{"@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":"2020-02-20","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1918-09-13","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0389390\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" \\~-~rrrr\u00bb-..e-F\u00a5-\n*iy Dally Newi haa the largeet tit-,\nBUlawn of any dally newspaper In J\nCanada'In proportion to the population}\n\u25a0 i of Its homo town.\nMERICANS START BIG DRIVE\n\u2666     \u2666'\u25a0*\u2022\u00bb    * *   * ' *     * :.\u00bb  IW    II*    *    *     *     \u2022     *'*.*     *     *..*      *     *     *     *     \u2666:*     *     *\nw\nThe Dally Newa carrlea the full night ])\nf leased wire newa service*of Canadian.'\nt Press, Limited, which Includes the Al-;\\\n> soolated Press service. .\nNELSON, B. C, FRIDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 13, 1918\n50c PER MONTH\ncf i   * 41\n* *\nST. IK SALIENT IN\nIHaig's Men Drive for\nCambrai\nNORD CANAL\nISCR0SSMD\nMake Gains on Other\nSectors In\nNorth\n' (By the Associated Press.)\nIn the north Field Marshal Haig is\n)tlll hard after the Germans in the re-\njion of Cambrai.   Here he again has\nidvanced his front toward the much\ndesired German base, penetrated into\n\u2022he  olid  British  defense  line, crossed\n:he Canal du Nord north of Havrin-\n-.ourt and another section of the Hindenburg line, and sent a thousand Ger*\nnanB into the British prisoner cages\n;h the rear.\n.'The Germans fought hard at Hav-\n:incourt to stay the British, but all\nyheir countarattacL. were - beaWlff^bff.'\n, Further advances-for the British\n'ilto are reported in the region south\n\u25a0it La Bassee canal and  .northwest of\nfl-rrientieres*;' '    - \u25a0\"\"' \"**\u25a0'     '\" \"\nIV. \u2022 *, Take 1000 Foemen.\n\\ LONDON, Sept. 12.\u2014The British\n'lave made further important progress\nRewards Cambrai, having captured tho\ntowns of Havrlncourt, Trescault and\nSlouevreB, penetrated (nto the old British defense line at several places and\ngrossed tho Canal du Nord, north of\nHavrlncourt, according to Field Marshal Haig's communication issued to-\ntoifnt! Approximately 1000 Germans\nW-pre made prisoners in the operations.\nThc text of the communication fol-\nqws:\n\"Our operations on the Havrincourt\nsectors were continued with great success this morning in spite of the un-\nTavorablo weather.\n; \"English troops attacked and captured Trescault,^and the old British\ntrench lines to the east and north of\nJt; On their right New Zealand iroops\nmade progress east of Gouzeaucourt\nwood, overcoming tlie obstinate rc-\nBiatanco of the German Jaeger division.\n\u25a0At Havrincourt the G2nd Yorkshire\ndivision, which carried the village on\nJN'ov. 2, 1917, attacked for a second\n(.line over the same ground with like\nfsuccess. Other English troops attacked\nho Canal du Nord, north of Havrln-\nloUrt. Aflei; sharp fighting, our troops\n'.'optured the village, together with the\nsection of the Hindenburg line, between\nthe village and the canal.\n'North bf Bapaume-Cambrai road,\nLancashire troops completed the capture of Moeuvres, also after sharp\nfighting. About 1000 prisoners have\nDeen taken by us in these operations.\n\"On the northern portion of the front\nfurther progress has been made 'by us\naouth of La Bassee canal and northwest of Armentieres.\"\nMag Restore Belgium\nDeclares Von Pager\n(By Daily Newa Leased Wire.) '   ' \u2122Wfy\nCOPENHAGEN, Sept. 12.\u2014That Germany may restore Belgium without conditions or Indemnities in case no other country would be better situated as regards Belgium than* Germany was the belief expressed today by\nFrelderlch von Payer, the imperial vice chancellor of Germany in a\nspeech delivered at Stuttgart.\nHerr von Payer, was speaking on the depression felt in Germany and\nallied countries which he attributed not to recent military events, but to the\nprospect of a fifth war winter. \"If w e could be sure that no other country\nwould bo better situated as regards B elglum that ourselves,\" said Herr von\nPaper, \"I -believe I could venture to say that Belgium could be restored without conditions and without indemnities..;\nBY 70 MILES\nAdvance of Allied Troope Means Less\nNumber of Miles of\nTrenches.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Sept. 12.\u2014All Indications\non the British front point to. the Intention- of the Germans to defend their\npoBltiqnB ln the highly organized battle zone of the German's old positions'\nand tho Hindenburg line Inundating the\ncountry where that Is possible. Doubtless, however, they consider the establishment of a strong line farther\nhack with tho towns of Doual and St.\nQuentin as pivots.\nIt Is pointed out that the Germans\nsince July 14 have shortened their line\napproximately T0*nillcs, \"thereby saving between 80 and 40 divisions.\nA. further shortening, however, Is not\nlmp(jijsible..,,jll*^ncei.the Brlttah expect\nstrong resistance and counterattacks\nto continue. Before tho Hindenburg\nsystem, now held by the Germans can\nho successfully dealt with, much reconstruction of communications will\nbe necessary, but this Is not viewed as\na great task, owing to the speeding of\nthe British engineers, who are now\nengaged in the preliminaries of this\nwork.\nIn their recent advance the British I\nfired moro than 10,000,000 shells In\nfour weeks, as a result the enemy's!\nwire was cut with greater thoroughness\nthan ever before and the British counter battery work according lo the German statement destroyed 10 guns to\nthe German's one.\nPEACE FEELERS\n1\nWashington  Says   Neutral   Countries\nAre Being Mado a Target for\nParleys.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nWASHINGTON, Sept. 12.HOffIcial\ndespatches today from France say that\nthc general campaign and peace maneuvers of which the speech today of\nEmperor William Is regarded as a\npart, Is being extended Into neutral\ncountries.\nGerman press agencies are supplying special articles and Information on\nthe subject to the newspapers of German proclivities in Holland, tho Scandinavian 'countries nnd Switzerland,\nand In this connection the despatches\nnote that the German conservative\nlender, Erzberger, Jdentlfli*(ji In the\npast with other peace movements, has\nturned up In Copenhagen, whero a\nScandinavian lnter-parllamentary conference is taking place and that the\nDutch Socialist pacifist, Troelstra, has\nIncluded Germany In his return trip to\nHolland from Northern Europe.\nPAPER INQUIRY\nHold Important Ground.\nWITH THE BRITISH ARMY IN\nPRANCE, Sept. 12.\u2014(2 p. m.)\u2014British\niroops stormed their way today into\nfhe' shell-shattered town* of Havrin-\nlourt, which lies on a dominating\nridge within the forward defenses of\nho Hindenburg line, and at atlest re-,\nports were maintaining their hold on\nthis ' highly important place.\nA little south they, ialao darrled\nTreschaut by assault, thereby gaining a still firmer grip'; on the high\nground dominating' this region. Fighting was still proceeding this afternoon and' about :800 Germati prisoners\nhave been sent back to the cages.\nThe attack waB begun this morning\nIn the midst of rain, which had been\nfalMng intermittently for several days.\nBecause of the elevation of the ridge,\nhowever, the ground was not in a\nparticularly bad condition. The operation was a loca-1 one, restricted to the'\ncapture of positions of tho Havrlncourt-Treiiscault sector. This was tho1\nonly important action reported on tho\n'British front'today.\nBerlin Denies\nBERLIN, Sept. 12.\u2014An official\nstatement says:\n'Between the road leading from\nperonne and Arras tn Cambrai, renewed British (itlhoUs failed'\/'\nWill Result in Fixing of Price by Commissioner Pringie\u2014Association\nNot Represented,\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, Sept. 12.\u2014The inquiry\ninto tho cost of the production of news\nprint in Canada, resumed here today\nby Commissioner Pringie, will be followed by the fixing of a price for\nnewsprint by the commissioner in his\ncapacity as controller. The price will\nprobably apply to a six months' period,\nOot. 1, 1918, to May 1, 1919. The man-\nfacturers of newsprint, with the exception of Price Brothers and Belgo-Ca-\nnadian mills, which have withdrawn\nfrom being parties to the inquiry, alone\nwere represented at the hearing today.\nH. A. Stewart, counsel for the government, missed his train to the capital. Tho Canadian Press association,\nwhich had protested against the in-\npiry progressing on the ground that\nthe notivo given was too brief, was\nnot represented.\nReferring to tho absence of counsel\nfor the Canadian Press association,\nCommissioner Pringie expressed his\nregrets but said that in view of tho\nnecesslty~of a change being taken this\nmonth he would have to proceed.\n\u25a0The feature of the proceedings was\nan application by George Montgomery, K. C.j to the commissioner to enlarge the scope of the Inquiry so as to\ninclude investigation into the present financial positions of the newspapers and the extent to which they\nhave passed the increased cost of\nnewsprints along to the public. Commissioner Pringie aaid he would give\nconsideration to the request.\nThe afternoon session was devoted\nto the hearing of accountants who\nhnve been inquiring into the coBt of\nproduction at tlio mills. It developed\nthat tho higher freight rates and tho\nincreased cost of wood and wages have\nbeen the chief things responsible for\nthe greater cost of production.\nP. B, Wilson, vice-president of the\nSpanish River Pulp and Paper.com-\npnny, in testifying expressed ihe view\nHint the mills are entitled In a profit\nof $20 per ton.\nWilliam  Declares Germans  Must Get\nTogether in a Block\ntike Steel   \u2022\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nAMSTERDAM, Sept. 12.\u2014In a\nspeech today the kaiser said:\n\"My request, my demand, of you and\nthrough you to all the workers who\nhave proven themselves so admirable\nand capable, and through you again\nto the entire German people, Is this,\nfor me and for my relations to my\npeople, my words of Aug. 4, 1914, hold\ngood. I know no party. It is no time\nfor factions. We must all now com\nbine into a block, thc most appropriate to bc as hard as steel and a\nblock of the German people, which,\nwelded -into steel, shall show its\nstrength to the enemy.\n\"Whoever, therefore, is determined\nto obey this summons; whoever has\nhis heart in thc 'right place and whoever intends to keep faith, let him\nstand up.\n\"Now, promise me on behalf of tho\nentire German labor, wo intend to\nfight and to hold out to the last, so\nhelp us God. Whoever so intends let\nhim answer, 'Yes.'\"\nThe assembly loudly chorused \"Yes,\"\nand the emperor continued:\n*'I thank you, with this 'yes' I go now\nwith the field marshal. It is now up\nto us to fill our vow to duty and exert\nhis body and mind to the utmost for\nthe fatherland. Every doubt must be\nbanished from mind and heart.\n\"The watchword is 'The German\nsword is raised, hearts are strong and\nmuscles are taut. On to battle again\neverything that stands against us, 'no\nmatter how long it lasts, so help us\nGod.   Amen\/   And now farewell.\"\nLONDON, Sept. 12.\u2014The German\nSocialist party board and the committee of trade unions have addressed a\nmemorandum to Chancellor von Hert-\nllng which, according to a despatch\nfrom Amsterdam, to the Central News\nagency, says:\n\"The increasing stress which. exists\nIn all parts of the state and among all\nclasses regarding the supply of\nvictuals, and whicli is expressed ia\nbitter complaints and demands upon\nus has induced us to call your attention to the extremely serious conditions under which the greater part of\nthe population Is forced to live.\n\"Without doubt, we are being hastened to conditions which will be fatal\nIf the government does not decide to\nbreak with tho producer!?' interests\nnml tiike intn account tho vital inter-\ncat of tho people,\"\nRiordan   Says   Allies  Would   Make  a\nKilling if Hun Fleet Dared\nNose Out. .\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nNEW YORK, Sept. 12.\u2014Confident\nprediction that a naval battle between\nthe German sea forces and the allied\nfleets would result in \"a marine\nSlaughter\" for the Teutons was made\nby Representative Daniel Riordan upon\nhis return to New York today after an\ninspection of the American naval activities abroad.\n\"The protection that is being afforded merchant, vessels and transports is\nimproving hourly,\" he asserted. \"The\nU-boat was a peril. Now it is simply\nan annoyance. Very soon It will he\nobliterated.\n\"We were particularly anxious to\nget some idea of tho reception that has\nbeen prepared for the German navy\nshould it happen to come out. We saw\nthe armor-plated reception committee\nfrom 'the deck of a destroyer and it\nwas a sight that will live in my memory forever.\n\"Stretched about the point whence\nthe German fleet must emerge was a\n7S-cordon of allied warships\u2014British,\nFrench, American, Italian\u2014their men\non their toes, steam up and guns all\nready. It took us seven hours to pass\nthis huge flotilla. For us it was the\nmost magnificent spectacle ' in tho\nworld. The crews that man these vessels are waiting, hoping, longing for\nthe fight that I do not think they will\never see.\"\n1$\nGUILTY BY JURY\nCleveland Judge Agrees to Hear Coun'\nsel  Motion for New\nTrial.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nCLEVELAND, O., Sept. 12.\u2014Eugeno\nV. Debs, charged with violating the\nespionage act, was found guilty by a\nfederal jury today.\nTalking to newspaper men after the\nverdict, Debs said:\n\"It is all right.   I have   no    com\nplaint to make.    I will come out all\nright in God's good time.\"\nOf the original ten counts of the\nindictments, but four remained when\nthe jury retired to consider tbe evidence. Tho verdict found him guilty\nof three, not guilty of one. He was\nfound guilty of attempting to incite\nsubordination, etc., in the military\nand naval forces; attempting to obstruct recruiting, and uttering language intended to incite, provoke and\nencourage resistance to the -United\nStates and to promote the cause of the\nenemy.\nThe count on which he was adjudged\ninnocent, charged that he opposed the\ncause of tbe United States.\nSay Judge  Fair,\nCounsel for both sides said they\nconsidered Judge Weston Haver's Instructions fair. They were exhaustive and couched in simple language,\nand delivered in a kindly manner requiring only an hour and a half. He\nmade no comment on the evidence\nwhich, presented by the government,\nwas affirmed by the defendant, but assured the jury that the espionage act\nwas wholly valid. The jury wasfOUt\nfive and a half hours, mostly spent In\nassimilating the fine distinctions between the four counts. Rain fell and\ntlie courtroom was dark and gloomy,\nbut the spectators romained throughout.\nWhen it was announced that the jury\ngreat. Mrs. Rose Pastor Stokes, herself under constraint on a similar\ncharge, came inside tbo railing for the\nfirst time. Previously, at Deb's request,\nshe had remained bidden in the audience. She drew her chair beside his,\n\"Hnd into her hands he slipped his,\nwhile tlie clerk was reading the verdict and polling the jury. She had\nexpected an adversb verdict from the\nfirst, admitting It to her friends; nor1\nwas It a surprise to Debs. In his ad-:\ndress to the jury, lie said he had not\nono word to retract and rather went\nout of his way to accept the damaging:\nSt, Louis anti-war platform.\nMaximum Penalty.\nTlio maximum penalty is 20 years'\nimprisonment and a fine of $10,000 .\nJudge Weston Haver stated he1\nwould hear counsel on a motion for a!\nnew trlnl next Saturday morning. Debs\nuntil then will remain at liberty under\ntho trial bond,\nYANKS THREATEN TO POCKET\nDEFENDERS BY GOUGING INTO\nBOTH SIS OP SOOTH WEDGE\nTEUTON  PROTECTING KNUCKLE   ON SOUTHERN PART OF BATTLE-\nLINE IS BEING SWEPT BY UN   ITED STATES TROOPS WHO ARE\nSMASHING  FORWARD  ON   EIG HT-MILE   FRONT j)ON   WESTERN'\nHlirninitlO     Mir SIDE AND 12-MILE FRONT ON   SOUTHERN     SIDE \u2014SEVERAL\nlllYll Kll   uN\\    UKr TOWNS ARE TAKEN  AND GAI  NS   IN   SOME   PLACES   ARE   FIVE\nGOING STRONG 8000 PRlSQNERSllAVE BEEN COUNTED\n* ESTIMATE 13,000,000 +\n!*          MEN IN U. S. ENROLLED *\n*   *\n*'  (By Daily News Leased Wire.)   *\n* NEW YORK,    Sept.    12.\u2014New +\n* York's new army, nearly a million *\n* strong,   marched   to   registration +\n* centres today voicing In all the +\n* 50 odd tongues of the polyglot olty *\n* their willingness  to    join    Gen. +\n+ Pershing's men overseas. *\n* Officials tonight estimate that *\n* the   number   of  mien   registered *\n+ throughout the country today will *\n* exceed 13,000,000. *\n* + **\u2666*** + *****\u00ab\u00ab\u2022*\nWashington Says It Is  Evident That\nMetz  Is Not Present\nObjective\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nWASHINGTON, Sept. 12.\u2014Sixteen\nmonths of vast war effort by the United States reached its first goai today\nwhen Gen. Pershing's forces struck\ntheir first independent blow in France\nagainst the German army. Reports\ntonight show that success was meeting the American commander's effort\nto fling the enemy out of the sharp\nsalient thrust In behind the fortress\nof Verdun in the first year of the war.\nBut even greater significance to government officials was the fact that the\nall-Amcrican attack meant that\nmonths of ceaseless toil and effort\nhave now brought forth a third great\norganized army, backed by Its own\nsupplies and millions of .soldiers, If\nneeded, which has taken its place bo-\nside the. French and British- armies\nand is striking for decisive victory for\nDemocratic ideals.\nFirst reports were vague. They told\nmerely that the American army bad\nlaunched an attack around the St.\nMihiel salient, the only sharp thrust\ntowards the heart of France that remained to the German leaders to show\nfor their offensive efforts since the\nwar began. It seemed possible that\nthe object of the attack was Metz, just\nbeyond the German border on the\nMoselle river. \u2022\nPincer Tactics\nLater accounts made it clear, however, that for his first blow Gen.\nPershing had determined to employ\nthe pincer tactics Marshal Foch has\nnow used with repeated success In\nhurling the foe back from the Marne\nand out of the Picardy and Flanders\nsalients. Tlie chance lay ready to\nthe American leader's hand.\nThe American attack, as it 'now\nshapes up, is a major action, it Is\nstated, and thore is no doubt tliat tho\nstrongest American forces yet employed are engaged. Possibly a quarter of a million American troops either\nare In action or lu close reserve.\nTo many officers tho action started\ntoday is but tho forerunner of greater\nblows to come. They anticipate that\nGen. Pershing will follow up without\ndelay the clearing out of the St.\nMihiel salient with actions of greater  XQ'^\nHUNS ARE IN BAD PLIGHT A S FORCES DRIVE FORWARD\nTHROUGH FOREST AND ACRO SS. COMMUNICATING RAILWAY\nLINES\u2014ENEMY IS DUMBFOUN DED BY SUDDEN MOVE AND IS\nCOMPLETELY OVERPOWERED ^BOCHE LOSSSESi 1AR6 iGRE!\/lT\nWHILE AMERICAN CASUALTI ES ARE REPORTED SMALL-\nFIGHTING GOES ON.\n(By the Associated Press.)\nTho American first army under command of Gen. Pershing is in motion\nagainst the Germans on a 20-milo front on the famous St. Mihiel salient in\nLorraine, which has stood a sharp wedge in  thc French line southeast of\nVerdun since the commencement of thc war.\nGAINS MADE O N BOTH SIDES.\nIn the preliminary thrust ground was gained on both sides of the triangle and also at its apex at St. Mihl ol, and at last accounts the Americans\nwith whom some French troops are b rigaded, were 'fust sw-depi\/ng apross\nthe salient in an effort to close the m otith of tho big pocket before the Germans can extricate themselves from t he perilous position they arc in as a\nresult of the suddenness of the blow a nd tbo element of surprise It carried\nwith it. ''titjH-i-tt'9- \u25a0\nADVANCE FIVE MILES ON SOUTH.\nAlthough the advance of the Americans was swift and sure and gains\nin excess of five miles on tbo southern side of the battle area were made,\nthe cavalry far outstripped the tanks and infantrymen and was last reported\noperating along the railroad near Vigneulles, almost in the centre of the\nsalient and some 11) miles northeast of St. Mihiel and also northwest of Pont-\na-Mousson, through the forests and akong the railway line running northward to Metz, tlie great Gprman fort- |\nrcss, the southern out fortifications of\nwhich arc less than 10 miles distant.\nSeveral Towns Captured.\nThieucourt, BoulUonville, Pannes\nand several other towns in the south\nwere captured in the initial dash while\non tbe west, at tlie northern edge of tlie\npocket, tlie village of Combrcs was\ncaptured and tho environs of Dom-\nmartin La Montagne were readied.\nTo the south everywhere tho Americans penetrated into the heights of\ntho Mouse and the French fought their\nway into the outskirts of St. Mihiel.\nUnofficial reports are that the town\nhas been captured by the French.\nThc fighting front at thc commencement of the battle aggregated 20 miles\n\u2014eight miles on the western side and\n12 miles on thc southern side. The\nfighting was preceded by an extremely\nheavy artillery bombardment and the\ntroops and tanks advanced under\nbarrage which was carried out with\nmathematical precision.\nGermans in Pocket.\nFrom the war maps it would seem\nalmost impossible for the Germans to\nevacuate the salient, as they arc apparently trying to do, although thoy\nare offering resistance with machine\nguns and artillery, with huge losses\nin men and material.   The first report\n*. * * \u25a0?< 4- *,\u25a0 <*. * <t< + * * * * \u2022 \u2666 \u2022\n* SAYS ST.  MIHIEL HAS *\n* FALLEN TO  FRENCH *\n+  1 *\n* (By tho Associated Press.)       *\n* WITH     THE    AMERICAN *\n* ARMY    ON    -THK    LORRAINE *\n* FRONT,    Sept.    12,    (i    p.m.\u2014St. *\n* Mihiel has been recaptured by the *\n* French, according to the unoffl- *\n* cial information here. *\n* * ****** ih *********\nscope, probably directed toward the\ncapture of Metz. With such an advance, it is said, a French thrust from\nVerdun and along the front between\nVerdun and Reims would go naturally\nand the great movement to force the\nenemy out of northern France and\nmuch of Belgium would be well under\nway.\nWASHINGTON, Sept. 12.