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Bf C. WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 23.1912\n(JURY DISAGREES; JOHN\nBRADSHAW TO BE RE-TRIED\n|Lengthy Proceedings Come\nto Nought\nIBALSOM CASE\nTHIS MORNING\n|Conslable Identifies Marked\nCandle-Alibi .Offered\u2014\nEmphasize Red Belt\nAfter-over t\\yo hours' deliberations,\n[the jury in the John Bradshaw case,\nllast night announced that they had\nTfailed to reach an agreement and a\nnew trial of the alleged firebug will\n|bc necessary.\nNearly all the evening session was\n[occupied by addresses of counsel and\n[air. Justice Gregory's charge to the\n||ury, It being after midnight when it\n. announced by the foreman, William Matthews, that an ugreoment\npould not \"bo arrived at.\nThis morning at 10:30 o'clock, the\nRalsom murder trial will be uommenc-\n|-d and the second trial of Brads-haw\nwill take place In all probability dur-\ning tho present assizes, either Immediately after the murder case or following the hearing of the charge oi\nbeing in possession of a weapon dangerous to the public peace and of In-\nllcting bodily harm on G. M. Amiable on which II. II. Cleugh of Castle\ngar has been indicted.\nThroughout the three sessions yes-\nlerday, the courthouse gallery was\ncrowded with spectators who displayed the deepest Interest in tho proceedings.\nTho jury In tho cane was: Williim\njMatthews, foreman; V. F. N. 'Weir,\npi. ,T. Peet, C. A. Benedict. W. R. Bull,\nW. J. Hipperson, L. H. Choquefte, W.\nFothcrlngham, Robert Bell, J. J.\nalker, J. H. Mutheaon und Howard\nBush.\nC. R. Hamilton, K. C. is crown pros-\nicutor and Fred C. Moffatt defended\nBradshaw.\nCould Not Identify Clothing.\n. G. Nock wus recalled by Mr.\ntlamilton at the opening of court and\n|ald that whoever had lighted the fire\n\u25a0fluid not reach the locution of the\nI'lnHo without seeing witness' house.\n1 To his  lordship,  witness  said  that\nthe house could not be seen from the\npof-whero the fire was started.\n! Mrs. Nock was recalled at the request of Mr. Moffatt.    She remembered\naminlng,   at   the   preliminary   hear-\ng,  a  qunntlty  of clothing  found   In\nIiradshaw's possession by tho police\nnd declaring that she could not idon-\nify any of it as having been worn\ny tho man she mot nt the ranch on\nuno 11.\nWilliam Blllington, who lives on the\niranlte road near tho Nock ranch,\npoke of seeing the smoke of the first\nIro and of going at Mrs. Nock's sug-\nestUm toward the blaze.\nSees Candle Burning.\nj On  his way  he  came  to  a  gulch\nJ\/hleh  he found    difficult    to    cross,\n\u2022ooking  across   the  creek   he   saw  a\nnndlo   burning on   the   opposite   side\near tho bottom   of   tho   creek.   He\nrosaed over and put his foot on the\nandlo and then'picked It up, but drop-\ned It In his excitement.    Tlie candle\ncemed to have been set  in a hole\ncooped   out   in   the  ground.    Witness\nTent to Nock at the other fire, told\n|lm of the \"set\" fire and the two returned   to tho creek where  they dis-\n\u25a0overed, while looking for the candle,\nThe kindling wood, match box and paler, which wore brought In to Nelson\nInd given to Sergeant Kills and later\n\u25a0o Chief Black.\nJ Thero was considerable fallen timer nnd tho ground was hilly at the\nlace where he found the candle. Wit-\ness said that a photograph produced\nore some resemblance to the spot\nut he could not designate, on the pic-\n.ire, tho exact location of the candle,\n'he place looked as If It had been\ncooped out by someone with his\n| ands.\nCrossexamlned witness said Hurt he\nnd  seen  Bradshaw  on   only  one oc-\ntalon previous to tho Nock ranch fire.\n\u2122 wns In the Salvation Army barracks,\n(man telling him next day that a\nirtain man he had seen at the bnr-\nicks two Sunday' before the prelim-\nary hearing wns Bradshaw.\nHe had never previously beon to the\nlace where lie found lhe candle. He\nad put his foot on (he candle, stamp-\nl on It. He did not remember seeing\nchips,  match  box,  etc.,  when  ho\nTiw tho candle burning.\nHe thought, lhat he had stamped on.\nthe candle with his left foot, using the\ntoe. As far as he could recall, the\nground was covered with rotten leaves\nand similar debris. With Mr. Nock on\nthe evening of the fire, he found the\nspot on the creek, where the fire was\nset, easily, as they ran across the place\nwhile going down the creek: the following morning when he found the\ncandlo it took him 10 minutes to locate the spot. The wlek of the candle\nwas standing nearly straight up when\nhe found It.\nHo had heard of the reward for tho\nNelson firebug, but had not thought\nvery much about It. When he found\nthe candle he remembered something\nabout candles being mentioned in cOn\nnection with Bradshaw's previous trial\nand connected him With the Nook fires.\nThnt made him think of the reward\nwhich he had discussed with a good\nmany people afterwards.\nHe could not sny whnt1 time\nheen mentioned to Ellis ns the time of\nthe firo and If Ellis said 7:30 he would\nnot contradict It. He remembered\nEllis saying something about Bradshaw being in Nelson at 7:30.\nChild Recognizes Bradshaw.\nNorman Irving, nine years old, stated thnt on the night of the fire he was\ncuming into Nelson after supper when\nhe met a man near Salmon's chicken\nhouse on the Granite road.\n\"Would you know the man agaln^\"\nasked counsel.\"'\n\"Yes.\"\n' \"Where Is he?\"\n\"There,\" said witness, pointing his\nindex finger at the dock.\nNorman told Mr. Moffatt that It\nwas about 7:15 o'clock when he met\nthe man. Witness wns with his father\nat the time.\nPicked  Out  Wrong   Man   First.\nHe remembered going down to the\nJul! where a number of men were plao-\ned in a row. Constable \"Wlghtman\nwas there, WltneBS picked out the\nwrong man flrat, but then corrected\nhimself. He remembered Wlghtman\nsaying, \"now tako a good look.'' Tho\nboy said that he had answered too\nhurriedly when ho Identified the other\nman who wns not a bit like Brad\nshaw, \"\\\nNormnn' (old Mr. Hamilton that he\nplaced the time at 7: IB because he and\nhi3 father, who wero driving, reached\nlhe Brackmnn-Ker corner as the boat\ncame in,\nWilliam A. Thurman, cigar merchant,\nIdentified the mntch box found by\nNock and Billlngton as having been\nobtained at his store. About two days\nbefore the \"Nock\" fire Ttradshuw came\nInto his store and wilness gave him\na similar box.\nCrossexamlned, Mr. Thurman said\nlhat ho gave many such boxes of\nmatches away.\nFound Two Candles  In   Room.\nSergt. J. D. Wlghtman, of the city\npnlice, who was a provincial constable\nlast June, arrested* the priEoner In his\nroom at the Klondyko hotel. Witness\ntook two candles, which were produced, from, this room. They were in\na drawer In a dresser. There were\neight men In the room at the jail when\nMrs. Nock identified the prisoner. Five\n\u25a0of these men were prisoners in the\nJail. '\nTo Mr. Moffatt, Sergt. Wlghtman\nsold that the day after Bradshaw was\narrested all the prisoner's belongings\nwere sent to the provincial jail. He\ndid not know until tho day after tho\narrest that the candles had been\nmarked.\nConstable Donald McLeod stated\nthat he had been watching Bradshaw\nfor some time before June 11 and had\nvisited his room, No. 28, Klondyko\nhotel. Witness first wont, to the room\non March 0. On that date he saw three\ncandles which were In a suit case,\nMarked Candies With Staple.\nWitness visited iho room again on\nMarch 22. On April 18 witness tool;\ntho three candles from n drawer In\na bureau and marked each of them\nwilh a small staple which he happened\nlo have In his pocket. Constable McLeod Identified the two whole candles\ntaken from Bradshaw's room ns two\nof those mnrked.\n\"This is the third candlo that I\nmarked in his room,\" said the officer,\nlocking ot the small piece said to\nhave been  found at tho Nock.ranch,\n\"This candle, in particular, is double\nmnrked by me as when I mnrked It\na small piece was broken off by tlie\nstaple; while I was marking It some\none came along and In my hurry I\nbroke off a small piece of the cnndlo\nwith the staple,\" declared witness.\nOn April 21 and 20 and on May 8,\n13, 20 and 26 witness visited Bradshaw's room and found tbe threo\ncandles uiibtirnt In the drawer.\nConstable MeLeod said that directly\nafter he heard of the firo on the Granite road he visited llrudshow's room\nand found only two candles; one was\ngone. This was about 10 o'clock on\ntho night of Juno 11.\nUnder croBSoxnminntion the officer\nsaid that at. the trial In the'city police\ncourt, at which Bradshaw was acquit-\nfew Railway From\nLethbridge To Coast\n(By Daily Nows LeoBcd   Wire.)\nIMOOSltfjAW, Oct. 22.\u2014Surveys are\now virtually completed for an air line\netween Regina and Lethbridge which\n\u2022HI be built by the Grand Trunk Pa-\nIflc ns soon as weather permits in the\naming- spring, Engineers are now\niaklng preliminary surveys in tho\nloutitalns for a dlreot lino from Loth-\nridge to Vancouver, which will run\notwiTii the main line of the Canadian\nPacific railway and tho International\nboundary. If Iho route Is not feasible\nlhe company will build this lino to the\nsouth of the boundary. The line between Lethbridge and Regina will tap\nsome of the richest wheat raising territory in tho province and will give that\npart of Saskatchewan an .outlet to\nHudson's Bay via tho company'*! Md-\nville-Regina branch, Work, it Is said,\nwill bo started on tho line as early In\ntho spring as possible,\nted the accused had said that he had\nbought candles 10 days previous to\nthe hearing, whereas witness kneW\nthat ho had had some fully a month\nprevious, He had never found the\ndoor of Bradshaw's room locked, He\ndenied that ho had ever stated to\nanyone before June 11 that the candle\nwas very brittle. He had told -Constable R. Reid that he had marked the\ncandles but ho had not told hfm how\nhe had marked them. He had not told\nanyone olso, nnd ho had told no one\nhow he hod marked them.\nDefence Opens Clse. . I\nFrank Phillips, secretary of the Nelson miners union was the first witness\ncalled for the defence. On the night\nof the Nock fire witness saw Brad-\nshnw. He was dressed in tho same\ncoat and hat ns worn in court. Witness saw him between 7:00 and 7:15\no'clock at the corner of Ward and\nVernon streets..\nMrs. Hagcn, a waitress nt the Klondyko hotel, said that Bhe knew Brad>-\nshaw. On the night of the fire he\nhad supper between  6  nnd  7 o'clock.\nN. P. Nelson, bartender at the\nKlondyko, declared thut ho saw Bradshaw In the sitting room between 6:30\nand 7 o'clock. He was coming from\nsupper. \u25a0*\u2022\nEllis Tells of Seeing Bradshaw.\nJ. H. Eilis, ex-sergeant of the city\npolice, stated (hat he saw Bradshaw\non the night of June 11 at 7:30 o'clock,\ncrossing from the Poole Drug company\ncorner to the Ward-Vallance store. At\n9:15 witness was approached by Nock\nand Billlngton who were advised- by\nwitness ns to finding Chief Black or\nConstable Wlghtman. They went\naway and returned and told witness\nthat a firebug had been at work on\nthe Granite road, Blllington saying that\nIt was Bradshaw. Witness asked about\nthe \"time of the fire and was told that\nMrs. Nock said it was 7:30. Witness\nthen told them, ho said, that it could\n(Continued or. page three.)\nWIFE HYSTERICAL\nHUSBAND CRA2Y\nWoman    Tries to  Drown     Herself ih\nBarrel\u2014Man Attempts to Batter\nOut   Braina.\n(By Dollv News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON,'Oct. 22.-\u2014While his wife\nwns attempting to drown herself In\na-barrel of water in the back yard,\nthe husband of an East London family, was doing his best to butt out his\nbraina against tho brick wall of the\nhouse in which they lived. The husband w.iB crazy and was later tnken\nto the asylum, where he now is. Tho\nwife is In Victoria hospital suffering\nfrom acute hysteria. Both nre Londoners and have lived here for many\nyears. The woman was one of those\nupon whom pi*. Baker gave a clinic\nat the medical convention yentcrday.\nFriends of the two afflioted ones\nculled at Victoria hospital at the time\nthey were endeavoring to commit suicide. Officers at that institution hurried there and took both to the hospital. Thn man was later removed to\nthe asylum. The woman will likely\nrecover.\nWAS KILLED BY\nSHOT IN BACK\nTestifies  Accused  Took   Gun  to  Vieit\nTraps\u2014Would   Not  Join   in\nSearch.\n(By Daily N'ews Leased Wire.)\nLINDSAY, Ont., Oct. 22.\u2014The trial\nof Arthur Ellis, accused of murdering\nhis brother-in-law, Lew Porter, near\nMlnden, was begun toduy beforo Justice Clute. The father of the prisoner\nand the dead man were both present.\nThe crown prosecutor, Edmund Meredith, in outlining tho case to the jury,'\nsaid that the evidence would show\nthat Porter was shot in tho back.\nEdith Porter, daughter of the dead\nman, testified that Porter had taken\nher grandfather's gun when he, Porter, went to visit his traps. She said\nthut Ellis when asked to join In the\nsearch for tho missing Porter, had refused on the plea that ho had no time.\nShe donlcd writing a totter to Ellis,\nwarning him that Porter hud made\nthreats against him.\nT. C. Lobinelte, counsel for Ellis,\nvigorously cross examined the witness\nbut could not shake her testimony.\nLewis Porter, fathor of the dead\nman, was on the stand when court adjourned.\nSOLDIERS MUST\nANSWER DUTY CALL\nIf  Greeks  Remain  in  Canada During\nWar   Liable to  be   lm(prioonoa<\non Return  Home.\nMONTREAL, Oet. 22.\u2014If a Greek\nresident of Montreal, who Is a reservist,\nremains In Canada during the war and\nreturns to Greece again, he Is liable\nto imprisonment of from two to five\nyears. This fact was contained In a\nletter.received from the Greek charge\nd'affaires in Washington by D. N.\nNicholson, president of tho pan-Hel-\n-lenlc union. Tho letter also ontalns\nthe statement that if a Greek does not\niidhero to tho call to serve two years\naccording to tho laws of conscription,\nhe is liable to an imprisonment of from\nono to two years. If Greeks present\nthemselves to headquarters in Athens\nbefore Nov. 7 they need not present\na certificate which they must do If\nthoy go later,\nCONSERVATIVE MAJORITY\nNEARLY EIGHT HUNDRED\nWinnipeg, Oct, 22.\u2014The official\ndeclaration in the Macdonald election contest waa made thia evening.\nAlex Morrison, the Conservative ii\ndeclared elected by a majority of\n784. Of the 8,754 entitled to the\nfranchises but 2,412 failed to Cast\ntheir votet. '     > >   >\nCarries Off Trophy for Best\nBoxed Fruit\nKOOTENAY.FRUIT\nMUCH ADMIRED\nMany Visitors to Cranbrook\nBuilding at Dry Farming Congress\n(Special to The Dally News,)\nLETHBFUDGE, Oct. 22.\u2014Though\nopened yesterday, today has been the\nreal opening of the great dry farming\nexhibition nnd congress here. A husty\nrun through the various state and\nprovincial special exhibits gives but\na superficial idea' of what It really is,\nand whnt it is going to accomplish\nby way of education in a subject\nwhich Is called dry and treats of dryness. To British Columbians especially, the congress is already meaning\nmuch.\nAll the delegates and spectators\nfrom over the mountains showed their\nappreciation at the nttention shown\nthe provincial exhibit which is housed\nin a building some distance from the\nmain hail, and a little inconvenient\nto access, Notwithstanding this slight\ndrawback, crowdfl streamed througli\nthe hail all day and judging from the\nexpressions of wonder and surprise it\nwas perhaps the most interesting provincial or state display.\nThe Nelson display of boxed fruit\nwas the largest of the many fruit displays from British Columbia and was\nawarded tho special prize for the best\ndisplay of boxed fruit. Among the\nmultitudes oC apples from everywhere,\nJ. Nicholson of Salmon, B. C. took\nthe prize for tho largest apples, in a\nworld wide contest.\nThe awarding has not been Completed, and the British Columbia display\nwill secure more of the ribbons but\nthey will not get as many prizes ns\nthey might have secured had the exhibitors been better posted as to entering. Many o:A*.!'Jits, especially that\nfrom Creston, aro not entered for competition and of course will not uppear\nin the prize winning list.\nOn entering the British. Columbia\nbuilding, Creston apples and other\nfruits are the first to meet the eyes\nof tho multitude; just beyond comes\nthe East Kootenay display with many\nstriking samples. John Dcvltt, J.\nHamilton, the St. Eugene mission, St.\nMary's prairie and P. Lund, all have\nfine displays of fruit and vegetables\nwhich are eye openers to the prairie\nfarmers who are thronging the building. Kaslo comes next, with one of\nher fine displuys, and then comes tha\nbig Nelson collection of apples, over\n100 boxes being most advantageously\nplaced. Across the way from these ure\nthe Kelowna, Armstrong and -Penticton displays. All told there are more\nthan 600 boxes of fruit which with tlie\nvegetables, grains and grasses of the\ncollection, makes tho largest display\nto be seen on lhe groundH.\nCranbrook has played a winning\ncard With her individual building facing the main building in which many\nindividual collections are ou display.\nJoseph Ryan Is in charge of a collection of Kootenay ores and is kept\nconstantly busy explaining nnd describing tho processes of mining. II.\nA. McKcown Is iu charge of a display\nof Kootenay woods nnd tho finished\nproduct from the forests. In the British Columbia building is to be found\na most interesting display of the bee\nIndustry and Mr. RoblnBonis pushing\nthe importance of this Industry In\nconnection with the fruit growing\nbranch of Industry In the province.\nFrom New Westminster and the island\nCome, fine displays, that from Nanaimo being a particularly good one!\nProm Quesnel and Fort George\ncome small but most creditable displays which have been carted hundreds f miles to railways and have\nbeen on display at New Westminster\nand other places before reaching Lethbridge.\nCongratulations were wired from\nmany states ami from far away South\nAfrica, showing the world wide Interest in the subject of dry farming nnd\ndrawing the attention of all those\ncountries to southern Alberta and\nLethbridge. Lung Hholn, from China,\nond All Khan, from Persin, are making almost n sensation with their ln-\ntentness upon tlu* subject and the keen\nness of their vision of What Is to come\nto their peoples mil of this movement.\nCanadians on Top.\n(By Daily News  Leased  Wire.)\nLETKBRIDGU, Oct. 22.\u2014The general remainder of the prize list of the\nseventh Internal lonal Dry Farming\ncongress was published today ahd Its\ncompletion closes ono of the foremost\nfeatures of the congress. The most\nnoticeable feature of tho list Itself,\nhowever, Is the preponderance of Canadian awards. Most of the evcntB\nwere open to the world and alt the\nwestern provinces of Cnnada and their\nIntegral districts and townB were represented, ns well as districts and communities In the northwestern states.\nIn nearly every grain growing class,\nhowever, the Canadian farmers came\nout on top and II was only In such\nsouthern grains as malse, corn, etc.,\nthat the snb-bordcr agriculturists,\nmade any showing and In these classes tho Canadians made no effort to\nexhibit.\nIn the first place, a Canadian, H,,\nHolmes, Raymond, Alberta, took the\nopen sweep stakes for wheat; J. Lanigan of Elfros, Sask., came out victorious with his oats; A. Woolley of\nDunmore, Alta., with his peck of flax\nand N. Tarktnlger of Claresholm, displayed the best threshed grain, while\nA. Perrey of Cardston had a splendid\nexhibit and so the list went on.\nIt was the best advertisement for\nCanada farm lands given throughout\nthe convention and the samples of\nwheat shown in each class were of\nsuch high grade as to make the contest interesting keen.\nToday also saw the opening of the\nsecond international congress of farm\nwomen, which was opened by Mrs.\nBulyea, wife of the lieutenant governor of Alberta. Many delegates wore\npresent and the addresses were' of\ngeneral Interest to all the visitors. In\nthe evening a reception attended by\nall the delegates to the congress and\ntho numerous agriculture authorities\nand governmental representatives was\nheld at the auditorium when the\nawards in the various classes were\nannounced and the trophies presented. Tomorrow will be \"Farm Women's day,'' and special addresses will\ntie delivered at Knox church, whore\nthe farm women's congress is holding\nIts sessions.\nHaving started the general congress on its way, the members gravitated today to the various sections In\nwhich they were interested. At the\nInternational Farm Women's congress\nopening in Knox church, there were\na number of busy sessions. Its morning session was taken up With tho\nfederal addresses of welcome and\ngreeting, while the afternoon session\nwas given over to the delivery of addresses on farm problems and to discussions of those addresses. Dr. J.\nIf. Worst, president of tlie North Dakota Agricultural college, at Fargo,\ndiscussed the question of \"Educatim*\nthe Boy for the Farm.\" Dr. Worst\n(Continued on page four.)\nMinister of Public Works\nResigns Office\nICE BREAKERS\"0N\nLAKEfSUPERIOR\nMinister of Interior Hopes to Arrange\nInsurance Rates to Enable Grain\nShipments to Continue.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, Oot, 22.\u2014Hon. Robert\nRogers has all summer been working\non a plan to extend the period of navigation on the great lakes by a month\nso as to get down more grain by\nwater. Arrangements for Ice breakers at Port Arthur and Fort William\nhave already been made, so that that\nphase of the situation has been met.\nThe main obstacle has been the subject of insurance. Yesterday Mr, Rogers had u conference with R. J. Dale,\nvice president of the Montreal board\nof trade and representative of big insurance interests. Tho whole problem from every standpoint was thoroughly discussed and Mr. Rogers said\nat the close of the conference that he\nwas very hopeful that a satisfactory\narrangement would be reached between the shippers and insurance men\nfor a prolongation of the service. An\nannouncement will be mude shortly.\nKING OF NEWSBOYS\n\u25a0 TELLS HIS STORY\nConspiracy   to   Have   Becker   Electro-\n\u25a0 cuted\u2014Evidence of Sullivan\nCloses   Case.\n(Bv Dally News Leased Wire.)\nNEW YORK, Oct. 22.\u2014The case\nagainst Lieutenant Becker closed\nabruptly and dramatically this afternoon with the district attorney at the\ncourt's command i* reading fnto the\nrecord a flood of testimony from Becker's star witness, Jack Sullivan, for\nwhose admission Becker's lawyers had\nfought long and hard when Sullivan\ntestified today. Amid tho vigorous\nprotests of Becker's counsel,-who had\nprotested oh vigorously when Sullivan's testimony was barred several\ndays ngo, thi! \"king of tho newsboys\"\nunloosened  his tongue.\nHe told his story belligerently nnd\nexcitedly, in his own way, just as he\nhad asked permission to tell It when\nhe was on tho stand before^ Sullivan's testimony guided \u25a0 by the unwilling hand of the district attorney,\nwns in direct support of the contention of the defence that Rose, Webber, Vallon and Schepps' Informers\nand slate's witnesses, hnd conspired\nto send Bocker to the electric chair by\ntheir own perjury.\nMINISTERS LEAVE\nFOR  CONVENTION\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nVICTORIA, B. C., Oct. 22.\u2014Hon.\nW. J. Bowser, Hon. T. W. Taylor\nand Hon. H. E. Young left tonight\nto attend the Conservative 'convention at Revelstoke. They will re*\nturn to Victoria on Saturday,\nMeanwhile Hon. W. R. Ross is\nrepresenting the  ministry  here.\nHON. GEORGE PERLEY\nNOW IN CHARGE\nWill Temporarily Administer\nDepartment\u2014Monk Will\nTake Holiday\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, Oct. 22.\u2014Subscauent to\nthe formal acceptance of his resignation as minister of public works, Hon.\nF. D. Monk left for Montreal this\nafternoon. Only a few personal friends\nwero at tho station to see him off. Mr.\nMonk stated that he would be back in\ntho capital in the course of a day or\ntwo, and that a little later he would\ngo to Atlantic City for a well earned\nrest.\nThe work of administering the multifarious affairs of the department will\nat once be assumed by Hon. George\nPerley, minister without portfolio from\nQuebec. He will remain at the post\nuntil Mr. Monk's permanent successor\nis installed. Mr. Perley was acting\npremier all summer during the absence\nin England of tho Rrlght Hon. R. L.\nBorden, and ho is now called upon to\nadminister what Is probably the heaviest department. As minister without\nportfolio he does not receive any pay\nfor his services.\nMay Succeed Monk.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, Oct. 22.\u2014The name of\nLouis Coderre, Conservative member\nfor Hochelga, is mentioned in connec\ntion with the cabinet vacancy. He is a\nlawyer of considerable ability and popular with the rank and file of the party\nIL is believed that he would have no\ndifficulty in carrying the constituency.\nBrilliant Opening Expected.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, Oct. 22.\u2014Hon. T. S.\nSproule, speaker of the house, arrived\ntoday for the purpose of giving instructions to the house of commons\nstaff In regard to the sessional arrangements. Owing to the uncertainty\nas to whether there would be a November or January session, the usual early\nstart was not made, but from now on\neverything will be rushed to a conclusion. Owing to the interest growing out of tho naval question and the\nbig program of legislation a particularly  brilliant opening is anticipated.\nISABEL FORIN  WINS\nBRON2E   MEDAL\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nVICTORIA, B. C, Oot. 22.\u2014\nTwelve additional bronze medals\nhave been received from tho governor general by the department\nof education to be distributed as\nprizes among schools of the province. Tho following have been allocated to interior centres: Kamloops, Doris M. Sterry: Kelowna,\nMary Day; Nelson, Isabel D. For-\nin; Penticton, Irene A. H. Huntley; Summerland, Edith A, Bris-\ntow, and Vernon, Georglna Mc*\nkinnon.\nHeavy Fighting Reported in\nVicinity of Adrianople\nOFFICIAL REPORTS\nARE LACKING\nMontenegrin Army Engaged.\nTerrific Bombardment In\nProgress\nWILL BUILD SIX STORY\nTHEATRE IN EDMONTON\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nEDMONTON, Oct. 22.\u2014When W. B.