{"@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":"40cef7fd-5ec9-477a-85f4-0cefcab01a67","@language":"en"}],"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2020-02-19","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1918-11-18","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0389184\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" *cf*\nThe bally News bu the larfest elr*'!\nleulatlon of any dally newspaper Iti ;\n{Canada In proportion to the population j\nlet Its heme town.\n'* ...,.\u2666..\u00bb\u2666...\u2666 i\nI \\swrrrrt-rrr.-rrr.'w.'rf\u00bb*-.*rsm 1\nThe Dally News carries the full night ]\nleased wire news service of Canadian 1\nPress, Limited, which Includes the As-J\ni soclated Press service.\nVOL. 17 No. 18*\nNELSON, B. C, MONDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 18, 1918      \/\n50c PER MONTH\nS-ksSSS\nBelieve Brussels Free\nofEnemg\nFRENCHENTER\nALSACE FORTS\nBritish and Americans\nMarch Ahead as\nHuns Retire\n(By Dnlly News Loused Wire.)\nWITH THE ALLIED ARMIES IN\nPRANCE AND BELGIUM, Nov. 17.\u2014\nTies allied armies hnvo begun their\nmarch toward Germany. Tho Belgian\nforces have already occupied Antwerp,\nwhich was evacuated by tho enemy on\nFriday and Immediately tnlion over.\nBrussels was expected to bo free of\nGerman soldiers today.\nTho withdrawal from Antwerp was\naccomplished without untoward Incident anil'when the correspondent visited the city today tho people were in\ntho midst of a celebration for their\ndeliverance.\nBurgomaster Max hns left Brussels\nfor Ghen to visit the king.\nBASEL, Nov. I\".\u2014French troops on\nSaturday entered Oolmar and Miilhnii-\nson, two of Germany's groat fortresses\nin Alsnce, according to a despatch received here. There wns no trouble In\ncither place.\nPopulation En.hu.iajrtics\nPARIS, Nov. i\".\u2014Fronch troops havo\noccupied Mulhauson, Sedan, Munster\nand Altltlrcli, according lo the French\nofflclnl communication Issued this evening.   Tlio text reads:\n\"The   Fren   harmy   resumed   this\nmorning Its forward march to occupy\ntho regions formerly occupied by lire\nenemy.   Gen. Hlrselinuor, commanding\ntho 2nd nrmy, made his solemn entry\n\/ln'o*,M|iJhaiisen,.iT,i(>ri, txsyt great, en*\niliiisiasm nmiing tne population.\n\"Sedan, Gravetot ami  forts  In Urn\n| south of Mots, Munsler and Altklrch\nhave Ireen organised.\"\nThe text of tho communication roi\nI lows;\n\"The French nrmy. quilting the con\n| quered positions on ihe dny uf the or*\nI mistice, resinned this morning Its for\nI ward march to occupy lire regions\nevacuated by tlio enemy. Crossing tlio\nline on tho wholuc front, uur troops\npenetrated Belgium nml the annexed\n],. nvliices, Alsitce-Lorntino. At the\npresent time there Is not n single one\nof the enemy on our nrrtloiiul territory.\nTho liberated population everywhere\ngrcetetl the liberators enthusiastically.\nOn our left wc havo gono beyond Mtrt\nrienburg, Covin und Fiimny. crossing\nthe Scmoy niul reaching Carlgnan after\nhaving ocupled the towns of Bouillon\nund Sedan.\nPopular).   Enthusiastic,\n\"in  Lorraine,  our advanco  giiiirdp\nare In Gruvolotto. In the foils trr Iho\nsouth ot Met\/ uml nl Morhnnge nnrl\nDlcttso.\n\"In Alsace wc hnve reached Dunon\nand Schlrmcck. We are progressing\nbetween Salnlc Marie mix Mines nnrl\nSohlestadL |Turther south we havo\npushed forward to Colmur. ellyond\nhere we hnvo Diebnurt anrl Clrey,\nCbuleau SniinH, Minister, Cernoy rind\nAltklrch, which have become French\nagain.\n\"At nono Gen. lllrscliniier, commanding the -ml nrmy, made, ul the\nheird of his troops, solemn entry Into\nMrilliaiisen. Our troops have received\nthe heartiest welcome Into the town\nwhich Is mngnlflccntly beflngeil. Tlio\nWholo population hy iinuninious acclamation expressed their iinshirkcnble\nloyally to Franco.\"\nBritish  Move Ahead.\nLONDON, Nov. 17\u2014 Tho official an-\nlounccment of tho advance of the ailed armies Bays:\n\"Gen. Plummet's Snd army and Gen.\nBawllnBon's 4th army today com-\nnenced their advance, In\" accordance\nrvlth the terms of the armistice, In\nconjunction with tlie allied armies.\n\"Attho end of the day's mnrch, our\nlilvanro troops hnd approximated the\nInc of Cerfontalne, Pry, I'leton, Ln\nLrrulvlen', <jotgnlcs< '.Englllell ami\nsouth of Flnove.\"\nPAItlS, Nov. 17.\u20148:6S p.m.\u2014The\n\\merlonn 3rd army has Ireen deslg-\nlaterl \"the army of occupation.\" It\nivill be under the Immediate direction\nGen. Pershing, the commander\n;htef, who will be In command of Ihe\nSmcricnn positions In occupied tertl-\nory.\nThe 3rd nrmy will consist of (he 1st,\n!nd, 3rd. 4th, 5th, 26th, 32nd, 4-nil,\n:9th nnd 80th divisions which divided\nimong tho 3rd and 4th ;corps, wWI\nonslst for the present of about 2,10,01)0\nicn. It will be commanded by MnJ.-\nlen. Dlckmnn.\nPerilling'. Column. Advance.\nWITlt fHB AMERICAN AH MY IN\nRANCH, Nov. 17.\u2014Gen. Pershing's\nnccn moved fniHnnl early today In\nThese Men Headed Provincial\nCommittees in Loan Campaign\nAGAINST LEIBKNECHT; EBERT\nI\n(Hy Daily News Leased Wire.)\nAMSTERDAM, Nov. 17.\u2014Berlin\nnewspapers and despatches reaching\nhere indicate that there Is great confusion in Germany over the powers to\nhe given tho various committees. The\ndespatches Indicate that there in chaos\nin government affairs, owing to the\nformation hy tho Spnrtaeus group of\na new political party which has reduced the strength of the Independent\nSocialists-,. How strong this new party\nwill he Is nol known.\nThe so-called executive council of\nthe workmen's and soldiers' council\nhns folowed the Berlin garrison's demand by \"temporarily\" rescinding Its\norder for the formation of a civilian\nred guard. There is reason to believe\nthat the executive council, which\nBoron Yon Berfeld was forced tn leave\nbecause he was considered too radical,\nIs still mon. Socialistic and radical\nthan the larger council, from which\nIt has its committee.\nSoldiers Oppose Bolshevik!\nThat the hulk of the soldiers themselves refuse to countenance Bolshevlki methods again hus been demonstrated nt a meeting In the reichstag building of delegates from all the\nsoldiers' ennncils In Berlin and delegates of similar councils elsewhere.\nThe Berlin soldiers aro united firmly\nagainst Dr. Uebkneehl. They declare\nthat he had been thrown out of the\nbarracks owing to his repeated efforts\nto deliver Incltive speeches.\nPremier Albert In addressing the\nmeeting declared that a vast majority\nof the people supported  the govern\nment. The government had nothing\nto fear from the troops at the front,\nbut that many men from rear positions who are hurrying homo are\ncausing disorder In Baden and Wurt-\ntemburg.\nThe premier added that the United\nStates would help feed the Germans,\nbut that order must be maintained.\nTo Hold Election Soon\nCOPENHAGEN, Nov. 17.\u2014Tho Gfer-\nman government expects to hold elections for a national convention In\nJanuary, pays a Berlin despatch received here.\nFood for Germany\nLUN DO N, Nov. 17.\u2014The Bri t Ish\ngovernment is arranging for tho departure to the United States of a number of German vessels for the purpose\nof bringing to Germany foodstuffs\nwhich the allies will permit Germnny\nto receive.\n         ' IRl! I\nGrand Dukes Abdicate\nCOPENHAGEN, Nov. 10.\u2014Duke\nCharles Edward of Saxe-Cobourg und\nQothfl and Grand Duke I-Ylederlcli\nPram i V, of Mecklenburg-Schwerln\nhave abdicated.\nRevolutionaries in Battle\nLONDON, Nov. It!.\u2014Renter's Amsterdam correspondent, telegraphing\nThursday, reports a collision near the\ncavalry barracks between evolution-\nnrlea and the military and police. The\ncorrespondent says three persons were\nkilled  and ciKht   wounded.\nALLIES' FOOD\nCampaign End. With Whirlwind Rush\nof Subscriptions to tho Victory\nLoan.\nIlly Dully News Loosed Wire.)\nTORONTO, Nov. 17.Whllo rro official\nfigures linvu boon glvon out of Hie\nClosing dny of the victory lonn cum\npalgn rrnrl nono will Ire given out un\nIII the big mooting lu bo held here\nMonday evening, everyone connected\nwllh the control organisation Is absolutely certain lhat tho limn will i royi\nto hnve been oversubscribed Iry rr con\nsldcrulrlo sum, probably between ?.\"0,*\nooo.ooo and Moo.ooo.ooo.\nThe Ontarlno organisation Is purtle\nularly sanguine of tire showing mado\nby this province.   Commenting o>i Ih.\ncarhpalgn on Saturday, a ll. Wood,\nchnlriiiirn of Ontario, said:\n\"Siiirrrrlny wns such rr Irrrsy liny\niliruuitlioiii our orngunisatlon Hint no\nunit wns nblo lo serul complete returns, mnny were nnirlile lo report rrl\nnil. It Is quite evident, however,\nllinl nil records fur orre rlrry will he broken ns u|i|,llerilluns wero pouring m in\nrill officer, nml through canvassers.\n\"We ure receiving reports showing a\nvery decided Improvement in the sup*\nport of iho Innn Irr soma German com\nniunlUcs which lnst year produced little or tiotliini;.\n\"fourteen moro units wired Hint they\nhnil gono over tin* lop and won their\nflags, bringing the total number up to\n,',1 nut ot a total r,r to units. The units\nwhich won Ihelr flags on Saturday\nwere: L'liy of Ottawa, Brant, .North\nWaterloo, South Waterloo, I'lontenuo,\nWentworth, l'erth, Uiv.v, Elgin, Hosting*! Hruce, Norfolk, I'rlnee Edward\nrrnrl N'lppisslnK.\n\"When the tintil returns ure in we\nexpect practically every city nml county In Ontario will have raised Its quota!\nnnrl won lis ling.\nComploto returns will not Ire\ncelveil until Monthly nfleriioon and it\nwill bo nil wo cun tin in havo Ihohl\nliilniliiteii nnrl hnve litem ready tn re\nport nt Munsey hnil Monday even'ng.\nterritory Just abandoned by the Her-\niiuiii troops. Ou the \"lii line between\nMoii.on unil Thiriconrt, lying from the\nregion of Sorbin trr the south of .Mctz,\nthe Irops hnve been s>lntlunccl to uwrrit\norders for the ndvrrnee rrnrl rrt :\u25a0:,;<> llrls\nmorning the patrols marched out, nut\nIn line of buttle, but in columns' nlong\nHie high roads.\nThe American forces, following on\ntho heels of the homeward hound Germans, nre traveling libnilt 12 miles\nench dny,\nBests Lnst Year's Total by $3,500,000\u2014\n. Edmonton  Raises $2,600,000\u2014 Hard\nHit by Flu.\nIlly Dally Nows Leased Wire.)\nEDMONTON, Alia., Nov. IT.- Tire\ntotal subscription of lire province of\nAlberta to the Victory innn wus in\nround numbers $18,(00,000, being\n$3.r,0iJ,0Hr) In excess rrf Its objective of\n11.\",,000,0011. Last year's contributions\ntotaled M7.ooo.ooo.\nThe report for northern Alberta is\nover S 1,700,000. It is expected Hint returns from far outlying districts will\nshow thnt Hie $:>,00(l,U0i> objective was\nraised.\nThe city nf Edmonton's totnl victory\nloan subscription wns $2,600,000, being\n$100,000 In excess of Its objective nnd\nentitling the city to u flog and two\ncrowns.\nThe city and northern part nf the\nprovince linn been hampered in its victory lonn campaign by Hie Influonsa\nepidemic which has Ireen and is of\npeculiar virulence, with a very lnrgo\npercentage nf final cases.\nfa. I\nAWAY*PROPERTY\nGreat  Quantities  of   Loot  Are   Being\nStolen by Retreating Huns, Say\nAviators.\nWITH Till-. AMERICAN FORCES\nIX PRANCE, Nov. 17.\u2014Great (piantl-\ntles of civil Inn property are being carried nwny by Iho retreating Germans,\naccording to Llout M. K. Lockwootf\nnnd Lieut I>. C. Hebe of tho 50th nlr\nsquadron, who returned to the American front today after being prlBonors\nIn the hands of tho Gormans for 10\ndays. The aviators wvrv whot down\nNov. 4 In the region of Tan nay nnd\nw%tc released by the Qorm'amJ on\nThursday.\nPillage Brussels.\nLONDON, Nov. 17.\u2014Confirmation\nIiiih been reeeived here that Germans\naro pillaging or destroying property\nIn the suburbs of Urtissels, Although\ntho movement Ih in no sct.se revolutionary It Ih regarded OS possible Hint\nallied military steps will he necessary\nto enforce the atmlstlCO.\nAdVlcel reeeived in London today\nnny Hint the entry uf the Itelirlan It Ing\nnnd (|in-eii into nrtiMiMs lihs been postponed,\n(By Dully News- Leased Wire.)\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Nov. 17.\u2014\nAlthough official figures will not\nbe obtainable until tomorrow,\nChairman W. H. Malkin of tho\nBritish Columbia Victory loan\ncommittee tonight made the statement that this province, according to known results in hand and\nfrom telenraphic advicos, would\nshow contributions to tho Victory\nloan of an amount oxeccding $35,-\n000,000. The quota for this province was $22,000,000.\nOf the amount raised Vancouver subscribed $15,000,000.. Nearly\n100 points in British Columbia\nwon honor flags. Available figures show that one in fivo subscribed and that the per capita\nsubscription was $100.\nDR. OTTO IS APPOINTED\nAUSTRIAN FOREIGN MINISTER\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nCOPENHAGEN,   Nov.   J7.\u2014Dr  Otto\nban been appointed Austrian  foreign\nminister, according to \u00bb* despatch received here.\nGETS LOAN TOTAL\nComes   Across   in   Mighty   Whirlwind\nDrive During Last Two Days\n\u2014Flu   Demoralized  Work\n(By Dally News Leased Wire)\nUEGINA, Sask., Nov. 17.\u2014Sttslcnl-\nehewan has eome across, ln a mighty\nffort during the last two days lo\nivcrcomo the handicap caused by demoralisation of tho organisation from\nInfluenza, the province has attained\nits objective nf $22,000,000 and fnr\nexceeding Its official allotment of\nSli-.OOO.OOO. .Subscriptions officially\nreported as in the bands of divisional\nofficers amounted Saturday night tn\nalmost $18.000,0011, wllh estimates of\nbusiness in ihe bands of the several\nhundred of local district organisations\nof close to $.*.0u0,0((0. By the tlmo all\nthese outlying districts have reported\nthe f^.000,000 objective will have\nbeen passed. The banner city of tho\nprovince Is Regina with over Jll.fiOO,-\n000 and the banner division Iteglna\nwith over ?7.000,000.\nTO\nBOLSHEVIK!\nRumor Says Wilaon Threatened Break\nIn Armistice  But Washington\nDenies It,\n(Ily Dally News Leased Wire.)\nQOPEiVHiAGMN, Nov. J7,--Aecord-\ninff to a Berlin despatch to the Jler-\nlingske TItlende, President Wilson has\nInformed tho Gorman govern men! that\nmaintenance of law nnd order Is n\nprerequisite of the armistice and that\nif the Russian Bolshevlki representatives are received lu lierlln the armistice' agreement will be dissolved,\nFASHINGTON, Nov. 17.\u2014It was authoritatively stated tonight that Germany has tint been Informed by President Wilson that the nrmlstice v\u00bb?.t bo\nrenounced If tho ttilftlmin Bolshevlki\nrepresentatives are received in Berlin.\nCOPENHAGEN, Nov. 10.\u2014Friday\nafternoon's edition of Hie Vorwaerts\nof Berlin declared that the report was\ntrue that the German fleet was ordered out ou Oct. L'S for it final battle\nwhich was to be fought until the lust\nship was sunk.\nThe pan-Germans believed that such\na battle would reanimate the Herman\npeople with Iho spirit of I DM,\nIt Is said that the order to thu fleet\nspoke merely of a \"maneuver cruise,\nhut thu report that a sacrificial battle\nwas intended spread like wild fire. A\ngeneral mutiny followed. \"This,\" suyi\nthe Vorwaerts, \"was the real spark\nlhat kindled the revolution.\"\nThe  number   of  persons    killed     in\nBorlin since the revolution broke out\nis said to be about  100.\nHAMILTON HAS 18 MILLIONS\n(Hy Dally News Leased Wire.)\nHAMILTON, ont., No 17,\u2014The Victory loan campaign closed here Saturday and ft   was announced  that  tho\ntolul  would  bo Ubvul  $18,000,000,\nI\nBut Enemy Nations Must Not Starve\u2014\nVictory Imposes Obligations, Says\nFood   Controller.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Nov. 17.\u2014British Wireless\nService.\u2014John B. t'lines. British food\ncontroller, writing in the Sunday Times\nsays:\n'\u25a0One oi tbe problems which He he-\nfore Great Britain and her allies in\nthe immediate future Is the feeding\nof the destitute and almost staining\nmasses on the continent of Europe,\nThere Is no doubt that the condition\nof the enemy countries anil some of\nthe neutral countries is almost un iho\nbonier of starvation. Tills condition\nIs one which we cannot offord to ignore. Victory as well as war Imposes\nobligations on us.\n\"ll Is a satisfaction to tne to have, lu\nconjunction with Mr .Hoover. M, Boret\nand Slgtior Srospl, set up the litter*\nallied food council through which we\nhave been able to provide food fur tho\nallies and which now can be used in\narrange supplies fen- .ecuvcred territories and, lastly, for enemy countries.\nOur allies and the recovered terlr-\nlories will certainly have the first\nclaim on our attention.\n'Nevt week I hope to discuss the\nwhole situation with .Mr. HoOVCl anil\nthe other food controllers at a meeting\nof the interallied council.\"\nLOSTPROVINCES,\nBEATTY MEETS\nIN HAL\nConference  on   Armistice   I.   Held   on\nB oard  Flagship Queen Elizabeth\nin Firth of Forth\nLONDON, Nov. 17.\u2014Vlce-Admlral\nSir- David Beatty, commander ot lliu\ngrant] fleet, rcccivod Admiral Mtiurei;\nniul thf other German natal iti'iegaU'-r\nrrriurll'rl   111,,   (lagtllln   Queen   Kllzribetlt\nlii ih   iiiih i,i j'.iiiii, Scotland, i'rl-\nduy ovonlnff,\nTho German i-nilscr ECcnegtburg,\ncarrying the delegate., arrived at tho\nplace selected In the afternoon, when\nAdmiral Mcurer nnd lire delegates)\nwere tali,'n in ihe Queen IStliabetfa by\n.i destroyer, Tin. Herman minimi wan\n\"pipped\" aboard tlto flagsulp'g quarter dock, whoro Ire nml Hie othor acr-\nniirii wer,. received liy rjummudore Hubert ilrirrul and escorted lo Admiral\nl*ontt' sal,In, whoro the conference,\nlamed until Hie early linum ot Saturday morning.\nAdmiral Morrrcr aat uppoaltu Admiral\nuently, who bad fronting him a model\nrf lite battlo cruiser Lion, a momenta\not bin famous flagship, while on the*\nI'niilii wull rrt Ills back was a tine pic\ntin-,. \u201er Nelson. Tho Herman civilian]\ndelegate, remained aboard lire Kon-\nIgsl rg,\n'I'll, conference was resumed .Saturday and was conciudad Saturday evening. Among Admiral Meurer's stuic\nwere a Zeppelin commander and a sub*\nmarina   \u2022 mmander.\nL-tflf..\nFrance Celebrates Liberation of Al.ac.\nand Lorraine\u2014 Porncare Speaks of\nYears of Struggle\n(lty Dally Newa Leased Wire.)\nI'.utis, Nov. IT.\u20141're.ldent l'oln\ncore, speaking nt today's cclobrntlon\nover the return tu Franco of .\\l-ncoj\nrrnrl Lorraine, wild those provinces bad\nbeen awaiting In silence tbe rnvalii'iilng\nnf sleeping Justice.\nHeiniany, by hero declaration uf war,\nhe said, bud liberated the lr,trrli from\ntho coercion to which they were con\n\u25a0trained to submit through their jovr\not pence rrnrl horror of bloodshed. Tbe\nCountry ami the army had passed\nHiroiiisii four years of alternate hope\numl dejection. Tho nation bird seen\ndeath pluck tbr' flower of its louth,\nbut nothing bad broken Its will to\nvanquish, i Perseverdnct) and energy\ninni finally been rewarded and Alsace*\nLorraine had agnlii become irerrch.\nM. I'olncaro praised thr' sagacity\nrillrl r-rrerrty of Premier Heiirurs Cletlr-\nciiecrru, who hnd worked lor tlio llb-\noi'irllnn of the captive provinces. The\npremier declined that Hie forces if\ntbo allies had wo normal glory on land\nund sea In Ihelr struggle for n common Ideal. Ho ended wllb nn oxprcs.\nslinr nf reverence trr rthoflo who bud\ndied. *^\nLABOR STANDS\nBY LLOYD GEORGE\nllt.v Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLANDON, Nov. 17.\u2014At a meet-\nNing of laboritcs held today George\nN. Barnes, member of the war cabinet, announced that ho could best\nserve labor by remaining with tha\ncoalition. The nation, Mr. Barnes\nsaid, must have the highest standard of life and the high.lt stand-\nards of production. Happily, he\nadded, tho cnergie. of mon no\nlonger would bo employed in cm-\nMm i engines of destruction.\nThe meeting adopted a resolution\nol confidonco in tlto government.\nYOUNGEST GENERAL IS ON\nWAY HOME TO WINNIPEG\nNKW YORK, Nov. 17.\u2014The Megan-\ntie of tho White Star line, which hits\nI i In tbe service ol the British gov*\nbrnment us a transport since the war\nwas declared In Hill, arrived In port\ntonight with 113 passengers, among\nwhom was Hen. Cyril Critchloy,\nK.A.K., who is said to be tlie youngest itoiiernl lu service. He Is on his\nwiry homo to Winnipeg after serving\nIn ihe British army In nil Its branches\nrlrrtltiK Hie entire wnr.\n(Ion. Critchloy Is lbs- than 30 yenrs\nolrl nml bus boon decorated with the\nI1..S.11. and sevoral other rleeoratlofis\nfor valor. For the past year he has\nhrrrl charge of the llrltlsh nlr service,\nhaving ncted ns Instructor at various)\nHiitlsli Hying muis,\n PACE TWO\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nMONDAY, NOVEMBER, 18, 1818\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhere the Traveling Publio May Obtain Sup.rior Accommodation.\nLlc.n.e No. 10-1288\nA la Carte Table d'Hot.\nService Un.xcelled.\nSpecial  Summer  Sunday  Dinner,\n\u25a01.00\nTea Room open dally, 10 a. m. to\nMidnight.\nMusic and Dancing.\nIces, Ice  Cold  Drinks, Light Refreshments,\nAfternoon Tea, 3 to 5.\n25c\nHUME\u2014H. .1. Morris, B. S. Duns,\nVancouver; Allan 11. Rogers, Boston;\nMrs. .Bruce White and son, Skow-\nliegen, Wn.; G. Watt. Balfour; Charles\nLee, Spokane; C. IA.rchlbald, Lucius\nW. Itlnyro, Sulmo; Mrs. Mackay,\nLondon, England; W. J. Hay, Winnipeg; A. Trannorreor; Miss SaRrlum,\nNelson; Mrs. Pearl Brewve, Miss\nEdith ICmerson, Spokane; W. II.\nRboinbcrg, Benton; R. Wrilnistoy,\nCreston; W. A. Parrott, Montreal; W.\nA. Tlirutchley; Nell McCnllum,, Grand\nForks; H. A. Illllhoitse, Winnipeg;\nA. C. Mosker, W. 0. Moor, Midway.\nQueen's Hotel\nEuropean    and    American    Plan.\nSt.am Heat in Ev.ry Room.\nA. LAPOINTE, Proprietor.\nQUEENS\u2014A. Leaf, Slocnn City;\nMr. nnd Mrs. L. near, B. Rear, Hall;\nM Everymy, E. O. Windsor, Vancouver; T. K. Watson, Calgnry; J. A.\nMcDonald, Proctor; E. Cote, Rossland;\nC. Norrls, Grand Forks; Mr. nnd Mrs.\nDorricott, Coleman; V. Johnson,\nWynndel;  C. Longworth, Moose Jaw.