{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0384943":{"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP":[{"value":"c85da3f9-b808-417b-aa3e-0318cdaf03fd","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2019-10-29","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1912-11-08","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0384943\/source.json","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format":[{"value":"application\/pdf","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note":[{"value":" EIGHT PAGES\nSO CENTS A MONTH\nVOL. 11\nNELSON. B. G. FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 8,1912\nDuke\nof Abruzzi  May\nFirst King\nTO KEEP SERVIA\nFROM ADRIATIC\nAllies Hope to Divide Albania\nBetween Servia and Greece\nClash of Views\nI     . (By Dally NewB Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Nov. 7.\u2014The past 24\nhcurs have brought little news of im\nporlance from the seat of war. The\nreport that Saloniki, had been evacu\nated Is premature and a similar report\nconcerning Monastir Is still uncon\nfirmed. There has been no authentic\nnewt?, of the alleged defeat of the Turks\nbefore Tchalaja. On the >-*ontrary, a\ndespatch sets forth the Turkish claim\nthat there are no Bulgarians before\nTchalaja and that both armies are\nresting. The Turkish reports regarding the progress of the war, however,\nhave been so consistently misleading\nas to have little value.\nThe present lull in the news mny\nmean that Borne important  action  is\nprogressing.   In the meantime,  diplo\nmatlc efforts to end the war are mak\nim;   no    progress and the European\npress  la  busy discussing  all   the   aspects of the settlement of the difficult\nlea.   Everything  tends  to  show   that\nalmost Irreconcilable antagonisms will\narise over the    allocation of Turkish\nterritory.    Servia claims as her share\na large part of Albania, including the\nAdriatic ports of Durazzo, Alleslo and\nSai- Glovanl dl Medwa,\nAccording to the Servian premier's\nstatement to tho Park* Temps, the\nallies desire to partition off European\nTuikey, leaving the fate of Constontln-\nopcl to fne decision of the powers. According to reports current in Berlin,\nth-3 Intention of the allies is to divide\nAlbania between Servia and Greece, but\nan agreement already exists between\nAustria and Italy which would be supported hy Germany, guaranteeing the\nIntegrity and Independence of Albania,\nand the Triple Alliance Is determined\nto prevent Servia at all costs from\nreaching the Adriatic. It Is oven asserted that the Triple Alliance has\nagreed to make Albania independent\nwith the Duke of Abruzzi as king.\nAnother Important meeting occurred\nat Bucharest today between the Roumanian premier and the Russian and\nServian ministers. It Is rumored that\nhnvorrow tho powers will communicate\nto the Balkan states Turkey's request\nfor mediation. Abdullah Pasha, lately\ncommanding the eastern army, has arrived at Constantinople. The vail of\nAdrianople has sent a despatch briefly\noutlining the recent operations. Tho\nInst sortie occurred yesterday with severe losses to the Bulgarians.\nDetermined to  Fight.\n(By Daily News Leased  Wire.)\nCONSTANTINO BL IS, Nov. 7.\u2014Pub\nlie opinion In this city is strongly op\nposed to the Idcn of seeking niedtatior\nor peace. Nazim Pashu, the command\ner In chief, has reported to the gov\nernment that the army Is determiner\nto fight until It Is absolutely defeated\nHe regards the reverses sustained a:\nunfortunate but says that the ttra?i\nOttoman army Is confident of ultimaU\nsuccess and that the whole corps ol\nthe officers are unanimous In favor o\ncontinuing the war,\nThe principal officers In Constantinople have handed tbe grand vizier\nKiamil Pnsha, a signed declaration in\nthe same Bpirlt, and tbe party of vtnloi\nand progress promises to support the\ngovernment in the policy of prosecut\nIng the war with energy,\nMeanwhile, there have been no developments at the front. Reconnaissance^ by the eastern army today beyond Tchorlu failed to encounter any\nBulgarians, but Nazim Pasha reports\nthat Bulgarian reconnolterlng parties\nwere repulsed >about four miles from\nRodosto.\nSo far aB can'be learned here, there\nhas been very little, change In the military situation In tho past 24 hours. .A\nsort of self-imposed armistice obtains\non the Thraclan plums. Both sides\nappear to require time to rest nnd reorganize after their exhaustive efforts.\nFurther heavy rains have transformed\nthe plains Into a moraBB. The roads;\nare most difficult for transport und\nIt Is believed by the Turkish officials\nthat probably a week will elapse before hostilities are resumed along the\nTchatalja lines which battle is expected to decide the campaign unless\npeace comes to spare the belligerents\nfurther carnage.\nThe rumor that Saloniki has been\noccupied is not confirmed, but it Is\nknown that the town la hard pressed.\nMussulman refugees continue to arrive at the outskirts of the capital\nfrom practically the whole country\nsouth of the Bulgarian advance. The\nscene outside the city wails at Adrianople gate is one of direful distress.\nMen, women and children, carts add\ncattle are huddled together. The authorities are trying to supply the Immediate wants of the refugees and\nhave decided to send them to Asia\nMinor. Thousands have tramped the\ncountry the last 10 days and have undergone intense suffering. They say\nthat they feared the invaders would\nburn the villages.\nThe ambassadors of the five powers\nheld a meeting this morning at the\nporte and there met the grand vizier\nand the foreign minister. It is understood lhat they discussed measures of\npublic safety and the question of mediation, but nothing is known of the decisions reached. The powers as yet\nhave made no move with reference to\nmediation.\nHeavy Snow Falling.\n(By Dally *N*\u00bbws Leased Wire.)\nBELGRADE, Nov. 7.\u2014Fighting is reported north of Monastir. A heavy\nsnow Is falling throughout Servia nnd\nMacedonia and the roads are almost\nImpassable for guns.\nHas Adrianople Fallen?\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.*)\nLONDON, Nov. 7.\u2014The correspondent of the Dally Mall sends 'the following from Bucharest: \"I have just arrived from Sofia and hnve good\ngrounds for believing that Adrianople\n1ms fallen but Bulgaria is concealing\nthe fact lest tbe powers should intervene before the capture of Constantinople. Extraordinary endeavors have\nbeen made since Monday to prevent\nnews leaking, the censorship being\neven extended to letters. I understand\nthat the whole garrison surrendered\non  Tuesday    unconditionally.    Mean-\n(Continuefl on Page five.)\ni\nFurious Gale Prevents Work\nof Rescue\nHOPE THAT VESSEL\nMAY BE SAVED\nBRAVE COOPER\nPREVENTS EXPLOSION\nCrawls Along Floor of Burning Building and Shuts Tap of Escaping Gasoline.\n(By Daily Newd Leased Wire.)\nQUEBEC, Nov. 7.\u2014With tbe loakage\nfrom nn open tup, from a tank of 20,-\n00'J gallons of gasoline catching fire\nand threatening to destroy the entire\nworks of the Imperial Oil company of\nthis city, Albert Gulgeri, a cooper in\nthe company's employ, crawled on his\nbands and knees along the floor of tbe\nburning building and turned off the\ntap from which the explosive fluid was\npouring. Three streams af water were\nplayed upon Guigerl by the firemen\nas ho crawled toward the tank. He cut\noff the flow and the gasoline and saved the company from complete destruction.     .\nThe fire started in n peculiar manner.\nA workman wns driving a steel plug\nIntc lho steel tank containing gasoline\nnnd struck a spark. Immediately the\ngasoline Ignited and the storage shed\nwa-J quickly consumed. Fortunately\nthere wns no explosion. The entire\ncontents of the 2,000 gallon tank were\nhowever, consumed before tbe fire was\npui out.\nHITS HORSE I\nGUN EXPLODES\nFarmer Breaks Gun Over Horse's Back\n\u2014Charge Explodes\u2014Farmer\nIs Dead.\n'By Dally Newa Leased W|re,)\nEDMONTON, Alta., Nov. 7.\u2014One of\nthe most extraoirtinnrv accidents In the\nmortality records of Alberta was reported to tho coroner, Dr. Frankum, of\nStettler, yesterday, when the 12-year-old\nson of Rnohael Eagles, a farmer living\nnear Stettler brought tbe body of bis\nfather home after an interrupted hunting trip, during which the father was\nkilled accidentally by his own hand.\nFather nnd son had started out with a\nhorse and buggy on a bunt. They bad\ngone only a short distance when Mr.\nEngle tried to make Ids horse travel\nfaster. Falltr- to coax tbe animal Into\na tiot, the farmer picked up a loaded\ngun which was lying In the rig and\nntruck the l.orse sharply over the back\nwith the weapon, breaking the butt end\nbelow the trigger guard. By. some unknown agency tho trigger caught and\nthe right barrel of the gun exploded,\nthe charge entering Eagle's right breast;\nkilling him Instantly, .The son placed\n1.1a father's body in the bottom of the\nbuggy, returned to Stettler and notified\nthe coroner, who decided that an Inquest was unnecessary. The deceased\nwas well known in Stettler where be\nlived for several years.\t\nWill Settle Debts   ,\nOf Defunct Railway\n(Special to'The Daily News.)\nVICTORIA, B. C, Nov. 7.\u2014Creditors of the dofuhct Midway & Vernon\nrailway, a considerable part of which\nundertaking was taken over at the\nchartering of the Kettle River Valley\nrailway by that company, are to receive In tho near future full settlement\nof their legitimate claims for labor,\nmateria.!, teaming, etc. Upon the Incorporation of the Kettle River Valley\nline with government assistance In its\nfinancing, such aid was made conditional upon the payment of outstanding-claims as against that portion of\nthe line which they will utilize. A\ncommission consisting nf r. f. Green,\nM, P., L, M. Rice of Seattle and Judge\nForln of Nelson, was created to pass\nupon tho claims, each of which was\nInquired Into, certified and paid. Later on nn agreement was consummated\nbetween the railway company and the\ngovernment extending the compensation to other Midway & Vernon credl\ntors, the government and company\npaying in equal proportions. A check\nfor the railway company's proportion\nwas sent In to Mr. Green not long ago\nby President J. J. Warren and today\nthe government's cheek for Its1 share!\nwds transmitted. The amount'Involved In tbiH latest distribution is 114,-\nfiB2, leaving only about $2,ono ail\ntold to he yet disbursed nnd all outstanding obligations satisfied.\nFirst Class Passengers Are\nTaken Off Ship-Hold\nFull of Water\naboard.   The crew and about COO passengers are still aboard.\nRescued Just in Time.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nP1CTOU, N. S., Nov. 7.\u2014A Mr. Mac-\ngregor left Grindstone, Magdalene\nIslands In a sailboat on Monday for\nEntry Island. Owing to the heavy wind\ntho boat was disabled and drifted about\nhelplessly until eight o'clock Tuesday\nnight, when the steamer Lady Sybil\ncame along. Capt. Ferguson with the\naid of the searchlight saw an object dn\ntiie water directly ahead and had barely time to altef the ship's course, ahd\na\\oid going over what proved to be'a\nbeat. He at once stopped his ship and\nturned to find and pick up the man\nand with difficulty got him on board\nand took the disabled boat in tow.\nMncgregor was 36 hours in the boat,\nand was thinly clad and without food\nsufiorod greatly and could not have\nsurvived much longer.\n(B\u00bb Daily News Leased Wire.)\nQUEBEC, Nov. 7.\u2014The Canadian\nNorthern steamer Royal George still\nrests firmly on the rocks one mile\neasl of Point St. Lawrence, on the\nnorth side of the channel, with 500\nsteerage passengers and the \u25a0\"\u2022rew on\nboard. The company officials were\nfirmly convinced that the passengers\nwould havo been all removed from the\nsteamer today and conveyed by tender\nto Quebec, but the elements lnterferred\nwit! their plans. Consequently, tho\npeople had to remain with the ship at\nleast until tomorrow, when they will be\nbrought to Quebec.\nThe condition of the vessel is practically the same us when she got off\nher course and was carried at full\nspeed on the rocks head on, and though\nhci position Is serious, experts have\nevery \u25a0confidence that she can be haul-\nej off, but not before she is lightened\nand with the aid of tbe highest spring\ntide, which will occur on Saturday next.\nHov No. 2 hold is full of water but\nso far as can bo learned No. 1 hold is\n.In tact. Likewise No. 3 and No. 4,\nHtokehole and engine room. The steamer is caught on the rocks between her\ntwn funnels and so firmly seated that\nunless lightened of her cargo, at least,\nin No. 1 hold, It would not be prudent\nIn tho interest of saving the ship, to\ntry to haul, her off. Meanwhile, the\ngovernment steamer Lady Grey, the\nwrecking steamer Lord Strathcona and\nthe Canadian Pncific tug J. O. Gravel,\narc alongside to render assistance nnd\ntake part in releasing the steamer\nfiom her present position when it is\nthought practicable to do so. ,\nFurious Gale.\nNone of these vessels could make\nconnection with the Royal George toduy on account of the fury of the\nnortheasterly gale and high sea that\nprevailed all day and last night, The\nwind today averaged a velocity of 50\nmiles an hour with the indication of\nit? enntinuanco with rain throughout\nthe night hut finer weather is predicted\nfor tomorrow. The Quebec & Levis\nFerry company's winter ferry boats\nQueen and Polar have been engaged\nto leave their moorings tomorrow for\nthe BCene to take the remaining stefcr-\nag.* passengers and all baggage from\nthe steamer and carry It to the Louise\ndocks where the passengers will be\ncured for by the Immigration officials\nuntil they can he forwarded with all\ntheir personal effects to their destinations. The first class passengers who\nwere taken off the ship early this\nmorning and landed at the \"Louise\ndocks at 8:30 In the midBt of a severe\nrain, are still the company's guests at\nth;) Chateau Frontenac, awaiting the\narrival of their effects.\nKnife-Shaped   Rock.\nThe formation of the river bed where\nthe Royal George Is lying is a knife\nshaped rock that gradually rises to\na ledge. The steamer made for this\nrocky ledge at a speed of 18 miles an\nhcur bow on, and the moment the bow\nstruck it bounded upward with a crash,\nNo 1 hold clearing the obstruction until No, 2 hold was reached, wHJch had\nto bear the impact that followed and\ncrunched over the ledge until the vessel came to a stop and rested on the\nlodge between the two funds and there\nshe became firmly imbedded on the\nsummit of the rock which is shaped\nlike at horse's back. The bow of tho\nsteamer lies in a depth of six feet of\nwater at low tide and tho after portion from where she Is held is In 12\nfeet of water. She Is so close in to\nthu Island of Orleans shore that the\nresidents of tne vicinity at low tide\ncan walk out to within 20 feet of the\nBhlp and exchange words with the\npassengers on board. The work of\ndischarging the cargo is the first essential to successfully 'hauling the ship\nfrom Its stranded position.\nEverything should be ready by Saturday when the highest tide will take\nplace and cause a rise of water of 17\nfeet whloh Will give 28 feet of water at\ntha bow and 29 feet six Inches from\nmidship aft.\nAn attempt waa made tonight to pull\nthi Royal George off without success,\n\u25a0bur-the vessel was placed In a moro\nfavorable position to meet the weather\nconditions. Another attempt will be\nmade tomorrow morning.\nDamage Under Water.\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nMONTREAL, Nov. 7.\u2014Tho latest\nbulletin regarding the Royal George\nsent from thnt vessel by wireless says\nthat the damage Is all under wator and\nthe vessel Ib leaking slowly in several\nplaces, \u25a0     -\nThe plates are badly torn in the\nstokehold and four boilers art* blown\ndown. Shi- made an unsuccessful attempt to get off .enrlythlff-'morning\nwlth tugs and engines. She had 014\npassengers and about 400 of a crew\n1\nCANDIDATES PA88\nMEDICAL, EXAMINATION\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nVICTORIA, B. C, Nov. 7.\u2014Only\nnine out of 60 of the candidates\nin the British Columbia medical\nexaminations failed to pass. The\nresults: H. P. Cox, E. L. Sandi-\nland, VV. A. Clark, A. R. Robertson, VV. Creighton, T. E. Petman,\nHarvey Coe, H- C. Davis, H. B.\nChriatensen, VV. E. Wilkes, B.\nBlackwood, Thomas Lyon, Paul\nEwart, W. R. Stone, A. D. Webster, J. H. Moore, A; M. Warner,\nR. A. Simpson, D. A. Tompsett,\nE. C. S. Syngt, P. W. Parker, M.\nM. Giles, A. Lowrie, C. R. Marlatt,\nD. D. Freeze, D. A. Clarke, C. D.\nHolmes, H. H. Murphy, L. J. C.\nBailey, H. B, Logie, J. A. Mieburn,\nW. E. Soott-Monohleff, C. F. Ma-\ngee, Calvan McCallum.\nMinnesota   Is   Placed\nRoosevelt Column\nWILSON WILL NOT.\nHAVE MAJORITY\nPreliminary Count Gives President Elect Forty-Six\nPer Cent of Total\nPOLICE FORCE\nBADLY PAID\nMoose Jaw Constables May  Resign in\nBody\u2014Long  Hours and  Poor\nPay.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.*)\nMOOSE JAW, ' Sask., Nov. 7.\u2014A\nstrike of the police force is threatened\nfor patrolman start here at $\u00a3> a month\nleBs than in all other cities in the\nprovince and in addition, have to work\nan hour a day longer. At the next\nmeeting of the police commission demands will he presented and unless\nconcessions are granted, tho entire\nforce will move to another city where\narrangements have been made for the\nengagement of the constables. The\nlocal poljco forco is said tu bo the finest body of men, in the Dominion for\neach ono weighs over ISO pounds and\nIs over six feet tall. Serious trouble\nis anticipated if the city. Is left without a city police force.\nWILL REORGANIZE POLICE;\nAPPOINT  PLAY  CENSOR\n\/By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nTORONTO, Nov. 7.\u2014rA special meeting of the board of control will likely\nbe held to deal with the appointment\noi a play censor and to consider the\nresolutions passed at the recent meeting in which a reorganization of the\npolice department was advised. The\nboard held a private meeting this\nmorning but Mayor Hockin announced\nafterwards that tho time at the disposal of the-board had been too short\nfor adequate discusBlon of tho questions.\nHANGOVER\nBRINK OF RAVINE\nTrain   DamBqsd   by   Rook   Slide\u2014Passengers Have Miraculous Escape\u2014\nEngine Crews Jump.\nfBy Daily News Leased Wire.)\nMOOSE JAW, Nov. 7.\u2014Passengers\narriving on the Soo Flyer today, toll\nof a miraculous escape from death of\nthe entire trainlond of passengers. At\nSnake river a rock slide was encountered, while rounding a curve. The\nlocomotive, baggage and express car\nand one coach were damaged, while\nthree coaches wore derailed and hung\non the brink of the ravine at the bottom of which the river runs. Both\nengineer and fireman are reported to\nhave jumped and escaped injury beyond a few bruises. The wreck made\nthe train some 12 hours Into here.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nNEW YORK, Nov. 7.\u2014Uncertainty\nas to the electoral choice of California\nand Illinois, as developed by the be\nlated returns from these states was\nthe, chief point of Interest today, although counting of the ballots in several doubtful states still continued.\nThat Illinois was safely In the WilsOn\ncolumn was indicated In the evening\nbut California, which had heen vlalm\ned by the Democrats shortly after the\nclosing of the polls, wavered toward\nthe. progressive ranks. The Wilson\nplurality estimated on Wednesday at\n12,000 was cut to less than 800 with a\nfew hundred remote precincts still un\nheard from. Progressive leaders\nelnimed these would change tho total\nt- a Roosevelt plurality but the missing\nprecincts generally were accredited to\nthe Democrats and the Wilson lead,\nwhile small, seemed safe.\nAfter apparently holding Illinois for\nnearly 48 hours after the polls closed\nRoosevelt lost its 29 electoral votes later\nIn the da;' when the assembling of the\nslate wide returns showed a definite\nvictory for Wilson.\nOn the strength of the Incomplete returns as to the popular vote for Wll-\nsor. Roosevelt and Taft, the estimate\nwas made tonight that Governor Wil\nson would not have a majority of all\nvotes casj:. In many states' the popular vote has been only roughly estl\nmated thus fur; but the reports indi\ncute that the combined vote of Roosevelt and Taft will be nbout 1,000,000\nmorti than the vote for Wilson.\nTho figures will be materially chnng\ncd by the final count; but lt Is expected that the proportion for each\ncandidate will not vary greatly, Th*\npreliminary count of the votes gives\nWilson 40 per cent of the vote; Roosevelt 86 and Taft 25 per cent. The total vote thus far reported Is less than\nIn 100H, while the official returns are\nexpected to bring it ubove these figures. Tn 1908, out of a combined vote\nof 14,080,858 Mst fur Taft and Bryan,\nTaft  received over 54  per cent.\nRoosevelt Loses Illinois.\n(Bv  Dally  News  Leased  Wire.)\nCHICAGO, Nov. 7.\u2014With all but ISO\nscattering precincts out of 4,288 In\nIllinois reported, Governor Wilson to\nnigh! bus a plurality of 9,437 over\nRcosevelt and It is conceedod that the\nstate Is In the Democratic column. All\nthe preeincts to be heard from are\noutside of Cook county and many of\nthem in the southern part of the state\nwhero further pluralities for Wilson\nare anticipated.\nThe popular vote now stands: Wilson, 899,428; Roosevelt, 369,991; Taft,\n250,297.\nIt became apparent early todny that\nWilson would soon tie if not pass\nRoosevelt's vote. Then, when he was\napproximately 9,000 ahead of Roosevelt\nit was found that the president-elect\nhad beon credited erroneously with\n3,000 too many votes from Livingston\ncounty. This decreased the plurality\nand gavo liopo to tho progressives but\nil was short lived for almost every pro\ncinct reported from then on gave an\nincrease for Wilson.\nRepublican   for   Wisconsin.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nMILWAUKEE,  Wis,.   Nov.   7\u2014 Governor Francis M. McGovern,  Republican, will have a plurality of at least\n5,000 vfites over John C. Karel, Democrat, according to the returns received by the Republican slate chairman,\nMr. Scott.\nWilson Again Leading.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nSAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 7.\u2014Col.\nRoosevelt's vote in California passed\nthat of Woodrow Wilson ut one period\nof the count of the sta,te returns today, but within a few hours belated\nreturns had put Wilson back In the\nEarly tonight his plurality was\nslightly more than 1,000 und slowly\ncreeping up. Roosevelt carried Los\nAngeles by 20,257 with seven precincts\nmissing.\nRoosevelt Carries Minnesota.\n(B\" Dally News Leased Wire.)\nMINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Nov. 7.\u2014Col.\nRoosevelt has carried Minnesota by at\nleast 15,000. This represents returns\nfrom 2,353 precincts and those still\nto be heard from are not expected to\nchange the result. The count at midnight was: Taft, 52,722; Wilson, 90,-\n867, and Roosevelt, 113,000. No tabulation was made of the votes given\nthe Socialist and Prohibition candidates for president. Governor Eber*\nhurt will have about 32,000 votes to\nthe good when the full returns are\nreceived. He climbed steadily and at\nmidnight  had 115,601 votes.\nDetroit'd Congressmen.\n(Bv Dally News Leased Wire.)\nDETROIT, Mich., Nov. 7.\u2014Congressional representation will be composed\nof eight Republicans, three Democrats\nand two Progressives. Samuel W.\nBeakes, Democrat, was victor in tho\nsecond district und Samuel W. Smith,\nRepublican, was re-elected after a hard\nstruggle ln the sixth. Both of the\nProgressive congressmen elected succeed Republicans. In the tenth, Wood-\nriff defeated George Loud. McDonald, in the twelfth, won over H. O.\nYoung.   '\nCabinet Makers Busy.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 7.\u2014Cabinet\nmakers arc already busy conjuring\nwhose names will share with Wood-\nrow Wilson in shaping the policy of\nthe administration. Necessarily, this\nis purely gossip, but the cabinet builders are .none the less active in pointing out the persons and the elements\navailable as cabinet material. One of\nthe available elements embraces those\nWho were conspicuous party figures at\nthe Baltimore convention, including\nSpeaker Clark, Oscar W. Underwood,\nWilliam J, \"Bryan, Governor Fuss of\nMassachusetts, Governor Harmon of\nOhio and some others. It is generally\n\".Continued op pace Five.)\nProvincial Ministers In\nConference At Ottawa\n(\"By Daily N\u00abw\u00ab \"Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, Nov. 7.\u2014Sir Richard McBride, Premier of British Columbia,\naccompanied by Attorney General\nBowser, L. M. McRae, his private secretary Neil Mclntyre, assistant commissioner of fisheries for British Columbia and F. H. Cunningham, chief\nDominion Inspector-of fisheries, arrived in Ottawa tills morning to hold the\nannual conference with the federal authorities in regard to' several matters\nwhich have been the subject of negotiations for some time past. Premier\nMcBride and Mr. Bowser had a two\nhours' Interview with Premier Borden\nIn the morning at which Hon, Martin\nBurrell was present. In the afternoon\nSir Richard saw Mr. Borden again\nWhile Mr. Bowser saw Hon. .1. D. Ha-\nnen, minister of marine nnd fisheries.:\nMessrs. Mclntyre and .Cunningham\nWere also busy with the officials of\nthe department of marine and fisheries. Sir Richard and Mr. Bowser were'\nthe guests of Premier Borden al\nluncheon at the Ridefiu club and in\nthe evening attended a dinner given\nin their honor by Hon^ Martin Burrell, at the Chateau Laurier.