEXTENDING TELEPHONE SYSTEM\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nVNCOUVER, b. a. Oct. 13.\u2014The Brit-\nish Columbia Telephone oompany has\nplaced $500,000 with eastern companies covering extensions of its Bystem about this\ncity. The order for wire will take half\nthe output of the Montreal Wire and\nCable company for the next six months\nand the works of the Northern Electrlo\ncompany will toe taxed to their capacity\nto fill calls tor the eoulpjritnt ot Its line.\nWanted\nTwo good live real estate\nagents. Best selling proposition\non the market. Liberal commission. Apply B.C. United Agencies\n311 Baker street.\nFREE MAP\not\nPort Mann\nThe new Can. N.  Ry Townsite.\nWith list ot our special- snaps.\nM. O. Morrison & Co*\n536   Hastings St. W., Vancouver.\nBuilding Road to Burton City\n\u2014Boom in Land and Town\nLots\u2014Industries\nActive\nNAKUSP, Oct. 12\u2014Work has heen\nresumed on the Arrow lakes trunk\nroad from Nakusp to Burton City.\nSome three weeks ago operations were\nsuspended until it was seen how the\nfunds in connection with the appropriation stood. This fund had been considerably impaired on account of the\nraging fires that existed throughout\nthe district necessitating the construction and repairing of unexpected, work\nin the mining locality. Today, however,\na large gang arrived from the Slocan\nvalley and will immediately encamp a\nfew miles south of Nakusp. This is\nglad news to Nakuspians as well as to\na large portion of the ranchers down\nriver. It would he well if extra efforts\nwere made to make the portion from\nNakusp to Rock Island passable for\nsleighs during the winter, even If a\nsupplementary appropriation has to be\nasked for. There are a large number\nof settlers at the foot of the lake at\nSunnyside who would be cut off unlesd\nthis important part is completed before\nthe river freezes up, should that be tha\ncase this season.\nBoom in Land.\nThere has been a perfect boom in\nland and town lots recently in the Immediate vicinity of Nakusp. Mr. Sam\nHenry has subdivided a portion of his\nestate into acreages of varied sizes all\nof wliich were picked up in record time.\nAmong the buyers are Messrs. Foucher,\nEdwards, Vanderbourgh, Harlow and\nMcVicar. Mr. Henry is also about to\nplan out twenty suburban lots containing about a fifth of an acre each, several of which have been spoken for\nalready. This property is beautifully\nlocated on the lake shore and on the\ntrunk road to Burton, within a few\nminutes walk of the town. At Sunnyside, the Arrow Lakes Orchards Co. are\nselling their tracts very fast, the proprietors bringing in a party of settlers\nand Investors every alternate week,\neach excursionist Invariably buying,\nwith the Intention of settling on the\nland. Up to date some 160 odd farms\nhave been disposed of by this one firm\nalone, the last sale involving the payment of $4fi,000. Among the recent settlers are Mr. Pierce and family from\nManor, Sask., and F. P. Cork from\nKamloops.\nLarge Logging Gangs.\nTwo large logging gangs have started work on opposite sides of the lake\nclose to Nakusp. The Crescent Bay\nOrchards have a gang under Mr. Vlpond\nof Nelson getting, out some two million feeet of logs and many thousand\ntelegraph poles and ties from their\nproperty two miles south of the town.\nMr. Symons of Plngston creek is equally busy on the west shore with similar\nwork.\nConstructing New Roads.\nThe Natural Resources Security Co.\nare constructing roads among their\nholdings of over a hundred fruit farms\nadjacent to town under the foremanshlp\nof Mr. McDonald. This will be carried\nout from an artistic point of view, the\nroads being Irregular making the whole\nholding parklike and picturesque.\nHouses Scarce.\nAlthough many houses and business\npremises have heen erected this year,\nthere la a dearth of dwellings ln town,\nmany families being compelled to live\nin old shacks of one room capacity. The\nhotels are full and with the coming of\na large gang of about fifty machinists\nexpected to arrive from the east to construct the new steamer, lt is a serious\nquestion how they will fare as far as\naccommodation is concerned. There is\nroom for from ten to twenty houses ln\ntown. Among the recent additions in\nthe house buildings are: Opera house\non Broadway hy Thomas Abriel, store\non Slocan avenue by same party, addition to Bank of Commerce Slocan avenue, and a seven-roomed dwelling by\nL. J. Edwards, three dwellings on Lake\nstreet by R. A. Quance, stone residence\non Burton road hy H. L, Rothwell, residence by Mr. Lameroux, residence by\nF. Funcke, addition to Nakusp hospital\nby Mr. Abriel.\nFor New Steamer.\nSeveral carloads of machinery and\niteel hull for the new steamer are re\nported to be on the way from Toronto\nto Nakusp and preparations are being\nmade at the local shipyard for the\nconstruction of the newest and largest\naddition to the Canadian Pacific fleet\non the lakes. It Ib intended to have\nthe vessel ready for commission during\nthe next summer's tourist trade. The\nfoundation work for a new machine\nshop at the shipyard is being laid at\nthe present time.\nSawmill Output.\nThe output from the local sawmills\nand pole yards have been very heavy\nduring the laBt few months and the demand for lumber locally is very heavy,\nthe wharf at Nakusp being littered\ndaily with shipments to points along\nthe lakes.\nJ. R. Edwards of Claresholm, and\nfamily have arrived. Mr. Edwards has\nbeen appointed constable for Nakusp\nby the provincial government. He is a\nman of large experience in police work\nhaving been in the Northwest Mounted\npolice and held the chief constableship\nof the town of Claresholm. Mr. Edwards has secured some land at Sunnyside also.\nThe bishop of New Westminster and\nKootenay will hold confirmation services in St. Mark's church on Thursday\nthe 13th when three candidates will\nappear before his lordship. In the\nevening there will be an institution\nservice when Dr. Heaton of Needles\nwill be formally placed as lay reader,\nunder the Rev. S. H. Phlllimore, at\nNeedles and Edgewood.\nHarvest Thanksgiving services were\nheld at the Presbyterian church on\nSunday evening. There was a large\ncongregation and the church ground\nwas illuminated.\nGeorge W. Jordan has severed his\nconnection from the firm of F. W. Jordan and Co. and has bought out the\nclothing business from L. F. McDoug-\naid opposite the station. Mr. Mc\nDougald will devote his time entirely\nto his outside business.\nRobert Abbie and family have returned from the prairies where they\nhave been farming for the last eight\nmonths. Mr. Abbie has resumed his\nduties with his old firm Jordan and\nCo., where he has been employed for\nmany years.\nMr. and Mrs. Cadden desire to thank\ntheir many friends for their help and\nsympathy, and for the many floral offerings on the occasion of the death\nof their little son who died so suddenly and was buried at Nakusp. The\nlittle fellow was sick but a few days\nat Rosebery. Mr. and Mrs. Qadden are\nnow at Vancouver where they will\nspend a few weeks.\nMiss Whiteman left today for Saskatoon to visit her brother prior to her\ndeparture for her home in Scotland.\nShe has been visiting her old school\nmistress Mr. and Mrs. Scott, whom she\nhad not seen for many years. Mrs.\nScott accompanied her as far as Nelson.\nMrs. H. R. Jorand, late of Nelson and\nSlocan city, but now of Portland, Ore.,\nreturned today to the latter city after\na visit to Mrs. L. J, Edwards. Mervyn\nEdwards accompanied her as far as\nVancouver.\nMr. and Mrs. J. T. Cameron left today for Vancouver to attend a meeting of the Natural Resources Security\nCo. and will return to Crescent Bay\nthe latter part of the week.\nGeorge Tillett, storekeeper at the\nshipyard, has bought a pretty buggy,\nwhich carries him to and from his farm\nat Box lake.\nThe friends of F. J. Heyes will regret\nto hear that his progress at Victoria\nis not as fast as they would like to\nhave lt. He has, however, left the hospital and it is hoped he will soon >be\nenabled to return to Nakusp.\nThe monthly meeting of the board of\ntrade was held on Tuesday evening.\nG. F. Robinson of Summit Lake Lumber Co. is on a cruising trip through\nthe Little Slocan vaiiey limits and will\nbe away for some three weeks. Mr.\nRobinson visited the Arrow Lakes fair\non his way to Nelson, and expressed\nhis views of its merit in the following\ntypical manner: \"I want to tell you\nthis, I have been to many fruit fairs\nand other fairs, I have been to the local\nfairs In the Kootenay this year, but\nfor quality of apples, the vegetables\nand the beautiful exhibit of fancy work\nthat I saw today at the Nakusp fair, I\nhave not seen their equal yet. The\nsight I beheld today is a veritable revelation to me.\"\nNew School.\nTenders are about due to the government for the erection of a two-\nroomed school at Glenbank, a suburb\nof Nakusp. The building will cost\nabout $4000 and will accommodate the\nchildren from the ranching district\nabove the town. As an instance of the\ngrowth of the surrounding country it\nmay be stated that on one section of\nland *>40 acres, there are over 60 children of school age tributary to this new\nschool. The building will be modern\nln every respect, the outbuildings alone\ncosting upwards of a thousand dollars.\nIt will be located on part of Edwards'\nsubdivision near the Methodist church.\nMrs. F. W. Jordan has returned from\nNew Denver.\nCapt. Fraser of the steamer Kootenay, Is away at the coast on his annual vacation, being relieved by Capt.\nAlfsmo. Capt. Forslund has taken command of the steamer Rossland after his\nannual charge of the steamer Revelstoke on the upper river for the summer. Tbe latter boat has tied up at\nRevelatoke this year.\nNew Wharf.\nA new wharf something Bimllar to\nthe one recently built at Burton is to\nbe constructed at Arrow Park by the\nDominion government. Mr. Perry\nLeake being in charge. A new school\nis also being built on the west side\nof the same town.\nR. A. Quance of the Quance Lumber\nCo. is on a buslneBB trip to the prairies.\nMrs. Middlemas of Rock Island, who\nwas an enthusiastic exhibitor with her\nsons at the fair, and who acted as judge\nof fancy work, waB the guest of Dr. and\nMrs. Mossman while here.\nMrs. Capt. Dougal has returned from\nher lengthy trip to Tacoma and has\ntaken up her residence at her old home\nwhich w,as let while the family were\naway.  She Is much improved in health\nFads for Weak Women\nNine-tenths of all the ncknesa ol women te doe to tome denmtfen-ent or dte-\neaie of the organs distinctly feminine. Stub sicltncM can be cured\u2014i\u00bb cured\n\u25a0very day by\nDr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription\nIt Makes Weak Women Strong,\nSick Women Well.\nIt acts directly on the orfani effected and te et the same time a general restorative tonto lor the whole lystcm. It cures female complaint right in the privacy\nof home. It makes unnecessary tbe disagreeable questioning, examinetionr sod\nlocal treatment so universally insisted upon by doctors, end so abhorrent to\nevery modest woman.\nWe shall not particularize here es to the symptom* ol\nthose peculiar affections incident to women, but those\nwanting full information as to their symptoms and\nmeans of positive cure are referred to the People's Common Sense Medical Adviser\u20141008 pages, newly revised\nend up-to-date Edition, sent free on receipt of 31 one-\ncent stamps to cover cost of mailing aaly; or, in cloth\nbinding for 50 stamps.\n Addrese Dr. R. V, Pier-*, Buffalo, N. Y.\nThat Cold Room\non the side of the house when\nwinter blasts strike hardest always\nhas a lower temperature than the\nrest of the house. There are times\nwhen it is necessary to raise the\ntemperature quickly or to keep the\ntemperature up for a long period.\nThat can't be done by the regular\nmethod of heating without great\ntrouble and overheating the rest of\nthe house. The only reliable\nmethod of heating such a room\nalone by other means is to use a\n^PRFECTIO]\nSmokeless\nrrm i\\-i.\\ii\n- Absolutely smokeless mi odorless\nT'hlch can be kept at full or low heat for a short or lone time.\nwi,hoFu0tUrsmqoUker,or\u00b0smeiri\" ^ ' Bl\u00b0W'n- heM f\u00b0r nineLurs-\nAn indicator always shows the amount of oil In the font.\nf\u00abler-cap does not screw on; but is put In like a cork In a bottle,\nand is attached by a chain and cannot get lost.\nw.,t fn^Ul?\u2122aUc'loJcy,l9 llame spreader prevents the\nwick from being turned high enough to smoke, and Is easy to\nremove and drop back so that it can be cleaned in an instant.\n\u2022\u201e ..7$L ..\" boiy ?' ea\"'rry ,clnnot become wedged, and can be unscrewed\nin an Instant for rcwicking. Finished in japan or nickel, strong, durable, well-\nmade, built for service, and yet light and ornamental.   Has a cool handle.\nDealer, Everywhere.   If not al yours, write for descriptive circular\nia the nearest agency of the\nThe Imperial Oil Company,\nLimited.\nand her friends are glad to have   her\nback. \u2022\nThe thanks of all settlers and residents are unqualifiedly due to Thomas\nAbriel, president of the fair, for his\nactivity throughout the period of preparation for the great work, and for\nthe success of the undertaking. As\nMr. Abriel explained at the banquet,\nhe has been more than repaid iu knowing that they appreciated it, and by\nthe number of bouquets thrown at\nhim.     But wait till the next show.\nTHIS DATE IN  HISTORY\nOctober 13.\n1001\u2014Tycho Brahe, the famous Danish astronomer who had a nose of gold,\ndied at Prague, Bohemia.   Born in 1545.\nIfi3a\u2014Roger Williams banished from\nBoston for heresy.\n1812\u2014Sir Isaac Brock, the British\ncommander, killed at the battle of\nQueenstown Heights, Canada. Born\nOctober (I, 1769.\n1815\u2014Napoleon Bonaparte landed at\nSt. Helena to begin his exile.\n18(10\u2014Sir Hugh Montagu Allan born.\n1870\u2014President Grant issued a proclamation against Feniauism.\n1S84\u2014Adoption of the Meridian of\nGreenwich.\n1899\u2014The Boers  Invaded  Natal and\nCape Colony.\n1905\u2014Sir Henry Irving, famous English actor, died.    Born  Feb. 6, lS.'iS.\n1909\u2014Prof. Francisco Ferrer, accused of revolutionary activity, executed\nat Barcelona, Spain.\nWESTERN ELECTRICAL INSPECTOR\nOMAH, Neb., Oct. 12.\u2014The \"Western\nAssociation of Electrical Inspectors began\nls sixth annual meeting ill Omaha today\nwith an attendance of members from\nChicago, St. Louis, Minneapolis, Dtiltitli,\nKansas City, Denver and a number of\nother cities. The convention will spend\nthree davs In the discussion of technical\nsubjects and the members will also visit\nthe local electrical plant and the wireless telegraph station at Fort Omaha.\nYOU LOOK  OLD!\nIn nine csaes out of ten it Is not be-.\ncause you are old, hut because you are\ntired, all worn out, and you act as If you\njust wondered how you are going to get\nthrough  the season and do your  work.\nThis condition may be caused by a rundown and debilitated condition, or by a\nbad cold which has left you without\nstrength   or  ambition.\nWe want to ask every sucTi person to\ntry Vlnol, our delicious cod liver and Iron\ntonic, without oil. If It does not build\nyou up and make you feel young, strong\nand well again, we will return the money\nyou -aid us for It. Isn't that fair? W.\nRutherford,^Druggist,  Nelson;\t\nMatured as Good Whisky\nShould Be.\nIt a lime limit had been set on the building of the Egyptian\nPyramids, likely they would not be standing to-day.\nIt doesn't pay to hurry some things.     That is why\nCorby's\n\"Special Selected\" Rye Whisky\nIs matured by ths \"slow but ture\" method of\nstorage in charred o\u00bbk casks. Tor yeara ths\nwhisky Is gradually ripened, Nature takes her\ntime\u2014but it thorough. Ths chemical properties\nof the ehsrred wood remote Ihe harshness of ths\noew whisky. Ai\u00ab pots the flaithiof touches to\nIhe flavor\u2014 imparts the delicacy that it characteristic of Corby's \" Special Selected.\"\nThll it Ihe loosest aid consequently ths\nmost expensive method or maturing, whisky. Not\nall whisky it aged thla way. Bat it It the only\nwny to get Ihe Corby Quality.\nCorby'e \"SPECIAL SELECTED\" tje\nWbisay It told everywhere.   Try It to-day.