\nNelson House\nELI  JULIEN,  Proprietor,\nEuropean Plan,\nCafe Open  Day and Night,\nMc\u2014Merchants' Lunch, 12 to 2\u201435c\nPhone 275     Room., 60c and up,\nThe Strathcona\nH, W 8H0RE, Proprietor*\nIdeal  Hot.l for Trav.l.r. and\nTouri.t..\nSample room, all above ground with\nnatural light.\nBodroom. large, airy and quiet\nBp.oial Rat., to Boarders and\nFamllle..\nOCCIDENTAL HOTEL\nThe most homollko hotel in tlio\ncity. Meals served family style.\nRoom nnd bonrd by tho month, $35;\nroom nnd bonrd by the rlny, 51.25;\nrooms, 35o up; meals, 35c.\nEdward Korr, Propriotor.\nHOTEL PROVINCE\nL, C. Odell, Proprietor.\nOld moderato prices. First-class\nboard. Nicely furnished rooms.\nPool and billiard parlor and barber\nshop In connection. All modern\nelectrical appliances. All liramls of\ncigars nnrl temperance drinks at\ntbe bar.\nBRIDGE ST., GRAND FORKS, B.C.\nPROVINCE  IHiTHI Thomns  Hal\nllday, North Fork; R. (1. Bolllngsby,\nPaulson. 1'.. C.j .loci Rosenqulest, Chrls-\ntlnn. Luke; Pete Vaut, Mrs. E, Vaut, E.\nVuut, Grand Forks; II. P. Thompson,\nLynch Crock; Dan Morrison, Morrison\nCrock; Harry Coleman, Weston, B. C;\nF. O. Johnston, Phoenix; C. O. Northrop, Greenwood; Pun V. Keesc, Cascade; .1. Miller, P. Allen, Nelson; .las.\nCairns, Eholt; A. Mackintosh, Billings; II. Weber, Nelson; A. MiTlliill,\nSpokane; F. Sutherland, Christina\nLuke; S. Cnrrulltcrs, Cnlgnry; Eric\nLeilfnrs, Midway; C, Poly, Rock Candy\nmine.\n8PEND YOUR HOLIDAYS AT\nHalcyon Hot Springs\nSanitarium\nAND STOCK UP WITH HEALTH.\nIf you .lifter from muscular, Inflammatory, sciatica or any other\nform of rheumatism, or from metallic poisoning ot any sort don't delay.\nGome at onco and get cured. Moat\ncomplete and best arranged bathing\nestablishment on tho continent All\ndepartments under one roof, steam\nheated and electric light\nRate.! 13 per day or $17 per week.\nDAVI8 A DAVIS, Prop..\nHalcyon, Arrow Lake.. B.C.\nNELSON HOUSE\u2014W. Snrw, Hall;\nH. Mansfield, Rambler; L, Noble,\nTrail; II. Bottrgvls, 1). Bourgvls, J.\nDelude, Crescent Valley; R. S. Potter,\nK. Smith, Calgnry; A. Evans, T. Tidy,\nCranbrook;  A. Robinson, Slocan City.\nGrand Central Hotel\nJ. A. ERICKSON, Prop.\nOpposite  Po.tofflc\nRoom  and  Board, 835 p.r  Month.\nEuropean Plan, Room. SOo up,\nMeal. 35c.\nNEW GRAND\u2014It. Swift, Molly\nGibson; Georgo Jackson, Phoenix; F.\n.1. Whitfield, city.\nMadden House\nM. J. MADDEN, Propri.tr....\nSTEAM HEATED.\nCorn.r Bak.r and Ward St.., Nel.on\nMADDEN\u2014.lames Grant, city; Mr.\nund Mrs. G. W. Gill; Mr. and Miss\nHunter, Edinburgh; Mrs. Book, England; Daniel Barrett, Rossland;\nDaniel Barrett, Rossland; Michael\nLoverly, Donegal, Out.; C. Tidy,\nTadanac; D. B. McEachrTan, Marcus;\nJ. H. Harding, Vancouver; T. Klrkby,\nVancouver; Mr. nnd Mrs. Blenkln rrnrl\ntrrmlly, Lintaluta, Srrslt.; M. Urulotte,\nBIrchbank; T. ,T. llartsltorne, Winnipeg; s. Fletcher, Winnipeg.\ni-The Kootenay Hotel\nMRS. MALLETE, Proprietr.es.\nA Homo for tbe World at J1..6 a\nDay. First-class Dining Room,\nComfortable Rooms,\ntil V.rnon Stre.t, Near Po.toffjoe.\nKOOTENAY\u2014A. II. Itichardson,\nLethbrldge; W. P Duncan; George\nMuchln, Bull River; C. Crctton, II.\nHandier, Cranbrook; J. Broker,\nSlocan.\nNew Grand Hotel\n\u2022JOHN BLOMBERG, Proprietor.\nUp-to-Date  Brick Building.  Ste\u00abm\nHuted.\nHot and Cold Wator In Evtry Room\nAmerican and European Plan.\nTulameen Hotel\nPRINCETON, B.C.\nThe bet.! known worklngman'e\nhotel In town. Hot and cold wator\nbaths, eto. Rooms 60c per night.\nFreo auto meets nil tralna. Stage\nauto leaves hotel dally tor Copper\nMountain and Mill Side.\nProprietor, D. O'Brien.\n\u25a0>\nTHE  8TANDARD  RESTAURANT\n826 Baker Street\u2014Two Doors West\nof Stanley.\nOPEN DAY ANO NIGHT.\n12 to 2, Special Lunch 35c\nYOUR   PATRONAGE   SOLICITED\nReturned   Men   First,   *l hen   Married\nMen, Then Those in Lower\ni Categories.\n(By Daily Ngwh Loused Wire.)\nOTTAWA, Nov. 17.\u2014The following\nordor wns despatched on Saturday to\nofficers commanding all military \"flis-\ntricte:\nGeneral Pemob.lI.ml.on--Aa a remilt\nof consul.un of hostilities ami information' just received from overseas,\ntho forcos In Canada will ho reduced at\nonce In accordance? with Instructions\nwhlh will he issued from time to tlmof\nSince tho declaration of tho armis-\ntlco, tho staff nt militia tietuJquartora\nhns boon working at toj. pressure in\norder to he ready for quick action In\nflorineet'Jon With |demol.!\\Mi.at*on nml.\nthe cnhlos havo boon busy transmitting\nnecessary information to enable important decisions to bo arrived nt. All\nnrrniiKomcnts in connection with actual demobilization of troops rest with\ntlio department of militia and defense.\nAfter that hns been accomplished, nil\nproblems dealing with tlie rcestubl.Bh-\nmont of soldiers In civil lire nnd reconstruction Keiiorn|y will Ijo dealt\nwith by othor departments of tho government.\nIn order to bring about ne'oessnry\ncoordination, <i si-jocto bomni'lttoo of\ntlie cabinet lias been appointed umler\ntho chairmanship of Hon. J. A. Caldor,\nThe first step will bo a drastic reduction of all military establishments\nin CnnadP( brjlnglnff these down to\nabsolute rei|uliemonls for the operations of demobilisation, tho sarc of soldiers In hospitals nnd aid of tho civil\npowers. Fop demobilization Itself a\nconsleloiiible fence will be required at\nmilitia headquarters, ut headquarters\nof military districts ami district depots,\nwhich have been organised for tho ex*\npress purpose of cnrylng out demobilisation; In addition thoro jwlll bo\ntho personnel required in connection\nwitli the medical services nnd dental\nservices. Subject to the above and to\nthe maintenance of a moderate force\nin aid uf tho civil forces, demobilization of troops In Canada will be carried out as rapidly as possible by reference to tlie following classes.\nRoturncd soldiers who can bo spared\nand  arc desirous of discharge.\nMnrrleel men who can bo spared and\nWho are desirous of discharge,\nMen in lower categories who have\nboen held for various duties in Canada\nand who can be spared.\nMen who enn bo spared, whose oc-\nitpations aro such as to make them\nurgently required in civil life for economic, reasons.\nAll other men whose services are not\nquired,\nOrders have almuly been Issued thnt\nall men serving in Canada ami who\no desire, ami who wero railway cm\nployees upon enlistment or when cnlled\nup for service, nre to be discharged Im\nmediately.\nACCOUNTING\nExperienced man wishes to hear\nfrom mining companies and other\nconcerns whoso books need attention. Kor particulars apply in first\nInstance to\nC.  W.  APPLEYARD\nBox 626 Nelson, B.C.\nG. A. BRIDGEMAN OF\nROSSLAND   IS  WOUNDED\n(Uy Dally News Leased Wlro.)\nOTTAWA,   Nov.   17.\u2014Tho   following\n'stern Canadian soldiers arc reported\ncasualties:\nInfantry.\nKilled in action\u2014Acting Sergt. II. \\V.\nBrown, Vancouver; 1). A. Munson, LII-\nlooel; H. O. W. Roberts, South Vancouver.\nDied of wounds\u2014K. T. Jones, North*\nfield, B.C.\nDied\u20141<\\ C.  Metcnlfs,  Vancouver.\nMissing\u2014Lieut ii. Stevens, D.C.M.,\nSt. Lambert, Que.; .Lieut. 1. A. Ross,\nMontreal; Lieu I. It. Curb-ion, Hartlng-\nton, Ont.; Capt. W. J. Pearson, Toronto.\nAdmitted to hospital\u2014Lieut. IL L.\nRobson, Rramptou. Ont.; Capt. II. D.\nThomas, Hamilton;.\nWounded and gassed\u2014Lieut. O V..\nAtkins, Vancouver; Lieut. J. It. Wilson, Toronto.\nWounded\u2014Llout. A. H. Crcglhlon,\nDnrtmoulh, N.S.; Lieut, A. D. Baxter,\nAddington Forks, N.S.; Lieut. M. I-:.\nAmos, Lower Derby, N.B.; Lieut (Acting Capt.) 0. B. Oxley, Toronto; S. 1<\\\nMcDonald, Squamlsh, B.C.; 0. A.\nBrldgman, Rossland; L. DftOttl, Revelstoke; P. W, Feeraultf Kamloops.\nGassed\u2014C. J. Connolly, Now Westminster.\nMedical Services.\nWounded\u2014Lieut. A. F. U. Dudley,\nEngland.\nEntjincers.\nKilled in action\u2014J'\\ J'lummcr, Victoria.\nWounded\u2014R. C. Molt, Vornun; 0.\nBrown, Vancouver.\nCavalry.\nDied\u2014Lieut. It. Whtgham, India.\nGRAND CENTRAL\u2014J. Parent,\nAlbert Herert Mooso Jaw; S. llob-\nHon, Kaslo; Hans Lassen, Fernle; O.\nLundblud, Vancouver; W. J. Morton,\nLethbrldge; Sam Lynch, Granite; E.\nWilson, Proctor,\nW. WELLMAN DIES\nWINNIPEG,      Nov.      17.\u2014William\nWellman, contractor, died at the gon\noral hospital today aged 03. Ho wa\nan old-timer of Winnipeg, having com\nto this city from KnK.und 45 year\nago.\nMAX THINKS THEY\nMADE MESS Of IT\nEx-Chancellor    Says    Military    Men\nThought  German   Position\nWorse Than  It Was\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nCOPENHAGEN, Nov. 17. \u2014 The\nformer Imperial chancellor, Prince\nMaximilian Of Baden, has Issued a\npamphlet In Which ho writes:\n\"My peace policy was entirely upset\nby tbo proposal for nn armistice,\nwhich was handed to mo In comploto\nform on my arrival in Berlin. I\nfought against It for practical nnd\npolitical reasons, it seemed to me a\ngrave mistake to allow tbo first step\ntoward ponce to bo accompanied \"by\nsuch an amazing admission of Germany's wenUnosB.\n\"Neither the enemy powers nor our\nown peoplo regarded our military situation such as to mako desperate\nmeasures necessary, 1 proposed that\nthe government as a first measure\nshould state exactly its program of\nwar aims nnd demonstrate to the\nworld our agreement wilh President\nWilson's principles and our readiness\nto undergo heavy national sacrifices\nto satisfy those principles,\n\"[ was told in reply Hint there was\nnot time to wait for tho effect of such\na stntemont nnd thnt the situation at\ntho front demanded lhat a proposal\nfor an armistice should be made within 1.4 hours, to be supported hy publication or the nanus of a new and\nunimpeachable government.\n\"A week later, the military authorities informed mo (hat they had\nbeen mistaken In the judgment they\nhnd formed concerning the situation\nat tho front on Oct. 1.\"\nPrlnco Maximilian snys thnt he Informed (lie emperor that it would have\nan Important effect If the emperor de-\ncbled to abdicate of his own free will,\nas by so doing, ho would probably bo\nnblo to save the country from serious\ndisturbances. But other Important\ncircles tried lo convince tho emperor\nthat hia abdication would be tho\nsignal for the breaking up of the Gorman front.\nWHOLE WOP\nT OF MEAT\nMillinery Reduced\nTODAY   WE   PUT  ON   SALE   OUR   STOOK   OF\nHIGH   CLASS   HAT3\n<\\T   PRICES   WHICH   WILL   MAKE   ANY   ON*.\nOF THEM A PRIZE\nPATTERN  HATS\nRegular $12.00 to $15.00 and up\u2014 QQ QC\nAll Cleaving nt  ydiuw\nSTYLISH  MODEL8\nRegular \u00a510.00 Values\u2014 OQ QC\nClearing at  ,   spO,vtf\n.ATTRACTIVE   STREET   HATS\nA. Very -\u2022'Inc Assortment.   Priced regularly 09 QC\nnp to $7.r,ii.   Clearing at   tyd.Uv\nIF YOU ARE ABLE AT ALL TO GET DOWN\nTOWN TODAY\nBE SURE TO COME AND GET THAT HAT\nYOU NEED\nSMILLIE & WEIR\nLADIES'    WEAR    SPECIALISTS\nGERMAN WARSHHIPS INTERN\nAT SWEDISH  HARBORS\nilly Dnlly News Leased Wire.)\nSTOCKHOLM, Nov. 17.\u2014Thu Gorman armored const defenso vn.lf.il\nBeowulf arrived Into lnst night In the\nStockholm archipelago. Tho vo-jol\nwill bo Interned, other vessels ot the\nGorman liable fleet art expo-ted to\narrlvo In Swedish waters.\nTEN DEATHS IN  EDMONTON\nilly Dnlly News Leased Wire.)\nEDMONTON, Nov. 17.\u2014Thoro wero\n10 deaths roportod lis the result nf tho\ninfluenza cpldomlo In Edmonton during the last 4s hours and 25 new*\nenses.\nMothers!\nWatrh Hie tongue or your ynnngl\nClean the clogged-tip plneesl\nBring joy to little faros!\nKiddies will eat and smile,\nWhen you rlo nwny with bllo,\nCareful mothers o'er tiro land\nAlways keep Cascarel, at hand.\nChildren think them dandy\u2014\nThey are mild cathartic candy.\nCiracarots sell for a dime;\n'Ihey \"work\" every tinic.\nBritish Food Ministry Says It Look, to\nCanada and United States to\nSupply Britain.\nOTTAWA'. Nov. IT\u2014Sir William\nlloorle, of lire British ministry or food,\nhas cabled the Cnnndn food board nn\naftcr-lhe-ni.ivlstlce Statement of the\nlivestock ln the chief European conn-\ntries which Is of tho utmost significance to Canadian fninieri.   Ho says\n'\u25a0There Is throughout Europe- a si\noris dotorloratlbn in tire numbers of\nlivestock. The nllied and neutral rrotnc-\nproduced ment supplies conot Inn rove\nfor several months, hen-, an insistent\ndemand for overseas supplies Mil be\nInevitable, The me.it filiation In Germany, nnd especial!.' ,11 Aiislr.u-iluu-\ngnry, Is considerably more difficult\nthnn wo hnd anticipated Urns further\nIncreasing tho call upon exportable\nsurpluses to tho limit of our transpoit\nfacilities.\n\"Owing to the universal reduction\nof pigs, the world production of bacon, hum. pork und lard at present Is\nunequal to iho d,|mnml., inclutllng\nthose ut the i.'nlvd Kingdom, w|||Cl\nlurs always boon by far ihe largest c<a-\nsumor of Impart.;, pig products,\n\"Tlio milk yield In iruncrnl Is generally diminish..1!, l.i ract, almost to n\nvanishing point in Central l-u.'.pc,\nHolland, Swlthserhind nnd Scandinavia\nwhich ure normally rur-re exporters nl\ndairy products, will probably not have\nany considerable surplus fir Ihe United Kingdom, Which will thus be practically dcpen.tc n on Imported tats, err\nlirely from tho Dominion und the United Sillies.\"\nTlie following show the doctenses 'r\nmost of the couuli'l -s given in Sir William Ooode's cablegram;\nCattlo\u2014Franco, i.Mll,'..!); Italy, ftt'i,.-\n000; Denmark, 845,1)00! Stvid-n. r.)0,-\nooo; Germany, -.-Jyiiui. AusU1a-Hun\ngary, considerable.\nSheep\u2014.''ratios, \"..rs il'i; Italy, 13*.\nooo; Denmark, 171(h).; Holland, SOO,*\n000; Auslrla-Hungnry considerable\nPigs- Franco, 2,816,000; Holy, sr>4.-\nooo; Denmark, 1,878,00; Sweden, 3.12-\n,,00; Holland, 1M.O00; Germany, 10,806,*\nooo; Austria-Hungary, considerable,\nTotal May Go Somo Millions Higher\u2014\nPer    Capita    Investment    Runs\nAround $84.\n(Ily Dully News Leased Wire.)\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 17.\u2014Approximate*\nly 00,000 Mrrnltobnns llirvo subscribed\nbetween '842,000,000 rrnd 847,000,000 to\nIho second Victory loan, In tho opinion\nof officials. Following are conservative estimated amounts in round figures secured by tiro various chief divisions of tin' campaign;\nGeneral committee, 818,000,000; business and industrial, $5,600,000; women's residential, 81,1)00.000; city\nbanks, 88,000,000; provincial districts,\nJ t-.000,(100; provincial banks, J2.O00,-\n000; applications held up becauso ot\nerrors,   $1,000,000;   total,   $4:1,000,000.\nLast year 78,026 Mnhltobnns subscribed $82,204,460 an avcrago of $58\nper capita as against a minimum tills\nyear of $43,000,000 from iio.ooo shareholders, being over $77 for every man.\nwoman anrl child in the province, on\ntho basis of $47,000,000 contributed iu\ntho province every person on an aver-\nago Invested $81 in tlie loon.\nFOURTEEN  DEAD\n(Ily Dully News Leased Wire)\nlcKGlNA,    Now    17..I\u2014Der ths from\nInfluenza Saturday nnd Sunday  here\nwero 14, with 42 new cns.s reported\non Saturday.\nWhon a child has a coated tongue,\ntainted breath or Is bilious, constipated, feverish, or full of cold, give\nCascnrcts. Ckllrlrtn gladly tako this.\nharmless enndy cathartic which thoroughly cleanses their littlo stomachs,\nlivers! and bowels without griping.\nEach 10 cent box of Cnscarets contain\ndirection, for dosn for children aged\nono year and upwards.\nEX-EMPRESS TO JOIN  KAISER\n(Ily Dnlly News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Nov. 7.\u2014Tho former\nGerman empress and the w fe of\nthe former German crown prince\nwill leave for Holland in a few\ndays on a special train, provided\nby the workmen's and soldiers'\ncouncil, according to Potsdam roports recoived at Copenhagen by\nthe correspondent of the Exchange\nTelegraph company.\nSINK SHIPS TO\nSAVE FROM ALLIES\n(Hy Daily News Leased Wlro.)\nCOPENHAGEN, Nov. 17.\u2014A\nlargo number of ships demanded\nby the allies under tbe naval\nterms of the armistice were sunk\nby thoir German crows during\ntho revolution, according to Gor-\nmanin  of Berlin.\nClause 30 of tho armistice provides that all merchant vessels in\nGerman bands bolonging to tho\nallied and associated powers aro\nto be restored in ports to be specified by the allies and the United\nStates.\nVON MACKENSEN\nREACHES     HUNGARY\n(Ily Dally News Leased Wire.)\nCOPENHAGEN, Nov. 17.\u2014I'he\nGerman field marshal, Von Mack-\nonsen, who hns been operat r.g in\nRumania, arrived yesterday at\nDebreczen, Hungary, with 2000 of\nhis troops, according to a despatch\nfrom Vienna. Th. troop, war. disarmed and (started toward Germany.\nGRAND DUCHESS OF\nLUXEMBURG MUST GO\n(Hy Daily News Leased Wire)\n013NEVA, Nov. 17.\u2014Tho Lausanne\nQasiotto says it learns the peoplo ana\nparliament of Luxemburg will demand\nthe ndhicatlon of the Grand Duchess\nof Luxemburg, who is considered tho\nsymbol of Gorman intrigue. Tho members of tho liberal party deslro tbo\ngrand duchy to lie linnsloririorr lnt\na republic and attached to Franco.\nALLIED PRISONERS\nRUSH TO FREEDOM\nWITH TUB AMERICAN AKMY\nNORTHEAST OF VERDUN, Nov. 17.\n\u2014Russians, Indians, French and Ru*\nmutilans l,y thousands, all released b\niho Germans, streamed Into American\nlitres Sunday. The quest'on of feeding\nand housing thein Is taxing the facilities of tlie army rrrrrl tho various organisations which hnve been furnishing tlie Americans with luxuries.\nLET QUENTIN'S BODY STAY IN\nFRANCE, SAYS ROOSEVELT\nNEW YORK, Nov. 17\u2014Col, Theo\nduru Roosevelt today authorised tho\nannouncement that he rind Mrs. Roose*\nvolt would visit tbu grave ot their son,\nLieut. Quonttn Roosevelt, who was\nburled irr France at Iho spot whoro ho\nfell after his airplane had been shot\ndown by (hi: Germans, Col. Roosevelt\nat the same tlmo mado public nn emphatic protest be had sent to Gen,,\nMarch, chief ot staff ot Iho United\nStates army, ngainst the planned removal of his son's body to this coun-\ntiy.\nGen. March In replying to Col.\nRoosevelt consented thrrt Lieut. Roosevelt's body should remain in the grava\nin which It was buried by the Germans.\nBRITISH  COLUMBIANS\nWIN   MILITARY  CROSS\n(lty Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, |Nov.  17.\u2014Thel JMf.l Hairy\nCross  Is  ganetled  to    the    following,\niti'itlsh Columbia men: j\nCapt'. .lames McGlashan, Vancouver;\nCapt. George Sharp. New Westminster;\nLieut.  Godsford   Martin.    .Vancouver;\nLieut. James   McDonald,    Vancouver;\nanil Lieut. Harry Templemnn, Victoria.\nRED FLAG SHIP\nSINKS KAISER'S CREW\n(Ily Daily News Leased Wire.)\nCOPENHAGEN, Nov. 17.\u2014Two\nhundred cadet, ad . 130 sailor,\naboard tho German training ship\nSchocoin were drowned whon that\nvessel was sunk by two German\nbattle ships flying tho red flag.\nBULGARIAN SOLDIERS ASK\nFOR UNION  WITH GREECE\n(Ily Dally News Leased Wire.)\nSALONIKI, Nov. 17.\u2014A monster\nmass meeting at Strumnltsa of soldiers demobilised by lliilgnrla under\nthe terms of tho nrmisllc sign, d on\nSopt. 20 denounced Bulgarian domination and risked for a union wllh\nGreece.\nf\u00a7)\n.si\nTIHPITZ   FLED  EARLY.\nCOPENHAGEN, Nov. 17.\u2014Admiral von Trrpitz, former mini.ter\nof th. German navy and th. man\nwho was chiofly re>pon-,iblo \u00bb(,'\nGermany', intcn.ivo .ubmanni\ncampaign, fled to Switzerland im\nmediately th. revolution in Gormany brok. out, .ay. the FrJnk*\nfort Gazette.\nGERMANS LEAVE\nFINLAND TO BRITISH\nLONDON,   Nov.   18.\u2014G.n.   von\ndor Goitz, German commander in\nFinland, has  informed tho  Fini.h\ngovernment,   say.   a   Cop.nbagen\ndetpsteh^to  the| Exobange Telegraph    company,    th.t    German\ntroop, '\".r. boing withdrawn from\nFinland in ord.r to avoid conflict\nwith British forces whloh aro expected there  soon.    Th.  de.patch\nadd. th.t Gen. aMnnorhcim, commander of th. Ftfini.h government\nforoe., will be governor of Finland\nand  that   a   coalition   government\nwill b. in power,\n\u00ae\nPi\ntl\n<\u00a7\u25a0\nW\ni\nf\u00a3\u00a7*\nPi\nI\nPi\nIIU\nh\ni\n(3)\n1\n8\nE\n%\nPi\nm\nTastes fine, but contains no'caffeine the\ndru^ in tea and coffee\nThe unusually attractive taste of\nTANT\nPOSTUM\nmakes many people prefer it\nto \"tea or coffee.\nAnd you can make each cup\nstrong'or mild just as you\nwish by varying the amount\nof Instant Postum used per\ncup.\nA Trial Is Convincing.\n'., There's a Reason \"\ni\nm\n8\n!-\u00bb\u25a0!\n1\nR\nU\no\nPi\n111,\ni\n@lM0_i|MQs\u00ae\n IAS\nMONDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1819 \"\u00bb\n.i-ru-i r-r,.,.,,.      ii '    )     l\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPAOl THRU\nDr. W, S. Downlram, who since thb\nresignation of Capt,,ji[, ,W, H\u00bbIJ, ha.s\nbee nactlng medical officer of health\nfor tho city of London, wns rocom-\nmendorl by the board of control for\npermanent appointment.\nInsurance\n8TOCKS, RENTAL8\nD. 8T DENIS,\nPhon. 89.   509 Ward 8I\u201e N.l.on, I\nMING\nTRUTH\nThe only publication of Its\nkind In tho world anrl the only\nexclusively mining periodical In\nthe Interior Northwest fields.\nEdited by Sidney Norman, an\nold-timer In tho Kootenays and\na firm believer In the future of\nBritish Columbia's mines.\nPublished twice a month. Subscription price, (3 per annum.\nMINING TRUTH\nSPOKANE,  WA8H.\n.rimrnitu mm. ..\u00ab.<*.\u2666\u00ab\u00bb. >. > .ir.-....... ...\u00ab..+\u00bb.\u2666\u2666\nMm\/r^ or\/it\/ Miotrfei*\n8\ni........................... ....... .4 .*...*.*..*....\nFAMINE CONDITIONS SEND\nCORN PRICES UPWARD\n(By Dally News Leusorl Wire.).\nCHICAGO, III., Nov. 17.\u2014Famine\nconditions in Europe brought about\nfresh advances Saturday In the corn\nmarket hero. Prices closed strong y,\nto 1 cont net higher, with December\nat 11.25% to H, and January, \u00bb1.26tt\nto %. Oats finished % to % to tt to\n1% oonts higher and provisions at a\nrango varying from 17 cortts off to a\nrise of tl.\nPP0TAT0E8 ACTIVE.\n(By Dally Nows Leased Wire.)\nMONTREAL, Nov. 17.\u2014Potatoes\nhave been fairly active and steady.\nButter strong. Prices of egsg firmly\nmaintained.\nCheese: Finest easterns, 24tt to 25.\nButter: Choicest creamery, 50 to\n\"tt.\nEggs: Selected, 50 to 54; No .1 stock,\n49. ...\nPotatoes: Por bag, carlots, ?1.70 to\ntl.75.\nBOURSE IS CL08ED.