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J\nloners. Try One, per word |(J\nVOL.7\nNELSON,  B. C.   WEDNESDAY  MORNING,  OCTOBER  7. 1908\n-are csSiSlQHh^raiUs^^fie cavalry bar-\nNO. 142\nBIG SUCCESS\nEnthusiasm Reigns at Young\nConservative Smoker\nMR. GOODEVE IS PRESENT\nCANDIDATE DELIVERED   AN    ELOQUENT      ADDRE88      AND      18\nCHEERED   TO   THE   ECHO   BY\nLARGE    MEETING\u2014OTHER    ADDRESSES,  80NG8    MUSIC,   ETC.\nThe smoking concert given by the\nYoung Conservatives In their club rooms\nlast night, was one of the most successful affairs of Its kind ever held In Nelson and the officers and members are\nto be congratulated on the success. of\ntheir efforts.\nThat such a large audience as that\nwhich was present should remain till\nlong after midnight for the express\npurpose of greeting A. S. Goodeve, the\nconservative standard bearer in the\npending election, speaks volumes for\nthe enthusiasm of the people ot Nelson\nin their support of the principles of the\nccnservative party and success of the\neloquent and magnetic candidate whom\nthey are supporting. Not a man went\nhome, and when Mr. Goodeve did arrive, the enthusiastic and prolonged applause which greeted him on entering\nthe hall and which was renewed time\nand again throughout his speech was a\nsure and certain evidence of the spirit\nof the electorate and their determination to land Mr. Goodeve at the top of\nthe poll.\nOn being Introduced by chairman\nSewell as the man who stood for a\nwhite British Columbia, better terms\nfor the province and the conservative\ncause, Mr. Goodeve delivered an eloquent half hour speech which bristled\nwith telling points. He told his audience of his reception throughout East\nKootenay and of the support which he\nwas receiving, not only from friends\nof the party, but from liberals who\nwere disgusted with the petty tactics of\nSmith Curtis and his party managers.\nHe spoke modestly of himself. He did\nnot ask people to work and vote, for\nhim personally;'but for the principles\nthat -he represented, which meant the\nupbuilding of Canada.\nHe said that he found, from one end\nof the rising to tbe other that not only\nthe great Independent vote, * but even\nliberals were rallying to the standard,\ndetermined to stand by the party that\nstood for clean, patriotic government no\nmatter what tactics might be pursued\nto defeat the best interests of Canada.\nIn this present fight, throughout this\nprovince and Canada from the Atlantic\nto the Pacific a wave was arising and\ngathering strength that would sweep\nfrom power those who had been re-\n,- creant to their trust, and would place\nat the helm, the liberal-conservative\nparty which had brought about confederation and should guide the destinies\nof this fair Dominion to their, full\nfruitive.\nThe climax of Mr. Goodeve's splendid\nperoration was greeted with round after\nround of applause and his speech closed\namid the greatest possible enthusiasm.\nThe idea of holding the meeting was\nto lend zest to the start In of the federal election contest which Is now under way and the notion was carried out\nIn a most happy and successful manner.\nPromptly at ft o'clock president Sewell opened the ball and from that time\ntill the close of the proceedings, the!\nbumper audience, which filled the\nlarge hall'to the doors, thoroughly enjoyed the speeches delivered and the\nentertainment provided for their amusement.\nA fine orchestra supplied music be-\ni tween the songs and speeches and was\n1 a very popular feature of the evening.,\nStirring songs were sung by Messrs. B.\nSmith, Dodds, Holloway and Dodds and\nthe music supplied by Professor Melan-\ncon, J. T. Wilkinson, R. McCandllsh and |\nI Leon McCandllsh was beyond praise.\nOne of the features of the evening's\ni proceedings was a stirring speech'by W.\nA. Macdonald, K, C. who carried his\naudience to a high pitch of enthusiasm.\nHe expressed his absolute conviction\nthat the great Independent vote of\nCanada would do as it had already done\nIn New Brunswick, Ontario, British Columbia and Manitoba and decide that\nthe honest side was the right side and\ncondemn the corruption which had been\nproved to be rampant throughout the\nDominion and which would cause Tammany Itself to turn green with envy.\nThe liberals were beaten now, the\nspeaker said, and Smith Curtis had\ncontracted a had attack of cold feet.\nHe, therefore, grasped at a straw like a\ndrowning man and insisted on a postponed election, notwithstanding his\nown previous utterances and the fact\nthat there was* not the slightest excuse\nwhV \"the election should be delayed.\nThe one ghost of a chance that Mr.\nCurtis had was that the result in the\nj rest of Canada might be close and that\n[ then his friends might pour a horde of\npluggers, ballot Bluffers and boodters\nInto the constituency In order to steal\nthe seat for him. In that case the conservatives would have what had never\nbefore been seen In British Columbia, a\nsaturnalia of the same nature as had\ndebauched London. West Elgin, West\nHuron and West Hastings. This was a\npossibility to be forestalled and guarded\nagainst and he warned one and all to\nbe on the lookout and to do everything\npossible to frustrate such tactics. Thus\nfar elections In this province had always been clean and the people must\ndo everything in their power to keep\nthem so, If the election were held on\nthe same day as the rest of Canada A.\nS, Goodeve would sweep the constituency, and he would do so in any event.\nVictory was In the air, Mr. Macdonald\nsaid,in concluding, and it only remained\nfor the conservatives to make assurance doubly sure by working till the\nlast vote was polled.\nWilliam Irving also delivered a stirring address, dwelling on the chicanery\nof the local liberal representatives In\npostponing twice the date of the election which should have come off on\nOctober 26th and exposing the hollow\ntrickery that had been resorted to- The\nresult on November 12 would -be the\nsame as it would have heen on October 26 or November 3, but the trickery\nof Smith Curtis and his manager, F.J.\nDeane, remained neverthless as a lasting disgrace. The returning officer,\nJohn Keen, was trying to Bay that the\nelection had not been further postponed; but the statement of Smith. Curtis\non the public platform at Moyle last\nweek that the election would come off\non November 3 gave that attempt at\nequivocation it quietus. The conservt-\ntives were not afraid of the result even\nIf the election were postponed; but the\npossibility was always there that foul\nmeans might be and would be used by\nthe liberals if necessary. In conclusion\nMr. Irvine urged one and all t0 join together to work till the last vote was\npolled.\nA, S. Horswlll delivered an eloquent\naddress, full of enthusiasm and optimism .which elicited great applause from\nthe audience.\nThe meeting closed with the national\nanthem and rousing cheers for R. L.\nBorden, Richard McBrlde and A. S.\nGoodeve. , )\nASSIZES 10_0PEN TODAY\nCOURT   SITTINGS   WERE    YESTERDAY ADJOURNED FOR DAY\nREASON    WAS  THE   NON-ARRIVAL\nOF THE JUDGE\nAt 11 o'clock yesterday morning sheriff Tuck duly opened the assizes at the\ncourt house and registrar Bowman forthwith declared the sittings adjourned until this morning at tbe same hour. The\nnon-arrival of Mr. Justice Morrison\nmade this necessary. There is a provision in the statute that, iii such a\ncase, the registrar has power to postpone the court.\nAt the assizes, three indictments will\nbe preferred against George S. Coleman,\nnamely, attempted murder, wounding\nwith intent to kill and theft. He will\nbe defended by W. A. Macdonald, K.C.\nFrank Connolly will have to face\ncharges' of obtaining goods by false pretences and theft. He will be defended\nby .las. O'Shea.\nAn indictment, is to be laid against\nPercy Cawley charging him with seduction under promise of marriage; but, as\nhe married the young woman whom, it\nis alleged, he had wronged two days\nago, It is more than likely that the case\nwill be dropped.\nThe attorney general's department\nwill be represented in all the cases by\nR. M. Macdonald as crown counsel.\nENQUIRY AG^I STARTS\nMR.   JU8TICE   CAS3ELS   REOPENS\nMARINE INVESTIGATION\nONE    WITNESS   TESTIFIES AS   TO\nBUSINESS TRANSACTIONS\nMONTREAL,\" Oct. 6.\u2014Mr. justice\nCassels has resumed his inquiry here\ntoday into the affairs of the marine\ndepartment. This morning the session\nwas brief owing to the late hour at\nwhich th& proceedings commenced. One\nWitness was examined In part, namely\nAlfred Beauchemin, late president and\ngeneral manager of the firm of Beauchemin & Sons, manufacturers, of Sorel,\nHe declared that all transactions with\nthe government were done on d straightforward basis.\nConnecticut Prohibition.\nNEW HAVEN, Oct. 6\u2014The prohibition forces had a drawn battle with the\nliquor men in the town elections of\nyesterday, the complexion of the 168\ntowns remaining unchanged. \u25a0 Nine\ntowns went from no license to license.\nNine others went from licenses to no\nlicense.'This makes 97 towns no license\nto 71 licenses.\nDemocratic Nominations.\nPROVIDENCE, Oct. 6\u2014Olney Arnold\nof Providence, was nominated for governor of Rhodes island by acclamation\nat the democratic state convention held\nIn this city today. Adelard Archambault\nof Woonsocket was nominated for lieutenant governor.\nLynched a Negro.\nGLENFORA, Oct. 6\u2014Ben Price, a\nnegro was seized by a mob here and\ntaken to tho centre of the town and\nhanged to a tree today, He Is charged\nwith criminal assault on his own daughter. The mdb broke in the jail In order\nto capture the negro.\nIS UNCERTAIN\nPeace or War in Balkans in\nthe Balance\nCONGRESS Of THE POWERS\nTURKEY WILL PROBABLY AWAIT\nRESULT OF THE CONFERENCE\nBEFORE TAKING ANY STEPS\u2014\nSERVIA IS STIRRED AGAINST\nAUf~\" \t\nrnoviNCUL, LiniunY.\nTIRNOiVO, Bulgaria, Oct. 6.\u2014Immediately after the proclamation ot Bulgarian Independenance at the cathedral ol\nthe oPrty Martyrs In this city yesterday morning, prince Ferdinand assumed\nthe sovereignity ot Bulgaria. The presidency ot the Sebranje, representing the\nnational assembly, and the prime minister, representing the government, then\naddressed Ferdinand as \"Your majesty'\nand begged him to accept the laurel of\nglory as the first Bulgarian king. In\nreply Ferdinand said: \"I accept the\ntitle of Bulgarian king offered me by\nthe nation and the government.\"\nPHILLIPOPOUS, Eastern Roumania,\nOct. 6.\u2014The official announcement of\nthe independence of Bulgaria made at\nTirnovo yesterday by prince Ferdinand\nlias been enthusiastically received in\nthis city, the capital of Eastern Rou-\nmelia. Today the church bells are ringing and large crowds, headed by bands,\nare parading the streets and holding\nptaceful demonstrations in front of the\nvarious consolates. \"Emperor\" Ferdinand is expected to arrive here shortly.    \u2022 \t\nBELGRADE, Servia, Oct. 6\u2014A ukase\ncalling out all the navy reserves of the\nfirst class was published here today.\nThese reserves number about 120,000\nmen. It is explained officially that this\nstep Is taken because many time-ex-\n. plred soldiers are to leave the ranks on\nOctober 51th, and in view of the situation In the neighboring Balkan states,\nespecially the Inflamed state of Servia\nitself, It has been deemed advisable to\nfill up in advance the vacancies thus to\nbe created.\nTelegrams received here from the prov-\n. Inces -show great enthusiasm for a war\nagainst Australa Hungary, as emperor\nFrancis Joseph's -proposal to annex the\noccupied provinces of Bosnia and Herzegovina threatens to hem in Serviai on\nthe west. Furthermore the majority of\nthe population of Bosnia are Servians\nwho are bitterly opposed to annexation.\nBERLIN, Oct. 6. \u2014 The question\nwhether there is to be peace or war in\nthe Balkans has not yet been decided\nin Constantinople, according to official\ndespatches received at the foreign office\ntoday. The ambassadors of the powers\nat Constantinople find the situation a\ndifficult one, because the control of affairs does not rest altogether with the\n-cabinet of the young Turks, but partially with the powerful committee of\nYounk Turks outside the cabinet. The\ncabinet and the committee appear to be\ndivided in their views.\nOfficial opinion in Berlin leads to the\nbelief that there will be no war inasmuch as the change in the relations\nbetween Bulgaria and Turkey is merely\na paper change. \u25a0\nPARIS, Oct. 6\u2014It was announced this\nafternoon that France and Great Britain are in complete accord with the\nprinciple of an Immediate international\nconference to consider the Bulgarian\nsensation. Russian and Italy also are\nin favor of such a conference and even\nGermany is expected to adhere to the\nproposition.\nFurthermore the latest advices from\nConstantinople indicate that the Porte\nwill accept the. advice. of France and\nGreat Britain arid await the result of\nthis congress.\nST. PETERSBURG, Oct. 6.\u2014AUstro-\nHunga'ry has lost no time in getting\non aj friendly footing- with the \"new\nkingdom of Bulgaria, for she has insinuated her desire in initiate negotiations for a new commercial treaty.\nA draft of Russia's circular note to\nthe \"powers, in voking an international\ncongress to discuss revisions of the\nBerlin treaty has been completed and\napproved by emperor Nicholas. It is\nIntended to communicate this note to\nthe Berlin signatories through the Russian ambassador on October 8, especially If the Austro-Hungarlan declaration\nconcerning the annexation of Bosnia\nHerzegovina ia proclaimed on October\n7 as is now expected. It is thought that\nthe congress will assemble before the\nend of the three months, since the\nlabor of preparation of the programs\nof various powers will entail a vast\namount of work.\nThe Turkish ambassador to Russia,\nTaurkham Pasha, called at the foreign\noffice this evening and had a long conference with the foreign minister To-\nharykoft regarding the congress. It is\nunderstood Turkey Is favorably Inclined\nto this meeting. The Austro-Hungarlan\nambassador also was a visitor at the\nforeign office but he declined to be\nquoted concerning the possibility of his\ngovernment accepting the Russian invitation. The St. Petersburg bourse\nhas not been affected by the rumors of\nwar. Russian imperial fours dropped\nthree-eighths today but this was not a\nresult of the political situation. Tho\nBulgarian diplomatic agent In St I\nPetersburg,   Tookoff,   today communl-1\ncatsd to the Russian government the\nannouncement of tbe independence of\nBulgaria and expressed the hope that\nRussia would Immediately recognize\nthe new kingdom. Russia refrained\nfrom answering this notification.\nPrince Ferdinand assumed sovereignty\nover northern arid southern Bulgaria\nunder the title of Czar. This title was\nborne by the Bulgarian monarch previous to the conouest of Bulgaria by\nthe Turks.\nBASEBALL YESTERDAY\nAll-s,tar 2; Vancouver 0.\nPLAYEOtRROSLtSSBALL\nDETROIT CAPTURES PENNANT DEFEATING CHICAGO\nSTAR WORK   OF   DONOVAN   FROM\nSTART TO FINISH\nCHICAGO. Oct. 6.\u2014What is jaid to\nhave been the closest pennant contest\never waged by American league base-\niball clubs came to an end In this city\nwhen Detroit, champions of 1907, captured the emblem for another year hy\ndefeating Chicago 7 to 0.\nDetroit, Cleveland and Chicago struggled all Beason for the first place, never\nbeing far from each other In the percentage table and not until today could\nthe winner be picked. St. Louis put\nCleveland out ot the running yesterday,\nleaving the field to Detroit and Chicago.\nChicago's fight h\u00ab8 'been an uphill one\nbut manager Jonea never despaired until the last Chicago Player had been\nretired today. Had Chicago triumphed\ntoday the pennant would have come to\nthis city, but the defeat of the local\nteam in the final test left no subject\not debate for the \"If club.\" Detroit's\nvictory was decisive. Jones used three\npitchers, White, WalBh and Smith, But\ncould not subdue the DetroitB. Donovan\npitched the kind ot -ball that will win\nat almost any game. His team mates\ncoming first to hat left him confident\nin the Initial by knocking white out of\nthe 'box and putting four runs across\nthe plate.\nDonovan's manner was confident as\nhe faced tbe batsmen, and inning after\ninning with a calmness approaching\nnonchalance, he proceeded to make first\nbase a very north pole of unattainabil-\nity for his opponents.: Two hits In different-innings were all that Chicago\ncould garner and a local runner perched\non second base, just.once. That was\nthe only time that Chicago made even\na shadow of a threat-- This being the\nfirst time- Chicago Had' an opportunity\nto cheer they seized it and for a time\nBedlam would' have appeared a quiet\nretreat compared ta the Southslde ball\npark. J. Atz, of the Chicago team,\ncoaching off the third base became so\nexcited that he intruded on the diamond\nand was ordered to the -bench by the\numpire. As he protested with much\nvigor he was expelled from the grounds.\nDetroit's assisted column showed a\ntotal of only two, for when Donovan\n-did not strike out the batsman he.,\npitched the brand of ball that results\nIn flies. All told lie struck out ten\nmen. Behind him errorless ball was\n\u25a0played and -hits were made when hits\nwere needed. There were thirteen of\nthem, a fatal proportion from the local\nviewpoint beginning in the first Inning.\nDetroit's batting alone would have captured the contest with ease, but assurance was made doubly sure by Chicago's errors, five in number. Detroit's\ncommanding lead al the outset (lid not\ndishearten Chicago but It had a repressing effect which deepened as the game\nproceeded and Donovan's superb control\nshowed no signs of weakening.\nNATIONAL PENNANT.\nChicago Now Leading Wit New York\nand Pittsburg close Behind.\nN&W YORK, Oct. 0-New York's chanera\nof playing- off a final declBlv* game with\nChicago for -the National pennant brightened todHy when tho home club again won\nfrom Boston, 4 to 1. Thla makes the standing us follows: Chicago, S41 per cent; New\nYork, 638; Pittsburg, 638. New York plnya\nIts final game with -Boston tomorrow and\nIf the home- club wins, New York will be\ntied with Chicago for first place.\nCINCINNATI, Oct. 6-Tho dlroctora of\ntho National league this afternoon officially announced their decision In the matter of the protested, gome between New\nYork and Chicago on Sept. 23, holding that\nthe game was \u00ab tie and that It could be\nplayed off If tlie condition of the pennant\nrace called for such a game and the New\nYork management requested that it be\nplayed over again.\n^\nChicago Now leading With New York\nVICTORIA, Oct. fr-The survey made on\nthe steamer Nederlnmta shows that tho\ndamage Is not as great as anticipated.\nThere ia no injury to the bottom, Just some\nrivets started and the vessel can be repaired where she lies and proceed In two days;\nBonds will be given to cover the libel placed\non her of HMO on account of Injuries sustained by n longshoremun who fell In the\nhold on her lust visit.\n\" New Line of Great Northern.\nEMERSON, Man., Oct. 6\u2014Twelve surveyor ore here with t'qiiipment to locate\nthe new line of Great iNorthern from Emerson to Winnipeg. They stnrled in at\nNovel?, which is the union depot for the\nOreaL Northern and Soo Line, ro Htuke out\ntlie proposed route,\nNo Canadian Cattle.\n(Canadian Associated Presi)\nLONDON, Oct. 0\u2014Lord Carrlrigton\nspeaking at the dairy exhibition today\nsaid he was resolutely opposed to tho\nimportation of Canadian cattle into this\ncountry.\nMurder and 8ulcide.\n8CRANTON, Oct. 6\u2014Andrew Zydusa,\na retired hotel keeper at Jessup near\nhere today shot and killed his wife and\nturning the revolver on himself committed suicide.\n5UGARJHJTIES\nReciprocity Treaty With the\nWest Indies\nGUIANA LEADS THE WAY\nSPECIAL SESSION OF LEGISLATURE\nCALLED BY GOVERNOR HODGSON TO DISCUSS CL08ER\nTRADE RELATIONS WITH CANA-\nDIAN PEOPLE.\n(Canadian Associated Press)\nGEORGETOWN, British Guiana, Oct.\nC\u2014The chamber of commerce is urging\ngovernor Hodgson to take steps to show\nCanada that the people of Guiana realise\nthe benefit to them of the preferential\ntariff, pointing out that unless the tariff\nis reduced Germany might be put on\nCanada's immediate tariff. Guiana\nrelies on Canada to take the bulk of\nher sugar,\nThe governor has summoned a special meeting of the legislature to discuss\nCanadian reciprocity. But jt is understood here that no official announcement as to a reciprocity treaty between\nCanada and the West Indies will be\nmade until after the Canadian election*;.\nPQIITICT~PATR0NAGE\nBOARD   OF   CONCILIATION   MAKES\nITS  REPORT\nSTATE   OF  AFFAIRS   UPON   INTER-\nCOLONIAL RAILWAY\nOTTAWA. Oct. &-The hoard of conciliation appointed under the Lumleux. act to\ndeal with the demand* of the Intercolonial\nfreight ugents for more pay, has made ii\u00ab\nreport to the labor department.\nit finds that there is too much political\npatronage in appointments und there are\ntoo many employees, and lecomniendH also\nthat the pa>* is too low. The bourd recommends that appointments througn political\ninfluence should cease, that the staff be\nruduued and that the money saved through\nreduction be applied to increasing the salaries of those who remain in the service.\nThe committee recommends that clerks lie\npaid for overtime \u25a0\"\"* for work on Sim-\ndtiys; that two weeks' vacation with pay\nshould continue; that u relieving tiers;, alter two weeks, should receive the rate of\npay of tlie clerk whom ho relieves, If he\nbe of a senior position or elasw. No recommendation is mude as to how many hours\nshould constitute a day's work. Tha present day is practically one of eight \u00bb\"d a\nhalf hours.\nII is further recommended that the principle of promotion should nhtain  with  dim\nregard to efficiency and the requirements\nof tlie service. Tlie clerks asked that theilG\nshould be no discrimination for being members of the Intel-national union, out, as\nAir. Pottinger sated theie was no objection\nto an employee belonging U> u union, tlie\ncoinmilt.ee had no recommendation to make\nTin- board consisted of judge McGlbbon\nof Peel, chairman; J. D.-O IJuiiogliuo, representing the Clerks' union, and Henry\nHolgato, K.C, of Montreal was appointed\nby the Intercolonial. Tlio demands of the\nclerks Were for increased salaries a fixed\nworking day. definite lilies for promotion\nand recognition of the. union.