\nIt was said tonight that the negotia\ntions had only readied the preliminary\nstage, but that the various matters\nunder discussion would be gone into\nmore fully on Friday.! Thoy include\nthe question of tho appointment of a\nroyal commission to consider better\nterms for British Columbia, the old\ndispute over the refusnl of the provincial government to recognise the\ntitle of the Indians to lands and several matters pertaining to tlie administration of tho fisheries law. Premier McBride expects to be through\nwith his business in Ottawa by Saturday when lie will leave for tlie south\non a brief holiday trip. Mr. Bowser\nwill feo to New Brunswick.\nTOOK  MULE INTO BAR\nTO  GIVE   HIM   DRINK\n(By Dally New* Leased Wire.)\nEDMONTON, Alta., Nov. 7.\u2014\nBecause he insisted on taking his\nmule \"Bill\" into two hotel bars to\nhave a drink. Tom Wilson, a local horseman, was fined today for\ndrunkenness. A police department\nsummons was issued for tho mule\nwhich did not appear in court,\nhowever.\nEight   Hundred   Members\nStrike in Toronto Alone\nMINISTER OF\nLABOR'S POSITION\nStrikers Stand Firm at Calgary\u2014Sherbrooke Men\nReturn\nCOLDBLOODED\nMURDER IN REGINA\nReal     Estate    Agent    Bludgeoned    to\nDeath\u2014Crime Witnessed at Dis*\ntance by Passerby.\n(By Doily News Leased Wlre.i\nHBQINA, flask?, Nov. 7.-One of the\nmost cold blooded murders ever committed in tiie city took place tbis evening when Frank S. Satowski, a German\nreal estate agent nnd former police court\ninterpreter, waa bludgeoned to death In\nthe open roadway at the corner of\nMontreal street and Tenth avenue.\nactual committal of the crime was '\nnoased by an onlooker, but at too great\na distance to identify tbe three assailants of tbo victim, who, after striking\ndown tbvir victim, made off across nearby vacant lots. Tile two weapons with\nwhicb tlie crlipo wns Committed, Short,\nheavily weighted clubs, were found lying\nclose beside Hie murdered man. Beyond\nthese there nt present appears to be no\ntrace left by the assailants, though\npolice are encased in a search for\nHENRI BOURASSA\nON NAVAL POLICY\nExplains  Views to   Large   Number  of\nMcGil!   Students\u2014Opposed  to\nContribution.\n(\"By Daily News Leased Wlro.)\nMONTREAL, Nov. ' 7.\u2014Before a\ncrowd mainly composed of McGlll students which filled tho capacity of the\nassembly hall of the McGlll university,\nHenri Bourassa this afternoon explained his views on the naval question and defended his opposition toward any contemplated contribution\nto the imperial authorities. The occasion was the re-organization of the\nMcGlll Canadian club, of which nothing had so far been heard this session, and the speaker pleaded with bis\nhearers for the development of a greater spirit of Canadian unity rather\nthan tho following of those who fanned tho flames of what ho termer]\n\"false sentiment\" for their own ends.\nWhile Mr, Bourassa did not deliver\nsuch an outburst of impassioned oratory as those who attended are accustomed to hear, he was granted a\nmost attentive hearing until the very\nend of an hour long address. Besides\nexplaining his own views, Mr. Bourassa attacked what he termed the\nJingo journals and bis sarcastic sallies elicited much laughter from his\nhearers.\nStatements from Montreal by Canadian Paicfic railway officials to the effect\nthat tbo number of men called out by\ntho Canadian Brotherhood of Railway\nEmployes has never reached 1,000 is\nbranded as ridiculous by members of\nth;; branch of the brotherhood. \"According to our information, 800 have\ngone out at Toronto; they are out at\nFort William, Ottawa, Calgary. Cranbrook, Michel, Fernie, Lethbridge and\nMticleod,\" they declare,\nOne railway employe last night while\nemphasizing tho fact that the chief\nobject of the brotherhood at present\nis to secure recognition of the organization and the appointment of a board\nof conciliation .under the Lemleux act\nIn order that conditions may be Investigated, declared that tne men embraced by the brotherhood were, considering the duties they had to perform, about the most poorly paid\nbranch of the service. Long hours and\nthe almost Insuperable difficulties\nwhich faced any man who desired to\nplace any grievances which he might\nhnve before tho higher officials were\nother causes of dissatisfaction, he declared.\nSome of the men who most greatly\nneeded relief, he said, were checkers\nat some of the points In British Columbia. These men, especially those on\nFeme of the lakes, had to be on duty\nalmost day and night in order to check\noars which arrived or departed by rail\nand barge. \"They frequently work 14\nand IK hours ,a day and aro on duty\nseven days a week,\" he said.\nNo  Pay For Overtime, They Say.\nWith regard to the, clerks in the\nfreight house ahd genernl offices tho\ncomplaint Is made that the hours aro\nIfr't-gular, and that the western head-\n([iiarters office at Wlnipeg thinks\nnothing of sending out orders which\nnecessitate the local clerks working\nfour or five hours overtime a day for\na month without any estriv pay and\nthnt the salaries, although they havo\nbeen increased to some extent during\ntho past six months, are not commensurate with the duties. The averago\nsalary paid to the clerks in tbe Nelson\nfreight and general offices, he said, was\nnow $70 per month.\n\"But ono of the chief hones of contention is that when fl alcrk has any\ncomplaint to make he cannot go to the\nsuperintendent, but must make it to a\npetty official: this means that the petty officials are given too much pewer\nover the men who work under them.\nW:> think that' If the higher officials\nreally knew pf all tli\" conditions, and\nwere able to irfvestigato complaints\nthat might be made, they would soon\nremedy them.\"\nMinister   '\".o.isiders   Matter.\nIn reply to tho telegram sent by the\nNelson board r*f trade to the minister\nof labor asking that he do everything\npossible to avert a strike of the Canadian Brotherhood of Railway -Employes and thai he should, if necessary,\nappoint a. board of conciliation a message- hns been received from the department stating that the minister is\ngiving careful consideration to the subject discussed in the telegram sent to\nhim.\nStill Out at  Fernie.\n'Special to The Dolly News.*)\nFERNIE, B. C, Nov. 7.\u2014The strike\nof tho Canadian Brotherhood of Railway Employes is still on hero, every\nemploye in the freight and baggage\ndepartment being out and no handlers\nas yet have taken the places of the\nfreight men.\nSpecial Constable Bruce of the Canadian Pacific railway, came in from\nCalgary yesterday, and last night a\nbaggage man, said to be from Calgary,\nwas handling the baggage under tha\ncare   of   the   special.\nStation Agent Reading is overworked to keep any kind of scmbianco of\nsystem going.\nThe Ferula board of trade has pass-\n(Continued on Page Five.)\nKilled Hushan ds Must\nWork For Widows\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 7.\u2014Convicted\nof manslaughter by killing men by\ncareless driving of automobiles, two\nyoung   chauffeurs   were   given   novel\nntenccs today by Justice Clement,\nThe accused were Hughes and    Pol-\n\u2022d, youths of 20 and they agreed\nwhen the judge allowed them freedom\non bonds, to devote themselves during the next few years to working for\nthe support of the widows and children of the men whom they killed. Tho\ntwo Inds had already spent some time\nin'jnll and were penitent.\nWilliam Morris, a highwayman was\ntoday sentenced to 10 years and two\nlashings and David Oppenheim, a well\nconnected young Englishman, who\nwas brought here by a police officer\nall the way from Bow street, was sentenced to five years. He had buncoed\na Vancouver woman out of $17,000.\nTaking the money he wont to England\nand was married.' Recently his wlfo\npresented him with a son. Both tho\nwlfo and baby were In court today\nwhen sentence was imposed and the\nwoman Immediately left the building\nand made nn unsuccessful attempt to\nkill the child and herself.\n PAGE TWO\n\u2022Cut Ma\\l_ Jims.\nFRIDAY    NOVEMBER..8\nAnother Great Victory\nWon Bg Bulgarians\n{By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Nov. 7.\u2014According to a\nspecial cable dispatch received here\nlast night another great victory has\nbeen won by the Bulgarians, who havo\novertaken and annihilated the rear\nguard of the Turkish army, which was\nfleeing to safety behind the lines of\nthe Tchatnla forts, Sofia reports the\nTurkish losses in killed and wounded\nwere double those In the four days'\nbattle near Lule Burgas, which the\nDaily Chronicle's correspondent estimated at 0,000. Late dispatches from\nConstantinople say the mosques,\nschools and churches are unable to\ncontain the great army of hungry fugitives, many of whom are starving and\nwandering about tho streets.\nThe Turkish ambassador at Berlin\ntelegraphs that Germany is willing to\nsupport Turkey's legitimate request for\nmediation. Encouraged by this intimation Turkey today sent to the powers a precisoly worded basis for peace,\nasking the powers to safeguard Ottoman dignity.\nThe hope also Is expressed that King\nFerdinand will abstain from further\naggression.\nMake  Little Progress.\nMiss'M. Edith Durham, in a special\ndispatch to the Daily Chronicle from\nPodgoritza, dated Wednesday, indicates that the Montenegrins before\nScutari are making little progress\nagainst the <Turks. Describing the retreat of the Montenegrins she says:\nTurkish shells wero bursting before\nand behind her. She continues: \"The\nMontenegrins burned all the houses of\nthe Turks as they retired,* although\nthey reached Gruimer, where the Montenegrin forces were rallied and sent\nas reinforcements to Scutari, where all\nnext day the fighting was so violent\nthere was no time even to think of\nrest. Down below on our right towards Vranja a terrific fire wds be-\nfing maintained, and away on the left,\nwhence we hud come, shells could be\nseen bursting In the Karl valley, tho\nsmoke from  burned houses still mak-\n--\"-I\nWho's\nthat\nknocking\nat the\nkitchen\ndoor?\nWhy, it's Mrs. Edwards round\nagain\u2014she's always ready to lend\na hand with the cooking. That\nnourishing home-made Irish soup\nof hers is a real dish-of-all-work\n\u2014useful in a hundred ways.\nIt's fine and tasty by itself. It's the secret\nof a savoury sauce. It's the making of a made\ndish. And, to bring out the goodness of your\nown soup and gravies and hashes and meat\npuddings there's nothing like adding\nSOUPS\nPrime beef and the finest of Irish vegetables\u2014'that's\nwhat Mrs. Edwards puts in it ; nothing but what's\npure and delicious. As there is no strong added\nflavouring, it will blend perfectly with any other soup.\nRemember to boil it for half an hour. '\n5c. per packet.\nEdwards' Desiccated Soups are made in three varieties\u2014Brown, Tomato,\nWhite.   Tlu Brown variety is a thick, nourishing soup prepared from\nbeef and fresh vegetables.    The other two are purely vegetable soups.\nLots of dainty new dishes in our new Cook Book,   Write for a copy post fret\ns. H.,B.\nRepresentatives for  British  Columbia. W. G. Patrick & Company, Vancouver.\ning a smoky-sky. \u25a0 While whiffs of\nsmoke rising away from the same spot\ntold that the Montenegrin shells were\nfalling well within the fortifications\nof Taraboseh. The, attack on Scutari\nwas being made from all sides. As\nthere seemed no Immediate proBpect\nof Scutari being recaptured, I decided\nto return to Podgoriza, being influenced by the-fact that I had not had\nmy clothes off for 15 days, so on Saturday I left the army and riding all\nday Sunday reached Podgoritza today.\"\nMiss Durham then tells of many\ntreacherous murders and outrages by\nBashi Bazouks, who posed as Albanians, and concludes her statements:\n\"Intense cold weather has set in and\nunless Scutari has fallen the war will\nend soon In this region. The Montenegrins have suffered terribly. An\nAustro-Hungarlan peace mission to\nScutari has failed. The Moslem quarters at Scutari will be bombarded tomorrow. Montenegrins from the United States are beginning to arrive.       \"\nThe London papers this morning,\ndiscussing the question of intervention, hold that the disposal of Albania\nforms the crux of the position. While\nit is asserted that Vienna Insists that\nany attempt on Servia's part to encroach on Albania will be regarded aa\na casus belli, the concensus of editorial opinion Is that the prospects\nwill be neither worse nor better than\nthey were after the Bulgarians have\ntaken Constantinople. A way will be\nfound to adjust the allies' territorial\ndemands in a manner satisfactory to\ntho victors and avert hostilities between the great powers.\nRecoveries Rapid.\n{By Dally News Leased Wire.*)\nSTARA GOURA, Nov. 7.\u2014I have\nstopped here en route to Mustafa\nPasha In order to show regular correspondent's credentials to the chief\ncensor before proceeding. The lack of\nconfusion on tho single track railroad\nbringing In the wounded and dispatching supplies is remarkable\nAt Philiopolls I talked with Count\nJean de Castellane, in charge of the\nFrench Ked Cross mission at work\nthere. He said tho simple fortitude\nof the mounded is like the classic\nstories of the ancients.\nThe recoveries from wounds are extremely rapid, due to the health and\noutdoor lives of the soldiers. I havo\nseen wives begging husbands who\nwere slightly wounded to hurry and\nget well so as to return to the front.\nUndoubtedly supplies captured from\nthe Turks, Including grain and flour\nand many flocks of sheep, have been\ninvaluable in feeding the Bulgarian-]\narmy.\nBulgarians all show eagerness to follow up their victories. The railroad\nfrom Kirk Killsseh to Lule Burgas Is\nnow operating with captured stock engines,\nMortality Enormous.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Nov. 7.\u2014Frank Gerurd\nClcmo, M. D., physician to tlie British\nembassy at Constantinople and a noted authority on disease and epidemics,\nin an article in the Lancet stated that\nthe mortality of the war in the Balkans will be made enormous, as much\nby di^se,. aj -b-^^lfiHting. The arrangements of tho sick and wounded\non both sides, he says, are exceedingly\ninadequate and all the help of the Red\nCross and the Red Crescent organizations will be more than needed. The\nsufferings of non-combatants will be\nalmost as great as those of the soldiers. The penniless refugees In Constantinople are only too certain to be\nravished by starvation and disease.\nTyphus and smallpox are the most to\nhe feared, and if cholera, of which\nthere is serious danger, is added, the\nhorrors will be enormously increased.\nDiplomatic Situation Easter.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Nov. 7.\u2014The crushing, irremediable Turkish reverses have had\nthe salutory effect of easing the diplomatic situation between the members\nof the concert of Europe. If the triumph of the Balkans had been less decisive and If they had become in any\nsense dependent upon -the good will\nof the powers, the allies undoubtedly\nwould have been deprived of the fruits\nof their gallantry and sacrifices. But\nas it is, the powers are accepting the\naccomplished fact and Bulgaria's occupation of Constantinople, the bare\nthought of which at the outset of the\nwar was declared intolerable, Is now\nregarded as both inevitable and Just.\nEngland's interest in preventing the\nTurks from being driven in desperation back to Asia is more vital than\nthat  of any other power,   because  it\nw\nHARRY\nLAUDER\n\"hi* tJASSEtt* \"\u2022\u00bb\u25a0*\n\"the best KNOWN TRADE mask IN THE WOULD\"\nVICTROl\n6-S32.SO\nB9HBI\n-**-.\nREMOVAL NOTICE\nOn account of increasing business, McQuarrie\n& Robertson beg to notify all clients and\nfriends that they have taken  more commodious offices in the Annable Block.\nHii5n\u00a3iiBiBBHeaya\nHI\nAND MANY OTHERS\nOF THE WORLD'S\nLEADING VAUDEVILLE ARTISTS\nWILL   PERFORM\nTHEIR   FAMOUS    \t\nSPECIALTIES IN   \u25a0IMBHBPDRBB\nYOUR    OWN\nHOME, WHENEVER YOU WISH, IF YOU OWN A GENUINE\nVICTOR\ni VICTROLA\nthe marvellous Musical Instrument that reproduces the original tones and accents of the singer\nto such life-like perfection, that you actually FEEL the\npresence of the living Artist. Free demonstrations at\nany of \"His Master's Voice\" dealers everywhere.\nVictrolas are from $20.00 up. Easy payments as low\nas $1.00 per week if desired. Double-sided Records\nare 90c for the two selections. 5000 Records to\nchoose from. Ask for free copy of our 300 page\nMusical Encyclopaedia and Mrs, Van Puyster's idea.\nBerliner Gram-o-phone Co., Limited.\nMONTREAL\nmmmmmm^ml\nEDES.'i3Bi(!HSEa\n_PH!\t\nimijiiiiJE:;;^,^\nIIBHIIBBBaBBflBfflHaaaHBBE\nW. G. THOMSON, Bookseller and Stationer, Nelson. fi. C. Local Distributing Ageftt\nMcQuarrie & Robertson\nReal Estate and Insurance Agents\nWard Street, Nelson\nmight lead to a declaration of a holy\nwar and a Mohammedan revolt Involving India. The Bulgarians, by the sagacity with which their campaign was\nplanned and their consummate military qualities, as well as the tremendous gallanlry with which their plans\nhave been carried out, have conquered\nnot alone the Turks, but the admiration of the whole civilized world. The\nfall of Constantinople Is thought to be\na matter of a few days, but it is now\nfeared that the .settlement of peace\nterms will lead to international complications, as Czar Ferdinand has declared that he wantis a peace lhat will\nbe lasting, which, indeed, is essential\nto Balkan development.\nWar Correspondent Safe.\n(By Dally News Leased wire.)\nLONDON, Nov. 7.\u2014The Dally News\nhas received from Constantinople fi\nmessage establishing _\\\\c safety pf\nFrancis MeCullagh, war^correspondent,\nwho was reported killed. The message gives no details concerning his\nwhereabouts, but it is believed that\nhe was captured by the Bulgarians, as\nwas reported in a message received\nin London some days ago.\nWipe Turkey From   Map.\n(By Dally  News  Leased  Wire.)\nATHFNH, Nov. 7. \u2014 Politically,\nevents are marching as* rapidly as the\nallied armies. Less than three weeks\nago the territorial integrity nf the Ottoman empire was accepted us nn\naxiom by ail, including the Balkan\nstates. Now lhat doctrine has been\nthrown overboard and the very existence of Turkey is threatened. The\nTurks may continue to live in the Balkan peninsula, but-the allied Balkan\nstates are determined to prevent them\nfrom again ruling there. A significant\nevidence of this evolution Is a leading\narticle in tlu* Patrls, official organ of\nthe Greek government, which, commenting on Mr. Acland's speech In\nLondon, says: \"IE England wishes\npermanent peace in the Balkans she\nmust reconcile herself to tho disappearance of the Ottoman states. Peace\nis possible only on the conditiqn that\nthe throne of the Sultan be transferred\nto Asia Minor and. guarantees given\nfor the lives and liberty of Christians\nthere. Peace will be concluded only\nwhen Turkey is wiped off of tho map\nof Europe.\"\nOfficers Shot.\nThe Kairol, another Influential Journal, defends the samo policy. It says:\n\"After the victories of the allies\nEurope must realize that the time has\ncome to relegate Turkey to Asia\nMinor.\" The prospect of. tho Greek\noccupation of Saloniki has disintegrated the Turkish army defending the\ncity. The fleeing soldiers are streaming in without arms, ragged and exhausted by hunger and cold. Among\ntho fugitives are a number of officers.\nSome of the latter escaped disguised\nas women wearing the Mohammedan\nveil. The soldiers are utterly cowed\nand  refuse  to  join, their  -companies.\nTen officers on Monday sought to\nleave aboard a steamship for Constantinople, but the vessel was stopped by\na gun fired from Port Kerabournou,\nand the officers were taken prisoners\nby the authorities. Four were put to\ndeath, with 20 soldiers for abandoning-\ntheir posts. The city is short of provisions. Tho residents of the suburbs\n%re flocking in panic stricken, making the chautic conditions worse. The\nmosques, schools and churches and all\npublic buildings are packed with refugees.'\nChristians  in   Dread.\nNumbers of wounded arc also arriving. The Turkish soldiers speak of\nlhe Greek artillery as the \"sciun top,'*\nor the devil's cannons.\nNewspapers alluding to Greek victories have been suppressed. All the\ngarrison retaining a semblance of discipline Is being concentrated at Topslu\nto oppose the advance of the enemy.\nIn the meantime the Christian population Is living In agony. In dread of pos\nsible   massacres  and   praying for the\nentry of the Greek army.\nThe Patrls' correspondent adds that\nthere has been a vast sale of blue and\nwhite woven stuffs, with whicli Greek\nflags arc being hastily Improvised.\nBRJDGEMAN FALLS TO DEATH.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.!\nTORONTO, Nov. 7.\u2014A telegram received this morning stated that William\nLecher, foreman of bridge construction\nat Reul, a point on the Canadian\nNrrthern railway at mile 03.5 west\nfrom Sudbury lost his hold upon the\ngirders, and falling a distance of 45\nfeet, was Instantly killed.\nCARNEGIE WILL  NOT PAY\nTAX ON PERSONAL PROPERTY\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nNEW YORK, Nov. 7.\u2014Andrew Carnegie   will   pay   no   personal   porperty\ntax to tho city of New York this year.\nThe   Ironmaster's     personal   nronortv\nwas assessed at $10,000,01$, but htl\nappeared today before the\"! prcsidentj\nof the tax department an.d. made\/\naffidavit that this was erroneous, jlr\nCarnegie swore that the value of ;hli\neffects ln the city did not exceed |3,\n500,000 while his debts aggregate.$8,\n400,000. Accordingly, the UBSessmen\nagainst him will be cancelled.\nMAYOR   ACQUITTED\nLILLE, France, Nov. 7.-J-Emil' So*|\nhicr, former mayor of Houpllnos in tM\ndepartment of the Nord, who recetUl-jj\nreturned to France from Detroit, Mich.f\nto face a charge of embezzlement,\nwas acquitted today and discharged]\nfrom custody.\nTV\/O   EARTHQUAKES\nSAN JUAN DEL SUR, Nicaragua,)\nNov. 7.\u2014Two earthquakes wero -felt\nhere this morning. Both were strong;)\nthey were separated by an interval-olj\nnn hour.   No damagp was reported\u25a0\nAT LAST, BUT NOT LEAST\nMY BIG SALE\nGoods at Great Sacrifice\nH. GINSBERG (Silver King Mike) is going East, and wants to\nthank the people for the patronage of the past. This is a\nchance to get goods below cost, just to show my appreciation\nof the past.   Special bargains in '}\u2022'.'\nRugs, Linoleum, Clothing, Gents' Furnishings, Boots, Shoes, Rubbers, Trunks, Suit\nCases\/ Pillows and Mattresses\nDon't miss this chance, as'my Rugs and Linoleums m ust be sold\nH. GINSBERG 4\"-418 HALL STREET\n \u2022 BBtDAY;.\nNOVEMBER  8\nCD* Bait? j|rt\u00bbB.\n\/\/3f\nPAQE  THREE\ns of Sport\n\u2014\u2014\nTO FEATURE BOXING\n.. AT-LOOAL Y.M.&A.\nInstructors   Have   Been   Secured   and\nGood    Season     Is     Expected\u2014\nWrestling Also Planned.\nBy special request the physical department of the Y. M. C. A. intends\nto give particular attention to the devotees of.the squared arena during the\nfall and winter season. Such instrucr\ntors as T, D. Desbrlsay, Joe Holland\nana IS, Wilson havo been secured and\nas soon as a sufficiently large, number\nor members signify their intention of\nattending these classes active work will\ncommence, This, is something that is\nexpected to appeal to a large number\nof -members' 'ot .the \"Y,\" according to\ntho Physical director, James Thompson.\nAll those Who Intend to take advantage\nof this opportunity are requested to\nnotify Mr., Thompson at once.\n\"Wresllhii covers are being obtained\nfor the gymnasium mats and wrestling\nclasses will be held in conjunction with\n, th\u00bb boxing. Tho classes will he*held on\nMonday and Thursday evenings at 7:30\nami on Saturday evening at 8:30.\nWILMER  IS  ARRANGING\nFOR WINTER SPORTS\nv    ISnecIal *\" The Dally News.)\nINVERMERE,  Ti.. C,   Nov.   7.\u2014The\nfirst meeting for  the  season  of tho\nAVilmor Curling club wns held recently.\n\"'. Thf. members find that everything is\n-In,.such- a flourishing condition as to\neiljibro.them to make nn addition to the\nriijk building which they erected Inst\n\u25a0.year. They fixed the date for the\nlocai' bonspiel for next year for January 7 and 8. This is done so as' to\nenable tho local'clubs to get through\ntheir- matches and send out rinks to\ncompete in other bonsplels of this part.\nA strong body of 'officers'has been\nselected foi* the ensuing season and\neverything pblnls to-a very successful\nIssue. The other clubs of this district have rtot yet organized for 1*913\nbut will- be falling into line at once;\nThere is muoh likelihood that some td-r\nboggnnlng will be Indulged in this\nj-Vhi*. which is another revival in winter\nsports.\nOFFICERS UNABLE TO\nLOCATE   JACK   JOHNSON\n(By Dally News leased Wire.)\nCHICAGO, Nov. 7,\u2014Jack Johnson,\nchampion negro pugilist was indicted\nby the'federal grand Jury today,' charged .with violation of the Mann act\nagainst the transportation of women\nfrom one state to another for immoral\npurposes. Johnson was Indicted on\nfour counts and his bail fixed at $30,-\n000 by Judga Landis.\nFederal officers were Instructed to\narr6st Johnson, who could not be\n,-found; ekrly this evening. The search\nfor him\"* extended to various quarters\nof the city. The specific case upon\n\u25a0which the indictment was based was\nthat of Pell Schriber of Pittsburg\n(white), whom Jack Johnson\nwas charged with bringing t'>\nChicago in August, 1310. The\nJury, however, heard testimony of\nLucile Cameron of Minneapolis, whose\nmother charged Johnson with abduction and she was held as a witness\nin 915,000 bail.