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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":" i\ni\nj*?\nEIGHT PAGES-\n50 CENTS A MONTH\nCLASSIFIED ADS\nI CENT A WORD\nVOL. 10\nNELSON. B. C. TUESDAY MORNING. OCTOBER 17,1911\nNO. 158\nInitial Work on Lloyd George\nScheme Colossal\nACTUAL YIELD LESS\nTHANlSIX THOUSAND\nEnglishlConservatives Gleeful\nat Exposures in Inland\nRevenue Report\nLONDON, Oct. 16\u2014The Unionist\npress is seized with glee over the report of the commissioners of Inland\nrevenue, showing how Lloyd George's\n1909 budget is operating with regard\nto the land tax. The interest and revenue report now shows that there are\n(11,000,000 hereditaments of different\nplots of land to be valued.\nFor this work a veritable army of officials has been instituted. There are\n172 permanent civil service officials,\nwith aggregate salaries of '$3'88,000*.\n' with 1,476 assistants of various, kinds,\ndraughtsmen, technical assistants and\nothers hringing the total salary and\npayroll up to the estimated amount of\n1,408,000. To this there is to be added\n$25,000 for office accommodations.\n1 The report gives the hereditaments\na value of $309,000. The actual yield\nin revenue so far has been $5,810. At\nthe present rate of progress it is calculated that the work will require 29\nyears at a cost of $40,000,000, but since\nMarch the number of officials has been\n\"considerably augmented.\" The increased number of first class appraisers adds $68,750 to the yearly salary\nlist.        gf H*5\nProperty Values Shrink\nIt is now pointed out that the famous budget, which started the recent\nparliamentary revision, says that all\nhereditaments owned by statutory companies, such as railroads, shall make\nnew valuations in 1914. The report\n_ ali^shnwj*-}3 marked shrinkage in the\ntahjL&\u00a7 of; estates passing to new owners by the death of former ones. In\n1906 the total. value of such estates\nwas \u25a0 \u00a3298,000,000: In 1909 it had\nshrunk to \u00a3283,000,000, and in 1910-11\nto \u00a3272,000,000.\nThe budget also miscalculated the\nnumber of the \"very rich\" liable to\nsupertax. There were 30,829 forms issued by the end of the\" year ,but only\n10,257 cases were disclosed as liable\nto pay. the additional impost. The total income reported by these is \u00a3128,-\n992,000 and the amount of the supertax is \u00a32,'458,0Q0. 'From the \"very\nrich,\" that is those whose incomes are\nover \u00a325,000 a year, and who pay 60\ncents on the sovereign, the income tax\n'is shown to be slightly over \u00a310,000,\n000.\nKOOTENAY'S  MEMBER ON\nWAY HOME FROM COAST\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 16.-A. S. Goodeve,\nM. P., is here from Victoria en route\nhome. He exchanged congratulations\nover the recent victory with John Stan\nfield, M. P. for Colchester, N. S. He is\na manufacturer at Truro and in the\nlak parliament was chief Conservative\nwhip for the maritime provinces. Recent\n\u2022despatches state he is likely to succeed\nGeorge H. Perley as chief whip, or become speaker of the new -house. He made\na flying visit to the coast and left tonight for the east.\nFIVE  SLAIN   IN  TERRIBLE\n\\   FASHION   BY UNKNOWN  MAN\n{ELLSWORTH, Kas., Oct. 16\u2014William Showman, his wife and three\nchildren were slain Sunday night as\nthey slept in their homes here. The\nfeatures of all the victims were bat\ntered beyond recognition, the baby's\nhead being blown off. There is no\nclue to the perpetrators.\nWORK STOPPED ON\nI CONTRACTS RUMOR\n\u25a0r\nReports to  be  Made  on Some Jobs\nGiven Out by Defeated Government\n\u2014Terminal at Quebec\nlOTTAiWA, \u25a0 Oct. 16-hHon. Frank\nCochrane, minister of railways, could\nnot be seen tonight in regard to the\nreport from Winnipeg to the effect\nthat the contractors on division \"F\"\nof the Grand Trunk Pacific had been\nordered to7stop work. At the department of railways it was stated that\nno such order had been sent out.\nIt is said, however, that the minister has ordered a cessation of work\non a number of contracts let since\nSept. 21, including the contract for the\nGrand Trunk Pacific terminal station\nat Quebec, some shops at Winnipeg,\nand a number of stations. This action\non the part of the minister is due to\na\" destre to have reports made on them\nby ciiicials of tho department and also\nto the fact that there has been no .parliamentary appropriation for these expenditures.\nSETTLEMENT TODAY\nOR TOMORROW\nLETHBRIDGE, Alta., Oct. 16.\n\u2014Representatives of the miners\nand operators of the Crow's Nest\npass are in conference today. It\nis stated on reliable authority\nthat the announcement of the\nsettlement of the strike can be\nexpected tomorrow or the next\nday.\n11 Charge of Sending Threatening Letters Before Jury\nWAR  BETWEEN  CITY AND\nPOWER CO. WEAKENS STOCK\nTORONTO, Oct. 16\u2014The Globe says:\n\"On the apparent outbreak of hostilities between the city of Winnipeg and\nthe Winnipeg Electric Co. over the\nsupply of light and power, the stock\nhad a weaker turn. Bids at one time\ndropped to 239, but there was no\nstock for sale under 242. The negotiations for the sale of the plant to private interests are said to be still in\nprogress and have gone so far as to\nreach an agreement as to the price..'5\nDUKE DONATES.\nOTTAWA, Oct. 16.-\u2014The Duke of\nConnaught today sent a contribution\nof $25 to Christ .Church cathedral toward the Sunday school fund, following his attendance at the children's\nSunday service at the cathedral yesterday.\nBETTER TO LYNCH\nTHAN TRY M'NAMARA\nThis is Sarcastic Observation of Counsel at Los Angeles Trial\u2014Jury\nFarce Continues\nLOS ANGELES, Cal., Oct. 16\u2014The\nexamination of talesmen was the only\nbusiness occupying the attention of\nthe court in the McNamara murder\ntrial today. Nelson, the talesman over\nwhom some difficulty has arisen, today admitted that he believed the\nTimes building was blown up by dynamite* and had his own opinion as to\nMcNamara's guilt and by this* admis\nsion it was finally decided that he\nhad disqualified himself. John W.\nRoberts, real estate dealer, was examined as a. talesman without any defence as was al\u00a3o Robert Blain, a carpenter.\nIn the address of Attorney Scott, the\nopinion was expressed that it would be\nbetter to lynch McNamara than to try\nhim, an affirmation which so agitated\nfour spectators in court that they had\nto be ejected.\nSEAT FOR WHITE IN\nEAST  MIDDLESEX\nLONDON, Ont, Oct. 16\u2014It is announced that a meeting of the executive of the East Middlesex Conservative association will be held this week\nwhen the matter of opening up the\nconstituency, to give Hon. Mr. White,\nminister of finance, a seat, will be\ndealt with. The Free Press says that\nthe name of Mr. White will be favorably received and that the farmers\nare taking no notice of the fuss beini\nraised by a \"few interested parties in\nToronto.\" fcvSt\nIt is also claimed that the Liberals\nwill not put a man in the field and\nMr. White will be elected by acclamation. If the seat is opened up Peter\nElson will likely go to the senate.\nLIFE   TERM   FOR   INDIAN\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nVANCOUVER, B.C., Oct. 15\u2014Eneas\nMack, an Indian was found guilty of\nmanslaughter at the New Destminster\ntrial for the murder of William Bernard, an Indian. He was sentenced by\nChief Justice Hunter to imprisonment\nfor life.\nMUST ADMIT TO\nIMPERIAL COUNCILS\nDay Has Come When Overseas Dominions Should be Partners in Government of Empire\nLONDON, Oct. 16\u2014The Earl of Dudley, first governor general of the Commonwealth of Australia, speaking at\nKidderminster said:\n\"The day has come when the overseas dominions must be admitted as\npartners in the councils of the empire.\nWe must never relax our efforts to\nbring about closer co-operation. Upon\nsuccess along such lines eventually depends. Britain's existence as a first\nclass power.\"\nLONG INDICTMENT!\nBY PROSECUTION\nGrand Jury Returns True Bills\nin All Cases on\nDocket\nNEW BRUNSWICK CABINET\nMINISTERS  SWORN   IN\nFlemming is Premier; Grimmer, Attorney General; McLeod, Provincial\nSecretary;   Morrissey, Works\nFREDERICTON, .N.B., Oct. 16\u2014The\nFlemming government was sworn in\nthis afternoon as follows: Hon. J. K.\nFlemming, premier and surveyor general; Hon. W. C. H. Grimmer, attorney general; Hon. H. F. McLeod, provincial secretary; Hon. John Morrissey, public works commissioner; Mr.\nLandry, agricultural commissioner;\nHon. Robert' Maxwell and J. A. Murray\nwithout portfolios. The solicitor generalship is not filled.\nTrue bills were returned by the\ngrand jury at the first day's sitting of\nthe assizes yesterday in all the three\ncases on the docket. In Kex vs. Far-\nrington, the accused is charged on two\ncounts with shooting with intent to do\ngrievous bodily harm. The first count\non the indictment, .that of shooting\nwith intent to kill, was returned as .a\n\"no bill.\" In Rex vs. Hoffman, in\nwhich the charge is theft and having\nstolen goods in possession, and in Rex\nvs. Watkihs, where the charge is sending a threatening letter, the jury returned true bills on the indictments as\nprepared by the prosecution. Mr. Justice Clement presided and Fred C. Mofc\nfatt acted as crown prosecutor.\nThe grand jury consisted of A. S.\nHorswill, foreman; J. E. Annable, Leslie Craufurd, Frank Fletcher, John.\nHamilton, Jhmes Johnstone, A. G. Lambert, W. J. Meagher, J. S. Munro, William Rutherford, F. A. Starkey and E.\nB, Stevenson of Nelson and.R. W. Gri-\ngor of Rossland.\nTo Consider Interests of Society.\nIn directing the grand jury nis lordship said that he-was happy to see that\nthe criminal docket was so light. There\nwere only three bills to place before\nthem and none of these was of a very\nserious character. It was the accepted custom in criminal trials to give\nthe accused the benefit of any reasonable doubt. But -it was not the function of the grand jury to try the cases;\nthey had to decide whether it was for\nthe interests of society that the accused should be placed before the petit\njury, and it there were any reasonable\ndoubt it was the duty of the grand jury\nto give the benefit to society.\nAncient Usefulness Outlived.\nAfter the bills had been returned his\nlordship, instructing the grand jury as\nto the powers with which they had\nbeen endowed by an old statute of visiting all buildings supported by public\nmoney and of making such presentments upon any subject of public interest which they might think fit, sad:\n\"In my opinion the grand jury'insofar\nas this other work which they may\nperform, has outlived its usefulness.\nBut the field is wide open and I will\nsee that any presentments which may\nbe made are forwarded to the proper\nquarter.\"\nFarrington, who is being defended\nby W. B. Farris, pleaded not guilty and\nwill probably be tried today. Hoffman\nentered a similar plea and said that he\n-did not wish to be represented by\ncounsel.\nMotion to, Quash Fails.\nDirectly Watkins, who is on trial\non a charge of sending threatening letters. to;A. Posey of Coal Creek, took his\nplace at the bar A. M. Johnson, who is\nacting for the defense, moved that the\nindictment be quashed on te ghrountts\nthat the offense committed, if any,\ntook . place outside the jurisdiction of\nthe grand jury which had returned the\ntrue bill and that the crown had ,acted\nimproperly in placing in the indictment a number of the threatening letters alleged to have been written by\nthe prisoner before these documents\nwere proved. He argued that the jury\nmight be prejudiced by hearing this\nindictment read. His lordship ruled\nagainst Mr. Johnson and the indictment was read to the jury.\nFirst Letter.\nThe indictment is probably the longest that has ever been read in a British\nColumbia court. It contains 14 counts\nand is over six foolscap pages in\nlength. In it are set forth a .number\nof letters and extracts from letters\nwhich the prisoner is alleged to have\nwritten and in which. the alle*\nthreats are contained. The first letter\nis addressed to A. Posey, Coal Creek,\nand is dated Vancouver, April 3, 1911.\nIt is as follows:\n\"You evidently don't like the tone\nof my last letter as you havn't answered it. Now I dont care so much\nabout hearing from you; but I don't\nlike for a man to get hufed at me on\naccount of a woman. I treated you\nfair and square and though I knew\nwhat was going on I let you alone.\nNow Mamie is still my wife and I am\ncoming up there again in a*few weeks\nso you had better get her a divorce. \\t\nI come up there and find you living\nwith her and she hasn't got a divorce\nI will kill you on sight; Now don't\nthink this is a joke for you .did me\ndirty and revenge will be lawful and\nsweet; but I would rather you have\nher get a divorce at once than to shoot\nyou; but one or the other will certainly\nbe done. No more at present. Hoping\nto retain your respect, I am yours ir\nearnest,\n(Signed) \"N. R. WATKINS.\"\n\"Please write and let me know what\nMOB SACKS CITY\nHALL   AT   ROME\nROME, Oct. 16.\u2014Believing\nthe government intended to poison the cholera victims held in.\nquarantine, a mob tonight\nsacked the city hall arid then\n\u25a0 burned it. The mayor, whom\nthey sought, j\nyou intend to do as 1 don't care to take !\nyour life if you put in for that divorce\nand marry at once.\"\nMade Mamie Drunk.\nEpistle No. 2, which the prosecution\nleges was sent from Vancouver by [\nWatkins to Posey, runs:\nI received your letter today and answer at once. Now if you are telling\nme the truth which I dont believe you\nare, you are safe enough as far as I:\nam concerned, and I wouldn't have said\nanything about you living with her\n(For God knows I dont want her) if\nyou hadn't got huffy; but now if I do\ncatch you with her, you know what to |\nexpect, if you are going to not heed \\\nthis your blood be on your own -hands\nfor I mean every word I have said, as\nfar as me not supporting Mamie, I did |\ntill you butted in and kept her always\ndrunk. I hope that fellow will take her\nto N. Y. or some other foreign part. |\nWhatever you do dont. think I am joking for your days are numbered if 11\nfind you with Mamie and\/l will be up :\nthere soon.\"\nThe next letter is said to have been\nsent by Watkins to Posey'from Mid-!\ndlesboro, B. C. An extract in the indictment reads:\n\"If you keep on living with my wife\nafter all the warning I have given you\ntill I come up there and kill you, you\nhave only yourself to blame.''\nPosey Called Home Wrecker.   -\nAnother letter dated Middlesboro is\nin the same strain. The next extract,\nwhich is alleged to have been sent by\nWatkins to Posey-from Merritt is:\n\"If* you have any earthly affairs to\nsettle up before you leave this world\nit is time you got busy for vour time\nis short if I catch you with Mamie.\"\nThis extract is also from Merritt:\n\"It appears to me as though you are\ncrazy and unless you keep away from\nmy wife there will be one house wrecker less the day I see you. If you are\nwith my* wife when I arrive, Doctors\nwont do you any sood.\"\nBeauty and  Loving  Disposition\nThe last letter in the indictment is\nallleged to have been written by Watkins to his wife. It Is dated Merr tt,\nAug. 15 last:\n\"My Dear Wife\u2014I know you are\nsurprised to get this letter, but I am\na fair man and^ifeiieve in giving a\nsquar deal, though you made me very\nmiserbal on account of my great love\nfor you and though I know I can\nnever be happy again without you I\nam willing to'do all I-can to help you\nget a divorce. While, I have no notion of ever marrying again as my\nlove for you is so sacred to me; you\nwith your beauty and loving disposition may at any time marry quite happily and possibally rich. So please go\nand consult those lawyers whom you\ntried to scar me with and ask them\nwhat a divorce will cost if you can\nprove the charge of non-support, cruel\nand unhuman treatment and desertion\nand let me know and if it isnt too\nmuch I will pay half .of the cost if\nyour man will pay the other half which\nI am certain he will do if he loves\nyou and loves his life for I intend to\nshoot him dead if I ever find him in\nthe same house with you unless you\nhave a divorce from me.\n\"Now Mamie, whatever you intend\nto do please answer this letter and\nlet me know what you think about the\ndivorce proposition, Remember I have\nno selfish motive in asking you to do\nas I say. I just simply want to do\nthe squar thing by the wife I promised\nbefore God and man to love and cherish. Hoping to hear from you soon as\npossible, I am.as ever;\n\"Your loving husband.\"\nThe members of the jury hearing the\ncase are J. M. Ludwig, Lome Stewart,\nAlex. Cheyne, G. G. McLaren, G. W.\nHale, L. H. Poole, William Batchelor,\nW. H. Houston, Alfred Bunker, L. K.\nLarson, John Cooper and Thomas\nBrown, foreman.\nCourt Motions\nC. R. Hamilton, K.C., was gradted an\napplication for foreclosure in the Bank\nof Montreal vs. Campbell and the Bank\nof Montreal vs. Harris. Judgment\nwas reserved in an application by Mr.\nHamilton for confirmation of sale in\nthe case of Barrow vs. Topping.\nFred C. Moffatt, acting for the attorney general, made aplication for an\norder for the holding of civil assizes\nat Fernie on Oct. 30, which was\ngranted.\nCOL.  ROPER  DEAD\nOTTAWA. Oct. 16\u2014The death occurred here today of Lieut. Col. S. C. D.\nRoper, formerly commanding officer\nof the Governor General's' Foot Guards.\nDeceased was 63   years old.   I\na OCTOBER. 17, 1911. \u2022\n\u2022                           \u00bb\na Coupon No. 2. \u2022\n\u2022 This  coupon, with  one from \u2022\n\u2022 each of the other issues of The \u2022\n\u2022 Daily News of the week ending *\n\u2022 Oct. 14, and 10   cents   entitles \u00ab\n\u2022 the holder to a photogravure \u2022\n\u2022\u00bb reproduction of the great his- a\no torical picture \"Founders of the \u00ab\nt Dominion.\"   If pictures are to \u00ab\n\u2022 be mailed 5 cents must be ad- \u00bb\n\u2022 ded to cover postage. \u00bb\nGovernment Loses Gunboats\nOff Hankow,\nIMPERIAL SOLDIERS\nDESERT MANCHUS\nArsenal in]Hands of Rebels\nTurning Out Arms and\nAmmunition,\nSAN FRANCISCO, Cal., Oct. 16\u2014\nNews of the first engagement between\nthe Chinese revolutionists and the imperial forces was received here today,\na cablegram to the Chinese Free Press\ngiving an account ofcthe disabling of\nthree government gunboats by the\nrevolutionists near Hankow yesterday.\nThe boats destroyed were the Chor.\nKun, the Chor Geung and the Chor\nChay. Two other boats of the flotilla,\none of which carried Sui Ching, viceroy\nof Pu-teh province, escaped. It is reported today at the local headquarters\nof the revolutionary government that\n\u20221,800 men under Gen. ChingPiao' revolted and joined the revolutionaries.\nFrom Hangwein it was reported that\ntroops numbering 10,000 came over to\njoin Li Yuen Hung, commander of the\nrevolutionary army.\nBritish Chinese Interested\nThe Chinese National association has\nwired Secretary Knox as follows: \"The\nChinese National association, representing four-fifths of the Chinese residents of the United States, British\n)Columb|ia and Mexico, earnestly request the United States best offices to\nmaintain or preserve the neutrality of\nthe powers toward the revolutionary\nstruggle now ift progress in China in\norder that the nation in its entirety\nmay be preserved and another government established.\"\nControl Many Provinces\nAnother cablegram was received by\nthe Free Press today from Shanghai.\nIt read as follows: Although the Pekin government has strictly prohibited\nthe sending of news' of the rebellion\nfrom the seat of the disturbances\ncomes news of a serious nature, wh ch\nshows that the days of the Manchu\nregime are numbered. The revolutionary volunteer army is occupying several districts of the province of Sze-\nchuen. The imperial army of Honan\nis being sent south after having met\nthe-revolutionists. The railway guards\nhave rebelled against their officers\nand have been returned to. their former locations. Three thousand of the\nimperial soldiers joined the revolutionists. Three ship loads of foreign\nrefugees, consisting of women and\nchildren have just arrived from Hankow. They report that the revolutionists have complete control in Hankow,\nSan Yang and Wu Chang and are organizing the administration of the\ncities in those localities.\nTwo   Imperial  Warships Sunk\nGen. Lie Yuen Hung, a revolutionist\nleader, is leading 20,000 picked soldiers\nagainst the imperialists. The Hen-\nyang arsenal in the hands of the rebels is rushing work day and night *\nting out ammunition and arms for the\nrebel army.    .   .\nKi Fang Shi, opium collector of the\nprovince of Yen-sze-chang and treasurer of Yen-kow, has been kidnapped\nby the rebels.\nTwo imperial warships near Hankow were destroyed yesterday by the\nguns.in the fores in Wu-chang. This\nmakes three warships destroyed |by\nthe rebels. * Yuen Shi Kai has refused\nthe appointment of viceroy of the province of Shu-peh and Hunan, and Sen\nchun-hsuen has resigned from his post\nas military commander.\nRun on Native Banks.\nLONDON, Oct. 16\u2014A dispatch to the\nMorning Post from Shanghai says\nthere has been a run on native banks\nthere, but up to the present only one\nbank has failed to meet the demands.\nThe foreign banks have sent $5,000,000\nto Hankow to help the Chinese bank\nthere. Banks everywhere are sending\ntheir silver to Shanghai. Every steamer arriving in Shanghai is crowded\nwith refugees.\n\u25a0 The Chinese officials say that owing\nto the flight of the native operators\nfrom Hankow it is impossible to forward messages. It is suggested that\nthe powers insist that the telegraph\nlines at Hankow be placed under foreign control.\nATTORNEY GENERAL CHARGED\nWITH BREAKING BYLAW\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 16.-Hon. W.