{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0382219":{"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP":[{"value":"2e1139c1-7233-4fcf-af05-3ba9d2085a9e","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2019-08-29","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1906-11-14","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0382219\/source.json","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format":[{"value":"application\/pdf","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note":[{"value":" m\nNOV 171906\nm\nIT     VI\n*\u00a33\n^\u2022i2C\"-~ORIA   B* \u00b0''\"'\nie -****\"'\nNEWS\nVOL. S\nNBLSON, & 0., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER U, 1906\nSAILORS IN\nTRAINWRECK\nSecond Section of C. P. R.\nAtlantic Express Collides Kith First\nI Physicians arrived at once and the Injured and dead were taken to Kamloops,\nwhere the former ara now in hospital.\nThe Inquest on the dead man, to ha\nheld Wednesday, will probably place tba\nblame tor the wreck. From what can\nbe learned the Becond section waa too\ndose to the flrat aa Crowe, the flagman,\nhad not sufficient time to go back far\nenough for engineer Hosker to come\nto a standstill.\n* The Overseas Limited was following,\nhurrying to make up time with through\n-malls for the old country, and was stopped by the wreck causing a delay ot\nseveral hours.\nbony, Kings, Niagara and some othe-\ncounties the canvassing of the returns wll\nbe slow and the official announcements of\nUie figures may not .be In for severe:\nweeks.\nHomcw\u00ab-d Bound Mot|Kkcb ExptrUscc\nHI ityRar-cBd Collision it Traiqalllc\n-Only One Mm Kllltd Ootrlgjit\n\u25a0 (Special to The Dally News)\nKamloops, Nov. 13.\u2014By a rear,   end\ncollision at Tranquille siding, 7 miles\nweBt of here, enrly this morning, one\nman was killed and 111 Injured.\nWho is to blame foe the accident, the\nflrat ln the history of the Pacific division\not the Canadian Paclflc railway, will be\ndetermined by the Inquest.\nThe eastbound passenger left Vancouver yesterday afternoon in two sections,\nthe first carrying the pald-olt crew of\nthe gunboat Shearwater stationed at\nEsquimau. The westbound passenger\nwas late and the flrst section of the\neastbound train was kept waiting at a\nsiding on the main line, the rule being\nthat the west train takes the siding:\nwhile so waiting. The second section,\ndashed Into the advance section, telescoping the Pullman Loralne. The acetylene tanks exploded and Bet flre to the\ncars, destroying the Pullman, tourist\nand one baggage oar, and two hundred\nyards of track were burned.\nThe marines and Jack-tars scrambled\nout of the wreck with the agility of\ncats and immediately set to work extinguishing the flames and extricating\nothers. They did yeoman service. Many\nwere ln their bunks and only naif-clad\nwhen the accident occurred. All were\nbrought on to Kamloops, many of them\n\u00ablad ln shirt and blankets only. Sixteen\nwere Injured, hut only two seriously,\ntheir Injuries consisting of burns. The\nburned men, Whiting and Logan, were\nin such a condition as to necessitate\ntheir removal to the hospital here,\nwhere they are doing well and will recover. One man, a civilian employed\nas third cook ln the commisslary car, re-\nBelved serious injuries and died before\n\u2022Id could be obtained. His name la\naot known here ana helng a civilian is\n-unknown to the sailors.\nThe second section, following the cus-\n: torn, had no orders, the rule being that\nthe flrat section must protect the rear\n; division. Whether engineer Hosker, on\n! the second section, saw the warning\nsignal, or whether a warning signal was\ndisplayed, ls not yet apparent\nThe flrst section was pulled by engineer . Sweeney,   conductor   Bourne   in\n| charge.\nWhen No. 9? reached Tranquille the\nI accident had Just occurred and the engineer, seeing the blaze from the burning\ncars, pulled up the train with a Jerk.\nOeorge McCormlck, formerly manager\nlot the Kamloops Lumber company, now\nI manager of   the Pacific Lumber cora-\n| pany, Vancouver, says the shock of the\nI sudden pulling up was severe.\nHosker, engineer, and Dewar, fireman,\nI of the Becond seotlon of No. 96, Jumped'\nIrwben they saw. the collision was Inevlt-\n| table.  They escapd unhurt.\n| Kamloops, -Nov. 13.\u2014(Later)\u2014The\nname of. the one man killed Ib J. A.\nRowe. The injured in the hospital here\n.re Whiting, chief stoker, burned feet\nmd legs; Logan, sailor,   burned   face,\neet and hips Joe Allan, second cook,\njuts and bruises, Louis Charney, chief\nik, face cut. Chas. Mead, Inspector of\nlning and sleeping cars, fractured ribs\nnd bruises.  S. W. Durrott, porter, con-\nisions\nTraffic was resumed at 1 o'clock.\n(Special to Tlie Dully News)\nJI Vancouver, Nov.  13.\u2014Only the fact\n|hat the commlsary   car was in the\nmr of the sailors' special, carrying re-\nliming men of   the Shearwater   and\nigeria homward board, saved a fright-\nEll catastrophe and holocaust near Kani-\n| \u00bbps early this morning.\n.! The train running as flrst seotlon of\n.96 was standing at Tranquille Biding, seven miles west of  Kamloops,\ntbout 3.30 a.m., waiting for the second\nli-ctlon to come up and allow the west-\nround to pass both, when the aecond\nfiction dashed into the rear.  The huge\n1'igine tore Into the standing train, de-\nI tiling three cars   and   crushing   the\nl*ar one to fragments.     Hosker, the\nf uglneer, who had seen the collision to\nlie inevitable, when too late to avoid It,\nI it the brakes and reverse, and with the\n\u2022eman, Jumped, both escaping unhurt,\n[J When the confusion has passed over\nL was found that 3. A. Rowe, aecond\nlink of the sailors crew, had been al-\nost instantly killed, several waiters in\nie same car were severely injured and\n\u25a0> numher of sailors, ln the forward car,\nr-ere suffering severely from results of\n[lie oolll-lon.\nJ,! The acetylene lighting system exploded at ones and set fire to the wreck, en-\n(rely consuming the debris.   One un-\n'brtunate Bailor was   pinned   by   the\nleavy weights and buth legs were burn-\n' 1 off below the knee.  Ths sailors had\n> time to save their effects and nearly\njlU were destroyed by th firs. Those who\nf .sre able turned to and worked at ths\nsscue of their fellows worse situated.\nIS STAR PREVARICATOR\nROSSLAND BOY \"TAKES BACK\"\nSECOND AtPFIDAVrT.\nHIS\nSA.V9    THAT    STORY    THAT    HE\nSTARTED PIRE IS CORRECT.\n(Special to The Dally News)\nVancouver, Nov. 13,\u2014Robert Mltohell,\nthe Rossland boy, whose contradictory\naffidavits created such a sensation at\ntho full oourt last week, was up for examination today.\nHe Bwore that his original statement,\nthat he had started the fi.re that caused\nthe destruction ot Blue A De-champs'\nmill, was correct He offers by way ol\nexcuse for making the aecond affidavit,\nalleging that he bad been bribed to\nmake the original one, that he was terrorised Into so doing by lt being whispered into his ear that he might get ten\nyears for starting the fire, or words to\nthat effect\nMitchell stuck to his flrst story under\ncross-examination and swore positively\nthat the 0. N. R. detective, Raymer,\nnever mado any promises to blm whatever.\nFREIGHT RATE RULINGS\nRAILWAY      COMMISSION\nCOMPLAINT OF KASLO.\nORDER   ISSUED   RECTIFYING ALL\nDISCRIMINATIONS.\n(Special to Th. Dally N.w.)\nOttawa, Nov. 13.\u2014The Railway Commission iu the complaint of the Kaalo\nboard of trade against discrimination ot\nrates by the C. P. R\u201e Nelson it Port\nSheppard railway, and Kaslo ft Slocan\nrailway, in favor of Rossland and Nelson, bas made an order rectifying thc\ndiscrimination\nThe order provides that on stations\non British Columbia Southern, Columbia ft Kootenay, and Coloumbia ft Western railways, east ot Nelson, including\nProcter, and west of Nelson, Including\nWest Robson, Trail and Rossland, Nelson rates shall apply on C. P. R. traffic, while to stations on the Nelson ft\nFort Sheppard railway. Nelson rates\nshall alao apply. In traffic originating\naouth ot the international boundary i>\nports of call on Kootenay lake by vessels connected with the C. P. R. or Nelson ft Fort Sheppard, Nelson rates,\nplus certain arbitrary rates not to; be\nexceeded, on C. P. R. and Nelson ft Fort\nSheppard railway traffic shall apply.\nCertain arbitrary rates are laid down\nfor C. P. R. traffic to stations on the\nKootenay and Arrowhead line and the\nNakusp ft Slocan line, on C. P, R. traffic originating west ot Kamloops and\nstations on the same line. On westbound\nC. P. R. traffic, routed by Kootenay\nLanding and to Columbia ft Western\nStations, west of Castlegar Junction,\nNelson rates plus certain arbitrary\nrates, are to prevail. Nelson rates are\nalso to apply to Halcyon and Nakusp on\nthe upper Arrow lakes. There has been\na general reduction In accordance wltb\nthe views of the board ot trade.\nWATERWAYS COMMISSION.\nAgain In Session At Buffalo\u2014Matters\nUnder Consideration.\nBuffalo, Nov. 18.\u2014The international\nwaterways commission convened this\nmorning in exectulve session for the\npurpose of considering the reports ot\nthe mincers on several matters of Importance. The session will probably\nlast for three days. The commissioners\nat the meeting are:\nAmerican Section\u2014Oeneral 0. H.\nErnst Oeo. Clinton, Buffalo, and E. E.\nHaskell, of Detroit.\nCandies Section\u2014George C. Gibbons,\nLondon, Ontario, Loula B. Costs, Ottawa, and Dr. W. A. King, Port Col-\nborne\nW. B. Wilson Is secretary ot the\nAmerican section and Thomaa Cote is\nsecretary of the Canadian section,\nThe matters discussed this morning\nwere the Chicago drainage canal project the application of the Minnesota\nCanal company to divert waters for\npower purposes into lake Superior by\nway of the St Louis river, a tributary\nof the lake, and the boundary question\nIn Niagara' river, which has to do with\nrestricting fishermen from both sides of\nthe river. The commission wlll make no\npublic report at the conclusion ot the\nsession, hut will submit the findings to\nthe departments at Washington and\nOttawa.\nKING HAAKON GARTERED\nIMPOSING CERBJMONY AT WINDSOR\nCASTLE LAST NIGHT.\nFIRST INVESTITURE OF THB KIND\nIN FIFTY YEARS.\nLondon, Nov. 13.\u2014King Edward tonight invested king Haakon of Norway,\nwith the Order ot the Garter, at a\nspecial charter held in the throne room\nof Windsor Castle. The investiture was\nattended with great pomp and ceremony.\nAlthough knights of the order are elected from time to time as vacancies\noome, there \"has not been an investiture\nlike the one of today since 1855, when\nthe late queen Victoria conferred the\nhonor upon Napoleon III. and Victor\nEmmanuel, then king of Sardinia.\nKing Edward is the only surviving\nmember of the royal house of Great\nBritain who participated in that historic event.\nQueen Alexandra as the \"Lady of the\nOrder,\" whose predecessor lived two\ncenturies ago, was present tonight.\nThe brilliant colors of the gorgeous\nrobes of the knights and knight commanders of the order, as well as the\nrichness of the decorations of the historic chamber, wh-v\u00bb tb* investiture\ntook place, made tbo sc-iae one ot the\nmost brilliant and topi-stive of the\npresent reign. The ceremony was followed by a state banquet.\nAiMBIUCAN FEDERATION\nSecond Day's Session nt Minneapolis\u2014The\nUniversal Label Design\nMinneapolis, Nov. 13-The most Important action taken at the second day's session of the 26th annual convention of the\nAmerican Federation of Labor, waa the\nreference to the convention of 1907 of the\nmatter of the adoption of a universal label\ndestgn. The cigar makers, printers and\nhatters led the opposition.\nPresident Gompers' plan of creating a\npolitical party out of the combined union\nstrength was adopted by the convention,\nwho approved the report of Hrst vice-\npresident James Duncan, in which he\nsanctioned the policy of Mr. Oomperfl. Mr.\nDuncan's report showed that the Federation's camp grand fund amounts to $8056.\nA resolution to adjourn at Saturday noon\nuntil Monday was carried.\nTonight witnessed the largest Informal\ngathering Incident to the convention. The\nAuditorium .which seats nearly 3000 pert-tons, was filled with friends of labor, who\ngathered to listen to addresses by Samuel\nOompera, president of the American Federation; Jobn Mitchell, president of the\nUnited Mine Workers of America, and\nJ, H. Duncan, flrst vice-president of the\nAmerican Federation.\nULTIMATUM\nT010RDS\nBirrell's Speech on Education Bill so Regarded by tlie Press\nNO. 176\nthe river to Edmonton. Tho 'brldg'e will be\na mile long and will cost approximately\n<me million dollars. The work on tho\nMUso wlll bo started this winter. The\nstructure is to have railway and tramway\ntracks In Uie center of the bridge and on\neach side a vehicle traffic way and a toot\npath.\nIf Prcsnt Edncatlo-Ml Bill be Destroyed\nSectilir System of Religious Education\nWill Most Uktly be Substituted\nBristol, Bag;., Nov. 13.\u2014In a speech\ndelivered nere tonight Augustine Blrrell, president ot the board of education,\nsaid the Education bill as reconstructed\nin the house ot lords was a sheer impossibility. As the measure came (rom the\nhouse of common., It van undenominational, but the lords had fostered and\nbolstered up the denomhurttonallsm.\nMr. Blrrell said he hoped the lords\nwould recognise during the committee\nstage of the bill that they had gone too\nfar and that a liberal government could\nnot be carried on with advantage and\nsincerity If measures prepared In accordance with Its pledges were mutilated and destroyed by an unrepresentative assembly.\nLondon, Nov. 14.\u2014Tho liberal papers\nthis morning comment upon the speech\nof Augustine Blrrell, president of the\nboard of eduction, at Bristol last night,\nas an ultimatum on behalf of the government to the house of lords. The Tribune declares the Education bill Ib the\nlast effort that will be made to reconcile\npopular control with religious education, and avers that If the present bill is\ndestroyed lt will be substituted by, not\na denominational, but a secular system\nof religious education.\nOUTLOOK FOR FRANKLIN\nVIEWS OP W. B.  BROCK    OP THE\nGEOLOGICAL SURVEY.\nBELIEVES OAMP    WILL  PRODUCE\nOOOD MINES.\nCHBAP DIAMONDS IN  SIGHT\n[encouraging Report from South Africa-\nAustralian Tariff Measures\n(Special to The Dally News)\nOttawa, Nov. 13-The Canadian commercial .gent at Sydney, Australia,, writes\nthat there Is no likelihood of the governor\ngeneral approving the CommonweoSth's\ncustoms preference law In the form It has\npassed. For this reason the customs authorities have already ceased collecting\nlhe higher duty put Into force when the\nbudget proposals wore presented to the\nAustralian parliament.\nMr. Larke says the New Zealand authorities will lower the duties on many\narticle- at the next session of parliament.\nThe Canadian commcrol'l ngents in South\nAfrica report recent discoveries of diamonds lu various localities, hundreds or\nmile, apart. In view of this foot It Is possible that the world's supply of diamonds\nmay, In the next few years, exceed the\ndemand, with the result of a fall In prices.\nLondon, Nov. 13.\u2014The house of commons, after sitting all night discussing\nthe land tenure bill, the object of which\nIs to ameliorate the conditions of the\ntenant farmers In England and Scotland, adjourned at 9.40 this morning,\nthus ending the first prolonged sitting\nof the new parliament.\nN'KW YORK STATE ELECTIONS\nNew York, Nov, lS-The official canvas\nof the vote cost on Tuesday last w.a he\ngun today throughout the .tat.. The que*,\ntlon a. to the lieutenant governorship and\nother offlcpH below governor -will not be definitely settled until thi. count U ntlish-d\nand In fact may not he oOdally dUpoiM.\nof than, thould th. *-*<-\u2022\u00ab*. oaMldatat\napswl to. th. court*, in N-w -fort, Al-\nUNIPORM DIVORCE  LAWS\nCongress Now In Session at Philadelphia to\nPass upon New Measure\nPhiladelphia, Nov. 13-The national con-\nre** on uniform divorce laws in session\nhere, today adopted one third of the proposed uniform divorce bill us drafted by\ndie committee appointed at the meeting\nheld In Washington nine months ago. Tho\nportion*, adopted include seven causes under whloh annulment of a marriage may\nbe obtained. Delegates from 37 states and\nthe dlatrlct of Columbia and representatives of all Protestant denominations, who\nattended the International conference on\nmarriage, together with the Catholic prelate, bishop Shanlcy of North Dakota, attended the meeting, whioh was presided\nover by governor Pennypacker.\nThe cause, tor whloh a divorce can be\ngranted nre Infidelity, felony, bigamy, desertion, habitual drunkennes snd Intolerable cruelly.\n\"BL-ACK HAND IN NEW YORK\nNew York, Nov. 13\u2014In the presence ot\nscores of men and women, hurrying\nthrough Mott street In the Italian quarter,\nPavonne Enrrio todny .hot and killed\nNunslato Legato, Enrrio, who was arrested, claims that the killing was Instilled\nas Legato, who represented himself a. an\nwent of the \"Black Hand\" society and\ndemanded money, would have killed him\nhad he not fired first,\nA loaded revolver wu found on Legato'.\nholt.\nnKAJTH OP SISTER KARY JULIA\nChicago. Nov. 13-slster Mary Julia, the\nrounder and mother superior of St. Vincent', orphan asylum in thla elty, who\ngained an Inlnrnatlonal reputation In religious olrole., becauw *,- ___; b-n-volenc-\nand a-.l-t.nc. ta th. poor, dt-d at Ui.\norphanage today or pn-umonla after an\nIlln-M of a (Mr dar*.\nDIPLOMATIC DENIALS\nVanoouver, Nov. 13.\u2014(Special)\n\u2014Premier McBride and minister\nof finance Tatlow were In Vancouver for a short time this\nmorning.\nIn an Interview with your representative the premier declared there was no truth ln the\nstatement that dissolution\nnotices would be posted on Wednesday, He also denied the report (rom Victoria that lt was bis\nintention to run at the capital\nwhen the nest election does take\nplace.\n\"Is there any truth In the report that dissolution is near?\"\nthe premier was asked.\n\"I have seen the reports In the\npapers, that ts all I know about\nIt,\" was the reply. \"Mr. Tatlow\nwill tell you all about It.\"\nMr. Tatlow sain: \"I cannot\ngive you a definite statement that\ndissolution will not take place.\nOne never knows.\"\n\"It Isn't Imminent though?\"\nasked the reporter.\n\"Well, I am leaving for a hunting trip to Ashcroft tomorrow,\"\nanswered the minlBter. \"That\ndoes not seem as If lt was likely\ndoes it?\"\n\"Is there any truth In the Victoria report of the premier running for a seat In tbat city at\ntho next election?\"\n\"I have heard nothing of It,\nand you may be sure I would\nknow,\" was tbe reply.\nOttawa, Nov. 13.