\nJohnson  Arrested.\n(By Dally News  Leaned Wlr\u00ab.l\nCHICAGO, Nov. 7.\u2014Jack Johnson,\nheavyweight champion, was arrested\nby the federal officers tonight, charged\nwith a violation of the Mann white\nslave law.\nFederal officers searched the south\nside several hours before Johnson wns\nfound in a hotel surrounded by four\nnegro guards. An attempt was made\nby the guards to prevent the officers\nfrom entering Johnson's rooms, but\nthey were pushed aside nnd tho war\nrant served on the prize fighter without\nserious difficulty. , At the federal\nbuilding tears cameito his eyes as the\nofficers put the hand cuffs on his\nwrists. \"You don't havo to do. this, I\nam not going to run away,\" ho said.\n\"I'm square; you ought to know that.\"\nJohnson's bonds have been fixed nt\n$30,000 but all the federal judges had\nleft the building for the night and declined to leavo their homes to go\nthrough the formality of accepting ball.\nAfter several hours work Johnson\nfound a 'court clerk willing to act and\ntbo fighter was taken to the home of\nhis aged mother on the south side, who\nsigned tho bonds along with several\nothers nnd Johnson was released.\nREGINA TEAM  DECIDES\nTO  GO  TO WINNIPEG\n' (By Daily News Lensed Wire.)\nWINNIPEGr Nov. 7.\u2014After much\nwrangling the final game for the western Canada Rugby championship be\ntween the Winnipeg Rowing club and\nthe Regina team will be played here on\nSaturday- The Regina team decided\nat the last minute tn follow the league\nUllng and travel to Winnipeg, paying\ntheir-own expenses and inking a chance\non the gate receipts.. The rowing club\nteam decided to default rather' than\nbreak their decision not to give a guarantee. -. >      \u25a0\nPHOENIX STARTS  NEW\nATHLETIC  ASSOCIATION\n(Special to The Dally News,)\nPHOENIX, B. C, Nov. .7.\u2014Phoenix\nnow boasts of an Athletic association,\nand judging from the way thp- boys\nturn out It will be a live one. The association has rented rooms on Iron*\nsides avenue nnd are going in for basketball, more particularly the hockey\nboys and they are getting In' finis\nshape for the winter game.\nOTTAWAS HOPE TO TAKE\nGERARD TO TORONTO\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, Nov. 7.\u2014The ' Ottawas\nhope to have Eddie Gerard along with\nthem when they go to Toronto tomorrow night. While the little centre\nhalf has not been out to practice since\nthe' game of Saturday he has been\nresting up and will probably be able\nto jstnrt against the Argonauts. The\nlocals will try to have him fixed up\nso that he will be* able to play. Should\nhe play the Ottawa line will see that\nhe receives protection. Last Saturday\nGerard was charged heavily after he\nhad returned a kick nnd consequently\nwas Injured.\nDECISION FOR WILLIAMS\n(By Dally New-** I**ased Wire.)\nNEW YORK, Nov,.?.\u2014Kid Williams,\nthe Baltimore bantamweight, outpointed Bill Fitzsimmons of Yonkers lu a\n10-round bout last night. Fltzslmmon3\nwas outclassed, although from the\nseventh round to the end he fought\ngamely and landed several telling lefts\nand rights to Williams' body. George\nKirkwood of St. Louis, a feut:hei>\nweight, had the better of every round\nexcept one in a hard-fought battle with\nPatsy Kline of Newark. In the third\nround Kline with a. left swing knocked\nKirkwood down. The latter took the\ncount, arose, and in turn knocked\nKline down with a right uppercut to\nthe Jaw and then outfought the New\nJersey lad to the end.\nSHERMAN   IS WINNING'\n.\"By Dnlly News Leased WlrM\nNEW YORK, Nov. 7.~-Frank Sherman of Washington led at the end, of\nthe first night's play last night In his\nC00-point match with Alfred De Oro,\nholder of the world's, pocket billiard\ntitle, the score standing 200 to 129.\nSherman jumped into the lend at the\nstart of the gam*> tiftrt'wn i never headed. Sherman made a high run of 29\nand Do Oro 24. The match was played\nunder the new \"open lireaii\" rule and\nplay was very fast.\nAMERfCAN CRICKETER SCORED\nTHE FIRST SHUT-OUT GAME\n(By \"Gravy.\")\nIn baseball, where runs are always\ncomparatively few, the pitcher who\nshuts out his opponents without a run\nis entitled to pat himesif on the knob\nami refer bonstingly of himself as\n\"somo twirler.\" In cricket, where the\nrun'? scored in a contest frequently\ntotal several hundred, to retire a team\nwithout a run is a feat that may, for\nali practical purposes, be called impossible. Yet It has been done, and,\nalthough cricket Is the national sport\nof the English, it was an American\n\"bowler\" who first turned the trick.\nFifty-two years ngo today, on Nov. 8,\nUfiO, Creighton, of tho Excelsior Cricket clubof Brooklyn, retired a team wlth-\no)U n solitary run being scored off IhS\ndelivery. This was tho first blank\nscore, well attested, in the history of\nthe ancient game, und it has never\nbeen repeated in a contest between\nteams at all well matched and of any\nImportance. Those unfamiliar with\ncricket may better understand Crelgh-\nton's ncr-omptlshmcnt by comparing It\nwllh tho scores of big-games. For this\npurpose the Englnnd-Australla contests\nbetween picked tenms of the world's\nbest cricketers, may be tnken for examples. In 1886 England won by 217\nruns, in 1892 England was the victor by\n230 runs and an innings, in 189I5 the\nAustralians won by 382 runs, nnd in\n1904 Australia won by 218 runs. The\nhighest authenticated record in cricket\nwiim in 1898, when Melbourne university\nscored 1,094 against Essendnn at Melbourne. In a match between A. E.\nSttittnrt's English team and New South\nWales a total of 1,730 runs were scored\nby both sides, which is a record for\nfirst class cricket. The Individual\nscoring record' in a first clnss match\nwii!* set up in 189G, nt Taunton, England, when A- C. McLaren scored 424\nfor Lancashire in a game with Somerset. In a minor match, however, this\nrecord was excelled by A. E. J. Collins, of the Clark's House team, who,,\nIn a game with North Town, played\nat Clifton,JRngland In 1899, scored G28\nnot out, the record In any match. Tho\nIK'\n!> \u25a0\u25a0\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC:\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nB^H\nOF THE\nHALL & JESSUP STOCK\nMen's Suits\nIn  Fancy Tweeds and Mixtures.     Suits  that   were   always   extra\ngood   value .at  $15.00.    Closing out *hQ   AC\nPric.     .VPO.40\nExtra\n\"\"Men's     Heavy     Wool     Undershirts\nand Drawers; $1.25 in the regular way;   now\t\nMen's Suits\nEvery thread wool, in plain and fancy colors;  suits that at the\nregular   price,  $20.00,   would  make you sit up and take\nnotice.    Price now   i......._\\i^\n$11.95\n.15\nBoys' Suits\nKnee length  pants.    Sizes, 4 to   11  years.      In   Grey  and   Brown\nmixed suits \"-^at a.-o good values at $4.00 to $4.50. \u25a0hn Qr\nWhile they last, at    \\|)-l-wU\nMens Suits\nHand  Tailored.    All the  lets new  patterns;'also  plain  blue and\nblack suits that sell everywhere at $25.00,    Going\n$15.85\nExtra\nMen's  Sweaters and Sweater Coats,\n$3.00 and $3.30 was the for- j\nmet* price;  now \t\nBoys' Suits\nKnee  Pants.    SizeB, 6 to  14     years.       Plain   and   fancy     colors.\n$\/.00 values and good at that.\n$4.65\nMen's Suits\nStrictly   hand-tailored.     The best  it's possible to  make at $30.00\nand $35.00, the old   price.    Now (MR C\\f\\\nidling  at   . ..\u2022..\/.  M> I O\u2022 UU\nExtra\nMen's   Dress   Shirts  sell   always   at\n$1.50;  new, late patterns;\nnow   \t\nBoys' Suits\nNavy Blue, Black, Grey, Brown and Mixtures. Knee Pants.\nSizes, 6 to 14 years. Regular $8.00 and $8.50 values. *r nr\nWill now go at   VJ>0iD0\n.95\nBoys' Suits\nCut and tailored on men's patterns- Sizes, 8 to 16 years. Very\nlate, new designs and colors. Extra good $10.00 suits. Art rsrr\nAr0  going  at    vJ)UibU\nMen's Overcoats\nIn Tan, Grey and  Fancy Coats  made to sell at $15.00 and  extra\ngood value at that.     Will sell -*hQ   A r\nnow at   ..' ...VVf- ipO.'T'O\nMen's Overcoats\u25a0'<\nIn Brown, Grey and Black; A real genuini bargain tit $20.00,\nthe former 0'rfce;.. * Now' to \\__y' <[*;*\u25a0','--'j^dji I Cffi\ngo at   '.'  Si S-_-y\\ 11 J U\nExtra\nMen's Work Shirts worth $1-25, in a\ngood   range   of   colors;\nnow\t\n.15\nMen's Overcoats\nAll the late 1912-13 models;   hand-tailoreH in every ,<felail.   A snap\nat 525.0J.      To closo Air   -7 r\nExtra\nMen's $1.25 Overalls with and without bib; black, blue and\nstriped;   naw   \t\nBoys' Overcoats\nSizes, 4 to 10 years.    Good    heavy     winter   weights.       Fine   for\nsdiool   wear.      Worth   $4.00    and $4.50. A\\f\\  -\u00bb*r-\nTo close out   vj)t*~i vJU\nBoys' Overcoats\nSell in the regular way for $6.00,     Sizes, 5 to 14 years.    A good\nrange cf colors;   very dressy.\nWii!, be sold  at  \t\n$3.95\n.15\nMen's Overcoats\nThe very best coats turned  out.       Right  up to the style  minute.\n$30.00 and $32.00 valuos.    Must go (Mfl HO\nnow  for    ....\\piy.UU\nExtra\nBoys'   Heavy   Winter     Undsrshirts\nand Drawers; nearly all sizes;\nnow   \t\nBoys' Overcoats\n\u2022Sold always at $8,00.     Sizes, 7 to 14 years.    All this fail's styles.\n\\\"?iy   stylish,  warm   coat,\ngo  now at  \t\n$4.95\n.35\nBoys' Overcoats\nSizcn, 7 to  15 years.      The very   best   coat   it's   possible  to   buy.\n$10,00 is the  price of this lino   everywhere. fSrj    A r\nMust now go for 4)0.40\nRemember! Everything Has An Eni Don't Wait Too Long\nTHE CAIN-W\nEXCURSIONS\n\u25a0IN  CONNECTION  WITH TRANSATLANTIC\nOcean Steamship Tickets\nTICKETS ON SALE DAILY, NOVEMBER 7 TO DECEMBER 31, 1912\n. *. Return    from   Nelson\nMontreal  or Quebec. '.  $ 88.25\nSt. John, N. B., or Halifax        96.25\nPortland,  Maine    98.25\nBoston,   Mass      104.55\nNew York          99.25\nCorrespondingly low fafes from all other points  In Kootenay district, Midway and East and Nakusp and Soutn, Including branches.\nGood' to return within five months from date of sale, except going\njourney, must  ho completed wi thin 10 days from date of sale and return Journey within 15 days from dale ticket Is validated for return\n-at-Canadian or United States Atlantic seaport'.'*\nStopovers allowed in Canada  east of Fort   William or Sault Stay\ni';Mflpla***\u00bbt*lthltv gofng; and return transit limits.\n\u00bbi.JFurthei\u00bb particulars And ticket's from any C. P. It. ticket agent or\n\u25a0;wrlte-'--;v.*';,\"... .':v:,:,'v,','  * \"*\u25a0\n\"Ji  A.   M'DONALD, District Passenger Agent,  Nelson.\nlorpest partnership on record was 023,\nhung up by Capt. Oates and Private\nFiti-.gerald, In 181)5, playing against'the\nArmy Service Corps at Cunagh. Cricket\nrecords hung up by United States and\nCanadian teams include the following:\nPatterson's eleven vs. Wood's eleven\nat Philadelphia, the former scored 089;\nJ. B. King scored 044 not out for Rel-\nment, playing against the B. Merion\nKam in 1906; J. Wilson, bowling for\n(leorge Parr's English eleven against\nUnited States and Canada's twenty-\ntvo at Rochester in 1859, secured six\nwickets In 3lx consecutive bails, and In\nlS5i. the Crescent Athletjc club scored\nonly 4 against the-Now Jersey Athletic\ncluh.\nJOCKEY IS SHOT.\n(By Dally News Least\"! Wire.)\nCINCINNATI, Nov. 7.\u2014Jinks Mc-\nCarey, a prominent rider on the race\ntracks, was shot and probably fatally\ninjured In tho corridor of a hotel here\ntotilght.Capt. JamcB Jacobs of the La-\ntonla Jockey club detectives is under\narrest charged with shooting to kill.\nIn a? statement to the police Jacobs\nadmitted the shooting and claimed he\non}y used his gun after having been\nassaulted by McCrarey. The latter was\ndenied admission to the Latonla track\nby the management at tht beginning of\nthe present meet.\nBADLY  BURNED  BY\nCIPL0SION  OF  COFFEE  POT\n(By Bally News Leased Wire.)\n\u25a0 EDMQNTON,, Ailth., Nov. 7.\u2014The\nexplosion' of a patent coffee pot In\nhis rCstaura.n'fi*'. on First ,stro^t today\ncaused Frank ffayfer to'bo so badly\nInjured about the face, hands and body\nthat Ho May'aie.       -\nWIRE TAPPING\nSWINDLERS CAUGHT\n. Wilmington and entertained lavish!\nand through them Dr. PnwcH and\nidbury were   told   how   to  \"beat   tlie\nline\" in New York.\nDefrauded Southerners of Twenty\" Five\nThousand   Dollars\u2014Swindlers'\nElaborate Preparations.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nNEW YORK, Nov. 7.\u2014On the coin-\npldipt of Dr. J. W. Powell nnd Curby\nCleveland Sldbury, a lawyer, both of\nWilmington, M. C, the New York po-\nllco today arrested tw*b men on a\ncharge of having defrauded the southerners oi' -J^r.,000 through a wire tapping game. Siillniry Indeulficd ono of\nth'*: prisoner;, as a man who posed as\na telegraph company official. The\nlawyer say-rf he lost J22.00Q. The prisoners gave the names of Charles Daly\nanc Frank (Jraham. The poljco have\nthem booked, however, as Charles and\nF'ri.nk Gondorf, notorious for.years as\nswindlers.\nThe pollse later arrested a third man,\n00 years old, whom they described aa\nan international swindler. He gave his\nnomc ns John Kay, but the police say\nho has often posed as \"Sir John Gray,\"\nami that he has been more, widely\nknown as \"Paper Collar Joe.\"\nOn complaint of Simon Jon\u00abs of\nPittsburg, Pa., that he lost $20,000 in\ntho samo sort of swindle as that to\nwhich the southerners fell .victims and\nin the same houso, Charles Cnrbontjl\nnisi' was arrested. The police say It\nla a puzzle to them that with so much\npublicity given to the oldwlre tapping\nswindle, even an occasional victim is\nfound, Tn the case of the southerners\nIt Is alleged $5,000 was'spent In staging\nthe swindle. A \"steeror\" from N\u00bb\u00a3w\nYork with hla wife, took up resldonte\nSHOOTING  AT   HALIFAX\n(By Dully News Leased Wire.)\nHALIFAX, N. S., Nov. 7.\u2014A shooting affray took place In Summorslde\nthis afternoon about C o'clock when\nRobert V. Phillips, a well-known resident of that place, wns injured by a\nman named Silas Clarke. Mr. Phillips\nwas driving along the street past\nClarke's house when the man deliberately aimed nt li'nn, evidently with tiie\nintent to kill, Phillips is wounded In\nthree places, the forehead, neck and\nShoulder. Ho WW taken to the Prince\nCounty hosjjital. .Mr. Phillips has at\nseveral timed acted as policeman and\nonce arrested Clarke and it is supposed that for this cause Clarke had\na grudge agalmJt him, Immediately\nafter the shooting Clarke Kicked himself ln his house and threatened to\nshoot anyone who came nwir him, He\nwas surprised and captured.\nSIX   HUNDRED THOUSAND\nREPRESENTED AT CONVENTION\n(Ry Dully News Leased Wire.)\nROCHESTER, N. Y., Nov. 7.\u2014About\n800,000 of the 2,000,000 members of\nthe American Federation of Labor\nwere represented hero today at the\nopening session of tile Union Label\nand Metal Trades departments at the\nfederation, which will close Saturday.\nThe convention proper will open Mon-\ndajEf. Labor men will he In\" session\npart-Ntt four weeks. About 500 delegates are expected Cor the main con*\ni Ventlon which may be In cession two\nt%eoMr?'.President Samuel    Gompetft*\nind  other officers will arrive   turn'\nTHAMES IN  FLOOD.\n(By Dailv News Leased Wire.)\nST. MARY'S, Ont., Nov. \".\u2014 Heavy\ndownpour of rain last, night has ctusod\nUts river Thames to rise up to spring\nflood proportions and it is feared seri-\noii.i damage will result.\nGrand  River in  Flood.\n(By Dailv News Leased Wire.)\nC-ALT, Out., Nov. 7.\u2014The Grand\nriver is today at the highest it has\never heen except in flood times, say\nold residents along (he river valley.\nTlio heavy rains of the last couple of\ndays have caused the level of tbe river\nto rise suddonly. Wharves at tho hoat-\nlumses and at the dain have been\nwashed away and a lot of driftwood\nhas passed down thu river.\nFLOODS SERIOUS\nUN ONTARIO\nDFFENDS REPUTATION OF\nCANADIAN WHEAT\n(By DaMy News LeaJJod Wire.)\nLONDON, Nov. 8.\u2014During yesterday's sittings of the Dominion royal\ncommission, a member of the Manchester chamber of commerce stated\nUnit Australian wheat was by fnr tho\nbest in the world. Hon. George Foster\nimmediately pounced upon the speaker\nfor proofs of his remark.\n\"How,can you expect a Canadian to\nsli: cool and listen to such a statement\nunless you give us some proof? You\nknow,\" he stated, \"wc havo bolstered\nourselves up in Canada with the Idea\nthnt our No. 1 Manitoba wag the best\nwheat on earth; perhaps you will raod-\nifv your statement to the affect that\nbo Australian wheat Is Just as.good.\"\nDaily News Want Ada. get results.\nLarge Tracks of Land Inundated\u2014Seri-\nious Damage Is Feared\u2014Wharves\nWashed   Away.\n(Uy Daily News Leased Wire.)\nSTRATHROY, Out., Nov. 7.-Tho\nWorst flood in yean* covers the lowland\nllii'ciiBh which the Sydenham river\nflows. The river has been unusually\nhich nil this fall and the heavy rain\nof yesterday was all that wns needed\nI i make the stream overflow Its banks.\nTlie abutments on the second Cardfle\nstreet bridge ami on one of tin* Head\nslieet bridges hnve heen washed opt\nand these lending roads have bo-m\ndoted by Commissioner Folkes. A\nlarge number of cattle and horses\nwhich were pasturing on tbe flats had \/\nto be removed to higher ground. Oho'\nodd si^lu loday was a cow that was\nfoicod, to take refuge on a little knoll\nWhile tho flood raged all around her.\nThe rapidity with which the water rose\nwas remarkable. It rose four feet In\nan hour and is now about 12 feet above\nnormal. No reports have been received from the surrounding country\nbut It Ik feared that much damage will\nb^i done.\nKOREANS  GET  NEW   TRIAL\n(By Dnllv News Leaned wire.)\nSEOUL, Korea, Nov. 7.\u2014Tin* in*\ntrial on appeul of tho 12,3 Koreans r\ncently sentenced to long terms of ir\nprisomnent for conspiracy against ll\nlife of Count Teruachl, lhe govern!\ngeneral, will begin November 2ti..\nA_\n H  PAGE FOUR\nCfce\"\"Bill)\/ Jletos.\nFRIDAY   ...\nNOVEMBER, S.\nCtje \u00a9ail? fim*.\nPublished   at   Nelson   Every   Morning\nExcept Sunday, by        '\nThe News Publishing Company,\nLimited.\nW. G.  FOSTER, Editor and  Manager.\nFRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8\nACCOMPLISHES     A     DOUBLE\nPURPOSE.\nThe Vancouver Sun, the paper established to preach the principles of real\nslmori pure Liberalism  in British Columbia, Is not always strong either in\nlogic'or argument.    Its principal aim\nin life appears to be to say something\ninterrogatory,  if not nasty, about its\nopponents   on   every   occasion   upon\nwhich an excuse therefor can be had\nor-   manufactured.      Concerning    the\npresent visit to Ottawa of Sir Richard\nMcBride, during which, it Is expected,\na settlement will be reached of many\nquestions which are and hnve been for\nyears at issue  between this   province\n\u25a0Juid the Dominion. On such an occasion\nThe Sun naturally felt called upon to\ndeliver itself of something particularly\neffective.    With   this   end   in   view   it\ndevoted quite a large amount of space\nto the subject, concluding as follows:\nWith  a   weak  government,   embarrassed by questions with which\nit finds itself incapable of dealing\nwith  strength and  decision\u2014such\na government as the present one\u2014\nthere  will   be   much   more   probability of British Columbia obtaining her full demand than would be\notherwise   the   case.     Unquestionably Premier McBride understands\nthis  and   will   use   his   knowledge\nof   It   to   the   utmost.     Iff>t'in   the\npresent negotiations,  he  does  not\nsucceed  as   completely   as   he   expects,   it  will   undoubtedly   be  because of the commission of one of\nthose'    lamentable     mistakes     to\nwhich he is so prone.   We certainly\nwish   him   every   success,   but   it\n' would be absurd riot to remember\nthat   Sir Richard's    diplomacy   is\ndisplayed rather in his intercourse\nwith the Individual elector than in\nnegotiating on big questions with\ncapable   representatives   of   other\ngovernments.\nIt will be observed that in this paragraph the Sun has got in a crack at\nthe government' at Ottawa, which it\nsays, In effect, Premier McBride will\nhe able to twist round his little finger.\nSir Richard Is represented as being\nsomewhat of a clever .diplomat. But\nln the next breath the Sun repents of\nany measure of justice which has been\ndone Sir Richard and belittles his ability to deal on big questions with capable representatives of other governments.\nIn the one and the same paragraph\nthe Sun describes the Government at\nOttawa as a weak one and Premier\nMcBride as the\" one man to secure\nfrom it the satisfaction in full of British Columbia's demands, and a few\nlines lower down it Is lamented that\nhe is a weak man, not qualified to discuss big questions with capable representatives of other governments, such,\nas from the Sun's fears for British\nColumbia's welfare as a result of\nPremier McBride's negotiations, the\npresent government at Ottawa must\nbe.\nin this matter the Sun is not very\nilluminating, but it accomplishes its\npurpose, it gets in a mean word in\nregard to tho government at Ottawa\nnnd the head ot the government of\nBritish     Columbia,     both     numbered\nThe Prettiest Picture\n\\\nthat you can draw or imagine is\nthat of a typical Kootenay orchard\nhome or small mixed farm\u2014usually\ntho, emblem of prosperity and comfort'. Picture to yourself a farm of\nthis kind nnd then come to us and\nlet us show you your Ideal in tho\nmost desirable locality, namely, on\nKootenay lake.\nPeople from California, the\nprairies and other distant points arc\nalive to-the opportunities and inducements existing In this beautiful district as Is proven by the great\nnumber of sales wc are making.\nEvery one of our numerous clients\nvwho havo bought farms from us of\n.'.late in this favored district are\n.jtvlthout exception delighted and satisfied with their purchase, and especially with our methods of doing\nbusiness.\nWe have several choice selected\nproperties from 10 to 20 acres in\nvarious stages of development at\nvery reasonable prices, and we -can\nusually arrange terms to suit you.\nBetter investigate right now. Prices\nWill never be lower than today.\nB.C. United Agencies\nInvestment Brokers.\nP. 0. Box 232. Phone 391.\n419 Baker Street, Nelson, B. C.\namong its political opponents. This\nmay be newspaper politics, but It will\nnot result In the changing of many\nvotes.\nA WORD TO FRUIT GROWERS.\nQuestions relating to tlie growing and\nthe marketing of rrult appear to be\nthe order of the day just now. In\nview of this the following letter from\nMr. C. W. Baxter, chief fruit inspector\nfor the Dominion government for the\nprairie provinces, addressed to Mr. R.\nG. Clark, who holds a similar position\nin British Columbia, will be read with\nInterest.\nMr. Baxter says:\nI am pleased to see that, generally speaking, fruit, especially apples, from British Columbia has\nbeen coming In fnir, and holds first\nplace in comparison with its competitors across the boundary. We\nfind that some British Columbia\nshippers are sending boxes of apples In violation of Section 320 B. t\nThere appears to be the word\n\"cooking,\" and no variety. I am\nsending letters of warning in these\ncases, and, If it continues, they\nwill be followed by prosecution,\nWhile this may appear, on the face\na minor offence, you will appreciate the seriousness of this when\nI state that I have found \"Russets\" and \"Ben Davie\" in boxes\nmarked \"cooking,\" consequently a\ngreat disappointment to tlie consumer.\nIt is gratifying to know that, generally speaking, British Columbia fruit,\nespecially apples, have been arriving\non the prairie markets in fairly good\ncondition as regards packing, etc., but\nit Is to be regretted that, according to\nthe same authority, there are men engaged ln fruit growing in British Columbia, so unprincipled nnd with so\nlittle regard for the future of the Industry In which they are engaged, that\nthey do not hesitate to try to flim-flam,\nif the expression will be pardoned, the\nconsumers on the prairie. Anything\nthat savors of sharp practice In the\npacking or marketing of fruit should\nbe frowned down upon by every person who has the slightest interest In\nthe fruit growing industry of British\nColumbia. What British Columbia\nfruit growers must do, if they are to\nsecure and to hold the prairie market,\nIs to send forward nothing but the\nvery best fruit and thereby compete\nwith their American and Ontario rivals\nfrom a quality standpoint. Good fruit,\nproperly packed and intelligently marketed, will sell and bring Its price on\nthe prairies,\nThis is the lesson that each and\nevery fruit grower In British Columbia should learn and should keep constantly before him.\nEDITORIAL   NOTES\nJack Johnson, from reports, will\nsoon be where he belongs\u2014in jail.\nTurkey has made a proposal to Chile\nfor the purchase of two warships now\nbeing built in Great Britain for the\nlatter, but the answer was chilly.\nGen. Nazim Pasha, commander of\nthe Turkish forces, says \"the brave Ottoman army'' Is confident of ultimate\nsuccess. This is not in keeping with\nthe porte's appeal to the great powers\nfor their good offices in bringing the\nwar to an immediate close.\nIt is proposed that Toronto should\nspend ten million dollars on civic Improvements. This is ono thousand\nmillion cents\u2014which would tend lo\nshow that the city of goodness is also\ndeveloping progressiveness.\nIf the arrival of belated returns of\nTuesday's American elections continue\nlo come In for a few days more. President-elect Woodrow Wilson may have\nall the votes of tho electoral college.