\nThe H.Corby Distillery Compony\nLimited\nHead Offices: Montreal. \"Cc\u00abrVtotCc\u00bbbvvni\u00abrorOv\u00abrHsJf.a.Contury-\n r mi rautt  \u00ab\nCtie 9aU? $etoa.\nTHURSDAY r\u00bb.... OCTOBER II      1\nfyht Bail? Jletoa.\nFibllahed at Nelson Bvery Morning\nExcept Monday, by\nNew. publishing Company, Limited\nm. O. FOSTER Manager\nTHURSDAY, OCTOBER  13.\nNADRu-c0oYsPEPS^AaL\u00a3TS\nrelieve and cure Indigestion\u2014acidity of the stomach\u2014biliousness\u2014flatulence\n\u2014dyspepsia. They re-lnforce the stomach by supplying the active principles\nneeded for the digestion of all kinds of food.   Try one after each meal.\n50c. a box.   If your druggist has not stocked them yet, send us 50c.\nand we wilt mall you a box. 33\nNational Drug and Chemical Compear of Canada, Limited,      \u2022     \u2022      \u2022      Montreal.\nTHE  NORMAL  8CHOOL  QUESTION.\nAt present there is one Normal\nschool in the province. Students from\nthe whole of the Interior have to travel\nto the coast if they wish to attend. Iu\nthe case of students from the Kootenay\nthiB meanB a journey of hundreds of\nmiles at considerable expense, and\nabsence from home for monthB at a\ntime.\nIt Is, however, better for them and\nfor their pupils that they should attend\nthe best possible Normal school, even\nat some inconvenience, than that they\nshould attend one not so good though\nmore conveniently situated; and it may\nbe that the total number of students\nat present in the province does not\njustify the coat of establishing two or\nmore institutions thoroughly equipped\nboth as to the teaching staff and as to\nother essentials.\nWhen it does become possible to\nestablish two or more such Institutions, lt would seem in all fairness that\nthe second should be placed in the interior at a point equally convenient\nto the western and the eastern por-\ntitons of the \"up-country,\"\u2014equally\nconvenient, that is ,to the Boundary\ndiBtrict and to the Crow's Nest Pass.\nIt so happens that the capital of the\n\"up-country\" is so situated, and that\nin other respects it would make an admirable site for such a school.\nA different view, however, was taken\nat tbe last sitting of tbe legislature by\nthe leader ot the Opposition, and is\nnow taken by the personal organ of\nHon. Mr. Templeman. They propose\nthat the Becond Normal school should\nbe placed within about eighty miles of\nthe existing Normal school.\nThe Times  Bays:\nMr. W. J.Sargent has written a\nletter to the Colonist urging that\nthe present Ib an opportune time\nto urge upon the provincial government the necessity for a Normal\nschool in Victoria.\nWe assure the Colonist   correspondent that he can depend upon\nour   hearty   co-operation   in   the\nmovement.    During the last four\nyears The Times   has   repeatedly\nurged the government to take action upon this matter.   We pointed\nout the great need   for a Normal\nschool in Victoria   and that Victoria was the only capital city.in\nthe whole Dominion ot Canada in\nwhich students could   not qualify\nthemselves for the teaching profession.   Moreover, large and influential deputations at different times\nwaited upon tbe   government and\npressed   for a Normal  school  for\nVictoria, but to all their representations   Premier   McBride   and his\nministers turned a deaf ear.   Not\nonly was the request of the deputations refused, but Hon. Dr. Young,\nminister of education, went so far\nas to declare on the   floor ot the\nhouse that when tbe next Normal\nschool waB established it would be\nin the Interior of the province.\nThus Mr. Templeman's organ, which\nIs also tbe chief organ of the provincial  Opposition, is not satisfied with\nmerely Ignoring the claim of the interior to the first additional Normal\nschool; it actually denounces the minister of education because he has recognized that claim.    The glaring injustice of the position   taken   by The\nTimes and by Mr. Brewster is obvious.\nIt la a remarkable position for an opposition which presumably is appealing\nfor support to the province as a whole\nand not merely to the city ot Victoria,\nor rather to such electors in the city of\nVictoria as desire that the provincial\ngovernment should \"play favorites\" for\n- their benefit.\n06MS\u00ab\nWESTERN CANADA'S GREATEST SCHOOL\n^J i i     C \u00abL -    Vancouver, B.C\n\u2022sjOf Oit~wu AW    R J- spR0TT- ba-\n\u2022 Manager\nBusiness Institute send tor catalogue.\nBest equipped school west of Toronto.   Ten chances for every student\nnam\nWe have just received the new October records in these three leading\nNew Records\nVictors, EdiSOOS, ColumbiaS Come in and hear them.\nRemember you save money by buying music machine goods hero\nas against sending out for them, 'because we sell them right here at the\nsame prices you have to pay no matter where you buy thorn and you\nsave tbe express.\nW.  Q.  THOMSON KrAo.\nBook\u00ab\u00abiler and Stationer\nTHE  ASSOCIATED   BOARDS  OF\nTRADE.\nBut two or three months of the present year remain, the annual meeting\nof the Associated Boards ot Trade of\nthe Kootenay ls approaching, and there\nls little time to be loBt in considering\nthe subjects to be brought before the\nconvention.\nThe business of the convention will\nbe expedited and will probably be more\nefficiently transacted If the various\nboardB will as soon aB possible draft\nthe resolutions they intend to present\nand Bubmit them to discussion before\ngetting them into more or less final\nform.\nThere are also various questions\nwhich might well be discussed with a\nview to the Instruction of delegates and\nin order that the Associated Boards\nmay understand how far these delegates are expressing individual opinions or how far they are expressing the\nmatured opinion of those whom they\nare elected to represent\nWithout attempting to give a ljst of\nsuch questions one or two may be mentioned. There is in the tlrst place the\nforming of a strong organization for\nthe development of tbe Kootenay and\nfor bringing in settlers and capital.\nThen there is the question of the construction of public roads. Much progress haB been made with these of\nlate years, and still further progress iB\nto be expected because of the liberal\npollcyof the provincial govrnment in\ndealing with this matter.\nThe time has now come for considering these roads as parts of a system\nand not merely as Isolated fragments.\nBy linking up the roads already constructed or decided upon, a number of\nimportant main highways will be secured. But a few gaps remain to be covered, for instance, to complete a road\nfrom Nelson Into the valley ot tbe Slocan river and lake; and the same thing\nmay be said of a road branching from\nthis to the valley of the Columbia and\ntbe lower end of the Arrow lakeB, as\nwell as ot a roadfrom Nelson to Ymlr,\nSalmo and the southern country. \"Then\nthere is the road to Balfour and the\npossibility of co-operating with the C.\nP. R. with a view to so constructing it\nas to provide routes for motor cars\nfrom the tourist hotel about to be constructed at the head of the arm.\nEDITORIAL NOTE.\nThe prospect that the Pincher Creek,\nCardBton and Montana railway may become the property of the Great Northern seems to be regarded by some people in southern Alberta aB rather grat-\ni\nBeautify Yout Homes\nLeave your orders for DUTCH BULBS now. A good assortment ot\nNarcissi,  Tulips,   Crocus,   Jonquils,\nHyacinths, Scilla-Sibirica, Freesia,\nIris and Paeonies\nare expected to -arrive\nI:     DIRECT FROM HOLLAND\nwithin the next few days\nSecure your requirements before they are all sold.   Don't delay.\nThe Hudson's Bay Stores\n^ ill s > \u2666\nifying. Perhaps the following editorial\nparagraph from the Kaslo Kootenaian\nmay be interesting to them:\nOf all the mlsfltB of railway systems operating in Canada the\nGreat Northern is certainly the\nworst. This district knows its own\nexperience with the outfit to Its\nsorrow; the Slmllkameen section\nis not much better off for the G.\nN.'s advent into it, and but recently the company was jerked up before the railway commission in\nVictoria because of its absurd operation of lines on Vancouver island.\nTEN YEARS AGO\nExtracts from The Nelson Daily Tribune of Oct 12,1900.\nThe Kootenay Wire Works Manufacturing company Is the latest enterprise\nadded to Nelson's industries.\nThe team ot British Columbia golfers\ncaptained by Judge Forin which played\nin Spokane on Wednesday lost to the\nhome players by 47 holes.\nW. F. Teetzel, J. A. Gilker and H.\nMatheson have been appointed license\ncommissioners for this district\nAlexander McGregor has applied for\na hotel license at Crawford bay and\nE. J. Curran for a similar license at\nFairview.\nGARDEN  ROAD TO NELSON\nFROM CITY OF CALGARY\nCalgary Herald\u2014Quite recently it\nhas been suggested in England, to\novercome the overcrowding In cities,\nand from sanitary reasons, to construct\na garden road from one end ot the\nkingdom to the other, The Idea being\nthat residents on this modern highway\nshould share in tbe kaleidoscopic life\nof the highway and relieving them in\na great measure from the dreariness of\nmean streets. It would also afford Increased chances for outdoor recreation\nsuch aB horticulture. In Bngland the\nprincipal objections to this road are\nthe land values that would be encountered in the making of the highway.\nBut such an objection would not apply\nto the construction of a great commercial, tourist and residential highway\nbetween Nelson, via the Columbia valley, and Calgary as suggested ln the\nnews columns of The Herald today.\nThe length of this proposed road\nwould only be 300 miles when complete. The grades encountered in\nconstruction would be nowhere difficult, and the advantages to the provinces of British Columbia and Alberta\nwould be enormous. The government\nof British Columbia are this year making certain allowances for this project\n(J2500) which no doubt will be increased annually as far as that province is concerned. That is within Its\ngeographical limits. It only remains\nfor the people of Alberta generally to\ntake up this matter and see what can\nbe done. It will be too late when the\ncountry is settled along the suggested\nroute to think of what might have been\nwith mutual regret.\nLARGE INCREASE\nIN LEAD SHIPMENTS\nReport From   Trail   Smelter to G. O.\nBuchanan Indicates Heavier Pro*\nduction of Lead.\nThe report made by the Trail smlter\nto O. O. Buchanan, Dominion lead\nbounty commissioner, on the amount\nof lead ores and lead contents received during the month of September con*\ntains the names of a number of properties which have not previously shipped for some monthB and several which\nhave not been on the list for over a\nyear. Among these are the Enterprise,\nthe Fidelity, the Hewitt snd the Standard.\nIncreased Lead Production.\nThe report shows a considerable increase over the former months of the\npresent year and is an indication of the\nchanges which have taken place In the\nmining situation ln this part of British\nColumbia during the past Bummer\nmonths. It will be Been that the percentage of lead in the ores varies from\naB low as an eighth of 1 per cent to as\nhigh as 70 per cent. An Interesting\nfeature of the past month's report Is\nthat for the first time in many yearB\nthe St. Eugene takes second place ln\nthe totals of lead ore sent to Trail.\nThe Sullivan heads the list with approximately 3600 short tons. The figures in the following report represent\npounds:\nMine Weight\nBluebird  (Rossland)      48,667\nBismark      34,623\nEmerald     344,484\nEnterprise       46,165\nEastmount    135,668\nFerguson      56,769\nFidelity     663\nHewitt        42,085\nHighland     132,061\nIdaho Alamo      142,234\nMolly Hughes      63,556\nNoonday      29,497\nMayflower       38,081\nRuth      140,803\n.Standard     399,072\nSlocan Star   172,890\nYankee Girl    744,825\nVan   Roi       211,395\nE. W. Widdowson\n(assay office)   ....      2,348\nRichmond-Eureka  ...   626,147\nSullivan  7,251,890 1,362,586\nSt. Eugene   1,183,394    716,034\nGOOD  ROADS  IN  ALABAMA\nBIRMINGHAM, Ala., Oct. 12\u2014Strong\nInterest in the good roads movement\nin this state has been awakened by\nthe meeting of the Alabama Good\nRoads' association which opened here\nfor a three days session. Delegates\nfrom all parts ot the Btate, members\nof congress and of the state legislature\nand state officials of Alabama and\nsome adjoining states are In attendance and great. Interest is manifested\nby all of them. The last day of the\nmeeting, which Is also \"good roads\nday\" at the state fair, Is expected to\nattract thousands ot visitors. Among\nthe speakers will be Hon. A. C. Jackson, president ot the National Good\nRoads' association.\nCOLUMBUS DAY\nBOSTON, Oct. 12\u2014In- accordance\nwith a Ian passed by the last legislature Columbus Day was obBerved as a\nlegal hdllday throughout tbe state to-\nidy for the first time, the program\nJot the Belebration in this city Included\na pontUioal high mass ln the cathedr-*,'\na big parade of Catholic societies'and\nItalian organizations and commemorative exercises. The eighty Chinese\nmarching in the parade attracted particular attention.\nLead\n2,095\n1,731\n122,326\n16,142\n18,002\n11,524\n263\n3,096\n79,408\n39,056\n572\n9,999\n900\n80,393\n283,460\n66,114\n19,839\n125,995\n96,991\nTotal    11,848,307 3,036,884\nCASUALTY REPORTS\nEXAGGERATED\n'Continued  from   Paee  One.)\nBtaff arrived here this morning. Despite the early hour the governor at\nonce left hts car and looked over the\nsituation, turning less than 60 refugees\nquartered here and he ordered that\nthey be at once sent to Duluth and\nBeraldji. For the stock that had been\nsaved -by the settlers he .ordered three\ncarloads of hay and a car of. oats and\nthey are expected to arrive tonight.\n\"Everything Is in good shape at International Falls,\" said the governor.\n\"The people do not need soldiers, and\nneither do they need nurses nor supplies for there ls no danger now.\nThose who have arrived here from the\nburned districts and need medical attention wilt at once he sent to places\nwhere they can receive the beat attention. The town is well patrolled and\nthe authorities have the situation in\nhand. I am leaving at once for Beaudette to look over the situation.\"\nBar Prices too High\nINTERNATIONAL FALLS. Oct. 12\u2014\nSheriff Rutledge declares the worst\noutrages of the whole scenes following\nthe first is the attitude of the Canadians at Rainy River. He says the\nKing Edward hotel will not permit\nrefuges to sit down in the hotel,\ncharges them 12 for a bed and 50\ncents fo ra sandwich and that he paid\n$1 for two soft drinks at the bar while\nmaking an Investigation. He Bays the\nother prices are In proportion and that\nnone of the Rainy River citizens have\nhelped ln the work at Beaudette or\nSpooner, of seeking out the dead or\nburned animals.\nInternational Palls Safe .\nAll reports that International Falls\nIs endangered are false. The smouldering blazes ln the muskegs have been\nstamped out entirely and there ls not\na bit of smoke here today. Further-\n\u2022more the city offers a refuge for all\nfire sufferers and will care for them\nwlthout state aid. A bulletin has been\nissued to this effect.\nBASEBALL GAMES\nNational League\nAt St. Louis\u2014Chicago 12, St. Louis\n2: Overall and Archer; Amherst and\nPhelps.\nAt Boston\u2014Boston 9, Brooklyn 2;\nFrock and Raridan; Barger, Bell, DeB-\nsau and Bergen. Second game, Boston 3, Brooklyn 2.\nPost Season Series\nAt Philadelphia\u2014All Star. 5, Philadelphia 1; Walsh and Sullivan; Bender,   Plank, Coombs and Lapp   and\nThomas.\nPERTH  MURDER TRIAL\nPERTH, Oct. 12\u2014The trial of Rufus\nWood, Smith's Falls, laborer, for the\nmurder of his wife on April 13, has begun here. The grand Jury returned a\ntrue bill ot murder. Medicinal experts\nconsisting of Or. Bruce .Smith and\nothers, made a careful examination of\nthe prisoner on Monday, but the results\nare not yet fully known.    '\nQUEEN'S PROFESSOR PRINCIPAL\nOF ALBERTA COLLEGE\nJjKINOSTON, Oct. 12\u2014Prof. S. W.