{"@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":"d250fa31-1771-4fce-a769-e1967acd1e1c","@language":"en"}],"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2019-10-21","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1911-10-25","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0384413\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" EIGHT PAQES-\n60 CENTS A MONTH\nm(p\nCLASSIFIED ADS\nCENT A WORD\nVOL. 10\nNELSON. B. C. WEDNESDAY MORNING. OCTOBER 25, 1911\nNO.  165\nE\nW, E. Zwickey Has Force of\nMen at Work\nGROUP OF SIXTY\nCLAIMS BONDED\nCopper  Company   Becomes\nInterested in Voights\nCamp\nSupported by a group of Spokane\ncapitalists W,- E. Zwickey, manager of\nthe Rambler-Cariboo mine, is preparing to open up the famous. Payne mine\nin the Slocan, a property which at one\ntime ranked among the greatest producers in the province. Already Mr.\nZwickey has a force ot men at work\ncleaning out the tunnels and carrying\non other work preparatory to operating\nthe mine.\nMr. Zwickey came In from the mine\nlast night and waB a guest at the\nStrathcona. He leaves on this morning's boat for Kaslo.\nThe Payne mine was located on\nSept. 9, 1891 hy Ell Carpenter and\nJack Seaton. They sold It to Steve\nBailey for $20,000 who disposed of it\nafter some development had been carried on, to A. W. McCune for $125,000.\nMr. McCune,- it is said, took a million\ndollars* worth of ore out of the mine\nand then sold it to an eastern company, from whom Mr. Zwickey has\ntaken a bond, for $1,000,000.\nThe development of the mine under\nMr. Zwickey's management will probably include the driving of a lower\ntunnel.\nBond Big Group\nThe news of the bonding of between\n50 and 60 claims in what Ib known as\nVoight's camp in the Similkameen by\nthe British Columbia Copper company\nwas confirmed last night by Frederic\nKeffer, the company's engineer, who\nwas at the Strathcona.\nTbe deal Includes about 2,000 acres\nof land, timbered and grazing, which\nwould supply a smelter site, should\none be required. The mineral values\nare copper, gold and sliver and \"cover\nan extensive area,\" said Mr. Keffer.\nThe vendor of the group of claims is\nEmil F. Voight who haB prOBpected\nthe property and carried on some development work for the past 13 years.\nMr. Voight Ib a prospeetor well known\nIn Rossland and in the mining camps\nof Idaho. '\nReverses     Dishearten     Government\u2014\nContinuous Skirmishing  In  Neighborhood of Hankow.\nPEKIN, Oct. 24.\u2014Two important\ntowns, Kalu Kiarig in the province of\nKiang-si, and Sian, capital of Shenshl\nprovince, have fallen into the hands of\nthe rebels, materially extending the\narea of the uprising, disheartening the\ngovernment and giving new confidence\nto tbe revolutionary leaders. Sian was\nregarded as a government stronghold.\nConsular reports from Kiau Kiahg\nsay the people in the evening of October 23 burned Taotals Yamen and declared in favor, of the rebels. The imperial troops made no serious resistance. General Yin Tschang, who commands the government forces, still remains with Sun Yang Chow. He demands reinforcements before taking\nthe offensive, as he learned, according\nto his report to the administration\nhere, tbat the rebels are supplied with\nartillery.\nA letter from Ichang says \"Wu\nChang Ya is under a heavy guard. A\nmessage from Hankow says the rebels\nhave arrived at a point eight miles\nnortn of that city near where the Imperialists In uncertain numbers are intrenched. One of the latest messages\nfrom Sian says the rebels are making\novertures to the Mohammedans in the\nprovince of Kan-su, who have been in\nopen rebellion since August, and the\nsender of the message says the rebels\nwill have other parties join there.\nThere is no information here as to\nthe whereabouts of Admiral Shah's\ngunboats.\nContinuous Skirmishing.\nLONDON, Oct. 24.\u2014A special from\nPek'ng dated this evening says that oil\nMonday there was continuous firing\nand Bktrmishing by the rebels and imperialists near Hankow. The Insurgents\ndisplayed bold tactics and engaged the\nImperialists at many points. Meanwhile, says the correspondent, the\nnorthern rebel army was on its way to\nthe north and clearing everything in\nfront of it. The remainder of the government forces are fighting without\nany regard to order or method.\nROYAL CANADIAN\nWILL SHIP ORE\nWill Commence to Send Consignments\nto Trail Smelter Today\u2014J. P.\nSwedberg Leaves\nJhe Royal Canadian group, located\nwest of the Granite-Poorman mine, wilt\ncommence shipments to Trail smelter\ntoday. This property was purchased\non June 1 by the Royal Canadian syndicate, composed of Victoria capitalists, from A. Gordon Savage of Calgary and T. A. Robley of Nelson and\nhas been developed since that time\nunder the management of H. Mangel\nCook.\nIncluded in the group Is the Nevada\nclaim which the syndicate purchased\nfrom J. P. Swedberg, who leaves today for Rochester, Minn., where he\nwill spend some time at the sanltorlum.\nLADY BARRSITER MUST\nOBTAIN SPECIAL ACT\n(Special to The Bally News.)\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 24.\u2014If Miss\nMabel French, desires to practice law\nin British Columbia, she must obtain\na special act of the legislature, tbat was\nthe effect of Justice Morrison's ruling\ntoday, dismissing her application already disallowed by tiie benchers. The\ncourt agreed with their conclusion that\nthe present act dealt specifically with\nthe sterner Bex as to admission to practice law in this province. Miss French,\nls a member of the bar of New Brunswick, where she obtained the right to\npractice by a special act.\nCANNON CARTRIDGE\nCAU8ED L1BERTE EXPLOSION\nPARIS, Oct. 2<.\u2014The commission to enquire Into the case of the explosion which\nwrecked tho French battleship Llberte at\nToulon on Sept. 26 last haB reported that\nthe explosion was not the result of the\noutbreak of flame, but was due to the\nIgnition of a cannon cartridge, although\nwhat caused the Ignition has not been\nestablished.\nQUEBEC LEGISLATURE WILL\nA88EMBLE  IN  JANUARY*\nQUEBEC, Oct. 24.\u2014It was announced\nthat tbe next session of the legislature\nwill open In the first days of January,\nprobably on the, 8th or 0th of the\nmonth. The question was decided at a\ncabinet meeting today presided over\nby Sir Lomer Gouln.\nTWO MORE TOWNS\nFALL TO REBELS\nQUESTION OF\nDEMURRAGE\nCoal   Dealers   Make   Representation  to\nDominion   Railway   Board\u2014Freight\nCar .Famine Feared.\nTORONTO, Oct. 24.\u2014The first case\ntaken up today by the Dominion Railway board, dealt with the old Question\nof demurrage. At present Canadian\nrailroads allow three days for unloading a coal car. The Dominion Retail\nCoal Dealers association of London,\nasked for an amendment providing that\nthey be allowed five days to unload.\nThe contention of the coal dealers association is that they should be allowed\nan average of three days to unload\ncars, thus, if one car was unloaded in\nless than three days, the time gained\nshould be allowed on other cars for the\nsame dealer, which went over the three\nday limit. They would agree to a total limit of six days and after that the\ndouble demurrage dues might be charged.\ntfhat Canada was now facing a\nfreight car famine, was stated hy Mr.\nDuval. The G. T. R. was now 2,000\ncars short, he said, and the C. P. R. officials told him they were In the same\nfix. \"We'll take the matter under consideration,\" Bald the chairman. He intimated that not only coal demurrage,\n.hut cars of all classes, would be considered by tbe board before judgment\nwas given.\nFOURTEEN JURORS\nIN M'NAMARA CASE\nChance  Street Conversation  Leads to\nDisqualification of one Venireman\nSix Accepted,\nLOS ANGELES, Oct. 24.\u2014A chance\nstreet conversation started by B. W.\nClark, a venireman in the McNamara\nmurder cases, with Harry Chandler,\nvice-president and general manager of\nthe Times-Mirror company, and son-in-\nlaw of General Harrison Grey Otis,\npublisher of the Los Angeles Times,\nbrought Clark's services as a prospective juror to an abrupt end when he\ntold aboul It In court late today. Clark\nwas censured by Judge Bordwell for\ncarelessness and promptly excused on\na challenge by1 the defense suggested\nby the court.\nChandler, according to Clark, had\nsaid that he hoped the talesman would\nqualify as a juror. It was Bald that\nChandler was in no way responsible for\nthe occurrence so far aa the court was\nconcerned.\nIt was stated definitely today that 14\nmen would hear the McNamara case as\njurors. This is possible under the Call-\nornla laws, which provide in addition\n'o the regular jury that two additional\njurors,may be quallfed In canes where\nthe trial Is likely to be of great Importance and duration.\nThese two must be kept with the\nother 12, having equal opportunities to\nhear, the evidence, in caBe any regular\njuror ls disqualified through illness or\ndeath the name of one of the two extra\njurors Is to be drawn from a box and\nhe thereupon headB the list. Six jurors\ntemporarily accepted by both Bides\nwere in the box but all are subject and\nliable to preemptory challenge.\nT\nSAYS EARL GREY\nRoyal Colonial Institute Pays\nHonor to Lord Grey\nQUEBEC IS READY\nTO DO DUTY\nDistinguished Guests Present.\nConnection With Empire\nDeep Rooted\nLONDON, Oct. 24\u2014The Royal Colonial Institute last night banquetted\nEarl Grey, former governor general of\nCanada. Hon. Lewis Harcourt, colonial secretary, presided apd at the top\ntable were among others Earl Minto,\nSir J. Bevan Edwards, the Duke of\nMarlborough, Earl Carrlngton, Hon.\nArthur Lyttleton, Earl Dundonald and\nEarl Brassey. The general body of the\nguests Included practically all the leading'men in London and Canadian circles but the crush was so great that\nmany of the guests were forced to dine\nin the ante-room. The total company\ncomprised nearly 300.\nMr. Harcourt in proposing Earl\nGrey's health, said that his excellency's\ndeparture from Canada coincided with\nSir Wilfrid Laurter's resignation of\nthe premiership.\nMr. Harcourt remarked that he was\nquite sure that there was no assembly\nof Englishmen who would not want at\nthis moment to pay tribute to the distinguished prime minister and express\na'grateful sense of the great services\nrendered for so many years to the progress and prosperity of the Dominion,\nto which he devoted his intellect and\nenergies and no divergencies upon his\nlatest policy can detract from the\nwarmth and gratitude felt for the\nachievements of his past career.\nTurning to the subject of Earl Grey's\nreturn, the colonial secretary said that\nit was no reflection upon \"his able and\ndistinguished successor to say that\nCanada would gladly have seen Earl\nGrey's governorship indefinitely prolonged. He also quoted many administrative acts for the strengthening and\nsolidifying and even the extending of\nthe Dominion during Earl Grey'B term\nof office. During the last five years\nthe Canadian government had been in\nclose touch with Washington and, the\nBritish ambassador at Washington and\nthrough him hnd negotiated a series of\ntreaties and arrangements of the highest possible value to tbe amicable relations between Canada and the United\nStates.\n\"t nra not referring at this moment,\"\nsaid Mr. Harcourt amidst laughter, \"to\nthe recent reciprocity proposals and\nf don't think in my official position\nthat any advantage would be gained by\ndiscussing these circumstances. I had\nin mind other agreements which In the\npublic estimation bad been overshadowed by these proposals. Practically\nevery outstanding question between\nCanada and tbe United States has\neither been settled or Is In tbe way of\nsettlement.\"\nMr. Harcourt then said that his excellency had witnessed the advancement of the naval and military program\nof Canada. His excellency had witnessed perhaps the greatest and most\nextensive prosperity ever recorded In\nCanadian history and In conclusion Mr.\nHarcourt referred to the charms displayed by Lady Grey and said: \"We\nwelcome Earl Grey back as a great governor, a good fellow and a true friend.\nPleasant Billet\nOn responding Earl Grey was accorded a rousing reception. Alluding to bis\nwelcome he said:\n\"It is a great reward for seven years\nconstant effort to serve Canada and\nthe crown and I hardly think that such\na reward Ib deserved when conditions\nof my governorship are considered. I\nhave said more than once, I believe,\nthat I have been privileged to occupy\nthe most pleasant billet in tbe whole\nempire and it Is no ordinary privilege\nto live in an atmosphere of undiluted\noptimism and continued development.\"\nIn allusion to the humorous opening\nremark of Mr. Harcourt Earl Grey\nsaid: \"It is quite true that he and I\nhave differed only In opinion and I\nnever recollect that during the 25\nyears I have been connected with him\nbe has made any speech with which T\nso heartily agree as that which he has\nJust concluded.\"   (Laughter.)\nProceeding Earl Grey acknowledged\nthe reference to Lady Grey and his\ndaughters and also referred to the cooperation of a cheerful and sympathetic staff, \"t feel,\" he continued, \"that\nwith the shadow of the governorship\nstill upon me, It would be out of place\nto give expression to any Individual\nviews upon the subjects of controversy\nin Canada, but I can say, however, with\nthe greatest confidence tbat with the\nexception of an occasional crank here\nor there, It is Impossible to find a pessimist tn all Canada. I say that notwithstanding some desire to the contrary\nthere Is no expectation in Canada that\nthe result of the recent general elections should be used for inducing u\nchange In the tariffB of- tho   United\nKingdom. It can not be too clearly\nunderstood that the Canadians are as\nadverse to the idea of interfering in\nyour local affairs as they are to interference on your part in theirs.. They\ndo not wish to interfere with the desire of the people of the United Kingdom to raise revenue in such a way as\nmay seem to be best to them.\"\nProceeding, Earl Grey said that the\nrelation of Canada to the empire was\ncontained in Sir Wilfrid's words that\ntbe country belonged to Canada and In\ngreeting the Duke of Connaught on his\narrival in Canada, a banner was hung\nacross the street bearing the inscription \"the empire Is our country, Canada Is our home.\"\n\"In justice to Sir Wilfrid Laurler,\"\nhe continued, \"my affection and admiration for that distinguished statesman\nrequires me to say that he had a government actuated by no annexation sentiment. Sir Wilfrid was persuaded that\nhis policy, if adopted would strengthen\nboth Canada and the empire. The people of Canada, however, saw a great\ndanger in the proposals (cheers) right\nor wrong it is not for me to say. Thousands of Liberals feared that their\nadoption might lead thein into the\nUnited States. Recollections of past\nharsh treatment received from the\n\"United States and the present great\nabounding prosperity of the Dominion\nall combined to strengthen the national\nresolve to vote down the policy which,\nhowever advantageous to their material interest, was one fn which they\nscented a possible danger to their fiscal Independence and national autonomy. The Canadians have shown a\nlove of their country, superior to every\nconsideration thereby justifying their\nbelief in the empire and its coming\ngreatness. To those who do not Know\nthe Canadian people ns I know them\ntho revelation offered by the recent\nelections of the strength and vigor of\nthe national sentiment in Canada must\nhave been welcome. I do not, however, require this new revelation of\nthe traditional spirit of Canada. The\nalready acquired history and the character of her people and their attachment to national institutions show that\nher connection with the empire was\nfar too deeply rooted ever to be overthrown.\"\nAn eloquent reference to the sacrifices of the United Empire Loyalists\nfollowed. Then Earl Grey continued:\n\"But let It be clearly understood that\nthe Canadian people are not in sympathy with any form of imperialism\nwhich involves the idea of subjecting\na self governing people to any authority outside, or with any form involving\nthe Idea of Jingo aggressiveness, but\nnow that it Is recognized in Canada\nthat true imperialism is the best authority for loyal nationalists Canadians\nare all imperialists nnd all nationalists.\nNaval Assistance\n\"It may be objected by some people\nthat Quebec and perhaps other provinces are opposed to participation in\nthe naval donation of the empire. For\nthe moment It is true but I honestly\nbelieve .that the reluctance of the\nFrench Canadians of Quebec Is not due\nto any lack of appreciation of what the\nBritish empire means to them but solely to the lack of appreciation of what\nnre the requirements of the empire.\nThis is duo to an exaggerated idea of\nits omnipotence. To tell them that the\nempire requires tho assistance of the\ninhabitants of Quebec seems to them\nabsurd. But once let them grasp the\ntrue facts of the situation and I am\nconfident that they will prove themselves as ready to do their duty to the\nflag as they were in the days of Montcalm or on the field of Chateauguay.\nFrom the point of view of self-interest\nthere are none who more than the inhabitants of Quebec stand to gain from\nthe naval supremacy of the empire, for\nthere is no part of the world where\nthe Roman church enjoys the equality\nand privilege guaranteed to Quebec by\nthe British North America act. All\nthese privileges are Becured to the Roman Catholics of Quebec by the British\nnavy.\nEarl Grey concluded by an earnest\nappeal to his distinguished audience to\nmake It a point of honor to visit Canada. \"Believe me,\" he said, \"It Is ab*\nsolutely impossible, however vivid your\nImagination, to understand Canada by\nremaining on this side of the Atlantic.\nI am satisfied, just as in the case of\nCanadians visiting the United Kingdom,\nso in the case of Englishmen visiting\n'he Dominion, all will go back prouder\nthan ever of his British connection and\nmore confident than ever in ItB bright\nand glorious future.\"\nNONAGENARIAN   IS  FOUND\nGUILTY OF MANSLAUGHTER\n(Special to Tho Dally News.)\nVANCOUVER, B.C., Oct. 24\u2014John\nTaylor Channel, an aged civil war veteran, charged with the murder of Levi\nMcCutcheon here Inst June, following a\ndrunken row, has been found guilty of\nmanslaughter. \" Justice Murphy deferred sentence to the end of the assizes. The prisoner, aged 92, Ib the\noldest to be accused of the crime in\nthe history of the province. S. S. Taylor, K.C. appeared for the accused and\nW. A. Macdonald, K.C. for the crown.\n\u2022 OCTOBER 25, 1911. \u2022\nt                               \u2022\n\u2022 Coupon No. 3. \u2022\n\u2022 This   coupon, with  one from \u2022\nt each of (he other Issues of The \u2022\n\u2022 Dally Npw\u00abt n* trip week enrBmr \u2022\n\u2022 Oct.  28,  nud 10 cents entitles \u2022\n\u2022 the holder  to  n   photogravure \u2022\n\u2022 reproduction  of  the   great his- *\n\u2022 torlcal picture \"Founders of tbe \u2022\n\u2022 Dominion.\"    If pictures are to \u2022\n\u2022 be mailed 5 cents must be ad \u2022\n\u2022 ded to cover postage.\n\u2022 \u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022*\u2022\u00bb*\u2022\u2022* i \u2022\u25a0-..\u2022> \u00ab\nThomas Gough Thinks New\nBody Banner One\nPLATINUM. ASSAYS\nARE SATISFACTORY\nRussian GovernmentAttempts\nto form Merger to Control\nWorld's Supply\nThat a fifth vein, parallel to those\nalready developed, has been opened up\non the Granite-Poorman group aud that\nthe showings are such as to indicate\nthat the vein will prove even more\nvaluable than the well known Poorman\nvein, was the statement made last\nnight by Thomas Gough, manager of\nthe property.\nTbe new vein is on the Hard scrabble\nclaim and has been opened up by a\ntunnel which Is In \u00bb0 feet and is all\nIn ore. \"I think that the new vein\nwill be the banner one on the property\"\nsaid Mr. Gough. \"The values are high,\nthe vein Is wide and continuous and\nthe ore can be handled more cheaply.\nMill   Running  at  Full  Capacity\n\"The mine in general never looked\nbetter,\" he continued. \"The mill of\n24 stamps is running 24 hours a day\nand we are obtaining plenty of ore,\nchiefly from the Poorman vein on the\nfourth and fifth levels. The Poorman\nIs the best vein of free milling gold\nore I have ever seen. We are now\nsloping from a body of ore from three\nto six feet wide.\n\"As a matter of fact our developmeni\nIs producing ore more rapidly than we\ncan mill it so that the ore reserves are\nincreasing all the time.\"\n^The Granite-Poorman group consists\nof the Granite, Poorman, Hardscrabble,\nGreenhorn and Beelzebub claims.\nPlatinum  Assays Satisfactory\nWith regard to the platinum discovery Mr, Gough said: \"We have just received returns from some samples we\nsent for assay to Denver, Colo. The\nassays are very satisfactory and entirely confirm the reports we had obtained before.\"\nThe modifications to the mill at the\nGranite-Poorman which are being made\nwith a view to saving the metals of\nthe platinum group, are progressing\nfavorably nnd A. Gordon French, who\nmade the discovery of the metals and\nunder whose direction the changes to\nthe mill are being carried out. is going\ndown to the mine today to make an inspection of the work. Mr. French is\nhard at work, since his return from\nVictoria on his investigations into the\nvarious dykes carrying platinum values\nIn various partB of the Nelson district.\nLast night he showed a representative of The Daily News a specimen of\nplatinum which had been superficially\nalloyed with a thin plating of palladium obtained from this district. The\nadvantages of such an alloy is that the\npalladium gives the platinum a very\nbrilliant white surface which will not\ntarnish under any conditions. Palladium plated over gold or silver will\ngive the same effect.\nZinc Process Patents Issued\nWhile here a short time ago, W.\nFleet Robertson, provincial mineralogist, visited Mr. French's plant for the\ntreatment of complex ores and both in\nNelson and on his return to Victoria\nexpressed his high opinion of the process. The patent for the process as\nfar as Canada Is concerned was issued\nto Mr. French's company on Oct. IT\nand efforts are now being made to obtain patents in the United States and\nMexico. \"The plant is running without\na hitch,\" said Mr. French last night.\nMr. French has also obtained the patent for the \"slimes and float gold\"\nprocess which he Installed at the Granite-Poorman mine and which is effecting a saving of as much as IT per\ncent of the 25 per cent or thereabouts\nof the gold values lost under the old\nmethod.\nWhile in the east a short time ago\nMr. French visited Montreal where\nhe met the representatives of the syndicate which controls the platinum\nmanufacturing industry in France and\nwas told by them that recently the\nRussian government had proposed that\na merger should be formed of the large\nplatinum Interests. These interests\nconsist of the syndicate in France, the\nRussian government which controls\nthe mines in Russia and two firms in\nEngland. The French comnany had\nrefused to join the proposed combine\non the grounds that it did not wish\nto be fettered In' Its operations. Its\nrepresentatives in Montreal told Mr.\nFrench that the Russian government\nhad mining engineers In Canada who\nwere at that time In Cobalt but who\nintended to go to British Columbia.\nThese are the two men who visited\nJohn Roche's ranch and inspected some\nnearby properties nenr the Granite-\nPoorman mine some weeks ago and\nwent, nwny, after refusing to give their\nnames, with large quantities of samples\nof what was believed to be platinum\nore.