{"@context":{"@language":"en","AIPUUID":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AIPUUID":[{"@value":"c85da3f9-b808-417b-aa3e-0318cdaf03fd","@language":"en"}],"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2019-10-29","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1912-10-16","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0385029\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" CoSl\nEIGHT PACES\n50 CENTS A MONTH\n.AS&mEB ADS.\n1 CENT A WORD\nrrr*-\nVOL. 11\nNELSON, B. C. WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 16, 1912\nNO. 157\n|Kaslo's Sixth Annual Fair Is\nSplendid Success\n\/EGETABLES AND\nFRUIT EXCELLENT\n\"-tiondel Wins Baseball Match,\nKaslo Victors At Football   '\n(Special to Tho Dally News.)\nKASLO, B. C, Oct. 15.\u2014Kaslo's\n\u25a0sixth annual fair was opened at 1\n(o'clock today by Rowland Hunt, M.\nfor South Shropshire, England,\n(who was introduced by A. Goldsmith,\n[president of the Fruit Krowers' asso-\npiation. The day was bright and clear\nLnd large numbers came from outside\npoints to see tho display of apples,\nplums, pears, vegetables and preserved\nJfruits. The variety shown was quite\nequnl to other years and the coloring was ahead of last year. The packing especially was a great step In advance over last year, due to the interest taken by students in the packing classes taught last winter. The\napple section was particularly fine,\nand tho increased productiveness of\nthe surrounding country was exempli*\nlfled In a must practical and telling\nmanner. The other wonderful resources of the district of which Kaslo\nIs the centre, were forgotten for 'a\nday, the marvelous wealth of timber,\npulp wood, silver and lead, and the\nboundless agricultural and fruit\ngrnwing possibilities so plainly demonstrated was on everybody's lips.\nThe display was mado' in the drill\nhall. A fruit stage running centrally\nthrough the building hold the plate\ndisplays, and the beautiful coloring\nof the fruit made a pleasing sight.\nThe vegetable section occupied tho\nleft side and was filled to repletion\nwith cabbages, turnlpn and' potatoes\nanil the entire list of farm produce.\nIn tho centre uf each long wall was\na stnge With sides sloping at an angle\nof 45 degrees. On these were shown\nthe packing school exhibits, nnd the\nbox exhibits in apples. The domestic\nsection was shown at the rear end of\nthe hall.\nA   unique   display   was     shown   by\nMrs. E. Norman of Mirror, Lake!    It\n\u25a0consisted    of    canned    lake    salmon,\nIbrook   and   lake   trout,   char,   grouse,\n\u25a0rabbit, wild and tame, mountain goat\njand chicken, nil canned in glass seal-\n\u25a0ers.     Two   of  the   exhibits which  at-\nItracted' a great amount of admiration\nIwere  those of Mrs. A,  T.  Davis and\niMrs. 13. Norman, both of Mirror Lako,\n\u25a0who competed for the Oregon nursery\nipfize of 50 cherry trees for the best\n(fancy   display   of   fruits   and   flowers.\nMany  on   Excursion.\nProspects for a fine day were none\ntoo  bright   when   the  Moyie   steamed\nnway from her \"Nelson  moorings this\nmorning at 7 o'clock, threatening rain\nclouds, low lying around the hills, presented   a . decidedly    gloomy   aspect.\nNearing, Proctor the clouds began lo\nlift and by the time the boat arrived\nhere,  King Sol  was  shining  with    a\nforce   worthy  of his  best  July  traditions,    Three stops were made on the\noutward journey.    Quito a number of\nvisitors were taken on board at Proctor, Alnsworth and Riondel, the Moy-\nle's saloon and  main deck  space being crowded. !\nShortly before 11 o'clock lhe visitors were wervfing their way along the\nfair building where the fruit judges,\nH .Thprnbor and Ben Hoy, assistant\nhorticulturists, from tbe department of\nagriculture were making the awards.\nThe display of fruit was certainly excellent, apples of all varieties predominating. Potatoes', cabbage, squash\nnnd marrow wero host .in the exceptionally choice exhibition of vegcln-\nbles. Cut flowers, preserved fruits\nand meats, home baking and ladies'\nfancy work were particularly attract\nive to the large number of lady visitors.\nExhibition Opened.\nJudging the numerous exhibits took\nup tiie greater part of the afternoon\nand it was closo upon G o'clocji before\nAlex Goldsmith, president of the Kootenay lake fruit fair, introduced Row:\nland Hunt, M. P., for South ' Shropshire, England, who was present to\nofficially declare tho fair open. Mr.\nHunt, whu is a strong advocate of\nth\u00ab commercial defence of people and\nempire said ho was delighted to have\nthe honor to say a few words on the\nmagnificent fruit fair at Kaslo. He\nhad traveled the United Kingdom,\nparts of America and South Africa\nand be could truthfully suy' he 'had\nnever seen such' remarkable samples\nof fruit as were on exhibition here today.\nOld  Country  Market.\n\"Where I live In the old country,\nthere is nothing to approach it,*' continued Mr. Hunt, \"and 1 hope the\nranchers will strive for the old country market where there is always a\ndemand for such high-class fruit as\nproduced In the Kootenuys. There is\nnu difficulty in selling there and ut\ngood prices. This is a great country\nwell worth keeping for the white people of the British empire and although\n1 am perhaps transgressing m y privilege, I should like to say that every\nmun, being a native of this country,\nshould learn to protect his country.\nField Marshal Earl ' Roberts will\nshortly visit these shores. We live\nin an age of great unrest and onu\nnever can tell when we may bo Involved in war. While wo have such\nextraordinary natural resources, tho\nfact Is that they can not be developed\nwithout the protection of the Imperial\nforces, and I think the least we can\ndo in return fur the benefits wa en-\nJoy is to sec to it lhat we give willingly tbe united support required lo\nmaintain British prestige and freedom.\n\"Agriculture is lhe greatest industry\nof any country and history tells us\nthat no great country in tbe past- has\nkept its power and position for long,\nafter it allowed its agriculture to be\nruined. The Roman empire is the\ngreatest example. It was the free Importation of agricultural produce into\nItaly from Rome's conquered colonies which made agricultural products so cheap that the hardy Itulian\npeasants were no longer able to mifke\na living and so they were driven off\n(Continued on page three.)\nOver Three Hundred Thousand Dollars in Year\nROSSLAND MINES\nVERY SATISFACTORY\nIncreased Values In Golden\nCity and Heavier Lead\nProduction Features\nATTEND BALL AT\nINDIAN HEAD\nRoyal Party Visits Experimental Farm\n\u2014Visit File Hills and Indian'\nReserves.\n(By Dailv News Leased Wire.)\nINDIAN IIEAD, Snsk., Oct. 15.-ld.-al\nweather favoied the governor general\nand party during their IN hours' visit to\nIndian Head. The town was brilliant\nWith flays, bunting and electric lights,\nan Imposing nrrh crossing Grand avenue\nbeing especially effective. Tbe royal\nparty arrived Inst evening, a number of\nthe members of the party attending tlu\nannual hospital ball, held under the patronage of their royal highnesses. Tins\nmorning, after visiting the experimental\nfarm, a civic reception wns tendered the\ngovernor general and Ills party. An address of welcome was presented by\nMayor Davidson to which the duke responded. Botiquosts were presented to,\nflic duchess and the princess, 'His royal\nhighness presented the Nelson shield to\nMiss Olive Skinner of the high school.\nTh:; members of the town council, of\ntbe rural council and of the towns of\n.Sintnliita nnd (]u 'Appelle, with their\nwives, were presented to the nival party.\nThe massed school children sang \"The\nMaple Leaf\" and \"God Save the King,\"\nThe governor general poisonnlly li\nspect*jd the' cadets of the Ifith Light\nHorse', complimenting the boys .and their\nofficers on the state of efficiency. The\nroyal party hi the afternoon visited the\nKile bills and Indian reserves to the\nnorth, leaving Indian  Head tbls evening,\nROOSEVELT\nSUPPORTER SHOT\nHears of Assault on Roosevelt, Shouts\nHurrah,  Draws  Revolver and\nShoots Bystander.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nCLEVELAND, Oct. 15.\u2014Charles\nFrown, a Roosevelt supporter, was\nshot in the hip last night by a fanatic\nwho was apparently celebrating the\nshooting of Col. Roosevolt.\nUrow,n had purchased a paper from\na newsboy who cried out the news of\nIhe shooting wheti a man standing a\nfew feet distant, drew a revolver and\nshouting \"Hurrah,'' fired two shots,\none of which struck Brown. Brown\ncollapsed  and   the   shooter  escaped.\n\\ltaly And Turkey\nSign Peace Protocol\n(By Dally News  Leased  Wlre.1 j\nOUCHY, Switzerland, Oct. 15.\u2014After\nmonths of diplomatic strife for hotter\nterms Turkey surrendered this evening\nand the Ottoman and Italian plcnipo-\ntontarles signed the protocol of a peace\ntreaty which puts an end to the war\nbetween Italy and Turkey and inci-\ndontially relieves tho Ottoman empire\nof a crushing handicap In the forthcoming struggle with the Bnlnkns.\nThe precis\u00a9, tertris will not bo available until a, definite treaty Is signed\nat tho end of the week, probably nt\nLausanne, Their tenor, however, is\nwell known, Tho treaty will provid-\nfor absolute soverlgnty of Italy In\nLybia; free, exercise \u2022 If religious\nauthority by tho khallf; Turkoy will\nWithdraw her regular troops from\nLybla. free' exercise of religious\nequivalent to Lybla's contributions t*i\ntho Ottoman treasury; restitution of\n: the. captured Islands to Turkey with\nguarantees for the Christlnn peoples;\n'\u25a0 no indemnity payable by either side\n, toward the cost of the war and ro-\nestablishment *>f former diplomatic\nrotations.\nDuring tlie past week there has been\ndoubt ns to whether the war, whicli\nhas lasted for more than a year, would\nbe brought to a peaceable close. Italy's\nlim., limit for tho conclusion oxplrel\nOct. 12, but on that day she granted\nthroe days gi-uct- to Turkey to decide\nwhether It Bhould be peace or a continuance of war. A definite understanding was reached yesterday when\non tho arrival of a special message\nfrom Constantinople a. conference between the delegates was held, the conferees inter phowing every evidence of\nhaving roached a settlement.\nItaly declared wnr ngainst Turkey\nSept. 20, mil and promptly hivaded\nTripoli. A blocado of the coast of\nTripoli nud Cyrcnaica wai begun by\nthe Italian fleet. Various ooaat towns\nwero bombarded and in a naval battli\nmany of (he Turkish ships were crippled. Several engagements have occurred between the Italian troops and\nlhe Turks and their Arab'allies with\nlargo losses nn both sides.\nTbe const Is now hold by Ttnly, while\ntho Turks and Arabs occupy lhe interior.\nOperations of the Consolidated\nMining & Smelting Company of Canada during the year ending Jyne 30\nlast show a net profit of \u00a5310,345.97\nafter writing off $185,120.94 for deprlcl-\nation pn plant and equipment, $43,-\n120.51 for development on proporltied\nthe company has under bond and sundry items totalling $7,(125.45 and charging to profit and loss account $319,-\n548.91 expended in development of tlm\ncompany's own properties, according\nto the annual report received in Nelson\nj.ye'stordny.\nAs the increased cost of coke during\na part of the year on account of th?\nCrows Nest strike was about $120,000,\ntho profit Is considered very satisfactory. A dividend of 4 per cent baa\n|\"been declared hy the company.\nPurchase New Properties.\nAdditions to plant and equipment\nduring the year cost $119,743.10.\nExpenditures on tho purchase and\ndevelopment of new properties\namounted to $337,017.72. This amount\nwas expended ih further purchase of\nstock nnd bonds of tlie Fort Steele\nMining' &. Smelting company, In the\npurchase of claims adjoining this corn-\npony's property, in tho purchase of tho\nLe Rol mine at Rossland, the Virginia\nmine at Rossland and in the purchase\nor part purchase of claims in tho Alnsworth camp and in tho development\nof these and other properties.\nThe amount due to banks for borrowed capital is $313,819.82, a reduction\nof $240,212.13 for the year.\nProduction Shows Increase.\nThe gross value of lhe metals produced at Trail smelter for tho year was\n$5,083,078, as compared with $4,437,901\nfor the previous, yenr, increases being\nshown in nil metals except copper in\nwhich there is a heavy decrease, attributed to the closing down of the\nSnowshoe mine. Production of the\ncompany's mines is given as follows:\nCentre Star group\u2014Tons, 179,082 i\ngold in ounces, 83,046; silver in ounces,\n46,208; copper in pounds, 1,859,894;\ngross value, $2,005,356.\nLo Rol\u2014Tons, 39,345; gold in ounces,\n15,016;, silver In ounces, 17,633; copper\nIn pounds, 70',502; gross value, $428,-\n904.\nSt, Eugene ore\u2014Tons, 13,400; silver\nin ounces, 69,673; lead in pounds, 2,-\n538,163; gross value, $133,405. St.\nEugene concentrates totalled 2,283\ntons,\nRichmond-Eureka\u2014Tons, 1,6215; silver in ounces, 50,7-17; lead In pounds,\n278,070; gross value, $42,875.\nMolly Gibson concentrates\u2014Ton.1*,\n2,144; silver in ounces, 118,511; lead in\npounds,   652,069;   gross value,   $90,093.\nNumber Ono\u2014Tons, 436; silver in\nounces, 41,738; lead in pounds, 27,15-1;\ngross value, $25,753.\nSullivan\u2014Tons, 21,189; silver in\nounces, 205,654; lead in pounds, 10,-\n509,211; gross value, $517,206.\nCentre Star Leads Producers.\nIn tho table showing the production\nto date the Centre Star leads with a\ntotal of $23,494,101 and the Le Rol\ntakos second place with $21,648,171.\nThe St. Eugene has a total production\nof $10,527,985 and the Sullivan, $3,083,-\n655.\nIn development tlie Centre Star with\nn total of 20.55 miles leads nnd tho\nLo Rol Is credited With 13.27 miles.\nThe St. Eugene development totals\n19.59 miles and the Sullivan has 3.39\nmiles. Others nre Richmond-Eurekn,\n1.44; Phoenix Amalngamted, .48; Molly\nGibson, 1.5ft; Number Seven, 1,12;\nNumber One, ,57.\nDuring the year, the company carried\nout 18,549 feet of narrow work and\n82 feet of diamond drilling. On (he\nCentre Star there was a total of 9,700\nfeet of narrow work and 9,575 feet of\ndiamon drilling; Le Rol, 3,063 feet of\nnarrow work and 7,276 feet of diamond\ndrilling: on the Sullivan, 2,751 feet of\n(Continued on Page Five.)\t\nHon F. W. G. Hadltain, leader bf tho\nopposition in the Saskatchewan legislature, who, it it expected, will be appointed to succeed Chief Justice Wet-\nmore of tho supreme court of Saskatchewan, who resigned yesterday.\nACCEPT  RESIGNATION\nOF CHIEF JUSTICE\nfBy Dally News Leased Wire.)\nREGINA, Oct. 15;\u2014It was said late\ntoday that while the appointment of\nP. W. G. Haultain, K.C, as successor\nto Chief Justice Wetmoro bad not\nbeen gazetted, it was practically certain that it has been unofficially made.\nThe \u25a0\u25a0eslgnntion of Chief Justice Wet-|\nmore of the supreme court of Saskatchewan was today acceptd by tho\ndepartment of justice at Ottawa, according to nn announcement made here\nthis morning. The resignation dates\nfrom today.\nAWAIT JUDGMENT\nIN LUMBER CASE\nArgument Concluded  jn Case to Tost\nTariff  Schedule   as  Applied  to\nSized   Lumber.\n{By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, Oct. 15.\u2014In tho supreme\ncourt this morning arguments were\nconcluded nnd judgment reserved in\nthe Important case1 of the Poss Lumber company of Winnipeg versus the\nCrown and [he British Columbia Lumber & Shingle Manufacturers. The\npoint at issue is whether duty is collectible on.sized lmi'V siiWji on three\nsides and planed on one side.\nEugene Lafleur, IC, C, on behalf\nof British Columbia lumbermen, enlarged upon his contention of yesterday that the lumber on which duty\nwas collected in order Lo constitute a\ntest case had gone through more than\none process \u2022 of manufacture and\ntherefore is not entitled to free entry.\nMany questions were asked by Sir\nCharles Fltzpttfrick, chief justice and\nother judges and lt was apparent that\ntlie court regards thp matter of the\ninterpretation of clause 504 of the\ncustoms act as a legal problem of considerable difficulty. Judge Duff said\nit wtnild be desirable to know just\nwhen representations had been made\nto the government in regard to thus\nimportations nnd what decision the\ncustoms board had given on that\npoint.\nMr. Lafleur said that no evidence\nhad been submitted in the exchequer\ncourt as to that. Judgment was reserved.\nI\nLSS\nBullet Lies Five Inches Beneath Skin\nROOSEVELT MUST\nCANCEL MEETINGS\nNot Allowed to Receive Visitors-Wound Not Yet\nProbed\nLAYING STEEL ON\nKOOTENAY-CENTRAL\n(Special to The Daily NeWs.)\nGOLDEN, B. C, Oct. 15.\u2014Steel\nis being laid rapidly on that section of tho Kootenay Central railway between Carbonate and Spill-\namachene, Six cars of steel and\nnine car5 of ties bava just arrived at the former place. The first\ncars of freight for points in the\nvalley are now being unloaded at\nCarbonate.\nGREAT NORTHERN EARNINGS\nSHOW HEAVY INCREASE\nMINNEAPOLIS, Oct. 15.\u2014-The earnings of the Great Northern nrllroad\nfor the fiscal year ending June 30,\nshows an increase of $4,oTo,lSG, or i\nliltlo more lhan eight per cent of the\nearnings of the mad for the previous\nyear. The road's gross earnings for\ntho year were $0i3,lIlT,818.09.\nThe freight revenue for the year\namounted to $-17,877. .'tiO.OO, an Increase!\nof $4,404,194, compared with the proceeding year. Passenger receipts wore\n$13,302,008.01, showing an increase of\n>,061.79. over 1911.\nGovernment Will Issue\nFree Stumping Powder\n(Special to Tho Dally News.) '\nVICTORIA, B. C, Oct. 15.\u2014As an\nndvanee step to what is hoped to be\na more general system of aid to settlers in clearing timbered lands in\nthis- province,   the  department of ag-\nicultyre has issued notification to the\nvarious agricultural societies and\nfarmers institutions that It Is propai*-\ned to Issue supplies of stumping powder to bona fide settlers free of cost\nupon conditions which shall be equitable both to the settler and to tho\nprovince.    Any settler    who is deslr-\nqs of benefiting from this' boon can\nobtain .details of how to secure It\nfrom his provincial representative\nfrom the secretary of his local agricultural society, of tho farmers institute or, falling both thoso, by direct\napplication to the minister of agriculture,\nThe suggestion hits been made that\nthe government should assist '-settlers'\nby direct grant. That suggestion is\nunder consideration. Meanwhile tlie\nprior step 1ms been taken of providing\nsettlers with tlie material with which\nto attempt the work of stumping. This\nshould be successful in view of the\nfact that the explosive material is provided and only the individual effort.\nIs required. But if this experiment\ndoes not give the results expected,\nthen further action may be token by\nthe government, but In tiie meantime\nthe supply of free powder is. considered ns a distinctly advance step,. It\nis ono given by no othev province and\nis another proof of the dfcsire of the\ngovernment to extend aid and co-operation to the settlers whero.lt can be\ndone   to  thu public advantage.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nCHICAGO, Oct. 15. \u2014 Theodore\nRoosevelt was not merely superficially\ninjured by the bullet fired into his\nbreast yesterday In Milwaukee by\nJohn Sehrank, It was determined tonight by surgeons after an all day\nexamination and the colonel must nol\nsec*. t or speak to anyone for several\ndays Without permission of'the doctors. The wound was definitely described as a serious wound in the\nchest and \"not a \"mere flesh wound.\"\nThe lute bulletin which prohibited\ncommunication between the colonel\nand others than his attendants, declared that \"quietude is absolutely essential.\"\nThe surgeons asserted, however,\nthat it was not yet .necessary to probe\nfor the bullet and the patient will\nprobably be kept as calm as his nature will allow for several days.\nThe patient slept well at Intervals\nduring the day, ate ravenously of articles custoijiarily making up his blU\n|\/of fare, read lengthy extracts from\nMaeaulay and hinted to his physicians\nthat he would not object to a ride in\nthe fresh air .\nReceives Correspondents.\nFinally, learning that tho correspondents accompanying him on his\nspeaking tour who had left him after\nthe assault to file their articles, had\nrejoined his entourage at the hospital,\nthe colonel insisted that tho edict of\nhis physicians against communication\nwith him he ignured for tho time. He\nreceived the newspapermen with, an\napology for not arising, Jested with\nthem about his condition and told\nIhem, \"I'll hurry up nnd get out of\nhere so I can keep you busy again.\"\nIn opening the door to his room to\nadmit the correspondents the heavy\nodor of heaps of flowers banked high\nin the ante room flooded the colonel's\napartment and he inhaled deeply several times. The exertion caused a little pain and when the doos were shut\nagain he instructed his nurse to present part of the flowers to other patients in tlie hospital. This was done.\nHis doctors, however, did not feel\ninclined today to allow him to leave\ninside of 10 days so that ho might\nhave no break in their minute watch\nfor possible Infection from tlie bullet.\nUnofficially It was made known today that the physicians do not consider it necessary to. probe for or operate to remove the bullet. It lies, as\nshown by tlie X-ray photographs\nbrought from Milwaukee, and corroborated here, not, far below the collar\nbone. The missile did not get inside\nthe ribs, but ploughed upward and inward fur a distance of some five\nInches from where it entered. The\nflesh along the course of tiie bullet\nshowed no discoloration today nnd\nthere appeared to the physicians no\nneed for concern from any feature of\nthe assault.\nCol. Roosevelt, anxious that his\nfriends and particularly members of\nhis family who were chroule to Chicago, should not be unduly apprehensive at bis condition, protested\nagainst the* edict barring callers from\nhis room, but acceded when all the\nconsulting physicians endorsed the\nplan.\nHe was anxious to greet members\nof his family. The first ho was to\nsee was his daughter, Mrs. All\nLongworth, who arrived from Cincinnati in lime to have dinner.with her\nfather. His concern all day was not\nfor himself but for those he believed\nwere likely to be too foarful of his\nCondition. He renl all of the hundreds of telegrams that poured into\nthe hospital, and was delighted with\nseveral from men of note ho met while\nabroad.\nOutside the hospital grounds, a curious crowd hung all day, asking for\nnews from all the usual callers who\nleft the Institution. Each was hailed\nas he left with an appeal for Inside\ninformation but none was available\nbesides the bulletins posted early in\nthe day.\nMeetings Cancelled.\nSo many newspaper men gathered\nIn the office of the hospital iu response to demands from their papers\nthat they obtain fresh reports that\nthe house authorities finally asked\n(hem to leave and the reporters gathered outside with the rest of the\ncrowd. All of Col. Roosevelt's speaking dates were cancelled, save one tomorrow night at Louisville, Ky. To\nthat city former Senator Bevorldge\nwas sent after a conference with the\ncandidate with the message tbe colonel insisted be rood to Ills friends\nthere. No announcement regarding\nthe future plans of Col. Roosevelt was\nmade today, all such action depending\nupon Ihe length of time demanded of\nhim by the physicians.\nPhysicians 'Bulletins.\nTonight's bulletin on Col. Roosevelt\nwas as follows: \"Records show that\nCol. Roosevelt's pulse is 80, his temperature 99.1!; respiration is 18; thnt\nbe 1ms less puiu in breathing than\nhe had In the forenoon; that he has\npractically no cough; that there has\nbeen no bloody expectoration. \"We\nfind him in magnificent physical condition due to his regular physical exercise, his habitual abstinence from\ntobacco and liquor. As a precaution-\narv measure he has been given a\nprophylactic dose of anti-tetanus serum to guard against the occurrence\nof lockjaw. Leucoccyte count 8800,\nlymphocytes 11.5. (Signed) Dr. J. B.\nMurphy, Dr. Arthur Dean Ucvan, Dr.\nS. L. Terrell.\"\nCol. Roosevelt bade the last of his\ncallers good night at 8 o'clock and\nprepared for a comfortable night,\nwhich was to be spent in part in reading. He said he felt fine and toid Dr.\nJohn I1'. Golden, who is keeping watch\nover him tonight, that unless the final injection of the tetanus anti-toxin interfered, he would have the \"first\nreal comfortable evening to himself\"\nhe lias enjoyed In many a day.\nTWO THOUSAND  MINERS\nMAY GO ON STRIKE\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nCALGARY, Oct. 15\u2014Failing to\nget their claims for yardage submitted for arbitration, the miners\nin the employ of tho Crow's Nest\nCoal company numbering 2000,\nhave practically declared they will\ncontinue negotiations no longer,\nbut will go on strike. Notice to\nthis effect has been served on the\ncompany and the miners claim,\nignored by the company. Tho\npresident of the union has issued\nthe statutory notice to strike, and\na board on industrial disputes has\nbeen asked for in an application\nto the minister of labor.\nNINETY MILLION  BRICKS\nFOR   NEW   CAPITOL\n(By Dailv News Leased Wlre.1\nMELBOURNE} Aust., Oct. 15.\u2014A\nsupply of no,000.000 bricks, has been ordered by the Hon. K. O'MnIley, minister of home affairs, who is superintending the arrangements in connection with the new federal capitol. Considerable progress has already been\nmade with the preparations necessary\nfor the building of tbe enpltol on a\nNew South Wales site.\nARMAND LAVERGNE\nGOES TO BALKANS\nNationalist  Leader  Will  Watch  Operations as Canadian  Military\nAttache.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, Oct. 15.\u2014Hon. Sam'\nHughes has favorably considered the\napplication of Arinnnd Lavergne, captain and -ndjutnnt of the Sixty-first\nMontlayuay regiment, to be sent as a\nCanadian military attache watching\nthe military operations in tho Balkans in the war against Turkey.\nThe young Nationalist leader despite his anti-imperialism, is a good\nsoldier and a personal friend of the\nminister of militia. Capt. Lavergne\nwill probably bo ordered to the Balkans with'in u few days. Col. Hughes\nWill also probably dispatch an Gng-\nlish speaking officer of tho Canadian\nmilitia to accompany Captain Lavergne and collect pointers in the\nwar game.\nANOTHER FOOT\nis mm\nRoad to Scutari  Open   to\nMontenegrins\nDIPLOMATIC\nRELATIONS END\nTurkey Withdraws Ministers,\nPeace With Italy Is Reassuring Factor\nCREDITORS WILL\nL0SE*HEAVILY\nProbably   Only     Receive   Fifteen   Per\nCent of Claims on  Defunct\nBrokerage Company.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nBUFFALO, N. Y\u201e Oct. 15.\u2014At a\nmeeting of the creditors of the defunct\nbrokerage firm of R. B. Lyman & Co.,\nheld hero today, it was announced\nthat thr liabilities were $3S3,752 and\nthe assets ?100,<f2L Of the latter it\nwas said hy Attorney Williams for\nthe firm, -?\".-l,000 due from customers\ni of doubtful value and a creditor\nprobably would not receive more than\n15 per cent of his claims, a committee nf creditors was appointed to examine the books of tho concern. Attorney Williams admitted in response\nt volley of questions, lhat tlu; firm\nwas short 20,000  shares of stocks at\ntime    business   was    suspended.\nLosses in tho last four years, lie said,\nuinted to nearly half a million dol-\n. _ j. The claims of the Toronto creditors amounted to $100,000.\n(By Daily N'ews Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Oct. 15.\u2014-Turkey's refusal to reply lo the note of the Balkan\nstates will In all probability impel\nthese states to address an actual ultimatum to the porte tomorrow before\ncommencing hostilities. The ministers\noi' Bulgaria, Servia and Greece nre\nstill waiting in Constantinople, although diplomatic relations are virtually ended because of the recall of\nthe Turkish ministers from Sofia,\n1 Selgradc a nd A thens. The conclusion of peace between Italy and Turkey removes much of the uneasiness\nfelt in Europe as to tlie consequence\nof the Balkan war. The German foreign secretary referring lo this at Berlin today,'said that it would faeilitnte\nthe localizing of the war, a matter\nupon which tho powers had hud ample\ntime lo arrive at an agreement.