\nALL WILL BEREINSTATED\nSTRIKE BREAKERS ARE BEING DISCHARGED DAILY\nPEACE   IS ONCE   MORE  EXPECTED\nTO PREVAIL\nWINNIPEG. Oct. li-In a few days the\nC.P.R. shops wi.l be iu full blast again and\nalmost every man who went out on strike\ntwo months ago will be reinstated in his\nformer position. Tlie C.P.R. is paying off\nthe strikebreakers just as fast as possible\nand most of them are leaving tlie. works.\nMore than BOO strikebreakers left lost\nnight. At the offices this morning there\nwere a large number of men applying for\nwork but they were told to make application ut the shops where the men were being tuken on. At tin* meeting of the men\nin the Trades hail the majority of the men\nexpressed themselves satisfied with tlie settlement of the strike.\nIt Is confidently expected lliat It will only\nbe a matter of a few days until haim'ony\nbetween the men and tlie company prevails\nagain and all will be at work.\nDIED OF HYDROPHOBIA.\nPet Dog Causes One Death and More\nMay Ensue.\nELIZABETH, Oct. 8\u2014After suffering\nwith convulsions at intervals for two\nweeks, Mrs. Harvey Day of this city\ndied of hydrophobia today. Her husband, a woman neighbor and a mail\ncarrier who were bitten by the dog\nwhich caused Mrs. Day's death, are being carefully watched by physicians\nfearful of the development of hydrophobia symptoms.\nMr. and Mrs. Day and two others\nwere bitten by Mrs. Day's pet dog In\nAugust last. A scientific, analysis of\nthe dog's brain gave evidence of hydrophobia and all the victims received the\nusual treatment for prevention by inoculation.\nDISASTROUS TYPHOON.\nMuch Loss of Life and Damage in the\nPhilippines.\nMANILA, Oct. 6\u2014Restored communl*\ncutlon with the northern part of the\nisland of Luzon discloses the fact that\nthe typhoon which raged In the harbor\nlast Sunday extended over a wide area\nand did considerable damage. The artillery \"barracks at Ox dot sen burg were\ndestroyed by the storm and Its troops ]\n| racks .weru-also-ba'dly damaged and the\ntotal loss at the post is estimated at\n$3G,000. The schooners Lucia and\nSoledad were wrecked.off the coast of\nMindano during the storm of September 27 and all the passengers and crew\nof the Soledad but one were drowned.\nCaptain J. C. Heinschein and nine members of the crew of the Lucia were also\ndrowned.\nHORJWILL^JREW WINS\nDEFEATS NOTTS IN FINALS OF THE\nREGATTA\nJOY    AND    M'DONALD    TIED    FOR\nDIAMOND SCULLS\nThe finals in the regatta of the Nelson\nbout club were rowed yesterday afternoon\non tlie lake over the mile course and proved most exciting, tlie winners being A. F.\nHorawill's crew. The contending crews\nwere stroked by A. F. Horswill and Frank\nNott and the battle was stubbornly contested. Nott iuul Hanson, Joy and Wales\nIn his boat, while HorswlU's partners were\nElcome. Hopkins and C'heyne.\nThe boats overlapped one another nil\nthrough the race und it wus nip and tuck\null the way. In the end, by a supreme effort HorswlU's crew managed to nose their\nboat across the line u bare eighth of a\nlength ahead of their competitors.\nAs a result of the summing up of tlie\npoints all round Joy and McDonald are tied\nfor first place and the possession of the\nPatenaude diamond sculls, with 13 points\neach. The committee will arrange shortly\nfor the tie to be decided..\nILLNESS OF CASTRO.\nPuts a New Phase on the Complications\nWith Holland.\nTHE HAGUE, Oct. 6\u2014The Nether-\nland government was today notified by\nthy government of Cttraco that the second Netherlands note had been presented to Jose De Jesus Paul, the Venezuelan minister of foreign affairs.\nThe governor adds that he had received official advices dated September\n2fi to the fffect that president Castro\nwas seriously ill and that demanst ration of Venezuela would probably have\nto be handed over again to Vicente\nGomez, vice president of the republic.\nThe counsel of ministers has tlie new\nsituation thus created under consideration.\nBRIBED WITH  WHISKY.\nAutumn Term of Supreme Court Sitting\nat Halifax.\nHALIFAX, Oct. 6.\u2014The autumn term\nof the supreme court began today. The\nonly criminal case is against Bayne, the\ntomato expert. After being out an hour\nth? jury found a true hill on all the indictments excepting In the case of J.\nB. Morrison, who received $5 and much\nwhiskey. Morrison did not appear, consequently the case in which he was a\nwitness could not be proceeded with.\nWarrants have been Issued for him.\nTrue bills were found against Bayne\nfor bribing Alexander Mb Donald with\n51 5 and ten flasks of whiskey. Robie\nPanlkirar, $;:o and 39 flasks; Suther\nFaulkner, 24 flasks; Joseph Jamjeson,\n$5;  John C. jamleson, $5.\nCARLETON   COUNTY   CONVENTION.\nR. L. Borden Will be Candidate in Two\nConstituencies.\nOTTAWA, Oct. C\u2014R. L, Borden returned to Ottawa this .morning from\nwestern Ont'ah'a and left at 10,45 for\nStfttsvHle to attend the concerva-\nlive convention for Carleton county.\nIt Is understood that Mr. Borden\nwill accept a re-nomination by the\nconvention and will, like sir Wilfrid Laurier, be a candidate in\ntwo constituencies, namely Halifax and\nCarleton.\nMRS. DUNSMUIR'S WILL.\nBulk of Property Divided Among the\nDaughters.\nVICTORIA. Oct. 6\u2014The will of the\nlate Mrs. Dunsmuir was read today and\ndisposes of an estale valued at in the\nneighborhood of two million dollars.\nEighty-five thousand dolars in legacies\nto more distant relatives are made after which the residue Is divided equally\nbetween the five daughters who are\nnamed as executors.\nPrince of Wales Oak.\nNEW YORK. Oct. 6\u2014The big English\noak known as the Prince of Wales tree\nwhich grew from an acorn planted in\nthe mall In central park In 1S61 by the\nthen Prince of Wales, now King Edward, has been cut down by a park\nforeman upon the order of the park\nsuperintendent IJeatty. The stump was\npulled out and the spot covered with\nsod. Since UtOo the tree has been\nrotting. The acorn from which tho tree\ngrew was brought hy the Prince of\nWales from England.\nRestrict Skyscrapers.\nNEW YORK. Oct. G\u2014If the building\ncode revision committee has its way,\naccording to a resolution adopted today, the buildings In this city will be\nrestricted to 1100 feet in height unless\nthey face a park, a square or plaza\nwhen they may be built .\"!50 feet high.\nAn ordnance will be drawn containing\nthese provisions.\nCholera in Russia.\nST. PETERSBURG, Oct. 6\u2014The\ncholera in St. Petersburg continues to\ndecrease rapidly. For tho 21 hours ending at noon today there wen- 111 cases\nand 58 deaths in the municipal hospital. There have been ten cases and\ntwo deathB In the hospital of Palace at\nGatchlna, the residence of Empress\nDowager. The Empress Dowager Is\nnow In Denmark.\nDEMAND WAR\nServians Object to Austria's\nAggression\nTWO PROVINCES ANNEXED\nBOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA TO BE\nHEREAFTER A PART OF THE\nDUAL MONARCHY-PROCLAMATION WILL BE ISSUED AT\nVIENNA TODAY.\nVIENNA, Oct 6.\u2014The proclamation\nor emperor Francis Joseph will be issued tomorrow declaring that the\nAustro-Hungarlan rights of sovereignty\nand succession have been extended over\nBosnia and Herzegovina. The new Imperial provinces will be informed in\nIhe same proclamation that they will\nbe given a constitution hy a special\ndiet.   The proclamation says:\n\"When, a generation ago, our troops\ncrossed the boundaries of your countries you were assuer that they came\nnot as enemies but as Mends with a\nfirm resolution to put a stop to the ills\nfrom which your fatherland for so many,\nyears so severely suffered,\n\"To our great pleasure we can say\nthat the seed which was scattered in\nthe furrow of ploughed soil has come\nup richly. We consider it our most\nsolemn duty to move forward along this\npath and with that goal before our\neyes we are of tlie opinion that the\ntime has come to give the Inhabitants\nof both countries a fresh proof of our\ntrust in their political maturity.\"\nThe emperor has addressed a rescript\nto baron Von Aehrenthal, the Austro-\nHungarlan mlfnsier of foreign affairs,\nin which he says:\n\"Being imbued with the unalterable\nconviction that the lofty, civilizing and\npolitical objects for which the Anstro-\nHungarian monarchy undertook the occupation and administration of Bosnia\nand Herzegovina, and that the results\nwhich that administration has already\nobtained with costly sacrifices can be\npermanently secured only by granting\nthe constitutional institutions corresponding to their needs, Institutions for\nthe settling tip of which the estbllsh-\nment of a clear and unequivocal legal\nposition for the two provinces, forma\nan indispensable condition, extend my\nsovereignty over Bosbia and Herzegovina, and at the same lime bring Into\nforce In these two provinces the rules\nof succession applying to my house.\n\"As a demonstration of the peaceful\npurposes which have led me to this Immutable decree I at the same time order the evacuation of the Eanjak of\nNovipazar by the troops of my army\nstationed therein.\"\nBELGRADE. Servia, Oct. 6.\u2014A mass\nmeeting of 10,000 persons was held in\nthe public square tonight, the major of\nthe city presiding. The leaders of all\npolitical parties made addresses and\nresolutions were adopted calling upon\nthe government to induce the powers\nlo save Bosnia and Herzegovina from\nannexation and pledging the lives of\nthe Servian people. Copies of the resolutions were taken by all the foreign\nministers with the exception of tho\nAustrian representatives. Shops have\nbeen closed in Belgrade ami processions\nfilled the streets. The newspapers demand war.\nRAILROAD WRECK.\nOne Marr Killed and Several Badly Injured.\nLANCASTER, Oct. G\u2014One man was\ncrushed to death two more were fatally\ninjured, five others seriously hurt and\na dozen more briiisqd nnd cut, by u\nwreck today on the Pennsylvania railroad freight line at Washington\nBorough. The accident was due lo a\ndense fog. A work train with a coach\nat the rear stopped at a bridge over a\nsmall stream which empties into tho\nSusquehanna river nt this point. There,\nwr-re fifty Italians in the coach antl before the flagman had time to go bnck\nto flag a heavy freight train following\nit crashed Into the coach.\nACCIDENT WAS FATAL.\nDeath of a Coal Miner at Michef Yes.\nterday;\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nMICHEL, Oct. 6\u2014Another fatal accident occurred at the mines here early\nthis morning claiming as its victim a\nSlavonian miner by the name of Mike\nHalko, about forty years of age. A\ndump car, while crossing the tipple\njumped the track crashing into the\nside of the building and demolishing a\nlarge portion of the wall. A heavy timber was knocked out and falling to tho\nground struck Halko, who was working\nuuderneath, on the head, rendering him\nunconscious. He was taken to the Cottage hospital where lie succumbed to\nhis injuries about 1 o'clock.\nMore Street Railway.\nEDMONTON, Oct. 6\u2014On Saturday\nafternoon mayor McDougnll made a trip\nof inspection over the construction work\nof the street railway both In Edmonton\nand atrathcona. According to the estimates cars will be running between tbe\nTwin Cities three weeks from today\nand at tbe present rate of progress upon the construction ft appears almost\ncertain that the estimates will be carried out to the letter.\nws^w,^\n PAGE TWt,\n\u00a9he \u00aeaUg $Un\u00ab\u00ab\nWEDNESDAY  OCTOBER 7\nr \/ucurtmi twcirio\nTo fit Every Man\nThere is no trouble in getting just what\nyou want in Knit-to-fit Underwear.\nKnit-to-fit is made in both combination\nsuits and separate garments\u2014in all sizes and\nweights, and in all fabrics from silk to cotton.\nEach garment is knitted separately and com-\n| pletely, assuring perfect fit, comfort and wear.\nWrite for measurement blanks anil illustrated catalogue if your dealer does not\nhandle Knit-to-fit goods.\nTHE KNIT-TO-FIT MANUFACTURING CO.\nVa Fapln.au Avenue      \u2022      -       MONTREAL.\nJOHN BURNS\nCONTRACTOR  AND BUILDER\nCabinet and Turned Work,  Offia Fittings, Sash and\nDoors.   BRICK AND LIME FOR SALE\nEstimates Cheerfully Given\nOffice and Factory: Carbonate Street, Nelson, B. C.\nCAMPBELL & ROBB\nOONTRAOTORS-AND BUILDERS\u2014\nE8TIMATES GIVEN\nJobbing Promptly Attended to\nSHOP, VICTORIA ST., OPPOSITE OPERA HOUSE     P.O. Box 498\nCreston Townsite Lots\nNow Is the time to buy In the Town oj Creston, B. C. It yon wish\nto get In on the ground floor. These lots are within one minute's\n.walk trom Creston station.\nPrice $J00, on Easy Terms\nFor further particulars write, or call on C. F. HUTTON Box 812, Nelaon\nB. C, 309 Baker Street.\nSomething Special\nTor camp, hotel and restaurant trade\nA new line ot\nHeavy Hams, Smoked\nAt Particularly Low Prlcea.\nP. BURNS & 00., Limited\nNELSON, B. C.\nI. A. ISAAC\nR. W. HINTON\nNELSON IRON WORKS\nEngineer* and Contractor* Founder! and Machlnlata\nCorner Hall and Front Street!.\nTh! following material alwaya In atMk:\nPUMPS STEEL WILFLBY TABLM\nVALVES (H to 8ln.)       8HAFTINQ SPROCKBT CHAINS\nBELTINfl (Qrlpoll) SHOES AND DIES DRT BATTERIES\nP. O. Box 1051. NELSON, B. C. Ttiephono; M.\nBOUGH   LUMBER DRBSSBB\nWlndowi, MonMlBp, SUsflM, Timed Work! aad \u00bb\nup to data itoek alwaji on hand.  Mall ordui proatlr\nA. G. LAMBERT & CO.\nRAIDS PUBLIC TREASURY\nHOW   HON.  WM.   PUGSLEY  ACTED\nIN   NEW  BRUNSWICK\nAS ATTORNEY GENERAL  HE  PAID\nHIMSELF FOR LEGAL WORK\nST. JOHN, N.B., Oct. 6.-Premier\nHazen's charges against Mr. Pugsley,\nthe minister of public works in the\nLaurier government, have produced a\nsensation In the province, and the\nquestion people are asking is whether\nunder the circumstances, sir Wilfrid\nLaurier will retain Mr, Pugsley in the\nDominion cabinet. The feeling is that\n\u2022Mr. Pugsley ought to be retired, in\norder to prevent an absolute loss of\nconfidence in the government. Since\nthe long-lived New Brunswick, in which\nMr. Pugsley was for years connected.\nThe discoveries made <by the new ministry have heen Btartllng. The first notification had that there was anything\nwrong in the conduct of affairs came\nwhen an old and valued official of the\nprovince committed suicide.\nPUOSLTSY'S REFUND.\nThe next shock was the Intimation\nthat Mr. Pugsley, the minister of public works at Ottawa, had sent a cheque\nfor $4,331 to pay up what he had taken,\nin the form of overdrafts from the\ntreasury of New Brunswick, when he\nwsb a member of the government of\nthe province. Mr. Pugsley entered the\ngovernment In 1900 as attorney-general,\nand held office under Mr. Tweedle until 1907. Mr. Tweedle then resigned to\nbecome lieutenant-governor, and Mr.\nPugsley was appointed premier. When\nMr, Emmerson, the minister of railways, got 4nto trouble; Mr. Pugtfley\nturned his attention tq Ottawa, and\nsoon after was taken into the cabinet\nas minister of public works.\nDuring the New Brunswick general\nelection Mr. Pugsley was sent to New\nBrunswick by sir Wilfrid Laurier to\nfight against the demand of the people\nfor a new and better government. He\nwent about from point to point promising In the name of sir Wilfrid all\nsorts of public works if the people\nwould only stand by the local administration, which was in alliance with\nLaurier. The result was not happy.\nOn election day the Laurler-pugsley-\nRobinson government was wiped out.\nFive \u25a0days afterwards Mr. pugsley sent\nhis cheque for $4,331 to the retiring go.\neminent to square his account.\nThe enquiry which followed this re\nmarkable Incident resulted In the discoveries which have led Mr. Hazen to\ncharge that Mi* Pugsley drew from the\ntreasury during his term over $40,000\nfor alleged legal services. It Is represented that although, drawing a salary\nat attorney-general, Mr. Pugsley charged for the work he did for the province. His last account, which the Hazen government disputes, illustrates\n\u25a0what has taken place. That hill\nagainst the j province calls for $3,670.\nOne item reads thus:\n\"Retainer in suit against his majesty\nagainst the St. John River Lumber\ncompany to restrain the company from\ncontinuing booms, etc., in the St. John\nriver, numerous consultations, going\nover draft of information, making corrections, alterations and additions to\nthe same, and finally approving there-\nof, $250.\"\nThen comes the following:\n\"Carefully pursuing and abreviating\nlengthy affidavits, also examining and\ncorrecting interrogations, $125.\n\"Counsel fee, attending before judge\nin equity, four days, $50 a day. $200.\n\"Consultation with Powell and Barn-\nhill re special case, $25.\"\nSo that the attornew-generad retained himself and billed himself to the\ntune of $600 in this case.\nOTHER BIG CHARGES.\nAnother interesting charge \\% one\"\nwhich calls for $500 for professional\nservices, which consisted of going to\ntho ttn.nV  nP Mnntrpal  \u00abn   Hie. unlilwfr of\na loan of 300,000 pounds sterling for\nthe province. Still another Is a charge\nof $250 for going to Montreal to interview the president of the Grand Trunk\nPacific re the taking over or the New\nBrunswick Coal and Railway company,\na provincial corporation running a\nsmall railway, a further cheque of no\ninconsiderable amount is one of $500\nfor attending the Interprovincial Conference at Ottawa.\nAltogether, Mr. Pugsley's claims upon\nthe province, according to his last bill,\nis for $3,670, which is in addition to his\nsalary na a minister. Mr. Hazen's\ncharge is that the amount so far drawn\nby Mr. Pugsley In this way 1b $40,000.\nThis matter Mr. Hazen has challenged\nMr. Pugsley to discuss on -the public\nplatform; but the minister of public\nworks declines to enter into a debate.\nThe refusal adds to the interest that is\ntaken in the question.\nThe overdrafts of Mr. Pugsley were\nenquired into by the legislature at its\nlast sitting. A report was presented\nwith reference to them by the auditor,\nand they show that Mr. Pugsley was\nindebted to the treasury in the following sums In the years mentioned:\n1901    $2,163\n1902     1.748\n1903     6,227\n1904     7,314\n1905     7,030\n1906     M05\n1907    4.331\nThe payment made  five days after\nthe defeat of Mr. pugsley's party in\nNew Brunswick covers the amount of\nthe overdraft in 1907. By the provincial government it has been found that\nMr. Pugsley has paid nothing Ih the\nway of Interest for the money has has\nbeen using. A calculation has been\nmade of the amount that is due under\nthis head, and $2,000 is demanded from\nthe minister.\nANOTHER CURIOUS CASE.\nMr. Pugsley's colleague, Mr. Tweedle,\nbecame lieutenant-governor In the early\npart of 1907. The government found\nout the other day that some time before he took offiee he handed $13,686\nto the treasury to square his account\n-with the province. With this money he\nseems to have paid what money appeared on the books to be unpaid\nBtumpage dues by wealthy lumber firms.\nWhy the lumbermen should he behind,\nand for so many years, nobody seems\nto know.\nBut they were in the arrears to the\namount of $13,686, and Mr. Tweedle.\nwithout saying a word to them, paid\ntheir indebtedness out of his own\npocket. The government maintains\nthat Mr. Tweedle, seeing that he announces himself as responsible.for the\nmoney, Is also unswerable for the Interest, and the sum of $8,110 is demanded from the lieutenant-governor and\nex-premier.\nA  THIRD  ONE.\nWhatever may be the explanation ol\nthis affair, the fact is not to be lost\nsight of that Mr. Pugsley and Mr.\nTweedle were colleagues and fellow-\nworkers for many years, A third extraordinary case has been developed in\nconnection with the railway operations\nof the Pugsley-Tweedle government.\nThe Investigation of this scandal is not\nconcluded. But so far as It has gone\nit appears that Mr. Pugsley started a\nrailway enterprise which was to develop\nthe coal mines of the province. The\nprovincial credit and subsidies, both\nFederal and provincial, were used for\nthe scheme, and the directors never\nhad to put up a cent of capital. After-\nspending more than a million the road\nis not worth the money.\nThe question that U agitating the\nprovince is whether sir Wilfrid Laurier Intends to retain Mr. Pugsley in\nthe government. If he does not ask\nfor his resignation the people will see\nto it that public affairs take such a\nturn that he will have to get out What\nNew Brunswick needs Is the aid of the\nother provinces to bring about this\nresult.\nSERIOUS WRECK OCCURS.\nOpen Switch Causes Smash up on a\nSiding.\nSASKATOON, Oct. 6 \u2014 A serious\nwreck occurred Saturday afternoon at\nXena Siding, west of Waterous and 54\nmiles east of Saskatoon, on the Grand\nTrunk Paciilc. This resulted in the'\nwrecking of train No. 60 which was going eastward. The accident is said to\nhave been due to an open switch as the\nengine and a number of cars were left\non the siding and were mixed up and\nsmached, one of them piling on the\noverturned engine. The train was running at a high speed In an effort to\nmake up lost time In consequence of\nthe number of construction trains coming west The accident came without\nwarning. There was no time to make\nan escape and, when taken from under\nthe wrecked engine, engineer Martin\nbad his arm and log completely severed\nThis woman was ill. blnn. and\ndiscouraged. Cured by Lydia E.\nPinkham'i Vegetable Compound.\nMrs. It. Gentleman, 1093 St. James\nStreet Montreal, Quebec, writes to\nMrs. Pinkham:\n\" I suffered from a severe female\nweakness, and extreme nervousness,\nand was blue and utterly discouraged.\n*' Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com*\npound wus recommended, and after\ntaking several bottles, I am not only\ncured, but am an entirely different\nwoman, and on the whole a healthier\nwoman than before taking your valuable medicine.\n\" Every woman who suffers from any\nform of female ills should not fail to try\nLydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.\"\nFACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.\nFor thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made\nfrom roots and herbs, lias been the\nstandard remedy lor female ills,\nand has positively cured thousands of\nwomen who have been troubled with\ndisplacements, inflammation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, irregularities,\nperiodic pains, backache, that bear. 5\nmg-down feeling, flatulency, indiges. '\ntion,diioiness or nervous prostration.