\nDyde of Queen's university has received official notification ot his appointment to the prlnclpalshlp of the Presbyterian theological college ot Alberta\nsituated at Strathcona and he haa del-\nADVISED\nOPERATION\nCured by Lydia E. Pink-\nham'sVegetableCompound\nCanlfton, Ont\u2014\"Ihadbeenagreat\nsufferer for five years. One doctor\ntold me it was ulcers of the uterus,\nand another told me it was a fibroid\ntumor. No one\nknows what I suffered. I would\nalways be worse\nat certain periods,\nand never was\nregular, and the\nbearing-down\npains were terrible.\nI was very ill in\nbed, and the doctor\ntold me I would\nhave to have an\noperation, and\nthat I might die\n.during 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 lt the best medicine in the world for female troubles,\nfor it haa cured me, and I did not have\nto have the operation after all. The\nCompound also helped me while pass,\ning through Change of Life.\"\u2014Mrs,\nLetitia Blair, Canlfton, 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, perlodie pains, backache, bearing-down feeling, flatulency, indigestion, and nervous prostration. It costs\nbut a trifle to try It, and the result has\nbeen worth mililonstosufferingwomea\nI TVe have bad placed in ur hand* for sale one of Neluon's fine\nhomes. The house Is situated on four lots, all ln bearing fruit trees.\nThere Is a stone foundation with cement floor basegient. House has\ndouble parlor, dining room, kitchen, three bedrooms, etc. A good\nstable on property.\nPrice 14200, easy terms.\nHunter & Annable\nlnltely decided to accept tt He will\nremain at Queens till the close ot the\nfirst 1911 session.\nCHOLERA IN ENGLAND\nLONDON, Eng., Oct. 12\u2014The first\ncase of Asiatic cholera has appeared in\nBngland. A man who lived In one of\nthe Rowton houses, a series of \"poor\nman\" hotels, died In a public house on\nFriday. The directors of the houBe ascertained that lt was a virulent case.\nNine Deaths In Rome.\nROME, Oct. 12\u2014During the laBt 24\nhours 22 new cases of cholera were reported, with nine deaths.\nA  SENSIBLE  MERCHANT\nBear Island,  Aug.  26,  1903.\nMinard's Liniment Co., Limited.\nDear Sirs,\u2014Your traveller is here today\nand we are getting a large quantity of\nyour MINARD-S LINIMENT. We find it\nthe best Liniment on the market malting\nno exception. We have been In business\n13 years and have handled all kinds, but\nhave dropped them all but yours; that\nsells Itself; the others have to be pushed\nto get rid of.\nW.   A.   HAQERMAN.\nImperial Bank of Canada\nHEAD OFFICE: TORONTO\nCspltal Authorised 110,000,000\nCapital Subscribed  .1 5,675,000\nCapital Paid Up  (6,330,000      Reserve Fund 15,330,000\nD. R. WILKIE, President   HON. ROBERT JAFFRAY, Vice-President\nBRANCHES IN BRITISH COLUMBIA:\nArrowhead, Chase, Cranbrook, Farnle, Golden, Kamloops, Michel, New\nMichel, Moyle, Nelson, Revelstoke, Vancouver   and   Victoria.\nSAVINGS DEPARTMENT\nInterest allowed on deposits at currant rate (rom date of deposit\nNELSON BRANCH J. M. LAY, Manager\nCanadian Bank of Commerce\nPAID UP CAPITAL....\u202210,000,000       DESERVE  t8.000.000\nDRAPT8 ON  FOREIGN COUNTRIES\nArrangements hare recently been   completed   wider   whloh   the\nbranches of this bank are able to Usue Drafts on the principal point*\nln th* following countries:\nFinland < Ireland\nFormosa Italy\nFrance ..-I Japan\nFr'ch Cochln-Chlna  Java\nAutrla-Hungary\nBelgium\nBrasll\nBulgaria\nCeylon\nChina\nCrete\nDenmark\nEgypt\nFaroe Islands\nNo Delay In Issuing.\nNELSON BRANCH\nGermany\nGreat Britain\nGreece\nHolland\nIceland\nIndia\nRussia\nServla\nSlam'\nSouth. Afriea\nManchuria Straits Settlement\nMexico Sweden\nNorway Switaerlaud\nPersia Turkey\nPhllliplne Islands    west Indlei\nRoumanla and elsewhere.\nFull Particulars on Application\nJ. L. BUCHAN, Manager\nRANK OF MONTREAL\nEstablished  817\nCapital All Paid Up... .114.400,000       Rest   112,000,000\n' HEAD OFFICE: MONTREAL\nRt. Hon. Lord strathcona and M cunt Royal, Q.C.M.Q., Hon. President.\nR.  B. Angus, President\nSir Edward 8. ClousUn, Bart., Vice-President and Qen. Manager.\nBRANCHES IN BRITISH COLUMBIA:\nArmstrong, Chilliwack, Clove rdale,   Enderby,   Greenwood,   Hosmer,\nKelowna, Merritt, Nslson, New D enver, Nicola, New Westminster, Pentlcton, Prince Rupert, Rossland, 8 'mnurland. Vancouver, Vernon, Victoria\nNELSON BRANCH ~     L. \u00ab. DEVEBER, Manager\nThe Royal Bank of Canada\nIncorporated I860\nCapital Paid Up  \u2022 5,000,000\nReserve snd Undivided Profits    6,028,000\nTotal Assets 67,000,000\nHEAD OFFICE: MONTREAL\nH. S. HOLT, President. E. L. PEASE, Vlce-p.esldent snd Qen. Manager\nOne hundred and fifteen Branches ln Canada and Newfoundland.\nEleven Agencies ln Cuba: Nassau, Bahamas; San Juan, Porto Rico;\nNew York City, 68 William Street\nBusiness accounts carried upon favorable terms. Savings department\nat all branches.   Correspondence solicited.\nNELSON BRANCH A. B. NETHERBY, Manager.\nDiamonds   Diamonds\nNow ts the time to select your diamonds from our well assarted s took. We have them ln all sizes and\nat all prices. Each one ls warranted to be perfect in color and free of flaws. Our prices compete with\neastern houses. If jrou contemplate buying a diamond ring or a diamond 'brooch or any thing ln diamond\nJewelry, it would be to your advantage to inspect our stock and get our prices before buying.\nEYES  EYES\nRemember your eyes as tbey are very precious to you. If tbey are tired or ache at any time, consult me about ti.em. _ .,..:\u25a0\n. .'ellMti .',<! .-*\nFlnq watch repairing a specialty.   Mall orders receive our prompt attention.\nJ. J. Walker *\u00b03 **\u00bb \u00bb\nGraduate Optician and Jeweler\n THURSDAY\nOCTOBER 18\nCt>e Bails$ttoa.\nPAOE FIVt\n<?#;\nMOTEL ARRIVALS OFAUAY\n11\nThe Hume j\n^aee\u00bbes\u00bbamr\u00bb\u00bbette4\u00bb\u00bbe\u00bbea\u00bbi>\nHUME-J. F. Downs, Vlotorla; E. a.\nHatt, Vancouver; A. J, Bates, Vancouver;\nP. H. Bruneau, Vanoouver; A. Mulr, Vancouver; A. Clarkson, Ymlr; A. B. Buck-\nworth, Tmlr: F. W. Dowler, Tacoma; Mr.\nand Mrs. W. Mlloon, Fruitvale; J. M.\nCance, Orand Forks; Charles Anselmo,\nOrand Forks; John Matheson, Hamilton;\nWilliam P. Folger, Spokane; F. U Wills,\nSpokane; Oeorge L. Murry, Trail; A. C.\nMeeker, Midway: A. Carney, Kaslo; Levi\nJacobs, New York; J. H. Winer, Montreal;\nOeorge A. Howard, Montreal; H. H. Fulll,\nLiverpool; A. W. Nielmann, Chicago; J.\nC. Downle, Winnipeg; J. W. Nutt, Winnipeg; George E. Henderson, Bull River\nFalls: T. Moore, Fort Clair, Mich.; T. O.\nMoore, Fort Clair, Mich.; Herman Schuli,\nMadison, WIS.; N. C. BOUtler, Toronto; T.\nMortimer, Toronto; Mrs. L. Harris, Eholt;\nOeorge A. Ohren, Rossland; T. L. Churchill, Rossland; J. A. Kinney, Rossland.\nSTRATHCONA\u2014Miss fl. Noyme, Chris*\ntlana, Norway; W. F. U. Atkinson, Ottawa; Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Blahop, Elgin;\nO. C. Johnston, Okanagan; O. O. Buchanan, Kaslo; c. R. Hamilton, city.\nQueen's Hotel\nBaker Street *\n. A. LAPOINTE, Proprietor\n.Rates: 11.50 to |2.00 par day.\nMeal Tickets, 17.00 per week.\nBusiness men's lunch, 16c.\nQUEENS\u2014B. Wakefleld, Crawford Bay:\nA. Blaney, Crown Point; A. Dee, Crawford\nBay: D. Sustees, Cranbrook; W. Shllloch,\nRock Creek: T. Williamson, Rock Creek;\nEd. Robb, Kaslo.\niUkeview Hotel   |\nCorner Hall and Vernon Streets\nB. L. GRIFFITH, Prop.\nTwo blocks from city wharf,   t\nThe best dollar a day house In   I\n' Nelson.\nAll White Help\nLAKEVIEW-P. Johnson, Sirdar; J. Olson, J. Ryan, MoCreed, J. Brennan, Medicine Hat.\nGrand Central Hotel\nOPPOSITE POSTOPFICI\nAmerican and Buropean Plans.\nJ. A. ERICKSON\nORAND CENTRAL-O. Needle, Vancouver; P. Johnson, YmlriStewart, Tmlr; A.\nBird, Vancouver; W. Whltaley, Slocan; J.\nMurray, Slocan; E. Boucher, Spokane; O.\nBranigan, olty; J. Munro, II. Mead, Harris,\nMontreal* T. Howard, Spokane; T. Howard, Spokane; T. Laurie, Spokane; D.\nOrugnon,\" c Smith, Pittsburg.\nI The Klondyke Hotel li\nVernon Street\nHeadquarters ler miners, UMl.\ntermen, loiters, railroad sun.   |\nRatea: 11.00 per dav up.\nNELSON \u00ab JOHNSON, Props.   \\\nKLONDTKE-W.  Msult,  city; W.\" Nel~\neon, Saskatchewan,  \u25a0\nNelson Cafe\nLarge and Commodious Dining\nRoom\nPrompt ud Courteous Service.\nMeals Served at all Hours\nBlegentlr furnished rooms In\nconnection; 11 a day aid if\nA. AUDIT, Proprietor\nNELSON\u2014E. Stanterltrarj, Nakusp; A.\nClute, Nakusp; Ed. Pelk, Nakusp; P.\nRyan, Nakusp; H. Dow, .Slocan olty; D.\nDonahue, Slocan olty; D. Wilson, Slooan\nelty: J, Poollck, Sloean olty; G*. Jessie,\nEd. aSley, ~  * -\"-   *      \t\nBest on the\nContinent\nThat Is what authorities say\nregarding the medicinal qualities ol the waters at Halcyon\nHot Springs.\nThe Sanitarium ls now under\nnew management and has been\nremodelled (rom top to bottom\nand now otters every facility\nfor the comfort and convenience ot patrons.\nSates |12 and 116 per week\nor $1 per day and upwards.\nHALCYON HOT SPB1N6S\nSANITARIUM\nWM. BOYD, proprietor\nHalcyon! Arrow Lakes, B. C.\nrla.\nD. Leslie, J. Brennan, Vlcto-\n\"SILVER KING-J. Choate, Sandusky; J.\nMiller, Ashcroft; W. Morrison, W. Jones,\nCummins, Lardo; A MoDonald, Fruitvale;\nPearleao Newendorf, Toledo; J. Owen, D.\nBaker, B. Baker, R. Campbell, J. Jack-\neon, A. McLachlan.\nKOOTENAY\u2014P. Erdroush, Gerrard; T.\nSyogrson, Trail; O. Pavelick, P. Patrick,\nL. Carsl, New Denver; Delprato, New\nDenver; B. Vittenl, New Denver; W.\nBrown, Regina. -wo***,   , \u201e\u201e,...-\nBARTLETT\u2014J. Jones, \u2022\u25a0\u25a0-Q*r~---Thomaa, \u25a0\nWales; L. Wilson, England; J. Murphy,\nDublin; J, Jones, Seattle.\nROTAL-J. Bell, Vancouver; J. Butcher,\nEngland: W. Butyer, Molly Gibson; Ol\nAllck, Molly Olbson; T. Blck. Vancouver,\nP. J. Fraser. Vanoouver; J. Oraham, Van-,\ncouver; 8. R. Tyler, Vancouver. ,\n\\   Tremont House   $\nBaker tt, Neleon.\nMalone 4 Treglllus, Proa,\nEuropean Plan, lOo. up .. _\n|     American Plan, $1.25 and $1.10 I\n* Heals, I6C *\nBpeolal Rates per Month.\nTREMONT-A. Wilson, olty; A, McGregor, city; J. Mcintosh, Salmo: J. Kelly, Lardo; Angurlns, city; J. Stapleton,\nCalgary; P. Trlveron, Pittsburg; F. Sweed,\nPittsburg; O. Johnson, Pittsburg.\nMadden House\nThos. Madden, Prop.. Baker St\nWell furnished rooms wltb bath   t\nBeit Board In the Olty .    |\nA Comfortable Homo\nMADDEN-F. Reld, Ainsworth: W. Collins, Thrums; W. Cochrane, Molly Gibson;\nF. Van Duren, Portland; R. Williams,\nCowley; j, Rellly, Edgewood; R. Fulmore,\nEdgewood.\nSHERBROOKB-T. Telia, V. Ballest, P.\nBruffin, D. Calnnnon, M. McLeod, D. Ms-\nCad, W, Houlston, A. Argen, Ed. Mingo,\nLouisville.\nCLUB\u2014J. Mason, Slocan; R. Jenklss,\nWinnipeg; J. O'Connell. Lardo.\nROOSEVELT C0MMEND8 WORK\nOF CATHOLIC CHURCH\nPEORIA, 111., Oct. 18\u2014Col. Roosevelt oame up from the south Into Illinois today, denounced corrupt legislators\naud commended the work which the\nCatholic church Is doing. Leaving St.\nLouis early today, he travelled across\nthe southern end of Illinois, speaking\nat several places on the way. At\nPeoria he was the guest of the Knights\nof Columbus, to whom he made a\nspeech tonight. It was Col. Roosevelt's\nfirst public utterance to Roman Catholics since the Vatican Incident last\nspring. Hp said he favored the broadest measure of religious tolerance.\nLAKE 8HIPMENTS HEAVY\nPORT WILLIAM, Oct. 12\u2014Lake shipments today were the heaviest of the\nseasou, 1,050,000 bushels of wheat having been taken out of Fort William In\nthe past 24 hours. Ahout 825,000 bushels went to Montreal, 125,000 bushels to\nKingston and the rest to Buffalo.\nENGLISH  EARL  IN   ONTARIO\nFORT WILLIAM, Oct. 12\u2014En route\nto Australia on a pleasure trip, the Earl\nof Harrowby, wife and three children,\narrived ln Fort William this morning.\nThe earl ls partner In Coutts and Co.\nhankers, London. The earl sails from\nVancouver November 4.\nNOT  WANTED  IN   ITALY\nROME, Oct. 12\u2014A semi-official communication states that tbe Italian government has adopted measures to prevent the religious orders expelled from\nPortugal, from settling in Italy.\nTEACHER AND FARMER     .\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 12\u2014After a week's\nIllness in the general hospital A; Mr-\nCampbell of Stonewall, Manitoba, died\ntoday of pneumonia. Mr. Campbell,\nwho was 54 years old, came here 30\nyears ago from Barrle. Later he was\nprincipal of the Edmonton high school,\nbut the soil called him and he became\na successful and prominent agriculturalist. He served on the Alberta beef\ncommission and when taken ill was attending the session of the Manitoba abattoir commission,, of which he was a\nvaluable member.\nMOTHERS' CONGRESS\nAUSTIN, Texas, Oct. 12\u2014The Texas\ncongress of mothers and parent teacher associations opened Its anniversary\nand second annual convention here today with a meeting of the executive\nboard and board of directors. The\nI opening session of the congress will be\nI* held this evening and the congress will\nremain in session three days. An unusually interesting program haH been\narranged for the meeting and the list\nof speakers contains the \"names of\nmany distinguished men and women\nInterested In Uie welfare of children.\nSOUTH   CAROLINA   POSTMASTERS.\nCOLUMBIA, S, C, Oct. 11\u2014The \u25a0 annual\nconvention of the South Carolina postmasters was called to 'order here today by\npostmaster B. E, Foag of Rock Hill, The\nproceedings will extend over tomorrow.\nMad\u00ab la i_\ndiftwentMrlw.\nn Ityourbedrteid has the \"Ideal\" Gunr-\nX Bntee on the foot-ail, you bave bought\nM wifely.    For \"Ideal\" Metal bedi are\n\u25a0 nude to tatisf*-, not merely to sell.\n__-_^__\\__J  Vou cannot tee   the  difference be-\nn*~mr    tween one metal bed and another\u2014\nexcept in external!.    Nor need you\nsee, If you look for the \"Ideal\" Guar.\n- entee.   It )\u25a0 put on beds you can\n0 safely buy with eyei shut.\nA IsAtrnwhr before vou liar anothar bed. 1HO\n' A Mtot\u00bbndroa\"Th\u00abPhlfoioph)'ofSlee-,\"-\nJ ^  (m.bottaUrtrtlii't. AtfforfiookletNo...\n\u25a0r    \u2022IDEAL BEDDING CW\nGETS   IMPERIAL   COMMISSION\nTORONTO, Oct. 12\u2014Allen Rogers,\nson of Inspector E. R. Rogers of the\nprovincial secretary's office, sails for\nEngland today to accept an appointment In the imperial army. He graduated with honors from the Royal Military college at Kingston last June and\nreceived a commission In India.\nQUI8 CUSTODIET\nOTTAWA, Oct. 12\u2014ConBtables Cam*\npeau and Charbonneau, members of the\npolice force, arrested on a charge of\nbreaking Into a house with the object\nof committing a robbery, were today\nsent down for trial at the next criminal assizes.\n\/ARMY OF  CUMBERLAND  REUNION\nCHATTANOOGA, Tenn,, Oct. 12.-A\nsmall but dignified gathering of veterans\nWaa on hand today at the opening of the\nthirty-eighth annual reunion of the Society of the Army of the Cumberland. The\nreunion nrogram covers two days and has\nas Us leading feature an address by General Charles H. Grosvenor of Ohio.\nHAULTAIN   IN  TORONTO\nTORONTO, Oct. 12\u2014P. W. Haultain,\nleader of the Conservative* party In\nSaskatchewan was a visitor at the\nparliament buildings this morning and\ncalled on Str James Whitney and Hon.\nW. J. Hanna. He said that hit. visit\nwas purely a business one and was not\nin any way connected with politics.\nGIRL'S SUICIDE.\nLONDON, Oct. 12\u2014Daisy Henwood,\naged fourteen, committed suicide here\nby drinking a mixture of rat poison.\nThe girl had been wayward lately and\nhad been reprimanded for being out at\nnight. Last evening she drank poison\nand after suffering terrible agony for\nmany hours died today.\nPETERBORO CITIZEN  DEAD\nKINGSTON, Oct. 12\u2014The death occurred in the penitentiary on Monday\nof Robert Wardell of Peterboro, sentenced last February to three years\nfor arson. Deceased suffered from\nrheumatism. He was 83 years of age.\nThe remains were sent to Peterboro\nfor interment.\nPETITION INVALID\nMANITOU, Man., Oct. 12\u2014At the\nmeeting of the village council last\nevening the local option petition signed\nby more than one-third of the ratepayers was rejected on the grounds of\nfaulty affidavits. For the same reasons\nthe rural council for Pembina refused\nto entertain the petition on Monday.\nBoth petitions had been prepared on\nthe 1910 list of electors, which had not\nbeen revised yet. *\nMRS.  WINRAM   DEAD.\nMANITOU, Man., Oct. 12\u2014Yesterday\noccurred the sudden death of Mrs.