\nBowser, author of the provincial auto\nlaw, was himself charged in the police\ncourt today with a breach of the Vancouver street bylaw in leaving his auto\nstanding in the street for a longer period\nthan ten pjinutes. A student from the\nattorney-general's office explained that\nMrs. Bowser was using the auto shopping,\nand that she was not acquainted with the\nexactions of the civic enactment. The\ncase was dismissed.,\nSENATOR LAFOLLETTE\nINSURGENT CHOICE\nCHICAGO, Oct. 16.\u2014Two hundred Progressive Republicans, in\ntheir first national conference\ntoday, endorsed the candidacy of\nSenator Robert M. La Follette,\nof Wisconsin, for President and\ndeclared in favor of a direct primary as a means for the expression of a presidential choice.\nWINNIPEG MAN HELD\nFOR  EMBEZZLEMENT\nMINNEAPOLIS, j Minn., Oct. 16\u2014-N.\nC. Keats, bookkeeper for Ryan & Co.,\nof Winnipeg is held here in the police\nstation. The Winnipeg police want\nhim on a charge of embezling $1,500\nfrom his employers. He was arrested\nSaturday by a detective who had arrived the day before. He recognized\nhim on the street. Keats admits his\nidentity.\nNOT   MOBILIZING   ON   FRONTIER\nROME, Oct. 16\u2014The Italian government emphatically denies the report\nwhich has been given currency that*\nItaly is mobilizing on the Austrian\nfrontier. Reports from Cyrenecia estimate the total number of Turks in that\nterritory at 500. A proclamation issued prohibits the importation of arms\nand grain.\nTURKEY AND ITALY\nSTILL FAR APART\nChances  of  Settlement Considered  to\nBe  Very   Unfavorable-\u2014German\nAction in China.\nBERLIN, Oct. 16.\u2014The outlook for h\nsuccessful intervention to bring to an\nend the Turko-Italian war is less favorable, according to a semi-official statement today. Italy has yielded to popular opinion at home and is no fcnger\nwilling to concede a Turkish suzerainty\nfor Tripoli, while on the other hand\nTurkey is not willing to surrender\nTripoli unconditionally because of the\ninternational dangers that would be involved by sucn yielding on the part of\nthe government, jj It is impossible for\nother powers to* negotiate definitely\nwith Constantinople in the absence of\na settled government truce. Although\nyesterday's report that the emperor\nhad summoned the Italian ambassador-,\nSignor Pansa, to his majesty's hunting\nlodge in Prussia for a conference of\nthe political situation proves to have\nbeen incorrect. The ambassador did\nhave an extended conference with the\nGerman foreign minister, Heir von\nKiderlin Waechteir. Today the emperor detained Chancellor von Beth-\nmann-Hollweg at his hunting lodge in\norder that they might discuss the\nTurko-Italian 'situation.\nThe Chinese situation is almost as\ndelicate a one and no surprise would\nbe felt here if it caused international\nnegotiations to determine on joint action by the powers. A German cruiser\nand a torpedo boat have sailed for\nHankow by way, of Nanking. The commander of the German gunboat Tiger\nreports from Hankow that the American admiral has assumed command of\nthe foreign warships at Hankow, the\nJapanese admiral Kawashima continuing at the head of the foreign land\nforces.\nPacific Attempts Fail.\nLONDON, Oct. 16\u2014The Chronicle's\nVienna correspondent. declares lhat all\ndiplomatic terms made to bring about\npeace have failed utterly. Italy has\ninsisted [upon the unconditional annexation of Tripoli and Cyrenecia and\nrefuses to give Turkey financial compensation. Another attempt at peace\nintervention, says the correspondent,\nmay be made later.\nDISMISS MEN FOR\nREFUSING TO SIGN\nWinnipeg Saddlery Company is in Dispute with Employees Over Drastic Resolution\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 16\u2014The trouble in\nthe Great West Saddlery Co. which\nturned out ten of its employees last\nweek for refusing to sign a drastic\nset of resolutions, is of more importance than at first thought, as more\nemployees have been turned --out for\nsimilar cause. A mass meeting was\nheld at Trades Hall last night for ||\npurpose of preparing a statement of\nthe case for presentation to the department of labor at Ottawa. Accompanying the statement will be a warning\nto the effect that the company may import foreign labor to replace the men\nlocked out.\nCHOATES  MARRIED  FIFTY YEARS.\nLENOX, Mass., Oct. 16\u2014Joseph H.\nChoate, the former ambassador to\nGreat Britain, and Mrs. Choate today\ncelebrated their golden wedding anniversary at Naumkeag, their country\nplace in the Berkshires, surrounded by\na large party of their relatives and\nfriends from New York and other cities. The marriage of Mr. and Mrs,\nChoate took place Oct. 16, 1861, a few\nyears later Mr. Choate had begun the\npractice of law in New York. Mrs.\nChoate before her marriage was Miss\nCaroline Dutcher Stirling, a daughter\nof Frederick A. Sterling of Cleveland.\nIs  Sworn in by  Duke  of\nConnaught\nHAZEN WILL FIND\nSEAT IN ST. JOHN\nDate of Yale-Cariboo Nominations Not Set\u2014Meeting of House\nOTTAWA, Oct. 16\u2014After the Ouke\nof Connaught had sworn in Hon. Martin Burrell as minister of. agriculture,\ntoday, there were presented to him a *\nnumber' of orders in council for his signature, one of which gives effect to a\nchange whereby polling for the by-\nelections for the return of new ministers is made Nov. 3 instead of Nov. 1\nowing to the desire not to interfere,\nwith All Saints' day. Another order in\ncouncil provided for the payment by\nwarrant of money for such of the civil\nservants as have been without salary\nthrough the- exhaustion of supplies\npassed by the house. The duke was\nat his office for an hour. This .evening the duchess attended the Mark\nHambourg piano recital at the Russell\ntheatre.\nLength of Session Uncertain\nOTTAWA, Oct , 16\u2014Canadas' 12th\nparliament will meet for dispatch of\nbusiness on Wednesday, Nov. 15. This\nwas decided upon at a meeting of 'the\ncabinet council. A speedy decision as\nto the date on which the house will\nopen' was necessary because'it is customary to give the members at least\n30 days notice. ,\nParliament will meet on Tuesday in\norder to select a speaker and the usual\nopening ceremonies and the delegates'\naddresses will be proceeded* with on\nthe following day; This is the customary course for the opening sw-ssi'm\nof a new parliament.        ^^^^^^K\nNo announcement was made as .to .'\nwhether there would be a short session with a second session opening in\nmidwinter or a single session with a\nregular adjournment over Christmas\nholidays. The course to be pursued\nwill depend on developments, after the\nhouse meets. There is no possibility\nm all the business being disposed of\nbefore Christmas and of the second\nsession not being held until next\nautumn. The estimates for the fiscal\nyear 1912-13 could not be prepared in\ntime to be dealt with before Christmas\nBesides the legislative program will be\nfairly ^heavy and as a cabinet minister\nremarked when discussing the matter,\n\"The opposition has something to say\nabout the duration of a session.\"\nHazen for St. John\nSubsequent to the cabinet council it\nwas stated that Hon. J. D. H&zen,\nminister of marine and fisheries^ will\nsit for St. John city and county, Dr.\nDaniel retiring in his favor. Hon. R.\nRogers will sit for Winnipeg. No definite decision has as yet been reached\na3 tc the constituency * which will be\naccepted by the minister of finance.\nBy-elections in these three constituencies have still to be fixed, likewise\nthe date for the by-election in Yale-\nCariboo, which was only made vacant\nwhen Hon. Martin Burrell took the\noath of office.\nDaniel For Senate Is Rumor.\nST. JOHN, Oct. 16.\u2014Dr. John Daniel,\nwho was elected M. P. for the city and\ncounty of St. John ih the last election,\nwill\" resign his seat in order to provide\na constituency for Hon. Mr. Hazen,\nminister of marine in the Borden government.\nIt is understood that Senator Woods\nis to be appointed lieutenant-governor\nof New Brunswick on the expiration of\nGovernor Tweedie's-term and Dr. Daniel will take Mr. Woods' place in the\nsenate.\nOBJECTS TO CLERGY\nON STRIKE BOARD\nGrand   Trunk   Pacific  Manager  Says\nMen too Arbitrary on Shop Rules\nQuestion\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 16^E. J. Chamberlain, vice-president and general manager of the Grand Trunk Pacific, in a\nstatement given out today on the\nstrike of machinists and boilermakers\non the road, expresses dissatisfaction with the fact that there are. two\nclergymen on the board of conciliation.\nHe maintains that the men are arbitrary in pressing for the settlement of\nthe second point in dispute, the question of shop rules, after the first point,\nthe equalization of wages had been\nsettled in the men'sj favor. He also\nraises the question of validity of the\npresent board of conciliation since the\nstrike is on, or until it is called off\nand the men who caused it, are pun-\nm\nI -\u2014\u25a0-\u25a0:--\u25a0:--\u2014\u25a0 ~- --->---   ---- -:-.---;\n^\n\u2022\n PAGE TWO\nCfje \u00a9atip Jta,\nOCTOBER 17\n\/'The Envy\nother\nNeighbors\nis the woman whose kitchen shines with a handsome, roomy range\u2014whose\nface beams with the satisfaction afforded by a perfect cooking equipment.\nFor every woman wants a good stove.   Whether 6he does her own\ncooking or not, she\nare prepared on it,\nhaving the best,\nsatisfies that pride;\nbor's envy. Gurney\nranges carry every\nconvenience, econ-\neats the meals that\nand feels a pride in\nGurney - Oxford\njustifies the neigh*\nOxford stoves and\nknown feature of\nomy and  control\nwith some new points of excellence that are exclusive.\nFirst of all is Jme lever that hopfl No danger of the fire going out\nbetween meals. The Oxford Ecos&mizer will hold the heat at a low ebb\ntill you want it; then turn the Bundle, and your stove is hot in a jiffy.\nBesides this saving of time aha worry it saves in fuel to the actual extent\nof one ton in six \u00a3      jgr\nTHE DIVIDEfe ITOE STRIP is the envy of all women who bake.\nIt guides tbe heat equally along sides, back and front of the oven.\n. Let us demonstrate these and other strong advantages of the Gurney*\nOxford line., We have stoves for every purpose, every fuel, and a variety\nof prices.      | fj^lftj\nE. K. Strachan\nPlumbing and Heating\nTel. 262, 313 feaker St\nTWO HUNDRED\nREBELS KILLED\nZapata Followers Cut to Pieces in Battle With. Mexican Federal\nForces.\nMEXICO CITY, Oct. 16\u2014Today's advices from Ciierna Vacas says that the\n500 followers of Zapata were cut to\npieces in the battle near the village of\nTepetlan yesterda^but the leader himself onpe more escaped. The rebels\n. were caught betwen th forces of General Figuera and General Blanque. Two\nhundred of them \"are -said to have been\nkilled, a large number wounded and\nmany taken prisoners.\nVISIBLE SUPPLY GREATER\nTHAN FOR TEN YEARS\nCHICAGO, Oct. 16\u2014Although today,\nthe first time since 1901, the visible\nsupply of wheat in the United States\nwent beyond 60,000,000, the price of the\ncereal made a gain of one-quarter to\none-half cent net. t\nThe chief reason for the advance was\nthat the world's shipments for the week\nwere much less than was expected. Not\nonly were the world's shipments of\nwheat more than 5,000,000 bushels under the total for the corresponding year\nbut the supplies afloat for importing,\ncountries has decreased nearly 4 000,-\n* 000 bushels in the last seven days and\nwere 12,000.000 bushels beneath the aggregate in 1910. On the other hand the\neffect of the huge piling up of stocks\nin the United States has been largely\ndiscounted, and to a considerable ex-\ntentwas offset by a decidedly improved\ncash ^demand. Nevertheless the re-\nmarkable sijse of the total amount of\nwheat immediately available in this\ncountry gave the market a temporary\nsetback and caused an unsettled feeling. The, close, however, was at near\nly the. top point of the day.\nBELMONT MAN GETS POST ON\nNATIONAL TRANSCONTINENAL\nWINNIPEG, Oct., 16\u2014A. G. Macfar-\nlane, aged 45, of Belmont, Ont. one' of\nthe inspecting engineers on the National Transcontinental, has been promoted\nto chief engineer of division \"F,\" va-\nvant through the death of S. R. Poulin.\nDYNAMITE SET\nFOR PRESIDENT\nWatchman Engages in  Revolver Duel\nNear Santa  Barbara With Would\nbe Assassins\nSAN FRANCISCO, Cal., Oct. 16\u2014A\nreport received today by officials of\nthe Southern Pacific railway from C.\nB. Brown, section foreman for the road\nat Naples, Cal., give details of ihe discovery of 36 sticks, of dynamite under\nthe Cairton viaduct, 20 miles north of\nSanta Barbara, several hours before\nPresident Taft's special train passed\nover the bridge en route to Los Angeles this morning. The dynamite was\nfound after the watchman engaged in\na revolver battle with two men who\nNEW BURNS ABBATOIR.\nMACLEOD, Alb.,'Oct. 16\u2014P. Burns\nof Calgary, the millionaire cattleman,\nhas purchased 600 acres* of land near\nMacleod of Mrs. Amonty. It is reported that he intends to erect an exten-\nsive abbatoir on the place.\t\nNo anxiety on\nBaking-Jay if you use!\nCBEAM\naking Powder\nInsures ligki, sweei.l\nwholesome   food I\ns Apure,CreamofTartar\\\nPowder |\nliraiffioipMll\nfc^:::ss^^^^\u00bb\nNEW BRIDGE OVER\nPEND D'OREILLE\nConnecting Link Between Spokane and\nNelson\u2014Telephone Line in Valley\n7   is Project\nWANETA, Oct. 16.-W. F. Teetzel, government agent, J.. P. Ford, public works\nengineer and G. M. Benney, road supervisor were here last week, and\" it is rumored that rStfiteir visit was in connection\nwith the huilding in^e near future of a\n*$a^cV,bridge across the Pend d'Oreille\nriver, as a- ^ttnecting link between Spokane and Nelson. Such abridge will be\nin urgent demand just as soon as the highway from Waneta to Ymir is. extended\nthrough to Nelson.\nBesides collectively winning the silver\ncup at the Trail fair, many individua\nranchers from this valley were at the top\nin different classes,*'.;Amongst the ladies\nwho won handsome prizes were Mrs. Free\nAdie, for fancy work and Mrs. William\nReith, for a fine lot of preserves. In consequence of the good showing made al,\nthe fair, several of the Trail hotel and\nstore keepers have already placed locally\nlarge orders for onions and other vegetables.   *    WguMt .   I\nAn* engineer attached to the Dominior\nConservation commission was here lasn\nweek to enquire into the power resources\nof the Pend d'Oreille river.\nFred Adie, fruit pest inspector, was in\nNelson on official business last Friday.\nThe ranchers are interesting themsel*\nin a project to build a telephone line up\nthe valley. This line would either make\nconnection with the existing telephone line\nat Boundaryjl'yyash., or be joined to-a line\nwhich it is proposed, shall be built\nfrom Trail down- by way of Columbia\n\u2022Gardens.\nA. G. Lang has this year a nice lot oi\nfilberts and Kentish cob nuts, and has\nalso' grown some good tobacco from imported Cuban seed.\nA. D. Frederick's splendid bunches of\ngrapes were at the Trail fair it fine advertisement for this valley and for the\nKootenays in general.\nThe carload of beef cattle which was\npurchased here by A. J. Jackson for P\nBurns and company's branch at j Rossland has been\nFREEDOM ASTOUNDS\nRUSSIAN WRITER\nMadame Vstromskaja Rejoices at Con\nditions in Canada and Intends to\nReside Here\nMadame Vstromskaja, a well known\nRussian writer on agricultural matters\nwho devotes particular attention 'to\ndairying, is visiting Mr. and Mrs. K\nPopoff at Thrums. On her way west\nMadame Vstromskaja spent some time\nat the Winnipeg fair where she wrote\na number of stories on Canadian dairy\ning to her home country! Her nom de\nplume is Nichofaeff.   i\n\"I think I will remain in Canada.v I\nam very happy here,\" she replied when\nasked when she proposed to return to\nRussia.\n\"Everyone seems to have such\nhappy life in this fine country. But\nin Russia\u2014Ah, I cannot tell you of the\nterrible (conditions under which the\npoorer classes of my fellow country\nmen live. They have no joy, no pleas\nure\u2014nothing but hard work and, some\ntimes, Sibejfiy | \\\n\"Yes, and it is those who fight for\nfreedom from the oppression of our\nwicked government who most frequently walk the dread road to Siberia. It\nis only those who starve and suffer\nand die in silence who are safe.\n\"Oh, but the freedom that you enjoy\nin this country is wonderful. I can\nhardly realize it, I who for so many\nyears have lived in Russia.\"\nMadame Vstromskaja speaks English\nwell and Frencli perfectly..\nBEEKEEPING IN\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nTo the Editor of The Daily News:\nI I have been \u2022 in' this country a few\nweeks and having kept bees for many\nyears in England have been interest\ned in ascertaining what progress the\nindustry has made here. I am sur\nprised to find considering the impor\ntance fruit growing has assumed that\nthere are so few bees kept in the pro\nvince and that the only honey obtain\nable at any of the Nelson stores is\nCalifornian. There can be no question\nthe two industries, fruit growing and\nbeekeeping should go hand 'in hand\nnothing is so likely to benefit the fruin\ngrower by ensuring more regular crops\nand more perfect fruit than cross-fertilization by bees. Anything I can do\nto increase the number of beekeepers\nand so further the production of honey\nin this country will give   me   great\nW. J. SHEPPARD,    5\nCertified Expert,  British  Beekeepers'\nassociation;   late honorary  secre\ntary Essex and Suffolk'~\nassociation.\nNelson, B.C., October, 16\nFREIGHT HANDLERS\nOUT AT MONTREAL\nC. P. R. Men Want \"Straight Hours\"\nor Flat Ten Hour Day\u2014Explain\nAlleged Wrongs.\nMONTREAL, Oct. 16\u2014Twenty three\ngangs, comprising 150 freight handlers\nemployed in the C. P. R. sheds on the\nwharf went on strike this afternoon,\ndemanding \"straight hours\" or a flat 10\nhours a day's work. They claim that if\nthey leave work at 5:55 they are docked a half an hour, and if they start at\n7:15 they are credited 30 minutes late.\nThey assert that this is the third time\nthis season that they have struck, but\nthey say they always returned to work\non the promise that the matter would be\nregulated. At 3 o'clock this afternoon\nthey held a meeting in the Longshoremen's hall, when there was considerable talk of joining the Longshoremen's\nunion.\nMADAME NORDICA SCORES\nHIT IN SAN FRANCISCO\nSAN   FRANCISCO,   Oct.   16.\u2014Two\nhundred thousand- people cheered till\nPROVINCIAL ELECTIONS ACT\nYmir Electoral District\nTake notice that I have received objections in writing to the following names\nbeing retained on the register of voters for the Electoral District of Ymir on the\ngrounds stated below, and that at a Court of Revision to be held on the 6th day\nof November, 1911, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, I shall hear and determine the\nsaid objections, and unless such named persons or some other Provincial voter on\ntheir behalf, satisfies me that such objections are not well founded, I shall strike\nsuch names off the register.\nDated at Trail, B. C, this 12th day of October, 1911.\nF.  E.  DOCKERILL,\nRegistrar of Voters, Trail, B. C.\n      ABSENT  FROM THE  DISTRICT.\nName.\nPlace..\nActon, William R\t\nAdams,  John   \t\nAllan, Joseph \t\nArchambault, Charles ..\nAvis,- Cecil E.  E\t\nBaillie Kehneth; 'W&&'*s.\nBaillie,   Walter   \t\nBarnfather, William C.\nBarsotti  Mariani  \t\nBarber, Charles E\t\nBattiste,  Peter\n Trail.\n Granite.\n Nelson.\n Nelson.\n Nelson.\n Trail.\n Trail.\n Hume \"Addition.\n Trail..\n Edgewood.\n..Nelson.\nBatchelor Frank  Shields.\nBaverstock William J.  Nelson.\nBell, Claude F jHK I. Hume Addition.\nBercier,  James Blues Mill.\nBertrand,   Joseph \u2022 China Creek.\nBishop, Thos Nelson\nBlaney, Arthur W Hume Addition   '\nBlewett, Edward   Hume Addition\nBodist, Frank Trail\nBorella,  Mike  ...'..'&&\u2022.'. Trail\nBoyd, Geo ......Winn\nBowyer, Wm \\ Nelson\nBowyer, John  .l&p. Granite\nBowden, Albert C. ...^Va, Renata \u2022\nBowden, Edmond J Renata\nBorden,  Ernest G Fairview\nBratt, Chas. H ;. .- Blueberry Creek\nBredin, John JE ...'..Trail\nBridcatt,   Stephen ......Hume Addition\nBrosseau, Narcisse  ...^'.^airview\nBrown,  Matthew   'w;^-. Fairview\nBullock,   Jus .Hume Addition-\nBurdett,   Jas .^ralil *' \u2022\nBuxton, Wm :$$~........Fairview \/\nByers, John   .ft;iNelson \/\nCameron, Jas Trail &$Mja\nCampbell, Geo. B A ...Winn \/\nCampbell, Allan   # \u2022 I Trail \/    jj\n\u2022Campbell, Robt I Trail \/   \/\nCampbell, Kenneth  #. '..Fairview \/   \/\nCarruthers, Thos. T I Trail 1-JlA\n\u2022Chambers, Harry W #. Shields '^ugf^fk\nChina,  Gluiseppe   .\/ Trail V.' tl\n' Chevner,- Adelard, Jr...[.: Winnipeg      \u00a5S|^iKl\nChevrier,,  Adelard  ....(\u2022 .ft*.,...!..... .Winnipeg\nColes,  Arthur   'I Trail\nCollins, Harry L J. ,.- Erie\n^Cooper, Wm. H. J. ..\/. Westley\nCraig,,David  \/ ......Sirdar    '*+*\u00bb*\u00bb\u00bb*\u00bb\nCrettan, Henry J. ..I Blue's Mill\nCrowley, Patrick G\/ ......Nelson\nCrossley, Geo .\/. ;...: Castlegar\nDalton, Jas I if^-****'\u2022* Needles ',;'\nDameron, Vincenzif , Trail    \u25a0Jr\nDaraugh, Duncanf Nelson^\nDavies, Walter  #. Fairview\nDavis,-Frank \"VMf Bilberry Creek\nDegans, Jos. ..#. \\ l&jjgewood\nDelando, Domiffico Jffail\nDempster, Johji  ....jTrail\nDewar, Jno. M  .Jr.Nelson\nDick,   Josephf J....Renata\nDilley,   ChasJ V\u00ab \u2022 \u2022 rjlT..,.. Fairview\nDonaldson, Jas .Jr. Trail\nBonnithorae, jWm 'W'\" Nelson\nDobiento, ClG Jr..... Trail\nDomenig,  Cf _\/\u25a0\u2022\u2022\u2022>$\u00a3;....Trail\nDuhamel, Jbs .f. Hume Addition   \/f\nDuhr,  Ernj&t  .#. Fairview\nDunne, JafE P .Jr. Shields\nEllis, Jas.fH .\/.. Velvet Mine\nFahey, Stwhen  jK. Nelson\nFalk,  Ott\u00ab Jt. i'^m;-A;..-...Castlegar\nFalsetta, f^tunatojf. .' Trail\nFerguson, foonaldjr Trail < -4\nFitzpatric*  MaUmew Venus Mine;:aj^^*|jjt\nFloyd, JaJLA_F \u25a0 Rossland\nForrest, Wnr .wf*;.\u2022.;'....Trail,' ?   r-\n'Eagtfcer, Howard H Nelson\nFownes, Levi Fairview N-\u00bb^_^\nFairbairn, Maurice G '. Trail \u2022  y-*\"*-**-**\u2014.\nFrieake, C. E . Fairview     \/\nFrancesconi, Cresti  -\u2022\u2022..:.. .Trail 'j*M$|f V.' v' \u25a0\" \u2022 *\nFunnell, Alfred ...........v^;-* Castlegar     T;-w||^\n\u25a0Gagnon, Joseph ....'