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Oa, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER I ft, 1906\nHOV tt1\nTO BE TRIED\nFOR MURDER\nJames A. Dale Committed\nfor Trial at Spring\nAssizes\nOut t* PrtlMurr Huriil ii Ural\nSkm^mj-riwattltkltm-\n-M-arily Cont'd lir-ktrnJifl\n(Special to The Dally News)\nGreenwood, Nov. 16.\u2014The preliminary trial of James A. Dale, the Carmi\n'murderer, closed late last night and ths\naccused was committed to stand trial\nat the spring assises which wlll be held'\nhere probably ln May.\nThe most Important 'evidence submitted at the hearing was that of David\nSmith, tbo wounded man, a full report\not which waa given in The Dally Newa\nof today. Smith was one of Dale's victims and waa the only man who wltness-\n, ed the. shooting. He was badly wounded In tho arm but has not recovered.\nAlex Hood waa one ot the principle\nwitnesses and in his evidence told what\nhe knew of ths affair. After Dale and\ntho two Frenchmen Qodereau and Celle.\nhad quarrelled and had gone * with\nSmith to Qodereau's c-'iln, followed\nlater by Dale, who was armed with a\nrifle. Hood was asked by Dale's wife to\ngo after Dale and either bring him back\nor take the weapon from him, as he\n(Dale) had threatened to shoot the\nFrenchmen, and she waa sure he would\ncarry out the threat unless forcibly prevented. Hood started for the cabin but\nwas too late and on the Way met Smith\nwho had sustained' a wound ' In the\nshoulder. Together they went to Dale's\nuncle's cabin. By this time Dale was\non his way to the post office and on the\nway Bred at the cabin where Hood and\nBmlth and the other men were. Hood\n\u2022poke to Dale, warning him to stop nr-\n. Ing leet he shoot his father and uncle,\nJames 0. Dale, \u2022 highly respected prospector. Dale replied that \"he had no\nfather any more.\" Dale continued llrlng\nat the cabin and sll the nun except Hood\nsought safely in flight The later remained to care for Smith, whose shoulder wu causing him much suffering.\nLater the witness went over to the\npostofflce door and again spoke to Dale,\nwho was now en-coned In hla father's\ncabin, adjoining the post office. Dale\nreplied with a shot which, happily,\nmissed Its mark. Hood then went Into\nthe post offlce and got a 22 rifle and lired a few shots at the window from\nwhloh Dale had been shooting.\nContinuing witness said: \"Dale continued shooting for a time. After he\nhad stopped firing I called to the men\nand told them where Dale wu. Two;\nmen Bubar and Laing. came over and\nwe set a watch On the cabin, continuing\ni until ahout 1a.m. when Dale escaped.\nMusgrove, the magistrate, Frank Clark,\nand myself went to Peter Qodereau's\n. cabin and there found Joseph Celle and\nGodereau lying dead on V* floor.\"\nWitness gave details of the condition\nof the bodies, corroborating the evidence of Dalvld Smith.\nDr. Spankle. who examined the bodies\nupon their arrival in Greenwood,' gave\nvery complete evidence as*, to the nature .1\not the wounds,, stating that death wu \u25a0\ndue to hemorrhage caused by the bullet\nwounds. The doctor's testimony,closed\nthe taking of evidence.\nThroughout, the  trial   the  accused\nmaintained au absolutely uncommunicative attitude.  To all questions put by\nIthe magistrate he   positively   refused\nIan anawer, hanging his head and refus-\nI to even look up.  When ordered .to\n1 up he doggedly refused until cammed to,rise by constable  Dlnsmore.\na would then lean heavily on Ms chair\n,ud sullenly glower at the floor or de*\naently eye the court.   His whole demeanor was decidedly displeasing  and\nmded to strongly prejudice spectators\nmlnst him.   When requested to sign\ni usual document he paid no heed\nnd paid no attention when the privilege\nI making a statement wu offered. His\n\u25a0refusal to assent lo having heard the\npvldence u given by the witnesses, ne-\neasltated the re-reading of the mass of\nMtlmony by the magistrate\u2014no etay\nrask at so late an hour.   No  plea or\nStatement wu entered by the. defence,\nliter the conclusion of all necessary\nmalltles, magistrate HoHynn  corn-\nled the accused to stand trial tor\n\u25a0der at the spring asslies. The prls-\nmet consulted for a Jew minutes with\n-ds father and uncle, and wu then ea-\nIto his celj.\nDaw was taken to  Nelson  on   this\nlernoon's train In charge of conaUble\nnsmom of Grand Forks, where he will\n\u00bb loc-dsd temporarily pending his re-\nnoval lo Kamloops.  lt Is thought that\nmould the Nelson Jail not be crowded,\nlie prisoner may remain In Nelaon all\n.inter.\nBefore his departure for Nelaon to-\nlay TIM Dally News representative In-\n.ervlewed constable Dlnsmore regard*\n\u25a0 ig tha,condition of the prisoner,\nI, \"Dale has well recovered from his self\nInflicted wound,\" said Dlnsmore, \"and\nis able to speak (airly, distinctly, He Is\ntaking a lively Interest In his cue.\n-When he began to Improve In the hos-\nyttaL at Grand Forks, he asked me what\nwould become of htm after leaving the\ncare*1 of tbe doctor and mines. 1 told\nhim he would be taken to Greenwood\nfor preliminary trial and than to Nelson\nto.awalt full trial In the spring. At thirl\ntoe' coughed and huskily remarked: '1*11\nnever see Neiton.' I believe,\" continued\nDlnsmore, \"he ls determined to* do away\nwith himself of he can possibly get a\nchance. There la nothing In hi) physical condition to prevent blm seeing Nelaon, and I'll do all In my power to get\nhim there.\"\n\"What view does he take of hla chance*\nfor acquittal at the coming trial?\"\n\"lie does not say much,\" said Dins-\n.-more. \"He Is taking a lively Interest In\nyoung Sioane's case In Spokane, and I\nthink he will base hla hopes largely upon the fate of that young man. I think,\nhowever, that whatever an American\njury may do wltb Sloane will have little\neffect upon a Canadian Jury's verdict\nupon Dale,\"\nNO. 178\n************,********\u201e****\n0. T. JP. CONSTRUCTION\n(Sp-clal to Th. Dally News)\nOttawa, Nov 15.\u2014The. Grand\nTrunk Pacific has Wed location\nplans with, the. Railway Commission from Edmonton westeward\nto a point 14 miles beyond f,el-\nlowhead Pass. Work le to be\nstarted on the Paclflc coast In the\nearly part of next summer.\n***,**\u2022***\u201e****\u201e\u201e\u201e*,***\nFEARS OF FUEL FAMINE\nLHTHBRIDQI!  0TRIK-K CAUKW OOAli\nSHORTAGE ON PRAIRIE\nMACKENZIE KWO, COMING V7K8T TO\nINVESTli3ATE AFflAWS\n(Speolal to The Dal)}' News*)\nOttawa, Nov. Ifr-Premler Scott of Saskatchewan, Is now In Ottawa calling the\nattention of tho labor department to the\ncoal shortage In the new province**, whtch\nhas now aaaumer a grave ccndltlon through\nthe continuance of the Lethbridge sti^ke,\nA message received by him today saya\n-that actual suffering now exists, even Before the cold weather has set In. Inune-\ndlate steps Tor relief are Ml vised aa imperative unless word cornea of a prospective settlement Markensle King, deputy\nminister of la-bor, will leave tomorrow Mr\nLethbridge In the. hope of reaching a wt-\ntleHaent of the trouble.;\nMORE WORK\nIS ORDERED\n\/ \u2022**\"\u25a0**\u2014-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0\nChief Justice Hunter's Ruling in Sandon Mining\nSuit Reversed\nMUNICIPAL OWNERSHIP\nINTEIRBSTINO     EXPERIENCE     OF\n\u2022fm TOWN OP PORT ARTHUR\nRUNS OWN TRAMWAY AND TELEPHONE BYSTKHS PROF1TAIILY\n(Sp-cio.1 to The Dally New.)\nPort Arthur, Ont., Nov. IS.\u2014In a very\nshort time the ratepayers of tbls town\nwlll be recetvluc a letter from the' town\nclerk uking them to call at his offlce\nto receive their share of the prollts ol\nthe municipal epvernment tor the past\nquarter. Strange u it may seem the\npeople of this town fully expect such a\nstate of affairs to came ahout within\nthe next ten yean. Every stranger who\ndrop* off here Is at once made acouaint-\ned with the town's method of doing business. He may not be Interested but\nthat does not matter, he la obliged to\natop and listen before making headway\nIn any other direction. Every resident\nof the town carries around a copy of\nthe lut municipal report and knows to\na cent the prollts derived from the\nwaterworks, street railway; electric\nlight or telephone planta. Incidentally\nhe will tell you that the rival town of\nPort William, four miles away, Is helping to pay Port Arthur's taxes because\nthe atreet railway owned by Port Arthur\nruns through the two towns and every\ntime a Fort William resident pays his\n5 cent fare he reduces Port Arthur's\ntaxes by an Infinitesimal mite: No one\nner lands In.this town without being\nInformed ot this fact before he has'been\nhere ton minutes. Every ratepayer, tells\nlt on every possible occasion whenever he can get anyone to listen. The\nBell Telephone oompany charged tit per\nyear (or all telephones, but under municipal ownership the price was reduced\nto **4 for business phones and residences were charged 112 per annum, and\neven at these greatly reduced prices the\nmunicipal plant tor the last year showed a net profit of $2301 after paying run**\nnlng ejpences and Interest on the bonds.\nPor the same period the electric light\nplant cleared a net profit of \"111,000 and\nthe street railway system cleared a similar amount The most conspicuous clt-\nIsen in town Is a member of the railway\nand electric commission. He receives\nno pay but the position la eagerly sought\nafter. This commission consists of three\nmembers, one being elected each year\nwhen the third year member retires.\nThe controlling ofllclals serving without pay uve all the salaries which\nwould go to cat up the profit\" of municipal ownership and this Is doubtless\none of the principal reasons for Its success. One half of the taxes of Port\nArthur are paid by the revenues derived\nfrom the waterworks, lighting plant,\nstreet railway and telephone system.\nThe total Investment of the municipality\nwu flitm and last year the total\nIncome amounted to (36,000 aad ln a\nvery short time these enterprises wlll\nhave paid tor themselves.\n.TWHIOTr MKN KIIJ.KD\nDousia-, Aria., Nov, 1S-A report r*ach.d\nher. that 10 men' wm klll-d at neon today by an explosion In a .ten. aaatty,\nnine miles from tbl. city.\nFall Coart Sotfilit Appeal of PlaiiUfli U\ntHAII-rwdUDiNtitWtrtitlMk\nEiHli of Blwt Flsnrc\n(Special to The Dally News)\nVancouver, Nov. 15.\u2014Before the full\ncourt today, composed of Irving, Martin\nand Morrison, J.J., the judgment of chief\nJustice Hunter in the celebrated mining\ncase of the Star Mining A Milling company vs. the Byron N. White Mining\noompany, wu reversed with costs, In so\nfar as the chlet Justice refused to allow\nthe plaintiffs to do more experimental\nwork., The full court directs that tne\nfurther work asked for by the plaintiffs\nbe done and the matter referred back to\nthe chief Justice who tried the case and\ndismissed the plaintiffs' action with\ncosts. The case hu been argued for Hie\npast four days, K. P. Davis, K.C, and\n8. S. Taylor, K.C, .appearing for the\nappellants, the Star M. A M. Co., and\nB. V. Bodwell, K.C, aod R. S. I-ennte,\nfor the defendants, the Byron N. White\nOo. Mr. Bodwell concluded a lengthy\nargument luting three days, this afternoon, and the full court theu gave their\ndecision u above without.,* \"Uur upon\nM. Taylor, Mr. Davis ha>-> -oned\nthe argument in favor of the *.      ...\nthis great legal battle between two\nbig silver-lead Slocan mining compan-\nnea, with the Star M. & M. Co. headed\nby J. M. Harris u plaintiffs, and Ihe\nByron N. White Co., .with Byron N.\nWhite of Spokane, as president and chief\nstockholder, u defendants, commenced\nlive-years ago, on July SO last, the writ\nbeing Issued on July 30, 1901. The\nplaintiffs claimed the right to follow\ntheir lead, the apex of which they claimed |*ras upon their own ground, into adjacent territory under the old law.\nAfter a long delay the case finally\ncame to trial here before ohlef Justice\nHunter without a jury.\nThe main trial occupied 21 days In the\nhearing, aud in addition the chief justice\ntwice viewed the mine workings personally, and later, in December lut, the argument wu heard at the coast. Previous to the trial a certain amount of\nexploratory work wu done under the\ndirection of the court, but the plaintiffs\nwanted more work done. Previous to\nthe argument on the main case at the\ncoast a formal application made by the\nplaintiffs for more exploratory work,\nwu refused by the chief Justice who\nthen heard the main argument and found\nagainst the contention of the plaintiffs,\ndismissing the action with costs. The\norder based on the judgment refusing to.\nallow more work to be done and dismissing the action with costs wu perfected In February, whereupon the\nplaintiffs launched an appeal against\nboth findings In March. There being no\nquorum ot the full court in May, Martin, J., being absent In England, the appeal could not then be heard, but came\nUP on Monday last and wu concluded\nyesterday with the result above given.\nThe defendants taxed their costs of\naction before the local registrar hem for\nover 118,000. Both Parties apealed from\nthe taxation but these appeals were ordered to stand over pending the main\nappeal to tbe full court just disposed of.\nThe defendants then applied for security for costs of action and tor addition\nsecurity for costs of appeal over, and\nabove the 1200 given, but these appeals\nwere not allowed. The defendants then\nappealed to the full oourt from the order refusing security for costs, but were\ndenied by the full court lut week.\nWhether the defendants will now appeal against the judgment of the full\ncourt given yesterday to the lords of the\nprivy council remains to be seen, but lt\nIs more than probable that this will be\nthe next step In this famous long drawn\nout suit At the moment Mr, Harris ln\non top and the burden of an appeal to\nthe privy council is thrown oa Mr,\nWhite.\nThe now work uked for by the plaintiffs and now directed to be done by the\nfull. court ls the extension north and\naouth of what Is known u the \"Black\nFissure,\" at the two points where the\nplaintiffs claim It cuts off tbe defendants' lead. If this work ls done, then\nthe evidence of what Is disclosed wlll be\nlaid before the ohlef Justice, who wlll\npresumably ascertain If his previously\ngiven decision Is affected or not.\nraNirolTTHEOAv\nReV- J- C, Herdman ot Calgnry Id a\nguest at the Queen's.\nDr. A. Goodman Levy haa opened an\noffice In the Tramway block, Baiter atreet.\np. Burn* and Co.. yesterday received a\ncarload of fowl for the Christmas trade.\nMra. Sturgeon wlll raffle a handsome p\u00bb-\now In aid of the into to be held next week,\nWednesday, Nov. % by the -CathoUo\nLadles' Aid.    The  pillow  la  of delicate\nsalmon pink silk, with point laoe top In\nprincess Louise design, enclosing an embroidered center of. bolting silk.\nBy speolal request -made laat night of\nthe management of the Nelson-Bruce company, the play for Saturday's matinee haa\nbeen changed from \"The Soldier of Fortune\"  to \"The Virginian.\"\nProvincial constable Isaac A. Dlnsmore\nof Orand Forks,, brought over -lumen A.\nDole of Greenwood, laat night and lodged\nhim with warden Lemon, Ae announced\nIn another column, Date has been committed on the charge of wilfully murdering Goderau and Celle at Carmi, on the\nHth of October. The trial will come on for\nhearing at the assises In May. The constable said that Dale- had almost recovered from his wounds and came along to\nNelson quietly.\nDr. K. C. .Arthur yesterday received a\nletter from Dr. Pagan asking him to call\na special public meeting for thla evening\nto discuss the ant I-tuberculosis question.