\u2014According to the same despatches some light\nIs thrown upon the veiled utterances\nof Count Burlan a few days ago that\nthere might be opportunities for a\n\"calm exchange of views,\" some sort of\ndirect informative discussion\u2014which\nwill be far from being peace negotiations. By which it is regarded as an\ninspired article in the Duluth press,\nwhich the German authorities have\ntaken pains to republish in Germany.\nThis article says that the two emperors, at their recent conference, decided that the time would be ripe at\nthe beginning of winter, when all war\noperations would be paralyzed, to propose an armistice instead of straight\npeace conferences und adds that tlie\nproposal of an armistice In itself might\nbe an indication that Germany was\nnot only ready to free Belgium and Indemnify her from International funds,\nbut also -to discuss the evacuation of\nnorthern France and restitution of German colonics and even to settle the\nAlsace-Lorraine problem In a way to\nsave French feelings. Finally, on condition of certain indemnities and\nconcessions Germany might consent\nto revise the Brest-Litovsk treaty.\nIf this proposal for an armistice is\nrejected lhe Dutch paper holds that\nthe moral position of Germany would\nbc greatly strengthened.\nthat   the  Americans   took   700\nprisoners in the first stages of the bat-\ntic and later SOOO was reported, and\nhad suffered remarkably small casualties.\nObjective Not Known.\nThe strategy of Marshal Foch in the\npresent maneuver cannot bc foreeseeri\nexcept they have reached the first objective of the level of the St. Mihiel\ndistrict and thc straightening of thc\nallied line from Verdun eastward. The\nobliteration of tho salient would be\nnecessary before a direct thrust toward German territory from this region would be possible..\nCount 8000 Prisoners\nWASHINGTON, Sept. 12.\u2014American troops operating in thc St. Mihiel\nsector made considerable gains today,\nGen. Pershing reported in his communication to the war department late\ntonight. Already 8000 prisoners have\nbeen counted ond the movement is\nstill in progress.\nTho statement follows:\n\"Headquarters American Expeditionary Forces, Sept. 12, 1818\u2014Section\n'A': This morning our troops operating in tho St. Mihiel sector made considerable gains, assisted by French,\nunits, they broke the enemy's resistance and advanced at some points to\na depth of five miles. Wc have counted 8000 prisoners up to the present.\nThe operation is still in progress.\"\nGen. Pershing Commands.\nLONDON, Sept. 12.\u2014The Dally Mail\ncorrespondent at the American front\nsends the following description of the\nbattle along the St. Mihiel sector.\n\u2022The first American army under personal command of (Jen .Pershing, for\nthe first time went into action today at\ntho St. Mihiel salient. Never before\nhas there been such a large concentration of American troops for one operation and never have thc Americans\nbeen In such complete control of their\noperations.\nThe event had been long anticipated. Home people assigned to' it\ngrandiose objectives, but In reality the\nattack is for limited objectives only.\n\"The country over which the Americans are fighting is very difficult. The\nliigh ridges and thick woods offer\nevery concealment for enemy machino\nguns and in addition thc Germans have\na fortified line of resistance which has\neverything in its favor.\nPuzzling \"Show.\"\nAt 1 o'clock Thursday morning tho\nartillery preparation began with a\nroar that could be heard many miles\niway and all night it rose and fell\nwilh peculiar fluctuations.\n'om all tho roads that ran parallel to the flashes of innumerable guns\ntold of the impending assault. Toward 5 o'clock, the hour set for the\ntttack, the firing became even more\nrapid and Its sullen tone mingled\nstrangely with the sound of the rain.\n\\t dawn whole fleets of tanks;\nmanned by strong young Americans\nand Frenchmen were to be seen moving out of their shelters to lead the\nattack. They lumbered on but the Germans offered little opposition. Tho\nAmerican infantry followed in open\n\u25a0order, plowing through the mud but\nthey were little troubled by the feeblo\nartillery resistance .\n\"At one point, near Selchoprey whero\nthe Americans had previously fought,\nthcy had desperate battles with the\nGormans. Machine guns and automatic fire swept down upon the Yanks'\nright flank, but tlie tanks and artillery\nquickly moved in that direction and\nthe Americans wont steadily forward.\nAt 7 o'clock the tanks had disappeared amid a smoke cloud over tho\nridge in front of Seicheprey.\nThe Germans have offered very little resistance to the advancing Americans. Occasionally a stray machine\ngun or automatic rifle has been discovered but it is apparent that the enemy has withdrawn his main forces\nto a strong line which possibly he will\ndefend with a certain degree of tenacity.\nLost Only One. Tank.\nITIs artillery has been firing from\n(Continued on Page Two.).        i\n PAGE TWO\nTHE4DAILY NEWS \u25a0\nFRIDAY,    3EPT.    13,    1918.\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhtra tha Traveling Public May Obtain Superior Accommodation.\nLicense No. 10-1288\nA la Carte Table d'Hote\nService Unexcelled.\nSpecial   Summer  Sunday   Dinner,\nSI.00\nTea Room open dally, 10 a. m. to\nMidnight\nMusic and Dancing.\nIces,  Ice  Cold  Drinks, Light  Refreshments.\nAfternoon Tea, 3 to 5..\n35c\nNew Summer Verandah now open\nto the public. Coolest spot\nin Nelson.\nHUME\u2014A. Freed, Vancouver; W. J.\nStumpf, Toronto; Mr. and Mrs. A. J.\nMott, Elko; Mrs. AY. G, Morton, Cranbrook; H. A. Graham, Calgary; Mrs. C.\nO. Beard, Waldo; Mr. and Mrs. T. R.\nWeldon, Clayburn; A. A. Ross, J. G.\nMcDonald, Vancouver; C. H. Barring-\nton, Calgary; H. R. Cramer, Vancouver; A. H. Munson, Montreal; D. McLeod, City; L. W. Oregon, Nelson;\nMr. and Mrs. Charles A. Stuart, Janes-\nville, Wis.; Joseph C. Roberts, Portland; E. M. Parent, R. P. Smith, Vancouver; Ivan DeLashmutt, Silverton;\nJ. Hoskins, Castlegar; Mrs. A. Sayer,\nCrawford Bay; R. Liversidge, Long-\nbeach; H. Earle, Vancouver; J. Hag-\nerty, Spokane; J. Hamer Hoyle, Queens\nBay; E. A. Nagle, Penticton; V. Mul-\nhall, Vancouver.\nQueen's Hotel\nEuropean    and    American    Plan.\nSteam Heat in Every Room.\nA. LAPOINTE, Proprietor.\nQUEENS\u2014W .Shioll, West Demars;\nA. Leaf, E. A. Coulon, Slocan City; A.\nKlein, Vancouver; Mr, and Mrs. Calder, Medicine Hat; Mrs. Rinior, Spokane; Mrs. Bransley White, Harysvlllc;\nJ. C. Jones, Fernie; Corp. Davis, Morrlssey; E. Hickey, Vernon; A. McPhall,\nCranbrook; J. S. Reynolds, Penticton;\nMrs, Gray, Vancouver; G. Hambly,\nBeavcrdoll; Dan McGillis, Greenwood.\nNelson House\nELI   JULIEN,  Proprietor.\nEuropean Plan.\nCafe  Open  Day and  Night.\n35c\u2014Merchants' Lunch, 12 to 2\u201435c\nPhone 275     Rooms, 50c and up.\nNELSON\u2014J. B. Elliott, P. Martin,\nCalgary; W. Stringer, Lethbrldge; L.\nA. Winter, Winnipeg; Mrs. A. W. Boss,\nPrinceton.\nGrand Central Hotel\nJ. A. ERICKSON, Prop.\nOpposite  Postoffice.\nRoom and Board, $35 per  Month.\nEuropean Plan, Rooms 50c up.\nMeals 35c.\n, |Q(RAlND -CENTRAL\u2014 N. Hclgeson,\nInvermere; John Adams, Gray Creek;\nJ.. J .Evans, H. Evans, Fernie; B. Baln-\nbridge, Porcupine; T. Chevans, Calgary.\nMadden House\nM. J. MADDEN, Proprietress.\nSTEAM HEATED.\nCorner Baker and Ward Sts., Nelson\nMADDEN\u2014D. Bonnentt, Trail; R.\nBarrow, Beasley; J. Chyslo, Trail; D.\nHibbcts, Alberta; D. Clements, Trav-\ners; A. Springer, Michel; J. Dondowey,\nAinsworth; D. Guest, A. Keen, Saskatchewan; Frank Scott, Fernie; Arthur Coles, Vancouver; J. Watkins,\nGrand Forks; Sam Weir, Vancouver;\nS. Dran, I. H. May, Castlegar.\nNew Grand Hotel\nJOHN BLOMBERG, Proprietor.\nUp-to-Dato Brick Building, Steam\nHeated.\nHot and Cold Water in Every Room\nAmerican and European Plan.\nNEW GRAND\u2014R. B. Head, J. Cia-\nrelll, Trail; J. Brady, s; Arinoto, Salmo; P. James, Calgary.\nThe Kootenay Hotel\nMR8. MALLETE, Proprietress.\nA. Home for the World at $1.25 a\nDay. First-class Dining Room.\nComfortable Rooms.\n313 Vernon Street, Near Postoffice.\nKOOTENAY\u2014Peter W .Grant, Cascade; James Hall, Vancouver; Peter\nSmith, Spokane.\nThe Strathcona\nH. W SHORE, Proprietor-\nIdeal  Hotel for Traveler! and\nTourists.\nSample rooms all above ground with\nnatural light.\nBedrooms large, airy and quiet.\nSpecial Rates to Boarders and\nFamilies.\nTulameen Hotel\nPRINCETON, B.C.\nThe best known workingman's\nhotel in town. Hot and cold water\nbaths, etc. Rooms 50c per night.\nFree auto meets all trains. Stage\nauto leaves hotel dally for Copper\nmountain and Mill Side.\nProprietor, D. O'Brien.\nTHE  STANDARD   RESTAURANT\n826 Baker Street\u2014Two Doors West\nof Stanley.\nOPEN DAY AND NIGHT.\n12 to 2, Special Lunch 35c\nYOUR  PATRONAGE  SOLICITED\nSummer and Fishing Resorts\nin Kootenay and Boundary\nWHERE THE  FISHING IS GOOD\nOutlet Hotel\nPROCTOR.\nFishing,   Boating,  Bathing, Tennis\nCourts\nGrocery Store in Connection.\nW. A. WARD, Prop.\nAmerican    Plan,   $2.50   and   $3.00.\n$15.00 and $17.00 a Week.\n8PEND YOUR HOLIDAY8 AT\nHalcyon Hot Springs\nSanitarium\nAND STOCK UP WITH HEALTH.\nIf you suffer from muscular, inflammatory, sciatica or any other\nform of rheumatism, or from metallic poisoning of any sort don't delay.\nGome, at once and get cured. Most\ncomplete and best arranged bathing\nestablishment on the continent. All\ndepartments under one roof, steam\nheated and electric light.\nRates: $3 per day or $17 per week.\nDAVI8 & DAVIS, Props.\nHaleyon, Arrow Lakes, B.C.\nCard\nPrinting a\nSpecialty\nHigh grade stock and superior\nworkmanship enable us to guarantee satisfaction In this as In\nall other UneB of printing. Samples and prices on application to\nThe Daily News\nJob Department\nNelson - B. C.\nPrinters       Rulers      Bookbinder*\nSAVE    YOUR    STATIONERY!\nUSE\nScratchpads\nto make memos or to figure on;\nthey are very cheap, while tho\naverage office stationery costs 35\ncents per pound or more, besides the printing.\n5 lbs. for 75c\nSend for a package of Scratch\nPads and begin to save   your\nstationery.\nTHE\nNews Job Department\nNELSON, B. C.        PHONE 144\nList of Those Obtaining Best Marks in\nGarden Competition, Is Announced,\nWinners in the garden competitions\nheld under the auspices of the Nelson\nImprovement association have been announced by J. \"VV. Holmes, president.\nThe competitions for which prizes were\ngiven hy R. F .Green, M.P. and Dr.\nW. O. Rose, M.P.P., and the Improvement association were arranged into\nthree classes, those cultivated in 1918\nonly, those cultivated in 1917 and 1918\nand a third class which was open to\nal lwar gardens. A perfect garden\nwould he given 100 points. ,\nThe winners In the class for gardens\ncleared and planted in 1918 were; Joe\nArmstrong, 85; T. D. Deslirisay, 81;\nRobert Reid, 78; J. W. Holmes, 75 and\nH. Bush, 70.\nFor thc 1917 and 1918' class: C. V.\nGagnon, 90; Robert Rctd, 87 and N. M.\nCummins,  82.\nFor the open war garden competition\nfor which seven prizes were given by\nthe Improvement association the following were tbe winners: A. Jeffs, 90;\nA. V. Gagnon, 89; R. V. Ramsden, 88 &;\nA. Pitchford, 87; A. M. Black, 86^;\nE. R. Gigot, 85%; W. Ebbs, 85%; A.\nWoods, 85; E. Frose, S5; W. J. Mohr,\n85; T. Rock, 84%; A. E. Pickford, 84;\nC. D. Magllo, 84; Thomas Lawson, 82;\nT. Keith, 82; Dr. Morrison, 81; J. S.\nGouldlng, 81; J. Sterzaker, 80; H. Waters, 78.\nThe judging was done by E. C. Hunt,\nprovincial assistant horticulturist and\nW. J .Sheppard.\nVMS HEN TO\nPOUf DtffllD\n[BS\nCasualties\nPAMPHLETS\nAND BOOKLETS\naro produced oconomically and\nefficiently  by The Daily News\n. Job Department.\nClear type, good paper and\nfirst class workmanship aro demanded by those who wlBh to\nhave pamphlets and booklets\nprinted. The News Job Department can always satisfy these\ndemands.\nCLASSIFIED AOS BRING RESULTS\nInfantry\u2014Wounded.\nCapt. A. Pritchard, M.C., not stated;\nLieut. F. R. Rliey, Dunville,; 'Ont.;\nLieut. F. R. Riley, Jerseyville, Ont.;\nLieut. H, M. Scott, Melrose, N.B.;\nLieut, T. Stevens, M.M., Montreal;\nLieut. E. T. Cromarty, Perth township,\nOnt.; Lieut. T. G. Tillcy, Lindsay, Ont.;\nLieut. C. Wilcox, Ayers Cliffe, Que.;\nLieut. E. D. McDonald, Scotland;\nMajor P. Walker, Winnipeg; Capt. H.\nA. Love, Londonderry, N. S.; Lieut. W.\nE. Gingeil, England; Capt. F. K.\nProuse, India; Capt. (acting major) G.\nP. Vanoer, M. M., Montreal; Lieut. L.\nH, l-iantolman, Fonton, Iowa; Lieut.\nT. D. Stockdale, Scotland; Lieut. W. H.\nEdwards, Calgary; Lieut. O. M. Pease,\nToronto; Lieut. R. J. Pearson, To-\nronton; Lieut. C. C. Henderson, Or-\nangeville, Ont.; Lieut. E. A. Henderson, Vernon, B. C; Lieut. W. A. Hos-\nkin, England; Lieut. H. Newman, Montreal; Lieut. J. M. Reid, Vancouver;\nLieut. J. L. Hart, Mooscmin, Sask.;\nLieut. A. N. Gurney, Hamlton, Ont,\nIII.\nLieut. J. R. Harris, England.\nGassed.\nLieul. II. A. Thompson,    Desoronto,\nOnt,\nArtillery\u2014Wounded,\nA. S. McFarlanc, Chatham, Ont.;\nLieut, (acting captain) J. Ward, M. C,\nD. C. M., England; Lieul. B. E. Scott,\nVictoria; Lieut. A. R. Gordon, Toronto; Lieutl E. L. I'enno, England;\nLieut. C. C. Al'tlsinson, Melbourne,\nQue; Lieut. E. H. Gordan, Goderich,\nOnt.\nIII.\nCapt. H. L. Robinson, Victoria, B. C.\nMachine Guns\u2014Killed in Action.\nLieut. 11. O. Leach, M. C.,. not slated;  Lieut. W. ,1. N. Gill, Utile York,\nV. 10. 1.\nWounded.\nLieul. R. L. McAdarns, Toronto, Ont.;\nLieut. J. Miln, Toronto; Lieut. J. A.\nMaciJliei'.sun, Lower Fort Garry, Man.;\nLieut, W. A. Liddcll, Cornwall, Ont.;\nMajor C. F. Bailey, D. C. O., Vancouver; Capt. li. L. Ralnboth, M. C, Ottawa* Lieut. K. J. Buck, Kitscotty, Alta.;\nLieut. .1. F. Maclellan, Ottawa; Lieut.\nF. Waghorn, England.\nIII.\nLieut. H. A. Davis, Sjirlnghili, N. S.\nForestry Corps\u2014III.\nLieut. E. Lord, Waubaushenc, Ont.\nCyclists Corps\u2014Killed in Action\nLieut. E. G. Sellars, England.\nMedical  Corps\u2014Wounded.\nCapt. H. Black, Toronto.\nCANADIAN BREEDERS\nWANT TO FURNISH HORSES\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nOTTWA, Sept 12.\u2014Canadian horse\n.breeders want to furnish all the horses\nused by the Canadian army. A delegation of them said so to the minister\nof agriculture,\nWilliam Smith of Ontario and G. F.\nHadley, M. F. A\u201e of Alberta, headed it.\nThe British government did all the\nbuying and thc Canadian army support\nwas secured through it. The purchases, however, were made largely\noutside the country. The minister of\nagriculture promised to take up the\nquestion with the cabinet and see\nwhat can be done, A question of finance Is involved.\nITALIANS TAKE FOEMEN\nIN SURPRISE ATTACK\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nROME, Sept. 12.\u2014The official report\nfrom tlie ltallun war office today says:\n\"At the mouth of the Piave river\nour soldiers and sailors passed to the\nleft bunk and took prisoners in a surprise attack. There has been violent\nartillery activity on the Asiago plateau\nand in the Asoione area,\n\"In Macedonia an attempt to raid\nour positions east of Hill 1050 was\narrested with heavy losses to the enemy.\"\n(Continued from Page One.)\nbehind a ridge which runs In front of\nthe American line but he is being pursued by tanks which at one point lost\nonly one out of 45 and that stuck in\nthe mud. A few prisoners of the 10th\nlandwehr division, were taken.\n\"The Americans are pressing forward in fine style and slowly closing\nin the extreme ends of the St. Mihiel\nsalient.\nAt the time of telegraphing news\nof what has happened is very meagre\nbut the correspondent has just visited\nthe battlefront and heard of the progress of the American units in the region of Mont Sec and Seicheprey and\nof the capture of several villages.\n\"From Beaumont I could see lying\njust below me tbe trench from which\nthe Americans started and the valley\nthrough which they fought. The sun is\nstreaming across the valley, casting\nshadows from the melancholy wrecks\nof villages all around. On the left\nwhich the black forbidding heights of\nMont Sec, with the tiny village of that\nname nestling on its black side, spirts\nof earth sprang from its side as the\nartillery battered it.\n\"In the valley the tops of what once\nhad been houses in the village of Ribecourt were discernible when the smoke\ndisappeared.\nTorrent of Shells.\n\"Away to the right, bathed in the\nsunlight, was the village of St. Baus-\nsarit, resting on the side of a majestic\npromontory. Khaki clad figures were\nmoving along the valley. The smoke\noccasionally blotted them from view\nbut they would reappear soon afterward; walking with easy strike.\n\"Meanwhile the air was rent with\nthe torrent of shells passing overhead.\nAmerican gunners, manning every possible type of gun, were working with\nmechanical rhythm and they loaded\nand sent the shells to their destination. The light railways continually\nbrought up supplies.\"\nAfternoon Report\nWITH THE AMERICAN ARMY ON\nTHE LORRAINE FRONT, Sept. 12,\n3'p.m.\u2014Tbe Americans in their drive\nleached the first objectives at some\npoints an hour ahead of schedule time.\nSeven hundred prisoners have already\nbeen take'-i.\nAll along the line the advance has\nbeen carried out on schedule.\nNear Maiserais the troops went\nahead against machine   gun   fire   by\nawllng and tanks were sent to their\naid.\nTo the north, Las Eparges hill and\ntbe neighboring Hill 322 wero captured. Numbers of thc enemy surrendered at the latter place, The\nAmerican casualties have been remarkably low.\nFar in Wedge\nLONDON, Sept. 12, 7 p.m.\u2014American cavalry patrols aro moving in the\ndirection of Vingneuilles, 10 miles\nnortheast of St. Mihiel.\nScries of Strokes\nPARIS, Sept. 12.\u2014(Reuter's, Limited.)\u2014American forces in the course of\nthc last 24 hours have accomplished a\nseries of bold strokes in Lorraine a.id\nin tbo Vosges.\nFour Villages in Afternoon\nWITH THE AMERICAN ARMY ON\nTHE LORRAINE FRONT, Sept. 12.\u2014\n(By the Associated Press..)\u2014By 2\no'clock in the afternoon the Americans\nhad taken possession of the villages of\nMoosard, Pannes, BoulUonville and\nThlcucourt.\nAirmen Busy.\nLONDON, Sept. 12.\u2014The report from\ntlie  headquarters of  tho   independent\nair force says:\nIn spite of tho strong wind several attempts were mado to bomb targets along this front. Bombs were\ndropped on the railway at Courcelles\nand direct hits were attained on the\ntracks. The village of Verney (south\nof Metz) and the railway west of it\nwere also bombed with good results.\"\nResisting at St. Mihiel.\nLONDON,  Sept.  12.-7:20  p.m.\u2014St.\nMihiel, where the French have repulsed the western outskirts, the Germans are making a strong resistance.\nThe Germans still hold Roman fort,\nwhich is now being attacked by the\nGermans.\n\"Northwest of Pont-a-Mousson, the\nAmerican cavalry patrols are reported\nto be operating on the road north of\nthe Bois Commounaux,\nIs Major Action.\nPARIS, Sept. 12.\u2014The first big\nAmerican offensive which began at\ndaybreak today between the Meuso and\nMbsel rivers, was conducted under\nGen. Pershing's personal supervision\nand was executed under orders of\nAmerican officers and with Arnerican\nsoldiers. This was the first distinctly\nAmerican operation of a major character launched on the western front.\nFrench  Report\nPARIS, Sept. 12.\u2014\"The American\narmy attacked this morning near St.\nMihiel. The operation Is developing\nunder the best conditions.\"\nThis announcement was made by the\nwar office tonight.\n\"West of St. Quentin, in cooperation\nwith the British,\" the statement adds,\n\"we advanced as far as the Holnon-\nSavy road.\" (About three miles west\nof St. Quentin,)\nBerlin Says Little\nBERLIN, Sept. 12, via London.\u2014\nThe German high command has little\nto say of the American drive in the\nSt. Mihiel sector, merely mentioning\nthe attack in the official communication tonight and the fact that fighting\nis going on.\nBetween the Meuse and the Moselle\nthe French and Americans attacked at\nthe St. Mihiel bend. The fighting\ncontinues.'1\nInstant\nPostum\nhas a peculiar importance\nthese days, not alone on\naccount of its wholesome\npurity as a table beverage,\nbut because of its labor-\nsaving convenience.\nNo Boiling\nNecessary\nMade instantly by placing\na level teaspoonful in a\ncup of hot water, stirring\nand adding cream or milk.\nLittle or no sugar needed.\n\"There's a Reason\"\nCunadlan   Postum   Cereal   Co.,\nLtd., Windsor, Ont.\nSOCIALISTS PROTEST\nPRUSSIAN  REFORM\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nAMSTERDAM, Sept. 12.\u2014A protest\nof the German Socialist party against\nthe Prussian' electoral reform comedy\nand a demand for the dissolution of\nthe Prussian house of lords is publish-,\ned by the Berlin Socialist newspaper\nVorwaerts in display type on its front\npage.\n\"In the name of the millions which\nare behind us and who cannot today\nbring their influence on the government, the manifesto reads, \"we enter\nInto the strongest protest against tho\ncontinuation of the electoral reform\ncomedy in the Prussian upper house\nand wc demand the immediate dissolution of the upper house. Away with,\nthe three-class parliament. Away\nwith the upper house. Up with universal, equal, direct suffrage. Long\nlive democracy and peace.1'\nLORD DERBY CALLS ATTACK\nBEGINNING  OF THE  END\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nPARIS, Sept. 12.\u2014Announcement\nthat the American attack \"was\nlaunched this morning\" was made by\nLord Derby, British ambassador to\n\u25a0'ranee, at a luncheon today given by\nthe British press representatives of\nParis to a number of Australian, New\nZealand and South African editors now\nmalting an official visit to France.\n\"Ami according to tho news reaching\nmc since this luncheon began,\" Lord\nDerby added, \"tho attack is proceeding most satisfactorily. We can hope\ntliat the news will continue better and\nbetter and in the future years that we\nwill be able to recall this luncheon as\nthe date of 'the commencement of the\nend.\"\nTWO MURDERERS BREAK\nJAIL AT CHICAGO\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nCHICAGO, 111., Sept. 12.\u2014Two convicted murderers awaiting execution, a\nsafe blower and another, escaped from\ntlio fourth floor of thc county jail\ntonight by sliding down a rope, while\nnearly a score of persons watche'd\nthem. An automobile was waiting\nand carried tlie quartet away.