\u2014In 1900 R. W. Brock,\nof the Geological survey, whose name is\nso well known ln connection with the\ngeology and mining industries of the\nKootenay district, made an examination\nof the Franklin Camp, B. C, situated up\nthe north fork of the Kettle river, about\n45 miles by railway from Grand Forks.\nAfter describing the gold-bearing rocks\nof the district Mr. Brock gave particulars of the more promising claims, especially the Banner and the McKInley,\nand spoke encouragingly of tlte prospects and possibilities. At the time of\n' Mr. Brock's visit vne camp waB considerably hampered by two difficulties\u2014\nfirst, that of transportation, being three\ndays from Grand Porks, and, second,\nthat bug-bear, wblch ls so often the\nreason of delay ln development ln mining camps, namely, the ridiculous prices\nput on tbeir claims by prospectors, who\nseem to think that because a lode bap-\npens to contain a valuable mineral lt\nnecessarily contlns It In paying quantity.\nMr. Brock has lately returned from a\nvisit to this camp and his views on It\nwill shortly be Included In the summary\nreport of the Geological survey whose\ndirector has decided to bring the report out as soon as possible after the return of the field ofllcers, Instead of\npublishing it In June or July of the following year, when lt has lost half its\nvalue. Meanwhile It Is learned that\nMr. Brock Is very 'well satisfied with\n1 the progress that has been made In the\ncamp during the last five years. The\nMoKlnley mine, which has probably had\n$30,000 expended on lt, and the Banner\nare stilt two of the principal mines and\nare under development by a company,\n' while the Gloucester, which at the time\nof Mr. Brock's visit was only down fifteen feet, has been taken over under\nbond by the Dominion Copper company.\nIn general the ores carry only a\nsmall value ln gold, although the Gloucester ore Is reported to carry nearly\n$6, a' proportion sufficiently large to be\ntreated as a by-product if tbere are no\nchemical difficulties.\nSeveral small companies are doing a\nlittle work on the Maple Leaf and other\ngroups, and a number of prospectors are\nbusy on their claims.\nThe two above mentioned initial difficulties have disappeared or at least are\ndisappearing. Tbe camp can now be\nreached in a day from Grand Forks, and\na railway Is being constructed from tbat\nplace, which will naturally considerably\nreduce mining expenses.\nMoreover, the prospectors have\nbrought their Ideas of prices and values\ndown to a business basis, and have\nrealized that the mine purchaser of today wants something more for his\nmoney than a hole In the ground.\nMr. Brock sums up his views of the\ncamp ln tbe following words: \"While\nnone of the claims are yet past tho prospect stage (though the MoKlnley Is\ndeveloping satisfactorily), and none\nhave been proved to any considerable\ndepth, the camp possesses some ot the\near-marks of a mineral-bearing district.\nAdditional discoveries are extremely\nprobable, and there sems to be a reasonable prospect of something In the\ncamp developing Into a mine.\"\nriot act would be read if disorderly conduct In streets when cars are operated Is\nnot stopped. The street railway company\nuskod lhe mayor to requisition the mdltla\nbut he refused. The police commissioners\nmet and decided that If tbe oompany op-\neratcd Its cars It must assume tho risk\nas the commissioners were unable to give\nlt proper protection. ThlB evening tho\ncompnny announced Its IntenUon or running cars tomorrow and have asked Toronto   authorities   for   mllltla proteotlon.\nToronto. Nov. 13-One hundred and alxty\nmen of the regular forces here aro being\nheld In readiness at Stanley barracks to\nproceed to Hamilton.\nSOCIALISTS WERE WEARY\nVOTE WITH GOVERNMENT TO END\nRELIGIOUS CONTROVERSY\nDEBATE ON LAW OP SEPARATION\nOF CHURCH AND STATE\nParis, Nov. 13.\u2014During the debate ln\nthe chamber of deputies today on the\napplication of the law providing for the\nseparation of church and state, M. Denys\nCochin, conservative, sustaining the attitude of the vatlcan, protested against\nthe repeated assertion that the pope\nhad accepted similar legislation ln Germany and Switzerland, pointing out\nthat the laws of associations in tbose\ncountries, unlike the French laws, recognized the hierarchy of the church.\nAmid a lively demonstration by the\nmembers of the right party, M. Denys\nCochin predicted that the churoh would\nemerge triumphant from the fight wltb\nits persecutors.\nM. Jaures, the socialist leader, announced that the socialists were weary\nof the religious controversy, and anxious to pass on to the discussion of social reforms. Being convinced of the\ngovernment's intention to apply to separation law firmly but without violence,\nthe socialists have decided to support\nthe cabinet and Join ln a vote of confidence ln tbe government.\nThe vote of confldence was taken and\ngave 416 ayes against 163 nays. It voiced the chamber's belief that the government would carry out the separation\nlaw without modification,\nMlnlster\/of education Briand, then assured the house that the government\nwould not negotiate directly with the\nvatlcan. He declared also that there\nhad been formed under the auspices of\ncardinal Lecot, archbishop of Bordeaux,\nlegal and diocesan associations, which\nwere composed of a federation of local\nlay and worship societies, and that the\nassociations would organize the financial arrangements for worship in each\nparish. The diocesan council, composed exclusively of members of the clergy,\nwould have control of all questions of\northodoxy.\nONTARIO BANK FAILURE\nFORMER   ACCOUNTANT   LANGTON\nCROSS-EXAMINED\nSUIT ENTERED AGAINST EX-PRESIDENT COCKBURN.\nSETTLEMENT\nIS REACHED\nNational Board Member\nBurke Concedes Company's Case\nStrike at Crow's Nest Pass Coal Co's Nines\nOrdered Off -Gladstone Union Moses\nlo Comply Until Further Orders\n4*tt$4M44w4*w4*w4444w****w\nRUSH TO NBW GOLD FIELD\nFurther Reports Trom Maid-stone, Saskatchewan Confirm Earlier Reports\n\u25a0Maidstone, Sask., Nov. U-lndlcnttoni are\nfavorable that one of the richest gold finds\nwaa made five miles eaat of here yesterday. Messrs Field-house and Bowelott of\nVermillion, with two expert miners -from\nMontana made one of the biggest discoveries. They returned today to Vermillion\nto organise a syndicate and wlll at once\ngo to work and rush developments on the\ncflalms. Several experienced men who have\nbeen for years In th Klondike, are now\non the property prospecting. Without\ndoubt It wlll prove one of the richest\nplacer discoveries In Canada. Elvery train\nIs crowded with gold seekers.\nWALKER BANK LOOTED\nWalker, Ohio, Nov. lS-Bobbers here this\nmorning escaped with the contents of the\nbank of Walker. The amount secured is\nnot known. The safe and front portion of\nthe hank -building, was wrecked hy the.\nexplosion of a heavy charge of dynamite-*\nTO BRUDOB SASKATCHEWAN\nEdmonton, Nov. Nov. 13-Wtlllam Whyte,\nviw-prtvtident of the C.P.R., and R, R.\nJamieson of Calgary, western general a**1\nperlntendent, are ln the city to confer with\nthe olty council In regard to the new\nhigh level bridge from Strathcona across\nWRECKED LINER KENSINGTON\nQueb-c**?, Now. 13-The Dominion tllncr\nKensington .at-ihore at .Mutant-, changed\nher position during the night. A heavy\nsnow storm prevailed all night with a gale\nof wind and continues. Tlio vessel tills\nmorning could h-inlly be seen. Tho whereabouts of the other steamers and the remainder of the Kensington's passengers\nIs unknown. Nothing can he seen on the\nriver on account of the heavy snowstorm.\nThe Qaspcsian with nbout 300 of Uie\nKensington's passengers on board, arrived\nhere at 12:30 p.m.\nLEMIEUX CHOSES GASPE\nBecancour, Que., Nov. 13.\u2014A political\nmeeting was held here yesterday called\nby Hon. Rodolphe Lemleux, postmaster\ngeneral, who has been representing the\ncounty of Nlcolet since 1904. He called\nthe meeting to notify hts constituents\nthat he bad decided to leave the county\nhe had represented for the past two\nyears to return to Gaspe, where he was\nalso elected.\nBESE'IpED IN A SALOON.\nAshvllle, N. C, Nov. 13.\u2014As the result\nof a negro running amuck with a rifle\ntonight, two policemen and a negro\nwere killed and a police captain waa\nwounded. The chief of police broke\ninto a hardware store for weapons to\narm a posse. The negro is beselged ln\na saloon.\nMUST NOT JOIN Y. M. C. A.\nHamilton, Nov. 13.\u2014By order of the\nbishop of Hamilton Roman   Catholics\nare forbidden to Join the Y. M. C. A.\nHAMILTON   STREET   CAR   STHlKUl\nlitrect Uallwny Company Apply to Toronto\nI for Militia Protection\nHamilton, Nov.  13-Mayor Bigger Issued\n| a proclamation -today  stating   that  the\nToronto, Nov. 13.\u2014In the trial of\nCharles McGill this morning J. C. Langton, former accountant of the Ontario\nhank, was cross-examined by R. P. McKay, counsel for McGIU. He declared\nthat the bank would have collapsed in\n1895 had it not been supported by brokers, He also declared that speculation\non margins was begun to Improve the\nconditions of the bank, that the operations on tbe stock market were carried\non by Mr. McGill for tbe bank and not\nfor himself personally. There was absolutely no doubt about this. Up to 1901\nover $200,000 of proflts had been made In\nthis way. As for tickets, other banks\nused them as well as the Ontario bank.\nThis morning the Ontario bank on behalf of Itself and all other creditors of\nGeorge R. Cockburn, entered suit against\nCockburn and his wife, Mary E. Cockburn, to have it decided that tbe conveyance made by Cockburn to his wife,\nof property on Bay street Is fradulent,\nand also to prevent the sale of this property by Mrs. Cockburn to any oue,\nalso the property recently transferred\nby Mr. Cockburn to his wife, but which\nIt Is understood was purchased with his\nwife's money.\nMORE WIRE TROUBLE\nC.P.R. wires went down again last night\nand wero out of business .for several hours.\nIt is something remarkable the ha-bit these\nwires have acquired of going down Just\nabout the tlmo the night news service\nshould be at Its best. Some duy the O.P.K.\nmay bo Induced to devote something like\ntho same attention to its telegraph business that lt does to the freight and passenger departments and tihen .hero wlll he\nless frequent complaints of wire trouble.\nCITY OF TORONTO INDICTED\nToronto. Nov. 13-.Tho grand Jury this\nmorning brought ln an indictment against\nlhe city of Toronto for maintaining a\ncommon nuisance, with reference to the\nJail. Tho conditions In the building, claimed tho Jurors, would hardly bo flt or tol-\nrated In a hrst class stable.\nBOBR RAIDS CONTINUE\nCape Town, Nov. 13.\u2014According to\nthe latest Information received here the\ncolony bas been invaded by two parties\nof Boer freebooters tn addition to the\nmen operating under Ferrelra. The police have had an ineffectual brush with\nthe Ferrelra party near Upington.\nDEATH OF HARRY WEBB.\nToronto, Nov. 13.\u2014Harry Webb,\nwell known caterer, ls dead.\nthe\n(Special to The Dally News)\nFernle, Nov. 13.-~iNew developments\nhave occurred today lu the strike situation.\nAt a meeting of Gladstone local union held this afternoon, it was decided\nnot to accept the settlement signed by\ngeneral manager Lindsey and representative Burke last night and not to return to work till Instructed to do t\u00bb\nby president Mltohell.\nMessra. Burke, Sherman and Patterson left for Indianapolis tonight to lay\nthe whole matter before the president\nof the U. M. W. of A..\nThe local union disputes the authority\nof Burke to Anally settle the strike.\n(Special to Tiie Dally News)\nFernie, Nov. 12.\u2014The strike at Fernie\nis off, the Coal company having all their\ncontentions conceded. Mr. Burke called\nupon, general manager Lindsey at hia\nofflce at 8.30 last night and after a\nshort conference it was announced that\nMr. Burke unconditionally conceded that\nall the contentions made hy the company were correct The following la\nthe statement which was drawn up and\nsigned by general manager Lindsey and\nMr. Burke:\nMEMORANDUM OF AGREEMENT\nI, Thomas Burke, acting for president\nMitchell, and sent to Fernle by him to\nsettle the strike, find tbat tbe Crow's\nNest Pass Coal company were promised\nby the conference committee which\nframed and signed the agreement of\nMay 23rd, 1905;\n(a) That tbere would be no refusal to\nwork with non-union men.\n(b) That the Issue of the closed shop\nwould not be raised.\n(c) That president Mitchell would not\npermits a strike for any such purposes.\n(dj That It was relying on the faith\nof those promises that the discrimination clause in the previous agreement\nwas omitted from the agreement of tha\n23rd of May, 1905.\nI further say that president Mitchell,\nhad he been advised of the aforesaid\npromises would not have ordered a\nstrike nor sent his telegram dated September llth, 1906.\nIt is therefore agreed between myself\nand Mr. Lindsey, acting for the Crow's\nNest Pass Coal company:\n1.\u2014That thero shall be no discrimination by union men against non-union\nmen or refusal to work with them.\n2.\u2014That all men who joined the U.\nM. W, of A. since September llth, 1906,\nand signed to deduct dues under article\n5 on or after the said date, are released from the said agreement and their\nsignatures to such orders shall be and\nare cancelled and they may rejoin and\nre-sign at their option\n3.\u2014That the monies collected for tha\nunion by the company for dues in October from the September payroll shall bo\npaid over to the union.\n4.\u2014That inasmuch   as   the   present\ncheck-off order does not last for the Ufa\nof the agreement a new check-off order\nls to be prepared and substituted for it\nwhich will last for the life of Uie agreement and this when signed, the company will accept\n5.\u2014All men are to go back to work.\n(Sgd.)     G. G. S. LINDSEY,\nTHOMAS BURKE.\nWitness: R. W. Coulthard,\nDated Fernle, Nov. 12th, 1906.\n[The foregoing despatch, giving particulars of the strike settlement, was\nfiled on Monday night by our Fernle\ncorrespendont, but the wires were down\nand for some reason Is was not sent\nround by Calgary, and, as a matter of\nfact, it did not reach Nelson until 5.30\no'clock last evening, although a similarly worded despatch had been delivered\nln Rossland ln time for publication ln\nTuesday morning's Miner.]\nYMIR NEWS NOTES\n(Special to The Dally News)\nYmir, Nov. 13.\u2014Messrs. Lay and\nBooth, of Nelson, the flrst mentioned\ngentleman being the Hall Mining Co.'s\nengineer, paid a visit to the New Victor group of claims on Wild Horse\ncreek yesterday.\nAlexander Oddie and bride returned\nSunday from Strathcona, where they\nwere married last week. They wore\nheartily welcomed at the station by\ntheir many friends. The bride is well\nknown In Ymir where she resided for\n-some time as matron of the Ymir general hospital. The groom ls the proprietor of the Ymlr stage Une and also\nconducts a blacksmith! ng business.\nJohn Stinson, who ls well known\naround Nelson and Rossland, and who\nIs Interested with M. S. Logan, late of\nNelaon, ln the real estate business at\nVancouver, ls seriously IU and has gone\nto Portland, Ore., for medical treat*\nS'Ji'*KwaiB-i-**ip\u00bb\u00abi\n THI PM*-** HBWS, NBLBON, B. 0., WKDNEBDAT, NOVKMBBB 14, 190U\nJ1   **-a.m***J*H**i-il--**i---|-*-|--**l*|*i _____ aa-m**\u2014mta\u2014a\u2014\u2014**\u2014-*\u2014\nWr\u2014ww\u2014\u2022\u2014\u2022\u2014'\u2014\u2022\u2014\u2022\u2014.\u2014\u2022\u2014\u2022 w \u2014.\u2014r\u2014r\u2014rwmmmwwwtmww\nI Hudson's Bay Stores\nOral alfhta ara sow tn *r**t. Tbey trill lntlta   pleaaaot\nHudson's Bay Blankets\nWa bsr* nlatttj of tbem In nd and blue.\n31-2 Points, weighing 10 pounds, $7.50 per pair\n4 Points, weighing 12 pounds - -   8.50 per pair\nThen blimkBta an Dually oaMmM lor tbslr wwll.na*.\ncarry them ln thla olty. \u2014-\nWe alone\nC-np Qnip    Lots in Addition 58 A\nI   Ul        \\rAIC     Adjoining new City Park and on Tramway line.\nThese Are Choice Building Lots\nThe sawmill about to be erected at the Old Park\u2014and other busings* propositions now under construction make theae lots a safe Investment.\nPrices from \"150.00 to \"200.00 per lot.\nTerms\u2014One-third cash, balance ln 6 and 12 months.\nApply\nT. G. PROCTER\nAgent Nelson City Land and Investment Co.\nAlao oompleta line* ot white and gray all wool and union blankets, dlf-\n-rent sUes and weight*, trom\n$2.75 to $7.00 per pair\nHeadouartora for Campers, Miners, Prospectors and Lumbermen-\nPillows Comforters, Gloves and Mlts, Socks, Shirts and UnderolotWng,\nOil Clothing, Sweaters, Miners' and PrespectorB' Boots and Shoes and\nRubbers. Qroceriee and Provisions. Bverythlng of the best quality\nand prices surprisingly low.\nI Hudson's  Bay  Stores\nl*********a*_ a ********\u2014***m\nSee the Handsome Display of\nLadies' Hand Bags\nShown in our window.   We have thein nt nny price you may he prepared to pay\nFrom 60c up to $10\nTo make more room for new stock coming in, we are giving a discount of\n25 per cent from marked prices. '\nW. G. THOMSON lsAelLe,!^dStefer\nimperial Bank of Canada\nHEAD OFFICE:  TORONTO\nCAPITJi AUTHORIZED . *M**.M .3*rg.'**'\u25a0'f\"\nCAPITA*. PAID DP \t\nD, B. wn-Ki* **-i**-u--it\n  HAM\nBOM. MOBT.   JAM-RAT,   -nM-Pn-Unt\nBr&aoheB ln British Columbi-.\nAKROWBBAD. CBA!**\u00bbOOK.(KIU>BN,   NULeON,  BUTBLiTODt,\nTHODT \u20141X3. VANCOUVSB, VICTORIA.\nSAVINGS DEPARTMENT\nDapc-Us reemn* aad Int-nM allowed at current rates Irom date at\nopening aooount and credited half-yearly.\ni-Jetson Branch\n). M. Lay, Manager\nThe Canadian Bank of\nCommerce\n\u25a0ipKal Md up, 110,000,000. Re*., 14,500,000\nHEAD OFFIOE:  TORONTO.\na. -ft WALKBR, Gen.nl Manager. ALEX. LAIKD, As-t O-a'l Manager\nBEANCHES THROUGHOUT OANADA  AND IN\nHU.TOITBD STATES AND BNOLAND\nBANKING! BT MAIL\nBusiness may he transacted by mall with any branch of the bank.  Accounts may\nhi   opened and deposit* made or withdrawn by mail.   Brery attention la paid to\n\u25a0out-of-town acoounuta. . **-:*S40bbbbW\n7. L. BUCHAN, Manager,        NELSON BRANCH.\nWE WILL BUY\n8000\n1000\nAlberta Coal  10\n(Par value $1.00.)\nInternational Coal  M\n1000   Diamond Val.  U\n100   Dominion Copper  $5.50\n5000  Denora Mines 10\n1000  White Bear  04\n(\u00bbV>c paid)\nB. B. MIGHTON & CO.\nnrawar 1081\nNELSON, B. O.\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nI'ublUhed at Nelson Every Morning ]\ncept Monday, Ly\nP. J. uka: iii\nATE8\nSUBSCRIPTION\nL'-il.y, per year  16.00\nDilly, per month   N\nAU subscriptions pay&bl-! In adYanct.\nEND OF STRIKE.