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The\nWellington hag made a number ot\n\u25a0mall shipments, the first being ln\nApril. In the first week ln June the\nJack Pot mine, owned by the British\nColumbia Copper company, commenced\nshipping end has never missed a week,\nhaving now a fine tonnage to Its credit.\nThe'Rawhide mine was the ibig mine\nof the group owned by the Dominion\nCopper company, now the New Dominion Copper company, the control of\nwhloh is in the hands of the British\nColumbia Copper company. This mine\niwas laat a shipper In the summer of\n1908, when it Bhipped altogether 10,-\n740 tons of ore to the Boundary Falls\nsmelter. When the company became\nInvolved in litigation, the mine closed\ndown. Last year a force ot IB men,\nwas kept working, carrying on development, but no shipments were made.\nThe shipment recorded this week went\nto the smelter of the British Columbia\nCopper company at Greenwood, where,\nalso, the ore ot the Jack Pot goes.\nSlocan Star Also\nThe returns also tell tbe story ot\ntho reopening of the Slocan Btar mine,\nof the Slocan diBtrict, a shipment being made to the- smelter of the Consolidated Mining ft Smelting company\nat Trail This \u2022property had been tied\nup for a lengthy period iby litigation,\nbut previously had shipped tbe second\nlargest tonnage of silver-lead ore of\nany mine in the Slocan district. It ts\nsi* years or more since this once famous mine was a large shipper, tout\nlt is understood that the parties to the\nlong drawn out suit 'have made a deal\nby which the properties involved may\nbe worked to mutual advantage without\nfurther friction and the Slocan Star\nwill have an opportunity to resume its\nold honorable position in the list of\nproducers. *\nThe\"!ollowlng are the returns of the\nore production and movement for the\npast week:\nSS \u25a0imat\u2022::!:: \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 *.\u00ab %-\u00bb\nSnowshns     2''S    \"*SS\ng&8?:::::::::::::::::..::: u\u00bb   *.-\u00bb\nOther mines               *'\"\"\n.   Total \u2022    *\u25a0** i*w*m\nBOSSLAND SHIPMENTS\nCentre Star      Ml*    \"f*\u00abJ\nLeRol NO 2         H\u00bb      \u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\nISA ^.2:.\u2122n!\u00b1:::::::   8 \u00abf\nOther mines                 .\"*\nTotal  ,.'.  '\u2022,\"*\" m*m\nSLOCAN-KOOTENAY SHIPMENTS\nSt Eugene, milled   \".TO \u00bb\nVan Rol, milled     *\u00bb \u00bb.\u00a3\u00bb\nQueen, milled     g\u00bb 'ffSS\nOranlto-Poorman, milled ... 260 9,250\nNugget, milled  JJ\u00bb J.JJJ\nHighland, milled \u25a0 \u201e.....,.... M0 6,800\n.\u25a0Wllooi, milled  J5 \u00bb\nHlohmond-Eureka , .\u2014 \\_ <M\u00bb\nEmerald   ,\u00bb '\u2022*\"\nSullivan  \u00ab** \"\u2022J\"\nRuth   f? 4S\nEnterprise     g \"\nSlocan Star  \u2022  *> \u201e.\"\"\nOther mines I        \u25a0J*'\nTotal   r. \u2022    *,\u00b0\u00b0    22\u00b0,t86\nThe total shipments tor the\" week, ln-\ncludlnn   the   estimated     milling,     were\n40,398   tons,   and   for   the year to date,\nl,\u00ab26,Ki tons.\nB. O. COPPER COMPANY'S RECEIPTS\nGreenwood,   B.C.         \t\nMother Lode      &JJ\"    \"Wgf\nJaok-Pot      .\u00ab18      *,*\u00bb\nRawhide       1,800      1,SM\nOther mines  -         ' 8,sw\nTotal      10.\u00ab11    206,2*3\nORANBY SHELTER RECEIPTS.\n\u25a0\\.      Grand Forks, B.C.\nGranby      18.6M    8*4,164\nOther mines  ..\u00bb\u2022-      ___\nTotal   1\u00ab,6*J 844,274\nCONSOLIDATED CO.'S RECEIPTS\nTrail B.C.\nSt Eugene, concentrates ... 160 11,243\nLeRol No. 2. part conoen-\ntrates  .....  \u00bb\u00bb 22.J84\nQueen, concentrates ........ 89 606\nHlshland, concentrates  \u00ab 147\nCentre Star   MM 187,604\nLeBol  ;..,,         178      11,398\nSnewsh's \u25a0\"...;;..\u25a0;. - *,!\u00bb lio,i*J\nBlohmond-Bureka  22 IMJ\nBmerald   *| ,*.\u00ab\"\"\nSilllvan ,.,  _ 1*800\nuth ,.i    88 412\nEnterprise      *\u00bb *J\nNickle Plate ,\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0: g \"S\nBloc\u00bbn Star  \u00bb \u201e-\u00bb\nOther mines  ,        *-.*\u25a0*\nTotal ..: '\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022'.   '\u25a0\u2022n    **W*\nThe total receipts at the smelters toe\nths week, Including concentrates, were\n88,008 tons, and tor ths year 'to   date;\nMM*.*\nNELSON B. C,  SUNDAY  MORNING.  SEPTEMBER  18, 19(0\nNO. 131\nOVERNOR\nLikely to  Retire  Fi-SK Cabinet\u2014Differences With Colleagues\u2014&.C.\nHomeeteft) Regulation!\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nOTTAWA, Sept. 17\u2014The Morning\nCitizen (Conservative) dealing with the\nappointment at an early date of new\nlieutenant governors for Saskatchewan\nand Alberta, says:\n\"The leading candidates for the lieutenant governorship of Saskatchewan\nare Mr. George Brown of Regina and\nMr. J. G. Turlff, M.P. for Bast Asslnlboia The former nas the backing of\nthe Scott government, while the latter\nls recommended by a Liberal member\nof parliament for Saskatchewan\nOliver Tendered Resignation\n\"In Alberta the situation derives Interest on account of the probable retirement of Hon. Frank Oliver from\nthe cabinet. It Ib generally believed\nthat sharp differences of opinion exist\nbetween Mr. Oliver and his colleagues\nrespecting the question of policy ln the\nadministration of the department of\nthe Interior. Tbe minister's regulations\nin regard to Immigration were modified by the government during his absence ln the Yukon, and It Is currently\nreported that differences ot opinion as\nto the proper method of allotment of\nhomesteads in tbe railway belt of British Columbia terminated a few days\nago ln an Interview between Mr. Oliver\nand Sir Wilfrid Laurier at Kamloops\nIn the course ot which the former tendered hts resignation. It was not -accepted at that time ibut there ls every\nreason to believe that -within the next\nfew months Mr. Oliver will be succeeded tn the cabinet by Premier Sifton\nof Alberta. There la none the less\neverv disposition on the part of the\ngovernment to part with Mr. Oliver on\ngood terms snd there Is authority for\nthe statement that the minister has\nthe refusal of the lieutenant governorship ot Alberta.\"\nNEW YORK POLICE SCANDAL\nNEW YORK, Sept. 17\u2014New York\nCity Is on the eve of a \"Police Graft\"\nexposure if credence Is to be given to\npersistent reports in circulation in police circles today. These are to. the\neffect that a police official who had\nbeen caught In the toils of the stringent .Investigation ln vice conditions Instigated by acting Mayor Mitchell, had\nIndicated his desire to tell the high\nadministrative authorities all that he\nknew concerning the existence of graft\nfrom gamblers, proprietors of disorderly resorts and other panderers to tbe\nvices of the community.\nMEMBER OP1 PARLIAMENT\nAPPLIES  FOR  DIVORCE\nOTTAWA, Ont., Sept. 17,\u2014An unusual\napplication appears In the Canada Gazette \u25a0 today, ln the form of an application\nby a French Canadian member of parliament of Canada for divorce from hiB wife.\nThe application states that St. Aubln, of\nthe city of Montreal, will apply for a bill\nof divorce from his wife, Dame Marc\nAnysle Trueau, residing in Montreal, on\nthe statutory ground of desertion.\nMURDER ENDS FEUD\nOF RIVAL TRAPPERS\nSpecial Constable Searching for Illicit\nBeaver Skint ts Shot\u2014Murderer\nSurrenders\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 17\u2014Donald McDonald, rancher and trapper of Salmon\nArm was brought to the city this morning by Constable Mlnty of Rock Bay,\ncharged with murder and on the same\nboat was the body of hie alleged victim, Frank Savage. The two men were\nrival trappers and a feud of long standing bas existed between them. Recently one of McDonald's neighbors\nlaid an information against him of\nhaving beaver sklns concealed and Indian Agent Halliday swore ln Savage\naa a special constable to make a search\nBad feeling broke out when Savage\nstated his errand and a few moments\nlater the pair were engaged in a fierce\nstruggle for a rifle. Another trapper,\nCushman, came % along and separated\nthe men. Cushman then read the warrant and he and Savage entered the\nhouse. McDonald again resisted end\nhe and Savage got Into another fight,\nCuBhman again Interfering. Finally\nMoDonald went outside and dared the\nothers to come out Baying he would\nshoot them. Cushman came out first\nand as Savage appeared In the door\nMcDonald fired, the rifle bullet killing\nthe man Instantly. McDonald gave himself up without opposition and was\ntaken to Rock Bay.\nNew Westminster Takes First\nGame by Seven to Three\nNATIONALS WERE    ,\nMUCH OVER-RATED\nNEW TYPE OP MONOPLANE\nNEW YORK, Sept 17\u2014Walter L.\nFalrchlld, an electrical engineer of Manhattan who has taken up aeronautics,\nmade a flight today at Garden City. He\nused an original,type of monoplane and\nsuccessfully flew back and forth across\nthe aviation field several times. Mr.\nFalrchlld has been .trying out the various parts of hia machine for three\nweeks and Judging from the speed already displayed the monoplane ia likely to develop ft apeed of seventy miles\nftn hour. *'\nFailed to Show Vaunted Speed\nand Combination\u2014Were\nNot Dangerous\nIN PORT ARTHUR.\nPORT ARTHUR, Sept, 17\u2014William\nMackensle spent Uie forenoon In Port\nArthur while en route east and discussed several matters ot local interest\nwith olty oWolals.\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 17\u2014Twelve\nthousand persons saw the New Westminster lacrosse team successfully defend the Minto cup at Queen's park\noval this afternoon the Nationals of\nMontreal being defeated In the first\ngame ot the series by a score of seven\ngoals to three.\nBusiness at Standstill.\nGreat Interest was taken ln the game.\nBusiness ln New Westminster being\npractically at a standstill and every\nsport enthusiast along the coast turning out to the game. Feeling among\nlacrosse fans was strongly confident\nIn favor of the champions, betting being two and three to one in their favor\nwhile many bets were registered on the\nchampions doubling the score. The\nshowing made by tbe Nationals In practice had, however, made an Impression\nand the majority of the spectators expected a close game. The result of the\ngame shows that the Nationals must\nhave been greatly over-rated when compared on western lacrosse standards as\nit was not until the third quarter that\nthey appeared at all dangerous. During the first and second quarters New\nWestminster did not extend themselves\nat all and the remark was current\namong the crowd that the game was\nnot as exciting as the Montreal series.\nThe Nationals failed to show either\nthe speed or combination with which\nthey were credited and the general\nfeeling here tonight is that there is\nno doubt but that the second game next\nSaturday will be a duplicate of today's\ncontest.\nFirst to Westminster.\nThe Nationals secured the ball on the\nface off and started toward Westminster's goal with a rush but were unable\nto get in a shot with any hope of sue*\n.cess, so vigorous was the champions'\ndefense. New Westminster got the ball\nand attacked the Nationals' goal only\nto be repulsed. Both sides figured iu\nsome pretty work each man evidently\nfeeling the mettle ot his opponent After nine minutes play Cliff Spring\nscored the first goal for the champions just as the referee waB handing\nthe time check to Decarle. For the\nbalance of the quarter Westminster\nplayed rag largely because G. Spring\nand Turnbull were ruled off leaving the\nside start.\nTwo More in second.\nThe second quarter opened with one\not Westminster's famous dashes to\ntheir opponent's net, Len Turnbull\nBcorlng in less than two minutes. The\nNationals made desperate efforts also\nat this time endeavoring to give Lalonde a good chance at the net but\nGalbraith checked Newsy too closely\nfor him to be dangerous. After ten\nminutes Westminster made a good combination rush for the goal and G. Spring\nfound the net with a difficult shot.\nNew Westminster Slackens.\nThe third quarter opened with everything going New Westminster's' way,\nbut the Nationals displaying dogged\nenergy and persistence. They repulsed\ntwo dashes ot the champions on their\ngoal and then L. Turnbull found the net\nfor the fourth goal. Five minutes later\nhe duplicated his work, aided by good\ncombination and rushes. New Westminster slackened play about this time\nand the Nationals took advantage of\nthe opportunity, Lalonde scoring ln\nfive minutes and on the faceetf Gau-\nthier made a dazzling run. and found\nthe Westminster net ln eleven seconds.\nC. Spring cut Gauthler down when\nmaking the shot and was benched.\nBoth Played Out.\nThe fourth quarter was slow, both\nteams being well played out. The Nationals opened with a series of dashes\nwhich landed the third goal tor them.\nThis aroused the Westminsters and\nthey worked hard to make the score\ndouble. After, eight minutes Len Turn*,\null accomplished the trick and toward\nthe end of the quarter he scored the\nseventh and final goal.\nChecking Fierce.\nMat Barr officiated as referee and\nLionel Yorke as judge of play, the actions of both being perfectly acceptable. The play throughout the game\nwas clean although checking Was\nfierce at times.\nThe lineup was aa follows:\nNationals Goal        Westminster\nL'Heureux1 Gray\nPoint\nCatterlnlch  T. Gifford\nCover Point\nGagnon  .. J. Gifford\nFirat Defence  \u2022\nDecarle  Galbraith\nSecond Defence\nClement  Marshall\n(Continued on Pais row.)\nSHOT HIS WIFE TO\nEND HER AGONY\nProspector's Awful  Ordeal\u2014Wife   Be-\nseeched Him to End Her Suffer.\nInge\u2014Physical  Wreck\nNEW YORK, Sept 17\u2014James Mc-\n\u25a0Doweli, prospector and miner, who killed his wife to end her sufferings ln\nthe wilds of the Canadian northwest\nls at the home of friends at 2774 Bain-\nbridge avenue today. He i8 a nervous\nand physical wreck. McDowell compiled with the plea of hts mortally\ninjured wife to end her agony. He\nwas examined by a jury. \"My wife\nwas Fanny Crawford, a native of the\nprovince of Alberta,\" he said. \"I had\na rich claim sear Castle mountain, in\nthe British Columbia extension of the\nCascade range and soon after we were\nmarried We decided to visit It. The\nmule on which my wife was. riding\nwas stung by a hornet, kicked and\nplunged over a precipice, carrying my\nwife with him. My wife was crushed\nto a shapeless mass and begged me to\nend her agony.   I then shot her.\"\nRIGHT FOOT TORN\nCOMPLETELY OFF\nMate of Steamer Moyle Suffered Painful Accident at Riondel Yester.\nday Morn Ins\nHis foot caught In a coll of cable\nand drawn Into a cavil by a movement of -the boat, John Annett, mate of\nthe steamer Moyle yesterday had his\nright foot completely torn off and his\nthigh fractured, while the steamer was\ntaking on passengers at Riondel. The\n'boat was at the wbart and was being\nheld against the swing of the wind\nwhen an unusually strong gust caused\nher to move outwards suddenly.\nAnnett was standing at the side,\nwatching the passengers come aboard\nand did not notice -that his right foot\nwas entangled In a coil of rope, one\nend of which was attached to the boat\nand the other to the wharf.\nAs the boat swayed outward the rope\nsuddenly tightened and his foot was\ndrawn into the cavil, around which the\nrope was drawn. He was pulled\nagainst the railing of the boat, his\nthigh broken and hl8 right foot torn\noff in a flash. The severed member\ndropped Into the water.\n. He was rendered first aid by the\nengineer and purser on the boat and\ntaken to Kaslo at once, where a doctor attended to the wound. The Moyle\nmade the return trip to Nelson as\nquickly \u25a0 as possible and the injured\nman taken ln the ambulance to the\nKootenay Lake General hospital where\nDrs. Rose and Hartln found It necessary to amputate the limb. The patient\nwas progressing well last night.\nAnnett is a native ot Northumber-\nlandshlre, Bngland. and came to British Columbia about three years ago.\nHe is 26 years of age and unmarried.\nSince he hag been on the Moyie he has\nacted at different time8 as mate, stevedore and watchman.\nLABOR'CONGRESS\nHAS CONCLUDED\nPermanent Fair Wage Scale Required\n\u2014To Facilitate Evidence Under\nCompensation Act.\nPORT ARTHUR, Sept. 17.-The twenty-\nsixth annual convention of the trades and\nlabor congress waa closed this noon after\na mornlne session at which the principal\nsubject of discussion was the appointment\nof a permanent organiser. The matter was\nreferred to the executive. At noon many\ndelegates were on the train en route home.\nThe resolutions passed this morning were\nof minor Importance except possibly the\nrecommendation that the Dominion government appoint a permanent fair wage\nscale. Others had to do with pensions for\nblind, widows and crlpplea and means of\nnetting evidence to better facilitate the\npressing of claims under the workmens\ncompensation act. \t\nLET CONTRACT\nTO CLEAR LAND\nMr. Vlpond Will Take Timber off Property of Natural Resources\nSecurities Company.\nU3. R. Vlpond haa received from the\nNatural Resources Securltlea company, the\ncontract for taking all the merchantable\ntimber off the large tract of land owned\nby the company In the vicinity of Nakusp. The contract is to be completed\nin a year's time, and lt will yield \u00a3,000,000\nfeet In saw logs, 100,000 railway ties, and\n8000 telegraph poleB. The logs are to be\ndelivered at the Nakusp sawmill.\n\u2022 Mr, Vlpond will leave this week for\nNakusp to build the camp, and he expects\nto have 60 men working full blast by Qcto-\nThe' company has just had the tract\nsurveyed and subdivided by A. U McCulloch, the Nelson engineer, and It will be\ncolonised with a ranching population.\nMODERNIST REVIEWS ADDED\nTO INDEX EXPURGATORIUS\nROME. Sept. 17.\u2014A papal decree issued\ntoday Instructs the congregation of the\nHoly offlco to index long Hat of modernist reviews and books.\n\u2022 The new C. P. R. rate on po*   \u2022\n\u2022 tatoes from Quebec and Ontario   \u2022\n\u2022 ' points Is 69 cents per 100 lbs.   \u2022\n\u2022 Current   quotations    at   these   \u2022\n\u2022 points are 65 cents per bag of   \u2022\n\u2022 90 pounds. i      e\n\u2022 \u2022\n\u2022eo*o********o**n**e******o\nT HOTEL\nI Iff\nWinnipeg Contractors Are the\nSuccessful Tenderers\nCOMPLETION FIXED\nFOR NEXT SPRING\nRailway Company Proposes to\nChange Name of Balfour\nto Riverside\nWINNIPEG, Sept, 17\u2014C, W. Sharp\n& Son are the successful tenderers for\nthe construction of the new C P. R.\nsummer hotel at Balfour, on Kootenay\nlake, 20 miles from Nelson, British\nColumbia, The contract figure Is $160,-\n000, and the hotel is to be completed\nby May 1, 1911, so as to be ready for\nthe opening one month later. William\nWhyte, second vice-president of the\nC.P.R, has placed his signature to the\ncontract and Mr. Sharp has already\nleft for Nelson, Excavation on the site\nwill be commenced Immediately The\nplans w*-*e drawn by William Wallace\nBlair, who has planned several of the\nfinest buildings in this city, including\nvarious skyscrapers. Mr. Sharp ls also\none ot the largest builders in the west.\nLike the other summer tourist hotels\nof the C.P.R., the handsome structure\nthat will overlook the lake and the\nWest Arm will be of frame construction Considerable stone and cement\nwill -be used, howeyer, and a large portion of the exterior will he rough cast.\nIt will be the first hotel to he buiWi\nby the Canadian Pacific in southern\nBritish Columbia. There are now eight\nC.P.R. hotels on the main line In the\nwest, in addition to the hotels in Win-\nnipee and Victoria, but there are none\noff tbe main line\nOfficials Pleased\nLocal C.P.R. officials are much pleased with the decision to go on with the\nBalfour hotel. The attractions at that\nplace are the fishing, boating and hunting. The climate is delightful and\nfruit is grown in large quantities all\nalong the West Arm, on which Balfour\nand Proctor are located. Rainbow trout\nare the chief fish which are sought, by\ntourists hut mountain trout are also\nto be bad. On the mountains there are\nlarge numbers of bear and hunting parties go out after these animals. The\nfacilities for boating could scarcely be\nbetter, and It is expected that the new\nhotel will do a capacity business from\nthe start.\nThe C, p, R. company Intends to\nchange the name of the locality from\nBalfour to Riverside, a proposal which.\nit is understood, is meeting with local\nopposition.\nPOLICE INSPECTOR\nCOMMITS SUICIDE\nMember   of   Winnipeg   Force   Shoots\nHimself While  on  Train\u2014Was\non Holidays\nTORONTO, Sept. 17\u2014Alfred G. Robertson, police Inspector of Winnipeg,\nshot himself in the forehead on the\nO.P.R. train at Agincourt, near this\ncity this morning and died shortly afterwards. He was on his vacation and\nen route from Ottawa to Toronto. It\nis reported here that he was under\nthe Influence of liquor last night and\nthat a revolver which he always carried with him had been taken tram\nhim on the train, He seemed to be all\nright this morning although he was\nsolemn and morose and the weapon\nwas returned to him. The body waa\nbrought to this city and It is likely\nthat an inquest will be held.\nTerror of Crooks\nWINNIPEG. Sept. 17 \u2014 A sensation\nwas created here when the report of\nInspector Robertson's suicide wa-> received. He was one of the hest known\npolice officers In Canada and enjoyed\nthe highest reputation on account of\nhis work In Winnipeg. He had ibeen\nconnected with the local force for eight\nyears during which time he was a terror to crooks and criminals generally.\nHe rose steadily and ~ns practically\nsecond In command of Winnipeg's police body at the time of his death. Of\nimmense size and abounding in good\n. nature, prominent In athletics, he was\nregarded as an excellent officer. Absolutely no motive for his rash act can\nbe ascertained.\nDOLLAR  A   BUSHEL\nFOR  HIGH CLA8S OATS\nLLOYDMINSTER, Sept. 17\u2014The\nCanadian Pacific railway Co. has purchased from J. C. Hill and Sons, Lloyd-\nminster, forty-two and one-half bushels\nof oats at one dollar per bushel. TheBe\noats are from Beed grown on J. C. Hill's\nfarm, six miles east of Lloydmlnster.