{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0385383":{"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP":[{"value":"b7c954fb-f159-427e-897d-245fc68232f8","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":"2019-11-05","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1913-10-31","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0385383\/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":" %q^ Qz^j\nWGHlPAGES\n50 CENTS A MONTH\nft\nTOUNITED STATESPUREWATEB BOARD\nM   \u25a0   ' \u25a0\ni; [j Elections Show Return  of\nHuerta Administration\nLit\nAMERICANS\nPREPARE FOR FLIGHT\nConference Discusses Pollution of Streams.\nPresident Wilson Undecided\nas to Adoption of Words\nor Action.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nMEXICO CITY, Oct. HO.\u2014Wilh the\nelection uf Gen. Yk-toilano Huerta\n| und Gen. AurellO ' Ulaiu*ui*t. almost a\nforegone conclusion, accordlhg to the\nofficial returns, tho question us to\"\n.what Washington proposes to do Is\nHooping tho, foreign residents, and the\nmajority of Mexicans In. a state of\npainful suspense. Ou the surface ut\nleast tbe administration is giving\nlittle consideration to the subject\nseemingly taking the ground that the\nMexican . people jjave declared in\nfavor of Huerta's continuance in the\nprusldoncy. Although it Is openly\ncharged In many quarters that it wus\nofficial pressure , thut resulted In\ntotalling up the mujorlty for Uuerta\nand Blanquet, which nre now being\nofficially reported from all\" parts\n\u25a0where the election forms were observed, the ftict remains, and It In\npointed out that theru Is no possibility of going back'of the returns as\nthere Is no thought that either enndU\ndate polled enough to place the\n,Huerta-Blamiuet ticket in jeopardy.\n, In view of Washington's previous\nrepresentations on tho subject the next\nImove of the Amerfcan government is\n\u25a0awaited here with no little misgiving\"\n.Many Americans have already packed\ntheir portable belongings preparatory\nto flight and are facing the necessity\nof leaving their household effects to\nfate. j.They express no hope of finding any left upon lheir return.\nTransportation facilities are already\novurtuxed and most ot those who <*on-\ntomplatcd flight expect to leave their\nhomes in charge of Mexican caretakers n\u00ab the only alternative.\nWhat the new Mexican congress\nwill do with reference to the elections\nlie.one undertakes to predict, although\ntho statement made recently by Senor.\nMoheno, minister of foreign affairs, I.\nregarded as reflecting the executive's\n\u2022desire. Senor Moheno asserted that\nin the event that congress finds that\na majority uf the votes were cast for\nHuerta and Blanquet, tho votes cast\nfor Huerta would bc declared void by\nreason of his Ineligibility under the\nconstitution to succeed himself and\nBliui'inet would assume the vice-presidency nnd tbc acting presidency,\nponding the calling of a-.new election.\nThe Mexican attorneys take Issue\nwith the foreign minister on this\npohil, declaring that If Blanquet ls\nadiiulged elected to Lhe presidency it\nwilt be for the unexpired six years\nterin which was begun by Porfirio\nDin;*, in December, 31)10, and continued\nby Francisco Ue la Barra, Francisco\nMadero and Gen. Huerta, and not for\na temporary period, since there would\nbq no occasion for further elections\nuntil ihe regular constitutional per\niud. of 1818.\nfc;..The flight of Gen. Felix Diaz, while\nnever arousing great Inlorost in th>\ncapital, has practically ceased tu be\na subject of rommenl. His candidacy was regarded by many Mexicans\na** a more incident of the campaign\nlind was never taken seriously;. his\n. flight eliminates him from the calculation. Frederico Gamboa and David\nde la Fuenta appear to have conceded their defeat in the face of obstacles alleged to have been found\nIn the way of their adherents, To\ntho Impatllal observe,- ll only remains\nfor congress to be reconstructed und\nanuuitico tho election of the admln-\niBtralion ticket\u2014this- to ii(, followt-d\nbv Huei ta'H proclamation renouncing\nthe votes cast for hi in,\nWilson Still Waiting.\n-    (By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nWASHINGTON, Oct. 30.\u2014President\nWilson let it be known today that he\nwns waiting for things to take definite shape in Mexico as a result of\nthe election last Sunday and that Hn\nUnited States goveimment would not\nnet, unlit Informed In detail of what\ntook place at the polls.\n, Recently the president In a note to\nthe Mexican foreign office, transmit\nted by Charge d'Affalres O'Sl.augh\nncssy, declared that the . election i of\nOctober 26 would not ue c nslilered\nepnstitulionul b.v the United States.'\nHow long the United Stat*-}*, will wait\nfor the returns Is net known. It is\nbelieved that several days, perhaps\nweeks, will elapse before the Huerta\ngovernment, handicapped by difficulties of communication, wil! be ablo to\nannounce the result, though November 10 was set for the counting of the\nballots, No Information -i - to the\ngovernment's future course wan\ndivulged at the White House. The\npresident told those who dlE'.ussed tbe\nsituation wilb him that he had not\ndecided whether thc next step would\nbcmude known by words ur action.\nHo Is at work on a plan by which ho\nhopes to solve the troubles of Mexico.\nOne of the features of it is the formal\nstatement of tbe alms and purposes\nof thp^niped States,'-its stand against\nNEW DEPARTMENT\nOF PUBLIC HEALTH\nTo Aid in Solving Inter Provincial Problems-Burrell\nSpeaks.\n\"rjCnritlmtnrt on pium four.)\n\"\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\n, OTTAWA, Out., Oct. 30.\u2014The creation of a federal board with full authority to deal', with the question of;\npure water, as well as otlter questions\naffecting the public, health, mis strongly advocated by the delegates from\nthe various provinces at the inter-\nprovincial conference on the pollution\nof tbe navigable streams, which\" convened hero this morning iu response\nto a call from Hon. J. D. Hasten, minister of marine and fisheries.\nTho conference was called'as the\nresult of evidence obtained lust winter hy the Bradbury committ*e on the\npollution of streams. It was deemad\nadvisable to have the views of the\nprovinces on the question before anything of a definite character would he\ntioiie, and in response to an invitation\nsent out by Mr. Ilozen every province\nin the Dominion was represented at\nu gathering of the agricultural committee at the house of commons this\nmorning.\nMr. Hnzen was elected chairman.\nIn addressing tlie gathering ho said\nthe growing demand for the prevention of pollution and necessity of pure\nwater, reviewed tho introduction of>\nhills in the .senate and commons hy\nSenator Beleourt and G. H. Bradbury,\nand the work of the committee ou the\npollution of streams. The question\nwas one, lie said, which involved great\ndifficulties. Tlio treatment of tbe\nsew-*\u2122 itself- was a very expensive\nmaster, \"i'.ir- Mmrc was the question\nof intern\"\"oir.i] streams calling, for; iij-\nternatioi:n; rVn^ir'fe'nce oh'the part of\nCanada and the United States.\nThe joint international commission\nhnd taken the question up and thev\nwould sbortly issue a report outlining\nthe result of their observations nnd\nmaking recommendations as to what\nit deems proper courses for the respective government-- to follow in dealing with tlie question.\nMr. Bradbury, chairman of the\nhouse committee on tlie pollution of\nstreams, outlined the course which it\nhad taken. He was led to take action\nof this matter by tiie condition of affairs, which had befallen Ottawa,\nwhere more then 2,000 lives were lost\nus the result of a typhoid epidemic\nwhich was a direct outcome of an impure water supply.\nTlie. question was nn interimtiona!\nand intei'-provincial one. and while\nthe co-operation of the United States\nwas almost necessary, it was Canada's\nfirst duty to care for tbe health of our\nown people. He would favor Canada,\nor the federal government, in co-oper-\natiou with tho provinces, taking immediate action, regardless of the attitude\nof the United Slates.\nJames Wliite. deputy head or Ihe\nconservation poijimission, dealt with\nthe question from a national point of\nview. Any lech-la tion that is framed\nshould make the burden for the municipal I ties directly affected nt* light\nas possible. Ho would favor the creation of a commission to deal with the\nquestion in separate cases, a commission whieh would lie absolutely un\nhampered in its operation's.\nDr. La Oliappelle of Montreal, representing the government of Quebec,\nwas next heard. He told tbe confer\nene'e of tlie powers exorcised on the\nquestion of pure wator by the provincial hoard of health of Quebec and advocated the creation of a federal board\nof health, responsible for safeguarding\nthe health of tlie whole nation, and\nwhich, with the co-onerntion of all the\nprovinces, could deal with the question from a broad, national viewpoint.\nHon. J. H. Howden ' of Manitoba\nthought that more information was advisable bororo tlie question could he\nintelligently proceeded with. The\nstops taken hy the provinces, should\nfirst ho Investigated and then an an*\npassed dealln*** witli water-* lhat are\ninter-nrovlncfal or international. In\nthe light of the knowledge which\nwould be gained, in this way a Dominion or federal hoard of health could\nbc well established.\nHon. W. it. Ross of British Columbia\nwas not iu favor of any definite step\nbeing taken until tiie report of tbe\njoint committee on international waterways has boon made.\nDr.  M. M. Seymour, commissioner\npublic health   for   Saskatchewan,\ntold of what is being done In his province in regard to treating sewage and\nproviding pure water,\nDepartment of Health,\nHon. ,T. D. Hnzen presided at tlie\nafternoon session, when a resolution,\nmoved by Dr. La Chappelle, Montreal,\nnnd soconded hy Dr, Seymour, Saskatchewan, was carried unanimously\nthat, whereas, In tho past questions\naffecting-sanitation and public health\nto he denlt with concurrently by tho\nfederal und provincial authorities,\namongst others ihe question of protecting water courses from pollution;\nONTARIO'S REPRESENTATIVES AT CONFERENCE   OF  THE  PROVINCES.\nThe premier, and leading government members of the province, have been dl.cu.slna manv Question, ih.t\nrelate to federal and provincial jurisdiction and the proportion of federal subsidies to \"he various province.'\nSHORTER ROUTE FORI\n, KETTLE VALLEY\nLong   Detour   Saved\u2014New   Territory\nOpened by Line From Osprey\nto Peachland.\n\" (Special lo The Dnlly News.)\nVANCQU VKR, B. C, Oct. 30.