\n.Jos. Moran, well known cracksman,\nbent a guard Insensible and with his\nkeys released Earl Dear and Lloyd\nBopp, the murderers, and Frank Mc-\nErlane, alleged accomplice of Bopp.\nThey tore away window bars that previously had been sawed nearly in two\nand produced the rope that carried\nthem to the street.\nRED RUBBER RINGS\nCAUSE ALL TROUBLE\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nB13GINA, Sask., Sept. 12\u2014Complaints have reached the provincial\nbacteriologist regarding the rubber\nrings used in sealing fruit und vegetable 'glass jars. The odor of carbolic\nacid is strong and efforts to get rid\nof it by scouring have failed. Dr.\nCharlton attributes the odor to acids\nused in reducing scraps of rubber ln\nthe process of manufacture and says\ntbe quality of the rubber is poor and\nwhen tainted with the odor complained\nof Is unfit for use as sealers. Mony\ncomplaints have reached him from\nseveral points in the province, in each\ncase the rubber rings complained of\nbeing red. The white rings are giving\nno trouble.\nVANCOUVER ISLE BRANCHES\nOF VETERANS TO BE SEPARATE\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nVICTORIA, B. C, Sept. 12.\u2014Vancouver Island branches of the Great\nWar Veterans' association decided at\nDuncan yesterday to draft this section\nof the province into a distinct organization primarily and solely responsible to the Dominion body. With the\nexception of thc James Island and\nAlbernl branches all the island organizations were represented at last night's\nmeeting and the result reached with\nabsolute unanimity.\nAutumn Outfits\nIN   LADIES'   CLOTHING   ARE   NOW   ON   DISPLAY\nTHE COAT VALUES WB ARE ABLE TO OFFER\nTHIS YEAR WILL BE VERY HARD\nTO  BEAT,  EITHER  IN  STYU3,\nMATERIAL OR PRICE\nTHEY COME IN\nTWEEDS,   VELOUR8,   BROADCLOTH,   PLAIN\nAND   FUR  TRIMMED   PLUSHES\nPrices Range from\n$20.00 and up\nOUR  DRESSES, SUITS, SKIRT3, RAINCOAT8,\nETC,  SHOW  EQUALLY  ATTRACTIVE  VALUES\nSmillie&Weir\nLADIES'  WEAR   SPECIALISTS\nShoes That Insure \"Good Standing\"\nTn appearance, as well as\ncomfort, our shoes are made\nto meet the requirements of\nmen who realize that their\ngood standing rests largely\nIn the shoes they choose.\nOur Hartt Shoes for men are \u2022\nnoted for fit, appearance and\nendurance.\nC. Romano\nShoemaking  and  Repairing\n\"Wanted: A table and three chairs,\nalso dishes and ice closet, need not\nbe new if in gotfd condition.\"\nCan you imagine how you'd go scurrying out to the storeroom to\nlook up \"that old stuff out there\" if you thought you could get $4, $5\nor $10 cash for it.\nBut why wait til! somebody comes and rings the bell and asks tho\nquestion? Hundreds of people \"want three chairs,\" hundreds want a\ntable, too, and dishes, and coffee pots, and urns, and hall racks, and\nlinoleum, and odds and ends of carpet, valises, trunks, suit cases,\nstoves, cutlery, furniture, lamps, everything you can think of.\nThere's always a demand and a fair price (If you reach the actual\nbuyers themselves), and the only way and the sure way to reach them\nIs by a DAILY NEWS Want Ad. You can make dollars out of your\nput-away-old-thlngs\u2014If you want to\u2014and even one ad. will prove it.\nMake up a list and try it\u2014and remember that\nThe Daily News\nIS    THE     PAPER   THAT    MAKES    LITTLE    ADS    RAY   BIG\nVICTORIA HEARS NOTHING\nOF ROAD MAN KILLING\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nVICTORIA, B. C, Sept. 12.\u2014No information has reached tho provincial\npolice here with regurd to the shooting of Frank Martin, road superintendent, who met his death at Swamp\nPoint, 25 miles from Stewart, Tuesday. A wire to provincial police headquarters here, merely states that Martin is supposed to have been shot by\nJohnson Wartley, a prospector, and\nthat the coroner and a constable from\nAnyox have gone lo the scene of the\ntragedy to Investigate in the absence\nof the constable stationed at Stewart.\nHarkley Charged.\nPRINCE RUPERT,  B.  C,  Sept.  12.\n\u2014At a coroner's inquest held at Swamp\nPoint Into the death of Frank Martin,\nprovincial .rood superintendent, a verdict of murder was returned against\nJack Harkley, who is in custody.\nFARMER   FINED $200 AND\nLOSES 3000 POUNDS FLOUR\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nREQINA, Sask., Sept. 12.\u2014Chris\nAnger, believed to be a German, is minus 3000 pounds of flour, whic hho\nwas found to be harboring in his house\nsouth of Morse. The flour was confiscated. Anger was fined 1200 and\nthe Canada food board %nrlched by\nthe proceeds of the sale of the hoarded stock.\nHon. Dr. Cody, Ontario's minister of\neducation, Is going to England and\nFrance to study educational problems\nIn connection with the reestabllsh-\nment of returned soldiers.\nFor Biliousness\nBiliousness is a common form of indigestion. It\nis brought on by food-waste which the stomach, intestines and bowels fail to expel. If you will take a few\ndoses of Beecham's Pills, when bilious, you will soon,\nrid yourself of the impurities, relieve sick headache,\nstimulate the liver and bile and tone the stomach.\nHealthy conditions are quickly re-established by using\nBEECHAM'S PUIS\nDtnctiont of Special Valua to Wobm an with Emr Bw,\nfrmnien\\yl^~rhemnB..c}tMm,Sl. H.l.u, UaeuUn, EatUai\nStM\u00ab'Ki\u00abfctniaC*u>'hudUJ.AawiiM. la been, Una*. (\n [f.  EBIBAY,.   SEPT,   13,    18.18. \/\u00bb\nTHE CKJLY MEv^t\n\/\u25a0*\u25a0\"* Wit tHOTt\"\nNO COMPROMISE *\nAVERS LLOYD GgOROE \u2666\ni> (fiy Dafljr News Leased IMri.) \u2666\n; MANCHESTER, Sept. 12.\u2014 \u2666\nSpeaking at a luncheon Premier *\nLloyd George today said: *\n\u25a0 \"There are some men who say \u2666\u25a0\n\u00a3dro\u00bb,it and let us have peace (by .\u2666\n[Jiegotlation.'\" And added, \"There \u2666\nis no compromise between free- +\nilom and tyranny, no compromise *\nvbetweea light and darkness. I *\nknow that it Is British to sacri- *\n.flee one generation rather than +\n(sacrifice liberty for ever. That *\nj|s what we are fighting for and *\nleaven grant* that we fight *\ntlvrough to the end.\" *\nHlGARY FIND8 ITSELF\nt WITHOUT SUPPLY OF SUGAR\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nALGARY, Sept. 12.\u2014There is not a\nund of sugar in wholesale houses ln\n8 city and very little ln the retail\nires, with none apparently on the\n\u25a0 Jy. Acute famine is certain for the\n\u25a0met few days, which, coming in the\nl.ldst of the canning season\/ Is re-\nlirded as acute. Wholesale fruit men\nT&t a wire to the food controller to-\n\u25a0is** notifying him ot the situation but\nitaeived. no reply. Calgary Is sup-\nJjtfed by Vancouver. No large store is\nIpjjrt on hand ahd sugar supply conies\n\"\u25a0gularly. This supply, suddenly\npopped without any explanation here.\nIt'\nt..f.,W.^....,..T...rv?5^,.....i..r..:,. ,,\u201e,\u2014,\n[ XPECT JAPAN TO RECOGNIZE\nCZECHO'-SLOVAK  NATION\n(    (By Daily News Leased -Wire.).\nI TOKIO, Thursday, Sept. 5.\u2014A gov^\nraiment statement, formaljy recogniz-\n'i(*t the Czecho-Slovaks as cobelliger-\nlis against Germany and Austria-\n'ungary, Is   expected   to   be   Issued\nIjidrtly.\nNO COMPROMISE \u2022{ '**,\"* I.*. * .        *m,~ -\nMining and Markets\nSPOW\/iNE' MARKET1 CLOSED':\nSPOKANE, Wash., Sept. 12.\u2014The\nSpokane stock market was closed today on account of the registration.\nI        .   .       \u00bb*   *' *\u2014-\u25a0\u25a0\n[PRICES MOVE IRtfEfcULARLY\nON MONTREAL MART\n(By Dally News Leased* Wlije.)\nMONTREAL, Sept*. 12^\u2014Prices' moved Irregularly In a short session. Cn\nthe Montreal stock exchange today,\nwith the general trend slightly downward. The principal exception to the\neasier, tone of the market was Can'-'\n\u2022ada Forgings, whose strong close, oh\na rise of iy. points on Wednesday, -was\nfollowed hy further buying which advanced the price of that issue 5%\npoints to 213, a new high for the year.\nLight realizing resulted in a reaetlo i\nof a point to 119VJ; Brazilian, which\nwas fractionally higher at 43V& to 43%,\nwith My. bid at the close; Montreal\nPower, which sold unchanged at 8B%\nand closed 85% bid, and Canada\nSteamship preferred which was unchanged at 77. i  i\nWeaker stocks were the car issues,\n.the common falling back 2% to 35,\n[while the preferred went to 731,4, with\na subsequent drop in Laurentide, which\nsold at a decline of 3 points. Quebec\nsold VA lower. Fractional declines\nwere shown by Steel of Canada at 71\nand Shawlnlgan at li''\/..\n. Sales:  Shares,. 2392; bonds, $12,100.\nJAPANESE 300 MILES\nNORTH OF VLADIVOSTOK\n(By.Daily News Leased Wire.)\nJTOKIO, Thursday, Sept. ,5.\u2014A ; war\nffice   communication    Issued   today\n,iys:\n. \"Our cavalry reached Rozengart-\n;*aka, 300 miles north of Vladivostok,\n!ept. 2.\"\nTONE* IMPROVES 0*1\nMARKET AT TORONTO\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nTORONTO, Sept. 12.\u2014Although the\nNew York market was closed today,\nand trading dt Montreal,was confined\nto the morning session, dealings on the\nToronto exchange were slightly larger\nthan on Wednesday and the tone was\nbetter. Rumors arc again in. circulation to the effect that an extra dividend would be made to Maple Leaf\nshareholders and the stock at today^\nSTOCKS\nI WILL BUY\n15)00 Silversmith rx\\.  ........... 10%\nD. ST DENI8,\n.hone 39.  509 Ward St., Nelson, B. C.\nTHE\nof Commerce\nSir    Edmund    Walker,    C.V.O.,\nLL.D., D.C.L., President.\nSir John Aird, General Mgr.\nH. V, F. Jones, Ass't. Gen'l. Mgr.\nCapital Paid Up..... .$16,000,000\nReserve   Fund. $13,500,000\nConsult with the Manager regarding your banking require*:\n'ments. A current account will\nfacilitate tho handling of your\n'receipts and payments. Arrange-\n. ments made for loans and collections..\n1 * * i      \u2022* *-\u2022'-   \u25a0*\u25a0;''\u25a0   * \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nBranches tn Kootenay and\nBoundary at Nelson, Fernie,\nOranbrook, Creston, Grand\nForks, Greenwood, Nakusp,\nPhoenix.\nNelson   Branch',  P',   B,  Fowler,\nManager.\nLIVESTOCK MAFtkfcfS.\n(By' Dally News leased Wire.)\nCHipAQO, 111., .Sept. 12.\u2014Hogs: Receipts, 17,000. Market closed weak,\nmostly 10 to 15 centB lower than yesterday's best; early top,* 20.75; butchers, 20.15 to 20.60; light, 20. 25 to 20.60;\npacking, 19.40 to, 20.10; rough, 18.50 to\n19.50; pigs, good and ehoice,-18.75 to\nJ9.25.\n, Cattle: Receipts, 16,000. Western and\nbeat natives, steady to strong; others\nsteady to 10.., cents lower. Butcher\nstock firm. Calves strong to 25 cents\nhigher. Beef* cattle, goody, choice and\nprime, 17 to 19.20; common and medium, 10.25 to 17; butcher stock, cows\nand heifers, 7.05 to 14.25; canners and\ncutters, 6.75 to 7.65; stockers and feeders, good, choice and fancy, 11 to 14;\ninferior, common and medium, 8 to 11;\nveal calves, good and choice, 18.50 to\n19.25.\nSheep: Receipts, 31,000; fat lambs,\nstrong to 10 cents higher; fat sheep\nsteady; feeder lambs, weak, 25 cents\njlower; feeding and ,yearling sheep,\nsteady; lambs, choice and prime, 17.60\nto 18.10; medium and good, 16 to 17.50;\nculls, 10 to 13.50; ewes, choice and\n[prime, 11.75 to 12.25; medium and good,\nJ.0.25 to 11.75;  culls, 4 to 8.\nToronto.\nj TORONTO, Sept. 12.\u2014Union stockyards receipts today consisted of 33\ncars, with 340 cattle, 73 calves, 690\nhogs and 993 sheep and lambs. The\ncattle market continues strong and active, with a good steady demand for\nall grades of cattGvbutcher and feeding stock btjn^. Jaually ln dSihand.\nToday's offerings' of fresh cattle were\nlight and\\ everything was cleaned up\nat.'ggqdjSteady prices. , ... ,, ..\nU Tftj^un.\/rf sheep and lambs.-was a\n.-little on the.heavy side fpr a weekend\nj market, with the. result that there was\nan easier tone.\n'Bogs were steady and unchanged at\n19.90 fed and watered but the feeling\nof the market was easier. Canadian\npackers have been advised by the gov\nWAR NEAR END:\nsnarenoiuBiB tmu .\u00ab...*- \"-  \u2014   ..     -     ipacaers nave t\nhigh point, 120, was close to the high Lrnment  that no  further orders  for\npoint of tho year to date.   The closing I\t\nbacon will be accepted for export. This\nwaa ut j.h**,s, .. ..\"*  .- -means that hogs weighing 250 pounds\nzllian, after opening at 43, was bid up I requirea,\n.v.*,   -I-.,.\u2014 \u201et <i97\u00a3. n-r si, higher I XLI,\nwas at 119%, a net advance of %. Bra-\nto 43%, closing at 42,%, or % higher\nthan on Wednesday.   Steel of Canada       \t\nwas lVi* lower at 71V. and preferred |recelpta M the Union stockyards today\nweakened from 84 to 83.   Steamships | totaled 2M cattl0i 81 calves, 309 hogs\ncommon was y. off at 44*14 but the\npreferred rallied % point to ~~%.\nRussell Motor also showed a gain\nof %. Barcelona was % point up at\n11 y.. British Columbia Fishing was\nIS lower at 49%.\nThe war loans were fairly active and\nfirmer, the third issue selling % higher at 94'!4. \u25a0''\nMUCH CORN SOLD.\n(By Daily News.Leased Wire.)\nCHICAGO, 111., Sept, 12.\u2014Inspiring\nwar advices led to much selling today\nin the corn-market and to an unsettled\nfinish,* 1% to 2% cents net lower, with\nOctober at $1.62% to 11.68% ahd November at ?1.51% to IL51S*.\nOats closed % cent off to % cent up\nand provisions down 5 cents to $1 advance.\nThree deposits of nickel have been\ndiscovered in Alaska and work Is under way to ascertain the extent of two\nof them*.\nThree Edmonton teachers, Miss\nBurns, Miss Buck arid Miss G. Maguire, have left for Yukon, where they\nwill take charge of schools for the\nnext year.\nAnchor-Donaldson Line\nPopular Servlco\nCANADA   TO   GLASGOW\nFor full Information apply to agents or\ncompany's of floe, 622 Haatingi Street\nWest,* Vancouver.\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting Co.\nol Canada, Limited\n\u25a0''\u25a0:<-Offices-'Smelting and Hefining Department\nTRAIL,  BRITISH  COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ores\nTADANAG, BRAND PIG LEAD, BLUESTONB AND SPELTER\nFallFair\nPARE    AND    ONE-THIRD    ROUND    TRIP\nNelson Fair\nSeptember 25-26\nON SALE 8EPT. 23-26\nRETURN   LIMIT   SEPT.   28\nFrom all stations Calgary to\nMidway, Field to Vancouver,\nKettle Valley Railway, all\nKootenay steamer lines and\nbr.noh lines,\nTrail Fair\nSeptember 17-18\nON   SALE   SEPT.   16-18\n.   REfURN   LIMIt   86PT*  26\nFrom all atationa Kootenay\nLanding to Midway, branch lines\nand Kootenay steamer routes.\nTickets\nFROM   AGENTS  OR   PURSERS\nCONDUCTORS     WILL     SELL     EXCURSION\nTICKETS    FROM    FLAG   STATIONS\n.J. S. CARTER D. P. A., Nelson, B.C.\nWinnipeg.\nWINNIPEG,     Sept.     12.\u2014Livestock\ntotaled 250 cattle, 81 calves, 309 hogs\nand 279 sheep and lambs.\nCattle market was firm at strong\nprices on all lines of stuff. Hogs,\nsteady; veal calves, sheep and lambs,\ntrade good.\nButcher steers, 9.50 to 15; heifers,\n6 tO- 12; cows, 5.25 to 10.50; bulls, 0\nto 8.25; oxen, 6 to 12; stockers and\nfeeders,. 6.75 .to 11? veal calves, 7 to\n12; sheep and lambs, 10 to 17.\nHogs: Selects, 19; heavies, 17 to IS;\n[sows, 15 to 16; stags, 8 to 10; lights,\n,15 to: 17.\nBANK  CLEARINGS   FOR\nWEEK ENDED SEPT. 12\n. (By Dally News leased Wire.)\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 12.\u2014Following are\nthe bank clearings for the principal\nj cities of the Dominion for the week\nending today:\nMontreal  $107,490,1SG\nToronto         <j<S,94rj,S59\nWinnipeg        26,525,575\n: Vancouver       12,834,418\nOttawa         6,601,282\nHamilton         5,109,4(57\nQuebec         4.S42.252\nEdmontori,       3,212,165\ni Halifax '....!   'r. 4,751,849\nLondon '.'.,.,   ', 2,5iG,420\nRegina    ( 3,071,773\nSt. John       2,235,445\nVictoria    ,.,,.      2,031,600\nMoose Jaw  .-*\t\nBrandon   \t\nBrantford \t\nFort William  \t\n| Lethbridge \t\nNew Westminster\n1,191,837\n568,151\n827,872\n569,172\n750,945\n. 564,062\nFROM TREASURY FRANCE\nDIMINISHES DEBT\n  %\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nPARIS, Sept. 12.\u2014Today's bank of\nFrance statement will show a diminution of 114,000,000 francs in advances\nto the state, which have been reduced\n12 billion francs, leaving intact after\nthree months the advance of three\nbillion francs authorized by law on\nJune 7. A semi-official note published\nto*day draws attention to thc fact that\nthis is the first time since the war,\nexcept when a loan was raised, that\nthe state has been able to diminish its\ndebt to the bank solely by the resources of the treasury.\nTRADING IS STRONG\nON LONDON MARKET\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Sept. 12.\u2014The stock market maintained a good tone and displayed increased strength today and\nsecurities under tho lead of consols\nadvanced and iron, steel, shipping and\nWest African mining shares hardened.\nOtherwise the dealings wero moderate\n,at steady prices. Money was more\nplantlful and discount rates were quiet.\nitfOlilTREAL PRODUCE.\n(By Dally.News Leased Wire.)\n\u2022 MONTREAL, Sept. 12.\u2014Butter was\nweaker; .cheeBe. unchanged.\nCheese: Finest easterns, 22^ to 23.\nButter: Choicest creamery, 43'^ td\n43%.\nEggs: Selected, 52 to 53; No. 1 stock,\n47 to 48; No. 2 stock, 45 to 46.\nPotatoes: Per bag, carlots, $1.75.\nPresident of Canadian Pacific Railway\nSees Closs of Hostilities\nat Hand.\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 12.-Less than a\nyear and the war will be ended, is the\nconfident opinion expressed by Baron\nShaughnessy, president of the Canadian Pacific railway in an interview\ntoday. ,\u25a0 ,\nTho growing strength of the allied\narmies forcibly Impressed on the Hun\nby the mlgnt of the blows delivered\nby (Haig and Mangin and other allied\nleaders In the past few weeks impels\nthe veteran railway man to tills belief.'\nI think that with the smashing that\nthe Germans now are getting,\" he said,\n\"the war should be over in a year.\nPersonally I would lie very, much surprised If it lasted longer. It seems to\nme the enemy has got to a point\nwhere he must realize that he must accede, to allied demands if he has not\nyet come to that frame of mind hen\nit will simply be a case of smash' th'em\nuntil they do.\"\nReferring to government ownership\nof railways, Baron Shaughnessy declared \"Government ownership of railways implies government operation,\nwhich is akin to political operation,\nwhich is destructive financially and\nmorally.\"\nImmigration  to  Canada.\nOf after-war immigration he said:\n'\u25a0'Immigration to Canada will resume\nwithin a reasonable time after the\nwar in as great a volume as formerly,\nIn fact, it will be increased because\nof thc war,\"\nOf reconstruction he said: \"We are\ntrftpWg in the dark when we discuss\ndfterthe war problems. We must faoe,\nmAny of these problems as they arise.\"\nBaron Shaughnessy expressed the\nhope that long before hostilities ceased\nthe government of Canada would have\nmade complete arrangements for the\ndemobilization of troops and for the\nrehabilitation of those now fighting or\nengaged in war work, which would\ncease when peace was restored.\nThis war has been waged on a\nmore gigantic scale than any previous\nconflict,\" he said. \"Men and materials\nhave been used in a manner heretofore\nunheard of and the feelings of nations\nhave been embittered to a greater extent than ever before.\n\"The task of reconstruction will be\nhuge. I hope the government has laid\nadequate plans for the gradual ab\nsorption of our soldiers into civilian\nlife. Not only is.there the soldier to\nthink about, however, there are numbers employed in shell factories and on\nother war contracts which must be\nconsidered. One of our first industrial\nenterprises should be the provision of\nfinished products for the devastated\nregion^ of Europe,\"\nThe baron did not foresee any great\nindustrial disturbance contingent on\nshutting down of war industries, with\nthe consequent dismissal of a large\nforce of men.\n\"Our population,\" he said, \"will noL\nbe any greater for a while after the\nwar than it was in 1912, so that the\nproblem to be dealt with will be one\nof readjustment. When the work of\nrehabitating thc ravaged countries of\nEurope begins Canada will necessarily\nbe drawn upon, as well as other countries In this gigantic undertaking. They\nwill not draw labor from' this country\nbut will export from here much material, especially lumber, for the work\nof rebuilding their ruined towns and\nvillages.\n1' \"This In itself,\" he continued, \"will\n|Voom industries here, not the industries of war, as at present, but industries ot peace.\"\nDo Not Want Enemies .\nRegarding immigration, Baron\nShaughnessy expressed tbe hope that\nthe policy would be rather tp discourage immigration from enemy countries\nrather than encourage it.\n\"We don't want them for a long\nwhile,\" he said of the immigrants from\nenemy nations. \"Human nature, however, is today the same as it was 100\nyears ago and in time the bitter feeling against our present enemies may\nbe minimized.\"\nPersonally thc baron favored only\nsuch a policy as would encouvag^ immigrants from friendly nations, who\nwould be willing to settle upon' the\nland and become citizens of Canada.\nFor some time at least after tlie war\nIs ended, the baron said, boats would\nbe wholly required for bringing borne\nthe troops. This task in itself would\ntake some time, so that Canada would\nhave a chance to \"find itself\" beforo\nthe influx of immigration began.\nOn the question of'railway nationalization, Baron Shaughnessy spoke with\nno uncertain voice. He did not think\ntho federal government was contemplating \"tackling the Canadian Pacific\nrailway\" and he was dubious of tbo\nsuccess of the steps already taken by\nthe government In the direction of\nnationalization. Some of the lines the\ngovernment now controlled he .thought\nhad been built in locations that had\nnot been selected by good \"railway\nsense.\" It would be difficult for such\nlines to be mado profitable no matter\nhow well handled they were.\n\"The National Transcontinental,\" ho\nsaid emphatically, \"was a blunder from\nthe outset.   Anyone knowing a thing\nabout railways should know that.\"\nOwnership Question.\nThe baron said, however, that ho\nwas not an opponent of government\nownership, if,that was the wish of thc\npeople but he hoped flio people would\ncarefully contemplate the dangers of\nsuch a policy before expressing ap-\noroval.   