\nThey are of the class styled \"English\nDudance oats\" and scored 95.5 points\nout of a possible 100 at Brandon winter\nfair. The thxeBhing return tor these\noats showed a yield of 86 bushels to\nthe acre, the weight being 50 pounds\nper bushel. The company will use the\noats for exhibition and publicity purposes. Some seventeen thousand small\nbags each containing about two ounces\nare to he distributed.\nRAILWAY MEN'S FREE\nPASSES TO  BE CUT OFF\nCHICAGO, Sept. 17\u2014Railroads In the\nwestern passenger association comprising the lines between Chicago and the\nRocky mountains have adopted a resolution that after January 1, .1911, no\ncomplimentary annual passes will be issued to the officers and agents of other\nrailways below the rank ot assistant\ngeneral passenger agent. This will cut\noff from the privilege the thousands of\ngeneral agents, district division travelling passenger agents and local representatives ot the roads In various cities\nwho have heen accustomed to travelling\ntree.\nDIVORCE SEQUEL TO\nLOVELESS   MARRIAGE\nNEW TORK, Sept. 17.\u2014Judge BIJuro of\nthe supreme court signed today a final\ndecree of absolute divorce Jn favor of Roy\nE. Pardee, aon of Dwight W, Pardee, secretary of the New York Central and Hudson River railroad, from Lillian Beasley\nPardee. Roy E. Pardee, who Ib 22 years\nold, married In June; 1909, but lived with\nhis wife only a few months. He says\nthat his wife confessed to him withly M\ndays of their marriage that she did not\nlove him, but married him only to obtain a name and social position.\nBIG CATTLE SHIPMENT.\nWINNIPEG, Sept 17\u2014One of the\nseason's best shipments of cattle passed through here today on Its way from\nSwift Current to Liverpool. The consignment numbered 913 head of Hereford steers averaging 1150 pounds and\nsold for fSS \u00abtQh.\nBELL  BOY  SURRENDERED\nCOUNTESS' STOLEN JEWELS\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 17\u2014It Is reported on the best of authority that the\n\u25a0Countess of Antrim recovered her lost\njewels before she left Winnipeg. The\nstory is that a bell boy at the hotel gave\nthem up when threatened with prosecution. The countess declines to be interviewed.\nNot Stolen at Hotel.\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 17\u2014Offlcials of the\nAlexandra hotel maintain their refusal\nto discuss the robbery of jewels from\nthe Countess of Antrim. They say, however, that a safe is kept for the purpose\nof storing jewels, money and other\nvaluables, and that the hotel is not responsible for guests' property unless it\nis placed there. Evidence Is accumulating that the jewels were not stolen\nIn the hotel at all. During the absence\nof the countess at the theatre a large\nnumber of jewels and a roll of bills belonging to 'Mrs. Adams were left lying\nton the table in the room occupied by\nthe counteBs, and her companion, and\nthese were not disturbed while the\nguests were away. The theory is that\nIf the thief had entered the room he\nwould have taken the entire swag. The\npolice are dumb as oysters but something is expected to drop in a day or\nso in that direction.\nNELSON MEN GO\nAFTER BIO GAME\nGeorge   Ferguson    and   W. J. Brodie\nLeave Tonight for   Hunting\nGround on Kettle River.\nEquipped with .351 automatic Winchesters, pack horses and sufficient\n\"grub\" to last 30 days, George Ferguson and W. J. Brodie are starting out\nthis evening for a month's hunting excursion among the mountains forming\nthe divide between Edgewood and\nVernon, near the north fork of the Kettle river.\nThey intend to spend the greater\npart of their time In the vicinity of the\nLightning Peak mine which is famed\neven among the members of the sporting clubs tn London as a great hunter's\nparadise. For years past parties of\nEnglish shikari have camped there in\nthe fall and have seldom gone away\nwithout the skin of one or more grizzlies and a cariboo head or two.\nIt is after these bulky members of\nthe big game tribe that MeBBrs. Ferguson and Brodie are going ln pursuit.\n\"Grizzly and cariboo or bust\" said the\nlatter last night.\nThey leave on the coast train this\nevening and will meet William Calder\nat Edgewood. The party of three will\nthen proceed west up the mountains.\nProvisions were packed up a few days\nago to a convenient point by Mr. Calder. On his way home he was successful in shooting a fine stag. The\nrest of the party consider thiB the best\nof augerles for the success of thetr\nhunting venture around Lightning peak.\nIRISH  MISSIONARIES ARE\nCROSSING THE  POND\nLONDON, Sept. 17.\u2014The steamers Lusltanla, Baltic and Laurentic, which sailed\nfrom British ports today for America, carried 5700 pBBsengers,. The Baltic's travellers Included John E. Redmond, leader of\nthe Irish nationalists, and his associates,\nT. P. O'Connor and Joseph Devlin, who\nare to tour America in the interest of the\nIrish .lational movement. The steamer\nLevis, which also sailed today, carried\namong her passengers \"Hadji Mohamed\njumalulklram,\" the Sultan of Zulu.\nMAY NOT USE NAME.\n(Speclnl to Tn* Ttofty News.**\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 17.\u2014Judge Clement\ntoday granted an Injunction restraining\nthe SempReady company, registered under\nprovincial companies* act, frofh carrying\nbusiness on under that name on tbe\n\/\u25a0round that another -eompany of the\nsame name chartered by. the .Dominion\nwas doing business In tbe province.\nWILL BUILD ZINC\nSMELTER IRE\nProvincial Metallurgist Makes\nImportant Statement\nGREAT PROBLEM\nSOLVED, HE SAYS\nThat a smelter for demonstrating the\nsuccess of a new method for the reduction of low grade zinc ores will be established tn or near Nelson, and be\nIn full working order before Christmas\nwas the statement made to a representative of The Dally News at the Strathcona yesterday by A. Gordon French,\nan eminent consulting metallurgical\nchemlBt of Victoria.\nMr. French haB been paying visits to\nvarious silver-lead-zinc properties' in\nthe Kootenays during the past tew\nweeks and previous to that time had\nmade experiments at the coast with the\nresult that he has been confirmed In\nhis belief that he bas worked out a\nmethod for the reduction of the refractory ores In the Kootenay, containing\na comparatively small percentage of\nzinc, on a commercial scale.\nBacked by Big Capitalists.\nMr. French is representing French's\nComplex Ore Reduction company which\nhas heen organized by large capitalists\nat Victoria, He will leave for the\ncoast on. Monday and upon his return\nwill make arrangements for the erection of a smelter at Nelson with a\ncapacity of tour or five tons of ore\nper day. The new method having proved successful one or more large smelters will be built in the Kootenays, at\nleast one of which will 'be located in\nNelson..\nWill Produce Zinc White.\n\"The main object ot the new smelter\"\nsaid Mr, French \"iB the recovery of\nzinc in the form of the merchantable\nproducts of that metal, the metallic\nzinc and the well known zinc white.\nThe residue,- containing lead* and sliver, will be forwarded to the Trail\"\nsmelter and there reduced. That my\nmethod is a success 1 proved to the\nsatisfaction of my people at Victoria\nby experiments with Kootenay ore obtained specially for the work. Since I\nhave come to the Kootenays and visited the Slocan and other mines, of\nwhich the chief values lie In silver-lead\nore, made refractory by the presence of\nzinc, I have been more than ever convinced that the demonstratory smelter\nwe shall erect before the snow comes\nwill prove to the mine owners In the\ndistrict that a method has been discovered for the reduction at a reasonable\ncost of the complex ores of the Slocan\nand other partB of the Kootenays.\"\nHas Had Long Experience.\nMr. French has been engaged In the\nstudy of refractory ores all his life. At\nan early age he learned the rudiments\nof metallurgical chemistry at college\nand at a big smelter in Glasgow. From\nthe Scotch city he went to Swansea,\nthe centre of the greatest lead and zinc\nrefineries In Great Britain. He there\nfor the great smelting company of Vivian & Sons, devised a method for the\nsuccessful smelting of the Constantine\nores of the island of Sardinia; which\nwere recognized by smelter men as presenting the greatest difficulties that\nhad up to that time been encountered\nin modern smelting. He reorganized the\nfamous Broken Hill mines ot Australia\nand put them on a paying basis; he\nbuilt the first copper smelter iu Canada at Notre Dame, Newfoundland, and\nwas responsible for the working of a\nbig smelter in Tennessee for some\nyears.\nIt was Mr. French who constructed\na smelter for the reduction of the ores\nfrom the Bethanga mines In Victoria,\nAustralia. In this instance he adopted\nthe same method of procedure as in the\ncaBe of the silver-lead-zinc ores of the\nKootenay, First experimenting in the\nlaboratory, be next built a smelter for\ndemonstratory purposes and later constructed a large reduction plant.\nAt the request of Byron N. White of\nthe Slocan Star mine near Sandon and\nof M. S. Davys of the Hewitt mine at\nSilverton, Mr. French will visit both\nthese properties on his way to the\ncoast.\nDANGEROUS DISEASE\nTORONTO, Sept. 17\u2014Dr. McCullough\nprovincial medical health officer for\nOntario, has issued an order to medical practitioners to report all the cases\not Interior poliomyalitis which Ib an\nInfectious germ disease that attacks\nthe horns of the spinal cords creating\nan lnflamation that is nearly always\nfatal.\nKILLED BY ORE SLIDE\nPORT ARTHUR, Sept. 17\u2014Caught In\na slide of a large body of ore while fixing a diamond drill after a blast at\nAtlkokan mines yesterday, Ogala, a\nFinlander aged 24, was killed Instantly\nand August Ranqulst severely injured.\nDemonstratory Plsnff%^gr-\nation Before Christmas^-x\nThen Big Plant\nmm^mnm\n**--'\u2014\n WWW TWO   -J-\nCf* Ball? #eto\u00ab.\n\u2022UNDAY ....t.. SEPTEMBER II\n^\n| Our Customers All Acknowledge\nthat we are giving by far the best values In Nelson today. Has your friend told yon about it? If not, we\ninvite you to come and inspect our stock and prices. We are sat lsfied to leave the results with you-*\nwhether you can save money or not\u2014-whether you buy or not. The earlier you come the 'better the selection. S\nMen's Soft and Hard\nFelt Hats\nRegular 75c: aale price  $  .50\nRegular (1.00 and 11.2*5; aale price      .75\nRegular $.150 and $1.75; sale price    1.00\nRegular '2.26 and 12.50; sale price     1.75\nRegular |3.00 and 13.50; sale price     2.25\nRegular 15.00 Stetson; sale price     3.75\nBoys' Felt Hats\nRegular SOc; sale price  I  .35\nRegular 75c;  sale price  ,..-. 60\nRegular $1.00 and $1.25; sale price      .75\nRegular $1.50; sale price    1.00\nRegular $1.75 and $2.00; sale price     1.25\nMen's Fall Caps\nRegular 35c;  sale price  - $   .25\nRegular 50c;  sale\" price       .35\nRegular 65c and 75c; sale price  60\nRegular $1.00 and $1.26; sale price 75\nRegular $1.50; sale price 100\nBoys' Fall Caps\nRegular 25c; Bale price 9   -20\nHegular 35c and 40c; sale price 25\nRegular SOc; sale price 35\nRegular 05c and 75c; sale price      *50\t\nWallace's Big Clearance Sale\n506 Baker Street\nHouses\n6 rooms and bath, Mill   $1900\n5 rooms, near Fairview school... 1200\n3 rooms, 2 lots, near shipyard....   750\nRent\n5 rooms and bath, Hoover  \u00a522.00\n6 rooms and bath, Fairview 21.50\nCabin, 4 rooms     6.50\nLots\n50 It, Water street  *500\n70 ft, corner, Fairview   475\n300 It, corner Stanley  600\nLand\n5 acres, Kootenay lake  $750\n7 acres, Kootenay river  460\n20 acres, Slocan river looo\nBRIDGE ACROSS\nCOLUMBIA RIVER\nBarge Being Built Preparatory to Making Borings at Trail\u2014Much\nRoad Work\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nTRAIL, Sept. 11\u2014J. E. Griffith, provincial government engineer^ was in\nthe city on Monday of this week for\nthe purpose of making arrangements\nto take borings ln connection with tbe\nbridge across the Columbia river at\nthis city, the water having receded\nsufficiently to allow of this. Before\nborings can he taken, however, it will\nhe necessary to string a three-quarter\ninch cable across the river and also\nbuild a barge for the accommodation\nof the machinery. There are three eld\n\u2022bargee in th1B city hut they were found\nto he unsuitable for the purpose and\nit was decided to build a new one. The\nservices of James M. Bulger, master\nship builder of the C.P.R. at Nelson\nwere secured and he arrived In the city\non Wednesday for the purpose of making arrangements for the building of\nthe barge, which wilt be 40 feet by 16\nfeet and work will be commenced just\nas Boon as the material arrives. In the\nInterval the machinery for tbe ibortng\noperations has been ordered from the\ncoast and It Is expected that everything win be ln readiness by the first\nweek in October and tbat the concrete\nfoundations for the piers will be put In\nthis winter. \"While it is not definitely\nknown what style of bridge will he\nput In, it is pretty generally conceded\nthat it will he a steel structure with a\ndraw.\nRoad Work Suspended\nWork on the government, roads In\nthis vicinity wa* suspended for the\nseason last week. On tbe Trall-Castle-\ngsr wagon road, at the Castlegar end,\nForeman Harkness has had 15 men\nemployed and the road Is completed\nas far as Blueberry. On the Trail end\nForeman Mcintosh has had from 12 to\nIB men employed and the road Is completed bevond Sullivan creek. It Is ex*\npected that the six remaining miles\nof this important highway will be completed next season when It will he possible to drive from Trail to Castlegar,\na distance of 20 miles.\nBuild Retaining Wall\nH, P. Lake, Dominion government\nengineer, who Is superintending the\nbuilding of a wharf at Burton OHy\naetlm-; under Instructions from Ohlef\nengineer Aylmer, wa\u00ab ln the citv Tuesday lookinsr Into the matter of building % retaining wall across the mouth\nof Trail creek to protect the fill being\nmade by the city on Bay avenue. He\ntook measures and levels and will submit his report to the minister of public works at Ottawa. Mr. Lake boiler* the work * necessity and inti\nmated that his report would be favorable.   He estimates \"the cost at about\n$6000 and it i8 expected that the work\nwilt he commenced his winter.\nDisplay of Fruit\nThe display of local grown fruit and\nvegetables which Postmaster Brown\nundertook Isst week to make in the\npostofflce window has far surpassed\nhis most sanguine expectations and\nbas proven a source of surprise and admiration to the citizens and also to a\nnumber of outsiders who have been in\nthe city during the week.\nAmong those who sent in exhibits\nare:   '\nPotatoes\u2014J. Quandstrom, R. Som-\nmerville, John Fluhrer, R. Heath, C.\nClay and F. W. Brown.\nTurnip, weighting 9 1-2 lbs\u2014J.\nQuandstrom.\nPumpkin\u2014D. C. Shields.\nParsnips\u2014Tong Lee and company.\nCarrots, B. Downes.\nCorn\u2014John Hints.\nOnions\u2014R. Heath, W, Cunning and\nM. Laurlente.\nCitron\u2014Rev, j. Black.\nTomatoes\u2014R. Sommerville. R. Heath,\nC. Clay, B. Gregory; G. W. Thompson, B. Downes and M. Laurlente.\nCudumberB\u2014Albert McLean.\nCabbage\u2014M. Laurlente, B. Gregory,\nJohn Hints, Tong Lee, W. Cunning, R.\nSommerville.\nFears\u2014-John Fluhrer, Caut. Duncan,\nPend d'Oreille, G. F. Weir, R. Heath,\nGeorge Henry, C. Clay. V. Cavlc, Mrs.\nGuernsey, G. Clark, W. Carr, F. A.\nWalker, Williamson & Peterson, C.\nCarlson and Mrs. F. Glover.\nApples\u2014F. W. Warren, J. Quandstrom, Joe Dougan, G. F. Weir. A. P.\nAustad. George Henry, A. Halllday, K.\nW. Hazelwood, W. Forrester, F.\nGlover, V, Caviac, Cavlac Bros.. J. P.\nRoblllard, F. E, Grosvenor, J. Clulow.\nW. H. Johnston, C. Carlson, C. Johnson\nthree varieties; Mrs. F. Glover, five\nvarieties; C Clay, eight varieties.\nPlums\u2014George Henry, Mrs. F. Glover, three varieties: F, G. Weir, N*\nBlnns, R, Truswell, C. Carlson, M.\nLaurlente, John Hints, c. Clay, four\nvarieties; P. Dunkerley.\nCrab Apples\u2014A. L. Ellison, M. Laurlente. three varieties.\nApples  and  pears\u2014Alex Hector.\nPears, apples, plums, crab apples and\ngrapes\u2014G, Morin.\nApples, pears and plums\u2014Rev. Jas';\nBlack.\nBlackberries\u2014Mrs. D. H. Chapman.\nAstors*--T. Laurlente. A. McLean,\nMtb. W. Cunning, Mrs. Hector. Mrs. \"tt.\nF. Weir, Mrs. N. WHmes, Mrs. W.\nHarkness, Miss Ella McKay\nDallas\u2014Mrs. G. F. Weir.\nCactus\u2014R. Collie.\nMixed bouquets\u2014Mrs. Carlson. J.\nQuandstrom, F. ~. Grosvenor, Mrs: A.\nHalUday. -\nnmna-^art, W. Cunning and F. W-\nBrown.\nSweet pets\u2014Mrs. T. Glgnay, six va\nrieties; Mrs. W. Cunning, three varieties.\nPansles and sweet peas\u2014Mrs. McLean.\nThe display pToves beyond a doubt\nth\u00a9 productiveness and fertility of the\nsoil in this district. The flower display\nwas particularly admired and taken all\nin all the display was a very creditable\none. When the bridge across the Columbia Is completed and the fertile\nFruitvale and Pend d'Oreille districts\nPlaced in communication with this city\nit will be possible to hold annual fruit\nfairs which will compare favorably\nwith anyheld in the province.\nMiss TIosBle Binns left on Monday\n'for Toronto where she will pursue her\nstudies in Westminster college for another year. She was accompanied as\nfar as Nelson by her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. Noble Binns.\nThe city will extend the water system to the Riverside Addition.\nAt a meeting of baseball enthusiasts\non Wednesday evening it was decided\nto go ahead with the work of finishing the grounds at Smelter Junction\nand a committee consisting of Messrs.\nMoKlnnon, Booth, Butler, Sullivan and\nGage was appointed to look after the\nmatter. It will require about $260 to\nput the grounds in good shape.\nSPORTING~NEWS\nResults nf Football Matches in Great\nBritain Yesterday\u2014Baseball Championship Game.\nLONDON, Sept 17\u2014Following are\nthe results of the Old Country football\ngames played today:\nFirst Division.\nLiverpool 2, Notts Forest 3.\nNotts^County 0, Everton 0.\nBury 2, Blackburn Rovers 2.\nAston Villa 3, Woolwich Arsenal 0.\nMiddlesboro 3, Bristol City 0.\nSunderland 2, Oldham Athletic 1.\nPreston North End 1, Sheffield Wednesday 3.\nTottenham Hotspur 1, Newcastle\nUnited 2.\nSheffield United n| Bradford Olty 1.\nManchester United 2, Manchester\nCity 1. .___\nSecond Division.\nBarnsley 1, Clapton Orient 2.   \u2022\nBradford 3, West Bromwlch Albion 3,\nBurnley 2, Birmingham 2. '\nDerby County 1, Blackpool 2.\nFulham 0, Hull City 1.\nOainsboro Trinity 3, Huddersfleld\nTown 1.\nLeeds City 1, Lincoln City 1.\nLeicester Fosse 1. Chelsea 0.\nStockport County 2, Olossop 1. :\nWolverhampton Wanderers 3, Bolton\nWanderers 0.\nSouthern Division.\nWest Ham United 2, New Brampton 0\nQueens Park Rangers' 2, Mlllwall AU*\nletlcs 1.\nLuton 4, Coventry Olty 2.\nPortsmouth 2, South End United 2.    '\nNorthampton 3, Southampton 0'.\nBrighton and Hove 2, Plymouth 1..\nExeter City 2, Walford 0.\nSwindon Town 2, Leyton 0.\nBristol Rovers 0, Brentford 1.\nCrystal Palace 0, Norwich 0.\nScottish League.\nGLASGOW, Sept. 17\u2014Following are\nthe Scottish league games played today:\nKilmarnock 3, Hearts 0.\nMotherwell 2, Hamilton Academicals\n2.\nHibernians 1, Patrick Thistle 0.\nFalkirk 3, Queens Park 0.\nGlasgow Rangers. 2, Aberdeen 4.\net. Mlrren 0, Clyde 2.\nThird Lanark 0, Airdrieonians 0.\nCeltic 2, Dundee 1.\nFor World's Championship.\nCHICAGO, Sept. 17\u2014According to\nGarry Herriman, president of the National commission, the meeting to decide the details for the world's series\nbetween the Cubs and Philadelphia Americans will not be held for some weeks\n'at least and in the meantime fans will\nhave to wait for definite Information\nregarding the exact date and the order\nof which the games will be played. It\nis said, however, that the opening day\nwill be Sunday, October 16th and the\nwest side grounds here the battlefield.\n\"I don't care when the world's series\ncommence or if the games are played,\"\ndeclared Charles A. Murphy yesterday\nNaturally I have to look after the players' interests In this matter for they\nare partners ln the receipts. As far\nas 1 am concerned however, they can\nplay the series on a corner lot or anywhere for tbat matter.\"\nWINNIPEG BUILDING COLLAPSES\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 17\u2014Fifty people\nhad a narrow escape in the collapse of\nthe Manitoba Clothing company's building on Main street near Rupert.\nThe loss Is estimated at 125,000 and\na nice question may arise as to settlement for damage.\nDon't waste your money buying plasters\nwhen you can get a bottle of chamberlain's Liniment for twenty-five cents. A\npiece of flannel dampened with -tbls liniment Is superior to any plaster for lams\nback, pains In the side and chest, and\nmuch cheaper. Sold by all druggists and\ndealers.\nMinard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia,\n, <*************************'\nA FEW SNAPS\n10   acre tracts ot lend   at\n; )     Castlegar,\n- >        31 acres improved, Crawford\n' !     Bay.\n*        370 acres Slocan valley.\nrow lakes.\n; |        Columbia Gardens and Ar-\nFruit Lands\n; |        In large and email tracts.\nj Nothing But the Best\nFr-ceg  to  suit  all  pockets.\nWhy not have a talk with us.\n: B. C. UNITED AGENCIES\nReal Estate. Auctioneers\nAnd Employment Agents\nBox 232 Phone 391\n218 Baker Street\n\u2022rt***********+4*****T***+*\nMMMu1>\u00abM\u00abMHimMMillM\nCornwell & Co.\nTelephones 401 and 351\nApples fresh from our own\norchard. ,    , | j^\nGravenstein*   and   Wealthy*\n$1.50 per box\nCrabs. $1.25 per box\nPrunes, 90c per box\nBaker Street Nelson, BjC.\nNOBODY SPARED.\nKidney Trouble*   Attack   Nelson Men\nand Women, Young and Old.\nKidney ills Belie young ana old.\nCome quickly with little warning.\nChildren suffer in their early years.\nCan't control the kidney secretions.\nGirls are languid, nervoui, suffer pain.\nWomen wory can't do dally work.\nMen have lame and echini backs.\nThe cure for man, woman or child.'\nIs to cure the cause\u2014th* kidneys.\nBooth's Kidney Pills cure sick kidneys.