..... Castlegar (\nGardiner,  George   ....'...,.\\ Fairview  \u25a0^jNmjffi\nGarlando, Gluiseppe Trailr\"*\u00ab^^  :   -L\nGarll, Stephen Waterloo^^-^^\nGardutt, Wm. J .Fairvif&w\\      ^h*-\u00ab-*,\nGardner, Robt Trail V\"  <_)\nGardner, John Nelso*_7   j\u00a3m$ti&ffl&\nGenello, Leonardo  Trail\nGilchrist, Wm Castlegar      y\nGlendenning, RobL Naktf*s-*pL        O\nGraham, Robt. M \u2022>,\u2022>'.\u00ab:% RosslaJt**!   p\u2014- ^\nGraham, John  i.^Z'^.i... Rosshftid )       _\nGrant, Alex ....:^*.v. Nel&n   J     **C\nGrevley, Jas. J. .. j Nelson ^^*\nGray, Wm RosglaBl(a^i^1^j^^\nGrove, Jas Nelson\nGrove, Thos Nelson\nGunten, Wm W$r$ Nelson\nGusnorano, Pietro  ..: Trail\nGlunn, Norman  ' j .'...Shields\nGuidosak, John  Castlegar\nSJamblin, John Fairview      \\^^^\nHandow, Walter  | Trail\nHarkness, John W l....\u00ab}Mi....Trail\nHarrington, Chas Nelson\nHartford, Wm ffflm** \u2022.'\"*\u25a0\"\u2022 i \u2022 -Trail\nHayes, Edward  .'. ...'..;#h1na Creek\nHayes, Thos *. Nelson\nHawkins, Jas. J Nelson\nHeasel, Wm Fairview\nHern, Wm. E ;....'.^*|^^ir#airview\nHeighten, Jas. S Trail\nGuernsey, Forbes W Trail\nHenderson, Jno .-.Nelson\nHercules, Brousseau Nelson\nHill, Jas. G Nelson\nHoskins, Geo Nelson\nHouston, Thos ...Nelson\nHopper, Jno. G Fairview\nHowe, Chas. T ..: Shields\nHoward, Jno Fairview\nHusband, David S *... Nelson\nHusband, David S Sayward (Repeater.)\nHusband, Chas. E Sayward \u2022    *\nHusband, Alfred P Sayward\nHuff, Jas. C Nelson\nInglis, Harold J Nelson\nInglis, Rupert C \u2022'$$*'\u2022 Nelson\nIvens, Thos Nelson\nJackson, Jas Nelson\nJackson, Lloyd  Fairview\nJefferson, Albert E , Nelson\nJeffroth,   Ernest   ..; Trail\nJerome, Thos Nelson\nJensen,. Jens. C Nelson *\nJohnson, John S Fairview\nthe echos reverberated from the Golden Gate to the distant hills when\nPresident Taft and Madame Lillian\nNordica, Americas famous prima donna\narose in front of the stadium in Golden\nGate park to begin the ceremonies, for\nthe Panama exposition of 1915. Madame\nNordica opened the program by singing\n\"Years at the Spring.\" As President\nTaft lifted the golden spade filled with\ndirt Maddme Nordica sang \"The Star\nSpangled Banner,\" the vast multitude\njoined in the chorus.\nWILL INVESTIGATE DELAY\nIN ARRIVAL OF GUARD\nOTTAWA,. Oct. 16\u2014There may be an\ninvestigation into the tardiness of the\nguard of honor for the Duke of Connaught at Quebec which kept the royal\ngovernor general waiting ten minutes.\nHon. Col. Sam Hughes, minister of\nmilitia would not give out any statement when seen, but said: \"There will\nbe a report on the matter.\"\n'Will there be any investigation?\"\nhe was asked.\n\"That I cannot say at present,\" he\nreplied. It is said that a certain staff\nofficer delayed the guard in Quebec\nfor his inspection after the guard had\nalready been inspected by its officers\nand was ready to move off on time.\nCluny and heavy macrame laces are\nin great, favor and may be said to' prac-\ntically lead the new lace vogue.\nLAME BACK\nTo have a lame back or painful stitches\nmeans Disordered Kidjjdys, and the soone\nyou have thi' Ki^yo and Bladder in\nperfectly hea^y'conditio*) the sooner yo\nwill enjoy life. As far as we know, ther\nis only one remedy that is guaranteed t\ncure you, and that is FIG PILLS. If the\ndon't make you a strong, healthy persor\nin two weeks, your money will be refunded\nAt all dealers, 25c per box, or The Fig m\nCo., St. Thomas, Ont\nSold in Nelson by the Poole Drug Co., Ltd.\n\u00a7:\nJohnson, Christian \t\nJohnson, Arch. F\t\nJones, S. M. Lloyd \t\nJones, Wm|x\t\nJordan, Edward \t\nJordan, Wilson\t\nJoyce, Edwin \t\nKeating, Wm. F\t\nKelly, Chas. A\t\nKelly, John J\t\nKennington, Geo. A.   ......\nKettlewell,  Noah  \t\nKing, Chas. H\t\nKnight, W. H. ...:,.,>\\'X;\nKovach, Jos \u00ab\t\nLalonde,   A .'.w\u00bb.^^\nLamb, Herbert\t\nLangill, Chas\t\nLangill, Frank \t\n\"Langill,   Howard\t\nLaviolette, Paul  \t\nLee,  Frederick E\t\nLeslie,   Allan    .,\nLewington, Robt.'\t\nLindsay,  Percy  \t\nLloyd, Chas >.\u00a30\u00ael&.\nLoff, Augustus F\t\nLogan,  Septimus  \t\nLeucchesi, Guiseppi  \t\nLuigi,  Fontello   \t\nLundi, Jacob \t\nMackay, Hugh  '.\t\nMackay, Chas\t\nMackenzie, John \t\nMascou*, Felix Gi\t\nMartin, Frank  *.\t\nMarusak,  Stephen \t\nMason, Arch. V\t\nMatheson, John\t\nMathews, Andrew \t\nMachem, Thos\t\nMears, Jas .'.\t\nMildren, Wallace B\t\nMy les, John   ,\nMiller,- Saml\t\nMiller, Edwin J\t\nMiller, Jesse \t\nMillross,- Miles \t\nMilne, Jas.  \t\nMitchell, Jas. L\t\nMilne, Alex\t\nMontgomery, Alex\t\nMoore, Isaac\t\nMoore, Wm. B\t\nMeachem, Thos. ;..f..-.l*V..v.,\nMorrissey, Jos. T\t\n'S-tpr^ibh, Donald \t\nMorrison,  Alfred  \t\nMorter, Henry\t\nMunro, Kenneth  1.\nMunroe, Donald A .'.\/.\nMunroe,  John\nMunroe,  Robt.\nMurdock,  Wm.\nMurdock, Jas.\nMyers, Reany\nMcAllister, David\nMcArthur, John At\nMcDonald, AngusJ\nMcDonald, Israel\nMcDonald, George H.\nMcDonald, Joh\nMcDonald,  Kerfneth\nMcGregor, Joef\". |||U\u00bb*\t\nMcGregor,  Rolt ,j$r.\nMcKay, Dan\nMcKay, Pete:\nMcKay, Jas.\nMcKenzie, Mu:\nMcKim, Walter J. ..\nMcLean, W. W. ....\nMcLennan, Frank ..\nMcLeod, Angus \t\nMcLeod;  Wm\t\nMcLeod, Rod  '\nMcMillan, Jno. J. ...\nMcNabb,  Peter   \t\nMcPhee, John \t\nNewman, Geo. T. ..\nNicholson, Donald E.\nNicholson, Albert  ..\nNisbet, Jas\t\nNorman, Telfer J.  .\nOgle,  Frank  \t\nO'Connell, Leo\t\nOrange Frank \t\nOrford, W. W\t\nOvery, Henry G. ...\nPallister, Henry ....\nParkes, Edward E. .\nPaton, Andrew \t\nPatterson, John \t\nPascoe, Wm\t\nPavlis,  Joseph  j\nPecord, Eli \t\nPaoletto, Dominico .\nPerekin, Francisco .\nPerry Joseph \t\nPerri Antonio  \t\nPerry, Cyril .H.\t\nPerry,  Oswald  ......\nPhillips,  Wm\t\nPhillips, Jno \t\nPieroni Pietro \t\nPignatelli, Antonio .\nPiper,  Harry\t\nPlumbtree, Wm'. ....\nPlumbtree, J-O^n;;*;, -. |\nPorro, Guiseppe .....\nPratt, Wm...^.^.\nQuida, Gennaro\nRanmark, Carl A\nRanthier, Emelien .\nRetallaek, Richard .\nRighton, Albert \t\nRobertson, Ch^;^'^.\nRobertson, Alex.\nRobertson, David\nRobinson, Chas.\nRode, Edward\nRoss, James\nRoss, George\nRussell, Wm. N.\nSalisbury, Wm. ,\nSantry, Wm. J.\nScherbo, Angelo\nSchultz, Jno. A. 1\nScott, D. W. (Ri\nSelous, Alfred .\nSergent, John ..\nSharp, Wm. H\t\nShardelow, JoHn-X^p,;\nShaw, Malcolm \t\n'Bffe'Siite&^Edward *\t\nSheriff, Gleorge C\t\nSilver,  Wm.  S\t\nSiemens, Frank P. ...\nSmith, J. C\t\nSmith Robt, Mel\t\nSmith, Chas. a .......\nStiuires^Jphn\t\nSnedden, Jas\t\nSolomon, Albert \t\nSteel, David \t\nSteffini,   Stefano   \t\nStephini, Michael .....\nStewart, Chas\t\nStewart, Jno. G\t\nStoddard, Henry \t\nStainton, Jno. B\t\nSutti, Angelo \t\nThomas, Windsor H. .\nThorndale, Chas. J. ..\nTognotti, Almando ....\nTolleno, Frank \t\nTicknor, Lawrence V.\nTonkin, John  \t\nTregear, Wm. H\t\nTureak, John \"M. tit i.y,\nTurnbull, Wm. D\t\nTukner, Lawrence V.\nValoisek, Frank  \t\nVerlinic,  Jan  \t\nVaughan, Richard W.\nWarren, Wm\t\nWatson,  Ernest \t\nWeller, Victor \t\nWhiteman, 'Jamfesl^E;^\nWild,   Joseph   \t\nWillan,  Wm\t\nWillcox, John H\t\nWilliams, Jas.\n...A olson\n. ..J*..'3i-.egar\n...Nelson\n...Edgewood\n...Edgewood\n...Ymir\n...Nelson\n...Nelson\n...Fairview\n...Edgewood\n...Trail\n...Fairview\n...Nelson\n...Fairview\n...Trail\n...China Creek\n...Trail\n...Trail\n...Trail\n...Trail\n...Nelson\n...Trail\n...Nelson\n.. .Nelson\nm\nIPSO \u2022 Williams, Jas. P.\n; Wills, Sheldon !\n\u2022>fi   w-^ p*tPr \t\n07- Wiede,  Jacob  \t\n'<>  Word,  Sidney ,.*;.^-..-.,...A;\nL8 Wickham, Wm. C\t\nThe following are deceased:\n.Beaver\n.Westley\n.Fairview\n.Trail\n.Trail\n..Nelson\n..Shields\n.Shields \\\n.Shields\n.Nelson\n.Nelson\n.Trail    \",\u00a3*&I$ira\n.Nelson\n.Nelson\n.Columbia Gardens\n.Fairview\n\u25a0Tt&hc\\-)f\n.Nelson\n.Nelson\n.Ymir\n.Nelson\n.Edgewood\n.Trail\n.Nelson\n.Waterloo\n.Trail\n.Shields\n.Nelson\n.Nelson,\n.Fairview\n.Nelson\n.Fairview\n.Nelson\n.Trail\n.Trail\n.Nelson\n.Trail\n.Shields\n.Fire Valley\n.Nelson\n.Chtoa Creek\n\u2022Tpii\njoiina Creek\n'.Shields\n.Trail\n.Trail\n.Shields\n.Shields\n.China Creek\n.Nelson j\n.Trail        -'sl$)ra$S\n.Trail\n.Trail\n.Shields\n.Fairview\n.Trail\n.Rossland\n.Shields .\n.Castlegar\n.Nelson\n.Trail\n.Edgewood\n.Winn\n.Shields\n.Nelson\n.Castlegar\n.Robson\n; Nelson\n.Erie\n.Edgewood\n.China Creek\n.Fire Valley\n.Trail\n.Nelson\n.Nelson\n.Nelson\n.Nelson\n.Trail\n.Nelson\n.Sirdar\n.Trail\n.Trail\n.Trail\n.Edgewood\n.Edgewood\n.Nelson\n.Nelson\n.Trail\n.Trail\n.Fairview\n.Winn\n.Winn'\n.Trail\n.Shields\nTrail\nNelson\n.China Creek\n.Fairview .\n.Fairview\nChina Creek\nEdgewood\nStoney Creek\nNelson    |\nTral^r^\nShields\nTEdgewood\n.Nelson\n.Nelson\nSirdar    ''ij|$&!\nNelson\nCreston\nBlueberry Creek\n.Rossland\n.Nelson\n.Fairview\n.Nelson\n.Nelson\n.Nelson\n.Shields\n.Renata\n.Edgewood\n.Nelson\n.Shields\n.Waneta\n.Fairview\n.Fairview\n.Fairview\n.Trail\n.Trail\n.C.P.R. Quarry\n.Castlegar\n.Nelson\n.Shields\n.Trail\n.Nelson\n.Nelson\n.Trail\n.Shields\n.Nelson\n.Nelson\n.Trail\n.Fairview\n.Westley\n.Trail\niTrail\n.Robson   'im|||\n.Fairview\n.Fairview\n.Trail\n\u25a0Robson\n.Fairview\n.Fairview\n.Fairview\n.Fairview\nFairview.\n.Fairview\nRenata\nRenata.\nNelson\nSalmo\nNo.\n54 Babbitt, Dan. S\t\n225 Beemer,  Jno.  D.   .\n\u2022508 Etter, Chas.  F.  ...\n970 Knisely, Jno. C.  ..\n1010 Leahy, Henry  \t\n1422 Pacitto, Leonardo\n1635 Shannon, Chas\t\n1723 Sullivan, Michael .*\n.1887- Wilson, Joseph \t\n..Creston\n..Fruitvale\n..Salmo\n..Trail\n..Creston\n. .Trail\n..Deer Park\n..Rossland\n..QreSton\nThe following are not British subjects:\n211 Buckwatz, Jacob\n809 Hop, ftykert. \t\n..Trail I\n..Edgewood\n TUESDAY  OCTOBER 17\n%ty lailp J^ttS,\nPAGE THREE\n(\ncorn's\nPEIFECTIOM\nCOCOA\nCowan's seems to hit the\nright spot It is a great\nfood for husky young athletes : satisfies the appetite:\neasy to digest: and delicious\nf %iD0 Y0U USE\nWanted\nMen to Work\non C.P.R. exj^hsion between\nThree Forks\/md Bear Lake. Apply A\/'A^Serson & Co., Three\n.Forks, B.C.\nA Remarkable Offer\nI am instructed to offer for quick sale\n107 acres of choice water front land on\nthe Arrow lakes, with two good streams\nrunning through the property, at tjfce remarkably low figure of $2,400, oibBBejOl-.\nlowing terms. One-half cash^&ie balance\non arrangement at time of ,s\u00a3le.\nBy far the. larger portWE of this land\nis choice fruit land, apd water frontage\non the Arrow Akes jjfRhmands from $100\nper acre up, Tifiis land at this pr.ce and\non such easy tejfflS is indeed a chance\nthat investor^ sliould not let sHp by. Act\nquickly,   as  time 'is  money  in  this  in-\nPhillies Are Now Even\nWith Giants in Series\nPHILADELPHIA, Pa., Oct. 16\u2014When\nJohn Franklin Baker, third sacker,\npoled a home run over the right field\n\u2022wajll of ^Sihibe's playground, iscorpoigj\nEddie Collins ahead of bim, today he\nput tbe Athletics on an even footing\nwith the Giants and the two teams now\nwill go to New York for the third\ngame tomorrow in the series for the\nworld's baseball honors. Tbe score\nwas Philadelphia 3, New York 1. The\npaid admissions were 26,286.\nThe big bit came in the sixth frame\nwith two men down, and when the\nfighting Philadelphians had touched\nup Rube Marquard of the Giants for\nonly three safe bits. Baker's wallop\nwas the last in the game for the American leaguers but it was sufficient.\nJust as important as Baker on the\noffensive was Eddie Plank, Mack's\nstar twirler. Only one New Yorker\nreached the middle bag and that was\nHerzog, who lined out a long hit to\ncentre which Oldring either misjudged\nor lost in the sun. Plank never was\nin bad and in the last six innings New\nYork went out in order.\nMarquard on whom Manager MoGraw\nbad pinned his faith to make it two\nstraights for New York, pitched a\ngame that was almost the equal of\nthat of Plank. He allowed the heavy\nhitting Athletics but four safe hits,\ntwo in the first inning in which the\nAmerican leaguers got their first tally,\nwith the help of a wild pitch, and two\nin the sixth, Collins' double and Baker's homer. In the eighth Manager Mc-\nGraw changed pitchers, sending in\nCrandall, a right hander.\nThe New York left hander only once\nduring the game showed any unsteadiness and that was in the first inning.\nHe appeared nervous and for a time\nhad trouble in reading Myers* signals,\nBut Marquard under the steady-coaching of his Indian catcher, soon steadied\ndown and he had no more trouble until Baker broke up the game in the\nsixth. Marquard, however, was hit\nharder than the score indicates. Five\nouts were long flies to Devore and one\nlong fly to Snodgress. New York sent\nonly three flies to the outfield, two of\nwhich were captured by Lord and one\nby Oldring.\nPlank had eight strikeouts, Devore\nfanning four times, Marquard twice\nand Snodgrass and Murray once each.\nSix Philadelphians   struck   out.   They\nstance.\nR. J. STEEL\nRoom 7, Griffin Block.\nReady Orchards, Fruit\nand Farm Lands\nSHOREACRES-10 acres, 5 clear, a\nfew trees; good location. Snap for\nquick buy.   $2,500.\nSHOREACRES-10 acres, five cleared, i\nbest location, 309 trees, apple and\ncherry; strawberry and gooseberry\nbushes. \u25a0 New 2-story house, barn.\nAt station, schoolhoup and post-\noffice.   $4,000, good^rmS.\nNELSO^-1-^4 acr^T 2-story frame\nhouseAnd chtolln house.   $1,500.\nNELSpN-Twflf lots, four-roomed\nhoure, cemJft basement; some apple\ntrefe, beJFng. On car line. $1,200.\nTefms^Snap.\nFaiwyMTwo lots, shack and house\nin course of* building. City water.,\nOne block from car line.   $800.\nPOPOFF & CROFTS\nReal Estate Agents.\n507 Baker St., Nelson.\nCity Property and Insurance\nPhone 466. Box 547\nWELL    WELL!\nTHESisa HOME DYE\nJhat ANYONE\nJ\nBBMtt\nrl dyed ALL these\n^DIFFERENT KINDS\n^mA Goods\nrttj^fthe SAME Dye.\nused\nNo Chance of Mis-\nI takes.   Simple and\nClean.    Send   for\nFree   Color   Card\nand1 Booklet 161.\nThe JOHNSON.\nmCHARDSOV\nCO., Limited,\nMontreal, Can,\nWere Lord, two, Baker, Murphy and\nPlank. 'Marquard got four of these and\nCrandall two, Lord and Plank, in the\nclosing innings. Neither Plank nor\nMarquard gave a base on balls. The\nonly misplay charged against them was\nMarquard's wild heave in the first inning, and a man hit by a pitched ball\nby Plank.\nPhiladelphia's first run came in the\nfirst inning. Lord, the first man up\nsingled to right and reached second on\nMurray's fumble. He was sacrificed to\nthird by Oldring and came home on\nMarquard's wild pitch. The fielding\nhonors today were the reverse of those\nof Saturday with the particular features Lord's fielding of iSnodgrass and\nhis throw to second which caught the\nfleet footed centre fielder by a couple\nof yards when he was trying to stretch\nthe hit into a double. In the ninth\ninning .Collins took a nasty bounder\nfrom the side and tossed out Murray,\niding the game.\nPhiladelphia went through the game\nwithout a miscue, while New York had\nthree errors. One of these| was made\nby Devore who muffed Barry's long\nfly, another by Murray who fumbled\nLord's hit. He also muffed a foul sent\nup by Lord.   Score by innings:\nPhiladelphia  10 0 200 Os&O^\nNew York  01000000 0\u20141\nAMERICAN LE\/ttpERS WILL\nLIKELY   BE  VICTORIOUS\nCHICAGO, 111., Oct. 16\u2014With the\nAmerican league team leading the Nationals three to nothing in the fourth\ngame of the championship series, rain\nfell in torrents in the last half of the\nsecond inning causing the game to be\ncalled off. Having three victories in\na row to their credit the American\nleaguers are expected' to win tomorrow thus ending the series.\nBefore the game .started Frank\nSchultz, one of the fielders was presented with the National league automobile prize and the pennant, won by\nthe Cubs when they were declared the\n1910 champions of the National league,\nalso was hoisted.\nHYDE TO STAND\nSECOND TRIAL\nWe    have   the.   Fastest    Livery\nLaunch on Kootenay Lake\nElford Boat Co.\nLtd.\nW. D. BUSK, Manager\nLaunches for Large or Small\nParties.  Rowbeats for\nHke or Sale\n1 \u00a3\u25a0\nMa^Wfacturers of launches, row\nboats and accessories.\nOffice and Livery, foot of Josephine St., Factory, foot of\nWard Street.\nPhone A148\nNelson, B.C.\nTHE\nLondon Directory\n(Published Annually)\nEnables traders throughout the world\nto communicate direct with j English\nManufacturers and  Dealers\nin each class of goods.   Besides being\na complete commercial guide to London and its suburbs, the directoryjwifi-\ntains lists, of\n\/Export Merchant*^\nwith the\/goods they shi^and the colonial aid foreign majJrets they supply.\nSteams^tp Lines\narranged unde^ne ports to which they\nsail and*.jjacKcating   the   approximate\nClasses in Parisian French\nfor Children jj|\nTwice a wgek from 4 to 5 o'clock\nFrench mnv,e*s^t!oj^nd reading classes' for adVjgpced students,\ntwo evenmgs nejpweek 8 to 9 p.m.\nEnglisli^Lji^ture classes, once\na week 4 rj5 o'clock.\nMRS. ARM3RISTE3\n904 STANLEY ST.\nBox 1012\nKansas City Doctor Will  Once Again\nFace Jury on Charge of Murdering\nFamily.\nKANSAS CITY, Mo., Oct. 16.\u2014Unless\nthere is some change made necessary\nby circumstances unforseen \u2022 now, the\nsecond trial of Dr. B. Clark Hyde for\nthe alleged murder of Col. Thomas H.\nSwope will begin in the criminal courts\nhere this week.\nThe case is one of the most celebrated in the criminals of this section of\nthe country. Colonel Swope, the alleged victim of the murder plot, was one\nof Kansas City, and was widely known\na millionaire and philantrophist. Dr.\nHyde, the alleged murderer, was a physician in good standing. Hints that\nother members of the Swope family\nhad met with mysterious deaths deepened the public interest in the case.\nThe first trial of Dr. Hyde ended May\n16, 1910, and resulted in a verdict of\nguilty and life imprisonment. Dr.\nHyde's inability properly to explain\nthe purchase of capsules of potassium\ncynide was chiefly responsible for his\nconviction.\nThe first of a series of deaths in the\nSwope family was the death of James\nMoss Huntoon, on Oct. 1, 1909; The\nprosecution charged Hyde purposely\nbled the patient beyond the limit, of recovery. Two days later Colonel Swope\nwas striken with convulsions and died.\nWitnesses testified that a few mniutes\nbefore the convulsion Dr. Hyde had\ngiven Colonel Swope a capsule\u2014similar\nto the syanide capsules it was shown he\nhad bought.\nColonel Swope's will, leaving $1,600,-\n000 to relatives   was filed,   and   then\nM*\nProvincial Trade Notices\nof leading manufacturers, merchants,\netc., in the principal provincial towns\nand industrial centres of the United\nKingdom.\n\u25a0' A copy of the current edition Will\nbe forwarded, freight prepaid, on receipt of a postal order for 20s.\nDealers seeking agencies can advertise their trade cards for \u00a31 or larger\nadvertisements from \u00a33,\nThe London Directory Co., Ltd<\n25 Abchurch Lane, London, E.C\n'   We atend to your\nPLUMBrai\npromptly ap-**i^ell\nB.C. Pltlnrt^tg & Heating Co.\nVictoria Street, near Opera House\nTelephone 181\nM\n\"PUBLIC INQUIRIES ACT\"\nHis Honor th* Lieutenant-Governor in\ncouncil has been pleased to appoint the\nHonourable Albert Eiward McPhilllps,\nK. C, president of the exooutrre council;\nthe Honourable Price Ellisea, mtoiater of\nfinanee; \"Charlog Henry Lagrtn \u00abf the\ncity ef Victoria, esquire; and William\nHarold Malkia of the city of Vancouver,\nesquire, tt be oommlseieners under the\n\"Public Enquiries Aot\" fer the purpose\nof enquiring into and reverting upcj-Tthe\noperation of the \"Assessment Apt, 1903,\"\nwith respect to its practical bjjRrlngs on\nthe financial requirements op the province, jr\nThe said conMbis\u00bbionera^rill hold their\nmeetings on tire dates Jfid at the places\nmentioned  hereunderj\/naraely:    .\nVictoria, a\/the ejwutire eouncil cham-\nbr, Parliajbent jRiildin-gs, Monday and\nTuesday, 2l*bh am. 26th September at 10\na. m. At fthe^eurthouse oi the government \u00a9ffice^Tt the following places:\nNanaimo, Wednesday and Thursday, 27th\nand 28th September.\nVancouver, Friday aad Saturday, 29th\nand  39th  September.\nNelson,  Wednesday,   11th   October.\nRossland,  Thursday,  lkh  October.\nGrand Porks, Friday 13th October.\nPrinceton,   Saturday,   14th   October.\nMerritt,  Monday, l\u00abth October.\nKamloops,  Tuesday. 17th  October.\nSummerland,  Thursday, 19th  October.\nPenticton,   Friday,   20th   October.\nKelowna, Saturday, 21st October.'\nVernon, Monday, 23rd October.\n,It is requested that all persons who are\ninterested in the matter aforesaid' and\nwho desire to be heard, will not fall tc\nbe. present at the meetings of the commissioners.\nPRICE   ELLISON,\nChairman.\nTreasury Department,\n33th September, 1911.\nI\nExact Site of the Big Car\nShops Officially Announced\nAnd on the exact spot predicted by us in our advertising talks with you for the past six\njnonths, and now that our predictions have come to be facts today you surely qannot hesitate\nany longer if you want to make money quickly. Another prediction we have been making\nis: The greatest development in connection with these big car shops will be south and south-\n\u20acast of the car shops site. Our advice is to buy right if you want to sell right, and let the\nprice be a secondary consideration, and we claim that our advice to you for the past six\nmonths has proved to be absolutely correct in every detail.   You have the proof direct from\nthe C.P.R. officially.\nA Pointer for You.   This j^iot a prediction, but a bald statement of facts.   None of the C.\nP.R. officials have boughtifiny property north of the location for the shops.\nThere's a Reason, a#\u00a7 the fact Mt the men who should know have bought south and southeast of the shops location whefe our lots are situated is the strongest kind of backing possible\njr for our advice to you.