\nMary Winram, relict of the late Hon.\nWilliam Winram, one time speaker of\nthe Manitoba legislature. She lived\nhere with her daughter, Mrs. T. Clarke\nwho was In Winnipeg at the time. On\ngoing down or up from the basement\ntbe deceased fell, striking her head on\nthe bard basement floor, rendering her\nunconscious. She died within a few\nhours of the fall]\nDEITZ RELEASED ON\nTHOUSAND   DOLLAR   BAIL\nHAYWARD, Oct. 12\u2014Clarence Deitz\nwas released today on $1000 bond and\nJohn Deitz has accepted Rubin and\nBeahle, Milwaukee attorneys, as his\ncounsel. Deitz's first hearing will be\nnext Tuesday. The hearing of Clarence\nDeltz has been adjourned until November 7.\n8IR THOMAS IN SASKATOON\nSASKATOON, Oct. 12\u2014Sir Thomas\nG. Shaughnessy president of the C. P.\nIt., with a party of directors Including\nWilliam Whyte, passed through the\nelty this afternoon making a stay of an\nhour.\nMASSACHUSETTS W, C. T. U. MEETS\nATTLEBORO, Mass,, Oot. 12.\u2014Mrs.\nKatherlne Lent Stevenson, state president\nof tbe Massachusetts Women's Christian\nTeiht>erance Unions today opened the 37th\nannual conventttn-ofthe state organisation In the Attleboro Methodist church.\nSeveral hundred delegates, representing\nthe various sections of the state, were in\nattendance, among them two of the charter members, are in attendance at the\ngathering, whloh will continue for three\ndays. ,,.,i^u.J-i-LUr      \"\nISONIE PICTURES\nOF CHINESE LIFE\n i*U\u2014\nPoppy Growers Who Keep Mandarins\n)n pear\u2014Girls Shrink From\nSight of Men\nFor five dayB journey from Pa'siang\nIn Shansl to Hwachow in Shensl one\nnotes a strain of Greek beauty and\ngrace ln the population. Several times\na day the eye lights on a 'boy or youth\nwho would serve as a model for Ganymede or Endymlon. With Hwachow\nthe type vanishes and the squat knobby\nfaced, dull complexloned Mongol dominates *-H we come out Into the valley\nof the Han, says a letter In the Japan\nAdvertiser, of Toklo. from Prof. Ross,\ndescribing his travels through Shansi.\nWith the coarse and ugly cast of\nfeatures of central Shensl goes a stupidity that exceeds anything I have\never experienced among American negroes. You ask a peasant \"How far is\nit to Paokl?\" You repeat the question\ntwice and you have not even stirred\nbig attention. After your third asking\ntiei is suflfclently waked up to repeat\n\"Paokl?\" In a considering way. The\nfourth time he catches the idea \"How\nfar?\" The fifth asking may enable\nhim to connect the Ideas \"Paokt?\"\n\"How far?\" and his (^e lightens up\n\u25a0with comprehension. Often, however.\nno amount of questioning elicits anything more than grunts and \"Ohs!\"\nDullest of all were the Kanush reapers\nreturning north to their province after\nthe harvest. The ox like slowness of\nmental processes may be due to hereditary deficiency, to lack of stimulation or, which ia more likely to the\nbenumbing of the faculties by opium\nsmoking.\nWomen Opium Fiends\n(For Shensl Is one of the worst of\nthe provinces In this respect and the\nwomen are worse than the men. It is\nestimated that nine out of ten women\nover 40 smoke. Beyond Wukting poppy\nfields began to appear and south from\nFengslanfu we passed hundreds of\nthem. About the capital it has come\nto be disreputable to grow the poppy.\nIt Is planted in small patches In out of\nthe way places and sometimes the\nleaves and flowers are cut off so it\ncannot be recognized at a distance. -\nThe poppy is by far the best paying\ncrop and when Interfered with the farmers are near to rebelling. Two stageB\nwest of Slanfu the district magistrate\nwent out in April with a few soldiers\nto destroy the poppy. The fanners\nrallied with their forks and sickles and\nhe had to fee for his life. In Kansuh\nthe mandarins stand In fear of their\nfierce Mohammedan subjects and the\npoppy Is grown in the old way. Still\nthe reduction in poppy acreage in\nShensl has been 70 or 80 per cent and\nthe enormous cr<>P of wheat raised in\nthis first year of poppy prohibition will\naid next year's efforts.\nIn all directions.one notes how the\n;.people stand In their own light by neglecting to protect common Interests\nfrom the encroachment of Individuals.\nThe roadside ditches are baited out to\nget little flBhes of a finger's length,\nbecause what one does not take another will. Each bunch of wild strawberries being picked as soon aa one\nbecomes red, most of the wild berries\ncome to the market unripe and unfit to\neat. After a rain the great road from\nTungkwan to Slanfu Is a canal from\nwhich the water has no exit. The\nmule muscle wasted during the week\nin pulling carts through the quagmire\nwould repair the road for a year. For\na furlong or more on each side of a\nvillage the stone paved road over\nTlensha pass has been ruined by the\nvillagers stealing the stones for their\nstoops and pigpens. Such is the natural and Inevitable result of letting private interests have full scope or doing nothing to protect public interests.\nCn.nese Girls Are Timid\nThe condition of women in central\nShensl Is deplorable 'hut ls quite what\nis to he expected when the male sex\ntakes upon Itself to shape not only its\nown standards and life, but also those\nof the women. Little girls of nine\nyears shrink away into the Interior of\nthe house If your gaze lights on them\na moment. It would not be proper to\nbe looked at by a man. All the women\nwho are not old vanish away into their\napartments like frightened birds when\na man hoves in sight. The traveller\nmight easily suppose that all the females of 10 to 25 years had been carried away by a plague so rarely doeB\nhe see one of them. Never does a woman travel unless she (belongs to an official changing his residence.\nThe women or the common people\nprobably get not a mile from home in\nthe course of their lives. Their feet\nare very tightly bound, bo ' much so\nthat in Kansuh the housewife crawls\n<   I\nSidmesa tt ipuajlr\ncaused by the accumulation of waste\nmatter and impurities\nwithin the body.\nDr. Morse's\nIndian\nRoot Pills*\nenable the bowels, the\nkidneys, the lungs and\nthe pores of the skin\nto throw off these\nimpurities. Thus they\nprevent or cure dis*\n25c a box.\nabout her home on her knees. The result is that, crippled in feet, crushed\nby conventional restrictions and regard\ned with contempt she shows none of\nthe homemaklng instincts that in America brightens even the log hut of the\nmountain backwoodsman with crazy\nquilts, tidies and old newspapers scissored into patterns and pasted round\nthe clock shelf or over the windows.\nThere is no effort to adorn, no bit of\nwhite or color, no sign of woman's\nband. There Is not even a family\nmeal, but each fills his how) and stands\nor lounges about eating when he\npleases.\nCATTLE KING DEAD\nMONTREAL, Oct. 12\u2014Robert Ironsides, millionaire, member of tbe cattle\nexporting firm of Gordon Ironsides\nFares and Co. died this morning. He\nhad been suffering from enlargement\nof the heart for some time.\nMEMORIAL   BOULDER   DEDICATED\nBRADFORD, Mass., Oct. 12\u2014In the\npresence of a large number of spectators, Including a delegation from the\nAmerican -board of commissioners for\nforeign missions, at present in session\nIn Boston, the memorial boulder, recently erected on the edge of \"missionary woods,\" on the shore of Rabbit's Pond, to commemorate the starting of the movement 100 yearB ago,\nwhich led to the organization of the\nAmerican board, was unveiled today\nwith appropriate ceremonies. The\nmonument is of Concord granite eight\nfeet high, five feet wide and three feet\nthick. On one side Is a large cross,\ncarved ln relief, and on the other a\nbronze tablet, giving a brief history of\nthe society which was founded in a\namati church that stood in the place\nnow ocupled by the boulder. Prof. Edward Y, Hlncks of the Andover theological seminary made a brief historical statement and Rev. Robert A.\nHume, a graduate of the seminary and\nlater a missionary to India, delivered\nthe dedicatory address.\nPARLIAMENT   MAY   NOT\nMEET IN NOVEMBER\nOTTAWA, Oct. 12\u2014It Is stated tonight on what appears to be excellent\nauthority, that parliament will not\nmeet In November as was Intended and\nit may not meet for months. Mr.\nKieldlng's illnesB may .be given as the\nexcuse but the real reason Is that the\ngovernment dreads next session,\nDisturbing questions which will involve statesmanship of the highest order are to he dealt with. There is\nthe tariff, also the naval question, the\nelevators and the multitude of promises made by the premier on his western tour. No work has been done by\nthe cabinet yet in the way of preparing for the coming session.\nMr. Fielding has aged considerably\nduring the last few months. His step\ntacks\" Its old nervous buoyancy.\nmm*\u00aemhk\nSome Nice Dres*\nses for the Girls\nIn Sailor and College\nStyles\nWe have some very nice dre sses for children, three to fourteen\nyears that wo should like you to see.\nThese are for fall wear andcome in Serges and Cloth in sailor and\ncollege styles are prettily trimmed with braid, buttons or plaid. They\nare of excellent wearing quality and just the thing for school, with\nsome better qualities for Sunday wear.\nPrices from $3.50 to $8\nMEAGHER & CO.\nEagle Block\nBaker Street\n1ROOSEVELT   AID   FOR   BEVERIDGE\nINDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Oct. 13.-The senatorial campaign in Indiana promises to\nreceive a new impetus tomorrow, when\nformer President Roosevelt Comes Into the\nstate and speaks ln behalf of the candidacy of Senator Beverldge for re-election.\nThe Roosevelt Bpeeoh. Is awaited with\nkeen Interest by republicans and democrats\nalike, though opinion differs radically as\nto the effect It may have on the contest.\nThe fight over the Benatorshlp has already developed Into one of the greatest\npolitical campaigns In the state's recent\nlilstorv. On one aide Is Senator Beverldge,\nthe progressive, the foe of Cannonism and\nSevere attacks of rheumatism are often\nresponsible  for  cases of organic  heart\ntrouble.   At-any-rate it is foolish to\n\"grin and bear it.\"\neJtyd$\nRHEUMATIC REMEDY\nwould likely cure your case. It has proved\nbeneficial in all forms of Rheumatism \u2014\nmuscular, inflammatory and gouty. A big\nbottle costs only $1.00.\nAnything you\nbuy\nwith thai\n*\u00bbfll tt*w you\n\u2022BUM\"'\"\nuttfaetion.\nSold and guaranUod by\nOEE!   I'M FROZEN\nThat was the exclamation heard tme after time yesterday. Now that was\nrather ridiculous when people could buy a small electric heater which would\ngo In their pocket and with It could boll a glass of water or milk in half a\nminute for the remarkable sum of j,i which Is the cost of this little article.\nThese heaters are a thing that ar needed in every home. The baby wants\nhot water at night. We all like to get out of bed to light a stove, but\nwith this small electrical attachment vou can do It from the bed. While the\nfellow sharpens his razor his water has boiled. The doctor can sterilize his\nhis Instruments by the bedside and Perhaps save a life, being able to have hot\nwater almost instantaneously. The cook can boll her potatoes, cabbage, puddings and In fact everything where hot water ls needed. Call and see the\nlittle marvel at\nMARCUS-TUROEON ELECTRICAL, CO.\nStore,  606   Baker   Street,  or   Phone 346   and   we   will   call   at   your   house.\nAldrichism and of a tariff which is \"too\nprotective,\" and on the other John W.\nKern, twice honored by the democracy ot\nIndiana with the nomination for governor\nand once the running mate of William J.\nBryan on the national ticket.\nSenator Beverldge is facing a difficult\ncontest, for all the elements of the democratic party have united In the effort to\ncrown the oft-times unsuccessful Kern\nwith final success. Many elements have\nentered Into the campaign, but in the main\nit Is the progressive tariff Idea matched\nagainst the tariff-for-revenue only plan.\nThe liquor question figures In the contest\nln a secondary way and will .affect the\n\u25a0outcome of the senatorshlp because the\nlegislature elects the United States senator. In respect to the liquor question it\nls a straight contest with the democrats\nstanding for the elimination of the county\noption feature and the republicans for\nthe retention of It.\nToo   Close   to  Taggart.\nMr. Kern has been charged with standing too close to Thomas Taggart, the\nlong-time boss of the democratic party\nIn Indiana and who met with defeat when\nthe state convention disregarded his\nwishes and nominated a candidate for\nUnited States senator. But the Taggart\nalliance has been relegated to the background as the senatorial campaign has\nprogressed and apparently It will have lit\ntle or no effect uion Mr. Kern's chance\nof success. He lias the solid backing of\npractically all the prominent leaders of\nhis party, Including Governor Marshal),\nwho two years ago carried Indiana by a\nmajority of more than 16,000.\nOn the other hand, the democracy In\nSenator Beverldge has a foe worthy of the\nsteel. He Ib popular and won the admiration of many when he stood out against\nthe powers at Washington and voted\nagainst the Payne-Aldrich tariff bill, He\nngaln won the admiration of many when\nhe came back to Indiana and, defying such\nold standpatters as James E. Watson and\nJames A. Hemenwny, organized the stato\nconvention to suit himself and adopted a\nplatform to his liking.\nThe democrats aro rather pleased over\nRoosevelt's coming to Indiana to speak\nfor Beverldge, Just how the former president is going to help the progressive senator without justifying his attitude towards the tariff bill, and how he can\njustify that without condemning Taft and\nothers who uphold the law, Is a problem\nthat they do not believe can be solved.\nThey contend that lt was democratic disaffection with Parker and not Roosevelt's\npopularity that gave the latter such an\noverwhelming majority In 1904, and they\nsay that the conditions now are exactly\nreversed, for then it was democrats, and\nnow It is republicans who are split into\nfactions.\nHURRY   HURRY\nJuat as sure as you are alive winter will be with us within a short\ntime\nDON'T  DELAY,  GET   8ETTLED  AT ONCE\nCome in and see us, we have houses for Bale at such price-; and\neasy terms that you will wonderwhy you haven't owned your own home\nlong: ftjfo,\nLOOK\u2014A seven roomed house three bedrooms, bath, electric light\nfire place, double corner lot, having view of lake, no hilla to climb.\nPrice 12200. on easy terms.\nHERE YOU ARE\u2014Large house, ten rooms, fine bedrooms, bath,\nelectric light, fire place, cellar, corner lots, no hills and within five\nminutes of postofflce.   Price only 13600, on easy terms.\nSOMETHING NEAT AND COMFY\u2014A five roomed house, two bed-\nroomB, bath, electric light, one lot, interior ot house very neat and up\nto date, on one of the best streets and only three blocks from Baker.\nLook at it.   Price, for a quick sale, $2600, on terms\nGet your city of Nelaon Pocket Map.\nWAREHOUSE FOR SALE OR RENT\u2014Very roomy and handy to\nbusiness centre.   Get particulars.  \"* '\"\"\".'.'~\nM'QUARRIE & ROBERTSON\n r  MO* six\nC&e Satis $rti\u00bb,\nTHURSDAY OCTOBER 13\nWestern Canada Investment Co.\nA\nFAULTLESS\nLOCATION\nImproved ranch situated on the south shore ot the West Arm at\nHarrop; beautiful sandy beach; 4 acrea thoroughly cleared and planted\nwith standard varieties of fruit trees. Two cottages of four rooms each.\nChicken house and runs, root house, lo g stable 3 1-2 acres slashed. Total\nacreage 17 1-3, all fenced, every foot suitable for orchard, almost level, abundant water supply.\nPrice S2800; terms $1000 cash.\nFOR RENT\nA modern Groomed housa Observ atory street, $20 per month.\nThe Western Canada Investment Co.\nP. O. Box 1042\nFire Insurance\nBaker Street\nLowest Rates Best Terms\nNelson, B. C.\nLife Insurance\nHouses\nDesirable residence in good repair, containing seven rooms and\nbath. Open fire place, furnace\nand all modern conveniences. A\nlarge garden with lawn, fruit\ntrees, etc. Within half a mile ot\npostofflce. Furniture If desired,\nwill be Included at a low figure.\nAlso several houses for rent.