\nA feeling of intense- relief will be ex-\nporloucetl throughout southern British\nColumbia at the prospective early and\ncomplete settlement of thu strike at the\nCrow's Nest Pass Cot*-.! company's\nmines. We unfortunately bave to qualify the announcement regarding the\nsettlement of the strike because of the\naction of Gladstone (Fernie) local union yesterday afternoon In declining to\nreturn to work until so Instructed by\npresident Mitchell. However, there can\nhe no question ln face of national board\nmember Burke's unqualified admission\nof the correctness of general manager\nLlndsey's contentions and his agreement, on behalf of president Mitchell,\nthat \"all men are to go back to work,\"\ntbat at the earliest possible moment imperative instructions will be received\n11 Din president Mitchell by Gladstone\nlocal to loyally observe the terms of\nMlUement agreed upon by hts representative.\nRelief will bt aiperlenced not only be-\niBKusje aa l&dtMtrUd  dtoputo  bm b*\nterminated that threatened serious Inconvenience and loss to the great mining and smelting Industries of southern\nBritish Columbia and made probable a\nfuel famine just as winter was at hand,\nbut because tbe action taken by national\nhoard member Burke serves to remove\nany lack of confldence that may have\nbeen engendered in the public mind as\nto tbe honesty of purpose of a great industrial organization. Mr. Burke appears to havo taken a bold course in\nface of circumstances tbat might have\ndeterred a less courageous man and\n\"whloh certainly would have deterred\nhim had he not felt absolutely certain\n-that he would have the support of his\nchief, president John Mitchell.\nThe Daily News, from time to time,\nthroughout the progress of the strike\npublished the statements of both sides\nand the conclusions drawn from those\nstatements were practically those set\nforth ln Mr. Burke's memorandum of\nagreement and consequently we took the\nposition that the strike Bhould not have\nbeen called and that the wisest course\nfor district president Sherman to take\nwould be to order the men back to\nwork. This view did not prevail until\na national board member had been sent\nout from Indianapolis hy president Mitchell to investigate the facts. Mr.\nBurke made his investigation and whilst,\nae In duty bound, he made every effort\nto protect the Interests of those whom\nhe represented, he was forced to unqualifiedly concede the soundness of the\nposition taken by the company.\nThis Is in no sense a victory gained by\noaptul at tht expense of labor. It la\n\u25a0Imply a declaration that honesty and\ngood faith must- be observed between\nlabor organizations and employing companies and as such it is a prouuounce-\nmeut of the very greatest Importance\nand one tbat should exercise a potent\ninfluence for good in British Columbia.\nIt may not be out of place to again express gratification at the admirable\nconduct of the strikers throughout a\nvery trying period aud to congratulate\nformer president Dicken of Gladstone un\nion, upon what cannot be regarded\notherwise than as a complete vindication of his course.\nSANDON LABOR SITUATION\nWe publish today In another column\na copy of a resolution adopted by Sandon Miners' Union, No. SI, Western\nFederation of Miners. The resolution\ncalls for no special comment, save to\npoint out that The Daily News did not\ncharge the Sandon Miners' Union with\nfomenting trouble, neither did it insinuate that the majority of its membership were not in sympathy with the\nmovement to prevent the introduction\nof Asiatic labor into the camp.\nThe resolution would have more force\nand might have served some useful purpose had it dealt with the statements\nTbe Daily News did make and which,\nas at present advised, it sees no reason\nto either retract or modify.\nIn this connecetion we have read with\nvery great pleasure some comments In\nlhe Sandon Mining Review as indicating a sincere desire to meet a difficulty\nthat has long proved a cause of friction\nbetween mine managers and the unions.\nThe Sandon Mining Review, after some\nreflections upon the editor of this payer\nof a rather humorous nature, proceeds\nto say:\n\"A few of the mine mauagers have undoubtedly bad cause to regret their experience in one or two instances with\n\"white\" cooks. It Is a serious matter\nfor a mine manager to discover a big\ngang of his men waiting for breakfast\nand to learn that his cook is down the\nhill on a drunken jamboree. Several\ninstances have occurred also in which\nthe \"white\" cook, brooding over some\nreal or fancied grievance, has Impulsively torn off bis apron, rolled his blankets, and quit the job cold. Some of-\nthe mine managers argue that for this\nreason a Chinaman is preferred. He,\nthey claim, will not leave a body of men\nIn the lurch and the manager ln a serious predicament. \"John\" has always\na brother or cousin handy who wlll fill\nhis shoes on short notice, and so Chinese kitchen help has been Installed at\none or Sandon's banner mines.\n\"We believe that matter can be adjusted to Uie satisfaction of all If a little\ntact is displayed. It ls not to be supposed for one moment that the Miners'\nunion or any other body of men will\nendorse such actions of their cooks. We\nbelieve the Miners' union should be in a\nposition--flrst, to guarantee tbat the\ncooks supplied are proficient, industrious and sober; second, that all cooks\ncontract for a stated period, and third,\nthat adequate notice of -qultfllng 'be\nhanded the manager, If the contract has\nlapsed. The union could reasonably\nadopt such methods, as their members\nat the mine are directly and distinctly\nthe employers of the cooks. It would be\na satisfactory condition for both mine\nmanager and man, as the former would\nbe protected from an arrogant, Inexperienced \"hash-sllnger,' and the union\nwould thus weed out these undesirables\nwho are a menace to its constitution and\na disgrace to an honorable profession.\nUnder such a desired order of things\nthe Chinese cook would be a relic of bygone days, and a better class of labor\nwould .predominate at the mines, for tbe\nreason that Lhe ban would be lifted.\"\nThe case could not he better put and\nwe feel confident that if this problem be\ngrappled with along the lines suggested\nby the Sandon Mining Review the best\nof results will ensue. Wo might, perhaps, add to the recommendations of\nour contemporary, that the desired end\nwould be more speedily obtained if more\nof the union miners who endorse these\nviews would take an active Interest in\nthe affairs of their respective unions.\nEDITORIAL NOTES.\nThe statement contained tn the address of the chairman, lord Ernest\nHamilton, at the meetings of ths share-\nMust Be Sold\nAt Once\nAnd the Price\nWill Sell it\n$200 down and balance |400 on easy\nterms, buys 2 corner lots cleared, 12\nfruit trees, 2 years old.\nA 6-romed house that was built by\nan English carpenter, has 4 rooms downstairs and 2 upstairs. Verandah on back\nand front of house, has brick chimney,\nwhole lights lu windows, glass In door,\nand can be occupied now, and finished\ncomplete for $125.00.\nTOYE & CO.\nFRUIT LAND, REAL ESTATE\nNELSON, B. C.\nholders of the Hall Mining & Smelting\ncompany, a report of which appeal's elsewhere ln this issue, that a strong company Is being organized with a view to\nunwatertng the Silver King mine and\nthe active operation of that property,\nwill be read with very great interest ln\nNelson. It is to be hoped satisfactory\narrangements will be speedily come to\nin the matter. In any event It Is clear\nfrom the chairman's statement that the\ndirectors are fully alive to the advisability of unwatertng the mine and if\nthe proposed new company should fall\nto materialize lt may be taken for\ngranted that the proprietary company\nwlll get busy.\nThe Victoria Colonist rebukes some\nup-country paper for stating that some\nof the resources of the province have\nbeen criminally squandered by a series\nof governments. \"OriniiuaDly -squandered,\" Is certainly coming It strong,\nbut still tbe profligacy of such deals as\nthe sale of Kalen island for (10,000 and\nthe handing over of 800,000 acres of land\nto the Columbia & Western Railway\ncompany, to go no further back in provincial history, might, ln the utter disregard shown for the people's interests,\nhe fairly classed as criminal. Perhaps\nthe Colonist wlll consider these items as\na starter and If our up-country contemporary falls to supply additional examples wo shall be pleased to oblige. If It\nbe not a criminal offence to give away\nthe country's resources, it ought to be.\nBANDON MINERS*  UNION\nfashionable\nOvercoats\nAt Cost\nThey say it's going to I\nbe a mighty cold winter, I\nThere will be no danger |\nof your getting cold this\nwinter, if you take to\nwearing   one  of   our\nswagger overcoats. We\nare closing this line out\nand it's a chance of a\nlife time to get a good\nthing cheap.\nfrom $10 to $18\nTaylor & McQuarrie\nFashionable Tailors\nIjohn Fieri-.,, H50; Stubbs vb. Tale-Koot.-\nimy Ir. Co., \u2022ISO] Slubbi v.. l\".\u00bbti. US;\nOlus'eV vs. French, Wu; Adanw vs. Busk,\nJlW.Tu: Douglus v.. Harris, lift; MeDanlel\nvs. C.P.R,; IHO; MoBan'el vs. C.P.R.. HT5;\naasaiwici vs. C.P.R., tfli; M*-\\-lll. ye,\nReld, 5240.\nMii-iit**- Lli-lmMt Our-* pip*--*---**\nCZAR EXPELS MINISTER\nSt Petersburg, Nov 13\u2014M. Kulomttn,\nformerly president of the council of\nministers, has lett here In consequence,\nlt ls reported, of a personal order of the\nemperor who was angered at receiving\na memorandum from him regarding the\nabolition of the death penalty. His\nmajesty is satd to have taken' the almost unprecedented course of sending\nhis' personal adjutant to order M. Kul-\nomzln's' expulsion.\nMONEY MARKET SITUATION\nNew York, Nov; 18.\u2014Secretary Shaw\naald today that he had discovered no\nmaterial change ln the financial situation since Saturday at which Ume he\nannounced that he would not take any\nmeasures of relief for the mosey market\nunder conditions then prevailing. He\nsaid that he still adhered to that determination.\n'Sf\t\nNELSON-BRUCE CO.\nTONIGHT\n\"David Garriok's love\"\nThursday\u2014\"Arl-ona.\"\nFriday\u2014\"The Merchant of Venice.\"\nSaturday\u2014\"Facing tlie Music.\"\nPrices, 50c, 75c, *1.00.  Saturday Matinee 26c, 60c.   On  sale at Rutherfords.\nTou want th. best Canned Meats, then try\n^AING'S\nC. C, RICHARDS & CO.\nDear Slrs\u2014A few days ago I waa taken\nwitli a severe pulti and contraction of the\ncords of my leg, and hnd to be taken home\ntn a rig. I could not sleep for pnln and was\nunable to put my foot to the floor. A\nfriend told mc of your MINARD'S UNI-\nM.QNT, und one hour from the llrst application I was able to walk, -and tlio pain\nentirely disappeared.\nYou may use my name as freely as you\nlike, as I consider It tho best remedy 1\nhave ever used.\nCHRISTOPHER GERRY.\nIngersoll, Ont.\ntn their opinion will beneflt the country as\na whole; and\nWhereas, wo believe no -Bettor evidence\ncould bo adduced of the workingman's\nloyalty to the camp than the fact that\nmany of the mining properties at present\nIn aclve operation were -brought to lite\nthrough the Intelligent efforts of men\nwho hold membership In the Sandon Miners' union.\nNow, therefore, be it resolved, thnt we\ndeprecate the publication of an article\nwhich can only tend to Injure the camp,\nand brand us a malicious falsehood the\nimputation cast upon the Sandon Miners'\nunion.\nBe lt further resolved, that we reattlrm\nour opposition to the employment of Aula-\ntic litbor In any capacity whatsoever, believing as we do that this olass of labor\nis a detriment to every int.-re-*.t that make--*\nfor the permanent prosperity of the cuun-\ntr:*.\nAnd be lt further resolved that a copy\nof this resolution be forwarded to every\nlocal of Uie Western Federation of Miners\nIn British Columbia and also to the public\npress,\nNO NAVAL DEMONSTRATION\nLondon, Nov. 13.\u2014-The reports from\nGibraltar that preparations are being\nmade for an Anglo-French naval demonstration off Tangier are officially declared to be erroneous. The admiralty\nstates that Uie Atlantic fleet, whloh haa\nJust returned to Gibraltar from a cruise\namong the Baleric Islands, ls replenishing Its stores In the ordinary manner\npreparatory to a further cruise.\nDUBAND'S SUCCESSOR.\nLondon, Nor. 13.\u2014Gerrard A. Low-\nther, the British, minister at Tangier.\nIs mentioned as the possible successor\nof sir Mortimer Durand as ambassador\nof Great Britain at Washington. Mr.\nLowther was bom In 1858 and Is the\nsecond son of the Hon, William Lowther,\nbrother of the third earl of Lonsdale.\n' He was educated at Harrow, and entered\nthe diplomatic service in 1879.\nMinard'i Liniment Curat Coldi* ito.\nAdopts Resolution re Recent Editorial in\nThe Daily News\nEditor Tlie Dally Newt*.\u2014The following\nresolution was unanluvuosly udopted at a\nregular meeting of tlho Sandon Miners'\nunion No. 81, of the Western Federation\nof Miners, held here on Saturday evening,\nNov. 10 .190,!. Kindly insert tho Same in\nyour paper and oblige. Yours respectfully,\nA. SHIL-LAND, Secretary.\nSandon, Nov. 12, 1906.\nRESOLUTION\nWhereas, In the Issue of The Dally News\n\u2022f Tuesday, Nov. 6, there appeared an article imdi-r the caption of \"A Black Eye\nfor Sandon,\" in which the Sandon Miners'\nunion Is charged with fomenting trouble\nnnd preventing tlie resumption of mining\noperations on an extensive scale; Insinuating niso lhat the majorhy of Itu membership were not in sympathy with the movement to prevent tho Introduction of Astatic\nlabor Into the camp; and\nWhereas, when ever requisitioned by a\nmine manager, tho Sandon Miners union\nhas al those times endenvored to secure\nfor thorn any kind of help that was needed,\nstanding ready today to co-operate with\nthe mine managers ln any measure which\nTRAMWAY RETURNS\nIncreased Passenger Traffic and Cash\nReceipts Well Maintained.\nTbe figures for the week ending -Nov.\n11 of the tramway passengers carried\nand caah receipts posted by lhe city\nclerk yesterday, continue to show a gratifying increase over last year.\nThe passengers carried were 2689 as\nagainst 1030 for the same period last\nyear.\nThe receipts were $127.00 as against\n148.25 In 1905, au Increase of 1G7U and\n$79.35; quite a remarkable showing.\nFor the year to date, 113,399 passengers have been carried as against 89,u*86\nlast year, and the receipts total $6,106.55\nas against $4,867.90 last year and all\nthis In addition to the fuct that the line\nwas closed down for six weeks early In\nthe year.\nSIRDAR SCHOOL REQUIREMENTS\nThe following hopeful reply has been\nreceived to the petition forwarded the\nsuperintendent of education in regard to\nthe greatly needed school facilities at\nSirdar:\nMrs. M. J. McPeak, Sirdar, B. C:\nMadam,\u2014I beg to acknowledge the\nreceipt of your tetter of the 1st instant,\nenclosing petition for the establishment\nof a sohool at Sirdar and to state in.\nreply that the matter lias been placed hi\nthe hands of Inspector Glllls, who will\nvisit your district and teport on the application before returning to Victoria\nin December.   I havo, i> c,\nALEXANDfiR RQBINFON,\nSuperintendent of Education,\nVictoria, Nov. Sth, 1W.S.\nCOUNTY COURT\nList of Coses for Trial at Sittings on\nNovember 27\nThe noxt county court sittings will be\nheld on Tuesday, Nov. 27. The following\nare the cases bo far set down for trial\ntogether with the amounts involved;\nPhllbert vs. Bywater, |M3.r-0; Oosnell vs.\nHart wig. $21.10; Motel Ins Pluno House VS.\nWe will sell\n2000 International Coal   .66\n1000 Rambler. 32%\n2000 Yale* Kootenay Ice   .Q9A\n10 Great West Permanent Loan $125.00\nMcDERMID & McHARDY\nFred Irvine & Co.\nJuat received 25 Ladle.' Coat., the nry latest styles and colon.\nNo two coat, tha Bam* etyle.   Pile, v.ry low for tbla lot.\nNew wool ihirta and drawari In all -'ne.; new wool combination..\nFred Irvine & Oo.\nDo Not Delay\nIn purchasing your Christmas Gifts, now\nis the time. We can show you a larger\nassortment now, than we will be able to\nlater on, atter the wise ones have mad*\ntheir choice.\nJ.J. WA\nMER\n13 OPTICIAN\nStop the Waste\nEvery day that you put off placing a piano within the reaob ot\nyour children Is another day thrown Into life's waste-basket, for\nthese golden moments lost tn the! matter ot acquiring an education\ncan never be regained. How muoh would you give today to bring\nback the days of lost opportunities? TALKING ABOUT A PIANO\nwll not put one into your home, j nor make tbe proverbial \"next\nyear\" tbe one of peace and plenty.\nlive Today\nGive -your family tbe piano they -wished for so long. A little down\nand a trifle each montb will soon make you Its proud owner, and\nyour borne a sunnier and happier one.   Call and see ut and our\npiano*. ,     \u00ab\nMason ft Biseh Piano Company, Ltd.\n, Largest aid Strongeat.\nNELSON, B. 0.\nCHRISTMAS GOODS\nTHEY ARE HERE\nARRIVED AT LAST\nD. J. Robertson & Co.\nSTOVES AND RANGES\nOnr atock ot COOKING and HBAT1NO BTOVBB It com*\ntlate ud Tailed. _\nIt will pay you to examine onr  farloui  llnea  It yon\nIntend purchasing.\nWa hay* alto a new lln* of Stow Boardt, thlt teaton't   g>\nfoodi and nry att-totloe pattern*\nWood-Vallanoe Hardware Oo., United.     1\nwHOLCiAiv *-auK\u00bb* rur-An.   m\n ffl\n*'\"\u25a0*\u25a0  '\nMany housewives think\nit cheaper to buy 'than to\nbake. That is because their\nbaking isn't successful every\ntime. Their failures run\nthe cost up.   Get\nRoyal Household\nFlour\nand follow directions. The\nresult will be light, wholesome bread or pastry every\ntime. You pay a few cents\nmore for Royal Household,\nbut those few cents buy\ncertainty and purity. Your\ngrocer can supply you.\nOgilvie Flwr Mills Co., Ui.\n1J5 Meat-Mi.\n\u2022auuosi-iooi -SuajAui 'dsu*)\n\u2022sum sip -*-- ptre awn\nArc 8u;ito poo8 art Xat]^\ns-cpos*   uivs-iq\nuoipojaad\nc\/suoo)-\n\u2014att are noX sjaip-js jsao,\nai|l oiui tuaijl -J3AU03 0)\n\u2022ep-jue-j in \/Cia-fec- p3dd|nb\u00bb\nissq 31*1 pus -sonpojd\nu-eo saurep snourej s,**********)\n\u2022wp ure-us put -sunq tsaq\n3t*l 's|||ui -ep-su-eQ i*eui Jtwu\nJ53*! ****I SU3**OV****0\nS.A3N00W oi\"!  \u00b08  \u00ab\npooS 00) Suil|10U     JJ3l|J_\nA~l_\\ -tauoi  \u2022*-. a-j.\nales\nspecial\nNote-the\nfesturei:       |\nTwo supports under the front.\nUnbreakable bracken under\nfront and heel.\nRunner specialty made to prevent\ncutting too deeply in ice.\nWrite for 1907 Book of Starr\nSkates and REX and MIC MAC\nHockey Sticks, , -\nTHE ST-RI* -dMUFACTUHMOCO.. Ltd.\nDARTMOUTH, N.S. CANADA.\n\u25a0RANCH Ome. i TORONTO, ONT.\nMOTHER\nSEIGELS\nSYRUP\nINDIGESTION\nIN EVERY FORM.\nSoc. per boi tte.   Sold everywhere.\n________ MOWTBSAL.\nWINDSOR TABLE SALT\nwon't cake. It *> PURE-ckan,\ndry cqrftib that cbolve iasUnlly.\nPerfeafortheutle.\nAU tli. st-snath giving prop.rtlM ar. pr.-\n.erve* In\nTAING'S\nCanned Meat.\nZINC RESOURCES OF B,C,'\nCOMPILED FROM REPORT OP SSINO\n\" (J011MI8SION,\nBBHMARY     OP    MAONBTIO    ORB\nTKSTS AT DENVER.\nVIII.\nlttt C\u2014*Monitor and Ajax mine.\nBlende-pyrite-pyrrhotlto - galenn-slder-\nIte. Assayed 34 per cent zinc, 3.00 per\ncent lead and 14 01. silver. Roasting\nand magnetic separation give, from one\nton ol ore, 0..C16 ton of -lno concentrate, assaying SO per cent -.lac, 9.8 oz.