It the present government-\nowned lines are kept aloof from politics, ho said everything should be \u25a0 all\nright. -But \"If the-question* is* going\nto be made a pbtitical football there\nwill obtain a sad state of affairs..\nThe' baron explained the difference\n?a ssnBroundsfN' T...tro Dw TTJSb\npetweeh government and private ownership as it appears to hint In a progressive movement that Would rebound\nto the benefit of both the company and\nthe country, the company can proceed\non its own initiative, he said, but a\ngovernment would have to consider the\ninfluence of outside factors\u2014the influence which any step might have in\nother localities. \"If tlie Canadian Pacific railway thinks It would encourage\ntourist travel to build a hotel at Calgary, that is its own affair, but if the\ngovernment builds a hotel at Prince\nRupert, demands are at once made upon it for hotels elsewhere, irrespective\nof whether rr '\u2022\u25a0 i any revenue can be\nderived t^'Moivyin. Such a condition\nmust of necessity be an obstacle to\nprogress.\"\nThe baron continued: \"Local jealousies are a potent factor in a national\nscheme. More than one big unnecessary work has been forced upon the\ngovernment because of that condition.\nAsked If such a thing as nonpolltl-\ncal management of a government owned road was not necessary, Baron\nShaughnessy would not give an opinion. He smiled when he referred to\ncertain appointments made recently.\nChemists    in    Regina    Scoff    Whole\nAffair and Belittle Discoveries\non Prairie\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nL REGINA,\" Sept. 12.\u2014A large field of\npotash has been discovered two.,miles\nfrom Font's,,Sask., and isi.,alleged to\nbe superior to that near Maple Creek.\nNearly all analytical chemists in Regina openly scoff at the whole story\nof potash in commercial quantities In\nthis province, claiming that potash is\nrarely found in the alkali deposits of\nthe prairies. Dr. Carlton, provincial\nbacteriologist, says that he has been\ngiven samples secured from three\nmiles of the big deposit north of Maple\nCreek and from the same valley and\ndeclares that there is merely a slight\ntrace of potash and that the deposit is\nsodium sulphate and worth only a few\ncents a pound. He says that in hundreds of analysis of alkali waters in\nthe province he has not detected more\nthan a trace of potash.\nMINES IDLE AS WORKERS\nATTEND  BIG  FUNERAL\n(By Daily News Leased Wlro.)\n1 NANAIMO, B. C, Sept. 12.\u2014The\nfuneral of the 16 miners who met\ndeath in Protection mine shaft last\nTuesday was held here today, attended by a great concourse. Every minister of the city took part in the\nfuneral. The mines of the district\nwere idle today.\nDAUGHTER OF DOHERTY\nWEDS QUEBEC  MAN\nj      (By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nSTE. AGATHE, Que;, Sept 12.\u2014\nEileen Mary, daughter of Hon. C J.\nDoherty, minister of justice, and Mrs\nDoherty, became the bride at noon to;\nday of Capt. Reginald Cecil Wlngate,\nQ.O.C., son of the late Capt. Wingate\npf Craigengelt, Dunbar, Scotland, and\nMrs. Wingate, now residing at South-\nsea, England. The marriage was celebrated in tho private chapel of I.inish-\nowen, the country residence of' the\nminister of justice. The celebrant\nwas Rev. Father Cornell of St.\nJosephs church, Ottawa. There were\npo attendants and the guests were\nlimited to members of thc two family\ncircles.\nThis Milk\nSecret\nBelongs to\nNature\n\u25a0 The difference in evaporated milk\nlies solely in the richness of th'e fresh\nmilk from which it is made\u2014together\nwith the care taken In handling it.\nThe rich green pastures around Ladner arc knec-dcep fn tender grasses.\nThe cool sea breezes keep tbe air clean\nand fresh. The cattle thrive and their\nmilk Is unusually rich.\nAll wo do is to remove the water\nand seal it in tine. You add water and\nhave the milk in Its original state;\nexcept that it is sterilized so It keeps\nbetter.\nPACIFIC  MILK CO.\nLIMITED\nFactor*\/ at Ladner, B. C.\nCanada   Food   Board   Lice'nsa   14-156.\nC J. CARLSON, Und*Jrt\u00bbk\u00bbr.\nUndertaker*,,   Emb.lmere   and\nFuneral Directors\nTne llneat wid most up to date\nj undertaking parlora and onape] ln\nInterior ot B. On Lady attendant for\nwomen and ahlldren.\nDay Phona tl.\nNl|ht Phon. 252 and \u00ab.\n  * '\n!i\u00abw?i\u00bb\u00bb^^--^-\u25a0\u2014wr^.e-^&\n\u25a0\u25a0 -    \u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0 \u25a0\nbut what you\nassimilate\nthat does you\ngood.\nBovril has the wondetful power of\nmaking other foods more nourishing.\nThis was proved by Professor\nThompson, of Dublin, in independent experiments carried out at the\nrequest of a Government Department.\nBOVRIL   STANDS  ALONE.\nIF YOU INTEND TO MOVE\nWo are at your aervice with\nvans and employees whose jobs\ndepend upon their carefulness ln\nthe handling of household effects.\nYou will find our sorvice satisfactory in every way. And though the\ncharges vary according to distance,\nthey are in every case moderate.\nOur phone number Is 33.\nWest Transfer Co.\nPHONE   tt\n-s\nEFFECTIVE\nPRINTING\nTo i>4 effectiv-i your printing\nmust be good\u2014must'convey your\nmessage to tho public tho way\nyou Intend it, and carry the confidence you feel in your business\u2014in fact, it must represent\nyou. If you sell good goods, you\nwill get tho greatest returns by\nusing good printing. With us\ngood printing Is not a tod, a\npastime or an experiment\u2014it's\nour business.\nTelephone 144 for\nQuality  and   Service\nThe Daily News\nJob Department\nNELSON, B. C.\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\" PRINTED ON THE WRAPPER.\nAS YOU NOW HAV13 TO USE PRINTED WRAPPERS WHY NOT\nHAVE YOUR OWN NAME OR THE BRAND'NAME PRINTED 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 the Dominion\ngovernment regulations all\nfarmers who sell butter\neither to tho stores or privately, are required to have\nit properly covered in a\nwrapper on which MUST\nappear in prominent letters\ntho words\n\"DAIRY BUTTER.\"\nThe fact is also emphasized\nthat all butter in such-\npackages must be of the full\nn.et weight of sixteen ounces,\nand in default of same a fine\nbf from ?10 to $30 for each\noffense is imposed. Whey\nbutter must be so labelled\neven when mixed with dairy\nbutter and dairy butter ro-\ntains its label even though it\nbe mixed with the creamery\ni product.\nYOU CAN BE SUPPLIED WITH\nNEATLY - PRINTED WRAPPERS\nFOR YOUR BUTTER AT THE\nDAILY NEWS OFFICE, FOR THE\nFOLLOWING PRICES;\n000   PaPer and Printing   &t\\ CA\n\u25a0tuu\nIncluded             yCtvU\n500\n\u201e    \u201e    $3.50\n1000\n\u201e    \u201e    $5.00\nThese prices include both the\nPaper, which is the best obtainable\nfor the purpose, and the printing.\nWE  CAN  SHIP  IMMEDIATELY  ON   RECEIPT  OF  ORDER\nDaily News Job Department\n.. *4    .'*.,        'THE   HOME  OF' GOOD ,PANTING .*,   \u25a0\u00ab\n*\u25a0\u2022 BAKBB STREET' NELSON,  B.C.\n wat wuh\nTHE DAILY NEWS ^\nFRIDAY,    SEPT.    IS     19U\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPublished every morning except\nBunday by The News 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, ahd In no case to Individual members of the staff.\nAdvertising rate cards and sworn\ndetailed statement of circulation\nmailed on request or may be seen at\nthe office of-any advertising agency\nrecognized by the Canadian Press. Association.\nSubscription Rates: By 'all 50 cents\nper month; 92.60 for six months; ?5\nper year. Delivered 60c per month; $3\nfor six months; |6 per year, payable In\nadvance.\nFRIDAY,    SEPT.    13,    1918.\nINTERIOR     SHOULD    GET\nTESTING   STATION.\nORE\nAt the Revelstoke mining convention\nthe valuable suggestion was made that\nthe Dominion government should establish an ore testing station in Kootenay and Boundary, similar to those\nwhich the United States government\nhas opened in Idaho and at Fairbanks,\nAlaska.\nSuch a testing station would have a\nstaff of experts, with all the necessary\nmachinery and supplies to test ores\nbelieved to contain valuable metals or\nwhich present exceptional difficulties\nin treatment, owing to their complexity.\nNow it is stated that the coast people are g^ing after the government\nwith the object of having such a station established at the coast.\n, Kootenay and Boundary mining men\nshould get busy at once and press\nupon the government the claim of this\ndistrict for the location of the plant\nIfuany plant Is to be established, and\nft would seem that one would prove of\ngreat value, it should be placed in the\ncentre of the greatest mining district\nof British Columbia. Kootenay and\nBoundary Is the place for it.\nNelson district people do not have to\nworry about their souls, meaning that\nthe God-in-nature is sufficient to inspire one to right living. Nor does he\nlet that do. He adds that \"their bodies\ncan exist on the fragrance of the\natmosphere.\"\nThis incident Is only one of scores\nthat occur each season and of which\nonly a small percentage get into print\nNor are these remarks confined to\nNelson; the whole of Kootenay-\nBoundary, the interior is becoming\nwidely known as a place of wondrous\nbeauty, a good place in which to live.\nAbout every other horse race on the\ngrand circuit is a world beater. \"Wartime speed, maybe.\n\"The entire truth at certain times\ndoes not serve, but harms, the public\nInterest,\" says Admiral von Hintze, If\na rubber stamp was made of this remark and imprinted on each one of\nthe German statements they would\nbe a great deal less misleading.\n| WHAT THE PRESS IS 8AYINQ |\nTAKING   THE   WAR   INTO\nGERMANY\nNow that the Germans have suffered\nseverely In the loss of ground which\nthey have acquired during the war no\ndoubt the Junkers are paying mpre\nattention to the larger looming possibility of suffering losses to such an\nextent that the Fatherland itself will\nbe threatened.. Reports have indicated\nthat it.Js a..part of the German plan\nnot to allow the war to be carried into\nGermany. It would be better to sue\nfor peace, the militarists argue, and\nplay up the Idea of preventing \"useless\nbloodshed.\" By harping on this chord\nthey would thus win over to their side\nsome of the adjacent neutrals and the\nfactions that see more glory in submission than in sacrifice for right and\nfreedom. Perhaps they would have to\ngive up the ambition for large gains\nin territory. But all of these things\nwould be better than having the war\ntaken into the still fresh and green\nfields of the Rhlneland, they argue.\nBut what about France made desolate by the invaders who have left no\nstone unturned in their fiendish thirst\nto destroy? Not only has the soli of\nFrance been covered with the blood\nof men fighting in the defense of their\ncountry but women and children have\ndied at the hands of the Huns. Hundreds of villages have been wrecked\nbeyond recognition, Whole cities have\nbeen ruined. Historic edifices dating\nback for centuries have crumbled\nunder the deliberate shelling of tbe\nBoche forces. War has made bare a\npeaceful land. The Junkers of Germany, in a wild endeavor to gain .world\ndomination caused a world war, murdered women and children, introduced\nthe most barbarous war methods in\nhistory and now may be soon expected to call \"Kamerad\" with the hope\nthat the rest of the world will allow\nGermany to escape Scot-free the con\nsequences of its sins.\nLeaving No Pit Unturned.\nUncle Sam is leaving no stone unturned to win the war. The United\nStates government has arranged for\nthe collection of peach stones which\nare reduced to a charcoal powder\nwhich filters the poison from gases\nsuch as those used by the Hun. Barrels nre provided where the stones\nmay be deposited. Another pit trap\nlaid for the kaiser.\nWhere He Said It\nDr. Nicolal, former professor in\nBerlin university, says Germans expect their government in future to pay\nonly 2 per cent on war loans, adding\n3 per cent to the principal. He had\nto escape from Berlin to Denmark in\nan airplane to say it.\u2014New York\nWorld.\nLots of Choice\nIt is reported that the kaiser is\nseeking a substitute for the German\nnational anthem. Why worry? He\nwill soon be given his choice of the\n\"Marseillaise,\" \"God Save the King'\nor \"The Star Spangled Banner.\"\u2014\nCleveland Plain Dealer.\n\u25a0#-\nTOLD IN RHYME\nNEW NATIONAL GALLERY.\nAs the result of an offer by Joseph\nDuveen, through Lord d'Abernon, a\nnational gallery for modern non-British art has been made possible, and,\nas soon as it is advantageous to do so,\nthe new building is to be erected on\na part of the vacant site reserved for\nextensions behind the Tate Gallery at\nMillbank. While other countries, particularly France, have bung a large\nnumber of works by modern artists in\nother lands, little has been done in\nthis direction in England.\nIn the report of the trustees of the\nNational Gallery, In 1915, under the\nchairmanship of Lord Curzon, It was\npointed out that \"the nation is at\npresent suffering in two ways. No\nfunds are considered to be available\nfor the purchase of modern foreign\npictures, and at the same time donors\nand testators are deterred from contributing them to the national collections, owing to there being no obviously suitable place in which they can\nbe shown. On the other hand, the\ngovernment is not likely to be lm\npressed with the urgency of provid\ning a suitable building so long as there\nis only the nucleus of such a collection\nto be accommodated.\"\nThe nucleus of the proposed collec\ntlon exists, however, In bequests and\ngifts of such men as Mr. Salting, Mr.\nDrucker, Sir Hugh Lane, Ernest Hill,\nthe national art collection fund and\nMr. Duveen himself, and it is expected that the erection of the new gallery\nwill call forth many other gifts.\nCANNOT FORGIVE OR FORGET |\n|     WAR CANNING  BULLETIN      |\nIF YOU CAN CAN TELL ABOUT IT.\n(Issued by Canada Food Board)\nThero aro some women who are not\nonly adept canners but adept talkers,\ntoo, and they have a,splendid opportunity to help olong a patriotic cause by\ntelling women not so well informed as\nthemselves just how to go about canning,  drying and  preserving,\nAny woman who has made a particular success of this kind of work,\nand who is well qualified to givo\nothers the benefit of her experience,\nshould make a point of calling together\nlittle meetings on her own account or\nelse attending meetings of different\nkinds to demonstrate as far as possible\njust how she has met with success in\nher own kitchen, This is a slight variation of the community centre canning\nidea and should be helpful, more especially in small communities.\nMOURNING\nShall I wear mourning for my soldier\ndead,\nI\u2014a believer?   Give me red.\nOr give me royal purple for the king\nAt whose high court jny love is visiting.\nDress me in green for growth, for life\nmade hew;\nFor skies his dear feet march, dress\nme in blue;\nIn white for his white soul\u2014robe me\nin gold\nFor all the pride that his new rank\nshall hold.\nIn earth's dim gardens bloom no hue\ntoo bright\nTo dress me for my love who walks\nIn light.\n\u2014Gertrude Knevels, in Literary Digest.\nEveryone who preaches the heresy of\nforgiving Is helping the Germans to\nto win the victory and is even making\nhimself an accomplice In their wickedness. To forgive is to condone and\ncondonation of the iHun will ensure\nthat, if war comes again to destroy\ntbe earth, worse practises and fouler\nweapons than those invented by the\nGermans will be used and approved.\n\"In that which makes a man an enemy,\" says Dr. Donne, \"he bath the\nimage of the devil, infidelity toward\nGod, perfldlousness toward man, heresy\ntoward God, infectious manners toward man and that we must always\nhate,\" And he who loves or hopes to\nlove, a German proclaims himself fhe\nfoe of his own land. The Germans\nhope for forgiveness\u2014that is certain.\n*They rely upon our weakness and\namiability for a complete reconciliation. They are sure that when tlie\nwar is over we shall forget all the\natrocities which they have committed\nby land and sea. This they believe because this they wish, It is not that\nthey repent them or that they are\nready to promise amendment. If it\nwere to come again they would commit the same crimes and worse.\u2014Lon\ndon Daily Mall.\nCOLD STORAGE\nA tramp went into a farmhouse recently, and seeing no one but a very\nold woman, he said in a fierce tone:\n\"Give me a good drink of milk, or\nelse \"\nBut Pat Fahey, the owner of the\nhouse, came behind him suddenly and,\ncatching him by the neck, said:\n\"Else what?\"\n\"Else water,\" said the tramp\nhumbly.\n\"Ever hear the story   of the  peacock?\" _\n\"I never did\u2014I swear it\"\n\"A beautiful tale.\"\nThere was quite a crowd of people on the Strand, causing a partial\nblock in the traffic. The lagging of\na particularly pompous old gentleman\nroused the ire of a held-up cabby, ac\ncording to Tit-Bits. \"Now, then,\n'urry up there, can't yer?\" he shouted.\n\"Am I not hurrying, cabman?\" was\nthe mild expostulation. \" 'Urryin',\"\nsnorted cabby with a flick of his whip,\n\"you're a-jumpin' abaght like a bit\no' stickin' plaster.\"\n(      HARD  BLOW  FOR KIDDIES      [\n<$ <$>\nIn the opinion of one of the represen\ntatives of a large circus now touring\nthe United States there will be none\nof the larger circuses on the road in\nthe Uqited States next year. . This,\nhe said, will not be on account of government interference but will be due\nto lack of help. He said that it takes\na normal force of from 5000 to 6000\nworkmen to handle the circus of large\nsize while this year there has been\nno time that the large circus represented by him could muster to exceed 300\nof this class of help. His circus, he\nstated, had created a new department,\none of labor. The specific duty of this\ndepartment is to procure the necessary help to run the circus. An agent\nIs kept ahead of the circus all the time\nscouring! for workmen. The circus\nrepresentative stated that the circus\nwas doing a larger business this year\nthan ever before. '   \"\n<$> 3>\n|     AIRPLANES SIZE OF BIRDS     j\n<g> . <!>\nThe smallest British airplanes now\nbeing manufactured are actually of\nless span that the largest ibrds. The\ngreat albatross has been known to\nmeasure nearly IS feet from wing tip\nto wing tip. A certain type of \"'mid'\nget\"   ojirpiane   recently   exhibited jjjli\nLondon is only 15 feet in width. \"Theso\nare tho machines that we expect to see\nafter the war carrying our malls,\" declared Major Ordc Lees,' of the British\naviation service, \"und they will bo almost as universal as the smart automobile vans of prewar limes. These\nsmall machines will be largely used\nby the postal authorities on account of\nthe existing limitations of storage and\nstarting ground in our great cities.\nPostal aerodromes, like railway stations, must bo near the post offices, at\nleast at the Initial stages of the development.\"\n?&<\u00bb\u00a7i*e!0\nAn\nUnvarying\nStandard\nPerhaps the secret of the\nBirks' success as diamond\nmerchants is in the determination of the house to\nadhere to its old established principles. T h e\nstandard of duality fixed\nwas the highest that could\npossibly be attained\u2014and\nit has never varied.\nSh     Canada's National Jewelers     j!&\nWALTER  HINES  PAGE.\nWalter Hlnes Page, United States\nambassador to Great Britain, Is resigning because of ill health. Page was\nappointed to the post in April, 3913,\nso has been in charge during the crit\nical war period when diplomats foun\nit extremely difficult to maintain hai\nmonious relations. Page Is head of th\npublishing firm of Doubleday, Page\nCo., and prior to his appointment vri\neditor of the World's Work.\nTHE SEVEN EXCLUSIVE PATENTED!\nIMPROVEMENTS IN THE ROUND OAK i\nChief will solve that problem*\n18 YOUR RANGE GOING TO DO YOU THROUGH THE WINTER\n NOW  IS THE TIME TO  MAKE YOUR  SELECTION\nWE   HAVE  ALL   KINDS AND   PRICES\nCALL  EARLY\nNelson Hardware Co.\nP.O.  BOX  1050 NEL80N,  B.C.\nJohn Burns & Sons \u2022\"SSSSf\nSASH AND DOOR FACTORY.     NELSON PLANING MILLS.\nVERNON STREET, NELSON, B.C.\nEvery Description of Building Material Kept in Stock.\nEstimates   Given   on   Stone,   Brick,   Concrete   and   Frame   Buildings.\nMAIL   ORDERS   PROMPTLY   ATTENDED   TO\nP.O.  BOX  134 *,# PHONE 178\nUnited  States has\nates.\n,500,000   illiter-\nIndia is making earnest efforts to\nrevive its long-neglected indigo industry.\n| FOUND OLD LIFE AND NEW |\nTHE CALL OF THE KOOTENAYS\nFor years Nelsoa has been adding\nto Its list of tourist friends and there\nIs evidence  that  this list  has  never\nbeen greater than It is this season.\nThere   are few of   the   larger news\npapers of the continent that have not\nat some time or other printed para\ngraphs about the pleasure that some\none found  in the natural beauty of\nKootenay-Boundary      and      Nelson.\nEvery convention has resulted directly\nin the appearance of numerous trib\nntes from those who have attended.\nEach   summer. brings  many  tourists\nwho return to their homes glad that\nthey visited Nelson.\nA few days ago Joseph Handley returned to his home in Blairmore, Alta.,\nafter Bpendlng a short vacation in the\ncity. He is graphic in his enthusiastic\nhomage for the land which impressed\nhim so much. He says Nelson is \"the\nonly spot on earth\" and he wonders\nwhy Palestine should be chosen for\nthe holy* land. He does not stop with\nthat hut he goes on to say that in the\nLoss of memory frequently is one\nof the results of shell sb.ock.\nIn the Chatham military hospital\nthere is an Australian who, though\notherwise perfectly normal, could not\nremember a single incident out of his\npast previous to the bursting of the\nshell which caused his condition.\nRecently while looking through\nsome overseas magazines he came\nacross some views of his home. Immediately his full senses wero restored. He ran across the ward as\ngleeful as a child, calling out: \"Sister,\nI can remember!   1 can remember!\"\nHe has made a complete and wonderful recovery, and is about to return to Australia, taking with him as\nhis wife a nurse who tended him in\nhospital\u2014the same \"sister\" to whom\nhe conveyed the first glad news of his\nreturn of memory.\nFIND  PEACE  LOCUSTS.\nCONNELSVILLE, Pa.\u2014A perfect\n\"P\" on the backs of locusts found at\nSpruce Hollow means \"Peace,.\" according to some of the veteran natives.\nThe \"war\" locust is proverbial and\nmany persons are pinning their faith\nhow on the '\"peace\" variety of the\ntribe.