\nThis meeting will be held at 8 o'clock in\nthe court house. It le specially requested\nthat the members of the city council and\nof the local anti-tuberculosis society, as\nwell as every business and pr-ofes-iloQal\nman Intereted tn the steps now being token\nto flght the ravages of the disease in British Columbia, attend; thla meeting,    ,\nT ihe' through mall for this city from the\neast and from the ooast,: which comes via\nSpokane, was dumped off at Northport last\nnight, when by the exercise of a little\nthought fulness it could, have been sent\naround by Rossland ae on farmer occasions. If the-Great Northern railway company cannot maintain sufllcl-mt stock to\nrun tbe line properly between thla city\nand Northport, mid the- whole truffle Is\nheld up by a Hmall mudslide at Troup\njunction, they might at least see that the\nmall Is sent on with the least delay possible\nThere was an unusuuly good uttemlahce\nat the monthly meeting of tbe liberal association last evening In the board of trade\nrooma, President A. B. Docksteader occupied the chair, while some routine business was transacted and then made way\nfor Dr. fit. C. Arthur, who announced a\ndebate on the Hindu Immigration question.\nAt this latter affair quite n humtfer. of\noutsiders were present and an animated\ndiscussion took place. Finally tbe following resolution was unanimously adopted:\nResolved, that we endorse the action of\nthe) dominion government \u2022\u25a0\u25a0* taking,measures to represent to the Indian government\nthrough tho Imperial authorities,,that the\nImmigration of Hindus into Canada should\nbe prevented and that British immigration\nlnt<f Canada, and especially Into the province of British Columbia, should be encouraged In every way possible,\nA; B. Cowan, vice-president of Cowan\nand Co,, Ltd,, of Gait, Ont., the largest\nexcjualve manufacturers of wood making\nraaohlnory In Canada, la In the city on\na brief visit, stopping at the Hume. Mr.\nCowan, has just been praotlcally across the\ndominion, having recently visited Newfoundland and the maritime provinces and\nsubsequently Manitoba, Alberta and Saskatchewan. He wlll spend a day or so\nhere and then go on to the coast, stopping\noff 'at several intervening points, \"The\nwhole country la in a very prosperous condition,\" aald Mr. Cowan yesterday. \"Every\nsection of the dominion that I have just\nvisited shows the same happy siaite of affairs. I have just learned, with some surprise, of the fruit growing outlook hero.\nIt seems to me that the possibilities are\nlimitless.\"\nBorn, at Williams' siding, on Nov. lti, to\nthe wife of William Brown, a daughter.\nBRAKEMAN WAS BUMED\nMISINTRBPRKTATION    OF    RULES\nCAUSBD 0. P. R. WRECK.\nENOINEER   OF   SBCOND   SECTION\n8AW (TO SIQJiAL.TO STOP\n, (Special to Th. Dally News)\nKamloops, Nov. 1*>.---The Inquest on\nRowe, the victim pf lhe C. P. R. train\ndisaster at Tranquille, was completed\nlast night, the verdict being: \"Death\nfrom Injuries, the result of an accident\ncaused by the misinterpretation ot rules\nby the rear end brakeman on the Arst\nseotlon of No. 98.\"\nThe evidence showed that the train\napproached the aiding at a twenty-mile\ngait, the engineer claiming the rules\ngave him the right-of-way to a distant\nswitch unless signalled to stop. He says\nhe saw.no signal, The brakeman claimed that the rules required the second\nsection to alow up at all sidings till\ntrain No. >7 crossed, claiming that' the\ndistance from which he signalled to stop\nwould have been sufficient had this rule\nbeen observed. He admitted tbat he\nplaced no torpedoes ss the rule reqlras.\nPapers tound on Rowe, produced last\nnight, show thai he was ln the 3rd Scots\nQuanta, discharged October 4, 1904, with\ntwo medals and clasps, for service in\nSouth Africa, Cape Colony and Transvaal. Ws full name wu John Archibald Rowe, and his address 198 St. Antolne St, Montreal.\n8BVW YEARS AT KINGSTON\nPort Arthur, Ont., Nov. 15,-rTwo\nFinlandera, Emmanuel Janata ,.and\nWaldamere Jensen, were sentenced today to serve seven years each Jn the\nKingston penitentiary, by Judge\nat the district court Their\nthat of highway robbery with .\nupon Robert Mooney, a resident off-art\nWilliam, which occurred about two\nmonths ago. Mooney was wa-flali on\nthe Fort William road hy tbrOTIbn,\none of whom escaped, They, severely\npummelled bla aad robbed him of $60\nand also threatened Ms life.\nRETURNING\nTO WORK\nMiners Now Flocking Back\nto Michel and Coal\nCreek Camps\nm-tcl UrtB Wi'Id Nut T-l-ntt tttr-\n\u25a0ui's Arblltirj Rule nd Oeclarcd for\nStrict ObunrMtt oi Cntncts\n(Speclol to Th. Dally News)\nFernie, Nov. 15,-An Increasingly\nlarge number of miners are applying for\nwork at all the mines, the afternoon\ntrain to Coal Creek carrying 188 men\nseeking work, making a total of 326 now\non the books at that camp, while at\nMichel over 300 are already working\nand the balance of the old employees\nhave made application for their old\nplaces.\nEvery train brings ln its quota of returning miners, who will be given work\nas soon aa possible. Preliminary work\nof oleanlng up Is being rushed with all\nspeed and lt ls confidently expected by\nthe company that a satisfactory tonnage will soon be on the cars for shipment\nNo wire has yet been received from\npresident Mitchell though one Is expected hourly.\nTonight a meeting of Fernle local was\nto be held to discuss the situation, but\nas there has been suoh a defection\nfrom the ranks of those who have preferred to obey the order of Sherman instead of that of Burke, It is not thought\nthat anything of Importance will result.\n'Special to The Dolly News) I\nMichel, Nov. 16.\u2014At an enthusiastic\nand well attended meeting Wednesday\nmorning Michel Miners' union repudiated the authority of dlstrlot president\nSherman. By a vote of 98 in favor of\nstarting work at once against 41 dissenting votes, Michel union put itself on\nrecord against the one man rule of Mr.\nSherman and to stand by the agreement entered into by Mr. Burke and\nMr; Lindsey on Monday night Seventy\nseven men went to work Wednesday\nmorning and over two hundred applied\nfor work during the day. As soon as\nthe different mines here can be put In\nworking shape all the men will be put\nto Work aud the men that left camp at\nthe beginning of the strike to find work\nelsewhere are returning. All incoming\ntrains are loaded* for Michel as they\nwere outgoing seven weeks ago.\nThe local union has disbursed nearly\n14000 In reliet funds during the strike,\na like sum yet remaining ln the treasury. The work of the committees In\ncharge can only be commended. Everything was handled In a strict, businesslike way. No kicks have been registered\nat any time. Michel union may well be\nproud to have amongst Its leading members suoh men as Andy McLeod, Jack\nLaurenson, J. L. Carter, J. Wyllc, John\nGorton and others, to whose Influence Is\ndue tne excellent condition ot the nuances and their conservative counsels\nhave no doubt been influential In the\nexcellent behavior of the men throughout the strike.\nFLOODS IN WASHINGTON\nRAILROADS   HAVE   BEEN   BADLY\nDISORGANIZED.\nBRIDGES     WASHED     OUT     AND\nWAGON ROADS IMPASSABLE\nPortland, Ore., Nov. 16.\u2014\"\"ortland tonight Is cut oft by floods from Seattle,\nTacoma, Bel'lngham, Spokane and every\npoint north and east of Kelso, Wash,\nThe rainstorm that swept over the\nnorthwest Paclllc coast last night has\ncreated a oondltlon under which railroads are at a standstill or greatly Interrupted. Flooded rivers have washed\nout bridges and wagon roads are Impassable. The only trains that entered\nPortland today were from the south.\nTrains from the north are stalled in\nand about Seattle and Tacoma and trains\nfrom the east over the Oregon Railroad\nA Navigation tracks, are stalled by a\nlandslide at Bonneville and passengers\nwill be brought here by boat\nA despatch from Kelso, Wash., says\na raging torrent Is rushing through the\nlowlands ln that vicinity carrying away\nthousands of dollars worth of property.\nThe CowllU river, which began to rise\nrapidly yesterday, Jumped to 20 feet\nabove the low water mark this morning\nand the big IKK) toot drawbridge that\nspans the stream between KelBO and\nCatlln, unable to withstand the terrific\nstrain, broke from its fastenings early\ntoday. Nine steamers have lett Portland for tbe Cowlits river to recover\nbooms or saw logs that broke loose near\nthe headwaters of the river.\n' The Willamette river In Oregon, at\npoints above Portland rose rapidly yesterday and today.\nN T. C. AGAIN CONVICTED\nNew York, Nov. lS-The grand Jury this\nafternoon found  th. N.w York Central\nrailway company guilty of (ranting rebates\namounting to l*tUW to tb. American Sugar I\nRefining company.  It wa. announced that |\nth. trial of th. American Sugar Re*.n1ng\ncompany on a onarge of accepting the.\nrebates paid by. the New York.' Central\nwould  be  commenced  tomorrow.\n**********4*\u00a5*************,\nSTILL ON DOUBTFUL ST.\n(Speolal to The Dally Newa)\nVlotorla, Nov. 16.\u2014The Times\ntonight made the announcement\nthat the election date-had been\ndecided upon and that the proclamation dissolving the house\nwas momentarily expected.\nPremier McBride, interviewed\nby the Colonist, denied the truth\nof this statement He did not\ndeny, however, that he had asked,\nor was about to ask, for a dissolution.   He evaded that point\nKamloops, Nov. 16.\u2014Finance\nminister Tatlow was at Ashcroft\nyesterday to take to Victoria his\ndaughter, who has been a guest\nof Judge Cornwall for the past\nmonth. He stated that McBride\nhad decided there should be no\nelections until after the holidays\nsnd perhaps not then.\nSTRANGERS\nREMAINED\nMotion to Clear House o\/\nCommons for Unsavory\nDebate Quashed\nBeck-iill Report tn Chinese Pnctlc** ia\nSouth African Coapoon-ls Sobfcct of\nDbciuslon In Bath Hook*\nAMBASSADOR INSULTED\nBRAZIL'S .-.K^nESEiNTATIVia RBSBNTS\nTREATMENT Aft NEW YORK\nABKKD      IMPERTINENT     QUESTIONS\nBY   IMMIGRATION OPFIOAL3\nNew York, Nov. l^Whether or not an\n\u25a0imba.--sa-.tor of a friendly nation on arriving ut Now York to take up hla duties\nIn Washington, must be compelled lo inform the Immigration Inspectors whether\nhe haa ever been In prison or in an alms-\nhouf-u, or supported by charity or whether\nhe la a polygamlst or an anarchist, muy\nbe referred to the state department at\nWashington as the result of the refusal\ntoday of Jaot-uln Nabuco, Brailllan ambassador, to answer the questions when he\narrived here today from [Liverpool, The\nImmigration law requires that all arriving\nat the port shall answer these and other\nquestions.\nConcerning the incident Mr. Nabuco said:\n\"I answered every question which I believed would add to the statistical government information, but when it comes\nto asking questions regarding my beliefs\nand opinions, lt la different, I am not a\nvisitor to this country ln the Implied sense\nof the word. I am here as a representative of another power and as such I am\nto a certain extent tbe guest of this nation. This Is the ground I take and for\nthis reason alono I refused to answer certain questions.\"\nWashington, Nov. If-\u2014Upon being unofficially Informed of the circumstances attending the landing in New York of the\nBrazilian ambassador, Senor Nabuco,\nbrought about by his refusal to answer\ncertain questions. United States secretary\nof state Root promptly communicated with\nthe department of commerce and labor and\nrequested that the necessary instructions\nbe telegraphed to the collector at New\nYork Immediaely to extend the courtesies\nof the port to the ambassador and his secretary. It ls possible an apology also will\nbo offered to the ambassador and a severe\nadmonition given to the immigration officials responsible for the Indignities.\nROOSEVELT AT PANAMA\nPRESIDENT  TAKES   ORUISE   ABOUT\nPANAMA BAY\nSOME     OPINIONS\nNEWSPAPER -MEN\nColon; Nov. 16-The president landed here\nhalf an hour earlier than waB expected\nand. there were no representatives of the\ngovernment of Panama or'.the Cann) company present to receive him. Chief of\npolice Shan ton, with a force of 72 picked!\nmen belonging to tha Zone police, waa at\nthe pier and the prealdent immediately\nInspected the force and highly complimented shun ton on their appearance. Soon\nafter this Messrs. Shont*. and Stevens,\nwith their wives arrived, and word of the\narrival of the president was sent to president Amador's party, who were at breakfast. President Amador and hla suite hurried to meet president Roosevelt and found\nhim on the platform of hia railwuy car.\nMr. Roosevelt very cordially received president Amador and the ladies of his party,\nand personally helped the latter to enter\nthe train. At 8 a.m. sharp lhe train, which\nconsisted of four cars handsomely decorated, left Colon for Panama. The tlrst\nstop was at Gatun, where the school\nchildren were paraded, speeches of welcome delivered and patriotic songs sung,\nThe sume program wus repeated at Bo-\nhlo and all tho stations, president Roosevelt thanking all the welcoming delegations.\nPanama, Nov. ID\u2014The train, bringing the\npresidential party from Colon, Arrived in\nfront of the Tlvoll hotel at Ancon at 10:99\na.m. There president Amador and party\nalighted and president Roosevelt and his\nparty were conducted to Laboca, at the\nPacitic entrance of the canal, where the\nsteamer Bolivar was in waiting to take\nthe president on a cruise about Panama\nbay. Afterwarls the party returned to\nLaboca. All ships were decorated With\ntlnga when prealdent Roosevelt's steamer\npassed and saluted, -blowing their whistles\nwhile the crews or tho seven American\nvessels cheered the president frantically.\nSpeaking to newspaper men the prealdent said he felt like tbe commander.of a\ngreat nnd successful army.\nThough It rallied from 10 a.m., the weath-.\ner did not Interfere wtth the cruise.   -\nLondon, Nov. 16.\u2014Both houses of parliament tonight debated the unpleasant\nsubject arising; from the rectn unauthorized publication of the contents of the \u25a0\n\"Bucknill\" report which gives the results of the inquiry Into the tondlttons\nof Chinese labor In South Africa aiiu\nwhich reveals the systematic practice ot\nunnatural vices In the Chinese com- ;\npounds there.\nNotice of the debate was given todny\nby R. C. Lehman, liberal, who, In the\nhouse of commons, obtained leave to\nmove the adjournment of the house to\ndiscuss the,\n\"Prevalance of gross immorality ln\nthe Chinese compounds In the Trans-\nvail as disclosed by the 'Bucknill' report\nand the Imperative necessity for the\ngovernment to take Immediate steps to\natop this state of affairs, especially by\na more rapid and systematic repatriation\nof the Chinese.\"\nThe government has hitherto declined\nto publish this report on the ground\nthat it was confidential. Among the\nradicals the hope seemingly prevails\nthat this scandal may be used In justification of the abolition of Chinese labor. .\nThe motion that all strangers should\nwithdraw having been rejected by 326\nvotes to 26, Mr. Lehman, before a crowded house, moved the adjournment. In\na studiously moderate speech he declared the country was in the presence\nof a great moral tilt-aster and asked the \"^-^j\ngovernment for information on specific\npoints and what It Intended to do In the\nmatter.\nWinston Spencer Churchill replied on\nbehalf of the government. He said it .\nhad been decided not to publish the\n\"Bucknill\" report because It was unprintable and because the evidence upon\nwhich lt was based had been obtained\nconfidentially. It was undoubtedly true,\nMr. Churchill said, that such vices existed In many compounds, but the opponents of Chinese labor always recognized that such a state of affairs was\nalmost Inevitable and the responsibility\nrested largely, in the flrst place, with\nAlfred Lyttleton, until lately colonial\nminister. It was unlikely, however, as\nalleged, that these practices amounted\nto an open public scandal or were tolerated by the police or mine managers.\nTheae evils had long been foreseen\u2014\nthen why this belated Intervention on\nthe part of the bishops and archbishops,\nasked Mr. Churchill. The revelations of\nthe \"Bucknill\" report, although they did\nnot bear out the statements alleged,\nnevertheless disclosed a condition of affairs sufficiently unhealthy and unnatural to seal the fate of Chinese tabor.\nIt was a matter, however, which should\nhe left to South Africa which was on the\neve of responsible government.\nMr. Lyttleton then declared that no\nshred ot evidence of this horrible and\nmonstrous system of vice had reached\nhim while la the colonial office. Other\nmembers spoke on the subject and then\npremier- Campbell-Bannerman said the\ngovernment had every reason to believe\nthe evil would be diminished If not altogether eradicated.