\nCure all kinds of kidney suffering.\nMrt*.  N.   Good,   of  70  Stadacona   Btreet,\nMoose Jaw, Sask.. Mjrii\n\"1 am pleased to state for the benefit\nuf any person suffering with weak and\npainful back, that they will find Booth'*\nKidney Pills & most excellent remedy. 1\nhave suffered for months with a very weak\nback and severe pains and ache* In the\nkidneys, and felt very much depressed.\nThere waa also a swelling under my eyes.\nWhen I learned of Booth'* Kidney Pills,\nI procured a box, and found them th* beat\nremedy I have ever used, .,*\u2022 they were\nvery quick In giving m* relief. Th* pain*\nhave left my back and it.ha* strengthened.\nThey have also helped to build up my\nhealth.\" For sale fitKafesM by the Pool*\nDrug Co., Ud.\nSold by dealers. Prkw M> cant*. The K.\nT. Booth Co., Ltd., Fort Brio, Ont., Boi*\nCanadian Agent*.\n\u2022\u00bb*\u00bb*\u2022*\nThat trade-mark is widely advertised for ,YOUR protection, i When you see the name NYAL'S on a family,\nremedy you can be quite sure of  three \"things, viz:\nFirst\u2014Pure ingredients scientifically\ncompounded.\nSecond\u2014That its beneficial effects\nhave been proven.\nThird\u2014That we know the formula and\nyour doctor may know it too.\nNyal's Family Remedies are made by a house frith a solid reputation of over hall a century. The formulas are all exceptionally\ngood\u2014very similar to what your doctor would prescribe. We know\nwhat's in all Nyal's Remedies.  That's why we recommend them.\nAnything you\n.boy\nwith the name\n%$&\nwill give  you\nSold and guaranteed by\nExcursions\n.   $19.05\nTo Victoria, B. C. and return, account Provincial Ex-\nhibitlon, Sept. 27th to Oct. 1. Tickets on sale Sept. 24 to\n28.   Return limit Oct. 6.\nTo New Westminster, B.C., and return, account of the\nNew Westminster Exhibition, Oct. 4 to 8. Tlokete on\nsale Oct. 1 to Oct. 5.   Return limit, Oct. 13, $16.55.\nTo Spokane, and return, account Spokane Interstate\nFair, Oct. 3 to 9. Tickets on sale Oct. 1st to 7th. Return\nlimit Oct. 10, 18.80.\nExcursion fares from all Points. Ask Great Northern\nAgent, or call or write,\nH. E. DOUGLAS,\nCity Agent, Nelson, B.C.\nMILLINERY\nHISSHAHLIN     \u2022\nHudson's Bay Block - NELSON\nElectric\nSuction\nSweepers\n$50 each\nHandle** than a 'broom.   Good\nfor any voltage.\nShipment will arrive next week.\nJ. H. R1NGR.OSE\nElectric Supplies\nP.O..Box 165 Phon. A227\nBANKERS VISIT WINNIPEG\nWINmwiO, Sept. 17\u2014Bight train-\nloads ot bankers, delegates to the American Bankers' convention at Los\nAngeles will pas. through western Can\nada on their way home ln October. Two\ntrains will be brought through to Winnipeg tad the balance will come only\nas tar a* Moose Jaw. several hundred\nprominent financier, ot the repubUo\nwill be included In the party.\nLAKE FRONT\nFruit land tracts on Kootenay lake are fast disappearing\noff the market. Here Is one\n'that i8 a winner.\nIt contains seven and one\nnaif acres, almost two of\nwhich is slashed and burnt.\nIt has choice frontage in t\ngood section and can all be\nplanted to fruit. There ls no\nwaste. Improved ranches and\nneighbors on all sides, tt ls\na snap at $650\u2014half cash.\nV. DYNES & SON\nGriffin Block\nMOTOR BOAT SUPPLIES\nLargest and beit Mibrted \u25a0tock In the\nInterior of B.O.\nBpark colli, tw-k plugs, iwltchei, primary and secondary Mbit, mavtutot, stor-\nat* batterltth   dry batttrlM,   headlight**\ncarbide,   dock  fittings,    \u25a0tetrlm  wheels*\n       \u2014( uie        -  '-'\u2014\ntlltsr rope,  anchors,\t\nSohsblor carburetors, check valval, \u00ab*\u00bb\u2022\nline flttlngi, copper tubing, stuffing boi\u00abs#\ncouplings, reverse gears, propeller wheels,\nbilge pumps, lubricating oils Ud grease,\noil and grease cups, battery connectors,\nboat books, priming cups, motor boat\nhorns, volt and ammeters, metal polish,\n\u25a0peed Indicators, oil cans, gasoline ongtnee\n\u2014marine and stationary.\nHaU orders promptly attended to. Frloes\nfight  Callw write. \t\nTHOMAS aAHGBH-r,\nlot Stanley it. Phone **, Httow, B.C.\nColeman\nImportant Sale\n,    In the\nTownsite of\nColeman. Alberta\nSituated! in Famous Crow's\nNest Co.1 fields\nHeadquarter, ef ths Olgsntle\nCollieries of th. International\nCoal and Cok. Co, Ltd.\nMessrs. Stewart Williams ft\nCo., of Victoria having been\nduly instructed by the International Coal ft Coke Co., Ltd,\nwill sell by publlo auction at\nVictoria, B.C. on Monday and\nTuesday, the 10th and 20th September, 1010, the remainder of\nthe company's real estate holdings in the Olty of Coleman,\nAlberta, comprising some three\nhundred eligible business and\nresidential site., located ln thla\nthriving Industrial centre,\nPor further and full particulars, plans, maps, i holographs,\netc., apply to the Auctioneer.\nStewart Williams\nS37 Fort Street, Vlctorls, B.C.\nLargs Double House, suitable\nfor first class boarding house,\nin roost convenient situation\nin town. On south side of Vlotorla street, .between Y.M.C.A.\nand opera house.-' '\nTwo and a half stories with\nsix rooms, bathroom and large\nattic on each side, making 14\nrooms in all.\nAlso two large shacks at\nback of lots.\nOne and a half lots where\nland values are rapidly Increasing.\nTbe establishment is now offered as a running concern.\nBvery room is occupied by\nsteady boarder, and arrangements can be made as to. furniture.\nTo any one wanting to invest in Neleon real estate\nwhere values afe sure to Increase, and at the same time\nacquire a money making business ln first class shape thl. ls\nan unequalled opportunity.\nPrice S5600; cash 12000 and\nbalance on terms.\nP. J. Gleazer & Co.\nP.O. Box 316 Nslson, B.C.\nMade In British Columbia ...\nRUBBER STAMPS\nSaab, Standb, Dog Togo.\nBrau Signs, SU\u00ab1 Stamp*\nVANCOUVER STCNCIL ft HAL CO.\nP.O. Box 70S, Vancouver, B.C.\nKooteoiy Like Beienl Hospital\nMaternity Branch\nPatients are now received at the following rates:'\nPrivate ward patients, week....120.00\nBeml-prlvete ward patient., week DM.\nAddr.se applications to mat-on at\n \u2022UNOAV ....... MPTIMBIR 11\nI\n%ht Bail? J&etos,1\n\u00bb*OI THRU\nqof\n\u25a0\u25a0\n\u25a0\u25a0\nYou can Replace these Linings\neasfly, speedily and without the aid of any mechanic. Made\nra five separate pieces so if one burns out after long con-\n\u00ab iSS' *y\u00b0\" can renew it without disturbing the other\nfour. This lining is made of extra heavy durable semi-steel\u2014\n\u00abK fire brick. It resists the strongest heat for the longest\ntime.  It is only on. of the many strong exclusive improvements\n\u25a0 \u25a0\n\u25a0 \u25a0\nKootenay\ni Steel Ran^\nand the neatest McClary agent will be glad to have you ask him\nfor a conclusive demonstration of all the offer advantages.\nDon t spend that range money before you get fun informaflon\nand the Kootenay booklet. Write the nearest McClary branch.\nNow is the 6m\/ time. '\nM^ClaiyS\n\u25a0\u25a0\nLondon,  Toronto,  Mont\u2122!,   Winnies,,   Vincounr,   St. Jobs, SMI*    Hamilton,  CslfUT\nFor Sale by Wood-Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\"\nivto?\nEwery ounce of Kellogg's carries strength and vitality. No food\nis better than good torn and Kellogg's is the hest corn, rolled into\ntender flakes and cooked to a nut brown turn. M\nTOASTED\n\"THE\nSWEETHEART\nOF THE\nCORN \"\nCORN\nFLAKES\nEvery package of Kellogg's wiil be the same as the one before\u2014\nwith toothsome flavor, and nourishment at its finest.  We want\n<   to get the first package into your hands.   Quality will do it again.\nWhen Friends Drop In\nthe housewife is never at a loss if she is able to offer\nthem a cup Of piping hot\nBlue Ribbon Tea\nTHE GRAND PRIZE TEA\nIts rich flavor is sure to be appreciated by your most\nparticular guests.\nCarefully sealed in airtight lead packets.   Sold by all\ngood grocers.\nTiTe Nelson Wine & Spirit Co.\nWHOLISALI AND FAMILY TBAOB\nBegg's Lochnagar Scotch Whisky\nJohn Bew, \"\"*\u2022. Here! Warrant Holden slace IMS..\nFabat Blue Ribbon Beer.  A file summer beverage.\nKill orders promptly attended te.\nStorei  Vemen St, Near Pssufflee\nPA Ita ION\nFINE EXHIBIT OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nCanadian National Exhibition, To*orto\n\u2014Marveloua Display of Fruit\nand Timber.\nReferring to the British Columbia\ndisplay at the Toronto exhibition ihe\nHamilton Spectator sayu:    .\nThe exhibit of the Brlt'.sh Columbia\ndepartment of agriculture in the horticultural building ls displayed to perfection in.a rustic booth of unique and\nattractive design. \"We had r.o do\nsomething better than tho ordinary in\nthe way of exhibits, iu deference to\nthe size and scale ot this exhibition,\"\nsaid Edward Bullock-Webster, of Pentlcton, exhibition commissioner for\nBritish Columbia, who si ln charge of\ntiie booth. And right nobly have the\nauthorities risen to the demands of\nsuch an occasion.\nThe display includes freBh fruits of\nall kinds raised in the province, both\nlarge and small, blocks of huge trees\nof various species, and specimens of\nfruits preserved ln alcohol and spirits,\nbesides photographs of orchards, big\ntrees, etc.\nSplendid Fruit Display.\nThe fruit is the first part of the exhibit to attract notice, It is kept in\nexcellent condition by means of electric fans, whfch maintain a cool atmosphere   and keep off the flies.\nThe peaches, pears, apples, crabs,\nplums, prunes, apricots, cherries and\nother varieties are remarkably well\nmatured, and not only good in appearance, but luscious to the taste, aB\nthe Spectator representative was privileged to test for himself. The principal sorts shown are the Bartlett\nand Bossack pears, Bradshaw plums,\nItalian prunes, Wealthy, Gravenstein,\nDuchesB, Thistlewheat and Wolf River\napplea, Transcendent grapes, and Crawford peaches.\nPacking is Excellent.   .\nThe packing of the fruit Is worth\nnotice, the crab apples, plums, apples,\netc., making a fine appearance in their\nboxes. The pack is, however, not a\nspecial one for exhibition, but the\ngoods are simply taken from, Uie No.\n1 grade of each grower, being the ordinary commercial pack. The apples\nweigh forty pounds solid to the box,\nand the plums twenty pounds.\nFrom the Tall Timber.\nOf equal importance with the fruit\nIs the display of British Columbia timber. There are eight pieces, constituting one carload. One block is an\nImmense cut of a Douglas fir, seventy-\nfour inches in diameter, from a tree\nestimated to be six hundred years old.\nIt took eight men to put the block ln\nplace. Next stands a cut of spruce,\nsixty-seven inches in diameter, both\nthese being round cuts off logs and\nwith the bark taken off; with the\nbark they would measure a couple of\ninches more across. A cube forty\ninches in dimensions, another ot cedar\nforty-two inches to the side, one of\nspruce forty-four inches, and a round\nblock of fifty-eight inches diameter\nand fifty-two inches thick, complete the\nlot.\nFine Photographs.\nThe next feature to notice is the\nphotographic display. One picture of\nsome of the big trees is four feet\nhigh. Others are of similar dimensions.\nOver the centre of the exhibit hangs\na banner &t sheepskin, of the shade\nof green which the agricultural, department of the province has chosen\nfor its own, bearing the coat of arms\nof the province, and tbe motto of\nBritish Columbia, \"Splendor si necO N\nBritish Columbia, \"Splendor sine Oc-\ncasu.\"\nIn Betting up the booth of his province, Mr. Bullock-Webster has had an\neye to the artistic side, and litis spent\na good deal of thought on the decorative aspect Flowers add to the\nadornment, and at night the whole is\nbeautifully illuminated.\nPossibilities of the Province.\nWhen one considers that these products come from a province with a\npopulation considerably smaller than\nthat of the city of Toronto, being only\nabout three hundred thousand, and\nthat of this total number Vancouver\ncontains one hundred and twenty-five\nthousand, while three other places together have about a hundred thousand\nmore, it will be seen that the possibilities of the Pacific province for output of all kinds of agricultural, horticultural and forest products is beyond\nestimation.\nWHY A SENATE!\nToronto Telegram: Britishers of Canadian origin honestly and earnestly doubt\nwhether thts old empire could be helped\nby the deliberations of an assemblage of\noracls at London.\nWhy add tbe life and times of such an\naugust and unnecessary body to the other\nafflictions of the British empire?\nCanadians might reluctantly tolerate the\nnature of such an assemblage as Mr.\nGriffiths, ot Wedneubury, proposes to\ncreate.\nCanadians could never tolerate the name\nwhloh Mr. Griffiths wishes to attach to\nthe offspring of his Hopes..\nCanada understands that Mr. Griffiths\nwishes the proposed committee of the\nwhole empire to go thundering down the\nage as an Imperial senate.\nSenate?\nDoes Mr. Griffiths Understand that Canadians have good reasons to abhor the\nvery mention of the word senate?\nThe name senate is a far from fragrant\nperfume ln the nostrils of this young nation. <\u25a0_,.%\n'. If Mr. Griffiths must have a name for\nan aggregation that should be left in the\nemptiness whloh It adorns, why does he\nnot call hia Pan-Britannic assemblage a\nUniversity  Convocation,\nToWnshln Council,\nBoard of Aldermen,\nCourt of Revision,\nFarmers'  Institute,\nCongress ot Path-masters and\nFence-viewers?\nCall the proposed assemblage anything\nbut a senate.\nIf Norton Griffiths, M. P., would Inspire\nreal enthusiasm In Canada let him teach\nCanadians how to get rid of the senate\nthis oountry baa instead of trying to moll\nthe British nations with a senate their\nempire does not want and will not have.\n. Tour complexion as well as your temper\nIs rendored miserable by a disordered liver,\nBr taking   Chamberlain's   Btomach and\nliver Tablets you ean Improve both.  Held \/\nby au dftigguta \"\" *\t\nNOTICE TO CONTRACTORS\nKaslo Court House.\nSealed tenders, superscribed \"Tender for\nKaslo Courthouse,\" wilt be received by the\nHonorable the Minister of Publlo Works\nup to and Including Monday, the 10th October, 1810, for tbe erection and completion\nof a new Courthouse at Kaslo, in tbe Kaslo\nElectoral District.   -\nPlans, Specifications, Contraot and Forms\nof Tender may be seen on and after the\n10th day of September, 1910, at tbe offices\nof the Government Agent, Kaslo; Government Agent, Nelson; and the Department\nof Publlo Works, Victoria.\nEach proposal must be accompanied by\nan accepted bank cheque or certificate of\ndeposit on a chartered bank of Canada,\nmade payable to the Honorable the Minister of Publlo Works, for a sum equivalent\nto 10 per cent of the amount ot the tender,\nwhloh shall be forfeited If the party tendering decline to enter Into contract when\ncalled upon to do so, or If he fall to complete the work contracted for. The cheques\nor certificates of deposit of unsuccessful\ntenderers will be returned to them upon\nthe execution of the contract.\nTenders will not be considered unless\nmade out on the forms supplied, signed\nwith the actual signature of the tenderer,\nand enclosed ln the envelopes furnished.\nThe lowest or any tender not necessarily\naccepted.\nF. C. GAMBLE,\nPublic Works Engineer^\nPubllo Works Department,\nVictoria, B.C., 6th Sept 1910. 126-26\nWATER NOTICE.\nNotice Is hereby given that an application will be made under Part V. of the\n\"Water Act, 1909,\" to obtain a license In\nthe Nelson Division of West Kootenay\nDistrict.\n(a) The name, address and occupation\nof the applicant Fred A. Starkey, or\nHarrop, B.C., Merchant\n(b) The name of the lake, stream or\nsource (if unnamed, the description 1b):\nMill Creek.\n(c) The point of diversion: About 6W\nteet southwest of Blook 20, Lot 222, Group\n1, Kootenay district.\n<d) The quantity of water to be applied\nfor (in oubio feet per second): One-quarter\ncublo foot\n<e> Tbe character' of tha proposed\nworks!   Ditch and flume.\n(f) The premises on which the water Is\nto be used: Lot 8 and Blook 6A, Block 20\nof the west sub-division of Lot 222, Group\n1, Kootenay district\n(g) The purposes for which the water\nis to be used:   Irrigation.\n(h) If for Irrigation describe the land\nIntended to be Irrigated, giving acreage:\n12 acres Lot 2 and Block 6A, Block 20 ot\nthe sub-divlslon of Lot 222, Group 1, Kootenay district\n(1). Area of Crown land Intended to be\noccupied by the proposed works: None.\n0) This notice was posted on the nana\nday of August, 1910, and application will\nbe made to the Commissioner on the 22aa\nday of September, 1910.\nFRED A.   STARKE X,\nNelson, B.C.\nNOTE\u2014One cubic toot per second is equivalent to 85.71 miners' inches.\nWATER NOTICE.\nNotice Is hereby given that an application will be made under Part V. of the\n\"Water. Aot 1909,\" to obtain a license ln\nthe Nelson, B. C, Division of West\nKootenay District\n(a) The name, address and occupation of\nthe applicant:' Geo. F. Motion, of Harrop,\nB.C., merohant.\n(b) The name of the lake, stream or\nsource (If unnamed the description is):\nMill Creek.\n(c) The point of diversion: About W0\nfeet southwest of Block 20, Lot 222, Group\n1, Kootenay district.\n(d) The quantity of water . applied\nfor (in oublc feet per second): One-quarter\ncubic foot.\n(e) Tbe oharaoter of the proposed\nworks:   Ditch and flume.\n<f) The premises on which the water is\nto be used: Lot 4, Lots B. and C, sub-,\nlots of 15 and ISA, Block 20 ot the subdivision of Lot 222, Group 1, Kootenay\ndistrict.\n(g) The purposes for which the water\nIs to be used:   Irrigation.\n(h) If for Irrigation describe the land\nIntended to be irrigated, giving acreage:\n25 acres Lot 4, Lots B, and C\u201e sub-lots of\n15 and ISA, Block 20 of the sub-dlvlsion of\nLot 222, Group 1, Kootenay district.\n(1) Area of Crown land Intended to be\nocoupied by the proposed works: None.\n(]) This notice was posted on the 22nd\nday of August, 1910, and application will\nbe made to the Commissioner on the 22nd\nday of September, 1910.\nGEO.  F.   MOTION,\nNelson, B.C.\nNOTE\u2014One cubic foot per second ls equivalent to 36.71 miners' inches.\nNOTICE.\nIn the matter of an application for the\nisBue of a duplicate of Certificate of\nTitle to Lots 5, 6, 7, and the Westerly\n6 acres of Lot 4, being part of Lot 6300,\nGroup l, Map 8)0, Kootenay District\nNotice ls hereby given that lt ls my intention to Issue at the expiration of one\nmonth  after  the  first  publication  hereof\na duplicate of the Certificate of Title to\nthe above mentioned land In the name of\nThomas Hardinge Going, whloh Certificate\nIs dated the 4th of August 1909, and numbered U087A,\nSAMUEL R. ROE,\nDistrict Registrar.\nLand Registry Office, Nelson, B.C.\nNOTICE.\nIn the matter of Chapter 88 of tbe British Columbia Statutes, 1910, and of the appraisement and apportionment thereunder.\nAll persons, or their assignees, who die\nwork*or supplied material, including goods\nor merchandise ln connection with the actual construction of the grade of the Midway ft Vernon Railway, between Midway\nand Rock Creek, are requested to send in\na detailed statement of their claims verified by affidavit or statutory declaration te\nthe undersigned. R. F. GREEN,\nSecretary for Valuators.\np. o Boa HI Victoria. B. n\nIN THE SUPREME COURT OF BRITISH COLUMBIA\u2014IN PROBATE\nIn the Matter of the Batata ot Daniel\nThomas Fraser, Deceased.\nNotice Is hereby given that all persons\nhaving claims against the late Daniel\nThomas Fraser, who died at Trail, B.C.,\non-the 1st day of June. 1910, are required\nto sand by post prepaid or delivered to\nthe undersigned solicitor, at h-s law offices,\nSchofield block, Rossland, B.C., for the\nadministratrix their names-and addresses\nand full particulars tn writing ot their\nolaims. duly verified, and the nature of\nthe securities, If any, held by ftem.\nAnd take notice that after the 80 of\nSeptember, 1910, the said administratrix\nwill proceed to distribute the assets of\nthe said deceased among the persona entitled thereto, having regard only to the\nolaims of which she shall have then had\nnotloe, and that the said administratrix\nwill not be liable to any 'person of whose\nclaim she shall not then bave had notloe.\nDated at Rossland, B.C., this 22nd day\n\u2022-**\u2022* B...H.-VINN.\n110.11      Bollcllor tot th. AdMaUtratrut.\nWATER NOTICI.\nTak. notlM thst I. Id. j. Dawson, ot\nNslson, B.C., Intend to apply, X) days (ram\ndata, to th. Water Commissioner (or a\nwater license to tak. ona>fl(th of a eublo\nroot of water from an unnamed stream\n(lowing out of OarrltT Creak, to b\u00bb used\nfor Irritation lurnosos on Blook t of Lot\n'\"'' -\u201e   __   \u00ab*>i*.*AWiO\u00bb.\nNelson, B.O, Mr Ms*\n1 The Event of the Season\ntil   \u25a0\u2014\u2014\u25a0\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014gag\ntil  ' -\nii\n$\ntii\nThe Eigth Annual\ntil\ntit\ntil\ntil\ntit\nI\ntil\ntit\ntil\ntit\ntil\ntil\ntil\ntil\nti\ntil\ntil\ntil\ntil\ntil\ntil\ntil\ntii\ntil\ntil\ntii\ntil\ntii\ntii\ntii\ntit\ntil\ntii\ntil\ntii\nuV\nti\ntil\ntii\ntil\ntii\ntil\ntii\ntii\ntii\ntil\ntii\ntil\nNELSON FRUIT\n\u2014FAIR\u2014\nWednesday\nThursday   .-.   Friday\n3 BIG DAYS 3\nSEPTEMBER 28th; 29ih and 30th\nFtffl of Surprises in\nFruit, Poultry, Vegetables, Minerals,   Lumber\nand District Exhibits\n$3,000   PrUe Money   $3,000\nThis year's free attractions are without doubt the\nmost elaborate ever attempted in the interior, the following acts having been secured after having scoured the\namusement world for the best obtainable:\nThe Five Flying Banvards\nacknowledged to be the premier attraction in aerial long\nleaping and casting acts. 50 feet in mid air, the space\nrequired for this act being 50 feet wide and 60 feet in\nlength. The Banvards at one time were the rage of\nBerlin, Germany, since when they have featured with\nRingling Bros, and all the big circuses.\nThe Leojoe Troupe\nof three ladies and two gentlemen in the unparalelled\nand refined bicycle act.\nLaCattella and LaFolletta\nThe Fool and the Circus Girl\n$ Prof. Darnell\ntil the fearless aeronaut who without safety belt or other\ntil appliances will make a balloon ascension and parachute\nijjr leap daily.