\u2014\nChanges In the route of the Kettle\nValley railway, with a view to providing a shorter route from Okanagan\nto Mitchell tiinn originally proposed,\nare indicated by the announcement\nthat a now route map waa recently\nfiled with tho authorities at Ottawa\nshowing tho proposed railway from\nCohlwater summit to Osprey lake, near\ntiie headquaters of Deep creek, which\nflows into Okanagan lake near Peach-\nland. Tho construction of a line from\nPeachiand to Osprey lake would save\na long detour and open up a stretch\nof new territory north of Hope mop.it-\nlain road.\nTho route of tlie Kettle Valley railway as mapped out originally merely\nskirted the shores of the lower end\nof Qkanagan lake on the west side,\nbrnnchlng from Penticton in a northwesterly direction nnd following the\ncourse of Five-Mile creek to Tulameen.\nUnder a recent -arrangement the\nrailway will go further north than In\nthe earlier pi tins and will serve Sum-\nmerlui'd.      \u2022-\u2022\u25a0\u25a0 , .--\u25a0>\u2022-;\n<rvinllnii*M on p*ig-B fire.)\nINDIANS CLAIM\nMILLION AND HALF\nGigantic Task Before Judge Hearing\nScaling    Claims\u2014Evidence\nTaken in Chinook.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.) '\nVICTORIA, .B. fj, Oct. 30.\u2014When\nMr. Justice Aiuiotto returns to Vicloria from tlio east at tlio first of\nnext mouth to resume tlie 'hearing of\ntlio Bealing claims Jio will he confronted with one or the most gigantic tasks\nthat any Judge of the Dominion bench\nlias had lo deal with. Before he left\nlore to sit In Ilalirax. N. s\u201e the commissioner heard the claims of about\n76 seniors and was woll launched in\nthe heavy claim ot the Victoria Sealing company.\nIt is quite plain that Mr. Justice\nAudette Will have to sit here for ahout\nIwo  months.    Since lie  left,  nearly\n00 Indian hunters hnvo called on\nCapt. tlcoi'go Kirkcndalo. shipping\nmaster, for their time certificates,and\naro now having lheir claims compensated from the Dominion government.\nMot oven the claims or the native!\nwho aro now in the happy hunting\ngrounds are to lie overlooked. Sons\nand other relatives aro looking after\ntheir intqrosls.\nTho Indians have como from tho\nQueen Charlotte islands and all the\nreservations on tho west coast of Vancouver island to have their claims\nmade out. It may bo somewhat surprising to learn that thero wore 700\nnatives Interested In tho sealing business as hunters. Somo of the men\nwero out ovory your from tho early\ndays of the Industry and reported up to\ntoll, when thoy wero forced out by\nthe Pelagic sealing treaty. Judging\ntrom tho claims of the Indians, tho\nDominion government will have, a\nheavy bill of. compensation to ' pay.\nThe total amount which tho natives\nare\/looking for will run woll up to\n?1.500,UO(I. The hunters are of tho\nopinion tlmt tho money Is here aud\nthat all tlioy have to do is to prove\ntheir claims and thc amount they ask\nas compensation will bo paid over to\nthem.\nVeiy few ot tho Indians speak tbo\nEnglish liingungo und his lordship will\nhave a illl'llcult ttiBk, as the examination will no doubt be conducted in\nChinook, which will necessitate an interpreter. Tho hearing will therefore\nconsume a great deal of time.\nAfter tho Indians aro finished thero\naro the claims of several hundred cupulas, mates, seamen, boat pullers and\nhunters to bo hoard, so it ls thought\null of the two months will have ox-\npirod before his lordship announces\nthe final adjournment.\nADMIRAL'S WIDOW\nFOUND NOT GUILTY\nMrs. Eaton Acquitted by Early Morning Verdict\u2014Jury Out All\nNight.\nIlly Dallv News .Leased wire.)\nPLYMOUTH, Mass., Oct, SO.\u2014.Mrs.\nJennie May Eaton was acquitted of\nthe charge of murder of her husband,\nformer Admiral Joseph G; Eaton, by\na verdict of the jury rendered.at 5:10\nn.m. today. Tho iury retired at G\no'clock last night, notwithstanding\nthat there seemed little prospect as\nthe night wore on of a verdict before\nmorning a crowd of nearly. 200 persons sat out the tedious night.\nMrs. Eaton awaited the verdict complacently and smiled when she heard\nthe foreman pronounce her \"not\nguilty.\"\nPRINCE REGENT.SUCCEEDS\nMAD  KING OF BAVARIA\n(By Dully News Loosed \"Wire.)\nMUNICH, Bavaria, Oet. 30.\u2014A bill\nauthorizing Prince Regent Ludwig ot\nBavaria to bring his regency to an\nend and proclaim himself. King of Bavaria in place of the Insane King Otto\nwas passed today by the lower house\no[ tho,Bjviu'j|in.j|)9ii,5'3i]!y tllr. Socialist deputies and the iwo Democrat*\nvoted against the measure, which had\nbeen already approved by the upper\nhouse.\nVESSEL DRIVEN ASHORE\nON MOROCCAN COAST\nC.VSA BLANCA, Morocco, Oct. 30.\u2014\nDuring, a violent storm early today\nthree vessels were driven ashore on\nthe Moroccan coast, near this port.\nEight men from one of the ships were\ndrowned by the capsizing of a lifeboat.   All the others were saved.\nBETTING FAVORS\nGOVERNMENT\nFisheries  Question   Eliminated   From\nNewfoundland Election Contest-\nAbsence of Outstanding Issues.\n1 ST. JOHN, Nfld., Oct. 30.\u2014The first\nreturns* from the elections are expected\ntomorrow morning. Tbe betting favors tho re-election of the government\nby ii reduced majority.\nThere has been a marked absence\nof outstanding issues in the campaign\nculminating in today's elections and\nneither side presents any couvfucli _\nprophecy of victory. Supporters of\ntlie government had laid great sti*._\non the present prosperity under Sir\nEdward Morris' regime, while Sir Robert Bond's party hark back to that\nstatesman's term of office when, they\nclaim, the firm foundations of today's\nwell-being were laid by Sir Robert's\nfar-sighted policy. The opposition\ncondemned strongly the alleged extravagance of the Morris government,\nto which is advanced justification of\nthe Increased expenditures by the\ngrowth of the colony and the extension of railways and public works.\nThe fisheries dispute, which hitherto\nlias been the bone of contention in\nmany previous elections and which re-\nhiuttl-itL tli'. o'-'-Jitrno'.-- Of Sir Robert\nBond lit 11)09. has not appeared, the\nwhole issue having been settled by\nthe. passage of the Underwood tariff\nbill, which provides for the tree entry\nto fish at American ports\nWALLACE  KNOCKED OUT\nIN FOURTEENTH ROUND\nPORT ARTHUR, Out., Oct. 30.\u2014iIu\ntlio fourteenth round of a 20-round\nbout advertised for tlie featherweight\nchampionship of Canada. Billy Hughes\nof Sault ste. Mario last, night knocked\nOut Kid Wallace of Alberta. Up to\nthat it .was a nip and tuck struggle,\nwilb hits of go nnd excitement.\n#t\nW  \/$\u25a0\nT   faajfi\n..-\"\" \\^^[l\n4JI\nCOURT BUSY WITH\nWESTERN CASES\nGENIAL   MR.  TAFT\nFormer     United     States     president,\nsnapped   at   dedication   of   Princeton\nGraduate school and Cleveland  memorial tower\nHow's Bu&iOess,\nMr. Grocer?\nCould yon possibly do any\nmure with your present equipment1!\nOf course you could;.\nThe'-(-.uesiloii Is, do you want\nmore business If It may be had\nwithout expense to you.\nYou will answer \"yes\" to that,\ntoo.\nOh your shelves are many\narticles thut are advertised all\nover the country by the makers.\nIn this city these articles are\nadvertised In The Daily News.\nThere is a demand for these\ngoods, and if you want .to increase your business be sure\nyour customers see the.-tc products prominently displayed in\nyour windows and on your\ncounters.\nPush tho advertised articles.\nHelp the manufacturer who\nhelps you. More profits will\nfollow.\nDamages for Loss of Husband Upheld\n\u2014Suit for  Damage by  Fire\nin   Kootenay\nOTTAWA, Oct. 3D.\u2014In tbe supreme\ncourt today the arguments wore con\ntinued in the appeal McPhee vs\nEsquimau & Nanaimo Railway company. Tbe action was brought by tho\nAppellant against the Canadian Pacific Railway company und the respondent for damages suffered by reason\nof tho loss of his right arm while in\ntheir employ as an angineman on a.\nsteam shovel used In construction work\nnear Duncan on Vancouver island.\nThe appellant contends that on the\nlaw and facts of thu case the trial\njudgment should not have been reversed and also that thu doctrine of\nvolens was not applicable under the\nBritish Columbia Employers' liability act.    .Judgment  was reserved.\nThe appeal iu the Canadian Pacific\nRallwav vs. Iieinrleh was then taken\nup. The action was brought by the\nwidow of Ut- \\einrieh. who was killed ou t'lff^ .our front of Vancouver\nby o *>\"f 'tbo appellant. Judge\nMorriii\" -''TJi-w-'d lhe ease to go to the\njury, who rendered a general verdict\nfor $6,000 damages. $3,000 to the\nwidow and $3,000 to an infant child.\nThe trial judge then gave his judgment upon thc motion and dlsmissei\nthe action on the ground that there\nwas only one Inference lo be drawn\nfrom the evidence and lhat it was\nconclusive that deceased was killed\nthrough his own negligence and fault\nIn attempting to cross the tracks.\nOn appeal this judgment was set\naside and judgment entered for $6,900\non the ground that the company had\nbeen guilty of the ultimate neglig\nence Which was the cause of the ac\neideut. On the present appeal, the\ncompany admitted original negligence\nin running fast, hut It is contended\nthat the unlawful course of tlio deceased in attempting to cross the\ntracks ami disregarding the signals of\ndanger was the solo cause of his\ndeath. Thc appeal was dismissed\nwithout costs. Hellmutb, K.C., for tlie\nappellant; Maedonald for respondent.\nThe next appeals were the consolidated appeals by the Canadian Pacific Railway against Kerr. Ciminiings\nand Laid law, Farcjuharson and liois-\nJolf. The respondents socured judgments In actions against the company\nfor damage lo timlier destroyed by\nfire on tho Elk river near Morrissey,\nin East Kootenay. The trial judge\nfound that the fire had originated\nfrom one of the company's engines\nand although he found that the engine\nhad all appliances and was In good\norder he gave Judgments to the plaintiffs, aggregating $4,500. By the\njudgment appealed from the court of\nappeals for British Columbia affirmed\nthese decisions. Hellmutb. K.C., for\ntho appellant; Lewis, K.C.. and Mc-\nflonald for respondent.\nBRUCE    FPp;itJ STREET\nELECTS LIBERA' ^ilWAY 1PR0P0SAL\nReuben Truax Wins by Hundred and Twenty Four\nCity   to   Control   System^\nStockholders Partnees\nPOSITION OF\nPARTIES UNCHANGED\nEven   Break   in  By-Elect-\nions\u2014Liberal Candidate\nStrong Locally.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nWALKERTON, Ont.. Oct. 30.\u2014Rou\nben E. Truax, the Liberal eundldate,\nwas  elected  in  the   South  Bruce by-\nelection today by a majority of 124,\ndefeating Wellington D. Cargill.    The\nseat was rendered vacant by the elevation of Hon. James J. Donnelly to\nthc  senate  and   the   campaign   was\nfought almost altogether on the nav\nquestion.    Mr. Donnelly's majority at\nthe last general election wus 103.  Ni\nfigures of the total vote were obtain\nable tonight, as only the majorities ut\nthe different polling subdivisions were\nbrought Into Walkerton.    it Is under\nstood,   however,   that   the   vote   was\neven heavier than in the general el'\ntion.