\nTWO LEADERS\nCHANGING ROOMS\nWork of Transferring  Books and Papers   Begins\u2014Liberal   Caucus\nWill  be  Held\nOTTAWA, Oct. 24\u2014The task of\ntransferring the positions of Sir Wilfrid Laurier and Hon. R, L. Borden, which it was thought had been\ncompleted by the resignation of the\nlate government, and the swearing in\nof the new one, Is not yet complete.\nIndeed, so far as the rooms of the two\nleaders in the house are concerned it\nonly began today. So far as the new\npremier ls concerned all of Sir Wilfrid's personal belongings have been\nremoved from the room at the end of\nthe north corridor of the new wing\nsave a few Pictures which will probably be restored to room No, 8, when\nIt Is fixed up.\nBut the work of transferring Mr.\nBorden's papers and books and other\nthings from No. 8 to the premier's\nroom only began today and there is\nsuch an accumulation of papers and\ndocuments (hat It will take many days\nto get them into shape In their new\nquarters. There is, of course, a quantity\nof party correspondence which will\neither have to be destroyed or handed\nover to the new chief whip, John\nStnnf'eld for examination and report.\n.And It looks as if Sir Wilfrid will not\nbe able to get into his new quarters\nas the leader of the opposition much\nbefore the opening of parliament.\nMeanwhile the leader of the opposition is taking things quietly. He receives a few friends at his home on\nLaurler avenue, goes out for a daily\nconstitutional and keeps himself informed of what Is going on by a careful perusal of the newspapers. It is\nunderstood that immediately after the\nassembling of parliament there will\nbe a Liberal caucus at which plans for\nthe future will be discussed.\nA general arrangement of plans is\nexpected following the new government assembling. The seats in the\nchamber as well as the private rooms\nof the former ministers will be occupied by their successors. Mr. Foster\nbeing desk mate of the prime minister.\nFront seats will be occupied according\nto seniority of members. The overflow will be composed of the new\nmembers.\nBURIED ALIVE\nIN MUD SLIDE\nDeath Falls Upon Two Italian Laborers\nin Mountain Tunnel Near\nKipelas.\n((Special to The Dally News.)\nPRINCE RUPERT, B. C, Oct. 24.\u2014\nBuried alive in a mud slide in the heart\nof a mountain tunnel near [Cltselas is\nthe fate befallen D. Collati and Albeit\nCercl, two Italian laborers employed by\nContractor Macdougall, who lias the\ncontract for the tunnels of the Pacific\nsection of the Grand Trunk Pacific.\nGangs working night and day to rush\nthe work are now a distance of 300\nyards into the mountain. The two men\nhad gone into the tunnel to start work,\nwhen, without warning, the wall caved\nIn and a vast stream of mud and muskeg burst into the tunnel, overwhelming them. A gang of men is now ai\nwork clearing away the slide, but there\nIs not the slightest hope for the victims. In any event it will take three\ndays' hard work to reach the spot\nwhere the men were last seen. The\ntunnel Is the second that the Grand\nTrunk Pacific has started at this point.\nThe first one had to be abandoned after the tunnel had 'been driven a long\nway in owing to striking a mud bank\nin the mountain. Several lives had\nbeen lost through powder explosions on\ntbe first tunnel. This fs the first serious accident on the second tunnel.\nReturn to Grand Forks\non Friday\nTO INVESTIGATE\nCENSUS COMPLAINTS\nWill Take Special Interest in\nDevelopment of Western\nCanada\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 24.\u2014lion Martin\nBurrell is here today and, leaves for\nGrand Forks on Friday, meanwhile\nvisiting Victoria. He will remain in his\nhome city until Nov. 4, when he will\nappear at Kamloops for nomination. It\nis understood here that be will not be\nopposed.\nMr. Burrell said It was a little premature to discuss matters of public\npolicy, adding \"I have scarcely got into harness.\" Referring to complaints of\nthe census he said. \"My department,\nwhich is entrusted with the task of\ntaking the census, has been deluged\nwith complaints from all over the country in respect to the manner in which\nthe enumeration was conducted. While\nIt is out of the question to take another census, I have decided to make,\nfull investigation of these complaints.\nIn Winnipeg I was met by a deputation\nfrom Saskatoon, headed by its mayor,\nwho, as spokesman, declared that hundreds of people had not been enrolled\nby the enumerators. Again at Moose\nJaw, I was interviewed by a civic deputation, which entered a similar complaint, and protested that returns from\nIts adjacent rival, Regina, had been abnormally padded. I hope to nave details of the census for presentation to\nparliament shortly after the opening\nsession on Nov. 15.\n\"The Duke of Connaught, before\nwhom I had the honor of being the first\nminister sworn in, informed me that\nthey were deeply affected by the kindness and congratulations which reached them from British Columbia on their\narrival at Quebec. The Duke and\nDuchess hoped to visit British Columbia next year.\" Me added that British\nColumbia being the only province to\nvote solidly Conservatice, created a\ngreat Impression in the east. Mr. Borden fully appreciated the confidence\nreposed In him, and from the premier\nland his colleagues the people can ex-\n! pect good clean progressive n'Overn-\ni ment. \"While I am unprepared to dis-\n[ cuss any specific questions affecting\ni the Dominion, 1 have no hesitation in\nI stating that as a western cabinet minister, or if you like, representative of\nBritish Columbia. I shall try to discharge my duties with an eye to tho\nwelfare of tho whole Dominion, and\ntake especial interest in all matters affecting the legitimate expansion and\ndevelopment of western Canada.\"\nLEGAL POST\nMAY BE ABOLISHED\nProposal to Dispense With Services of\nSolicitor General\u2014R. B. Bennett\nto Move Address\nOTTAWA, Oct. 24\u2014The Evening Citizen says: \"There is a possibility that\nthe position of solicitor general may\nbe abolished. No decision about It has\nhern reached but the sugggestion has\nbeen'considered. While A. A. McLean\nof Prince Edward Island has been prominently mentioned friends of A. C.\nBoyce, the active young member for\nEast Algoma, are pressing his claims\nwith strong hopes that they will be\nrecognized. There has been no decision in the matter as yet. If the department is maintained Its utility will be\nIncreased.\nAddress to Throne\nOTTAWA, Oct. 24\u2014When the house\nmeets the nddress fn reply to the\nspeech from the throne will bo moved\nby R. B. Bennett, member for Calgary,\nand seconded by A. Snvlgny, member\nfor Dorchester.\nOPEN VERDICT.\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 24.\u2014The coroner's\nJury returned au open verdict In the\nWasyl Byrcznk inquest. Tho vlctli'-\ndropped dead at work on an outside\nscaffold on a new building in course of\nconstruction, and It was suspected tha\nMie cables of the scaffold had touched\nthe live wires, causing electrocution.\nPRESENTATION TO\nSIR WILLIAM\nHandsome Silver Service  Presented to\nRetiring  Vice-president of\nCanadian  Pacific.\nWINNIPEG, Oct. H4.\u2014Sir William\nWhyte, retiring vice-president or the\nCanadian Pacific, was the guest of\nhonor this afternoon at the Royal Alexandra hotel, at a banquet tendered by\nthe western officials of the road, over\n125 being in attendance, including also\nabout 40 former officials of the road.\nSir William was the receipient of a\nsplendid silver service, including a\nmonster silver punch bowl. The health\nof the guest of honor was proposed by\nhis successor, George Bury, and the\npresentation address was delivered by\nF. W. Peters. The reply of Sir William\nWhyte was brief, characteristic and\nfull of feeling, telling of the pleasant\nrelations that always existed with his\nposition.   Those present were:\nA. Price, the general superintendent\nat Calgary; F. E. Busteed, general superintendent nt Vancouver, and J. J.\nScully, general superintendent at\nMoose Jaw; H. W. Brodle, Vancouver; George E. Graham, superintendent\nat Vancouver; R. A. Payne, master\nmechanic at Calgary; W. O. Miller, superintendent at Nelson; R. W. Drew,\ndivisional freight agent, Nelson; W. J.\nWells, district passenger agent at Nelson; Capt. J. C. Gore, superintendent\nof the Inland Lake and River Servico,\nNelson; W. A. Speers, fuel agent, Vancouver; C, S. McHarg, superintendent\nat Calgary; W. J. Uren, superintendent\nat Cranbrook; H. H. Boyd, superintendent at Saskatoon; H. H. Sims, assistant divisional engineer at Moose Jaw;\nR. A. Gamble, fuel agent at Moose Jaw\nW, B. Powell, solicitor for the company\nat Moose Jaw; J. A. Cameron, Medicine\nHat; E. H. Boalch, Moose Jaw; J. A.\nMcGregor, superintendent at Brandon;\nT. R. Flett, superintendent at SonrlB;\n'?.. A. Armstrong, superintendent of terminals. Fort William; J. Brownlee, superintendent at Kenorn; J. E. Proctor,\n\"strict ptS3enger ngent, Erandnn.\n PAGE TWO\nCtie Batty $?&&,\nWEDNESDAY   OCTOBER 25\nUseful, pretty and smart\nare these improved knit coats\nFor driving or motoring\u2014ns for a hundred other outdoor\nenjoyments\u2014you will be glad of your Pen-Angle Sweater\nCoat on windy days and chilly evenings. For though they feel\nso fleecy to the touch and set so lightly on the body, they\nare warmth-giving indeed. Knit by Pen-Angle process,\nfrom wools of the choicest; these useful garments possess\na smartness and style not known to the usual knit coat.\nAnd they retain their shapely lines, because they are care-\n. fully shaped to fit snug to the figure. That shape stays in\nthem because it is knit into them\u2014the Pen-Angle way.\nYour exact physical type is included in the wide range of\n\u00ab!i\nYour taste in style and colors has\nbeen carefully consulted. Some store\nconvenient to you will show you\ntheBe beautiful garments for men.\nwomen and children. 77\nPENMANS LIMITED\nPARIS  . .  CANADA\nPenJ\nInqle^\nKnit\n&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&Au\nMISSING TEACHER\nIS FOUND\nManages to Make Way to Velvet Mine\n\u2014Huge Search Parties Scour\nBush\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nROSSLAND, B.C., Oct. 24\u2014Consternation aud excitement were rife in\nRossland, when early on Monday morning it became known that Miss Bruce,\na member of the central school teaching staff was lost in the hills west of\nthe city.\nMiss Bruce had left her boarding\nhouse, the Queens, before noon on Sunday, taking with her a 22 rlt'le. Later\nin the afternoon she was seen by an\nAustrian resident, and again about 4\no'clock, A. WllliaraB, janitor of the\ncourt house, saw her and spoke to her\nnear tbe Wellington mine on Mount\nRecord, several miles out of the city.\nAs he approached her she was sitting\ndown and she raised tha gun thinking\nhe was an animal, but as he came into\nsight she lowered the weapon and Mr.\nWilliams asked her if she were not\ngoing to Rossland as it would be dark\nbefore he got out of the bush. However, Miss Bruce told him she was not\ntired and that she was all right so Mr.\nWilliams came on to Rossland.\nAs the lady d'-d not return her friends\nbecame anxious and through the night\ntelephone messages were sent to various houses where she might have called and stayed. But no news could be\ngained of her and finally T. H. Long,\nchief of police was communicated with.\nIn the early hours of Monday morning Chief Long in order to summon a\nposse set the fire alarm ringing and\nfired six shots from his revolver. Very\nquickly small search parties were organized among willing and anxious citizens and Borne of the searchers went\nto the spot where she had been last\nseen nnd others went In various directions. At intervals during the day\nother parties went off and a number\nof Boy Scouts took the trail, but nothing was seen of the missing lady, although her footsteps were traced for\nalmost a mile and a half beyond the\nspot where Mr. Williams spoke to her.\nThe footsteps led away from Rossland\nand then were suddenly lost. Grave\nfears were entertained for her safety\nas It was thought Miss Bruce might\nhave injured herself by a fall or that\nshe might have fallen In the dark into\nsome prospector's shaft. Sunday night\nwas bitterly cold in the mountains ss\nwas evidenced by three inches of Ice\nfound by some of tbe searchers.\nAs hour followed hour without any\nnews and as darkness again approached with another night in the hills for\ntho missing one in view, it was decided\nto call a town meeting to adopt a ays-\ntematlc   plan   with   a  huge  posse  of\nATVd>^.Tir  \\ **'W\u00a3;)Jh\"^\/3>   \u2014the best known to modern medicine\nlUiiTW   J^ft!?kC&iUiV(C.   -is the active principle which makes\nso much better than ordinary physics.    While thoroughly effective, they never\nLgripe, purge or cause nausea. a:iJ never lose their effectiveness.   Oneol the\nbest of the NA-DR'J-CQ line.\n25c a box.    If your druggist has not yet stocked them, send 25c, and we\na\/ill rc.ail them. 23\nNational Draft nnr! Chemiml Otrapaar of Canada, limited,     .     .     \u2022     Montreal\nr.'vswvrir*- \u2014 \u00ab \".\u2014 -\u25a0\u25a0->'-:--   urn m.i\u2014\u25a0i\u00bb|htjw \u00abanc\u2014\nsearchers. At 7:30 the fire alarm waB\nrung and such a* crowd of residents as\nhas rarely been seen in Rossland assembled at the city hall where Mayor\nMcKinnon briefly told them what was\nintended. Quickly some 100 volunteers\nhanded In their names and the Rocky\nMountain Rangers promised to turn\nout. Then E. Levy, general manager of\nthe Le Rol No; 2 and Fred Peters, superintendent of the Le Rol promised\nto close the mines mentioned and M.\nE. Purcell, superintendent of the Centre\nStar, gave every man who desired permission to lay off and the numbers\nspeedily swelled. The mayor proclaimed a civic holiday and 12 men who\nknew the country thoroughly were appointed to head as muny big bands of\nsearchers. The meeting then dispersed to meet at 4: SO on Tuesday morning\nwhen about 10:50 a long deep blast\nfrom the Le Rol mine whistle proclaimed to the anxlouB city and to the\nsearch parties who were camped in\nthe hills that the missing lady was\nfound.\nAfter spending a bitterly cold night\nin the bush Miss Bruce had found her\nway on Monday morning to the Velvet mine, reaching tbat place afler a\nterribly rough walk about 11 o'clock In\nthe morning. She was fed and rested\nby Watchman Stead, who then brought\nher into Rosslnnd on horseback. Immense relief was felt by the whole\ncommunity at this ending to what had\nbeen feared at one time to be a\ntragedy.\nPROMINENT LIBERAL  DIES\nOF  HEART DISEASE\nTORONTO, Oct. 24.\u2014Charles McLel-\nland, aged 86 years, was suddenly\nstricken with heart failure at his home\nin Belgrave and expired almost immediately. He was a life long Liberal, and\nknew Canadian Liberalism from Its\nfradle days. Mr. McLelland was born\nIn Port Down, in Ireland, In Amary-\nhaga county. He came to Toronto fn\n1853 and taught school in York township, later he kept a store in Malotte\ncounty, and finally entered thi> drug\nbusiness nt Belgrave.\nMlnard's Liniment Cures Dandruff.\n\u2022$- -tt- \u2022&\u25a0 -\u00a9- *\u2022 -frjLjftLxy\n. I lib\n\\\\ is V* li M \u00a7 :\nMJ5Jr3\u00abSLJ\u00a3 S:\nf' \u25a0'ffl.'. # ! Si Si  t?'_jM m \u00ab? \u25a0 8?\" ?\nH        \"rrn\"   '   t   : Eg     \u25a0\u00ab      '-,*_\u25a0<  \u25a0',      **      BB     \u25a0?\n\u00ab~-f:i--MsFBF'.\"   ' .-'ffyt\"\ni\nThe Bachelors9 Chambers, Ltd.\n$8$\nW\n\u25a0kz.; \u25a0 sy\nhas been organized to erect and operate a thoroughly\nmodern bachelors' apartment house in the West End of Vancouver.\nThere will be a bath with each room, showers on each\nfloor, and numerous comforts and conveniences ordinarily enjoyed only by members of first class clubs. There is a great\nand constant demand In Vancouver for accommodations of\nthis distinctive character.\n\\ Very Careful and Conservative Estimate Shows that the Annual Net Earnings of\nThe Bachelors' Chambers Will Be at Least 18 per Cent.\nThe  directors of the company are Vancouver business and professional men of the highest standing.\nThe BacbelorB' Chambers, Ltd., capitalized at $200,000, offers a limited amount of stock at the par value\nof $100 a share, 25 per cent cash, balance over G months.\nThis is one of Vancouver's best investment opportunities. It is safe and will yield you an unusually\nlarge income on your money.   Write for prospectus and detailed information.\nTHE PEOPLE'S TRUST CO., LTD. 425 Pender Street West, Vancouver, B. C.\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 SK*s**#J**f---**W*8?*tf-'^\nIN HOOD FLOUR\nTHE choice Wheat used In the milling\nol Robin Hood Flour makes it the\nmost nutritious JgojJ in the world\u2014and a\nsack ol Robin Hood Flour will make\nmore loaves than any other brand on the\nmarket.\nRobin Hood Flour 1. .old on ft money-back Eunr-\nftntcc bMl. \u2014^ ft written guftrftfttM In .very Bock.\nPIN voce\nu^r* ROBIN HOOD FLOUR-MADE IN MOOSE JAW\nMORE LAND SOLD\nAT CRAWFORD BAY\nLady  Bags Grizzly  Bear\u2014Farmers   In-\nstute to Hold Meeting\u2014Returns\nto Sweden.\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nCRAWFORD BAY, Oct. .M.\u2014Besides\nthe 310 acreB mentioned recently, in the\nDaily News as having been sold up\nhere, two other properties have also\nchanged hands. These latter are both\nimproved ranches, and were sold for a\ngood consideration. The more Important one was Axel Milton's place on the\nLyncbvllle road, the new owner being\nNT. FraBer, who came out here from\nScotland a few months ago. There is a\ngood frame dwelling house and other\nbuildings on the property; Beverai acres\nIn orchard, having bearing trees and a\nfine bay meadow. Mr. Fraser intends\nhowever, to carry out very considerable further improvements, and has already let a contract for more clearing.\nIt was from this, ranch that the plate\nof tbe previous year's \"Ontario's\" was\nshown at the Nelson fair last month.\nThe late owuer was one of the old-timers iu tho district, was extremely popular, and his departure for his old home\nin Sweden, is much regretted here; he\ntalies with him the best wisheB of the\nwhole community, the interests of which\nhe was ever ready to advance.\nThe other sale was S. Hanson's place\nto Mr. Miller, of Calgary, who was in\nhere to inspect the property last week,\nArchdeacon Beer, of Kaslo, .ield the\nusua] service up here on the 15th inst,\nin place of the Rev. C. Reed, and there\nwas an excellent attendance. The occasion was of special note, as the archdeacon officiated at the first christening ever held in the Bay, and bnptised\nIjoche junior.\nThe local Farmers Institute nave arranged a meeting in the public hall for\nthe 31st inst., to Ihe followed by a social\nand dance. The same body have also\nput in a strong application for a government packing Bchool, to be bold here\nduring the coming winter, the maximum number of names already having\nbeen given to the secretary.\nWhen up In the hills recently, Miss\nHarrison had the good fortune to come\nacross a fine specimen of tho Silver\nTip bear. It. took five shots from her\nrifle, and that of Harry Mawdslpy, who\nwas acting as guide, to slay the grizzly.\nA couple of timber cruisers were up\nCrawford and Canyon creeks looking\nover the large limits lying around same\nVisitors from this point to Nelson\ngreatly appreciate the change to the\nsteamer Moyie, in place of the old Nelson,\nMANY NEW ARRIVALS\nIN   EDGEWOOD  DISTRICT\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nEDGEWOOD, B.C., Oct. 24\u2014Sunday,\nOct. 15 Mrs. Grant Davis left for a fortnights well earned holiday and rest in\nSpokane.\nSeveral new arrivals have taken\nplace during the last few days. Mr.\nand Mrs. Blakemnn and family from\nMoose Jaw. Mrs. Blakemnn is a sister\nof Robert Hughes who haB a ranch\nnear here. Mrs, W. D. Kerr from Burton City will locate here this .winter.\nMrs. Masters of Peterboro, Ont., also\narrived and has rented a house adjoining the store; this week she was visiting one of her daughters, Mrs. Lane,\nat Burton City. Her son Ernest, who\nhas a ranch there has been in town\nall summer. Mr. and Mrs. McFarlane,\nArrow Park, are alBo here.\nR. Hop has taken a contract to take\nout telephone poles on F. W, Jordan's\nland. This week he bought a fine team\nat the Needles.\nMiss Tlmaens, from the old country,\ntook charge of the Fire Valley school\nthis week. She is boarding at the ranch\nof L. C. Morrison,\nRev. A. P. Durrani held service Sun-'\nday at the Needles and in the evening\nat Edgewood. This week he commenced\ngiving private tuition at his borne to\nseveral of the children In the town who\npreviously have lacked this advantage.\nThis winter will be by no means a\nr.uiet one here. Mr. Waldle, preaide.it\nof the Edgewood Lumber Co, was in\nthis week making arrangements to put\nin a logging camp on tbe property of\nthe Edgewood Orchard Tracts, 12 miles\nup Fire Valley. The asme company's\ncamp in charge of W. D. Kerr has been\nhere for some days taking out logs, \\V.\nA. Calder has taken a contract to supply the C.P.R. with 75,000 ties and will\nput. In another camp and start work\nImmediately up Fire Valley.\nThis week an eight h.p. ga^line engine arrived to the order of the local\nsyndicate who imported in the spring\nthe first eight horse threshep,and binder seen In this district.\nSaturday, Oct. 28, a social organized by the Rev. A. P. Durrant will be\nheld at the Edgewood hotel in aid of\na fund to build a church here, A meeting at which Dr. A. R. Wilson will preside, will also be held to discuss the\nquestion. All residents are cordially\ninvited to attend.\nNEWS FROM NEEDLES\n(Special to Tne uatti* News.)\nNEEDLES, B.C., Oct. 24\u2014J. P. Love-\nBey of Pincher, Alta., has purchased 612\nacres on the east side of the Arrow\nlake between the ranches of F. G. Fauquier and Mr. Schlag. He Is at present\nmaking the Edgewood hotel his headquarters.\nA new drum for the steam stump\npuller recently installed on Welford\nBeaton's property in the- Watshan valley, was shipped in this week. The\nweight complete, 1,200 pounds, will\ngive some idea of the size and power\nof this machine.\nR. Lower has commenced business aa\na blacksmith here.\nEmll Straub, one of our ranchers,\nhas taken a position as bartender at\nthe Edgewood hotel.\nCANADIAN   JEWELERS   FORM\nBIG   AMALGAMATION\nMONTREAL, Oot 24.\u2014The latest Canadian merger Is the jewellers' amalgama-\nENDS AT ONCE ALL\nSTOMACH DISTRESS\nA  Little  Diapepsin Cures  Indigestion,\nGas, Heartburn or Dyspepsia in\nFive Minutes\nIf you had some DlapepBln handy and\nwould take a little now your stomach distress or Indigestion would vanish In five\nminutes and you would feel fine.\nThis harmless preparation will digest\nanything you eat and overcome a sour,\nout-of-order stomach before you realize\nIt.\nIf your meals don't tempt you, or what\nlittle you do eat seems to fill you, or lay\nlike a lump of load In your stomach or If\nyou have heartburn, that is a sign of In-\ndigestion,\nAsk your Pbarmachlst for a 50-cent case\nof Pape's Diapepsin and take a little just\nas soon as you can. There will bo no\nsour risings, no belching of undigested\nfood mixed with acid, no stomach gas or\nheartburn, fullness or heavy feeling in the\nstomach, Nausea, Debilitating Headaches,\nDizziness or Intestinal griping. This win\nall go, and besides, there will be no undigested food left over In the stomach to\npoison your breath with nauseous odors.\nPape's Diapepsin Is a certain cure for\nout-of-order stomachs, because it prevents\nfermentation and takes bold of your food\nand digests it just the same as if your\nstomach wasn't there.