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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":" l&>{\n< '\u2666\u00bb\u2666\u00ab.\u00bb\nTho Bally News has the largest clr- '\ndilation  of any dally newspaper in\nCanada in proportion to tho population\ntoe Its homo town.\nt\u00ab< ...........ox.........\n.......... ft >< >>IH\u00bbI\u00bbH>.I\n; The Dally Newa carries the full night i\n. leased wire n\u00ab*a,service of Canadian 1\n: Prasa Limited, which Includes the J\ni! Associated tress sewlp?. ,\nVOL. IB No. 179\nNELSON, B. 0;, FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 9, 1917\nFROM POWER BY PEACE\ni ORDERLY RCTHNT BY\nITALIAN TROOPS CON WD\n[Main Units  Not Molested\nby Enemy\nKIMS ten\n[Berlin Claims 17,000 More\nPrisoneis Have Been\nTaken\n(By.. Associated Press.)\nThere has been no cessation in the\n[retreat of the Italians toward the\n|\u00bbew lines of defense on which it ts\n[purposed to stand and face the ln-\njvading German forces. The. larger\n[units of the Italians are falling hack\n[without molestation, according to tho\n[Homo communication, but consider-\nlubtc fighting has occurred in the hills\n[of Vittorio and on other points in tho\n1 north.\nThe Berlin war oftce says that on\n\u25a0tfte middle Tagliamento river Italian\njforces who were still standing out\nI.''gainst the Invaders were captured.\nTA general and 17,000 additional Italian troops aro reported to havo been\nraptured, making the total prisoners\n\u25a0taken since the retreat from the\nlisbnzo river began to more than\n1250,000, according to Berlin. It Is as-\nIserted also tbat In excess of -300 guns\n|h.iyu born token by tho Teutons.\n(Hy Daily News Leased Wire.)\nJOMK, Ntoftd, 8.\u2014Italian forces\nlt(MiK\"t inimoroiu: rearguard actions in\nItho emirse of which they--succeeded in\n\u2022 holding up the German advance tdm-\nIporarlly,    Italian  airplanes  continued\n\u2022 bombarding hostile forces along the\niTagliatncnto river and brought down\n\u25a0.five enemy airplanes. The text of the\n[official report rends:    -\n\"During Wednesday we continued\n[the withdrawal of our line. The larger\n[units have retired without being ino-\n[Icstod by the enemy.\n\"Numerous engagements, occurred\n[between the hills of Vittorio and the\n^confluence of the Montioana and the\n[l-lvensea , in tho course of which our\n[yroopr. succeeded in detaining the enemy's advance.\n\"Iu spile of strong resistance on the\n|.ai;lt of llio hostile machines, our avian's ' renewed their  bombardments of\nNemy troops along the Tagllamento.\nIf-'lve airplanes wero brought down.\"\nGermans Claim 17,000 Prisoners.\nJtKRIJN, Nov. 8.\u2014An official report\ndilutes:\n\"Itnliim front: Our detachments,\nAdvancing on the mountain roads,\nIiavo broken the resistance of the ene-\n[ny rearguard. Uy. an outflanking\nJuovemonl, our attacking columns out\nIff the retreat of tho enemy troops\nfitlil holding out on the middle Tugllu-\nRiiciftu between Tolmonzo and Geinona\n|nd on permanent fortified works of\nKiunto Saint Simoenc.\nJ \"Up to the present 17,000 Italians,.\nJmong them a general, with 80 guns,\njSuv-n had to surrender.\n\"In tho pluln, fighting has developed\n||ong the I.lvonsca river. By a vigor-\ni advance Gorman and Austro-Hun-\nJralfan divisions, in spite of the re-\n\u25a0istanco, have thrown the enemy back\nTcHLward. The total number of prls-\n|iiers taken  hns now  boon  Increased\ni more than 250,000. and the booty in\n|uns to more than 2300.\"\nEmperor Charles Decorates.\nAMSTERDAM, Nov. 8.\u2014A Vienna\n[cpateh says that in recognition of thqj\n[uccceses won on tiie Italian trout,\nBmperor ChurleM has made Gen. von\n(torbatin a field marshal, has con-\nl.rrcd on ljuge Eugena and Field\nmarshal von Hlndenburg the brill Hants\nIf the cross of the military order of\n[in first class, with the war decora -\nBon and has awarded to Gen. von Buo-\nfljw the grand cross of the Order of\nleopoldj with war decorations.\n* AMERICAN FREIGHTER *\n* SINKS SUBMARINE *\n+   ' *\n* (By Dally News Leased Wire.)   *\n* AN ATLANTIC PORT, Nov. 8. \u2666\n* \u2014Information that a shell fired \u2666\n* by   an   American   naval gunner +\n* sank a Teutonic submarine in the *\n+ Mediterranean Is contained in a +\n+ report that has been made to the *\n+ navy department by the officers +\n+ of an American freighter   which *\n* has arrived hero. +\n* After a torpedo had passed +\n+ harmlessly by the freighter, the *\n+ American gunners struck the un- +\n* derma craft with their sixth shot *\n* and destroyed the U-boat. *\nSTEM NAMED FOR\nCENTRE VANCOUVER\nJ. 3.  Crowe  Nominated for  Burrard\nCentre\u2014Liberal Ranks at\nVictoria Split\n(Ely Daily News Leased Wire.)\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Nov.' 8.\u2014H. H.\nStevens received the nomination tonight at the Conservative-Unionist\nconvention of Vancouver Centre for\nmember of the house, and J. S.\nCrowe, former city alderman, was the\nchoice of Liberal Unionists of Burrard Centre. Nominations from\nVancouver South will be made tomorrow night. Both tonight's conventions were well attended and enthusiastic.   .\nSplit in Liberal Ranks\nVICTORIA, B. C., Nov. 8.\u2014A distinct split in the ranks of the Liberal\nparty here has resulted owing to last\nnight's decision of the Central association to put a Laurier-Liberal candidate into the field. Tonight at a\nmeeting of -the Unionist committees\nit was decided* lo admit to the \u2022forthcoming convention GO delegates from\na new organization of Liberal-Unionists which is to be formed nt once.\nProminent among the bolters from the\nLiberal party are Dr. Lewis Hall, the\npresident of the Victoria Liberal association, and Joshua Kingham, a\npast president and one of the most\nprominent members. George Tlell,\nM.P.P., Is another who refused to bo\nbound by the resolution of tbe Liberal association. The Unionist nominating convention will be held on\nWednesday next.\nWill Name Unionist\nVICTORIA, B. C., Nov. 8.\u2014A round\ntable conference of the political Interests of the Nanaimo electoral district held at Duncan today pledged\nitself to a joint convention to nominate a Unionist candidate. Liberal,\nLabor, Conservative and Win-the-\nWar league detegates were present.\nThe nominating convention is to be\nheld at Duncan on Thursday next.\nRepresentation of 2G delegates each is\ngiven to tho Win-the-War league, the\nConservatives and the Liberuls. Organized labor and the United Farmers\nof the district are to send three delegates each and the War Veterans association arc invited to send one delo-\ngat6 each from Nanaimo and Esqui-\nmatt.\nPATROL ENGAGEMENTS\nOCCUR IN MACEDONIA\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nPARIS, Nov, 8.\u2014An official report\nstates:\n\"Eastern theatre: Lively artillery\nfighting occurred near Sokoland north\nof Monastir. There were patrol encounters near the lakes.\"\nWELSH TROOPS MAKE\nSUCCESSFUL RAID\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Nov. 8.\u2014Welsh troops\nconducted a successful raid Wednesday night in tho sector of Armentleres,\nsays today's official statement from\narmy headquarters.\n\"Fourteen prisoners were captured\nby us, und other losses were Inflicted\nupon the enemy. Our own losses were\nsmall,\"\nIABOR MAN TO OPPOSE\nHON. FRANK COCHRANE\nW. Roe Nominated as Opponent\u2014\nGraham May Get Walkover in\nSouth   Essex.\n|WETASKIWIN, Altu., Nov. 8.\u2014At a\nnrge convention of the Liberals of\njrathcona federal constituency today,\nMilan T. Mode, barrister of Edmonton\n(outh, was chosen as standard bearer\nthe coming election..\n|| The convention was presided over by\n,ugh Montgomery, M.P.PY, who 'prc-\nQcted an overwhelming majority for\nRe Laurier Ltboral candidate.\nNominate Liberal.\nfflWlNNlPEa, *fov. 8.\u2014N. H. McMll-\nwiiS selected to contest ' South\nWinnipeg at the coming federal elec-\nlli'ns by tho meeting of tho Laurier\nliberals of the constituency tonight.\nDauphin   Convention   Planned.\nKJWINNIPEG, Nov. 8.\u2014It is announced\n. tho Union government committee\n[al tho Unionist convention for tin-\nfederal riding of Dauphin will be hold\nin tho town of Dauphin on Nov. 15.\nIt is expected that Robert Cruise will\nbo the choice of this convention.\nH. McLean, a Sparling farmer, is\nsaid to be a likely candidate for the\nhonor of leading the Provenchero\nUnionists. The name of Dr. Ross of\nMorris, has also been mentioned. Tho\nname of J. Shlrtliff, who farms on a\nbig scale in the White-Horse plains\nregion, Is mentioned today as the likely Laurier Liberal candidate in Macdonald.\nLaurier Man Named.\nSAULT STE. MARIE, Ont, Nov.\n8.\u2014At a gathering of Laurier Liberals\nat Massey today, Laurence O'Connor\nof Sudbury was chosen as standard\nbearer. He will contost the riding of\nEast Algomn,\nMay Not Be Opposed,\nWINDSOR, Ont, Nov. 8.\u2014South Es-\nti.'oiitimted on Pago *JSvo.)\nTHE CHANS\nCould Do Anything With\nThem, Says Officer\nCIIIINTER-ATTACK\nIS NOT YET HADE\nTerrific Artillery  Fire on\nEnemy Line is Maintained\n(By Canadian Overseas Corre\nspondent.)\nCANADIAN HEADQUARTERS IN\nFRANCE, Nov. 8.\u2014Hlndenburg's or.\ndors to his troops to retake Passchen.\ndaele at all costs havo not yet result\ned ln any Infantry activity in front of\nPasschendaele. Both Wednesday and\nThursday have been quiet, except for\nour artillery, which has been maintaining a harassing fire on all the\nroutes of approaches to the centre of\nactivity in the enemy area. Reports\nof an eastward .movement of enemy\nbatteries probably indicate that he\nmay be preparing new gun positions\nto support an attack upon the ridge.\nThe battalion commanders, with their\nstaffs who were captured in the last\nengagement, are a striking Illustration\nof the rapidity with which our troops\nmaintained their attack.\n\"With such men I could go any\nwhere, do anything,\" was one captured\nofficer's comment on tho Canadians.\nIndeed, the prisoners arc loud In admiration of our troops. Recent captures confirm the reports of heavy enemy lossos. Our troops- went over\nso rapidly that numerous cases are\nreported where tho enemy had no\nchance to use his machine guns beforo\nour infantry was on top of him. Our\ncourtier-battery work and, artillery\nconcentrations have been so effective\nrecently that tho enemy battery positions have been constantly changing.\nTwo companies of the enemy were\ntaken without firing a shot on tho\nmorning of Nov. 6. Sheltered in covered shell holes from the intensity of\nour artillery and machine gun barrage\nthey were captured by our men before\nthey could get their guns ready for\naction. Heavy losses were sustained\nby enemy reinforcements, whioh were\nendeavoring to support their front\nlino,, both from our artillery and machine gun fire.\nEnemy Is Raided.\n(By Dally News Loused Wire.)\nLONDON, Nov.  8.\u2014The war office\ncommunication says:\n\"A successful raid In which we captured 21 prisoners and a machine gun\nwas carried out at noon Thursday by\nEast Yorkshire forces north of Fres-\nnoy. Tho hostile garrison was caught\nby machlno gunfire while endeavoring to escape from our artlllory bar-\nage and many casualties wero inflicted. In tho course of the raid the en\nemy's support troops attempted an advance but wero engaged with a direct\nmachine gunfire and suffered heavily.\n\"In the battlefront the enemy's artlllory is active in tho neighborhood of\nPasschendaele.\"\nFrench Airmen Bomb Stations.\nPARIS, Nov. 8.\u2014Tho war office announcement tonight says:\nSpirited artillery actions occurred\nalong the whole front north of the\n(Continued on Page Two.)\nBRITISH DRIVE\nBACKiTHE WS\nImportant Gains Made in\nMesopotamia\nTOWN Of THI\n18 OC\nGallant  Indian Regiments\nCapture Two lines of\nTrenches\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Nov. 8.\u2014An  official   re\nport  on operations   in   Mesopotamia\nreads:\n\"Following; the successful action\nfought near Dup on Nov. 2, our troops\nadvanced farther up the Tigris and\non Nov. 5 attacked the Turks, who\nwero holding a strongly entrenched\nposition. Under the fire of our artillery, we crossed 1200 yards of open\ncountry and tho Indian rifle regiments\npressing home the attack, captured\nthe first two lines of the enemy\ntrenches, Inflicting heavy casualties.\nThese trenches were consolidated arid,\na Turkish counter-attack was repulsed.\n\"In the meantime the cavalry attacked the enemy's right flank ana\nour artillery on tho left bank of the\nTigris obtained good targets on the\nTurkish columns leading to the north.\n\"In the afternoon our troops attacked again and carried further linos of\ntrenches with heavy losses to the\nenemy. In this attack our cavalry on\ntho left flank took a prominent part.\nBritish and Indian cavalry charged\nover the trenches and cut down a\nnumber of retreating Turks. Tho\nfighting continued until nightfall.\nwhen tho Turks retreated under cover\nof darkness, burning some of their\nstores and blowing up three ammunition dumps. We occupied Terklt on\nthe morning of Nov. 6.\n\"The battlefield has not been cleared In timo to report, but 132 un-\nwounded prisoners have been brought\nin.\"\nQUEBEC WELCOMES\nUBERAL LEADER\nENEMY'S STRENGTH\nE\nBritain Denies Statement About Overwhelming Nature of Forces Assailing Italians.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON,   Nov.   8.\u2014The   following\nannouncement was Issued tonight:\n\"A statement from a correspondent\nof the Associated Press at Italian\nheadquarters appeared in the British\npress today This statement set out\nto remind tho allies thut something\nmoro than assurances wore necessary\nfor getting men and munitions to tho\nthreatened Italian lines, and purported\nto reflect the feeling of Italians who\nwere represented as distrusting the\nallies' efforts to help them, lt was\nalso stated that the enemy masses\nwere so overwhelming that nothing but\neffective reinforcements would stem\nthe tide.\nThis statement is absolutely uncalled for, and Is calculated to do groat\nharm by suggesting that the seriousness of the military situation is not\nappreciated by her allies and that the\nlattor are not giving her the support\nshe requires. There Is no truth whatever tn these assertions The state-,\nment tnat the enemy masses ure overwhelming 1b an absurd exaggeration.\"\nDespatches to which tho foregoing\nBritiBh statement refers to wero sent\nhy the Associated Press at Italian\nheadquarters on Nov. 7,\nHuge Crowds Turn Out to Greet Sir\nWilfrid  Laurier, Who Opens\nCampaign Today\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nQUEBEC, Nov. 8.\u2014Sir Wilfrid\nLaurier arrived at Quebec tonight.\nHe opens his campaign hero tomorrow. His arrival was heralded by a\nwelcome beyond question. Tho crowd\njammed the station und tho streets\noutside.\n\u25a0 Sir Lomer Gouin and Hon, Walter\nMitchell, provincial treasurer, tendered the official welcome. Cheering\ncrowds lined the rodds. At every stop\nalong tho railway lino from Montreal\nthero wero demonstrations on a\nsmaller scale.\nThe approaches to the station at\nThree Rivers, half way to Quebec,\nwero packed. Among the crowd were\nhuge placards bearing ln red letters:\n\"For Laurier, the Hope of the Cuna-\ndiun Peoplo,\" und \"For Laurlor and\nVictory.\" Hore Sir Wilfrid alighted\nfor a few minutes to receive an address of welcome and a bouquet of\nroses.\n\"This,\" he said, \"is a light duty for\nme to undertake ln tho midst of a\nstrenuous campaign. The word I give\nyou is: \"Fight, fight with faith in tho\ncause and fight for the country's\nsake.\"\n* RUSSIAN   WOMEN'S *\n* CORPS SURRENDERS *\n\u00ab.   *\n* (By Dally News Leased Wire.   +\n* PETROGRAD, Nov. 8\u2014Oovern- +\n+ ment  forces  holding  the  winter *\n* palace were compelled to capltu-\u25a0*'\n* late early this morning under the +\n* fire of the cruiser Arora and the *\n* cannon of the St Peter and St *\n* Paul fortress across the Neva.   At *\n* 2  o'clock  this  morning the wo- *\n* men's7 battalion, which had been +\n* defending the winter palace sur- *\n* rendered, *\n* The   workmen's   and   soldiers' +\n* delegates are in complete control *\n* of the city. *\nBRITISH PUSH ON\nTOWARDJERUSALEM\nGeneral   Retirement  of  Turks   North\nward Indioated\u2014Haul of Stores\nand Guns Great.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Nov. 8.-\u2014British' forces\nstill pushed on toward Jerusalem today. There are indications of a gen\neral retirement of the Turks north\nward In Palestine.\nAn official despatch reported tho\nadvance out of Gaza continuing on the\nright of Alimuntar and on the left to\nSheik-Redwan.\nThe British, says the statement,\npushed beyond Gaza on tho right to\nMukham-ol-Muntar \u2022hill, dominating\nthe town an on to the left to the Sheik-\nRedman fortifications, a mite ,to the\nnorth. The advance also penetrated\nas far as the mouth of tho Wudi-Hesi,\neight miles north of tiio original British line.\nBritish forces also continued their\nadvance from the Wady Sherlkau,\nnorthwest of Beershccba pushing farther northwest.\nThe British capture of prisoners,\nguns and stores arc of considerable\nvalue.\nGeneral   Retreat   I ndioated\nLONDON, Nov. 8.\u2014Gen. Allenby, In\ncommand, reports as follows:\n\"About midnight Tuesday our\ntroops attacked tbo Turkish trenches\nsouth of Gaza and captured them,\nfinding them lightly hotd.\n\"The advance was continued on tho\nright to Alimuntar, the hilt dominating the town on tho south and southeast; on the left to tho Sheik-Rodman\nfortifications, about ono mile outside\nthe town on the north. During the\nday wo pushed forward through the\ntown und advanced to tho mouth of\ntiie Wady-Hessi, eight miles north of\nour original lino.\n\"Our forces from Sheriba also successfully continued their advance to\ntho northwest,\n\"In the area east of Gaza the Turks\nstill occupy somo trenches, but thero\naro indications of a general retirement northward. Our airplanes in-\nflloted losses on the retiring troops\nund on concentrations at railway\nheads. Ou our right the enemy has\nnot renewed his counter-attacks.\"\nGen. Allenby reports thut thero were\nconsiderable captures of prisoners\nguns and ammunition.\nSeveral Ministers of Provisional Government Arrested-\nWinter Palace, Bombarded by Warship and\nFortress   Capitulates\nDELEGATION NAMED BV LEADERS\nOF REVOLT TO INITIATE PEACE\nCossacks Declared in Support of Overthrown Government-Fleets Side \"With Insurrectionists-Civil War\nFeared\u2014Drastic Proclamations Are Issued\nSESSION   OF CONSERVATION\nCOMMISSION ARRANGED\n(By Dully News Loused Wire.)\nOTTAWA, Nov. 8.\u2014The ninth an-\nnual  meeting of the  commission  on\nconservation will bo hold  In Ottawa\non Nov. 27 and 28.\nNO REPORTS FROM\nRUSS FRONTS ISSUED\n(By Daily News Leased Wiro.)\nLONDON.  Nov.  8\u2014It  Is  officially\nannounced from Petrograd through the\nWireless Press that  no headquarters\ncommunique was isBiied toduy.\nNovember 10th\n\u2014SATURDAY\u2014\nAll ^Reports\nfor Service\nMust be in\nSee Page 4\n+ + * + * + + + * + + + + + + + +\n* COUP  D'ETAT  IS +\n* WITHOUT BLOODSHED +\n*   +\n+ (By Daily News Leased Wire.) *\n+     LONDON,      Nov.    8.\u2014Premier *\n* Kerensky    has     been     deposed. \u2666\n* Maximalists have obtained con- *\n+ trol of Petrograd and issued a *\n+ proclamation saying the new gov- *\n+ ernment will propose Immediate +\n* peace, the scmi-ofucial Russian +\n+ news agency announces. +\n+     Maximalists  wore  assisted   by *\n* the Petrograd garrison, which *\n+ made possible a coup d'etat *\n+ without bloodshed. *\n*****************\n(By Associated Press.)\nPetrograd again is in turmoil. The\nprovisional government lias been\nthrown out of power by the extreme\nradicals) headed by Nicolai Lenine;\nPremlor Kerensky bus fled the capital ; several of his ministers placed\nunder arrest, and the winter palace,\nthe seat of the government, has been\nbombarded by the guns of the cruiser\nArora and of the St. Peter and St.\nPaul fortress and forced to capitulate.\nA congress of the workmen's and\nsoldiers\" delegates o\u00a3 all Russia has\nconvened in Petrograd and will discuss tho questions of organization of\npower, peaco and war, and the formation of a constituent assembly. A delegation has been named by the congress to confer with revolutionary\nand democratic organizations with a\nview to initiating peace negotiations\nfor tho purpose of taking steps to slop\nbloodshed.\nWarship  Bombards  Palace.\nAs yet details of the disorders which\nfollowed tho assumption of power by\nthe radical element are meagre, but it\nis known that from its moorings in the\nNeva the Arora fired shrapnel and\nsolid shot against the winter palace\nfor four hours with tho guns of the\nfortress and machine guns stationed\nin front of tho palace keeping in accord with the salvos from the warship.\nDesultory fighting also occurred ai various points inside tho city. It is possible that tbe casualties among the\ncitizens wcro slight, as the workmen's\nand soldiers' council warned tho people to seek refuge lu their homes.\nWhore  Is  Kerensky?\nReport.1, as to tho whereabout.'; of\nKerensky are varied. Some of them\nsay that he has sought safety in\nMoscow, while other says that he has\ngone to the front in an endeavor to\nobtain the backing of tho troops. Cossack regiments are declared already to\nhave announced their readiness to\nsupport the government on condition\nthat no compromise is made, but, on\ntho other band, it Is asserted that the\ndelegates from the Black and Baltic\nsea fleets have declared themselves in\nfavor of the radicals.\nCongress Takes Action.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nPETROGRAD, Nov. 8.\u2014The general\ncongress  of  workmen's  and   soldiers'\ndelegates of all Russia was convened\nhere last night with 560 delegates ia\nattendance. The chairman declared,\nthat the time was not propitious for\npolitical speeches and the order ot\nbusiness of the congress was as fol-\nlows:\nFirst, organization of power; second,\npeace and war; third, a constituent\nassembly; the officers elected comprising 14 Maximalists, including Nicolai\nLenine, the rndlcal Socialists' leader,\nand M. Zinovicff, an associate of Le-\nntne and Leon Trotsky, president of\nthe central executive committee of tho\nPetrograd council of workmen's and\nsoldiers* delegates. In addition seven\nrevolutionary Socialists were named.\nA delegation was named to initiate)\npeace negotiations with the other rev*\noln tlonary and democratic organizations with a view to taking steps to\nstop bloodshed.\nProclamations Issued.