\nPARIS, Nov. 17.\u2014Th    Bourse was\nclosed Saturday.\nMrs. Dowd, wife of J. A. Dowd,\nM.P.P. for Kerrobert, Sask., died of influenza.\nTHE NELSON IRON WORKS, Ltd.\nPARTIAL LIST  OF SECOND-I\nI 14 x 1(1 Phoenix llorlzo.ital Engine.\n1 80x7 Vertical Bollor.\nI 86x8 Vertical Boiler.\nI 80xl( Horizontal Rot. Tub.\nBoiler.\n1 10x10x10 Steam Driven Compressor.\nI 12x12 Belt Driven Compressor\n1 12x18 Steam Driven Compressor.\nI 16x18 Steam Driven ComprosBor,\nSectional.\n1 No. 1 Cameron Bollor Food Pump.\nI No. 6 Cameron Sinker, Pletosi\nType.\nAND MACHINERY FOR SALE\n18x5 Hoist, Steam.\n16x8 Hoist, Steam.\n1 2-h.p. D. C. Motor, 220 volts,\nd-h.p. A. C. Motor, 210 volts.\n1 6-b.p. A. C. Motor, 220 volts.\nI 6-k.w. D. C. Generator;\n' 17tt-k.w, D. C. Generator.\n1 10-k.w. D. C. Generator,\nttt tons 12-ib. Mining Ralls.\n1000 feet  10-Inch Hydraulic   Pipe,\nRlvetted.\n2400 feot 4-Inch Casing Pipe.\n1 12-l.ich Pelton Motor,\n1 24-Inch Pelton Motor.\n1 86-Inch Polton Wheel.\nConsolidated Ining & Smelting Co.\nof Canada, Limited\nOffices, Smelting and Refining Department\nTRAIL, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ores\n\"\\DANAC BRAND PIG LEAD. BLUESTONB AND SPELTER\ni\nHave Your Own Name\nor Brand Name\nPrinted on\nButter Wrappers\nTHE LAW SAYS THAT YOU MAY NOT SELL BUTTER FROM\nA FARM OR THROUGH A STORE OR MARKET UNLESS IT HAS\nTHE WORDS \"DAIRY BUTTER\" PRI'JTED ON TIIE WRAPPER\nAS YOU NOW HAVE TO USE RINTED WRAPPERS WHY NOT\nHAVE YOUR OWN NAME OR THE BRAND NAME PRINrED ON\nTHE WRAPPER AS WELL AND IN THAT WAY GAIN VALUABLE\nADVERTISING. IF PURCHASERS OF YOUR BUTTER WHO LIKE\nITS QUALITY DON'T KNOW WHO MAKES IT THEY CAN'T KNOW\nWHAT BRAND TO ASK FOR WHEN THEY WANT TO BUY THE\nSAME KIND AGAIN.\nAccording to tho Dominion\ngovernment regulations all\nfarmers who sell butter\neither to tho stores or privately, are required to have\nIt properly covered ln a\nwrapper on which MUST\nappear In prominent letters\ntho words\n\"DAIRY BUTTER.\"\nThe fact Is also omphaslsod\nthat all butter In suoh\npackagos must bo of tho full\nnet weight of sixteen ouncos,\nand In default of same a fine\nof from $10 to |30 for oach\noffense Is Imposed. Whey\nbutter must bo so labelled\neven when mixed with dairy\nbutter and dairy .buttor retains Its label even though it\nbe mixed with tho creamery\nproduct.\nYOU   CAN   BE   SUPPLIED   WITH\nNEATLY - PRINTED     WRAPPERS\nFOR    YOUR    BUTTER    AT    THE\nFOLLOWING PRICES:\nDAILY   NEWS  OFFICE,   FOR  THB\n200   PaPerinacludedrlnUn'  $2.50\n500\n1000\nH\nM\n$3.50\n$5.00\nTh... prists inolud. both th*\nPaper, whloh It th* b..t obtainable\nfar th* purp..., and tht printing,\nWE CAN  SHIP  IMMEDIATELY ON   RECEIPT OF ORDER\nDaily News Job Department\nTHE HOME OF OOOD PRINTINC\n\u25a0AKER STREET\nNELSON, B.C.\nApple, and Potato.. 8.11  High\u2014Eggs\nHave Ready Salt)\u2014Mark.t Well\nAttended.\nThere was practically no poultry on\nsale at Saturday's markot. Eggs, although fairly plentiful wero rapidly\nsold out at 00c per dozen. Apples werb\nnot plentiful and prices ranged from\n$2.00 to $2.60. No cut flowers wero offered:\nFresh killed beef, 11].....$ .18\u00ae$ .30\nFresh killed veal, lb 20\u00a9   .35\nFresh killed pork, lb 30\u00ae   .35\nPotted meats   .20\nChicken,  lb. 30\u00ae   .35\nFowl, Ib; ....;.... 26\u00ae   .30\nFresh eggs, dozen    .95\nFresh butter, per lb 60\u00ae   .65\nHolnemnde cheese,  lb. .46\u00ae    .60\nCrfenm, tt-pliit bottles .. .25\nHoney, extracted, jars ,.   .35\u00ae   .40\nPotted plants  15\u00ae   .50\nVegetables.\nPotatoes, 10 lbs  .25\nPotatoes, 100 lbs  2.25\nCarrots, per lb  .02V4-\nHeets, per lb    .02?4\nParsnips, per Ib.   .03\nTurnips, per lb  .04\nOnlonB, per lb  .05\nGreen onions, bunch  .... .0.1\nI.ceks, per bunch   .05\nCelery, per bunch   .10\nCauliflower, each   15\u00ae   .25\nEndive, two heads for... .05\nKale, per head  10\u00ae   .15\nOreen peppers, per Ib. .. .25\nTomatoes, per Ib  .10\nSquash, per lb  .03\nPumpkin, per lb   MM\nMarrows, per lb  .03 %\nCitron; per Ib    .04\nQuinces, per lb  .10\nApples, per box   2.00\u00ae 2;50\nApplo elder, gallon    .76\n\u25a0t>\nPRICE MOVEMENTS AT\nMONTREAL ARE IRREGULAR\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nMONTREAL, Nov. 17\u2014Irregularity\nln price movements and a small volumo\nof business continued the chief characteristics of the trading on the local\nstock exchange at the closo of the\nweek.\nProminently strong specialties Included Wabasha Cotton, up 2 points\nto 57, and Asbestos Manufacturing,\nwhich sold at 82, was based on hopes\nof favorable dividend action at the\ncoming meeting of the hoard of directors.\nDominion Textile wan 1 higher at\n96 with that price hid for moro stock.\nCanadian Locomotive was 114 hlrrher\nat 67, a strong fcatnro nnd Cement 1\nlower at 60. Dominion Iron was unchanged nt the close rrt 60%.\nErrsler stocks included the powers\nwith Montreul ut S2% and Shawlnlgan\nat linv*. Canada Steamships at 44%\nwas marked with a net loss of \\%.\nHillcrest Collieries, inactive for some\ntime, sold at 35, u net loss of 5 points.\nBrazilian was fairly steady at 55?6 to\n55 V4.\nBonds were fnlrly active and firm.\nThe third war loan held at Its High\nrecord price of 92.\nSales:  Shares, 2232;  bonds, $40,500.\n*s>\nOFFERINGS ON LIMITED\nSCALE AT TORONTO\n(By Dnlly News Lensed Wire.)\nTORONTO, Nov. 17.\u2014Trading on tho\nToronto exchange Saturday morning\nwas practically without feature. Offerings were on a limited scale and\nthe purchasing was extremely narrow.\nThe behavior of Maple Leaf Milling\nsuggested thrrt, whllo tho 10 per cent\nspoclrjl dividend |dld (not meet the\nhighest hopes entertained ln somo\nquarters, shareholders wero on tho\nwhole fairly well satisfied. The salo\nprico was % point bolow the low level\nof Friday and 3 points under the maximum price of that day. Brazilian was\nnot prominent und at r.5Vl a not decline of & wrrs shown, while Bnrcelona\nwas off \\ to 13%. Fractional losses\nwere also sustained by Steamships\ncommon at 44%, Steamships preferred\nat 16% nnd Mackay at 79%.\nCommercial Loan camo into sudden\ndemand and sold at 69, 2 points abovo\ntho previous high for tho year.\nMOUNTAIN  CHIEF  MINE\nTO OPERATE ALL WINTER\n(Special to Tho Dnlly News.)\nCASTLEGAR, B.C., Nov. 17.\u2014Man*\nnger McDanlels of the Mountain Chief\nmine, Renata, is down with another\nbarge of ore for the Trail smelter. Mr.\nMcDanlels suys overytbing is looking\nflno nt tbo mlno and ho expects in a\nfew days to put on a large staff ot\nmen, to increnso shipments and operate all wintor.\nCHANGE   TAX   SALE   LAW\n(By Daily News Leased Wiro.)\nREGINA, Nov. 17.\u2014Tax salo purchasers, private and municipal, may\nIn future, ut the tlmo application is\nmado to tho land titles offlco for\ntransfer ot llllo, bo relieved of the\nnecessity of effecting porsonal sorvlco\non parties Intorcstcd in properties\nwhich they havo purchased for arrears\nof tax. Hon. Georgo Langlcy, minister of municipal affairs, said on Saturday that tho government contemplated the abolition of this provision.\nm '\n'Tho Alberta government Invested\n$50,000 In tho Victory loan.\nDiary   of   Physioian   Tell.   Story\nExptri.no.. In 1892 and\nR.m.dy Than U..d\nof\nThe Spanish Influenza germ was\nIsolated as long ago as 1892 by Dr.\nPfolffcr of London, who discovered a\nrod-shaped bacterium In bronchial\nsecretions, lungs, blood and tissues ot\nthoso suffering from tho disease.\nThe following Is Dr. Pfelffer's own\nvorsion of this disease us taken from\nhis diary:\nThis disease Is referred to In the\nworks of tho ancient physicians, but\naccurate descriptions of It havo been\ngiven by numerous medical writers\nduring the Inst throe centuries, In\nconnection with epidemics which have\noccurred from time to time. These\nvarloUB accounts agree substantially\nin their narration of the phenomena\nand course of the disease, and influenza has ln all times been regarded\nas fulfilling all tho conditions of an\nepidemic in its sudden invasion, rapid\nand extensive spread, and speedy and\ncomplete disappearance. Among the\nchief epidemics of Influenza nre those\nof 1557, 1762, 1782, 1787, 1803, 1833,\n1837, 1847 and 1889. ln several of\nthese, tho disease appeared to originate ln some parts of Asia, and to\ntravel westward through Europo and\non to America, resembling In this respect certain cholera epidemics, although the two clnsses of disease\nhave nothing in common. In some of\ntho epidemics, Influenza bus sproad\nthrough tho whole of Europe ln tho\ncourse of six weeks. Wherever it appears, the wholo community suffers\nto a greater or less extent, Irrespective of age ar condition of life, It has\noccasionally appeared in fleets at sea\naway from all communication with\nland, nnd to such an extent as to disable them temporarily for service.\nThis happened In 1782 In tho case of\ntho srpiadron of Admiral Kempenfelt,\nwhich had toreturn to Englnnd from\ntho coast of France in consequence\nof a severe epidemic of Influenza attacking his crews, while at the samp\ntime the squadron of Lord Anson, off\nthe const of Holland, suffered extensively from a similar outbreak. Many\nInstances of a llko kind have beon\nrecorded.\nMuch speculation and somo nmount\nof scientific inquiry have been expended In endeavors to ascertain tho\ncause of this remarkable ailment. The\nItalians In the seventeenth century\nascribed it to tho Intluonco of stars,\nand bonce the name \"influenza,\" Uy\nwhich the diseaso has subsequently\nbeen known. By some it hns been\nheld to depend on certain telluric and\nby others on certain climatic conditions: but tho occurrence of the ills-\nease in all sorts of climates and\nlocalities Is sufficient to negative\nthese theories. Other hypotheses\nhave been advanced, such as somo\nchange In the electrical condition of\nthe air. or the \"over-abundnnco of\nozone, but these nre not confirmed.\nIn 1892 Pfelffer discovered a short,\nrod-shaped bacterium In the bronchial\nsecretion, lungs, blood and other tissues of those suffering from the disease, and It Is very probable that this\ngerm Influenzae, which Is very constantly found while the disease lasts,\nIs the direct carrse of the attack, although various points ns to Its spread,\nund tbe reason why tho disease becomes epidemic at certain limes, have\nnot yet been cleared up.\nMental depression, und a feeling of\nexhaustion accompany symptoms\nnnmed further on, and last for three\nto five days, or the attack mny he\nprolonged to several weeks. There Is,\nhowever, after tbe feverlshness und\nother symptoms have passed off, a\nvery slow relurn to ordlnury appetite\nanrl strength. A stale of feebleness\nrrnd easily Induced fatigue, lasting for\nweeks or months nfter the attack lias\npassed off, Is also highly characteristic of Influenza. Beyond theso general symptoms there ore threo more\nor less distinct types of the malady,\nwhich shade off Imperceptibly Into\none another, but of which one or other\nhas been most pronounced in different\nepidemics. These nro the types In\nwhich tlie respiratory, nervous, nnd\ndigestive systems respectively nre\nchiefly affected.\nIn tho respiratory form, ln addition\nto the symptoms mentioned above, tho\ncough anil bronchitis especially develop, ami this type forms tho most\noomthon of all. in many cases, just\nas the patient\" Is apparently 1-ecoverorl\nfrom tho Influenza nttnek Itself,\npnoumonla develops, and tho Illness\ntakes ti vory scrlolis turn. Pnoumonla undor tho circumstances is far\nmoro likely to bo fatal than an ordinary attack of pneumonia, and tho chief\nmortality of Influenza Is duo to this\ncomplication.\nSymptoms.\u2014Owing to tho fact that\nalmost any' organ of tho body may bo\naffected in Influenza, rrnrl that tbe\ndisturbance produced is rather Interference with the functions of affocted\norgans than nny destructive bhange,\ntho symptoms are fairly vague. Tho\nmost common disturbances consist of\na sudden febrilo attack, accompanied\nKy a chilly feeling, shivering, headache, and aching pains through the\nbody, followed liy tho development of\nsore tbi'orrr and cough. The onset Is\nso sudden In mnny cases that tho\npatient can describe what he was do-\nihg ot the moment ho was first affected.\nWhen the nervous form predom-\ninntes, ns ln tho epidemic of 1889,\nmnny vurled symptoms referable to\nthe nervous system appear. The\nheadache and backache aro often extreme. Sleeplessness, neuralgia and\nIrregularity or great slowness of tho\nheart's uction are common symptoms.\nVnrlous mental disturbances, such as\ngreat depression, which mny bo prolonged Into melancholy after the attack clears off; delirium, which\nsometimes passes into mania, dr\nsuch enfleeblement of the powers of\nmind nnd body that a long-continued\nor even permanent state of weak-\nmindedness, or of ncurttsthonin remains, aro by no menns infrequent\nresults of influenza. A curious condition, In which tbo patient gradually\nbecomes comatose and dies, or after\nremaining In this slate for a day or\ntwo slowly recovers consciousness,\nalso results now and then from the\neffects of Influenza poison on the\nbrain. Paralysis of limbs or of single\nmuscles, with gradual wasting nl the\nnffected part. Is alsu an occasional\nsymptom.\nWhen the digestive system Is\nchiefly affected, and tills Is perhaps\nthe rarest form, in addition to tho\ngeneral symptoms ot Influenza, there\nensue vomiting, colic nnd diarrhoea,\nwith the passage of a gront deal of\nmucus, followed by u weakness of the\ndigestive powers which may Inst for\nmany months, nnd these symptoms\nure liable to bo mistaken fur those of\nappendicitis.\nIt is said thut, In the 1S89 epidemic,\ntwo-thirds of the population of St.\nPetersburg were affected, one-third of\nthat   of   Berlin,   and   ut   least   ono-\nsovonth of nil the people In London.\nTreatment.\u2014Often tho onfeeblement\nnnd fevcrlshnebs nro So great that tho\nporson must porforoo tako to bed, but\nlit is not at all uncommon for vigorous peoplo to struggle on with their\niisiuil work. This is very unwise, be-\ncnuso not only Is tho risk of pneumonia and othor serious complications\nmado much greater by this course,\nbut the resulting enfeeblemont is\ngreater nnd lnsts longer than If the\npatient had husbanded his strength.\nIt Is a good rule, therefore, to koep\nIn bed as long us tho temperature remains elevated, and, In the caso of\nelderly people, for sevoral days after\nIt has become normal. As to diet, tho\nfood should be nf tho lightest, particularly in the digestive type of tho\ndisease, being limited to milk, rice, or\ncornflour, and thin broths. In severe\nor complicated enses careful nursing,\nfeodlng, and stimulation of the heart's\naction nro specially required, In\nevery ense, nfter the attack has passed off, a courso of tonic trentment Is\nnecessury for the speedy restoration\nof health and strength.\nWINNIPEG POLICE\nE\nCommissioners   Refuse   to   Recognize\nUnion or to Permit Affiliation\nWith  Trades Council\n(Hy Dally News Leased Wire.)\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 17.\u2014Owtrifc to the\nrefusal of the police commission to\nrecognizo tho policemen's union, a\nstrike of the city's police force Is\nlikely to Start on Tuesday morning\nnext.\nOn Friday, tho officers nf the union\nsent un ultimatum to the commission, in the morning, that the union\nhe recognized by Monday, Nov. 18,\neven if it necessitated calling a special meeting of the commission to\ndeal with the matter. A special meeting of the commission was called and\nas soon as the memhers assembled,\nthe chairman, Alderman Frank O.\nFowler, reael a tetter which he had\nwritten and which he purposed sending to the minister of labor, in this\nletter, the policeman's oath of office\nand the oath of the trades and labor\ncouncil were compnreed and contrasted, and Alderman Fowler, in his\nletter, stated that ll was the commission's opinion that tho two oaths\nwero incompatible and that no police\nofficer could fulfill both, nnd that,\ntherefore, the commission hold that\ntho union should  not be recognized\nand that thee men should not be permitted to affiliate with the trades and\nlabor council, nor should they be permitted to form a union. \\.    ' \u25a0\nAfter a lengthy and warm argument the commission voted as to\nwhether the letter should be sept,\ntho chairman, Aid. Fowler, having to\ncast the deciding* vote ln favor of the\ndespatch of the letter. :'\nThe chairman then produced at let- s\nter addressed to the officers of the\nunion, notifying thorn that the commission was not ppposed to the\npolicemen forming an association of\ntheir own for their own benefit, \u25a0fwjt\nthnt the commission was opposed tb\ntho formation of a labor union and its\naffiliation with the trades and labor\ncouncil, und that therefore the 'commission must refuse to recognise the\nunion.\n80UTHERN ALBERTA Q0E8\n97,000,000  ABOVE   QUOTA\nCALGARY, Nov. 17.\u2014Southern Alberta has overshot its Victory loan\nallotment by approximately $7,000,000,\nThe figures from points outside of the\nthreo main cities will be increased\nwhen canvassers who nro far out In\nthe country report on Monday, Up\nto a lute hour today the- amount subscribed outside of thoso cities was\n$5,044,450. To this must be added\nCalgary, IB.rH7.200, which entitles It\nto a flag and five crowns; Lethbrldge,\n$1,1-10,550, flag and six crowns; Medicine Hat, $1,075,000, flag and seven\ncrowns, making a grand total of $13,-\n-107,200. This, with the final figures\nto be reported from outside points\nwill run the final figure to well over\n$13,500,000.\nThe success of the campaign Is\ndemonstrated by the fact that the objective set was $8,500,000 and considerable doubt was entertained\nwhether that could be attained.\nHuslness men, farmers, coal miners\nami all other classes of workers subscribed.\nCalgary benefitted by large subscriptions, thoso of over $25,000 alone\nrunning into over $1,500,000, with one\nOf $500,000.\nTho Victory loan of 1917 brought\nout $12,056,750 from southern Alberta*\nTO DEMOBILIZE ARMY\nMEN IN SASKATCHEWAN\nREGINA, Nov. 17.\u2014Demobilization\nnf the 1st Saskatchewan depot battalion may take place sooner than\nexpected, as it is Intimated In orders\nIssued Saturday night by the officer\ncommanding that allied N.C.O.'h and\nmen who desire to remain ln knakl\nuntil spring will be left to the 12th\nbattalion Canadian garrison regiment\nand the remainder will be discharged.\n.Men wishing lo stay ln uniform must\nsignify their Intention by Nov. 20.\nThe After Effects of\nSpanish Influenza\nTHIS TERRIBLE SCOURGE LEAVES IN ITS WAKE WEAK HEARTS, SHATTERED NERVES,\nIMPOVERISHED BLOOD, AND A GENERAL RUN-DOWN, DEBILITATED CONDITION OF THE\nSY8TEM.\nTHOUSANDS OF PEOPLE THROUGHOUT CANADA ARE JUST NOW NEEDING THE TIMELY\nUSE   OF\nMilburn's\nHeart and Nerve Pills\nTHEY WILL STIMULATE AND 'TRENGTHEN THE WEAK HEART, BRING BACK THE SHATTERED NERVOUS SYSTEM TO A PERFECT CONOITION, RENEW THE LOST VITALITY, BUILD\nUP THE STRENGTH AND ENRICH THE BLOOD.\nPrice 60c a box, ot all Dealer., or m.ilerl direct on receipt of price by\nThe T. Milburn Co, Limited   -   Toronto, Ont.\naple Leaf\nWORTHY of their name, because Maple\nLeaf  Tires   have   the   stamina\nnecessary to reach their objective\u2014\nMore Miles for the Dollar!\nMaple Leaf Tires are honestly built by\nskilled craftsmen, using high grade materials.\nAnd now, for the first time, you can get\nNon-Skids for the price of Plain Treads.\nAsk your dealer for Maple Leaf Tires.\nDEALERS:   Get partiev'ars from leading Jobbers.\nJOBBERS:   Write tu for prices Ond terms.\nThe Maple Leaf Rubber Co.. Limited.\nMONTREAL. m    3\n MM POOR\nTHE DXILY NEWS\nr MJJNBAY, NoVBMSiR 1\u00bb, lOTI\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nts^^*^..'h*^-.\"y\"..^*r*fc*^*^-*-w*\u00bb*.-^*.*^\u00bb-..^-\u00bb\"*-^-*'^-*^-^^*'^.'*fc-s*s.**.\nPublished every morning except\nSunday by Tbe Newa Publishing Company, Limited, Nelson, B.C., Canada.\nBusiness letters should be addressed\nand checks and money orders made\npayable to The News Publishing Company, Limited, and In no case to Individual members of the staff.\nAdvertising rate cards and sworn\ndetailed tatement of circulation\nmailed on request or may be seen at\nthe office of any advertising agency\nrecognised by the Canadian Pross As*\nsoclatlon, <\nSubscription Rates: By mall SO cents\nper month; 12.50 for six months; $5\nper.: year. Delivered 60o per month; $3\nfor 'six months; $6 per year, payaMn Id\nadvance.\nMONDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1819\nMUST   HELP  THE   BELGIANS  TO\n.(GET BACK ON THEIR FEET\nAlthough the war is over, the need\nfor relief measures in Belgium promise to be as grent as ovor. 1\" fllcl\nthe demand for assistance for tho1 repatriated Belglun people will be tremendous. There will be one bright\nspot in the situation as compared with\nthnt which has existed during the\nwar. That Is that thero will be no\nGermans in Belgium to interfere with\nthe giving of relief, or constantly to\ninaugurate new methods ot oppression\nwhich created additional suffering\nand added to the necessity for relief.\nBelgium Is freed of the oppressor,\nbut the allied peoples have bofore\nthorn a great opportunity to do furthor\ngood for this unfortunate little nation,\nwhich with such splendid courage,\npatriotism nnd refusal to accept the\nGermans as their masters, havo done\nthejr pnrt in the great war.\nTho Belgians must be fed. And so\nmust the peoplo of northern France.\nCanadians will willingly do all in their\npower to assist them.\nTHE   VICTORY    LOAN    SHOWING\nBY KOOTENAY-BOUNDARY\nTho showing which has beon madt\nby tho Kootenay and Boundary district\nin the Victory loan campaign is little\nshort of remarkable.\nThe large total which has been subscribed Is the best possible testimony\nof the patriotism and wealth of tho\ndistrict When the number of sub\nscrlbers is known It will be found that\nIt Is proof of the fact that the people of the Interior of tho province hnve.