\nWhy don't you try it?\nlbs. Pinkham Invites nil sick\nwomen to write her for advice,\nShe has guided thousands to\nhealth.  Address, Lynn, Mass.\nwmm\nWH SODAS\nLight irebmutifwi\nCRISP *\n.,.- DAINTY\nAneveryday luxury,-They are\nprime for use with soup.temp-\nfing with cheese .and always'\nan acceptable afterthought bult-\nered; Slightly browned in fhe\noven.lhen served hot they are\ng\u00bb Vancouver\nI If*\"1*    RAMSAY^ CRACKERS\nbeing made af home are always fresh,\nItiis piacestttem in a preferred class with\nWeslern peoplc.>rbu know the efFecrs\nofaMngBiKuibtoslandfbrw\u00abM\nLADIES SSsJSs\nTEA. A Powerful but hswmlws TegotaMe\nmedieiM lor sickness pectillu to women,\nMd^fliefjwi hMdi therefrom. All\ndruretaU tell at 23c, or pontMld for price\nfrom Dr. T. A. Slooum, limited, Sp&iu\nArenut, Toronto.\nof bis gun the shot was lodged In his\nleft leg near the hip.\nand was otherwise seriously hurt. Conductor Ourron and brakeman Vlsch\nwere also seriously hurt and were rushed to Waterous for medical treatment.\nMeantime, however,, poor Martin suc-\nBUmbed to his injuries. His body was\nbrought to this city at noon aoday.\nParticulars of the smash up are not\nclearly obtained but It 1b claimed ao be\nthe worst that has happened on this\nsection of the transcontinental. . It will\nbe another day before the wreckage can\nibe cleared up so as to permit a resumption of the traffic on the line,\nFire In Steve ston.\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 6\u2014Fire destroyed Chinatown In Steveston, early this\nmorning, doing damage to the extent\nof $35,000.\nAccident While Shooting,\nVANCOUVER, Oct. , 6\u2014Frederick\nHopwood, a young dentist employed In\nthe office of Dr. Telford) nearly lost his\nlife yesterday. He was shooting tn the\nwoods on the north shore of Burrard\ninlet and by an accidental discharge\nWhy Coldi are Dangerous*.\nBecause you have contracted   ordinary\ncolds and recovered from   them without\ntreatment of any kind, do not for a moment Imagine that colds are not dangerous.\nEveryone knows that pneumonia and\nchronlo catarrh have their origin In a\ncommon cold. Consumption la not caused\nby a cold but the cold prepares the system for the reception and development of\nthe germs that would not otherwise have\nfound lodgement. It le the same with all\nInfectious diseases. Dlptheria, scarlet fever,\nmeaselB and whooping cough are much\nmore likely to be contracted   when the\nchild has a cold. You will see from this\nthat more real danger lurks In a cold than\nIn any of the other common ailments. The\neasiest and quickest way to cure a cold\nla to take Chamberlain's Cough Remedy.\nThe many remarkable cures effected by\nthis preparation have made It a staple article of trade over a large part of the\nworld. For sale by all druggists and dealers.\nA SMALL GROUP OF THE POLLARDS AT THE BEACH IN HONOLULU.\nFred Irvine & Co.\nWOOL BLANKETS\nM\nAND COMFORTERS      1\n*\n\u00a7\nSpecial for One Week Sale\nWe have a very large Btock of white wool blankets and we are te \u00bbetl\nthem for one week at cut price.\nBLANKETS worth (4.50 at 53.75; $5.50 tor f4.ll; 36.50 for |5.60; 17.51 for\n$0.50; all new clean stock.\nWOOL COMFORTERS in large sitae from $1.50 each off duins sale.\nEIDERDOWN QUILTS from $6.25 each un.\nSOFA CUSHION FORMS all sizes and qualities.   We invite Inspection.\nFred Irvine & Co.\nm\n$\nW\nTAX SALE OF LANDS\nFor Unpaid Delinquent Taxes in the Nelson Assessment District, Province of British Cofomb'a\nI hereby give notice than on Friday, the Ninth day of October, A. D\u201e 1908, at the hour of twelve o'clock noon at the\nCourt House, Nelson, B. Ci, I Bh.ll otter for .ale by public auction, the lands hereinafter set out ot the persons mentioned\nhereunder, for the delinquent taxes unpaid by the said persons an on the thirty-first day of December, HOT, .hd for lutereat,\ncoats and expenses, Including coat of advertising1 aatd sale, if the total .mount is not sooner paid.\nPerson Assessed\nDescription of Property\nClara Magnusson ., '. iBIock 1. Lot as \t\nPrank Elvery Block  2.   Lot 98  \t\nJ. B. Gill  Part of Lot 191     :\t\nKootenay Land and \/\nImprovement Company 'Part of Lot 229\t\nW.  H. Smith \u2022 jLot 251   ...\nFrank D. Arundel  iBIock 201, Lot 201 \t\nPrank D. Arundel  |Block 201, Lot 301 \t\nNorman Fraser   Block 216, Lot 301\t\nWo Kee    Blocks  250-261,   Lot  301\t\nSam Kee  Block 255, Lot 301\t\nAlf. W. Dovles  Block 272, Lot 301\t\nTho?.   A.  Cory    Lot  279\t\nArthur Ooc    Block !>,  Lot 019 \t\nThomas Whlntle  , Block 1,   Lot 911   \t\nRoger V. Perry and Alice Perry Part of l,ot 1315 \t\nAndrew   McCoy    .-..Lot 5920 U.\nC. J., L. A. and Thos. McAstocker Blocks 7. 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, Lot 222.\nJ. B. McLeod  \u2022 Lot 3, Block 10, Lot 222 \t\nWilliam Green '. Part,of Block IB, Lot 812 \t\nJ.  Hobden    Block 0, Lot 891 \t\nJ.   Holden Part of Block 11, Lot 891 \t\nMrs. S. A. Barnhart Block 29. Lot 891  j-..\nJ. llempoon and Guy Lowenburg  .Blks. 1.3,5,6; part Blk. 2, Lot 892.\nAlice Broughton Mln. Co. Ltd Part ot Block 2, Lot 892\t\nGreen City Mln. Co. Ltd....  In Sees. 31 nnd 85, Tp. 14. Lot 1286.\nBroken Hill M. at D. Co. Ltd In Sec. 25. Tp. 11,,Lot 1242\t\nJohn Phllbert   In Sec 27 and 28, Tp, 17. Lot 1242.\nGeorge H. Green  .\u2022\u2022\u2022In Sec. 2, Tp. 37, Lot 1288\t\nGeorge H. Green  , In Bee. 2. Tp. 87, Lot 1288.........\nBelief Gold Mln. Co In Seen. 22, 25, 26, Tp. 17, L. 1338..\nKatie D. Green \u2022\u2022\u2022\u25a0 In Socs. 2 and 3. Tp. 37, Lot 1238....\nJ. Byan and F. Donnelly  In Sec. 39. Tp. 36, Lot 1238\t\nFisher,  Hamilton Co \u2022\u25a0\u2022 Sub-lot 20, Lot 4695\t\nFisher, Hamilton Co Sub-lot 21, Lot 4595 \t\nFlaher, Hamilton Co , -Sub-lot 83, Lot 4595 \t\nMiller, Dolan and Learmouth IBuh-mt 31, Lot 4895 \t\nW. K. Baling  Suh-lot 1\u00bb, Lot 4888\t\n4.30\n7.90\n60.04\nrax under\nAjMenment\nAct\n.60\n3.66\n2,00\nSchool\nTax\nInt.\nCorns*\nHxpen's\n32.03\n8.09\n3.00\nTold\n87.00\n3.73\n.40\n3.01\n320.00\n18.00\n3.00\n.98\n1.01\nl.M\n1.49\n.05\n2.09\n1.01\n1.30\n.06\n3.00\n4.03\n3.45\n.16\n2.00\n6.11\n.81\n.0!\n2.00\n3.61\n2.70\n.16\n2.00\n6.62\n8.80\n.10\n2.00\n250.00\n3.09.\n.30\n2.09\n6.00\n.4!\n2.00\n18.16\n4.00\n.20\n2.00\n73.00\n3.12\n.15\n2.00\n63.00\n9.00\n.40\n2.00\n66.83\n16.60\n1.18\n2.00\n3.00\n.16\n2.00\n61.26\n(.40\n\u202200\n.30\n2.00\n37.20\n3.00\n.18\n2.00\n20.00\n6.10\n.90\n.39\n1.00\n80.00\n6.00\n....\n.30\n2.00\n190.00\n10.80\n.00\n100\n10.00\n.60\n.08\n100\n124.00\n4.39\n.28\n2.00\n29.89\n6.96\n.30\n2.00\n61.29\n5.11\n.26\n2.09\n36.27\n8.00\n.28\n2.00\n11.30\n3.3)\n.15\n2.00\n187.84\n19.00\n.86\n1.00\n868.01\n34.33\n1.85\n2.60\n6.00\n8.09\n.89\n.26\n2.10\n302.80\n3.(6\n.16\n2.00\n37160\n14.83\n.OS\n1.00\n207.80\n7.01\n.36\n2.09\n190.00\n7.X\n.    .35\nV  .08\n109\n163.00\n1.81\ntoo\n1.70\n(.16\n11.13\n2J.95\n3.46\n3.36\n5.90\n2.85\n4.86\n11.20\n8.39\n145\n6.29\n5.27\n11.40\n18.73\n6.15\n8.09\n5.18\n8.60\n1.30\n13.30\n1.01\nT.06\n8.26\n7.37\n7.38\n6.01\n11.36\n37.87,.\n7.86\u00ab*\n6.10\n17.6.1\n10.03\n1.68\n140\nDated at Nelaon, B. C, this 6th day of September, 1903.\nfcJtuiM-\nPERCY J. OLBAZBR,     _ \u25a0\u2022\n<    Collector, Nelson Assessment District\n WEDNESDAY ...... OCTOBER 7\n\u00a9he \u00ae\u00abUa #en\u00ab..\n<?5&\nMOE THREE,\nWHEN DRINKING BEER^\nQuality and Purity are Pre-Eminently Important\nFamous A   P   \u00a3 St. Louis\nBOHEMIAN BEER\nThroughout Us entire process of brewing and bottling, comes in contact only with copper, tin lined and enameled surfaces. It is brewed in\nBcrupulously clean copper vessels, then piped through block tin pipes to enameled steel tanks where it is aged and lagered for at least six\nmonths; then piped again through block tin pipes to air-tight bottling machines, where it is filled oil into thoroughly cleansed and\nsterilized bottles.   We use only (he Finest Grade ol IMPORTED BOHEMIAN HOPS.   Absolutely Free From Adulterant, and Preservative*.\nTHE AMERICAN  BREWING CO.,  St. Louis, U. S. A.\nTHE HUDSON'S BAY COMPANY, Distributors, Nelson, B. C.\nBottM Only ml tho Browtsry la St Umlm.\n(a&$lw^\nTEA\nIs Most Carefully Selected\nOf ell the countries In ths world, Ceylon and India have proved\nthe beat adapted for producing good tea. So Indian and Ceylon teas\nare exclusively used for Blue Ribbon,\nAnd as hill-grown leaf Is superior to the coarse, rank growth of the\nlowlands, only \"hill\" tea la allowed In Blue Ribbon.\nOf the hill plantations, a certain number of estates are especially\nnoted for the unusual and uniform excellence of their product\nFrom these celebrated hill estates, the very choicest of the crop Is\nselected and reserved for blending Blue Ribbon Tea. So It is unusually\ndelicious and fragrant, with none of the woodlness or bitterness that\nspoils so many teas.\nJust get a pound of Blue Ribbon Tea and see for yourself\nhow good It Is.\nLead Packets\nDon't accept anything else.\nRICH,   STRONG,   FRAGRANT\nBLUB  RIBBON  TEA CO.,\nVANCOUVER.\nThe Suit of a Gentleman\nMust reveal quality.  The quiet, unobtrusive character of a \"correct\"\nsuit bespeaks good breeding and wins favor for the wearer.\nSOVEREIGN BRAND CLOTHING\ncarries the hall marks of quality and gives more   general   satisfaction\nthan any other.\nAsk for a SOVEREIGN Suit\nThe W. E. Sanford Mfg. Co., Ltd.\nHAMILTON, ONT.\nWINNIPEG, MAN.\n21 Years of Age\nThe \"Dominion\" Canada's biggest and strongest accident company became\nof age In August and to celebrate same are Issuing the best accident policy\non tbe market.   Get particulars before renewing your policy.\nG. A. HUNTER\nAlan Block \u2014 Agent \u2014 Nelson, B.C.\nWHAT HE THOUGHT OF IT\nLIBERAL CANDIDATE   ON\/' CROW'S\nNEST PASS DEAL\nSHOW UP SACRIFICE   OF   BRITISH\nCOLUMBIA'S INTERESTS\nHere Is what W. W. B. Mclnnes, the\nliberal candidate for Vancouver   in the\npresent election, said In the house  of\ncommons on April 9, 1897, when   he\nrepresented Nanaimo in that assembly,\n. In the regard to the Crow's Nest Pass\nrailway deal by which Hon, George  A.\nCox and Hon. Robert   Jaffray,    chief\nproprietors of the Toronto Globe and\nI two of the leading liberals of Ontario,\n\u25a0 secured 280,000 acres   of   coal   lands\n[> through the Dominion government's action In Increasing to the extent of $2,-\n| 000,000 the C. P. R.'s subsidy to build\n, under the B. C. Southern charter:\n\"Sir. I can say that I am more inclln-\ni ed to believe In the absolute truth   of\n[ every statement I made on account of\n1 the extraordinary exhibition which the\nOlobe has made of Itself In regard   to\nthis mutter, and the bold denials it has\nglvtu without a scintilla of argument\nIn refutation of what I stated,, I   felt\nthat I hud a duty to perform in connec-\ni tlon with this British  Columbia question.   The matters which I brought forward, and the statements which I made\nIn support of my motion,   were   not\nmade either to please or displease   the\nOlobe.\n\"I did not bring the matter forward\nor speak as I did to either please or\ndisplease the Canadian Pacific railway\nor any person else. I conceived that I\nhad a duty to perform towards my province, and. that It was my duty to ventilate a condition of affairs which certainly, In my opinion, demanded prompt\nand firm action on the part of this parliament. There can he no doubt, sir,\nthat the Olobe did take this matter up\nwith a sudden, extraordinary and in*\ntense interest at the start.\n\"Why, sir, It surprised people in\neastern Canada to see the Globe taking\nsuch an Interest in this undertaking. It\nwas a new scheme to the people of the\neast. No person in the east seemed In*\nterested In it five or six months ago;\nbut, notwithstanding that fact, tho\nGlobe came out in the early part of November last year and dealt with this\nmatter editorially, It published strong\neditorials day after day, and week after\nweek, and It has continued that course\nuntil the present time.\n\"We did not know at that time what\nwas the reason for that sudden and intense interest, we had no proof, but I\nam going to show that subsequent\nevents proved that there was a very\ngood motive from its standpoint for the\nGlobe dealing with this matter with\nsuch intense interest. I say that its attitude has been characterized by cant\nand deception.' It is not my purpose to\ngo,through the files of the Globe to\nshow that this has been so. Time will\nnot permit, but no person can look\nthrough,the,,f 11 eB of the paper without\ncoining to that' conclusion\".     ,\n\"The Globe will not support a motion for disallowance, and for a very\ngood reason. It Is not for the reason\nthat it assigns ,in this editorial, or because, it believeB in the liberal policy of\nnon-disallowance.   It Is because if that\nact were disallowed some of the prominent directors of the Globe would fall\nto make that big haul they are now\nmaking. \u2022 * * * I charged, and\ncharged It advisedly, that the action Of\nthe Globe In this matter was characterized by a lack of principle, I say that\nbecause we cannot forget that for years\npast the Globe was the avowed opponent of the Canadian Pacific railway.\nToday we find In It the greatest friend\nin the country of the Canadian Pacific\nrailway. We see it advocating subsidies being granted to the Canadian Pa-\nciic railway for bogus concessions in\nreturn.\n\"in the past the Globe has always opposed a monopoly and everything that\npartook of the nature of monopoly.\nBut, sir, we see the Globe today supporting a policy which would create the\ngreatest monopoly that has ever existed in this country. * * * * I say\nagain that the Globe has been unprincipled in this matter, that it has been a\nmere political weathercock, that it has\nacted more like a nlckel-in-the-slot machine, that is prepared to do any turn\nor take any stand that Is lucrative to\nits owners. * * * True, I come to\na conclusion from circumstantial evidence, but as honorable members know\nmany a ntlin has been hanged on circumstantial evidence, and evidence\nnothing like as strong as that which\ncan be adduced to show that the Globe\nwas implicated In this deal.\n\"Two of the prominent directors of\nthe Globe undertook to sell the British\nColumbia Southern railway charter to\nthe Canadian Pacific railway.\n\"The course of the Globe in upholding\nthe purchase of the Canadian Pacific\nrailway for bogus concessions in return\nis not disinterested, but, on tbe other\nhand, characterized by deception and\nfraud. Notwithstanding al! this, tbe\neditor of the Globe In last night's Issue\nsays that he Is above all these things\nwhich are going on with the directors\nof his company. He would have us believe that he is immaculate in his sanctum and utterly uninfluenced by what\nis going ou among his directors, that\nhe knows nothing about It and is not\nactuated or Influenced by it In the least.\nSir, I cannot accept that.\n\"I would say to the editor of the\nGlobe, come down off tbe perch a little. I would ask him to rid himself of\nthis assumed indignation.' 1 would ask\nhim to get rid of that appearance of\nInjured innocence which he assumes\nand come down to facts. Let him deal\nIn facts, because that Is what the people want in this matter. There 1b no\nuse In dealing In recrimination and\noffensive language, for that serves no\npurpose at all. Let him explain if It Is\na fact that the directors of the Globe\nare interested In the British Columbia\nSouthern railway and coal lands out\nthere. I^et him state If, through the\ninstrumentality of the directors of the\nGlobe, the Canadian Pacific railway\nwere Induced to purchase that charter\nwhen previously they could not be Induced to do so.\n\"Let the Globe explain why it was\nthat just as soon as the directors of the\nGlobe became interested in this matter\nthe Globe came out editorially In support of the scheme let them explain\nfurthermore wby, in connection with\nthis matter, they have abandoned\nprinciples which are undoubtedly lib:\neral principle' why they are opposing\nthe governme... construction of that\nline, when It would beyond a doubt be\na paying investment to this country.\nLet them explain why they are not opposing monopoly tn regard to this matter as they have denounced It in abandoning us to a stupendous monopoly,\nand let them explain, above all, why,\nwhen their conduct is questioned, they\nhave only torrents of abuse to turn upon the person who thinks it Is his public duty to call attention to the matter.\nSir, until these matters are cleared up,\nI have no ft'ar of standing In this house,\nor any place else in public, and stating,\nwhat I have stated; and I am perfectly\nwilling that the genera) public should\njudge who is the liar and the slanderer.\"\nJUDGE FORIN HOME AGAIN\nRETURN8   AFTER   AN   ENJOYABLE\nTRIP TO OLD COUNTRY\nATTENDS    MANY  MEETINGS    AND\nHEARS INTERESTING ADDRESSES\nJudge and Mrs. J. A. Forin and their\nfamily arrived back in Nelson after a\n\\ lengthy absence on Saturday night on\nthe Crow boat and are being welcomed\nhome by their many friends.\nHis honor has been on leave of absence for the past eight months and\nhas thoroughly enjoyed the outing and\nj been benefitted in every way thereby.\nI He spent the first three months ot\nhis holidays with Mrs. Forin and the\nfamily at his old home In Belleville.\nOnt., meeting old^riends and visiting\nthe neighborhood. Then in the month\nof May he proceeded with his eldest\ndaughter .to England and Scotland,\nwhere he spent that month and also\nJune and July. A large part of the\ntime was taken up in seeing the sights\nof London, especially in visiting the\nlaw courts on the Strand and attending various meetings where a large\nnumber of the leading public men of\nthe mother country delivered addresses. 'Prominent amongst these was H.\n' H. Asqulth, the prime minister. Manchester, Edinburgh and Glasgow were\nalso visited and.a.vtofy enjoyable couple of weeks .were spent-at the seaside\nIn Essex during the warm weather.\nSince his return.to Canada the judge\nand his family have spent several\nweeks camping and fishing on the\nbeautiful bay of Qulnte, which is famous for Its scenic beauty, particularly\n\u00ab in the autumn months when the maple\nleaves begin to turn.\nJudge Forin expressed himself as delighted with all he saw on his trip; but\nas being pleased at returning once\nmore to Nelson and the Kootenays,\nRobbed Post Office.\nVANCOUVER, Oct. fi\u2014The post office at Ladner, was broken Into early\nthis morning and $250 in cash taken,\nas well as several small articles of\nvalue. The men who robbed the place\narc believed to have got to the other\nside qf the line.\nFifty Years a Blacksmith.\nSamuel Ft. Worley of Hlxburg, Va., has\nbeen shoeing hones for more than fifty\nyearn. He says: \"Chamberlain's Pain Balm\nhas given me great relief from lame back\nnnd rheumatism. It li the beat liniment I\never used.\" For sate by all druggists and\ndealers.\nCURTIS AT CRANBROOK.\nMeeting was a Frost for Liberal Candidate\u2014A Chilly  Reception.\nOn Wednesday evening Curtis came\nhere for his meeting with J. A. Macdonald, K. C, of Rossland and F. J.\nDeane of Nelson as his bottle holders\nand bearers of the bag with the cloro-\nform sponge in It, says the Cranbrook\nProspector. That meeting, or rather\nthe amosphere of it, would keep Pat\nBurns & Co. in Ice for a century. It\nwas a heartbroken, frozen fiasco. There\nwas a haunting sense of dissolution in\nthe air and a silence such as creeps on\npeople gathered in a> house where death\nIs imminent. Things went well enough\nwhile Rr. J. H. King was speaking, but\nwhen Deane started the chill set In. He\nspoke awhile in the hushed silence of\nthe hall and succeeded In saying nothing. He had no mandate to deliver. J.\nA. Macdonald, K. C, the leader of the\nopposition In Victoria, followed and the\nladles reached for their wraps. He said\nthat Laurier was responsible for the\n120 million bushels of wheat that they\nharvested in the west this season. That\nthe great fault of the conservatives was\nthat they never defined their charges\nagainst the governmnt He admitted\nthat there was something wrong In the\ndepartment of marine and fisheries and\nthat Goodeve will make a splendid case\nagainst the liberals out of the material,\nfurnished by the famous civil service\nreport. But he could not raise a cheer\nor a hand clap. So it drifted from\nchilly weather to Arctic regions. Macdonald Is the Tulklnghorn of the liberal\nfold.\nThen came Smith Curtis heralded by\ntin thunder from the wings, the common theatrical thunder produced by\nsome fellow Bhakfng a sheet of paper\nin the wings of the stage. The wild applause, that's what they will call it,\nlasted for every second of ten, and then\nCurtis launched Into a compliment ot\na most involved character to the ladles\npresent. ' He appeared to get tangled up\nin his smiles and ended that part of\nhis speech by saying something about\nmaking this province a white man's, or\na white woman's country with blond\nhair. No one understood what he\nmeant, and a few smiled feebly as tf\nthey felt there was some kind 0t' a Joke\nconcealed on the premises. Here the\ncold reached zero, or near It. To warm\nit up he referred to the gas buoys that\nwere of so groat use to the navigation\nof the St. Lawrence, that they helped\nsave two mud scows from the horrors\nof a wattery grave. Therefore, vote for\ngas buoys. (We are deeply interested\nin gas buoys out here.) Then he turned to a portrait of Laurier at the back\nof the platform and asked the people to\ngaze on that noble countenance, and\nhaving gazed, to ask themselves in their\nsouls, could  a man  with  so lofty a\nGoodeve Meetings\nMr. A. S. Goodeve, the conservative candidate In Kootenay for\nthe bouse of commons, will address meetings in the riding as\nfollows:\nSlocan City, Wednesday Oct.\n7; New Denver, Thursday Oct. S;\nRevelstoke, Friday Oct. 9; Arrowhead, Saturday Oct. 10; Cam-\nbourne, Monday Oct. 12; Ferguson,\nTuesday Oct 13; Kaslo, Thursday\nOct. 15; Nelson, Friday Oct. 1G;\nAInsworth, Saturday Oct. 17.\nWm. Hunter, Thos. Taylor, N.\nF. MacKay, M. L. A.'s and other\nspeakers will accompany Mr.\nGoodeve and take part in the\nmeetings in his behalf. The liberal and socialist candidates are\ninvited to attend.\n1ENRYS4\u2014i\nNow ready for   fall   trade:\n90,000   Peach, Apricot, Nectarines, Cherry, Plum, Prune\nPear    and    Apple\u2014In    all\nleading varieties.