\nFURS\nGuaranteed high class furs, nice\nselection kept in stock or made to\norder from selected skins. Customers' furs made up,. remodelled\nand repaired. Skins dressed and\nnounted at moderate prices. Best\nprice paid for raw skins.\nG. GLASER\nManufacturing Furrier,\n416 Ward Street, Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 106.\nUse Cocoanut Oil\nFor Washin\u00a3Hair\nIf you want to keep your hair looking Its best, be careful what you wash\nit with. Don't use prepared shampoos\nor anyrhlng else, that contains too\nmuch alkali. This dries the scalp,\nmakes the hair brittle and ruins it.\nThe best thing for steady use is just\nordinary mulsified cocoanut oil (which\nIs pure and greaseless) and is better\nthan anything else you can use.\nOne or two teaspoonfuls will cleanse\nthe hair and scalp thoroughly. Simply\nmoisten the hair with water and rub\nit In. It makes an abundance of rich\ncreamy lather, which rinses out easily,\nremoving every particle of dust, dirt,\ndandruff and excessive oil. The hair\ndries quickly and evenly and it leaves\nthe scalp soft and the hair fino and\nsilky, bright, lustrous, fluffy and easy\nto manige.\nTou can get mulslfied cocoanut oil\nat any pharmacy, it's very cheap and a\nfew ounces wl' supply every member\nof the family f-w months.\nii it were possible to take every Canadian out into the heart of\nthis bloody struggle, and there, for one month let him experience\nthe deprivation, sacrifice and suffering our dear boys are enduring in their great battle for the freedom of the world, this fund\nof $500,000 for their relief would be many times over-subscribed.\nHave you ever missed a meal, been caught in a cold, drenching\nrain, fatigued, weary and Chilled to the bone, and some one gave\nyou a cup of hot coffee? Have you ever been in a strange place for\nhours and hours, in the broiling sun, sleepy, hungry, aching tor\nrest, and some one took you in, gave you a place to sit, something to eat and a chalice to sleep? Have you ever been homesick, lonely and \"blue,\" and cheered up, \"made over by some old\nfamiliar music?-\u2014Then you know in a small way wha^arm^\nhuts\" do for our brave heroes.\nWONT YOU GIVE HIM WHAT YOU WOULD WANT\nIF YOU WERE \"OVER THERE?\"\nm\nm\nm ....\"LcssD.\n15* to    23*\nEverybody Welcome and Everything Free\nA  FIT  AND  APPROPRIATE  SLOGAN   FOR  THIS   PATRIOTIC   WORK\nTHE   BOYS   IN   KHAKI   ARE   NOT  ASKED   IF  THEY  ARE   MICS   OR   MACS,   BUT   IF   WE   HAVE WHAT THEY WANT THEY\nGET   IT   AND   IT   DOESN'T   COST THEM   A  CENT.    THE  SUPREME   CC-UNCIL   PAYS  ALL  THE  ADMINISTRATIVE  EXPENSES OF\nTHE   DI8ThlBUTI0N   OF   THE   FUND,  SO  THAT   EVERY   DOLLAR  YOU   GIVE   BUYS  A   DOLLAR'S   WORTH   OF   COMFORTS  FOR.\nTHE  BOYS.\n w\nr   FBIDAY,    8EPT.    13,    \"1918..     I\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nMOEFIVl\nPreserving\nPears\nPUT THEM DOWN NOW FOR\nTHE WINTER. EVERYONE ENJOYS PRESERVED PEARS.\nPER BOX\n4>1.\/J,   4>Z>  4>\/<\u00a3J\nand $2.50\nPLUMS.\nGreengages, per crate $1.25\nLombards, per crate  $1.25\nStar Grocery\nPHONE 10.\nQUICK, PAINLESS WAY TO j\nREMOVE  HAIRY GROWTHS I\n1$ ! $\n(Helps to Beauty.)\nHero Is a simple, unfailing way to\nrid the skin of objectionable hairs:\n-With some powdered delatone and water make enough paste to cover the\nbniry surface, iipply and in about 2\nminutes rub off, wash the skin and\nevery trace of hair has vanished. This\nis quite harmless, but to avoid disappointment be sure lo get the delatono\nin an original package.\nNew Walking\nBoots\nIgpTLISHbootswith\ntorn ample lines and\nsmart mannish finish\nwill be popular for Fall\nand Winter. Comfort\nplays a most important\npart and style consists\nof the best of the present modes.\n\u2022 '*:.\u2666. \u2022>\nSimple lines have been\ndeveloped to the utmost\nin grace and beauty by\nskilled hand work and materials.\nNow In stock In\nMahogany c a 1 \u00a3\nand   Black   Calf.\n$8 *o SIO\nPer Pair.\n*>-\u00bb\u00ab .\u2666>...<\nKootenag and Boundarg\nR. Andre w& Co.\nFIRE ON  DESERTERS\nIN COLOGNE STREETS\n(13y Daily News Leased Wire.)\nAMSTERDAM^ Sept. 12.\u2014\"I-Ueoin-g\ndeserters recently have been repeatedly fired at in the busy streets of Cologne.\" said Herr Oeeri'old, a member\nof the -Reichstag, in a message addressed to the imperial German chancellor,\nasking the chancellor to take measures to prevent this danger to civilians,\" says tbe Cologne Volks Zeitung.\nWEATHER CONDITION   -\nHINDERS WORK IN AIR\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Sept. 12.\u2014The report on\nair activities over the battle zone tonight says:\n\"Frequent rainstorms and a high\nwind severely limited operations on\nSept. 1, and there is nothing of interest to report.\"\nLLOYD GEORGE SUFFERS\nFROM CHILL, REPORT\n(tly Daily News Leased Wire.)\nMANCHESTER, Eng.( Sept. 12.\u2014It\nSvas officially announced late tonight\nthat Premier Lloyd George is suffering from a chill. He has a high temperature and -may -bo prevented from\nfulfilling all his engagements in his\npresent tour of Lancashire, tho statement adds.\nFORMER EMPRESS' DEATH\nIS   NOT VERIFIED\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\n\u2022 LONDON, Sept. 12.\u2014The Dally Tel\negraph says tlmt although the report of\nthe death of the former empress of\nRussia and her four daughters is not\nconfirmed officially, and detuils are\nlacking, there Is no doubt that it is\ntrue.\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 12.\u2014William Jen.\nnings, of the firm of Borden & Jen'\nningH, live stock dealers, died at his\nhome here today, aged 52 years. He is\nsurvived by a widow.\nROSSLAND NOTES\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nROSSLAND, B. C\u201e Sept. 11.\u2014A. M.\nlletts and E. Morrison left Tuesday\nmorning on a auto trip to Grand Forks\nand Penticton.\nMr. and Mrs. W. G. Ternan, J. M.\nJordan, Mrs. .1. Anderson and Mrs. R.\nJ. Clegs motored to Rock. Island and\nspent the afternoon fishing.\nMiss Millicent Evans returned Monday evening from a visit to Spokane.\nMrs, T. Stout entertained a number\nof young people at cards Monday\nevening in honor of Miss Nina Eraser,\nwho is spending a few days visiting\nat her home,\nWillard Graham lias returned from a\nfortnight's vacation to Spokane.\nMrs. Kerr who spent several months\nvisiting her son, A. Seaton, at Kimberley, has returned to Rossland andl\nwill visit her daughter, Mrs. C. S. Williams.\nMrs. B. Warden and Mrs. Anthony\nof Trail were visitors to the city this\nweeke.\nMiss Eva Blockman of Trail spent a\ncouple of. days In the city.\nAlex. Smith returned Tuesday from\na trip to the    coast.\nMiss Nina Fraser who has been visiting at her home for the past two\nweeks rotuijned to Bellingham this\nmorning where she will resume her\nduties as u nurse.\nThe whist drive and dance given\nhy the Church Helpers of St. George's\nchurch was most flifccessfulj, about\n100 attending. Thc honors wero won\nby Mr. and Mrs. G. Knox.\nROSSLAND  COUNCIL  GIVES\n$100 TO SISTERS HOSPITAL\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nROSSLAND, B. C.t Sept. 11.\u2014At\nthe regular meeting of the city\ncouncil held Monday, a communication\nwas received from the Sisters hospital\nasking for financial assistance toward\nthe electrical current, the council made\na grant of $100 to the hospital.\nMr. Isaac Berg appeared before the\ncouncil and requested that immediate\naction be taken to open up for foot\ntraffic several streets In the northern\npart of the city, the matter was referred to the chairman of the board\nof works committee to have the\nnecessary work done.\nMayor Plester drew the council's\nattention to the advisability of instal-\ning a fire alarm box In the new school.\nIt was referred to the fire chief.\nOALGARY, Sept. 12.\u2014The Moose\nJaw Robin Hoods walked away from\nthe Calgary All Stars in thc first of a\nthree-game series today.\nA splendid wash\u2014EARLY!\nPurity \u2014complete cleanliness \u2014 garments that are unworn and unfaded\u2014\nwith the wash-board rub-and-scrub\ndone away with so the clothes are out\nearly\u2014that's a Sunlight Soap wash\nday. Good news!\nLEVER BROTHERS LIMITED.   Toronto.\nShamrock Brands\nHams, Bacon and Lard\nPasteurized Creamery Butter\nSATURDAY SPECIALS\nFRESH   KILLED  FOWL,  SPRING  CHICKEN   AND   PORK\nP. Burns & Co., Limited\nPHONE  32\nCanada Food Board License No. 8-11410\nToronto   Meeting   Receives   Delegates\nFrom United States and\nNewfoundland.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nTORONTO, Sept. 12.\u2014Today's sessions of the synod of tho Church of\nEngland in Canada were; noted for the\nreception of delegates from the sister\nchurch in the United States and of a\nrepresentative of the church in Newfoundland, who declared bis hope that\nthe church of tlie island soon would\nbe   united io the church in Canada.\nAt the afternoon session the synod\nheard the experiences in the field of\nreturned chaplains, Including an address frqm Bishop Dcpencler of the\ndiocese of Westminster, who told ot\nthe hearty cooperation of the chap\nlains of different denominations und\nmade a point to go out o fills way to\npay a special tribute to the Christian\nand. loveable*. nature of the priests of\nthe Roman Catholic church who wore\nserving as chaplains.\n\"When you find mon like these,\" he\nsaid, \"who believe in the same God as\nwe do, 1 do not like to see mud thrown\nat them.\"\nIn the evening Bishop McCormick of\nwestern Michigan, and Bishop Richardson of St. John, N. B., addressed a\ngreat audience in Massey hall, on their\nexperiences with the American and\nCanadian troops, and spoke of the lessons the church should draw from thc\nwar.\nA.    E.     Fitzgerald,     merchant    at\nChinook, Alta., Is dead.\nW. J. Lonergan, from Drumheller, is\nthe new principal of the Blackte\nschool.\nSHUNKLAND,   CRANBROOK,\nIS ELECTED PRIORO\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nBELLEVILLE,   Ont.,   Sept.   12.\u2014At\nthe concluding session of the 35th an\nnual assembly of the Sovereign Grand\nPriory of Canada In this city today the\nofficers selected by ballot were James\nA. Morris, Toronto,    grand    marshal,\nand Dr. W. H. Wright, Toronto, grand\nregistrar.\nProvincial grand prloros included:\nManitoba, J. T. Holllnbeck, Port Arthur; Pacific coast,   Frank   Wheeler,\nVancouver;   Kootenay   district,  A.  C.\nShunkland, Cranbrook.\nGrand councillors, S. A. Luke, Ottawa; Dr. A. E. Estery, Calgary; H. A.\nPorter, St. John, N. B.; Col. S. S. Lazier, Belleville, and W. H. Rekhurdt,\nMontreal.\nSt. John, N. B., was chosen as the\n.next place of meeting.\nJURY SAYS  KILLING\nDONE BY SUICIDE\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.) '\nCALGARY, 'Sept, 12.\u2014That Tesse\nMunroc came to her death by a shot\nfrom a .22 calibre revolver in the\nhands of Alex Livingston, and that he\ncame to death in the same manner by\nturning 'the instrument .on \"himself,\nwas the verdict of the coroner's jury\nwho sat at the inquest upon the two\nbodies last night. Very little evidence\nwas heard. E. T. Tarrant told of Miss\nMonroe rapping on the window of his\nhouse and of his running out. At first\nall he saw wus the fleeing\" man, whom\nhe attempted to follow. Livingston said\nyou bad belter step back. Seeing he\nhail a revol ver he hesitated a moment, which gave Livingston timp to\nturn the revolver on himself. As soon\nus he saw the man was dead he returned and found Miss Monroe sitting\nnear tbe front of the house with a\nbullet wound in her head. She could\nnot speak and was rushed to thc hospital, where she died.\nEDMONTON, Sept, 12.\u2014Tho city\ncouncil tonight fixed the mill rate at\n30 mills.\nNOME BLUEBERRY CROP\nEXCEEDS ALL RECORDS\nNOME, Alaska.\u2014Nome's wild blueberry crop is breaking all records this\nyear and it is believed housewives of\nthis section will be able to put a big\nsupply of blueberry jam and jelly\nahead for the coming winter. Reports\nsay the blueberries are growing on the\nnearby hills in quantities greater than\never before.\nThe export of casein from Canada\nhas been prohibited.\nThere have been 13 deaths at Chatham from typhoid fever since the epidemic started.\nDairymen and\nRanchers\nTHE   PRICE  OF  ALFALFA  IS  ADVANCING\nIT WILL PAY YOU TO BUY YOUR SUPPLY FOR THE\nCOMING   WINTER   NOW\n8EE US OR WRITE FOR QUOTATIONS\nThe Taylor Milling and\nElevator Co., Ltd.\nHOW AY\nGIRLS\nUNG\nFERED\nAnd Wm Reitored to Health By\nLydia L Pinkham's Vegetable\nCompound\u2014ToM By\nHer Mother.\nBrooklyn, N. Y.\u2014\"I cannot pr\u00bb!i\u00ab\nLydia E. Pinkham's Vegetabb Com-\njy^. pound enough for what\njjgn? It haa done for my\ndaughter. She was\n15 years of age, very\nsickly and pale and she\nhad to stay home from\nschool most of the time.\nShe suffered agonies\nfrom backache and\ndizziness and was without appetite. For three\nmonths she waB under\nthe doctor's care and\ngot no better, always\ncomplaining about her\nback and side aching bo\nI didn't know what to\ndo. lreadin the papers\nabout your wonderful\nmedicine so I made up\nmy mind to try it She\nhas taken five bottles\nof Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and doesn't complain any more\nwith her back and side aching.   She has\nfained in weight and feels much better.\nrecommend Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to all mothers and\ndaughters\/'\u2014Mrs. M. FlNORE, 51G\nMarcy Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.\nFor special advice in regard to such\nailments write to Lydia E. Pinkham\nMedicine Co., Lynn, Mass.\nAUSTRALIAN SWIMMER\nIS KILLED IN  FRANCE\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nPARIS, Sept. 12.\u2014(Havas Agency)\u2014\nLieut. Cecil Healy, a well known Australian swimmer, was killed by a bullet on tho Somme battlefield Sept. 1,\naccording to Le Journal. The lieutenant led a party of BOO swimmers\nacross the Komme, enveloped the en-\nemey position and captured Mont St.\nQuentin, thc key to Peronne.\nThe newspapers announced that\nLieut. Nungosser, the French aviator,\nhas scored his 44th official air victory.\nTWO AIRMEN DIE IN\nTEXAS PLANE SMASH\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nWACO, Tex., Sept. 12.\u2014Capets J.\nOliver of Sioux City, Iowa, and F. P.\nSlater of Trenton, N. C, were killed\nat .Rich field here today when their\nairplanes collided 300 feet in the ah\nand crashed to earth.\nare obsolete or are worn out. A special ceremony Is provided for such\nevent. Two officers act as sacrificial priests and the books are\nburned to ashes.\nBefore they are put in the furnace\ntlie titles and numbers have to be\nchecked, registered and certified, the\nnames removed from the register kept\non the ship, and the fact of the destruction entered on another page of\nthe register.\nTHE WELL KEPT SECRETS\nOF THE ROYAL NAVY\nPORTLAND, Me.\u2014Signal books are\nnot the only confidential volumes Issued to the navy, though they are the\nones most often mentioned. There are\nconfidential books about wireless, gunnery and_torpedo matters, and volumes\nthat are only Issued to commanding\nofficers, and are \"not to be communicated to persons below that position.\"\nTho safe keeping of confidential\nbooks is impressed on everyone responsible, writes \"Tarpaulin\" In the\nDally Express. Signal books are in\nconstant use, of course, but they are\nkept in a special box, and the officer\nof the watch has to satisfy himself\nboth when he goes on duty and when\nhe gpes off that the books are in tbe\nbox.\nSpecial chests are provided for\nother confidential volumes, and the\nkeys of these are issued only to the\ncommanding officer. He gives a receipt for them when the ship is put\ninto commission. Two keys are supplied for big ships, one for the commanding officer and one for the second in command. When the commission ends tbe keys are tested by\ntho naval store officer at the dockyard to see that they are correct, and\nthey are then placed in sealed covers\nuntil the chests are reissued for an'\nother commission.\nThe loss of a key must be reported\nto the admiralty at once, and an in\ncldent of tliat sort\u2014rare enough, for\ntunateiy\u2014causes more commotion\nthan would ten zeppelin bombs in\nWhitehall.\nConfidential books sometimes have\nto be destroyed, either because they\nENGLISH   HOUSEWIVES\nCOMPLAIN   OF   PRICES\nLONDON.\u2014England is no better off\nin, the matter of the high cost of living than America. Housewives are\ncomplaining bitterly that they are\ncharged enormous prices for fruit and\nvegetables.\nIt costs more to live in London than\nIn any city in America. Fancy prices\nare demanded for the commonest vegetables and profiteering extends lo the\nretail as well as the wholesale stores.\nHere Is a list of the prices being\npaid for vegetables In American money.\nCababge, pound, 12 cents; cauliflower, pound, 40 cents; broad beans,\npound, 12 cents; peas, pound, IS rents;\nspinach, pound, 16 cents; lettuce,\npound, 12 cents; carrots, bunch, 25\ncents; cucumbers, each, 25 cents; tomatoes, pound, 50 cents; mushrooms,\npound, 75 cents; rhubarb, bundle, 40\ncents;   oranges, each, 1G  cents.\nRetailers declare the fault Is not\ntheirs; that they are forced to charge\nhigh  prices  because  they   pay  them.\nTo overcome i'or the workingman\nthe high cost of living the government\nfood ministry has opened a national\nrestaurant on New llrldge street near\nLudgute Hill station where meals can\nbe had for much less than they can\nbe obtained in any American or English restaurant. The daily menu consists of the following:\nSoup 4 cents; fish, 8 and 12 conts;\nroast meat, 8 and 12 cents; two entrees, 8 and 12 cents; vegetables, 4\ncents; desserts, fi and 8 cents; bread,\nIf cent; coffee, 4 cents; tea, 2 cents.\nThus a person can obtain a meal,\nincluding soup, fish, roast meat, a\nvegetable ,a dessert and coffee for 35\n3ents. The food is excellently cooked,\nill the baking and roasting being done\nby electricity.   Accommodation is pro-\nIded for 170 persons at a sitting and\nevery chair Is occupied four or five\ntimes a day. The restaurant opens at\n11:30 and closes at 8 p, m. every day.\nA New Arrival of\nWomen's Cloth, Plush\nand Fur-Trimmed\nCoats\nTHESE RECENT ARRIVALS ARE VERT\nHANDSOME AND RICH LOOKING, AND WILL BE\nMOST ATTRACTIVE TO WOMEN WHO ARE\nLOOKING FOR GOOD VALUES. MAKE YOUR\nSELECTION NOW, WHILE THE ASSORTMENT\nIS COMPLETE.\nMaterials are Cheviots, Velours and Plush, and\nthe styles are very charming and youthful. Nearly\nall are made with large collars and have pockets,\nbuttons and hells for trimmings, also fur.\nThere is every wanted fall color tn choose from\nand values lo suit every purse.\nPrices from\n$25.00 to $150.00\nEach\nSmart Separate Skirts\nTH13    \"LAST    WORD\"    IN   FALL   STYLE   IS\nINCORPORATED   IN   THEIR   MANUFACTURE\nLadles who are thinking of supplying their\nwardrobes with one or more separate skirts for\nAutumn wear will be pleased with our present\nassortment.\nWe have the New Skirts In Plain, Striped and\nPlaUl Taffetas, Fancy Satins, Plain Serges, Tweeds\nand Worsteds In every wanted color and make.\nAt Prices from\n$7.50 to $25 Each\nMEAGHER & CO.\nTHE   STORE   FOR   STYLE\nTHE   STORE   FOR   QUALITY\nanother reclamation Institution. Here\nis handled the waste paper, old magazines, bottles, tin cans and old rubber\nscraps.\nAs tlie bottles are brought in they\nare sorted into different grades and\nsizes and eventually sold. The paper\nis put into large presses and baled.\nForty to fifty tons of paper are shipped and sold each month. Tin from\ntin cans likewise is pressed into\nmasses averaging 42 younds fn weight\nand then sent to the rolling mills, when\na melting process reclaims the tin and\nsolder, the balance going into cast\niron. No estimate lias yet been made\nof the cash value of the projects.\nELIMINATE FOOD WASTE\nAT CAMP LEWIS\nCAMP LEWIS, Tacoma, Wash.\u2014\nWaste has been, practically eliminated\nat Camp Lewis. There was a time\nhere when rubbish and much of the\ncamp garbage was burned In a great\nfire kept burning outside tlio camp\nlimits. Now most of this matter Is\nsaved and used.\nThe best way to tell of the saving\nIs to begin with the large garbage\ncans that are to be seen outslite tlie\nmess halls. These cans are marked\n\"bread,\" \"coffee grounds,\" \"fats,\"\n\"bones,\" etc., and 111 betides the soldier\non kitchen police who puts potato\nparings into the bones or otherwise Is\ncareless. If he does the can comes\nback and he is compelled to separate\nthe two.\nEach day the cans are sent to the\ncamp Incinerating plant. There the\nbread, scraps from plates and gurbage,\nwhich consists of parings, green trimmings and things of like nature are\nsent to a large hog farm 11 miles from\ncamp and fed to tho pigs. This totals\nthree to six truckfuls a day.\nThe fats and bones are sent to Nls\nqually, where the fats are turned into\noils and the bones Into fertilizer. The\nunreclatmable matter Is burned.\nJust beyond the camp incinerator Is\nGOVERNOR OF ALASKA\nASKS FOR MILITIA FORCE\nCORDOVA, Alaska.\u2014Alaska at present has no national guard or territorial\nmilltin.    Forces are to be authorized,\nhowever, in the near future, it Is believed, as Thomas Rlggs, Jr., governor\nof Alaska, while here recently declared\nthat he intended to ask tlie next territorial legislature to pass a measure\nordering the formation of a military\nbody.\nHome guards In various Alaska\ncities now form the only units resembling the militia. Guns have already\nbeen shipped by tho war department\nI'or use of the guards. As soon as the\nlegislature passes the proposed bill,\nGovernor \"Rlggs said, tho guards will\nhave a standing similar to that of the\nnational guard in the States.\nThe clubhouse of the BrltamVa\nBoating club near St. Thomas, with\nabout i!00 canoes and many thousand\ndollars' worth oi' personal belongings\nof members of the club, was destroyed\nby fire. The total loss is estimated at\n$50,000.\nHer One Deformity\nAn Unnecessary Corn\nWhen you see or f-el a corn\nremember this:\nMillions of people have found\na simple, easy way to completely\nend this trouble.\nIt is the Blue-jay plaster.\nWhen a corn appears, they apply a Blue-jay, and do it in a\nJiffy. Then they forget it, for\nthe corn never pains again.\nIn 48 hours they remove the\nBlue-jay, and the corn is gone.\nOnly a rare corn needs a second\napplication.