\nThe only additional military news\nreaching here today told of the capture of the fortress of Houms by the\nMontenegrins. Premier Vcnlzelos, in\nthe Greek chamber announced that\ntlie Greek fleet was equipped for a\nwar lasting a year .\nAnother Fortress Captured.\n(By Dally News  Leased  Wire.)\nPODGtiLlTZA, Oct. 15.\u2014The fortress of Houms, the last between\nTushi and Scutari, surrendered today '\nto the Montenegrins. Among the\nTurkish prisoners already captured\nare 02 officers, including a colonel and\nthe'commander at Tushi.\nAddressing tlie war correspondents.\nat a reception today King Nicholas\nsaid that he regretted the bloodshed\nbut thought it would result in a new\nand better era of freedom and civilization.\nTurkey Wants Aeroplanes.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nBERLIN, Oct. 15.\u2014Turkey Is negotiating wilh German manufacturers\nfor the purchase of aeroplanes and\nhas also engaged military aviators as\ntrainers. Both Turkey and the Balkan states are making endeavors to\nbuy war automobiles In Germany,\nWILL ERECT RESTING\nPLACE FOR  IMMIGRANTS\n(By Bally News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Oct. lg.\u2014-From January 1\nti June 30 of this year. 2.41'S selected\nemigrants from Great Britain arrived\nin New South Wales from the nominated emigrants numbering 1,003, . The\nagent genera! for New South Wales,\nT. A. Coughlan, expects by the end of\nthe year 2,000 more selected emigrants\nwill have reached New South Wales,\ntogether with 8,000 more nominated\nemigrants.\nTlie  New South Walei government\n\u2022ontemplates the erection of a \"rest-\"\ning place for the immigrants.\"\nGRAIN INSPECTION BREAKS\n11ECORD AT TWIN CITIES\n(By Dfi-ilj\" News Leased Wire.)\nFORT WILLIAM, Ont., Oct. 15.\u2014\nSeven hundred and twenty-four cars\nof grain were inspected at the head\nof the lakes yesterday, this being a\nrecord for Fort AVilllam and Fort\nArthur. There has been a slight In-*\nereasn in rates for Buffalo carriers\nml the big- American freighters arc\nnow handling their share of the year's\nwheat shipments.\nDefence Says Gamblers\nInstigated Murder\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nNEW YORK, Oct. 15.\u2014Gamblers and\nnot Police Lieutenant Charles Becker\ninstigated the murder of Herman Rosenthal. A large sum of money, raised\noy tho gamblers, was paid to get Rosenthal out of New York when he began to \"squenl\" on the subject of police protection, and when he tooit tho\nmoney and he refused to go the gamblers threatened with the loss of their\nprotection, plotted and executed his\nmurder through the agency of four\ngunmen.\nSuch wns the line of defense implied\nin questions put by John E. Mclntyre,\nBecker's counsel, to Sam Schepps, on\nthe witness stand today.\nSchepps was not given an opportunity to say whether he had knowledge\nthat such wa\u00ab the origin of the plot,\nfor Justice Goff excluded the questions.\nSchepps merely looked bored. He bad\nat that time spent practically tlie entire day on tho stand, corroborating\nthe testimony of Jack Rose, Brldgle\nWebber and .Harry Vallon, tho trio of\nself-confessed accomplices in the\ncrime, who accused Becker of having\ninspired the murder. Schepps added\nanother link to the chain of evidence\nagainst the defendant   by   swearing\n* that Becker had asked him If the gunmen bad been paid for their work. He\nalso testified that he had been tho\nboarer of a reassuring message from\nLieutenant Becker to Jack Rose when\nthe latter was In hiding, \"ready to commit suicide\" at the home of Harry Pollock. Sehepp's part in the plot was\nthat of messenger for Rose in rounding up the gunmen, but he denied thnt\nho was conscious tljjit the killing of\nRosenthal was on foot. He did not\nfully comprehend It, be said, until Jack\nRose had made a \"clean breast of it\"\nto him, and then on \"advice of counsel\"\nhe had got out of town.\nMr. Mcln tyre's efforts to break\ndown the testimony of the witness resulted in such frequent word tilts between them that Justice Ooff was\nobliged to curtail the examination.\nSchepps, glib of speech and combative in manner, on one occasion called\nthe lawyer a \"liar,\" and Mr. Mclntyre\nretorted by referring to Schepps as a\n\"grovelling thing.\"\nBecker'* attorney tried again nn<l\nagain to make Schepps admit that ho\nhad been an accomplice in the crime,\nbut the witness appeared always with\na ready explanation of the part he had\ntaken.\n PAGE TWO\nGfaMi^\u00aem&\nWEDNESDAY\nOCTOBER 16\nBalkan States Now\nCockpit Of Horrors\n(By Daily News  Leased  Wire.)\nLONDON, Oct. 15.\u2014The Dally\nChronicle's Constantinople correspondent telegraphed just before midnight\nthat the ministers of the Balkan states\nhad demanded their passports from\nthe Ottoman government. Lord Mor-\nley announced in the house of lords\nyesterday that tlie negotiations between Italy and Turkey have taken\nan unfavorable turn. Consols yesterday reached the lowest point in years,\nI'l^k, but American stocl's generally\nadvanced.\nThe Turkish troops having attacked\nthe Servians near Rystovatz and the\nJJulgarlans at Chujuken, the London\nPress this morning declares ^nothing\ncan avert war. The Morning Post\nsays: \"It seems that nothing enn prevent the flame from spreading all over\nthe Balkans.\" The Daily Exprt\nsays: \"Diplomacy having failed, it Is\n\"war, and the near east now becomes\na cockpit of horror:-).\" The Dally Telegraph says: \"War has not heen declared. It has been begun.\" The\nDaily News says: \"Europe is now\nconsidering how best to avoid being\ndragged in whole or in part into the\nconflict or how one may be avoided.\"\nThe Times says: \"The dangers of\nwar are unappreciated by the public\neven at this late hour, but formidable\nthough the danger may ultimately become, they do not warrant the frenzied\nalarm of the financial circles in England or abroad. Small investors have\nbecome frightened too soon.\"\nrt*\">- Dally Chronicle says: \"War\n,has been begun, but if the demands\nof the Balkans had been enforced by\nthe powers a month ago a reformed\nMacedonia would have resulted.\"\nHopes Shattered.\n(Bv Dally News Leased Wire.)\nBERLIN, Oct. la.\u2014The few hopes of\nmaintaining pence in southeastern\nEurope that had been entertained are\nall shattered by the note of the Balkans. If among government officials\nand   foreign  diplomats    bore    anyone\nNA-DRU-CO\nLAXATIVES,\ni '\nWomen's commonest ailment\n\u2014the root of so much of their\nill-health\u2014promptly yields to\nthe gentle but certain action\nof Na-Dru-Co Laxatives.\n25c. a box at your druggist's.\nstill thinks war can be averted, he\nkeeps the thought to himself. All profess that the Macedonian issues now\nare bound to be settled by force of\narms and not by negotiations. One\ndiplomatist remarked: \"The note Is\nso stiff in form and its demands so\nexcessive that it seems to have been\ndrawn with the deliberate purpose of\nprovoking a rupture with Turkey.\n\"The note of the Balkans appears\nto have been devised to force Turkey\nti declare immediately for peace or\nwar. If It Is peace, she is called upon\nt.t demobilize instantly, and if she refuses her refusals are equivalent lo a\ncasus belli.\n\"The Balkans may decide to open\nl-.fstflities without delay. Every day\ngained by Turkey for mobilization\nadds to iier chances and lessens thos.-*\nof the Balkan league. Tho latter certainly realizes this and has framed its\ndemands that admit only a categorical\nacceptance or a categorical rejection.\"\n\"Which step dn you think the porte\nis likely to take?\" \"I fear the latter,\"\nwas bis reply. \"The Turkish people\nan* now so wrought up and the Ottoman cabinet, between war abroad and\nrevolution at home, may cast the die\nin favor of a foreign war as the least\ndangerous in itself. It dare not, owing to the popular outcry, accept\nItaly's peace terms, although the\nTurks realize not only the futility of\nfurther resistance in Tripoli, but the\nadditional handicap that the war with\nItaly means for Turkey in the Balkan\ncrisis.\n\"If the Turkish government, after\nyear of uninterrupted defeat, does not\ndure to conclude peace on the sole\nterms Italy offers, what use is there\nof her being able to comply with the\ndemand for immediate demobilization\nand the application of reforms under\nsupervision in the Balkans which if\nliiis disregarded heretofore?\"\n\"Do you think a Balkan war would\nbe likely to set the powers at odds?\"\n\"TUtit depends.\" he replied, \"upon tho\ncourse of events. The eastern question hns already caused two European\nwars\u2014the Crimean and Hie Russo-\nTurklah wars. Will a third grow out\nof it?\nAdvance for Womon.\nLONDON, Oct. 15.\u2014Dr. Sandler, the\nLondon Daily Chronicle correspondent\nat Constantinople, sends the following\ndispatch:\n\"The sultan visited the war office\ntoday and Inspected some battalions\nwith the usual enthusiastic ceremonial,\nthe idea being that his presence will\nnerve the soldiers to patriotic frenzy.\nHis- majesty appealed to the troops to\nremember the bravery of their ancestors and save their fatherland from\nthe four-fold foe.\n\"The coliggg of medicine is closed, nl.\nlors being engngefl in mili-\no. Many Turkish women\n: abandoning their attituue\neparation from the - men,\nhe traditional position ol\nwomen In the Turkish empire, and are\nasking tn be sent to the front in order\nlo serve tinder the Red Crescent. This\nmeans a great step forward In the\nemancipation of Turkish women.\"\nthe proft\nlary sen\nseem to\nor strict\nwhich   is\nCARES NOTJA RAP\nABOUT BEING SHOT\nColonel   Roosevelt   Tells   Audience to\nSpeak Truthfully of Opponents\u2014\nWeak Minds Inflamed.\nfBv Daily News  Leased  Wire.)\nMILWAUKEE,   Oet.   IB.\u2014\"I   do\nnot\nLUMBER\nBusiness Is Good.   Call and\nGet Our Prices.\nDominion Sawmills & Lumber, Ltd.\nPHONE   15.\nLATE  YALE-COLUMBIA   LUMBER  CO.\nP. O.\nEXTRA   SPECIAL\nScotch Whisky\nArthur Bell  & Sons, Perth\n\u25a0    Established 1825\nQuality and Age Guaranteed\nSole Agents\nNelson Wine & Spirit Co.\nVernon St., Nelson.\nP. 0. Box 1099\nHotel for Sale\nA Snap at $17,500\nSTANDS   IN   COMMANDING   SITUATION   IN   IMPORTANT\nRAILWRY CENTRE,\nthirty-three  rooms fully furnished and every accom-\nccessary to  a   live  running  business.    Bar trade aval's   per  day.    Full   particulars  given\nContains\nmodation   r\nerages over thirty-five do\non  enquiry.\nTERMS\u2014$9000   CASH;   BALANCE  TO  SUIT   BUYER.\nMciSuarrk & tRobertson\n.' G enera. I Brokens\nReal    Estate and   Insurance    Agents.\nNelson, B. C.\ncare a rap about being shot, not a\nrap,\" said Colonel Roosevelt In hla\nspeech, after lie was wounded last\nnight. \"Friends,\" he began, \"1 shall\nhave to ask you to be as quiet as possible, as 1 de nut know whether you\nfully understand that I have just been\nshut, but It takes mure than that lu\nkill a bull moose. But, fortunately, 1\nhad my manuscript (holding up manuscript showing evidence where tlie bullet had gone through), so you see 1\nwas going to niake a long speech.\n\"And, friends, there's the. hole in It\nwhere the bullet went through, and 11\nprobably saved the bullet, from going\ninto my heart. The bullet is in me\nnuw, so thut 1 cannot make a very\nlong speech. But 1 will try my best.\nAnd now, friends, I want to take advantage of this incident to say a sob\nemu word of warning, as 1 know how\nto. My felluw Americans, first of all\nI want to say this about myself: I\nhave altogether tou many important\nthings tu think of to pay any\" heed\no: feel any concern over my own\ndeath. Now, I would not speak to\nyou Insincerely within five minutes of\nbeing shot.\n\"I am telling you the literal truth\nwhen 1 say that my corncern is tor\nmany other things. It is nut in the\nleast for my own life. 1 want you to\nunderstand that I am ahead of the\ngame anyway. Not many have had\na happier life than I have had\u2014a happy life in every way. ' I have been able\nto do certain things thut 1 greatly\nwi. ,ied to do and I am Interested In\ndoing other things. 1 can tell you\nwith absolute truthfulness that I am\nvery mucli uninterested in whether I\nam shot or nut. It was just as when\nI was colonel of my regiment; I always felt that a private was to be excused for feeling at times some pangs\nof anxiety about his personal safety,\nbut I cannot understand a man fit to\nbe colonel who can pay any heed to\nhis personal safety when he Is occupied as he ought to be occupied with\nthe absorbing desire to do his duty.\n\"I am in this cause with my whole\nheart and soul. I believe In the Progressive movement\u2014a movement for\nthe betterment of mankind, the movement for making life a lot easier for\nall our people, a movement to try to\ntake the burdens off the man and especially the woman In this country\nwho are most oppressed. I am absorbed in the success of -that move\nment. I feel uncommonly proud In\nbelonging to that movement. Friend:\nI ask you now this evening to accept\nwhat I am saying as absolute truth\nwhen I tell you I am not thinking of\nmy own success; 1 am not thinking\nof my life or of anything connected\nwith me personally. I am saying this\nby way of introduction because I want\nto say something very, serious to our\npeople, and especially to the newspapers. I do not know who the man\nwas who shot me tonight. He was\nseized by one of my stenographers,\nMr. Martin, and I suppose is in the\nhands of the police now. He shot to\nkill me. l^am just going to show you\n!lhe colonel unbuttoned his coat and\nvest and showed his while shirt badly\nstained with blood.)\n\"No, friends, I am going to be as\nquiet as possible, even if I am notable\ni'i give the challenge of the bull moose\nquite as loudly. Now, I do not know\nwho ho was, or what party he represented. He was a coward. He stood\nIn the darkness in the crowd around\nthe automobile and when they cheered\nme and I got up to bow, Me stepped\nU3 and shot me In the breast. It Is a\nvery natural thing that weak nnd\nvicious minds should be Inflamed to\nacts nf violence by the kind of foul\nmendacity and abuse that has been\nheaped upon mc for the last three\nmonths by the papers in tho interests\nnot only of Mr. Debs, but of Mr. Wilson and Mr. Tuft. Friends, I will dis-\newn and repudiate any man of my\nparty who attacks with such vile, foul\nslander and abuse any opponents of\nany other parly. Now, I wish to say\nseriously to the speakers nnd the\nnewspapers representing both the Republican and Democratic and Socialist\nparties that they cannot, month in and\nmouth out, year in and year out, make\nthe kind of slanderous, bitter and'\nmalevplent assaults they have been\nmaking and not expect that brutal and\nviolent characters, especially when the\nbrutality Is accompanied by a not ton\nstrong mind, they cannot expect that\nsuch natures will be unaffected by It.\n\"I am not speaking for myself at\nall; I give you my word I do not care\na rap about my being shot. I have\ntiad a good many experiences in my\ntime, and this Is only one of them.\nWhat I do care for Is my country. I\nwish I were able to impress on. our\npeople the duty to feel strongly, but\nt.i speak truthfully of their opponents.\nI say now 1 have never said one word\nagainst an opponent I could not substantiate, and nothing I ought not to\nhave said, and nothing, looking back,\nI would not say again.\"\nShaves. Himself.\n'By Dally News LeaBed Wire.*! ,\nROOSEVELT SPECIAL TRAIN,\nMILWAUKEE, Oct. 15.\u2014Before Colonel Roosevelt would He down he insisted on shaving himself and did so\ndespite the protests of the surgeons\nwho accompanied him. The train\nstarted on a slow run. It was planned\nto get to Chicago somewhere near\nmorning, although the run could be\nmade In less than two hours in an\nemergency.\nMRS.*R008EVELT\nWAS'ALT HEATRE\nFOUR MILLION DOLLARS\nFROM   TOURIST TRAFFIC\n(By Dally Vews L\u00abmsed Wire.)\nCHRISTIANS, Norway, Oct. 15.\nAccording to a 'consular report\nprofits of the tourist traffic in\nNorwav are estimated at about\nHW0O.  lij!\nNews   Broken   to    Her   While   With\nParty in  Box\u2014Spends Anx-\n\u2022' ioug  Night.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nNEW YORK, Ouct. 15.\u2014Mis. 1'heo-\ndore Roosevelt was attending a musical comedy at a Broadway theatre last\nnight at the time the. attempt was being made on her husband's life in Milwaukee . The news was broken to her\nas she sat in a box with a party of\nfriends at the theatre.\nIn fear that the announcement of\nthe attempted assassination might be\nmade from the stage ami be an unnecessarily great shock to the colonel's\nwife, George W. Perkins, chairman of\nthe executive committee uf the Na-\ntiunal Progressive party, who was\namong the first to receive the news,\nhad dispatched a messenger to Mrs.\nRoosevelt.\nAlthough assurances were given In\nthe first dispatch that the colonel had\nnot been seriously wounded, Mrs.\nRoosevelt was alarmed and immediately left the theatre, driving tu the Manhattan hotel. Here she awaited anxiously for further news from Milwaukee. She was considerably relieved by\nthe early bulletins reporting that the\ncolonel had been so slightly wounded\nthat he was about to proceed with his\nschedulel speech for the evening. She\nwas alarmed again later, however,\nwhen the wires told nf the removal of\nthe colonel to a hospital and doubt\namong his physicians as to the seriousness of the wound. As to how\nMrs. Roosevelt hud received the news,\nMr. Perkins only said: \"Just as such\na strong woman as- Mrs. Roosevelt is\nwould receive it.''\nColonel Roosevelt's son, Theodore\nRoosevelt, Jr., heard of the attack\nupon his father late last night and\nhurried to Progressive headquarters tn\nmeet his mother and to wait details\nfrom Milwaukee.\nUnited States Senator Dixon ol\nMontana, Loose veil's campaign manager; William Hotchkiss, chairman of\nthe New York state committee of the\nparty; Timothy L, Woodruff and\nFrank A. Munsey were others who\ngathered at the quarters during the\nnight.\nMayor Gaynor when leaving lhe\nbanquet which, as chief executive of\nthe city, he had tendered tn the president and naval nfficors last night, had\nthis to say on the attempt on tbe life\nof Colonel Roosevelt:\n''There are too many assassins in\nthis country. They have assassinated\nmore people In this country In five\nyears than they have in 500 years In\nEngland. I express my sincere regret.\"\nAt Progressive headquarters George\nW. Perkins said: \"Our last messages\ntn the colonel were ones urging him\nto give up his next two or three\nspeeches and come home for two or\nthree days' rest. We intend to urge\nthis upon him:''\nMrs. J. West Roosevelt, who was\nwith Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt at the\ntheatre when the news from Milwaukee reached them, took, the .colonel's\nwife to'her home for -the-night)- after\nboth women hud spent several anxious\nhours at Progressive headquarters.\nAlthough Mrs. Roosevelt bore up\nstrongly under the circumstances, It\nwus evident that she was skeptical\nof the assurances that her husband\nwas not seriously hurt.\n\"That's what they said when President McKtnley was shot,\" she exclaimed, when these assurances were\nrepeated to her time after time.\nTO INCREASE\nRURAL LABOR\nNew  Zealand  Government Will   Erect\nHomes  on   Small   Holdings\nfor Farm Laborers.\n(By Dnlly Newa Leased Wire.)\nCHRISTCHUROH, N. Z\u201e Oct. 15.\u2014\nThe government of New Zealand is\nabout to introduce legislation to empower the county councils lo borrow\nmoney sufficient to supply the need\nof good lioiiies for laborers in rural\ndistricts, the farmers o'f the dominion\nhaving of recent years found themselves faced with the difficult problem\nof obtaining labor when it Is most urgently needed. The government itself contemplates steps to obtain\nhemes-for laborers accustomed to farm\nwork who desire to live In the country\nrather than in the town. If a local\nbody can present a reasonable guarantee that in .uiy neighborhood such\nhomes will in. occupied by respectable\npersons, the government will erect\nthem. The ureas of ground around the\nhouses wonlil vary from one to 10\nacres. By tbls scheme the New Zealand government hopes to provide sufficiently comfortable houses in open\nsurrounding*\" to Induce men to leave\nthe towns and assist U'e. farmers in\ncultivating their land. The annual\nrent will be worked out In.the form\nof 5 per cent Interest on the money\nexpended by the government in building, while a sinking fund will provide\nfoi the paying ,off of the capital in\n2.1 years. The farmers' union in Auckland has drawn up a somewhat similar\nscheme, which will provide Inexpensive farms for men. These will be\ngradually owned by the men themselves, and while cultivating their own\nground to some extent, they will be\nable to give assistance to the big farm-\nen: in time of pressure.\nNOT LIKELY TO\nRATIFY AGREEMENT\nMarconis Sold  Shares After Contract\nArranged With Government\u2014Tho Be\nin  Know  Made  Fortunes.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON,  Oct.   15.\u2014\"What a  story\ncould-be  told   by   the   Marconi  sharo\nwarrants\u2014120,000 shares\u2014If they only\npossessed articulate utterance.\"\nThe foregoing editorial comment of\nthe Financial News in a two-column\narticle, which is published this morning, showing the Immense number of\ntransfers of Marconis during the recent lively period. In tho history of\nthat company, *rfh6n those \"In the\nknow\" made fortunes at the expense\nof the present1 holders, who having\npurchased shares \"When they wore 3%,\nafter the announcement that the gov-\n* Mr. Homebody Said\u2014\"This  REGAL  SALT is simply\ngreat.    Even on a rainy day like this, it stays dry\".\nMrs. Homebody Said\u2014\"Just think what it means to a\nhousekeeper to have a salt that she can measure accurately\nall the year round\"\nMr. Homebody Said\u2014\"I should think the dampness would\nsoak through the bag\u2014\"\nMrs. Homebody Said \u2014 \"Bag ? Why, REGAL SALT\nisn't put up in bags. It comes in paraffin coated wood\nfibre cartons. This protects the salt against dust, dirt,\nmoisture and odors\"\nMr. Homebody Said\u2014\"Does our grocer have REGAL Salt ?\"\nMrs. Homebody Said\u2014\"Of course he does. All good\ngrocers sell\nFREE RUNNING \"REGAL\" SALTl\nMANUFACTURED BY\nTHE CANADIAN SALT CO., LIMITED, WINDSOR, ONTARIO.\neminent contract for Its round the\nworld wireless installation had been\nmade with the company, lhat are now\ndown to 4'^, with u chance of dropping further when parliament's select\ncommittee begins iis Investigation as\nto how the contract which agreed to\na basis of 10 per cent instead of 3 per\ncent royalty.\nIt seems certain now that parlin-.\nment will not ratify the contract\non the present terms and will not'\nagree tn create u monopoly for the\nMarconi   company   at   the   expense  of\nall other wireless companies. The article In the Financial News, after laying bare the manner in which the\nbanks and bankers of London, Paris,\nLome, Amsterdam, Brussels and other\ncentres unloaded when the shares wore\nnear their top price, reveals the fact\nthat William Marconi disposed of more\nlhan lp.000 ordinary shares between\nAugust 4, lllll, and the end of July\nthis, year and that lie now retains ojily\n4,842 shares of this class; that while\nMr. Marconi still holds 2,733 preference shares, as against 2.000 last year,\nho  disposed  of fi.OOO   of   these shar'\nbetween dates in 1910. and 11M1.   Til\nreturns of Alfonso Marconi, however\nwho had 8,075 preferred last year ail\nIs credited with only 300 now, aro ]\nluininating.\nTho feature of the Financial Nov!\nstory Is that nearly 200,000 ordlnarf\npartly paid shares were disposed\nby their holders between the time .til\nrumors of the government were firj\nheard and the day when it was.\nnounced that the postoffice depatj\nmont had accepted the Marconi..!\nNEW VICTOR\nOCTOBER RECORDS\nOUT TO-DAY\nSOME SPLENDID SELECTIONS  FROM THE NEW LIST.\n10-INCH DOUBLE SIDED RECORDS\n90c FOR THE TWO SELECTIONS\ntniAi, \/My Bombay Maid, i    That Girl Quartet\n1\/1*0 ^Way Down South _  Heidelberg Quintette\n17148  \/As Long as lhe Shamrock Grows Green, .   Wallet J. Van Brunt\nIA Wee Little Drop o' the Cruiskeen Lawn,      . Peerless Quartet\n17150\nfFiddlc-Dec-Dce\n\\ Ragtime Soldier Man,\nVan Brant & Burkhardt\nCollins & Harlan\nCharming French Song by Canadian Tenor\n64232\u2014Chanson Lorraine,\nEdmond Clement\nMcCormack Sings 'The Wearing of the Green'\n64258\u2014The Wearing of the Green John McCormack\nFice demonstrations at any of \"His Master's Voice\" dealers everywhere. Ask for a\nfree copy of our 300 page Musical Encyclopedia, listing\nover 5,000 Records.\nBERLINER GRAMOPHONE COMPANY, Limited,\nMONTREAL\nW. Q. THOMSON, BOOKSELLER AND STATIONER, NELSON, B. C,   DISTRIBUTING AQENT,\n \"   iWEbNESbAY ..., bCTOBfeR 16\nCJe Battj j&tto-s.\nPAGE THREE\nmm.\n\u25a0*\u2014\nV     -i\n#*!\ni   \u25a0Ti\nLatest News of Sporting Events Hot From the Wire\nT   I     Tn\nTeams Now Tied-^ Giants\nAdminister Decisive Defeat '\nTo Red Sox-Final Today\n\u25a0 Cily Dally NeWs Leased Wire;)\nfeOSTON, (Jet. 15.\u2014the New York\nGiants, pennant^ winners of the National league, administered a crushing\ndefeat to the Boston Americans tcday\nby a score of 11-4 in the seventh game\nof the world series.' Tonight finds the\nGiants and the Red Sox waiting tb\nengage in the' final combat'here tomorrow that will determine which\nteam shall be the world's champions\nof 1912. The series now stands. Boston 3 games Won, New York 3 games\nwon. one contest a tie.\nSix in First.\n\"Smoky Joe\" Wood, the Red Sox\ntwirler, who Jirnl already beaten the\nGiants twice In lhe eeriey, was Hent\nout to pitch the Red Sox into the\nchampionship. His. end waa so swift\nand so sudden that the 30,000 spectators sat In silence nt Fenway park us\nthey saw Wood's delivery butted to ol!\nparts of tho field and six Giant players race over the plate before tile last\nNew Yorker was put out in the first\nInning. The Red Sox never recovered\nfrom that first inning and though\nthey peppered away fitfully at Tesreau's moist hall, they never came\nwithin threatening distance of tlie\nGiants.\nShower of Hits.\nManager MeGraw in the coaehors\nbox down off third base, directed the\nattack on Wood's delivery. Ho gave\norders to hit the first hall pitched und,\nwith few exceptions, all of tho nine\nmen.who confronted Wood in tlie first\nInning, rapped the first ball that\nWood sent up to the plate. This shower of hits, combined with a double\nSteal, paved the way to New York's\nsix runs. Thereafter Wood was a\nbroken rood' and Charlie Hall, Boston's, relief .pitcher, was sent to the;\nbox.\nSome, of the Giants seemed to think\nthat Wood had broken under the\nstrain of his two earlier games in the\nseries. His curve ball had little break\nth It and the Giants had nn trouble\nin batting his fast ones. The Ked\n.Sox have Bedient to go on the firing\nline in the deciding game tomorrow\nwith Wood prepared to go 'to his assistance while the Giants will depend\non Christie Mathewson with '\"Rube\"\n.. Marquard held in reserve,\nTesreau Mystery.\n\u25a0^^Tearcau held the Whip-* htiiicl over'\n' the Red Sox throughout the game.\nHis moist ball broke sharply over the\nplate apd tho Red Sox were unable\ntb fathom his delivery when lilts\nwould have scored runs. Twelve of\nthe Red Sox were left on bases because of Inability to touch Tesreau's\nservice for tho needed hit.