\n10,000 small fruits\n10,00 ornamental trees In all\nleading varieties for B. C.\nStrictly home grown without\nirrigation and not subject to\ndamage    from    fumigation.\nStock of bulbs on hand from\nJapan, France and  Holland,\nBee supplies, spray   pumps,\nseeds, etc.\n140 Page Catalogue free\nOffice, Greenhouses and\nSeedhouse: 3010 Westminster     Road,    VANCOUVER\n^NURSERIES\nCI-EANINQ AND PRESSING\nSuits Called (or and Deliver*!.\nA. J. DRISCOLL\nPhone 365.\u2014Baker St Opposite Queu'i\nHotel.\nbrow and a countenance so noble, be\npossibly guilty of the charges that were\nlaid to the door of the party he represented? Of course not. It was absurd.\nThen give your votes t0 that noble\ncountenance. The trade in 1896 waa so\nmuch, and the trade in 1906 was so\nmuch more. Who made that trade?\nLaurier. Therefore vote for Laurier. By\nthis time the audience had grown tired,\nand wearied and perished, anil disgusted, and sleepy and home they went.\nThat Is what Smith Curtis ought to do,\ngo home and keep himself quiet.      (\nThe worst of the matter is that the\nfamed banana belt of Cranbrook js\nwithered by the gizzard of this business. It Ib no laughing matter by any\nmeans.   Tis true.\nPOLLARDS TOMORROW.\nJuvenile Opera Company Will Open In\n\"Florodora.\"\nSomething far removed from the ordinary line of theatrical attractions is\npromised in the engagement of the Pollard Lilliputian Opera company at the\nopera house commencing Thursday evening. The Pollards are a notable organization among the world's many and\nvaried amusement attractions, as it is\ncomposed entirely of bright and gifted\njuveniles. They are now making their\nfourth tour of America, having performed in every city of consequence In tho\nOrient, South Africa, China, Japan and\nthe Philippines. The sultan of Jphore\nwas a notable auditor at the performance of \"The Belle of New York,\"\nwhich the juveniles presented at his\ncapltol during their tour of India. The\nlate Cecil Rhodes was a great admirer\nof the organization and had his picture\ntaken In the midst of the talented\nyoungsters during one of their trips In\nSouth Africa. The clever youngsters,\nwho preBent their performances with\nall the snap and go of veteran professionals, wilt make their opening appearance tomorrow evening and will\noffer the following: \"Florodora.\" \"The\nToy Maker\" and \"Rcnaway Girl.\"\nShoemaking\nand Repairing\nGo to the old stand next to post\noffice, Ward street, Nelson, B. C.\nEvery description of boots and\nshoes made to measure on the\nshortest notice. Loggers', miners'\nand ranchers' boots a specialty.\nBring your repairs and get good\nworkmanship.\nWilley Qb Sadler\nBoots and Shoes\nFuU line of men's and   boys'   hand\nmade miners' and loggers' boots.\nRepairing promptly attended to.\nC. Romano\n310    Baker   Street    3IO\nKOOTENAY DISTRICT\nLIBERAL-CONSERVATIVE\nASSOCIATION\nCandidate for House of Common..\nA. S. Goodeve, Rossland.\nOFFICERS,  1908.\nPRESIDENT\nR. S. Lennle, Nelson.\nVICE-PRESIDENTS\nN. S. Mackav, M. L. A., Kaslo;    J a*.\nSchofield, M. L. A., Trail;  Thos.\nTaylor, M. L. A., Revelstoke; W.\nR. Ross, M. L. A., Fernle; Wm.\nHunter, M.  L. A.,  Silver-\ntoo; H. O. Parsons, M.\nL. A., Golden.\nSECRETARY\nD. C. McMorris, Nelson.\nTREASURER\nL. A. Campbell, Rossland.\nEXECUTIVE\nP. R. Macdonald,' Rossland; Dr. Broi\nnell, Fernle; Thos. Caven, Cran-\nBrook; T. McNelsh, Slocan; F.\nC. Billot, Trout Lake; W. W\nFoster, Revelstoke; H. An*\nderson, Trail; W. A. Macdonald. Nelson.\nKOOTENAY LMDS AGAIN\nSupport local enterprise and buy\nKootenay Jam Co.'s\nPURE PRESERVES\nof all dealers.\nCanada's   Best\nThe f.Cellner Electric co.\nELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS\nOffice\u2014Cor. Josephine and Victoria.\nPhone A. 89.\nArmature Winding and Electrical\nRepairs.   Light and Power Plants\nInstalled Complete, also Telephones,\nHotel Annunciators, Electric Signs,\nAutomatic   Fire    Alarms,   Housi\np Wiring, and The Apple Automatic\nSparker.\nPrompt Serrlce and Special Attention given to all work.\nDrunkenness Can Be Cured\u2014The\nEvans Gold Cure Institute..\nThe Evans Institute for the cure of\nthe drink and drug habits, established\nIn Winnipeg 14 years and in Vancouver\n1 year, with entire success. Now removed to more commodious quarters\nHt 950 Park Drive, Grundvlew, corner\nParker   street.\nProspectus, testimonials, etc., sent\nprivately on application. The superintendent may be consulted at any Lime.\nPhone   B4020.\nWest Kootenav Butcher Co.\nE. C. TRAVE8, Manager\nWholesale and Retail Dealers In\nFRESH, AND SALTED MEATS.\nNothing   hut   fresh   and   wholesome\nmeats and supplies kept In stock.\nMall orders receive careful attention.\nW\u00bb Pat ftt.nri.it Attention to Mall Orders\nH. J. WILTON, Tailor\nLadltY and Santa' Clothea Cleaned,\nRepaired and Preeaed.\nSATISFACTION GUARANTEED\nClothaa Called for and Delivered.\n106 Joaephloe St., Opposite Manhattan Hotel, Nelson, B. 0.\nSend to\nE.GRIZZELLE. Plorht\nNELSON, B. C.\nFOB CHOICE\nCut Flowers\nAnd Artistic Floral Designs, Wedding\nBouquets, Presentation Flower Baskets,\net cetera.\nTHE INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOLS\nIs a savings hank of spare momenta. It enables the busy worker to Invest spare time in the acquirement of technical training\nthat returns as interest many\ntimes its cost in the shape of increased earnings and a successful\nlife.\nOfflce     Wood-Vallance     Block,\nRoom 1.\nR. LAWRENCE, Representative.\nAddress:  Box 741, Nelson, B. C.\nAtlantic S. S. Sailings\nMONTREAL AND QUEBEC TO\nLIVERPOOL\nALLAN LINE-\nCorsican, Montreal to Liverpool,,..Oct. 18\nVirginian, Montreal to Liverpool ....Oct. U\nDOMINION  LINE-\nDomlnlon, Montreal to Liverpool....Oct. M\nSouthwark, Montreal to Liverpool..Oct. 31\nCANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY LINE-\nEmpreas of Ireland, Quebec to Liverpool  Oct, fa\nLake Erie, Montreul to Liverpool ..Oct. 24\n\u25a0  'N*KL>   UN-v-\nCaronia, New York to Liverpool....Oct. 17\nLauretania, New York to Liverpool..Oct. 21\nWHITE STAR LINE\u2122\nArabic, New York tot Liverpool ....Oct. IS\nCeltic, New York to Liverpool  Oct. 23\nATLANTIC  TRANSPORT LINB-\nMinnehaha, New York to London....Oct. 24\nAMERICAN LINE-\n8t. Louts, New York to Sout).am'n..Oct. 17\nPhiladelphia, New York to Southampton ... Oct. 24\nFRENCH LINE\u2014\nLa Touralne, New York to Havre..Oct. 15\nLa Savole, New York to Havre....Oct 22\nRED STAR LINE-\nZeeland, New York to Antwerp Oct 17\nKroonland, New York to Antwerp..Oct. U\nit you tun going ut buttttu* can oi *\u2022*.\u00bb*\nui for particulars.\nAll continental rates and soilings on as*\nplication. If you are contemplating Ul>\ntag an ocean voyage drop ua a Una an*\nw\u00ab will be pleased to furnish you with\nfull information promptly.\nW. H.   DEACON, H.  M. TAIT.\nC. P. A., Nelson.      Gen. Ast. Winnipeg.\nNOTICE\nCERTIFICATE OF IMPROVEMENTS.\nNOTICE.\nJoint Fractional and St. Eugene Fractional mineral claims, situate In the Nelson\nmining division of West Kootenay district.\nWiier> located:   On Fawn creek.\nTiks notice that I, F. C. Green, acting\nas agent fer En eat Latudlppe, free miners' certificate No. B35C5. Intend, sixty days\nfrom date hereof, to apply to the mining\nreported for certificates of Improvements,\nfo;' iht: purpose of obtaining crown grants\nof tbe above  claims.\nAnd further take notice that action, un-\nstatement of tne oppioxlinate number of\nder section 37, must be rommenceil before\nthe Issuance of such certificate of improvements.\nDated this fourteenth day of September,\nA. D. 1908. 9-24-6W\nF.   C GREEN. Nelson.  B.   C.\nNOTICE.\nIN THE MATTER OF AN APPLICATION\nfor the issue of a duplicate of the Certificate of Title to et 11 minerals precious and\nbase (save coul) under Lois iSKf, \"Cork\"\nMineral Claim, ami 4SS4, \"Dublin\" Mineral\nClaim; both In Group One, District of\nKootenuv.\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that it Is\nmy Intention to Issue nt the expiration ot\none month after the tlrat publication hereof duplicates of the Certilleates of Title to\nthe above mentioned minerals In Hie name\nof Julea Justin Fieutot, which Certificates\nof Title are dated the 23rd of April, 1601,\nand the 22nd of January, 1901, and numbered 223A,  and 4087K. respectively.\nH.   F.  MACLEOD,\nDistrict Registrar,\nland Registry Office,\nNelaon, H. C,\nSeptember,   2nd.   I!*. 114-26\nSHERIFF'S SALE.\nRy virtue of a Writ of Fieri Facias Issued\nout of the Supremo Court of British Columbia, In an action whereof the Western Lumber nnd Pole Company is plaintiff and W.\nR. Kinney Is defendant. I bnvo alt-zed and\ntaken into execution nil the rifcht, title and\nInterest of the said defendant, W, It.\nupon the ground where .situate, and tho\nKinney in a quantity of telegraph and telephone poles anil piling, now situate along\ntlie line of thte Bcdllngtoh nnd Nelson railway, in three Iota, at the Kinney Landing,\nthe English Landing und Smith Landing, so\ncalled, between Creston and Port Hill, Ida-\nbo, amounting lo nil 14,6tK> poles, more or\nloss, in lengths from 25 feet to GS feet. In 5\nfeet Increments, un also 15,128 lineal feet\nof piling, more or less, nt the Kinney Landing and  English Lunding.\nAll of which I shall expose for sale nt\npublic miction, or sufficient thereof to *;ai inly said Judgment debt and costs nt my of-\nnce in the City of Nelson, B. C on Tuesday, the 22nd day of September. 1D08, at 12.\no'clock noon.\nThe poles and piling may be Inspected\npoles of eacb length at eacli landing, may\nbe seen at my ofttce.\nDated at Nelaon, B. C, 16th September,\nIMS,\nS. P. TUCK,\n125-5. Sheriff of South Kootenay.\nTbe above sale la postponed until Tuesday the 29th day of September, 1908, at tbe\nsame place and time.\nB. P. TUCK.\n130-6 Sheriff of South Kootenay.\nThe above sale Is further postponed until Thursday, the 8th day of October, 1908,\nS.  P.  TUCK,\n134-8t Sheriff of South Kootenay.\nThe above sale is further postponed until\nTuesday, tbe 1Mb day of October, l!);s ut\ntbe  name   place and   hour.\n1-11-7 S. P. TtlGK,\nSheriff or South Kootenay.\nNotice of Dissolution of Partnership.\nNOTICE is hereby given that tho partnership heretofore existing between the undersigned as ranchers at Caribou Ranche,\nCrawford Bay, B.C., is dissolved a* of the\n21st day of September, IMS, the undersigned\nCecil J. Fnddo'n retiring from tho partnership. Tho undersigned Robert G. Fuller\nwill not be responsible for any debts contracted by the said Cecil J. Paddon on account of the aald partnership on and after\nthe said 21st day of September, 1908.\nDated this 2lst day of September, 1908.\nROBERT G. FULLER\nCECIL J. PADDON.        136-12\nPHYSICAL CULTURE.\nClasses are now being formed and will\nbe held by Miss Sandeman. at 614 Victmln\nStreet, (next fire hall) from October 1st.\nFor Information and further particulars\naddress Box 665, Post Office, Nelaon,\n\"9S9\n=m\n*2-j\u00bbj*j\u00bbjHj2ggjK^^ft^^^^2gj^^^^^jF\u00bb^\n PAGE FOUR.\n\u00a9he \u00a9attoj JJetn*.\nWEDNESDAY .\niOCTOBER 7\nwssewsssKes*\nBlankets\nWe offer 50 pair ot English white all wool blankets,   perfectly   new\natock, whcili were slightly soiled by being shipped in a coal car.   Keg-   \\\nular price $6, J6.50 and 17.50 per pair\nSpecial Price This Week $4.45\nThe Hudson's Bay Stores\nStanley and Baker Sts., Nelson\nImperial Bank of Canada\nHEAD OFFICE TORONTO\nCapital Authorized  .110,000,000   '\nCapital Paid Up    $4,990,000 I Rest   $4,990,000\nD. R. WILKIE, Praaldent        |  HON. ROBT. JAFFRAY, Vica-Prao,\nBRANCHES IN BRITISH COLUMBIA\nArrowhead, Cranbrook, Golden, Michel, Nelaon,   Revelstoke,  Vancouver,\nVictoria.\n8AVINGS DEPARTMENT\nIntereat allowed on depoalta from date of depoalt and credited quarterly.\nNELSON BRANCH J, M. LAY, Manager.\nCanadian Bank of Commerce\nCapital Paid Up $10,000,000     Reat $5,000,OW\nHEAD OFFICE TORONTO\n\u00bb. E. WALKER, Prealdent ALEX. LAIRD, Oeneral Manager\n\u25a0ranches Throughout Canada and In the United States and England\nA general banking bualnese transacted.. Accounts may be opened and\nconducted by mall with all branches of this bank,\nSAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT\nDeposits of $1 and upwarda received, Intereat allowed at current rates\nand paid quarterly.. The depositor le subject to no delay whatever In\ntha withdrawal of the whole or any portion ot the depoalt.\nJ. L. BUCHAN, Manager NELSON BRANCH\nBANK Of MONTREAL\n(Established 1817)\nCapital All Paid Up ....$14,400,000     Rest $11,0\nHEAD OFFICE MONTREAL\nRt Hon. Lord Strathcona and M ount Royal, 0. C. M. 0. Hon. Prealdent\nHen. Sir. George Drummon d, K. C. M, G., President\nE. $. Cleuaton, Vice-President and Oeneral Manager\n\u2022RANCHES IN BRITISH COLUMBIA\nArmstrong, Enderby, Greenwood,   Kelcwna,   Nelson,   New  Denver,\nNicola, New Westminster, Rossland,  Summerland,  Vancouver,  Vernon,\nVictoria, Chlllawack, Hosmer.\nNELSON BRANCH L, B. OEVEBER, Manager.\nThe Royal Bank of Canada\nINCORPORATED 180$.\nCapital Paid Up  $3,900,000\nReserve Fund $4,990,000 \u2014\u25a0\"\u25a0\"-*\nTotal Assets  $46,800,000\nHEAD OFFICE MONTREAL.\nBranches In Canada extending I   A   general   banking   business\nfrom the Pacific to the Atlantic |   transacted.\nSAVINGS BANK DEPOSITS.\nReceived In sums of $1 and upwarda.   Interest credited1 thereon quarterly\nat current rate.   Depositors are subject to  no delay whatever  In the\nwithdrawal of the whole or any portion of the amounts dspoolted.\nQ. A SPINK, Manager. NELSON, B. C. BRANCH\nSubject to Market Fluctuations\nWe Will Rnv We Will Sell\n2000 n. C. Amalgamated Coal  4c\n100 B. C. Copper   16.12 1-2\n20 Consolidated Smelters JC9.no\n1000 Canadian N. W. Oil   40c\n200 Dominion Copper 62 l-2c\n20 Granby Consolidated   $95.00\n1000 International Coal     58c\n2000 Royal Collieries     20c\nWe deal in all listed and unlisted s\ntions at all times. If you will trade\nwires at our expense. \t\n1000 Alberta Coal   10c\n10 Canadian Metal Co :.. $7.50\n2000 Diamond Vale Coal 13 l-2c\n1800 Diamond Coal   54c\n200 English Marconi   (6.50\n5000 Forty-nine Creek Reports  bid\n150 Hewitt Mining   bargain\n1000 Rambler Cariboo   ISc\necurltles and can make closest quota-\nat prices named above, please use the\nMIGHTON & GAVANAUGH\nDrawer 1082\nBROKERS\nNELSON, B. C.\nPhone 110\n\u00a9he \u00a7atltt Slew*.\nrtOUibed at Nelson Brtry Morang\nWTcept  Monflny. to\nNewt Publishing Company, Limited\nW. a. ICrMORRIS  Manager\nA LIBERAL CONDEMNATION\nThe Montreal Dally Witness, which\nlias always since Its foundation been a\nstaunch advocate of liberalism, has the\n\u2022 following to say regarding the Crow's\nNest Pass railway deal aad recent con-\ntroversy -between premier Roblin of\nManitoba and the Toronto Globe, which\nis generally looked upon as the leading\nliberal organ of Canada:\n\"It is known to all men that the\nGlobe at the time referred to blossomed out with broadside after broadside, demanding the subsidies In question. It was known that, the principal\npromoters of the Crow's Nest deal were\nsupporters of the Laurier government.\nIt was understood that the same men\nfinancially controlled the Globe. The\nprincipal of them was the president of\nthe Globe company.\n\"No one could question that the\nGlobe was injured tn standing and re*\n\u00bb\u00bb\u00bblt\u00bb$\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bbt\u00bb\u00bb\u00bbtt4\u00bb\u00bb\u00bbl\u00bb\u00bb*\u00bb*t\u00bb\u00ab4^\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb#\u00bb*\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb>M\nModern. In Every Way\n'.      Fine residence tor sale, partly furnished.   Owner   must   sacrifice.\nCall and get full particulars from\nPROCTER &JMLACKWOOD\nAgents\nElectrical and Steam Engineers\nand Electrical Workers\nWill find on our shelves many standard works by the foremost authorities on these subjects. Here are a few of them.\nWe can procure any book you want In the Bhortest possible\ntime.\nRoper's engineer's handy hook\nfor steam and electrical engineers     $4.50\nRoper's questions and answers\nfor steam and electrical engineers       $2.25\nSteam and electrical engineers, Spaugenherg   ...$4.25\nThe locomotive up to date,\nMcShane  \u25a0\u00bb $2.50\nMarine engineer's guide, by\nWannau        $4.25\nFoster's   electrical    engineer's\npocket book - \u25a0 \u25a0 - - $5,50\nThe   electric   railway,   Rosenberg    $2.50\nModern wiring   diagrams   and\ndescriptions    for    electrical\nworkers   $1.75\nHowe to become a successful\nelectrclan, by Sloan .. $1.65\nEngine, general and elec. traction pocket book,   by   Dawson   $5.50\nAnd many others.\nW.  Q. THOMSON\nBookseller and Stationer\nPhone 34.\nNelson. B. C.\nA   8EN8I8LE  MERCHANT\nBear Is'nnd, Aug 20, 19)3.\nMINARD'S LINIMENT CO,  Ltd.\nDear Slrn\u2014Your traveller Is here- today\nand we urn gettlns n inept*, quanlitv of\nyour MINARD'S LINIMENT. We find it\nthe best 1 nlment In tlia market making no\nexception. Wo have been In business 13\nyears and have handled nill kinds, but\nhave dropped them till but yours; that\npells Itself; the others have to be pushed\nto get rid of.\nM. A. HAQERMAN.\nputatlon by this barefaced raid, which\nbore no resemblance to newspaper advocacy of a public interest and was\nsimply the pushing of a private interest, That that raid did anything to\nturn public opinion In favor of the\ndeal, we cannot imagine, with such\nan Intelligent and high-minded public\nas that to which tbe Globe addresses\nitself, The effect must have heen precisely the opposite, and must have\ngreatly weakened the allegiance of\nmany of the party which the Globe\nsupported.\n\"An illustration of this we thought\nwe observed in the then editor of the\nGlobe, who was up till then\u2014shall we\nsay after that?\u2014an enthusiastic supporter of the liberal party and of its\nleader. We should have been more convinced of this had Mr. Willlson not\nchanged his views on questions of abstract principle as well as on the merits\nof parties und leaders.\n\"Without waiting for what Mr. Willlson may have to say, by way of explanation, we may say that the broadsides in question were not editorial\nand may have been looked on as advertisements to be paid tor, as Mr.\nUublin avers they were paid for, in a\nvery unriusual way, and on a very unusual scale.\n\"In so far as the proprietors of the\none enterprise were also proprietors of\nthe other, that was simply transferring\nvalues from cue pocket to another,\npossibly to a pocket with holes in it.\n\"It 1b also to be said for Mr. Willlson, that whether he did or did not\nat tbe time hand in his resignation, he\ndid some time after transfer his services.\"\nEVIDENCE OF WEAKNESS.\nOne of the most striking evidences\nof the Laurier government's weakness\nis the manner in which its members are\ngoing up and down the country promising anything and everything In sight If\nthe people will only give them another\nterm In offlce. Sir Wilfrid Laurier 1b\nthe leading promise maker. Since the\ncampaign opened he haB promised the\npeople of western Canada that he will\nbuild a railway to Hudson bay, the\npeople of the Niagara peninsula that\nhe will have the Welland canal deepened, the people of North Bay that he\nwill have the Georgian bay canal constructed, the people of Berlin that he\nwill make Mr. William Lyon MacKenzie\nKing minister of labor if they will only\nelect that young man to parliament. All\nthese and many more smaller brlbeB\nof a similar nature has he held out to\nthe people of Canada to induce them to\nforget his government's record of maladministration, extravagance and graft\nand return Win to power again.\nBut Sir Wilfrid Is not doing all the\npromising. The other members of his\ncabinet as well a\u00bb his supporters\nthroughout the country are also doing\ntheir Bhave. Hon. Rodolphe Lemieux,\nfor example, has promised the country\nfree rural mall delivery and the i same\nminister has offered the people of Berlin a brand new clock for the post\noffice building if they will only elect the\ngovernment candidate, Mr. William\nLyon MacKenzie' King, whose cause apparently needs considerable bolstering\nup. Promises of public works of various kinds, tooth great and small, involving the expenditure of hundreds of\nmillions of dollars are being held out\nto the electors all over the country. Sir\nWilfrid has seen fit to descend from the\nhigh pedestal of statesmanship on which\nhis friends have\" placed him, and la\nmaking a barefaced attempt to bribe\nIhe people of Canada with their own\nmoney to return him to power tn order\nthat the Siftons,'.the Turrlffs, the Ad-\namsons, the Hltchcocks, the McGregors,\nthe Malcolm MacKenzles, the BurrowBes,\nthe Frasers, the Coxes, the Jaffrays and\nothers, who havjj,-already grown rich\nthrough their TaM^on the public domain, may further batten at the expense\not the people of Canada.\nSir Wilfrid's course in the campaign\ncannot but be humiliating In the extreme to every Canadian who takes any\npride in his country, but particularly\nto those among his followers who have,\nheretofore looked up to him aB being\nabove the ordinary run of politicians.\nThis policy of wholesale bribery on the\npart of Sir Wilfrid-ta proving a rude\nawakening to whose faith In public men\nwould lead them to expect that a man\nwho had been entrusted with the premiership of this great Dominion would\n,bo above such methods; It serves to\nBhow, however, the lengths to which the\ngovernment finds -Itself driven in its endeavor to retain the reigns of power.\nNot daring to ask for a verdict from\nthe people on Its record, it is trying to\nbuy Its way back [Into the power, using\nthe people's own money to accomplish\nthis object.\nMEN TO BE COMPLEMENTED.\nThe strike of the C. P. R. machinists\nwill end this morning when the men\n\u2022will return to work after being out for\ntwo months. It has been a long and\ntrying time on the men and they are\nto <be complimented on the fine spirit\nthey have shown throughout. They\nwere out in a tight for principle and\nthey conducted themselves as men engaged In suck a struggle might be expected to.\nIn all the two months they were out,\neven when things looked blackest for\nthem, not an act was committed to\nwhich objection could be taken on any\nground. Throughout they have lived\nup to the best traditions of good citizenship and, by their conduct generally,\nhave earned the respect of one and all.