\npe.r^ca.pl.ta, as substantial financial resources as those of any other part of\nthe world. In fact, the per capita subscription ln the interior of British Co>\nlumbia Is likely to exceed that of all\nsimilar districts In the Dominion. It\nmay be surpassed by some of the larj\nflnancinl centres, but that well be due\nonly to the fact that financial mag.\nnates i those places have Individually\nmude large subscriptions.\nAnd this showing by the interior of\nthe province, let It be remembered, has\nbeen made under the most trying of\nconditions. Tho Spanish Influenza epidemic has been a tremendous hand!\ncap.\nDESERTERS AND  DEFAULTERS\nARE TO BE PUNISHED\nNews that tho Dominion government ns ono of Its demobilization\nmoasurcs was doing nway with the\nmilitary police whose duty It has been\nto round up defaulters caused a fear\nthat the government might have do\nelded to allow defaulters lo go free\nof punishment.\nIt Is gratifying to learn that this Is\nnot the case. The defaulter, the de\necrtcr and others of that class, are\nnot to go free. Tho offenses they\nhave committed during the war are\nto he remembered and fitting punishment Inflicted.\nJust what measures arc to be taken\nis a matter now under the consideration of the government. The Important thing Is that punishment Is to be\nInflicted where punishment ts due.\nDefaulters will not be able to fluut\ntheir ignominy In tho faco of patriotic\npeople.\nremanded for trial.\u2014Calgary Canadian.\nIn Dutch\nWhat did tho Dutch ovor do that the\nkaiser hnd to Inflict himself on thorn?\n\u2014Lethbrldge Helurd.\n-*\nCOLD  STORAGE\nCaller\u2014And Is this littlo Bessie\nwhom I haven't seen in two years?\nWhy, you're getting to bo quite a\nyoung Indy, my dear.\nBbssIo (sedately)\u2014Don't you menn\nold lady, Miss .Tones? 1 was only five\nwhen you saw mo last' und now I'm\nseven.\nTOLD IN RHYME\nHE  EAST  TO   LIVE  OR  LIVES\nTO EAT\nWo  may  live  without   poetry,   music\nand art;\nWe mny live without conscience, and\nlive without heart;\nWe  \"may   .live   without   friends')   hn'd\nlive without books;\nBut civilized man cannot live without\ncooks.\nHo may live without books\u2014what is\nknowledge but grieving?\nHe may livo without pone\u2014what Is\nhopo but deceiving?\nHo may live without love\u2014whnt    is\npassion but pining?\nBut where is the man that con live\nwithout dining?\n\u2014Meredith.\nMOPPING UP\nNow that the fighting is over there\nwill still be sevoral years mopping\nup to be done. Europe will have to bo\npoliced and famine, pestilence and\nrebellion fought as sternly as Hun\nKultur was fought. Peace must bo\nmade permanent and prosperous and\noppression and Injustice must bo\nswept from the world, Unselfishness,\nthe religion of the trenches, must bo\nthe religion and practise of all peoples\nand nations If the war Is to bo worth\nwhile\u2014a brotherhood and sisterhood\nof helpfulness which should go far to\nbanish poverty, distress and false\npride of caste from the world must be\nestablished. Government must be of\nthe people and for the people with\nequality of opportunity, and opportunity unshnckled. No unbridled\nanarchism or brutal, Ignorant Bolshc-\nvlklsm or destructive sabot ism of Industrial Workers of the World, but\nconstructive practical statesmanship\nIn public life and a help-one-another\npolicy in private life, with charily in\nall things\u2014an end of carping criticism\nand malicious gossip which knifes\ncharacter and dostroys confidence.\nThoro must be a reconstruction era\nwith high Ideals gleaned from the\nlessons taught by wur which will\nwork ever upward fe\u00bbr the upbuilding\nof tbe nations and the strengthening\nof Individual character and resourcefulness.\nIf a new and better world does not\narise from the ruins of war then all\nthis sacrifice of blood and tears and\ntreasure will have been In vain.\nIndividual responsibility Is the keynote of reconstruction for better or for\nworse.    If  every   Individual  will  en\ndeavor to model his or her life upon\nrules of unselfishness and helpfulness\nand  consideration of the  rights and\nfeelings of other people, communities\nand nations will quickly respond to n\nnew nnd better Impulse which will re\nsuit In the greatest good to the great\nest number.\n-4\nCOOK BECOMES MUSICIAN\nFlu ts bad enough to be German,\nnny way.\nAnd so Von Tlrpltz fled to Switzerland. Probably he wanted to get\nns fnr away from the sea and its murdered innocents as possible.\nWhile final official figures are not\nyet available every indication points\nto the Victory loan having been a\ngreat success throughout tho Dominion and that the objective of hnlf a\nbillion dollars has been reached.\nOnce upon a time there Uvea a man,\nLully, who contributed much to music In general and French opera in\nparticular. At one time he was an\nunder scullion ln the back kitchen of\na French lady whose page he would\nhavo been only his ugly appearance\ndisqualified him. But Lully was doom\ned to expulsion from the kitchen. Between playing tho fiddle in the kitchen and by composing a song which\ngavo offense to the' mistress he was\ngiven  his  walking  ticket.\nIn some way or other this fellow\ncamo to tho attention of Louis XIV,\nwho pitied him. he king could hardly\nput him In the court band so he gave\nLully n commission to form nn orchestra of his own which got the name\n\"Les petit., vlolons du Rol.\" This organization of little fiddlers soon gave\nthe big ones a run for first pluce. Ultimately Lully's men bemuce the court\nhand. This man who hnd climbed so\nquickly became a great favorite of the\nking, with whom he conversed very\ndemocratically. It Is recorded that on\nono occasion when the program failed\nto commence on time Louis XIV sent a\nmessage to the conductor of the bany\nto hurry up. \"Tell tho king he enn\nwait\" was Luty's ofhand reply.\nSIR   THOM   AS   WHITE,\nMinister of Finance, who led Canada      in its task of raising the $500,000,000\nVictory  Loan, which has     beon largely oversubscribed\nTHOUGH WOUNDED, PLUCKY\nSUBALTERN \"CARRIES ON'\n| WHAT THE PRESS IS SAYING |\n\u2666>\nCivilization v.. Hoh.niollern\nRo the cue of Civilization VI. Ho-\nEhcnzollorn: Prisoner Indicted on\ncharges ,of murder, uison, rape, slavery, mayhem, mallcioUB destruction of\nproperty, \u25a0bribery, tyranny,, nocrlfego,\nblasphemy,extreme cruolty, Inciting\nto riot and violation of international\nlaw    Grand Jury rrt lire world Wings'\n(By Llout ,1. I!. Morion,)\nFour men sat nl rr wooden Irrlrlo In\nthe divisional canteen, ratine sausages\nrrnrl mashed potatoes. When they harl\nfinished they pushed thoir plates aside,\nfinished their coffee rrrrrl Ut their pipes.\nThen they crrllorl err I'hellm Raforty\nfor n trrle, Phelitii wns rr gunner rrrrd\nwas temporarily attached to the tanks,\nlie hurl a great reputation rrs n teller\nof tales nnrl this Is lire Inle he told\nthnt night:\nThere wns n platoon holding a strong\npoint in rnr Important part ot the Hritlsh line. The trenches ran along a\nridge which the Qormnns particularly\ncoveted for it commanded a view of\nthe surrounding country nnrl wns carefully urrrl strongly fortified. Evoryono\nknew they wore nobis\" to attack thu\nposition again rrnd every man thero\nknew thrrt If lire strong point fell thrrt\npnrt of lire line went with il. A barrage hurl been pill down behind tire\ntrenches, which mado It very difficult\nlo get food up. Kor tire last 12 hours\nthe men had contented thomselvos\nwith their pipes rrnrl cigarettes rind at\nlnst their supplies of tobacco ran short\nalso.\n'\u2022I hopo they'll come soon,' suld nno\nmnn, \"or we'll be out of tobucco.' '\nThat night the I'lntoon Commander\nsat at tho telephone.\n\"Yes, sir,\" he snid. \"We all qullo\nunderstand. Hold out to the death.\nYes, sir. Forty-three men, sir, all ln\ngood spirits.'\nHe got up urrrl walked slowly down\nthe trench. There wns no question\nabout the spirit's of the men. Their\nonly anxiety was Tor their dwindling\nsupply of cigarettes ond tobacco. Tho\nplatoon commander' emptied his cigarette caso when he enmo to tho\nLewis gunners and gave tho sentries a\nword or two of advice. Then ho saw\nthat his own revolver wus In proper\nshape nnd thrrt every man know whero\nto find tbo reserve of ammunition and\ntho bombs. A \"Minnie\" lumlcd a few\nfoot from the parapet rrnd brought in\nsomo of tlie sandbags. He took a spado\nhimself and started too build (horn up\nagain, sucking ut his empty pipe. Ho\nwas patting tiro parapet into shape\nwhen tho alarm was given. Thero was\na bustling ln tho trench rrnrl In a second or two every man wus ut bis post,\nbis rlflo In position. There wns a\nmurmuring unions the Lewis gunners\nis thoy strained their eyes Into tho\nInrkncss of No .Man's Land.\nDrive Attackers Out.\nIt was a moonless  night rrnd  tlio\nRUNNING UP BIG SCORE\n-*\nAt a  recent  banquet of the  Mer\nchant Hoamen's League In London, tbe\nsong that was sung wllh greatest spirit\ncontained tlie following verse:\nOh, never a Frits shall sail\nIn a ship that sails with mc.\nNever a box or bnlo\nThat smells ot Germany.\nNever tho llko of they\nKhali sail the llrltlsh shore\nTill the soumon of Englnnd say,\n\"Y\/ou'vo     settled     the    seamen's\nscore.\"\nTho scorn to bo Bottled Is the cold\nblooded  murdc   rof    something    llko\ntwonty  thousand  British  seamen\nunarmed vessels which tho Hun raiders have sunk either with no concern\nfor tho lives on board or wllh dellbor*,\noto attempts lo mnko    their   dcaths^nco more,\nsure.   Cabinet mlnlslcrs   and   olhcr'   \"Yes, B'r'\nto the tank.   Expert they'll have another shot, sir.'\nLooks After Wounded.\nThen he went round his defenses\nand saw Hurl everything possible waa\ndono for the wounded men. He hurl\nkept a smal lreservo of cigarette's for\ntbls emergency. These he destrlbuted.\nThey were to bo relieved quite soon,\nurrlos stbere wns rinothr attack.\nlie began to feel very weak. He\nwished\" there was some tobacco In his\npipe. Ho wondered If anyone hnd\nrroticerl blood 'on ills clothes. HI*\nthigh hurt devllsbly. His head begun\nIr, whirl anrl intense physical sickness\ncame over him. Hed better lean up\nagainst something. He went slowly to\na corner of the trench rrnd a great\ndarkness was In front of his eyes nnrl\na great slnglnr. In bis ent's, llko the\nsound of the sen In storm. He must\npull himself together: somebody was\nspr'iilting. He leant ono hand ngainst\nthe parapet.\n\"Yes, sergeant.'\n\"They're coming, sir.\"\n\"nh. right\" Ho mado one great effort to walk.\n\"Sentries nil right?   I\u2014I\u2014\"\n\"it's the relief\u2014yes, I meant, sir.\nWord PJust como. Wore to get ready\nto go.\"\n\"Oh\u2014relief\u2014yes.\" He felt Ills mind\nSlipping uwny. That Infernal pain\nwas burning him. Thu sergeants voice\nwns coming from a grent distance.\nGradually he wns sinking Into deop\nplnccs\t\nThe sergeant caught him nnd uttered nn cxclrrmntlon of surprise. The\nsulrultern's tunic wns wet with blood\nround the thigh. Presently tbo relief\ncamo and he wns taken away on u\nstretcher.\nIn the mess two days later In a vlllngo behind the lines, the M.O; was\ntalking lo tbe colonel.\n\"Yes, sir,\" he said, \"there's no doubt\nabout It. Young Merrick wns hit some\nlime beforo that attack but ho Just\nkept it quiet. And be know what wan\ncoming. But It's not serious fortunately. He'll need' n bit of o rest,\nHint's all.\"\nThe Lord of Castle Mountain\nCastle Mountain In the Canadian Pacific. Rockies.\nsky wns\ndark with clouds, bo lhat It\nwas difficult at first to make out tho\nmoving forms, liut tbe artillery bud\nseen thorn already unrl had shortened\ntheir barrage. That drove the attackers moro quickly out of their trenches.\nFor a fow seconds they mny have had\nthe delusion that they wero surprising\ntho British; Just for a few seconds and\nthen camo the disillusionment Lewis\nguns and rltlca Bpokc and tho air wan\ntilled with bullota. Tlioro wero great\nnumbers of tho GcrmanB and the check\nwas only momentary. They presBcd\nforward ovor the fallen, coming nearer\nand nearer.\nThoy woro some 40 yards from their\nobjective when Percy came. He camo\nqullo calmly, almost superciliously,\nblundering out ot Iho night nnd tho\nGermans saw bis bulk looming closo to\nthem. Then Percy stopped and Joined\nIn tho fighting with his Lewis guns\nand his two six-pounders. Thoy know\nthat any moment be might movo forward In that deliberate, Inexorable\nmanner of tho lonk8. They Judged It\nwiser to withdraw. So thoy went back\nwith Percy neatly enfilading them and\ntbo mon In the strong point speeding\nthem from tho rear. When all was\nclear onco moro, Percy turned and\nwoddlcd hack into tho night Tho pla-\nUoon commander went to tho telephone\nIn a true bill on all counts.   Prisoner distinguished guests Joined the league.\nMerrick speaking.   Hold\nthorn?   No, sir; \"\u2022\u00bb* ll\"\u00bbn otf| tllftnl\"\nPROTECT APPLE TREES\nFRO MMICE AND SUN\nAn apple tree girdled by mlse of\nrabbits may possibly be saved If lire\nwound is noticed In time, cleaned nnrl\ncovered with grafting wnx or some\nI paste sin-li as sulphur, cow dung and\nI day anil wrapped with cloth to exclude the air and prevent tho wound\n! drying out, but a badly girdled tree\nusunlly riles undess tho orclinrdlst is\nun expert In bridge grafting.\nSince Injury to npplo trees by mice\nand rabbits Is apt to occur In nny\nwinter, Ihe grower to bo on the safe\nsldo should tngo tho precaution of\nproviding protection for the trunk of\nvery young tree In his orchard. \"In\nlire north,\" according to Prof. Mncoun,\nDominion horticulturist, \"protection\nfrom sun scale Is almost as Important\nas protection from mice anrl at tho\nccnlrnl experimental farm wooden vo\npeer protectors havo been used for\nsovcrnl years past for the standard\ntrees rrs theso protect from mice and\non account \"of being loose about the\ntreo leavo a good air space, which appears to protect tho tree from sudden\nchanges ot temporaturo which seem\nto bo tho main cause of sun scald.\nThough tho mlco do not as a rule\nstart working In tho orchard until\nthoro Is a good covering of snow, it\nIs as well to put tho troo protection In\nplace boforo tho ground freezes up for\ntho wlntor. At tho samo time a small\nwound of earth should bo built up to\ntho base of tho tree as added protection and Into this mound the lowor ond\nof tho veneer protector should bo fitted\nm     \t\nA snake In Ireland Is causing u great\ndeal of excltomont at Omagh. Tho\nreptile, measuring IB Inches In longth,\nwns found In tho hothouso at Omagh\nrectory. While many theories nro advanced as to how It arrived there,\nnothing definite Is known on tho sub-\nJoct it was afterwards placed In a\nglass caso and Is on oxhlhltlon on bo-\nhalf uf tho Itod Cross society.\nmagnificent specimen of the Rocky\nMountain sheep, or bighorn, nibbled\ndaintily at some tender lichens. A\nshadow flitted across his eyes, but\nhe paid no heed, tor the lambs that\nwere small ln the spring were now\nwell-grown and could take care of\nthemselves should some bold eagle\ntry to topple one off the ledges. The\nbig buck had no worries therefor.\nThe bears were down below fattening\non berries; the wolves were in the\ntimber getting good feed from among\nthe partridges, rabbits and perhaps\nsome wounded deer or moose. The\nprecipice on which the sheep stood\ndropped sheer tor some six hundred\nfeet to the snow-covered rabble ot the\nupper edges of the timber belt\nstunted, scattered trees barely eking\nout a precarious existence where the\nreck walls started to climb, Away\nIn the valley bottom a black dot\ncrawled unheeded. It was a Canadian Pacific freight train laboring\nalong from Banff to Lake Louise.\nA man, rifle on back, crawled like\na fly up a steep \"chimney\"; sweat\ndripped from his brow, his breath\nwas labored; he crept slowly upwards, using hands and feet and\nsometimes his chin. Field glasses\nhad told him the splendid buck was\nIs Igneous rock thrust from the bowels {abovo and ho wanted a shot at the\not tho earth by some fierce heat i king 'of the peaks. At list he reach-\nepasm of forgotten ages, thrust up in ed the plateau and looked, There,\nthe midst ot tho tamer grey ot sand- five hundred yards away on the fur\nstone'aand limestone formation of there side of a canon, which It would\nthe tint belt of the Canadian Rockies! take a halt day ts circle, stood the\n,0a the edge ot a sheer iretlgloi \u00ab (mm placid.\/ liedlag,  Waiting In\nTHE! early tall Gail come In the\nmountains. Hunting partlee patrolled the valleys still green\nand untouched by frost The lower\nslopes of the rising ground were dark\nwith spruce, brightened here and\nthere with the lighter green of poplar\nand willow. Higher still the spruce\nforests climbed ln ever narrowing\ntails up the water fed gulches, white\nhere and there large patches ot poplar\ngleaned golden yellow, for the frost\nwas nipping things at six thousand\nfeet.\nAbove the timber line the grey\ncrags towered, their highest peaks\nand plateaus shining with tha virgin\nbrightness ot the first snows. In the\nmidst of the mountains, standing\nalone tn seeming aristocratic exclusion, the colored battlements of Castle\nMountain reached heavenward above\n'\u25a0 the timber. Castle Mountain la a\n! freak ot nature. Fer a hundred miles\nI south there la none like It To the\nnorth the range runs to the Arctic\nwith no similar outcropping. East\nward to the prairies where the Cow\nRiver crashes down from the first\nsteps of the foothills it Is not duplicated, but westward, fifteen or twen*\nI ty miles, there first appear signs of\nI similar formation.  Castle Mountain\nconcealment behind a rock until his\nbreathing grew normal and his\nstrained muscles became steady, the\nhunter adjusted his rifle and took\npreliminary sight It was late after-\nnoon and the light was deceptive.\nSomething Btruck the rock at the\nfoot of the sheep, \"whee-ee-d\" oft Into\nthe clear air, and then from a distance came a short, shsrr report. The\nanimal lifted his glorious head and\nstood ln splendid pose, very perfect\nnerve and muscle qulverlngly ready\nto bunch and tauten to throw the\nbig body to safety as soon as the\nsource ot danger was discovered.\nThe hunter raised his sights a trifle,\nsighted a little further back, and\npulled the trigger. The sheep heard\nno sound of the rifle. Something,.\nstruck him and crushed through his\nbody; something that sped faster\nthan sound. Blindly, frantically, he\nleaped up and out over the chasm.\nTho hunter scrambled madly to the\nchimney and nllrl, rolled and ran te\ntho shalo slope at the foot of the precipice, the shale where the first new\nsnow lay thinly on the rubble, where\nthe stunted trees shivorod In the cold\nair; for he knew his game woul lay\nthero dear as the very rocks. And\nthere he found It; Its head lylnc up\nthe slope, a dark blotch on the snow,\nAnd it had a pair ot horns that many\na sportsman has spent a thousand\ndollars to obtain, hut la vain.\u2014\nI*. V, K,\nA RARE BANK NOTE\nA rare English bnnk note Is In tho\npossession of a Mr. Vesey Holt Tho\nnote Is dated 1821 rrnd Is the Issue of\nthe Hank of Englund. After the Napoleonic wars England wns short of\ngold, nnrl as n temporary expedient\nthe Hank of England put a number\nof fivo dollar bnnk notes Into circulation, until tho gold reserves was\nrestored. In appearance they closely\nresemble a $115 note, and bear no\nlikeness to the English paper money\nof todny.\nSit Around the\nFire Tonight\nrrnd look through our\n\"Year Book.\" In this\nsmall space wc ca.iuot tell\nyou of tho wonderful\nvariety of gifts It contains\n\u2014gifts for the princely\npurse as well as the modest wage. The book Itself\nIs second to no other of\nIts kind anywhere\u2014AND\nIT IS A CANADIAN\nPRODUCTION. Wo\nknow it will please you.\njpx*\n\"The Finest Diamonds\"\nss^\nThe Dally Newa Job Department\ncarries  a  tult  Btuck  of\nMourning\nCards\nAND\nEnvelopes\nand   can   deliver them printed\nwith any names and wording desired   the   day   after   receiving\norder,\nThe Dajiy News Job\nDepartment\nThe Home of Good Printing\nNEL80N, B. C.\nAladdin\nLamps\nIF YOU\nare Interested In the Saving\nof Coal OU by using a Lamp\nthat will give you\nMore Light\nthan any othor lamp made we\nwant to nak you to look into the\nmerits of the\nALADDIN  LAMP\nBurns Less Oil\nGives More Light\nGives Better Service\nPRICE\u2014Table Lamp, plain  _ t M0 eaoh\nTable Lamp, with white shade  \u00bb11.00 each\nHa aging Lamp, with white shade  VISUM) each\nHanging Lamp, with shade and spring 118.60 each\n\u2666\nWRITE FOR CIRCULAR AND AQENCY NOW\nNelson Hardware Co.\nP.O.  IOX  1060\nNELSON, B.C.\nJohn Burns & SonsGrSSSS^.\nBASH AND DOOR FACTORY.    NELSON PLANING MILLS,\nVERNON 8TREET, NEL80N, B.C.\nEvery Description of Building Material Kept In Stock.\nistlma'.e Given on  Stone, Briok, Concrete and  Frame  Buildings.\nMAIL   ORDERS   PROMPTLY   ATTENDED   TO\nP.O. BOX 134 \u2022        PHONE 171\nEnvelopes\n-HE DAILY NEWS JOB DEPARTMENT CARRIES THE LARGEST\nSTOCK OF ENVELOPES IN THE INTERIOR OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nIT  18  FULLY  EQUIPPED WITH  TYPE  AND  MACHINERY  FORS\nPRINTING IN ANY STYLE THAT MAY BE DESIRED\nThe Daily News Job Department\nTHE   HOME   OF   GOOD   PRINTING\n I \\s \u00bb.\nf MONDAY, NOVEMBER 18, ISIS\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nSalmon\nU-lb Tins Sockoyo   2Sc\n1-lb. Tlna Pink  30c\n1-lb. 1,1ns Sockoye    -45c\n\u2022\u25a0 . i   '\n~PILCHARD8\n1-lb  Tins   26C\n\\,    ' '\nr \u25a0\nHERRINGS\n1-lb. Tins 20c\n8ARDINES\nBrunswick      10c\nIlorJsco    20C\nCinicoi'd 30c\nStar Grocery\nPHONE   10\n|\u00bbUILDING A SHIP 18\nLIKE TAILORING A SUIT\nRHATTLU, Wash.\u2014This la tlio day\n|f tho tailor-mudo ship und there la\nSeattle a great shop whero ships\n; cut to measure.  This novel tnllor-\nl establiahment Is known to tlio\n(*ado as Meacham & Bobcock's, and It\nthe largest of its kind in tho Unl-\ncd States built on fresh water.\nShips nro constructed at Meacham\n; Hancock's very much tho some as a\nIII I or constructs your pants, coat and\neat.   