{"@context":{"@language":"en","AIPUUID":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AIPUUID":[{"@value":"e42bf369-3a85-421a-b052-317e3392d255","@language":"en"}],"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2019-09-27","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1909-11-23","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0384017\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" WCK\nThe Drily New* Clusifled Ate. I\n\u2022reWlHen. TryOae.perww*d | C\n\u25bcour\n NELSON   B. C  TUESDAY   MORNING.  NOVEMBER   23.   W \t\nBOUNDARY WILL SUPPORT M!\nNO. 166\nTHOMAS CAVEN WILL OET GOOD\nMAJORITY IN CRANBROOK\nCRANBROOK, Nov. 22\u2014Caven will\ncertainly redeem Cranbrook this time.\nHe la gaining strength every, day and\npeople ire now beginning to speculate\non what his majority will be. M. A.\nMacdonald, the liberal candidate, ia being assisted by Dr. J. H. King, the late\nmember, bnt the latter it finding W absolutely lmpoMlble -to line up behind\nhts nominee hi this election a very*\nlarge number of thoee who supported\nhim three yeajri ace.\nFIGHT IN FERNIE BETWEEN R08S\nAND SOCIALIST CANDIDATE .\nFERNIE, Nov. 82\u2014As eleotlon draws\nnear the reelection of W. R. Ross, who\nhas represented tills riding, durlngThe\npast six yeara, becomes more certain\nand (here now eta. be mo doubt whatever of the result. The socialists are\nwaging a hart battle but practically the\nentire thinking vote ot the constituency\nta with Mr. Ross. A. I. Fisher, the liberal candidate, who was put up by a\nsection of that party, will lose his de-\npatffc  ' *\nERNEST MILLER IS GOING TO REDEEM GRAND FORKS THIS TIME\nGRAND FORKS, Nov, 22\u2014Election\nday is now close enough to be able to\nJudge pretty accurately as to what the\nresult will be and It is now generally\nadmitted that Ernest Miller, the conservative candidate, will this Ume redeem\nthe riding, The principal opposition\nla from John Mclnnes, who represented\nthe constituency ln the hut house as a\nsocialist. Dan * Patterson, the liberal\ncandidate will be a poor third.\njackson will ie greenwood's\nmember of Legislature\nGREENWOOD, 8ov. 22\u2014Greenwood\nis going to be rep*psented ln the next\nlegislature by a supporter of tbe Mc-\nBride government And J. R. Jackson,\nthe conservative cafcdidste in the present eleotlon, will ft the man. D. A.\nMacdonald, the Ulfctal candidate, has\nno ohance whatewr, the fight being\nbetween Mr. Jackson and George\nHeatherlngton, the; socialist nominee,\nwith odda greatly Mvorlng the former,\na nan on the fencb.\nHON. THOMAS TAYLOR WILL AGAIN\nREPRESENT REVELSTOKE\nRBVBLSTOKB, Nov. 22\u2014The re-election o( Hon. Thomas Taylor is mow assured beyond any shadow ol a doubt,\nand the situation has resolved itself\nInto a matter ot speculation regarding\nhis majority and whether or not both\nor only one Ot his opponents will lose\ntheir deposit Mr. Taylor Is being sup-\nported alike by conservatives and liberals, the latter preferring to vote for\na government supporter rather than for\nBRADEN IS CONCEDED TO BE CER-*\nTAIN WINNER IN ROSSLAND\nROSSLAND, Nov. 22\u2014Tbe fight ln\nthis constituency Is now only a quev\ntlon of majority tor W. R. Braden, the\nconservative candidate. All attempts to\nrally the electorate to the support ot\nDr. English, the liberal candidate, have\ntailed, many belonging to that party to\nwhich he belongs having openly expressed their Intention of this time sup*\nporting the McBrlde government and its\nrailway policy,\nFIGHT IN COI',>y.rA IS KEEN BUT\nKNOWING ^iS PICK PARSON\nGOLDE>'o''jv. 22\u2014The fight in Columbia b ? een H. G. Parson-, who represented Columbia in the last house i\u00bb\nthe conservative Interests, and J. A.\nBuckham,. his liberal opponent, Is keen,\nbut shrewd observers pick Mr. Parson\nas the winner, while bis frlcods say he\nwill have a larger majority than he had\nthree years ago when be defeated *W.\nC. Wells of Nelson who waa then the\nsitting member and who was tn addition quite popular In the riding.\nSEWEBYLAW\nWill Introduce Local Improvement Systeihv\nIS COURT OF REVISION\nALDERMEN HALE AND M'MORRIS\nWITH MAYOR TO REVISE THE\nVOTERS' LIST-COAL TEAMS\nMUST NOt SACK ON TO SIDEWALKS\nThe city council last night decided\nto Instruct the city solicitor to prepare\na general bylaw providing for the construction of sewerB by local lmprove-\n\u2022   ment.\nThe decision arose out of the discussion regarding the construction ot sewers, for blook 4, which has been before the.council on several occasions\nrecently. In reply to queries from the\ncouncil asking whether, in the event\nof a sewer being built ln the lane for\nblock 4, the sewer to run down Hendryx to Vernon, the lots facing on Vernon, along whloh the sewer rah, could\nbe changed tor the improvement, although they already have sewer connection, and also ae to the advisability\not passing a local improvement law, A;\nJohnston, city solicitor, wrote:\n\"I have no, doubt the city cannot seek\nto charge lots ln block 4 facing on Vernon with any Part ot the cost of a\nsewer laid ln the alleyway in block 4,\nsuch sewer being Intended lo serve lots\nIn that block facing on Baker street)\nOwners of lots lb this block which face\nVernon atreet already have sewer .connection for which I assume they are\nbeing charged, and it would be unfair\nand unjust to ask them to bear part of\ntbe cost ot a sewer ln rear at the\nproperty trom which they would derive no benefit\n\"I think a general bylaw should be\npassed by the council covering local\nimprovements, whether sewers or, cement sidewalks. Such bylaw should be\npassed under the provisions of Subsection A of section 266 of the municipal clauses act Sewers can be built\nunder local improvement bylaws under\nauthority of subsections 10 and U of.\nsection 256. No petition la necessary\nand the work oan be undertaken and\nthe cost charged to lands benefited,\neven although a majority representing\none-half in value of the lands proposed\nto be charged may object for by subsection 22 ot section 266 the council ls\nnot required to publish notice of Its\nintention to make auch assessment, as\nis necessary in other cases of local Improvement, I cannot see any necessity\nfor petitions in any case ot intended\nworks to be carried out as local improvement and subsection 17 of section -266 expressly states that such\npetition ls unnecessary.\nGeorge Kurtz, who was present regarding the proposed construction of a'\nsewer for block 4, skid that, he understood that the cost of digging and backfilling would amount to $216. The tour\nproperty owners Interested were willing\nto pay $40 each, and It Mr. Bird, whose\nproperty Is also concerned, would do so\nthe amount would be sufficient to meet\nthe required cost If Mr. Bird would\nnot consent the project might be done\nby local Improvement\nMr. Kurtz waa s\u00bbked to ascertain\nMr; Bird's views. If he decides to contribute $40 the sewer will be proceeded\nwith, the five property owners paying\nthe cost ot digging and backfilling,*\namounting to about $200, and the city\npaying the balance of the $720 that the\nsewer is expected to cost\n. The report ot the finance committee\nrecommending the payment ot accounts\nto the extent of $183 was adopted.\nThe nubile worka committee recommended that the scavenging team, consisting of the lame horse, Tom, and\nhis mate, be offered tor sale tor $250.\nIt also recommended tbat a cellar-\nway in tbe lane on block 3 be closed,\nVqfs It encroaches oil the lane.\n; The recommendation regarding the\n\u25a0ale of the team waa referred back to\nthe board of works and fire, water and\nlight committee, as Alderman Hale reported that one of the horses belonging to the fire team of the lower hall\nhad gone lame, Jt was thought that\nIt might be advisable to buy % qtw\nfire team. ;\"\u2022\">'\". v\nThe recommendation regarding  the\noellarway waa adopted.\nAlderman McMorrls gave, notice ot\nthe Introduction of the local Improvement bylaw.\nThe city solicitor reported on Alfred\nBunker's claim for rent of land over\nwhich the Bume had passed. JHe\nthought tbat the recent offer ot $27\nrecommended by the finance committee\nwaa liberal. It Waa decided to offer\nMr. Bunker $27 ln settlement of all\nclaims. .    * ,\nA court ot revision for the voters'\n\u25a01st consisting of Aldermen Hale and\nMcMorrls with the mayor was appointed.   .\nOn the motion of Aldermen Kerr &\nMatthew It was decided that type-written copies ot the proceedings of the\nrecent police Investigation should be\nprovided tor each member of the council.\nThe mayor said that the cost should\nbe considered but that It was not for\nhim to object as much ot the investigation seemed to be directed against\nhimself.\nAlderman McMorrls thought that, to\nprovide the copies would be to make\nan* exception ln the case of this Investigation, but finally the revolution passed\nwithout a division.\nAlderman Steed drew attention to\nwater that ran onto the sidewalk from\na building at the Junction of Baker and\nStanley streets and the owner will be\nnotified.     \u25a0\u25a0 , '\u25a0\n.The question of coal teams backing\nonto tbe cement sidewalks after covering them with planking was brought\nup by Alderman Steed.\nThe city engineer reported that he\nhad given permission ln a few Instances\nbut the council decided that the practice must be stepped, and the polite\nwill be notified to- enforce, the provisions of the existing bylaw.\nAn advertisement will be published\nwarning ratepayers to clean the side*\nwalka opposite their properties and\ncautioning them not to damage the sidewalks by use of axes or similar Implements.\nThe mayor and Aldermen Hale, Kerr,\nMatthew, Steed and McMorrls were\npresent.\nIS SAFE IN CRANBROOK\nTHOMAS   CAVEN   IS   CERTAIN   OF\nELECTION  THERE\nA. E. WATTS TELLS OF SITUATION\nIN CONSTITUENCY\nThat Thomas Caven, the conservative\ncandidate in Cranbrook ls assured ot\nelection and by a good majority is the\ncheering newa brought to the city yesterday by A. E, Watts of Wattsburg,\nwho leaves for home again this morning\nafter attending to same business here.\nDiscussing the prospects in Cranbrook, Mr. Watts, who ls one of the\nleading business men ot East Kootenay\n\u25a0aid: \"Cranbrook city will give Caven\na majority, Moyie gave him one the last\ntime he ran and will give him a larger\none this timet while the Indications are\nthat the outlying districts will also declare for him. You may say that the\nrailway men are practically solid for\nCaven, ao that his election Is certain. -\n\"Aa to the tight In general I find that\nwherever you go people with mall balanced minds admit that premier McBrlde's railway policy Is sound and\nbusinesslike and that the opposition\nhaa th no caee shown to the contrary\nby any valid or reasonable argument,\nhaving In moat cases confined their\ncriticism, to senseless verbiage.\"\nSURVIVORS INDIGNANT\nCharge Steamship Management With\nNaglact and Harsh Treatment\nLOS ANGELES, Nov. 22\u2014Indignation\namong the hundred or more survivors\not the St Croix disaster continued today*. An Impromptu mass meeting was\nMM at the offices of the North Pacific\nSteamship company today where nearly 100 passengers appeared la an effort\nto make a settlement with the con*\npany. Ihe company tendered tickets\nto San Francisco to the survivors. Several were almost hysterical In their denunciations of the steamship owners.\nMany decided they would never step on\nboard a ship again. It was decided to\nhold a jnass meeting in San Francisco\nas scon aa the survivors arrived there\nand had placed their grievances ln the\nhands cf attorney*.'\nThe iurvivorg charge the management with Bros* negieot and harsh\ntreatment They assert that some ot\nthe ban-els on the lifeboats supposed\nto be tolled with drinking water contained only brine. Some oomplalned\nthat the officer* made a greater flour-\nIsh of firearm* than was necessary.\nTHE BUDGET\n.   \u2014-I .\nDebate Commences in the\nHouse of Lords\nINTEREST NOW INTENSE\nREJECTION OF BILL 18 FOREGONE\nCONCLUSION \u2014 ADMIRAL SEYMOUR GIVES BOWL TO FLAGSHIP AS MEMENTO OF VISIT-\nBARON REUTER DEAD\nLONDON, Nov. 22\u2014Not since the\npeers refused to agree to the Irish\nhome rule bill has public interest in tbe\nmeeting of the upper bouse equalled\nthat shown today when the lords met to\ncommence debate on the budget, this\nIn spite of the fact that the rejection of\nthe budget Mil is a foregone conclusion.\nLONDON, Nov. 22\u2014The report connecting Harrods, Limited with the Hudson Bay company are denied by Harrods and by lord Strathcona.\nLONDON, Nov. 22\u2014Sir Edward Seymour today presented tbe flagship Inflexible with a sliver bowl for its wardroom to com-taraorate tb* ^battleship's,.\nmission in carrying the admirals' flag\nto the Hudson-Fulton celebration at\nNew York,\nLONDON, Nov. 22\u2014Baron George de\nRenter, younger son of the late baron\nde Reuter, who founded Renter's Tele*\ngram company, and a brother of the\npresent 'baron Reuter, died today. He\nIs survived by a widow and two Bona.\nLONDON, Nov. 22\u2014The Times learns\nwith satisfaction trom sir William\nWhite that, ln spite of local differences\nof opinion and some clearly accentuated but not perhaps widely accepted divergences of policy, the imperial idea\nhas already taken shape among all\nolasses and ln all parts of Canada ln\nuniversal recognition of the principal\nthat must be. at tbe root ot any well\nconceived system ot imperial defence,\nnamely the unquestioned command of\nany contribution that may be made.\nINGENIOUS INVENTION\nInhalations of Oxygen Increases One's\nMuscular Force\nLONDON, Nov. 22\u2014An Ingenious machine has been Invented at tbe London\nhospital tor proving that inhalation ot\noxygen directly Increases one's muscular power.\nThe apparatus was devised hy Prof.\nLeonard Hill,' whose experiment; ln\nwhich a man held hts breath for nine\nminutes after previously breathing, in\noxygen, was recently described.\nA sixty pound weight ls attached to\na rope running over a pulley at the top\not an upright beam some eight feet\nhigh. The experimenter by pulling\ndownward on the free end ot the rope,\ncan Utt the weight vertically upwards\nfor a distance of 19 inches. On letting\ngo the rope the weight falls on to a\nprojecting shelf, where It rests until\nthe experimenter pulls it up again. The\nexperiment consists ln seeing how\nmany times a man can lift the weight\nduring one breath.\nOne of his assistants while breathing\nln his ordinary manner, suddenly held\nhis breath when his lung* were ordinarily full of air and began to raise the\nweight. He was able to raise and lower\nIt 17 times In the 23 seconds he sue-\nceeded ln holding hi* breath. He then\napent three minute* In taking full deep\nbreaths of ordinary fresh air. It was\nthen found that he oould raise the\nweight 30 times ln 60 seconds before\nhe had to breathe again. .\nThen, after a short rest he breathed\ndeeply pure oxygen out of a bag for\nthree minutes, after which he raised\ntbe weight 70 times during the 88 seconds he was able tb work without\nbreathing.\nSir Thomas Will Challenge.\nQDEENSTOWN, Nov. 22. \u2014 Sir\nThomas Upton, who arrived on board\nthe steamer Lucanla today, again an*\nbounced to the waiting newspaper men\nhis decision to challenge for the honor\nof America's cup ln 1011, providing the\nNew York Yacht olub would permit the\nrace to be sailed under universal rules.\n.....aa.*:..*:::..*.:.\n* *\n* WRIGHT  IS CERTAIN. *\n* -.:*\u25a0{  \u2022\n* In keeping with the, dispatches *\ne which. Ths  News publishes  thla e\n* morning from; every constituency \u2022\n* In the Kootenay* and In the Boun- *\ne dary Is the situation In Nelson, *\ne which   may. * already   be   safely e\n* classed  as  among  the  constltu- \u2022\n* ancles which ths day after tomcr- *\n* row will return a supporter of the *\n* McBrlde government.  Mr. Wright *\n* Is assured of slactlon, but neither *\n* he nor his supporters are taking e\n* any chances but will work right e\n* gp to the momsnt the polls close. *\n* \u2022\nPOSITION OF HAULTAIN\nWILL    URGE   CONSTRUCTION    OF\nHUDSON BAY RAILWAY\nSASKATCHEWAN UNIVERSITY SITE\nAS POLITICAL BRIBE      -\nREGINA,-Nov. 22\u2014Debating on the\naddress from the throne ln tie Saskatchewan* legislature today, Mr. Haul-\ntain completely exonerated the minister\nof education from wrongdoing in connection with the letting ot the Morang\nschool book contract He stated tbat\nbis figures had been1 provided and bis\ninformation glven.by book manufacturers in Toronto in whom he had every\nreason to have confidence, bnt at the\ntime of the sitting of. the commission\nthey had failed htm .and \"lqft him In\n\u2022afc-imch.**'* So fktf-as concert***! graft-\"\nin connection with tbe contract he entirely exonerated the .minister of education and he admitted that on tbe evidence put before the commissioners\nthere was no other report which they\ncould submit. He was still prepared to\ncontend,* however, that: the commission*\ner of education was tailing In his duty\nto the provinoe when he did not secure\nlower prices as* contracts let since that\ntime showed that lower prices were\npossible by 40 per cent.\nOn the question of the Hudson Bay\nrailway he stated his position again.\nHe said that be had been misrepresented by the government speakers and tbe\npress on the question heretofore. His\nposition was this: \"While he believed\nthat more rapid construction of the\nroad to the bay could be secured by the\nco-operation of the three prairie provinces, yet the government had started\nanother policy and it would be futile\nto block this policy because his personal opinion waa against it. He would\ntherefore give every assistance, in\nbringing to the attention ot the government the necessity for the building\nof the road at an early date and would\nstrengthen the handB of the government ln any action that would hurry\nthe construction of the* line.\nThe location of the university he\nlooked upon as settled but he questioned the right ot the municipal commissioner to promise the university to Saskatoon as an election vote getter. He\ncharged that the board of governors\nhad not located the university at all,\nbut that the government had decided\nthis for them. Now that the university\nwas located, he for one was prepared\nto assist It to every prosperity.\nThe address in reply was moved by\nLisle of Lloydmlnster and -was seconded by Mitchell, Weyburn, Both made\nexcellent speeches of the kind usually\ndevoted to this duty. They spoke ot\nthe prosperity of the country and the\nproblems which would yet have to be\nconfronted ln the wny ot building mil-\nways and roads, the development of\nthese things was urged upon the government. All three speakers who occupied the floor this afternoon laid themselves ous as prepared to assist the\ngovernment In solving the elevator problem ln the manner hest suited to the\ninterest* ot the country.\nUniversity Is Expropriating -\nSASKATOON, Nov. 22\u2014Expropriation proceedings were token today by\nthe governors of the university oi Saskatchewan, tb secure certain lands held\nby Butler & Byers, situated tn the site\nChosen tor the new unlveralty buildings\nand thl* morning the court of arbitration met to hear witnesses, the above\nfirm having refused to turn the land\nover to the governor* for the price offered, ' ', -t :\u2022}\u2022\nLongboat and Shrubb Tomorrow\n-WINNIPEG, Nov. 21\u2014Tom Longboat\nand his trainer Sol Mint*, arrived from\nthe east today. Longboat and Shrubb\nwill run a fifteen mile no* tofhorrow\nBight,   ' '\u25a0 '    \u25a0\nWIRESJOWN\nSevere Storm in Oregon\nand on Great Lakes\nCOMMUNICATION BROKEN\nSTREAMS NOW ROARING TORRENTS AND BRIDGE8 CARRIED\nAWAY\u2014LOSS OF LIFE FEARED\n\u2014 TELEGRAPHIC COMPANIES\nARE  IN  DIFFICULTIES\nPORTLAND, Ore., Nov. 22.\u2014A heavy\nwind and rain storm prevailed. Last\nnight and today. During the early hours\nof the morning it was severest over the\nwestern portion ol Oregon, though\nwestern Washington felt It to a slight\ndegree.\nDuring the day the storm progressed\nto the eastern part of the states. The\nrainfall amounted to 1.66 Inches In\nPortland for the 24 hours ending at 5\no'clock this evening, and appears to*\nhave been especially heavy In all parts\nof the Willamette valley and ln thei\nColumbia river gorge.\nMountain streams are already\nswelled almost bank full and were\nturned Into torrents, and numerous\nbridges and othei obstructions were\ncarried out.\nFrom the Siletz and Yaqulna ports,\nwhere the storm was the heaviest of\nthe year, no damage has been reported,\nbut fears are entertained that there\nmay be some loss of life In the low\nlands along the Siletz river.\nIn the city the Wllamette, river is\nrunning 13.3 feet above low water, ai\nraise of 2.5 feet -today. The flood is accompanied 'by am eight mile current,\nwhich has done considerable damage\nby carrying out log rafts. Other than\nthis no considerable damage has resulted so far as reported. The telegraph and telephone companies have\nsuffered considerable difficulty today in\nkeeping communication open but it is\nexpected that all but one or two routes\n\u25a0will be open by midnight and that traffic will be moving on a normal basis.\nAccording to the United States weather\nbureau for this district the storm is tonight general throughout British Columbia but it will, however, continue\nto create disturbances over the Pacific\nnorthwest tomorrow. The bureau Is\nstill displaying storm signals at all\npoints along the coast\nCHICAGO, Nov. 22\u2014A heavy storm\nof rain and sleet accompanied by high\nwinds and every indication of a drop in\nthe thermometer is raging today over\nthe great lakes region. Tlie storm is\ncentered near St. Louis and extends\nnortheast. The sleet and ice have\nhamepered telegraph Hnes and storm\nsignals have been displayed at aU ports.\nSOLDIER'S STRANGE RUSE.\nObtained   Discharge   by  Claiming   He\nHad Sleeping Sickness.\n..PARIS, Nov. 22.\u2014A telegram from\nMontpelier giveB particulars of a\nstrange ruae which a soldier named\nGlron employed In order to secure his\ndischarge. When he arrived at Belters he declared that he was suffering\nfrom sleeping sickness. He was placed\nunder observation and kept without\nfood or drink for 48 hours. Neither\nInjections nor baths were effective in\narousing the soldier from his lethargy.\nIt was decided to discharge Wm.\nThen the schemer, filled with joy at\nthe prospects of his release from military service, wrote a letter to hts parents boasting of the \"trick\" he had\nplayed on the majors. The letter was\nseized, and Glron, now completely\nawake, was transferred trom the hospital to a cell.\nHOPE IS NOT DEAD.     '\nStill Cherish Belief That Men Live In\nSt. Paul Mine.\nCHERRY, III, Nov. 22.\u2014Two exploring parties la the St. Paul mine today\nfound indications which lead them to\nbelieve that many living men are still\nln the last workings. The searchers at\n3 a. m. were able to pass far Into the\ngalleries and their hope springs from\nthe fact that where they expected to\nfind a large number of dead, hone were\nseen. Nearly two hundred are still un\naccounted for. If the men still live lm*.\nprisoned in the depths of the mine they\nare probably too weak to aid ln their\nown escape, as It was nine days ago\nthat the fire occurred, and tor that time\nany possible survivors have been without food and with very little, If any,\nwater. Their only hope is that from\nthe rescue party which Is working frantically to remove the timbers, dead animals and earthfalis which block the\nway to tbe east workings. But It is\nslow work.\nRatn fell all night. Four of the score\nor more bodies seen lying ln the black\ndamp were hoisted. It Is stated it is\nimpossible to reach the others, although\nthey were ln plain view.\nCHERRY, 111., Nov. 22.\u2014A man taken\nfrom tho St. Paul mine was at flrst\nthought to be alive, but after being\nrushed to a hospital ho was pronounced\ndead. Wild scenes followed the carrying of the supposed live man to the\ncar. Soldiers had to disperse the\ncrowd. Twenty-two other bodies were\ncarried from the shaft to the temporary\nmorgue.\nF0RMJWR0L\nBranch of Boy Scouts is\nStarted in Nelson\nTHE THREE-FOLD PLEDGE\nNEW LEADER   ARISING\nCHIEF     OF      ONTARIO      LIBERAL\nPARTY COMING WEST.\nMIGHT BE WILLING TO FILL JOHN\nOLIVER'S   SHOE8.       .-,\nNotwithstanding the frequent denials\nthat have been given to persistent rumors currnt with regard to a change\nin the leadership of the Ontario liberal\nptfr'ty 'iii' the * legislature'\u25a0 the story\"'\nseems to contain more truth than fiction, says the Toronto World. . ,\nThe World understands that the Liberal leader, Hon. A. G. MacKay, Is himself anxious for a change. It ls said\nthat he will only appear for one more\nsession in'the legislature and afterwards will betake himself westward\u2014\nln all probability to British Columbia,\nforsaking Grey county, where he was\nborn, leaving Owen sound behind,\nwhere his hardest political battles have\nbeen fought, which has been described\nby the poet as;\n\"The land of local option,\nWhere the ground is hard and sere.\"\nIt is said, too, that Mr. MacKay's\ncontemplated change is not altogether\ndue to a desire to practice law in the\nPacific province. He still has political\nambitions. These he expects to materialize in the service of tho liberal party\nIn the British Columbia legislature.\nJohn Oliver, present leader, is not ex-i\npected to emerge from the impending\ncatastrophe on November 25, when the\nconservative administration under Premier McBride expects to receive the\nImprimature of public approval.\n\"As far as a leader is concerned, Mr.\nMacKay Is well regarded,\" a friend\nspeaking to the World vouched the information. \"He is an indefatigable\nworker and a man of deep penetration\nnnd wide ability.\"\nTWO PATROLS OF SIX BOYS EACH\nWILL COMMENCE TRAINING-\nEACH BOY WILL COMMAND PATROL IN SPRING\u2014UNIFORM\nANO BADGE.\nFOR   IRRELIGIOUS   WOMEN.\nAnnuities for Poor Women Who Do Not\nGo to Church.\n(Special to Tiie Dally News.)\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Nov. 22.\u2014The\nwill of Dr. Eady Stevenson, an old pioneer of tills city who recently died in\nVictoria, was published here today. It\ndevises property worth $150,000 for the\ncreating of a trust fund from which\npayments not exceeding $20 per month\nshall he made to women destitute or\nwithout adequate means of support who\nare not attendants of any Christian\nchurch or denomination. The mayor\nof the city is trustee for seeing thei\ncharitable provisions carried out and\na committee of three Vancouver citizens are to have the choosing of beneficiaries who must have been residents\nof the city for five years. In case a\nsurplus exists at any time the amounts\non hand are to be devoted to support\ncharitable organizations for children.\nThe entire estate ls to be turned over\nfor the fund save two small annuities\nand minor bequests of personal property.\nAt an emhtis'.astlc meeting In the offices\not' W. H. Bullock-Webster last nipt it-\nNelson branch ot Hie Boy Scouts v.nS\nformed, and steps were taken to carry\nforward til-a plan of organization as laid\ndown by Llcuu-Qeuernl Baden-Powell, tho\ndistinguished luuiLiRT oi mt: Buy sCOUt.\nin oven. em. itev. F. 11. Uralium was i-ieri-\ned lo Lin; cnalr and O. ti. J-Umg.. iwau\nnamed aa soeretaiy uf me mee.ingj\nAfter tne alms of tiie movement and the\nmethods of working were explu.-ned by\nMr. Graham and it. W. Murk.mm, wiui\nthe aid of literature obtained by Mr.\nMarithflin from the iieuuqtiurters in Lon-\ndan, the branch was fo.mally organized,\nand a committee was appointed u> Have\ngeneral supervision of tne organisation.\nThis committee was composed oi t* Crau-\nfurd, -U. W. Busk, C. J. Broadwood. Itev.\nF. H. Graham, D. O. Thomas, W. H.\nBullocK-Webpter,, H. A. Kitfly, ,H.. XV,.\nMarkliam,'id. a.' batemun, ti. d. Akrtsg,\nH. II. Currle.        \"\nMr, Cruuiuid was elected permanent\nchairman of the meeting, Mr, Akrigg was\nelected permanent secretary, and Mr. Kelly\n* was elected scout-masLer.'\nI It wus decided to commence with two\npatrols, of six boys each, wno will bo\ntrained during tne winter by the scoutmaster, in methods of scout ng and woou*-\nc;aft Hlni other usclul knu\\-.ieil\u201eei ami in\nscout law. In the spring, on being Quail-\ntied, eacli boy will be given tho command\nof a patrol. In the matter of uniform,\nIt Is probable that the regulation uniform\nwill be adopted, with one difference, that\nthe boys' knees will not be -.ire. Tne\nsecretary was Instructed to apply to bead-\nquarters tor permibSiOii to uiU;.**) 'ma\nchange. Budges will be u.watdc-d for efficiency in various lines of useful knowledge, for instance, In camp-craft, or in\nllrst aid to the injured. It is the u'-.mato\nintention to have a headquarters or club-\nroom, but for the purposes of this winter,\nnnd the preliminary training of future\npatrol leaders, a room lor drill znuposes\nwill suffice. Each patrol Is enuueii to\nhave Its own emblem and calls. At least\notice a year a camp will bo held. Tim\nmovement  Is undenominational.\nMessrs, Craufurd, Kelly and Grnham\nwere appointed a committee to select the\n12 boys to be tra ned for patrol leaders,\nand to carry forward tlio organization of\ntbe two patrols.\nIt was decided to correspond with tlifl\nbrunches at Greenwood, Hosstand and\nPei'nle on the subject of uniforms. Ii la\npossible that in the course of time a joint\ncamp of the branches In ths part ot tlie\ncountry may become the practice.\nThe next meeting of the general committee will be held at Die call of tho\nchairman.\nThe Boy Scout movement was originated by Lieut.-General Baden-Powell as an\nagency for dealing with the boy problem\nin England's congested d strlcts, but lis\nmerits have Instantly been rurognlzed all\nover the empire as a means fur dliet-ims\nthe youth of the emplro at its most critical age along lines that wll assure a clean\nmanhood. The organization'is not military\nln Its ultimate intent. The pledge each\nboy is required to take is three-fold, loyalty to Glod and to the king, assistance to\nthe distressed, and obedience to the scuut\nLands Withdrawn.\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 22.