\nslhrer, and 0.13 <k. gold, saving 90.04 per\ncent of -the zinc In the original ore; and\n0.31*! ton of Iron ore, assaying 0.34 02.\n\u25a0told, 24.9 oz. Bllver, 5.1 per cent lead\nand 10.1 per cent zinc.\nIn tha case ot this ore the benefit to\nbe derived frrm magnetic enrichment is\nvery positive. The crude ore is of too\nlow grade in zinc and silver to be mar-\nketaable. The process of treatment\nwhich is outlined above, gives products\nas follows:\n0.616 ton zinc ore at $16  * 9.86\n0.313 ton Iron ore at \"20     6.26\nTotal  $16.12\nCost of construction     2.85\nNot value  $13.27\nLot 7.-iBnt\u00abrprlse mine, Blende-sid-\nerlte-galena-pyrite-quartz. Assayed 43.7\nper cent zinc, 4.8 per cent lead and 116\nounoea allver. Thla ore is already a\nfair grade of zinc ore, and treatment\nmust be aimed at putting as much as\npossible of the silver into lead smelting\nore, rather than into zinc ore, because\nof Its greater value in, the former. The\ntesta point to a reasonably successful\nmethod of treatment The ore should\nbe crushed to pass a 26-mesh screen and\nshould then be carefully concentrated\non Wilfley or similar table, yielding\nabout 4 per cent of galena, assaying 46\nper cent lead and 293 oz. silver. The\ntailings from the tables should be collected In burlap-lined bins, which while\nallowing all of the water to drain out\nwill save all of the tailings. The latter should then be dried, should be\nroasted lightly and should be passed\nover a Wetherill magnetic separator.\nThe tests do not unfortunately, show\nprecisely the results that may be expected from this treatment, but they indicate that out of a ton of the crude\nore there can be obtained 0.55 ton of\nzinc ore with about 57 per cent zinc,\nand not more than 40 ozs. silver per\nton, a further product of comparatively\nhigh grade zinc ore, also high in silver,\nwhich may be marketed either with the\nzinc smelter or tlie lead smelter, and\nAnally an Iron ore, high in silver, that\nwould be sold to the lean smelter.\nIn this case the crude ore ls marketable either as a zinc ore or as a silver-\nlead ore. As a zinc ore its value would\nbe $46.30 per ton. As a sliver-lead ore\nIts value would be $37.80 per ion. The\nproblem ls to separate this ore, without\nloss of valuable minerals, so that the\naggregate value ot the various products\nwill exceed that ot the crude ore. The\ntests were not carried to thetr ultimate\nconclusion, but basing computations on\nTest C, (see Mr. Argall'*. report) one\nton of the crude ore yields the following products:\n0.660 ton zinc ore at $3*.6H $17.93\n0.124 ton allver ore nt SSO.ft\" .... 10.03\n0.241 ton Iron ore at $117.65.... 28.33\nTotal  $56.29\nCoat of concentration     2.85\nNet value a  $53.44\na The net value of this ore would\ndoubtless be materially increased If a\nconsiderable tonnage of the zinc products rich in sliver oould be offered.\nIt ls evident that separation adds\nmaterially to the value of this ore, and\nit Is probable that a process conforming to the suggestions In Mr. Argall's\nreport wlll lead to a greater Increase in\nvalue than has been here estimated.\nThis line of treatment Is tbe moat promising solution of the problem of the\nzlnky ores of the Slocan that are very\nhigh in silver.\nLot 8.\u2014Molly Gibson mine. Blende-\nslderlte-galena-pyrlte-quartz. Assayed\n11.3 per cent zinc, 4.3 per cent lead and\n71.6 ozs. silver. This Is obviously an\nore which can be treated most advantageously by direct lead smelting.\nLot 9.\u2014Big Ledge. Blende-pyrites*\npyrrhotite. Assayed 19.4 per cent zinc,\ntrace of lead, and 0.7 ozs. silver.\nLot 10.\u2014Big Ledge. Blende-pyrites*\npyrrhotite. Assayed 20.6 per cent zinc,\ntrace lead, 0.7 ozs. sliver.\nLot 11.\u2014Big Ledge. Blende-pyrlte-\npyrrhotite. Assayed 22.7 per cent zinc,\ntrace lead, 0.7 ozs. silver.\nLots 9. 10, and 11 are of practically\nidentical character. Concentration on\ntables to remove gangue, roasting of the\nconcentrate and troatment of the roasted ore on the Wetherill separator give,\nfrom one ton of crude ore 0.367 ton of\nconcentrate assaying 40.7 per cent zinc,\na saving ot 79.5 per cent of tbe zinc in\nthe original ore. In a region nearer to\nthe markets than British Columbia, this\nwould be considered a fairly good result, both technically and commercially.\nThe ore is a difficult one to separate.\nIn treating lt raw, ouly a small proportion of worthless material can be picked\nout as magnetic material, while after\nroasting the blende and pyrites all become more or less magnetic, and there\nis no sharp dividing line between the\naittractabillty of the various minerals.\nThe result of the treatment of this\nore, stated above, does not offer any\nhope ot profitably working this ore on\nthe basis ot 60 spelter and other conditions as they exist at present, because\nthe gross value of the product derivable\nfrom a ton ot the crude ore would not\n.amount to the cost of production. The\ngross value of the products would hardly be more than $1.36 per ton of crude\nore, which could not be expected lo\ncover the coat of mining and milling\neven If carried out on the large scale\nthat the magnitude of the ore deposit\nwould appear to warrant.\nLot 12.\u2014Goodenough mine. Blendc-\ngalena-slderlte-pyrlte. Assayed 45 per\ncent zinc, 10.8 per cent lead and 22 ozs.\ntn DAii*r raws, *e*.tm, a. e,_ wumetx-vt, aomuenm it, toos\n*mmmmaammm\u2014mmmmmmm_m\u2014mmiiim\nlillv-r, OpuablH t\u00ab pat. a mmu with\nO.OS-lt). hoi**- and washing on tables\ngives, from, one ton of crude ore, 0.893\nton of jlnc concentrate, assaying 48.7\nper cent zinc and 15 ozs. stiver, comprising 97,4 per cent of the zinc iu the original ore, and 0.107 ton of lead concentrate, assaying 62.4 per cent lead and\n81.6 oz. silver. The zinc concentrate\ncan be further raised ln grade by magnetic separation, but the additional gain\nwould not justify the expense. The\ntreatment outlined above is simple, efficient and satisfactory.\nThe crude ore Is marketable as a zinc\nore and the question Is as to the gain in\nvalue by separation ot its constituents.\n[{This appears in the following comparison:\nA.\u2014Crude Ore\u2014\n1 ton at $15.10  $15.10\nB.\u2014Separated Products\u2014\n0.893 tons zinc ore at $15.30....$13.67\n0.107 ton lead ore at $62    6.63\nTotal  $20.30\nCost of concentration     1.00\nNet value $19.30\nThe cost of concentration In this case\nis low, because it is a simple problem\nof milling.\nLot 13.\u2014Hewitt mine. Blende-sider-\nIte-pyrite-quartz. ABsayed 32.8 per cent\nzinc, 11.5 per cent lead, and\nstiver. Concentration on tabl.\nout a galena product, collection of the\ntailings, roasting and magnetic separation give, from one ton of ore, 0.482 ton\nof zinc concentrate,, assaying 54.8 per\ncent zinc, and 41 ozs. silver, comprising\n83.3 per cent of the zinc In tlie original\nore, and 0.446 ton of lead concentrate\nassaying 25 per cent lead, 14 per cent\nzinc, 20 per cent excess of lion over\nsilica, and 131 oz. silver, comprising 100\nper cent of the lead and 75 per cent of\nthe silver In the original ore.\nThis ore, because at Its high silver\ncontent, would be marketable In Its\ncrude state either as a zinc ore or as a\nlead ore, but its value is greatly Increased by separation into two elects,\nthe high concentration 01* lead and silver In the lead ore prod', -t cauBing the\nseparation to be of remarkable tchhi-\ncal efficiency. The product.! donv.tle\nfrom a ton of the crule oro are as fellows:\n0.482 ton ot zinc ore at $30.76 $14.83\n0.446 ton of lead ore nl $77.92.. 34.75\nCure For Tlie Iii\nONE MEDICINE THAT HAS NEVER FAILED\nHealth Fully Restored and the Joy ol\nLife Regained.\nI When a cheerful, bravf, light hearted\n-woman is suddenly plnnKutl  inlo that\nperfection of. misery, the BI-UKM, It U a\n\u25a0id picture.   It it* usually this wuy:\nShe has been feeling \"out of sorts\"\nfor some time; head haa ached and hack\nConcentration on tables to cut \u25a0 also; has slept poorly, beeiHjuitencrvo^,\nand nearly fainted once or twice; head\ndizzy, and heart-beats very fast; then\nthat bearing-down feeling, and during her\nperiodB ehe is exceedingly despondent,\nNothing pleuaes her. Her doctor says:\n\"Cheer up: you have dyspepsia; you\nwill be all right soon.\"\nBut she doesn't get ''all right,\" and\nhope vanishes; then come the orooiliiig,\nmorbid, melancholy, everlasting BLUE-d*\nDon't wait until your sufferings havo\ndriven you to despair- with your\" nerves\nall shattered and your courage gone, but\ntake Lydia R lln khsui *.'**. Vegetable t'ora-\nJotipd.    Sen what it did for Madame\nosephinu ltiuvillv, Jluetai, Que.    i-iho\nTotal   $49.58\nCost of concentration    2.50\nNet value $47.08\nThe increase In the value of this ore\nby separation is very Important.\n(To Be Continued)\nMm\u00bb\u00bbM\u00bb*IM*->mMM\u00bbm\u00bb-t\nAPPRECIATION\nA Portage la Prairie, Man.,\nsubscriber, in forwarding renewal\nsubscription to Tlie Daily News\nfor another year, says:\n\"I read your paper with a great\ndeal of interest, and must say\nthat outside of those published in\nthe large cities, I have met few\ntho equal of yours for general\nnews. (\n\"We organized a 20,000 club\nhere a few months ago, and are\nvery thankful to the secretary ot\nyour club for the valuable information received from him.\n\"In addition to ita many natural advantages, Portage la\nPrairie is now a great railway\ncentre, as you will see by the\nenclosed cards and with a 20,000\nolub of over 400 members, all\nenthused with what tbey have so\nfar accomplished, and inspired to\nstill greater deeds, our town is\nbound to go ahead. Just keep\nyour eyes on us.\n\"I hope the time Is not far distant, when -^o will be able to\nshake hands with each other,\nand offer mutual congratulations\non having reached the 20,000\nmark.\"\nThrifty Buyers Buy Tlplr St|oei at tip\nRoyal\nIN TIME OF PEACE.\nIn tbo first months of tho Russia-Japan\nwnr we had n striking example of the net-easily for preparation end the early ao\nvantage ot those who, so to speak, \"hav**\nshingled their roots In dry weather.\" The\nvirtue of preparation has made history and\ngiven to UH\u201eour greatest men. Thu indt\nvidua) ns witli ns the Milium should he\nprepared for \"any emergency. Are you\nprepared for a successful comhat with tn*-\nllrst cold you take? A cold can bo cure.)\nmore qulcky when treated as soon as it\nbus been contracted and before It has be\ncomo settled In the system. Chamberlain *-\nCough Remedy Is famous for Its curep\nof colds and It should be kept at hum*\nready for Instant use. For sale by al'\ndruggists and dealers\nBnnlight Sot \u00bb tt Twttti than o\u00bbber \u25a0oepa*\nimt is best wt -at nit-d In ths Sunlight waft\n\u2022.uy So-alight t-onp and follow (Um-taJ**.\nE. O. Windsor, piano tuner, Is In the\ncity. Leave orders at Canada Drug and\nBook company. lGC-tf\nIf you want to buy Frutt\nLand see me.\nThat is my business.\nJ. E. ANNABLE\nNBLSON, B. 0.\nBmfamANDONeMmAM\nwrites:\nDear Mr-i. Pinkham:\n\"1 suffered fur foi\ntroubles\u2014inlliuiimnlii'\nfallopian tubes wblcTi\nand often ti\nwalk iit timcrf ond\n]jfe was misery 1\nr years with female\ni ol' '.lie stomach and\nsauswl me violent pain\niK-lisoil-til I cotilu not\nnd to my daily duties.\n] was so bin-- and\ndespondent 1 did not lux-w which way to\nturn lor relief, I had tried the -lot-tors but\nthey did not lu-Ip inc. 1 was advised to try\nLydia 13. l-inkhain's Vegetable Compound,\nso thought a bottle, 1 iun glnd that I did so,\nfor I am well and strung to-day and the\nworld looks bright, for I linvoperfect health,\nthanks to your mculi-inc.\"\nIf you have some derangement of\nthe female organism write Mr:;,\nPinkham, Lynn, Alas*-;., for advice.\nPractically all makers of good\nclothes iu Canada use HewsOn\nTweedS. Look for the tag\nthat guarantees PURE WOOL,\n\"Unshrinkable\"\nUnderwear\nEvery dealer, handling\nSTANFIELD'S, is authorized\nto refund the purchase price,\nshould any STANFIELD\ngarment shrink from any\ncause.\nSafe Underwear\nfor you to buy,\nisn't it?\naaaaafaaaaaaaammwwmmm 4. \u25a0\nHOTEL DIReOTORY\nPHOENIX.\nHOTBL BALMORAL, FHOKWIX, B. C-\nTlie leading hotel ot Boundary's leading\nmining camp. Strictly nrat clasa, centrally located. John A, McMaster, Proprietor.\nHOTEL BROOKLYN, PlIOENIX-THH\nonly up to dote hotel ln Phoenix. New\nfrom cellar to roof. Best aample rooms\nIn the Boundary. Bath rooms In connection. Opposite Qreat Northern depot\nJames Marshall, Proprietor.\nYMIR.\nVANCOUVER HOTBL, YMIR, U. C--\nWhen In Ymlr make your headquarter**\nat the Vancouver hotel. First olass\nint-di'lt*, clean bed rooms, hest liquor*- und\ncigar*'.   J. F. McLeod, Manager.\nTHS QUEEN'S HOTEI\nBAKER STRHBT\nMRS. E, C. CLARKE, Proprietress\nRATES J2 PER DAY\nLarge  and comfortable  bedrooms,   and\nflrat class dining room, Sampts rooms tor\noommerolal men\t\nKOOTENAY HOTEL\nTenon Itnat, Ntltoa\nCentrally locate', thrte toon Irom\npo-to-nce. Newly reno-ated. Bar well\nito-ked with all latost brand, ot win-*-,\nllquora and cigara, Hatta ou dollar\nptr'day.\nMRS. M. !*AIA**TTB. Projri-t-*--\nWALDORF HOTBL, YMIR, B. C.-HEAD-\n(luut.rs for Mining und Commercial mon.\nMost comfortable hotel In the Diati-lct.\nBample rooms in connection,\nGKORGE COLEMAN, Proprietor,\nTHE DAILY NEWS CLASSIFIED ADS.\nThe bsst end ohwpsst wui ot -rwobliii tba fetopte ef tha Ktot\u00abnays. A femaU\nadvertisement In thess columns wlll bring big results.\nRATES-One cent par word ptr issut; sis liusfftlona far Um prtot of four It pa&fl\nIn advance.\nClassified ads. will ba rsoslred tar \u00bb\u00bbrt.\u00ab until I o'clock oa the evenlnr pra>\ntIoub to publication. Phone Mi\nFOR SALE\nMISCELLANEOUS\nHELP WANTED\n\u00a9LD CURIOSITY 8HOP-K jou went M\nbuy or sell anytilng go to tbe Old -Dunne--\nIty Shop. Always In atock, e fuU Uae \u00ab\nCroclwry, Furniture and Glassware\nFOR   SALE-SecoM\nbox iilj, Ncluon.\nbaud   pluno.  Apply\nRW-tt\nGRAND FORKS.\nFOR   SALE- We havt a few young pigs\nfor sale at our Crescent Valley ranch.\n\u25a0For   inieo   enquire   HcDeroild   and   Moil-inly. It\u00ab-1B\nFOR  SALE\u2014  Well built liouso, 8 rooms,\nolose to smelter and C.P.R., Baker Bt.,\neasy t-Jiim-H. Apply J, Roche, Ntlson.   171-tf\nH-OTJ2L PROVINCE, GRAND FORKH-\nThe heodquartern for tourists. Satisfaction guaranteed. Emil Larsen (late of\nNelBon\" Proprietor.\nHOTEL WINNIPEG, WINNIPEG avjs.,\nGrand Forks\u2014Thoroughly renovated and\nnewly furnished throughout. Large bedrooms, baths, eto. First clasB dining\nroom. Best brands of Wines, Liquor*-! and\nCigars at the bar. Everything first-\nclass.   McBean & Johnson, Props.\nARROWHEAD.\nTHE UNION HOTEL AKROWHEAD-\ntipeclal attention given to commercla\nmen and tourists. First class sample\nrooms. Finest scenery In British Columbia, overlooking upper Arrow Lake. W.\nJ.  Lghtburne,  Proprietor.\nTORONTO, ONT.\nWALKER HOUSE, TORONTO, ONT.-\nCulslno u next-el led. Two hundred well\nventilated, steam-heated bedrooms, a\nnumber with baths. British Columbia\nSaskatchewan. Alberta patronage tipec\ntally sollltedc. Strict attention to ladles\nand children. Rates 12 to ti per day.\nGEO. WRIGHT & CO., Prop.\nLate of Brandon and Winnipeg\nT. M. BAYNE, Manager.\nMADDEN HOUSE\nBAKER STREET. NELSON. B.C.\nDo you need a comfortable home? If so\ntry the Muddcn House. Well fumls-hei.\nrooms lighted with electricity; with baths;\nflrst class board. In the bur you wtll find\nall the best domestic and imported liquors\nand cigars.\nTHOMAS MADDEN, Prop,\nSHERBROOKE\nHOUSE\nNELSON,,   B.  C.\nOne minute's walk from C.P.R. station\nCulslno unexcelled; 31 rooms, well heated\nand ventilated.  Baths in connection.\nRATES-U per day.\nJ. POVEK\nGBAND CENTRAL HOTEI\nOpposite Courthouse and new Postofflce\nBest 25c meal In town. European and\nAmerican plan. Only white labor employed.  First class bar.\nQ.   ERICKSON.   Proprietor.\nFOR RENT\nA 12 roomed house\nclose to Baker Street,\nsuitable for either a\nboarding or rooming\nhouse. Full particulars of\nR. J, STEEL\nOLUB HOTEL\nThe Big Schooner of Beer\nor Half and Half\n10c\nThe only glass of good beer ln Nelson\nHotel o-CCouimodntlon second lu none in\nCORNER STANLEY & SILICA STHEETt*\nBritish Columbia. Rates $1 por day. Special rates to monthly boarders\nBAKTLETT   HODBp\n(Formerly  Clarke   House)\nThe best $1.00 per day house ln Nelsoi\nNone but white help employed.  Tbe bet'\nIs tbe best.\nil W, BAUTLRTT      *\u00ab\u2022 .\nLAKE VIEW HOTEL\nCorner Hall ana V-rnon Street.\nTwo block, from City Whart  Th. Mr\ndollar a day houa. In Nel.on.\nHO  CHINESE   EMPLOYS!-.\nGeorge Harrison\nPROPIUBTOB\nWANTED\nGeneral job work, chimney sweeping,\nLiirpet denning, fixing nnd cleaning stove**,\npte. Jackson Radcllffe, 131 east Baker tit.\nPhone No. A1U. JK\nFOR SAbE-Launeh \"Lnrllne,\" 3 1-2 h.p.,\nlength IS fct't, e inches, *by 6 feet beam,\nn -.-xi-cllenl condition. The safest and\ntoulcst launch on thc river. Apply T.\nMorley, room 8, Hudson's Buy block, Ncl-\nson. 176-u\nSOCIETY UARDS\nNELSON Baployment Agencr\nWANTBD \u2014 Carpenters, machine miners,\nbuflhmen,  waitress, teamsters, typewrit*\ner.  engineer.\nABMIDBBN HI VI. No. U. U O. T, M.-\nMeet- 2nd end ith Wednesday, 1:94 p.t*\nof each -month ln K. of P. Hail, Verw*\n\u2022treat, next to postoffloe. Vlsltiit-g sea-\nMis eor-ti&Uy Invited.\nMARGARET SQUIRES,  R.K.\nMRS. EI-ISiA INGRAM, L.C.\nREPAIRING\nWATi.'ilKS   cleaned,   11.00;   main  spring,\n11.60. O. Stratheara, Kaslo, B.C.      124-U\nWHOLESALE HOU6E8\nPfiODUCB\nSTARKEY & CO.. WHOLESALE DfilAV\nens ln Butter, Eggs, Cheese, Produoe end\nFruit. Houston Block, Josephine\nNelson, B.C.\nGROCERIES.\nA. MACDONALD ft <X>..-WHOLESAI-l\nGrocers and provision MerobanU.\u2014Bn-\nportt-rs of Teas, Coffees, Spices, Dried\nFruits, Staple and Fancy Groceries, To*\nbaccso. Cigars, Butter, Eggs, Cheese and\nPacking House products. Offloe and\nWarehouse, corner of Front and Hall\n8tre*-ti.   P.O.  Box 1066.  Telephone tt\nCAMP    AND   MINERS'   FURNISHING!\nA. MACDONALD ft OO.-WHOLBBAli*\nJabbers In Blankets. Underwear, Mitts\nGloves, Boots, Rubbers, Overalls, Jumpers, Macklnaws and Oilskin Clothing\nCamp and Miners' Sundries. Offlc; and\nWarehouse, corner of Front and Hal)\nBtreeta.   P.O. Boa 1066. Telephone S.\nASSAYERS- BUPPLDBB\nTHO B.C. ASSAY ft CHflatlGAb aUFFh'\nCo.. Ltd., Vancouver, B. c-lmporten\nand Dealers ln Assayer-* Supplies, aw-\nagents In Brltlah Columbia for tae eele\norated Battersea cructblee, \u25a0oorlflera aw\nMuffles and Wm .Ainsworth ft Uo.1 in*\nBalances Chemical and Fnysicai At\nparatae, C. P. Adda and CbomloaM. tnt\nUnum, Sodium and Potaaslura uyanidf\nQuicksilver. Carbonate and BloaTMmat-\nof Soda, Borax, Borax Olaaa, Silver, Jn>\nhead and -Litharge,\nMTNINNG  AND  MILL  MACHUSJBKY.\nWASHINGTON MACH1NKRY ft tUfFUl\nCo.\u2014Dealers ln Engines, Bud and Ctr\nentar Sawmills, Atkins' Saws, Woof aw\nIron Pulleys, Leyner Compreeeore tat\nDrills, Pumps and Hoists. Prompt at\ntent-Jon. Reasonable nrtees. Uavtaomt\n\u2666t-**o tmit-nt   Kookans.