\nMr. Andrew Carnegie will not pay\nany personal taxes in New York this\nyenr because he was able to prove\nthat he owes over eight million dollars. Many a man would be willing to\npay taxes If he could borrow that\nmuch money.\nWhat the Press Is Saying\nHeart Failure or Lead?\nThe editor of a religious paper hns\nstarted a discussion by the question,\n\"Shall we shoot our old preachers?\"\nEqually fatal results might be secured\nby suddenly doubling their salaries,\u2014\nGolden Star.\nThey Are Going to Get Soaked.\nThe C. P. R. stockholders get for\n(175 a share stock that anyone would\npay a great deal more for in the open\nmarket. What are the people who pay\npassenger and freight rates going to\nget to balance up?\u2014Toronto Globe.\nThey Are a Lively Bunch.\nThe Montreal Herald says that Glen\nCampbell woke up to find himself heir\nto eight millions. The Herald is mistaken. Glen Is a Manitoba Tory and\nnever  sleeps,\u2014Lethbridge  Herald.\nBritish Columbia's Fame.\nThe Conservative candidate In North\nWaterloo    had   a   majority   of   1,385.\nSounds  like  British  Columbia.\u2014Ottawa Journal.\nCold Storage\nManager\u2014\"Are you good at collecting\nmoney?\"\nApplicant\u2014\"Couldn't he better if I\nwere a college iresldent.\"\u2014Life.\n\"I  should   like to secure an audience\nwith your wife.\"\n\"If you will consent to be tho audelnco\nit ought to be easy enough.\"\u2014Houston\nPost.\nFirst Schoolteacher\u2014\"Does Edith's little ghl ever make any  bright answers?\"\nSecond Schoolteacher\u2014 \"No; she always\nknows  her  lessons.\"\u2014Judge.\n\"Opportunity ically knocks at many a\ndoor.\"\n\"Then why don't more of us succeed\nbetter?\"\n\"The tronhle. is that Opportunity wants\nus to go to work.\"\u2014Louisville Courier-\nJounial.\n\"Why hnve the children so suddenly\ndecided they don't want to go with us\non the sailing party?\"\n\"I think it was bocnuBc they henrd\ntheir father say there would be a speaking breeze.\"\u2014Baltimore American,\n\"It's difficult for a man to he a candidate and a political boss at the same\ntime.\"\n\"No;\" replied Senator Sorghum, .\"the\nmett.ods are different. The candidate la\nsupposed to \"ret votes by shaking hands\nwith the people, and the boss is supposed\nto get them hy shaking his fist at them.\"\n\u2014Washington Star.\nThis Date in History,\n'}\nThe first American appearance of\nSarah Bernhert, the great French actress, was at Booth's theatre, New York.\n32 years ago today. \"The divine\" nnd\n\"perennial\" Sarnh appeared In \"Adrlenne\nLecouvreuer.\" The theatre wns filled to\noverflowing and she was received with\nthe greatest enthusiasm. Since then\nMme. Bernhardt has made many farewell tours of America.\nThe first announcement of the discovery of what are known as the\nRoentgen or X-rays wns mads 17 years\nago today bv Baron William Conrad\nRoentgen, a German scientist, a member\nof the faetulty of the Roynl University\nof Wurzburg, Germany, This epochal\ndiscovery has been of immense benefit\nto humanity, not alone in Its use in\nsurgical cases, hut to undertake anatomical studies and ln the diagnosis of internal diseases,\nThe first through train frnm Montreal\nto Vancouver was run 27 years ago today.     *\nThe Weather\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nTORONTO, Nov. 7.\u2014A depression\nwhich was situated ln the vicinity of\nAlabnma last night has developed rapidly Into an Important storm, which is\nnow centred in northern New York\ncausing heavy gales and rains in the\nSt. Lawrence valley and the maritime\nprovinces. In the lake region the\nweather has cleared and In tbe west It\nremains   fine.\nMin. Max.\nNelson      35        42\nVictoria       42        48\nVancouver   i    42        46\nEdmonton     16       36\nCalgary       20        4C\nBattlewrd   28      3c\nMoose Jaw    23 36\nWinnipeg      2<i 42\nPort  Arthur     32 41\nPnrry   Sound     36 42\nLondon     *J!> 63\nMontreal  3C 42\nQuebec      24 33\nSt.   John     SO Til\nHalifax    4G 04\nFOUR MILLION  FORV WIRELESS\nCONNECTION   WITH   PARIS\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nPARIS, Nov. 7.\u2014The French government hns decided to. establish a series of wireless stations' connecting\nPnrls with the various French colonies and with North and South America. The project as laid before tlie\nchamber contemplates the expenditure\nnf $-1,000,000, about a third of the sum\nto be expended in 1913. The point of\nconnection in North America has not\nyet been specified, but the South American Pacific girdle Includes stations\nin Morocco, the island of St. Louis,\nMartinique, the Marquesas Islands, Tahiti, Noumea, cnpltal of New Caledonia\nand thence to Saigon, Indo-China.\nBAPTISTS MAY ESTABLISH\nCHURCH   IN   BULGARIA\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nTORONTO, Nov. 7.\u2014The Canadian\nBaptist foreign mission board at the\nclosing session of its annual meeting\ntoday considered an appeal from the\nmembers of the Baptist church in Bulgaria that they he brought under the\ncontrol of the Canadian board, A committee was appointed to make inquiries and it is not improbable that the\nrequest will be granted. Rev. Peter\nDoychett, through whom the appeal\nwas made, stated In his letter that\nthere was a great opportunity to establish tlie church in Bulgaria, tlie\nonly Balkan state which enjoys absolute religious liberty. The Baptist\nbody there comprises five churches\nand 13 preaching stations with a total\nmembership of 200.\nThe appeal was drafted before the\nwar, but tho board was given assurance that the struggle with Turkey\nwould not materially change the conditions of the church work.\nBEGIN TRIAL OF GANGSTERS\nFOR MURDER OF GAMBLER\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nNEW YORK, Nov. 7.\u2014Frank Muller,\nknown as \"Whitey Lewis,\" will be\nplaced on trial tomorrow as tho first\nof the four gangsters indicted for the\nmurder of Herman Rosenthal to face\na Jury. After Whitey's trial is over,\nthe other three, \"Lefty Louie,\" \"Gyp\nthe Blood\" and \"Dago Frank\" will be\ntried  in turn.\n\"Whitey\" will appear before Justice Goff, who sentenced Charles\nBecker, the former police officer, to\ndeath in the electric chair for instigating the murder of the gambler. A\nspecial panel of 200 veniremen has\nbeen summoned to appear in the supreme court tomorrow morning.\nJustice Goff today directed that a\nmurder trial now in progress in the\nsame court be hastened, and a prolonged session of that trial was held\ntonight In an effort to bring it to a\nclose.\nJustice Goff will hold court early\nand late and-pn Saturdays in the trials\nof Lewis and his companions.\nSEVEN  MILLION POUNDS\nOF STRUCTURAL IRON\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.*)\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 7.\u2014Beginning\nthe execution of Its extensive plans\nfor the permanent projects of the operation of the Panama canal, the canal commission has awarded a contract\nto the United States Steel Products\ncompany for 7,000,000 pounds of structural steel work to cost about $'110,-\n000. The commission's plans are for\nworks separate entirely from the canal\nconstruction and Include all the facilities that vthe government is to provide for the repair of ships, the upkeep of the vast canal machinery it-\nTested the Whole World Over\nand thrbugh three generations Beecham's' Pills are universally looked upon as the best preventive and corrective,\nof disorders of the organs of digestion and elimination ever\nknown. They give speedy relief from the headaches, sour\nstomach, indigestion due to biliousness or constipation.\nBEECHAM'S PILLS\nare no experiment. They are too well known for that;\nand their mild and gentle, but sure action on the\nbowels, liver, kidneys and stomach, too well approved.\nIf you are out of sorts take at once this famous\nremedy and you will endorse the good opinion of thousands\u2014you will know why Beecham's Pills so deservedly\nHave Unequaled Reputation\nSold everywhere,     \u2022    2Sc Tho direction* with ttt-ry box point out tho road to health.\nCALGARY\nThe Safest, Soundest City in Western Canada In Which to Invest\nCommercially, industrially and financially, CALGARY is the LEADER of the LAST BEST\nWEST.\nOpportunities Were Never Better Than\nThey Are Today.   The Thrifty Investor\nof Today Will Be the Monied Man of\nTomorrow\nWe offer you the choicest property in the direct\npath of the greatest development, below current\nprices, and on easy terms.\nDo Not Wait for Prices to Advance.\nWrite or Call NOW.\nWestern Provinces Co-operative\nRealty Co., Limited\n417 Ward St., Nelson, I\nP. 0. Drawer 1107\n\"The Strength of an 'Excelsior' Policy\nLies in its Availability as aQuick Asset\"\n'   'No Waiting! '\nNo sacrifice in order to realize cash!\nNo mortgage or forced sales!\nMoney Is AT ONCE available when most needed.\nThere is no limo when ready cash Is so essential as Just after the\ndeath of the ilead of the house. .\nHis income is cut off.\nHis persona! credit Ib destroyed.\nThe   personal   management   of his affairs has suddenly ceased.\nLarge extra expenses in addition lo ordinary living expenses have\nto he met, and\u2014tlio major portion of a man's estate is usually so \"tied\ntip,\" that to convert lt Into ready cash means mortgages, forced sales\n\u2014losses.\nThe easy way is provided by a Policy in The Excelsior Life Insurance Co., which protect their families against theso difficulties\u2014difficulties which might stagger even lhe most experienced.\nF. A. STARKEY, Agent for Nelson.\nS. G. NEWELL, Inspector Kootenay  District.    Office,   Imperial   Bank\nBlock,  Josephine Street.\nCANiftAKlPACIFIC\nM*3>PEr\nChristmas\nSailings\nST.  JOHN,  N.B. -       LIVEItPOOLr\nEMPRESS  OF  IRELAND FRI.   NOV.  29\nEMPRESS OF BRITAIN FRI. DEC. 1.1\nTHROUGH TOURIST SLEEPINO CARS FROM VANCOUVER\nXO TRANSFER.    NO  HcAeL EXPENSE.\nTickets nnd Informatl on from any Rnllroad or Stcnmshlp Agent\nor J. J. KORSTER,   General Agent, 713 Second Ave., SEATTLE\nt\nself, the handling of the coal and liquid fuel for shipping and permanent\noffice buildings and accommodations\nfor tlie army of employea which will\nbe required to operate tho canal.\nAmong tiie facilities to be supplied\nare 1,000-foot piers for commercial use\nat Balboa, two wharves and one pier\nat Christobiil besides a mole and\nbreakwater to be followed by four\nother piers should the traffic justify\nit.\nThere will he a great drydock at\nBalboa, 1,000 feet long, capable of\naccommodating any vessel that could\npass through the canal locks. A smaller drydoek at Balboa will bold vessels\nup to 350 feet.\nSNOW  IN   PRINCE ALBERT\n(By Dully News Leased Wire.)\nPRINCE ALBERT, Sask., Nov.-\n7.\u2014This district is today covered\nwith a heavy blanket of snow,\nmeasuring over six inches while\nin places drifts will reach two feet\nand more. Snow started about 7\no'clock last night and continued\nuntil  late  in  the  forenoon.\nBOY SCOUTS ASSIST IN\nSEARCH  FOR LOST CHILD\n(By Daily News \"Dcaf-ed 'Wlro.)\nCALGABY, Nov. 7.\u2014Fifty boy scouts\nwere called out tonight to assist the\npolice In the. search for four-year-old\nGeorge Campbell, son of E. G.Camp-\nbtll, a Nanton roncher, who disappeared from his homo in thia city today. Tho scouts proved of great assistance in locating the favorite haunts\nof runaway boys but up to a late hour\ntheir search had been unsuccessful.\nCLERGYMAN  ON  TRIAL\nFOR SHOOTING  BOY\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nWADENA, Sask., Nov. 7.\u2014Rev.\nJames Laing was today committed for\ntrial on a charge of Hhootlng Seward\nHougo with intent to do bodily harm.\nThe magistrate granted bail of security of $2,000. The evidence showed\nthat on Hallowe'en night, a band of\nyoungsters had been up to mischief\nand that the accused Iind been guard\nIng his residence. To scare tbo band\nhe had fired several shots nnd Houge\nwas hit ln the arm.\nCOURT DIRECTS NEW TRIAL\nTORONTO, Nov. 7.\u2014The divisional\ncourt today directed a new trial In the\naction of Elias Nakptt against the Kent\ncompany of Montreal. Nokea claimed\ndamages for Injuries received by tbe\nexplosion of a refrigerating plant installed by the company. At the trial\nthe company's counsel left tho court\nbecause he wus refused an adjournment to bring a witness from Regina.\nIn the absence of tho defense, Nokes\nwas given Judgment for $5,000 dam-,\napjerf and $200 medical expenses.\nPURE DRUGS\nIS OUR MOTTO\nAll Drugs used in dispensing your   doctor's  presortptlon  are    absolutely\npure. *\n-\nWe Never Substitute\nYou are safe when you leave your prescriptions her\u00a9.\nMen Who Know the Drug Business\nAlways At Your Service\nCanada Drug & Book Co. Ltd.\nPhone 81        Nelson's Pioneer Drug Store      P.O. Box 502\nAgents for the Remington Typewriter       : .*>     Mail Orders a Specialty\n1\nThe Canadian Bank\nof Commerce\nSIR   EDMUND   WALKER,   C.V.O.,\nLL.D.,   D.C.L.,   President\nALEXANDER   LAIRD,   Gen.   Mgr.\nCapital    $15,000,000\nRett ..'. $12,500,000\n' Travellers' Cheques\nIssued by the Canadian Bank ot\nCommerce are tho most convenient\nform ln which to carry money when\ntravelling. Tbey are negotiable every\nwhere, self-liiontlfylng, and tne exact\namount payable in the principal foreign countries is printed on the face\nof  every cheque.    The   cheques  are\nIssued  In denominations of\n$10, $20, $50, $100 and $200\nand may be obtained by application\nat the bank.\nIn connection with Its Travellers'\nCheques, The Canadian Bank oi commerce has Issued a booklet entitled\n\"Information of Interest to Toose\nAbout to Travel,\" which will be sent\nfree to anyone applying for lt.\nNelson  Branch, J. 8. Munro, Mgr.\nBank of Montreal\nESTABLISHED 1817\nCapital all paid-up $16,000,000\nRest    10,000,000\nHEAD  OFFICE!   MONTREAL\nRt.    Hon.    Lord    Strathcona    and\nMount Royal, Q.C.M.G., Hon. Pres.\nR, B. Angus, Esq., President\nSir    Edward    S.   Clouston,    Bart.,\nVice-President\nH. V  Meredith, Esq., Gen. Manager\nBranches in British Columbia\nArmstrong, Athalmer, ChUIiwaoK,\nCloverdale, Enderby, Greenwood,-Hob-\nmer, Kamloopa, Kelowna, Merritt,\nNelson, New Denver, New Westminster, Nicola, Penticton, Port Alberni,\nPort Haney, Prince'Rupert, Prinee-.\nton, Rossland, Summerland, Vancouver, Vancouver (Main street), Vernon,'\nVictoria,  West Summerland.\nNelson Branch, L. B, DeVeber, Mgr,\nJOHN BURNS & SON Sffi5\nNelson Planing Mill, Sash and Door Factory\u2014Factory and Tarda, 700-12 Vernon\nstreet Doors, Sash, Mouldings ln stock and to order. Coast Lath and ShlngleB.\nTurned Work and Brackets. Cement, Brick and Lime always In stock. Automatic Knife Grinder\u2014all kinds of grinding done. Store Fronts and Office Fittings, etc., a specialty. Estimates given on atone, brick and all kinds of work.\nMoving and raisin- buildings and setting plate glass. Guaranteed against\ndamage,    p.   O.   Box   IM.    Telephone 178.\nL U M B E R\nBusiness Is Good.   Call and\nGet Our Prices.\nDominion Sawmills & Lumber, Ltd.\nPHONE   15.\nLATE  YALE-COLUMBIA  LUMBER  CO.\nP. O.  BOX 1068\n\u2022 The,\nColdstream Estate Nurseries\nVernon, B. C.\nFruit Trees and Ornamentals, Budded\nStock on Three Year Old Roots\nFOR  PRICES,  ETC., APPLY\nMANAGER COLDSTREAM  ESTATE NURSERIES,\nVernon, B. C,\nLocal  Agent\nE,  E.  GREENWOOD,  Proctor,  B,  C.\nLeather Goods\nWe   have  just   opened  up  and  the  consignment   of   leather   goods   including\n60c to \u00bb1    00  Each\nCANVAS   AMD   LEATHER   RIFLE   COVERS\n     Price,,  $1.00 to $3.60 Eaoh\nMarble\nSpecialties\n\/\nIncluding\nMatch Safes.   '\nHunting      and      Canoe\nKnives*\nCleaning Rods.\nPocket Axos,\nTrail   Makers'   Knives\nAlso\nMarble     Game      Getter *\u25a0\ndun.   (Shoots  .22  and   .44\nCartridges*)\nNELSON HARDWARE CO.\n8P0RTSMANS1\nHEADQUARTERS\n;RS Nelson, B.C.\n .\/\/&\nNOVEMBER S\nCte Batl\u00a3 $rt*os,\n\u25a0->'   PAGE FIVE\ntell Trading Co.\nIARGAINS\nIt the Busy Store\nI Apart from moving our staff Is\nforking overtime to keep up with\nIrders.\nI Wo have experienced the busiest\nJaree day'a rush ln our history.\nlist About a Week\nMore at the Old\nStand\nAnd another week of bargains. ..\nIftrawbsrries In glass, regularly 40c,\nmoving price 25o\n|i.awton berries, regularly 35c, mov-\n.lng price   20c\nihivsr's Jam, regularly 25c, moving\nprice .\n.15c\nI\nI Tartan Catsup, 2 lb. tins  10c\nI loss Hand Cleaner, 3 cans ....25c\nB'aitila Soap, regular 35c,  moving\nprice 25c\nIjlhili Sauce, __-z size for 25c\n; size, 2 for 25c\nI Extracts, 2 oz. bottles 15c\n|*Jut Olives, all sizes, price cut In\ntiyo. ,\nI 'ohnston's Laundry Starch, 3 for 25c\n1\n| ta-on   Blacking,   for  stoves,  usual\n10c size  for So\n.Petley'a      Cocoa,\nregularly\n\u25a03r,c,\nApples, 6 lbs. for\n..25c\nSell Trading\nto.\neUp-to-Date\nGrocers\nUse Phone 56\nWhen Taking\na Vacation\ngo to the great Halcyon Hot\nSprings, where you can secure not\nonly rest, but at the same tlmo\nhavo the benefit of the best medicinal waters on the continent, un-\nequaled for rheumatism and kindred ailments. The springs are easy\nof access to travellers and the hotel\nhas been fitted up and Is conducted with a view to the maximum- of comfort and convenience\nfor guests.\nRates:   $12 and $15 ner week, or $2\nper day and upwards.\nHalcyon Hot Springs\nSanitarium\nWM.  BOYD,  Proprietor.\nHalcyon ' Arrow Lakes\nHOTEL ARRIVALS OF A DAY\nThe Hume\nTabic d'Hots and a la Cart*\nIIUW-R. C. Inglis, H. J. Inglla,\nCrawford Hay; T, W. Irvine, R. E.\nKnglish, Henry Lye, Vancouver; 13. V.\nUiekley, SI.cup Creek; G. D. Bell,\nSalmo; B. W. Abbott. A. G. Baker,\nSpokane; William English, R. 13. Cuope:\nA. Founder, W. H. Burgess, J. J. StreBt,\nKnslo; J. It. itylcy. Queens Bay; H. A.\nlienjiunln, W. A. Ingalls, Calgary; W.\nPainter, Grand Forks; James Tagg, Victoria; W. G. Watson, C. S. Holler, Edmonton; c F. Tams, Innesfallj J. H.\nSiuidcrson, Oscar Spltyer, New. Yoik;\na. J. Cluiswortli, Toronto: Mrs. _. 13.\nWilliams, Phoenix; James MoArdle,\nGrand Forks; G. G. Watson, Edinburgh;\nW. Norman Stewart, Gateway; It. A.\nHeavnn, Fernie*. C. Baxter, Cranbrook;\nT. C. Peck, Midway; T, W. Whitehead,\nShields; J. H. Hutcliinaon, Nelsonj Mrs.\nJ. E. Williams. Phut-nix; A. B. Williamson, Noith Vancouver; W. J. Ushln, F.\nU. Bosson, AVInnipeg; W. H. t-ammei;,\nToronto; .1. I.. Bttallaclt, Kaslo; F. A.\nMacFnrlam;, Boston; G. Ni Snow, A.\nG. rjurhnm, T. \\V. McFadyen, Vancouver; M. B. McArtliur, Truro; R. A.\nSonne,  W.  Sonne; Montreal.\nI\nKootenay Hotel\nTwo Doors from Postoffice\n\u25a0 Vernon Street\nRWetr^I.uO arid $1.-25 per-day,*\nEvery convenience given  to  tho\nI.traveling'public. Electric piano und\nJ {union bar in connection, where the\n| best of wines and liquors are kept.\nMRS. MALLETT, Proprietress.\nINVICTUS\nThe __    _\nBEST GOOD SHOE\nA WINTER TAN\nLEATHER LINED\nSTRAND SHAPE\nThis shoe means\ncomfort to the wearers\nas well   as long service.\nThe Royal Shoe Store\nR. Andrew, Prop.\nWANT   FACTS.\nDEPENDABLE\u2014Wants are assured\nan autlienoe\u2014many look at them every\nday  for   definite Information.\nCONVENIENT\u2014A Want Is easily\nwritten, easily mailed or 'phoned and\neasily answered.\nSPEEDY\u2014Wants are quick in ac\nHon\u2014they save time and money,\nBE A WANT USER.\nMAY ERECT BIG\nMILL  AT   LETHBRIDGE\n{By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLI3T1-1B1UDG13, Alta., Nov. 7.~ln an\ninterview last night John Taylor of\ntlio Taylor Milling company; slated\nthat provided Lethbridge would give\nhim the same concessions that Medicine Hat gavo to tho Ogllvic Milling\ncompany, he was prepared to erect a\nflour mill uf tlie same size and capacity In this city. The Ogilvle mill al\nMedicine Hat Is being erected at a\ncost of $\"150,000 and will have a capacity of 3,000 barrels dally. The concessions granted by tiie Hat Wero u\n20-acre site free of charge, free power\nfor 15 years, water at cost and exemp-\n__ Jfit\npropT \"\ncials.\ntipa from^tiucaUon^  tie. has-noUas yet\nmade tho* proposition to \"tlie civic oft!\nl*KOOTENAY-M. Oaiko, S. Vlloae,\ntnndon: R. Karkey, Perry Siding; W.\nI'.- Griffith, Noith Wales; M. Demcd,\n\u25a0\u25a0\"iiescent Valley.\nTremont House\nBaker Street, Nelson\nRANSOME 6 CAMPBELL\nProprietors\nEuropean plan, 50c up\nAmerican plan, {1.25 and $1.50\nMeals, 35o\nSpecial Rates per Month\n\u25a0*.'. TREMONT\u2014Angus McLeod, Silverton;\n\u25a0 M. Waist;. Ainsworth; G. McLeod;\nI '-lioenlx; J. McLeod, K. Ferguson.\nI greenwood; F. Fuller, \\V. Cockroft, G.\nI'llraugevUu, E. A. Woods, J. McDonald,\n1 \\ Mldle, city.\nI   A Home for the World at $1.00 a day\nLakeview Hotel   ,\nCorner Hall and Vernon Streets.\nRenovated and refurnlBhed through\nout. Best of wines, liquors and cigars served in the bar by Union\nBartenders.\nNAP. MALLETTE, Prop.\nLAKEVIEW\u2014J. Williams, Silverton;\nW. Swlmi'n, B. Bristol!. Cranbrook; G.\n.\u201eDimken, Fernie. Mrs. J. R. Jarvls and\nWamlly, G. Marks, city.\nKlondyke Hotel\nVernon  Street\nStrictly Union House\nHeadquarters for mlnera, Smel-\ntermen,   loggers, railroad  men.\nRales,  $1.00  per day  up\nNELSON & JOHNSON, Props.\nUnder New Management,\nF. B. WHITING, Proprietor.\nSTRATHCOXA-Mr. and Mrs. R. F.\nLangford, Koofenav rtny; Miss F. IT.\nDodge, A. J. Brady, Vancouver; F. P.\nArmstrong, Goidrn; J. A. Foley, To-\n\u2022oiitn: Mr. ami Mrs. F. S. Macdonald,\nSandon; M. S. Davys. New Denver;\nMrs.  Lee  and   jhlld,  Bonnlngton.\nQueen's Hotel\nA.   LAPOINTE,   Proprietor\nRenovated throughout. Sixteen now rooms added, all elegantly furnished. Steam heat\nin every room.\nQUFFNS-F. Tyms, Fife: D. B. Miller.\nLethbridge; J. li. McLean and wife,\nMacleod: O. A. James, wife and ciiililrca\ni'nl;.-ury; T. Liu\/*, Fernie; J.- Hopkins,\nMichel.\nI.' KLONDYKB}\u2014W. Owen, Sandon, O.\ni Htwson, Sho'P Creek; A. Anderson,\n\\ Salmo.\nNelson House\nEuropean Plan\nW. A. WARD, Proprietor\nCAFE\u2014Open day and  night\u2014BAR\nMerchants' Lunch 12 to 2\nPhone 97 P. O. Box 597\nNELSON\u2014A. Rowley, George Fnntrur,\nG. Whitehead, T. MulTell, L. B. El-lclt-\nson, J. Glbbs, Vletoria.\nSilver King Hotel\n-    \u00a3     Baker Street\nUnder new management.\nWell   furnished   rooms,   $1.00   a\nday   and   up.    Best   25c   meal   1ft\nNelson.   Best brands of liquors and\ncigars, served by union men.\n\u2022 r,      N.   McL^OD,   Proprietor        >\nSILVER KlfG-lI. Snohcer, P. Cau-\nsedy, Trail; F. A. Abbott, Kochs; F. 10.\nLewis' P. wicneff, A. Davis, city; .V.\nMeyers, *E. IniilSj Grand Forks; J. M.\nlOilgar, Phoenix;- J.. Baxter;. J. Naland,\nKaslo; A. Arse;), T. Slusslck, Yahk.\nMadden House\nThos. Madden, Prop., Baker St.\nRates:    $1.50 to $2.00 per day.\nMeal Tickets, $7,0ij per week.\nA Comfortable Homo\nMADDRN-A. 3 Maeaulay, Silverton:\nH. Boai'dley, .Jnokatiu; W. R. Cordon,\nQueens Hay, Mrs. A. Ladcsy, Molt-on;\nJ.   Healy,   elty;  F.   W.   Storey,   Sp^Lan.';\np. Maokander, Phoenix; W, Rlehmond.\n,T. Hi Granam, G. Klines, T. Hansen,\nHosmer.\nGrand Central Hotel\nOPPOSITE  POSTOFFICE\nAmerican and European plans\nH. H. PITT8, Proprietor\nFARMERS BANK TRIAL\nCOMES TO END\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, Nov. 7.\u2014Title Fanners'\nbank cases, ns far as the taking of evidence goes, is piactically finished. All\ntliat remains to be done is to sift some\nof the evidence to see If there are any\npoints not touched on. Such was the\nstatement of F. C. Hodglns, K.C., of\nToronto, formerly government counsel\nin tlio Farmers' hank case and newly-\nappointed Judge of the Ontario court of\nappeals, who Is hero today. Mr. Hod-\nKins did not know who would be appointed to take his place, and would\nnot. say whether it would be John T.\nThompson of Ottawa, as is rumored.\nOnly one more sitting will he needed to\ncomplete the case, however. The Fanners' bunk case has proved to bo a lucky\none for those associated with It, inasmuch as not I. Sir William Meredith who\npresided and Mr, Hodglns have received\njudicial appointments which are promotions.\nWILL OPERATE NATIONAL\nTRANSCONTINENTAL LINE\nfBv Dally News Leased Wire.}\nOTTAWA, Nov. 7.\u2014Tlie transcontln\nental commission lias decided to operate\nthe completed line ol the National Transcontinental railway In Now Brunswick\ntemporal liy until such time as' tho\nGrand Trunk Pacific commission bus\napplied for and been granted a lease\nof this section of the lino Under the\nterms of tlie National Transcontinental\nrailway act. Lnmmeiiclnjr Wednesday,\nNov. \"JO, a tri-weekly service will be Inaugurated for both freight and passenger'business; Tlie service will lie cairied\non between M otic ton and l-'omimdston, a\ndistance ot 230 miles, W. B. Crank, who\nhas been*! superintendent of transportation, hns been appointed general superintendent in charge of operations.\nPOLICE   MAKE   ARREST.\n(By Daily News Loosed Wlre.1\nMOOSK JAW. Sask,, Nov. 7.-Constable\nMcPhatter, of the Royal Northwest\nMounted police, tonight arrested Ralph\nSmith, for whom .tho country has been\nscoured for the past three weeks. He\nIs wanted at Hlrsch, for extensive thefts.\nHo  is  said  to  have  made  a  confession.\nINDEPENDENCE\nFOR ALBANIA\n(Continued from page one.)\nwhile, with the utmost energy that\nthey have, the Bulgarians ure concentrating an, overwhelming force with\na view to the occupation of Constantinople so-that intervention will follow  this accomplishment.\"\nThe Times prints the following despatch dated Sofia, Nov. 7, 11:20 p.\nm.: \"It Ib reported but without confirmation, that the Bulgarian troops\nhave occupied the Tchatalja lines.\"\nHard to Routo TurkB.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nBELGRADE, Nov. 7.\u2014Official reports describe the two days' heavy\nfighting which preceded the surrender of Prillp. 