\n\u2022 The motion was eventually talked out.\nThe subject was raised in the houae ot\nlords by the archbishop of Canterbury,\nwho ashed If the government had. any\nInformation thereon.\n- Lord Elgin, the colonial, secretary,\nsaid the evidence of the \"Bucknill\" report went to show that the practices\nprevail In nearly all the compounds and\nin his opinion strengthens the view that\nthe permanent adoption of a system of\nChinese labor was Impossible. The\ngrosser allegations, however, were not\nsubstantiated by the report.\nLord Lansdowne, foreign secretary In\nthe late ministry, defending the late\ngovernment, said the opposition would\ngo as far as possible to assist the government In stamping out the evils. The *\nsubject was then dropped.\nSTANDARD OIL. STOCK DROPS\nNew Tork, Nov. 15\u2014Afer opening up several points, Standard Oil stock dropped\nthree pc-inta to, 1574, a new record for several yeara. Sales were fairly henvy, beln*r\nabout 150 shares. All transactions In this\nstook are fractional and it Is somo years\nsince as many as 100 shares were sold m\na single lot. The decline was without offset on the general market.\n'FRISCO'S MAYOR INDICTED\nSan Frnnclsco, Nov. 15-The grand Jury\ntoday' returned five Indictments against\nmayor k. Schmltz and Abraham Ruef, on\ncharges of extortion. On each charge tha\nball waa fixed at $10,000 and the bond at\ntseoo.\nNEGRO  MURDERER SHOT\nAshevlllo     N.C.,   Nov.   1&-W.   Harris,\nthe negro who killed two Ashevlile policemen' and three negroes Tuesday night, %a#\nshot-by a posse of men near Fletcher to**\n THS DAiXT raWB, OTttSOS, B, 0., FBI OAT, N0VBUBBB IS, tBOS\na*9i\nHudson's Bay Stores\nWe Now Offer Several Carloads of\nFLOUR AND FEED\nthtt Qolo    --0-*8 -n Addition 58 A\nPm        OCllv     Ailjololuf new City Park sod (in Tramway Us..\nThese Are Choice Building Lots\nThs sawmill about lo be ore-ted at tbe Old Park\u2014and other business J>ro-\nposltlons now under construction make these lots a sate Investment.   '\nPrices from (1160.00 to 1200.00 per lot.\nTerms\u2014One-third casb, balance lu 0 anil 12 months.\n\u2022URSJWJ!    a****1**\nT. G. PROCTER\nWe quote :\u2014\nBRAN, per 100 lbs  I1\nSHORTS, per 100 lbs. *1\nPASTRY PliOUR, per 49 lb. sack .....|1\nOATS, elevator cleaned, last year's crop, and of the very choicest\nquality, per 100 lbs..... \u2022\u2022\u2022\u25a0**\nHARLiEY, per WO lbs .-. It\nWHEAT, of tbe best Quality, per 100 lbs.  |l\nSPBCMI. PRICES ON ALL FOR TON LOTB.\nTIMOTHY HAY, none better ever offered, per 100 lbs JI\nPer Ton      >\u2022*\"\u2022\nk Word About Our Bran and Shorts\nThese come (rom a small mill whero thoy DO NOT have all the\nlatest patents to take out the very last particle ol flour, anil to leave\nnothing bnt the woodly fibre of the shell, which Is ALRIGHT FOB\nTHB MII.IjBR but ALL. WRONQ FOR THB BUYER of Bran and\nShort*.\nEXAMINE OURS, It contains twice as muoh flour as the ordinary article In the market.\nAgent Nelson City Land and Investment Co.\nSOME WORKS\nMININO and\nMECHANICS\nI\n*\ni\n1\ni\n*\nt\ni\n1\n\u00a7\nU*-w*****h*hha****t.t**t** w G THOMSON feefand Stafe\nImperial Bank of Canada\nBEAD OFFICE:  TORONTO^\nOAWtJ* i.1\nCaPITAL PAID Vt\t\nII B. -TUUm, MtM\nwe have added to\nour stock of technical and scientific\nBOOKS\nEdward'* Examination Questions and\nAnswers for Engineer!* and Klremon\nstationary and  Murine   , 94.99\nW-iiatuin'H  Murine   Engineer-*'  Uutde.. 4.1ia\nLocomotlvo Catechism, Orlm-thaw 2,90\nFoster Beloirlcal Knj*-., poeketbook.... S.W\nTho Field I-towneer, Shank  2.H\nPractical Mathematics, Knott & Mackay tili -\nSaw Filing, Grlmshaw  M*\nKidder'a Architect-*.' nnd Builders' poc-\nketbook     5.W\nPrbspectlnR for nold and (diver, Lukes 1.6*.\nAnderaon'B  Prospectors'  Handbook.... l.*\nMine    Examiners'    and    Prospectors*\nCompanion 3.39\nf\nmm. BOBT.  l-m-t,  ytam-e*tea-mt\nBruMhM ls British Colombia\nuutowHiAo, ciuM**-too**,aau>irr*, **bumn, Bl\nTROUT 1\u2014tMt VANCOUVBR. VICTORIA.\nSAVINGS DEPARTMENT\nDsp-dls i-ostTM   iad Interest allow-d at current rata, tram gate al\n\u00ab  ila\u00ab aoeou-t aad ore*-*-* half-m-lr*\nNelson Branch\n). M. Lay, Manager\nThe Canadian Bank of\nCommerce\niMltal Paid up, t10,000,N0.\nInI,\n\u2022 \u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022tot1\n*amt^_rmwW\/fwww\nBEAD OFFICE: TORONTO.\n* \u25a0* WA-JODR, Ou.nl Valla--*. ALBX. LAIRD, Asst O-e'l\nBBANGBK8 TBB0UOB0UT OA5ADA AND Of\nthi amnio stubs ano bnoland\nBANKING \u00a37 MAIL\nBailness mar be transacted by mall with any brunch of the tank. Aooounta may\nbt opened and deposits (bade or withdrawn by matt. Every attention Is paid to\nout-of-town accounuta.\nJ L. BTJCBAN, Manager,        NSLSON BRANCH.\nWE WILL BUY\nB000   Alberta Coal  U\n(Par value $1.00.)\n1000  International Coal  04\n1000  Diamond Val.  II'\n100  Dominion Copper  |5,50\n6000  Denora Mines  io\nWOO   Willie Bear         04\nOHo paid)\nB. B. MIGHTON & CO.\nion\nNBL80N, a O.\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPublish.*, at Nelwn Every Hor-lnf *****\ne.pt Monday, by\nF. 1. UBANB >\nSUBSCRIPTION RATS*\nr-i,y, per ytar. \u2022\u25a0\"\"\nDally, per month  ,...**\n' Ail subscription. payaU. ta advaaoa.\nTHB PRICE OK 8ILYKR\nA few days ago Tbe Dally Newa pub-\nUsbed a telegraphic summary of an\nInterview with Qeorge W. Roberts, director of tbe United States mints, upon\nthe occasion of his official visit to Denver, Colorado. He was then reported as\nhaving predicted that the price of silver would steadily and naturally advance until a high mark, possibly near\nM. wlll be reached.\nDenver papers to hand contain lengthy\nicports of this interview, Mr. Roberts-\nView being regarded with all the weight\ndue to his position as director of tbe\nmints and a- close student ot the money\nmarket What he hail to say had, naturally, special reference to conditions In\nColorado, but In a general way his remarks would be appllct le to the Slocan. \u201e\nMr. Roberts expressed the opinion\nthat tbere would be a steady price of\n,G for silver and he estimated tbat this\nprice wlll open 100 new mines tn Colorado In t y-ar. Millions ot ounces of\nmetal In m dl.n-tttie o: a mm uototKh-\ned wilt again be mined, tbe same as 15\nyears ago. Increase the low' standard of\nproduction of 1903, less than 20,000,000\nounces, but 28 per cent aud the Increase\nto Colorado In a single year means\n\u00bb10,000.000.\n;The\u00bbe dgure* look large,\" director\nRoberta said, \"aud they are large. Tbey\nmean everything to Ibis western country, but they are not beyond probabilities.\"\nMr. Roberts went on to say: \"Since\nwe began buying silver for tbe United\nStates mints, tbe llrst of August, the\nprice has soared from 66 to 71 and bei-\n- ter. We paid almost 72 for our last purohase last Monday. But In these three\nmonths we have purchased a little less\nthan 6,000,000 ounces of silver.\n\"Five million ounces has crowded up\ntile market That is not a drop in the\nbucket India will this year break all\nrecords for silver purchasing, and will\ntake over 100,000,000 ounces. The full\neffect of tbls enormous demand will not\nreach tbe market for another year, due\nto the fact that India is gaining much\nof ber silver from tbe old Mexico pesos,\nwhich bave been discarded and are being\nsold to India for bullion. The cash In\nthis transaction Is coming back Into\nAmerica for gold to place the Mexican\ncirculation on a gold basis.\n\"Another year and the full force of\nthe Indian demand will be upon the\nmarket In Increased force. Then, China\nla taking more silver every year. It Is\na matter of but A few yeara until tb?\ndevelopment of the Interior ot Chins\nwlll demand an enormous Increase in\ntheir silver coinage, which is now\nUsing three mints. Add tb all this the\nenormous Increase In tbe past Ave years\nln the demand for silver for use In the\narts\u2014due lo Increased prosperity\u2014and\nyou understand why ,1 say tbat silver Is\ngibing up, and going up to stay.\"\nAsked If he thought It advisable for\nowners of low grade properties to re\nsume operations this yenr, Mr. Roberta\nreplied:\n\"It seems very cleor to me that be;\ntore the year ls ended the price wlll have*\nadvanced several points. The spring\nmay see 76 cents offered for silver. I\nam Buro that there Is very much ore In\nthis state that wlll not mine at a profit\nunder 70 cents that will make big money\nat 75 cents.\n\"Why, In the early '90s 84 or 85 cents\ntempted miners to work the very low\ngrade ore. Since then the cost of mining\nand smelting has been reduced almost\nCO |,ir cent. All of thes-i nJnes will be\nreopened soon.\"\nThese prognostications of so exper*,\nlenced an observer as the director of\nthe United States mints will doubtless\nhave their effect upon Slocau mine owners and tbe renewed activity now prevalent should be greatly stimulated.\nEDITORIAL NOTES.\nAn Investigation is tn progress at Toronto inlo the cost of text books supplied to public school pupils. The sworn\ntestimony of some of the publishers goes\nto show thot 50 per cent profit Is made\non the production of tbese books and\nwhen the retailers' profit ls added tt is\nobvious that parents have to pay an excessively heavy price for them. There\nhas been some agitation In this province\nlooking to the government publication\nof text books and in vlow of the disclosures at Toronto Uie possibility of\nthe government doing Ui|s work and\nsupplying the books at a great* reduction under present prices appears lo be\npracticable. The text books sold in this\nprovince to public school children are\npublished by the Toronto llrnis that appear to have a monopoly of tbe business\nIn Ontario. It would be well for minister ot education Fulton to look Into this\nmatter.\nIn discussing proposed amendments\nto the Election law at the coming session of the dominion parliament, with a\nview to curbing corruption, the Toronto\nOlobe draws attention to a suggestion\nmade by Judge Wallace, of Halifax. The\nHalifax Judge's point Is to secure the\nbetter enforcement of tbe law against\ncorrupt practices and he proposes the\nappointment ot a prosecuting official,\nwhose functions he thus describes:\n\"There shoulvd be established for tb- express purpose of supervising the'enforcement of such a law a department\nwith a special staff of officials, and,\nmost Important of all, directed not by a\ngovernment or any of Its ministers, but\nby a resolute and Independent chief or\n'General Superintendent of Elections,'\nwho could not be removed from office\nexcept by a two-thirds vote of the bouse\not commons, and whose energy and determination In enforcing the law would\nsoon make him a terror to the whole\nchain of currouptlonlsts\u2014not only to tbe\nman at tbe end of the chain who pays\nout the bribe money or distributes the\nliquor to the voter, but to the 'respectable' committee which hands It over to\nsuch men and tbe other 'respectable'\ncommittee which collects it, and also\nthose others who may be at the beginning of the chain\u2014the corporations,\nbonus-hunters, and others whose liberal\ncontributions sometimes go beyond proper limits and should In any event be\ndisclosed to the public.\" The Idea Ib a\ngood one and we should welcome the\nappointment of a man like police magistrate Dennlson of Toronto, who ls con-\ndueling the present enquiry Into the\nLondon bribery cases, lo the offlc-.\nThe suggestions ot our correspondent,\n\"C.M.W.\" should be taken to heart by.\nthose directly interested in the proposed\nchanges In the tariff affecting tbe sine\nIndustry. Some greater show of concern'ln what Is asked ror than the formal forwarding of a petition iscertain*\n___\nFOR SALE\nON EASY\nTERMS\nTwo corner lots and\nsix roomed house, almost completed, $125\nwill finish it complete. Terms, $21)0\ncash and the balance,\n$400, on easy terms.\nTOYE & CO.\nFRUIT LAND,. REAL C8TATE\nNELSON, B. 6.\nly desirable and, moreover as pointed\nout by \"C. M. W.,\" thero should be\nsomeone at hand to advise ministers\nupon the numerous technical points\nthat are sure to arise.\nThe public meeting called for this\nevening ln the Interests of the antl-tnb-\nerculosls propaganda should be largely attended. Practical steps have been\ntaken on the coast to establish a sana-\ntarlum and ln other ways to combat the\ndreaded scourge. The people of Nelson\nare concerned in this movement and\nshould show tbeir appreciation of what\nIs being done by attending the special\nmeeting called for 8 o'clock, this evening at the court house.\nNEW SCHEDULE.\nC. P. R. Winter Time Table ln Force on\nAnd After Sunday Next.\nOn and after Sunday next the C. P. R.\nwinter schedule will come In force and\nreaders of Tbe Dally News should note\nthe'changes carefully.\nFor tbe Boundary\u2014Leave Nelson at\n9 a.m., arriving here 9.10 p.m. dally,\nexcept Sunday.\nCoast and main line connection-\nLeave 7.80 a.m., arrive 7**16 p.m., via\nSlocan route dally\nRossland-Trall\u2014Leave 9 a.m. dally except Sunday, and 6.35 p.m. Arrive 11.35\n\u2022a.m. and 9.10 p.m. dally, except Sunday, On Sundays wHl arrive at 5.20 p.m.\nSlocan City\u2014Double service. In addition to the coast main line service above\nquoted, via Slocan; leave 1.15 p.m.,\n'arrive 1.40 p.m. There will be a dally\nservice In and out of Sandon.\nThe Boundary train leaving Nelson at\n9 a.m. wlll reach Orand Forks at 2.12\np.m., Greenwood, 3.36 p.m., and Midway 4.10 p.m. Will leave Midway for\nrun to this city at 2 p.m. reaching\nGreenwood 2.35 p.m. and Grand Forks\n3.65 p.m.\nThe Koounay Lake and Lardo services wlll remain unchanged for the\npresent\nZINC PROBLEM AT OTTAWA\nMine Owners and Others Interested\nShould Have Representative on Spot.\nEditor, The Dally News: Those Interested In zinc would be well advised If\nat tbls moment they arranged for special\nrepresentation at Ottawa.\nThat special providence that watches\nover children and drunken men may\npossibly be kind to them, but there Is\nmuch point tb the excellent adages that\nspeak ot help being extended to those\nfashionable\nOvercoats\nAt Cost\nThey say it's going to\nbe a mighty cold winter.\nThere will be no danger\nof your getting cold this\nwinter, if you take to\nwearing one of our\nswagger overcoats. We\nare closing this line out\nand it's a 'chance of a\nlife time to git a good\nthing cheap.\nfrom $10 to $18\nTaylor & McQuarrie\n****_\u00bb\nacute diBtrpBr.i prevailing; In northern China\nowl nt? to tin* famine. It Is estimated that\ntwelve million poop'\u25a0\u2022 are racing- starvation. - A imtlomil -.ubHcrlnttun la to be\na-tarted.\nMiiiard's Llqiment Cum Diphtheria\nCROUP\n. A rcllnble medicine and one that Bhould\nalwii*.- be kept tn the home Tor Immediate,\nii--.- Is Chamber!ttln's Cough Remedy. It\nwill prevent the attack If given as soon as\ntho ohtld becomes hoarse, or even after\nthc croupy cough appears. For sals by\nall   druggists  and dealera.\nForty Different Varieties\nfAIJVG'S\nCanned Meat! toChoos^roni\nship is the American  bIioo.\"    And tbey\nlinvo to hnve it; tha .buyer pays the duty,\ntoo,\nR.  Andrew and Co.,  Sole Agent*.\nfashionable Tailors\n.-\/\nC. C.  RICHARDS & CO.\nDcur Sirs\u2014A few ilnyH ago I was taken\nwith a severe pnln und contraction of ttie\"\ncords of my leg, and had to bo taken heme\nIn a rig. 1 could not sleep for pain nnd wns\nunable to put my foot to the lloor, A\nfriend told me of your MINARD'S LINIMENT, and one hour from the tlrst application I was able to walk, und the pain\nentirely disappeared.\nYou may use my name as'freely as you\nlike, as 1 consider It the best remedy 1\nhave ever used.\n.     CHRISTOPHER GERRY.\nIngersoll, Ont.\nwho help themselves.\nA very small expenditure (a few hundred dollars, a bribery and corruption\nfund is not at all necessary) wlll pay\nth* way of a zinc man to Ottawa and\nhis hotel expenses for the next three\nmonths, and there' are plenty of competent men who would regard the pleasure and honor of the mission a sufficient\ncompensation for the loss of time.