\nAnother Point worth Refnembering. If you have ever been in any city where large shops\no; big manufacturin^plants are located, you will find that after the first excitement has died\ndown the property joining the big industries has always depreciated in value, principally\non account- of tr\/smoke and dirt from the plants. It is the property that lies within a\nreasonable distance' from the industries that in the end commands the big prices and the\n\/ staple prices, and we predict that\nC. E R. Division Lots\n^^^mammaaaaamaa^aaaaao^mm^\nWill in the near future command the big prices, as this will in our opinion be, and not far\nhence,\nThe Heart of a Great Industrial City\nTHIS IS THE DISTRICT WHERE BIG   CAR   SHOPS   WILL   BE   BUILT.\nTAKEN FROM ACTUAL PHOTOGRAPH.\nDo not lay. this aside.   Cut it out, paste it in your hat if you like, but\nRemember There Are Just 50 Lots to Be Sold at These Prices\nand owing to the rapid advance in values, our price goes up this week. Do you fully realize\nthe tremendous increase in values the big manufacturing plants, car shops and new railroads\nnow comiig into S. E. Calgary will mean tcypJji^^P^uu tLu, vvli) delay ai\/d pay more?\n3e wise.\/ Buy in time. Thelijj*0g0i^?ry reasonable, and the terms are so easy that any\npe^o^^^f'Bke advaatage of the opportunity* here presented.\nEighty per Cent. Profit in six months is the profit our earlier buyers can take today on lots\nwe sold them in South-East Calgary. Can you beat this? We think not, and we venture the\nopinion that there never was a better, safer, more genuine proposition offered to the investors of British Columbia, and if you miss this chance we do not hesitate to tell you that\nin our opinion you may wait a good many years for such another opportunity. Come in at\nonce and talk with us. We shall be pleased to make your acquaintance whether you buy or\nnot.   Come in anyhow.   You will not be urged to purchase.\nWe Are the Owners\nand absolutely guarantee every lot we sell, and we give you an extension of time if you are\nunable to meet your payments,\nPrice\n$175 per lot\n] B. C. United Agencies\nTerms $10 cash,\n$10 monthly\nNelson, B.C.   Box 232\nBranches: Calgary and Winnipeg\nV::.\n1\nMiss Margaret Swope, a niece of Colonel Swope, became ill witn typhoid\nfever. Then Chrisman Swope and two\nother relatives mentioned in the will\nbecame ill with typhoid.. Dec. 6. Chris-\nman Swope died, having convulsions\nsimilar to his uncle, Colonel Swope.\nTwo days later, two more girls\u2014legatees under the will\u2014became ill with\ntyphoid fever, and nurses' at the trial\ntestified that Hyde had inoculated the\nsick persons with the fever germs. The\nrepeated and continued illness and the\ntwo sudden deaths aroused suspicion\nand a secret autopsy was made in the\nexhumed body of Colonel Swope. and\nlater that of Chrisman.   On the, toxi-\ncologists' reports and the testimony of\na druggist who sold Hyde the potassium, as well as that of nurses in the\nSwope home and of the typhoid patients, Hyde was convicted. Mrs.\nHyde, a niece of Colonel Swope, stuck\nby her husband, and against her relatives, and went on the stand in his behalf, but in vain.\nOn April 11 ^ast, the Missouri supreme court granted Dr. Hyde a new\ntrial. Since that time the convicted\nphysician has been at liberty on bail,\nand has spent the most of his time in\nMichigan and in the northwest. The\nprosecution of the second trial is to\nbe handled   solely by the  prosecutor's\noffice. In the first trial, Mrs. Logan\nO. Swope, widow of Colonel Swope,\nspent a small fortune in the employment of special counsel and expert witnesses to aid the prosecution.\nPUT STRYCHNINE IN HUSBAND'S\n'V^fFEE IS CHARGE\nONTOMAGON, ' Mich., Oct. 16\u2014After nearly five months spent in a jail\ncell, Mrs. Laura Standard, member of\na wealthy and prominent family of\nthis section, was-arraigned in the On-\nagon county court today to stand trial\nfor the alleged murder of her husband.\nOn the day of his death, Charles stan\ndard, the alleged victim of the tragedy,\ncame home at daybreak in a condition\nof intoxication, it is said. He went to\nbed after drinking some coffee, said to\nhave been prepared by his wife, and\nsoon afterward died in convulsions.\nThe prosecution allege that strychnine\nwas.put in the coffee, while Mrs. Standard maintains that what she put in\nthe cup was a powder to cure her husband Of the drink habit. Much public\nsympathy is felt for the woman because of her previous high standing in\nthe community and the fact that she\nis tlie mother of four little children.\nMinard's Liniment for sale everywhere\n PAGE FOUR\n-\u20ac$e Balis jJeto*\nTUESDAY     OCTOBER 17\nHi HH $&bs*\nPublished   at   Nelson   Every   Morning\nExcept Sunday, by\nThe News Publishing Company, Limited\nV7. G. FOSTER, Editor and  Manager.\nTUESDAY, OCTOBER 17\nHOW PREFERENTIAL TRADE\nWORKS*\nThat Imperial preferential trade is\n. more than a name is shown by the result of its adoption in' New Zeala\n' It has resulted in increasing the trade\nrelations  between that country a^dl\nGreat Britain, while that   with   the\nUnited States is falling off in many\nlines and' not advancing in others.\nRecently the United States sent\ntrade agent to New Zealand to learn\nthe reason why American trade with\nNew Zealand was declining and It did\nt not take him long to discover.   His report is now on file in Washington,\nDiscussing the matter the Ottawa\nJournal says:\n\u2022At the Imperial Conference of 1902\nthe representatives of the overseas ^do-\n\u2022 minions  at  the  Imperial, Conference\nconcurred in passing a resolution to\nthe effect that the principle of preferential trade would  stimulate  and\nfacilitate   mutual   commercial   intercourse and would by promoting the de-\n' velopment of the resources \u2022 and indus-\n. tries of the several parts, strengthen\nthe empire.   In 1904, two years after\nthe conference of 1902, when the resolution was first adopted, New Zealand\nput  it into  effect by establishing a\npreferential tariff.\nPrior to that year a considerable and\nincreasing export trade' passed from\nthe United States to-New Zealand. After the introduction of the preferential\nprinciple it steadily declined and this\nyear a United States \u2022 vice-consul visited the lesser dominions on special\nservice for the treasury department for\nthe purpose of discovering the cause\nof the decline. This he had no trouble\nin doing. Nothing but the preference\naccounted for the fall in United States\nexports and the corresponding increase\nin the imports,into New Zealand from\nthe United Kingdom and from Canada.\nIn his report the vice-consul states\nthat Oregon and Washington have now\nlost to British Columbia the greater\npart of their business in potted and preserved fish, which includes chiefly\ntinned salmon. In hardware products\nand in nails, New Zealands' imports\nhave been showing considerable gain,\nbut the United States, instead of participating in the increase, has lost\nground. In these lines Canada, which\neight years ago had practically no\ntrade at all is now taking an important\nposition, as also in furniture, cabinets\nand upholstery,- imports of which from\nCanada now exceed those from the\nUnited States. An especially severe\nloss to American trade is that in boots\nand shoes, imports of which from the\nUnited States have declined in value\nfrom $513,859 in 1903 to $80,893 in\n1910. Imports from, the United Kingdom in the meantime have nearly\ndoubled in value, from $565,757 in 1903\nto $1,096,768 in 1910.\n'Baltimore,;McL, Nov. 11, 1903.\/\nMinard's Liniment Co., LiitfKed.\nSirs\u2014I came across a bottle of your MINARD'S LINIMENT in. the hands of one of\nthe students at theJBniversity of Maryland, Ad he beinj^so kind as to let me\nuse itffor a verw5ad sprain;-- which I obtained in traigmg for foot races, and to\nsay fet iy$tiped me would be putting it\nvery \\m0y, and I therefore ask if you\nwould let me know of one of your agents\nthat is closest to Baltimore so that I may\nobtain some of it. Thanking you in advance I remain,\nTours truly,\nW. C. McCUEAN-\n14 St. Paul street,\nCare Oliver Typewriter Co.\n' R S.\u2014Kindly answer at once.\nlotice\nWe bei to adviffi our clients\nand fri\/nds thaif'we have moved out real^tate and insurance ftffice#from 419 Ward St.\nto thijpidden Block, corner\nof Ward and Baker Sts.\nWe solicit your patronage\nand assure you we will be\npleased to attend promptly to\neverything in our line.\nMcQuarrie & Robertson\nReal   Estate,   Fruit   Lands\nFire, Life, Accident Insurance.\nWard St. Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 68\nNELSON SHOWS WELL\nIN BUILDING GROWTH\n77ms Date in History.\nCity's Percentage of Increase Is Easily\nHighest of Any Place Reporting\nFigures.\nTORONTp, Ont., Oct. 16\u2014Thirty-one\ncities reporting to the Financial Post,\nshow a total expenditure in building\noperations for September for the- month\nof $12,481,851, compared with $5,610,078\nlast year, the increase reaching 65.\"\"\nper cent. This remarkable gain again\ndemonstrated the phenomenal development that is going on in Canada. Ten\nof the cities show a decline but in\namounts too small to seriously affect\nthe total gain.\nWinnipeg leads in the highest actual\nincrease and Vancouver, Toronto and\nHamilton follow with substantial\nemounts, exceeding half a million each\nThe figures are as follows fon tha\nwestern and all principal cities: v\nCity\u2014 1911 1910\nBrandon    $150,200    $438,675'\nCalgary       903,210     720,37\"\nEdmonton    369     168,86\nEdmonton       369,970     168,863\nFort William     147,500     170 340\nHamilton       771,200     266,645\nLethbridge        93,200'      72,180\nMedicine Hat     174 630       16,500\nMoose  Jaw       192,400       35,600\nMontreal    1,157,876     993,48<\nNelson        20 620        2,42!\nOttawa   .....  ^277,275     160,950\nPrince Albert     147,600     188,150\nPort Arthur      75,400       42 450\nRegfcia \u2022  (425,700\"     12(^750\n\u2022Saskatpon       330,950     -183,5.50\nToronto    1904,810   1,332,535\nVancouver    1,736,568     740,715\nVictoria       406,295     199,686\nWinnipeg    ....2 547,000     874,350\nNew  Westminster..    95,585   \t\nNorth Vancouver...    78 344   \t\nJames P. Day, Chancellor of Syracuse\nuniversity, was born in Washington county, Me,, on this date in 1845, and received\nhis education at Bowdon college. He entered the Methodist ministry in 1872, and\nfilled various pastorates in New England\ncities before he was called to the pulpit of\nCalvary Methodist Episcopal church in\nNew York City. While he was pastor of\nthis \u25a0cliurc)-, in 1893, he was elected chancellor of Syracuse university, which now\nhas faculties numbering 250, and an enrollment of nearly 3.500 students. Dr. Day\nIs recognized as one of the foremost educators in the United. States, and as a\npreacher he is said to have few equals in\nthe Methodist communion. He was elected\na bishop of * the ' Methodist Episcopal\nchurch in 1904 but resigned in order to continue his work at the university,\nGARDEN OF EDEN1\nWEDDING PROPOSED\nThe jumper design has been furiously revived for dressy shirt waists.\nEyelet designs in laces are expected\nto be one of the strongest features of\nthe winter fashions.\nPURIFIEDjHIS BLOOD\nDr. Morse's Indian Root Pills\nHealed Mr. Wilson's Sores\nWhen the sewers of the body\u2014bowels,\nkidneys and skin ducts\u2014get clogged up,\nthe blood quickly becomes impure and\nfrequently sores break out over the body.\nThe way to' heal them, as Mr. Richard\nWilson, who lives near Ijpdon, Ont.,\nfound, is f to purify tl# blood. He\nwrites:     #\n\"For soine time I Ma been in a low,\ndepressed conditioner My appetite left\nme and \/soon be^m to suffer from indigestion\/ Quitejfnumber of small sores\nand bleaches farmed all over my skin. I\ntried mtdxtiM for the blood and used\nmany kin^j of ointments, but without\nsatisfactory results. What was wanted\nwas a thorough cleansing of the blood,\nand I looked about in vain for some medicine that would accomplish this.\nAt last Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills\nwere brought to my notice, and they are\none of the most wonderful medicines I\nhave ever known. My blood was purified in % very short time, sores healed up,\nmy indigestion vanished. They always\nhaye a place in my home and are looked\nupon as the family remedy.\"\nDr. Morse's Indian Root Pills cleanse\nthe system thoroughly. \u00a7old by all\ndealers at 25c a box. 6\nTwelve   Thousand   People   Will   See\nFreak Ceremony at Colorado Apple.\n.Show\u2014Interesting Legend.\nDENVER, Colo., Oct. 16.\u2014\"The Gar\nden of Eden was Located in New Mexico and some of the original apple trees\nare still standing.\" This is the claim\nmade by many people of one of the\nnewest states in the union, and New\nMexico is making considerable noise\nabout the matter recently due to the\nactivity in the apple districts of that\nstate in preparation for the American\n.apple exposition, which will be held in\nDenver the Veek of Noy. 12. Apples\nfrom these trees will be exhibited at\nthe show.\nOf course the counter claim is made\nthat the aforesaid apples were planted\nby the Spanish invaders some 300\nyears ago. Be that as it may the trees\nare standing near the town of Man-\nzano, which is the Spanish word for apple, and in the vicinity of the old ruins\nof Cuara, Abo and Grand Quivira. And\nit must be admitted that the apples\nthat will be exhibited from these trees\nat, the Denver show wlil be a classy\ndisplay.     ^^^^^\nLegend has it that the original settlers were driven out of the country or\nkilled by the Comanche Indians and\nother tribes of savages that infested\nthat section. When the Mexicans resettled the country about 100 years\nago, they found the trees still standing\nand bearing fruit, and they named the\ntown Manzano. So the fact is Undisputed that the trees are at least more\nthan 100 years old.\nThe management of the, apple show\nhas decided to hold a Garden of Eden\nwedding one night during the show.\nThe given name of the groom must be\nAdam, and that of the bride Eve. If\nsuch a couple can be found in any\nstate on the American continent, the\nceremony will be preformed on a stage\nin the center*- of the big auditorium;\nwhere it will be witnessed by 12,000\npeople, which is the capacity of the\nbuilding. The couple will be given a\nhandsome wedding present, and also\nwill be oresent'ed with the apples from\nthe trees which are said, by some peo-\nFor Quick and Prompt Messenger Service\nRing\n4**\nCity Messenger Office\nSatisfaction Guaranteed\nSpecial Brass and Iron Beds\nBrass Bed, same as cut\n.00,\nIron Beds $5 and up\nStandard furniture Company\nComplete House Furnishers & Funeral Directors\nThe New\n\"Swan\"\nSafety\nCan't\nLeak,\nBlot or\nMiss\nOffered at a Sacrifice\n* 92 acres with quarter-mile main lake frontage, one mile south of Craw-\n. for-t Bay. Includes 20 acres of hearing orchard, all good varieties of apples,\nall level land; plowedVid stoned; 1 acre black curra^r'(large crop this year)\n1 acre strawberries; mrge quantities of vegetaM^of all kinds. In addition\nto the above the p^erty includes 40 acmp^rAl level fruit land, ,yery easy\nto clear. Two wapr records consistuj*^*of 32 inches flumed right on the\nland. New tworrotmied house, hu|j(pWr subsequent enlargement. The price\nhas been cut i i \\fln n iiJ^Upflri In 11 time only we can give you a bargain\nwhich will surprise^PPlWand. along the lake front sells for $100 per acre\nand we can offer this fine improved place at less.\nP. J. Gleazer & Co.\nP. O, Box 316\n412 Ward Street\nvNelson, B.C.\nfit\nCarter's, Stephens',  Stafford's,  Waterman's\nThe Four Big Leaders in Inks\nFor the Office\nfor the Home\nFor Fountain Pen\nBlue Black writings in quarts, pints,\nhalf pints;   Carmine in quarts, pints,,\nhalf pints, 4 oz. and 2 oz.\nBlue Black in lOtt^nd   25c. \u25a0 sizes.\nRed, Blue, Violin 10c. bottles.\n. 3 oz. bottle with patent filler. Don't\nhavej^remove stopper,- just hold pen\njjp*i\u00a3r spout and squeeze bulb. Price\n>4uc. Also in 10c. bottles and in wood\ncase for travellers, 30c.\nW. G. THOMSON\nBookseller and Stationer Phone 34 Nelson, B. C.\npie, to have   stood in the   Garden   of\nEden.\nAn artistic receptacle for wood alcohol is a little kettle of hammered\nbrass, with a long, slender spout, a\npretty addition to the tea table.\nA powerful and   cheap   disinfectant jelly.\nfor use in closets, stables, etc., may be\nmade by taking chloride of, lime, one\npound, and water three gallons.\nTo cover the pan in which fish is\ncooking will make the fish .soft.\nOdds bits of soap when gathered up\nand boiled, make a splendid shampoo\nWhat is finer than the finest,\nAnd better than the best\nWith a Kootenay reputation\nSpreading right from east to west?\nWhy, pf course\nTheK\/C^fand\nJams arid Jellies\nGuaranteed pure and perfect and manufactured only by\nThe Kootenay-Columbia Preserving Works\nNelson, B.C.\nP.O. Box 192\nJOHN BURNS & SONGontractors\nand Builders\nTelson planing Mill, Sash and Door JJjWftflry\u2014Factory and Yards 706-12 Vernon Street.\nDoors, Sash, Mouldings in Stoflte^lm'a to Order. Coast Lath and Shingles. Tunied\nWork and Brackets. Cem-\u00a7l,H!?-TSnck and Lime Always In Stock. Automatic Knlf\u00ab\nGrinder\u2014All Kinds of Grinding Done. Store Fronts and Office Fittings, etc., a Specialty. Estimates Given on Stone, Brick and All Kinds of Work. Moving and.Raising\nbuildings and Setting Plate\u00abGlas\u00bb.* Guaranteed Against Damage. P. 0. Box 134.\nTelephone 178. { \u25a0\t\nFALL   \/\nSAILINGS\nTHROUGH\nTICKETS\nGreat Britain, Ireland, Scandinavia, and the Continent\nCHRISTMAS SHIPS\nSt. John and Liverpool\nEmpress of Britain Fri  Dec 1\nLake Manitoba  Sat.    \"     9\nEmpress of Ireland  Fri.    \"    15\nRESERVE BERTHS EARLY\nJt is never too early and sometimes\n\u2022too late to secure good accommodation  on our steamships.\nFor reservations of berths or further particulars apply to any railway\nagent.\nR. K. SCARLETT, City Passenger\nand Ticket Agent.\nW.  RAYMENT, Depot Agent.\nJ. S. CARTER, General Agent\n450, Main St. Winnipeg\n;g'ST.  LAWRENCE  SAILINGS\nMontreal\u2014Quebec\u2014Liverpool\nEmpress of Ireland. .Fri. Oct. 20\nLake Champlain. ...Thur. Oct. 26\nEmpress of Britain...Fri. Nov.   3\nLake Manitoba Thur. Nov.    9\nEmpress of Ireland..Fri. Nov. 17\nLake Champlain....Thur. Nov. 23\nFountain Pen\nThe pen every business man should have.   All styles and prices.\nFrom $2.50 up\nCanada Drug & Book Co. Ltd.\nPhone 81        Nelson's Pioneer Drug Store      P.O. Box 502\nMAIL ORDERS A SPECIALTY.\nFRED IRVINE & CO.\nFURS\nFURS\nTo the Ladies\nNow is your opportunity to purchase. We wlil show MONDAY\nONLY Traveller's'full line of samples.\nFancy stoles and muffs includingj^Rfink Isabella Fox, Black Lynx, ;\nSable, Electric Seal, etc.        .&r\nFUR?\nFURS\nFRED IRVINE & CO.\nTheCanadianBank\nof Commerce\nSIR   EDMUND  WALKER,  C.V.O.,\nLLD., D.C.L., President\nALEXANDER LAIRD, Gen. Manager\nCapital $10,000,000\nRest    \u2022-\u2022:&  8,000,000\nTravellers' Cheques\nIssued by th-yCanadian Bank of Commerce are tm most convenient form in\nwhich to carry money when traveling.\nThey areJnegotiable everywhere,J&&\nidentifying, and the exact amewrtH?ay-\nable in ithe principal forelagf^ountries\nis prjinftd on the facej-rfj^ery cheque.\nThe clfeques are Issued in denominations or\n$1-MWff'\"'#0, $100 and $200.\nand may be obtained on application at\nthe bank.\nIn connection with its Travelers'\nCheques The Canadian Bank of Commerce has issued a booklet entitled\n\"Information of Interest to Those\nAi)Qu^ to Travel,\" viiich will be sent\nfree to anyone applying for it.\nNelson Branch, J. S. Munro, Man.\nBank of Montreal\nESTABLISHED 181.7\nCapital All Paid-up ......$14,400,000\nRest $12,000,000\nHEAD OFFICE: MONTREAL\nRt. Hon. L'ord Strathcona and Mount\nRoyal\/G.C.M.G., Hon. President\nR.  B. Angus,  President.\nSir Edyvard JyCfouston, Bart., Vice-\nPresideritand General Manager\nBranches  in. British   Columbia\nArmstrong, Chilliwack^'\u00a3Gloverdale,\nEnderby, Greenwood, Hosmer, Kelow\nna, Merritt, Nelson, New Denver,\nNichols, New Westminster, Penticton,\nPrince Rupert, Rossland, Summerland,\nVancouver,  Vernon,  Victoria.\nNelson Branch, L. B. DeVeber, Man.\nImperial Bank ot\nCanada\nHEAD  OFFICE:  TORONTO\nCapital Authorized  $10,000,000\nCapital Subscribed  $ 6,000,000\nCapital Paid Zip . $ 5,944,278\nReserve  Funi $5,944,278\nD.  R. V^^^fiMhWir^^\nHon. Robert Jaffray, Vice-President.\nBranches in British Columbia:\nArrowhead, Chase, Cranbrook, Fernie,\nGolden, Kamloops, Michel, New Michel,\nMoyie, Nelson, Revelstoke, Vancouver,\nVictoria and Wilmer.\nSAVINGS   DEPARTMENT\nInterest allowed on deposits at current rate from date of deposit.\nNelson Branch, J. M. Lay, Manager.\nThe Royal Bank\nof Canada\nIncorporated 1869\nCapital  Pai\/up   $   6,200,000\nReserve   aJfd   Undivided\nProfits   .\\awa0gW0GT*7,200,000\nTotal Assets $100,000,000\nHEAD OFFICE:  MONTREAL\n165 branches in Canada and Newfoundland; 18 agencies in Cuba and\nPorto Rico. British West Indies: Bahamas\u2014Nassau ; Barbados\u2014Bridgetown;\nJamaica\u2014Kingston; Trinidad\u2014Port of\nSpain and and San Fernando. London,\nEngland, 2 bank buildinfes, Princes\nEngland, 2 Bank buildings, Princes\nstreet, E.C.  New York City, 68 William\nBusiness accounts carried upon favorable terms, Savings department at all\nbranches. * -'^Mpjjj\nNelson Branch, A. B. Netherby, Man.\nI\n|j| Fruit Lands\nThe bjst in Kootenay\nFrom 5 to 1,000 I^BIocks from $20 up\nUnimproved, partly improved, all planted.   .\nWolverton & Co., Ltd.\n419>\/2 BAKER ST.\n1\n TUESDAY  OCTOBER  17\n%U Salt? $em\nPAGE FIVE\nBell Trading Co.\nOur Apple\nOffer\n3 boxes Fall Sweets.\n$1.25 box\n, 10 boxes Keswick Codlings.\n$1.50 box    Wm\n5 boxes Longfield\u2014-a nice apple\nfor all round family use.\n$1.50 box\nCookers\nAlexandrias    $1.75\nBaxter   $1.75\nWolf Rivers     1.75\nThe All-Round\nFamily Apples\nWealthies, $2.00 to $*#50.\nFancy fable\u2014dfows, $2.50^\nGravensteiAs, $p50; Mcintosh\nReds, $1.S aruR2.50; 3 lbs., 4 lbs.\nand 5 Ibsf 2W.\nBell Tradia\nCo. i.\nThe Up-to-Date\nGrocers\nHOTEL ARRIVALS OF A DAY\nThe Hume\nTable D'Hote and a la Carte\nHUME-Mr. and Mrs. Haig-Smeltie,'\nProctor; J. D. and Mrs. Yeatman, L. B.