\u2014Secretary\nBallinger has withdrawn from all forms\nof disposition approximately 3,262 acres\nalong the upper Deschutes river ln Oregon. This is a tributary of the waterway tn connection with which the\ncharge was made that In granting a\nright of way to tbe Hill and Harriman\nrailroads through the Deschutes canyon\nSecretary Ballinger rendered impossible the construction of a power plant\nIn the canyon.\nYmir Is Solid.\nTRAIL, Nov. 22,-James H. Schofield has\nreturned from a tour of the constituency\nand reports that everywhere he met with\nassurances of support, not only from Conservatives but also from Liberals and\nindependents. Mr. Schotleld's election is\nassured beyond all question. Its opponent\nwill not even make a good showing.\nHunter for Slocan.\nSLOCAN, Nov. 23.\u2014A careful survey of\nthe situation In this constituency makes It\nabundantly clear that William Hunter,\nwho has represented the district for tbe\npast three years, will be ro-clecud and\nby a majority that will certainty be decisive, If only his fullvote Is polled. Ample '\narrangements for this, however, are being\nmad a-\nSweep In Kaslo.\nKASLO, Nov. 23.-The election In this\nconstituency will be a. walk-over for Noll\nF. Mackay, who Is seeking le-election ns\na supporter of the McBrtde government.\nJohn Keen, the Liberal candidate, has no\nhopes whatever of success and Is, in fart.\nIn the field only because he was put there\nby certain Liberals ln Nelson.\nSteamer Drives Ashore.\nCHICAGO, Nov. 22.\u2014The steam\nfreighter Boston, ownod by the Western\nTransit company, after battling all\nnight with wind and waves on Lalto\nMichigan, was driven on a scndbni'\nnear here today. No lives were lost.\n_^m\n PAQSTWt\n\u00abhe\npn\u00bb\nTUESDAY\nNOVEMIER \u00bb\nMcBride and the Immediate Construction of Railways\nFACTS*ABOUT THE\nCANADIAN NORTHERN\nProvince Will Hold First Mortgage\u2014Whole Can-\nkiu \u00ab   adiaii Northern^ System Responsible\nif any Deficit Occurs\nThe following It a copy of a telegram received by,the Victoria Colonist\nfrom D. D. Mann, vice prealdent of the Canadian Northern railway:'\nReferring your telegram, thirteenth, Canadian Northern mileage In opera*\ntlon by provinces\u2014\nOntario     354\nManitoba      1,522\nSaskatchewan     1,006\n,     Alberta          214\nTotal     3,096\nAdditional mileage under construction by provinces and expected to be\nfinished thla year-\nManitoba      180\nSaskatchewan *.     210\nAlberta     170\nTotal    ;..    580\nGross earnings, all provinces, for the fiscal year ended\nthirtieth June, 1909  $10,581,767 93\nOperating expenses         .....*  7,015,405 76\nNet earnings $ 3,866,362 17\nDeduct for interest paid on bonds guaranteed by domln*\nIon and provincial governments $   976,441 35\nNet revenue    ..   2,589,920 82\nDeduct the interest on other securities Issued by railway\ncompany not guaranteed by any government *    1,943,175 78\nLeaving surplus of       646,745.04\nAfter providing for all fixed charges, experience since Canadian Northern\nbegan business ts that additional new mileage added year by year has not\nbeen a drain upon the older section of the line. Our annual report established thla beyond question.\nBelieve same condition will be amply borne out with completion of British Columbia section, particularly having regard large movement timber to\nother provinces. Present transportation rate on timber averages $10 to $12\nper thousand.   Therefore 20,000,000,000 feet would amount\nto over     $200,000,000 00\nOur balance sheet at thirtieth June last showed total\nbonds guaranteed     26,727,183 37\nMade up as follows\u2014\nGuaranteed by domlnnlon government      9,359,996 72\nGuaranteed by province of Manitoba        17,367,186 65\nTotal   .$26,727,183 37\nProvlncea of Alberta and Saskatchewan have guaranteed 920 miles and\n410 miles, respectively, at $13,000 per mile on lines partly under construction\nand not yet earned.\nDominion government have also guaranteed $13,000 per mile on a further\n657 miles and 100 miles at $25,000 per mile partly constructed but not yet\nfully earned.\nThe principal and interest on all bonds guaranteed by the province of\nBritish Columbia will be secured by first mortgage on such lines and the Ca-\nnadlan Northern will be responsible to make good any deficit, principal and\ninterest.\nThe government will be subrogated to the rights and security of the bond*\nholders same as In case guarantees by Dominion and other provinces.\nCanadian Northern, as before stated, has never called upon guarantors,\nnet earnings always being ample meet all charges. This does not Include the\noperation of 2,000 miles In eastern Canada, which are distinct organizations\nbut are controlled by our firm.\nHope this information satisfactory.\nD. D. MANN.\nMAKE  NOJMPRESSION\nSOCIALIST ORATORS PAY VISIT TO\nCRESTON\nOPPOSING    SPEAKER    SHOWS    UP\nFALLACY OF CLAIMS\n(Special to The Dally Mews.)\nCRESTON, Nov. 22\u2014On Saturday's\ntrain there arrived at Creston A. M.\nOliver and William Cribble, the former\nbeing the socialist candidate of the\nYmir riding and the latter bis spell-\n\u25a0btader-j-n-chief. Anything In the form\nof entertainment always attracts a good\ncrowd ln Creston and it waa not surprising, therefore, that a good audience\ngathered in the Creston auditorium to\nlisten to the words of wisdom Trom the\ntwo wayfarers.\nMr. Oliver ia not by any means up to\nthe usual average of the agitator class\nwho obtain a living by haranguing on\nthe wrongs of the working -class to\nwhich, they belonged before they ob-\n, italned an easier job In the socialist\nparty. Mr. Oliver, however, received\na fair reception from the audience especially from that Irresponsible portion\nof It composed of tbe nonvoting element who aire such a big feature at all\nsocialist meetings and some of his\npoints in regard to the gobbling up of\ntbe resources of the province by speculators were well received,\nBut the big gun ofl.tbe .meeltng was.\nMr. Grlbble, an English socialist orator,\nwho devoted himself exclusively to a\nrecital of the wrongs which the laboring class is supposed to have suffered\nat the hands of capital and to a blood\ncurdling account of the (revenge which\nwould be taken when the socialist party\ngot the reins ot government. Mr. Grlbble, from his own statements, was for\n-some years a hired assassin of the capitalist class or tn other words he had\nbeen In the British navy, also a soldier\nof fortune, presumably In South Africa.\nAfter these speakers had spoken tor\ntwo and a half hours Ralph G-. Scruton,\neditor of the Creston Review, in answer\nto requests for questions or speeches\nasked tbe speaker the following question: \"Do you consider thut the present\nworking class ln Canada ore capable of\ntaking over the means of production?\"\nThe speaker then answered In -the af*\nflrmatlve, and Mr, Scruton then took\nthe floor.\/ After pointing out tbat If the\nprevious' speakers' statements to the\neffect that the working class alone possessed all the intelligence and all the\npower were correct, then they would\nhave the means of production now, seeing that intelligence and power combined would logically and Inevitably\nrule, he proceeded: \"Do you mean to\nsay that the thousands of foreigners ln\nthis country, many of whom do not understand ffaglieh and 90 per cent being\nunable to read or write, who have come\nto this country from Russia, Italy and\nother backward portions of Europe to\nengage In day labor in Canada, are\ncapable of taking over the means of\nproduction In the complex modern civilisation, such as exist in the dominion\nat the present day?\"\nThe socialist orator, put in a position\nwhere he had either to admit that the\nmost ignorant were the (most-capable of\nruling, or that his previous statements\nand his whole basis were Inaccurate,\nwas forced to admit these were the people who under his theory should govern\nthe country. Mr. Scruton took up other\npoints and completely smashed the socialist arguments, quoting the many historical , cases where those ignorant\nclasses aided by a deluded portion of\nthe more intelligent had obtained power with the most disastrbus results\nto the real-working class and to civilization.\nThe socialist orators alarmed at the\nable manner in which they were handled by Mr. Scruton cut the discussion\nshort and closed the meeting abruptly\namidst the strong disapproval of the\nvoting section of the audience and without daring to pnt the usual vote of confidence In the socialist candidate. From\nthe course of events at this meeting It\nIs obvious that If only the socialist\nparty were met by Intelligent opposition from speakers who are acquainted\nwith the falacies of their platform, the\npresent tendency of workingmen 'to be\nhypnotized by paid spellbinders would\nbe counteracted.\nTHAT TIRED FEELING.\nRobson Farmers Told How It May Be\n\"Overcome\u2014Danger of Explosives.\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nROBSON, B. C, Nov. 22.\u2014A meeting\nof the Robson's Farmers' Institute was\nheld on Thursday with President Hartford in the chair. The speaker for the\nevening was Dr. T. I. Norman, who read\nan interesting paper on \"Fatigue or\nTiredness.\" He explained the cause of\nfatigue and how this could best be overcome. The paper was listened to with\ngreat interest by those present and It\nIs to be regretted that owing to the\nstormy evening there were not more\npresent. A heavy vote of thanks was\ngiven to Dr. Norman on motion of\nMessrs. Clyde and Wickham.\nThe following motion was carried\nunanimously:\nMoved Messrs. Norman and Watts\nthat a petition to the provincial government be prepared and signed by\nthe president and secretary-treasurer\npraying that directions for use, and\nwarning of danger in use of stumping\npowder be placed in every box of\nstumping powder or other dangerous\nexplosive, so as to reduce the danger\nof the use of these articles.\nMany school children sutler from constipation, which la often the cause of\nseeming stupidity at lessons. Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets are an\nIdeal medicine to give a child, for they ere\nmild and gentle ln their effect, snd will\ncure even chronic constipation. Bold by\nall druggists and dealers.\n\u2666 \u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666',\n******\nHARRY WRIGHT\u2014Nelson's Next Member. '*>',',\n- i>\n\u2666 AAatAAAAJMlHlMlAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAatAA*! >\nTTTtTttTTTTTTTTTTTtTTTtTTTTTtTTTTTi\nMEETING IS ABANDONED\nLIBERAL   GATHERING   AT   KASLO\nPROVES FIA8CO.\nLIBERALS,    LABORITES    AND    SOCIALISTS SUPPORT MACKAY.\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nKASLO, B. C, Nov. 22.\u2014The present\nprovincial campaign as far as Kaslo\nis concerned Is the quietest In the political history of the riding. The liberals\u2014or their former fighters at least\n\u2014are taking no part whatever, and in\nfact some of them are more concerned\nabout the plebiscite than the election.\nThere is much dissatisfaction locally\namong the liberals themselves at there\nbeing a contest at all, but particularly\nover the manner It was brought about.\nNell P. Mackay, the conservative\ncandidate, is sure of election by a large\nmajority. It Is a singular fact that\nmany liberals who worked and voted\nagainst him three years ago are now\nworking and openly state tbey will\nvote for him this time. By this It must\nnot be taken for granted that they are\nany less liberal,in federal affairs, but\nthey think, taking the local situation\nInto consideration, that Nell F. Mackay as Kaslo representative has made\ngood and should not be opposed.\nMr. Mackay returned Wednesday\nfrom a tour of the northern section\nand Is very much gratified over the outlook up there. Liberals, laborltes and\nsocialists who were against him before\nintend voting for him next Thursday.\nA meeting of the liberals\u2014the only\none ao far\u2014is to be held tonight, the\nchief speaker at which is to be John\nP. McConnell, but It Is doubtful If his\neloquence will alter tiie situation one\niota. Nell F. Mackay will again be\nKaslo's member by the largest majority\never polled by any successful candidate in the history of the riding, and\nwe believe lie will lead in every poll.\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nKASLO, B. C, Nov. 22.\u2014Liberals\nhere abondoned their meeting on Saturday. They explained that their Vancouver speakers were snowbound, but\nJohn Keen was here and was evidently\nunwilling to face the people of Kaslo\nby himself. Nell'F. Mackay's election\nis absolutely sure.\nFERNO WATER SUPPLY\nNEW 8YSTEM FROM FAIRY CREEK\nIS COMPLETED.\nCURLING   CLUB   MAPS   OUT   SEA-\nSON'S PROGRAM.\n(Special to The pally Kews.)\nFERNIE. B. C, Nov. 22.\u2014The new\nwaterworks system from Fairy Creek\nhas at last been completed, and on Saturday a test was made by the civic authorities. The water was turned into\nthe mains at 1 o'clock and at 4o'clock\nthe city engines made a test from one\nof the hydrants on Baker avenue in\nthe presence of the members of the\ncity council, when It was found tbat\nthe pressure amounted to 100 pounds.\nA test was then made In the Fernle\nannex, and the pressure woe found to\nreach the 125-pound mark. The tests\nmade are most satisfactory and tbe\ntown now possesses a water system\ncapable of filling all requirements for\nsome years to come. The annex has\nhitherto been supplied with water from\nprivate wells with the result that many\ncases of typhoid fever have occurred\ndid candidate who has made farming\na success as the splendid ranch which\n\u25a0he has hewed out of the forest is\nample evidence. Being one of the oldest residents he knows the wants of the\ndistrict from ,end to end, as well as\npossessing that stay-with-it characteristic by which L. W. Shatford has obtained such splendid results for the\nSlmllkameen.\n\u25a0With such a candidate backing a railway policy which means so much to\nthe Kettle river It is little wonder that\nthe liberals have to content themselves\nto vote for McBrlde and Jackson, while\nthe liberals have content themselves\nwith one lone conversion\u2014and this, as\nis well known, is a case of disappointed\nambition. This man attended the meeting for election of delegates to the conservative convention, was himself elected a delegate, attended the convention\nand asked delegates to support him tor\nthe nomination, but failed to obtain a\nnomination. It is not a question of\npolicy with this man or he never would\nhave stultified himself by attending the\nconvention and seeking nomination to\nfurther the policy, but simply a case\nof disappointed ambition.\nAs an evidence of Jackson's popularity the Rock Creek poll, which went 26\nliberal to 4 conservatives last local\nelection will this time give Jackson a\nmajority.\nin that section of the city which have\nbeen directly traceable to the water\nsupply. The Inauguration of the - system will now effectively put an end\nto this unsatisfactory, sanitary condition and will give the citizens of that\nsection of the city a pure water supply\nbesides adequate fire protection.\nTbe Curling club, held a well attended\nand mpst enthusiastic meeting Thursday night and mapped out a program\nror the coming season at the same time\nappointing the skips for the different\nrinks.\nAt the meeting of the city council\non Thursday it was decided to locate\na fire hose reel In the Fernie annex\nwith, a supply of 501) leet of hose, which\nwill be a sufficient protection at the\npresent time against nre.\nREVIVES OLD^ TRAGEDY\nFIND OF SKELETON AT CRESTON\n-      CREATE8 TALK\nMAY BE REMAINS OF PROSPECTOR\nKILLED FIFTY YEARS AGO\nfSneclal to The Dally News.)\nCIIESTON, Nov. 22\u2014Quite a sensation has been caused here the last few\ndays over the finding of a skeleton by\nJohn Huscroft on his land about eight\nmiles from CreBton. It appears that\nas Mr. Huscroft was engaged in making a wagon road in his logging camp\nand Just as he was grading on a s'de\nhill he encountered the skeleton. \u2022'\nOn examination It is stated that the\nremains were those of a very large man\nover six feet in height and there were\nsigns to show that they were not the\nremains of an Indian. Parties who have\njust seen this skeleton say that It has\nbeen burled 5,0 years at least and a\nstory is afloat that this gruesome find\nIs the remains of on old time prospector who was killed by his comrade\nwhile they were out prospecting together. The story is that a man named\nWallace was murdered over 60 years\nago near where the skeleton was found\nand the present Inhabitants put two\nand two together and Bay that the\nskeleton just found must be that of tbe\nmurdered man.\nAt a meeting of the Creston Dramatic\nclub just held It was decided to turn\nover the proceeds of their winter's re-'\ncetpts from plays to the Creston board\nA A A A A Ai, A A if\nTT-VTTTVTTJ\nGREENWOOD CAMPAIGN\nJ. R. JACKSON IS PROVING STRONG\nCANDIDATE. *\nMANY LIBERALS AS WELL AS CONSERVATIVES SUPPORT HIM.\n..US??011*1 l0 \">\u2022 Dally Ns*s;>\nMIDWAY, B. 0\u201e Nov.: M.*-*Consldei*.\nable Interest now center! Ill the political campaign which to drawing to a\nclose In the Greenwood riding and this\nIs added to owing to thla helng the\nflrat time that a resident of this part of\nthe riding has been honored with the\nnomination by any party. Jn J. B; Jackson the conservative party bat a splen-\nof trade to be used for fire proteotlon.\nCreston ha* grown ao during the past\nfew months that In spite of the fact\nthett many new houses have been erected thla fall every available building Ib\nnow occupied and several tannines\nwanting to locate here tare forced to\nwatt until more houses can be erected\ntor them.\nProf Andrew Miller of the Creaton\ndancing olaas has been so gratified with\n\u25a0the maimer in which the puMIe haa\npatronized hie data that he baa de.\nolded to hold a grand ball on Wednesday evening next, Nor, 24 In the Creaton opera house.\nFred Hurry, the local rancher, ao far\ncarries off the palm*, for growing big\npotatoes with Us five pound spud.\nSIR HIBBERT IS A\nDISAPPOINTMENT\nHis Attack on the Government's Railway Policy\nBrings no Comfort to Liberals With\nWhom He is Now Allied      v\nAs Is pretty generally known, Sir Hlbbert. Tupper la opposing the He-\nBride government In the present election, his chief ground of attack being.\nagainst its railway policy. Sir Hlbbert's stand naturally haa aroused considerable attention, especially his announcement that* he would take the\nstump against the government, for, although hit animosity toward the McBrlde government has been knows for yeara, he had never before came out\nso openly. He has now, however, spoken twice, once In Revelstoke and once\nln Victoria His Revelstoke speech was a great disappointment, not only to\nthe liberals, whom be la supporting this election, but also tb his own friends\nand admirers, and: judging from the dispatches to hand hit addresa In Victoria Saturday, evening was no better. A fair sample ot the attitude of the\npublic toward Sir Hlbbert. la afforded by two editorials which appeared In the\nVancouver Province, the first ln its issue Of Nov. 16 and the second in that\nof Nov. 19. One of these, it should be noted, waa published the day before\nSir Hlbbert spoke in Revelstoke and the other the second day after bis all-\ndress there. It Is, ln other words, a^case of \"before and after,? The two\neditorials are as follows:\n(Tuesday, Nov. 16.)\nWe are at a loss to understand what\nreasonable criticism there can be of\nSir Charles Hlbbert Tupper's attitude\non. the railway policy of the government. Like everybody else, Sir Hlbbert ls entitled to form his opinion ln\nregard to Its merits, and If he believes\nthat It Is not a policy which will prove\nto be ln the Interests of British Columbia it ls his privilege to say so. Indeed, he would be remiss in hia duty\nto the public, to which every man of\nhis prominence and ability, and acquaintance with affairs owes advice on\nsuch occasions, tf he did not express\nhimself freely, and give the electors\nthe benefit of his counsel. The railway\npolicy of the government can stand\ncriticism; If it could not It certainly\nwould not deserve the support of the\ncountry. That Sir Hlbbert should he\nexpected to refrain from an expression\nof bis views because ot his political affiliations ls absurd. I( a citizen la convinced that the policy of the party of\nwhich be ls a member ls not designed\nfor the advantage of the people no considerations of political loyalty should\nprevent him opposing it The duty of\nevery patriotic citizen Is first to his\ncountry. And we hold that his party\nshould have all tbe more respect for\nhim \u25a0because he has tbe courage to oppose it when he believes that it Is\nwrong.\nAccordingly we look forward with In*\nterest to Sir Hlbbert's Revelstoke address. We do so not because we think\nhe* will be able to prove that the railway program is not'for the advantage\nof the province, but because he will\nsubmit for our consideration the serious convictions of a man of admitted\nability, who has bad great experience\nof public affairs, and 'who. la acting\nfrom a sense of duty to the community\nIn pointing-out what In his estimation\nare the blemishes which the policy\ncontains. If such fair and reasonable\ncriticism ot public measures la to-be\ndecried because the man who Indulges\nIn them happens to be a member of\nthe political party which has framed\nand ls advocating those measures, then\nall Independence ls at an end.\nAnd while on this subject we might\nsay that it has always seemed to the\nProvince' a pity that the services of a\nman ot Sir Hlbbert Tupper's ability and\nwide experience of public affairs should\nbe lost to the country, We nave not,\nat the present time, enough men of\nSir Hlbbert's stamp In public life, and\nthe sooner we -realise that It ls to our\nown advantage to make use of bis\nknowledge and experience the better\nfor the country.\n(Friday, Nov. 1\u00bb.)\\\nThe general feeling which will be\nproduced by a perusal of Sir Hlbbert\nTupper's speech at RevelBtoke will, we\nfeel sure, be one of disappointment. It\nwas hot that the public expected to see\nSir Hlbbert demolish the policy of the\ngovernment as a reasonable one and as\nin tbe country's Interest. What was\nlooked for from him was a fair consideration of It from every point of view,\nand, as Sir Hlbbert had announced\nhimself as strongly opposed to It, a\nvigorous but rational marshalling of all\nthe arguments which could be urged\nagainst It. He had every opportunity\nof leaving the conviction with the people that his opposition to the government was grounded In the serious conviction that Its policy was not good.\nBut Sir Hibbert displayed such excessive hostility to the members of the\ngovernment,'lh the course of his address, that It Is Impossible to avoid the*\nconclusion that his animus Ib not so\nmuch to the policy aa to the personnel\nof the administration. And the conviction that this Is so la strengthened by\nthe weakness of hia arguments against\nthe railway program. The whole tone'\nof his speech was unhealthy. He treats\nthe public to a deluge of sarcasm and\nInvective, which, It ls true, makes\npleasant enough reading. People enjoy that sort of thing at the expense of\ntheir public men, who are expected to\n\"grin and bear It.\" But when an Important question which affects the Interests of the country Is up for consideration, Indulgence In this style of oratory ls of doubtful value, It Is not\nconvincing. It does not take the place\not argument In tact. It Is apt to have\nthe very opposite effect to what was\nIntended. The people are disposed to\nsay that a speaker resorts to abuse\nonly because reason ls against him.\n. The public verdict, we think, will be\nnot only tbat Sir Hlbbert has not Injured the prospects of the government,\nbut that he has made it apparent that\nconvincing arguments against tbe administration, and its policy cannot be\nproduced by any of . the opposition\nspeakers now In the field.\nIn his address at Revelatoke Sir Hlbbert approaches the railway proposal,\nas If It were the Instrument, secretly\ndesigned by which the government purposed bankrupting the country. But .\nno Intelligent elector will regard it In\ntbat light whether he approves of it or\nnot. The whole Intention In the guaranteeing of the Canadian, .Northern's\nbonds Is to allow tbe company to obtain\ncheap money to construct the road.' No\ncash or land bonus is given and secur-\nIty for performance has been obtained.\nThe real question to be considered Ib\nthe ability of the company to fulfil all\nIts obligations. If It Is. able to do so\nthe argument advanced ts that the\nprovince will be an Immense gainer\nsimply for the accommodation It furnishes and without parting with a doi- !\nlar.\nSir Hlbbert does not touch that\npoint at all. He does, indeed, argue\nthat Mackenzie and Mann might sell\nout their Interests, but even It they\ndid their successors would nave to\ncarry out their undertakings. To the\ncharge that provision has not been\nmade for a sinking fund to pay off the\nbondholders there Is the plain answer\nthat the contract haa not been drawn\nup yet,., and that when It is all necessary business details will be properly\nattended to. Even If Sir Hlbbert's farfetched fear that what should go into\na sinking fund might be employed for\nterminals and other improvements\nShould be possible of realization It\nwould only make the security held by\nthe province more valuable still. No\ndoubt Sir Hibbert was unaware of the\nsatisfactory assurance given by the attorney general regarding the freight\nrate clause;when he animadverted on .\nthat feature of the agreement.\nTHREE CASES DECIDED\nM'ALLISTER     AND    ROACH    WIN\nTHEIR SUITS\nKENNEDV   CLAIM    WITHDRAWN-\nFIVE DEFERRED\nOl the eight cases that came before\nUs bonor Judge Forin In die Nelson\nsession of the county oourt yesterday\nthree were determined and five were\nallowed to stand over to tbe next session.\nThe case of McAllister v. Freyteg, In\nwhich $114.(6 was claimed for goods\nsold and delivered, was decided ln favor of tbe plaintiff.  A. M. Johnson ap\npeared for ithe plaintiff, the defendant\nnot -being represented by counsel.\nI The case* of Kennedy v, Harris,\" an\naction for revision ot a Contract, 198,50\nbeing claimed, was withdrawn, the\nplaintiff pairing the costs, $24. W. B.\nFarals appeared for the plaintiff and\nB. A. Crease tor the defendant.\nAn action for wages, Reach v. \"he \u2022'\u2022\nMorning Bell Copper Mining * Smelting company, ln which $119 was claimed, was -decided In favor of the plaintiff.\nB..O. Wragge appeared for the Main- -^\ntiff and O. J. Wlgen, attorney of *.he\ncompany, lor the defendant. _\nThe Mrs oases deterred to the neat '\u2022\nsession Ot the count wens: P.P.IL vH\nFerguson and Goodeve, Munro v. Nor-\nthey, Munro v. Rlel, Ashdown Haul-\nwarn compangr v. LaBatt A Brydgw sod\nAshdown Hardware company v. DeWltt.\nWJflUhi*1-    -\n TUESDAY ,  NOVEMBER a\nI '%\u00a3,( Cort\n\\\\P\ntttte gWcHfc Stent*,\nPAGE THRU\nMcBrlde and Four Years More of Good Government\n',',     W. R. BRADEN\u2014Conservative Candidate, Who la Winning Votes\nEvery Day In Rosaland.\n.   *-\u25a0\u00ab-\u25a0*..**\u25a0 J. .*. A J. \u25a0*\u25a0\u25a0\u00ab\u25a0 \u25a0**.\n* PfTTTTTrTjT\nb AAA AA Ji \u25a0*--*--*\u25a0-*-\u25a0*-\u25a0*--*-\u2022*\u25a0-*-\u2022*\u25a0 \u25a0*--*--*--*\u2022-*--*\u25a0\u2022*\nF TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTVTTTTTV\ni SCIENCE Of MANHOOD\nll WELL KNOWN PROFESSOR DEALS\nWITH SUBJECT\n|, QUALITY, NOT QUANTITY IN FAM-.\njj      ILIE8 SHOULD GOVERN\nIt Ib not ao very long ago that the\nword \"eugenics\" was coined to name\nthe science ot race culture\u2014the cultivation of the fittest, says tiie Literary\nDigest. Now what the writer asserts\nto be the first attempt to define the\ngeneral principles of this science as a\nwhole, has just been Issued under the\ntitle of \"Parenthood and Race Culture\"\nby. Dr. Caleb W. Saleeby (London 1909.)\nFrom the basic assumption that there\nIb no wealth but lite and that the culture of the racial lite constitutes our\nvital industry, the author develops his\nsubject In various directions, emptor\n[sizing the Importance of heredity and\n1 education and the part played by avol-d-\nEance of harmful conditions, especially\nthose due to what he calls \"racial poisons\"\u2014alcohol and the like\u2014and dwelling on, the possibility of selection\nthrough marriage. In his Introduction\nDr. Saleeby decries the \"inhuman and\nImpotent\" idea, as be calls it, that we\nmust \"take the world as we find It.\"\nHe says:\ni \"The capital fact of man, as distinguished from the lower animals and\nrom plants, ls tllat lle ioes not have\no take the world aa he finds it, tbat\nhe does not merely adapt himself to\n|hla environment, but that he himself\ns a creator of his world. If our ancestors had taken and left the world as\n:hey found it. we should be little more\n'.ton erected^monkeys today.\"\nWe must do something then, Dr.\nSaleeby thinks, to Improve mankind\nmd to prevent the waste and destruc-\nion of valuable Uvea. Recognizing\nmrenthood as the foundation of all\nace culture, he passes on* to a eulogy\nif motherhood. The reader naturally\nroles next for something on \"raoe sul-\nIde\" and will be rather surprised by\n)r. Saleeby's opinion. We read:\n\"The    professional    and   dedicated\ncachera of morality.* are beginning\no join m that public outcry against\n\u2022tfajit mortality whloh will yet abolish1\nbat; abominable stain upon our time,\nlut tbey are lamentably uninformed,\n-hey do not know, for Instance, tbat\ni high Infant mortality habitually goea\n'Ith a high birth rate not only In hu-\nlan society, but In al) living species;\nnd they have yet to appreciate tiie\nropoBltlon which I have bo often ad-\nanced e\u00bbd which, to me at any rate,\nterns absolutely self evident, that un-\n,1 we have learned bow to keep alive\nll the healthy babies bonk-that Is to\nly not less than 90 per cent ot all the\nantes In the slums lncluded\u2014lt ls\nlonstrous tb cry more, to be similarly\nain. These bewailing! about our raer-\nifully falling birth rate, uncoupled\nlth any attention to the slaughter of\nie children actually boro, are pitiable\ni their blindness and would be lament-\nile if they had any effect\u2014of which\nlere Is fortunately no sign whatever,\nit Indeed the contrary. . .