\nSherman came from Calgary today to\nget a G2 foot additional' frontage for\nhis new theatre on Third street, he\nfound ho would havo to pay $1,000 a\nfoot for the land. The price was paid\nand tomorrow work Will start on a six\nstorey building, with foundations fo;\nten stories. The upper floors will be\nturned into a hotel,\nELECTION  GOES  AGAINST\nTURKISH GOVERNMENT\n(By Dally Maws Leased Wlre.1\nCONSTANTINOPLE, Oct. 22.\u2014\nThe general election is going\nstrongly against the government.\nOut of 124 seats the returns for 95\nare complete. In the case of 47\nof these the results are indecisive,\nrequiring another election. Of\nthe others only 14 scats were won\nby the government, while the radicals captured 29 and the Socialists\nfive.\nRoosevelt's Wound Is\nStill Wide Open\n(By Dally News Leased Wlre.1\nOYSTER BAY, Oct. 22.\u2014Thu qfllflt\nroutine of life at Sagamore Hill was\npicked up again by Col. Hoosovelt and\nhis family today as though It had not\nbeen interrupted by the firing of a\nshot meant to kill the master of the\nhouse. For the first time since he\nwas shot, eight days ago, Cob Boose-\nvolt was unattended tonight by a physician. There was no ono In the\nhouse except the membors of the family und servants and the colonel spoke\nhopefully of being able after one day\nmore of rest, gradually to resume his\nwork.\nDr. Alexander Lambert nnd Dr.\nScurry Terrell who accompanied Col.\nRoosevelt from Chicago, were Joined\nia New York by Dr. Joseph A. Blake\nand Dr. George E. Brewer. After examining the patient they said thnt the\nwound was still wide open and spoke\nof the possibility of infection and added they wero unable to say whether\nIt would be possible for him to take\nup the work of the campaign again.\nCol, Roosevelt said when his wound\nhad been dressed that there was no\nlenger need of a constant supervision\nof physicians, because ho was \"all\nright.\"\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Oct.* 22.\u2014An almost impenetrable veil conceals the most interesting operations of the war\u2014\nthose in the vicinity of Adrianople.\nNo official account of any kind bearing on those operations has yet heen\nissued. The Sofia newspapers report\nheavy fighting around Adrianople and\nKirk Kltisseh to the east and three\nforts in the vicinity of Adrianople captured. According to one rumor 2,000\nBulgarians were killed and -1,000\nwounded In a desperate engagement\noutside of Kirk Kitlsseh.\nIt is quite clear, however, thnt all\nreports of the fall of Kirk Kltisseh\nand the cutting off of the communication with Constantinople are quite unfounded. Fighting of a more or less\nserious nature continues at all points\nalong the extensive frontiers nnd an\nimportant battle Is impending in the\nKumanova district between the Servians and Zeklt! Pasha, who, according\nto a Constantinople report which Is\nprobably exaggerated, has 100,000 men\nand  strong artillery.\nA Constantinople despatch sent\nabout midnight gives a report that\nthe battle has begun practically all\nalong the lino from Adrianople to\nKirk Kltisseh, the Turkish troops advancing and the Bulgarians falling\nback with heavy losses.\nThe Montenegrins apparently are\nmaking slow progress tn the direction\nof Scutari. Podgrltza despatches say\nthat the hombnrdment of Tarahosch\ncontinues but although the fort hns\nbeen greatly damaged there is no sign\nof yielding.\nIn naval matters the honors bo far\nare with tho Greeks, who have captured Lemnos, thus securing a base\nfrom which they can attack the Turkish squadron, should it ever emerge\nfrom the Dardanelles. Seemingly,\nhowever, tho Turks are not disposed\nto leave the Black eon and risk an encounter with the Greeks.\nBulgarian   Loss   Heavy.\nCONSTANTINOPLE, Oet. 22.\u2014According to official information orders\nwere given this morning In the eastern army at Kirk Kltisseh to advance\nraft to tho village of Tuudja. The\ntroops encountered the enemy in force\nand heavy fighting ensued. The Bulgarians finally gave way before the\nimpetus of the Turkish assault. The\nBulgarian  loss   was   heavy.      '\nA second Turkish column came Into\ncontact with the Bulgarians west1 of\nKalimnndja nnd were equally successful, the fight continuing,' until nig-ht\nnnd tho Turkish advance being Irresistible.\nTerrific Bombardment.\nLONDON, Oct. 2,1,\u2014Al! the dfvisions\nof the Montenegrin army concentrated\nsouth of Scutari arc taking part in the\nattack on Tarnbom*]*,. A terrific bombardment, says a Fodgoritza despatch\nto the Express, has occurred and the\ngreatest battle yet fought botween the\nTurks and the Montenegrins Is now In\nforce. Crown Prince Danilo is personally commanding the operations. King\nNicholas is advancing his headquarters to Antivarl on tho southwestern\nside of the lake. Roads have been\nblasted in the mountains to allow tho\npassage of the heavy artillery which\nhas been mounted on the heights\naround Tarabosch.\nA despatch from Sofia to tho Express says that a big battle has been\nraging around Kirk Kltisseh for two\ndays. It is reported that tho line of\nTurkish defences between that city\nand Adrlanopo has been broken by the\nBugarians.\nThe Express understands that Gen,\nSir John French has been recalled to\nLondon from Denver, it fs supposed\nin connection with the Balkan war.\nThe Etara Zagora despatch says that\nnews which has reached there confirms\ntho Impression that tho allied armies\nhave taken the initiative with vigor\nand complete success. Amazing progress has been made along the whole\nlino and events may develop rapidly.\nPremier Pachitch says a despatch\nfrom Belgrade has announced that tha\nlargest Servian army is before Kum-\nunova nnd that somo of the Servian\nforces nro not far from Uskup.\nThe Larissa correspondent of the\nMall, describing the enpturo of Elassona, says that the Impetuosity of the\nGreek frontal attack prevented the\ncompletion of a flanking movement behind the Sorlt-iena to shut off the\nTurkish retreat. Otherwiso 3,000 Turks\nwould have been captured. An Athens\ndespatch reports the safe arrival at\nPiraeus of the four destroyers purchased in England.\nMORE MEN QUIT WORK.\nCOBALT, Ont, Oct. 22.\u2014The only\nchange In tho Cobalt townsite mine\nstrike is that there are fewer men nt\nwork today than yesterday. The b-isg\ncarpenter and his men quit work tonight. The total force working- la\nabout 25 men.\n r   PAGE TWO\nC&p Ball? jaem\nWEDNESDAY\nOCTOBER 23\nThe Carriage\u2014A Vital Part of |\nthe Wonderful Burroughs Visible'\nDon't be misled by generalities in adding machine advertising or celling. Get specific\nfncts and comparisons on specific points.\nParticularly notice the carriage construction, for the carriage mahes or mars adding '\nmachine convenience and visibility.\nThe carriage of the Burroughs Visible isso\narranged tlir.t it pi ves greater visibility of printing with lest effort by operator than any other\nadding machine iu the world.\nIt brings the printing point at just the\nproper distance fiom the eye and at the\nproper angle.\nIt is the only adding machine that gives the\nsame convenience of seeing all work at a\nglar.ee as tiie most approved visible typewriter.\nIn the Burroughs Visible carriage every lever\nand key is arranged for easy and direct manipulation. The carriage is only three inches\nfrom the keyboard\u2014no stretching nor shifting necessary.\nThe paper drops into place in the carriage\nautomatically\u2014like a typewriter. A uvirl of\nthe platen knob anil you arc ready for work!\nTiie carriage leaves the whole sheet exposed to view; no danger of coming to end of\npaper roll without knowing it. Construction\npermits interchangcability irom \\2}&* to 201,\ncarriage and \u2022vies 'versa.\nAutomatically adjusts itself to any thickness of paper without interfering with uniformity of feed. A unique friction-stop Idcka\ncarriage iu any position, Tlie hell counts\nitems listed, wains tlie operator when end of\nsheet is neared, and locks the carriage so\nheadings arc uniform.\nThese are exclusively Burroughs points.\nRemember that Burroughs Visible machines are built in the Burroughs factory, of\nthe same material, with the stupe wonderful\nmachine tools, and by the same workmen\nwho have Kink :i reputation for lifetime\nservice into other Burroughs machines.\nThe Burroughs factory is not a new one,\nbuilt just to make this one type of machine,\nli lias bcen'riuining 20 years and even the first\nadding machines turned out are still in use.\nT'he Burroughs reputation and prestige are\nbeing built into every one of these machines\nand every word of the Burroughs guarantee\nand of the Burroughs Service pledge goca\nwith it.\nBURROUGHS ADDING MACHINE CO.\nW. K. Tasker, Sales Mgr., 3-17 Pentlor Street, Vancouver,  B. C.\nCarriage automatic.\naUy aiLiuMs tuclMu any\nthickness of paper, or any\nnumber ol carbon*. Car-\nllate removable In oiic\nminute*\u20143S, 12Wor20-\ninch widili ai desired.\nNot merely\nPoints of\nMerit\u2014but\nPoints of\nSuperiority\nPLANING  MILL WILL\nRUN   DURING   WINTER\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nCRESCENT VALLEY, Oct. 22.\u2014\nPractically nil the mill hands in the\nlarge sawmill of tho British Canadian\nLumber corporation have moved away\nfor the winter, The mil! is Jo bo\ngiven a complete overhauling In preparation for next season's work, which\n\\. expected to be heavy. The planing\nmill will run all winter In order to\nlteep pace with tlie demand for finished lumber.\nRev. George S. Kennedy of Toronto.\nwho Is in charge of the Mothadtsl\nwork here, now holds regular service*-\"\neach Sunday at Shoreacres in t!:i\nmorning nnd Crescent Valley In the\nevening. Next Sunday there will be\n. special services and In the evening\nspecial music will be rendered by the\nCrescent Valley choir. Gordon Koat*\nlay who has been delighting Nelson\npeople with his wonderful soprano\nvoice,   will   take   part   In   '\u25a0 he   mimiml\nportion of the service.\nA choral society Is being formed at\nthe valley, which will no doubt form\nan enter tabling; feature of. the coming winter's social life.\n,T. .Tenson who hns been connected\nwith tho shipping department of tbe\nBritish Canadian Lumber corporation\nfor a conslderalile time, is moving to\n.Minneapolis in a few days, and will\nsettle' there.\nGeorge Prltchard of Creston is at\nCrescent Valley on business.\nA very large potato has been dug\non .John Green way's ranch, measuring\n2. Inches in circumference and weighing close upon 3 1-2 pounds.\nA heavy team belonging to J. Shep-\nley of Shoreacres, ran away from\nCrescent Valley ranch last Saturday\nbut were, fortunately stopped before\nuny serious damage was done.\nThe new school was opened last\nweek, and Is one of the most modern country schools In British Columbia.    It is beautifully situated on the\ndecided improvement to the appearance of Crescent Valley. The spacious\ngrounds have been nicely graded and\nare to be planted with trees. There\nare close upon 30 schola.nTln attendance.\nT, S. Richardson spent Monday In\nNelson on business.\nJohn Burns who bas heen taking\ntreatment for rheumatism at Halcyon\nHot Springs, returned last Friday\ngreatly benefited.\nC. I'\\. McHardy and a couple of\nfriends are spending a few days at\nCrescent Valley hunting.\nThe germs which make brewers'\nyeast are stronger alcohol producers\nthan any other yeast.\nThe late King Edward was Insured\nfor $4,ri00,000 during the last two\nyears of bis life.\nShipping casualties of all nationalities last year totalled 108 vessels, with\na tonnage of 114,231.\nDaily   News Want  Ads. net rnfmltR.\n7rwte Mer\/t\nPEN-MANS LIMITED\nPARIS . . CANADA\nClosed-Crotch\nCombinations\n}ia The part that was always so troublesome In the old\n1 bind now sets as snug as can be\u2014doesn't gap\u2014\ndoesn't strain. Truly it's an improvement you will\nappreciate. Some trustworthy store you pass every\nday has an array of these combinations in stock\nthat includes tjoitr favorite weight and style.\nAsk for Pen-Angle Closed Crotch \u2014 the new\nunderwear idea,   and   look   for  the  trademark.\nSWEATERS . . HOSIERY\nUNDERWEAR\nTemperance Hotel for Quick Sale\nMust Be Sold This Week\nA profitable business in [live running order, main street location, nearest hotel to station, complete^[to the smallest detail.    Furniture and\nfixtures  worth  $1,800.     Sixteen   bed-rooms.     Large  dining-rooms.\nDouble kitchen fully equipped, and all in sound condition.\nSpecial Price for Quick Sale, $5,500\nTerms:  One-third cash, balance to suit buyer.\ncQuarrie & Robertson\nReal Estate and Insurance Agents\nNelson, B. C\nCorrespondents' Costumes\nAre Wonderful Spectacle\n(By Dally Npwb Leaser] Wire.*)\nSOFIA, Oct. 22.\u2014-Wondrous scenes\nwere witnessed yesterday at the start\nof the special newspaper correspondents for the front. Some have extraordinary outfits. They seemed more like\nmen going on an expedition to the\nNorth Pole than to the seat of war\nin a temperate climate.\nExperienced correspondents, such as\nEennett Burleigh and the Marvuia de\nHc-yonzac, were notable for the simplicity of their costumes. The Germans' costumes were the most exaggerated, on the lines of \".Michael Stro-\ngoff\" stage costumes. Bennett Bur-\nlelght sayg the war will not last longer than six weeks ond the collapse of\ntlie Turks might bring the end sooner.\nDr. Standoff, tlu* Bulgarian minister at Paris, travelled on the train\nwith the correspondents. Ho is going\nto join King Ferdinand.\nSiege May Bo Brief.\n(By   Andre   Beaumont,   special   correspondent of .the London Telegraph\nwith the Bulgarian Army.)\nSOFIA, Oct. 21.\u2014It is stated on the\ntaking of Kirk Kltteseh, 30 miles\nnortheast of Adrianople, claimed as\nono of the most important successes\nso far of the present war, the Bulgarian attack was so sudden and carefully planned that 20,000 Turks were\ncaptured and three months' ammunition, food and general supplies for an\nentire army corps fell into the hands\nof the victors.\nStrong detachments of Bulgarian\ntroops are stated to have cut off all\ncommunication between Kirk Kltteseh\nand Adrianople soon afterwards and\nthat not only one, but tiie whole string\nof outlying forts north of Adrianople\nwere taken by the Bulgarians. It has\nbeen added that the success of the invading army has been through reinforcements for Adrianople having been\nstopped. The Turks, after their first\nreverses, seemed to have lost all confidence in themselves and in their\nleaders. The latest dispatch from the\ndistrict asserts that communication\nwith Constantinople has been completely severed and that the Turkish\narmy is now penned up In Adrianople.\nThe Turkish army is much smaller\nthan had been estimated and Is at the\nmercy of a few weeks' siege by the\nBulgarian troops.\nKing Ferdinand personally is directing army operations. He has shown\nhimself, so. far, a shrewd and brilliant\ncommander. Some oven predict that\nAdrianople will fall Into the hands of\nthe Bulgarians after only a few days'\nsiege.    .\n(By Daily News Leased* Wire.*)\nAdrianople Centre of Strife.\nLONDON, Oct. 22.\u2014While a semiofficial communique, issued at Sofia,\nreports that the Turkish troops arc\nfleeing panic stricken before the Bulgarians, throwing\" away weapons',\nequipment and ammunition, trying to\nescape,, the truth if* that very little re-\nliable news Is. coming from the seat of\nwar. Special dispatches tell of an extraordinary story current in Sofia to\nthe effect lhat the Bulgarian troops at\nthe taking of Kirk Klttlsseh captured\n2(',000 Turks, with ammunition and\nsupplies sufficient'for an army corps\nof three months. Some reports have\nit that the string of outlying forts al\nAdrianople have been taken and the\ntown Itself has been cut off from com\nmunicution with Constantinople. Theso\nreports lack confirmation. There Is\nno doubt the Bulgnrlan army Is advancing in a wide front on Adrianople and that the Turks are retiring;on\ntheir main position. It is evident, also,\nthat there has been some hot fighting,\nas numbers of wounded men are arriving in Sofia, but the encounters so\nfar apparently have been sharp skirmishes.\nMilitary authorities agree that the\nreports of Adrianople being invested\non three sides are premature, but all\nadmit that one of tho most sanguinary\nbattles of the war is certain to be\nfought there. From Conisantza, Rou-\nmania, comes the reports that the\nTurks landed a force at Kavarna, a\nsmall unfortified Bulgarian port,\nwhich the ottoman warships bombarded, destroying the customs bouse and\nother buildings, but Sofia advices con-.\ntradlct this, saying, the Turkish landing was frustrated by the fire of the\nBulgarian troops on shore.\nThe Greek army, full of enthusiasm,\nled by the crown prince, is still advancing nn the town of Servia, but the\nGreek government does not permit wnr\ncorrespondents or military attaches to\naccompany the troops.\nGreek warships have appeared off\nthe island of Lemnos, where they captured tho garrison. There has been\nsome fighting at Dichllatn, a village\nwest of Azilona, where a couple of\nGreek battalions routed a Turkish\nforce.\nSouth of the Servian frontier another battle seems Imminent, as the\nServian army, which is pushing down\nthe railway from Ristovatz, has Its\noutposts near Kumnanova and a decisive action there can not bn long delayed. The Servians have 100,000 and\nthe Turks 00,000. The censorship on\nboth sides is so strict that It is hard\nto obtain facts, but apparently tiie battle around Adrianople, where the Bulgarians with their Servian allies have\n325.000 men and 400 field guns, against\n200,000 Turks with 300 guns, will be\na titanic struggle. . The Bulgarians\napparently also mean to strike at the\nrailway from Adrianople to Constantinople, which Is only 20* miles south\nof Kirk Klttlsseh. If they succedd in\nseizing this road they will cut off\nAdrianople and the force there surrounding the great fort as the Germans in 1870 aurrounded Metz.    This\nwill compel the Turks to abandon\ntheir strategic retreat at the risk of n\ngeneral engagement.\nIt will be then or never for the\nTurkish commander in chief, Nazlm\nPasha. 'If the Bulgarians capture\nAdrianople, which is the Turkish Port\nArthur, military experts here agree\nthat It will be the beginning of the\nend for the Ottoman army and empire.\nWill Punish Balkans.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\n. WASHINGTON, Oct. 22.\u2014Breaking\nsilence for the first time since the war\nbroke out in the Balkans, tbe Turkish\nambassador last night Issued a statement In which he declared hostilities\ncould he charged directly to the Balkan states; that the trouble would be\nshort lived and that those countries\nshould be punished for their \"imper-\ntinency,\" '\nSIR ALBERT SPICER  IS\nCHAIRMAN OF COMMITTEE\nfRv Daily News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Oct. 22.\u2014Sir Albert\nSpicer, past president of the London\nchamber of commerce, has been appointed chairman of the parliamentary committee formed to Inquire into\nthe government for the erection of\nwireless stations in many parts of the\nBritish empire.\nREFUSES PASSPORT\nTO MINISTER\nReport That Sir Herbert Samuel, British Postmaster General, Was Refused Admission to Russia.'\n(By Dally News Leased \"Wire.)\nST. PETERSBURG, Oct. 2i!.\u2014The\nRussinn government is alarmed at the\nonslaught on its securities by foreign\nfinanciers, much more than because of\nthe Balkans. The official organ, the\nRussia, which is printed in the buildings of the department of tlie interior\nand edited by members of the civil\nservice appointed for that purpose,\nprints a desperate appeal to all Russian security holders not to be stampeded into selling their .holdings to the\ninternational Jewish organization\nwhich has opened its campaign on behalf of American Jewish passport agi-\ntutors.-*\nThe motive ascribed for the raid on\nRussian prices is that the enemies of\nRussia are making a determined effort to get control of her industrial\nstocks and use them as a leverage for\nforcing their claims on behalf of the\n.lews for equality in Russia. The\nNovoc Vremya supplements the attack\nhy a tirade against \"freedom loving\nAmerica, which is ready to furnish\nloans to help Turkey to continue her\ntyranny over the Christians within her\nterritory.\"\nTho Russian government's nnswer\nto this is to display an even greater\nantiJewIsh ferocity than ever. It has\njust dislodged Baron Ginsburg, head\nof the Jewish community in Russia.\nfrom tho presidency of the Lena gold\nfield corporation in Siberia, the largest gold producing concern in the Run\nsinn empire. It also has given a blunl\nrefusal to Sir Herbert Samuel, British\npostmaster general, who applied for a\npassport to Russia, on the ground tha'\nhe wished to discuss personally reforms With the Czar. His government\nsupported his claim on the ground thai\nhis official position should exclude\nhim from radical restrictions when on\nofficial business. The Russian government answered with an nhsolut'\nnegative, saying that on no account\nwould be be allowed to enter the frontier.\nSir Herbert Denies.\n*\"Rv Dully News Lensed Wire.)\nLONDON, Oct. 22.\u2014Sir Herbert\nSamuel, postmaster general, when\nseen bv a correspondent, denied that\nbe hnd applied for a Russian pnssport\nand that It had boon refused him\nTbis denial, however. Is likely to be\nnurely diplomatic, for it is probable\nthat If he contemplaled a trip to Russia bis efforts tn obtain passports Were\npurely tentative and unofficial.'\nDISAPPEARANCE IS\nSTILL MYSTERY\nJudge   Refuses  to   Presume   Denth   of\nMissiri*g Bank Manager\u2014Left\non Yacht,\nLONDON, Oet. 22.\u2014For the sixth\ntime an attempt was made in probate\ncourt yesterday to prove tho death or\nWilliam Robertson Lidderdale, the\nbank manager who disappeared mysteriously 20 years ago, when, it is alleged by the opposing insurance companies in which he wns insured for\n$10,000, he eloped with Miss Beatrice\nAlice Hnzeldoan Vining, described as\nnn eecentric wealthy American. Lidderdale, who was nbout to he married\nto Miss Chapman of Newbury, Berkshire, In January, 18A2, drew $1,500\nfrom his account and came to London\nIn tho following month the London\nnewspapers contained the announcement that Lidderdale had died on\nbonrd of Miss Vinlng's yacht as n result of an accident. Subsequently\nMiss Chapman received a letter containing SLfJOO In hank notes, with n\nmessage from Liddcrdnle, saving he\nwas true to her. The judge adjourned\nthe case, remarking thnt it looked as\nif Miss Vining and Lidderdale went\naboard her yacht and ho thought MIsm\nVining could probably produce Lidderdale.\nFOREIGN   BORN  VOTERS\nNUMER0U8 IN NEW YORK\n(By Dnlly News Leased Wire.)\nWASHINGTON, Oct. 22.\u2014Tho Influence that will he exerted by foreign\nborn voters In New York city in the\nforthcoming elections is Indicated in a\nbulletin Issued by tho census bureau\ngiving the foreign born white males\nof voting age and the number naturalized. New York city orj,AprlI 15, lfllO,\ncontained 828,793 foreign horn white\nmales of voting ago (21 and over), of\nwhom 318,001 wcro-.nat\u00abraiized. More\nthan half, -161,246, of the total number of foreign born white males of. voting age are in Manhattan borough:\n2*18,544 In Brooklyn; 48,676 In the\nBronx; 38,350 In Queens, and 11,377 In\nRichmond. The percentage naturalized Is 32.3 In Manhattan, 43.9 in\nBrooklyn; 48.3 In the Bronx, 54.8 in\nQueens and 49.6 in Richmond.\nEXTENSIVE ALTERATIONS TO\nWINNIPEG  HOTEL\n(By Daliv News Leased Wire.)\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 22.\u2014The extensive\nalterations to the Royal Alexandra\nhotel and the Canadian Pacific railway station, which have been so much\ndiscussed recently, are about to be\ndefinitely authorized by tho authorities ot Montreal and work may begin\nat any time. 'Probably the work will\nbo commenced In about four weeks,\nas the pressure of space has become\nso urgent that the officials feel thnt\nthey can hardly afford to wait until\nthe spring before they make tho start.\nThe complete improvements will cost\nabout $1,000,000. The extensions nnd\nalterations will be so general that the\nwhole appearance of the block will be\nchanged and the Improvements will\naffect the hotel and station, both of\nwhich will be practically doubled In\nsize. A large new grill room, a ballroom and banquet hall, besides 300\nnew bedrooms, will be the principal\nalterations to the hotel. Tho station\nitself will be practically doubled in\nsize by moving the front forward and\nso bringing lt level with that of the\nRoyal Alexandra.\nFEAR  FOR SAFETY OF\nUNITED STATES TRANSPORT\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nWASHINGTON, Oct. 22.\u2014Fears are\nfelt for tho safety of tho transport\nPerry, which with 75 marines and the\nUnited States commission aboard was\nlast heard from October 12 off tho\ncoast of Santo Domingo, whither it\nhad been ordered to Investigate the\nuprising there and Interference If\nAmerican or foreign Interests were endangered. Acting Secretary Wlnthrop\ntoday sent urgent dispatches to all stations. In Santo Domingo and Haytf\nasking information of the vessel's\nwhereabouts.\nGREEKS LEAVE CHICAGO\nTO  FIGHT AGAINST TURKEY\n(By Daily News Lensed Wire.).\nCHICAGO, Oct. 21.\u2014Fifteen hundred\nGreeks left Chicago last night to engage In tho battles of their country\nwith Turkey. Their departure was the\nsignal for a demonstration on the part\nof their countrymen who were left he-\nhind. With red fire burning and firecrackers exploding the departing\nGreeks were escorted to the railway\nstation by nearly 2,000 of their countrymen. In the front ranks the blue\nand white flag of Greece was displayed together with an American flag\nand each of the departing soldiers carried a small Greek flag.\nTO REVOLUTIONIZE\nB00T|TRAD\nBritish Company With  Four and Ha\nMillions  Capital\u2014Moveable\nSoles and  Heels.\n(By paily Nows Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Oct. \/22.\u2014An attemi\nshortly will be made by a compan\nwith a proposed capital of $4,500,0(\nto revolutionize one of the most in\nportant industries of the country\u2014tl\nboot and shoe trade. The keynotes (\nthe campaign will bo the Forbec sy\nte,m\u2014a new treatment of leather\u2014an\nthe Forbec sliding sole and heel. Tl\nname Forbec is derived from that (\nO. V. Forbec, chairman of the parer\nsyndicate. Some idea of the mngn\ntude of the trade which this compan\nwill attempt to capture may be galm\nfrom the following figures:\nPairs of boots made and sold in\nyear In the United Kingdom, 100,0\n000; value, $225,000,000; pairs ofleat\ner heels used annually in Great Br\nfiin. 