\t\nLIQUORS\nE. FERGUSON A CO., WHOLESALE\nLiquors and Cigars. Agents for Pabst\nBeer.   Vernon St. Nelaon, B.C.\n-NELSON CAFE\n(Und-- Hew S.n.g.m.nt.)\n..... '   \u25a0   s\u2014ms\u2014tmamemme:\nFirst-Class\nLunch\t\nWUm\u00ab  25cem8\n8PEOIAL\nSunday Dinner from I to I ..a.\nBOARD and BOOMS from SIM ptr\nda; np,   Tho room, hart b..i\nthoronghlj leno.\u00bbt.d aad\nrefuraish.d.\nA. AUDET, Prop.\nA drink of good liquor\nIa a rerj good tblnf\nIt will hoist np jour aplritt\nAnd cann ron to tint;\nAnd the beat place In torn\nTo sample your gin\nla at Archie Reld'a Quartan\n\"The No Place Inn\"\nROYAL HOTEL\nTELBPHONB U\nMBS. WM. ROBORTB, Proprletoreaa\nThe beet meals that oan be provided In\nthle market, cooked under the supervteton\not the proprletoreaa, who le a ftvorite\ncartsrer.\nNloe airy rooma. newly furnished; bath\nfor guests.\nThe best wines, llquora and olgara oaa\nbe obtained at the bar.\nTERMS: U AMD $1.60 PBR DAT\nOOR. STANLEY AND SILICA  ~~\nCere Pass tha Door\nWANTED-Men and wo.;t 'o team \u2022Barber trade In eight weeks. Graduates earn\ntS to es per week. Cat. free Moler aye*\ntern of colleges, 401, Front onus. Bpo-\nkane-i Waah.\nWANTSD-Agents to Introduce the great-\nets horticultural wonder, Burbank's new\nstonelcss plum, Miracle. Big pay; permanent position. Chloo Nursery, Salem,\nOregon. l-M-U\nWANTBD\u2014Agents to sell the best grown\nnursery stook on Lhe coast, Including\nBurbank's new pltless plum, Miracle; commission udvanced weekly; write quick for\nchoice territory. Albany Nurseries, Albany,\nOregon.\n[WANTEiD\u2014Local agents throughout the\nwest for Digest of Canadian Business\nLaws', greatest seller, largest commission,\n\u2022g-enulne money maker. W. H, Anger, To-\nronto, Ont. 171-8\nWAN-T-RD\u2014TIiree pair tog makers, 0 swampers, 1 cant hook man, l river man. J.\n!.  Winlaw,  Wlnlaw, B.C. na-t-t-\nWAiNTiiD-Sltuatlon In hotel by man ana\nwife with,-previous experience.   Apply H.,\nDaily News. 171.-6\nWANTBD-Good\nIon -Dairy.\nApply Domln-\nlra-e\nWANTED\u2014Agents throughout -Canada to\nluke orders for an old established English\n(firm of Wltole-iolo Bespoke Tailors, who\nsupply single garments of made to measura\nclothing at wholesale trade prices. Large\npattern bunches, fashion plates and meus-\nwre forms supplied free twice a year. Orders must be takon at advertised prloea,\nviz., suit to measure from 21s.; troueera\nto measure from Gs ,M. Terms; Caah, lesa\n16 per oent commission must accompany\neach order. A splendid opportunity for a\namort man to increase his Income. Pattern's wlll be sent on receipt of suitable\napplications. Business con commence right\naway. Write full particulars of business\ncarried on and prospects of business to\nWoolf Bros., 11 Barbican, London, England, mm\nWiANT-ED-tFirst olaas stenographer, with,\nknowledge of bookkeeping.   Apply Toye\nand Co.   Baker St. Nelson . 174-tt\nWAN-TED\u2014First class chambermaid, apply\nat once Hotel Strathcona. 174-tf\nWiANTKD-iMccn and women to loam har-\n;ber trude in eight weeks;  wages while*\nlearning; catalogue free. Moler Barber college, Cairoll St., Vancouver. 17Q*tr\nWANTBD\u2014Work, dressmaking by the day\n\u25a0C.O.D., Dally News. 176-$\nWANTED - MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED-Launches and row boats, a\nshipment of Truscott onglaes and launoh-\nflx-tures shortly to arrive, including Bat*.\nterlt-s, magnetos, spark plugs, steerlnft\nwheels, cups and wrenches, several hulls ta\nstock, can lit engines as required. Aderaa\nand Co., AgentH for Truscott Boat Co.-.\nbox 606, Nelson, B.C. 162-tS\nWANTED \u2014 Dozen thoroughbred  barred\nPlymouths,   winter   layers.   Write   W.\nRichardson, Crawford Bay. ii>?\nWiANTED\u2014MIIImen and bushmen.   Apply\nW.  E. Cooke Lumber Company, Kaslo,\nB.C. 1TU-10\nWAJNTJ50-*Shipper for ont of town saw-\n\u2022mill.    Telephone 39,   Nelson   . 17M\nWANTElMfltujallion   aa  housekeeper or\ncook for small camp, country prufurred.\nAddress Housekeeper,   Dolly  News.    114-4\nWANTED\u2014For several  muiit.li*-,   comfort-\naibly ruinislii'd house of llvo or six rooms.\nAddress  Iv.il.,   Daily  News ofllco.     175-&\nWANTED\u2014Scotch girl wants .sit um Jon at\nhoum-work. Address ALL. cure Tbt* Dally*\nNews. 175-S.\nASSAYERS\nB. W. WIDDOWSON, CHEMIST AND Aft-\nsaytr. Nelson, B.C.-G\u00ab\\d, Silver, Lead!\nor Copper, tl each; Oold-SUver, ll.W;\nSilver-Lead. 11.60; Zinc, %%; Oold-SUver,\nwith Lead or Copper, 12.60. Samplea arriving by express or mall will receive\nprompt attention. P.O. Drawer, Ult;\nphone Ae7.\nA. HARRV HOOK, CHEMIST AND PIIO*-\nvlnclal Assayer, Greenwood, B.C.\u2014Gold-\nsilver, $1.60; silver-lead, 11.60; gold-silver,\nwltb copper or lead, 92.90; slut-, $2; gold\nand sliver, SI each; copper and lead,\n11.25 each; mall and express samplea\ngiven prompt attention. Control asaya\na specialty.   P. o. box 261.   Phone t*.\nII    -~,\u201e      .-\u2014. \u201e  \u2014I      =      .-.I\u2014\nO. S. RASHDALL. FOR U TEARS A\nresident of West Kootenay, will attend\nat the Hall Mines Bmelter on behalf af\nshippers and see tn \u2022**\u25a0\u00ab\u25a0 ighlng and sampl*\nIng of ores cona!*-*\"*** *d  to the smelter-\n4rtdraM V O    \u25a0 NTftlBOn,  B.f!\nLOST-tA parcel from Dominion Exprem\ncompany's wagon, nddrmed to Miss B.\nThorn, from Henry Bros., Winnipeg. Findor\npiea-se* return to Dominion K-tprv-**- otttca\nand receive reward. 175-tr\nFOR RENT\nFOR n.E**\"T--Lurge front room, warm ami\npleasant,   alt   convenience*.     Address\n\"Comfort,\" Dally Nows. H-.-f\nFOR   RKNT\u2014By   Mrs.  Sloan,   .  roomed\nfurnished  house,   corner Joeephln. .mt\nOore street.. 174-0\nl     ll l I   I\u2014\nCLBa-TOra  ANO PRIMING\na-a-mm*****-! sum rkpaisbd.\nal-aa-4 aaa \u2014tmti. (kadi oalM tut\nmat U-JIW---I promptly.   A. J.\nn-omptly.\n\u2022 -aM-i,\n Inn DAILY NBWB, aBIiBOH, B. 0., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, tflW\n-^ffiansBp\nFHa^HEF@HM\nFOUNDERS IN CANADA OF\nHand Tailored 'Garawnti, Completely Fini-hcd.\nThe Double Breasted\nOvercoat\nIt's more than warm\nand comfortable. It's\nstylish. Fit-Reform tailor-\nmen know how to\ncombine all three of these\nessentials.\nMade in the handsomest Scotch and Irish\nTweeds you ever saw.\nEmory & Walley,   Nelson. B.C.\nPierce\nlaunches Are the\nLaunches to Buy\nThey hare proved their superiority\nright here la Nelsoa over all comers,\nC. E. MILLER, the general agent, ls\nnow in Racine, Wis., arranging for 1907\nbusiness and will be In a position to\nfurnish you any slse from 16 to 50 feet\nat RIGHT PRICES and upon EASY\nTERMS.\nNow Arriving\np.\nNew Season's Haddies\nHams and Bacon\nof finest quality\nFresh Eastern and Olympia\nOysters\nBURNS & OO.\nWholesale and Retail Meat Merchants. Nelson, B. C.\ni CANADA'S FAVOIRTE\nTEA IS    \"\nIt ls blended to suit conditions\nanil tastes right here in the west\n\u2014not ln England or 'way down\neaat. It has stood the test of\ndally use for years, and has won\nnew friends right along.   Tea\nusers have found Blue Ribbon\nthe richest, strongest, best Savored tea they can buy.\nTou are sure to like It, too.\nTry a pound anyway, and test it\nfor yourself.  60c a pound.\nPREPARE FOR CAMPAIGN\nGOVERNMENT POROSIS ALREADY ACTIVE ON THE ISLAND\nPREMIER McBRIDE MAY SEEK ELECTION IN VICTORIA\nVictoria Times, Saturday, Nor. 10: It Is\naorno time since the Times made the announcement that premier Me-B-rlde. would\n' not meet the leglnlature ngaln before holding an election. It was then announced:\n\u25a0that the premier would -probafoly go to\nthe country In December. Since that tlmo\nthe government has been steadily preparing for that elecilon. The premier's trip\nto Ottawa to attend the inerprovlnclal conference of premiers und the course he pursued there were In fact a part of the plana\nof Hon. Mr. McBride to make what he believed would he a campaign cry which.\nwould detract from the many sins of his-\n\u2022dmlnsstratlon ond ensure hla return to\npower. \"\nThe most hats been made of the premier a\nwaHc out of the conference since his return lo make political capital, and the government has about decided to take the\nchances of appealing to tlie country. All\nthts week a final iitinouncememt on betialf\nof the government has been expected. It\nhaw not yet come, but next week, the premier may reach a conclusion. ;\u25a0\nWhile December was to have been tne\nhionth for elections, yet the Indecision ol\npremier McBride has delayed the matter\nso that there Is some likelihood now that\nIt may not be possible to bring on the\nelection until early In the new year.\nAlready ln anticipation of the election\nthe names of probable candidates are being\ndlacussed. It has been suggested that\npremier M*pBrkle .may -aonlteat Victoria\ncity ln view of tho fact that R. Jardlne\nhas accepted the liberal nomination for\nDewdney, which Is popularly taken as\nspelling defeat to the premier,\nD. M Eberts has been at work In Saanlch\nfor some weeks preparatory to again contesting that sent, where he went down to\ndefeat at the hands of H. Tanner, the\nliberal candidate at the last election. It\nhas even beon suggested that Mr. bib-\nerts might be taken Into the cabinet before the election- In order to strengthen\nhis cause.\nIn Esquimau district it la somewhat\nquestionable who will represent the conservative Interests, fl. E. Pooley. speaker\nof the legislature ls not regarded as being\na strong cnndldate, and there ls talk or\nhis dropping out of the fight conditional on\nthe position being made hereditary and\nH. Pooley fti'lna* given the nomination. On\nthe other hand H. Dallas Hetonoken If*\ntwlleved to have his eye on that constituency ,\nIn Cowlchan the conservatives expect\nW. II. Hayward, formerly M.P.P. for\nEsquimau,  to represent the government\nInterests.\nW. Manson In Alberni and R. Grant in\nComox mny very likely be given the nomination again.\nln Cnsalar C. W. D. Clifford is regarded\nas an impossibility and J. A. MoKlnnon\nOt Vancouver, who is deeply Interested in\nthe Swanson Bay pulp and sawmill proposition, moy be expected to get tihe nomination.\nG. A. Praser's removal to Victoria precludes hla winning again in Grrad Forks.'\nAn .effort will be mnde by tlie conservatives\nto Induce E. Miller, barrister of that place\nto contest the seat.\nIa the majority of cases the sitting members of t-he different constituencies, representing both sides of the houae may be\nexpected to again receive nomination.\n3. II. iHawthonuhwalte, the socialist, expects to again run in Nanalmo a-nd states\nthat he will win. Ho also looks to having\nolbout Ave followers In the new house.\nThis Includes P. Williams and W. Davidson, and he ulso expects to win Pernle,\nGrand Porks  nnd  Greenwood.\nAmong the liberals already nunned as\ncandidates, other than the sitting members\nare R. Jardlne of 'New Westminster, for\nDewdney and Dr. O. A. B. Hull of Nelson, Smith Curtis, one of tbe ablest campaigners, ls also recognized as a likely candidate. He Is spoken of ns the liberal representative In the -Similkameen and also\nCor Ymlr. Nothing definite has been settled\nhowever, while Dr. Macdonald of Kelowna,\nwlll have an easy fight for the Okanagan.\nH. lire-wester ls already in the held In\nAlberni.\nNEW   BRITISH  SUBJECTS\nTwelve Applications for Naturalization on\nNovembur 21th\nThe following applications for naturalization wiJl oome up for njudlcatlon before\nJudge Forin at the county court sittings\non Nov. 27. The name, present abode, occupation nnd present nationality of each\nof the 12 applicants is  ns follow*--;\nRooco Schlarizzt, Nelson, section man,\n'Italian; Henry P. Gibson, Nelson, teamster, United States; Stanley Mordnrlskl,\nNeleon, Ilreman, Austria; Peter Johnson,\nNelson, hotel keeper, United States; Saverlo\nAmatt, -Nelson, farmer. Ita-Han; Joseph\n(Campbell, Erie, miner, United States; Olaf\nAugust Hnylnnd. Nelson, miner, Sweden;\nPrank H. Horn, Nelson, cook, Japan; Itobt.\nHarrie, Nelson, United States; Paul Wal-\n\u2022Sach, laborer, Austria; John Walgren, Salmo, miner, Sweden; Alfred HJaJmar, Nelson, bartender,  Sweden.\nA  SEASON OP SIMPLICITY\nAU Exaggerations Disappear from the\n-Coats for tihe Pall Season\n'\u2022Severity\"' and \"plainness\" are the\nwatchwords for thc fall nnd winter fash-\nIons ln men's clothing. All exaggerations\nhave been taken from the coat and the\ntrousers are being cut in -more rational\nmodes. The plain black and blue BLunoz\nserge suits, Semi-ready tailored, and sold\nIn Scml-ready wardrobes from coast to\ncoast, at the same price, (20, are having\na tremendous vogue In Canada. \"Wo had\nto meet another advance In price to get\nenough Blunoz -serge from tihe mills,\" said\nthe general manager of the Semi-ready\ncompnny.\nJ. A. Gilker, the pioneer merchant or\nNelson, secured the agency for the incomparable Semi-ready.\nThrifty Buyers luy Their Sh,o-w at the\ntaM\t\nSELLS    MORE    OP    CHAMBERLAIN'S\nCOUGH    REMEDY    THAN    ALL\nOTHERS PUT TOGETHER\nMr. Thomas George, a merchant at Mt.\nilgin, Ont., says: \"I have the local agency\nfor \u2022Channberluln'B Cough Remedy ever\nsince lit was Introduced into Canada and 1\nsell as much of lt as I do of all other llnea\nI have on my shelves put together. OI\nthe many dozen sold under guarantee, I\nhave not had one bottle returned. I can\npersonally recommend this medicine as 1\nhave used lt myself and given lt to my\nchildren and always with the best results.\"\nFor sale by all druggists and dealers.\nMintrd't Liqiment Curat Diphtheria\nCLARK'S PORK AND BEANS\nThose who know them are always ready\nto eat more.   Delicious, meaty flavor, plain\nor with Chill or Tomato sauce.\nCROUP\nA reliable medicine and one that should\nalwaj-4 be kept In the home for Immediate\nuse ls Chamberlain's Cough Remedy, lt\nwill prevent the attack If given as soon as\nthe child becomes hoarse, or even after\nthe croupy cough appears. For aale by\nall  druggists   and dealers.\nZam-Buk Wins Workers' Praise\nMARVELLOUS CURE OF BURNS\nZaim-Buk has been called the \"worker's\nfriend\" because It brings such relief and\n\u25a0healing to workers who suffer from\ncuts, burns, bruises or any skin Injury or\ndisease. Alf. J. Clark of Cavendish St.,\nLondon, Ont., tells how Zam-Buk cured\nhim of severe bur*n.| He says; \"I got\nmy handa severely burned with lime. The\nburns were no deep that as I piled niy\nshovel the blood actually ran down the\nhandle. Thc ngony I suffered you may\nwell Imagine. I tried si-vcral different\nkind-s of oalvcs but the burn---. Were too\nsevere for these preparations to heal.\n\"I obtained a supply of Zam-Buk And\nthe very first application gave me ease.\nThis pleased me you may guess, ibut as I\napplied thc balm each day I was more and\nmore pleased with the effect. The pain\nwas   relieved  completely.\n\"I had often heard of ZamiBuk, but\nthought before I tried it that It was similar to the ordinary snlv'-s you see advertised. In a very short time Zam-Buk\nhealed my burns completely and my hands\nactually felt better, the muscles more\nlira and the skin In better condition than\nbefore I waa burned;\"\nNot only for burns, but far cuts, bruises,\n\u2022pralns. etc., Zam-Buk is the best and\nuircMt cure.   It also cures eczomn, ulcers,\nbscesses, ringworms, boll, erupllons, poisoned wounds, chapped hands, cold sores,\n\u2022hllb1n!ns, bad leg. plica, etc.( Aai drug-\n','18-ts sell at 60 cents a box, or post free\nfrom the Zam-Buk Co., Toronto, on receipt of price, six boxes for 92.60,\nChafing Dish Dainties\nare all improved  by the addition\nof a small quantity of\nArmours\nSolid Extract\no\/Beef\n(POTTCD IN CANADA)\nArmour's Extract of Beef is\nconcentrated soup stock. It goes\nfour titlTes as far as other extracts\nand fluid beefs,\n\"Culinary Wrinkles \" tells how\nto create 20 triumphs of the\nChafing Dish. Send for it. It's\nfree. \u00bb7\nARMOUR LIMITED    -    Toronto\nCANADIAN FACTORY\u2014TT  PROMT tTRtTT EAST\nOrange\nMeat\nis good all around\n\u2014 good to the\nappetite\u2014good to\nthe body \u2014good\ntothepocketbook\nThe cheapest\nbecause the best.\n25c. \"Jumbo\" package contains\n%% times the quantity of 15c\npackage.\nSold by all grocers in 15c. tnd\n25c. packages. Every 15c. package\ncontains a  coupon good for\npremiums.     Write   \" Ortnge\nk     Meat,  Kingston\"    for   new\n^k   premium catalogue.\nA WOMAN TO BE PRETTY\nMeat Have Luxuriant aad Glossy Hair-\nNo Hatter What  Color.\nThe finest contour of a female face, the\nsweetest smile of a female mouth, loses\nsomething if tho head Is crowned wltb\nscant hair. Scant and falling hair. It Is\nnow known. Is caused by a parasite that\nburrows into the scalp to the root of the\nhair, where It saps the vitality. The little white scales tho germ throws up In\nburrowing are called dandruff. To euro\ndandruff permanently, then, and to stop\nfailing hair, that germ must bo killed.\nNewbro's Herplclde, an entirely now result of the chemical laboratory, destroys\nthe dandruff germ, and, of course, stops\nthe falling hair, and prevents baldness.\nSold by lending druggists. Send 10c. In\nstamps for aample to The Herplclde Co,\n-Detroit.  Mich.\nCANADA DRUG & BOOK COMPANY,\nSpecial Agents, K.W.C. Blook.\nRING UP 165\nFor that cake you want ln a\nhurry, and haven't time to\nbake.\nYOU WILL BE SATISFIED\nWhen you see the O. K,\nstamp on a loaf of bread, you\nmay be sure that it Is O.K.\nO.K. BAKERY\nR. B. HAT, Bole Proprietor\nTelephone 166 Stanley Si.\nSynopsis of Canadian Homeit-wd\nRegulation!\nANY avallabl. Dominion Lands within tli.\nRailway belt in British Columbia, max be\nhomestwded by an; person wbs U th,\nsole head of a family, or any m.le over\nU -un of oaa, to th. extent ot one-quarter section of 100 acre., mor. or lew.\nEntry must be mule personally at tilt\nlocal land office lor Uw district In which\nthe land la situate. ,\nTbe homesteader la required to perform\nthe condition, conneoted therewith undel\none of the following plana:\nO) At least .li montha' resident* upor.\nand culUvation of th. land la <aoh ytai\nfor three yean,\n(i) If tbe father (or mother, It th. fathei\nIs deceased), of the homesteader reside,\nupon a farm In the vioinlty of the land\nentered for, the requirement, as to real,\ndenoe may be .atlsded by such persoi\nresiding with the father or mother.\n(I) If the settler has his permanent real\ndenoe upon farming land owned by hue\nIn the vicinity of hla homestead, the re*\nqulremouts aa to residence may be satis\nlied by residence upon the said land.\nSix months' notice In writing should bt\ngiven to the Commissioner of Domlnlot.\npatint. \"\"\"\"' l,,*l,,to*' ** \u00bbW'*\" *\u00bb\nCoal Unas may be puroh\u00ab-ed u no .\u201e\nacre tor -oft coal and Mo fo, antlJacl\"\nNot more than ano aorea can bT Motrins\nby one Individual or oompany. Royalti\nat the rate of 10 cent, per ton of soot\npounds shall be collected on the grosa out-\nDeputy of the Minister of the Int-rloi\nN.B.