\nThe manner.in .which they have behaved has been an object lesson to\nthose who naturally associate strikes\nwtlh lawlessness.\nIt Is to be hoped that the company\nappreciates the manner In which the\nmen have conducted themselves and\nthat whatever grievances the men had\nat the time the strike was declared will\nbe remedied In the near future, if not\nimmediately. The 0. P. R. should ,be\nproud to have such a fine body of men\nin Its employ as those who were on\nstrike in Nelson and in Its own interests should be prepared to meet them\nat least half way in any negotiations\nwhich may hereafter be undertaken.\nEDITORIAL NOTES.\nWhile Sir Wilfrid Laurier Is promising public works' of all kinds In other\nparts of Canada, the fruit growers of\nsouthern British Columbia are suffering\nfrom the lack of an experimental farm\nIn this part of the country.\nLet Borden commence.\nIt Is time for a change.\nBorden, Goodeve and a white British\nColumbia.\nWhat do you think of Sir Wilfrid\nLaurier's policy ot wholesale bribery?\nA vote for Mr, Smith Curtis is a vote\nIn endorsatlon of the Crow's Nest Pass\ndeal.\nAccording to Mr. John Keen, returning officer, It is at Ottawa, and not at\nVictoria, that there has been delay in\nregard to the voters' lists..\nIf Mr. Borden does not keep his promise of clean, progressive government\nhe can be turned out in five years from\nnow as the Laurier government .should\nbe on October 26. Only in this way can\nCanada hope to secure good government.\nDuring the twelve years that It has\nbeen in office the' Laurier government\nkhas gathered around it a bunch of\ngrafters who are allowed to enrich\nthemselves at the country's expense.\nIf only to get rid of these there should\nbe a change of government.\nIt is time the Kootenays had a man\nin the Dominion house who will keep a\nclear head and he capable of administering the affairs of his constituency.\nThe people will have no regrets for\nsending Mr. A. S. Goodeve to Ottawa.\u2014Moyle Leader. ,\nLa Patrle, one of the leading liberal\npapers of the province of Quebec, is of\nthe opinion that tbe liberals, will carry\ntwo and the conservatives five seats In\nBritish Columbia. From present Indications La Patrle Is too generous to its\nfriends. If they get a single seat they\nwill be doing well.\nMembers of the government became\nenormously rich while in office, without any apparent means ot enrichment\nexcept the power placed in their hands\nby virtue of their position.\u2014Hon. Joseph Martin, former liberal leader and\nmember of parliament in his address at the International Free Trade\ncongresB in London, Eng., 4th August.\n1008. ' \u25a0\nThe remarks of Mr; W. W. B. Mclnnes, the liberal candidate for Vancouver in the present election, on the\nCrow's NeBt Pass deal at the time that\nit was before the house of commons\nshows that the government was warned\nof the steal they were permitting but\nthey deliberately went ahead and put\nit through.   It was apparently another\ncase of \"Cox can't wait.\" The Globe\ndirector was hungry for those \"rich coal\nlands which have added so many millions to his wealth.\nThe officers and members, of the\nYoung Conservative club are to be congratulated on the success of their rally\nlost evening. Not only was there a good\nattendance, but .there was also enthusiasm, which reached Its height when Mr.\nA. S. Goodeve, the conservative candidate for Kootenay, entered the' room.\nSuch enthusiasm means a good majority for Mr. Goodeve from Nelson on\nelection day.\nThe Victoria Times owned by Hon.\nWilliam Templeman, minister of inland\nrevenue and British Columbia's representative in the cabinet of Sir Wilfrid\nLaurier, says: The. attempt to galvanize the issue of better terms Into\nlife for political purposes in this campaign will fall.\" This is the attitude\nof the government att Ottawa exactly,\none of determined hostility to the reopening, of this question which menus\nso much to the people of British Columbia.\nIt was stated yesterday that Mr.\nJohn Keen, returning officer for Kootenay, had repudiated the Interview with\nhim which appeared in yesterday's\nNews. In fairness to'itself, the News\ntakes this opportunity of saying that\nevery word that wbb credited '.to Mr.\nKeen yesterday was given expression\nto by that gentleman In the course of\nan Interview with a representative of\nthis paper.   t\nHere is what Mr. Borden said on the\nquestion of Asiatic exclusion, speaking\nin Vancouver during his tour of this\nprovince: \"The conservative party,\nwhich brought this splendid province\ninto confederation, will ever maintain\none supreme consideration to which all\nmaterial consideration must give way;\nand it is this: British Columbia must remain a British and a Canadian province, inhabited and dominated by men\nIn whose veins runs the blood of those\ngreat pioneering races which have built\nup and developed not only western, but\neastern Canada.\"\nRural mall delivery was one of the\nplanks of Mr. Borden's platform placed\nbefore the people of this country at'\nHalifax on August 20, 1907, or a little\nover a year ago. At that time the idea\nwas derided by the members of the\ngovernment and by the liberal papers\nfrom one end of the country to the\nother. Last session of parliament,\neven, the postmaster general, Hon.\nRudolphe Lemieux, came out flat foot-\nInvalids gain strength from\n\"BOVRIL\" quicker than from\nany other form of nourishment.\n\"BOVRIL\" Is recognized by\nphysicians throughout the world\nas being next to \"Nature\" In\nwinning a person back to health\nIn serious cases of collapse\nthere is no better reviver than\nan egg stirred Into a cup ot\nhot\nBOVRIL\nWHEN IN\nSPOKANE\nMop at In* Hotel Raymond, tho\nmost cantrslly located hotel In\nSpokane. Ratoa moderate. Buss\nmasts all trains.\nmsaoMatoosotmatmim\nMson Steam Laundry\nP. O. Box II.   Telephone Ut\nAU. Una. sad all colors of Xjadlas oat\nGents- Clothing\nCLEANED AND DTDD\nflannels,  Blankets,  Curtains,  Silks,  at*.\na specialty.   '\nStores nitrated to look Ilk. ae\u00bb.\nSteam Carpet Cleaning\nTour patronage solidtsl.\nPAUL NIPOtT. Proo.\ned against it. A few weeks, ago, how*\never, just on the eve of the election he\nannounced at Niagara, Ont., that the\ngovernment had decided on the adoption of free rural mall delivery. The\ngovernment having seen that the people In the country were Iii favor of this\nplank In Mr. Borden's platform jumped\nin and stole It. Even that, however,\nwill not save them on October 26. The\ncredit for the introduction of rural mall\ndelivery rests with Mr, R. L. Borden\nand the people know* It. ^j,\nArund Ps Successor.\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 6\u2014It 1b aUthorltai\nlively stated that W. O. Miller, service\nagent, wilt succeed J. T. Arundel, as\nsuperintendent of the C. P. R. in this\ncity.\nCO A L\nICE, COKE\nand WOOD\nWi nut k stick nl Cm Mm rnaptli Ms Ml Kaon (Mil CMl\nlhe Kootenay Ice & Fuel Co. n^cS,^.^.\nHandbags\nWe have just opened a fresh shtipment of the most beautiful\nhandbags we have ever shown. We cordially invite you to\ncome In and Inspect our stock and yon will be convneed that\nnowhere else in the city can you secure the same value.\nEye Weakness\nis something from which tbe majority\nof people suffer, and which is neglected\nby the majority of people who suffer\nfrom it. Do not neglect your eyes, if\nthey are in any way affected. We\nhave the best appliances for an accurate test and can fit you with glasses\nwhich will ease your eyes to such an\nextent that you will feel yourself to he\na new person.\nHave Correct Time\nIf your watch Is out of repair bring\nIt to us and we will put it Into first\nclass shape so that It will keep as a<v\ncurate tltme as though it were new:\nWe take pride In turning out work\nwhich can be relied upon.\nJ. J. Walker mMmJk\nGraduate Cpticisn and Jeweler\n WEDNESDAY  OCTOBER ?\n\u00a9he StfttjJ lien*..\nPACE flVt\n95?\nnOTELARMVALSOFADAV\nAt\nBurton City\nand you will be In the centre\nof the largest tract of level\nland on the Arrow lakes.\n6000 Acres\nof good, level fruit land, free\nfrom atones.\nIn the next two years, within five miles of .Burton City\n500\nPeople\nwill be engaged in the culture\not fruit and the land Is ao level\nand the roada ao good, that\nfruit growers will be able to\nRide In\nAutomobiles\nto and from the post office and\nIn their social visits.\nIn July we placed on the\nmarket a new subdivision ol\n10 and 20 acre blocks, fronting\noa tne lake shore at Orchard\nBeach, whioh la tour Biles above\nBurton City,\nTwo-thirds of these blocks are\ntold already. Every homeseek-\ner that we have shown over\nthis property has purchased one\nor more of these blocks for an\norchard home.\nFour blocks fronting on the\nlake shore are still left, any\none of which are good.\n$100 Down\nWill secure you one of these\norchard blocks and the further\npayments we will arrange to\nault you. Do not delay. Have\none selected for you'now.\nTo any one purchasing one\nor more of these blocks before\nOctober 20th we will pay 125.00\nfor expenses to examine the property. Write for photographs\nof the fruit exhibit at the Nelson fair from the Arrow Lake.\nHundreds of people who saw\nthis exhibit said that they were\nthe largest apples* they ever saw\nJ. E.\nAnnable\nWard Stmt\nNelson. 6. C.\nIHTMR-J. Klrkup, Rossland; G. F. Robinson, Summit; P. H. Burnham, Grand\nForks; I. S. McCrocken, wife and daughter,\nCahjary; C. W. Griffin. Hamilton; A, J.\nThornton, Vancouver; H. G. Nichols and\nwife. Ymlr; J. G. McDtarmlfl, Toronto; C.\nC. Stewart, Berlin; W. H. Kenneriiley, Bait\nLake; A. Alstrom. F. N. Dodd, Spokane;\nMrs. McNaught, C. Culllton, New Denver;\nHenry Blrks and wife, Q. N. Blrks. Montreal; H. R. Stevenson and wife, Lytton;\nMiss E. H. Ward, Greenwood.\nSTRATHCONA-B. Blodffett, G. H. HalHe\nSt. Paul; G. O. Buchanan and wife, Kaalo;\nJ. S. Harrison, C. Scott Galloway,. Leth-\nbrldge; C. E. Cartwrlsrtft; A. C. Fraeer,\nVancouver; A, S. Goodeve, Ronssland; R.\nDupont and Wife, Montreal; W. Hlllman,\nDes Moines; rt. Graham, Winnipeg.\nTHE QUEEN'S\nIAKH STRUT\nA. LAPOINTE,  Proprietor.\nLarge and comfortable bedrooms. Rates $2.50 to $5.00\nper week.\nQUEENS-Miss T.' L. Mackenzie, Trout\nLake; J. Gainer and wife, Mrs. McKeiinon,\nStrathcona,\nThe Royal Hotel\nMrs. Wm. Roberta, Proprietress\nCor. Stanley and Silica 8ta.\nOur   Special   Sunday   Dinner\nUnequalled in Kootenay\n25o\nRegular Boarders |8 par Weak.\nRates, $1.00 and $1.50 per day.\nTtOYAL-P. J.  O'Shea,  Port Hill; E. J.\nRichardson, Fan-on; F. S. Giant, ItosBland.\nThe Klondyke Hotel\nVERNON STREET\nHeadquarters for miners, smelter-\nmen, loggers and railroad men\nRates: $1.00 per day un.\nNELSON k JOHNSON, Fran*.\nKLONDTKE-B. Moaland, Athabasca; C.\nArthur, KubIo; D. Nute. T. shannon, Spokane; R. McLcoil, Salmo.\nTremont House\nBaker St., Nelson\nllalona ft Tregllluii, Props.\nInropean Flan, He. np\nAxnerioui Plan. \u00bb1.M and |Mt\nMeals, Uc.\nSPKC1AL RATES PBR MONTH\nTRKMONT\u2014R. Empcy. LaBlanche; C. A,\nClarke. Rlondel; F. Wilder, Wlnlaw; j. J.\n\u2022Grady, Creston.\nel; F. Wll\n- _\\1\n6rand Central Hotel\n\u2022ffMiTi put omit\nAmrlcii ui Itntm rini\nJ. A. CMCKSON    '\nGRAND CENTRALr-J.'Sexton, Rosslarldj\nW. Msraden, Calgary; H. Skonnuf. Golden;\nJ. McCallum, Northport; S. Clark, Grand\nForks; S. R. Clublne, W. Gray. A. Courtney, Salmo.      \u2022 '\nMadden House\nThos. Madden, Prop. Baker St.\nWell Furnished Rooms Wltb Balk\nBert Board In she City\nA COMFORTABL1 BOMB\nMADDEN\u2014J. Fowler, Robson; M. R. Mclean, Silverton; F. R. Anderson, M. C.\nMonaghan, D. Merber, R. Pohaff, Viuicou-\nv*t; J. S. Slmnis, Vernon.\nLAKEVIiEW-A. Fisher, Silver King; U.\nDavis and wife, Calgary; W. H. EJdridge.\nArrowhead.\nKOOTENAY\u2014F. Rcber, J. Noollng, Ked\nDeer; O. Lacomho. ahrldu cmi'w\nDeer; G. Lacomho, ,H. Semor, Grand Forks.\nNELSON\u2014A. McKlnnon. Kaslo; B. Ryan,\nA. 'Brickson. Spokane; A. Sutherland,.C.\nMurray, P. M. Hielschcr, F. Berganson,\nRossland.\nBAR'I'liETT-J. Hall. W. Howser, Greenwood; R. Daly, Vuncouver; R. Rogors, Seattle.\nSILVER KING-G. McLennan, A. N.\nGreathouse. G, Smith. Vancouver; 3. De-\nLeon, G. Crosslcy, Shields; J. Spohar, D.\nO'Mura, Spokane.\nSHERBUOOKE-n. Dunkerley. Winnipeg\nJ. 8. Lacombe, Ymlr; R. Drury, J. Gardner,\nSeattle; W. Hills, Campbelltown; W. Hall\nChicago; W. Hlgglns, Cranbrook; R. Drayman, Alamo. ^ ; ..   ' V   *\nFRUITGROWING INDUSTRY\nCAPT. CELSON WRITES   OF   PROSPECTS IN THE K0OTENAY8\nP0INT8 OUT ADVANTAGE OF THE\nCOUNTRY FOR SPORTSMEN\nThe following letter from Capt A. W.\nGelston, dated Nelson, B.C., appeared In\ntlie Issue of Sept. 3 of The Field, the leading sporting journal of the old country.\nSir\u2014As the fruit growing Industry In this\npart of the province of British Columbia is\napparently attracting considerable attention\nboth throughout Canada and the United\nKingdom, I think It la possible that some\nreliable Information on. this particular\nbranch of culture may be -acceptable to\nthose who may be contemplating' giving\ni\\ a trial. -During the last two years a\nlarge'amount of land has been bought for\nfruit growing on Kootenay lake and river,\nalso on Slocan river, adjacent to Nelson,\nand In outlying districts some miles further away from1 here, but within reach of\nNelson and the local markets.\nTlie price of land ranges from $26 (\u00a35)\nto 1100 (\u00a320) per acre uncleared and from\n$100 to $260 for cleared land under cultivation. These prices are, i however, only approximate and vary considerably according\nto location, quality of soil and meant, of\ntransportation. The cost of clearing land\nper acre varies from $26 to $100, depending\nentirely on whether the land is lightly or\nheavily timbered,\nI wish to point out the extreme Importance 1 attuch to the careful selection of\nproperties by Intending purchasers and alao\nthe advisability of placing themselves In\nthe bunds of a reliable and responsible\nlocal representative who would give them\nunbiased expert advice and also see that\ntheir Interests were fully protected,\nProvided the lund and location is good,\nand not too high u price is paid for it, 1\nam of the opinion that fruit growing, especially apples, should prove not only a\nremunerative and congenial occupation,\nbut pay a substantial interest on the capital invested.   '\nThe northwest territories offer practically\nan unlimited market for British Columbia\napples and there Is every indication that\nthe demand for this class of fruit will Increase annually very largely and high\nprices be realized by growers provided the\nquality Is maintained. With the exception\nof the winter months being somewhat colder and perhaps a little longer, the climate\nIs not unlike that-of England, although\nthe summer and autumn months are much\nhotter and the seasons more regular. As\nregards sport, there Is excellent salmon\nand trout tlshing to be had In the lake and\nrivers, und cariboo, deer, bear, gout and\ngrouse In the surrounding mountains, and\null of which' ure free. I must also add\nthat the Nelson bout and launch club have\none of the finest regatta courses 1 have\never beheld, und I have travelled u great\ndeal,\nA. IV. GELSTON, Capt. (Retired)\nNelson, B.C., Aug. 12.\nFERNIE ANNEX IN UPROAR\nTyphoid Cases Occurring But No Epidemic is Feared.\n(Pnertal to The Dailv Newm\nFERNIE, Oct, G-Much Indignation ex'sts\nand considerable adverse criticism Is being expressed In Fernle Annex over tho\naction of the authorities In permitting the\nestablishment of aK\"red light\" district In\nthat residential section of tlie city. The\nAnnex) Is fast becoming the part of tho\ntown where the miners, are making their\nhomes and, greater progress lias been made\nthere in erecting permanent abodes than\nin any other portion of the city and in a\nvery short time It will be one of the most\ndesirable localities to live in. The residents\nkeenly feel that an outrage has been perpetrated In allowing tlie undesirable clusu\nto settle In such close proximity to their\nhomes and most strenuously protest agulnst\nthe action of the authorities. A movement\nIs on foot to take the matter up with those\nresponsible for this state of uffalrs and\ncompel the removul of the objuciionabu*\nhouses. The Trades and Labor council\nhas decided to assist the local Miners union\nIn removing' them from the Annex.\nThe Fernle Industrial Provident Co-operative society hus secured the services of\nT. C. Hicks of Lcthbrldge, us. manager of\ntheir large store and he comes very highly\nrecommended for the position. It is the\nexpectation of the society to have the store\nopen for business before next pay duy and\nfrom the encouragement received from all\nclnsseB of the community, the venture promises to be an unqualified success. The following officers have been elected; President, John Wilde; board of management,\nWm. Lancaster, Thos. B!ggH, Win. Dickinson, Thos. Uphill, Albert Curtlege, Clias.\nEdgar, Thos. Simms. Thos. Spears, Wm,\nH. Evans, John Dudley and Fred Miller;\nsecretury-treasufcr, Jas. Ltimcustor.\nJuineB H. Marshall, chief clerk in the\ncoul compuny's office left last night for\nHpokanc on a visit and will be absent for\nabout u week.\nThe Victorian Order of Nurses, Ottawa,\nnave sent Miss Andrews, a trained nurse,\nto Fernle to astral In looklng'ufter the sick\nfor the next few months. Their uction is\nmuch appreciated by those who require\nsuch assistance.\nThere are several cuses of typhoid fever\nIn the .'Hy ut present, but thanks to the\nenforcement of stringent sanitary regulations there is little fear of an epidemic.\nBOUNDARY SURVEYS\nEngineers Return From Summer Work\n, In the North.\nVANCOUVER, Oct. G-Messrs. George\nWhite, Fraser, and his assistant, D, V.\nRitchie, both of Ottawa, returned from the\nnorth today. They were the representatives of the dominion government on the\nsurvey which for this portion of the work\nwas carried out by un American party in\ncharge of Fremont Morse of Washington.\nThey report that the delimitation of the\nInternational boundary between' tf.luska\nant] the Canadian Yukon south of Mount\nEllas, and tn the vicinity of the Olsek\nriver, extending over a distance of TO miles,\nhas been completed. It has occupied two\nyears. Permanent monuments were erect-\n\u00bb*tr. and the line wus cleared of trees in\nall wooded tracts,\nJ, N. Wallace, a dominion surveyor from\nCalgary, and a party of 14 assistants, came\ndown from tlio north today, He was engaged all summer in locating und marking\nthe boundary line between the Yukon and\nBritish Columbia. This was his second season on'the task, the completion of which\nwill take three or four years as the eastern\nboundary of this province is at the summit of the Rockies.\nMOIR'S DEFENCE.\nCommitted Murder W en In an Epileptic Fit.\nLONDON, Oct. 6-The trial of private\nMolr, charged with the murder of sergeant\nLloyd at Wolselcy barracks, bus1 been postponed until the January assizes to enable\nthe prisoner to bring witnesses from Scotland to prove that he lias been subject to\nepileptic fits from his youth und that he\nknew nothing beyond what had been told\nhim of having committed any crime.\nBridge Across Pembina.\nEDMONTON, Oct.\" 6-H. W. Gnnn of\ntfohn Giinn und company, a well known\nfirm1 of contractors in Winnipeg, arrived\nin the city yesterday in connection with tho\nbusiness of his firm. He leaves today for\nPembina to Inspect the work being done\nthew by -his firm which has the contract\nfor tho construction of the concrete footings for the G.T.P. bridge across the Pembina river. The bridge Will be roady for\nthe steel support structure by the time the\nbrack la laid as far as tbe Pembina,\nMinard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia,\nTHE OXFORD CHANCELLOR Is specially built to suit\nthe conditions lo British Columbia.'\nThe fire box Is mathematically proportioned .to suit the size\nof the ven, and is intended for\nburning either hard or Boft\ncoal, and can be reversed for\nburning wood.\nIf desired, a wood burning\nfire box can be secured. This\nwill take the roughest kind of\nwood fuel.\nTHE OXFORD CHANCEL-12\nLOR 1b a handsome, attractive I\nrange, beautiful In its dress and\nornamentation, yet in no place\nhas service or utility been sacrificed for appearance sake\nalone,\nFor Sale in Nelson by\nJ. H. Ashdown\nHardware Co.\nA Rare Chance\nto buy a small    block    of    land\nCHEAP, equal to six city lots, only\n$250.00\nfor cash.   Enquire of\nR. J. Steel\nHOMESEEKERS\nI have some very choice locations In\nthe Whutsham valley unimproved but\ncarefully classified and easily brought\nunder cultivation. The price is based\non the number of acres of 1st., Und.\nand 3rd class land in each block.\ni have also some Improved dairy\npoultry and fruit farmsin \"Fire Valley.\" Come to Needles or write for\nparticulars.\nC. B. M'ALLISTER, Needles, B. C.\nFifty miles by boat from West Rob-\nsoa on Lower Arrow lake.\nSUPPORT FROM QUEBEC\nCONSERVATIVE    GAINS .. IN    THAT\nPROVINCE ARE PREDICTED\nEASTERN TOWNSHIPS   AND    MONTREAL ARE FAVORED\n. The conservatives have now over fifty\ncandidates in the field in Quebec out of\nH5 ridings, and the end ot the week will\nsee most of the remainder filled, says\nthe Toronto News of September 30.\nThe U a genuine alarm felt among\nliberals lest the conservatives may capture anywhere from 15 to 20 seats.\nThe Eastern Townships and the seats\nin Montreal city are creating the greatest uneasiness, and it would not be a\nbig surprise in political circles for the\nmajority of the Montreal ridings to return Conservative members.\n. One of the reasons for liberal losses\nIs that the conservative candidates are\nthe stronger in many contests, for confidence In success and enthusiasm for\ntheir leader and their platform are\ngreater than since 1891.\nSOME INSTANCES.\nTake for example St. Anne's division\nof Montreal. Ex-judge Doherty will ha\nthe Borden candidate against the late\nmemiber, j. c. Welsh, and his popularity among the Irish makes his election\nreasonably sure. As to H. B. Ames lit\nSt. Antolne division, his election is con-\nceded,\nIn St. Lawrence, which Robert Bick-\nerdlke represented last parliament, H.\nA. Otters, a former mayor of Montreal,\nhas come out, and it is now a toss-up\nvhioh will win.   'In St. Mary's I* T.