\n\u2022\u00a3 *-*-***-********************>-=^\nijjr Amateur Athletic Sports, Log Chopping, Log   j|\\\ntil        Sawing, $450 for Rock Drilling Contests.\ntil For further particulars see daily program.   Cheap excursion\ntil    rates on transportation lines.\n* J. E. Annable,\nPresident\nGeorge Horstead,\nSf cretary, P. O. Box 39a, Nelson, B. C.\nA\na\na\na\nA\na\na\na\na\na\na\na\na\na\na\na\nA\na\nA\na\na\na\na\nA\na\na\na\na\nm\nA\na\na\nm\na\nA\na\na\na\nfl\n<n\nfl\nfl\na\nfl\nfl\nfl\nfl\nfl\nfl\nfl\nfl\nfl\nfl\nfl\nfl\nfl\nfl\nfl\nfl\nfl\nfl\nfl\nfl\nfl\nA\nfl\nfl\n ,r  MQI POUR\nCije Ball*? Jletos,\n.t.. SEPTEMBER It\nClje Sail? JStuis,\nPublished at Neison Every Morning\nExcept Monday, by\nH*w*  Publishing  Company,  Limited\n9*7. O.  FOSTER Manager\nSUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 18.\nTHE NEED FOR ASIATIC LABOR\nThe correspondent ol the Halifax\nChronicle who accompanied Sir Wilfrid\nLaurier on hia recent tour, writes as\nfollows to that paper:\nThe question is less acute here\nnow than it was. It is still being\nkept alive by the Socialist and Labor parties mainly for \"business\"\nreasons. They say that far more\nJapanese are coining in than are\nshown by the government returns\nand although their statement does\nnot carry much weight, being unsupported by statistics of any\nkind, it is sufficient to keep things\nin more or less ot a ferment. Outside of the labor element there Ib\nno real sympathy with the exclusion of Orientals. They form {he\nonly class of domestic servants obtainable and as the number is\nlimited, or the head tax goes up,\n. up also goes the wages. At pres-\n' \u25a0 ent it is difficult to get a servant\nof any kind here for less than\n$25 a month and that applies to\n'  girls principally; Orientals ask and\n\u25a0 receive more. This question of labor is the most acute of all those\nwhich agitate this province, and it\nis growing' more acute every Hay.\nThe labor men   of this   province\n\u00abiay not like the Asiatic, hut he is\neld in great and enduring reverence by the women.\n\u25a0 It is a pity that misleading statements of this sort should be sent out,\nbut the thing has been going on for\ntwenty years and eastern readers\nshould know by this time how much\nfaith to put in it.\nThe Oriental labor question will not\nbe \"kept alive.\" It will remain alive\nwithout any effort on the part of the\nSocialist and Labor parties so long as\ncapitalists living in Europe, like the\nchairman of the Grand Trunk Pacific\nrailway, continue to engage in vain\nefforts for the introduction of that\nlabor. Mr. Smlthers' idea ot British\niQolumbia is, apparently a country owned by capitalists living in other countries and developed by a Chinese resident population.\nThe question will also be kept alive\nso long as the C. P. R. continues to indulge in the hope lt has cherished for\n(many years that a scarcity of white\nlabor will cause a demand for yellow\nlabor from employers in this province,\nsuch as will lead to the relaxation of\nrestrictions upon Asiatics. C. P. R. directors and presidents have learned to\nhave more sense than to talk out loud\nas those of the G. T. P. do, but, whether\nit is because they want the business\nmade for their Pacific boats by Chinese\nimmigration or whatever else the reason may be, there is no doubt where\ntheir sympathies are. And there can\nbe little doubt that in this is to be\nfound the reason why they have nat\nfollowed in British Columbia the course\nthey have followed on the prairie. On\nthe prairie they run harvesters 'excursions and advertise them extensively ln\nthe east. But they have never made\nsimilar arrangements with regard to\nBritish Columbia. Every indication\ngoes to show that they have always\nwanted to force employers in British\nColumbia to look to Asia,\u2014not only\nlarge employers like the lumbermen\nbut small employers like the fruit\nranchers and those whom the Halifax\nChronicle mentions as finding in Orientals \"the only class of domestic servants obtainable.\"\nIf the Halifax Chronicle correspondent wants to learn why many women\nare in euch a position that they \"hold\n.the Asiatic in great reverence,\" he\nmight ask for a candid statement from\nthe C. P. R. Let him get from the C.\nP. R. If he can a statement such as that\nmade by the C. N. R.; namely, that they\nA New Head In 30 Minutes\nExchtntt ih-d \u2022eblnr, throbbing. wKarlnc, mudcUri head\nfor a dear, cool, cotnfiortabla ono by taking a\nNA-DRU-CO Headache Water\n25c about your dnirrists'or by mail from 2.\nNsUesudBrassad Cbosdcei Ce. of Csneile, IMud. MseMsL\n\u2022aMMWOI\n*Massa$sia'jai)a\/si>ax*sin*^^ swwmi\nWESTERN CANADA'S GREATEST SCHOOL\nVancouver, B.C.\nSprott-Shaw\nBusiness Institute\nR. J. SPROTT, B.A.,\nManager\nSend for Catalogue.\nBest equipped sohool west of Toronto.   Ten chanees for every student.\n\u00bbsss\u00bbe\u00bb6\u00bbMssss\u00bbBBsassssurisi-\u00abiiswi'imnii>i|isiin|\nSee the beautiful display of Eaton Crane\nStationery\nIn our window today. Our line of boxed\nStationery Is very extensive and includes many very beautiful finishes.\nPrices range from 25c. to $1.25 a .box.\nGood Vafoe fa Writing Tablets\nhas also always been a very special feature with us. We have tablets\nto suit every taste and every pur se. Note size from 15c. to 30c. each.\nLetter size from 25c. to 50c. each.'\nThomson's for Correspondence Stationery.\nW.  Q.  THOMSON EST.**\nBookseller and Stationer\ndo not want Oriental labor and do not\nthink it needed. Let him find if any\nC. P. R. enterprise has substituted\nwhite for Oriental labor as waa done\nin the case ot the FraBer River mills\nwhich brought in French Canadians.\nLet him find what encouragement the\nC. P. R. bas given to other companies\nwhich have wished to follow that example. He will then be in a better position to say whether the alleged need\nfor Asiatic labor is not due to those\nwho desire that such a need shall\nexist.\nAs to there being \"no real Byinpai-hy\noutside of the labor element wi:.h the\nexclusion of Orientals\" the Halifax correspondent is evidently very much in\nthe dark. Such a sympathy is stiong\nand widespread. It is to be hoped lhat\nthe day is far distant when only in \"the\nlabor element\" is there to be found sympathy with either this or any oilier\npolicy that is in the interest of the\ngreat majority of our people.\nA GOVERNMENT LABOR EXCHANGE\nIn the report of the proceedings ot\nthe Trades and Labor Congress, published in the Winnipeg press ,ve read:\nW. R. Trotter   presented a long\nreport on the subject in which he\nsaid in part:\n\"It should be understood that no\nscheme detrimental to the Interests\nof Canadian citizenship will be \".ol-\nerated   and   Canadian,   citizenship\nmust be held to include more than\nthe Manufacturers' association and\ntheir allied press.    No scheme of\nImperial labor exchange can pos-\nBibly be agreed to which is not preceded by a system of provincial and\nDominion exchanges. Any other arrangement would be open to a repetition of the   scandalous   shipping\nby the Salvation army to British\nColumbia ot 11,000 persons    when\nthere were 7500 unemployed people in Toronto alone.\"\nThe suggestion seems a good one and\nit is rather remarkable that it has not\nheen tried before.    A government labor exchange has lately been established in Great Britain; there are conflicting reports of its success but no doubt\nsomething could be learned   from its\nexperience.\nCanada is a country in which a Dominion labor exchange should prove\nmore useful than in Great Britain, because there is a greater diversity of\nconditions existing in different parts of\nthe country at the same time. In Great\nBritain, though there are, of course,\nexceptions sometimes notable, yet\nroughly speaking good or bad times are\nCold wealber is Sir and it Is well to frrtfttte for it.   Nothing is\n\u25a0more necessary than to have enough blankets ot the right kwa.\nHUDSON'S BAY POINT BLANKETS\nneed no advertising.   They are acknowledged t0 be the warmest and\n.best blankets mad\u00a9 and will outlast any other.   We have them in grey,\nWoe, white, scarlet, Khaki and green.\n3 1-2 point, weighing 10 lbs., sell per pair at > w.oo\n4 point, weighting 12 lbs., sell, per pair at  ....9.00\nFor a lighter blanket at a moderate cost, we have imported from\nEngland ,\n100 PAIRS GENUINE WITNEY BLANKETS\nThey are In white with a blue or pink Border, are of excellent\nquality and have that fluffy soft lm-\u00abh which has made the name a\nhousehold word.\nThey are large, 64 In. by 84 In., weighing 7 lbs., and are really\n\u2022worth |5.50. !\nOUR PRICE $4.25 PER PAIR.\nThe Hudson's Bay Stores\n\u00bbl H li I nil' t%4mam\\\\n n \u25a0 11 r r tr t - i \"\nmore or less general all-over the country. In Canada it quite frequently happens that conditions vary widely.\nOne year there may be a surplus of\nlabor on the coast and a scarcity In\nAlberta, next year the conditions may\nbe reversed. In either1 case the spectacle is presented of men unable to get\nemployment in one town while in another men cannot be obtained.\nAlong with a government labor exchange, If it were desired to establish\none, should go some means of providing\nfor transportation.\nTEN YEARS AGO\nExtracts From The Neison Daily tribune of Sept. 18, 1900\nPerry Wright has been appointed\ncollector of road taxes for Nelson and\ndiBtrict.\nThe Shay engine No, 111 has been\ntested on the big hill at Rossland. site\npulled 350 tons of coal over the grade\nwith comparative ease while the maximum load for any other locomotive on\nthe division is 135 tons.\nJameg McDonald went to Ainsworth\nyesterday to finish the Highland wharf\nThe company has leased his pile driv*\ner to use in handling the machinery\nto be put in at the mine.\nSheriff Tuck has seized the Jennie\nmineral claim on Hall creek to satisfy\na judgment and the claim will be\nauctioned on the 22nd inst.\nThe handsome Bilver trophy donated hy the local C.P.R. employees to\nbe competed for at the rifle association's annual matches is on exhibition\nin Jacob Dover's window.\nB. B. Chipman, assessor and collector, has been informed by tiie govern-\nmnet that all provincial taxes In Sandon have been remitted in consideration of the great loss suffered by the\ncitizens in the recent fire.\nThe Venus will close down on Saturday. The management Is satisfied that\nthe rotary mill put in some months\nago, Is a failure and It cannot be utilized to advantage. It Is understood\nthat no time will be loBt in ordering\na ten stamp mill to hand'e the ore.\nThe mine crew is still at work.\nTHRUMS  NEWS NOTES\nTHRUMS,  Sept. 17.-S.  I. Underwood is\nQ. E. Blrman had a party from Saskatchewan looking over the Cloverdale property\nyesterday. They seem well pleased with\nsame and have gone back to Saskatchewan to try to sell their property and expect to return here this fall to locate.\nA number of residents' here are now\nworking on the government road near\nShoreacres, which when complete will connect us with the Granite road Into Nelson,\nMr. Blrman has four Doukhobors at work\nfor him excavating the cellar for the\nnew. addition to his store, which, when\ncomplete, will double the room for goods.\nHe expects to put tn a pool table upstairs.\nJoe Demk'liill sold one of bis cows to\nJohn  Abrassemoff,  price 980.\nFred Trabalken Is building a new stable.\nJoe Demtchill has his new stable nearly\ncomplete.\nDan Morrison and Brie Fors have their\npipe line now complete and water ls now\nplentiful with them.\nDan Hlllman sold his horse to Fred\nTrabalken for W0.  , _\nYMIR NEWS NOTES.\n{Special   to The  Daily  News.)\nVMIR, Sept. 17\u2014Mr. Heddlngton, of\nthe Ymfr mine was a visitor in town\nfor a day this week and also made a\ntrip to, the mine.\nJohn Breau haa just finished repaper-\ning and painting tbe Cosmopolitan hotel throughout, the upper story was\nalso raised making the height of the\nceilings inside over 10 feet. John has\nnot raised the prices of accommodation either.\nMrs. Francis Ross spent the last week\nin Nelson visiting friends and acquaint-\nthe hospital thll week bat Is doing well\nand hopes to be soon at home again.\nP. Helsby and wife accompanied by\nlittle Bobby spent an evening In town\ntbls week the guests of MrB. Kneeland.\nMr. and Mrs. Churchill spent a day\nin town this week visiting old friends\nand acquaintances. MrB. Churchill\nshows very little evidence of the terrible experience she went through in\ncollision with a train of cars near Paterson some time ago.\nMrs. D. B, Orobe returned home this\nmorning from a few days visit in Nelson,\nMr. and Mrs. Davis ot Fruitvale, have\ntaken over the. boarding house at the\nYankee Girl mines and will run the\nsame in the future on tbeir own account\nDavie Peters, son ot Mr. and Mrs.\nEdward Peters has been a sufferer during the past couple of weeks from infantile paralysis, but at present is doing nicely under the care of Dr. Danks.\nJ. M. Gillie Is a very busy man these\ndays refurnishing and repairing the annex to his hotel, the Vancouver. Jim\nIs a pretty good all round man . and\nthinks when he gets through with the\nJob, he will be In line to take contracts\nfrom the beginning to the finish of\nbuildings Including painting, plumbing\nand the rest ot It.\n\u25a0i ^Ira. J. B. Bremner Is a patient *t\nCHAMPIONS OF      .\nEAST REPULSED\n(Continued from  Page  One.)\nThird Defence\nLachapelle   G. Rennle\nCentre\nSecours  1 C. Spring\nThird Defence\nThird Home\nDulude    W. Turnbull\nSecond Home\nGauthier    Wintemute\nFirst Home\nLalonde   Feeney\nOutside Home\nLamoureux   h, Turnbull\nInside Home\nDussault G. Spring\nSummary.\n1. New Westminster, Spring, 9 min.\nQuarter time:   New Westminster   1,\nNationals 0.\n2. New Westminster, Len Turnbull,\n2 3-4 min.\n3. New Westminster, G. Spring.\nHalf time: New Westminster 3, Nationals 0.\n4. New Westminster, Turnbull 4:03.\n5. New Westminster, Len Turnbull,\n5:07.\n6. Nationals, Lalonde, 5:05.\n7. Nationals, Lacbappelle. 11 sees.\nThird quarter: New Westminster   5,\nNationals 2.\n8. Nationals, Dassault, 3:27.\nfl.   New Westminster, Spring, 4:23.\n10.   New Westminster, Turnbull, 2:1.\nPrince Albert Elated.\nPRINCE ALBERT, Sask., Sept. 17\u2014\nA royal welcome awiated the Prince\nAlbert football team tonight when they\narrived from Saskatoon where they won\nthe championship of the province by\nbeating Regina by 2 goals to l,** The\ncrowd gathered at the depot to 'meet\nthe winners, a huge procession headed\nby a band going through the main\nstreets of the city. The victory caused\ngreat glee here owing to the action of\nRegina in going to Toronto to compete\nfor the Peoples shield before the final\nseries in Saskatchewan had been play-\n*.       4\nMile Record Broken.\nSYRACUSE, N. Y., Sept. 17.-Ralph De-\nPaliinm   broke  the   world\"s  record   for   a\nmile on a circular track.    Time 49:14.\nMOTHER\nWOMAN\nOTED\nBy Lydia E. Pinkham's\nVegetable Compound\nGardiner, Maine.\u2014\" I hove been a\ngreat sufferer from organic troubles\n\u2014  1 and a severe female\nweakness. The\ndoctor said I would\nhave to go to the\nhospital for an\noperation, but I\ncould not bear to\nthink of it 1 decided to try Lydia\nE. Pinkham's vegetable Compound\nand Sanative wash\n\u2014and was entirely\ncured after three\nmonths' use of them.\"\u2014Mrs. S. A.\nWilliam, R. F. D. No. 14'Box SB,\nGardiner, Me.\nNo woman should submit to a surgical operation, which may mean death,\nuntil she has given Lydia*. Pinkham's\nVegetable Compound, made exclusively from roots and herbs, a fair trial.\nThis famous medicine for women\nhas for thirty years proved to be the\nmost valuable tonic and renewer of\nthe female organism. Women residing in almost every city and town in\nthe United States bear willing testi-\nmony to the wonderful virtue of Lydia\nE. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.\nIt cures female ills, and creates radiant, buoyant female health. If you\nare UL for your own sake as well as\nthose you love, give it a trial.\nMrs. Pinkham, at Lynn. Mass.,\nInvites all sick women to write\nber for advice. Heradrioelslree,\nand always helpful.\nGOVERNMENT GRANT\nMADE TRIP POSSIBLE\nPresident  Starkey  Explains  How the\nBoard's    Representatives   Were\nAble to be Present\nCasual mention was made at the recent meeting of the board of trade of\na grant made by the provincial government, which enabled F. A. Starkey,\npresident, and E. K. Beeston, secretary, of the board, to make the trip to\nVancouver to watch the interests of\nthl8 oity at the session of the railway\ncommission when Vancouver's application for a re-adjustment of freight\nrates was heard.\nAsked yesterday to give an explanation of this matter, which had not been\nspecially reported on to the board,\nPresident Starkey said:\n\"When the city of Vancouver asked\nfor and obtained a grant of $1000 from\nthe provincial treasury, to enable it to\npresent Its -caae before the railway\ncommission, the Nelson board made\nrepresentations to the government that\nInasmuch as Vancouver's 1 application\nwas to a large extent against Nelson's\ninterests, the making of a grant to aid\nVancouver in obtaining what it asked\nfor wag unfair, unless this city was\nalso -given a grant. Our letter was acknowledged and we Immediately wrote\nagain, the answer of Premier McBride\nbeing a check for $250. This enabled\nMr. Beeston and myBelf to go to Vancouver and hear the argument of Vancouver, in which that city made tne\ngreat tactical mistake ot requiring the\nC.P.R. company to furnish It with materials for its case, with tbe result that\nthe hearing Is adjourned to Montreal,\nand Vancouver, instead of presenting\nits own constructive argument, will he\nrequired to break down the constructive argument of the C.P.R. Had occasion presented, that is, if the Inter*\nests of Nelson had been menaced we\nwere on the ground to interpose. In\nany event, especially in view of the\nprobable development of this matter\nin the future, the money wag very usefully spent.\"\nMr. Starkey stated that the \u2022government had been thanked for the grant,\nthough no record of the transaction appeared ln the minutes, -\nFOR PRI80N FARM     \u25a0\n.-.WINNIPEG. Sept. 17\u2014The latest rumors in connection with the purchase\nby the Manitoba government of a large\ntract of farm land near the city Is that\na prison farm similar to that of the Ontario government at Guelph will be established.\nDOMINION GOVERNMENT EXHIBIT\nAT NATIONAL APPLE SHOW\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 17.-Maxwell Smith\nreturned home today after an extended\ntrip through the east In the Interests of\nthe National Apple show. He Bays great\nInterest is being taken throughout the entire oountry In the exhibition and that\nexhibits wilt be on hand from every apple-\ngrowing section. The Dominion government will arrange for an 'exhibit whloh\nwill cover every district and be of great\neducational value.   ,\nMinard's Liniment Curea Dandruff.\nBt. Joseph, Levis, July u, XWfc\nMinard's Liniment Co., Limited.\nGentlemen,\u2014I was badly kicked, by my\nhorse last May and after using several\n\u00a3 reparations on my leg nothing would do.\nty leg was black as jet I waa laid np\nIn bed for a fortnight and could not walk.\nAfter using three bottles of your MINARD'S LINIMENT I was perfectly cured*\nid tbat X could start on the road.\nJOS. DUBBS,\nCommercial Traveler.\nMINING NEWS\nNew Air Compressor.\n(Special  to The  Dally  News.)\nYMIR, Sept. 17\u2014The    Yankee    Girl\nmines have let the contract for the Installation of an   air   compressor   and\nwork will begin on the same very soon.\nGood Showing of Ore.\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nAINSWORTH, Sept. 17\u2014F. D. Fraser\nsuperintendent for the Kootenay Silver\nLead Mining company, reports good\nshowings in the mine. The leads of\nclear 'ore are widening out and much\nsolid cube ore is being mined. He put\non a gang of men on the night shift\nMonday last and will soon be running\na double shift in the mill.\nMAY TAKE CANADIAN\nTROOPS  TO  CORONATION\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 17\u2014A rumor was\ncurrent this evening to the effect that\nLord Strathcona would pay the expenses of the Canadian Mounted Rifles\nto the coronation but Col. Steele denied\nit, saying no' useful purpose would be\nserved and the work of the camps\nbroken up for the year, while as most\nof the officers and men were English\nthey would be going home, the proportion of Canadians born who would real-\nQv benefit by the trip being small. He\nthought it much more likely that Lord\nStrathcona would bring home the detachment of Strathcona Horse now in\nSouth Africa.\nImperial Bank of Canada\nHEAD OFFICE: TORONTO\nCspltsl Authorized $10,000,000\nCspltsl Subscribed .\u00bb 6,575,000\nCspltsl Psld Up  15,330,000       Reserve Fund .(5,330,000 -\nD. R. WILKIE, President   HON. .ROBERT JAFFRAY, Vice-President\nBRANCHE8 IN BRITISH COLUMBIA:\nArrowhead, Chase,4Cranbrook, Fernie, Golden, Kamloops, Michel, New\nMichel, Moyie, Nelson, Revelstoke, Vancouver   and   Vtetorla.\nSAVIN6S DEPARTMENT\n, Interest allowed on doposlts at current rate from date of deposit.\nNELSON BRANCH J. M. LAY, Manager\nCanadian Bank of Commerce\nPAID UP CAPITAL... .$10,000,000        RESERVE  16,000,000\nDRAFTS ON   FOREIGN COUNTRIES\nArrangements have recently been   completed   under   which   the\nbranches of this bank are able to Issue Drafts on the principal points\nin the following countries:\nFinland , Ireland\nFormosa Italy\nFrance I Japan\nFr'ch Cochin-China Java\nAutrla-Hungary\nBelgium\nBrazil\nBulgaria\nCeylon\nChina\nCrete\nDenmark ,\nEgypt\nFaroe Islands ..._\nVo Delay In Issuing.\nNELSON BRANCH\nGermany\nGreat Britain\nGreece\nHolland\nIceland\nIndia   .\nRussia\nServla\nSlam\nSouth Afrlea -\nStraits Settlement\nSweden\nSwitzerland\nTurkey\nWest Indies\nand elsewhere.\nFull Particulars on Application\nJ. L. BUCHAN. Manager\nManchuria\nMexico\nNorway\nPersia\nPhllliplne Islands\nRoumanla\nBANK Of MONTREAL\nEstablished   817\nCapital All Paid Up... .H4,40O,0O0       Rest $12,000,000\nHEAD OFFICE: MONTREAL\nRt. Hen. Lord Strathcona and M ount Royal, O.C.M.Q., Hon. Prealdent\nR.  