They do things on a giant scale\nthey out with gargantuan shears,\n\u2022stead of sewing they nail things to-\n1 ether.    And   instead  of ono  or two\nilHiro mi. a \"fitting\" thero are thou-\nmils on the job.\nThe first  foundation pile for Mca-\nIiarii A Babocock'a shiji tailor shop\nas driven un n Salmon Hay site near\nallard, a Seattle suburb, on July 4,\nM7. The plant, filled in to a depth\nthreo or four feot with dredged\nhaterlal, now covers an area of 1*3\npreu.\n\"From Its sis building ways we are\nIUSBAND\nSAVES WIFE\nfrom Suffering by Getting\nHer Lydia E Pinkham's\nVegetable Compound.\nI Pittsburgh, Pa.\u2014\" For many monthi\nwaa not able to do my work owing to\na weakness which\ncaused backache\nand headaches. A\nfriend called my\nattention to one of\nyour newspaper\nadvertisements and\nimmediately my\nhusband bought\nthree bottles of\nLydia E. Pinkham's\nVoro tablo Compound for me.\nAfter taking   two\n \u25a0 bottles I felt fine\n.' troubles caused by that weak*\na are a thing of the past All women\nho suiter as 1 did should try Lydia E.\nInkriam's Vegetable Compound.\"\u2014\nIra. Jas. RonitBF.RG, 620 Knapp SL,\nI.B., Pittsburgh, Pa.\nn who suffer from any form of\nill indicated bydlsplacomcnta,\nmmation, ulceration, irregularities,\nlcache, headaches, nervousness or\ne blues,\" should accept Mra. Rolir-\nr'a suggestion and give Lydia E.\nkham's Vegetable Compound a\nough trial.\n'or over forty years it has been\nreeling such ailments. If you hnve\n'\u25a0tcrloua complications write for\ntrice to Lydia E. Pinkliam Medicine\nIs,. Lynn, Mass.\n23635\nwas the winning number ln our\nwookly drawing for a pair of $5\nShoes. Ask for tlckot with your\npurchase.\nR. ANDREW & CO.\nLEADERS IN FOOT FASHION\nFURS\nIOuaranteerl high class furs, nlco\nelection kept In stock or made to\nrrlcr from selected skins. Custo-\nlers' furs made up, remodellod\nnd repaired. Skins dressed and\nlounted at modorato prices. Best\nrice paid for raw skins,\nG. GLASER\nManufacturing Furrier,\nlit Ward Street, Ntlton, B.C.\nPhona 108.\ndropping ships Into the water about\nevery threo weeks, just like a glacier\ngiving off chunks of ice,\" as Meacham\nputs It.\nHe added that tho ships turned out\nare complete to the napkins on tho\ntable, even tbe furniture for tho crew's\nquarters being made at. tho plant.\nMeacham' &. Tlabcock havo contracts\nfor 12 Ferris type wooden steamers,\nfe.ur of which have been launched.\nThe Boulton was the first of Its type\nlaunched by Seattle yards, taking the\nwater May 18 last. Like all shipyards,\nthis plant Is a land of surprises, of a\npush and pull, .lick-tho-kaiser spirit\namong tho men, of a striving that\nknows no limit save the time when\nthe men hopo the Stars and Stripes\nwill wave over \"Berlin. Thero Is the\ngatekeeper who was a florist in \"real\"\nlife, and becauso of thta he has beon\nallowed to install and take care of\ndainty flower boxes around tho gen\nOral offices, There, in the bowels of\nthe ships, In tho yard shops, are the\nmen who helped Meacham & Babcock\nbuild tunnels beforo they tackled the\nwar industry.\n\"Building a ship, after all,\" Meacham asserted, \"is merely building a\nfloating house, nnd to build a ship one\nneeds only to gather tho specialized\ncrow.\"\nAmong the maze of interesting facts\non general aspects of shipbuilding is\none little known to the layman\u2014that\nevery ship Is \"tailored.\" hand-made,\ncut out by pattern and pieced together\nJust as the tailor cuts one's suit.\nEvery timber that goes onto the ship\nframes Ih \"tailored\" In n steam box.\nThousands of timbers are tailored\notherwise. For Instance, this ynrd\nhas a storage warehouse -10 feet wldo\nand one block long, and all the goods\nIt stores can be put Into a woman's\nthlmblee.\nIt is a vast drawing board. On lta\nsmooth surface of board master workmen mark out by pencil tlie pattern of\nspecial timbers. A giant, curved ruler\nsome 60 feet Ion, fastened to long,\nslender, movable Iron braces, one end\nof which can betacked Into the floor,\nenables the workman to lift the ruler\nfrom the floor pencil lines and plaeo it\non a board, so that the exact pattern\nenn bo traced. This is tbe tailor shop\nfor timbers. The sawmill completes\nthe pattern maker's work, tho steam\nbox adds tbo last touch and' the garment's pieces are ready for \"sewing.\"\nAt Meacham &. Babeock's yard the\nmen take a pride in the performance\nof their machines. They refuse to call\na huge locomotive crane anything but\na \"galloping goose\" or a stationary\nderrick for handling lumber anything\nbut a \"stlffneck.\" Tiny gasoline .cars\nwhich do enormous work about the\nyards are \"gas burrows.\"\nOf two machines they are especially proud. These arc the invention\nof Georgo If. Markley, superintendent\nnf the ynrd mill, and aro unique in all\nMhipyards. Ono is a circular cross-cut\n\u00abaw built in a mechanism which\noperates on a track overhead and enables tho saw to cut a timber at any\ndesired angle. Tho other Is a peculiar\nsaw which will nugle huge timbers\nused for ceiling and planking ships as\ntbe timbers pass down one side, and\nangle them as they return on the\nopposite side. This machine, invented\nfor war-time production, does Its\nwork in one-sixth the time required to\ndo the same work In any other yard,\naccording to officers of tho company\nIt will bundle *|tj planks per hour as\nngainst SO in nlno hours under the\nusual method.\nSPANISH FLU CLOSES ANNUAL\nPUEBLO  CRYSANTHEMUM  SHOW\nPUEBLO, Colo.\u2014Forced to abandon\nits niinunl crysantheinum show on account of the prevalence of Spanish\nInfluenza, Pueblo sold $1500 worth of\nflowers on the streets on the day set\nfor tho show. Tho Bed Cross, to\nwhich the city had given the flowers,\nconducted tho sale. They were grown\nby gardeners of the City park department in the municipal greenhouses of\nMineral 1'alace park.\nFor years the crysanthemum show\nhas been one of the big affairs of the\nearly winter In Pueblo.\nHay, Grain, Flour\nand Feed\nBest Quality\nAND\nBest Price''\nThe Taylor Milling and\nElevator Co., Ltd.\nKootenai) and Boundary\n\u00bb\u2666\u00ab\u2666.\u2666. \u00bb\u00ab\u00ab+\u00bb\u2666\u2666<\u2666 .-*+......... \u00bb-\u00bb\u00ab-*-\u00ab\nCASREGAR PUTS\nPrairie Company Will Establish Cord-\nwood and Post Camps\u2014Carload\nof Stock Arrives.\n(Special to Tbe Dally News.)\nCASTLEGAR, B.C., Nov. 17\u2014Castle-\ngar's subscription to the Victory loan\nwent slightly over $3200, about $700\nmoro than for the last loan. This\namount does not Include what was subscribed by employees of tho Edgewood\nLumber company or east of the Columbia river bridge.\nMrs, R. J. Campbell, accompanied by\nber mother, Mrs. Goodwin, of Nelson\nare visiting Mrs. Sam Thorpo In\nCastlegar.\nDr. Hartln  spent yestorday  here.\nD. McPhee and party of Milestone,\nSask., arrived here a lew days ago. Mr.\nMcPhee is manager for a company\nwhich has bought somo extensive timber limits near here and which proposes erecting a jjmnll sawmill and going into the cordwpbd and post business on a large scale. Two cars of\nhorses arrived for this company from\nMoose .law,\nMr. and Mrs. Whitehead of the\nCastlegar hotel who have been ill this\nlast two weeks are now on the road to\nimprovement.\nS. Dewberry Owens of Farron was\ntaken seriously 111 al noon yesterday\nand was rushed to the Nelson hospital.\nBorn to Mr. and Mrs. J. KMlougb,\nNov. 15, a son.\n.lack Kllldilgh of Kiewartsvllle, is\nspending a few days here, the guesl of\nBarney Lawrie.\nWork is progressing favorably on\nthe new road running to tbe proposed\nferry landing, which when complete!)\nwill abolish the antiquated ami dangerous crossing at Kinnard.\nTRAIL GOES AWAY\nRaises   $270,000,   Exceeding   Its   Allot\nment yb $85,000\u2014Four Deaths\nFrom Flu During Weekend.\nTRAIL. Ii. C, NOV, 17.\u2014Trail has!\nexceeded Its Victory loan quota by\n\u25a0185,000, closing tho campaign Saturday night with 11.70,0110. Its quota was,\n$185,000\nFour deaths from Spanish influenza!\noccurred during the week-end. They\nwore Mi's, Roe. Charles Lane, A.\nMathcwson and H. Grcst.\nMrs. Roe came down from Rossland\nto nurse her parents, Mr. and Mrs. \\V.\nGamble, both of whom are now convalescent.\nCharles Lane was fanitor at tho Fast\nTtrail school, lie wis about 22 years\nof age and is survived by a mother and\nfather In Trail.\nMessrs. Mathewson anil Grest wer\nemployed at the smelter.\nIn Whirlwind Campaign and  in  Spit\nof   Influenza  Conditions   City\nContributes $163,000\n(Special to The Daily News)\nROSSLAND, B. C, Nov. 17.\u2014In\nwhirlwind three-day finish Rossland\nnot only gained its Victory loan quota]\nof $150,000, but exceeded It by $13,000.\nTho total of $103,000 was announced\nby 9 o'clock on Saturday night.\nFor the first two weeks of the campaign conditions were so demoralized\nIn Rossland, owing to the influenzal\nepidemic, that no work In connection\nwith the Victory loan was done, but;\nduring tho last week of the campaign\na number of publls spirited citizens got\ntogether, nnd as soon as the eplddmic\nshowed signs of waning, started out on\nan energetic convlss, with tho result\nthat by Saturday night tho city'i\n(dodged nmount hnd been oversub\nscribed.\nThere .were no doaths from influenza\nepidemic during the week-end, ond\nconditions are steadily improving, although there are sllll three of four|\nrather critical cases.\nExceeds  Quota  by $10.Q00V-Has  Been\nSeven Deaths from Flu\u2014Disease\nDying Out.\nCRESTON, B.C., Nov. 17.\u2014Creston\nvalley's contribution to tlio Victory\nloan of BUS will not fall far short of\n$50,000. With one or two canvassing\ndistricts still to report the total is over\n$47,000, The valley quota was placed\nat $-10,000 by tbe central committee at\nKaslo In which constituency Creston\nwhs grouped for the purpose of this\nloan. This splendid response Is very\nlargely in the nature of a spontaneous\ncontribution ns duo to tho wretched\nweather that has prevailed the past\nthreo weeks, coupled with an outbreak\nof Spanish influenza that hns laid up\nono or more in almost every family,\nenn vassing for the loan was very limited. However, bonds were taken up\nby almost everyone who could be expected lo Invest, there being few bonds\nof large denominations sold.\nTho Creston valley which has been\nIn the grip of a very serious Spanish\nInfluenza epidemic for the past two\nweeks, now has Ihe situation well iu\nhand, there [bolng oiily about throe\nserious cases to record and few If any\nnew ones since Thursday. Once the\nseriousness of the outbreak was manifest the epidemic has been splendidly\nhandled, a committee of citize-ns renting the Grady building and cooperating\nwith a scon- or more of women in fitting it up as a hospital, tbe beds and\nbedding for it bolng loaned by ,Toe\nJackson, owner of the unused King\nGeorge hotel, supplemented by others\nsecured from local residents. At one\ntime 23 patients were eared for, with\nMrs. .Tames Johnston and Miss Fox-\nhall at tho head of the day and night\nshifts, and vice-principal Smith of the\nlocal school In charge as superintendent. From present appearances the\nhospital will be closed at the end of\ntho week, there being but ten patients\nnow receiving  attrition.\nDirectly and Indirectly tho flu hns\nclaimed seven victims to date In tho\nvalley. Tho of these were employed\nin one of the lumber camps. The third\nwas a returned soldier, Pte. Fred Me-\nClure, who was here from Bellevuc,\n.Vita, Another was Dan McDonald, a\nnew comer from Crescent Valley and\nMrs. Rich, wife of the proprietor of\nthe recently opened White Lunch.\nFrlekson mourns the passing of Mrs.\nRoy Telford, wlfo of tlie postmaster\nand general merchant at that point.\nThe last lo lie called was Andy Miller,\nwho for a number of years was provincial fire warden, and quite a prominent figure in Conservative circles,\nas well as In fraternal societies, In\nwhich he was past master of both the\nlocal Masonic and Orongo lodges. He\nhad a ranch jujst east of town, ami\nleaves a widow and six children.\nTo more expeditiously handle calls\nto Kitchener and Sirdar Dr. Henderson\nhas secured a gasoline speeder nnd\ntho C.P.R, has given him tho needed\npermission to use it on tho rails, lu\nthe recent flu epidemic something of\ntho sort was Imperative, as with the\nheavy roads making calls over n 23-\nmile stretch by auto was out of the\nquestion.\nThe union has a couple of rofrigorn-\ntor cars on the siding being loaded\nwith apples, and these will probably be\nthe last shipments for a time.\nT\nTurns  in  Big   Total   in   the  Viotory\nLoan Drive\u2014Not a Case of\nFlu in the City\n(Special to Tho Dally Nows.) '\nKASLO, 1J. C\u201e Nov. 17.\u2014Kurrlo district lonn totnl Is JU72.000. This Includes tho subscriptions from'Creston\nnnrl other places In tho olectornl riding. Knslo city's quota was $50,000.\nThere Is not a ense of flu ln Knslo.\ntir-\nELKO  NOTES\n(By Fred Roo.)\nSILVERTON PUTS\nMore   Than   Doubles   Its   Quota\u2014Van\nRoi and Hewitt Mines Employees Contribute $10,500      \u2022\n(Special to The Daily Nows.)\nSILVERTON, P. a, Nov. 17.-\nSilvorton ended its Victory lonn drlvo\nSaturday night With a total of $64,000,\nmoro than doubling Us $l!5.O00 quota,\nChairman Logan Alcl'hee reported today. He mentioned thut $10,500 was\nturned in from the Hewitt and Vnn-\nHol mines by the manager, F. C.\nMoore, who mnde the canvass at those\nproperties on account of the fact that\nthey woro quarantined ns n protection against Spanish flu.\nTO RENAME MOUNTAIN IN\nHONOR OF REFORESTATION  MAN\nPASADENA, Luton's Peak wl,l he\nthe name Twin Elsie Peak, a beautiful mountain in. the SierVoj Mndra\nrange near here, will hear In the future\nas a tribute lo the lato T, P. Lukens ol\nPasadena. Mr. Lukons was prominent In reforestation work in south\norn California and the United States\nforest service lias taton this method to\nperpetuate his name.\nPimples Broke Out\nAll Over\nFace, Arms and Neck\nPimples are a sure slg that tho\nblood Is not in its proper shape.\nWhile tho skin Is the seat of the Irritation, unsightly pimples, tho real\ndisease Is In the blood.\nMedicated lotions and powders may\nallay tho Itching and Irritation, Minever cure, no matter how long nnd\nfaithfully continued and the condition\nis often aggravated and the skin permanently injured by their use. Tho\ndisease Is more than skin deep; the\nentire circulation is poisoned.\nBurdock Blood Hitters quickly and\neffectually cures blood ond Skin\ntroubles, because It goes direct to the\nroot of the disease and stimulates and\nrestores normal, healthy action to tho\ndifferent organs, cleanses and enriches\nthe blood, and thus relieves the system of all poisonous secretions.\nH. D. B, Cures permanently because\nIt leaves none of the original poll to\nferment in the blood and cause n fresh\nattack.\nMiss IC. M. Davids \" Daysland, Alta.\nwrites: \"Last summer 1 was greatlv\ntroubled with pimples breaking out\nall over my face, arms and neck. 1\nwas advised to try Burdock Blood\nBitters and after taking two bottles\nthe pimples had almost all disappeared.\nI shall always recommend this remedy\nlo any one afflicted with skin troubles.'\nB.B.B, Is manufactured only by tho i\nT. Milburn Co., Limited Toronto, Ont.!\nJim Thlstlebeak thinks that Brlggs,\nthe cartoonist, could gel up a gOOQ\n\"Damn the Kaiser\" picture thut wooln\nhe appreciated right now.\nSergt. ,T. p. Stocks of Clear Hrrink\n\u25a0farm, fRoosv-llle, left for 'he coast,\nwhere he will report to tho military\nhoard for his discharge papers,   .\nMr. and Mrs,  Rudy of Cnetcn arrived iu Elko and |t\u00bbft for Waldo, where\nMr. Body will have chargo of ihe Ga\nnadian Pacific railway terralnuB.\nIt pays to ad'.rclae if you have thu\ngoods, and tni.'o is mon in iJvf.rtt.i-\nIng than U.->t b tyim goods and tilling space. If you have any suggestion\nto make >o tb: ed'lo:* of this areut\nfamily pap >r bow your ad should a: -\npear he will Uri.ii to you and ihe.:\ntell you how to magnetIsjq it.\nJim Thlstlebeak says he'll hot the\nkaiser and his whole damn family look\ntunny when they laugh. If a fellow just\nhad the Whole bunch In steel cages and\ncould take them around the woflld\nand exhibit them wouldn't he make\nsome money?\nContractor William Paniell has just\nCompleted plastering the Roosvlllo\nschool house, which makes It one of the\nmost comfortable schools in the district. When the flu subsides the trustees Intend bedding a masquorado ball\nfor tho benefit of the school funds.\nThe Elko mining exchange last\nThursday night was ihe scene or great\nhilarity, when the peace news was\nflashed over tbo wires. That the International troublo makers of the world\nhad surrendered, Mayor Kllngensmlth\nwent round to tho business men of tho\ntown for a donation toward n soothing\nsyrup banquet and at S o'clock the\nclub rooms were thrown open and the\ngrub would have given the Canada\nfood board tho pip had they seen it.\nOn account of Jim Thlstlebeak being\nunable to attend Altx (alwaysuptn-\nllnie) Hlrnle wus loastmasler. The\nrooms were decorated with the Hums\nof the allies und about 40 sat down to\nthe festive board that boasted of\neverything from nngci food to saur-\nkraut. After the big blow out, the\nshot and shell cigars gave the room a\nKootenay fog appearance, and it was\nonly the watrplane fizz, cruiser cock j\n(ails and the submarine whiffs that\nsaved the whole assemblage from icing gassed. The hospitality that prevailed would havo mado any old tinier\nthink he was back ln t,hc days of the\nconstruction of the Crow's Nost Pass\nrailway. Man.* songs were sung and!\ntoasts drank and tin banquet closed\nwith the singing of the national anthem, and for an encore \"Kolllrgj\nHome in the Morning, Hoys.\"\nJ. Kind Icy of Shawntgon Lake, Vancouver island, was In Elko and King-\nstone last week, returning lo the coast\nSome of tbe traveling salesmen vis-\nitlng the old historic burg recently\nwero James C. Sholrlock, \"with the'\nnerve of a burglar, came Into town at\na 45-mlle Clip In one of Pat Burns' Tin\nLizzies, making the jburvos on two.\nwheels,   selling   overland    trout    and,\nMGE FIVE\nRaincoats\nDependablefCoats'7 forlRainy\nm Days!|atJModerateTrices   '\n-Ts^'3*3*no\u00bb^.^\u00ab*ri*-Ts--nu-k.*\u00ab'\u00bb.|^\nWE ARE SHOWING A SPT*EN.\nDID RANGE OP TWEED RAIN*\nCOATS, MADE IN BELTED OR\nHALMACAN STYLES. GREY\nAND DROWN MIXTURES, WITH\nPOCKETS AND COLLARS TO\nMATCH TIIE  STYLE OP MAKE,,\n\/ EXCELLENT   VALUES   IN   ALL\n\u25a0*  1IZES.\nTHESE COATS CAN HE WORN\nWHEN THE WEATHER IS FINE\nAS WELL AS WHEN IT IS WET.\nSEE THEM.\nSPECIAL VALUES, EACH\n$20.00 and $25.00\nLADIES' UMHKEI.I.AS\u2014\nEach  \t\nCHILDREN'S UMBRELLAS-\nEach \t\n$2.00 to $5.00\n$1.25 to $1.75\nMEAGHER & CO.\nTHE STORE FOR STYLE\nTHE STORE FOR QUALITY\npickled whale meat; said he was sev\neral days late on account of tho flu\nanil had very little time and less money\nto spend as he was anxious lo get to\nBlalrmoro whero he was billed to address the Ladies' Culture club on bow\nlo cook a turtle In thu sholl. Then a\nWinnipeg man selling roofing, lar and\nbuilding paper, built somewhat similar\nto a shed roof, looked sort of one-sided\nand slanting, und hail about as much\nexpression in his face as a calcimined\nwall said if the retail merchants didn't\nbut his paper they should buy sumo\nkind of paper If It was only Victory\nbond paper. Jim Thlstlebeak told him\nlu- would get more education ronUlnj\nthis paper than the people would his\nbuilding paper. I'M Cay stopped over\nnight and returned to Vancouvr Oh\nreceipt of a telegram, It was this same\nHd Clay that told Jim ThlaUoboak thatj\nIf there were only three homely n.en III\nBritish Columbia he would be two and\nand had a smart appearance. James\nA. Black, (the Inimitable and only Jimmy) of Vancouver, who solid \"you\ncan't take a shirt off a naked man,\"\nbut he had a line of shirts thut any\nman would be proud to wenr, save him\nfrom getting the flu and give him a\npleasing disposition. It was this same\nBlack that told a West Kootenay hd*\nle] keeper that his grilled ham tasted\nlike a piece of Lot's wife's face. This\nwas Jim's first appearance since his\ndivorce from Jack Colvln, that prince\nof shoe travelers.\nTho Elko ladles' committee last week\nsent L'-l parcels to the soldier boys overseas and on account of several cases of\nInfluenza coming In from Alberta\npoints they had to suspend operations\nto attend the sick.\nIMPROVED WITH THE YEARS.\nuf half of them and they have been fast\nfriends ever since, Tho sunflower editor of the Illustrated seed catalogue\nwas (licking up empty boxes and booking future business. Me tells you how\nto grow Isabella Maria Olant nscarn-l\nYork Cottnge, where the King and\nQueen spent their honeymoon, Is a\nmuoh larger place today than It was\nwhen their mnjestles went there 25\nyears ago as a newly-married pair. It\nhas been added to on several occasions in order to provide the necessary accommoilatlons for a growing\nnus, mammoth smooth skinned greenjfamlly, Writing to a friend some yenrs\ngooseberries and pie plant, hothouse ago the Queen said: \"The cottage is\nborn, and carries a siele line uf bright very nice but so small for present\nblue anecdotes, a merry soul hiitl a needs. I wish I had one larke work-\nKood fellow to meet. Colin Dingwall ing room.\" The King and Queen are\nOttawa and Vancouver, with gents' very much attached to York Cottage,\nfurnishings and  oth.^r hardware,  said '*m\nhe had  the only smart-wood sock  In CLASSIFIEO ADS BRING RESULTS\nBritish Columbia would wear like wood EVERY TIME.\nBBeBSB\neal\/^r Baby\nMOTHER instinct tells you that\nbaby must have only milk\nthat is pure, rich and safe.\nThen use Carnation Milk. You arc\nsure of iis quality; for it comes sealed\nsafe against contamination.\nBabies tlirivoonit. It is \"whole\" milk\n\u2014not separated. Contains all lire\ncream, all the \"foorl values\" rrf rich,\nwholesome milk. Uniformly rirher\nin biilter-fat than tlie Dominion\nauthorities demand,\nYou can have it handy on the\npantry shelf ready In list\u2014as you\nneed it. Because it is sterilized, il\nkeeps fresh for months. Even when Ihe\ncan is opened, Carnation Milk will\nkeep fresh and sweet for several days.