\nMcPhil, Slocan; A. J. Cowie, Slocan Park;\nJ. McClish and daughter, Harry Wees,\nSalmo; P. ,W.,Cullen, Ss^Hno; C. B. Day-\nfoot, Georgetown; ,Wjr M. Henderson\nVictoria; B.jC. St. CLpr, Thomas Mattoch\nand wife, fcranbrGlK; C. McLean, T.\nKempis, vAcouvejf M. F. Shaw, H. A.\nDouglas, #. T. jfacleod, F. L. Rhodes,\nColis Jar*, WjfMartin, C. A. Craddock,\nW. B. Fafris, flfty; C. C. Porter, Spokane;\nC. H. Ijfler, JL. 0, Thomas, Ritzville; A.\nW. RobftisoiTToronto; 'J. ^.,SH. Thomas,\nVancoaFey Mr. and Mrs. C. Harrison, \"C.\nE. ClJh\/n, Mollie Glibson; H. J. Raymond\nCity; |lr. and Mrs. S. Simpson, Montreal;\nMr. and Mrs. J. Tefferts, New York.\nUnion Men, when in NeloD^\nPatronize\nLakewiew\nCor. Han\/and^non Streets.\nNAP. MAUlETTE, Prop.\nWhite Union Help Employed\n\u2666 Only\nLAKEVIEW-W. A. McDodges; Balfoifr;\nE.  J. Barr, Fred E.  Stykes, Revelstoke;\n. H. J. essops, D. R. Evans, Harold Vroon,\nVernon.\nSilver King Hotel\nBaker St.\nUnder new manageDMjl\nWell furnithed roonujr$1 a\nday and up.\/Best 2y*Tneal in\nNelson.      \/       f\nBest braJdsjrliquors and\ncigars serveVw^ union men.\nN. McLEOD, Proprietor\nchell,' J.   <$\nMine; Mrs.#Loujj\nS.  Hawley! ^\nW.  E. Zwf\nAnderson,   \"TCaslo;\nMunroe Archibaldj\nRoyal Canadian\nPratt, Vancouver; W.\nVanderford, Spokane;*\nCarney L. Hanna, S.\nE. Davis, Victoria;\nJ W. Buribell, Trail;\nFraser, Ymir; 'W. F. Almy, D. T.\nAndrews and family, Nakusp; Edwin F.\nBarry and wife, George E. Ellis, Winnipeg; F. S. Blakislee, Chicago; J. W. Doyle\nCalgary; S. S. Fowler, Riondel; J. R. Cogger, London; Harry Levi, Montreal; G. F.\nRobinson,  Summit.\nQueen's Hotel\n'oprietor\nQUEENS-William F. Harriman, W. L.\nSinclair, H. L. Glim, Spokane; J. H. Mar-\nlott, Howser; E. A. Griffith, C. O. Wood-\nrow, Slocan; W. E. Alexander, Seattle;\nW. H.'Coldough, Rossland; Mrs. Sinclair,\nBonners Ferry; A. Muteg, Fernie; William Williams, Edgewood; Gi. V. Sten-\nbouse, Winnipeg; G. K. Hartney, Vancouver.\nMadden House\nThos. Madden, Prop., Bafker St.\nRat\/s: iSMii per day.\nMealmcketa^fToO per week.\nTCComfortable Home\nMADDEN-H.. H. Cleugh, J. M. Dibble,\nCastlegar;' . Larson, New Denver; A.\nAnderson, Three Forks; J. C. Hansen, T.\nP. McAndrew, Sheep Creek; Fred W. Morton, Taghum. P. McDonald, Sandon; J. M.\n\u25a0Gunn, Creston; William Wilson, Yahk;\nMr.s J. P. Bell, Lawrence Bell, Erie; G.\nThair, Phoenix.\nTremont House\nBaker Street, Nelsp*i:\nRANSOME  & CAMPBELL\nI   Proprieto^r\nEaropean pUp 50c. up\nAmerican plj#r$1.25 and *$1.M\nMeals 35c.\nAMUWHITF LABOR.\nSpecial Rates Per Month\nSILVER KING-Thomas Powell, Williams Siding; E. Akaries, E. Aho, F. McLeod, John Chair, C. M. Val, Al. Flan-\nnery, City; H. Miller, Hall; P. McNab and\nwife, St. Louis; Charles Snyder, C. A.\nPick, T. Cary, A. D. Mainville, H. Wm\nCranbrook.\n  X\nKlondyke Hpifi\nVerion Stpfet.\nStrictlyi ^tiffi   House\nHeadquarter|^r miners, smeltermen, loggers, railroad men\nRates: $1.00 per day up.\nNELSON & JOHNSON, Props.\nKLONDYKE-M. E. Douglas J. E.\nFrancis, Frank Phillips, Winnipeg; H. R.\nFrench, J. O. Thomas, Rerb Chisholm,\nMichel; George Roblin, W. A. Sutte, A\nSutte, Brandon; J. D. Chipman, St.\nStephen. ; . ., '\nGrand Central Hotel\nOPPOajJJ^POSTOFFICE\nAmerican and European Plant.\nH. H. PITTS, Proprietor\nTREMONT-C. O. Carloon, John Great,\nF. Preston, Creston; H. Thompson, S.\nPaller, Sheep Creek; Jack Grubbs, Silver-\nton; R. K. Wallace, Moyie; C. E. Weaver,\nWillow Point; . E. Gigham, Kaslo.\nKootenay Hotel\nTwo  doors from^gfb'stoffies\n#    VernonSlWet.\nRates $1.00 an0F$L25 per day.\nEvejfr convMRnce given to tn\u00ab\ntraveling xgfBnc.    Electric piano,\nand fUnid^Dar    in   connMtioa,\nwher|\u00bb**B*rb\u00abst wines and liquora\nare kept. j I\nMRS. MALLETT, Proprietress.\nAll You Need Is a\nCascaret Tonight\nNo   Sick   Headache,  Bilious   Stomach,\nCoated Tongue or Constipated\nBowels by Morn in\/'\nTurn the rascals out\u2014theineadache, the\nbiliousness, the jndigestion#the sick, sour\nstomach and fiul gasesJIurn them out\ntonight and kpp they out with Cascarets. \/ M\nMillions of men and^women take a Cascaret now ana thenijand never know the\nmisery cause! \\>yM lazy liver, clogged\nbowels or aif upajlr' stomach.\nDon't put In^nother day of distress.\nLet Cascareljs Jreanse and regulate your\nstomach; renrafe the sour, undigested and\nfermenting food and that misery-making\ngas; take the excess bile from your liver\nand carry out of the system all the decomposed waste matter and poison in the\nintestines and bowels. Then you will feel\ngreat.\nA Cascaret tonight will surely straighten\nyou out by morning. They work while\nyou sleep. A 10-cent box from any drug\nstore means a clear head and cheerfulness for months. Children love to take\nCascarets because they taste good\u2014never\ngripe or sicken.\nWhen Taking\na Vacation\ngo to the great Halcjoii Hot\nSpringsjwhere you pp secure\nnot onlwrest but at tp same time\nhave the benefit oj^fne best medicinal Raters onjp continent, unequaled for rhoKiatism and kindred Silmenty The springs are\neasjlof access to travellers and\nthe |otelJfas been fitted up and\nis collated with a view to 'the\nmaximum of comfort and convenience for guests.\nRates: $12 and $15 per week, or\n$2 per day and upwards.\nHalcyon Hot Springs\nSanitarium\nWM   BOYD, Proprietor\nHalcyon Arrow Lakes\nFurnished Rooms to Let\nMessrs J Barten and McKax having\ntaken oyer the managem-srft of the\nRoominff House aboveJme. offices of\nthe western Ca*oaKi Investment\nCo., Amer B^er and Josephine\nstreetsJlanO^mng refurnished same\nwill be^*$lsed to confer with any\nwho require good comfortable rooms.\nApply at Room 12 on premises.\nNelson Cafe\nLarge and Commodious Dining\nRoom    j-#\nPromnt and Courte-fltfs Service\nMrtls Serve4$t all Hours\nEle|antb^firnished rooms In\neoDaectfim; $1.00 a day and up.\nA. AUDET, Proprietor\nNELSON-P. Davis, P. R. Morgan, Seattle; C. A. Bush, H. Hedberg, Marcus; P.\nM. Close, Spokane, A. S. Clute, City; J.\n.  Portlick,  W.  Britton,  Harrop.\nCHARGE AGAINST\nCLEUGH DISMISSED\nLOCAL CHINESE\nSUPPORT REVOLT\nNelson Orientals Have Contributed to\nDr. Sun Yat Sen's Big War Fund,\nDeclares Local Tyee\nChinese in British Columbia are taking\na great interest in the revolution fathered\nby Dr. Yat Sen, and have contributed\nheavily to the big campaign fund which\nhas been raised on this continent, admitted a merchant Chinaman of Nelson last\nnight, who would only consent to talk\non the subject on condition that his name\nbe withheld. \"Nelson has sent much\nmoney,\" he said, when asked if the local\nOrientals were in accordance with the\nmovement.\n\"Emperor too strong; too rich, too\nmuch money; people -too poor, many\nstarve,\" were the reasons given for the\nsatisfaction which he expressed at the\napparent success' of the revolt against\nthe Manchu dynasty.\n\"How much have Nelson Chinese contributed to Dr. Sen?\" he was asked.'\n\"Two thousand, three .thousand dollars,\"\nwas the reply.\nLEADERS OF BIG\nCOLONY ARRIVE\nForty-five Families Of Mennonites Will\nLocate on Three Thousand\nAcre Tract\n(Special to The Daily News.)\n\u2022 NEEDLES, B.C., Oct. 16\u2014Last week\nthe leaders of the party of Mennonites\nwbo have purchased 3,000 acres on the\nWatshan from Welford' .Beaton, arrived and visited the ranches of F. G.\nFauquier and others. In all 45 families\nwill take up the land, 12 coming next\nweek to build houses and prepare for\nthe rest. They will bring their own\ntraction engine for power and a portable sawmill and will cut all their\nown lumber.\nThe steam stump puller imported by\nMr. Beaton has been taken up the\nThe stea mstump puller imported by\noperations. The flange of one of the\ndrums was broken in transit and a\nnew part had to be obtained from the\neast.\nCAMPAIGN WILL\nSTART SHORTLY\nHospital  Directors  Decide That Time\nis Ripe to Ask Public for New\nBuilding\nThere was a special meeting of the\nboard of hospital directors last night, at\nwhich further steps were taken for the\ncampaign for the raising of funds for\nthe new Kootenay Lake general hospital,\nwhich w'ill be built near the site of the\npresent institution. Plans for the campaign were discussed to some length,\nand the consensus of opinion was that no\ntime should be losflk In getting the work\nunder way; and with this end in view, it\nwas decided to find a suitable man to\nact as secretary to organize the campaign and get the list of names ready\nfor the collection* teams that will be\nappointed. If it is possible to get a\nsecretary by that time, work on the lists\nof city people will be started Monday,\nand the two or three days required for the\ncollecting wil^ probably be selected before the end 'of the present month. In\nconnection with the campaign a motion\nwas made to ask the Ladies Hospital aid\nto furnish dinners to the workers throughout the campaign.\nGOVERNMENT   WORK\nPROGRESSES NEAR PROCTOR\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nX PROCTOR,  B.C., Oct.  16\u2014The new\nC.P.Ift hotel at Balfour was officially\nMADE! IN CANADA\n| B.W GILLETT 00t LTD\nTORONTO-ONT.\nJWJNNBPEC5     MONTREAL\nclosed for the .season yesterday.\nAmong those who are at present staying at the hotel attending to various\nmatters pertaining to the closing are:\nC. W. .Sharp, the contractor; W. W.\nBlair, the architect, and Thomas Pigg,\nclerk of works.\nThe road crew, under Clarence Ogil-\nvie is doing good work on the new\ngovernment road between Balfour and\nQueens Bay. The road will be finished\nin a week or so. Communication will\nthen be opened between | these two\npoints. This will be a great convenience to all the settlers. To help further the opening up of this district\nthe Proctor Boat & ' Launch Co. will\nrun a ferry between Proctor and Balfour when the new road is completed.\nUnder Foreman Andrew Jar-dine the\nnew government wharf at Harrop is\nnearing. completion. A couple of\nweeks will see it through.\nCapt. iCogle and his helpers are busy\nlaying the launching ways upon which\nhe is going to build a new tug j this\nwinter.\nMr. Walton returned on Saturday\nevening on the Kuskanook from a trip\nto Alberta. He went east owing to\nthe death of his son-in-law Mr. Cro-\nmack. *>Mrs. Cromack returned with\nher father.\nRev. C. Reid of Balfour who has to\ntravel upon the lake in all weathers,\nis trying a non-sinkable canoe from\nFredericton, N.B. I8K\nWilliam Almond has opened a meat\nstore here and Jim Hughes, a Nelson\nold timer, has opened a tonsorial parlor and pool room.\nKOOTENAY-A. B. Cummings, North-\nport; S. Pilson, Rosebury; Harry Smith,\nV. Wyfytono, E. Cerou, Salmo; J. Rivers,\nVancouver.\nROYAL-R. A. Will, Spokane;. James\nHagarty, Paulson.\nGRAND CENTRAL-P. Lorentzen, Athabasca Mine; Pat Murphy, Dublin; E, F.\nW. Towers, Silverton; S. Bridcott, Tag-\nhum; John McEachern, Rossland; H.\nE.* Wakefield, B. T. Foster, Mrs. J. P.\nBell, Erie, G. W. Wolfe, William Train,\nSalmo; J. M. Everett and wife, Spokane;\nGladys, Ettimer, Hazle Ettinzer, R. C.\nEttinier, Addy, Wash.; J. C. Sturman,\nElko; J. M. Richards Cutts, Alta.; J.\nJohnson, Creston; W. J. Anderson, North-\nport, Wash.; James Feame, Taghum; L.\nA. Lemon, Emil Mather, Hairy Lamb,\nKaslo.\nSHERBROOKE\u2014W. Greenwood, Koch;\nR. Gapalnse, S. J. Peck, Paulson; Joe\nTellier, F. Lafloure, Salmo; H. W. Fraser,\nKoch's; Emile Divine, Trout Lake; J.\nMiller, Harry Lanke, Emile Mantle, Ross-\nNEW    ELECTRIC    SIG^N.\nJ. H. Matheson yesterday completed\na magnificent new revolving electric\nsign for use for advertising purposes\n[oyer the offices of the Western Canada\ninvestment company.. The wo^ds\n\"Western Canada\" are seen first; then\nappears \u25a0.\"Invesitment coiripanly,\" \\jaitd\nfinally the complete name of the firm\nis shown. All the lights used are\ntungstens( and a new transfgrn\\r was\npart of the necessary equipment.\nLETHBRIDGE   DELEGATES WANT\nDRY FARMING CONGRESS\nCOLORADO SPRINGS, Colo., Oct. 16\n-^Lethbridge is makingi a determined\neffort to get the 1912 International\nDry Farming congress. Today 200\ndelegates from that vicjnity arrived\nand at once lodged a vigorous campaign. A message of greeting from\nPresident Taft was read at the afternoon session.\nA pinch of salt will make the white\nof an egg beat quicker.\nMinard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia,\nDoukhobor   Says  Castlegar   Rancher's\nPigs Run Wild and Damage His\nGarden\u2014Assault  Alleged\n'Pigs were the chief subject of discussion at the hearing yesterday afternoon by W. H. BullockWebster, stipendiary magistrate, of a charge\nbrought against H. H. Cleugh of Castlegar by a Doukhobor named Kerbiekoff\nthat he had alllowed his swine to run\nat large. The case was dismissed. J.\nO'Shea appeared for the prosecution\nand R. W. Hannington for the defence.\nThe Doukhobor swore that the five\npigs over which the trouble arose had\n[broken, into his garden -on Monday\nlast and caused considerable damage.\nHe caught one of them and it was\nnow imprisoned in his cellar. Mr.\nCleugh's pigs were frequently running\nwild, he declared.\nThe defendant denied that his pigs\nwere frequently off his property and\nJob Tibbie said that he had let them\nout of Mr. Cleugh's stable last Monday.\nKerbiekoff has laid another information alleging that Mr. Cleugh assaulted him and asking that he be bound\nover to keep the peace. The magistrate advised the parties to get together. Unless they do so the case\nwill be heard tomorrow afternoon.\nMinard's Liniment Cures Dandruff.\nThe Girl With\nBeautiful Hair\nAttract^  Att^fftion   Everywhere\nThere isfoiM'Jraure and certain' way for\nevery wontem* to have beautiful hair, and\nthat is to give it intelligent care, whicli\nincludes the use of Newbro's Herpicide.\nThis remarkable preparation kills absolutely the dandruff germ, eradicates dandruff and prevents the hair from falling.\nThe prophylactic action of Herpicide\nkeeps the hair free from disease, and with\nthe scalp sweet and clean a natural hair\ngrowth is inevitable.\nHerpicide hair scintillates with health\nand vigor, light and luster, produced only\n\u25a0by the well-known scalp and hair dressing,\nNewbro's Herpicide.\nAll druggists sell it and guarantee one\/\ndollar size bottles'\/\nAll first class barbers and hair dressers\nuse and recommend it.\nA sample and booklet will be sent to any\naddress upon receipt of 10c by The Her-'\npicide Co., Dept. R, Detroit, Mich. The\nPoole Drug Co., special agents.\nPOSTUM\n-A Rich\nPalatable\nNourishing\nFood Drink\n\u2014that has taken the place of tea\nand coffee in thousands upon\nthousands  of homes.\n\"There's a Reason\"\nThere's a drM\u2014caffeine~*-**in\ntea and coffee J^hich interferes\nwith indigestioif and has a disturbing* effectron the heart and\nnervoi* sysjpn\u2014showing in some\npersons more than in others.\nOne oty$ continue with the drug\nand pay the cost in physical suffering, or quit and return to comfortable health, provided the condition has not become chronic.\nPostum offers an easy way to\nslip off the tea or coffee habit.\nThen, with the cause of the\ntrouble removed, Nature will properly take up the rich food elements in Postum for the rebuilding of the system.\nOnce started, you can keep on\nthe road to increa-sing comfort,\nand you'll know\n\"There's a Reason\"\nFOR\nPOSTUM\nCanadian Postum Cereal Co., Ltd.\nWindsor, Ontario, Canada\nChoose Your Furs Now\nIt is always advisable to choose your furs early, as then there is\na much bigger selection. For the benefit of our customers who are intending to buy a set this winter we have arranged with- Mr. Keenan,\nwho represents one of the largest houses in the fur trade to have a\nspecial display of high class furs at this store on Wednesday next\nBeautiful sets of Mink, Fox, Seal, Russian Pony, Lynx, etc., etc., will\nbe on display and we cordially invite all interested to come and see\nthem.\nS^2SsiKa^?K2\"l?riS^Z^^S\nWilliams .bagged a goat, and.a silver tip\nC.  P.  R. STEAMER COLLIDES\nLONDON, Oct. 16\u2014Lloyd's' Gravesend\nagent wires that the C. P. R; steamer\nMount Temple, from Montreal for London, collided with the steamer Osterley\nof Brisbane, Australia, while the latter\nlay at anchor off Tilbury. The Mount\nTemple docked at Millwall. The damage\nis unknown. The Mount Temple is an\nold Elder-Dempster boat, .bought from\nthat shipping company in 1903 and carries\nprincipally freight and cattle with few if\nany\nSUBDIVIDE   FIRE   VALLEY\nFRUIT LAND TRACTS\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nEDGEWOOD. Oct. 16\u2014The Five Valley\nand Lake Shore Farmers Institute* held\na meeting Saturday night, L. C. Morrison\npresident, in the chair. After the adoption of the minutes of the previous meeting, the secretary, A. W. Hobbs, read a\nletter from the Deputy minister of agriculture, W. E. Scott, asking the requirements of the Institute for lectures\nfor fall and winter, the institute to pay\nthe transportation expenses of the lecturers. It was decided to arrange for\n'lectures on three subjects, mixed farming,\n\u25a0fpiit, and poultry.\nA discussion followed on potato raising, and valuable information was given\nto members by L. C. Morrison and^vjM-\nHobbs, of the methods used by them, and\nthe results obtained, the former, to prevent \"scab, had found formalin, in the proportion of 6 oz. to 14 gallons of water,\nvery effective and cheaper than bluestone.\nsoaking his seed potatoes for 12 hours,\nand had found it effective also to prevent\nsmut in grain. A.^. Hobbs advocated\ntwo eyes to the seed, and harrowing the\nground up -after the potatoes had been\nin a fortnight. Having the soil in good\nshape, using good seed, and keeping the\nground well cultivated, ' were also necessary to obtain good results.\nThe. next meeting is fixed for the second Saturday in November.\nA. H. Green, of Green- brothers and\nBurden, Nelson, and J. Serson were in\nThursday in connection with the bridge\nacross the Jnonoaklin river. The exact\npoint where it will be thrown across is\nnot yet decided, it rests with J. P. For,de,\nprovincial government engineer, whom\nMr. Serson will consult, work, has commenced .in the cutting of the timber required.\nThe sign for the wharf is now completed, and only requires erecting, the\nsecretary of the Progress association\nwishes *'to acknowledge a donation of\n$2.00 from L. C. Morrison towards the\ncost of it.\nLast week R. F. Colqhoun, of Vancouver, finished the surveying the properties of the Fire valley fruit lands\nElmer R. Sly, Vancouver, besides their\nholdings in the valley, 320 acres on the\neast side of the lake just north of Apple\nGrove, was subdivided.\nMr. and Mrs. P. Sherran of Nelson,\nwho have been paying a visit at the ranch\nof Adam Scaia, returned on Sunday.\nA farewell dance was given to Miss\nRollins Wednesday night in the Edge-\nwood hotel, previous to her departure for\nComaplix for the winter.' Mr. .and Mrs.\nrant Davis kindly provided. the refreshments.* It afforded Rev. A. P. Durrant\nan opportunity to meet the residents,\namongst whom he made a very favorable\nimpression, after supper music was indulged in. The comic song, \"Under the\nCircumstances\" making a great hit, and\nF. W. Jordan, of Nakusp, scored also\nwith another of a humrous nature.\nMiss Rollins,''?Miss Williams, Rev. A. P.\nDurrant and Messrs. Burt Smith and J.\nBurns provided the music. The last named also taking, charge of the floor. Mrs.\nB. Nash, Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Jordan, of\nNakusp,  were among those present.\nMr. and Mrs. Wilson and W. Williams\nwere out after mountain goat this week,\nand got., one, two deer fell to the rifles\nof Angus Mcintosh and party, and Alfred\nJOLT OF WAGON EXPLODES\nGUN WITH. FATAL EFFECT\n'^tL-^0HN, N. B\u201e Oct. 16.-Robert Min-\nnette, of .St. Martins, while on his ^\nto the woods today on a shootxng* Trip,.\nwas shot in the abdomen and will die. He\nhad his rifle on his knees when the lumber wagon, on which he was riding, jolted\noyer a log. The gun was discharged, the\nball entering his stomach and coming\nout under his arm, making a terrible-\nwound.\nA bread pudding may be deliciously\nflavored by a few slices of candied\norange peel.  .\nA French dainty possible from canned foods is sliced French goose liver\nserved on lettuce, with either French.\ndressing or mayonnise^.. ~s\nWhen running dates, fir1** or raisins\nthrough the food chopper, ?.dd a few\ndrops of lemon juice to pre. ant the\nfruit from clogging the choppe; \t\nBLACK Sim\nWflGHTpauSH\n\"Black Knight\"  Stove polish gives tlie\nshine that lasts.\n\u00bb Just a small daub spreads over a big surface.\nJust a few light rub^plJ^tloth or brush\n\/\u25a0'     brings a shine Voiwtfifsee your face ia\u2014and\nthe shinela^ft^a'ays\u2014fresh, bright, briHiant-\n. ^\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u2022''try the quick, clean and easy way cf shitting\nStoves, Grates and Ironwork.\nA big can, ioc.\u2014at dealers or seat\npostpaid on receipt of price.\nXflEF.F.MLUEYC0.UMrcED,\n2? Makers of the famous \"2 in\nj HAMILTON, Ont\n\" Shoe1 Polish.\nA. G. LAMBED & CO. Ltd.\n^anufactUQj^^J^md  Dealers in\nROUGH ancMjRESSED LUMBER\nShingles, Lath, Sashes, Doors, Mouldin gs, Building Paper, etc.   Sole agents\nfor Hu-ber-oid  Roofing and Manitob a Gypsum Co.'s Hardwall and Wood\nFibre Plaster.\nTelephone 82 Nelson B.C. -j-gBS p-\u00b0- B<>x 1066\nA Choice Buy\n75 acres level land, 1 mile from school, .postoffice, station, store\nand sawmill employing 75 men.\nTwelve acres cleared, m acres can be de^apea for $20 per acre.\nNone costs more than $3(f to $40. .Tenastfro m clover, 100 young fruit\ntrees; 1 1-2 story house\/0x25.   Clpflff-rhouse, small barn.\nThis property is loc^t^-M^e Slocan valley and is a good buy at\nthe price of\n$60 per Acre\nTerms arranged.   For information on this and other \\\nthe Slocan' valley call on or write.\n. buys in\nFruit and Farm Lands.        F\\     Of    npnjc\nCity Property, Insurance.    \u25a0L'#   ^t*  I-'CIIID\n505 Baker St., Nelson\nPhone B86.\nMines\nTimber\nOver E. B. McDermid.