\nThe    official    news    agency    today\nmado   public    the    following    state-,\nment:\n\"The congress of the councils of\nworkmen's and soldiers! delegates oC\nall Russia, which opened last night, issued this morning the three following\nproclamations:\n\"To all provincial council of workmen's, soldiers' and peasant delegates:'\nAll power lies in the soldiers' and,\nworkmen's delegates. Government\ncommissaries are relieved of their\nfunctions. Presidents of the workmen's and soldiers' delegates are to\ncommunicate direct with the revolutionary government. All members oC\nagriculture committees who have been\narrested are to be set at liberty and\nthe commanders who arrested them\nare in turn to be arrested.\nDeath Penalty Abolished.\nTho  second  proclamation  roads  art\nfollows: t|\n\"Tiie death penalty reestablished at\nthe front by Premier Kerensky is,\nabolished and complete freedom for\npolitical propaganda has been established at tho front. All revolutionary;\nsoldiers and officers who have been\narrested for complicity in so-called political crimes arc to be set at liberty;\nat once.\"\nTho third proclamation says:\n\"Former Ministers Knovaloff,  Kish-\nkin, Tcrestohenko, Malyantovitch, and\nothers have been arrested by the revo*\nlutionary committee.\nKerensky to Be Arrested.\n\"M. Kerensky has taken flight and\nall military bodies have been empowered tu take all possible measures tu(\narrest Kerensky and bring him back\nto Petrograd, All complicity with Kerensky will be dealt with as high treason.\"\nNicolai   Lenine  was  introduced   by;\nTrotsky as \"an old, old comrade, whom\nwe welcome back.\"\nLenine said;\n\"Now wc have a    revolution.    Tho\npeasants   and  workmen    control    tho\ngovernment.   Tho revolution   is  onlsj\n(Continued on Page Two.)\nALL CLASS 1 MEN CAN BE\nREGISTERED BY SATURDAY\nNo    Difficulty    Expected\u2014Claims    So\nFar, 228,000; Reports for Service,\n18,000.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, Nov. 8.\u2014At tho present\nrate ot progress, there Is no reason\nto suppose that there will be any difficulty in registering all men who come\ninto Class 1 under the Military Service\nact, beforo Saturday evening. This\nstatement was mado this evening by\nnn officer connected with the military\nservice council. Ho explained that,\nthough tho figures given out seemed\nto indicate that a largo percentage of\nmen In Canada belonging to Class 1\nhad neither reported for service nor\napplied for exemption, these figures\nwere sometimes from one to three days\nbehind the actual registration. The\nreports for service or claims for exemption, as the lease may be, are\nmade through post offices throughout the country. The postmasters send\nthem to assistant postoffice Inspectors, who forward them to the registrars,    After passUis   .t&rpyjgh    J.hg.|\nhands of tiie registrars, they am sent\nInto the military service boaro. hero\nand finally issued to tho press. Ap*\nproximately 1140,000 registrations had\nbeen received at the office of tho military service council up to last night,\nand of these approximately 228,008\nwere! claims for exemption, while\nabout 18,000 wero reports for service.\nTiie total registrations in the province;\nof Quebec yesterday was high. Following are tho figures of registration1\nthroughout Canada on Wednesday:\nReports Kxeiup.   PcL\n.    68\n41280\n33.8\nQuobcc       .\n4\n4000\n36.13\nHulirax  \t\n.    73\n880\n47.31\nCharlottetown  .\n4\nin\n63.181\nKenora \t\n.      3\n48\n18.33\nWinnipeg  \u2014\n.  US\nS13\n44.3\nHogina   \t\n. 178\n1781\n42.47\nCalgary\t\n.    97\n910\n41,88\nLondon  \t\n.    33\n1172\n56.711\nToronto \t\n. 838\n3953\n54.99\nKingston\t\n.    65\n1466\n46.61\n277\n30.8S\nNo figures wero available from.St.\nJohu o\u00a3 y.uucuuvur jJlsU'icJ.^ ,\n PAOE TWO      \"\"\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nFRIDAY, NOVEMBER.9, 191\/\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhfti* tha Traveling Public May   Obtain  iuparlor  Accommodation.\nGeorge Benwell\nProprietor\nWe will bpen our New Tearoom on\nSaturday, Noo. 10th, 1917\nSpecial Dinner\nand Dance\nin Main Dining Room\n$1.50 Per Cover\u2014Make Your Reservation Early\nJohnsons Orchestra\nVancouver;  L. Kartey, Revelstojie;  G.\nDcwoy, Nanaimo.\nTHE   HUME\nA la Carta Tabla d'Hiue\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proo\nSpecial Sunday Dinner. $1.00.\nV*\"\nHUME\u2014R. H Battey, Ferguson; D.\nH. Hart, Vancouver; M. Vistimet,\nTrail; Mrs. R. D .Hearo, Riondcf; .1.\nMcDougall, Ainsworth; H. Giegerich,\nMiss H. Giegerich, .Miss E. Giegerich,\nKaslo; Mrs. D. A. McClelland, Sandon;\nO. Long, Slocan; W. It. Buchanan,\nSpokane; C. I. Archibald, Salmo; T.\nW. Mouat, Nelson; C. Tjosivig, Seattle;\nJ. H. C. Acorn, Coivllle; H. L. Batten.\nRossland; P. Bellnger, Creston; R.\nWalmsley, Creston; D. B. McKenzie,\nLethbridge; 11. G. Wilcox, Vancouver;\nJ. S. Dcschamps, Rossland; James N.\nQuibley, Edmonton; it. I.,. Eastman,\nRlondel; R. B. Francis, Vancouver; W.\nA. Anstie, Revolatoke; D. G. Townsend.\nCalgary; T. C. Beck, Midway; P. HI'.\nHczkler,   Lancaster.\n[\nThe Strathcona\nF. B. WHITING, Prop.\n8PECIAL SUNDAY  DINNER\nSTRATHCONA\u2014B. Carley, city; L.\nAggerly. Slocnn; H. Parsons, Mrs. il.\nBird, Everett; .1. 11. Christmun and\nwife, Benzie, Sask.; George Boissy,\n\"Winnipeg; T. Kilpatrlek, Revelstoke;\nR. F. Ling, Spokane; W, .Johnston and\nwife, Vancouver; P. YVaimvright, Master E. Walnwrlght, Vancouver; J. F.\nBurnett, Toronto; John A. Foley, Toronto.\nQueen's Hotel\nEuropean    and    American     PI in.\nStesm Heat in Every Room.\nA. LAPOINTE, Prep.\nQUEENS\u2014J. Roblin, Arrow Park;\nI. Songola, city; Tom Johnson, Seattle; A. L. \"Warner, L. C. McColIum;\nMrs. May Lapointe; EI. R. Kinney and\nfamily, Wlnlaw; A. Robinson, Rcvel-\nBtoke; Percy Mills; Emll Wlnla,\nGreenwood.\nMadden House\nMRS. THOMAS MADDEN,\nProprietress.\n8TEAM HEATED\nCorner Baker and Ward Sts., Nelson\nMADDEN\u2014R. J. Hughes, Kaslo; F.\nBorho, Sandon; John Air, Brooks; M.\nKubencc, Sandon; Mrs, F. McFall, K;\nMcFall, Slocan; C. Caton, Ymir; .1.\nBonnycarthe, Salmo; J. P. Duffy,\nTrail; Mrs. J. Osmak,- Passmorc; R.\nSewell, Fernie; George Merklc, wife\nand child; Mary Junes, Salmo; Clarence  Howard,  Trail;   J.   McEachem,\nGrand Central Hotel\nJ. A. ERICKSON, Prop.\nOpposite Postoi'ilcc.\nRoom and  Board, $35  par Month.\nEuropean Plan, Rooms 50c up.\nMeals, 35c.\nORAND CENTRAL\u2014Frank Phillips,\nRock Ranch: Mrs. V. Parks, Winnipeg; J. Moore, Fernie; B. Meyer, Kokanee; Larry Qullaglier, Molly Gibson\nmine; .lini Gorman, Summit Lake; .1.\nW. Swanson, Summit Lake; George\nKiirziimn. iviislo; .1. R. McDougtil, Bert\nRiley, .], p. Mathcson, P. Daly. A. McDonald, Silverton; William H. itnr-\nlimii-, Erie; Rennlil Stonie, Molly Gibson mine; Patrick Devlin, Penticton;\n13. Hanrahan, silverton; Tom Lucey,\nTrail; i'te. E. Coddlngton, Balfour.\nNelson House\nEuropean I'lan.\nW. A. WARD, Prop.\nCAFE\u2014Open Day and Night\u2014BAR\nMerchants' Lunch, 12 to 2.\nPhone 97 P. O. Box 597\nNELSON\u2014F. Lacasae: K. J, Prince,\nTisdale, Sask.; A. s. Patterson; C.\nLelghton, Midway.\nNew Grand Hotel\nSTEAM HEATED\nHoi and Cold Water in Every Room\nAmerican and European  Plana\nNEW GRAND\u2014II. Jones and wife,\nHall; C. II. Cairns, Salmo; .1. Currie,\nKaslo; Gust Carlson, Cranbrook; F.\nEdwards. Revelstoke; P. Thompson,\ncity;   Sing Wing, Wellington.\nPRICES OF BACON AND\nHAM  CUT IN   ILLINOIS\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nCHICAGO. Nov. 8.\u2014Prices of ham\nand bacon to tile consumer were cut\n5 to 10 cents by the Illinois food administrator today. The government's\ncomplete control of lhe packing industry lends Importance to the announcement. While for Ihe moment the cut\napplies only to Chicago and suburbs,\nprices here eventually will survive us\ntile standard for the whole country.\n0U! HAVE A MASS\nOF BEAUTIFUL HAIR,\nSOflMSYJAVt\nA Small Bottle Destroys Dandruff and\nDoubles Beauty of Your\nWithin ten minutes after an application of Danderlne you can not find\na single traco of dandruff or falling\nhair and your scalp will not itch, but\nwhat will please you most will be alter\na few weeks' use, when you sou now\nhair, fine and downy at flrat\u2014yen\u2014but\nreally new hair\u2014 growing all over tho\nscalp,\nA little Danderlne immediately\ndoubles the beauty of your hair. No\ndifference how dull, faded, brittle and\nscraggy, just moisten a cloth with\nDanderlne aud carefully draw It\nthruugh your half, taking one small\nstrand at a time. The effect is amazing\u2014your hair will bo light, fluffy\nand wavy, and havo an appearance of\nabundance; an incomparable lustre,\nsoftness and luxuriance.\nGet a small bottle of Knowlton's\nDanderlne from any drug store or tol<-\nlet counter for a few cents and prove\nthat your hair is as pretty and soft\njis any\u2014that it has been neglected or\ninjured by careless treatment\u2014that's\nall\u2014you suroly can have beautiful\nhair and lots of it if you will just try\na little Danderlne.\nSPEND YOUR HOLIDAYS AT\nHalcyon Hot Springs\n\u2022Sanitarium\nAnd 8toek up With Health\nIt you suffer from muscular, Inflammatory, sciatic or any other\nform of rheumatism, or frjci metallic poisoning of any sort don't delay.\nCome at once and get cureX Most\ncomplete and best arranged bathing\nestablishment on the continent. All\ndepartments under one roof, steam\nheated and electric lighted.\nRates; $3 per day or $17 per week.\n0AVI8 & DAVIS. Props.\nHalcyon, Arrow Lakes, B. C.\nRemoval\nNotice\nWc bos to advise our many\ncustomers and tbo public that\nwe have removed into larger and\nmore commodious quarters and\nare now located at 415 Ward St.,\nnext to Hcan's Confectionery\nstore where we shall be pleased to\nhavo you call and inspect our\nstore.\nThe Nelson News Depot\n\u2022 415 WARD STREET.\nAnchor-Donaldson Line\nPortland, Maine, to Glasgow.\nFor further information apply  to any\nR..R, or S. S. agent or company office,\n470 Granville Street. 1'hone Seymour\n31(Ji\u00bb, Vancouver, B. C.\nLABOR HAN TO\nOPPOSE COCHUt\n(Continued from Pago One.)\nsex Liberals may return Hon. George\nP. Graham by acclamation at a convention to lie hehl at Essex un Friday. Other aspirants tor nomination\nare ex-Mayor John Auld of Amherst burg, Dr. A. Bowie of Essex and\nRobert Atkln nf Maiden.\nWilt Stand  by  Laurier.\nLONDON, Ont.. Nov. s.\u2014 At a representative meeting of the executive of\nthe Fast Middlesex Reform association hen' today a resolution carried\nwithout a dissenting vote thai. Fast\nMiddlesex Liberals aro unanimously in\naccord with the work and policy of\nSir Wilfrid Laurier. The stand of the\nLiberal candidate, G. P. Rosa, who declared himself as having been opposed lo conscription being introduced\nafter 400,000 men had enlisted voluntarily without consultation wilh the\nother sillies,' was''warmly emlornv...\nLabor Man1 Nominated.\nCOBALT, emu Nov. 3.\u2014Arthur W.\nRoe, formerly of New Likeard, and\nnow of Toronto, was nominated at n\nmeetlr.g held here as a. candidate ol\nthe Labor party for Temfskaming In\nthe coming Dominion election. At a\nLiberal convention held today at New\nLikeard a number of candidates were\nnominated, but on hearing of the platform of Air. Rue. ihey all withdrew.\nThe contest in the new district of Te-\nmiskaming will, therefore, he between\nthe win-tiie-war I'nionist candidate,\nHon. Frank Cochrane, and tbe independent Labor party,\nRancher   Is   Chiron\nCALGARY, Alta.. Nov. 8.\u2014At a\nNon-Bartizan league convention for\nthe federal riding of .\\1acleod held at\nMacleod today, S. .Marshall, a rancher\nof Stavely, Alta., was nominated.\nUnionist Named\nCAMROSE, Attn., Nov. S.~.James B.\nReldeu of Vegrevlllo was nominal ed\nas Unionist candidate in lhe Victoria\nfederal constituency at the. Unionist\nconvention held hero tonight.\nDr. Lesagc Nominated\nMONTREAL, Nov. S.\u2014Dr. Edmund\nF. Lesuge received the Liberal nomination for Hochclagii division tonight\nat a convention held tit Corbcll hail.\nTORONTO, Nov. S.-~.\\ seat has been\nfound for Hon. N, W. Rowell, it was\nstated today. John Armstrong, who\nwa.s Conservative M. P., is io make\nwav fur the Unionist minister in North\nYork.\nReport   Denied.\nTORONTO, Nov. S.\u2014Tho report that\nJohn Armstrong. Conservative member for North York, would give up hts\nseat in favor of Hon. N. W. Rowell, is\ndenied by the member. He says it is\nwithout foundation and was given out\nwithout his authority.\nDelegates Chosen.\nCALGARY, Alta., Nov. 8\u2014More than\n50 prominent Liberals of tho city met\ntonight and nominated 21 delegates for\nEast and West Calgary to attend the\nconference to be held Friday, Nov. 0,\nwith the Calgary Conservatives, Tho\nconference ou Friday will bo to arrange for the Unionist, convention to\nbe hold here on Monday. Representative Liberals wen; chosen and the general feeling, of tho meeting was that\nwhile there would bo a hard battle in\ntho coining elections, this Calgary electors realized tho necessity ot conscription ot men and weulth and the only\nmeans of obtaining tho same waa\nthrough tho Union government.\nOne speaker, Dr. R. M. Trotter, referring to tho abolishment of party\npolitics remarked*. -, oqii\/ti\n\"I believe ln God, I believe in Canada,\nI believe in tho British Empire, I bo-\nllovo iu victory, and to] hell wilh parties, now,\" which fairly well expressed\nthe sentiments of the Liberals present,\nMAN WHO CLAIMS TO BE\nBELGIAN HELD FOR SMUGGLING\n(By Dtiay News Leased Wire.)\nNEW YORK, Nov. 8.\u2014Juak 'forth,\nwho claims to be a Belgium was arrested hero today by customs officials on\nthe charge of smuggling 50 groaH^of\njewelers' saws into the United States.\nFederal authorities say they believe he\nis connected with a conspiracy to ship\nrubber to Germany,\nIn default of $5000 ball the man was\nsent to the Tombs.\nGERMANY CAL\nHER LAST\nIS\nDES\nOUT\nRYES\nCentral  Powers Will  Make Final  Effort to Smash Allies on Western Front.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, xMyv. S.\u2014Germany called\nup her lust reserves within the last\nfew days\/according to the Central\nNews corrt-spondent at Zurich, telegraphing under Wednesday's date. All\nmen who have been previously rejected have been ordered lo present themselves for reexamination and within\n'21 hours till not utterly incapacitated\nwere on their way to the training\ncentres.    \u2022,. \u25a0,\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\nThis action,, says the correspondent,\nit attributed to the intention of the\ncentral powers to make a final effort\non the western front.\nWED FROM POWER\n(Continued from  Page One.)\nii. preliminary step  toward  a similar\nrevolution everywhere.\"\nFleets Support;   Cossacks  Oppose.\nLONDON, Nov. 8.\u2014A Renter despatch from Petrograd, dated Wedes-\nday evening, says that delegates from\nthe Baltic and Black sea fleets have\ndeclared in favor of the workmen's\nand soldiers' council. According to\nthe correspondent, the first, third and\nfourth Cossack regiments informed\nKerensky that they were prepared to\nsupport the government, provided no\ncompromise was entered into.\nKerensky Goes to Front.\nPETROGRAD, Nov. 8.\u2014At the whiter palace today it wan .said that Premier Kerensky had gone to the front,\ndelegating his authority to M. Kiss-\nkin, mlniyter Of public welfare.\nBattle Spectacular.\nPETROGRA-D, Nov. 8.\u2014Tim bridges\nand the Ncvsky prospect, which early\nin the afternoon were in the hands of\ntiie government forces, were captured\nand held. during the night by the\nworkmen's and .soldiers' troops.\nThe battle at the palace, which began shortly after 0 o'clock, was a\nspectacular one, armed cars of the\nrevolutionist's swinging Into action in\nfront of the palace gates, while\nflashes from the-Neva were followed\nby the explosion of .shells frum the\nguns of tiie Arora.\nThe. Russian criuser Arora is a. vessel of 5730 tons and has a complement\nof 573 men.    She was built in 1S100.\nPersonnel of Congress.\nPETROGRAD, Nov. 8.\u2014Of tiie five\nhundred and sixty members of the\nworkmen's and soldjei's' congress, 250\nare Bolshevlki, 150 SpcluUsiic revolutionists, 00 MlnimulisK It of the Minimalist-International group, six of the\nNational Socialist group, threo nonparty Socialists, 1ho others being independent\nA resolution proposed by the Minimalists that an effort should be made\nto reach an agreement with the government was voted down.\nCity Again Normal.\nPETROGRAD, Nov. 8.\u2014The city\npresented a norma! aspect today. Even\nlhe noonday band, accompanying the\nguard of relief under the previous administration, continued its function.\nThero were the customary lines in\nfront of lhe stores and children played\nin the parks' and. gardens. There was\neven a notable lessening of tiie patrols,\nonly a: few armed soldiers and suilors\nmoving tihtiut  the streets.\nAll Russia Mot Represented.\nMEMPHIS, Tenn.. Nov. 8.\u2014\"Tho intent and spirit of Russia, as a whole\nshould in no way be judged by the\nrecent news from Petrograd,\" declared\nBoras A. Bakhmeteff, Russian ambassador tu the United States, hen. today.\nMACKENZIE RIVER MAIL\nSERVICE IS ANNOUNCED\nEstablished from Fort McMurray, Dec,\n1\u2014Letters to Roach Edmonton\nBefore Nov. 23.\nOTTAWA. Nov. 8.\u2014.V mail will leave-\nFort McMunay for Fort Aiel'herson,\nFori Resolution and other intermediate! points on the Mackenzie liver un\nDec. 1. It will be . nece isary l'or the\npublic to mail correspondence intended\nfor despatch .so as to reach Edmonton\nuefore Nov. '2'i. As there must necessarily be a limit to the quantity of\nmail niatter despatched, preference will\nbe given first to registered letters;\nsecond, to ordinary letters, and if possible lo despatch o\u00a3 other classes of\nmall niatter. Those registered will\nreceive first consideration according\nto dale o'f posting. The public, must\nkeep in mind that this is the only matt\nwhich will be despatched to points\nnorth of Furl Simpson until next, summer.\n\"API! FOIST\nI EVERY HOI\"\nThat la what the Peps treatment amounts, to. lt Is no longer\nnecessary to go to the Swiss\nMountains to breathe the health-\ngiving Pine air which doctors so\nIghly recommend for throat,\nbronchial and lung troubles.\nWith theaid of science these Pine\nvapors have been condensed into\ntablet form so that the treatment\ncan be taken at home.\nAll you do is to dissolve Peps\nla the mouth. The rich Pine\nvapors are then set free and\nbreathed down all the minute air\npassages to the lungs, destroying\nall harmful germs and soothing\nand healing the inflamed\nmembranes.\nPeps are unequalled for coughs,\ncolds, bronchitis, asthma, sore\nthroat, laryngitis, hoarseness, etc.\nAll dealers.  SOc box.\nFish\nToday we have.\nFRESH    SALMON,    HALIBUT\nAND COD\nSALT MACKEREL, KIPPERED\nHERRING, BLACK COD,\nBLOATERS. CRABS,\n0YSTER8\nWhen ordering  Ham,  Bacon,\nLard or Butter insist on\nSHAMROCK     BRAND.\nPlease yet your orders iu early\nand if possible leave your Saturday order today. No order\ntaken for delivery after 10:30\nSaturday  morning.\nP. Burns & Co., Ltd.\nPhone 32\nARMY HOLDS KEY\n10 ROSS SI\nIssue  Evidently  Hangs  on   How Soldiers Will Respond to Maximalist\nProclamation.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Nov. 8.\u2014Chancellor of the\nExchequer Bonar Law Informed the\nhouse today that the government had\nno news of the latest developments iv\nRussia. The Russian embassy also\nwas without advices. The only iiiws\nof the deposition of the Kerensky government mils far has been received\nfrom the Russian wireless and so nicf-\nflcial Petrograd news agencies, boLh\nof which are controlled by the Maximalists.\nThere is hope that there may be another side to the picture, it ia considered possible that the Kerensky faction may not'have heen turned nut of\npower as completely us tho MuximaM.t\nreport, and that the Conservatives may\nbe able to reassert themselves without\na. general civil war. The army ujw\nholds,, tho taWfcto the situation and tha\nissue appeal's\" to bang upon how far\nthe soldiers respond to the Maximalist\nproclamation. The opinion is expressed in Russian circles In London that\nM. Kerensky, who early was advised\nof the intention of Nicolai Lenine to\ngraHp power, removed the seat of the\ngovernment to Moscow and from there\nwill endeavor to unite the Moderates\nagainst the Maximalists and also to\nrally tu his support Cossacks and oth ir\ntroops who have not already gone ovjr\nto tho extremists.\nAll Russia Not Represented\nLONDON, Nov. it.\u2014Tiie Russian\nembassy in London was still without\nnews tonight from Petrograd. The\nHussion charge d'affaires declared\nthat meantime the world must regard\nwith a certain amount of reserve the\nnews which was evidently coming\nfrom a controlled source. It should\nhe borne in mind, he said, that the\nPetrograd garrison by no means represented tho whole of Russia.\nPEASE REELECTED PRESIDENT\nOF  BANKERS' ASSOCIATION\nMONTREAL. Nov. 8.\u201435. L. Pease,\nvice-president, and managing director\nuf the Royal Rank of Canada, was reelected president of tho Canadian\n.Junkers' association nt the annual\nmeeting or that body this afternoon.\nThe vice-presidents are:\nSir Frederick Williams-Taylor, Sir\nJohn Aird, C. A .Bogart and II. A.\nRichardson.\nFollowing are the honorary presidents: Kir Edmund Walker, Sir Vincent Merredith and Sir Georgu Burn.\nSave\nIn the Use\nof Wheat\nBy eating\nGrape-Nuts\nAt] the food value of the\ngrain is used in making\nthis delicious food; and its\nblend of malted barley not\nonly adds to its nourishing qualities but produces\na flavor of unusual richness.\nAll Food-\nNo Waste!\nCanadian   Postum   Cereal   Co.,\nLtd.,   Windsor,   Ont.\nWinter\nGoats\nA   NEW   CONSIGNMENT   IN   POMPOM, VELOUR AND BOLIVIA\nCLOTHS, IN NEW SHADES,\nARE   ATTRACTING   ATTENTION\nTHESE,    ADDED    TO    OUR    PINE\nRANGE, AGAIN MAKE PICKING\nOUT  A COAT  A REAL.\nPLEASURE\nNew\"Serge Dresses\nTHESE ARE MADE UP IN PINE QUALITY  SERGE\nIN  BROWN  AND  NAVY    ,\nSOME  ARE  EMBROIDERED,   OTHERS  TRIMMED  WITH   BRAID\nYOU   WILL  FIND  THESE   BOTH   DRESSY  AND   SERVICEABLE\nPOR PALL AND  WINTER WEAR\nPrice $22.50\nSmillie & Weir\nLADIES'   WEAR   SPECIALISTS\nLargest Victor Dealers in  Canada\u2014Complete Stock\nMASOIN   &   RISCM,  Ltd.\n\"The Home of the Victrola\"\nAnnable Blook, 513 Ward Street Nelson, B.C.\nTHE CANADIANS\n(Continued from Pago One.)\nAisne in   ho sector south of Corbeny\nand In upper Alsace ln the vicinity of\nSappois.\n\"On the night of Nov. G our bombing\nescadrillo dropped bombs on the stations at Thorout, Holders and Llchtor-\nveldc.\"\nBerlin Report,\nPERL.IN, Nov. 8.\u2014The report from\nheadquarters   tonight,   reads:\n\"Western theatre, front, of Crown'1\nPrince Rupprecht: In Flanders the\nahpniy has not reported his attacks.\nThe artillery activity continued lively\nand increased especially against the\nYser sector and near l'nsschcndaeie.