\n\"Quality, not quantity,\" ls apparently\ne watchword of eugenlsts. Not more\nilldren, but better ones. \u2022 Let only the\n*, bexnme parents, save the lives of\nelr offspring, Instead of killing off\n'o-thlrds of them) as we do now, en-\nurage what ls best for man and teach\nm 10 avoid racial poisons, These\nlogs, Dr. Saleeby thinks, are possible\nren a sane public opinion, He writes:\n\"So surely as this belief, the crown-\n! and practical conclusion to whloh\ni tho teachings of modern biology\narergee, comes to life ln men's minds\nsurely the difficulties will be met,\nt only oo paper, but also In practise.\n'Where there's a will* there's a way.'\nMeanwhile men are content to work\nat the impermanent, If not Indeed at\nmeasures which directly war against\nthe selection of the best for parenthood,\nthey do not realize tbe stern necessity\nof obeying Nature in this respect\u2014for\nit is her selection of parents tbat alone\nhaa raised us from the beast and the\nworm and since necessity alone\nwhether inner or outer, whether of\ncharacter or clrcumstnace, ls the mother of Invention, they fall to find the\nmethods by which our ideal can be carried out There is nothing, either ln\nthe character ot the Individual man or\nwoman, or in the structure of society,\nthat makes the Ideal of race culture impossible today,\"\nDr. Saleeby. would not have us think,\nstature or exceptional muscular\nstrength. Even in cases of the\" most\npurely military dominance, it was not\nforce aa such, but discipline and method that, determined success; while\nsome of the greatest soldiers ln history\n-have been physically the smallest . . .\nSelection In human society haa always\nheen, in the main, selection of tbat\nwhich, for. survival value, ls the dominant character of man, mind tn its widest sense. .. . Physical eugenics can by\nno means be Ignored; but.. . . the physical Is of worth only ln so far as It\nserves the psychical, and is worse than\nworthless ln so far as it does not.\"\n. What Ib the prospect that these alms\nof the students ot eugenics shall be\nmeasurably realized, If through the education of public opinion, aB they bops\nto educate It, tbe means of applying\ntheir own methods with some degree\nof * universality shall be given them?\nDr. Saleeby thinks that It Is good. In\nhis concluding chapter, on \"The Promise of Race Culture\" he enumerates,\namong the Immediate benefits to man*\nkind, the Increasing likelihood that a\ntalented father\u2014perhaps even a genius\n\u2014will transmit his qualities to his children; a probable decrease In the number of unemployed, who are now generally unemployable by birth or breeding\nand prevention of cruelty to children.\nFree variation Is by no means to be discouraged, as some of the opponents of\nrace culture have charged. On this\nlast point Dr. Saleeby Bays:\n\"The production of a uniform type\nof man .... ls unattainable because of\nthe existence of what we call variation.\nNo apparatus conceivable would suffice\nto eliminate from every generation\nthose who varied from the accepted\ntype.\n\"In the second place this uniformity\nIs supremely undesirable from the purely evolutionary point of view; because\nIts attainment would mean, the arrest\nof ail progress. All organic evolution,\nas we know, depends upon the struggle\nbetween creatures possessing various\nvariations, which constitute their possessors best adapted or fitted to tbe\nparticular environment. If there is no\nvariation there can be no evolution. To\naim at tbe suppression of variation,\ntherefore, on supposed eugenic grounds\n'which would be involved ln aiming at\nany uniform type of mankind) would\nbe to aim at destroying the necessary\ncondition of all racial progress.\"\nHow high are we to go, then? Have\nwe reached the top of the ladder, so\nthat all that may be done Is to preserve\nand Improve us where we stand, or ls\nthere more or it to scale? Says Dr.\nSaleeby:\n\"There Ib no warrant whatever for\nsupposing that the forces which have\nbrought up thus far are yet exhausted;\nthey have their origin In the Inexhaustible.   Who gazing on the earth of a\nJAMES H. 8CHOFIELD\u2014Who Has Made an Efficient Representative cf Ymlr foi| the Last Three Years and Will Do so During\nthe Next Four.\nHON. THOMAS'TAYLOR\u2014Minister of\nWorks, Whose Election In Revelstoke\nIs Assured.   ,\nwill ever be. What' ape could have predicted man, what reptile the bird, what\nameba the bee? 'There are many\nevents in the womb of time which will\nbe delivered' and the fairest of ber sons\nand daughters are yet to be.\"\nTO RAISE SQUABS HERE\nTWO HUNDRED FINE BIRDS FROM\nHONOLULU.\nMR. KELLOGG ESTABLISHES POULTRY RANCH  ON ARM.\nTwo hundred pigeons, chiefly Car-\nneaiix and homers, Housed in three capacious crates and loaded upoa a delivery wagon, (attracted much attention at tbe corner of Baker and Ward\nstreets lor a lew minutes yesterday\nafternoon. The pigeons.journeyed from\nHonolulu to become tiie nucleus ot a\ncolony at Ayrle's Landing, near Nine-\nmile point, on the West arm, where\ntheir owner, L. K. Kellogg, who recently arrived from Honolulu, has purchased a ranch. From Honolulu to San\nFrancisco the trip was made of course\nby liner, and from San Francisco to\nSeattle by a coast steamer. At the latter city tne Great Northern took charge\nof the twittering crates, and delivered\nthem safely at Nelson. ,i6nlyk,flve, birds\ndied since tlie 200 left Honolulu, ajid\nthey were young ones.\nAccompanying the pigeons were two\ncrates of handsome fowl of the breed\nRhode Island Red.\nMr. Kellogg leaves this morning tor\nhis ranch, where the buildings for his\nfeathered friends are already In existence. He has spent a life time in the\nprofession of poultry fancier and proposes to breed poultry on a large scale\nfor the market in. this district. Mr. Kellogg believes a market can be worked\nup lor squabs, hence his 200 pure bred\npigeons.\nNEWS Of MbOMINiON\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 22\u2014The G.T.P. and\nCanadian Northern railways wlli join\n\u2022together ln opposing the demands of\ntbe engineers and firemen of, these\nroads for increase in pay.\nSWAN RIVER, Man., Nov. 22\u2014Ernest Richards attempted to light a lire\nwith gasoline instead of coal oil and\nwas terribly burned and will probably\ndie. His house was also destroyed hy\nfi\u2122.       kUulH^\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 22 \u2014 A report was\ncirculated in the city on Friday that\nAmbrose Leplne, Riel's lieutenant during tbe stirring times In the northwest,\nhad died at tho home of his daughter\nat Grand Point. The report turns out\nto be untrue as Leplne ie still alive but\nhis condition ls said to li\u00a9 critical. Le-\nplne's grand daughter died, which was\nthe cause of the mistake.\nhowever, that the eugenlst regards man\nonly ss an animal. In a d apter on the\n\"Selection cf Mind,\" he asiiures ua that\nalthough the body Is syjl necessary,\nall the modifications thai have taken\nplace Id It since our simian forebears\npoint to something hlghet\u2014the erect\nattitude, the disappearance of the defensive covering, the disuse of certain\nmuscles, and the Increasing value of\nskill ss opposed to strength, and so im.\nIn fact, he asserts that mind has been\ndominant throughout humin history.\n\"There Is no record ot any race that\nestablished iltself In virtue of peat\nhundred million years ago, could have\npredicted life\u2014could have recognized tn\nthe forces then at work and the matter in which tbey were displayed, the\npromise and potency of all terrestrial\nlife? Who, contemplating life at a\nmuch later stage, even later mammalian, could have seen in the simian the\nprophecy of man? Who, examining the\nearliest nervous ganglia, could have\nforeseen the human cerebrum? The\nfoot that we can imagine nothing higher\nthan ourselves, that we make even our\ngods In our own Image, otters no warrant for supposing that nothing higher\nIS LEAVING FERNIE.\nRev. R. S. Wilkinson, Rector of Christ\nChurch, Resigns Charge.\n{Special to The Daily News.)\nFERNIE, B. C, Nov. 22.\u2014William\nPowell, president of District 18, United\nMine Workers ot America, returned to\ntown yesterday morning trom Edmonton and other northern points. He reports good progress being made in ail\nthe districts visited in the organization work of the great union he so ably\nrepresents.\nRev. R. s. Wilkinson, rector of\nChrist church (Anglican), has announced his intention of resigning his\ncharge here In order to accept a call\nIn one of the coast cities. Mr. Wilkinson has been stationed here for the,,\nlast three years, and ln that time has\nbuilt up a large congregation and\ngreatly Improved the financial condition of the church, and his departure\nwill be regretted by all classes In the\ncommunity. His successor has not yet\nbeen appointed.\nThe Curling club held a well attended\nmeeting on Friday night at which the\nskips for the various rinks were elected\nfor the season.\nDIE8 AT WANETA\nMrs. Adle, Mother of Fruit Pest Inspector, Passes Away\nfSwclal to The Dally News.)\nWANETA, Nov. 22\u2014Again death has\nremoved a member of this community.\nMrs. Joan Adle, mother of Fred Adle.\nfruit pest Inspector, passed peacefully\naway on Friday evening.\nThe late Mrs. Adle, who was 78\nyears old, received ln the death of her\nbrother a few 'days ago a severe shock\nwhich Uer advanced age and falling\nhealth were unable to recuperate. Mrs.\nAdle was one ef the oldest residents of\nthe valley having resided here since\n1893. The funeral took place today,\nthe settlers coming long distances to\npay a last tribute of respect to the de-\nTROUBLE LOOKED FOR\nAMERICAN MARINES WILL BE 8ENT\nTO NICARAGUA.\nFOUR   HUNDRED   WILL   SAIL   ON\nSATURDAY NEXT.\nWASHINGTON, Nov. ^.-Preparations\nare being- made for -100 marines to sail\nfrom Philadelphia either, tor the canal\nzone or for Nicaraugua next Saturday.\nThis will constitute' the tirst armed force\nto land in Nicaragua, Expected developments In the situation there in the next\nfew days require this course.\nThe depanure ot, the ma- ines came as\na result of rush orders sent to the League\nIsland navy yard after the state department received the prelim.nary report* of\nthe slaying by president Zalaya'B o.dor\nof two men. It had been intended to send\nthe marinas to Panama to relieve about\n380 marines on duty there.\nThe date of the departure from Philadelphia had been set for i>ec. 1, by which\ntime the troop ali.p Prairie would have\nbeen ready to sail. By working night and\nday the League island force will be ut>1<!\nto finish repairs on the ship by Nov, Zi,\nand that date has now been set for the\nsailing of the marines.\nSecretary Meyers of the naval department will go to Philadelphia on Saturday\nto review tnem, as lie intended to do even\nbefore war clouds appeared in Central\nAmerica.\nIn event of necessity the 3S0 marines\nnow on the canala zone would be u:illzed\nin Nicaragua In add.tlon to the 400 to be\ntaken south by the p.airle. With the\ntroop ship Buffalo on the Pacifict coast\nand the Prairie oh the Atlantic the marines\ncould be transferred from one cons: of\nNicaragua to the other in comparatively\nshoit time by way of the Panama railroad.\nRear Admiral Gnleire was at the naw\ndepartment today but In no instance was\nit admitted that his presence there had\nto do with the trouble in Nicaragua. Rear\nAdmiral Wainwrlght, Rear Admiral Swift\nand Rear Admiral Evans were visitors at\nthe department.\nAt the Theater.\nThe show for the.next two days at \u00bbh\u00ab\nArcade Is perhaps the strongest yet uuf\nup in the city. The basis for saying *h's\nIs exemplified In the picture entitled \"The\nGun Boat.\" The reel Introduced a .mm\nboat cutting: its wny through the turbulent\nwaters of the Bay of Biscay, The vessel,\nas it plows its way through waves mountains high, keeps the audience guessing\nas to the possibilities of tier pulling\nthrough. The scene Ib splendid and distinct from anything seen before. \"Caribou\nHunting In Newfoundland\" is well put on\n, R. ROSS\u2014The Man Whom   Fernle\nJ During the Next Four Years.\nand includes a splendid portrayal of\nShakespeare's \"As You Like It.\" Humorous subjects are \"Hiding the Dinner\" and\n\"A Fake Doctor.\" A good dramatic, \"The\nCoal Miner's Daughter,\" and an interesting scenic subject \"The Crocodile Hunt.\"\nwhich is positively a genuine picture.\nThe feature subject at the Gem theatre\ntonight in one that will lnteiest everyone.\nIt shows Commander Peary arriving at\nSydney, X. S., on his return from the\nnorth pole and his reception. The photography Is exceptionally clear and gives a\nsplendid view of the Intrepid explorer and\nhis family on board his ship, the Roosevelt,\nand also showing the entire crew that accompanied him on his successful search\nfor the pole. \"An Assortment of Aeroplanes\" is a very Interesting sat of views\ntaken in France by Path Freres, showing\nall the different models from the time of\nHenry Farmer's llrst aeroplane In 1907 up\ntill the present. The picture shows Bleriot,\nthe daring French  aviator, meeting w th\nyears ago, was directed today by attorney general Wlckersham upon 'the re- j\ncommendation of United States district\nattorney Baker and witli the concurrence of postmaster general Hitchcock.\nMurderer Electrocuted.\nAUBURN, N. Y., Nov. 22.\u2014Theodore\nRizze, who brutally murdered two children in a lonely culvert in the city of\nUtica on Sunday night, September 12,\nwas put to death in tlie electric chair\nin Auburn prison at 6:15 this morning.\nThe execution was the thirty-sixth to\ntake place ln Auburn prison and was\npronounced by the prison officials as\nsuccessful.\nSuppressing Opium Traffic\nPBKIN, Nov. 22\u2014Offflcial .reports received at tbe British offices throughout\nChina show that progress Is being1 made\nin the suppression of the traffic in\nopium in all of the 18 provinces. The\ncampaign has been most successful\nthrough the northern coast and least\nsuccessful in the mountainous di-stricts\nof Ihe west.\nWILLIAM HUNTER\u2014Whom  the People of Slocan Will Again Send $\nto the Legislature to Represent Them. *|\n\u2022\u2666WW*-W*\u00ab\u00abWW*WW*t*W+tHH-HH**WW*?\nand very interesting. \"Tragic Love\" is\nparticularly fine, as are nearly all blograph Pictures, and this one is no excep-\nHon to the rule. \"Dropped from the\nClouds\" Is something after the impossible,\nand reflects great credit on the operator.\n\"The Legend of the Lighthouse\" brings\nthe show to an end. The plot in this reel\nle thrilling, and if one cares for the melodramatic, his palate will be sufficiently\ntickled with this picture. The usual matinee at 2.30 o'clock this afternoon.\nMiss Jeanne Russell, who left such a\ngood Impression with Nelson Dlayswrs In\nthe preSentotlon, of \"Cousin Jf' jg\nTuesday night ast, will be seen here\n23!. fhls\" evening 'in another,* Ethel\nBarrymore'fl successes, \"Sunday- The\nfull strength of the Jeanne Russell company will be seen in this production, there\nbeing three members who \"re not required\nfor \"Cousin . Kate.\" A complete \u25a0wnto\nproduction is carried and great attention\ngiven to detail, which Is a feature vim\nMIsb Russell's company.\nMuch appreciation Is being shown In the\nexcellence of the programs that are being\nput on at the Empire theatre, not only\nIn the subjects but In the manner they\nare shown on the screen. The orchestra\nlately Installed ie also greatly \"PD^\u2122*^;\nThe proigra;    \"  \"\nnn accident at the start of one of his trial\nflights* from which he luckily escaped unhurt. \"The Lust Days of Pompeii\" Is a\nfine dramatization of the famous novel\nby that name, and is correctly staged and\ncostumed by the Ambroslo Film company\nof Italy. \"The Nature Fakir Comes to\nGrief\" is a fine comic picture, showing the\ntroubles of a bug-hunter. \"Dear Old\nGrandma,\" Is a good dramatic subject.\nMabelle Boccasini will sing \"Oh, Miss\nMalinda.\"\nFeatherweights Fight\nMEMPHIS, Nov. 22\u2014Abe Attell, the\nfeatherweight champion, will meet\nJimmy Moran, of Brooklyn before the\nPhoenix athletic club here tonight to\ngo eight rounds, the legal limit The\n\u2022menf are to weigh ln at 122 pounds at\n6 p.m.\nIndictment is Dismissed\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 22\u2014Dismissal\nof the indictment against William Gordon Crawford, once deputy auditor for\nthe postofflce department, who was prosecuted as a result of the sweeping in-\nFive Volcanoes In Eruption\nTENERIPF, Nov. 22\u2014The fifth crater has opened und the five volcanoes\nare throwing out great quantities of\nlava. The explosions, however, have\ncuassed and the population which has\nbeen in the interior for seveial days\nis slightly calmer.\nDeserted by Comrades.\nCOBALT, Ont., Nov. 22.\u2014The body\nof George Spence, an old man with a\nfamily near Toronto, has been found\nin the water near a small lake. Ho\nhad been drinking and was left behind by comrades who were on tlie\nway to work In the Maple mountains.\nENDS KIJJNtY MISERY\nMAKES   YOUR   OUT-OF-ORDER   KIDNEYS ACT FINE\nFEW   DOSES   END   MOST   SEVERE\nBACKACHE AND  BLADDER  MISERY\nIf you take several doses of Pape's\nDiuretic, all backache and d .stress from\nout-or-ordi-r kidneys or bladd-i r trouble\nwill vaplslL, and you will feel fine.\nLame back, painful studies, rheumatism*\nnervous headache, dizziness, l.rltahlllty,\nsleeplessness, inflamed or swollen eyelids,\nworn-out, sick feeling nnd Other symptoms\nof sluggish, Inactive kidneys disappear.\nI7ncoiiiruliable, smarting, frequent urinations (especially at n gut) and all bladder\nmisery ends.\nFeeling miserable nnd worried is needless, because this unusual preparation goes\nat once to the disordered kidneys, bladder\niiinl urinary system and distributes Its\nhealing, cleansing and vitalising Influence\ndirectly upon the organs nnd glands affected, and completes the cure before vou\nrealize It.\nThe moment you suspect uny kidney or\nurinary d'sorder or feel rheumatism pains,\nbegin taking this harmless medicine, with\nthe knowledge that there Is no other remedy at any price, made anywhere else In\nthe world, which will effect so thorough\nand prompt a cure ns a fifty-cent tieat-\nment of Pape's Diuretic, which any druggist can supply.\nYour physician, pharmacist, banker or\nnny mercantile agency will tell you thnt\nPape, Thompson & Pape, of Cincinnati, is\na large concern, thoroughly worthy of\nyour confidence.\nOnly curative* results can come from\ntaking Pape's Diuretic, and a few days'\ntreatment means clean, active, healthy\nkidneys, bladder and urinary -organs\u2014and\nno backache.\nThe old, old story, told times without\nnumber, and repeated ovor and over again\nfor the last 36 yeara, but It is always a\nwelcome story to those In search of health\n\u2014There Is nothing in the world that cures\ncoughs and colds as quickly as Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. Sold by all druggists and dealers.\nMlnard's Llnament Cures Distemper.\n t^mmm\nMM nun\nChe gfeiitg \u00aeexv*\n^ebV -fefl\n\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb*MM MM'+\u00bb\u00ab\u2666\u00ab I tM>W\u00abMMttit>MMMIM\u00bb\u00ab*\u00bb\u00bb\nil *    -. T\nI\nClothing for Boys\ni  Hete Ate Some Snaps\nBoys'or Girls'Reefers in navy serge,\nwith brass buttons, at $2.50, $3.00,\n$3.50 and tip to........ ..$5.00\nBoys' heavy Irish Frieze JReefers with\nstorm collars and lined with heavy\ntweed; at.........;..$3.25 and $3.75\n;; Red River Coats for hoys and girls,\nwith hoods, and lined with red\nflannel.......... .....$5.00 only\n: The Hudson's Bay Stores\nii \u201e*****!******\n.*******************************************************\nImperial Bank of Canada\nHEAD OFFICE, TORONTO\nCapital Authorized   J10.000.000\n* Capital   hid  Up   15,000,001)     Reserve Fund  $5,000,000\nO. tl. WILKIE, President HON. ROBT. JAFFRAY, Vice-Pro.\nBRANCHES IN BRITISH COLUMBIA!\nArrowhead, Cranbrook, Fernle, Golden, Kamloope, Michel, New Michel,\nHoyle,  Neleon, Reveletoke, Vancouver and Victoria,\nSAVINGS DEPARTMENT\nInterest allowed en deposlte at current rate from date of deposit\nNELSON BRANCH J. M. LAY, Manager.\nCanadian Bank of Commerce\nHEAD OFFICE, TORONTO ESTABLISHED 1857\nB. E. WALKER, President. Reserve Fund     0,000,000\nALEXANDER LAIRD, Gen. Man.     Paid-up Capital   110,000,000\nTRAVELLERS' CHEQUES\nTbe new Travellers' Cheques recently Issued hy this Bank are a\nmost convenient way ln which to carry money when travelling. They\nare Issued In denominations ot 910, $20, (50,1100 and $200 and the exact\namount payable In Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Great\nBritain, Holland, Italy, Norway,.Russia, Sweden and Switzerland ls stated on the face of each cheque, while tn other countries tbey are payable\nat current rates.\nThe cheques and all information regarding them may be obtained\nat every office of the bank.      ,\nNELSON BRANCH \u2022\u00bb\u25a0 L. BUCHAN, Manager\nBANK Of MONTREAL\n(EetaMlshM 1117)\nBwttal All Paid Up ....|14,4W,0M    Beat\t\nHEAD OFFICE MONTREAL\nIL Ha*. Lard Strathcona and Mount Royal, O. C. M. *. Hal.\nHan. Blr. George Drummond, K. C. M. 0., Prealdent\nSir Edward S. Clouston, Bart, Vice President and Gen. Ml\n\u2022RANCH!* IN BRITISH COLUMBIA\nArmatreng, Enderby, Greenwood,   Kelowna,   Nstoea,   Naw\nNleela, Naw Weetmlneter. Heasland, Summerlamf, Vanocnvor,\nV eterla, Chillawack, Heamar\nNBLSON BRANCH L. B. BEVIBER,\nThe Royal Bank of Canada\nINCORPORATED 1tM.\nCapital    Vt,800,000     Reserve    15,500,000\nTotal Aeseta \u00bb68fl00,P0O .r\u2014*-\nA general banking business transacted.   Savings Bank Department\nat all offices.\nSavings Bank Department at all\noffices. Interest allowed on deposits of one dollar and upwards\nat highest current ratea, com*\npounded halt yearly. Money may\nbe withdrawn without delay.\nNelson Branch\nWe receive Accounts of Corpora,\ntlons, firms and Individual on fa- .\nvorable terms and shall be pleased\nto meet or correspond with those\nwho contemplate making changes\nor opening new accounts.\nA. B. NETHERBY, Manager\nThe New\nRalph Connor Book\nThe Foreigner la the title ot the\nnew Halph Connor book.\nWe have It Prloe in. clod $1.50.\nSpecial Qltt Edition, limp leather binding, $2.60.\nW. G. THOMSCSNfK,,^\nBooksellar and Station*!-\n\u00a9He s\u00abUa |Uw*e\nPublished at Nelson Every Morning\nExcept Monday, by\nNawa Publishing Company, Limited\nW.*0. McMORRIS   Manager\nSubject to Market Fluctuations\nWe Offer for Sale\n1000-4000 American Canadian Oil  \u2022\u2022!  .11%\n100-300 B. C. Copper.1 \u2022 .**.' \u2022 \u2022'\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022   W0\n' MO Conetfidatad SmeWwa    86.00\n1000-8000 Diamond Coal' '\u2022\u2022\u2022' ,2\n600-1000 International Coal     .86\n1000-3000 McGllllv-aay Creek Coal     ...... Oder\nWe.deel In all. Western.securities.   We will consider an exchange of any\nmarketable stock.\nMIGHTON &CAVANAUCH\n*..:..-* BftOKERS    .***.***--\nNELSON, 3. C. ;fHONB110\n.   .-ut gjli'Mwa *&i:M.M&L\"\nTHE KOOTENAYS AND THE\nBOUNDARY\nThe day after tomorrow the people\nof the Kootenays and the Boundary will\nbe called upon to decide who shall represent them in the legislature during\nthe next four yearB. For the eleven\nseaita ln this portion of the. province\nthere are all told 30 candidates. The\ngovernment forces present an unbroken\nfront with a strong man running In\nevery constituency. The socialists\ncome next with men la the field ln nine\nconstituencies, in eight of whloh there\nare three-cornered fights. Following\nthe socialists come the liberals with a\nman in each of eight ridings, while the\nlist ia completed by two independents.\nIn eight out of the eleven seats there\nare three men Io the field, ln six oases\na conservative, a liberal and a socialist,\nand in two, a conservative, tun independent and a socialist. Of the throe other\nseats 'the fight ia In two cases bet\/ween\na conservative and a liberal and ln the\nother between a conservative and a socialist.\nThe constituencies In which there are\nthree-cornered contests between men\nrepresenting each of the three political\nparties are Nelson. Rossland, Grand\nForks, Qreenwood, Cranbrook and Fernle. In Slocan and Revelstoke the con-\nteat is between representatives of the\nconservative and socialist parties and\nindependents. In Columbia and Kaslo\nthe Hght in each: case is between a conservative and a liberal, while In Tmir\na socialist only is opposing the sitting\nconservative member.\nAit the start it will be seen that the\nconservatives have decidedly the 'best\nof it in having a man In every constituency. The liberals admit defeat right\nat the outset iby tailing ta nominate\nmen In three of the eleven ridings,\nwhile it ls acknowledged by the socialists that possibly ln only two ridings\nhave they even the slightest expectation ot success.\nBut apart from this advantage which\nthe government forces enjoy in this\npart of the province, the party has also\nbeen remarkably fortunate dn the\nchoice of its candidates. All are men\nwhom even their opponents are forced\nto admit would make good members of\nthe legislature. In fact seven of the\neleven have already served ln the legislature and have already shown their\ncapabilities ln this direction, while the\nother four can be counted upon to give\nequally good satisfaction if sent to\nVictoria to lepresent their respective\ndistricts during the next four years. Of\nthe liberals' who are seeking election\nnot one -has had any parliamentary ex-\nperience and the same can be said ofl\nthe two Independents. One ot the socialists represented the constituency\nwhich he Is now contesting in the last\nlegislature but his services during that\ntime give him not the slightest claim\nfor re-elfectlon.\nThe conservatives who are seeking\nreelection aire Hon. Thomas Taylor,\nhonored by his leader since the last\nelection by being made minister of\npublic works, In Revelstoke, Mr. H. G.\nParson in Columbia, Mr. William Hunter In Slocan, Mr. Neil P. Mackay ln\nKaslo, Mr. James H. Schofield in Ymir,\nand Mr, W. R. Ross In Fernle, while\nMr. Harry Wright, who sat for Ymlr\nduring'the flrst term of the McBrlde\ngovernment, is this time seeking the\nsuffrages ot the people of Nelaon. The\nnew men ln the field on the conservative side are Mr. J. R. Jackson ln\nGreenwood, Mr,, Ernest Miller In Grand\nForks, Mr. W. R. Braden in Rossland,\nand Mr. Thomas Caven In Cranbrook.\nBesides their individual fitness for\nthe position to which they aspire, tbe\nconservative candidates have an especially strong claim on the suffrages ot\nthe people of their respective constituencies, they are appealing to the public\nas supporters ot the McBrlde government and of premier McBrlde's progressive railway policy which, means so\nmuch to the opening up of this country.\nDuring the six years: that It has been\nln office the McBrlde government has\ngiven the people good ant honest gov\nernment, has done much to assist in de*\nveloplng the country by opening large\ntracts of land for settlement, building\nroads, trails and bridges and now, having done, this, is submitting to the' people of the province a railway policy\nwhich means the opening of still great,\ner tracts of country, at the same time\nproviding the railway competition tor\nwhich the province has languished for\nyears. \u25a0\"\u2022\u25a0\nProbably no part of the whole province has benefitted more from ithe\ngovernment's policy in regard to the\nopening up ot the country and the building of loads, trails, bridges, etc, than\nthe Kootenays and the Boundary. Hun-\ndreds upon hundreds of thousands ofl\ndollars have Been spent in this way In\nthis part of the province during the\npast six years, even witli the limited\nmeans at the disposal ot the government for works of this kind, While\nthis Is true it is also true that no part\nof British Columbia will benefit more\nfrom the oarrying into effect of premier McBride's railway policy than the\nKootenays and the Boundary, particularly the latter and the southern portion of the former, for the construction\not the Kettle Valley railway from Midway ito Nicola wil give the direct rail\nconnection between this part of the\ncountry and the coast so long desired,\nwhich will mean not only a; large saving in time for anyone desiring to visit\nVancouver or Victoria, but also a cut\nIn many oases ot more than halt in\nfreight and passenger rates.\nA vote for any one of the eleven conservative condldates im the Kootenays\nand the Boundary means an expression'\nof approval of the good work done by\nthe government ln the past and a request for a continuance of that policy\nas welt as the Immediate construction\nof a direct line of railway to the coast;\na vote for any of the liberal, socialist\nor independent candidates is a vote\nagainst all of these. Of the result of\nThursday's polling there should, therefore, be no doubt Every cne of the\neleven seats in the Kootenays and the\nBoundary should elect a supporter of\nthe government And unless all signs\ntail each will.\nEDITORIAL NOTES\nMcBrlde and four yeurs more of\nstable government\nMr. James H. Schofield has faithfully\nrepresented Ymlr during the past three\nyears and will do the same during the\ncoming four. \/\nTbe gratifying receptions which Mr.\nWilliam Hunter has been accorded at\nall points visited In the course of hts\ncampaign in Slocan makes his election\ncertain.\nAre you going to vote for Mr. Harry\nWright and Immediate railway construction, or Mr. E. A. Crease and indefinite delay in regard to railway construction?\nFernle needs Mr. W. R. Ross in the\nlegislature during the next four yeara\nand the province as a whole wants him,\nso there should be no doubt of the result in that constituency.\nThe electors of-Greenwood can count\nupon it that Mr. J. R. Jackson, the moment he is elected, will not pull up his\n-stakes and leave hiis constituency unrepresented as did the late member.\nA vote for Mr. Harry Wright is a\nvote for Premier McBride and his railway policy; a vote for Mi Crease Is a\nvote for Mr. John Oliver and against\nthe government's railway policy. Which\nIs it going to be?\nNeither Mr. John Oliver nor Mr. F. C.\nWade have yet come forward with that\n1100 which theyowe the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital. Perhaps they are too\nbusy electioneering these dayB to attend to a little matter like that.