20 miles to the northeast of Monastir. The Servians outnumbered the Turks, but owing to the\nnature of the ground were unable to\nuse their artillery. They could bring\nonly one mountain battery into action\nagainst the vigorous fire of the Turkish artillery. The Servians were not\nable to form up in fighting* lino arid\nwero ordered to make sacrifices, taking one position after another at the\nbayonet's point. The Turks held\nsuch strong positions that they should\nhave been able to annihilate the storming parties. Only at the end of the\nsecond day did tho Servian Infantry\nsucceed in driving the enemy from\ntheir stronghold and putting them to\nflight in the direction of Monastir. The\nServian wounded numbered many\nmore   than   the  Turks.\nDam River to Flood Town.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.*)\nLONDON, Nov. 7.\u2014Below Adrianople, says a Sofia despatch to the\nStandard, the Bulgarians have dam\nmed up the river Mnritza so that the\nwater has been forced back and flood\ned the town. It is expected that thU.\nwill compel an early surrender.\nA Cettenje despatch to the Standard\nsays that King Nicholas is annoyeVl at\nthe protracted siege of Scutari,\nMontenegro has occupied much' less\nTurkish territory than the oilier allies\nand it is feared that this will have\nunfavorable effect when tiie partition\nof Turkey is made. The king, there\nfore, has ordered the commanders of\ntlie Montenegrin columns to push forward and occupy as many places as\npossible before the Servians penetrate\nfurther west.\nAnother despatch from Celtlnje say\nthat the whole country Is In tho grip\nof winter, that the snow there is two\nfeet deep and that the roads aro impassable.\nTurks Scattered.\n(By Daily News Leased Wlre.1\nSOFIA, Nov. 7.\u2014The Bulgarians occupied the towril,fit'A'Drama on Nov. 0.\nTiie Turkish troops In that region have\nbeen scattered in o41 directions. Most\nOf them have surrendered their guns\nand arc returning trrlhclr homes. Other remnants arc Jui' demoralized thai\nlho .noaBailLl'-tcn-iyrV-***: thein and ..%y\u00abm-\npel them to disarm and flee. Throughout the district'the inhabitants hav.\nalready warmly welcomed the Hulgar\ninn administration >**JhlcH has been es\ntablished.\nRecapture Zerovitch.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nCONSTANTINOT'TIE, Nov. 7.\u2014The\ncommander of the -western Ottoman\narmy telegraphs that Zerovitch on the\nsouthernmost loop - of the SalnikI\nMonastir railway, bas been recap tuned\nfrom the Greeks. Me also reports thai\na Servian cavalry detachment with\nmany guns, has been routed at Ter\niepe.\nWill Not Sell Warships.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nVALPARAISO, Chile, Nov. 7.\u2014The\nTurkish government has made a pro\nposal to Chile to purchase the battleship and torpedo boat destroyer now\nbeing built in England for this conn\ntry. The Chilean government It Is reported, will decline to sell the warship.\n- Greeks   Win   Fierce   Fight.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nATHENS, Nov. 7.\u2014After a fierce\nfight In whicli iho Turks had . more\nthan 100 killed, the Greeks havo occupied Pentepimadia, which commands\nthe road to Janina. The reports thai\nthe Turks have evacuated Saolulki is\nsaid to be unfounded.\nBulgarians   Leave for War.\n(By Dally  News  Leased Wire.)\nMONTREAL, Nov. 7.\u2014Eight hundred Bulgarians left Montreal today by\nthe Allan line steamer Victoria for tin*\nBalkans. Another detachment of -10(\nwill, it is expected, leave for the seem\nof war in a couple of days.\nW. T. Crothers, minister of labor, will\nnot recede from the position which he\nnow holds. While Mr. Crothers has\nissued no official statement he made\nit plain this afternoon that no conciliation board will be granted. The minister of labor emphasized the point\nthat a board had been refused because\nthe act. did not apply -to tho peculiar\nconditions attached to the claims involved in the dispute. He maintains\nthat, to have appointed the board\nwould be to defeat the very ends\nwhicli the men und the department\nare seelting to attain.\n\"I have been negotiating with the\nCanadian Pacific railway.\" he said,\n\"for some months. In nn effort to secure better terms and conditions for\nthn men. The company met me In a\nsympathetic way and has already given material Increases to some of the\nmen. They were considering further\nincreases and endeavoring to meet my\nwishes us far as possible. In view of\nthese facts, I consider lhat it would\nhave heen wrong on principle alone\nif on nothing else, to have ignored the\nadvances being made by the company\nand appointed a board to deal with the\nmatter. This could only have resulted\nIn the company refusing to grunt the\nincreases and terms that they were already considering favorably and the\nmon would, as a consequence, bo deprived of those Increases at least until a board could report on the whole\nquestion.\"\nStrikers   Return.\n(By Dally  News  Leased  Wire.)\nMONTREAL, Nov. 7.\u2014The Canadian\nPacific officials received the following\nletter signed by the men who went out\non strike at Sherbrooke:\n''In view of the fact of our positions\nbeing returned to us ns per the conference this afternoon, also on account\nofthc way in which we have bee nlcd\nastray by the leaders of the so-called\norganization, and the misrepresentations that have been made to us by\nthorn, wo havo decided that wo will\nwithdraw from It and agree not to\nagain become members of this par\ntleular organization.\"\nThe men have been reinstated and\nwork is going along in proper order\nat Sherbrooke.\nILLINOIS GOES\nFOR WILSON\nHave You Bought Your\nWinter Coat Yet?\nFIREMAN   BURNED\n(Br Dally News Leased Wire.)\nEDMONTON, Alta., Nov. 7.\u2014Capl.\nII. Mitchell of No. 2 fire station, was\nItadly burned about the-face and hands\nwith sulphuric acid today and fears\nare entertained for the safety of his\neyesight. . ______^___\nGRAND FOKKS-R. Mooruhnd. Limerick; J. O. Jennings, Detroit; WilliAm\nClough, Sloean City; W. F. Finney, city:\nR. D. Bolter, Welmln; George MeGowan\nJ. Thomas, J, Healoy, .1. Kendall, Coeiir\nd'Aleno; Mrs. C. liurman. Miss Ruth\nHurman, Ainsworth; B. G. Ibout, Vancouver J J. A. Carter, Knslo; J. W.\nCagir, N. Progatti Paulson*. F. Simon.\nButte; T. A. Hyslop, Saskatchewan; T.\nMaltbe, Macleod,\nROYAL\u2014F. IX. Clement, Victoria; J.\nCallahan, W. II. Peaslel, IX FlUpatrlck,\n13. H. Freak, T. Hedley, England.\nSIIERBHOOK3-G. W. Reaves, Proctor; F. L:nio;y. Charles Richards, Crescent Valley; 1. Makl, M. Snarl, J.\nTurner, J. F. Erlckson, E. Johnston,\nD. McDonald, Sloean; D. Turner, P.\nRowanzln, Princeton G. Gilbert, J.\nHryson,   t\\ Sails, Nakusp.\nBRANTFORD TO  HAVE\nCIVIC COAL YARD\n(By Dally News Leased Wir6.)\nRUANTPORD, Ont., Nov. 7.\u2014The lo.\ncal trades and labor council at is\nmeeting tonight endorsed a resolution\nfa'or ing the establishment of a civic*\nooM yard. Tho .resolution wiia the re-,\nguit of a.raise of *2o:.cents a.ton .on\nlho hard coal last week.\nFOR FALLING HAIR\nYou Run No Risk When You Use This\nRemedy.\nWc promise you that, If your hair is\nfoiling mit and you have not let lt go\ntoo far, you can repair the dnmugo\nalready done by using Rexnll \"93\" Hair\nTonic, with persistency and regularity,\nfor n reasonable length of time. It Is\na scientific, cleansing, antiseptic,\ngermicidal preparation, that destroys\nmicrobes stimulates good circulation\nan-und the hair roots, promotes hair\nncurlShmont, removes dandruff and act\nto restore hair health. It is as pleasant\nto use as pure water, nnd Is delicately\nporfumed. It Is a real toilet necessity,\n, Wo want you to try Rexall \"03\" Hair\nTonic with our promise that it will cost\nyou nothing unless you are perefectly\nsatisfied with Its use. It comfis in two\nnl7.au, prices, BOc and $i.*oo.' Remember\nyou enri obtain Rexall Remedies in this\ncommunity only at our store\u2014The\nRexall Store. Poole Drug Company,\nLimited. l;. ^vHltMill\nBRAND STATEMENT\nAS RIDICULOUS\n(Continued from pago one.)\ncd the following resolution, nnd forwarded a copy to lho minister ot labor at Ottawa.\nWhereas, the cnnadian Brotherhood\nof Railway Employes arc on strike,\nand\n\"Whereas, on that account traffic l*\ngreatly disorganized throughout the\nentire west, and whereas, in the opinion of this board a speedy settlement\nof this strike should bo effected as\npromptly as possible;\nResolved, thnt tho minister of labor\nbo requested to accede to the request\nof tho Brotherhood and appoint a\nboard of conciliation under the Lemleux net.\nHold Firm in Calgary.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nCALGARY, AUa., Nov. 7.\u2014The Canadian Pacific* railway freight han-\ndlprs In this city aro still on strike.\nThere was a small demonstration a)\nthe freight sheds today, but the sympathizers were quickly dispersed by police. Local officials assert that traffic has not been materially interfered\nwith. There lias been rio violence since\nthe walkout took place on Monday.\nWill   Not  Grant   Board.\n(Ry Dally Nnwa Leased Wire.*).\nOTTAWA.   Nov.   7.\u2014Whatever     the\noutcome of the strike of the Brotherhood of Railway Employes along the\nCanadian Pacific railway system, Hon.\n(Continued from naze one.)\nassumed, however, that Speaker Clark\nand Chairman Underwood would pre\nfor to continue their work in congress,\nespecially now that the legislative program on the tariff and other questions\nis likely to meet with fewer obstacles.\nAs to Mr. Bryan, one of the Demo-\nratic senators was quoted during the\ncampaign as definitely assigning Mr.\nBryan to a cabinet place In case of\nWilson's election, although the latter\nstated about the same time lhat no\nconsideration had been given to the\npersonnel of the cabinet. None tlie\nloss, speculation is active as to whether the NeUrasltan will have a portfolio.\nAnother1 element from which chbinei.\nmaterial' \"is 6'eirig 'suggostetf1 ''e,n^^nr^J6'es,\nthose who have been prominently identified with tho Wilson campaign, notably Chairman McCoombs of the national committee, Representative Burleson and Henry of Texas, Representative Palmer of Pennsylvania, Assistant Chairman McAdoo and a number\nof others who bore tlie brunt of the\nconflict at Baltimore during tiie cti***n-\npaign. Sill another available element\nIs made up of prominent figures in the\nvarious states who were not conspicu\nously Identified with the recent national convention and campaign, while\nanother includes sonic of the veterans\nof the last Democratic administration.\nOutside of these usual elements\nfrom which cabinets are constructed,\nmany foresee the entry of a considerable new element In public affairs,\nmade up of men like Mr. Wilson, who\nhave been identified with collegiate',\neducational and economic study\npublic questions. This opens a \\\nfleld of available material.\nAll of this activity of the cablne!\nmakers is necessarily confined to gossip and although various names art\nlikely to be put forward from now on,\nnothing authorative is expected until\nthe president-elect himself has in, hi\nown way rind time given maturi\nthought to those who will make up IiIl\nofficial household.\nTask Not Easy.\n(Hy Pally News Lensed Wire.)\nLONDON, Nov. 27.\u2014Francis Dyke\nAcla'nd, parliamentary under secretary\nof foreign affairs, speaking al Taunton\nlast night, referred to the election o\nWoodrow Wilson as a victory for re\ndltced tariffs and sa'.d lhat the Eng\nlish democracy ought not to turn IU\nback on a policy which oilier democ\nnicies wished to establish. The Time:\nthinks that the rise of the Progressive;\nmay well prove to be a matter of sti\npreme moment not alone in the inter\nmil politics of the United States, but\nIn the history of modern democracy\n\"Mr. Wilson's success,\" adds Un\nTimes, \"will largely depend upon his\nskill in inducing ihe more conservative of his party to move fast enough\nHis task is not easy, but the Demo\ncrats succeed to power with a presi\ndent whose character and past achieve\nments are full of promise.\"\nJapan is Pleased.\n(Ry Dally News lA-ased Wire.)\nTOIUO, Nov. 7.\u2014Woodrow Wilson's\nelection has been received with favor\nin political and business circles In\nJapan. His scholarly qualification,\nespecially attract attention. Possibl\ntariff -modifications are hopefully dls\ncussed. The oven\/helming victory of\nMr. Wilson caused great surprise\nColonel Roosevelt's strength was over\nestimated in Japan.\nYou Will Find\nHere a Big\nSelection\nTo Choose\nFrom\nCold wealher wiil soon make a coat\na necessity if you wish to keep comfortably warm, and you cannot do better ttian make your choice from our\nStock. Although we have sold a larger number than ever before, we still\nhave a splendid selection, as knowing\ncoats would be more popular than ever\nthis winter,  we bought heavily.\nWe have them In Tweeds, Chinchillas, Blanket Cloths, etc., all sizes, and\nall fashionable colors.\nCome and try somo on, you will be\nagreeably surprised at their moderate\nprice.\nPrices from  $7.50 to $45\nIS NO  REFLECTION  ON\nCANADIAN   FINANCIERS\nfRv Daily News Leased Wire,)\nVAN'COPVFR, P.O., Nov. 7.\u2014In reference to the nisputeh from Moose Jaw\nsaving that C. S. Nlblock, of the Canadian Financiers', Limited, had been ar-\nrested at Moose Jnw. the wording ot\nwhicli was .-iilculiihil to reflect upon the\ncompnav, Patrick J. Donnelly, president\nof tlie companv, explains tliat NlblOCK\nhad been employed by the Canadian\nFinanciers, Limited, for only n very\nshort time. Ho was not arrested as a\nresult of ids connection with tlie company, nor docs ids arrest in any way\nafreet or reflect upon tbe company.-! he\nwarrant noon which the arrest WflB**ange\nwas Issued at the instance of Hie International Casuall\" company of Sp\u00abiU:nn-,\nbv whom ho was until recently employed,   The. fact that Nlblock was arrested,\nwith tin\nfor something which ma;\ned before he became con\ncompany cannot be fairly taken as reflecting upon the Canadian Financiers,\nLimited, which has a capital of |1,CW,000\nami lias been engaged in business successfully   for Hie past six years.\nnow trailing In tb\nwas  built In  1864  by  Mr.\n,u-d  governor uf the crow\nriver.    The\nMr.  Trutch,\ncolony.\nDEMOLISH HISTORIC FOOTBRIDGE\n(Ry Dailv News Leasee* Wire.)\nVANCOUVER, B.C., Nov. 7.\u2014The old\nsuspension footbridge across the Ftnsor\nriver, a tew miles above Yale, an object\nof great historic Interest, was recently\ndemolished; against protests from many\npeople   in   the     district. The     wooden\ntowers fit each end of the bridge were\nburned down. The wlro cables, forming\ntl'.e stringers of the structure over which\nInnisantls   uf   I't-rllnni   rrolil-s.*el\nLtLTHERIDGE  POLICE CHIEF\nWITHDRAWS   RESIGNATION\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nUETHBRIDGH, Alia.. Nov. 7,\u2014The\ncity council has contracted with Chbii\nof'Police Davis for one year, agreeing\nalso to form a commission for the\nmanagement of police affairs as requested by the chief of police. As a\nresult of this Chief Davis has withdrawn, his resignation and will remain\nor poll.\nIt's\nfree\nSend\nfor It.\nA new\n-ind valis j Me\nbook on\n\"Cheerful\nHomes.\"\nThis booklet\n1 tlu it rat ei tome\nof the moit\nbeau ti I'll\nhuni\u00bblo\u00bb\u00bbo(\nSouthern\nCllltorhli.\nA book eveir\nborne builder\nSciu I ree.\nYou cannot get a good weather and\nwaterproof roof for your building\nfrom a poor roofing.\nThe roof of your building is the\nmost important part of it and\nunless your roofing is right, there will\nbe no peace of mind for\nthose who live under it.\nA roof that leaks causes no end of\ntrouble, besides a lot of damage.\nThe best way to protect yourself from\nthese unnecessary troubles, is to\nuse Malthoid Roofing.\nMalthoid Roofing is made in the\nlargest and best equipped\nroofing factory in the world.\nThe men who make it have been\nmaking roofings for\ntwenty-six years and they understand\nwhat is necessary to make a roofing\nwhich will give perfect satisfaction,\nno matter how it is used,\nwhere it is used or\nunder what conditions.\nThe makers of Malthoid Roofing\nguarantee it to be a perfect roofing\u2014\nto give perfect satisfaction and to\nlast as long as the building it covers,\nprovided it is properly laid and\nordinary care is taken of it.\nTwenty-six years of experience enables\nthe makers to guarantee\nMalthoid Roofing\nunder these conditions.\nTo be absolutely sure tliat you have no\nroofing troubles, buy\nMalthoid and lay it properly.\nMade by The Paraf fine Paint Co.    A. S. Horswill & Co.\nSaofraodscoandEyeiywbere Nelson B.C.\n **M\u00ab\u00ab\nRAGE SIX\n''\u25a0%& pail? #ltoB.\nFRIDAY   ...\nNOVe\u00abBBR\n(.-\u2022\u25a0\u2022(\"I'H'.M\"\"\nTr\u2014\nHouses for Rent    Houses for Sale    Ranches for Sale\n. House,, 6 rooms and bath, Vernon\nstreet; splendid house in good order; every convenience. $25.00 a\nmonth including water.\nFurnished house, 6 rooms; good\nlocality; good condition; all conveniences. $25.00 a month; furnished.\nWE SELL INSURANCE AT LOWEST RATES IN GOOD STRONG\nCOMPANY.\n$1,500 buys a good house on two\nfine lots; one block from car'line;\nevery convenience; chicken house\nand fruit trees; worth investigating.    $400 handles it.\n$1,800 takes this house; 7 rooms;\nlight, hot and cold water; woodshed, fruits; good condition. A\nsnap.    $300 handles it.\n$2,450, 5 rooms and bath; right\nup to the mark in every respect;\nan excellent buy; on car line; easy\nto heat and every comfort. $300\ncash   handles  it.\nHere's a 20-acre ranch that we\ncan recommend. It has the quality\nand situation, being on the west\narm of Kootenay Lake and only 6\nmiles from Nelson. Soil the .very\nbest, abundance of pure water and\nadjoins some of the finest ranches\nin the Kootenay district. 250 fruit\ntrees, standard varieties; clearing\nvery light. School, store and post-\noffice close by. Price, $4,000; ea-r.\nterms.   See us if you want a ranch.\nWestern Canada Investment Co.Welson \u25a0B-c-\nFinancial Agents,  Real  Estate,  Fire, Life and Accident Insurance, Timber   Lands.      Rents  Collected.      Loans\nSafety   Deposit   Boxes  tor   Rent.\nGRAIN   PRICES   LOWER.\n(By Dally News leased Wire.)\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 7.\u2014Indications this\nmorning pointed to higher prices as following the opening, which was \"vi'ri'\/iC\nup;,there was a rally of a fraction on\nDecember and May but without bull\nnews to support the market fell flat ami\nprices declined, the bulk of the trading\nbeing around the lower quotation. Winnipeg closed Vjfa*\"&c lower. American\nmarkets opened unchanged to \u2022Jic lower\nand weakened considerably during the\nlater hours. Minneapolis closed \\_\u00ae%c\nlower. Chicago closed l\/_@%e lower. The\ncash demand was fair and offerings\nwere more liberal during the last hours\nof business, export traders buying moderately.\nOats were in fair demand at firmer\nprices. Flax was stiffer and the spread\nln the prices wide, the close showing a\ngain of *J*>'C for November and 2o for\nDecember, Receipts were heavy, cars\nto the number of 1,267 being inspected\non Wednesday and in sight on Thursday\nWere   1,150  cars.\nWINNIPEG STOCKS.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.*)\nBid Asked\nCanada  Fire,   F.P    IM\nCity &  Prow   Loan         HO\nCom.  Loan     105\nEmpire   Loan       110      115\nG.  W. Life, 53 p.c pd    300      310\nG.   W.   Permanent       13354   131\nNor. Canada MoPt. 2fi p.c. pd.   120\nNor Crown  Hank        9S%   100\nNor.  Mort. ol)  p.c.  pd    113      117\nNor.   Molt    112       117\nOccidental Fire,  40 p.c. pd.  ..   105\nStandard   Trusts    ._^---   180\nUnion Bank of Canada      160      153\n'\"Winnipeg Land & Mortgage ..   160\nWinnipeg Paint & Glass,  pfd.   105      110\nS.  A.   Warrants      !)25      5150\nSales\u20145 Nor. Crown, 38; 1 S. A. Warrant, 935; 500 Lucky .Jim, 17; 1,000 at IS.\nNEW YORK MARKET HEAVY.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nNEW YORK; Now 7.\u2014None of the\nbuoyancy which characterized yesterday's operations In tlie stock mai kel\nwas evident today. Trading, while much\nunder the i.%avy total or that session,\nwas moderately large, but its professional character was doubtless a source\nol disappointment to those who had expected that the close of the political\ncampaign might stimulate some investment demand. Initial prices showed a\nnumber of material gains, especially In\nSt. Paul, the coppers and Sears Roebuck.\nSt. Paul later became the leader In\nrespect to strength, with marked Improvement ifi the Hnrrlmans and a few\nminor rails, including Missouri 'Pacific.\nPressure upon Reading anil Steel resulted In a general shading of prices\nlater, with further marked weakness. in\nbeet augur ami a sharp break in American Cotton Oil, because of Lhe failure\nof an expected dividend. St. Paul was\nat its beat figure in the final hour, when\nthe balance of tlie list became more Irregular. Much of the restraint shown\nby this market was traceable to foreign\nconditions. The tone of tlie Paris and\nBerlin bourses was not entirely hopeful,\nthe Balkan situation again Intruding\nItself. The weekly statements of the\nBank of England anil the Bank of\nFrance, while relatively negligible, were\nnot calculated to inspire encouragement.\nThe British institution lost (-,000,1)00 gold,\nits tidal reserves decreased by as much,\nand its liability reset ves were 2 per cent\nunder last week's. Apropos of this, It\nIs Interesting to note tliat Great Britain's\nImports for October exceeded exports by\nfill, 000,000.\n. The money market was dull ami weak,\ntime rates falling as demand for call\nmoney increased. Most call loans today\nwere made at n per cent.\nBonds were again film with activity in\nSt. PuuI and Atchison Issues. Totu.1\nscales, par value. $2,818,000. United States\nbonds were Unchanged on coll.\nSPOKANE MARKETS.\n(Sharpe  & Irvine,)\nB. C. Copper \t\nCaledonia    \t\nCanadian   Consolidated   ..\nGranby   \t\nInternational   Coal  \t\nLucky Jim    *.\u25a0\nNugget    -\t\nBanibh-r-Cariboo   \t\nRoyal   \t\nStandard   \t\nSnowstorm     \t\nStewart    \t\nB-alfJs\u20143,000 Stewart at Si\nMONTREAL   PROVISION   MARKET-\n(By Daily News Lensed Wire.)\nMONTREAL, Nov. 7.\u2014Butter, active.\nCheese, quiet. Eggs, firm. Cheese, finest\nwestern.^. iWi \u2022::',\u201e\u25a0 finest easterns, li'VW\n12*44. Hotter, choicest creamery. '-Wc'\"'id:\nSeconds, \u25a0-SYi'ii-U. Exks, selected, W'fSl;\nNo. 2 slock. 211021 Pork, heavy Canada\nshort mess, bairels, :;\",f'l*>; pieces, 20\u00bb;\nCanada heavy cut back, barrels, J5*fi55;\npieces, 29.\nLONDON MARKET STRONGER.\nfBv Daily News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Nov. 7.\u2014Money was plentiful today despite large repayments to\nthe Bank oi' England. Discounts were\neasy. There was a further advance on\ntbe stock market owing to lhe belief\nthat the powers will arrive at a satisfactory agreement regard ins the near\neastern question. iCootlnuntal buying\nInter helped the Inlprovement In which\nAmerican rails and cupper and Peruvian\nshares were nromnient. The profit-\ntnklng   caused     n    j-.-tlmrk   In   the   late\nBid\nAsked\n: i.oo\n$ 0.00\n.20\n.22\nfifl.00\n100.00\nta.oo\n7 _. 00\n.30\n.'2\n.17\n.23\n.'76\n.TO-Vfa\n.03\n.05\n1.35\n1.55\nM\n.50\n1.26\ntrading and prices closed below the best.\nAmerican securities opened higher, but\nrt'ulizlng caused most of the list to fall\nbelow parity during the first hour.\nLater continental and local buying again\nadvanced. Improvement was maintained\nuntil the late trading when New Yorj-k\nofferings depressed values, Tlie closing\nwas steady,\nMONTREAL   MARKET  DULL.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nMONTREAL, Nov. 7.\u2014There was another dull stock market today and outside of some activity and strength in\nMontreal Power the trading was practically featureless. In the afternoon the\nbusiness dwindled to less than 1,000\nshares and tlie aggregate transactions\nfor the day. exclusive of mining stocks,\nwas less lhan 4,000 shares. The Canadian\nPacific movement in New York during\nthe noon Intel mission on Wednesday\nwhich infused some life Into the list and\nbrought about a strong close, was reversed today. Canadian Pacific declined\nrather abruptly In 'New York while\ntrading was suspended on the local exchange und the result wus to produce\nsome unsc-tt lenient in the general list.\nMontreal Power, which hnd sold as big!.\nas 232*,i in the morning and at that price\nshowing a gain of '1XA points over the\nclose on Wednesday, weakened to .'.WJi\nand closed nt the low. Even at that the\ngain of one uolnt was the largest shown\nbv any of the active -stocks. Canadian\nPacific was one point lower on the day,\nselling at 265% in the last transaction\nand closing somewhat weaker at 265%\nasked,  365><J  bid.\nMovements elsewhere wore of no great\nimportance anil were largely confined to\nsmall fractions. The Cement stocks\nscored advance**! of M point for the com\nmon and l point for the preferred. Dominion Steel, Detroit and Richelieu also\nshowed small fractional gains and Soo\nwas   strong,   rUing  to  l-H-Ji.\nTotal business, 1,733 shares and $27,000\nbonds.\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nBid   Asked\nNugget    $   .26%   $   .32\nKootenay  Gold  .30\nDunilnion  Trust    122.00      128.00\nB. C.  Permanent Loan  ...130.00     115.00\nTORONTO  STOCKS.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nTORONTO,  Nov.  T.-Ibii\/JIfan. iM-i-f^i;\nTooke,   52^63'^;   Canners,   60%;   Wheat,\nSuV'.K-Mi;    Bread.   \u00bbi;Ws;   Toronto   Paper,\n(Kl.li65%;  Ln Rase, 250;.