\nThe town of Dixmude was subjected to\na violent mine fire. North of Poelcapelle British reeonnoitering detachments wero repulsed.\n\"Front of the Gorman crown prince:\nIn the Allotto region French prisoners\nwcro brought In from successful engagements.\n\"Jn front, of Duke Albrecht-Sundguu\ndistrict, upper Alsace: The artillery\nactivity, which has been lively for\nsome days past, increased to the greatest, violence on both sides of Iho\nRhine-Rhone canal. In the afternoon\nFrench storming forces pressed fur-\nward north and south of the canul.\nWest of Heidwciler projecting trench\nsections remained in his bunds. In\nthe evoning renewed French attacks\nhere broko down with licavy losses.\n'Since Nov. 3, tho enemy bus lost in\nucrial battle and by our nntl-uireruft\nfire 34 airplanes.\"\nVOTE ON PROHIBITION\nSTILL DOUBTFUL IN  OHIO\n(liy Daily News Loasod Wiro.)\nCINCINNATI,   0\u201e   Nov.   8.\u2014At   tho\nend of tho second day of the prohibition election In Ohio by the result of\nwhich either its citizens will be stil\nJeet to a wet or dry state, was si ill I\ndoubt, but witli complete returns froi\nSS counties, C7 of which hud turned i\nofficial reports, the wet were leadtn\nby a majority of 3013 on the face (\nthe  returns.\nThese figures, however, included\ngain of 1831! wet votes in Humiltt\ncounty, officially allowed by the boat\nof elections in that county, which lit.\nnot been reported to the secretaries t\nday.\nAWFUL ATTACKS Of\nHEART TROU.BL\nEASED  BY SECOND  DOSE OF\nMilburn's Heart and Nerve Pil\nOne of the first danger signals at\nnouncing something wrong with tl\nheart is tho Irregular beat or vlole\nthrob. Often there Is only a flutte\ning sensation, or un \"all-gone.\" sinkh\nfeeling, or, again you may experlent\na smothering sensation, gasp ft\nbreath and feci as though about\ndie\nIn such cases the action of Miburn\nHeart und Nerve Pills in .piloting tl\nheart, restoring ils normal beat at\nImparting tone to the norvc contros,\nbeyond question marvelous.\nMrs. Frank Arsenoau, Nowcastl\nN.B., writes: \"t hud awful attacks\nheart trouble for the past five or s\nyears and as I had tiiod many Icini\nof medicine without getting any bctti\nI decided to glvo Mlburn's Heart, a\nNorvo Pills a trial and to my.Burprl\nI found easo from the second dose.l\ncontinued taking them until I hud us\nsix boxes, and now I feel as well\ncan be.\n\"At present my sister is taking thi\nfor nervousness and finds great cot\nfort by tholr use.\"\nMilburn's Heart and Nerve Pills u\nr.Oc a' box at all  dealers,  or mail\ndirect on receipt of price by Tho\nMllbnrn Co., Limited. Toronto, Ont.\n-\u25a0\n FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1917\nTH| DAILY NEWS\n\u25a0    N\u00abw York Curb. I\nBid \u2022 Anked\nCanada Copper  ji .68 %   $1.75\nRay  Hercules     3.00        3.1814\nStandard 37%      ,43%\nUtica   .\u25a0 12 .14\n\u25a0 New York Exchange.\nHigh    Low    Close\nC P.'B 136'\/.    131%    133%\nChlno    39        3554     37H\nInspiration    42%     38 38%\nMiami  279,     26 211\nSales; C. P. R., 162,000; Chino, 3100;\nInspiration. 11,400; Miami, 1400.\nBUTTER MARKET STEADY.\nMONTREAL, Nov. S.\u2014Butter and\neggs  unchanged.    Cheese firm.\nCheese; Finest westerns, 21%; finest\neasterns, 2114*\nButter; Choicest creamery, 43% to\n44;  seconds,  42%  to 43.\nEggs; Fresh, 53 to 55; selected, 46 to.\n47; No. 1 stock, 42 to 43; No. 2 stock,\n39 to 40.\nPork; Heavy Canada short, mess, 52\nto 53; Canada short out back, 50 to flat'\nINTERNATIONAL   NICKEL -,;\nREDUCES DIVIDEND\nNEW YORK, Nov. 8'.\u2014directors of\ntho International Nickel company\nhave- reduced the quarterly dividend\non tiie common stock from $1,50 tc $1\na share) Report of earnings for tho\nsix months ended Sept. 30 showed\nthat the surplus for that periud was\nnot sufficient to pay the regular common dividend as the balance after\npreferred dividend requirements was\neqjial to only ?i.18 11 share on tho\ncommon slock.\nGross Income for the three months\nended Sept. 30 showed a loss of\ntl,139,449, as compared with the previous year.\nj&2\nPAQI.T>IB\u00a3jl.,1\nMining and Markets\nAT NEW YORK\nActive List Drops 3 to 8 Points on Outpouring  of About  1,300,000  Shares\u2014\n'        U. S. Steet Breaks to 90, Causing Closing of Many Speculative Accounts\n\u2014Active  Railroads and Special  Issues Hit Heavily.\n(By Daily News ijehaed Wire.)\nNEW 'VORK,' Nov, .8.-\u2014Foreign de-\nl.yelopments'loomed 'ominously in the\n| financial horizon today, the latest Russian revolt' -forcing the active stock\ni)at lower by 3 to a points on an outpouring ot approximately 1,300,000\nhares.   Weakness spread to bonds and\nI the  foreign  exchange  markets,   rates\nto Petrograd and Rom* recording their\ngreatest depreciation since the inception of the war. ^Incidentally the Lib'\nerty 3(% per cent bonds which changed\nhands'ln round amounts fell to the new\nnlnimum  of 99,36.    Wall  street  was\nto realize the importance of the\n* from Petrograd, which came dur-\njjing the forenoon trading.   The market\n^continued strong for a period but once\nextent of the coup d'etat became\nI known, stocks were thrown over in\nlarger volume than at any time in the\nthree months of almost continuous\nliquidation. The feature of the day's\n.activity,'which bore no direct relation\nito international affairs, was the great-\n_'.'.r weakness of local street railway is\n[sues. Extreme reactions in some shares\nanged from 3 to 5 points. Lines ln\nfonenil lists wero orderly at first but\nhie movement, bordered upon dcmoral-\nzatlon as. it. gathered momentum In\nhe V&rly forenoon. United States Steel\nwas,' | ns usual, the central feature,\ni miking almost a steady descent from\njtHSktAll*' top .price of the first hour,\no 83% around 2 p.m. A great many\nipeciijatlye accounts were closed ow-\nn# tovjfte steel break to 90. The-stock\n.foseavVt'aJOJii.'a net loss of 4% points,\nin. tbtal trades of 4?1,J.QR shares or. con-\n|i,idbrably more than one-third of the\nrrana total. '\nTaking today's minimum levels as a\nisis of 'comparison, the 30-odd active\nailroads and special stocks in the\nist showed declines of ,15 to almost\nD points from their levels of the mid-\ncaivIn mora than a few instances\nlay represent lowest prices of five\nO 20 years.\nSince June 30 lost Uethlehem Steel,\n\"icw stock, has declined 68 points to\n2#. .Crucible Steel 40, to 49%; United\n^tafep, 40 to 88%; Lackawanna Steel\n)lv, to 68; Central Leather, 36-to 58;\nluhorican Smelting 36 to 69; Utah\nJopper 27, to 72; Baldwin Locomotive\n15, to 49; American hoec-motivc* 22, to\n.0#|;...American Sugar 32, to S9; Republic Iron 26, to 65;  Studelmker 33,\nwm\nAmong investment rails Atchison has\n[affc^lS to 82; Canndian pacific, 27;\nfit Paul 30, to 37; Norfolk & Western,\n;0; New York Central, 25; Reading,\n2; Union Pacific, 25; Southern Paci-\n,ic\u201e 12; Northern Pacific, 16 and\nii^at ^Western, 15. '\nNumerous inactive rails of the lower\nradeH and many minor specialties to-\nay registered prices 50 per cent or\nlore below the year's best. Shippings\n\u2022ere almost the only stocks to show\nelative strength, comparing favorably\nith mid-year prices, although consid-\nirably 'under maximums prior to and\nince that period.\n[t After the  close  of  today's  market,\nrokerage houses Were'busy issuing,\nSTOCKS\nlive can handle promptly your buying\nInd selling orders on all exchanges. See\nyur board for dally quotations.\nST DENI3 A LAWRENCE\nH>hona 39      609 Ward St.      Box 1102\nNELSON,  B. C.\nThere'll Be\nHeat Enough\nwhen our trucks have filled your\nbin with fine coal and tho fires\nhave been started. Our coal is\na sure enough house warmer. It\nbums evenly and it requires\nonly a little attention morning\nand night to keep the house\ncomfortably worm. If you have\nneglected to order your winter\ncoal as yet, do so at once. We\ncan fill your order now. Later\noh it' may not be so easy to\ndo so.\nWest Transfer Co.\nP. O. Box lie.\nPhone 33\ncalls for additional margins, and bankers held informal conferences to review\nthe situation. Stock exchange officials\nreiterated their recent statements that\nit would be unwise to further restrict\ntrades by establishing minimum prices\nand in this attitude, :it was added, tho\nexchange has the support of the most\nconservative interests.\nCloiing Prices.\nAmerican Smelting   70%\nAnaconda     52^\nC. P. R.  133%\nU. S. Steel  .... 90\nU  S. Steel preferred  ., 109\nUtah  .73%\nNickel    -  26 Vi\nPRICE Of SILVER AT\nNEW YORKJS 861-8\nQuoted  on   London   Market  at 43%\u2014\nSpelter    Dull\u2014Quotations    For\nLead.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nNEW YORK, Nov. 8.\u2014Stiver, 86%;\nat London, 48%v\nSpelter dull; East St. Louis, 7.\u00ab2\nasked., At London: Spot, .\u00a354; futures,\n\u00a350.,\nCopper at London: Spot, \u00a3110; futures,   \u00a3110;   electrolytic,   \u00a3125.\nLead: St. Louis, 6.17%; New York,\n6.25; Montreal, 7.75; London, \u00a330 10s.\nDOMINION STEEL FORFEITS\nGAIN MADE AT TORONTO\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nTORONTO, Nov. 8\u2014Dominion Steel,\nwhich forfeited all its gain of Wednesday, selling back to 52% in sympathy\nwith further weakness at New York,\nwas a noticeable feature of today's\nquiet market. While tho number of\nshares dealt in reached 853, nearly half\nof the turnover was in Nipissing, 400\nshares being put on the market at\nfrom $7.80 to $7.70. Tho trend of\nprices in general had no significance\nand the entire absence from tho sales\nof former active issues, emphasized\nthe extremely narrow character of tho\nmarket. In the- war bonds a sudden\ndemand sprang up for the secolid issue, dealings in which made up $33,-\n00d of the total trades of $54,100.\nSMARTWOOD8 COMMON\nRISES SPECTACULARLY\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nMONTREAL, Nov. 8.\u2014A spectacular\nise in Smurtwoods common redeemed\ntoday's market of the local stock exchange from being miserably light, this\nstock scoring a net 5-point increase\nduring the day, opening at 55, going to\n61 and falling back again to 60 at the\nclose. A small amount of stock on\nthe market and talk, of an increased\ndividend is advanced1 as an explanation qy the brokers for the stock's activity. Ogilvie was fairly active at\n140.\nIdle Wives, Gem theatre, Wednesday\nand Thursday. (7421)\nLIVESTOCK  MARKET8.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nCHICAGO, 111., Nov. 8.\u2014Cattle: Receipts, 11,000; weak. Beeves, 6.60 to\n16.85; western steers, 5,75 to 13.25;\nstockers and feeders, 5.60 to 11.40;\ncows and heifers, 4.40 to 11.60; calves,\n6.75 to 13.\nHogs: Receipts, 19,000; strong. Light,\n15.80 to 17.20; mixed, 16 to 17.35;\nheavy, 16 to 17,35; rough, 16 to 16.25;\npigs,' 12 to 16; bulk, 16,85 to 17.25.\nSheep: Receipts, 9000; firm. Native\nlambs, 12.25 to 16.60.\nToronto.,\nTORONTO, Nov. S.-^Union stockyard receipts of 62 cars comprised 618\ncattle, 47 calves, 1363 hogs and 1785\nsheep and lambs. The market turned\nrather draggy today and there was\nanything but a brisk cleanup. Good\nbutcher stuff, what little there was of\nit, held steady, but there was a sudden let-up for the demand for canners\nand common cows. This class dropped\n25 cents per 100. Common light stockers were also draggy, but choice feeders held firm. At 25 cents lower lambs\nwere easier. Hogs held steady, the\nbulk selling at 17 fed, though a few\nwere picked up at $16.75 fed and\nwatered.\nWinnipeg.\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 8.\u2014Receipts of\nlivestock at the Union stockyards today totaled 2000 cattle and 600 hogs.\nCattle trading was steady at unchanged prices on all grades of butcher cattle. The quality of the offerings was\nmostly common and medium class.\nBulls and oxen steady. Veal calves\nsteady, sheep and lambs slow. Prices\naro fully .60 cents lower than last week\nfor sheep and lambs. Hogs sold steady\nat 15.75 for select.\nConsolidated Mining & Smelting Co.\no! Canada, Limited\nOffice., Smeltint and Refining Department   \u2022' '\nTRAIL. BRITISH COLUMBIA '     \\\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and ZlntOres\nTADANAC BRAND PIG LEAD. BLUHSTONB AND SPELTER\nIMSfTOK\nOverthrow  of  Kerensky and   Russian\nPeace Talk Responiibte\u2014Provis*\ny ions Gain.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nCHrCAGO, III., Nov. 8.\u2014Corn underwent a decided setback in value toddy\nlargely as a result of Kerensky's overthrow and of Russian peace talk.\nThe market closed nervous at losses\nof 1% to 2 cents net, with December\nat $1.16% and May at $1.12 to $1.12%.\nOats declined.% to % to 2% cents.\nProvisions gained 20 to 55 cents.\nOats held relatively firm owing to\nthe fact that arrivals were light, corn\nhaving preference in the railway movement of crops.\nBuying that Was credited to pacfci\ners led to sharp upturns in the provision market*- -Realising sales later\nnullified part of the advance.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nWINNIPEG,    Nov,   8.\u2014Oats:    May,\n67%; November, 68%; December, 65%.\nFlax:  May, $2.90;  November, $3.09;\nDecember,   $2.88%.\nTRADING SIICHIIV\nE\nHUT MAI\n'Fractional  Advance   Made  by   Slocan\nStar Stock\u2014Rambler Shows Small\nRecession.\nTrading Hliowcd a . .sllffht improvement on tho Spokane market yesterday, transactions tnking place in practically all stocks on the list. . Slocan\nStar made a fractional advance, helng\nquoted aa? 1%. Rambler at 71,., was\n1,4 down. Standard was quoted at 30\nand Utica at 10%.\nSpokane Closing Quotations.\n(Reported by St. Deiils & Lawrence.)\nBid     Asked\nCork-Province    $.02      f ,\nRambler   07%\nSlocan Star 01%\nandard ..'    .30\nUtica    10',i\nCalcdonlo 60\n.07%\n.02%\n.13\nDODDS '\nIkidney\n^ pills r\nlk   ^KlDN\u00a3tJhc\n.11 V     q=HT-s   DlS^aC\". '\nBANK CLEARING8 FOR\nCHIEF CANADIAN CITIES\n(By, Pally News Leased \"Wire.)\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 8.\u2014Following are\nthe bank clearings of the principal cit\nies of the Dominion for the\nweek end.\ning today, as compared with the cor\nresponding week. Inst year:\n1917.\n1916.\nMontreal   ...   ...S89.76M62\n$99,560,41\nToronto 00,567,742\n62,780,886\nWinnipeg .82,130,278\n68,945,907\nVancouver ..  ..'.   9,89,399\n7,182,370\nOttawa .\u2022 5,726,978\n0,964,714\nCalgary    '.' 10,412,979\n6.508,530\nHamilton   ..    ..    5,294,207\n5,276,707\nQuebaB]Ti3. .i.'!\".<<- 5,691,351\n5,291,417\nEdmonton   . f.r.i  4,146,418\n2,683,109\nHalifax      4,015,920\n2,903,051\nLondon  ..,      2,588,623\n2,166,967\nRegina    ,    ..-.\t\n4,113,194\n1.889,028\n1,644,150\nSaskatoon  ..' ..    3,240,056\n2,544,150\nMoose* .Taw ......:   2,2\u00bb5.'668\n1,517,758\nBrandon      1,177,4,33\n701,848\n818.884\nFort William .'.   1 934,850\n647.390\nLethbridge .....    1,356,812\n1,058,702\nMedicine Hat ..       783,967\n758,956\nN. Westminster..     335,412\n293,403\nH. S. ARKELL APPOINTED\nLIVESTOCK   COMMISSIONER\nReports   of   Committees   Adopted   at\nConvention Held Regarding Hog\nProduction.\n(By Daiiy News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, Nov. 8,\u2014The convention\non hog production sat all day and the\nvarious committees brought in reports\nof their finding, and these, after considerable discussion, were adopted. It\nwas* however, decided that nothing\nshould be given to the press until all\nthe resolutions had been submitted to\nHon. X* A. Crerar, for his approval.\nFor this purpose many of the delegation will wait over another day and\nmeet the minister at l):30 o'clock Friday morning, lt was learned today\nthut H. s .Arkell, who for a number\nof years has been assistant livestock\ncommissioner and who had been acting head of the department since the\ndeath of John Bright, has been officially gazetted livestock commissioner\nfor Cana'da.\nWINNIPEG WOMAN\nDIES   IN   100TH   YEAR\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 8.\u2014Tho death occurred here today of Mrs. Elizabeth\nBollngbrook. She was probably the\noldest woman In Winnipeg, being in\nher 100th year.\nGet the right kind of\npowder for stumping\n\"The farmer needs to know that      !\nhe is getting quality in the powder\nthat   he   is   purchasing,\"  says   the\nWestirn Farmer,   \u2022 If he secures the tight kind of powder, the\ncost of removing stumps is greatly lessened.\" \u2022 '    \"\u00bb\nThe right powder to use for stump blasting is\n<^tSn)MPmGP\u00abwrett  i\nbecause it is made in British Columbia especially for.\nblasting the kind of stumps that are found here. It has\nbeen used by British Columbia' land clearers for 32 years.-\nIt is the original Giant powder (\n\u2014the pioneer Canadian farm\nexplosive.\nGiant Stumping Powder has a greater\nheaving and lifting effect than ordinary\npowders. It therefore goes further and\ngets the stumps out cleaner than explosives that merely shatter.\nGet our book;\nsave money\nOur book, \"Better\nFarming with\nGiant Stumping\nPowder,\" will\nBhow you how to cut down your blasting\ncosts. It explains (lie latest powder-saving\nways of loading and firing. It is free. Mail\nthe coupon or ask for it on a post card.\nFree Book\nCoupon\nGIANT POWDER CO. Ltd.\nVancouver, B. C.\nSend me your book, Better Farming\nwilh Giant Stumping powder,\" 1 am\ninterested in the subject* which I have\nmarked X:\nI\nD Stump BUattnc\nD Boulder Blutiai\n[. ] Red Makinc\nD Tree Bed BUatioi\nD Ditch Bleating\nD Mining\u2014Quarrrlnc\nThe Military\nService Act, 1917\nCANADA\nNotice to Employers\nThe attention of Employers is especially called to the\nfollowing provisions of the Regulations   passed  under\nThe Military Service Act, 1917, and The War Measures\nAct, 1914, which directly affects them.\nEMPLOYER Every employer, and every person\nUNDUE* acting on behalf of any employer, who\nADVANTAGE stipulates or attempts or offers to\nOP stipulate with any employee or other\nEMPLOYEE, person for any reduction of an employee's salary or wages, or for the\nalteration of any other term or condition of his employment, in consideration of the employer exercising or\nrefraining from exercising his right to\nclaim exemption from military service on behalf of any employee, or\nwho alters or attempts or offers or\nproposes to alter, adversely to any\nemployee, any of the conditions of\nemployment affecting such employee\nby exercising or refraining from exercising or by authorizing or suggesting\nthe exercise or abstention from exercising of his right to claim exemption\nfrom military service on behalf of any\nemployee, shall be guilty of an offence,\npunishable on summary conviction,\nby fine or imprisonment, or both, in\nthe discretion of the convicting magistrate; the fine to be not less than one\nhundred dollars and not more than.\none thousand dollars, and the imprisonment not' to exceed six months.\nSlftttwtm \u00b0 Every Per30n sI?a!r. be S\"\u00bblty of an\nMEN WHO offence, and liable on summary conviction to a penalty of not less than\nfifty dollars, and of not more than five\nhundred dollars, who, after the expiry\nof the time within which a man is by\nproclamation or regulation required\nto report in accordance with section 4\nof the Act or to apply for exemption,\nemploys or engages in his service, or\ncontinues in his service for a period\nof seven days, any man who belongs to\nany class or sub-class which has been\nEMPLOYER\nTO MAKE\nENQUIRIES.\nARE IN\nDEFAULT.\ncalled out, and who has not reported\nas required by section 4 of the Act,\nor in respect of whom an application\nfor exemption has not been made,\nunless such person prove that, having\nmade due inquiry, he believed upon\nreasonable grounds that the man so\nemployed, engaged or continued in his\nservice did not belong to any class or\nsub-class called out, or that he had\nreported or had at the time a certificate, or that an application for exemption by or in respect of the man\nwas at the time pending.\n(a) It shall be the duty of every\nperson who is an employer to make\ninquiries forthwith after the issue of\nany proclamation calling out men for\nmilitary service under the Act whether\nany, and, if any, which of [his em-\nployees are within the class or subclass called out by such proclamation;\nand, forthwith after the expiry of the\ntime limited by the proclamation for\nreporting for service or claiming exemption, to inquire and ascertain\nwhether there are any, and if any,\nwhich of the men in his employ so\ncalled out who have failed to report or\napply for exemption from service, or\nin respect of whom an application for\nexemption from service has not been\nmads.\nP'\">.om:s (b) It shall be the duty of every\nro Ar..> ...x. cmployee to answer any questions that\nshall be put to him by his employer,\nand to give any information which\nhis employer may require of him for\nthe purpose of enabling the employer\nto comp.y_w.th the duty imposed upon\nhim by this section.\nREPORT TO\nMINISTER.\n(c) Every employer shall, forthwith\nafter the expiry of the time so limited\nby any such proclamation, report to\nthe Minister (of Justice) according to\nthe best of his knowledge, information\nand belief, the names and addresses and\nthe whereabouts at the time of all employees in his service called out by\nany such proclamation who have failed\nto report or apply for exemption from\nservice.\nPENALTY. And any person who is an employer\nwho refuses, neglects or fails to comply with any of the requirements\nimposed upon him by this section\nshall be guilty of an offence and liable,\nupon summary conviction, to a penalty not exceeding, as to each employee in respect of whom he has so\nrefused, neglected or failed to comply,\none hundred dollars and not less than\nfifty dollars, or to imprisonment for a\nterm not exceeding three months, or\nto both fine and imprisonment in the\ndiscretion of the convicting magistrate.\nEMPLOYING    Every person who employs or re-\nTl PSF RTF n?Q .... \u2022 \u00bbrf\ntains m his service any man who has\ndeserted, or who is absent without\nleave, from the Canadian expeditionary force, .hall be guilty of an offence,\npunishable on summary conviction by\nimprisonment not exceeding six\nmonths, or by a peifelty of not less\nthan one hundred dollars, and of not\nmore than five hundred dollars, unless\n, such person prove that he was not\naware, and had nc reasonable ground\nto suspect, that the man so employed\nor retained in his service was a deserter or absent from the force without leave.\nUnder the proclamation issued on the 13th of October, 1917, the last day\nfor members of Class One under the Act to report or claim exemption is\nNovember lOth, 1917\nm\nIssued by\nThe Military Service Council\n f   PAGE F.MJR     \">\nTHE4>AILY NEWS\nFRIDAY, NOVEMBER !). 1917\nTHE, DAILY NEWS\nPublished   every   morning   except\nSunday by The Newa Publishing Com-\npany, Limited, Kelson, B. C, Canada.