B. Angus, President\nSir Edward S. Cloustwi, Bart., V Ice-Presldsnt and Sen. Manager.\nBRANCHES IN BRITISH COLUMBIA:\nArmstrong, Chllllv,ack, Cloverdale,   Enderby,   Greenwood,   Hosmer,\nKelowna, Merritt, Neleon, New Denver, Nicola, New Weetmlnater, Pentlcton, Prince Rupert, Rossland, S 'mmerlsnd, Vancouver, Vernon, Vlotorla\nNELSON BRANCH L. B. DEVEBER, Manager\n2=\nThe Royal Bank of Canada\nIncorporated 1869\nCapital Paid Up   $ 6,000,000\nReserve and Undivided Profits    5,938,000\nTotsl Assets........' 67,000,000\nHEAD OFFICE: MONTREAL\nH. S. HOLT, President., E. L. PEASE, Vice-President and Pen. Manager.\nOne hundred and fifteen Branches .In Canada and Newfoundland.\nEleven Agencies ln Cuba; Nassau, Bahamas; San Juan, Porto Rico;\nNew Tork City, 68 William Btreet\nBusiness accounts carried upon favorable terms. Savings department\nat all branches.   Correspondence solicited.\nNELSON BRANCH A. B. NITHERBY, Manager.\nSfMi\u00a9*W'Wi'MlJ'W*Mt' \u2022MlifMliitffifffi'ili $$$*j^^ \\_\\\nHEADACHES\ni . .\nI am In a position to convince the biggest sceptics that I can positively\ncure tbeir headache by scientifically adjusted spectacles. No matter how\nmuch you have been told tbat the hest has been done for you, lt would'be\nworth your while to consult me, no m etter how difficult a case you are. I\nam proud of boasting that I have positively succeeded where other . good\nmen In \u2022-'a business have failed, and I have the proofs to produce at any\ntime. I Invite all people that are wearing spectacles and I can prove toany\none of you that I can fit you up with spectacles so that you will see better\nthan you ever saw before and you be the judge and If I tall I will not\ncharge you one cent for the trouble and expense I have gone to. How many\neye specialists have we got in Canada or In the United States that are\nIn a position or have the confidence In themselves to make you an offer like\nthis? Now then, lt you have anything wrong with your eyes or your head\nwill you be putting off or will you consult me now. Bvery intelligent person\nknows that procrastination pays no dividends, and where you have nothing\nto lose and everything to gain, It's up to you to have your eyea fitted up\ntoday.\nJ. J. Walker mMsjk\nGraduate Optician and Jeweler ' j\n SUNDAY ....... SEPTEMBER IS\nCfje Ballj? J&tto*.\nPAOE FIVt\nm ' \u2022\nHOTEL ARRIVALS OFADAY\n\u25a0\u00bbeeseeiiHie\u00bbi\u00bb*\u00bb\u00bbee\u00bbe*^#V\n. i i\nThe Hume   ;\n************************ I .\nHUME\u2014IV P. TJrquhart, Montreal; Mrs.\nW. J. Moore, Montreal; W. W. Crulman,\nToronto; F. H. MoKeen, Vancouver; G.\nK. Marshall, Vancouver; M., H. Roberts,\nVancouver; F. E. Harmer, Vancouver; C.\niF. Nelson, New Denver; W. F. Anderson,\nPoplar Creek; T. D. Brown, Lethbrldge;\nR. H. Ley, Sheep Creek; E. R. Bennett,\nSpokane; Q. M. Fisher, Spokane; E. W.\nRuddy, Rock Cut, Wash.: J. W. Donovan, Rock Cut, Wash.; John H. Cole,\n\u25a0iParla, Ont.; Ernie P. Choquette, Calgary;\nM. C. Nelson, Riondel; C. E, Greenwood,\nOrand Forks; Colonel S. B. JameBon, England; T, C. Peck, Midway; W, D. Hill,\nCranbrook; W. J. Moore, Slocan Junction;\nR. ingllB, Crawford- Bay,\nBest on the\nContinent\nThat Is what authorities say\nregarding the medicinal qualities of the watera at Halcyon\nHot Springs.\nThe Sanitarium is now under\nnew management and has been\nremodelled from top to bottom\nand now offers every facility\nfor the comfort and convenience ot patrons.\nRates 112 and $15 per week\nor 12 per day and upwards.\nHALCYON HOT SPR1NBS\nSANITABIUM\nWM. BOYD, Proprietor\nHalcyon, Arrow Lakes, B. C.\nSTRATHOONA-A. J. Howe, Oeorge A.\nOhren, Rossland; H. H. fl. Fellows, Golden; B. W. Ruddy, Rock Cut; R. W.\nSouthern, Jr., o. F. Anderson, C. J. Weest-\nhead. Nelson; Mr. and Mrs. Frank 0. Williams, G. T. Williams, St. Paul.\nQueen's Hotel\nBaker Street\nA. LAPOINTE, Proprietor\n.Rates: *1.6o to 12.00 per day.\nHeal Tickets, $7.00 per week.\nBusiness men's lunch, Ik.\nQUEENS-C. Woodron, Poplar; G. Lin-\nBard, Ainsworth;   W.   Pearce,    city;  H.\n,'Moher,   C.   Valley; J.  Parker, olty; W.\n. JWiisht. olty; Ed Peterson, c. Valley; S.\nTanabe, Vancouver.\nMadden House\n; ;    Thos. Madden, Prop.. Baker St.\ni * \u2014 \u2022 *\nWell furnished rooms with bath I !\nBest Board tn tbe Olty . ;;\nA Comfortable Homo\n**************************,\nMADDEN-Mayall, Crows' Nest; Harris,\nSpokane; Lawrence, Spokane; J. Travis,\nE. Hall, Tarron; J. Lerson, Winlaw.\nTremont House\nBaker It, Nelson.\n. Malone A Treglllus, Prop.\nEuropean Plan, Mo. np .,\nAmerican Plan, $1.25 and $1.60   '\nHeals, IK.\nSpecial Rates psr Month.   - <\nTREMONT\u2014D. Laren, Winlaw; J. Mulholland, Balmo; D. Arthur, Salmo; \\V.\nMunro, Molly Gibson; J. Tlesher.\n\u25a0 ************ ***,***********>\nLi-keview Hotel\nCornsr Hall and Vernon Streets\nB. L. GRIFFITH, Prop.\nTwo blocks from city wharf.\nThe best dollar a day house In\nNelson.\nAll White Help\nt*********** It**,******\u201e*?\nLAHBVIEW-A. Lenard and wife, New\nTork; J. Jennings, Moose Jaw.     -\n\u2022\u2022************,******,*,*,**\n*\nGrand Central Hotel j\nOPPOSITE P08T0FFICE\nAmerican and European Plug,\nJ. A, ERICKSON\n. GRAND CENTRAI^-J. Johnson, Koch;\nW, King, Salmo; p. Scott, Hall; W. Wilton, Athabasca; D. Kent, Moyle; F. Martin, Moyle; W. Cadoo, Scotland; A. Me-\nlure, Creston: J. Mack, Paulson; H. Mll-\nJer, Ymlr; O. Gongo, Ymlr; D. Laro,*\nYmlr; A. Campbell, Moyle; N. McDonald,\nMoyle.\nThe Klondyke Hotel\nVernon Street\nHeadquarters (or miners, imel-\ntermen, loggers, railroad men.\nRates: |1.00 per day up.\nNELSON & JOHNSON. Props.\nKLONDYKE-A. Johnson, Koch; ' C.\nOberg, Koch; H. Rutherford, Taghum; B.\nCarlson, Ymlr; M. Peterson, Ymlr; B, Am-\nberg, Granite; Lumberg, Hunt, Princeton;\nJ. Robertson, Princeton.\nBARTLETT-W. Brlsto, Ontario; X,\nWaters, .Silverton; Brutern,\nROYAL-J. Brass, Summit.\n8HERBR00KE-J. Collette, Mi WeUlle,\nO. Hart,' Trail.,\nNelson Cafe\nLarge and Commodious Dining   !\nRoom\nPrompt and Courteous Service.\nMeals Served at all Hours \u00bb    < \u25a0\nElegantly furnished rooms In\nconnection; 91 a day and hp\nA. AUDET, Proprietor\nNELSON-W. Smith, Rossland; J. Han-\nson, Host-land' A. Hanson, Rossland; H.\nPatterson, Ymlr; A. Patterson, Ymlr; H.\nHogan, Ci. Jessie, Butte, Mont; W. Lewis,\nButte, Mont.; W. Williams, Butte, Mont.;\nW, Smith, Butte, Mont.; J. Hanson, Butte,\nMont; S. Telcle, Rossland; D. Jeslle,\nTroup Junctoln.\nCLUB\u2014N.  Hogg,  C.  Valley;  F. O'Brien,\nflocan; J. Callaghhan, Lardo,\nSILVER KING\u2014A. Crossley, Cottonwood; W. Riley, J. Stickler, J. McKes-\nzie, F. McDonald; Ireland; E. Shand.\nTrail; J. McKay, J. McKenzle, J. Barton,\nNew York.\nKOOTENAY\u2014E. Wright, Fernie; F.\nRice, Fernie; V. Mosely, Burton City; S.\nJones, Burton City; J. Parkerson, Rossland; S. Ferguson, Montreal; tA. Tolden,\nC, Valley.\nPARKER TAKES\n-\u2014UP CHALLENGE\nWill Meet Bob Forshaw at Phoenix In\nBoxing  contest\u2014Oct  15   is\nLikely Date\nBob' Forshaw, the Phoenix pug,\nwrites to a Nelson friend that permission has been secured'irom the municipal authorities of that city to hold a\nboxing match there and suggests that\na mill take place between himself and\nFrank Parker of Coleman, who arrived\nin Nelson a few days ago, on Oct 15\nnext. Parker has already expressed his\nentire willingness to take up the challenge and left yesterday for Phoenix\n\u25a0where he will conclude all the necessary arrangements.\nThe Phoenix man's height is 6 feet\n2,Inches; he bas a chest measurement\nof 42 inches; waist, 34 Inches; reach,\n83 inches. In hiB letter received yes-\nterday he said that, he was willing to\nfight any man in Canada and seemed\nto be disappointed that he had been\nunsuccessful in his efforts to induce\nBig ,Ta$k Ehlfn of Spokane to arrange\na boxing bout wi*h him. Ehltn Is the\nman Boh Fitzsimmons picked on as\nthe only pug capable of licking Jack\nJohnson and Boh Forshaw observes,\n\"he waB too scared to meet me.\" From\nhis letter Bob evidently thinks he can\nput one over on anything that ever nut\non the gloves in 'the northwest. The\nmatch should -be a good one m Frank\nParker ls an old country man of considerable experience In the ring. He\nhas fought Jim Jollv, champion of India; George Sunshine of the British\narmy; Corp Collins, champion of the\nEnglish Footgnards and Ben Taylor.\na boxer of no mean reputation at\nWoolwich, England, and many others.\nHis age Is 26 years and his measurements are: Weight, 176 -pounds; height\nft feet 2 1-2 Inches; reach, 80 inches:\nwaist 34 inches; chest 42 Inches: neck\n18 inches; forearm, 13 inches and top\narm, 15 inches.\nIt will be seen that (Forshaw has the\nadvantage of three Inches ln reach but\nln height and chest measurement the\nrival pugilists are about equal. The\nbout should be one of the hest sporting events the followers of the ring\nhave witnessed in Phoenix for many\nmonths.\nThe details as to referee and finances' will be settled between the two\nmen this week end.\nEXPERIMENTAL FARM CROPS\nTURNING OUT WELL\nBRANDON, Man., Sept. 17.\u2014Threshing\noperations have been ln progress at the\nexperimental farm all the week and up\ntill yesterday nearly 1000 bushels of different varieties of wheat had been\nthreshed and Invariably the yield was\nmuch better than had been expected. The\ncoarse grains also promise yielding well,*\nThe threshing of oats and barley will\ncommence on Monday as the wheat will\nbe-flnlshea today. The yield of the different varieties of wheat per acre Is as\nfollows: Red Fyfe 28 bushels, White Fyfe\n34 bushels, Preston 32 bushels, barley, Red\nFyfe, 27 bushels.\nThe general crops at the experimental\nfarm are fine, much better than had been\nexpected considering the dry season.\nDISSOLUTION    OF   SUGAR    TRUST\nWASHINGTON, D. C\u201e Sept. 17.- petition for the dissolution of the so-called\nsugar trust will be filed In, the United'\nStates court In New York probably next\n-week. This Is an action entirely Independent of the Indictments whloh were\nfound some time ago against the American\nSugar Refining company iind some of Us\nofficials.\nPrevent and\nRelieve Headache\n\"It gives me great pleasure to\nbe able to refer to Dr. Miles'\nAnti-Pain Pills as the best remedy we have yet had in our\nhouse for the prevention and\ncure of headache. My wife who\nhas been a constant sufferer for\na number of years with above\ncomplaint joins me in the hope\nthat they may fall into the hands\nof all sufferers.\"\nJOHN BUSH,\nWatervleit, Me,\nUsed Them Four Years.\n\"Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills\nare the best I ever tried for the\nrelief of headache.   I have used\nthem for nearly four years and\nthey never fail to give me relief,\nI have tried many other remedies, but have never found any\nbetter.\"\nJOSEPH FRANKOWICK,\n854 Trombly Av., Detroit, Mich.\nThere is no remedy that will\nmore quickly relieve any form\nof headache than\nDr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills.\nThe best feature of this remarkable remedy is the fact that\nit does not derange the stomach\nor leave any disagreeable aftereffects.\nPrice 25o at your druggist. Ho should\nsupply you. If ho does not, send prlco\nto us, we forward prepaid.\nDR. MILES MEDICAL CO* Toronto.\nRemember Gipsy Hawkins* meetings In\nBaptist ohuroh today at 11 and 7:80 o'clock.\nMln.rd'i Liniment for sal. .varywhar.\nWILL MAKE PARK\nFOR CRESTON\nSyndicate Buys Six Acres for Ball and\nRecreation Grounds\u2014To\nClear Land.\nCRESTON, Sept. 17.-Thanks to the public-spirited action of leading Creston\nbusiness men, our town will shortly be\nequipped with an up-to-date park and ball\nground. The matter of obtaining a park\nfor Creston has been under consideration\nfor some time. As the town Ib not yet\nincorporated no city funda are available\nfor the purpose and It seemed as If the\ngolden opportunity to secure suitable land\nbefore the rapidly rising values place same\nout of the question, would be allowed to\nslip by. Accordingly on the 9th of September a syndicate of leading business\nmen comnflslng Messrs. w. H. Crawlurd,\nS. Hatfield, W. Burton, George Mead, K.\nM. Reld, C. O. Rodgers, E. Mallandalne,\nJ. Arrowsmlth, S. A. Speers and Dr. G.\nB. Henderson, was organized and six\nacres of land close to town well wooded\nand in every way suitable' for a public\npark, have been purchased from Mr. j.\nArrowsmlth, while an option has been\ntaken on an additional acre. The purchase\nprice Is $20 per acre. The syndicate will\nhave for Its object the holding and development of a recreation ground and\npark at Creston. Each of th\u00a9 members\nwill be assessed for an equal share in\nthe outlay of the syndicate and will have\na corresponding share In the prow* derived therefrom. As soon as the preliminary arrangements have been made tenders will be called for the clearing of the\nground. -The town water supply will be\nextended to give an ample service on the\ngrounds, and a bridge has been promised\nby the provincial government crossing the\ngully, while Schofield avenue will be continued right to the grounds, thus giving\neusy access from town,\nThe establishing of this park at Creston\nIs a striking proof of the faith of the\ncitizens in the future of tiie town and with\nthe completion of these improvements\nCreston will possess a Playground which\nwill be a credit to the town, a splendid\nsign of the enterprise of our citizens and\ntheir faith in the future of this coming\ncity.\nW. A. Pease returned a few days ago\nfrom Cowley Alta, with a carload of cattle. Mr. Pease says things In and around\nCowley are fairly good. The spring wheat\nand oats have been a failure, but the fall\nwheat Is not too bad, averaging as high\nas 20 bushels to the acre.\nJohn Atherton, foreman at the Review\noffice, Is taking a well-earned holiday this\nweek and will fish and Ifunt to his heart's\ncontent. His position in the Review office Is being temporarily filled by Willie\nAtherton.\nAmong the prominent donators to the\nspecial prizes at the Cranbrook fair from\nthe Creston district are O. J. Wigen,\nJames Compton and W. E. Jackson.\nC. M. O'Brien, a noted socialist orator,\nwill address the people of Creston on\nTuesday  evening next the 20th.\nThe Rev. J. P. Westman of Nelson will\npreach ln the Methodist church both morning and evening on Sunday next. In the\nmornin\" the sermon will be to the children.\nMrs. George M. Gunn and. family, who\nhave been upending the past few days\nhere, returned to Nelson on hursday. They\nwill, however, return to Creston as soon\nas Mr. Gunn has made certain improvements to the Jim Richard property, which\nhe has this week purchased.\nSam Hatfield Is building a neat cottage\non his 12-acre **tot adjoining the town\nlimits. Mr. Hatfield has already cleared\nfive acres of land. Mr. Miller will occupy\nthis house when completed.\nKILLED BV WORK TRAIN.\nHITCHCOCK, Sask., Sept. 17\u2014H. L.\nBrown, a young Englishman, who came\nhere from Mellta, Man., waa killed and\nA. Stivelberg waa fatally Injured by a\nwork train near here. They were driving over a crossing where the view of\nthe track was obstructed by snow\nfences.\nMlnard'4 Liniment Cures Colda. Et\u00bb\nHome\nDYEING\nDYOLA\nE\"**\u00bbAUKffiD5\nI\njuiTTHiNKorrri\nHALL AND SEWARD\nWIN DOUBLES\nOtner  Event,  in  Tennla Tournament\nYesterday   Left   Unfin,shed\u2014Reynold! Play. Pretty Came\nUnder ideal'weather conditions and\nwith a fair crowd of spectators the\nhandicap tennis tournament yesterday\nafternoon at the local courts proved aa\nsuccessful aa that held on the previous\nSaturday.\nThe entries 'or the variou. events\nwere many and the only matches completed were In the -men's doubles, first\nprize in which was carried ott by H. C.\nHall and J. Seward, H. J. S Reynolds\nIn a closely fought set with J Seward\nin the men's singles put up a splendid\nfight. The score was S3 in favor of\nthe latter but nearly every game reachft\ned the \"vantage\" stage (before it was\nfinally won and lost.\nMrs. H. C. Hall, ably assisted by O.\nDixon of Willow Point, served tea on\nthe grounds.\nThe full score ln yesterday's play\nwas as follows:\nMen's  Doub'es\nH. C. Hall and J. Seward (minus 30)\nbeat W, Busk and T. Nunns (minus 1-2\n15) 6-3; C. W. Appleyard and B. McGregor (minus 15) beat R, H. Balmer\nand H. J s Reynolds (scratch) 6-4. In\nthe finals H. C. Hall and J. Seward\nbeat O. W Appleyard and B McGregor,\n6-2 and 6-2,\nLadies' Singles\nMiss Bourlte (Plus 30) neat Miss\nBate    (scrateB)     IH5;     Mra     Goepel\n(scratch)   beat   Mis.   E.   UoFarland\n(minus 15) 6-2.\nLadles' Doubles\nMlsa Bate and Miss E. MoParland\n(plus 15) beat Miss Bourke and Miss\nU. M. Hill (scratch) 6-2.\nMixed Doubles\nMiss Bate and H. Clyne (plus 1-2 30)\nbeat Miss E. McFarland and H. J. S.\nReynolds. (scratch) 6-2.\nMen'. Single.\nJ. Seward (minus 15) beat H. J. S.\nReynolds (Plus 1-2 16) 6-3; R. it. Balmer! scratch) beat H Clyne (minus\n16; 6-1; H. C. Hall (minus 16) beat W.\nBusk (scratch) 6-5; J. Seward ibeat R.\nM. Balmer, 6-1.\nWILL TE8T WIRE WOUND\nPIPE AT GRAND FORKS\nAustrian  Ha.  Foot Cut by Saw\u2014Barrister Leaves to Take Position\nin Victoria.\n(Special to The Dally News.) \u25a0\nGRAND FORKS, Sept 17\u2014At the\nfirst meeting of the re-organlzed local\nbranch of the Canadian Bible society,\nheld in the. Presbyterian church this\nweek, the following committee -was\nelected from the different churches of\nthe city to act hi conjunction with the\nofficers of the churches in the work\nof the organization, which has for its\nobject the wider circulation of the\nBible, throughout Canada: Presbyterian\nchurch, Messrs. J. McKie, N. McNlven\nand W. C. Mclnnes; Baptist church,\nMiss Campbell and Messrs, A. P. Robinson and W. Frache; Methodist\nchurch, Messrs. ,T. F. Demuth, D. Carter and .1. A. Todd; Church of England,\nMessrs. VV. R. Dewdney,   C. A. S.   At-\nVAKE YOUR OWN DOCTOR\nON   YOUR  VACATION\nLola of lines on a vacation\nyou'll Had a drop of good Whisky\nInvaluable.   City-bred folks are susceptible\nlo eolds ia the chilly evening air of (he moun-\ntaint or lakeshore.   Carry a doctor in your suitcase.\nA bottle of\nCorby's \"SPECIAL. SELECTED\"\nRye Whisky\nwill remedy the host of minor Ills the vacationist is\nheir to. This pore, well-m stored whisky is a beneficent\nrestorative when you are out of sorts. Those who\nt\u00bbke a \"Little Touch\" before turning ia sleep well\no'aightt, even though the sir be raw sad the blanhettthia\nYour Grocer con snpphj you with Corby's\n''SPECIAL SELECTED\" wrapped in a\ncorrugated carton to prevent breakage.\ns\u00bb\u00ab H. Corby Distillery Company\nLIMITED m\n\"Corby's of CorbyvlUe tor Over Half-a-Centary.\"\nA lecture on\nChristian Science\nwill be given in the Congregational\nchurch on Tuesday evening, Sept. 20,\ncommencing at 8.30, by\nFrank H. Leonard. C.S.B.\nMember of the Board of Lectureship\nof The Mother Church,\nThe First Church of Christ. Scientist,\nin Boston, Mass.\nAdmission Free Admission Free\nm tcttuccc *Mi**tot\nJD U OU 1 C*0*U business people\nis what keeps tne wheels going round in our busy Job department.\nFor office and factory, lumbering concern and smelter and mine, shop\nand store, our skilled work and prompt service do much to promote\nprogress and lubricate the way s of business. Call us up or write to\nus when you require any printing and we'll attend to your wants at\nonce.\nWe have special \u2022facilities for turning out work suoh as nre\npossessed by no other printing office in the interior of British Columbia. We have an up to date binding and ruling department in\nconnection with our job office and can turn out all kinds of ruled\nwork and blank books on short notice. Our work in this department\nis unexcelled.\nGive us a trial order and you will Join the ranks ot our satisfied\ncustomers. 'UsSta*\u00bb- \u25a0a---... .\nThe News Publishing Company. Limited\nNelson, B.C.\nFall Hats Are Stunning\nThere is snap and chic to every one of the clever creations on display at this store. Style Ib the keynote of the advance showing. Large,\nsmall and medium sized hats are all Included. Fabric hats for the\nwoman who wants the newest th Ing. They are made ef serge and velvet and are fetching when worn with tailored suits. Those who favor\nthe more picturesque style of hea dgear will find the new mushroom\nshapes charming. Brims turned up on the left side and well towards\nthe front make them dashing and becoming. Bicornes and tricornes\nare also here\u2014in fact pretty nearly every kind of hat you could wish for. -\nPrices are the most agreeable feature. The range ot smart but inexpensive millinery Is large. In preparing this selection of autumn\nhats we have catered to the need s of all of our customers\u2014those who\nwish to pay little as well as those who wish to pay much. Your are Invited to Inspect the new arrivals. Not ready to buy just now? Come\nand see them, you will enjoy a visit.\nMEAGHER & CO.\nEagle Block\nBaker Street\nOur   Vancouver   Office\nWe have recently opened a branch office at 801-2 Bowers' Building,\nVancouver, B.C.\nThose desiring ito trade In t|ie Portland Canal stocks,, [Canadian\ncoal stocks or listed Coeur d'A lene securities can address us at either\noffice.   Glad to place you on ou r mailing list.\nSharp \u00ab& Irvine\n514-17   Paulsen   Building,   Spokane  Wash.\n801-2 Bowers' Building, Vancouver, B.C.\nwood and J. P. Pilgrim. The officers of\nthe society for the year are as follows:\nPresident, Rev. M. D. McKee; vice\npresident, Rev. H. W. Wright, Rev. J.\nCalvert, Rev. H. 8teele and Messrs. F.\nLathe, J. W. Rutherford and Ernest\nMiller, M. P. P.; secretary, W. R. Dewdney; treasurer, P. T. McCalhim.\nThe annual reunion of tbe Kettle\nRiver PioneerB society was held at\nGreenwood on Thursday.\nFoot Cut by Saw.\nAn Austrian, employed at the saw\nmill of RoblnBon & Lequime on Smelter lake, met with a painful accident\nwhile at work on Thursday. In some\nmanner the unfortunate man's foot\ncame in contact with the circular saw\nwhich cut the foot at the instep, running up to the ankle and nearly severing the foot from the leg. He is con-\nHned to the hospital, but the attending\nphysician last night expressed tbe hope\nof Bavlng the foot entirely.