\nAlthough New York hail a commanding, lead throughout the .game,\nMeGraw kept Mathewson warming up\ntdown off left field to relieve Tesreau\nIn case the wet ball twirler weakened,\n.After making the cluster of runs in\n\u25a0.the first inning, the Giants scored another tally in the seoprid, two more:\nlu tho .sixth, one In the seventh and\none in the ninth. The Red Sox sent\ntheir four runs across the.plato in the'\n\u25a0second when Gardner shot a scream-:\ning home run into the right field\nscats, the first circuit drive of the\n\u25a0series. Two more runs were scored\nin the seventh and another tally in\nthe eighth. Captain Doyle of New\nYork, drove a liner into the crowd in\nright field for a home run in the\n;slxth, sending in Devore ahead\nhim. There were several strikeouts\nIn tho game. Herzog was the only\nman on the Giants to fan. The Red\nSox who struck out were Hooper,\ntwice; Yerkes, Gardner, Wagner and.\nCady, ono each. I\n, - Loose Fielding,\ni Tho game was loosely played in the\nfield, while a constant gale of wind\n.made lt difficult for the fielders to\n.get under fly balls. Speaker, how-\n. ever, made a brilliant catch. Play\nwas suspended frequently during the\ngame when dense eiuuds of dust\nswirled across the diamond.\n\u2022 While the Giants wore at practice\noil tho members of the Red Sox team\nwere called into the club house for a\n, .talk with President McAleer and\nManager Stahl behind closed doors.\nManager MeGraw tonight said, \"The\n.Red'Sox have broken and are on the\n\"\u25a0.run.\" He added that with the same\naggressive attack tomorrow the Gi-\nnntB would be carried to victory. MeGraw said his club was thoroughly Instilled , with the fighting spirit and\nlhat the players showed a return to\nthe form that had won them so many\nvictories in the National loague in the\n.-spring and early summer.\nManager Stahi remarked: \"All clubs\n\u25a0 have form reversals, but tho rebound\n\u2022 .Is always violent.   Tomorrow will tell\nanother story for the Red Sox.\"\nt   Windstorm and Cold.\n,yl The weather up to noon was mild,\n\u25a0but at 2 o'clock a windstorm came up,\naccompanied by heavy dark clouds\nirand the temperature fell, making it\nuncomfortable for. the spectators and\n'players alilte. Thick clouds of dust\n(Swept across the field when tlie game\nibegah...   . i,\n, i. Reliable Joe Wood had two victories\n'to his credit and was given a hearty\ntgrcetlng When,- ho,, stepped into tho\n{pitcher's box. Wood's first offering to\nDevore was called* a ball and the next\n.ball pitched was hit to Wagner. The\nshortstop could not field it to first in\nlllmo and Devore was safe. Doyle\njHnped a single to centre and Devoro\nadvanced to second. Op the first ball\npitched Devoro and Doyle caught the\n. Red. Sox \"pitcher   napping   as   they\nfulled off a. double steal.\n,-, First Runs Scored.\n', ; Snodgrass hem came to time with\nla rattling: two-bagger to right field and\nDe.V<H*e ;,nnd :p.cfy!e, scored ...with   New.\n\u25a0 York's\" fit**H'* ru'na. \u2022 Things looked bad-\nfor Wood,..but they rapidly grew worse.\nWith no one out, Murray sacrificed,\nStahl making the out unassisted,\nSnodgrass taking third. Merkle the.i\ntapped a fly to left field, but the stiff\nwind carried it toward tho infield and\ntho bali fell safe for a single. Snodgrass scored on this play and Merkle\ntook second on the throw In. Herzog\nchopped a grounder to Wood and Mer-\nklo was run down between second and\nthird base, Wagner nl.sp getting nn assist and Gardner the putout. Herzog\ntook second on the play.. \"Meyers\nsingled to left field and Herzog scored\nNew York's fourth Tun. Fletcher\ncracked a single to right and Hooper\nmade a perfect throw to third to head\noff Meyers, but Gardner missed the\nball. Meyers was safe and the New\nYork shortstop took second on the\nthrow in. Big \"Jeff\" Tesreau, th-*\nninth to go to the plate In the inning,\nsingled post Wood and Meyers came\nhome with the fifth run. Fletcher and\nTesreau then attempted a double steal,\nbut Tesreuu was caught between the\nhags, .but not before Fletcher slid\nacross the pinto with New York's sixth\nrun. Tho big pitcher was run down,\nCady to Yerkes, Stahl to Wagner. Six\nruns, seven hits, a sacrifice hit and\ntwo stolon bases was the result of the\ninning, the biggest of the series.\nThero was not much enthusiasm\namong the moro than 30,000 Red Sox\nrooters as tho Boston team went to\nbat. Hooper opened the inning badly\nby striking out. Yerkes was given a\nbaso on balls. Speaker put up a fly\nthat was captured by Curray, who was\nplaying left field on nccount -of the\nsun, Devoro going to right. Lewis was\nan easy out, Herzog to Merkle.\nGiants Add Another.\nTho Giants added another run to\ntheir score In the second inning. Hall\ncamo In to pitch for Boston' and\npromptly issued a base on balls to Devore, who again stole second on the\nfirst ball pitched. Doyle also was given a free pnss on four balls, but a moment lolor Hall caught Devore napping, Wagner taking the throw. Snodgrass shot a single Into right field and\nDoyle moved to the middle. Hall tried\nto repeat Llio play he made on Devore\nand In throwing to catch Doyle off the\nbag, burled the ball lo centre field and\nthe New York captain came home,\nSnodgrass reaching third on the error,\nMurray sent a fly to Wagner and Merr\nkle closed the inning by grounding out,\nWagner to Stahl.\n\u201e ,.,\u201e .^a., .First .Home.. Run,   . v,,i ^m\n, \u25a0 Gardner In the second inning partly revived the drooping spirits of tbe\nBoston fans by making a terrific\ndrive to right centre, the boil bounding over the three-foot fence into the\ncrowd for a home run, the first made\nin the series. Stahl sent up a high\nfoul lhat Meyers captured. Wagner\nsliced a grounder at Tesreau who was\nunable to pick up the ball and\nFletcher, rushing in, scooped lt up\nand threw the runner out at first.\nCady  struck  out.\nAlthough New York made two hits\nIn the third inning, they failed to\nscore. Herzog singled to centre and\nwent to second when Meyers dropped\nbase hit Into left, field. Fletcher\nDropped a grounder in front of Hull\n:ind Herzog wus forced.out at third,:\nUoth Meyers and Fletcher advanced\na base on Tesreau's out, Hall to Stahl.\nDevore  ended   the  Inning by sending\nfly to Hooper who got the ball on\nthe run.\nFine Double Play.\nHall opened tho Red Sox third inning by sending a single toward Merkle. The latter threw wide to Tesreau who covered tbe base and the.\nball rolled toward the . grandstand,\nHall going to second. Hooper drove\na single to centre and Hall moved\ndown to third. Yerkes struck out.\nSpeaker sent up a big!) fly to Devore\nwho made ah airline , throw to the\nplate, heading off Hail. It was fine\n.double play.\nNew York went out In order fn the\nfourth Inning. . Doyle grounded out\nto Stahl, unassisted, and Snodgrass\npopped to Wagner. Hail could nut\nstop Murray's grounder but Yerkes\nwas right on top of the ball and got\nMurray at  first.\nTesreau in Trouble.\nTesreau got Into a little trouble in\nthe fourth inning, but got out of lt\nwithout a Red Sdx crossing tiie plate\nLewis sent a high fiy to Devore.\nGardner was hit. by a pitched ball\nand took second on Stahl's single to\nleft. Wagner forced Stahl at second,\nDoyle to Fletcher, Gardner going to\nthird. Mathewson started to warm\nup, but Cady ended the Inning by\ngrounding to Tosreau, who tossed him\nout.\nTlie Giants did not last long, in the\nfifth Inning. Merkle dropped.a little\ngrounder in front of the plate and\nwas thrown out by Cndy. Herzog\nstruck out. Then Meyers made his\nthird hit, a single to left and he was\nforced at second by Fletcher, Wagner\nto Yerkes.\nTosreau got Into a hole In the fifth\nInning. whei\\ Hall started the inning\nwith a double back of second. Doyle\nand Snodgrass. got mixed up as to\nwho would, take the fly and it foil\nbetween therii. Hooper received a\nbase but was ! held at second by\nYerkes, Hall taking third on the out.\nSpeaker wns passed to first nn four\nbad ones and Mathewson again .started to warm up. Lewis sont up a high\nfoul fly to Merkle and the Now York\ncontingent breathed easier. Wngner\nwas an easy out, Tosreau to Mor-\nkle, leaving three men on the bogs.\nTwo More Runs.\nNew York .added two runs to her\ncore In tho sixth, Tesreau grounded\nout, Yerkes to Stahl. Devore was given a baso on balls and Doylo,brought\nhim home and scored himself, on a\nhome run hit thai bounded [nto the\nright field crow<i llko Gardner's four-\nbase   hit   drive.   Snodgrass  filed   to\nLewis and Murray was the third out,\nHall to Stahl.\n-Tesreau also-showed some unsteadiness In the Rod Sox half of the sixth.\nStahl drove a.'lop'g fly that\" Devoro\nghthere.a Ih after a hard run and Wagner sbqfa-single to centre field. Her*?\nTesreau cil.t loose a wild pitch aiid\nWagner -sprinted to', thrill. Wagner\n\\yas hold'there.while Cady .was being\nthrown out, .Tesreau to Merkle. Hall\nwas given a base on balls arid Hooper\nended ,.t,ho afaxlety, among thp Giants\nby striking out, leaving two Tied* Sox\non tiie paths.\nTenth   Run.;*\nThe'G-iaints got their tenth run In the\nseventh- inning. Merkle opened with ;l\nsingle to- centre. Herzog went out on\na drive' to Lewis; On a fielder's choice\non Meyers' grounder, Merkle was safe\nat second ns'was also Meyers ot first.\nFletcher filed duj to Speaker. Tesreau\ncracked: nr-Ingle, to right field turn!\nMerkle scored and Meyers;advanced to\nsecond.    Devore filed out to Lewis.\nLucky Seventh.\n. Tho \"lucky seventh\" brought .two\nmore runs to the Red Sox. 'Wilson\nsucceeded Meyers. In this. Inning.\nYerkes grounded weakly to Fletche-\napd was out-at- first.1 Spenker drove\na single lo centre and went to third\non .Lewis' two base bit to left. Gardner grounded to Fletcher to Merkle nnd\nSpeaker scored. Doyle fumbled\nStahl's easy grounder and Lewis came\nacross the plate; Wagner Was out oh\nstrikes,   i\n.Doyle operied New York's eighth inning; with a -safe drive to right field\nfor a- single hnd took second when\nSnodgrass grounded out to Stahl.\nSpeaker made a great running catch\nof Murrayls. \u25a0Ions-plush that brought\ncheers from tho crowd and Merkle\nended tbe inning by going out Wagner to Stahl.\nBoston's Fourth Run.\nBoston's fourth run .was put. together in the eighth inning. Doyle\nmuffed Cndy's high fiy, he thought one\nof the other fielders were after It. Hall\nhit to right field and Cady took third\nbase, while Devore. slightly fumbled\nthe ball. Hooper then sent Cady\nhome by driving out a sacrifice. Yerkes\nhit.to Tosreau, who deflected the ball\nand Fletcher scooped it up and threw\nHall out at second base. Tesreau let\ngo another-wild pftch, and, Yerkes went\nto second, where he was left w'hfin.\nSpenlier grounded out, Doyle to\nMerkle.\nNew York's Last.\nNew York got its last run in the\nninth. Herzog received a base on\nballs and went to third on Wilson's\nsingle and scored on Speaker's bad\nthrow to hend him off. Fletcher sent\nup a fly to Speaker, who rah in and\ntouched second baso and doubled up\nWilson, who did not know that tho\nball had been caught. Tesreau received a baso on balls and Devore wns\nout, Yerkes to Stahl.\nThe RGd Sox ninth inning was short.\nLewis \u25a0 Wns' given' n\"TVii-SS on^Kgil*- niirj\nGardner funned. Stahl forced Lewis nt\nsecond, Herzog to Doyle. Wagner ended the game by going out, Tesreau to\nMerkle.\nNew York.\nAB. R. H, P.O. A. E.\n1\nSnodKrass. cr\".\nMurray, rf. .\nMorltle, lb. ..\nHerzog. 3b.  .\nMeyers, c.  ..\nWilson, c. ...\nTosreau, p.  .\n  0   12   10\n  4   0   0   10\n   li    1    2 10    0\n  4   2    10    2\n  4   1   3   6   0\n   1   .0    1    2    0\n....... 4.   0206\n0\n0\n1\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\nHooper, rf.\nYerkes, 21). ...\nBoston.\nAB. R. H. P.O. A.\n  3   ,0    1    1    1\n  4   0   0    14\nE.\n0\n0\n1\n0\n1\n0\n0\n0\n0\nl\n3\nJowls, If\t\nGardner, 3b.\nStahl, lb\t\n 4   ,1    1    3    0\n-ncly, c.  .....\nWood, p\t\nHall, p\t\n  4    10    12\n  0   0   0   0    1\n  3   0   3   0    5\nScore by innings-\nNew York ....6 0 10 0 0 2 10 1\u201411\nBoston  0 1 0 0 0 .0 2 1 0 0\u2014 4\nSummary \u2014 Two-base . hits\u2014Snodgrass, Hall and Lewis. Home runs-\nGardner, Doylo. Hltsr-Off Wood, 6\nruns ond 7 hits in eight times at bat\nin one inning; off Hal], 5 runs and 9\nhits in 32 times at bat In eight Innings. Sncrlflco hits\u2014Murray. Sacrifice fly\u2014Hooper. Stolen bases\u2014Devore, 2; Doyle, 1. Double plays\u2014Devore to Meyers; Speaker, unassisted.\nLeft on bases\u2014Now York, S; Boston,\n12. First base on errors\u2014Boston, *J.\nStruck out\u2014By Tesreau, 6; by Hail, 1.\nBases on balls\u2014Off Tesreau, 5; off\nHall, 5. Hit by pitcher\u2014By Tesreau,\nGardner. Wild \"pitches\u2014Tesreau, 2.\nTime\u20142:20. Umpires\u2014At plate, Evans; bases, Klem; left field, O'Lough-\nlin; right field, Rigler.\n. The attendance and receipts at today's game of the world seriqs as announced by.the national commission!\nwere as follows: . Total attendance,\n32,00'; total-receipts, \u00ab07,196; national commission's share, ffiTlO^O; each'\nclub's share, $25,'\u25a068.20.\nBATTING RALLY WINS    ,\u25a0',\nFOR   CHICAGO. AMERICANS\n(By Dally News Leased Wlre.1\nWEST SIDE PARK, CHICAGO,\nOct. 15.\u2014A grand batting rally In the\neleventh Inning gavo the,Chicago Americans their first victory in the series for the championship of Chicago\nwith local Nationals. The Americans\ntook an early lead, bunching hits in\nthe second for three runs. The Nationals played an uphill game, tieing\nthe score in the eighth. Today was\nthe second meeting of Walsh and Lavender, tlie first meeting having resulted In a 0-0 seore tonight. The series\nslonds 3 to 1 In favor or the Cubs.\nScore:\nR. H. E.\nNationals  4    8    2\"\nAmericans     ..\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u2022.  5 11 , 5\nBatteries\u2014Lavender    and    Archer;\nWalsh and Sohalk.      \u2022\nSULLIVAN  THE  CONQUEROR\u2014III.\nTills yenr Is the thirtieth nnnlversary\nof John L. Sullivan's victory over Pad\ndy Ryan, by which the Old Roman he-\ncanie the champion of the world,. Some\nsporting, writers deny that. Sullivan\nwas ever heavyweight title holder,- apd\ntho matter-Is now a subject 0*;. controversy in some New York papers^ . To\nme lt ailpearB that any denial of Sullivan's' claim as the greatest flighting\nman of his time-r-snd one. nfigjit add,\nof all time\u2014Is based on a, mene technical quibble. Certainly Sullivan In\nhis prime feared no man and. was always ready to \u25a0 meet oil, eppnprs,\nJdhn'L. was not champion from 1883\nto 1892, then no mon was ever cham-\nplon. The Sullivan-Ryan battle was\na bout between.gladiators..-The. sporting fraternity of the'gulf states 'Is now\nraising 0 fund to erect,a monurnent at\nTwin Oaks, near Mississippi City,\nMiss., to commemorate the contest. It\nIs the'plnn'to have the principal incidents of the affair, fought under London prl-ie ring rules with, \"bpre fists,\nChiselled on the monument, -which Will\nbo the first of Its kind -ever .erected.\nBilly Ryan, who was the first.manager\nof a fighter In.America,'and .who Is\nstilt prominent lh New .York sporting\ncircles, worked strenuously with Sulli\nvon before tub bout with Ryan, ond\nJohn X. wns in. the pink-of condition,\nas *wns the champion.''The encounter\n-was for the title and $2,500 It side,\nThreots of -official interference led to\nuncertainty as to the -time -and plac.\nof the.combat, but 2,000 of,the faithful were on hand and surrounded the\nring pitched only a short distance from\n'the Gulf of'Mexico, in 11 minutes Sul\nllvan won the title. For ti decade the\nOld Domon remained supreme, until\ntoppled from his throne-djy James J.\nCorbett and John J. Barleycorn. Deprived of his tltlo, John L..still had\ngroat capacities for rnoney-m-ijting In\ntheatrical tours, but a greater thirst\nand ability to squander money.; First\nand last he mado a million dollars, as\nmay be proved by statistics, and four\nyears ago he was broke nnd reduced\nto accepting alms from -friends.. With\nthe sameness that has always characterized him, Sullivan refused to .admit\nthat booze had mastered ;him.' In r\nday he was transformed from, tin\nworld's greotest drunkard to a strict\nteetotaler. And now he lectures on\ntemperance before Young Men's Chris\ntian ossociations. ... \u25a0    \u2022\nKILBANE IS WINNER\n(By Dally News Leased Vt\\r\u00a7.)\nCLEVELAND, Ohio, Dot, 15\u2014Johnny Kllbane, featherweight champion,\nwas given the decision over, Eddie\nO'Keefe of New York at.the end of a\nfast 12-round' bout nere tonight. There\nwas no knockdown. A cyt was opened\nover Kilbane's eye when they bumped\nheads.\nTHINKS PROPOSED LEAGUE\nIS   NOT PRACTICABLE\n(Special to Tito Bally News.)\nItOSHhAND, niCv, Oct. IB.\u2014F. Willis,\n(the .TrnUV Hockey, ,dub..,secretary., \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0***&\ndiscussing the proposed. boukey league\nwith sonic Rutland hoi-key officials and\nIs of the opinion that It would'hot bo\npracticable for eithur Rosalnnd,! Nelson\nor Trail to go Into fl conipntitiou which\nwould necessitate their .players being\naway for three days at a time, but\nthought that lt would be better for tbe\nBoundary   teams   to   play, for   the   best\nA NEAT WORK APRON.\nNo woman con have too many of\nthese useful work aprons ,that qover\nthe whole dress. The UJ\u00bbvM aprun\nmaterial, such as percale, linen, gingham, cambric and Hofland are all\nsuitable for the making; The front is\nin Princess effect and the side bre-\ntelles over the shoulder are .always\nbecoming. The pattern is.cut, iii 3\nsizes, small, medium and large. It\nrequires 31-2 yards of 30-inch material for the medium size.\nteam of that district, the winner to play\nthe best team In this district. This would\nresult in tiie best teams being In the\nfinal, and it would be simply a matter\nof ilrawing where the final should be\nplayed.\nHOLD BANQUET IN\nHONOR OF G0W\nDistincjishcd  Men  From All Over Alberta Will  Be Present\u2014Cow\nIs Wonder.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nCALGARY, Alta., Oct. 15.-Distinguished men from all over Alberta will meet\nin Red \u25a0 Deer at a banquet tomorrow\nnight in honor of the achievements of\na Jersey cow, \"Rosalind of Old Busing.\"\nAmong those who will attend will be\nHon. Dunean Marshall, minister of agriculture; J, S. Dennis, head ol' the department of natural lesources of the Canadian Pacific railway; \\V. J. Treglllus,\npresident of tho United Fanners ot Alberta. The cow is said to have tho record\nof ber kind, having produced in one year\n15,700 pounds of milk, the average test\nOf Which was 5.17, and three calves for\nwhicli  tlie owner has refused ?3,000.\nTO WITHDRAW TRADE COMMISSIONER  FROM  MEXICO\n.(By Dally News . Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, Oct. 15.-The department of\ntrade and commerce has decided to withdraw A. W. Donley, its trade commissioner in Mexico, and for the present at\nleast no successor will be appointed.\nLack of business between the Dominion\nnnd Mexico Is given as the reason for\nthe withdrawal. It Is said that the continued disturbances in Mexico and the\nadditional fact that tiie Mexican steamship line, formerly plying between Vancouver and Mexico and subsidized by\nCanada, has been withdrawn, have beun\nresponsible for tbe dropping off in Canadian trade. Mr. Donley, who is a .Slmcoj\nman, has held the position as commissioner for the past 10 years. For the\npresent the Interests of Canadians li\nMexico wll) he looked after by the Brit\nish consul.\nNO TRACE FOUND\nOF MURDEROR\nJealousy     Motive   of   Triple   Crime-\nForced Wife to Try to Extract\nBullet.\n(Special to The Daily Xews.)\nMISSION CITY, Oct. lu.\u2014Although\nmany have been seeking William McLaughlin accused of tlie triple murder here on Sunday, no trace has\nbeen found of him. The motive for\nthe crime seems to have been jealousy. McLaughlin wos suspicious of\nthe relations between his wife nnd McNeil and it is stated that on one occasion he threatened that the next time\nhe found them together he would\nshoot. Tile three survivors in the rig\nall stick to the* same story. They state\nftWflithey ;we?c'\",arl\\'ilig' 'nloflg 'wen\n'they came to McLaughlin who was\nsitting on a log on the side of the\nroad with a rifle across his knee;\nThey say that as soon as McNeil saw\nMcLaughlin he pulled out a revolver\nand pulled the trigger. They agree\nthat as soon as McLaughlin saw the\nrevolver he let louse with his rifle,\nkilling the old lady first, 13illy Jasper second, and McNeil last. While\nbe was disposing of the first two,\nMcNeil got his revolver, shooting McLaughlin In the breast. The survivors all agree that when the fusilode\nwas all oyer, McLaughlin commanded\nliia wife to get out of the rig and toll\ntlie others tu drive on. According to\nhis wife's story he compelled her to\ndress his wound and even forced her\nto attempt to extract a bullet which\nwas near the skin on the left side,\nhaving pierced the fleshy part of the\nbreast. She claims that she was unsuccessful in trying to get the bullet\nout, the wound starting to bleed so\nbadly that she had to desist.\nThe man has made no effort to\nharm her. It Is expected by tho po1*\nlice that the man's wound will either\ncause his surrender or death lh the\nnext few days.\nEach pattern can be obtained by\nsending 10 cents to the office of this\npaper. In some cases.the IllusiJ-ation\ncontains two patlerns,i ea'ch nijmbeij\nrepresenting a different -pattern. * In\nsuch cases 20c should b*\">; enclosed.\n_\n\u2014\nPattern   No. 9359.\nPattern  Department      ,'   , V-. . \u25a0'\nDally News:   (- J ,\nEnclosed find 10 cents for which\nhind the above pattern to     n\nName    >.\u2022.....,.,.\nNo    Street..,,,.\".,.........\nTown  ;.....v....\u25a0;.',,\nMeasurement\u2014Waist...., .Bust....\nAge (if child's or miss' patten.),..\nThese patterns are iup^lied direct from the makers, , re,ijui*fing\ntwo wooks from receipt, qf., order\nat the Dally News Office. ,,'\u201e ,,   ,\nNO MORE CORNS\nNo More Dangerous Paring.\nNobody needs lo suffer from corns\nsince \"lOxtermlnator\" was invented.\nMillions apply tills little plaster. Tho\npnln stops Instantly. Then the \"Exterminator\" gently loosens the corn. In\nfew days the whole corn comes out\u2014root,\ncallous and all.\nExterminator\"    has    done    that    for\nmillions of corns, without any soreness,\nny trouble, any delay or disc oni fort.\nCommon treatments mean lust a brief\nrelief. \"Exterminator\" ends the corn.\nFarim; a corn just removes the top layer.\n\"'he  main   part   is  left  to  grow,   and   in\nilllkma of rases paring causes Infection.\nAll tho3o methods are wrong. Soon or\nlato tho corn must be removed. Why\ntrifle and delay? \"Exterminator\" remove's it In four days. In the meantime\nyou  forget lt.\nPlease 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\npackdge. Sold by John Swan, Sandon,\nB.C., 'Canada. i3S-la.w-10\nMADDEN LEFT OVER\nTHIRTY THOUSAND\nHotel is Valued at Thirty-Three Thousand Dollars\u2014Widow is Named\nAdministrator.\nThe late Thomas Madden left an\nestate valued at ?35,350, according to\naffidavits presented by E. A. Crease\nwhose application for letters of administration to the widow of the deceased  has been granted.\nTho Madden hotel is valued at ?33,-\n000 with a mortgngc against the property of $6000. Personal and residential property mnke up the balance of\nlhe estate.\nWOMAN PRISONER MAKES\nCHARGES AGAINST POLICE\n(Py Dally News Leased Wire.)\nMOOSE JAW, Sask., Oet. ir>.-AIma\nEivlns, woIL known to tjic Winnipeg\nmolality department, made serious ac-\ne 1 mat ions against the local police today\nregarding the coMuot toward her whep\nshe wos la the cells awaltipg -.trial on\na charge of vagrancy. It Is possible o\nspecial meeting of the police commissioners will He held to bear what she has tn\nsay. Incidentally, fellow prisoners do not\nsupport her statements.     \u201e    . ,, (\nFAIR OPENED BY\nBRITISH MEMBER\n(Continued from1 page one.)\ntho soil of Italy, which became uncultivated and only provided great quantities of game for the Roman nobles,\nond when the barbarians came there\nwere no hardy peasants left to fight.\nOur land grows larger crops per acre\nOf most kinds of grain than the land\nof other countries, and if we keep as\nmuch of our land under the plough\nand as well cultivated as other nations do, we shall not only grow most\nof our own food but we shall grow\nstrong, healthful men and women to\nkeep up the numbers and physical\nstrength of our people, and to defend\nour race and country.\n\"In England we allow other nations to use our country as a free\nmarket for almost all the surplus\ngoods of tbe same kind as we produce ourselves, which they cannot sell\nin their own country. If the United\nKingdom did not exist, foreigners\nwould have no free market for their\nsurplus competing goods. These surplus goods employ the working people\nof other countries instead of our 1\npeople and they are often sold\ncheap that our working people cannot\ncompete witli them unless they ore\nwilling to work for starvation wages.\nUnless tbe ranchers ond wheat growers of Canada combine to fight down\nthe Influx of American products it Is\nprobable that the some condition may\nobtain here. If we are to prosper as\na great people of a superior civilized\nrace. We must not only defend our\ncountry ngolnst invasion and conquest\nbut we must defend our industries\nand the wages of our people against\nforeign aggression of all kinds. Cheap\nimported fruit of the same kind as w\nproduce must mean cheap men and\ncheap women, because our people\nmust either lose their employment altogether or take wages low enough to\nenable us to compote with the cheapest goods, and therefore the cheapest\nlabor abroad. Self preservation is\nthe first law of nature, and our working people must protect themselves\nand their race from the cheap labor\not the south even more than from tbe\nsurplus and bounty fed goods of the\ngreat   protected   nations.\"\nClosely Fought Games.\nA very large number of the visitors\ntook advantage of the delightfully fine\nafternoon and visited tbe recreation\ngrounds. The greatest excitement prevailed, both baseball and football\ngames being enthusiastically applauded throughout. Both games were\nclosely contested and from a spectator's standpoint were excellent, the\nsympathizers of each team making\nthemselves heard In no uhcertaih\nmanner throughout each contest.\nRiondel proved the victor In the baseball match by a score of 4 runs to 3,\nwhile the Kaslo team wrested a hard\nfought victory from Proctor at football by a score of 3 to 2. The baseball lineup was as follows:\nKaslo\u2014White, c; (Desmond, lb;\nFiSttiitUSr, gb^Afldfaws. 3ftL Mackay\np; Leet, ss; Foiirnicr, cf; Dunn, If;\nLink, rf.\nrtiundel\u2014McKarland,     c;     Wheeler,\nlb;   Hull, iib;   Lingard and   Nord,  3b;\nSherraden,   p;   Davis,   ss;   Hufty,   cf;\nMcArthur, if; Kamser, rf.\nUmpire\u2014D.  Reid.\nKiondel went to bat in tlie first part\nof the first inning and McFarlahd\nsucceeded in scoring. Davis, Ttamser\nand Lingard followed and all went out,\nIn tlie second holf of this inning a near\naccident occurred, McFarlond and\nLingard running; to catch a fiy, knocked by White, and colliding with a\ncrash. Doth were partly unconscious\nfor a couple of minutes and Lingard\nwas forced to quit the game and was\nsucceeded by Nord. Leet made one for\nKaslo In this inning. In the second\nInning neither side succeeded in scoring. Tlie players being either fanned\nout or were stopped at first. Riondel\nmade a big gain in the third inning,\nwiien Davis and Ramser tallied one\neach, due to some poor field work by\nlhe home team. Kaslo was stopped at\nthe outset, when hatting not a player\nreadied  first.\nThere was some very neat work on\nboth sides in the fourth, fifth and\nsixth innings, neither side scoring,\nwith some streaks of good batting and\nexcellent fielding. The game concluded at the end of the seventh Inning,\nHufty rolling up another tally for\nRiondel, and sensational runs made by\nLeet and Fournier adding two to tho\nKaslo score, and evening up things\nconsiderably.\nFootball Match.\nFor the football game between Kaslo\nand Proctor, the lineup was:\nKaslo\u2014Clegg, goal; M. K. Harrison,\nleft back; Relkle-, right back; Moston,\nleft half; W. E. Harrison, right half;\nChandler, centre half; McOibbon, centre half; Gough, centre half; Burgess,\nforward; White, forward; Bacchus,\nforward. -   ' '|\nProctor\u2014Homes, goal;   A. MacKcr-\n'i, left back; A. Walton, right back;\nlerraden, left holf;  W .Hollis, right\nhalf; Smith, centre half; McGee, centre\nhalf; McAlloch, centre half; A. Wals-\nforward;     Ashmole,      forward;\nStanton, forward.