\nROBB SUTHBRI^AND,\nGeneral Manager.\nBusiness letters should be addressed\nand checks and money orders made\npayable to the News Publishing Company, Limited, and In no case to Individual members of the staff.\nAdvertising rate cards and sworn\ndetailed statements of, circulation\nmailed on request, or may be seen at\nthe office of any advertising agency\nrecognized by the Canadian Press\nAssociation.\nSubscription Rates\u2014By mall 50 cents\nper month, $2.50 for six months, $5.00\nper year. .Delivered: 60 cents per\nmonth, $3.00 for six months, $6.00 per\nyear, payable in advance.\nFRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1917\nGIVE THE CHILD A VICTORY BOND\nFOR CHRISTMAS.\n\"What shall we give tho children\nfor Christmas?'' will be the Question\nthnt parents in Kootenay and Boundary will he asking in a few weeks.\nWhy not let \"Victory honds\" bo the\nanswer?\nA $50 or $100 Victory bond is about\nas suitable a present as any child could\nreceive at thiR time. In> 14 years, if\nthe Interest is compounded, it will\ndouble In value, while the possession\nof un interest -ben ring bond will inculcate in the child the spirit of saving, of thrift. Nothing will bring home\nto a child so thoroughly the benefits\nof saving money as tbo twice-a-year\nexperience of receiving Interest from\ntho government.\nNot all parents can afford to buy\nVictory bonds for their children, hut\nof thoso who cannot subscribe to the\nnew war loan many can afford to purchase war savings certificates, which\ncost a few cents more than $S each and\nwill return $10 in three years.\nCAUSE OF  LIBERTY  IS GREATER\nTHAN   PARTY\nSir Wilfrid Laurier's personal magnetism. Sir Wilfrid's great, gifts and\nSir Wilfrid's services to the Liberal\nparty are recognized by political\nfriend nnd political foe.\nBut tho issue today is greater, infinitely greater, than the fortunes of\nthe Conservative or the Liberal party,\nor a Conservative or a Liberal leader.\nLoyalty to party or a party leader\nbecomes treason to the cause of liberty if tho expression of that, loyalty\nnt the polls involves a vote against\nsending men to reinforce the boys at\nthe front\nLiberals during these critical days\nof the war are choosing between\nLaurier and the boys at tho front. It\nis not surprising that tho majority of\ntho leaders among English-speaking\nLiberals are on this paramount issue\nparting from Laurier and backing tiie\nsoldiers. The war in which Canada's\nsoldiers aro making such noble sacrifices and winning such glorious\nlaurels is essentially a war fo;- Liberalism. If Germany should win, Liberalism, which can only flourish under complete liberty, would be destroyed.\nin future there Will be no \"profiteering\"\nby packing houses. Not only will there\nbe government control but the books\not\" the packers will be open lo inspection by rep resent at ives of tho farmers'\norganizations.\nGovernment control will not only\nlimit tne spread between tho price received by the farmer and that paid\nby the consumer, but it will result in\ngreater coordination of effort in supplying iho entente allies with the\ngreatest possible tonnage of Canadian\npacking  houso   products.\nEndorsement of tho Union government at the coming election will ensure that Canada will not play tho\npart of Russia.\nThere is evidently somo sort of link\nbetween the bears on the stock exchanges nnd the Russian bear. Poth\nwont on a rampage yesterday.\nThe Russian and Italian situation\ndrives homo the necessity for every\nportion of tho British Empire putting\ninto the. war every ounce of strength,\nin manpower and material, that can bo\ndeveloped.\nTwo days remain in which Class 1\nmen may register. Thoso who have\nnot registered by Saturday will bo subject to the heavy penalties of tho law,\nwhich will bo strictly enforced. But\nfortunately there is no roasnn to suppose that any men in this district aro\nattempting to evade registration.\nOne point is that if Russia quits,\nGermany will have no assurance that\nIt will stay out of the war, Reestab-\nlishment or ft stable government would\nalmost certainly bring it back beside\nthe entente allies. Hence the Teutons\ncannot leave tho eastern front entirely\nunguarded.\n\\llan T. Mode has been chosen as a\nLaurier Liberal candidate in Strathcona. Tho fight will therefore bo between Mr .Mode and James Douglas,\nthe former member, a Liberal who supported tho Military Service bill and the\nUnion government program. The Conservative-Unionists, in view of Mr.\nDouglas' sound record on war questions, are, of course, not opposing him,\nnnd he will have the united support of\nall  Unionists.\nWHAT THE PRESS IS SAYING\nWORSE CHAOS IN  RUSSIA.\nNews from Russia is bad. Thr ex\ntreme element has control of retro\ngrad and has embarked upon a program calling for immediate peace.\nKerensky hits fled, possibly to Moscow,\nor possibly to the army. From the\nbattlellno or from the ancient capital\nhe may succeed in developing sufficient\nstrength to regain control, hut whatever happens Russia cannot, prove of\nmuch importance as a military Factor\nfor months.\nIf tne extremists carry out their\nprogram, Teuton forces on the eastern\nfront will bo released for concentration against the entente in the west,\nin Italy and'ln. the Balkans. Russian\nfood supplies will to some extent, at\nleast ho released for Teuton consumption.\nBut no Russian government., revolutionary or othp,rwise, can exist without funds and it \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0in doubtful if Germany can fill that need. The entente\nholds the sack,; a fact which may prove\na decisive factor in keeping Russia\nfrom committing suicide by capitulating to the enemy\u2014which is what n\nseparate peace, would amount to.\nRussian defection would lengthen\nthe war, but the British Empire, the\nUnited States, France and Italy will\ncontinue unshaken until victory h\nbeen won, no matter what may happen\nin Patrograd. Oermany is definitely on\nthe. down grade and successful in\ntrigucs in Russia will 'delay and not\nprevent the ultimate collapse of Ihe\nHun machine.\n*   \"My Son.   Oh My Sonl\"\nHarry Lauder was one or tho speak\ners nt the luncheon tendered to the (...=;\ntinguished   French    editor,   Stephan'\nLauxannc,  on  Monday.    He  surprised\nhis hearers by the simple pathOs!\nwell as by the trumpet-like patriotism,\nof his address.   In closing he turned t\nM. Lauzunno and said:   \"I am one of\nthose who love Frnnce.   ] own a little\ncorner of your country.    It  is a small\nplot lying on the crest of one of your\ngreen  hills,   buck  of  the  battle  lines.\nMy son is there, buried in the sacred\nsoil   which   has   always  nurtured   hii\nman  liberty.    All  of   the  gladness  of\nmy life is burled there in his grave.\"\nNew York Editor and Publisher .\nMarse  Henry to  Kaiser Bill\nHad Wilhelm lived some centuries\nago, and pillaged and murdered- Saracens with the cross upon his banner\nhe- might have been mistaken by the\nmob for a. religious man. Nowadays\npretense nf piety cannot mask the motives of a. scoundrel nor can a crown\nand the purple of royalty make a Ho-\nhenzollern seem other than the self-\nseeking criminal and ruffian he happens to he.\u2014Louisville Courier-.Toumill.\nWhy Not Save Sugar?\nSugar waste in this country is enormous. If this article wore merely left\nout of tea every day In the United\nSlates tho American oversupply would\n. away up. Thore is tho expert testimony to encourage this experiment\nby individuals thai the true flavor\nand stimulation of lea are neutralized\nby sugar. A sugarless day a week\nmight be counted a hardship by those\nwho are used to overindulgence In it\nand indeed a little sugar .every day is\nbetter for the body than the usual excess for six days and complete abstention on tho seventh day. A more satisfactory way of saving Is for every\none to cut it out for at least one meal\nevery day in the week.\u2014Providence\nJournal.\nNOT A  PRIVATE WAR\n$ . s>\nSir Wilfrid would hot give his personal support to compulsory service,\nHe is unprepared to say that even if,\nafter an extended further trial of voluntarism, it should fail, ho would be\nprepared to support the raising of reinforcements  by. selective   draft.\n.This, of courso, puts Sir Wilfrid\nLaurier wholly out of touch with the\npeople of Canada from whose homes\nNo Spooning Allowed\nIF you have been unfavorably impressed with the\nflavor of Soman Meal Porridge, sure enough you must\nhave stirred iti Be fair to\nyourself and to Roman Meal!\nDon't stir it except while mixing meal and water. Remember \"no spooning allowed.\"\nForce of habit made you stir\nthe porridge without knowing\nyou did so, perhaps. Just get\nanother package; make the\nporridge according to the\ndirections. Surely it is no\ntrouble NOT to stir Roman Meal porridge after mixing the\nmeal and water.\n  Dr. Jackson's\nRoman Meal\nmakes the most delightful flav-\nory porridge of all\u2014when not\nstirred. The flavor of grains\nlies in their DARK parts. Roman\nMeal is rich in the dark parts of\nwheat and rye.\nIt is made from the WHOLE\nberries of these grains, bringing\nto you every bit of their nut-like\nflavor. ; .\nRoman Meal also contains\nwheat-bran and flaxseed; and\nyou know how splendid these\nare for relieving constipation.\nThe flaxseed in Roman Meal is\nabsolutely tasteless and odorless, rendered so by a special\nelectrical process invented by\nDr. Jackson.\nStirring Roman Meal porridge\nwhile cooking brings back the\nflaxseed taste and odor. Don't\nstir except while mixing meal\nand water.\nRomanMeal prevents indigestion. It positively relieves constipation or \"money back.\"\nAnother important thing:\nRoman Meal is porous, because\nit is granulated, thus allowing\nthe digestive juices to reach\nevery particle and preventing\nindigestion. Stirring when\ncooking breaks up the granules,\nmaking a sticky mush instead of\nthe delicious Roman Meal granular porridge.\nThousands of families all over\nAmerica enjoy Roman Meal\nporridge every day\u2014it is delicious. Doctors prescribe it for\nconstipation and indigestion and\nall undertone conditions. You\ncan bake with it: mix it with\nyour white flour when baking, it\nhelps white flour foods to digest\nand restores their lost balance.\nAsk your doctor about it.\nRoman Moil Ccmpan,, Toronto, Cuuds; North Ts.w.iad., Niw York;\nTftcomo. Within.!... ,-\n\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\nmen have gone to risk life and all they\nhave und are in this war.\nThey cannot support him in this attitude. And because of the kind of\nsupport this attitude will draw to him,\nthoy must oppose him and compass\ntho defeat of the forces that will gather behind him.\nSir Wilfrid Laurier, like many\nothers, appears to have the view that\nthis is a private war in which anybody may quite properly decide for\nhimself whether ho -will take part or\nremain neutral. It will scarcely do to\nentrust the Government of the country\nin the miJ|jrlSfe\\aj^war to men committed to such*a vle\\v'as this. ThoHc\nwho do not. regard this as a private\nwar in which only those need engage,\nwho choose to do.so, biit'who maintain\nthat Canada is ati war and the nation\nshould act accordingly and call upon\nall mon to perform thoir.duty should\nelect representatives who will carry\nout that policy.\u2014Montreal Star.\nThe New Chancellor.\nAnd tho kaiser has another chancellor\u2014Qeorge von Hertllng; a Bavarian. We hover hoard of him before,\nbut ho must be a brave man to tako a\njob In whioh ho is sure to lose friends\nand make no ond of enemies.\u2014Hamilton Herald.\nDiamonds for the\nChristmas Gift\nNo gift is worthier, more\nwelcome, or greater in in-\ntrim.c value than one of\nBirks' Diamonds. You will\nnote in our 1918 Gift Book\na very pleasing selection\nof fine diamond jewellery.\nRings, brooohet, pine, pendants and, necklaces are\nall illustrated, described\npriced.\nIf you do not receive a\ncopy of this book, write us.\nHenry BirkiS Sou Ltd.\nVaneouver, B. C.\nSw\nCarpet\nSweepers\nWE HAVE JUST OPENED UP  A LARGE SHIPMENT OF CARPET\nSWEEPERS   WHICH   WE   ARE   ABLE   TO   SELL   AT\nA  SPECIAL  PRICE\nEVERY   ONE   GUARANTEED  OR  MONEY  BACK\n\"FAULTLESS\"   CARPET   SWEEPER      Price $2^6 Each\n\"KEYSTONE\"  VACUUM   SWEEPER8    Price  17.50   Each\nDON'T DELAY\u2014ORDEJt  NOW\u2014PRICES CANNOT BE REPEATED\nNelson Hardware Co*.\nP. O. BOX 1050 NELSON, B. C.\nJohn Burns & Sons ^IST*\nSASH AND DOOR FACTORY. NELSON PLANING MILLS.\nVERNON, 8TREET, NELSON. B. C.\nEvery Deioription of Building Material Kept In 8tsek\nEatimate. Given on Stone, Briok, Concrat. and Frama Building..\nMAIL ORDER8 PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.\nP  O   BOX 1M DUANt tTf\nGOVERNMENT CONTROL OF THE\nPACKING HOUSES.\nWithin two or three weeks the pack\nIng and cold storage Industry of Canada will ne under government control.\nFood \"Controller Hanna's announce\nmen'tto this effect will bo welcome,\nas nothing, but government control\ncan remedy the conditions which havo\nbeen .brought to light as the. result of\nthe government exposure of the operations of the William Davies company.\n. Packer, will be permitted a fair pro.\nCOLD STORAGE\nj .\nThoy wore now neighbors and Virginia Lou, aged fivo, put her wits to\nwork to find out about them. She\naccordingly appeared in the yard of\nthe neighbor accompanied by her\nthree-year-old sister.\n\"Whero do you live?\" she asked.\n\"Right here\/' explained the neighbor.\n\"Well, you didn't used to live here.'\n\"No.\"\n\"Well, do you have n grundfndder?'\n\"No.\"\n\"Or a grandmudder?\"\n\"Nn.\"\n\"Or a fndder?\"\n\"No.\"\n\"Well, what do you got?\"\nTho truck driver ontered the dentist's operating room and looked round\nat the various appliances suspiciously.\n\"Well, what's your trouble?\" asked\nthe dentist.\n\"Toothache \u2014 bad,\" replied the\nsticker out.\n\"Just sit In this chair,\" said tbe\ndentist, \"and we'll have a look at it.\nAh! badly decayed. That tooth must\ncome out.   Will you have gns?\"\n\"Will it hurt much if I don't?\" nsk-\nod tho truck driver, anxiously.\n\"I'm afraid It will.\"\nThe driver looked grim.\n\"Then I think I'd better take lt for\nyour sake,\" he replied.\nA girl .can  love almost  any  man\nfit and to that they are entitled, but* hgr parents are willing to objcot to,\nCANADA\nTO-MO.RROW\nThe proclamation which issued on October 13th under\nthe Military Service Act requires that each man who is\na member of the First Class\u2014bachelors and widowers\nwithout children (not otherwise excepted) who were 20\nyears old on the 13th October, 1917, and whose 34th\nbirthday did not occur before January 1st, l9l7, shall, on .\nor before the\n10th day of November, 1917\nreport himself for military service, unless application for\nhis exemption shall then have been made by him or by\nany person entitled to apply in his behalf.\nWhat is Required Immediately\nAny man in Class One, if it has not already been done,\n. must before the Post Office closes to-morrow night, obtain\nfrom the Postmaster a form for reporting for service or a\nform for claiming exemption, fill out the same, and hand\nit to the Postmaster for transmission to the proper\nquarters.\nPenalty Provided\nThe Military Service Act provides that failure to fulfil\nthe above obligation entails a penalty \"on summary conviction to imprisonment for any term not exceeding five\nyears with hard labour.\"\n\u25a0.-}\u25a0   \u25a0   \u25a0         >\u25a0\u25a0' '\" Issued by\nThe Military Service Council\nSome Light All Night\nin\nA sudden attack of croup, restlessness tor nightmare\u2014niother.\nappreciates the glow of\nALL-NITE-LITE TRANSFORMER\nPor loss than half a eciit\nnight this little light will give\nenough illumination for her\ncare for the little \"nos without\nhunting for a switch in the dark\nor striking matches. The light\nis not bright enough to disturb\nrest. Its protection and general\nusefulness ennnot be over-outi*\n\u2022 mated.\nLet us Show You This Low\nPriced Convenience.\nCanadian General Electric\nCompany, Limited\nMcCulIoch Building, Nelson, B.C.\nrima.\nGuaranteed high clas. fun, nlc. \u2022\nectlon kept In stock or made to ord\n'rom eeleoted skins. Customer* fn\noade up, remodelled and repalrt\n<kfns dressed end mounted at mode\n\u00bbte price*. Beat price paid far l*\niklna,\nQ, QLA8ER, Manufacturing Furrla\n16 Ward St., Nelaon. B. C.  Phone 1\n, NOTICE.\nLand Registry Aot.\nIN THE MATTER OFAN APPla\nCATION for the issue ot a duplies.)\nCertificate of Title to nnun'diy!2.i\nHth interest in nil minerals precloi\nand base savo coal and petroleum\nOr under Lots 2879, 2880, 2881, '2882 at\n23S3, All in Group 1 and known aH.t\n\"Swiss,\" \"Highland Chief,\" \"Berne\n\"Kootenay Pass\" and \"Rocky Kra\ntlonal\" Mineral Claims respectively.\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that\nis my intention to issue at. the expir\ntion of one month after the first pu\nlicatlon hereof a duplicate of the Ce\ntiflcate of Title to the above mention\nInterest in said minerals, in the nar\nof Maximilian (.Max) Heckmali\nwhich Certificate is dated the 25th d\nof March, 1902 and numbered 1282A.\nDated at tbo Land Registry OKI\nat Nelson, D. C, this 2nd day of No\nomber, 1917.\nE. S. STOKES,\nDistrict Reglstrl\nDate of first publication Nov. 6, MM.\nSYN0PSI8 OF COAL\nMINING REGULATION\nCoal mining rights ot the Domini\nIn Manitoba, Saskatchewan and\nborta, the Yukon Territory, tho Nort\nwest Territories, and tn a portion\nthe province of British Columbia, m\nbe leased for a term of twenty-o\nyears at an annual rental of tl I\nacre. No more than 2560 acres w\nbe leased to one applicant.\nApplication for lease must\nmade by the applicant in person\nthe' agent or sub-agent of the distr\nof which the lights applied for are s\nuated.\nIn surveyed territory the land m\u00ab\nbe described by sections or legal au\ndivisions of sections and In unsurve\ned territory the tract applied for sb\nbe staked out by the applicant hUqw\nEach application must be accompe.\nled by a fee of 15 which will be i\nfunded it the rights applied for I\nnot available, but not otherwise,\nroyalty shall be paid on the merohai\nable output of the mine at the ti\nof five cents per ton. '\nThe person operating the mine Shi\nfurnish the agent with sworn rotor\naccounting tor the full quantity\nmerchantable coal mined and pay t\nroyalty thereon. It the coal mint\nrights are not being operated, au\nreturns shall he furnished at least en\na year.\nThe lease will Include the coal ml\nIng rights only, but the lessee may\npermitted to purchase whatever ava\nable surface rights may be consldei\nnecessary for the working ot the ml\nat the rate ot 110 an acre.\nFor full Information appllcati\nshould be made to the Secretary ot t\nDepartment ot the Interior, Ottawa,\nto any agent or sub-agent of Domini\nlands. W. W CORY,\nDeputy Minister of the Interior\nN. B.\u2014Unauthorized publication,\nthis advertisement will not be paid *\nA movement Is on foot to supply .1\nvillage of Wark worth and faripi\nalong the lines tn Percy township w\nlight and power which will be brouj\nln from Campbollford.\nTHE:  DAILY   NEWS   WANT   At\nANTICIPATE. YOU* W*\"T#\n lOcd^\nr   FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9, IW     1\nTHE'\u00a9AILY NEWS\nJAGE FIVE\nAt The Star\nlettuce:\nHothouse, per pound 30o\nI CELERY\n3 heads to bunch 10c\nHERRINGS\nPel- kit si.76\nNO. 1 ASHCROFT POTATOES\nPer 100 pounds ,  $2.25\nStar Grocery\nPHONE 10\nFanners, Ship Us Your\nCREAM\nButter Fat, now, per lb\u201445C\nF. O. B. Nelson.\nWRITE FOR SHIPPING\nTAG8.\nCurlew Creamery\nBOX 1192\nCompany\nNEL80N, B. C.\nSimple Way To\nEnd Dandruff\nThere is one sure way that has\n\u25a0never failed to remove dandruff at\nonce, and that In to dissolve it, then\nyou destroy it entirely. To do this\nJust get ahout four ounces of plain,\ncommon liquid urvon from any drug\nBtore (this is all you will need) apply\nit at night when retiring; use enough\nto moisten the scaj|i( und rub it in\ngently \"with the finger tips.\nHy niprning most, if not all, of your\ndandruff will be gone and three or\nlour more applications will completely\ndissolve am. entirely destroy every\nsingle sign and trace of it, no matter\nhow much dandruff you may have.\nYou will find all itching and digging\nof the scalp will stop instantly ami\nyour hair will bo fluffy, lustrous silky,\nglossy and soft, and look and feel a\nhundred times better.\nIdl* Wives, Gem theatre, Wednesday\nand Thursday. (7421)\nln his giant Capront biplane, Lieut.\nSilvia Resnatl carried eight passen\ngers from Hampton, Va., to Mineola,\n3..I., in four hours and eleven minutes.\n\u25a0 '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nThe Sprightly Springy Step of Youth\nis yours in the\niss Shot\nThe soft fibre cushion insole supports your foot at\nevery point, removes the cause of corns, bunions\nand fallen arches and your feet sink into the luxurious cushions to perfect ease and corhfort,\nIt is never too late to mend j but satisfy four-\nul\/ now.\nRe*\nR. Andrew & Co.\nSOLE   AGENTS\n13.5-ClJSr.tOH, I\nLcUWiiCSSF-SUHDES 1\nI^Lb.WJ.l.SffFLXTMIl* ,\nTOM\n2.cu;mowsupP0!tTSxrar\u00bb\n\u2022Vatfllior, Mis ItoiMW iuci*    i\n\u25a0  \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nWINNING   NUMBER   LAST   WEEK,   16872 y7\nAsk for Ticket With Your Purohase\u2014Pair of $5.00 Shoes Free EaclTweek\nKootenag and Boundary\nKIMBERLEY HOTEL\nPROPRIETOR FINED\nCase    Against    Cranbrook     Brewing\nCompany   Dismissed\u2014Judgment\nReserved in Agent's Case\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Nov. 8.\u2014At\nMarysville on Tuesday, II. W. Drew,\nproprietor of the North Star hotel,\nKlmberley, was charged with having,\ncontrary to the act, a quantity ol1\nliquor in a pluce other than in the\nprivate dwelling in which he resides.\nThe case was tried before Justices\nBurdett and Ferris and they held that\nthe offense wns proven and imposed\na fine of $50 and costs and made an\norder for tho forfeiture of the liquor\nwhich is said to be valued at $1700,\nOn Monday two eases cumo up before J. A. Arnold and E. A. Hill. In\nthe first case an offense was charged\nagainst the Cranbrook Brewing com\npany for selling liquor containing\nmore than Wfa per cent of proof spirit\ncontrary to section 10 of the act, and\nin the second case, arising out. of thi\nsame, Harry Hesse, agent of the\nbrewing company, was charged with\na liko offense. C. J. Spreull appeared\nfor the prosecution, and A. B. Mac\ndonald for the defense. It. was slated\nin evidence that on Oct. 16 Hesse was\npassing along Norbury avenue, near\ntho police station, when tiio chief of\npolice took a keg of beer from the\nwagon and had two bottles drawn\nfrom same and had one bottle sent to\nVictoria, for examination and tho\nother given to A. P. Nohle of the\nBcattle-Murphy company for his\nanalysis. Mr. Noble produced what\nwas alleged to be the bottle handed\nhim for analysis. Mr. Macdonald nt\nonce objected, saying that there was\nno identification of the bottle produced by the chief of potice when he was\nunder examination and lhat the\nprosecution could not now mend Its\nhand.