\nJohn McDougall of this city has pur'\nchased the general store of H. B. Cur-\nran in the north addition. Mr. Curran.\nhas been engaged in business for a\nnumber of years in Grand Forks, but is\nleaving shortly for New Westminster,\nwhere he will embark ln the grocery\nline.\nSome two thousand feet of eight\nInch wooden pipe is being laid by the\ncity on Riverside avenue ut present.\nThis is the first water main In the\ncity to be replaced, and also the first\ntrial of wire wound wood pipe. Tbe\nold mains were laid some twelve years\nago, but have about passed their useful stage, and the city being owners\nof the system themselves, are anxious\nto maintain the high standard of efficiency both for fire and domestic purposes that has been enjoyed by Grand\nPorks in the past.\nNot a minute should be lost when a child\nshows symptoms of croup. Chamberlain's\nCough Remedy given as soon as the child\nbecomes hoarse, or even after the croupy\ncough appears, will prevent the attack.\nSold by alt druggists and dealers. .\nCLOSE IN SNAP\nWe have had listed for quick sale a seven room house with stone\nfoundations, within three minutes of postofflce, no hills to climb.\nHas all modern conveniences.\nWe Can Recommend This House\nIn first class repair and lately renovated thorughout    We expect\nto make a quick sale of this property so donU delay &ut get particu-\nPrice $3COO, on Terms to Suit Purchaser\nMcQUARRIE\n411 WARD STRUT\n&   ROBERTSON,\nAgent- NELION, \u25a0.*>.\nnam\n mas\nmaaa\nmmmaaaawaa\nfc&e Satin $ehMj.\nSUNOAV  SEPTEMBER 11\nSeventy-Eight Payments of $20\nper month, no interest, buys a comfortable home within\nhalf a mile of post office. One block from car line. Eight\nrooms. City water. One lot, 30 by 120. Cultivated\nbearing fruit trees.\nWHY PAY RENT?\nWhat will you have ten years from now? Just a\nbundle of rent receipts. The other fellow has the property\nYOU PAID YOUR GOOD MONEY FOR.\nThe Western Canada Investment Co.\nP..O. Box (042 Baker Street Nelson, B. C.\nFire Insurance Lowest Rates Best Terms Life Insurance\nbUSINESS DIRECTORY\n      AUCTIONEERS\t\nCHAS.   A.   WATERMAN   A   CO.-P.   O.\nBOX SB, \t\nW. CUTLER, LICENSED AUCTIONEER,\nBox \u00ab*. \t\nPUBLISHERS AND PRINTERS\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LTD.-\nPubllshers o\u00ab Th. Dally News: subscription IS per year by carrier; 15 per year\nby mail. Commercial lob printing ol all\nkinds neatly and promptly executed, m\nBaker street, Nelaon, D.c, Phone Mi,\nI aint no literary woman!\nBut I do know soap.\nI've heard some wimen say soap\nmade their hands ruff.\nThey're either lazy or else they\ndont use the right soap.\nMy hands don't get ruff. In fact,\nthe kind X use makes 'em all smooth\nan' white.\nWhite Swan Soap\nYours soapily,\nANN NONYMOUS\nLOCAL MARKETS\nNELSON, Sept. 17.\nFOODSTUFrfc.\nLake of Woods, per baa 2.00\nRoyal Household  2.00\nPurity Flour   \"\u2022\u00bb\nGold Drop Flour  _*>\nRobin Hood Flour  2.00\nDAIRY   PROnuCE.\nButter,  creamery, per lb S?o\"\u201e\nButter,  bulk,  per  lb 36813714\nButter, dairy, per Ib.  \u2022\">\nCheese, Canadian, per lb At\nCheese, Swiss,  per lb \u00bb\nTges, fresh, per doz w\nHOKE., case, per dos *\u00bb\nEggs,  ca\u00bb     1rmBt__fL_a4\nN.w Potatoes, per lb \u00ab\u00bbi\nCabbage, per lb r \u00ab\nTomatoes, fresh, per lb. \u2022\u2022 -*w\nLettuce, per Ib.   \u2022 J\u00bb\nDry Onions, per Ib w\nFRUITS.\nOranges, per dos **J J\u00b0 f~\nBanana., per dos \u00abto.w\nLemons, per dos.  '___\u00a3\nPlums, per lb \u00abt\u00aelj>\nApples,   per  lb. _\\\nHoney, comb, per lb g\nHoney, Mb. Jars  *\nBeef, wholesale .' 1} to -\"H\nPork, wholesale  }' Jo \u2022}'*\nHutton, wholesale  \u00bb to \u2022}'\nVeal, wholesale  ;\u2022\u00bb Jo .16\nBeef, retail  **}* Jo \u25a0__\nPork,  retail  HK'S\nMutton, retail \u00bb to .*\nVeal reUU  SJS'S\nHams,  retail   g __ \u25a0\"\nBacon. r.tall U\" \u25a0\u00bb\n5SJ, \u2122\u00absa :::::::::::::::::::::\u00bb\u00a3 \u00a3\ngausagea, retail  ** to Is\nVANCOUVER STOCK MARKET\nReported by Mlghton ft CK__%_m$__M\nAlberta Coal ft Cokei \u25a0\u25a0 -TO\nInternational Coal & Coke ..    .69 .67*,\nGreat West Permanent  124.00 131.00\nNugget Gold   Mine     .JJ \u2022\"\u00bb\nBiJcllff Mining Co.   .......  1.00 1.06\nSAfiSAiB.\",::'.'.:\u00a3   \u2022\u00bb\nCanadian North West Oil .... 1100\nDiamond Vale Coal ft Coke..    .07 .11\nMtool. valley Coal ft Coke..    ... 60.00\nHammer Cariboo       \u00a3\u00ab* \u2022;**\nBoyal Collieries      \u2022\u00ab\u00bb \u2022*\u00bb\u00bb\n8.  A Scrip  7\"-'B\nNEW YORK STOCK MARKET\nMEW YORK, Sept .17.-Openlng dealing, in stocks were active and prices\nallowed an advancing tendency. New York\nCentral rose H4 and B. * o. a sutatan-\nglair amotion. EvaMvllte and Terre\nCUut. Mid at an advance of 2.  lnterboro\nMetropolitan pfd.  reacted % from yester-\nday's advance and Delaware and Hudson\n\"unto  Pacific,  1M*;   Canadian   Pacific,\n188%;  Southern Paciilc, 113%.\nMETALS\n_E^S^_J____&^\nDOMINION NEWS\nboth the G.T.R. and C.N.R. may\nbuild subways at Cobourg\nCleveland capitalist may build an\nelectric road between Owen Sound and\nMeaford\nA. deposit of tin has been discovered\nnear Arnprlor. The ore assays 25 per\ncent tin.\nA. H. VanCleve of Niagara Falls has\nbeen appointed head engineer for London, Ont.\nArchbishop Oauthler of Kingston has\nbeen promoted to the Archbishopric of\nOtt&Wft\nSquire McCormlck' ot Sudbury, who\nis 84 years old, fell and broke hia right\nthigh bone.\nThe I.C.R. management will spend\n1250,000 to replace the buildings burned at Campbeilton, N.B.\nFire In the lumber and stave mills\nof J. S. Alnelie and Bros., at Comber,\ndid over 16000 damage.\nJesse Ash, a member of tbe Brant-\nford license board for the past six\nyears 18 dead. \u00bbM* 66.\nA double track on the C.P.R. between Windsor and Toronto is expected by Sept. 1, 1911.\nAnthony Cuningham of St. John, has\nlost by death, his wife and three children since last May.\nHoward Nilea of Sydney, C.B., drove\ninto an excavation which was not lighted.   A good deal of damage was done.\nFred F, Farrar of Watrous, Sask.,\nhas fallen heh- to one-fourth of an estate In Scotland, valued at $2,000,000.\nWilliam J. Woods of Port Arthur, a\nlumbering contractor, wag found dead\nof heart failure. A widow and six\nchildren survive.\nRobert Kerr, passenger traffic manager of the C.P.R. and steamship lines\nat Montreal, has resigned. He will\nretire on Oct. 1.\nMurphy's hotel, Moore's ice house,\nand the houses owned by Dr Beatty\nand W. H. Nelson, were destroyed in\na \u00a56000 fire at Kenora, Ont.\nPremier Roblin of, Manitoba, received a letter threatening his life, the authorship of which was traced to an Insane Italian, who Is now In Selkirk,\nasylum.\nFour young men who were nearly\ndrowned after the capsizing of their\nyacht off the Island of Orleans, were\npicked up hy the steamer Athenla and\n'taken to Quebec.\nBurglars tooted five stores at Red-\nvers, Sask., and made unsuccessful attempts on two others- They were\n[frightened away while making an attempt on a bank.\nGen, Baden-Powell had a very quiet\ntime at St. John, N.B. There was no\nreception. The general wemt to an\nhotel and went to work on his correspondence.\nThe police near London are investigating alleged attempts to wreck trains\non the London & Port Stanley railway,\nlies were placed on the track and\nafter being removed were placed on a\nsecond time.\nAn Inquest was held In the case of\nWilliam Campbell who died as the result of an accident ln the McDonald\nmines, Verona. The verdict said the\nwall of the mine was unsafe through\ninsufficient scaling,\nA big railway proposition for the\nconstruction of a line tv> cross the province of Alberta, a distance of 700\n;mltes, ha\u201e been laid -before Premier\nSifton. The promoters are New York\njBapltalista, who wm .build a line to the\nKootenay Coal fields.\nHAIRDRE88ING   AND   MANICURING\nMME. KATHLBEN WOAH, HA1RDKESS-\nin-f and manicuring parlors. Boom 38,\nK. W. c. block.\nCOLLECTION  AGENCIES\nW. CUTLMR\u2014COLLECTIONS OF ALL.\nkinds. Returns promptly made. References given. . Office 313 Baker street.\nNelson, B.C. <\t\nBOOKBINDING AND RULING\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LTD.-\nAU kinds ol office forms ruled and punched for loose leaf binders. The most complete book binding equipment ln tbe Interior of British Columbia. 219 baker\nstreet, Nelson, B.C., P.O. drawer 11X9,\nPhone l\u00ab.\nWhen In   INeed\nPhone, day tf, night s\u00abL\nSTANDARD   FURNITURB   COMPANT*!\nUNDERTAKING PARLORS, stt Baktr, It\nR. S. BRifiRBTON,\nI-unerai Director and Embalmer.\nThe best equipped undertaking parlors la\nthe Kootenays, with experienced attendant\navailable M aU hours.\nWA8   LIGHTING   FIRE\nI WITH COAL OIL\nKENORA, Sept 17\u2014Charles Albert,\nth\u00ab young son of Andrew Albert, section man at Vermillion bay, died as a\nresult of injuries sustained ln a fire\nat his father's home on Sept. 8. The\nfather was lighting a fire with coal oil\nand an explosion followed. Andrew\nAlbert was terribly burned at the time\nand died on the evening of the accident.\nCONTRACTORS ANO BUILDERS\nlice Fitting Factory. Brick and Lime\nfor sale. Office and factory: Carbonate\nstreet, Nelson, B.C. Large quantity of\nshavings, suitable for stable bedding, can\nbe had tor hauling away.\n. Remember Giney Hawkins' meeting-* in\nBaptist church today at 11 and 7:99 o'clock.\nPRIVATE  MATERNITY  HOME\nNICE   LOCALITY    AND   HOME    COM-\nforts.   For terms and particulars write\nP. O. Box 768, Nelson, B.C.\nDRE8SMAKING.\nMRS.    HOWSON    and   MISS    DANCK\u2014\nDressmaking and plain sewing; cleaning\nand reuovating. Corner Cedar and Observatory.   Box S76. 1UHM\nMUSIC.\nPIANO AND THEORY-MRS. BTARMEK\nSmith, Box, 916. Pupils prepared for local\nexaminations by the Associated Board of\nthe Royal Academy of Muslo, and the\nRoyal College of Music, London, England.\nWHEN HAVING YOUR PIANO TUNED,\nhave lt done by reliable men, backed by\na reliable tlrm. Messrs. Wm. and A. R.\nKllby, the authorized tuners of the Mason\n& Risch Co., for B.C., are now residents\nof this town, and are open to take orders,\nwhich If left at the Mason & Risch agency\noffice, or at 8M Stanley street, will be\npromptly attended to.\nMISS Q. HAVILAND PURDY, ORADU-\nate of Mount Allison Conservatory of\nMusic, Sackvllle, New Brunswick. Teacher of Piano, Pipeorgan, Harmony, History of Music, etc. i Studio, 5W Cedar\nstreet. iua-ti.\nSINGING AND VOICE PRODUCTION\u2014\nA, Treby Heale will commence giving\ntuition ln above on Oct. 3. -For terms\nand particulars apply H, Treby Heale,\ncare Dally News. 119-tf.\nHOUSE AND 8IGN  PAINTERS\nHARTMAN & BENNETT, house and sign\npainters, paper hangers and decorators.\nShop, Stanley St., next door to B. U.\nTelephone office, Nelson, B.C.\nASSAYER8\n2. W. WIDDOWSON, ASSAYER (PRO-\nvlnolal) Metallurgical Chemist, Charges:\nGold, Silver, Copper or Lead, 11, each;\nGold-Sliver, (1.50; Silver-Lead, $1.50; Zinc,\n12; SUver-Lead-Zlnc, *3; Gold, Silver-\nCopper or Lead, $2.50. Accurate assays;\ncareful sampling, and prompt attention.\nP. O. Box A1108, Nelson, B.C,\nASSAYERS' SUPPLIES\nTHE B. C. ASSAY AND CHEMICAL\nSUPPLY COMPANY, LIMITED, Vancouver, B. C, Assayers' Supplies,\nChemical and Physical Apparatus, Balances and Weights of precision, etc.,\nSole Agents In British Columbia for the\nMorgan Crucible Company, London, England; F. W. Braun, Los Angeles; the\nBraun-Knecht-Helmann Company, San\nFrancisco; the J. T. Baker Chemical company's Analyzed C. P. Acids and Chemicals; Way's Pocket Smelters; write for\npamphlet describing these smelters. Complete assay outfits furnished at shore\nnotice.\nThe Corporation of the City of Nelson\nNotice of Rules and Regulations gov*\nernlng the use of water by the Inhabitants of the City of Nelion and\nlocalities adjacent thereto.\n- 1. These regulations shall come into\nforce on the 13th day of August, 1010, ana\nremain In force until further notice,\n2. The hours between which water may\nbe used for any of the purposes following\nshall be as follows:\n(a) For the sprinkling of lawns and\ngardens, between the hours of 6 o'clock\np.m. and 9 o'clock p.m.\n(b) For the sprinkling ot streets, alleys and sidewalks, between the hours\nof 7 o'clock a.m. and 9 o'clock a.m.\nAnd no person shall use water for any\nor all of such purposes beyond tbe time\nand outside the said hours.\n3. No person shall, with a lawn sprinkler or otherwise, water any adjoining or\nother premises to or than tbat for whloh\nhe has paid the regular garden or lawn\nrate.\n(4)  All water used for any of the above\nSurposes shall be used by garden hose or\ntwr. sprinklers only,\n(6) When any alarm of Are has been\nsounded and during ths continuance of any\nfire within the corporate limits of the city\nof Nelson, or during the progress of any\nfire in any of the localities adjacent thereto, any person using water for any of tbe\npurposes mentioned ln paragraph 3 hereof\nshall at once cease using same until such\ntime as the fire has been extinguished.\n6. Any person guilty of an infraction or\nviolation of any of tbe foregoing regulations shall, in addition to all other penalties imposed by bylaw or statutes, be\nliable to have his water supply out oil\nwithout notice.\nBy Order,\nW.  B. WASSON,\n100-tf. City Clerk.\nStandard furniture Co.\nNELSON. B.O.\nFOR SALE\u2014Two H-acre  tracts Al  fruit\nland.   Easy terms.   Apply at Belle Vue\nfarm, \u00ab9 Creek Road or at Silver King\nhotel. 03-20\nFOR SALE-Contents of two furnished\nrooms ln block for sale. Purchaser can\ntake over tenancy. Apply 28 K. W. C,\nblock. m\nFOR SALB-The largest stock of boats\nand paddling canoes In British Columbia,\nthat have only been used a short while\nthis season, at one-third off spring prices.\nSeveral launches from 18 to 36 feet, at\nbargain prices. Several of the famous\nPeterborough motor canoes, new and second hand. These are without any doubt\nthe best small boat ever constructed. No\ncraft of their slse and dimensions can\ncompete ln sea-going qualities, carrying\ncapacity, durability, and gracefulness. Propelled by a 2 horse power engine, they\nare capable of making between 7 and 8\nmiles per hour. A man of ordinary\nstrength can haul one out on the beach\nwithout any exertion. For further particulars and prices write or call. The\nLindsay Launch & Boat Co., Box 34, Nelson, B.C.\n\u2022 WANT AD. RATI*. \u2022\n\u2022 \". \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u2022\ne Rates for   Want   Ads. In The \u2022\n\u2022 Dally News are as follows: One \u2022\n\u2022 cent per word per Insertion or e\n\u2022 four cents per word per week or \u2022\n\u2022 fifteen cents per word per \u2022\ne month. e\n\u2022 In the ease of persona not hav-1 a\n4 Ing a regular monthly account e\n\u2022 with The News, cash most ac- \u2022\ne company the order.   No depar* \u2022\n\u2022 ture   from  this   rule   will   be \u2022\n\u2022 made. Want Ads, phoned to \u2022\ne the office am accepted only on- \u2022\ne der the above conditions. e\ne Copy for Want Ads. should be \u2022\ne delivered to The Dally News e\ne office either personally or by e\ne letter to make certain of correct \u2022\ne Insertions. \u2022\nHELP WANTED\nNELSON EMPLOYMENT AGENCY\nC. P. Hutton, Manager   -\nWANTED\u2014Sawyers,     carpenters,    edger-\nmen, sawmill laborers, bushmen, circular\nsawyer, waitresses, girls for housework.\n130-tf\nHelp of all Kinds\nPromptly Furnished\nTHE WORKINGMEN'8 EMPLOYMENT\nAND REAL E8TATE AGENCY.\nWANTED\u2014Carpenter for sawmill; 4 car-\n-tenters for tram and bin work; 6 carpenters for tram work; swampers; teamsters; sawyers; hookmen; upstairs and\nwaitress, country, easy place, $30 girls for\nhousework; circular sawyer $0 and board;\nedgerman, $4 fireman, $60 month and\nboard; brldgermen's helpers. W. Parker,\n312  Baker  street.    Phone  283. 131-tr\nFOR    SALE\u2014First    class    confectionery,\nfancy goods, cigars, tobacco, and stationery, and only Ice cream parlor In town.\nAddress P. O. Box 130, Phoenix, B.C.\n128-13\nFOR SALE\u2014High grade American player\npiano, with 400 rolls music.   All nearly\nnew.   At a bargain, as  owner ls leaving\nprovince.   Address M. M., Trail News.\n126-tI.\nMinard's Liniment Cures Burns, Etc\nEXAMINATION FOR INSPECTOR OP\nSTEAM BOILERS AND\nMACHINERY.\nExaminations for ths position of inspector of steam boilers and maohinery, under\nthe \"Steam Boilers Inspection Aot, um,\"\nwill be held mt the Parliament building,\nVictoria, commencing November 7, 1W0. Application and Instruction forme must he\nreturned correctly filled in, not later than\nOctober 24, Uio. Salary. P*n per month\nIncreasing at the rata of fl.00 per montn\neach year to a m \u2022\u00bb\u00bb!\u2022\u2022\u00bb.\u2022\u25a0\u2022\u2022\u00bb of fiso.oo.\n-\u2022johkmouk,\nChief Inspector of Machinery.\nNew Westminster.\nFOR SALE\u201404% acres, three miles from\nNelson, large orchard, house and buildings. $4.1500, terms. Also lh% acres, juuu.\nCows, pigs, poultry, and 'implements. Mrs.\nIrving, Nelson P. O. 120-0\nFOR SALE\u2014New five room cottage, modern Improvements, two lots.   Situated between Silica and Carbonate on Cedar. Apply on premises. 120*0\nFOR SALE\u2014Family tent 20x20-8-15, wall,\n12 01. duck. Thoroughbred silver laced\nWyandotte cockerels; also R. C. brown leghorn cockerels, Apply John Greenway,\nCrescent Valley.\nFOR  SALE\u2014Secondhand   sawn.ui   equipment.    For    particulars    apply  to   a.\nLund, Wardner, B. C. 127-6\nFOR SALE\u2014Ten acres In fertile Slogan\nvalley. Good soil and ample water supply for all purposes. Location excellent.\nInvestigate this.' A bargain for cash.\nAddress \"Land,\" care The Dally News.\n12f-tt\nFOR SALE\u2014In West Kootenay, store,\nBtock and fixtures, Including land, boats,\ncanoes, chickens, etc., etc. For further\nparticulars apply F. B. Lys, Griffin\nblock, Nelson, B. C.\t\nFOR SALE\u2014Snaps. Town lot centre\nGrand Forks cheap. Four corner lota\nCamrose, Alberta; easy terms. Irtsh\nTweed overcoat; any reasonable offer. Ap-\nply Realty,  Box 5*8,  Nelson,  B. -C.   130-4\nFOR    SALE\u2014Bearing    orchard,     twenty\nacres,  extensive crops and good fishing\non river   frontage.     Apply C. E.  Cottun,\nShoreacres,   B.  C.   (No  correspondence.)\nFOR SALE\u2014320 acres of wheat land, eastern Saskatchewan, value $4800; will trade\nfor apple or hay land to $3500, owners only.\nWhat have you? B, Monroe, Los Angeles,\nCalifornia. 131-1\nFOR SALE\u2014One of the best residential\nproperties In Fairview; seven-roomed\nmodern house 'newly painted and papered),\nsituated on five (6) lots ln garden planted\nto fruit; also barn, chicken house, etc. For\nprice and \"terms, apply owner, W. J. Mc-\nKim, Chatham  street,   Fairview. 131-6\nLIVE 8TOCK\nFOR SALE\u2014One team good horses; both\ngo single in Bpring   wagon.     Will  sell\nSeparate.     Apply    to    Albert   Lavlolette,\nPostofflce, Nelson, or at Silver King hotel.\n108- tf.\nWANTED\u2014Young   pigs,     Kwong    Wing\nChong. 124-lm.\nFOR  SALE\u2014Wykoff hens  and  Lakewood\ncockrels for sale.   The largest and best\nlaying strains of single comb White Leghorns,   Box 44, Michel, B.C. iaf-6\nFOR  SALE\u2014Saddle    pony,    with  saddle;\ngood traveller.   $75.   E. P. McDermld.\n120-9\nFOR SALE\u20148. C. B. leghorns, 1 cock 2\nyears old, 16 1 year old hens\u201423 pullets\nMay hatched. 1 dosen Buff Orpington\nhens 1 year old; 1 cock 1 year old; broilers.\nMrs. J. Fred Hume, Box 65, oity.      128-tf\nWANTED-One dozen Rhode Island Buff\nOrpington  early  pullets.    Barnard,   Kokanee. . 128-7\nFOR  SALE-One  saddle  horse,   5   years\nold, sound and gentle; six-year-old cattle, four heifers, two steers.   Apply Daily\nNews, A. T. P.\n.WANTED\u2014Cow, fresh In; state amount of\nmilk  given and   price.     Daniel Boyd,\nProctor. 131-9\nrow WENT\nFOR    RENT \u2014 Furnished    housekeeping\nrooms.   Apply, Carney block; *Mt\nFOR RENT-Housekeeplng rooms, Baker\nstreet, near C.P.R. station. Apply J. W.\nGallagher, 101 Baker street 72-tf.\nFOR   RENT-Cottage.\nGosnell, brewery.\nApply\nFOR    RUNT \u2014 tfurnlibed    housekeeping\nrooms,  snd bedrooms,   70S Hall street,\nbetween Baker and Victoria. IW-tf.\nFOR RENT\u2014Housekeeping\n607 Silica.\nApply\nWATER ACT IMt.\nBy direction of the Board ot Investigation notice is hereby given that the Board\nwill proceed to adjudicate upon claims to\nwater on tbe following oreek and tributaries thereto in the Nelson Water District,\nunder authority ot Part I of the Water\nAct, W*.\n8HEEP CREEK AND ITS TRIBUTARIES\nA meeting for purposes of adjudication\nwill be held in the City of Nelson at If\no'clock m. m. on or about the ethe day or\nOctober, ItlO. W. B. DRBWHT,\n       .Chief Water fjommtssleyer.\nChamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy Is today the best known\nmedicine In ass for tne relief, and cure\nof bowel complaints. It cures griping,\ndiarrhoea, dysentery, and should be taken\nat the llrst unnatural looseness of the\nbowels. It Is equally valuable for children\nand adults, It always cures. Sold by au\ndruggists snd dealers\nB.C. UNITED AGENCIES, 318 Baker St\nAuctioneers Real Estate\nEmployment Agents.\nBox 232. Phone 391,\nWANTED\u2014Skinners, hookmen, sawyers,\nswampers,    laborers,    teamsters.     WJ3\nCAN   SUPPLY THE   RIGHT   MEN   FOR\nTHB RIGHT PLACES.\nWANTED\u2014Entries for auction sale to be\nheld shortly.   We will sell live stock,\nfarm Implements and household furniture.\nWANTED\u2014MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED\u2014Men and women to learn barber trade ln eight weeks: tools free;\nsecured over 10.000 position** for graduates\nlaat year; unable to supply the desaandl\ngraduates earn UB to $26 weekly; Catalogue free. Moler Bystem ColUgos. 0_\\\nFront Ave., Spokane, Wash.\nFind the Finder\nIf you found \u25a0 purse your first\nImpulse would be to look In tho\n' Lost and Found \" columns of\nour paper.\nIf you have lost o pVree don't\nyou think the tlndor would do the\nseme.\nIf you wish to find the finder\nuse our Classified Want Ads.\nnmt-imiH* Mart,\nOne Cent per word.    