300,000,000; pairs of rubber hot\nsold by one firm in a year, 20,000,0(\nThe sliding soles and heels can\nfitted   in   55   seconds.      Between   I\nsliding soles aim the foot there iht<\nvenes the middle sole, which Is treat\nby a special process.\nIt Is claimed for the now footwe.\nthat It will wear from 60 to 100 p\ncent longer than any other leather,\nli permanently waterproof. It is,)\na large extent a non-conductor of hea\nthat is, It keeps tho foot cool In su\nmer and warm in winter. It* abolish\ndown-trodden heels, for heels can\nchanged over or renewed altogether |\nn few moments.\nTwenty thousand people have trii\nthe new footwear and encouraging i'i\nports have been received, especlalj\nfrom the army.\nWhat Mrs. 8. Says\n\"Words nre useless to express tl\nwonderful magic of White Swan Yeai\nBread? Why we have never had aul\nluxury on our table before.\" Sold '1\npackages of 6 enkes for 5c. Free sam-fl\nsent by White Swan Spices & Cereap\nLimited, Toronto, Ont.\nSPUN  ROPE FOR  HANGINGS ]\n(By Dally Naws Leased Wire.)\nBALTIMORE, Md\u201e Oct. 22.\u2014Willis!\nMeyers, tho man who spun the roM\nthat hanged Gulteau, the assassin^\nPresident  Garfield,  and   hundreds \\\nother   murderers   In   all   parts* of  tl\ncountry, is dead here, aged 74.   M<T\ners never saw a hanging, as he hi\na horror of this method of, capital piT\nishment.   He would make the nooa|\nand  havo  them all  prepared  to\naround   the necks  of the  condemn^\nmen, but there his work ended,\nreceived high praise'for his work,\nrope that Meyers spun ever broke,\nit was made of the strongest aolect|\nhemp fibre. ^^\n\"The Connoisseur\"\nThe man who KNOWS good things at table finds royal pleasure in|\na  cup  of\nInstant Postum!\n\u2014-the new food-dfinkl\nThis beverage has a charming flavour much like mild, high-grade*]\nJava.\nINSTANT  POSTUM  is regular    Postum    in    concentrated    foriyr-\nnothihg added\u2014made  in the cup\u2014\nNo Boiling Required\nStir.a level toaspoonful in a oup of hot 'water\u2014 add sugar and!\ncream  to  taste\u2014a  delicious  bovcrage   is  ready  instantly. I\nTea and coffee contain a drug\u2014caffeine\u2014which causes a lot ofl\ntrouble\u2014nervousness. , sleepless nights or some other annoying con-l\ndition. I\nPostum tends to build up steady nerves and a -clear, trusty brainj\nand a ten days' trial will show valuable  results. r\nGrocers sell Instant Po3tum in 100-cup tins at 50c. Smaller tincj\nmaking 50 cups at 30c.\nCoffee averages about double that cost\nIf your grocer does not have Instant Postum, send a 2-oent stamp!\nto cover  postage, for a  free  5-cup sample.\n\"There's a Reason\" ipr POSTUM\nCanadian PoBtum Cereal Co., Ltd., Puro Food Factories, Windsor, Ont\n WEDNE8DAY .... OCTOBER i\nCft Ball? j&ctoa.\n*%\nPAGE THREE\nWW .DISAGREES;\nTG BE RE-TRIED\n(Continued from page one.)\nnot have been Bradshaw as he was\nIn Nelson at that time, Blllington\nBald, \"we're looking for tlie reward,\"\nand made other remarks to the same\neffect at least threo times.\nHe met Bradshaw again that night\nat'between 9:40 and 0:46 o'clock.\nBradshaw was walking along Baker\nstreet from the west and told witness\nthat ho had gone to a picture show\nabout 8:15 o'clock and afterwards had\nwalked down to tlio Canadian Pacific\nrailway depot.\nCrossexamlned by- Mr. Hamilton,\nwitness said that he took out his watch\nwhen he met Bradshaw because the\nman was under suspicion. It was correct that Bradshaw had said that It\nmight have been 8:25 when ho went to\nthe picture show on June 11. He had.\nquestioned Bradshaw and had told\nMcLeod to watch him as It occurred to\nhim that Mrs. Nock's idea of the time\nmight be incorrect.\n'Saw Bradshaw at Seven.\nOn tho opening of the afternoon session Constable , McLeod produced, at\nthe request of his lordship, his discharge from the Glasgow police force\nof which he was a member for nine\nyears, having spent three years of that\nperiod as a plain clothes man. The\ndischarge spoke of tlio constable's conr\n*?iluct very favorably. Seven certificates, showing' occasions upon which\nConstable McLeod was rewarded for\nespecially meritorious conduct were\nalso brought Into court.\nMr. Blljington, recalled, told his lordship that he did not know Constable\nMcLeod 'personally. He had known\nFx-Sergt. Bills for several years.\nL. H. Poole of- the Poole Drug company, stated that counsel for the defence, Mr. Moffatt, had purchased the\nbottles of perfume exhibited at the\nstore on Monday.\nHe could not detect nny perfume\nwhen counsel placed Bradshaw's grip\nunder his nose. On the night of June\n11, witness saw Bradshaw about 7\no'clock, when accused bought some\ngrape juice and chocolate. He saw\nSergt. Ellis standing on the street at\nthat time. '\nMrs. Anderson Testifies.\nMrs. Josephine Anderson, who sells\ntickets at' the Starland theatro, said\nthat Bradshaw frequently went to tho\nshow. On tho evening of June 11 she\nsold a ticket to Bradshaw. She remembered tiie night because the following niqrnlng.h'cr husband told her\nthat Bradshaw had been arrested for\nsetting a fire the provious hlght. She\nhad at that time exclaimed that Bradshaw was In the show that evening.\nSho placed tho hour that he entered the\nshow at about 8:15, because she looked\nut her watch three or four minutes\nbefore he arrived. Sho was not certain about the clothes he was wearing,\nbut thought that the hnd a light suit\nand a grey hat, something like the\nbrown one tho prisoner had in court.\nCrossexamlned by Mr. Hamilton,\nwitness said that she could not tell of\nanyone who had entered at any special\ntime on an evening previous to June 11.\nOn that night she remembered, that ,*\u00a3.,\nA. \"Waterman had gppe into!-tne sh\"pw;\nat  ribout   0:lfS-as-\u00bbhe had'looked at\nher watch at that time. It was a mistake, she said, when she said at the\npreliminary' hearing that Mr. Waterman had entered about. 8:45 pr. 9\no'clock.\nFlourished  His Ticket.\nWalton Heppel, 14 years of age, who\nwas doorkeeper at the Starland\ntheatre, stated that he knew Bradshaw\nwell. On June 11 a special feature,\n\"Tho Redman's War,\" was a picture\nshown. On that night us Bradshaw\nentered, the theatre he flourished his\nticket around witness' face as he, witness, wns busy taking tickets from\noilier people. The time was about 8:15,\nas the second show was about starting. He went out about 9:20.. Witness\nsaid that Bradshaw usually came to\nthe show about 8:15. The show started about 7:30 and occupied about one\nhour.\nThomns Bastable said that Bradshajw\nwas working all day until 5 o'clock.\n, Martin Sinclair, operator at the Star-\nland theatre remembered two films\nshown on,June 11. One was \"The Bed-\nman's War,\" and the other was two\nboat races. It took about 30 minutes\ntc run tho two pictures. The Bedman\npicture was shown one night only.\nThree shows wero given nightly, said\nwitness lo Mr. Hamilton, each occupying one hour;\nMan Resembled Bradshaw.\nC. W. Young, chief of city police,\nsaid that foi* purposes of Identification he had got to know Bradshaw\nfairly well. When he was arrested in\nSeptember, 1911, on a vagrancy charge,\naccused hod objected to being watched\nby the police, witness telling him that\nif he did not like it he had better go\nsomewhere else. On another occasion\nwitness had advised Bradshaw to leave\nthe city, the reply bejng that he, accused, would go and see his lawyer.\nHe saw a man oil the street one day\nwho resembled Bradshaw somewhat, in\nbuild and general appearance. At a\ndistance when ho saw him coming\ndown the street ho thought he was\nBradshaw. On looking at tho man\nmore closely he had seen that he was\nnot Bradshaw.\nCrossexamlned, Chief Young said\nthat ho had never seen the \"double\"\nbefore or after the occasion mentioned.\nF. F. Payne, a newspaperman, who\nsaid that he knew Bradshaw well, having reported the proceedings in tho\ntwo preliminary hearings, told of\nmeeting a man near tho P. Burns\nbutcher shop on Baker street, on a\nSaturday night about the end of May\nor the beginning of June last and of\nbelieving him to be Bradshaw, pointing the' man out to his wife ns such.\nNear the Madden house corner he\nmet a second man whom he was later\nconvinced was Bradshaw, the man on\ntrial.\nCross-examined, witness said that\nhe had never seen him before nor,after that occasion and that he had not\npointed out the alleged \"double\" to\nChief Constable Black, Although he\nhnd discussed the matter with both\nthe city and provincial police.\nSaw Man Like Bradshaw,\nWilliam Hazel said that he know\nBradshaw well for the, purpose of\nidentification. Just after the fire on\nthe Granite road on .tune 11, he met\nsomeone on Baker street who he\nthought was Bradshaw until he got\nclose to the man and realized that tho\naccused was in jail,\nIn the box, Bradshaw gave hla age\nas 24 years. Ho arrived at. Nelson In\n.1910 and had been in the district'ever.\nsince He told his story of being arrested In September, 1911, and in\nApril, 1912, and of being watched and\nquestioned.by the police. . He stayed\nin the city, after having been warned\nby Chief Young,. \"To spite them.\"\nBradshaw Describes Movements. ,\nComing to\" June 11, Bradshaw said\nthat he left work about fi o'clock^ went\nto his room, washed and changed lils\nclothes and went for a walk. He went\nto supper about 6:15, the meal occupying 20. or 25 minutes. He spent l*1\nor 15 minutes In tho sitting room, lip.\nwent for a walk and at the Poole Drug\nstore bought two bars of chocolate.\nHe went back to the hotel at about\n7 o'clock. He stayed there about ,15\nminutes. Leaving the hotel at 7:20\nho walked to Ward street and at the\npostofflce corner he asked some men\nfor a match. He walked alpng nearly\nto the Poole Drug company's store.\nHe re'turtied to the hotel and thought\nthat he stayed for a few minutes at\nthe door. He went to Ward and along\nBaker west. He had a dish of Ice\ncream at Bean's going again to tho\nhotel, Bradshaw said that he obtained a drink of water and spoke to\nPeter Nelson, tho bartender.\nEnters  Picture Show,\nBradshaw said that he entered the\npicture show at between 8:05 and\n8:10. He did not look at his watch\nuntil he had seen probably half a\nreel; at that time it was 8:20.\nHe named the pictures he saw and\nsaid that the show occupied about\nan hour. He was never on tho Granite road except on one occasion a\nyear ago last summer. He had never\nhad a belt, coat or hat such as described by Mrs. Nock. Ho, used the\nmatches given him by Thurman and\nthro wthe box away on Tuesday while\ngoing to work along Vernon street..\n\"I UBed It up In my room for lighting purposes. I used lt for lighting\ncigarettes at night and for reading,\"\nsaid Bradshaw when asked what became of the third candle. It was before Juno 6 that he used the candle\nHe threw a small portion of the candle that remained Into a utensil In\nhis room.\n' Cross-examined by Mr. Hamilton,\nthe prisoner said that he had no other\ncandles than the throe referred to\nwhich he purchased In April. Therr\nwere no candles in his room on March\nI'i or later but before April 17 as stated by Constable McLeod. He started\nto use the third candle about the end\nor May or the beginning of June. He\nthought he used it about eight time::\nbut not on consecutive days, B>\nthought be had usod it up by June <!:\nlie was certain it was before June 6\nHe did not think that lie started to\nuse tho candle before May 26. He had\nused matches to light his cigarettes\nbefore May 26 and after. June 6.\nStuck Candle on Paper.\nHe stuck tho candle on a piece of\nbrown paper nnd placed It on the\nbureau; sometimes during tho day he\ntook it off the paper and on other occasions be left it on the bureau during the day. The end of the candle\n.thrown away was smaller than the\npiece produced. He recollected giving\na different account of the disposition\nof tho match box at the preliminary\nhearing when he said first that he\nhad thrown It on Baker street and\nsecond that h'e had thrown it on Ward\nstreet near Baker. He thought that\nIt was somewhere on one of these\nstreets.,,He explained, that he had remembered several things since the jire-\n.limiaauy hearing.   \u25a0\u2022\u2022\u2022\u25a0\u25a0-     >    .iri*     I'*\nTHREE NEW STYLES\nThe Greatest Values Ever Offered\nin the Greatest of all Musical Instruments.\nVictor-Victrol\u00ab\\jjfX,\nHahoBany     or oak,\n$ioo\nVictor-Vich-ol. \u00a9 Xfc\nMahogany or oak\n$135\nVictor-VictroU SJ XIV,\nMahogany G&nr oak\n$200\nreproduces the voices of the world's greatest singers in so\nnatural and lifelike a manner th^t you actually FEEL the\npresence of the Iiyjng, Artist. Double-sided Records are 90c\nfor the two selections. Ask for a Free copy of our 300 page\nMusical Encyclopedia listing over 5000 Records. Call at\nany of \"His Master's Voice\" dealers everywhere and hear\nyour favorite music on a genuine Victrola. When thinking\nof Christmas Gifts remember the Victrola and the famous\n\"His Master's Voice\" trade mark. Use only genuine \"His\nMaster's   Voice\"   Needles    with\nVictor Records.\nBerliner Gram-o-phone Co.,\nMONTREAL\nLIMITED\n\\\\4fi &ffy<$tMqn,  BOOKSELLER AN*        D* 3TATIONftR, NELSON; tt. C\u201e   0i8f ftlBUTm*G AGENT,\nCounsel for the crown referred to\nyradsnaTr\/'s \"Improving memory\" several timers during the grilling cross-\nexamination through which he put the\nprisoner. Several differences wero\nshown between the story told in direct\nexamination yesterday and that told\na*, the preliminary hearing. Mr. Ham\nilton paid special .attention to Bradshaw's account of his actions between\n6 and 9 .o'clock, on, the evening of the\nfire and'elicited a'st'ory of\" an extra\nwalk for a few blocks from tho Klon\ndyke hotel.\nTimes V\/alk to Ranch.\nJxihn Scolej* said that at the request of the provincial police, fie had\nwalked out to the Nock ranch from\nthe Klondyke hotel. The journey occupied him 33* minutes aB fur as he\ncould remember and it took him 27\nminutes to return. Cross-examined by\nMr. Harnlltori'witness said that his\nweight was 21r0 pounds and his age\n80 jjears! *'\"'\nDora  Jordan on  Stand.\nCalled in rebuttal by the crown\nArthur ailker said that on the night\nof June 11 he saw Bradshaw pass hie\nfather's house on Victoria street. He\nwas.walking westwards. It' was be\ntweon 7:15 and 7:30 o'clock.\nWitness told Mr. Moffatt that Bradshaw was not walking fast, just sauntering.\nDora Jordan said that she saw Bradshaw on tho night of June 11. He\nwas crossing from the Wood-Vallance\nstore toward the Western Canada Investment company where witness was\nstanding. She saw him go toward tho\nStarland and later saw him leave\nThe time he passed witness was \"be-\ntween 8;30 and 8:-to. He came out\nbefore   9:45.\nTo his lordship witness snld tliat who\nplaced the time boeunse she listened u\nthree selections at the band eonce.*t\nwhich commenced at S o'clock, and heard\nthe curfew at 8:1*5 a few minutes nfior\nshe entered.\nMrs. rayons, who was chambermaid rt\nthe Klondyke hotel in May, leaving on\nJune 1, declared that from May 211 Lo\nthat date sho saw no partly luirneJ\ncandles on a piece of brown paper on\ntlie  bureau.\nTo1 Mr. Moffatt witness admitted writing a letter in which she expressed surprise at hearing of Brodshaw's arrest,\nspoke favorably of him, stated that -iho\nhnd not seen the end of a candle he said\nho had thrown Into a utensil In the rou.y\nund that she. had only seen one candl\nIn the drawer.\nShe told   his lordship that during  t'.ii\nlatter  part  of  May she  did not  Bee  ;\npiece of brown paper spotted witli grea^i\nor otherwise on the dressing table.\nMoffatt Addressed Jury.\nAddressing'-the Jury, Mr. Moffatt asked\neach member If he had any preconceived\nidea of the case to set it aside before\ncoming to nny verdict. They might have\na strong suspicion which some of the evidence at tlie trial had not eradicated, but\ntliey hud to go farther and find tliat\nhis guilt was proved beyond a reasonable doubt before they could find him\nguilty.\nIf the mnn Mrs. Noch saw at tho sate\nthat night was thu prisoner then Hru.i-\nsliaw was the guilty man.\nMrs. Nock was absolutely positive thnt\nthe hat, coat and the belt with a broad\nicd bnnd was worn by the man she saw.\ncontinued Mr. Moffatt, who declared that\nIf Bradshaw had had any of these clothes\nthe police in their frequent searches iu\nhis rooms and among his effects woulJ\nhave found them.\nIf Bradshaw had wished to disguiaJ\nhimself would he not have used som<\nclothes totally different, instead of soni.\nvery much like he those he wore or\ndlnarlly? asked counsel.\nHe thought the Idea of a -$2,000 reward\nfigured very largely in the mind of Wil\n11am Billlngton. He reminded the jury\nof the conversation regarding the fire\nhaving been nt- 7:30 between Ellis and\nNuck and  Blllington.\nWith, regard to the candle Mr. Morfalt\nasked, holding tip the exhibit: \"Docs that\nsuggest that that candle hns been stumped on?\" He pointed out that the wicit\nwas straight up and suggested that when\na candle was stamped on tho wick was\nbent down Into the grease and the\ncandle usually stuck to the boot.\nHe suggested to the Jury that the piec.\nof candle produced was not that stanipoJ\non by Billlngton and that the latter\nplere had never been found.\nBradshaw had no conceivable mottvi\nfor committing arson, argued counsel,\nwho referred to tbe fact that Bradshaw\nhad not hesitated to tell his story to tho\npolice nor to go In the box nt the preliminary hearings and the trial, and subjected himself to lengthy cross-exumln-\nutii'ii.\nHo referred to the conflict In evidence\nwhich placed Hiudshaw on thu Granite\nroad at 7:15, on Victoria street between\n7:15 and 7:30, while Frank Phillips said\nthat he saw him at 7:15 at the postr-fi\"!.^\ncorner, nnd urged tho claims of the la \"\nnamed  to  thn greatest consideration.\nCounsel asked the jury If It appeared\nreasonable   for   Bradshaw   in   the   short\ntime during which he was not placed\ntho evidence,   to  have travelled  the\nmile  each   way,  3 miles  in  all.   lo\nNeck  ranch,   go   up  through  the  busn,\nlight the  two fires, return  through  tiie\nbush, change bis clothes and got to U.j\nStarland by 8:15.\nMr. Moffatt spoke for over an hour.\nCounsel  For Crown Speaks.\nMr. Hamilton, in his address to the\njurjy, said tliat ho did not think there\ncould be -any dispute as to the incendiary nature of the fire nor that if it\nhad not been got under control that\nwould have lvached the Nock house.\nThere was Mrs. Nock's positive, u,*\nshuken testimony thnt Bradshaw won\ntiie man she met in her garden, whom\nshe identified In the provincial Jail fro.o\na numhor of other men. A very slg.i.-\nflcant thing was that she recognized tne\nscent used by Bradskaw.\nMr. Hamilton asked the jury to tnI-.o\nas a second reason for finding Bradshaw\nguilty the evidence of Norman Irving.\nIt was true tliat the boy had fixed thi\ntime at 7:15 but he hod not done so hy\na clock but hy the crowd coining up\nfrom the Crow boat. The tlmo must\nthe re Con* be only approximate. \u25a0 Ho suggested that the time was really a great\ndeal later than 7:15 when Irving saw the\nman. Glitter's time cd! 7:15 was also\ngiven approximately, but'there was th*1.\nfact that somewhere ' about that time\nBradshaw wns walking out in the dlreo\ntlgn of tlie Granite road.\nCandlo Strong  Point.\nThe conjunction of the fact thnt to?\nmarked candle was found nt the Nock\nranch with the three facts offered in t'ie\nevidence of Gllker, Irving and Mrs. Nock\nwns strongly urged upon the jury by\nMr. Hamilton. Tho piece of candle and\ntwo other candles were Identified by\nMcLeod, who marked them. Tho important thing was that on May 26 tin-\nthree candles were seen In Bradshaw's\nroom by McLeod .and on June 11 there\nwere only two-candles while the remains\nof tlie third were fblind at the ranch.\nLtradshaw's explanation was not worthy\nof belief for a number of reasons; One\nwas that Bradshaw said that he commenced to use tlie candle the day after\nMcLeod's last visit to. the room. Hn said\ntliat he had used it stuck, on brown\npaper and that the chambermaid could\nmil of thnt. The chambermaid had been\ni'iilied and know nothing. Another point\nwas wbT* he choso to uso a\ncandle for liBlitlng cigarettes on June l*\"\nAnother valuable piece' of clrcum9tantl.il\nevidence was tho finding of the match\nbox. Another point that must tell against\ntho prisoner was that HrfidBha\\v was\nable to tell what he did with the empty\nbox and that ho told different stories a:\ntho preliminary hearing and the trial .as\nto where he threw it awn**\/.\nTha defence had undertaken to prove\nan alibi. The critical time was betwa's.i\n7:15 or 1:2. and the time lie went hr.o\nthe theatre. Bluing tho prisoner's stoiy\nuf his movements, from 7:30 to 8 o'clock\nho referred only to having met two men,\nNelson at the Klondyke and J. W. John-\nstono on Baker street. Tho former sa.d\nthat ho did not see Bradshaw after 7\no'clock and Johnstone had not been called, but at tho preliminary hearing had\nHE SAID\u2014\"This salt is nice and dry. Yesterday the salt was so\ndamp that we couldn't get it out of the shakers. Did you put it in\nih6 oven and dry it ?\"\nSHE SAID-\u00abNo. This is \"REGAL\", made from WINDSOR\nSALT. Our grocer told me about it. He said it would stay dry and\nfree running at all seasons of the year.\"\nHE SAID\u2014\"He is right. This certainly is a damp day and this new\nsalt is perfectly dry.\"\nSHE SAID\u2014\"And this REGAL SALT comes in nice, clean wood-\nfibre cartons, coated with paraffin. That protects the salt from dust,\ndirt, moisture and odors\u2014which affect salt put up in bags. I certainly\ndo like Windsor Regal Salt\u2014and I like our grocer for telling\nme about it.\"\nWINDSOR \"REGAL\" SALT\nALWAYS DRY-ALWAYS FREE RUNNING\nnly\nstated   that   he   had   seen   him\nabout fi o'clock.\nThere was an Important discrepant-;\nbetween' Bradshaw's accounts of belli',\nat the Poole Drug store corner. At thi\npreliminary hearing he had stated lu.u\nhe was there at 7 o'clock, a statement\nsupported by L, X. Poole at the trial\nEx-Serf*, t. Ellis said that he saw Brad\nshnw at this corner at 7:3u and ooutise\nbelieved that the prisoner hud changee\nhis story to agree.\nHo did not think that the jury would\nconsider that Kills' statement as to f\ntime was correct; the other evlden\neven the prisoner's, showed it to\nwrong. Other peculiar tilings were that\nKills told Nook and Billington not to\nsay anything about It and that Ellis,\nalthough he did not believe that Bradshaw\nwas guilty, proceeded to make jnvestl\ngatfonfi himself Olid to tell McLeod i<\nwatch Hnulsluiw. It was also peculm*\nth.it Hills had not hunted up the provincial police and given them the chip.-1,\nmatch box and paper. Mr. Hamilton\ncontrasted Bradshaw's statement as to\nentering the theatre about S o'clock with\nbis statement to Kills that it might have\nbeen 8:15. Mrs, Anderson's evidence\nwas not verv decisive as she was naturally frequently interrupted. Heppel1--:\nevidence that the show started at 7:^0\noccupied an hour and that Bradshaw en\nterctl after the second show had started\nproved that the time must have\nafter S.UO, continued Mr.  Hamilton.\nRidicules  Double Theory.\nThe suggestion that Bradshaw had a\ndouble was somewhat ridiculed by M.'.\nHamilton, who described him as \"this\nmysterious man who comes out of nowhere and dlsHpnears nowhere, Tha\nevidence was either irrelevant or suggested that Mrs. Nock had seen tb:\ndouble. If the latter, Mr. Hamilton\nthought that it showed tn what deapeiftto\nstraights Ills learned fiiend had been put.\nWith regard to ehanglng his oiotiits\nit struck Mr. Hamilton that it would\nhave heen rather a clever thing lo.'\nI'nidshaw to do to change his attire In\nthe respects named by Mi's.  Nock.\nCounsel for the crown also spoke exactly one hour.\nHis Lordship's Charge.\nTn his charge to the jury, which occupied SO minutes, Mr. Justice Gregory remarked that counsel for the defeneu had\nsaid that'if the Jury came to the conclusion that the man Mrs. Nock saw wac\nBradshaw, then tbe prisoner was the\nguilty man. lie had no objection to the\njury accepting that. The evidence In tie*\nease was largely circumstantial. It was\na well known rule that where tlie evidence was circumstantial and not one\nfact was such as to glvo reasonable pro-\nsumption of guilt, that It was nece-*saiy\nfor the chain of circumstances to be\ncomplete. He drew attention to the two\nfacts contained In the evidence of Constable McLeod and Mrs, Nock. With regard to the motive he said that lt was\nnot necessary for the crown to prove\nany. although tin' case would be much\nstrengthened if the motive wero shown.\nHe thought that It would be difficult to\nmove nnv motive for all tho Incendiary\nfires which had occurred in the Nelson\ndistrict.\nSpeaking of the alibi evidence his Ion-\nship remarked tliat there was' no evidence of any kind as to Bradshaw s\nmovements between l:'oi) and H:15 o'clock.\nMiss .Jordan, who placed him at the picture show between 8:\"JO and _:!_ had set\nthe tlmo by two things, that she ha.I\nheard three selections by the band ami\nby tho curfew  which  rang at \"JiJG.\nWith regard to Mis. Nock's evidence\nIt looked to Ids lordship ns if she mig.'.t\nhe mistaken ns to thi* clothe.-\", althinig-.\nIt was not an unlieurd of thing for a\nman to be positively Identified by som<--\nono who turned  out to be mistaken.\nHe urged the jury not to consider the\nprovious trials nor to ho influenced by\nany nnpular feeling in the matter, it\nthero were nny reasonable doubt they\nmust glvo the benefit to the prisoner.\nHe explained that he had rtsltod for\nConstable McLcod's discharge pupeis,\nwhich wore entirely satisfactory, because;\nhe thought from his bearing tliat he was\nan old country policeman with conslde.*-\nablo  cvorience  in  police  matters.\nHe referred to Mis. Nock's evldiiucc f..l\nbeing  worthy   of consideration.\nThe case went to the Jury nt 10;*J0\no'clock.\nDaily Now* want *>ds 1 cent a word.\nINDIANS EARNED\nFIVE MILLIONS\nRodskin   Population    Practically   Stationary\u2014General Health Last\nYear  Was  Good.\n(By Daily News Leased Wiro.1\nOTTAWA, Oct. 22.