\nMr. Spreull argued that lie was in\nno way bound, to produce ihe bottle as\ntbe burden of proof of the right lo\nsell wns thrown on the defendant.\nThe justices dismissed the case, holding that it wns not conclusively proved that the bottle produced was the\nactual bottle handed Mr. Noble by\ntho chief of police.\nThe case against Harry Hesse was\nthen proceeded with nnd the evidence\nas given obove was repeated except\nthat the chief of police now identified\nthe bottle as that given by him to\nMr. Noble. It contained 0.03 per cent\nproof spirit on the basis of 57 per\ncent, or equal to .-{.fif. per cent proof\nspirit.\nMr. Spreull rested his case at this\npoint, and Mr. Macdonuld pointed out\nthat the information charged an offense by Hosse as agent, employee or\nworkman of the Cranbrook Brewing\ncompany contrary to the act. It could\nnot, said Mr. Macdonald, bo argued\nthat the Cranbrook Brewing company, or any other company was a\n\"person\" within tho meaning of the\nact. Ho asked for a dismissal of the\ncase. The justices reserved their decision on this point.\nIdle Wives, Gem theatre, Wednesday\nand Thursday. (7-121)\nmm\nTo Retail Trade of Nelson\nOn account of Half Holiday Saturday Afternoon, we,\nth. undersigned, aro finding great difficulty in getting\norder, for delivery, in time to be filled and delivered\non time.\nTo relieve thi. situation it i. necessary for us to make\nthe following regulation.:\nFirst deliveries Saturday morning leave not later than\nNino o'clock.\nSecond deliveries leave at Teh-Thirty o'clock sharp.\nAll orders for delivery must be in before that time.\nNow that the weather i. cooler we would appreciate\ncustomers, when possible, placing order. Friday instead\nof Saturday, which will enable us to' give better and more\nprompt service..;'\nP. BURNS & CO., LTD.\n  LUCIA MEAT CO., LTD.\nWEST   KOOTENAY   BUTCHER  CO.\nf:\nmen\nand Ranchers\nFOR YOUR FALL CALVES\n, USE  .\n\"ROYAL  PURPLE\"  CALF   MEAL\nCAN BE MIXED WITH SEPARATED MILK OR WATER\nSOLD  BY\ne Taylor Milling and\neyator Co., Ltd.\nTRAIL SOLDIER 1$\nKILLED INACTION\nH. Cadwatlader Makes Supreme Sacrifice\u2014J. McKay, Trail. Missing\nBelieved  Killed\n. (By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA. Nov. 8.\u2014There were 117\nwestern soldiers in the casualty list\nissued tonight, out of a total of 339.\nThey are: One killed in action, five\ndied of wounds, one missing believed\nkilled, nine seriously ill and wounded,\n86 wounded, five wounded and gassed,\nnine gassed and one cancel report\nwounded.\nBritish Columbia casuatties are:\nKILLED IN ACTION\nH. T. Cadwallader, Trail.\nDIED OF WOUNDS\nC. T. Wales, Victoria,\nG. Jack, Vancouver.\nSERIOUSLY   ILL   AND   WOUNDED\nF. A. Dayton, Kamloops,\nE. G.  Fletcher, Nelson.\nMISSING,   BELIEVED   KILLED\nE. Lovell, Vancouver.\nF. Stanton,   New  Westminster.\nL.  H.  Atchison, Tynehead.\nCorp. F. A. Taylor, Kamloops.\nW. L. Wood, Salmon,\nSergt.   E. Tucker, Victoria,\nA. J.  Miller, Clayburn,\nJ.  Hunt, Vancouver.\nSergt.  F.  Hume, Victoria,\nR. H. Smithers, New Westminster.\nJ.  H. Gray, Vancouver.\nH. Wiffen, Vancouver.\nH,  Mcintosh,  Vancouver,\nJ. Fill, Kamloops.\nJ, Clasoff,  Princeton.\nCorp, C. A,  Duncan, Vancouver.\nR. L. Radford, New Westminster.\nD. H, Sherman, Dunoan.\nR. Roe, Okanagan.\nJ. T. Webster, Vancouver.\nH. Ewen, Chilliwaok.\nJ. W. McKay, Trail.\nGASSED\nH. C. Greame, New Westminster.\nA.  Menzies,  Vancouver.\nH,  M.  Patterson, Victoria.\nW.  Murdock, Flagstone.\nH. P. Jolliffe, Vancouver.\nG. Stevenson, Victoria.\nMOUNTED RIFLES\nWOUNDED\nC. E. Sprinkling, Victoria.\nMEDICAL SERVICES\nGAS8ED\nCorp. M, A, Beach, Vancouver.\nARTILLERY\nDIED OF WOUNDS\nGunner A. S. Cartwright, Victoria.\nCITV BUSINESS MEL\nTBI SLOCAN TOUR\nExcursion    Trip    to    Slocan    District\nMeets   Unanimous   Support   of\nBoard of Trade.\nFred A. Starkey's proposal that a\nrepresentation, of Nelaon business, men\nmake a two-day tour of, the Slocan\ndistrict met with instant approval at\nthe meeting- of the board of trade last\nevening and W. &. Kins, F. A. Starkey\nand E. G. Carpenter were appointed a\ncommittee of three to make arrangements for the excursion party to leave\nthe city Tuesday morning- next. The\ntrip will include visits at Slocan, Silverton and New Denver. Practically all\nof those In attendance placed their\nnames on the list and it is expected\nthat tho party will number1 a full B0\nbefore the train leaves Tuesday morning.\nDuring the discussion which followed\ntho proposal, W. S. King stated that\non account of snow which might be expected at any time now he thought\nit was advisoblo to set tho date ns\nearly as possible while the weather\nremained favorable.\nAll tho details of the trip will be loft\nin the hands of the committee and\nother than the time of the departure of\nthe CF.R train Tuesday morning was\nnot mentioned.\nThe matter of extending tho tour to\nother cities in tho district was considered and it.was thought better to\nleave that to another time so that the\npnry would bo able to return to the\ncity Wednesday evening.\nENUMERATORS ARE\nNAMED BV BOARD\nForty-nine Polling  Divisions in  West\nKootenay\u2014Each Man to Cover\nHie Own District.\nBOARD STANDS BACK\nOF YMIR ROADWAY\nAt tho smoker held in the board of\ntrade rooms last evening, J. Wilson\nof Erie stated .that the residents, of\ntho Erie district were behind ull efforts of tho local hoard in the support\nof the building of the Ymir road. That\nthe board members themselves were\nstrongly for the early completion of\nthe new highway was also evident in\nthe discussion and in the report of the\nwork of the hoard with reference to\nthe matter, Secretary E. P. Glgot said\nthat, with two exceptions, all of the\ndistrict petitions were now ready to\nforward to the government. The\nnames on these petitions will, when\nthe entire canvass is made, number\nabout 1000.\nIn his remarks Mr. Wilson stated\nthat he had been a resident of the\nErie district for 18 years and that\nduring that time the government had\nalways made' promises, especially\nabout election time, to give assistance\nIn tho building of tho much needed\nroadway. Now that the road was being surveyed the residents of the district felt that there was a good chance\nof seeing it go through and that they\nwero behind the efforts of the local\nboard to a man.\nCharleB.Patton, on Inspector on the\nLondon & Port Stanley railway, was\nalmost Instantly killed in the St.\nThomas yards.\nEnumerators who will prepare the\nvoters' lists for the West. Kootenay\nconstituency under the Wartimes Election net were appointed last night at\na sitting of a board composed of Fred\nC. Moffatt, returning officer; E. A.\nCrease, Dr. E. G. Smyth, Alex Leith\nand D. St. Denis. The constituency\nhas been divided into 40 polling divisions, In many of which there will lie\na number of polling places. The names\nof the polling divisions and the enumerators are as follows:\nTrout Lake\u2014George M. Yulll,\nLurrto-Duncan\u2014William  Simpson.\nKaslo North\u2014W. G. Robb.\nKaslo South\u2014J. W. Cockle.\nAinsworth\u2014James W. Smith,\nCrawford Hay\u2014J. W. Kean.\nNelson City\u2014it. .1. Steel and Charles\nLowe. 4\nRossland City\u2014Richard W. Timms\nand Samuel E, Wilson.\nPasmore\u2014-William Wilton.\n. Winlaw  and   Perry    Siding\u2014.T.    F.\nBird.\nSlocan City\u2014.7. T. -Tipping*.\nSilverton and Three; Forks\u2014.1. T.\nKelly.\nNew Denver\u2014Thomas H,  Hoben.\nSiimlnn\u2014D. A. MdClellnnd.\nDeer Park\u2014Alfred Cullcn.\nRenota\u2014.1.  Minchin,.\nKdgewood\u2014W. A. ,lowett..\nFauquier\u2014F. G. Fauquier.\nBurton City\u2014A. A. Burton.\nArrow .Park\u2014iH. Nicolie.\nNakusp\u2014D. T. Bulger.\nSummit Lake\u2014Mrs. J. T. Burkott.\nAnnable\u2014E. F. Kerr.\nTrail City\u2014Mervin C. Simmons, It.\nC. ('rowe and Robert M. Perduu\nFalrview and Hume\u2014William\nDouche.\nCreston West\u2014C.  F. Hayes.\nCreston East\u2014 G. A. M.  Young.\nitoswell\u2014.lames Copeland.\nCastlegar\u2014Fred   A.   Newell.\nKootenay River\u2014R. I. M. Power.\nWillow Point\u2014A. B. Shannon.\nProctor and Harrop\u2014Percival Coles.\nSalmo, Ymir, XCrie\u2014M. C. Donaldson.\nFrultvale\u2014Hurry Colebrook.\nRevelstoke riding\u2014L. A. Howson, A.\n13. Kincard, A. M. Smytho, Thomas\nBarrett, William Leslie, John McLeod,\nH. Kirk, W. Andrews.\nEach enumerator has a district which\nextends beyond the central point nam\ned.   Theso divisions are set out in the\nproclamations   which   were   issued   by\nReturning Officer Moffatt yesterda;\nMeagher's\nFriday Bargains\nWomen's and Misses' Serge [Skirts\nCoats\nAT   LESS   THAN   HALF   PRICE\u2014$9.95\nFifteen Only, Conts of Good Tweed or Plain\nAll goodfstyles and a range\nAll-Wool Coating.\nof colors to select from\nto   $22.00.\nFHIPAY   BARGAIN\nCLEARING   AT  $3.95\nJust twenty in the lot. Made in good styles\nof All-Wool Serge, in Navy, Black or Green.\nSizeH to 28-ineh waist measure. O0 AC\n\u2022JO.SJIj\nFRIDAY   BARGAIN\nSizes 10 to 40.   Values\n$9,95\nUnderskirts\nAT   $1.50   EACH\nGood Sateen, In Black or Light Colors. All\nsizes in the lot. $4  CO\nFRIDAY BARGAIN, EACH    ajt I i3l\u00bb\nWomen's Serge  ,\nDresses\nAT  $7.95\nSeven Only, Dresses of All-Wool Sorgo in\nNavy Only. AH nicely mado, In sizes OJ QC.\nfrom 16 to 38.   FRIDAY BARGAIN  ...  fliStl\nRibbed Cashmere\nHo:\nse\nAT   50c   PER   PAIR\nTen Do7en Ribbed Stockings; extra soft Cashmere; pood heavy weight; sizes S*\u00a3 to 10. CA.\nFRIDAY   BARGAIN       UUC\nMisses' and Ladies'\nSuits\nCLEARING   AT   $19.95\nTwenty-Five Suits of All-Wool Mannish or\nCheviot Serges. Smart styles, all well tailored.\nColors are Navy, Brown, Green and 01Q QC.\nBlock.    FRIDAY BARGAIN     <j\u00bb I Ji3\u00abJ\nTailored Linen\nBlouses\nAT   $1.98\nThirty Only, Blouses of rure Linen, made\nplain tailored style, with tucked or embroidered\nfrontB. Sizes to -12. Values to $4.00. tf*1 Art\nFRIDAY   BARGAIN       \u00abJ I l30\nWrapperette\nAT    19c\nTen pieces of Nice Soft Wrapperette, in\nnovelty designs, suitable for Kitnonas or House\nDresses;   full 30 inches wide. 1Q\u00ab*\nFRIDAY  BARGAIN         I dO\nFelt and Velours Hats at $4.95\nFIFTEEN ONLY, NOVELTY FELT AND VELOURfi MATS, IN A VARIETY Ol.' STIArES AND NEW\nCOLORS\u2014VALUES TO  $9.00\nFriday Bargain $4.95\nMEAGHER & CO.\nTHE   STORE   FOR   STYLE\nTHE    STORE    FOR    QUALITY\nFREIGHT CARS LEAVE\nTRACK   NEAR   STETTLER\ntFour '   Aro  ;   Overturned\u2014Trainmen\nEscape\u2014Little Delay Occurs As\nResult of Wreck\n(By Daily News Bensed Wire.)\nSTETTLER, Alta., Nov. 8.\u2014A wreck\noccurred here at 2 o'clock today when\na heavily laden Canadian Pacific\nfreight train was within half a mile\nof Stettler depot. Seven cars left lhe\ntrack and were severely damaged, four\nof them being overturned. The rails\nand ties for some distance were torn\nup and the roadbed suffered oonsiiior-\niihle damage. None of the trainmen\nwas injured. Very little delay occurred lo the traffic, however.\nmore expensive than plain whib\nbread. In a report to the city health\nofficer, Inspector Plant says that.\ncornmcnl cannot bo used as n substitute, for both comment and oatmeal\narc higher in price thnn white flour.\nConsequently, no matter how willing\ntiie bread manufacturers may be to\nconform to the request of the authorities at Ottawa, they cannot produce\na cheaper loaf, he says, and concludes\nby waving that \"it is my opinion Lhat\nthere is practically no conservation\nof wheat products in Vancouver, but\nthat rather the reverse is true, and\nthat more bread is being consumed in\nthe city per capita  today than ever.\"\nDIES  AS   RESULT   OF\nFALL ON PAVEMENT\nCHARLOTTETOWN,  P. E. I., Nov.\n8.\u2014%\". Ii. E, Gill, chief clerk of tho\npostoffice inspector's department, died\ntoday, aftor having fallen on the\nstreet, striking bis bend against tho\nconcrete pavement. He wns 52 yours\nold.\nWhen You Can't Sleep\nOr.  Cassell's  Tablets  Will   Sooth   the\nNerve Restlessness That Causes\nInsomnia, and  Ensure\nRest.\nSleepless nights mean ovorstro incd\nnerves\u2014nerves that, aro always shaky\nbecause they are always weak. That\nis why you cannot sleep. The remedy\nis to nourish your nervous system and\nso liuId up new vigor and vitality by\ntaking Dr. Cassell's Tablets. Then you\nwill sleep' naturally and healthfully and\nwake refreshed. DI*. Cnsselt's Tabids\naro true restoratives. They act by\nrestoring the vital power of the system,\nby promoting digestion, by enriching\nthe blood, by strengthening' every\nbodily organ.   And thore is no dope in\n>em,\nA free simple of Dr. Cassell's Tablets\nwill be sent to you on receipt of 5 cents\nfor mailing and packing. Address Harold F. Ritchie A Co., Ltd., 10 McCaul\nSt., Toronto.\nDr. Cassell's Tablets are the supremo remedy for Dyspepsia,, Kidney\nTrouble, Sleeplessness, Anaemia, Nervous ailments and nerve paralysis and\nfor Weakness In Children, Specially valuable for nursing; mothers and\nduring the critical periods of life.\nPrice B0 cents per tube, six tubes for\ntho price of fivo from druggists and\nstorekeepers throughout Canada, Don't\nwaste your money on Imitations; get\nths genuine Dr. Cassell's Tablets.\nProprietors, Dr. Cassell's Co., Ltd.,\nManohMtar, Eng,\nAPPROVE REFERENDUM\nBUT REGRET DELAY\nAustralian Papers Comment on Situation\u2014Labor Less Able to Wage\nStrong   Fight.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nMELBOURNE, Nov. 8.\u2014(Via Rou-\ntor'S Ottawa Agency)\u2014The newspapers warmly applaud the government\ndecision to take another referendum on\niMuiseriptinn, hut deplore 'the delay\nwhich it involves.\nThe newspapers declare that the\ngovernment should stake ils existence\nand the life of parliament on the success of the appeal, It is staled that\nthe soldiers at the front will again\nhave the voto. The official labor party,\nWhich opposed the last referendum, is\nnot able to fight strongly against the\ncoming referendum because of the lack\nof funds. Over .C2O.UOO.U00 has been\nsubscribed  to tho  Liberty loan.\nUNITED STATES HAS\nRECORD CROP OF GRAIN\n66,000,000  Bushels Greater Than   Any\nEver    Grown    in    Country,\nAuthorities Report.\n(Uy Daily News Leased Wire.)\n.'WASHINGTON, Nov. 8.\u2014A 'corn\nprop larger by more than 00,000.000\nbushels , than nny ever grown in the\nhistory of American agriculture, is the\nproduction of the farmers of the I'nited States this year. The department oi\nagriculture today, in its preliminary\nestimate of the crop placed the quantity at 3,101,083,000 bushels. Conditions\nsince tiio October forecast caused n\nreduction of about 1!),700,000 bushels\nin the indicated output.\nPreliminary estimates are:\nCorn, 3,191,083,000,  compared    with\nl!,.r.S3,Ml,000 In 1910.\nBuckwheat,     lfi.813,000,     compared\nwith  11,840,000  in  1016.\nPotatoes,  '139,61)0,00,  compared  with\n386,437,000 in 1916.\nMAKING OF \"WAR BREAD\"\nAT  VANCOUVER   IS  \"DEAD\"\nCannot    Be    Resurrected,    Says    Inspector of Bakeries Plant\u2014More\nExpensive Than White\n(By Daily Nows Leased Wire,)\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Nov. 8.\u2014Thnt\nthe manufacture of \"war bread\" in\nVancouver Is practically dead and\ncannot bo resurrected is tbo statement\nof Inspector of Bakeries Eugene Plant\nof this city, who says thta the iugro.\ndlents used in making war bread have\nadvanced  to  a  price   that  makes  it\nADMITS   BRITISH   \"FIRE\nROLLER\"  IS  IRRESISTIBLE\nGerman   General   and   Military   Critic\nTestifies to  Efficacy of Artillery  Barrage.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nCOPENHAGEN, Nov. 8.\u2014Unwilling\ntestimony of the irresistible might of\nthe British offensive in Flanders Is\ngiven by Lieut. Gen. von Ardohne, the\nmilitary critic, of the Tagehlatt of Berlin, who sends from the Flanders front\na graphic picture of the difficulties of\nlhe Germnn defense. No way, be says,\nhas been devised to prevent the \"Flt'O\nHoller,\" as the Germans call Hie moving barrage,   from   making slow and\nToo Late to Classify\nCanadian   Victory\nloan\ncommittee\nmeets1\nin\nthe\n'ommittce\nrooms,   nu\nWard\nst re\n\u25a0t, ih\ns ev\nining\nll 8 o'clock.\n(7448)\nsteady gains. He reports the German\nlosses as heavy in an attempt to hold\nthe front lino trenches in force, while\na. thin line adds to Hie speed of the\nBritish advance\n22 TIMES   MORE  TIMBER\nWAS BURNED THAN CUT\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, Nov. 8.\u2014That 22 times as-\nmuch timber has been destroyed by\nfire In British Columbia than lias been\ncut by tbe lumbermen is the conclusion\n:iched by officials of tho commission\nof conservation who have been inquiring into the fire losses in the various\nprovinces. The investigation shows\nthat nn 95,000 squaro miles the timber\nhas been uselessly destroyed, mostly\nmany years ago, to the extent of 6r>0,-\n000,000,000 feet. The destroyed timber\ns equivalent lo almost twice the\nmount of saw timber now standing\nin the province and to nearly as much\nsaw lumber as is now standing in the\nforests of nit Canada.\nThat is what Rabbi M. Shallit of Edenbridge, Sask.,\nsays regarding a cure by Zam-Buk, of which he gives\nthe following particulars:\n\"A short time ago,\" said the Rabbi, \"a man brought his little\nson to me and asked if I knew of anything that would cure the\nchild of a terrible skin disease, with which he had suffered for\nthree years. The child's forehead, eyes and cars were covered\nwith sores. The sight was shocking, and the child had not been\nable to see for two years. As he was an only child, the father said\nhe would give anything to huve him cured, but as he had already\nbeen treated by many doctors, each of whom had given up the\ncase as incurable, he had about despaired of ever finding a cure.\nHaving great faith in Zam-Buk, I recommended it. and to cut tt\nlong story short, perseverance with Zam-Huk has now completely\ncured the child.\n^THiEnFiivrHE^s^c^ulQF\nThe following letter from tiie father of tbe boy expresses his gratitude- !\n\u25a0'The Zam-Buk Company, Toronto * J\nDear Sirs: I beg to testify that my boy suffered for three years with a severe !\nskin disease, which doctors tried to-curc, but in vain. The sores on his eyes 1\nWere so terrible that for two years he was quite unable to see. Zam-Buk,'\nhowever, has worked a complete and permanent cure. j\nT|>e Zam-Buk treatment was recommended to me by Mr. M.<\nShalht, Rabbi of Edenbridge, for which 1 shall be grateful to him forever.     '\nW ith hearty thanks to you, I remain, Yours faithfully,\n^^^^^ (Signed) E. KOMANUK.\"\nHam-Buk la just aa rood for scalp sorts, ringworm,\n\u25a0alt rheum, running tores, nM wounds, boll*, ulcers,\nabscesses, pimples, blooil-i'msoumif, piles, cud, burns,\nand all skin tniutirr and diseases. All drugnisl* and\n\u25a0tores oi Zain-Hu.. Co., Toronto. SOc. boa, 3 for $1.25,\nLTD L? IT Sendtblsacoopos.,\nrnuu name of paper\n\u2022nel lc. stump (for return post*\neae) to Zam-Buk Co., Toronto,\nand free trial box will be wot.\nA MB UK\n\u25a0   II   III  i   II  I I ,m^ wmt>\n I      PAOS BIX\n\"Mid, Man'i Method.\nThe Time\nHas Come\nto Deal\nWith Coras\nina\nScientific\nWar\nNot Thi, Maria\nLet An Expert Deal\nWith Corns\nAsk who makes it before\nyou use a method for ending\ncorns.\nHarsh methods are not\nsanctioned now. Mussy methods are unnecessary. Soreness never need occur.\nBlue-jay was invented by a\nchemist of high repute. It is\nmade by a concern of worldwide fame as a maker of surgical' dressings: Its action is\ngentle and results are sure.\nIt acts on the\ncorn alone, not\non the healthy\ntissue.\nApply it as\nyou wrap a cut\nfinger. That\ne .dsallpJn.all\nStop Pain Instantly\nEnd Corns Completely\n25c Packages at Druggists\ndiscomfort. In two' days the\ncotn disappears. Sometimes\nan old, tough corn needs a\nsecond application. But no\ncorn can resist this method.\nIt is sure to go.\nMillions of people know\nthis. At the first sign of a\ncorn they apply a Blue-jay.\nCorn pains never bother them.\nYou will always do likewise when you see the results. One trial\nwill convince\nyou. It means\nso much, and\ncosts so little,\nthat we urge\nyou to make it\nnow.\nDeal with one\ncorn tonight.\nBlue=jay\nCorn Plasters\nBAUER & BLACK, Litniied, Maker* of Surgical Dreeeinge, Etc. Toronto,\nHow Blue=jay Acts\nn Is the \"B&B wax, which gently\n.iii.Icrn.li.eH the corn. I'suiilly it tnkcs\nonly U hours to ond the corn completely.\n0 Is rubber adhesive which sticks\nwithout wetting. It wraps around the\ntne nnd makes the plaster snug and\ncomfortable.\nBlue-jay ts applied in a jiffy. After\nthat, one doesn't feel the corn. Tho\naction is gentle, :ind applied to the\nA Is a thin, soft pad. which stops corn .ilone. So the com ilinappearn\nthe piiiri by roHfv'nB the pressure.-        without soreness.\nTwo  British  Columbians Among Soldiers Honored for Remarkable\nDeeds of Heroism\n(By Daily News Leasee! Wire.)\nLONDON,   Nov.   8.\u2014(Via  Reuter's\nOttawa   Agency.)\u2014The  London  Gazette announces the award of the \"Victoria Cross to the following:\nMajor Okill, Massey Learraouth,\nM.C., late, of the Canadian infantry,\n\"for most conspicuous bravery and\nexceptional devotion to duty. During\nil determined counter-attack on our\nnew positions this officer, when his\ncompany was momentarily surprised,\ninstantly charged nnd personally disposed of the attackers. Later he carried on a tremendous fight wilh the\nadvancing enemy. Although under an\nintense barrage fire and mortally\nwounded, he, stood on tiie parapet of\nthe. trench and   bombed   tho   enemy\nAN OPERATION\nAVERTED\nVANCOUVER WAT\nHEN GOION STRIKE\nWant Shorter Day and More Money\u2014\nPickets Will   Be on   Duty This\nMorning.\n(By Daily Mews Leased Wive.)\nVANCOUVER, B. C., Nov. 8.\u2014The\nlong expected strlltc ot butchers, meat\ncutters and packing house employees\nwas launched tonight to onl'ort'c demands for a sljorJcra,dny and more\nmoney, tickets have already been assigned and beginning at U o'clock Friday morning, will be on duty. The\npacking plants will be' affected first,\naccording to the plans of the union\nwhich has been newly formed but\nretail, shops will not be affected im-\ninediately unless an attempt is' made\nby the packing houses to supplant the\nstrlkers'-with strikebreakers. Thirty\nmoil'from the Vancouver-Prince Rupert company are out tonight and\nabout 120 men from the P. Burns\nplants. They demand a 44-hour week\nand a 10 per cent raise In wages. Retail market men ask for a 52 hour\nweek arid a minimum wage of J2B.