\nCompare conditions in this provinoe\nsix years ago with what they are today\nand ask yourself whether the government hasn't preyed Itself worthy of the\nconfidence which was then placed ln\nit.\nA part of the government's policy Is\nthe construction of a trunk road\nthtpugh East Kootenay from Kootenay\n-Landing to th$ Alberta boundary hy\nway of the Oroyt't Neat Pass, the work\non which is at present wall under way.\nThe question tor the people of East\nofKootenay to answer In* marking their\nballots Is whether they approve of thla\nput ol the government's policy and\nwhether they -desire the work completed with the least possible delay as It\nwill he If the government Is sustained.\nFor some reason or other the liberals\nare making a dead set on Mr. Thomaa\nCaven In Cranbrook but his friends are\nrallying to his support in magnificent\nstyle and will place him at the head by\nthe largest majority in the history of\nthe constituency.\nMr. E. A. Crease has not up to the\npresent advanced a single reason why\nthe people of Nelson should sacrifice\ntheir interests at this stage of the city's\ndevelopment by electing him a member\not the legislature. And the day after\ntomorrow is election day.\nCoast advices say that Mr. John Oliver ls certain of defeat in Victoria and\nthat he has very little chance of election even In his own constituency of\nDelta. In this connection It Is worthy\not note that In the Dominion elections\na year ago Delta gave tho conservative\ncandidate a majority of over 200 votes.\nRossland has twice made the mistake\nof electing an opposition member on\ntbe strength of promises which have\nnever heen fulfilled; This time it will\nelect a supporter of the government In\nthe person of Mr. W. R. Braden whom\nthey know will look after their interests faithfully and well.\nAdvices from the coast are to the'effect that Victoria Is again* going to send\na solid four to the legislature to support the McBrlde government and that\nVancouver Ib going to go. the capital\none better by sanding over five. What\nls the matter with the Kootenays and\nthe Boundary combining and going both\not them just a little better by sending\na solid eleven? r\nMr. Nell F. Mackay would have received the well-deserved honor of an\nelection* by acclamation if tbe wishes of\nthe people of Kaslo had been respected,\nhut a contest was forced upon the elec-.\ntors of that constituency by liberal poll-\ntlclans tn this city. The result tbe day\nafter tomorrow will be an answer to\noutside interference in the local affairs\nof the constituency.\nGrand Fbrks has been represented\nby a socialist member during the past\nthree years, but will not make that\nmistake again. This time the people\not Grand Forks will elect Mr. Ernest\nMiller and In doing so will declare their\nconfidence In the McBrlde government\nand their desire for the carrying into\neffect of a railway policy that means\nmuch to the future of that city.\nThe people of Revelstoke should have\nmo trouble ln malting their choice on\neleotlon day. On the one -hand they\nhave In Hon. Thomas Taylor a minister\not the crown, who has already rendered\nhia constituents valuable service, and\non the other two men, one of whom\nclaim-} to he an Independent and would\nnot, from his own statements, It elect,\ned, know on which side of the house\nto take his seat, while the other has\nabsolutely ao chance of success, but,\nTUESDAY ....\nNOVEMBER \u00bb\n^ammtstmrntm\nFred Irvine & Co.\nSpecial Sale for One Week\nLadies Tate Made Suits,\nWinter Coats, Skirts, Capes\nCommencing Monday next we will\nsell our complete stock of ladies' tailor\nmades at prices cut almost in two.\nAll latest style suits, skirts and coats\nfor this season.\nWe have any size suit from 32 to 44\nin this lot.\nWe advise an early selection while\nstock and sizes are complete.\nThese are all special bargains during\nthe sale.\nFred Irvine & Co.\nwho, even It he had, could only hope to\njoin with one or two other socialist\nmembers in occasionally kicking up a\nfuss in the house.\nMr. H. G. Parson ls putting up a winning fight for reelection tn Columbia,\nalthough he was called out of the constituency in the middle ot the campaign\nthrough the aad and unexpected bereavement which he suffered through\nthe death ot his son at the coast The\npeople of Columbia, however, appreciate Mr. Parson's mat. services and\nare anxious (or u continuance ot them.\nRailroads Oet the Lemon\nLOS ANGELES, Nov. 22\u2014The lemon\ngrowers ot southern California woo the\nfirst point in their contest with the\nrailroads to prevent ai raise In freight\nrates on lemons here today when Judge\nW. J. Morrow of the United States circuit court overruled demurrers interposed by the railroad companies.   The i\nlemon growers seek to enjoin the railroads from putting a proposed raise on\nthe lemon rates Into effect and the *\nhearing today was on an application to\nmake   a  temporary Injunction.   The\nrailroad demurred on the ground that i\nthe court was without jurisdiction.\n.-\u00a3#MM\nThe Wrong Glass\nIf your present glasses fail to give you ease and cmfort, there's\nsomething wrong.   Is it your glasses or your eyes ?\nTHAT'S A VITAL QUESTION WITH YOU\nEither is bad enough, and should bring you to us at once. We\nlike to discover unusual eye defects, the kind that puzzle die\naverage optician.\nGLASSES RIGHT, GOOD SIGHT\nHandbags\nWe have just received a supply direct from the manufacturers,\nprices ranging from $1 50 to $18.00. Now is the time to get\nyour choice.\nWe make a specialty of fine watch repairing. N Mail orders\npromptly attended to.\nJ. J. Walker <\u00b0' **\u00bb *\u2022\nGraduate Optician and Jeweler\nlo iotWin ,oibA (lEot .i-.li. | wt3l.1I an'dloif laiil talmnw* .ml \u00bb\u2022\u2022\u25a0\u2022   I'M\nolg   io  ptwtv m  ii*jiiii. i\u00bbi)Snoo!80 \u2022 .Jaii*\"\"1! <|* \u2022-\u25a0>\"\u25a0\"\"'\u2022\"*\u2022'*,''. \"\" \u25a0**'\n \u00bb.)\nTUESDAY   NOVEMBER \u00bb\ntftte 9MU-9 Slcwfi\nPH\nDM\nHOmAMHVUSOTAIMV\nHUME-D. P. Qreenshields, Lalnto; O.\nfi. Brown, Hamilton; C. D. Griffin. Chl-\n\u2022cago; G. R. Northey, Creston; P. C.\nManning, L. P. Stranahan, Calgary; D.\nIlllquhart, Montreal; Newton W. Emmons.\nTrout Lake; C. Eckford Dalnett, Arrow\nLakea; A. M. Johnson, Kamloons; B. B.\nAndrews, Jr., Edgewood; G. H. Hull, T.\nH. Crump, Grand Forks; E. T. Ross,\nHowser; W. S. Ribbet. Bhoreacres; j. B.\n\"Wlnlaw. Wlnlaw; J. S. Alrheart, Alnsworth; M, Cantlon, Crescent Valley; J. E.\n\u25a0Read. Erie; C. S. I&ngUte, W. R. Pool\nand wife, Salmo; R. Neven, Victoria; J,\nID. Cteverhlll, C. L. 'White, R. B. Pyke,\nVancouver; F. S. Hammond and wife.\nLethbrldge; G. Weaver Loper, B. Weaver,\nSpokane; Frank Mason, Alaska; E. Berg-\nland, Moyie; J. H. Lavailer, Orillla; D.\nL. Wilson, Santa Crux, Cal.\n8TRATHC0NA-T. I. Anderson and wife,\nVancouver; D. Roach, Calgary; A. B.\nWatts, Wattshurg; W. B. Cooke, Kaslo;\nO. G. Smart, Spokane; C. V. Jones, city.\nQueen's Hotel\n' Baker Street\nA. LAPOINTE, Proprietor\nRates: $1.60 to (2.00 per day.\nSpecial ratea to City Boarden,\nQUEENS\u2014T. Greenwader, Harrop; T. L.\nMcAllister, Sandon; T. Gl. Macleod, Creston; J. J. Fruci, J. 3. Loswen, Ottawa.\nGRAND CENTRAL-F. Hannell, Kokanee; J. H. Hyde, G. Cartwrlght. Creston; M. Talt, ymlr; T. Fletcher, city.\nThe Royal Hotel\nMrs. L. V. Roberta, PraprlatraM\nOor. Stanley and Bllioa Sts.\nElectrlo Piano\nFree carriage or bus from all\nboats and trains.\nRatal, ll and 11.50 per day.\n\"\u00bb\u25a0 \u25a0 i * * \u25a0   ' * \u25a0   \"\u25a0.\nROTAL-K. llllngworth, Kingston; D. E.\nArm-strong, Crane Lake, Sask.; 8. Satter*-\n-walte. New York; O. Royal, Rossland; J.\nJ. Thompson. Arrowhead.\nTremont House\nBeta 8fc, Nairn\nMains Ib TmUlus, Puss,\n\u25a0annaa Han. no. \u2022*\nFUo.llJSsndllJI\n\u25a0PHIAL BATBS FIR MONTH\nTREMONT-M. Hastings, Slocan; W. J.\nlyan ---'*- * **\u25a0-'\u25a0**\u25a0\u2014 \u25a0\"\u2022-.*\"\u00ab d-i-k*\nVifit\nTKHiMUrtX\u2014so. tlBBiinga,  oiucai'*   vy.  -J\n' Ttyan, Trail; J. Laldlaw, Kaslo; C. Bright\n-Virden.\nThe Klondyke Hotel\nVernon Strest\nHeadquarters (or miners, smel-\ntermen, loggers, railroad man.\nRates: $1.00 per day up.\nNELSON 4 JOHNSON, Props.\nKLONDYKE-N. Jensen, Minneapolis; N.\nJohnson, Rossland; K. -Amsendsen, Trail.\nLi.keview Hotel\nCorunr Rill ud Vernon Kml\nN. MALLITTI, Prtprltim\ni wo block* trom dtr wtart.\nTha Nat dollar a dv kowt ta\n.Nelson.\nAll White Holp.\nLAKEVIEW\u2014B. Montmorency, Montreal; R. .Llsdale, Hamilton; B. Konsence.\nSpokane; A* Marks, Upper Bonnington;\nB. Burnaby, Fernle,\n, WBLSON-S. W. Brawn, Spokane; C.\nAvray, P. Smith, B. E. Smith, A. S.\n\u25a0'- Clute, A. Erlckson, Marcus; J. Kllllan,\nNorth port; T. Benson, J. Brown, p. McLean, Cranbrook; R. Rule, Daysland, Alta,\n\u2022C. Langley, Revelstoke.\nBARTLBTT-S. Wills, Blue Bell; H.\nBarton, Creston; T. Amett, Granite mine.\nSHERBROOKE\u2014A, Klnnunen, Spokane;\nWl. B. Hughes. Lardo; N. Aostko, N.\nflwlsuh, M. Conto, Gutelius; M. Dlorkskl,*\n\"Wlnlaw; 3, Lanton'nk, Greenwood; J. Ord,\nKasio. '\u25a0\u25a0 ,   .\nCLTJB-B, Oiane, Alnsworth; Y. Dugffan.\nOillllwack; F. Benjamin, Moyle;rP. 011-\n\u25a0\u2022'\u25a0 more. .Tacoma.-\n.li-SW    .o'-> islauaiT neste'el ol rnuls'i iol    I\nMadden House\nThos. Madden, Prop.   Baker St\nW*ll furnished rooma with hath\nBeBt Board in the City\nA Comfortable Home\nMADDEN-R. W. Perduca, Trail; J. D.\nKennedy, Revelstoke! C. Reamer, Summit;\nD. A. Middleman Burton; Mrs. McVlcar,\nMlsa Isabel, Slocan; Mrs. w. Jacobs, proctor;. F. Donnelly. Kaslo: Mrs. A. Tallon,\nTrout lake;  W.  Mulbolland, Vancouver,\nSILVER KING-B. Wilson. Willow\nPoint.  . *\nKOOTENAT\u2014P. Amaud, Edmonton; O.\nMurdoch, Winnipeg; ' D. Rasmussin, T.\nOutfitter, Trail; A. Ruby, K. Otto, Ross-\nlaud.\nFRANCE   DEPOPULATED\nFRENCH PAPER ATTRIBUTES THE\nCAU8E TO  REVOLUTION\nABOLITION OP PRIMOGENITURE IS\nGREAT INJURY\n\"Give me children, or I die,\" Ib the\nRachel ory of France, There are armiea\nto be raised, navies to do manned, fields\nto be tilled, factories to be worked, and\nstill the cry goes up, wheie are the men?\nThe worst of It ls that France is 1-kely to\nbe crowded out ot Europe by competing\nnationalities. Thus the Solell, Paris, declares:\n\"Statistics prove that France Is being\ngradually depopulated. It Is not necessary\nto advance arguments ln BUpport of this\nfact. Every publlo return shows that In\na certain time we shall be crowded out by\nrival nationalities, moat probably by Germany, whose population increases in proportion as ours dwindles. Thus It Is that\nFrance must go.  This is the brutal truth.\"\nThis Ultramontane and Royalist Journal\nlays all the blame on the Fiench revolution. France at one time took the lead\ntn Its growth of population. What has\ncaused tbe change?\n\"It Is only since the revolution that we\nhave begun, little by little, to degenerate,\nto decrease, to perish. It Is the revolution\nthat ls responsible for the frightful Inferiority which marks our present condition. Before the revolution we were the\nvanguard of the nations, now we are far\nbehind.\"\nThis passionate complant ot the great\nreligious organ of France finds a mournful confirmation In the columns of the\nTemps, Paris, which haB long been considered the ministerial organ, the counterpart of the London Times on the other\naide of the channel. In this powerful and\nInfluential Journal we are told:\n\"There ls no more sickening problem\nand none that Is more battling than the\ndecreasing birth-rate in France. \u2022 It Is\nsickening because the moment our population ceases to Increase, we are likely to\nbe suppressed and crowded out iby the\nnations whose population unceasingly\nmultiplies, and the problem It battling, because all the remedies proposed seem to\navail but little.\"\nThe Sollel, quoted above, declares that\nthe \"race suicide\" Is caused by poverty,\nwhich, In turn, Is caused by the aboltton\nof the law of primogeniture and the decree which divides every piece of property\nequally among the heirs ot the landowner.\nWe read:\n\"We can see now how the two systems\nof primogeniture and equal partition operate. Primogeniture meant the conservation of property. Bqual partition amounts\nto the enforced dissipation ot the ancestral possessions, tinder the one system\nwe see the increase of the population, we\nsee the prosperity and the greatness of\nFrance, Under the depopulation .and the\ndecadence of France, her degradation In\nthe eyes of the world. It may safely be\nAid that of all the laws whloh on the\nsham plea of equality emanated from the\nstupid spirit, of the revolution, the law\nwhich has dealt the country the most Irreparable Injury has been the law of equality In succession.\"\u2014Translations made for\nThe Literary Digest.\nITALIAN     EMIGRATION\nCOUNTRY     BEING    DRAINED    OF\nVIRILE POPULATION.\nRESTRICTIONS     ON     EMIGRATION\nARE PROPOSED.\nThe rulers of Italy are awakening to the\nfact that Italy Ib being drained of her\nmost virile and vigorous population for\nthe advantage of foreign countries, and\nespecially ot the United States. The young,\nChe strong, the Sabine and the Calabrlan\npeasants who established the supremacy\nof Rome In Gaul and Africa are now being drifted by thousands, declares Lulgl\nVillarl ln Nuova Antologla, Rome, to feed\nthe labor market of America and to build\nthe railroads as tbey. built the highways\nthat led from the golden pillar at the foot\nof tlhe capltol to the extremes of Cadiz\nan'd Constantinople.' Mr. Villarl complains\nthat the emigration of Italian cltliens Is\nfostered by mercenary agents of American\ncompanies who demand cheap Illiterate\nlabor.\nSpeaking generally of this emigration of\nnative Italians, this writer remarks:\n\"Italian emigration has two great\nbranches. One of them tends towads Central Europe\u2014Swltierland, France, Germany,\nAustria-Hungary. Ths Is, of course, merely a transient change ot country. The\ntransatlantic emigration Is of a more permanent character, and may be described\nas a tending toward North and South\nAmerica. I confine myself at present to\nthe discussion of emigration to the United\nStates, to which country most Italians\nwho leave their country repair. This is\nmade the permanent home of a great number of Italians, few of whom return, Most\nof the Italians In the, United States come\nfrom the south of their native country.\nThere are of course a number of northern\nItalians In California, Ih Colorado, In Illinois, and In a few other states. But at\nleast 80 per cent of the Italians In' North\nAmerica spring from southern Italy, and\nIn many cities in the United States we\nAnd actually existing the life and customs\nwhich are In the smaller, southern\nItalian cities and villages. The number of\nthose of our countrymen who emigrate\nto the United States has In recent years\nIncreased with dlisy rapidity. In 1820 no\nmore than 90 Italians landed In the United\nStates. In 1870. the number of Italian\nemigrants thad risen to 3,000. In 1900 It was\nover 100,000, and seven years later this\nfigure was tripled.\"\nThe Importance ot this vast Italian addition to the laboring population of America\nla dwelt upon at some length by Mr.\nVillarl. who remarks:\n\"Ever since America was ooloniied, immigration has always been a matter of\n\u25a0Vital Importance to the country. , , .\nThe arrival of Germans, Irish, and other\npeoples of Northwest Europe ihas gradually diminished trom various causes, principally trom the financial progress ot the\ncountries to which they belonged, such as,\nfor instance, the surprising commercial development of Germany, nnd England's wise\nagrarian legislation In Ireland,\"\nThe Ir'ah, at one time, rccaltn the write\",\ndid the work which these Italian immigrants now do. The former have become\nengaged In city pursuits, they find.open-\nisqmaiaiCJ 89-iuO,tn3rn*snU a'bunlM     * iS\nTHE  NATIVE   PURITY AND\nFRAGRANCE OF\n\"SALADA\"\nrpT? A   is pteserved by the use.of sealed lead\nJL. JQi\/iL packets. Black, Mixed, Natural Green\nTUESDAY NIGHT*\nOverture\u2014The Shogun\nE. A. MELANCON, Director\nCommander Peary Arriving at Sydney trom the North Pole.\nAn Assortment ol Aeroplanes.\nThe Last Days ol Pompeii.\nThe Nature Fakir Comes to Grief.\nDear Old Grandma.\nSong, \"Oh, Mis, Mallnda,\" by Ma-\nbell Boccasini.\nADMISSION 10 CENTS\n. DOORS OPEN 7:15\nNotice to Fruit Growers\nAs the Kootenay Jam Company, Ltd., has been, .repeatedly ap*\npreached by many fruit growers ot the surrounding districts with\nenquiries as to the best varieties ot fruits, etc., for supplying the\nfaotory, the company* would be glad to bare It generally known that\n. the following kinds will be more particularly required:\nName of Fruit\u2014Varieties Wanted\nStrawberries\u2014All varieties, Royal Sovereign and ,British Queen\n(called New York) preferred.\nRaspberries, specially required\u2014Red (Cuthbert for example) but\nWhite Berries will not be refused.\nBlack Currants, specially required\u2014All varieties.\nRed Currants\u2014All varieties. ij    |\nGooseberries\u2014Green and  red. i\"\nBlackberries*\u2014AU varieties.  '\" :\"l\nCherries\u2014Blngy Lambert, Morello and Royal Anne preferred.\nPlums\u2014All varieties.\nFears\u2014Bartlett, Flemish Beauty, Idaho and Winter Nellls.\nApples\u2014Most varieties.\nCrab Apples\u2014AU sour varieties. *.,*\u25a0..\nApricots\u2014All varieties.\nPeaches\u2014All varieties.\nThis company will require large quantities (and In respect to\nRaspg and Black Currants, unlimited quantities) of above fruits next\nseason and are prepared to enter Into definite contracts with the\ngrowers for the supply ol same and they also desire to Impress\nupon those growers who have not as yet put in any of the varieties named, or wiho have only ver,y email patches, to plant out fresh\nareas wherever passible, as they may rest assured that there is a\nready market provided close at hand. At a later date the company\nwill publish prices, arrangements tor shipping, suggestions as re-\ngards carriage or fruit, picking, etc., all at. which arrangements wlU\nbe carefully framed to facilitate business.\nKootenay Jam Co., Ltd. Nd\u00bboii,B.c.\nIngs In polities and the civil service, and\n\"it may safely be said that at this present\nmoment the Irish have a monopoly in certain branches of American public life.\"\nThe Italian emigration is being aitlfi-\ndaily stimulated, according to this authority, who believes that it should rather\nbe restrained. As he puts It:\n'\"There exists at present in Italy a'certain class of people who llnd it their peculiar Interest to promote the exodus of\nour peasant population. About 11,000\nagents of transportation companies are\nscattered throughout Italy. We hear people\ntalk about the 'sacred liberty to emigrate'\nwhich belongs to every indlvudal, but I\ndo not believe that such a liberty should\nbe granted to every one. l think that\nminors, who are incompetent under the\nlaw to possess or dispose of. property,\nshould not have the free opportunity of\nemigrating.\"\nThis writer suggests that Italy or\nAmerica might impose more restrictions\nthan now exists.. He observes: .\n\"it Ib highly probable that the American\ngovernment wilt end by forbidding the Immigration of Illiterates\". If the United\nState* falls to Impose this limitation, I\nbelieve that the Italian authorities will\ndecide either to forbid or at least to limit\nthe emigration of this class of cltliehs.\"\nSTILL   IN  SUSPENSE.\nSafety of John Jacob Astor's Yacht\nRemains In Doubt.\nTAMPA, Fla., Nov. 22.\u2014Brief wire-\nleas communications between Key West\nand San Juan, Porto Rico, thla morning has served to complicate rather\nthan to enlighten the situation surrounding J. Jacob Astor's yacht, Nourmahl, but after sifting matters down\ntonight there is nothing to indicate that\nthe yacht ls not safe at San Juan, or\nwas at least there on November 15,\nas reported by the steamship Caracas\nyesterday, and confirmed by ihat vessel's captain again today. The fact\nthat the wireless operator at San Juan\ncould not state off hand this morning\nthat the ship was In the harbor gave\nTlse to a report that the vessel waB still\nmissing. But this Interpretation, according to a statement issued by the\noperator   at   Tampa   tonight,   Is   un:     ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\n\u2022i$na biiooja o\\ti fciiii\" aaHmlHi 5Z I fan jjijgig n ottil fwtfOtfjJ \u00a9Wuob s ant\nWe believe   MINARD'S   LINIMENT   Is\nthe best:\u2014\nMathlaB Foley, Oil City, Ont.\nJoseph Snow, Norway, Me.\nCharles Whooten, Mulgrave, N. S.\nRev. R. O. Armstrong, Mulgrave, N. S.\nPierre Landers, 8r\u201e Pokemouche, N, B,\nThomas Wesson, Sheffield, N. B.\nfounded and due solely to the fact that\nthe Sap Juan operator ln his station\nwas not aware of the presence of the\nyacht in the harbor.\nWhen questioned regarding the yacht\nhe replied that he did not know If Astor's yacht was there or not. Soon,\nafter communication was Interrupted,\nleaving the situation open but in no\nwise, according to all appearances, questioning the reliability of the reports\nabout the yacht's safety as given at\nWlllemsted yesterday and at Caracas\ntoday by the steamship Caracas.\nIn view of the fact that the brief\nconversation between Key West and\nSan Juan might be taken to indicate\nthat It was positively ascertained that\nthe Nourmahl is hot San Juan, the\nwireless station at Tampa sent the Associated Press a message tonight In\nwhich It was stated \"there was absolutely no truth In the report regarding\nwireless received via Key West about\nyacht Nourmahl not-being at San Juan.\"\nThe operator adds that he ls still trying to get into touch with San Juan\nsince the break this morning, with the\nhope ot getting from the operator there\npositive assurance of tbe Nourmahl's\npresence. This, according to the best\ndeductions, the latter was unable to\ngive this morning, merely because of\nlack of information.\nf        Holding Their Wheat.\nWINNIPEG. Nov. St.\u2014Traffic men are\nwondering what .has happened to ihe\nwheat crop of western Canada, because\nsince the beginning of the month there'\nhas beew a blf falllna- off Ingrain shipments. \"There won't be the usual rush\nat the close of navigation,\" a prominent\nofflcibl remarked today. \"The farmers are\nholding their wheat for higher prices, and\nwe cannot get at It at all. At every point\nin the country we have cars waiting, with\ntheir wheels getting rusty. They are certainly not marketing the wheat, we looked for. and - all' the (wheat has not gone\nout of the country yet. September and\nOctober were very heavy months for shipment of wheat November started very\nbadly, and doesn't seem to be getting any\nbetter.\nMUST RE8PECT CANADA'S RIGHTS.\nMinneapolis Journal Says Great Lakes\nMust Not Become Mediterranean.\nMINNEAPOLIS, Nov. 22.-Corament-\nlng editorially on the international\nquestion of great lakes naval militia\nwhich Is just now causing so much\ndiplomatic Interchange of Ideas, the\nJournal says:\n\"Canada is within her rights If she\nhas given notice that she will refuse\nconsent to the presence of any more,\npractice ships for our naval militia\non the great lakes. The refusal we\nmay construe as too cynical an Interpretation of her rights under tbe Rush-\nBagot convention, but we are bound by\nformal obligation to respect her refusal.\n\"Moreover, the convention that has\nneutralized the great lakes is a blessing, both to the Dominion and to this\nrepublic. No minor Irritation or Inconvenience due to that convention\nshould be permitted to make it unpopular.\n\"The great lakes must not become a\nMediterannean with a Gibraltar at\nMackinac, a Malta at Put-In-Bay, a\nToulon at Duluth, a Bizerta at Toronto,\na Spezzia at Buffalo. If a rivalry ln\narmament upon the great lakes be\nonce begun no man can prophesy to\nwhat extent it might ultimately be carried. It is our duty and our interest\nas a nation to put such power on the\nsalt seas that we can defend our rights\nand at the same time keep actual war's\ntheater away from our shores; It ls\nalso both our duty and our Interest to\ncontinue the paclflc status ln North\nAmerica and to bar forever from this\ncontinent the European military rivalry\nthat grows more intolerable than actual\nwar. *\n\"This republic Is dedicated to peace.\nSo also ls this continent.\"\nAirship Company Incorporated.\nALBANY, N. Y., Nov. 22.\u2014Capitalized\nat $1,000,000. the Wright company of\nNew York was incorporated today \"to\nmanufacture, sell and deal in, operate\nand otherwise use at any place or\nplaces on the North American continent\nand the Islands adjacent thereto, machines, ships or other mechanical contrivances for aerial operation or navigation of any and every kind and description and any future improvements\nor developments of the same.\" The directors are Wilbur Wright, Orvllle\nWright, of Dayton, O.; George A.\nStearns, Henry S. Hooker and Alpheus\nF. Barnes of New York.\nPromiscuous Drinking by Jury.\nNEW YORK, Nov. 22.\u2014Martin W.\nLittleton, counsel for Charles W.\nMorse, the convicted banker, argued a\nmotion for a new trial before the\nUnited States court of appeals today\nalleging promiscuous drinking among\nthe members of the jury which con-\nvictel Morse, The court reserved decision. -\nRtsult of Last Election\nThe following Is the result hy constituencies of the lust provincial election, held\nFeb. 2. 1907:\nConstituency Member        Pty. Mjy.\nAlberni   H. C.  Brewster  Lib.   33\nAtlin   Hon.  H.  E.   Young  Con.   21\nCariboo (2)   Harry Jones  Lib.   32\n J. M. Torston  Lib.   31\nColumbia  H. G. Parsons  Con.   fiO\nCow.chun  W. H. Hay ward Con.   18\nComox   Robert Grant   Con.   SO\nCranbrook  Dr. J. H. King Lib.  95\nChlllfwaek  C. W.  Munro  Lib.   21\nDelta  :...John Oliver  Lib. 169\nDewdney  ....Hon. R.  McBride ....Con. 148\nEsquimau  '......Jolm  Jardlne  .Lib.   53\nFernle  W. R. Robs, K.C., .....Con.   65\nGrand  Forks  ....John  Mclnnis ....Soc.   fis\nGreenwood   G. R.  Naden  Llli.   27\nIslands  A. E. McPhllllps Con.    tt\nKamloops ....Hon. F. J. Fulton ....Con.   95\nKaslo    Nell  F.   MacKay    Con.   44\nHave You Bought Yoar Furs Yet\nIn all the merchandise a store carries there la nothing so lotac\n\u00bbtlng, nothing so tar above the ordinary trade level as Purs.\nThis year we have endeavored to halve a better showing and mora\nenticing prices than ever before, and tt Is a unanimous verdict that we\nhave succeeded. f \u2022*'$ \\\nHere you can see tbe latest fashions ln neckpieces ln Mink, lea*\nbella Fax, Mink Marmot and Alaska Sable, each with Mutt to match, st\nprices that are as attractive as the Furs.\nOur beautifully Illustrated catalogue depicts the latest styles in\nFur Coats, etc., which we oan obtain for ,you at short notice.\nThe prices of neckpieces run as follows:\nMink  120, $25, (35 to $125     ,\nMink Marmot  $4.50, $5.50 to $20\nIsabella Fox ........ .$16, $22,50 to $50\nAlaska Sable  $10 to $37.50\nAnd Muffs at proportionate prices. *      < i.\nCome and see tbem.   They'll please you.\nMEAGHER <& CO\nLlllooet   M.  Eagleson Lib,    8\nNew Westsmlnster ..T, GIffoid -.Con. 44\nNanaimo J. II. Hawthornthwaite Soc. 165\nNewcnstle  ....Parker Williams  ....Soc.  62\nNelson Dr. G. A. B. Hall  Lib.    5\nOkanagan   Price  Ellison    Con. 2S0\nRevelstoke ...Hon. Thos. Taylor ...Con. 1*1\nRichmond Hon. F. F. Carter-Cotton Con.   14\nRossland  J. A. Macdonald \u2022-\u2022..Lib. 55\nSaanlch  D. M. Ebevt Con. 18\nSimilkumeen ...L. XV. Shatford  ...Con.  08\nSkeena  XV. T. Kergln  Lib.   TO\nSIoL-an  William Hunter  Con.  14\nVancouver (5) Hon. W. J. Bowser Con. 907\nA. H. B. MacGowan Con. 897\nHon. R. G. Tatlow Con. 898\n....J. F, Garden ....Con. 817\n.Dr. G. A. McGu!re .Con. 725\nVictoria   (4)...Hon. R.   McBride  ...Con.\n Fred   Davey  ......Con. 305\n..H. F. W. Behnaen  ..Con. 278\n...H. B. Thompson  ...Con. 180\nYale   Stewart Henderson    Lib.  82\nYmir   J. H. Schofield  Con.   S6\nPremier McBrlde elected to sit for Victoria and W. Manson, Conservative, was\nreturned by acclamation Ih his place.\nThere have been three other by-elections,\nin Atlln. where Hon. H. E. Young was\nunopposed after being made a minister of\nthe crown; Nanaimo, where J. H. Hawthornthwaite was re-elected In January of\nthe present year after unsuccessfully contesting Nanaimo for the house of commons, and Revelstoke, where Hon. Thomas\nTaylor was re-elected In January last after\nbeing made minister of public works.\nMOTOR BOAT SUPPLIES\nThe largest and best assortment In\nths Interior of B. C.\nDry batteries, lubricating oils ut\ngreases, spark colls, spark plugs, magnetos, primary and secondary cable,\nheadlights, lite buoys and fenders,\nsteering wheels, deck fittings, gasoline\nfittings, carburetters, anchors, tiller\nrope, switches, horns and whistles,\ncotton waste, carbide, bilge pumps,\nvolt and ammeeters, storage batteries,\nreverse gears, propeller wheels, and\neverything used on a motor boat\nMall orders promptly atended ta\nPrices right Agents for Barber\nEngines.\nE. D. MESSENGER CO.\n606 Stanley Street        P. O. BoBi 1TI\nMonday Only\n.....Closing Sale of\nODD CHAIRS\n33 1-3 Per Cent Off\n1 Oak Armchair, regular prloe 113.00, Monday W.70\n1 Oak Armchair, regular prloe 116.60, Monday  %MM\n1 Wire IVame Solid Leather Chair, regular price $70.00, Monday....$4\u00ab.68\n1 Oak Rocker, Leather Seat, regular price $23.00, Monday  \u00bb1\u00bb.00\n1 B. E. Chair, Spanish Leather, regular price 132.60, Monday  W1.70\n1 B. B. Morris Chair, Verona Bev. Cushions, price $35.00, Monday....$23.35\n1 Oak Chair, SHk Upholstered, regular price $12.00, Monday  $7.00\n1 McKlnley Rocker, B. B., regular price $18.00, Monday  $10.70\n1 Moni* Chair, Qolden Oak, Verona Cushions, price $30.00, Monday...$20.00\n11H Armchair, Spanish Leather, regular price $22.00, Monday $14.70\n1 Royal Victorian Hall Chair $10.00\nMason * Hlseh Mam*\nQatar-moor Mattress   ,.\nStandard Ftffnitofe Co.\nComplete Hoose Fmntehen\nidiiffl\/Mod a**\"! uolIimlDia ' .iM .-.IwiUlnO Its auhoiIJaa tal\/wra a J o\/l)    .uovo'J ::M.    ..MiUu is jlooidasiO\n**M^MHHMaii^^MillHi\n **.?*\u00bb -\u00bbR\nMOKIX\ntClw \u00aeattg item*.\nTUESDAY\nNOVEMBER 23\nAbsolutely Free of Cost\n\u2022A*)\nThe People's Common Seme Medical Adviser, la Plain\nBullish, or Medicine Simplified, by R. V. Pierce, M. D.,\nChief Consulting Physician to the If vslidi' Hotel sad Sor-\n|ical Institute it Buffalo, s book of 1008 Itrfe pe\/fes snd\nover 700 illustration., in strong p*4* V covers, to sny one lendini 31 one-cent\nrttmps to cover oost'of mailinfi oe\/y, or, in French Cloth binding for 50 stamps.