\nDuring the first Half lhe Kaslo team\nhad considerably the advantage by a\ndownhill run and bod no difficulty in\nkeeping the ball close to their opponents' goal. Fred MoGibbon scored tho\nfirst goal for the home team and W.\nH. Burgess put through the third.\nProctor picked up considerably during\ntho last half and appeared to be determined not to go home without scoring. They kept the ball pretty close to\ntlie Kaslo goal at times, and It seemed\nns If bod luck Interposed to prevent\nthem scoring moro frequently than\nthey did. However, Smith and Mtto-\nKqrlth succeeded In putting through\none each, wblie Clarence White mode a\nthird score for Kaslo. It resulted In\na victory for Kaslo and wns a clean\ngam0 throughout .although the play\nwas rough occasionally. J. Reikio\ncaptained tho Kaslo players nnd A\nWnlton wos In command on the Proctor team. Buck Taylor, of Riondel.\nreferred the game nnd gave excellent\nsatisfaction.\nGood Work of Woman's linrtitute.\nReturning from thp sports, tbe visitors crowded into tlie fair building and\nuntil early evening were busily engaged inspecting the exhibits. Ten\n'rooms under the auspices of the Knslo\nnnd district women's Institute were\nsought after and Miss M. Twins, presl-\nlent; Miss Katlo Milton, honorary\nsecretary;  Mrs. Jack Archer,    Mirror\nlake; Mrs. Tuppin, chairman of the\ncommittee; Mrs. W. Ylngord and Mm.\nA. Jordon all found ample work to\nsupply tho needs of the people: Locally\nthe women's institute has been doing\nsplendid work and today's receipts will\nconsiderably help to swell the funds\nwhich are devoted to free literature\nand entertainments nnd demon stations\nof home cooking and housekeeping.\nRecently the committee was able lo\nsubscribe $300 toward Improvements\nto the Kaslo cemeery. Great interest\nis taken in the good work and the ladies were highly commended by the\nfair board today for the excellence of\ntheir arrangements.\nGoes to  Lethbridge. \\\nMrs. Ernest Normnn of Mirror lake,\nwon a great many of the prizes for\npreserved fruits, meats nnd vegetables.\nIn all Mrs. Norman was showing no\nfewer, than 105 jars. These weje\nshipped last night for exhibition at\ntho dry forming congress at Lethbridge, where Mrs. Normnn will go'bt\nthe request of tho government and\ngive a series of lectures on homo canned moots, fruits and vegetables. Mrs.\nNorman proposes to baso her addresses on the scientific as well nsj the\npractical side of canning nnd will also\ngive practical demonstrations. A\nspinning exhibition on an old Scotth\nspinning wheel, said to be 150 years\nold, nnd on art gallery wore among\nthe entertalnements provided by the\nwomen's institute.\nDance in Evening.\nIn the evening Johnson's Nelson orchestra ployed dance music in the\nEagle hall, where about 80 couples\ndanced up to within o few minutes of\nthe time for the Moyie to leave on thi\nhomeward trip. By one and all the\nsixth annual fruit fair of Knslo has\nbeen voted an unequivocal success.\nWILSON CANCELS\nENGAGEMENTS\nWill   Not Take Active Part In  Campaign While Roosevelt Is\nIncapacitated.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nPRINCETON, N.J., Oct. 15.-Governor\nWoodrow Wilson tonight announced that\nhe would cancel all speaking engagements with tho exception of those arranged for Thursday and Frldav of this\nweek until Col. Roosevelt Is able to take\nan active part in the campaign. Tito\ngovernor will speak in Delaware, West\nVirginia and Pennsylvania tbis week,\nconcluding his campaign lu Pittsburg on\nFriday night. Tbe governor In a statement says that President Taft has at no\ntime taken an active part In the campaign, and he lias no desire to be the\nsingle candidate on the stump engaged\nagufnst  no active antagonist.\nMrs. Woodrow Wilson tonight sent to\nMrs. Theodore Roosevelt at the Mercy\nhospital, Chicago, tbe following telegram: \"My heartfelt sympathy in your\nanxiety ond distress. Mr. Wilson and I\nhove been shocked beyond expression\nand await each item of news with duep\nsolicitude.\"\nINHERITED FORTUNE\nGOES TO JAIL\nForged     Cheques   to   Pay\" ^Gambling\nDebt\u2014Expected   Money to   Pay\u2014\nSentence  Two  Years.\n(Special to Tho Dally News.)\nVICTORIA, li. t.:., Oct. 15.\u2014After\nremaining in Jail for 55 days, H. A.\n1'tnsoiiby, aged ^lt self confessed forger, wus today sentenced by Magistrate Shaw to serve two years at hard\nlabor.\nAll tho young man's defalcations\nhave been cleared up as he became\nheir to a fairly large fortune 21 days\nago.\nFrom Pensonby's own admission in\nlhe police court he forged two\ncheques In order to get money to pay\na gambling debt, thinking that bis\nmonthly allowance would reach him\nbefore It could be learned that tho\ncheques were worthless. He also ad-.\nmilled issuing five worthless cheques\non a Vancouver bank in whicli he had\nan account.\nFINNS ARRIVE WITH\nSTOCK OF WATCHES\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nPOUT ARTHUR, Ont., Oct, IE.\u2014With\na 13,000 stock of watches, chains and\nother articles of jewelry, the possession\nof which they refused to explain, two\nPin la nd ers, strangers in the city, were\nplaced under arrest today by the police\non a charge of bringing stolen goods Into\nthe country, The men, who gave the\nnames of August Torrillo and Henry\nToharian, had been trying to sell the\ngoods in town. The police raided their\nrooms and found the jewelry in two\ngrips and also a revolver In each. While\nholding the men on the charge of smuggling, tlie officers will communicate With\nUnited States police to learn if thu\ngoods were stolen.\nFOURTEEN-YEAR-OLD  GIRL\nCHARGED  WITH   MURDER\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nCOBALT, Ont., Oct. 15.\u2014Charged\nIth poisoning her three-days-old\nbaby about a yenr ago, Mario Coyn,\nof Ville Marie, Quebec, who is 1-1\nyears old and who has just given\nbirth to another child, is under arrest\nat the Silver Nugget house in North\nCobalt. It is alleged tlie girl told\npart of her story to the officer giving\nhorrible details and Implicating her\nmarried sister and two brothers in the\noffalr. During n visit to Ville Marie,\nprovincial Constable Lefevher beard\nof the case and inquiries of the\ntownspeople and tlie priests are alleged to have brought further facts to\nlight.\nLIPTON COMING TO CANADA.\n(By  Dally   News  Lensed  Wire.)\nTORONTO,  Oet. 16\u2014Str Thomas Llpton\nwill arrive  In  Toronto oh  Monday  for u\nthree days' visit.    He will then xo to'tlia\nPacific  coast,  stopping off at   Winnipeg\ninl btlrt\nnjiortiii\nlis first visit to\nthe\nDON'T CUT OUT A VARICOSE VElt*\n^ABSORBINLJK?!1\n\"*\u25a0 A mlkl, safe, antiseptic, dlaott-\nth'iti, resolvent liniment, anila\niirm-i'H r.'iundy furUilsandstm-\ni'.irlrmil.les. Mr. 11. C. Kollooa,\nlleclii't. Mass., bi'foru using this\nrrtni'ily, Miiii-ivrt IntetiM'ly with\npainful and Inilmiiod yrlnn*\n[Imy wero swollen, knotted and\ni hard. Ho nrlti'i: \"After ualnu\n1 WW nnd omi-hiilf butilos 6?\n, , , * AHS(.KHI>.K,.JU..tliOTulnH\n\u2022\u25a0 leilmvil, Lli!l;.i:tni;i!inn ;iin! (Mill t-i.N<\\ ll.lul J\n....j h;id no ree.urrene.mV the twiil-lo durlnu the\n'list SI* fi-an.\" Alijo removes Unlire, I'aVntnl\n''V\/'V^V \u2022'\"','' \"\u2022\u25a0'\u25a0'\"\u2022'\u25a0 '\u25a0\u25a0'^''''\u25a0''\u2022. Unlink \"HIihm\nfLCDnr\/i! .W ;.!\u201e-, [; aiOruKKlstsordellvgVf^\n: BO fi-ou.   Wrltofurlt.\nft fr.W\u00abM A;B-\u00ab1.R.B.LN.E and Man*\n^Bctured only by W. F. Young, P.D.F.\n445 Lyman \u25a0 Bnlldlti\u00ab, Montreal. P.O. .\nAV:> fnnil.l.r.1 I.)   Jdui:,! Ii.l,. .*,   ivvim,, <',.., \\vTnnl*v.f.\n'Hn'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0iti.>li:ill'ni;: ll li.'iu i.il Cii., Wiiii.liv',111.1 l,*.ll)-nv\u201e\nauU Uotianrsua Una. Co., LU., Vancouver.\n t \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0  \u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nr :PAGE FOUR\nWEDNESDAY .\nOCTOBER.16.\n\u2022 *=\ncue 3sau?:j5\u00aboiQ.\nPublished   at   Nelson   Every   Morning\n\"*\u25a0'\u25a0\"      Except Sunday, by\nThe News Publishing Company,\nLimited.\nW. G. FOSTER, Editor and Manager.\nWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER  16\nj, ,       LOANS  TO  SETTLERS.\n> Hon .Price Ellison, who has given\nninny striking evidences of hia thorough understand Ing of the needs of\nthe.agricultural Industry of this prov-\nnce,' haa Come out strongly in favor\nif the proposal that the government\nihouid come id the assistance of new\nsettlors in the way of loans at a low\nrate of Interest. In the course of an\nntervlew at Victoria recently, upon\nlis return from the upper country, ho\ne quoted as saying:\nIt- is my firm conviction that if\nagriculture is to be properly developed In this province, some\nmeans must be found of supplying the farmers with'cheap money. The province has several million dollars on hand and I cannot\nsee why It should not be loaned to\nthe farmers at a low rate of interest Instead of being loaned to\n' the' banks.\n\"There Is no apparent reason why\nMr. Ellison's suggestion should not be\ncarried ihto effect, but should there\nbe any objection to loaning government funds in the way proposed, it\nIs hard to see why money should not\nbe raised for tho purpose on the province's credit and re-loaned to agriculturists as Is done in New Zealand,\nAustralia and elsewhere. The whole\nmatter, it may be added, has been\nmore or less before the government\nfor some time, but action in the matter, if any Is to be taken, will probably \u25a0 be delayed until after the proposed agricultural commission has\nbeen appointed and has concluded its\nlabors and made its report.\n\u25a0 \"When that commission Is engaged\nOpori -Us.work, }twould be well, therefore, -'if. all those interested would\nplace before its members the necessity\nfor some action along the lines of\nsupplying, settlers -frith money, and at\na! reasonable rate of interest, for the\nauvelopment of their properties. At\npresent millions upon millions of dol-\n-itus .Worth of soil products are being\nImported into British Columbia each\nj-ypar.. Thero Is no reason why practically all of these imports should not\n. ,be produced at home. All that pre-\n' ivehts this being -done is the present\niba'ckward state of agriculture in the\nj-pjovlnce, due to a very large extent,\nn4fl lack ot capital'on the part of those\n^engaged in the industry.\njt* Anything whioh the government\nimay do to assist agriculture In the\n\"-way of loans to bona fide settlers will\nibe a move in the interests of British\nColumbia and of all its people.\n'ELECTING A PRESIDENT IN CASE\nOF  DEADLOCK.\nTho method of electing a president\nof the United States in event of' a\ndeadlock is the subject of considerable   discussion.\nI The constitution provides that the\npresident and vice president shall be\nfleeted by electors! selected by the\npeople on the first Tuesday after the\nfirst Monday of November In every\nfourth year preceding the year In\nWhich the presidential term expires.\nThese electors meet on the second\nMonday in January next following\ntheir election at the capital and cast\ntheir vutes.    The  result of  this vote\nA BARGAIN\nwas best iNVEsvnmv\nX&   IN   \u201e\nREAIi\n\u25a0V66 ACRES of first class land, situated on Government Wagon Road,\n\u2022June' hours ride from Nelson, close to\nJpchool 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.\nThe 10 acres alone will produce 60\ntons of potatoes.\nTh|s flue property which we consider tbe best buy In the district is\noffered \"for the first time at the\nvery low figure of \"$65 per acre.\nTerms to suit you.\nBo advised In time and lay the\nfoundation for your futuro independence. \u25a0 The above property purchased now will make you independent of landlords for all time to\ncome.\nAsk us to show you this property.\n'It will be a pleasure to do so.\nB.C. United Agencies\nP. O. Box 232 Phone 391.\n\u25a0     419 Baker Street, Nation, B. C.\ntu signed,* sealed and'-transmitted\" to\nthe president of the senate at Washington. . \u2022\nAccording to the twelfth\" amendment to tbe constitution, the president\nof the senate shall in the presence of\nthe house of representatives and the\nopen senate opon all the certificates and' the votes shall then be\ncounted. Tho person having the\ngreatest number of votes for president shall be president, If such number be a majority of tbe whole number of electors  elected.\nIf no person has such majority,\nthen from the persons having the\nhighest number, not exceeding three\non the list of those voted for as president, the house of representatives\nshall choose the president immediately by ballot, but in choosing the president the votes shall be taken by\nstates, the representation from each\nstate having ono vote. A quorum for\nthis purpose shall consist of a member or members from two-thirds of the\nstates, and a majority of all the states\nshall be necessary to a choice. And If\nthe house of representatives shall not\nchoose a president when the right of\nchoice shall devolve upon them, before the fourth day of March next following, then the vice president shall\nact us president as in the case of a\ndeath or other constitutional disability of the president.\nIn tho case of a vice presidential\ndeadlock, if no candidate has a majority of the total electoral vote, then\nfrom the two highest numbers on the\nlist the senate shall choose the vice\npresident. A quorum for the purpose\nshall consist of two-thlirds of the\nwhole number of senators and a majority of the whole number shall bo\nnecessary to a choice.\nEDITORIAL  NOTES.\nCol .Roosevelt is a tenacious gentleman. He still has possession of the\nbullet which hit him Monday evening.\nMr. Armaud Lavergne, lieutenant tb\nMr. Henri Bourassa In the Nationalist\nmovement, will go to the Balkans to\nwatch the war there. It will be unfortunate If he cannot take his friend\nand leader, Mr. Bourassa, along with\nhim.\nThe report of the Consolidated Mining & Smelting company for the year\nending June 30 last, while It does not\nindicate that the company is making\nany undue profit, shows that the mining industry of the Kootenay is coming into Its own, providing it receives\nno setback in the shape of delay or\nsuspension of operations or development.\nWhat the Press Is Saying -\nIn Verdant Toronto.\nA   Toronto   dairy  wagon advertises\n\"pasturtzed milk.\" And after all, some\nof it does come from the pastures.\u2014\nToronto Star.\nPlease Omit Flowers.\nThis Is a strange world and you can\nnever tell when a change is coming.\nA few weeks ago the editor was alive\nand happy and today he's married.\nLet Ed. the tailor and the big Dr.\nbeware. (Riverside correspondence.)\u2014\nAllsa Craig Banner.\nHe Got Some, Too.\nWatermelons are getting so plentiful around Obar that farmers are\nfeeding them to the hogs. We had\nseveral this week.\u2014Obar, IN. M.) Progress.\nStranger Than Fiction.\nIt Is a bizarre situation at Lawrence\n\u2014the men on strike, the president of\nthe biggest cumpan-v* out on ball, two\nleaders of the last strike still in prison on a charge of murder. A\nnovelist who had invented such a tale\nof an American Industrial town would\nhave heen accused of exaggeration.\u2014\nSpringfield Republican.\nCold Storage\nCaptain\u2014\"Supposing the barracks were\nto catch fire,  what would you sound?\"\nTrumpeter (newly joined)\u2014\"Sure, sorr,\nI'd sound the \"cease fire.' \"\u2014Punch.\nThe spread of tho love of luxury seems\nto be affecting everyone and everything.\nTbls year many of our birds bave left\nfor the south much earlier than usual.\u2014\nPuncb.\nFlflne\u2014\"And your flirtation with Ga3-\nton?\"\nMnrle-\"FlniBhed!\"\nFlflrit\u2014\"What!!    Did   you  quarrel?\"\nMarie\u2014\"Oh, no; we're married.\"\u2014\nSketch. \u2022\nMaud\u2014\"-\"Miss Oldun thinks that hotel\nelerk just lovely.\"  \u25a0\nEthel-\"Why so?\"\nMaud\u2014\"Ho wrote opposite her name on\nthe    hotel    register,    suite  1G.\"\u2014Boston\nTranscript.\n\"Are you expecting a landslide this\nyear?\"  asked  one  campaigner.\n\"No,\" replied the other. \"There has\nbeen so much mud-throwing that theru\nwon't be any loose land left.\"\u2014Washington Star.\n\"When does your husband find time to\ndo all his reading?\"\n\"Usually when I want to tell him something important.\"\u2014Detroit Free Press.\n\"Don't you think lt Is dreadful about\nall this graft business being discovered?\"\n\"Of courso I do. Why couldn't they\nkeep such a good thing quiet?\"\u2014Baltimore American.\nThis Date in Historo.\nThe first newspaper In the city or\nprovince of New York was the New York\nGa-iflUc, first issued 18? years ngo today\nwith William Bradford as editor and\npublisher. It was the fifth newspaper\nto be established In the American colonies, its predecessors having been the\nBoston News-Letter, founded In 1704; tho\nBoston Gazette, 1719; the American Weekly Mercurie, Philadelphia, 171S, and the\nNew England Coiirant, Boston, 1721. Thi*\noldest New York newspaper now published Is tin* Globe and Commercial Advertiser, established under the name of\ntbe Commercial Advertiser In 1797. The\nBoston Daily Advertiser \"began publication In 1700, and tbe New York Evening\nPost, still published, two years later. The\nNew York Sun, tho flrat penny paper,\ndates from 1.S33, the New York Herald\nfrom 1S3G, the New York Tribune from\n1841, and tho New York Times from 1850.\nThe first Illustrated paper in New York\nwas the Daily Graphic, founded In 1870,\nWhich for il time held a prominent place\nin New York journalism, but has since\nfallen by the wayB.de.\nThe Weather\nfBy Daily News Leased Wire.)\nTORONTO, Oct. 15.-Thc disturbance\nwhich was centred to the northward of I\nthe Ottawa valley last night has now\nreached the Gulf of St. Lawrence, accompanied by a moderate noithwestcrly\ngale. Local showers have occurred in\ntho maritime provinces but elsewhere In\nCanada the weather has been fine. In\nthe west temperatures of about 70 degrees have been quite general.\nMtn. Max.\nNelson   ;    32       67\nVictoria        48        54\nVancouver      51       5-j\nKamloops       48        (0\nCalgary        48        50\nBattleford     40       70\nPrince  Albert      31        Oil\nMoose Jaw      87\nMl 11 IH il\" :i        24\nPort  Arthur       26-\nParry   Sound       84\nLondon       3D\nToronto     40\nKingston       40\nOttawa       38\nMontreal    ,   38\nSt.  John    44\nHalifax      30        04\nASSAILANT WAS\nRABID SOCIALIST\nFormerly   Ran   Laundry\u2014Was   Bitter\nAgainst Wealthy\u2014Member of\nHungarian Society.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nNEW YORK, Oet. 16,\u2014John\nSehrank, tho man who shot Colonel\nRoosevelt, is said to have lived at 370\nEast Tenth street two years ago. His\nwife wns with him then. Sehrank ran\na laundry at Sixth street and Avenue\nC and later moved away from the\nTenth street address, in which neighborhood he was known as a rabid Socialist, although It was asserted that\nhe was a peaceful sort of man. Often\nSehrank used to talk at Tenth street\nand Tompkins park in an effort to\nenroll Socialists. He was extremely\nemphatic In these talks and extremely\nbitter ago Inst the wealthy. He was a\nmember of a Hungarian society. According to Mrs. Mathilda Stern, who\nlives In the Tenth street house,\nSehrank was a quiet man. He was fn\ntho habit of inviting men to his rooms\nen Sunday and talking over Socialistic\ndoctrines with them. The description\nol the man Who did tho shooting in\nMilwaukee was said to tally with that\nof the man who lived in the Tenth\nstreet house.\nSeamlessHose Is Worth The Money\n\u2014No Other Kind Can Be\nFor yourself, or your household, only\nPen-Angle Hosiery! Because this is the\nkind knit to fit without a seam\u2014smooth-\nfitting comfort, longer wear, less darning)\nno rips nor bulges. This is the only hose\nmade that really fits\u2014that snugs in close\nand shapely to every curve of the foot\nand leg\u2014that hasn't a seam\u2014and yet you\nare not asked to pay more for it than you\nhave been used to paying for the common\nkind.\nTAFT HOPES ROOSEVELT\nWILL 80ON RECOVER\n(By Bally News Leased Wlro.1\nNEW YORK, Oct. 15.\u2014\"I speak for\nthe American people in expressing the\nptJofbtind''tttJiie'that'C6ltfnel Roosevelt\nmay speedily recover from tho effects\nof this dastardly attrck.\"\nMr. Taft sent messages to Colonel\nnnd Mrs. Roosevelt, respectively, as\nfollows:\n.  \"I am  greatly shocked to hear of\nthe outrageous and deplorable assault\nmade upon you and I earnestly hope\nnnd pray that your recovery may be\nspeedy and without suffering. (Signed)\n\"W. H, TAFT.\"\n\"I extend to you my heartfelt sympathy in your present distress.   I earnestly hope and pray that you and your\nfamily    and    the    country    may    be\npromptly relieved of the suspense by\nthe   news  that  all  danger  is  passed.\n(Signed) \"W. H, TAFT.\"\nWilson's Sympathy.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nTRENTON, N. J., Oct. 15.\u2014One of\nthe first things that Governor Wilson\ndid today was to read tho newspaper\naccounts of the attempt to assassinate\nC-ilonel Roosevelt. He sent the following telegram to Colonel Roosevelt:\n\"Please accept my warmest sympathy and heartiest congratulations\nthat your wound is not serious.\"\nBELIEVE SCHRANK\nIS NOT INSANE\nTrial  of    Roosevelt's  Assailant    Will\nNot  Take   Place   Until -After\nElections.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nMILWAUKEE, Oct. 15.\u2014State's Attorney Wlnfred G. Zahel of Milwaukee\ncounty, tonight announced that John\nSehrank, Col. Roosevelt's assailant,\nwould be brought to trial until after\nthe national election, Nov. 5. He said\nthe trial would he opened somo time\nbetween Nov. 11 and 15.\ni Mr. Zabel who is said to be the only\nSocialist state's attorney in the country, gave three reasons for his decision to delay the trial for one month.\nHo said first, that It was only reasonable to awnlt the result of Col.\nRoosevelt's injury; second, he had no\ndesire to crowd the defendant and.\nthird, he gave it as his opinion that\nit would be unwise to call the case\nduring the final, struggle In the presidential campaign.\n\"It Is my desire to try this case\njustly and expeditiously,\" said Mr.\nZabel, \"and this will be done, but we\nwish to avoid having the plain criminal aspects of the case In any way\nInvolved in the national political situation. It would not be fair to any\nof the persons involved to do so. If\nhe went to trial before election da^ It\nia almost certain that the matter\nwould be dragged into the campaign\nby one or another of the big parties.\"\nDiscussing the case as viewed by\nhim, the Milwaukee county prosecutor said that as far as surface Indications went, Sehrank wns sane.\n\"If Sehrank Is Insane.\" said Mr.\nZabel, \"It seems that there Is a method in his madness when he selects\nfor the scene of his crime where there\n1.- no capital punishment. Also, I am\ninformed In messages from New York\nthere has been no Insanity in his family as far back as can be traced.\nThe state's attorney said he believed Sehrank bad no accomplices or\nadvisers In the crime and that    the'\nFuUFashione4\n-Seamless\nMan, woman or child, Pen-Angle Hosiery will fit\nyou better and suit you best, whatever weight you\nwant and whatever color. The store you trade at\nkeeps it. Just look for the trademark. \"\nPenmans Limited,\nParis,   Canada\nUnderwear,\nSweaters,\nHosiery\nshooting of Col. Roosevelt was the outgrowth of Individual plans.\nFIRE ALIGHT FOR\nTWO CENTURIES\nCottage in Occupation by One Family\nfor Six Hundred Years\u2014Fifteen Miles to Vote.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nNEWCASTLE, Englnnd, Oct. 15.\u2014A\nremarkable case... came before the\nNorth Cumberland revision court during the consideration of the Lodge\nvote. It seems that a voter has a cottage 15 miles from Gilsland, which was\nonly to be got at, by horseback. The\ncottage is one of four on a moorland\nof 3,000 acres. It lias been in the occupation of one;'' family generation\nafter generation for 600 years, and it\nis said that the kitchen fire, in which\nT^eat |is' burned,- liu's'bccn kept KliglK\nfor two'centuries.1''A child living in\nthe cottage has not!'seen another child\nfor the past two ye'ars, and the voter\nIs obliged to walk 15 miles to a polling\nstation on election day.\nCEASELESS TOIL\nIN GRAIN OFFICES\nInspection- Goes on   Night  and  Day\u2014\nAll   Records  for   Grain\nReceipts   Broken.\n(By Dally News Leased  \"Wire.)\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 15.\u2014Wilh 1342\ncurs Inspected yesterday and on the\nmarket today and 1200 cars in sight\nfor Inspection, all records for receipts of grain in Winnipeg were\nbroken. Ceaseless', unremitting toil is\nthe order of the day In the grain inspection offices for the great onrush-\nlng flood must be analyzed and classified and night and day the wofk\ngoes on.\nIn the yards of tbe transportation\ncompanies the name ceaseless activity prevails. Unceasingly the great\nlocomotives start otft with their long\ntrains of heavily loaded cars, rushing\nonward lo the liiad of navigation. At\nthe same time, the never-ending\nstrings come In from Manitoba, Saskatchewan and from Alberta. Winnipeg Is substantiating its claim as the\ngreatest grain centre in America and\nreally the greatest In the world.\nComparing today's inspections with\nthe leading Anu-rican centres, receipts\nnt Chicago were 266 cars, at Minneapolis, 462 cars; at Duluth, 702 cars.\nThat is, Winnipeg comes near handling as much us the three of them.\nThe quality of tbe grain, too, Is remarkable. Of the H01 cars of wheat\ninspected, and on the market today,\n851 cars were of contract grade, the\nfamous Hard wheat of tho Canadian\nwest. Of 145 cars of oats, 82 cars were\ncontract grade, No. 2 Canada white\nflour.\nA reduction of 30 cents per barrel\nfor top grades and of 50 cents per\nbarrel \u25a0 on the lower grades Is now\ngeneral throughout the west and flour\nprices may be considered as steady\nfor some time.\nARRESTED  IN   BOSTON\n:By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nWINNIPEG, Out, 15.\u2014R. O. Larimer,\nwanted In this city to explain some\nheavy transactions as an automobile\nmerchant and much money advanced\non his stock, was arrested last night\nlu Boston, Mass. Detectives have\nbF.cn looking lor him since September\n10 last. Extradition Is now being arranged for.\nDRY FARMING CONGRESS\nOPENS ON  MONDAY\nffiv Tlnllv >Tewn Lnnsed Wlrn.t\nLETHBRIDGE, Oct. 15.\u2014Tho Inability of some of the exhibitors from the\nstates and from afar to get their exhibits here In time to Install them for\ntho proposed opening of the exposition on Saturday morning, has necessitated, the postponement of tho formal\nopening until Monday morning at 11\no'clock.\nThe exposition committee and . th-\u00bb\nexecutives of the bodrd.of control have\ndiscuHBed the advisability of thlsmov*\nat length and have conferred with the\nexhibitors and finding the sentiment\nin favor of putting off the opening until the first of the week have done so.\nThe exposition promises to he one of\ntho greatest affairs of the kind ever\nheld In western Canada and the management, through tho bornd of control,\nlias decided to charge the general public an admission to tho grounds. The\ngrounds will be closed to everyone but\nexhibitors on Sunday next and the exposition will be officially opened on\nMonday at 9 o'clock.\nTHREE YEARS FOR STEALING\nREGISTERED LETTERS\nLeased  Wire.)\n-Judge Denton  to-\nI    Alhotl  ' n    ol\n(By Dailv New\nTORONTO,  Oct.  11\nday sentenced William Albon\/a clork fn\nthe postofflce, to three years' imprisonment for stealing registered letters, tbis\nbeing the minimum ponnlty. Albon secured only $4 from the letters which be\nstole.\nThe B.C. Assay and\nChemical Supply Co.\nLimited\n513 Pender St., Vancouver B. C.