\nP.O. Box 497\n PAGE SIX\nCfje BaUp-JjflM,\nTUESDAY     OCTOBER  17\nDo It Now\nSect* te Some Stock in Nelson Street Railway\nToday\nEvery mail brings in fresh applications. Our plant is new, the equipment the best money could buy.\nOur franchise includes free power and free taxation. We operate at half the expense of what street car\ncompanies do that have to proide their own power.\nFoil of Application for Shares\nTo the Directors of the Nelson Street\nRailway Co., Ltd.      'f^^fy\nI hereby apply for  shares\nin the above named company, and request you to allot me that number of\nshares and I hereby agree to accept\nsame or any smaller number that may\nbe allotted to me, and pay for same\nthe sum of $ \u2022 \u25a0 \u2022 \u2022 as follows:\nThe sum of $  on the\n day of each month until\namount subscribed for is fully paid,\nand I hereby authorize you to register\nme as the holder of the same.\nName in full...\t\nOccupation   \u2014\t\nAddress  \t\nDated 191....\nSignature   \u2022 \u2022\u2022\nSend Us Yotir\nApplication\nWe want your application today. Every dollar received is\ninvested in equipment. Consider what this means. No promoters' stock, no watered stock, no passes. A company operated on a strictly business basis. Buy stock for your children they will then profit by the growth of the city and district. Street railway stock has proved a very profitable investment in other cities that did not have as favorable a\nfranchise as we have.\nMail or hand your application to Secretary H. E.\ndrawer 1042, Nelson, B.C., or at office of the company, corner\nJosephine and Baker Streets. -\u00a711111\nCalgaty's Increase of Population\nFrom 11,967 to 50,000\u2014Calgary's growth in five years.   The increase in the next five years will be twice\nas great.   Our West Mount Pleasant subdivision made 366 per cent for our clients in one year and a half.\nHighgate Will Make the Same Profit for Yo* If Y< a Bay Now\nPrice, $165 each, $25 cash, balance $10 per month,\nbefore July 1, 1912.\nAbsolute guarantee included in contract of car line\nRemembet, $25\nRemember $25 starts you, the\nbalance in monthly payments of\n$10. You have absolutely nothing\nto lose by writing at once for full\nparticulars or better still by send-\n$25\nthe first payment on a lot with\nthe distinct understanding that if\nyou are not entirely satisfied with\nour selection we will at once return your money; but write anyway. You will not be fair to\nyourself if you do not look into\nthis offer It will cost you but\ntwo cents and a minutes time.\nIsn't it worth  while?\nrailway  is  not completed  on  or\nbefore  June 1st, 1912.\nMoney Back If\nNot Satisfied\nVisit Highgate any time within\n90 days after you purchase, keep\nwhat you have if you think it the**-\nbest bargain in our entire hoWi-\njngs, change it to any ot.\u00bbejyTot\nif you feel the property hcjjFbeen\nmisrepresented in any w-jp or go\n.to our cashier's desk and get back\n\/every dollar you ha^r paid us.\nfit's all the same todk\\ we want\nf satisfied customers^\nBy foreseeing Wk future of Calgary we are bow able to offer\nyou this opi^tunity. By selling\npart of thaflots will enable us\nto get frojr ,$400 a lot up for the\nbalance jwhen   car   line   is   com-\nHi^gate Homesite\nCo., Owners    l\nH. E. DOUGLAS, Sales Manager,}    P|e*\u00ae^\nJCffis Line Ri*ns\nThough Highgate\nWestern Canada  Investment Co.,\nCor. Baker and Josephine St.    \\\nStreet Railway\nBuilt Not Yet\nIf it were you would pay $400\nper lot'instead of $165. We give\nyou an absolute guarantee that\nthe street railway line will be\nbuilt to and through Highgate by\nJune 1, 1912. Or will pay any and\nail damages sustained   if  street\nBuy now and share in the increase in value by the time the car\nnumber of lots at this price.\n(Calgary Herald, Oct. 1, 1911.)\nWILL    BUILD    ROAD\nBY   DAY   LABOR\nGrading    Will    Commence    This\nMorning   on   the   Chestermere-\nCalgary  Railway\u2014Work to  Be\nRushed.\nAt the meeting of the directors\nof the Chestermere-Calgary I ail-\nway company yesterday, tenders\nwere opened from Ihe different\npeople who tendered to build and\nequip the road. The directors\nconsidered that all tenders were\nexcessive ?nd d -ided to construct the read by day labor, placing a foreman in charge of each\nbranch of the work.\nThis morning Mr. D. H. Steen,\nin charge, of 1C workmen, commenced digging the holes for\npoles for the tlectric wires for 13\nmiles of the line.. The order for\n.po!;s was p' oed with the Linds-\nley dros. Co., who supplied the\nC i this y:ar with the poles required for ti.e construction of the\nL.v'scent [Lights line. Poles for\nthe line will arrive in Calgary\nduring t\\.s next two weeks and\nwill be put in position at once in\norder f t the aerial work may\nbe completed before the cold\nweather sets In.\nThe grading of the line will\ncommence tomorrow and enough\nteams will be employed to complete the grading in the next 30\ndays. The tires and steel will arrive in Calgary by November 1\nand will be placed in position and\nit it expected the whole road will\nbe completed before January next.\nline is completed.   Only a limited\nWe Can Help Yon Get a House\nIn justice to yourself and family you should own your own home. You have to pay rent. You can buy\na home under our plan and be your own landlord.\nToday's Special\nIf sold today our client will take $1,050 for'a cosey 4 roomed cottage on a level corner lot, fenced\nwith 16 hearing fruit trees and also undertake to have the .house painted with two coats in colors to suit\npurchaser.\nRemarkable terms\u2014A very small payment down and balance $25 per month. Only one block from\ncar line. lipiPf!\nOut Bungalows Are Rapidly Nearing Completion\nNo 1 will be completed about the 15th of next month. If you contemplate buying you should see this\ncute home.   Buying now you can have the house finished to suit you.\nWestern Canada Investment Co.\nFinancial Agents, ^eai Estate, Fire, Life and Accident Insurance; Timber   Lands, ' Rents    Collected,    Loans\nSafety Deposit Boxes for Rent\nJ.  E. TAYLOR, Manager. H  .E.  DOUGLAS, Insurance and      C   A.   VAN   HEMERT,   Timber\nLoan  Department. Department.\nP.O.  Box 1042.    Phone 254 Cor. Baker and Josephine Streets.\nLONDON   MARKET   OPTIMISTIC\nLONDON, Oct. 16\u2014Money and discount rates were easy today. The\nBank of England secured the bulk of'\nthe South African gold, $4,250,000 offered in the open market. The price,\n. paid was 77s 9d unchanged. The stock\nmarket developed cheerfulness and\nstrength under the lead of gilt edged\nsecurities, which advanced on a broadening   investment ; demand.    Consols\ngained 7-16 and fresh speculative support hardened Peruvian and copper\nshares and Mexican rails, but Chinese\nsecurities closed weak and lower.\nAmerican securities opened steady\nand in the forenoon advanced under\nthe lead of Canadian Pacific and\nUnion Pacific. Later New York offerings brought about a general decline\nand the market closed easy.\nMinard's Liniment Cures Burns, Etc.\nLATE GOVERNMENT GAVE\nBATTLEFORD COURTHOUSE SITE\nOTTAWA, Ont., Oct. 15.\u2014The Canadian Gazette contains the notice that\nan order-in-council has been passed by\nthe late government authorizing the\ntransfer to the province of Alberta of\nsufficient land for a site for a courthouse at North Battleford. The site is\na part of the K. N. W. M. P. reserve.\nPROFESSIONAL CARDS\nGREEN BROS., BURDEN,* CO.\nCivil Engineers.  Dominion aj-flTB. C. Lait\nSu*#eyor*s.^^\nSurvey* of Lands-* MlnedWownsites, Tim\nNelson, 616 WardVGfrA. H. Green, Mgr\nVictoria, 114 Pemberton Bldg., F. C. Green\nFt George, Hammond St.. F. P. Burdon\nA. L. McCULLOCH\nHydraulic Engineer^.*\nProvincial Land Surveyor\nP. O\/Box jy^\nOffice 'phone B86| resj^nce 'phone B74\nOffice: Over Mc'Befmid & McHardy\nBaker St.. Nelson. B.C.\nGEORGE H PLAyLE\nChartered Acco^nWin't, Auditor\nNelsonrB.C.\nMININjf\nProperties inspeetedJand expert reports\nfurnished. Jame*V#c. Campbell, M.E.,\nUnited States hotel, St. Paul. 130-tf.\nSinging and Voice Production\nH.   TREBY   HEALER-TUITION   GIVEIs\nin above.   -Studie^at 515  Cedar  street.\nAddress Haft&BfTP. O., B. C.\nMRS.    D.    R.    McFMiLANE,    PIANIST\nand teacher. *914jg*pca street,  y-\nVIOLIN AND THEORY OE>MUSlC-JVxlSS\nCruttwell gives lessons J^hese subjects.\nStudio, Metho<Bst scbfTOlroom, Josephine\nstreet. Addresecatre Mrs. Barton. 408\nVictoria street, nelson. 167-8\nHAIRDRESSING   M0  MANICURING\nMRS. J. M. HQULBfNG, HAIR DRESS-\ning.   514% KodtMjiy street.   Phone 477.\n145-26\nCHIROPODIST\nB.   DINSffiORpc-WORK   DONE BY  AP-\npointmen\\^Bl3 Baker street. 158-6\nBox 723 Phone 43\nI I LEP\nProvincial Assa^r\nLate of tab Hall Mras Smelter.\nTwelveyears ejuflrience in B.C.\nores.   CqAtrol yfl: umpire work a\nspecialty!    Jr\n312 Ward ST Nelson, B.C.\nOpposite Court Housr\nBungalows, Ranch and Towj**^\n- Houses\nPlans  and  Specificarons\nWILLHAfelSANE\nArchitected Valuator\nManJ^jjjJars experience with,\narchitecfurals firms of highest\nstanding.\n519 Stanley St. Nelson, B.C.\nLIQUOR ACT, 1910.\n(Section 42.)\nNotice is hereby given that, on the first\nday of December next, application will be\nmade to the SuperintendentjpjrProvincial\npolice for renewal of theJtfCtel license to\nsell liquor by retail in tJ$rhotel known as\nthe Palace hot*, sitjrfte at Ymir in the*\nprovince of Braishjffolumbia.\nDated this 13t\u00bb*ffay of October, 1911.\nHUGH JONES,\n156-30d* Applicant.\nLIQUOR ACT, 1910.\n(Section 42.)\nNotice is hereby given that, Q|,**'the first\nday of December next, application will be\nmade to the Superintende*uflR)f Provincial\npolice for renewal of the\/notel license to\nsell liquor by retail fn J-ne hotel known as\nthe Erie hotel, sinuKe at *Erie in the\nprovince of British Tolumbia. m$&\nDated this 12th day of October, 1911.\nJAMES J. HIOKET,\n156-30d Applicant.\nLIQUOR   ACT,   1910\nNotice is hereby given that on the 14th\nday of November next application will be\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial\nPolice for the transfer of the license^for\nthe sale of liquor by retail in an^rupon\nthe premises known as the Pakjce hotel,\nsituated at Ymir, British Colj*Hnbia, from\nJones & Walker to Hugh Jmes of British\nColumbia. *r\nDated this 14th da*A**OT;ctober, 1911.\n(Signed)   HUGH JONES.\nGEORGE   WALKER.\n157-SOd\nLIQUOR ACT, 1910.    j\n(Section 42.)\nNotice is hereby given that, on thaeHrst\nday of December next, applicationJwhl be\nmade to the Superintendent of JPrOvincial\npolice for renewal of the hottfr'.license to\nsell liquor by retail i| the hMe\\ known as\nthe Cosmopolitan hotel,, sitelate at town of\nYmir in the provincefoiL\u00abntish Columbia.\nDated this 12th da^W October, 1911.\nJOHN BREAU,\n156-30d Applicant.\nLIQUOR ACT, 1910\n, ..^Section 42.)\nNotice is hereby given that, on the flattt\nday of December next, application j^lnoe\nmade to the Superintendent of. Pa^hcial\nPolice for renewal ofi the hoteUPcense to\nsell liquor by retail il the hojfx known as\nthe Castlegar hotel It Caglflegar in the\nprovince of British Cbludffiia. i\nDated this 16th day mroctober, 1911.\n.W. H. GAGE,\n158-30d Applicant.\nLIQUOR   ACT,   1910\n(Section 42)\nNOTICE is hereby given that on the\nfirst day of December next, application\nwill be made to the Superlntendent^rPro-\nvincial Police for renewal of jj& hotel\nlicense to sell liquor by retaiL^Klthe hotel known as the Vancouver Jrotel, situate\nat Ymir, B. C.,. in the frojMice of British\nColumbia.\nDated this 13th day of October, 1911.\nJAMES M. GILLE,\nApplicant.\nLIQUOR   ACT,   1910\n(Section 42)\nNOTICE is hereby given thjiT on the\nfirst day of December nexb^appllcation\nwill be made to the i SuflfSrintendent of\nProvincial Police for rejMJwal of the hotel licence to sell liqu^Tby. retail in the\nhotel known as the Edgewood hotel, situate at Edgewood, B. C, in the Province\nof British Columbia.\nDated this 13th day of 'October, 1911.\nW. A. CALDER,\nApplicant.\nHELP WANTED.\nNELSON EMPLOYMENT AGENCY\nC. F. Hutton, Manager\nHELP OF ALL KINDS\nPROMPTLY FURNISHED.\nTHE WORK|NGMEN'8 EMPLOYME*\"\n\u25a0;'^||\/REAL  ESTATE  AGENCY.\nWANTED\u2014Men to contract for land\nclearing; hookmen, bricklayers; bush-\nmen; cook, small hotel; waitress put of\ntown, $35; woman for general housework,\n$40, $50 if can do cooking for small hotel;\nwoman cook, ranch, $30; carpenters (finishers); railway graders; girls for general\nwork; men for road work, long job;\nteamsters for bush; chambermaid.\nW. Parker, 312 Baker street, Phone 283.\nB. C. UNITED AGENCIES\nReal Estate Employment Agents.\n311 Baker St., Nelson\nBox 232 Phone 391\nWOMEN'S     EMPLOYMENT    OFFICE\nOVER    POOLE    DRUG    STORE;    EN-\ntrance on Josephine street.\nFORT GEORGE  LAND CO.\nReal Estate Employment Office\n218 Baker Street, Nelson.\nP.  O.  Box 888. Phone 134.\nJACOB  GREEN  & CO.\nAuctioneers, Appraisers,\n\"Valuators.\nP. O. Box 233.       J \u25a0; Nelson, B. C.\nFOR   SALE.\nFOR SALE-Fruitlands,320acresmfamous\nPend d'Oreille valley, about 6 miles from\nWaneta and 3 miles north of international\nboundary on interprovinoiail highway; admirably adapted for fruit raising; excellent\nland; plenty of water; admirable climate;\nrapidly developing district; large proportion\nof land can be plowed without preliminary\nclearing; $35 an acre for block or would\nsell In parcels of 20 acres each; terms. This\nis a snap and great chance to make money.\nWrite Box 965, Nelson, B.C.\nFOR SALE-To a man who is tifed of\nday labor and wants to settle down in a\nhome of his own, where he can raise fruit\nand chickens can in our %inicjMnd no\nbetter opportunity in the jsmm west\nthan these ten-acre tractg^to the Grey\n-Creek subdivision .TfiisJjFsplendid fruit\nland and easily J clearaff; well watered,\nand within a hllf am of steam boat\nlanding. postofffte^Id store. The above\nland is direct fafftn tne iocater to purchaser. Now, If you are interested, and\nevery man should be. write us or call and\nwe will give you full particuars. Address\nLindsay Launch & Boat Co.. Room 8.\nGriffin Block\nFOR SALE-A goodljj0\u00a3mg horse, about\n1300 pounds; wfeu^rsuit -rancher or ex\npress man.   Appjfw. Cutler, auctioneer.\n142\nFOR SALE\u2014Farm for sale.^j^) acres, excellent farm land, $18 v&f acre, fenced.\nHorse stables, good wa***!?, close by two\n\u25a0creameries, 5% mflesj#from town. Will\ntake part paymenVTn b. C. property.\nAlex Currie, Bowden, Alta. 152-8\nFOR SALE-Port Mann. The Pacific\nterminal port of the Canadian Northern\nrailway. Official announcement is made\nthat the townsite lots will be on sale within sixty days. As was the case in Pria^S\nRupert, record prices will reign, so*q***j\u00a7Kiy\n$15,000 to $20,000 per lot. The lots^fareSt\nto what will- be the highest prica#railway\nlots are those across the roadnbelonging\nto us. They are big, 50 fe*r by 164 feet\nlots, <to a 20-foot lane, an#are about 300\nyards off the; waterfrapP. Pripes now\nasked are only- from $3^00 up, with three\nyear terms. Jpese sjpw opportunities for\ngreatest quicjjf profjJJFever offered in the\ncountry. No|pri*vMre-subdivision in this\nterminal can'evenple so close as ours. Remember the hijKest prices at the sale\nwill set the v^rae to our lots. We recommend speedy^ction, \/as only about fifty\nlots remain unsold. Ask for our maps\nand prices. Sole agents, The Selwyn Investment Company, LimitecL\/811 Dominion\nTrust Building, Vancouyej^B.C. 152\nFOR SALE\u2014Cedar ]m&, suitable for boat\nhouses and floai^rof every description.\nApply Elforcf Jg-fl^BT compaj****^'.' 154-6\nFOR SALE\u2014Cheap-^Second hand piano.\nApply 2222, Dails^ews Office, or Phone\nF462. 133-tf.\nFOR SALE-Well-furnished cottage, three\nrooms and bathroom; hotj&d cold water;\n30 yards fiom carline; cbfeken house and\nrun: lot 25x120 feet: well stocked garden;\nprice, $1,400 cash. lpf>ly P. O. Box 982.\n156-5\nFOR SALE\u2014Eight-roomed house in good\ncondition, all conveniences.   518 Victoria\nstreet. 157-6\nFOR SALE\u2014Upland potatoes, BUrbanks\nand New Yorki $25 ^Jr ton, large or\nsmall quantities. fAlsoJprge Buff Orpington pullets and |^eaj#Old hens, $2 each.\nGlen Allan Ranoli.^rrow Park. 157-6\nFOR SALE, LARGE & SMALL TRACTS\nTHE RIGHT KIMD\nGENUINE FBUITJRNDS\nR. LAMONT,  CREfffON,  B.  C\nLIQUOR ACT, 1910.\n(Section 42.)\nNotice is hereby given that, on the first\nday of December next, application will be\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial\npolice for renewal of the hotel license to\nsell liquor by retail in the hotel known ae\nthe Northern hotel, situate at town of Salmo in the province of British Columbia.\nDated this 12th day of October, 1911.\nE. E. MCARTHUR,\n156-30d Applicant.\nPUBLIC HIGHWAYS\nProvince of British Columbia\nNotice is hereby given that all Public\nHighways in unorganized Districts, and all\nMain Trunk Roads in organized Districts\nare sixty-six feet wide, and have a width\nof thirty-three feet on each side of the\nmean straight centre line of the travelled\nroad.\nTHOMAS TAYLOR,\nMinister of Public Works.\nDepartment of Public WOrks,'\n\u2022Victoria, B.C., July 7th, 1911. 79-3m.\nLIQUOR ACT\nNotice is hereby given that, on the 4th\nday of November, 1911, next, application\nwill be made to the Superintendent of\nProvincial Police for the^ransfer of the\nlicense for the sale Qjfgfmquor by retail in\nand upon .the prejaises known as the\nKootenay\/FaUa^Botel, situate at Slocan\nJunction, '^\u00bbmsh Columbia, from John\nWinfield Moore to John Winfield Moore\nand. Peter Johnson of British Columbia.\nDated this 2nd day of October, 1911.\nJOHN   WINFIELD   MOORE,\nHolder   of  License.\nJOHN   WINFIELD   MOORE,\nand PETER  JOHNSON;\n1.47-30d Applicants  for  Transfer,\nWANTED\u2014MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED-Salesmen Ho^salesmen want\ned to sell the most.ycomplete line oi\nnursery stock in Jm Northwest. Cash\nweekly, capital iOKy Nursery Company,\nSalem, Oregon. ^ 272-tf.\nWANTED-An opportunity fo^Tlive man,\nselling our guaranteed pKima Valley\ngrown nursery stock.\/ Exaiusive territory.\nOutfit free. Cash wieMC \"Hustle,\" not\nexperience required. ^Toppenieh Nureery\ncompany, Toppenish, Wash.\nWANTED\u2014Clean cotton raar Apply The\nDaily News. jr 79-tf\nWANTED\u2014Married m\u20ac. te buy five and\nten acre fruit itares.   Small.eash payment,   balance  in^work.    Ajiply Harris,\nHoneymoon Place, K&olo.jr 97-tf.\nWANTED \u2014 Apples,.   to^\/Soo,   pears   and\nother treo fruits;! parces on application.\nK. C. Preserving \"Writs,   Nelson,' B. C.\nUMf\nWANTED\u2014Aocldents and sickness will\nhappen. Our new $2,-W0 accidental death\nand sickness policy, providing a woekly\n\u25a0bj61d<|fi*t 'o^^l 15^ i&:the most liberal contract\nissued by any company for small premium\nof $5 a year. It pays for typhoid fever,\npneumonia, scarlet fever, apjj&ndieitis,\ndiphtheria and 44*other disea^fljey sold to\nmen and women between thjFtiges of 16\nto 70 years; any oc^upatJjR; ho medical\nexamination required, \"ji^6 is more re&l\ninsurance in thislpolicjffcnan any other for\nthe premium clargg*^ without any exception, identifpatjm certificate genuine\nleather card cJjyinsures immediate and\naccurate identfifation in case of accident or sudden illness, including payment\nof all expenses up to $100. Strong stock\ncompany. Million dollars paid in claims.\nWrite agency terms. P. Frazier, & Co.,\n422 Winch Bldg., Vancouver, B.C., General\nAgents for British Columbia. 13&-tf.\nWANTED\u2014School   ieajfier    for    Harrop\nschool, 1st or 2nd [class certificate.   Apply E. Harrop, Secreffry, Harrop.     143-tf.\nWANTED\u2014Land clearj((| contracts. We\nwant to let contractir for clearing blocks\nfrom 10 to 100 apesjft Upper Bonnington.\nLight clearing! Jkanagan Commercial\nOrchards Compftn\/, Ltd. Apply to J. J.\nCampbell, teleSrone B462, Willow Point\nP. O. 152-tf.\nWANTED\u2014Lady teacher, honef graduate,\nQueens University, Belfa^wants B. C.\nschool.   Apply W. R>*TOy Newju  163-\u00ab\nWANTED\u2014Immediately,   probationers  for\nthe Gialt HospitalJTrainhj-pschool, Lethbridge,  Alberta.    A tMle years' course.\nApply to Lady Superintendent. 154-6\nWANTED-You can't help bjg^Tnake\nmoney selling our guaran^pPto-give-\nsatisfaction stock. \/EYee^plfifit; cash\nweekly; exclusive teyitojjw^Yaklma Valley Nursery compaj\u00bb^roppenish, Washington. 155-tf.\nWANTED\u2014Smajfboy or young fellow to\nlearn Ij-ju-njd-jlHauilding business.    Apply\nK. HenryWTCo.     . 155-tf.\nWANTED-A lady from England is now\ntaking orders for hand paintings.   Samples on view at Fred Irvine's store.   Miss\nWallis, over postoffice. 156-6\nWANTED\u2014To   rent   furnished   house   or\nrooms for small family.   Apply R.  A.\nHunt, Hall Siding, B. C. 157-3\nWANTED\u2014Board and room Fairview.  Apply F,  Daily News.\nWANTED\u2014B. C. widower, 30, would correspond with lady 28 to 35; view marriage.   Prefer widow with boy and little\nmeans.   Box 23, The Daily News.       158-4\nWANTED\u2014Girl  going\nfor board.  Good t&d\nNews.\nd school to work\nApply S. F. Care\n159-6\nWANTED\u2014Young girl^^companion-help;\nGood home i*qlii^tp(rfor light services.\nApply K. B. T.>dKmy. News. 158-6\nPOULTRY  AND   LIVE STOCK\nFOR SALE-Horse, suitable for rancher.\nApply Nelson Steam Laundry. 154-tf.\nFOR. SALEj-p&V Barred  Rock pullets,  30\nonefyear^T hens,  100 young  cockerels.\nAppi* K^Hoover,  opp.  C.  P.  R.  wharf,\nNels&lMF  158-6\nFOR   RENT.\nFOR RENT-Furnished room with use of\nbath.   214 Victoria St. 146-26\nFOR RENT-Furnished rooms.   411 Silica\nstreet. 147-12\nFOR RENT-Comfortable furnished rooms\nand   housekeeping   rooms.     507   Silica\nstreet. 150-12\nFOR RENT-Furnished house.   Apply 30\nRobson street. 153-\nFOR  RENT\u2014Warm  bedroom.    Close  to\nC.P.R.   109 Baker street. 153-6\nFOR RENT-Large  front bedroom;  also\ntwo housekeeping rooms.   712 Josephine\nstreet. 153-6\nFOR   REN-T\u2014G\u00abod. localism, I on   Baker\nstreet, ground\/ flobr^jmtable for office\nor small store. \\AgjBlfW. Gl. Thomson's\nBookstore. 155-tf.\nFOR RENT\u2014Warm bedroom.     Close   to\nC. P. R.   109 Baker street. 156-6\nFOR   RENT-Three   nice    housekeeping\nrooms.   712 Josephine street. .    