\nOver 680,000 copies of this eomplel \u25a0 Family Doctor Book were sold in cloth\nbinding at regular price of $1.50.   Aiterwards, one and a hall million copies\nwere given sway ss above.   A new, up-to-date revised edition is now ready\nlor mailing.   Better send NOW, before all are gone.   Address Woils's Dis\u00bb\nibuasy Medical Association, R. V. Pierce, M. D., President, Buffalo, N. Y.\nDR. PIERCE'S  FAVORITE  PRESCRIPTION\nTHE ONE REMEDY for women's peculiar ellmsals good enough\nUut |ts makers are not afraid to print on its ontaide wrappaa* tta\nevery jngrtdltnt. No Secrete-No Deception.\nTHE ONE REMEDY (or women which sentnina no aloekol aad\naw habit-forming drugs. Made from native Tilllnliial forest roots\nat woO established eorative valasa.\nScotch Whisky\nA Record of Nearly a Century.\nIt was in the year 1815\u2014nearly a hundred\nyean ago\u2014that the first gallon of Watson's\nWhisky waa produced.\nIt is distilled to-day in precisely the same\ncareful, conscientious manner as when first\nplaced on the market. * We use the old-fashioned Pot' Still and distil only from Malted\nBarley.\nNot a quart is ever bottled until we have\nfirst assured ourselves that it is thoroughly\nmatured\u2014and tbat maturing process, by the\nway, takes place in Sherry Casks, a method\nrecognized by experts as giving a specially fine\nflavor.\nSo firmly do we believe in tlie unvarying\nexcellence of our product tbat we guarantee\nabsolutely every bottle sold under our label and\ncapsule.\nInsist    on\nWatson's\n\"THREE STAR\"\u2014A mill lloioufkly m.tur.J Scollk.\n\"NO. IO\"\u2014A full-bodied, fisbly llsvor.JSc.lcl..\nJAMES WATSON & CO., Limited - Dundee.\nLIBERALS DEMORALIZED\nHAVE NO CANDIDATE IN FIVE CONSTITUENCIES\nPREMIER'S GREAT TOUR ENDS TO-\nMORROW\n(Special  to The Daily  News.)\nVICTORIA, Nov. 22.\u2014Premier McBrlde's great tour is drawing to a\nclose. Tonight lie addresses a conservative gathering in Albernl, and on\nTuesday in Ladysmltll, while on the\nevening of Wednesday, the day before\nthe election, lie will address the last\nrally of the local conservative party In\nthe Victoria theatre.\nDuring the greater part of the tour\nMr. McBride was accompanied by the\nattorney general, Hon. VV. J. Bowser.\nTbe first gun of the campaign had been\nfired by tlie latter in Kamloops on tlie\nevening ol Nov. 1 and on the evening\nof the 2nd Hon. Richard McBrlde w^s\npresent at the conservative nominating\nconvention for Vale, which was held at\nSpence's Bridge. He was unanimously\ntendered the nomination for that constituency, where he' will oppose Stuart\nHenderson, the former member. The\nsuccess ot the premier in Yale is certain. Ai the convention some 40 delegates, representing every portion of\ntbe constituency, were present and assured Mr. McBrlde ot victory.\nThe evening of Wednesday, Nov. 3,\nMr. McBrlde was joined by Hon. W. J.\nBowser, and the two, with Hon.\nThomas Taylor, addressed a magnificent meeting at Revelstoke, in the interests of the latter. The election of\nMr. Taylor is a foregone conclusion.\nThe electors of Revelstoke have observed Mr. Taylor's course while in office with much satisfaction and feel it\nan honor that Revelstoke should have\ncabinet representation in the present\ngovernment. The railway policy of the\ngovernment appeals to them strongly\nand the result here ls beyond question.\nNo liberal has been nominated to oppose the government candidate.\nOn Thursday, Nov. 4, tbe premier's\nparty was present at a meeting at Nakusp in the afternoon. William Hunter's record ls auch. that the constituency of Slocan was never ln doubt The\ngovernment's railway policy was unanimously endorsed here as at a monBter\nmeeting ln Nelaon tbat evening ln the\nInterests of Harry Wright. Nelson Is\ncertain to be redeemed at thla election\nand the chances of tbe liberal candidate, B. A. Crease, are regarded as nil.\nFriday eaw the party at Fernle,\nwhere W. H. Ross will assuredly be\nagain returned, while on tbe succeed-\ni Inr Saturday two meetlngB were ad-\ngriiiaH. Moyie ln the afternoon and\nCranbrook at sight   Mr, Caven,   the\nconservative candidate, ls a certain\nwinner.\nAt Kaslo, where, on the evening of\nMonday, Nov. 8, a meeting was addressed, Nell MacKay will win by a\nsweeping majority. The liberals of the\ndistrict, after at first resolving to let\nthe constituency go by default, at the\nlast minute put up' John Keen as a\ncandidate. It Is generally felt throughout the district that this was a great\nmistake, as Mr. MacKay's election ls\nconceded.\nRossland, which formerly sent the\nliberal leader, J.'A. Macdonald, to the\nlegislature, will certainly return W. R.\nBraden on Thursday next. The latter\nis exceedingly popular, a fine business\nman and one of whom Rossland will\nbe proud. Before the meeting, addressed by Mr. McBride here on the\nnight of Tuesday. Nov. 9, a dinner was\ntendered him. The conservative organizations, despite the favorable prospects, are not relaxing their efforts, but\nare working might and main.\nThe candidature of Ernest Miller In\nGrand Forks has elicited the support\nof liberals and conservatives alike, and\nhis return ls confidently expected: The\nmeeting here on Wednesday evening\nwas largely attended and augured well\nof victory.\nTwo meetings were held on Thursday evening, in Phoenix early and later\nln Greenwood. Mr. J. R. Jackson, the\ncandidate for Greenwood, is receiving\nstrong support and should win without\ntrouble.\nMeetings wero held on Friday, In the\nafternoon at Hedley and ln the evening\nat Keremeos. There is no doubt about\nthe return of Mr. Shatford.\nA like story was told on tbe journey\nthrough the Okanagan district. The recent elevation of Hon. Price Ellison to\nthe cabinet Is received with general\nsatisfaction. His personal popularity\nls great and with the return of the government the district Is assured of the\nconstruction ot Kettle River Valley\nrailroad, which ls Included ln the government's plans as enunciated. The\nconstruction of this link ln railway\ntransportation ls regarded as of vital*\nimportance to the district. Hence It\nwas a unanimous Okanagan which welcomed the premier and Mr. Bowser\nwhen they reached there. A large delegation' of conservatives met tbe steamer at Pentlcton and presented an address, and ln the evening a monster\nrally was held at Vernon and was addressed by the premier, Mr. Bowser\nand the. Hon. Price Ellison.\nMr. Bowser left the party here to return to Vancouver for one night, while\nthe premier proceeded to Ashcroft,\nwhere he addressed a meeting on the\nafternoon of Monday last Tne evening\nof that day he spoke ln North Bend,\nwhile the next day saw him addressing\na crowded gathering at Chilliwack. Mr.\nSam Cawley ls certain to be elected in\nChilliwack this time, leaving Mr.\nCharles Monroe at home.\nMr. McBrlde addressed a meeting at\nFort Langley on Tuesday last, where\nhe was rejoined by Mr. Bowser. That\nevening they spoke at Ladners ln the\ninterests of Frank MacKenzie. The defeat of the liberal leader, John Oliver,\nis as certain ln Delta as It is in Victoria\nProceeding to New Westminster,\nwhere on Thursday evening a meeting\nln the interests of Tom Glfford was\nheld, the ministers on Friday last addressed the largest political rally ever\nheld in Vancouver. No hall large\nenough to contain the audience could\nbe found and an overflow meeting was\nnecessary. The return of a solid five\nln the Terminal city ls as good as won.\n\"To sum up no better Indication of\nthe demoralization of the liberal forces\nls offered than the fact that there are\nfive constituencies where no liberal\ncandidate Is found, and ln Kaslo, Grand\nForks, as well as Slmllkameen and\nOkanagan, one might almost say that\nopposition candidates are presented for\nthe sake of appearances only,\" concluded Mr. McBride.\nLIBERAL MEETING AT MIDWAY\nAttendance 8llm and Speechea Are Die- *\npolntment to Audience\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nMIDWAY, Nov. 22.\u2014The great liberal\nrally, held on Friday night at the Spokane hotel, proved to be the greatest\nfrost from a political standpoint ln the\nhistory of Midway. J. R. Ferguson occupied tbe chair and without'any introductory remarks called on D. A. Macdonald, the liberal candidate, to address the meeting. Mr. Macdonald on\narising was greeted by applause from\nthe half a dozen liberals present. He\ntold the electors that he stood for the\ndevelopment of British Columbia and\nthe building of railways (practically- endorsing the McBrlde policy) and after\napologizing for his lack of eloquence\ntook his seat.\nMr. Macdonald was followed by\nGeorge Hetherlngton, the socialist candidate, who gave a socialistic speech\nabout capital and tbe producer. The\nsocialist candidate Is not taken very\nseriously, but he was given plenty of\ntime to air his view*-..\nThen followed James Kerr, he who\nhad Bought the conservative nomination, and because he did not succeed is\nnow on the liberal platform. He . denounced Hon. Mr. McBrlde as the\ngreatest rascal of modern times. It had\nbeen heralded throughout the length\nand breadth of the riding that Mr. Kerr\nhad documents of an incriminating\nnature that would shake tho very foundation of conservatism In British Columbia, documents that immediately\nthey became public would . cause the\ngreatest consternation in conservative\ncircles, and It was with no little degree\nof expectancy that the audience awaited this awful denouement. The surprise of the electors was great when\nMr. Kerr launched Into a eulogy of\nRobert Burns and Lord Byron and\nother Scottish celebrities, with many a\ntheatrical gesture. After he had continued in this strain for some time\nsomeone in the audience asked him\nabout those documents, and ln a* stage\nwhisper he accused an ex-road superintendent ot grafting 40 cents a day. Mr.\nKerr did not state for how many days\nthis gigantic Bteal went on, evidently\nIt could not have been for many days\nowing to the overflowing condition of\nthe provincial treasury, where an\namount of that magnitude would have\nsoon been missed. After Mr. Kerr had\ncriticised the premier, who had failed\nwhen at Greenwood to give a talk on\nimperialism, Mr. Kerr, like the Arab,\nfolded his tent and stole silently away.\nWhy Mr. Kerr should criticise the premier for his failure to talk on imperial-\nism led many of the electors to ask\nwhat figure Imperialism cuts in the Issues now before the people.\nThe meeting was brought to a close\nby Mr. Spence ot Greenwood, who criticised the railway policy and uttered\nthe usual \u25a0 liberal cry of blue ruin for\nBritish Columbia.\nCULMINATION  OF ROMANCE\nEnglish Love Story Haa Sequel at Arrowhead\nAm interesting wedding took place at\nSt. John's church, Arrowhead, on\nThursday, Nov. 11, .the ceremony being\nperformed by the Very Rev. Archdeacon Beer. The bridegroom, Richard\nDavies, who ls connected with the C.\nP. R. boat servloe on the Arrow lakes,\nIs well known among the regular passengers and local*settlers, his genial\ngood nature and pleasing manner making for him a host of friends. The\nbride, Miss A. L. Jacobs of Walmer,\nPort Elizabeth, South Africa, accomplished a journey of 16,000 miles tb fulfil her engagement to Mr. Davies, with\nwhom she had become acquainted ton\nKent, England. Beautiful weather prevailed during the ceremony, which took\nPlace about 2:15 o'clock. Mr. Davies\nwas assisted by his brother, H. H. Davies, the bride being accompanied hy\nE. Potts, Mr. Davies' brother-in-law, to\nchurch, and assisted et tho altar by\nthe bridegroom's stater, Miss Davlea.\nBreakSast was served at Mrs. Potto'\nresidence, to which about 20 guests sat\ndown. After supper a social evening\nwas spent amidst music and song In a\nmost enjoyable EnglWh manner, end\n\u2022the 40 or more participants will long\nretain pleasant memories of this gathering. The bride -and bridegroom were\nthe recipients ot numerous beautiful\nand costly presents. from -Mends and\nrelatives ln England, Egypt, South\nAfrica, Australia and Canada\nMilitia Storea Burned.\nOTTAWA, Nov. 22.\u2014Fire Saturday\nmorning did damage to the extent of\n120,000 to the mllltla atores building belonging to the department of mllltla.\nThe building was filled with military\nclothing and the damage to the by\nwater will not be known until an examination has been mad*.\nBRADEN ALL THE WAY\nCONSERVATIVE   CANDIDATE  WILL\nWIN IN ROSSLAND.\nRECEIVING PLEDGES OF SUPPORT\nON ALL SIDES.\n(Special to The Dally Neva.)\nROSSLAND,, B. C, Nov. 22.\u2014With\ntbe election only two days away the\nfeeling that W. R. Braden, conservative\ncandidate, will he successful at the\npolls has begun to take effect on the\nrank and file'of the opposing factions,\nmany alleged supporters of whom have\nnow declared themselves openly lor\nBraden. The conservatives, however,\nar leaving no atone unturned to make\nBraden's victory a complete sweep.\nThe liberal leaders admit defeat already and are making no secret of it\nThere le practically no betting, although Braden money Is lu sight by\nthousands and odds offered.   - \u25a0-, .\nROSSLAND, Nov. 22.\u2014As election\nday draws near it is apparent to the\nmoat prejudiced mind that the conservative candidate, W. R. Braden, vlll\nredeem Rossland city riding.' Be has\nsteadily increased in strength and it is\nnow certain that one of the other can*.\ndldates will lose his deposit and that\nthe other will have none too.many to\nsave his.\nThe independent voters here are very\nmuch impressed by the business like\npolicy of the McBride government, and\nas practically no criticism of the premier's record for the last few years\nIs heard.from the opposition candidates,\nand no defined policy having been\nenunciated by the liberals, the Independent voters are almost of one\nopinion In endorsing the conservative\nadministration.\nMany liberals, putting aside party\nlines, have come out openly for W. R.\nBraden, as a pronounced supporter of\nHon. Richard McBrlde, and believing\nthat with Braden as its representative\nRossland will be successful in securing very much greater assistance from\nthe provincial treasury than has been\ngranted during the past few years.\nRossland has been ln the cold shades\nof the opposition long enough and the\nelectors will emphatically demonstrate\non Thursday next that they are through\nwith liberal representation. In view of\nthe progressive- policy of the conservative government the general opinion\nis that Rossland must get Into line as\na supporter of that government In order\nto share in the advantages to be derived from the development that is\nbound to follow.\nThe conservatives are standing shoulder to shoulder, fighting as one, with\nthe best of harmony, and their united'\nefforts, with the assistance of the lnf\ndependent voters and the broad-mnld-.\ned liberals, will roll up a splendid majority for W. R. Braden on November\n25. t \u25a0\nThe conservative meeting Saturday\nnight waB addressed by R. S. Lennie\nof Nelson and Alexander Sharp, M. E.,\non behalf of Mr. Braden, J. P. McCon-\nnell of Vancouver representing Dr. Eng-\ngllsh, while William Davidson spoke\nfor the socialists. J. C. Scott presided.\nThe liberal representative spoke first\nand devoted his time to an endeavor to\nexplain John Oliver's puzzle map. His\nremarks were received in silence ex-,\ncept when they provoked laughter, and\nmost of hts audince are still wondering\nwhy he was brought here, as he was a\ndistinct \"false alarm.\"\nMr. Sharp then spoke for a few minutes, declaring that he had come to\nthis province 20 years ago and therefore knew from experience how greatly\ntransportation facilities had assisted ln\ndeveloping the country. He said he had\nbeen a liberal, but waB proud to state\nthat he was now a staunch supporter\nof Hon. Richard McBrlde and his progressive railway policy. He eulogized\nMr. Braden, whom he had known for\na great many years, stating that he was\na man of many sterling qualities, uprightness and business acumen, and\nwould be a worthy representative of\nthe Golden city at Victoria. He waB\nloudly applauded upon resuming his\nseat.\nMr. Davidson then took the floor on\nbehalf ot the socialist candidate. He\ncondemned Grits and Tories alike as\ncaplallst representatives and exhorted\nhis hearers to vote for George Casey.\nThe chairman then introduced Mr.\nLennie, who was received with loud\napplause In anticipation of an interesting discourse on the'government's policies, and the audience was not disappointed. Mr. Lennie went thoroughly\nInto the railway agreements, touched\non the Asiatic question, and showed\nup the liberal arguments as mere juggling with facts and figures.\nThe meeting was brought to a close\nwith cheers for Lennie, Braden and\nMcBrlde. ,       j* . .\u2022  \u25a0\nMuch sympathy Ib expressed by\nfriends and foes alike for W. R. Braden,\nconservative candidate, who is still*\nconfined to bed owing to a severe cold.\nHe is Improving and .will likely be allowed out on Tuesday.\nThe Knights of Pythias are going to\nhold their anniversary ball on Wednesday, November 24, Instead ot the following evening, the usual date, owing to\nthe latter being election day.\nSir Hlbbert's Wild Theories\n.hiwciki to The Dally News.)\nVICTORIA, Nov. 22\u2014Sir Charles Hibbert Tupper addressed a large meeting\nof liberals here on Saturday night devoting his time mostly to the railway\npolicy, declaring that the contract of\nthe C.N.R. would forever knock tbe\nbottom out of the question of better\nterms and was a direct going back\non tiie policy enunciated formerly that\nthe province could not do more than\ngive \"decent, Intelligent encouragement\nto any railway following -the G.T.P. and\nC.P.R.\" Under the contract the C.N.R.\nwill not yield with legtftf to control\nof rates. He claimed,; too, that the\nC.P.R. Is behind tbe deal, la Out having a double tracked lint ft treat part\nThey Keep The Brakes'Sat\nAn* S. Can Nmr Da Their Baal\nMany .men, and mora women, go\nthrough life like a train with the engine\ntugging, but the brakes hard on. They\nnever get anywhere near top speed,\nbecause they ate never really well.\nProbably they do not own even to\nthemselves that they are sick, but they\nscarcely known what it is to Rally\n\"feelgood\". Always there is Headache,\nor that -'dragged out feeling\" which\nmakes good work, either mental or\nphysical, utterly impossible.\nThe most common trouble with all\nthese people ia that they have Constipation. Their aystems are poisoned\nwith the waste matter, which stays in\nthe blood, instead .of being promptly\nremoved by the bowels. Harsh purga-\ntivea are worse than no treatment at all,\nbecause they weaken and irritate the\nbowels, instead of. coring the trouble.\nThe natural and permanent cure for\nConstipation, la \"Fruit-a-tlvea\".\n: \"Fruit-a-tives\" combine, the well-\nknown laxative principles of apple.,\noranges, figs and prunes. So perfect\nia the combination, that \"Fruit-a-tives\"\nacts like the fresh fruit, by stimulating\nthe aluggish liver to supply the proper\namount of bile to move the towels\nregularly.\nThe moat stubborn cases of Constipation promptly yield to the curative and\ncorrective effects of \"Fruit-a-tives\".\njoe. a boi, 6 for $2.50, or trial box,\n15c\u2014at dealers or from Fruit-a-tivea\nLimited, Ottawa.\nHENRYS*\u2014i\nfor fall Planting\nBulbs irom the best European and Japanese growers..\nHome grown fruit and ornamental trees, grown on upland soil without irrigation in\nthe only part of the American\ncontinent not Infested with\nSan Jose scale.\nGarden, field and flower\nseeds. Tested stock from the\nbest growers ln the world.\nWire Fencing and Gates,\nSpray pumps, fertilizers,\nbee supplies, cut flowers,\nspraying materials, -etc.\nWhite labor only.\n157 Page Catalogue free\nM. J. HENRY\nGreenhouses and aeedhonses\n9010 Westminster road, Vancouver; Branch Nursery, S.\nVancouver.\nNurseries\nMENU\nof luncheon and dinner, given by the ladles\nof St. Saviour's church, in Eagles' hall,\nThursday. Nov. 25.\nLUNCHEON\nCold Dishes\nRoast Beef      Spiced Beef      Boast Pork\nLeg Mutton\nHot Scalloped  Potatoes\nPickles Tomato Catsup\nDeep Apple Pie Jam Tart\nBread and Butter    Cheese\nTea and Coffee\nDINNER\nOx Tail Soup\nRoast Turkey       Ham Jellied Tongue\nHot and Cold Beefsteak Pies\nCreamed Potatoes\nVegetable Marrow with Cream Sauce\nRolls Butter\nJelly with Whipped Cream\nAssorted Cakes\nTea Coffee\nof the was east of tiie mountains it is\nworking In with 1he C.N.R. to compete\nwith the G.T.P. and as the .contract!\ndoes not prevent any such arrangement\nthere is no provision preventing the\nC.N.R. from selling or leasing to the\nC.P.R.\nLIGHTNING CARTOONIST.\nBengough Also Keeps up Rattling Fire\nof Small Talk.\nWith one bold stroke of his1 crayon\nBengough, the noted cartoonist and1\nall around entertainer, helps his audi'\nence to grasp every point of the humor*\nous yarns he' relates, as he works' in\ncolored chalk on a hlg pad of white\npaper. Not only does he draw, but he\nrecites funny little poems of his own\ncomposition, sings, .and keeps his audience in a bubble of continual laughter.\nSpeaking of him the New Tork World\nsays:\n\"This Maxim gun cartoonist will deft*\nly draw the letters T. E. D. and deftly\nconvert them Into the familiar head of\nRoosevelt, smile and all. Next ho would\nadd a few awkward looking angles, and\npresto! ln another moment you had a\nboy and girl eating apples. As for humorous caricatures, he drew them and\ndrew them almost ln the blink of an\neye.\"\nBengough will appear ln the assembly\nhall of the public school building on\nMonday, December 13, under the auspices of the High School Literary society.\nWardner Enthusiastic for Cave.?\n(Staff Correspondence.)\nWARNER, Nov. 20\u2014A large and enthusiastic conservative meeting was\nheld ln this town last evening ai which\nthe speakers were T. Caven, the conservative standard bearer, P. Lund, J. B.\nMcDonald and Mr. Bates of Moyie and\nGeorge Thompson of Cranbrook. The\nmeeting was enthusiastic for Caven.\nTremblay Beats Walsh-man.\nMONTREAL, Nov. 22.\u2014In the wrestling contest which took place Friday?\nnight between Eugene Tremblay of\nMontreal and Billy Saxon of Wales for\nthe lightweight championship, the former succeeded in beating the Welshman in two straight falls, the'first in\n35 mlndtes and the second after 81\nTEe DAILY NEWS\nCLASSIFIED ADfc\u2014One Mat sword.   Hi lnwtMikt tk* ata. tf\nfour when paid tn tdTuoe. i No tt taken tor leu tiun lis '\n144      THE DAILY NEWS\nFOR SALE\nFOR BALE\u2014A sub-dlvlslon of excellent\nfruit land In the famous Kaslo district,\nin 5 or 10 acre blocks. Abundance of\nwater, close to railroad and steamboat\nlanding, navigation the entire year. Fine\nhunting, flailing and wonderful scenery.\nDirect from locator to purchaser; See or\nwrite H. L. Lindsay, Lindsay Boat House,\nNelson   B.C. *      ttl-Nov.30.\nFOR SALE-36 acres splendid fruit land\nat Thrums, B. C, 20 miles from Nelson,\nright on bank of the Columbia river and\nthe1 C. P. railway. Four passenger trains\ndally. We are hot ln the rear estate business and will sell thla piece of land at a\nbargain.   Apply. Patrick Lumber Co\n3.4-M-tfi\nHOTEL FOB SALE-Twenty-one rooms,\nall well furnished; one block and a half\nfrom C.P.R. depot; good going concern.\nOwner leaving owing to 111 health. Any\nperson wishing to Inspect the property are\nrequested to call between 8 and 4 p.m any\nday at Empire hotel, Baker -St.        178-36\nFOR SALE\u2014or to exchange tor city prop*\nerty\u201454 acres of unimproved land oh\nWest Arm of Kootenay lake, 9 miles from\nNelBon. 12000. Terma Apply Mrs. J. P.\nWinter. Box 706, Nelson. 176-6\nFOR SALE\u20141000 Washer   and   Wringer\/:\nbaby    buggy;    sewing    machine.      724\nHoover St 178-6\nFOR SALE\u2014Cabbage and carrots at 11.25\nper cwt.   Address M. A. Burman, Tremont hotel, city. 180-6\nFOR SALB-Qulck, four city lots, Mill St.,\non proposed tram line; 50 bearing trees\nand small house.   A snap, 1800, one-hotf\ncash.   McQuarrle -ft Robertson, 1SS-3\nPROFESSIONAL CARDS\nS. S. FOWLER\nMINING ENGINEER\nNXLBON, B. O.\nWM. S. DREWRY\nA. If. Can. Soo. O. B.\nDOMINION AND BRITISH COLUMBIA\nLAND SURVBYOR\nMlninc Work a Specialty\nOffloe: Room It, K. W. 0. Biook.\n,       P. O. Box 434.\nBaker BL, Nelaon, B. O.\nW. J. fl. HOLMES\nCIVIL ENGINEER AND   MINE   8DR-\nVBTOR, PROVINCIAL LAND\nSURVEYOR, KASLO, B. a\nTen jean' experience In   the Koot>\nenay,.  Honor graduate 1891, Royal Military College ot Canada, Kingston.\nA. L. MoOULLOOfl\nHYDRAULIC ENGINEER\nPROVINCIAL LAND SURVBYOR\nP. O. Box 41.\nOffice Phone BBS; Residence Phone BT4\nOfflce*. Orer McDermid &*McHardy\nBaker Street     Nelson, B. O.\nr.C. Oreen.   F. P. Burden.   A, H. Oreen\nGreen Brothers & Burden\nCIVIL ENGINEERS\nDominion and British Columbia Land\nSurreyora\nP. O. Box 145 Phone BM1\nCor. victoria and Kootenay 3ta.\nNELSON. B. O.\nH. 0* BLA0K\nB. O. LAND SURVBYOR\nOlllce:   Orer Royal Bank\nP. O. Box 147 Nelaon, B. O.\nMiss Sarah McConnon\nIs prepared to take a -few more pupils on\npianoforte, and wishes to announce that\nshe has started a clasB ln painting. Instruction will be given at both flower\nand landscape painting. Terms moderate.   612 Mill Btreet.\nLocal Option Campaign\nPlebiscite Vote Nov. 26, 1909\nElectoral ridings of Greenwood,\nGrand Forks, Rossland, Ymlr, Nelson,\nSlocan, Kaslo, Cranbrook and Fernle.\nAll who will assist In the distribution\nof literature or In getting out the vote\non polling day are requested to write to\ntbe secretary of the local option league\nexecutive. \\\nJ. W. Bennett, Box 674, Nelson.\nNotice   for   Application   for   Liquor\nLiconst\nNotice li hereby given that I, William\nGosnell, Intend to apply to' the Superintendent of Provincial Police, at. the aspiration of one month from.the date hereof, for a renewal. of the retail liquor license (or the premises known aa the Grove\nHotel, situate at Fairvlew, B.C., In the\nYmlr district. .\nWILLIAM GOSNELL.\nDated Oot. 14, 1MB. 158-80\nminutes' hard wrestling. Saxon had a\nfair share of honors till the falls were\nsecured.\nWedding Party Killed.\nCUTHBBRT,, Ga., Nov. 22.\u2014Three\nmembers, of a wedding party were\nkilled and two probably fatally Injured\nIn an automobile accident here late last\nnight. The accident occurred two miles\nwest of this place as the party was returning from Guthbertto Coleman.\nLame backs come on suddenly and la\nextremely painful. It Is caused by rheumatism of the muscles. Quick relief Is afforded by applying Chamberlain's Liniment\nBold by all druggists and dealers,\nMlnard's Liniment Cures Dlsttmpcr\nHELP WANTED\nNeH-ioNEimSY^\nC. F. Hutton, Manager    -\n(Successor to J. H. Love.)\nWANTED\u2014Bushman, log and shingle bolt\nCutters,   waitress, girls -for housework.\nTHE WORKINGMANS EMPLOYMENT\nAND REAL ESTATE AGENCY.\nWANTED\u2014Swampers,   cordwood   cutters,\nwoman cook, small camp, $\u00ab; girls for\nfamilies,    chambermaid,  girl  for general\nhotel work, $85; planer foreman.\nFOR RENT-Houses, cabins, flats, furnished rooms for housekeeping, and board\nand yoom.\nThese want work-Two sisters, waltre\u00bb\nand chambermaid ln small hotel and town.\nAlso the best of men and women cooks.\nW.  Parker, 813 Baker street, Phone SSS.\nWANTED-MISCELLANIOUw\nWANTBI>-Men Md women to learn bar-\nbar trade In eight weeks: tools free:\nsecured over 10,000 positions lor graduates\nlast year; uuable to supply the .demand;\ngraduate! earn SIS to IS 'weekly; Cat*!\nlogue free. Moler System Colleges, 401\nFront Ave., Spokane, Wash.\nWANTED\u2014Youth as stenographer.   Apply\nat Superintendent's Ofllce, C.P.R.   164-tf.\nWANTED- Young   woman   as   assistant\ncook;  experience  not  necessary,   ..Also\nyoung lady stenographer,   A. E. Watts,\nProctor, B. C. i63-tf\nWANTED\u2014Logs and logging contractors,\nwill   purchase   cottonwood. laroh, pine,\nhemlock  or   cedar   logs.    A.   E.  Watts,\nProctor, B.  C. 162-26\nWANTED-Teacher for Trail school; duties\nto commence next term.  Salary $66 per\nmonth.   Apply to secretary school board.\nTrail, B. C.\nWANTED\u2014Several  experienced salesmen.\n$150 per, month tt) right men   Address\nBox 76L Nelson. < 177\nWANTED\u2014Position  by circular saw filer.\nCan furnish good  references.     Addre*ss\nL. B. Nlckerson, Yahk, B. C. 177-1&\nWANTED\u2014Log   cutters   and    swampers,\n$3.00 and $2.76; board 75 cents per day.\nTrail Lumber company, Paulson, B. C,\nWANTED-Oirl   for   general housework;\nmust be good cook.   Enquire Mrs, R, S.\nLennie. 418 Hoover St.\nWANTED-iFIrst-class washerwoman.   Apply 724 Stanley St. Iffl-tf.\nWANTED-Sewlng   of  all   kinds.     Apply\n423 Carbonate St. - 181-8.\nWANTED\u2014 Position,     stenographer,    by\nlady.   Address N. P. O., NelBon Dailv\nNews. 182^.\nWANTED-1360 for three years on highly\nimproved farm property. Apply H. McR,,\ncare Dally News. \u2022182-10'\nWANTED-Teacher holding 3ri (lass certificate; duties to commence 1st December, 1909; salary $80 per month. Apply to-\nA. M. Black, secretary school board,\nCorbin, B, C. 183-8*-\nWANTED-A Pelton waterwheet, twenty-\nfour  inches or larger.     Write W.  B.\nCooke,  Kaslo,  B.  C. 183-6\nWANTED\u2014Porter.   Apply Royal hotel,\nWANTED-Young lady, four years, ex-\nperlence bookkeeping and dispensing,,\nwishes situation. Would take position as\ncleric and bookkeeper. References. J.,\nDaily News. 185-6*\nWANTED-Young lad 07) desires position\nto learn ranching, salary no object.   M.,\nDally News. 185-6\nApply 617  Vernon:\n185-6*\nWANTED-GIrl  help.\n8*.\nWANTED-Posltlon   by  stenographer,  experienced law and real estate, etc.   Address O. L., Dally News. 185-6-\nWANTBD-Advertiser, married man, -\u00bb36,\n. desires situation, city. In any light capacity or position of trust. Reply E.M.A.,\nDailv News.  ' .186-7-\nFOR RENT-NIce large warm front room\nln private family, all modern conveniences,  centrally  located.    No  children.   $a\nper month.   Apply P. O.. box 465      .166-tf.\nFOR RENT\u2014Store on Water St., near.\nHome hospital; plate glass front; excellent location for grocery business; good\nneighborhood. Rent $12.60. E. B, McDermid. ...    170-29:\nFOR RENT\u2014Furnished  room.    Apply 518\n.Carbonate street. 176-tf.