\nLaboratory equipment for assayed\nand chemists. Complete assay outfit's\nturniBhed. Agents for Way's Pocke'\nSmelter outfits for prospectors and\nmlnln* men.\nPURE DRUGS\nIS OUR MOTTO\n''All Drugs used in dispensing your    doctor's   prescription  are    absolutely\np ure.\nWe Never Substitute\nYou -are safe when you leave your prescriptions here.\nMen Who Know the Drug Business\nAlways At Your Service\nCanada Drug & Book Co. Ltd.\nPhone 81       Nelson's Pioneer Drag Store      P.O. Box S02\nAgents (oi the Remington Typewriter       ::       Nail 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 Bank ot\nCommerce are the most convenient\nform In which to carry money whon\ntravelling. They are negotiable every\nwhere, self-Identifying, and tbe exact\namount payable In the principal foreign countries Is printed on the face\nof  every  cheque.    Tbe   cheques   are\nIssued In denominations of\n$10, $20, $50, $100 and $200\nand may bo obtained by application\nat the bank.\nIn connection with Its Travellers-\nCheques, The Canadian Bank oicom-\nmerco has issued a booklet entitled\n\"Information of Interest to 'i-'aose\nAbout to Travel,\" which will be sent\nfree to anyone applying for it.\nNelson   Branch, J. 3.  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, G.C.M.G., Hon. Prst.\nR. B. Angus, Esq., President\nSir    Edward    8.   Clouston,    Bart.,\nVice-President\nH. V   Meredith, Esq,, Gen. Manager\nBranches in British Columbia     .\nArmstrong, \u2022 Athaimer, ChllliwaoK,.\nCloverdale, Enderby, Greenwood, hob-\nmer, Kamloops, Kelowna, Merrltt,.\nNelson, New Denver, New Westmtn-'\nBter, Nicola, Penticton, Port Alberob.\nPort Haney, Prince Rupert, Princeton, Rossland, Summerland. Vancouver, Vancouver (Main street), Vernon^;\nVictoria, West Summerland.\nNelson Branch, L. B. DeVober, Mgr..\nImportant Notice to Fruit Growers\nEXCESSIVE FRUIT   CROP\nThe Kootenay Columbia Preserving Works having learned that a yi^-y'\nlarge number of Fruit Growers are absolutely unable to find a market,\nat any price, for their excessive crop of Apples, Pears and Plums, they\nhave made special arrangements to handle large quantities of same*\nrather than allow the fruit to be lost, and they are willing to take., immediate shipments at special prices to be obtained on application at\ntho   Factory. -    \u25a0'.\nR. C. TEVIOTDALE, Seo'y-Treas.  :\n..:.., -I      , Nelson,  B.C.\nJOHN BURNS & SON Contractors\nand Builders\nNelson Planing Mill, Sash and Door Factory\u2014Factory and \"Sards, 70W3 Vernon\nHtreet. Doora, Sash, Mouldings in stock and to order. Coast Lath and Shingles. ..*\nTurned Work and Brackets. Cement, Brick and Lime always in stock. Automatic Knife Grinder-all kinds of grinding done. Store Fronta and Office Pit-\ntings, etc., a specialty. Estimates given on stone, brick and all kinds of work;.\nMoving and raisin- buildings and setting plate glass. Guaranteed against *\ndnmngg     P.   O.   Boy  I'M.    Telephone 178.\n\u00a740.00\nWill Buy You a Nice\nVictolria\nteel\nRange\nFour 9-in. and two 5-in.\nholes,   16 x 18-in.   oven-,\nwith high closet ana water front, all nicely nickel plated\nNothing! better for the price in British Columbia.\nSee Oar Line of Heating Stoves Before You Boy\nNelson Hardware Co.\n, NELSON, B. C.\n IC&>\n!!   'WEDNESDAY\nOCTOBER 16\n!CfceBatlp$--to2,\n'PAGE FIVE\nBell Trading Co.\nHot Cakes\nFor\nBreakfast\nThat Is what these frosty mornings suggest. They- make a tasty\nfinish   to  the' morning  meal.\nTWO  KINDS  EA8ILY  MADE\nOlympic Pancake\nFlour\nNo yeast, salt, soda or baking\npowder. Full directions for making\npancakes, waffles or muffins on\nevery package,\n4 lbs., net weight, 3Sc.\nPeacock\nBuckwheat  Flour\nREADY FOR USE.\nwill make hot cakes that molt in\nyour mouth.\n3 lb. package 35c.\nJust a touch of sweetness to\nmake them tusto right,\nMaple Syrup\nAt a right price and right flavor.\nQuarts 35c\nHalf gallon  .65s\nGallon    ' $1,15\nToday's Arrivals\nCRANBERRIES\n20c  a   pound.\nCAULIFLOWER\n10c, 16c and 20c a head.\nPLUMS\nA fine lot of heavy weight pack,\nabout, the Just of the season.\n25c  a   basket.\nBell Trading\nCo.\nThe Up-to-Date\nGrocers\nUse Phone 56\nNelson House\n*\u2022 European Plan\nW. A. WARD, Proprietor\nCAFE\u2014Open  day  and  night\u2014BAR\nMerchants' Lunch 12 to 2\nPhone 97 \u25a0 \u201e   P. O. Box 597\nNELSON\u2014P. Johnston,  Sweden.\nGrand Central Hotel\nOPPOSITE  POSTOFFICE\nAmerican and  European plans\nH. H. PITTS,  Proprietor\n. GRAND CIONTRAL-J. 11. Ht.il, Mia.\nL.'Borggatd, Slocnn Park; L. 11. Keller,,\nSpokane;   Id.   Can*,   Silverton;     William\n, Forbes, A. Frubarn, W. Uurlte, Molly\nGibson; R. M. La lb, K. K. Lalb, Sheep\nCreek;   El.   akand,    R.   Cowans,   Grizzly\n. Creek; D. Ferguson; M. Haymond, Ru-\nBina;  T.   Luxton,  Granite;  Miss   Loomls,\n: England; Thomas James, Winnipeg; D.\nGallahor, E. B. Kernor, Sirdar.\nKlondyke Hotel\nVernon  Street\nStrictly Union House\nHeadquarters for miners, Smel-\ntermen,   loggers,   railroad   men.\nRatss,  $1.00   per  day  up\nNELSON & JOHNSON, Props.\n. JaLONDYK13-U. Nephbtle, M. Dantoii-\nvich, M. uutovio, J. Rubvls, w. J, King,\nGerrard.\nKootenay Hotel\nTwo Doors from Postoffice\n.\u25a0 . \"Vernon Street\nRates 11.00 and $1.25 per day.\nEvery convenience  given to tho\ntraveling public,  Electric piano and\nunion bar in connection, where lhe\n.best of wines and liquors are kept.\n'MRS. MALLETT, Proprietress;\nKOOTENAY\u2014M.   Dltnco,   Coryell;    R,\nBouoell,   C.   Vlttorlo,   Italy;   G.   Forbes,\n. Grond Forks; W. Muncler, E. Zuancler,\n; W. H. Zuancler. Calgary.\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\nBartender*!\nNAP. MALLETTE, Prop.\nit} LAKE VIEW\u2014T. Tenhouse, Spokane;\n- J. Sharpy,:. T\u00bbH;.-T.;-.A,.* Bush, James\nO'BrlenrScattle.       '\nWhen Taking\na Vacation\ngo to the^ great Halcyon Hot\nSprings, where ydu can secure not\nonly rest, but at the same time\nhave the benefit of the best medicinal waters on the continent, un-\nequaled for rheumatism and kindred ailments. The springs are 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\nHOTEL ARRIVALS OF A DAY\nThe Hume\nTable d'Hote and a la Carte\n.-\u2022JMIS-J, A. Haley, E. V. Vundor\nvoort, T. J. Foot, H. A. Watson, E. W.\nRnwsnn, James A. Black, Mr. and Mrs.\nW. H. qrlffln, J. J. Blnns, Vancouver.\nThomas Gough, Granite; 1). C. McGregor\nJ. F. Wlldman, O. J. Smlllie, Ap B.\nCrosby, Toronto; James Cronin, W. E.\nFinch, New Denver; S. Danoff, Charles\nClare, E. E. Vincents, Calgary; C. I.\nArchibald, Salmo; W. Watson, E. V.\nBuckley, Sheep Creek; F. h. McAllister,\nSandon; Donald McOarrity, San Francisco; Alfred McMillan, Xorlhport; S. 3.\nFowler, -Riondel; Lord Aylrncr, Queens\nRay: C. F. Caldwell, If. Gifigerich, Knslo\nR. T. Devre, London: A. G. Horsfield,\nYmlr; J. P. McDougall, Paulson; T. C.\nPeck, Midway; P. J. Cook, Ehoenix;\nMrs. S. A. Cook. Granby; W. M. Hay;\nA. K. Lavan, Fernie; Mr. and M.IS. 13.\nK. Mahon, Dr. and Mia. Hawkey, .1.\nGibson, F. A. Starkey, city; M. S.\nDaws, Slocnn: A. F. Collins, Winnipeg;\nH. S. Hughes, Halifax.\nUnder New Management. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nF. B. WHITING, Proprietor.\nSTRATHCONA-W. E. Zwlcky; James\nAnderson, Knslo; A. J. Itiadv, Vancouver: Alex Smith, New Denver; Oscar V.\nWb te, Sandon; George St ll well, Silverton\nWlllltim Watson, Sheep Creek; John\nWaldbeser, R. W. Mifflin, P. F. Horton,\n&abno; Walter Perkins, Crescent Vnlley;\nMr. and Mrs. J. S. O'Hrlcu, Valley; (!.\nDreyfus, l.os Angeles; S. J. Rlchcv, Kt\nJohn; D. B. Fotheringhain, Spok-m,- C.\nWard, Lethbridge; T. L. McAllister,\nSandon; r. t. Deane, London; J. A.\nSmith, J. Callan, Toronto; T. p. Blackey,\nVancouver.\nQueen's Hotel\nBaker Street\nA.  LAPOINTE,  Proprietor\nRenovated   throughout.    Sixteen new rooms added, all elegantly furnished.     Steam heat\nin every room.\nqi:i*:mxs-J. Martin, city; j. u. Burner\nHossland; G. M. Paiilin, Grass Creek;\nF. Vocbtlng, Winlaw; Mrs. Mi'tirorgo,\n< rawloril Bay; A. A. Gerard, K.islu; J.\nIf. McLniighlan, Victoria: J. R. Smith,\nAmherst; M.iw. Page, Medicine Hat;\nH. P. Lage, Laconibe; Mr. Provkev,\nVancouver; T. W. Llversedge, Ciawfnni\nBay.\nMadden House\nThos. Madden, Prop., Baker St.\nRates:    $1.50 lo $2.00 per day.\nMeal Tickets, $7.0o per week.\nA Comfortablo Home\nMADDEN\u2014c. S. Krompcau**', Taghuni\nM. O Doiinell, Sheep Creek; R. II. Whit-\nford, Eureka; P. Maekastocker, Phoenix.\nTremont House\nBaker Street, Nelson\nRANSOME & CAMPBELL\nProprietors\nEuropean plan, 60c up\nAmerican plan,  $1.2*3 nnd $1.50\n'   Meals, 35c\nSpeoial Rates per Month\n;-TREMONT\u2014Angus McLeod, F. ,W.\nStevens, city: P. Scott. Molly Gibson; J.\n\u25a0Munro, I-lanson McPhee, Alnsworth; W.\nCunningham, J. W. Mulholland, Ymlr;\nWilliam Wooley, James Winlaw, Thomas\nMoore, Arrowhead; L. II. Fisher' Sheep\nCreek.\nSilver King Hotel\nBaker Street\nUnder new management.\nWell   furnished   rooms,   $1.00   a\nday   and   up.    Best   25c   meal   la\nNelson.   Best brands of liquors and\ncigars, served by union mon.\nN.  MoLEOD,   Proprietor\nSILVER KING\u2014George Bertram, R.\nMcKenzie, J. Stewart, O. Chyerve, M\nJacobson, Ed. Myres, Kochs; D. W.\nMcLean, E. Black, J. H. Sullivan, Mol*\niy Gibson; 'Bert Weeks, Carl Lokun,\nRaker.\nSHERBROOKE \u2014 T. Koi.lbs.nn\nYmir; L. Laetagrede, and wife, Silver-\nton; A. Myers, T. Fallows, W. Myers,\nPhoenix.\n''ROYAL\u2014II.\" S.   Browning\/'\nPenetang\nThe Best\nTO\nTHE WEARER\nOf Shoe Packs\nWe are now\nready to supply\nyour wants for\nthis famous  line.\nThe Royal Shoe Store\nR. Andrew. Prop.\nPretty Homes\n...   Can Be   .   .   .\nMaHe Still More\nAttractive\nby   having   one   of   our   DeLuxe\nchandeliers Installed,\nThey are exceptionally artistic In\ndesign And the variety is so large\nthat we are almost sure to suit you,\nand the price is the best.\nInspection Invited whether you\nbuy or not.\nJ. H. Ringrose\nElectrical Supplies.\n508 Stanley Street. Phone A227\nDonaldson Line\nThe Scotch Line for the\nScotch People\nLargo new twin screw steamers\nsailing from MONTREAL and\nGLASGOW every SATURDAY, carrying One Class Cabin and Third\nClass passengers.\nCHRISTMAS  EXCURSIONS\nsnll from ST. JOHN, N. B., DEC.\n12th and  19th.   LOWEST RATES,\nUP-TO-DATE  SERVICE.\nReserve your accommodations\nnow nnd secure tho best. It costs\nno more.\nApply to\nD. Smeaton,\nG.T.A., C.P.R.\nor H. E. LIDMAN, General Agent,\n445 Main Street, Winnipeg.\nPhone M-5312.\nOLD  QUEBEC   HARBOR\nCOMMISSION   DISSOLVED\nfBy Dally News ceased Wlre.1\n- QUELU'C, Oet. IB.\u2014The old Quebec\nharbor commission which consisted of\nnine members and of which Victor\nChateau vert has been president, was\ndissolved yesterday to make way for\ni new commission. This will consist\noi three members only, William Price\nbeing chairman and the other two\nmembers being J. B. Lcteltler and A.\nGravel.\nNEW  STATION   FOR  DAUPHIN\n(By Dally Nnws Lensed Wire.)\nTORONTO, Oct. 15.\u2014Tho Canadian\nNorthern officials announce that tho\nilly of Dauphin, Man., between which\nplace and Gladstone, the first 100\nmiles of the Canadian Northern railway line wero operated) Is to have\na magnificent new depot to cost $50,-\nOGO. This will be larger than the\ncompany's stations at either Suska-\ntoun or Port Arthur.\nBURR  MclNTOSH  INJURED\n(By Dally Nows Leased Wire.)\nSAN FRANCISCO, Oet. 15.\u2014Burr\nMcintosh, newspaperman, actor, wai\ncorrespondent and photographer, Is In\na hospital here today wilh three broken ribs. In the dusk he walked Into\nan open elevator shaft last night in\nlhe building whore he has his studio\nand fell 20 feet. His injuries are not\nbelieved to be dangerous*.\nSAYS DEATH  CAUSED\nIN  SELF DEFENCE\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 15.\u2014On the\ncharge of having murdered Ernest\nSplnard, who (lied on Oct. 4 ns a consequence-oi a fractured skull received\non the night of Sept. 30, a young man\nnamed McNaughton was today committed by Magistrate Shaw for trial.\nEvidence given by Mrs. Spinard\nknown to tho accused as Miss Francis\nChester, was very favorable to .McNaughton and was to the effect that\nho had struck Spinard in self defence,\nSpinard having attacked McNaughton\nin the street when seeing 'the'latter\nwith hla, Spiuard's wife. I\nAt the Starland tonight\u2014The Battle\nof Two Palms, of tho historical Italian-\nTurkish War.'\nKootenay and Boundary\nEASTERN STARS WELCOME\nGRAND WORTHY MATRON\nAddrssB    And . Bouquet    Presented\u2014\nProgram Rendered\u2014Supper Con*\neludes Successful  Evening.\n(Special to The Dally Ngwb.)\nROSSLAND,' B. C, Oct! 15.-Last\nnight in Masonic hall Alpha Chapter No. 1, 'Eastern Btar.-f, gave a reception In honor of Mrs. Douglas, grant!\nworthy matron of British Columbia, a\nlarge and jepresentative gathering being\npresent. The hall waa tastefully 'decor\nated with flowers for the occasion. \/\nbeautiful address wan presented bi\nChapter No. 1, to which Mrs. Dougla3\nreplied. She spoke of the object and\nwork of tho order ami enlarged especially their charitable .schemes, opening of\nhomes for aged members who had met\nwith misfortune. A.boquct of white ana\npink carnations tied witli red ribbon was\npresented to Mrs. Douglas by the chapter.\nA musical program was then rendered\nby the following: Song, \"Over the\nOcean Blue.C-Mr. Cad well; reading, \"The\nI-'lcctric Lady,\" C. BoHtoelt; quartette,\n\"The Sailors' Chorus,\" Messrs. Roddu,\nCadwell, Jones, Glover; song, \"Then\nYou'll Remember Me,\" T. H. Long; club\nswinging, Master Fred Barnett; son.\nWill Junes; song, Miss Larson, violin ol\nligato by Rev. II. W. Simpson; song,\nMr. Glover; reading, C. Rostock; song,\nA. M. Betts; violin solo. Rev. H. H.\nSimpson.\nAll of the above program was rendered\nIn a masterly manner, many of' the\nartists being encored. The accompanist\nwas Mrs. Fred B. Hogg. The company\nthen ndjjourned to the banqueting hall\nwhere a delightful repast was served by\nthe ladies. The hail was decorated with\nflags and the tables looked very beautiful Indeed decorated as they were wilh\nflowers and many colored lights.\nMrs. C. P. R. Plncott will receive on\nThursday and afterwards on the third\nThursday of each month.\nH. T. Goodcve has returned from the\ncoast.\nJ. A. Macklniion was In town last night\nfrom Trail.\nThe St. George's church bazaar will b<\nheld In Miners' Union hail on Thursday.\nThe ladies of the church havo i*nne tu\nconslderalile trouble to make a success\nof this sale of work and are confident of\nits surpassing any of the previous attempts.\nMr. and Mrs. Douglas, of Kelly, Doug-\nlast & Co., Vancouver, are registered at\nthe Allan.\nThe Boy Scouts will meet tonight at\nthe armoury at 7:30 o'clock when Rev.\nGeorge Kinney will talk to tho boys\nThe Methodists are continuing their\nsale of home cookery again today;\nThe Rossland City Football clul) aro\nmaking arrangements with the Spokane\nSoccer association to play In that town\non Nov. 28.\nTho    Union    Co-operallvc   society   in\nshowing  In   their  windows  on  Columb:\navenue   a  splendid   assortment  of   vegetables,  grown by Mrs.  Balille.\nMrs. H. R. Townsend left for Spokane.\nyesterday where sho will meet her little\ndaughter, who has been east for the past\neight or nine months. Mrs. Townsend\nexpects  to  return  home tomorrow.\nThe Knights of Columbus are making\ngreat preparations for their dance tonight, which will be held in Miners'\nUnion hall.\nNEW DENVER NEW\u00b0.\n(Special to The Dailv News.)\nNEW DENVER, Bi C, Oct. IB.\u2014C.\nA. ViinHemert of Lethbridge, who has\ndone considerable -.timber cutting in the\nSloean Lnk0 district in recent years,\nspent Saturday 'in town on business,\nleaving''for Nelson yesterday. [\nTho Silverton .| Lumber & Power\nC\/imi'\u2022*-\"\u25a0\u25a0\u2022',' Limited', shipped,.in.jajbargr\nof lumber on Saturday for use in connection with a government tool house\nwhich is to be erected here shortly.\nJ. M. Harris. of Sandon passed\nthrough this morning, enroute\nKootenay Flats, where he will spend a\nweek duck shooting.\nErnest   Levy,  nmnacgr  of the Vi\nRol and Jos'io mhrifs, spent Sunday In\ntown, leaving for Nelson    on    today's\nboat.\nArrangements ore under way to\ncommence rehearsals shortly for\nmlnistrol show to be held as usual on\ntho evening of May 24.\nA, J. Becker, T. L. McAllister, manager of the Noble Five mine, Cody;\nand G. H. Aylard, manager of the\nStandard Silver-Load Mining company, left on the down bout yesterday\nmorning, enroute to Nelson.\nAmos Thompson, postmaster, who\nhas been spending the last three weeks\nwith his son In Victoria, is expected\nback today.\nAINSWORTH  MISSIONARY\nRETURNS TO COLLEGE\n(Special to The Daiir News.1\nAINSWORTH. B. C, Oct. 15.\u2014T. G.\nLondon left on Wednesday last on his\nreturn to Kingston, Ont., where he will\nagain resume bis studies at Queen's\nuniversity. Mr. London made many\nfriends here during his services ns missionary and now that there are no services being held those who were regular attendants miss him and tho services greatly.\nW. S. Hawloy, manager of tho Silver\nHoard Mines company, returned here\nSaturday last and will remain at the\nmine for several days.\nW. A Davidson, mnnager of the\nCrown group of claims, also returned\nfrom Spokane on Saturday last. Mrs.\nDavidson and daughter accompanied\nhim. lt is expected that they will reside in the camp during the coming\nwinter.\nMiss L. Foote of Hurrop visited Mr.\nand Mrs. A. D, Wheeler on Saturday\nand Sunday.\nA number from here attended tho\ndance held at tho Bluebell mine on Friday last. All report having had nn excellent time.\nCRAWFORD BAY INSTITUTE\nPASSES VOTE OF THANKS\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nCRAWFORD BAY, B. C, Oct. 15.\u2014\nA meeting of the farmers,' institute was\nheld In the public holl on Friday evening, when there was a very fair muster, with J- McGregor presiding. The\nprizes won at the local fair were distributed to the successful exhibitors.\nStumping powder and spray materials havo for some time past been purchased collectively by the institute, the\nformer especially having proved n\ngreat benefit to the members, nnd now\nfor the first time a couple of carloads\nof hay have heen ordered, and it is\nalso hoped to arrange for a car of\nmixed feed.\nTlie meeting passed very hearty\nvotes of thanks to tho president and\nE. J. Uhthoff for Ihe trouble taken and\nthe very excellent manner In which\nthey had put up the district display\nat the Nelson fair; to the department\nof agriculture for sending us such n\ncompetent judge for ourlocal fair, and\nalso to the the latter, F. G. Fauquier,\nof the Needles, for the, very painstaking and effloieht way In which he had\ncarried out his duties, his decisions\nhaving given general satisfaction. Aft\ner the adjournment dancing was indulged in until midnight,\nNeil F. Mackay, M. P. P., wos In last\nweek making a tour of this part of his\nconstituency, when he conferred with\na number of the residents.on the subject of a new school building; also as\nto the road work to be carried out\nnext year, in connection with the latter special prominence was given to\ntho necessity of another bridge across\nCrawford creek, which would be a\ngreat boon to all the settlers on the\nnortheast side, and general satisfaction is felt that it is now assured.\nHon. Francis Grosvenor of Riondel\nand B. S. Westbury have returned from\ntheir trip over the Hooker creek trail\nInto the St. Mary's valley. They had\ntho good fortune to secure three mountain goats only a few miles tho oj.her\nside of the summit.\nGus Hout also had a successful trip\nInto the hills, bringing home a couple\nof fine deer.\nA mooting of the local members of\ntho K. F. G. union has been called for\nSaturday evening next In the public\nhall.\nWoman's Rights and Bad Bread*.\nNo woman has any right to offer her\nhusband heavy, sour, pasty bread when\nshe can avoid It by using White Swan\nYeast Cakes. Ask your grocer for a 5c.\npackage (G cakes) or send for a free\nsample to the White Swan Spices &\nCereals, Limited, Toronto, Ont.\nSHIP  FIFTH CARLOAD\nFROM  SILVER   HOARD\n(Special to The Dully News.)\nAINSWORTH, Oct. 15.\u2014Another\ncar of\u2014silver ore was shipped on\nTuesday last from the Sliver Hoard\nmine. ' This is the fifth car sent out\nup to date, with another one about\nready to go.\nCONSOLIDATED\nMADE GOOD PROFIT\n(Continued from page one.)\nnarrow work and 3,430 feet of diamond\ndrilling. No diamond drilling was dona\non other properites, the narrow work\nbeing: Richmond-Eureka, 629 feet\nMolly Gihson, 981 feet; St. Eugene,\n329 feet; Number Seven, 455 feet;\nNumber One, 324 feet .\nRossland   Mines Look Well.\n\"Our Rossland mines,\" says the report of R. H. Stewart, general manager, \" show an Increase in the amunot\nof ore developed with, we believe, high\ner averug? value,\n\"In the Centre Star and Idaho mines\nhew oro has been developed t#n the\nsecond, third, fifth, seventh, eighth,\n11th and 12th levels, the tonnage developed showing a slight Increase over\nshipments.\n\"In the Wnr Eagle new ore has been\nopened up on the fourth, sixth, eighth,\nIth. and 13th.:.levels,,ldeyelpp**n.ent on\nthe-13t'b tev-sl' having'*been--espooiallj*\nsatisfactory. Tbls ore was referred to\nin last year's report as having been\nopened uu by a winze sunk from tho\n12th level. Tho total length of the ore\nbody developed on the 13th level h;\nbeen in the neighborhood of 530 feet.\nThe average value of this ore is high.\nThere is also in the War Eagle ani\nIncrease In tonnage of ore developed.\n\"The St. Eugene mine has been\npractically closed down for the greater\npart of the year, although we arc mining a small amount of good grade on\nfro mthe upper levels.\nImprovement at   Molly  Gibson.\n\"In the Molly Gibson mine operation?\nhavo been, up to the present time,\nmore or less limited but a considerable\nImprovement has been shown in the\nstupes during tho year. The prospects\nare good for a considerable tonnage of\ngood ore in the old workings and prospecting on the surface bus opened up\nblghgrado ore at a distance of 3,000\nfeet from the present workings. In\naddition to this a crosscut tunnel, 920\nfeet long, driven 2*10 feet below thi\nlowest workings, has just encountered\ntho vein and drifting has been commenced thereon. The vein has been\nopened up for a length of 75 feet and\nShows particularly good values. This\nfact, taken in connection with iho fncl\nthat tliero is considerable good ore\nin tho bottom of the tunnel, 240 feel\nabove, would make it appear that the\nore reserves of tbis mine will shortly\nshow a largo Increase.\"\nLoRoi of Great Value.\nRefferring to the purchase of the T'-1\nRoi mine which was made during the\nyear tho report says: \"This property has been of great value to us tli,\nconnection with out smelting operations both on account of the increased\ntonnage and lhe character of the ore\nwhich iiis been shipped besides having produced a reasonable profit on\nmining operations for tlie year.\"\nThe principal oxpedlture on plant\naccount, tho report says, was tbe Installation on Mark creek, near Klm-\nberley, of-a compressor plant operated\nby water power for the use of the Sullivan mine and other properties of tho\ncompany. At the Molly Gibson an additional compressor plant was Installed\nand changes were made to the mill.\nAdditions to the copper flue, ,the rebuilding of the matte handling plant,\nextensive alterations to the lead\nsampling plant, additional tanks In. the\nlead refinery and the construction of\na number electric traction lines nn-1\ntunnels throughout the plant to fnclll-\ntato the handling of ore and materials\nare tho chief improvements made at\ntho smelter during the year. ,\nCoal Strike Was Costly.'\nUnder the heading of \"general conditions,\" tho report says:\nDuring the first six months of the\nyear the strike In the Crows Nest pass\nand the consequent high price of coke\nimported from Pennsylvania increased the expenses of operating to a large\nextent, coke Imported from Pennsylvania having made an Increase in costs\nfor tho year estimated at $120,000.\nWith the settlement of the strike this\nunfavorable condition disappeared. At\ntho closo of the strike the cost of\nelectric power was Increased to an extent which will increase lhe expenses\nof the company approximately $40,000\nannually. In spite of this extra expense, hnwjever, the year has been a\nmoderately profitable one for the com*-\npany largely on account of improvement in the grnde of ore shipped from\nthe Rossland camp.   This, in turn, Is\nBlankets and Comforts\nThe Kind You Can Refer to as\nGood Bed Coverings\nBLANKETS\n$1.25 to $12 Pr.\n8\nFor, remember! There is as\nmuch difference between good\nbed coverings and poor ones as\nthere is between Winter and\nSummer. If you want\/blanketsa\nand comforts which will-give the\ngreatest amount of service and\nsatisfaction you should come to\nthis store for them. The mediocre\nunworthy qualities which flood\ntbe market are rigidly excluded\nfrom our' stock. We handle only\nblankets and comforts which we\ncan honestly recommend in every way. So you are absolutely\nsafe in buying your Winter bed\ncoverings from us.\nMinimum weight and maximum warmth and comfort and\nstrength are features of these\nblankets and comforts\u2014very\ndesirable features, too, while the\nmoderate prices which prevail\nare added attractions to the\nwise housewife. We suggest\nyou make your selections at\nonce.   It's best.\nCOMFORTERS\n$2.50 to $30\nThe  Opening of the Social Season\nLends Added Interest  to   Our\nSuperb Showing of\nEvening   Dresses   and\nOpera Cloaks\nBeautiful Exclusive New Creations\nat Alluring Prices\nAN ASSOKTipiNT of exquisite evening dresses and opera cloaks\nsuch as we have gathered this season is something any store might well\nbe proud of. And women who have shopped around town tell us lhat\nits equal cannot be found in this city.\nEVERY DRI3SS AND CLOAK IS DISTINCTIVE\u2014the styles, the materials, the tailoring, all are far removed from the commonplace or\nordinary. You will grow enthusiastic over the charm and beauty of\nthe modified new Pannier and draped effect models. You wl],!p,,UKv, the\nexquisite materials, you will be delighted with the perfect fit and you'll\n*ITe'\"uSTpres.se',(i,'\\vit'irVho 'I'h'iinfugiihess and artistic skill evidenced in the\ntailoring. There is not a paltry handful of styles to select from, \"but\nan unsurpassed variety of exclusive models ranging from charmingly\nsimple ones to elaborately trimmed creations. All the fashionable evening  shades  are   represented.\nMAKE YOUR SELECTION now while assortment of sizes, styles\nand shades arc unbroken.\nPrices from $27.50 up\nMeagher & Co.\nTHE STORE FOR STYLE\nlargely due to development in the lower levels of the War Eagle and to ore\nwhich hns been obtained from the upper levels of the Lo Roi.\nLead Ore Production  Increases.\n\"Since tho early port of the year\n(here has been a large increase In tho\ntonnage of customs lead ore. The\nSu HI van mine has been shipping In\nllio neighborhood of 3,000 tons per\nmonth. Tho Standard, Rambler-Cariboo and a number of other mines in\nllio Sloean district and recently tho\nBluebell mine at Riondel bas resumed\nregular shipments. The Kaslo & Slocnn railway has been taken over by\nlhe Canadian racifie and shipments\nfrom that district which have been suspended for some time have recommenced,\n\"A number of properties in tho Sloean district has resumed work after\nyears of idleness, some of them with\ncomprehensive schemes of development\n\"Taken as a whole prospects for silver-lea- mining in southern British\nColumbia show very decided Improvement and with tbe assistance of the\nDominion government in resonabljy*\nprotecting the\/industry should prove\nprofitable.\"\nOver Million to Credit.\nTho financial statement shows that\ntho captial stock Issued is $5,805,200.\nTho balance from profit and loss account on June 30, 1011, was $873,-\n289.38, which with the profit for the\nyear ending June 30 last makes a to\ntal of $1,183,1535.3.1. to the credit of\nprofit and loss account.\nAssets Include: Mines, mineral\nclaims and shares in other companies,\n$4,771,800.87; mining, smelting, con-;\ncentrnting and refining plants, less deT\npreclatlon of $185,120.04, $1,412,075.87;\nsmeller product, etc. on hand, $868.