\nLots\n60 feet, near school and car\nline, Fairview   3300\n120 teet, within half mile of\npostofHce     275\nLand\n2 acres on Stanley St $000\n3-4 acre on Pine St 375\n1 acre Lakeside  425\nm*\nLOCAL MARKETS\nNELSON, October 12.\nFOOLiaTUFr-b.\nLake of Woods,  per bag 2.00\n^toyal Household  2.00\nPurity  Flour    2.00\nGold Drop Flour  1.90\nRobin Hood Flour  2.00\nDAIRV   PRODUCE.\nButter,   creamery, per   lb 3S\u00ae40\nButter,   bulk,   per  lb ...3G@>37ft\nButter, dairy, per lb ao\nCheese,  Canadian,  per  lb 20\nCheese,  Swiss, per lb 83\nPggs, fresh, per doz 50\nEggs,  case, per doz 36\nVEGETABLES.\nNew Potatoes, per lb 03%\nCabbage, per lb 04\ntomatoes, fresh, per lb 10\nLettuce, per lb 15\nDry Onions, per lb 06\nFRUITS.\nOranges, per dot 35 to 60\nBananas, per doi. 40 to.60\nLemons, per doz 40\nPlums, per lb 614^15\nApples,   per  lb 05\nHoney, comb, per lb 2a\nHoney, 1-Ib, Jars  35\nMEAT.\nBeef, wholesale ll to .11%\nFork,  wholesale   17 to .17%\nHutton, wholesale  16 to .17\nVeal, wholesale  14 to .16\nBeef, retail  12% to .26\nPork,   retail    18 to .23\nMutton, retail 15 to .26\nVeal,  retail   16 10.23\nHams,' retail  22 to .28\nBacon,  retail    24 to .30\nLard,  retail   22 to .23\nFowl,   retail    20 to .22\nChickens,   retail  28 to .30\nSausages,   retail    16 to .18\nVANCOUVER 8TOCK MARKET\nReported by MIghton ft Cavanaugh.\nBid Asked\nAlberta Coal  &  Coke    ,   .03% .04\nInternational Coal & Coke .    .81 .70\nOreat West Permanent   126.00 181.00\nNutrKi't   Gold   Mines 83 .86\nRed  Cliff   Mining   Co 88 .99\nB. C. Permanent Loan (A)..128.00'\nAmerican-Canadian Oil ......    -1214 -13%\nB. C. Copper Co   6.26\nCanadian   Cons.  S.  &   K.   ..60.00\nDiamond Vale Coal & Coke..  7.00 9.00\nNicola Valley Coal & Coke.    ... 60.00\nRambler   Caribou 27 .28%\nRoyal Collerles  26% \u25a0'&%\nSouth African Scrip 710.00 740.00\nGRAIN  MARKET\nWINNIPEG, Man., Oct. 12.-Wheat-Oc-\ntober, te\\Ain%: November, 9(%A9fl'\u00bbi, December, 94% A W%; May, 99A99-%. Cash\nclose\u2014No. 1 Northern, 98; No. 2 Northern,\n94*4; No. 3 Northern, 90%; No. 2 Western\noats, 81*4;  flax, 2.40.\nNEW  YORK   MARKET\nNEW YORK, Oct. 12.\u2014Wall street close:\nSouthern Pacific, 116%; Union Pacific,\n169%; Canadian Pacific, 195.\nNEW YORK, Oot. 12.\u2014No markets; Columbus day.\nDESCRIBES REPORT AS\nA  LIBEL ON  PHOENIX\nPioneer  Warmly   Resents   Imputations\nSaid to Have  Been  Cast by\nRev.   Dr.  Chown.\nThe Phoenix Pioneer says: An unscrupulous politician might he pardoned for\nmisrepresentation in an effort to gain a\npoint of vantage, but suoh tactics on the\npart of a religious body for the purpose\nof enlisting sympathy calls for the contempt rather than sympathy from fair-\nminded citizens.\nThe following appeared In the Nelson\nNews of October 1 as a despatch from\nVictoria:\n\"The Methodist church of Canada\nthrough General Superintendent Chown\nhas called the attention of Attorney-General Bowser to the alleged non-observance\nibf license regulations In the town of\nPhoenix. Among Infractions alleged are\nthat the chief of police has been seen to\nbe supplied with drink after prohibited\nInjurs, that the chief of police and magistrate connive at Infraction of the license\nlaw, and that liquor conditions generally\nin town are such as require strict Investigation.\"\nThe whole article is a libel on the city\nof Phoenix and Its officials, and the person responsible for such false statements\nbeing scattered broadcast cannot be regarded as other than malicious.\nThere was a time when Phoenix was\n\"wide open\"\u2014when gambling flourished,\nthe roulette wheel splnned and liquor\nflowed freely\u2014but that day has long since\npassed. Phoenix today Is as law-abiding\na city as there is In the Dominion and\nwe challenge comparison. The license\nregulations are both enforced and observed; the license holders are all reputable men and there are no side-door supplies during prohibited hours.\nThe Imputation on the chief of police\nand magistrate is so far from the truth\nas to be ridiculous. Further comment is\nunnecessary.\nKASLO   ITEMS\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nKASLO, B. C, October 12\u2014J.\nW. Cockle returned laBt evening\nfrom his trip to Creston and Nakusp\narranging for the West Kootenay exhibit In the forthcoming Vancouver apple show.\nThe B. G. G. Co. received a carload of\nfeed today, many chicken ranchers being glad to see lt arrive.\nSteamer Moyie brought In another\ngarge for the' sawmill today. The\nshipments from here have been splendid this season and J. H. Stanland,\nmanager, reports further large orders\nfor lumber from the prairie and expects\nto surpass all previous years shipments.\nHoarseness In a child subject to croup\nIs a sure Indication of the approach of\nthe disease. If Chamberlain's Cough Remedy Is K'ves at onoe or even after the\noroupy cough has appeared, It wilt prevent\nthe attack. Contains no poison. Sold by\naU druggists and.dialers.\nJUDGE'S SPEECH VIOLATES\nTRADITIONS   OF   BENCH\nLONDON, Oct 12\u2014Strong complaint\nIs being made by the Liberal press\nabout the political nature of Judge\nGrantham's speech on Canada, a summary of which was cabled yesterday,\nas being a breach of the ancient traditions of the English bench.\nStrathcona the Spokesman.\nLord Strathcona, representing McGlll\nwill be the spokesman of all British\nuniversities at the centenary of Berlin-university.\nSHORT MEMBERSHIP\nCAMPAIGN PLANNED\nTwo Teams Will Rustle New Members\nfor the \"Y\" Next Week\u2014Literary\nSociety Also Proposed.\nA membership campaign for the Y.\nM. C. A. is being planned and will probably be put into execution next week.\nThe campaign will last not longer than\none or two days. Two teams will be\nchosen, each consisting of ten members\nof the association, one being under the\nleadership of T. D. DeBBrlsay, and tho\nother under the leadrshlp of Alec.\nCheyne. A meeting to definitely arrange details will be held at the Y. M.\nC. A. tomorrow night.\nAnother matter that Is under consideration is tbe formation of a literary\nclub, among the members of the association. Debates and the usual other\nfeatures of such a club would be the\norder, and a mock parliament would\ndoubtless be a part of the winter's program. A monthly luncheon, followed\nby a discussion. Is one of the features\nsuggested. A meeting will be announced at an early date, to take up this\nmatter.\nChamberlain's Cough Remedy has become famous for Its cures of coughs, colds,\ncroup and Influenza. Try It when In need.\nIt contains no harmful substance and always gives prompt relief Sold by all\ndruggists and dealers.\nMinard's Liniment Cures Burns, Ete.\nNOTICE TO CONTRACTORS\nOrand Forks Court House.\nSealed tenders, sunerscrlbed \"Tender for\nCourt-house, Grand Forks,\" will be received by the Honourable the Minister of\nPublic Works up to noon of Tuesday, the\n25th day of October, 1910, for the erection\nand completion of a brick and stone\nbuilding at Orand Forks, B. C.\nPlans, Specifications, Contract, and\nForma of Tender may be seen on and after the 24th day of September, 1910, at tbe\noffice of the Government Agent, Grand\nForks, and the Department of Publlo\nWorks, Victoria.\nEach proposal must be accompanied by\nan accepted bank cheque or certificate Of\ndeposit on a chartered bank of Canada,\nmade payable to the Honourable the Minister of Publlo Works, for the sum of\n$3,000, which Bhall be forfeited If the party\ntendering decline to enter into contract\n\u2022when called upon to do so, or If he fall to\ncomplete the work contracted for. The\ncheques or certificates of deposit of unsuccessful tenderers will be returned to\nthem upon the execution of the contract.\nTenders will not be considered unless\nmade out on the forms supplied, signed\nwith the actual signature of the tenderer,\nand enclosed in the envelopes furnished.\nThe lowest or any tender not necessarily\naccepted.\n7. C. GAMBLE,\nPublic Works Engineer.\nDepartment of Public Works,\nVictoria. B. C\u201e September 2Mb, UIO;\nCHA8.   A.\nBox 225.\nAUCTIONEERS\nWATERMAN   *   CO.\u2014P.   O.\nW. CUTLER, LICENSED AUCTIONEER,\nBox 474.\nPUBLISHERS AND  PRINTERS\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LTD.-\nPublishers of The Daily News; subscription |6 per year by currier; 15 per year\nby mall. Commercial Job printing of all\nkinds neatly and promptly executed. 216\nBaker street, Nelson, B.C., Phone 141.\nHAIRORESSING   AND   MANICURING\nMME. KATHLEEN NOAH, HAIRDRE8S-\niu; and munlcurmii parlors. Room 22,\nK. W. C. block.\ncollection agencies\nw7*cut!!!er^c7>ll^^\nkinds. Returns promptly made. References given. Office 212 Baker street,\nNelson, B.C,\nBOOKBINDING AND RULING\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LTD.-\nAll kinds of oltlce forms ruled and punched tor loose leaf binders. The most complete book binding equipment ln the Interior of British Columbia. 216 Baker\nstreet, Nelson, B.C., P.O. drawer 1119,\nPhone 144.\nCONTRACTORS AND  BUILDERS\nflee Fitting Factory. Brick and Lime\nfor Bale. Office and factory: Carbonate\nstreet. Nelson, B.C. Large quantity of\nshavings, suitable for stable bedding, oan\nbe had for hauling away.\nCARPENTERS AND  BUILDERS\nDOUCETTE AND LAWSON-ALL KINDS\nof Jobbing and bench work done promptly\nand well. Order your storm sash and\ndoor now. Workshop behind Scanlan's\nstore, Stanley street.   P. O. Box 165.\n141-tf\nFURNITURE MAKER\nM. HAWRYCZ & CO.-WE MAKE TO OR-\nder Mission Furniture, Clothes Cabinets, Cosy Corners, Couches, Settees.\nPianos tuned, repaired and polished. Expert staining, varnishing and polishing.\nTelephone orders promptly attended to.\nShop: 417 Hall St.   Tel. 438.\nPRIVATE  MATERNITY  HOME\nNICE LOCALITY AND HOME COM-\nforts. For terms and particulars write\nP. O. Box 763, Nelson, B.C.\nDRESSMAKING.\nMRS. HOW^m^T^nd^MWs\" DANCY-\nBressmaklng and plain sewing; cleaning\nand renovating. Corner Cedar and Observatory.   Box 275. 119-26\nMUSIC.\nWHEN HAVING^YOUR^PIANO TUNED,\nbave It done by reliable men, backed by\na reliable firm. Messrs. Wm, and A, R.\nKilby, the authorized tuners of the Mason\n& Risch Co., for B.C., are now residents\nof this town, and are open to take orders,\nwhich if left at the Mason & Risch agency\noffice, or at 8W Stanley street, will be\npromptly attended to.\nMISS G. HAVILAND PURDY, GRADU-\nate of Mount Allison Conservatory of\nMusic, Sackvllle, New Brunswick. Teacher of Piano, Pipeorgan, Harmony, History of Muslo, etc. Studio, 609 Cedar\nstreet. 103-tf.\nA. P. HUDSON (PUPIL OF HERR VON\nGrodno,    Teacher   of   Pianoforte,    Mel-\n' bourne, Australia). A thorough course\ngiven. Equal treatment given to every\nbranch of the art. Terms reasonable.\nApply either Box 184 or Empire Theatre^ 136-26\nSINGING  AND  VOICE   PRODUCTION\nH. Treby Heale is now prepared to give\ntuition in above. For particulars apply\nH. Treby Heale, care Dally News.    149-26\nHOUSE AND SIGN  PAINTERS\nHARTMAN & BENNETT, house and sign\npainters, paper hangers and decorators.\nShop, Stanley St., next door to B. C.\nTelephone office, Nelson, B.C.\nASSAYERS\nb. w. widdowIonTassayer <pro-\nvlnclal) Metallurgical Chemist. Charges:\nGold, Silver, Copper or Lead, 11, each;\nGold-Silver, $1.60; Silver-Lead, 11.50; Zinc,\n12; Silver-Lead-Zlno, (3; Gold, Silver-\nCopper or Lead, $3.50. Accurate assays;\ncareful sampling, and prompt attention.\nP. O. Box A110S, Nelson, B.C.\nASSAYERS' SUPPLIES\nTHE B. C. ASSAY AND CHEMICAL\nSUPPLY COMPANY, LIMITED, Vancouver, B, C, Assayers' Supplies,\nChemical and Physical Apparatus, Balances and Weights of preolsion, etc.,\nSole Agents in BrltlBh Columbia for the\nMorgan Crucible Company, London, England; F. W. Braun, Los Angeles; the\nBraun-Knecht-Helmann Company, San\nFrancisco; the J. T. Baker Chemical company's Analyzed C. P. Acids and Chemicals; Way's Pocket Smelters; write for\npamphlet describing these smelters. Complete assay outfits furnished at short\nnotice.\nAPPLICATION   FOR   RENEWAL   OF\nLIQUOR  LICENSE.\nNotlee Is herein* given that, on the first\nday of December next, application will be\nmade to the Superintendent, of Provincial\nPolice for renewal of the hotel license to\nsell liquor by retail ln the hotel known as\nthe Castlegar Hotel, situate at Castlegar,\nln the Province of British Columbia.\nDated this 12th day of October, 1910.\nW. H. OAGE, Applicant.\n13-10-10-4W\nAPPLICATION   FOR   RENCWAL   OF\nLIQUOR  LICENSE.\nNotice ls hereby given that, on the first\nday of December next, application will be\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial\nPolice for the transfer of the license for\nthe sale of liquor by retail ln and upon\nthe premises known as the Castlegar Hotel, situate at Castlegar, British Columbia,\nfrom Elenor Gage to W. H. Gage of British Columbia.\nDated this 12th day of Ootober, 1910.\nELENOR GAGE, Holder of License.\nW. H. GAGE, Applicant for Transfer.\n14-10-10-4\nNOTICE.\nIn the matter of Chapter 11 of the British Columbia Statutes, ItlO, and of the appraisement and apportionment thereunder.\nAll persons, or tbeir assignees, who did\nwork or supplied material, including goods\nor merchandise in connection with the actual construction of the grade of the Midway ft Vernon Railway, between Midway\nand Rock Creek, are requested to send ln\na detailed-statement ot their olaims verified by affidavit or statutory declaration te\nthe undersigned. R. T. ORBBN,\nSecretary for Valuators.\nP. o. box hi, Vfctorta, B. o\nPhone, day 86, night XI\nSTANDARD   FURNITURE   COMPANY'!\nUNDERTAKING PARLORS, HS Baker, SL\nR.  S.  BKiORETON.\nFuneral Director and Embalmer\nTbe beat equipped undertaking parlors In\nthe Kootenays, with experienced attendanse\navailable at ail **nura.\nStandard furniture Co.\nNELSON. B.O.\nFOR 8ALE\nFOR SALE\u2014The largest stock of boats\nand paddling canoes In British Columbia,\nthat have only been used a short while\nthis season, at one-third off spring prices.\nSeveral launches from 18 to 85 test, at\nbargain prices. Several of the famous\nPeterborough motor canoes, new and second hand. These are without any doubt\nthe best small boat ever constructed. No\ncraft of their Blse and dimensions can\ncompete ln sea-going qualities, carrying\ncapacity, durability, and gracefulness. Propelled by a 2 horse power engine, they,\nare capable of making between 7 and 9\nmiles per hour, A man of ordinary\nstrength can haul one out on the beach\nwithout any exertion. For further particulars and prices write or call. The\nLindsay Launch ft Boat Co., Box 34, Nelson, B.C.\nFOR SALE\u2014Few small tracts of the best\nland, 5 miles on wagon road, west from\nNelson; school on land.   A. J. Laviolette,\npostofflce  Nelson. 108-tf\nFOR BALE\u2014Baby buggy.   713 Stanley St.\nS\u00bb>*M  147-6\nFOR SALE\u2014Creston, 80 acres fruit land;\nalso Nelson, 15% by 64%, orchard, buildings,  stock and Implements;  cheap.    Box\nB. I., Daily News.         149-6\nFOR SALE\u2014Two-atory house, 6 roomB\nand bath; stone foundation; good cellar; lot 50 by 60; corner Park and Carbonate streets; terms. Apply above address. 1G0-6\nFOR SALE\u2014A good four-roomed house,\nnew; lathed and plastered throughout;\ndouble tier lumber; full basement; veranda; city water; there are four lots\nfenced with property; just outside city\nlimits, Fairview; price $1200, cash $800, balance monthly. Apply B. M\u201e Daily News.\n160-6\nFOR  RENT\nFOR RENT\u2014Housekeeping rooms,   Baker\nstreet, near C.P.R, station.   Apply J. W.\nGallagher, 102 Baker street. 72-tf.\nFOR   RENT-Cottage.\nGosnell, brewery.\nApply\nFOR RENT\u2014Bed Bitting room in private\nfamily suitable for married couple   or\nlady with children wishing to see Victoria\nFair.    Information  Dally News office.\nFOR RENT\u2014A suite of 2 furnished rooms,\nor unfurnished.   Apply Semaphore Cigar\nStore. 134-tf\nTO   LET\u2014Two   nicely   furnished   rooms.\nApply 607 Carbonate. .\nFOR   RENT-Furnlshed    housekeeping\nrooms, and bedrooms.   70S   Hall   street,\nbetween Baker   and   Victoria.. 146-6\nFOR RENT\u2014House,   Victoria street,   between Josephine and Ward; five rooms,\nmodern.   Apply at W. G. Thomson's book\nstore.\nFOR    RENT-Furnlshed    bedroom.      713\nStanley street. 147-9\nFOR RENT\u20143-room flat,  with  bath and\ntoilet: close In.   