\nFOR    RENT\u2014Modern     furnished    Beven-\nroomed bungalow, with furnace.   Apply\nO. B. Ford, Dominion Express ofllce.\n\u2022      , 183-6\nFOR RENT\u2014Room and board, or board\nseparate.   014 .Victoria St. 183-6\nFOR RENT\u2014Comfortable'front bedroom!\n.With bath.   406 Victoria St. 184-9\nFOR RENT\u2014A double bedded front room,\nsuitable for two gentlemen; home privileges, 806 Stanley St. 185-3\nFOR RENT\u2014Nicely furnished rooms, all\nmodern.   Apply 414 Silica St. 185-6 .\nFOR RENT\u2014Nicely furnished front room,.\nwith  bath.   .214 Victoria  St. 186-2S\nMISCELLANEOUS\nLADIES TAILORING and Dressmaking.\nApply 706 Victoria St. - \u25a0     155-36\nIF YOU WISH TO SECURE A THOR-\nough, up-to-date course In stenography\nand typewriting (touch, system) call or\naddress Mrs. D. P. Patenaude, 802 Car-,\nbonate St., Nelson, B. C. 166-tf.\nMRS. J. P. WINTER, TEACHER OF\nMusic, Certificated. R.A.M. and L.C.M.\nfor Singing; T.C.L. and Honors for\nTheory, and R.A.M. and L.C.M, for\nPianoforte Playing.   616 Mill street.\nMOTOR BOAT SUPPLIES-B. D. Messen-\nger Co.   P. O. Box 172, Nelson. B. O.   ..\nLAUNDRY WORK neatly done.   Mrs  E.\nBuchner, 606 Victoria St., Phone A114.\nm-M\nHIGH GRADE, profitable business proposl-\"-\ntlon; $160 handles It   Apply 3. R. Hoff-\nman, Hume hotel. . 186-1'\nOBSTETRICS.\nMRS.  KENNY~wuTbT7leaied to receive\nmaternity patients at her home,   Exvel-\nlent testimonials.   884 Observatory street.\nP. O. Box 178. telephone AM.\nLOST\nLOST\u2014Metal cup oft hack wheel.  Reward\nfor return to Nelson Transfer Co,   ltt-tf.\n How to Bay Real Estate That You Cannot\nAfford the Time Nor Expense Necessary to\nExamine Personally\nFirst\u2014The first an* most Important point ls to \u00abeleot some place so situated tliat It must from the\n\u2022wry nature of things become a city. Tien buy at the Yerjr beginning If you possibly can, and ae close ln\nto the center as you can afford.\nSecond\u2014Buy only .from some well known, reliable company who have areputation to sustain*.   .\nThird\u2014Insist on being furnished with a report on tbe property by some Provincial Und Surveyor, stat-\nin* where the property Is situated, how the lots lay, nature oB soil, distance from railway amd car lines If\nany- G\u00abt a blue print or map showing the number and location of your lots, eo that if you want to offer\nthem for sale later, you can give the agent the map to sell from.,\nlourtb\u2014If you are depending om your earnings to make payments, get if possible an extension clause\nIn your agreement If you buy ftom some well taown firm in your own locality, they will be anxious to\nprotect ffour interests as they value your business and your good will.\nIf yo\u00ab teat thoie font points to mind, aad buy under those conditions, there is\nno other investment so safe or profitable as real estate in a new country.\nLook back over the past-ten years. Think of the millions upon millions that have been divided among\nthose who have had the foresight to get in and buy real estate in the cities of Canada and the United\nStates.\n\u2022    There never was a time in the history of Canada so prugnant with possibilities tor making money in\n\u2022real estate as at the present time.   We are Just on tbe eve of a\u00bb tremendous development. .  \u2022'\nRemember as soon as you have made one payment on a lot the Increase to value is yours Just as.much\nas if you bad paid tor it ln full.\nThe two best investments In British Columbia today are Westminster and Port .George. Both have a\nmarvellous future before them and the advance will be rapid and cnntlnuou**. Do not delay, the longdr you\npostpone the more difficult it becomes, until procrastination becomes a habit. v\nSend for full infoVmatlom at once. We have prepared a monthly report at great expense whloh we will\nsend free to any one upon request. ,\nThe Wtight Investment Co.\n4*9 Baker Street, Nelson\nThe Greatest Bargain ever\noffered In Kootenay fruit land.\nThe owner being away from\ntills district and not aware of\n- the rapid advancement of the\nKootenays, has instructed us\nto sell 160 acres adjoining\nthe Edgewood townsite for $12\nper acre. The tract has a splendid lake frontage ot halt s mile\non Arrow lake. Tho wagon\nload from Edgewood to the\nNeedles passes through the\nblock; land ell around It is\nselling at (100 per acre. Secure this, while you have the\n-opportunity. Our client may\nraise the price any day. Terms\ncan be arrranged.\nBeautiful Furnished House\ntor rent tor the winter. Every\n-modern convenience-;. 140 per\nmonth clear..\nBuy Nelson Property Now\u2014\n$200 cash and the balance 120\nper month buys a house and\nlot on Victoria street, tbat cannot be duplicated today tor\n$2200 present price only $1600.\nA Good Corner\u2014One lot on\ncorner Latimer and Ward Sts.,\n$400, easy terms.\nFine Building Lots\u2014Twelve\nfor $600 terms $6 a lot cash,\nbalance moatmy payments, city\nwater within a mile of city post\noffice. ,\n$1400 Buys a good 6-roomed\nbouse and double corner on\nStanley street; terms to suit\npurchaser.\nA Cosy Home close ln, 7-\nroomed cottage and all modern\nconveniences in splendid state\not repair, basement full size ot\nbouse and 3 lots certainly a\nbargain at the price, $2100.\nTerms arranged. .\nA Beautiful Home\u2014Situated\non Nelson Ave., the widest\nstreet in Fairvlew, oar line\npasses the property. 'The house\nis a new two storey, well built\nframe, bas three bedrooms,\nlargo clothes closets in each,\nbathroom, 4 rooms and ball on\nground floor, shed and chicken\nhouses, Incubator, brooders, 6\nlots completely cultivated and\nwell fenced. Price $4000; terms\n$500 cash.\nFOR  RENT\n418 Houston Sti, 4 rooms,\ncity water, $11 per month clear.\nModem 6 .roomed house with\nbath, 2 lots on Observatory St.,\nopposite fire hall, $20 a month\nclear,\"\nAn Absolutely Safe\nInvestment\nEagle debentures, par value\noent interest from March 1, '09,\n$10 each; guaranteed 8 per\n5 debentures, value today with\ninterest earned, $52.82; today\noan sell for $50; profit to you,\n$2.82.\n10 debentures, value today\nwith Interest earned, $105.05;\ntoday can sell for $100; profit\nto you, $5.65.\n20 debentures value today\nwith interest earned, $211.31;\ntoday can sell for $200; profit\nto you $11.31.\n40 debentures, value today\nwith interest earned $422,53;\ntoday can sell for $400; profit\nto you $22.63.\nNo cost for transfers.'\nWe have a client who will\nexchange two quarter sections\nof the best wheat land In Manitoba and Saskatchewan for\nNelson city property. Wnat\nhave you to offfer?\nTWO GOOD LOANS\nWe have clients wishing to\nborrow $600 to $800 on residence property, well located,\nworth at least $2000; will pay\n8 per cent\nWestern Canada Investment Co.\n507 1-2 Baker Street\nR. BRUCE SCOTT.\nJ. E. TAYLOR\nNelson, B. C.\nDrawer 1042..  Phone 264.\nTAXIDERMY!\nSTANLEY W. JEKILL,\nMirror Lake, B.C.\nis prepared ti accept any orders along this Mae.\nDeer and. Goat Heads\nMammals, Birds\nFish, Etc.\nAll work guaranteed.  Prices\nright\n.To Provincial Electors.\nNotice is hereby given for the Inlorma*-\ntlon ot voters, that the Lieutenant-Governor In Council hoe determined that the\nholding of a General Election otters a\nfavorable opportunity to obtain the views\nof the Electors on the question of Local\n\u2022Option. '\nFor such \u25a0 purpose a vote will be taken\non the 26th of November Instant, at the\nsame time as the vote for the election of\ncandidates to the Legislative Assembly.\nHBNET E8SON YOUNG.\n180-s Provincial Secretary.\nNotice of Application for Renewal of\n'; Liquor License\n\/ Nnotlce Is hereby given that I, James\nB. Hunnex, of Erie, B. C. Intend to apply\nto the Superintendent ef Provincial Polios\nfor a renewal, of ..the. liquor license held\nby me for'tbe Mersey hotel at Brie, B.C.\nDatediat Erie, B.C., this 28th day ot\nttMMW.1**' JAMEB R. HUNNEX.\nTo Produce Best Results\nFlour Must Be Properly Aged\nMILLS with insufficient storage capacity are forced to ship\ntheir flour before it is properly aged. Underaged flour\nrequires expert handling in order to secure even fair results, tn'\nour big warehouses in six different cities we have storage\ncapacity for 370,000 (98-pound) bags. We are thus able to\nstore \"Purity\" Flour until it is properly aged.\nYou can never get underaged flour if you always specify\n\"Purity.\"\nGood results come easiest and surest with \"Purity\" Flour.\n\"More Bread and\nBetter Bread.\"\npuRity\nFLOUR\nPurity Flour is\npacked in 7,14,\n14, 49 and 89\npound cot tod\naackt. Also\nbarrets and\nhalf-barrels.\nWESTERN CANADA FLOUR HILLS CO., LTD.\nOfflce, Winnipeg, Manitoba,\nCOURT OF APPEAL DELAY\nLEGAL SITUATION IN BRITISH COLUMBIA DISCUSSED\nMARTIN BURRELL LAYS FACTS BEFORE PARLIAMENT\nThe delay of the dominion government ln appointing a court of appeal\nfor British Columbia was the subject\nof an interesting debate ln the house\nof commons on Nov. 12, the matter being brought up by R. L. Borden, leader\nof tbe conservative party, and the discussion being participated ln by Hon.\nA. B. Aylesworth, minister of Justice;\nMartin Burrell, member for Yale-Cariboo, and others, Mr. Burrell, in his\nspeech, drew attention to the fact that\nthe province has been without a court\nof appeal since Sept, 1, and In doing\nso, mentioned the fact that J, A. Macdonald, late leader of the liberal party\nin this province, had been promised\nthe chief justiceship of the new court,\nand that to his .Credit It should be said\nhe was taking no part In the -contest.\nSince then, however, it may be pointed out, Mr. Macdonald has been dragooned Into the contest and is actively assisting the liberal candidate in\nRossland, with the promise of the chief\njusticeship In his pocket, to be made\ngood as soon as the election Is over.\nHansard's report of Mr. -Barren's\nspeech reads as follows:\n.   Mr.   Martin   Burrell,   Yale-Cariboo:\n1 do not intend to detain the house for\nmore than a moment or two in the\ndiscussion of a subject which Is so\nlaj'gely legal ln its bearing as the one\nnow before the chair. It is with some\ndiffidence that any layman must rise In\nthis house to touch upon matters that\naffect directly the legal profession, for\non this floor one has Ihe felicity of finding lawyers in front of him, lawyers behind him, lawyers to right and to left\nof him ready to volley and thunder. It\nIs, however, of. some advantage occasionally to get members of my own profession, that is the farmers, as, after\nall, not only are they allied to tlie basic\nindustry of the country, but I do believe that in some of these legal matters the assistance of the farming fraternity would tend at least towards\nsimplicity, efficiency and the necessary\ncheapening of the processes of law. I\nthink, therefore, that the house should\nnot have In Its membership too great\na quantum of lawyers; and It is perhaps\nwell that a farmer and not a lawyer\nshould come to tills house from North\nEssex.\nThe question raised by the leader of\nthe opposition (Mr. R. L. Borden) has,\n2 think, been well raised. It is felt by\neverybody in British Columbia, be he\nlitigant or non-litigant, that we have\nsuffered very much from the law's delay. It is hard enough, heaven knows,\nfor the average individual to get into\nthe clutches of the law, and it is very\nmuch harder for him to be eating out\nliis soul with anxiety while a decision\nIs pending. Our position is very much\nharder at the present moment when\nwe have   absolutely   and literally   no\n..court \u25a0 of- appeal existing* in the whole\nprovince and-have.not had since the\nfirst day of September when the proclamation went into effect. I will not\ndilate on the remarks of the minister\nof Justice (Hon. A. B. Aylesworth) as\nto the delay on the part of the province\n'in proclaiming this matter, but we have\nheard it stated, and I have every reason to believe that it is true, that,due\nnotice was given to the minister of\njustice here as long ago as last May.\nthat it was the intention of the province to proclaim this act on Sept. 1, or\nat the end of August and, ipso facto,\ntherefore, there would be absolutely no\nway in which a man in British Columbia could appeal because there would\nbe no court of appeal until judges were\nappointed by the dominion government.   The minister of justice (Hon. A.\nB. Aylesworth) has, tt is true, expressed his Wish not to see judicial\nmatters mixed up in politics, and yet\nhe took on himself, I think rather 11-\nloglcally, rather unnecessarily and perhaps In a somewhat undignified way, to\nstate that this act was-not proclaimed\nby the government of the province of\nBritish Columbia because it was hoped\nthat after the election of 1908, the government of Canada might be of a different political complexion. If that is\nso, and if the minister of justice, taking that lofty idea, thought he could\nattack a province for delay on account\nof political reasons, It was evidently\nand abundantly clear that he should\nhave taken particular- pains to keep\nhimself clear of the criticism which he\nmight Incur by leaving a whole province void of a court of appeal when\nsome of the gentlemen who may be on\nthat court'are now taking part in an\nelection campaign against the present\nprovincial government. The minister of\nJustice (Hon. A. B. Aylesworth) has\nstated that he very much regrets the\ndelay, that he has not' been' ready to\ndecide on the personnel of the court\nand he does not wish to discuss that\nquestion in the house. That is a sentiment in which we would probably all\nagree, but I would point out to him\nthat the personnel of the bench has\nbeen very freely discussed all through\nthe province of British Columbia by\nliberal newspapers, and name after\nname has been bandied about In those\nnewspapers as the names of gentlemen\nwho are to fill positions on this court\nof appeal. So far has It gone that some\ntime ago dispatches were published In\nthe chief liberal newspapers announcing that the appointment would shortly be made of the late leader of the liberal opposition in British Columbia, a\ngentleman who has the unfailing respect of all people ln British Columbia,\nliberals and conservatives, and that\ngentleman and his friends seem to have\nattached such full credence to that report that he retired from the leadership of the liberal party in British Columbia, and, to hia credit, la not\ntaking any part ln the campaign\nnow in progress. I do not know\nthat   this   can   be   said   of  several\nIf you purchase a Kootenay\nwithout the reservoir and\ndecide later that the\nreservoir is a real\nnecessity, why, just\norder it and attach it\nyourself. It's easily\ndone.  Merely\nremove the screws _\nand take off the plate marked\n\"'REMOVE .FOR RESERVOIR\" (see top illustration),\nwhich provides an opening\nfor the hot air to come\nthrough and circulate\nunder the reservoir. Thenattaoh,\nby means of\nscrews, the\nreservoir and\nthe flue box\nshown in lower illustration.\nA screwdriver\nis the only\ntool required.\nmains\nWood-Vallance Hardware Company\nHOLBROOKS\nI\nAdds a delicious zest\nand piquancy to\nSOUPS, FISH, MEATS,\nPOULTRY, GAME.\nMME AND BOTTLED IN ENGLAND SOLD BV AU GROCERS\nSAUCE\ni\nA\njfisSSSIt \u25a0\u2022\"\"*\u00bb\u2022\u2022*-*'\u2022\u00bb...\u201e,\u201e\u201e;;.\ntoy-go\u00a9^\nPERFECTION   j\ncoC0'\u00bb\/'?(:onom,ca|that,,\n***VlELGRFlA0^ \/Haifateaspoonful\nIs the most\nyou can buy.\nwill make a cup V.      ~~ \"\/j^fdf cocoa \u2014rich,\nfragrant, nutritious**--        ^\u2014with the delicious\n^HBjftiL   '    flavor that is characteristic of Cowan's.\nM^^THI COWAN CO. LIMITED, TORONTO.\nother gentlemen whose names have\nbeen mentioned. The minister of justice (Hon. A. R Aylesworth) says that\nthese matters should be kept entirely\nfree from party political Inbuences. Unfortunately it does not always come\nwith the best grace from the minister\nof justice, when we have had in the.\npast In British Columbia the spectacle\nof judges shortly before an election,\nbefore their resignations hud been accepted, taking part In party politics,\nand then stepping down from the bench\nInto the party arena. In 1007 we had\nan extraordinary spectacle when a gentleman who hail been in party politics\nin British Columbia and who had been\nrewarded by being appointed to the important position of governor of the\nYukon\u2014I refer, of course, to Mr. W. W.\nB. Mclnnes, a very energetic and strong\nchampion of the liberal cause\u2014went up\nto the Yukon, and behold Mr. Henderson stepped down from his position on\nthe bench, went into party politics, was\ndefeated in 1007, and was rewarded by\nbeing appointed to Mr, Mclnnes' place\nas governor of the Yukon while the\ndominion government compensated Mr.\nMclnnes by putting him on the bench.\nWhen we have such an extraordinary\nshuffle as that, well may the minister\nof justice (Hon. A. B. Aylesworth) say\nthat the Judiciary ought to be above\nparty politics. I would like to re-emphasize the fact that at this time every\nman in British Columbia Is in this position that If he wants to appeal a case,\nhe cannot appeal It simply because we\nhave no such thing as a court of appeal In British Columbia, and have not\nhad since Sept. 1. The minister of jus*\ntlce (Hon. A. B. Aylesworth) concluded\nhis remarks by saying that he knew of\na great many gentlemen who would\nmake very excellent judges. Possibly\nhe does, possibly we all do, but he says\nalthough he knows of many qualified\nfor the position, he intends to go a little slowly, to wait a little longer, and\nhe added significantly that he would\nprobably make the appointments before\nthe end of the month! It is un extraordinary coincidence that the British\nColumbia elections are to take place\non Nov. 25. There is no doubt in my\nmind that when these elections are decided it will be far easier tor the minister of justice to give the awards, it\nleads to the suspicion that in soir(j\ncases it may be a party decision und\nthat these gentlemen will decide it according to the political merits of the\ncase, but not judicially. I think we are\njustified In coming to some such conclusion as that. It ls unfortunate that\nwhatever delays may have occurred,\neven assuming that there was delay in\nproclaiming the act on the part of the\nprovincial government, in view of the\nfact that the minister of justice had\ntaken this high -stand, should he not\nImmediately have put a court of appeals Into effect by proclaiming ft and\nby appointing Judges before the heat\nof an election campaign and so relieved\nhimself and his party 'from any criticism of this kind.\nCroup Is more prevalent during the dry\ncold weather of the early winter months.\nParents of young children should be prepared for tt. AU that Is needed Ib a bottle\nof Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. Many\nmother are never without it ln their homes\nand it haa never disappointed them. Sold\nby all druggists and dealers,\nBUSINESS DIRECTORY\ny^WTM\"* AWD PiC0'IAT0M\nTHOJIPBON^*\"\"\"mUOU^um*\"jS\u00bb\nSign Painters, Paper Hangers and Decorators. Shop m Ward Street. Wal\u00bbonr.ILC.\nAUCTIONEERS\nCHAS. A. WATERMAN A CO.-P.O. Hot\nas. _^\t\nPUBLISHERS AND PRINTERS\nNEWS PUBUSHNO COMPANY, LTD.\u2014\nPublishers of The Daily News; aubscrto-\ntton |6.00 per year by carrier- $6.00 per year\nby mall. Commercial Job Printing of a'l\nklnda neatly and promptly executed, fit\nBaker street. Nelson, B. C, phone 144;\nH^'RP-? --$IN-<J   ANP   MANICURlW,'a\nUME. KATHLEEN NOAH. HAIRDRESS-\nlng and manicuring parlors.   Room 38,\nW, W. C block.'\nCOLLECTION   AGENCIES.\nW. CUTLER-COLLECTIONS OP ALL\nkinds. Returns promptly made. References given. Office ant Baker street.\nNelson, B. C.\nBOOKBINDING AND RULING\nNEWTPUBU^\nAll kinds of olfice forms ruled and punched for loose leaf binders. The most complete book binding equipment ln the interior of British Columbia. 216 Baker St.,\nNelson, B.C., P. O. drawer 1119, Phone'I44.\nASSAYERS\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, ASSAYER (PRO-\nvlnclal) Metalluglcal Chemist. Charges,\nGold, Silver, Copper or Lead, U each;*\nGold-Silver, $1.50; Silver-Lead, $1.50; Zinc,\n12; SUver-Lead-ZInc, S3; Gold, Silver-Copper or Lead, $2.60. Accurate assays; careful sampling, and prompt attention. P.O.\nBox A1108,  Nelson,  B.C.\nASSAYERS' SUPPLIES\nTHE B. C. ASSAY AND CHEMICAL\nSUPPLY COMPANY, LIMITED, Vancouver, B. C\u201e 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; tlie\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 outllts furnished at short\nnotice.\nDRUGS AND ASSAYER8* SUPPLIES\nWholesale and Retail\nLIME SUI*PHUR SPRAY FOR FRUIT\ntrees. The fall Is tlie best time to apply.\nFresh lot just received.\nTHE ORIGINAL COUGH SYRUP-OUR\nWild Cherry, Spruce and Tar is the best\ncough remedy. Hundreds recommend it.\nBeware of imitations and Imitator-..\nA NEW LOT OF SPLENDID RUBBER\ngoods, hot water bottles, fountain syringes, etc., at lowest prices.\nPRESCRIPTIONS CAREFULLY FILLED.\nMall orders filled promptly. William\nRutherford,  Druggist,  Nelson,   B. C.\nLADIES CAN MAKE MONEY\nby selling to their friends Swiss Embroideries, trimmings, blouses, costumes, handkerchiefs, splendid novelties, offered by\nfirst-class Swiss factory. Goods sent bv\nreturn, free of charge, no postage nor\nduty, no trouble with custom;; house.'   2&\n\u00a3\" \u00abnt tanmfcstofij payment by \u00bbim.-\naurs%tetit on receipt of goods. Write tor\nsamples to 2a O. 2187. Rudolf Moose, St.\nOall, Switzerland.\nPRIVATE MATERNITY HOME\nNICE   MCALITY   AND    HOME   COM-\nforta.   For terms and particulars wrlta\nP. O. Boi 763, Nelson. B. c.\n^~\"~~pSoduce~n' ~\"\nstarkey & co., wholesale deal-\ners in Butter. Eggs, Cheese, Produce and\nFruit. Houston Block, Josephine street.\nNelson. B. C.\nGROCERIES\nA. MACDONALD & CO.-WHOLESALE\nGrocerB and Provision Merchants\u2014Importers of Teas, Coffees. Spices, Drlad\nFruits, Staple and Fancy Groceries, Tobaccos, Cigars, Butter, Eggs, Cheese and\nPacking House Products. Office and\nwarehouse, corner of Front and Hall\nStreets.    P. O,  Box  1095.    Telephone 28.\nLIQUORS\nB- FERGUSON & CO.-WHOLESALE\nand Commission Merchants-Importers\nand Wholesale Dealers In Wines, Llauora\nand Cigars. Kootenay agents for Pabat\nMilwaukee Beer. Agents for the Bruns-\nwick-Balke-Collender Co., milliards and\nPool Tables and Supplies, Bar Fixtures,\nCigar Counters, Bowling Alleys, etc.\nPrices and specifications on application.\nOffice and retail department, Vernon\nSt., Nelson, two doors east of post office.\nTelephone 260.   p. O. Box 1020.\nMINERS' FURNI8HING8 &\"\"\nA. MACrONALD & CO.-WHOLESALE\nJobbers In Blankets, Underwear, Mitts,\nGloves. Boots, Rubbers Overalls, Jumpers, Macklnaws and Oilskin Clothing,\nCamp and Miners* Sundries. Office and\nWarehouse, corner of Front and Hall\nBtreets.    P.  O.  Box 1095.    Telephone 28.\nMINING MACHINERY\nWASHINGTON MACHINERY & SUPPLY\nCo.\u2014Dealers in Engines, Band and Circular sawmills, Atkins\" Saws, Wood and\nIron Pulleys, Leyner Compressors and\nDrills, Pumps and Hoists. Prompt attention, Reasonable prices. Courteous\ntrpntnipnt.    Rnokane.  Wash.\nPublic Stenographer\n109 Bakflr 8t. Nalton. B C. Phono 171\nHELP   WANTED-MALE\nWANTED-Men and boys to learn plumbing. Plumbers in demand everywhere,\nearn {6 lo S-S per day, short hours. By\nmy methods I make you a practical\nplumber In a few months. Edward Mc-\nCaffery Plumbing School, 20 Riverside\nAve, Spokane, Wash. 150-21\nApplication for a Water License.\nNotice is hereby given that thirty daya\nfrom the date hereof I, Arthur Crandell\nMajor, physician, Proctor, B.C., Intend to\napply to tlie Gold Commissioner at Nelson.\n-B.C., for the right to take 10 inches of\nwater per second, tor Irrigation purposes,\nfrom Narrows Creek, rising on West Arm\nof Kootenay lake.\nARTHUR C. MAJOR.\nNov. 15, 1900. 18-11-08-4\nApplication for Liquor Licenie\nNotice Is hereby given that I, George S.\nColeman, of Ymir, B. C, Intend, thirty\ndays after the date hereof to apply to *the\nSuperintendent 'of Provincial Police for a\nliquor llcenae for the Waldorf hotel at\nYmlr.\nDated at Ymlr this 10th day of October.\n1909.\nU-10-O-MW. GEORGE S. COLEMAN.\nMM\n Northern British Columbia, tie Mecca\nof the Farmer, Stockman,\nand Homebtiilder\n( Utter \u00bbro\"> Mr* \u00b0^Z,h 5SSt4tt  1909. for the northern British Columbia:country, went byway\nI felt Seattle Wednesday, August \u00ab\u00a3 \u2122u^\u2122 \u2122      lve(1 ta A8hcr\u201eft Aug. 6\/  From there I drove\not Vancouver lh order to toko \u00bb\u00bb \u00ab-\u2122 <\u00abJ\u2122 m\u00b0\u2122 *\u00a3&\"\u201e* i embarked for Quwiel on the river steamr\n\"\"^,^\"^5 Iv \u00abSeSBeM. Ltd.r\u00b0fQ\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab*ftAt Quesnel took saddle horses and went to the Black-\nThe best farm ng \u00ab\u2122%\u00a3*%\u00a3 %?S^\u00bb Wtt of vegetation was of the rankest Mod.   I\nhad :been toW of the '\"\u2022\"\u25a0r\u00a3nexten4ta^ ovBer auch a broad e%tent of territory. Wild pea vine, vetch, red\nsuch a superabundant S\u2122*\u2122   \"~\u00a3??   . M tlw name5 of which I am not familiar with grew every-\ntop, clover and timothy, aad other BM, ot ^\u2122a\u2122 \"\u2122\u2122 d lt Motill the most nutritious food tor\nZbeKl v^l.Tnablf\u00b0Cc-^SySSL to^WSS? ^Tiling bt and u a stock gracing country It has\nUTe \"^rgXrksoM that ma* be Quito obvlpus to the reader that country ha. never been culUvated\n?\u00b0 \u2022BP^'\u00bb ^r\u00bb? temotww ttom markets and the lack of transportation fac lltles have p wed an\nto any great \u00ab*te\"V\u201eIS.*t7nuldnot he overcome except by the building of railways, but now since the\nembargo on produ^i<n .^\"'^^^^J^^ahW to comprehend Its enormous capabilities and\nGrand Trunk Pacific railwayJb asmrei, \u2122*\"\u2122* woowtw      ^ mv_y of ^ QK^\nV^SSlm US' iSS^no ftaeXm'fand Ites\u00ab'\u00ab d\u00bbrs than that in the mt yallw and\nCanadian mat__^_Wi3.^o^i^L tJllbtttary ,0 ae Gtmi Trunk Pacific road across the continent\npUteau. of \u00bb^^SSI\u00bb farmer and stock raiser not possessed by any\nBecause that magnincent regwn u.\u2122\u2122 u growing, a stock raising, a fruit, a dairy and\nof the prairie provinces. I.It. f^^ZZZsoerariJas thly ore enormous 'and Incomparable. In\na mining countij allta^one. In J^ \u2122t^<^B'a^one llM, there Is none better. As a mineral country\nshort, tor mixed terming which -W^Sf\/H \u2122\u00bb0 BUperior. Its rainfall Is not excessive, yet enough\nR possesess untold \u00ab?*-\u00bb\u00bb*\u25a0 gSmSit Sj'frSKgood and never failing crop,. It is subject to\nprecipitation occurs to k\u00abp the -^\u00bb* \u2122'\u00a3 m*% Z^eomtm to the prairie provinces and whoh\nno Mlssaids and no su(*1 low lempe\u2122^      * riTerSi ,akM and 6trcam8 \u00ab,mWlie t0 produce the\nmake living a bardshlp. Its oeauuim \u25a0\"\u00bb . ' \u201ereserve. Deer, caribou, moose, mountain' sheep,\nmost beauUful l\u00ab?\u00ab\u00aba'fmfea^ X$T \u00b0BShSLflSE water fowl and upland birds, salmon,\n&W'whM* S&ttSSSiTtotti htkes', rivers, and cr\u00abks make It the sportsman's par.,\n*8e*    . . .. .t,\u00bb i,.rdv mountaineer tranter and prospector, that country of mighty distances\n,. ?'ftert13?vefv Sntaowt Forty taMM(J JKi W the miner' and prospector was beguiled by the\nhas been o\u2122Para?T\u2122v,\u2122S\u00b0I mirS trekked over pathless mountain ranges, forded dangerous moun-\nthirst for gold and by >^^f\u2122^i\u00a3Snt Sshl\u2122and privations that taxed the strength endur-\ntain torrents at the *\u00bb\u00ab\u2022\u00bb\"\u00bb iZtetm the lure bt gold. Cariboo and Casslar, then considered as re-\nance and hardihood of ttie ston^*-J^J\u00bb \u2122 \u2122T\u2122M j* ^0 Iatter dayg, drew thousands to their wilds,\nmote from the haunts of men as \u2122\u2122M\u00bb* \u2122\u00bb S poorer than they went. Now the wilderness Is he-\nMany filled their pockets *\u00bb* \u00ab\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0\u00ab*^^\"taXofsteeland the boundless hills and vales, will, within\nIng linked with the marts 0'comme-^ \u2122\u00ab \u00ab,8^i\u2122bullder to the form of golden grain and fruit;\na few short years, yield their weaJin to we nnoau wa      p for fte c0UntlMB\nand .tooltwill roam ove..Itsf \"3\/,^ SIS*:ton. and clUes will spring up as If\nherds and flocks of the\u25a0 fatm* \u2122\u00bbgL'\u2122^ and ^4 tiie vast and silent wilderness existed as\n\u25a0^\u25a0^by'ta^^^T^mhlTMormedltiBto cultivated fields 'neath smiling\n\"J, M\u00b0\"\u00b0HSe wWs Irtfte^mX and river and lake steamer and the sound of the hammer and saw\n^ilrrerr^stle ^^^^\"J&tfZ^ as .he rose \u201e the next few year,,\nA In \"\"mSSo ?a^\"s.mpSj -ME^ha\u201ed of tho hnsbaildman to develop their rich areas and make\nthere are 200,000 tanns \u00abHW \u00bb to , tllrttt  energy dctermInation and am-\nthelr possessors rlcbl mm. He. **\u2122* \u21226JSf, iBJStri\u00abu, .terllng men are straggling tor an existence\nMtlon.   Thousands \u2022\u00bb\u00ab*\u2122\u00ab \u2022L,fm^^   i.VtSsar.y?   No!   Not for all.   It ls rendered necessary, seem\n1\" ,*t W0:'^mlbleTa-^na ure for some \u2122 toll and tor others to thrive and succeed on the fruits\ntagly by an immutable law oin\u00bb and on tte weaker ^j ^\nof that tolli Just as, Beasts birds and \u2122^ \u00ab ^ l^ ^d ^fctuo,,,  ma\u201e success lie. Just beyond\n.istless part, of animate ,\u2122Sm\u00b0.'tototn^\u201e \"ffort ^4 .\u201e\u00bb,\u00bb\u00bb.   lies in the broad, fertile and   re-\nwemlngly -M\u00bb\u2122?OT'\u00bb*'e '\"\"SS*\"X\u2122 thouMndsTot \"sturdy and dauntless men and women and\ntW3ff*&S\u00abE alf btfh0'aTweU as wea^U to he'found In Its val.eys among Its mountain.\nBi i iJ^-Tl. is a country of vaster and more varied resource, and because its climatic conditions\nCTW *id^,St to sSch Seme and rigorous alteration.. The valley, of the Fraser, Bulkeley, Stewart\nft \"SriKSSftifc OotSket, N\u00abohaco, Klsplox. Chllcotln and many others will be speedily tranrtom-\n^L-mWnSig^llS.-.Mn^Wi ta^tat *\u00abd gra..e..^\u00ab\u00bb^*   farms, dotted   with   innumerable\ntaPPToS'ldnSohteenmphas\u2122\"annot be laid upon the fact that the country from Soda creek to QuesMl Isthe\nToo muen eraiJ\"\u00bb\u00bb'\u00bb _. h   building of the Vancouver extension of the Grand Trunk\n^Slll^mSn^^mtSmL with lis natui-al mtmm and the advantage of water tranapor-\nr\u00ab'CJ?