\nRelief in five minutes from all stomach\nmisery is at any drug store waiting for\nyou.\nThese largo 50-cent cases of Pope's Diapepsin contain more than sufficient to\nthoroughly cure almost any case of Dyspepsia, Indigestion or any other stomach\ndisturbance.\ntlon, which alms at the consolidation of\nthe Canadian Jewellers' trade, both\nmanufacturing and retail. The new merger Is to bo called the Canadian Jewellers,\nLimited, and lias already secured a charter from the federal authorities. The\nauthorized capital is $5,000,000. One-half is\nto he preferred stock at 5 percent and the\nother half common stock. The amalgamation will have establishments in Montreal, Toronto,'Ottawa and in the Eastern\nTownships, and a string of some 60 retail stores shipping across the Dominion.\nThe following establishments are said to\nbe already Included among them: William\nBromley, the Hemming Manufacturing\ncompany and the Henoslcy Manufaeturng\ncopany, all of Montreal; J. A, Brown &\nCo., Toronto, and three other Toronto,\none Ottawa firm and one firm In the\nEastern Townships, the name not as yet\nknown. James McKay of Montreal is the\npresident of the new consolidation, with\nOscar .Tohanson, late of New York, as\nsecretary-treasurer. The merger has opened temporary business offices at 7 Bleury\nstreet.\nEFFECT OF CEMENT MERGER.\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 24.\u2014The city of\nWinnipeg feels the pressure of the cement merger, and at a meeting of the\ncity council it was hinted that the next\nsupply will be secured from the United\nStates markets.\n.Take What Pill?\nWhy, a Dp. Miles'\n*Anti-Pain Pill,\nof course. Good for all kinds of\npain. Used to relieve Neuralgia,\nHeadache, Nervousness, Rheumatism, Sciatica, Kidney Pains,\nLumbago, Locomotor Ataxia,\nBackache, Stomachache, Periodical Pains of women, and for\npain in any part of the body.\n\"I have used Dr. Miles' medicines for\nover 12 years and find them excellent I\nkeep Dn Miles' Anti-Pain Pills In the\nhouse all the time and would not think\nof taking a journey without them, no\nmatter how short a distance I am going.\nI cannot praise them enough.\"\n.        Miss Lou M. Churchill\n63 High St, Penscook, N. H.\nAt all druggists.   25 doses 25c\nMILES MEDICAL CO., Toronto.Csn.\n\"The Finest In the Land.\"\nGANONG'S\nG. B.\nCHOCOLATES\nEvery piece is stamped \"G. B.*\u00bb\nThe finest Chocolate and the\nDantlest Packages in Canada.\nSold by best dealers everywhere.\nKnowler & Macaulay\nVancouver and Nelson\nB. C Agents\n35 Years' Experience\nCarpet Cleaning\n10o PER SQUARE YARD.\nWork called for and delivered promptly.\nClothes of all kinds cleaned, renovated,\ndyed and repaired,\nGents' suits cleaned and pressed, 75c to\n*2.    Dyed, $3, -\nLadles'  skirts cleaned, tl; dyed, ti.\nGloves cleaned,  25c to 60c.\nSpecial rates for hotels, restaurants and\nBteamers.\nFamily washing, rough dry, 35c dozen.\nNelson Steam Laundry\n601-603 VERNON STREET\nTelephone 1\u00ab. PAUL NIPOU, Prop,   V...\nRapid Advance In\nBurnaby Prices\nOwing to an advance during the last few months of from $300 to\n?500 In acreage between the two cities, the directors of the Wright\nInvestment Company, Ltd., have decided to advance prices $50 per lot\nafter Nov. 1, 1911.\nWe Have Never Sold a Lot in Which We Have Not\nInvested Our Own Capital\nThe property has had to stand the test of thorough comparison\nof values.\nTwenty-five years knowledge of conditions enables us to Judge\nwhere to buy.\nOur subdivisions are situated where we believe the greatest development will take place and values advance fastest whether we sell\nor not.\nLast year the actual increase In the assessed value of property on\ntbe peninsula was about $50,000,000.   How much of this did you get?\nThis year It will be more.   How much will be your Bhare?\nRemember, When You Make the First Payment\nthe Increase Is Yours\t\nThe ~Vright Investment Co.\nVancouver:\n1110  Dominion Trust  Bldg.\nFort   George:\nSouth Addition.\nNew Westminster:\n613 Columbia Avenue. _\nNelson:\n419 Baker Street.\nNelson Opera House (~)pf OH\nTwo Davs. Commencing  Friday   V\/%\u2022!*\u2022\u00a3*\/\nTwo Days, Commencing Friday\nWood Prazee and Lederers' world famous musical comedy success.\n'iy UUiU am-aut' hu *      mott) -   injp \u00bbU lu   own,\nTHE ENCHANT1HG MELODY WHOSE HAUNTING STRAINS HAVE EWTHRAllED THE W0MD\nIt's Uia Thome Sons of .WOODB\\ FRAZEE It LEDEBEB, Phwwnanii StUctU.\nnADAItSHERRY\nrrai\nED\nBy OTTO HAPEHBSOH MS KABL jtOBCHWA.\nIE LAUGHING MUSICAL SENSATION OF TWO CONTINENTS\nCUT H MIAMI. tOMH* CELEBRIIIEJ. l.d.te I T\u201eu>\u00a5.\u00bb0\u2122\u201e SESiSa\n| srauUtlony.fQBV\nThe Famous New Amsterdam Beauty Chorus\nSpecial Orchestra Carried by Company\n- Two Cars Special Scenery\nPrices $2, $1.50, $1, 75c.   Seats now on sale at Poole's\nHack!       Hack!       Hack!\np\nH\nO\nN\nE\n18\nIf you can't find what you want give me a call. I have closed\nhack, open hack, rubber tired hack; three seated reversible carriage,\nonly one In B.C-; three seated express carriage, two seated express carriage; one seated buggy; one express wagon.   All new.\nStorage at the City Cab Co., Tel. 18.   Big John. John W. Llnebaugh.\nD. & J. MeCallum s\n\"Perfection\"\nScotch\nWhisky\nThe finest whiskey obtainable.   Has none ot that smoky taste so\nmuch disliked by consumers.\nTo be had at all the leading hotels.   Apply to the\nNelson Wine & Spirit Co.\nLOCAL AGENTS.\nOr THE B. C, WINE CO., LTD., Sole Agents for British Columbia, 534\nPender St., West, Vancouver, B.C.\n WEDNE8DAY   OCTOBER 25\n%ty Bail? $etns,\nPAGE THREK\nmi.\nSUREST TONIC\nIN IK WORLD\nIS \"FMJIt-l-riVES\" THE\nGREAt FRUIT MIME\nLike fruit juice, \"Fruit-a-trves\" acts\non tbe great blood purifying organs of\nthe body \u2014namely the liver, bowels,\nkidney* and skin, and stimulates all\nthese parts to increased.activity. The\nsplendid nerve tonics and intestinal antiseptics, combined with the intensified\nfruit juices, make \"Fruit-a-tives1* the\nfinest of nerve tonics.\nOn the stomach, \"Fru.t-a-t.ves'' acts\nas a soothing tonic.and allays all irritation.\nBy purifying the blood\u2014strengthening\nthe nervous system and regulating kidneys, bowels and skin\u2014\"Fruit-a-tives\"\nbuilds up tbe whole system as nothing\nelse will\n\"Frait-a-tives\" is a really wonderful\nmedicine\u2014being made directly from\n. fresh fruit\u2014and is tbe intensified juices\nof pples, oranges, figs and prunes.\n\"Fruit-a-tives\" is the only medicine lo\ntlie world mnde of fruit. It is mild in\naction\u2014pleasant to take\u2014and is a tonic\nol inestimable value.\n50c, i box S for $2.50, or trial size, 25c,\nAt all d^'l-rs, or from Fruit-a-tives\nLimited, Ottawa.\nCANADIAN\nXmas\nExcursions\nIn connection with\nEuropean\nTickets\non sale\nNovember 10 to\nDecember 31\nParticulars on application to\nR. K. SCARLETT, City Passenger\nand Ticket Agent, Nelson, B.C.\nW. RAYMENT. Deoot Ticket Agt.\nW.   J.   WELLS,   D.PA.,   Nelson.\nPhiladelphia Americans\nCapture Fourth Game\nNew York Nationals Defeated for Third Time in Succession-\nMatthewson Hit to Alt Corners of Field-Nationals Out-\nbatted and Outfielded -Score Four to Two\nPHILADELPHIA, Oct. 24.\u2014Hitting\nthe great Mathewson to all corners of\nthe field, the Philadelphia Americans\ntoday defeated the New York Nationals at Shibe park, a third successive\ntime, by the score of 4 to 2, and the\nAmerican league champions now need\nbut a single game to give them, the\nworld's baseball honors for the second\nyear in succession. Tbe victors not\nonly outbatted the National leaguers,\nhut also outfielded .them and showed\nmore alertness on the bases. It was\na finely played game, sensational in\nspots, and gave the huge crowd plenty\nof opportunity to cheer. New Yjrk getting the jump In the first inning, Philadelphia came from behind, and passed\nthe former In a fierce onslaught In the\nfourth inning, and never again were\nthey headed. Nearly 25,000 persons\nwitnessed tbe contest.\nMathewson, the mainstay of the New\nYork team, was fairly crushed under\nthe fuBllade of hits, and at the end of\nthe seventh inning retired in favor of\nWiltse. Ten httB for a total of 10 bases\nwere made off Mathewson In six innings. In the seventh inning, he gave\nhis only base on balls to Baker,\n\"Chief\" Bender, Philadelphia's sterling pitcher, while he did not equal the\nwonderful game he twirled against New\nYork on the first game of the series,\ndid fine work. They got but seven hits\noff him, only two of them coming In\none inning. He gave two bases on\nbrills. In the opening round the top\nof the New York batting list lit on the\nrhinpewan In a manner that made the\ntimid ones fear that all was lost.\nThe great Indian settled down, however, after New York had scored two\nruns on a single by Devore, a triple by\nDoyle and a sacrifice fly by Snodgrass,\nand afterward he bad New York at his\nmercy.    Parry, the brilliant Phlladel-\nLAST SAILINGS\nST.  LAWRENCE  PORTS\nMontreal  and  Quebec\nvia\nEMPRESSES\n\u25a0 EMPRESS OP  IRELAND\nFriday, Nov. 17\nLAKE  CHAMPLAIN\nThursday, Nov. 23\nWinter Excursion Rates\nOn Sale Dally, Nov. 10 to Dec 31\nRE8ERVE  BERTHS  NOW\nRates,  DetailB. Literature trom\nR. K. SCARLETT,, City Passenger\nand Ticket Agent, Nelson, B.C.\nW. RAYMENT, Depot Agt., Nelson\nJ. S. CARTER, General Agent\n450, Main St. Winnipeg\nWe atend to your\nPLUMBING\npromptly and well\nB.C. Plumbing & Heating Cl.\nVictoria Street, near Opera House\nTelephone 181\nShiloM Gure\nC-AHe ftAIIMIC HEALS THE LUNGS\nSTOPS COUGHS PKJCE. 25 CENTS\nf^D^U      is tne occau tare\nTo London and Liverpool\nNow is the time to make reservations for fall and Christmas\nsailings. Unexcelled accommodation for third class passengers.\nClosed rooms. Largo new twin\nscrew steamers. Special railway\nfares offered In connection with\nocean tickets to Europe.\nCunard  Line\u2014Canadian Service\nS. S. Ansonia  Oct.   7\nS.  S. Ascanica    Oct  21\nS.  S. Albania   Nov.    4\nS. S. Ansonia  ; Nov. 18\nChristmas   Excursion   New   S.  S.\nAscania,  Dec. 2\nFor  further  information  appty\nto any steamship or railway agent\nH.   E    LIDMAN\nGeneral Agent Canadian West\n445 Main St. Winnipeg\nBULBS\nOur Holland Bulbs are now In\nHyacinths\nTulips\nDaffodils\nWrite tor complete list tor fall\nplanting.   Bulbs and sbrubs.\nFrache Bros.\nFlorists Columbia,  B.C.\nWanted\nMen to Work\non C.P.R. extension between\nThree Porks and Bear Lake. Apply A. Anderson ft Co., Three\nForks, B.C.\nHot Water\nHeating\nNow Is the time to order your\nhot water * lien ting apparatus bo\nthat It may be Installed before\nthe frosty weather. ,\nE.K.Strachan\nPlumbing  and  Heating\nTelephone 262 313 Baker St.\nTHORPE'S    ,\n*__ DRINKS\nI^H\u00b0\u00a3b^\nphla shortstop, was the star man at\nbat. In four trips to the plate, he made\na single and two doubles, but none of\nhis hits figured in the scoring. The\nsensational Baker came to time with a\npair of two Ibase hits out of three times\nup, and Murphy broke loose and laced\nout a two base hit that set the crowd\nwild with cheering. Captain Davis,\nsubstituting for the injured Mclnnes,\nalso was in the thick of the battle,\nroiindmg out a two base hit In the\nfourth inning, when Philadelphia passed New York by scoring three runs. It\nwas in this inning that the greatest exhibition of hitting yet seen in the present world's series was given. The\non'y Philadelphia men who did not get\ninto the hitting were Oldring, Thomas\nand Bender. Oldring and Thomas, however, each had n sacrifice. Bender hit\nthe ball to the infield twice in his four\ntrips to the plate, but was unablo to\nbeat the ball to first.\nDevore and Doyle and Fletcher for\nNew York showed to best advantage.\nDevore got two singles in four trips.\nDoyle smashed a triple in three times\nat bat. Fletcher bad a pretty pair of\nsingles, but only Devore's hitB and\nDoyle's figured in New York's scores.\nIn tbe first inning Devore reached first\non an infield hit and came all tbe way\nhome on Doyle's triple., New York's\nsecond baseman probably would have\ngotten only a single on his hit had not\nOldring slipped in the soft mud of the\noutfield, the ball eluding him long\nenough to permit Doyle to go to third.\nSnodgrass brought in Doyle with a\nlong sacrifice fly to Lord. This was the\nend of New York's scoring.\nThe two runs looked big to Philadelphia partisans hut tiie Americans kept\npegging away at Mathewson. There\nwere chances to score In the second\nnnd third Innings but It was not until\ntbe fourth that the American leaguers\nbegan showing their batting strength.\nMurphy smashed a two bagger to left\nsending Baker across the plate and\nDavis brought the spectators to their\nfeet by driving a double to right field,\nsending home Murphy with the tlelng\nrun. Davis moved up \u25a0 to third on\nBarry's out and came home on a sacrifice fly to Murray.\nIn the fifth inning Collins singled to\nright field and came all the way home\non Baker's two bagger to right ceutre.\nIt was a great exhibition of running and\nhis headwork, coupled with his fleet-\nness, won him a round of cheers. This\ngave Philadelphia their fourth and final\nrun. In the other games played neither\nMurray of New York nor Thomas of\nPhiladelphia has made a hit.\nBrilliant Fielding\nAside from exceptional exhibition of\nbitting the game was replete with brilliant fielding. Herzog and Fletcher of\nNew York and Collins, Barry and Baker\nfor the AthleticB, put up a dashing\ngame. Baker threw a little wild once,\nthe only fault charged against him.\nCapt. Davis and Merkle fielded their\npositions brilliantly. No attempt was\nimde by either team to steal bases.\nMeyers tried to go from ' second to\nthird on a short passed ball, but was\nout on a good throw by Thomas. Once\nMurphy was on third with two out and\nin trying to put him out Barry slipped\na cog and Murphy was caught between\nthird and home.\nThe crowd filled Shibe park, but it\ndid not quite come up to the attendance\nof the first day. The figures given out\nby the National commission showed a\ntotal of 24,355 paid admissions, or a\ntotal of 126,138 for the series. The\nhome players, having the advantage of\ntwo victories to one for New York had\nthe greatest confidence that they would\ntake the next game and the team was\nheartily cheered when it appeared.\nBaker waa the hero and he threw the\ncrowd Into a wild burst of enthusiasm\nwhen in practice he drove a ball out\nof the grounds.\nThe game was cleanly played. Snodgrass, who had expected a demonstration against himself for the spiking of\nBaker in the game at New York, on\nTuesday last, went through the contest with only a few hoots and hisses\naimed at him. This was in his second\ntime to bat.\nRich Stakes\nThe stakes of the series are the richest ever played for by two baseball\nteams. The playerB' participation in\ntbe receipts ended with today's game.\nThey will split $127,910.61 of which 60\nper cent or $76,746.36 will go to the\nwinners and $51,164,24 to the losers.\nTwenty-one players on each team are\neligible to participate In the money ao\nthat the players on the winning team\nwill each receive $3,654.68 and tbe\nmembers of the losing aggregation\n$2,436.59 each. Each Philadelphia player In winning the world's championship last year received $2,064.74 and\neach Chicago player, $1,375.16.\nScore hy Innings:\nAthletics  00 031 0 0 0 0-4\nGlnnts 2 00 00 0 0 0 0-2\nSummary: Two-baae hits\u2014Murphy (2),\nBaker (2), Davis, Meyers, Barry (2), Merkle. Three-baao hit\u2014Doyle. Hlta\u2014 off\nMathewaon, 10 In seven Innings; off Wiltse,\n1. Sacrifice hlta\u2014Snodgrass, Thomas, Old-\nring, Collins. Double play\u2014Baker and Davis. Left on bases\u2014Giants, 6; Athletics, B.\nBases on balls\u2014Mathewson, 1; Bender, 2.\nStruck out\u2014Bender, 4: Mathewson, 6;\nWiltse, 6. Time\u20141;E0. Umpires\u2014Dlneen,\nbehind plate; Klam, on bases; Connolly,\nright field; Brennan, left field.\nThere seems to be a predominance of\nwing trimming on hats from the most\nnotable of the Paris milliners. A fnvor-\nite method bf arrangement Ib a sort of\nbanded effect bo that the wings entirely envelop the crown.\nThe Value of an Industry\nSo much has been written and said of the tremendous increase in values as\nthe direct result of the coming of the Big Car Shops to SOUtil-East Calgary\nthat the following interesting calculation has been made of what an industry\nemploying 1.0JO hands means to a community.\nIt   Increases   the   population by 5,000 consumers. .\nIt adds $90,000 to the value of public utilities.\nThe assessment is increased  by $600,000.\nIt pays out annually In salaries and wages $559,800.\nIt represents through its buildings, and Its houses and Its employees an  investment of $2,000,000.\nThe annual expenditure in food would be: $63,000 in meat, $9,600 in potatoes, $5,000 In sugar, $18,250\nIn milk, 65,700 in bulter and $27,600 In  eggs.\nSummed up, this means that an industry employing 1,000 hands Is worth $21,600 a year to the farmers of the district.\nThe expenditure In clothing would be $168,750.\nWith the annual payment of taxes added to the total expenditure on buildings, food and clothing, you\nhave In all $2,428,350 turned into the town in one year through the coming of one great industry.\nThe above Is culled from the pamphlet issued by the \"Publicity Branch of the Canadian Pacific Irrigation Colonization  Company,\" under date of September 30th.\nNow add to this the One Big Industry, namely, the C.P.R. shops. This plant\nalone will employ approximately 6,000 hands, so just multiply the above figures\nby six and we have something to talk, about, and remember we are only at the\nbeginning of things in the building up of the Industrial Section in South-\nEast Calgary.\nMr. Price Of the C.P.R. has told the city to expect 10,000 people in East Calgary.   Just think of it!   If 10,000 people are to be in South-East Calgary\nas a direct result of the coming of the Big Car Shops of the C.P,R., what will\nit mean when the yards and roundhouses, and possibly in time the shops of\nthe G.T.P. and CN.R. are located there?\nAsk the Man Who Owns One\nor more of the lots we sold him a few months ago in our first subdivision in South-East\nCalgary, what profit he will take on his buy. We have repeatedly offered 80 per cent,\nprofit, but no one will take it, and we do not blame them, as we think it will not be long\nbefore they will be able to get 200 per cent, profit.\nTHIS IS THE DISTRICT WHERE BIG CAR  SHOPS WILL  BE  BUILT\nTAKEN   FROM  ACTUAL PHOTOGRAPH:\n>\u00ab_\nOf course there was somo excuse for you In not buying these lots when we advised you, because\nthen there was a doubt as to the location of ihe Big Shops, but now there is absolutely no doubt about this. We\ncannot understand why every person who has a few spare dollars does not buy at once and participate In the tremendous profits to be made by those w ho buy early.\nC. N. R. Division Lots Offer Good Security\n\u2022 400 bouses (0 be built almost within a stone's throw of our lots guarantees this, and we are offering tbese\nlots on such easy terms that you should grasp the opportunity to buy right now and buy as many as you can possibly handle. Make your money work. Remember we are the actual registered owners and the property was carefully examined before buying, therefore we can truthfully state that every single lot is perfect and a beautiful view;\nIn fact\nWe Positively Guarantee Every Lot We Sell\nand being the owners will give you an extension of time if you are unable to meet your payments at any time.\nPrice\n$175 per Lot\nTerms $10 cash   j\n$10 per month   I\n] B. C. United Agencies\nReal Estate and Financial Agents\nNelson, B. C.   Box 232 Branches: Calgary and Noose Jaw\nAPPLICATION\nIS REFUSED\nExpress Association  Not Permitted to\nCancel Rates For Shipment of\nPrinted Matter.\nTORONTO, Oct. 24\u2014An application\nby the express traffic association for\nan order, authorizing the express companies to cancel section \"D\" of the\nclassification of express rates, relating\nto shipment of (books, maps, almanacs\nand other printed matters, was refused\nby the Dominion railway board today.\nThe rates were adopted by the express\ncompanies to compete with the postal\nservice. Now the association, claiming\nthat the rates have not proved remunerative; urges the deletion of the section,\non the further grounds that book rates,\nhaving long distance shipments, wore\ndiscriminatory favoring some shippers\nmore than others, and should be made\nto conform wtih other express rates of\nthe association. Chairman Maybee, iu\ndelivering judgment, said that no evidence bad been given by the express\nassociation to show that the rates bad\nnot been remunerative, ^s they had\n-ontended. Indeed the\" association had\nextended the c'assiflcatlon of the rates\nso as to cover shipments of 10 pounds,\nwhereas the postal service limited express shipments to five pounds. Indicating that the association considered\ntho new rate remunerative, .Moreover,\nChairman Maybee pointed out that the\nassociation had agreed to an 'ntorna\ntional scale with the United States express companies, covering many of the\nitems included in section \"D.\"\nRegarding the counter application by\nthe booksellers section of the Toronto\nboard of trade, for an order Increasing\nthe weights carried under section \"D\"\nfrom 10 pounds a single book to any\nweight, providing the article be limited\nto $10.00 in value.. Chairman Maybee\nsaid the   board    had no   authority to\ngrant the request.\nIn response to an application by the\nexpress traffic association, the board\nagreed to vary an order so as 10 provide that charges on empties must bo\nrepaid by the consignees, unless an\nagreement be otherwise made.\nTne hearing of the complaint of the\nEureka Planter company, Woodstock,\nagainst tho association on Implements\nshipped west of Port Arthur, was .adjourned indefinitely. Chairman May-\nbee was unwilling to deal with the matter until other interests could appear\nand be heard.\nMlnard's Liniment Cures Burns, Etc.\n PAGE POUR\nC&e pm$ $zm.\nWEDNESDAY   OCTOBER 25\nCbE \u00a9ailg $etos.\nPublished   at   Nelson  Every Thursday\nby\nThe News Publishing Company, Limited\n\\J.  G.  FOSTER,  Editor and  Manager.\nWEDNE8DAY,  OCTOBER   25\nSIR WILLIAM WHYTE.\nA fitting climax to Sir William\n\u25a0Wbyte's 49 years of railway service\n\u2022was the banquet tendered him last\nevening at Winnipeg by the officials\nof the western lines of the Canadian\nPacific railway, a company which he\nhas been connected with for nearly \"80\nyears and with which he will still be\nassociated as a director. Probably no\nman who has ever been connected with\nrailway work in Canada has understood\nthe west and Its requirements as did\nMr. Whyte and the result Is seen In\nthe company's policy during the quarter\nof a century that he haB directed, or\nto a large extent directed, its affairs\nthis side of the great lakes.\nApart from his great native ability,\nhis kindliness of heart and his great\nfairness in dealing with all matters\nwhich came before him, perhaps the\ngreatest factor which contributed to\nSir William's success was the fact that\nhe was a practical railway man. He\nknew the work from the ground up. He\nhad seen all phases of railway work at\nfirst hand in the course of his rise to\nthe Important position which he now\nholds as a director of the greatest railway system In the world.