\nW\nto\nto\nto\nto\nto\nto\nto\nto\nto\nto\nto\nto\nto\nto\nto\nto\nto\n%\nVc Ml tbe Sane Goods for Lets Hour\nOct Price for Enrykwlr at Tint tie Uwttf\nAutumn Millinery\nOur stock of millinery Is now at Its best. Displayed in (lie show room Is a range of millinery ac-\ncesorleB. Shapes, flops, feathers, flowers, Ostrich plumes, ribbons and hundreds of hat ornaments\u2014an\nextremely varied display ot the best of this season's novelties.   LEAVE YOUR ORDER NOW.\nNew Panama Skirts\nat $6 00\nTwo dozen ladies' skirts in plain gore\nor pleated styles made of all wool\nPanama and Venetian; colors brown,\nnavy, green or black worth up to 158;\nat each  $6.00\nSpecial Values in Silk\nBlouses at $4.00 Each\nThese are made of extra good quality\nJapanese taffeta or satin merino, fancy\ntrimmed and some pleated styles, worth\nregular $5 and $6 each; your choice\nfor    $4.00\nto\nto\nto\nto\nto\nto\nto\nto\nto\nto\nI\nto\nto\nto\nto\nto\nto\n- to\n- 9\nto\nto\n\u2666Kit-atiS: *\u00a3:&\u00a3:&;&\u00ab\u00a3:\u00a3:&\u00a3:&&& &&&&&.&&.&.\u00a3;.\u00a3..4&\u00ab\nMEAGHER & CO.\nMareohal, K. d one of the orators\namong the French-Canadians, Is the\nconservative standard bearer.\nEASTERN TOWNSHIPS.\nAs for the Eastern Townships only\none Is now held by the conservatives,\nSherbrooke, by Dr. Worthlngtoit. He\nis certain of re-election. In Shefford the\nliberals are weakened by the resignation of Mr. Parmlee to become king's\nprinter, and W..H. Robinson, formerly\nmanager of the Eastern Townships\nBank, can hardly he beaten. Megan tic\nis admitted on ail sides to be likely to\nbe a liberal loss. In Compton Mr, Rufus\nPope stands a good chance of winning.\nDr. Walsh, conservative, is looked on\nas a sure winner in Huntingdon,\nAND MR. BOURASSA.\nThen Henri Bourassl must not be forgotten. He has signed the nomination\npaper of Aid. Oirous in St. James division, Montreal, where for the local\nhouse he put up one of the most sensational campaigns in the history of the\nDominion, and defeated, on short notice, the premier of Quebec, sir Lomer\nGouin.\nThere will be no \"solid Quebec\"\u2014not\nby any means, and If present signs con-\nUnite the liberals will have a smaller\nmajority in Quebec than the conservatives in Ontario.\nMOTIONS TO COME UP.\nCases Which Mr. Justice Morrison Will\nPass on.\nThe following motions will come nn be-\nfore Mr. justice Morrison, sitting In chambers during the assises which open today.\nLaldlaw v. Imperial Coul una Coke Co. et\ntil. Motions to continue Injunction nnd to\nextend time for defence. Jus. O'Shea for\nplaintiff;, W. A, Macdonald, K.C, for defence.\nSmith v, sheriff of South Kootenay; motion to continue Injunction, H. C. Hall for\nplaintiff! E.  C. Vyragge for defendant.\nDoeksteader v. Dominion Copper ..Co.\nMotion for security of costs. Tnylor and\nO'Shea for plaintiff; J. 1). Spenco, Greenwood, anil  B. C, Wragge or defendants.\nHe Land Registry act and John Irving.\nMotion for order directing registrar of land\ntitles to register deed. 11. C. Hall for applicant. ) \u25a0\nHex. v. HelJIro Hlrayama, Application\nfor a writ of habeas corpus. A, M. John*\nson for applicant,\nEdmonton's Curfew.\nEDMONTON, Oct. 6-Thc department or\ntho attorney general has requested the city\npolice to see that the curfew law is mora\nstrictly observed in tho city. The chief\nof police has therefore issued Instructions\nlo the police officers to take the names of\nany children under the age of 14 years\nfound on the streets after the prescribed\nlKbUrs. He also sent a notice to the managers of the local theatres Instructing them\nto refuse admission to children under 14\nunlws accompanied by a parent or guardian after 9 o'clock at the present time\nand 8 o'clock after Nov. 1.\nMinard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia.\nWe Keep AU\nThe Little Things\n'Necessary in a bath room, Call and\nsee our goods. Our furnnco man has\nhad a long experience in hot air heating.\nDF'p in and tell ns your plumbing\ntroubles.   We can help you.\nSmith (8b Kunden\nPlumbers and Tinners.\nOpera house block. Phono 181\nProposals for New Station and Freight\nShed at Fernle.\nTenders will he received HO to Ifili, Monday, October, Will, for bui'dtnff a new station and  a  now freight, shed  at  Fern.e,\nPlans covering this work may bo seen,\nand other Information obtained at the office of the Superintendent or Resident\nBnttlneer, K\\ P. Ry.. at Cranbrook, B.C.\nProposals must be submitted on blanks\nfurnished by tlio Company, and the company reserves tho right to reject any and\nall bids. ^ k  \u201e   .M\nCranbrook. Oct. |MI ....\n141-12 J- BUQWNLEE, Superintendent\nAt the    Store Of Quality    Phone 10\nWHOLESALE AND  RETAIL\nAshcroft potatoes by the car, ton or sack; choice vegetables; fruits\nof all kinds; fancy and staple groceries of the very best; butter, eggs,\ncheese, lard, hams and bacon; teas, ccffees, cocoas; quality unsurpassed\nA trial order respectfully solicited.\nA. S. HORSWILL\nNelson, B. C.\nttmsasaa*amsmemsmmtomm:i}::>:::xx::>>Mm\u00bbesae*msaMaeM\u00bbmieMM\nYoa Want the BEST\n|    Then Boy\nIn an\n|    Old, Trfcd\nAnd Well-\nImproved\nDistrict\nCome\nAnd See\nMinor Lake\nHas Proved\nWhat Others\nAte\nOn'y Trying\nSeeing\nIs\nBel'ev.'ng\nThe Best Land for Fruit Is at\nMirror Lake\nORCHARDS\u2014Young or in bearing.\nLAND\u2014Cleared or uncleared.\nSOIL\u2014The best.\nWATER\u2014Abundance for all purooses fltiraed over the land.\nOnly 2 1-2 miles from Kaslo which again this year twice\nCaptured the District Prise Cup\nfrom the rest of Kootenay and Kootenay  Beats the World for  the\nhigh quality of her apples.\nPrices Reasonable\nRaw lands on Kootenay lake, subdivided, with lake frontage, on actually existing roads, with good transportation, at $10 per acre up.\nCOME SEE AND BE SATISFIED.\nK. K. Bjerkness or E. Norman\nComer Baker & Ward\nmr\n r Mwtix\nfJHt* gotlg gtetm\nWEDNESDAY  OCTOBER 7\nA Real Bargain\nSnap for Working Man\nSituated on the wagon road within twenty minutes walk of the\ncity we are offering for sale a snug little Improved property at a\nsacrifice price, two acres of rich land all cleared and containing the\nfollowing improvements:\nNew two story frame building, completely furnished, stoves, Iron\nbedsteads, bedding, dishes, good furniture, cooking utensils, etc.\nNew frame barn, two large new chicken houses and runs, wire fencing, large shed and good root house, 125 fruit trees of standard\nvarieties, four yeara old, will bear good crop next Beason, stream of\ngood water running continuously. The whole property complete as\nit stands for $1150 cash.   This offer holds good for three days only.\nTOYE, TAYLOR & McQUARRIE\nPhone 254\nBonnington Orchards\nSome of the Improved and some of the unimproved lqts have been\nsold to gentlemen who after a summer's experience are well pleased\nwith their purchases and are building fine residences. Some especially\nfine lots both Improved and unimproved are still for sale.\nThe conditions are Ideal In the following respects. Soil; Sun exposure; air drainage; economical cultivation. Transportation: Come\nand look at the trees, clover and strawberry plants and compare them\nwith what you have seen elsewhere. Situated 91-2 miles southwest\nof Nelson on the Kootenay river upposlte upper Bonnington falls.\nStation, middle front, of property; three passenger trains each way\ndally. Hotel, store, post office, telegraph offlce, telephone offlce between 1 mile and 2 1-2 miles; power plant across the railway track\nfrom which electric light can bo obtained. You can have a telephone\nla your house connecting you with the whole long distance system. Far\nfamed rainbow trout fishing. Pure mountain water from Falls \u00abreek\nflumed through property. You get a proportionate Interest In the water system free with the land you purchase. Get off at upper Bonnington falls station. The ranch foreman will show you the land, the plan\nand the price list.\nSlocan River\nI have also subdivided the Boisvert ranch half a mile from Perry\nSiding station, school and post office, on the Slocan branch of the C. P.\nP. Good land, little or no stone, mostly level with just enough slope\nfor irrigation, two creeks running through it; passenger train each way\ndally.' Six miles from Slocan city; thirty-five miles from Nelson. Overlooks Slocan river about one-quarter mile dlstnnt, Mr. W. F. Hasseil,\nC. E., has purchased two lots an'l will show you over the property and\nshow you plan and prices; or write to me for particulars or an appointment.\nLardo River\nI will sell that fine ranch formerly the Putman ranch, 320 news\nwith about 20 acres cleared, trees, buildings, clover, wild hay, facing\non the Lardo branch of the C. P. R. two miles beyond Lardo station,\nthe probable future main freight route from Atlantic to Pacific. Lardo Is at the north end of Kootenay lake. Abundance of water; valuable cedar timber; splendid ranch for combined Btock and fruit farm.\nI am not selling all my land, but am keeping 263 acres and am expending proceeds of land sales on clearing and planting more, acres of\norchard.\nFor further particulars write to me at Willow Point P. 0. or come\nto Bast Duntulm landing, seven miles from Nelson to see me and see\na Kootenay, orchard in bearing, or write and make an appointment with\nme in Nelson.\nJ. J. CAMPBELL\nThe Yellow God\nBy\nH. Rider Haggard\nAuthor of \"King Solomon's Mines,\"\n\"She,\" \"The Brethren,\" Benlta,\"\nEtc\n(All Rights Reserved.)\nAll that day they run, pausing nt Intervals to get their breath una at night rented,\n\u25a0because they must. When the' light cama\n\u2022upon the following morning they looked\nhack from a little bill and Baw the outposts\nof tbe Aslkl advancing not a mile behind.\niJoubtleBa \u00aboiiii of the army had been\nburned, but the rent gueselng th<'lr route.\nsad forced a-way through the reeds and\ncut acroHB country. So they, begun to run\nagain harder than ever, and kept their\nfend during the morning; but when atter-\nqfoon came the Aslkl gained on them. Now\nthey were breasting a long tlse, the river\ntunning In the cleft beneath, und JeeMi\nvjho seemed to be absolutely untiring, held\njUun by the hand, Fahni following close\nBehind. Two of tlieir men had fallen down\nand been abandoned and the rest struggled.\n\"No go, Jeeki,\" gueped Alan, \"they will\ncatch us al the top of tlio bill,\"\n, \"Never say die,  major, never aay die,'\nEtiffed Jeekl, \"they get blown too and who\nnow wltut other side of hilt?\"\nSomehow they struggled to the creat of\nthe hlh and behold!  there beneath them\nwan * great army of men, \u25a0   .\n\"Ogulu!\"   yelled  Jeekl,    \"Ogulu!   Just\nwhat 1 told you major, who knows what\nother \u00bblde of hill?\"\nCHAPTER   XXIV.\nA Meeting In tlie Forest\nin five minutes more they were among\nthe Ogula, who, having \u2014recognized their\nchief while he was yet aomo wuy off.\ngreeted him with ruptornua cheers and the\nclapping of hands. Then uu there was no\ntime for explanations, they retreated across\na little stream which run down the valley,\nfour thousand or mora of them, und prepared for battle.' That evening, however,\nthere was no fighting, for when tho riret\nof the Aslkl reached tile top of the' rifle nnd\nsay that the fugitives hud escuiK-d to the\nenemy, who. were In Strength, they halted\nand finully retired.\nNow Alun, and Fnl.nl uIbo, hoped that\nthe pursuit waa abandoned but again Jeekl\nshook his big head, saying: \"Not at ah.\nmajor, I know Aniki und their little ways.\nWhile one of them alive, not dare go back\nto Asiki without yon, major.\"\n\"Perhaps she Is with them herself,\" suggested Alan, \"and w\u00ab might treat with\nher.\"\n\"No, major; Aslkl never leave Bonsa-\nTown, that against law, and If she do so\npriests muwe another Aslkl and will kill her\nwhen they catch her.\"\nAfter that a council of war was held,\nand It was decided to camp there timt\nnight, since the position was good to meet\nan uttack At jc-no should be made and the\nOgiilu, were afraid of being caught on the\nmarch with their hacks towurda the enemy.\nAlun wus glad enough to bear this decision\nfoi* be' was quite worn out and ready to\ntake any risk for a few houra' rest. At this\ncouncil he learned also that tbe Aslka'\nbearers, carrying his gold with their Ogula\nguides, hod arrived safely among the Ogulu,\nwho bad mustered In answer.to their chief's\ncall and were advancing towards Aslkl-\nland, though the business was one that did\nnot  pieaBe them.\nAs they were leaving the council, Alan\nasked Jeekl if he had any tidings of his\nmother, who had been their first messenger.\n\"No, major,\" he answered gloomily,\n''can't learri nothing of my ma, don't know\n\u2022where she is. Ogula camp no place for\nold girl if they short of chop. But perhaps\nshe never get there; I nose around and find\nout.\nApparently Jeeki did \"nose around\" t(\nsome purpose, for Just as Alan waa drop'\nping oft to sleep In his bough shelter, a\nmost fearful din arose without, through\nwhich he recognized the vociferations of\nJeekl. Running out of the shelter he discovered his retainer and a great Ogula,\nwhom he knew again as,the headman who\nhad been Imprisoned with him and freed\nby the Aslka to guide the bearers, rolling\nover nnd over on the ground, watched by a\ncurious crowd. Jufll as he arrived, Jeekl,\nwho notwithstanding his years was a man\nof enormous strength, got the better of tho\nOgula und kneeling on his stomach, was\nproceeding to throttle him. Rushing at him\nAlun dragged him off und asked What, was\nthe matter.\n\"Matter, maior!\" yelled th\u00ab indignant\nJeekl. \"Mv ma inside that black villain,\nthat all. Dirty cannibal got digestion of\none ostrich nnd eut her up with his mates,\nnil except one who not like her taste and\nlell me. They catch poor old lady asleep\nby road and stop and lunch Hi once when\nAalkl heurers not looking; Let me go at\nhim, major, let hie get at him. If I can t\nbury my tha, us nil good sort ought to do,\nI bury him. which next best thing.\"\n\"Jeekl, Jeekl,\" aald Alan, \"exercise a\nChristian spirit and let bygones be bygones.\nIf you don't, you will make u quarrel between us and the Ogula, ami they.will give\nus up to tlie Aslkl. Perhaps the man did\nnot eat your mother, I understand that he\ndenies ii, and when you remember what\nsin- was like, It seems Incredible. At any\nrat- he has a right to a trial, and I will\nspeak to Fahni about It  tomorrow.\"\nSo they were separated, but as it chanced\nthat case never came on, for next morning\nthis Ogulu waa killed In the fighting with\ntwo of his companions, while the others\nInvolved in the charg'- kept themselves out\nof sight. Whether Jeekl's \"ma\" was or\nwas not eaten by the Ogula no one ever\nlearned for certain. At least, she was\nnever heard of any more.\nAlan was sleeping heavily when a sound\nof rushing feet nnd of strange, thrilling\nbattle cries awoke him. He sprang up,\nsnatching at a spear and shield which Jeekl\nhad provided for him, and ran out to find\nfrom the position of the moon, that dawn\nwas near.\n\"Come on. major,\" suld Jeeki: \"the Aslkl\nmake night attack; they ulways like do\neverything at night who love darkness\nbecause their eye evil. Come on, quick\nmajor,\" and he begun to drug him to the\nrear.\n\"Rut that's wrong way.\" said Alan presently.    \"They  are attacking over  there.\"\n\"Do you think Jeeki a fool, major, that\nhe don't know that? He take you where\nthey not attacking. Plenty Ogula to. he\nkilled, but not many white men like you,\nand In all the world, only one Jeeki.\"\n\"You cold-blooded old scoundrel!': ejaculated Alan, as he turned and bolted bnok\ntowards the noise of fighting, followed by\nhis reluctant servant.\n(CouunutHl In Next iwuo.i\nStamped With the Seal of Success.\nA vital, moving drama of force and power\na play of rare merit and distinction such\nas \"Thel Holy City,\" the religious drams,\nby Clarence Bennett, which Is to be the\noffering at the Nelaon theatre on Monday,\nOct. 19, It treats of a religious subject\nwith reverence and sympathy and has won\nthe approbation of thousands of clergymen\nof alt denominations. Mr, Harold Nelson\nwill' be seen lu the part of Marlufl, a Roman soldier, supported by Frederick Clarke,\nund an excellent caste of metropolitan ur-\ntists.\nFor Chronic Diarrhoea.\n\"While In the army In 1863 I was take*\nwith chronic diarrhoea,\" says George M.\nFelton of South Gibson, Fa. \"I have, sines\ntried many remedies but without any permanent relief until Mr. A. W. Miles of\nthis place persuaded me to try Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, one bottle of which stopped It at\nonce.\"   For sale by all druggists and deal-\nBRITISH  FOOTBALL\nOld\nResults of Monday's    Games    in\nCountry.\n(Canadian Associated Press)\nLONDON, Oct. 6\u2014The following are\nthe results, of the games played today\nIn the Irish and Southern leagues:\nIrish League.\nShelborne 1; Distillery 3.\nDerry Celtic 0; Oletoran 1.\nSouthern League.\nSouthampton 4; Crystal Palace. 4\nA TERRIBLE ADVENTURE\nFERNIE  MAN'S  ENCOUNTER   WITH\nA BIG BEAR\nHUNTER      NARROWLY      ESCAPES\nWITH HIS LIFE\n(Speolal to The Daily News.)\nFERNIE, Oct, ti-Beais have been so\nplentiful this season and have venture!\nao near the settlements in the district that\nmany local' sportsmen have been making\nsuccessful trips into the surrounding mountains in (search of tho big game. One of\nthese excursions today narrowly escaped\nending in a tragedy, and as it is the hunter\nlies in the hospital here tonight sufferings\nfrom several severe wounds inflicted' by\nan   infuriated  animal   he   had  wounded.\nFrank Pride, a driver in the employ of\nP. Burns and company In Ferule, this mom\nIng went down to the Wood-McNob Lumber company's limits, a few miles north uf\nhere, where several bears had be'.*n seen\nlately, and soon discovered the tracks;\nAbout two miles above the mill he cumo\n\u25a0upon three of them, and though he shot\none, It escaped Into the brush. Ho tracked\nthe animal for a couplo of hours and was\nabout to give up the chase, when hi entering some heavy underbrush he came\nsuddenly upon his quarry which was but a\ngun's length from him. He fired point\nblank at the beast, but before lie could got\nout of the wuy, it struck li!m a heavy blow\non the head which felled him to the ground\nand before he could recover himself tlie\nmaddened animal hud inflicted some terrible wounds with Its teeth and claws. Tho\nInjured man fought as best he could In the\nunequal contest and though of powerful\nphysique, was rap illy becoming exhausted\nfrom loss of blood, when the animal for\nsome unaccountable reason, left Its 'prey\nand wandered Into the bush, hastened by a\nparting shot from the riile of the wounded\nman.\n'Price bound up his wounds us well as ho\nwas able and dragged himself for some\ndistance down the mountain side where he\nwas discovered by another hunter from\nFernle, who assisted him, to tho lumber\nmill, where u conveyance was secured and\nthe injured man ut once driven Into Fernle\nand his wounds dressed by Dr. Corsan.\nHe had an ugly looking wound on the left\nleg above the knee, a badly lacerated foot,\nand a deep wound In the right hand, all\nInflicted by the animal's teeth, while\nthere were several minor cuts, Inflicted by\nthe animal's claws. The unfortunate man\nwas very weak from loss of blood and the\nterrible experience through which he bad\npassed, but If no complications set In he\nwill probably be around again in a couple\nof weeks.\nThe congregation of the Methodist church\nheld the usual Sabbath services in a commodious and comfortable temporary building which has been erected on the site\nformerly occupied by the old church -The\nCatholic church will be ready by next\nSunday, it Is expected, hut the Anglican\nchurch services wilil he conducted In a tent\nfor a few more weeks, while the foundations and a temporary roof are being put\non the new building.\nQUANTITY NOT QUALITY.\nPoints Awarded in District Fruit Prize\nat Recent Exhibition.\nIn The Daily News of September 25\nan easily made mistake crept into the\naccount given of how the district prize\nwas won at the Nelson exhibition hy\nKubIo. \"^.\nIn describing the points given for\neach exhibit the word \"quality\" should\nhave read \"quantity\" referring to the\nnumber of plates of fruit In one exhibit. At one time there whb no opportunity to judge of one quality, the fruit\nfor the most part not being fully matured. Judge Porter of Hood River calls\nattention to the slip, which unless set\nright might causse trouble next year at\ntho exhibition.\nMinard's Liniment Cures Burns, etc.\n^Jf\u00a3ELJlREOTrjSY_\nSilver King Hotel\nBaker Sreet, Nelson.\nRegular BoarderB, $6.00 per Week.\nRates, JL25 and $1.50 per Day.\nBest 2S Cent Meal In the City.\n(On City Time.)\nD. McRAE, Prop.\nNelson Hotel Bar\nBAKER ST., NELSON.\nFirst Shipment of Limes.\nBest Appointed In the City,\nFinest Liquors and Cigars\nINK & WARD, Proprietors.\nTry a \"Qln Ricky.\"\nBartlett House\nQ. W. BABTLHTT. PROP.\nTse bsst C \u2022 flay house In\ntown.     A Ulnar's Home.\nKootenay Hotel\nUna MALLBTTB, Proprietress.\nA home for everybody.   Bvsry convenience given to the travelling public.  Blee-\ntrie Piano.   Culslns unexcelled.   Bates ft\nper day.\nSherbrooke House\nNBIdON, B. C\nOne minute's walk from O. P. R. station.\nCualllae unexcelled; well heated aad ventilated.\nBOTBR BROS., Proprietors.\nLakcview Hotel\nCOR. HALL AND VERNON STB.\nN. MALLBTTB, Proprietor.\nTwo blocks from City wharf.   The\nbeat dollar a day house In Nelson.\nALL WHITE HELP\nSunnysidc Hotel\nBaker Street, Nelson.\nThe house Is thoroughly   remodelled\nthroughout.   Clean rooms.\nWeekly Boarders $6.00.\nRates $1.00 per Day.\nTemperance   house;   home   comforts;\nbeat cook In the city.\nMRS.; i. E. HARRIS, Proprietress.\nHOTEL BROOKLYN, PHOENIX, B. C-\nThe only up to date hotel In Phoenix.\nNew from cellar to roof. Best sample\nrooms In the Boundary. Bath rosm In\nconnection, steam heat. Opposite Great\nNorthern depot    Jamas Marshall, prop.\nNEWFOUNDLAND ANGRY\nTROUBLE COMING FROM IMPERIAL\nGOVERNMENT\nINTERESTS OF COLONY GENERAL-\nLY ARE NEGLECTED\n(Canadian Associated Press)\nLONDON, Oct, 6\u2014British Immigrants\nto Canada during August last numbered\n9315 against 15,296 for the same month\nlast year.\nW. R. Lawson writing from St. John's\nto the Financial Times says during the\npast twenty years Newfoundland has\nsuffered not a few Indignities both foreign and domestic. The worst of these\nhave come from the Imperial government. The colonial offices, which should\nhave stood by ancient colony, if only\nout of respect with a colony which has\nfought heavy odds, waa generally lukewarm, sometimes Irritable and but rare-\nIf sympathetic.