Apply over Union Grocery, 701 Baker  street,   corner Hall;   entrance on Baker Btreet. 149-6\nFOR RENT\u2014Furnished rooms and board;\ntable boarders also.   Apply 719 Josephine\nBtreet. 151-3\nWANTED\u2014MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED\u2014Large furnished room and\nboard or well-furnished house for man\nwith wife and small family; must be flrst-\nolass and modern. Apply J. R. Meldrum,\ncare Ashdown Hardware Co. 150-6\nWANTED\u2014Young lady desires position as\nclerk   In   store  or  housework.   Address\nC. C\u201e Dally News. 160-6\nWANTED-Would like to hear from lady\nbetween 20 to 30 who ls believer In physical    culture   living.     Address   James  P-\nDollver,  Kaslo.   B.  C. 150-6\nWANTED   AT   ONCE-EXPERIENCED\nBUSHMEN.    WILL PAY   THE   HIGHEST  WAGES  FOR   FIRST-CLASS MEN.\nApply TRAIL LUMBER CO., Paulson, B.C.\n152-6\nWANTED\u2014Man or woman to travel and\nappoint agents for established house.\n$16.00 a week and expenses. State age\nand previous employment. E. McGarvuy.\nMgr., 290 Wellington Street, West, Toronto.\n132-12\nLIVE 8TOCK\nWANTED-Young\nChong,\t\nFOR SALE\u2014Pigs, four months old: price\nJ10.00 each.    H.  Nixon, Perry Siding.\n148-6\nWANTED\u2014To hire a light horse or pony,\ngood worker, for light work, for a month\nor   six    weeks.     Wblverton & Co.,  419^4\nBaker street, Nelson. 161-3\nWANTED\u2014Steady horse for ranch work;\nweight about 1200 pounds.    Apply J. C.\nBalleny, Tarry's, B. C. 161-tf\nLOST.\nLOST\u2014Strayed from house on Carbonate\nBtreet Scotch terrier dog. Resembles a\nbadger, Is stranger to Nelaon and has\nmeek disposition. Please arrest, and notify owner, 824 Carbonate street or Dally\nNews office and receive thanks.\nLOST\u2014Envelope    contatnlsg    check    for\n156.60, probably on one of main streets;\ndrawn In favor of W. Hills.   Finder rewarded.    Return to Dally News  office.\n160-3\nOBSTETRICS\nMRS. KENNY will be pleased to receive\nmaternity patients at her home, Excellent testimonials. 214 Observatory street\nP. O. Box 171 telephone AM.\nEXAMINATION FOR INSPECTOR OF\nSTEAM  BOILERS AND\nMACHINERY.\nExaminations for the position of inspector of steam boilers and machinery, under\nthe \"Steam Boilers Inspection Act, 1101,\"\nwill be beld at the Parliament building*\nVictoria, commencing November 7,1910. Application and Instruction forms must be\nreturned correctly filled In, not later then\nOctober 24, 1910. Salary, 9130 per month\nIncreasing at the rate of |5.oo per month\neach year to a maximum of |i8o.oo.\nJOHN PJflUK,\nChief Inspector ot Machinery.\nMaw Westminster.\nWANT AD. RATES.\nRatea for Want Ads. ln Ths\nDally News are aa follows: One\ncent per word per insertion or\nfour centa per word per week or\nfifteen centa per word per\nmonth.\nIn tbe case of persona not hav-\nlug a regular monthly account\nwith The News, caah must . accompany the order. No departure from this rule will be\nmade. Want Ads. phoned to\nthe office are accepted only under the above conditions.\nCopy for Want Ads. should be\ndelivered to The Daily Newa\noffice either personally or by\nletter to make certain ot correct\nInsertions.\nHELP WANTED\nNEL80lTEM\u00a3umwENT~AGENCY\nC. F. Hutton. Manager\nWANTED\u2014Hookmen, sawyers, swampers,\nteamsters, railroad laborers for sawmill,\nroad graders, sawmill yard laborers, camp\nblacksmith, harness repairer, edgerman,\ncamp clerk and scaler, woman hotel cook.\nHelp of all Kinds\nPromptly Furnished\nTHE WORKINGMEN'8 EMPLOYMENT\nAND REAL  ESTATE AGENCY.\nWANTED\u2014Two teamsters, 945 and board;\n1 thandy with rigging, |50; hookmen, $3;\nlaborers, - carpenters, masons, stock\npicker. for lath mill, young man for\nranch, must be good with team, good\nmilker and all-round ranchman, $35 (or\nbetter) tbe year round; man and wife,\nthoroughly practical, for a banner fruit\nranch, J600 per year, with Bide money for\ntourists' meals, poultry, garden, etc.;\nhorseshoer, ti.\nW. Parker, 312 Baker street.    Phone 283.\nB.C. UNITED AGENCIES, 218 Baker St\nAuctioneers Real Estate\nEmployment Agents.\nBox 232, Phone 391.\nWANTED\u2014Edgerman, sawyers, swampers,\nroadmakers, \"nookmen, teamsters, woman\ncook, girls for housework. WE CAN SUPPLY THE RIGHT MEN FOR THE\nRIGHT PLACES.\nWANTED\u2014MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED\u2014Men and women to learn barber trade ln eight weeks: tools free;\nsecured over 10,000 positions for graduates\nlaBt year; unable to supply the demand;\ngraduates earn $15 to $26 weekly; Catalogue free. Moler System Colleges, 4US\nFront Ave., Spokane, Wash.\nWANTED\u2014A limited number of young\n. ladles to complete class ln practical\nDermatology. A full course Includes Halr-\nUressing, Marcel Waving, Hair Dyeing\nand Bleaching, Scalp Treatments, Facial\nMassage for Removing Wrinkles, Black-\nbeads and Blemishes of the skin, Manicuring and Children's Hair Cutting, Wig\nmaking and hair work in all ita branches.\nGood positions are easily secured by\ngraduates from this College. Course\nopens October 16th. Full particulars , on\napplication to the Secretary, Miss Eva\nPowell, Canadian College of Dermatology,\n723  Pender   Street,   Vancouver,   B.   C.\n137-26\nA SQUARE PE4\nin a Round Holo\nYou may be alright, but if\nyou are in the wrong- position\nyou are like a square peg in a\nround hole. You want a position where you fit.\nThis paper Is read by Intelligent business men, and a\nWant Ad. in our classified,\ncolumns will reach them.\nWANTED\u2014Young  man  desires  work  on\nfruit and poultry farm; good references;\nstate wage.   L Sutton, Brandon. 187-26\nWANTED-By  Foote & Pradolinl, -Revtl-\nstoke, plasterers at once. 138-tf\nWANTED\u2014Yellow plums, alt kinds.   The\nKootenay Jam Company, Ltd. 142-tf\nWANTED-Salesmen. Incorporated company has made $100,000 In last three years.\nDesires to extend field of operation. Salary and commission with chance to become shareholders and directors if satisfactory.   Address Z, C, Dally News.\n144-tf\nWANTED-Poaltlon by experienced  dairy\nman, on farm or ranch; reference If required.   Address X. C, Dally News.     147-6\nWANTED-Toung girl or woman for one\nhour's work each   morning   (2   rooms),\nfamily of two.   Apply Nelson Empoyment\nAgenoy.    *        148-8\nWANTED-Board and rooms for husband\nand wife   and   two   daughters.   Apply\nC. C. C. 146-6\nWANTED-Swampers, hookmen, Bawyers,\nteamsters, etc., for logging camps, at\nSlocan city* also setter, dogger and man\nto repair harnesses at Crescent Valley.\nApply Patrick Lumber Co., Nelson.    MM\nWANTED-Sash and door factory hands\nwanted, men who oan handle machinery\nand lay out work; highest wages paid.\nMarried men preferred. Apply Box O. K.,\nPally News. lff-tt\nWANTBD\u2014To   purchase house  of about\nsix  rooms;   small   cash  payment,   balance monthly.    Please  give  particulars\nto P. O. Box 905.\nWANTED-Farm teamster.   Apply to J. J.\nCampbell, Duntulm Ranch, Willow Point.\n160-tf\nSilver King Hotel\nBaker Street, Neleon, B.C.\nKegular Boardera, lo per week\nRatea: 11.26 per day.\nBaat 25 Cent Meal In the City\nWM. NEUENDORF, Prop.\nNelson Hotel Bar\nBaker Street, Neleon, B. a\nINK 4 WARD, Prop,.\nTry a \"QIN RICKEY\"\nMade from California Lime,  specially\nImported\nFor a cool, satisfying smoke\n  Try a Savannah cigar\nThe Royal Hotel\nMra. L. V. Roberta, Praprletreie\nCor. Stanley and silica at,.\nHatea H.oo and 11.60 per day.\nKootenay Hotel   .\nMR8. MALLETTE, Preprletreae\nA home tor everybody.   Ever, am.\nEK\",06 gl,Ten to tt\u00ab \u2022\"\u2022\"111'* PubK\nSherbrooke House\nNelaon, B. c. ,\nOne minute', walk from C.P H ate.\n^i^SSpaT\"** \u25a0-* *\u2014\nBOYER BROS, Proprletore\nEmpire Temperance Hotel\n(DB2.r',?r..rN.rnX:,,t)\nThe house thoroughly remodelled\n\u00a3,T\"SU ' .ClBaD ro0m-' \u00a3\u00b0Se coE\n\u00a3o.ectty!\"1S9rda!,U-- BMtro<*\n *>\u25a0 OPEN8HAW, Prop,\nBartlett House\nO. W. BARTLETT, Prop.\nThe beat 11.00 a day house ln town.\nA Miner', Borne\nHotel Castlegar\nCASTLEGAR JUNCTION\n^KA11\u00bb,m,(,aerI1' 04oii Plc\"l\u00bb Ground*.\nThe Nelson-RosBland train atoos here\nfor luncheon.\nW. H. GAGE, Prop.\n(Formerly C.P.R. Agent)\nR088LAND\nTg\"J, HOFFMAN ANNEX, BOSSLAND,\nw.Cr?r1? * Snmn' Pr\u00b0M- Centrally\nlocated. European and American plan.\nSf1\"*,'^?' \"\u2022\u00bbv?llBr* \"\"I .nnd U\ncomfortable sample rooms, a special dining room and excellent accommodation,\nat the Hoffman. Baths, bowling allay.'\nsteam laundry. ',   \"\"\"\"\u00bb \u2022\"*\u00bb\u2022\nWANTED\u2014A good modern house to rent\nD. L. Haolaurln, Insnector of Schools,\nNelson. UM\nWANTBD\u2014Men for railroad construction;\nbushmen; axemen; teamsters; steam\nshovel laborers; tie makers; mill laborers;\nswampers. HIGHEST WAGES pall.\nWORK ALL WINTER. JOBS GUARANTEED. THE CRANBROOK AGENCY\nCO., Cranbrook, B. C. 141-11\nWANTED\u2014Offir for <i Interest In Strath-\noona mineral claim: clear titles, etc. Address V. Q\u201e  Dally N.W, UMs\nWANTED-Gedar poles, twenty-five foot\nand. upwards.   Cash paid.   Send stock\nlist with best prices and shipping points\nto CLARKSON BROS., Tmlr, B. C.     152-J\nPHOENIX\nHOTEL BROOKLYN, PHOENIX, B. 0\u2014\nThe only up-to-date hotel in Phoenix.\nNew from cellar to loof. Best sample\nrooms ln the Boundary. Bath room In\nconnection, steam heat Opposite Great\nNorthern depot    JameB Marshall, Prop.\nARROWHEAD\nTSLY,NI.\u00b0.N .?0TSL' ARROWHBAD.-\nKX? ^>J\".enu?n *1,\"> te commercial\nS\u201e\u2122Ju\"L1\u00b0ur'\"t\"- Flr\u00ab \"'ass sample\nrooms.   Finest scenery ln British Colum-\nSSSEffiS\"\"* Upl>*r Arrow lake.   W.\nJ. Ugntburaa, proprietor.\nORAND F0RK8, B. C.\nPROVINCE HOTEL, GRAND FORKS,\n&SZ~!i Xf.W* alld best appointed\n.SS\"\u00bb'S.S*.tat!?or\"' Brl<|\"> SEE\nand offers to the travelling public tie\nbest accommodation obtainable. Th!\nou\"diS3 f.-,'i Mw,\" furnUhSd throuin!\nfJJi IS\" \u201e\"V 0Illy Br\u00ab woof hot.1 in\nthe city.   B. Larsen. proprietor.\nYMIR\nYMIR HOTEL, TMIR, B.C.. MOST MOD.\nSKJ5SS \"\"-\"-date hotel In Vmlr-locatM\nSM* ePPosite d,pot_Best accommi.\ndatlon posslble-Dlnlng room In conneo-\ntlon.   J. B. Bremner, proprietor.\nSTARKEY A CO., WHOLESALE DEAL-\ners In Butter, Eggs, Cheese, Produce and\nFruit Houston Block, Josephine street\nNelson, B.C.\n0R0CERIE8\nA. MACDONALD A CO.-WHOLESALM\n\u25a0 Grocers and Provision Merchants\u2014lm-\nKrt*r\" ,?' T\"M' CoBees, Spices, Dried\nFruits, Staple and Fancy Groceries. Tobaccos, Cigars, Butter, Eggs, Cheese and\nPacking House Products. Office and\nwarehouse, corner of Front and HaU\nstreets,   p. o. Box 1095.   Telephone IB.\nMINERS' FURNISHINGS\nAi MACDONALD A CO.-WHOLEBALB\nJobbers ln Blankets, Underwear, Mitts,\nGloves, Boots, Rubbers, Overalls, Jumpers and Miners' Sundries. Offloe and\nwarehouse, corner of Front and HaU\natresia,   p. p. Box lm.   Telephone as.\nMINING MACHINERY\nWAStHNOTON MACHINERY A 8UFPLT\nCo.\u2014Dealers In Engines, Band and CITS'1** aawmllls, Atklna' Saws, Wood and\nIron Pulleys, Leynar Compressors and\nDrills, Pumps and Hoists. Prompt attention. Reasonable prices. Courteoue\ntreatment   Spokane, Wash.\n\u00bb NOTICE\niT8!\"J?.l\"lc\" ,h** *'\u2022\u2022 *\u2022 *\u2022 Malone and\nA. Treglllus, intend to apply to the Board\nof Licensing Commissioners ot the City of\nNelson at the next meeting held, thirty\ndays after the date hereof for the transfer, to F. E. Ransome and A. Campbell of\nNelson, British Columbia, of the Hotel\nLicense now held by us for the Tremont\nHotel situated ln said elty and being en\n.Iota six i- seven (!) and eight (I) ln\n'block six (\u00ab of the said city of Nelson.\n..Dated at Nelson this 6th day of October,\n1910.\n MALONE A TRBQ1LLUS.\nAPPLICATION FOR RENEWAL OF RETAIL LIQUOR LICENSE.\nNotice is hereby given that, on the first\nday ot December next, application wilt\nbe made to the Superintendent of Provincial PoUce for a renewal of the hotel license to sell liquor by retail ln the hotel\nknown as the Edgewood Hotel, situate at\nEdgewood, B. C, In the Province of British Columbia.\nDated thla _m day of Ootober, UIO.\nW. A; CALDER, Applicant\n THURSDAY OCTOBER 13\n%ht Sail? JieVDSe\nPAOE SEVEN\n\u00b0m\nThe\nRight\nDirection\nto go tor pure,, fresh and reliable\ngroceries Is to make a bee line for,\nour up to date store, where everything lg of the best and where\nqualities are uniform.\nAN APPEAL TO THE FORCE\nof reason will tell you that Inasmuch as we are extremely careful\nbuyers we are naturally careful\nsellers.   Try ub and see.\nCRANBERRIES\nhave arrived; make your jelly now.\nJoy's Cash Grocery\ncorner of Josephine and Mill Streets\nP. O. Box tn Telephone IS\nOwn Your Own Home\nA  ORAND  PROPOSITION   FOR  THE\nWORKING MAN\nUse other people's money to buy\nyour home; then pay lt back ln monthly payments; less than ordinary lent.\nTour money Is not being thrown\naway as fl per cent Interest la allowed\nduring the time the contract ia maturing.' Do not ask others who know nothing about this plan, but come and see\nme. I will be pleased to giro you the\nl| Tory fullest information as well as a\ncopy of the contract.\nIf you hare no lots now, I can show\nyou how you can (buy lots and build on\nthem and so own your own home.\nIf you cannot call, write me. I will\nexplain everything. Numbers have already taken advantage of this Bystem.\nWhy not you.\nR. J. STEEL, Secretary\nHudson's Bay Block\nWe attend to your\nPIAJMB1NQ\npromptly and well\nB. C. Flumbi g & Heating Co.\nVictoria Street, near Opera house.\nTelephone 181\nFOR   SALE\nAT\nA BARQAIN\nOnt One Horsepower Motor\nOne Hall Horsepower Motor\nOan be inspected at any time.\nApply\nTHE DAILY NEWS\n_^__M       Nelson, B.C.\nCarpet Cleaning\n10c  PER SQUARE YARD.\nWork called for end delivered promptly.\nClothes of all kinds cleaned, renovated,\ndyed and repaired.\nGent's Suits Cleaned and Pressed, 76o to\n12: dyed, *3.\nLadles' Skirts Cleaned, $1; Dyed, 12,\nGloves Cleaned, 26c to 50c.\nSpecial rates for hotels, restaurants and\n\u25a0teamen.\n_       Family   and   plain   washing; mangling\n|    work, 26s dosen; rough dry, Ke dosen.\nNelson Steam Laundry\nW1-6W   VERNON   BTREET.\nTelephone 141 PAUL NIPOU, Prop.\nPROFESSIONAL CARDS\nf. C. Oreen   P. P. Burden   A. H. Careen\nGreen Brothers & Burden\nCIVIL ENGINEERS\nDominion and British Columbia Land\nSurveyors\nF. 0. Boi 108! Phone B264\nCM Ward St., Nelson, B.O.\nA. R. Heyland, C. E\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\nTwelve years In the Kootenays\n\u2022ox 478 Kaalo, West Kootenay\nA. L. MoOTTLLOOH\nHydraulle Engineer\nProvincial Land Surveyor\nP. O. Box 41\nOffice Phone BM; residence Phone B74.\nOffice: Over McDermld 4b McHardy\nBaker Street, Nelson, B.O.\nPiano Instruction\nMr. I. 0. Johnson of the Arcade Is\nprepared to accept a limited number of\npupils for tuition on the above instrument. For terms apply P.O. box 848,\nor at 111 Silica street:\nPhone B352\nBox 888\nWaters & Pascoe\nCarpenters and Builders\nConcrete, brlok and (tone work. Shop\nnext elty kail\nSomething to Read\n500 NOVELS\nANOTHER SHIPMENT OP THOSE   STANDARD   NOVELS   JUST\nRECEIVED.\nWe Sell Hundreds Every Month\nEverybody Reads Them\nThey Are Snappy Reading\nThey Are Cheap\nOnly 75c Each\nALL THE LEADING AUTHOR8 ARE  REPRESENTED.\nLook Over the List\nPoole Drug Co. Ltd.\nP. O. Boi 505       :-:       Phone 25 Day and Night\nComer Baker and Josephine Streets\nNELSON'S   LEADING   DRUGGISTS\nThe Real Thing\nNo city made Btuff, no packinghouse brand, but the real, genuine, country made, clean, sweet,\nfresh sausage.   Plump as a partridge, fragrant as thyme, It delights the  eye,  the  palate,  the\nstomach.   It's appetizing, sustaining, nourishing, fattening.   Let's\nhave your orders early and regale yourselves with the genuine\narticle.\nP. Burns (8b Co.\nLtd.\nSSp S_\\_\ns\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\n(Additional local tiewi note* on page H.)\nNelaon encampment No. 7, I. O. 0. P.,\nmeets tonight at 8 o'clock.\nAleck Stewart, the well-known miner,\ncame In Tuesday nlglit Irom a prospecting\ntrip on the lower portion of Summit\noreek.\nThe officers, guards and members of\nthe Ladies of the Maccabees are requested\nto meet at the K. P. hall this afternoon\nat 3 o'clock.