157-6\nFOR     REN^ftrffftirnished     housekeeping\nrooms.   Apply Carney B^q-ck.    .      158-tf\nFOR RENT-Twoj^dflyfurnished rooms.\nHot air fuijhj*^r Use of baths.   904 corner of Stanley and Mill Streets. 158-6\nward.   Apply Madden house.\nBURTONDALE  SCHOOL\nSealed tenders, superscribed \"Tender for\nBurtondale School House,\" will be received by the Hon. the Mijpter of Public\nWorks up to 12 o'clock n-flon of Tuesday,\nthe ,31st day of October^roil, for the erection and completion of' a small one-room\nframe school-house it Burtondale, in the\nSlocan Electoral Mftrict, B. C.\nPlans, specifications, contract, and forms\nof tend** mayjie seen on and after the\n11th daf of Qptober, 1911, at the offices\nof J. S. Mc*cormack, Esq., Secretary of\nthe Sclool^oard, Burton, B.C., the Gov-\nernmeft Aments,. Nelson and Kaslo, B.C.,\nand tl*MPepartment of Public Works, Parliament Buildings, Victoria.\nEach proposal must be accompanied by\nan accepted bank check or certificate of\ndeposit on a chartered bank of Canada,\nmade payable to the Hon. the Minister of\nPublic Works, for the sum of $250, which\nshall be | forfeited if the party tendering\ndecline to enter into contract when called\nupon to do so, or if he fail to complete\nthe work contracted for. The checks or\ncertificates of deposit of unsuccessful\ntenderers will be returned to them upon\nthe 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.\nJ. E. GRIFFITH,\nPublic Works Engineer.\nDepartment of Public Works,\nVictoria', B.C., October 9th, 1911. 155\nHOTEL DIRECTORY\nNELSON   HOTEL BAR\n*  Baker Stree*Lf-**Nelson, B.C.\nINK^UtfARD, Props.\nGin Riokeys.  (Only place carrying Limes.\nSHERBROOKE HOTEL\n'Nelson, B. C. ^jjT\nOno minute's wai\/from^-flt. station.\nCuisine uneBceUeds' welL^Heated and ventilated. I   j*T\n BOYER EfROS., Props.\nROSSLAND\nT?B^H0\/FMAN ^NEX, J&SSLAND,\n1 .'T43*^ & %nith\u00bb ?WPS. Centrally\nlooated. Sferopean and^Tmerican plan,\ncommercial tr-\u00bbvellej^s, will find light\ncoafortebl\u00ab saiftpj^fooms. a special din-\n'T^^t g& excellent accommodations\nat the Hoffman. Baths, bowling .alley,\nsteam laundry. 6       y'\nphoenix\/\nHOTEL BROOKLYN, PaS^ENIX B C -\nThe only up-^-date\/ffotel in Phoenix.\nNew from celfer t|Froof. Best sample\nrooms in the friary. Bath room in\nconnection. Ste^m heat Opposite Great\nNorthern depot.   James Marshall, Prop.\nGRAND   FORjg\nG5^NDJ0RKS HpTEI^RAND FORKS\na. U-Fmest fire-ffrroo^oMto Boundary.\nAmenean and fiuijPean plan. Commer-\"\ncial travellers faj**TOnd light, comfortable\nsample rooms. Tg. Frankovitch, Prop\nCASTLEGAR\n\"HOTEL CASTLEGAR,'-. CASTLEGAR\nJunction. All modernjJExcellent accommodations for\/touru**\u20ac and drummers.\nBoundary tra* leases here at 9.10 a.m.\nRossland-Nelsej^ain stops for breakfast and dinner.\nW. H. Gage, Proprietor.\nBusiness Directory\n-^W',Jr5)DOW*i5w\u00bb ASfiA^ER AND\nSff ^P* *W *\u2022!&*% B.C. Chafes\nWold, silver^ copper? or lead, $1 each\ngold-saver, n-ayper-lead, $1.60. Prieei\nfor other nietairon application.\nAUCTIONEERS\nC. A. WATERMAl4i^fa-^^rboT^\nW. -CJTLER, LICBNga\/AUCTIONEER\nAuctioi rooms aid warehouse Ward St.,\n\u2022a\u00abxt o-oera houseMBox 474, Phone 18\n\\iJSTlfS' *COi#ECTIONS OF ALL\n* *' R\u00ab*a,fyi*flromptly made. Ward\nstreet, next o^ra house. 20-S\nbudding homes. Deligtfkd customer our\nb^ta\u00abve*ttse\u00abeni K O. Box 165. Phone\nJ^l  27-tf.\nC^^TJ8RS-Pers*ns wanting good\ncarpenters aMflm to -ffnitfed Brotherhood\nof  Carpentws, jBox  20,   or at  regular\n*$M$$M-8 p-m\" M^ers'\nROBB & THOMI\u00bbSOJN--BUILDBBS AND\nCon-feraotors, Victoria stroeUjifext opera\nhouse. P. O. Box 496. f^oial attention\ngiven jobbing aad reftf? work. Estimates gi-VOB. gg_t\/\nSTARKBY &CoTwHO^^X^dS\u00a3\ners in Butter, Eggs, Cheea^ProdueoS\nFruit. Ho*uston^ock-iWsephine street\nJNelSOB, B.C.     \u00a7.  ^tr .\nA. MACDONALD A CO., - Wholesale\nGrocers and Proyisiea Meififejints-Im-\nporters at Tea*, Coffees, Spices, Dried\nFruits, .Staple, aad Faney,\u2022 Groceries, Tobaccos, OffM-* Buttor^gs, Cheese and\nPaoking Ho-bm Produce. Office and\nwarehouse opraerMt Front- and Hall,\nstreets.  P.  C^pTm  Tolopko\nA. E   BE*NNsg?T) pailltw. ^ i60om\nwall poiwrs and paper hanging a specialty; estimates atom; a* work promptly\nP. O. Box 927, Nelson.\n\u2022HCB    LOCALITY   \u00a3ND   HOME   COM-\n\u00a3*\u00a3 ^*r.^^,fetf*ar\u00ab\u00ab\u00ablars write\nB Q- Box wg, Noifai; B.n.\nFALL CLEANING-HAVE TOUR-HOME\ncleaned by our vacuum procoss^Mhygienic\nsanitary, eheap. Don't turjiif-your home\nupside down. Try Ap-to-date methods.\nEndorsed by NelsJ^aip\u00a3SiM citizeUs.\nWindow cleaning, t'hoj&e cleaning and\nchimney oleaningl^Phone 19. Nelson\nVacuum Co., officr'Stanley St\nJ. H. RINGROSE. ELECTRICAL CON-\ntractor and supplies! Completeplstalla-\ntion of isolated lighting and telephone\nsystems a specials. Stock of supplies\nalways on hand. fSpjpStanley street,\nstreet. Phone A22foaW o. Box 155.\n M 157-tf\nLIQUOR ACT, 1910\n(Section 42.)\nNotice is hereby given that, on the first\nday of December next, application will be\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial\nPolice for renewal of the hotel license to\nsell liquor by retail in the hotel known as\nthe Kootenay Falls hotel, situate at Slocan\nJunction in the province of British Columbia.\nDated this 12th day of October, $&$\n,      MOORE & JOHNSON,\n158-30q-  Applicant.\nLIQUOR ACT, 1910    j\n(Section 42.)\nNotice is hereh\/ given that^Srthe first\nday of Decemb* next, appJi'C'ation will be\nmade to the SaperintenjBt of Provincial\nPolice for ren\/wal oj^ie hotel license to\nsell liquor by ket0f!h the hotel known as\nthe Grove ho\u00abWfrtuate at Fairview in the\nprovince of British Columbia.\nDated this Kth day of October, 1911.\n\\ WILLIAM GOSNELL,\n158-30d \\ Applicant.\nLIQUOR ACT, 1910\n| (SecWi 42.)\nNotice is hereby gr^n that,, on the first\nday of December nexf^application will be\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial\nPolice for renewal otAhe hotel license to\nsell liquor h\/j^a4Hn the hotel known as\nthe Outlet Horel,\" situate at Proctor in the\nprovince of British Columbia.\nDated this Uth day of October, 1911.\nGILBERT T. SNOW,\n158-30d Applicant.\nTENDERS WANTED\nSealed tenders for purchase of the James\nRitchey sawmill plant^etc., (no lumber),\nat Bride\/ville, BX^f^mU. be received by\nthe. un^'signeik*\u20act Bridesville, B.C., post-\noffice jinJiM2 o'clock noon on Friday, the\n20th day of October, 1911.\nThe highest or any tender not necessarily accepted.\nJ. R. MARTIN,\n145-tf. Asst. Timber Inspector.\n TUESDAY     OCTOBER 17\n\u20acU \u00a9att? jgem\nPAGE SEVEN\n1\ni\nKootenay Subdivision\nSituated only a short distance South-East of\nthe C. P.R. car shops in the heart of all the\ngreat development, in the  centre of the\ni*||1 future city of\nSouth-East|Calgary\nOur prices are still 25 per otnt. below prices\nwhich prevail in thecM of Calgary itself\nWhat Doe's Tkfs Mean to You?\nInvest ydurjtfoney where it will give you the\nSafest and Quickest returns.   Invest It\nwith Us,   Every single customer of ours is\na booster.\nWestern Provinces Co-operative Realty Co., Ltd.\nRoom 15, K.W.C.  Block,  Nelson, B.C\nA.  B.  DOCKSTEADER,  President.\nHAROLD BRETT, Secretary-Treasurer\nPhone 188 P.O. Drawer 1107\nKENNETH CAMPBELL, Vice-President\nand  Managing Director.\n\"WATER   ACT,  1909\"  AND  AMENDMENTS\nNotice is hereby given that the board\nof investigation, created by Part III of\nthe \"Water Act. 1909,\" for the determination of water rights existing on the 12th\nday of March, 1909, intends, on or about\nthe 24th day of October, 1911, to proceed\nto adjudicate upon the claims to watel*\nfrom the following streams in the Slocan\nwater district:\n** Carpenter creek.\nSouth fork  Carpenter   creek.\nFirst   stream   flowing   into   Carpenter\ncreek.\nSecond stream   flowing  into   Carpenter\ncreek.\n[   Simpson creek,    i\nRasdall  spring.\nTurrig   creek.    I\nAylward  creek. I\nFlorence  creekf\nEccles creek. J\nMountain  Chitff creekf.\nSprings  on GoVt mp^rfftain.\n. Stream out of Sweet Grass tunnel, Goat\nmountain. \u2022\nStreams on Goat mountain.\nAngel creek.\nCadden creek.\nBonanza  creek.\nCropp's creek.\nSawmill  creek.\nWright creek.\nWilson creek.\nHarris creek.\nMollie   Hughes  creek.\nCody creek.\nDardanelles  or  Rambler creek.\nNo. 8 Tunnel, Payae mine.\nGipsy Boy creek.\nHowson creek.\nMcGuigan creek.\nMiller creek.\nNoble Five Slide creek.\nPayne creek or slide.\n\"Return\" Mining Co. tunnel\nSandon creek.\nSeaton creek.\nTributary   or Second   creek.\nWaterfall   or   Falls   creek.\t\nShea creek.\nBlue  Bird  creek*\nWhite creek.\nGold  creek.\nEmily creek.\nBartlett or Hume creek.\nTributaries of Bartlett creek.\nGrady creek.\nStandard  creek.\nCory  creek.\nGranite  creek.\nVancouver creek.\nAllen creek\nCreek from \"L.  H.\" mine.\nWakefield  creek.\nFour-mile  creek,   east  side   of   Slocan\nlake.\nEight-mile  creek.\nTen-mile  creek.\nTwelve-mile creek.\nLemon  or  Salmon  creek.\nNorth fork Lena creek.\nSouth fork Lena creek.\nSecond north fork Lena creek.\nBrogans creek.\nOrange creek.\nMonument  creek.\nLatendresse or Goose creek.\nCrescent Valley creek.\nMcHardy fsreek.\nIsabel crelk.              JF\nMabel  crenk.            Jp\nKinney or Wah-w^r creek.\nTilicum Jreek.\nSnake creek.\nNixon  cleel^P'\nSchiavonv- <*Jfeek.\nDurham creek.\nTrout creek.\nMill creek.\nGlacier creek.\nNemo or Six-mile creek.\nCove creek.\nIndian creek.\nEvans creek.\nNorth fork Evans creek.\nGwillim or Goat creek.\nMulvey or Robertson creek.\nBannock   creek.\nNorth fork Bannock creek.\nHolder creek.\nSlocan river.\nLittle Slocan lakes.\nLittle Slocan river.\nEast fork Little Slocan river.\nWest fork Little Slocan river.\nNorthwest fork Little Slocan river.\nBeaver creek.\nFour-mile creek.\nCougar   creek.\nGrizzly creek.\nRussell creek.\nSpringer creek.\nFive-mile, creek.\t\nColdwell creek.   %\u00a3^&j&\nDrayton  creek.\nCedar creek.\nPedro   creek.\nVincent creek.\nSpeculator creek.\nGoat  creek.\nTwo-mile creek.\nCamp creek.\nUnnamed small stream two miles south\nof Lemon creek.\nUnnamed stream flowing into Slocan\n.river three miles north of Slocan Junction.\nStream flowing about three miles and\na half south of Slocan City.\nAnd all unnamed streams. on which\nwater records may be claimed.\nEach and every person, partnership,\nCompany or municipality having such a\nclaim is required to forward to the Chief\nWater Commissioner at theJParliament\nBuildings at Victoria, on^r before the\n10th day of October, 191^bTmemorandum\nin wrijing as requireJrby section 27 of\nthe saa Act as anproed. Printed forms\nfor sfch memor^rfdum can be obtained\nfrom! any oldfiie Water Commissioners\nin tie njjj^nce.\nEvfciwre will be taken and arguments\nwill be heard at New Denver, and notice\nwill be given of the day on which each\ncreek .will be dealt with.\nDated at Victoria the 12th day of September,  1911. ,\nBy the board,\nJ.   F.   ARMSTRONG,\nActing Chief Water Commissioner.,\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\nBorn,   on  October   16,   at   316\nstreet, to Mr. and Mrs.  J. M. Wills, of\nSummit Lake, a son.\n^Mra James M. Bulger and daughter\nBertha arrived home Sunday night after\na three weeks' visit to relatives in Minnesota.\nMrs. J. Kinahan and family wish to\nthank their many friends for the kindnesses shown during their recent bereavement.\n\/ The Ladies' Aid of the Catholic church\nwill give one of their popular whist\nparties tomorrow night. A lady's and\ngentleman's prize will be awarded.\nDuring the evening the ladies will\nserve refreshments, including Boston\nbaked beans and brown bread, cake\nand coffee. They will serve tea in\nthe afternoon from 3 to 6 o'clock. Everybody TOlcome.   ,\nBand at the Alice Rorfer Rink tonight. .\nA large confiignsgaeht of toys has just\narrived at theSvifiety Store and will be\non sale about ljj(nday.       *r\nMutual Life of Cana#T.   Ladies insured,\non  same terms isJmen.    No  questions\nSee John lyTper. 154\nj.here is skating jftiree\/ffines daily, 10 to\nRink, Baker street*\nRing up Phone 88 for j-fuick messenger\nservice. 8 a. m. to 11 p. -ni. Room 7, Mara\nblock.   J: D. Mulrooney. 158-6\nThe glass watjr pit<?hers offered today\nat the Variety Stor\/at 25c are remarkable value. Onlf af:few to stall, so if you\nwant one come I<trl0 o'clock sharp.\nDo you want a real treat for afternoon\ntea? Try Scott's hpme-mady^cotch shortbread. On sale at\/Elfojd^ Boat company\nand leading grocer-y^gfores.\nLadies, this is your oppojl&rfnity to see\nthe'new styles in furs Faen Irvine & Co.\nare showing today onfly^r full line of traveller's samples. '      Mr\nWilkinson's Orchestra j\/Box supply yov\nwith the best music iff? dances, picnics,\ngarden parties, \u25a0*m<L-**tul social functions,\netc. All the latA^opular music. P. O.\nBox 184.   707 Victoria St. 99-tt\nCut down your fuel hil^mls winter by\nputting up storm; windows. We make\nthem to any . sfz^rPrizes reasonable.\nWaters & Pasco&JKootenay Lake Sash\nand Door Factorfr Front * street. P. O.\nBox 835, Phone B194. 124-tf.\nGREAT  SALE   OF   BpATS  ON\nat cost price. The\/genuiK Peterborough.\nCome right now. Tha^fest go first. Nelson Boat & Launcl*fc*\u20aco.   i 138-26\nMutual Life of Can-faa. Premiums\nsmaller than somA splits larger than\nothers.   See John msawev. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022 154\nDANCING SEASON\"'\nThe following combinatioj-rcan be engaged on the most-reasonable terms: Catl\nMeyer, violinist; Leon M^Candish, clarinet;\nArthur Oehler, drlmj-rlrvin G. Johnson,\npianist. All comjarfuni cations to Gem\nTheatre or P. O. Box 348.\nMARKETS\nLIQUOR ACT, 1910.\n(Section 42.)\nNotice is hereby given that, on the first\nday of December next, appUcatian*' will be\nmade to the Supemntendent^rProvincial\npolice fqr renewatfof theJwtel license to\nsell liquor by retail in^ti^rnotel known as\nthe Ymir hotel,\/situjreat Ymir in the\nprovince of Briftal^Columbia.\nDated this 12tHTOay of October, 1911.\nJ. B. BREMNER,\nIo6-30d Applicant.\nLIQUOR ACT, 1910.\n(Section 42.)\nNotice is hereby given |j| on the first\nday of Decejnber nextyaWjlication will be\nmade to this Supermjendent of Provincial\npolice for -Knewawr the hotel license to\nsell liquor Myfieraxl in the hotel known as\nthe Miller notel, situate at Ymir in the\nprovince  of  British  Columbia.\nDated this 14th day of October, 1911.\nWILLIAM DOWLING,'\n156-30d Applicant.\nMoose\/Jaw Lots\nThe best and safest investment in the West.\nLynbrook Heights, within the city limits and one mile circle.\nOne block from main stre^Kqnd carline.   The centre of the\nfashionable residential district.   Moose Jaw's growth is phenomenal.   These lots will be worth $1,J00 in 18 months.\nPrice $250 per lot. $25 down, $10 per month. See plan in our office\nToye & Toye\nWholesale Dealers in Fruit Lands\nPhone 325        ::        Box 147\nGOOD DEMAND FOR CASH\nWHEAT IN WINNIPEG\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 16.-World shipments\nwere very small, nearly 5,000,000 under the\nsame week last year. Cables were ail\nhigher. An afficial report from Russia\nwas bullish and rains were again general\nin Manitoba and many parts of Saskatchewan.\nThere was a good demand for cash\nwheat of all'grades and in spite of heavy\nreceipts the offerings were not large.\nThis, coupled with the general dullness,\nmade the market very jumpy toward the\nclose No's. 1, 2, and 3 Northern and No.\n4 were taken on the basis of the October\noption, but lower grades were only wanted on the basis of December. Export\nhouses reported that at the moment continental inquiry was for contract rather\nthan for lower grades.\nThe fluctuation for October for the\nmorning was l%c, and the close l^c up,\nNovember %e, December ^c and May -&C.\nOats were unchanged and flax is higher\nfor October and November, unchanged.\nChicago wheat was up % to ^c and\nMinneapolis Ys to ^c higher.\nDuluth flax jumped. 4 to 6c.\nListed stocks\u2014 Bid.  Asked.\nCanada Fire  -. ,125\nGreat West. Life   310     325\nDo Perm   115     120\nHome Investment        150\nHome Investment Rights      105\nNorthern Mortgage   120\nNorthern Trust       135\nStandard Trusts    160     ...\nNorthern, CFE    97      99\nUnlisted stocks-\nEmpire Loan,  FP     108     115\nEmpire Loan, PP     110    115\nWestern Trust     110     ...\nWinnipeg Fire     105     115\nCentral Canada Fire    105\nWinnipeg Land     140\nIndustrials-\nBeaver Lumber, pfd      92\nManitoba Pressed Brick   100     ...\nTraders' Bldg '\u2022\u2022  100     103\nCarbon Oil        25.\nPortland Canal        8      12\nWarrants   875     900\nSPOKANE MARKETS\n(Reported by Sharp & Irvine.)\nB. C. Copper   $3.00     $4.00\nCaledonia    \u00ae       -80\nCanadian     $42.00      ....\nGranby      29.00     30.50\nInternational   50\nLucky Jim   24%     .28\nRambler-Cariboo    50%       .28\nSnowstorm      16.00    23.00\nStewart    77%     .82\nStandard    1J4\u00a3    vl-58\nSales-1.000 Standard at $1.53; 1,000 Rambler-Cariboo at ol^c; 1,000 Rambler-Cariboo at 5iy2c; 4,000 Lucky Jim at 25%c.\nFine Watch and\nClock Repairing\nDo not overlook the fact that I\nhave at the head of my watch\ndepartment a man thift will give\nyour watch or clock^absolute satisfaction. .Send M your watch\nwork by mail ojraxpress. We will\nbe prompt, m\\\\ guarantee it for\n\u2022one year^ffid if not satisfactory\nlyour matey will be cheerfully re-\nI fun^d.\nJ. J. Walker\nOPTICIAN   \\ND JEWELER\nOh! Joy!\nThe first lady or gentleman that enters\nJoy's Cash Grocery and wearing the various colors that Joy, the grocer, has in\nmind, will be presented with a HANDSOME DINNER SET, consisting of 85\npieces, on condition that the J&dy or gent\npurchase merchandise to tJJ^ value of $2\nor over. If\/no person jjearing the colors\nthat Joy has in mind^nters the store before November lsjrhe will present the\nKootenay Lakejgeneral hospital with the\nsum of ten j*6llars ($10), time limit, 1st\nNovembeiyRll.   Joy will meet you at the\ndoor.\nJoy's Cash Croc ay\nCorner Mill and Josephine Sts,\nPhone 19 P.O. Box 63?\nHot Water\nHeating\nNow is the time to order your\nhot water heating appar^tfis so\nthat it ma\/ be inslfl-fral before\nthe frostv\/weathe\nLOtrachan\nPlumbing and Heating\nTelephone 262 313 Baker St.\nthe one event of the day, with an especial bearing upon securities. The prophecy had been made that the filing of the\nplan wouid be followed by a marked improvement in sentiment *but the tobacco\nsecurities shared in the general heavin\nThe action of the, market indicated that\neither the effect had been discounted or\n\u2022that because of the determined opposition\nto the plan doubt was felt whether it\nwould succeed.\nReading and United States Steel showed\nmost decidedly the effects of pressure,\nsellers of United States Steel, largely from\nout of town, Pittsburg in particular, adopting a bearish attitude. Northern Pacific\nwas the heaviest loser of the standard railway issues, although the Harriman stocks\nand St. Paul also were weak.\nThe London market was influenced to\nsome extent by the decrease in spot copper, which advanced on active trading.\nThe bond . market was irregular. The\nAllis-Chalmers bonds developed further\nweakness, but recovered partially. Erie\nbonds were decidedly strong.. Total sales,\npar value, $3,703,000. United States bonds\nwere unchanged on call.\nMETAL MARKETS\nLONDON, Oct. 16,-Silver, 24%; lead, \u00a315\n2s 6d.\nNEW YORK, Oct.\/16.-Silver, 25%; standard copper, 11.80@11.90; quiet.\nWALL  STREET WEAK\nNEW YORK, Oct. 16.-The demand for\nstocks lessened today and the market lost\nthe firm tone which was its characteristic\nlast week. Short covering, which was the\nmainstay of the market on its recent advance, ceased, as there was virtually no\ninquiry at the higher levels.\nFiling of the American Tobacco company's reorganization plan in court was\nAT THE THEATRE\nDelia   Pringle   Stock   Company   Commence Week's Engagement\nLast evening at the opera house the\nDelia Pringle stock company commenced\na week's engagement with the production\nof \"The Man on the Box.\" This evening\nthe company will present \"The Blue\nMouse,\" a dramatization of the well-\nknown novel of the same name, and for\nthe rest of the week well selected plays,\nincluding \"California,\" \"Pierre of the\nPlains,\" \"What Happened to Jones,\" etc.,\nwill be given.\nThe house was well filled last evening.\nThe play was clever and ran smoothly\nand satisfactorily. There was plenty of\nhumor and the several parts were all well\ntaken.\nThe play this evening, \"The Blue\nMouse,\" appeals particularly to the fair\nsex, as every one knows who has read\nthe book. People who are fond of witnessing well-selected, interesting dramas\nof the lighter sort should patronize the\nplays put on by the Delia Pringle stock\ncompany for the balance of this week.\n\"Through Fire and Smoke,\" which will\nbe shown tonight and tomorrow evening\nat the Gem theatre is a Selig fire drama\nthat is exceedingly realistic. The pricipal\nscenes in the picture were secured during\nthe great Bryne building fire in Los Angeles recently. The Selig company was\non hand with their corps of actors and\ncamera men as soon as the fire department itself and they were allowed to\nwork in the very midst of the conflagration. Mr. Sautsche and Miss Harte risked\ntheir lives to secure the great rescue\nscent, which is a thrilling feature of this\nreel. In the opinion of the moving picture\nworld reviewer it will be many years before a fire picture equal to this one will\nbe sectored. Other subjects: \"As Fate\nDecreed,\" a Pathe feature; \"Adventures\ni of a Baby,\" and \"The Stolen Dog,'.' Edison comedies..\nIncorporated 1670\nIncorporated 1670\nThe Hudson's Bay Stores\nThe Stores of Satisfaction for Value and Quality\nEvery Dag Brings Additions\nto Our Stock of New Fall\nand Winter Goods\nEnglish and Scotch\nBlankets\nA full stock of tjiese has just\narrived and we can, offer extraordinary value in these lines:\nWhite Whitney Union, 64x84,\n$4.50 per pair.