\nIt is almost disrespectful to the Tariff\nCommission and to our parliamentary\nrepresentatives, to ask them to deal\nwith a proposition full of technicalities\nand. bound to provoke keen criticism,\nand from some quarters, strenuous resistance, and to leave them without a\ncontinually available medium of communication with those whom they are\ntrying to serve.\nThe owners of zinc mines and thc\npromoters of zinc treatment schemes\nBhould do this work without prompting\nfrom any one. But. they are not doing\nit, and probably will not wake up to its\nnecessity until too late; eo there remains\nonly the old expedient of passing the hat\nand collecting from the man on the\nstreet the needful funds. Perhaps the\nlong suffering board of trade of Nelson\nwill take the Initiative. Will president\nStarkey make a move?      C. M. W\\\nNelson, Nov. 15, 1906.\nMinard'i Liniment Cure* Diphtheria\nIN TIME OF PEACE\nIn the flrst montliu of the Russla-Japai\nwar we had a striking example of the ne\noesslty for preparation ond the early a*\nvantage of those who, so to speak, \"ha***.\nshingled their roofs In dry weather.\" Th*\nvlrtue of preparation has mnde history am\nliven to un our greatest men. The Indt\nvidua! as well as the nation should < b.\nprepared for any emergency. Are yoi\nprepared for a successful combat with lb-\nfirst cold you take? A cold can be cure.\nmore qulcky when treated as soon as \u2022\nhae been contracted and before It has bf\ncome settled In the system. Chamberlain \u2022\nCough Remedy Is famous for lis cure*\ni\u00bbf colds and It should be kept nt hurt-\nready for Instant une. For sale by a-\ndruggists  and dealers\nThrifty Buyers luy Tlp.r Shw\n-to*'\nat thr\nHIGH PRICK OF SIIjVBR\nWushlogton, Nov. Ui\u2014lt lias transpire*.\nthat the 100.000 ounces of sliver Jusi purchased by the United Stales governmen*\nfor subsidiary coinage has cost 71.58 centF\nan ounce. This Is the highest pilec paid foi\nBllver since the repeal of the Sherman law\nIn 1S93, when the low price was IT centi\nan ounce. The prrsent price represents ar\nadvance of S4.G8 cents nn ounce, which <\u25a0*\u25a0\nequivalent lo 53 per cent In 13 years.\nMinard'i Llqimamt Cum Colds, eto.\nFAMINE IN NORTHERN CHINA\nL-ondon, Nov. 16-Tom6rrow a ureal meet\nIng of the beads of all British missionary\nsocieties will be held in the Exeter hai\nfor the purpose nf considering what step*\nshould -be taken to relieve (lie ex-tremelj\nWe will sell\n2000 International Coal   .66\n1000 Rambler 32K\n2000Yale-Kootenay Ice   ,09A\n10 Great West Permanent Loan $125.00\nMcDERMID 4 McHARDY\nHELD RESrONSIDLE POR IT\nThis Charge Is Hurled at the Salter Hhoe\nby a Dealer\n\"You are responsible und you alone for\ntho Impoi'tuiltiii of American shoes into\nCi}iituia.\" Mr. Sister was surprised when\nthis charge was hurled at him ly an Indignant shoe man. He bad opposed tlie\nsupplication of .the other Canadian shoe\n\u25a0mnnuafcturers for an increase In the shoe\ntariff, and stoutly and ably opposed tt, his\ncompetitors admitted. 'Hut bis opposition,\nhe maintained, did not favor the foreign\nshoe.\nThis is the way the charge against tbe\nSlater Shoe Co, was argued: \"You give\nexclusive agcncIcA for the Slater Shoe.\nOnly one man in each town or city can\nhave the agency. What nre the other dealers In the town to do? Sit still, and allow\nthe Slater Shoe to get all the trade of people who want fine shoes? Not much, sir.\nwc know that the only shoe tlmt can stand\nup with your shoe for style and workman*\nThrifty Buyrs luy Their Short at tha\nloyal\n*-\u25a0      _...\nTRANSVAAL LAROR ORDINANCE\nLondon, Nov. 16-Tho Trnnsviuil labor ordinance comes Into foree loiliiy. Under Its\nprincipal sections the recruiting of Chinese\nlabor Is entirety stopped and the lntrodutv\n.tlon of Chinamen Into the country made\na penal offence.\nMlnird'i ll-hr,.\nildi, lie.\n\u00bb   AUK-MOAN  TIC   IRON   IMI'OICTH\nLondon. Nov. 15-Tlio total value ot pl\u00ab\nIron fxportcil from thin country lo tlio\nUnltoil Slates during Uio premnl year\namount* lo tn,\"**.*\"*,. while humlral. ot\ntliousaml\" or tan-.' of the name material\nare belnit got renily ror further alilpment\nrrom Newca\u00bblle-on:Tj*ne, Bhlolils, uariUIC,\nSwansea and other porta.\nThrHty luyt-i luy Their Slum tt %\n\u25a0far-J .\nIt*-)-*,, to-, it bett-r *uir*WM*l\nbat It iMt wt \u25a0 im*. la tk. lulifki m\n\u00bbn\u00bb tami-H *to\"f \"i* m-n\u2014e <I*~*H*\u00ab. ~\nFred Irvijie & Co.\nFriday\nSale\nOuting flafinels and flannelettes\nAt 10, 12#, 15 Cents\nWorth is, ao, 25 Cents\nFred Irvine & Co.\nDo Not Delay\nla purckasing your Christmas (lifts, no*\nis the time, Wa can show you a larger\nassortment now, than wa wlll he able to\nlater on, after the wise ones hare mad*\ntheir choice.\nJ.J.WALKER\n'IWBLBR Pk-at 111 OPTICIAN\nStop the Waste\nBrery day that you put off plaotni e piano within tha reach or\nyour children Is another day thrown Into life's waste-basket, for\nthese golden moments lost In the matter of acquiring an education\ncan never be regained. How much would you give today to bring\nback the dayi of lost opportunities? TALKING ABOUT A PIANO\nwll not put one Into your home, hor malts tba proverbial \"new\nyear\" the one of peace ind plenty.\nLive Today\nGive your family tha piano they wished for so long. A little down\n\u25a0nd a trifle eaoh month will soon make you Ita proud owner, ua\nyour horns a sunnier and happier ons.   Call and sea us and our\npianos.'\nMason & Bisek Piano Company, Li\nOldest, Largest asd Strong*-*. NBLSON, B. 0.\n1\n\u2022\nCHRISTMAS OOOwS\n* \u25a0 \\\nI\nTHEY ARE HERE\nARRIVED AT LAST\nD. J. Robertson t Co.\nSTOVES AND RANGE!\nOur stock ot COOKINO ud HBATINO STOVBB Is complete ul Tarte*.\nIt will par tiou Is -cumin* onr Tarioua  llnea  tt jron\nIntend purchasing.\nWa hart alio a new Una at Store Boards, tbla a-ason's\ngoods ud rery **(mtl*i patterr*\nWood-Villanos Hirdwari Go., Umttid.\n*ttiBQM--e ****** i-ati-oir sir-jj.\n SBi\n<&>\nmammte.\n\u25a0n hktirmwi, \u00abuq*, p, a., mttut, my was* \u2022\u00ab, \u2022\u25a0\u00ab\u2022\nM*****\n=--\/, *-*.*:- j*\n(octet Tragedj\nr ^   .ioitien WhoBrave Death forSoclal Honors.\n*- * In the midst of one ol the most brilliant social functions of the season, a noted society woman started'\nsuddenly-from her chair with a scream of agony and'\nfell Insensible to the floor.\nA few hoars later the distinguished physician told\nher anxious husband that she was suffering from an\nWitacute case of nervous prostration brought on\n'\u2022\u25a0by female trouble, and hinted at an\nHalt, operation.     Fortunately a\nfriend advised her to try\ni\nlydia I.\nPinkham's\nVegetable\nCompound\nm\ny\nThe result was that she\nescaped the surgeon's knife\nand to-day ls a well woman.\nThe derangement of the delicate female organism sets every nerve In'\nthe body quivering With pain. Headaches, backaches, torturing bearing\ndown pains and dragging sensations make women nervous and hysterical.\nMrs. T: E.Cillls, of Windsor, N.S., writes:\nDkab Mss. Pi-titan i\u2014When 1 comnienceil to take Lydia E. 1-lnkham's Veg.\netable Compound I was suffering with weakness anil female trouble, heailacliee,\nbackaches, and that,worn-out, tired feeling. .1 have only taken tbe Vegetable\nCompound a (ew short week., and it hs. made me well, strong and robust. I\nbelieve that L'ydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound 1. without eiitiiil for\nfemale trouble*,\nMrs.. Laura Emmons, President Loyal Home Workers, Walkervllle,\nOnt, writes:      ., \u25a0*,\u2022* \u25a0\nDiua HBLiVmnau,\u2014I am enjoying nuch gooil health tlmt T feel It a duty\nto write and thank you for what I.ydia E. I'inkhsm's Vegetable Compound bus\ndono for me. 1 suffered for more than Ave years with functional troubles,\ncausing an unpleasant dj-charge and weakness which no amount of medicine, diet\nor eierci-e seemed to correct. Your .Vegetable Compound, however, reached the\nroot ol my trouble, cured me and made me strong, healthy and well. I \\vant\nto -ay to every suffering womsn, don't dally with medicine\" you know nothing\nabout, lnt take Lydia E. Pinkhstu's Vegetable Compound.\nMrs. Pinkham's advice Is free to -all     Her address is Lynn, Mass.\nLydia E. PiiiKIiam's Vegetable Compound Cures Where Others Fail\nTUB TESfED TEA\nTeas May Come and Teas May Go But\nTBA has stood tha test of yeara\nof actual use under ..all conditions. Avla-ct.propotUon.ofUi*\nmost particular tea drink.\" o*\nthe West hav* now tried tt and\nbeen won by tta uniformly high\nquality.\nWa mnt the r--at to try it and\nJudge H strictly on Its met'ta.\nHav. you ever tried Blue Ribbon Tea? It*.Sna, rUsh flavor\nwlll delight .you. Uad packet*\n(Oo a pound.\nI IIIIIIIIHlUllllHMtlllHIIIIIHHIlnilll\nTO BREAK STANDARD OIL\nATTORNEY OENffiRAt. MOODY I88UE8\nSTATEMENT OF CASE\nPROCEEDINGS  TAKEN  TO  DISSOLVE\nTHE COMBINE\nWash In g ton, Nov. 15\u2014Attorney general\nMoody, acting today through the resident\nUnited States district attorney, Instituted\nproceedings against the Standard Oil company of New Jersey under the Sherman\nanti-trust act by filing In the United States\ncircuit court ait St. Louis a petition In\nequity against It and Its *,<) constituent corporation!! and partnerships, asking that\nthe combine be declared unlawful and In\nthe future be enjoined from entering Into\nuny contract or combination In restraint\nof trado, etc.\nTho, following statement wax prepared\nand mado public .by attorney general\nMoody:\n\"In,June lnflt,;by direction of the president. Messrs. Kellogg and Morrison were\niil-poline-l by me special assistant attorneys general to act with assistant attorney general Purdy to make un Investigation of the relations of lhe Standard Oil\ncompany of New Jersey to tbo business ot\nrefining, transporting, distributing und selling oil throughout the United States, and\nlo ascertain all the facts and report to\nme whether or not, in thetr opinion, there\nhas been u violation of the Sherman ante*\ntrust law by thc Standard Oil company of\nNew Jersey or the persons or corporations\nnssoclnted with or managing it.\n\"The counsel have completed thnt duty\nnnd the report of their Investigations has\nreceived careful consideration by thc president and his cabinet, The information\navailable to the department tends to show\ntbat the various corporations nnd limited\npartnerships under, their .control, In tho\nmanner hereinafter designated, the Standard Oil company of New Jersey, produce,\ntransport and sell about 90 por cent ot\nthe refined oil produced In the United\nStates for domestle use and about the same\nproportion of refined oil exported from the\nUnited States. Thnt this share of the\nbusiness hns been produced by n course'\nof action whtch, beginning :n 18.U, haa\ncontinued under the direction of the same\npersons in the main down to lhe present\ntime.'        _.\n\"These persons now surviving are John\nD. Rockefeller, Wlt.lnm -Rockefeller, Henry\nRogers. Henry H. Flagler, John D. Archi-\nibold,; Oliver  H.   Payne and  Charles  M.\n! Pratt\",\n\"TtvU the design throughout of tho per-\nturns having control of -the enterprise has\nbeen ao suppress competition In tho pro-'\nducil&n, transportation nnd sale, of refined\noil atjd to obtain ns far at possible a monopoly therein,\n\"Between 1870 and im the design was effected through agreements made between\nmany persona and  corporations engaged\nin. that business.\n\"Tl.nt in 182 the result aimed ai WM\nmade -more eei'lgl'n by vesting in n\\b* true*\ntees, including five of the -\u00bbboye ntynflft\npresons, spfllclent stock In the as corporations concerned to enable thc trustees to\ncontrol their operations In suoh a way that\ncompetition between them was suppressed.\nThat the individual defendants lu lfct*\nincreased the stock of the Standard Oil\ncompany of New Jersey from 10 million to\n110 million dollars; that suld company was\nthen a producing and selling corporation,\nand they added to its corporate powers the\npower of purchasing stock in other companies and practically all the powers exercised by the trustees under the unlawuft.\ntrust agreements of 18S2. Tbat the Standard Oil company of New Jersey, taking\nthe place of the trustees, acquired all ot\nthe stock of lhe corporations before held,\nund controlled by the trustees, paying\ntherefor by the Issue of Its own shares,\nin  exchange.\n\"That the president of the board of truB*\ntern 'became the president of the Standard\nOil compnny of New Jersey, and the same\npersons, the individual defendants, who\nhnd directed thc business of the trust then\nassumed the direction of the business of\nthc Standard Oil company of New Jersey\nand ever since continued it. That thc pur-\npot.' and effect of the use of thc Standard\nOU company of New Jersey, as u holding\ncompany was precisely the same as the\npurpose and effect of the appointment of\nmthc trustees, hereinbefore referred to,\nnamely to suppress compe-titlon between\nIthe corporations and limited partnerships,\nwhose stock as held first by the -trustees\nand then by thc Standard Oil compnny ot\nNew Jersey.\n\"That the foregoing methods, obtained\nby the establishment of railroad rates for\ntransportation, was discrimination in favor of the corporations whose stock was\nheld by tho holding company. That -that\ncompany bas been enabled to obtain in\nlarge sections of the country a monopoly\nof the sale of refined oil, with tbe result\nthnt the prices to the consumer within the\n\u2022territory where the monopoly prevails are\nvery much higher than within the territory where competition to some extent\nstill exists.\n\"It Is believed that these Tacts, togelhor\nwith others contained, in tht\u00bb report of the\nspecial commission. Justify and require\naetlon by thc United Stales In tho courts.\nAccordingly a petition lu tqulty under the\nprovisions of the Sherman act bus been\nfiled against the Standard Oil company of\nNew Jersey and TO other corporations and\nlimited parincrhhlps ond the seven Individ mil defendants mimed in the right Judicial circuit at St. Louis, No., to hnve\nsaid combination adjudged and decreed\nto be unlawful and the said corporations\nbe declared unlawful and the said corporation's prohibited from declaring or paying\nany dividends to tbe Standard OH company\nof New Jersey, and enjoined from enuring\nInto or performing any contract or combination to restrain trade and commerce\nor to monopolize trade In the future.\n\"The question whether an action of a\ndifferent nature should be taken is reserved for furture consideration. The controversy Is now pending in the courts and any\nfurther comment by tho department or\nby anyone connected with It .would be\nobviously improper nnd unfair. ,   ' _\nTutvipby\nYAl-HSTOfcC.\nA drink of good liquor\nIl a very food thlnf\nIt will hoist np jour splrtt*\nAnd caiiM 70a to slnt;\nAnd tha best place ln town\nTo sample your till\n\u25a0\u2022at Archie Reld's Quartan\n\"The No Place Inn\"\nKOOTENAY HOTEL\nTarnon KrMt, NeUon\nCentrally located, throo doon from\npostoillce. Newly renovated. Bar wait\nitoelnd with all latest brands of wln-a,\nllauon and ol-ara Rates on* dollar\nper day,\nUU. M. af-AUR-n. rnatmttm\nme.\n^T^5110I05Y\u201e THE DAILY NEWS CLASSIFIED ADS.\nPHOENIX.\nHOTEL BALMORAL, PHOBNIX, B. C-\nThe leading hotel of Boundary's leading\nmining camp. Strictly first olass, centrally located. John A. McMaster. Proprietor.\nHOTBL BROOKLYN, PHOBNIX-THE\nonly up to date botel ln Phoenix. New\nfrom cellar to roof. Best sample roomt\nIn the Boundary. Bath rooms In connection. Opposite Oreat Northern depot\nJames Marshall, Proprietor,\nYMIR.\nVANCOUVBIl HOTEL, YMIR, B. 0,-\nWhen in Ymlr make your .headquarters\nat the Vancouver hotel. First class\nmeals, clean bed rooms, best liquors and\ncigars.  J. F. MoLeod, Manager.\nWALDORF HOTEL, YMIR, B. C.-HEAD-\nquaters for Mining and Commercial men\nMost comfortable hotel In the Dlstrlot\nSample rooms In connection.\nOBORQE COLEMAN, Proprietor.\nQRAND FORKS.\nHOTEL PROVINCB, QRAND FORKB-\nThe headquarters for tourists. Satisfaction guaranteed.' Emll   Larsen (late of\nNelson) Proprietor.\nHOTEL WINNIPEG, WINNIPEG av\u00ab..