^lS to rail the country will glow by leapt and houhds. That the present and future travel\n^\".? ?n.eriir if British Columbia to reach the Grand Trunk Paclflc line and ae valley through which It\ni5\u00ab^SS2fli to toXmyW creek and QuesnOI.and on to Fort George, that being the stortes .\n^^ifldch^pert route Therefore as a logical sequence the first, most rapid and permanent devel-\nopmiS willfmSS \"esin and continue along that line of let resistance.\nThe'atove is'another sample of letters by men of large experi-\n^^^.fhnJmeJatelY examined the land tributary to Fort George,.\nEvery man man who ha. seen this magnificent country unanimously proclaims Fort George the natural\n*\"%\u00a3?\u00a3\u00a3[&& HSySTtoSk?I^Ts'lnce the sate a few month, a*,. W five mil-\niio*, Srs to been touted. Single lots .old as high a. \u00bb18,000. Prince Rupert has ao far only ono\n\"%.\u00ab,S7.1*1.   Itet George has lines projected In every direction.\nGreaiVetoUTaptailural land make the most solid foundation for a city.   In this respect Port\n^BSy8SePthee\u2122sh!'t'Have a few lot. to offer the eager thousands who will soon be rushing to the\n\"\"\"senfln'ySn'r'order and trust us- to make a selection for you.\nThe Wright Investment Company\nBaker Street      .-     -     -     \u2022      N*m\u00bb \u2022\u2022 t\nNotice to Machine Miners.\nTenders are Invited and will be received\ntoy the undersigned up to the flrBt December neit, at their offices ut Kaalo. or\n\"Whitewater, for the driving of a three\ncompartment raise approximately 660 feet;\nfor cutting certain stations therein, and\nfor -driving, at the option of the undersigned, certain crosscuts and drifts there-\nSpecifications In detail will be ruoplled\nOft application to the undersigned at Kaslo\nor Whitewater.\nThe lowest or -any tender not necessarily\naccepted.\nTHE DEEP MINE, LIMITED.\nBy John hf Retailack,\n~     Director.\nKaslo,\n18M0.\nB.C., Kth November,\nNotlM of Application for Renewal  of\nLiquor License\n1-Totlce li hereby, given that 1,  Fred Adle,\n.  .-  ._t._i . '7 to the Buperln-\nmt the ex-\n..  Jo date here\nof, for a renewal   of  the   retail   liquor\nlicense held by me for tbe Fort Sheppard\nFDED ADTE,\na-io-oMw.\nLiquor\nof Waneta, intend to apply to th<\nSnSStof Provincial Police, at\nnirailon of one month from the t\nplratlon of one month\nDated Oct. \u00bb, aw.\nBig Sale Now On\nDon't Miss the Bargains that are Going at\nKwong Wing Chong's\nEverything in the Dry Goods Line   \\\nGOING  AWAY BELOW COST\nBargains! Bargains!\nItalic*   ol   AppllcptWfl\t\nDense.\nNodes H imlv Ilv\u00abi that *>*** I*i\nBSSbTot Boseberr. B. O.jjnttndAo W\u00bb\u00bb\nSlB miwrlnteiifcnt ot provincial Police\n2 ,\u00a3. npiratlon of one month from tt\u00bb\njSsprwoln Mow\u00bb u M\u00bb Roe-Jbeir b\"\"1'\nDaud Oct. I. \u00ab*\nMuwmmmtm\nPBTIB LABBASB.\nWESTERN CANADA'S 8REATE8T SCHOOL\nVancouver, 1.0.\nSprott-Shaw\nI Business Institute\nR. J. SPEOTT, BJL, lite.\nSend for otUlofM\ni   Best equipped MhoOl mtt ot Toronto.  New YeW* tonn opw \u25a0>\u25a0\"'\u25a0 ^\nj^tMt(Wm^..iji[iiiiiiiiipinrTf ]-r ;    iiiifriiiiiiiiii ***\nSIR HUBERT'S RECORD1\nWHERE WA\u00ab HI IN LAdT PROVIN-\nCIAL ELECTION?\nPERTINENT  QUEfTION   IS  A8KED\nAT VANCOUVER MEETING\nThe past and praient attitude of Str\nCharles Hlbbert Tupper and his Revelstoke speech were briefly reviewed at\na meeting of the conservatives of the\nGrandview district ot Vancouver, held\non Thursday evening last, and reported\nIn Friday's Issue of the Vancouver\nProvince. It was addressed by all the\nconservative candidates save the absent attorney general, and by Mr. C,\nM, Woodworth, Aid. McSpadden and\nMr. F. a. Ti Lucas.\nMr. Woodworth took Sir Charles to\ntask tor his Revelstoke profession of.\nloyalty and allegiance to the conservative party In earlier years and nls then\nabsence trom the tanks of Its active\nsupporters, Mr. Watson adding a word\nto the castlgatlon.\n\"I wish to say something to you to*\nnight abqut the man who calls the pre*'\nmler's railway policy 'wild and unconsidered,'\" began the president of the\nBritish Columbia Conservative association. \"The conservative party is wide\nand broad and big enough to hear any\nJust and fair criticism within its ranks.\nAnd let me say here that the party did\nnot drive out Sir Charles. He himself\nwent out Into the wilderness with bis\nown political sins, and he will be the\npolitical gost in this election.\" Laughter and applause,)\n\"Now he speaks of his previous loyalty. Well, if lt had been so marked,\nIf he had bad such a strong desire to\nfollow and support the party I think\nthat in the position that 1 hold as president of the provincial association I\nwould have heard of it. Yet In the\nelection of 1907 I went to Sir Charles\nhere in Vancouver1 and begged of him\nin vain to help ua. (Derisive cheers.)\n\"Yet he tells you in this RevelBtoke\nspeech that he was In whole and hearty\naccord with us then. If so, was it not\nhis duty to come out and support the\ngovernment which was doing Its best\nIn the interests of the people?\" (Affirmatives and renewed applause.)\n\"At Ottawa he was an honest and\ncapable administrator,\" continued Mr.\nWoodworth, after .speaking of his past\nadmiration of the former minister of\njustice. \"But Sir Charles' record for\nthe past five years,*while not dishonest,\nseems tinged with something Indicating\nthat perhaps he was not the whole\nshow in British Columbia. (Renewed\nlaughter and renewed derisive cheers.)\n\"Well, the conservative party ln this\nprovince does not want a man who Is\nthe whole show. (More cheers.) We\nwant every man to feel that be ls per*\nsonally responsible tor the government\nof this great province, and If, at any\ntime we disagree with the cabinet at\nVictoria there Is enough material in\nthe party from which to choose another\ncabinet.\" (Hear) hear! and applause.)\n\"Perhaps,\" added Mr. Woodworth, a\nlittle later, after he had supported, with\nmany arguments, the 'wild and unconsidered railway policy,' \"Sir Charles\nthought that by going up to Revelstoke\nhe could get away from this splendid\nconservative city.\"\nHere tbe meeting left Sir Charles and\nhis' ReveUtoke speech until near the\nclose when Henry Holgate Watson, In\nhts support of the premier, the' government and the railway policy, paid a\ntribute to Seattle and Its progressive\nspirit\n\"What do you suppose that city\nwould do If asked tb pass' upon such a\nrailway policy? Wihy, it would chase\nTupper, Wade and Oliver into the tall\ntimbers, and they would still he on the\nrun.\"   (Laughter and applause.)\nPLEA FOR SCHOFIELD.\nVote for Socialist Candidate Would Be\nContrary to Ymlr's Interests.\n(Bpecial to The Dally mn.)\nYM1K, Nov. 20.\u2014lt Ib not John Oliver,\nthe Liberal and present friend ol Sir Hlbbert Tupner who Ib running In the Ymlr\nriding on the Socialist ticket, as some suppose It to be. It Ib another Oliver, bud-\nposed to be a member of tho Socialist\nparty, and it is said he never was a resident ot the Ymir riding; knows nothing\nof the valuable financial assistance already rendered through Mr, SchoAeld, and\nless of the future requirements of the\nriding. Why, then, jump out of tlie frying pan into the Are, or cut off your nose\nto spite your face? Electors Will be doing both If they eaat their votea for the\nSocialist candidate, who has a mun here\nall the way from Toronto giving lectures\nIn his behalf. What buBlnesa have Toronto\npeople to dictate to any of us out here ln\nBritish Columbia as to the way we should\ncast our votea. Let them* set the example\ndown there, then If it works out well we\n\u25a0nay follow suit. The Toronto speaker\nmust think he will have some Influence\nover the Liberals of this riding and cause\nthem to cast their vote against James H.\nSchofield. The Liberals of this riding\nused good judgment In not bringing out\na -candidate to oppose our present and\nfuture member; ao none of these will ba\nso, short-sighted or weak-minded as to\ncast their vote for the -Socialist candidate,\nwhose depoalt has already been acknowledged to be loat by hit own supporters.\nSocialists should exercise a little judgment\nln thla election and rolll up a good bis\nmajority ln favor of Mr. Schofield at each\npolling station.       '   ','\nThis would assist In future aooropria-\nttons for each of the various localities\nand be of more or less -benefit to each Individual. Opposing tbe government and\nasking for much needed favors with the\nSams breath la hardly a fair thing to do.\nRendering assistance to the present government, while you have the golden opportunity and without prejudice, would\nplaes you In a far bitter position to secure\nsuch assistance as yon may be In need of.\nAlready Mr. Schofield has done far more\nthan any of us ever expected he would be\nable to do. and remember this, too, lt Is\nonly his -flrat term. Greater things may\nand undoubtedly will be done during his\nsecond term, provided, eaoh and everyone\nof hi* supporters get In and work for the\ngood cause, and on the morning of the\nafth, both Liberals and Socialists, use just\nordinary Intelligence, and go to the polls\nwith a full determination to cast your\nVote tn favor ot him who has proven himself a man among not only nls supporters\nhut his opponents as well, and can be\n'trusted to future government transactions. '\nS As regards Mr, McBrlde's railway policy,\ns vote against this railway policy Is liken-\n, ed unto the foolish \"people who cut their\nHOTBL DIRECTORY\nthe Office\nHOUSE CLEANINtt\niMtead ol being \u25a0 \"\"\u2022\u00bb\u00bb\u00b0\ntonou* drudgerytjcynf*\nrieuure when Sunlight help\u00ab\n?oT amttttm-'mgM\ncoat nnd In nail *\u00bb\u2022\n* time ol other Sonps.\nFollow directions\nWn-iStmt\n  IHIIM, D. v.\n. Drop In ud Mmple tbe wweet Im*\nportation. *\nKing William IV.\n(v.o.p.) Scotch Whiskey\nThla whiskey is guaranteed SO years\nold before bottled at Lelth, Scotland.\nRemember we serve nothing but the\nbeat llquera, wines, whiskeys, been,\nand cigars on the market\nYOUNG * BOYD, Proprietors.\nSilver King Hotel\nBaker Street, Nelson, B.C.\nRegular Boarders, $6.00 per week\nRates: $1.26 per day\nBest 25 Cent Meal In tha City\nWM. NEUENDORF, Prep.\nWhat Will We\nHave for Dinner?\nThat's a point that Elves many a good\nhousewife conoern., Something differ*\nent from what we have been hairing.\nSameness palls so on the fickle tastes\nof man. the question ls easily settled\nIn our store. We have a large variety\nof Choice things at prices, that make\nselection easy and satisfactory:\nSweet Potatoes, 4 lbs. for 26c.\nFlorida Grape Fruit, each 15c.\nFlorida Oranges, per dozen, 60c.\nButter, 3 lbs. for $1.\nRanch eggs, per dozen, 60c.\nJersey and St. Charles Cream i cans\nfar 26c.\nJoy's CasifOroccry\nComer of Josephine and Hill Btreets,\nJoy Will Meet You at the Door\nP. O. Box 037 Telephone II\nNelson Hotel Bar\nBaksr Street, Nelson, B.C.\nINK 4 WARD, Props.\nTry a \"GIN RICKEY\"\nMade from California Limes, ipeclally\n. Imported\nFor a cool, satisfying smoke\nTry a Savannah Cigar\nWater Notloe\nNotice U hereby liven that an apnllca*\ntlon will be made under Part V. of \"Water\nAct, UN,\" to-Aecotd the rlfht to take,\ndivert, convey and vae water in Kootenay\nDistrict, tor ordnary, domeatlc, atTtetu-\ntural and mining purpona:\u2014\n(a.) The name of tha applicant la John\nMcMartln, (U for mining purpoies) Fret\nMiner's Certificate No. ia BUM.\n(b.) The name of the lake, stream or\n\u25a0ource ia (If unnamed, the description ts)\nSouth Fork of Sheep 'Creek.\nAbout 6 acres of Crown land to be occupied by proposed worka including mill. ,\nsite.\nc.) The point of diversion or ditch-head\nti about 17,000 feet above junction, of Wolf\nand Sheep creeks.\nThe point of diversion Is about 7,000 feet\nabove junction where Mother Lode right\nof way for tramway is cut.\nTne difference In altitude between the\npoint of diversion and tbe point when tt\nis to be returned is 800 feet. \/\n(d) The means by which It is'Intended\nto store and divert   the   water la dam,\nflume or pipe.\nThe number   of   Inches   applied for la\nB cubic feet per second,\n(f.) The water Is required for mining\nand milling. '-\u25a0,.\n(g) The land or mine on which the water\nls to, be used is the Mother Lode group\nand mill site.\nThla notice was posted on the 27th day -\nof October, 1900, and application will be\nmade to the commissioner on the 29th day\nof November, 1909.\n(Signature)    JOHN McMARTIN,    -\nMine Owner,\n(P.O. Address)    Cornwall, Ontario.\na0-l(M\u00bb4w.\nBartlett House\nQ. W. Bartlett, Prop\nThe best $1.00 a day house ln town.\nA Miner's Home\nKootenay Hotel\nMRS. MALLETTE, Proprietress\nA homo for everybody.   Bvery convenience given to the travelling public.\nElectrlo   piano.    Cuisine . unexcelled.\nRates $1 per day.\nFOR SAUE\nTwo exceedingly choice build-\ntag lots, Inside, close to old skating rink, easily cleared and level,\nonly $100 each for cash.\nA tine corner and inside lot, on\nproposed .route of tram -line up the\nhill, easy to clear. A choice building site amd a snap at the prloe.\nOnly $300 for the t*o. Move\nquickly If you walnt bargains aa\nboth of these are. Full particulars of\nR. J. STEEL.\nHudson's Bay Block'\nSherbrooke House\nNelson, B.C.\nOne minute's walk from C.P.R. sta-\ntlon,   Cuisine unexcelled; well heated\nand ventilated.\nBOYER BROS., Proprietors\nEmpire Hotel\n(Late Sunnyslde.)\nBaker Street, Nelson, B.C.\nThe house la thoroughly remodelled\nthroughout,   clean rooms.1\nWeekly hoarders, $6.00.\nRates $1.00 per day up.\nTemberance house! home comforts;\nbeat cook In the city.\nMRS. J. E. HARRIS, Proprletreu.\nWater Notice\nNotice Is hereby given that an application will be made under Part V. of \"Water\nAct, 1909,\" to record the right to take,\ndivert, convey and use water in Kootenay\nDistrict, for ordnary, domestic, agrlcul- ,\ntural and mining purposes:\u2014\n(a.) The name of tbe applicant Is John\nMcMartln, (If for mining' purposes) I*ee\nMiner's Certificate No. is B16099.\n(b.) The name of the lake, stream or\nsource Is (if unnamed, the description is)\nBheep Creek.\nAbout 0 acres of Crown land to be occupied by proposed works including mill   -\nsite.\nc.) The point of diversion or ditch-head\nIs about 17,000 feet above junction of Wolf\nand Bheep creeks.\nThe point of diversion Is about 7.000 feet\nabove junction where Mother Lode right\"'\nof way for tramway has been cut.\nThe difference ln altitude between the\npoint of diversion and the point when It ,\nis to be returned Is about 800 feet.\n(d) The means by which it la Intended\nto store and divert the water ls dam,\nflume or pipe.\nThe number of Inches applied for to\n10 cubic feet per second.\n(f.) The water is required for mining\nand milling.\n(g) The land or mine on which the water\nts to be used ls the Mother Lode group\nand mill Site.\nThis notice was posted on the 27th day\nof October, 1909, and application will be\nmade to the commissioner on the 29th day\nof November, 1909.\n(Signature)    JOHN McMARTIN,\nMine Owner,\n(P.O. Address)    Cornwall, Ontario*\n30-10-00-2W.\nS\u00a3SS^SaS=BS9^SBSSaS!^\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nANNUAL\nAthabasca Saloon\nCor. Baker snd Kootenay Sta.\nNoted   house   for Big Beer.   Best\nbrands ot Wines and Liquors and Union\nCigars In stock.\nIVEN8 A PHILBERT, Props.\nEASTERN CANADA\nEXCURSIONS\nLow Round Trip Rates to\nOntario, Quebec and\nMaritime Provinces\nTickets on sale Dec. 1 to Dec. 31, Inclusive, good to return within three\nmonths.\nTickets Issued In connection Atlantic\nsteamship business will be on sale from\nNov. 21 and limited to five months\nfrom date of Issue.\nIFnest equipment, standard first class\nand *tourlst sleeping cars on all through\ntrains. Compartment-library-observa-\ntlon cars on Imperial Limited and Atlantic Express.\n3~Through Express Trains Daily--3\nTHE*TORONTO EXPRESS\nleaves Winnipeg dally at 22:40, making\nconnection at Toronto for all points\neast end west thereof.\nThe Imperial Limited leaves Winnipeg dally at 18:15 and the Atlantic Ex-\npress at 8 dally, making connections at\nMontreal for all points east thereof.\nApply to tiie nearest C.P.R. agent for\nfull information.\nCLUB HOTEL\nCor. Stanley and Kootenay Sts.\nNewly furnished, renovated through-\nout The best dollar a day house west\nof Winnipeg. Big schooner Beer or\nHalt and Halt 10c Special rates to\nsteady boarders.\nJOHN GRANT, Prop.\nWater License\nNotice Is hereby given that I, A. D.\nFerguson, Intend to apply to the Wat.r\nCommissioner, 80 days after data, for leave *\nto take one-half cublo foot of water per\nsecond from an unnamed stream flowing\nInto Sub-Lot 2D ot Lot 7169, for domestic\nand Irrigation purposes.\nA. D. FEROUBON,\nPer F. P. BURDEN.\nOctober 28, 1909. EMO-OM\nNotice of Application for Renewal of\nLiquor License\nNotice Is hereby given that 1, Pete Johnson\nof Slocan Junction, Intend, thirty days after..\nthe'date thereof, to apply to the Superintendent of Provincial Police, for a renewal of the liquor llcenBe held by me for\nthe Kootenay Falls hotel at Slocan Junction.\nDated at Stocen Junction this 80th day\nof October, 1909.  .\n166-30 PETE JOHNSON.\n**\u2014\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2014\u25a0\u25a0\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014MM\nHotel Castlegar\nCASTLEOAR JUNCTION\nAll modern.  Best accommodation for\ntravellers.\nHARTMAN & BENNETT\nHouse snd Sign Painters, Paper\nBangers and Decorators. Shop: Corner .Stanley snd Victoria streets, Nelson, B. (1,\nNtLSON CAfE\nLarge, Com mod lout Dining Room.\nPrompt and Courteous Service.\nMeati Served at -all Houra.\nElegantly furnished  rooma In\nconnection.\nA. AUDET, Proprietor.\nPhone 275.\nNOTICE\nIn tlie matter of an application for the\nissue of a duplicate Certificate of Title to\nLot 80, Block 86; UU 8 and 4. Block 47\n(Map 266); Lot 1, Block 88; Lot 9, Block tt\n(Map 266A), Nelson city.\nNotice la hereby given that It li my Intention to Issue, at the expiration of one\nmonth after the flrst publication hereof,\na duplicate of the Certificate of Title to\nthe above mentioned lots ln the name of\nAngus Campbell, which Certificate Is dated\nthe 28th March, 1883, and numbered 161WA.\n, H. B. JORAND..\n' DlatHct Registrar.\nLand Registry Office, Nelson, B. O.\nOct. a 1MB ur-a\nROSSLAND\nTHHJ HOFFMAN ANNEX ROSSLAND,\nB. C\u2014Green & Bmlth, Props. Centrally\nlocated. European and American plan.\nCommercial travellers will find tight,\ncomfortable sample rooms, a special dining room and excellent accommodations\nat the Hoffman. Baths, bowling alley,\nsteam laundry^\t\nPHOENIX\nHOTEL BROOKLYN, PHOBN1X.B. C.f-\nThe only up-to-date hotel In Phoenix.\nNew from cellar to roof. Best sample\nrooms ln the Boundary, Bath room ln\nconnection. Steam heat. Opposite Great\nNorthern repot.   James Marshall*, Prop.\nNOTICE.   ,\nProvincial Legislative Aaaembly.    \u2022\nPrivate Bills.\nCopies of Bills. Petitions, and notloe* aa\npublished must be deposited with, and all\nfees paid to, the Clerk of the House, not'!\nlated than 12 January, 1910,    -\nPetitions for Bills will not be received .\nby the House after 31at January. 1910.\nBills muBt he presented to the Home\nnot later than 10th February, 1910.      .   -\nReports from Standing Committee on\nBills will not be received by the House\nafter 17th February, 1910.\nTHORNTON FELL.\nClerk, Legislative Assembly.\nVictoria, \\et November, 1909.       \u25a0   176-tf.\nMtfS1 M upon the waWiT It will be keeping\ndown the prospector, the miner, the rancher, the manufacturer and others who may\nbe benefitted 'by the construction of this\nroad.\nAs a matter of fact, who In opposing this\nrailway policy of Mr. McBride's? It's the\ngreat corporations and trusts of the east\nwho are really doing it. They would be\nonly too glad to see It defeated In hopes\nof securing It a little longer for themselves. Now, are you going to cast vour\nvote against the McBrlde government\nand try to hold this railway route for the\ngrafters and land sharks and money grabbers of the eaBt? The Canadian Northern\nwill build this railroad at once and all\nthey are asking the government to do\nls to <baok their note so they can raise\nthe money to do It with, and as security\nthey give the government a flrat mortgage,\non the whole layout' What more could\nbe expected of them? The'British Colum<\nbla government ta not in a position to xo\nahead anl build, equip and operate .this\nroad. For them to .borrow the money\nwould place the road and country at the\nmercy of the sharks and money grabbers,\nand ln due time they would have the\nwhole works. If the Canadian Northern\nbuild it the British Columbia government\nhas this advantage.\nTherefore It Is up to. yon, Mr. Voter, to\ncast your vote In favor of the candidates .\nsupporting Mr. McBride and his railway I\npolicy'.   Ordinary Intelligence, and horse |\nsense win do It.\nARROWHEAD  \u2022\nTHE UNION HOTEL, ARROWHEAD-\nSpeclal attention given to commercial\nmen and tourists. First class sample\nrooms. Finest scenery ln British Columbia, overlooking Upper Arrow lake.. W.\n3. Lightburne, proprietor.\nGRAND FORKS, B.C.\nPROVINGB HOTEL, GRAND FORKS,\nB, C.\u2014Is the newest and best -appointed\nhotel ln the interior ot British Columbia,\nand offers to the travelling publlo the\nbest accommodation obtainable. The\nbuilding Is all newly furnished throughout and Is the only Are proof hotel in\nthe city.   B.-Larsen, proprietor.\nCOMAPLIX\nQUEEN'S HOTEL. COMAPLIX, B. C-\nChief Young, Prop. Best of wines, liquors\nand cigars.  Travellers- to FJah Creek will\n' find excellent accommodation at thla\nhotel. Sample room for commercial\ntravellers Is If x 66, one of the largest In\nthe Kootenays. .. \u25a0       ,\nYMIR\nYMIR HOTEL, YMIR, B.C.-Moet modern\nand up-to-date botel 4h Ymli-\u2014located\ndirectly opposite depot-Beet accommodation pfflwbte\u2014Dining room ln connection,  J. B. Bremner, proprietor.\niurpn\u00bb*ie?ip\n(Subject to change without notice.)\nFROM From MONTREAL\nLIVERPOOL AND QUEBEC\nBT. LAWRENCE ROUTE\nOct 27 Lake Champlain Nov. U\nNov. 8 .......... Lake Erie ......\u00bb,. Nov. B>\nLIVERPOOL AND BT. JOHN.\nNov. 12 .\nNov. 19 .\nNov. M .\nDec. 10 .\nDec. 17\nDec. 24 .\nDeo. It.\nIan. 7 ..\nJan. 14 .\n\u201e Chartered ateamer\nCorslcan (chartered)\n\u201e Chartered steamer .\n, Empress of Ireland\n. Chartered eteamer' .*\nCorslcan (chartered\nJen. 28\nFeb. 4 ..\nFeb. U ..\nFeb. 18 .,\nFeb. 25\/..\nMarch's\nMarch 11\nMarch IS\nMarch 25.\nMarch 80\nApril 8 .\nApril 18 .\nApril 22 .\nChartered steamer .... Nov, II\nEmpress of Britain .... Dec. I\nLake Manitoba Dec. 11\n\u00bb Dec M\n, Dec. II\n.... Jan. 1\n... Jan. 14\n,., Jam n\n... Jan. 28\n...Feb, 4\n... Feb. 11\n... Feb. 18\n... Feb. %\n, March 4\nMarch 11\n. March 19\n.March*,.\n..April*\nJan. 21 Chartered steamer *\nEmpress of Britain\n.Chartered ateamer .\n. Empress ot Ireland\n. Chartered steamer .,\nEmpress of Britain .\n... Lake Champlatn ..\n,. Empress of Ireland:\n.... Lake Manitoba ..\n\u201e Empress of Britain\n Lake Erie *\n. Empress of Ireland\n... Lake Champlain *,\n., Empress ot Britain\nrtltt\nRead Daily News Want Ads\nOL1ANINO AND HUHMNO\nMt* oslM lor *M MUrscs*\nA.J. DRISCOLL\nfloat Wl Pater \u25a0troo-t, ohwHU flMt\n TUESDAY ...... NOVEMBER U\n^ 90*09 Stent*.\nMQE NINE\nIU3\nTrunk and Suit Cases\n(Nmr Stock)\nSELLINO AT EATON  PRICE*\nAlso Boots, Clothing, Carpet Btnsrss\nand Unolenm.\nCome and ses (Or yourielt   Flnrt\nchoice ls always the belt\nH. Ginsberg\n(\u2022ILVER KINO MIKE)\nHall ttrsst   \u2014      '  Nslson, B.O.\nClfESRTAKINU\nWQUUVtD     \t\nIND DKBAUaNO PARL0R8 IN THJI\nCOOTITNAT.\nw. 1. torn*, ondbrtakir.\nflikt Hmm \u00bb       '   ,    Dsy Phons a.\nStandard Furniture Co.\nNSLSON. a c.\nCarpet Cleaning\nBmUm* wrpet. br hand moll, Ihe US-\nore snd doe. not remove the dirt\nOor up-to-date Steam Gleaning Prooew\nmoves all the impurities and reatora. th.\nood. to original colon.    _.__\n100 PDR SQUARE TARD.\nWork called tor and delivered promptly.\nClothes of all Kind, oleaned. renovated,\nred and repaired. ,\" *_ j.\nOent.' Suits cleaned aad Dressed, Tic to\n&S*i(urt!,'ol\u00abuied. HM: dyed. SMS.\nGloves cleaned, Xo to GOo.    _   . .\nftUrttl  Rates  ter  Betels, Restaurants\nSTstss\nNeboa Stum Laundry\n<n-M vtonon sraagT..^\nIlephone 141, P. NIPOP. Pro,\n\u25a0\/est Kootenay Butcher Co\nQ. a PETER*, Man.\nOnr stock ot fresh and salted meats\nunsurpassed ta the dty. Give ns\nMil.order, tt will be followed ty\nIlsh twloe a week boa ths\noatenay Lake General Hospital\n,   Maternity Branch\nPatients are now reostyed at the ft*\nsins rates:\nIfsto ward nstlsuts, week ....120.00\nmlprivate ward patients, week 118.00\ntddrass  applloattona  to matron at\nal Mialng by Correspondenee\nStudents prepared\/for provincial ex.\ndnations. We can maks you compe.\nnt however negleoted your educa-\nn may be.\ne Watan Correspondence School\n910 Pandsr W, Vancouver, B.C.\nIOHN CUNLIFFE, M.E., Principal\nLUMBING AND HEATING\nJopp'o stores and ranges.   Tile.and\nI pipe always on hand.,\nLK. Strachan\nPlumber Etc.\nBaker St >\nNelson, B.C.\nJOHN BURNS\nCONTRACTOR AND BUILDER\nSssh, Door and Office   Fitting\nFactory.  Brisk and Lime for sale\nOffice and Factory\nCarbonate Strest,      Nslson, B. a\nksrgs ' qusntltlss  of  shsvlngsi\n\u2022ultsbls for stable bedding dan fee\nhsd for hauling sway.\nlectors of Kaslo\nRiding\nDojrt (all to remember\nThs Twenty-fifth of November\nTories, Grits, Socialists, Nell\nlackay men; John Keen men,\n\u2022inking men, sober men, all are\nndlally tavited tr *,*\u00ab\nVote for\n,ocal Option\nid retntin Mr. Local Option at\nte head of the polls.,\nOod' Save the King\nid banish from bis dominions Us\norst enemy.\nTENDERS\nNation Strest Railway Co., Ltd.\nmlers are requested for two semi.\natlble oars and for station meter-\nmd awltcUng equipment, full par-\nv. ot which with copies of spedfl-\nns ess be secured at the office\ntt undersigned.\nI. B. McDERMID,\nSscrstary-TrSMUrsr.\nYou Cannot Find\na better place to get pust the RiOHT THINO  FOR  EVERYONE.\nA Handsomely Selected Stock\nA Stock TM h Entirely New\nHammered Brass\nI In numerous pretty designs\nLeather Goods\nIn   Handbags, Toilet Sets,   Travelling    *\nCompanions and endless varieties ot\n\/ -dainty selections.\nJewel Boxes\nPuff and Powder Boxes\nx Fancy Xmas Stationery\nFancy Box Candy\nIn these lines we far excel anything ever shown in Neleon.\nOUR SELECTION of Christmas goods Is far beyond criticism.\n. WE HAVE strained every point to give Nelson folks an opportunity\nof seeing something entirely New and Different from the usual\nXmas stock.\nOUR LINE is ful of iiew Ideas, well adapted to the wants and requirements ot our patrons.\nWE ARE READV FOR YOU\u2014Awaiting the opportunity of putting\nyou In touch with the latest Xmas designs.\nXmas Cards\nCalendars\nsupplies In any numbers at amazing prloes.\nIN8PECT OUR STOCK before purchasing. We can satiety the most\nfastidious.\/\nWe Are Headquarters for Xmas\nPresents.   Watch Our Ads.\nSpecial attention to out ot town folks.   We guarantee satisfaction.\nWe are known everywhere as   ^artr.\nNelson's Leading Druggists\nPoole Drug Co. Ltd.\nBaker Street\nNelson, B. C.\nPhone SB, Dsy or Night\nBox 805\nWE NEVER SLEEP\n-WMNWr  #\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab,\nIs It Not a Treat?\nto have on your table meat of which\nyou can thoroughly enjoy every morsel.\nThat ja the kind of meats we give to all\nour. customers and our shopmen take\nspecial pains In studying the wants of\nour patrons and selecting the choicest\ncuts.\nWe are able to have on hand at all\ntimes a fresh supply of Fresh, Smoked\nand Shell Fish, also Oysters, as these\narrive ln daily shipments trom the\ncoast,    1\nP. Burns & Co. Ltd.\nphone 32\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\nE. B. Stevenson, manager of the Canada\nDrug & Book company. haB moved Ills\nfamily from Winnipeg to thla blty.\nThe Baptist Ladles' Aid realised $160\n'by the sale of work and tea In the K, of\nP. hall on Saturday afternoon and evening. .The society tenders Its thanks to\nthe merchants for the window space, to\nFred Irvine ft Co. for goods and the man\n\u2022of decorations, to the Standard Furniture\ncompany for'the loan of tnolefe, and to\nThe Dally News.\nTn addition .to the list of Candidates previously announced by The Dally News.\nThomas Y. McKay, formerly of Greenwood, vice-president of this district of the\nWestern Federation 'of Miners, la standing as Socialist candidate In Skeena riding.\nTwo events of considerable moment take\nplace this week In Nelson and both are on\nthe same day, Thursday, 26th. One Is the\nelection and the other Is the luncheon and\ndinner at Eagles' hall, given by the ladles\nof St. Saviour's church. Be sure that your\nballot paper In each case has the, official\nmark.   See the menu. 188-1\nZAM-BUK   ENDS  YEARS  OF  PAIN!\nPowerful Proof of Its Healing Value.\nAs a household remedy, useful ln\nemergencies such as are always arising In\nany home, and particularly where there\nare children, Zam-Buk Is without eoual.\nHere are tome opinions of its merits:\nMrs.  Halltday,   Wroxeter,  Ont., says:\u2014\n\"I have proved Zam-Buk unequalled for\ncuts, sores, and diseases of the skin. In\nevery case to whloh I have applied It, It\nhas brought about a cure, and I recommend It alt mothers.\"\nMiss Cassle Petri* Victoria Mines, Caoe\nBreton, Nova Scotia, says: \"For a long\ntime! suffered from pimples arid unsightly spots on-my face, and hearing so much\nabout Zam-Buk, gave It a trial. It has\nnow removed the eruption, and I would\nheartily recommend It for pimples and\nskin diseases.\"\nMiss A. Bourge, Notre Dame, Kent\nCounty, N. B, says:   \"For .months I suf\nfered with a running sore on my leg, nnd\nalthough I tried several ointments and\nsalves, none did me much good. The sora\nwould just heal over, and then break out\nagain. I was advised to try Zam-Buk,\nand obtained a supply, together with some\nSSam-Buk soap. I carefully washed ihe\nsore, night and morning, with Zam-Buk\nsoap, and then applied the balm, A few\nweeks of this treatment vutno-o'elv *-..\u00ab.ipd\nthe sore.\"\nMr. Joseph Kostyuk of Woodrldge. Man.,\n'says: \"I had ectenia oh my face, neck,\nand hand, so bad that I was unable to\nleave my room. Several dootors failed to\ndo me any. good, although I spent large\nBums of money. Zam-Buk has effected\nwhat they failed to do, and I am now\ncured.