\nHoth candidates were residents of\ntho riding. Mr. Truax has lived in\nthe district 57 years and his personal\npopularity made him a strong candidate. Besides supporting the Liberal\nposition on the navy, in practically\novery speech, he declared his preference for the doctrine of reciprocity\nwith the United States.\nWalkerton, Mr. Truax's home town,\ngave him a majority of 90. At the\nlast general election his majority\nthero was 56.\nThe following Ib a comparison of\nmajorities in tho different townships\nand munlclpjillties In this election and\nthe\/elect liyn of, lfllt*.\n1913 1013 1911 1911\nRrants,  8  polls   ..\nft\n\t\n\u25a017\n\t\nGarrlck, X palls - \u25a0\n20\n\u2014\nff-1\n\t\nCutross, 7 polk  ,.\n\t\n145\n\u2014\n58\nAlderslie,   4   polls.\n\u2014\n10\n38\n\t\nHuron, (J polls .,.\n40\n\u2014\n1\n\u2014\nt'reenoch,  S polls.\n144\n\u2014\n13t!\n_\n\u2014\nTS\n~\nPaisley   \t\n4\nLucknow    \t\n\t\nIR\n\t\n25\nTeeswater   \t\n\t\nH\n\u2014\nn\nWalkerton    \t\n\u2014\n90\nm\n5ft\n\u2014\n81\n\u2014\nTotals      2t50    384    .'127   21\nThe 1911. majority for Donelly w\n103, The 191.1 majority for Truax w\n124.\nVotes In :-revious elections: South\nBruce hi Its present form was created\n:i constituency itt lima, following\nthe majorities since then: 1904\u2014C. II.\nMcKenzie, liberal, 144; 1908\u2014J.\nDonnelly, Conservative, 193; 1911\nJ. Donnelly. Conservative, 103.\nOttawa Not Surprised\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA. Oct, 30.\u2014Keen Intel\nls being taken in the capital tonight\nin the returns from South Bruce. 'I'ho\nresult was known early and did not.\ncause a great deal of surprise.\nWhile the Conservatives have all\nalong been hopeful of carrying the\nconstituency they have realised ever\nsince the appointment of ,T, J. Donnelly, the late member, to tiie senate,\nthat Ihey would have a hard fight to\nretain the seat If the Liberals nomin\nated the former member, Reuben\nTruax.\nIt was expected, however, that if\ntho Liberals won it would be by a\nsmall majority.\nSome surprise is expressed that Mr\nTruax's plurality over Mr. Cargill\nreached three figures. Hon. W.\nWhite, who conducted the campaign\nfor the Conservatives, Gerald White,\nmember for North Renfrew, and An\ndrew Brodeur were umongst those\nwho heard the result at the Chateau\nLaurier this evening. They were all\nof tho opinion that their defeat was\ndue in a large measure to tbe strength\nof the personality of Mr. Truax a\ncandidate and liis thorough canvas-\nthe constituency covering a period of\nseveral months.\nThe   Liberals   of    the   capital    were\nnaturally Jubilant over tbe result. Sir\nWilfrid Laurier gut the news of the\nvictory at his residence over the telephone. He declined to make any\ncomment for publication more than\nto say lie was satisfied with the result. Liberals, while admitting that\nthey had a more experienced candidate than their opponents, say that\nthe turnover in the vote at the by-\nelection Is an indication of a marked\nchange of .sentiment on the part of\nthe  people  of Ontario.\nThe Conservative victory in Chnteauguay indicated the first inroad tho\ngovernment had made on the Liberal\nmembership of the house since tho\ngeneral election. Had the government\nnot lost South Bruce its majority\nwould have been Increased from 47\nto 49 on a division. The Liberal victory today means that the parties\nhave broken oven and the government\nmajority remains just as It stood after\ntho voting 011 September 31, jntl.\nTHIRTY THOUSAND.\nBONO ISSUE PLAN\nStockholders Will Consider\nProposition Outlined by\n.Committee.\nMunicipal operation of the street\nrailway with the stockholders retaining tlieir interest In the system on a\nproportionate partnership basis war**,\nthe scheme adopted at a conference\nhist night between members of tho\ncity council and directors of the company. To consider the new proposition a meeting of the stockholders of\nthe company will be called for Tuesday night, Nov. 11, at 8 o'clock in tho\ncity hull.\nReorganization of the company. Involving increasing tho capital from\n50,000 shares to 75,000 shares in order\nthat the city may be given 40,000\nshares, by which it will have control\nis the basis of the new plan. Stockholders of the company hold approximately 32,000 shares, so that the city\nwill have control by a majority of\nS.000 votes.\nThe city, It is proposed, shall Issue\nbonds to the amount of $30,000 to pay\noff the indebtedness of about $18,000\nand provide capital which Is considered absolutely necessary for improvements and repairs. This new\nhond issue, together with the $10,000\nIssue made some years ago.when tho\ncity purchased the old track and\nequipment, which is now under lease\nto the company, will balance with the\n40,000 shares which will give tho\nmunicipality control of thc operation\nand .financing of the system.\nResolution   Is Passed\nMoved    by   Aid.   James   Johnstone,\nseconded   by   Aid.  A.  A. Ptjrrier,  and\nendorsed  by   the meeting, thw-^CuTovv''-*--'\nIng  resolution   crystabued   the   sentiment of those present:\n\"That a committee of the city conned recommends that the capital oC\nthe Nelson Street Railway Company,\nLimited, he increased to $75,01)0 and\nthat in consideration of the city issuing bonds to the amount of $30,000\nand increasing the company's assets\nby the addition of the track, etc., for\nwhich $10,000 was paid by tlio city.\nthe company issue to the city stoojc\nto tho amount of $40,000, giving tho\nmunicipality control.\" \u2022\nMayor Keefe, who was hi the chair,\nexplained that the council had considered that tho proposal that tho\ncity should buy out tlie stockholders\nat 50 cents on the dollar would not\npass as it involved the submission of\nby-laws aggregating at least $46,000,\nmade up of $30,000 to pay thc company's debts and provide capital for\nimpi'uvements and repairs and $16,000\nto pay tha shareholders.\nDirectors of the company, during a\nlengthy discussion of the partnership\nand purchase proposals, declared that\nthey believed all tiie stockholders desired was to see the system continue\nIn operation und that they would accept any fair proposition submitted\nby the city.\nTo Cost City Loss\nPurchase by the city of the system,\n: was proposed, would mean that tho\nmunicipality' would have to pay interest and sinking fund ou nt least:\n$S1,000, it is pointed out. This sum\nIs made up of $10,00l\u00bb for the purchase\nof the track for which the city has already issued bonds; tiie original\n$25,000 . bond issue by tho company,\nwhich was guaranteed by the city; a\nnew issue of $30,000 to pay the company's debts and provide capital for\nrepairs and improvements, and $16,000\nto buy out the stockholders at 50\ncents on tho dollar.\nUnder tho *parUiership plan the city\nwill pay interest and sinking fund ou\ntlie $10,000 bond issue and on tho new\nbond issue of $30,000.. In effect, tho\ncity, it Is stated,will pay interest and\nsinking fund on $40,000 and will remain In the position of guarantor for\nthu company's original bond Issue of\n$25,000, a total possible debenture liability Of $65,000 instead of $81,000 iC\nlhe stockholders were bought out.\nDirectors <>f thc company declare\nthat as the system is now paying interest on the $25,000 bond issue, It la\nvery unlikely that the city will bo\nculled on to make good its guarantee\nwhen the issue becomes redeemable\nand they point out that In any event\nthe municipality will continue to hold\na mortgage on the system as a whole.\nHomo   of   the   shareholders   present\nviewed    the    partnership    plan    with\nir from  the stockholders' point of\nv  on   tho   ground   that   Instead   oC\nHelling out at a 50 cents on the dollar\n1 they would 'bo \"given a run for\ntheir money,\" and ultimately receive\ndividends, gaining also by the Increase in the value of the stock aa\ntho proposition became a paying one.\nOther stockholders, while not disapproving of tho partnership plan.\nthought there might he some difficulty in Inducing the stockholders to\nsupport It aa they had already by an\noverwhelming majority voted to sell\nout to tho city at 50 cents on tbe\ndollar.   In reply it was remarked that\ni''<mtiune,*  -oj-   page five.)\n Iff   PAGE TWO.\n%\\)t fisll;*? $fli>8.\nFRIDAY  OCTOBER S1 \u00bb*J\nHallowe'en\nDecorations\nNap'ins\u2014Crepe, Cat and Pumpkin designs, pcr dozen  10c\nTablj Cloths, extra large, Witch designs, each 50c\nBlac    Cats, cut outs, per package  20c\nBlack Witches, cut outs, pcr package  20c\nGarl tnds, alternating black and orange, each  50c\nCrepe Folds, Pumpkin, Witch and Black Cat designs, each i 35c\nCape, Ghosts, Pumpkin, Witch, Black Cat, and  weird designs, will fit\nanything, each 10c\nFalse Faces, designs of all kinds, from 5c to $1.50\nCanada Drug & Book Co. Ltd.\nPhone 81 Nelson's Pioneer Drag Store       P.O. Box 502\nAgents (or the Remington Typewriter Nail Orders a Specialty\nFIRE AT MOYIE  DOES\n, CONSIDERABLE  DAMAGE\nj (Special to Thc Daily News.)\nMOYIE. B. C, Oct. 30.\u2014On Saturday morning about 11 o'clock a fire\nbroke out in a small residence across\nthe track. Roy Birch happened to pass\nthat way and noticed the blaze. He\nquickly gave the alarm and in a few\nmoments tlie fire brigade was on the\nspot. After about au hour's work tbc\nfire was extinguished, but much damage was done to the property. The\nbouse was vacant ahd it is reported\nthat some hoboes had occupied it on\nthe previous night and a tire had been\nmade in the stove. The bouse belongs to Mrs. Uottomley, formerly of\nthis place.\nMrs. Weir went to Cranbrook on\nWednesday to receive medical treatment.\nMrs. Martin's mother, who has been\nvisiting here for some time, left on\nSunday for Wardner. She will visit\n, Michel he-fore leaving for eastern Canada.\nMr. nnd Mrs. McTavisli and Mr. and\n.Mrs. Mead went to Lethbridge on\nWednesday, where they were called\nto thc bedside of Mrs. Whitehead, wh-j\nIs dangerously ill there.\nMr. and Mrs. Smith left here on\nThursday.\nOn Wednesday night a very pleasant\nlittle dance was given hv a number of\nthe young people at the Central hotel.\nThe music, which was excellent, was\nfurnished by Miss Martin, principal ol\ntbe school Iierd.\nJ. W. Fucjff went to Cranbrook on\nTuesday.    \/\nGeorg-^Xvhitehoad left here onMon-\nOn Friday evening Mrs. Dtmmock\nentertained* a number of her lady\n\u25a0friends. The entertainment teak the\nform of a bee for making paper flowers for tbe school eritertainmont,\nwhich will be held on Halloween. Refreshments were served by the\nhostess.\nTbe Ladies' Aid society of Ihe Methodist church held a special meeting in\nthe church on Friday evening to arrange for the anniversary entertain-\n'ment ou November 9. it was decided\n\"to have the entertainment take the\nform of a lantern lecture to be delivered by the Rev. Mr. Pearley of Fernie.    