\nADMIT CONSPIRING TO\nEXPORT TUNGSTEN\nThree Admit Hiding  it in  Stateroom\nof Steamer\u2014Was  Destined for\nGermany,\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nNEW YORK, Nov. S.\u2014Pleas of\nguilty for violating the Espionage act\nby conspiring to export tungsten, used\nfor hardening steel, from this country\nwithout manifesting it, as required by\nlaw, wcro entered in tho federal court\nhere today by FrIU Corundal, steward\non the Scandinavian-American liner\nUnited States, Wahlemnr Adam's and\nRobert Collins, Swedish book sellers.\nThe tungsten in five pound bags\nwns found hidden in a. stateroom or\nthe steamer. It is said tho scarcity\nof tungsten In Germany, which needs\nit for war purposes, would have made\ntho lot found, normally valued at about\n$500, worth $3000 under present conditions there. Sentence wns deferred until Friday.\nPhiladelphia, Pa.\u2014\"One year ago I\nwaa very lick and I suffered with pains\nnin my side and back\nuntil I nearly went\ncrazy. I went to\ndifferent doctors and\nthey all said I had\nfemale trouble and\nwould not get any\nrelief until I would\nbe operated on. I\nI had suffered forfour\n\"years beforo this\n| time,but I kept get-\n!l ting worse the more\nmedicine I took. Every month since I\nwas a young girl I had suffered with\ncramps in my sides at periods and was\nnever Tegular. I saw your advertisement in tiie newspaper and the picture\nof a woman who had been saved from\nan operation and this picture was impressed on my mind. The doctor had\ngiven me only two more days to make\nup my mind so I sent my husband to the\ndrug store at once for a bottle of Lydia\nE- Pinktiata's Vegetable Compound, and\nbelieve me, I soon noticed a change and\nwhen I bad finished the third bottle I\nwas cured and never felt better. I grant\nyou the privilege to publish my letter\nand am only too glad to let. other worn in\nknow of my cure.\"\u2014Mrs.Tnos. McGoi \u25a0;-\nIGAL, 3432 Hartvillo Street, I'hila., Pa.\ncontinuously and directed the defense\nin such a manner as to infuse a spirit\nof the utmost resistance into his men.\nOn several occasions this officer actually caught bombs thrown at him\nby the enemy and threw them back.\"\nSergt.-Mnjor M. Robert Horina,\nCanadian infantry, \"for conspicuous\nbravery ln attack when his company\nmet with a severe resistance and all\ntho company officers became casualties. A strong point, heavily protected\nby wire and held by a machine gun\ncompany, had beaten off three assaults of the enemy with heavy casualties. This warrant officer, erider\nheavy machine gun and rifle fire,\ncoolly collected a party of men and\nleading thein against this strong\npoint, rushed through the wire and\npersonally bayoneted three of the,\nenemy and brained a fourth, capturing the position and silencing the ina-\nchine gun.\"\nPte. James O'Rourke, Canadian Infantry, \"for most conspicuous bravery\nand devotion to duty. During patrol\noperations for threo days and nights.\nPte. O'Rourke, who is a stretcher-\nbearer, worked unceasingly in bringing the wounded into safety. On several occasions he was knocked down\nand partly buried by enemy shells.\nThree times he went forward under\nfire and each time rescued a comrade.\"\nThe next of kin of the late Major\nLearmouth is given as Martha Lear-\nmouth, 43 Murray avenue, Quebec.\nSergt.-Major Hanna, 31 years old,\nwas a lumberman. He enlisted in\nVancouver and is unmarried. His\nmother lives in Ireland.\nPte. O'Rourke, 39 years old, enlisted\nin New \"Westminster, B. C. He was\na miner. His sister, Mrs. H. E. Mack,\nresides at 2504 Broadway, Montreal.\nVETERAN OF CRIMEAN\nWAR  DIES AT CLEARFIELD\n(By Dailv News Leased Wire.)'\nCLEARFIELD, Pa,, Nov. 8\u2014Frcder\nick Chield, a. veteran of the Crimean\nwar, is dead at his home near Clearfield. Ho served for five years in the\n4th Queen's Own Light Dragoons, and.\ntook part in the Crimean, campaign\nunder Gen. Lord George Paget.\nBra\n*?^*?*w*t*mmm\n.FlilRA.Y.JNpVEMBER 9, 101?    . ]\nHOW BRITAIN Rio\nWARTIME POST Off ICE\nWheri'lSts^Mfljeaty the King- visited\nthe genea^. postoffice he .wan,.shown,\ntho iwtonU'liin'g machine which stamp\nwith the';poatmark something like 600\nor 700 letters a minute. <\nIt is Or fascinating operation. A girl\nstands' With,a bundle of letters between Weir hands at the end of a table,\n'presenting them to a piece of machinery which is moving at sn tremendous\na speed that you cannot sue what it\nis. As she approaches one end of\nher bundle to this machine, with a\nsuddenness which is liKe a conjuring\ntrick, you; see* the letters flip out ot'\nher hands; letter after letter, and then\ngive themselves quietly up to another,\ngirl on the. further side uf the table,\nwho sees \"that none of their stamps\nhas alluded the mark. The sudden\nflip of those letters, at the rate of \u00abQ0\nor 700 a-minute, or, let us say, ten h\nsecond, ii* a most attractive .spectacle.\nThe 'King-, greatly interested In this\nmachine, inquired if it was ;i British\ninvention. Regretfully, he was informed that1 it was not. \"What a pity,\"\nhe exclaimed, adding lhe wish lhat\nmore\u25a0., of . these- wonderful inventions\nwere of British -origin. \"Hut sir, we\nhave, invented something much greater thlin th'te^- 'stamping machine,\"\n\"WhatWthat-?\" asked Hie King..\"Tiie\ngeneral pofltoffice.\"\nNow., it is. a fact, which no. man in\nthe world will gainsay,-that ihe general postoffice-of Great l.lrltnin is the\nsuperlative'postoffice of the globe.\nGermany has-'ah admirable imstoffloe,\nand Switzerland, too; but Britain is\neasily first hV this niatter. Wilh in-\nfintely mpre letters to handle than\nany other-postoffice, and with an enormous amo'uni' of state work to perform in addition, the G.P.O. is nevertheless, one of the most imexcilod centres of industry you can visit, and by\nfar the quickest and must certain of\nall postal systems. This is acknowledged,'but how many people realize\nthe great attainment of tliis institution during the war?\nIh the London postal service alone\n14,000 men have gone into the army,\nand 10,000 women, hitherto ignorant\nof postal Work,* have been taken on.\nImagine the dislocation arising from\nthe loss of 14,000 men. Imagine tho\nconfusion of.drilling 10,000 women in\nwork,to which they were unaccustom\ned. ^And yet there has been no dislo\ncatlpii, .j^o,- confusion. The postal ser\nvice has been curtailed, like the railway service; but never before has. the\na. P. O. had to deal with such an en-\nurinous volume of business. And this\nenormous volume of business is handled with all thg. old efficiency of peftjc?\ntime. \"Tharis'the point. But consider\nthis new business.'\nHuqe Army Mail   ....\nFor exiimpje, no fewer than 32,500\nmail bags are despatched every week\nfrom the G. I,. O. to the army alone.\nIn one room of that most orderly office as many \"as 4,000 bags, for the\narmy are despatched every day. These\nhundreds of thousands. of letters' are\nsorted into their regimental unitst and\nplaced in the bag of \u25a0 eaeh particular\nunit. AH'thta Is done 1ft London. -The\nurmy-4hW'nothlng: to'do' but deliver\nthe \u25a0retSfelfl^-fl|^,'';ftilsri unit receives\nits particular .Dag- from the G.P.O. AH\nnight and all day, without a break.the\nletters of Thomas Atkins are sorted\ninto the regiments of the British army\nand despatched from L_ondon all over\ntiie world.\nJl .is an impressive,-even a memorable,'sight to -stand'1 Ir. one of the\nhuge rooms and watch the w'omen at\ntheir work.' You see the women who\nopen tiie mail -bags and arrange the\nprimary sorting on-what is called the\nfacing table; their you see the women\nwho arrange these sorted letters In order and place them on a moving band\nwhich carries them to tbe other end\nof the table; here they are picked up\nby the other women and in bundles,\n'presented to a stamping machine, as\nalready described \u2666 and after this they\nare taken to various tables to be sorted gradually down Lo their finnl destination. And, while all this sorting\nproceeds, you notice the smart post-\nwomen coming in for their piles of\nletters, and the girl telegraph messengers going backwards and forwards.\nThe men are so few in number that\n(hey attract attention.\nAgain, the G. P. O. attends every\nwee kto Tommy Atkins' separation ai\nlawanci\nrainlf.fi-\nhas entailed a-new machinery, and de\nnjjands a moit exact carefulness. Sir\nRobert Bruce; the controller, tells me\nflint lie lias been much Impressed by\nthe reaiiy notable way In which all\nthi.'. financial work, I'e'tftilrlng the nicest accuracy, has been handled by\ngirls.- He is also impressed' By the\nway women and girls have performed\nthe general work of the postoffice. lie\npointed out -to me'that with U. vast\narmy in a foreign land, and no charge\nfor postage, the temptation -to write\nhome Is v\u00ab*y great; while parents at\nhome, separated from their sons,-w\u00bbo\nare constantly ..exposed to the very\ngreatest conceivable peril, nnturally\nwrite to them as often as possible.\nThe consequence is thnt the army pos-\nl-Sv-ances'Tin udditlmi to its usual ad-\nition of old age pensions. This\ntal service alone, quite apart from*all\nthe other work of the Q.P.O., has become to a bupiness of colossal' proportions, .'. \u201e......\n'\" Secret  of Our  High   Place\nThe G.P.O., of coarse,'is an institution which will flourish of Itself, and\nwhich is In great measure, Independent of individuals; but I cannot help\nthinking that the successful handling\nof its vast business during a, world\nwar owes at least something to the\nImperturbable temperament of its controller, Sir Robert Bruce, who has served under some 17 postmaster general^ and'it the least hurried or excited\nof men. .He finds time to employ in his\ndealings with the very loaat of the\nstuff that fine and considerate courtesy which is'a part.of his spirit. In\ngoing round the rooms with him I\nobserved that he never left the humblest of sorters, with whom he had\nspoken for, a moment or two, without,\nbowing to her and thanking her for,\nthe way in which she had answered\nhis questions.\n1 like to think that this spirit is\ncharacteristic of England, and that\nthose who gird at us for being less\nnoisy and advertising than other nations miss the secret of our high place\nin the world's activities. We endeavor to do our business as gentlemen.\nAnd it really is not necessary in business to be vulgar and self-assertive.\nIn my travels 1 have never failed to\nfind courtesy and detachment at the\nhead of our greatest British concerns;\nwhile for fussiness, brtisqueness and\npomposity, I have only to go to a Jack\nin office or lo an industry of third1\norder. ,\nln another department of this wonderful institution\u2014-namely, the savings bnnk, practically tin: whole business of war finance is\"-transacted by\nwomen. Here the staff lias, been increased by 600 temporary women,\nmost of whom had no ovperlence of\nbusiness before, and here, too, under\nMiss Buchanan, there is an entire absence of turmoil. \"They are* splendid,\"\nthis lady told me, \"in times of stress\nthey never fail to rise to the occasion.\"\nAnd it is truly no exaggeration to say\nthnt this vast building Is so quiet\nthat you might fancy yourself in a\nschool during an examination.\nIn the corridors, I passed 60,000 ledgers on the shelves.\nWILL SELL ONIONS ..ATHER\nTHAN. ALLOW THEM TO WASTE\nOTTAWA. Nov. 8.\u2014As a result of\nrepresentations made by the food controller to the department ot customs,\ninstructions have been given for the\nimmediate sale at the best price obtainable of 10 tons of Spanish onions\nwhich were spoiling in storage in To\nronto. The onions were placed in\nstorage by the Canadian Kspanio company, 32 Front street, wost, but the\nstorage company was.unable to locate\nany person at that acMress. The fifties\nhad been shipped from the West Indies in bond.\nBob Lone\nU NION   MADE\nCLOVES\" OVERALLS\nAN\nAitoSttop\nWill give a great deal of pleasure to your relative or friend in\nthe trenches.\nInclude one in your next par-\neel.\nThe Razor that\nsharpens  its  own   blaoes\nautomatically.\n&SS858S^^\nPUGSLEY SWORN  IN\nAS LIEUT.-GOVERNOR\nFREDERICTON, N. B., Nov. 8.\u2014\nHon. Wiliam Pugsley of St. John was\nsworn In as' lieutenant-governor of\nNew Brunswick here tonight. , The\noath of office was administered by\nChief Justice McKee in the presence\nof Premier Foster and all the mem-,\nbers of the provincial government and\na large gathering. Rudolph Brudenu,\nsecretnry of the privy council at Ottawa, was the official representative\nof the Dominion government, bearing\nthe commission and the authority to\nbe invested by the Dominion in Mr.\nPugsley.\nHon. Willinm Pugsley was presented with the seal of the province by\nProvincial Secretary Murray.\nSEAMAN CRUSHED\nTO DEATH AT LOCK\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nSAULT STE. MARIE, Mich., Nov. 8.\n\u2014Lying somewhere at the bottom of\ntho canal above the Poe lock is the\nbody of Frank Bowery, a seaman from\nthe steamer G. A. Flagg, who was\ncrushed between the steel side of the\nsteamer and the cement side of the\ncanal, near thu International bridge\nthis afternoon.\nART ROSS WILL MANAGE\nWANDERER   HOCKEY  TEAM\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nMONTREAL, Nov. 8.\u2014Art Ross, ex-\nOttawa hockey player, was elected\nmanager of the Wanderer Hockey club\nlast night at the annual meeting. He\nsaid some of the players have agreed\nto play on a percentage basis this si\nson, and insist at the same time that\nsome of this percentage shall go\ntheir individual contributions to the\nRed Cross. The club's financial statement was not very rosy.\nHOPE  FOR SAFETY OF\nU. S. SAILORS ABANDONED\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nWASHINGTON. Nov. 8.\u2014All hope\nfor the safety of Lieut. J. T. Melvin\nand the 20 enlisted men reported miss\ning after the torpedoing of the Amerl\ncan patrol ship Alcedo has been abandoned. Vice-Admiral Sims cabled the\nnavy department today that the search\nhas been given up, and that it is believed most of the men had been killed\noutright by the explosion of the torpedo. #\nSIX TEAMS COVER 709\nMILE8 IN BICYCLE RACE\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nBOSTON, Nov. 8.\u2014Eaton and Cameron of New York and Carman and D.\nSmith of New York and Bowker broth-^\ners of Lynn lost one lap early tonight,\nwhen riders in the six-day bicycle race\nheld a series of sprints in an effort to\nthin the field out for the final and\nmoney sprint Saturday night. Bowker\nbrothers aro now two laps behind the\nfield. At 10 o'clock this evening the\nsix teams whioh are bunched ln the\nlead had covered 709. miles and 10\nlaps,\n+ + + + * + + *4'* + + + <t-4>'> +\n* AT THE THEATRES. \u2666\n+ *> + ** + *\u2022** + + * + * + **\n'Under False Colors\" at Starland.\nThe Starland shows today another\nfeature in which Frederick Wardc and\nJeanne Eagels have the leading parts.\nIt is called \"Under False Colors,\" was\nwritten by Lloyd Lonergan, directed\nby Emilo Cliautard and produced by\nThanhouser. The last time these two\nstars appeared in the same production was in \"Fires of Youth,\" which\nwas more than ordinarily successful\nand was very well received by tho\ncritics.\nThe story is most timely, dealing as\nit does with Russia and America just\nprior to the dethronement of the czar.\nMr. Warde plays the part of John\nColton, an American millionaire,\nJeanne Eagels plays the \"Countess\nOlga,\" a Russian revolutionist. Fleeing to this country to escape arrest\nIn her own country, she impersonates\nthe daughter of a Polish friend of\nMr. Colton and so gains his confidence.\nA picture with two such sterling\nplayers as Mr. Warde and Jeanne\nBagels in it is sure to be distinguished\nby acting of the highest class. Furthermore, it has two big stars in one\nand the same production. It Is believed that \"Under False Colors\" will prove\nto have a wide apopal \u2022 and will be\nmore than ordinarily well received. It\nwill be shown today only.\nFamous Author Praises \"Idle Wives,\"\nDorothy Dix, the famous author, recently wrote a letter to Lois Weber\nand Phillips Smalley, photoplay producers of James Oppenheim's novel,\n\"Idle Wives,\" which comes to the Gem\ntheatre on next Wednesday and Thursday.\n\"I went to see'Idle Wives' the other\nnight,\" said Miss Dix, \"and enjoyed\nit very much indeed. It is one of the\nmost appealing human dramas I have\neVef seen, the best exponent of the\nincalculable power of the moving picture as an influenco for good.\n\"The thing that got me was hot the\nstory itself, but the^wondorful framing\nyou gave it\u2014the^lIi^wiUeated husband\nand wife, the quarreling'family with\nnothing to brighten their sordid lives\nor give them new thoughts, the girl\nand boy on the verge of the precipice\n\u2014all of whom are lifted out of themselves, saved, turned back, by having\ntheir danger visualized before them,\nby having new thoughts presented to\nthem by the magic reel.\n\"The Bible says that 'salvation Is\nwithout money and without price.' Be<\nlievo me, I think that the moving pictures have cut the price of salvation\ndown to 10 cents, and that's putting it\nln the reach of the poorest\n\" 'Idle Wives' Is a great sermim\nThere is no human helng who woii't>bo'\nhotter for seeing It.\"\n\u25a0**i\n\u2022*r\n%X    Jii\nmm\n^\naj*<\n\"*\u25a0*\u25a0** ^*mt\nv\/*\n~x\n\/**M\nV\nv4\n*.\n%\nu\n\u00a5\n11\n\u25a0m\nJkjC\nV.&m\nr\nSECOND AID \u25a0\u00a7\nThere is many a brave .fellow in the trenches\nto-day, who will appreciate most gratefully\nthis nourishing Chocolate. At timesduring\nheavy bombardment the army commissariat\nbecomes so disarranged that ordinary food\nis unprocurable for days. FJuring such\ntimes as this the value of a convenient and\nconcentrated food; that may be carried and\nhandled easily, cannot be over-estimated.\nActive Service Chocolate answers ail'the requirements of such a food. It is the most\nnourishing and wholesome Chocolate manufactured. Sold in Sc. and 25c. sizes. The\n25c. package is specially wrapped for immediate, mailing.\nC<owan's\nThis Chocolate also makes a\nvery nourishing and palatable\ndrink when mixed with hot\nwater. It is easily soluable and\nnone of the excellent food\nqualities are lost when prepared in this fashion. Explain\nthis to your friends when writing.\nMade by.\nThe Cowan Co'y Limited, Toronto\n\u25a0 7\nLouisiana sugar growers have con-j\ntractwl to supply 100,000 tons of rav|\ns.usm at tik cents a pound.\n FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1917\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPA0E8EVEW    1\nlittle Ads that Bring Big Returns\n0N1EN8ED  AVERTI8ING  RATE8\nn* Insertion, per word    lo\nlnlmum charge   25o\nIz consecutive Insertions, per\nword     <e\nwenty-slx oonsocutlve Insertions\n(one month), per word   16o\none Insertion   BOc\naniases, one Insertion   BOc\nitaia, one Insertion   BOe\nof Thanks   BOc\nEach subsequent Insertion   26c\n,th and Funeral Notice $1.00\nAll condensed   advertisements   are\nIn advance.\nIn computing the number of words\na classified advertisement count\nch word, dollar mark, abbreviation,\nitlal letter and figure as one word.\nAdvertisers are reminded that It Is\nntrary to the provision of the pos-\n1 laws to have letters addressed to\nitlals only; therefore any advertiser\nslrous of concealing his or her id*n-\nmay use a box at this office wlth-\nt any extra charge If replies are\nUed for; If replies are to be mailed\nadvertisers allow 10 cents extra in\ndittos to prhie of advertisement, to\npostage.\nIhe News reserves the right to rest any copy submitted for publica-\nn.\nJWANTED^\nWANTED\u2014Visible typewriter, survey\nor\"s transit and aneroid.    Emerald\nRing.   Box 7431, Daily News.       (7434)\nWANTED^-Cleun   cotton   rags.    Tho\n.Dally News.\nWANTED\u2014Shingle bolts In large or\nsmall quantities.   Will pay big price.\nWestern Box &  Shingle Mills, Ltd..\nNelson. (7406)\nWANTED\u2014SPLIT   CFJDAH   POSTS-\nKootennv   Lakes   Cedar   Company\nNelson, B.C. (7407)\nFURNISHED ROOM8 TO RENT.\nFOR RENT\u2014Suites of furnished house\nkeeping  rooms   In   Anaable   block.\nEnquire room 32. (7401)\nKI3RR APARTMENTS.\n(7402)\nFURNISHED  modern   suite.    Campbell's Art Gallery, 715 Baker street.\n(7439)\nFURNISHED    housekeeping     rooms,\nover Poolo Drug Company.    (7336)\nFURNISHED housekeeping rooms in\nbrick block; large bright rooms with\ngas and use of bath; $10 per month. C.\nW. Appleyard, 505 Baker St.      (7403)\nL80N EMPLOYMENT AGENCY\u2014\nParker, 309 Baker St, Phono 283.\nANTED\u2014Woodsmen; good cedar\nyork, contract; laborers; chamber-\nid; waitress, first class, good tips;\nneral blacksmith for woods.\nVO MEW~to~cut\u2014shingle-bolts, $2\n>er cord.   S. p. Pond, Nolson. (7432)\n\\NTED\u2014Ten men for work in mill\nind woods. Apply to Waneta Do-\nlopment Company, Limited Waneta,\n(7436)\nWHEN REPLYING TO ADVERT1SE-\nments In Condensed Columns, kindly\nmention you saw lt ln The News\u2014it\nwill help you.\nHEN REPLYING TO ADVERTISE-\nnents in Condensed Columns, kindly\nintion you saw It in The News\u2014it\n11 help you,\nlMP COOK, 23 years' experience,\n,vants position; any size crew. Ap-\n' Goorgo Talbot, Queens Hotel.\n(7425)\nLIVESTOCK.\n\\NTED\u2014A pedigreed Improved\nChester White boar, eight to ton\ninths old. Apply, slating price, to\ncretary Harrop and District Mock\nnotation',. Harrop, B. C. (7124)\n>R SALE^7 weeks' old pigs. E. R.\nJlarke, Granite P.oad, Nelson. (7120)\n)R SALE\u2014Thoroughbred Holstcin\nheifer, two years old in December.\nJ. Bangs, Edgewood. (7122)\nANTED\u2014i\\. few EOOd owes. ' Apply\nr particulars to W. , B. Melernuk,\nuth Sloonn, (7.118)\nANTED\u2014Good milch cow. Box 7109,\nDaily Nows. (7409)\nVENTY HORSES FOR SALE, from\nono thousand to sevonteen hundred\nunds each. Spiers & Vallancc,\nislo. (7393)\n)R SALE OR TRADE\u2014Registered\nAyrshire bull Conquestadar Lockcr-\n, very quiet, three years old; sired\nHobsiand   Sunrise;    grandson   ol\nibsland Masterpiece,  the champion\n11 of Canada.   Will take part trade\ncordwood sawing outfit, about six\n>., calves or steers; value $250 (worth\nuble.)    This is a splendid animal.\nwill hire to responsible farmer tor\ni ynonths. Apply box 7395, Daily\n(7395)\nWSiTFtpR SALE\u2014Nino years old,\nweighs 1350 lbs., good and sound;\nw sleigh, (nice light express wagon,\nmess and) collar, $325. C. V. Olsen,\nnsworth.   ( (7113)\n \u25a0\u2014, .\u2014-\nIR SALE\u2014tone pair draught horses,\nweight about 2800; set of 'harness\nd wagon. ' Western Box & Shingle\n... , \/rAnx\\\nUs.