\u2014The total Indian\npopulation of the Dominion on March\n31, 1D12, was ll)4,95G, according to the\nannual report of tlie superintendent of\nIndian affairs, Issued today. In addition there are 4,(100 Eskimos within the\nconfines of Canada, making a native\npopulation of 109,556. This is practically the same as for the previous year,\nthere being an increase of only a few\nhundred. The general health of, tho\nIndians for the year is reported as good,\nbeing conrineG to omureaks of measles\non several reserves in Quebec and the\nwest. Grippe was also somewhat prevalent among the red men but tiie\nnumber of futaltios was small. It is\nnoted lhat tuberculosis continues to\nprevail and will continue until there Is\na wider acceptance by the Indians of\nlhe information given them on measures necessary to prevent the disease.\nIt is noted that the efforts of the de-\npqrlnient to have the Indians engage in\nfarming is meeting with success. There\nhas been eonsidcrable increase in the\namount or land brought under cultivation as compared with the previous\nyear.\nIt will perhaps surprise many people\nto know that the earnings of the Indians uf the Dominion aggregated over\n\u202255,000,000. The pursuit of agriculture\nleads the list with a total *f $1,484,343\nto its credit. Then the red men receive $1,610,049 iu wages paid by white\nemployers.\nThere was a total of 325 Indfan\nschools in operation during the year,\nan increase of only one as compared\nwith the previous year. The Roman\nCatholics lead the list with SO day, 38\nboarding and 0 industrial schools, while\nthe Church of England is second w(tl*<\n77 day, 13 boarding and four industrial\nschools. The total enrollment for the\nyear was 11,303 pupils, 5,048 boys and\n5,655 girls, a slight increase as compared with 1911.\nTwo country youths were on n. visit to\nLondon.      Tliey    went   into   the   British\nMuseum and saw a mummy, over which\nhung   a   card    on    which   was   piloted,\n\"B. C. S7.\"\nThev were  mystified,  and  one said:\n\"What  do  von  make of  that,  SamV\"\n\"Well,\" said Sum, \"I should say it was\ntlie number of tbe motor car that killed\nhim.\"\u2014Harper's Basar,\nDailv News want ads 1 cent a word.\n[\nWhen You\nGet Run Down\n\u2014catch cold easily\u2014and dread, instead of enjoying,\nthe keen winter weather\u2014then you need\nNA-DRU-CO Tasteless\nPreparation of\nCod Liver Oil\nThis Na-Dru-Co Compound embodies the\nveil-known nutritive and curative elements of\nCod Liver Oil\u2014Hypophosphltes to build up the\nnerves\u2014Extract of Wild Cherry to act on the\nlungs and bronchial tubes\u2014and Extract of Malt,\nwhich, besides containing valuable nutriment\nItself, helps the weakened digestive organs to\nassimilate other food.\nThe disagreeable taste of raw Cod\nLiver Oil is entirely absent, and the\nCompound Is decidedly pleasant to take. In 50c.\nand Jl.00 bottles, at your Druggist's.\nNATIONAL DRUG AND CHEMICAL CO.\n302 OF CANADA, LIMITED.\n r    PAGE FOUR\nCfr'Atfl?Jletos.\nWEDNESDAY! .\nOCTOBER 23\nCtie Batlp j&exos.\nPublished   at   Nelson   every   Morning\nExcept Sunday, by\nThe News Publishing Company,\nLimited.\nW-  G.  FOSTER, Editor and Manager.\nWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23\nSIR   THOMAS   LIPTON   ASKS   FOR\nSPORTING CHANCE.\nJudging from his remarks telegraphed from Toronto yesterday. Sir Thomas\nLipton Is still eager to challenge for\nthe American cup and hag hope, that\nthe officers of the New York Tacht\nclub will consent to amendments to\ntjie regulations by which the contest\nIs governed which would give the\nChallenger a sporting chance of victory. ( it is to be hoped that the\nchanges In the rules may be permitted,\nfor otherwise the last race for the\ncup has probably been sailed.\n! It Is evident that under the existing\nrules the challenger faces a hopeless\ntask, and all that Sir Thomas Lipton\nasks Is for a chance to race under the\nrules that govern yacht racing of all\nkinds In the. United States, with the\nSingle exception of the American cup.\nUnder modern conditions the American cup rules are an anachronism\nwhich give to the holder of the cup an\nadvantage which conveys a practical\ncertainty of victory and which must,\nif maintained, result in the race falling\ninto  abeyance.\nNine years ago, Sir Thomas Lipton\nraced his third Shamrock - for the\nAmerican cup. Five years ago, ho\nagain challenged, but his challenge was\nrefused because he wished to race under changed conditions.\nTwo great injustices have been enforced by the New York Yacht club.\nOne Is that the challenger must cross\nthe ocean under her own sail. This\nmeans that while the New York Yacht\nclub can build a purely racing machine\nto defend the cup, the challenger must\nbuild a safer sea-goihg vessel\u2014therefore a clumsier and slower one than\nhe might otherwise have to do\u2014or\ntike the chance of a flimsy racing machine being badly racked in crossing\nthe Atlantic. Secondly, Sir Thomas\nLipton asks that he be allowed to\nchallenge under what is known among\nyachtmen as the \"universal rule\" of\nmeasurement of yachts\u2014the rule which\ndetermines time allowance in racing\nbetween two boats when they differ in\nsize. This rule governs technical matters for Internationa}, racing, except in\nthe case p.f.competitions for the American cup, which the New York Yacht\nclub, holders of the trophy, long ago\nplaced under a set of reglatlons. Theso\nregulations, In the opinion of the majority of yachtsmen, make all foreign\nattempts to win tiie cup useless.\n. That such a condition of affairs is\nregarded by good sportsmen as odious\nthere can be no doubt, and it is apparent that the implied reflection upon\nthe standard of sportsmanship main\ntained in the United States is being\nkeenly felt. Writing to the New York\nAmerican, which has started a cam-\npa-Ign to \"give Lipton a race,\" Mr. F.\nS. Nock, secretary of the Bast Greenwich, R. I., Yacht dub, and ono of the\nbest known yachting authorities in the\nworld, says:\n\"Sir Thomas Lipton has proven that\nhe is a true sportsman, and inasmuch\nas he is ready and willing to build\nboat and race under the 'Universal\nItulc,' I cannot see where there should\nbo   the   least   opposition   to   same.   It\nA BARGAIN\ndoes seem poor policy to hold a challenge cup hound with any ironclad\nrules, and furthermore, It is not the1\nessence of true sportsmanship to insist upon a rule which will give an\nadvantage to either the challenger or\ndefender.\"\nEDITORIAL   NOTE.\nThe showing made by the Turkish\ntroops opposed to the invading Montenegrin army does not, at first sight,\njustify the high reputation of the Ottoman soldier. But until we have definite\nInformation regarding the respective\nstrength of the combatants, it Is Impossible to pass Judgment. Montcnego\nhas the advantage of striking the first\nblow after presumably adequate preparation.\nCold Storage\n\"It's going to be a hard winter.\"\n\"How  can  you tell?\"\n\"By the size of the salary I'm getting. '\n\u2014Boston Transcript.\n\"We will season our little feast with\nsome Attic salt.\"\n\"Dear me; how odd! \"Wo keep our salt\nin tl.e kitchen.\"\u2014Baltimore American.\n\"What's that you say?\"\n\"I say our ancestors didn't know\nbeans.\"\n\"Well, If prices keep going up, our descendants will become very well acquainted with them.\"\u2014Louisville Courier-\nJournal.\n\"Why does Miss Schrcecher close her\neyes when she sings?\"\n\"Perhaps  she has a tender  heart.\"\n\"I don't quite understand.\"\n\"Maybe she can't bear to see how we\nsuffer.\"\u2014Birmingham Age-Herald.\nMrs. Willis\u2014\"I'm afraid the young man\nwho married our Emma Is very parsimonious.\"\nMr. Wlllis-\"How so?\"\nMrs. WIIlis-\"She writes that their\nhoneymoon is scarcely costing over her\nfirst 10 years'  salary.\"\u2014Life.\n\"And what is your occupation?\" asked\nthe accident insurance agent.\n\"I'm a woodsman. During the hunting\nseason I act as a guide.\"\n\"I'm sorry, but my company won't\nwrite a policy on your class.\"\n\"Why not?   Surely I'm a good risk.\n\"M>- dear sir, you're not a risk; you're\na certainty.\"^Detroit Free Press.\nThis Date in History.\nThe first friction machines were patented In Knglnnd sa years ago today by\nWallicr, of Stockton-on-Tees, England.\nLucifer matches came Into use about 1831.\nPor many years mutches were very expensive, a package of CO costim- a shilling\nor iffi cents. In 1342 Reuben Partridge,\nan Englishman, patented machinery for'\nmanufacturing tbe splints. Tl.ree y\"ears\nlater Schrotter of Vienna produced his\namorphous phosphorus, by heating ordinary phosphorus in a gas which it cannot absorb, and tlie use of matches was\nthereby rendered less dangerous, and the\nmanufacture less unhealthy. For a lone\ntime workers in match factories were\nsubjected to the likelihood of terrible occupational diseases, but the processes\nnow In use reduce tlie dangers to a minimum. For 30 years match manufacture\nin France ban been a government monopoly. The first American match patent\nwas granted 7fi years ago tomorrow,\nThe Weather\n(By \"Dally News Leased Wire.)\nTORONTO, Oct. 12.-Since last night a\ndisturbance of Importance has developed\nover the lake region and rain is falbJiJ\ntonight over the greater patt of Ontario,\nIn Quebec and the maritime province.*\nand also In the west the weather had\nbeen fine.\nMin. Max.\nNelson       27 *.'J\nVancouver       12        ifl\nKamloops       !>**> 'iS\nEdmonton     22        50\nPrince  Albert      24 Hi\nMoose  Jaw       33        al\nRegina      '\u25a0''J        B5\nWinnipeg       22 44\nPa fry   Sound       52        112\nLondon       \"m U)\nToronto       47        oi\nOttawa       M        <>i\nMontreal    '.    411 ti3\nSt.   John       :tQ ~-\nHalifax       28 iti\n55 ACRES of first class land, situated on Government Wagon Road,\n'pne hours ride from Nelson, close to\n.School and Post Office.\n10 acres of the above Is cultivated,\nin clover and partly planted to\ncommercial winter apples, all\nfenced, abundance of running water for all purposes, new frame\nshack 20x24.\n\"the 10 acres alone will produce GO\n,tons of potatoes.\n.This flue property which we consider the best buy In the district is\noffered for the first time at the\nvery low figure of $65 per acre.\nTerms to suit you.\n\u25a0\" Be advised In time nnd lay the\nfoundation for your future Independence. The above property purchased now will make you independent of landlords for all time to\ncome.\nAsk us to show you this property.\nIt will be a pleasure to do so.\nB.C. United Agencies\nP. O. Box 232 Phone 391.\n419 Baker Street, Nelson, B. C.\nHUNTING SEASON\nPROLIFIC   IN   ACCIDENTS\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 22.\u2014Five\nhunting fatalities have occurred in\nthis vicinity since the opening of\nthe shooting season. Three accidents, one of them fatal, occurred\nat the last week end. Edward\nRestal! and John Stevens, emplcye\nof the Canadian Pacific railway at\nNorth Bend, were shooting when\nRestall was killed by the accidental discharge of Stevens' gun.\nTheo. Hayes, while climbing a\nfence with hie gun, shot himself\nthrough the wrist and had to havo\nhis arm amputated. Fred Parmit-\ner had his eye shot out by his\nnephew who was aiming at pheasants and did not notice that the\nolder man was in line with the\ngun.\nSECOND  DEATH   FROM\nQUEEN   MINE  ACCIDENT\n(Special tr- Ths Dally Nows.)\nYMIR, B. C, Oct. 22.\u2014Albert Y.\nW. Bowers who was one of the victims of the accident at the Queen\nmine on Sunday morning, died\nlast night at the Ymir hospital\nfrom injuries, at 10:30 p. m.\nNone of the unfortunate man's\nrelatives have so far been lo-ated\nin this country; his mother, Mrs.\nJohn Brown, is a resident of Lincolnshire, Eng. At this hour, no\ndisposition has been made as. to\ndisposal of remains, but it is prob\nable that interment will be made\nby the Ymir Miners' union of this\ncamp.\nThe funeral of the other unfortunate, Murdo Campbell, was held\ntoday at the undertaking rooms\nof William Clark, and the remains\nwere buried in the Ymir cemetery.\nCURED OF THIS\nEdmonton Girl saved By\n\"Fruit-a-tives\"\nEdmonton, Ai,ta., Nov. 20II11911.\n\"I had been a sufferer from babyhood\nwith lhat terrible complaint, Constipation.\nI have been treated by physicians and\nhave taken every medicine that I\nheard of, but without the slightest\nbenefit. I concluded that there was no\ncure for this horrible disease.\nFinally, I read of \"Fruit-a-tives\" and\ndecided to try them, and tbe effect was\nmarvellous.\nThe first box geve me great relief,\nand after I used a few boxes, I found\nthat I was entirely well.\n\"Frait-a-tives\" is the only medicine\nthat ever did me .any good for Chronic\nConstipation and I want to say to all\nwho suffer as I did\u2014Try \"Fruit-a-tives-\"\nwhy suffer any longer when there is a\nperfect cure in this great fruit medicine\"\n(Miss) E. A. GOODAX-L-.\n\"Fruit-a-tives\" is the only remedy in\nthe world made of fruit and the only\none that will completely and absolutely\ncure Constipation.\n50c a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 25c.\nAt all dealers or sent on receipt of price\nby Fmit-a-tivea Limited, Ottawa,\nNELSON EXHIBIT\nWINS PRIZE\n(continued from -page  one.)\nSTEAMER   NOT   BADLY   INJURED\n(By Daily Nows Leased Wire.)\nQUEBEC, Oct. 22.\u2014The steamer\nBengore Head, .now In tho graving\ndock has been surveyed and found not\nto be so seriously Injured as expected.\nShe Is to be temporarily repaired and\nrepairs are expected to be completed\nby next Saturday when she will start\nto reshlp her cargo.\nspoke at length, drawing from ids long\nexperience in the instruction of the\ncoming farmer. He was followed by\nMiss Matthews of Oklahoma who\nspoke on \"Farm Homes,\" dealing with\nthe question very fully, and pointing\nout the things that went to make tbe\nreal farm home. Dr. James A. McLean, president of the University ot\nIdaho, also addressed the assembly,\nbeing followed by Miss Lllla A. Hark-\nens of Bozeman, Montana.\nThe  sectional departments met    at\narlous   places during   the   day.    The\nagricultural colleges and experimental\nlation branch convened  In the  Baptist church at 9:30, while in tho afternoon      the    agricultural      forestry\nbranch met in the same place.    Agricultural   engineering was  the subject\nmatter discussed in the  Presbyterian\nhurch, as was also farm management.\nOther sectional gatherings were tho\nscientific research branch, crops and\nbreeding section; livestock nnd dairy-\nng soils, tillage and machinery and\nagricultural education. All sections\nwere attended by representative gatherings, tlie adureBaes delivered being\nvery informative in their summing up\nOf the subject lu hand.\nNo evening sessions were held today, practically all the delegates and\ncitizens attending tlie reception in the\nauditorium. A press banquet tendered\nby the executive of the congress was\npresided over by Hon. Duncan Mar*\nhalj. During tbe evening; Mr. Mar*\n;hall paid a tribute to' Miss' Cora' E'.'\nHind of the Manitoba Free Prois.\nwhom he declared, had done more, for\nagriculture In the past few yearn\nthan most of us have done in a life\ntime.\"\nNelson Wins Prize.\nA. Perry, Cardston, Alberta, wins the\naward for the best individual farmer's\nexhibit while Cardston carries honors\nfor the best district exhibit for grasses\nand forage crops. The best exhibit of\nsheaf grain goes to Pincher Creek, and\nndian Head is second. Indian Head\nand Cardston nre first and second In\nthreshed grain. In garden and field\n;ecds A. Perry, of Cardston, leads tlio\nlist.\nCardston board of trade captures the\nAlberta board of trade trophy, Indian\nHead taking the open board of trade\ntrophy.\nThe best alfalfa display prize was\nawarded H. F. Maunaell, of Macleod.\nXelson securing the award for the best\nbox of fruit. All competitions save\nthe Alberta board of trade arc open\nto tho world.\nOther prizes Include:\nDistrict exhibit, open\u2014Spokane Inland Emplro.\nState or province exhibit, open\u2014Saskatchewan.\nDistrict vegetables and roots\u2014Sacramento Valley, Cal.\nDistrict fruit\u2014Spokane Chamber of\nCommerce.\nIndividual jelly and fruit\u2014Miss\nMildred Swiss, Kaslo, B. C, first; Mrs.\nHeathersham, Magrath, second.\nBest peck potatoes\u2014II. Matheson,\nArmstrong, B. C.\nFour Dollars a Bushel.\nThe Mooney Seed company of Regina has bought the whole of Henry\nHolmes' prize winning Marquis wheat\n(.1150 bushels) for $1,000 or ?\u2022! a bushel.\nSaskatchewan Jubilant.\n(By Daily News leased Wire.)\nLETHBRIDGI*; Oct. 22.\u2014The special curs of tlie Saskatchewan contingent were abuzz with congratulations\ntonight over the province's success al\nthe exposition. The splendid trophy\nawarded to the state or province having the finest representative exhibit at\nthe exposition was tonight presented\nto the Saskatchewan contingent at\nthe reception by Lieutenant Govcrnoi\nBulyea. The competition hud been\nkeener, perhaps, in this class than In\nany other, fur the foremost members\nof the provincial and state departments of agriculture had personally\nsuperintended the placing of tlie exhibits and the contest waxed keen\nThe Manitoba gathering waa a little\nless jubilant over the victory of Us\nboys In the grain judging class, and\nof Its women and girls in the home\neconomics department. Principal\nBlack of the Manitoba Agricultural\ncollege referring to the mutter tonight, said that the team had not been\nchosen until this morning, the college\nat present being closed und the boys'\nsuccess was noiie the less creditable in\nview of the fact that they had no spe\ncial training, but just the knowledge\ngained from ordinary routine study\nand as there were six teams In the\ncontest they had a difficult task. Last\nyear a team from the same college\ntook second In the open stock judging\nWe Carry the Largest and Most Complete Line\nof\nIn the interior of B. C, and can suit the\nmost exacting in all grades at all prices.\nWe are featuring Tapestry  Squares  this\nweek only.\n9-ft. by 12-ft. Tapestry\nOnly\nStandard Furniture Ca\nComplete House Furnishers and Funeral Directors\nAgents Mason & Risen Pianos Nelson, 8. C.\ncompetition at Chicago. A handsome\ncup Is the award given to tiie winners\nin the grain judging.\" ,\nAbout 1,200 people,attended the reception and were present at the distribution of prizes \"aifd trophies;\" Receiving with Lieutenant-Governor Bulyea and Mrs. Bulyea were .Lieutenant-\nGovernor and Mrs. Brown of Saskatchewan, Hon. Martin and Mrs. Burrell\nand all the principal officials of the\ncongress and uf the city of Lethbridge,\ntogether with \"principals of departments of agriculture and colleges and\nthe function lasted several hours. No\nother gatherings of tho congress was\nheld during the evening.\nSWINDLED  MINISTERS CHARGE\nAGAINST   CHURCH   WORKER\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nCALGARY. Oct. 22,-r-M. L. Delong,\nmanager of tho .Mundane Land company, of Calgary, was charged with\nthe embezzlement of 5*137.50 from the\nCoquitlam Terminal company, Limited, of Vancouver, in a compla'fnt\nsworn to by Harry L. Knappen of\nVancouver.    Delong disappeared  from\nEYES\nTHANKS\nCalgary a week ago and is believed to\nb-; enroute to Mexico.\nGambling and fondness of liquor are\nsuid to be responsible fur Oolong's\ntroubles. He was an active church\nmember hnd Is reported, to hav\nswindled two Calgary minlstern out\nof sums aggregating $500 a few days\nbefore leaving. Delrmg's peeniations:\nare said to be in execs** of !1,0C0,   ,\nDaily News want nds 1 rent n word.\nPURE DRU\u00a9S\nIS OUR MOTTO\nAll Drugs used in dispensing your    doctor's  prescription  are    absolutely\npure.\nWe Never Substitute\nYou are safe when you leave your prescription! here.\nMen Who Know the Drug Business\nAlways At Your Service\nCanada Drug & Book Co. Ltd.\nPhone 81        Nelson's Pioneer Drug Store      P.O. Box S02\nAgents for the Remington Typewriter       ::       Mail Orders a Specialty\nThe Canadian Bank\noi Commerce\nSIR   EDMUND   WALKER,  C.V.O.,\nLL.D.,   D.C.L.,   President\nALEXANDER   LAIRD,   Gen.   Mgr.\nCapital    $15,000,000\nRest   $12,500,000\nTravellers' Cheques\nIssued by the Canadian DanK M\nCommerce ore tho most convenient\nform In which to carry money when\ntravelling. Tliey arc ncEotlaple evely\nwhere. self-WentlfyliiB, nnd t|,e,c:S\u201e\namount payable In the principal foreign countries Is printed on the (ace\nof every cheque. The cheques are\nIssued In denominations of\n$10, $20, $50, $100 and $200\nand may ho obtained by application\n\" In 'connection with He Travellers'\nCheques, The Canadlnn Bank or commerce hns Issued n booklet cntltlea\n\"Information of Interest to inose\nAbout to Travel,\" which will he sent\nfree to anyone applying for lt.\nNelson   Branch, J. S.   Munro,   Mgr.\nBank of Montreal\nESTABLISHED  1817\nCapital all paid-up $16,000,000\nRest      16,000,000\nHEAD  OFFICE:   MONTREAL\nRt. . Hon.    Lord    Strathcona    and\nMount Royal, 6.C.M.G., Hon. Prei.\nR. B. Angus, Esq., President\nSir    Edward    S.    Clouston,    Bart.,\nVice-President\nH. V   Meredith, Esq., Gen. Manager\nBranches in British Columbia\nArmstrong, Athaltner, ChllUwactt,\nCloverdale, Enderby, Greenwood, Woa-\nHier, Kamloops, Kelowna, Morritt,\nNelson, New Denver, New \"Westminster, Nicola, Penticton, Port Altierni,\nPort Hanoy, Prince Rupert, prince-\nton, Rossland, Summerland, Vancouver, Vancouver (Main street), Vernon,\nVictoria, West Summerland.\nNelson Branch, L. B. DeVeber, Mgr.\nm\nEXTRA SPECIAL\ncotch Whisky\nArthur Bell & Sons, Perth\nEstablished 1825\nQuality and Age Guaranteed\nSs Nelson Wine & Spirit Co.\nVernon St., Nelson.\nP. O. Box 1099\nIOHN BURNS & SON 2dnKffi2\nilson Haning Mill, Sash unci Door Factory-Factory and Yards, 706-12 Vernon\nitreet Doors, t-iash, Moulding*?; In stock and to order. Coast Lath and Shingles.\nI'unii'd Work und Bra f kets. Cement. i'Hck and Llmo always In stock. Auto-\nnatic Knife -Grimier-all kinds of grinding done. Stor0 Fronts and Office Flt-\nIligH, etc.. a specialty. Estimates niven on stone, brick and all kinds of work.\nUnvitiB ond raiHin- buildings and setting plate glass. Guaranteed against\nT-i-n^T      P     O.    nny   13-1.     Tele-plume 17S.\nIf you will vend this article and\nwatch this space. It will he interesting and valuable,\nFAKE..\nI4, Is such an easy word to Fay without tho use of brains that certain\nauthorities (?) nnd their echoes have\nbeen applying this and other courtesies\nto mc since I have opened my office\ntn \"Nelson. Meanwhile I havo been\nbusy hoeing my row single handed,\na total stranger and with endless other\nodds against mo, but I am steadily\nwinning in spite of everything, because I have a system that works.\nMY HOME.\nI have satisfied myself (that Nelson\nand vicinity suited mo properly for\na permanent home before I made a\nmove to begin my professional career\nhere.\nI am here to slay, and that to the\neverlasting sorrow of those who\nhumbug the public, then call honest\npeople fakirs, ete. I have been out of\nschool less than eleven months and\nhave had most of my experience right\nhero, but I have the only real system\nof eye practico in existence and am\nnow happy in tlie gratitude of patients\n'who have been and are being so faithful\nthat I must thank them and sny I have\none more good reason for being the\nmost hopeful of optimists.\nMY ENEMIES.\nI am now ready for my natural\nenemies. 1 shall give them the same\ncareful attention I give to my patients;\nsuch attention as only McCormick students know how to give. Watch this\nspace.\nDr. F. E. McConnell\nOphthalmologist\nOver Starland Theatre.\nAnnable Block After Nov. 1.\nWill Buy You a Nice\nictoria\neel\nRange\nFour 9-in. and two 5-in.\nholes,   16xl8-in.  oven,\nwith highfcioset ana water front\/all nicely nickel plated\nNothing better for the price in British Columbia.\nSee Q-af Line of Heating Stoves Before Yo\u00ab Bey\nLardware Co.\nNELSON, B. C.\n jjvzGc,\nWednesday\nOCTOBER 23\nfCf^-JtaUrj&rtDB,\nPAGE FIVE\nJell Trading Co.\nfe Will Pay\nrou to Help\nUs Move\nWo do not wish to handle our\n\u25a0foods more often than wc can help,\n10 here are a few\nMoney-Savers in\nEvery-Day Meeds\nCANNED CORN\nRegularly 15c,\n\u2022 8 cans for $1.00.\nCANNED   PEA8\nRegularly  16c\n8 cans for $1.00.\nCANNED   BEANS\nRegularly   lfic\n8 cans for $1.00.\nTETLEY'S TEA\ni pound cans, regularly $2.25, moving  price    $1.75\nSEEDED RAISINS\n|3egularly     2     for     25c,     moving\nprice    3 for 25c\nCANNED  PLUMS\n[Regularly   20c,    moving   price,    7\nfor     $1.00\nCANNED PEACHES\n|l pound cans, regularly 20c, moving\nprice  .7 for $1.00\nCANNED   PEARS\n|tegularly     20c,     moving   price   7\nfor $1.00\nTOILET SOAP\nJ-legularly 0  for 25c, moving price\nfor    25c\nUTILITY MILK\nNear to the natural flavor of genuine cream, large can  10c\nYACHT SALMON\n\u25a0\u2022Splendid quality, per can 20c\nCLARK'S PORK AND BEANS\nLargo cans,  regularly  25c, moving\nprice      15c\ntell Trading\nfhe Up-to-Date\nirocers\nUse Phone 56\nWhen Taking\na Vacation.\ngo to the great Halcyon Hot\nSprings, where you can secure not\nonly rest, but at the same time\nhave tho benefit of the best medicinal waters on the continent, un-\nequatcd for rheumatism and kindred ailments. The springs arc easy\nof access to travellers and the hotel\nhas been fitted up and is conducted with a view to the maximum of comfort and convenience\nfor guests.\nRates:    $12 and $15 ner week, or $2\nper day and upwards.\nHalcyon Hot Springs\nSanitarium\nWM.  BOYD,  Proprietor.\nHalcyon Arrow Lakes\nflOTELAKRIVALSOFADAY\nThe Hume\nTable d'Hota and a  la Carte\nHUME-J. Fisher, Wlllnid Graham,\nKosshiml; A. 1). Taylor, Jifhu A. Churlcs-\nworth, T. \\V. Cameron, J. A. Black, il.\nJ. McKcnzie, J. H. Maycock, il. L.\nSheath, L. Fran'tenburg, C. P. Ballon-\ntine, H. Thompson, 'Vancouver; F. M.\nTurner, Northport, Mrs, Ofakeyer, Coi-\nvllle; P. T. M, Galium, F. Domuth. li.\n.1. Anderson, ('.rand Ko:ks; W. It. Alloa,\nelty; Mrs. 11. V. Dennis, H. A. Coyloj\nSloean; D. D. Minds, Jr., Mrs. Cunningham, Seattle; L. O. Kellogg, Ta^um.i;\n\\V.   S.   Ilawlcy,   Spokane:   A.   J.   Curie,\nE. l-l. Cliipman, D. McLellaa, .7. u.\nKetullucl*,  Kaslo: D. G. Mcl'hall, Moyie;\nF. Summons, Proctor; ll. L\\ T. Gal-\nlualtli, Fort Steele; Arthur C. Riviere,\nPiiu'her Creek; Miss J. Johnson, George\nl'rl<*hn:d, Creston; Mr. and Mrs. 1. 8.\nXlrCracken, Cincinnati; Mlf. D. 1^ Nell is\nWainpsha; A. C. Mesker, Midway j II.\nIf. Townshend, Clubs Landing; K. 3.\nf'urnithcrs, Mollv Gibson; I.. It. Bubslon,\nXanaimo: Charles 11. King, Calgary; \\V.\nM. Gownns, Eholt; I.lruce White, R, CJ.\nHolme, S, L, Kaltl., Spokane; B, Townshend, C. \\V. West, Willow Point; C. i3.