\nlu using Carnation Milk for baby\nfollow your physician's ndvicc. He\nwill 11>|| yon iii what proportion you\nmust dilute it lo suit your baby.\nCarnation Milk is evaporated to\nthe consistency of cream, Water\u2014\nand waler only\u2014is taken away from\nil. Nothing is mlderl. No artificial\nsweetening and no preservatives, So\nyou can use it for everything\u2014in\nevery way you use ordinary milk.\nThis is the safe, convenient, economical way to buy milk. Order\nthree trial cans (tall size) with your\ngroceries-your grocer is the Carnation Milkman.\nCarnation Milk Products Company, Limited\nAylmcr, Ont., Seattle and Chicago\nCONDBNSBttlBSfil\nAyltner and SprtnalHU, Ont.\n('rrnirdrr t'\u201e\u201erl llotrrrl\nl.lrrrr-rs 11-1. rrml 14-97\n(ainalu'n\nCarnation Milk\n\"from Contented CoIVj\"\nMADE IN CANADA\n PArlE SIX\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nMONDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1811 \"1\nNOT fit\nI\nUntil She Tried \"Fruit-a-tives\"\n\u2014Made From Fruit Juices.\n112 Comma St., St. John, N.B.\n\"I feel I must tell you of the great\nbenefit I have received from your\nwonderful medicine, 'Frult-a-tlres'.)\nI havo boen a sufferer for many\nyears from Violent Headaches, and\ncould* get no permanent relief.\nA friend advised mo to take 'Fruit*:\nrvtives' and I did io with great\nsucoesn; and now I am entirely free\nof Headaches, thanks to your\nsplendid medicine\".\n.'MRS. ALEXANDER SHAW.\nHOc. a box,6 for $2.60, trial size 25c.\nAt all dealers or sent on receipt of\nprico, postpaid, by Fruit-a-tivej\nLimited, Ottawa.\t\nEFFECTIVE\nPRINTING\nTo . bo effectlvo your printing\nmust be good\u2014must convey your\nmessage to tho public the way\nyou Intend It, and carry tho confidence you feci in your business-\u2014in fact, it must represent\nyou. If you sell good goods, you\n\u25a0will get the greatest returns by\nusing good printing. With us\ngood printing is not a fad, a\npastime or an experiment\u2014It's\nour business.\nTtlophoni 144 for\nQuality   and   Service\nThe  Daily  News\nJob Department\nNELSON,  B. C.\nHurricane  Is  Aocompanied  by  Tiday\nWave\u2014Waterside Property Washed  Away\u2014Ship   in   Distress\n(By Dally Nows Leased Wire)\nCURLING, Nfld., Nov. 17.\u2014A south\nwest hunioane blowing 95 miles an\nhour ond accompanied by a tidal wave,\nswept the west coast of Newfoundland\ntoday, causing heavy losses. Virtually\nall tho waterside property In this vl\u00ab\noin lty, Including that occupied by tho\nGorton Fishing company of Gloucester,\nwas swept away. Hugo seas vtwcpi\nover Channel Head lighthouse, blinding tho light 100 feet above the sea\nlevel. At Grand Bay the railway\ntracks were torn away. The damage\nis estimated at 5250,000.\nST. JOHNS, Nov. 17.\u2014A wireless\nreeeived here today from the British\nsteamer Gasped In of the Federal Line\nsaid sho was In a sinking condition\noff Cape Race. No further particulars\nwere given. It was thought here thai\ntho ship was damaged in the hurrleano\nwhich swept this coast tho last 24\nhours,\nMONTREAL   GOES   OVER\nHUNDRED MILLION MARK\n(By Dally News Leased Wlro.)\nMONTREAL, Nov. 17.\u2014Though final figures In the Victory loan for\nMontreal will not be announced until\ntomorrow night, it Is known that the\ncity has gono over the $100,000,000\nmark set for Itself, and moro than $20,-\n000,000 over the ofifelal objective of\n5SO.000.000 set by the ministry of finance.\nNOV 28  IS THANKSGIVING\nDAY IN UNITED STATES\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nWASHINGTON. Nov. 17.\u2014President\nI Wilson in a proclamation today designated hursdny, Nov. 28, as Thaukvglv-\nIng day and snid this year the- American people have special moving causes\n| to be thankful and rejoice.   Complete\n\u25a0 victory, he said, has brought not only\ni peace, but the confident promise of a\nnow day as well, in which \"justice shall\nreplaeo   force   and   Jealous   Intrigue\namong the  nations.\"\nWHY   WAIT  TILL   WINTER\nreally sets In and catches you with\nan empty coal bin? Come now nnd\njrder tho coal you must have sooner or later and tho sooner the better. We aro In a position Just now\nto mako immediate nnd full deliveries of first class coal. You will bo\nr.'ise to take advantage of that\ncondition at once.\nWest Transfer Co.\nPHONE   ll\nSITUATION IN\nHOLLAND BETTER\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Nov. 17.\u2014Despatches\nfrom Holland show that the situation is distinctly improved and\nwell in hand though excitement\ncontinuos. The queen appeared\non the stroets and was received\neverywhere with rcspoct.\nLONDON,  Nov.  16.\u2014In  view of\nthe agreement reached between\nDutch riologatea and representatives of the allied governments and\ntho United States, owintj to the\nserious distress in Holland arisirg\nfrom insufficient food supplies, the\nallied food council in London has\narranged to divert to Rotterdam\nthe steamer Adra with whoat on\nboard. The vessel carries 7100\ntons of whoat.\nWILSON   MAY GO\nTO  ENGLAND  SOON\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON,  Nov.  17.\u2014Ueuter's,  Limited, is Informed that President Wll-\nBon is expected in England shortly.\nThe Daily News\nIs on sale regularly at the\nfollowing places:\nN1HU80N.\nCity   Drug   &   Book   Company,\nBfskcr Street.\nCaua.lD Drug & Book Company.\nBaker Street.\nHumo Hotel, Ward Struct.\nStrathcona Hotol.\nNolson Newa Dapot, Ward Street.\nLrmdr Counter, C. P. It. Station\nTRAIT.\nJ. A. MacKinnon\nHunt Brntrrnr- ft K,nrr*Jr\nArthur Nolllo\nV. W. Warren\nROSSLAND.\nHunt Brotliera\nCRANBROOK.\nCranbrook Drug ft Book Company\nBr<attlc ft Murphy CompBhy\nJaraon Casrrlrly\nAlex Cnaatriy\nR. P. Moffatt\nVictor Tromtrlay\nyBRNIE.\nLou!. Boal\nB. Covert\nJames Davldaon\nW. A. Ingram\nJohn Kennedy.\nCASTLEGAR.\nRosa n, rn-.\nA. Lommol\nCRKHTON.\nCreston Drug A Book Company\nCALGARY.\nAlexander Cigar and   Nun-iarrd.\n104 rtth Ave. W\n8LOCAN CITY.\nGeorgo Hendcraon\nSANDON.\nW. J. Par-ham\nW. .1. McDonald\n8ILVKRTON.\nA l'errchey\nKASLO.\nP, McGroeor\nQRBBNWOOb,\nJ. l. Colea\nGRAND FORKS.\nR. V. Petrlo\nWoodland & Co.\nPROCTOR.\nF. J. Sammona.\nPHOENIX.\nA. Almatrom\nWEST GRAND FORKS.\nRobert Scott\nFORT STEELE.\nJ. Tacnhauaer\nCOLEMAN, ALTA.\nWilliam Dnly\nBLAIRMORE. ALTA.\n.IriHoph liiurrl\nVANCOUVER\nPanama   News   Agency,   cornet\nHaatlnga and Columbia.\nMra. B. Rowley, 37 Hmrtlngs St. W.\nUnlvcraal Newa Company,\nCharlea   Roaa,   Granvllla   Stroet\nNowa Stand.\nYMIR.\nJ. Daly\nSPOKANE.\nSpokano Hotol Nowa Stand\n\u2022bn   Stubeck,   Jamleaoa    Bldg.\nWall and Riverside.\nAll C. P. R. boata and tralna and\nGreat Northern tralna In Kootenay\nan. Boundary dlatrlot\nNOT TO ESCAPE\nOttawa Is Now Figuring on Means to\nPunish Those Who  Dodged the\nConscription Act\nOTTAWA. Nny. 17.\u2014\"Defaulters\nare to bo punished. The government,\"\ndeclares an official statonment Issued\ntonight, \"has no Intention of permitting\nthese defaulters who refused to come\nto the help of their country In the\nheiur or their country's need, to escapti\nalLpunlshm. lit or penally.\"\nThe' Btatpmont rends.\n\"The Impression that tlio govern\nment has decided finally to abandon\nall prosecutions of defaulters unoer the\nMilitary .Service act and to let them\nso free, Is without any foundation, No\nach decision has been reached by tin*\n[overnment The whole question of\nhow theso defaulters should be dealt\nwith Is now engaging th?. serious attention of the government In connection with other plans for demobilization. t\u00bbn the one hnnd the very heavy\nexpense of maintaining a large force\nnf military police over a long period\nto secure tlio apprehension of all defaulters most be considered. The military police havo met with the greatest\ndifficulty in ascertaining the whereabouts of these defaulters,\n'Vnrious alternative suggestions\nhave been mads tin to how these men\nshould be dealt with. Among others\nIs that thoy should be disfranchised\nfor a definite period. The government\nhaa no Intention of permitting these\nllOfaultOTB who refused to come lo the\nhelp of their country in the hour of\ntheir country's need, to escape all punishment or penalty,\"\nLEGISLATOR   DIES,  VICTIM\nOF INFLUENZA EPIDEMIC\n(By Dally News Leased Wire,) j\nSASKTOOX, Nov. 17.\u2014MangUS O.\nRnmslnnd, Liberal member or the Saskatchewan legislature for the Polly\nconstituency, died this morning ai\nKamsack from pneumoniae) following\nan attack Kit Influenza. Mr. Rnmslnnd\nleaves n wife nd three young children.\nPROBE SHOWS MILK\nPROFIT IS LARGE\nWINNIPEG, Man., Nov. 17.\u2014While\nthe Crescent creamery officials declared at the Tustln milk probe Saturday that the company lost $410,000\nIn four years on American milk, the\nnet profit* of the company in 1014\nwere 1122,278.10. Tho profit oh all\nmilks handled by the company per\nquart Wtta .68 of 1 cent. These figures\nwere brought out in the report of the\nchartered accountants employed by\nthe commission.\nIt waa shown that while the average companies In larger cities of the\nUnited States showed the goodwill of\na milk business at 7 per cent, the\ncompany's goodwill was listed nt\n(191,260, or $2250 for each route. This,\nit Is Judged, Is excessive.\nCommissioner Tustln Informed It.\nA. Rogers, who, ns president and\nmanaging director of the company receives tt salary of 512,000 per annum,\nthat the Increase ln tho cost of milk\nthe company wished to chargo tlie\nconsumer would cost the publio\n1118,000 per annum, and that tho company's profit since tho war began was\n12'4 per cent,\nSASKATOON PASSES ITS\nVICTORY LOAN OBJECTIVE\n(By Dally News l.etsed Wire.)\nSASKATOON, Nov. 17.\u2014Tile allotment of $4,500,000 for the Saskatoon\ndistrict is practically certain to he\npassed when the full f.gres are known\nThe district up to clow of business on\nSaturday night had 'subscribed $3(800,\n300, while the city subscriptions bad\nrcacherd 5$ 1,951,750,' but there are sev\noral districts yet to bo reported.\nPrlnee Albert  hns subscribed $400,-\n000.\nFORT WILLIAM GOES\nWELL OVER MILLION\n(By Dally News Lensed Wiro.)\nFORT WILLIAM, Ont., Nov. 17.\u2014\nFort Wllllam'H contribution to the Vic-\nlory loan passed the million dollar\nmark last nlglit at :i o'clock, bolng\n$300,000 over Ihe objective.    A second\n, crown lo its honor flag was attached\n\u25a0on Saturday morning, when 50 per centl\nover the objective was reached. Com-|\nplete returns will not bo available tilt\n1 Monday morning as some workers\nwere on the job into Saturday night\nI and did not turn ln full reports.\nCATHOLIC  PRIEST  NOW\nPRIVATE IN  U. 3.  RANKS\nTn   Rev.   Father  Alphonse   l'lskup,\ncurate of Marie Cello church, Chicago;\nhas fallen the honor of being probably\nthe first Catholic priest , from the\nUnited States to serve in the ranks of\nthe allies as a private. Rev. Father\nBlskup Is now Pto, Blskup of tho\nCzecho-Slovak legion and has taken\npart in several engagements with tho\nRoche. When the United Stales entered the war Rev. Father Blskup tried\nto enlist In tho United States army\nas a regular chaplain and when he\nfailed in that effort he enrolled as a\nvolunteer with tlio nKigllE of Columbus and landed In Franco as a volunteer chaplain. As his parents are of\nCzech nationality, although American\ncitizens he tried to got Into the Czech-\nSlovak legion In Paris but found he\ncould not do so as n Knights of Col\numbus chaplain, because tbe Czechs\nare serving as part of the FVrench\nforces. Ho secured permission from\nthe Knights to enlist In the Czech legion ami ut once did so.\nAUSTRALIAN  M.  P. DIES OF\nINFLUENZA ON STEAMER 1\nlluNol.l'LL*.\u2014.1. C. Manifold, uem-\n\u2022ber of tho  Australian  commonwealth I\nparliament   and   recently   engaged   In\nho.'pit.il work In France, died or Influ-\nonuzn after the steamer on which he I\nwas a passenger had left San Francis-1\nco for  Australia  via   Honolulu.    Then\nbody was burled at'sea the following J\nday, British army ofticers cumin, tins I\nthe services.\nA Classified Ad. will brlinr results.\nMILITIA  DEPARTMENT\nISSUES BONUS CHECKS\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, Nov. 17.\u2014With respect\nlo the civil service bonus, inside service, it was ascertained today that\nthe department of mllltla and defense\nhas already Issued somo 1300 chocks\nout of a total of approximately 2000.\nThe militia department has not allowed heads of branches to deal with\nextraordinary cases, but hns detailed\na special board tn Inquire Into each\nand every caso nnd mako a report\nthereon through .the minister to the\nspecial committee of the privy council.\nVETERANS PROTEST\n<\\\\y Dally News Leased Wire.)\nRKfMNA. Nov. 17.\u2014The Great\nWar Veterans hero met representatives of the military Y. M. C. A, and\nprotested against the erection of a\nY. M. C. A. hut on which work began Saturday, on the grounds that it\ncompeted with the veterans' plans for\na soldiers* home and was unwelcome,\nhowever well meant, interference.\nEDITOH  DIES\nNEW YORK, Nov. 17.\u2014John A.\nMcLeod, aged 45, night editor of the\nCanadian Press at New York for the\npast three years, died early today.\nMr. MeLeoel, prior to coming to New\nYork, was employed at the Globe, In\nToronto, lie was a native of River\nJohn, N.S., near New Glasgow, whero\nhis parents now reside. lie Is survived by his widow, tine daughter and\na son, serving with the Canadian artillery In France, ills remain! will bo\nBent to Canada for burial.\nSPANISH   FLU   EPIDEMIC\nABATING   IN  WINNIPEG\n(By Dnlly News Leased Wire.)\nWIN Nil \u00bbK, I, Nov. 17.\u2014Over the\nWeekend 306 new cases of Spanish influenza were reported to the local\nhealth authorities, with 41 deaths.\nThese were distributed as follows:\nFrom C p.m. Friday to G p.m. Saturday, 250 cases, 25 deaths; from G p.m.\nSaturday to 11 p.m. Sunday, 137 cases,\n10 deaths. As compared with preceding days last week tbe epidemic\nshows a Slight abatement, the number\nof new cases recorded averaging over\n300 dally.\n *o~\t\nSIR GEORGE FOSTER\nAFTER SIBERIAN TRADE\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, Nov. 17\u2014Sir George Fos\nter, minister of trado and commerce\nhas In view tlie fostering .of Canadian\nexport trado In eastern Siberia, In regard to which territory tho Canadian\ntrade commission established there!\nnow for some time has sent in glowing\nreports, in connection with this. D. C.\nRen, manager of tho Toronto brunch ot\ntbo Royal Bank of Canada, with three\nsenior officials oil the bank, will sail\nfrom Vancouver fdr Vladivostok within the next few days, with a view to\ninvestigating . tho trado conditions\nMicro nnd oslnidlshfng a branch of tho\nRoyal bank In that city.\nYou Can Buy hat You Want\nWhat You DonTWant\nThrough a News Gassified Ad\n_ ...     THOSE WHO WANT HELP CAN GET IT BY ADVERTISING IN\n''THE DAILY NEWS CLASSIFIED AD COLUMN.\nTHOSE WHO WANT JOBS CAN 8ECURE THEM BY RUNNING\nA WANT AD IN THE DAILY NEWS.\nIF YOU HAVE POULTRY, EGGS, LIVESTOCK OR RABBITS, OR\nA DOG, TO SELL YOU CAN FIND A BUYER THROUGH THE\nDAILY NEWS CLASSIFIED AD COLUMNS,\nAROUND YOUR HOME YOU PROBABLY HAVE MANY\nARTICLES FOR WHICH YOU HAVE NO FURTHER USE, BUT\nWHICH ARE WORTH CASH TO SOMEONE EL8E. ADVERTISE\nTHEM IN THE DAILY NEWS CLASSIFIED COLUMNS AND GET\nINTO TOUCH WITH THOSE WHO HAVE USE FOR THEM.\nPROPERTY CAN BE SOLD OR RENTED THROUGH THE DAILY\nNEWS CLASSIFIED COLUMNS.\nIF YOU WANT TO BUY OR RENT A HOME, A RANCH OR A\n8UMMER RESIDENCE YOU CAN GET INTO TOUCH WITH\nOWNERS THROUGH THE DAILY NEWS CLASSIFIED COLUMNS.\nPOSSIBLY YOU HAVE SOMETHING FOR EXCHANGE.\n\"TRADES\" CAN BE MADE QUICKLY AND SATISFACTORILY BY\nPUTTING YOUR WANTS BEFORE THE PUBLIC THROUGH THE\nCLASSIFIED AD COLUMN3.\nClassified Ads Bring Results and\nthe Cost Is Small\nTHE CHARGE 18 ONE CENT PER WORD PER INSERTION,\nWITH A MINIMUM CHARGE OF 25 CENT8. SIX INSERTIONS\nARE GIVEN FOR THE PRICE OF FOUR WHEN PAYMENT IS\nMADE IN ADVANCE, OR A MONTH'S INSERTIONS FOR 15 CENTS\nA WORD, A.25-WORD AD WILL C08T YOU ONLY \u00bb1 FOR A\nWEEK. TRY ONE. IT WILL BRING YOU THE RESULTS\nYOU  8EFK.\n MONDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1819\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nf AGE SEVEN ,\nLittle ids that Bring Big Returns\nINDENSED ADVERTISING RATES ,3   FRUIT AND VEGETABLES.\nInsertion, per word     lc\ntilriiiini  chnnio    25c\nconsecutive    Insertions,   per\nrorrl, paid In rrdvnnce     4c\nenty-six consecutive Insertions\none month)  per' word, paid ln\ndvnnce   ltro\nson News of the Day Column\njr word each insertion     2c\nMinimum charge per insertion.. 26c\nrlc fnco type, per word, ouch In-\n\u25a0rtlon      3c\nblack face capitals, per word,\nInsortlon       4c\n[le   lino   black   face   capitals.\nred aa hoadlng  20c\nIts, ono Insertion   GOc\n11   condonsed, advertisements   ure\nIn advance,\ncomputing tho number of words\nclassified or Kelson Nows of tho\nadvertisement count each word,\nir mark, abbreviation, initial letter\nfigure rrs ono word.\nIvertlsers are renilndod that It is\niry to the provisions of tho pos-\nws trr hnvo letters addresser, to\niris only; therefore nny ndvertlscr\n\u2022oris of concealing his or her Iden-\nnruy uso a box rrt this office wlth-\nliny extra clittrge If replies rrre\nd for; if replies nre to bo mailed\ndvertisers, rrllow 10 cenls extra In\n;toh trr prico of advertisement to\npostage.\n0 News reserves the right to ro-\nany copy submitted for publicn-\nWANTBD \u2014 2000 to  3000  pounds ot\ngood   winter  cabbage    Quote   best\nprico and quantity you  havo to H.\nCllegerlch, Alnsworth, B.C. (T41)\nMALE    HELP    WANTED.\n5~dN\"~EMPLOYMENT AGe'iNOY-\nParkar, 303 Balrar St., Phone 28i\n1TED \u2014 Tlomnkors:   woodsmen;\ncksmith;  wonian cook.\n(TED\u2014An engineer  with  second\nss British   Columbia   certificate.\ny with  testimonials to Uox  70\",\nNews. (707)\n.TED\u2014Ten piece-makers to cut\nits nnrl poles. Salmo Cedar Co..\n8  Siding,  B.C. <GS3,\nITUATIONS WANTED\u2014MALE\nIT1.D\u2014 .loir   cooking   in   mine   or\nnp.   Apply box 7_s. Dally News.\nMISCELLANEOUS\u2014WANTED\nrTED---cTiAir^TTOr7TiAGS.\nCENTS A POUND; SMALL\n;ES NOT WANTED. DAILY\n'S. (3*3>\nFALSE TEETH BOUGHT, sound\nbroken, vulcanite or metal; nlso\newrrrk. post them to .1. Dnrrstono\nfflce box 1280, Vancouver. Hlgh-\n\u25a0ash prices Bent by return mnll\ntOII)\nl.\\G WANTED\u2014$1.50 per day anrl\nrrd.   Box 7S4, Dally News.     (734)\n30ATS AND AUTOMOBILES\nP\u2014McLaughlin five passenger\n35 h.p.; fine shape; rnechnnle-\n'Orfect; good tires; extra tire in\nr; cheap for ensh; near Cran-\nBox 710 Dally News.        (710)\nFRUIT FIANCHEI.S\u2014We will give a\nfour year contract, for strawberries\nand raspberries: any amount up to\n.00 acres, a' good prices McDonald\nJam Co. (082)\n14 FURNISHED ROOMS TO RENT\nKEwTAPA^mENTS. (684)\nFURNISHED housekeeping rooma for\nrent ovor Horawlll's grocery btore;\norlck block: HO.   Apply C. W. Apple-\nyard, phone 444. (CSS)\n\"LEAN, comrortahlti rooms for men.\nseutral location; hot snd cold shower\n'vrtlrs.   Rite moderate. T.M.C.A., Stan\nley nnd Victoria WS0)\nEOR RENT\u2014In Annable block, sin\u00able\nrooms, two room suites. (IIS7)\nFOR   RENT\u2014To   respectable   parties,\nclean, well furnished 3 nnd 4 room\nsuites for housekeeping; 507 Silica St.\n(097>\n11      FEMALE HELP WANTED.\nXVTN^D^Tu^gnndyTrn^twS'oT\nflee work;  must hnve goud knowlodgo  of stenography.    Hudson's  Bay\nCo., Nelson. (742)\nWANTED \u2014 First\ndining room girl,\nhotel\nclass   experienced\nApply Strathcona\n(0881\nWANTED  \u2014  Chambermaid.    Apply\nhousekeeper.    Hume hotel.      '(630-\nWANTED \u2014 Chambermaid.\nQueen's hotel.\nApply\n(7141\nPATRIOTIC, steady, well paid employment ut home, irr war or peace\nrime\u2014Knit socks for us on the fast,\nsimplo Auto Knitter. Particulars today, 3c stamp. Auto Knitter Company,\nDepL C82, 607 College, Toronto.\n(6S0)\n19\nPOULTRY AND EGGS.\nl''OR    SALE\u2014Toulouse    geese,    $3.50\neach.   Sinclair, top of Stanley street.\n(720>\n18\nARTICLES FOR SALE\nNO 3 TAYLOR SAFE, only little used,\nworth  new  in  Toronto,   $150,  salo\nprice,  $75. W.  Parker,  309  Baker St.\n(715-\n$135 Victrola nnd 31 records, bargain\n$85.   Box 716. Dally News.       (716)\n43 HOTELS.\n\"KOrl^ERirT\u2122E.^H5Ts^^\nat tbo Province Hotel, Grand Porks.\n(6S3\u00bb\nWHEN REPLYING TO ADVERTISE-\nmenls In Condensed Columns, kindly\nmention you saw It in The News\u2014it\nwill help vnu.\n20        LIVESTOCK FOR SALE\nTO7TXH3S---Kln!raia7^^\npups, registered stock; riuallty and\nprico right. Pedigree and particulars\nMarlborough Kennels, Gray Creek,\nB.C. (747>\nCOLUMBIA VALLEY FARM\u201440 acres\nrich loam, 18 cleared and fenced; no\nstumps, no rocks; good houso and\nbuildings; 10 head of cattle; 10 tons of\nliny, seed gruln rrnrl potatoes; implements, tools. Price $5500. Box 748.\nDally News. (748>\nFOR SALE\u2014Strong, thrifty six weeks'\nPigs, $4. Applcton Bros., Proctor.\n(702*\nFOR  SALE\u2014Flvo  heavy  horses nn<\nhri'.'noss.    Salmo \"Cedar   Co.,   Pari\nSiding, B.C. '       (090)\nFAMILY COW\u2014Ayrshire, 5 years, giving sixteen qunrts daily, ninety rlol-\nlnrs. Jersey tn freshen In February, 2\nyears olrl, sixty dollars; few head heel\ncattle cheap. Kennedy, Harrop.     (692)\nFOR SALE\u2014Lady's Black Pomeranian\npet dog; pedigreed.   Good homo es-\nsonllal.    Apply  E.  II.  Boyer,  Willow\nPoirrt.\nWHEN REPLYING TO ADVERTISE-\nments in Condensed Columns, klndb\nmention you saw it  in Tbo News\u2014ir\n\"'111 help you.\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\nPLEASE   NOTICE.\nAll people wishing to holp with provisions 01' assist In othor wuys during\ntiro epidemic nro nsked to do so only\nthrough phono 133, tlio _ Rod Cross\nrooms, from 9 a.m. to 9' p.m. More\nolenn cotton urgently needed.      (710)\nThe funeral of tho lute Bruco White\nwill be held from tho Standard undertaking parlors on Monday at 2 o'clock.