\n(7405)\n)R SALE \u2014 Two heavy teams of\nhones, weighing 2900 and 8400 lba.\nvon to nine years old. Price reason-\nle. Can he seen In Nelson. A. Q.\nmbert Co., Ltd. (7404)\nHEN REPLYING TO ADVERTISE-\nmonts in Condensed Columns, klndlj\nintion you saw it in The News\u201411\n11 help you.\nARTICLES   FOR  SALE.\n)R  SALE\u2014Typewriter;   good   con-\nllitlon, $25.   Box 586, Nelson. (7414)\nJTCHER shop fixtures for sale at a\nsacrifice. Possession can be given\nmediately. Everything up to date.\n>ply box No. 932, Nelson. (7445)\n)R SALE\u2014Brandy and whisky barrels, slot machine, boor and wine\nisses, mirrors, marble top counter,\ne work horso 1100 lbs., cash register,\nrroom chairs, double barrel shot gun,\np. Morgan, Nelaon, B. C. (7428)\n)R SALE OR EXCHANGE\u2014Now\nmodel Steol Beauty hay press, in\nod order. ' Capacity ton tons per day.\nldross, P. O. Box 1023, Nolson. (7423)\n)R SALE\u2014Pocrloss mangle in good\nconditions; suit largo family; $13.\nrtwrlght, Taghum.         (7410)\nIUNG KIN, R. B., No. 1, Willow\nPoint \u2014 Vegetables, apples, pork,\nagon In town Tuesdays and Fridays,\nrite for prices. (7197)\n>R SALE\u2014Assayers balance, new,\nAinsworth & Son, maker. J. Honry,\nnsworth; B.C. (7398)\n)R SaUaE\u2014Mentges newspaper folder; folds 4, 6, 8, 10 and 12 pages; In\nnt class condition. Snap for cash.\nie DaSly News, Nolson. (678)\ni>R SALS\u2014Edison Dictograph com\nPlato; eleetrlo power. Apply to Dally\nsws business office. (654)\nMl BALD\u2014Shaving machine for Edison records.   Box 685. Daily News\nHEN REM.Y1NO TO ADVERTISE,\nments In Condensed Columns, kindly\nsntlon yoiiaaw lt In Tho Newa\u2014It\n111 help you,,\n^ORjlENT^\nFOR RENT\u2014Six roomed house, close\nIn.   Apply J. W. Gallagher's store.\n(7400)\nFOR RENT\u2014Good house in Fttirvicw.\nParticulars apply J.  Balding,  City,\nphono 308L1. (7147)\nPOULTRY AND EGGS.\nFOR SALE\u2014Black and white   Leghorn hons and pullets   and   Barron\ncockerels.   Mrs. Burton, Box 44, Michel\nBritish Columbia. (7348)\nBUSINESS CHANCES.\nFOR SALE\u2014Little   Davenport   cafe,\nNolson.    Fully equipped  and good\nbusiness.   Bargain. (7194)\nROOMING HOUSE FOR SALE or will\nexchange for land.   For information\napply to box 328, Nelson. (7397)\nBARBER SHOP FOR SALE~Vernon\nstreet; good location; good business;\nfor $350; two chairs. a.ddress Ralph\nDegirolnmo, 1\". O. box 962, Nelson,\nB.C. (7382)\nFLORISTS.\nGRIZZELLE'S GREENHOUSES, Nel\nson.   Wreaths,   wedding   bouquets,\ncut flowers.   Phono 187.\nWHOLESALE.\niL \"MACDONALD''& CO, WHOLE,\nsale Grocers and provision Merchants. Importers of Teas, Coffees,\nSpices, Dried Fruits, Staples and\nFancy Groceries, Tobaccos, Cigars,\nButter. Eggs, Cheese and Packing\nHouse products. Offiee and warehouse, eorner of Front and Hall Sts.\nP.O. box 1095; telephones 28 and il.\nENGINEER8\nGREEN BROS, BURDEN <V CO.\nivli Engineers, Dominion and B. C.\nLand Surveyors,\nsurveys of Lands, Mines, Townsites,\nTimber Limits, etc.\nNelson, 616 Ward street, A. H. Green.\nMgr.;  Victoria, 114 Pemberton Bldg,\nF. C. Green; Fort George, Hammond\nstreet. F. P. Burden.\nA, L. MoCULLOCH,\nHydraullo Engineer.\nProvincial Land Surveyor.\nBaker St.. Nelson. B.C\nA. D. NASH\nMining Engineer\nConsultation,  Exploration,  Development, Reports\nRoom 1, Royal Bank Bldg., Nelson.\nJkUjCTIONEERS^\nC. A, WATERMAN & CO, Opera blk\nWM.  CUTLER,   AUCTIONEER.   BOX\n474: phone 18.\nBARRISTERS  A  SOLICITORS\nDONAGHY & DONAGHY, Barristers\nSolicitors, etc, McCulIoch block, Nelson. B.C.. Flack block. Vancouver\nACCOUNT ANTS.\nW. H. FALDING,\nPublic Accountant, Bank of Montreal\nChambers. Rossland. B.C\nSTENOGRAPHY.\nSHORTHAND, Typewriting, Penmanship.    Day and night classes:   820\nVictoria St., Box 745. (7399)\n^OPTICIANS^\nR. L. DOUGLASS, Nelson\u2014Graduate\noptician and optomotrlst.   Room 18,\nK. W. C. Block.\nJWgjjJ^WEJtND^^EA^JSTATIl\nSACRIFICE SALE\u2014Seven roomed\nmodern houso, heated with hot air.\nStono basement and foundation. Also\nwell built four roomed house on rear\nof lots. In good neighborhood; two\nblocks from Baker street; ono lot and\na half; this houso was built by a leading contractor for himself, was sold\nfor $5500. Owner has Instructed us to\nsoil tho property to clean up the mortgage, $2500.00; $1000.00 cash, balance\nsame as rent. .\nRANCH ON ARROW LAKES\u2014Waterfront, fine Band beach, one of the\nfinest locations ln B.C.; 12% acres; 10\nacres planted In five-year old trees,\ncommercial varieties; the wholo place\nIs cleared and plowed, in first class\nshape.    Good modern bungalow and\noutbuildings. . Water   right.     Price,\n$4600.00.   This Is less than It cost to\nput the work In the place.  Easy terms,\nMeQUARRIE A ROBERTSON.\nNelson, B.C,\n_AJ3SAYER8X\na W. WIDDOWSON, box A-llOsVNoT\nson, B.C. Standard western charges\nP. GORMTSP^PaffiSiigTTilunhujrTa'\nperhanging, kalsominlng.   phone or\ncall Club hotel. (7267)\nTAXIDERMISTS-TANNERS\nWHERRy\"& TOwTe^Mulora^ven-'\nue, Victoria, B. C.   Western Canada's tried   firm.    Big game    heads,\nrugs, specialty. Trial solicited.   (7408)\nPRICE BROS., taxidermists. Taxidermy work and rug and robo making\na specialty . Send for price list. Price\nBros, Rossland, B. C. (7349)\nMISCELLANEOUS.\nDIVORCES\u2014Easy, confidential.    Address Lawyer, box 1202, Boise, Idaho.\n...\"    s. (6978)\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DA)\nIdle Wives, Gem theatre, Wednesday\nand Thursday. (7421)\nREMEMBER\u2014Junior Red Cross tag\nclay tomorrow. Proceeds to buy materials.   Every little helps. (7412)\nThe nurses ul' the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital will hold a tag day\non Friday, Dec. 21st In aid of tho new\nhospital. (7444)\nH. E. DILL\nFire,  Life and  Health   Insuranee\n'Phone 180, K,.W. p. Blk,, 508. Ward St.\nFUNERAL  DIRECTOR8.\nD. J. ROBERTSON, F. D. D. A B, 80!>\nViotorla street. Phone 262; nigh'\nlahniw  It7-1,\nPHE ARK pays cash for second hand\n'urnlture. stoves: son Vernon\nPrivate  Hospital\nLICEN3ED BY PROVINCIAL\nGOVERNMENT\nWe give particular attention to al)\nfemale trouble\u2014home-like apartments\nfor ladles awaiting accouchment. Cer-\ntilled nurses sent out on private cases,\ntown or country. Highest references,\nreasonable terms;   Inspection Invited.\nMrs. Moore. Superintendent.\nTHE   HOME   PRIVATE   HOSPITAL\nFalls and Baiter Sts., Nelson, B. C,\nP. O. Box 772.\nPhono 372 for Aopolntmont\n\\ Win-uie-War executive mooting;\nwill be held tonight in the city hall tit\n8 o'clock.    Full attendance desired.\n(7M3)\nChurch Helpers' ;annual o.ooksti.11\nwill hii held in new store of the Ideal\nGrocery company, \"Friday, \u25a0 November\n16th. 11 to 3. (7448)\n++++*++++\u2666\u2666\u2666++\u2666*+\n+ FIVE   NELSON   BOYS                   *\n* * ON  RETURN HOME *\n+   *\n* That five Nelson returned sol- *\n+ diors have arrived in Canada *\n+ and may be expected homo at an +\n* early date Ih the information giv- +\n* en In a letter received by Secro- +\n+ tary H. G. Joy of tho returned sol- +\n+ diers' committee from J. H. Mill, +\n+ general secretary of the returned +\n* soldiers commission.\n+ The   names   given   are;    I'te. +\n+ ICric Bealby, Pto. Samuel  Miles, +\n* Pte. .1. la. Munroe, I'te. Benju- +\n+ mln Boinford and Pte. Reginald *\n+ Uversidge. They are all city boys. +\n+ with the exception of the last +\n+ named, who is a well known +\n+ Crawford Bay volunteer.                 *\nRED CROSS NOTES.\nThe regular monthly shipment of\nUed Cross supplies hus been sent forward to headquarters. The following\nllHt comprises September and October\nshipments: 2\\ dressing gowns, 135\nsuits pyjamas, 100 day shirts, 33ii pairs\nsocks, S30 towels, 170 pillow slips, 17\nsheets, 100 personal property bags, 50\nhot water' bottle covers, 270 triangular\nbandages, 50 sculletus bandages, t>5 \"T\"\nbandages, 42 khaki slings, 10 amputation covers, 20 surgeons' caps, 15\nstretcher caps, 0 pairs surgeons'\nsleeves, 7 French caps, 1 pair slippers,\n1 pair wristlets, 10 handkerchiefs,\nDr. Karl von Edwards, on trial for\ntheft in Buffalo, testified In New York\nthat he had been offered ?1000 a week\nto organize strikes In Canada und the\nUnited States on behalf of the German\ngovernment.\nIOC\nHIS\nEN\n\"CAS\nLAXA\nCARETS\"\nK FOR\nIVER AND BOWELS\nDon't Stay Constipated, Headachy, Bil\nious, with Breath Bad or Stomach Sour.\nNo odds how bad your llvor, stomach or bowels; how much your head\naches, how miserable aud uncomforl-\nube you aro from a cold, constipation,\nindigestion, biliousness and sluggish\nbowels\u2014you always get relief with\nCascarets.\nDon't let your stomacli, liver and\nbowels make you miserable. Take\nCascarets tonight; put an end to tho\nheadache, biliousness, dizziness, nervousness, sick, sour, gassy stomach,\nbad cold, Ovffenslvo 1'ieutb and; all\nother distress; cleanse your Inside organs of all tho bile, gases and const!\npa ted matter which Is producing tho\nmisery.\nA 10-cent, box means health, happl\nnous and'a clear head for months.   All\ndruggists sell Cascarets.   Don't forget\nthe children\u2014their little  Insldos neod\na gentle cleansing, too,\nMoney*Savers for Friday\nShop at The Bay and Save Money\u2014Then You Can Buy Victory Bonds\nSTAPLE    DEPARTMENT    SPECIALS    FOR    FRIDAY    SELLING\n1,'ANCY LADIES' COLLARS\u2014In- White, Black unci White and\nColors; all good shapes and atyles. Regular values to 1(1.25 CQ\u00ab\neach.   All One tt'lcc .'\u25a0'     WWb\nEDEN CLOTH\u2014In Stripe Designs, also .VII White; splendid washing material; suitable for ladies' and, children's wear, pyjamas, etc.;\nfar superior to flannelette yet a lower price; alt good and fast OK\u00ab\ncolors; 28 inches wide.   Per Yard  aCuu\nCOLORED SILK FOR LININO FANCY BAdS\u2014ln Rose, Paddy\nGr on, Copenhagen Blue and Sky; 29 inches wide. 7P...\nrer Yard       I JO\nSNOW WHITE INDIAN HEAD\u2014Extra strong, hard wearing Qfl\u00ab.\ncloth; heavy, even weave; 3C ilicheB wide.    Per Yard     UUU\nBLACK   SATEEN   LINING-^Special   permanent finish;\nThe old qualities at the old prices.\n30 Inches Wide.   Per Yard, 40c, 35c and \t\nfnst dye.\n30c\nSPECIAL   VALUES   IN   CHILDREN'S   WEAR\nGIRLS' NAVY  WOOL SERGE  SKIRTS\u2014Kilted,  with  lining;   top\nto oe worn with middies or sweaters; good quality; two yards \u00abJ<) 7C\n711\n\u25a0 It\nCHILDREN'S WOOL SWEATERS\u2014Reseda, Green. Navy and\nBrown; extra fine quality; button on shoulder; sizes to fit four 7E\u00bb\nto six years.   On Sale   I OI\u00bb\nGIRLS' NAVY SERGE DRESSES FOR SCHOOL\u2014New arrivals;\nlong waisted style; double collar trimmed with plaid, also belt and\ncuffB piped with plaid; sizes six to four teen years. 01 CO\nOn  Sale       <9*ll%)U\nBARGAINS   IN   FINE  FURS\nSUNK STOLE\u2014Four skins, heads and tails complete;\nnicely marked.   Old price, $55.00.   Now \t\nMINK STOLE\u2014Straight throw-over; six skins; width\ninches, length 100 Inches; trimmed six tails. Old price,\nJ135.00.    Now   \t\nBLUE GREY WOLF MUFF\u2014\nLarge shape.   Old price, ?25.00.   Now \t\nBLUE GREY WOLF STOLE\u2014Shaped on shoulder;\nwarm and comfy to the neck.    Old price, $22.50.   Now...\n$35.00\nn front 6%\n$75.00\n$15.00\n$18.50\nFOR\nLADIES' BOOT SPECIAL\nFRIDAY AT $2.25\nTwa Real Live-Wire Bargains\nWOMEN'S SMALL SIZE BOOTS\n-\u2014Sizes 2$\u00a3, 3 and 314 only. These\nare lines that have all been sold except the small siKes, and In order to\nmake a quick clearance of them we\nare putting a price on them that will\nmake them move quick. They ure\nmade up * from Dull Calf, Patent\nLeather, with Dull and Cloth Tops:\nsqmo havo fancy tops; button and\nlace: Goodyear welt soles and leather\nheels; all good shape boots and sold\nin the regular way from J4.00<M| t%F\nto $6.00.    Clearance Price..  ityCtCO\nBOOTS   AND   SLIPPERS   FOR   SMALL   GIRLS\nWe have a lino of Patent Leather and Vlcl Kid Boots and a few\nlines of Strap Slippers. Wo have made ono table of these and put, a\nprice for quick clearance. These are the famous Classic Make and\nare worth $3.00 per pah'. Sizes 8 to 10%.\nSpecial Price, Per Pair  '.'\t\n$1.65\nSHORT-\n20c\n15c\n30c\n25c\n25c\n15c\n15c\n25c\nBOBBIE      BURNS'\nBREAD  FINGERS\u2014\nPer Dozen   \t\nPOPHAM'S FANCY BISCUITS\u2014 %-lb.  Packet.\nNEW  COMB   HONEY\u2014\nSection  \t\nFANCY  EMPEROR\nGRAPES\u2014Per   Pound\nHEINZ'S     SPAGHETTI\nLarge, Per Tin   \t\nCLARK'S    SPAGHETTI\nPer Tin \t\nCLARK'S PORK AND\nBEANS\u2014is, Per Tin..\nCLARK'S PORK AND\nBEANS\u20142s, Per Tin..\nLIBBY'S PREPARED MUSTARD\u2014\nTen-Ounce Bottle   \t\nSHRIMP AND LOBSTER SAUCE\u2014\nCrosse &  Blackwell's.    Regular 35c for\nCREAMERY  BUTTER,  PALLESEN'S\u2014Our Brand, the finest butter in Western Canada.   Two Pounds for \t\n$1.05\nMudsotfeBat) (fomparat\nHONOR FOR\nDEAD\nVietoria  Cross  Posthumously  Awarded to Capt. Crisp, Whb Defended\nBoat to  Last\nLONDON'\u2014Tho London Quzutto announces the award of the Victoria\nCross to tbe late skipper, T. Crisp, naval reserve, of the smack Nelson, and\nClio Distinguished Conduct medal to\nIlls sun.\nFollowing Is the story of the sinking of the Nelson:\n(Jn an August afternoon, on or about\na quarter to three, tho trawl was shot\nfrom the smack Nelson, and tbe\nsmack was on 1 ho port tack,. The\nskipper was below packing fish, and\none hand was on deck cleaning fish\nfor the next morning's breakfast. The\nskipper came on deck and saw an object on the horizon. Ho examined it\nclosely and sent for his glasses. Almost directly lie sang out: \"Clear\nfor action, submarine,\" and lie bad\nhardly spoken when a shot fell about\n100 yards away on tbe port bow. The\nmolonnan got to his motor and the\ndeck hand1 went to the., ammunition\nroom. Tim olher bauds, at the skipper's orders,  let   go  the  warp.\nMeanwhile iho guuluyer held his\nfire, until tbe skipper suld, \"It Is no\nuse waiting any longor. We will have\nto let 'em have it.\"\nAway In the distance the submarine\nsent shell after shell at the smack,\nami about the fourth shot a shell\nwent through the port bow just below\nthe wuterllne. There was no confusion on board, not even when Iho seventh shell struck tho skipper, passed\nthrough his side, through tbo deck\nand cut through tho side of the ship.\nAH tbe time the .ship was sinking.\n\"It Is all right boys, do your best,\"\nsaid tho skipper, to the gimluyer, and\nthen turned to tbe second hund, \"Send\na message off.\" This was the message: \"Nelson being attacked, .skipper killed; send assistance at once,\"\nAll this time the smack wus sinking and only fivo rounds of ammunition were left. Thu second hand went\nto the skipper, lying there on the\ndeck and heard him say: \"Abandon\nthe ship; throw tho bunks overboard.\"\nHe wus asked then if they should lift\nhim into a boat, but his answer was:\n\"Tom, I'm done; throw me overboard.\"\nHe was In too bad a condition to\nbe moved, and they left him there on\nills deck and took to the small boat,\nand about lii minutes aftenvard tbe\nNelson went down hy thn head, it was\njust, drawing into dusk then and the\ncrew* of tho small bout pulled all that\nnight. Toward morning the wind\nfreshened and blew them out of their\ncourse. They pulled ull that day and\nhud a pair of trousers and a large\npiece of oilskin fastened to two oars\nto ultiuot attention. Once a vessel\nwas sighted and onco a group of mine\nsweepers, but they passed out of sight.\nAt night the weathor became somewhat calm and fine, and through that\nnight they pulled until 10:30 In \u25a0 the\nmorning, whon they found a buoy and\nmado fast to it. By tho afternoon they\nwero sighted and rescued.\nTho second hand, who took charge\nof tho tiller aftor tho skipper hnd\nbeen shot down, wnB his son. And1\nso the great tragedy goes on.   i\nPRIEST FROM NEW YORK\n13 JAILED IN LONDON\nHad Naval and Military Code\u2014Got it\nFrom Priest Interested in Sinn\nFein Movement.\n(Uy Daily News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON. Nov. 8.\u2014Fatlfiy Michael\nDaly, who has been for two yours in\nthe United States, and who arrived in\nLondon recently from New Vork, has\nbeen sentenced lo three months* imprisonment for having In his possession a code by which the communication of naval and military information\nwas possible. He was also charged\nwith having two letters for conveyance into the I'nited Kingdom and\nmaking false declaration to un alien\nofficer.\nFather Daly -said the code bad been\ngiven to him In the I'nited Slates by\nFather Murphy, who was interested in\nthe Sinn Fein movement, and who requested Father Daly to use it to send\nnews concerning Ireland.\nTurning ' state's ovldeuce, Hans\nHouner, formerly chief steward on tho\nSeandinnvin.il liner Krlslunifjord, lold\nhow rubber wus smuggled to Germany\nin phonograph .cu'vmets. ,       '. ^\nBRITISH  FOOTBALLERS\nIN GERMANY'S CAMPS\nWriter    in    Sporting    Life   Tells   of\nEfforts   Made  to   Help\nPlayers\nSu far buck as tbe middle of .Inly I\nwok In close touch with the Swedish\nFootball association witli regard lo\nlhe efforts thut were being made to\nsecure tho release of Steve Bloomer\nfrom Ruhleben, says G. Wugstuft'e In\nSporting Life. Whon tho idea was\nfirst taken up by the Swedish F. A.\nthey cabled me for certain particulars,\nwhich I immediately forwarded. T\nought, perhaps, to mention that the\ngenesis of the whole matter was a\nconversation In the Sporting Life\nofflco some months ngo, when a well\nknown Swedish .sporting journalist of\nstrong pro-entente sympathies, was\nover here on a special mission. Wc\nthen discussed tho unfortunate experiences of famous English professional\nplayers who arc interned iu Germany\nand it was suggested that the Huns\nmight reteaso them to the extent that\nthey'eoutd be employed in Sweden for\nfootball couching, on the necessary\nguarantees    being   given    that    they\nSPECIAL SALE-ODD PIECES OF\nHigh Grade Furniture\n?\u00ab.0U    CIRCASSIAN    WALNUT    LADIES'    DRESSING   OOfl flft\nTAULE\u2014Special Sale Price      t}3l>.UU\nJ3S.01I QUARTERED GOLDEN OAK LADIES' DRESSING OOP ftft\nTABLE\u2014Special Sale Prico      aJaljiUU\n$25.1)0 QUARTERED GOLDEN OAK LADIES' DRESSING <M B flft\nT.VBLE\u2014Special Sale  Price      ajHUiUU\n?1S.U0  MAHOGANY  I'ARLOR  CABINET,  WITH   LARGE  OH   CO.\nMIRROR\u2014Special Sale Price     $ I I .ill\/\nS35.00    COMBINATION    WRITING     DASK.     SHAVING   01 C, Oft\nCABINET AND OULLARETTK\u2014Special Sale Price ... <j>l JiUU\n$12.00  EARLY  ENGLISH   HALL SEAT\u2014 M Pft\nSpecial  Sale   Price       fliOv\nlfs.00 Sill IE AND SLIPPER BOX. UPHOLSTERED\u2014 \u00bbil  fin\nSpecial   Sale   Price       \u00ab?'fiUU\n$10.00 UMBRELLA RACK, OAK\u2014 OO  Eft\nSpecial Sale Price     \u00abPUl3u\n$li..\",0 UMBRELLA RACK, OAK\u2014 Al  PA\nSpecial  Sale   Price       y4.wil\n?7.S0 ANTIQUE WOOD BLACK CENTRE TABLE\u2014 (II AA\nSpecial  Sale  Prico       $0.Uv\nJARD1NBRE STANDS\u2014 An  AA\nSpecial Sale Price, $1.00, $2.00 and       a)j.UU\nStandard Furniture Co.\nAgents for Pathe  Phonographs\u2014Complete  House  Furnishers\nBAKER STREET NELSON, B.C.\nTRY THEM\nThe neatf time you suffer with\nheadache, indigestion, biliousness or loss of appetite, try\u2014\nBtKHAI*\nPILLS\n4> \u2014: $\n! HAIRS WILL HANISH\nAFTER THIS TREATMENT |\n(Tollot Helps.)\nYou can keep your skin free from\nhair or fuzz by tho occasional uao of\nplain delatone and in using it you\nneed havo no fear of marring or injuring the skin. A thick paste Is mado by\nmixing somo of the powdered delatone\nwith water. Then spread on tho hairs\naud after 2 or 3 minutes rub off, wash\ntho skin and all traces of hah* have\nvanished. Bo careful, howovor, to get\nroal delatone.\n.should not loavo IhuL country until\nafter the termination of thu war, or\nGermany consented to them doing so.\nShortly afterwards my Swedish\nfriend returned home and then promptly got to work. Tho Swedish P. A.,\nbetween whom und the football\nauthorities in this country relations\nhavo been most cordial, deckled to\nendeavor to bring about the release\nof some of the English professionals.\nAnton Johansson, the honorary secretary of the Swedish V. A\u201e and\nHuron llermeltn, the president of tho\nSwedisii Sporting .Tournulists elub,\nwere .sn far successful in their representations to their own foreign\noffice that the latter placed it In the\nhands of their diplomats at  Berlin.\nIt was agreed lhat it wonld be best\nto deal with one case first, and that\nof Steve Hloomer was selected. Had\nsuccess attended the efforts of\nSweden to secure his rol case, then,\napplications would have been made\non behalf of other professionals. Iu\naddition to tho ordinary instructions\nsunt to the Swedish ambassador at\nBerlin, an urgent private letter was\nsent to him by Baron Hermelln,\nEverything was done that could possibly be dono by Sweden to bring\nabout Bloomer's release, with the\nprospective liberations of some of his\ncolleagues at Ruhleben, but Germany\nwas ine.vorable. Sho listened to all\nthat wus put forward by thu Swedish\nambassador, oxpressed her readiness\nto oblige Sweden in any way she possibly could\u2014hut, for military roasons,\nthis particular request could not be\ngrunted.\nWhen it was perfectly clear that\nSweden would not succeed, representations were mado that Germany\nmight favorably consider a suggestion\nthat Britishers who, at the outbreak\nof war, were engaged In Germany as\nfootball coaches, should not bo treated us ordinary prisoners of war. but\nshould bo permitted to continue to act\nns coaches under conditions that\nwould not be. and could not bo, in any\nway prejudicial to Germany's interests,    That I.s where the matter re\nmains at present. I have not received any further definite information, but r is extremely doubtful\nwhether there will be any amelioration ol' the lot of tbe professional\nfootballer.^ at Ruhleben and ^lse-\nwhero. The footballers of this country deeply regret that Sweden was\nunsuccessful, but that does not lessen\nour sense of obligation to Baron Her-\nmelin to tbo Swedish K. A., and to\ntiie Swedish foreign office, who in\nthis matter tried their utmost to do\nBritishers a good turn.\nNINE BOILS\nKept Coming on Neck\nOne After the Other\nAnyone, who has over mifTered from\nl>ol!n, knows how sick anil miserable\nthoy make you fool.\nWhen you think you are about cured\nof one, another seems ready to take ils\nplaco and prolong your wretchedness.\nAll tho poulticing and lancing you may\ndo will not cure lliem and stop more\ncoming.\nDolls are simply bad blood bursting\nout, and the lad blood must lie made\npure before, the boils disappear.\nBurdock niood Bitters is lhe greatest blood purifier known. It cleanses\nthe system and removes every particle\nof foul material from Ihe blood, then\nnever another boll comes and the cure\nIs permanent.