\nCluvton, Kokanee; 1). Dale, Cntwfeid\nHav; S. W. Marson. Winnipeg; W. G.\nScott, J. Colvfn, J. Craig Xellsun; Vancouver; George Prlchard, Creston; Percl-\nval Coles, Sunshine r.uy; 3. W. Black-\nmorc, F. IT. Colllnge. P. II,'LuU. Montreal; Mrs. J. A. Hawley, Miss M. O'Brloil\nMr. anil Mrs*. T. c. Cummins, Bonnlngton Falls: Archdeacon Boor, Kaslo; Gen.\nUse, B. Kalian, Spokane; C. J. Gospel\noily; T. C. Pe k. Midway: .1. W. Alnhery\nVictoria: Glenn Rash, Vlrden; Jam.*''\nFinch;  11.  Riviere,  Plnehcr Creek,\nKootenay Hotel\nTwo Doors from Postoffico\nVernon Street\nRates $1.00 and {1.25 por day.\nEvery  convenience  given   to   the\nBraveling public.   Electric piano nnd\nTninii bar in connection, where the\nliest of wines and liquors arc kept.\n\\ MRS.  MALLETT,  Proprietress.\nDoctor's\nSpecial\nThe celebrated\nWET WEATHER\nSHOE\nFor Men and\nWomen\nBuy a pair and\nbe sure of\nDRY FEET.\nThe Royal Shoe Store\nR. Andrew, Prop.\nLET    US    LOAN\nVOU     MONEY\nTo Buy or Build   Houses\nor pay off Mortgages\nCANADIAN HOME INVESTMENT\n5%\nWood Vallance Block.\n- Nelson, B. C.\nGrand Central Hotel\nOPPOSITE   POSTOFFICE\nAmerican  and  European plans\nH. H.  PITTS,  Proprietor\nKOOTKNAY-U. Ghorlevlck, Snska-\nIm; George Olson, city; li. Bono. Stain;   C.   I'lnziero,   (.1.   Giabiel'   N.   Wufl-\nlul. N. Mcherd. M M'islraiif;cr, Spokane\nI Bronl, G. JVdlnnl, M. Vlncangl, C.\n\u25a0lams, 11. Mason, Max .lanokitelek, D,\n\u25a0\u25a0mos, city; M. Pilke, Silverton; \\V.\n\u25a0-'Leed, F. Frangey. Grand Forks: Pat\n\"l'ggfs, Creston; John Urn ham; J. M.\nliluskin, T. Berolter,  Nell Track.\nSilver King Hotel\nBaker Street\nUnder new  management,\nWei]    furnished    rooms,    $1.00   a\npay   and   up.     Best   25c   meal   11\nelsun.    Best brands of liquors and\nI'igars, served  by union men,\nN.   McLEOD,   Proprietor\n\u25a0 SILVER KING\u2014Charles DoddS,\nJilin MeRabb, Cedar Point; R Abbott,\n, D. Graham, Three Forks; P. Kcrrn,\n\u25a0norir.au mine; B, Joyce, J. M. Anley,\nllveNon; T. Cimninglinm, F. Smith,\nlilino;    Alex    Davis,    G.    Fitzgerald,\n\u25a0anhrnok; Edward Patten, D, J. Sulil-\nIn, R. D. Munro, VV. Creun, W. John-\nIn, J. Campbell, P. Smith, It. Joyce,\n\u25a0ed Johnson,\" A. Majunsson, A. E.\n\u25a0cCralg, Willlani Angus, Taghum;\nwhn McLeod.\nTremont House\nBaker Street,  Nelson\nRANSOMF. & CAMPBELL\nProprietors\nEuropean  plan, 60c up\nAmerican plan, (1.25 and $1.50\nMeals, 35c\nSpecial  Rates per Month\nI TREMONT\u2014W. II. Ponpare, Fort-\nInd, Ore.; F. Dodge, Silverton; Don-\nId Morrison, Sheep Creek; 13. 'Zinldc,\niindon; B.\" Peterson, Hans Hansen,\nTrand   Forks;   J.  Anderson,   Phoenix;\nSalter Gehlert, Dave Anderson, Molly\n\u25a0ibson;     H.    Taylor,    Salmo;     John\njimpbell,   Proctor;   Donald   Mclnnes,\n|ty; Tully McKelvey, Alnsworth;\nInrglo Cameron, Rossland; R. Mc-\n\u25a0tod, Coffee Creek; John Chisholm,\nInslo;   C. C.  Marshall,  Sandon;   Roy\njj*rcB, Crescent Vnlley; Rod Campbell,\nnlr; P. Scott, Molly Gibson; J. Mid-\n\u25a0eton, Porcupine; A. Gill, Fred At*\n|nson, W. Turnbull, Kimberley; W.\nMcKinxcy, W. P. Hood, Spokane;\nJ Lenry.\n\u25a0\"ROYAL\u2014 R. Young, Georgo Payne,\nTrlnga Creek; E. Watklns, B. Creasey,\n\u25a0 lllow  Point;   G.   Janett,   A.  Brooks.\n\\ Hays, J, Fitzgerald, A. Raven, R.\nbunff.\"\nUnder New Management.\nF.  B. WH1TJNG, Proprietor..\nSTRATI ICON'A\u2014Commander Harrison,\nMajor ami Mrs. Gool-Ii, Miss Blytmah,\nCrawford Bay; Mrs. A. H. Noaks, S. *-..\nFi'ase'ri Balfour; F. J. Macgougan, A. 1*.\nKitting, Vant'ouvei*; J. M. Carney, Saimo\nL. G. Drake, It. II. Mueiich, city; .!.\nV. 'Itmid, elty: Mr. and Mrs. J. F.\nl.lackle, Saskatoon; F, B. Aslibrldgo;\nVtfhcouver.\nQueen's Hotel\nBaker Street\nA.  LAPOINTE,   Proprietor\nRenovated throughout. Sixteen new rooms added, all elegantly furnished. Steam heat\nIn every room.\niHIKKNS\u2014 J. A. Burke, Montreal;\nWilliam Thompson, London, Eng.; T.\nC. Cook, Baltimore; 11. P. Lodge, Alex\nR. iMulrbead, Bonnington Falls; A. T.\nDavis, K. K. Bjerkness, Mirror Lake;\nH. L. King, Three l-'orks; Mrs, J.\nSimpson, Kaslo; Mrs. Lusco, Eholt;\n.Mr. and Mrs. J. Perguson, Vancouver;\nMrs. P. Cogle, Proctor; Mrs. L. Collins,\nAscroft; George Ferguson, Seattle; M.\nP. Belton, Vancouver; Mrs. J. Moggy,\nEd Olson, Riondel; Mr. and Mrs. A.\nR. Mlvickel, Pincher Creek; H. Boycc.\nMadden House\nThos. Madden, Prop., Baker St.\nRates:    $1.50 to $2.00 per day,\nMeal Tickets, $'7.0o per week.\nA Comfortable Home\nMADDEN\u2014J. T. Russell, Russell\nSiding; Dan Kenny, Salmo; Miss Jewell, Farron;. J. Jackson, Grand Forks;\nMrs. h. Llvesley, Ainsworth; J. F.\nO'Broin, J. J. Maepberson, Revelstoke;\nF. H. Coiiinge, Proctor; H. Taylor,\nSalmo; L. B. Sheridan, Alnsworth; R.\nBeardscy, Owen Owens, Spokane; J.\nT. Wlson, Qranlte Road.\nA Home for the World at $1.00 a day\nLakeview Hotel\nCorner Hall and Vernon Streets.\nRenovated and refurnished through\nout. Best of wines, liquors and cigars served in the bar by Union\nBartenders.\nNAP. MALLETTE, Prop.\nLAKFjVIFAV\u2014George Rank, Rossland; C. Wilfred, Trail; M. O. Jano,\nD. Scpter, Cranbrook; Mr. Anderson,\nJames Bevan, Jane Uevan, Taghum;\nS. Lem, Tony Murphy, D. Sriper. Midway; Thomas Williams, J.' T. Morris,\nK. Dickson, Port Hill.\nGRAND CENTRAL\u2014W. 0, Hardie,\nJ. T. Tipping, A. E. Teeter, .Sluean;\nH: Luston, Granite; J. Leadbcater,\nCity; J. W. Hearn, Salmo; \u25a0*** Frank\nPhillips,   Rock   Ranch;   J.   Thompson,\nD. ,1. Fraser, Chris Holm, Sheep\nCreek; W. W. Park, Spokane; George\nA. Jackson, Paulson; Norman McLeod,\nKaslo; L. Skelly, James Gordon, Ainsworth; W. O. Dore, Doven Lee, Alta.;\nBen Olson, Sandon; W. .1. Biewett,\nPoorman Mine; \\V. T. Narkans, L.\nClark, William Walsh, F. Aekerman\nRossland; C. L. Gansner, Granite-\nRobt. Easton, Coleman; Miles Arnold,\nCranbrook; Jack Fox, Jliine-j liroeu\nA ^C. McLennan, City; George BlonettJ\nTaghum; F. Martin, Grey's Creek; .1\nRodgers, Vancouver; Fred Johnson\nPrinceton; Adolf Magnusson, Joseph\nGillespie, Lethbridge;   M. Gale. Ymir-\nE. A. Lurabce, Crescent Valley; B\nMaloney, Castlogar,\nNelson House\nEuropean  Plan\nW. A. WARD, Proprietor\nCAFE\u2014Open   day  and  night\u2014B^f-J\nMerchants' Lunch 12 to 2\nPhone 97 P. O. Box 597\nNELSON\u2014S. Marshall, Appledaie;\nAlex Adyniski, 'J. J. Parllck, E. E.\nSmith, Marcus; J. W. Harriot, Chicago; A. Ronuni, Gottfried Kulmbaeh,\nPortland; Ore.\nKlondyke Hotel\nVernon   Street\nStrictly Union House\nHeadquarters for miners, Smel-\ntermen,   loggers,   railroad   men,\nRates, $1.00  per day  up\nNELSON  & JOHNSON,  Props.\nKLONDYKE\u2014Louis Strom, A. Lemtrd,\nA, ISrickBon, T. Andetson, A. Johnson,\nA. Larson, A. V. Bailey, A. Potorson,\nCarl .lolinson, O. JolVnson. A. Bookman,\nC. Xyninry, M. l.arnein, M. Sala, Alike\nRensle,  M.  Lulcon.\nSMEFtllROOKE\u2014W. Ronald, Midway; E, Hill, M. Mutlerson, Sandon;\nIf. A. Tapp, Silverton; George Boudin,\nGrand Forks; James Brock, F. Maid-\nmint, M. Harrett, Eliott; T. Fonich,\nJ. Jalrin, Rossland; J. Makus, Kaslo;\nF. Meter, Grand Forks; A. Bowmen,\nProctor; J. Dougnl, Nakusp.\nBRAZILIAN  SUGAR CROP\nTho city of Pernambuco Is in tb'\ncentre nf the principal sugar-prndiu:\ning and manufacturing section of\nBrazil, and In con set me nee is tho chief\nmarket for its reception and exportation;\nTho nmoimt of sugar delivered in\nPerriambuoo during tiie season of 1!H1\nwas 2,141!,077 hags, an Increase over\n!f<10 of US,569 hags. Of this umotinl.\n151,500 hags of unrefined sugar, hav-\ninjr a value of $1,016,943 'American\nmoney ,wero sent lo the United States,\nthe greater part of the remaining\namount being shipped to Rio do' Janeiro and other southern Brazilian\nojtlea.\nNo prices of sugar arc quoted at\npresent, and little business is being\ntransacted. More activity in this llnu\ntvill hegin to lake place when the son-\n*on's crop arrives, which will be during the latter part of September. Following are tbe last market quotations\nper pound in .this city: Fine-Drained\nWhite crystal, M cents; white crystal,\n7.8fi cents; yellow crystal, 6.4 to fi.88\ncents; Muscavlnho, 4.1,1 to 4.42 cents;\nSomenos, 3.54 to 3.73 cents; Mnscavo,\nT51 to 3.73 cents.\u2014Dally Consular and\nTrade Reports,\nHelp To Carry Union\nJack To Victory\n(Special to Tlie Daily News.)\nFIELD, B. C, Oct. 22.\u2014\"The portals\nat empire on the Pacific coast are\neasily reachable by a third power and\nwe are doing little or nothing to ensure the necessary protection for these\nshores In case of European complications. I am strong in advocacy of\nImmediate and tangible action on behalf of Canada to contribute ships or\nmoney to the mother country in like\nmanner to Australia and New Zealand. This is a matter of national\ncharacter   and   should   be   settled   by\nSTUDENTS ASSAULT\nMONTREAL POLICE\nTried  to  Choke Constable to  Prevent\nArrest\u2014Another  Policeman   Hit\non   Head.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nMONTREAL, Oct. 22.\u2014Frederick J.\nMiller today pleaded guilty to the\ncharge of molesting Constable Bastion\non McGlll college avenue, the evening\nof Oet. 11, when some McGill students\nand the police came into conflict by\nlaying hands on the constable and trying to choke him and thereby preventing him from making an arrest\nand also causing a disturbance in the\nstreet. James Davis, another student,\npleaded guilty to assaulting Capt.\nDice of the West St. Catherine street\nstation by striking him on the head\nwith his fist. A fine of %X> was imposed.\nWilliam Ludinglon was ncquitted of\na charge of disturbing the peace and\nWalter Laffa#s charged with a like'\noffense was let off on suspended sentence. Tho recorder waa willing to\naccept their story that they were doing   their   best   to   quell   the   dislurb-\nCASE DISMISSED\nA charge against Thomas Dunbar of\nfailing to report a case of mumps al\nhis residence was dismissed by Police\nMagistrate Irvine yesterday. Tlie information was laid by Dr. E. C. Arthur, medical health officer.\nKID M'COY, GENTLEMAN   ADVENTURER.\nIn the early part of 1S!I3, when he\nfought in Hot Springs, New Orleans\nand other southern cities, Kid M'Coy\nbegan to achieve a reputation as a\nclever boxer, and his financial returns\ncorrespondingly increased. Soon he\nwas drawing no less than $100 for a\nbout, and often considerably more.\nGoing north in the spring, he fought\nat Indianapolis, Muncje, Ind., Akron,\nO., Wheeling, W. Va\u201e and Pittsburg,\nand always with ancli effect that the\nworst ho got was a-draw Willi Mike\nUoone at Muneie and with Joe Welsh\nat Wheeling. The early part of 189'\nfound the Kid In'New \u25a0England, knocking out Pat Haydpn\" at Providence,\nJoe Burke   at   Fall River, and others\nA   COMFORTABLE   HOUSE   DRESS,\nLadies' house or home dress. Dainty\naad serviceable in this model. The\nrovers nnd band trimming, . together\nwith the euffs and belt are of contrasting material. The skirt is a five-\ngore model. Dotted percale was used\nlo make this simple design. Tlie pal-\ntern, suitable for any of tills season'.!\ndress fabrics; is out in 6 sizes: 32, 34.\n30 38, 40 and 42 inches bust measure\nU requires 5 1-4 yards of 44 inch material  foi* a 36-inch sli'.e.\nEach pattern can he obtained hy\nsending 10 ccnls to the office of this\npaper. In some cases the Illustration\ncontains two patterns, each number\nrepresenting a different pattern. In\nsuch cases 20c should be enclosed.\nPattern   No. 9367.\nPattern   Department\nDaily News:\nEnclosed'find 10 cents for which\nsend the above pattern to\nName   \t\nNo 7..    Street\t\nTown    \u2022\t\nMeasurement\u2014Waist    Bust... r\nAge (If child's or miss' pattern)..\nTheso patterns aro supplied direct from the makers, requiring\ntwo weeks from receipt of order\nat the Dally News Office.\nCanadians as a unit so that In addition to providing,adequate naval defence we as a Dminion, could be placed In a position to render aid in case\nof emergency to the mother country\nand thus help to carry the Union Jack\nto victory.\"\nIn these wcnVls, Sir Richard McBride addressed a large gathering in\nField tonight at a banquet tendered\nto himself and R. F. Green, M. P., In\nMount Stephen house, H. G. Parson\nand H. E. Forster also addressed the\ngathering.\nIn Cleveland a little later M'Coy first\nmet defeat, a middleweight named\nBilly Steffens turning tlie trick In the\nsecond round. M'Coy has always\nclaimed that the Cleveland referee\ngave him the worst of It, and that tlie\nblow that put him out of commission\nwas a foul. From Cleveland M'Coy\nwent to Minneapolis, where lie fought\na ten-round draw with Jim Baron, an\nAustralian who was one of the best\nwelterweights of the time. Back in\nOhio he put away Jack Grace and got\na decision over his former victor,\nSteffens. He also defeated AI Roberts. In Memphis tiie Kid outpointed\nShadow Maher, the clever Australian.\nIn Boston he beat Jack Wilkes, a\ngood fighter from Missouri in two\nrounds, and fought a twenty-five\nround draw with Dick O'Brien. By\nthis time the Kid was a welcome guest\nat all sporting clubs, and was drawing down good money for his bouts.\nHe got ?1,000 for whipping Maber, a\nsimilar sum for the Baroa affair, and\nalmost as much in the O'Brien fracas.\nMcCoy always had a strong family\nfeeling, and in his days of prosperity\ndid not forget the \"folks,\" who became almost reconciled to their \"black\nsheep's\" career. M'Coy had great pugilistic ambitions for bis \"kid brother.\" Homer Selby, and under the Kill's\ninstructions Homer did manage to cut\nsomething of a swathe, though be\nnever became tho topnotchcr. As the\nrecipient of $1,000 purses, McCoy\nabandoned the local 'freight a3 a way\nof getting from where he was to\nwhere he wasn't, j and travelled In\nstyle. He knew all the tricks for\nbeating conductors, however, and invented .several new schemes, with the\nresult that in all his thousands of\nmiles of travel on tlie best trains he\nseldom paid any fare.\nWINNIPEG STABLE WINS\nMANY   RICH   PRIZES\nMONTREAL, Oct. 22.-Thc Mackenzl\nstable oC Winnipeg stands sixth in t!;\nlist of winnings ol' stable on tin* Gram\nCircuit, carrying off ?3fi.fi01. Joe Patahe;\nII earned during the. season f^.S-iO but\nthis include--- Jf'j.non won off the Grand\nCircuit and not included In tbe Mackehafo\nstable winnings as given. Witli thin\namount incuM-d, Jon Patchen U won\nmore money than was ever earned by a\npacing horse.\nAUSTRALIAN   CRICKETERS\nBEAT   WINNIPEGERS\n(By Dailv News Leased Wirfl.1\nWINNIPEG,' Oet. 22.\u2014The famous\nAustralian cricketers completed their\nvisit tp Winnipeg tonight after defeat\nfng 'the local 15 here today by seven\nwickets. As was expected they proved\nthemselves to be the superiors in every\ndepartment of ihe game. Their bowl\ning waa magnificent, their fielding as\ngood as could lie expected under the\nconditions, and their batsmen show\nthemselves capablo of doing what they\nliked with the local attack.\nTlio Winnipeg team completed their\nsecond innings with a score of 13\u00a3\nwhich Lnngton and Maefnrlane starred\nwith the hat, the former scoring 20\nruns and tbe latter 18. Jack Aright\nalso contributed 20 runs. The run:\ncame fast when the Australians went\nto bat, Mnyne being the big scorer wllh\n4T> when they ran up the 108 runs for\nthree wickets. Tlie weather was bright\nand though a cold breeze was in evidence it was remarkable for Manitoba\nto play a cricket match so late In the\nseason. After a banquet hi the evening the visitors left for Victoria,\nST. LOUtS MANAGER'S\nCONTRACT IS CANCELLED\nfBv Daily News leased Wire.\")\nST, LOUIS, Oct. 22.\u2014That formal\nnotice has heen served on Roger Bres\nnahan, manager of lhe St. Louis National league team, that his contract\nhas been terminated hy the club management, although it still has, four\nyears to run, was admitted tonight by\nJ. C. Jones, president of the club. Bres-\nnahan said lie would tnke every means\nto force the club to live up to the\ncontract. No specified reasons for tho\naction were given.\n\"I can now confirm ,the statement\nthnt notice of the termination of his\ncontract lias been served on Bresna-\nlian,\" Jones said after refusing nil day\nto discuss the matter. \"I have a contract with tlie clul) for four years to\nrun,\" Bresnaban said, \" I will male\nevery effort to force tho club to live\nup to their end of it. I have fulfilled\nall my obligations to the clul* and will\nexpect the club lo fulfill Us obligations\nto me.\"\nIDENTIFIES   ROBBER   BY\nODD APPEARANCE, AND WALK\nmv Dally News Leased Wire.)\nTORONTO, Oct. 22.\u2014Hy his appearance, his peculiar walk anil his voice,\nEdward Field, proprietor of the liquor.\nstore at. 207 Wellesely street in court\ntoday identified Ovid B. Lalremouille.\nformerly a policeman, as the man who\nentered Field's store on Oct. 7 and\nrobbed the till of J21 at the point of\na revolver.\nHALF  MILLION  FEET OF\nLUMBER  CONSUMED\nfBv* Dailv \"News Leased Wire.)\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 'J'J.-A half inlllk'-a\nfeet of lumber and eight dry kilns, all\nvalued at a total ol' saxi.OOO. were burned\nlast nlgltt at tbe Prasor River mills at\nMlllsliU*, near New Westminster. In a\nowners of tlu* property are Meketule '*.-\nMnnn. Col. Davidson and A. U MoRao.\nIt took neary IU hours to extinguish the\nfire.\nMINING MEN WILL\nATTEND SPOKANE CONGRESS\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nSPOKANE.  Wash., net. 83,\u2014Many mining men of  llrltlsli Columbia will attend\ntlie  American   Mining  congress   at  a(.o-\nYou Can Depend Absolutely\nOn the Furs You Bug\nAt This Store\nWe Handle Onlg Lustrous, Carefully Selected\nSkins of Perfect Dye and at the Vers\nLowest Possible Prices\nThere are many \"tricks of\nthe trade\" in furs that the\naverage purchaser knows\nnothing about. Most furs\nlook good at first\u2014it is only\nafter they are wora a little\nwhile that they show their\ntrue color. Have you ever\npurchased a fur set or coat\nlhat lacked lustre after a few\nweeks' wear? The only way\nto guard against buying such\nfurs Is to buy oaly at a house\nof known reliability, such as\nthis store.\nAll our furs are selected\nfrom the most reliable makers In the country. Tho\nskins must be of trustworthy\nquality, the dye must he perfect and tho workmanship of\nevery piece must be thorough\nor we wouldn't have it at any\nprice.\nNO, our prices aro NOT high! They are tlie same as many of the inferior quality furs aro sold for, so why take chances? We are showing\na big assortment of rich, cozlly warm and luxurious fur sets, muffs,\nand scarfs. \"        *\nFur Sets  $10 to $350\nMeagher & Co.\nTHE STORE FOR STYLE\nkano on Nov. 25-29, to which tlie governors of all the states will be invited by\nMayor  W.   G*.   Ilitulley.\nAs the public lands question will bo an\nat tha\nha\ned \u2022\n. bleb Is vital In\na law n'rirefJuril'ilMi of .governors ;s\nontlcipated, At the session of Nov. 27,\nwhich bus been designated as \"Go.-W-\nno:s' day,\" it is believed that a specifi:\nwestern policy may lie adopted by tlu\ncongress on tbe public lands question as\nlln* result, to a considerabl.' extent, oC\nthe views of the states affected, *.s\nvoiced by their executives in convention\nhere.\nDISCIPLES OF CHRIST\nDENOUNCE SENSATIONALISM\n(Bv  Dnilv  News  Leased  Wire.)\nLOUISVILLE,   Ky.,   Oct. 22.\u2014Evangel-\nists and  evcnnngellsm occupied   the  attention  of  the   International  convention\nof hiselnles of Christ at the closing ses-\nsession of the convention here yesterday.\nWhat started out to be a debate\non the question uf whether the\nmethods of the leading evangelists of\nscriptural'\nthey attain the age of 14. The government also hiEitls upon a worker's oen-\nsluu in the cast of Illness or disablement.\nThis is arranged by nienns of a \"savings\naccount,\" l. e.., at the end of each week\ntlu* employee takes his saving-book to\nhis master., to whom lie pays the amount\ndue. Tbis sum may not be less than 10\npfennigs (a penny and a fraction), and\nmay be more at his own discretion\u2014the\nhigher the amount paid in the better the\nrctuih. For every penny thus entered\nby a workman, the master Is obliged to\nenter an equivalent sum; moveover, nny\nworkman attaining the age of 70 is entitled  to a  pllt of 130.\nBesides the usual hands, there are iu\nBUmmer what are termed ''wanderarhc.lt-\ner.\" The people come from the confines\nof Russia and Poland, being gathered\ntogether and marched to the various\nGerman et'tales by overseers, whose duty\nis lo Interpret and keep them at work.\nUa arriving they are bound over for a\nont I.s,   but  not  in-\ned\nilellll\nlllOI\ntlonal and spectacular means of obtain\nIng additions to tlie church. \"Whirlwlni\ncampaigns,\" \"use of decoy converts,\n\"the [lumber lust.\" and other device:\ndescribed ns undignified, were denounce*\nby a number of speakers,\nCOUNTRY LIFE IN GERMANY.\nMany   EsUtes   Are  Still   Run   on   tho\nFeudal Plan.\nProbably there are few places In\nEurope where country life Is so well understood ns it is in Germany. There two\nnorthern and eastern provinces are almost entirely agricultural, and tlie greater number of Influential and noble families are \"gutsbesUsers,\" or land-owneis\n\u2014otherwise farmers on a large scale.\nThe '-'gutshauser\" vary in size and stylo\naccording to the wealth and social stal.i.,\nrig  to  .he\nally\nto\n\u2022j-wil-ja   having tin  f\non a shield above the door, while li 'J\nmanors of the \"wolilgehoren,\" or gentr;'.\nare less imposing hi appearance, mora\nresembling the rambling two-storey\ncountry houses familiar to many parte\nof England.\nIn most of those dwellings comforts\nand luxuries of every sort are usually\nconspicuous by their absence, so,that\nhowever palatial the oxtorlor may seen.,\nthe interior, is, at first. Bight, likely 10\nImpress the stranger unfavorably. For\ninstance, the vestibules und entrance\nhalls are rarely provided with rugs ol\ncarpets, which is due rather to hygienic\nthan economic principles, Xor nre those\nhygienic precautions always confined lo\nthe hall, for even the bedrooms and\npassages are generally devoid of everything save absolute necessaries. Hut if\nornamental, they are commodious\nand airy.\nTn point of size the estates seldom ex-\need 2,600 acres, except in a wooded district, and, generally sneaking, the management Is much the snnie on nil, Varying slightly according to the mind and\ndisposition of the owner, lu some waya\nIt   is  reminiscent  of  feudal   days,   when\nthe bold baron ruled supreme,\" at once\nthe friend and master\u2014occasionally the\nmisfortune\u2014of bis dependents,\nOf lute years it has be>*n compulsorv\nfor a land-owner lo provide for the edu-\ncatjgn of the children mi his estate until\nL'jiti:\nthe;\n:er   lliej\nwisli  for\nmore\n'   in   tin.\nnight m\nanoth\ngrow   li\nid   str\nfrontier\n-Tiie  yut\nen.\niltiOll\nnd  s j\nHOW  HEMP  IS GROWN\nCultivation   of   the   Crop   in   Italy\u2014Its\nMany Uses.\nHemp is raised throughout Italy generally, but in the department of Emilia, in tbe vicinity of li,ologna, the\ncultivation is carried on to a far larger\nextent than in other sections, in importance as a hemp-raising centre\nEmilia la followed hy Campania and\nVenetia. The finest Italian hemp is\ngrown on rich, strong loams that have\nbeen brough: into a friable condition\nby cultivation and manuring. The\nsoil Intended for hemp must be deeply\nplowed and repeatedly harrowed to\nproduce a fine surface tilth, and it\nmust he heavily dressed with manures\nrich in nitrogen. Rotation with other\ncrops is advisable. The seed is sown\nbroadcast fnr the Cine hemp. In Italy\ni; is usual to lay the stalks in a fairly\nshady place before retting. Hemp is\nretted hy three different methods,\nknown as \"water retting,\" \"dew retting,\" and \"snow retting.'' The first is\npracticed in Italy either hy still or\nrunning water. Tbe yield of hemp\namounts to about 2fi per cent of the\ndry stalks, and the product furnishes\nabout 65 per cent of spinning fibre,\ntlie remainder being obtained in the\nform of tow. The commercial value\nof hemp depends lo a large extent\nupon the color and the lustre. Tbe\nnearly white and pale gray are regarded as tbe best. The best hejnp Is tho\nItalian, especially [lie liolognese product.\nHemp seed is used ns a bird seed.\nand also for tlie production nf oil and\noil cake. It usually contains from 20\ntt* 35 per cent of oil. The oil is used\nin tho mannfactnre of soft soaps,\npaints and varnishes. Hemp seed cake\nis used for feeding cattle, and should\nform a nutritious food, although the\namount of crude fibre is somewhat\nbit-'h.\u2014-Consular TVnnrt^\t\n\"Oh, How I Itched!\"\nwi.at long nerve-racking days of constant torture\u2014what sleepless nights of\nterrible agony\u2014Itch\u2014Itch-Itch, constant\nitch, until lt seemed that I must tear off\nmy very skin\u2014then\nInstant relief\u2014my skin cooled, soothed\nand  healed!\nThe very first drops of D. D. D. Prescription for Eczema stopped that awful\nItch Instantly; yes, the very moment\nD. D. D. touched the burning skill tho\ntorture censed.\nD. D. 1). has been known for years aJ\nthe only absolutely reliable ecaema\nremedy, for it washes away the disease\ngerms and leaves the skin as clear and\nhealthy at} that of a child.\nIf you wll! come lo our store, we have\nhad the agency for this remedy for so\nmany years thnt We enn tell you all\nabout D. 13. D. Prescription and how il\ncures eczema.\nOr you can get a free trial bottle by\nwriting J). D, D, Laboratories, -til Col-\nborne St., Toronto. Poole Drug Co., Ltd.,\nDruggists.\n PAGE SIX\n\u20aci)t Jkttp j-ietoa.\nWEDNESDAY .\nOCTOBER 23\nInvestors, Consider Moose Jaw\nYou can wisely place your confidence and dollars in this 'flourishing prairie city and both wiil increase.\nMoose Jaw's ability to develop your investment is assured by the big things this city is doing\u2014new railroads,\nnew industries, new buildings, big grain shipments all make for enormous advancement and therefore money\nmaking opportunities. We invite you to consider HILLHURST. This fine property is inside the ctty, right in\nthe midst of the best growth, is right now in big demand by Moose Jaw citizens who know and will quickly\ndemand big prices. In fact, it is just such properties from which fortunes arc made. Act quickly before the\nadvance, and share in the profits. Call at our office and 1st us show you. Just think, inside city property\nfor only $175 and $200 a iot.    Don't miss this.