-Unauthorlied publication ef thi.\nvlv.rtl-.m-nt wlll not be paid for.\nTasty, Appetising\nfAING'S\nKootenay Fruit Lands\nfor sale in io, 20, and 40\nacre blocks.\nI have a few bargains\nnow, write for my list.\nT. E. ANNABLE\nNBLSON, B. O.\nPROFESSIONAL CARDS\nF. M. CHADBOURN\nMINIM\", OPEHHTOB\nMine, examined and reported on-\nThorough Knowledge ot Kootenay Mine.\nOn Sampling Witnessed\nNELSON, B. O.\nMcKAY& RAHAL\n(Buccesors to D. A. Munro)\nHorse shoeing, Carriage Work ud Oeneral   Blacksmlthlng.\nP.O. Box IBS.   Phone AIM\nWard Street Nelson, B.C,\nW. J. H. HOLME8\nOIVIL ENGINEER ft MINE SURVEYOR\nPROVINCIAL LAND   SURVEYOR\nTen years experience ln the Kootenays.\nHonor graduate, 1891, Royal Military College of Canula, Kingston, Ont\nKASLO,  B. C.\nJOSEPH RYAN\nRANCH    AND PRUT    LANDS,    IRON\nORB, COAL LANDS\nKO Million Feet Standing Timber\nBox 803 -     Cnnbrook, B.O.\n8. 8. FOWLER\nMINING ENGINEER\nNEL80N, B.O.\nCanned Masts\nFREDERIC S. CLEMENTS\nCIVIL ENGINEER\nDOMINION AND    PROVlNCAl   kAND\nBURVBYOR\nAgent for obtaining Crown Oranta, min,\nsurveying, etc.\nRoom 10, K.W.C. Block.\nP. O, Box 1 Nelson, B. O.\nCLAUDEI) & WYNNE\nASSAYERS, METALLURGISTS and MINING\nENGINBKRS.\nB.H. CLAUDET. L C.WYNNE\nAsm. Inst. M.M. Assoc, Inst. M.M.\nMem, Am, Inst, M.E.\nRo-sland, 8.0, Princeton, B. O\nC. S. BAKER\nPROVINCIAL AB8AYES\nand   Ore Shippers'   Agent\u2014Samples   by\nmall  receive   prompt   attention.   Correspondence solicited.   P, O. Box 41; telephone 63; Grand Forks, B.C.\nFRANK C, GREEN\nOIVIL ENGINEER\nDominion and Provincial Land Surveyor\nP.O. Box 1(5.  Phone 261B\nOor. Kootenay and Vlotorla Sts., Nelson.\nEVANS & HERON\nACCOUNTANTS\nAND  COMMISSION  BROKERS\nBooks posted dally,   statements issued.\nAooounta collected.   Terms moderate.\nP. O. Box -ill\nRoom 6, Aberdeen Block\nC. M.OLIVER & Co.\nBROKERS,  STOCKS, GRAIN AND\nSECURITIES\nUnexcelled private wire service  to all\nleading exchanges.\nOlllce: Above Royal Bank of Canada.\nFLOURA=^FEED\nWe have opened a Flour and\nPeed stor* next door to the\nKootenay Coffee Co., Baker at\nOnr leader will he the famoui\nWybourn Flour made from No.\n1 Hard Wheat\nLAURIE & SON\n144.\nStoves and Ranges\nWe are selling out our  entire stock\nAt-Actual Cost\nNow is the Time to Buy\nQRANITDWARB AT COST\nStrachan -ft Hebden\nBaker Street\nPlumbing, Oas and Steamflttlng, Hot\nWater Heating, Etc\nLAUNOHE8   BOAT8\nSeveral launches, ins .nglne. and .team\naln rowheata. Bargain, all.\nASTLEV8 BOAT HOU8E\nCtTT WHARF\n\u00bb\u00bb Boi, m, ttmema.\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC1\nEXCUf-jSIOJIS\nTO\nOntario-Quebec,\nMaritime Provinces and\nThe Old Oountry\nTickets on sale dally Nov. 24 to Dec. 31.\nOood for three months with stop-over\nprivileges east of Fort William.\nPinclfer   $56.25\nFernle  |e*,\"5\nCranbrook  |67.,5\nKaslo IJ78.25\nNelson   178.25\nRossland $79.55\nGrand Forks  $81.55\nPhoenix |83.46.\nTo Montreal, Toronto\nAnd all points west thereof. Correspondingly low rates from and to other\npoints.\nFor detailed Information, Ballings of\nocean steamers, first class or tourist\nsleeper reservations, apply to' local\nagents or write\nJ. \u00a7. CARTER, District Pass, Agt\nNelson.\nTHC COM-OKTAIIX WAV.\nThirty-second Annual Convention\nAmerican Bankers'\nAssociation\nRound trip rates to Bt. Louis and\nChicago on aale Oot. 12 to 13, 1W6.\nSt. Louis  $60.00\nChicago    64.011\nGoing transit limit 10 days Irom\ndate of sale; final return limit,\nNov. 80.\n1 Round Trip Rates io Southern\nCalifornia\nin effect Oct 25, 1906, on sale dally,\nlimited to three months from date\nof sale.\nLos Angeles and Santa Barbara    185.60\nPasadena   80,10\nSanta Monica   66,W\nRiverside   and   San   Barnar-\ndlno   | \u00bb,10\nRedlands    89.70\nFor further Information, apply to\n9.0. YERKES,    X H. E. DOUGLAS,\nA.o.p.a., seatUclfSatf)      Olty P.A.\nAtlantic S. S. Sailings\nC.P.R.   P.OTAL  HAIL  STEAMSHIPS\n(St. John .West St. John, Ballings)\nh. Manitoba,.Nov. 2IL. Champlaln.,Dee. 8\nErap. Ireland..Deo. lEmp. Britain..Dee. 13\nALLAN LINB\nFrom St. John From Halifax\nProtorian Dec. lVlotorlan  Dec. 8\nIonian  Deo. lo Tunisian Dec. 28\nDOMINION   LINE\n(From Portland)\nDominion ....Nov. 2-t Canada  Dec. 8\nATLANTIC TRANSPORT Ll-'Kl\nMinneapolis..Nov.   17Minnoiiaha....Nov. H\nAMERICAN LINE\nSt. Louis ....Nov. 24Philadelphia..Dec.  1\nRED STAR LINB\nFinland  Nov. 2*1 Zealand    Deo.  1\nCUNARD LINB\nLucanla  Nov. iMCaronla  Dec. 4\nUmbria Deo. lCampanla Dec. 8\nWHITE STAR UNB\nMajestic  Nov. ato-ceanic Dec. 8\nCeltic  Nov. \u2022\u2022 Teutonic- Deo.  18\nFRENCH LINB\nLa Savole  Nov. 22\nLa Provence  .....Nov. 9\nHAMBURG-AMERICAN LINB\nBatavla .....'.Nov. 24Patrlcla .......Dec. 1\nNORTH GERMAN-LLOYD\nFrledrlch dor Qrosse Nov, 22\nMain  Nov. 27\nAll continental rates and sailings on application. If you are contemplating taklni\nan ocean voyage drop ui a line and w\nwlll be pleased to furnish you wtth full Information promptly.\nJ. S. CARTER,   W. P. F. CUMMINOS,\nD.P.A. Nelson     Geo. Aft, Wlnnlpet\nSHERIFFS SALE\nBY VIRTUE OF a writ of Fl. Fa. Issued\nout of the Supreme Court of British Columbia, Vancouver Regltsry, on ttie 20th\nday of October, 1900, between A. O. Re-\nibagllattl vs.' Trustees Dredging Company\nand to me directed tn tho above named suit\nfor the sum of $538.82 and costs of execution, besides sheriff's fees and poundage,\nand all other legal Incidental expenses, 1\nhave seised and wlll offer for sale by public auction, at the ofllce of the above company by public auction, at the offloe of tbe\nabove company at Lillooet, B, C, at the\nhour of eleven a.m., on Tuesday, the 4th\nday of December, 1000, all rights, and title\nto the following goods and ohaittels belonging tt> the above named company to satisfy the judgment, debts, taxes and expenses: One dredge, said to be the latest\ntype of gold dredge, New Zealand pattern,\ncapable of treating 4000 cublo yards per\nday of 24 hours; one Vertical Compound\nEngine 76 horse power; one boiler loo\nhores power; one dynamo and engine;\none 19 foot foot Bucket Ladder, with 27\nbuckets; feed pump, pump engine, winches,\nchains, wire cables, 12 Gold Tables, Oold\nScreen, blacksmith and carpenter tools,\nnails, oils, assorted bar iron, small tools,\netc., together with offloe furniture consist.\nIng of stove, two office tables, two desks,\ntypewriter desk with Remington Typewriter, two tetter cabinets, letter press,\nchairs, gold scales, 2 Iron bedsteads with\nBprings and mattresses, iwo lamps, seven\nlanterns, etc. Also those cortatn dredging\nlenses, two ln number, on tho Fraser river,\nLllooet District.\nD. W. ROWLANDS.\n171-84 Deputy Sheriff of -Cariboo,\nYou Know\nthe kind of Celery that is nice to eat.\nThe fresh and crisp kind, grown\nat Perndale Ranch, willow Point,\nalso some Parsnips, Tnrnlps and\nOnions, for sale at\nJoy's Cash fipoeepy\nPhone 11, cor. ef Josephine and Ward Bis.\nP* O. Boa <*\u25a0 T-1-pbons UL\nAll Unds and all colors of Ladl-a* an*\nOenta' Clothing\nCLEANED AND DYED\n-flannels, Blankets, Cart-ins, Bilks, Et-.,\na speciality.\nWens renovate- to look like n.w.\nSteam Carpet Gleaning\nTour; patronage solicit-*.\nPAUL NIPOU  Prop\nCOAL TAR\nPitch, Paints and Creosote\nWa in tba only prodiom\nei toil tar In the Koot*.\n**\u2014.   Writ* as for price*.\nNelson Coke and Gas Co'y\nQUeen Studio\nPietuN\nNBLBON\nihert- and\nB.O\nGEO. M. QUNN\nWABO BTKBET      NBAR POBTOFPICB\nManufacturer of snd dealer In Hen's Fine\nFootwear. R-palrlni prompt!-- dans,\natOTTO-LlTe and ut Um\nFor A Good Roast or\nTender Steak\nRing up Phone No. 5\nWest Kootenav Butoher Oo.\nTO   WORKINQMEN\nNOTICE\nWh-nas, st the teat Chane. and Burprlw\n\u25a0nine., Chine,- kitchen help Is at area-\nsat smpoyl-d, ts ths -.elusion of wut*\nlabor.\nTherefore, be It ra-olved that this organisation, Bandon Miner.' union Mo, u oc\nths W, F, of 11. nearming u, oppcsiusa\nto the employment ot Orientals wltbln Its\nJurisdiction, strongly condemn, ths po-l-\ntlon taken by th. management of the properties ln question, and eoun-el. working-\nmen everywhere and tho.. favorably disposed toward organlnd labor to bs genrn-\ned by tbls action.\n8ANDON MINERS' UNION\nA. mTTiMiNP. iwrstary.\n\u2022\"\"\"\"\u2022\"\"\u25a0\"\"-MIIIIIIIIIH\nBusiness\nInstitute, Ld.\nHa-tlng.-\"!.*-, Vancour-r.   '\nBookkeeping, Gregg and Pitman\nShorthand, Telegraphy and Engl-\n[ n-erlng.\nEight Teachers\n\"\"orty-Flve Typewriter.\nCourses by MaU\nR-spectabls lodging. Mound for\n; strangers.\nR. J. 8PHOTT, B. A., Principal\nSimn\n-ii-wi-mwnnniimmiiiinni!\nFOR 8ALE\nTwenty acres, close to school, \u2022nuraii,\netc., tvo waste land, easily cleared- leur\nacrea cleared and planted, trees bearlns;;\nflow In .three payments.\ngeo. g. McLaren,\nBaker Street\nNOTICE\nNOTICB Is hereby given that the llrm ol\nAshcroft and Malcolm, tr-Gtofore carrying on bualn... as blacksmiths, haa been\ndlsKlved a. from th. 1st Day of October,\nA.D., UN, by mutual cp.iMent,\nThe bu.ln.ss wlll hem. Am be carried on\nby Jama. Malcolm alone, who will ooueot\nsll outstanding accounts.\nDated at Nelson, British Columbia, Ola\nUth day of October, A.D., in*.\nH.   D.   ASHCROFT.\nJAME8 MALCOLM.\nWitness: A. M. John-on, Bolloltor, union, B. c.\nNOTIOE\nNOTICE I. hersby given that the partnership heretofore aubsLUng between u.\nth. undersigned s. baker, and confectioners lh the olty of Neleon has thi. day been\ndla-olved by mutual consent. All debts\nowing to the .aid partn-r-hlp aro to b.\npaid either to David Crawford or R, B.\nHoy of Nel-on aforesaid, and all.claim.\nlaalnat th. -aid partner-hip ar. to be presented either to llie Hid David Crawford\nor R. B. Bsy by whom th. ume will be\nMtU-d.\nDated at Nelson, B. C. tbls 1st day ot\nNovember, IM.\nDA VI11 CRAWFORD.\nROBllltT B, HAY.\nWMM-SI   I. A, II1EA8B, W-U|\n -ttf.\nTBI DAILY NBWB NEtBOS, B.C.,  WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 180S\n__________________\n**-\nWHEN ORDERING FtOUk\nsay to your grocer\ndistinctly\nNoilet's Best\nLeave nothing to chance.    The uni\nformity and superb quality of this west\nern family flour that has made it so\npopular has caused competitors to re\npresent their flour as \"Best.\"  There ls\nonly one \"BEST\" Hour   on tho B. C.\nmarket today   and   that   Is   Moffat's\n\"BB-JT.\"\nAvoid disappointment in Bread mak-\n* Ing by seeing that your sack bears the\nword Motfet's \"BEST.\"\nColumbia Flouring Mills Company. Ltd.\nENDERBY, B. C\n\"Jaeger\n,\" Pure\nWool\nFor Foot Comfort\nwear Jaeger Felt Slippers (lined or un-\nltned) soft, easy and restful to the feet.\nThe coziest and most comfortable slipper made.\nThey prevent the feet and legs from\nbecoming chilled by floor draughts.\nSold ln Nelson at the same moderate\npricea as elsewhere by\nJ. H. Wallace\nSelling agents ln Nelson.\n\"Jaeger\" Hoad Offlce for Canada, 101'.\nJames street, Montreal.\nWhat \"sterling\" means\n|to silver, what \"cutting\"\n] means to glass, what \"18k\"\nmeans to gold this trade\n| mark means to\nRUBBER rOOTUEAR '\nIt's the hallmark of\nquality.\nMaple Leaf Rubbers, as\ntheir'name signifies, are\nHADE IN CANADA\nfrom pure Para Rubber.\nAll kinds, all styles, all\nsizes. There are no others\n\"just as good\" for Western\nconditions.*\nJ. Leckie Co., Ltd.\nSel'lif Amts, Vi-coim*, B. I.\nNOTICE\n\"\\\nT. H. Wilson, Silverton, Is hortfty ml-\nthorlted to receive all -payments of* m*\noounts due me.\n(Signed) H. M. THORBIJBN.\nHAIL MINES' MEETING\nSHAREHOLDERS ADOPT REPORT OF\ni DIRECTORS.\nCOMPANY   rORMBD  TO  OPERATE\nTHB SILVER KINO MINE\n(London Financial Times)\nTho seventh ordinary general meeting of the Hall Mining & Smelting company, limited, (British Columbia), waa\nheld at River Plate House, Finsbury-\nclrouB, B.0., lord Ernest Hamilton (the\nchairman) presiding.\nThe secretary (Mr. A. E. Ashley)\nhaving read the notice convening the\nmeeting and the report of the auditor,\nthe chairman said: I should like to begin hy saying that it lias been a matter\nof considerable disappointment to the\ndirectors tbat the balance-sheet this\nyear does not show up better Last year\nthe balance-sheet showed an Improved-\nprofit on the previous year, and the pervious year again, showed an increased\nprofit on the year preceding that, and we\nhad; we thought, every reason to hope,\nif not to expect, that that Improvement\nin our profits would he permanently\nmaintained. However, that bas not\nproved to he the case, Thla year tho\nprofit on the mine account la \u00a31,1112,\nthe profit on the working of the Emma group la \u00a31,3.2 and the loss on the\nsmelting account Is \u00a31,030. lt ls, of\ncourse, owing to that loss on the smelting account that the balance-sheet does\nnot Bhow better. However, tho causes\nof that loss are very easily eiplalned,\nand I think when I have endeavored to\nmake clear to you what those, causes are\nyou will understand that though the results this year are disappointing, still\nthey are not in the least discouraging\nfrom the point of view of the future\nprospects ot the company.\nThe primary cause of the lose which\nthe smelting account shows this year ls\nundoubtedly the extreme caution whioh\nHie board on this aide and the management on the other side have ahown with\nregard to the Installation ot an Improved process at our works at Nelson for\nsmelting ores. I have told you on prevloua occasions that we had: in contemplation the Installation at onr smelting\nworka at a plant for the facilltatlnc and\ncheapening \u00ab\u2022' smelting and the Improvement fit extraction. There were In the\nHeld three rival processes, all of whicli\nclaimed our attention. These three were\n\u2022ultimately reduced to two, and the balance appeared to be very evenly divided\nibetween the merits ot those two. I\nithlnk you wlll understand how disastrous it would have been for a com-\nipany situated as we were to make tho\ncolossal mistake of Installing the plant\nof a new process which, when Installed,\nmight have turned out to be not by any\nmeans a failure, but other than absolutely the best process known In existence. The hoard, therefore, deliberate-\n*ly came to the conclusion that the best\n\u2022and safest policy was to face the probable loss which might ensue from being at a disadvantage with other competing smelters for a short period rather\nthan to run the rbsk of making such a\ndisastrous mistake as Installing a plant\nwhich was not absolutely the heat procurable. I Bhould like to make it quits\nclear why this has resulted In a loss. In\nthe district in whloh our Btnelter Is situated there are several rival smelters,\nand between, these Bmeltere the compeU-\n:tlon ls extremely keen for the ac<tulsl-\ntlon of certain very desirable ores, and\nthe form this compeUtlon takes Is ln\nthe underbidding of several smelters\ndown to the very lowest calculable margin of proitt. The effect, therefore, in\ntho past year has been that smelters\nwhich were better equipped than we were\n\u2014that la to Bay, had had these newer\nmethoda Installed in connection with\ntheir plants\u2014were able to bring down\nrates to such a low level that for a smelter which had not the advantage of the\nnew process there was a very alight\nmargin of molt, if any profit left at\nall. The very existence of a smelter,\naa you all know, depends upon a continuous supply ot ores, and therefore\nwe have been In the position thts year\nof having to bid at very low rates for\nores In order to maintain our existence,\neven though we knew that on those on*\n, with our then equipment there was practically no profit, ln this connection I\nmay say that we have now installed the\nWhen the Liver\nis out of Order\n.calomel, cascara, salts, strong liver pills\nand purging mineral waters -won't do\nany permanent good.\nWhen a person is bilious, the\nliver is not giving up enough bile\nto move the bowels regularly\u2014and\nsome of the bile is being absorbed\nby the blood. In other words,\nthe liver is in a weakened, unhealthy condition.\nNow, purgatives don't act on tbe Uver\nat all. They merely irritate the bowels,\nand afford only temporary relief. But\nFRUIT-A-TIVES are the one\ntrue UVER TONIC. They act\ndirectly on the liver\u2014strengthen\nand invigorate this vital organ\u2014\nand put it in a normal, healthy\ncondition.\nFRUIT-A-TIVES also stimulate the\nglands of the skin\u2014and regulate the\nkidneysandsweetenthestomach. When\nskin, Uver and kidneys are normally\nhealthy, there can be no biliousness, no\nconstipation, no kidney trouble, no\nimpure blood, no headaches.\nNo other medicine known to science\nis so reliable and so effective in curing\nBiliousness as these fruit Uver tablets.\nFRUIT-A-TIVES are fruit juices\nwith tonics added\u2014and ore free from\nalcohol and dangerous drugs.\n50c. a box or 6 for $2,50. Sent\non receipt of price, if your\ndruggist does not handle\nthem.\nFRUIT-A-TIVES\nLIMITED,\nOttawa;\n(five me it\nTin of\n\"Empress\nOoTTge.\nTh**.tsthewa>-_'hc.\nsafe *****\u2022\u2022 to buy Coffee.\n(To ask for Coffee,\nwithout specially men\n\u25a0tionMlEMPRESS BRAND\nCTrrEE\"lesyes you In\ndanger of getting one\nof the mwy ordinary\nhinds- none of which\nwill satisfy you.\nThe rich flavor,\nfragrant aroma and\nsustaining strengh of\n'Empress brand comE\nnw.Kes it well worth the\ntrouble of ashii\\-| for\nSold irvllb-Sf aibti-As\nby all good grocers.\nPACKED BY\nEmpress MaGst?\nVangouver.bg.\nprocess known as the Huntlngton-\nHeberlein. I went in the winter over to\nGermany and saw iho inventor and patentee of one of these processes, and I\nalso inspected his smelting works and\nsaw the process In operation there. In\nthe spring I also went to British Columbia and saw the rival process in\noperation at a neighboring smelter, and\nas tbe result of this and of other negotiations we Anally decided to insist\nthe Huntlngton-Heberlein process. In\naddition to this process we have put ln\nduring the past year very considerable\nImprovements and alterations in our\nsmelting plant Tho plant was originally very badly designed, and in a way\nwhich entailed a great deal of unnecessary handling and consequent manual\nlabor and expense, and as the labor situation is one of the greatest difficulties\nthat smelting managers have now to\ncontend with In British Columbia It became Quite clear to us that tt was absolutely necessary, even at considerable\nexpense, to Instal a utant whioh would\nhave the effect of doing away with this\ndouble handling and replacing manual\nlabor by mechanical appliances. The\neffect of all thts ts that we have spent\na good deal of money on the plant tn\nthe past year, and we are now, I think\nI may say, as fully and efficiently equipped as any other smelter tn British Columbia. Those of you who have read\nthe reports of our general manager and\not our smelting manager will see that\nthey both express the utmost confldence\nthat with the plant we now have they\n1 will In the future be able to make out of\nthe smelting business a very substantial profit\nThere Is not very much to be said with\nregard to the Elm-ma mine except this, that\ntrom the very tlrst It lias turned out a\n-most successful enterprise, and though the\nprofit Is not by any means a sensational\none, still that does not In the least represent the value of our Interest In the Bmma\n-mine. When I was over there 1 went down\nthe mine In company with the general\n\u25a0manager and I must say I was greatly\nimpressed with the size and solidity ot the\nore .body and also fey tbe indications which\nundoubtedly exist there that aa we drive\nfurther into the hill the value of the ore\nwlll materially increase. There. It every\nreason to believe that In course of time\nour quarter interest in the Bmma mine\nmay prove a very Important asset to tbe\nconmany.