-\n111.04, mine and smelter stores arid\nmateria I, $332,611.41; accounts rei\nceivable, $272,580.87; cash in banks\nand on hand, $4,929.28.\nThe profit and loss account showi\nthat the customs ore, lead and bullion\npurchased totalled $1,805,275.56; freight\non oro from company's mines, $55,-\n413.SO; mining, smelting and general\nexpenses. $2,162,277.25; development\nexpenses, $319,548.61; to development,\nwritten off, $43,120.51.\nSmeter products, ore, etc. sold totalled $4,911,231.67 while the ores arid\nriietals on hand nnd in transit th\nsmelter on June 30, 1812 are valued at\n$748,459.29.\nEXPLOSION   AT   LEATHER\nPLANT;   TWO   INJURED,\n(Ry Dally News Leased Wire.)\nTORONTO, Oct. 15.\u2014Accidental 1^\nnltion by a lightod match of benzine'\ngas in a drum of skins at the plahl\no' the National Leather company thi^\nafternoon caused an explosion whldh\nresulted in painful Injuries to Erneat\nBroughtori, aged 35 and Arthur Grant,\naged 40 years. They were badly\nburned about the face and hands'.\nUiith will recover.\n\"Our Personal Advice\nto All Skin Sufferers\"\n(Poole Drug Co., Ltd., Druggists)\nAgain and again we have seen how a\nfew drops of this simple wash, applied\nto the skin, takes away tiie ite'h Instantly. And the cures all seem to be pot>\nmanent.\nD.D.T Prescription   made   by   tht\nWe have been hi business In this town\nfor some time, and we are looking to\nbuild up trade by always advising our\npatrdus right.\nSo when wo tell you that we have\nfound the effective eczema remedy, you\ncan depend upon It that we give our\nadvice, not In order to sell a few bottles\nmedicine to skin sufferers, but be-\nse we know how it will-.help our\nbusiness  if  wo  help our patrons.\n. We keep'In stock and sell all. the well\nknown skin remedies. Rut we will say\n(his: If you are.suffering from any kind\nof skin trouble, ei'Keiiin, psoriasis, rash\nor tetter, we want you to try a full size\nbottle of D.  D. D. 'Prescription,\nD.   _\t\nD. D. D. Laboratories of Toronto\ncomposed of thymol, glvccrlae, oil oT\nwlntergreen and other healing, soothing,\ncooling, Ingredients. And if vou are just\ncrazy with itch, you will reel soothed arid\ncooled, the Itch absolutely washed away\nthe  moment you  apply  this  D.D.D.\n\"We have made fast friends of 'moile\nthan one family by recommending thfe\nremedy to a skin sufferer here and there\nand we want'yon to try It now.\n PAGE SIX\nC|\u00ab -Baity Jtetofl.\nWEDNESDAY\nOCTOBER 16\nNO PLACE LIKE HOME\nIt's a delight to own your own home. All the little jobs you do around it, all the improvements;*'are for\nyourself and your'family. You're putting your money in your own pocket. Our system of \"homo ownership\"\nmakes your monthly -rent pay for your home. It's the easiest and best way to buy a home arid is as far\nahead of the old rent paying system as could be imagined. Our new way secures for you a new, cozy home,\nup-to-date in every particular, built for warmth, comfort and convenience. Tho horse is just being finished\nby the contractors; has 5 rooms, with modern bath room, clothes chsots, pantry and halls, hot arid cold water, sewer, etc.; built on two fine lots. Our price only $2550, which is much below what you could build it for.\nTerms, monthly payments as low as the rent you are now paying.    See. us  at  once.\nWestern Canada Investment Co.Welson \u2022B*c-\nFinancial  Agents,  Real   Estate,  Fire, Life and Accident Insurance, Timber   Lands.\nSafety   Deposit  Boxes for  Rent.\nRent's   Collected.      Loans\nMARKETS\nUNABLE TO MEET\nDEMAND FOR EGGS\nSupply   of   Local   Fresh   Variety   Not\nEqual to Third of Orders\u2014Washington Eggs Dearer.\nSo scarce are fresh eggs on the local\nmarket that one large grocery ilrm in\ntin* city yesteruay could secure only-three\ndozen anu received orders tor lully *t\u00bb\ndozen. The price remains at Til emus a\ndozen. A shipment ot Washington tggs\nwas received lu Nelson yesterday anil\nfound u ready- sale at 60 cents a dozen,\n6 cents above the price ol tiie lasi eoi,-\nsignnient received.\nKootenay tomatoes are becoming le33\nplentiful and are now selling at uu cents\na  JO-pound   basket  lor  the  uest  quality.\nWHEAT PRICES DECLINE\n{By Daily News Leaded Wire.)\nWINNIPEG, Oet. 15.\u2014Wheat prices reacted this morning following tne recent\nadvances on war news, ami aunng Uiu\nearlier hours trading waa quiet. Later\n'prices following tne opening ueclined a\nlu.ttier J-i'i&c but rallied considerably\nbefore the close. Winnipeg opened \"iaiy\nle lower and closed Vt'b'nc lenver. Liverpool cables were Vy-H***\" lower and weak.\nContinental cables iViire all lower, Fails\nbeing 2Ul\\4, Berlin 2*^0, Buda Pest 3-'B0\nan Antwerp **ic. American markets opened lower and were weak during tne\n.greater part of the business hours, firm-\n\"lug near the close. Minneapolis closed\nle down on both months. Cpicago closed\nTi'i'l'.ic lower. The cash tiemand was\nfairly good for all grades. iSpot wheat\nofferings were heavy, which, however,\nseemeu to be all picked and export houses\nbuying. Prtc-jB were lfrlte down ou contract grades.\nOats wero weaker although there was\na fairly good Inquiry, and tlax was offered at a tew cents lower, closing le\ndown on all months. The record inspection of last -Saturday was broken on\nMonday when a total of 1,1142 cars were\nlisted, and for inspection toduy theru\nwere a total of Law cars lu sight.\nWINNIPEG STOCKS.\n(Bv Dally News Leased Wire.J\nHid Asked\n-Canada..Eire,. .F.P    BO ...\nCity & pruv.  Loan    Hi>\nCom.  Loan  & Trust    lUo\nEmpire Loan       no ll j\nG.  W, Life     aw *J1U\nG.  W.  Permanent      YAl MO\nHome lnv. & Hav    135 138\nNor.  Canada Mortgage    120\nNor. Crown Bank    lw\nNor.   Mortgage       HO 1-i\nNor.  Trust       130 IK\nOccidental  Fire       105 110\nStandard  Trust       lib*\nOnion Pan!; of Canada      lit\nWinnipeg Land & Mortgage..   itiO\nWinnipeg Paint &  Glass, pid. . 10S 110\nS.   A.   Warrants       f>4y 875\nSaius-5 G.   VV.  Permanent,  134; -1 Nor\nCrown, 100.\nTORONTO   STOCKS.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nTORONTO, Oct. If..-General Electric\nllT'.\/llii; Mackay. sS^'iiSr.; Colan, SO; Lak-\nSup.-rlur, -Mii; Kails. MllSil-ll; Royal, 2%\nCanadian Steel, IS; lUelulk-U, 11S.\n* Unlisted\u2014Domei 2&5Qf&?2.50-1 Holllngor,\n14.25((j)14.i)0j McKinley, 102; Peterson. 3;\nWettlaufei',  33.\nresults before the end of the week. Some\ndefinite announcement regarding tlu\nTuii'O-Hulian situation Is also looked fur\niu the Immediate future. Money was\nmore abundant In this market today,\nmuch of the now supply coming from\nout of town sources. .Nevertheless, tl;\ntone held llrm with a slight advance Iu\n90-day rates.\nBonds were firm but without support\nfeature. Total sales, par value, $2,060,000,\nUnited States government bonds were\nunchanged on call.\nSPOKANE MARKETS.\n(Sharpe  & Irvine.)\n? ;,.;.ii\nCanadian   Consolidated   ... fio.oo\n05.00\n.IBs\n.aa\n.\u2022M\n.71\n.01\n1.00\nWaJ.-s-.i'-XJ  hici national  Coal,  42>,\n-c; l.M>\nRambler-Carlbtfd,  71c; 700 Snowstorm, tic.\nNEW YORK  MARKET\nSHOWS  RENEWED ACTIVITY\n(By Daftly News Leased Wire.)\nNEW YORK, Oct. 15.\u2014Taking Us cue\nfrom abroad, wheie all the bourse\nstronger) as a result of the support\ntendered by substantial interests, tt><\nBlock market here opened active and al\nmoat buoyant. Gains of 1 to 2 points\nwere numerous in the first hour, these\nbeing extended In some instances ut midday when interest ceiilied largely in the\nmetal Issues and tobacco specialties. In\nthe final hour, howover, the selling\nmovement of moderate [prdportibhs soon\nwiped out the greater part of the early\ngains- and the market closed with an Irregular undertone; The setback coincided with advices from Chicago that,\nthe winnd suffered by Col. Roosevelt\nwns a serious one. The better showing\nof our securities lu London and other\nforeign centres was followed by some\nbuying for these accounts in the course\nof the day, but this wns more than offset by local realizing for profits. The\nstrength of the coppers1 was directly\ntraceable to the sh:irp rebound In these\nmetals abroad, also to the belief thai\nthe directors of the Amalgamated company at their meeting will Increase the\npresent rate of divTdends. Respecting\nthe situation in eastern Europe. International banking houses were in receipt nf-j\ncabl.'s to, the effect that negotiations\npending  are   likely   lo   product*   li-vornlil.'\nMONTREAL   PROVISION   MARKET.\n(By  Dailv  News  Leased  Wire.)\nMONTREAL,   Oct.   15.\u2014Butter  Is   fairly\nactive  and   llrm,   while  the  demand   for\ncheese Is steadily Increasing and especially so for colored, which is scarce 6n\nSeptember, Eggs; active. Trade in pnl-\nIslons fair. Cheese, finest western, 13*-^\nM%; finest easterns, 13fifl3%. Buttei,\nchoicest creamery, ?j-i-'.i'.,; seconds, 'HU\nt*2S. Eggs, selected. W,rM; No. 2 stock.\n'Jl'ii-JJ. rork, heavy Canada short mess,\nbarrels, So'-i-.\"i; pieces, \"W; Canada short\ncut back,  barrels, 4J'i!*JiJ; pieces, 28.\nNEW   YORK   METAL   MARKET.\n(By Daily  News Leased  Wire.)\nNEW YORK, Oct. 4.-Copper, quiet.\nStandard spot. 17.20 bid; October, November and December, IT.aogiT.SO; elec-\ntrolytlc, -17.62*fflT-.S7{ easting, 17.25(817.37.\nLondon, firm,   spot, \u00a375 7s od.\nTin\u2014Firm. Spot, MB.&'ii-lii.su; October,\n$4!l.:\u00ab)Ti49.T:.; Novemlier, W.'&'n IH.75. London,   firm.     Spot,   \u00a3225 us;   futures,   \u00a3224.\nLcad,-Stcady. *5.02Vj bid.\nSpelter-Sl-ady, $1.00,    London,   \u00a327 12a.\nIron\u2014Firm and unchanged.\nCleveland  warrants  lit  London, 60s Hid.\nLONDON MARKET RALLIES\nfBy Dailv News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Oct. 15.-There was a good\nsupply of money available today. Discount rates were firm, the maiket assuming that the bank rate will be raised\non Thursday. The stock market opened\neasy but quickly rallied, Paris und Berlin liuytug helped a : recovery In their\nfavorites, local traders' covering in speculative Issues and Inveatois picking up\ncheap investment stocks. The strength\nheld during the day and the market\nclosed generally higher. Consols advanced li but lost the ecain. Foreign\nbonds were inclined to Irregularity'.\nAmerican securities opened easy and\nfrom Wii% below parity. Continental\nand local buying followed the advances\nunder the lead ot Canadian Daclflc, \"Later\nWall street support and renewed Berlin\nbuying sent prices higher and caused ii\nfirm closing.\nMONTREAL MARKET STRONG\n(Bv Dally News Leased Wlr'e.V\nMONTREAL, CK't. lii-Tlie general tone\nof the market was strong In the afternoon with further Improvement. Laur-\nentide was notably stronger at l-'2St?22i)'U,\nlater reacting to 22S\\<.. Spanish Rive.\n64% and Power 233fB-233\u00bb. Richelieu opened at 114 and cased back to 113*14, while\nSteel, after opening at Sift, went to Gl*,j.\nOther features were Scotia Hlh., Car Mb,\nDetroit 71,  Rails  141*14 and Soo 114.\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nBid    Asked\nNugget    '. I   .15      J   .30\nstreet was shot In the right ankle.\nBoth were taken to the general hospital where it was found that the bullets from the policeman's revolver had\nonly bruised the skin in both cases.\nThe boy was sent to his homo, but\nO'l'onnell who It Is alleged was one\nof those who attacked and Interfered\nwith lhe constable, was taken to the\nChenneville street station and locked\nup. He will be arraigned in the recorder's court charged with Interfering with an officer in-the discharge of\nhis duty.\nAPPROVES ROUTE OF\nRAILWAY TO NORTH\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.) E\nOTTAWA ,uct. 15.\u2014Hon. Frank\nCochrane, minister of railways, ' thte\nmorning resumed consideration of the\napplication of the Alberta, Peace\nRiver & Eastern railway for apdrovft\nof its route map covering the line\nfrom the international boundary\nthrough Calgary and Edmonton to\nPeace river and Port Churchill. The\nminister expressed the view that between Edmonton and Calgary the proposed line runs pretty close to the\nCanadian Northern railway, hut decided to approve it. Ho stated that\nthe application will be made by the\ncompany for the right to build from\nCochrane to Calgary. The route-of\nthe Grand Trunk Pacific branch line\nfrom Mouse Jaw to Riverside was approved.\nWRITES   TO   TIMES      .\nON   IRISH QUESTION\n(Canadian Associated Press.)\nLONDON, Oct. 15.\u2014Radical papers\nhere declare it would be interesting\nto have the Duke of Norfolk's opinion on a letter signed \"Catholic Unionist,\" In yesterday's Times. The\nduke, of course, is tho leading Roman Catholic layman and a staunch\nunionist; In this letter the writer\nsays: (\"'That with few exceptions the\nold Irish Catholic families have hec-n\nIntensely unionist,\", but the disgusting spectacle of a distinguished member of the law profession carrying on\na campaign of bigotry and religious\nhatred t\u00bb servo political ends nnd appealing to the lowest mob tnstinetp j\nls'iimW'biie-sur-ely tftftFug l!He\"loyal''\nCatholics Of Ireland Into the Nationalists camp.\nnlniou  Trust\n..l-JS.OO      121).uu\n'ermanent Lo:\nMETAL   MARKETS.\n(Special to The Daily Nows.)\nW   YORK',   Oct   15.-Sliver,   03'^.\nN'PON, Oct. IE\u2014Silver, 20 5-10; lead,\nMAN   AND   BOY  ARE\nSHOT BY CONSTABLE\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nMONTREAL, Oct. 15.\u2014Two were\nshot in West St. Catherine street early tonight, a man and a boy, when\nConstable Gagne, of Chenneville street\nstation, who was in plain clothes, had\nto draw his rev ui ver to defend hlm-\n.,nlf from attack while making an arrest. Daniel O'Connell, plumber, 45\nyears of age, was shot In the right\nfoot, and Ernest R. Roulledge, 14\nyears  old. \u2022 re-Biding at SI'IT St.   An'one\nSTOCKS -WE WILL SELL\n100-500 Standard Silver Lead\n,,   500 Kootenay Gold Mines\ni International Coal\n-43 &\nE. B.  McDermid feggfeg^\nDECLINES  TO  ATTEND\nTHOUSAND   POUND  BANQUET\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.) '\u25a0>\u25a0\nLONDON, Oct. 15.\u2014Lord Hythe has\ndeclined the Duke of Westminster's\ninvitation to the \u00a31000 imperial fund\nbanquet which takes place this even-,\ning. His lordship states that ho would\ngladly contribute \u00a31000 for tho furtherance of imperial preference, hut\nhe feels it would .be a sheer waste of\nmoney to do so under present conditions. There is not the remotest prospect of imperial preference being carried so long as. the home rule question remains unsettled. Imperial and\ndnmestlo questions are submitted to\nthe electorate In the same confused\nIssue and the leaders of the Unionist\nparty continue to sacrifice the Interests- of their party and the-country\nund empire to the racial and-.religious\n-prejudices of the Ulster men.\nANGLICAN   SYNOD   PROTESTS\nAGAINST  HOME  RULE\n'Canadian Associated Press.)\nLONDON, Oct. 16.\u2014Tho Anglican\nsynod of Sydney, New South Wales,\nhas cabled Sir rEdward Carson protesting against home rule as unjust\nto, the most loyal section of the Irish\npeople and declaring that It is threatening the stability of the empire by\nplacing tiie traditional enemy of Pro*\ntestant principles, in a position- to effectually carry out its Internal principles.\nSENTENCED TO THREE YEARS.\nfBy Dally New* Leased Wire.)\nTORONTO, Oct. 15.\u2014Dominlco Rossi, an Italian, was sent to the penitentiary for three years by Justice Denton for slashing a fellow countryman\nwilh a razor.\nBANK  MANAGER KILLED\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nCHICAGO, Oct. 15.\u2014W. A. Cornwall, manager of the Bank of Commerce, Claresholm, Alta., was killed\nand a woman was probably fatally injured today when a street car collided with-a night-seeing automobile.\nCoi-nwaU'fl-'HkulL was fractured. He\ndied half an hour later, after being\n'tuken to a-:hospital.   \u25a0\u25a0*.\n\u2022f-rxV-P    fi    .^-y^Y'I?    Dealers in High Class Property\nL\\J I Jut    CSt     1:M I \u00a3*: ,P. O. Box 147 Nelsbft, 6. C.\nCLEAft HUNDREDS\nOF'aCRES OF LAND\nReady iMfif-fc'.Ranches-for Old Country\nSettlers  at Tobacco  Plains-\nHardier Fruits Flourish.\nThree :huttdred acres of land have\nhceii bledrdd' -this year by tlie British\nColumbia-.; Farms, Limited, a company which, Is preparing \"read;-made\"\nfruit ranches fit Gateway, near Tobacco l?Iaina In . East Kootenay, in\nreadiness- for- now settlers who are\nexpected, .to- arrive from Great Britain next 'spring, said O. B. Appletorl,\nmanager of the property, who was In\nXelson yesterday.\n\"All the. hardier varieties of apples\nuan.be grown successfully in the Tobacco Blitins district, ranches on both\nthe GanadhjJi *ahd American side of\nthe boundary - 'line testifying to this\nfact,\"  declared Mr. Appleton.\nORDER OF,- FORESTERS\nORGANIZES JUVENILE COURT\nOfficers   Are     Elected\u2014Prizes   Promised\u2014Senior  Court  Initiates  Seventeen  New Members.\nNelson now has a juvenile cobrt of\nthe Ancient Order of Foresters, the\ncourt having been instituted oh Mon-\nday itight by Deputy District Chief\nRanger Tagg. The officers elected\nare.:  ..'\nW. 'Durham, junior past chief ranger; W. Radcllffe, chief ranger; J.\nSmith, sub-chief ranger; S; Ra'dejlffo,\nsenior woodward-; J. II. Jerome, junior woodward; Stanley Litchfield,\nsmlor beadle;. Gordon C. Wilson,\njunior beadle; James Johnston, secretary;   Frank Deacon, treasurer.\nMr. Tagg initiated the boys Into the\nsecrets of ancient forestry and in the\nci'urse'of an address promised to\naward first and second prizes to the\ntwo boys securing the largest number of new members during the year.\nAfter the junior gathering, the adult\ncourt held a'meeting at which 17 new\nmembers .were Initiated. A social\nevening concluded the functions.\nLIBERALS FILE ANOTHER\nELECTION PETITION\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.\"!\nREGINA, Oct IB.\u2014Saskatntchetwan\nLiberals today filed another election\npetition. This ono is against the return, of J. A. McDonald In North Qu\nAppelie. The usual allegations as. to\nimpersonation, etc., arc made.\nTO ENCOURAGE DISCUSSION\n-    ON LIBRARY MATTERS\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA. Oct-15.\u2014Fifty delegates\nto the convention' to the Eastern Li-\nbrary association'nre meeting here today and tomorrow to encourage a discussion- oh library matters. The provincial'government Is paying tho expenses of the delegates.\nTO DRAFT CALGARY\nCITY   BEAUTIFUL   PLAN\n(By Daily News' Leased Wire.)\ni CALGARY, OctJ. lG^Tttomas \"\u25a0&\u25a0\nMnwson, the London civic beauty expert, will probably- be commissioned\nby the city of Calgary to draft a Calgary city beautiful plnn, including a\ncivic Centre to cost in the neighborhood of $4,000,000. vMawson's fee for\nthe preliminary- work, will be about\n$10,000. \u25a0\u2022\nATTEMPT TO BLOCK ROAD'S\nENTRANCE INTO CALGARY\n(By Dally Newa Leased Wire.)\nCALGARY, Oct. 10.\u2014Representatives of the Canadian Northern assert\nthat tlie 'numerous injunction suits\nbrought by the Canadian Pacific railway against the Canadian Northern\nrailway, is an attempt of the big road\nto block Its rival's entrance into this\ncity.\nGOLDEN PREPARES\nTO   RECEIVE   PREMIER\n(Special to\n* GOLDEN, li.\nclnl general m\nboard of trade, :\nreception to be\nto Sir Richard\nBritish Columbi.\nprime minister\n21, accompanied\nfor Kootenay, ;\nin public life.\nThe Dally News.)\nC, Oct. 15.\u2014At a speeding   of   the   Golden\nauitters relating to the\ntendered by that body\nMcBrldc,   premier  of\ni, were discussed. The\nwill  be  hero  on   Oct.\nby K. P. Green, M. P.\niml   others  prominent\nCHARGE AGAINST FUR\nTRADER  DISMISSED\n(By Dally Xews Leased Wire.)\nMOOSE JAW, Oct. 15.\u2014D. C. Mackenzie, a Winnipeg fur dealer, was\nthis afternoon in police court found\nnot guilty undei- the transient traders\nact. In dismissing the charge Magistrate Dunn said'Jtlmt the prisoncj-\nwas guilty In his mind, but the city\nhad failed to prove] certain very vital\npoints. Mackenzie! is manager of the\nWinnipeg Fur company.\nCAIRO IS JUMBLE\nOF ALL THE AGES\nEgyptian. City  Queer  Mixture  of  the\nAntique and the Modern.\nWhat were my. first impressions of\nCairo? Perhaps I was rather disappointed, or perhaps It was merely that\nI was feeling decidedly shaky as a\nresult of the desperate passage from\nLiverpool. .At any rate lt struck mo\nat first that the whole place was\nfrightfully modern. The street cars,\nthe hotels, the carriages and automobiles, with thdlr fashionable English nnd American occupants, even the\npedestrians, seemed prosaically up to\ndate. But this was ah Impression\nwhich did nut last; .for In tho native,\nquarters of the city you may see\nCairo today as it was 1,000 years ago,\nand even on the most fashionable\nthoroughfares you will frequently witness scenes which will carry you back\nInto by-gone ages\u2014scenes which the\ndominant modern note merely serves\ntb throw into strong relief.\nI have specially In. mind the old\nwater sellers, with their ancient jars\nand goatskins thrown over their backs.\nIt Is Interesting to see these old fpl-\nlows parading up .and down on.the,\nsidewalk, mingling wit|i the-up-to-date'\ncitizens of the present day. The same\ncontrast.Is notiveablajP.pt.on-the street.\nAn automobile of the latest design pis\nfollowed (more leisurely.!) by a camel\nmounted by an Arttb Of tHe desert.\nBelow tho waist.his body. Is absolute-\nFOR RENT\nPOR RENT-Office and living rooms 1 >\nK. W.  C. block, Baker street.   Apply\nA. Macdonald & Co., wholesale grocers\nFront street. W-.f.\nFOR     RENT \u2014 Comfortable     furnished\nroom.    Modern conveniences.   BJ.l Carbonate street. \u266615e-0\nFOR   RENT-Furnished   room,   21-1   Victoria street. *1D0-21\nFOR RBftT-By private family, comfor.\nable bedroom, ono or two beds, board\ninclusive.   Terms moderate.   Minute frui*\ncar.   Apply F. E., Daily News.        'ISM\nFOR RENT\u2014Housekeeping  rooms.     Ap-\nply Room 10, Victoria block. Mutt-G\nFOR RENT\u2014Furnished  bedroom.    Lady\npreferred, 634 Mill street. *135-il\nFOR   RENT-One   furnished   three-room\napartment.   Kerr block. l$5-tf,\nNotice  of  Application  for  Liquor\nLicense\nNotice Is hereby given that I, Thomas\nII. Bohart, of Nakusp, B.C.. intend, 30\ndays from the date hereof, to apply to\ntho Superintendent of Provincial Polle.e\nfor a license to sell liquor by retail In\nand upon the premises knmvn as the\nLeland  hotel, situate nt Nakusp, B.C.   !.\nDated this 2Gth day of September, 1912.\nHff-N'ov. fl. , .\nLAODGJOiQJJCES\nKOOTENAY  LODGE  No.  16.  I.O.O.F.-\nMeetB   every   Monday   night   in   uaa-\nfellows' hell at 7:30 u'clock.\nQUEEN     CITS'     REBEKAH     LOL-^li.\nNo. 16, I.O.O.F., meets first and tnfzo\nTuesdays, Oddfellows' hall,  7:30 o'clock.\nNELSON   ENCAMPMENT   NO.   7,   l.U.\nO.F., meets second and fourth Thursdays In Oddfellows' hall at 7:30 o'clock.\nCANTON   CORONA  NO.  7  meets, every\nsecond Tuesday 10 Oddfellows' hall al\n8. o'clock.\nHELP WANTED,\nNEL80N    EMPLOYMENT   AGENCY\nC. F, Hutton, Manager.  ,\nHELP OF ALL KINDS\nPROMPTLY FURNISHED.\nTHE    WORKINGMEN'S    EMPLOYMENT AGENCY,\nWANTED-10 pairs sawyers, (3.25 per\n' day, fare advanced, all year round\nwork; 5 pairs sawyers, near by, $;i.-.j,\nwork year round; fi sawmill laborers, ^.V.i\nto (3, work till Christmas; 10 trackmen, J3 day, lio fee, fare advanced, if\nmen remain six Weeks or two mouths\ntares will not be deducted. After present\ntrack work is done there will he work\non grade for the winter, rock work;\ntie t loadeis, $4 day; 3 blacksmiths; '1\nlumber pliers and 1 helpers; laborers for\nwagon road; muckers.\nW. Parker, 312 Baker street. Phone 2S3.\nWANTED\u2014MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED\u2014An opportunity for a live\nman, selling our, guaranteed Yakima\nValley grown nursery stock. Exclusive\nterritory. Outfit free. Cash weekly.\n\"Hustle,'* not experience required. Top-\npenlsh   Nursery   Co.,   Toppenlsh,   Wash.\nWAN TED-Clean    cottou   rags.     Apply\nThe Dally News. 7\u00bb-tt.\nNELSON'S QUEEN No. 341, S. O. E.-\nMeets 1st and 3rd Monday, K. of P\nhnll     w.   \"ft    (Tnmninn,   ppcrMary.\nKXIOHTS OF PYTHIAS MEET EVERY\nTuesday night In K. of P. hall, Eagle\nbuilding. L\nly rigid; The upper part of his body\nsways to and fro in rhythmic accord\nwith the absolutely noiseless tread of\nthe great clumsy animal. And the\nman himself gazes silently and steadily straight shead, looking neither to\nthe right hand nor to the left, as if\nthere wus nothing In front of him but\nlimitless miles of sand. One cannot\nfail to b impressed by this striking\nblend of ancient and modern.\u2014The\nChristian Herald.\nETIQUETTE   OF  THE  JUNGLE\nA moving picture firm has been\ntaking some remarkable pictures al a\nwater hole in Abyssinia of animals\nwhich come there from miles around\nto quench their thirst.\nIt Is tho etiquette of the jungle for\nthe elephant to drink first. No matter how many animals are around the\nwater hole they all stand aside for the\ngreatest beast of all. Many of the1\nanimals come 10 or 50 miles for a;\ndrink, nnd there is a truce between\neven the most deadly enemies.\nAfter the elephant comes the rlil-.\nnoceros. Although most of tho other\nanimals observe the water hole truce'\nfaithfully, two rhinos will fight over\ntheir precedence. The cinematograph\noperator obtained wonderful pictures\nof\"two\"6f these 'huge 'animals'going\nat it hammer and tongs. The fight\nonly ended by one of the animals being killed.\nWhen the rhinoceros has finished\nthe giraffes drink their fill, followed\nby zebras. Zebras always travel in\nherds and sometimes 40 or CO will arrive at the water Hole at a time. According to the etiquette of the jungle,\nhowever, they only come in fourth for\nthe drinking stakes.\nThe first four animals are fixed in\norder, but the rest get a drink just\nhow and when they can.\u2014Pearson's\nWeekly.\nA  PLESING  FROCK  FOR GIRLS.\nGirls' dress with chemisette; In high\nneck   and   standing   collar,   or   round\nick and broad collar and with full\nlength   or  shorter  sleeve. Flannel,\nishmere, serge, repp, galatea, gingham, chambray, llncne or linen may(|\nbe used for this design. The pattern\nis cut in 4 sizes, 8, 10, 12 and 1*1 years.\nIt requires 3 yards of 41-Inch material\nfor the. 10-year size. I\nPOULTRY ANO  LIVE STOCK\nFOR SALE\u2014Horse and rig. Bay horse,\nI . S ^rears, 1500 weight.    Drive double  -ji*\nsingle. Apply City Cab company, Nelson.,\nI 132-tf.\nW0\nEach pattern can be obtained by\nsending 10 cents to the office of this\npaper. In some cases the lllustratlop\ncontains two patterns, each number\nrepresenting a different pattern. Ih:\nsuch cases 20c should be enclosed.\nPattern   No. 9370,\nPattern Department\nDally NeWs:\nEnclosed find 10 cents for which\nMend the above pattern to\nName   \t\nNo.   .......   Street\t\nTown\t\nMeasurement\u2014Waist.....   Bust....\nAge (if child's or miss' pattern)..j.\n...These patterns, are,.supplied di-.\nrect from the makers, requiring\ntwo weeks from receipt bi-'order\nat the. Daily News Office.'\nWANTED\u2014Married men to buy five and\n10 acre fruit tracts.    Small cash payment,   balance  In  work.    Apply Harris.\nHoneymoon   Place,   Kaslo. 97-tt.\nWANTED\u2014Tie  and   pole   makers,   hush-\nmen and teamsters.   Vlpoud, Nakusp,\n151-tf.\nWANTED\u2014Twenty agents to sell best\nsub-division property In growing cities.\nEasy to sell and liberal commission- to\nlive men. Every assistance given by our\nstaff and good money made on every Idt\nsold. Our easy terms assist you. See as.\nFull equipment free. Western Canada Investment company, Nelson, B.C.       351-tf.\nFOR SALE.\nFOR SALE\u2014Cluap, 120 acres In famoiis\nPend d'Oreille valley, near Waneta;\nclose to government highway; large\nproportion ready for plow, free from\nroots and stones; excellent land; perfect I\nclimate; ample water available; half mill\nfrom surveyed route of new railway; %%\nper acre for block, or would sell In 20-acr-j\nplots. Terms. This is a snap for rancher '\nor investor. P. o. Box 90S, Nelson. > .