\nWestern Canada Investment Co.Welson -B*c-\nFinancial Agents,  Real   Estate,  Fire, Life and Accident Insurance, Timber  Lands.\nSafety   Deposit  Boxes  for  Rent,\nRents Collected.      Loans\nMARKETS\nBUSINESS  HEAVY ON\nWINNIPEG   GRAIN   EXCHANGE\n{By  Daily  News  Leased  Wire.)\nWINNIPEG,   Oct.   22,\u2014Trading   on   the\nwheat market In options was active and\na heavy volume of business transact;'..\nPrices opened \\\/k@%Q higher on the firm\ncontinental cables and Liverpool closing\nunchanged to ::-\u201eu higher. Later, following the opening; a further gain of WB%c\noccurred on the rumois of tlie Grecian\nfleet blockading tlio Dardanelles, bm tbi<s\nadvice was not fully upheld. Winnipeg\nclosed '\/iffr^e up. Minneapolis dosed \u2022,..\n\u00ae%Q higher. Chicago closed %<&&_\nhigher.\nThe cash demand was on the whoie\nnot quite so keen as on Monday and\nprices wore firmer fur contract, grades,\nwhile offerings were equal to requbo-\nments and export houses buying freely.\nOats were practically unchanged and demand .quiet. October closed Vie lower,\neastern mills buying oats in Chicago,\nprices hero being too hifth. Flax waa\noffered at lower prices and closed 3\u00ae4u\nlower. Heceiiita continue extremely\nheavy. On Monday the total ca:s Inspected numbered J,ii!t;i and in sight this,\nmorning are 1-2S0 cars.\nWINNIPEG STOCKS.\n(Bv Dally News Leased   Wire.)\nHid Asked\nCanada   Fire.   F.P    130\nCity & Pro v.  Loan       140\nCom.  Loan      105\nEmpire  Loan       110      115\ntl.   W.   Life, So p.c.  pd    8J0      310\nG.  W.  Perm    13316   134V-\nHome   Investment          135\nNor. Can. Mort., 25 p.c. pd. .,   120\nNor.  Crown  Bank         05       %Yj\n.Nor.  Mort., 'JO p.c. pd.         120\nNor. Trust      130     LIS\nOccidental Fire, -w p.c pd. ..   105\nStaudnid  Trust      178\nUnion Bank ot Canada        154\nWinnipeg Paint & Glass; pfd.   107      J10\nSales\u20141 a. A. Warrant, 875; 10 Home\nInvestment, 136} 1 S. A. Warrant, 875;\n0 Nor. Crown, $&&.\nBALKAN SITUATION CAUSES\nWEAKNESS   IN   LONDON\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Oct. 22.\u2014The Balkan sltUB\ntion set bad; la Wall street and a free\ndecline on the continent favoiites o:\nParis and Berlin selling Imparted weak\nness lo the stock market and revive\nnervousness regarding the settlemen\nnext week. Stocks were offered froel:\nuntil the afternoon when fair buying\nrallied prices and made the closing\nsteady. Consols were easier and lost ;i-lu\nand then Tin kish aad Russian bonds\nwere weak. American securities started\na fraction lower, supporting orders helping the market anil) tlie end of the firs\n- -hoar when prices fell below purity oi\nthe continental selling. Later, New fori\nbuying caused an upward inovemi n\nwhich was led by the Canadian Pad fit\nand United Stales Steel. The closing\nwas steady. Money and discount nitej\nwere  quiet.\n.  MONTREAL MARKET WEAK.\n(By  Daily  News  Leased  Wire.)\nMONTREAL,  Oet. 22.-The tone ot I\nmarket continued we-ik  in the aftornoi\nCanadian Pacific easing fr m -''\u25a0\" Li2C3\nand Power from 232fp*231.    Bell Telephone\ntook a  spurt from  107 lo IBS on  picking\nup of small parcels.   The highest of the\nforenoon was 168*46.    '-Tbe balance of the\nlist   was   dull.    Richelieu   was   lll<S-ll&%,\nLauren tide 2_G, Quebec Railway 12.    Textile wns inactive.    Shawinlgan  went off\nto 1301= and  Converters 17.\nPRICES FALL STEADILY\nNEAR CLOSE Or MARKET\n(Bu Dally News Leased Wire.)\nNEW YORK. Oct. 22.\u2014Tho war In thi\nBalkans was again a paramount lnflu\nenco lu the stock exchange here today\neven though there was an utter lack oi\nyesterday's {heavy liquidation for thi\nforeign account. On the contrary, Lou\nilon bought moderately hole of U. S\nSteel, Amalgamated Copper and a fe.\nother speculative favorites. Nevertht\nless, all European markets continued i\nShow uneasiness, London taking mor\nStocks from Paris and Berlin. The la I\nter exchanges were weak, Canadian Pa\nclfic railway declining six points v\nBerlin on what appeared to be urgent\nBelling.\nLondon's nervousness was accentuated\nby feaen regarding tlie outcome of next\nWeek's settlement, and private cable*\nfrom Paris stated that a syndicate of\nFrench bankers had been formed tj\nassume  the   liabilities  \"f  several   broker\nage   fir\nhad\nled   he-\nlosses   lu   till\nrecent   depression   of  tho\nRussian   and\nTurkish  securities.\nThe   openln\n;   here   was   rather   a  sur-\nprise,     unier\n1     a i lines     having     been\nlooked  for.\nutaad, the market simply\ndisplayed  son\nie Irregularity  followed  bj\nImprovement\nand  by   midday  a   number\nof subfitaiitiu\nsains wen- recorded, chicr-\nly In the cos\nrs, Union Pacific Kteel ami\nAmalgamate.\nCopper,    in the hitter pan\nof the session trading fell oTf until L\nfailed to possess any significance, tlu\nonly feature being tbe activity In China\nCopper at a new high record. Towar.l\nthe end prices fell steadily until HttL*\nremained of the early Rains, Union Pacific und LehlKh Valley helng especially\nheavy. For the first time in some days\ncall loans opened at ii per cent and tha\ngreater part of the day's offerings wero\nat that figure. Local hanks suffered another heavy drain to tho sub-treasury,\ntnolr total loss since tFriday approximating W.OOO.OM; The market for time\nmoney was dull but steady, with some\nofferings   by   out-of-town   institutions.\nThe bond list followed the course oC\nthe stocks. Total sales, par value, fl,-\n700,000. United States govern hie lit bonds\nwere unchanged on call.\nMONTREAL   PROVISION   MARKET.\n(By Dally News Lensed Wire.)\nMONTREAL, Oct. ^.-Butter Is firm\nand fairly active. Some contracts ail\nNew Zealand butter have been made for\nJanuary and February shipment at HO&o,\ndelivered here. A steadier feeling has)\ndeveloped in cheese With mon; business\nloins over tin* cable, and the demand.\n\"or colored goods on spot is good, which'\nire scarce. Eggs, fulrlv active and\nstronger. Cheese, finest western, 13)6(3\n214c; finest casL-rns, 33Vrl3' ie. Butter,\nholcost creamery, attfiffiSS-K; seconds,\n\u25a0\u25a0.<\/\u25a0r:s*.,\". l-jg-.*s, selected. ;MW3lc No. 2\ntook, fil<82S. Pork, heavy Canada slant\nness, barrel.-, l.-'a\"^; pieces, 2Sc; Canada\nhort cut back, barrels; 45@55; pieces, 2Sc.\nSPOKANE MARKETS.\n(Sharpe   &  Irvine.)\nBid\nAskec\nil.  C.  Copper   $1.7\").\n$ 5.25\nlaledonla   20\n.23\nCanadian   Consolidated   ... GO.Oit\n70.00\n3ranby   02.00\n05.00\nInternational   Coal    30\n.40\nLucky   Jim    it;\n.22\nRunibler-Cariboo     i;\u00bb\nTORONTO   STOCKS.\n(By Daily  News  Leased  Wire.)\nTORONTO, Oct. 22.\u2014Brazilian; 91%; La\nRose,   24:   Telephone,   UiMil'IV;   Winnipeg,\nL*24'\u00ab22r\u00bb:   Steel   Cur|toratJn,   i:iV'*U',S*'   tlus-\nsell,   pfd..   100;   Wheat,   pfd.,   B2j   Rogers,\niyi:  Porto  Rico,  7-\"s;  Canadian, 23.\nUnllsted-Juplter, 8G&S3S;  Bailey, 7.\nNEW   YORK   METAL   MARKET.\n(Bv Dally News Leased Wire.)\nNEW YORK, Oct. 22.\u2014Copper, weak.\nStandard sport, 17 bid; October, 17.i*;\nNovember, lT.UKi ll.V-Vy, December, 17.0i\nfu-li.15; electrolvtle, 17.ii2fil7.S7; lake, 17.tk\nQ17.87'; casting, 17^25^17.37. London, firm,\n\u25a0Spot, \u00a375 15s{ futiites, -ETfl Lis.\nTin-Dull.    Spot.   October  and   Novetn-\nSpelter-I7.H)'67.60.    London.   .E27 10s.\nIron\u2014Firm and unchanged.\nCleveland wan ants iu London, 60s I'r.d.\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\n(Special to Tlio Daily Ne'\nBid    Asked\n S ....      $   .31\nGold   \t\nDominion\nB.  C.  Pe\nTrust  \t\nrmnnent Loi\n 121.00     120.00\nn       Mu.OO\nMETAL   MARKETS.\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nXl'W YORK; Oct. 22.-Silver, 68,\nLONDON,   Oct 22.\u2014 Silver, 20 1-10;  bad,\nUNCOMPLETED CONTRACTS\nMAY  BE CANCELLED\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nCALGARY, Oct. 22.\u2014Half rt million\ndollars worth of paving for which contracts were let last spring to tho Bi-\nthullthlc & Canadian Mineral Rubber\ncompanies, may be forfeited, because\nof a contract stipulation to the effect\nthat .work unfinished liy Oct. 31\nshould revert to the city.. The aver-\nago price received by these Companies\nfor their work is about $2.66 per\nsquare yard. Since the contracts were\nlet tlie city established a municipal\nplant which has laid its initial block\nof sidewalk, under disadvantageous\ncircumstances, at about $2. This has\nhad the effect at inaugurating a movement to declare contracts unfinished\nat the end of this month forfeited.\nWILL RE-OPEN PAN-SILVER.\nCOBALT, Ont., Oct: 22.\u2014The Vnti-\nKllver is lhe latest mine to announce\nplans for re-opening. This .will make\nTi working mines in the camp.\t\nWe Will Buy Special Snap\n1,000 Rambler-Cariboo  $ .75100-200 Standard Silver-Lead  $1.47\nE. B.  McDermid ^^^_^^\nMUTE EVIDENCE\nOF UMBRELLA\nUsed   by   Clark   to   Shelter   Dynamite\nfrom   Rain  Before  Blowing  Up\nBridge.\n(By  Dally  Netvs  Leased  Wire.)\nINDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Oet. 22.\u2014A\nbattered ivory handled umbrella that\nhad survived an explosion was pro\nduced as a government exhibit at tht\n\"dynamite conspiracy\" trial today.\nThomas Berger of Pittsburg, Pa., fore\nman of a bridge construction com\npany, Identified it as having been\nfound after an explosion on a railroad\nbridge at Dayton, Ohio, May 3, 11)08\n\"I notice you are examining the\nhandle. What attracts your attention\nto it?\" asked United States District\nAttorney  Charles W. Miller.\n\"I see on the handle engraved the\ninitials 'E. C \" replied tho witness.\nIt was the umbrella which tlie gov-\nernment charges Edward Clark of\nCincinnati carried when he attempted\nto blow up the bridge and which he\nheld over the dynamite to protect 11\nfrom a heavy rain. The government\nasserts Chirk after lighting tbe fuse\nforgot the umbrella. Clark at the\nopening of the present trial, pleaded\nguilty. The indictment alleges that\nHerbert Hockin assisted Clark in pre-\nparing; for the Dayton explosion.\nA dozen foremen of construction\nfirms testified about explosions. S.\nG. Reynolds of Richmond, Va., told\nol an attempt to blow up a bridge\nacross tho Susquehanna river near\nPerryville, Md., June 2, 1003, when\nfour men ran away leaving dynamite\nbehind them.\nE. J. MeGiveney of Chicago describ\ncd the blowing up of a construction\near on an elevated road extension a'\nBurna Parte, Chicago, March, 1008.\nand the dynamiting of a car of stee!\nat  Indian  Harbor, Ind.,  a year Inter\nH. W. Ashley of Pittsburg told of\nthe dynamiting of a viaduct near Clayton, Pa., Oct. 12, 1110G, after which\npieces of a suitcase in which the bomb\nhad been enclosed, were found scattered   over   the   country.\nJudge Anderson today ruled that evidence concerning all the 100 explo\nsions referred to hy the government\nincluding the Los Angeles Times disaster, might be introduced as showing\na motive.\nHe 'said a conspiro'cy already hae\nbeen proven hy the pleas of guilty on\nthe part of Clark and McManigal, but\nthe Jury was to determine whether tlu*\nremaining defendants were Implicated.\nThe court stated further that the\ngovernment had undertaken to show\nthat the object of the conspiracy was\nmuch broader than the mere Illegal\ntransportation,\nWILL SLAUGHTER\nBUFFALO BULLS\nVeterans   of   Herd   in   Danger   From\nYounger  Animals\u2014Applies  For\nBuffalo  Meat.\n(Bv Dally News Leased Wire.)\nW'ALNAVK'IIT, Alta., Oct. 22.\u2014Intl-\nniation hns come from headquarters in\nOttawa to the superintendent of the\nNa.tlpn.al Buffalo park that steps will\nlikely be taken lo kill off 40 or (50 buffalo bulls enclosed in the local reserve.\nThe Ottawa commissioner is of the\nopinion that these steps are necessary\nso that danger of their destruction by\nyounger bulls may lie avoided. A large\nnumber of these bulls have passed tho\nhalf century mark and unless they are\ndestroyed they will be the victims of\nthe stronger animals, The local board\nof trade has applied for a quarter of\nbuffalo beef in the case of a slaughter\nand in the event of their request being\ngranted the businessmen of the town\nwill put It on the menu at the annual\nbanquet next month.\nRAILWAY OFFICIALS WILL\nCONFER AT CALGARY\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nCALGARY, Oct. 22.-~General Manager McLeod of the Canadian Northern railway arrived in Calgary today\nto confer with the city council regarding (injections of property owners to\ntbe construction of the Victoria street\ntunnel. While there Mr. McLeod will\nmeet with Cunudlnn Pacific railway officials to discuss some differences that\nhave arisen between the.two lines regarding the culverts along tho line ot\nthe Canadian Northern railway.\nSNOWSTORM\nDELAYS THRESHING\nSeventy-five' Per Cent Now Completed\n\u2014Movement of Crop is\nSteady.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 22.-\u2014That two\nweeks will see tlie wlndtip of threshing is the opinion of W. A. Mutheson\nof the ;Lake of the Woods -Milling company, provided that the weather is\nseasonable. Inquiry at the offices of\ntiie milling .company whoso organization covers practically all the western\nCanadian wheat belt, \u2022 summed up,\nwould show that 11 per cent of the\nthreshing is now completed; that the\nyield of wheat, according to threshing\nreturns is exceeding IS bushels to the\nacre, both in Saskatchewan and Man-,\nitoba and', that not more than 30 per\ncent of the crop is yet marketed; Some\ndistricts report as high as 90 per\ncent of their grain threshed and but\nfor Saturday's snow storms many districts in Saskatchewan would be\nihrough. Tho storm in question has\n.set back threshing from the stook\na few days but the delay is not serious as in most cases there were stacks\nto go on with. The great movement\nov the crop is going on steadily. Qf\nthe enormous volume of moving grain\nnow being handled, yesterday's inspections totalled 1,299 cars and there\nwere 1,300 cars on hand this morning.\nAbout 1,200 cars per diem has heen\nthe average receipts on the Winnipeg\nmarket for the past 10 days. Of yesterday's inspections I'\")!1 cars wore\nwheat, of which 768 were of the contract grades. Included in the Inspection were 160 cars of oats, 98 of barley and 74 of flax.\nOats are moving freely and 72 cars\nof No. 2 C. W. went through for\neastern   millers   today.\nOOSE JAW\n_\u00bbtwtmm__wma_______mm_mim___M-_mm\nINVESTMENTS\nTT.OY1?    R     THYP   Dealers in High Class Property\n1 \\J L JL\/    OL      IvlL    P. O. Box 147 Nelson, B. C.\nRICHELIEU  ELECTION  IS\nKEENLY CONTESTED\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nSORBL, Quo., Oct, 22.\u2014\"I pledge\nmy word of honor that if you elect Mr.\n.Morgan on Thursday, tbe murine railway, will he voted during the present\nsession which will open next month.\nAnd if the government does not keep\ntlie promise whicli was made to me\nir. writing, I will ask Mr. Morgan to\nresign his seat and 1 know lie will do\nit.\"\nSuch was the declaration made last\nnight by Sir Rodolphe Forget, at a\nmeeting In front of the Conservative\ncommittee room here. Sir Rodolphe\ndeclared he had seen the Hon. Robert\nRogers and that tiie minister had given him a written promise binding the\ngovernment. As tlio day approaching\nfor the final verdict of the electors nt\nRichelieu, the two opponents arc gathering their forces and all their reserves are coming to the front.\nThough the two candidates are engaged in one of tho. fiercest political struggles in the history of the country the\npeople themselves are showing little\nenthusiasm although they attend in\ngreat crowds at the numerous meetings being held all over the constituency.\nPENTICTON'S  POPULATION\nTW.ENTY-TWO HUNDRED\n(Special to The Daily 'News.) -\nPENTICTON; -Bi C, Oct. 22.\u2014A police census has '-just been taken here\nwhich shows tlie population to be\n2,277. This is an increase of over\n100 per** cent in a little more than IE\nmonths.\nReeve Slovens and Councillor Greer\nA  PLEASING  SUIT  FOR  BOYS.\nBoys' Russian suit with knickerbockers, For comfort, utility and\ngood style, this model will readily be\nrecommended. The left front closes\nover the right at the side and is finished with two box plaits. Tiie trou,\nsera are tlie regulation \"knickers.''\nThe design Is suitable for corduroy.\nvelvet, cloth, linen or galatea. The\npattern is cut In 4 sizes: '&, 4, ft, and\n0 years. It requires 28-4 yards of 4-1-\ninch material for a 6-year size.\nDr. Morse's\nIndian Root Pills\ncure many common ailments which\nare very different, but which all arise\nfrom the same cause\u2014a system\nclogged with impurities. The Pills\ncause the bowels to move regularly,\nstrengthen and stimulate the kidneys\nand open up the pores of the skin.\nThese organs immediately throw off\nthe accumulated impurities, and Biliousness, Indigestion,Liver Complaint, .\nKidney Troubles, Headaches, Rheum- -'\natism and similar ailments vanish.'\nDr. Morse's Indian Root Fills    \u00ab\nSave  Doctors'  Bills\nTHE     VVORKINGMEN'S     EMPLOY-\nMENT AGENCY.\nWANTED-100 bushmen, S3 to $3.25 per\ndav; railway builders: machine miners;\nhlaekMiiilhs, logging camps: chiimbiT-\ninalds and waitiesses; teamsters; house-\nkeciicr; Iw. .puclt. ti-ni.-hc-is.\n'\"    Parker,  ;il'J  i;;1k.-i_Sirc.-l,J_'ol.iie_>.J\nDonaldson Line\nThe Scotch Line for the\nScotch People\nLargo new twin screw stenmers\nsailing from MONTREAL and\nGLASGOW overy SATURDAY, carrying One Class Cabin and Third\nClass passengers.\nCHRISTMAS EXCURSIONS\nsail from ST. JOHN, N. I)., DEC.\n12th and   10th.    LOWEST RATES,\nUP-TO-DATE  SERVICE.\nReserve your accommodations\nnow and secure the best. It costs\nno more.\nApply to\nD. Smeaton, G.T.A., C.P.R.\nor H. E. LIDMAN, General Agent,\n445 Main Street, Winnipeg.\nPhono M-6312.\n|t)s\\rallenVarlco\"BVeinsE*i1o',t'.53!\nI.;',;,-'* Tcii-tiim*;*, m-craled, KuiUnreii,\n*\u25a0\" \u25a0       JVmI  l>)Vii. Mill: Leg, 'Jiinjs-.ilm-\n\u2022Os, I'llepiiiiiHiiisirt,   Hi'D-cfit'UUlHS\nn.'-arancc   AKSOKUtlSK,Ji;.,r'iH.\n\u25a0*\u2014*-  mllil, siifo, pleasant nuilsuptlo liniment, hunting mill sdotnlnr**. 8ovc.ro casoa *nhcro\nwins li;-vt* uluiTiilcd ami hrulien havo Imcn com*\nnlotolS iin-1 botrmMlBDtl? euml. First, few apull-\nr:,ilonaot A\\;NOKS!! N',;, ,li:\u201e will (!ito n*fief\na*iU irtOVB its merit, ff 1.011 anil t.'.OO pitr.-bottlo nt\nilniciTiiiiS cr .ii-livi\".-,:. in MILil .iii-i'd ions, reports\nou wcimtcasoa ana Uook O tt froe oil requoat,\nIt lo spelled A-B-R-O-R-B-I-N-I*. \u00bbp d Muiu.\n' icturodonly by W. F. Young, P.D.F.\n445 Lyman a EinIMtii-r, Montreal, P.Q.\n\u25a0) f!iT nl. ip.il Ly ;H:(:C I \u20141 \u25a0 -  '   Wviiis-; C.i., IVIiml'\n  --- 'cnio- \u25a0**\t\n\u201e Vol\nwill re-present the council at the annual convention of tlie Union of Brit\nIsh Columbia municipalities which\nmeets in Revelstoke on the 22nd :in<i\n23rd, They will plnce before the convention resolutions dealing witli :i\nrecommendation to tiie government\nfur legislation whicli.wilt give municipalities the power to deal with the\nwidth of streets in sub-divisions; that\nmunicipalities be empowered to borrow money for the purpose of putting\nin their own telephone system; that\ncouncillors serve two years instead or\none as at present; that municipalities\nhave power to charge a frontage tax\nfor improvements, such Improvements\nto mean and Include domestic water\nand electric lighting utilities; that\nmunicipalities have power to construct sidewalks where deemed necessary by the council without a petition,\narid charge same to owners directly\nbenefited, the same as if a petition\nhud been presented, and that some effort bo made to have legality of money hy-laws-passerr on by-some one in\nauthority, so that there may be less\nchance of money by-laws being quashed as illegal upon some technical\npoint.\nCONFIDENCE IN\nWEST GENERAL\nBank Manager Says Jealousy Rapidly\nDisappearing\u2014New Bank  Building  in  Winnipeg.\nfBy Dally News Leased Wire.)\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 22;\u2014John Alrd,\ngeneral manager of the Bank of Commerce arrived In the city today, preceding Sir Edmund Walker, president\nof the bank, who is expected tomorrow. Their visit here is for the purpose of attending the formal opening\nor! the new Bank of Commerce building on Saturday. Mr. Alrd said on\niii*! arrival that confidence In the\nwest was general throughout the east,\nand had never lieen disturbed. In Toronto no doubts of the success \"E this\nyear's crop were entertained and optimism for botli east and west was the\nprevailing feeling .\nConcerning the reports of the lack\nof harmony between east and west,\nMr. Alrd said: \"I do not think any\nsuch feeling ever existed to any extent. But whatever jealousy has existed is rapidly disappearing. We\nknow that we can not do without you\nand wc believe that you cannot do\nwithout us, and In this fact lies the\nsurest guarantee of permanent solidarity.\"\nEach pattern can be obtained by\nsending 10 cents to the office of this\npaper. In somo cases the Illustration\ncontains two patterns, each number\nrepresenting a different pattern. In\nsuch cases 20c should be enclosed.\nPattern  No. 9375.\nPattern Department\nDaily. News:\nEnclosed find 10 cents for which\nsend the above pattern to\nName   \t\nNo    Street\t\nTown   \t\nMeasurement\u2014Waist    Bust\nAgo (If child's or miss' pattern).\nThese patterns are supplied ! direct from the makers, requiring\ntwo weeks from receipt of order\nat the Daily Netys Office.\nMONEY FOR FARMERS\nAT CHEAPER RATE\n(By Daily News Lensed Wire.)\nST, PAUL, Minn., Oct. 22.\u2014When\nJames J. Hill organized his big financial Institution in St. Paul; a great aid\nto farmers in the northwest will be\ngiven in the matter of borrowing\nmoney. Mr. Hill has looked with displeasure upon the rales of Interest\ncharsed farmers of Minnesota, North\nDakota, South Dakota and Montana,\nrates which usually vary from 8 to It'\nper cent, lie is sald'to he a firm be\nIlever in rates of from 4 to 6 per cent,\nWA.NTKl'-I'ositlun   as   housekeeper,   for\ngcnllemaii, city or country.    Good euoU.\nItefei'citccs     furnished.      Apply   liox   21.\nNotice  of  Application  for   Liquor\nLicense\nNotice Is hereby' given that I, ThomaB\nH. Bohart, of Nakusp, B.C.. Intend, ofl\ndays from the date hereof, to apply to\nthe Superintendent of Provincial Police\nfor a license to sell liquor by retail In\nand upon the premises known ns the\nLeland hotel,  situate nt Nakusp, B.C.\nDated this 2fith day of September, 1912,\n149-Nov. C.\nNotice of Application for Transfer of\nLiquor License.\nNotice in hereby given thnt on Iho !t1st\nday of October next application will be\nmade to lh.* Superintendent of Provln\nclal I'lilice for tlie transfer of the llceusi\nfor thu sale of llnuor by tetall In nnd\nabout the preinlt\u00ab-i* known as the Leland\nhotel, at Njikusp, Uritlsh Columbia, from\n.hiines Sneddon to Thomas H. Bohart oi\nNakusp, British Columbia.\nDnt.;d this \u00a3(ith dny of September, 1912.\nJAMES  SNEDDON,\nHolder of  License.\nTHOMAS   K.   BOilABT,\nHB-Nov. G Applicant for Transfer.\nHELP WANTED.\nNELSON    EMPLOYMENT   AGENCY\nC. F, Hutton, Manager,\nHELP OP ALL KINDS\nPROMPTLY FURNISHED.\nWANTED\u2014MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED\u2014An opportunity tor a live\nman, selling our guaranteed Yakima\nVulley grown nursery stock. Kx< lu^ue\n\u25a0territory. Outfit free. Cash weekly.\n\"Hustle,\" not, experience required. TOP-\npenlsh   Nursery   Co.,   Toppenish,   Wash.\nWANTED-Clean    cotton    rags.     Apply\nThe Dally News. 78-tr.,\nWAKTED\u2014Tie   and   pole   makers,   hush-\nmen and teamsters.    Vlpond,  Nukusp.\n151-tf.\nWAXTED-Twenty asents to sell best\nsub-dlvislon property In growing cities.\nEasy to Bell and liberal commission lo\nlive men. Every assistance given by oar\nstaff and good money made on every lot\nwold. Our eaBy terms assist you. Sue us.\nFull equipment free. Western Canada In-\ntnunt company. NelBon. B.C.       l&l-lf\nWANTED\u2014Two licensed  engineers, steam\nplants,   Golden   Zinc   mine.     Write    oi\nwire C, II. Brooks, Hedlcy, B.C.     lufl-tf,\nWANTED\u2014Logs or shingle bolts. Nelson\nShingle Mill. les-tr.\nWANTJSD\u2014By man and wife, position as\ncooks In camp or mine. Must be steady\nJob. Apply nox 2li, Daily News. \u2666ISij-ii\nWANTED\u2014'fenders for 2fl0 cords dry\nwood, 2-foot length, to be delivered* at\nLlllv B. mine. Apply George Long,\nSloean City, .     159-0\nIF IN NEED of I.athern, drop a card to\nLathern.   P. O. Box (502, Nehon, B.C.\n\"llJO-211\nWANTED-Chllds   Iron   crib.    Apply   O..\nDally News. MtiQ-g\nWANTED\u2014Uf capable, active, elderly\nEnglish woman, domestic emiihiynieiH,\nranch preferred. Permanent work. Dis-\nenga!.rt'il ou _..d. li. J. Crotch, cure .Mrs.\nGalbralth,   Fort  Steel,  B.C. \u20221G0-G\nWANTED\u2014Position  as  clerk  or   cheek*\nscaler    for    logging    camps.      \"Experienced.\".' Box t-.'Y., Dally Nows.     *lul-t\nWANTED-A parcel hoy. Apply .Me:ig!n*r\n$_ Co., Baker street.  Hil-tf_.\nFOR JtDNT-Lodv In Fairview offer*.\ncomfortable   room   at   normal   rent   to'\nCompanionable    person.      Apply   B.   B.,\nDally News.  ^u\nWANTED\u2014Dry    goods    salesman,    thoroughly  competent,  of good  appearance\nand  a   hustler.      Apply    Hudson's   Bay\nStore, city. 1G1-U'-\nWANTED\u2014Ten    men    for    yard    work,\nloading poles at. Nakusp;   wages *.1. The\nLiiKbav Bros,  COhlpany,  Nakusp, B.C.\n168-t\nPOULTRY AND  LIVE STOCK\nFOR SALE OR HIRE-Bay team, 7 and 8\nyears,   weight  2.S00.    Guaianlee  in  t'ir-U\nclass  condition.    Castlogar  Brick  Works.\nFOR SAI-E-I am closing out.   My stoc-*.\nis  of tho  best.    Have  some  real  good\nBlack  Minorca   cockercle  at a   baigaiii.\nAlso  IS  Buff  Orpington   pullets.    H.   A.\nads.  Grand  Forks,  B.C. loS-lo\nFOR  SALE-Tho^'ughbrcfl  S.   C. \"White\nr.i'uhurii   pullets.    C.   Jacoljsou,   Craw-\nford Buy-  \" ; ^6\nFOR SALE\u2014 Buff Orpington and WlliW\nWvaniiutte cockerel-: from English Imported stock, ffi and J3. Also White Leghorn hens, one year old. $1- each. Watson,\nBalfour; ___iZ\nEOR S \\Ll!\"\u2014R.\" C*.   tlliorle Island  piilU-l*.\ngood laying strain, .six for -M0; cork, .vis\n$1.2; 1, !-inin1, Kok.uio F C._ 'li.N\nFOR\" SALE\u2014PUi'ii   brad \u25a0 Imported   silver\nlaced Wyandotte cockerels, iff* and *\u25a0;\neach.   T. itoclt,  Mill wti't-et, west. .- ntiSr-l\nFOR  RENT\nFOR BENT-Office and  living  rooms 11\nK    W.  