\"\nZam-Buk Is the finest known cure for\nskin diseases and Injuries. It heats cuts,\nbruises,- burns, abscesses, ulcers, ecsema,\nscalp sores, bad teg, Inflamed patches,\npoisoned sores, insect stings, blisters, sore\nfeet, etc. It also cures plies. All drujr-\nglsts and stores sell at SOc a box, or post-\nfree from the Znm-Buk Co.. Toronto, for\nprice.\n8TORM ON GREAT LAKE8.\nAnxiety Is Pelt for Safety of Many\nVessels.\nCHICAGO, Nov. 22.~Raln and sleet.\ndriven by a wind which at times reached\na velocity of 48 miles an hour, marked\nthe entrance of the storm which has raged\nall day on Lake Mlch'gan and throughout\nthe region of the great takes. In *h*\u00bb\nmorning the government life-saving crews\nfrom Evanston and Chicago answered an\nappeal for help from tlie crew of the\nfreighter Boston, which after battling all\nnight In the storm on her way from\nMilwaukee, was thrown ruthless and beyond control upon the* sand bar near\nWilmington, one of Chicago's north shore\nEight of the crew of the 18 men, who\nelected to leave the vessel, which was fast\non the sarid bar, were taken by the Mf*\nsavers to shore.     \u201e i\nThree*.; steamers, the Puritan, the City\nof Benton Harbor and the Missouri left\nthe Chicago harbor during the day, barely\nescaping serious damage by being dashed\nagainst the end of the pier.. The average\nvelocity of the wind was 88 to 40 mites\non,hour, which makes the storm one of\nMETALS\n- New Tork, Nov. 22.-Sllver, $o%; standard Copper, 13)4 to 13*%; quiet.\nLondon, Nov. 22.\u2014Sliver, 23%; Lead, \u00a313\nthe hardest on the lake this season.\nThe government forecast la for a continuance of the atorm during the nigh*,\nwith snow and colder tempcature.\nMuch anxiety is felt for vessels known\nto be out of roach of safe harbors.\nCorrect Evening Qothes\nENTHUSIUTIC AT MOYIE\nSUCCESSFUL   EVENING  OF   MUSIC\nAND 8PEECHES.\nLARGE MAJORITY PREDICTED FOR\nTOM CAVEN.\n(Staff Correspondence.)\nMOYIE, Nov. 22.\u2014To be successful, a\nsmoker does not necessarily have to be\nheld by the Moyie Conservative\" association, but to be held by'that association\nnecessarily means that It be successful.\nThe spacious Conservative committee rooms\nhere were packed to overflowing on Friday\nevening when the second event of thla\nKind to be held since the organization of\nthe': Conservative' association here, was\nheld, proving even mote successful than\nthe, former gathering. In fact, never before has a smoker been held in the entire\ndistrict that could equal It. Some 200\nvoters were present, all of whom were\nboiling over with enthusiasm for Caven.\nF, 3, Smyth occupied the chair and\nopened by saying that judging by the raise\nof the audience the memory of the first\nsmoker must still be fresh In the minds\nof those present. Enthusiasm among the\nConservatives was rampant throughout\nthe province. It was catching. The best\nof reports had been received from all sections and In no other riding did the ptos-\npects for Conservative, victory appear\nstronger than in Cranbrook. He announced the speakers of the evening as\n\"Judge\" Carney of Kaslo, A. E. Watts;\npresident of the Cranbrook Senior Conservative association, and Mayor Fink of\nCranbrook.\nThe platform was suitably decorated with\na picture of Hon. Richard McBride, while\na large banner was hung on the wall bearing the words \"Caven for Mine,\" and\n(Union Jacks and other decorations made\nthe whole arrangement very tasteful. The\nmusical program was auch as lias never\nbeen heard in Moyie before and the committee ln charge have much to their credit\nfor the manner In which the arrangements were carried out. Among others\nthe following selections formed part of\nithe program:\nInstrumental. Messrs. Chapman and\nBuBh; Bong, \"Long Live the King.\" T.\nSowerbutts; song, \"Oh, Isn't It Singular?\"\n'Herb Jackson, encore, \"Gee, I Wish I Had\na Girl;\" duet, \"Larboard Watch,\" Messrs.\nSowerbutts and Weeper; song, \"Moonlight\non the Prairie,\" chorus; Bong.- \"Rainbow,\"\nchorus; song, \"Genevieve,\" Fred Weeper;\nencore, \"If Those. Eyes Could Only See;\"\ndance, Joe Gunyer.\nAt this Juncture a telegram was read\nfrom Jim' Grant of Waidner, expressing-\nhis regret at being unable to be present\nto dance and stating that Joe.Gunyer\nwould fill the vacancy. He predicted a\nmajority of 2E0 for Caven.   (Cheers.)\nSong, \"Picture In the Hall,\" Mike Hill-\nery: song \"Are You Coming Back Again,\"\nWalter Lang; song. \"Home Pa,\" John\nWills; encore, \"Thee Will Be No One to\nWelcome You Home\"; selecfon. \"Down In,\nJungletown,\" orchestra and chorus. Several Instrumental selection Interspersed\nthe program. *\nOne of the most Interesting addresses\ndelivered In Moyie during : thij. present\ncampaign was' tlmt- delivered^ bj- {'Judge\"\nCarney of Kaslo, who sluted that lie was\na bom politician and could,, not refrain\nfrom expressing his views at this all Important juncture. He dealt with the action of Sir Hibbert Tupper, stating (tint\nthat gentleman was opposing the government1 for tlie reason thut he had'not been\nallowed to carry on his business at Hie\nback door of government house regarding some Flathead properties, He sookc\nln energetic terms of the government's\nrailway policy, stating that the reason the\nGrits were opposing the Canadian Northern railway construction was that they\ndesired to build lt themselves. The Liberals had stated that there wus noLhliig\nIn the country through which the railway\nwould traverse. From ))Ib own knowledge\nhe could Bay thnt the Thompson valley\ncontained ten times as much timber\nas did the Crow's Nest Pass, while coal\nexisted In almost Inexhaustible Quantities\nin the Yeliowhead. There was no doubt\nas to the government being sustained. One\nLiberal for 'whom every member of this\nprovince had every respect was the late\nlieutenant governor. Sir Henri Joly dc-\nLoblnlere. This man. In spite of his Liberal principles, had chosen Hon. Rlchaul\n'McBrlde to conduct the affn'rs of the\nprovince, passing by John Oliver, Joe\nMartin and Hod well, all mem-era of his\nown part}'. The speaker closed by stating\nthat Thomas Caven was a workingman In\nwhom every elector could place conlldence\nand he urged them on November 25 to\nrecord a magnificent mhjorlty for the\nConservative candidate. The speaker resumed his seat amidst cries of \"You bet\nwe will\" and cheers,\nMayor Fink of Cranbrook was next introduced as the man who nominated. Mr.\nCaven, and was received with hearty\ncheers. H stated that on account of the\nlarge audience the atmosphere waa rather\nwarm but not nearly so warm aa the\nLiberals would find tt on Nov. 25. Tho\nlarge an enthusiastic audience which  he\n1  til\nFor evening functions after\nsix o'clock, if ladies are present, Ml dress ls rthe rule.\nWhite ties, standing collar,\npatent leather, high button\nshoes, if you are very\nstrict, but low shoes are\nworm by many careful dressers, silk or opera hat, Mack\nor white waistcoat. Never\nwear a black tie with a full\ndress suit. The Tuxedo coat\nIs often worn to the theatre\nwith ladles, and many times\nfor dinner.\nIf It's an Informal aHfalr In\nthe evening\u2014.men's dinner,\nstag party Or dinner at home\nTuxedo, black or gray waist,\ncoat\u2014not white; black tie,\nand turned over or wing collar, patent leather shoes,\nhigh or low. Any hat goes\nwith a Tuexdo except a cilk\nor opera hat.\nFit-Reform Full Dress Suits stand as the highest\ntype of the tailor's art. For beauty of design, richness\nof fabric and finish, perfection of fit, and absolute correctness of style, there is nothing in Canada with which to\ncompare them.\nJust a little\nExtra Value\nImproved ranch of 15 acres on\n\u00abood wagon road itve miles from\ntown. Two acreg cleared and\nplanted witli trees and small fruit\nGood four room house, chicken\nhouse, small cabin and good well.\nMost ot the land Is enclosed with\na good fence and there is plenty\nof water for Irrigation If considered necessary. Easy clearing,\ngood soil and very little rock, no\nwaste land. Price 11800. Any\nreasonable cash payment and,your\nown terms on balance. -;-v\nV. Dynes & Son\nGriffin Block\nMore than this, the Fit-Reform designers put subtle\ntouches of style, grace and elegance into these garments\nthat are never seen in other than Fit-Reform Full Dress\nSuits. Fit-Rtform prices are based on the quality of\ncloth, silk and trimmings.\nFull Dress Salts... .$25, $30, $35, $40\nTttxedo Coats $(5, $(8, $20\nEmory & Walley\nClothes, Hats and Toggery\nnow faced was just one more Ind'catlon\nthat Tom Caven would be elected or a\nlarge majority. (Cheers.) He urged them\nto leave no stone unturned until this object wus accomplished.\nA. E. Watts stated that the premier\nhad proven himself to be a good businessman. He had brought the province's\nli mi i ices from a state uf despondency to\nthe present high standing. All this had\nbeen accomplished and besides RTCO.OOO\nnow lay In tho Cnnudlun Bank of Commerce to the province's credit, while nearly 93,000,000 would be added to this by 'he\nreceipts from, thn Point Grey sale. (Applause,) Besides this, ten times more\nroads and trails had been built during the\nadministration of the McBrlde government\nthan during any period In the hinton- of\nthe province. Would the people vote for\ncontinued progress or retrogression. If\nthey chouc the former they would mark\ntheir ballots for the McBrlde government\ncandidate, but If they desired the loiter\nthev would vote for the o:>:>osltlon. M. A.\nMacdonald had charged the premier with\nprevarication but had never sold anything\nto sustain thts contention:   He asked those\npresent to mark their ballots for Tom\nCaven and continued progress.\nThe affair was brought to u close with\nthree hearty cheers for the premier, Tom\nCaven. the future member for Cranbrook,\nA. R Watts, \"Judge\" Carney, Mayor Fink.\nP. J. Smyth and the orchestra, all di-o-\nnounclng the smoker to hnve been one of\nthe most entertaining ever held here.\nThat Moyie will give Caven a good majority is a foregone conclusion,\nLETTER  EXPLODED\nCurious Attempt Upon Life of Baron\nAlbert Rothschild\nBRBSLAU, Prussia, Nov. 22\u2014What\nappears to have been an attempt upon\nthe life of baron Albeit Rothschild of\nVienna, is reported from Schillersdorf,\nthe Rothschild hunting sea-line in upper Silescia. A school master who was\non the Schillersdorf was stopped iby a\nman who courteously requested him to\nCOLUMBIA\nRecords for November\n10-INCH DOUBLE DI8C, 85C.\nHoney on Our Honeymoon; tenor.\nI've Oot  Rings on My Fingers; soprano*\nDon't Take Me Home; baritone.\nBeautiful Eyes; soprano.\nThe Garden of Roses; tenor.\nCan't You See?; baritone and soprano.\nMoon Bird; baritone and tenor.\nLady Love; quartette, male.\nRun, Brodder Possum, Run, bari. and tenor\nAlexander Jones; baritone.\nAlpine Violets; violin, flute and harp.\nOn the High Alps; violin duet.\nLong, Long Ago; vocal trio,\nA Rose Fable; tenor. ;*\nSleep Time, Mah Honey; baritone.\nDaddy's Piccaninny Boy; baritone, i \u25a0\nThe Two Grendlers; baritone.\nVulcan's Song, Gounod; bass. ,. j.\nMaria-Louisa (Mazurka);  band. 'w\nSphinx (valse); band. ; J   J\"\nCadiz; band.\nButterflies, Selections; band.\n12-Inch Symphony Double Disc, $2.00\nMary of Argyle.\nDrlng to Me Only With Thine Eyes.\n(Two baritone solos by David Blspham.)\nINDESTRUCTIBLE  CYLINDER, 45C.\nAutomobile March; band.\nI Never Knew I Loved You Till You Sali\nGood-bye; tenor.\nTake Me on a Honeymoon; sopr. and tenor\nMoon Fairy; orchestra.\nOn Calvary's Brow; baritone and tenor.\nStrawberries; baritone.\nBenediction of the Polgnards* band.\nArrah, Come In Oout of the Rain; sopnuMb\nPony Boy; quartette, male.\nPrunes;  baritone.\nMendelssohn's Wedding March; band.\nMy Faith Looks Up to Thee; vocal trio,     I\nLet's Go in a Picture Show; tenor.\nZep Green's Airship; vaudeville.\nThat Wasn't All; baritone.\nSantiago Walts; orchestra.\nRun, Brodder Possum, Run; bar. and tenor*\nThe Actor and the Rube; baritone and tea.\nPass Dat Possum; Xylophone.\nGames of Childhood Days; soprano.\nMedley of J. K. Emmet's Yodles; Yodle.\nSadie Salome (Go Home; tenor.\nDrink to Me Only With Thine Eyes; fault\nThe Whistlers; band.\nFletcher Bros., Ltd.,\nVANCOUVER\nSole distributors for B. C.\nW   G. THOMSON, Local Agent.\ndeliver a letter to the --baron. The\nschoolmaster consented and had continued on his way but a short distance\nwhen the letter exploded, frightfully\nInjuring the bearer.\nWhen a cold becomes settled In the system, it will take several days' treatment\nto cure it, nnd the best remedy to use is\nChamberlain's Cough Remedy. It wilt\ncure quicker than any other, and also\nleaves the system In a natural and healthy\ncondition. Sold by all druggists and\ndealers.\nBuy Nelson Business Property\n$500 Cash and $500 every six months will\nbuy two lots one block from Baker Street. On\nthis property there is erected a large frame\nbuilding built for hotel purposes. It contains\nabout 30\"rooms. With proper attention this\nshould be made one of the best paying propositions in the City.\nPrice Only $4500\nStocks\nE. B. McDERMID\nChartered AcoonsUnt*\nind  Financial Agent\nWe Will Buy\n2000 McGillivray Coal  Quote\n1000 International Coal    $   .83 %\nSOO Diamond Coal 70\n500 Kootenay Jam  ....Quote\n3 S.A. Warrants   540.00\nWe Will Sell\n7 Great Western Permanent\nClass A, fully paid $115.00\n6 B. O. Permanent 160.00\n12 Rocky Mr. 6 p.c. bonds.. 100.00\n2000 Rambler 1014\n6000 Kootenay Ice & Fuel 1114\nNelson, B. C.\n^m.\n \u25a0\u25a0\nMP\nmm*\nX    PAOE TEN\n\u00a9he 9*ilg Stew*\nTUESDAY\nNOVEMBER Vt\nImmediate Sale\n10 acres, 8 bearing ln cherries\nand apples, 1-2 bait acre straw.\nberries, 1-2 acre black and red\ncurrants, 250 nursery stock.\nPlastered house, two bedrooms,\nparlor, kitchen, bathroom, water\nand drainage, fully furnished.\nLog shack, stable, two horses\naud two cows, rig, stoves, lumber\nand Implements. Lake frontage\nproperty.   A snap. .\nWanted at Once\u2014Small furnished flat\nH. E. Croasdaile & Co.\nRevenue-Producing\nProperty\nResidential property for sale. In\ngood repair and centrally located.\nNow leased and bringing good returns on purchase price.\nF. B. UYS\nReal Estate Agent. .316 Baker St\n\u2022Unequalled to. General Use\"\nW. fc TIERNEY, General Sales Agent.\nNelaon, B.C.\nCan shipped to all railway points.\nOur\nAfternoon Teas\nare universally patronized by\nchoppers these cool afternoons.\nWe have everything to make\nyiu comfortable outside and\nInside.\nOUR MENU\nTea, Coffee, Beef Tea, Tomato BuHlion, Malter Clams, really\n-delicious, and  an endless variety of cakes and sconee.\nChoquette Bros.\nStar Bakers and Tea and Coffee\nParlor.\n,  Baker Street Phone 268\nNelson Opera House\nTO-NIGHT\nMiss Jeanne Russell\nand her Company ln\n\"Sunday\"\nFlan at Opera House.\nPRICES: 60c, 75c, and $1.00.\nNELSON tfWS OF THE DAY\nBorn, on Nov. 23, to tho wife of J. W.\nWelsh, of Fairvlew. a a\u00bbn.\nAa masquerade ball will be held on Friday\nevening In Lindsay's pavilion, Wilkinson's\norchestra In attendance.\nH. C. Hlgbee of Vancouver, Associated\nPress operator, recently joined the city\nstaff of the C.P.R. telegraphs.\nMiss Qrace Qulgg of Brandon haB joined\nthe staff of the C.P.R.. telegraphs at Nelson, as an operator, on commercial work.\nH. J. Steele and Dr. 17. C. Arthur, the\nKelson delegates to the British Columbia\nAssociation of School Trustees, at Cinilll-\nwack, have returned.\nThe junior branch of the Women's Auxiliary of St. Saviour's church will hold a\ntea and sale of fancy work bu.'table for\nChristmas presents, in the parish hall on\nFriday. Deo. 10,\nA rally will be held at the Conservative\nheadquarters In the Young Conservative\nrooms this evening, which will be address-\n\u2022id by Harry Wright and other local Conservatives of -prominence.\nAt the residence of James Tarry, at\nTanya on Monday, Nov, 22, 1809, by Rev.\nFred H. Graham, rector of 8t. Saviour's\nchurch, Nelson, B. C\u201e Percy Frank Tarry\nwas married to Miss Florence Ann Dodd,\ndaughter of Thomas \\v. Dodd of Thrums.\nThere has been considerable movement\nof late In Fairvlew property. Hugh W.\nRobertson reports some recent sales. Lots\n11 and 12, block 5, with \u25a0* neat 4-room\ncottage, waa sold to George If. Bartlett,\n\u2022who ba\u00bb lately arrived from Albeit*.\n- -   \u00bb *nd II, Mock 1, with a 6-room\n ^\u201e-Jx .waa . MM' * Mrs. D. Vyse.   Lo\u00bbs\n'\u25a0    K Jl an* K fclMk 4, Which la a splendid\nkeBetoa rite, were rttt to local parties.\n1\u00bb^\t\nPrepare\nfor Xmas\nNew Peels, Raisins and Currants, Shelled Walnuts and Almonds.\nAll ingredients tor your Xmas\nCakes and Puddings.\nC. A. Benedict\nGrocer\nCorJoscfUNMlSaka.\nNBS0M.C\n\u00bbMH.t((.*M*MMI.\u00bbMialJH  '\nOrchard and\nGarden Lot\n1*54 acres for sale, suitable\nfor orchard and garden, situated within half a block of the\ncity ttmlts.\nThis block, which is equal to\n25 city lots, faces on to a well\nused .wagon road, amd ls one\nof the few remaining acre and\n\u25a0three-quarter lots now ottering.\nPrice (900.\nTerms, |450 cash, balance ln\none and two years.\nH. & M. BIRD\nNmoa, B. C.\nRazors,\nI   Strops, Etc.\nGlllett's   Safety Razors,   all\nstyles,\nEver Ready Safety Razor.\nNev-a-Hone Razor Strops.\nStropping Machines.\nRubberaet Shaving Brushes,\nShaving Sets.    ,\nTry a tube of Berset Shaving\nCream Soap.\nTheJ. H. Ashdown\nHardware Co.. Ltd.\nNELSON, B.C.\nWholesale Retail\nTHE\nEMPIRE\nPictures the\nMONDAY AND TUESDAY\nA Splendid Program.\nEmpire Orchestra.\n\"As You Like It.\"\n\"The Crocodile  Hunt.\"\n\"A Fake Doctor.\"\n\"Hiding the Dinner.\"\n\"A Coal  Miner's Daughter.\"\n7:00 open every evening 7:00\nADMISSION 10 CENTS\ndent of Fairview. The laBt two transactions were for Investment purposes, these\nparties apparently realizing that the operation ot the tram line within the nest\nfew months will increase the value of\noutside property very considerably.\nThe usual meeting of the Young people's\nBociety will be held in the Methodist\nchurch parlors tonight at 7.30 o'clock. A\npaper will he given by Mr. Read on\n\"Servtcn,\" and a' solo will be rendered.\nA cordial invitation Is extended to all\nfriends and frlenda ln the citv.\nLunch .will be served between 13 and 3\no'clock In the Eagle hall today and tea\nfrom 2.30 to 4 o'clock, with dinner from\n6 to 8 o'clock, this being the Becond day\nof the bazaar being given by the Catholic\nLadieB' Aid In support of Bt. .Tosfiph's\nschool. \u2022 The tempting display of articles\nfor sale ls rapidly disappearing before\nwell pleased natrons.\nWilliam McClacharty, better known as\n\"Gink,\" an employee of the Nelaon Iton\nWorks, who waa taken to the Home hospital last week suffering from a dangerous\nwound, a triangular piece of steel a\nquarter of an inch long having pierced the\nright eye and lodged -In the head, was\ntaken to Spokane to consult an eye specialist, Dr. Thompson, and If at all possible\nBave the Injured eye..\nMap of Rossland Camp.\nA geological map of the Rossland mining\ncamp, to a scale of 1.200 feet to the Inch\n(No. 1001) has just been published by the\ngeological Biirvey, Ottawa. This sheet differs from  the  special  map  of  Rosalano\ntown and environs (No. 1O0S-4OO feet to\nthe inch); for It embraces a much wider\narea; taking In tho Evening Star mine ott\nthe north, Lily May on the south; O.K.\non the west, and Kootenay on the east.\nThe geology of this famouB mining caino\nis well brought out In 12 different tints\nrepresenting the main rock formatloriB.\nThe principal dykes are Bhown, also me\nmain exposures of veinB. A special feature\nis that the approximate position Is marked, by separate colors, of veins not exposed on the surface, but developed underground. The map is an admirable example ot draughtsmanship, and the engraver's art. for small though the scale\nis the deluiled Held work Is brought out\nwith fine definition, and. the -coloring Is\nexcellent. This sheet will doubtless bo\nappreciated by prospector and miner alike,\nsince it will enable the former to docide\nupon favorable ground to prospect, and\naid the latter ln planning the development\nand extension of work already begun.\nAT THE THEATER.\n\"A Doll's House\" Excellently Given by\nMlsa Nielsen\u2014\"Sunday\" Tonight.\nAn exceedingly pleasant surprise was the\nproduction at the opera house last evening of the dramatization of the Ibsen\nstory \"A Doll's House\" by Hortense Nielsen, supported by Norval MacGregor. The\nInterest of the story centres on Nora Hel-\nmer, the toy wife, her self sacrifice to save\nher husband at a critical period of his\nlife when his health breaks down, and\nher frantic desire when exposure threatens,\nthat a mtrcale of miracles shall happen,\nthat her husband shall stand the test and\nat any risk save her answering full responsibility for the-forging of her father's\nname, was most faithfully portrayed by\nMiss Nielsen, who gave a sympathetic\nrendition of the part that greatly pleased\nand Interested the audience as the plot of\nthe play unrolled. As was anticipated, the\nleading lady appeared to much greater\nadvantage last evening than In \"Magda\"\non Saturday night, and easily and most\nartistically, first as the merry \"Doll\" and\nIn the last act as the woman whose dream\nIs over, charmed the audience.\nMr. MacGregor rendered most efficient\nsupport and increased the very excellent\nImpression he created on Saturday evening\nThis evening the Jeanne Russell compnny play a one night return onsagpnient\nwhen \"Sunday,\" a mining romance which\ntook so well in London and New York,\nrunning for over 360 nights tn both places,\n'Jwill be produced. The play ls said to be\nspecially well suited to Miss Russell and\nher company, and a crowded bpuse Is looked for.\nFIGhViNG JOE ON CANADA'8 NAVY,\nRidicules Government Policy at Liberal\nColonial Club Dinner.\n(Western Associated Press.)\nMONTREAL,   ,N0V.    22.-(Btar    apeclal\ncable.)-There   la   amusement   In   Anglo-\nThe Cabinet\nCigar Store\nWhole-tab\n\u2022ml Ratal\nG. A. MATTHEW, Prop.\nExpert Advice Free\nHere ie an aggregation ot\nsix experts out of a staff of\neleven. Is lt not worth anything to you? The buying ot\njewelry is Important; you may\nnot know the value, you depend entirely on .the.advice of\nthe salesman or the reputation\nof the firm, 'being careful to\nbuy only tiie article ott merit.\nSo that our patrons may be\nmore fully protected we have a\nbeautiful selection, better than\never before seen in our city, at\na price to compete with out.\naide catalogue prices. Call\nearly and take advantage ot\nthe choice.\nJ. O. PATENAUDE\nMANUPMTUIIINt JIWILU, WAIftHMAKM AN* OPTICIAN.\nThe biggest week we have\never had In\nRubbers\nAnd\nWaterproof\nShoes\nwas last week.    Why?\nBecause the Quality of our\ngoods and prices are right\nKeep your feet well shod. Save\n\u2022time and money by coming direst to I\nIhe ROYAL\nShoe Store\nHigh Class Exclusive Dealer*\nMail orders promptly and\ncarefully looked after.\nCanadian circles over a reported Incident\naffecting Hon. Itodolph Lemieux and\nJoseph Martin, K.C, formerly of Vancouver, at last week's dinner at the Liberal\nColonial club. An 'Influential gathering\nwaa present Including several members ot\nparliament and British ministers, Mr.\nMartin belns down for a speech let out\nln pungent, biting sentences against the\nCanadian government's naval policy. He\nridiculed what lie called a \"Tin pot navy,\"\nwhich would be ot. no possible help to\nEngland ln time of peril, but would only\nmake Canada a laughing stock to the\nworld and serve to nil the pockets of certain Canadians with Ill-gotten gains at\ntho public expense,' \"For 18 rears,\" he\nsaid, \"he had been fighting graft ln the\nTory party of Canada. Now ho must\nturn around on his friends and fight It\nin the Liberal party. Canada should make\na (rank, direct contribution to the empire's\ncentral fighting force.\"\nMr.  Lemieux defended the  government\npolicy on general lines.\nMlnard's Llnament Curca Colds, Etc\nWORTH LOOKING INTO\nWe have another good opportunity for the man who can see far\nenough ahead and wants to make some money.\nThis property ls easily handled, as It does not retain* any great\namount of capital.     *    -.*:*,\nHere you are, Twenty-five feet on Baker street Good frame\nbuilding on property which oan easily be made to brine In 10 per oent\nclear.\nHere ls another thing. It ta between two of Nelson's handsome\nbrick buildings and there la a one-half interest ln a brick wall which\ngoes with the property.   Thlg ls worth at least $800.\nThe prloe It W,000.\nRight hundred dollars oash and the balance to salt purchaser.\nNow the way Baker atreet values are going up at present we (eel\nconfident we can make you ai good return on your Investment before\nvery long.\nTake a look at this today.\nM. K. McQmnfc or Hugh W. Rotation\n41) Ward \u2022trsst 5    Nslton, I.C.\nNorthern Spy\nApples\nWe have a few Ontario Spys,\nbut we won't have them long.\nWe also have Mcintosh Red apples, McMillan White, Alexandras,\netc,\nPHONE 223.\nStewart <8\u00bb Co.\nM It's from Stewart's It's good.\nTowels!   Towels!\nOne hundred dozen towels to go at\nHALF PRICE. From 10c. a pair up.\nSecure some while they last\nOld Curiosity Shop\nJosephine Street\nQUAINT CUSTOM  OBSERVED.\nCity of London Secondary Attends to\n\"Pay tho Quit Rents,\"      ~~\nLONDON, Nov. 22.\u2014A quaint custom was\nobserved at the law courts the other day.\nwhen the city secondary, on behalf of the\nsheriff of the city of London, attended\nbefore the king's remembrancer to \"Pay\nthe quit rents of two faggots and horseshoes and nails.\nThe custom dates back to the time when\none, Walter le Brun, a farrier, held a\nplot of land in the parish of St. Clement\nDanes, the condition of his tenure being\nthat he should annually present the king\nwith six hoieeshoes and sixty-one nails.\nFor many decades the king's remembrancer has presented the reigning monarch.\nand he did so again this year.\nThe Strand forge was demolished In the\nreign of Richard II., and all traces of certain lands, known as the Moors In Shtop-\nahlre\u2014upon which two faggots severed\nby a sharp hatchet, and afterwards by a\nblunt instrument, had to be presented\u2014\nhave also disappeared. As time went on\nthe rendering of the tribute devolved upon\nthe sheriffs of the city of London; hence\nIt was that the city secondary attended\nbefore the king's rememoranoer, and duly\npresented half a dozen horseshoes and\nsixty-one >nailB( as prescribed. The horseshoes bave been presented for upwards\nof BOO years.\nThe city secondary, ln accordance with\nthe custom, chopped two smalt faggots,\ntirst with a sharp hilbook and then wirh\na blunt hatchet, and the Instruments were\npresented to the lady mayoress,\nWILL ALTER CU8TOM8.\nFrench Postmaster General la Revolutionizing Postofflce\/\nPARIS, Nov. 23.-The new postmaster-\nGeneral M. Miileraiui, who was onoe a\nSocialist, Is revolutionizing the postofflce.\nProm Jan. 1 next, the time required for\nobtaining a money order will be reduced\nfrom an average of \u00ab minutes to perhaps\nless than half that time. Moreover, one\nmay now send with a halfpenny stamp, a\npicture postcard containing actually Ave\nwords, and In thoBa Ave words you may\nsay anything you like, barring of course,\nlibel; whereas, until M. UUlerand came,\nthe face words had to he merely complimentary.\nFinally, the postofflce cheque system Is\nto be Introduced. The cautious French\nmind never took easily .to one'ue*t\u201e*n*t\ngovernment cheques, at any rate, will be\nabove suspicion. At any postofflce customers will be able to open' a hanking account on the usual lines. Money orders\nwill thus be done awi-.y with ln the cose\not all persons having such accounts.\nStricter Truancy Lawa.\nEDMONTON, A1U., Nov. 22.\u2014The\nAlberta legislature-will convene for the\nnext session on or about January 16,\ntha same date as last year. Stricter\nlegislation'governing truancy ln publlo achooU In Alberta will be Introduced at the direction of the attorney\ngeneral's department\nWhile no announcement can be obtained from the department the legislation ls being prepared and will be\nIntroduced early In the session. _. The,\npresent truancy laws In force Ito the*\nprovince are antequated and practically\nhave no effect whatever on the regulation ot truancy.\nPancakes, Waffles,\nMuffins, Etc\nFor ages people lave been searching\n(Or a perfect flour lor making these\ntasty things. It may now be had from\nany grocer In Mb. packages.\nPuritan Ksi Flour\nla the name, and It bears that  well\nknown trade mark \"B ft K.\"\nOur\nSweet\nPotato\nSpecial\nFor the next few days we offer some very\nfancy\nSweet Potatoes\nAt the unusual low price of\n6 Pounds for 25c\nBELL TRADING CO.\nMlnard's Llnament Cures Diphtheria.\nHandsome Parlor Lamps\nYou ay have electric or gas lights ln your home but doo't you\nthink a beautifully designed lamp will add beauty and comfort to your\nparlor these cold evenings. The warm glow ot a pretty lamp makes\none feel so cosy. Just drop ln and look over our Immense selection ol\nImported lamps at all prloes and ln all styles.\nB\u00ab63i Nelson Hardware Co. \u25a0\u00bb\u2022*\u2022*\u2022\u00bb\nHAMILTON\nWINNING\nTry us for\nSNOW SHOVELS\nOurs are\nLight, Strong and Cheap\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co., Limited\nNEL8QN. B. O.\nWholesale\nRetail\nT0I0NM\nvucouva\nAt the Store of [Quality\nFine-it Quality\nFlorida Grape Fruit\nFlorida Oranges.\nMalaga Orapes.\nConcochan Orapes.\nTokay Orapes.\nBananas, Apples and Lemons.\nSmoked Halibut\nSmoked Kippered Herrings.\nSmoked BlosJers.\nIn Fancy and Staple Groceries we lead.\nP.O.Box54    A. S. HorSWill    Phone 10\nThe\n\"Victor\" Talking Machine\nThe world's greatest musical Instrument that brings to you voices\nof the most famous singers, the music of the most celebrated hands and\nInstrumentalists. * In every case the proof Is is the hearing. Ask to\nhave the Victor play one ot Farrar's newest records and that will illustrate the wonderful advances recently made to the art of Victor recording.   For sale by.\nCanada Drug & Book Co., Ltd. **j\u00ab\nNdsoa's Up-to-nate Stationery\nJa*.\nMM\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1909_11_23","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0384017","@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":"1909-11-23 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1909-11-23 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\/1.0384017"}