\nJlrs. Geo. Ayros, 302 Gloucester St.,\nOttawa, Ont., writes: \"I wish to tell\nyou what I know about your wonderful\nBurdock Blood Bitters, ln tno spring\nI suppose my system needed cleaning\nout for I had nine bolls como on my\nnock one after tho other. I quickly\ngot a, bottle of B. B. B. and before ii\nwas half finished I felt a groat change\nand tt cortaluly put an end to my boils,\notherwlso I might hove had a lot more.\nI recommend B.B.B. to all I can for I\nknow It to be a great remedy.\"\n PAGE EIGHT\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nFRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1917\nUNEQUALLED FOR GENERAL USE\nW. P. TIERNEY, General Sales Agent,\nNelson, B. C,\n| Cars supplied to all railway points.\nBuy Christmas\nPresents Early\nA good word of advice is:\n'WHEN   .IN   DOUBT   G.VE   A\nWE   HAVE   ALL   KINDS   FOR\nALL AGES.\nLET   US   HAVE  YOUR   MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTIONS.\nCanada Drug & Book Co.\nEastman  Kodaks  and Supplies.\nWillard Chocolates\nTHE ARK\nLadles' Vests, good weight....36o\nCurtain Scrim, yard 15c\nCurtain Cretonne, yd. .250 to 306\nPortieres, pair   S4.75\nWindow Shades, each  60c\nCrockery Cups, % dozen 750\nFlannelette Blankets 12-4 pr $2.76\nMen's Shoes, old prices $2.75 to S5\nNew  and   Second-hand   Furniture,\nStov.s and  Ranges Bought\nand Sold.\nJ. W .HOLMES,\nPhone 65L. (HIS Vernon St.\nD. A. McFarland\nIs unloading a car of lump coal today.\nSend your orders in.\nInsurance,    Real    Estate.     Room    6,\nK. W. C. Block.\nTelephone 49. P. 0. Box 24\nNOTICE\nStrike on at Skyline  Nine\nAINSWORTH, B. C.\nAll men working or going to work\nwill be placed on unfair list.\nNEL80N MINERS' UNION\nMARCUS MARTIN, Secy.\nloan count\nADDS JO NUMBERS\nf Choose  32   More   Citizens   to   Act   in\nConjunction With Original Ten\nBIG     DRIVE     STARTS     MONDAY\nMayor    Annable    Gives    Office    for\nHeadquarters\u2014Special   Meeting\nWill Be Held Tonight\nAt a meeting of the Victory loan\ncommittee yesterday afternoon 32\nmembers were added to the original\nnumber and arrangements were made\nfor a general meeting, to be held in\nthe new headquarters of the Victory\nloan committee in the Annable block\ntonight, when final arrangements will\nbe made for the big drive which will\nbe launched In full earnest Monday\nmorning at 9 o'clock, when tho loan\nwill be formally placed on the flnan-\nDiamond Ring\nSpecials\nOUR FINE $20.00 to $25.00 DIAMOND SINGLE-STONES\nin\nNEW AND ARTISTIC\nSETTINGS\nfor\nTWO DAYS ONLY\nat\n20  PER  CENT  DISCOUNT\nJ.O.Patenaude\nRING  MAKER\ncial market of the city and the Dominion.\nThose appointed at the meeting yesterday afternoon were:\nVF. G. Calvert, B. P. Steeves, R. \"W.\nHinton, F. A. Starkey, T. D. Stark,\nE. F. Gigot, G. F. Stevenson, J. H.\nLawrence, R. M. Bird, W. R. Allen,\nC. W. Appleyard, J. W. Holmes, W.\nR. Jarvls, Aid. John Bell, W. J. E.\nBiker, A. D. Emory, F. W. Stirling, T.\nIT. Long, William Irvine, M. R. McQuarrie, J. P. Forde, George Hor-\nstead, W. R. Thompson, D. A. McFar-\nlane, W. S. King, D. H. Proudfoot,\nCharles Mclnnes, A. G. Carpenter, C.\nW. Tyler, W. E. Wasson, Rev. F. H.\nGraham and S. S. Jarvls.\nThe headquarters for the Nelson\nand district committee for the three\nweeks in which the loan will be\nhandled by them will be in Mayor J.\nE. Amiable's office, 515 Ward street.\nThe mayor announced to the committee yesterday afternoon that the\noffices would be at their disposal,\nrental free, during the pleasure of the\ncommittee.\nMRS. COSE DIES\nIN HARROP HOME\nMrs. Sophia Cose, a well known resident of Harrop, died at her home Nov.\n8. Funeral services will be held in the\ncity Saturday afternoon at 1:30 from\nthe parlors of the Standard ..Undertaking company and interment will be\nmade in the Nelson cemetery. Rev.\nBagnall will preside at the service.\nENEMY  OFFICERS WHO       '\nESCAPED ARE ARRESTED\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nLAREDO, Tex., Nov. 8.\u2014Lieut.\nHansberg and Lieut. Loeschner, who\nescaped from Fort McPherson,\nGeorgia, Oct. 23, were arrested today\nby the customs inspectors at a point\nsix miles below Laredo, near the\nRio Grande. They were turned over\nto the military authorities.\nNothing Like Them for Service\nSemi-ready\nBelted Overcoats for\nFall\nYou get long service in the all-wool\nfabrics and fine tailoring that go Into\nthese coats.\nYou get genuine utility in the many\nways you can wear a coat of this kind.\nUse it for rainy weather; for sharp,\nfrosty mornings in the fall; wear it over\nyour dress clothes going to parties or\ntheatres, or wear it when you'ro driving\nthe car.\nThe all-around belt with the buckle is\na smart touch; so are the pleats, the\npatch pockets. There are several stylish\nvariations of this trench coat and they're\nall good; guaranteed to satisfy or your\nmoney back.\nSuch a coat is almost a necessity\u2014\nevery man ought to havo one; it's easy\nto find just what you want here.\n$20 to $35\nJ. A. Gilker\nBOYS' AND BENTS' OUTFITTER\nWOVALOID\nWE  HAVE  EXCLU8IVE  SALE  OP  THIS\nBEST QUALITY  RUBBER  ROOFING\nWe Querent.. Every Gqusre ef it and the Price Is Lower thu any other\nHigh Cists Reefing\nSAMPLES AND  PRICES ON   REQUEST\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nWHOLESALE AND  RETAIL NELSON, \u00bb&\nKEANE PAILS TO ESTABUSH\nHALF INTEREST NI CLAIM\nJUDGE MORRISON GIVES DECISI ON AFTER TWO-DAY HEARING OF\nKEANE-CUNNINGHAM DISPUTE\u2014\"QUEEN BESS\" REMAINS IN\nHANDS OF DEFENDANT\u2014KEANE GETS DECISION AND COSTS AS\nFAR AS MILLS ARE CONCE RNED \u2014 ACCOUNTING MUST BE\nMADE.\nThat   the claim   of   Joseph   P.\nKeane for a straight one-half interest in the Cunningham mining\nproperties  was   not   substantiated\nwas   the   effect   of   the   decision\nmade  by Judge   Morrison  yesterday   afternoon,   when   the   noted\nKeane-Cunningham   civil   suit,   in\nwhich property said to be valued\n\u25a0t   |760,00O   was    involved,    was\nbrought to a close.    Before giving\nhis  decision   the   judge   gave   a\nlengthy resume of the case.\nHis decision was as follows:\n\"Under the circumstances I cannot\nsee how I can give effectato the request of the plaintiff.    On the evidence I do not think that the plaintiff\ncan claim any interest in the Queen\nBess.\n\"As to the Ivanhoe, he is entitled as\nclaimed. That has been specially\ndealt with by Cunningham and also\nby himself, and there he has a one-\nhalf interest, in respect of which there\nwill be an accounting as claimed by\nthe plaintiff.\n\"As to the Rosebery, it seems to me\nfrom, the way that has been dealt with\nthat the defendant is really as anxious\nto avoid a liability as anything else in\nnot claiming the whole of it. I really\ncannot get away from the impression\nthat were the Rosebery a paying\nproposition I would not have witnessed what took place here today, the defendant repudiating an interest in the\nwhole of it. But there is a. liability\nand I can say that the defendant cannot get out of at least claiming half\nof It, and would claim the wholo of it\nwere there any profits. Therefore, I\nthink in that case I must force one-\nhalf Interest on the defendant.\n\"As to the Sovereign, I apply the\ntests to which I referred, and I am\ndriven to accept the defendant's version of that.\n* \"As to the \"Wonderful, again taking\nthe evidence and applying the tests\nreferred tu, that would leave the\nplaintiff with the one-fifth interest.\n\"I must say that I have the Impression that Mr. Keane was picking and\nchoosing. If he saw a property and\ndid not like it he ignored it and did\nnot care what Mr. Cunningham did\nwith it. Now It seems to me that the\nQueen Bess wns one of these that Mr.\nKeane did not think much of.\n\"I am sure, if Mr. Keane was in my\nposition he would tnke the same view\nthat I take. Tbe partnership aspect\nof the case I cannot follow, but there\nwere undoubtedly theso agreements\nand I have dealt with them as I understand them.\n\"I cannot do better than to glvo to\ntho plaintiff tbe costs of tho issues ho\nhas succeeded on nnd to the defendant\nthe costs on the mutters he has succeeded on, and there will be an accounting.\"\nJudge Sums up.\nIn summing up the evidence of the\ncase  before  giving   his   decision   the\njudge said:\n''There is no question of law Involved in this action. It seems to entirely\nturn upon tbe facts peculiar to this\ntrial and resolves itself into a question of credibility.\n\"As far as the parties are concerned,\nMr. Keane and Mr. Cunningham are\nboth strangers to me and I have to rely\non my knowledge of liuma nnature ad\npowers of observation and circumstances of that sort in coming to a\nconclusion as to which one of them is\nmore likely to tell what actually did\ntake place and what was the actual\narrangement between them.\nI do not think that one is much\ndifferent from the other as far as ln-\nThe beautiful star,\nGail\nKane\nIn a   melodramatic   production,\ndealing with the Nihilists\nof Russia.\n\"The Scarlet Oath\"\nOTHER REELS.\nChange of Date:\n\"IDLE WIVE8\"\nWednesday    and    Thursday\nInstead of Monday and Tuesday.\ntelllgencc is concerned; Ihey are both\napparently educated men, men of experience in certain lines of business, at\nany rate. I do not think that either of\nthem poses as a kind of superman as\ncounsel so generally try to make out\ntbat the opposite party is. They struck\nmo as being the ordinarily sane, sensible sort of people, trying to make\nthe best.they could of conditions as\nthey find them. Apparently the kaleidoscopic turn of the capricious wheel\nof fortune landed the plaintiff in rather hard circumstances at the beginning; circumstances which led to this\ntrial.\n\"It has not been denied that Mr.\nKeane had to rely upon Mr. Cunningham's bounty in Vancouver ad afterwards during the winter and spring in\nSeattle and whilst lit; was In thnt'eon-\ndition they did talk over Ibe possibilities of mining, whereby, so far as I\nam impressed, Keane would first be\nadvantaged, I will not say.1 that Mr.\nOunnlngnam was actuated by a missionary desire to advance the interests\nof Keane at his own expense, or anything of that kind, lie would not bo\nquite a sensible man if he did that,\nconsidering his own circumstances;\nbut I do get the impression that Cunningham liked Keane; that he really\nand genuinely tried to help Keane and\nwhilst so doing that he was not, of\ncourse ignoring his own Interests. . I\nthink he simply meat along with\nKeane, helping Keane and also ho was\nlooking after his own interests as well.\nIt seems to me tbat Keane, without\nCunningham, during the times material to the matters in dispute here,\nwould have been rather helpless.\nInstances  Contradiction.\n\"Then, when it comes down to the\nconflict between the two men where\nthey arc apparently on the same footing one has to look for the extraneous\nelement, and the first extraneous element that strikes one is the contradiction between the letters of Mr.\nKeane relative to these issues and his\nstatements on oath at the trial.\n\"X am ln the position of a Jury and\nit well may bo that what*Mr. Keane\nnow states on oath is true and what\nho wrote deliberately on another* occasion is not true, yet like the jury,\nI may accept one statement or the\nother. I may disbelieve what be said\non oath and believe what be wrote on\nanother occasion and vice, versa. When\nI am confronted with that difficulty,\nand there are other extraneous circumstances, then the difficulty is not quite\nso great.\n\"It seems to me they nre here in the\nshape of tbe evidence of Mr. Powers.\nMr. Keane says that he' himself was\nnot a trutnful person on a certain occasion when he wrote certain letters.\nHe says that. Then Mr. Powers comes\nin and says he isn't truthful, and Mr.\nPowers' evidence is not impeached. 1\ndo not know Mr. Powers but his appearance Is entirely in his favor nnd\nthere does not seem to be any reason\nin the world why he should come here\nand controdlct Mr. Keane and he does\ncontradict him on a matter entirely\nrelevant to one of the Issues in this\ntrial, if he is not justified in so doing.\n\"Taking the accumulative effect of\nall -these things it seems to me that\none in the position of a judge without\na jury, or one in the position of a\njury, Is driven to the conclusion and\nof drawing ono inference,\n\"I cannot decide this by guessing but\nby applying the ordinary rules of evidence and methods of dealing with evidence. Now, If I am not justified in\naccepting Mr. Keane's version on one\nessential part I cannot see how I can\nproceed to accept his version on the\nother parts. That Is what makes cases\nof this kind so undesirable from the\njudicial point of view. Judges dislike\nvery much to deal with them. Personally I would have been very much better pleased if we had had a jury und\nhad a multiplicity of minds considering the conflict of evidence.\n\"I have a difficulty, in a way, of arriving at this because Mr. Donaghy\nfought, what is an extremely difficult\ncase for him. In a very able manner,\nand Impressed me; and gave me more\ndifficulty in coming to this conclusion\nthan I otherwise would have, but I\nreally think that the evidence Is so\nstrongly against him that I cannot see\nhow he stood up against It as long as\nhe has, taking into account these letters and the evidence as given.\n\"Well, it ln^ be as I say, that what\nMr, Keane iwated on oath is true, yet\nnobody knows that but himself, but in\ndealing with his evidence I am driven\nto apply thoso other tests. Mr. Cunningham, on the other hand, has none\nof. these obstacles In his way. Maybe\nthey sh uld be there, but I did not recognize them. I do not see,that there\nis anybody contradicting Mr. Cunningham, except Mr. Keane, of course;\nand there are none of these contradictory statements in the correspondence.\nIn other words, there seems to me a\ngeneral consistency in the evidence of\nthe defendant which is absent in the\nevidence of the plaintiff. I am taking that view as the view of an entire\noutsider, Jus dealing with the cold\nfacts of the thing as it were.\"\nDecision as quoted above was given.\nAre You a\nParasite ?\nTaklns   all,   giving   nothing\nln return.\nSEE\nIDLE WIVES\nIt may not euro you, but it\nwill give you an awful jolt.\nWednesday and Thursday\ninstead   of\nMonday and Tuesday.\nTHIS COLD  8NAP FORCES  ONE  TO LOOK   CAREFULLY\nINTO ONE'S COAL BINS\u2014BE WISE\nORDER  NOW  A8 THERE  MAY  BE  A  8CARCITY  LATER\nWE  HAVE  NOW  IN  STOCK:\nTen Tonit and Over.   Tons.\nFranco-Canadian Steam     \u00bb 7.50 $7.75\nFive Tons and Over.\nC.W.C, Lump, Domestic  \u25a0\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022      9.00 9.25\nC.W.C. Nut, Domestlo (Range) ...*       7.60 7.76\nWyoming Lump, Domestlo  ...      19.25 10.60\nWyoming Nut, Domestic (Range)        8.60 8.75\nTen Tons and Over.\noankliead Anthracite, Domestlo (Egg Size)     11.75 12.00\nTERMS\u2014CASH  WITH  ORDER\nKootenay Columbia Fuel Company\nCHA8.  F.  MoHARDY,  AGENT\nSoldiers' dirts\nDon't leave sending your Christmas gift anytyonger.. Now isv the\ntime. -Our store is full of articles\nthat any soldier would he pleased\nto receive.\nCOME    IN    TODAY\n4. J. WALKER\nJEWELER AND OPTICIAN.\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nWHEAT\nThis Is good   quality.     Also   have        i,-\nAlberta Fesd Wheat a little cheaper,        ,%\nBarley,   Oats,   Rough   Groats,   Bran,\nShorts.\nPending   the  arrival   of  Corn,   we\nare   mixing  a  Scratch  Food   of   the   ;\nother usual ingredients.\nThe Brackman Ker\nMilling Co., Limited\nDon't Take Chances with That Cough\nCALL   AND   GET   A   BOTTLE   OF\nWAMPOLE'S TASTELESS   COD   LIVER   OIL   .51.00  PER   BOTTLE\nChildren  Like to Take It.\nZIP\u2014THE'WELL   KNOWN   COUGH   MIXTURE    26c and 50c per Bottle\nCALL AND 8EE OUR FULL  LINE  OF  CHRISTMAS CARDS\u2014ALL  PRICES 60 TO 26c  EACH\nCANDIES KODAKS TOYS,   GAMES NEILSON'S   CHOCOLATE8\nPHONE  34\nCITY DRUG AND STATIONERY CO.\nMAIL  ORDER8   GIVEN   SPECIAL  ATTENTION\nP.O. BOX 1083\nAMEND HOLIDAY ACT,\nSAYS BOARD If]\nLenghty   Discussion   Follows  Victoria\nProposal   to   Petition   Rescind-\nment of Existing Law.\nSTARKEY    STRONGLY    OBJECTS\nConsensus of Opinion  Is That Saturday Would Not Carry Again\non Vote.\n\"That this board regrets that It cannot sec ils way clear to endorse the\naction of the. bonrd of trade of Victoria in asking for a repeal of the\nweekly half holiday act, but tbat it\nwould be glad to endorse a resolution\nasking the government to amend tbe\nact to road for tbe six summer months\nof the year instead of a full yearly one-\nhalf holiday.\"\nSuch was the motion passed at the\nmeeting of the board of trade last\nevening, when a letter from the Victoria board was read and discussed\nand in which the support of tbe Nelson board was asked for in their action of petitioning tbe government to\nrepeal the existing act,\nIn the dlscuslson which followed the\nreading of the Victoria communica-,,\ntion J. A. Irving stated that ho was\nof the opinion that before any action\nwas taken in the matter tho load\nboard should hear what other cities\nbad to say about the Victoria proposal to agitate the resclndment of\nthe act,\nPresident ,1. R. Hunter stated that\nhe was as fond of the weekly half hoi-\nMay as anyone. He took the view\nthat If the hoard assisted in getting'\ntbe act annuled there would be difficulty in getting the merchants together in an effort to arrange a mu-\nt.ual holiday as the Victoria board\nhad suggested. If each of the towns\nhad the privilege of choosing its own\nday then no one, he said, would know\nwhere they stood.\nAid. John Bell had found that insofar as his business was concerned\nWednesday was a much bolter day\nthan Saturday.\nJoseph Meagher was of the opinion\nthat the present law restricted to a\ngreat extent the business man's aide\nof tbe question.\nFred A. Starkey strongly opposed\nany thought of endorsing the action of\ntho Victoria board before first hearing\nboth sides of the story. He suggested\nthat a meeting might be called at\nwhich the clerks and citizens of the\ncity would be represented and then\n\u2022uke such action as would bo most\nbeneficial to tho majority. He did not\nthink that now the government would\nrepeal the act ontirely as it had already been referred to the people. \"If\nwe undertook to decide the question\ntonight,\" emphatically stated Mr.\nStarkey, \"It would be unfair for ua as\nthe board of trade to represent the\npeople.\"\nJoseph Meagher expressed the opinion that the board of trade represented the business interest of tho qtty\nand that as such it was quite within\ntho scope of the. board to act.\nT. p. Stark said that if tho clerks\nand- ratepayers wanted to take up the\nquestion It would be quite in order for\nthem to do so. W. S. King remarked\nthat he had said so much last year\nthat he was willing to let the matter\ngo either way. although he believed\nthat If the question was brought to a\nvote next January that the half holl\nday would not be Saturday. \"If It\ncomes to a vote,\" he Bald, \"Saturday\nwill bo knocked in the head,\"\nThe same opinion held with B. G.\nCarpentler, who stated he was confident that the people would vote any\ndays except Saturday when the question was brought beforo them again.\nSaturday had heen a detriment to his\nbusiness. He had assumeU that Wednesday, would have been much more\nsatisfactory.\nMayor J. R. Annable suggested that\nlt might be a wise plan to lay the matter over until the house meets before\naction was taken.\n.. itojjll a&Sfrff&VA JUffJPaca Hlvtlon\n\u25a0| A Thrilling Story of Russia ]\u25a0\nUnder False\nColors\nFEATURING\nFrederick Warde and Jeanne Eagels\nA  WONDERFULLY ABSORBING  UP-TO-THE-MINUTE STORY\nOF   THE    RUSSIAN    REVOLUTION    AND   THE\nFALL   OF'THE   CZAR\nBILLIE   BURKE   IN   \"GLORIA'S   ROMANCE\nSELECTED   COMEDY\nTONIGHT   ONLY\u20147:00 to 10:45\u201415c and  10c\u2014TONIGHT   6NLY\nTOMORROW\u2014MAE    MURRAY    IN    \"AT    FIRST    SIGHT\"\nMONDAY   AND  TUESDAY\u2014NORMA  TALMAOGE   IN   \"POPPY\"\nStarland Theatre\nDrugs by Nail\nTry us when you need goods in a\nhurry.\nTry us when you want intelligent\nservice.\nPure Drugs and Medicines, Films\nand Camera Supplies, Gramophone\nRecords and Needles, Sprays for\nRosea, Fruit Tress or Poultry\nHouses, ate.\nRutherford Drug Co.\nNELSON, B. C.\nwas then placed before the meeting\nand with the dissent of F. A. Starkey\nwas passed.\nSocial and Personal\nMrs. H. Giegerich and Miss Giegerich\nare in the city en route to Vancouver,\nSeattle and. other coast points for the\nwinter.\nMrs. W. C. Rudduck and her daughter, Phyllis, have left the city for Vancouver, whero they will spend the next\nfew weeks.\nK. H. Battey of Ferguson was registered at the Hume yesterday on his\nreturn from Trail. Mr .Battey expects\nto leave next Wednesday for an extended visit to coast cities and Minnesota state points. Mrs. Battey will\naccompany him.\nThe local commltteo tn charge of\nthe boxing and wrestling entertainment\nto be staged at tho local \"Y\" gymnasium Saturday evening states that the\nsale^ of tickets has so far been most\nencouraging and that there is every\nIndication of a big turnout, Special\narrangements are being made for women.\n10\u2014 t- VENT 8\u201410\nBIG AMATEUR\nBoxing\nAND\nWrestling]\nTournament!\nY. M. C. A. f\nSATURDAY, NOVEMBER 10\nTickets    '.    SI.OO]\nReserved Seats, 25op Extra.\n. \\\n10-E V E N T 8\u20141 0\nNEW SOURCE OF FARM\nLABOR   IS   PROPOSE\nMen Called Up But Not Accepted ;\nMilitary Service Msy  Be\nPut on Land\nTORONTO,    Ont.,    Nov.    8.\u2014At '\nluncheon given by the United Faril\ners of Ontario here today, Hon. TY. T\nHanna, food controller, said that tl\ngovernment  would  undoubtedly  col\naider the suggestion of B. C. Drury T\nBarrie as to the employment on fan|\nof men called up but hot accepted':\nmilitary sorvico.\nUnited States transports  in futu|\nare to bo manned and   officered\nnaval men.\nFor $35\nYou can get \u2022\u2022 fine a Winter Suit as any man would'\nearo to wear.\nYou can also get a genuine Fit-Reform Hand Tailored\nSuit aa low as 120.00\nThe mora you pay, the finer the cloth and trimmings.\nBut no matter what you pay, ths style will be right\u2014the\nfit will be right\u2014and you will feel perfectly satisfied with\nyour purchase, long after you have made It.        j\nEmory   &   Walley\nFIT-REFORM    WARDROBE\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_1917_11_09","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\/1.0388085","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1917-11-09 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":"1917-11-09 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":""}]}