Four cents per\nword per week, when cash\naccompanies order\nWANTED\u2014Female stenographer, six years\nexperience in legal and mercantile work,\ndesires position in Kootenay district, about\nOct. 1.   Box H. J., News Office. 126*8\nWANTED-Posltlon as office boy, in city.\nBest of references.   Two years'  experience.   Applybo^1_C::!^lIyJ^fl:_^^vi\nWANTED-By man and wife, situation as\ncook and cookee.   Apply Box R., Daily\nNews. W-*\nWANTED-Agents  for  private  Christmas\ncards.     Any   one.     Sample book free.\nPostage 30 cents.   Large profits, empchase,\n\"Cardex,\" Darlington, England. l\u00ab-o\nWANTED-Flrst    class    locomotive    machinist. ' Only man with experience need\napply Box 65, Grand Forks, B. C.    127-tt\nHOTEL DIRECTORS\nSilver King Hotel\nBaker Stmt, N.l.on, i.c.\nBe,ular Boarder., 18 per week\nRate.: Il.lt per day. .\nBest tt Cent Meal In th. City\nWM. NEUINDORF, Prop.\nNelson Hotel Bar\nBaker Street, Nelwn, B. C.\nINK A WARD, Prape.\nTry a \"GIN RICKEY\"\nMade from California Lime, epeolally\nImported\nFor a cool, satisfying imoka\nTry a Savannah Cigar\nThe Royal Hotel\nMra, L. V, Roberta, Proprletreae\nCor. Stanley and Silica Sta.\nRates $1.00 and 11.50 per day.\nWANTED\u2014To buy a good house, about\nsix or seven rooms.   Apply P. Q. Box\nJtt       *\nWANTED-To rent or buy strlotly moaern\nfive-room cottage or bungalow.   P. o.\nBox 1044.      '  '\t\nWANTED-A     flrst-olass     waitress,    at\nBrooklyn hotel, Phoenix, B. C.; wages\n|\u00ab per month with room. !\u00bb\u2022'\nWANTED-Log outters, hookmen, swampers; must be experienced bushmen. Trail\nLumber Company, Paulson, B. C.       12M\nWANTED-7 or 8 men at Cascade, B. Cj,\nto work ln  sawmill  and lumber yard,\n12.50 to 13 per day; S1.00 for board.  Apply\nBoundary Lumber company, Cascade, U. u.\nWANTED\u2014Competent    and    experienced\nbush foreman; state experience and references.   Apply to Box Q, Dally News.\nWNTJBD-An    apprentice    to   learn   as*\nsaying.   E. W. Widdowson,   317   Baker\nstreet  \"\u00bb\u2022*\nWANTED-Work as   ohamberraaid;   two\nyears\" experience.   Apply M. C, Dally\nNews. \"M\nLOST\nLOST-On  tbe city  wharf,  black ribbon\nwatch fob, with gold Initials \"8. W.\"\nFinder plesss return to Dally News office.\nIS reward. US-tf.\nWATER ACT IN*.\nBr direction of the board of Investigation\nnotlc. is hereby given that the board will\nproceed to adujdleate upon olaims to\nwatar on the following streams and tributaries thereto ln the Nelaon water district, under authority of Part I of the\nwater Aot, lie,:\nTrail creek, lake stream or Cambridge\nereek, Ryan oreek. Rook oreek, Bine\nGrouse   gulch,    Brewery   gulch,   CJorge\nSlob, Nigger creek, Tiger oreek, Daniel\nilch, Bast Hill stream,TWest Mill stream,\nBtoney oreek. Grass Springs, Violin lake,\nMurphy oreek, Topping gulch, aad their\ntributaries.\nlee of edjudtea-\n\" a.m.\nA meeting for the purposes of adludi\ntion win be held at Trail at 10 o'clock a\non or about the (rd day of Oootobor, IB\".\nW. S. DREWRT,\nKootenay Hotel\nMRS. MALLETTE, Proprietress\nA home for everybody.   Bvery convenience given to tne travelling publlo.\nElectrlo   piano.    Cuisine   unexcelled.\nRotes II per day.\nSherbrooke House\nN.laon, B. C.\nOn. mlnute'a walk from C.P.R. station. Culalne unexcelled; well boated\nand ventilated.\nBOYER BR08., Proprietor..\nEmpire Temperance Hotel\n(Under entire new management)\nBaker Street, Nelaon, B.C.\n\u25a0 The   bouae   thoroughly   remodelled\nthroughout.   Clean rooms, home comforts   Rate. |l per day up.  Best cook\nin th. city. '\nJ. OPEN8HAW, Prop.\nBartlett House\nO. W. BARTLETT, Prop.\nThe best 11.00 a day house In town.\nA Mlner'a Borne\nHotel Castlegar\nCASTLEGAR JUNCTION   '\nAU mouern.   Good Flcnlo Ground*.\nThe Nelson-Rossland train stops hen\nfor luncheon. \"\nW. H. GAGE, Prop.\n(\u2022formerly O.P.R. Agent)\nROSSLAND\nT1PS, HOFFMAN ANNEX, ROSBLANK, I\nB.C.-Qreea it Smith, Props. Centrally fi\nlocated. European and American plan.'\nCommercial travellers will find light,'\ncomfortable sample rooms, a special dining room and excellent accommodations\nat the Hoffman. Baths, bowling alley,\nsteam laundry.\n.    PHOENIX \"\nHOTEL BROOKLYN, PHOENIX, B. C-\nThe only up-to-date hotel ln Phoenix.\nNew from cellar to roof. Best sample\nrooms In tbe Boundary. Bath room in'\nconnection, steam beat. Opposite Great\nNorthern depot.   James Marshall, Prop.\nARROWHEAD\nTHE UNION- HOTEL, ARROWHEAD.-\nSpecial attention given to commercial\nmen and tourists. First class sample\nrooms. Finest scenery ln British Columbia, overlooking Upper Arrow late W.\nJ. Ligbtburne, proprietor.\nGRAND F0RK8, B. C.\nPROVINCE HOTEL, GRAND FORKS,\n?'pT\/*At\",.\".*\"i,*t \"\"* be\"' appointed\nhotel in the interior of British Columbia,'\nand offers to the travelling publlo the\ni\"$., accommodation obtainable. The\nbuilding Is ail newly furnished throughout and is tbe only Are proof botel in\nthe olty.   E. Larsen, proprietor.\n'. VMIR ' ':\nYMIR HOTEL, YMIR, RC.-, MOST MOD-\nern and up-to-date hotel in Ymlr-located\ndirectly  opposite depot\u2014Best accommodation possible\u2014Dining room in conneo-\ntlon.   J. B. Bremner. proprietor.\nPRODUCE\nSTARKEY A CO., WHOLESALE DEAL-\ners ia Butter, Eggs, cheese, Produce and\nFruit.   Houston Block, Josephine .treet.\nNelson. B.O.\nGROCERIE8\nA. MACDONALD A CO.\u2014WHOLEBALs)\nGrocers and Provision Merchants-Importers of Teas, Coffees, Spices, Dried\nFruits, Staple and Fancy Groceries, Tobaccos, Cigars, Butter, Egg* Cheese and\nPacking House Products, office and\nwarehouse, corner of Front and Hall\nstreets,   p. o. Box IMt.   Telephone as.\nMINERS' FURNISHINGS\nA. MACDONALD A CO.-WHOLESALE\nJobbers In Blankets, Underwear, Mitts,\nGloves, Boots, Rubbers, Overalls, Jumpers and Miners' Sundries. Office and\nwarehouse, corner of Front and Hall\nstreets,   p. 0. Box 1M.   Telephone as.\nMINING MACHINERY\nWASHINGTON MACHINERY A SUPPLY\nCo.\u2014Dealers ln Engines, Band and Circular sawmills, Atkins' Saws, Wood and\nIron Pulleys, Loyner compressors and\nDrills, Pumps and Hoists. ' Prompt attention, Reasenablo prices. Courteous\ntreatment   Spokane, Wash.\nOBSTETRICS.\n\"RS_. KENNTwHTbTptaased to'rwolve\nmaternity patients at her home. Excellent testimonials. \u00bb Observatory street\nP. O. .Box in, telephone AH.\nTO CONTRACTORS.\nSealed tenders, marked .\"Tenders for extension of TraU Water Works,\" will be\nreceived at the olty office. Trail, B. C, up\nto 8 p. m, on Monday, September IB, 1W0,\nfor the digging of the ditch, and the laying and covering of the pipe, for the water\nmain to be laid down the Riverside Ad- .\nditlon. specifications can be seen at the\nolty offloe, TraU, B. C. The lowest tender not necessarily accepted.\nWM. E. B. MONYPBNN Y, City Clerk.\nNOTICE\u2014flOHE mUllERY\nMrs. a. p. Bellmyre. who has been with\nMessrs. Gage Bros., wholesale millinery,\nof Chicago, for eeveral years, will open a\nhome millinery parlor at O. Vlotorla street\nLadles wishing up-to-date Eastern beta\nwill please cell on or after Friday, Sept U.\nMade-over work a speolatty.\n SUNDAY  SEPTEMBER IS\nCft Batty J&eto*.\nPAGE SEVEI\nA Family's\nSupport\nlg a matter of serious consideration\nthese days. We recognise the tact\naad are keeping our price, down to\n\u2022 the lowest possible level that will\npermit us to sell\nGROCERIES OF QUALITY\nIt 1. our aim to give you better and\nmore groceries tor the money than\nyou can get elsewhere. Come and\nsee If we succeed.\nTRY OUR PICKLING VINEGAR\nMalt, Cider or White Wine.\nJoy's Cash Grocery\nCorner of Josephine and Hill Streets.\nP. O. Box NT Telephone It\nOwn Your Own Home\nTon cannot plant seeds today and\npick the flowera tomorrow. Twenty\neents a day or It a month will atart\nyou In the right way to acquire a home\nby our plan.\nMake a atart, aave some of your Income each month, others are doing so,\nand your savings combined with the\nothers will buy you a home ln the shortest time and at the least cost. Contract, non-forfeltable after alx months\ndues hare been paid, 6 per oent allowed\non your savings.\nLoans may be repaid wholly or ln\npart at any time anl the interest proportionately reduced. No drawings.\nNot a lottery. Bvery person treated\nalike. I shall be pleased to supply all\nliterature and answer all questions.\nWrite or call.\nR. J. STEEL, Secretary\nHudson's Bay Block\nPLUMBING & HEATING\nI    Copp's  Stoves  and   Ranges.\n|.l i] Tile and Soil Pipe always on\nhand. \/\nE. K. STRACHAN\nPLUMBER. Etc \u2022-.'\n313 Baker St., Nelson, B.C.\nCLEANING AND PRES8ING\n\u25a0 Suits Called for and Delivered\nA. J. DRISCOLL\n\u25a0 Plan. 885\u2014Baker Street, opposite the\nWe attend to your\nPLUMBING\npromptly and well\nB. C. Plmnbivg & Heating Go.\nVictoria Street, near Opera house.\nTelephone 181\nFOR   SALE\nAT\nA BARGAIN\nOne One Hotsepower Motor\nOne Half Horsepower Rotor\nCan be Inspected at any time.\nApply\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nNelson, B.C.\nPROFESSIONAL CARDS\nF. C. Green   F. P. Burden   A. H. Green\nGreen Brothers & Burden\nCIVIL ENGINEERS\nDominion and British Columbia Land\nSurveyors\nP. 0. Box 108\" Phone B264\n(18 Ward Bt, Nelson, B.O.\nA. R. Heyland, C. E\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\nTwelve years in th. Kootenays\nBox 47S Kaslo, Wsst Kootenay\n\u2014A. L, MoOULLOOB\nHydraullo Engineer\nProvlneial Land Surveyor\nP. O. Box 41\nOffice Phone B88; residence Phone B74.\nOftlce: Over McDermld ft McHardy\nBaker Street, Nelson, B.O.\nPiano Instruction\nMr. I. 0. Johnson of the Arcade la\nprepared to accept a limited number of\npupils for tuition on the above Instrument. For terms apply P.O. *oox 848,\nor at IU Silica street .\nPhone B352 \u25a0 \" '^mTB.\nWaters & Pascoe\nCsrp.nt.rs and Builder.\nConcrete, brick and stone work. Shop\nnext city kail\nRANCHERS\nWe have lust received a large shipment of\nPratt's Veterinary\nRemedies\nThe following Is a list ot 0 nas most used:\nPRATT'S ANIMAL REGULATOR.\nPKATT'8 POULTRY  REGULATOR\nPRATT'S WORM KILLER.\nPRATT'S     VETERINARY     COLIC\nCURE\nPRATT'S CONDITION POWDERS.\nPRATT'S ROUP CURE\nWe have always in stock a full line of these goods and can positively guarantee satisfaction.\nThese Are Money Makers For You\nOur Mail Order Department\nAt every turn we can please you and there's but one solution to\nthe problem.\nDeal at the Popular Store\nWe are here day and night to serve you.   Tour orders are never\nheld over and the smallest order has the same careful attention.\nOur drugs are fresh.  Our Stock Is complete.   Our prices are right.\nvj WRITE, PHONE OR CALL.\nPoole Drug Co. Ltd.\nP. O. Bo* 505       :\u2022:      Phone 35 Day and Night\nCorner Baker and Josephine Streets\nALWAYS AT YOUR  SERVICE\nA VISITOR TO THI8 MARKET\nCannot fail to be impressed\n\u25a0with the perfect cleanliness apparent, No housewife could be\nmore particular than we.are to\nexclude dirt of any kind, Come\nand select your meat in person and you will ibetter appreciate our care In this respect.\nThat's only one of our ways\nof making this market the very\nbest place at which to buy your\nmeat,\nP. Burns (8b Co.\nLtd.\nNELSON NEWS Of THE DAY\n(Additional local mwi notM oo page \u00bb.)\nBorn, to the wife of John Erickson,\nGranite road, on September 12, a son.\nRev. Thomas Blaylock, who was operated on by Drs. Rose and Hartln on\nWednesday last, Is progressing favorably.\nThe parish guild of at. Saviours chureh\nwill resume their regular meetings on\nMonday evening next at the parish hall.\nThe regular convocation of, Neison\nChapter Royal Arch Masons will be held\nln Masonic hall on Wednesday next at 8\np, m.\nMrs. W. J. Meagher  left  on the coast,\ntrain last night for Vancouver and Victoria for an extended trip during which she\nwill visit friends in both otttes.\nThe engagement Is announced of Miss\nVyvyan Bolton, only daughter of the late\nRev. and Mra. W. W. Bolton of Admiral's\nroad, Esquimau, and T. C. Cummins of\nBonnington Falls. The wedding will take\nplace In the early winter,\nA large number of tickets have, already\nbeen sold for the dance which Is to be\ngiven at Lindsay's pavilion on Thursday\neventng next under the auspices of . the\nBoy Scouts. Tickets may be obtained\nfrom T. E. Robinson at his store on Baker\nstreet, from 8. A. Kelly or from any\nmember of the contingent. The price of\nthe tickets will Include supper. Wilkinson's orchestra will supply the musical\naccompaniment, '\nThe officers and members of Queen City\nRebekah lodge No. M, I. O. O. F., are\nrequested by the deputy district president\nto meet in the lod*ce-room tonight. at 9\no'clock to arrange for the official visit of\nthe president of the Rebekah assembly at\nthe regular meeting Tuesday next.\nRoyal Hotel, hare's your home lor the\nwinter.   Best board In the city. 1H\nI have lust received from the factories\nof Munro A Mcintosh Carriage company,\nAlexandria, Ont., one oarload of democrats,\ndelivery wagons, buggies, backboards and\nFISHING WATER.\nBoats for hire on pool at Slocan Junction, most famous fishing water of British\nColumbia, Fly fishing par excellence. Try\ngrasshoppers for the big fellows. All conveniences at C.P.R. Creel Lodge, J,\nKUley, lodge keeper. tt-tf.\ncarts, whloh I now have for sale. D. Grant,\nblacksmith and borsesboer, Vernon street\n'. KS-tf.\nThe apple packing season la now on.\nSecure your apple packers and ladders\nfrom J. Burns & Sons. A few for sale\noheap.\nRound trip by automobile Balmo and,\nSheep creek. Two round trips dally between trains. Fare one way $2, round trip\n$3.60.   M. C. Donaldson, proprietor.     126-6\nA HEALTHY    SCALP    MEANS LUX-\nURIANT HAIR\nMarinello Scalp Treatments Stop Hair\nLoss. They get at the root of the trouble,\nMarinello System affords different antiseptics that destroy any germs In the hair,\nwithout any Injury to the texture, Also\nsearching ointments, stimulating tonics,\nand soothing lotions. The Prismatic Ray,\nElectricity, and Scientific Manipulation\ncombined with the preparations indicated\nmake Marinello the most successful treatment known for the scalp. Marvelous Improvements result from' all treatments\ngiven for any of the following troublers\n\u2014Dandruff, Hair Loss, Oily Scalp, Bcaly\nor Dry Scalp, Itching Scalp, Exzematons\nCondition and Psoriasis. Marinello Treatments can be given only by graduate operators, who are supplied with all the\nlatest apparatus. For appointments, call\nor telephone John Van Schmidt, Graduate\nMarinello Training School, 10 and ll Victoria Blook.\nBOY CHARGED WITH MURDER\nSCHOENWISSE, Man., Sept. 17.-An arrest was made today of Dletrloh Hlebert,\n18, charged with the murder ahout 10 days\nago of Isaac Hlebert but no relation, who\nwas found dead with a .2! rifle bullet\nwound in the head. Local opinion Is that\nDletrloh shot his companion accidentally\nand was too frightened to confess.\nROSSLAND MINER\nON OPIUM CASE\nRank Termination of Bribery Charges\nShatters Faith in Administration of  Law\nIf there Is one feature in which the\nCanadian citizen pridea himself it Is\nthe prompt and impartial execution of\nthe law and it la this feature which,\nabove and -beyond all things else, has\ncommanded for Canada the commendation and esteem of the outside world.\nBut the rank termination of the recent\nbribery charges in the Rossland customs service In connection with the\nsmuggling of opium, Ib enough to shatter the Idol ot law. There are many\ncurious corners In connection with tne\ncase and U will be shown, shortly,\nhow radically rotten was the farce enacted in this city last week.\nHere was a case where a citizen of\nCanada was arrested In the United\nStates under due process of law resulting from the sworn charges of the\ncollector of customs at Rossland. He\nia brought .back to Canada by the vigilance of Ohlef of Police Long and\nthen the prosecutor for the crown, the\ndirect representative of the Ottawa\ngovernment, calmly tells the magfe-}\ntrate that the charged were laid simply\nae a club to force a monetary settlement on the part of a couple of Chinamen who bad smuggled opium and that\nhe had no evidence against the accused. Think of such an outrageous action against the person of a citizen\nwho might have been innocent and of\nthe appalling statement that there was\nno evidence after the acting collector\nInformed his superiors that he had\nbeen personally approached by a\nChinaman who bad offered him $200 to\npass a shipment of opium and tobacco\nand this information was emphasized\nby a letter proposing to double the\namount. Collector Macdonald thought\nthis evidence strong enough to warrant the arrest of the man implicated\nwith the Chinamen but the crown\nprosecutor\u2014a prominent Liberal who\nwas brought over especially from Nelson, notwithstanding; the fact that C.\nR. Hamilton, a K.C., qualified to act\nin any court and living In Rossland,\nwas available\u2014calmly stated that he\nhad no evidence, although the letter\nabove referred to had been placed ln\nthe hands of the Rossland collector.\nWas Bribe Accepted\nAnother and' more serious feature of\nthe case is the fact that the information on which tho suspect was arrested\ncharged with an attempt to bribe D.\nB. Stevens, the customB officer. The\npublic is left In the dark as to whether\nMr. Stevens accepted a \"bribe; whereas,\nin fact, he it was who informed tiie\ndepartment, laid the matter before his\nsuperior officer and was the primary\ncause of capturing $400 worth of opium\nand contraband goods, and then, for\nthe purpose of securing a monetary\nsettlement the Dominion government\nuses the police court.\nWhile in thla case it Is not doubted\nthat ho more than tbe duty properly\npayable has been collected as penalty,\nyet it Is a breach of an important principle that lt should have heen collected\nafter charges had 'been laid that were\nmore Berious than that involved Un\nthe fraudulent entry.\nTh\u00a9 ordinary rule of law prohibits\nsettlement of a monetary claim in\nwhich an Indictable offence iR Involved,, until that offence has been prosecuted. By the Customs act the officials are given extensive powers of\ncollecting penalties without laying\ncriminal charges. They therefore could\nhave sued in. the civil courts or made\ntheir own settlement as far as fsillse\ndescription of the liquors and concealing of the tooacco were concerned.\nBut they had no Tight to include in\nthe settlement the opium charge which\nls laid under a different statute and tor\nwhich no duty has been collected for\nthe simple reason that none Is provided. Therefore in thiB case it was apparently less of an offence to smuggle\nopium than it was to smuggle the tobacco.\nSurprising statement\nThat such a statement ns was reported in The Miner should be made\nby a solicitor of the standing of Mr.\nJohnson Is surprising; that It should\ncome from a crown prosecutor is astounding. It Is also inconceivable that\nthe department of customs at Ottawa\ncan .be cognizant of or approve of the\nposition taken by Ub local representatives. The only way the department\ncan escape the stigma Involved in Mr.\nJohnson's remarks is to press the\ncharges which are not or at least were\nnot, ln the police court, included in\nthis settlement.\nThe Miner is also informed that Mr.\nJohnson stated in the police court that\nhe did not think a conviction could be\nobtained under the pplum act The\npresent case is clear in so far as that\nthe opium was imported, and if the\nact is inoperative, the public is entitled to know it by a judicial decision to\nthat effect.\nThe charge of attempted bribery was\ndrawn up by Mr. Johnson after consultation with the customs officials and\nafter seeing the alleged offer by letter.\nThis charge concerns personally one\nof the Rossland officials. The Miner\nrelieves that Mr. Stevens has acted\nfaithfully and honorably to the department, as la shown by his communication with the department In May last\nand his handing the letter to his superior officer, but the withdrawing of\nthe bribery charge deprived Mr. Stevens of the opportunity of publicly\nclearing his name from the breath of\nsuspicion. The accused white man and\nthe Chinaman should be punished if\nguilty, and if not. guilty they *are equally entitled to vindication. It Is mon-\ns'rous that a man should he arrested\nIU a foreign country charged with this\nserious offence and thrown Into prison\nsimply to force money from a Chinaman and the fact that. It was done at\nth\u00ab Instance of the -Dominion government makes it the more reprehensible.\nAn individual might he excused for\nwishing to depart from principle when\nGOOD\nUNDERWEAR\nWe are fully prepared to lake care\nof every Man's Underwear requirements.\nThis important item of a Man's\nattire receives here the attention it\ndeserves.\nWe've chosen for our trade the best\nMill's productions in the different wanted fabrics.\nFor Fall      We'*e medium weight Merino in na-\nswa.au   tura, wooa   or wWte or heavy Balbrlg.\ngan, *1 to |2 tbe garment.\npM Merino,  Non-shrinka\/ble  Wool, Ans-\n-\u201e tralian Lamb's Wool, Camel's Hair, Na-\nWaaattr tural Wool.etc, Bilk trimmed, full fashioned. All sizes, $1, |2 to (3.75 tbe\ngarment.\nSUnfielu's ta medium and heavy weights, $3,\n'3.50 and $4 the suit.\nWolsey\nIn pure Natural Woo], all sizes, *5\nper suit.\nPen-Angle, Watson's, Ellis, Spring Needle\n\u25a0,j  Prom J2.60 to $5 per suit.\nEmory & Walley\nThe Hub Furnishing House\nperhaps his bread and butter are at\nstake but a government should be\nactuated by consideration of the public interest and a regard for principles\nwhich the courts maintain in the cas^\nof Individuals rather than the acquisition of a few dollars of tainted money.\nRossland Miner.\nSPOKANE MAN\nPAYS TRIBUTE\nTalks of High Prices Paid by Nelion\nFruit Fair for Free Attractions.\n\"No other fair In the northwest will\npay such high prices for free attractions\nas Spokane Interstate fair except the\nNelBon fair,\" said R. H. Cosgrove of the\nInland empire city to George Horstead\nduring the visit of the latter to the inland empire city at the beginning of\nthe week. It was an eloquent tribute to\nthe manner in'which the directors of\nthe fair are endeavoring to provide even\nmore than usually good attractions for\nthe amusement ot visitors to the exhibition this year.