\nWith regard to the SUver King mine,\nyou remember that at the termination of\nhis lease ot the mine we entered Into a\npartnership agreement with Mr. Davys.\nThe terms of the partnership arrangement\nwere that Mr. Davys should aot as manager, with entire control, and without salary; that he should And half the capital\nwhich was required for further development, the oompany finding the other half,\nand that the proflts should be equally divided (between Mr. Davys and the company. The main object of this arrange-\nment\u2014which I may tell you was suggested\nto the company by Mr. Davys himself--\nwas the ultimate unwatertng of the mind\ndown to the seventh level. Mr. Davys expressed the wry strongest coivtidence in\nthe existenc of a strong body of ore between tbe firth and seventh levels, and It\nwas in order to unwater the mine 8'id get\nat tlmt ore body that this arrangement\nwas entered Into. Unfortunately, however,\nthe unwatertng ot Uie mine has not yet\ntaken place. We have from time to time\nrepresented to Mr. Davys the desirability\nof taking active measures In that direction, and when 1 was'over there I had an\nInterview with him on the subject and he\nquite agreed with me as to the desirability\not immediate action. We have had quite\nrecently a very candid, frank and straightforward letter from Mr. Davys on the\nsubject, ln which he says thut he confidently expected to be able to extract bo\nmuch ore from the upper levels as wouid\nfurnish him with the necessary capital to\nAnd his part of the money for the unwatertng of the lower levels. 1 must say that\nthis was not tn bur minds when we made\nthe arrangement with Mr. Davys, and we\ndid not at that time understand that his\nfinding half the capital for unwatertng the\nmine waa dependent upon his being able\nto get sufficient ore from the upper levels\nto provide him with funds; but he now\nstates frankly that having been disappointed with regard to the ore ln the upper levels, he Is not ln a. position to help\ntlie company In unwaterlng the mine, it\nmust be apparent to every shareholder\nas lt Is to the directors, how extremely desirable it Is that wtth copper at Its present unprecedented high price, action, and\nImmediate action, should, If possible, be\ntaken in order to ascertain whether there\nis a considerable body of copper ore below the fifth level.\nOur agreement with Mr. Davys terminates on the 30th June next year, and we\nhave now written to Mr, Campbell asking\nwhether Mr. Davys would release us from\nour partnership arrangement and allow us\nto work the mine ourselves. The letter\nhas been crossed by a cable containing a\nproposition from Mr. Davys himself to\ntransfer his partnership agreement to a\npowerful and substantial company, which\nwould take his place and whtch expresses\nUs anxiety to at once start unwaterlng\ntho mine and to get at the ore. The matter Is now in negotiation and on that subject 1 can give you no further information,\nhut we are quite alive to the Tact that\nwo must leave no stone unturned to unwater the mine and get at the ore if It\ndoes exist. I have already alluded once\nor twice to my visit to British Columbia\nthis year. I was at Nelson and the neighborhood for a week in company with our\ntwo managers, Mr. Campbell and Mr, Hedley and 1 must say I was Immensely struck\nwith their enthusiasm and by the determination which they both displayed to\nmake the affairs of the company a success; and not only by their determination,\nbut by the confidence which they both\nexpressed ln their ability to bring this\nabout. I hod ample opportunity of seeing\nthe working of our own smelter, and 1\nalso visited lhe smelters of Trail and of\nGranby and went down the Emma mine,\nand it will, no doubt, be a source of grati-\nilcatlon to the shareholders to know that\nmy visit was not mode at the expense of\nhe company. The chairman concluded by\nmoving the adoption of the report and\nbalance sheet.\nMr. 8. Boulnols seconded the motion.\nMr, F. Walker said that the dlreotors\nhad apparently entered Into a partner-\nHhlp wtth Mr. Davys, and he did not think\nthe arrangement reflected credit on Uie\nillrootors. Referring to the Loudon expenses\nhe expressed the opinion that they were\nfar too heavy for a company like this, and\nsuggested that steps should be taken to\nreduce them.\nThe ohairman In reply, said that he\nUd not think there was any co-use for\nalarm over what he had, perhaps, wrongfully described as a partnership with Mr.\nDavys. It was a working partnership and\nwhen they had entered Into the arrangement, whloh he could not say they had\nregretted, they did lt with their eyes open.\nIlu was perfectly certain that If any proposal to the advantage of tho company\nwere mado to Mr. Davys he would put no\nobstacle In the way to prevent It being\ncarried out. With regard to iho offlce expenses, no doubt they were high, but the\nmatter was now having the consideration\nof the directors, and he hoped that at the\nnext meeting ho would bo able to report\na reduction. There was no obligation on the\npart or Mr. Davys or tho company to find\nany -particular sum In order to unwater the\nmine. There was only a, stipulation that\nIf capital was found It was to be found\nIn equal proportions.\nMr. O.   Freeman expressed the opinion\nthat the oompany wns In a very much\nbetter position now than It was last year\nand he thought that at the next meeting\nthe dlreotors would have a muoh better\nbalance sheet to present.\nThe motion was carried unanimously.\nThe retiring director, Mr. O.  Freeman,\nwas re-elected, and Mr. Harry Baker was\nreappointed auditor.\nThe proceedings then terminated.\nThrifty l\u00ab]f\u00ab luyTWrlhoMitthi\nloyal\nTWENTY THOUSAND CLUB\nREPORT OF  FINANCES ON  ROSCIAN\nENTERTAINMENT\nSERIES   OF   DANCES   TO   BE  GIVEN\nDURING WINTER\nThe executive committee of the 20.WI)\nolub held their regular monthly meeting\nln the board of trade rooms last evening,\nFred Starkey In the chair. Among tbose\npresent were j, M. Lay, A. Lean, S. M.\nBrydges, I. G-. Nelson, 3. 3. Walker and\nFred Starkey.\nS. M. Brydges reported that the advertising committee had no further report to\nmake. Mr. Beeston said he had written the\nB. P. Engraving company at Victoria for\nthe cute and a letter had been received in\nreply saying the cuts had been shipped on\nNov. 9. When the outs arrived everything\nwould -be ready to go on with the printing\nor the new folder. The letter from the engraving company was referred back to the\nadvertising committee to take action.\nMr. Beeston further reported that a special article, together with some views sent\nto the Toronto Globe, had not appeared\nas the Globe asked (300 for Its publication\nand on consideration thc matter had been\ndropped.\nAt the committee's request Mr. Beeston\nwill take up the question of the publication of special articles with Collier's Weekly and the Pacific Monthly,\nThe secretary read a communication from\nC.P.R. land commissioner Dennis, addressed to T. G. Procter, asking for Information\nabout land sales In tho Kootenay during\n10M, and also for other specific information\nfor use in the company's annual publication.\nTho secretary stated that a letter had\nbeen sent to many local ranchers asking\nfor specific information as to their experience during the past year, this being\nasked for by Mr. Dennis. It was decided\nto prepared a special article on the fruit\nland situation hereabouts and hand the\nsame to the local agents, Messrs, H. and\nM. Bird. The matter or preparing the\nspecial article was referred to Tl. G.\nProcter and the secretary. The secretary\nwill also make, a special effort to get In\nthe views of local ranohers for use of thc\nC.P.R. land depratment.\nOn behair of the entertainment committee Mr. Walker read a statement of the\nRosclan entertainment given in the agricultural hall recently, showing a deficit.\nM. S. Parry received the following sums:\nFrom F. Bosquet at gate, \u00ab05; from C.\nLonghurst, 1172; from J. J. Walker, 75c;\nfrom Larsen, $1,60; balance due Parry, SO;\ntotal, 1286.26. Mr. Parry paid out thc rol-\nlowing: Rosclan opera company, 1200; for\nscenery, $10; labor, $15; W. H. Jones ror\nprinting, $8; cxpressage, $16.75; newsboys\nand ushers. 14.60; Wragge for royalty,\n$12,60; labor, $4; sundries, Parry, $10; hiring\nproperties,  $5.50;  total, $285.25.\nA supplemental account Hied showed the\nfollowing amount received, by Parry as\nper statement above, $285.25; deposited by\nLonghurst In bank, $110; received from advertising, $1.1; total receipts $406.26.\nDl&bursoment s; Paid by Parry as per\nstatement above, $285.25; W, P. Tlerney,\n$6; Mason and Risch, $6; playing for Co.,\n$10; messenger service, $14; F. Irvine and\ncompany, $2.26; Ashdown Hardware company, $29.l\u00bb; NeUon Transfer compnny,\n$5.26; labor, $8; Dally Canadian, $11; labor,\n$13.75; F. Irvine and compuny, $10.06; Btun-\ndard Furniture company, $8.40; total,\n$407.85.\nMr. Lny thought that In future all payments should be made only through tho\nclub's treasurer on tho \"O.K.\" of tho\nchairmen of tho respective committee--., a\nmotion to that effect was unanimously carried.\nA vote of thanks to M. S, Parry for his\nefforts ln carrying out the Rosclan entertainment was passed.\nIt wob the general opinion that under the\ncircumstances the club got off fairly easy.\nTho secretary asked for Instructions regarding the issuing weekly or the mining\nshipments aa appearing In The Dally News.\nMr. Lay thought the arrangement ought\nto be continued; It was one of the hest\nkinds or advertising ,and ho moved that\nIt be continued.   Mr. Nelson seconded the\nmotion, which carried.\nMr. Lay reported $261.39 cash in the bank.\nThe salary or the secretary for December,  January and February was fixed  ul\n$25 a month.   The rent of the office, $10 a\nmonth, was loft at thut ngure.\nMessrs. \\V, Walker, allium and Procter\nwill be asked to assist the entertainment\ncommittee in getting up the dances.\nThe socrenry was Instructed to got into\ncommunication with all tourist associations\nIn Canada und in Seattle and Spokano and\narrange for exchange ot literature and\nbusiness generally.\nThe regular meeting of tho club will be\nheld two weeks hence. The meeting then\nadjourned.\nevery point scored was taken up by the\naudience. Pearl Reesor made a charming\nsweetheart, looking and speaking her part\nmoat naturally. The cowboys were very\nlifelike and the occasional lapses Into cursory adjectival English was rorgiven from\nita very truthfulness, Honey Wlggln was\neasily the best, however, although Travers\ndid well as Steve. Mr. Ynle kept his role\nthroughout and showed that lie has something In him beyond mere rarco comedy.\n\u25a0He never degenerated Into mere tomfoolery\n-but kept his audience In a roar nevertheless. George A. Dayton aa the villain,\nTram pas, played well. The contrast be-\ntyeen the part and that of Monday night,\nwhen he appoared as the chancellor of\nWolfsberg, was marked enough to emphasize the verdlitlllty for which this actor is\nknown In New York.\nThe house was better than that of Monday night but Nelson play goers who ore\nnot going \"early and often\" are missing\na rare treat.\neast to point of commencement, the whole\ncontaining 160 aores.\nA. M, PINOLE, Locator.\n8. E. OLIVER, Agent.\n.  Sept. 12, 1908.\nAT THE THEATRE\nGood Production of \"The Virginian\"\u2014\nDouble Bill This Evening\n\"Ohe or the prettiest things ever seen\non the Nelson stage,\" was the dictum ot a\nwell known play goer last night after\nwitnessing the Nelson company ln Owen\nWlster's dramatized novel, \"The Virginian.\" Such Is doubtless the verdict of\nthe great majority of the audience, for\nthe applause wus continuous throughout\nand certainly the Nelson coinpany cannot\ncomplain or a cold house\u2014ir they wll) only\nvivify it wtth the right kind or play. With\ntho \"Soldier of Fortune\" ou Monday night\nand \"The Virginian last night, the company hns begun the week well. Tonight\nwill be played \"David Gnrrlck's First\nLove\"; on Thursday, \"Arizona,\" and on\nFriday night \"The Merchant of Venice.\"\nNo bill was announced last night for Saturday but It would be a good thing to end\nthe week with \"As You Like it.\" It Is\none of tho finest or Shakespeare's plays\nand It ls understood that It la on the repertoire of the company. Harold Nelson's\nspurs were won in the Kootenay with\nShekespeare and there are many who\nwould like to see him as Orlando, to say\nnothing of the opportunity of presenting\na new Rosalind, and a pretty one, to a\nNelson audlance.\nThe honors of \"The Virginian\" were\nfairly divided between Clifford Bruce ns\nthe Virginian, and William Yule, as Honey\nWlggln. The charm of the love scenes bet-ween the Virginian and the sohool marm.\nPearl Reesor, was fully appreciated by\nthe house.   Bruce U good ae a lover and\nMININO REJCORDS.\nAt the mining recorder's office on November 13, certificates of work were\nIssued to J. B. Flerct on the Evening\nStar and on the North Star and to James\nMiller on the Little Gem.\nA bill of sale was recorded transfer-\ntng the Black Jack, a mile and a quarter\neast of Kitchener from G. A. Hunt to\nMrs. L. Lalb.  Consideration nominal.\nAn agreement was recorded between\nC Olmstead of Nelson. A. G. Duncalfe of\nVancouver, and A. B. Irwin of Vancouver, in which tt Is recited that Olmstead Is Indebted to Duncalfe in the\nsum of $1965, and for lie purpose of\nsecuring the debt Olmstead grants a\nmortgage to Irwla as trustee for the\ncollection of the debt for the amount\nnamed, on the Columbian mineral claim\non Sheep creek. There are the usual\nclauses providing for sale in case of default of payment '\nMinard's Liniment Cures Colds, etc.\nNOTICE is hereby given that two montha\nafter date I intend to apply to the Chlet\nCommissioner of Lands and Works for permission to purchase the following described\nlands, situate in West Kootenay district:\nCommencing at the southwest corner ot\nLot 4682,. thence south 60 chains; thence\nweat -tt chains, more or less, to the Kootenay river; thence following the shore of\nsame river northeasterly to point of 00m-\nmenoement, oomprlslng 160 acres, more or\nlesa.\nDated Sept 26, 1901 -\nA. FTFB.\nJANITOR WANTED\nApplications for the position of janitor\nof the Public School building. Nelson, will\nbe received by the undersigned until 6\np.m. on Friday, 16th Instant. Duties to\nbegin Dec. 1, 1000.\nE.   C.  ARTHUR\nYMIR LICENSE DISTRICT\nNOTICE is hereby given that at a meeting of thc Board of License Commission\ners to bo held at  the Chief Constable^\nofllce at Nelson, B.C.. on tho 16th December, 1906, I Intend to apply for a transfer\nof my hotel license for the Outlet hotel\nat Procter, to Gilbert Thomas Snow.\nT. O. PROCTER.\nNovember, 13th, 1906.\nLAND NOTICES\nNOTICE is hereby given that 60 days\n* after date I Intend lo apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works for\npermission to purchase about 160 acres of\nland, situated In the West Kootenay district, and described as follows: Commencing at a post marked \"W. L. Coog-\nun's S.E. corner post,\" situated at A. M.\nLang's S.W, corner post of lot 17*11, near\nQ-Mlle oreek, Pend d'Orellle river, thence\nnorth 20 chains; thence west 80 chains;\nthenco south 20 chains; thence east 80\nchains to tlie place or beginning.\nWnnela,  B.C.,  12Lh Nov., 1906.\n11-17 W.    L.    COOOAN.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that sixty days\nafter date I Intend to apply Io the Hon.\n(he Chief Commissioner of Lands and\nWorks- for permission to purchase the following described lands ln West Kootenay\ndistrict: Commencing at a post marked\n\u25a0\u25a0Charles T. Partington's N.W. corner,\"\nsituated on tlie taat side of 7-Mile creek on\na small branch of same on the Pend\nrOrlello river, and adjoining John James'\npre-emption on tho south, and W. A.\nDuncan's purchase applied for, on the\neast, thence 10 olialns south; thenco east\nSO chulns; thence north -10 chains; thence\nwast SO chains to point of commencement,\nand containing 320 acres .more or less.\nLocated this Kith day of October, 1906.\nCHAS. T. PARTING-TON\nW.  A.  DUNCAN.  Agent.\nNOTICE is hereby given that 60 days\nutter date 1 Intend to apply tu the Hon.\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nror permission to purchase the following\ndescribed lands ln the Lower Arrow take\ndistrict, about three mllea above the\nNeedles postofflce on the west side of the\nlake: Commencing at the southwest oorner or F. B. Lucbb' pre-emption, post No.\n1 40 chain-- west to Post No. 2; thenoe\n20 chains north to post No. 2; thence 40\nchains eaat to post No. 4; Uience 20 chains\nsouth to pluce of commencement.\nDated this 23rd day or October, ltwti.\nA, V. LUCAS. IO--\/*\nNOTICE ls hereby given that 60 days\nafter date I intend to apply to the Hon.\nthe Chler Commissioner or Lands and\nWjorks for permission to purchase the\nfollowing described lands in West Kootenay district; Commenolng at a post\nmarked \"M.E.T.'s northwest post\" and\nplanted on the east line of Lot No. 3872,\nabuut one mile trom Kootenay river on\nthe south side, thence 80 chalnB south;\nihence 20 chalnB eust; thence 80 chains\nnorth; thence 20 chains west, to point of\nbeginning.\nM. E.  TAYL'.iVI..\nW. J. TOYE, Ai-int.\nDated  this 22nd day of Ai'irust, 18*06.\nNOTICB Ih hereby given that sixty days\nartor date I Intend to apply to the Hon\nChlor Commissioner or Lands and Works\nfor permission to purchase the tollowing\ndescribed lands, situate in West Kootenay\ndistrict:  Starting 400  reot  weBt or post\nmarked  \"R.    Corlett'B    southeast corner\npost,\"  about ten chains from   Kootenay\nriver, IB chalnB west to lot 6082, more or\nleas;   thence IB chains   north;   thence IB\nchuins east, more or less; thenco IB ohalns\nto place of commencement.\nDated this 13th day or Oot., 1906.\nR. CORliETT.\nSixty days after dato I Intend to apply\nto the Hon. the Chief Commissioner ot\nLands and Works, tor permission to pur*\nchase the following described lands ln\nWest Kootenny District: Commenolng at\na post marked \"A. M. Pingle's 8.E. poet.