\nThere is no muss, no bother,\nno repeated applications. There\nis no after-soreness.\nThere are none of the faults\nof the old-time methods, harsh\nand inefficient.\nIt doesn't take one-tenth ths\ntime it takes to pare a corn.\nAnd paring cannot end it.\nFor your own sake, make a\ntest of Blue-jay. See what it\ndoes with one corn. It is doing\njust that with millions of corns,\nin a gentle, scientific way.\nPlease find out \u2014and now\u2014\nwhat folly it is to have corns.\nBlue-jay\nCorn Plasters\nStop Pain Instantly \u2014 End Corns Completely\nlarge Package 25c at Druggists\u2014Small Package Discontinued\nBADER k BUCK, Limited, Milan .1 Suites! Dr.nioi.. tie., CUcin, New York, Toroati\n   (963)\n PAGE SIX\nTHE DAILY 1\u00abEWS\"\nT    FRIOAV,. 86PT. .19,   191$.   1\nFRUIT SALT\nFamous for\nForty years*\nSettles the Stomach\nStimulates the Lioer\nStrengthens\nDigestion\nPurifies the Blood\n'\\!Zi\nA Great Nation's\n, Tribute\nThe United States Government has conscripted the\nentire .output of our U.S.\nfactories in order to supply\nthe \"Yanks\" witii AutoStrop Razors as part of\ntheir regular equipment.\nThis tribute is worthy of\nyour consideration when\nnext you send a package\nOverseas\u2014*your soldier's\ncomfort is your first\nthought \u2014the AutoStrop,\nbecause of its automatic\nself-stropping device, is\nthe ideal razor for his use.\nPrice $5.00\nAt leading store* everywhere\n22c. Postage will deliver an\nAuroStrop Overseas by first\nclans registered mail.\nAutoStrop\nSafety Razor Co.,\nlimited\n83-87 Dultt Si.', Tomato, Ont.\nMilk Tickets\nThe Daily News Job department\nmakes a specialty  of printing\nmilk and other tickets.   Send ln\nyour  order  to\nTHE     NEWS     PUBLISHING\nCOMPANY, LIMITED,\nNelson, B. C,\n* \u00abiihii ims *\u25a0>*>:*\u00bb.*>\u00ab\u00bb i > i ..**\u00a3.***,... it su i.\u00ab:\u00ab\u00ab muhii. '\n!'. News of Sport\nFALL FOOTBALL\nIS\nAlthough   Plans  Had  Been   Made for\nCarrying Out 1918 Schedule,\nIt's Off Now.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nCHICAGO, Sept. 12.\u2014The possibility\nof tho complete, suspension uf football\nin important colleges and universities\nin the country ns a war measure loomed up strongly today as a result of\nthe war department's request that no\nfall gridiron schedules be arranged by\nthe educational institutions having student army training corps* There nre\n400 universities and colleges scattered\nthrough the country with student\ncorps.\nAll of the big universities In the\nmiddle west had already made plans\nfor carrying out the IMS schedule and\nthe request for the abandonment of\nthe inter-collegiate sport came as a\nsurprise.\nOfficials of the University of Chicago said the war department's request undoubtedly means that all\nspare time of the students will be devoted to military instructions instead\nof athletics and that there would be\nno time for the development of football.\nThe abandonment of the game will\nresult in heavy financial loss, as the\nproceeds of the sport usually met the\ndeficit in baseball :ind other college\ngames.\nTROT FEATURES DAY\nAT SYRACUSE RACES\nSYRACUSE, N. Y\u201e Sept. 12.\u2014Jin\nPrinceton, Walter Cox's sensational\ntrotting horse, won; a stirring duel\nfrom St. Frisco, driven by Ed Geors*.\nin tho free for all trot, that, featured\nthe third day of the grand circuit meet\nhere this evening. Cox lost a nose in\ntlie opening heat after a thrilling dash\nto the wire, but in the second he came\nfrom behind at the start to win by a\nhead after a brilliant drive from the\nthree-quarters mark. Lu Princeton was\nnever headed in the final heat and\nwon by two lengths.\nHarvey Earnest won a popular victory with Tma day in the governor's\nstake for $5000. In tho opening event\non the card Murphy won first money\nwith Betrix in straight heats and with\nlittle opposition. A rain during th*\nmorning delayed the start of. the races\nuntil 4 o'clock and one of the events\nwas put over until tomorrow.\nCarol    Holloway,    Heroine    of    \"Tho\nFighting  Trail,\"  Starting  at the\nGem Tonight.\nCalgary aldermen voted to reduce\ntho carfare to Sarcee camp for soldiers\nin uniform to 5 cents each way.\nA Dalton. Mass,, man borrowed 5\ncents from a friend on a trolley car\nabout fl.ve years ago and recently paid\nit back with 2 cents added. He said\nthe nickel he borrowed was worth at\nleast 2 cents more then than at present.\nThe New Story of an\nOld Stove\nThey thought it a wonderful thing when thcy bought it, fivo years\nago. It had big shiny places on it, and. it glittered and looked like a\nmillion dollars\u2014that old hall stove.\n\"Then they moved.\"\nSteam heat sent the old stove to the basement In disgrace; in fact\nthey were even \"sorry they'd brought the old thing with them.\"\nThey'd paid $40 for it when thoy got It, now It wasn't worth anything\n\u2014to them.\nSo they forgot the old stove until one evening thcy read tne\nClassified or Want Section in The Daily News, ond little Mrs. Busybody saw a great light. She hiked down into the basement next morning, right after breakfast, and what she did to that old \"glltterer\" was\na plenty. Solomon In all his glory wasn't in it with tbe old stove.\nThen she ran a want ad., 7 lines, in The Daily News. She sold the\nstove for a brand new crinkly ten dollar bill. It was worth three times\nthat to the people who bought It. Both made by tho bargain\u2014and all\nfrom a little sensible, plain, truthful want ad.\nMoral: What have you in your house that ought to \u2022\u25a0\u2022> sold and\nused ln somebody else's house instead of letting It go to waste ln your\nhouse? \u201e, .^Y .    '\n^Iso, why not get back somo of that good \"old money. Want ads\nare money finders.\nThe Daily News\nIs the paper that makes little ads pay'big\nP0CKET$U00 EACH\nRed   Son   Divide   $20,838   and   10   Per\nCent Not  Included Goes to\nCharities.\n(13y Rally News Leased Wire.)\nBOSTON, Sept. 12.\u2014Members of the\nBoston American league baseball team,\nwinners of tbe WIS world's series, received $20,838.55 today as their share\nof the gate receipts from the world's\nseries. Manager Barrow and the 14\nBoston regulars were each given $1,-\n108.45, while Infielder Fred Thomas,\nwho obtained a furlough from the\nGreat Lakes navy training station to\nplay for the Red Sox was voted $750.\nVarious sums were given to j-pther\nplayers now in war service, the trainers, ground Keepers and others.\nThe check did not include 10 per\ncent which It had 'been voted, to donate to charitable institutions and\nthe plnyers instructed Captain Hooper\nto obtain the amount from the commission and distribute it among Boston war charities.\nCHICAGO PLAYERS READY\nTO  DISBAND NOW\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nCHICAGO, Sept. 12.\u2014All but three\nmembers of lhe Chicago Nationals,\nrunners up in the world's series, returned tonight from Boston and will\ndisband tomorrow until the. war is\nended.\nThe players decided to divide $1000\nof their world's series share between\nGrovervAlexander and four other members fpCjthe club, who enlisted In;thc\nnavy**w joined the army' before the\ncloso of the season. Kilduff, Aldrlch,\nElliott and Daly are the others in the\nservice, Trainer Brady was given\n$300.\nThe remainder of the money was\ndivided among 22 players, each receiving $574.\nAT THE THEATRES\n\"My Soldier Girl.\"\n' Containing more than a score of\nnovelties and elaborate scenic ideas,'\nthe military musical spectacle \"My\nSoldier Girl,\" the season's greatest\nsuccess, coming to the opera, house\nSept. 2G, is probably tlie most novel\nattraction of the entire season. The\nproducers, LeComte and Flesher, have\ngone into detail as to their stage settings, the first act presenting a scene\nfrom the stage or the roof of the\nNew Tork 'Theatre, showing a high\nart interior and a grand illumination\nof New York city in the distance. This\nscone changes to the balmy atmosphere of Miami, Fin., picturing Col.\nStone's home near the aviation camp.\nTlie last act is a novel electrical effect, presenting a bewildering scene\nof a desolate battlefield, \"somewhere\nin France.\" The feature novelties are\nmany, including the popular \"Flirtation\nWalk,\" an Illuminated runboard extending from the stage almost to tho\nrear wall of the auditorium.\nWilliam Duncan, Hero of \"hTe Fighting  Trail.'1\nSENDS  NOISY  PATRIOTIC\nRECORD TO KAISER\nLOS ANGELES, Cal.\u2014Kaiser William may never visit tho shipyards at\nLos Angeles harbor but there nevertheless Is a possibility that he will\nhear the patriotic noise made there by\nthe men who are busily building the\nvessels which will hasten his Imperial\ndefeat. This possibility is easily explainable.\nA worker at the shipyards has completed a phonographic record of the\nnoise incidental to shipbuilding, has\nwrapped it carefully, addressing it to\nthe Kaiser, via Switzerland and placed\nit in the United States mall. On the\noutside of the package the workman\nwrote these two legends.\n\"Compliments of the Los Angeles\nshipyards,\" and \"Just listen to that,\nBill, And that's only one corner of\none of the smaller shipyards of the\nUnited  Slates.\"\nSUGGESTS NEW BODY TO\nADMINISTER WAR MEASURES\nOTTAWA.\u2014The suggestion has been\nmade by Mr. Alexander Smith, barrister, that the Dominion government\nestablish a new court, to deal with nnd\nadminister all war acts and orders-In-\ncounell; in order to relieve the judges\nof tho provincial courts of the extra\nwork imposed upon them, particularly\nsinfio the pdSsingo'f the Military Service act. In an interview Mr. Sfriith\npointed out-that the federal.authorities had ample powers under the British North America act lo create sucn.a\nCourt or high tribunal, which would\n1)o vested with powers similar to that\nof the judicial committee of the privy\ncouncil in 'Great Britain. Such a tribunal would be invaluable not only at\nfite present time, but for years to\ncome, as It could decide upon questions on which the civil and military\nauthorities' seem to be at variance.\nFurther it would remove all war time\nlegislation from governmental or partisan administration and give all parties an opportunity to bo heard in\nopen court. Mr. Smith called attention\n>tjo the fact that all superior courts in\n,t,lie various provinces were established\nby the local governments, but the\nJudges were appointed by the Dominion government* These courts interpreted the' law and the administration\nrested with the provincial authorities:\nFor some reason and exception had\nIjeen made in' regard to the Military\nService act, which was administered\ntrom Ottawa, as was other special\nwar legislation.\nAPPOINTED.TO  POST WITH\nAMERICAN ARMY IN FRANCE\nVANCOUVER, B. C\u2014.1. Williamson,\nwho has served on the j Vancouver\n.World reportorial and editorial staffs,\nlias been appointed war secretary to\nthe Knights of Columbus, He left on\n.Thursday for New York to take up\nhis duties and from there will proceed\nto France with a contingent of the\nAmerican army.\nThe great work of the Knights of\n'.Columbus in> providing for thp com\nfort of the boys at the front, is grow\n\"ing daily.   Twenty-fivemillion dollars\nhave already been subscHbecT'In  the\nUnited'States and Canadian Knights\nare about to make a big drive-to col*\niject   S500.000   in   this \"Dominion.'-i;Ah\nno distinction is made' in the^f-ree; dis-\n.fribution of the good thlngs-'pitov.lded,\nthe necessity for raising large  sums\ncan easily bc understood.\n.;, Mr.  Williamson    was    at    various\nperiods of his sojourn in British Co\nlumbia, editor of the Penticton Her\naid,   B.   C.  Western  Catrolic,    Kam\nloops  Telegram  and  Mount Pleasant\nChronicle.   He was also collected with\nthe Coquitlam Star during the boom\ndays   of  the  municipality.    He   is  a.\njournalist  of many years', experience\nand will probably be heard from with\nrespect to his .visit to the war zone.\ni Lieut. J. S. Williamson of the Royal\nAir  force,  his- son,   is   shortly   going\noverseas; a son-in-law, Gunner Leslie\n.1. McLcllan,  Is serving with the ar-\nlillery 'in the present    big    drive    In\nFrance.\n(By Lieut. C. D. Stalling.)\n\"We1-Understand all foreign nations;\nnone of them understand us, and none\nof themr. can understand usV* -Thus\nwrote a certain German professor*, one\nSombart, in his' book entitled \"Hucksters and Heroes.\" He was as abysmally wrong in his first statement as\nhe wns intentionally right in his second. Germany has shown tho.most\nprofound and meticulous misund|U>\nstanding of , France, Britain and:\nAmerica. It was her misunderstand-;\ning of Britain that induced her to think,\nthat Britain would never come into\"\nthe war. It was her misunderstanding\nof France that led to her bloody defeat'\nat Verdun. It was her misunderstanding of America that roused American\nopinion to the pitch that brought her\ninto the .war.\ni      Could Not Understand Them.\nBut it is true that other nations did\nuot understand the#Germans, for they\ncould not conceive that a nation enjoying the advantages of centuries of culture and Christianity should conceal\nbehind the mask of civilization so evil\nif. soul. Thc world played Marguerite to\nGermany's Faust. \"Evil, be thou my\ngod\" was the watchword of Goethe's\nMcphistopheles, and it was the watchword of the Mephistophelean powers\nthat ruled Germany.\n, j From the very earliest days of history the person of an ambassador has\nbeen' considered sacred. He was the\nprivileged guest of tho nation to\nwhich he was accredited, Germany\nthought it an honorable act, because\nperformed in the interests of. Germany\nto use the P$E7Ieged positions, of her\n\u2022ainbassdors jn^Mie service of her\nsystem of espionage and sabotage, as\n'is) notorious In the cases of: Count\nBernstorff, Count Liixburg and oth-\nerfe.y'Germany did not hesllafc' to molest arid, ill-treat in the. peUiest ways\nthe ambassador of France after he had\nbeen handed his passports on the outbreak of the war. These are small\nmatters compared with Germany's general conduct of tho war, but they are\nindicative of the standpoint of a country whose principles are utterly at\nvariance with those of the civilized\nworld,\nMade New Religion,\nThe secret of much that is hard to\nunderstand in the mentality of Germany is to he found in the fact that\nthe kaiser and his circle arc atheists.\nThey do not believe in God, they do\nnot believe in an abstract God. \"God\nand Germany belong to one another,\"\nsaid one of the kaiser's favorite pas\ntors, and if the kaiser's utterances are\nexamined. It will be found that the\n-,iAJl^tgJies\u00a3'~-\u00a3it'self a* blasphemous\nphrase) believes' thaf ft,is rather (Jod\nWho belongs to Germany thai* Germany to God. Kais'erism has fashioned a new religion.- The kaiser has dei-\nffed Deutschtum. He has invented a\nnew God, Der Deutsche Gott, a'n.d he\nhimself is the regent upon earth pf.thts\nso-called god as well as the sole..find\nsupreme arbiter of what Is rlght;.and\n\u2022what is wrong.       .    ,.\nIt is a strange religion .that bfjftne\nGermans,; a state-made affair grafted\non to the remains of their old Christianity arid, based .upon1 a system, of\neth'.cs peculiarly 'Germajn. '(Stated\nbriefly,, the official German religious\nstandpoint is this; Christianity,\nchurches,, priests anfls -preachers,, popular worship are .allj part of the.-machinery of state. The ideas prevail-\n'irig In Other countries of right, and\nwrong, good and evil, are primitive\nand out of date. There is no such thing\nas abstract right. \"Might is the supreme right.\" (Bernhardt). ,*. |\nMinds* and Feelings Drilled,\nThe ultimate test of what Is good\nand right is merely whether it is in the\nInterests of Germany. .On this princi-\nple.all crimes and all actions reputed\nvicious or dishonorable become justified. It is a principle that has been\nImbued into the minds of the German\npeople so thoroughly during the past\ntwo ' generations that fhe- individual\nGerman probably believes in It.with\nperfect sincerity. To the average German the Kaiser is, or was, thc living\nembodiment of God on earth. He is\nundoubtedly indicated in the above-\nnuoted Professor Sombart's statement:\n\"Friedrich Nietzsche was but the last\nof the singers and seers who, coming\ndown from the height of heaven\nbrought to us the tidings that there\nshould be born from us the Son of\nGod, whom in his language he called\nthe Superman.\" There can be little\ndoubt that Sombart wishes to imply\nthat Nietzsche played the part of a\nmodern John tho Baptist to the Savior\nof Wilhelm II. These words sound\nblasphemous, to our ears, but to the\nmodern German they ring true .enough.\nJACKRABBITS  BY  MILLION\nTO BE PUT ON  MARKET\n\u25a0 CHEYENNE, Wyo.\u2014One of Wyoming's greatest natural resources\u2014the\njackrabbit\u2014Is to be capitalized arid\nutilized to combat the fast increasing\ncost of beef, mutton ahd pork. An\neastern promoter, backed by t astern\ncapital, is now arranging details of tbe\nplan, which Involves ihe pluugTiteiV of\nmillions of rabbits and their preservation in cold storage plants until winter\nwhen the carcasses will be marketed\niri all the eastern cities.\nNetting for  Drives\nThis   man   has   already   purchased\nfour miles of wire netting which' will\nbe used as the' cage or corral irijto\nwhich the rabbits will be driven by-\nwell organized expeditions of stockmen and farmers who regard the jack-\nrabbit aff a pest, and who will tie will-\nIhg to-Iferitf- their efforts\" t'b 'his extermination without cost bo long as he-\nIs put out of business. The first of the\ndrives will take place next fall. ,--;\nWhile the scheme Is a novelty in\nWyoming, it {h said to have worked\"\nwell In Kansas, where one man last\nwinter marketed riiore than' 170',000 \u25a0\nJabkrabblts iri the'east and made- a\nlarge profit in\" the meat, with upward\nof $15,000 In additional profits from\nthe sale.\n' This man, a resident of Hutchinson*,\norganized drives in all parts of the\nSurrounding country. His first shipment'of 10,000 carpasses failed' to sell ,\nat good prices because they were\nshipped unsfeirined. After that rebuff\nhe established a dressing plant, in\nwhich the rabbits were turned out in\nattractive form, and the result was\nthat they sold at fancy figures.\nMillions of Animals\n'. The hides were'disposed of to manufacturers for conversion Into felt and\nthe refuse was fed to'a herd.of hoga\nwith excellent results. This man Is\nnow breeding Belgian hares on a large\nscale, and the promoters of the new\ncompany feel that his success can be\neasily duplicated In Wyoming, where\njackrabbits are more common even \"\u2022\u25a0\nthan oil companies.\n\u25a0 No stock will be. sold, it Is ..an- &\nriounced, and the company when\nfinally organized will be maintained as .\na closed corporation. It is estimated\nthat the annual birth rate of jackrabbits in Wyoming exceeds 10,000,000, so\nthat the new vehfu're is sure of a\nbroad field for its operations.\nDEMOCRATS AND REPUBLICAS\nCONVENE AT SALT LAKE\n. SALT LAKE CITY.\u2014Democrats arid\nRepublicans of Utah have set Sept; 30\nand October 4, respectively, at , Salt\nLake City, for their conventions,, at\nwhich candidates for state and congressional office will be nominated.\n,Two members of the house of representatives and three justices of the\nsupreme court are to be nominated.\nBesides state offices and members of j\nthe slate legislature. In many districts .\nwill secure nomination at these con-\nveritibns.\n. Prospective candidates, with a few\nexceptions, have not yet appeared on\nthe horizon. That there will be three\nparties in the field with both state and\ncounty tickets is certain, for the1 Socialist party will also hold a convention at a date to be determined later.\nThe National party, which Is composed principally of those who left the '\nProgressive party and did not affiliate\nwith either the Republicans or Democrats, Is contemplating a convention,\nbut up to date has reached no. decision.   .        .\nA Classified Ad. will bring results.\nAdvertising's Responsibility for Its Adverse Condition\n\u2022:  Hj ii*,-   fv  U   ' 31\n\"Trade follows the Flag\" the economists used to tell  us.\n\"Trade follows the Advertising\" is the truer and   nore modern version.\nThe advertising of yesterday is responsible for a share of the unfavorable trade balance which Canada\nhas in the United States today\u2014the advertising of the American manufacturer which has enabled him\nto capture a big slice of the Canadian market. .*\u25a0\u25a0\nIt would be inconceivable, of course, eVen: without afivbi-tising,'ithat- two peoples living on each\n, side.ofa.ii^invisiblq.houndary line.fpr three thou-\n..smnl-mUep,. speaking'the saiije language, with the\nsame habits, commercial and personal, should not\ntrade with each oilier. Ad;nto;;this. tho fact that\nthis invisible boundary line Is pierced by scores of\nrailways and other transportation lines.    Put on\ntop, the acknowledged leadership of-the one people\nin tho field of specialized and intensive manufacturing\u2014and cap the climax by the fact that the\nmore numerous, the richer, and the more highly\n.specialized people aro the greatest advertisers in\nthe other country.\nIs it any wonder that the trade balance swings\nheavily towards the American side of the international line?\nTariffs  will   not  balance  geography,  transportatijn  facilities   and   good   and   needed   merchandise-\nplus ADVERTISING.\nCanada has no world balance against her.\nCanada is selling more than she is buying. Canada\nhas changed since 1914 from a debtor to a. creditor\nnation, but today Great Britain is running a\n\"charge\" account In Canada. She will pay her\nbill after the War, and so this country has not\nnow the gold to pay tlie United States for the\ndifference between her sales, which amounted to\n$2SO,6IG,330.00, and her purchases of $004,219,-\n053.00 in the fiscal year ending March 31st, 1917..\nThat's\u25a0 when* the unfavorable trade balance comes\nin. That's why your Canadian money, or credit,\nIs marked down 2 per cent the minute It, crosses\nthe international line.\nWar Boards may establish their edicts and\nby artificial restrictions may rectify ,the situation\nto some extent, but the people and the manufacturers have a remedy greater in effect than the\nauthority and power of any War Board.