\nJohn Harryman, the well-known mining\nengineer, left yesterday for Salmo en\nroute to Sheep Creek, where he will make\nanother general Inspection of the camp.\nRugby enthusiasts are asked to remember the opening practice of the Beason on\nSaturday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. A\nmeeting will follow the practice.\nThe October session of the board of\ntrade will be held this evening at 8:30\no'clock In the board room. Among other\nmatters that will bo dealt with will be.\nthe resolutions from Revelstoke.\nJ. A, Smith has just sold, for Smith &\nHunden, a tract of 151 acres, back of\nCastleffar, to Mr. Crowsten, for caBh, at a\ngood price. ' Mr. Crowsten some time ego\npurchased 41 acrea from Mr. Hirst, of\nCastlegar.\nA Joint meeting of the officers of the\n102nd regiment, R.M.R., and the executive\nof the Nelson Boat club will be held at\nthe armory this evening at 7:30 o'clock to\nmake arrangements for the Joint Hallowe'en dance.\nGrand Forks will exhibit at the National\nApple show at Vanoouver the only carload lot of fruit from the Kootenay, In\naddition to maktng a district exhibit. The\noar will be of apples, but will not be all\nof one variety.\nAll officers and members of local unions are requested to attend a meeting ln\nMiners' Union hall tomorrow evening at\nI o'clock \u25a0harp, to consider a matter of\nImportance. The call is issued by C. A.\nBarton, president, and A. E. Elliott, secretary, of the Industrial Workers of the\nWorld.\nDrs. Rose & Hartln yesterday received\na box of splendid Early Concord and Niagara'grapes and some perfect specimens of\napples from Maurice Charboneaux, who Is\none of the most successful ranchers on the\nPend Oreille river, about 10 miles from\nWaneta. Mr. Charboneaux stated that so\nfar only one frost, and that a comparatively mild one, has yet been felt at his\nranch. He Is gathering a second crop of\nstrawberries which average about half an\nInch In size and are of excellent flavor\nand color. The grapes received by Drs.\nRose and Hartin yesterday are the equal\nIn flavor, size and color of those imported\nfrom warmer climes, The Early Concords,\na grape of \u2022> beautiful full purple color,\nare of a particularly fine flavor.\nBilly Brodie and George Ferguson, who\nleft three weeks ago for a hunting trip\nIn the Lightning Peak district, midway\nbetween Okanagan and Arrow lakes, with\nthe declared Intention of \"grizzly and\ncaribou or bust,\" arrived back In Nelson\nTuesdn** m>ht \"bust.\" They saw not a\ncaribou, nor tracks of any, and their acquaintance with Mr. Grizzly waB limited\nto Inspecting his tracka. They did get,\nhowever, three blacktall deer, and unlimited nnantltles of grouse. The country it-\nfull of blacktall deer, aa the number of\ntracks showed, and on one occasion\nFerguson ran into a bunch of five black-\ntail and was only prevented from bringing down three of them by an untimely\nand Inexplicable attack of buck fever. Two\nweeks of the three were spent above tho\ntimber line, ln the snow, and the remaining week was spent visiting old cronies.\nRnval Hotet. here's your homo tor tho\nwinter.   Beat board ln tho city. IW\nMIbb Olga MacKay Is prepared to resume\nher dancing classes. Apply 912 Vernon\nBtreet 163-6\nGEORGIA W. C. T. U.\nMADISON, Gn., Oct. 12.\u2014A large and\nrepresentative attendance marked tho\nopening here today of the twenty-ninth\nannual convention of the Georgia organlia-\ntlo of the W. C. T. U. The annual reports\nshow a gratifying Increase In membership\nduring the past year.\nPURCHASES CAR\nLOADOF^CATTLE\nBear Breaks    Fruit   Trees In Waneta\nOrchard\u2014Spokane Owners Improving Orchard Lands.\nfS*iei-1al   to  Tne  Dn'ly  News.*\nWANETA, Oct. 12\u2014W. E. Ketchum,\nthe popular station agent here, has\nbeen promoted to the Nelson office of\nthe Great Northern railway company.\nA. Young is in from Trail to do some\nfurther clearing on his ranch.\nGeorge B. Campbell, manager of the\nAnnable Lumber company, has purchased from local ranchers a carload of\nbeef cattle. Mr. Campbell intends to\nmake regular purchases here just as\nsoon as the completion of the Columbia river bridge, enables him to take\nhis cattle in on foot.\nThe many friends here of J. W. Hearn\nof Salmo had a pleasant surprise the\nother day on hearing of his marriage\nto Miss Grutchfield.\nMr. and Mrs, Vroom have issued invitations to their friends to attend the\nmarriage on Wednesday next ot Miss\nVroom to William NeilBon of Fruitvale.\nMrs. E, Adle Is to be congratulated\non taking so many prizes for fancy\nwork in the ladies section at the Nelson\nfair.\nBear Does Damage.\nA bear has been doing considerable\ndamage in William Relth's orchard by\nbreaking off the limbs laden with fruit.\nD. Walmsley and J. Fitzmorris of\nNelBon are ln the valley on a hunting\ntrip.\nR. H. Jamieson, the well known tea\nmerchant of Victoria, has been in town.\nThe Spokane parties owning the\nblock of orchard land at the mouth of\nthe Salmon river came in on today's\ntrain and will look over the property\nwith a view to making improvements in\nthe near future.\nNEWSPAPER  MAN BECOMES\nDEPUTY ATTORNEY GENERAL\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nVICTORIA, Oct. 12\u2014John P. McLeod\nformerly of the editorial staff of the\nTimes this city and latterly engaged in\nthe attorney general's department has\nbeen appointed deputy attorney general\nto succeed H. A. McLean who recently\nresigned. Mr. McLeod is well and favorably known in the city and province\nand Is generally regarded as possessing exceptional qualifications for the\npost which he assumes.\nWILL  REMAIN  IN YMIR\n{Special to The Dally News.)\nYMIR, Oct. 12\u2014The item in yesterday's issue of the News, appears\nto be misunderstood. Clarkson Bros.'s\noffice will remain In Ymir for the present the same as heretofore; lt is true\nthat Roger Clarkson, one of the firm,\nis arranging for his departure for Toronto for the winter, but business will\nbe continued at their office just the\nsame.\nThere is a probability of their head\noffice being removed to Nelson In the\nspring, but their business interests will\ncontinue ln Ymir as usual.\nCONTRACT FOR DEVELOPMENT\nOF NEW TERMINAL\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 12\u2014The Canadian\nNorthern railway has awarded the Initial contract for the development of\nPort Mann aB its terminal port to the\nNorthern Construction company. The\nwork undertaken consists of the construction of a wharf 1000 feet long and\n300 feet deep. The location chosen Is\nat a point where 40 feet of water can\nhe obtained.\nMinard's Liniment     Sieves Neuralgia.\nDEEP-SEATED COUGH\nCURED IN 5 HOURS\nNew Home-Made Syrup\n(Cut this out)\nFrom Boston Press\nProgress in medical compounds never\nceases and now it is stated by a prominent medical man that any deep\nseated cough or cold on the lungs can\nbe actually cured in five hours .by the\nclock. Opium and morphine have been\nresorted to In the past as relief measures. But now it is learned that the\nsystem muBt be treated to rid it of inflammation and congestion. A tonic\nlaxative cough syrup does the work so\nquickly and thoroughly as to be almost\nmagical. \"What heretofore bas taken\nweeks to cure can be accomplished in\nhours. Get this formula filled or mix\nit at home and always keep It on hand;\nOne half ounce fluid wild cherry bark,\none ounce compound essence cardiol\nand three ounces syrup white pine\ncompound Shake the bottle and take\ntwenty drops every half hour for four\nhours. Then take one half to one tea-\nspoonfui three or four times a day until the system Is purified and tones up.\nGive children less according to age.\nOne filling will usually cure a whole\nfamily as the dose ts small.\nWATER NOTICE.\nNotice Is hereby given that an application will be made under Part V. of the\n\"Water Act. 1909.\" to obtain a license In\nthe Nelson Division of West Kootenay\nDistrict.\n(a) The name, address and occupation\nof the applicant. Fred A, Btarkey, ol\nHarrop, B.C., Merchant.\n(b) The name ot the lake, stream or\nsource (If unnamed, the description Is):\nMill Creek.\n(c) The point of diversion; About \u00ab\u00bb\nfeet southwest of Blook 20, Lot 222, Group\n1, Kootenay diBtrict.\n(d) The quantity of water to be applied\nfor (In cublo feet per second); One-quarter\ncuble foot '     ..\nfe) The character of the proposed\nworks:   Dltoh and ilume,\n(f) The premises on which the water Is\nto be used: Let 2 and Blook SA. Block W\nof the west aub-dlvlslon of Lot 122; Uroup\nL  Kootenay dlStrlot\n(I) Tbe purposes for which tho water\nIs to be used:   Irrigation.\n(h) If for irrigation describe tho land\nIntended to be irrigated, giving acreage:\nHow are you going to look\nthts sea.on?\nWhen a man gets so he\ncares nothing about hts personal appearance he ought to\nbe Oslerized.\nOur fall suits and overcoats\nwill please tbe most critical\ndresser.\nThey ought to, for they are\nthe Best Made\nThen we have tbe season's\ncorrect hats and the new creations in toggery\u2014all direct\nfrom the hands of makers who\nhave a reputation for making\nthe best.\nSuits 915. \u00a51.1, up to 935.\nOvercoats 915, 918 up to 928\nAll our outfitting has a good pedigree  and  there's  not a clothes\nrisk when you buy here.\nMEN'S  COAT  8WEATER3\n93, 94, 94.50 and $5.\nColors In navy, maroon, khaki, olive, grays. Some In plain colors,\nsome with colored trimming on front. Special values from special\nmakers.\n'GOOD GLOVES FOR EVERY PURPOSE.\nOur large glove stock is very complete In every detail.   We have\nmen's gloves for all purposes.   The best made.\nEmory & Walley\nThe Hub Furnishing House\n12 acres Lot 3 and Block 6A, Block 20 of\nthe sub-divlslon of Lot 222, Group 1, Kootenay district.\n(I) Area of Crown land Intended to be\noccupied by the proposed works: None.\n(J) This notice was posted on the una\nday of August, 1910, and application wilt\nbe made to tbe Commissioner on the ainu\nday of September, 1910.\nFRED A.   STARKE If,\nNelson, B.C.\nNOTE\u2014One cubic foot per second Is equivalent to 35.71 miners' Inches.\nWATER NOTICE\nNotice is hereby given that an application will be made under Part V. of the\n\"Water Act, 1909.\" to obtain a licence In\nthe Nelson Division of Kootenay District.\n(a.) The name: Jonathan Rogers; address: Vancouver, B. C.\n(If for mining purposes) Free Miner's Certificate No.  41933 B.\n(b.) The name of the lake, stream, or\nsource (if unnamed, the description Is):\nSheep Creek.\n(c.) The point of diversion: about\n6000 feet up from the Junction of Sheep\nCreek and Wolf Creek.\n(d.) The quantity of water applied\nfor (In cublo feet per second): 11.2\ncubic feet.\n(e.) The character of the proposed\nworks: flume and pipe.\n(f.) The premises on which the water ls to be used (describe same): The\nKootenay Bells group of mines.\n(g.) The purpoBBs for which the water Is to be used:   mining purposes.\n(h.) If the water Is to be used for\npower or mining purposes describe the\nplace where the water Is to be returned to some natural channel, and\nthe difference ln altitude between\npoint of diversion and point of return;\nTo be returned to Sheep Creek about\neighteen hundred feet up from the\nJunction of Sheep Creek with Wolf\nCreek, difference ln attitude about 150\nfeet.\n(1.) This notice was posted on the\n1st day of July, 1910, and application\nwill be made to the Commissioner on\nthe 1st day of August, 1910.\n(J.) Olve the names and addresses of\nany   riparian   proprietors   or   licensees\nwho or whose lands are likely to be\naffected by the proposed works, either\nabove or below the outlet: Queen Oold\nMines,   Salmo;   A.   H,   Tuttle,   Ymlr;\nAmalgamated Gold Mines, Vancouver.\nAttach copy of such parts of the Company's memorandum of association as authorize the proposed application and works.\nJONATHAN  ROGERS.\nPer F. B. Morrison, Agent.\nVancouver, B. C.\nWATER NOTICE.\nNotice Is hereby given that an application will be made under Part V. of the\n\"Water Act, 1909,\" to obtain a license ln\nthe Nelaon, B. C, Division of West\nKootenay District.\n(a) The name, address and occupation of\nthe applicant: Geo. F. Motion, of Harrop,\nB.C., merchant,\n(b) The name of the lake, stream or\nsouree (If unnamed the description is):\nMill Creek.\n(c) The point of diversion: About eou\nfeet southwest of Blook 20, Lot 822, Group\n1, Kootenay district\n(d) The quantity of water applied\nfor (ln oublo feet per seoond); One-quarter\ncubic foot.\n(e) The character of the proposed\nworks:   Dltoh and flume.\n(O The premises on whloh the water is\nto be used: Lot 4, Lota B. and c. sub-\nlots of U and UA, Blook SO of the sub\ndivision   of   Lot   222,   Group   1,   Kootenay\ndistrict.\n(g) The purposes for which the water\nis to be used:   Irrigation.\n(h) If for irrigation describe the land\nIntended to be Irrigated, giving acreage:\n25 acres Lot 4, Lots B. and C, sub-lots of\n16 and 16A, Block 20 of the sub-divlslon or\nLot 222, Group 1, Kootenay district.\n(1) Area of Crown land Intended to be\noccupied by the proposed works: None.\n(J) This notice was posted on the 22nti\nday of August, 1910, and application win\nbe made to tbe Commissioner on the ~im\nday of September, 1910.\nGEO.  F.   MOTION,\nNelson, U.U.\nNOTE\u2014One cubic foot per second Is equivalent to 35.71 miners' Inches.\nNOTICE TO CONTRACTOR\nGlenbank  School.\nSealed tenders, superscribed \"Tender for\nGlenbank School,\" will be received by the\nHon. the Minister of Public Works up to\nnoon of Friday, the Uth day of October,\n1910, for tbe erection and completion of a\ntwo-room school building at Glenbank,\nnear Nakusp, in the Slocan Electoral District.\nPlans, Specifications, Contract and\nForms of Tender may be seen on and after\nthe ISth day of September, 1910, at the\noffices of G. ti. Utaruiner, Kflp., iNaKusp,\nSecretary to the school Boara; tne uov-\nernment agents at ivaslo ana iteveistoae;\nand the Department of Public Works, victoria\nEach proposal must be accompanied by\nan accepted bank cheque or certificate\nof deposit on a chartered bank oi uanaaa,\nmade payable to the Hon. tne Minister or\nPubllo Works, for the sum of 9300, which\nshall be forfeited If the party tendering\ndecline to enter into contract when called\nupon to do so, or If he fall to complete the\nwork contracted for. The cheques or\ncertificates of'deposit nf unsuccessful tenderers will be returned to them upon the\nexecution of the contract.\nTenders will not be considered unless\nmade out on the forms supplied, signed\nwith the actual signature of the tenderer,\nand enclosed In the envelopes furnished,\nThe lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted.\nF.   C.   GAMBLE,\nPublic Works Engineer.\nPublic Works Department,\nVlotorla, B. C, September 16th, 1910.\n_____ 132\"23\nVisitors to Nelson will find\nour tea rooms a pleasant place\nfor rest and refreshments at\n\"moderate~charges.\"'\"\"\"\nBreakfasts, Lunches, Teas,\nConfectionery and Fruit.\nAn especially fine line ot\nour celebrated cakes this week\n+     Family    Bakers   and   Confectioners, Cakes. Biscuits\nPastries\nBaker Street Nelson, B.C.\nTelephone 401\nJust Arrived\nthree hundred candle power, four\nhundred candle power, six hundred candle power\nTungsten Lamps\nJ. H. RINGROSE\nPhone A227 P.O. Box 15S\nElectrical Supplies\nStanley St. Nelson, B.C.\nj One of the I\nBest\nGood brick house close in.\nIn fine position on two lots.\nCould rent for $30. House consists of 7 looms and bath with\nusual officos, everything in\nsplendid condition. Price $3000,\neasy terms.\nSee our lists for the best\nbuys in city homes, fruit lands,\netc.\nB. C.  United   Agencies\nReal Estate Brokers\nAuctioneers\nPhone 391 Box 232\n311  Baker St., Nelson\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nMaternity Branch\nPatients are now received at the following rates:\nPrivate ward patients, week $20.00\nSemi-private ward patients, week 15.00\nAddress  applications to  mat-on  at\nhospital.\nCLEANING AND PRESSING\nSuits Called for and  Delivered\nA.  J.  DRISCOLL\nPts ie 355\u2014 Baker Street, opposite the\nOXYPATHV\nNature's  Royal  Road to  Health\nThe Oxygenator, the new curative\nagent, eradicates disease by introducing fresh oxygen Into the body. It ls\nabsolutely harmless and can be operated by any person. It will prevent\nappendicitis, cure rheumatism and Is\nunequalled for women's troubles. Write\nme for particulars.