There  will   also   be   a   supper\nserved by the Ladies' Aid society and\ngames will be provided for the young\npeople.\nThis town and vicinity has suffered\nfrom the attack of skunks during the\npast week. Several of our citizens\nhave lost valuable chickens in large\nnumbers and in one case the owner\nof some fine chickens set a trap for\nthis nightly visitor, but the skunk\nwalked off with the trap on one foot.\nIt was seen by several people and\neventually shot.\nThe Porto Rico sawmill closed down\nfor the season on Saturday night and\nseveral of the families will leave here\nat once.\nMr, Wil Ian went to Cranbrook on\nMonday to attend tlie banquet given\nthere in honor of Dr. Chown.\nZ. Baiclie of St. Camllle, Wolf\ncounty, Quebec, has been spending the\nlast week visiting his aunt, Mrs. R,\nA. Smith, of this place.\nMr. Kilby of Nelson was here this\nweek.\nJack McTavlsh of Bull River, has\nbeen here this week visiting friends.\nCharles Martin of Wardner arrived\nhere on Monday to visit his mother\nand sister.\nThe teachers and pupils of the public school have made arrangements\nto hold a Hallowe'en entertainment\non Friday evening in the school house.\nThe entertainment will commence at\nS o'clock sharp and wonderful tricks\nperformed by witches, brownies.\nfairies and ghosts will he the order\nof the day. A short program by the\npupils will lie furnished and refreshments will he served.\nOn Saturday evening Mrs. Laird entertained a few friends. Whist was\nplayed and dainty refreshments were\nserved.\nMr, Willun, Methodist missionary\nhero, went to Eastport on Saturday\nto hold service there. Owing to the\nwinter time-table having come into\nforce he was not able to make connections with the Canadian Pacific\nrailway train and so was unable to return on Sunday. The usual Sunday\nevening service was conducted hy Mr.\nScott.\nK. A. Smith, who was out hunting\non Tuesday, brought down 18 fine\nducks. Only a few days ago Mr.\nSmith ami a companion secured 20\nducks in a few hours, while out hunting in tiie vicinity of Movie lake.\nCANADIAN *\nPACIFIC\nTwenty-Seventh Annual Series\nof\nExcursion Fares\nTo the British Isles and the Continent\nTICKETS   ON   SALE   NOVEMBER   7th   TO   DECEMBER   31st,   1913.\nFinal Return Limit Five Months.   Very Low Fares\nChristmas Sailings\nLAKE   MANITOBA    from St. John Dec.mber 10th\nEMPRESS   OF   IRELAND   ...   from  St. John December  13th\nEMPRESS  OF  BRITAIN    from St. John December 27th\nBook your passage now and secure first choice of staterooms.\nRatos, other sailings, and complete information from any C, P.  R.\nAgent, or write:\nD. SMEATON, Agent, J. V. MURPHY,\nNelson City, Distrct Passenger Agent,\nNELSON, B.C. NELSON, B.C.\nF. L. PADDON, AGENT, NELSON DEPOT.\nKootenay and Boundary\nLINE OPEN BY\nNEXT JULY\nThrough  Connection  Between  Nelaon\nand   Penticton\u2014Good  Progress\nBeing Made on Construction,\n(Special to Thn Daily News.)\nPENTICTON, B. C, Oct. 30.\u2014On tlie\nKettle Valley railway, on the west\nfork of Kettle river, between Beaver-\ndell and the summit, splendid progress is being made, and unless there\nshould be delay in tlie assembling of\nmaterial and the construction of tlie\nhuge bridge over Canyon creek, on\nthe Penticton side of the Hydraulic\nsummit, trains should be running between Nelson and Penticton by July\nof next year. The grade ls already\nfinished to tbe summit and the steel\nis within 10 miles. Three locomotives\nemployed on the ballasting and trock-\nlaying are working out from Arlington\nlakes, about 10 miles above Carmi.\nwhere tlie operator is now stationed.\nThe fiaming yards are located at\nCarmi, and aB fast as the bridge timber is framed it is being hauled to\nthe front. The work on the tunnel\non the Penticton side of the summit\nis progressing satisfactorily, and the\nonly possible hitch lies in the fact of\na possible* delay in the arrival of material for the big Canyon creek bridge\nor some other circumstance which\nmight delay the construction.\nJust what might happen is well illustrated hy the fact thut as a result\nof tho carrying away of some of the\nfalse-work of the Trout creek bridge\nby the flood last spring it was only\nfinished last week when it should\nhave been done by the middle of June.\nAnother reason for the delay lies in\ntbo fact that a man fell off the steel\nwork some weeks ago and was killed,\nand after that it was difficult to get\nmen to stay on the work. As tile Canyon creek ravine is very deep, somewhat the same difficulties may happen to crop up there.\nWest of Penticton a new track-laying machine is now laying steel at\nthe rate of over a mile a day, but\neight miles beyond Trout creek there\nwill he another delay, on account of\na small bridge. Tbo contract has not\nyet been let on the Coldwater June-\ntion-Osprey lake section, In spite of\nthe fact that tho coast paper have repeatedly, and in error, stated that the\nlast contract on thc Kettle Valley Hue\nhad boon let. It Is expected that this\ncontract will be let shortly. It has\nbeen definitely decided that the Kettle\nValley line will not go into Princeton,\nas was at first supposed.\nRESULTS  OF TRIALS\nAT   FERNIE   ASSIZES\n(Special to The Dnily News.)\nriOKNll-:, B.C., Oct. 30.\u2014At the assizes just closed the following cases\nwere disposed of: H. Biggs, attempted\ncriminal assault, dismissed; Jos\nDavidson, obtaining money on fills-\npretences, three years iu the penitcn\ntiary; Nichlos Rahal, murder, dis\nmissed; John Bunyange, burglary, one\nyear; \\V. Codkin, theft from the Canadian Pacific railway, bis ball was\nestreated*, Bruno Cutri, murder, was\nsentenced to be banged un January 8,\nmil.\nAn Insane man named Joseph Voga!\nwas taken lo New Westminster this\nmorning.\nF, s. Elliott; general superintendent\nwestern lines Great Northern railway,\nand J. C. Sessor, superintendent Ki\nspell   division,   spent   Wednesday   and\nThursday in Fernie.\nThe Bachelor Maids nf Fernie are\nentertaining their gentlemen friends\ni'i ii ball on Halloween and as they\nare sparine no expense It promises l\u00bb\nhe the event of the season.\nTin- board of trade of Kalispell,\nMi-nl.. paid a visit lo this city, arriving over the Great Northern un Wednesday und visiting the Crows Nest\npass mines on Thursday, leaving for\nhome Thursday noo*n. They were\nwell pleased with their reception and\nappreciated the kindness uf W. IE.\nWilson In arranging a special train U\nand from the mines to suit their con-\nvenlencc.\nFEAR   FOR   HUNTERS'   FATE\n11!'* Dallv News Leased Wire.)\nPOUT ARTHUR, OuL, Oct. 30.\u2014\nrave fears are cnl^BJ^icd for a\niirly of hunters, vV^B^j^CoHin-\nood; Charles \\V'hii!\\mi;'|^|^ Mnl-\nui'k  Hunk;   and W. Taylur^rWu left\nweek ago hist Saturday and were\nne to arrive back last Friday, No\n'iisoii can be given for their extn\ning stay near Black Bear. A tug\nill he sent to look for them tomoi\n>w.     They   went    from    here    In\nFor nursing mothers\nNa-Dru-Co Laxatives\noffer lhe important advantage that they do not disturb\nthe rest of the system or\naffect the child.\n25c a box at your\nDruggist's.\nNatron*! Drug nnd Ch-smical Co.\nof Can*da. Limited.\nNeat House, Five Rooms, Furnace, $2,100\nSituated within few minuten of Baker Street. Living, dining, 2 bed-rooms with closets, kitchen, with gas\nand coal range, large pantry, bath-.-oom. A comfortable, medium sized house, all on one floor. Owner has\nleft City.    We have instructions to arranye  terms to suit  purchaser. \u201e\nMcQuarrie & Robertson\nBURDEN OF PROOF\nON PLAINTIFF\nScmeone  Scoundrel, Says Judge\u2014Suit\nof Wimlaw vs. Corv Dismissed\nat  Cranbrook\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nCRANBROOK, B.C.. Ocl. tfl).--Thu\nC-ftae of Wlnlaw vs. Cory was before\nthe supreme court sittings here yes-\nlerdiiv and today, Mr. Justice Murphy\npresiding.\n*.l. Ll. Wlnlaw of Nelson is sueing\nT. T. Corey. Canadian Pacific railway\nconductor running between Medicine\nHat and Cranbrook, for $100, paid him\nIn December, 1911 ror an option on\nsome land at Duck Creek: but Mr.\nWlnlaw stated that the real matter\nbetween 'them was the fact that Corey\nhad accused him at Medicine Hat of\nforgery, by adding- clause and signature to the option, of which there was\nonly une co- after Corey delivered\n.1 to him;\nThe clause In question Is tu the effect that the -f 100 was repayable If no\nJen I was made.\nNelson Wlnldw, sun of tli,. plaintiff,\ntestified that he canio to Cranbrook\nin December, lilll, to see Corey about\ninirchiisliig the land for his father;\nthat Corey asked a higher price 'than\nhe waB authorize-] to pay; so he made\ni memo of price and terms Corey\n\u25a0vuulcl accept, which Corey signed and\nWlnlaw look with him to Nelson. He\nUso paid Corey (100 to make the option binding. Mr. Wlnlaw, Sr,, deeld-\n\u2022d be did not want the land at the\nirice asked and told hiK son he had\n\u25a0ecu \"stuck*.' for \u00a5100, and the matter\ndropped, Nearly f, year later Mr.\nWlnlaw. Jr., passing through Medicine\nHat. saw Corey again, and asked If he\nwould sell part of the land In oucs-\n*.lou. Nc thing was done, however, but\nMr. Wlnlaw says be thCn asked what\nihout the $100 already uald, and that\nCorey replied that he would send it\nT Willlaw returned certain plans. The\nplans and also thp option were returii-\n\u25a0d to Corey, but the $100 was not re-\npayed hv blm.\nMr,  Wlnlaw, Sr..   then  took  up  the\nlorev   and   recounted   a   meeting   between himself and Corey at Medicine\nHat some two months later.   He asked\nCorey  about   selling  th,.   land.   Corey\ntook   him   to   an   office   where,   being\nalone,   h(* said   lo   Wlnlaw   \"There   Is\nsome-thing   In   lhat   agreement   that\ndid  not sec the,-,   when  I signed it.\nWlnlaw said:   \"Do  you  mean to  Insinuate that I forged soincthin- to It\nCorey said;   \"Ves, I do; 1 am going to\narrest  vuu  for It.\"\nMr. Wlnlaw' description of the\nscene was extremely vigorous and\ndramatic; If be were a younger man.\nhe said Corey would nut have got out\nuf lhat office: he WTMld have \"catched\nhis windpipe.\" However, alter much\nanirry talk, wherein Wlnlaw challcng'\ned Corey to carry out bis threat and\na visit to Hv chief of poliee, Corey\nfinally said he was nut going to do\nanything, and \"It Is tip -to you.\"\nSo Mr. Wlnlaw. to vindicate hh\nhonor, had hroughl Hih action, and\nhulii tha * he bad a few hundred thousand dollars In the bank and was will-\nIr.g t0 spend it* nil if necessary t<\nmake Corey sorry for what he had\nsnid;\nARRANGING SALE OF WORK\nAT  SOUTH  SLOCAN\nSOUTH SLOCAN. B, C.. Oct. r.0.\u2014\nThe Bonnlngton branch of the Woman's Auxiliary held their fortnightly\nmeeting yesterday afternoon, which\ntook the form of a quilting bee. There\nwas u large attendance of members,\nSome beautiful needlework was displayed suitable for -Christmas gifts,\nwhich has been made and given by\nthe members for the sale of work and\nsocial which is to be held on November 21. A business meeting was also\nheld, Mrs. Cecil Patey in the chair,\nHie most important feature being the\nelection of a new secretary in the\nplace of Mrs. J. R, Kennedy, resigned\nA hearty vote of thanks was passed\nto Mrs. Kennedy for her valuable services during the past five months.