\nOrand Forks-Thoroughly renovated ana\nnewly furnlBhed throughout. Large bedrooms, baths, eto. First class dining\nroom. Best brands of Wines, Liquors and\nCigars at the bar. Everything nrst*\nolass,   MoBean e\\ Johnson, Props.\nARROWHEAD.\nTHE UNION HOTEL ARRQWH BAD-\nSpeclal attention given to commercla\nmen and tourists. First class sample\nrooms. Finest scenery in British Columbia, overlooking upper Arrow Lake. W.\nJ.  Lghtpurne, Proprietor.\n TORONTO, ONT.~ \"\nWALKER HOUSE, TORONTO, ONT.-\nCuisine unexcelled. Two hundred well\nventilated, stenm-hented bedrooms, a\nnumber with baths, lirltlsh Columbia\nSaskatchewan Alberta patronage spec\nlally aollltedc. Strict attention to ladies\nand children. Rates J2 to VI per day.\nOEO. WRIGHT ft CO., Prop.\nLate of Brandon and Winnipeg.\nT. If. BAYNE, Manager.\nMADDEN HOUSE\nBAKBR STREET, NBLSON, B.C.\nDo tou need a comfortable home? If so\ntry the Madden House. Wei) furnished\nrooms lighted with electricity; with baths;\nflrst class board. In the bar you wlll And\nall the best domestic and Imported liquors\nand olgara.\nTHOMAS MADDEN. Prop,\nSHERBROOKE\nHOUSE\nNBLSON,, B. 0.\nOne minute', walk (rom C.P.R. station.\nCulalne unexcelled; 31 rooms, well bested\nud ventilated.  Batha In connection.\nRATES-tl per dar.\nJ. BOYER\n\u2022wwiiiriw\nGRAND CENTRAL HOTH\nOpposite Courthouse and new Fostofilce\nBest 26c meal In town. European and\nAnrerlcnn plan. Only white labor employed.  First claes bar.\nO.  ERICKSON.   Proprietor.\nFOR RENT\nA 12 roomed house\nclose to Baker Street,\nsuitable for either a\nboarding or rooming\nhouse. Full particulars of\nR J, STEEL\nCLUB HOTEL\nThe Big Schooner of Beer\nor Half and Half\n10c\nTbe only glass of good beer In Nelson.\nHotel accommodation second lo none In\nCORNER STANLEY ft SILICA STREETS\nBritish Columbia. Rates fl per day. Special rates to monthly boarders.\nBAETLETT   HOUST\n(Formerly Clarke   House)\nThe best 11.00 per day house In Nelson\nNone but white help employed. Tbe best\nla the beet\n(J. W. BABTLETT -  Prr ,\nLAKE VIEW HOTEL\nCorner Hall and V.rnon Btreet.\nTwo block, from City Wharf  Tks Met\ndollar a 4a; houn In Neleon.\nHO  CHINESE  EMPLOYED.\nGeorge Harrison\nPROPRIETOR\nWANTED\nOeneral job work, chimney sweeping,\ncarpet cleaning, Axing and cleaning stove-*,\n\u2022te. Jackson Hadelifft. m east Baker St.\nNO. AIM. in\nThe best and cbeepMt meett at ree-bln* Uu people ot tbe Kmtena-j-a. A *****\nadvertisement In tbese columns will bring b lg results.\nRATDS-One oent por word ptr luue, eU Inaertions ter tbt priot of four if paid\nIn advance.\nClassified adi. will bt reeelvti Mr UHrati utU I -\/clock ti tbt evening pre-\nftoUB to publication. Phone 141\nFOR 8ALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\nOLD CURIOSITY HHOP-lf mm want u\nbuy or sell anything go to Ut OU Cirtw\nlty Shop. Always la ttook. a full toe of\nCrockery. Furniture and Olaaswan.\nFOR BALE-Second   hand   piano,  Apply\nbox 613, Nelson. lW-tf\nFOR SALI.-W-* have a few young pigs\nfor sale at uur Crescent Valley rancb.\nFor  price   enquire   MeDeroUd   and   Mo\nillardy. 1S4-V2\nFOR SALE- Well built house, fi rooms.\nclose lo smelter and C.P.R., Baiter St..\neasy lei-ms. Apply J. Rcche, Nslson.    171-tf\nFOR SALE-Launch \"Lttrilne,\" 3-1-2 h.p.,\nlength 18 feet, 9 Inches, by S feet beam,\nin excellent condition. The safest and\n-stoutest launch on the river. Apply T.\nMorley, room 8, Hudson's Bay block, Nelson. i7(j.*(\nPOR  BAIJfi-We-ll   built   Iioumi and  three\nlots, in good locality.   Apply Mr.s J, F.\nWelr, Front street. ITt-tt\nFOR   SAUK\u2014Dry   cedar   logs   for   floats.\nApply Tremont hotel, ____.fi\nFOR   SALE\u2014Tricolor  Collie  Bitch,   black,\nwhite and tan, one year old. Pedl*n-ee and\nphoto on application to P.O. box 374.   178-3\n80CIETY CARD8\nABERDEEN HIVE, No. li, L. 0. T. M.-\nMists tnd ana <th Wad-wony, tM rm\nat Mob month In K. of P. Hall, Ve-aos\nItreet, nut to noiteo**. Tut-ej. am\nba* eoMlslly Invited.\nMAROARET BQ.MRES. U.K.\nMRS.  BUZ* ISUKAH, L,Q.\nWHOLE8ALE HOUSES\nPRODUCB\nSTARKEY A CO., WHOLBBAUB DBAJr\nera In Butter, Est., Cheese, Produo. and\nFruit. Houston Blook, Joaephlne Mre**,\nNelaon, B.C.\nOROCBKIBS.\nA. MACDONALD * CO..-WBOUE8AU\nGrocer, and provi-lon Merchant*.\u2014us*\nporters of Teas,  Coffeee, Bplcee, Dried\n. Frulta. Staple and Fancy QrooerlM, Tobacco, Cigars, Butter, En*, cheoee and\nPocking House products, ottce i\n.Warehou... oomer of Front and HaU\nBtreeta. P.O. Box KM. Telephone a\nCAMP   AND   M1NERT   FirRNMHDJM\nA. MACDONALD * OO.-WHOLBM.I.l\nJobbers In BlankMs, Und-rwaar, Mitts,\nOlovea, Boots, Rubbers, O-eralla, Jump*\ner., Mackinaw, and Ollakln Clothing,\nCamp and Miners' Sundries. Oflloe and\nWarehouse, oorner of Front ana* Hall\nStreet..  P.O. Box UK.  Telephone \u25a0.\nASSATBRS' SDPPLW\nTHH B.C. ASBAT A CHBMICAL tRUrPlal\nCo., Ltd., Vanoounr, B, c.-tape-ur.\nsnd Dealer. In As-ar.r'. Boppllee. mm\nagent, ln British Columbia for ths saw-\nmat-d Batt-nea c-udbi--, \u2022oomurs aas\nUutOoo and Wm .Ala-worth * oo.'s aai\nRalanoes Ch-mleal and rnrBosl Am\n-aiattis, C. P. Adds and Chii-ilsaa-. na\nUnum, Sodium and PoUMum UjanM.\nQulck-ilvar, carbonat. and Bicaraoaai.\ncf Sods, Borax, Borax Olaas, BUnr, Flat\n___A snd Lltharae.\t\naUNINNO AND  MILL MACHaMaWI\nTASHINOTON MACH1NBKI * BUfl-W\nCo.-Dealers In Bngtaes, Band and ar*\nnlar Sawmills, Atkins' laws. Wool aa.\nIron Pullers, Le-aer Coiii-r\u2014ils aas\nDrill., Pump, and Hoists.   Pro*--*, at-\n.r-.tw.wt    aiwiksjie. '\nUQUOB8\ne. FEROUBON A CO., WHOUaULB\nLiquor, aad Clears. Agsnu far NaM\nBeer.   Vernon Bt.. NeMHa, B.0.\nKELSON CAFE\n(Under lew Managensit.)\nFirst-Class\nLunch\t\nFrom 12 imp   n__ _\u2014\u201e..\nto2i.ni.     2-> cents\n8PEOIAL\nBimd.r pinner trom I ta I *___\nBOABD and BOOMS from 11.00 por\nda; ap.   Tho rooms im boot\nthoronghlj renotatod ui\nrefurnished.\nA. AUDET, Prop.\nROYAL HOTEL\nTBLBPHONa B\nMRS. WM. BOBBRTB, Proprluetss.\nTb. best meals that can be provided la\nthla market, cooked under the eupe-vtston\nof th. proprletoress, who la a *tvorits\noerterer.\nNice alrr rooms, n.wl- fuml-had; hath\ntor gueat*.\nThe beet wlnee, liquors and cigars oan\nbe obtained at the bar.\nTERMS: n AND UM PBR DAT\nCOR. STANLEY AND SILICA STttBtaTI\nCar. Pass ths Door\nTHE WEEK'S NOTE!\nBAKBR tTBBBT\nMRS. B. C. CLARKB, PreprletMss\nRATES It PBR DAT\nl.arg. and comfortable bedree-as, aad\nflrat olass dining it-am, Beapl. room Mr\nHELP WANTED\nNELBON Employment Agmm\nWANTED \u2014 Carpenters, machine miner*,\nbushmen, waitress, teamster., typewriter, engineer.\nWANTED-Men and mo,-- \u2022\u201e 'earn mt-\nber trad. In eight weeks, oraduatss am\nIU to Ml par week. Cat. tree Moler Bj\u00bb\nUm of college., us, Pron- -nue. Bpo.\nnana, Way.\nWANTED-Agent. to Introduce the great-\neta horticultural wonder, Burbank'. new\netonele*. plum, Miracle. Big pay; permanent position. Cliloo Nursery, Salem,\nOregon, lM-tif\nWANTBD-Agent. ao sell the bent grown\nnursery atock on the oooa. including\nBurbank's new pities, plum, Miracle; com.\nmission advanced weekly; vsrite quick for\nchoice territory. Alban*- Nurser'ae, AlDsoy-,\nOregon.\nWANTED-<!ood dairyman. Apply Dominion Dairy. h-^>\nWANTKD-Flrst clues atonographer, with\nknowledge of bookkeeping.   Apply Toye\nand Co.   Bnker St. Nelson . Ift-tf\nWANTED\u2014Men and women to lonrn barber trade In eight weeks;  wages white\nlearning; catulogue free. Moler Barber col-\nlego. Carroll St., Vancouver. 17a-tf\nWiANTED-Work, dressmaking by the day\nC.O.D., Dally Newa. 175.4\nWANTED\u2014Accountant, bookkeeper or office manager wants change.   Experienced\nand accurate.   Addresa \"Accountant,\" box\n919. Keglna. 177.7\nWANTED-Thrce  pair  log  makers,   all\nswampers.  J. B. Wlnlaw. Wlnlaw.  177-tt\nWANTED  - Competent   housekeeper  to\nwork in Rosaland, salary $2:, per month.\nTelephone today, Miss Demutli, Rossland,\nB.C. 17-.1\nWANTED - iviwoclLANEOUS\nWANTflD-Millm. ,hmen.   Apply\nW. E. Cooke Luniuu.   -.ompany, Kaslo,\nB.C. 170J,\nWIANTED-flhipper tor out of town sawmill.   Telephone 39,  Nelson  . 17.-1\nWAN-IED-atifcilon  aa housekeeper or\ncook for small camp, country prefe-red.\nAddreas Housekeeper, Dally News.    17.-1\nWIANTBD-For several months, comfortably fumlahed house of Ave or six rooms.\nAddress K.M.. Dally News olllce.     176-.\nWANTED-Com'ortubl*'  turntehed   hau-e.\nHhree to six months.   No children.   Apply L.T., Dally News. m-a\nWiANTED-By married couple; no children; smal ifurnlshed house, or two housekeeping rooms. \"Room,\" Dally News, in-a\nWANTBD-Large office eafe In good condition.   Give full particulars and price.\nC.P.T., Dally News. 177-1\nA88AYER8\nB. W. WIDDOWSON, CHEMIST AMD Assayer. Nelson, B.C.-0-.ld, Sllvsr, Lead\nor Copper, 11 each; Gold-Silver, n.H;\nSUver-Lesd, UM; Zlno, tl; Oold-SUvsr.\nwith Lead or Copper, UM. Samples arriving hy axpn-s or mall will rsoslvo\nprompt stt-nUcn, P.O. Drawn, lif-i\nPhons AR. '       '\nA;.?^J5**.*' **\u00b0\u00b0**' cH\u2122WT AND PB(>\nvlnclal Assayer, Greenwood, B.C.-Oold-\nsUver, *l.soj sllver-lead, 11.50; goid-sllver.\nwltb copper or lesd, 13.60; tins *3; gold\nsnd silver, ti each; copper and lead,\nUM each; mall and expreee samplea\ngiven prompt attention. Control asays\na specialty.    P. Q. box El,   Phon. M.\nC. * RASHDALL, FOR Lt TEARS A\nreeldent of West Kootenay, will attend\nat th. Hall Mines Smsltsr on behalf of\nshippers and see to weighing and sampl.\nIn* of ono conalgned to tho amelur.\nAddnes P.O. Rex tM. Nelaon. R.<*\nL08T\nLOBT\u2014A parcel from Dominion Kxpress\ncompany's wagon, uddrosed to Mfcis tt.\nThorn, trom Henry Bros., Wlnnlp--** Finder\npintle return to Dominion Exprrhn ottlcs\nand recetv* reward. 17S-tt\nFOR RENT\nSEWING Mschlnss 10 rsnt, n sor\nSinger Sewing Msoblne do.\nFOR RENT\u2014Large front room, warm and\npleasant, all conveniences. Addreae\n'Comfort,\" Daily News. Ut-tf\nFOR   RKNT-lly   Mrs.   Sloan,   <  roomed\nfurnished  house,  corner Joaephlne and\nOwe streets. 17\u00ab-fi\nFOR RENT \u2014 Furnished  room, furnace\nheated on Silica St., Opposite the English church. 178-1\nREPAIRING\nWATCHES   cleaned,  a.GO;   main spring,\n0.60. O. Btrathearn, Xasls, B.C.     Im-tt\nCLBANING  AND PRBBBINQ\nOBNTLBMUNB     STJITI      REPAIRED.\nGo-da caUad for\nA. J. DraHOU,\n-msbpUt.\ns \u25a0seal\nNOTIOE\nNOTICB Is hereby given that the part-\nnexslilp heretofore subsisting between us\nthe utidfaralgned as bakers and oonfeetlon-\ners tn tihe olty of Nelson has this day been\ndissolved hy mutual enreent. AU debts\nowing to the ssi-i r\"\"'-\"-hlp are to be\npaid either to Oavlil \"rd or R. B.\nHay of Nelson a,    \u25a0 nd all claims\ngaalnst the eald i-nruu istup are to ba pre-\n\u25a0anted either to the Mid David Crawford\nor R. B. Hay by whom the same wlll ba\ntattled.\nDated at Nelsou, B. C. this 1st day ol\nNovember, IW).\nDAVID CRAWFORD.\nKOBfiRT B.  HAV.\nWltoesa:   B. A. CUKASB.\n \u25a0foes+cfip\n*mm-mmmm\nSORE BACK\n\" Tha doctor told me my bat-It was tbs worst ho lwd\nover soon,\" said Mr. Alt Lillierapp, of\nWalthamstow, when  telling of what\nZam-Bnk had oured him.\n\"It was covered with eruptions whieh\noame In the form of headless pimples, and\nspread until my back was one mass.   The\nitching at night was so bad that at last I\nhad to have my bands tied to prevent me\nsoratohing myself and making the eruptions bleed.   I took internal medi-\noines and tried various salves;\nbut in vain.    One night I read\nabout Zam-Buk and bought a box.\nWell I hardly know how to express\nmy gratitude for the benefit I derived I\nTbat first box gave me relief and a few \t\nmore oleared the pimples and eruptions from my body.\"\nSimilar eloquent* testimony oomes from Manitoba.\nMr. B. J. Burgoine, of Harding, says;\u2014\"I had some very bad\nsores on my heel but Zam-Buk cured them in a few days. It\nalso oleared my cheat of an unsightly eruption,\"\nZAM-BUK NEEDED IN EVERY HOME.\n'Aiiii-Hu'-* sho-ilil be In orery home. It curei cuts, buhir, bruises, ocald-i, chllblnliw,\ncold wore-*. L-huppeU linn <n. Heal** ulcer!-, eczonim, riiniihiksoren, abaoe-wei, niaj be\n\u2022mf.-.y upplle-t to the -lelicnto akin ot li.ilii.--i uiiil tiurc-* twining rath-*--.. \\t also eniei\n**\" *\"\"\"'\"\" \" iiiles.   It it* Kuml us mi uiii'irocitlon, and e;;ct-)lent for rheil mat turn nnd\nll druKid^-ti-iell it nt aucoiitua box, or from the Zaiu->Hkl'\u00bb, Tornalii,\nt of price,   \" * ***\" \u25a0*''\"\n\u25a0tf      '**\u00bb>     \u25a0' \u2014 '\nThe Dally News, Nov. 16. 1906\nRED CROSS GIN '\nis the only Gin which bears the\nGovernment stamp, as a guarantee of age,\nquality and purity.\nfl\ny \t\nTHE DAILY  NKWH, rVflLBOK, B. 0\u201e FRIU-1T, *fTOtW\u00abBMI it, ttOt\nNow Appiving\nNew Season's Haddies\nHams and Bacon\nU      ol finest quality\nFresh Eastern and Olympia\nOysters\nP. BURNS & OO.\nWholesale and Retail Ment Merchants. Nelson, B. C.\nZINC RESOURCES Of B.C.\nCOMPILED FROM REPORT OF ZINC\nCOMMISSION.\nGENERAL    CONCLUSIONS    AS\nMAGNETIC SEPARATION\n' Th* powlbllity ol enriching the zlno,\nores ot Brltlah Columbia to a high de-\ntne by magnetic separation bas been\nthoroughly deownstrated by ibe testa\noonducttd *y the  commission,  which\nhave been heretofore summarized. The\noree tested are or wide variety and represent all of the classes tbat thc mines\nof the province are at present capable\nof producing. In every case It has been\npossible to produce a tine concentrate\nassaying upward of 40 per cent zinc; in\nmany cases concentrates assaying about\nBO per cent sine; and In a tew cases concentrates assaying as high as 57 per\ncent zinc.\nThese results compare varey favorably with those whtch are attained In\nthe concentration of similar ores In the\nUnited States. \\h Australia and In Europe. The .zinc concentrates, produced\nfrom the mixed ores weet of the Rocky\nmountains In the Unltod Slati-a do not\naverage better thnn Ki por cent -sino;\nthat produced at Broken HIU, N.S.W.,\ngoes only 40 to 45 per tent zinc. The\n\u25a0zlno concentrate tlmt cun be produced\niu British Columbia will average belter\nthan those figures. It is to be remarked, however, tbat a thoroughly good\ntechnical result* Ib nut necossarily a\n'good commetcial result. Ore assaying\nonly 40 per e.*>m ziuc. unless it contain\nalso an imporlunt sber value, will not\nbe a profitable r-icduoi In British Columbia on the basis of 5c. spelter (It is\nnot safe to make calculations on a higher basis than that), but this is because\nof ttie remoteness ot the province and\nthe long railway carriage to markets,\nabsorbing a large part of the value of\ntho ore, which must inevitably be borne.\nThis is an uuforunate condition, which\ncan not be altered; indeed, can not be\nmuch ameliorated. This subject has been\nthoroughly discussed in previous sections of thiB report.\nOf practical importance in no way\ninferior to the degree of concentration\nis the matter of percentage of mineral\nextracted from tho ore. With Uie exception of a few especially difficult ores,\nthe tests of the Commission show remarkably high percentages of extraction, these rising in ch<} case to nearly\n99 per cent, and beiny upward of 90 per\ncent in many case**.\nThe matter of relative efficiency of\nvarious types of -xngnetic separators will\nnot be disc'^-od, except broadly. It\nwas aot within tlie means of lhe commission to make exhaustive competitive trials of different makes of machine,\nand anyway this matter is of eampara-\ntlvely little importance providing the\nmachines conform to sound principles of\nmechanism and magnetism. The design\nof these machines will bo treated to\nsome extent further on in this report.\nIt is a common mistake among the inexpert to look for some machine, which\nin itself will be the solution of all problems in ore treatment. There is no one\nmachine which will prove such a universal panacea. Attention should be concentrated not on the machine, but on\nthe process. Thc process being successfully devised, it will frequently be found\nthat several different kinds of machine\nwill do equally well the particular work\nthat is required of them. It will be observed from Mr. Argall's report that the\nprincipal experimental work of the commission was in the determination of\nprocesses, rather thnn the competitive\ntrial of various machines, ln so far as\nsuch trials were made, readers of this\nroport may draw their own conclusions.