\nIn compliance with tho health regulations tho service, will bo private rrt the\nparlors and public nt the gravesldo.\n(750>\nNELSON LODGE NO 23, A.F. 4 A.M.\nThe Worshipful Master would lie\npleased if nil members nnrl sojourning\nbrethren who enn conveniently do so,\nwould intend the funeral of tho late\nltro. Bruce White on Monday nt 2\np.m.   By order W. M. (751)\nIN  MEMORIAM.\nln loving memory of our dear son,\nDaniel Smith, who fell in nctlon on tho\nSornmo, November 18th, 191G.\nWhirl though Irr lonely urlof we sigh\nFor him beloved no longer nigh,\nSubmissive  would  wo still  reply   .\nThy will be done.\nInserted  by his sorrowing parents,\nMr. anil Mis. Alex. Smith, Nolson, B.C.\n(752.\n34\nTEACHERS WANTED.\nSCHOOL BOARDS reouirrng teachers\nwrite or wire to B. C. Teachers*\nAgency, 1601, 3rd Ave.. Vancouver. Expert service. Promptness nnd enre.\nFullest details concerning teachers.\n(696>\nWHEN REPLYING TO ADVERTISE-\nments in Condensed Columns, klr,dl>\nmention you saw It In The News\u2014ll\nwill help you.\n12\nMATRIMONY.\nMARRY\u2014Many rich.   Particulars free\nF. Morrison, L 3053 W. Holden, Seattle, Wash. (619)\nWHEN REPLYING TO ADVERTISE.\nmerits In Condensed. Columns, kindly\nmention you sow It ln Tho News\u2014il\nwill help you.\nSECOND HAND DEALERS.\nPHE ARK pays casl. for secundum,\n.'urnl.ure, stovos: 606 Vernon; Ph. 651\nLOST AND  FOUND.\nLOST\u2014Bunch  of  keys  between   post-\noffice    and    Bnker    street.    Finder\nplease leave    at Bean's store.      (732)\n35\nFOR   RENT.\nTHE MOST COMFORTABLE rrnd\nmost artistic homo In the city for\nrent completely furnished or would\nrent unfurnished If desired. Telephone\n294. (719>\nCARD OF THANKS.\nMr. rrnd Mrs. H. Christenson anil\nfamily desire to thank their marry'\nfriends for kindness rrrrd sympathy extended trr them in thoir recent bereavement In tho loss of their duughtor\nSolvel. (7191\nNOTICE.\nOn account of tho Spanish Influenza epidemic no passenger's will be\nallowed to land nt Alnsworth, Princess\nCreek or Cedar Creek. (753)\nThe funeral of tho Inle Arehio Chap*\nmnn will tnke plnce from D. .1. Robertson's pnrlors nt 1 o'clock today. (754)\nusiness and Professional Directory\nACCOUNTANTS.\n\"wTTTTAXDiNGT\nAccountant, Bank of Montreal\nChambers, Rossland, B.C.\nJ. H. LAWRENCE,\nAccountant, Etc\nal Bar>< Building, Nalaon, B.C.\nBUSINESS   COLLEGES.\n'oiT^Bij^iNEss   PoujLSiLP\nand  night  classes.    Complete\neaa course.   Apply P.O. box 745\n(6911\n^RneRAL^Di Vectors.\nROBERTSON.F. D. D?&. E-. Sli\".\ntorla street. Pbone 292; nlr.hr\nr. 167-L.\nAUCTIONEERS.\nWATERMAN & CO., Oporn blk\nCUTLER, AUCTIONEER,\nphone 77.\nJOB PRINTERS\nNEwTpUBUm4JNG CO, LTD.\nAll Kinds of\nMERCIAL PRINTING, RULING\nAND BOOKBINDING\nHigh  Claas Work\nul Attention Paid In All O-rf.r.\nA8SAYER8.\n^\"wrwTbbOWSON, box A-1108, Nelson, B.C., Standard western charges.\nWHEN REPLYING TO ADVERT1SE-\nments in Condensed Columns, kindly\nmention you saw it In The News\u2014It\nwill help you.\t\nENGINEERS.\nC?\nrrf*\n$ros., Burt\/\nNelson. B. C.\nCo\nCIVIL AND  MINING ENGINEERS\nB. C, Alberta and Dominion\nLAND  SURVEYORS\nCrown Grant Agenti       Btu\u00ab Rrinting\na. l. Mcculloch,\nHydraulic Engineer.\nProvincial Land Surveyor,\nRnker St., Nelson, B.C.\nA. D. NASH,\nMining Engineer.\nConiultatlon,    Exploration.    Development  Reports.   '\nRoom   1,   Royal   Bank   Bldg.,   Nelson.\nWHEN REPLYING TO ADVERTISK-\nments In Condonsed Columns, kindly\nmention you saw it in Tho News\u2014it\nwill help you.\nPHYSICIANS  AND  SURGEONS\nDr.A.T.Spankie\nM. D., C. M.\nEye, Nose, Ear and Throat\nSpecialist\nOffice:   Suite   121-122   New   P.\nBurns Building, corner 8th Ave.\nand 2nd Stroet E., Calgary.\nPhones:   Office,   M2848;   House,\nM2077\nInterne and House Surgeon Manhattan Eye, Ear. Nose and\nThroat Hospital, New York City,\n1011-14. Specialist to Calgary\nSchool Board.\nWHOLESALE.\nA. MACDONALD & CO., WHOLE\n\u25a0ale Grocers and Provision Merchants. Importers of Teas, Coffees,\nSplcea, Dried Fruits, Staple and\nFancy Groceries, Tobaccos, Cigars,\nButter. Eggs, CheeBe, and Packing\nHouse Products. Office and warehouse\ncorner of Front and Hall Sta. P. O\nhox 109E.   telepnonea 28 and 23\nIN SRIKEBREAKERS\nSAYS  U. S.  POSTMASTER\niy Dally News Leased Wire.)\nftjEAPOUS,   Minn.,   Nov.   17.\u2014\nhone sorvlco In tho Twin Cities,\ntho exception of tho automatic.\nffldly tied up tonight as thu re-\n,f tho strlko of operators of the\n, City Telephone & Telog^rph\niny in St. Paul and tho North-\nrn (Boll) Telephone company in\njapolls. Buslnoa Kin general has\nhandicapped in both cltlos during\nliy. Postmaster General Burleson\n;lt wired the companion *o pro-\nat once to hire opernt-iva lo tako\n)lHce of the  strikers,  who woro\n21 hours to return to work or bt\nfrom further employment wilh\nompanios. The strikers demand\npor cent increase ,in wagon which\nbmpnny contends it cannot p.i.v\nut inroasiug telephone rates.\nTS FOR TRACES OF\nWRECKAGE   OF   GALIANO\n3y Dally News Leased Wire.)\nTORIA,   Nov. 17\u2014The Canadian\npatrol steamer Malasplna senl\no waters off tho southern part\nQueen Charlotto islands to\n\\ for traces of tho Galinno, is\n,ed sheltering In FlUhUgh sound\nIng good weather. She reports\nIng the whaling lender Gray und\nInformed by Cnpt. Blllington of\nvessel that the skylight picked\nf Capo-St. .Tnmes and believed\nvo  been   torn   from  the engine\nroom of the Gallano could not have\nbeen from that vessel as tho iron\nbands hold ing It to tbo deck woulei\nhave broken il lo pieces, whereas the\nskylight found was practically intact.\n\u25a0    LIVESTOCK MEN TO MEET\n(By Dally News Leased Wire)\nOTTAWA, Nov. 17.\u2014The mooting of\nlivestock men called by Hon. T. A.\nCrearar will be held in Ottawa on\nTuesday, Nov, II), lo confer wltn the\ndepartment as to tho best measures,\nto be adopted lo promote the llvhSlockj\nIndustry of Canada tn recognition of\nthe unprecedented opportunity which\nIs presented to this country of supplying the livestock needs of Europe\nduring the next fe wycars.\n\"LOCAL   MUSICAL   TALENT\"\nA newspaper is seldom popular\nwllh tho average local musical talent.\nThe pianists expect tho paper to suy\nof them they aro Padcrewskl; tho\nvocalists must equal Melbu and Galli\nCurd, and the violinists must have\nan art on par with that of Krelslcr.\nA newspaper Ih unwilling to stand up\nbefore tho world with such statements. What is tho result? Local\ntalent says: \"With such a paper It is\nimpusslblo to create nn artistic atmosphere In tbls town.\"\u2014Atchison\nGlobe.\nIF YOU WANT RESULTS TRY A\nTHRESHERS SAVE\n16,000,000 BUSHELS\nCleaner harvesting ami threshing in\nthe United States havo come to stay,\naccording to reports received by thu\nUnited States food administration\nfrom throshormen, farmers and local\nrepresentatives in grningrowing states.\nTho so called \"blanket test\" has shown\nthousands of grain producers how to\ndetermine when a threshing machlno\nis operating properly and has been\nespecially impressive. Other methods\nof farm conservation have restdted in\nfurther large savings of marketable\ngrain.\nOf 33 grain states whore efforts toward cleaner threshing were centered,\ntwo-thirds have already reported an\naggregate saving of 16,000,000 bushels\nof wheat.\nTHE HARVEST IN ITALY.\nTlO*M,E.>\u2014-Thrashing opera tlons are\nnot yet quite over and ful ldotails as\nto this year's harvest uro therefore\nnot available but it is thought that\ntho yield will prove to be abovo tho\naverage. On land of the first class\ntho results, it is considered will probably show a return of about 15 or 20\nquintals to tho hectare, on loss productive land nbout 5 to 7 quintals to the\nhectaro nnd on the poorest land from\n3 to 5. Ah regards potatoes, chestnuts\nand maize the results aro not quite so\nsntlsfiiotory as last   year.\nMr. and Mrs. D. A. McFarland extend heartfelt thanks ti\u00bb their friends\nfor the great kindness and sympathy\nshown to them In their double bereave-\nmont <765>\nENGLISH PEOPLE SEE FILE\nFISH   OFF  LAND'S  ENIJ\nLONDON.\u2014Tho fish file captured ofr\nland's End is a very rare visitor to\nour const, tbe only previous specimen\nrecorded having bene caught su long\nugo as 1827. It belongs to a numerous and Important family of the tropical seas, which are so called becauso\ntho first dorsal fin Is studded up thb\nfront with small projections that suggest some resemblance to a file. Another peculiarity nf these comic looking fish is tho gunbiek spine, the principle of which was adopted for the\nearliest safely rifle locks.\nLAND REGISTRY ACT,\n(Section 24.)\nIn tho matter of Lot 47, Block 22,\nNelson City.\nProofs having been filed In my office of the loss of Certificate or Title\nNo. 21S3A, to tho above mentioned lot\nIn the name of Arthur Booth, and bearing idate .'itho 20th .January; 11903, IT\nhereby give notice of my Intention at\nthe expiration of one calendar month\nfrom the first publication hereof to\nissue lo the said Arthur Booth a fresh\nCertificate of Title'In lieu of such lost\nCertificate. Any person having any information with reference' to such lost\nCortllflcato 'of Title Im requested to\ncommunicate with the undersigned.\nDated at the l^ind Registry Office,\nNelson, B.C., this 30th day of Actober,\nmis.\n13. S. STOKES,\nDistrict Registrar of Titles.\nDale of first publication, November\n4, 1918.\nFRED FULTON WINS \\^\nFIERCE SLUGGING UOUV\"\n(Hy Dally News Leased Wire.)\nSAN FRANCISCO, Cal., Nov. 17.\u2014in\nono of the fiercest four-round fights\novor staged here, Fred Kulton of Kansas last night won a decision over Willie.Meehnn of Han Frnnclsso, The men\nslugged their wny through every mln-\nIlitO of the four rounds. Median centered his attack on Fulton's body,\nwhile tho latter conceittruted on Moo-\nhnn's face wltb a constant succession\nor straight  lofts.\nRound 1.\u2014Tho men started In fighting, both playing for the'body. Whenever Fulton could gel Mopium at arm's\nlength, he drove straight lefts into the\nface. Near the close of Ihe round Mee-\nhad drove Pulton against the ropes\nwith a fusllade of blows to the stomach.   Round even.\nRound 2.\u2014Meehan attacked Fulton's\nbody, while the latter played fer Mee-\nhnn's head wltb straight lefts. Thoy\nfought heael to head.. Meehnn was\nbleeding freely as a result of fid ton's\nsharp punches to his face, Fulton':-\nround.\nRound 3.\u2014Meehnn rushed Fulton tn\nthe ropes, despite several lofts to his\nface. In a rapid OXOhangO of blows,\nMeehnn had Fulton lacking up. Fulton got in some more jabs to tho faco\nand Meohanj partly blinded by Ihe flow\nof blood, clinched.    Fulton's round.\nRound 4\u2014Median rushed Fulton to\nthe ropes, swinging to the body, Tlry\nexchanged a volley e>f rights end lof s\nlo the head. Standing too to tne. both\nthrew science to the winds and slugged, Meehnn was nearly ont wh?n the\ngong rang,   Fulton's round.\n400 Yards for\n15 Cents\nCoates' Black^and White Spool Thread -\nBist quality, six-cord, in all sizes. 200 yards\nin each spool. -I p\u00bb\nTwo Spools for  J.UL\nCOA.TES'     I'UHI.      WHITE\nM HRCEIUZED      CROCHET\nTMItl.AI.~In nil sizes.\nTwo Mulls for'  \t\n35c\nELGIN      MAID      CROCHET\nTHREAD\u2014In rill shades;\nrr!l one size.    Four Rnlls\n25c\nAMERICAN  MAID CROCHET\nTHREAD\u2014In While nnrl Ecru;\nrill slzesrrnil r'rrlnrs;   in 30   1 R*\nonly.    I'er llrrll     lull\nNEW STYLES IN LADIES'\nWHITE LINEN COLLARS\u2014\nSeveral different shrrpes in\nstock. All orro Trice,\nEnch   \t\nPURE        WHITE LINEN\nTHREE-CORD MACHINE\nTHREAD\u2014203   yards   nn   cncli\nrrpnol;  White only:  sizes\nSS rrrrrl r,0.   Tit Spool\n30c\n55c\nVURK      WHITE       COTTON\nLACE\u2014Effective   patterns;   3%\nInches wide.   Extraordinary  Value,   I'er Yard   ...\n10c\nSUPERIOR QUALITY rillUE SILK. FOR CROCHET WOltK\u2014\nVery much irr demand rrnrl very scarce. Suitable for mnUinu Boudoir\nCr.pr,, etc. A nice ar.Bortn.6ht rrf art shades, Including Copenhagen,\nHindi. While, Rose, Gold, Sky, Hern, Dnrk Oreen, Lavender, QK%\u00ab*,\ncic   T\\v\u201e Balls for   OUw\nIF  YOU   WANT  QUALITY\u2014\"GET   IT  AT  THE   BAY\"\nWILLARD  SHOWS FORM\nIN  BOUT;  RAISES $5000\n(Hy Dnlly News Lcnsed Wire.)\nPORT WORTH, Tex., Nov. 17.\u2014\n.less Willard, champion heavyweight\nof the world, appeared here tonight In\nrr four-round hoxlng exhibition for the\nbenefit of the United Wrrr Work\ncampaign, Pitted against him was\nSergt. Walter Monaghan, hoxlng Instructor at Port Oglethorpe, On. The\nbout was fast throughout, the champion showing no bad effects from his\nlong absence from the ring. The show\nnetted thr- wnr work fund nlumt |f,000.\nAMERICAN   FOOTBALL\nMichigan  Aggies,   13;   Noire  Dnme\nTech,\n\u25a0.)\nExeter. 28;  Amlovor, 7.\nHoly Cross, 27; Worcester\nColumbia, 11; Wesleyn, 0.\nMinnesota, 6:  Wisconsin, 0.\nUniversity of Pennsylvania, o\nversity rrf Pittsburg, 37.\nMlelgnn, 1.1; Syracuse, 0.\n\u25a0*\u25a0\nAIRMEN   BEATEN\n(Ily Dally News Leased Wlr\nToronto, Nov. 17.\u2014Beaches team\ndefeated n tenrrr from the Rrryrrl Air\nforco In nn exhibition grime of rugby\nhere on Saturday nftornoon by 13 to\n10.\nTORONTO  LOSES\n(By Drills' News Lenscrl Wile.)\nHAMILTON,   Out.,   Nov.   17.\u2014Some |\nof thr- olrl Intercity rivalry won inrrnl- I\nfest  here yesterday afternoon,  when\nHamilton  Colloglntc  Institute  undertook to cut down the IT, point lead of\nToronto university's school, piled up rr\nweek ugo In the Queen City  Irr tie\nJunior o. It. F. U.   At the piny\nthe  errd   of  the   grrrne   llnnrlltou\nscored 13 to Torontos' 9.\nSpecial\nSelling\nin Our Ladies'\nShowrooms\ni'lVII   LADIES'   SKIRTS   IN   FANCY\nBELTED  EFFECTS,  TRIMMED\nFANCY   BUTTONS\nIN  GOOD QUALITY  TWEEDS\nValue, up  to $11.75\nFOR   TODAY'S   SELLING\nEach $7\n50\noff at\n1   baet\nMORTGAGE  SALK\nUnder and by Virtue ol\" tbo powers\ncontained in a certain mortgngo which\nwill bo produced at tho lime of gale,\nthoro will bo offered for sale by pub-'\nlie auction, by Moasrs .Charloa A.\nWaterman and Company, at their auction rooma, Opera bouse block, in the\ncity of Xelson, Province of H Itlsh\nColumbia, on Monday tbe 2nd d* y of\nDecember, A.D, 1018. at tbo hour of\n12 o'clock noon, tbe following property:\nAll and singular tbose certain \"parcels or tracts of land and promises\nsituate and lying and being in the District of Kootonay, in tbe Province of\nBritish Columbia and bolnpr composed\nof Lots I to 10, both inclusive, and\nLots 17 lo 21, both Inclusive, being part\nof tbe subdivision e>f District hot 6547.\nCJrotip 1, Kootenay District afeiresaid,\nMap 8.JC, and Blocks 5, 8 and 13, being\npnrt or tho subdivision of Lot 303*\nCroup 1, Map 782.\nFor terms and conditions ef sale apply to\nE. A. CREASB,\nSolicitor for MorlKiiKeo, Griffin block,\nBaker street, Nelson, I.rltisb Columbia.\nDated November 2nd, 1918.\nPrivate  Hospital\nLICEN8EO  BY  PROVINCIAL\nGOVERNMENT\nW\u00ab fly. partloular attention to all\nfemale trouble\u2014home-like apartment!\nfor ladles awaiting accouohmont Certified nurses sent out en private case.,\ntown or country. Highest references;\nreasonable terms;   Inspection Invited\nMrs.  Moore, Superintendent\nTHE HOME PRIVATE HOSPITAL\nFalls and Baker Sts., Neleon, B, C.\nPhone 172 for Appointment\nP. Q.Wo*T7l\nHIS    SEASON'S    GOODS\nLadies' Overcoats\nLADIES' WINTER WEIGHT\nrr V EKi'n A TS - Six only;\nlilnrrli.'i Cloth, Chinchilla,\nTweed; belted; fancy cuffs nnrl\npockets; largo collars, some\ntrimmed velvet. The newest\nslvlcs. Vrilries lo f3..r,0. Kor\nTorlny's Selling, tlM Q Rfl\nBach       vi rjruu\nRUBBERS\nFor This Sloppy W\nWenr-  Rrrbbors  and   H\nFeet  Dry.\nMEN'S   RUBBERS\u2014\nI'er  Pair   \t\neather.\neep  Your\nci en\ns>I.OU\n$1.00\nOC*.\n... Utflr\nWOMEN'S RUBBERS\nl',r Pair \t\nCHILDREN'S  RUBBERS\u2014Por Pnlr ...\nM W Buibn's finy togi\nBEATS CANADIANS.\nrrr'ss is particularly flourishing. Shnrr-\niiing tops the list with 10,000 hnndlts.\nI Slrensl Is rr poor second Willi Turin, nnd\nJAnliwc! follows with 5000, Hunan rrnd\n; Euklelr lit- for fourth plnce with 3D0I)\nench.\nWAS  CRUDE   PROCESS\n(Ily Dnlly News Loosed Wire.)\nHARRISON,   N.  J.,   Nov.     17.\u2014Tire\nHctlrlclicin Kldd club soccer team, the.COINING IN EARLY TIMES\nchamplnns of lire  I'rriterl States, rlc\nTented n Canadian selccctod olvh Iry 'ii\n, ,    ,. ,     , ,   .... '    Attempts i\" orgunlse 11. rrrrm\" rr1\nscore nf 4 to 1 at tb, rcrieral loaeue EngInnd'ftro rccorriw| ii:. f;i|. ,,\u201e.,< ftS\npark horo today In a gm In support or lho  Angi0.Saxon   period;   and   It   In\ntbo failed work wor!; fund campaign. |inmvn that on the dissolution of the\nTho contest was played on a muddy Boptnrchy the mints were regulated by\nfield.\nTHERE  ARE 37.0C0\nBANDITS IN CHINA\nChi nil has recently taken a cciihiih\neif ber bandits ami au official report\ngives a total of 37,000 without Including oMngolla, where tbe bandit luisi-\nluws framed In the- Wilenagemotes.\nAtholstaii is regarded By authorities\nas the fli^t to deal sticcosflllty with\nihe organisation nf tho colnngc. Livery\ntown nf Importance bad Its own mint.\nThe work was done liy juoneyers wltb\nWhom the- mint master contracted, tho\nlatter being a sort nf mldolomnn l>c-\ntween the government and the coiner.\nj \"The actual art of coining in early\ntimes.\" to quote an article on the mint\nin tin- Encyclopaedia Brltanntca 'wero\nfew In number ami simple in character. The- metals forming the alloy\nwero melted together in the proportion\nnecessary to bring them tn the requisite standards and the alloy thus obtained waa cast into bars which wern\nreduced by the hammer to the required\nthickness. Thoy, were then cut with\nshears Into pieces, more or lea sreRii-\nlar In size and form, roughly annealed\nand finally Impressed with the proscribed device by a blow from tho\nhammer.\" This primitive system lasted, says Macaul.iy rrom the 13th century in tbe time or Charles II. in\nwhose reign machinery was Introduced\nand many Improvements took place.\n--family Herald.\n:lassified ads bring results\nevery time. .\nCondensed \"Want\" Ads Order Form\nUie this blank on which to write out your condensed ad., one word In eooh space.    Enolo.e money\norder or check and mail direct ro The Daily News, Nel.on, B.C.\nRater   One  cent  a  word  each  insertion,  six  consecutive   insertions   chorged   a.   four.     Each   initial,\nfigure, dollar sign, etc., count ss ono word.    No charge less than 25 eents.\n:\n\u00ab\nPlease publish ths s\ntimes, for which 1 -\nIflHri*.                 \t\nII desired, replies n\nmailed tnelosa 1\n.ay be addressed te B\n)o extra to oover eost\nex Numbers it The I\nof postage and allow\n>arly News Office,   If replies are to be\nfive word, extra fer box number.\n (t-AQE EIQHT  *\u25a0\nFfTHB DAILY NEWS\nMONDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 11.1ft.\nUNEQUALLED FOR GENERAL USE\nW. P. TIERNEY, General 8ales Agent,\nNelson, B. C.\nOin suplpled to all railway points.\nBuild Your\nHealth Dp\nWITH  OUR TASTELESS COD\n'      LIVER  OIL COMPOUND,\n$1.00 PER BOTTLE.\nCanada Drug & Book Co.\nKodak   Supplies,   Presorlptlons\nI Filled Accurately.\nPHONE tl.\nTHE ARK\nMon's Fine Wool Gloves 65c\nMen's Heavy Underwear     SI.00\nMori's Heavy Black Shirts..SI.25\nLadles'   Corsets,   pnlr    SI.00\nLadles' Winter Hoso, pnlr 45c\nBoys' Winter Hose, pair  50c\nLadles' Vests nnd Drawers\u201475c\nLumberman's Socks  SI .00\nMackinaw Pants, heavy $7.00\nWe buy and sell all kinds of Seeond\nHand  Furniture, Stoves, eto.\nJ. W. HOLMES\nPhone 6SL. 60S Vernon St.\nmi ii in\u2014-gg\nNelson nnd district's total subscriptions to tho Victory lean up to 0:30\nSaturday night wrrs $539,7110, but as ro\nports wero still to bo turned in from\ntwo of tho banks thnt nmount Is exacted to bo nonrcr tbe ?5[i0,000 mnrk,\nwhich the canvassers aimed to reach\nby lnst Saturday, the closing day of\ntho campaign.\nActual figures ns the amounts sub\nschlber by outlying districts wero not\navailable last nlglit, ns tho secretary\nof tho Victory loan committee, G. A,\nHunter, has been off duty owing to Illness In tho bouse. But it Is thought\nthat tho city proper bus subscribed\nabout $500,000.\nA meeting ut tho committee will bo\nheld tonight, when full reports from\nall sources nro expected.\nANDICAPS In llfo's\nwork   or   Its   pleasures, caused by accidents   or   Injuries,\nare now fast being\n* overcome  by  scientific methods.\nMany  pcoplo, however,  carry\na handicap that Is not tho result\nof accident, but carelessness and\nneglect of the eyes.   These peoplo wonder why thoy feel tired\nor nervous and have headaches.\nWo make, fit and design glasses\nto overcomo suoh troubles.\nDon't handicap your health,\nsueeess or pleasures.   If you\nneed glasses our examination\nwill show the kind you need,\nJ.O.Patenaude\nSPECIALIST IN OPTICS\nTHREE DEATHS FROM\nINFLUENZA IN WEEK-END\nThree deaths from influenza occurred in the city during the weekend. The victims were H, G, Law-\nley, A. Chapman of Erie, and a\nChinaman.\nA numbor of new cases developed\nin the two days and were taken to\nthe hospital, but most of these aro\nof a mild type.\nThere are only two or three patients who are in a critical condition at present,\nThe emergency hospital is full up,\nbut conditions are woll organized\nand things are running smoothly.\nThe building is well supplied with\nnurses. i\nA. CHAPMAN OF ERIE\nDIES IN NELSON HOSPITAL\nA. Chapman died from Spanish Influenza at the Kootenay Lake General\nhospital early Saturday morning after\nu fow dnys Illness. He was rrlrout 30\nyears ot age nnd had been working at\ntho Second Relief mine at Krle.\nHis father and mother in England\nsurvive him and nlso a brother, who Is\nliving In Kansns. Another brother\nwas killed at the front.\nBLACK WALNUT ONLY WOOD\nFOR AIRPLANE PROPELLERS\n\"Of rrll our native woods, only black\nWalnut will do far alrpla.no propellers\nrrnd gun slocks. The atrplnno propel*\nler blades must be exceedingly tough.