\nMrs. Turner Lee, who was the lion,\nsecretary-treasurer up to thnt time,\nwas unanimously elected lo the position. Final arrangements were made\nfor the sale of work, Mrs; T. Davidsor\nof South Slocan and Mrs. R. G. Long\nof llonnington Falls are to be in\ncharge of the fancy work stall, and\nany contributions to it wilt he gladly\nreceived by them. Tt was decided to\nhave an extra meeting next Wedne\nday. November 5. in order to get all\nneedlework finished ready for the sale.\nThe fortnightly meeting will take place\nas usual on November 12, in thc public hall at Slocnn Junction, commencing at 2:.1ft p.m. A dainty tea was\nserved hv Mrs. -T. R. Kennedy and Mrs,\nTurner Lee. The meeting closed with\nprayer.\nT. A. Wheildon. who lias been away\non a shooting trip with J. H. Schofield.\nM.P.P., returned on Tuesday night. He\nreports ducks plentiful and hnd a good\nbag.\nMr. and Mrs. ,T. Barrett, who have\nbeen In charge of Creel lodge for tlie\nseason, left last night for Balfour,\nwhere Mr. Barrett will have the position of guardian of the Kootenay Lake\nhotel.\nThere will he two church services at\nthe Junction on Sunday next. There\nwill be a celebration of Holy Communion at 8 n.m. and the usual service in the afternoon at 2: SO.\nD. Blackwood and W. A. Ward of\nNelson had a day's shooting around\nthe Junction. Mr. Blackwood closed\nup his summer bungalow for the season before returning to Nelson.\nSMALL  POX  AT OROVILLE\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nI'lQNTICTON, B.C., Oct. 30.\u2014There\nIs a serious outbreak of small pox al\nOrovllle- with seven cases already\nported, and the town has been placed\nunder quarantine, Autolsts from here\nwho spent Sunduy In thc American\ntown narrowly escaped being forced\nto take up their residence there indefinitely. Loomis, a few miles from\nOrovllle, hus no less than 14 cases,\nwhile a later report, says there are\n20 cases In Orovllle, ulthough this report Is not believed here. It is said\nthat contagion has already Hpread to\nKeremeos, and that there are two\ncases there. Dr. White, provincial\nhealth officer here, is taking the mat\ntcr up with Dr. Pagan, medical health\nFriday and Saturday Bargains\nExtraordinary Values in Staple Dry Goods\nBelow is a PARTIAL LIST of some splendid bargains for early shoppers\nKour Dozen Mudo Up ROLLER CL0TH8   (Linen).   2%  .yards.     ItcKiilaidJ     OR\n50c,   for    \u00abt>    .*Sv\u00bb\n\/Elgin Dozen  Made  Up  ROLLER CLOTHS  (Linen, Extra Heavy).    Regu- Q\/\\\nlar Olio, for     01\/\nTABLE SILENCE CLOTH     off\nRegular  $1.50, \u25a0 for         .Op\nUne  Dozen  1'alr   (only)   FLANNELETTE BLANKETS (Extra Large)  ....01   OK\nResular $1.65,   for        iJH.OO      .     .\nKlvo  Only  COTTON   FILLED  COMFORTERS        \u00bb\u2022\u25a0,   nf.\nItouular $2.85, for   yi.\/O\nFifty Pieces FLANNELETTE, in stripes. In plain, ln white und In pink  10   10\nRegular up to 20e, for .    \u2022 ***?   -I\"*\"*\nSNOW WHITE -MAR8EL\" BEDSPREADS    dtQ HE\nRegular $3.95, for  \u00abP&.\/O\nTwelve Dozen  LINEN  CLASS CLOTHS.   Ready for use  QA\nRegular 30c, for   em.\\J\nCHILDREN'S   KIMONAS   IN   FANCY  FLANNELETTE     \u00bb\u25a0\u00bb\u00a3\nRegular $1.50, for \/O :':\nl'lvo Pieces UNBLEACHED LINEN       nn\nRegulaT 35c,  for          .C\\)\nBLEACHED   SHEETING,  2   yards  wide,   a   snap     QA\nRegular 45c, for         ....  ....        .OU\nOur milliners have been busy this week trimming New Hats, which are\nnow on sale at Half Price\nPrompt Attention to Mail Orders Watch the Windows\nSmillie & Weir\nBurns Block\nNelson, B. C.\nofficer at Vancouver, urging that no\ntravellers he permitted to cross the\nboundary line unless they can show\nevidence of vaccination. There ls a\ngreat deal of automobile travel between this point nnd Orovllle, as there\nare large numbers or railroad laborers continually on thc move who go\nout to Spokane and come In the same\nway.\nREADING  ROOM  AND\nGYMNASIUM  FOR GRAND FORKS\n(Special to Tho Daily Nows.)\nGRAND FORKS, B.C., Oct. 30.\u2014A\nBelter City Is the beading of handbill's which are being distributed for\nthe purpose of advertising an organization meeting of the Citizens' Improvement association to be held In\nthe Miners Union ball at eight o'clock\ntonight. It is thc purpose of those at\nthc head of thc movement to establish\nif possible a public reading room and\ngymnasium and work for the betterment of the city in general.\nThe Halloween sheet and pillow\ncase dance, given under tho auspices\nof thc Pythian sisters In the Davis\nhull last night, was everything that\ncould be wished for. Tbo large gathering glided over the new hardwood\nflour to the Inspiring strains of Werner's orchestra until thc night was\nfully spent. Refreshments were provided in regal style.\nFIRST  BABY  BORN\nIN   VANCOUVER   IS   DEAD\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Oct. 30.\u2014\nMrs. W, F, Mitchell -the first baby\nborn   in   Vancouver,   after   the   incor\nporation o ftbe clly. 27 years bbo, died\nyesterday. Her husband was formerly\ncomptroller of the British Columbia\nElectric railway here.\nLOST\nOn   Train  at  Kootenay   Landing\/\nBlack     Leather    Case,    containing!\n8-piece  Kitchen  Set.    Finder keep *\ncontents as reward and send cover\nto The Dally News.\nPB^^\nYour Best Shopping\nGuide\nC UPPOSE there were no advertisements\u2014\n^ what a worrying task shopping would\nbe! Think how you would miss the helpful\ninformation that now guides you to select\nthe best goods, and to know the shops\nwhere they can be best obtained.\nHow difficult to make up your\nshopping list without first knowing\nsomething about tho goods you\nneed, or the store that sells them!\nYour shopping would be all experiment. You would pay out a\nlot of money during the slow process of learning by experience how\nto avoid disappointment and dissatisfaction.\nThanks to the high standard of\npresent-day Advertising, no person\nneeds to shop at random.   The ad\nvertising columns of a newspapef\ngive you just thc information you\nrequire to make your best selection of goods or store. Leisurely,\nin the comfort of your own home,\nyou can plan and decide upon the\npurchases in view.\nFrom soap to gas ranges\u2014from\nshoes to automobiles\u2014one gets\nfrom newspaper Advertising the information that is essential to safe\nand advantageous buying.\nNewspaper advertisements are the fingerposts on the road to right buying. They\nare quick and safe guides to the places and\ngoods most worthy of your patronage.\nAdvice regarding your advertising problems is available\nthrough any recognized Canadian advertising agency,\nor through tlie Secretary of tlie Canadian Press Association, Boom 503 Lumsden Bldg., Toronto. Enauiry\ninvolves no obligation on your part\u2014so write, V\ninterested.\nllMMf^^\n W-' Friday--.\nOCTOBER 31\n110%\nrun thrHi\nWT BASKET BALL\n.: TOMORROW NIGHT\nV. M. C, A. Class Trophy Series Opens\n\u25a0\u2014Teams   Evenly  Matched\u2014-Large\nCrowd   Expected\nThe gymnasium of the Y. M. C. A.\nIs expected to prove thc centre of at-\nI   ^traction for a large gathering of bas-\n',' ketball enthusiasts tomorrow evening,\n* when  tho claBS teams  of  the young\nand professional men's classes meet in\nthe opening game of the class trophy\nseries: of 1913-14. The teams taking\npart in the series were probably never\nso evenly matched at the beginning of\nany previous season html great interest Is being taken and much speculation is rife as to what the result of\nthe series 'this1 season will 'be**\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u2022\u25a0'\u00ab\nThe teams that will open the series\nwill in all probability line up as follows;   ti -,      Hull     iff,,   r*rt   Irt\nYoung Mon-~C; E.; Armbrlster and\nC. Emory, guards; R. S. Turner, centre; H. Gibbs (capt.) and H. Francis,\nforwards.   ....,-.\nProfessional    Men\u2014W.> fB.     Steed\n<capt*.[f 'ftrttl \u25a0 W.\" B. Cummins, guards\nW. A. Curran, centre; W. \"W. Kergu\nson and E. Murphy forwards.    -\nLOCAL MEMBER  GETS FOUR\nDUCKS WITH TWO SHOTS\nTo kill four ducks with two shots\nwas the stunt performed by W. R,\nMaclean, M.P.P., while Ih a launch\nwith George Ferguson near Danger\nPoint yesterday.\nThe four ducks were in the wntcr\nand as they rose Mr. Maclean killed\ntwo with the first barrel and two\nwith the second shot.\nCIVIC PRIDE\nsays one writer, \"is the first rung on\nthe ladder of patriotism.\" Patriotism,\nin other words, like charity, should begin at home.\nIt is a pleasing sight to see some\ncitizen of a town or city point with\npride to some civic institution of which\nhe Is justly proud.\nAn eminent English writer recently\nsaid: \"There Is no mor\u00a9 important\ninstitution in a community than the\nnewspaper.\" This is true, because\nwithout printer's ink the localities of\nthe earth would become provincial and\nisolated and have very little interest\nin one another;?'A'lnewspaper is the\npulse-beat of a town, city or district;\nIt registers correctly the Heart-throbs\nof thc social and business life within\nher portals.\nNo dead, unprogressive town ever\nowned a live newspaper and no up-to-\ndate, ambitious town ever tolerated a\npoor one.\nThere are two things that are necessary before a superior newspaper can\nbe produced^ The first is an up-to-\ndate news service, and the second is\nlocal support. Without the latter a\ncollection of Carlyles and Emersons\nwould be of no avail.\nthe Nelson Dally News is the best\ndally In any town of its size in Canada.\nWe say this without fear of contradiction. And furthermore^ it is the\nbest daily newspaper published in any\ncity under 10,000 in America.\nBut a short time ago a traveller in\nBlairmore, Alta,, said: \"I am very\nanxious to see Nelson; it must be a\n.live town to possess such a live newspaper.\"\nMr. Martyn, special representative\nof Answers, the well-known old country paper, in an article in that publica\ntion, described The Nelson Daily News\nas \"the dally paper most to my taste\nof any I saw In British Columbia,\" and\nhe had then seen them all.\nNow let credit be given to whom\ncredit is due. Who made It possible\nfor Nelson to possess a daily worthy\nof metropolitan notice?'    '\nThe answer is\u2014those who have supplied in loyal manner the advertising\nrevenue. Not those who advertise\nalone when times are good. They'are\nlike the Irishman who only took' medicine when he was well\u2014but those who\nyear in and year'otit give their suppbft\nin the advertising columns,.