\nR. J.   BUSH\nFruitvale, B. C.\nMade ln British Columbia ..\nRUBBER STAMPS\nSeals, Stencils, Dog Tags,\nBrass Signs, Steel Si amps\nVANCOUVER STENCIL & SEAL CO.\nP.O. Box 793, Vancouver. B.C.\nStocks    Stocks   Stocks\nCan you trade ln any of the following at any price?  If so see\nbids and offers.\nINTERNATIONAL   COAL NUQQET\nMGILLIVRAY COAL NORTH STAR\nRAMBLER-CARIBOO B. C. COPPER\nWe can also buy or sell a South A Mean Warrant.\nE. B. McDERMID\nus for our\nBaku Stteet\nNelson, B. CI\n PAOE EIGHT\n%ht Bail? J&eto*\nTHURSDAY ....... OCTOBER 13 \\]\nFIRE    FIRE\nInsure your property ln the best\nand oldest companies and by doing so you save the right cent.\nFRUITLANDS\n1 \".We havfi; the choicest Improved\nand ijftiirri proved properties for;\nsale In blocks of five acres upwards.!    Prices to suit evreyone,\nCroasdaile, Mawdsley\n&Co.\nBox 621 Baker St., Nelson.\n\"Unequalled for General Use\"\nW. P. TIERNEY, General Sales Agent.\nNelaon, B. C.\nCars shipped to all railway points.\nBulbs for\nFall Planting\nnave arrived. Hyacinths, Daffodils, Lilies, Tulip, Crocus,\nSnowdrops, etc.\nOur bulbs have proved tho\nbest for six years. Call early\nand get your choice.\nMail orders filled promptly.\nWM. RUTHERFORD\nDruggist Nelson, B. G.\nTHE\nEMPIRE\nTonight\n3      NIGHTS      3\nand  Saturday   Matinee\nLiving Pictures and Lecture\nNEAREST THE SOUTH POLE\nwith Lieut. Shackleton and the\nBritish Antarctic Expedition of\n1908.\nThe   finest moving   picture\nproduction ln existence.\nAdults 25c, Children 10c.\nCRANBERRIES\n20c. per lb.\nSWEET POTATOES\n3 lbs. for 25o.\nC. A. Benedict\nGrocer\nGir. Josephine and Silica. Phone 7\nNEISON, B.C\nFOR SALE\nFRUIT\nWRAPPERS\nAll Sizes\nTHE NEWS PUBLISHING CO.\nLimited\n216 Baker St.       Nelson, B.C.\n  ..\u25a0;\u25a0!\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 Jg\n*********** mm rt.\nE. W. Monk's\nResidence\nThe owner has advised us\nthat the above property must\nhe sold within the next 30\ndays. The property consists\nof two and a half lots on Silica\nstreet, between Stanley and\nKootenay streets on which is\nerected a two story and basement frame dwelling, with a\nstone foundation. The house\ncontains three bedrooms and\nbathroom, dining room, parlor,\nsmoking room and kitchen.\nThe rooms are large and airy.\nThe lots are In the best residential part of the city. We\nare prepared to receive and\nsubmit any  reasonable  offer.\nH. & N. BIRD\nNusoft\u00bb B\u00ab C\u00ab>]\nAutomatic Cleaners\nTour home cl'aned and purified without a backache with\nan Automatic Vacuu Cleaner\nthe best yet, newest out\nWe can sell you either the\nhand, electric, or combination\nmachln 3. Bee us about these\nat once.        _   ,u ..L^j^a\nJ! H. ASHDOWNXHARDMRE\nCOMPANY, LIMITED\nNelson Branch\nFLOUR\nWhy use an inferior grade o f flour when you can get the best at\nthe same price.\nPurity 50-pound Sack $2\nJ. A. IRVING & Co. \"\"\"JKf\"\nTHE SEMAPHORE CIGAR STORE AND\nBILLIARD PARLORS\nOur new stock hag just arrived.   Will\ntell you all ahout lt next week.\nBaled Havanas our specialty this week\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\n(Additional local niwi ootea on yea* 1.)\nF. D. Fraser, superintendent of the\nHighland silver-lead mine at Ainsworth,\nwas In the city Tuesday.\nThe Pythian Slaters will hold their regular meeting this evening at 8 o'clock ln\nthe K. P. hall. All members are requested\nto attend.\nA number of coses of Kootenay apples\nwere expressed by the board of trade laat\nnight for Quebec from where they will\nbe aent to England as part of the provincial government display for exhibition at\nthe various apple shows and expositions in\nGreat  Britain,\nPercy Lewis Smith of Bird's Hill, Man.,\nwas married to Miss Gertie Christina Peterson of Nelson yesterday at 6:15 a.m. In\nSt. Paul's manse by Rev. Dr. J. T. Ferguson. The ha-iy couple left on the Kuskanook at G a.m. for their future home at\nMcCall Ferry, Pa., U. S. A.\nMiss Hazel Bohart of Wardner, a pupil\nat St. Joseph's school, who was operated\non for a-Dendlcltis by Drs. Bone, Hartln\nand Hawkey on October 4 at the Koote-\n. nay Lake General hospital, is now out of\ndanger. Miss Bohart was taken ill on\nthe night of Ootober 3 and the doctors decided the next day that an Immediate operation was necessary.     ,\nThe sale of tickets for the Nelson Lawn\nTennis club's dance in the Eagles' hall\nnext Thursday night Indicates that the attendance at this, which will be one of the\nmost important balls of the Beason, will\nbe very large. Mrs, N. F. Kendall has\nbeen appointed to take charge of the refreshments. The committee have obtained\nthe services of Wilkinson's orchestra and\narrangements are being made for the\ndecoration of the hall.\nMrs. Livingston, an Ontario temperance\nspeaker, will address a meeting for women\nunder the auspices of the W.C.T.TJ. at the\nMethodist church at 3:30 this afternoon.\nThe subject wilt be ''A Sohool of Methods.\" A cordial Invitation Is extended to\nevery woman In Nelson to be present.\nThere will be a \"question box\" into which\nmembers of the audience desiring to ask\nthe lecturer any questions.may place written notes. In the evening Mrs. Lwngston\nwill address a public m\u00abetlng at 8 o'^luck\nIn the Methodist church on the subject\n\"The Nation's Call.\"\nLast night the opening meeting of ths\nChurchman's club in connection with Bt.\nBavlour's church was seld In the parish halt\nand took the foim of a whist drive, which\nwas.a great success, being well attended\nby both sexes. At the conclusion Miss\nHorswill was found to be the winner of\nthe ladies* prize, and J. J. Hoadley of tha\ngentlemen's, the booby prizes in either\nclass beln~ won by Mrs. Wilkinson, who\nreceived a pretty baby's rattle, and \"Jo\"\nChamberlain, who was the recipient of a\nminiature baby's feeding bottle. Refreshments  were  served  during   the  evening.\nThe salmon hath charms for J. C. Moen,\nsnoerlntendent of the Mother Lode gold\nmine of Sheep Creek, who arrived in the\ncitv yesterday. Mr. Moen goes out to the\ncreek today, but will be back on Saturday,\nand looks forward to spending Sunday at\nthe pool. If he gets one of the big fish,\nlt will not be his first, for he tells of nn\noccasion when, watching with great interest the efforts of a school of salmon at\nthe coast to Burmount a flume, and noting\nthat their leapings only took them half\nway up. he devised the plan of taking up\na position on the flume with a gunny Back\nheld on two sticks, and succeeded in bagging a large number.\nAT THE THEATRES\nHon. Charles Murphy, secretary of\nstate of Canada, Vice-president Sher,\nman and Judge Peter Groascup of the\nUnited States circuit court.. Political\nand economic subjects were avoided by\nMr. Murphy and the vice-president.\nJudge Grosscup said: \"To establish\nan, enlarged democracy for the future\nthere Is needed a president and a congress who will take up the tariff as\njudicial tribunals take up cases that\ndemand careful and disinterested inquiry Into the facts; a president and\ncongress whose purpose will 'be to re\nconstruct the corporations, those that\nar\u00a9 monopolies, as well as those that\nare not, so that the corporate medium\nof holding property will become as representative of the people as the land\nlaws have become. We must take our\n\u25a0leaders not from among those who in\nthe language of a friend of mine sit on\nthe tailboard of a wagon and do nothing hut holler \"Whoa\"; nor from those\nwho sit with the driver urging him to\n\"whip the horses into a runaway. The\nAmerican people, I believe, are in no\nmood to come to a standstill, nor do\nthey wish a smashup. There need be\nneither.\nAlthough Shackleton was not successfl\nin reaching the geographical pole, it must\nnot be overlooked that a party from his\nexpedition succeeded in finding the magnetic pole.\nThe party of three which set out with\nthis object alBo experienced a series of\nthrilling adventures, and had the narrowest escape of death. They had, in\nfact, at one time given themselves up as\nlost, owing to the Ice having broken away\nand left them with no means of returning\nto the Base. Fortunately they were found\nand rescued by the Nlmrod in the nick of\nOne photo Is actually taken at the magnetic pole, and shows the members of the\nparty\u2014McKay, Mawson (from left to\nright) standing against the Union Jack\nwhich they had holBted. This picture is\nnecessary from a still photo, which was\nexposed by means of a string 7500 feet\nabove sea level. \t\nThese, the moBt wonderful living pictures, by arrangement with the Gaumont\nCo Ltd., London, Eng., also a descriptive\nlecture will be the feature attraction at\nthe Empire theatre tonight, also Friday,\nand Saturday, with special matinee on\nSaturday for children.\nThe program at the Gem Is composed of\nsome excellent feature films. The following is a list of the subjects: \"Kit Carson,\" a fine Bison; \"AsslBted Elopement,\"\na clever Thanhouser comedy. Others rSTOj.\nof a good humorous kind entitled \"The1?\nConjurer\"' and,\"The New Burglar Alarm.\".\nCHARLE*-MURPHY  PRESENT\nAT COLUMBUS DAY BANQUET\nCHICAGO. Oct. 12\u2014At the Columbus\nday banquet of the Knights of Columbus tonight, addresses were made by\nTO   DI8CU38   PUBLIC   HEALTH\nOTTAWA,  Oct.  12\u2014Representatives\nQf the various provincial governments\ninn ain i inl\u00abMV\u00bbi 11 iti tttt i i I i ' \"\"\"\"   ;\nn:\nWedding Gifts\nA .very fine assortment of WEDDING PRE8ENT8 has Just arrived and are on display on our shelves.\nNew Hand Painted China\nNew Intaglio Cot Glass\nNew Sterling Silver Tea Sets    .\nNew Sheffield Plated Tableware\nThese goods are a revelation in design and of beautiful decoration.\nPRICES MOST  REASONABLE     ___.:__..\nDo Not Forget October is\ntbe Opal Month\n1     fi    PA TEW A UT.!. MANUPACTURINCi  JEWELER,\n|.  V. rnlEllAUUC?    WATCHMAKER AND OPTICIAN\n ...II Mill I Illllll\nREGALS\nTo men who know, this\nWord stands for footwear\nsupremacy\u2014smartest style,\nhighest quality, longest\nservice.\nWe sell Regal,\nbecause we\nwant to give\nevery customer\ncomplete satisfaction.\nTHE ROYAL\nR.  ANDREW\nAGENTS.\nProprietor]\nmet here today in conference with the\npublic health and conservation committees of the commission of conserva\ntion under the presidency of Hon, Clifford Sifton, chairman of the commission, to consider various questions\nbearing upon the subject of public\nhealth. Among the subjects to be\nconsidered by the conference are the\nbest method for preventing the pollution of international, Interprovinclal\nand other waterways; international\nand Interprovinclal quarantine, regulations; the relationship of the federal\nand provincial governments to the subject! of tuberculosis; harmonizing of\nthe public health laws and tbe creation\nof a central council of health.\nOFFICES CLOSED\nMONTREAL, Oct. 12\u2014The lateBt de-\nTwo Good Buys\nCARBONATE ST.\u2014No bills to cllm><. A double house, stone foundations, strictly modern; each pa *t contains six rooms and bath. Price\n$4600, one-third cash, balance to arrange.\nSTANLEY STr-Beven room house, two corner lots, very cheap.\nPrice 11700.   Terms: Cash MM, halance easy.\nHouses to rest are scarce.   Make that buy before winter sets in.\nE. B. McDERMID\nBelter Street\nNelion, B.:C.\n10 boxes\nAPPLES\nat $1.10 per box\nStewart (8b Co.\nIf It's from Stewart's It's gtod.\nPOND'S\nNOW IS THE TIME\nto buy your hay supply and protect yourself from a shortage and\nfrom a higher price. We have a\nvery fine stock of timothy hay\nand we expect three cars of choice\nalfalfa to arrive any day now.\nNow ls the time to buy alfalfa.\nS. P. Pond & Co.\nFront st Nelson, B.C.\nPhons 23S\nYou Are Invited\nTo drop into our parlors and\nhave afternoon tea. A nice cup\nof tea and some of our delicious\ncake Is Just the thing you need\nthese  autumn afternoons.\nWo also serve hot drinks of\nvarious kinds.\nChoquette Bros.\nBaker Street Phone 258\nFOR SALE\u2014Ono good team of horses,\nweight \u00a3900 pounda; a cheap team with\nset of harness, right out of hard work,\nweight 2800 pounds, for 1275; very handsome pony mare well broken and used to\nchildren; one thoroughbred York boar pig.\ntwo years old; and pure bred Jersey cow.\nApply by letter to C. W. Lester, Crescent\nValley,  E.  C, or phone B. 171.\nvelopment in the Sheldon case Is the\nissue of two writs of seizure on his\nhouse, stable, and offices on behalf of\ncreditors, A bailiff is now in possession\nof tbe house. Mrs. Sheldon's whereabouts are unknown. It develops tbat\nhe had $10,000 mortgage on hiB house\nin Westmount. The offices were closed\ntoday.\nVANCOUVER DOCTOR DEAD\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nVANCOUVER. B. C, Oot 12.-Dr. A. I*\nKendall, one of the most prominent among\nyounger physicians of the city, died at\nthe general hospital yesterday after a\nlong-continued attack ot typhoid fever.\nHe was a leading member of the Alpine\nclub and has been 111 ever since the summer encamnment organisation.\nRETIREMENT OF MAJ. JAMIESON\nWASHINGTON, Oot 12\u2014Major C. 0.\nJamieson, until recently on duty at the\nWatervliet arsenal. New York, was\nplaced upon the retired list today 1%\naccordance with the law. Major Jamie-\nton ts from Vermont and was graduated- from the (military academy ln June,\n1892. After three years service ln 'the\n16th infantry he waa transferred to\nthe ordnance department tn which he\nreached the grade of major In June,\n190*.\ni)um f gTO\nChicken Chop\n, Fer dry mash or wfet. Contains sf\nerai Ingredients, mixed by formula. I\neludes Beet Meal,\nCrushed   Dry Bone, Crushed    Clai\nShell, Swift's Special' Beef Scraps,\nways on hand, ~. !>!<si\u00bbr i\u00b0 (tja-\nThe Brackman-Ker\nfilling Co., LU\nCREAM\nCEREALS\nMalta Vita, 2 for 25J\nCorn Flakes, 2 for ;-...*3\nCarnation Wheat Flakes, ukt ....5(X\nShredded Wheat, pkt.' 151\nGrape Nuts, pkt, i|i\nPeacock Buckwheat Flour 8(i\nPurity Pancake Flour  2&\n[The Up-to-date Grocers BEttL TRADING COl\nEmpress, large, 9 for 11.00\nSt. Charles, family, 9 for 1.00\nSt. Charles, hotel    .25\nSt Charles, large, 2 tor    .25\nCanada, first family    .10\nSpecial price on case lots.\nGun Pointers\nWe wish to call the attention ot the public to the fact that we\nhave lust opened up a large shipment ot\n Stevens' Fiteaft\nKnown the world over as the best. The Stevens' Pump Gun Is tbe\nnewest In shot guns, and the price Is within reach ot all. Don't fall\nto see our line of Stevens' Shot Guns, Kifles and Pistols. Watch our\nwindows.\nNELSON HARDWARE CO.\nPhone 15 602 Baker St.\nHAMILTON\nWINNING\nSawmill Supplies\nAXES ROPE \u00a3f\"V  OILS\nSAWS PEAVIES WASTE\nCHAIN CANT HOOKS PACKING\nLeather and Rubber Belting, all slits\n* We carry a full line ot sawmill and\nlogging supplies and can make prompt\nshipments from stock.\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co., Limited\n1NEL80M. B. C.\nWholesale Retail\nTOIONTO\nYANC0UVEI\nTHE STORE OF ftUAUTY\nWholesale and Retail Grocers\nEye\nOpeners\nRead\nThem\nPlease\nSt. Charles Cream, hotel else, per case $5.50\nSt. Charles Crea m, hotel else, per tin 25\nSt. Charles Cream, family else, per case  5.20\nSt. Charles Cream, family size, 9 for   1.00\n1 gal. crock ot plcWes for   90\nOld Dutch Cleanser, per tin    .10\nBkg. Soda, per 1 Lb. packet  \u2022 10\nGrape Nuts, per packet  15\nShredded Wheat per box  , 15\nAbove prices good during October.-\t\nP. O. Box 54    A. S. HorSWill     Phone 10\nAre You Interested?\nIn the matter ot writing paper, It lo we would be pleated to have\nyou come ln and look over our Uses, at we consider onr paper and our\nprices the best ln B.C.\nCanada Drug & Book Co., Ltd. mm\nNelson's Kodak Supply Hesse\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1910_10_13","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\/1.0383844","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1910-10-13 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1910-10-13 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. 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To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}