\nIt is proper, however, to point out the\nbrood difference between the Lwo grand\ntypes of magnetic separators, viz., the\nhigh intensity and the low intensity.\nThe former require much more power\nthan the latter, but they will make separations of minerals of low magnetic\nattractablllty, which remain unaffected\nby the machines of low Intensity. In\norder to enable the latter to operate at\nall, tbe ore must be cunverted by roasting into a more highly magnetic form,\nand the cost of roasting is more than an\n'offset of their economy in power aud\nlower first cOBt. In the case of the\nblende-siderlte ores, however, roasting\nand separation by low intensity machines gives a higher grade of product\nthan does raw separation by high intensity machines ,and the commercial result figures out better. Consequently,\nIt that class ot ore were alono to be\ntreated, the choice would by all means\nbe for a roaster and low Intensity machines. But when it is a case of treating a variety of ores, some of which\ncan be separated only by a high Intensity machine, the choice Is determined\nby different considerations. The high\nIntensity machine, will perform all of\nIho separations of strongly magnetic\nmaterial that the low Intensity machine\nwill make, and Is capable of far more\ndelicate adjustment and ot effecting separations between minerals of several\ndifferent degrees ot magnetic permeability. A plant for the treatment of\nmiscellaneous ores of the West Kootenay should, therefore, he provided with\nhigh intensity separators, rather than\nlow Intensity. Means for roasting the\nore are required In any case.\nA disappointing feature of thc experimental work at Denver waa the failure\nof the Blake electrostatic separator to\nprove of service In the treatment of the\nores of British Columbia. In no case did\nthis appear to be of useful application.\nIn the treatment of some ores in Colorado and elsewhere, this separator has\ngiven excellent results on a commercial\nscale, but Its action depends upon the\nrelative conductivity for static electricity of the component mine as of an ore,\nand In many cases the difference is not\nsufficient to enable a separation to be\nmade. This appeared to be the case of\nores of British Columbia in so far as\nthey were tested by this process. Iu\nfairness it Is to lv*. rf-marked that the\ntests of tbe Blake St-ptualor were by no\nmeans exb'.uistive, ai-d 1* is possible that\nby modifications in the ore treatment\nsatisfactory commercial results nmy be\nobtained with it in certain cases.\nIn Australia, the ores ot Broken Hill\nwere flrst successfully treated by magnetic separation. During the last two\nor three yeais a class ot pvoccs3c-s known\nas the flotation processes, has been Introduced, and these have now dearly\nbeaten the magnetic separation processes ln the treatment of the ores of\nBroken Hill. So far, the flotation processes have not heen tried except at\nBroken Hill and comparatively little is\nyet known as to their theory or the\nprecise conditions which determine\ntheir application.\nI caused some experimental work to bo\ndone, on a laboratory scale, at New\nYork, under my own direction, to determine tbe applicability of the those processes to the ores of British Columbia.\nI shall refer to these experiments at\nmore length ln a subsequent section of\nthis report. It is sufficient to state\nhere that some of the ores of British\nColumbia appear to be amenable to separation by this process, but the results do not indicate any superiority\nover magnetic separation in point of\nenrichment of the grade of thc ore,\nwhile for the treatment of the miscellaneous ores of a district flotation would\nprobably be less elastic and less efficient\nCjark's\nCorned Beef\nAll good meat, boneless and wasteless. Open\nthe germ proof can and\nit is ready-to-serve at\nany hour. Order some\nfrom your dealer to-day.\nWM. CLARK, Mfr.\nM-str-al.\nRING UP 165\nFor that cake you want In a\nhurry, and haven't time to\nbake.\nYOU WILL BE SATISFIED\nWhen you seo the O. K.\nstamp on a loaf of bread, you\nmay be sure that It ls O.K.\nO.K. BAKERY\nR. 13. HAY,\nBolo Proprietor\nStanley St.\nIf you want to buy Fruit\nLand see me.\nThat is my business.\nJ. E. ANNABLE\nNELSON, B. O.\nTHE REAL TEST\noi I.-'ri-l-'Mr In In  Glvlnfr It  \u25a0 Tbet*\noituli  Trial.\nThere !s only ono teat by which t(\n|udgc of tli*.- efficiency of any ortlcl*\naml tlinl la by iis ulilllty to do thai\n'which It Is Intended to do. Many lin in\nvlgorg may look nlc-*- nnd Btnell nice\nM the point la\u2014dn they eradicate Dan\n\u25a0IfufI  and  stop  fulling- hair?\nNo, they do not, but Herplclde does\njocuuae it -roes to tho root of the evli\nind itllla tho germ that attacks the\n...].\u25a0:,,*i Irom whence the hair jicta itt\nlife,\nLetters from prominent people every\n\u25a0.vli-'ie nro dully proving that Newbro'r\nHerplclde Btnnds thc \"test of use.\"\nIt Is a dollRhtful dressing*, clear, purr\nand  freo from  oil  or grenEe.\nSold by tendinis* drugirlsts. Send 10c. i*\nitampq for sample to The Herplclde Co.\nictroit. Mich.\nCANADA DRUG & BOOK COMPANY.,\nSpecial Agents,  K.W.C.  Block.\nEach tiny grain of WINDSOR\nTABI^SALT is a perfe-ftayfta)\n-pure and dry. That a wfay k\nnever cakes.\nFor A Good Roast or\nTender Steak\nRing up* Phone No. 5\nV eat Kootenav Butoher Oo.\nYou Know\ntlte kind ol Celery that ts alca ts eat\nThe (resh and crisp kind, grown\nat Ferndale Ranch, Willow Point\nalso some Parsnips, Turnips and\nOnions, tor sale at\n-Toy's Cash Grary\nPhons IB, oor. Of Josephine and Ward Hts.\nP. O. Bex tt, Telephone let\nAU Unds and all oolors el Ladle-* aw\ndents' Clothing\nCLEANED AND DYED\nFUnnels, Blank-*-, Curtains, Silks, Bt.\na sveotaM-.\nGlove, renovated te look like a.w.\nSteam Carpet Gleaning\nTour; patronage -eltott-d.\nPAUL NIPOU. Prttp -\nCOAL TAR\nPitch, Paints and Creosote\nWa an tka only prodacan\not ami tar ln tha Koota-\nnays.  Writ* u tor atm*.\nNelson Coke and Gas Co'y\nQUeen Studio\nPlOtUP*\nihti*** and\nNBLSON\nB.0\nGEO. M. GUNN\nWARD STREET      NEAR POSTOFFICB\nManufacturer of ud dealer ln Men'a Fine\nFootwear.  Repairing promptly don*.\nMOTTO-Llve and lot hre.\nFOR 8ALE\nTwenty acres, close to school, churoh,\netc., no waste land, easily cleared; four\nacres cleared and planted, trees bearing;\n11600 In three payments.\ngeo. g. McLaren,\nBaker Street\nTO   WORKINQMEN\nNOTICE\nWhereas, at ths Last Chanoe and Surprise\nmines, Cblness kitchen help Is at present empoyled, to the exclusion ot White\nlabor.\nTherefore, be It resolved that this organisation, Sandon Miners* union Mo. a ol\nthe W. F. of M. reaffirming its opposition\nto the employment of Orientals within Its\njurisdiction, strongly condemns the position taken by the management of the prr\npertles ln question, and counsels working-\nmen everywhere and those favorably disposed toward organised labor to be govern*\ned by this aotlon.\nSANDON MINER? UNION\n 4. smmMD. georetary\nNOTICE\niuuu\nlUUUUUtifaUUalt,\nBusiness\n Institute, Ld.\nMuting. St W, Vaneem*.\nBookkeeping, Gregg sad Pitman\nShorthand, Telegraphy and Engineering.\nEight Teachers\nForty-Five Typewriters\nCeutssa by Hall\n\u00a3    Keepeotable lodgings eeount ter\n-.ranger*.\nR. J. 8PROTT, B. A., Principal\nSnnnnnnnnnniMinnnnnnnnm*i-f\n# Kootenay Fruit Lands\nfor sale in 10, ao, and 40\nacre blocks.\nI have a few bargains\nnow, write for my list.\nI. E. ANNABLE\nNBLSON, B. a\nPROFESSIONAL CARDS\nF. H. CHADBOURN\nMINIM OPtRATQg\nMines examined and repor-M on.   .\nThorough Knowledge of Kootenay Klaas.\nOre Sampling Witnessed\nNELSON, B. O.\nMcKAY&RAHAL\n(Suoeesore te O, A, Munro)\nBore, .hoeing, Carriage Work and Oeneral Blaoksmlthlng,\nP.O. Boa US.   Phons AIM\nWard Street Nelson, B.O.\nW. J. H. HOLME8\nami, ENOINEER A MINB BURVBTOB\nPROVINCIAL LAND  BURVBYOR\nTen years experience 'In the Kootenays.\nHonor graduate, 1891, Royal Military College of Canala, Kingston, Ont*.\nKASLO, B. C.\nJOSEPH RYAN\nIANCH    AND TOUT    LAND*,    DtO:\nORB, COAL LANDS\nICO Million Feet standing Timber\natt Cranbrook, B.C.\nS. 8. FOWLER\nMINING ENGINEER\nNELSON, B.O.\nFREDERIC S. CLEMENTS\nCIVIL IDNaiNBBR\nDOMINION AND   PROVINOA1   t\u2014ttO\nBURVBYOR\nAgent for obtaining Crown Oranta, seine\nsurveying, ete.\nRoom 16, K.W.C. Block.\nP. O. Box 1 Nelson, B. C.\nCLAUDET & WYNNE\nAS8AIER8, METALLURGISTS and MININO\nENOINBIIRS.\nB.H. CLAUDET. LC. WYNNE\nAaaoc, Inst. M.M. AM0.lnrt.MJI.\nMem, Am. Inst. M.E,\nR**alsnd,B.O. Princeton, B.C\nCa S. BAKBR\nPKOVIHOIAL ASSAYER\nand  Ore Shippers'  Ag-nt-Samplas   by ]\nmail receive  prompt  attention.   Correspondence solicited.  P. O. Box it; telephone 63; Grand Forks, B.C.\nFRANK C, GREEN\nOIVIL BNGINBBR\nDomlndon and Provincial Land Surveyor\nP.O. Box MS. Phone JOB\nOor. Kootenay and Vlotorla Sts., Nelson.\nEVANS & HERON\nACCOUNTANTS\nAND  COMMISSION  BROKERS\nBooks posted dally.   Statements issued.\nAccounts collected.   Terms moderate.\nP. O. Box #1\nRoom 4, Aberdeen Bloek\nT. ll. Wilson, Silverton, ts hereby au-\nliorizui to receive all payments of uc-\n-oiuiis due. me.\n(Signed) H. M.-THORBURN.\nthan magnetic Hepai-ufon. Flotation Ib\nespecially adapted to the treatment of\ntlie oro of a single mine on a large\nscale. This condition does not obtain\nat the present time ln British Columbia; certainly not ln the Blocan. The\nconclusion may, consequently, be accepted Uiat for the enrichment of these\nores, the best method Is a combination\nprocess In which washing on tables and\nmagnetic separation are the essential\nfeatures.\n(To Be Continued.)\nSELLS MORE OF CHAMBEJRLAIN'S\nCOUGH RJSMBDT THAN ALL\nOTHERS PUT TOGIOTHBR\nMr. Th-'imiH George, a merchant At Mt.\nElgin, Ont., Bays: \"I have the local agency\nEar riiiuni'-irliilir-K dough Remedy over\nsince it wan Introduced Into Canada and 1\nBell aa much of It tut I do of all other lines\nJ have on my -shelves put together. Ot\nthe many dozen sold under guarantee, 1\nhave not had one bottle returned. I can\npersonally recommend this medlolne as 1\nhave used lt myself and given It to my\nchildren and always with the best results\/'\nFor aale by all druggists and dealers.\nCM.OLIVER & Co.\nBROKERS,  STOCKS, GRAIN AND\nSECURITIES\nUnexcelled private wire servics  to au\nleading exchanges.\nOfflce: Above Royal Bank of Canada.\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nEXCURSIONS\nTO\nOntario, Quebec,\nMaritime Provinoea and\nThe Old Country\nTickets oa sale dally Nov. 24 to Dec, 81,\nOood tor three months with stop-oyer\nprivileges east ot Fort William.\nPlncher |56.25\nFernle 162.25\nCranbrook $67.45\nKaslo ;.... 178.25\nNelson $78.25\nRossland $79.56\nOrand Porks  $81.66\nPhoenix $89.45\nTo Montreal, Toronto\nAnd all point* west thereof. Cones-\npondinglr low rates from and to other\npoints, *\nFor detailed Informatlop, sailings ot\nocean steamers, first claas or tourist\nsleeper reservations, apply to local\nagents or write\nJ. S. CARTER, District Pass, Agt\nNelson.\nthi c-Hnemuic way.\nTKIrty-Secend Annuel.Oonv.nUon\nAmerican Bankers'\nAssociation.\nRound trip rates to St Louis and\nChlcaio on sal. Oot. u to U, IMS.\nBt Louis   , tai.W\nChicago  H.W\n(Joint transit limit 10 days (rem\ndate ot sale; final' return limit\nNov. ID.\nRound Trip Rates to Southern\nCalifornia\nInetteot Oot ft, IMS, on sals dally,\nlimited to three months trom date\nof sals.\nLos Aateles and Santa Barbara WM\nPasadena    86.10\nSanta Monlea 66.60\nRlvirslds and Ban Barnar-\ndlno  a.W\nRedlsnds  \"\u2022\u2022ro\nFor further information apply te\nS.O. YERKES,\nA.O.P.A., aeatu..\nH. E. DOUOLAS,\nOlty P.A.\nAtlantic S. S. Sailings\nC.P.R.   R5TAL KAIL BTBAMSH1HI\n(St. John .West Bt. John, sailing.)\nL. >lanltot)\u00ab..Nov. UL. Champlaln.,Deo. I\nEmp. Ireland..Dec. lBmp. Britain..Dee. 15\nALLAN LINB\nFrom Bt John ' From Halifax\nP\u00ab\u00abrUra.......D-\u00ab. lVlotorlan ......Dec. 8\nIonian  Deo, 16 Tunisian Dec. 21\nDOMINION LINO\n(From Portland)\nDominion ....Nov. Mcansda  Deo. I\nATLANTIC TRANSPORT Ll.--'**-\nMinneapolis..Nov.  17Minnehaha....Nov. 64\nAMERICAN LINB\nSt. Louie ....Nov. \u00abPhiladelphia..Deo.  1\nRBD BTAR LINB\nFinland  Nov. UZeeland    Deo,  1\nCUNARD LINB\nLueanla Nov. HiCaroma  Dec. 4\nUmbrla Dee. lcampanla Dec. \u2022\nT-BTTB BTAR LINB\nMejeetle  Nov, tSOo-anfe Deo. i\nCeltic  Ner. 8STeuumlc Deo. 11\nFRENCH LINB\nLa Savele  \u2022\u25a0\u2022\u201e', Nov. a\nLa Provenoe '.,..-. Nov. a .\nHAMBDRO-AMBRICAN UNB\nBatavla ......Nov. -.Patricia Deo, 1\nNORTH OBRMAN-LLOYD\nFrl.drloh.der Qro.be' Nov. a\nMain  Nov. 27\nAU continental rate, and sailings on application. If you are contemplating taxing\nan ocean voyage drop us a line and we\nwill b. pleaied te furnish you with full Information promptly.\nJ. S. CARTER, W. P. t. CUMMINOa,\nD.P.A. Nslson     Qen. Aat Winnipeg\nSynopsis of Canadian HomttUatl\nRegulations\nANT .Tillable Dominion Iannis within ths\nRailway holt In British Columbia, may bs\nbomeeteaded by any parson who Is th.\naole head of a family, er any male over\n18 years ot age, to the extent of one-QWr-\nter .ectlon of 160 scree, more or less.\nEntry must be made personally at th.\nlocal land offlce for the dlstrlot In whloh\nthe land Is situate. ,\nThs homesteader la retulred ta partem\nthe conditions connected therewith unuei\none of the following plans:\n(1) At least six months' residence upon\nand cultivation of the land In each year\nfor three year..\n(2) If the father (or mother, If tbe father\nIs deceased), of the homeetesder reeldea\nupon a farm In the vioinlty ef tbe land\nentered for, the requirements ea te residence may be satisfied by suoh person\nresiding with the father or mother.\n(1) It the MMer bas hla permanent rat-\ndene, upon farming land owned by him\nIn th. vioinlty of his horn-stead, the re-\nquit-entente as to residence may be satis-\nfled by residence upon the said land\nSix months' notice In wrlUng should bs\ngiven to the Commissioner of Dominion\nl*-*jda at Ottawa of intention to sppl\"Si*\nCoal lands may be purchased *.. -,\u201e\n.or. for soft coal and mVjh___ff\nNet mor. than BO acrea can bTSoJuSd\nby one Individual or company; lutwui.\nat tbe rate ot 10 cents par toi at am\npounds shall be collected on the gross out-\nDeputy of the Minister ef the Interior\nN.B.-Unauthorlssd publication ef this\nadverUsement wtll aat be paid ter. *\nmm ***. a. oo**-*,     ,-\u2022.\nFLOUR^FEED\nWa have opened a Flour and\nFeed store next door to Uw\nKootenay Coffee Co., Baker at\nOur leader will he Uw famous\nWyboura Flow nadt from Ita.\n1 Hard Wheat\nLAURIE & SON\nKM.\n8tove8 and Ranges\nWo are selling out our  entire stook\nAt Actual Cost\nNow is the Time to Buy\nORANIOTWAMI AT COST\nStrachan & Hebden\nBaker Street\npiumhlng, Oas aud SteamntUng, Hot\nWater HeaUM, Bto.\nJANITOB WANTED\nAwll-Mtloni for the*. po\u00bbltlon of Janitor\nof tho Pubtto Sohool butldlnv, Noloon, will\ntM received by the undesigned until 4\np.m. on Friday, Uth, .net-wit. Duties to\nb\u00abffin Deo. 1, 1901.\nft. O. ARTHUR\nSHERIFFS SALE\nBY VIRTUE OF a writ of Fl. Fa. issued\nout of the Supreme Court of British Columbia, Vancouver Regttary, on the nth\nday of October, IBM. between A. O. H\u00ab-\nibagllattl vs. Trustees Dredging Company\nand to me directed In tbejabove named suit\nfor the sum of $688.82 and coste ot execution, besides sheriffs fees and poundage,\nand all other legal Incidental expenses, 1\nhave seised and wlll offer for sale by public auction, at the ofllce of the above oompany by public auction, at the office of uie\nabove oompany at Lillooet, B. 0., at the\nhour of eleven a.m., on Tuesday, the 4th\nday of December, 1906, all rights, and title\nto the following goods and chattels belonging to the above named company to satisfy the judgment, debts, taxes and expenses: One dredge, said to be the latest\ntype of gold dredge, New Zealand pattern,\ncapable of beating 4000 cublo yards per\nday of 24 hours; one Vertical Compound\nEngine 78 horse power; one boiler ioo\nbores power: one dynamo and engine;\none 75 toot foirt Bucket Ladder, with \u00bb\nbuoM*; teed pump, pump engine, winches,\nchains, wire cables, IS aold Tables, Oold\nScreen, blacksmith and carpenter tools,\nnails, oils, assorted bar Iron,-small tools,\neto., together with ofllce furniture consisting of stove, two offloe tables, two desks,\ntypewriter desk with Remington Typewriter, two letter cabinets, letter press,\nchairs, gold- scales, S Iran bedsteads with\nsprints and mattresses, two lamps, seven\nlanterns, eto. Also those certain dredging\nleases, two in number, on the Fraser river,\nLllooot District.