\nThe American manufacturer has bought and\npaid for his Canadian market. He has made the\ngoods the people want. He has overcome the\ntariff Jn his production costs or has brought his\nfactory into Canada. He competes with Canadian-made goods in quality and price.\nHe has studied Canadian needs, put himself\nin a position to supply them, and then he has told\n\u2014and has kept on telling\u2014the Canadian people\nabout his product through the daily newspapers\nof the cbuntry. He has been a> larger advertiser\nin Canadiah'newspapers than the Canadian manufacturer himself.\nEverything\u2014and more\u2014Whiph the Amet'tcari\nmanufacturer has accomplished in Canada is\nwithin the grasp of the Canadian manufacturer,\nbut he must adopt some similar methods; He\nmust\u2014among other things\u2014ADVERTISE.\n. \"Buy my goods because thgy are made in Canada\" albrie won't win the favor of the Canadian to' goods\nof home manufacture, There must be something more. Even producing goods of like quality and price\nwon't do. Thc public must know about both the quality and the 'price. Advertising is the great aid\nwhich the Canadian manufacturer needs today\u2014advertising in the newspapers of the territory in which\nhis goods are sold.   He likely will find the trail blazed liy some American competitor' in the same line.\nNow while the war is'on nnd there Is no sign of peace\u2014now \\vhllo the world's master minds are1\npeering into the future to discern the things to come -now when all business, all manufacturing, all trade,\nIs confronted with evolution\u2014which may mean revolution\u2014now Is the time for the Canadian manufacturer to win the Canadian people by showing that his goods have other virtue besides being \"Made in\nCanada,\" \u25a0    1      '   \u25a0\u2022*   '\nOf courbe, you can't take care of orders ahead; Of course, you're short of labor nnd raw materials.\nThings will change, labor and materials will be in plenty, selling will come back- to the basis of perhaps\nmore severe competition than before, and tho article which thc people have learned to know by name,\nand are accustomed to use, will be the one they will stick to, and buy, and use, In the days when evolution\u2014or revolution\u2014will come to Canadian business.\nAnd advertising will do more than build your business. It will build your country. It will encourage\nyour countrymen to buy morei of their country's products. It will reduce your country's foreign debit\nbalance. For your country, after all, is only the aggregation of yourself and the rest of us. Advertising\ntoday is therefore the business and the patriotic duty of tho Canadian manufacturer and. distributor.\n 6\nFRIDAY,.. SEPT.    13,    1918.     1\nTHE4>AILY NEWS\nd\nPAGE SEVEN\n*7\nLittle Ads that Bring Big Returns\nh\u2014 \u2022\u25a0\t\nOJJDENSE^DVEJRTjSING^RATES\nine insertion, per word     lc\nInlmum charge  25c\nIx   consecutive   Insertions,   per\nword paid in advance     4c\nwenty-slx consecutive insertions\n' (one month) per word, paid in\nI advance  16c\nfelson News of the Day Column\n| per word each Insertion    2c\nMinimum charge per insertion.. 25c\nHack face type, per word, each insertion    8c\na black facQ capitals, per word,\nper insertion      4c\nIlngle   line   black   face   capitals,\n1 used as heading 20c\nilrths,  one  Insertion  ...   Dc\nlarriages,   ore   insertion,   up  to\nfire lines   3lo\n>eaths, one Insertion, up to five\ntines ''-\n!ard of thinka, one insort'.in, up\nto five linen  50\nEach subsequent insertion  25c\nfleath and Funeral Notice  *1.0\"\nAll   condensed   advertisement   are\nHah In advance.\nTn computing the number of words\nI En a classified or Nelson News of the\n[.Day advertisement count each word,\nfoliar mark, abbreviation, initial letter\nnnd figure as one word.\n| Advertisers are reminded that It is\njjjontrary to the provisions of the pos\n[tal laws to have letters addressed to\n'initials only; therefore any advertiser\nlesirous of concealing his or her Identity may use a box at this office without any extra charge If replies are\n'Sailed for; if rcplleB are to be mailed\n^o advertisers, allow 10 conts extra in\naddition to price of advertisement to\npay postage.\nThe News reserves the right to refuse any copy submitted of publication. -\nWant to Sell\nYour Business\n?\nA WANT AD IN THESE COLUMNS   WILL   FIND   A   PURCHASER  FOR YOU.\n\u00ab      MALE   HELPjVAjnXD^^\nNELSON EMPLOYMENT AGENCY-\nW. Parker, 309 Biker St., Phone 283.\nWANTED\u2014House     carpenters     and\nframors; flunkeys; waitress, laundress.'   :'\ni\n,at Diamond Coal Mines, Diamond City,\n\/Alta, 12 .miles north of Lethbrldge\n\u25a0 Experienced miners are making from\n;$7 to $10 per day, net.\nDaily Train Service\nDiamond train meets outgoing and In-\n' going trains from and Lethbrldge.\nChange at Kipi> for Diamond City.\n(102)\n.BLACKSMITH WANTED\u2014At once; a\ngood horseshoer preferred;  $5 eight\nj hour day.   O. Opsahl, Trail, B.C. (188)\nI WAITED\u2014Experienced\nApply Nelson Jobbers,\nbookkeeper.\nLtd.      (196)\n16 \"ROOM AND BOARD.\nROMT^ND^OA^D^^Reasonable\nterms; 912 Vernon. (62)\n17 HOUSES WANTED.\nWANTED\u2014^niisheTTiousrTsT^c^\ncentral; 4 bedrooms.\nNelson. (160)\ntober; modern\nMrs. J. Fred Hume,\nMI^^POULTRV^AND EQQS.\nFOR SALE\u2014One Rouen drake and two\nducks, yearling, $5. Also some fine\nthoroughbred Rose Comb Rhode Island\nRed cockerels, 75c. A. T Coleman,\nArgenta, B.C. (143)\nFOR\nRENT.\nSEVERAL \"HOUSES for rent, 'furnish^\ned   and   unfurnished.     Appleyard,\nNelson.  (112)\n18        ARTICLES FOR SACI\t\nHOTJSEHOLTSn^JItNlTURE for sale.\nApply   mornings   at   821   Carbonate\nstreet. (.136)\nFOR SALE\u2014Boy's tricycle and elec-\ntric iron.    Call Friday or Saturday.\nApartment 10, Annable block.      (197)\nSEED FALL WHEAT, $5 per 100 lbs.,\nf.o.b. Benton Siding. Fresh cows for\nsale.   S. Barkley, Benton Siding. (161)\n{125 VICTROLA and records, \"cheap.\nBox 126, Dally News. (126)\nFOR SALE\u2014Double light harness,\ntwenty-five dollars; single light harness, fifteen dollars; all in good condition; John Deere twelve-inch plow;\nset lever harrows, used one season.\nKennedy, Harrop. (146)\nSEND a Dominion Express money order.    They are payable everywhere.\n20        LIVESTOCK FOR SALE\nFOR   SALE\u2014Grade   Ayrshire   heifer;\nfreshens this week;   bred to purebred Ayrshire bull.   Apply Wickham &\nMltchel, East Robson, B.C. (192)\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\nNOTICE TO PUPILS\u2014Mrs. C. W.\nTyler will resume her vocal, pianoforte and theory lessons on Monday,\nSeptember 16th at 706 Stanley street.\n(155)\nDressmaking\u2014Mrs. Marquis, over\nRutherford Drug store. Successor to\nthe Misses Lemieux. (164)\nFOR SALE\u2014One good cow In calf;\none bull calf, 8 months; one pig, 3\nmonths; f 125 for lot.   W. Brown, Tag\nhum. (198)\nFOR SALE\u2014Fox terrier pup, 2 months\nold, |5.   Box 1145, Nelson. (181)\nFOR  SALE\u2014Good  serviceable horse,\nabout 1300 lbs.    Apply O. K. Bakery. (166)\nFOR   SALE\u2014Young   pigs.\nCooperative, Needles.\nNeedles\n(151)\nFOR SALE\u2014Grade caw, due to freshen\nOct. 1st, in calf to registered Ayrshire bull.   For particulars apply box\n141, Daily News. (141)\nFOR   SALE-r-Dandy  yearling   Jersey\nheifer, excellent milking strain, 550.\nWebb, Proctor. (140)\nAYRSHIRE-SHORTHORN   cow,   five\nyears old; fresh, heavy milker; also\nseveral    Ayrshire    heifer   calves,    4\nmonths old, cheap,   Kennedy, Harrop.\n(144)\nFOR SALE\u2014Five  heavy horses and\nharness.    Salmo   Cedar  Co.,   Park\nSiding, B.C. (113)\nFOR SALE\u2014Pure bred Ayrshire bull\nfor Bervlce,   $7.00.    Hillside  ranch\nNew Denver, B.C. (9977)\nGOOD  WORKING   TEAM   far   sale;\nweight 3300 lbs.   A. Hout, Crawford\nBay. (135)\n21        LIVESTOCK WANTED.\nW^NTlED^IlOTsCloiirtoTaOoT^omS\nand quiet for ranch work. Could exchange milking cow or young stock.\nApply Wickham .*& Mitchell, East Robson, B.C. (191)\nWANTED\u2014Fresh    young   cow;    give\nparticulars.   Rlsden, Harrop, B.C.\n(193)\nWANTED\u2014Good family milk cow.\nMust be Jersey or part Guernsey or\nAyrshire. Must come ln September or\nOctober. Write to box 496, New\nDenver. ,   (174)\n25 FOR EXCHANGE.\nWILL EXCHANGE for Nelson dwefl^\nIng, 140 acre farm, forty cultivated,\nnecessary buildings; value easy $2500.\nH. E. Dill, Nelson. (148)\nAPPLE      PACKERS     WANTED\u2014At\nonce.    Apply. Grand  Forks Orchard\nCo., Grand Forks, B.C. ,   (199)\n; WANTED   AT   ONCE\u2014Good   apple\npackers.    F.  R.  S.   Bailee,    Grand\nForks  Growers'  Cooperative  association, Grand Forks, B.C. (176)\nWIRELESS OPERATORS are urgently needed for work of great national\n' Importance. Students trained in our\nI wireless department aro greatly in\n' demand for both government and com-\n* pany service. For particulars apply to\n', Sprott-Shaw Institute, Victoria, B.C.\n(9963)\n, WANTED\u2014Boy to milk a few cows\nand assist in garden.   Apply box 61,\nDally News. (109)\nWANTED\u2014Apple packer by the box.\nWill pay good price. About 1000\nboxes to pack. Apply Chas. O. Rodgers, Creston, B.C. (179)\nTIE    MAKERS    WANTED\u2014At    lie-\nEuchcrn's camp, Edgewood, 15c per\ntic.    Good timber. (180)\n37   BOATS AND AUTOMOBILES^\nWANTED\u2014To purchase motor launch,\nabout 25 ft. ln length. State price,\nmake and style of engine, full particulars of equipment. Must be in good\nrepair. Wanted for patrol work on\n! Kootenay lake.' Write Supt. Govt.\nTelegraph Svc, Kamloops, B.C.   (139)\n?500 WILL BUY 45 h.p. automobile. Inquire A. Bernheim,  City. 1*03)\n13 SITUATIONS WANTED\u2014MALE\nSmL\\1flON~wXNfED\u2014By engineer\nand mechanic, 3rd class certificate;\nmine or sawmill.   Box 176, Dally News.\nWANTED\u2014Position as cook In lum-\nber or mining camp.    State wages\nand crew in first letter.   Box 194, Daily\nNews.* . (194)\n13   FRUIT AND VEGETABLES.\nFRUIT RANCHERS\u2014We will give a\nfour year contract for strawberries\nand raspberries; any amount up to\n200 acrey, at. good prices. McDonald\nJam Co. (110)\nWANTED\u2014Mangels,   state  prlco  and\nquantity in first letter.   Crown Hill\nPoultry Farm, Balfour. (183)\nBLUE  PLUMS   FOR  SALE\u2014In   bulk\nor packed.   Phone 344L2 or postoffice box 68*0.   Northeast corner Chat-\nbam and Pino streets.\n(206)\n28 MISCELLANEOUS\nWOUL^YOU^MASRYITsuitedr^^\nguaranteed U please you.   In strict\nconfidence write P.O.  box 2055,  Calgary, Canada. (27)\n\"FEATURE WAR PICTURE.\nOUR NEW EDITION of our famous\nwar picture, \"Victorious Charge ol\nthe Canadians at.the Battle of Cour-\ncelette,\" is now on the market for the\nfirst time. It Is bigger, better and\nmore artistic than ever before. Size of\npicture 22x28 inches, finished in nine\ncolors of oil, an exact reproduction\nfrom the original painting by E. P.\nGartlan. It is on heavy, rich, triple-\nply Bristol paper, \"A\" quality. Price\nof this picture retail $1 to any part ol\nCanada, postage prepaid. We want\nagents in every town and village In\nBritish Columbia. Will soil in lots\nfrom 26 to 100 t0 prospective agents at\nwholesale prices. Address, Harrington & Barrett. Publishers of Historic\nand Patriotic Pictures. No. 46 St. Alexander street, Montreal, Que. (187)\nWhist drive and dance Tuesday evening at G.W.V.A. club rooms.   Cards\n8:30;   dancing,   10:30. Admission 25c.\n(185)\nIndependent\nmeets tonight,\nquested.\nOrder    of    Foresters\nGood attendance  re-\n(186)\nBorn\u2014At the hospital, Silverton,\non Sept. 8th, to Mr. and Mrs. D. Mac-\nNaughton, a daughter. (190)\nThe Junior Red Cross auxiliary will\nhold a special meeting tonight. All\nmembers urgently requested to attend. (201)\nSt. Paul's Ladles' aid will hold a tea\nand sale of aprons at the manse, Silica\nstreet on Thursday afternoon from 3 to\n6, the 19th Inst. There will bc a table\nof home cooking, etc. \"00)\nCARD OF THANKS.\nMr. and Mrs. W. E. Graham wish lo\nthank their many friends for their\nkindness during the recent illness and\ndeath of their daughter, Lorna, and\nfor the many floral tributes.        (201)\nCARD OF THANKS.\nMr. and Mrs. J. M. Rue wish to\nthank the many friends for their kind\nness during the recent illness and\ndeath of their RranddaiiKhte Lorna,\nand for the many floral tributes, (203)\nPresident and Mrs. Wilson drove to\nchurch last Sunday behind a pair of\nhandsome bays, observing the fuel administrator's ban upon the unneees-\ncary use of automobiles on Sunday,\nSecret service men who usually trail\nthe president on motorcycles, were\nilong in a carriage.\nBOY SCOUT PEDESTRIAN\nGASSED IN  FRANC!\nST. PAVh, Minn.\u2014Max Bernstein, a\nlocal athlete who was gassed In\nFrance, is rapidly recovering, accord-\nng to letter received here.\nTwo years ago, Bernstein and a\nchum, Leon Blehart, walked from St.\nPaul to San Francisco. They were\nBoy Scouts then and they made the\njourney to advertise St. Paul. \"When\nthe war broke out, Bernstein and Blehart enlisted. The former joined thc\nmarines and Blehart the navy.\nrooLate^toJ^la*^\npanrT6TTT?AT\u00a3^TTin*g(fan^\nsmall.   Apply Lol Sing, South Slocan.\n''' (20*3)\nIN\nTHE    SUPREME    COURT\nBRITISH COLUMBIA.\nOF\n14 FURNISHED ROOMS TO RENT\nKERR APARTMENTS.       (110)\nFURNISHED    SUITE\u2014All    conveniences.    Campbell's Art Studio,   716\nBaker. (184)\nFOR RENT\u20143  furnished  housekeeping rooms; 524 Latimer street. (173)\n11     FEMALE HELP WANTED.\nPATrw5TO3T^itraidyr''wcir^\nployment at homo, in war or peace\nlime\u2014Knit socks for us on the fast,\nsimple Auto Knitter. Particulars today, 3c stamp. Auto Knitter Company,\nDept. C82, 607 College, Toronto.\n(154)\nWANTED\u2014Housekeeper    for     about\nthree months; family of three; baby\nnine months;   good salary.    C.  Bur-\nbrldgc,  New  Denver. B.C. (189)\nWANTED\u2014At once, chambermaid. Ap.\nply Hume hotel. (202)\nFURNISHED housekeeping rooms foi\nrent over HorawlH's grocery store:\nbrick block; $10.   Apply C. W, Apple-\nyard,  phone  444. (117)\nCLEAN, comfortable rooms for men\ncentral location; hot and cold shower\nhatha.   Rate moderate. Y.M.C.A., Stan\nley and Victoria. (118)\nFOR RENT\u2014In Annable block, single\nrooms, two-room suites. (119)\nFOR RENT\u2014Housekeeping rooms, (5\nper month. Over Poole Drug.     (124)\n12 SITUATIONS WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nEXraRI^Nw35~^tmognn>ter^osb\u2122\nposition; knowledge of bookkeeping.\nBox 314, Nelson.. (146)\nbetween Joseph P. Keime, Judgment\nDebtor, and Clarence* Cunningham,\nJudgment Creditor.\nUnder and by virtue of an order for\nsale Issued out of thc above court by\nthe Hon. Mr. Justice Gregory, dated\ntlio 12th day of July, A.D. 1918, and in\npursuance of a reference to the District Registrar of the above Supreme\nCourt of British Columbia at Nelson.\nB.C., on the thirty-first day of July,\nA.D., 1918, 1 will offer for sale at my\noffice at the Court House, Nelson,\nB.C., on Monduy, September the sixteenth, 1918, al the hour of twelve\no'clock noon, tbe undivided one-fifth\ninterest of the above Judgment Debtor\nIn the following mineral claims,\nnamely;\n\"Wonderful.\"\n\"Look  Out  Number Two.\"\n\"Columbus.\"\nBeing respectively Lots 481, 130S and\n1309, all situated in tlie Slocan Mining\nDivision of West Kootenay District,\nto satisfy the Judgment obtained by\nthe said Judgment Creditor against\nthe said Judgment Debtor.\nTerms: Cash.\nJAMES W.  DOYLE,\n.Sheriff of South Kootenay.\nDated at my office In tile City ol\nNolson, B.C., Aug. 28, 1918.\nLonely Sale\nIn Our Ladies' Showroom\nALL ARTICLES ADVERTIZED HERE ARE OF SPI5CIAL MENTION AND THE PRICE ASKED\nFOR THEM IS* SO LOW THAT A COMPLETE CLEARANCE WILL BE EFFECTED. ALL ARE NEW\nGOODS THIS YEAR, BUT MOSTLY IN SINGLE GARMENTS ONLY AND ODD SIZES. MAKE A\nSTAMPEDE FOR THE SHOW ROOM EARLY AND GET YOUR CHOICE.\nONE FAWN RAINCOAT\u2014\nSize 40. ffQ Qk\nSpecial       \u25a0\u2022JtQld'J\nONE FAWN RAINCOAT\u2014\nSize 36. \u00ab\u00abC OK\nSpecial      \u00abP0iJU\nONE NAVY RAINCOAT\u2014\nSize 40. OC QC\nSpecial      9 Old If\nONE GREY RAINCOAT\u2014\nSize 42. tinRD\nSpecial      %f IUi\u00abIU\nONE GREY RAINCOAT\u2014\nSize  40. OO Kfl\nSpecial     *ipOi\u00abIU\nTWO FAWN COATS\u2014Military style; both size OQ QC\n38.   Special    **JKji3o\nTWO     BLACK     ALL-WOOL\nSERGE  DRESSES\u2014\nBoth size 36. Q<f 1  QR\nSpecial, Each   \u00ab{* 1 IiUm\nONE NAVY ALU-WOOL\nSERGE DRESS\u2014 ffQ Eft\nAge 16.   Special   fuivw\nONE NAVY SERGE SPORT\nCOAT\u2014Size 16. OT Eft\nSpecial       ijtliUU\nONE MYRTLE SERGH\nDRESS\u2014Trimmed  Black  Braid.\nSize  36. Stl\/L 7R\nSpecial       -f I -Tl I 1*\nONE BLACK ALL-WOOL\nSERGE DRESS\u2014 011 QK\nSize 36.    Special ... S> I ln\u00bb*U\nONE BLUE ALL-WOOL\nSERGE  DRESS\u2014 \u00bbQ  CQ\nSize  38.    Special       iJOlUl\/\nON 13 BLANKET CLOTH\nSPORT COAT\u2014White with Blue\nDvercheck. Size 40. OC (\\(\\\nSpecial       $UlU\u00abS\nONE BLANKET CLOTH\nSPORT COAT\u2014White with\nPale Grey Stripe. 09 OK\nSize 16.   Special   ywDu'ii\nLadies' Shoes\nSPECIAL VALUE  IN   LADIES'\nWHITE KID SHOES\nRegular $10.50 Pair,\nLY-\nFIVE     PAIRS     ONLY\u2014Sizes\n~%, 4, 4Vi and 7.\nSpecial Price ...\nONE   PAIR   ONLY,    CHAMPAGNE   KID   SHOES\u2014Sife   7.\nRegular $10.50 pair.\nSpecial Price \t\n$5.25\nTRUNKS\nWe have a Splendid R:wige of\nTrunks in stock.   Prices from:\n$7,00 to $17.50\nr\nFruit\nWASHINGTON      CANT A-\nLOUPES\u2014                    <)Qf.\nPink Meat.    Each..   t.<j\\j\nTOKAY  GRAPES\u2014\n0K\u00ab\ntwo\nFANCY     GOLDEN\nNAS\u2014\nBANA-\n1 111\nPLUMS\u2014\n25c\nFANCY RIPE TOMATOES\u2014I'd*  Basket.\n25c\nBlackVclvct\nRibbon\nWe have the very best values\nin Black Velvet Ribbon; deep\nrich pile with satin back.\nBoys'\nSuits\nStrong School\nSuits\nThese arc a few special values iu\nhoys' Grey Tweed Norfolk Suits;\nbloomer pants; governor fastenings.\nThis broken line must be cleared,\nhence the attractive prices. OC QK\nRegular $0.00.   Special   *$Ui*JU\nGrey, as above\u2014Size 00 QC\nSpecial yCiUV\nOne\n31.    Regular 811.50.\nBLACK AND WHITE  LONG   PANTS SUIT\u2014\nSizes 35 and *10 only.    To Clear \t\n\\\\ -Inch\n%-lncli\n%-lneh\n%-Inch\n%-Inch\nWide\u2014Pel-\nWide\u2014Per\nWide\u2014Per\nWide\u2014Pel*\nWide\u2014Per\nYard..\nYard..\nYard..\nYard..\n..5c\n..7c\n..8c\n.10c\nWHITE KID GLOVES\u2014\nSize '.I Ms.   Regular 86<* pair.\nSpecial, Pet* Pali*\n$12.50\n 25c\nMEN'S   WORK   SHIRTS\u2014All   sizes;    rodlriy and  slrong;   in  great\nvariety;  in Oxford, Djuok, Galatea and Drill. Or) Ari\nPrices, $1.15, $1.25, $1.50 and   *$*ClUU\nHi-Inch Wide-\nI'\/i-Inch Wldo-\nPer\nYaril..12i\/2c\nYard... .15c\n\u2022I'er Yard..17|4o\nSAM E\nEach\nBOYS'\nloday $2.2\nIN*  STRONG  BLACK SATEEN\u2014\nTELESCOPE  HATS\u2014These\n'i each.   Spoclal \t\n\"ISLGIN MAID\" CROCHET\nCOTTON\u2014ln White a.id All\nShades. Size 30. Special l)KB\nValues, Fuur Balls for...   *LU*j\nMEN'S  WHITE .SILKANA\nThroe for\t\nIIANDKERCl-llW'-S\u2014\nMEN'S FIGURED? EXOELDA  HANDKERCHIEFS\u2014\noi en \u00abi ft*\n>p I iilU| i(l I iuu\n$1.50, $1.85\n. uuu\n49c\nGUT YOUR SHARE OF THESE BOYS' AND\nGIRLS' BLACK ALL-WOOL RIBBED STOCKINGS\u2014Sizes 0V4, 7, 7Vi, s and s;i. Worth up\n$].r>0 per pair.\nAll OnS Price, While Thoy Lust, I'er Pair\n79c\nSPECIAL VALUE IX COLORED STRIPED\nOATH TOWELS\u2014Deep, spongy weave; good\nwearing and absorbent quality; huge* and useful\nsizes. Value's up to $ J .0U pair.\nAll One Price, i'er Pair\t\nBusiness and Professional Directory\naccountants.\nENGINEERS.\nW. H. FALDINO, 1     GREEN BROS,, BURDEN 6 CO.\nPubUo Accountant, Bank of Montreal Civil Engineers, Dominion and  H. C.\nChambers, Rossland, B.C,\nJ. H. LAWRENCE,\nAooountant, Etc\nRoyal Bank Building, Nelson, B.C.\nA88AYER8.\ntt. W. wmMWBiONrb\u00abA-1108, Nelaon, B.C., Standard waitsrn charges.\nBU8INES8 COLLEGES.\nNELSON    BUSINBis    COLLEGE^\nDay and  night  classes.    Complete\nkuelneas ooursa.   Apply P.O. box 746.\n, (180)\n-~r\n8CHOOLS.\nKINO EDWARD'S SCHOOL AND\nBualness College for Girls, Cranbrook, B.C.\u2014Puplla prepared for matriculation and teachers' examinations.\nFull commercial course. Music, dancing; French taught by Parlsienne. Boys\nunder 12 taken, Write for prospeotus\nto Miss Cherrlngton, principal,     (121)\nSECOND HAND DEALER8.\nTHE ARK pays cash for secondhand\nfurniture, stoves; 806 Vernon; Ph. 65L.\n^^FUNERAL DUECTOftS.\nixX^araRrioN^Fr^rDTX^rsoii\nVictoria street.    Phone  292;   nlKht\nphone, 1M-L,\nLand Surveyors.\nSurveys of Lands, Mines, Townsites,\nTimber Limits, etc.\nNelson. 516 Ward street, A. H. Green,\nMgr.;rVlctoria, 114 Pemberton Bidg.\nF. C. Qreen; Fort George, Hammond\nstreet, F. P. Burden.\nA. L. McCULLOCH,\nHydraulio Engineer.\nProvincial Land Surveyor.\nBaker St., Nelson, B.C.\nA. D. NASH,\nMining Engineer.\nConsultation,    Exploration,    Development Reports.\nRoom 1,  Royal  Bank  Bidg.,  Nelson,\nWHOLESALE.\nA. MACDONAjGD~&\"c^WHOi.E-\nsale Grocers and Provision Merchants. Importers ot Teas, Coffees,\nSpices, Dried Fruits, Staple and\nFanoy Groceries, Tobaccos, Cigars,\nButter, Eggs, Cheese, and Packing\nHouse Products, Office and warehouse,\ncorner ot Front and Hall Sts. P. O.\nbox 1095.   telephones 28 and 28.\nAUCTIONEERS.\nC.TA.~ WATERMAN & CO., Opera blk.\nWM. CUTLER,  AUCTIONEER.\n474; phone 77.\nBox\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 Street E., Calgary.\nPhones;   Office,  M2848;   House,\nM2077\nInterne and House Surgeon Manhattan Eye, Ear, Nose and\nThroat Hospital, New York City,\n1911-14. Specialist to Calgary\nSchool Board. -\nTENDERS WANTED.\nSealed tenders marked \"Tenders for\nCupboards, Shelving, etc.,\" for the now\nKootenay Lake General Hospital will\nbe received up to noon on Monday,\n16th inst., at the office of the secretary.\nPlans and specifications may lie seen\nat the office of thc architect, Will Hal.\ndane.\nTho lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted.\nGEO. JOHNSTONE,\nSecretary.\nGAME ACT, SEASON 1918-19\nPublic notice is hereby given that\nthe shooting season tn East and West\nKootenay and Yale, for Grouse, Deer,\nDuck and Geese, opens on tho 14th\nSeptember,   1918.\nWM. G. McMYNN,\nProvincial Game Warden.\nMONUMENT8.\nKOOTENAY GRANITE & MOUN-\nmental Co., Ltd. Office 607 Front\nstreet, P.O. box 865; phone 164, The\nonly monumental factory In the Kootenays. \t\nJOB PRINTER8\nTHE NEW8 PUBLISHING CO, LTD.