\nIf the merchants of Montreal ceased\nadvertis'ihg the Montreal Star, the\nmost widely circulated paper'in Canada, would cease publication tomorrow. No newspaper can exist independent of Its advertisers.\nNow, to be explicit, there nevcr.was\na copy of The Nelson Daily News published but brought some benefit, direct\nor indirect, to every advertiser In It.\nWhen outsiders come here they\nmake purchases from several stores\nand among these store is one that\ndoes not advertise. This man reaps\nbenefits for which the other patriotic\ncitizens paid good money to secure.\nIs It fair?\n' Now,-Mr; Consumer, It Is plain that\ntf merchants and others did not buy\nadvertising space It would be impos-\n. sible to publish a daily in Kootenay\nand Boundary. Then, do you not owe\na certain consideration to these men\nwho have made a dally newspaper\npossible in this district, why not give\nthese men who believe fn-the country\nthe preference?\nHow many are willing to do their\npart in making Nelson's daily a paper\nto attract attention everywhere?    \u00ab\nYou can do your part if in future you\nagree to trade only with men who are\nwilling to support the most important\nof ail civic institutions\u2014{he newspaper.\nNews of Sport\nOFFICIALSFOR\n;,AB0UT CHOSEN\nAlexander   Has   Previously   Met   and\nLost to Hughes\u2014 Alexander Has\nHad\"   Experience\nThe thlrd.imani In-the ffing on Wed*\nnesday evening .when Alexander and\n'HiigheH-.niix it for featherweight honors -ifll! the opera- house-will he doe\nHolland, the well known local ama^\nteur boxer. George Horstead will act\nos ^ (announcer and arrangements nn\nnow about completed' for n. Rood pre\nllmlnnry go.- H. G. Porks will be one\nof tho -contestants in the preliminary\nhoutand the other will in till probability boiseciired today.\nThat Alexander is a fighter with\nsome experience is shown hy his record,;.which-includes the following engagements*:' i\" \u2022\u25a0 \u2022       \"'\nKid- Locke,- six I rounds, no- decision,\nat  Philadelphia.\nJoe Hurst, six rounds, no decision,\nat Philadelphia.\nWon from Mickey Gnnnon in four\nrounds int. Philadelphia.\nWon from Tommy O'Kuofe In five\nrounds at Philadelphia.\nKnocked out W. Russell in five\nrounds at Philadelphia.\nLost to Young Fit-igeruld in eight-\nrounds  at  Milwaukee.'\nKought a draw Willi Kid Murphy nt\nMilwaukee.\nFought a draw with Tommy Scully\nat Wuul-lgan, 111.\n[\u2022\"ought a draw with ('ooney Kelly\nat Peoria, HI.\nKnocked out Eddie Shannon at\nSeattle in  four rounds.\nFought four round draw wilh Billy\nDavis at Victoria.\nLost to Bert Hughes in six rounds\nat   HnzeNon,- i.\n1'onghi a draw 'With Rill Hanifon at\nPrince Rupert,\nFollgllt a draw Willi Scully (*\nat Portland.\nFought a draw Willi   Kid Alo\nI'osion,  12  rounds,\nFought a draw with Ydling .1.\nut  Philadelphia.\nAs Ih shown In his record of fights\nAlexander bus previously fought\nHughes, to whom he lost at Ilazellon\nIn six rounds.\nTEAMS PRACriCE\nHARD FOR GAME\nppe\nris a I\nck&on\nRHODES  SCHOLARS   PROMINENT\nIN  UNIVERSITY SPORTS\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nOX FORD, lOngla nd, Ocl. IK).- The\nnew Rhodes scholars were prominent\ntoday in the athletic meeting of the\nOxford freshmen. Norman S. -Tuber,\nformerly of BrovVn university, providence, won lhe mile event easily in\n4:41 3-il, hut was beaten In the -Hfl\nyards dash by the South African,\nHudd,  in r,0 1-5 seconds.\nV. P.. Havens, formerly of Rutfrer's\ncollege, New Hiunswlck, N.J., won the\ntin) \u201evardH dash tn )0 !-*> seconds mid\nthe shol put wilh ;)0 feet S inches. -\nGIANTS DEFEAT WHITE SOX\nDONIIAM, Toxflfc Oct. 30.\u2014The Now\nYork Giants defeated the Chicago\nWhite Sox  hen-  lotbtv   1   to   I.   Score:\nNew   York     4   fi   0\nChicago          l    7    *!\nTesreau and Meyers; kussell and\nSchalk, Dally.\nBluebell and Trail  Both Confident of\n^Victory\u2014Bluebell Has Unbeaten Home Record.\nWord received -h-ret- 'night from Rlondel states that the football team of\ntheRlUebell'mme.- winner-of division\nB of the West -Kootena-y Divisional\nFootball league, Is practicing faithfully for the first of the cup final games\nfqr tbe league championship, whicli it\nwill play with the Trail team on Sunday next. The mining hoys hav*; not\nyet. met defeat on their home grounds\nand It Is their one great hobe to maintain this record ' when tbfcy run up\nagainot the winners of division A.\nTho Bluebell hoys have undergone a\nrigid course of training for some time\nno\"w and nothing has been left undone\nthat might assist In -fielding the strongest team that has ever represented\nthe blue and white.   \u25a0\nSimilnr reports emnnato from Trail\nand those who have closely followed\nthe work of both aggregations expect\nto Bee the best and most exciting game\nof fool-ball that'has ever-been played\nin the district. - -\nThe klokoff for the game will hike\nplachiat 12:45 on Sunday.\n.     BASKETBALL  AT  TRAIL\n'Snot-hl to Thn Doily News)\nTRAIL, R. C., Oct. .VI.\u2014The initial\ngame of basketball in Trail was\nplayed on Tuesday evening al the rink\nbetween the intermediates and a team\npicked from lho office staff, the former winning by a score of 14 to\nOn Friday night the intermediates \u25a0a\"!\nmeet tho'ltosshtiid quintet in the local\nrttik. On Monday, November \", 'lie\nRoi'slaiid ami Tfftll seniors will play\"\nhere.\nHe Knows Corns\nThis Chemist Who Invented Blue-jay\nHe studied corns for a dozen years,\nthen worked out this\nway to remove them.\n\u25a0 It's a Simple little\nplaster With a little\ndrop of wax.\nApply it In a jiffy,\nand the corn pain\nstopsatonce. Youfor-\nget the corn entirely.\nIn  48  hours the\nwhole corn comes out\u2014root,\ncallous, everything. Not a whit\nof pain or soreness.\nThat ends the corn.\nWhy pare corns? Why daub\nthera? Why use old-time pads\nand plasterr.? Those are archaic\nmethods.\nBlue-jay is so vastly better that\nfolks use it on a million corns a\nmonth.   Try it on one of yours1.\nA In the picture Is the nod D & D wax.   It loosens the corn.\nB stops the paid ami keeps thc wax from spreauiin*-.\ng wraps around the toe.   It is narrowed to bo comfortable.\nIs rubber adhesive to fasten the plaster on.\nBlue-jay Corn Plasters\n: r   Sold by pru-jgiat** \u2014 15c and 25c per package\nSample Mailed Free.   Also Clue-jay Uunlon Plasters.\n(303)   Bauer & Black, Chicago A New York, Makers of Surgical Drciting*-, etc\n!!\u00abS'\u00ab$\u00ab-\u00ab-*'-$*^^\nMUST PLAY  AT  COAST\nOR  NOT  AT ALL\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nVANCOUVER, B. C, net. 3').\u2014Skene\nPionnn and Newsy Lalonde will play\nhockey on thp Pacific coast 'this winter. Otherwise they will not jilav at\nall.\nThai iK (\u2022\"- dictum of Prank Patrick,\nand   Frank  ge'herally  knows  what  he\nis talking about:\n''Wf.   have   nude   legitimate   tradOB\nfor Rohan\nment with eastern oil\nMr. Putrick to.Uiy, '\ncome out this way.\nOttawa in oxchflhgp\nunless we fchal] ma\nide in which hp is\nIs not in pi'ospeW Ju\nSkene will he mn her\n\u25a0Oliver  dub.   Th,.\nunder \u25a0\nthey'\nLid\n let\nKendall goea to\nfor Roniin, and\nHe some further\nincluded, which\nit this minute\u2014\na with the Vunr\n. ,     . .\u201e. \u201eH.'cement   between\nEjnBt and west has worked splendidly to date. All the club owners feel\nb&tte'r under the proief-lion it affords,\nand thf men with monev invested in\nhockey can *iy witli Hume assuranc'-\nJus-t what they will and will noi have\ninter, tir course, it's hard on\nthe players to lose their Inflated anilines, hut every man engaged lit the\ngame, particularly on ihe Pacific\ncoast, will .receive exactly what, his\nservices ;u*- worth, and thorp appears\nho much contentment gehefajly\namong the stick handler*-* whoso- l<*t\nfound Ihem In ihs part of the world\nwhen the agreement was entered n-\nto.\"\nOOK-DINDING\nB00KB\nOf Every\nDescription\nWe can fulfil any order for Book-\nBinding in an efficient manner. We\nhave competent workmen and full\nequipment for the binding of Special\nLoose Leaf Ledgers, all styles and\nsizes, Blank Books, Library Work and\nthe Binding of Magazines and Papers.\nGet our prices on this work and you\nwill be surprised how little good binding in your home town can be produced for.\nThe News Job  Department\nNelson, B. C.\nTHE\n1    '\u25a0\u25a0\nNelson Opera House-Two Nights Only\nB. E. LANG PRESENTS\n.A    vi *\u25a0:',*. |   in,\nMonday, Nov. 3\n.   .....        \u25a0   v     i\nKirk Lashelle and Julian Edwards' Broadway Success\n\"The Princess Chic\"\nOne Year at the Casino Theatre, New York\nSPECIAL SfcENfERY CORRECT COSTUMES\nTWENTY-ONE MUSICAL NUMBERS\nTuesday, Nov. 4\nThe Rollicking Irish Musical Comedy\n\"The Rose of Blandeen\"\nINA  MITCHELL\nBILLIE  O'NEILL\nPRICES: $1,00, 75c arid 50c\n^jte8|gjS^ly^|i^   I ..... ..' '    .mv   '\u2022    \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0' \u25a0\u25a0..-\u25a0\nSeat Sale at City Drug Store\n t>AQe FOUR.\nCt# Batty $ctofi\nFRIDAY\nOCTOBER. 3)\n-Ctie Sail? #etos\nPublished   at   Nelson   Every   Morning\nExcept Sunday, by\nTht Nows Publishing Company,\nLimited.\nVV.  G.   POSTER,   Editor ind   Manager\nLEGAL   AND   OFFICIAL\nADVERTISING.\nCffsetlvt   on   and   After  Jan.   1,   1913\nLtgal Advertising CIncludes munlclpp'\nsnd \u25a0rovernmim* notices) \u201412'\nper Hne for the first Insortlor\nand oljrht cen's per line fo*\" si'\nnulla firm on' insprMnnp\nIn certain ease*-, however, for th<\nConvenience of **-,,\u00bb puhMc. fin\nrat*****, have been set. ns fallowa*.-\nApplieations for Liquor Licenses: \u2014\nOnee per week for four week*\n$5;   daily for month. ?30\nApplications for Transfer of Liquo-\nLicenieii\u2014Onee per week fo*\nfour weeks, S7.S0: dally fo*\nmonth,  $45.\nLand    Purchase    Notices:\u2014Once   pc\nweek for GO dava, $7.\nLand Lease  Notices:\u2014Once per weel\ntor CO days, $7.\nCertificate   of   Improvement    Notices\n\u2014Once   per   week    for    10    day*-*\n112.50.\nDelinquent    Co-ownership    Notices:-\nOnee p\u00ab*r week for % days, $25.\nDuplicate Certificate of Title Notices\n\u2022-Four   insertions.   $8;    eight   In-\n\u25a0trtlons, $14.\nWater      Application      Notices:\u2014Fnn\ninsertions   up   to   100   words,   $6\nover 100 woniH In proportion.\nWhere any of the above applications contain more than one application or no. Ice, each application ot\nnotice will be charged for as a separate advertisement.\nFRIDAY, OCTOBER 31\nthe money, and: the culprit escapes\nwith only an obligation to his or her\nbenefactor. If time were allowed in\ncases where the financial circumstances of the convicted one required\nsuch a concession much real injustice\nwould be avoided. Tho custom of fining, Instead of imprisoning, for minor\noffences has Its drawbacks, but on the\nwhole its usefulness \"warrants an extension of It.\nPAYING  FINES   BY   INSTALMENT.\nThe British home secretary, Hon.