\nChamberlain's Health.\nBIRMINGHAM, Oct. G\u2014Members of\nthe family denied yesterday the report\npublished In the News of the World,\nthat Joseph Chamberlain intended\nshortly to retire from the house of\ncommons. On the contrary they declared that his health Is much Improved and that he has prepared an\naddress to his constituents.\nPROFESSIONAL CARDS\nS. S.FQWLEB\nMINING ENGINEER\nNELSON, a 0.\nDrawings and Specifications\nPrepared tor Patents, Eta, ui patent\nRights secured.  Apply to\nO. C. MACKAY\nP. 0. Box 87$ Nelson, B. a\nMechanical and Structural Work Designed and Supervise!\nWM. 3. DREWRT\nA. M. Can, Soc. C. E.\nDOMINION   AND   BRITISH   COLUMBIA LAND SURVEYOR\nMining Work a Specialty.\nOffice: Room 10, K. W. C. Block, P. O.\nBox 4M,\nBaker St Nelson, B. C.\nW. J. H. HOLaiKS\nCIVIL ENGINEER AND MINE SURVEYOR, PROVINCIAL LAND\nsurveyor; KASLO, B. 0. ...   \u25a0\nTen years' experience In the Koots-\nnaya. Honor graduate, 1891, Royal Military College ot Canada, Kingston.\na. a ulaok\nB. C. LAND SURVEYOR\nOFFICE\u2014OVER ROYAL BANK    \u2022\nP. O. Box 147 Nelson R O.\nJOHN KAY & SONS\nBOILER SETTERS\nFURNACE and\nOVEN BUILDERS\nEstimates   Given  on  All  Kinds  ot\nMasonry Work.\nP. 0. Box \u00ab. Nelson, B. C.\nMUKPfll & FlSHEii\nOTTAWA\nBarristers, Solicitors, etc.\nParliamentary, Departmental and Patent\nOffice  Agent,  practice  before Railway Commission.\nCHAS. MURPHY.    HAROLD FISHER.\nARROWHEAD.\nTHB UNION HOTBL, AHROWHBAD-\ngpedal attention . given to commercial\nmen and tourists. First class sample\nrooms. Finest scenery In British Oelum-\nMe, overlooklnf Upper Arrow lake. w.\nS. Ltghtburae, proprietor.\nA,L. MoOULLOOH\nHYDRAULIC ENGINEER\nPROVINCIAL LAND SURVEYOR\nP. O. Box 41\nOffice Phone B86. Residence Phone B74.\nOffice: Over McDermld and McHardy.\nBaker Street Nelson, B. 0.\nF. C. Green. F. P, Burden. A. H. Green.\nGreen Brothers it, Burden\nCIVIL ENGINEERS\nDominion and British Columbia Land\nSurveyors\nP. 0. Box 146 phono BM1\nCor. Victoria and Kootenay Sts.\nNELSON. B. 0.\nMcKAI & RAHAL\nBees* (noting, Carriage Work and flea.\noral Blaeksmltblng.\nP. O. Box 1st, Telephone AIM\nWard Street. Nelson B. a\nTKe DAILY NEWS\nCLASSIFIED ADS.\u2014One cent a word.   Six Iniirtlons tor tha prloa ol\ntour when paid In advance. No al taken tor less than 26c\nTelephone 144    THE DAILY NEWS\nBUSINESS DIRECTORY\nPAINTERS AND DECORATORS\nTHOMMON\"*\"lX)UQl^B-HouBe   and\nSign  Painters,  Paper Hangers  and Decorator!.  Shop  614 Ward Street,  Nelaon,\nB. c.\nCOLLECTION AGENCIES\nW. CUTLER-Collectlons ot all kinds.  He-\nturns promptly made.   References given.\nOffice, 313 Baker Street, Nelson, B. C.\nPROVINCIAL COLLECTION BERVICE-\nMcMorrls & Horatead, Mgra. No charges\nunless collections made. Correspondents In\nall parts of Canada and United States.\nBank reference, Canadian Bank of Com-\nPUBLISHERS AND PRINTER8\nNEmTpUBLlllH^^\nPublishers of The Dally News: subscription tew per year by earner; |5.w per year\nby mall. Commercial Job printing of all\nkinds neatly and promptly executed. KWft\nBaker street. Nelson, B. C. Phone 141.\nBOOKBINDING AND RULING\nAll kinds of office forms ruled and punched for loose leaf binders. The most complete book- binding equipment In the interior of British Columbia. 6*1% Baker St,\nNelson, B. C, P. 0. drawer Uti. Phone 144.\nAUjrnOJJEEM\nCHAS. A. WATERMAN ft CO.-P. O. Box\nHAIRDRE8BING   AND   MANICURING\nMwS. KATHLEEN NOAH, hairdressing\nand manicuring parlors. Room 38. K. W.\nC. block.\nNURSING\u2014Mrs. Thos. Parker, experienced\nnurse. Victoria Block. Phone St*,     *J-tf.\njWSAYER8_\nS. W. WIDDOW80N. ABSATHR (PRO\nvincial, Metallurgical Chemist Charges:\nGold, Silver, Copper or Lead, II each;\nGold-Silver, $1.00; Silver-Lead, 11.14 Zinc,\n$2; Sllver-Lead-Zlnc, S3; Gold, Silver-Cop-\nper or Lead, (1.60. Accurate assays; careful sampling, and prompt -*\u25a0--\u2014 \" \"\nBox AllOfl. Nelson, B. C.\nA88AYER&' SUPPLIES.\nTHE B. C. ASSAY AND CHEMICAL CO.,\nLtd., Vancouver, B.C. Agents In British\nColumbia, for tho Morgan Crucible Company, London, England; F. W. Braum,\nLob Angeles and San Francisco; Baker\nand Adumson's C.P. Acids and Chemicals;\nWay's Pocket Smelters. Write for Information about these smeltera, invaluable to the proapector. assayer or miner.\nComplete assay outfits furnished at short\nnotice.\nWHOLESALE flUUSES\n8TARKET ft CO., WHOLESALE DEAL-\ners in Butter, Eggs, Cheese, Produce and\nFruit Houston Block, Josephine street,\nNelson, B. C. .\nGROCERIES.\nA.    MACDONALD  ft  CO.-WHOLESALE\nGrocers and Provision Merchants-Importers of Teas, Coffees, Spices, Dried\nFruits, Staple and Fancy Groceries, Tobaccos, Cigars, Butter, Eggs, Cheese and\nPacking House Products. Office and\nwarehouse, corner of front and Hull\nBtreeta    P.  O.  Box 1096.    Telephone 28,\nLIQUORS.\n31.    FERGUSON    ft    CO.-WHOLESALE\nand Commission Merchants\u2014Importers\nand Wholesale Dealers in Wines, Liquors\nand Cigars. Kootenay agents for Pabst\nMilwaukee Beer. Agents for the Bruiis-\nwick-Balke-Collender Co.,. Billiard and\nPoole Tables and Supplies, Bar Fixtures,\nCigar Counters, Bowling Alleys, etc.\nPrices and specifications on application.\nOfflce and retail department Vernon\nSt. Nelson, two doors east of poslofflce.\nTelephone 260.  P.  O.  Box 1020.\nMRS. STARRER SMITH\nwill resume her class   In   Piano   and\nTheory, September 1st.\nMISS C. E. ANTHONY\nPUBLIC   STENOGRAPHER\nHums Hotel\nHours: 9.30 to 12, 2 to 5.\nKOEBEL & BELL\nDIAMOND DRILL CONTRACTORS\nHand power machine for prospecting.\nBox 72, Rossland or Salmo, Is. C.\nCHAS. MOORE, C. E.\n\u25a0. C. Land Surveyor\nARCHITECT\nP. O. Box 35, Crsrton, I. C.\nMINERS' FURNISHINGS.\nA. MACDONALD ft CO..-WHOLESALE\nJobbers In Blankets, Uno^rwear, Mitts,\nGloves, Boots, Rubbers, Overalls, Jumpers, Macklnaws and Oilskin Clothing,\nCamp and Miners' Sundries, Office and\nWarehouse corner of Front and Hall.Sts.\nP. O. Box 1096.  Telephone 24.\nHELP WANTED\nNELSON EMPLOYMENT AGENCY\nJ. H.   LOVE, Manager.\nWANTED -  Bricklayers, *fi, nine hours,\nsawyers, swampers,  rock men.\nSituations' wanted by cooks, cookees, engineers, etc., etc. -\nTHE VVORKINGMAN'B EMPLOYMENT\nAND REA.L ESTATE AGENCY.\nWAKTED-Machlne men for railway work*\n*5.(\u00bb lohour day, board \u00ab,ffi per week:\nsection nnd extra gang men, girls for families, lawyer, hookman \u25a0 and woman cook.\nA first olaaa waitress wants place In\nEast Kootenay or Alberta.\nWANTED To Kent-Houses ana Cottans,\nturnlslieil or   umurniBnud,\nF9-\u2122 SALE-Home of five rooms, \u2022\u25a0\u2022 lot.\n$oG0 cash-\nFruit and grassing lands, city property and\ntimber limits\nAbandonment of two sections of best fruit\nand grualng   lands, $1 per acre.\nRelinquishment   ot splendid homestead ha\nIdaho, ISO.\nW. PAltiiBR, 312 Baker St.  Phonl S3.\nWANTEO-MISCELLANEOU8\nA flrst-clus steel sharpener wants work.\n_Auuress 6. A., unity ^ens.\nWANTBIMJhlmncy cleaning; pipes clean-\ned and replaced. Leave orders at foots\nDrug Company. 11*4\nMINING   MACHINERY\nWASHINGTON MACHINERY ft SUPPLY\nCo.\u2014Dealers In Engines, Band and Circular Sawmills, Atkins* Saws, Wood and\nIron Pulleys, Leyner Compressors and\nDrills, Pumps and Hoists. Prompt attention. Reasonable prices. Courteous\ntreatment   Spokane, Wash.\n\u25a0p\n:\u2666\u2666\u00ab\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u00ab H H lr*\u00ab\u00ab+\u00abt**\u00bbj\nUNROLL NOTT FOR TH\u00bb\n\u2022UMMKB CLASaffll OV IS!\nI Sprott-ShawKS I\nrANootnrat, a a\nTie keel ot tsteken, ths see*\n\u20221 equipment and ths very best\nreealta.   Write (er oatalofae.\na I. \u25a0FROTT, B.A., ninuhm.\n\u2666\u00ab\u2666\u2666\u00ab\u2666\u2666>\u2666\u00bb\u00bb\u2666\u00ab\u2666\u2666\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u2022\u00ab\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u00bb\u2666'\nNELSON CAFE\nPIR8T CLA88 MEALS\nFURNI8HED ROOMS IN CON-\nNECTION\nOPEN DAY AND NIGHT\nFIRST CLA8S LUNCH FROM\n12 NOON TO 2 P. M.\nPHONE 276\nA. AUDET, PROP.\nFor Building Brick\nApply Castlegar Brick Wcrks\nCastlegar. B. C.       -\u00bb\nWANTED-Flrst-class cook and wife wi\u00bb\u00ab\nwork In mining or logging camp, stllr\u2014s\nNelson Btnplo^muit Agency.   J. M, Leva.\n  UM\nROOM aid Board in private family, *Xj\u00bb\nper ween,   in Vernon street.   Geattemea\npreferred.        19-1\nWANTBD-At   the Square Deal    second'\nhand stores, new stand HM Raker Street,\nyour Cloiiilng-, Shoes, Jewelry, ivurniture,\ncarpets und \u00abaveiything else. lWt\nWANTED TO  PURCHASBV-No   I   Cook\nstove, coal,   showcase and pair of shop\nscales; must .be In good repair.   Address\n\"Purchanr,\" Daily News. xtl-%\nWANTED-Ci*rk wants situation la general store.   Adress Bellevue, Ually News.\n       130-M\nItf.lW PUtSlTlUiNl, foti UbU liHrfVi-\u00bbUAlK*E>\nlast year. Men and women te learn barber trade in \u00ablgtit weea*; tools tree; more\npuHiuoua ii.au m run supoiy; graduates\nearn $lfi to <t\u00a3l wie'dy. Catalogue (res.\nitolur ayititm Colleges, 402 Frsai Ave.,\nSpokane.\nWANTED-Cooper te set up lime barrels.\nApply Summit Lime Works, Crew's Nest..\nB.C. B-W\nWANTED-Lady tuwkkeiipjr. Apply at tha\nSinger sowing Hacnlnu Co,  uuiue.  ltl-2\nWANTED-SIx imn class carpet-r*. Ap-\nply  John Burntt, Caruonute ttt.        l4i-a\nWANTED-Immediaie y,   office   man   for\nlumber comX'Uny. Uoud Haiary 10 i-xpei'l-\nencHl man,   Must niuko smau investment.\nAddress \"Luuu.e.iuuii,\" bti.ly Nans    itt-ti\nWANTED-Kltchen cabinet or good kitchen\ntable, bed lounge and rocking cnalr. Apply  \"Purchaser,\" Ually News. 142-fi\nWANTElVN^8e-gl rl   to look  after two\nchildren from 10 till 1 and trom 2 till 7.\nApply Phone 1. 142-i\nFOR SALE\nFOH SALK\u2014Two shot guns. Apply MeSBen-\nger oiflte, W7t\nFOH' SALE\u2014Large ten-roomed house and\ntwo lots, corner Latimer and Falls St.;\nheated with hot water, bath room, electrle\niigut, stone foundation, basement full else\nof the house; the lota aro under fruit.\nPrice S2bU0. Terms can be arranged. Apply\non premises or to box 'JUS, tiviuoiu    U-*.\nFOR SALE\u2014Six heavy horses, ranging in\nweight from 1200 tr 1600 pounds, In good\ncondition for tmmedlotc hard worn. Prices\nfrom *\u00a3*> to mod pe* team. Will sell harness w.th t\u00abams If desired. Also soma\nheavy sleighs In good lepulr. Three good\nsaddle horses. Address S. Daney, Ferguson,  B. C. 131-lft\nFOR SALE\u2014A few Single Comb Rhode Island Reds, cockerels, bred Crom prise\nwinners at Salem and Portland. Also winners at the Kaslo fair. For particulars enquire of W.  \u00a31. Zwtcky. Kaslo, B.C,  130-1*\nSALE of Boats and Canoes-H. I* Lindsay\nIs selling this year's boats and canoes\nat the remaraable cut or one-third oft\nspring prices. Don't miss this chance if\nyou need a good boat or cunoe. Largest\nstock carried in British Columbia. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded.\n; ' ua-18\nFOR SALE\u2014Well eaUb.ished fcalobi, business, bur fixture*, full \u00abu,>ply of Block,\ngood paying bualmus In Urst olass running,-\nuond.tlon, App.y MuutiatUn saloon, Ne.-\nson, B.C. \u25a0 141-t\nFOR SALE\u2014Two work horses. Apply Wm.\nHancouK, Nelson Brick Co. lil-C\nFOR SALE\u2014lOO cords of wood,  44.50 per\ncord   delivered.   Leave orders at   the\nQueen Cigar store and Dollar grocery. HI-11\nFOR SALE\u2014Land by the owner. Easy\nterms: Free of rock; three-quarters-of a\nmile frontag-e on east Bide .town Needles.\nArrow lake, B.C, Will sell In lots to suit.\nPrice reasonable. For particulars apply\nG.A.T., Dally  Naws.     lttg\nCEDAB MOTOR CANOES-Now Is tha\ntime to place your orders for motor canoes, made out of cedar by the famous\nPeterborough; Canoe Co., Ltd. I have them\non way from Peterborough, tt feet to K\nfeet long. Prlcus are right. You can purchase with or without engine. Satisfaction\nguaranteed or money refunded.. H. L.\nLindsay, foot of Josephine St., Nelson, B.C.\nFOR SALE\u2014Four dozen yearling hens,\nprincipally White Wyondottes and Black\nMlnorcus, Also Black Minorca cockerels,\nBlx months old, M. B. Edwards, Hmme\nAddition, 142-3\n5P\nFOR RENT\nFOR RENT\u2014Suite of rooms suitable for\nhousekeeping.   Apply  Macdonald Block.\nEntnincu Josephine street,\nTO  LET-Three nice   rooms,    Apply Mrs.\nHeaton, 609  Victoria street, opposite city\nholh .- .',     ,. \u2022\u25a0   -       '       '. MO-tt\nFOR RENT\u2014Six roomed house, furnlshVaT\nApply R. K. Dally NewB,\nFOR RENT\u2014Two rooms partly furnished or otherwiBo with bath and pantry.\nFront street, two doors outside of city\nlimits; all modern conveniences. Enquire\nDally News Office, Hu-tf\nFOR RENT\u2014Two   nice furnished rooms.\n615 Carbonate Street. I37t\nFOR    RENT\u2014Housekeeping    room;   gas\nstove. GOT Silica Street lKt\nFOR RENT\u2014Comfortable furnished front\nroom. 008 Carbonate street. 137-0\n :.     WEDNESDAY   OCTOBER 1\n\u2022She fPatlij $\u00abn\u00bb.\nPAOt IEVIN\n\u00a3*\nPickling Spices & Vinegar\nMalt vinegar, white wine vinegar,   per\ngallon   ,    75c\nPickling spice, per pound   40c\nMustard Seed, per pound 40c\nCelery seed, per pound 40c\n\"Whole cloves, per pound  40c\n\"Whole clnamon, per pound 40c\n\u2022Chllles, per pound   40c\nBy buying these at\nJoy's Cash toy\nyou get goods that preserve your\npickles and Impart to them delicious\nflavors.\nFrom Montreal - From\nand  Quebec Liverpool\nSept 26 Lake Manitoba Sept 9\nOct. 2.. Empress ot Britain ..Sept. 18\nOct 10... Lake Champlaln ...Sept. 23\nOct 16 ..Empress ot Ireland ..Oct. 2\nOct. 24 Lake Erie Oct 7\n<Jct 30.. Empress ot Britain ..Oct. 16\nNov. 7 Lake Manitoba ....Oct. 21\nNov. 13.. Empress ot Ireland ..Oct. 30\nNov. 21... Lake Champlaln ...Nov. 4\nFor further lnferawtlon regarding rates,\ndates of sailings, etc., eppty\nW. H. DEACON. C.P.A., Nelson, B. O.\nO. McL. BROWN, O.A.P., Montreal, P.O..\nCANADIAN     J\nPAcrpic;\nSpokane Pair\n'\u25a0        October 5 to October 10.\nFare   $0.8U   Fare\nTickets on sale October   4 to 8   inclusive.   Final limit, October 12.\nSpecial on October 6.\nfare   $6.60   Fare\nWith limit October 12.\nWestminster Fair\nSeptember 29 to October 3.\nfare $16.55 Fare\nTickets on sale September 26 to\nOctober 2. Final limit October 7.\nTickets may be destined to Vancouver\nIt desired.\n'Daily Bleeping car   Revelstoke   to\nVaiconver, berths secured at C. F. B.\n[ \u00ablty ticket offlce.\nFor further Information apply to\nJ. E. PROCTOR, D. P. A., Calgary\nW. H. DEACON, C. P. A., Nelaon\n=-50=\nPopular Odors\nWe have 59 popular edors in the finest makes of perfume.\nPlate of some kinds, ounces of others,   Every one at a bargain.\nThis Week\nAll $1.00 an Ounce for\n\u201450c\u2014\nWE ARE MAKING ROOM\nNEW GOODS COMING DAILY\nDON'T MISS THIS OPPORTUNITY\nPoole Drug Co., Ltd.\nNelson's Leading Druggists\nCorner Baker and Josephine Streets\nf\nStandard Furniture Co.\ni\nI\nI   Cold Weather Coming On\nW Now is the time to look over your\ns       BLANKETS AND COMFORTERS\nWe have them at all prices.   ...\nSpecial: The Celebrated Boyd-Caldwell All-Wool Lines\nFull and Complete Line of House Fuanishings\nAOENTS FOR THE\nMASON * RISCH\nPRIZE WINNING PIANOS\nStandard furniture Co.\nComplete House furnishers and funeral Directors\n\\V\n%\n01\nOr\na\n*\nit\ni\n*\n%\n*\ni\niii\nill\n*\nS\n5\nm\nm\n*\n*\nft\nft\nft\nft\nft\n*\nft\nft\ni\nJOSEPH MACLENNAN\nTMACHBROF PIANO AND ELOCUTION\nPiano pupil ot Ducharme   A Antonlne,\nMontreal.   Elocution pupUjrf E. Keye\u00bbv\nWHAT'S DOING IN CANADA\nOTTAWA, Oct. 6\u2014The board of. conciliation appointed to investigate tlie dispute\n(between the Intercolonlol railway and Un\nfreight clerks, in a report to tlie labor department urged that the .system of the appointment of employee! should be revised\nto as to do away with political pull and\nthat tbe service be reorganised with a view\nto eliminating unnecessary employees., it\nla also recommended that the salaries be\nincreased from 15 lo 20 per cent.\nTORONTO, Oct. fl-WUliam Oill, through\ncounsel, la making an application to Justice Anglin for squashing of the sentence\nof nine months In the Central prison Imposed upon him by magistrate O'Brien ot\nFort William. 0111 -waa one of the Nova\nScotinJ harvesters arrested for throwing\nstones at Insulators on the railway tele\ngraph wires.. It Is claimed in the appeal\nthat tlie magistrate applied to the case\nrulings that apply only to much more serious offences,\nTORONTO, Oct. 6-Suocesnlon duties collected by tho province for the past nine\nmonths of the present year exceed a million dollars.\nTORONTO, Oct. 6\u2014Rev! canon Tucker is\nconfined to his home through illness, but\nexpects to leave for the west at the end\nof the week.\nMONTREAL. Oct. 0-Chartes R. Hosmer\nwas today elected a director of the bank\nof Montreal, succeeding the late air Robert\nReid.\n\u25a0HALIFAX. Oct. 6\u2014James Morrow of the\nfirm of S. Cunurd and company, died tonight, aged 62. A widow and three children survive him.\nWOODSTOCK Oct. 6-Thomas Newton,\nThamesford, today fell from a ladder and\nsustained Injuries which caused death five\nhours later.\nOTTAWA, Oct. 6\u2014The supreme court of\nVanada opened Its autumn session this\nmorning, the chief justice prts'ding, and alt\nthe Judges being present.\nBRANTPORD, Oct. 6-A collision took\nplace tlits morning between a work train\nand a yard engine between Mount Vernon\nand Hurl'onl.   Three men will die.\nLONDON, Oct. 6-The grand jury has\nreturned a true bill against private Molr,\ncharged with shooting color sergeant Lloyd\nat Wotscly barrucks here in April lust.\nHALIFAX, Oct. 6\u2014Habeas corpus proceedings were taken here today in tlie case\nof 180 Chinamen on board the Bornu which\narrived yesterday from Montreal, bound\nfor Mexico.\nMONTREAL, Oct. 6-Two street ears\ncollided In u fog on Notre Dame street\ncast thiB morning. The conductor, motor-\nman and three passengers were taken to\nthe hospital with slight Injuries.\nKINGSTON, Oct. fr-After lightering 140\ncords of pulp wood into the schooner Oran-\nthiin, the tugs Donnelly and Florence\npulled off the steam barge Ketchum, ashore\non Jackflsh shoal, three miles below Mor-\nrlsburg. 1\nQUEBEC, Oct. 6\u2014The trouble between\nthe Quebec Railway, Light and Power Co.,\nand Its motormen and conductors has been\nsettled \u2014by a board of arbitration under\nthe Lemieux act. The report suggested a\nsolution of tho difficulties nnd has been\naccepted by both 'sides.\nMETALS\nNew York, Oct. 6-SUvcr,\n13 1-8 and 13 8-a,\nOct. 6-Sllver, 23\n1 3-4; copper,\nM| lead, \u00a313\n8s. Ikl.\nOct. fi~CloBlng quotations on tlie Neur\nYork curb and Spokane exchange, reported by Mlghton and Cavanaugh:\n\u25a0id    Asked\nAlberta C. ft C\t\nB. C. Copper     6.25       8.02(4\nChas. Dickens  1H     . Ili\nCan. Con. Smelters  67.00    74.00\nCopper King  1%     . 2!,\nDominion Copper     .87tt     .!*3'.\naalbralta Coil\t\nGertie  2%     . 3\",\nGranby  95.00   110.00\nHeolo,     8.26\nInternational Coal   57M    .61\nKendal    1.35     1.50\nMlssoulu Copper 3       .3*4\nNabob  234     . 214\nOom  Paul   03*    .0414\nPanhandle   (34     .6%\nRambler-Cariboo    15        .17%\nBex  w 414     .614\nSnowahoc  8ft     .10\nSnowstorm  :   1.69     1.70\nSullivan          M     .IK\nSullivan bonds\t\nStewart     .70       .90\nTamarack & Chcapeake ....I.    .50       .76\nOPENING COPPER  QUOTATIONS.\nGranby  \u2022. 100.01 110.00\nB.  C. Copper       6.3714  0.6214\nDominion Copper 871. l.uu\nNELSON NEVVSOF THE DAY\nThe tempernture yesterday varied between (9 and 36 degrees.\nThe Pythian Sisters, Nelson Temple No.\n10,   will meet tomorrow  in   K.P. holl.\nNelson lodge No. BO, I.O.G.T.. hold their\nsemi-monthly meeting tonight in K.P. hall.\nWm. Davidson, the socialist candidate, la\nto address a meeting ut Creston on Friday\nnight.\nThe Brotherhood of Itnllway Carmen No.\n9ft, will meet at Miners' union hull tomorrow evening.\nAt the meeting of the Knights or Pythias\nlust night th'i second und third degrees\nwere confumed.\nReturning officer John Keen stated yesterday that he intended to leave for Revelstoke last night.\nHon. Jules Tcsaler of the city of Quebec,\naccompanied by Madame TeBsler, arrived\nIn Nelson on Monday evening and left yesterday for 8-Mile where they propose spend-\nMen's Underwear\nDon't wait for an attack of the Grippe to force you   to   buy   your\nheavier underwear\u2014get It now and be ready for the drop in temperature\nWatson's\n-Paris\ns\n-Unshrinkable\nEllis\n- Spring Needle\nWolsey\n-Pure Wool\nFleece lined in natural and brown, per\nsuit $2.00\nCotton and wool mixture, a serviceable\ngarment, per suit  $2.75\nPure wool elastic ribbed at, per\nsuit  $3.50\nAll wool, heavy weight, all sizes at, per\nsuit   $3.00\nAll wool, medium weight, all sizes at,\nper suit  $4.00\nHeavy ribbed cotton, a great wearer\nand a good garment for those who\ncannot wear wool, per suit ... .$4.00\nNatural wool, medium weight, a very\nserviceable garment at, per suit $3.50\nHeavier weights at per suit $5.00\nNothing has yet taken the place of the\nWoUey underwear for anyone who\nlikes fine goods.\nFine natural wool at, per suit $5.00\nand    $6.00\nA finer quality with double breast and\ndouble back at, per suit  $7.50\nWe've gathered a flue stock of all the good kinds of underwear\nfrom the best mills in the world, so we've ready to give you exactly the\nkind of underwear you want.\nCombination suits In union and all wool from, per suit $3.25 to \u2014$6.00\nEmory & Walley\nThe Hub Furnishing House\nIng two or three days with Mr. nnd Mrs.\nT. A. Alrcy. Mrs. Alrey and Madame Tes-\nfller are sisters.\nThe members of the local companies ot\nthe 102nd regiment, practiced signalling ut\nthe armory last night.\nSmith Curtis, the liberal candidate, will\nspeak at Fruitvale and the Queen mine tomorrow afternoon and evening.\nCourt Kootenay Belle, C.O.F., No. 731,\nwill hold their semi-monthly meeting In\nthe K.P. hall tomorrow evening,\nTlie United Brotherhood of Carpenters\nand Joiners. Nelson branch, No. 624, meet\nthis evening at  Mlnurs'   union hall.\nThe monthly meeting or the board of\ntrade, which was to have been held tomorrow night has bven postponed for a\nweek,\nA guard practice or the Ij.O.T.M. will l>\u00ab\nheld in K.P. hall this afternoon at 8:80\ncity time. A full attendance of members Is\ndesired, \t\nThe Canadian Otoer of foresters intend\nholding a smoker in the K.P. hall on Monday evening next. All members are entitled to ask their friends and a good pro\ngram has been provided by the committee,\nJohn Mtlir, general manager or tlie order\nIn British Columbia will, be present.