\nSir William began his railway career\nas a station agent on the West of Fife\nrailway in Scotland, the land of his\nbirth, in 1862, and since then has been\nengaged in it continuously. He came\nto Canada the following year and lm-\nmedlalely secured employment on the\nGrand Trunk railway as brakeman. It |\nis nqt necessary to trace his rise step\nby step In the Grand Trunk's service\nto the position of assistant superintendent of the central division of the company's system, his territory extending\nfrom Kingston through western Ontario. He left the Grand Trunk to become general superintendent ot tbe\nCredit Valley railway, from which position he stepped to that of general superintendent of the Ontario and Eastern divisions of the Canadian Pacific\nrailway hi 1884, since when he has\nbeen continuously with that company.\nIn 1886, on the completion of the line\nfrom Montreal to the Pacific coast, ho\nwas transferred to Winnipeg as general\nsuperintendent of the Canadian Pacific\nin the west. His next promotion came\nin 1907, when he was made manager of\nthe company's lines In the west. This\nwas followed by another four years\nlater, when he assumed the duties of\nassistant to the president with head'\nquarters In Winnipeg. Three years\nlater he was made vice-president with\ncomplete charge of all the company's\naffairs between Lake Superior and the\nPacific coast. From the duties of this\nposition he is now retiring and In doing so has been honored with a seat on\nthe company's directorate, where he\nwill continue to advise on western affairs.\nIn spite of his 68 years, Sir William\nis still robust and energetic and his\nmany friends in NelBon, as elsewhere,\nwill wish him many years of well-\nearned rest after his long career of activity.\nMlnard's Liniment Co., Limited.\nGents,\u2014A customer of ours cured a very\nbad case of distemper In a valuable horse\nby the use of MIN'ARD'S LINIMENT.\nYours truly;\"\nVILANDIE FRERES.\nNeat\nCottage\nfor\nSale\nN :ely kept lawn, rose\nbushes, two lots, 14 fruit trees.\nPleasantly situated, fitted with\nail modern conveniences, 5\nrooms and bath. A snap at\n$2,300, and a further $300 will\ntake the furniture.\nTerms $600 Cash,\nbalance $25\nmonthly\nInspected and well recommended.\nMcQuarrie & Robertson\nReal   E.tal.,  Fruit  Land.\nFire,  Llfe, Accident Insurance.\nAt   Our   New  Office!.\nMADDEN BLOCK\nNEW BOATS FOR\nPACIFIC COAST\nPrincess Alice Arrives at Monte Video\n\u2014Turbine Steamer For\nNanaimo   Run.\nMONTREAL, Oct. 24 \u2014 \"Princess\nAlice arrived at Monte Video on Sunday, Oct..22nd,\" was the message flashed over the wires to the steamship department of the Canadian Pacific railway yesterday. This is the new boat\nwhich the C. P. R. is sending around\nto Vancouver for Its Pacific coast service, and as It reached Monte Video on\nSunday the boat is making fairly good\ntime, considering that on a trip like\nthis no attempt is made to run the\nboat at full speed. When the new\nsteamship arrives at Vancouver It will\nbe thoroughly overhauled, and It will\nthen be ready to. take Its regular trips\nin the service for which it is intenedd.\nIt is a beautifully furnished craft, and\nis bound-to be very popular with the\ntravelling public on the Pacific coast.\nThe turbine steamer, \"Queen Alexandra,\" a vessel with a speed of 21\nknots an hour, has been purchased\nfrom the Clyde passenger service by\nthe Canadian Pacific railway for the\nVancouver-Nanaimo run, and will be\nplaced in service next spring, to make\na two hour run between tbe two ports\ndaily. As soon as the business warrants she will make two round trips\ndaily.\nThe \"Queen Alexandra\" ls low being fitted out, and alterations made In\nview of her new service at the yards\nof her builders, Denny brothers, of Dun-\nmartin, and will leave on her voyage to\nVictoria in about four weeks time, and\nwill he placed in service in the early\nspring.\nI     Ten Years Ago,     j\n(Extracts from the Nelson Dally Miner ol\nOctober 25, 1001.)\nA score of friends assembled at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. J. Paquette on\nWednesday evening for the purpose of\ncelebrating the second anniversary ot their\nhosts' wedding.\nNews was received In Nelson yesterday\nfrom Kitchener that Frank Shannon and\nHugh English were seriously Injured on\nWednesday by an explosion of dynamite\nlu the shaft of the Iron deposits which are\nbeing developed under the management of\nWilliam Blakemore.\nThe tug Hercules brought down a load of\nlimestone from Kaslo yesterday.\nThis Date in History.\nOn this date Henry V. of England, with\nabout 9,000 men, defeated about 60,000\nFrench in the battle of Aglncocrt. Following the example set by his predecessors,\nthe young King crossed to France after a\n30-day siege and then decided to force bis\nway to the English fortified town of\nCalais. The French, commanded by the\nConstable d'Albert, fell into the snare by\ndrawing up his army in three lines in a\nnarrow plain between two woods. Henry\nhad placed 200 archers In cover of the\nforest and the rest in wedge-shaped formation in the centre of the field. Their arrows wrought great havoc among the\nFrench and resulted in the defeat of the\nfirst line. The Duke d'Alencon, who led\nthe second, waa dispatched by Henry in\nperson, and the third, becoming completely demoralized, fled without striking a\nblow. The number of the enemy slain is\nestimated at 10,000, While only about 1,000\nEnglish lost their lives. This ls considered\none of the most glorious victories in the\nannals of BrltiBh history.\nCOMMUNICATIONS\nHAD  NO NOTIFICATION\nTo the Editor of The Dally News:\u2014\nSir: I would like to state to the people of Nelson school district chat the\nreason I was not at the October school\nhoard meeting, was that I bad had no\nnotification' that such a meeting was to\nbe held at 7:30 Monday evening.\nA. V. JONES\nNelson, B. C, Oct. 24.\nBUILDING RAILWAY\nON ISLAND\nCanadian   Northern   Let  Contract  for\nForty   Miles\u2014Total   Distance   Is\nHundred  Miles\nTORONTO, Oct. 24\u2014Contracts will\nshortly be let by Mackenzie & Mann\nfor 40 miles of railway on Vancouver\nisland to complete the present program\nof tbe Canadian Northern system In\nthat part of the country, The route of\nthe company's line runs from Victoria\nalong the southern shore of the island\nto Barkley Sound, thence along the Albernl canal, eastward and inland to\nNanslmo. The latter part will parallel\nthe new Albernl branch. The total\ndistance Ib about 100 miles and about\nGO miles from Victoria to Barkley\nSound is contracted for and under construction. The specifications for the\nextension, which completes the line will\nbe brought to Toronto early this week,\npossibly by Roderick Mackenzie, the\ncompany's western executive head and\ntenders will then be called for, though\nIt Is considered more than likely that\nthe contract will go to the Northern\nConstruction company of Winnipeg.\nPOSTPONED TO SUIT TAFT\nCHICAGO, III., Oot, SL-To fit In With\nthe schedule of President Taft, who Is to\nbe one of the chief speakers at the annual\nmeeting of the American Mining Congress\nIn this city, the opening of the congress\noriginally fixed for today has been postponed until Saturday.\nMISSISSIPPI  STATE   FAIR\nJACKSON, MISS., Oct. 24.\u2014The eight annual exhibition of the Mississippi State\nFair association, one of the most notable\nexhibitions of Its kind In the South, opened its gates this morning and will continue until November S.\nTO  IMPORT SONG\nBIRDS FROM  ENGLAND\nfSpeclal to The Dally News.)\nVANCOUVER, B.C., Oct. 24\u2014Chief\nGame Warden Bryan Williams will submit to the department at Victoria a\nproposal to import song birds from\nGreat Britain for distribution throughout the province. During his coming\nvisit to Ottawa he will renew the proposal to import several head of red\ndeer from England, refused by tbe late\ngovernment on the ground of foot and\nmouth disease among cattle of Great\nBritain.\nELECTION  IN   ONTARIO\nEARLY   IN   DECEMBER\nAYLMER. Oct. 24\u2014Tbe Liberal convention today nominated C. W. Wonna-\ncott, Dr. R. P. Miller, C. O. Luton, S.\nS. McDormond and Daniel Mclntyre.\nAll withdrew but Mr. Mclntyre, who\nhas taken 10 days to consider.\nThe Duke of Sutherland, accompanied by Sir Edmond Walker and Sir\nWilliam Mackenzie, had a conference\nwith the Ontario cabine today. Sir\nJames Whitney stated tbat the government was favorably impressed with the\nDuke's project for bringing farm laborers for Canada, but would await detailB\nbefore deciding what assistance It\nwould extend.\nSir James Whitney said today* that\nthe reason for delay in announcing the\ndate of e'ections was to give Hie municipalities   time   for   the   revision   of\nthe voters' list.\nThe announcement, it is expected,\nwill be given before the close of the\nmonth and the date will be in the early\niart of December. North Norfoluk\nConservatives today nominated Dr.\nWilliam McGee of Otterrord for the\n'eriislnture, H. Hines, having decided to\nretire,\nTWO YOUNG BANK CLERKS\nCHARGED   WITH   ARSON\nWINNIPEG,, Oct. 24\u2014John K, Macleod, and Morden V. Nagel, bank\nclerks In the Union bank branch on\nSelkirk avenue appeared In the police\ncourt this morning charged with arson\nand were remanded without bail. Their\nhomes are in Winnipeg and they are\nlittle more than boys. Tbe charge of\narson was laid by the police the hank\nrefusing to take action, and It is believed that restitution has heen made\nof a shortage of about ?2,000. The police theory Ib that the fires were started with a view to burning up evidence\nin the bank bookB of shortage.\nBROWN   PLEADS  GUILTY\nMORDEN, Man., Oct. 24\u2014At the sitting of the court of Klng'B bench here\nthiB afternoon before Mr. JuBtlce Pren-\ndergast the case of George Brown\ncharged with the abduction and attempted rape of Mrs. Frank Patterson,\nformerly MIbb Gladyu Price, and the\nattempted murder of William Adams,\nthe Snowflake hotel proprietor, waa\nbrought up, Brown refused counsel,\npleading guilty to both indictments. It\nwas said that a charge of attempted\nBulclde would also be brought against\nBrown but as no mention was made of\nit the charge was evidently dropped.\nBrown was ordered back to jail to be\nbrought up for sentence when called\nfor.\nNEW MINISTER WILL\nSIT FOR NIPISSING\nNORTHBAY, Oct. 24.\u2014George Gordon, Conservative , member-elect for\nNlplssing, has agreed to resign his seat\nIn favor of Hon. Frank Cochrane.\nFARMER DEAD FROM EXPOSURE\nSOURIS, Man., Oct. 24\u2014MiBslng\nsince Saturday, when he started for\nhome with a wild horse, G. T. McClelland, a prosperous farmer was found\ndead from cold and exposure on the\nTo Nine-Owners, Contractors and\nOther Employers of Labor\nWe have recently been appointed local agents of the BRITISH AMERICAN TRUST CO,, LTD., and are prepared to write all kinds of Employers'\nLiability at attractive rates In companies operating under Dominion charters,\nwhereby they are obliged to deposit securities with the Dominion government\nsufficient to   cover all   possible, losses.\nThe rates are the lowest obtainable and every employer of labor should\nprotect himself from tho liability imposed upon him by law for the safety\nof his employees.\nSee us also for attractive Accident and Health policies Insuring you\nagainst any possibility of disability from accident or disease. The most\nliberal policies ever offered to the public.\nP. J. Gleazer & Co.\nP. O. Box 316\n412 Ward 8treat\nNelson. B.C.\nYon will find some Al values here in\nMen's Furnishings\nOur stock is constantly receiving additions. We have sufficient now to give you a pleasant jolt of surprise at the values.\nOur Silk-Lined Gloves Are Handfuls\nof Comfort\nThe only true test of value Is comparison of goods. We urge\nyou to compare our lines with others on tbe market. Your decision will be our pleasure.\nDid You See the Slide .Easy Collar?\nWe will thank you for an opportunity to show you and if\nyou decide not to purchase, we alwayB keep a smiling \"thank\nyou\" for your exit.\nWe make good clothes and clean and press your old ones.\nDave Small & Co.\nDistinctively\nArtistic\nOur Private Greeting Cards are\nthe finest in point of quality and\nhigh artistic merit that we can\nget. N\nEveryone who has seen them is\ndelighted with them.\nWe have three lines to select from.\nSend for our sample books and see our line before making your\nselection.\nW. G. THOMSON\nPhone 34       Bookseller and Stationer     Nelson, B. C.\nopen prairie today. The horse was\nfound dead in Plum creek and deceased bad apparently crawled out and\nstarted to make his way across the\nprairie through the darkness on Saturday night.\nTOWN DESTROYED BY\nFIRE AND DYNAMITE\nMEXICO CITY, Oct. 24.\u2014The town\nof Mllhaaita within 30 miles of the\ncapital, was almost destroyed last\nnight by fire and dynamite by Zapat-\nIsts, who today were defeated by the\nfederal troops In a battle which lasted\nfor more than five hours.\nKENTUCKY MEDICAL SOCIETY\ntucky are here attending the annual meeting' of the State Medical Society, which\nconvened today for a three days' session.\nA leading feature of the program will be\nan address by John B, Murphy of Chicago, one of tho most distinguished surgeons In America.\nNO  OPPOSITION  TO\nHON. ROBERT ROGERS\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 24\u2014City Liberals\nwill offer no opposition to tbe election\nof Hon. Robert Rogers hy acclamation,\nnominations being received next Friday. On the evening of that day the\nnew minister of the Interior will be the\ncentral figure of a public reception at\nthe city hall, when a civic address will\nbe read.\npaducah, Ky\u201e Oct. 24,-Many prom-1    KeroBene rubbed on with a soft cloth\nInent  physicians   and   surgeons   of   Ken-1 will clean zinc perfectly.\nHEADACHE\nO PILLS.     The\n\u00abM or two doses\n___U\u20acB and cure\n. eJI dealers, \u00bb cents\nPU1 Co., 6t Thomas\nby the Poole Drug\nFOR SALE\nWhy go and buy property in far off towns when you can examine\nright here the following good investments.\nT. G. Procter's Residence\nCorner Carbonate and Hall\nThe above residence is built on a beautiful site overlooking the\ncity and lake, and has a large fruit garden. The house Is built on a\nstone foundation, ifl commodiouB, furnace heated, and being all modern\nis very comfortable. There are nine apartments. First floor has 3 bedrooms and 3 public rooms, bath room and lavatory. Upstairs haB a very\nlarge attic and 2 bedrooms. The kitchen, pantry, etc., Is down stairs\non a level with the large kitchen garden. Electric fixtures, blinds,\nstoves and fittings all go with the house.   Price for houee and 3 lots,\n$5,500\nALSO\n60 feet corner Baker and Hall streets   \u00ab,7,600\n50 feet corner Vernon and Hall ,  5,000\n60 feet lnalde, Vernon street  2,000\n3 lots, 30 feet, east Baker St., each      750\n5 lots, 30 feet, east Victoria Btreet,  each        600\nTerms: One-Third Cash, Balance in One and Two\nYears at 8 per cent Interest.\nApply\nT.G.PROCTER,    k.w.c. block\nHigh Grade Building Materials\nWe hare always In stock lime and cement, common brick, praised brick,\nfire brick, fire clay, plaster ot parts, wood fibre, crystal finish. All kinds\nand sizes of window Blast.  See us for prices on all kinds of building material\nJOHN BURNS & SON\nNELSON, B. C.\nPrivate\n* \u2014\u2014\nGreeting Cards\nGive us your order now bo that you may have your cards In ample\nlime for Christmas.\nWe Have the Assortment\nto Choose from\nPhone us and we will send you a sample book to look over.\nCanada Drug & Book Co. Ltd.\nPhone 81        Nelson's Pioneer Drag Store      P.O. Box 502\nMAIL ORDERS A SPECIALTY. I\nFRED IRVINE & CO.\nLadies' and Children's\nSweater Coats\nIn Plain and Fancy Colors\nUnderwear\nOur stock Ib now complete in all lines of fall and winter weights\nfor women and children.\nWe have also complete stock of shirt and no sleeve women's vests\nin medium weight.\nFRED IRVINE & CO.\nTheCanadianBank\nof Commerce\nSIR   EDMUND   WALKER,   C.V.O.,\nL.L.D., D.C.L., President\nALEXANDER LAIRD, Gen. Manager\nCapital    $10,000,000\nRest      8,000,000\nTravellers' Cheques\nIssued by the Canadian Bank of Commerce are the moat convenient form in\nwhich to carry money when traveling.\nThey are negotiable everywhere, self-\nldentlrying, and the exact amount payable In the principal foreign countries\nIs printed on the face ot every cheque.\nThe cheques are issued In denominations ot\n$10, $20, $50, $100 and $200\nand may be obtained on application at\nthe bank.\nIn connection with Its Travelers'\nCheques Tbe Canadian Bank of Commerce has issued a booklet entitled\n\"Information of Interest to Those\nAbout to Travel,\" which will be sent\nfree to anyone applying for tt.\nNelson Branch, J, 8. Munro, Man.\nBank of Montreal\nESTABLISHED 1817\nCapital All Paid-up ......$14,400,000\nRest .' $12,000,000\nHEAD OFFICE:  MONTREAL\nRt. Hon. Lord Strathcona and Mount\nRoyal, Q.C.M.Q., Hon. President\nR.  B.  Anaus,  President.\nSir Edward 8. Ctouston, Bart, Vice-\nPresident and General Manager\nBranches  In  British  Columbia\nArmstrong, Chllllwack, Cloverdale,\nEnderby, Greenwood, Hostner, Kelow\nna, Merrltt, Nelson, New Denver,\nNichols, New Westminster, Penticton,\nPrince Rupert, Rossland, Summerland,\nVancouver,  Vernon,   Victoria.\nNelson Branch, L. B. DeVeber, Man.\nImperial Bank oi\nCanada\nHEAD  OFFICE:   TORONTO\nCapital Authorized  $10,000,000\nCapital Subscribed  } 6,000,000\nCapital Paid Up ..' \u00bb 5,944,278\nReserve  Fund    $5,944,278\nD, R. Wllkle, President\nHen. Robert Jafiray, Vice-President\nBrandies In British Columbia:\nArrowhead, Chose, Cranbrook, Farms,\nGolden, Kamloops, Michel, New Michel\nMoyle, Nelson, Revelstoke, Vancouver,\nVictoria and Wilmer.\n.    SAVINGS. DEPARTMENT\nInterest allowed on deposits at snr-\nrent Tate from date of deposit\nNelaon Branch, J. M, Lay, Manager.\nthe Royal Bank\nof Canada\nIncorporated 1869\nCapital Paid-up  $   6,200,000\nReserve   and   Undivided\nProfits    $   7,200,000\nTotal Assets $100,000,000\nHEAD OFFICE:  MONTREAL\n168 branches In Canada and Newfoundland; 18 agencies tn Cuba and\nPorto Rico. British West Indies: Bahamas-Nassau; Barbados\u2014Bridgetown:\nJamaica\u2014Kingston; Trinidad\u2014Port of\nSpain and and San Fernando. London,\nEngland, 2 bank buildings, Princes\nEngland, 2 Bank buildings, Princes\nstreet, E.C.  New York City, 68 William\nBusiness accounts carried upon favorable terms. Savings department at all\nbranches.\nNelson Branch, A. B. Netherby, Man.\nFruit Lands\nTha best In Kootenay\nFrom 5 to 1,000 Acre Blocks from $20 up\nUnimproved, partly Improved, all planted.\nWolverton & Co., Ltd.\n41\u00bb'\/j BAKER ST.\niomp,\n WEDNESDAY   OCTOBER 25\nCfie M&ilv $etoe.\nPAGE  FIVE\n(C$\nBell Trading Co.\nInf. '\" \" a\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014     '      '     \u25a0\u2022\nWe Will Pay\n60c\na dozen\ntor strictly new laid\nEggs\nWe Are Selling\nA firBt  class,  strictly candled\neastern egg for\n35c doz.\nOur new price for\nHouse of Parliament Sauce Is\n25c\nFor a relish for flab, flesh, fowl\nor game or gravies Ib hard to\nbeat.\nBell Trading\nCo.\nThe Up-to-Date\nGrocers\nHOTEL ARRIVALS OF A DAY\nThe Hume\nTable D'Hote and a la Carte\nHUME\u2014William H. Harvey, GI R.\nStrachan, C. H. Globs, Percy Martin, L.\nR. Nash, A. Sinclair, Vancouver; C. H.\nThuestls, Red Deer; E. A. Wolf, Alnswortli; T. S. Richardson, Crescent Valley;\nJ, D. Bastedo, Toronto; F. D. Fortln,\nGreenwood; Ous Cochenthaler, Calgary; R.\nW. Ridden, Coleman; Arthur Lakes, Jr.,\nYmlr; W. BrydBon, Toronto; H. Caswell,\nMoose Jaw; K. L. June, Burton; M. Harrington, W. E. Maudsley, Dr. Morrison,\nMrs. D. T. Maine, Miss Miller, Nelson; J.\nJ. Campbell Duntulm.\nUnion Men, when In Neloo\nLakeview Hotel\nCor. Hall and Vernon Streets.\nNAP.  MALLETTE,  Prop.\nWhite Union Help Employed\nOnly\nLAKEVIEW\u2014G. Jenka, C, E. Couger, W.\nMcOarvey, S. J. Williams A. Cannon, City.\nSilver King Hotel\nBaker St.\nUnder new management\nWell furnished rooms;  fl a\nday and up.   Best 25c meal In\nNelson.\nBest brands of liquors and\ncigars served by unton men.\nN. MoLEOD, Proprietor\nSILVER KING\u2014 J. Martin, Vancouver;\nT. Cronle, Cascade; Ed Smith, Spokane;\nJ. Martin, F. Buglas, Greenwood; L. .\nRogers, Griff Jones, City; F. Oslas, City;\nW. Kent, Revelstoke; Bill De Ohm, Slocan; J. McKay, D. G. Attacander, Silver-\nton; G. Thompson, W. Burke, Fruitvale.\nKlondyke Hotel\nVernen Street\nStrictly  Union House\nHeadquarters for misers, smal-\ntermen, loggers, railroad man.\nRates: 11.00 per day up.\nNELSON A JOHNSON, Props.\nKLONDYKEW.  Latliere,  C. Bush,  Tim\nStanley, Cranbrook; A. Nellson, Hall.\nKootenay Hotel\nTwo  doors  from peetotflee\nVernon. Street\nRate* tl.M aid &.S per day.\nEvery coavenies.ee fivea to tbe\ntravelling publle.    Bleetrle piano,\naid   UsJoa   bar     la   eooaeetloa,\nwhere the best wines and liquors\nare kept\nMRS. MALLBTT, Proprietress.\nKOOTENAY\u2014B. Miller, City; W. Mak-\nson, E. Nellson, J. McMillan, Kaslo; J.\nBarry, S. Sopps, <J. Phil\" \" \"\nCoplammlo Cranbrook.\nNelson Cafe\nUrge and Commodious Dining\nRoom\nPrompt and Courteous Service.\nMeals Served at all Hours\nElegantly furnished noma In\neonieetlon; $1.00 a day and up.\nA. AUDET, Proprietor\nNELSON\u2014P. Donavan, Jersey City; T.\nMarshall, Midway; S. B. Miller, Greenwood; Ella Lyden, Grand Forks; W. Carey,\nSilverton; H. E. Hardy, Vera Cruse; J.\nDrowley, Spokane; G, R. Jesse, SIdley;\nW. J. Lumls, SIdley; J, GI Lutes, Spokane*\nWash..\t\nSMioAsGure\nQUICKLV  STOPS  COUQHS,  CURES  COLDS,\nHfiAlS THE THNOAT AND LUNQB. AS CKNTS\nSTRATHCONA-Munroe Archibald, Mr.\nand Mrs. E. W. Hazlewood, Trail; D. C.\nJennings, C. Johanneson, CCalgary; G. H.\nFerguson, W. A. Macarthur, Mr. and Mrs.\nThomas Caldwell, C. A. Forrester, Mr. and\nMrs. M. A. Sanders, Toronto; Ivan De\nLaahmutt, AInsworth; A. L. Dewar, Jr.,\nVancouver; Frederic Kepper, Greenwood;\nMajor and Mrs. F. GIossop, Rock creek; F.\nWoodyanl, Lethbridge; James Dlllard. C.\nHussey, T. R. Tannatt, Spokane; W, F.\nTierney, City; William J. Lode, Mr. and\nMrs. Samuel Comstoke, John M. Scrlml-\ngeon, Spokane.\nQueen's Hotel\nBaker Street\nA.   LAPOINTE,   Proprietor\nRenovated throughout. Sixteen new rooms added, all elegantly furnished. \u25a0\nQUEENS\u2014F. B. Morrison, Castlegar; G.\nMitchell, Vancouver; J. M. Swlngear, Vancouver; F. W. McCurrach, Greenwood; W.\nClaugh and wife, Miss J. Armstrong, Slocan; W. S, Carrot, Grand Forks; W. M.\nFroBt, F. J. Plnzel, D. E. Giron, H. H.\nStuart, Spokane; J. Simpson Kaslo; Mrs.\nElley and child, Fernle; Mrs. R. E. Plowman, Rossland; Henry S. Chapman, Leeds:\nMr. and Mrs. F. Davis, Rossland.\nDoctor's Prescription\nto Cure Eczema\nThe most advanced physicians of this\ncountry and Europe are now prescribing\na wash jbf Wlntergreen, Thymol, and\nother soothing and healing Ingredients\nfor the cure of Eczema, Psoriasis and all\nother forms of skin trouble. This compound ls known as the D. D. D. Prescription.\nDr. Holmes, the well-known skin specialist, writes:\u2014\"I am convinced that the\nD. D. D. Prescription Is as much a specific\nfor Eczema as Is quinine for malaria. I\nhaVe been prescribing the D. D. D. remedy\nfor years.\"\nWe ourselves vouch for the D. D. D.\nPrescription for Eczema and absolutely\nknow that It will take away the itch\nthe Instant you apply It.\nDrop Into our store and get posted on\nthis wonderful remedy for Eczema and\nall other skin troubles, Or write the\nD. D. D. Laboratories, Dept. No, 40, Col-\nborne St., Toronto, for their free sample bottle. They will be glad to send it\nImmediately.    Poole  Drug Co.\nWhen Taking\na Vacation\ngo to tbe great Halcyon Hot\nSprings, where you can secure\nnot only rest but at the same time\nhave the benefit of the best medicinal waters on the continent, unequalled for rheumatism and kindred ailments. The springs are\neasy of access to travellers and\nthe hotel has been fitted up and\nIb conducted with a view to 'the\nmaximum of comfort and convenience for guests.\nRates: $12 and $15 per week, or\n$2 per day and upwards.