\nThey revolve so rapidly in nctlon that\nthose on seaplanes are sometimes\nsplintered hy the writer dashing on\nthorn. Properly seasoned walnut gnu\nmocks will not Warp nwny from tho\nmetal parts of the guns. Mahogany\nIs the only substitute for black walnut; but lenvlng lis high cost out of\nconsideration, It must be Imported\nfrom tbe tropics rrnd our ships now*\ncr'lay:; are loo precious to be spared for\nmich commerce If we can obtain sull-\nublo wood ut home.\n\"Tho war has brought the first great\ndemand for black walnut that there\nIras been for 25 yours. Each airplane\nmust havo not ono or two but four or\nfive extra propellers, the extra ones to\nlia on hand in cue of breakage innl\ntbls country In selling thousands. H\ntukes 100 bonrd feet of walnut to mnko\nu Blnglc propeller. Add lo this tho\nsupply needed for gunslocks by millions and millions nnd It lu easy to seo\n\u25a0why the |,ovci,nt*nt,'s construction\nprogram calsl for 60,000,000 feet ot\nblack walnut lumber each year.\"\u2014P.\n]\u2022\u2022. Wilson In St. Nicholas.\nMISS CHRISTENSON\nBURIED SATURDAY\nFuneral of Young Woman Who Died\nat New Denver Held in\nCity\nTbr' funeral of tbe laic Miss Solvel\nClnistonson, who died at New Denver\nfrom Spanish Influenza on Nov. 11,\nwns held on Saturday afternoon from\ntho parlors of tbe Standard Furniture\ncompnny. Those who acted as pall\nhearcrB were Fred Slkstrom, Andy\nLlfo, John Swanson, Emll Wnlgrcn,\nChrist Holm and Pete Swnnson.\nAmong those who sont beautiful\nfloral tributes were: Mr. und Mrs. H.\nChrlstenson rrrrd fumlly, Mr. and Mrs.\nGreen anrl family, Mr. and Mrs. J.\nJohnson nnrl fumlly, Mr. and Mrs. E.\nCarlson, Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Bcrgstrom\nnnd fumlly, Mr. nnrl Mrs. .T. Lovlno\nnnrl family, Mr. nnd Mrs. H. Olson\nnnd family, Mr. rrnd Mrs. Pork nnd\nfamily; Mr. nnd Mrs. A. Jncobson, Mr.\nrrnd Mrs. II. C. Thomcnson, Mr. nnd\nMrs. M. LaurlU, Mrs. and Miss\nMathoson, Mr. anil Mrs. A. A. Johnson. Mr. nnd Mrs. M. Michelson, Mr.\nrrnrl Mrs. G. W. Hall, Mrs. John Ny-\nmrrn, Mrs. lllRg, Miss Hell, P. Slkstrom, Chris Holm, John Brisk, Ed.\nWnllberg, John Bergman, Fred Cnrlson, H. Hanson, tho Nelson Browing\ncompany, walkyrlen Lodgo No. 50,\nI. P. fi. A.\nFOR  RELIABLE\nService\nPATRONIZE\nKerr's Jitney\nPhone 4\u00bb1\nKerr Bleek\nCANNING SEASON IN UTAH\nHAS BEEN BANER ONE\nSALT LAKE CITY, Utah.\u2014Tho cunning season, Just ended, bus been a\nbanner one in Utah, according to Walter M. Hoyden, slate dairy rrnrl foorl\ncommissioner, who srrys lire season has\nbeen so god thrrt already several additional canneries aro planned for next\nyear. A banner crop and pack of tomatoes Is recorded, according to Bol-\nden, despite a shortage of help which\nIn said to have necessitated the dumping nf several carloads. Canneries In\ndifferent parts rrf the stnlc hnvo nl-\nroudy mndo plans for additions rrnrl for\nexpansion of their canning products,\nwhile several firms have arranged for\nerection of new' plants.\nMOTHER  HEARS OF SON'S\nDEATH  FROM \"BUNKIE\"\nFrom somewhere In France a loiter\nwritten by Pie. James A. Flynn, 97th\ncompany, 6th marines concerning thu\ndeath of bis biinkle, Pte. Kcrlin L.\nLchmniin. hns just been received by\nlire mother, Mrs. Louis Lehman ot\n141s llryn Mawr avenue.\n\"Wo woro advancing across a wheat\nfield.\" It rends. \"Abend of us rrnd In\na clump of trees wns a sniper who wus\npicking off some of our men. At tho\ncommand of our captain for some ono\nto 'go get Hurt sniper' Bab anrl two\ncomrades went uftor him on the\ndouble. A shell bit just In front of\nthe three iirul a piece of shrapnel killed him Instantly. Death was painless\nrrnrl a smile was on his face. Ha was\nmy pnl.\"\nPte. Lehman wns 17 years old.\nA Classified Ad. will bring results.\nQueen Heaters\nThe most satisfactory cheap healing stove Is the old reliable\n\"Qveen\"\u2014burns any kind of fuel, can be kept gelng all night and\nlesves little or no ash.\nWe make these up in three stock sizes In our own tin.hop and\nTHE  PRICES ARE  RIGHT\nWood-Vallance Hardware Company, Ltd.\nWHOLESALE AND RETAIL\nNEL80N, B.C.\nI\nThank* Friends for Parcel of Goodies\nTells of Camp Life and\nFrance.\nDr. 13. C. Arthur, who is attached to\na Canadian hospital in Prance, has\nwritten to tho Queen City Rcbckah\nlodge thanking them for a parcel of\ngoodies.    Tho letter in part says:\n\" Today I received, in good condition, a parcel uf good things enclosing\na note expressing your best wishes.\nMany thanks for the parcel nnd tho\nexpression of good wishes.\n\"Perhaps you will be Interested to\nknow Just how tho contents of tho par-\ncol will bo disposed of. Let mo prefaco\nby saying that in France it is a kind\nof unwritten law that all parcels from\nhome aro to bo shared with one's\nfriends and tho officer or man who hn-\nbitually keeps his parcels to himself\nspeedily becomes about as popular as\na skunk nt a garden party.\n\"Also lot mc say that when I opened\nthis parcel, I was Iti the dressing tent\nwith a nursing sister from Ottawa and\nan orderly from Vancouver.\n'As I do not smoke cigarettes, they\nwero given to the sister nnd the orderly (the cigarettes went to the orderly) as the sister politely declined\nher package it will go to some other\nperson who will appreciate them. The\ncake, coffee, ehoeolnto and veal wore\nset aside for tomorrow morning when\nabout 10 o'clock (provided Fritz does\nnot blow us off the map before that\ntime) tbe sister will give a feast and\nInvite thereto some other sisters nnd\norderlies and two or three officers nnd\nI may ndd that her Invited guests will\nnot make excuses ns Is said to havo\noccurred in a certain festive occasion\nreferred to In the scriptures, thus saving her from the humiliating neessity\nof using compulsion in the highways\nand hedges. From exporlenco I can\nsafely promise that the guests will not\nfnll to accord full measure of praise\nand thanks to my Nelson friends who\nmado posslblo (his feast.\n\"I havo now been M months In\nFrance\u2014''Sunny France,\" more than\nhalf of that tlmo where for about 360\ndays In tho year the wind blows o-\ngale, where tho rains of Vancouver, by\ncomparison, would he only a moderate\ndew; where all the garbage of tho\ntowns Is deposited in the main street\nand left there; whoro the seworago\nsystem consists of an open gutter on\neither side of the street; where thi*\nindustrious housewives carry their\nwash water and other slops to the\nfront door and empty them into tho\ngutters, with the result that tho fos-\ntlve mosquito flourisheth even Into\nOctober, that the odors are higher than\ntlio church spires and stranger than\nthe equinoctial gales and the files mora\nof a plague than they were to the\nEgyptians during the Israelltish captivity.\nHero when the farmer plows all tho\nfurrowa aro turned In one direction;\nall the products of the field arc hauled\nin Immense two-wheeled carts and\nwhen the load Is too heavy for ono\nhorse, two are used, one ahead of tho\nothor, usually with a driver for each\nhorse.\"\nTHIS WAS SOMETHING LIKE\nA BEARD; FIVE FEET LONG\nMistakes of military signallers arc\nsometimes amusing. A Herman prisoner escaped from an internment\ncamp and to facilitate recapture a\ndescription of the man was circulated.\nThe description contained a succession\nof sibilant sounds, which rendered Its\nreception by telephone somewhat difficult. One signaller, otter struggling\nvaliantly with the prisoner's name,\nappearance, etc., finished tbe message\nwith \"height 5 ft. 6 all beard and\nmoustache.\" Tbe possibility of u\n5 ft. C beard wandering about on Its\nlonesome was questioned, wltb the\nresult    that thu following   correction\nis circulated\u2014\"J'lease read 'small'\nfor 'all\/ \"\nENTERTAINMENT ON LINER\nMADE $2000  FOR  RED  CROSS\nHONOLULU, T. H.\u2014An entertainment given on a liner bound for Australia during the run here from San\nFrancisco cleared $2001) for tho Red\nCross. This is believed to establish\na record for lied Cross collections on\nPacific liners. Ono ot the entcrtaln-\njW wns Max Figman, the American\nactor, who waa on his way to Australia.\nMY VICTIM\nOF\nII\nMember of Water Rights Branch Diet\nat Kootenay Lake General Hospital, Aged 22\nHerbert George Lawloy, engineer on\ntho staff of the provincial water rights\nengineer at (Nelson, died Saturday at\ntbo Kootenay Lake General hospital\nof pnoumonla, following an attack ot\nSpanish influenza.\nBorn In Grlnshill, Shrewsbury England, Mr. Lawley was 22 years of age.\nHe bad 'been assistant to W. J. Bl\nker, water rights engineer, slnco 1913,\nHo had resided in Canada for 12 years,\nrccontly practicing as a civil engineer\nIn the employ of the railway com\npanlos and the provinclnl govern\nment.\nA.father, Willinn Lawley, and a sis,\ntor, both residents of England, sur\nvlve him. He was a member of tho\nNelson Masonic lodge.\nGUILTY IN POLICE COURT\nWard Depew, a blacksmith,\npleaded guilty in police court Saturday morning, -when brought before Magistrate E. A, Crease on a\ncharge of obtaining goods under\nfalse pretenses.\nThe judge reserved his decision\nand sentence will bo prouounced\non the prisoner this morning.\nSocial and Personal \\\n MMOMIMMtni\nE, Wilson ot Proctor was registered\nat the Grand Central yesterduy.\nL. Noble of Trail was registered at\nthe Nelson House on Saturday.\nR, Swift of'Molly Gibson was tt\nguest at tho New Grand on Saturday.\nMr. and Mrs. Blenkln and family of\nLiutalutn, Sask., arc guests at tbo\nMadden.\nRov, F. II. Graham, who is suffering\nfrom an attack of inrluenzu, was much\nbetter last night.\nMiss Marjorlo Hill, who is ill with\nInfluenza al the hospital, was better\nearly this morning.\nA. Leaf of Slocan City wus a visitor\nto the city on Saturday. Ho was\nregistered at tho Queens.\nWillie Stanley was reported to be\nImproving satisfactorily al the Kootenay Lake General hospital.\nJ. Broker was a Slocan visitor to\ntho city during tbe weekend. Ho\nregistered at the Kootenay.\nThe condition of Miss .1111 McFarland, who Is ill at tier home, was reported unchanged last night.\nR. Waltnsley of Creston was a\nvisitor to tbe city during the weekend\nand was a guest at the Hume.\nMayor McQuarrie, who is confined\nto bis home by an attack of influenza,\nwas repeirted lo bo not so well last\nnight.\nStanley Carter, son of .1. S. Carter,\nwus taken to tlie Kootenay Lake General hospital yesterday suffering from\nInfluenza.\nMiss pearl Gillette, who bus been\n111 at the Kootenay Uike General hospital was sufficiently recovered to return home Saturday afternoon.\nMrs. Alex Leith, who has been nursing at tho Kootenay Lake Gemerai hospital, is confined to her home with la\ngrippe. She was nuikln gguod progress yesterday.\nThe final meeting of tbe Nelson\nVictory loan committee will be held\ntonight at 8 o'clock at the committee\nrooms In the McCulloch block, when\nthe affairs of tho campaign will bo\ncleared up.\ntwo furnished;houses\nFor Rent\n1, Small, Completely Furnished House, on Cedar Street, between\nCarbonate and Mill  V?M P\u00b0r month\n8. Six-Roomed House, oompletely furnished, hot water heating,\nsituated on Mines Road, corner of Kootenay Street. $25,00\nper month.\n1    Charles F. MeHardy    .\u25a0\nBEAL   ESTATE INSURANCE PUBL\nHave  Your  Eyes\nTested\nEyo trouble upsets your whole\nsystem. It .makes you nervous,\nIrritable and unablo to give your\nbest to your work.\nJ. J. WALKER\nOPTICIAN AND JEWELER\nDOUBLE FUNERAL\nMisses   McFarland   Buried   Together\nin Nelson Cemetery\u2014Many Beau\niiful Wreaths Sent\nA largo crowd of friends attended\nthe double funeral on Saturday afternoon when tbe lute Miss Madge Mo\nFar-land and Miss Esther McFarland,\nwho died from pnoumonla, wero laid\nto rest in the Nelson cemetery. Tho\nsorvice, which was held at St.\nSaviours church and was private,\nwas conducted by Rev. F. P. Hughes\nof Kokanee, In tho absence of Rov.\n!\u2022', H. Graham. Tho graveside sorvlco\nat tho cemetery was public.\nThe pallbearers for Miss M. McFarland wero J. II. D. Benson, W. H.\nCunliffe, J. P. Fordo, R. W. Hlnton,\nFred Irvine and F. W. Sterling.\nThoso for Miss Esther McFarland\nwere P. B. Fowler, J. A. Gibson, G.\nW. Miller, James O'Shea, E. S.\nStokes und Lesllo Wlgbtwick.\nFloral offerings wero numerous and\nbeautiful, and were received from the\nfollowing: Tho family, Mr. and Mrs.\nLesllo Hrnufurd, Mrs. Shorlock, Mr.\nand Mrs. F, V. Bodwell, Vancouver;\nMr. and Mrs. J. W. McFarland, Vancouver; Mr. and Mrs. F, M. McFarland, Vancouver; Reginald Dempster,\nOroville, tho Department of public\nworks of Canada, the government\nngent and staff, the staff of tho I .and\nRegistry office, the News Publishing\ncompany, tho Association of Church\nHelpers, St. Saviours Sunday school,\nKokanee chapter Daughters of <the\nEmpire, Mr, and Mrs. Russell Allen,\nMr. and Mrs. C. W. Appieyard, Mrs.\nand the Misses Armstrong, Mr. and\nMrs. C. II. Bean, Mr. and Mrs J. H.\nD. Benson, Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Bird,\nMr. and Mrs. C. D. Blackwood, Mr.\nand Mrs. Bloomer, Mr. and Mrs.\nBoles, Mrs. Cartmel, Mr. and Mrs.\nN. M. Cummins, Mr. and Mrs. W. M.\nCunliffe, Mr. and Mrs. William Ebbs,\nMrs. and Miss Elliott, Mrs. Arthur\nEskrlgge, Mr. and Mrs, J. P. Fordc,\nP. B. Fowler, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Gibson, Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Glgot. It. F.\nGreen, M.P., Mrs. Grizelle and family,\nMr. and Mi's. C. R. Hamilton, the\nMisses Hill, Mr. and Mrs. It. W. Hlnton, Mr. and Mrs. George Horstcad,\nMrs. Ink and family, Fred Irvine,\nTinks ii mi Sonny Irvine, Mr. and Mrs.\nA. M. Johnson, Vlctorln; Mr. and\nMrs. George .Johnstone and family,\nMr. and Mrs, J. D. Kerr, Mr. and Mrs.\nC. Maglio, Mr. and Mrs. G. S. Millar,\nMr. and Mrs. W. O. Miller, Mr, and\nMrs. P. G. Moroy, Mr. and Mrs.\n\u25a0lames O'Shea, Mr. and Mrs. Rutherford and Mary, Dorothy Rowling,\nHarold Selnus, .Mr. anil Mrs. J. H.\nSonus, T. D. Stark, Vancouver; F. W.\nSterling,   Mrs.  Stokes,  Mr.  and  Mrs.\nD. \u00bb. Thomns, Mr. and Mrs. W. M.\nWalker, .Leslie Wlghtwlck, Mr. and\nMrs. T. S. Wilson, Billy and Arthur,\nMr. and Mrs, Wragge.\nIn nearly every Instance tho\nflowers und Wreaths were duplicated.\nOn Saturday tho flags on tho federal\nand provincial offices were flown at\nhalf-mast,\nRAISE WILD TURKEYS N\nON CONVICT FARM\nSPOKANE, Wash.\u2014The prisoners In\nthe state penitentiary run, among\nther things, a game brld farm .Until\nlately they havo raised wild turkeys\nfor tlto Thanksgiving dinner for tho\nconvicts.\nThe fact that wild turkeys have been\nkilled In such numbers In the forests\nof the western part of the state that\nthey havo ulmost disappeared hns\ncaused the stato game wardens to decide to take up tho business of raising them on a large scale and flocks\nwill hereafter be liberated each summer to  populato  the  woods.\nTlie wild turkeys aro larger and\nhardier than the domestic breeds and\nthe warden Is experimenting with\ncrossing hrccd^.. Hei hopes to develop a bird that will be usefult to\npoultrymen and yet able to sustain\nItself In the woods.\nScratch Food\nWe are again able to offer a 001\nplete Scratoh Food, differing from t\nold grade only In the absenoe of 8u\nflower Seed. Also have a good ats\nof No. 4 Yellow Corn, kiln drlr\nBarley and Oats, and of Ntls\nPoultry Mash.\nThe Brackman-Ker\nMilling Co., Limited\n-*3K,?'v     ' -'\n;\u00b0*\u00ab*iM_<Vf      Canada Food Board License No. 12-1\nNEWSBOY   KNOWN  AS\n\"FIGHTING\" 18 WOUNDED\nHAN FRANCISCO, Cal.\u2014A littlo\nmore than a year ago James De Flt-\nllppo, a newsboy, sold papers to hurrying throngs at the Ferry building,\nwhero be shouted In foghorn fashion\nthe latest war news. At that time he\nwns known as the \"fighting newsboy.\"\nWord comes that he has been wounded\nIn action while with the American\nexpeditionary forces In France,\nCorp. Do Fillippo lert this city last\nNovember with a draft unit, going to\nNorth Carolina, where he was assigned to an infantry division and\nsent overseas. R was not until bo underwent his Intensive training In\nFrance that he won his corporal's\nstripes.\nGeorgo Gott has resigned his position o\u00ab collector of customs at Ab-\nherstbnrg, which ho hns held lor some\nyears. It Is thought that ,1. II. C. Atkinson, nsflstnnt mllector, will now be\nnjipolnteei to the vacancy,\nLaunch and Car Owners\nHave your storage batteries charged\nand taken care of during the winter by\nNELSON TRANSFER CO., .\nPhone 36.\nWanted\nWo nro mostly after Furs and\nnro paying full value on application\nor Inquiry. Also Hides, Pelts and\nother Junk.\nCOMMERCIAL   HIDE  AND   FUR\nCOMPANY\nManhattan Building\nNo. 2 Josephine St.      Nelson, B.C.\nWl JOHNSTONE\nUUDJO RES!\nFuneral  of Son-in-law of  E. J.  McGregor Held on Friday\nAfternoon.\nThe body of the Into W. \\V. .lohn-\nstone, who died last week from Spanish\ninfluenza, was interred In the Nelson\ncemetery on Friday afternoon. Tho\nfuneral, which took place from D. J.\nRobertson's parlors, was conducted by\nRev. D. T .McCHntock. Members of\ntho Machinists' union, of which* the\nlatc-,|Mr. Johnstone wns a member,\nacted as pallbearers.\nFlowers were received from the following: The family, Mr. and Mrs. K.\nLane, Mr. and r.Ms. C. H. Hean, Mrs.\nKlrby, R. O. L. and P. R\u201e Mr. and Mrs.\nF. Scott, Ethel Kpperson, Mr. and Mrs.\nQ. H. Rowell. Mr. and Mrs. Rlakey,\nfellow workers of tho C.P.R., Machinists' union No. Gti3, Mr. and Mrs. T.\n\\V, Ijine, Mr. and Mrs. T. Rock, Mr.\nand Mrs. R. A. Peebles, Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. Ryan and family, Arthur and Florence Choquette.\nApples! Apples\nRush Them In Before the Free:\nLAST  CAR\nfor the season\nTHURSDAY, NOV. 21st,\nKOOTENAY    FRUIT   GROWEI\nUNION,   LTD.\nPhone 180\nSOS Ward Strs\nFinal Meeting\nVICTORY LOA1\nCOMMITTEE\nAll canvassers aro requestorl to\nti'irrl thu final meeting at tho Co\nmlttco Rooms, McCulloch Block,\nnight (Monday) nt S o'clock.\nM. R. M'QUARRIE,\nChalrmai\nFIGHT AN DFINE FOLLOW\nCLOTHES POLE DISPUTE\nSOUTH VANCOUVER, ll.C\u2014When\nmen scrap over rr clothes pole It Is considered pormlBBiblo for women to dispute over n hat pin. Two nlrlo Irorllorl\ncitizens ot South Vancouver actually\ntook a case of ownership of rr clothes\npolo Into court, when Ihe man who\nbought tire property urrrl the man ho\ndispossessed each contended the won-\ncrslrip anrl ono laid a charge of as*\nmult against the other Inoonjunotlon\nwith tiro dispute. Tire chnrgo of theft\not tiro pole wrrs finally withdrawn but\nIho man wrrs fined ,8,50 for assault.\n.Magistrate Johnston expects trr have\nlo try Iho next case over tho ownership of a carpet tuck or something uf\ntho sort.\nAUTO CLUB CLEANS UP\nSTREETS OF L08 ANGELES\nLOS ANGELES.\u2014A large motet\ntruck 'hearing a crow armed with\nbrooms rrrrrl ,]nsl purrs recently con\neluded a week's campaign Inaugttratea\nhy tho Autumolrllo Club rrf Southern\nCalifornia to remove broken glass Irom\nllro city's streets nnrl protect thr, tires\nnf motorists. Truckloarls nf iho auto*\nIsis' menace woro depositor* al the city\ndump.\nFIRST COAL FROM BERING\nFIELDS COMES TO CORDOVA\nCORDOVA, Alaska.\u2014Thirty tons of\nanthracite coal from iho Bering fields\n\u2014the \"first commercial shipmcuit ot\nAlaska coal ever received here\u2014arrived\nnt Cordova todny nnrl will he sold for\nwinter fuel. The conl Is snlrl to be anthracite of a. high grade.\nSon of George Motion of Nelson, >\nDied of Influenza at Harrop, In\ntarred In City Cemetery,\nTho funeral of tho lato Thomns\ntion, who dlod nt Hirr-rop took l\nSunday afternoon from D. J. nol\nson's undertaking parlors. Tho\nvice, which was prlvato at tho pal\nand publio at tho graveside, was r\nducted by Rev .D. T. McCllnl\nThoso noting ns pallbearers were 1\nHam Wilson, John Boll, H. Wall\nS. Barton, J. T. Sroll, James Ull.\nFloral offerings wero received f\ntho family, George Motion, Mr.\nMrs. Cl. P. Mollon, Mr. nnd Mrs. (\nKnriz, Mr. anrl Mrs. E. J. Crimp\nMr. and Mrs. I). C. Wilson, Mrs. .\nCurrle, Queen City Rcbokuh lodgo\nMrs. Howell. Harrop.\nSUICIDES ON DECLINE.\nTho  British  Medical Joumul  1\nthat the wur has caused a marked\ncllnc ln the proportion of suicide\ntho   population*    Ajrrnng  (amies\nrate per million living was 1ST ln\n10 years ending 1910, 151 In 1914\n105 In 1816,   In 1916 it was a\nhigher, 111.  The rate of suicldo at\nwomen showed a fall from il In\nyears 1901-10 to 43 In 1914 und\nnnrl lit In 1916.   The greatest re\nlinn nmong men was at the age\n4ii to 65, whero ns for women of\nmiddle rrgo the rate hus not fnllc\nonce.   Tlto reason for this, nccor\nlo the Journal, is the Increased\nployment openod up hy tho war. F\nInterests  nnd  diversions  havo  |\nthe mind it new outlook on life.\nSEPARATED WHEN SAIL,\nBROTHERS MEET AT FRI\nPHILADELPHIA, l'n.-Tho mer\nof two brothers near the front III\nFranco following tt separation of\nmonths Is told In extracts from le\nwritten Iry Joseph C. and Robot\nBurns In their mother In this cl\nBoth were stationed at Camp 1\ncock prior tu being sent oversea\nMay. From thnt time until a\nSept. 1 cither had seen the othor\nboth kept track of the units and\nlowing tho American offensive in\ngust In which they took pnrt tho\nmot Jooseplt was on rest with\nother members of the 109th info\nnt the time.\nA Classified Ad. will bring ret\nOvercoat\nExcellence\nIf you want nn Overcoat that is\nbut rrf tire ordinary\u2014n little better\nthan your money calls for. It's\nhere I\nThat's tlto way we do business\u2014\nout of the ordinary\u2014above the\nordinary In evcrythngl\nWe're going tn nnk you to como\nIn to look over these new distinctive Overcoats of oursl\nThey'll prove nt a glance any\nclaim we make for them!\nThe medium length Overcoat\nwith the set-In sleeve is one rrf ,1110\nmost useful slyles,\n$22.00,   $25.00,   \u00bb30fl0   to   V'5.00\nEmory & Walley\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1918_11_18","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0389184","@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":"1918-11-18 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1918-11-18 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Daily News","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0389184"}