\nB Co.. nf the 102nd regiment has challenged) C Co., and the regimental staff to a\nrifle match to be shot off on tlie ranges in\nthe near future.\nA guard practice nr the li.O.T.M. will b\"\nheld in tho K.P. hull this afternoon ui :l\no'clock, city time. All in embers are requested to be present.\nR, A. Brown, city electriclnn, has Inspected the high tension wires of the Canada Zinc company in accordance with the\nrecent Instructions of consulting engineer\nCecil  B. Smith.\nAll members of the 1st Nelson Co,, Boy's\nBrigade, are requested lo assemble In St.\nPaul's church hull this evening at 7 o'clock\nsharp. New members will he recruited and\nthe company organized tor the winter Bes-\nslon.\nOn Monday last a mass meeting was held\nnt the conservative committee rooms if\nKaslo when arrangements were perfected\nfor the work of the federal campaign\nthroughout that district. The utmost enthusiasm prevailed and a strong fight will\nbe put up to ensure the triumphant return\nKootenay Coffee Co.\nDealers In all grades and varieties of\nTEAS AND COffEE\nRoasters of high grade coffee.\nThe best In these household luxuries at moderate prices.\nFresh roasted coffee at 35c to\n20c per lb.\nTeas, all grades and varieties,\nat $2.00 to 25c per lb.\nPure ground and whole spices.\nBaking powder, cocoa, cream Tartar, baking soda, flavoring extracts.\nKootenay Coffee Co.\n306'Baker Street\n\u25ba\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2014\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666Of <>>tMM<>>t\nThe\nBritish Columbia  Government'!   ; |\nAuction Sale!\nOf Fruit Land!\nIn the Creston district of West\nKootenay, will be held at the\ntown of Creston, B. C. Commencing at 2 o'clock p. m., October 14, 1908, and continued\nuntil sold.\nTerms\u2014One tenth cash, balance in nine equal annual payments, at 6 per cent. Interest.\nFor maps, description of property and all other particulars\nIn reference thereto address,\nW. F.Tcetzel  jj\nOFFICIAL    SELLING   AGENT      j\n912 Stanley St.,     Nelson, B. C.   \\\\\not A. S. Goodeve, the conservative standard hearer. James Anderson Is president\nand O. Strathcurn secretary of the association. \t\nJ. W. Cockle of Kaslo was a visitor in\nNelson yesterday and stated that earl\nGrey visited Kaslo lust Saturday on his\nway to Argenta and was presented by the\ncitizens with a handsome basket of fruit\ngrown in the vicinity.\nMajor Stewart, on behalf of) the Rocky\nMountain Rangers has accepted the challenge of the Canadian Order of Foresters\nto shoot at the 300, 500 and 600 yard range*\nand tho match will come off \u2014on ThunKa-\ngiving day, Nov. 9.\nJohn Klrkup, gold commissioner of Rossland, is lu the city In attendance on the tail\na.-inizes. He was recalling the fact .yesterday that some 1*0 years ago he personally\nsurveyed and sold the lot on which the city\npostofflce now stands.\nThis is Canad'an day at the Spokane fair\nand tonight is Hugh's' night. Judging from\nthe crowded trains going south lor the past\nfew dnys there ought to be a goodly number of Canadians on hand to partake <>f\nUncle Sam's hospitality.\nFull supply Ardath Tobacco; State\nEypress Cigarettes; Quo Vades Cigarettes: smoking mixtures at the Hotel\nHume. 139-6x\nA guard practice of the L.O.T.M. will\nbe held In the K.P. hall on Wednesday at\n:: p.m.,  oily  time.    All members are  requested  to be  present.\nin tills age or aKitntion for pure, cleat,\nfoods, it l\u00ab refreshing to know that **Sa-\nlado\" Tea is sold to the public in nil its\nnative freshness and fragrance, preserved\nIn sealed air-tight pickets, ft r cl from tho.\ngardens to the consumer, insuring a t-upj\nof tea \"In perfection\" hitherto unknown.\nMr. Smith Curtis, the liberal candidate\nfor Kootenay, will address a public meeting at Fruitvale on the afternoon of\nThursday next, Oct. S, at 1:80 o'clock and:\nanother meeting nt the Queen mine on\nthe evening of the same day. On Friday\nafternoon, Oct. 9, he will address a public\nmeeting at Wanota, Opposition candidates\nor their represents lives invited.\nMinard's Liniment Cures Burnt, etc.\nCity   Property\n92000 Will  Buy\nA seven roomed house on Park street\nnear Baker, atone basement, very central. Terms $1000 cash, balance to\n\"Bit. ,     .  ,,, (\n$lSOO Will Buy\nA five roomed house on Hull street\nnear Kill, excellent location. Terms to\nsuit.\n*UOO Will Buy\nA four roomed house on Gore street\ngood location.   Terms easy.\nWhat have you for sale? List It with\nnj.   We can sell It.\nStocks\nW\u00ab Will Buy\n1000 Royal Collieries   2<e\n300 B. C. Copper  \u00ab6.M\n5\u00ab\u00bb Canadian N. W. Oil  30c\n200 Niplsslng (Cobalt)    \u00bbS.M\nList your stocks with us, we can sell\nthem.\nFor  Rent\nGood flvo roomed cottage on Hoover\nstreet.   All conveniences $18.00\nFlat on Water Btreet, partly furnished (or    $15.00\nFive roomed   house   on   Carbonate\nstreet, near Josephine $18.50\nMcDERMID & McHARDY, Nelson, B. C.\nF3^$_mW^?m*V*\n\u2022 nir'T'-'ir'-***\"\"^T**-,M^T*'\n_Jj__j__\njai^^j^^^^.^^^i^^^jz^^^^^^^^^^^\n hktsk EIGHT\n\u00a9It* Unity Item*,\nWEDNESDAY ....... OCTOBER r  '  I\n 1  \u2014\t\n170 ACRES\nOn Main Lake\nFirst clan Bench Land, hsi been\nlogged.\nSplendid stream ot water.\nBandy and gravel beach with\nsheltered bay, 2 steamers passing\ndally.\nExcellent fishing and shooting\nclose to. ,\nFor prices and terms apply\nH. E. Croosdoile\n<8b Co.\n\"Unequalled   for   domestic   use.\"\nGALT COAL\nW. P. TIERNEY,\nGeneral Sales agent, Nelson, B. C.\nCars shipped to all railway points.\nFOR SALE\nLots, Houses and\nLand\nF.  B. L.YS\nReal Estate Agent.    315 Baker St\nFOR  CROW'S  NEST OR  GALT\nGoal and Good Wood\ntry the\nCity Transfer\n311 Baker St.\nPhone 179.\nNelson Opera House\n\u25a0 \u2014 \u2666 \u25a0\n3 Nights\nCommencing Thursday October 8.\nMatinee Saturday 25c and 50c.\nReturn of the little \"big\" favorites,\nPollard's\nLilliputian\nOpera Co.\nThursday\nFlorodora\nFriday\nA Runaway Girl\nSaturday Matinee\nThe Belle of New York\nSaturday Evening.\nThe Toy Maker\nPrices 50c, 76c and  {1.00\nMatinee: children 25c; adults 50c.\nPlan at Rutherford's Wed. Oct. 7.\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\nA. B. Buck wort li, J.P., of Yinlr, waa a\nvisitor In  tlie ultyi yi-merduy on business.\nBorn,  to  the wife of Scott Thompson,\ncorner Stanley and innis streets, on Oct, 0,\n'  a son.\nCiller Denny of the fire brigade is expected to return from Ills holiday trip to\nthe coast the end of this week.\nThe Ladles Aid of St. Paul's church\nwill meet In the church parlor today at\n11:30 p.m.    A full attendance is requested.\nLieut. Col. Holmes, D.O.C., has announced his intention of presenting the bugle\nband of the Nelson compunles with a handsome silver bugle.\nMr. justice Anlay Morrison arrived in the\ncity lust evening from the coast via Spokane for the purpose of holding the usaIzcs\nand Is registered at the Hume.\nThe United Commercial Travellers, who\nrecently organized a lodge In Nelson, will\nhold their first regular meeting on Saturday night when a number of Initiations\n-will take place.\nS. S. Culllton, superintendent of bridges\nfor the Great Northern railway lines north\nof Spokane, Is in Nelson nnd is engaged in\na thorough Inspection of all bridges and\ntrestles between here and Marcus,\nA. S. Goodeve, conservative candidate for\nKootenay. came over from Kossland last\nnight and leaves this morning tor Slocan\ncity, where he is to hold u public meeting\nIn the evening. He will speak tomorrow\nnight In New Denver.\nActive work In connection with the installation of the second unit will be undertaken at once and city engineer Dufreane\naccompanied by city electrician Brown,\nare visiting the power plant today for the\npurpose of arranging for the pulling In of\nthe necessary derricks, concrete mixer and\n\u00bbo forth, as well as having gravel for the\nconcrete and lumber for the superintendent^ house, brought on the ground. All\nthese matters as well as tho arrangements\nIn connection with the switchboard can b\u00ab\ncone on with at once.   The machinery for\nSpecial\nValues\nIn Boys'\nQothing\nFor This\nMonth\nWe call the attention of mothers and their boys to a special\ndiscount of 25 per cent, on a great\nnumber of odd suits to clear during the month of October. Do not\nmiss the chance for fall and winter clothing.\nJ. H. Wallace\nMEN'S OUTFITTER.\n$400 Cash\nand the balance in monthly\npayments will purchase an\neight-roomed house and lot In\na good position in the Hume\nAddition. The house has city\nwater and is piped for plumbing.\nH.&M.BIRD\nNELSON, B.C.\nQuality of Material\nforms the basis ot any well made range. A good design Is essential,\nbut a poor Quality product lacks durability, costs too much, (or repairs, and proves a nuisance In every way.\nIn the OXFORD CHANCELLOR, tbe body Is made ef tbe best\ncold-rolled steel plates. To this is closely riveted an interlining ot\nasbestos millboard.\nBetween the main bottom and the bottom ot the stove are two\nair spaces whlcb protect the floor from overheating.\nThe OXFORD CHANCELLOR Is a strong, sate, satisfactory\nrange in every way.\nThe J. H. Ashdown Hardware\nCo., Ltd.\nNelson Branch      .*.      Nelson, B. C.\nWHOLESALE RETAIL\nthe new unit will take several months to\nIhstaL\nDr. O. A. B. Hall, M.P.P., returned to\nNelson on Monday night after an absence\nof five months In the old country and waa\nwelcomed yesterday by bis friends,\nSir. and Mrs. Henry Blrks of Montreal\narrived in the city last night and are staying at the Hume. Mr. Blrks is widely\nknown as one of the leading jewelers of\nCanada.\nJ. H. Brock, general manager, of the\nGreat West Lift- Assurance company of\n\"Winnipeg, was in the city yesterday on\nills annual tour of inspection. He was accompanied by hts son and nephew and intends going cast thia morning.\nGladys Irene, the two year old daughter\nor Mr. and Mrs. A. Bnlcom, Mill street,\ndied yesterday. The funeral will take\nplace nt 2 p.m. today from the family residence. Rev. Ft. Newton Powell will officiate.\nMr. nnd Mrs. H. It. Stevenson came In\nfrom Lytton last night and are going to\nSpokane in the morning. Mr. Stevenson\nwas formerly C.P.R. agent at Midway and\nafterwards at New Denver, but resigned recently to accept a lucrative ponllloii In\nSpokane.           -.\nDETERMINED SUICIDE.\nTwelfth Case Reported During the Past\nSummer.\nNIAGARA FALLS, N. Y. Oct. 6-About 7\no'clock this morning a woman, about six\nfeet tall, wearing a black hat, long black\ncoat, Mack ehoes and spectacles, and of\nsallow complexion, appeared In the reservation here, acting strangely, and tried to\ncross over tlie bridge to Goat Island but\nwas stopped by a policeman who Informed\nher that tlie island was not open to visitors\nuntil & o'clock. She continued to wander\nabout, still acting strnngely. She was asked by the superintendent of the park as to\nwhat she wanted. He elicited nothing\nfrom her except that she was from Saginaw,  Mich.\nAbout 8 o'clock she went towards Prospect Point. The officer started after her\nbut before he reached her she passed under the rail and leaped from the bank into\nthe American fulls and nothing more was\nseen of her. Site Is the 12th suicide here\nsince July 1.\nWINS BIG PRIZE\nWilbur Wright Fulfills   All   Aeroplane\nConditions.\ni.BMAN. Ocl, 6-Wtlbur Wright, who on\nSaturday lust established u world's record\nfor aeroplane flight carrying one passenger, made a new record this afternoon\nwhen under similar conditions he remained\nIn the air for one hour four minutes and\ntwenty-fllje seconda. Tlie best previous record was 55 minutes and 37 seconds. Mr.\nWright thus fills the conditions of the\ncontract signed by him and Daare Weiller,\nrepresenting a syndicate. The contract calls\nfor the payment to Mr. Wright of $100,000\nby the syndicate', in return for which the\nsyndicate secures the patent rights of the\nmachine In France and the colonkn.\nThe world renowned\nG. B. D. Pipes\n-AT THE\u2014\n\\\nCabinet Cigar Store\nWholesale and retail.\nQ. B. MATTHEWf Prep.\nChina Hall\nCan Supply You\nWe have a large and varied\nstock of China, Glassware, Lamp\nGoods, Toilet Ware, Jardineres,\netc. to choose from and our prices\nare the lowest In the city.\nWe offer Special Bargains in\nSecond Hand Guoda of every description. Come in and Inspect\nour stock.\nMunro & Nelson\nPhone A. 261.\nP. O. Box !\nCAPITALS AGAIN BEATEN\nROYALS DEFEAT THEM WITH FOUR\nINTERMEDIATES\nPOOR    GAME    ATTRACTS    BUT   A\nSPARSE ATTENDANCE\n,\/\u00bb\u2122SW8L\u2122 Thft D*llv News,)\nVANCOUVER, Oct. fi-The capital lacrosse team of Ottawa left tonight for\nhome In their special palace car over the\nC.P.R. carrying away not only no money\nas a result of their ten days sojourn on\nthe coust, but also little of the great reputation which they brought with them.\n\u201eTh.is . aftornOon the world's champion\nWestminster team, crippled by the absence\nof four of the regular senior players, took\nwhat, little of the Capital's reputation remained after the first two 'beatings tied\nsundry kinks in It, and then tossed it In\nthe Fraser. A score of ti goals to 4 was\nrun up by the fleet footed homebreds and\nthe spectacle made even George Blyson,\nthe affable manager of the easterners,\nhang his head in sorrow and In anguish.\n\"What's the use of trying to beat you\nfellows,\" said he aften that fearful third\nquarter, when the Royals scored five goal*\nto one for the Caps. \"You don't do anything else In this town but play lacrosse\n12 months In the year. Every season Is lacrosse seasoa here. No wonder you have a\nlacrosse team, and you sure have one,\ntoo,\" he added as he watched the shifty\nwestern youngsters playing rings round the\neastern veterans.\nAnd no wonder George was sad nnd\nheavy of heart. Having seen with his own\neyes the monstrous crowds which attended\nthe two games last week at tho exhibition\nMr. Bryson, ably seconded by Dave Mulligan, had beseeohed the Westminster club\nito give the Caps a chance to capture a\nlittle pocket money by playing an extra\ngame. New Westminster club officials\nhaving opinions of their own In this connection tried to disBuade the Ottawa men,\nbut the lacrosse experts from Canada's\ncapital, would not have it that way. They\nfigured out that another game would Just\nabout account for the refreshment bill on\ntheir homeward trip, besides a few other\nincidentals of the kind, so they stayed over.\nIt cost the Capital team $46 a day to hold\ntheir special car the extra three days besides a dally feed bill of ISO or thereabouts.\nThis meant an extra expense bill for the\nstopover of about 1286 besides a few sim-\noleons the party scattered in their leisure\nmoments.\nToday's extra game attracted but a few\nhundred \/people. Altogether there were\nabout 700 at a liberal estimate. Tho Capitals' share of \"two bits\" apiece of these enthusiasts represented Just about tho odd\n186, leaving the club $200 to the bad an the\ngame, And then on top of all this to have\nthe score doubled on them by a team comprising four Intermediates, two of whom\nwere making their \"deeboo\" in senior company, It can easily be understood why the\nfinal hours of the Capitals' sojourn on tho\nBracelets\nWe have received a beautiful line of bracelets. The styles are the\nlatest finish In best gold filled and prices the lowest.\nPlain Bands, $4.50, $5.50, $6.00 and $7.00\nChased Bands $6.00\nStone Set, $6.50, $8.00, $8.50, $10.00 and $15.50\nThey are good values and a close Inspection will verify the  above\nstatements.   See our window display. ..\nJ.O.PATENAUDE\nMANUFACTURING JEWELER, WATCHMAKER AND OPTICIAN.\nBaker Street\nNelson, B. C.\nMoney Makers for Wise Ones\nDouble bouse close In, pays over 20 per cent., price $1100; only $300\ncash.\n97 acres with railway and stenmer service; 75 per cent, good; station; post office; store at your gate; some improvements. 12500; small\ncash payment. )\nWOLVERTON \u00ab. CO., Baker Street\nI2vefty Man\nshould now have right handy\na pair of our waterproof shoes.\nThe more'; thoroughly mon\nbecome acquainted with our\nvlscolized waterproof shoes the\nless use they have for rubbers.\nOur Doctor's special Is the\nboot made of best box calf and\nfull double sole; Blucher or\nlaced; price $6.00\nlie Royal\nR. Andrew &\nCompany\nSHOE SPECIALISTS\nbanks of the historic Fraser were filled\nwith darkness and gloom as of the tomb.\nThe contest itself was as poor as the\ncrowd and in marked contrast to the brilliant, breesy display of the national game\non Saturday.\nThe Caps, after they had looked over the\nBllm gathering of spectators seemed to become afflicted with an excessively tired\nfeeling. The champions were little better\nand between them they served up a wearisome exhibition. Neither team enthused\nenough to even check hard at any stage\nand the referees had nothing to do but refrain from laughing at the proceedings.\nMot a single player was ruled of and not\neven one cautioned. Feeney and Uryson\nwere absentees from the Westminster team,\nwhich was shifted around In consequence.\nSandy Gray went out on the defence field.\nMunn replacing him in the net. Latham\nwent to Inside home. Both Munn and L\u00abn-\ntliam played good lacrosse and tried their\nbest to keen the others awake'. The Springs,\nthe other Intermediates on the team, played well but none off the other Players\nstarred, principally because there wag no\nnecessity for them to do so. The easterners all lacked ginger. Harry Scott and\nBones Allen were the only home players to\n..Try Bosquet's..\nBusinessmen's Lunch\nfrom 11 a. m. till 2 p. m. commencing today\n 25c\t\n\"Easier     than walking\nhome, and money saved.\"\nBosquet's Cafe\/East Baker Street\nFinest In\nThe Land\nKing Edward Chocolates\nFresh    from    the    Cadbury\nfactory.\nS. H. Seaney\nPhong 206.\nBaker Street.\n.WSS$SW\u00bb>98gM<W\u00abWSS\u00bbffSWS3\u00bb\u00abi\nCut Glass\nWe are showing a special line of the\nrichest of cuttings In Bon Bom, Sugars\nand Creams, Berry Dishes, Vases, Etc.,\nFROM {2.00 TO (10.00\nOLD CURIOSITY SHOP\nJosephine Street\n\u25a0; \u2666\u2666 .,,.!\u00bb<\u00bb\u00bb<<\nWe Have\nMoved\ndirectly serosa the street to. the\npremises occupied Sir the\nThomas Drug Co.\nNear Goods are arriving dally\nsnd we are better prepared\nthan ever to take care ot your\njewelry wants.\nSea Ua In Our New Store.\nR.H.Ewert\nJ^weki abd Engraver\n\u00bb\u00bb<\u00ab\u00ab \u00bb SIM*) \u25a0\nBhow any life, while Prlngle, Cameron and\nHutton wero the best of the defonec.\nKilled by Street Car.\n\"WOODSTOCK, Oct. 6~Dr. A. K. Ferguson was run over and killed by a Btreet\ntear this afternoon. Ho was riding a\nbicycle and In getting out of the way of\na wagon he rode IA front of the cur ana\nwas knocked down and cut In two. A\nwidow, son and daughter survive him.\nUnion Stock Yards Sell Out.\n\/\nTORONTO, Oct. C-The Union Stockyards\ncompany of West Toronto has decided to\nsell out to a United States concern, Bald to\nbe Swift and company of Chicago. Tills\nfirm has mode an offer of 80 cents for pre*\nerred stock and \u00bb cents for common. The\ncompany Is capltulixed or $900,000.\nBreakfast\nla the specialty covered by\n\"B. & K.\" Cereals]\nRolled Oats, Rolled Wheat, Wheat\nFlakes, Buckwheat Flour, Caverhlll's-\nBsrley Flakes.   Made by\nThe Brackman-Ker\nMilling Co., Lhi\nBeautiful in color, luscious In flavor.     Cookers,   the-;\nkind mother likes for apple dumplings.\nExtra large, Wolf river; Bertlngheimer, a box ....I1.7& \u25a0\nGravenstien, very fancy ,  M.0OV\nThe finest of eating apples In the world.\nWealthy, five tier .'. \u00bbtM\u25a0]\nWealthy, four tier ..,..:....:  \u00bb1.75.j\nThe best family apple for eating or cooking.\nBuy home grown fruit and keep your money In Nelson-'\nBell Trading Co.\nBAKER ST., NELSON\n.-;^;\u00ab^CTjsjag\u00bbKew\u00ab>\u00abcCT^,^g\u00bbKe^^\u00ab\u00abyta\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab;:: :t r: axiawmm\nGoing Fishing?\n8     It so, outfit with ua and you will never be able to say that If your\ntackle had been good, you would have leaded the big one. The \u2022\u25a0-.\u25a0        *\nV\nFishing Tackle\nwe aell Is the best made and Insures a good eaten with the smallest\npercentage of loet flab.\nNELSON HARDWARE Co.\nBaker 8t. Nelson, B. Q.\nThis Store Closes Wednesday Afternoons at 1 o'clock.\n\u00abmsmtmatsemsteo\u00abssstai\u00bb\nK\u00abJKSS5K\u00ab\u00bbf\u00bbSM\u00abS\u00ab5S$$S\u00ab5SS\u00ab9\u00bbSi\u00ab\u00bb50SM|K\n$2000\nla not a high price to pay for a modem 8-room house and two well cultivated lots In Nelson. But add to this 20 acres of good fruit land\nnear Bonnington; without increasing the price, and you have one ot the\nbest Bnaps on the market. We have it, and 1600 cash, balance on terms'\nto be arranged, wilt take the property.\nMcMorris & Horstead\nREAL ESTATE. CUSTOMS BROKERS. FIRE  INSURANCE\nBAMILTOH\n(WINNIPEG\nHeating Stoves\nWe have a fine assortment of Heating Stoves and will\nbe pleased to have intending purchasers inspect our stock\nbefore buying.\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co., Limited\nNELBON, B. C.\nWholesale Retail\nTORONTO\nVANCOUVER\nNew Books\nBy Mrs. Humphrey Ward\u2014\"The Telling ot Diana Mallory\" ....,. 11.60 J\nBy L. M. Montgomery\u2014\"Anne of Green Gables\" ................. itJSO J\nBy Prince Urussor\u2014\"Memoirs of a Russian Governor\"  $1.75\nThe official book of the Emmanuel Movement, \"Religion and Medicine\" \u00bb1M\nBy Marie Corelll\u2014\"Holy Orders\" %13B\nPickling Spices\nNow that the pickling season Is here your stock of spices will have\nto be replenished.\nWHY NOT BUY THE BEST?\nWe Bell, only sovereign spices (Manufactured by National Drug ft\nChemical Co.) because they are absolutely pure and give you the best\nvalue for your money. . \u25a0\".\nMixed pickling spice, tor all vegetables, preserving the color and\nflavor, doves, cassia, milted Spice, ginger and pepper 15c a package.\nMace, cayenne 25c a package.\nCanada Drug & Book Co., Ltd. .ws.\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_1908_10_07","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0382967","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. : News Publishing Co.","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"}]}}