\nHalcyon Hot Springs\nSanitarium\nWM   BOYD, Proprietor\nHalcyon Arrow Lakes\nCON JONES' BIG\nLACROSSE SCHEME\nNadden House\nThos. Madden, Prop., Baker St.\n'-   Rates': 91.60 to $2.00 per day.\nMeal Tickets, 97.00 per week.\nA Comfortable Home\nMADDEN\u2014H. A. McMillan, J. Gallops,\nBalfour; Mrs. S. J. Schonberg, Perry Siding; J. J, McHenzie, Penticton; W. DeRae,\nCoryell; A. Sherman, Hall; G. W. Benney,\nSlocan; Wilson Kan, Nakusp; W. Beaumet,\nQueens Bay; G. Cosomely, Vancouver.\nTremont House\nBaker Street, Nelaon.\nRANSOME   &   CAMPBELL\nProprietors\nEuropean plan, 60c, up\nAmerican plan, Si.25 and *1.H\nMeals 35c.\nALL WHITE LABOR.'\nSpecial Rates Per Montn\nTREMONT\u2014J. Bera, Lloydmlnster; W.\nHearsey, Calgary; J. Goodlad, City; J.\nWatters, Mother Lode; Beech Caruperet,\nSalmo; M. Newltt, L. v. O. Buln, Miss B.\nDally, Spokane; A. Wilson, Seattle.\nGrand Central Hotel\nOPPOSITE POSTOFFICE\nAme.lcan and European Plana.\nH. H. PITTS, Proprietor\nGRAND CENTRAL-A. G. Stover, Waldo; R. B. McLeod, M. McLeod, B. Smith,\nWilliam Smith, G. W. Moore, Salmo; L.\nMcWInns, Silverton; J. M. Farrel, Slocan\nMr. and Mrs. C. Wright, Kuskanook; J. A,\nJohnson, Hall.\nSHERBROOKE-E. ^enson, Kochs; G.\nBartlfitt, Midway; Harry Moor, Midway;\nL, Comkle, S. Ryelsbrook, M. Mucllsrlck,\nS. Golsvlck, M. Golsvlck, Cour Dealene.\nROYAL\u2014John Sneddon, John Bayles,\nChllllwack; Charles Sucker, Crescent Valley; W. G. Tucker, Grimsby, Ont.\nDIES OF TYPHOID.\nPORT DALHOUISE, Ont., Oct 24.\u2014\nAlbert Zimmerman, a prominent farmer\nand fruit-grower, died last night from\ntyphoid fever. He Is an ex-reeve of\nPort Dalhoulse, and a prominent Ma-\nson, also a staunch Conservative. He\nwas principal of the public school here\nfor many years. He leaves a widow\nand five children, all but -one being\ndown with the same disease.\n-     JURORS WANT MORE  PAY\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nVANCOUVER, B.C., Oct. 24\u2014Petit\njurors at New Westminster have sent\na petition to the provincial government tor higher pay declaring the present 92 per day wholly Inadequate for\nthe time spent.\nTO   SUCCEED   M'RAE.\nWINNIPEG, Oot. 24.\u2014Inspector Donald McPherson of the city police has\nbeen appointed acting chief for Winnipeg to succeed ex-Chief J, C. McRae\nHie duties commence tomorrow.\nAUCTION SALE\nAuction Room, Next Opera House\nWednesday, Oct. 25 at 1:30 sharp\nWe have received Instructions from\nH. A. Webster, Esq. to sell by public\nauction at the above rooms and date\nall his household furniture, consisting\nof bureaus, wash stands, sideboards,\nsewing machine, new washing machine,\niron bedsteads, springs and mattresses,\nextension table, blankets, sheets,\ntowels, carpets, floor cloths, kitchen\nutensils, garden tools, etc. We shall\nalso offer a quantity of henting stoves\nand kitchen ranges, stove pipes, etc.,\nand a second hand Remington typewriter. These goods are all in good\ncondition.\nTERMS:   CASH.\nWm. Cutler;, Auctioneer\nWffiBRI\nRoyal Nail Steamers\nSt. Lawrence Route\nMontreal \u2022 Quebec \u25a0 Liverpool\n\"Canada\"   Saturday, Nov.   4\n\"Teutonic\"   Saturday, Nov. 18\n\"Laurentic\"  Wednesday, Nov. 22\nChristmas Sailings\nPortland, Ne., Halifax, Liverpool\n\"Canada\"   Saturday, Dec.   2\n\"Marantic\"    Saturday, Dec.   9\n\"Teutonic\"   Thursday, Dec, 14\nWhite Star Line S. S. \"Laurentic\"\nand \"Megantlc\" are the largest, finest\nand most modern vessels Balling from\nCanada. Elevators, Lounges, String\nOrchestra, etc. First, Second and\nThird class passengers carried, '\nWhite Star Line S. S. \"Teutonic\"\nand Dominion Line S. S. \"Canada\"\ncarry One Class cabin (II) and Third\nclass passengers only.\nApply to any railway agent\u2014R. X.\nScarlett, City Passenger Agent,\nC.P.R.; W. Rayment, Depot Agent;\nW. E. Ketchum, Agent G.N.R.\nCompany's Office, 619 Second Ave.,\nSeattle.\nTo Tour United States and Canada In\nChampionship Matches For Minto\nCup. \/\nMONTREAL, Oct. 24.\u2014Con Jones has\na tremendous lacrosse scheme on for\nnext year. It was Newsy Lalonde who\ndivulged it. This Is the scheme. Instead of playing his championship lacrosse matches in British Columbia,\nhe intends to make what he calls a tour\nof lacrosse education throughout Canada and the United States, and schedule his matches In such a way that the\nmajority of them can he played In the\nUnited States, while he will havo\nenough left to make a good finish for\nthe benefit of the Victoria and Vancouver people. In a nutshell, the\nscheme is this: Every match will\ncount towards the championship, and\nnaturally the possession of tho Minto\ncup, but It will be played in some place\noutside of the province of British Columbia, excepting the last few matches.\nThe cost of transportation will be\nsomething Immense, but Mr. Jones\nfigures out that even with the clubs\ntaking part in the scheduled trip will\nmake money, and at the same time they\nwill pursue a policy of education which\nwill create a new interest in, and taste\nfor lacroosse in the United States. He\nhas already been figuring on visits to\nSan Francisco, Minneapolis, and Chicago, In all of which places lacrosse has\nbeen coming to the front more or less\nin the last few yearB.\nPossible Not Probable.\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 24.\u2014Questioned\nregarding the truth of the story given\nout in Montreal, by Newsy LaLonde,\nthat Con Jones Intended to make an\nelaborate lacrosse education tour\nthrough Canada and the United States,\nplaying both countries in championship\ngames, the president of the Vancouver\nchampions said: \"Possible, but not\nprobable.\" He stated that before La\nLonde went east, he had discussed with\nhim the idea of doubling the champion'\nship series, making 20 games instead\nof 10, Vancouver and New Westminster\nplaying half of the games, In eastern\nCanada and American cities, but the\nmatter did not go beyond the sugges-\nHon.\nANNUAL CONVENTION\nBIGGEST ON RECORD\nDRAMATIC SOCIETY\nGOES ON TOUR\nLA8H  FOR  WIFE BEATERS.\nTORONTO, Oct. 24.\u2014The associated\ncharities of Toronto, will petition the\nnew minister of justice for an amendment to the criminal code, making wife\ndesertion a indictable offence, punishable by a $10,000 fine, or two years\nhard labor, the proceeds in either case\nto go to the support of the family. The\nlash to wife beaters ls also recommended.\nDEVELOPMENT FOR 8T. BONIFACE\nWINNIPEG, Oot 24.\u2014The plans for\na joint entrance of the national transcontinental railway and the Grand\nTrunk Pacific into St. Boniface, If approved, will mean a change of the\nwater front on Seine river, -ind another bridge over the river into Winnipeg. An area of rapid development Is\nexpected in St. Boniface It the plans go\nthrough.\nENGLISH  MEMBER OF\nPARLIAMENT COMMITS SUICIDE\nLONDON, Oct. 24,\u2014A. P. Hilller,\nUnionist member of parliament for the\nnorth division of Hertfordshire committed suicide today by cutting his throat.\nMr. Hilller was associated with John\nHays Hammond and Dr. Jameson In\nthe' English raid In the Transvaal.\nAsk for Minardi' and take no other.\nWill   Give   Performance   at   Nelson-\nSawmill at Proctor Running\nFull Time\n(Special to-The Dally News.)\nPROCTOR, B.C., Oct. 24\u2014The Balfour Amateur Dramatic society under\nthe leadership of W. R. Draper, late of\nthe Barrow Dramatic club, left this\nmorning on tour. The society has a\ngood repertoire and will open at Kaslo\non the 23rd Inst, after which points on\nthe Crow's Nest Pass will be visited.\nRossland will be taken in on the way\nhome. The society will finish up at\nNelson. Fred Russell of Proctor Is\nacting as advance agent.\nThe Indians are bringing lota of\nducks to town. They .seem to be the\nonly ones who can lay hands on them\nat present.\nThe sawmill ls running full time\nnow. i\nThere are quite a number of English\nsparrows flying about. It Ib to be hoped\nthat they do not multiply.\nThe Presbyterians will hold a\nThanksgiving service on Sunday at 7\no'clock p.m.\nMrs, A. G. Gallup has returned from\na trip to the east.\nMrs, Baker of Pilot Bay Ib spending\na few days with Mrs. Bourne of\nProctor.\nCapt. Ferguson of the tug Valhalla,\nafter relieving Capt. Robertson on the\nNelson, took a couple of weeks holidays and has now returned to the Valhalla.\nEveryone is busy clearing up their\nlots, especially those within the town\nlimits.\nSome much needed improvements\nare being carried out at the C.P.R. station where additional buildings are to\nbe erected. Mr. Bean, the station agent\nhas returned from a trip to Nelson.\nThe English church at Balfour was\ncrowded last Sunday by those wishing\nto take pnrt in the harvest festival.\nRev. C. Reld, assisted by Mr. Lane, officiated at the service.\nW. W. Blair and C. W. Sharp have\nreturned to Winnipeg.\nSWIMMING GALA\nHELD TONIGHT\nRaces for Seniors and Juniors and Exhibitions In Strokes, Diving and\n\u2022\u25a0^Llfe Saving\nThe swimming gala, to be held at S:16\ntonight, In the Y. M. C. A\u201e promises to\nbe as entertaining as Instructive. The program includes senior and Junior races; an\nexhibition of stroke swimming by C. D.\nRlts, champion of Scotland In 1910-11; life\nsaving methods by P. Benson and H. Wilson; a pillow fight, and a diving competition. The officials will be Aid. T. D.\nStark, referee; J. Johnstone and R. Turner\njudges of finish; C. D. Risk and H. Wilson, ]udges*of diving; James Thompson,\nstarter, and W. Kettlewell, competitions'\nsteward. v\nMADERO'S   INAUGURATION.\nEL PASO, Texas, Oct. 24.\u2014A telegram received here today from Francesco I. Madero announces he will be\nInaugurated president of Mexico on November 5.\nHITCHCOCK TO OPEN   BANK\nAMHERST, O., Oct. 24.\u2014Postmaster F.\nH. Hitchcock, who Is a native of this\ntown, is expected here tomorrow to assist\nat the opening of a postal savings bank.\nThe bank will be the first to be established in a third-class postoffice.\nOver Two Hundred Delegates Expected\nto Meet for Session of School\nTrustees\nThe eighth annual convention of the\nBritish Columbia Association of School\nTrustees promises to be the biggest\non record, over 200 delegates expecting\nto meet In Vancouver on Nov. 8 for\nthe three days session. Invitations to\nbe present are extended to provincial\nschool Inspectors and, where possible,\nto school teachers as well and every\ndistrict is entitled to representation.\nMany important resolutions are In hand\nfrom the various school boards and\nwill be considered at this convention.\nThe 'School act will also be taken up.\nAll delegates are notified to purchase\nfirst class tickets and ask the agent\nfor a standard sleeper. If to travel\nover several lines, get certificates\nfrom each. The certificates are to be\npresented to the secretary of the convention for-signature and if 100 hold\nthese certificates the delegates will be\nreturned free; if less than that number then they will receive one-third\nrate. Everyone is cautioned to buy his\nticket at least ten minutes before the\ntrain starts. These arrangements also\ninclude the delegates' wives and\nfriends.\nProgram\u2014Wednesday,  Nov.  8\n9:30 a.m.\u2014Appointment of credential, auditing and resolution committees.\nAddress of welcome, mayor of the\ncity of Vancouver, president of the\nboard\" of trade, president of the Women's council and other prominent\nbodies.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014President's address.\n\"The needs of rural schools,\" W. E.\nBuckingham, chairman of the Richmond school board, Eburne.\nDiscussion.\n2:00 p.m.\u2014\"The effect of hand and\neye training on Industry,\" John Kyle,\nA.R.C.A., provincial Normal school.\nDiscussion.\n3:00 p.m.\u2014\"The socialization of educational work,\" J. B. McCaig, B.A.,\nfctL.B., superintendent of schools, Edmonton, Alta.\n4:00 p.m.\u2014\"The school and vocational education,\" Ben. W. Johnson, Seattle, director of industrial education.\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Address, Maxwell Smith,\nsubject \"patriotism.\"\n\u25a0Address, Ben. W. Johnson, subject,\n\"A day at Tuskegee, the Industrial\nschool  of Booker  T.  Washington.\"\nAddress, Judge F. W. Howay, New\nWestminster.\nThursday, Nov. 9\n9:30 a.m.\u2014\"Modern Schools as I\nhave seen them,\" Illustrated by stere-\noptlcon views, J. J. Dougan, Vancouver.\nDiscussion.\n10:30 a.m.\u2014\"Physiological development in childhood,\" Miss Alice Raven-\nhill, Charcheveattle, Shawnlgan Lake,\nB.C.\n11:30 a.m.\u2014\"Medical inspection,\"\nFred W. Brydone-Jack, M.D., medical\nsupervisor of Vancouver city  schools.\n<2:0a p.m.\u2014\u25a0\"Tendencies of modern\neducatlon,\"W. P. Argue, B.A., superintendent of Vancouver city schools.\n3:00 p.m.\u2014Addresses, Premier McBride and Hon. H. E. Young, M.D.\nLUD., minister of education,\nReports of  committees.\nElection of officers and arrangements\nfor next convention.\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Address, Wm. Burns, B.A.,\nprincipal of the provincial Normal\nschool.\nAddress, Rev. W. H. Vance, M.A.\nprincipal of Latimer Hall, \"Tho weakness of our educational system.\"\nAddress, J. McCaig, B.A., LL.D., Edmonton, education, \"the measure of\nthe City Bystem.\"\nFriday, Nov. 10\n9:30 a.m.\u2014Resolution, unfinished\nbusiness.\n10:30 a.m.\u2014Visiting city schools,\nsightseeing, North Vancouver, South\nVancouver and Stanley Park.\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Social evening.\nSIR   MAX  SAYS\nMERGER   IS   BENEFICIAL\nOTTAWA, Oct. 24,-SIr Max Aiken spent\nthe day In Ottawa, and made a number or\ncalls on ministers and officials on Parliament hill. When questioned In regard to\nthe Canada Cement company, Sir Max re^\nmarked:\n\"I do not go back on anything I have\nsaid aa far as Canada Cement was concerned, it waa the greatest industrial concern in the Dominion. The price of cement was reduced 10 cents per barrel last\nN'ovember, and now It looks like another\nreduction will take place In 1911.\" He said\nlie had no right to speak for Cement, and\nbad no knowledge of Us future plans. Already prices are ns low as In England, and\nany further reduction would be due entirely to the economies of consolidation.\nNine Year Old Boy\nCured of Bed Wetting by Booth's Kidney Pills\nMrs. J. Tait of Denmark St., Meaford,\nOnt., says: _     _\n\"Our nine year old boy has suffered\nseverely with kidney weakness or bed\nwetting for over two years. Several\nremedies have\" been used to cure the\ntrouble but none gave any relief until\nhe used Booth's Kidney Pills. This\nmedicine went right to the cause of the\ntrouble, removed same, and today the boy\nis practically devoid of all kidney\ncomplaint. I wish\n.* all mothers knew\n\u00a3] of this excellent\ncttfatltve remedy\nand am glad that\n\u25a0. Booth's Kidney\nt Fills were brought\nto my notice.\"\nBooth's Kidney\nPills cure backache, dull shooting pains, thick\n<p nnd cloudy urine,\ngrayel or stone,\nrheumatism and all diseases of the kidney\nand bladder.\nThe Booth Guarantees\nWe do not guarantee to cure In all cases,\nbut If you derive no benefit our agents\nare authorized to refund you your money.\nBooth s Kidney Fills are sold by all druggists 50c, or postpaid from tho R. T. Booth\nCo., Limited, Fort Erie, Ont. Sold and\nguaranteed by Poole Drug Co., Ltd.\n'tB'db'n\nimm\n[ a Meagher & Co. SS\nHave You Bought Your\nNew Fall Coat Yet ?\nFashion Says that\nCoats Will Be Worn\nMore Extensively than\nEver Before.   Style,\nOriginality and\nElegance Mark Our\nCollection of\nSeparate Coats. Come\nand See Them\nYou need not waste time looking any further or waiting for the\nbest styles any longer\u2014the finest coats that the most skillful tailors\nhave fashioned are here in extensive assortments.\nAny kind of a coat you want Is here. There's almost no limit to the\nstyles, the fabrics, the colors and the sizes\u2014everyone fresh and new,\nsmart and becoming, serviceable and moderately priced.\nBesides insuring absolute style, perfect fit and utmost service by\nchoosing now you will also save on your purchase, as we bought these\ngarments at unusually favorable prices and give you the full benefit.\nAs every coat Is different want of space prevents us giving exact\ndescriptions of themjanyway it is much better to see the coats themselves.   Come and try some on and see how they suit you.\nPrices $10 to $45\nHome Grown Fruit Trees\nWe have a large supply of\nApple Trees, also Plums, Cherries,\nPeaches, Pears, etc.\nAll guaranteed home grown slock.   Write for catalogue   and   price\nlist to\nThe Riverside Nurseries\nComprising 120 Acres\nWe learn that the unscrupuiou\ncompany has circulated the repor\nBupplled ufl with a large number\nto say that there Is absolutely n\nguarantee to those placing order\nwill receive none but fruit trees\nForkB, B.C..\nAll our fruit trees are of ou\nto anyone who can prove to th\nSept. 6, 1911.\nGRAND FORKS, B.C.\ns agent of an irresponsible nursery\nt through the Kootenays that his firm\nof fruit trees last year. We wish\no truth In his statement and we strictly\ns with us for nursery stock tbat tney\ngrown at our own nurseries at Urand\nr own growing and we ofer $500 reward\ncontrary.   '\nCanadian Northern Steamships, Ltd.\nannounce\nXmas Excursion Rail Rates\nFrom the west In connection with\nTHE ROYAL LINE\nTickets on sale November 10th to December 31st inclusive, with a\nreturn  limit of five months from date of Issue.\nFrom Montreal\nRoyal Edward      Nov.    1\nRoyal George ...    Nov.  15\nf t>\nI \u00bb Christmas  Sailings\u2014From   Halifax I\nI   Royal Edward         Nov.  29 I\nI  Royal George  Dec. 13 I\nJ\nRoyal Edward     Dec. 27\nInsist upon your steamship ticket reading \"via Royal Line.\"\nFor   further  Information,   Illustrated booklets, etc., apply to W. Rayment, joint ticket agent C.P.R. and G.N.R,, Nelson; R. K. Scarlett, city\nticket agent, C.P.R., Nelson; W. E. Ketchum, city ticket agent, G.N.R.,\nNelson, or write A. H. Davis, general  agent,  272  Main  St.,  Winnipeg.\nIF YOU HAVE ANYTHING TO SELL TRY A  NEWS CLASSIFIED AD.\nA Choice Buy\n75 acres level land, 1 mile from school, postoffice, station, store\nand sawmill employing 75 men.\nTwelve acres cleared, 20 acres can be cleared for $20 per acre.\nNone costs more than $30 to $40. .Ten acres In clover, 100 young fruit\ntrees;  1 1-2 story house 20x25.   Chicken house, small barn.\nThis property ls located in the Slocan valley and ls a good buy at\nthe price, of\n$60 per Acre\nTerms arranged. For information on this and other good buys in\ntbe Slocan valley call on or write.\nFruit and Farm Lands. T\\     Ox    r\\_-_J\u2014     Mines\nl8( U. ot. Denis\nCity Property, Insurance.\n505 Baker St., Nelson\nPhone B86.\nTimber\nOver E. B. McDermld.\nP.O.   Box  497\n PAGE  SIX\nCfie BaUp $em\nWEDNESDAY ..... OOTOBER 25\nWestern Canada Investment Co.\nFlnanclsl Agents, .(sal Estate, Fire, Life and Accident Insurance: Timber    Lands,    Rents    Collected,    Loans\nSafety Deposit Boxes for Rent\nJ.   E.  TAYLOR,   Manager. H   .E.   DOUGLAS,   Insurant   and      C.   A.   VAN    HEMERT,   Timber\nALEX.  CHEYNE,  Secretary Loan   Department. Department,\nalea. unc,lp^5'Box   1(J42-    phone j54 Cor. Baker and Jossphlne 8treets.\nFo* Rent\n411 Cedar St., 8 rooms, modern\nconveniences, 827' per month including water.\nCottage, Nelson avenue, 6\nrooms, $16 per month, including\nwater.\nCottage, Fairview, one block\nfrom car line, $11 per month, including water.\n$300\nStarts you in a home of your\nown, fully furnished. Cosey\ncottage In pink of condition,\n1 lot cleared and fenced, alley\nIn rear, situated on car line.\nBalance on rental payments.\nTotal purchase price *1,420.\nSaviag Is\nMaking\nYou can buy today a well\nbuilt 8-roomed cottage and\ndouble corner lot with bearing\nfruit trees on car line for $800\ncash, balance on easy terms,\nthat you could not duplicate today for $1,000 more than the\nprice we can deliver it to you.\nCalgary, the Fastest Growing Spot\nin Western Canada Today\nIn the next five years Calgary  will   have   added  to  herself  another city the size of herself.\nThe increase must come on land values. Calgary real estate will not go back, it can't. It moves one\nway, only upward.. The tremendous pressure creates new and higher levels of value. To buy and to hold\nIs to amass wealth. Will you come with us now.. Will you make money without effort or risk by simply\nwaiting  for  the   onward  march of the city?\nWe own hundreds of lots, by selling some at $165 we can hold others until they sell for $400 and\nmore a piece.\nWe Off ef Highgate Lots at\n$165.00 each, $25 cash, $10.00 per month. We hold clear title. .We give every purchaser an absolute guarantee of a car line to be completed by July 1st, 1912.\nThe building restrictions on Highgate insures purchasers of nice homes and uniformity of general\nconditions.    Highgate is exactly three  miles from the centre of the city.\nG3EEN   BROS., BURDEN & CO.\nCivil Engineers.   Dominion and B. O. Law\nSurveyors.\nSurveys of Lands, Minos. Townsltes, Ttt\u00bb\n'.er Limit*,  Btt.\ns'elson, 516 Ward St.,  A.  H.  lireen, Mgi\n'.'ictoria, 114 Pemberton Bids-, F. C. Qrs\u00bb\n!-*t. George.   Hammond St.. F.  P   Burdsa\nA. L. Mcculloch\nHydraulic Engineer\nProvincial   Land Surveyor\nP. O. Box 41\nifflce 'phone B86; resilence phone B7\nOffice; Over McDermld &. McHardy\nBaker St.. Nelson, B.C.\nGEORGE  H PLAYLE\nChartered Act-onuunt, Auditor\nNelson, B.C.\n,    MINING\nProperties Inspected and expert reports\nfurnished.     James    C.    Campbell,   M.E.,\nUnited States hotel, St. Paul. 130-tf\nSinging and Voice Production\nH, TREBY HEALE-TWTION GIVEN\nin above, Studio at 615 Cedar street\nAddress*Harrop P.O., B.C,\nHAIRDRESSING   AND   MANICURING\nMRS. J.  M.  HOULDING, HAIR DRESS-\ning.   m\\k Kootenay street   Phone 477.\n 145-26\nHELP   WANTED.\nNELSON EMPLOYMENT AGENCY\nC. F. Hutton, Manager\nTHE  vVORKINGMEN'8 e^PLOYMGW\nAND   REAL   ESTATE   AGENCY\nWANTED\u2014Men to contract for land\nclearing; bookmen; bricklayers; bush-\nmen; woman cook, ranch, $30; carpenters\n(finishers); railway graders; girls tor general work; lumber pliers, {3.50; man1 to\nwork on chain, $3; waiter.\nW.  Parker,  312 Baker street,  Phone 218.\nB. C. UNITED AGENCIES\nReal Estate Employment Agents.\n-311  Baker St., Nelson\nBox 232 Phone 391\nWOMEN'S     EMPLOYMENT     OFF1CG\n\"OVER     POOLE     DRUG    SToTtEJ     tut-\ntrance on   Josephine street\nFORT\nReal   Estate\n315 :\nP.   0.   Box\nGEORGE  LAND CO.\nEmployment Office\nBaker Street, Nelson.\n888.                          Phono  134.\nJACOB   GREEN   &  CO.\nAuctioneers, Appraisers,\nValuators.\nP.  O.   Box 233. Nelson,  B. C.\nGive us a chance to tell you\nour story. It won't last long.\nIt will be interesting. Or better still, get the best choice by\nsending us $25, the first payment on one lot, with the distinct understanding that If\nyou are not entirely satisfied\nwith our selection, we will at\nonce refund your money. But\nwrite anyway, a postage stamp,\na pen full of Ink will bring you\nfull information.\nMoney Back If Not Satisfied\nVisit Calgary any time within six months after your purchase\nVisit our properties, keep what you have if you think it is the best\nvalue in our entire holdings, change to any other lot if you will, or\nif you consider the property to be misrepresented in any way,< go\nto our cashier's desk and get back every dollar you have paid us. It\nis ail the same to us.\nWe would prefer to have you a good friend and not a customer\nrather than a customer and not a good friend. But a decision Ib\nrequired at the time ot examination and the offer extends to those\nwho visit Calgary within said six months. In other words we do\nnot give options. We do give you six months to examine your property  and get your money  back  if not satisfied.