\nD. W. ROWLANDS.\n17M* Deputy -Sheriff 0f Cariboo.\n \u2022OS*\n^Jjj^aaj\n61\nta naiu hiws raiiSox, p. o\u201e frioay. xovsmbir te. isoe\nm\n_*_*\nm\nm\nSHERMAN'S OPERA HOUSE\nOne Night Only, Monday, November 19-th\nThe Funniest Show Since Time Began\nJERRY f ROM KERRY\nCOMPANY\nPATTEN & FLETCHER\nOwners and Managers\nClean, Refined and Moral\nHigh Class Comedy\n\u25a0 m\"\"*- Band and Orchestra \" people\nPrices 50c, 75c, $1.   Plan opens at Rutherford's Saturday morning.\ntt\nPRESS COMMENTS\n\/   Nelson Daily News, Nelson, B. 0.\nClever and Clean.\u2014Jerry from Kerry company closed a three-nights' engagement at the Nelson Opera House last evening. The entire company has\nmade a most favorable impression In the city by the cleverness and cleanness\nof their performances.\nThe 1*081, Sydney, Cape Breton.\nThe Jerry from Kerry company closed a .very successful three-nights' engagement here Saturday evening. The .company Is one of the best that has\nvisited Sidney for a long time and wlll always command a large patronage\nwherever they play.\nIV Dally Telegraph, St. John, N. B.\n\u25a0 Jerry from Kerry Please Opera House Audience.\u2014Jerry from Kerry came\nto the opera house last night and gave an evening of pleasure to a good-size\naudience. The entertainment ie of musical farce comedy nature and carries\nfirst clasa vaudeville features. There are good comedians, excellent acrobats,\npleasing singers, a good band and orchestra. Altogether lt made up a program'whloh* greatly pleased the audience and gave very hearty enjoyment, as\nthe laughter producing qualities were certainly all that were promised. Jerry\nfrom Kerry will be at the Opera house alt this week and to judge from the\nsuccess of the opening performance will do a good business.\nEvening Journal, Edmonton, Alta., N. W. T.\nA surprise was ln store for many of those persons who attended the performance of the Jerry from Kerry company at the opera house last evening.\nWhen the orchestra took thetr seats the re was standing room only and many\nwere turned away. They play was adv ertlsed as amusing, and it was truly so,\nthe audience being kept In a continual round of laughter. No doubt the capacity will be tested tonight.\nJerry from Kerry.\u2014Last night the\nof theatre patrons to witness Jerry from\nsome exceedingly capable people who\nparticipate in a number of very clever\nerously applauded; in fact all the mem\nfor amusing the public of this city. The\never heard ln Calgary.\nEvening T\n.When Patten and Fletcher presente\nterday lt proved to be pleasing and the\nwater. Thetr vaudeville acts are all fe\nabove the average.\nDally\nJerry from Kerry at. Savoy.\u2014The S\ntraction being Jerry from Kerry, a com\nstant good humor.  The attraction is me\nDally Herald, Calgary, Alta., N.W.T.\nLyrio was crowded with the best class\nKerry. The company ls composed of\nrender some very mirthful comedy and\nturns. John Patten as Jerry waa voclf-\nbera have earned a lasting reputation\nbend and orchestra is one of the best\nelegram. Portland, Ore., Dec. 25, 1905.\nd Jerry from Kerry at the Empire yes-\nlarge audience took to it like a duck to\natures, and thetr band and orchestra\nNews, Tacoma, Wash., Dec. 18, 1905.\navoy had the crowd last night, the at-\nedy that kept the big audience tn con-\nrltorlous. , ,i\n\u2022>\nThe Secret of Success is\nGenuine Merit\nThat's the foundation of the\npopularity of\nMonet's Best\nBREAD FLOUR\n-'BEST\" ia much Imitated but good\nbakers are never deceived. They readily\nrecognize the difference between the\noriginal and inferior imitations. Moffet'a\n\"BEST'' makes bake-d&y a delight and\nits results a certainty.\nColumbia r^Buring Mills Company, Ltd\n\u2014      ENDERBY, B. C.\niPieree\nLaunches Are the\nThey have proved their euperiorlty\nright here ln Nelson over all comeri.\nC. E. MILLER, the general agent, li\nnow ln Racine, Wis., arranging for 1907\nbusiness and will be in a position' to\nfurnish you any size from 16 to 60 feet\nat RIGHT PRICES and upon EASY\nTERMS.\nLondon municipal] Turkish baths for the\nworklngman who doesn't us-* them, steamers that ply for Ihu pleasure of the middle\nclasses instead of for laborers, electric\nlight plants that do nol work at all.\nHundreds or other Utopian Invention! appear to have created scarcely any improvement In existing conditions, white Increasing, ul a terrific rate, the burden of taxation. Aguinst this burden of rates London hus risen In arms.\nIn a little borough like Poplar, the house\nholder has to pay In local taxation alone\nIS on every 99 ot taxable value. Add to that\nan Income tax of 29 cents on every 15 earned and you cun scarcely be surprised that\nthe Londoner has revolted aguinst the\nparty that originally tickled his fancy with\ndelightful vistas of socialistic experiments\nthat would make aU the poor rich.\nIn the constituencies represented by the\ngreat labor leaders John Burns and Wlll\nCrooks the upheaval has been remarkable\ngums' recent parliamentary opponent has\n\u25a0been returned by a large majority.\nWoolwich, <the . supposed stronghold of\nsocialism, where the laiborltes hold 28 out\nof the 86 seats, now sends back only one\nlabor councillor. Kelr Hardle and other\nparliamentary socialists stumped thc boroughs, but, apparently, only helped to\nswell the utterly unexpected majority of\nthe moderates.\nProm the provinces comes the** name tale.\nIn the great manufacturing centers where\ntbe contests were generally fought on ordinary political lines, the unionists captured muny seats from the socio lists. The\nlaborltes believe that neither these nor\nthe London results have any political significance. That Ib to say, thc country Is\nstill llbv.al ind supports the liberal government. Bui ihc'-.D results do go to show\nthat t.io ureal middle class of Kngland,\nthe rtipcetable people of small incomes,\nand the majority of the laboring classes,\nhave started to fight socialism.\nThe new division of the national parties\nIs due to the rise of socialism, and this\nIs strikingly proved by Thursday's voting.\nIt Is e war that will keep England In an\naxn'o-.ie state for many years to come and\nwill olTtct her position among the powers\nwhen the terms liberals and conservatives\nare.forgotten. Conservative papers and\nspeaker-* today are glorying in their victory, but the wise political -prophet* of\nboth parties know thnt'socialism has received only a temporary reverse, which Is\nsevere, but not decisive.\nTAXES CAUSED A REVOLT\nI EXPLANATION OP 10NG-L1SII COUNTY\n.COUNCIL BLET-.TIONB\ni \u25a0MUNICIPAL    OWNEU8HHP    ANU    HO-\nCIAILISM  BUPPQR   -RttVBKSE\nLondon News-Letter, Nov. 3\u2014Municipal\nownership, socialism and all Uiat makes\nfor what may he termed \"eextremlsm\"\nIn local affairs, hnve suffered a sweeping'\ndefeat this week, By a large majority'the\npeople of London and the surrounding district, have turned out of office the municipal authorities who favored these advanced Ideas. London's revolt against faddists, crnnks, socialists and laborltes, is\nnothing hort of dramatic.\nThroe years ago the party known as the\n\"progressives\" swept the moderates from\npower,, capturing a majority of the 28\nhoroughs Into which Loudon in divided. Today the \"reformers,\" ns the moderates now\ncall themselves, control more thnn 20 boroughs, capturing what hnd been considered\nstrongholds of socialism and labor.\nThe scenes at the polling boohs bore eloquent testimony to the fact thnt the Lon-\ndoher Is beginning to realise the Important\npart played In the national life by the municipal government. The result of alt this\n>wns a landslide in favor of careful admln-\nIstrailon tinflnclured with municipal ownership and  socialist  theories.\nThe progressives,-, giving them, tbe best\nintentions In behalf of the poorer classes,\nhave made a sad muddle of their three\nyears 'spell of power.   You can And In\nMBN'S  WINTER STYLES\nAre Shown In the Book Just Published In\nMontreal\n\"Manners and Modes for Men\" Is thc\ntitle of the book published by the Semt-\nready company In Montreal. Copies may\nue had free from .the mnnnger of thc Semi-\nready wardrobe here. In the bock the\npresident of the Semi-ready compnny, who\nii* a recognised authority on men's dress,\nfives a series of effective pictures showing\nthe distinctive character of dress for various pursuits and purposes. While It .\u00ab\n'-impossible to picture that touch of warmth\nind brightness .In the new cloths, the Seml-\n-endy styles cling closely to the subdued\nind unobtrusive finer cloths which assure\nJlstlnotive elegance and forbid that too\nj-old effect which Is displeasing.\n. The forecast made some months ago by\nthe author of this book hns turned out correct tn the tone, the shape nnd the color\nmost desired by gentlemen. Thu new sack\ncoat for the fall and winter of lftiw will\nhave neither center or side vents. This\nhas given place to the close waist und\nflowing hip and the easy fitting sack. Both\nstylet*; are shown.\nThe newest winter overcoat Is called the\nFrench Chesterfield. It Is a modification\nof the fashion first shown.\nJ. A. Gilker, the pioneer merchant ot\nNelsou, secured the agency for thu incomparable Semi-ready. ...\nHALL MINES RECEIPTS\nORB AND LEAD CONTENTS FOR THB\nMONTH  OP OCTOBER\nST.   EUGENE  DOES  NOT  FIGURE  IN\nTHIS LIST\nThe statement of lead receipts at the\nHall Mining and Smelting company for\nthc month of October arc appended In detail, showing a total of 2,53T,Ul lbs. of ore\nand 6&1.8H lbs. of lead:\nMine Ore Lead\nArlington, Slocnn   im.\u00bbb li.iw\nArlington,   Erie     36S.9T0 MM\nBlack Diamond     13,463 1,922\nBosun     00,421 31,1111\nCunadlan Group   40,3tti 15.(67\nColonial      *  -J7.ir.ii 9.209\nCork    81,614 69,411*-\nGrey Copper   2,289 1,367\nJennie Llnd   U.16S 4,132\nKrao    94,569 6,fl\u00bb\n1-a Plata   402,778 58,962\nLittle Donald, amended  .... 606\nMammoth Group  30,318 6,666\nMountain Con   30,916 6,91)6\nNo. 1  15,587 969\nPayne    50,628 31,529\nReed  nnd  Tenderfoot     52,760 18,726\nRuth *  96,384 63,748\nSilver Cup dump   15,466 4,160\nSilver Cup    \"... 312.W0 56,106\nStandard   94,625 60,099\nSunshine   -33,5(6 17,961\nUpper Columbia Trans. Co... 19,244 16,797\nVancouver   40,373 13,928\nVIbex   90,896 16,966\nWhitewater   216,752 93,067\nWhitewater Deeo   111.581 41,610\nYmlr     196.971 18,619\nTotal 2,37,tll    661,856\nAT THE OPBRA HOUSE\nlt was evident last night from the crowded state of the opera house that the public hnd taken tho Nelson-Bruce company\nat their word-that tho play of \"Arliona\"\nwas the best modern piny In their reper-\ntalre\u2014and had come to Bee lt. Nor were\nthey disappointed. The scene wns of the\nwest nnd though pliched In Arlsona yet\nwas of sufficient human Interest\u2014the characters being Intensely human and not\nmerely melodramatic heroes or villains\u2014to\nhold the attention of any critical audience.\nThere were many pretty scenes throughout\nibut thc finale'wns easily the best of them\n\u25a0all. It came rather unexpectedly and\nended ly leaving something to the imagination In a manner which brought out the\ndramatic instinct of both tho author and\ncompany us perhaps nothing else could\nhuve done.\n- Among the |women great talent was\nshown 'by Pearl Reesor aa the much tempted wife of colonel Bonhnm and also by\nthe coming young actress, -Marie Goodrum,\nas Lena Kellar, whose scene when accused\nof the murder of the villain of the piece,\nwas one of the best parts of a hlKbly attractive dramu. Lucy Thayer, as Mrs.\nCnniby, wns n very well thought out piece\nof character acting. Jackson Rlgby us\nCol. Bonhnm, wus seen ut his best ou this\npresent visit nnd shows also that great\nstrides have been made by him since his\nengagement at Rossland two years ngo hy\nHarold Nelson, Mr. ftlgby then being a\nwell known amateur. Wllllum Yule as\nHenry runny, was a fine piece of acting\nund Bryce Desmond, us thu vuquero, showed to better advantage than In nny other\nplay this week. George Dayton, as the\nvillain divided public favor with Clifford\nBruce, the hero, and it would be Invidious\nto say which was the most successful In\nhis portrayal of his part.\nTonight wlll be enacted the \"Merchant\nof Venice,\" In which Harold NelBon wlll\nnppenr ln the best of ull his partB\u2014Shylock.\nB. O. Windsor, piano tuner, ts In the\nclly. Leave orders at Canada Drug and\nBook company. 166-tf\nThrifty luyari Buy Tlielr 8l)oes at tip\nRoyal\n'Sf\t\nNELSON-BRUCE CO.\nTONIGHT\nTHE MBROHAINT OF VENICE\nSaturday Matinee\nA SOLDIER OF FORTUNE\nSaturday Night\nFA01NO THE MUSIC\nPricea, 60c, ISO, $1.00.   Saturday Matinee 26c, 60c.   On   sale at Rutherfords.\nONB NIGHT ONLY\nMor-day, Rmmber 19tr*\n\"Jerry From Herry\"\nThe funniest show since time began,\nBAND AMD ORCHESTRA.\nWatch (or the atreet Parade.\nPric*--60c, 76e, ll.M.\nPlain opens at Rutherford's Saturday\nmorning.\nJames Malcolm\nSuccessor to Ashcroft and Malcolm\nHorse shoeing, Carriage Work, General\nBlack smithing.\nPhono SI.   P.O. Box 163\nHaU Street Nelson, U.C.\nKootenay Steam\nLAUNDRY\nOoo-ls   Cnlled   for and  Delivered  Free.\nThe latent modern appliances now In use\nnt   this   laundry.\nBaker Street Nelson, B.C.\n-Telephone UW\nDainty, Appetising Dishes\nTAING'S\nCanned Meata\nTENDERS\nWe nre instructed to calt for tenders for\nthe  slock  nnd  fixtures  and goodwill   of\nThe Athabasca Saloon, of Nelson.BX.\nwhich wlll be sold as a going concern.\nStock of llauors about 1700; fixtures, 12500;\ntotal, $3200. Tenders will ibe received up to\nNov.   26,   lt-HW.    For   particulars   enquire\nMcDERMID & MoHARDY\nNelson, B.C. Financial Agents\nDr. A. O. Levy\nOffice:  No.  2,  Tramway Block.  Baker St.\nOfllce Hours: 11 to IS; 2 to 4.\nTelephones: Olllce,  430;  Residence, 431.\nLAND NOTICES\nNOTICE ia hereby given thnt 60'days\nafter date I Intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Land*] and Works for\npermission to purchase about 160 acres or\nland, situated In the WeBt Kootenay district, and described aa follows: Commencing at a post marked \"W, ti. Coog-\nan's S.B. corner post,\" situated at A. M.\nLang's S.W. corner post of lot 7741, near\n9-Mlle oreek, Pend d'Oreille river, tlience\nnorth 20 chains; thence weat 80 chains;\nthence south 20 chains; thenco east no\nchain* to tlie place of beginning.\nWanotn,  B.C.,  12th Nov., 1006.\n11-17 W.    L.   OOOOAN.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that 60 days after date I inter-] to apply to the Hon.\nChief Commissioner of Landa and Works\nfor permission to purchase the following\ndesoribed lands In the West Kotenny district: Commencing at a post marked \"C\nM. Gay lord's N.B. corner,\" at the northeast corner of Frank Carte's old pre-emption claim, near Brooklyn creek, and about\ntwo miles book frcm the southwest ahore\nof Lower Arrow lake, thence weBt 80\nchains, mere or less, to the boundary line\nbetween said pro umptlon and Ipt -6817;\nthence south 80 ohalns, more or leas, to the\nboundary line of said lot and old pre-emption; thenco east 80 ohalns, more or less,\nto the boundary line of said lot and old\npre-emption; thence north si) chain's, raoro\nor  leaa   to point of commencement,   containing 640 acres, moro or lesa.\nDated  Oct.  10,-1906.'\nC.  M..OAYLORD.\nRAiLFII  SLVE, Agent\nNOTICB is heroby given that sixty days\nafter date I Intend to apply to the Hon.\nthe Chief Commissioner of Lands nnd\nWorks for permission to -purchaso the following described lnnds In West Kootenay\ndlatrlct: Commencing at a post marked\n\"Charles T. Partington's N.W. corner,\"\nsituated on the eaat side of 7-Mile creek on\na smnll branch of same on the Pend\nd'Orlelle river, nnd adjoining John James'\npre-emption on the -south, and xv. a.