\nWhite Whitney all wool, 64x84,\n$6*50 per pair.\nWhite Whitney all wool, 68x88,\n$7.50 per pair.\nThese blankets come singly,\nand are whipped at both ends.\nThey are entirely free from\ngrease and are as pure as can be\nproduced.\nGrey Canadian\nBlankets j\nWeighing 6 lbs., 56x76, per pair,\n$2.75.\nWeighing 8 lit., 64x84 per pair,\n$4.00.\nLadies' Suit*\nYou can save from $5 to $10\nright now by purchasing one of\nour very latest fall suits. We'll\nlet the suits tell their own story,\nasking you to shop around before\nbuying, and see for yourself if\nsuch suits can be had for the\nsame money elsewhepe. They are\nmade of the new fancy Scotch\nweave, and various fine all wool\nmixtures, diagonals, serges, mannish worsteds, cheviots and imported novelty fabrics. We have\npriced them at from $12 to $30.\nLadies' Winter Coats\nHigh grade models, full length,\nwith graceful semifitted lines;\nnew large reverse or deep shawl\ncollar. inlaid with velvet and\ntrimmed with large self colored\nbuttons, large pockets, velvet\ntrimmed ;s|leeves, yokej line, in\nnew mannish greys, tans and Oxfords. A perfect coat at from\n$10 to $30.\nLadies' Plain Black\nCashmere Hose k\nAll wool. Our special price for\nthese is four pairs for $1.\/\nLadies' Kid Gloves\nSilk lined, long wnfets, one\nstrap, dome fasteners,\/ in tans\nonly.   Price $1.50 pea pair.\nHudson's Bay\nPoint Blankets\nThese are justly celebrated for\nthe warmth and comfort they\ngive, and for their durability, as\na pair of them, with fair usage,\nwill last a lifetime.\n4 point H.B. blankets, weighing\n12 lbs., 72x90, $9 per pair.\n3% point HjB. blankets, weighting 10 lbs-, 63x80, $8 per pair.\nHorrocks' Sheeting\nKnown the world over.\n72 inches wide, per yard \u201440c.\n81 inches wide, per yard ....45c.\nThese sheetings are plain and\nare entirely free from dressing.\nThey are considered, the best\nmade. slP-sPi\nRoyaLJtVbrcester\norsets\nThese we offer in three qualities at $1,50, $2.50 and $3.25.\nD* & A* Corsets\nMaternity Corsets, No. 101, per\npair, $2.00.\nNursing Corsets, No. 10, per\npair, $2.00.\nTwo Specials in\nCorsets\nNo. 450, with four garters attached, 75c.\nNo. 130, with four garters attached, 95c.\nChiffon Scarves\nPure silk, in all shades, prices\n$1.50 to $3.00.\nParisian Novelties\nWe have just received direct\nfrom Paris something new in\nladies' Tinsel Collars. Tb\u00a3se. are-\nentirely different from anything\nshown heretofore, and are well\nworth examining. Prices, $1.50\nto $3.00.\nBone Hairpins\nFour on a card, per card, 10c.;\n3 cards for 25c.\nLadies' Underwear\nLadies combinations from $1.00\nto $3.00.\nVests from 45c. to $1.50.\nDrawers from 45c. to $1.50.\nChildren's vests from 35c. up.\nChildren's drawers from 35c. up.\nlens\nClothing\n&?$m toll for wellldressed men, whether the weather is cool or not.\nThey like to be fiM -in style, first to be seen in the new things\nand first in the eyei^f correctly attired friends; andy^'like too,\nto patronize a store thaN^^^tinaiyj|jiii^i!u^tes^a -store,\nlike this.\nWe have a lot of splendid clothing achievements to spread before you this fall\u2014clothing that reflects our sincerity in serving\nyou and our determination to satisfy you.\nYour ideal apparel may be found in any of the lines at from $12\n.to $3*5 per suit.\n\\.\nHBI\nSHARP & IRVINE CO., Brokers 514517 Paulsenm^ s\u00a7\u00a7! wash\nMcGIway CreetM^f Coke Company\nMcGillivray Creek Coal &' Coke company's shares look cheap to us at\npresent prices. We. look to see the labor troubles existing in the Crow's Nest\nPass district settled within a short time. Buy this stock at the market and\nbuy it to hold\u2014it should make you a good profit before long.\nIf you cannot get a quotation from your broker write us.\nCustom Quality Mens Shoes\nOur stock of men's fall and winter shoes now ready for your\ninspection. Smart, snappy, up to date, sty les that are sure to please\nthe well dressed man. Tan and black storm calf leather, with water\nproof soles for winter wear to select from, also the lighter ones in\npatent and gun metal button. Vici kid, Velour and Tan Bluchers\nin various shapes. We will be pleased to show you the different\nstyles.   Prices right.\nA Few Grocery Specials\nGuava Jelly, 1 lb. glass Jars.| .30     Bovril, 4 oz. bottle 65\nGinger Syrup, 2 lb. tins 25     Bovril, 8 oz. bottle   1.10\nPreserved Ginger, 1 lb. jars..   .25     Bovril, 16 oz. bottle   1.75\nPreserved Ginger, 2 lb. jars..   .50 Holland Herrings,   per   keg,     \\\nBovril, 2 oz. bottle 35        best quality  ..,..;.... 1.20\nAsk or Write or Our Grocery Price List\nA Ladies Parlor Is Provided Upstairs, Where They\nCan Meet Their Friends and Rest\nWe Will Buy\nWe Will Sell\n500 Kootenay Gold  .\/;^wer\n200 Standard   1 *rT.$1.48  ,\n1000 McGillivray  15\n2000 Royal Collieries 08^4\n1000 Lucky Jim\n1 S. A. Warrant $975.00\n1000  International    55\n150 Kootenay Jam 95\n1000 Kootenay Gold  Market\nWe recommend the purchase of Kootenay Gold at present prices for a\nquick advance.\nE  B. McDermid\nBauer Street\nNeison, B. C.\n PAGE EIGHT\nCi)e laity $etos,\nTUESDAY     OCTOBER 17\nFor Quick Sale\nWe are offering for sale 20\nacres first class land, situated on\nthe West* Arm of Kootenay lake.\nThis property has 2 l-2y*6res\ncleared and planted and krdivid-\ned into two excellentypieces of\nbench landJ It hasyrgood lake\nfrontage, and is cl-gfce to steamer\nlanding, ffhe c^ner is desirous\nof disposmg or this property immediately a>ro will take a reasonable casdM&fer and leave the balance on mortgage. This is a particularly . attractive offer and well\nworth while considering.\nFor further particulars call and\nsee us.\nHAWDSLEY, SHAW & CO.\nLots\nIn all parts of city and jrfourbs.\nHouses\nI>r\nLand\nFruit, poultry' or lakeside homes\nF. B. LYS\nGriffin Block, over Dom. Ex. Co\nNELSON NEWS OF 11 DAY\nG. F. Robinson, of Summit, is registered\nat the Strathcona.\nMr. and Mrs. Haig-Smellie,\nare guests at the Hume.\nQueen City Rebekah lodge No. 16, I. 0.\n0. F., will meet tonight at 8 o'clock.\n; , John McClish and daughter, and Harry\n! Weis, of Salmo; are guests at the Hume.\nThere will be a meeting of the leader\ncorps   of  the   Y.   M.   C.   A.,   tonight  at\nAll petit jurymen are expected to be\npresent at the assizes at 10:30 o'clock this\nmorning.\nJack Riley, foreman of the Athabasca\nmine,   shot a  black  bear weighing 1,215\n, pounds yesterday.\nThere will be a special meeting of the\nT. M. C. A. board of directors at 5 o'clock\nthis afternoon.\nThe Y. M. C. A. bowling alleys will be\nFresh Smoked\n* \/Fi^\nKipper\/ pe&t-rffT 15c.\nHalibuMST 20c.\nC.A.Benedict\nGrocer\nHOUSEHOLD NOTES\nNever leave medicines, drink of food\nuncovered in the sick room.\nNever let a comb soak in order to\nclean it.   Use a stiff nail brush.\nOxalic acid and javelle   water   are\nexcellent for removing ink stains.\n.   A clam shell placed inside the kettle\nwill prevent the formation of lime.\nGreen window shades should provide\ndarkness for baby's daytime napsl\nEmbroideries and colored garments\nshould be ironed on the wrong side.\nClean tins with soap and whiting,\n\u2022rubbed on with a piece of flannel.\nOne of the very best health guards is\nthe drinking of a great deal of water.\nLarge red apples, when served whole\nupon the table, are polished with olive\nOil.\nBuild Your\nOwn Home\n$25 cash and $10 monthly\nwill buy you a lot.\nAll these lots are level and\nwithin easy walking distance\nof the car line.\nDouble corners fir $300 and\n$250, inside lots MOO and $125\neach acceding lo location and\nadvantages.   \/\nBuy ntw and don't miss this\nopportunity.\nH. & M. BIRD\nNelson, B.C.\nClear Brains\nand good spirits come naturally\nwhen tbe stomach is up to tor\nhwork, the liyer and bowelsia-rfuve I\nand the blo\/d pure.   Bejjfe con- !\nditions -always follov^fne use of\nBmMkMS\nSold Everywhei **-.\nEstablished 1898\nThe Sign of the Fish\nThe Fisherman's Mail\nOrder jtouse\nEverything foj^ne fisherman\nE.WfrCUFFE\n411 Baker St Nelson,\nNew Fresh Fall Stock\nChristie's Biscuits\nSodas,\nSodas,\n2-lb.\n3-lb.\nGra|am Wafj\nJ.A.IRVI:\nSu^anas, Arrowroot, Big Bar,; Jam\nmm, Fruit Ginger 25c lb.\n'24b. tin 40c\nTHE GREAT SUPPLY HOU?E\nBaker St. Phone 161\nGIFTS\nSuitable\nfor\nComing\nWeddings\nSelected from Hawkes Cut\nglass, Pickard hand painted china,\nEnglish Sterling ware English\nNickel Silverware, Sterling deposit\nware, Canadian Sterling apri! silver plate, will make acceptable\ngifts.      \/ \/\nThes\/ lines iaflude most pleasing designsjfi their quality cannot bfcjrfcelled.\nA visit to our store will be appreciated by us.\nJ. 0. Patenaude\nImporter of Fine Wares.\nhirts*\nhe Ark\n606 Vernon St. Phone A395\nNew and Second Hand Furniture.\nAuction Sale\n624 Mill St., Thursday, Oct. 19\n2 o'clock sharp\nWe have received instrudfions from\nR. S. Forster, Esq., to onl by public\nauction aft the above J^ace and date\nall his household furrfture and effects\nconsisting of bedroll and dining room\nsuites, rplendid ircewart kitchen range\nand se|f feeding heater, kitchen utensils, ere. G-*rods on view morning of\nsale.\nTERJV\nWm. Cutler, Auctioneer\nBRACKMAN-KER\nMILLING C9\nCream oi Oats\nJust a little better than any other\nRolled Oats maJj<^Tackages of iy2\nlbs. a.n6\\J0mT<each.   Ask your grocer.\nThe Brackman-Ker\nMilling Co., Limited\nIf You Have Not Yet Selected Your\nWinter Overcoat\nDo not delay any longer but see our range of very newest cuts\nand patterns in grey and brown twepd's. Also black and brown\nbeaver cloth.   FiU service and satisfaction guaranteed.\nPrices jfajft&KW, $22.50, $25\nJ. A. GILKER\nBaker Street\nNelson, B. C.\nHot Water Bottles\nNOTE THE  EXTRA VALUES\n2-qt. Venus, cloth inserted,$1.50\n2-qt. Canadian, white with slate\ntrimming, $1.25.   .\n3rQt. Do, $1.50.\n3-qt. Adonis, slate color, $1.50.\n4-qt., flannel covered, $2.75.\nFountain syringes, white rub*-\nber, 2-qt, $1.50.   .\nDo, red rubber, 2-qt., $2.00.\nDiamond, 3-qt. Fountain, $2.25.\nCombination tube and fittings,\n75c ahd $1 eaclr\n2-qt. Maroon, eaflra heavy Hot\nWater   Bottles,   guaranteed,\n$2.0X1. \u2022   \/\n3-qt. fDo, JK50.\nB!feSF stock of rubber\ngoods. Lowest prices. Mail\norders, filled promptly.\nWm. Rutherford\nDruggist\nopen tonight for the benefit of those who\nwish to practice for the tournament to\nmorrow night.\n\u2022 The Ladies aid of the Presbyterian\nchurch will hold a sale of home cooked\narticles in the church parlors on Saturday\nafternoon.   Tea will be served.\nA whist drive will be held in St. Sa\nvior's parish hall under the auspices of\nthe churchmen's club tomorrow night at\n8 o'clock. The ladies will provide refresh-\nmens.\nJ. H. Grant has received a copy of the\n\"McGill Daily,\" the fifth edition of the\njournal. It is a bright sheet, containing\n^sport notes and other matter of interest\n\\o McGill students.\nArrangements are being made at the T.\nM. C. A. .for a big crowd at the first\n\"open house\" of the season Wednesday\nevening. A good program has been arranged and an excellent time is assured\nall who attend.\nThe evening classes at the T. M. C.\nare now in full swing with a good\ntendance. The bookkeeping class has\nchanged its hour of meeting to Monday\nevening for two hours from 7:30 to 9:\"\"\ninstead of having one hour classes twice\na week.\nDr. M.. J. Vegnieux, M. D. C. M., a recent graduate of McGill university, arrived in the city yesterday, where he\nwill remain for a few weeks, after which\nhe will go to New Denver to take up\nthe practice of Dr. Browse, who is retiring.\nHarry Wright, M. P. P., with Mrs.\nWright, leaves today for Victoria, going\nby way of Spokane, where they will stop\nover for a couple of days. They will return to Nelson in a couple of weeks, an<.\nafterwards go to Ottawa to be present at\nthe opening of the new parliament under\nthe Borden administration.\nJ. R., Cogger, a representative of \"Canada,\", which is published in London, Eng.\narrived in the city last night from Vancouver, on his return from a trip there.\nMr. Cogger has been in Canada for several months, and has visited every town of\nimportance from Sydney to Victoria. He\nis traveling in the interests of his paper,\nand' today will interview several real estate men regarding the placing of English -capital in the Kootenay valley.\nThose who attended theTable d'Hote dinner at the Hume Sunday night were favored with a musical treat in the sinking of'\nMiss Sparkling, mezzo soprano, and B.\nD. Bard, baritone, of the Delia Pringle.\ncompany. Both artists rendered several\nselections, all of which received liberal\napplause. In addition to this the Gem\norchastra played from 5:30 to 9 o'clock.\nGRADERS OPEN\nUP COAL SEEM\nBig Strike of Black Mineral in Thompson Valley During Construction\nWork\n(Special to Tha Dally News.l\nKAMLOOPS, B. m Oct. 16-nAs an\nindication of the mineral wealth which\nmay be disclosed by the construction\nof the C.N.R. 'through the Thompson\nHeating Stoves\nWe have a fine assortment to suit all\nrequirements ajw will be pleased to\n.  have You\/^\nExamine Our Stock Before You Buy\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co. Ltd.\nWholesale and Retail.\nTORONTO HAMILTON\nNdson B. C.\nWINNIPEG VANCOUVER\nand North Thompson valleys, a five\nfoot seam of coal was uncovered today near Battle Bluff tunnel by the\ngrading crew. The point where the\nseam is uncovered is approximately\nthat indicated in Dr. Dawson's report\ncovering the seam which was opened\nsouth of Kamloops by Major Vaughan\nsome 20 years ago and has been trac\ned northward to Kamloops lake. This\nis a very- much more important find\nas the'deposit is evidently of commercial proportions and of superior quality. Should further investigation prove\nthe apparent values to be real there\nis no doubt that a first class field will\nbe opened up without delay as the\nquantity of coal needed for the driving\nof the big tunnel would warrant an im\nmediate opening of the field.\nURGES BRANCHES\nM       IN DOMINION\nNorton  Griffiths Tells  London  Manufacturers to Open Factories in\nCanada\u2014Great Destiny\nLONDON, Oct. 16\u2014Norton Griffiths,\nM.P., has issued an appeal to London\nmanufacturers to start branch factories\nin Canada the same as have the Americans.\n'There is not a single trade here,\"\nhe says, \"which could not successfully\nbe established in Canada. Without any\nbooming going on Canada is destined\nto be one of the greatest countries\neven if England never sends a single\nman or penny.\"\nFORGET GETS CERTIFICATE.\nOTTAWA, Oct. 16\u2014At a meeting of\nthe treasury board a certificate was\nIt's a Gem of Great Value\nThe Gem Safety Razor for one dollar is  surely\nvalue to the jnan who shaves himself.\nof exceptional\nTry One\/\n1\/ you are not satfefjpi^eturn it and get your money':\n4ave yous|0^ne Twihplex Stropper for Gillette Blades? We will sharpen two blades free for you.   It's a dandy.\nThe Poole Drug Co.\nNelson's Druggist That Knows.\nThe Rexall Store\nKootenay's Drug Emporium\nissued to Rodolphe Forget, as presi\ndent of the International bank, which\nwas capitalized during last session at\n$10,000,000. The bank will, it is said,\nbe organized for business without de\nlay.\nTRESTLE  BRIDGE  FALLS.\nLETHBRIDGE, Alta., Oct. 16\u2014 A\nwooden trestle bridge built by the\nKootenay & Alberta railroad over Mill\ncreek near Pincher creek was blown\ndown Saturday. The loss is $3,000 in\nmoney and a great deal more in delay\nto the Completion of the line, which\nwas extended this fall..\nCLEAN ORE RUNS\nEIGHT FEET WIDE\nNew Strike in Lowest Tunnel at Stan\ndard Proves Rich\u2014Some Concentrating Rock\n(Special to' The Daily News.)\nSILVERTON, B.C., Oct.  16\u2014Assay\nof the ore struck last week in the Ndf\n6 tunnel of the  Standard mine give\n60 per cent lead and 80 ounces silver.\nThis  strike in the lowest tunnel on\niBESiilflli\nr,A\nliBllTS\ndec! by expert chemisls-as are\nNa-Dm-Co preparations.   \u2022   Mor.ey back if not satisf\n50c a box at ail druggists*.  .\nw      (National Druq & Chemical Co. of Canada. Limited\n$?5*-*te*\u00bb\u2014^ 49\nLook at These\nRanch Property\nTwo ten acre lots at Harrop.\nLevel, no waste. If sold before'\nthe owner leaves the city in a\nfew days, $125 per acre. Terms\none third cash, balance one and\ntwo years.\n54 acres  on lake \/shore, west\narm, fine bench, Vs acres cultivated, 500 fruit treds, water piped*^\nsix room cottage\/etc., an i^eal\nhome.   Price, $7,150-   TenjC\n25 acres at yShoM-greres, six\nacres cultivated.^Sfmple water,\nhouse, barn,  poultry house and\nCity Property\nI Fairview\u20145 room cottage and a\nthree room cottage. City, water,\nelectric light, poultry house, wood\nshed, etc. Lots 90x120, fenced,\nall in .garden and \"fruit trees, a\ngoojHmy at $2,000. Terms, cash\npH balance in $300 yearly payments at 7 per cent.\nObservatory Street\u2014A well\nbuilt, 5 room cottage, concrete\nfoundation, lot 50x120, good garden, fruit trees, poultry house and\nrun, including furniture,, a bar-\nrun;  $300 per acre.   Terms.        I  gain at $1,200 terms.\nE. B. McDermid\n505 Baker St.,\nNelson, B. C.\nNelson Opera\nHouse, Monday,\nOct. 23\nAMERICAN  CONCERT TOUR,  1911\nMADAM LILLIAN\nAORtflCA\nAssisted by\nMYRON W, WHfrNE^ E. ROMAYNE SIMMONS\nBasso \\,M+r and Pianist\nPRICES:   FIRST OR SECOND  PART, $2.50; .FULL PROGRAM, $5.00\nFirst part starts 8:30 p.m. sharp; doors open 8:00;  Second part starts\n10:00 p.m.; doors open 9:50.\n'Seat sale for subscribers now open at opera house.   General sale\nopens Wednesday morning.\nthe property which proves the continuity of the main ore body, gives stoping\nground of 250 feet in clean ore ranging\nfrom 8 to 15 feet in width. In addition to the clean ore there is a large\nbody of concentrating ore which carries galena and zinc.\nONTARIO ELECTIONS WILL\nBE   LATE AS  POSSIBLE\nTORONTO, Ont., Oct. 16.\u2014Sir James\nWhitney stated this morning that the date\nof the coming provincial elections would\nbe as late as possible so that the new\nlists in the unorganized districts could be\nused. The writs cannot be issued till the\nlists are ready. The prime minister has\nin preparation a letter to the people of\nOntario which he says he will issue in a\ndate of the elections will be announced\nat the same time.\nVery short tunics are shown on\nmany of the new dresses. The effect\nis of a double skirt, which is coming\ndecidedly into favor.\nA silk and linen season is passing;\nin its wake, will follow a season that\nwill see satin on the crest of the wave\nof popularity.\nSaddle Horses for Hire\n'    HACKS, BAp-JAGE,  LIVERY\nNelson Transfer Co., Ltd.\nPhone 35\nf _\nThe Store of Duality\n1 Prices Explode Some\nFlemish Beauty Pears 4 lbs.^\n.25\nPears by box, per lb\t\n. 5y2\n1   Fine Wealthy Apples, box.\n2.00\nPotatoes, 100 lb. sack....\n1.75\nGold Dust Powder, pkg\t\n.25\nI   Castile Soap, 2Ji). bars....\n\".25\nCow Brand  Baking  Soda,\nlbs., 3 for\/. .....;\n.25\nFinest Cleaned Currants, 2\nlbs. fo\/\t\n.25\nFancy \/Seeded   Raisings\nlbs. lor  .^K\\...\n.25\n3 lb. jjins Boile&jffltoit\t\n.40-\nBoiled Crah^*1arge tin....\n.45\nRoyal>Pmi Sauce, bottle..\n.20\nMexican Chili Ketchup ..\n.35\nFinest Bananas, dozen\t\n.40\nA. S. H0RSWILL\nBaker St.                       Phone 10\nDr. Mattel's female Pills\nEIGHTEEN YEA^^HE STANDARD\nPrescribed ^pj^commended for wo\nmen'sj'-^ijaflnts, a scientifically prepar\ned i-^Breoy of proven worth. The re\nsuit from their use is quick and peT\nfew days.   This probably\" mean*T'that\"the'   cbanent.    For Rate at all ftrwz storaw\nFit-Reform Suits and\nOvercoats Made\nto Measure\nAnd they will beyfnade to your liking\u2014we guarantee that.\nYou make selections from hundred'of\nthe season\u2014the handsomesl^efrects from\nalone can show.V-^^^\nthe choicest patterns of\nabroad that Mt IReform\nYou are assured an absolutely perfect fit\u2014and the best workmanship that the greatest tailoring organization in Canada can give you.\nLet us take your measure for new suits and overcoats.\nEmory & Walley\nFit-Reform Wardrobe\nConfectionery and\nCakes\n.   We have a choice line of cakes\nand confectionery.   Always Jpeih.\nm\\\nCHO^ETT^JROS.\nThe UpX*^te Bakers and\nConfectioners\n516 Baker St- Phone 258\nNelson Opera douse\nAll This Week\nPringle-Van Auker\nStrfckCjunpany\nin a selectf repej&rtfe of plays that\nplease.    HB\nThe Blue Mouse\nPrices: 25c, 50c., and 75c.\nPlan at Poole Drug Co.\nLIQUOR ACT, 1910\n(Section 42.)\nNotice is her-sjy given that, on the first\nday of December next, application will be\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial\nPolice for renewal of the hotel license to\nsell liquor by retail in the hotel known as\nthe Mercey hotel, situate at Erie in the\nprovince of British Columbia.\nDated this 12th day of October, 1911.\na*M.. HAGLAND,\n158-30d J\\    m Applicant.\nLIQUOR ACT, 1910\n(Section 42.)\nNotice is hereby given that, on the fiyst\nday of December next, application mill be\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial\nPolice for renewal of the hotel license to\nsell liquor by retail in the hotel known as.\nthe Salmo hotel, situate at Salmo in the\nprovince of British Columbia.\nDated this 13th day of October, 1911.\nWILLIAM GRAY, -\n158-30d Applicant.\nLIQUOR ACT, 1910\n(Section 42.)\nNotice is hereby given that, on the first\nday of December next, -application will be\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial\nPolice for renewal of the hotel license to\nsell liquor by retail in the hotel known-as-\nthe Fort Sheppard hotel, situate at Waneta in the province of British Columbia.\nDated this 14th day of October, 1911.\nFRED ADIE,\n158-30d Applicant.\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_1911_10_17","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\/1.0384417","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. <br> Microfilm images missing, replaced with images from physical copy.","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":"1911-10-17 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":"1911-10-17 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}