\nAll Kinds of\nCOMMERCIAL  PRINTING, RULING\nAND BOOKBINDING\nHigh Class Work\nCareful Attention Paid to All Orders\nPrivate Hospital\nLICEN8ED  BY PROVINCIAL\nGOVERNMENT\nWe give particular attention to all\nfemale trouble\u2014home-like apartments\nfor ladles awaiting accouchment Certified nurses sent out on private cases,\ntown er country. Highest references;\nreasonable terms;  inspection Invited.\nMrs. Moore. Superintendent.\nTHE' HOME PRIVATE H08PITAL\nFalls and Baker 8ti., Nelaon, B. C.\nPhone 872 for Appointment\nr. o. box m.\n(The Hudson's Bay (fainimmj\nHfcRnERT E RUa^lDGf. 5rORI3 COMMr-ZjIONCI?\nLOST LIFE SAVINGS\nWHILE IN FRANCE\nNKW VnRK.\u2014Kmile l'\\ Monjelimi,\n^Vest lltli street, a mkklle-ageil\nt'reneh waiter, who although a natur-\naJized American, voluntarily joined the\nKronen army hi 1915, haa returned\nfrom throe years on the battlefields\nto make the distressing discovery that\nduring his absence tlie city Hold two\nlots he owned outright at Mollis terrace, Queens Borough, and for which\nhe paid $1250 in 1909. The lots were\nsold   under   tax   lien   proceedings   to\nsatisfy an old unpaid lax uf if.s.UO Mr.\nMonjelard did not know existed.\nThe lien was bought at auction for\n$ll.ll> by Harry Klrlrtsky. Klrinahy\ntransferred tho lien In Charno Kata,\nwho can neither read nor write, and\nshe foreclosed on the property. Tu regain title, Mr. Monjelard must now\npay to David Kirinsky, tttloniey and\nofficial ageni or Hurry Kli-Inaky and\nMrs. Kai\/, Sliall. If lie tails, be will\nhave no further claim on the lots.\nThis remarkable transaction is\nwholly within the law, so Car as can\nbe determined, and is only one of\nthousands which have occurred since\ntho lax lien sale law went into effect.\nAs a result a huge number of persons\nwho think they own property will find\non inquiry thai title is now In the\nhands of same one else, although they\naro still paying the taxes. Meantime,\nseveral   groups  of  men   are   profiting\nLieut. Roy McCliffen, the Toronto\nhockcylst, was killed while acting as\naviation instructor in a. Texas camp.\nMrs. ISmmeline Pankhurst, bbig-\nlish militant suffrage leader, has been\nengaged as a speaker for the United\nStates department of labor.\nCondensed \"Want\" Ads Order Form\nUse this blank on which to write out your condensed ad., one word in each space,\norder or check and mail direct to The Daily News,  Nelson, B.C.\nEnclose money\nRate:   One  cent  a  word each  insertion,\nfigure, dollar sign, etc., count as one word.\nsix  consecutivo   insertions   charged\nNo ch arge less than 25 conts.\nas  four,    Eaoh   initial.\nPlease publish the above advertisement   times, for which I enclose %.\nName\nAddreee\nIf desired, replies may be addressed to Box Numbers at The Daily News Office.   If replies are to be\nmailed enclose 10c extra to cover cost of postage and allow five words extra for box number,\n PAGE EI6HT,   V\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nFRIDAY,    SEPT.    13,    1918.    \"fl\nUNEQUALLED FOR GENERAL USE\nW. P. TIIRNEY, General Sale* Agent.\nNelson, B.C.\nQua supplied to all railway points.\nTonol\nTHE ONLY PREPARATION TO\nPREPARE THE SYSTEM FOR\nTHE WINTER MONTHS.\n$1.00 PER BOTTLE.\nCanada Drug & Book Co.\nKodak   Supplies,   Prescriptions\nFilled Accurately.\nPHONE 81.\nI Will Buy\nHags, 2 cents per pound; Sacks,\nI centa each; and Brass\nCopper, Scrap Iron, Hides, Felts,\nand Woola at market prices.\nAll kinds of Second-Hand Furniture bought and sold,\nJ. P. Morgan\nBuying Agent, O. W. Smelting Co.\nVERNON STREET, NELSON, B.C.\nPhone 47 P.O. Box 417\nI STRIKE;\nPLAY Hi\nDiscouraging for Troops to  Read  of\nMen Asking for Gold, Says\nCapt. McQuarrie.\n\"If those workers would only quit\ngoing on strike and play the game we\ncould finish the whole business this\nyear,\" Is the statement of Capt. D. A.\nMcQuarrie, M. C, in a letter to his\nparents, Mayor and Mrs. McQuarrie.\nCapt. McQuarrie has ' returned to\nFrance after recovering from his second wound.\n\"It isn't much encouragement to a\nTHE ARK\nTapestry Rugs, 9x9 .........$18.00\nAxmlnster Hugs, 7x9  33.60\n\"Wilton Rugs, 9x12  47.50\nBrussells Bugs, 9x9  ,... 32*50\nLace Curtains, pair .........   1*25\nPortieres,   pair ,....: -.<\u25a0..., 6.50\nScrim, per yard ....>    .20\nCurtain net, yard ............   \u25a0SO\nLadles White Hose      *4D\nAxmlnster,   Wilton   and   Tapestry\nRugs\nWanted \u2014 Secondhand    Furniture\nand Ranges.\nPhone 65L. 606 Vernon St.\n.IDE ANGLE lenses\n5 that conform to the\nBhape of your eyes\nand permit unrestricted vision in\nall directions are our specialty.\nUntil you have worn glasses\nfitted with our new Punktal\nlenses you will not know what\neyesight keenness and comfort\nmean.\nJ.O.Patenaude\nSpecialists   in   Optics.\nFor Reliable Service Patronize\nKerr's Jitney\nHe Will Take You Anywhere at Rea-\nReasonable Prices Day or Night. Auto\nMeets all Trains and Boats.\nKERR BLOCK PHONE 491\nfellow when he has gone over the top\nand seen half his battalion wiped out\nto pick up a newspapor and read about\na few thousand stiffs going on strike\nfor more money\/' he continued.\n\"As we pass | through England the\ncountry looks fine. I think there is\ngoing to he a bumper harvest this\nyear. There is plenty to eat over here\nnow, but the price is away up In the\nair. How the poor unfortunate officer who is married carries on I don't\nknow. Field boots cost $32 a pair, a\ntunic $35 and breeches $25.\"\nFOOD BOARD CLOSED\nEDMONTON CANDY STORES\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, Sept. 12.\u2014Three establishments ..tin Edmonton dealing \",in\ncandy, fruit, etc., have been closed by\norder of the Canada food board for\ndisregarding license regulations. Tho\nplaces penalized are: Mike Evanoff,\nE. Gibson and Jane Detroit.\nA Classified Ad. will bring results.\nlyaCsMuta OstttiUOlUk\nTonight\nTonight\nFIRST  EPISODE  OF WHAT  IS  UNQUESTIONABLY THE  MOST\nT    DRAMATIC   OUTDOOR  SERIAL   EVER   PRODUCED\nThe Fighting\nTrail\nAL80   A   REGULAR   BEAR   CAT   OF   A   FIVE-REEL   FEATURE\nSunlight's Last Raid\nA   PROGRAM  TEEMING  WITH  THRILLS\nWATCH   AND  WAIT   FOR\n\"THE KAISER \"THE BEAST OF BERLIN\"\n\"Arco\nW\nFIX UP YOUR  LEAKY  ROOFS  BEFORE THE WET WEATHER\nBY  USING  \"ARCO  SEALIT\"\nTHE   BE8T   PREPARATION   FOR  THAT   PURPOSE   MADE\n\"ARCO  SEALIT\"   18  YOUR   LEAK   IN8URANCE\nNO   TROUBLE   TO   APPLY   AND   WILL   STOP   THAT   LEAK\nINSTANTLY,  ONCE  AND   FOREVER\n80LD   BY   US   IN   SMALL  OR   LARGE  QUANTITIES\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nWHOLESALE AND  RETAIL\nNELSON,   B.C.\nAsk Government to Guarantee Bonds\nfor  Ymir  Road\u2014Want Ore\nSampler in the Interior\nAt a meeting of the hoard of trade\nheld last night the secretary reported\nthat, as instructed, a resolution from\nthe board had been forwarded to Hon.\nDr. King, minister of public works,\nVictoria, asking that the provincial\ngovernment guarantee bonds or undertake that bonds be guaranteed in order\nthat money might be obtained for the\nbuilding of the Ymlr road. The resolution read as follows:\n\"Whereas it is of the greatest Importance that the section of the Ymir\nroad between Nelson and Hall be constructed at the earliest possible time,\nas many Industries along that road\nare seriously handicapped and injured\nin their business by not having transportation facilities with Nelson, such.\nas that road, when built, will provide\nand whereas It is understood that the\nminister of public works promised to\nmembers of this board to ask at the\nnext session of the legislative assembly for authority to guarantee bonds\nto be issued for the purpose of providing funds for the building of the\nYmtr road, and whereas there is yet\ntime to construct the road from Nelson to Hall before the cold weather\nsets in this fall, therefore be it resolved that the minister of public\nworks be respectfully asked to make\nsome arrangement to provide sufficient funds now, so that work on that\nsection can be started at once.\"\nA letter was- received from H, W.\nRust ln whlch'he tendered his resignation as treasurer of the board. The\nsecretary was instructed to write to\nMr. EUst telling him that it was with\nregret that the board accepted his\nresignation and thanking him for his\nservices rendered as treasurer. I. R.\nPoole was elected to fill the vacancy.\nThe board of trade endorsed a resolution of the Great War Veterans association asking the government to\nhave a convalescent hospital at Nelson\nfor treatment of returned soldiers.\nA request was received from the\nnatural resources intelligence branch\nof tht Dominion government for good\nphoto prints or negatives relating to\nthe development of natural resources\nIn the Kootenay district. It was decided by the board to offer two prizes\nfor the best photo prints to be exhibited at the fall fair.\nThe secretary was instructed to\nwrite to Hon. D. Beland, who was a\nprisoner of war for four years and\nwho Is lecturing throughout the west,\nasking him to speak In Nelson under\nthe auspices of the board of trade.\nThe board also passed a resolution\nasking the provincial government to\nhave a sampling and testing plant\nbuilt in the interior of the province.\nThe secretary was instructed to submit the resolution to the minister of\nmines, Victoria.\n!T\nJudge Forin Will Preside at Sitting to\nStart at 11 O'clock This\nMorning.\n1 -Six cases are slated for the county\ncourt, which will start at 11 o'clock\nthis morning. Judge Forln will preside,   Following is a list of the cases:\nMcArthur et al against Newcomen, a\nsuit for $584, being an action on a\ncontract. F. C. Moffatt will appear\nfor the plaintiff ond Hamilton \u25a0 &\nWragge for the defense.\nWood-Vallance Hardware company\nagainst the Gold King Mining company, an action for $318 for goods sold\nand delivered. James O'Shea will appear for the plaintiff and Hamilton &\nWragge for the defendant.\nO'Glnskl vs. Zetlnuk, a suit for $30\nfor goods sold and delivered. E. A.\nCrease will appear for the plaintiff\nand James O'Shea for the defandant.\nElford Boat company against J. T,\nPierre, a suit for ?57 for commission.\nJames O'Shea will represent the plaintiff and E. A, Crease the defendant.\nThe New Idea I Pattern compay\nagainst Openshaw, a suit for \u00a5212 for\ngoods sold and delivered. James\nO'Shea will appear for the plaintiff\nand Heggio & Debec for the defendant.\nMankin and Huddleston against William Olynyk for $321, being a suit on\na promissory note. James O'Shea will\nappear for the plaintiff and A. Donaghy for the defendant.\nIS\nREADY FOR DRIVE\nMen in Charge of Campaign to Raise\nFunds  for  Overseas  Work\nAre Confident\nIS\nBlairmore, Alta., Visitor to City pays\nGreatest Tribute to City Yet\nReported.\nWhen Joseph Handlcy of Blairmore,\nAlta., returned to his home after\nspending a vacation in Nelson, the\ncity sent back to the prairie one who\nthoroughly enjoyed his stay and will\nundoubtedly come again, if the enthusiastic tribute which he pays in his\nhome paper, the Blairmore Enterprise,\nis any Indication of his attitude.\nThe Enterprise says:\n\"Joe Handley returned Tuesday\nfrom a visit to his family, who are\nsummering at Nelson, B. C. Joe admits that Nelson is 'the only' spot on\nearth and wonders why Palestine\nshould have been chosen as the Holy\nLand. Ho says that in the Nelson\ndistrict th\u00a9 people do not have to\nworry about their souls, and I their\nbodies can exist on the fragrance of\nthe atmosphere washed down by the\nripples from the lakes. Joe says that\nIf he had to choose between Nelson\nand heaven to live in he would prefer\nthe latter, for he is confident that the\ndevil could not live in such a lovely\ncountry.\"\n$ $\nj THE WEATHER |\n$ ! *\nNelson and vicinity\u2014Continued fine\nand warm. Min.   Max.\nNelson   48      81\nVictoria  54      79\nKamloops   52       84\nPrince Rupert   46       58\nDawson  32       48\nWinnipeg  40       70\nPenticton    \"...GO       84\nGrand Forks  ....... 50       87\nVancouver     ....... 52      70\nBarkerville   38       60    ,\n\"Everybody welcome and everything\nfree,\" is the slogan of the overseas\nservice of the Knights of Columbus\nfor the boys at the front. From Sept.\n15 to 23 they will carry on a Dominion\nwide campaign in an effort to raise\n$500,000 for their work of supplying\ncomfort and recreation for the Boldlers\noverseas. Cigarettes and refreshments\nare supplied free of charge to tho boys\nwho are given the liberty of the\nKnights of Columbus huts at the\nfront.\nAlthough the Knights of Columbus\nIs a Catholic organization there is no\ndistinction made as to the religion ot\nthe men entertained in their huts. The\nmoney which is raised in Ca.iada for\nthis organization is for Canadian boys\nas the organization with the American\ntroops is conducted separately. All\nthe money given is used directly for\ntho boys and purchases are made in\nCanada so that the money is spent at\nhome and is retained in Canada.\nA local committee, organized to\ncarry on the campaign, has reported\nthat it is in readiness to ask everyone\nfor a subscription to provide comforts\nfor the soldiers. Judging by the\namount of interest shown in the campaign, the committee believe that a\nlarge amount of money will bo raised\nin Nelson and surrounding towns\nwhore similar committees are working.\nPatience in War Time\n\"Keep your temper, gentle sire,\"\nlays the watch repairer,\nThough your watch may be overdue\nFor a month, or may be two,\nWe   can't   help   it.    Please   don't\nswear.\nLabor's scarce, materials rare,\nThere's lotB to do, but we'll get by.\nThese are facts; we tell no lie.\nThough we plug with a will,\nAlt our work is now uphill;\nSo your watch, we're afraid,\nMay still be a bit delayed.\nStill you'll get it, don't be vexed,\nMay be this week, may be next.\nKeep on hoping.   Don't say die,\nThings will straighten by-and-by.\nA. T. NOXOIN\nWatchmaker and Jeweler\nLD.\nClam Chowder\n} Social and Personal I\nPTE. KEAREY\nY.M.C.JL\nTells Local \"Y\" Director That Institution Is One of Soldiers Best '\nFriends.\n\"Nelson has certainly done well by\nthe Red Cross which well deserves her\nsupport. I hope she did as well by the\n'Y' overseas,\" says Pte. W. M. Keatley,\nwriting from somewhere in France to\nono of the directors of the Nelson\nY.M.C.A. He continues to say that a\ngreat deal of unjust criticism has been\nthrown at the \"Y\" by some persons.\n\"The 'Y' Is one of our best friends\nin France. It furnishes us with many\nlittle luxuries right away up to the\nsupport line at the same prices as are\ncharged at the expeditionary force can-\nteen far in the back areas. It provides\nfree movies and concerts, free libraries,\nathletic goods, hot and cold drinks\nand reading rooms supplied with papers, magazines and gramophones. It\nis a splendid institution and we all\nback it up.\"\nPte. Keatley went overseas with the\n196th battalion and at the time of enlistment was teaching school at the\ncoast. He trained as a signaller at\nSeaford camp and made good marks in\nall tests. After going to France he\nwas connected with the Vimy ridge\nuniversity, which was carried on under\nthe leadership- of Capt. Oliver, chaplain of the 196th battalion and formerly chaplain of a Manitoba theological\ncollege.\nAre You and Your Family Protected by\nl, FIRE INSURANCE\u2014Ws represent some ef th* strongest\nOld Country( Canadiin (nd American companies. Rates on\nresldenoes in Neleon hava been again reduoed. Don't take\n\u2022 chines.   Let some etrong oompany do that\nL ACCIDENT IN3URANCE\u2014In other words Insure your\nIneome agalnet aoeident and aioknets, Ratea ar* very\nreasonable.\nI. LIFE INSURANCE\u2014Proteet those dependent upon you.\n8hould you live you get your money baok with interest.\nShould you die, your wife and family are not dependent\nupon friende and relatives, nor upon their own efforte. ***>\nAnyway, It will oost nothing ts investigate the\n\u2022oat of any of these three kinds ef protection.\nCharles F\/McHardy\nREAL  ESTATE\nIN8URANCE\nlar\"\nFUEL\nJ. B. Patton left for Ymlr yesterday\non a business trip.\nBorn to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Freed,\na daughter, Sept. 12,\n.   L. A. Carripbell of Rossland is expected in the city today,\nJ. Hamer Hoyle of Queens Bay was\na visitor to the city yesterday.\nMrs. W. G. Morton of Cranbrook was\na visitor to the city last night\nMisses Ida and Isabel Gunn of New\nDenver are visitors   to thc city.\nMrs. A. Sayer of Crawford Bay was\na guest at the Hume last night.\nMrs. A. Pitchford returned last night\nfrom a two weeks' visit to Spokane,\nMr. and Mrs. Calder, Medicine Hat\nwere guests at the Queens last night,\nMajor Gilbert Anderson of the Morrlssey internment camp is visiting the\ncity.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Watson, Nelson, are\nguests at the Fairfield hotel,\u2014Victoria\nColonist.\nE, H. Nagle of Penticton was a vis\nitor to the city yesterday and stayed\nat the Hume.\nJ. Watklns was a Grand Forks vls;\nitor to the city last night and stayed\nat the  Madden,\nT. Lane of Ainsworth will return\nhome this afternoon after a few days'\nvisit In the city.\nT. J. Hoskins of Castlegar came to\nthe city yesterday and stayed at the\nHume last night,\nJames H. Schofield, M.P.P. of Trail,\nis expected to reach Nelson today on\nhis way to Creston.\nIvan DeLashmutt of Silverton was a\nvisitor to the city last night and was\nregistered at the Hume.\nFrank Scott of Fernie came to tho\ncity on the Crow boat last evening and\nregistered at the Madden,\nM. J. Walsh bf Nelson was included\nin last night's casualty list as among\nthe infantry killed in action.\nMrs. C. O. ..Board came to the city\nfrom Waldo on tho Crow boat last ovo-\nnlng and stayed at the Hume.   ,\nLieut. Mayor, an original 54th battalion man, has recovered from wounds\nand has again returned to France.\nMr. and Mrs. A. J. Mott of Elko arrived in the city on the Crow boat last\nnight and were registered at the Hume.\nGeorge D. Bell will return this\nmorning to his home in Salmo afttr\nspending a couple of days in. the city.\nJ. J. Evans and H. Evans were\namong Fernie visitors to the city last\nnight and were guests at the Grand\nCentral.\nMrs. Ellis of Edge)vood was operated\non by Dr. Rose and Dr. Hartin yesterday at the Kootenay Lake General,\nhospital.\nMiss L. M. Collins, who has been\nvisiting friends in Edgewood and who\nspent the day in Nelson, will leave this\nmorning for Killiny.\nMr. and Mrs. Crone of the Florence\nMining company, Ainsworth, accompanied by H. Noble and Mr. Pope,\nspent yesterday in the city.\nArchie Graves, who went overseas\nwith the 54th battalion, has returned\nto France, according to word received\nby friends in the city. He was wounded last March.\nMrs. Charles F. McHardy and family\nhave returned from their summer home\nat Balfour. Mrs. McHardy's mother,\nMrs. A. Alloway of Brantford, Ont., Is\nmaking them a short visit.\nMiss Nicholson, formerly of Leth-\nbtlflffi visited iii the city |as(. week\nCorn\nW' have a good stock of No, 4\nYellow Corn, kiln dried, and can\nsupply it either whole or cracked, also\nFeed Cornmeal,\n\u2022 Barley   Chop   and   Oat   Feed   are\nworking vwetl together for hog feed.\nThe Brackman-Ker\nMilling Co., Limited\nNEW TIME\nWillow Point Ferry\nTuesday, Thursday and Friday\nLeave Willow Point  8 a.m.\nLeave Nelson   5 p.m.\nMasters & Fletcher\nenroute for the the coast. Miss Nicholson left Tuesday for Ymir, near Nelson, where she is to have charge of the\nhospital.\u2014Lethbridge Herald.\nE. L, Buchanan, registrar for the\nAmerican army, registered nearly 50\nAmerican citizens yesterday. The registration cards are sent to the American consul at Fernie and forwarded\nfrom thero to the home board in the\nUnited States.\nCapt. B. H. Olson, medical superintendent, acknowledges the following\nfor the patients of Balfour sanatorium: From Rev. H. S. Bagnall, Nelson,\nflowers; from Mrs. W. J. Roberts,\nKaslo, one box of apples; from Miss\nThompson, Balfour, magazines; from\nMrs, Basil Rennio, Balfour, magazines;\nCapt. F. D. Smith, who enlisted in\nthe Nelson company of thc 54th battalion, has been seriously wounded ln\nthe chest and has been admitted to\nNo. 2 Canadian General hospital,\nFrance. , Capt. Smith was employed in\na bank at Cranbrook before enlisting.\nThis is thc second time ho has been\nwounded.\nMajor R. Holrqes a Court, who went\nBeautiful Earrings\nI have just received a selection\nof carvings which will appeal to\nthe most exacting taste. They\ncomo In great variety of material\nand shapes, including jet and plain\ngold and the emerald, ruby, ultramarine, brilliant and amethyst\nstyles.\nJ. J. WALKER\nOPTICIAN AND JEWELER\nT\nRutherford Drug Co.\nIt Pays to Deal Here for\nDRUGS,    MEDICINES,    PHOTO\nGOODS, COLUMBIA GRAFANOLAS,\nRECORDS AND NEEDLES\nMail Ordera Filled Promptly.\noverseas with the 54th battalion, has\nbeen admitted to No. 5 Southern .General hospital, Portsmouth, with a gunshot wound in tho left thigh. This\nis the second time he has been wound*\ned. The wound Is stated to be not\nserious. Mrs. Holmes a Court Is also\nat Portsmouth,\nJAR OF PRESERVES\nEXPLODES IN PORT ARTHUR\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nTORT ARTHUR, Sept. 12.\u2014Mrs. W.\nLister was opening a jar of her 1018\npcrserves this morning when the thing\nexploded, hurling the top of the jar Into\nthe kitchen ceiling. - Another jar also\nexploded. Mrs. Lister's season's work\nof 30 quarts appears lost The local\npress has received numerous similar\ncomplaints, thc trouble being laid to\nthe rubbers supplied with this year'ti\npurchases of preserving jars.\nA New Fall\nSuit\nWHILE  It Is   now Fall  Suit timo, still,\nafter all Ib said, a new Suit should\nnot be entirely a question ot woatlier.\n* It's moi*e a question of personal appearance.\nWouldn't a new Suit about now make life\na little dearer and Inspire you with new\nambition?\nLet your friends see you handsomely dressed in a new Suit these\nlovely Fall days, before you have to\nhide It with an Overcoat.\nThe conservative Styles are shown\nalmost exclusively in two and three-\nbutton models.\nPRICES  NO  BARRIER\n$25.00, $!8.00, $30.00, $82.50, $35.00 to $50.00\nEmory & Walley\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1918_09_13","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0389390","@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":"1918-09-13 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1918-09-13 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\/1.0389390"}