\nRECEIVE REPORT\nWITH DERISION\nRailwaymen    Indignant   at   Report   of\nRailway Commission\u2014Acceptance\nIs Refused\nLOXDON, Oct. 24\u2014Railwaymen held\nmeetings in many places throughout\nGreat Britain at which they passed\nresolutions repudiating the report of the\nrailway commission. References to the\nreport were punctuated with angry and\nderisive shouts. Secretary Williams of\nthe Amalgamated Society of Railway\nServants, addressing the men at Sheffield admitted that the report embodied\nsome small improvements but said it\nwas an absolute disgrace to suggest\nthat tbe men continue under present\nconditions until July, 1912.\nA resolution passed refused to accept\ntbe commission's findings and asked\nthat the executives of the varlouB\nunions convene a national conference\nto frame better conditions for employment and to submit the plan forthwith\nto the railway companies for adoption.\nWhen the commission was appointed\nIn August the board ot trade announced that both parties had promised to\naccept the findings. Several leaders\nnow say that neither the men nor the\nexecutives were consulted , that compliance was not pledged thereto, and\nthat tbey will not recognize such an\nobligation.\nREFUSE TO BE BOUND\nBY PROPOSED AGREEMENT\n' HALIFAX, Oct. 24.\u2014Some days ago\nthe P. W. A. at a meeting of the grand\ncouncil, appointed a committee to draw\nup a schedule for the miners oS Nova\nricotia, on the lines of the 1900 schedule. The different lodges were authorised to enter into an agreement with\nthe companies on the basis of the\nagreement. The V. Jtl. W, executive of\nNova Scotia now comes out with a\nproclamation addressed lo all mine\nworkers of Nova Scotia, in which they\nrefuse to he bound by the proposed P. >\nW. A. arrangement, and protest against I\nsuch an agreement being entered Into. I\nThey allege as reasons for this that the\nP. W. A. was voted out of existence\nby Its own members iiiree yea.s agu,\nthat there have been two general increases in wages to tbe organized mine\nworkers of North America, while the\nmen of Nova Scotia have received no\ngeneral increase, that all present contracts between mine workers ind operators in North America terminate on\nMarch 13, 1912, at which all the miners\nof the country will present demands\nfor increased, wages and better working conditions, and that the Dominion\ncoal companies wish to have Its employees in such a position as will enable it to take an undue advantage of\nconditions in the coal market, which\nmay occur during deliberations for new\ncontracts. The U. M. W. say that they\nare willing to negotiate a wage contract, but they wiil not stand for one\nnegotiated by anybody else. They announce that public meetings will be\nheld at the collieries to agitate the wage\nquestion.\nLIQUOR   ACT,   1910\n(Section 42.)\nNotice Is hereby given that, on the first\nday of December next, application will be\nmnde to the Superintendent of Provincial\npolice for renewal of tho hotel license to\nsell liquor by retail In the hotel known as\nthe Kootenay Lake hotel, situate at Balfour In the province of British Columbia.\nDated this Uth day of October, 1911,\nCANADIAN    PACIFIC   RAILWAY,\nE. D. IRELAND,  (Mnnager),\n156-30d Applicant.\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 24.\u2014George Chlvers\nan orderly at the scarlet fever Hospital,\ncommitted suicide by taking bromide.\nHe was 45 years old, and divorced. He\nhad been brooding on family troubles.\nNELSON   LAND   DISTRICT,   DISTRICT\nOP WEST KOOTENAY.\nTake notice that I, James Hughes, of\nProctor, B.C., occupation barber, Intend\nto apply for permission to purchase the\nfollowing described lands:\nCommencing at a post planted about 2\nmiles south of Wilson creek, thence west\n20 chains, thence north SO chains, thence\neast 20 chains, mence south 80 chains to\npoint of commencement, containing 160\nacres more or less,\nOctober II, 1911.\nJAMES HUGHES.\nLIQUOR ACT, 1910 '\n(Section 42.)\nNotice Is hereby given that, on the first\nday of December next, application will be\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial\nPolice for renewal of the hotel license to\nBell liquor by retail In the hotel known as\ntho Salmo hotel, situate at Salmo In tbe\nprovince of British Columbia.\nDated this 13th day of October, 1911.\nWILLIAM GRAY,\n:68-30d Applicant\nLIQUOR ACT, 1910\n(Section 42.)\nNotice Is hereby given that, on the first\nday of December next, application will be\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial\nPolice for renewal of the hotel license to\nsell liquor by retail in the hotel known as\nthe Fort Sheppard hotel,  situate at Wa-\nneta in tbe province of British Columbia.\nDated this 14th day of October, 1911.\nFRED ADIE,\n15B-3M Applicant\nA Little Beauty:\nContains 6 acres, and Is without a doubt\nthe snuggest, most compact, best located\nlittle fruit farm along the West Arm of\nKootenay lake. It Is situated on the south\nside of Kootenay lake, one mile west of\nProctor, and Is within five minutes' walk\nof the lake, Slightly elevated on a fine\nbench, it commands a fine view of the\nmain Kootenay lake, the west arm of Kootenay lake and the new C. P. R. tour|Bt hotel, directly opposite on the lake\nshore. This farm fronts on the main government wagon road and also has good graded road- leading to the lake and\nsteamboat landing. It is situated in the centre of a large, prosperous settlement and has many advantages In the\nway of schools, stores church, together with first-class dally transportation and mall.\nThis Is a rich piece of level fruit land, well watered by Narrows creek, which flows along the south boundary line.\nFrom this stream water can be piped at a very nominal cost for any farming purposes.\nThe land Is unimproved but easy to clear, and when put into shape would Certa.uly mr.ke a swell farm. Less than\n\u00a3250 ought to put it into shape for planting, to orchard. Anyone contemplating a fruit farming life on a moderate\nscale among pleasant surroundings will find this proposition almost all that couirj be desired,\nSumming up its good rich soil suitable for growing all kinds of fruits and vegetables, splenlid location In the centre\nof one of our most prosperous settlements, the beautiful view, fine surrounding scenery, government roads, daily mail\nservice, first-class transportation, tho very best of salmon and Rainbow trout fishing practically at your door, placing\nyou on a farm where surrounding orchards have thoroughly demonstrated win produce the highest class of fruit grown\nin the British colonies, on a farm la a portion of the Kootenay district where values will Increase with more rapid\nstrides than elsewhere, we submit It to you as the best property ever offered ln our district.\nIt can be bought for $800.   Terms, $250 cash, balance one and two years.   7 per cent interest   Within two years and\nwithout any improvements this farm by virtue of Its quality will be good valUe at $350 per acre.\nWire at our expense and we will hold for inspection.   Clear title.\nToye & Toye\nWholesale Fruit Land Dealers\nPhone 325\nNelson, B. C.\nBox 147\nR. H. LEY\nProvincial Assayer\nLate of tbe Hall Mines Smelter.\nTwelve years experience In B.C,\nores.   Control and umpire work a\nspecialty,\n312 Ward St. Welson, B.C.\nOpposite Court Housr\nThe B. C. Assay & Chemical\nSupply Co., Ltd.\nAssayers' supplies, chemical and\nphysical  apparatus.\n513 Pender St-, Vancouver, B.C.\nBungalows, Ranch and Town\nHouses\nPlans  and   Specifications\nWILL HALDANE\nArchitect and Valuator\nMany    years    experience   with\narchitectural    firms    of    highest\nstanding.\n519 Stanley St. Nelson, B.C.\nLIQUOR ACT, 1910.\n(Section 42.)\nNotice is hereby given that, on the first\nday of December next, application will be\nmade lo the Superintendent of Provincial\npolice for renewal of the hotel license to\nsell liquor by retail in tbe hotel known as\ntiie Palace  hotel,  situate at Ymir  In  tin\nprovince of  British  Columbia.\nDated this 13th day of October, 1311.\nHUGH JONES.\n150-30d Applicant.\nLIQUOR ACT, 1910.\n(Section 42.)\nNotice ls hereby given that, on the first\nday of December next, application will be\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial\npolice for renewal of the hotel license to\nsell liquor by retail In the hotel known as\nthe   Erie   hotel,   situate   at   Erie  ln   the\nprovince of British Columbia,    .\nDated this 12th day of October, Mil.\nJAMES J. HICKEY,\n156-3M Applicant.\nLIQUOR   ACT,   1910\nNotice is hereby given that on the Uth\nday of November next application will be\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial\nPolice for the transfer of the license for\nthe sale of liquor by retail In and upon\nthe premises known as the Palace hotel,\nsituated at Ymlr, British Columbia, from\nJones & Walker to Hugh Jones of British\nColumbia.\nDated tills 14th day of October, 1911.\n(Signed)   HUGH JONES.\nGEORGE   WALKER.\nLIQUOR ACT, 1910.\n(Section 42.)\nNotice Is hereby given that, on the first\nday of December next, application will be\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial\npolice for renewal of the hotel license to\nsell liquor by retail In the hotel known as\nthe Cosmopolitan hotel, situate at town of\nYmlr In tbe province of British Columbia.\nDated this 12th day of October, 1911.\nJOHN  BREAU,\ni56-30d Applicant.\nLIQUOR ACT, 1910\n(Section 42.)\nNotice is hereby given that, on the first\nday of December next, application will be\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial\nPolice for renewal of the hotel license to\nsell liquor by retail In the hotel known as\nthe Castlegar hotel at Castlegar In the\nprovince of BrltiBh Columbia.\nDated this 16th day of Ootober, 1911.\nW. H. GAGE,\n153-30d Applicant,\nLIQUOR  ACT,  1910\n(Section 42)\nNOTICE is hereby given that on the\nfirst day of December next, application\nwill be made to the Superintendent of Provincial Police for renewal of the hotel\nlicense to sell liquor by retail ln the hotel known as the Vancouver hotel, situate\nat Ymlr, B. C, In the province of British\nColumbia.\nDated this 13th day of October 1911.\nJAMES M. GILLE,\n Applicant,\nLIQUOR ACT\nNotice Is hereby given that, on the 4th\nday of November, 1911, next, application\nwill be made to the Superintendent of\nProvincial Police for the transfer of tbe\nlicense for the sale of liquor by retail In\nand upon tho premises known as the\nKootenay Falls hotel. Bltuate at Slocan\nJunction, British Columbia, from John\nWlnfleld Moore to John Wlnfleld Moore\nand Peter Johnson of BrltiBh Columbia\nDated tills 2nd doy of ^October, 1911.\nJOHN   WINFIELD   MOORE,\nHolder   of   License.\n.10HN   WINFIELD   MOORE,\nard PETER JOHNSON,\nI47-8M AppUeints for  Transfer.\nFOR   SALE.\nFOR SALE\u2014To a man who Is tired of\nday labor and wants to settle down in a\nhome of His own, where he can raise fruit\nand chickens can In our opinion find no\nbetter opportunity ln the entire west\nthan these ten-acre tracts In the Grey\nCreek subdivision. This is splendid fruit\nland and easily cleared, well watered,\nand within a half mite of steam boat\nlanding, postoffice and store. The above\nland is direct from tne locator to purchaser. Now, If you are interested, and\nevery man should be write us or call and\nwe will give you full particuarsv Address\nLindsay Launch & Boat Co., Room 8,\nGriffin Block.\nWANTED\u2014MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED\u2014Salesmen Hoi Salesmen want\ned to sell the most complete line of\nnursery stock ln the Northwest Cash\nweekly, capital City Nursery Company,\nSalem, Oregon. 272-lf.\nWANTED\u2014An opportunity for a, live man,\nselling our guaranteed Yakima Valley\ngrown nursery stock. Exclusive territory.\nOutfit free. Cash weeklv. \"Hustle,\" not\nexperience required. Toppenlsh Nursery\ncompany, Toppenlsh, Wash.\nWANTED\u2014Clean cotton ruga.   Apply The\nDally News. . 79-tf\nWANTED\u2014Married men  to buy  five and\nten acre fruit tracts.   Small  cash payment,   balance   in   wo'lt.    Apply   Harris,\nHoneymoon  Place, Kudo. 97-tf.\nWANTED \u2014 Apples,    plums,     pears   'and\nother tree fruits; prices on application.\nK. C.  Preserving Works,    Nelson,    B. C.\n113-tf\nWANTED\u2014Accidents and sickness will\nhappen. Our new $2,000 accidental death\nand sickness policy, providing a weekly\nbenefit of $15, Ib the most liberal contract\nissued by any company for small premium\nof $5 a year. It pays for typhoid fever,\npneumonia, scarlet fever, appendicitis,\ndiphtheria and 44 other diseases; aold to\nmen and women between the ages of 16\nto 70 years; any occupation, no medical\nexamination required. There Is more real\ninsurance ln this policy than any other for\ntbe premium charged, without any exception, Identification certificate genuine\nleather card case Insures immediate and\naccurate Identification ln case of accident or sudden illness, Including payment\nof all expenses up to $100. Strong stock\ncompany. Million dollars paid ln claims..\nWrite agency terms. P. Frazler & Co.,\n422 Winch Bldg,, Vancouver, B.C., General\nAgents for British Columbia. 139-tf.\nWANTED\u2014Land clearing contracts. We\nwant to let contracts for clearing blocks\nfrom 10 to 100 acres, at Upper Bonnlngton.\nLight clearing. Okanagan Commercial\nOrchards Company, Ltd. Apply to J. J.\nCampbell, telephone B1C2, Willow Point\nP.  O. 162-tf.\nFOR SALE-Port Mann. The Pacific\nterminal port of the Canadian Northern\nrailway. Official announcement Is made\nthat the townsite lots will be on sale within sixty days. As was the case In Prince\nRupert, record prices will reign, some say\n$15,000 to $20,000 per lot. The lots nearest\nto what will be the highest priced railway\nlots are those across the road belonging\nto us. Tiiey are big, 50 feet by 101 feet\nlots, to a 20-foot lane, and arc about 300\nyards off the waterfront. Prices now\nasked are only from $1,500 up, with three\nyear terms. These show opportunities for\ngreatest quick profits ever offered in the\ncountry. No private subdivision in this\nterminal can ever be so close ns ours. Remember the highest prices at the sale\nwill set the value to our lots. We recommend speedy action, as only about fifty\nlots remain unsold. Ask for our maps\nand prices. Sole agents, The Selwyn Investment Company, Limited, 311 Dominion\nTrust Building, Vancouver, B.C. 152\nl-'OR SALE\u2014An improved farm of 147\nncres, near good road, % mile from\njunction. Large barn and other out-buildings; water piped to log house; also choice\n10-acre tracts. 15 acres 100 yards from\nstore and postoffice, fronting wagon road;\nclose to depot and hotel; two acres bearing orchard; well watered; small house.\nMartin  Anderson,   Slocan Junction,      100-6\nFOR   SALE\u2014Private    sale    of    furniture,\nstarting Oct. 24th.   80S Goro street.   161-0\nFOR   SALE\u2014450   shot   gun,   with   leather\ncase,   fine  English  walnut  stock.    Price\n$30.   Apply box A. K., Dally News.     164-G\nFOR SALE, LARGE & SMALL TRACTS\nTHE RIGHT  KIND\nGENUINE FRUIT LANDS\nR.   LAMONT,  CRESTON,   B.  C.\nLIQUOR ACT, 1910.\n(Section 42.)\nNotice is hereby given that, on the first\nday of December next, application will be\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial\npolice for renewal of the-hotel license to\nsell liquor by retail In the hotel known as\nthe Northern hotel, .situate at town of Salmo In the province of British Columbia,\nD;ited this 12tti day of October, 1911.\nE. E. McARTHUR,\n16G-30d Applicant.\nLIQUOR ACT, 1910\n(Section 42.)\nNotice ls hereby given that, on the first\nday of December next, application will be\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial\nPolice for renewal of the hotel license to\nsell liquor by retail in the hotel known as\nthe Mercey hotel, situate at Erie in the\nprovince of British Columbia.\nDated this 12th day of October, 1911.\nO. A. HAGiLAND,\n158-30*1 Applicant.\nLIQUOR  ACT,   1910\n(Section 42)\nNOTICE Is hereby given that, on the\nfirst day of December next, application\nwill be made to the Superintendent of\nProvincial Police for renewal of tbe hotel licence to sell liquor by retail ln the\nhotel known as the Edgewood hotel, situate at Edgewood, B. C, In the Province\nof British Columbia.\nDated this 13th day of October, 1911.\nW. A. CALDER,\nApplicant.\nBURTONDALE  SCHOOL\nSealed tenders, superscribed \"Tender for\nBurtondale School House,\" will be received by the Hon. the Minister of Public\nWorks up to 12 o'clock noon of Tuesday,\nthe 31st day of October, 1911, for the erection and completion of a small one-room\nframe school-house at Burtondale, In the\nSlocan Electoral District,  B.  C.\nPlana, specifications, contract, and forms\nof tender may be seen on and after the\n11th day of October, Mil, at the offices\nof J. H. McCormack, Esq., Secretary of\nthe School Board, Burton, B.C., the Government Agents, Nelson and Kaslo, B.C.,\nand the Department of Public Works, Parliament Buildings, Victoria,\nEach proposal must be accompanied by\nan accepted bank check or certificate of\ndeposit on a chartered bank of Canada,\nmade payable to the Hon. the Minister of\nPublic Works, for the sum of $250, which\nshall be forfeited if the party tendering\ndecline to enter into contract when called\nupon to do so, or if he fall to complete\nthe work contracted for, The checks or\ncertificates at deposit of unsuccessful\ntenderers will he returned to them upon\nthe execution 'of the contract.\nTenders, will not be considered unless\nmade out on the forma supplied, signed,\nwith the actual signature of the tenderer,\nand enclosed In the envelopes furnished.\nThe lowest or any tender not necessarily\naccepted.\nJ. E. GRIFFITH,\nPublic WbrKs Engineer.\nDepartment of Public Works,\nVictoria, B.C., October 9th, MIL 1\nWANTED\u2014You can't help but make\nmoney selling our guaranteed-to-glve-\nsatisfaction stock. Free outfit; cash\nweekly; exclusive territory. Yakima Valley Nursery company, Toppenlsh, Washington. 155-tf.\nWANTED\u2014Board and room Fairview.   Apply  F, Dally News.\nWANTED\u2014Young girl to take care of two\nchildren  from 3 to 6 In   the  afternoon.\nApply   to   Mrs.   Cunllff,   423   Observatory\nstreet. 159-tf\nWANTED\u2014To rent, 0 or 7-roomed  modern house.   Apply P. O. box 51, city.\nWANTED\u2014Active partner with up to $5,000\nfor established business.    Bona fide assets, $50,000.   Party In town at present. Inquire at once to W. R. S. care Dally News.\n161-4\nWANTED\u2014$2 a day salary and up\u2014also\ncommission\u2014for local representatives;\neither sex; sure money maker; rapid advancement; experience unnecessary; Bparo\ntime accepted; elaborate outfit free;post-\nage 20 cents. Nichols, Limited, Publishers, Toronto. 161-6\nWANTED \u2014 Good busbmen, sawyers,\nswampers, etc., from $2 to $2.75 per day.\nTeumsters, $35 to $40 per month. Board,\n75 cents per day. Apply McLaren's Sawmills, Blalrmore, Alta. 161-lm,\nWANTED\u2014Energetic agents, sure business getter for best proposition on\nmarket. Highest commission. Write National Realty Co., room 17 Cadogan block,\nCalgary. Write Mr. Schmersahl, P. O.\nbox 1011, city. 161-6\nWANTED\u2014Man to  work   on   dairy   farm\nMust   have     experience.      (Married     or\nsingle). Address Box 33, Greenwood, B. C.\n162-7\nWANTED\u2014Woman for house work, widow\npreferred.    Apply 51)9 Cedar street.   164-f\nNELSON   HOTEL BAR\nBaker Street, Nelson, B.C.\nINK & WARD, Props.\nGin Rlckeys.   Only place carrying Limes.\nSHERBROOKE  HOTEL\nNelson, B. C.\nOne minute's walk from C.P.R, station.\nCuisine unexcelled; well heated and ven\ntilated.\nBOYBRBROS,, Props.\nROSSLAND\nTHE HOFFMAN \"ANNEX, ROSSLAND,\nB. C\u2014Green & Smith, Props. Centrally\nlocated. European and American plan.\nCommercial travellers will find light,\ncomfortable sample rooms, a special dining room and excellent accommodations\nat the Hoffman. Baths, bowling alley,\nsteam laundry.\nPHOENIX\nHOTEL BROOKLYN, PHOENIX, B. C-\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\n1 Northern depot.   James Marshall, Prop.\nGRAND FORKS\nGRAND FORKS HOTEL, GRAND FORKS\nB,C.\u2014Finest fire proof hotel in Boundary.\nAmericah and European plan. Commercial travellers will find light, comfortable\nsample rooms,   M. Frankovitch, Prop.\nCASTLEGAR\n'HOTEL CASTLEGAR,\" CASTLEGAR\nJunction. Al] modern. Excellent accommodations for tourists and drummers.\nBoundary train leaves here at 9.10 a.m.\nRoB&land-NelBon train stops for break*\nfast and dinner.\nW. H. Gage, Proprietor.\nBusiness Directory\n^SSAYERS^\nB. W. WIDDOWSeNT^SsA^ER^ANQ\nChemist, Bex Alios, Nelson, B.C. Charges\nGeld, sliver, copper or lead, $1 each\ngold-silver, $1.50; silver-lead, $1.60. Prices.\nfor other metals on application.\t\nAUCTIONEERS\nC. A. WATERMAN ft CO.-P. O. box 826.\nW. CUTLER, LICENSED AUCTIONEER.\nAuction rooms and warehouse Ward St.,\nnext opera bouse.   Box 474, Phone 18.\n20-tf.\nCOLLECTION AGENCIES\nVir^U^LER^rcmZE^TToNT^'F ALL\nkinds. Returns promptly made. Ward\nBtreet, next opera bouse. 20-tf.\nCARPENTERS AND  BUILDERS\nDi^ucET^jfa^^\nbuilding homes. Delighted customers our\nbest advertisement, P. O. Box 105. Phone\n101. 27-tf.\ncarpenters apply to United Brotherhood\nof Carpenters, Box 202, or at regular\nmeetings, Wednesday, 6 p.m., Miners'\nUnion hall.\nROBB & THOMPSON-BUILDERS AND\nContractors, Victoria street, llext opera\nhouse. P. O. Box 490. Special attention\ngiven jobbing and repair work. Estimates given. 56-tf.\nWANTED\u2014Young    man    for    temporary\nposition In railway office.    Write P. O.\nbox 1097. 164-tf.\nWANTED\u2014Apprentice    for    dressmaking.\nApply  Mrs, Young, Baker street.       164-4\nWANTED\u2014Experienced  chocolate dippers.\nMontgomery's candy factory,  1015 Water\nstreet. 1G4\nWANTED\u2014Representative wanted at once\nfor work in your locality. Will guarantee $2 to $3 per day. Opportunity to advance rapidly. Will pay liberally for\nspare time. Work not difficult. Experience not required. International Bible\nPres, Toronto. w-s\nWANTED\u2014Experienced swampers, sawyers, teamsters, bookmen, etc., for\nsteady work at going interior wages.\nCome at once. Adams River Lumber Co.,\nLtd.,   Chase,  B.  C. 164-tf\nWANTED\u2014Young girl  to  help  In  housework and look after two small children.\nApply 032  Mill Street. 164-1\nWANTED\u2014Furnished rooms    or   cottage.\nAddress R, A. Hunt, Care Hume Hotel.\nPOULTRY   AND   LIVE   STOCK\nFOR SALE\u2014Horse, suitable for rancher.\nApply Nolson Steam Laundry. 154-tf.\nWANTED\u2014A horse about 1,300 lbs., suitable   for   ranch   work;   must   be   good,\nsteady ranch  horse.    Rlgby,   Sans Soucl,\nBoswell, Kootenay Lake. 159-6\nFOR SALE\u2014One pair black draft horses,\nweight, 3,200 lbs.   Apply A, Larson, Castlegar,   B.   C. 159-tf\nFOR SALE\u2014White Orpington, Golden and\nSliver   Laced  Wyandotte   roosters;   also\npullets,   Apply Kennedy, Willow Point.\n160-6\nFOR SALE-Pure bred Pekin ducks.   Apply T. J. Rock, Mill street west.        164-6\nFOR SALE-40 Houdan and 50 White Leghorn 1-year thoroughbred hens, for sale\nat once.   E.C, Dally News. 161-3\nFOR RENT\u2014FurnlBhed room with use of\nbath.   214 Victoria St. 146-26\nFOR   RENT\u2014Good   location,    on    Baker\nstreet,  ground floor, suitable for office\nor small store.   Apply W.  G.  Thomson's\nBookstore. 155-tf.\nFOR KENT\u2014Comfortable   bedroom,   with\nor   without board,   614   Victoria   street.\nCentral, 161-6\nFOR   RENT-fl  roomed    cottage,    corner\nCedar  and Observatory;  $17 per month\nwith water.   G, H, Fraser, Nelson.     164-6\nFOR RENT\u2014House of 4 rooms; 10 minutes'  walk from postoffice.    