\nReginald McKenna, has In preparation a hill changing the penal system\nhy allowing police court fines to be\npaid In instalments. Outlining the\nprovisions of the coming hill to his\nconstituents at Pontnewynydd, Mr.\nMcKenna said that the number of persons committed to jail last year for\nnil offences was 151,000. That was\na startling total. And of the 151,000.\nabout 80,000 were committed in default, of paying a fine. He thought\nthat there was largo room for reform\n..in such conditions. If a fine was n\nfit punishment for the offence there\nought to be every provision for Its\npayment, and not a resort to imprisonment in default, Investigation of the\ntype of offences for which the 80,000\ndefaulters bad been sent to jail showed that considerable over 10,000 ol\ncases were those of violation of\npolice regulations, over 1,000 were\ncases under tho Highway acts, and\nover 1,000 were offences under the\nEducation acts. He thought it could\nbe asserted with confidence that over\nhalf of the 80,000 offenders had gone\nto prison because they could not pay\nthe fine.\nHere is, indeed, says the Toronto\nMall and Empire, an opportunity for\nsome law reform. It. would be necessary to invest magistrates and justices\nof the peace with lar^e discretionary\npowers as to when time should he allowed on the payment of fines. Probably tbe most direct, result of such a\nreform, if applied In Canada, would\nbe to make tlie offender himself or\nherself bear oftener the burden ol\npaying the fine. As it is now, when\nthe. offender faces jail because tin\nmoney to pay the fine is not fort'.com-\ning, some relative or friend puts up\nPAPE'S DIAPEPSIN\nREGULATES STOMACH\nTime   It!     In   Five   Minutes  the   Gas\nSourness, Heartburn and Indigestion  Misery  Is Gone.\nDo sfme foods you eat bit back-\ntaste .good, hut work badly; f'-rnvni\nInto stubhorn lumps and Cause a siek.\n-sour, gassy stomach? Now. Mr. oi\nMrs. Dyspeptic jot this down: I'upe'.s\nDiapepsin digests everything, leaving\nnothing to sour and upset you, There\nnever whs anytVlh-* s(1 safely quick\nsn certainly effeetive. No difference\nhow linrily your stomach is dlsorderei\nyou will get happy relief in five minutes, hut whai pleases you most ii\nthat It strengthens anil regulates youi\nStomach b0 you con eat your favorite\nfoods without fear.\nMost remedies give you relief sometimes\u2014 they are slow, hut not surf1\nDiapepsin Ir quick, positive and put:\nyour stOmach In a healthy conditio!\nso th-* mseiy won't eomp bark.\nYou feel different ns soon as 01\"-\npepsln comes in eontaet with thr\nstomach\u2014distress just vanishes\u2014yout\nstomach nets sweet, no gases no belch\ning nr. eructations of undigested food\nyour head clenra nnd you fi-p* fine.\nGo now, make the best Investment\nypu ever made by getting a larse fifty\ncen( rase of Pape's Diapepsin from\nany drug slur*'. Yon reali'\/e in fivr\nminutes how needless it is h, suffe*-\nfrom indigestion, dyspepsia or nn>\nstomach disorder.\nTHORPE'S\nDRINKS\nl.b     J*\"\"\"\u25a0 \u25a0 -\"   Mi-\n:t>-     60     ~~+-Jyyj\nA CIVIC EXPERIMENT.\nThe city of HoiiBton, Texas, has\ndecided to attempt an experiment in\nci-ic or municipal ownership which.\nit Is believed, is without precedent\neither In the United States or Canada.\nUnder a new charter, which Houston\nwill secure at once, the civic administration Is given authority and opportunity to engage in all sorts of business enterprises. Not only can it operate its own telephone, lighting, power and transit franchises, but it enn\nundertake all sorts of Beml-private and\nprivate business, runs Its own hotels,\nrestaurants, saloons, bakeries, meat\ngrocery or dry goods establishments,\nand deal in all other lines from cradles\nto gravestones. It can nlso buy land\nbeyond the city boundaries, build\nhouses and sell or rent them to its\ncitizens.\nMunicipal housing. If adopted In\ngrowing cities, might do much to relieve congestion and improve the con\nditions under which the people live,\nMunicipal street railways, telephones*\nand light and power plants have also\nproven successful ventures, hut it is a\nquestion, says tho St. .Tohn Standard,\nIf any city Bhould compete with its\nown tax payers in lines of private\nbusiness. Such competition would operate against business development,\nwhile the whole system of civic or\nmunicipal store*? would greatly Increase the opportunities for graft and\ndishonest practices. It will he interesting to see how the Houston Socialist charter will work out.\nWhat the Press Ia Saying\nMad   Wags\nThe Street is full of mad, mad wags\nthese days, who nsk -imonu other\nthings: Who is the guy who put nil\nthe water in Spanish River? Who\nlied the enn on dinners, and who, for\nKoodnes.s, gracious sake, put the\n\"ends\" in dividends?\u2014Toronto Star.\nThe Way of the People\nIn Seattle, whieh Is a thrifty city in\nthe initiative and referendum state of\nWashington, a proposition -to spend\n$20,000,000 on harbor Improvements\nonly broughl out one In five or thc\nvoters, but If any attempt bud been\nmade to spend the money without u\nvote lliere would have been a Ire.\nmendous kick by four out of five citizens.   Philadelphia   Press.\nThe Ocean  Leviathans\nThe  new  Gladstone  dock  ni   Liverpool, which Is the largest in the world,\nmiiy  he  utilized   soon   by   the  present\ngreatest   steamship   in   the   world,   the\nGerman Imperator. Tin- Hamburg-\nAmerlka line has made an Inquiry of\nthe Mersey Duck hoard if lhe Imper-\nafor could be sent there for her annua] overhauling. All other exisiinu\ndoeka are on the small side. Tie\nMersey Dock board have replied that\nihey are able to provide the necessary\naccommodation al the new Gladstone\ndock, which has a length of l.or.l) feet,\nwidth of entrance 120 feet. The inquiry emphasizes the new oeenn harbor trouble which is arising owing to\nthe increasing size uf steamships. It\nhas been reported recently nt Hamburg thnt there is a proposal lo pul\nthe Imperator during the dead season\ninto a service from New York to\nNaples and Monte Carlo. The enni-\nM-iny admits that this scheme hap\nb en considered, but indicates that the\ndifficulty of finding accommodation\nfor the Imperator in Mediterranean\nports has hitherto prevented a decision.\u2014 London   St fl nda I'd,\nThis Day in\nCanadian Histoiy\nA century ago, when there wan little\nfacility for travel by land, all the\nsmall eentres of population In Upper\nCanada were situated on the lakeland rivers, and the Interruption of\nwater communication at this season\nof the year caused great inennvonl-\nence. It was perhaps peculiarly trying to the persons responsible for the\nissue of the early newspapers. In the\n\"Gazette\" of October 31. ISO\", for In-\nstnnee, complaint Is made that the Irregularity of communication with\nNiagara by water \"lias prevented US\nreceiving our papers this week.\"\nHowever they had a resource in \"the\nIndian Kxprcss,\" not open to their\nsuccessors. When this express commenced Its regular weekly route, the\neditor announced' \"Our publish Ing\nday will be changed to Wednesday,\"\nadding dls'-iuirugingly, \"We have nothing of moment or interest. Should\nanything occur we will give nn extra\nsheet\" (In the following year better\nwealher must have prevailed, for the\nchange of the day of publication was\nnot made till Ihe middle of December.)\nin November, 1X07. the publishers\nagain had lo apologize this time for\nprinting Ihe \"Qiizette\" on blue paper,\nsuch as is used for magnzlne covers,\n\"owing to the non-iirrivnl of our expected supply.\"\nItBGINA, :&iiHk\u201e Oct. 30.\u2014Theodore\nSchmidt, pn-yr!elin- ni Hie \\ on-j ni-\nlei. wns today fined Mi,, minima.?-\noennhy of $20>\u00ab0 nnd rosis fur In r'Ai\npolice louit-for permitting ;| game of\ndlee to take place In hfs bar room last\nSaturday night. Mr, Schmidt declared he had never violated the license\nact, nor oermlttod gambling of any\ndescription Id hia hotel if he knew It.\nGENERAL   BRA MWELL BOOTH\nWho is  in  Canada to moke his first inspection of the Army  in  Canada as\nCommander-in-Chief.    He  will  travel to various parts of the country\nCOMMUNICATIOI**\nROSSLAND  MAN  GIVES\nVIEWS ON SOCCER  DECISION\nTo the Sporting Editor of The Daily\nNews.\nSir; As a member of the Rossland\nFootball club and one who has done\na good deal to help to foster association football in many ways, 1 contend\nthat tho Rossland team has heen handed one of the most unfair deals that\nany body of men who represent themselves to run a league ever gavo.\nSurely the league secretary kepi, a\nstanding of tbo clubs that were playing in each division, and when each\ndivision schedule was played, then I1\nhe furnished the standing of the clubs,\ngames played, won and lost, points of\neach club, I cannot, see how a president of a league can order two teams\nto play a game to see which Is champion when t.hey have already played\ntheir schedule out, and one team is-\none point ahead, which tin- standing\nof the teams will show, and that\nwould make the Rossland team lhe winners of this division.\nThen why should they he deprived\nof playing Ihe winners of thf' other\nlivlsion for the championship of the\ncat-ue?\nIn reference to tlie league meeting\nhat was held in Trail, the president\ngave his decision on evidence that\nwas produced and given by Trail people. There was nothing pnaaed between the two captains ol the teams\nin regard to n friendly game; and\nsurely, sir, you must admit that those\nmen are' tho bosses of lhe teams who\nre to play.\nTake tho meeting that was held in\nNelson later, when a Nelson man\nseconded a motion which is illegal unless the president can Hhown other-\nwise, If a club Is suspended from a\n[\u2022ague then lhe delegates of said eluh\navo no say whatever at .'my oilier\nmeetings.\ni reference to the president of the\nleague sending down word to the meeting that \"if his decision was not upheld he would resign\"; well, that- is\nshowing very poor sportsmanship toward the league, especially as il is\nthe first, season of Its existence.\nIt. W. TIM MS.\nRossland, B. C, Oct. 29,\nREG.MENT  LOSES  KLAVILY\nIN   EDMONTON   FIRE\n(By Dallv News Leased Wire.i\n[3DMONTON, Oct. 30.-- fire which\n'>rui'e iti,t from pome cause unknown\ni tor tiri'ni'rht, swi'i'i bv a strong\nvlnd, \"ompMHy dcMi'-yed ihe Thistle\nink ',i Sicond up eel and the old\ncurling rink used an armories of the\nlOLsi Regimen! Edmonton fusiliers,\nvhlch was In un adjoining building.\nThe Kin\" Edward hotel, just Across\nhn Line, was 'threatened |,v tlie intense hpal, bin was not injured. The\nd-'gesi loser.- an- thn lifoat Regiment,\n'n tiie urmorloq were two uniforms for\n\u25a0ath of u-e 401) members of the rogl-\nueni, heeides r.c.nou noinds oi' ammunition ar the' Instruments of the\nedmetnal banfl.