\nW-tf.\nFOR SALE\u2014Lumber, lath, shingles,\nBashes, doors. Orders exceeding $50 delivered free to any point on lake. Write\nus for quotations, Wattsburg Lumber\nCo., Ltd., Proctor, B.C. tfl-tf.\nFOR SALE-10 ana 20-acre tracts *pf\nchoice fruit land; 2,000 acres to choose\nfrom, all good title, with no encumbrance,, direct from the locator. Some\nexcellent bench land, nice beaches, build- '\nlug sites and good rlshlng, with three\nmiles of main Kootenay lake frontage.\nCome early and have first choice. Lind-'\nsay. Launch & Boat company. Room fi,\nQrfffln   Block,   P.   O.   Box  84,   Nelson,\nb.c.      ra-tr.\nFOR SALE-Ten million feet saw timber,\nlocated right on railroad at loading ,\nspur. Good location for sawmill. Will i\nsell nt 50 cents per thousand. or'at'.U]\npay when you saw. F. L. Churchill, 1\nRoBslund, B.C, \u00ab141r21 |\nFOR    SALE    OR    RENT-Four-roomod \\\nhouse   and   four  lots.    For  particulars j\napply Box 274, Nelson. *146;12 \\\nFOR SALE\u2014A  set of harness.     An*pjy I\nNelson  Brewery.      14fi-tf.  '\nWANTED\u2014A good  general servant, wages\n$25.    Apply  mornings.    Mrs.  Munro,  417\nHoover street. *I52-0\nWANTED\u2014Clerical \u25a0 position    by    young\nman,   good   references.    Apply   Uox   3,\nNelson, B.C. '152-0\nWANTED\u2014Position ns manager of railway branch uf genuine business concern. Thoroughly understand tark'f\nclitsslflc.itinn, shipping, etc. Eighteen\nyears' experience. Apply S. S., Daily\nNews. : ; .    . *153-.tl.\nWANTED\u2014Position in Nelson by experi\nencd general Servant.   P. O. Box 854.\n-1B8U1\nWANTED-By man and wife, position \u25a0 -\u25a0*,\ncamp  cooks   for  winter  months.      Ad-.\ndress John Fllckiger,  F. D.  R.,  Box 23'\nAddy, Wash. .   *15l-0\nWANTED\u2014A   large  boundary  of  timber\nto    work    up.      Apply   Timber,   Dailv\nNews. \u2022 '154-1\nWANTED\u2014First  class  filer  wants   position or will take on sawing and fllelng\nin small  mill.    Address B.  F.  N.,  Proe-.\ntor,  B.C. *155-U\nWANTED-rGIrl for general house work,\n\u25a0 S0\u00ab Carbonate.street.       '-   -. - *156-3\nWANTED\u2014T\\vo licensed   engineers, steam\nplants,   Golden   Zinc   mine.    Write    or\nwire C. H. Brooks, Hedley, B.C.     150-tf.\nWANTED\u2014\"Alessenger   boys   for   C.P.R.\nTelegraph    office.     Apply1   to   E.   W.-\nClayton, manager.       -  \" 156-3-\nWANTED\u2014Position as companion 'or\nhousekeeper In B. C, where there are\nno children preferred. References exchanged. State particulars. MtSs-.B. A.\nFox,  Lost Lake,  Alberta.     , ,   *156-0\nWANTED-Competent typist and clerical\nassistant.   Apply P..O. Box 055, Nelson.\nWANTED-Apprentice.      Intelligent    boy\nof  about  Hi   to   learn    boot    and  shoe\nbusiness*.      Apply    Hudson's Ray  Storu.\nCity. .   .157-3\nWANTED^Dry    goods    salesman,    thor->\nouglily  competent,  of  good  appearance\nand   a .hustler.      Apply ' Hudson's   Bay\nStoic, City.  h-r-S\nWANTED-Stock  salesman,   on   proposition  which   will  be  a winner  for  both\ni-alesmaii   and   buyer.     .Apply    Box   iV\nDaily News. 'lo'-*2\nFOR SALE\u2014Two 4-horae teams with\nwagons, harness and sleighs, u No. l ore\nhauling outfit. Teams can he seen dt\nThroe Forks, B.C. Rambler-Cariboo\nMines,  Limited. 150-10,\nFOR   SALE\u2014Good   work   horse,   weight\nabout   1500.      Trees,   cherry   and   plum;\nbest varieties.    Order now for full planting.   W. J. McKim, near shipyard; Nel-\nFOR SALE OR IUHE-Bay team, 7 and S\nyears,   weight 2S0O.    Quuiautee  in  first\nclass condition. Castlegar Brick Works.\n lolJ-'i 2\nFOR SALE\u2014Holsteln bull, two years old.\nSure   stock   getter.      Apply     Cu-mem\nDairy, Box S07, city.       _*155-*J\nFOR  SALK-EngllsU   fle)d   spaniel,   five\nmonths old; of good bunting strain. Apply Box E.  C. Daily News. * 150-2\nNotice of Application for Transfer of\nLiquor License.\nNotice is hereby given that on the 31st\nday of October next application will bo\nmado to the Superintendent of Provincial Police for the transfer of the license\nfor the Bale of liquor hy ictall in and\nabout the premises known as the Leland\nhotel, at Nakusp, British Columbia, from\nJames Sneddon to Thomas II. Bohart oi,\nNakuBp, British Columbia.\nDated this 20th dav of September, 1912.,\nJAMES  SNEDDON;\nHolder of License.\nTHOMAS  II.   BOHART.\nHO-Nov^ Pi Applicant j*n** Tnuisfer\nSYNOPSIS OF COAL\nMINING REGULATIONS\nCoal mining lights of the Dominion, in\nManitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta,\nthe Yukon Territory, the Nortn-west\nTerritories, and in a portion of the province of British Columbia, may be leaBOd\nfor a term of twenty-one years at an\nannual rental of $1 per acre, Not more\nthan 2,560 acres will be leased -to one\napplicant.\nApplication for a lease must be made\nby 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 be\ndescribed by sections, or legal sub-divisions of section!', and in unsurvcyed territory the tract applied for shall be\nstaked out by tho applicant hlmpelf.\nEach application must he nccoiripanlod\nhy a fee of $5, whicli will be refunded li\ntho 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 the Agent with sworn returns aci\ncounting for the full quantity of mer-J.\ncountable coal mined and pay the royalty'\nthereon. If the coal mining rights are*\nnot being operated, such returns should\/1\nbe  furnished  at least onpe a year,     .1\nTho lease will Include the coal mminn\nright* only, hut the lessee may be'per-J!\nmltted to purchase whatever available\nsurface rights moy he considered ncces-,\nsary for tho working of the mine at the,\nrate of Jio.no nn aere.        ' -\u25a0\nFor full Information application should,\nbe made to the. Secretary of the Depart-*:\nment-of the Interior, Ottawa; or to any,\nAgent or Sub-Agent of Dominion lianflH\nW. W. UOKY, .-\nDepute Minister of the Interior.\nN.B.-TTnRiithoriEed publication of thu\nadvertisement will not be paid for.\n-BMI1\nFOR  SALE\u2014For  less  than  cost,  Lots, 1\nand 2,  Block 10,  town of Lardo,  B.C.\nW.  M.  Glover,  Nelson, B.C. *148;itt\nFOR SALE\u201410-foot motor boat, $225, cost\nnew $450; used two seasons; cushions,\nbrass railing, reverse gear, etc. Will bo\nstored free through winter. Terms to\nright party. Genuine snap. Applv K.\nHeyry & Co.         153-lf.\nFOR   SALE\u2014Collapsible   baby   carriage.\nApply E.  C\u201e  Dally News. \"1G0-3 |\nl-'OR   SALE\u2014Ten-acre   Improved   ranch,  ,\n41*2 acres cleared and planted,  400ap*>lu '\ntrees, ?i acre strawberries; 2-rootn shack,  i\nlog chicken house.    All fenced and closo\ntu   depot,   In   thriving  settlement   of  400\npeople;   3   stores,   powtofflee    and    hotel  '\nclose by.    Price RODO.   Tcims **500 down;'\nbalance $150 a  year, 0 per cent Interest.\nApply  box 124,   Dally  News. *157-d\nFOR  SALE\u2014Blacksmith  business,   doing ,\ngood trade, no opposition.   Includes lot,\nbuilding and  all  necessary fixtures,  also j\nhouse and  lot.    For further particulars ,\napply to J. J. Scott, Box JO,. New Michel.\nB.O .-   .'157-3 j\nFOR  SALE\u2014White   Orpington  cockerels,\nJune hatched, 0 pounds.   Few for salii,*\n12.50 Up.    Will Improve, any flock In eggs  '\nand quality.    J.   Kolinmr, Tiall, B.C. f    \u25a0\nSHERBROOKE HOTEL\nNelson, B. C.\nOne minute's walk from C. P. R. station.    Cuisine   unexcelled;  well  heated\nand ventilated.\nLAVIONE & DUNK.   | \u25a0\u2022-   I\n'   PHOENIX\nHOTEL BROOKLYN, PHOENIX, B.V.\nThe only up-to-date hotel In V\u2122***\nNew from cellar to roof. Best sample ,\nrooms In the Boundary. Bath room \"i\nconnection. Steam heat. Opboslte; Great\nNorthern depot.   James Marshall, Prop.\nCASTLEGAR\n'HOTEL CASTLEGAR,\" CASTLEU-AH\nJunction. All modern. Excellent accommodation for tourists and drummers.\nBoundary train leaves here at 9.10 a.m.\nRossland-Nelson ,tj;aln, stops for breakfast and dinner, H^\u2122\nW. H. Gage,  Proprietor,\nIT. FRANCIS HOTEL, VANCOUVER.\nB.C.\u2014Directly opposite tha new C.P.R.\nmillion dollar depot\u2014The Royal Alex.-\nof Vancouver. Catering to family,\ntourist and   commercial   trade,      Sur-\nS rising accommodations. A refined\nouse of Unusual excellence. It's central position gives Its patrons the ad-\nvantage of nearness to shops, churches\nand theatres. Personal management.\nFree bus. Tariff JZ.60 and (3 D.\nMackay, proprietor.\nBusiness Directory j\nASSAYERS j\n3.   W.   WIDDOWSON,   ASSAYER   AND\nChemist,    Box    A1103,    Nelson,   B.   C.\nCharges;   Gold,  silver,  copper  or lead,\nJI  each;   gold-silver,   $1.60;   silver-lead, ,\n?1.50.    Other  metals  on application.   \"\nAUCTIONEERS\nC. A. WATERMAN & CO.-P-O. Box a\u00bb.\nNELSON   AUCTION.  MART-W ...CUTLER, licensed auctioneer.   Auction and\nsales rooms.   600 Ward street. Phone 18.\n119-tf.\nv. S. HORSWILL & CO-WHOLESAL13\nImporters and Manufacturers' Agents,\nProduce, Fruits, Flour and Feed,   P. O.\n_Box BJ, Nelson, B.C.   Phone 121.     M-\u00ab.\n^QROCERIES^\nA. MACDONALD & CO., WHOLESALU\nGrocers and Provision Merchants, importers of Teas, Coffees, Spices, Dried\nFruits, Staple and Fnney Groceries,\nTobaccos, Cigars, Butter, Eggs, Cheese\nand Packing House Produce, oriiee\nand warehouse corner of Front ana\nHall streets. P. O. Box 1095. Telephones as and liS.\nPAINTING   AND   PAPER   HANGING\nA. E. BENNETT, PAINTER AND\nDecorator\u2014Wall papers and paper\nhanging a specialty. Estimates given.\nAll work promptly executed. 614 Stanley street. Phone 3U. P. O. BOX 827,\nNelson.\nELECTRICAL SUPPLIES\nJ. H. RINGROSE, 608 STANLEY STi-\nInstallatlon of electrical machinery,\ntelephone plants, house wiring. ' Repair\nwork, supplies carried, Pnone ;*A*\u00bb\/,\nP. O. Box 156. a*-\"-\nGREEN  BROS., BURDEN A CO.\nCivil   Engineers.     Domlnlop and  B.  C.\nLand Surveyors,\nsurveys   of   LfkndB,   Mines, ,TowhstteB.\nTimber Limits, Etc.\nNelson, 610 Ward, street; A.  H. ureen,\nMgr.    Victoria,'.Hi Pemberton Bldg.; F.\nC. Green,   Ft. George, Hammond street!\nF.  P.  Burden. '\nA. L. McCULLOCH\nHydraulio Engineer\nProvincial  Land  Surveyor\nP.  O. Box \u00ab\nOffioe phone, BBS; residence phone, B74.\nOffice,  Over McDermid & McHardy:\n__ Baker Btreet, Nelson, B. C.\nA. MACNEIL, BARRISTER, SOLICI-\ntor, etc. Solicitor for W.F.M., Fo'nle,\nBritish Columbia. 114-tf.\nT.   M.   RIXEN.    AUTJITOR    AND    A0-\ncountant; insurance.   P. O. Box 873. '\n  ias-\\t\nMRS. MARY S\\vARTZ, PROFESSION-xL\nMld-Wlfc. When.:n Spokane see MfS.\nMary Swartz, specialist in female\ntroubles. Expert :n confinement cases.\nGood home for \u25a0patients. Mi-s. Ma\/V\nSwam, Galena Blk.*; 10G Post Street.\nSpokane, Wash.' J*151-NW, 9\n idSH\nWEDNESDAY\nOCTOBER 10\nCfte Hatl? $eto&\nnf.  PACE SEVEN    H\nSTAR GROCERY\nDirectly opposite the  Dominion\nExpress Office.\nStore of Quality\n\"\u2014\"*\u25a0      ' PHONE 10 '    \"\nSole Agents for Ridgeway's Famous Teas.\nAgents for \"Egg-O\" Baking\nPowder.\nSolo Agents for Beech\u2022 Nut\nBaoon.\nNEW  ARRIVALS\nBeech Nut\nBacon\nThe best ia what you want, and\n.you can't mistake the flavor.\nCrisco\nThe boot Shortening on the market.\n40o per Tin;  \u25a0\nRipe\nOlives\nVittuccio\nOlives\nper Pint.\nfl\nSTAR GROCERY\n= NELSON ,===\nImperial Bank oi\n''Canada\nEstablished 1875.\nHEAD OFFICE:  TORONTO, ONT.\nCapital (paid-up)    $6,460,000.00\nReserve Fund , 6,460,000.00\nD. R. Wilkie, Pres. and Qen'l. \"M-jr.\nHon,  Robert Jaffray,  Vice  Pres.\nSAVINGS  DEPARTMENT\nAn account can be opened with $1\nor more. Interest Is allowed at current rates from date of opening the\naccount .and added to the principal\ntwice a year.\nTravellers' cheques and drafts sold,\nnegotiable in all parts of the world.\nBank money orders issued, payable\nthroughout Canada, tho Unltod States\nend Great Britain at the following\n.*ates: (5 and under, 3 cents; over $5\nto $10, C cents; over $10 to J30, 10 cents;\nover $30 to $50, IS cents.\nOut of town customers can transact\ntheir banking business by mall \"^lnd\nare given every attention.\nNelson Branch, J. H. D. Benson, Mgr.\nThe Royal Bank\nof Canada\nIncorporated  1869\nCAPITAL PAID UP....$ 11,500,000\nRESERVE FUND     12,500,000\nTOTAL A83ETS   175,000,000\n8AFETY   DEPOSIT   BOXES   FOR\nRENT.\nWills, Title Deeds, Mortgages, Insurance Policies or other valuables,\nwhich are at present exposed to\nrisk of being destroyed or lost, may\nbo securely lodged in a safety de-\nposit box for a small annual foe.\nFULL    INFORMATION   ON    APPLICATION:\nNELSON BRANCH\nA. B. NETHERBY, Mgr.\nWarmth Without Wealth\nAattend to your house heating now.\nDon't wait until winter winds blow. It'd'\nsafer and cheaper now. Our facilities for\nreparlng or renovating steam or' hot-\nwater heating, radiators, pipes; valves,'\netc., arc exceptionally good. Wo are experts at new Installations, changing fiom\nstoves to furnaces rapidly, cheaply and\neffectively. Steam or hot-water heating;'\nsaves coal, hoaltli, labor. It's safer,\nquicker to heat, gives a steadier heat\nand removes the dangers of fire. If wd\ndo It, It's right and guaranteed.\nE. K. STRACHAN\nBAKER STREET\nNELSON\nCARIBOO FINEST\nSHOT IN BIO BEND\nCaptain   F.   P.   Armstrong   of   Golden\nTells of Remarkably Good Specimen Now Being  Mounted.\nWhat is declared by Captain F. P.\nArmstrong of Golden to be the finest\ncariboo ever secured in the Big Benu\ncountry was shot a few weeks ago by\na party consisting of Captain Armstrong and Pete Bergerham and Gus\nHcdstrom of Revelstoke. The unimal\nwus shown at Revelstoke fair and is\nbeing mounted by Hi W. Edwards ot\ntbe main line city, who in a letter to\nCaptain Armstrong? who was at the\nStrathcona last night, says:\n\"I have the honor to congratulate\nyou on the splendid cariboo you have\nsecured, the finest, I fully believe, ever\ngot in the Big Bend district. , I have\ntaken the measurements of the specimen, which are as follows:\n\"Length from nose lo tail, 7 feet C\nInches; height from foot to top of\nshoulder, 4 feet 0 inches; around neck,\none foot from horn base, 42 Inches;\naround chest, 85 Inches; number of\npoints on horns, 26; length of best of\nhorns, 40 Inches; width between horns,\n30 Inches; weight, estimated, 476\npounds.\n\"Remarks\u2014In perfect condition;\npelt In good order; horns unbroken\nand not scratched; unusually fine\ndark colored face.\"\nTho animal was first sighted in the\nriver about 30 miles above Revelstoke.\nWounded by a bullet from a rifle of\none of the members of the party, who\nwero in a canoe, the cariboo headed\nup tho mountainside, where it was despatched by a shot by Mr. Bergerham.\n.Captain Armstrong will leave this\nmorning for Kootenay Landing and\nexpects to return to the city tomorrow\nevening.\nFASCINATING MUSICAL\nNUMBERS ARE FEATURE\nOno of the especially brilliant features of \"Hopp, Skipp & Jump\" is said\nto bo tho fascinating musicnl numbers\nand the songs connected with them.\nA largo list of them will be heard when\ntho production Is staged and among\nthem are \"Tommy Atkins,\" \"Fifty\nYears Ago\" and a beautiful duet with\ndance, \"The Owl in the Old Oak Tree.\"\nAn especially catchy drill song is\n\"There's n Dixie Girl Who's Longing\nfor a Yankee Doodle Boy,\" and another\nwith a chorus of 18, \"Good-bye, Old\nPal.\" \"Can I Make Love to You\" and\n\"Come Down, Nellie, to the Old Red\nBarn\" are very attractive numbers, and\n\"The Girls From A to Z\" forms a pretty donee. \"O'Cdllahan\" with the Irish\ngirls* chorus Is said to be a very lively\nstunt, arid \"Sunbonnet Sue,\" \"Take\nYour Girl to the Ball Game\" and \"I\nWish I was In Dixie\" are all Important\nnumbers in the very stirring and\nlaughable musical comedy which\n\"Hopp, Skipp & Jump\" Is said to be.\nIt is made clear as rehearsals progress thnt this tuneful comedy Is real\nentertainment and df the lively, bright\nsort, best intended to please an'audi-\nThe Extremely\nLow Keyboard\nmak03 the Burroughs\nVisible adding machine\nvery convenient for use\non either a high or low\ndeslt\u2014for the manager or\nthe bookkeeper.\nIt Is light and easy to\ncarry about the office\u2014\n-can he used whore lt Is\nneeded.\nIt Is a Burroughs product, mado fn the bluest\nand most efficient adding\nmnehlne factory In the\nworld, and is backed by\nthe Burroughs- reputation\nnnd guarantee of continuous Service.\n\u25a0 May we show you the\nBurroughs \"Visible,\" at\nour expense and risk,\nwithout obligating ynu?\nBurroughs Adding\nMachine Co.\nTV.   K.   TASKER,\nSales  Manager,\n347 Pender Street,\nVANCOUVER, -B.C.\nBUY   NOW\nSwift's\nFertilizers\nFor Fall and Spring Use.\nIT PAYS TO USE THEM\nSwift Canadian\nCo., Ltd.\nNELSON, B. C.\nUS   LOAN.\n_ J    MONEY!\nI To Buy or Build Houms)\nJ   \u00abfPi\u00bb 0\u00ab MortiifH .   _\nImi CAN(WHAN HOffll^STMENTCOtWW\nWood Vallance Block. Phono 179.\nNotion, B. C.\nence to the uttermost. It Is strictly\nnot a cantata, operetta or pantomime\nor child's play. It Is decidedly In style\nwith professional performances of up-\nto-date character, and the ludicrous\nsituations brought about by the odd\ncharacters, especially Hiram Hopp,\nSilas Skipp and Johnny Jump of' the\nclever, scheming firm of promoters and\nbrokers are prepared for the fun th-****\nbring forth only. From the generous\nHat of well-apportioned characters, It\nIs not hard to Judge that the results\nare going to be unusually satisfactory\nWhen the production is given on Wednesday and Thursday evenings of next\nweek, October 23 nnd 24.\nThe Nelson public library will benefit by the performances.\nNELSON NEWS OF IHE DAY\nH. A. Dymond of Cedar Point was in\nNelson yesterday afternoon.\nC. W. West of Willow Point was a\nvisitor in the city yesterday.\nC. D. Jarvls has gone to Vancouver\nwhere ho expects to reside In future,\nTho monthly meeting of the school\nboard will be held at 7:30 o'clock thin\nevening.\nEdward WatorB, the 11-day-old son of\nMr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Waters, died\nyesterday morning.\nThe Brotherhood of Carpenters wiil\nhold a special meeting In Miners' Union\nhail tonight at S o'clock.\nVirlgll O. Strlokler will lecture on\nChristian Science In Trinity Methodist\nchurch on Monday night.\nCharles A. Waterman will continue\ntho auction sale at the residence of P.\nM. Delamare, Fairview, today at 2\no'clock.\nW. E. Wasson, city clerk, and Mrs.\nWasson will leave this morning for Toronto and will spend a month's vacation\nIn that city and other parts of Antarlo.\nThere will be a whist drive In St.\nSaviour's parish hall this evening In connection with the Churchman's club, commencing at S o'clock. The management\nof the Churchman's dub wishes to thank\nMrs.' H. Bird and Fred Irvine for refreshments given for last Sunday evening's mectnlff.\nAsk   or  write   for   the   Hudson's   Bay\ncompany's grocery price list 101-tf.\nMiss   G.   B.   Choquette,   406   Latimer,\nteaches French and music. \u202215G-0\nGo to King George Cafe, Hall St.    Get\na square meal, 25c up.  White cook,   \u2022155-C\nAt the Starland tonight\u2014The Battle\nof Two Palme, of the historical Italian-\nTurkish war.\nRex Beach's, new book, \"The Net,\" Is\njust to hand at Thomson's book store.\nIt Is published at $1.50, but In common\nwith all the now $1.50 books It's on sale\nat Thomson's for $1.25. 168-2\nYes, If you want some oyster shell,\nwheat, oats, bran or shorts for you*\nstock, or If you > oqulre some perfect\nroofing paper to protect them properly,\nwe enrry it. Call, write or phone to A.\nS. Horswlll & Co., Nelson, 'B.C.        154-tr.\nMr. F. Warner Smith, F. GId. O., organist and choirmaster of St. Paul's\nchurch, Nelson, will receive and visit\npupils for tho following: Organ, piano,\nsinging, vlollni ...&c... theory at .music\n(harmony, counterpoint, musical forms.\nInstrumentation and history). Classes \"of\nthree or over for theory of music, or Individual lessons as desired. Pupils should\nenrol now so as to commence directly on\nMr. Warner Smith's arrival, on or about\ntho 10th of October. Prospective pupils\nmay leave their addresses at the Daily\nNows. 151-7\nDUKE PRESENTS\niZUK NELSON SHIELD\nTakes   Forty-Mile  Run   in  Automobile\nto File Hills\u2014Indian Treaty\nMemorial.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)    .\nINDIAN HEAD, Oct. 14.\u2014The program for the visit of the governoi\ngeneral's party here Is providing theii\nroyal highnesses with one of the\nbusiest and most varied and most Interesting of their whole western tour.\nAt 10 o'clock this morning the civic\naddress of welcome was presented at\nthe city hall. In reply his royal highness said:\n\"I hope you will transmit to tho municipalities you represent our best\nthanks for the welcome you have extended to me as well as to the duchess\nand my daughter, on the occasion of\nour visit to Indian Head.\n\"My only regret is that I could nol\nbe here in time to see the country before the harvest was -gathered, but I\nam glad to hear that tho results have\nbeen satisfactory, although I fear they\nwere not as good as was at one time\nanticipated.\n\"I trust that future years may bring\nbountiful crops and that you may lone\ncontinue In the prosperous condition\nyou now enjoy.\"\nNelson Shield.\nNext came the presentation by the\nduke to tho high school of tho Nelson\nshield, the gift of Lord Strathcona,\nmade from copper from the flagship\nVictory. The royal party then visited\nthe Dominion experimental farm, over\nwhich their royal highnesses were conducted by Superintendent McKay. The\nparty then set forth In motors on a\n40-mIIo run to File hills to take luncheon with Mr. Graham, inspector of Indian agencies.\nAmong the matters In which tlu*\nduke evinced speclul interest tbls\nmorning is the memorial In course of\npreparation to commemorate the\ntreaty made with the Indians in 1874\nHis royal highness was also grenlly\nIntercsted In meeting Mr. McDonald\nwho came into this country in 1856.\nand Is the only surviving chief factor\nof tho Hudson's Bay company. The\nroyal train will leaVe at 9 o'clock tonight, the next stop being mode al\nBrandon, where tho arrival will be ai\nnoon tomorrow.\nKidneys Wrong?\u2014\nIf they ore yoii an Id danger. When\nthrough weakness or disease the\nkidneys fail to filter the impurities\nfrom the blood, troublecomes at once.\nBackache, Rheumatism, Sciatica,\nGravel, Diabetes, Gall Stones and the\ndeadly Bright's Disease are some of\nthe results of neglected kidneys. Dr.\n** Morse's Indian Root Pills contain\na most effective diuretic which\nstrengthens and stimulates the\nkidneys so that they do their work\nthoroughly and well.  Try\nDr. Morse's   \"\nIndian Root Pills\nPARALYSIS \u00a301-\nPIJETELV_CilRED\n\"Fruit-atiies\" Performs\nAnother Miracle\nBristoi,. N. B., Jt'I,Y 25th, i9n\n\"I had a stroke of Paralysis in Marcis\ntoio, and this left me unable to walk or\nhelp myself, and the Constipation ot the\nBowels was terrible.\nNothing did we any good and I was\nwretched in every way.\nI then took \"Fruit-a-tives*- for the\nConstipation and it not only cured tuc\nof this terrible trouble, but gradually\ntbis fruit medicine toned up the nerves\nand actually cured the Paralysis.\nBy the use of \"FniU-a-tivrs\", I grew\nstronger and stronger until all the\nParalysis and weakness left me.\nI am now well again ond attend my\nstore every day. I say \"Thank God\nfor Fruit-a-tives\"\nALVA rumjps.\n\"Frait-a-tives\" not only cured the\nterrible Constipation, but so toned up\nthe nervous system and the general\nhealth as to completely overcome the\npalsy.\nTruly \"Fruit-a-tives\" Is a wonderful\nmedicine.\n50c a box, 6 for $2.50 trial sire, 25c.\nAt dealers or sent on receipt of price bj\nI'ruit-a-tii'cs Limited. Ottawa.\nwould rebuild^\noldThospital\nOne Isolation Building Should Be Torn\nDown, Says Dr. Arthur\u2014Would\nStop Coasting on Sidewalks.\nNeed for better accommodation at\nthe city Isolation hospital is urged by\nDr. E. C. Arthur, medical health'officer, Jn his report to the city board of\nhealth for the quarter ending on September 30. He suggests that the old\nbuilding be demolished and the material used next year for the erection\nof a new building.\nCoasting on sidewalks should be prohibited, declares Dr. Arthur. The report is:\n\"During the quarter 33 cases of scarlet fever have been reported or discovered. These occurred in 17 houses. I\nbelieve five of these cases originated\ndirectly or Indirectly from a case said\nto have been diagnosed as German\nmeasles In June and not reported. At\nthe close of tbe quarter there were\neight cases In quarantine In four\nhouses,\n\"As It seems possible. If not probable, that one house was infected by\nclothing collected and distributed by\nthe charity organization, I would recommend that in future no clothing be\ndistributed unless H\/ia first disinfected.\n\"The only other^ disease reported\nduring tho : quartet*, j >vaa mumps, of\nwhich.there; were 15. cnses.-i A\\ rltv.not\nthink that nearly \u25a0all the cases wore\nreported. The last case was reported\non August 13 and I know of no cases\nnow existing.\n\"In my last report I mentioned the\nneed of a house of refuge in which residents of Infected dwellings could be\nsent while their houses were being disinfected. \"When tho new fire hall Is\ncompleted the living rooms In connection with the old hall could well be\nused for this purpose. Also in the old\nhall could bo built at small cost a place\nfor disinfecting conveyances. This\nshould be done.\n\"Tho last city patient In the Isolation\nhospital wns discharged September 23\nand the new building disinfected. The\nold building is in such a condition that\nit cannot be satisfactorily disinfected\nand no attempt at disinfection has been\nmade. I would recommend that this\nbuilding be demolished, the material\nbeing preserved and next year used in\nerecting another permanent building\nsimilar to tho present new building\nthnt would provide all the isolation accommodation likely to be required for\nsome time.\n\"The isolation grounds should be\ncleared of underbrush, logs and loose\nstones.\n\"As the winter season Is approaching I wish to call attention to tho dangerous prnctlco nf coasting nn intersecting streets. If this is not stopped\nthero Is likely to be some serious accident. Coasting on sidewalks should be\nstrictly prohibited.\n\"Tho city can make some saving by\npurchasing disinfecting materials in\nquantity. I would recommend the purchase by tender of 30 gallons of formalin, guaranteed '10 per cent, and 100\ncabs of formangiiniite briquettes.\"\nSTRIKES IN'EAST\nDELAYW0RK HERE\nNew   Lighting   System   Will   Nat   Be\nCompleted  Until  February\u2014Effect Saving At Power Plant.\nBecause of strikes in Cincinnati\nWhere the Iron standards which are to\nbo used in installing the new lighting\nsystem on tho main streets and on\naccount of tho failure of tho British\nmanufacturers to deliver tho 5,000 feet\nof lead cable on time it Is likely tljat\ntho work will be so delayed that it will\nnot be completed until possibly the end\nof February, although Herbert P.\nThomas, city electrical engineer, hopes\nto have some blocks illuminated with\ntho three-ball tungstens during January.\nAbout two blocks have been wired In\nreadiness for the continuance of the\nwork but the delay In the arrival of the\nmaterials has practically placed operations at a standstill.\nAlterations at the power plant, according to figures made public yesterday, cost $2,263.82, a saving of 11,746.1)1\non tho estimates. The improvements\nmado include the Installation of the\nconcrete floor on tne thrust deck of\nNo. 2 unit, which has proved successful, said Mr. Thomas, In stopping the\nvibration of tho steel girders on tho\nfloor.\nDuring tho first nine months of this\nyear revenue from the electric light\nplant has increased 13,980:02 over the\nsamo period lust year, while tho aver-\nago \"lood\" carried, whicli practically\nrepresents tlie powor and light consumed, was 6 31.4 8 kilowatts for the\nnine months of this year, against 673\nSpecial \"Pay Day\" Sale\nJAPER CENT.\n\u00a3H REDUCTION\nOn All Men's Clothing, Furnisn)ngs'& Shoes\nThose who want to make\"the dollars go the farthest will welcome this exceptional offering.    