Apply Box\n428,  Nelson. 164-3\nLIQUOR ACT, 1910.\n(Section 13.)\nNotice la hereby given that, on the first\nday of December next, application will tie\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial\npolice for renewal of tbe hotel license to\nsell liquor by retail In the hotel known as\nthe Ymlr hotel,   situate  at   Ymlr  In   the\nprovince of British Columbia-\nDated this 12th day of October, 1911.\nJ. B. BREMNER,\n156-8W Applicant.\nLIQUOR ACT, 1910.\n(Section 42.)\nNotice Is hereby given tbat, on the first\nday of December next, application will be\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial\npolice for renewal of the hotel license to\nsell liquor by retail In the hotel known sb\nthe Miller hotel, situate at Ymlr In the\nprovince  of British Columbia.\nDated this 14th day of October. 1911.\nWILLIAM DOWLING,-\n156-3M Applicant\nWHOLESALE  PRODUCE\ners in Butter, Eggs, Cheese, Produce ami\nFruit. Houston Block, Josephine street,\nNolson, B.C.\nGROCERIES\t\nA. MACDONALD & CO., - Wholesale\nGrocers ami Provision Merchants\u2014Importers of Teas, Coffees, Spices, Dried\nFruits, Staple and Fancy Groceries, Tobaccos, Cigars, Butter, Eggs, Cheese and\nPacking House Produce. Office and\nwarehouse corner of Front and Hal)\nstreets.   P.  O. Box 1095. Telephones 28 &\nPAINTING  AND   PAPER   HANGING\nA. E. BENNETT, painter and decorator;\nwull papers und paper hanging a specialty; estimates given; all work promptly\nexecuted. 514 Stanley street. Phone StL\nP. Q. Box 027, Nelson.\t\nPRIVATE   MATERNITY   HOME\nforts.    For terms and particulars writs\nP. O. Box 763, Nolson, B.C\nHOUSE CLEANING.\nPALL CLEANING-HATE YOUR HOME\ncleaned by our vaeuum procoss\u2014hygienic,\nsanitary, cheap. Don't turn your homo\nupside down, Try up-to-date methods*\nEndorsed by Nelson's loading cltisans.\nWindow cleaning, house cleaning and\nchimney oleaning. Phono 19. Nelson\nVacuum Co., office Stanley St.\nELECTRICIANS\nJ. H. RINGROSbT^EL^CTRICAL CON-\ntractor and supplies. Complete Installation of Isolated lighting and telephone\nsystems a specialty. Stock of supplies\nalways on hand. 506 Stanley street,\nstreet.    Phone A227.   P. O. Box 156.\n 167-tf\nLIQUOR ACT,  1910\n(Section 42.)\nNotice ls hereby given that, on the first\nday of December next, application will be\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial,\nPolice for renewal of the hotel license to\nsell liquor by retail ln the hotel known aa\nthe Kootenay Falls hotel, Bltuate at Slocan\nJunction in the province of British Columbia.\nDated this 12th day of October, 1W.1.\nMOORE & JOHNSON,\n153-3M Applicant.\nLIQUOR ACT, 1910\n(Section 42.)\nNotice Is hereby given that, on the first\nday of December next, application will ba\nmade to tho Superintendent of Provincial\nPolice for renewal of the hotel license to\nsell liquor by retail ln the hotel known aa\nthe Grove hotel, situate at Fairview in tho\nprovince of British Columbia.\nDated this 12th day of October, 1911.\nWILLIAM  GOSNELL,\n158-3M Applicant.\nLIQUOR ACT, 1910\n{Section 42.)\nNotice Ib hereby given that, on the firBt\nday bf December next, application will be\nmade to the Superintendent of Provincial\nPolice for renewal of the hotel license to\nsell liquor by retail In the hotel known as\nthe Outlet hotel, situate at Proctor In the\nprovince of British Columbia.\nDated this 14th day of October, 1911.\nGILBERT T. SNOW,\n158-30d Applicant.\nTENDERS WANTED\nSealed tenders for purchase of the James\nRltcliey sawmill plant, etc., (no lumber),\nat Brldesvllle, B.C., will be received by\ntbe undersigned at Brldesvllle, B.C., post-\noffice until 12 o'clock noon on Friday, the\n20th day of October, 1911.\nThe highest or any tender not neo.es*\nsarHy accepted. l-.L'-i\u2122.\nJ. R. MARTIN,\n145-tf. Asst. limber Inspector.\n WEDNESDAY    OCTOBER 25\nChe \u00a9all? jBeiM..\nPAGE SSVIN\n10c?\nA Larger Warming Goset\nthan ever, in the Kootenay Steel Range, because the\nimprovement in the operation of the door adds nearly\nfive hundred cubic inches to its capacity. Every inch\ninside can be used\u2014and you can always depend upon it\nfor keeping your food piping hot while you wait for some\nspecial dish to finish cooking. Made of heavy polished\nsheet steel, durable and easily cleaned, i Besides this\nimportant feature, there are many exclusive advantages\nfor you in the\nKOOTENAY\n,steel Range\nand the nearest McClary agent will point them out to\nyou. He will show you why your money will be best\nspent for a Kootenay. Write today to the nearest\nMcClary branch for Kootenay booklet. 53\n=M-Claiys=\nLondon.   Toronto,    Montreal,    Wlonln'\",    V\u00ab\"ncoover,    St. John, H B\u201e   Hamilton    Canary\nFor Sale by Wood VaMance Hardware Co, Ltd,\nMARKETS\nJ\nSPOKANE MARKETS\n(Reported by Sharp & Irvine.)\nB. C.  Copper      $3.25 14.25\nCaledonia 09 .80\nCanadian       33.00 45.00\nGranby        28.00 32.00\nContinental     .... .74\ninternational Coal   64 .60\nLucky  Jim    29^ .31\nNugget     35 .00\nRambler-Cariboo       .63 .50\nRoyal    08 .12\nSnowstorm     15 .20\nStewart     80 .84\nStandard     y.    1.47 1.0\nSalcs-1,000 Lucky Jim at 30c; 1,000 Rambler-Cariboo  at  54c.\nGRADE  OF WHEAT LOWER\nWINNIPEG, Man., Oct. 24,-Cables were\n% to %e lower, receipts 010 cars, with 050\nIn sight for today; offerings were liberal\nand the grade emphatically lower. There\nwas no active demand. For the moment\nat least, It would seem that space chartered for the low rate has all been filled,\nand with' the higher freight after ttie\nclose of the month. The fluctuation for\nthe morning was %c for October and the\nclose at 14c down; November wns unchanged, December 14c lower and May %c\nhigher. There was a decline of %c on October oats, with a poor demand. Deliveries\non contract were 25,000 bushels. Chicago\nwheat -was unchanged to 14 to %c lower.\nMinneapolis li to 14c lower.for December;\nMay unchanged.\nCorn was up % to V*a and Chicago oats\nunchanged to %c lower to lo higher.\nThere was little new In the gossip.\nWeather dull with some rain.\nListed stocks\u2014 Bid,   Asked,\nCom.  Loan      H>2     110\nGlreat  WeBt  Life         ^5\nDo  Perm       118     120\nHome Investment      1\u00ab\nBo Eighth           B\nNorthern Trust     \u2022\u2022\u2022     1BB\nStandard Trusts     1\u00ab)     <\u2022\u2022\nCrown, CFE      88      \u00a3\nNorthern, CFE      08      \u00bb9\nUnlisted stockB\u2014\u25a0 ,nn     \u25a0\nEmp. Loan, FP    I08     JJ6\nDo PP    HO     11&\nWestern Trust     110     \u2022\u2022\u2022\nWinnipeg Fire     105     115\nCan. Cent. Fire    105     ...\nWinnipeg Land       101     ...\nBanks\u2014\nTraders    ,'.    14B\nSterling       90     ...\nIndustrials\u2014\nBeaver Lumber      92     ...\nTraders Bldg    101     JW\nCarbon Oil     1\u00bb      &\nPortland  Canal        88      95\nWarrants       m 8Ua\nSales-10 Com. Loan at 101; 1 warrant at\n890; 1 warrant at 890; 1 warrant at SOO; 1\nwarrant at 890; 10 Northern, CFE, at 98;\n1 Northern, CFE, at 93; 1 Great West Perm\nat 1181*.\nMARKET IS  DULL,\nNEW YORK, Oct. 24.\u2014In ihe absence of an Impelling motive for trading on either side of the stock market\ntoday, movements were of the narrowest character of recent sessions. With\neach day it 'becomes more -apparent\ntbat public Interest In the market Is\nnot being aroused. Outside participation Is as small as at any time of tbe\nyear. Trading consequently Is restricted largely to professional operations.\nTbe standard stocks ended at about\nwhere they began. Changes were so\nsmall that they could be said to Indicate no trend in either direction. Reading, Missouri Pacific and Norfolk and\nWestern were the only railroad stocks\nto manifest a decided strength.\nThis resulted from a continuation of\nthe buying of the stocks, which has\nheen noted for some time. London took\nonly a small part in the day's trading.\nForeign lending by the banks was on\na heavy scale, and purchase of ex-\nohange raised the rate for sight sterling to the highest point of the year.\nTransactions In bonds, both In and out\nof the stock exchange, continue on such\na scale as to attract attention.\nbonds were relatively more active on\ntbe exchange than were stocks.- The\ntotal sales, par values, $2,680,000. United States bonds unchanged on call.\nMETAL MARKETS\nNEW YORK, Oct. 24.-Silver, Htt; standard copper, 12.1S@12.25; quiet.\nLONDON, Oct. 24.\u2014Silver, 21 15-16; lead,\n\u00a316 15d.\nSTEAMERS SHIPPED FROM\nCOAST  TO   EDMONTON\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 24.\u2014Two Skeena\nriver stern-wheelers, the Operator anil\nConveyor, will be towed in a few days\nfrom Prince Rupert to Vancouver. Here\nthey will be taken to pieces and shipped\nto Edmonton lby rail, then assembled,\nto be operated on the upper Fraser for\nFoley, Welsh & Stewart.\nOn Some of the fine new evening\ngowns fur appears on tunics, 3kirt edge\nand waist, and ls shown ln contrasting\ncolor to the dress.\t\nThe Famous JSd^b Lamp\nThe Rayo Lamp b the bat and most serviceable lamp you can find\nIts strong white light has made\nIhe Kayo Lamp uth\nfor any part of your home.\nIt is in use in million! of families.\nit famous.   And it never flicker,.\nIn the dining-room or Ike parlor ihe Rayo gives juit ihe light that ii molt effective. It it a becoming lamp\u2014in itself arid to you. jut the lamp, too, for bedroom\nor library, when a clear, needy light ii needed.\nThe Rayo ia made of solid watt, nickel-plated; alio in numerous other styles and\nfinishes. Easily Lighted without removing shade or chimney | easy to clean and rewick.\nMlniraVaWtoaHawyouhJiIiBftoft^ToUniMiorvrntefcffdWipbTecircnW\nThe Imperial Oil Company, Limited\nGOOD ROADS\nCONVENTION\nMany Delegates   Will be    Present   At\nMeeting in New Westminster\nNext Month.\nProspects Tor the success of the good\nroads convention, which Is to be held\nIn New Westminster on Nov. 3 and 4\nare most encouraging, and that the\nmeetings will have an important bearing on the movement for the improvement of existing roads, and tbe building\nof new highways, is now assured.\nIn addition to the representative\nmembers of the Pacific Highway association, who will make the trip to the\nRoyal city for the purpose of taking\npart In, the convention, a large number\nof men who are showing their interest in the movement for the firBt time,\nwill also be present, Delegates from\nboards of trade from all parts of tbe\nproyince, representatives of automobile clubs from .as far east as Winnipeg,\nand as far south as Portland, and several members of the provincial parliament will be among those taking an\nactive part in the debates.\nMuch of the preliminary work in con\nnection with the holding of this convention is being done by W, J. Kerr,\nfirst vice-president of the Westminster\nAutomobile club. Mr. Kerr Is firBt of\nall a real estate man, but good roads\nhas been his hobby for a long time. He\nwas one of the few British Columbia\nmen attending the annual convention\nof tbe Pacific Highway association in\nPortland last August.\nAn invitation to attend the Westminster convention has been extended to\nP. E. Sands, of Seattle, who successfully drove the first automobile that ever\ntraversed'the wilds of northern British\nColumbia, making the journey from\nSeattel to Hazelton, 1,281 miles, in a\nlittle over three weeks. Sands has\nbeen asked to bring his pathfinder car\nto Westminster, so that the highway\nenthusiasts may 'judge of the state of\nthe northern roads by the condition of\nthe automobile.\nLE ROI  NO. 2 REPORT\n{Special to The Dally News.)\nROSSLAND, B.C., Oct. 24\u2014The following excellent report has been received at the London office of the Le\nRol No. 2 company from the company's\nmanagers in Rossland:\nJosie mine renort for September\u2014\nShipped 2,130 tons of ore and 130 tons\nof concentrates. The receipts from the\nsmelter are $52,702, being payment for\n2,482 tons of ore shipped and $2,147 being payment for 91 tons of concentrates\nshipped.   In all $54,849.\nEstimated costs for corresponding\nperiod\u2014Development, $9,000; ore production, $10,000; milling, $1,300; total,\n$20,300.\nNorth Ennle west drift, 50 foot level\n\u2014Advanced 96 feet. The first 35 feet\naveraged 13 dwtB. gold and 18.2 per\ncent copper over 1 foot 7 Inches. The\nnext 1 feet In faulted ground, since\nwhen greater width was exposed. In\nall 86 feet averaged 9 3-4 dwts gold\nand 13 1-2 per cent copper over a\nwidth of 1 foot 10 Inches.\nSouth Rodney drift west, 1,300 foot\nlevel\u2014Advanced 30 feet, which averaged 5 dwts. gold and 1-2 per cent copper over 1 foot 5 Inches,\nRodney drift, 1,200 foot level\u2014Advanced 48 feet of which 42 feet averaged 7 1-4 dwts. gold and 2 7-8 per\ncent copper over 1 foot 9 inches. Indications favorable\u2014some more ore ln\nhanging wall.\nRodney raise, 1,200 foot level\u2014Advance 9 feet which averaged 3 dwts\ngold and 1 per cent copper over 2 feet\n4 inches.\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\nThe registration lists are now open and\nwill close on October 31.\nNext Monday Is Thanksgiving day and\na public holiday ln the Dominion,\nThe aiimiiil Christmas excursions to the\nold country will take effect on November\n10, announces the C. P. R, from advice\nJust received.\nMrs. J. H. Riley of Queen's Bay took\nfirst prize In the miscellaneous apple ex-\nniiiit at ilie Nelson fruit fair with a plate\nof  Bramley's  Seedlings.\nA whist drive in connection with the\nChurchmen's club will be held in St.\nSavior's Parish hall tonight at 8 o'clock.\nThe ladles will provide refreshments.\nThe record held by a Kaslo angler for\nthis year, who caught an 18 pound salmon,\nwas beaten by Mrs. J. H. Riley of Queen's\nBay, who landed a fish weighing 18%\npounds on September 2.\nStating that his son, Edgar Harper, has\nbeen missing since October 12, 15. Harper\nof Fernle has written to the chief of city\npolice asking for Information as to his\nwhereabouts. The boy lias dark hair, blue\neyes, is a little deaf and has a scar like\na cross on his forehead.\nThe first calendar for 1912 to reach The\nDully News office comes from the Poole\nDrug company and Is one of the most artistic examples of such work ever distributed by a local firm. A water cVor\npainting of a beautiful girl takes up nearly the whole of the calendar, the advertising for the firm consisting merely of a\nfew words on the lower portion.\nThe following will make application for\nnaturalization papers at the next sitting\nof the county court on Monday, November 6: Victor Oiunstrom, Nelson; Grant\nK. McLean, Proctor; G. \\V. Moore, Salmo;\nBmll Henke, Brouse; Peter Corstadt, Erie;\nCharles A. Swan, Nelson; Stephen Evuskl,\nErie; Jacob Pannela, Mattl Kojola, Kusta\nHelberg, McGulgan;^ Charles O, Rodgers,\nCreston.\nChief of Police Young has received a letter- from Michael M. McAndrew of 3213\nSummer street, Philadelphia, asking for\nInformation as to the whereabouts of his\nuncle, Michael McAndrew. He states that\nMcAndrew was interested ln the telephone\ncompany here and that he had some mineral claims near Cody with a partner\nnamed McChulrk. He ls about 50 years\nof age and Is probably ln Indifferent\nhealth. Up to five y\u00abars ago ho wrote\nregularly to his grandfather In County\nMayo, Ireland.\nAfter breaking a window at the American consular agency offices and attempting to burst open the door early yesterday\nmorning a colored man ran Into a Chinese\nEnglish and Scotch\nBlankets\nA full stock of these has Just\narrived and we can offer extraordinary value ln these lines: '\nWhite Whitney   Union,   64x84,\n$4.50 per pair-\nWhite Whitney all wool, 64x84,\n$6.50 per pair.\nWhite Whitney all wool, 68x88,\n17.50 per pair.\nThese blankets come singly,\nand are whipped at both ends.\nThey are entirely free from\ngrease and are as pure as can be\nproduced,\nHudson'8 Bag\nPoint Blankets\nThese are Justly celebrated for\nthe warmth and comfort they\ngive, and for their durability, as\na pair of them, with fair usage,\"\nwill last a life time.\n4 point H.B. blankets, weighing\n12 lbs., 72x90, S9 per pair.\nm point H.B. blankets, weighing 10 lbs-, 63x80, }8 per pair.\nChiffon Scarves\nPure silk, ln all shades, prices\n?1.50 to }3.00.\nParisian Novelties\nWe have just received direct\nfrom Paris something new in\nladles' Tinsel CollarB. These are\nentirely different from anything\nshown heretofore, and are well\nworth examining. Prices, $1.50\nto $3.00.\nLadies' Plain Black\nCashmere Hose\nAll wool. Our special price for\nthese Is four pairs for $1.\nRoyal Worcester Corsets\nThese we offer in three qualities at $1.50, $2.50 and $3.25.\nD. & A. Corsets\nMaternity Corsets, No. 101, per\npair, $2.00.\nNursing CorsetB, No. 10, per\npair, $2.u0.\nTwo Specials in Corsets\n-No. 450, with four garters attached, 75c-\nNo. 130, with four garters attached, 95c.\n{Comforters for Kold Knights\nIt is getting a little chilly at\nnights now, and it would be well\nto prepare for cold weather. We\nhave a splendid line of eiderdown\ncomforters from $-1.25 up to $18.\nThey are filled with pure down,\nare well ventilated and covered\nwith a good quality of satin.\nIncorporated 1670\nIncorporated 1670\n-: The:-\nHudson'sBayStores\nTheStores of Satisfaction for Value and Quality. The Place\nfor Solid Comfort and Sound Values.  A Parlor Is Provided\nUpstairs, Where Ladies Can Rest and Meet Their Friends\nor Write Letters.\nMore Novelties Arriving Every Day. Our\nBuyers in Philadelphia, New York and Montreal\nHave   Again  Sent  Large   Parcels   by Express\nSILK DRESSES\nStill another shipment from New York received today, consisting of 20\nlovely creations by fashionable up-to-the-minute artists, Have a look at them;\nwe will be glad to show them to you, whether you wish to purchase or not,\nand feel confident that you will enjoy examining them.\nThey are in silk poplins, duchess satfn and tamallne, shades of rich\nbrown, navy, black, fawn and grey, and are trimmed with silk cord and\nfringes, and have cord girdles. They are worth from $30.00 to $40.00, but\nwe are making a special price of $20.00 $22.50, $25.00 and $27.50\u2014the best bargains ever offered in this city.\nLADIES'   FURS\nA new supply of these has arrived to replenish our stock, which has sotu\nmore rapidly than we could have exppected. The best in quality and reasonable prices are what did it. Furs are our specialty\u2014we know all\nabout them\u2014and in purchasing in such immense quantities as we\ndo, to supply our twenty odd stoles, we enjoy extraordinary advantages and\ndiscounts and our customers get the full benefit of these. Our furs are in\nall styleB and at. prices to suit every pocket.\nSPECIAL OFFERING  IN   ENGLISH  FLANNEL AND  DELAINE WAISTS\nWe have an exceedingly nice line.   They are in fancy stripes and in plain\nshades;   are nicely made, and are all-wool  and   unshrinkable.    The  regular\nprices  of these  Is  up  to  $3.00.    Our special price, $1.75.\nCELEBRATED   WATSON'S   UNDERWEAR\nThese well-known goods do not shrink, and there are none better procurable.   We havo them in\nLadies' combinations at $1.00,  $1.25, and up to $3.00.\nChildren's combinations at $1.00 up to $2.00.\nLadies' drawers and vests In great variety, in white and natural wool, at\nfrom 35c to $1.50 per garment.\nLADIES' UNDERSKIRTS\nOur stock of these Is very complete, and having made a chance buy we\ncan offer them at much below their value.\nMolrette  Skirts,  Imported  goods, in many shades, worth $5.00\u2014Our\nprice, $3.25.\nColored and Black Sateen Skirts, pleated, with flounces, from $3.95\nto $7.50.\nIf you want a really smart underskirt it will pay you to examine our\nstock and compare prices.\nCHILDREN'S   WARM   DRESSES   FOR FALL AND WINTER\nIn navy serge, and nicely trimmed:\nAges, 2 to 5 years 42.50       Ages 5 to 8 $3.00 and $3.75\nBlack and white check dresses from $1.50 to $5.00, according to size.\nSPECIAJ. VALUES IN   TRUNKS, SUITCASES   AND   VALISES.\nIf you are thinking of purchasing a trunk, suitcase or club bag and are\nin doubt as to where the best can be procured, don't hesitate. We can show\nyou a splendid range of the best obtainable at very reasonable prices. Note ,i\nfew:\nFibre and canvas covered .steamer trunks, from $6,00 up.\nRegular canvas covered trunks, $1.00 up.\nSuit' enses at from $2.25 to ?25.00.\nClub bags from $2.00 to $12.00.\nMen's Underwear\nWe would draw  particular attention   to   the   very   complete\nstock we carry In these lines:\nPenman's \u25a0 all-wool,   unshrinkable,\nelastic ribs, good fitters, at $1.00\nper garment, $2.00 per suit,\nStanfield's   unshrinkable,   elastic\nribs, at $1.25 per garment, $2.50\nper suit.\nA better grade of Stanfields  at\n$1.50   per   garment,   $3.00   per\nsuit.\nWolsey   celebrated   unshrinkable,\nwool, per garment, $2.(5, $5.50\nper suit.\nCheaper lines at from 75c per\ngarment up.\nYouths' Sweaters\nWe Becured a lot away below their\nregular cost. They are with roll\ncollars, nicely trimmed, sizes 30\nand 32, suitable for boys from 14\nto 18 years. There are only 24\nloft. Regular price, $1.25\u2014our\nprice, 75c. Some of these are\nbutton at the shoulder and ore all\nwool and fast colors.\nBoys' Reefer Coats\nWe have a line in Irish Frieze,\nand in navy nap cloth\u2014heavy\nwinter weights. They are all excellent quality, and have cord and\ntweed lining. Regular price, $5.00;\nto clear, $3.00.\nWinter Overcoats\nIt will pay you to examine these\nbefore purchasing, and compare\nquality and prices. We are offering men's overcoats from $7.50 to\n$25.00, and boys' and youths' from\n$4.00 to $13.50.\nMen's Clothing\nIt's fall for well dressed men,\nwhether the weather is cool or\nnot. They like to be first in style,\nfirst to be seen in the new things\nand first in the eyes of correctly\nattired friends; nnd they like too,\nto patronize a store that Is first\nin all these requisites\u2014a store like\nthis.\nWe have a lot of splendid\nclothing achievements to spread\nbefore you this fall\u2014clothing that\nreflects our sincerity in serving\nyou and our determination to satisfy you.\nYour Ideal apparel may be\nfound in any of. the lines at from\n$12 to $35 per suit.\nstore, where he came Into collision with\nSee Hlne, who holds Uie position of professional \"chucker-out\" In Chinatown. See\nhud tl|e better of the battle, landing the\ncolored Intruder n blow on the mouth\nwhich caused the blood to fly. The colored man, who was drunk, was gathered\nin by tbe police and will appear before\nthe magistrate this morning, ,\nBuy a cornpopper at the Variety Store.\nTwo qualities, 15c und 25c,\nAsk or write for the Hudson's Bay company's grocery price list. lfil-tf\nOur private Christmas card assortment\nIs unique.\u2014Poole's.\nMutual Lite of Canada. Ladles Insured\non same terms as men. No questions\nasked.   See John Cooper. 154\n'Special value In cornpoppers at 15c and\n25c at the Variety Store. See the window\ndisplay.\nThere is skating three times dally, 10 to\n12, 2 to 5, and 7 to 10, at the Alice Roller\nItlnk, Baker street. 153-tf.\nMany different private cards to choose\nfrom at Poole's.\nRing up Phone 88 for quick messenger\nservice. 8 a. m. to 11 p. m. Room 7, Mara\nblock. 168-fi\nDo vou want a real treat for afternoon\ntea9 Try Scott's home-made Scotch shortbread. On sale at Elford'a Boat company\nand leading grocery stores.\nLeave your orders at Poole's stationary\ndepartment for your private Christmas\ncards.\nLadies, this Is your opportunity to see\nthe new styles in furs Fred Irvine & Co.\nare showing today only a full line of traveller's samples.\nWilkinson's Orcnestra can supply yoi\nwith the best music for dances, picnics,\ngarden parties, ami all social functions,\netc. All the latest popular music. P. O.\nBox  184.    