C.  block,   Baker street.    Apply\nA.  Macdonald & Co.,  wholesale grocers\nl-'roat street.  **\u2022*' _\nFOR   RENT\u2014Furnished\ntorla street.\nFOR      BENT-Fnrnishcil      housekeeping\nana bedrooms, BIB Hall street. :i\":\"\nFOR UEXT-Xieely I'ni-nished  front bedroom,   suitable   for   two   ladles   or- twe\ngentlemen.   Apply m silica.\nSYNOPSIS OF COAL\nMINING REGULATIONS\nCoal mining ilglrtaTl the Dominion, n>\n.Manitoba, Saskatchewan nnd A \u25a0;\u25a0 u.\nthe Yukon Territory, the Noitn-wes-l\nTeirllui'lcs, and in a portion of the pio-\nvliiee of British Columbia, may he leased\nfor a term of twenty-one years at an\nannual rental of JI per acre. Not more\nthan 2.EIM acres will bo leased to one\napplicant. ._\nApplication for a lease must be mai\"\nhy the'applicant In person to the Agent\nor Sub-Agent of the district of which\nthe  rights  applied   for  are  situated.\nIn surveyed territory the land must bt?\ndesiTllied bv sections, or legal sub-divisions of sections, and In unsurveyed territory the tract applied for shall D*\nstaked  out  by  the applicant himself.    .\nEac'n application must be accompanlep\nby a fee of to, which will be refunded H\nthe rights applied for are not available,\nbut not otherwise. A royalty shall be\npaid on the. merchantable output of the\nmine at the rate of five cents per ton.\nThe person operating the mine shall\nfurnish lhe Agent with sworn returns accounting for the full nuanttty of mor*\nc'nnntable coal mined and pay the roynllj\nthereon. If .the eoal mining rights-arc-\nnot being operated, such returns shouio\nbe  furnished   nt  least   onca  a   yGar- ,\u201e\u201e\nThe lease will Include the coal mining\nrights only. but. the lessee may be permitted to purchase whatever avalianie\n8iirfac\u00bb> rights may be considered neccs-.-\nvn'v for the working of tho mine at the\nrate  of  SIO.OO  an   acre.     ,, .     .\nFor full Information application shnul\nhe mad'* to the Secretary of the Department of the Interior, Ottawn,  or to nn\"\nAgent or Sub-Agent of Dominion Land:\n\"W.   \"V\"V\\   CORY,\nDeputy Minister of the Interior.\nN.R.-Unanthorl-jod publication of tnit\nndvertlsemnnt   will  not  he  pntd   for.\nLAODGEJiOHCES\nKOOTENAY   LODGE   No.   III.   I.O.O.P.-\nMeets   every   Monday   night   in   *MO-\nfellows' hall at 7:30 o'clock.\nQUEEN     CITY     REBEKAH     LOu-t\nNo.  16.  T.O.O.F.,  meets  first and tmro\nTuesdays,  OddfellowB'hall,  7;30 o'clock,\nNELSON    ENCAMPMENT   NO.   7,   1.0-\nO.F.,   meets  second  and  fourth Thursdays in Oddfellow-' hall at 7:30 o'clock,\nCANTON   CO^ONa  NO.   7  meets every\nsecond Tuesday in OddfellowB' Hall a'\n8 o'clock.\nNELSON'S QUEEN No. 241, B. O. E.-\nMootH 1st nnd 3rd Monday, K. of P\nhnll     w    a    Cnmnlnn.   S(>-!ri>tRrv\nKNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS MEET EVEltY\nTuesday night In K. of P. hall, Eagle\nbuilding.      \u2022     i\t\nFOR SALE.\nFOR--SAI.J3----Ch.3ap, 120 acres In famr|\nPend   d'Oreille   valley,   near   Wanef\nclose    to    government    highway;..   .\nproportion   ready   for  plow,    free    frl\nroots and stones; excellent land; pern\nclimate; ample water available; half nl\nfrom surveyed route of new railway; \u25a0\nper acre for oloek, or would  sell  In 20-al\nplots. Terms.  This Is a snap for raticB\nor investor.    P.  O. Box  966,  Nelson, f\nFOR -. SALE-Luniber. lath, shingi\nsashes, doors; orders exceeding ISO I\nllvered free to any point on lake. Wil\nus for quotations. Wattaburg Luml\nCo., Ltd., Proctor, B.C, fill\nFOR SAT^E-IO and 20-acre tracts L\nchoice fruit land; 2,000 acres to chol\nfrom, all good title, with no encuT\nbrnnce, direct from the locator. Sol\nexcellent bench land, nice' Peaches, ball\ning sites and good fishing, With thi\nmiles of main Kootenay lake frontal\nCome early and have first choice. LIB\nsay Launch' & Boat company. Room!\nGriffin Block,' P. O. Box 34, Melsf\nB.C.\nFOR   SALE\u2014A set  of  harness.\nNelson Bre*tyery.-\t\nFOR   SALE\u2014For  less  than  cost.  Lot!\nand 2,  Block 10, town of Lardo, I'm\nW.  M.  Glover,  Nelson,  B.C. M-jl\nFOR SALE\u201419-foot motor Opat, (225,' a\nnow S'fiO; used two seasons; cushlqL\nbrass railing, reverse gear, etc. Willi\nstored free through winter. Terms I\nright   party.    Genuine  snap.    Applv r\n'Hvtiry & CtJ'. \u25a0         _$_f\nFOR    SALE\u2014Will    sell     second    gr;\nshingles for a short time at JI.BO\nthousand,   cash.    Nelson  Shingle MIL\nFOR   SALE-Wholesalo   liquor   busln.L\nOne of the best In B.C.    For full il\ntkulars address,  Wholesale,   care  Dif\nNews. \"f\nFOB SALE-Good Cheer heater; good!\nnew,  DOii Carbonate street.  ^^ \u25a0\u25a0\nHrarEL^iRF^roF\nSHERBROOKE HOTEL\nNelson, B. C.\nOno minute's walk from C. P. B. \u00a3_\ntion.     Cuisine   unexcelled;   well  neaj\nand ventilated.\nLAVIGNE  &   DUNK.\nPHOENIX\nHOTEL BROOKLYN. PHOENIX, \u00ab.\nThe only up-to-date hotel In rnoeu\nNew from cellar to roof. Best sanm\nrooms lu the Boundary. Bath rootaB\ncorinectlcn. Steam heat. Opposite Oil\nNorthern  depot.    James  Mar*-*\"aU*  \"*T\nCASTLEGAR\n\u2022HOTEL CASTLEGAR,\" CASTLEOl\nJunction. AH modern. Excellent accif\nmodntlon for tourists and drumma\nBoundary train leaves here.at 9.10 al\nRosslnnd-Nelson train stops for bfeB\nfast and dinner. j T\nW.  H.  Gage, Proprietor. I\nST, FRANCIS HOTEL, VANCOCITg\nB.C.\u2014Directly opposite the new COT\nmillion dollar depot\u2014The Royal AM\nof Vancouver, Catering 16 faml\ntourist and commercial trade. SI\nprising accommodations. A. refill\nhouse of unusual excellence. It's cfl\ntral position gives Its patrons the m\nvantage of nearness to shops, chare!\nand theatres. .Personal mana\u00abeme*J|\nFree bus. Tariff ?2.B0 and 13\nMackay, proprietor.        .   \u2014 \u25a0\nBusiness Directory!\nASSAYERS\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, ASSATEB Al\nChemist, Box Alios, Nelson. B. J\nClmrces: Gold, silver, copper or lei\ntl each: gold-silver, $1.60; sllver-lel\n11.50.   OtTier metals on application, r\nAUCTIONEERS\nC. A. WATERMAN & CO.-P.O, Boxi\nNELSON AUCTION. MAKT-W . Ol\nLGR, licensed {Uirtioneer. Auction \u2022\nsales rooms.   GOO Ward street. Phone!\nWHOLESALE  PRODUCE\nA. S. HORSWILL & CO-WHOLE3AL\nImporters and Manutacturers Age|\nProduce, Fruits, Plour and Feed. PI\nnox 51, Nelson, B.C.   Phone 121.    hM\nGROCERIES\nA. MACDONALD & CO., WHOLESA\nGrocers nnd Provision Merchants. _\nporters of Teas, Cotlees, Spices, Dl|\nFruits, staple and Fancy, OracerP\nTobaccos. Cigars. Butter, Eggs, ChaL\nand Packing House Produce. OI|\nand warehouse corner of ,\u00a3\u2122nt-,f\nHall streets. P. O. Box 1M6. T|\nphones 28 and 2a.\nPAINTING  AND  PAPER   HANGI|\nA _ BENNETT, PAINTER\nDecorator\u2014Wall papers and , _\nhanging a specialty. Estimates \u00abM\nAll work promptly executed. 514 Htl\nley street. Phono Sll. P. O. Box f\nNelson.\nELECTRICAL SUPPLIES\nI It. RINOROSE, 508 STANLEY S'l\nInstallation of electrical machine!\ntelephone plants, house wiring. Refl\nwork. Supplies carried. Pnone \/\u25a0\nP. O. Box 15G.\nPROFESSIONAL CARI\n^3REErTlmo1\u00a3r^\nCivil   Engineers.     Dominion  and B,|\nLand Surveyors. I\nSurveys   of   Lands,   Mines,   Townsll\nTimber Limits,  Etc. W\nNelson, 51G Ward street; A. H. Or!\nMgr. Victoria, 114 Pemberton Bldg.;!\nc. Green. Ft. George, Hammond strfl\nF.  P.   Burden.\nA. L, McCULLOCH\nHydraulic Engineer\nProvincial  Land  Surveyor\nP. O. Box 41 - '\nOffice phone, BSG; residence phone, '\nOffice,  Over MoDermld & MoHard|\nBaker Street, Nelson,, B. t\n*v. MACNEIL, BARRISTER, SOLI*!\ntor, etc. Solicitor for \"W.F.M., Per*\nBritish Columbia.\nT.   M.   RIXEN.    AUDITOR    AND\ncountant;' Insurance.   P. O. Box 378,1\n132f\nPR. MARY BWARTZ, PROFESSION!\nMid-Wife; 24 years' practice. \\\\'M\nIn Spoknno see Mrs. Mary Swal\nspecialist In female troubles. Hx-fT\n. Irt confinement cases. Good home i\npatients. Mrs. Mary Swartz, Gall\n, Blk., 108 Post street, Spokane, Waal\n164-Nor\nNelson lodge No. SIS,\nmeets 2nd and 'tli\nThursday at 8 p.m.,\nIn Englo ball. ,\n. S. TUORPliJ, Diet.\n0. HORSTEAD, Socretsry, P. O. Bwx393\nL0.0.MJ\nThe B. C. Assay ar\nChemical Supply C|\nLlihited\nSupply    complete    equipment\nAssay Offices and Laboratories, Che]\nteal   (and    Physical    apparatus\nSchools and Colleges.\n\u25a0   Agents In B. C. for the \"KELL^\nAssay   balance.\n513 Pender St. Vancouver, Bl\n 161*?\nT    WEDNESDAY .\nOCTOBER 23\nC&e-tatl? j&etos.\n,**  PAGE 8EVEN\nSTAR GROCERY\nDirectly opposite the  Dominion\nExpress Office.\nStore of Quality\nSole Agents for Ridgeway's Famous Teas.\nAgents for \"Egg-O\" Baking\nPowder.\nSole Agents \u2022 for Beech-Nut\nBaoon.\nJUST THE  BEVERAGE  YOU\nWANT.\nEmpress\n\u2022Coffee\n50c\nOur\nImperial Tea\n31bs.$l\nApples\nWealthys\n51b. 25c\n^raveristeins\n4-lus.25c\nSTAR GROCERY\n\u25a0    \u2022    NELSON =\nImperial Bank oi\nCanada\nEstablished  1875.-\nHEAP OFFICE:.TORONTO, ONT.\nCapital   (paid-up)    $6,460,000.00\nReserve Fund 6,460,000-00\nD. R. Wilkie, Pres. and Gen'l. Mgr.\nHon.   Robert  Jaffray,   Vice   Pres.\nSAVINGS  DEPARTMENT\nAn account can bo opened with JI\nor more. Interest Is allowed at current rates from date of opening the\naccount and added to tho principal\ntwice a year.\nTravellers' cheques nnd drafts sold,\nnegotiable In all-parts of the world.\nBank money orders Issued, payable\nthroughout Canada, the Unltetl Stntes\nand Grent Britain at tho following\n,*ates: J5 and under, 3 cents; over ?5\nto HO, fi cents; over $10 to $30, 10 cents;\nover *|S0 to m, 15 cents.\nOut of town customers can transact\ntheir banking business by mall and\nare  given  every attention.\nNelson Branch, J. H. D. Benson, Mgr.\nThe Royal Bank\nof Canada\nIncorporated  1869\nCAPITAL PAID UP....J 11,500,000\nRESERVE FUND     12,500,000\nTOTAL ASSETS   175,000,000\n8AFETY DEPOSIT BOXES FOR\nRENT.\nWills, Tltlo Deeds, Mortgages, Insurance Policies or other valuables,\nwhich ore at present exposed to\nrlsle -or being destroyed or lost, may\nbo secuieiy lodged in a safety deposit box for a small annual fee.\nFULL     INFORMATION   ON    APPLICATION.\nNELSON BRANCH\nA. B. NETHERBY, Mgr.\nSome Take Water\nbut wo don't-not In tho Plumbing business. We claim to do tho most thorough,\nperfect, clean, and satisfactory Plumbing work of any concern in tho town, and\nwe back up our assertion bv proving It:\nwe construct new Plumbing work, of\ncourse, whether It be for a single room\nor a row of houses; but wo aro also ex-\ntfer repairers, and we don't give the Joke-\nttiakcr an opportunity to havo fun at\neither delays or charges. \"Honest work\nat an honest price\" Is our motto.\nE. K. STRACHAN\nBAKER STREET NELSON\nThe Flexible Keyboard\nThe Burroughs^ Visible\nadding machine Is equipped with either the flexible keyboard of the safest\nand most up-to-date design, or tho famous Burroughs locking keyboard\nat no extra charge to you.\nLlko all Burroughs\nproducts the Burroughs\nvisible model carries the\nBurroughs guarantee of\nmechanical perfection and\ncontinuous service.\nFree demonstration,\nanytime, anywhere\u2014at our\nexpense.\nBurroughs Adding\nMachine Co,\n*W.   K.   TASKER,\nSales   Manager,\n347 Ponder Street,\nVANCOUVER,   B.C.\nFor New and up-\nto-date\nElectric\nChandeliers\nwith the pretty\nglassware go to\nJ. H. Ringrose\nElectrical Supplies.\n508 Stanley Street Phone A227\nMISGIVING BAY\nFare and One-Third\nfor tho round trip between all stations from Port Arthur to Vancouver,   Including  branches,\nGood going October 25 to 28, 1912,\ninclusive.\nReturn limit October 30, 1812.\nPull particulars nnd tickets from\nany C. P. R. ticket agent.\nJ. A.  M'DONALD,\nDistrict Passenger   Agent,   Nelson.\nconnection  with   Trans-Atlantic\nOccon Stoamship Tickets.\nTickets on sala daily, November\n7 to December 31, 1912.\nReturn\nfrom Nelson\nMontreal or Quebec   $ 88.25\nSt. John, N. B\u201e or Halifax..    9G.25\nPortland,   Un Ino *     06.2E\nBoston, Mass  104.1)5\nNew York   99.25\nCorrespondingly low fares from\nall other points'in Kootenay district,\nMidway nnd East and Nakusp nnd\nSouth, including branches.\nGood to return within five months\nfrom dnto of sale, except going\njourney must be completed within\n10 days from date of sale and return journey within 15 days from\ndate ticket 13 validated for return\nat Canadian or United States Atlantic seaport.\nStopovers allowed in Canada oast\nof Fort Wlllium or Sault Ste. Marie\nwithin going and return transit\nlimits.\nFurther pnrtl'culnrs and tickets\nfrom any C. P. R. ticket agent or\nwrito\nJ, A.  M'DONALD,\nDistrict  Passenger  Agent.,  Nelson.\nDaily News Want Ads. get results.\nBUY   NOW\nSwift's\nFertilizers\nFor Fall and Spring Use.\nIT PAYS TO USE THEM\nSwift Canadian\nCo., Ltd.\nNELSON, B. O.\nFRUIT RIPENED\nBY ELECTRICITY\nMethod for Providing Ripe Fruit Out\nof Season\u2014Apparatus Will\nBe Improved.\n(Ry Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Oct. 22.\u2014Unripe peaches\ncan now be ripened in a few minutes\nby electricity. This remarkable, discovery Is the result of an experiment\nwith a high frequency electrical apparatus made by T. Thome Baiter, scientific expert. Thfs Is how the modern wizardry occurred:\nA spray of electric sparks was directed full on the surface of the fruit.\nVery soon with the sparks flying off\na* all point of the peach the green skin\nwas seen to turn to a light brown\ncolor. The whole peach was completely charged with electricity and sparks\nwould even fly out of the fruit immediately any part of its skin was\ntouched by the finger. After the current had been turned off the peach\nwas left for a few minutes and then\nit was cut open. The ripening effect\nhad penetrated almost to the stone.\n\"I nm improving on my apparatus\nshortly,\" said Baker, \"and soon It\nought to be possible for hotels and\nfruiterers to purchase an apparatus\nthat will ripen most kinds of fruit in\na few minutes. In this manner people will be able to enjoy ripe out of\nseason fruit at very little cost.\"\nDIFFICULT TO AVOID\nINFRACTIONS OF LAW\n(By Dally Nows Leased Wire.)\n. BERLIN, Oct. 22.\u2014There is either\nsomething wrong with the laws in\nGermany or there are too many of\nthem. Statistics just published reveal\nthat Germany Is not the automatically\nself-disciplined nation it bas been reputed to he, for ono person out of\nevery 12 has been convicted in the\ncourse of tho past year of some trans\ngression or other. There arc so many\nsigns of \"verboten,\" which means \"prohibited,\" everywhere ono looks, that\nthere should be fewer Infractions of\nthe law In the empire than elsewhere:\nyet, thero are more. One girl out of\nevery 213, one boy out of every 23,\none woman out of every 25 and one\nman out of every six have had trouble\nwith the law and have been punished\naccordingly..\nTEACHERS FINED FOR\nBELONGING TO  UNION\n(Bv Dally News Leased Wire.)\nPARIS, Oct. 22.\u2014Twenty-five members of tho Teachers' union of Paris,\nwere today sentenced by the correctional court to the payment of a \"f 10\nfine each and costs for refusing to\ndisbnnd by order of the government\nThe court ordered tho dissolution of\ntiie union, Because of the action of\nthe congress of teachers' societies held\nat Chamhray last August, when rei\nlutlons approving anti-militarism were\nadopted, the prefects of the various\ndepartments under instructions from\nthe government, ordered the societies\nto disband before Sept. 30. All hut\nthe Paris union obeyed this order.\nPERJURY BECOMING\nCRIME TOO COMMON\nReal  Estate Agent Charged With Perjury   in   Winnipeg  is  Acquitted\nby   Magistrate.\n(Bv Dnlly Nows Leased Wire.)\nWINNIPEG. Oct. 22.\u2014The case\nagainst William Genser, real estate\nagent fn tlie Mclntyre block, for perjury, was this morning dismissed by\nMagistrate Alexander McMloken. Genser was arrested in the court of Kingr\nbench on June ii for perjury In a case\nwhich was at the time before Chiel\nJustice Mathers. It was at tho order\nof tho chief justice that tho charge\nwas laid against Genser. in dismiss\nIng the case the magistrate, said that\nthe highest commendation was due to\nthe chief justice for ills effort tc\nstamp out perjury which wns becoming a crime too common in the courts\nThere was no doubt that ho waa justified in his nctlon.\nMAY ANNUL MARRIAGE\nOF CHILD BRIDES\n(By Dailv New* 1>ase<1 Wlro.1\nALBANY, N.Y.. Oct. 22.\u2014The marriage\nof a girl under the ngc of legal consent\ncontracted In another state may be annulled by the courts of this state if th-*\ncouple aro residents of New York state,\naccording h> n decision by tho court if\nappeals. William Cunningham, who\nboarded at tlio homo of Anna Prell ,n\nNew York elty, took the girl to West-\nwood, N.J., on Jan. 30, 1010. whore they\nwere married. They kept the marriage\na secret for three months. When tha\nmother learned of It she began an action\nto annul the marriage, hut the complaint\nwas dismissed by justice Greenhauin\nand his action wns upheld by ihe a*:-\nncllnte division. The court of appeal*,\ntoday reversed the lower court's decision and ordered a new tiial.\nMUCH  GRAIN SHIPPED\nTHROUGH MONTREAL PORT\n(By1 Dally News Leased Wire.)\nMONTREAL,  Oct. 2..\u2014Thlrtv per cent\nof   the   grain   shinned   so   far   thla   *\u25a0'\nHIS BLADDER WAS\nTERRIBLYJNFLAMED\nGIN PILLS Brought Belief\nLarder Lake, Out., March 26th.\n\"I had been suffering for some time\nwith my Kidneys and Urine. I was\nconstantly passing water, whicli was\nvery scanty, sometimes as many as\nthirty times a day. Each time the pain\nwas something awful, and no rest at\nnight.\nI heard of your GIN PILLS and\ndecided lo give them a trial at once.\nI sent my chum 60 miles to get them\nand I am pleased to inform yon that in\nless than Bix hours, I felt relief.\nIn two days, tlie pain had left me\nentirely.  I took about half a box and\ntoday I feel as well as e ver | and iny\nkidneys are acting quite natural again.\"\nSID CASTLEMAN.\nGIN PILLS soothe the irritated\nbladder\u2014heal the sick, weak, painful\nkidneys\u2014andstrengthon both these vital\norgans.   Money back if they fait.\n50c. a box, 6 for I2.50. Sample free\nif you write National Dmgand Chemical\nCo., of Canada, Limited; Toronto.    139\nPURE\nWHOLESOME\nRELIABLE\n\u2022W ECONOMICAL >\nT\u00bb> MADE IN CANADA W\nEWGlLLETrCQLTn\nTORON TO ONT.\nfrom North America has gone through\nthe port of Monti eal. This statement is\nborne out by figures In the hands of\nJames Carruthers, of James Carruthero\n& Co. \"Congestion is to be feared,*' ne\nsaid, \"as there Is so much grain in\nstorage at Fort William. The government authorities are alivu to the situation and aie doing their utmost to he'j>\nby endeavoring to keep navigation open\nIn the great lakes during the month of\nlii'i-Linhcr.\"*\nNELSON NEWS OF TBE DAY\nThere will bo a children's night for the\nchildren of members of Clan Johnstone\nIn Oddfellows' hall at 7:30 o'clock on\nFriday night instead of Thursday night,\nThe Overseas club Is Indebted to the\nfollowing for services rendered at the\nTrafalgar Lay smoker; 13. O. Thomas,\nA. 13. Bennett, R. Q. Fraser, F. li,\nHlllam, G. Orewitt and P. Hayden.\nOn Halloween the Young Ladles' Sodality of the Church of Mary Immaculate\nwill glvo a Halloween party In the Nelson Catholic club hall. Some attractive\nfeatures suitable to the occasion will\nfoim part of the evening's entertainment.\nThe Clan Johnstone Is holding a Halloween entertainment In Fagle ball on\nOct. 31. It Is taking the form of a concert, supper and dance and promises to\nbo as great a success as was the entertainment given by them on Burns\nnight last season. An excellent concert\nprogram has been arranged Including\nmany of the best artists In the city.\nAsk   or   write .for   the   Hudson's   Bay\ncompany's grocery price list. 161-tf.\nGo  to King  George  Cafe,   Hall  street.\nGet a square meal, -5c up.   White cook.\n\u2022lGl-li\nBurnt wood (or \"Poker Work\") and\npierced brass materials arc being cleared\nout at very low prices at Thomson's\nsale. Beautiful Christmas gifts can he\nmade up In these. Its time now to be\ngetting to work on them. 1G3-3\nBuy at the Union Cash Grocery and\nget a discount card. We punch this fo:\nevery cash purchase and when it reaches\nS10 you are entitled to 50 cents. Everything Included except flour and sugar.\nPay cash and save money. 161-C\nWc nre sole agents for Malthoid roofing\npapers, the best and cheapest roof you\ncan put on nny building. Can sell it to\nyou in any niiantltles. We also sell all\nkinds of feed, oyster shell, etc., and\ndon't forget we sell ran try Queen flour.\nWe sell it. P. O. Box 6-1. A. S. Horswill\n& Co., Phone 121. 102-tf.\nThe Hudson's Bay company are allowing a discount of five por cent on\nall purchases for spot cash, and two\nper cent off regular prices on monthly\naccounts if paid promptly as may be\nagreed upon.\nBRINGING OPPORTUNITY.\nInvestment chances appeal to many.\nThe opportunity to acquire part Interest\nor entire ownership In established businesses or provide capital in now undertakings Is often outlined In the .Want\nColumns.\nTl.e ownership in small businesses \\_\nconstantly changing. Cigar stands, barber shops, agencies of various kinds,\nhotels, boarding and rooming house.-;,\nstores and other businesses are bOUglit\nand sold [brought the Want Columns.\nLooking for a business-seeking an Investment? Make use of the Wants in\nbringing opportunity  to  you.\nNO MORE CORNS\nNo  More Dangerous Paring.\nNobody needs to suffer from corns\nsince \"Exterminator\" wns Invented.\nMillions apply this little plaster. The\npain stops Instantly; Then tbe \"Exterminator\" gently loosens tho corn. In\nfew days the whola corn comes out\u2014root,\ncallous and all.\n\"Exterminator\" hns done that for\nmillions of corns, without nny soreness,\nany trouble, any delay or discomfort.\nCommon treatments mean just a brief\nrelief. \"Exterminator\" ends the corn.\nParing a corn hist removes tho top layer.\nTbe main part Is left to grow, and in\nmillions of cases paring causes Infection.\nAll those methods arc wrong. Soon or\nInto tho corn must be removed. Why\ntrifle and delay'.' \"Exterminator\" removes It in four days. In the meantime\nyou  forget It.\nPlonBe prove this\u2014for your own sake.\nIt is the only right way to treat corns.\nIf  not  satisfied  money  back.\n\"Exterminator\" corn plaster, 50 cents\npackage. Sold by John Swan, Sandon.\nB.C., Canada. 189-la.W-10\nSHOE COMPANY\nWILL OBEY LAW\nIf  Methods Not  Lawful   Must  Change\nThem\u2014Six Months to Decide\nAction.\nfBy \"Daily News Lea**en Wire.)\nMONTREAL, Oct. 22.\u2014That the\nUnited States Shoo Machinery company will abide by tho ruling of the\nhoard of Inquiry was the statement\nmade today by J. Knowlton, manager\nof tho company.\n\"We always obey tho laws of the\ncountry in which we nre working,\" he\nsaid, \"wo will havo six months In\nwhich to decide upon our courso of\naction. Our president and' directors\naro In Boston, of'courae, nnd lt will be\nfor them to arrive at a decision In the\npromises. Wc aro in tho meantime\ngoing on ns usual and will continue to\ndo so until we make somo readjustment In harmony with tho Judgement.\nWe make machinery, not shoes. Wo\naro busy manufacturing and shall continue to do so for the present. If our\nmethods aro not according to tho law\nof the country they will have to bo\nmado to conform to that law whatever\nIt Is. Wo hnd no Idea that wo aro\nbreaking any law, however.\"\nIs Illegal Combine.\n(By Dally  News  Loascn  Wire.)\nOTTAWA,    Oct.    22.\u2014Hon.    T.    W.\nCrothers, today made public the detailed roport o_ the board of investigation which inquired into the chargo\nlBs___ma_mk____\u20ac_mmfm&m*ui-___m_am\nGROCERY TALK\nTetley's Teas\nA cheering cup for a cheerless day.    Extra quality,\nthe very best procurable, per half pound package..50c\nNo. 1 quality, per half pound package  35o\nGolden  Tips,  per 1-lb.  tin 6O0\nRed   Sunflower,  per  1-lb.  tin     50c\nRed  Sunflower,  per 3-lb,  tin    $1,40\nRed Sunflower, per 5-Ib. tin   $2.25\nOur own blend of Teas at, per lb. 30c, 35c, 40c and 50c\nMcLaren's Cheese\nPimento, a   new  line at    10c\nImperial,  small  jars    30c\nImperial,   large  jars 55o\nApples\nWealthy and Gravcnsteins  $1.25 to $1.75 per box\nPreserving Pears\nA few boxes only at, per box $2.00\nFancy   Malaga   Grapes,   per   lb 25c\nCranberries, 3  lbs. for   25c\nHuntley & Palmer's Biscuits\nA new shipment just arrived; they are fresh, dainty*\ncrisp; simply delicious. They vary in price from\n  25c to 85c  per  lb.\nGenuine Maple Syrup\nStraight from the sugar bush in Quebec; warranted\npure and in every way up to best ever made in the\ndays of long ago.\nReputed   1   quart   tins    $ .55\nReputed  2  quart  tins    $1.00\nReputed  3  quart tins    $1.40\nBovril\nNice  to   have  handy  these  cold  days.\n2-oz.  bottle    $ .35\n4-oz.  bottle    $ .65\n8-oz.  bottle    $1.10\n16-oz.  bottle    $1.76\nL NOTICE\nOn All Purchases for Spot Cash a DISCOUNT OF FIVE PER\nCENT., and on All Regular Monthly Accounts, if Paid\nPromptly as May Be Agreed Upon, a DISCOUNT OF TWO\nPER CENT. Will Be Allowed Off Regular Prices.\nay Company\nIncorporated 1670\nIncorporated 1670\nlhat the operations of the board In\nStinada constitute an Illegal comblna\nWon In restraint of trade, perhaps, th\ntnost salient and outstanding feature\nftt tho report Is to be found in the dec\nlanition of the majority of the mem\nbcrs of the board, Judge Laurcndeau\nand J. C. Walsh, that \"the United Shoe\nAlachinery Company of Canada Is a\ncombine and by the operation of the\nclauses of tho leases quoted in the\nforegoing, which restrict the use\nlensed machines in the way therein set\nforth, competition In tho manufacture,\nproduction, purchase, snle and supply\nof shoe machinery In Canada hns been\nand, Is unduly restricted and prevented.\"\nThe majority report gives nn exhaustive but clear cut survey of the workings In Canada of tho United Shoo\n.Machinery company and Its effect\nupon competition In that line of trade.\n, It shows that in 1S99 there were\nSeveral sources from which tho manu\nfacturer of shoes could obtain his machinery, there being various American concerns nnd ono Canadlnn concern. Since thnt time nil the AmeVlcan\ncompanies havo either been absorbed\nby iho United Shoo Machinery company In the United States or \"In any\nevent It appears the United Machinery\nCompany of Canada today controls the\nsupply In Canada of all the machinery\nwhich was previously owned by these\nvarious companies.