\nMr. Cosgrove expressed his entire satisfaction with the system under which\nboth Nelson and Spokane obtained the\nsame attractions for the fall fairs. He\nstated that it had worked out very\nlargely to the benefit of Spokane and\nthat it must obviously do the same as\nregards Nelson.\nNew Advertising Idea.\nMr. Horstead stated yesterday that it\nhad been decided by the directors to\nplace a large searchlight either on the\ngrandstand or at the top of the exhibition building on the three nights of\nthe fair. This will be Switched from\npoint to point and will light up the\ncountry for miles around and will undoubtedly prove a great advertisement.\nOn his way from Spokane Mr. Horstead met a party of tourists who were\ngoing to Kaslo and, telling them of the\nNelson fruit fair, persuaded them to so\narrange their tour as to be able to attend Nelson on Sept 28, 29 and 30.\nAs Press Agent.\nManager G. Horstead of the Nelson,\nB. C, fair Is spending a few days ln\nSpokane in the interests of the big\nWest Kootenay annual exposition which\nopens September 28, a week preceding\ntbe Spokane Interstate fair, says the\nInland Herald, Spokane, Wash., of\nSeptember 14, 1910. Mr. Horstead says\nthat far more than ordinary Interest is\nbeing taken tn the boundary country In\nthe Spokane fair and that a number\nof big   exhibits and attractions   from\nthe   Nelson fair will be seen later at\nthe local fair.\n\"We have had an unusually i-rus-\nperous year in our part of British Columbia,' 'said Mr. Horstead, \"and that\nfact will in all probability he reflected in the largest attendance we\nhave ever had at the Nelson fair. I\nknow that many people of Nelson mid\nvicinity are planning to attsad the\nSpokane fair later. In spite of the\nboundary line, the people of iha Nelson district, whose trade rela-lous\nwith Spokane are constantly drawing\ncloser, feel that our interests are identical and that development on Br\"her\nside of the line is bound to have a\nbeneficial effect on the other Bide.\"\nBACK IN OTTAWA\ni OTTAWA. Ont., Sept. 17.\u2014Sir Charles Fiti-\npatrlck, who represented Great Britain on\nthe Hague fisheries tribunal, returned to\nthe city today. The chief Justice had no\nstatement to make regarding the award.\nOCTOBER  31   THANKSGIVING\nOTTAWA, Sept. 17 \u2014 An order in\ncouncil has been passed making Monday, Oct. 31, Thanksgiving day.\nRemember  Gipsy  Hawkins'  meetings  in\nBaptist church today at 11 and 7:30 o'clock.\nCarpet* Cleaning\n10c PER SQUARE YARD.\nWork called for and delivered promptly.\nClothes of all kinds cleaned, renovated,\ndyed and repaired.\nGent's Suits Cleaned and Pressed, 76c to\n$2; dyed, $3.\nLadies' Skirts Cleaned, tl; Dyed, 12.\nGloves Cleaned, 26c to 60c.\nSpecial rates for hotels, restaurants and\nsteamers.\nFamily and plain washing; mangling\nwork, 25c dosen; rough dry, 86c dozen.\nNelson Steam Laundry\n601-OT   VERNON   BTREET.\nT\u00abI\u00abphon. US. PAUL NIPOU. Prop.\nWe Will Boy\n2000 Rambler   '. J   .26\n10 Great West Permanent.... 125.00\nHA. Warrants  730.00\n2000 Hoyal Collieries  22\n1000 Nugget  70\nTh*\nArcade\nPictures are superior to any others\nFeature film\nThe Return of Ta-wo-wa\nRuined iby His Own Son.\nThe   Door    Keeper    Will    Get\n. Tntaner.\nAdmission\n-   10c\nVancouver Island\nBeautiful Residential\nProperty and Good\nFarm\n160 acres, 1 1-2 miles from railway station, 5 miles from Duncans,\n55 acres cleared, part under cultivation and part rough pasture;\n1 1-2 acres bearing orchard; good\ngarden with strawberries, etc.\nComfortable nine roomed house,\nprettily situated overlooking lake\non property with, boat and boat-\nhouse, spring water laid Into the\nhouse; 2 barns with horse and cow\nstabling, pig houses, 5 large poultry houses, will accommodate 400\nfowls. Granary, Incubator house,\ntool house and other outbuildings.\nSome good timber, splendid shooting and fishing. Price $13,500.\nAddress \"Owner,\" Lakeview Farm,\nWestholme ,B.C.\nPrices\nAre Advancing\nOn the Arm\nWe have Beveral choices, Fruit\nranches with lake frontage for sale\non the Arm. Also unimproved\nfruit land which we will be pleased to show Intending purchasers.\nSee our list of residences for\nsale before buying.\nHUNTER &\nANNABLE\nWard St.\nBox 28\nAttend tbe Boy Scouts'\nDANCE\nIn Lindsay's Pavilion, Thursday evening, Sept. 22 and have a good time\nTickets,  including Supper, $1.50\nper Couple\nWILKINSON'S  ORCHESTRA\nJL E. ROBINSON\nWatchmaker and Jeweler\n417 1-2 Baker Street     NELSON, I.O.\nOpposite Silver King Hotel\nThe Man\nWho Wires\nYour House!\nfor  electricity   place*  at  your   _.\nmima  a  hundred  oomforu and conveniences. .;    .  *L\nTELL US TO SEND HIM\nIf vou are Inclined to delay lust come\nand lee how the wiring will enable\nJrou to do almost anything from curios milady's hair to doing all tne\nspring houeocleanlng. That should\ndecide you It you live In this age.\ni you it\nB. P.\nMANHART.\nWe Witt Sell\n2000 McGlilivray Goal  * .26\n100 Marconi  1.40\n1000 Kootenay Ice & Fuel  1014\n1000 Diamond Coal  58%\n1000 Portland Canal 3214\n300 Red Cliff  1.2*\n100 B. C. Copper 5.90\n25 Granny 35.00\nE. B. McDERMID\nBaku Street\nNcIwm, B. C.\n\u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0 \u25a0' \u25a0\u2022-\u25a0\u25a0-.\u25a0-\u2022\u25a0   V ,..-.....\u25a0\u25a0..\u2022.!;*.-A.-.i.S*ii*\u00bbLL\nmmUji^m\n PAOE EIOHT\n%\\yt Bail? J&etoft.\nSUNDAY SEPTEMBER 18\n$1300 Will Buy\ncity lot and cottage, -within 100\nfeet of Baker street.\nIt May Be\nthat a single payment of $100 will\nsecure $1000 per annum to your\ndescendants for EVER and EVER.\nCroasdaile, Mawdsley\n&Co.\nBox 6*f\nBaker St., Nelion.\n\"Unequalled for Qen.ral Uie\"\nW. P. TIERNEY, General Salea Agent.\nNelton, B. C.\nCars shipped to all railway points.\nSPECIAL FOR\nSATURDAY\nApples, $1.50 per box, 5 lbs. for\n25 cents.\nPears, $2'50 per box, 3 lbs for\n25 cents.\nPeaches, good, $1.25 per box, 3\nlbs. for 25 cents.\nPlums, 95c. per crate.\nSweet Potatoes. 3 lbs. for 25c.\nTomatoes, 10c. per lb.\nA Pretty Picture\nof the baby Is what\nevery parent naturally desires, and we\nmake them so natural\nthat they are lifelike,\nevery little Individuality being brought out\nfaithfully and finely.\nChildren's\nPhotographs\nare a specialty with\nus, and we take them\nby the Instantaneous\nprocess. You will find\nour work most artistic and our prices\nvery reasonable.\nCampbell's\nArt\nGallery\n715 Biker 8t PHONE 4\u00bb\nNext Door to Kootenay Steam\nLaundry\n\u20ac. A. Benedict\nGrocer\nCor. Josephine wid Silka. Phon* 7\nNEISON, B. C.\nModern Residence\nFor Sale\nIn one of the best locations\nin the city.\nThe house ls up to date in\nevery way and the lots <taste-\n, fully laid out and well cared\nfor.\nSeven good rooms, bathroom,\nbasement and furnace.\nEASY TERMS.\nH. & M. BIRD\nNelson, B. G.\nTHE\nEMPIRE\nMONDAY\nLe Grand Bretache.\nLoving Hearts.\nHand ot the Heiress.\nChildren 10c, Adults 15c.\nAutomaticGleaners\nYour home cleaned and purl-\nfled without a backache with\nan Automatic Vacuum Cleaner\nthe best yet, newest out.\nWe can sell you either the\nhand, electric, or combination\nmachine. See us about these\nat once.\nJ. H. ASHDOWN HARDWARE\nCOMPANY. LIMITED\nSeptember\nthe\nSapphire\nMonth\nThe Sapphire ls a very popular and beautiful gem found ln Slam,\nBurmah, Ceylon, Cashmlre. Australia and the United States. The color\nIb generally blue, but it is also found in many pretty shades such as\npinki yellow and green. J\nWe have ln stock a lovely collection of Sapphires and t am sure we\ncan give you the very .best- Among our stock ef Sapphires is some exceptionally nice deep blue stones, which when mounted with diamonds\nmake a combination that is hard to excel.\nCome In and see our atock of fancy Sapphires, If you are contemplating the purchase of a birthday token. If we make you a piece ot\nJewelry to order you may be assured it will, he the very best\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE,\nMANUFACTURING  JEWELER,\nWATCHMAKER AND OPTICIAN\nScratch Food\n. \u25a0 Ttili b a mixture ot th* bait of four\nvarletlei ot grain, with a percentile of\naunflower Mad and clam shells. Specially adapted for thou who hart small\nfloclta and cannot handl* straight sack.\nof each variety.   .\nThe Brackman-Ker\nlilling Co., Ltd.\nFancy Plums\n35 cents basket. Large Purple and extra large Golden Egg varieties.\nChoice Plums, 20c. and 25c. (basket.\nPeaches 10c. lb.\niFancy Okanagan Apples, local cook*\ning, 5 lbs. 25c; Fancy Wealthy 4 lbs.\n25c; box 'lots, very fancy stock, $2 box.\nPears\n8 lbs. 26c; Tomatoes, 3 Ibe, 25c.;\ncrab apples, 4 lbs. 25c.; sweet corn, 360.\ndozen, Hubbard squaeb, Sweet potatoes\nsummer squash, parsnips, etc.\nTM Up-to-date Grocer, ^gfj^ TRADING CO.\nNelson Branch\nTHE SEMAPHORE CIGAR STORE AND\nBILLIARD PARLORS\nOur new Btock haa just arrived.   Will\ntell you'all about it next week.\nBaled Havanas our specialty thla week\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\n(Adaltlonsl local news note* on page ?.)\nGdpsy Hawkins, the English evangelist,\nwho has been tilling the pulpit ot the Baptist church, will preach at both services\ntoday.\nThe winning number In the weekly draw\nat Weir's shoe store last nic.it was IW;*.\nT. McGregor of Kaslo was the winner\nthe previous week.\nThe organization session ot Judge Fo-\nrln's Bible class at the Y. M. C. A. will be\nheld this afternoon at 4 o'clock. All men\nare Invited to be present.\nW. J. Moore, proprietor of the hotel at\nSlocan Junction, was in the city last\nnight to meet his wife, who returned from\nMontreal.    They   are    registered    at   the\nHume.\nErnest Tplett was sent down for 30\ndays hy Police Magistrate William Irvine\nyesterday morning for creating a disturbance on Josephine street by being drunk.\nJ. B, Bloom, tlje well-known Spokane\nmining man, and Mrs, Bloom, who have\nbeen visiting Mr. and Mrs. H. Y. Anderson for 10 days, have returned to Spo-\nkone.\nThe Ladles' Hospital aid will meet In\nSt. Pauls school room tomorrow afternoon at 3 o'clock for the consideration\nkit imprtant business. All members are\nrequested  to  be In  attendance.\nW. A. Anstie, secretary of the Mountain Lumber Manufacturers' association,\nleft last night for the coast, to attend the\nannual sessions of the Canadian Manufacturers' association, which will be held at\nVancouver on September 20-24.\nFrank H. Leonard will dsllver a lecture\non Christian Science In the church at the\ncorner of Stanley and Silica streets on\nTuesday evening next at 8:30. Admission\nwUl be free to the public. Mr. Leonard\n!\u25a0 the author ot a work entitled \"Christian  Science\u2014A  demonstrable  religion.'\"\nMrs. 8. B, Hanna of Vancouver, president of the Rebekah assembly, I. o. O. F.,\nof British Columbia, Is on hv official tour\nand will visit Queen City Rebekah Lodge\nNo. 16 on Tuesday, September 20. Officers and members and all visiting members are cordially Invited to attend. After the session, a social evening will b-f\nspent.\nIf this should meet the eye of Henry\nJohn  Nesham  (who originally came from\n\u25a0Troquay, Esgland, aud. who worked until\nMay last at the Dominion Dairy, Granite\nroad, Nelson) or of any one .knowing his\npresent address   he is asked to communl-\n' eate with the Rev. Fred H. Graham, Nelson, B. C. The matter Is one of great urgency.\nMr. and Mrs. Vlgneux leave on the coast\ntrain thla evening for Revelstoke. From\nthe main line Junction they will go to Calgary and thence to Winnipeg and McGIll\nuniversity, where Mr. Vlgneux is taking a\ncourse In medicine.   They will be accom\npanied by David Hartln, sqn of Dr. and\nMrs. Gilbert Hartin, who is also studying\nmedicine at McGJll. At Toronto Mr. and\nMrs. Vlgneux will visit a relative, Hon.\nJoseph Reaume, commissioner ot public\nworks for Ontario.\nH. O. Archibald of Los Angeles, ls visiting his brother, C. I. Archibald. He Is\non his way home after a visit to another\nbrother In Edmonton. C. B. Archibald, a\nfourth member of the family, came In\nlast night from Columbia Gardens, where\nhe Is government road foreman, to meet\nH. C. Archibald. It ls the first time the\nthree have met tor over three years. On\nhis way from Edmonton Mr. Archibald was\nvery much Impressed with the evidences\nof development apparent both in Alberta\nand British Columbia and stated last\nnight that Nelson was the prettiest mountain  city  he had ever  seen.\n1 AT THE THEATRES.\nThe Arcade will show In their change of\nprogram on Monday the subjects below:\n\"The Return of Ya-Wa-Wa,\" \"Ruined by\nHis Son\" and \"The Doorkeeper Will Get\nThere.\"\nThere will be an entire change of pictures at the Gem.on Monday evening.\nThe change of program at the* Empire\ntheatre on Monday evening includes,\namong others, the following subjects*. \"La\nGrand Bretache,\" \"Loving Hearts\" and\n\"The Hand of the Heiress,\"\nChureh Notices Today.\nAll changes for church service announcements must be handed ln or phoned to\nThe Dally News office before 0 o'clock on\nSaturday. If not received by this time\nthe notices will be omitted from Sunday's\nissue.\nThe services announced for today in the\nchurches of Nelson are as follows:\nANGLICAN \u2014Seventeenth Sunday after.\nTrinity. 8 a.m.. Holy Communion; 11 a.m.,\nMatins and Holy Communion; 2.30 p.m.,\nSunday school and Bible classes; 7.30 p.m.,\nEvensong. Rector, Rev. Fred. H. Graham.\nROMAN CATHOLIC\u2014Church of Mary\nImmaculate, corner Ward and Mill streets.\nLow Mass, 8 a.m.; High Mass, 10.30 a.m.;\nevening service, 7.30. Rev. Father Althoft.\nMETHODIST\u201411 a. m., services 2:30 p,\nm., Sunday school and Bible classes\n7:30 p. m., service. Rev. J. P. Westman,\npastor. ,   I\nPRBSBYTERIAN-St. Paul's, corner ot\nVictoria and Kootenay streets. Services\n11 a.m. and 7.30 p.m.; Sunday school, 2.80\np.m. Rev. J. T. Ferguson, D.D., pastor.\nBAPTIST-Stanley street, near Mill.\nHorning service, 11; Sunday school, 2.90;\nevening service, 7.30. Rev, John Hawkins,\n\"Gipsy\" Hawkins conducts evangelistic\ncampaign,\nCHRISTIAN SCIENCE-Servlce at 7.30\np.m., In the- Congregational church, corner\nStanley and Silica streets. Wednesday\nevening service at 8. Reading room in\nchurch building, open dally 3 to 5.30. Visitors cordially welcome. Today's subject,\n\"Matter.\".\nSWEDISH EVANGELICAL LTJTHER-\nAN-Servlee will be held by Rev. J. A.\nLevin today at i p.m. at Miners* Union\nhall, 32114 Baker street. Sunday school at\n8 p.m. AU are cordially Invited and welcome. \t\nSALVATION    ARMY-Sunday    services,\nGEM THEATRE\nMONDAY  NIGHT\nMOTION PICTURES\nEntire Change of Program.\nDoors    open at 7 p.m.;    show\nstarts at 7:15, 8:15 and 9:15.\nAdmission - 10c\nINVITES RANCHERS\nTO SEND EXHIBITS\nA. D. Emory Wishes to Receive Names\nof Those Sending Displays to\nNational Apple Show.\n\u25a0 \"We want every grower of apples in\nthe Kootenays to send some of hts best\nfruit to the National apple show at\nVancouver,\" said A. D. Emory, who\nhas been appointed with J. W. Cockle\nof Kaslo, to assist in the collection of\nthe district exhibit for that great exhibition this fall.\n\"We want plate and box exhibits and\nwould like to obtain a large number of\nBpecial displays of. not less than 36\napples of each variety. There Is of\ncourse no limit to either the number of\nvarieties or to the number of specimens of each variety.\nFruitgrowers having apples for exhibition at the great show should forward -their names to either Mr, Emory\nor Mr. Cockle who have already received a great deal of encouragement from\nranchers in various parts of the district\nWith the co-operation of the growers\nthey expect to succeed In gathering to-\nFall Styles in\nRegal\nShoes\nAwait your  Inspection.\nPatent Leather!, Winter\nTani, Black Calf Skins.\nRegals are easy fitters,\n\u2022mart lookers, long liver*.\nThe ROYAL\nR.   ANDREW,   Prop\ngether the greatest exhibit of fruit that\nhag ever been sent from the Kootenays,\nan exhibit that will compare more than\nfavorably with those from Okanagan\nand other large apple growing centres.\nAt the National apple show Kootenay\nwill be ln competition with not only\nBritish Columbia fruit but with that of\nthe whole of Canada. The advertisement to be obtained from a first class\nexhibit will be enormous as the Na-\ntltonal show year after year draws\ncrowds from all parts of the world.\nUNITED STATE8 TO BUILD\nWARSHIPS FOR CHINA\nSAN FRANCISCO, Cal., Sept. 17.*-The\nCall this morning states that Charles M.\nSchwab, former president of the United\nStates Steel corporation, la to meet i-rince\nTsat Haun, uncle of the emperor of China,\nIn this city next week \"to clofle a deal\"\nfor the building of a fleet of warships\nfor China.\nSALVATION     AMMi-duiiuhj     aarv-u-n-,\nU a.m., 3 p.m. and 7.30 p.m.    Service at\nthe  citadel  nightly,  except Tuesday,  at\n8 o'clock.\n\"Can be depended upon\" Is an expression\nwe all like to hear, and when it ls used in\nconnection with Chamberlain's CoUc,\nCholera and Diarrhoea Remedy It means\nthat lt never falls to oure diarrhoea, dysentery or bowel complaints. It ls pleasant\ni to take and equally valuable for children\n; and adults. Sold by all dru\u00abHta art\ndealers. _.\nDoYouWantaHome?\nWe have for sale one of Ne'*\u2122'\" n\"'8' comfortable and homelike\nhomes. The liouse contains large reception hall, parlor, dining room,\nkitchen, four 'bedrooms, cellar, atone foundation. Tne hath room fixtures are all the very best, (teal enamel tub, glass towel racks, bevel\nplate mirror, etc, etc. I\nThere are six lota planted ln \"nit trees. About 28 trees bearing,\nlarge quantity of berry bushes, currants, strawberries, asparagus bed.\nTwo large level lawns, about 100 rose .bushes, besides shrubbery and\nplants. Magnificent view. Excellent neighborhood. WW sell on cash\nor monthly payments.   Por further particulars enquire\nE. B. McDERMID\nBate Situ*\nNairn, B.C\nWe have Just received\nSO crates of\nFresh Peaches\n.They are In the very best condition. Will keep tor some time\nif you wish.\nSelling at 95c per crate\nPHON 3 229.\nStewart (8b Co.\nIf lt'a from Stewart's It's good.\nDINNER SETS\nWe are offering the biggest bargains ln specially imported dinner\nsets ever known in tbe Kootenays.\nThese goods are of the finest Austrian manufacture. We were lucky\nin securing a number of these\nsets at a remarkably low price and\nwe are offering the people of Nelson the benefit. Call and Bee\nthese sets. They are worth looking over even if you don't purchase\nMUNRO & NELSON\nCHINA HALL\n121 Baker St P.O. Box 688\nDo Not Buy Vour\nDinnerware\nwithout looking at our stock. We have\na complete stock of Dlnnerwares, China\nGlassware, Granlteware, Furniture,\nStoves and Ranges.\nOLD CURIOSITY SHOP\n513, SIS, 517 Josephine St\nFOR FURNISHING\nOF NEW STEAMER\nCapt Gore Gathers Ideas In Portland\nand Seattle\u2014Not Much to Learn\nFrom 8ternwheelers.\n\"While at Portland and Seattle\/'\nsaid Capt. Gore, superintendent of the\nC. P. R. lake and river service, yesterday, who haa Just returned from a visit\nto those cities, \"I saw many of the large\npassenger steanrers and made a study\nof the manner in which they are fitted\nup with a view to utilizing some of the\nIdeas of the American builders ln fur*\nnishlng, the new steel boat whfch ia being built at the Nakusp yards for Uie\nArrow lakes service.\n\"From some of the large boats I\ngained some valuable hints but I found\nthat our Kootenay steamers compare\nmore than favorably with tbe stern\nwheelers plying on the Columbia river.\nWe haven't much to learn from them.\"\nCapt. Gore found that the prices of\nland In and near Portland have increased tremendously during the past\nyear, some of the property having\ntrebled ln value. The past season In\nthe Portland district has been the dry-\nest for 26 years and the country-waa\nlooking -very brown and dried up.\nWhile at the Columbia river metropolis he learned that a project waa under way for the deepening of the Columbia river to a further depth of from\nsix to eight feet, from Portland to the\nocean..\n=LAMPS\u2014\nWe are showing this week the finest assortment of\nHanging   Hall and   Parlor Lamps\never shown ln the Interior, com prising   'all the latest designs    and\nshades.   Also stand and 'bracket lamps.\nIf you want bargains come e arly. Brasg Stand Lamps, 11.50 complete.\nNELSON HARDWARE CO.\nPhone 15 602 Baker St.\nHAMILTON\nWINRIPIG\nRANCHERS SUPPLIES\nRanchers find our store the best shop\nping place ln the Kootenays.\nWe always carry' a complete stock ot\nTools, Plows, Harrows, Barb Wire,\nstoves, Pumps, pipe, Pipe Fittings,\nPoultry Netting, Granite Ware, Mixed\nPaints, etc, etc.\nPrompt attention to mall orders.\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co., Limited\nNEL80N, B. C.\nWholesale\nRetail\ntoioiito\nVMC0UVEI\nTHE STORE OF QUALITY\nPears. Plums and Other Good Things\nBartlett Pears, very fine, per box     $2.35\nPlums aud Prunes, per box 1.00\nTokay Grapes, fancy, 2 lbs tor 25\nOranges, per dozen ..50c. to SOc.\nLemons, very choice, per dozen..- 40\nTomatoes, ripe, very nice, per lb    .10\nSweet Potatoes, good' ones, 3 lbs. for   ; ' -25\n, Quality and Prices guaranteed.\nP. O. Box 54    A. S. HorSWill     Phone 10\nThe Convenience of a\nSelf-Filling\nFountain Pen\nadded to tbe reliability ot the teed and the superiority ot the action ot\nthe gold nib In Waterman's Meal Fountain pen, may now for tha\nfirst time be had In the New Ideal (alf Filling Pen. It's a rare oombtns.\ntlon ot oonvenlence and service and la bound to prove immensely popular\nNew stock Just received.   Let us at one to your hand.   For sale at\nDONT  FORGET THI  MY ICOUT? DANCE, THUMDAY $t*PT. 22\nCanada Drag & Book Co.,\nNelson's Kodak Smwiy Heme\nBex 502\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1910_09_18","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0383961","@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. : News Publishing Co.","@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":"1910-09-18 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1910-09-18 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\/1.0383961"}