707  Victoria  St. W-tt\nThe wise are getting their orders in\nearly at Poole's for private greeting\ncards. *\nCut down your fuel bill this winter by\nputting up storm windows. We make\nthem to any size. Prizes reasonable.\nWaters & Pascoe, Kootenay Lake Sash\nand Door Factory. Front street. P. O.\nBox 835, Phone 13101- 124-tf.\nGREAT   SALE   OF   BOATS   ON\nat coat price.   Tho genuine Peterborough.\nCome right now.   The best go first.   Nelson Boat & Launch Co. 138-26\nMutual Life of Canada. Premiums\nsmaller than some: profits larger than\nothers.   See John Cooper. 154\nDANCING SEASON\nThe following combination can be en\u00ab\n\"aged on the most reasonable terms: Carl\nMeyer, violinist; Leon McCandlsh, clarinet;\nArthur Oehler, drums; Irvln G. Johnson,\npianist. All communications to Gem\nTheatre or P. O, Box 348.\nFARMER'S NECK BROKEN.\nBELLEVILLE, Ont,, Oct. 24.\u2014Joseph\nLatta, aged 67, a Thurlow township farmer, was thrown trom a neighbors\nwagon on Saturday by the breaking of\na board, and his neck was broken.\nMlnard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia\nEXTEND PLATINUM\nBELT WESTWARD\nMore\nClaims   Were   Staked\nKootenay River Last\nWeek-End.\nAlong\nFifteen claims were staked last\nweek-end in what is believed to be the\nplatinum belt. The majority of tiie locations were made on Hover and Bird\ncreeks, and along the Kootenay river,\none claim being located as far west as\nthe mouth of the Slocan river, J. C.\nDevlin, George Douglas, It. J. Elliot\nand C. O. Woodrow le\u00bbd the prospecting activity in this direction. The\nclaims recorded are:\nThe Tipperary, near Shannon creek,\nby Leo R. Devlin; the Rainbow, the\nBluerock and the B. B. B., on the cast\nside of Kootenay river below Slocan\nJunction, by George Douglas; the River-\nview, on the east side of Kootenay\nriver; near the mouth of Slocan river,\nby. R. J .Elliott; the Comet and the\nriverside ,near the Rainbow, by C. O.\nWoodrow; the Frontiersman, on Rover\ncreek, by C. J. Archer; the Margaret n.\non Rover creek, by Margaret Brown;\nthe Julia L., and tbe Alfredna. on Hover creek, by C. R. Walker; the Transit,\nnear Bird creek wagon road by J. G. Mackay; the W. Y. O. D\u201e on Rover creek,\nby \\V. McDermant; the Last Trip, on\n.tover creek, by C. O. Woodrow.\nLOCATIONS MAY\nBREAK RECORD\nProspectors    Have Been   Very   Active\nThis Year\u2014New Locations in\nSheep Creek and Bayonns.\nThere Is no let-up In the activity of\nprospectors in the Sheep creek, Ymir\nand Bayonne districts, which with tho\nNelson platinum belt have attracted\nthe greatest attention among claim locators during the past season, and it\nseems probable that the number of records this year will exceed that of any\nprevious year. Following is n list ot\nclaims recorded since last Thursday:\nThe Tommy, southwest of Kokanee\nlake, hy R. McLeod; the Ontario, southwest of Kokanee lake, by A. Grant: tbe\nHudson Bay fractional, on Brisbane\nmountain, by G. C. Schmidt; the Wan-\neta, on Roadside mountain, by James\nQuayle; tbe Cascade, on Summit creek,\nby John Williams; the Anna S. and\nMajestic No. 2 fraction, at Sheey creek,\nby William Watson; the Mlcauber, on\nHidden creek, by James Stewart; the\nYellow Aster, on Hidden creek, by F.\nC. Descent; the Golden Calf, en Hidden creek, by L. J. Winslow.\nMlnard's Liniment curat Garget In cows\nSMoA'sGure\nSTOPS C0UCHS I'KICE. ,5 CENTS\nWatches\nfor boys and girls ranging in\nprice from $1.50 to $3. We have\nthem in nickel and gun metal.\nCall and see them. They are\nwarranted for one year.\nJ. J. Walker\nOPTICIAN   -.ND  JEWELER\nOh! Joy!\nMIbs Helen Jeffs came into our store\ntoday wearing a white toque and blue\ncoat trimmed with a red border, making the blend of colors, red, white and\nblue, the colors Joy had In mind. Joy\nwas too busy to meet her at the door,\nso he met her in the store and presented her with a handsome dinner set.\nBuy your groceries at\nJoy's Cash Groca)\nand get  good  value  for  your  money.\nCorner Mill and Josephine Sti.\nPhone 1\u00bb P.O. Bo* 63'\nWe    have    the    Fastest    Livery\nLaunch on  Kootenay  Lake\nElford Boat Co.\nLtd.\nW. D. BUSK, Manager\nLaunches for Large or Small\nParties.   Rowboats for\nHire or Sale\nManufacturers of launches, row\nboats  and  accessories.\nFOR SALE\u2014Cedar logs, suitable for boat houses and floats\nor every  description.\nOffice and Livery, foot af Josephine St., Factory, foot of\nWard  Street.\nPhone A148 Nelson,  B.C.\nA Remarkable Offer\nI am Instructed to offer for quick sale\nlo\" acres of choice water front land on\nthe Arrow lakes, with two good streams\nrunning through the property, at the remarkably low figure of 42,400, on the following terms. One-half cash, the balance\non  arrangement at time of sale.\nBy fur the larger portion of this land\nIs choice frait land, and water frontage\non the Arrow lakes commnnds from $100\nper acre up, thiB land at this pr.ee and\non such easy terms is Indeed a chance\nthat Investors should not let slip by. Act\nquickly, as time is money In this instance,\nR. J. STEEL\nRoom 7. Griffin Blook.\nEmerald green is   often    combined\nwith white.\nSHARP & IRVINE CO., Brokers 514.517 Paulsen Bldg., Spokane, Wash\nMcGillivray Creek Coal & Coke Company\nMcGilllvray Creek Coal & Coke company's shares look cheap to us at\npresent prices. We toon to see the labor troubles existing in tbe Crow's Nest\nPass district settled within a short time. Buy this stock at the market and\nbuy it to hold\u2014It should make you a good profit before long.\nIf you cannot get a quotation from  your broker write us.\t\nSTOCKS\" ~\nWE   WILL  BUY WE  WILL SELL\n200-1000 International   ...J.53       500-2000 Kootenay Gold  Market\n2000  Royal  Collieries    0Sy4 10\u00b0? McGilllvray  J   .1614\n1000-3000 Lucky Jim   27     1000 S^JS&^V.V.V.^ffl\n1000  Rambler 52       150 Kootenay Jam 05\n8PECIAL OFFERING\n1000 Kootenay Gold   to   trade   for Lucky Jim.        '\nE   B. McDermid   ^ T* \u201e *\n\u25a0\u25a0H\n J>AGE EIGHT\nCot 'Muup. ^et\u00abfi\u00bb\nWEDNESDAY  OCTOBER 25\nFor Quick Sale\nWe are offering for sale 20\nacres first class land, situated on\nthe West Arm of Kootenay lake.\nThis property has 2 1-2 acres\ncleared and planted and Is divided Into two excellent pieces of ,\nbench land. It has a good lake\nfrontage, and is close to steamer\nlanding. The owner is desirous\nof disposing of this property lm*\nmediately and will take a reasonable cash offer and leave the balance on mortgage. This is a particularly attractive offer and well\nworth while considering.\nFor further particulars call and\nsee us.\nHAWDSLEY, SHAW & CO.\nLots\nIn all parts of city and suburbs.\nHouses\nFor sale or for rent\nLand\nFruit, poultry or lakeside homes\nF. B. LYS\nGriffin  Block, over Dom.  Ex. Co\nA Pose\nof\nGrace\nis absolutely essential\nif your photographs\nare to be satisfactory.\nWe always place you\nln an artistic position\nbefore we snap the\ncamera.   That is why\nOur\nPortraits\nare acknowledged to\nbe superior. Although\nour pictures are more\nvaluable and better\nthan the ordinary\nprints, they'll cost you\nno more.\nCampbell's Art\nGallery\n715' Baker Street\nNext door to Kootenay Steam Laundry\nPhon. 46\n10,000' Bulbs   for  Fall\nPlanting\nDutch   Roman   Hyacinths,\npink and blue and white..50c doz\nFancy Forcing Hyacinths,\nblue, white, yellow, pink.,76c doz\nDouble Hyacinths, same\ncolors tHlc doz\nSingle  Hyacinths,   1st  size,\nat    ; $1.20 doz\nNARCISSUS   OR   DAFFODILS\nDouble Von Lion, mammoth\nmother  bulbs    COc doz\nIncomparable,   light   yellow.UOc doz\nIncomparable,  Sir  Watkln..G0c doz\nPaper White Narcissus-\nforcing     40c doz\nEmperor, Trumpet Variety 50c doz\nEmpress, Trumpet variety     GOc doz\nGolden Spur, Trumpet variety    40c doz\nPoet's  Narcissus    25c doz\nPoet's   Narcissus,   double...25c doz\nSpanish Iris, yellow, blue,\nand     white  15c doz\nEnglish Iris, white, light\nand dark blue and\nwhite 25c to 50c doz\nCrocus, all shades, and\nSnowdrops, 15c doz; (1,00 per 100\nScilla  25 and 20c aoz\nTulip list tomorrow.\nWm. Rutherford : Druggist\nWard St. ..elson, b.C.\nPICKLES\nIn gallon crocks\nSour  H-00\nSweet     1.10\nC. A. Benedict\nGrocer\n\u2122*GEM\nPictures Changed Dally\nOverture, Orchestra *\nIMP  FEATURE\nAs a Boy Dreams\nSolax Feature:\nBrand  of  Fear.\nOn the Bengal Coast.\nThe Strike Leader.\n10c.    ADMISSION    10c.\n$600Cash\nWe can sell you for \u00a52,600 a\nhouse worth \u00a53,500, containing\neight rooms and hall, standing\non two lots, the first story of\nbrick and stone.\nTerms: $600 cash and the balance extended over three\nyears.\nInvestigate this chance to\npick up a real bargain.\nH. & M. BIRD\nNelson, B.C.\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\nMajor and    Mrs. IT.    Glossop, of   Rock\ncreek, are at the Strathcona,\nGeorge Stllwell, manager of the Hewitt\nmine,   leaves this  morning lor  Silverton.\nBorn, on Oct. 21, at the Durdans ranch at\nVaneta, to Mr. and Mrs. A. 13. Churches,\nMunro Archibald and Mr. and Mrs. E. W.\nHazlewood, of Trail, are guests at the\nStrathcona.\nJ. M. Doyle, manager of branches for\nP. Burns & Co., leaves this morning for a\nvisit to  Kaslo.\nA raffle for a rowboat will take place\nat the Queen cigar store tomorrow night\nat 8.30 o'clock.\nThe Xelson Male Voice party will meet\ntonight for the usual weekly practice in\nthe rooms of the I. O. O. F.\nJ. E. Annable and J. J. Malone are proposing to make a hunting trip to What-\nsliau lake within the next two weeks.\nThe Nelson Aerie No. 22 Fraternal Ordet\nof Eagles meet tonight at 8 o'clock in\nEagle Hall.    Refreshments will be served.\nMr. and Mrs. Ross Lee Forbes leave this\nmorning for Edmonton, where Mr. Forbes\nhas accepted a position with tiie Swlft-\nCanadlan company.\nC. Johanneson, of Calgary, reached the\ncity last night and is at the Strathcona.\nHe has come to Nelson in order to join th\noffice staff of the West Kootenay Butcher\ncompany.\nC Hussey, secrctnry-treaKurer of the\nStandard-Lead Mining company, came in\nlust night from Spokane, and is registered\nat the Strathcona, He leaves this morning\nfor Silverton.\nToday's gymnasium classes at the Y. M.\nC. A. will be:   Professional men, 5:1\") to C;\nWe Have Specials All\nthe Time at\nCitizens* Co-operative\nAssociation\n812 Baker Street\nPhone  122 P.O.  Box 334\nFROM  TEXAS\nSome Tea and Coffee  Facts From the\nLone Star State\nFrom a beautiful farm down In Texas,\nwhere gushing springs unite to form\nbabbling brooks that wind their sparkling way through flowery meads, comes\na note of gratitude for delivery from the\ncoffee   habit.\n\"When my baby boy cmne to me five\nyears ago I began to drink postum, having a feeling that It would be better for\nhim and me than the old kind of drug-\nladen coffee. I was not disappointed In\nit for it enabled me, a small delicate\nwoman, to niirse a bouncing, healthy baby\n14 months old.\n\"I have since continued the use of\nPostum for I have grown fond of it, and\nhave discovered to my Joy that It has\nentirely relieved me of a hiltous habit\nwhich used to prostrate me two or three\ntimes a year, causing much discomfort\nto my family and suffering to myself.\n\"My brother-in-law was cured of\nchronic constipation by leaving off\ncoffee and using Postum. He haB\ncome even more fond of It than he was\nof the  old coffee.\n\"In fact the entire family, from the\nlatest arrival (a 2-year-old who always\ncalls for his 'potle' first thing In the\nmorning), up to the head of the house,\nthink there is no drink so good or so\nwholesome as Postum.\" Name given by\nCanadian Postum Co., Windsor, Ontario.\nRead the little book, \"The Road to\n\u25a0\\Vellville,\"   In  pkgs.    \"There's  a reason.''\nLUNCH SETS\nThe newest thing in fancy china\nfor serving tea.   They\nTake the Cake\nand teacup all on one salver. See\nthem; only 50c tbe set.\nOur open stock pattern of\n\"Bridal Rose\" Austrian china Is\ncomplete.\nCHINA HALL\nMUNRO & NELSON\nPhone A261\n321 Baker street;      P. O. Box 588\nhigh school, 4 to 5; employed hoys, 7:30 to\n8::i0; basket ball, 0 to It); employed boys'\nswim, 8:30 to 9.\nJohn Toye brought fn the head of a fine\nspecimen of deer yesterday which he shot\non Monday opposite his ranch at Shore-\nacres. The head ls one of the finest that\nhas been brought Into Nelson tills year.\nIt Is announced that the Nelson street\nrailway will return to the half hour schedule on account of the new loop materially\nInereuslng the length of time necessary to\ncover the distance. Without stopping for\npassengers it takes 17 minutes, so that the\ni!0-minute schedule is now Impracticable,\nA gang of men was at work yesterday\npreparing the lots at the corner of Baker\nand Kootenay streets, which were recently\npurchased by Harry Houston for A. G.\nLambert & Co., who propose to move from\ntheir present site on Vernon street. Mr.\nLambert hos found the Vernon street site\nentirely Inadequate for the requirements\nof ids offices and retail lumber yard and\nhas decided to locate on the main street.\nRecent visitors to the publicity bureau\nare: A. H. Shaw, Weyburn, Sask; S. H.\nCurtln, Harry G. H. Howard, C. W. Esmond, Goorge E. Hancot, Vancouver: Arthur V. White, G. H. Ferguson, Toronto;\nD. C. Jennings, Toronto; G. V. Stonehouse,\nWinnipeg; Rev. J. C. Hobson, St. Andrews,\nN. B-; Captain G. Drage. Jr., North Wales.\nCnptaln Drage is a fellow of the Royal\nGeographical society and is looking over\nland In the district\nW. P. Tierney, the well-known contractor, came ia from Vancouver, mid is at the\nStrathcona. He will go up to Three\n^orks in order to make an Inspection of\nthe new C. P. R, line to Three Forks,\nwhich Is being built by Anderson & Co.,\no subcontractors, on Friday morning. Mr\nTierney stated that work was progressing\ni npidly on the Canadian Northern contract, which he has near Big Bend, and\nthat he had 500 men nt work, and expected to Increase the force shortly.\nSt. Paul's Presbyterian church Monday\nafternoon was the scene of a quiet wedding when Cecil Berthram Thorpe of Nakusp and Miss Verna Embree of Pena-\ntang, Ont., were united in the bonds of\nholy matrimony, Rev. Allan Wilkle of Nakusp officiating. The bride was dressed\nIn a traveling suit of navy blue and set\nof furs and was supported by Mrs, E. Wilkinson of Nelson. A. Turner, also of Nelson, played the part of best man. The\nhappy couple left the same evening for\nNakusp, where they Intend to make their\nfuture home.\nCut Glass\nPretty Designs\nNewest Shapes\nWe have just received a shipment of lovely cut glass. A large\nchoice. Bowls, sugar and creams,\nvases, rose bowls, nappies, bonbons, sandwich plates, electric\nlamps, etc. Prices to suit everybody.\nJ. 0. Patenaude\nImporter of Fine Cut Glass\nC.P.R, and G.N.R. Time Inspector\nThe London Cafe\nbeg to announce that they are\nnow open to the public. Home\ncooking, prompt and courteous\nservice together with the best\nquality of everything at reasonable prices meritB your attention.\nWe make a specialty of catering\nfor private suppers, banquets and\nwedding breakfasts.\nG. & A. Bartlett\n419 Baker St.\nProps.\nPhotographs\nDon't put off having your Xmas\nphotographs made to the last minute,\nhave them made now. You don't have\nto pay for them at once, pay $1 down\nand $1 per week and when the time\ncomes to send them away they will be\npaid for, You feel and look better\nthese bright autumn days than In the\ndark gloomy days of December, and we\nwon't have to sit up nights to get your\nwork out on time.\nQueen Studio\nEstablished 1899\nP.O. Box 206 Phone 180\n.vSaR*!\nCBEAH\nOATS\nBRACKMAN-KER\nMIUINOC9\nCream of Oats\nJust a little better than any other\nRolled Oats made. Packages of 1%\nlbs. and 4 IbB. each.   Ask your grocer.\nThe Brackman-Ker\nMilling Co., Limited\nWe have Just what you have been looking for in\nWinter Fancy Vests\nand Sweater Coats\nVests direct from New York In the;  very latest cut and patterns.\nSomething strictly up to date, $2.00 to \u00bb7.00.\n\u2022 Coat Sweaters In plain knit and Honeycomb, with high and low\ncollars, \u00bb3.00 to $7.50.\nJ. A. GILKER\nBaker Street\nNelson, B. C.\nAre You Sending a Christmas Card to\nFriends in the Old Country?\nWe Are Displaying for Your Benefit a Handsome\nLine of New Cards\nC,ome In and see them.   Write us for an assortment.   We wi^l gladly make\ni   any quantity for you.   Mail orders promptly attended to.\nThe Poole Drug Co.\nNelson's Druggists of Ability.\nThe Rexal Store\nNelson's Popular Stor*>\nhere to take part In the annual council of\ntiie Second Missionary department, repre-\n.seating tiie various dioceses In New York\nand New Jersey and the missionary district of Porto Rico. The council openB\ntonight and continues In session over\nWednesday and Thursday.\nPREPARING FOR\nHOSPITAL CAMPAIGN\nEstablished 1898\nThe 81gn of the Fish\nThe Fisherman's Mail\nOrder House\nEverything for the fisherman\nE. SlITCLIFFE\n411 Baker St Nelson, B.C,\nWe have a large stock of\nBARB WIRE\nPlain Fence Wire, 9 and 12 Gauge,  also Annealed Wire 14 Gauge.\nPut up your fences before snow files.\nPRICE RIGHT Let us know your wants.\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co. Ltd.\nWholesale and Retail\nTORONTO HAMILTON\nNelson B. C.\nWINNIPEG VANCOUVER\nMISSIONARY  CONFERENCE\nNEWARK,   N.  J.,   Oct.  24.-8lx  btahopB\nof   the   Protestant  Episcopal church   are\nContract Let to Waters \u25a0&. Pascoe for\nTemporary Addition\u2014Completed\n\/ November Eleventh\nLast night's meeting of the hospital\nboard to make arrangements tor the raising of {20,000 for the new building was\nattended by much enthusiasm and confidence on the part of the members. It is\nprobable that tliu campaign will run from\nNovember 7 to 9, 11. C. Boyd taking charge\nof the canvassing. The board of traue\nrooms have been put at his disposal and\nthe Y. M. C. A. haa permitted the use of\none of its assembly rooms for a uaily\nluncheon to be provided by tho Hospital\nThe committee chosen to examine the\nsite for tho temporary structure to accommodate the overflow of patlentB decided\nto build It extending from the rear of the\nmain building. Tenders for this had been\ncalled for and received from no less than\nsix parties, but no two of them gave estimates along parallel lineB. The lowest\nsubmitted was (680, by Waters & Pasco,\nwho obtained the contract, on a penalty\nclause for each day over November 11,\nthe date on which the structure must be\ncompleted, and on the understanding that\ntl ere would be no extra expenses unless\ncertified first by the committee. The work\nwill commence this morning.\nMr. Boyd explained that his ByBtem foT\nBetting in touch with the donators was\nthe Bame as that used by the Y. M. C. A.\nIn collecting the funds for the local building. Cards and subscription books are to\nbe used, each director will act aB a team\ncaptain with two assistants under him and\nthe members or the board Will select the\nnu-.i whom they will approach for funds.\nTbe names of all the mine and mill owners In the vicinity will be collected and a.\ncircular letter sent to each explaining the\nBcope and Importance of this undertaking\nand requesting that a subscription list be\nposted where all employees may read it.\nLists will also he brought to the attention\nof the general public in all hotels, board-\nIng houses and steamboats, so that there\nLots of People Are\nSaying-\n\"TetleyTeas\nPlease\"\nBe\nPersistent\nAll  Grocers, $1.00 to 40c. per pound\nwill be no danger of the collectors finding\nanyone unprepared.\nThe  board   will   meet  again   in  a   few\nGood Investments\n$4800 will purchase an agreement for Bale, the balance due on which\namounts to $5,200. Over half already paid. Dears Interest at 7 per\ncent.\n13600, on terms will purchase a revenue producing property, pacing $40 a month, which can be increased if desired.\nFull particulars of the above will be furnished on application. Wby\nbe satisfied with Bank Interest when you can do so much better.\nE. B. McDermid\n505 Baker St.,\nNelson, B.C.\nCANADIAN  NORTHERN SHOPS\nTO  BE  BUILT  NEAR OTTAWA\nOTTAWA, Oct. 24.\u2014An evening paper today made the definite assertion that the\nmain car shops of the C. N. R. system\nwill be located near Hogsback, nearly\nfour miles from Ottawa, where shops on\nabout the same scale as the Angus car\nshops, will be built.    The shops will be\nbuilt at the junction point of the Toronto-Montreal and Ottawa branch of the C.\nN. R. and the Port Orchard, Winnipeg\nmain transcontinental lines. D. McNIchol,\nvice-president of the Canadian Pacific\nrailway, who was here today, stated that\nthe Canadian Pacific will erect a new station at Ottawa, across the Rideau canal,\nand Just opposite the new Grand Trunk\nstation, on property owned by the government, which the Canadian Pacific proposes to ouy. He said that the project\nto close up the Rideau canal and to bore\na tunnel under the city from Central to\nUnion station, has certainly to be carried\nout some day soon.\t\nUnderwear\nWe call your attention to our lines of underwear for men. We've\nall the .good styles and kinds\u2014the sort that has proved satisfactory.\nThe underwear question Ib not so much a matter of taste as a matter\nof \"skin.\" Some underwear looks good hut Ib unpleasant to wear. Come\nhere with your special requirements ln underwear and see how well\nwe can meet them.\nHeavy weight in pure wool, $2, $2.50,\n\u00a53 and $4 the suit.\nFiner  qualities,  not  bo heavy.  %2M,\n%3.50, ?4, $6 to $7.50 per suit.\nCombinations in pure wool from $2.75\nto $6.\nEmory & Walley\nFit-Reform Wardrobe\nSaddle Horses lor Hire\nHACKS, BAGGAGE,   LIVERY\nNelson Transfer Co., Ltd.\nThe Store of Quality\nGood News\nJust arrived, fresh case eggs,\nper dozen 35c.\nWe sell House of Parliament\nSauce and our price always was\n25c. per bottle.\nBovril, 4 oz. bottle   % .65\nBovril, 2 oz. bottle   35\nArmour's Fluid Beef, 10 oz.. 1.00\nJohnson's Fluid Beef, 16 oz.. 1.00\nChoice Medium bams, lb 23\nDavies' prime bkt. bacon, lb..   .25\nOranges, dozen 50c. and 35c.\nAll kinds flour and feed. Send\nin your orders.\nA. S. HORSWILL\nBiker St. Phonai 10\nMadras Curtains\nCheapest in the city\nThe Ark\n606 Vernon St. Phone A395\nNew and Second Hand Furniture.\nWILL DISCUSS SOCIAL CENTRE\nMADISON, Wis., Oct 34-Tbe first national conference ever held for the purpose of furthering the social centre movement will begin a three days' session at\nthe university of Wisconsin tomorrow under the auspices of the extension division\nof the university and the Social Centre\nassociation of America.\nMlnard's Liniment Cures Distemper,\nSMofi'sGurv\nouicklv stops couam, CURES colds,\nHUM TMt THUOAT MID LUNGS. 25 CENTS.\nReady Orchards, Fruit\nand Farm Lands\nSHOREACRES-10 acres, S clear, a\nfew trees; good location. Snap for\nquick buy.   $2,500.\nSHOREACRKS-10 acres, five cleared,\nbest location, 800 trees, apple and\ncherry; strawberry and gooseberry\nbushes. New 2-story house, barn.\n^ At station, sohoolhouse and post-\noffice.   $4,000, good terms.\nNELSON\u20141% acres, 2-story frame\nhouse and chloken house,   $1,600,\nNELSON\u2014Two lots, four-roomed\nhouse, cement basement; some apple\ntrees, bearing. On car line. $1,200.\nTerms.   Snap.\nFairview\u2014Two lots, shack and house\nln course of building. City water.\nOne block from oar line.   $800\nPOPOFF & CROFTS\nReal Estate Agents,\n507 Baker St, Nelson.\nCity Property and Insurance\nPhone 460.    Box 647\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1911_10_25","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0384413","@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":"1911-10-25 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1911-10-25 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\/1.0384413"}