\"\n\u2022 After showing that at present there\nripponrs to ho only one other manufacturer of shoe machinery in Canada,\nonly seven small and unimportant factories being equipped from other\nsources than the United Shoe Machinery company, the report explains the\nmethods by which this company arranges for the uso of its machines.\n\"Since 1005,\" It says, \" the plan hns\nbeen to install the machines on lease\nwithout limited charge but to exact\nfrom (ho manufacturer whenever such\na machine is returned to tbe company\nthe cost of putting the machine In good\nand efficient working order and condition.\"\nApart from this, thero nre levied\nupon certain machines, or sets of machines working together, a royalty\ncharge of a fixed amount per pair; and\nIn the case of other machines the company derives its return from the sales\nof mntcrlals, such a wire, pegs and\neyelets, all of which are sold to the\nmanufacturers, who must take them\nfrom the company at prices set hy the\ncompnny nnd which prices nro in excess of the market prices except in the\ncase of tho eyelets which are sold at\nthe market price.\"\n.-'. The report that goes on to show\nthat the lenses nre all mado for a period of 20 years. Where a machine is\nreturned and exchanged for a new one,\npr when a change occurs in the status\nof the lessee; or when a transfer is\nmade by a lessee t oanother, a new\nlease, to run for a new term of 20\nyears is required to bo made,\nAfter again pointing out. that the\ncompany has obtained practically com\npletc control of the business of supplying shoe machinery in Canada, the\nboard continues in its report ns follows: \"We have now to consider whnt\nIs the effect of tho situation so established upon (1) competition In tfhe\nmanufacture and supply of the shoe\nmachines; (2) the position of the\nmanufacturers of hoots and shoes;\n(3) tbe consumers of the boots and\nShoes.\nThe only complaint of the shoe manufacturers when they complain is that\nthey are deprived of such advantages\noh might accrue to them if they were\nfree to nvnit themselves of the benefit\nCf tho competition In the supply of\ntho shoe machinery. They do not complain of tho company's charges, ns\nall qhoe manufacturers arc In that re\nspect, on the same footing and they\nall incorporate the charges mode upon\nthem for royalties in the factory cost\nof their shoes.\n\"Tho same reasoning applies to the\ncase of the ultimate consumer because\nit Is a uniform royalty charge, that is\nincluded in the cost of shoes to him\n\"In regard to the* manufacture and\nsupply of the shoe machinery, it Is\nestablished that in all the 138 factories in which tho company ma' bines\nare under lease, competition is effectively eliminated. The board con-\neludes by recommending that 'in view\nof all tho circumstances of tho case\nhowever, we consider it necessary thai\ntho delay of 10 days prescribed in\nclause 23 of the combines' Investigation act, bo extended to an addition1!\nperiod of six months and we recommend   thnt  such   delay  be  granted.'\"\nW. J. White, K. C, representing the\nUnited Shoe Machinery company, presents a minority report in which he\nobjects to the conclusions arrived m\nby the majority of the board. He\nsnys: ''There Is one stalenient In\nwhich I cannot concur, to lhe effect\nthat with the conditions said tn bo\nin existence, competition in the manufacture nnd supply of shoe machinery In Canada Is practically impossible.\"\nMr. White contends that the only\ndifference of opinion among the members of the board was as tn the interpretation of the word \"unduly.\" In\nhis opinion, the leases of the machinery made by tbe company arc not un-\nreasonably oppressive or contrary   to\nDID NOT CLOTHE\nCORPSE PROPERLY\nCharges    Undertaker    With    Offering\nIndignities  to  Human   Remains\nand  Neglect of Duty.\n'By  Dally  Xews   Leased  Wire.)\nTORONTO, Oct. 22\u2014\"That he did without lawful excuse neglect to perform  tbe\nduty undertaken by him with reference\nto the burial of the dead human body\nor human remains of George Brown, de-\n\u25a0 eased, and did Improperly and Indecent:\nly offer indignities to the dead human\nremains of the said George Brown,  ue-\n\\\\*. Mllei\n-4\nmorning. Owing to the absence or\nAllies' counsel the ease was remanded\nuntil October _0. The family allege that\nthe undertaker neglected to clothe the\nbody properly, although charging for tho\nservice.\nGREEKS LEAVE\nVANCOUVER\n\u2022\nTO\nJOIN  COLORS.\n'Th\n\"Dally Nei\n\u25a0\u25a0*  T\neased Wire.!\nVAXC\n3UVER, Oct. .\n.\u2014About 10 Or\n\u2022in\nsoldiers\nmembers\nnf\n;he   first   rose\nve\n)f   tho   sec\n)ud\ncontingent    fr\nin\ner  to depn\nt   t\ni  join   the  Gn\n-*\narmy,\nwill    leave\nth.\ncity    tomorr\n)W\nnight   for   Xew   Vi\nrk,\nwhere \u25a0 they   \\\nill\nembark\nfor Athen\nHARPOON THIS FACT-\nThnt the 1\nthis paper\naid  to  the\nant   Art   service   of\nlhe most efficient\nmn and  woman   in\nLU\nBusiness Is Good.   Call and\nGet Our Prices.\nDominion Sawmills & Lumber, Ltd.\nLATE  YALE-COLUMBIA   LUMBER  CO.\nPHONE  15. P.  O.  BOX  1068\nPACIFIC\n-to\nEmpresses\nOP  THE  ATLANTIC   AND   OTHER\nSTEAMSHIPS \u201e.\u201e\u201e\u201e..,\nMONTREAL.   QUEBEC   AND   LIVERPOOL\nVIA TIIE SCENIC ROUTE TO EUROPE\nThousnnd miles on tlio   St.   Lawrence   river,    tho   Bhortost\njcean pnssnge.     Loss than four class tit Sim.\nFirst Ciibln JD2.50 and up.    Second   cabin fi>.t.ii' ami up. , ono-\nClnss-Cnbln  (second class)   (itO.Ofl and  up.\nrates on request.\nTickets nnd Informatl on from any Railroad or Steamsbln ABent\nor  J. J. FORSTER.  General Agent, 713 Second Avo., SEATTLIt\nEX..; tSSsE^--\nThird  class, lowest\n PAGE EIGHT\n%ty laity $fa&.\nWEDNESDAY\nOCTOBER 23\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\nBruce White of Sandon is at the llui\nB.   Newell   left   last   night   for   ReVcl-\nArchdcacon Beer of Kaslo came lu hut\nnight and Is a guest at  tbe Hume.\nP. A, Newell Imn purehnsed the Nelson\nEmployment Office, formerly .run hy U,\nIF.  Hutton.\nThere will be a progressive whist drive\nat at. Saviour's parish hall this evening\nat 8 o'clock.\nOn account of the presentation uf\n\"Hopp, .Skipp and Jump\" tomorrow evening the Knights of Columbus social Iia3\nbeen postpone-].\nThe ladles of the Baptist church Intend holdlntr a sale of home cooking un\nlaaturflay afternoon from 4 until 10 in\nDr. Wolverton's office, Baker street.\nTranksgiving delicacies will be a specialty.   Afternoon tea will be served.\nFred Grant, tbe well known local\nhockey and lacrosse player, who has\ncompleted bis course nt Belleville bu.nl-\nnesK college and who has been visiting\nfriends In Montreal, Is expected lo\nturn to Nelson next week. He will\nBlue here in future.\nLast night's dress rehearsal of \"IT\nSkipp and Jump\" win* a great sue\nand the play Is expected to be welcomed\nby a large audience at tbe opera bouse\ntonight All taking part are asked Jj\nbe present at 7;15 o'clock. Tbe plan i\\.:\ntomo! row's performance will open \u25a0\u00bbt the\nPoole Drug store loiluv,\nAmong the delegates from the Nelson\nConservative assoclallun who will intend the provincial Conservative convention nt Revelstoke, which will open l\"*\nmorrow, are W. R. Maclean. M.P.P.\nC A. Waterman, Dr. 1.. K. Borden, William Irvine, C. P. Mcllarly, Mayor\nAnnable, \"W. G. Poster and  I'bil waua.\nNelson \"Street railway returns for the\nthird week of this month were: Receipts, %22s.'M; piif^oiiMei-s carried, C.Jil.\nThis number was represented by Ucliui.-\npresented to 4,S9J adults and 750 children,\ncash fares being 032. For the corresponding period of the previous yenr the re-\nceTpts were $211.05 and the number of\npassengers 5,973.\nW. A. Wilkinson, the well known vio\nllnlst In Johnson's orchestra, loft th.\ncltv last night for Vernon where be hat'\naccepted a position in one of the local\norchestras. Mr. Wilkinson came to Not-\nson five vears ngo, playing first at lie\nold Empire, nnd when that theatre closed\ndown he joined the Starland orchestra\nand afterwards the Gem.\nArrancements have been made by th\nUnequalled for <*\u00abnaral   Use\nMALAGA GRAPES\n35c   a   pound.\nCRANBERRIES\n20c   a   pound.\nC. A. Benedict\nGrocer\nneGEM\nSelections, Orchestra\nSpecial Features\nDlogrnph\nTHE   NARROW   ROAD.\nVitngraph\nAT THE  END OF THE TRAIL.\nEssanay\nTHE HERMIT.\nADMISSION   10c.\n24\nLots\nFor\nSale\nl\ni\nj Situated oh Richards & Del-\nbruclc streets, Goodi level lots\nand all within easy reach of the\ntram car. Prices $125 and $150\neach. Easy terras to suit the\npurchaser,\ni Prices will be advanced at the\nbeginning of the year.\nH. & M. Bird\nI       Nelson, B. C.\nThe Store of Low Prices\n~it.   Charles   cream,   20  oz. size, 2      Swift's bacon, 1 lb. for  25c\nfor -25c     Shamrock bacon, 1 lb. for  25c\nSt. Charles cream, family size ..10o     Hums,  per lb 23c\nUtility cream, 20 oz. size Mc Sodas,    Christies,    McCormtcks    or\nCreamery butter, 2 lbs. for  75o Mooncys, 2 lb. tins   .35c\nTHE UNION GROCERY\nCor.  Hall  and Baker Sts. Phons  176 Nelson, B.C.\nSplit\nSecond\nTiming Watches\nMade by Famous Swiss Manufac-\n: turers\nA 10 size heavy 18-karat case,\nfitted with a high-grade Agas-\nslz, split second, taking the time of\ntwo contestants to 1-5 of a second.\nPrice  $225.00\nA 12 size -14-korat ense, fitted\n\u25a0***\u25a0 with a celebrated Touehon &\nCo.\u2014one of the world's best.\nPrice  $175.00\nTheso are complete wllh minute\nregisters and are absolutely\" perfect in construction and as time\npieces.\nJ. 0. Patenaude\nImporter of Swiss Watches.\nL\nStarland Theatre\nMeyer's Starland  Orchestra.\nPictures Changed Dally.\nActs\u2014VAUDEVILLE\u2014 2 Acts\nJACOBS a. SARDELL\nAcrobatic Jumping Comlques.\nMISS  IRMA   MORTON.\nNew Songs and Eccentric Dances.\n3 REELS PICTURES.\nChildren, 10c\u2014Adults, 15c.\nStandard Furniture\n=Company=\nC. J. CARL60N, Undertaker\nUndertakers 'Em balm ers\nand Funeral Directors\nThe finest and most up to date\nundertaking parlorB and chapel in\nInterior of B.C. I-ady attendant for\nwomen and children.\nDay .Phone 85\nNight Phones 252 and L64\nRedtop Hay\nWe have just unloaded   a   car\nrplendld quality.   This is fine for tat-J\ntie\u2014good milk feed.\nGood  stock   of   Bran   and   OHc|ike|\nMeal.\nThe Brackman -Kcrl\nMilling Co., Limittidl\nWaters & Pascoe\nBuilders, etc.,  Nelson,  B.C.\nKOOTENAY LAKE SASH AND\nDOOR FACTORY\nDoors, windows and mouldings of\nall kinds In stock or made to order.\nLime, cement and bricks for sale.\nESTIMATE8 GIVEN\nDaily News Want Ads, gat results.\nladles of St. Paul's Presbyterian churcn\nfor a grand bazaar to be held on Friday\nnnd Saturday. .Nov. !\u2022- tttul I1;', in aid .tf\nthe urgan fund. There will Be for safe\nall kinds of plain and fancy sewing, net\ndolls, dressed dulls and dolls clutiies,\nhome cooking, Including jams. Jellies,\npickles, etc. Afternoon tea will be\nserved on  both days.\nMr. and \"Airs. S. Coryell, MIsb Ruth\nCoryell, Mr. and Mrs. It. C. Watersotl\nand Miss Catherine Waterson, who haw\nbeen guests nf Mr. and Mrs. C. P. .M>-\nHauiy, will leave this morning fur tho\neast, Mr. and Mrs. Coryell and daughter\ntu Toronto and Mr. and Mrs. Watersou\nand daughter to Toronto on their way\nto Florida for the winter. The three latter will be accompanied by WHiner Mu-\nHardy.\nTO RUN EVENING\nTRAIN TO SLOCAN\niV. P. TIERNEY, General Sales Agent,\nNelson, B. C.\nCars shipped to all railway points.\nHOT WATER\nBOTTLES\nNo need to pay big prices for\nrubber goods.\nLook at these:\nNew     Fresh      Pure\nTwo-quart hot water bottles,\n31.25 each.\nThree-quart hot water bottles,\nSI.DO each.\nCombination fountain fitting,\n75c each.\nSomething new\u2014Pigs or font\nwarmers, stone water bottles,\nunbreakable, $1.25 each.\nGuaranteed 2-quart hot water\nbottles, $2.00.\nGuaranteed 3-quart hot wntcr\nbottles, $2.50.\nRubber gloves, $1.00 pair,\nMall orders filled promptly.\nWm. Rutherford\nDruggist.\nWard St.\nNelson,\nCanadian     Pacific     Will     Inaugurate\nSpecial Service Each Saturday\u2014\nEffective Thia Week.\nFor the convenience of residents between Nelson and Sloean City who aro\ndeslrlous of spending Saturday afternoons and evenings In Nelson, nnd returning home the same night, the Canadian Pacific railway will, commencing\nnext Saturday, October 26, and each\nSaturday thereafter until further notice, attach a concli to lhe through Saturday night freight train for Sloean\nCity, leaving Nelson at 10 p. m. South\nSloean at 10:30 p. m. and arriving at\nSloean City nbout midnight. Stops\nwill he made at all intermediate points\nif business offers.\nINDUSTRIAL UNITY\nQUESTION LAID OVER\nTrades    and   Labor Council     Discuss\nMatter\u2014Opinion is Divided Among\nLocal  Unions.\nIndustrial unionism founded on the\nbelief that unity of labor is the hope\nof the world was a subject discussed\nby the Trades and Labor council in\nthe Miners' Union hnll last night. The\nious local unions had been called\nupon   to send  representatives to cast\nvote for or against the local body\nbecoming affiliated with the Industrial\nunion. The votes recorded were Typographical union against; United\nBrotherhood of Carpenters, for; Barbers' union, against; Painters' union.\nFederal union and Machinists, for. No\nreports were received from the Bricklayers, Brewery \"Wdrkors, Moulders, or\nAmalgamated  Carpenters.\nThe subject was considered to be of\nmost vital importance and it wus\nthought that the various bodies had\nnot yet had sufficient time to givt\ndue consideration to the pros nnd eons\nof the case, therefore it was finally\nileilded to lay the matter over until\ntlie next meeting.\nThe suggestion of Industrial union-\nIsm among the trade unions of Canada cmnnated from the Vancouver\nTrades and Labor council. Severn)\ntheories were expounded last nighi\nwhy it wns not advisable, und should\nCROCKERY\nWe have dlnnerware of all kinds\nJn hand, Nine open stock patterns\nto choose from. Make the composition of your set to suit yourself or\nilll  up   the   set   you   already   have\nOur China and Semi-Porcelain\nwares are of artistic design nnd\n3ainty decoration.   See them.\nCHINA HALL\nMUNRO & NELSON\nPhone A261\n321 Baker Btreet.      P. O. Box 588\nLARGE SHIPMENT OF\nLATE PLUMS ARRIVES\nA largo shipment of late plums lias\nnrrived in the city. They aro in splendid condition and housekeepers who\noverlooked plums at the time of preserving arc advised by retailers to take\nthese up at 90 cents a crate.\nOpera House, Nelson\nSATURDAY, OCT. 26\nFRED   RAYMOND\nAnnounces ITIb PlamouB Successful\nDomestic Comedy\nThe Missouri\nGirl\nA series of comical surprises,\nstartling situations and thrilling\nclimaxes!\nA Drama that appeals to all that is\npure and noble in human naturel\nA   Maaterpicco   of   Stage   Pictures\nBubbling   Wit!*.   Merriment!\nSCENICALLY SUPERB!\nDRAMATICALLY BRILLIANT!\nMUSICALLY GREATI\nNew    Songsl    New     Dances    New\nMU8ICI\nAdvance sale at Poole's.\nprlces_f'0c, 76c, $1.00.\nJUST THE THING  FOR THESE COLD  MORNINGS  AND  EVENINGS\nBuy a \"Perfection\" Oil Heater\nHEAT WHEN YOU WANT IT\nAND WHERE YOU WANT IT\nNo  odor,  and  coats but four cents an hour.\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co. Ltd.\n' Wholesale and Retail ,   Nelson B. C.\nHAMILTON TORONTO VANCOUVER WINNIPEG\ned.\nT. F, Stanley of the Typographical\nunion, gave It as his opinion thtrt lite\nadoption of Industrial unionism would\ntenr down the whole organism of Iho\nTrades and Labor councils because H\nwould primarily havi- the effect ol*\nplacing the power in the hands of the\nfew, just the vory thing employers of\nlabor were looking for. The speaker\nthought It likely tliat Typographical\nunion workers throughout the Dominion and United States would secede\nfrom the Trades and Labor councils\nif the measure were adopted; Severn!\noilier speakers held the same view\nwhile others were strongly in favor.\nThe council resolved lo rent the\nunion headquarters on Stanley sired\nand appointed Messrs. Hardy. Elliott\nNolnian, Smart and Chapman tn act\nas a committee of five in the management of the building.\nThe dnnce committee's report that\na dance be held in the Eagle hall on\na date to be fixed later, was adopted\nit. Bloom's barber shop on Raker\nstreet was replaced on the fair list.\nThe postofflec committee appointed\nto look into the rumor that certain\nemployes of 1C years of age were;\nworking as long as 13 hours and some\npart of thai time during tlie night, reported thai (here was no foundation\nfor the allegation.\nIt  was  pointed out that a certain\nbarber's  shop hnd  been   receiving    a I the Conserv\nnewspaper not produced by union la-   gan, nnd\nbor nnd thai the proprietor, who w?   the end i\n77ie Old Favorites Are Here Again\u2014A Fresh [Shipment of\nNeilson's Chocolates\nTHE HIGHEST IDEAL OF FASTIDIOUS LOVERS OF RICH, SATISFYING CONFECTION IS REALIZED IN\nNEILSON'S CHOCOLATES\nThe craving for one more lingers., because their irresistible charm of flavor\nthey arc \"The Sweetest Story Ever   Told.\"\nWE ARE  EXCLUSIVE AGENTS.\nnever   forgotten.    That'a   why\nThe Poole Drug Co.\nWE REXALL STORE\nWE APPRECIATE YOUR PATRONAGE.\nALWAYS AT YOUR SERVICE\nunaware of the fact, liau agreed mu\nto take that paper in future. '\nSIR WILFRID\nIN RICHELIEU\nSpeaks    for   Opposition     Candidate-\nConservative Candidate Listens to\nFlow, of Oratory.\n(By Dally News ceased Wire..)\nSUHEL, Que...,'Oct. 22.\u2014Before nn\naudience of over. 7.000 people gatherer\nfrom Sorel und till parts- of Hiohelleu\ncounty and wllh a large contingent oi\nsome thousands brought in by excursions from Moiilrcal, Threo Klvew;\nNlcolet, Uerthler and St. Hyaelnlhe,\nSir Wilfrid Laurier and a goodly num\nbor of his ehldf Liberal helpers today\nmade appeals for the election of A. 1'.\n.1. Carin, Liberal candidate in Richelieu county against E. A. D. Morgan\nThe chief of the opposition expressed\ngroat confidence in the result, going\nso fur us in predict that as Sept. 21\nwas spoken of us a memorable duto,\nOet. 2-1, the date of the election here\nwould be another day which would\nb_ referred to. He and all the other\nspeakers made constant references to\nthe reported Intention of the Hon. I\u00a3.\nD. Monk to resign on the navy question, Sir Wilfrid speaking hopefully ol\nit as \"the beginning of the ond.\" lie\nsnld Mr, Monk would have deserved\nsympathy and respect if he were resigning to save his honor after having\nmade conditions to Mr. Borden before\naccepting the portfolio be now holds\nOtherwise, he thought thnt Mr. Monl-\nshowed considerable naivete and\ngullelessness it' he accepted the portfolio without seeing the inevitable out\ncome.\nThe train from Montreal \u25a0bringing\nIn Sir Wilfrid iJiurler was mot by-\nMayor Lafrenlerji and the lender of\ntbe opposition was led to the Miami In\nthe park where a large audience waj\ngathered. After the band had played\nand a large number of bombs bad\nbeen exploded, two young ladles, Ml:;.*\nAnno Llsotte and Miss Maflon Onsai\nvant presented two bouquets of flowers for the town and for the county\nLiberal Associations', being rewarrte*'\nIn the us-iul happy* manner. The\ncrowd applauded the speakers liber\nally and the whole afternoon pastv\noff wlihmit incident but some of th'\ncitizens objected to' the presence o'\n,*e candidate, Mr. Mor\nemark lie made towim\"\nmeeting and n__h___ 'v\"\nSecure Your Own Home\nBefore Cold Weather\nWe can givo you a good selection of modern propertied on easy tormo.\n5-room  cottage on Victoria street  near   Kootenay  street.   Prloe, $2303.\n7-rootn house on Cedar street near Vernon  street.    Price, $2800.\n5-room house on Water stroet near Cedar street.   Price- S1400.\n6-room   house  on   Hoover stroet near Hall street.    Priosr 13000.\n5-room house oil Silica street near  Hall street.    Pries, $3350.\nE. B. McDermid\n505 Baker St.,\nNelson, B. C.\nto go. Ho withdrew after having listened to speeches in which his name\nwas often referred to.\nSTABBED  IN  HEART\nNEGRO COMPLETELY RECOVERS\nrny Dally News Lensed Wire.)\n..PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 22.\u2014j'ulin\nThompson, a negro, left iho Pennsylvania hospital yesterday well und\nstrong after surviving the operation\nof having nine stitches taken in hLs\nheaH. Thompson was stubbed, in a\nquarrel 77 days ago. The knll'e penetrated deep into his heart and the hospital doctors had little hopp of saving\nhis life. Ho wns operated Upon within two hours and the wound In hi\u00bb\nhenrt sewed up without delay. Nol\nonly did ho live ihrough tho operation,\nbut he began Immediately to lmprov.\nnnd today lie was declared us well and\nas strong as before he was wounded,\nSASKATCHEWAN CONSERVATIVES CHOOSE NEW LEADER\n(Bv  Dnily  News  Lensed  Wire.)   .\nPRINCE ALBERT, Oot. 22,\u2014\nElaborate preparations have Ik en\nmade for a big Ccnservative convention here on Wednesday when\nit Is likely a new loader fcr tho\nparty will be chosen to roptaco\nHon. F. W. G. Haultain who lias\njust been appointed to the chief\njusticeship of Saskatchewan.\nFrom three to four hundred delegates arc cxpoctcd.\nRUSSIA  WILL  DEAL\nDIRECT WITH MONGOLIA\nThe\nno per-\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nST. PETERSBURG, Out. 22.\u2014\nCzar Is determined to have\nsonal relations wilh the Ci\npublic. He bus sent by his personal\nequerry his portrait In coronation\nlobes, inscribed with his signature, to\nthe reigning abbot of Urga. the chief\no* the Mongolian community. Tbe acl\ndeclares more definitely than any political treaty that Russia moans to\ndeal Willi Mongolia direct and not via\nPeking. The Czar has mado no such\npresent to any dignitary In China.\nPAJAMA-CLAD STUDENT ROUTS\nBURGLAR   WITH   HATPIN\n'Hy fin liy New? Lensed WIro.1\nBELOIT, Wis., Oct. 22.\u2014Clad in\npajamas and armed with a hatpin\nMis8 Agnes Thornton of Bedford,\nMass.) a student of Boloit college,\nrouted a burglar whom she foitrid\nin her room. The young co-ed\nchatted the intruder through the\npark nnd inflicted a dozen vigorous thrusts of the hatpin, whioh\nelicited yells of pain frcm tho flao-\ning thief and caused him to drop\nher violin, which he had purloined.\nWhen Miss Thornton returned to\nher quarters in the dormitory, hor\nroom-mate, Miss Helen Miller, cf .\nGenoa, III., had arcusod all the\nother co-eds and they were organizing a posse to go to their companion's aid.\nJOHN COWAN DEAD.   \".\n\u25a0\"Rv  \"Pnlly  News  L-*nPed  WlrtO\nWINNIPEG,    Oct.    22.\u2014Mr,      John\nPlumbing and Heating\nADVICE\nFor Nothing\nCall nnd see us before you build\nyour bathroom.\nB. C. Plumbing & Heating Co.\nVictoria St., Near Opera House.\nTelephone 181.\nCowan is dead there, aged 5G years,\nsifter n peek's Illness with pneumonia.\nH was a resident of St, Paul, Minn.\nIlls father, Dr. Cowan, was one of the\nlending figures at lhe time of the Riel\nrebellion nnd was in charge of Fort\nGarry when tliat revolt broke out. Mr.\nCowan himself w.ts bom at ihe Hud-\nton liny post at V\/urk Factory.\nMONTREAL PAYS HEAVILY\nFOR FLOODED CELLAR\n(By Dully News Leased Who.)\nMONTREAL, (let. 'J2.-~The city of\nMontreal was today condemned lb pay\nW. Mcthul $128.50 damages caused by\nIho flooding of Ills cellar. The city\nwas In the habit of dumping street\nsweepings in the sewer. When it rain-\ned. hard, these were washed nwny.\nWhen tho rainfall was slight thn water backed up into tlie cellars, not haying force sufficient to move the sweepings. A largo number of actions depend upon the verdict.\nHUNDRED GREEKS WAITING\nORDER TO LEAVE FOR HOME\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nEpMONTQN, Oct. 22.\u2014Onc hundred\nCreeks are now awaiting a telegram\nfrom tho Greek consul at Washington\ngiving word for them to proceed to tho\ndefence of their native land. This is\nthe second lot of Greek residents who\nhave gone and It another 100 is wanted\n\u25a0Edmonton can furnish them without n\nmoment's delay.\nRugs, Linoleums\nand Oil Cloths\n\"Cheapest in the City\"\nThe Ark\nNew and Second Hand Furniture\nPhone   L395   , 806'vernon St |\nNelson,   B.  C.\nE Y E S\nI have   no  years   of  experience\nwhich to boast, and I ani not sorry .j\nThoso who go to learn the McCornjiIck\nsystem  find   they  must  forget\nyears of experience which have 1\nyears only of vain groping In the flirk\nness of old school errors.   Witness\nproof in the results all around yoj.\n\"No, I have no years of cxperlenc\nboast, and when I shall have had,\nI need to boast if my work has g\nperfect satisfaction?\nDon't  miss, my ad on the  cditcrialj\npage.   It will prove valuable to you.\nDr. F. E. McConntl\nOphthalmologist\nOver  Starland  Theatre.\nAnnable Block After Nov, 1.\nt usirl\nWilli\nvcn|\nQueen Studi\nEstablished 1899\nPhone\nthe oldest\nand best\nFrench Dry Cleaning\ndyking And pressing, ste|m\ncarp13t cleaning\n\u00a30 years' experience.\nSpecial rates, wnshing for hotels,\ntauraiila and steamers.\nWork done on short notice.   All ii'or\u00ab|\nguaranteed flrat class.\nTil 15   NEI-SON   STEAM   LAUNDttT j\nCOl-UO'l-GOG  Vernon  St.,  Cor.  Josephln i St.l\nNELSON. B. C. T\nP. O. Box -IS. Telephone Hw\nPAUL NIPOU. ProDrletor.\ni'TrioifePii's^:;''^?:\n&3&   ^DRINKS\nimm\nTimely Warning\nIf your eyes tire easily take tl nel;\nwarning. This Is* a certain Indiciitlor^\nthat they arc called upon to do :\nlhan they can perform without assist-]\niince, anil lhat assistance can only\nobtained from correctly fitted glosses!\nOptical work hns been my life studyf\nand tho great success lhat has attend?!\ned my work In Nelson Is suffi :lenvT\nguarantee that you will receive pepfec\nsatisfaction at my hands.\nmfmssi\nJ. J. Walkei!\nJeweler and Optician\nBaker Street Nelson,\nExDert Watch Renairing\nUNDERWEAR\nWe're often called, and justly so,\n\" The Underwear Headquarters \"\nWe certainly show the bet and most\nworthy Unc'erwear in the trade.\nThe kinds that have proved their worth.\nNATURAL WOOL, CASHMERE AND\nSILK MIXED\n$1.25, $1.50, $2.00, $2.50 to $3.50\nTho Garmont.\nCOMBINATION SUIT8\nIn Natural  Wool\n$2.71\n$3.25, $4.00, $5.00 to $7.00\nThe Garment.\nQualities the Best - Prices Moderate\nEmory & Walley\nTHE OUTFITTERS\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1912_10_23","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0385015","@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":"1912-10-23 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1912-10-23 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Daily News","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0385015"}