\nUnlisted\u2014Plenaium. 01;  Jupiter,  MiW._\nIlolllnger,     1500,     Chambers,     20%t*2d%;\nBailey, TW.\nMETAL  MARKETS.\n(Special to Tho Dally News.)\nNEW   Y.URK.   .\\in\\_7.H511ver.   ISI*.     ] \"\nLONDON\", Nov. 7.\u2014Stiver,   29;    Lead,\n\u00a318 5s.     *\nNEW   YORK   METAL   MARKET.\nfBy  Dally Nows  ceased   Wlre.1\nNEW YORK, Nov. \".\u2014Copper, quiet.\notatiibiril spot, ]7fr]7.50; November, 17.0.1\n@17,85J December and January, IT-vilT.r.;\nelectrolytic, 17.:!*Wi17.**.7; lake. 17.U2fi17.S7;\ncasting, 17.2.'.'.m;.::7. London, dull. Spot,\n\u00a376 12s 6d; futures, \u00a377 lis.\nTin\u2014Quiet. Spot. $50.10\u00ae30.40; November, SSO.r'j'.\/GO.su. London, steady; Spot\nand futures,  \u00a3229.\nLead-J'.'OIH.SO.\nSpelter\u2014Quiet, |7.85*#7.45, London, \u00a327\n7s Od.\nEach railroad has its own charge and\nin addition, there is a levy of an extra\nhalf cent per 100 pounds for all cars\nbeyond the yard limits.\nAs these charges, It is said, are in\nforce at all terminals, tlio far reaching effect is apparent. The farmers of\nthe west are also interested as much\nof this levying is charged back to the\nproducer.\nBANK  CLEARINGS.\nfBv  Dnllv  News  Leased  Wire.)\nTORONTO.  Nov. 7\u2014Tbe following are\nthe  bank  dealings  for the week  ending\ntoday   with   comparisons  for  the  corresponding week last year:\n1912 1011\nMontreal    S 05,811,\u00a353   -> 62,602,050\nToronto     ..' 4U.li10.Ifis l.\",.T:iO,r,-,;\nWinnipeg         47.574,525 :!7,*\"24,5L,2\n\u25a0viirniiiviT       15,Mi:i,WW i;;,2','s,;:t;!\nOttawa          4,516,754 6,110,098\nCal'-iai-v          7.222.718 5,S7:i,21U\nquX'c         :!.tWV-i:i :v'-'-.,,li;\nVictoria          4,703. i:.s 3,:iS!i,:W9\nHamilton         4,203,697 3,027,116\nHiilifav-         2,1R4.U5S 2,mil2\nSt   John         2.01NSM Ui:{,273\nI MmnN t on          5.11:15,54s .l,.,L,.i.J\nLondon          2,0S!U*17 1,;>;m,i.I,,\nrVb,h          3.63H.li02 2,:iMVi;,S\nRntndon          USB,53l 1.004.9. W\n.     i,i,if,v              887 444 S13.9M\nSfiJKon          8,369.744 2,197,0K\n\\..i\u00bbl   Jaw         1.884,081 hW,\nFort  William        l,04O,9S4 (60.9J0\nTotals   ....\n,.J22?,(89,932   (198,473,067\nASK BOARD TO\nREVISE SWITCHING CHARGES\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nFOKT WILLIAM, 'int. Nov. 7.\u2014A\nfight, the outcome of which will affect the shipping interests of the entire Dominion, comes to a climax before the railway board whicli sits here\ntomorrow. The local board of trade\nwith the backing of the grain men,\nnre asking the board to change the basis for switching charges at terminals\nand make a fiat rate ol $2.50 a car.\nDuluth and Minneapolis schedules\nwhere the rate is $1.50 a car, will be\nsubmitted as evidence. The charge Is\nat present one cent per 100 pounds\nwith a minimum of $fj per car. At\ntimes lhe .charges when inter-switching is necessary, amount tn $28 a car.\nA Secure Investment\nWe can deliver two choice corner lots In Victoria Heights, city of Moose\nJaw for $575; terms, $33 and balance $26 monthly: 7 per cent interest. The\npresent population of Moose Jaw Is over 23,000 and Increasing rapidly. This\nIs inside property, locuted In the high class residential section and less than\none mile from the business section. Taking the past two years' increase In\nvalues as a basis and With the present flourishing state of Moose Jaw in\ngeneral, these lots wilt Increase In value over 60 per cent within 12 months.\nTl.e value of theso lots is excellent and we guarantee the property first\nclass ln every respect. This is an opportunity for an Investor with small\ncapital to buy high class property on easy terms.' A wlro at our expense will\nhold these lots. Money refunded if representations are not correct,\nhave made money for .others and can do so for you.   Act promptly,\nWe\nToye & Toye\nDealers   in   High   Class   Properties.\nP. O. BOX 147. NELSON,  B. 1\nUNLICENSED COMPANIES\nCANNOT COLLECT\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nVANCOUVER,, ,B, C,, Nov. 7.\u2014The\nCompanies act which deprives unlicensed extra provincial companies of\nthe right to maintain action of law \\n\nthe provincial courts was the deciding\nelement in -an interesting case just\ndismissed by the eourt of appeal. The\nsuit was that of the Komanfeh Machinery company, a United States concern against ' the British Columbia\nPressed Brick company. Ah unusual\nfeature of the case is that the company took out a provincial license before bringing suit, but in the opiplon\nof the majority of the judges of tlie\nappeal court, this did not suffice to\ngive the company retroactive rights\nat law, section 166 of tlie Companies\napt not then being in existence. Chief\nJustice Macdonald rendered a dissenting -judgmenti on this point but ills\njudgment stood ulone.\nJURY SAY SUICIDE-\nPOLICE SUSPECT MURDER\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Nov. 1\u2014On\nthe possibility that Christopher Drng-\noiovich who was found dead in November on a wood pile in the basement\nof his home here,' was murdered and\ndid not commit suicide as reported by\nthe coroner's jury yesterday, much\nagainst the advice of Coroner\nJeffs, the police\" admit that the'y\nare working on the case. Coroner\nJeffs stated late 'today that he will\nsend a complete oopy of the evidence\ntaken at the inquest to the attorney\ngeneral to have it reviewed. Deceased\nwas engineer of the S. S. Comox. \"I\nam not nt all. satisfied with the verdict given,\" suid Coroner Jeffs, \"and\nI want the case Investigated further.\"\nSAILORS MUST, WORK   ii oldhio ( j a\nON SUNDAYS\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Nov. 7.\u2014That\ncoaal ship owners have right to demand their crews to work cargo at\nports of call on Sundays nnd falling\nobedience can engage longshoremen\nanil deduct .the cost from the objecting sailors' wages is the effect of a\njudgment by the court of appeal In\nth .* case of Murray vs. iho Coast\nSteamship company. The court unanimously upheld the judgment rendered\nat Ihe irial by Judge Mclnnes. The\ncase was a test one to decide a question whicli has been a source of con-\ntehtion for some time. Duncan Murray, plaintiff in the action, was a deck\nhand 011 the steamer British Columbia\nand had refused to work on Sunday at\ndischarging cargo In a. Vancouver\nIsland port. The cost of-a longshoreman was deducted from his wages and\nhe brought suit. The shipping federation took the matter up and appeal\npre ecedings were argued in June at\nVictoria. The result of the appeal\net art decision upsets the law hitherto\nobserved on the question in the judgment of Green vs. Canadian Pacific\nrailway in which Judge Grant held\ntint the company had no right to make\ntl-eii men work on Sundays. Green\nvs. Canadian Pacific ruilway was never\nppealed.\nMUCH LAND CLEARED\nAT PERRY SIDING\n(Special to The Dally Nows.)\nPERKY SIDING, B. C\u201e Nov. 7.\u2014A\ngood deal of progress has been made\nin clearing land in this locality. Mr.\nSehonberg's big tract of 12 acres Is\npractically finished while others who\nhave cleared are Messrs. Costlund,\nGraham, Paterson, Stevens and Hamilton. Many new houses and additions\nto others have been made this past\nsummer and fall, while a number of\nbarns have also been built.\nA small committee has been formed\nto collect subscriptions for a public\nhail which it is hoped will be built\nthis winter.\nA very successful dance and concert\nwus held at Appledale on Thanksgiving day and a whist drive was held\non Monday last between Perry's and\nAppledale, the, latter winning. Perry's\nwas represented by Mr. and Mrs. Bird,\nMr. anil Mrs. Dawney, Messrs. Paterson and Hamilton.\nFrank Bcntley arrived home on\nTuesday from the Dundee mine at\nYmir.\nDeer are plentiful in the district\nand hunters are getting good sport.\nM. Nixon had the misfortune to\nhave a young cow killed on the railway track on Saturday night by the\ntrain from Nelson.\nMr. Hamilton had his rooster killed\non Monday by the train from Sloean,\nthe body of which mysteriously disappeared, the head only remaining to tell\nthe tale.\nBRAKEMAN KILLED\n(By Dally News Leaded Wire.)\nMACLEOD, Alta:., Nov. 7.\u2014William\nMurphyi 27 years old, single, of Macleod, a brakeman on the Canadian Pacific railway, was run over and killed\nby a freight train ln the yardB this\nmorning.\nDaily New* Want Adi. get results.\n':, \u25a0 r,r,\u2014~\u2014*r--tv 1 :-PMfi.^\\v.V<\/.\nKdtitenat) and Boundary\n'Mi ifi, 1 '\u2014        '        ' r.    '   \\\nCLEARING AT\nLOCKHART CREEK\nWork*Will-Be Pushed During Winter\n---'Last Pile Driven on Boswell\n...\".   . .      -'-    ..   Wharf.\n(Special to Tl.e Daily News.)   ,.\nBOSWEI\/L, Ii. C, Nov. 7.\u2014A gang\nof men have started clearing und road\nmaklngkoperations on the government\ntownsite atLockhart Creek, more fa-\nmiliarly known as Davie. The work\nwill be pushed .diirinf;; the winter and\nthe lots Will'.probably be sold in the\nspring by public auction.\nThe last pile of the new Boswell\nwharf was driven yesterday. The men\nwill be laid off for a day or two as\npart of the lumber needed for the completion of the work was destroyed in\nthe Proctor sawmill lire last week.   :\nIn place of a proposed evening picnic to Goat Creek to celebrate the\nKlfth appropriately with a bonfire,\nwhich owing to the weather was impracticable, Mrs, A. K. Wilson gave\nan impromptu social. Card games and\nmusic were thoroughly enjoyed by\nthose present.\nDancing classes are now held fortnightly under tho auspices of the Bos'-\nwell Social club. At the iast held on\nSaturday, D. B. Crowther gave un\nceedingly clevei' impersonation of\ngii't,. many bein*,' entirely deceived as\nto his identity until well on in the evening.\nS. J.' Cummings lias built another\nhouse at Goat Creek; this brings his\ncollection up to live.\nA. Kennedy has secured -some of the\nGold Coin potatoes which took first\nprize at Lethbridge last week. These\nlie will use for seed in the spring.\nRipe sour cherries were picked yesterday ,at   Aqua   Vista   ranch.     They\nwere in perfect condition und had\nsplendid  flavor.\nJoe Noel of Sirdar and J. Williams\nof Creston, have gone on a short hunting trip up La  France creek.\nS. Simpson has returned from a\nweek's duck shooting at Kootenay\nLanding. He reports that sport is not\nvery good as the birds are exceptionally shy.'\nW.-Tangye has returned from Lethbridge and Is now busily engaged\nmaking alterations lo his house.\nChurch services will be held on Sunday 1n the school house at 10:30 a. m.\nRev. John A. Mahood of Queens Bay\nwill officiate.\nWINTER SEASON\nBEGINS AT HALYCON\nScenery of Arrow Lakes Now at Best-\nElectric Light at Hot Springs\n'hotel.    \/\n'\u25a0 -'\u25a0'mpetlaf't'b'-T'n-* baito^e&'r   '\nHALCYON, B.'C:, Nov. 7.-Now that\ntiie mountain tops are again snow clad,\nvisitors to the northern portion of the\nArrow lakes district arc afforded an opportunity on fine' days, and most davs\nare. reasonably fine, of viewing scenic\neffects which It would be hard to surpass and the beauty of which no one\nwho bus not setirt it can even imagine.\nSome particularly fine effects are sci-ri\n011 Mount Halcyon, across the lako from\nhere, bin other peaks and mountains are\nalso worthy nf treatment bv a master-\nband in' description by a word painter.\nThe view alone the Arrow lakes, particularly the northern portion, is magnificent ia summer, but nothing seen at\nthat sen^.n c*.-, n ronipau* with the views\nwhlcl. the late fall and the early winter\npresent, a trip up the Arrow lakes at\nthis time of the year Is worth any person's time,\nAt the Hot Springs hotel preparations\nan* bein*,' made for tbe coming winter,\nwhich Is it^ busiest season, people coming from far and near to secure tbe\nbenefits of Die v.underfill qualities of the\nwater bete und at tl.e same time enfov\ntbe comparatively mild weather which\nprevails all the year.\nla pfcparatlim fpr the winter business,\nWilliam BOyd, the proprietor, has Installed  an   electric  llghtin**-  systetri   and\nicpects shortly   to   have  the  hotel   and\nther buildings at Halcyon lighted In\nthat way. In fact, part of the hotel is\nalready bo lighted and the remainder\nwill be as soon as the necessary wiring,\netc., is completed! The electric light\nmakes a wonderful Improvement.\nJoe, the pet bear, wheih. Is part and\nparcel of tl.e hotel livestock, is preparing\nto hibernate for the winter. When he\nillf:ii]iiH-ui-s f0[. ],jH long sleep one of t(ie\nattractions of the hotel will, for the time\nbeing, have disappeared.\nAmong those registered at tho sanitarium for tl,,. p\u00bbst week or so are; D.\nMi'I'onabl, Mrs. K. G. and Mrs. A. Mc-\nRale, F. Robinson, H. C. Laugblan, J.\nWalker, C. Xewson, P. Wade and wlfo,\nMcltae, Mr, and Mrs. 13. Edwards\nand dau 1;I.ter and R. E. Allen of Revelstoke; Mr. and Mrs. Roy Sweney of\nKelnwna. H. D. Tattrle, M. L. Williams,\nTrail; Xell McKay, C. D. Goepel, J. IT.\nMi'Lnchiiwi, Victoria: Mr. and Mrs. 0,\nShook, Comaplix; Giis Olson, Summit\nLake; R. A. Larton and Mrs. F. M. and\nMrs, A. Gordon. Vernon: John Burns,\nF. P. 'Mantlev, Miss B. Wade, Miss II.\nWinter, C. p. McHardy, W. G. Foster,\nNelson; Mr. and Mrs. A. Carlson and\nchildren, s. Jackson, Mr. and Mrs. D.\nD. Home and children, Miss Munroe, W,\nH. D. Horne, O. Moe, M. Solum, Nakusp; Mrs. Mills nnd children, Fernie;\nJ, W. Gralmm, Sienmons: T. Sloan,\nKiimlof)])**; T. Waly, Calgary; Colin\nCaineron, Golden: John Boyd, Anaconda,\nMont.; Capt. M. P. Reid, Okanagan\nLanding; T. Work, Phoenix; J. T.\nBrooks, J. T. Griffiths, Alex Lucas,\nVancouver; Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Hughes'.\nRdgewooil; P. Le Bourdals. Clinton; M.\nMa!in:--ki. Greenwood; J. T. McNaught,\nNorth Vancouver; H. T. Goodeve, F. W.\nPretty, Hossland; Mrs. T. Moodie, Edmonton; A. Miller, Graham's Landing;\n.1. Gillick, Armstrong.\nPHOENIX   NOTES.\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nPHOENIX. B. C., Nov. 7.\u2014Mrs. P.\nBrine is visiting friends in Spokane.\nDaniel Rankin returned to town after a trip to tho east.\nJoseph Slrutzcl,'accountant for the\nGranby company, returned from Spokane on Saturday.\nMrs. A. D. McKenzle is on a month\/3\nvisit to Vancouver 'nnd New \"Westminster.\nMiss Etta Murray is visiting her\nsister at Hilllard, WaBh., for a few\ndays.\nEdward J. Sullivan of Toronto, \u25a0returned east on Tuesday.\nMrs. William Hower with her mother, Mrs. Dawson, who, has been visiting at Hilllard, Wash,, returned to\ntown on Monday.\nMr. ami Mrs. H; Mi Lai*, who haife.\nbeen spending 'thfctr wedding tour on\nthe coaal, retnrnea to'l'oWn last cveh*\nIng, .' ':  *\u25a0\nMrs, E, E. Campbell and childi'eii re\nturned from the east on Friday. Mr,.\nCampbell met the party at Nclsbh* aWd\nreturned  with  them.\nMr. Hayhiirst is clearing out the\nstock of C. IH, Edwards! furniture establishment, or\nE. .P. Sealo of the Granby, companyls\nmining staff at Anyax, \"aobse Bay\nwus in town for a duy last week.\nC. F. Edwards is moving to the coast\nshortly.\nSamuel Matthews has sold his block\nand store here and is leaving shortly\nfor Medicine Hat, Alta..\nHELP WANTED,\nNELSON    EMPLOYMENT   AGENCY\nF. A. Newell, Manager.\nHELP OF ALL KINDS\nPROMPTLY FURNISHED.\nPROCTOR NOTES   ;\n(Special to Tho Dailv News.)\nPROCTOR, B. C\u201e Nov. 7.\u2014The Proctor Ladies' aid will hold a sale of\nwork on Tuesday, Dec. 10. The articles for sale will be of such a nature\nas to be suitable for Christmas gifts.\nThe sale will bo held in the Proctor\nhall and will occupy the afternoon aha\nevening. A special feature will he a\nsupper served from 5 p. in. to 7 p.,m,'\nA similar sale was held last year and\nwas a great -success. The ladies look\nforward to even a greater success this\nyear.\nMrs. A. G. Gallup and Mrs. T. Bea^i\nwere visitors to Nelson on Tuesday of\nthis week, _ >,\nArchie Walton and N. Nickershi*i\nleft on Sunday morning for Yahk\nJunction on a hunting expedition.\nThey expect to remain away a week\nor 10 days.\nCaptain Cogle of the tug Oiido*,\nsilent Sunday at his home here, ulsd\nT.Hilsie.\nMr. and Mrs. M. MeKinnon are receiving congratillations\" on the' arrival\nof a young daughter at their home,\nNov, e.\nCRESTON   NOTES\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nCRESTON, B. O., Nov. 7-.\u2014Considerable interest was shown here In the\npresidential elet'tlqh returns, both hotels malting lhe necessary arrangements for the  bulletin service.\nA masquenuie ball was given in the\nMercantile hall by the local Orange\nlodge, which was pronounced a huge\nsuccess. There would have been many\nmore present had the weather been\nfine. Mrs, S. Poole won the ladies*\nfirst prize, being dressed as a witch,\nW, A. McBean won the gentleman's\nprize as an earl, and Mrs, J. M. Barton\nwon the ladies' comic prize, being\ndressed as a squaw.\nThe Ladies' Aid of the Methodist\nchurch gave a dinner nnd concert in\nthe Mercantile hall last Monday night\nwhich was In every way a great success.   They cleared over $70.\nMr. Jolliffe of Cranbrook bought a\ncar of cattle and hogs here this week.\nC. W. Lester of Nelson is now here\nand intends shipping two curs of stock\nto Nelson.\nMrs. T. H. Hickey left for Nelson.\nT. Harris left for, .Nelson yesterday.\nDarty tt4WB-tomuAi__:,k.&lrieim:\nPOULTRY ANO LIVE STOCK\nFOR SALE\u2014Huff Orpington cockerels, $3\n'h. J. J. Wilson, Harrop, B.C,   *l72-tl\nFOR SALIO-I'ullets,    first    cross;    also\nAncona   cockerel.    Miss   Peacock,   131!)\nKootenay street. *I7G-'l\nFOR SALE-Good   cow,   due    to    calve\nabout Dee. 23.   Apply Gus Hout, Craw-\nford Bay. 177-tf.\nFOR SALE-Thoroughbred  Irish  Terrier\npuppies.    For price and particulars ap-\nPb' Fred Wallace, Rossland, B.C.     *177-H\nIMPERIAL DEVELOPMENT SYNDH\"\nCATE, LIMITED.\nNotice Is hereby given that, under\nautl.ority conferred by Sections 2fl to \"JI\nhu'lusive. of the Articles of Association\nof the Syndicate, and on resolution of\ntlie board of directors, duly passed on\n5th November, 1912, tliu following .shares\nare declared forfeited for ium-pavmeiit\nor calls and become the property of the\nSyndicate:\nSharfl No.   25\u2014E. A.  Crease.\nShare No.   GO\u2014George  E.  Full.\nShare No. I33-Geort*e  E,  Full.\nShare No.   9<\u2014T.  Taffonl  Wynne.\nShare No. 10*5\u2014John A.  Turner.\nShare No. 111?\u2014James   E.   Annable.\nShare No.   M-Charles H.  Sttlwell.\nShare No.   27\u2014J.  J.  Malone,   In  trust.\nShare No. 127\u2014E.  A.  Crease,  In  trust.\nShare No.   35\u2014J. G. Gordon.\nShare No.   74\u2014George  P.   Wells.\nShare No.   SS-George  P.  Wells.\nShare No. H7\u2014Georse  P.   Wells.\nShares No. II*\u2014Migbton   &   Cavatiniigh.\nTho Syndicate are open to receive\ntenders for the purchase of the above\nshares, either singly or en bloc, up to\nand Including  the 30th  November,  1912.\nTenders are to be addressed to the\nSecretary, Imperial Development Sndl-\ncate,  Limited,   Nelson,   B.C..\nHighest or any tender not necessarily\nnccepted.\nBy Order, W, C. Bayly,\nSecretary.\nNovember Cth, 1012. 177-3\nNOTICE.\nTo Whom It May Concern:\nNotice having. appeared in the press\nof tho issuance of a writ by this company against Tbe ' Cnnadian Tungsten\nLamp company of Hamilton, Ont., for\nInfringement of our patents on incandescent tumps having a drawn wire\nTungsten filament, we desire to notify\nlamp buyers that this writ has now boon\nwithdrawn as The Canadian Tungsten\nLamp company have obtained from us\na license to manufacture and sell incandescent lamv*s having a Tungsten filament of drawn wlro.     \\\nCANADIAN   GENERAL   ELECTRIC\nCOMPANY,  LIMITED.\n177-1\nKOOTENAY LODGE No. 16, I.O.O.F.-\nMeets every Monflay night in opa-\nfellows' hall at 7:30 o'clock.\nQUEEN CITY REBEKAH LOLv-1!;\nNo. 1G, I.O.O.F., meets first and trtiro\nTuesdays, Oddfellows' hall, 7:30 o'clock.\nNELSON ENCAMPMENT NO*.' 7, LU.\nO.F., meets second and fourth Thursdays In Oddfcli.vA's' hall at 7:30 o'clock,\nCANTON CORONa NO. 7 meets every\nsecond Tuesday In Oddfellows' hall at\n8 o'clock.\nNELSON'S QUEEN No, Ml. 8. O. _$.-\nM\u00abets 1st and 3rd Monday, K. of P\nnull    w.   r.   Camolon,  Sflereurr\nKNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS MEET EVERY\nTuesday night In K. of P. hall, Eagle\nbuilding.\nL0.0.MJ\nNelson lodgo No. 815,\nmeets   2nd   and   4th\nThursday at 8 p.m.,\nJn Basle hall.\n8. THORHE*.' Diet;   'Q. HORSTEAD, Sec.\n. Nelaon Aerie ,I*Jo. '.%% meeta\n2nd', and 4th Wednesdays in\nEagle -Hail,     . '\nTHE     WORKINGMEN'S     EMPLOYMENT AGE.NCYt\nWANTED-30 men for railway grading,\nship Friday or Saturday, If secured by\ntliat .time, fares advanced. Look this up\nearly. 10 all round bushmen, work all\nwinter, big drive In spring, fares advanced, ship Tuesday, Nov. 13; 30 all\nround bushmen, local camps; tie makers;\ndonkey engineer; carpenters; waltrct-s,\nMB;' mill men, ouartz.\nW. Parker,  312 Baker street,  Phone. 283.\nWANTED\u2014MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED~Aft opportunity for a live\nman, selling our guaranteed Yakima\nValley grown nursery stock. Exclusive\n\u25a0territory. Outfit free. Cash weekly.\n\"HustleiV not experience required, Top-\npenlsh   Nursery   Co.,. Tbppenlsh,   Wash.\nWANTED-Clean    cotton    rags.     Apply\nThe Daily News. W-ti\nWANTED\u2014Two licensed  engineers, steam\nplants.   Golden   Zinc   mine.    Write   or\nwire C. H. Brooks, Hedley, B.C.     lbS-tf.\nWANTED\u2014Logs or shingle bolts. Nelson\nShingle Mill. 158-tf.\nWANTED\u2014Dry   goodB   salesman,   thoroughly competent, of good appearance\nand a   hustler.     Apply   Hudson's   Bay\nStore, city, 161-lf.\nIF IN NEED of lathers drop a card tu\nLather.    P. O. Box (KB, Nelson, B.C.'\n\u2666i&Hr\nWANTED\u2014Engagements for evenings its\nlady pianist.   Box IM, city. \u2022106-12\nWANTED\u2014Young   lady    wants   position\nwith   private  family,  or  work  by  tlie\nday.    First  class cook  and   best refer-\nenegfl.   Apply Box 408, city. '171-6\nWANTED\u2014Girl   for   general   housework.\nApply 622 Mill street. 171-tf.\nWANTED\u2014A good general servant.   Apply    to    Mrs.   W.   Waldle,  S01   Stanley\nLlFiUlt SJITO.P\nWANTED\u2014By   young  lady,   position   as\nstenographer.   Apply Box 7!\u00ab;,  Nelson.\n\u2022172-6\nWANTED\u2014A   root   pulper.      Apply   Box\n698, city.   . \u25a0    *173-0\nWANTED \u2014 Peterborp rowing     canoe,\nsingle scull  preferred. State age, pride\nond where  to bo seen. H.   B.   Wilson.\nProctor, B.C. *i]--'t\nHOTEI\u00a3jlIKDCTOl\nSHERBROOKE HOTEL\nNelaon, B. C.\nOne minute's walk from C. P. R.1\ntion.    Cuisine  unexcelled;   well  b|\nand ventilated.\n-LAVIGNE  &  DUNK*.,\n;.. ..'PHOENIX\nHOTEL BROOKLYN, PHOENIX. I\nThe only up-to-date hotel in Phi\nNew from cellar to. roof. Best el\nrooms In the Boundary, Bath rbcf\nconnection. Steam heat Opposite f\nNorthern depot. .James Marshall, I\nCASTLEGAR\n\"HOTEL CASTLEGAR,\". \u00a3ASTLli\nJunction. All modern. Excellent adL\nmodatton for tourists and drumfl\nBoundary train leaves here at 9.101\nRossland-Ne]son train stops for bl\nfast and dinner,   . \u25a0\nW. H, Gage, Proprietor.\nST. FRANCIS HOTEL, VANCOUl\nB.C.\u2014Directly opposite the new CT\nmillion dollar depot\u2014The Royal \u2014\nof Vancouver. Catering to fafl\ntourist, and commercial trade. I\nprising accommodations. A re]\nhouse of unusual excellence. It's!\ntral position gives Its patrons ttitl\nvantage of nearness to shops, chufl\nand theatres. Personal manage**!\nFree bus. Tariff $2.60 and |3|\nMacka*\/. proprietor-\nBusiness Direct-on\n^^SSAYERs\"\nE.   W.   WIDDOWSON,   ASSAYER\nChemist,    Box    AU08,    Nelson,   I\nCharges:   Gold, silver, copper orl\nII   each;  gold-silver,   (1.50:   sllver-l\nM.m     Other riietnls  on  apnlinntlni*l\nAUCTIONEERS\nC. A. WATERMAN & OO'.'-P.O. BcJ\nNELSON   AUCTION.   MART-W . d\nLER, licensed auctioneer.   Auction!\nsales rooms,   m Ward street, Photfl\n      ll\nWHOLESALE   PRODUCE\nA. 8.  HORSWILL & CO-WHOLES|\nImporters and Manufacturers' AsT\nProduce, Fruits, Flour and Feed.\nBox fri, Nelson, B.C.   Phone ia.\nWANT E D \u2014 Experienced    dressmaker\nwishes  sewing  by the day.     Call 810\nVernon street. *]\"' \"\n\\yANTED\u2014Girl   for  general   housework.\nApply Mrs;  R.  \\V.  Drew,  corner Silica\nand Hall. \u2022174-6\nWANTED\u2014Ono  good  milch   cow.    Stati\nwhen last  freshened.    Peter Lain,  Box\n662 Nelson. '175-6\nWANTED\u2014General  servant   for  family;\nmust be food plain cook.    Steady employment,   good   wages,    Apply  Mis.   G.\nG. Jewell,   Hanbury.  B.C. *t70rB\nWANTE1 '-General    help    from   8   to   3\ndaily.    Must   be   competent,   1122  .Stanley street. 176-tf.\nWANTED\u2014At   onee-eompeteiit   girl   for\ngeneral housework, small family. Write\n_r   phone   Mrs.   M.   H.   Sullivan,   Trail,\nB.C. 177-6\nWANTED\u2014To   rent   a   typewriter,   with\noption to purchase.    Box S.   S., Dally\nNews. 177-6\nFOR 8ALE,\nFOR SALE\u2014Cluap. 120 acres In famoJs\nPend d'Oreille valley, near Waneta;\nclose to government higmvay; large\nproportion ready for plow, free from\nroots and stones; excellent land; perfect\nClimate^ample..yatec.available; .half arub\nfrom surveyed route of new railway; \u00a3\"0\nper acre for oloc'i, or would sell ln20-acr'-i\nplots. Terms. This is a snap for rancher\nOr investor. P. O. Box 965, Nelson:\n'. BJ-tf,\nFOR SALE\u2014Lumber, la,th, shingles,\nBtts'hes, doors.* Orders eiceedlng PiO delivered free to nny point on lake. Write\nus for quotations. Wattsburg Lumber\nCo., Ltd., Proctor. B.C. 6l-tf.\n\u25a0'OR   SALE\u2014A  set  of   harness.\nNelson  Brewery.\nAnply\nHfi-tf.\nFOR SALE\u201419-foot motor boat, (225, cost\nnew J'iiO; used two seasons; eiishlnmi.