\"\nthence 40 chalnB north to S.E. corner ot\nlot 8512, .near south shore of West Arm ol\nKootenay lake; thence 40 chains west;\nthenoe 40 chains south; thence 40 ohalni\nNOTICE Is hereby given that sixty days\nafter date I intend to apply to the Hon.\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\ntor permission to purohase the following\ndescribed lands, situate In West Kootenay\ndistrict, starting from a post marked\n\"Margaret McLeod's southwest corner,\"\nadjoining application to purohase of W. J.\nToye on the Arrow lake, about eight miles\naouth from Nakusp, thence 80 ohalns east;\nthence 40 ohalns north; thenoe 80 chains\nwest; thence 40 chains south to point of\ncommencement\nDated  this 10th day of October, 1U0B.\nMARGARET McLEOD.\nJ. E. TAYLOR, Agent,\nNOTICB ls hereby given that 60 daya after\ndate I Intend to apply to the Hon, the\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works-\ntor permission to purohase the tollowing\ndescribed lands, situate In West Kootenay\nDiatrict; Commencing at a poat marked\n\"Minnie McPherson's northeast corner,\"\nand situated three miles west of the Upper Arrow lake, near Fosthall creek, thence\nrunning 80 chains south; thence 80 chains\nwest; thence 80 chains north; thence su\nchains east to point or commencement, and\ncontaining tiW acres; more or less.\nminnie Mcpherson.\nJ. E. TAYLOR, Agent.      10-20\nDated this 8th day of October, 1906.\nNOTICE is hereby given that 60 dav*\nafter date I intend to apply to the Cb.e\nCommissioner or Lands and Works t&'<\npermission to purchase the following described land In West Kootenay district:,\ncommencing at a post marked \"Q. A.\nBrown's N.E. corner,\" said poBt being \u25a0**>\nchains north or southwest corner or lot\n301A, and at southeast corner or lot 6591,\nthence 20 chains south; thence 40 chains\nwest; thence 20 chains north; thence 40\nchains east, to place of beginning, containing 80 acres.\nG. A. BROWN.\nK. K. BJERKNESS, Agent.\nLocated this lath day of August, 1906.\nSixty days after date I Intend to apply to tbe Hon. Chief Commissioner ot\nLandB and Works for permission to purchase the tollowing described lands situate\nin West Kootenay district, and adjoining\nN. D. Stewart's pre-emption, starting lfi\nchains west from N. D. Stewart's northeast corner post, thence west 40 chalnB;\nthence north 40 chains; thence east 40\nchaina; thence south 40 chains to point of\ncommencement.\nDated Sept. 22nd, 1906.\nN. D. STEWART.\nSixty days after date I intend to apply\nto the Hon. the Chief Commissioner ot\nLands asd Works, for permission to purchase the tollowing described lands ln\nWest Kootenay District: Commencing at\na post marked \"E.T.'s S.E. oorner,\" on\nwest Bhore of Kootenay lake, about four\nmiles south or Wilson creek, thence 20\nchaina west; thence 60 chains north; tbence\n20 chains east, more or less to lake; thence\nSO chains south alung shore line, to point\nor commencement, (containing 160 acres\nmore or less.\nSept. 17, 1906.\nERROL   TRELEAVEN,   Locator.\nS. B. OLIVER, Agent.\nNOTICB Is hereby given that 60 days ar-\nter date I Intend to apply to the Hon.\nChief commissioner or Lands and Works\nat Victoria, tor permlaslon to purchase\nthe tollowing described landB situate In\nFlre Valley, West Kootenay dlstrlot, Joining L. C. Morrison's ranch, starting at a\npoat marked \"L, C. Morrison's N.W. corner post,\" running 40 chains east; thence\nSO chains south; thenoe 20 chains west;\nthence 40 chains north; thence 20 chains\nwest; tence 40 chaina north, to place ot\ncommencement, containing 240 aores more\nor lees.\nDated Sept. 24, 1906.\nL.  C.  MORRISON.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that sixty days\nrrom date I intend to apply to the Hon.\nthe Chler  Commissioner   or   Lands and\nWorks   for  permission   to   purohase  the\nfollowing described lands situate on the\nwest side or lower Arrow lake; Commencing at a poet planted about 30 chains north\nof   Paul  Auder's    pre-emption    on  Band\ncreek, marked \"P.A.'b S.E. corner,\" thence\n40 chains north;   thence 30 ohuins west;\nthenco 40 chains south;  thence 80 chains\nesst to point or commencement.\nPAUL AUDERS.\nW. R. HOBBS, Agent\nLocated Oct. 6th, 1906.\nNOTIOE is hereby given that sixty days\nIrom date I Intend to apply to the Hon.\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor permission to purchase the following\ndeacrlbed lands situate In West Kootenay district: Commencing at a post plunted at the southwest corner of John Logan's application to purchase, one milo\nsouth of Fosthal lcreck, und three and a\nhalf miles west of tho weat ahore of Arrow lake .and marked \"Elizabeth Taylor's\nN.E. corner, thence SO chaina west; thence\n80 chains south; thence 80 chains east;\nthence 80 chains north to point of commencement.\nDated thla 29th duy of .October, 1906.\nELIZABETH TAYLOR.\nJ. E. TAYLOR, Agent. u-S\nNOTICB la hereby given that 60 days after\ndate I Intend to apply to the Hon, the\nChief Commissioner or Lands and Works\ntor permission to purohaae the tollowing\ndescribed lands, situate in West Kootenay\nDistrict: Commencing af a post marked\n\"Peter McPherson's southeast corner,\"\nthree miles west rrom the. Upper Arrow\nLake, near Fosthall creek, thence 80 ohalna\nnorth; thence 80 chains west; thenee tw\nchains south; thence SO chains east to\npoint of commencement, containing Mil\naores, more or leas. -\nPETER MCPHERSON.\nJ. E.  TAYLOR, Agent.      10-20,\nDated this ith day of October, ifos,   u\n __o<Jr Ops)\ntn naitt raws, mtsoM, t, e\u201e wednesda*. govaausn u, tsos\nChoice Acre Blocks\nIn Lot 97\nFive minutes (rom oar line. Oood\nbuilding lota ln Hume addition to Nelaon\nCity.\nFruit land In blocks of 40 Is 820 acrea\ntin West Arm and Lake.\nH. L Croasdaile & Go.\nMot next loot Caa. Bank at oomm.r-*\n-non. Ml      N-,1-0*. B.e.      P.O. to-i m\nCOAL\n\u00ab2-Tm tlc 1 Dir\u00ab' torn****** \u00ab<*<\u2022*\n-fmlthlng   j     \u00abo\u00abl'~\u00abwyP\u00bb\"\u00ab\"\n*W. *F.  TIBJE3STEIT\nGENERAL, SALES AGENT\nbox 823. Nelson, B.C.\nMEN'S QLOVES\nFOR\nEVSRY PURPOSE\nWt- uulect our gloves rrom the product of the best makers' best.\nGloves ror working  60o to 11.75\nGlove*-* ror th<* Httettt  tl to U.5-J\nUloves tor dr-rsa  76q to fl\nW-B'RE LONG ON GLOVBS\nE-mory & Walley\nTHE RUB\nPB1CB Of MBTALtt\nNew York. Nv. 13-Sliver, 71 1-2; casting\ntopper. 21 3-8; lead, 15.76.\n, London. Nov. 13 - Silver. 33: lead,   \"IB\n7s. dl.\nOLSON'S NEWS OF THE DAY\nK.   S.   II.  Winn, barrister or Rossland,\nis In the city nn legal -buslnei-s.\nTicket No. 7S6 won the prise at the Ool-\nlury grocery raffle last night.\nTUNh Sped left last night ror Armstrong\ncon u two weeks' visit to hpr mother.\nturnnd rrom a\n>s ut Butte, Bt.\nMrs, T. Q. Kelson has\nI, .o montlis' visit to relat'\n1'ititi and isflnnt-apolls,\n.Then.* may ba \"some money ror you\"\nhid* \u25a0 n away among today's claf-wtfied ada.\nTry to locate 11\u2014Iw a \"'prospector.\"\nTho Junior Auxiliary of Bt. Saviour's\nchurch will give an afternoon tea in the\nparish Iiou.h-l- this afternoon at 3:30,\n\u2022 .At a meeting of the executive of the\nNelson choral aodeiv It was decided to recommence jiractices the first Monday in\nJanuary.\nTlmi'Miy challenges the sconi or women;\nr-nd (is store advertising Is directed chiefly\nl i womr-n, timidity ns lo space used Is\nt..n any better pollo'y Ihan Ih timidity or\nben ring or conduct In a suitor.\nThero la nearly always something NEW\nl-i a store tbat advertises. You will not\nt fad the same old Ktorks you saw nn your\nlujt visit\u2014 rur publicity will have sold them\nand made room and necessity for a proces-\ntlon of new tilings.\nComplaints were ugatn made last nig tit\nat (be opera house of some young hoodlums lu tht- gallery who Insist upon cat-\neaUing In a most hideous manner. The\nlions.' Is losing pat runs by the neglect to\nsuppress this nuivunct-.\nAt i.ln* meeting nt tbe Hume last night\nof those Interested in supporting hockey\nfir tlm forthcoming season It was decided\n10 adjourn ror a week Hnd to hold a meat*\nlug next Tuesday evt>nlng at 8 o'clock in\nAlex.    I'Hfe'r- barber shop.\nThat real estate Is moving, and moving\nIn thc right direction, Ih Instanced by a\ntransaction that was closed yesterday,\nLess than a. week ago Mike Scully sold a\n60x120 lot on west Baker street, adjoining\nthe IJ. C, GohUlPlds ofllce. It is said for\nIIJOO. Mr. Svulfy lias been holding the lot\n1 ir some time and wus ple-iHfd to part with\nIt Tor the (tgufe mentioned. Yesterday the\nHtme lot changed hands for HtXW and Mr.\nrr:ully's Wows en the value of Haker atreet\nTHS STORE OF QUALITY\nFOBtive merit ensures public patronage. The foundation of value ls quality.\nFor thla reason our\nMonarch\nGoffee\nIs the best sold In Nelson.\nGround., pulverized or ln the bean, at\n45c per Ib,\nIt has no superior; people who once Iry\nit always use it\nRobt N|. Hood & Go.\nGROCERIES tut PROVISIONS.\nS. W. O. BLOCK NBLSON, B. O.\nPHONB 10.\n$600 GASH\nand monthly payments\nwill purchase a seven\nroomed residence and\nthree lots. The position is especially will\nsuited for railway or\nsmeller men.\nR&M.BIRD\nNBLB0N, B.0.\nWe Invite You\ni\nTo come and visit our store and will be pleased \u25a0\nto show you our large and well assorted stock of ;\nSTOVES AND RANGES\nWhether you buy or not it is a pleasure \u2022\nfor us to show what a COMPLETE STOCK |\nof these goods really means.   Also I\nGuns, Rifles and Ammunition \u2666\nThe J. H. Ashdown Hardware Co., Ltd.!\nNBLSON BRANCH X\n\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u00bb 4*e*\u2666\u25a0>\u2666\u2666 #\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666 \u2666\u00bb\u2666\u25a0>\u2666\u2022>\u2666\u2022>\u2666\u2666.\nvacant lota are said lo have undergone a\nolianga.\nThe regular monthly uic-eilng of tho Nelaon liberal association will lie held tomorrow evening at tho board of trade roo-ma.\nApart from the regular business there win\nbe a debate on tho Hindu immigration\nquestion.\nAccording to the -last Provincial Gazette tho Undsley* Bros, company has been\nregistered aa an extra-provincial company,\ncapital of \u00bb25,00O. The head olllce la in Portland, Ore., and tho office In the province\nIs ln this city, with Edward J. Llndsley\n\u00ab.h Its attorney.\nThe C.P.R. coatt:*Bniintuuy train reached the olty Bhortly ufier m.dn gill, the delay being caimwl by iho down river m. amer\n.b\u00ablng away behind lime. Tt e Ureal Northern e-spreHH reached here several houra late\nlast nlffht, the delay being occasioned by\npour coul.\nThe Catholic Ladles\" aid will serve lunch\nand dinner at the forthci tiling sale or\nwork, including oytAer soup, and candles\nwlll be di-ppenfled by M-lta Sturgeon, nil ot\nwhich wl I Ik- homemade. The sol-' of work\ntakes place one week from today, Wednesday. Nov. 21.\nAt the meeting of tiie Nclon Trades\nand Labor council Inst evi-ling. delegate\nWm. Johnston made his report on tlio\nVancouver labor convention, reciting what\noccurred, particular.-; of Which bave already, been given very fully Jn these\ncolumns. Mr. Johnston's report was unanimously adopted.\nTRIAL OP HARRY~THA\\V\nNew York, Nov. ia*-Dla-trict atlorncj\nJerome aald tonight that the trial of Harry\nThaw would be moved for the llrst week\nln December. Ho stated that the Judge\nwho would try the case had not been decided on, but that It probably would be\nheard before recorder Ooff In the court ot\ngMit-ral Hwtslon-*. Mr. Jerome said that he\nwould conduct tho prosecution and would\nbe utwlstftd by awrlHlant district attorney\nGarvin. ,\n\u2022vS^?\nHTME-A. Carney. If. A. Carney, Kaalo;\nJ. \\V. Collins; A. Casey, J. 0. Milllchamp,\nJ. Oppcnhelmer. Vancouver; G. \\V. Beat-\ntie. \/Jninbrook; A. J. Jackson, Greenwood;\nIf. S.   Holeroft, Toronto.\nSIHEKBROOlCli-jr. O. Ferguson. Midway; G. Prulx. J. Stedlte, A. Dlxn. ti.\nGoute, Argenta min; A. Carrion?, Salmo;\nJ. Smith. W. F. Ward. C. Housden; J.\nAetam. J. Gibson. Shields; H. Both.Ol-\ntatta; W. F. McOotinell, Tronto.\nCLUB\u2014W. A. Woods, Kaslo; J, McCallum, Ymlr.\nHOYAI-r-.P. Culver, Silverton; J. C. NcW-\nMuu, Moose- Jaw.\nWe Can Sell Yon\nAn Iron bed, a good spring and mat-\ntre-w, double slie, for\n$12.50\nThin Is a special, good for only a\nfew days, do not miss thts opportunity; only OO on hand.\nThe STANDARD FURNITURE Co.\nComplete House Furnishers   Undertakers and Embalmers\nAOBNTS Mason -ft Risch Pianos   Olobe Wernicke Book   Oases,    oster-\nraoor Mattresses,\nSTItATHCONA-Kdbert Irving. Kaslo; C.\nOlmstead. New York; C. II. Smith, Spokane; IS. Hi Balls, Ravelstbko; E. J. Grant,\nJ.  Smith, I'.  Henderson, Rossland.\nQlMiENS-Mrs. W. Simpson; Howser; K.\nWilkes, Jerry from Kerry Co.; H. Hamilton, Granite.\n12ARTLICTT-T. Ruoko, Cork mine; A.\nB, Burkman, Hewitt mine; T. Jones. Poor-\nman mine.\nLAKEVfEW-G. W. Langdon, U. Davey,\nCranbrook.\nKOOTENAY-T. B. Mtirflitt, A. Wiles,\nEstevan, 1>. Cesare, U .Vlncetfao, Italy;\nv,  Muto, Slocan.\nNELBON\u2014N. IV. Howe .Cranbrook; J.\nA. Kaster und wire, Spokane; P. P. Parker and wife; G. Coulson snd wife, .Miss\nN. La Mont. Novelty Amusement Co,; J.\nP. Pall, Rltisvlllo; E. F. O'Connor, Bradford;   B.    Battams,   Bl lings.\nMADUBN-G, Henderson, Slocan; R. 3.\nSheedy, Spokane; E. C, Klrkhuff, Portland; J, Wolverton. Spokane.\nGRAND CENTRAI--C. Blndhiill. llart-\nnoy; T. McArthur, C. B. Sibbald, G. Dewar, G. Walker, Ymlr; Miss L. M, Schultz,\nAirs.   Hognn,  Sprague.\nThrifty Buyers Buy Their Shoes at tip\nrjoyal\nNew Stock\nJust\nArrived\nChina and\nCut Glass\nOur famous Salt and Pepper Shakers at 75c\n**.   a pair are now on sale.   These will be sent\nby mail to any part of the country.\nOrder now.\nJ. O. PATENAUDE\nWATCKMAKER\nl-MtU-M-****.-**- JEWELER\nMMM-M*\nHORSES SI-\nTwo carloads to arrive Monday, November 5th.\nNelson Transfer Co.\nPhone 35\nOffice and Stables corner of Vernon\nand Stanley.\nIt's up to you\nTo keep your feet dry and warm.\nWhether It be RUBBERS or waterproof boots, we can supply you. Our\nBtock Is complete.\nTHE ROYAL\nR. Andrew to Co. Nelaon\nCigars, Tobaccos\nand\nG.B.D.\nPIPES\nat the\nCabi-qet Oigar Store\nG t. HHTTHIW, Prop., Baker St.\nChina\n\"We have jutu opened up a tine\nassortment or China Tea Sets tine,\nqunlliy and dainty decorations, ?f>\nup. Also other odds and ends In\n\u2022China .Vases, Cheeae Dishes, nets\nor Jugs. Plates, Cups and Saucers,\nBroad Trays, JnHlJhlWB, \"Bruah and\nComb Trays, etc., at lowest prices.\nA 4 h.p. Gasoline Launch In good\ncondition, with boat house.\nCHINA HAIL\nMunro A Nelsoi, Proprs,\nP. 0. Box 588. Phone A261\nJUSnRY A LITTLE\nof our delicious Home Made Candy. Its\nthe kind that melts In one's mouth. A\ndozen different kinds.\nHot Drinks and Oyster Cocktails.\nCUT FLOWERS\nLONGHURST\nPhone 25\nBaker St.\nChocolates\nThe best quality of\nChocolates will always be found at\nmoderate   prices   at\nwa\\?   CHOQULTrE BROS.\nPHONB IU BAKBR STRBBT\n$2300 will buy\nA large two-story dwelling and two\nlots on Mill street. Parlor, dtningroom\nkitchen, four bedrooms, bathroom.\nElectric light; house in excellent condition.\nTerms: $300 cash, $500 in quarterly\npayments; $1500 on mortgage.\nricDermid & McHardy\nA Snap in Large Sized\nLumbermen's\nRubbers\nWe have a number of two buckle,\ncorrugated edge, solid heel rubbers,\nsize 11, which we will clear at $2.00,\nworth |2.75; and two buckle, plain,\nquarter heel, for tl.60. worth $2.00.\nThis Is a bargain for those requiring\nlarge sizes.\nJ. H. WALLACE\nHUN'S OUTFITTER\n\\ Here's an Opportunity\nYoii don't have every dayi\nFresh ground\n\"I & K\" BUGKWHFAT FtOIIR\nstraight from the mill at Victoria, It's,.\nput up In 10-lb. sacks, not the so-calledi\n\"self-raising\" kind. Ask your grocer!\nfor It.\nTbe Braekman-Ker Milling Co.. Ltd.J\nCAREFUL HOUSEKEEPERS\nwho like ilainly creations, should meet   Mm.\" Lloyd,   who   is   demontsratin*r\nCowan's Cocoa, Chocolate Cake lolnga. eto. .\nMrs. Lloyd will be at our store today and Saturday.  You ore cordially invited tu drop in while out shopping, and try a oup of Cowan's Cocoa.\nThe Bell Trading Company\nW^r\nIfpffr\nThe Medicine Chesti\nShould have a bottle of cough medicine this weather.\nOur Wild Cherry, Spruce nnd Tar Id\nthe best and safoRt remedy for coughi.\nand sore chests. T faes 25c and 50c ]\nbottles..\nWe have double ic.t, cheat protectors,\n3 sizes at 40c and 50c each.*\nChamois Vests, double, $2.00 each.\nMall orders filled promptly.\nWM. RUTHERFORD\nDRUGQIBT\nWard Street. Nelson, B.O.\nt ISTRN !   We can prove are covered with tha best chocolate.\nuiuiijn,    to you that\nHave the moat delicious centre*\n\"     lllllllflliltlii.  Are the best keepers and most popular\n-UUUUU--UU Aom}tta on (j,, mark,t\nYou can't go wrong on any sited order but a small one.  Patronise horn*\nIndustry.\n*}. A. iVTDONALD\n\u2022^WHOLESALE  FRUIT   AND   CONFECTIONERY\n-V\\t')i^\\iiia\u00ab^-iivi<*ii-iia\/^ \u2022 o\u00abiii\/-4\u00ab-ii'iii^a\/-i\u00ab>\u00ab\u00abia*^a<<i'\nI Woodenware\n3\n3\n3\n3\n1\ntl\n-3\n3\n3\ni\n3\n3\n3\nWe have opened up another lot ot  line  woodenware,  Including t_\nBread Boards (round, square and oval), Butter Dishes (glass center)\n26c; Chopping Bowls, Spoons, Etc., Etc.\nNelson Hardware Company\nPIIOiNE 15\nNELSON, B. C.\n$1000 CASH\nBalance ln easy payment*, will purchase a modern two-story house on\nCedar street; 7 rooms,..electric light and gas connections.   Price 13000.\nWe have tor sale a good paying buslnes\u2014a going concern\u2014or wlll con-\nalder a proposition for Investment aaa partner. Only those meaning business apply to * i ^ (\nMcMorris & Horstead\nFIRE AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE.   PHONE 209. EMPLOYMENT AOBNTS\nElliot Block, Baker St, Next Walker's Jewelry Store.\nHouse For Sale\n^$1800\nApply to\nWe have for sale a fine seven\nroomed house,, in good repair,,\ntwo blocks from Baker Street.\nHas all modern improvements-.\nCan. arrange terms,\nFruit Land, and Real Batata\nTOYE  &  CO.\nNdion, B, C.\nNew\nBooks\nWayside Talks, by Wagner 11.15\nThe Ooapel of Life 11.15\nThe White Plumes ot Navare\t\nCrocket   flM\nSir Ntgel,,Conan Doyle 11.25\nThe Silver Maple, Marian Keith.. 11.25\nThe Call of the Blood,' Robert\t\nHlchene ..'...................'1.15\nWesley and Hla Century .., $1.75\nThe Roosevelt Bears Teddy b\u201e and Teddy o. \u00ab.to\nCanada Drag and Book Go's Stores\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"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.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1906_11_14","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0382219","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : F.J. Deane","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/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","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"The Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}