At regular prices no better values could be found anywhere.   The special reduction is made to crowd extra business into the\nnext three days.    Read.\nMen's\nSuits\n$12.50 to $30\nThe materials aro fine English and Scotch Tweeds and\nWorsteds in every desirable pattern and weave that a man\nwould v\/ant. They are tailored\nby experts and guaranteed to\nfit. Let us show you. Prices,\n$12.50, $15.00, $17.50, $20.00 to\n$36.00.        '\nThese Prices Less\n10 Per Cent\nMen's\nOvercoats\n$10 to $25\nIn Melton Cloths, Diagonal\nand Fancy Mixed Tweeds. Styles\nto suit every taste in all the\nnewest Fall colorings. They\nare beautifully cut, properly\nfashioned and fit to perfection.\nLet us show you. Prices, $10.00,\n312.50, $15.00 to $25.00.\nThese Prices Less\n10 Per Cent\nMEN'S FURNISHINGS\nMEN'S ACADIAN PRIDE HOMESPUN\nPANTS\u2014The best wearing trousers on the market for working men. Guaranteed pure wool-\nPrice   per   pair $3.50\nMEN'S HEAVY TWEED PANTS\u2014In nice dark\nmixtures of grey and green, finished with gocd\ntrimmings.     Price  per  pair    $2.00\nMEN'S CORDUROY PANTS\u2014Made in good,\nroomy sizes, witli belt loops, side straps'and finished with the best of trimmings. Price per\npafr       $4.25\nMEN'S BEDFORD CORD PANTS\u2014In drab\nshades with belt loops, side straps, etc. Strong\nand  durable.    Price   per  pair     $2.75\nMEN'S MACKINAW COATS\u2014\"CARSS\"\u2014The\nonly waterproof Mackinaws made; with or without leather bound pockets. Prices, $5.50, $6.50\nand  $7.00.\nMEN'S MACKINAW PANTS\u2014Long, per pair\n    $4.00\nMEN'S FURNISHINGS\nMEN'S   MACKINAW   PANTS-\n-Short,   psr   pair\n    J3.50\nMACKINAW  SHIRTS    $2.50, $3.00\nMEN'S TWEED SHIRTS $1.25, $1.50, $1.75\nIMPORTED   ARMY   FLANNEL  SHIRTS. .$1.75\nStanfield's \"Red   Label\"  Underwear $1.50\nStanfield's   \"Blue   Label\"   Underwear $1.75\nFLEECE   LINED   UNDERWEAR 65c\nWOLSEY   UNDERWEAR    $2.50\nStanfield's  Silk  and   Wool   Underwear $2.25\nWOOL   SOX    25c,   35c,  50c,   60c\nCASHMERE   SOX    25c,  35c, 50c\nLEATHER GLOVES  ....50c, 75c, $1.00 to $2.25\nLEATHER   MITTS 50c  to  $1.75\nSWEATER   COATS\u2014In   plain   and   combination\nsliades cf gVey, tan, brown, etc..$3.00, $3.50, $4.00\nSUITS\u2014In  flannelette    and   Ceylon\n $2.00 and $2.75\nPAJAMA\nflannel  at .\nThe Huds\u00a9i's Bay Company\nIncorporated 1670\nwotBammm\nIncorporated 1670\nkilowatts for the samo period In 1911.\nThe largest addition to the power\nconsumers during: the period was the\nCanadian Pacific railway which Is now\nJifllng a 10 horse power motor at its\nshops in addition to the 121-2 horse\npower at the shopyards. The addition\nto revenue per year is ?9C0.\nJ Motors installed in ihe city now total\n325 and there aro sufficient on hand\nfor .new customers during the remaining thrQjB months of this year.\nMr. Thomas has inaugurated a cost\nsystem for use in connection with his\n\"\u2022department and Is now In a position\n'to give the exact cost at a moment's\n\u25a0lotico of any work carried out. Each\njob is given a separate sheet, that for\ntho work In connection with illuminating the exhibition grounds and building during .the fair showing thnt the\nfcost was $295.19 In labor and materials\nwhile the powe rused was worth, at\nthe usual rate, $143.60,\nAT THE THEATRES.\nAnother crowded audience at the\n\u25a0opera house last evening witnessed thu\nproduction of Hiss Verna Foi ton and the\nAllen Players In \"The Third Degree,\" u\n'four-act dramatization of the well known\nhovel Illustrating the working*1 of the\nthird degree by the New York police\n'force In their dealings with the criminal\nolass.\n), Tho Royal Hungarian Quartette, under\ntho direction of JOB Schranko, again delighted the audience with their musical\nSelections. The musicians appeared to\nenjoy their own music and smilingly acknowledged the applause which greeted\n-their  efforts.\n| Between tlie acta Miss Hmlars, whpae\n[rendition of popular ballads during the\nInst season of tho Allen Players haro\nwas so well received, sang two solos last\nnight with most pleasing effect and was\n.warmly  encored.\n-j'Tho costuming and scenery of the play\nlast night was all looked after with tha\nmice attention to detail for which the\n\u25a0Allen Players are famous.\n1 As \"Annie Jeffries,\" Miss Felton appeared to most excellent advantage, but\nfie on tho previous evening when \"The\n*Glrl From Texas\" was presented, tho\nJeadlng lady's part called for no sustained dramatic effort, at the same time tho\nCharacter showed tho winsome little lady\nIn a very pleasing light and She charmed\n'iho audience by her clever acting from\nstart to finish.\nJ \"The Third Degree\" Is a strong play\nfull of striking-dramatic situations, all\n*Jf which Miss Felton made the most ol*\n'to the delight of the audience, which\ncompletely filled tho body of the house\nwhere standing room only was the older\npf tho evening. A word of oxtra pralsa\n'Is duo tho management for the elaborate\nStage setting of lhe whole nlny. Infinite\n\u25a0trouble was taken to havo every detail\n'looked after, and tbe result was a mo-\njHuctlon that would have done credit in\nany of tho big eastern cities of tho con\ntinent.\nMr. Mitchell, the leading man of the\ncompany deepened tho already good im\npresslon ho made hero tho first night\nand had more opportunity last night to\nmake good before a Nelson audience.\nThe rest of the company rendered most\nexcollont support and It can be fairly\nsaid thero was not a weak snot in the\nproduction. The company will present\ntills evening. \"A Contented Woman, *\nbased on the suffragette question and\nsaid lo be extremely funny, and now\nproduced for tho first time in Nelson,\nand with the attractive bill presented\nthere Is certain to be another crowded\nhouse.\nThe province nf the stage In the past\nhas been to entertain and educate. Of\nlate, what Is known OS drama has fallen\ninto decay\u2014hence Shakespearean plnya\nare seldom enacted on the stage. The\npublic lias taken more kindly to musical\nand novel entertainments, that do not ra-\nqulro deep thought to comprehend; hence\nanything that is both novel and musical\nattracts the public more today than at\nother period in our natural history. The\nRoyal Hawaiian Musical & Novelty company, coining to the opera house, Nelsoil,\non Monday, Oct, 21, is announced as a\nunique, novel entertainment of quality.\nThe Kanakas render the music of their\ncountry, Hawaii, on the native Instruments and In an Incomparable manner.\nFor an American to attempt to imitate\nIt would lie folly. The songs and dances\nare eqiiftliv novel, they are In a class\nby themselves and of the very highest\nartistic excellence. Hawaii now Is a\npart of America. Tlie lato royal entertainers   to    Kln-r    Kalakana    and    Queen\nLllitiokalnnt are released from their\nformer wilful or un wilful associations:\nand they are now true Americans anil\nare at liberty to entertain whomsoever\nthey please. \u25a0\nIn addition to the Hawaiian portion of\nthe entertainment Otto Wels, the famous\nGerman comedian and aceoidian player,\nis a feature that will command moro attention than any one who has been scan\nhere In the past, for Mr. Wels, in h|s\nIllustrated songs of all nations, and rendering ids own muslo on the famous German accordlan that he used ub an entertainer of loyalty, is ono of the mo3t\nnovel, pleasing and high-class inusic.il\nnumbers that has ever made a tour at\nthe hands of any aitlst in the Unitc-p\\\nStates. The lady violinist Is another\npleasing feature of the hill of which tlvc\npeople never tire, and her rendition o!\nthe different numbers Is high class and'\nof artistic excellence. I\nWORKERS WATCH WANTS\nWork that's congenial, pleasant anil\nprofitable. The kind of endeavor that\ncalls forth heart Interest and enthusiastic\nservice. Finding Just the right kind of\na jol\\\nThere's a practical and speedy way to\nget in touch with opportunity and chnosjc\na position that is worth while and holt|a\nencouragement and advancement for thu\nfuture.\nFor those who are trustworthy, capable\nand energetic the Want Columns contajl\nmany chances that lead to Jobs that an)\nsteady,  profitable  and   plertsnnt. 1\nThe beter grade of workers watch Th'o\nDailv News Want Ads. *\n'Empresses\nOF  THE  ATLANTIC   AND  OTHER\nSTEAMSHIPS\nMONTREAL.   QUEBEC   AND   LIVERPOOL\nVIA THE' SCENIC ROUTE TO EUROPE\nThousand   miles  on tho    St.   Lawrence    river,    the    shortest\njcean passage.     Leas than four days at sea.\nFirst Cabin $93.50 and  up.    Second   cabin  55:!.75 and  up.    Ono-\nClass-Cabln  (second  class)  JfiU-DO  and  up.    Third  class,   lowest\nrales on request.\nTickets and Information from any Railroad or Steamship Agoni\nor J. J. FORSTEH,  General Agent, 713 Second Ave., SKATTLV\n PAGE EIGHT\n(^ topi\n%%t Bail?' $tm.\nWEDNESDAY ....OCTOBER 16\nNELSON NEWS OF TBE DAY\nLord Aylmer of,Que\nHum,**. u\nBayjs nt the\nT. W. Llversedge of Crawford Bay Is\nat the Queens.\n\u25a0E. V. guckley, manager of the Queen\nmine. In among the gu-.sts at the Hume.\nHenry GlcgeTlch. tbe Kaslo merchant\nand mining ipaii, Is rcKlstorud at the\nHume...\nW. E. Zwlcky, manager of tho Rambler-Cariboo mine, is a guest at the\nBtiathcona.\nR. M. Lalb and J. K. Lalb, operators\nof a group of claims on Canyon and Cul-\ntUB creeks, arc guests at tho Grand\nCentral.\nW. Fleet Robertson, provincial mineralogist, who has .lust returned from a\nvisit to Trail, will leave this morning for\nVlctotia via Spokane.\nP. F. Horton of Salmo, ono of tho\nowners of tho Hudson Bay group, tin\nbi\" load carbonate property on Deoi\ncreek. Is at the Strathcona.\nThe committee on bovs' work will\nmeet tomorrow afternoon at 5 o'clock in\ntho association building to draw up a\nprogram for the juniors during tho fall\nand winter months.\nThe ladles of the Baptist church will\nhold an afternoon tea and sale of home\ncooking In Dr, Wolverton's office, Baker\nstreet, on Saturday afternoon and evening, Oct. 26, from 1 to Hi o'clock.\nFor the benefit of those wishing to\npurchase magazines or papers from the\nY.M.C.A. reading room when taken off\nthe file they may be had for half price.\nAlready several orders have been placed\non this basis.\nF. L. Scott and J. A. Craggie of Har\nrop yesterday booked nassage for Kng'\nland on the steamer Manretanla at the\ncity ticket office of tin* Canadian Pacific railway. They will sail from New\nYork on Oct. 25.\nfThore will bo a dancs on Friday night\nin tho Eagle hall under the auspices of\nthe Ladles' Auxiliary of the Ilrotherhood\nof Locomotive Ennineers. Tickets mav\nbo procured from members of tiie Order\nor at the door on the night of the dance.\nEmest H. Woolls, Patiee Desnoyei'3,\nFred L. Irwin. Andrew Williamson, William Pitts. Oeorge E. Stoll, Charles\nSaunders, Thomas Plsaereta, Horace Lu-\npolnte and Charles A. Watei man have\nregistered as householders on the elty\nvoters' list.\nTJiero will be a German meeting for\nprayer and praise In the NcpheloS'\nparlors of the Baptist church this evening at S o'clock. An address will bo\ngiven by Christian Landau of Winnipeg.\nTho service will be conducted by J. L.\nSimmers.\nThe past grands of officers of Queen\nCity Rebekah lodge are Invited to attend a reception to be given tomorrow\nafternoon by Miss Barker, 02\"! Vo-non\nstreet. In honor of Mrs. Lnmiham. president of the Rebekah assembly of British\nColumbia.\n\"There  will  be  a  reh-araal    for    both\nUnequalled for General  Use\nW. P. TIERNEY, General Sales Agent,\nNelson* B. C.\nCan shipped to all railway points.\nCROCKERY\nWe have dinnerware of all kinds\n)ii hand, Nine open stock patterns\nto choose from. Make the composition of your set to suit yourself or\ntill up   the  set  you  already  have\nOur China and Semi-Porcelain\nwares are of artistic design and\nJalnty decoration.   See them.\nCHINA HALL\nMUNRO & NELSON\nPhone A261\nS21 Baker street.      P. fl. Box ESS\nHOT WATER\nBOTTLES\nNo need to pay big prices for\nrubber goods.\nLook at these:\nNew      Fresh      Pure\nTwo-quart hot water bottles,\n$1.25 each.\nThree-quart hot water bottles,\n\u25a0H-GO each.\nCombination fountain fitting-,\n75c each.\nSomething new\u2014Pigs or foot\nwarmers, stone water bottles,\nunbreakable, $1.25 each.\nGuaranteed 2-tiuart hot wuter\nbottles, $2.00.\nGuaranteed 3-quart hot water\nbottieu, $2.50.\nRubber gloves, $1.00 pair.\nMall orders filled promptly.\nWm. Rutherford\nDruggist.\nMcCormick's\nAbernethy and\nSocial Tea\nBISCUITS\nIn Tins, 25c  Each.\nC. A, Benedict\nGrocer\n\u00abs GEM\nSelections, Orchestra\nLtibin Comedy\n\"A WESTERN COURTSHIP\"\nEdinn Comedy and Industrial\n\"MAPLE SUGAR INDUSTRY\"\n\"REVENGE IS SVYEET\"\nEssanay  Feature\nHER ADOPTED FATHER\nADMISSION   10s.\nResidences\nTor Sale\n$2,400 will purchase ^a five-\nroomed house, with bathroom, basement, hot water\nfurnace, and two lots, on\nObservatory street, close to\nStanley. $1,400 cash, balance\neasy terms.\n$2,500 will purchase a flvc-\nroomed house, with bathroom and three lots, on Rob-\nson street, close -to Stanley.\nTerms to arrange.\n$1,400 will purchase a four-\nroomed cottage, with bathroom, basement and one lot,\non Silica street. Terms: $500\ncash; balance easy terms.\n$3,000 will purchase a six-\nroomed house, with bathroom, basement and hot air\nfurnace; one lot, on Carbonate street. Terms: $1,000\ncash, balance to arrange.\nH. & N. Bird\nNelson, B. C.\nLow Prices Not New With Us\nFlour, 49's, any  brnmd '.'  $2,00\nDr. price's Baking ..Powder, 12-oz. '.ins  $ .40\nSugar,  20-lb.  sacks' .....!,..  $1.40\nBlue Ribbon Tea, per pound  $ .45\nTetley's Tea, por pound  $ -^o\nC. & S. and Empress Coffeo, per pc und     $ -40\n5 PER CENT DISCOUNT  FOR  CASH.\nTHE UNION GROCERY\nCor.  Hall  and  Baker Sts. Phone 178 *      Nelson, B.C.\nprincipals and chorus- of \"Hopp, Skipp\nand Jump\" at 7:15 o'clock this evening\nIn tbe Catholic parish hall. Tickets for\nthe performance, whlcb will be In aid of\ntbe public library, may be secured from\nany member of tbe cast.\nTbe staff of the Hume hotel laBt night\npresented W. C. Wells with a handsome\nsuit ease and a morocco leather dressing\ncase. At the same time George Benwell,\nthe new proprietor, who assumed pos-\nbesslon iast night, was presented with a\nwritten address of welcome.\nThe officers and members of Queen\nCity Rebekah lodge No. 16, I.O.O.P., are\nrequested to be present at a special\nmeeting tomorrow evening at 7:30 o'clock\nin I.O.O.P. hall to welcome Mrs. Lans-\nham, president of the Rybe'iah assembly\nof British Columbia, on  ber official visit.\nAuction Sale\nOi Household Furnit are\nAt the: Residence of P. M. Delamare.\nEsq., Second St., Fairview, will be con-\ntinucd today at 2 p. m.\nEverything must be sold this afternoon.\nTERMS   CASH.\nC. A. Waterman & Co.\nAuctioneer.\nOpera House, Nelson\nTONIGHT.\nVerna Felton\nAnd The\u2022\nAllen Players\nIn\n\"A Contented Woman\"\nPrices:    2\".c,  fiOc, 75c.\nSale al Poole's.\n' One Night Only '\nMONDAY, OCTOBER 21\nSpecial Kn^ngomenl of the\nOtto Weis' Royal\nHawaiian Musical\nComedy Company\nAn entertainment of Quality,\nunique nnd extraordinary In character. Comedy, songs, music and\nnative dancing, embracing the songs\nand music of all nations, rendered\nIn an unusual manner and with the\nnative instruments of each country.\nPrices;   BOc, 75c and \u26661.00.\nSale at Poole's.\nJUST THE THING FOR THESE   COLD  MORNINGS ANO  EVENINGS\nBoy a \"Perfection\" Oil Heater\nHEAT WHEN  YOU WANT IT\nAND WHERE YOU WANT fT\nNo odor, and costs  but four cento an hour.\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co. Ltd.\nWholesale and Retail Nelson B. C\nHAMILTON TORONTO VANCOUVER WINNIPEG\nson and A. Hogbcrg of Nelson who will\ngive a free public dance tomorrow evening to celebrate the Inauguration of tho\nnew management. Meyers Starland orchestra  will  be in  attendance.\nTho veterans arc requested to meet at\nthe armory tunlght at 8 o'clock to make\narrangements for a program for the\nwinter season. Out-of-town veterans In-\ntonj}l[|g to be present at the Trafalgar\nday concert which Is to bo given by the\nOverseas club on Monday are asked tu\nsend in their names to the secretary, A.\nE. Bennett.\nJohn Waldbeser, manager of the Emerald mine at Sheep creek, was at the\nStrathcona yesterday and will return to\nSalmo this morning. The cross cut tunnel at the property has reached a length\nof about 400 feet. R. W. Mifflin, secretary-treasurer of the company operating\ntin* mine, is also at the Strathcona. lie\nwill spend  today iu the city.'\nA meeting to which the general public.\nIs Invited will be held this evening nt H\no'clock In the Y.M.C.A. parlors In connection wilh the Literary and Debating\nsociety, and a cordial invitation to be\npresent Is extended to ull friends Inter-\nisted. An election'of officers will bo\nhold and tho winter program arranged.\nWilliam Rutherford, president of tho society,  will occupy Mie chair.\nA Jury will decide the action Hell va\nMotion, which is to be tried at tho supreme court sessions next week. An\norder tn this effect has been granted by\nJudge Thompson In* chambers on application of Fred C. Moffatt. -C. G. Beeston (Hamilton & Wragge) wns granted\nan order for tho reseating of letters of probate In the estate of Patrick J. Butler,\ndeceased.\nTickets for the Overseas club concert,\nwhicli will be held on Monday next m\nhonor of tlie anniversary of Trafalgar\nday, may be seeu'ed from Fred A.\nStarkey, S. H. Hoskins, O. J. Areher,\nthe Star Grocery, Fred Irvine & Co.,\nthe B. C. United Agencies, the Variety\nStore and the following members of thu\ncommittee; D. O. Thomas, A. E. Bennett. W. F. Loveland. Chris. Cooper,\nCharles  Harrlmnn,   R.   V.   Venables  and\nSplit\nSecond\nTiming Watches\nMade by Famous Swiss Manufacturers\nA1G slzo heavy 18-ltarat case,\nfitted .with a high-grade Agassis, split second, talcing the time of\ntwo contestants to 1-5 of a second.\nPrice  $2-25.00\nA 12 size '14-karat case, fitted\nwith a celebrated Touchon &\nCo.\u2014one of the world's best.\nPrice $175.00\nThese arc complete wilh minute\nregisters and are absolutely perfect in construction and ns time\npieces.\nJ. 0. Patenaude\nImporter of .Swiss Watches.\nStarland Theatre\nlayer's .starland Orchestra\nEntire' *Ch'urige    at 'Pictures    and\nVaudeville\nOAKES 4 JOHN30N\nIn \"C0U8IN BOB,\" Comedy Sketch\nSinging and Dancing\nRAYMOND, THE JUGGLER.\nPICTURES.\nThe Great Military Feature in Two\n.. Keels\nTHE  BATTLE  OF TWO  PALM9\nFLOWER OF THE FOREST\nChildren, 10c\u2014Adults, 15c.\nStandard Furniture\np. J, CmRLSON, Undertaker\nUndertaken Embalmers\nand Funeral Directors\nTho finest an(' most tip to date\nundertaking parlors and chapel In\nInterior of B.C. Lady attendant for\nwomen and children.\n\"Day  Phone 85\nNight Phones 252 and L64\nBALED OATl\nSTRAW\nJust received, another car of nlc*a|\nbright Oat Straw for Litter. Mulching J\nor for pitting potatoes.\nThe Brackman Kerl\nMilling Co., Limited!\nWaters & Pascoe\nBuilders, etc.,  Nelson,  B.C..\nKOOTENAY LAKE 8ASH AND\n'   DOOR  FACTORY\nDoors, windows and mouldings of\nall kinds In stock or made to order.\nLime, cement and bricks for sale.\nESTIMATES GIVEN\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.\nDaily News Want Ads, get results.\nThe Old FavoriteslAre Here Again~-A Fresh Shipment of\nNeilsdn 9s Chocolates\nmmmmm.mamm^m.^mB.mmVMaMm\nTHE HIGHEST IDEAL Of' FASTJ DIOUS LOVERS OF RICH, SATISFY ING CONFECTION IS REALIZED IN\nNEILSON'S CHOCOLATES\nThe craving for one more lingers,- because their Irresistible charm of flavor  Is   never  forgotten!     That's   why\nthey are \"The Sweetest Story  Ey er   Told.\"\nWE ARE EXCLUSIVE AGENTG.\nThe Poole Drug Co.\nTHE REXALL STORE\nWE APPRECIATE YOUR PATRQ NAGE. ALWAYS AT YOUR SERVICE\nH. \"Hlllam. The program will include\nsours, music and speeches. Canadian\nPacific -railway men can secure tickets\nfrom Mr. Harrlmnn In the superlpiuii<\ndent's offlee.\nThe social committee ot tho Y.M.C.A.\nmet last night arid decided to hold the\nfirst social of  the' year,   which will\nheld  In  the  form of an  open  houai:,  on\n\"      Tho program will take the font\nOct.\nHalloween Social evening. A good\nmusical program is. also being arranged\na\u00ab a part of the. evening's entertainment.\nEff6rtH arc biitng (U)ade to have several\nfortune tellers present.\nApplications to ' purchase land hnvo\nbeen received as follows- at the government office: Levi Bent of Cranh.uok,\nland at Kuskiiiiopk; W. J. Devltt of\n.Nelson, land at t?ar*;lty creek; J. W.\nRossiter nf Vhik onver. land at Boulder\ncreek bridge; 1<\\ It. Blochberger ot van*\ncouver, land at Murphy crack; Ttinodoic\nWink of Van coil vur, land at Muri-liy\ncieuk;Henrv \/.Itinens uf Vancouver, lurid\nat Murphy creek. All the land Is In tho.\n.Nelson district.\nA quiet \"but happy event took place\nyesterday afternoon at the residence of\nCapt. and Mrs. William Seaman, Vennirt\nstreet, when Capt. Walter Henry Wright\nof Sloean City and Miss Rose Ellen\nWilliams of Edgewood, B.C., were united\nIn wedlock. Rev, Charles W. King, of\nthe Nelson Baptist church, tied the nuptial knot Mrs. William Williams, the\nbride's mother, gave the bride away and\nthe signatory witnesses were J. L. Pad-'\ntlow and   Mrs.   S.-.imnn.     Immediately ful-\n\u25a0p\nA Lecture\nOn\nChristian Science\nWill be given in trinity methodist church\nMonday, October 21\nAt 8 p.m.\nBY\nVIRGIL O. STRICKLER, C. S. D..,\nMember of the board of Isctureship of Tho Mother Church, Tho First\nChurch of Christ Scientist   in   Boston,  Mass.\nADMISSION .FREE\nEVERYBODY \\VELCOME\nSecure Your Own Home\nWe can give you' a good selection of modern properties on easy terms.\n5-room  cottage on  Victoria  street  near   Kootenay  street.   Price,  (2300.\n7-room house on Cedar street near Vernon  street.    Price. $2800.\nGroom house on Water street near Codar  street.    Price,  $1400.\nGroom   house on   Hoover street near Hall street.    Price, $3000.\n5-room  house on  Silica street near  Hall street.    Price, $3850,\nT-\nE. B. McDermid\n!.\n503 Baker st;,\n>  i\nNelson, B. q.\nlowing tlie closing benediction of the\nwedding coieihony a telegram arrived\nfrom the bridegroom's home folks It)\nPortland, Ore., and signed by his brother,\nH. W. Wright, which read: \"Congratu-\n\"atlons from all and heartfelt weieoniu\no our new sister.\" After'1 the ceremony\na wedding breakfast was se.ved by' the\nhostess, Mrs. Seaman. Mr. and Mrs,\nWright took yesterday evening's Canadian Pacific railway train and steamer\nKonnliujtou for Edge wood, where they\nwill spend a brief Honeymoon.\nBelieving that Herman Wilson, ono of\nthe rneti who shot a guard nt the New\nWestminster penitentiary during an attempt to escape, was a man of the same\nname who was In the Nelson provincial\nJuil for si** months *_arly this year p lor\ntn being sentenced to It) years and lashes\nat Fernie bit a hold-up charge' W. K.\nJurvls, warden of the local juil, wrote\ntc  the const  for information  und  heard\nestenlay that his surmise Was correct.\nAinatt'iiis and thoughtless hunters aru\ninking tlie mountains around Nelson,\nespecially on Sundays, extremely dangerous to human life. Last Sunday, for ex-\nuhipl.e, two men on their way down from\ndoing assessment work on' Toad mountain properties were twice shot at,\nhaving narrow escapes eaeli time. Tltoy\nwere apparently mistaken for' deer by\nwould be iihnrods. Sovoial others havo\nhail somewhat Similar experiences within the last few weeks.\nNEW SCHEDULE\nIN EFFECT MONDAY\nAddition     to   Kaslo\u2014Nelson     Service\nWill be Made Week Earlier Than\nFirst   Proposed.\nEffective next Monday, Oct. 21, intend of Oct. 27 as first proposed, the.\nsteamer Nelson will .inaugurate the\nnew schedule for the extra boat on,\nKoolenay lake that will supersede tho\npresent' Nelson-Crawford bay service.\nThe steamer will leave Nelson for\nKaslo via Grey's creek and Crawford\nbay at 7 a. hi. Monday, Wednesday\nand Friday, and return from Kaalo;\nleavlug there at, 6 n. m. for Nelson via\nGrey's creek and Crawford b^y ori\nTuesday, Thursday and Saturday, On\nsouthbound trips she will connect with\nthe steamer Kuskanpok 'eustbound at\nl'roctor.    '\nNo definite arrival times at Nelson\n.and Kaslo can be stated as they will\nlargely depend on the amount of\nwork for the steamer to do. This\nsteamer will relieve the Kokanee as\nfar as possible of her freight shipments, and will also handle the deck\nbarges on the- lake with ore shipments. Tho steamer will carry malls\nonly   for Grey's  creek  and Crawford\nbay.    Passengers, freight and express!\nwill be carried on all Mpa.\nThis will give a trl-weekly service\nby this steamer between Nelson and\nKaslo and Crawford bay points and\n13 oxpected to assist materially tho.\nKokanee and enable the latter vessel\nto perform her regular U'lps on\nschedule lime. As soon as the Moyie\nhas completed repairs in tlie shipyard, she will replace the steamer Nelson on this run. This will bo some\ntime next week, in the meantime,\nthe- steamer Nelson will be UBed for\nthe- service.\nSKILLED MECHANICS NO\nLONGER IN LABORER'S CLASS\n'Hy pally News Leased Wire.*!\nOTTAWA, Oil. ir.-It Is announced that\ncontemplated civil servlee reforms Include the placing of skilled mechanics\nunder the control or the civil service\ncom miss I on. There are n large number\nof these mechanics in the government\nemploy and they are classed as laborers.\nAuction Sale\nAt Iho Auction Room, GOO Ward St.,\nFriday afternoon at 2 o'clock, and will\nconsist of extension and other tables,\nsideboards, massive brass bedsteads,\npiano, carpets, pictures, writing desks,\ncounters, typewriter, cash register, a\nquantity of new tinware, buffet, rocking chairs, etc.\nTERMS CASH.\nW. CUTLER\nAuctioneer.\nSummer Is Gone!\nNow's the time to have your chitrf-j\nneys, stoves, pipes, etc., attended to.i\nCall up. f |\nVACUUM CLEANING CO,\nPhons 19 Box 166.1\nQueen Studio]\nEstablished 1899\nP.O. Box 206 Phons 180|\nthe oldest\nand best\nEYES\nTheir Treatment And The Fitting <\nGlasses Is My Only Occupation.\nNo Drugs, No Operations, No Danger.\nI use the McCormick system, which I\nhas proved that elaborate - machines I\nand those who use them In eye-worlt I\nuro humbugs, that most If not al|, I\neye diseases are mythical, thn,t drug*? ]\nafe\" of no permanent value, and that\nboth drugs and operations are unnecy- j\ncssary and dangerous.\nHalf Hour Consultations\nfree during remuinder of tills month. I\nHours:    10-12, l-li.   please do  not j\ncall at other hours except by arrangement.\nDr. F. E. McConnelll\nOphthalmologist\nOver Starland Theatre.\nAnnablo Block After Nov. 1.\nDaily News Want Ads, get results.\nTime Is\nMoney\nYour business ability is often JudBedl\nby your punctuality In keeping yourffl\nappointments. Don't carry a watchS\nthat does not keep good tlmo when']\nyou can hnvo It repaired and regulated hy lis at short notice and at\nsmall cost. Wo guarantee our wntcfifj\nwork for ono year nnd solicit mail t\ndors.\nJ. J. Walker\nJeweler and  Optician\nBaker Street Nelson, B.\nExDert Watch Renairing\nPlumbing and Heating\nADVICE\nFor Nothing\nCall and see us before you build\nyour bathroom. \\ u\n6. C. Plumbing & Heating Co.\nVictoria St., Near Opera House.\nTelephone 181.\nFrench Dry\u201e Cleaning\nD.TEINO  AND   FBESSINB,   STEAM\n,   ,\"\/ .gAJrf'ET'CrjEAM^fl.        |\nSO years' experience.\nSpecial rates, washing for hotels, \u25a0 restaurants and steamers.      i   - -\nWork done on short notice.   AH won\nguaranteed first class. v\nTHE   KBLSOr!   STEAM   1AUNDRT\nMl-\u00abB-605 Vernon St., Cnr. JosopDIno St\n\u201e NELSON. B. C.\nP. O. Bo* \u00ab. Telephone lie\nPAUL NIPQV. Proprietor,\nA\nOvercoat\nEmbodying all\nthe niceties\nof tailoring\nand stefjing\nquality which\ndistinguish\nFIT-\n\"* REFORM\nBSHHI\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1912_10_16","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0385029","@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":"1912-10-16 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1912-10-16 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Daily News","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0385029"}