\nbrass railing, reverse j-ear, etc. Will lie\nstored free through winter. Terms 10\nright party., Genuine snap. Applv K.\nHenry & Co. 152-tf\nFOR    SALE-WIU    sell    second    grade\nshingles  for  a  short  time  nt (1.90  per\nthousand,   cash.    Nelson   Shingle  Mill.\n15Srtf.\nFOR SALE\u2014Modern four-roomed cottage, stone foundation, two lots, lawn\nand fruit trees. Small cash payment,\nbalance to suit. Apply 313 Robson street,\nor P...O- Box u77. *1G1-U\nFOR SALE-Two 22-foot ers, fully equipped, top, cushions, reverse gear, etc,\nseating for S or 10, 1350. Thea.* boats\nwill not be sold in the spring for less\nthan i'00 each. We guarantee them.\nCost StiiO and (TOO, new. We need the\nCaSh and will give easy terms to responsible parties, stored free dining winter.\nApply K.  Henry & Co. 108-tf.\nFOR SALE\u201413-foot motor boat, (\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0nipped\nwith 10 horsepower engine. Speed 10\nmiles per hour. Been usi-d 12 months.\nIf taken 'at once will sell for J2IW e;ist..\nApplv Box 23P6 Dally News. *lt>S-8\nFOR   SALE-One   upright   Jinks   boiler,\nnew, 12 horse power, with fittings.   A.\nG.  Lambert & Co., Nelson, 171-tf.\nFOR QUICK SALE-Wo nre offering first\nclass apple trees at $12 per 100, two and\nthree year roots, grafted on best French\nerabapple roots, one year body, Grand\nForks Fruit & Nursery compaiiv, Grand\nForks,, B.C. *172-6\nFOR  SALE  CHEAP-BIacksmlth   shop.\nGood    small    town;   or   will   work   on\nshares.   Drawer J., Grand Forks, B.C.\n\u2022173-7\nFOR SALE-Oak  Souvenir  heater;  good\ncondition,   half price.    -118 Mill street.\n\u2022171-6\nFOR SALE\u2014Cottage piano by Westphal,\nBerlin  (Germany), In first class condition.    Can be seen at Robertson's furniture store, or write IIox 671, Nelson.\n\u202217G-G\nFOR SALE-A well built  cabin and two\ncultivated  lots  In   Fairview.    Apply  H.\nBourne,   al.'tlidne  lint, Alta. '177-15\nFOR RENT-Offlcc and living rooms li\nK. W.   C.  block. Baker Btreet,   Apply\nA. Macdonald & Co., wholesale groceis\nFront street. 3-1- r.\nFOR   RENT\u2014Rooms,   with   good   board,\nGOT Carbonate street. 171-tf.\nFOR RENT\u2014Furnished Louse,  813  Robson  street.    Apply 3jB Robson  street.\n  171-0\nFOR     RENT\u2014Furnished     housekeeping\nrooms. Apply Queen Cigar store.   \u00bb-75-6\nFOR RENT\u2014Well furnlsln*-] bouse, winter\nmonths.    Hot water; heated.   Applv 4M\nHoover street,, corner Stanley. 176-tf.\nFOR RENT\u2014Two   roomed   front suite*,\nfurnished for housekeeping.   Over Star-\nland theatre. - 175.6\nFOR RENT-Com for table bedroom, \u25a0without board.   Apply 721 stunlev street.\n,'175-f\nFOR   RENT-One    housekeeping-   suite;\nalso board   ind room. 712 Josephine.\n\u2022177-6\nFOR     RENT\u2014Furnished     housekeeping\nanil bedrooms, 615 Hall street. M77-6\nLOST.\nLOST\u2014Brown Retrieve? pup,' -8 tnOniths\nold. Answer's to naifie of \"Pat.\" iter\nwaTd. y. .Return, \\\\- Vf.' F. Mawdsft-y,\n9i?!liti:i'' oy; \"oti-fy pally Jfaws,c' \u25a0 173:a\nLOHT-Lariw nugget,'wjjrpoch. \u2022 Llbelal\n1 reward ir i'etu**n\u00abd'to Daily. Nows \u2022pf-\n(iw  \u25a0,;. -'.'\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0* ''\u25a0'\u25a0\/.\u2022\u2022..1-,.'.   v\" '*\u25a0 \u25a0\nGROCERIES\nA. MACDONA^D^TaTwHOLE\nGrocers and Provision Merchants. I\nporters of Teas, Coffees, Spices, F\nFruits, Staple and FBJicy Qroc-I\nTobaccos, Cigars, Butter, Eggs, C|\nand Packing House Produce, tl\nand warehouse corner of Front!\nHall streets. P. O. Box 1096.\nphones 28 and 23.\nELECTRICAL SUPPLIES\nJ. H. RINGROSE, 508 STANLEY L\nInstallation of electrical machlrL\ntelephone plants, house wiring. KB\nwork. Supplies carried. Pbone P\nP.  O. Box 155.\t\nGET    IN    LINE\u2014HAVE    YOUR\ndows,    carpets,    chimneys,   stoves L\npipes   attended   to.     Nelson , Vacl\nCleaning company. Phone 19, Box \"T\nPROFESSIONAL CAR!\nGREEN  BROS., BURDEN & Cl\nCivil   Engineers.     Dominion and Bl\ntand Surveyors.\nSurveys   of   Lands,   Mines,   Towns)\nTimber Limits, Etc.\nNelson, 516 Ward streot; A. H. Oil\nMgr. Victoria, 114 Pemberton Bldg.i\nC. Green.'-Ft.-George, Hammond gUr\nF..P.   Burden. ...  ,   .,\na. l. Mcculloch\nHydraulic Engineer\nProvincial  Land Surveyor\nP.  O.  Box 41\n)ffice phone, BSti; residence phone, _\nOffice,  Over McDermid A Mellaril\nBaker Street. Nelson, B. C.\nA. MACNBIL, BARRISTER,. SOLM\ntor, etc. Solicitor for W.F.M., Pell\nBritish Columbia. \"\u25a0\nT.   M.   RIXEN,    AUDITOR   AND\ncountant; insurance.   P. O. Box 1\"\nDR. MARY SWARTZ, PROFESSION.\nMid-Wife; 24 years' practice. Wl\nIn Spokane see Mrs. Mary Swif\nspecialist ia female troubles. Exl\nin confinement cases. Good honiel\npatients. Mrs. Mary Swartz, Gafl\nBlk., 106 Post street, Spokane, Wasl\n154-N(|\nFRENCH AND GERMAN\u2014Miss Clfl\nCrutwell. First class honors, From\ntwo years In Berlin. Greek If desla\n105 Kerr apartments. Phono 237,_\nNOfiCE OF MEETING.\nThe annual meeting of tho Nell\nAgrleulUtral & Industrial associate\nwill be held on Friday evening, Nov. If\"\nat 8 o'clock, in the council chamber, d\naI'd.  EMORY, G.  HORSTEAD,!\nPresident. Beoretar-f1\nLAND  REGISTRY ACT NOTICB\nIn tbo Matter of an Application for L\nIbbuo   of   a   Duplicate   Certificate!\nTitle   to  an   Undivided   One-Fifth!\nLot 11,  Block S7,  Nelson  City.-      \u25a0\nNotice  ib  hereby  given  that  lt  Is  \u25a0\nIntention to Issue,  at tbe expiration |\none   month   after   tbe   first   pnblicatE\nhereof,   a   duplicate   of    tlie    CertlflcfJ\nof Title to the above mentioned  lotP\nthe    name    of    Albert    George    Willi!\nFoster,   which   Certificate   is  dated   f\n21st  of  July,  10*\u00bb3.   and   numbered  2571\nSAMUEL R. ROE.l\nDistrict   Regl3tra|\nNelson,  B.C.,  6th  November,  1912.   f\n- 177-la.*i\nSYNOPSIS OF COAL\nMINING REGULATION\nCoal mining lights of tha -Domlnloiijl\nManitoba, Saskatchewan and AMMJB\nthe Yukon Territory,; the N\u00b0rtfl-w|\nTerritories, and In a portion of,tM||\nvlnce of British Columbia, may be leaf\nfor a term of twenty-one y\u00abn at 1\nannual rental of $1 per acre.. -Not mj\nthan 2.B60 ncroS will- be .leased, to..\u2122\napplicant .      \u2022'  -'    ,'.     J.M\nApplication for a lease must be ma\nby tho applicant In person to tbe AM\nor Sub-Agent of tho district of whi\nthe rlfehts applied  for are situated.. ff\nIn sitrveved territory the land must!\ndescribed by sections, or legal aub-dil\nslons of sections, and In unsurveyed tl\nritory the tract applied for shall f\nstaked out by the applicant himself,!\nEach application miiBt be aocompaml\nby a foe of |5, which will be refunded!\nthe fights applied for are not avallAtl\nbut not otherwise. A royalty shall F\npaid on the merchantable output of tL\nmine at tho rate of five Cents per tfl\nThe person operating- the mine shl\nfurnish the Agent with sworn returns m\ncounting for the full quantity 6f m!\nchantable coal mined and pay the roya\"\nthereon. If the coal mining rights '\nnot being operated, such returns shot!\nbe  furnished at leaBt once a year.'. I\nThe lease will Include ihe coal minfJ\nrights only, but the lessee- may be p!\nmltted to purchase whatever avallaj\nsurfacf rights may be considered nee!\nf-arv for the working of the mine at If\nrate of $10.00 an acre.     ,,,. lti. ,-\nFor full Information application nm\nbo made to the'Socretary of \u25a0the \"Depl\nment of the Interior, Ottawa,: on 'toy*\nAgent or Bub-Agent of DcHTnlnlpj *\"\"\nW. W.T CO     .\nDepuw Minister of th8\u00abnt\u00ab*rt\u00abI\nN.B.4uhauthorlied publication oTM\naarerlllement wiil not bt palfl tt_\\ L\n\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.\u2022\u2022mm\n Cfie $atln $eH>s,\n\/   PAGE SEVEN1\n0\nSTAR GROCERY\n] Directly opposite the Dominion\nExpress Office.\nStore of Quality\n| Sole Agents for Ridgeway's Famous Teas.\nj Agents for \"Egg-O\" Baking\nPowder.\n[Sole Agents for Beech-Nut\nBacon.\nAnother Shipment of\nBEECH NUT\nBACON\n|Th\u00ab bacon with tho nutty flavor.\nSCHEPP'S\nSHREDDED\nCOCOANUT\n30c per lb.\nCHRISTIE'S\nBISCUITS\nFig Bar .,\nSultana\nQueens\nMarshmallow\nArrowroot\nGinger Nuts\nCoronation\nAil 25c per pound.\nSTAR GROCERY\nNELSON\n[Imperial Bank oi\nCanada \\\nEstablished  1876.\n\u25a0 HEAD OFFICE: TORONTO,* ONT.\nCapital  (paid-up)   96,460,000.00\nReserve Fund   6,460,000.00\nD. R. Wiikie, Pres. and Gen*!. Mgr.\n.    Hon.  Robert Jaffray,  Vlee  Pres.\n1 8AVING8 DEPARTMENT\nAn account can be opened with $1\nor more.   Interest is allowed at cur-\n: rent rates from date of opening the\n! account and added to the principal\n\u25a0 twice a year.\nTravellers' cheques and drafts sold,\nnegotiable In all parts of the world.\nBank   money orders   Issued,   payable\n, throughout Canada, the United States\n_   and   Great  Britain  at  the   following\n\u25a0 ' ,-ates:   (5 and under, 3 .cents; over $5\n1   to $10, 6 cents; over 110 to $30, 10 cents;\n\u25a0 over S30 to #0, 15 cents.\niOut of town customers can transact\ntheir banking business by mall and\nare given every attention.\ni Nelson Branch, J. H. D. Benson. Mgr.\nSafety\nDeposit Boxes\nFor Rent\nWills, Title Deeds, Mortgages, Insurance Policies or other valuables,\nwhich are. at present exposed to\nrisk of being destroyed or lost, may\nbe securely lodged in a safety deposit box for a small annual fee.*\nFull Information At\nThe Royal Bank\nof Canada\nNELSON BRANCH\nA. B. NETHERBV, Mgr.\nFor New and up-\nto-date\nElectric\nChandeliers\nwith the pretty\nglassware go to\nJ. H. Ringrose\nElectrical Supplies.\n608 Stanley Street. Phone A227\nIn the Bath Tub\n1^   M\nSwift's\nFertilizers\nOn Hand All the Tear.\nBuy Now.\nIT PAYS TO USE THEM\nWrite for Booklet.\nSwift Canadian\nCo., Ltd.\nNELSON, B. C.\nEight cases for\ncounty court\nSession  This   Month   Promises to  be\nBusy One\u2014Three Wish to Become\nBritish Subjects.\nEight caaes have been set down for\nbearing at the next Bitting of tho county\ncourt of \"Weat Kootenay, which will be\nheld on Nov. 19. There will be three\napplications for naturalisation papers.\nThe applicants are: Olaf Donveld of\nSalmo, Norwegian; Olaf Amundsen, Silverton, Norwegian; Car) Oscar Llndberg,\nNelson, Swede. Those who have already\nbeen examined by a county court judge\nneed not appear but others must be\npresent at court    Caaes set down are:\nH. Johnston' vs A. 8. Maeaulay, |4S1\nfor wages. iTred C. Moffatt for the\nplaintiff and A. ii. Johnson for the defendant.\nD. R. McDougall vs Andrew T, Parke,\n(15.80 for goods sold and delivered. J,\nS. McKay is for the plaintiff and Mr.\nJohnBon la for the defence.\n<3eorge Tomllnson vs W. A. \"Wllklnaon,\n1199, damagea for breach of contract. Mr.\nJohnson la for the plaintiff and Mr.\nMoffatt for tlie defence.\nWilliam Grutchfleld vs the Nelson &\nFort Sheppard railway, 376 damagea for\nthe loss of a cow. \u00a31, A. Crease* is for\ntho plaintiff and Mr. O'Shea represents\nthe railroad.\nSalmo Trading company vs the Sheep\nCreek Summit Gold Mines and A. B.\nDuscltenay, $838 on a bill of exchange.\nMr. O'Shea ia for the plaintiff and Mr.\nJohnson represents the defendant Dusch-\nenay.\nAlbert L. Sllversteln va E. Medcalf,\n$52.05 for goods sold and delivered. E.\nC. Wragge la for the plaintiff and the\ndefendant will appear in person.\nThomas D. Bunco va P. K. Hurry,\n$\u25a010,50 for tho hire of a team. Mr. O'Shea\nIs for the plaintiff and the defendant\nwill appear in person. This is an appeal\nfrom the Judgment of the magistrate of\nthe small d*bts court at Creston which\nwas in favor of the defendant.\nElford Boat Company, Limited vs\nGeorge Leece, $113.58, repairs to a lounch.\nMr. O'Shea is for the plaintiff and Mr.\nWragge for the defendant\nHkWkMt\n\u25a0(frequently lies a lot of dangers to\nThoalth in the family. You cannot be\nI too careful about your bathroom\n\u25a0Plumbing. If doubtful about it at all,\n\u25a0let us advise and help you. We arc\nImpractical Plumbers of long experience,\nI well up in sanitary work of all kinds.\n\u25a0 We do necessary repairs promptly, and\nI wo are known to be very reasonable ln\nBout' charges.\nIE. K. STRACHAN)\nDONALDSON LINE\nThe Scotch Line for the\nScotch People\nLarge new twin screw steamers\nsailing from MONTREAL and\nGLASGOW every SATURDAY, carrying One Class Cabin and Third\nClass passengers.\nCHRISTMAS EXCURSIONS\nsail from ST. JOHN, N. B-, DEC.\n12th and 19th.   LOWEST RATES,\nUP-TO-DATE SERVICE.\nReserve your accommodations\nnow and secure the best. It costs\nno more.\nApply to\nD. Smeaton, G.T.A., C.P.R.\nor H. E. LIDMAN, General Agent,\n445 Main Street, Winnipeg.\nPhone M-5312.\nStandard Furniture\n=Company=\nC. J. CARLSON, Undertaker\nUndertakers Efobalmere\nand Funeral Directors\nThe finest and most up to date\nundertaking parlors and chapel ln\nInterior of B.C. Lady attendant for\nwomen ahd children.\nDay  Phone 86\n(Night Phones 262 and L64\n\"Should Auld Acquaint\nance Be Forgot?\"\nOne of the most appropriate and at\nthe samo time convenient ways of re\nmemberlng Vour friends during the approaching holiday season Is by sending\nou1,\nA Personal\nChristmas Card\nWc have a beautiful assortment on\n.w!i ich wo can print your name and any\ngreeting you may desire.\nSeo our samples.\nThe Daily News Job Department\nTHE EFFICIENCY OF A\nWANT ADI\nTry tlio Wants in mec:infr corrHttuns\ntliat demand Instant attention in buy\niiij:. selling, renting, exchanging and\nVi:.-.ng.\nWANTS ARE EFFECTUAL.\nThe B. C. Assay and\nChemical Supply Co.\nLimited\nSupply complete equipment for\nAssay Offices and Laboratories, Chemical and Physical apparatus for\nSchools and Colleges.\nAgents in B. C. for the \"KELLER\"\nAssay balance.\n613 Pender St. Vancouver, B, C\n\u2022   Mr.MOR'ftNb-JM\nLIT   VS    LOAN\n,   'VOU    MONEY\nI To Buy or Build  House.\nx P.y Off Mort\u00ab.\u00abc*\nC CAN\u00bbW\u00bb.N HOME ((lyjSTMINT WmUtT\n5%\n.-Z___\\\nWood Vall.no. Block. Phon. 175\nNelBon. B. C.\nTHORPE'S\nDRINKS\n(BAKER STREET\nNELSON1\n.i^org^\nALLREADYFOR\nTHCtLEANING\nGILLHTS\nmt\\t(__m_\\\ncording to the president's ruling a\nmeeting of the rowing club executive\nwas held and the offer was turned\ndown. The club thinks that 'the rule\ndrafted out by the league last August\nshould be abided by. This will probably mean that the game will be post*\nponed and likely that the oarsmen will\nlose the championship of western Canada by default.\nNELSON NEWS OF HE DAY\nAndrew Sutherland, provincial boiler\nInspector, spent yesterday in Trail.\nfit. Saviour's church annual turkey\ndinner will take place in Eagle hall on\nNov. 20.\nConstable Robert Reid was not sufficiently recovered to assume his duties\nyesterday and John Berry is acting as\na special constable.\nThe city yesterdav commenced the construction of the retaining wall In the\nalley between the Madden house and the\nAnnable block where a fill Is to be\nmado,\nTomorrow's classes at the Y.M.C.A.\nare aB follows: 4 to 5 o'clock, senior\nschool; 5.15 to 6 o'clock, professional\nmen; 7 to 8 o'clock, employed boys; 8:16\nto 10 o'clock, young men.\nJudge Porln will not reach Nelson from\ntho coast until Tuesday evening, according to advices received yeBterday, and\nconsequently there will be no chambers\nsession on Monday morning.\nThe annual meeting of tho Nelson Argl-\nculturot & Industrial association will be\nheld this evening at 8 o'clock In the\noouncll chamber of the city hall. Reports for the past year will be presented\nand officers will be elected.\nM. S. Middleton, assistant provincial\nhorticultural 1st, Is expected to return\nfrom Victoria tonight or tomorrow. He\nwill leave almost Immediately for the\nChicago land show where the provincial\ngovernment is to make an -exhibit,.\nIntending competitors In the Y.M.C.A.\nswimming gala on Wednesday next are\nadvised to get all available practice\nduring this week as tho dooI will not be\nopen for use during Monday and Tuesday of next week,\nCar service on the street railway was\ndelayed for over half an hour yesterday\nwhen the trolly wire wos severed at the\ncorner of Victoria and Stanley streets\nby coming In contact with one of the\ncity power wires.\nM. E. Malone, late travelling passenger agent for the Canadian Pacific railway, with hendquarters at Spokane, who\nhas been appointed to succeed J. A. McDonald as district passenger agent at\nNelson, Ib expected to assume ills new\nduties on Sunday evening.\nAsk or write  for the Hudson's  Bay\ncompany's grocery price list lGl-tf-\nAt the Gem\u2014Edison special feature,\n\"A Man in the Making.\"\nSelect your Holland bulbs nt the Hudson's Bay stores now\u2014before they are\nall gone. 176-tf,\nW. Cutler will hold an auction sale of\nfurniture, crockery, tinware, etc, at 2\np.m. today at the auction room, Word\nstreet. 177-1\nAll children will want to visit the\nVariety Store Holiday opening, which\nwill take plica In a few days. Santa\nClaus will visit our present store as well\nas our new cne and he will bave a free\npresent for all. Watch the paper for\nopening date. 177-1\nWe are sole agents for Malthoid roofing\npapers, the best and cheapest roof you\ncan put on any building. Can sell lt to\nyou in any quantities. We also sell all\nkinds of feed, oyster shell, etc., and\ndon't forget we sell Pantry Queen flour.\nP. O. Box 64. A. S. Horswlll & Co.,\nPhone 121. 162-tf.\nAn important patent suit, commenced\nby tho Canadian General Electric company against The Canadian, Tungsten\nLamp company, lias been withdrawn\nfrom Iho courts, the Canadian Tungsten\nLamp company having arrived at a settlement with the Canadian General Electric company, and secured from that\ncompany a license to manufacture and\nsell drawn wire Tungsten lamps.      177-1\nThomson's toys and dolls will be In\nfull display shortly. Having been bought\nearly in the year, before we had any\nthought of selling out, wc have our\nusual full line of toys. While we always\nshow a strong line In the better cIbbs\nof dolls and toys, we do not overlook or\nneglect the cheaper lines, and our range\nIs very complete In all grades from the\nlowest priced lines up. Prices? As ln\nall other lines, prices are away down.\nRegular 25c and 35c .lines aro marked\ndoSvn to 10c and 16c, and In the higher\npriced lines the reductions are even\ngreater. Whether you buy of us or not,\ndon't fail to see our toys ond prices.\n176-3\nPLANS OF THE HOUSEHOLD.\nWhy not start tho new year In a home\nof your own? Now ia a good time to\nlook over tho realty situation and see\njust what chances are at hand. If you\nore thinking of buying, If tho household\nhas planned some day to own a home\nof Its own\u2014why delay?\nThe first step to to get a list of realty\nopportunities and become thoroughly\nposted as to terms and other facts. The\nquickest way Is to use the Want\nColumns.\nOutline your realty needs In the Wants.\nThe Dally News Want AdB wield a\ntremendous influence In tho buying and\nselling of real estate.\nTURN   DOWN   REGINA'S   DEMAND\n(By \"Dally News Leased Wlro.l\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 7.*~-After receiving the wire from the Regina club this\nmorning as to the guarantee for Regina to come to Winnipeg .for^Snyir-\nday's game with the rowing club, ac-\nSEVERE  SENTENCES  FOR\nRUSSIAN SAILORS\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nSEBASTOPOL, Russia., Nov. 7.\u2014The\nnaval court has sentenced 17 sailors\nto death and 106 to imprisonment for\neight years at hard labor for instfgat\nIng mutiny In the Russian fleet.\nDEMONSTRATIONS\nOF FIELD CROPS\nNew Experimental    Stations on Lines\nSimilar to Demonstration Orchards\n\u2014Boon to  Farmers.\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nVICTORIA, B, C, Nov. 7.\u2014W. E.\nScott, deputy minister of agriculture,\nbefore leaving for Vernon and Chicago tonight, announced that the department was engaged in the preparation\nof a program of demonstration work\nin the growing of .field crops on different ranches in various parts of the\nprovihee on similar lines to the demonstration orchards which are already\ndotted about all over the country and\nfrom the results of which valuable Information is expected. Acreage or\nfarms will be selected which the ranch'\ner will undertake to cultivate according to the instructions of the department throughout the entire rotation\nunder terms to be'i arranged between\n\u25a0the department and himself. In some\ncases the acreage \u25a0.will be divided up\ninto plots to be treated with different\nfertilizers In a similar manner to the\nexperiments carried on the Rotham*\nsted experimental farm In England. In\nthis way the farimirs in each district\nwill have before their eyes the practice of the best methods of cultivation\nand bo able to watch in detail the results gained on land similar to their\nown. The details of this program\nhave yet to be worked out but the\nstep thus taken by tho department\npromises to work Incalculable benefits toward the education of the farmer.\nDYNAMITER WAS\nBUSY IN EAST\nActive    Four     Months     Before    Los\nAngo'es Explosion\u2014Charged With\nHarboring  McNamara.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nINDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Nov. 7.\u2014Four\nmonth's activity on the part of labor\nleaders on thB Pacific coast preceded\ntho falal explosion In Los Angeles, Cal.\naccording to letters and telegrams Introduced by the government at the trial\nof tho 45 accused dynamite plotters today. Prom letters and telegrams read\nto tho jury the government set forth\nthis part of vits contention as follows:\n\"Pour months before the Times\nbuilding was blown up, Eugene a\nClancy, a labor loader in San Fran-\nCisco, who had been Instructed to investigate the labor conditions in Los\nAngeles, telegraphed to John J. Mc\nNumara in Indianapolis: 'Tho fight if\non in Lob Angcle3. We ore going to\nwin.   Send Hockin at once.\"\u00bb\nMcNamara, nfter referring the request to Frank M, Ryan, president of\ntho iron workers union wired Clancy:\n\"Better get a m.in in Los Angeles to\ndo the work. Hockin is too busy in\nth\\i east.\"\nIt was about this time, according to\nOrtle M-aMariigal's confession, that\nHerbert S. Hockin was leader in the\ndynamiting crew.\nJnmes B. McNamara was In Seattle\nand tho government charges Clancy\nmot him there. On August 31 an of-\nficq building under construction In\nSeattle was blown up, At this time\n(1,000 was voted hy the union iron\nworkers executive board to the Calf\nforr.Ia building trades council for uso\ntn promoting the union at Los Angeles.\nA receipt for the amount signed by\nflat A. Tveitmoe, secretary of the\ncouncil was produced.\nJ. B. McNamara, In the meantime,\nvisited San Francisco and later went\nto Los Angeles, whero he blow up the\nTimes building, Oct. 1.\nClancy visited Michael J. Young,\nBoston, another defendant, but according to the telegrams hurried back to\nSan Francisco when he heard 21 people\nhad been killed. The government contend? the correspondence shows that\nMcNamara's mission to the Pacific\n\u25a0coast was known to Clancy, Tveitmoe\nand J, E. Munsey, Salt Lake City, who\nis charged with harboring the dynamiter for two weeks after the explosion.\nTestimony thnt dynamite was taken\nto tho iron workers headquarters in\nIndianapolis to within a few weeks\nbefore the MeNamaras were arrested\nwas glvon by Martin J. Hyland, chief\nof police of Indianapolis. Ho identt\nfied newspapers which had been wrap\npad about four packages of the dynamite. There were newspapers from\nCleveland, Pittsburg and Cincinnati,\nthe latest being dated April 13, 1011.\nNew Coats s New York\nThe very latest wraps in angora, chinchilla and reversiblelblanket cloths, showing\nthe one-sided effects; beautifully cut and trimmed fancy buttons. A few descriptions:\nStylish Novelty Coat\nIn Brown Reversible Blanket Cloth; one side\nrever in contrasting, shade; also deep cuffs. A\nwide detachable belt extends from the rever ovar\nthe hip and fastens at back with *fTfc f) \u25a0>>\u00a5 50\nfancy  buttons. Price  only. '\n;$27!\nElegant Coat\nIn light weight Blanket Cloth with side rever,\nand round collar of reversed material in green'\nwith red stripe; large buttons and button holes\ncarried out in two shades, fastening over to side.\nOne of this season's novelties. 4S-*f\\ f_% flQ\nPrice   only\t\n$25\nFurs Moderately\nPriced\nNATURAL MINK STOLE\u2014Long ends; trimmed paws and tails;\nrichly  lined.    Price  only $100.00\nPILLOW MUFF TO MATCH\u2014Finished with heavy cords. Price\nonly     $85.00\nPOINTED FOX STOLE\u2014Large, fancy shape, with heads a?id natural brush tails; lined with satin.   Price only $57.50\nEXTRA LARGE MUFF TO MATCH\u2014With brush tails and heads;\nbeautifully lined and finished with cords. Price\nonly    $50.00\nHANDSOME THROW-OVER STOLE\u2014In fine quality Hudson Seal;\nlined grey satin.    Price only   $25.00\nLARGE PILLOW   MUFF TO  MATCH\u2014Price only $17,50\nCHILD'S WHITE HARE SET\u2014Round collar effect and lined white\nsatin;  muff to match.    Price only  $3.95 Set\nCHILD'S WHITE THIBET SET\u2014Narrow stole and large muff;\nlined white satin.    Price only $4.95 Set\nThe Hudson's Bay Company\nJ      Incorporated 1670\nIncorporated 1670\nHORRlBLgSCENE,\ni.liAT TRAIN WRECK\nStockman and Cattle Are Mangled and\nBurned\u2014Freight     Trains\nCollide.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nBRANDON, Man., Nov. 7.