\nDlllicanjs purchase applied for, on tho\neast, thence 10 chains south; thence east\n60 chains; thence north 40 chains; thence\nwest 80 chains to point of commencement,\nand containing 320 acres ,more or less.\nLocated this 29th day of October, lSWii,\nCHAS. T. PARTINGTON\nW.  A.   DUNCAN,  Agent.\nNOTICB ls hereby given that GO days\nafter dute I Intend to apply tu the Hon.\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor permission to purchase the following\ndescribed landa In the Lower Arrow lake\ndlatrlct, about three miles above tho\nNeedles postofllce on the west side of the ,\nlake: Commencing ut the southwest corner of F. B. Lucas' pre-emption, post No.\nI 40 chains west to Post No, 2; thence\n20 chains north to post No. 3; thenco -\"J\nchains euat to post No, 4; thence 20 chain*\nsouth to place of commencement.\nDated tills 23rd day of October, 11KW.\nA. V. LUCAS 10-27\nNOTICE ts hereby given that 60 dnyn\nafter date I Intend to apply to the Hon.\nthe Chief .Commissioner of Lands and\nW\/orks for permission to purchase tho\nfollowing described lands In West Kootenay district: Commencing at a post\nmarked \"M.B.T.'s northwest post\" and\nplanted on the east line ot Lot No. 8872,\nabout one mite from Kootenay river on\nthe aouth side, thence 80 chaina south}\nthence 20 chaina east; thence 80 chaina\nnorth; thence 20 chains west, to point of\nbeginning.\nM.  B.  TAYL-..*\",.\nW. J. TOYE, .\\\u00ab<nt.\nDated this and day of Auew-t. 100*3\nFOR SALE\nHotel Hum., I lot., 50x1*0. furniture,\nBlock V at Balfour, 12 lot.      Wl\nflxtu-e, and atock  ***.-*w*\nLot I and E half 1, block 1, with trailing., partly rented MS month    9,imi\n7 lot., blook UD, with bearing fruit\n\u25a0 tne \u2022___\u2022\u2022 '\u25a0\"*>\nLot. 7 and 8, W. halt \", Mock 14, wltn\ns-room new dwelling   \"\u2022\u00ab*\"-\n\u25a0 lot. town of Silverton   MWj\nHalf Intanit M0 acre. Slocan Ink\"** WJ\nQuarter Interett Trout Lake Olty.... *.__\u00bb\ntot Atlla City  W>\nHall later-at In 110 aere. near K\u00abi\u00b0 , \u00ab\"\n19) acre. Pan ValUy ...ij ...\u00bb V*\nHalf lntereat 70 acre.. I mile, up Uot-\ntonwood oreek, Nelaon      Itw\nAll   lntere.ta   In   mln.r.1   claim.,\n\u25a0took., .to \u25a0 \u00ab\u25a0**\"\nTotal I **\u2022*\u00bb\nTh. abov. n bloc ttMOOs WOO \"<\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0\nbalance in one and. two yean, I *m cut\nInt.-**-.\nJ. FRED HUME\n \u00bb\u25a0 k^fri^\u2014^ms'imfiv.\ns^.**5S*^s-ise\u2122\nChoice Acre Blocks\nIn Lot 97\nfive mlBUtea from  ear  11m.    Oood\nbuilding lota in Hum* addition to Nelson\nCity*\nFruit land ln block, of 40 to 320 acres\n* wu West Ann and take.\nH. L Croasdaile \u00ab Oa.\nOo. Nat door Oaa. Baal -gOf-am-*-*-\n,\u2022__, Ml      Welma*. \u25a0.-*.      F.O. ma m\nO OAL\nshlpmanU made\nUway points\nDomestic\nBieam\n\u25a0Smithing\n*W. JP. TIB3*. HT*****\"**\nOENKR-a, SALBS AOBNT\n3tox 823. Nelaon, B.C.\n} Direct shli\nto all r.\nMEN'S: GLOVES\n'FOB   .'\nEVERY PURPOSE\nWe Belvct our gloves from the product of the best maker*' b\u00abrt.\nOlov-t-9  for working  Sou to $179\nojovm for tb-j -itreet  II to fW\nOloves tor drean ,. 1flo to U\nWEBB LON'U ON OLOVB8\nEijiory & Wallet)\nTHB HUB\nm\ntat wUtit mtwa, emttot, a, o\u201e mot.*, eovmeah it, not\n\u2022naoB wmm\nNew York. Nov. lC-Sllver. 71 M; rutins\ncopuer, 21 3-8;  lead, (S.7B.\nLondon, Nov. U-J-e.d, CU a. 0d.; BU-\nter, 32 1S-1*. ;\nNELSON'S NEWS OF THE DAY\nBorn, in this city, on Nov. 14. U the wlte\nof Oeorge Broderlok of Creston, a daughter. .,\nBorn, ln this city on Nov. 14. to the wife\nef Dr. James Bproat of Victoria -itree-t, a\ndaughter,\nIt wan stared yeaterday that Archie\nBishop and Qeorge Dougiaa would beve\n-uhare\u00ab of the t-katlng rink   tht '\nAttention is dlreet-td to rtie mw C.P.R.\n\u25a0winter time schedule published elsewhere\nIn this Isue, which comes Into effect, on\nBurnlny  next.\nFrederick Henry Dfaka of Sayward and\nMist- Ada Rose Ankion of winaipf* were\nmarried In Kelson yeaterdny by Hev. J.\nT.   l-'orftiwon.\nA -\"pedal meeting of Nelson Kncump-\ntqeiu No. 7 Ih coIM for this evening for\n.k-t-i'*---. work. Kv-ary member la the city In\nr-v-iuci-twl to attend.\nThe regutar monthly m-wting ot the public m-liool truste-M will be held la the offlce of. the aecrelary, Dr. E. C Arthur.\nthi.-* evening ut 8 o'ol-ock.\nMrs. W. A Thurman did not rMufn home\nfiotm St. Paul last evening on tspented.\nA, train wrech In North Dakota oreyented\nconnectloit being mude at Moon J*w. Mr.\nThurman, who went to the landing yen-\nterduy to meet his wife and. fatally, hae\nki'tw on to Cranbrook und tbe party is\ncxpccLctl  to reach tlie city.this evinlag.\nW. Snatle of the Hume -arltiou hunting\nparty.'has - returned he .t*. Me declines\nto \u00abive further details tb.,a those already\npublished, of the -dumber of uMmals cap-\nturud,-but he eald slgnlAcintly that there\nWere only two caribou left and that J-\nFated Hume and tbe rant ot th* .party ea-\nIKJiit to get these end to reo-uh Nalson on\nlloiiduy \u00abytitling.\nJ. 8. Curter received a pocket of the\ncelebrated Outremont melon sotda, the\nplants from which are grown only on Ht.\nHelen's Islund, opposite Montreal. Mr.\nCarter Is sending the -seeds to J. L, Moore\nbecretary of the Spokane chamber of com*\nmercc, who ln turn Is arranging to grow\nthe plants In some of the market gardens\nnear Spokane, thought to be specially well\nnutted for the culture of melons. Some\nIdea of the value of the'Outremont melon*\nmay be gathered from thi   fuct that the\nTHI STOE1 OF QUALITY\nSoups\nthat are\nAppetizing\nWholesome\nCheap\nJust tbe thing for a  burrto*   aaa.\nWa have the following varietlM:\nClam Bullion\nClam Chowder\nMutton Broth\nPrlntanler\nAsparagus\nJulllenne     .\nCelery\nBeef\nV**   '        -,,i..'\nPuree of Bean\nVermlcllla-Tomato\nOxTaU\nTomato.\nClilelm\nBullion\nCoaaomma\nVegetable\nTomato-Okra\nMock Turtle\nMulligatawny\nCbleken Oumbo\nOn'y 20o Eaoh or 2 for 36c\nRobt IV|. Hood & Go.\nOROCBRnBB and HtOYMION**.\nK. W. 0. BLOCK NBL80N, B. a\nPHONS 10.\n$600 CASH\nand monthly payments\nwill purchase a seven\nroomed residence and\nthree lots. The position is especially well\nsuited for railway or\nsmeller men.\nNBLSON, ao.\n********* ttt* **********\n\\   To come and visit our store and will be pleased i\nto show you our large and well assorted stock of \u2022\nWe Invite You\ncome and visit our store an<\nhow you our large and well\nSTOVES AND RANGES\n. Whether you buy or not it is a pleasure t\n;    for us to show what a COMPLETE STOCK. !\n|    of these goods really means.   Also t\nGuns, Rifles and Ammunition \u2666\nThe J. H. Ashdown Hardware Co., Ltd.!\nNELSON \u25a0BANCH {\n******** ******************* ^--tiHlllMni MM Mlllll\n*emmeemeeeem\nmmaaamm\nWaldorf-Astoria hotel of New Tork, take*\nyearly the whole crop and obtains trom Ita\npalroTM tl a portion, or p for each melon.\nThe plant lt In aald, cannot be \u00abncc\u00ab*wruiiy\ncultivated hereabouts, but at preralltng\nprices It might he welt worth trying if\noome enterprising fruit grower would make\nthe experiment.\nTickets for the coming Bt ABdraWs\nbanquet aro now out and meeting with a\nready sale, the price thla rear bolng reduced to a couple of dollars. A meeting\n-will be beld In Atr. Wattle's offlce on noxt\nMonday evening to perfect arrang\u00abmwu\nfor the banquet which wlll be held lo Fra-\nternlty halt aa at prew-m errangtd.\nThe udjourned meeting nf the Whaia-\namlertf aa-Mclatlon will Vr lulii ibla evening In the board of trade ro-.ni-- at i-iii.\nIn view of the fact ttuit officer*-* for the\nyear are to be elected, and* ulso tbat the\nquestion of freight ratea Ia to ba dbwumud\na full attendance ln extremely -luelruble If\nthe ae-Mclnllon la to mike good It* rlgbt\nto erlflt.\nA rock and mudnlide on the Great Northern line, about a quarter of a mil* weat\nof Troup Junction, nn the upper Una, late\non Wetlneeday night, together with a \u25a0*)\u2022\u2022*\u25a0\nralled freight train, which run lato tbe\ntumbled down maaa, caused a temporary\nsuapenalon of buAlne-;>t on tht line between. Nelson and Northpo t y*ni*rday.\nThe mortilng expreas for the muth wa*\ncancelled and so Was the northbound train\nup from-Northport. the company having no\n-extra engine on hand for ttie worn, although the truffle along the- whol* line\nwould Justify the company taking proper\ncare of thin end of it. The aiall, whloh\nshould have gona out yeuterdity morning\nwill be dispatched today, aa th* Una wilt\nhe clear for traffic this morning. Northbound passengers from Spokane last night\nreached the city by way of Ron aland and\nthe C.P.R. from that point.\nleoVAh- Q. Dalton, Utsndeti; J. It. Ue\nRao. Vernon; 3 Dalton. Urandua;; J. onr-\nall. Jlo'-hwter.\n\u2022MADDEN--W. Anarm, Ureenwood; ft, J.\nCowan nnd wife, Spokane; B. C. Kirk-\npatrlrk. Portland; at. Jncobson. Now Don-\nver; 8. McElllgott, We-itleyi M. Carroll,\nNakuep; If.,Manhart and wife, Saskatoon;\nJ. J. Patterson, Vancouver.\nNtB1^0N--H. W. Stowe, Nakusp; H. T,\nGallon, New York; fl. Ryan, Grand Korku.\nGRAND CE}tTRAl--3. A. Foley. Blocan; A. McDougald, C. hostile. Bandon; H\nMcDonald, A. Cox, Strathcona: J. Morris,\nand wife, Greenwood.\nHL*M,B-W. A. Mugpp, Quebec; H. J.\nKirkwood, Slocan; W. H. Brandon, Silverton; J. F. Macdonald, C, Poole, Vanoouver; O. Bailey, D. C, Smcllte, Winnipeg; W. V. MlHichamp, Toronto; A. ti.\n-T'ewaii. Gait; J. A. Dln\u00bbmore, Grand\nFork*-!.\nSolid Comfort\nFor a few days only we caa sell jrou a\nhandsome Morris- Chair, rerer-lhle\nvelour cunhlons, tor\n$8\n00\nOnly a tew on band; Juat Ihe thlnf\n(or a Xmas present.\nThe STANDARD FURNITURE Co.\nComplet* House Pnnlabt-i   Undartak-n and Embalm.\u2122\nA0SNT8 Kason * Risch Pianos  Otobe Wernicke-Bosk  Oatea.    Oster-\nmoor Mattreeaee.\t\nflTUATHOO*fA-J. B. Henderson. Uon-\nnlnaton; Jamea AjideiHoii, 'Kaslo; T. M.\nSiiillh. Seallle; A.  T.  .Mnnnlnir. Toronio.\nOL-JiBNU-Hll, I.ffevre ond v,-lre, Q. BoDI),\nHosnland; Mra. tt. J. Hullierlund, Slocon;\nC. C. Brown. Vancouver; L. S. Lownen\n*ol mite. JlcUod; a. A. Work, Toronto\nJunotlon; J. C. lierdman. \/.'ulgnry.\nKOOTENAJ-J. Brewnlilll. Cranbrook; R\nSlonl.r. P. B.rlner, Mooje Jaw; O, A.\nN-jm, Phoenix; P o. Auguatln, Revelstoke;\nP. Tro-io. Wlnlaw; O. Zullopt, Fornlo.\n\u2022HlBRDllOOICB-B. Alklnron, W. mov-\nt\u00bbo. Cranbrook; J. Faulds. Elgin; c. Sum-\nln.r\u00bb.  Winnipeg; J. Chenard,  8kican.\nt-UVo\u2014H. Carpenter, Qranlte; Jt. Foley,\nYmlr; T. Morgan. C'aallegar.\nLAKBVII5W-0. Young. Blue Bell mine;\nH. McArthur. O. 0, Miller, .uontreal. *\nBAH-T1.BTT-C. Harrlnglon, Brie; H.\nBurttoo, Calgary.\n6m Your Grocer Gives You\nTAIMC'S\nNew Stock\nJust\nArrived\nChina and\nCut Glass\nOur famous Salt and Pepper Shakers at 75c\na pair are now on sale. These will be sent\nby mail to any part of the country.\nOrder now. -,-\u25a0*\nJ. O. PATENAUDE\nt\u00abiTep\u00ab-ii\n--JUNFUTiimn -ir.au\nOPTICIAH\nHORSES\nFOR\nSALE\nWeight from 900 to 1C00 lb*.\nNelson Transfer Co.\nPhone 35\nOffice and   Stables   oorner   of Vernon\nnnd Stanley\nCanned Meata\nIt's up to you\nTo keep your toot dry and warm.\nWhether It be RUBBERS or waterproof boots, we can supply you. Our\nstock is complete-;'\nTHE ROYAL\nH. Andrew tt Co. Nalaon\nCigars, Tobaccos\nand\nG.B.D.\nPIPES\nat the\nCabiqet Oigar Store\nC. I -MATTHEW. Prop., Baker tt.\nChina\nV\\'e iiuvf juts opened up a tine\nast-ortment or China Tea Bote fine,\nquality and dainty decoration**!, !!>\nup. Also other oddti and ends In\nChina .Vanes, Cheese Dishes, net*\nof JiiRfl, Platen, Cup\u00bb und Saucers,\nBread Truys, Jard'nl-r.--, t-trurih and\nComb Trays, etc., at lowest prices.\nA 4 h.p. Oaeollne Launch In good\ncondition, with boat house.\nCHINA HAIL\nNnro ft Ne'Mi, Propri.\nP. O. Boi 588.      *       Phone A281\nJUST TRY t\\ LITTLE\nof our delicious Home Made Candy. Its\nthe kind that melts in one's mouth. A\ndozen different kinds.\nHot Drinks and Oyster Cocktails.\nCUT FLOWERS\nLONCHURST'-J\nPhone 25\nBaker St.\nChocolates\nThe best quality of\nChocolates will always be found at\nmoderate   prices   at\nBaaarr\nPHONB IH\nCHOQUETTE BROS.\nBAKBR STRWn\n$2300 will buy\nA large two-story dwelling and two\n\u2022 lots on Mill street. Parlor, dining-room\nkitchen, four bedrooms, bathroom.\nElectric light; house in excellent condition.\nTerms: $300 cash, $500 in quarterly\npayments; $1500 on mortgage.\nricDermid & McHardy\nGYMNASIUM\nJERSEYS\nPANTS\nAll Wool Gymnasium Jerseys\nOre-Quarter Sleeves\n$1.00\nJaeger's Stockinet Gymnasium\nSweater, no Sleeves*\n$1,60\nPants $t.oo\nHere's an Opportunity\nVou don't have every day.\nFresh ground\n\"\u25a0 & K\" BUCaWHFAT Fioua  i\nstraight tram the mill at Victoria. lt'\u00bb\nput up In 10-lb. sacks, not the so-called\n\"sel'-ralalng\" kind. Ask your grocer:\ntor lt.\nThe Braeknun-Ker Hilling Co., Ltd.\nThem goods are mnde iii Cannda and\ncannot be benten lh price or quality.\nCocoa, per tin IS and wc.\nParisian Chocolate, cake .\".,\";. 10c.\nChocolate Cream Bur, enke 9c.\nDiamond Chocolate, cake  lite.\n-Chocolate Ginger, cake ,..; So.\nCrystal lied   Ginger,   cake 25c.\nThe Beii Trading Company\nCowan's\nChocolate\nafd - - r \u2022.\nCocoa\nThe Medicine Chest j\nShould have a bottle, ol .cough, medl- ]\ncine this1 weather. ' '\u25a0'.'.     .' l\nOur Wild Cherry; Spruce and Tar I*,!\nthe best and safest remedy for coughi I\nand sore chests.  Two sizes 26c and 50c\nbottles. \t\nwe have double felt chest protectors,\ni slj-s at 40c and SOc each.\nChamois Vests, double, 12.00 each.\nMali orders filled promptly.\nWM. RUTHERFORD\nLISTEN I   We can prov*  ***\u25a0 eanna w\"n *\u00b0e ***** chocolate.\n^  to you that     ^ tbe j^^ de|tc|0ua centre*\nAre the hest keepers and most popular\nohocotates on the market\nTou can't go wrong on any sized order but a small one.   Patronise noma\nIndustry,\nJ. As M\u00b0DONALD\nC3WHOLBBALB FRUIT   AMD   OOHFBOTIONBRT\n% Wooden ware\n3 Wo have opened up another lot  of  line  woodenware,   Including\n3 Bread Boards (round, equare and oval), Butter Dishes (glass center)\n3 26c; Chopping Bowls, Spoons, Etc., Etc.\n3 ~\t\n3\nI\nis ph(\n\u25a0*^*n*fli^*n*fjirT|i-|i[^'^*ii^li^\\ * wtiy*piftfttfr*_piw*yk*y.t}f***9\nNelson Hardware Company\ni;   ;; i;.',;___ NELSON, a 0.\n$1000 CASH\nBalance In easy payment*, wlll purchase a modern two-story house on\nCedar street; 7 rooms, electric light and gas connections.   Price 13000.\nWe have tor sale a good paying buslnea\u2014a going concern\u2014or wll) con-\n'   aider a proposition for Investment aa a partner. Only those meaning business apply to  1   r  ' \u2014\u25a0 i\nMcMorris & Horstead\nPIBB AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE.   PHONE 209. EMPLOYMENT AOBNTS\nElliot Block, Baker St.. Next Walker's Jewelry Store.\ndo\nHouse For Solo\ntSMoOO\nApply to\n. We have for sale a fine seven'\nroomed house, in good repair,,\n'two blocks from Baker Street.'\nHas all modern improvements.\nCan arrange terms.'\nFruit Land, and Real Batata\nTOTB  \u00abfe  OO.\nNelson, a O.\nJ. H. WALLACE\n,      MEN'S OUTnTTER\nChinaware\nOur now Holiday Stock ts now In and If In want ot any ODD PIECES\nof FANCY CHINA a visit to our J*e*mmm\\-*       V......\nChinaware Department\nwill repay you,  Now la the tlm* to make yo* Christmas \u2022olMtlona.\n. Chinaware If sold out now cannot be reorder.! before tho holidays,\nMORAXr-Select your lift-, now while stook Is complete.\nCanada Brag & Book Cofs Cash Stores\n__t____m_m___w\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1906_11_16","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0382302","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.493333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.295833","@language":"en"}],"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.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Nelson, B.C. : F.J. Deane","@language":"en"}],"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","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1906-11-16 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1906-11-16 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Daily News","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0382302"}