\u2014As a result of a rear-end freight collision here\ntonight a stockman, whose name is\nat present unknown, and a number of\nanimals in a cattle truck met a most\nhorrible deatbt.At about-'8c30*a. freight\ntrain was standing: in the west yards,\nnear Eighteenth street, while the engine waa being attended to for some\nslight repairs. Meanwhile, two other\nfreight trains, one westbound and the\nother caslbounci, were approaching. A\ncloud of steam from the westbound is\nsaid to have obscured the view of the\n.driver of the eastbound, with the result that the driver ran Into the caboose of the stationary train. According to**the statement made to Coroner\nMoore the engine was only proceeding\nat walking pace, but be that as it may,\ntbo caboose was piled bodily on the\ntop of the engine, which plowed Its\nway on Into u carload of cattle. The\nwreckage caught Eire and soon the\nscene was one ol! horror. While the\nfire brigade fought the flames the\ngroana and shrieks of half-mutilated\nanimals could be heard, and It wns\nknown that the stockman was missing.\nA search was made and his mangled\nand charred body was found an hour\nlater. Many of tbe animals were\nslaughtered as they were reached.\nPLEDGE  SIGNING  CAMPAIGN\nFOR  TEMPERANCE  SUNDAY\n(Bv Dally News Leased Wire.)\nTORONTO, Nov. 7.\u2014Sunday next is\nto be celebrated as temperance day\nthroughout tlie world and In connection with its observance the Methodists of the Dominion .-have planned a\ngreat pledge signing campaign.    It Is\nproposed to distribute pledge cards-_ to\nall Sunday schools, Epworth leagues\nand other organizations of the church.\nThis pledge is five fold in Its scope\nand tho signer to abstain from intoxicants, tobacco and bad language and\nto avoid impurity and tho reading of\nImmoral books.\nTo Get White Swan Yeast Cakes.\nIf yon can't gelt \"White Swan Yeast\nCakes from your grocer, send your\nname and address, and we will send\nfree sample of White Swan Yeast\nCakes and tell what grocer In your\ntown keeps it. White Swan Spices &\nCereals, Limited, Toronto, Ont.\nTEN  MILLION  DOLLARS\nTORONTO EXPENDITURE\n(By Dally News Leased Wire,) \u25a0\nTORONTO, Nov. 7.\u2014Tho by-laws\nwhich it is proposed to submit to Tor\nonto ratepayers in January will call\nfor an expenditure of about ?10,500,000.\nThey include the following amounts:\nScarborough water supply $6,000,000;\nBloor street viaduct, $2,500,000; garbage  disposal,   $09,000;   storm  sewers,\n$9r.c,ooo.\nFILTRATION PLANT ADEQUATE.\n(By Dally News LeaHed Wire.)\nTORONTO, Nov. 7.\u2014Judge Winchester, who conducted an investigation into complaints made by several\naldermen, reported that the filtration\nplant at the island Is not defective and\nis doing its work admirably.\nEMBARGO PLACED ON\nCHRISTMAS TREES\n(By Dailv News Leased Wire.)\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 7.\u2014The department ot agriculture today placed\nan embargo upon interstate shipment\nof Christmas trees from Maine, New\nHampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut, '\"because of\nbrown tail moths. The quarantine becomes effective Nov. 25 and also affects the shipment of decorative plants\nsuch as holly and laurel.\nDIARY OF\nQUEEN VICTORIA\nKing   George    Prefers    Kensington  to\nBuckingham Palace\u2014Queen's Courtship   of   Prince   Albert.\n(By Dally Nbws Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Nov. 7.\u2122The journal of\nQueen Victoria's life, bused upon her\ndiary and edited by Lord Esher, published today, contains tho statement\nthat King George would like to abandon grimy looking Buckingham palace\nfor Kensington palace, the home of his\ngrandmother, but In interviews with\nleading publicists and architects, the\nDaily Express proves that public sentiment is against the proposed change,\nso the King will have to be content\nwith a new front of Portland stone\nto make the homely pile presentable.\nThe diary is full of naive admissions.\nIt tells of the Queen's admiration for\nTaglionl, her dislike for Kemble as a\nranter, and her objection to ancient\nhistory, Latin and Bible lessons, and\nends with a description by the Queen\nof how she courted Prince Albert, who\nwas ''so beautiful, with lovely blue\neyes, broad shoulders and fine wrist\/'\nand tells how, when he accepted, they\nembraced, and ends by describing her\nwedding morning, when she says: \"I\nwore an orange wreath like all brides,\nand after the ceremony bade farewell\nto mamma and drove off with Albert\nall alone.\"\nSHOT BY  GIRL.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nKINGSTON, Ont., Nov. 7.\u2014John\nCampbell was accidentally shot today\na: Canonto, four miles from Folgar.\nLizzie Scales, while handling a shotgun, accidentally touched the\/trigger\nand the gun was exploded, the charge\nentering Campbell's head killing him\ninstantly. Campbell had told tho girl\nthat the gun was harmless as ho had\nunloaded it.\nYour Appetite Calls\nfor food that not only pleases the palate but contains\ntrue nourishment for rebuilding daily the tissue cells\nused up by physical and mental activity.\nCrape-Nuts\nFOOD\nCombines fascinating flavour and the rich, sturdy nutrition of the food grains-\nwheat and barley.\nThis delicious food needs no cooking. It is ready for use direct from the\npackage, and makes an] easily digested, toothsome dish of decidedly unique\nflavour, welcome alike to athlete, brain-worker and invalid.\n\"There's a Reason\" for GRAPE-NUTS\nMado by Canadian Postnm Cereal Co., Ltd., Pure Food Factories, Windsor, Ont.\n PACE  EIGHT\n%fy Bail? J&rtiBs.\nFRI DAY \".'.     ...   NOVEMBER 81\nKELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\nA.  S.   Maeaulay  of Silverton is at tlie\nR.  C. Inglis and 11. J.  Inglis or Crawford Bay are &l tb\u00ab Hume,\nM. S. Davys came in from New Den-\nved last nlg'.it and is ut the Strathcona.\nMr. and Mrs. h. F. Langford of Kootenay Bay arc registered at the Strathcona.\nJames Tagg of Victoria, orgunUer for\ntlio Ancient Order ot Foresters, is staying at the lli-ruc.\nCapt\nin on  _\nat the Strathcona\nArmstrong of Golden came\nin on  the  euuat  train  last  night and  is\nC. O. Westhead has sold his house\nboat \"Ivy\" to Alan Coomber of Doswell,\nThe prlee  was *2,200.\nE. V. Buckley, manager of the Quren\nmine at Salmo, came In last night anil\nis a guest at  the Hume.\nGeorge Ferguson left this morning for\nCreston from which point lie will bring\nin a carload of horses.\nH. W. Bradell, the new proprietor of\ntho Royal hotel, arrived last night on\nthe Crow boat from Gilbert Plains, Man.\nThe option secured by Charles F.\nLaws of Vancouver on the Queen mine\nat Sheep creek for *-5U,000 will expire on\nNov. 15.\nJohn L. j-tetiillack of Knslo and Oscar\nSpltzer, a mining engineer of Now York,\narrived on fie I'oaRt train last night and\nare guests at tne Hume.\nThere are elfrtit Inches of snow at the\nQueen mine al Lilieep cieek, but none at\nSalmo, accordii ',r to a visitor from Salmo\nwho was in Nelson last night,\nAn excellent portrait of the residence\nof James Johnstone, across the lake, appears in the Cr.nadlan supplement of tbe\nLondon Graph:.; of October 20.\nGeorge B. Bell of Salmo, who has been\ndeveloping   the   Bonanza   mine  at  Sheep\nUnequalled for General  Use\nW. P. TIERNEY, General Sales Agent,\nNelson, B. C.\nCars -shipped to all railway points.\nChest Protectors\nBest red feit, each ..50c and ?fic\nChamois lined, each ...,....$1.00\nRed   felt   vests,   chamois   linad,\neach    t $2.*jQ\nFor Coughs and\nColds\nOur Wild Cherry Spruce anil\nTar Is the best cough syrup, \u00b1:.c\nand 50c a bottle.\nRountrees Throat Pastile, 25c\na box.\nRountrees Menthol and EU31-\nlyptus, 2Ec a box and COc a\npound, also\nRountrees fine English line of\nFruit Flavored Pastile and Gum\n60c a pound.\nMail Orders Filled Promptly.\nWm. Rutherford\nDruggist.\nCROCKERY\nWe have dlnnerware of all kinds\nJn hand, Nine open stock patterns\nto choose from. Make the composition of your set to suit yourself or\nilll up   the   set   you   already   have\nOur China and Semi-Porcelain\nwares are of artistic design and\njalnty decoration.   See them.\nCHINA HALL\nMUNRO & NELSON\nPhono A261\n321 Baker Btreet.      P. O. Box 588\nPlumbing and Heating\nADVICE\nFor Nothing\nCall and see us before you build\nyour bathroom.\nB. C. Plumbing & Heating Co.\nVictoria St., Near Opora House.\nTelephone 181.\nCREAM\nUtility Brand\n2 oz. tins, 10 for J1.00.\nC. A. Benedict\nGrocer\nn'GEM\nSpecial Edison Feature\nA   MAN   IN  THE  MAKING.\nProduced in co-operation with the\nIndustrial Department of the International    committee of the Young\nMen's Christian Association.\nPATHE'S WEEKLY.\nSelig Comedy\nTWO GAY DOGS.\nADMISSION 10c.\nFor Quick\nSale\nFour lots fifty by one hundred\nand twenty feet each, having a\nfrontage of two hundred feet on\nHoover street, and planted with\n300 fruit trees, mostly in bearing,\n'and  500 black currant    bushes.\n,On the lots is erected a plastered\ncottage 20x12 feet with an addition 16x12 feet and basement.\nThe garden should give a return\nof at least $500 next season,\nurn j\nJ\n1    Tho  property   Is  within\nblocks of the car line and is in\nfirst class condition.\n!   Price $3,500\nH. & N. Bird\nNelson, B. C.       f\nThe Store of Low Prices\nSt.   Charles   eream, 20  oz. size, 2     Swift's bacon, 1 lb. for  25o\nfor     25c Shamrock bacon, 1 lb. for .....25o\nSt. Charles cream, family size ..10c     Hams,  per lb 23c\nUtility crenm, 20 oz. size  10c Sodas,    Christies,    McCormfcks    or\nCreamery butter, 2 lbs, for ....76c Mooneys, 2 lb. tins5\/.... 35\u00b0\nTHE UNION GROCERY\nCor.  Hall  and Baker Sts. Phone 176 Nelson, B.C.\nPrlae lists are nut for tlie firth annual\nWiriter show of tlu* Calgary Poultry and\n\u25a0' ' Stock association which will take\nplace from Nov. 2.-'\u00a3_, Entries close on\nNOV.  18.\nB. W. \"Abbott of Spokane atrlvcd in\nNolson last night und expects to leave\ntoday  for   'viiefis  Siding  where  lie  Ih  to\n fharge of the planer at W. C. E.\nKoch's  mill.\nThe Independent Order of Foresters\nwill liold a reunion in Eagle hall tonight\nat 8:80 o'clock for all Foresters, their\nwives and prospective members. The\nlodge will open at 7:*J0 o'clock.\nConstable O Baxter of Cranbrook came\nIn last night 'n charge uf 13. Knnwles,\nSentenced py Stipendiary Magistrate\nRyan to :*lx months In the provincial\nJail for breaking two plate gluHH window.**\nat the Royrl 'hotel In tlie Kast Kootenay\ncity during a drunken spree.\nPtomaine poisoning, believed to have\nboon cad Sod by eating onions which had\nbecome It, nume manner infected, is\ngiven as the nature of Constable Hold's\nserious lllnosji which is expected, according to reoo-ts last night, to prevent\nlilm from returning to duty for probab-\n>cks.\nThe dormitory men of tlio Y.M.C.A.\nmet last night to \u25a0IIbciu-s the advisability\nof organlzin- a dormitory club. The\nmon decided to organize such a club and\nto hold a social supper at least once a\nmouth. An executive committee was appointor! with authority to call other\nmeetings as occasion demanded. The\n.\u25a0jj.TUtiw   con.*-].-i.s   of   Dr.   Mr In tyre.   H.\nNelsoi Opera House\nONE   NIGHT   ONLY.\nMonday, Nov. 11\nUnder Auspices of\nNelson Lodge No. 815 L. O. O. M.\nThe Celebrated\nHERE\nBOWMAN\nMagician and Illusionist\nPrices: Adults, 50c; Children, 25c.\nPlan at Poole's.\nAUCTION SALE\nOF LIVE FOWL,\nTuesday, Nov. 10\u201e at 1:30 p. m. nt\nAuction Rooms, COO Ward street, I will\noffer for sale a lot of live chickens,\netc. Anyone having fowl to dispose of\nkindly send same In by 10 a. m.,\nNov. 18.\nW. CUTLER\nWOVALOID\nBEST QUALITY  RUBBER ROOFING\nThis  Roofing contains no  paper or tar,   is    made  of the  best   materials\nand we guarantee every roll.\nEasily   put  on.    Cement  and  nails   packed   in   each   roll.\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co. Ltd.\nWholesale and Retail\nHAMILTON TORONTO\nNelson B. C.\nVANCOUVCft ' WlNNrPBQ\nli.   Buswcll,  B.  Scott  McGregor,   K.   W.\nClayton and T. W. Fry.\nA. J. v. Venables, who has been with\nthe provincial gove: nment engineers\nwho have been making a hydrography\nsurvey iu connection with the proposed\nri.cliilining of Kootenay flntH, reached\nNelson last night. He will leave on Nov.\nIff for the old country where he expects\nto spend the winter.\nTho regular monthly meotin gof tho\nNelson Retail Employees' association\nwill he hold tonight at 8 o'clock at the\nOddfellows' hall. Business will include\ntho passing of the bylaws. Arrange-\nments will also be made for a social to\nbo held In December. It Is hoped as\nmany ladles as possible, who Intend to\njoin,   will   be  present,\nAbraham Kenneth Frieson of Nolson\nand May Comwell of Heyburn, Idaho,\nwere united In wedlock by Rev. C. W.\nKing yc-t'jr-Iav evening at the parsonage. Capt. Jackson', of the Salvation\nArmy, assistod in the ceremony and\ngave the bndo ^way. Tho signatory witnesses were H. A. Friesen, a brother of\ntlio bridegroom, and Miss M. .Jackson.\nThe  happy pair will  reside In  tills city.\nTin* boys' work committee of the T.M.\nC.A. met last night to arrange a program for the winter season for thi\nJunior member's. It was decided to organize the boys into groups with loaders. Competitions will be curried on between tho different groups along various forms of association activities. A\ndefinite program was not decided upon.\nThe committee decided to adjourn to\nSaturday afternoon at 5 o'clock when a\nprogram will be drawn up,\nTho first number of the Y.HP.C.A. lecture course ror the season will be given\non Friday ev>nintr. Nov. 22, in the public\nschool assembly Lall. Prof. William B\nPetty, an \u25a0 xperl exhibitor, will demon-\nstrati the three greatest wonders of the\nworld, radium, liquid air and wireless\ntelegraphy, Tl'cse marvels of science\nhave beon board of, hut little seen by\nmost people. irof. Patty is a fluent\nspeaker, witty and entertaining, i\nuses language such as oven lho child\nAuction Sale\nFriday, Nov. 8th, at 2. p. m.\nAt The Auction  Rooms, 609 Ward St.\nDressing tables, sideboards, couch,\ncounters, show case, chairs (dining and\nkitchen), and a quantity of new crockery and tinware, also one new Singer\nand ono second-hand Wanzer sewing\nmachine.\nW. CUTLER\ning\nGifts\nOur new stock of Sheffield goods\nIs very complete and of the very\nbest quality in sterling and plated.\nWe aro also showing a fine line\nof case goods of Sheffield make.\nYou will not fail to find something\nsuitable in our stock.\nCome early and get the choice.\nJ. 0. Patenaude\nManufacturing     Jeweler,     Watch'\nmaker and Optician.\nStarland Theatre\nMeyer's Starland Orehestra.\nHex Feature\nTHE UNKNOWN BRIDE.\nMajostlo Comedy\nTHE NEW BUTLER.\nSoiax Drama\nTHE STRIKE.\nADMISSION 10c.\nHotel for Sale\nIn   the  most  rapidly   developing\nlumbering district of the KootenayH.\nThis is a money-making proposition, and a very low price is .j-Afd.\nWrite for particulars to\nWestern Provinces Co-operative Realty Co., Ltd.\nOur Present Stock of \"\"\nWhite Wheat\nis extra fine quality.\nFor small'flocks of poultry urJ\n\"B. & K.\" Scratch food!\nGives you the variety necessar]\nAll ready mixed.\nThe Brackman-KI\nMilling Co., Limit!\nDave Small &  Co.\nTAILORS\nOUR NEW 8TOREIS SITUATED IN THE\nANNABLE BLOCK, WARD STREET\nWhere we will be glad to welcome  all  our old  customers  and  manyj\nnew ones.\n    SATISFACTION  IS   OUR   MOTTO.       '   '\nDaily News Want Ada, get results.\nJust Armed--A New Shipment of\nTaylors Talcum Powders\nIn the latest odors, viz., Pandora, Jap Lily, Valley Violet, etc.\nThis talcum is of excellent quality and remarkable value.\nPrice per box\n25 Cents\nWE NEVER SLEEP\nThe Poole Drug Co.\nTHE  REXALL  STORE\nALWAYS AT YOUR  SERVICE\nill understand. In addition to bringing\na sample of radium. Prof. Patty will also\nbring a complete wireltss telegraph apparatus and a. -supply of liquid ai;.\nThe Nelson -Mole Voice choir met for\npractice last night In tho Y.M.C.A. hull,\nwhen P. K tanner Smith, the newly up-\npointed conductor, was introduced nnd\ncordially received by the members.\nSeven new mi-rubei's were unrolled and\nnext week tlio choir committee anticipates a large addition to thu membership, it is the intention of the committee of manugununt to issue bono, arj\nand ordinary membership cards in the\nhope thai these may help to encourage\na stronger laUrcst. in the choir.\nFor stabbing art*'*.Italian at Cranbrook\nduring a oispi.le' in which glasses of\nbeer were thrown and a general \"rough-\nhouse\" took rlaee, Ella Frorlno waa\nsentenced by Judge Thompson to IS\nmonths in the provincial Jail at Nelson\nand was b:ought In last nfght bv Provincial Constable, R. A. Buavan of Fernie. Constibb Beavan also brought in\nClyde Carter. K-ntenced by J. B. Brown,\nJ.P., at Hosni'i, to six months on a\nvagrancy rJtargc, For a similar offence\nCarter recjntly served the same sentence here, oetag released from the Jail\nlast iSepteinuer.\nA well attended meeting of the Retail\nClerks* association was the result of the\nlecture by l_. LeClair. president of the\nUnion I.uiv-I league, In Miners' \u25a0Union\nhall iast night. On account of the great\nnumber of ena-iirlei made It was found\nimpossible to initiate the large number\nof applicants lor membership. Mr.\nLeClair was ahlu.d to mnke arrangements\nfor a meeting ui MlnerB' Union hall on\nMonday next, If possible, ln order to\nperfect the organization. Thu admission\nof women caihc under discussion nnd\nMr. LeClair aiivocated , a reduction In\ntheir dues, wihi.li met with hearty approval. Tlie meeting adjourned until\nnuxt Monday at S o'clock.\nnumber, with a beautiful picture of a\nrace of schooner yachts. \"Two Cay\nDogs\" is a Sclig comedy deputing the\ncomical experiences of two anniseineat\npark revelers and their  wives.\nSMOKER TO\nKOOTENAY MEMBER\nAT THE THEATRE3.\nHerr Bowman, magician and Illusionist, Is booked at tho opera house for one\nnight only, on Monday. Nov. ll, under\nthe asplces of lho I>oyai Order of Moose.\nThe Edison feature, \"A Man in the\nMaking,\" which is Included In the program being sl.own at the Gem theatre\nthis evening, was specially produced In\nco-operation with the industrial department of the International committee\nYoung Men's Christian association. It\nIs a simple, direct'and well-acted little\nplay upon a tbome that appeals to many\nyoung people throughout the country.\nTlie gymnasium scenes show mrttial work\not the Y.M.C.A. classes and the whole\nstory possesses a feeling -of reality and\nevery day lite that Is admirable.\n\"Pathe's  Weekly\"   Ib  a  very  Interesting\nTo the Citizens of Nelson\nFor a long time there haa been a doubt in my mind as lo the putting\nof money Into advertising. Naturally the Dally News man says it pays\nbut I want to prove that statement and I want you to help me. I realize that advertising must be backed by something of special import.\nThere is no use In my advertising something that everybody else has\nand at the same price. 1 will endeavor to handle and advertise only\nsuch properties that either from location or price are really good buys.\nIu this way I wish to foster the reading of my advertisements when 1\nwill be in a position to know if this sort of advertising pays.\nToday I have for sale and tho exclusive right to sell the Bunker properties, Lot 7, Block 43, Stanley street and lots 11, }2, 18, 14, Block 44,\nLatimer stroet. The Stanley street property is a modern five-ruomed\ncottage   adjoining   Drake's   grocery store.   Price, $1,7-00,   .'\nOn the Latimer street lots there ia a double cottage, each five rooms.\nA detached cottage, five rooms; all modern and In the rear of the lots a\nsmall four-roomed house. The tolal rental received from'all four houses\nis sixty-eight dollars per month. This property can bo had-for four thousand two hundred dollars, the purchaser in addition to pay a balance\ndue the government on lot No. 11. This rental would, give approximately 18 per cent gross on the purchase price. On both these properties  easy  terms can  be  arranged] 'Ij-j,;  '  ,     . -.   \u25a0\"'\nCHAS. F. MetmRDY.\nRossland Conservatives Will Celebrate\nVisit of R. F. Green to Golden\nCity  Next Week.\nfSj-eclal to The Dailv News.)\nKOSSLAND, 13. C, Nov. 7.\u2014The\nConservatives of Hossland are going\nto glvo a big free smoker to It. F.\nCroon, M.P., on November IB in the\nWiners Union hall. Invitations are be-\nfng sent to James IT. Schofleld, M.P.P.;\nWilliam Hunter, M.P.P.; W. R. Maclean, M.P.P., and Ernest Miller, M.P.P.\nQ. H. Barnard, M.P. from Victoria, la\nts be here and all the prominent Conservatives of the Kootenay will be on\nhand that night.\nL. A. Campbell. M.P.P., will be In the\n\u25a0\u25a0Jhfeli and a galaxy of musical and other\ntalent has been arranged to be there.\nOrders for refreshments, tobacco and\npipe*; have been placed and are the\nlargest orders ever given for thla class\noi enleralnment in this town. Everything is being done to mnke it the biggest and beat \"smoker\" ever. Further\ndetails will be published after the\nmeeting, which Is called for Monday\nevening.\nMrs. J. Honey left for Spokane this\nmorning, where she was called through\nsickness of her daughter, Mrs.\nLelgliton.\ni. J. Ma-okay Is back in town from\nKfmherley where he has beon working\nfor the past few months.\nL M. Roberts, who went to the old\ncountry for the coronation Is back In\ntown again.\nJ. G. Campbell of Toronto, representing the Colonial Investment & Loan\ncompany, Is in town on a tour of Inspection of his company's property.\nW. J. Farmer of Castlegar Is in town\ntoday.\nAlberta, and Is now on his way back\nto Roslyn. The mining company of\nwhich Mr, Menzics is manager, is the\nproperly of tlie Northern Pacific company and most of the product of these\nmines go lo that railway.\nMEDICAL   RESEARCH   FUND.\nTORONTO, Nov. 7.-\u2014Thut a medical\nresearch fund of $20,000 to $.60,000 annually lias been subscribed by busi-\nnosa and professional men for the\nmedical faculty of tho University of\nToronto, is the announcement made by\nthe faculty. Dr. A. Macphedran, professor of medicine has been enguge'd\nover a year in securing the fund. It\nIns been decided to devote a portion\nof it to an Investigation to tuberculosis.\nWILL CUT NEW CHANNEL\nOTTAWA, Nov. 7.\u2014Application has\ncome before the international commission on waterways for permission for\nthe United States government to\nmnke improvements in Livingston\nchannel. on the Detroit river. The\nimprovements are in the nature of\ncutting a new channel which will pass\nnn each side of the boundary line. It\nis probable that ihe commission will\nratify the work.\nINSPECTING  MINES\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nFERNIE. li. C, Nov. 7.~<Gencral\nManager Mcnziea of the Northwest\nImprovement company of Roslyn,\nWash., has been here for a few days\nlooking through the mines at Coal\ncreek and the coke ovon plant.   .      '\nMr. Mcnziea hag been on a tour of\nInspect ion   of   th*1   mln^s   In   northern\nQueen Studio\nEstablished  1899.\nALLAN LEAN, Photographer.\n'. In exploitation and publicity work\ngood photographs are absolutely essential. We havo photographs of all the\nlands in this district.         ,\nP. O. Box 812. Phono 180.\nNelson, B. O.\nFrench Dry Cleaning\nDYEINO  AND   PRESSING.   STEAM\nCARPET CLEANING\n20 years' experience.\nSpecial rates, washing lor hotels, restaurants and steamers.\n*Vork dono on short notice.   All worn\nguaranteed first class,\nTHE   NELSON   STEAjJ   JUAUNDHT\n601-603-005 Vernon St.. Cor. Josephine St.\n\u201e   \u201e NELSON. B, C.\nP. O. Box ts. Telephone Mil\nPAUL NIPOO. Proprietor.\nStorm Windows and\nStorm Doors\nTo Any Design\u2014Made, and Fixed.\nWaters & Pascoe\nKootenay    Lake    Sash    &    Door\nFactory.\nBuilders and Contractors.\nAll kinds of building material for.\nsale.   Estimates given,\nPillows, Quilts\nand Blankets\n\"Cheapen in the City\"\nThe Ark\nNew and Second Hand Furnltur|\nPhono  t-395 r 806 Vernon\nNolson.  B. C.\nEYE\nSCHOOL DAYS\nWell do I remember ' thorn.. VM\nf;htuldn't I? Two or three days of |\nseven saw mo abnormally elated, j\nbitious, work and study were pleasr!\nto simply live was joy. The other fl\nor five were days of dullness, depiT\nsii'ii, misery, days of indigestion, fe*l\nphysic, quinine, headache. Vividly]\n1 rt member them.\nAlso I remember there wero echcj\nmutes and teachers whom I now I\nwere suffering from tho same vail\ntlv: excess demands far nervous enej\nto overcome eye defects, directly i\nindirectly weakening and irritating |\nnervous   system   which   furnishes\nmotive    power  for and  controls\nfin.ctions.\nTeachers, parents and pupils shol\nwalch this space Monday. I hfl\nmore to say to you. Something spec!\nDon't forgot your bath room. ItT\nthe most neglected of all and Is)\nequal importance to any if used riff\nlhe McCormick way is tiie host. he_\nit.   Practice it.   Instruction free.\nShort consultations free.   .\nDR. F. E. M'CONNELL.\nOphthalmologist. Annablo BloJ\nDaily News want ade 1 cent a wol\nThe Average\nMan Thinks\nthe sun rises by his watch,,\nsometimes   ho   is  astray.   Hril\nyour  watch or  clock  to  us |\nthey  begin   to  vary.   We\nregulate and guarantee tnem ]\na year of good servhe.   Tl:\nthe place to buy a reliable wall\nat a price.that will uurciy st|\nisfy.\nJ. J. Walker\nJeweler and Optician\nBakar Street Nelaon, B.|\nExoart Watch Reoairinfl\nHave You Ever\nInvestigated\nFit-Reform?\nEver tried on i Fit-Reform\nSuit or Overcoat?\nEver examined the quality of\nthe fabrics and trimmings?\nEver noted Fit-Re form\nvalues?\nIf you have, it is almost certain that you how wear Fit-\nReform Clothing.\nIf you have not, you ate\nniissing something., Come\nin now and investigate Fit-\nReform.\nc   -,. ' , 1   '\nEmory & Walley\nTHE OUTFITTERS\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. 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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"}]}}