\nl*or more trnu hair an hour the ex-\nilosirins ui* uu- cartridges kepi up a\n-oniiniicd fusllade. ami this, combined\nwith lhe soectacular blaze of the\nvooden structure- attracted an im-\n\u25a0nense crowd. The buildings are bolh\nnvned bv McDougall A Socord and\n\u25a0re  valued   til   $20,000,   wilh   full   in-\nnirenoe,\nWEALTH OF FURS\nIN FAR NORTH\nCaptain   Bernier   Returns   from   Successful   Voyage\u2014Brings   Back\nFurs, Ivory, Fish and Oil\n(Ry  Dally  News  Leased  Wire.)\nMONTREAL. Que., Oct. HO.\u2014Hale\nand hearty Capt. Hernfer. the Arctic\nexplorer, arrived in Montreal his!\nnight after an absence of 16 montlu\nln the northern part of Baffin Land.\nHe stales that In- is absolutely convinced that ('aiinda has an inexhaustible harvest, of furs and other commercial commodities along her nnr-\niliei-n  boundaries.\n\"I have brought back witli me,\" he\nsaid, \"n full cargo of furs, Ivory, fish\nand oil, There is a harvest up there\nthat Canada of the future will he\nglad of, for II Is, boundless and hns\nhardly yet been touched. Of the fun-\nI brought buck foxes, blue und white,\nbut I have some very fine bear skins\nand seal skins. Reports from Ihe natives regarding iIks conditions of tin\nfiur hearing. aSiImitlH aro of, the very\nbest. The. skins I hnve bear out tlu-it\ncunt cut Ion thai tin* animals of Ihe\nArctic wilds have been wintering well\nnnd must hnve considerably  Increased.\nIn passing throbgh the simIts of\nRellej Isle we skirled the eonsl ol\nGiven land and froifl (here went across-\n\u2022o Lancaster Sound and thence lo\nI'ond's Inlel. Wc formed a parly\nthere nnd travelled south liutl miles lo\nIglolilc, stopping at our various stations un.the way. .The. natives are up\nfriendly ns lever and with guns ami\nammunition I h-l'I Ihem the trip previous had spent the. whiter profitably.\n\"I'an'ida will draw a huge revenue\nin tlie future from the north of this\nplace, which has never been lapped\nby   the   Hudson   liny  company.\n\"After 1-t moiilhs on land, speni\nvisiting new stations, I left the unlives with more guns and ammunition,\nfor 1 Intend to go back. I did see a\nlew mlherdl deposits, which I| will\nshow Inlet-,' hut il wiiH Incurred when\nstated over n year ago thai I hnd\nseen gold fur I never reporle.l findiim\nit. The party ,-tre all fit and as n\nbusiness trip It hns been a heller success than ever. The natives were\nwell disposed. J don't believe thai\nHe- Oiidwell party was-Jellied for when\nI gol to Kutlerton the'-natives there\nlold me Cuiiwell's Ksiitiimos had never\ngot   back.    They  were evidently lost.\"\nNEXT MOVE UP\nTO UNITED STATES\n\u25a0ontlnued   from   Dace   one l\nLatin-American   affairs,  its   devotion\nto the cause of constitutional governmeni nn this hemisphere nnd Its belter that a fair and free election with\nsafeguards and guarantees musl In-\nheld In order to establish a legal authority in the southern rapiiblle.\nThis statement of the go.i\u25a0rnmen.r*\nattitude already outlined In Ihe president's speeches at Mobile and\nSwarlhmore, In all probability will la\ncommunicated lo Mexico and a copy\nur the views transmitted to foreigi\nf-ovi'iiiments generally as nn expression of policy hy the Washlii^t-m'.id-\nmlniatratlon.\nThose Who Rely on\nthe great home remedy which has proved its power to\nrelieve safely and speedily the minor ailments arising\nfrom defective or irregular action of the organs of\ndigestion, find themselves spared hours of suffering\nand able to ward off the  attacks of serious sieknesss.\nBEECHAM'S FILLS\nnever disappoint those who take them. They help the\ndigestion, stimulate the liver, clear the kidneys and regulate the bowels. By purifying the blood they Increase\ncheerfulness and create confidence. As actions depend\non health and strength, those who know Beecham's Pills\nEnjoy Life\nPripired only hy Thonui Bceflham. St. Helen*, LiMWiblrc, Rh|I\u00abd<I.\nSold everywl^re in Caniili mid U. S, Anwlci.   In \"ihxm, 25 cenU.\nOBSTRUCTION TO\nSALMO REMOVED\nRun   Up  Fraser  River Only  Temporarily Obstructed by Rocks\nBlasted From Track.\n03y Dally News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, Oct. 30.\u2014According loan\nofficial of tho department of marine\nand fisheries the reportH that have\nrecently appeared in tho press that\nsockeye salmon Jiavo this year been\nprevented from roachlng their spawning beds In the Fraser river to the\nextent of decreasing the-big fourth\nyear rthi td-'tho proportion of an off\nyear, were somewhut exaggerated.\nIn building Its road along the side\nof the river in East Hills, Gale Canyon, the Canadian Northern railway\nallowed largo quantities of rock that\nwas blasted out to fall into the river.\nThis resulted In a considerable change\nIn thi flow of the water. The work\nwas not performed during the past\nsummer, but before the run of the\nsalmon to the river last, year, but notwithstanding last season the fish readily ascended.\nThis year the early run of salmon\ngot up, as Is evidenced hy the fact\nthat the salmon hatchery at Shushwap\nlake, a half mile up the river, more\nsalmon were caught in the hatchery\npenB early In the season tlian would\nhe required to yield sufficient eggs to\nrill tho hatchery.\nAs these fish would not spawn for\nseveral weeks and as it is not desirable to hold fish In the pens for a\nlong time, thev were liberated and a\nlater run relied upon to fill the hatchery. ' Shushwap lake Is hut one of the\nmanv resorts or spawning salmon in\ntho upper reaches of thp Fraser.\nThe water level in the Fraser during the time the salmon were running\nwas unusual for that season. It remained at medium height much.longer than ordinarily. In tho latter part\nof the season, when the water was\nat medium height,, it. was ascertained\nthat many fish were below the obstruction and wero unable to surmount It.\nThe federal and provincial governments, acting together, took Immediate steps to overcome thc obstruc\ntion, and as a result, a passagewav\nwas provided through which the fish\nthen barred got up. Tbe official says\nthere Is little room for doubt that a\nsufficiently large number of the salmon reached their spawning grounds\nto keep up, if not highly increase, the\nbig fourth year rttn.\nMoreover, in the hatcheries on the\nriver there are at present over 10,.\n000,000 eggs.\nLONDON. Oct. 30,\u2014At Newmarket\ntoday tho Jockey Club cup, \u00a3000; two\nmiles and a quarter, was won by Mr.\nFairie's four-year-old bay colt Aleppo,\nby Beppb-Chene Relne, 5 to 2. The\nodds-on favorite, Lord Carnarvon's\nRIvoli, 5 to 0, was second, and l\\\nNelko's Cylbii. I to 1, lasl, only three\nrunning.\nA HAPPY, LAUGHING\nCHILD IN FEW HOURS\nIf   Cross,   Irritable,   Feverish,   Tongue\nCoated and Sick, Give Delicious\n\"Syrup of Figs.\"\nYmu- child isn'i naturally cross Ir-\nriiabjeniuf pe.-vish, Mother!    Kxamlne\nthe    tongue;    if   coated,    it    means    the\nil'tie one's siomai-b j,- disordered, liv'T\nInactive and its thirty feci \u201ef bowels\n('logged wilh  foul, decaying wnsie.\nEvory mother n-nllz.-s lifter givlii;-\ndelicious \"Syni|, of FIgH\" that Mite Ik\nthe Ideal laxative atld physic for children. Nothing els,- regulates tlie Hill\"\none's tender stomach, liver and bowels\n-,. effectually besides ihey dotirly lovp\ns delightful fij*  taste,\nFor constipated bowels, sluggish\nliver. hlliouHnPss, or sour, disordered\nstomach, leverisluji'ss, dhirroea, sore\nthroat, bad breath or to hr<*ak a cold,\ngive uiie-half tu a teas-iooriful ,(if\n\"Syrup uf Figs,\" and in a few hours\nall the cloggc,) iip waste, sour bile,\nundigested food and constipated matter will gently movo \"ti and out of\nhe system without griping or nausea\nand you will surely hnve a well, happy\nand   smiling   child   again   shortly.\nWilh Syrup ,,r Figs you are not\n\u25a0trngfflng yum- children, being compus-\ned entirely of luscious figs, senna and\nitromatics it cannot be harmful,\nFull directions for children of nil\nagf's and far grown ups plainly printed on ihe package.\nAsk Vun,. drugglsi for the rul] name\n\"Syrup (,r Figs and I'hixir \u00bbf Senna,\"\nprepared by ihe Cnlifo\/hlu Fig Syrup\nCo. This is the delicious tasUng. genuine old reliable. Refuse iihything\n\u25a0iso offered,\nPossessing exquisite freshness and a\nfullness of flavor not found in other teas\n\"SALADA\"\nCEYLON TEA-\"Pure and Clean to a Leaf\"\nBLACK, MIXED OR 1 Sealed Packets Only\nNATURAL   GREEN I Beware of Imitation!      \u201e\n.. The ..\nColdstream Estate Nurseries\nVernon, B. C.\nAll Kinds of Fruit and Ornamental Stock.\nStrictly Home Grown.\nFor Prices, Etc., Apply\nManager, OR\nColdstream Estate Nurseries,\nVernon, B.C.\nO. W. Humphry,\nLocal Agent,\nSouth Slocan, B. C.\nCOAL!!   COAL!   COAL!\nWE ARE AGENTS  FOR THE  FOLLOWING:\nACME COAL CO. BANKHEAD' MINES\nCROWS NEST PASS COAL CO LETHBRIDGE COLLIERIES\nPRINCETON COAL \u00a3 LAND CO\nSpecial Pries Quoted on Car Lott.\nWest Transfer Co.\n723 Baker St.\n \u2014J\nm AI1ME5T5 AMRWANAOA\nSailing  Every Saturday  From\nMONTREAL                                       QUEBEC LIVERPOOL\nNew  S.8.  Laurentic                        15,000 tons New S.S. Megantir\nFirst  Class,  $92.50;   Second,  $53.75;   Third. $32.50.    -\nS.S. Teutonio                                  Twin Screw S.S. Canada\n582 feet long                              Steamers 614 feet long.\nOnly ONE CLASS CABIN (IL), $50.00, and Third Class, $31.25 and up carrier\nCHRISTMAS SAILINGS\nS.S.   Laurentle    Nov. 22   S.S. Canada   Nov. 29\nS.S.   Megantlc    Dee.    tt    S.S. Teutonh*    Dec, 13\nCompany's Olllee. A. 13. Disney, Pass, Apt., 619 Seeond Avenue, Seattle,\nW. 10. KETC'HUM, Agent O. N. Jty., D. SMEATON, Agent, C. P. Ity.\nF. L. PADDON,  D.T.A., C. P.  Ry.\nThe Canadian Bank\noi Commerce\nSIR  EDMUND WALKER, C. V. O.\nLL.D., D.C.L., President.\nALEXANDER   LAIRD,   Gen.   Mgr.\nCapital         $15,000,000\nRest    - $12,500,000\nPlace your Securities, Titles.\nDeeds, Mortgages, Insurance Policies, Wills nnd other values in\none of-our Safety Deposit Boxes,\nwhere they will be secure from\n\u25a0Bs hy fire or otherwise. Honlals\naccording to size of box.\nNelson  Branch, J. S. Munro,  Mgr.\nBank of Montreal\nESTABLISHED  1817\nCapital authorized   $25,000,000\nCapital all  paid  up $16,000,000\nRest    $16,000,000\nHEAD OFFICE:   MONTREAL\nRt.    Hon.    Lord    Strathcona   and\nMount Royal, G.C.M.G., Hon. Prei.\nR.  B .Angus,  Esq., President\nH   V.  Meredith, Esq.,\nVice-President  and  Gen.  Manager.\nIiranchcB In British Columbia:\nArmstrong, Athalmer, Chllllwaok.\nCI vGi-ilule.   Enderby, G reenwood,\nMnsmer, Kamloops, Kelowna, Mer-\nrltt.   Nelson,   New    Denver,   New\nWestminster.    Nicola,   Penticton,\nPort AlbernI, Port Haney, Prince\nKiipert. Princeton. Rossland, Sum-\nmerland,    Vancou\u00aber,    Vancouver\n(Main   street),   Vernon,   Victoria,\nWest Summerland.\nNelson Branch, L. B. DeVeber, Mgr.\nGeneral Contractor!\nind Builders\nJohn Burns & Sons\n8ASH AND DOOR FACTORY. NEL80N PLANING MILLS,\nVERNON STREET, NELSON, B. C.\nEvery Description of Building Material Kept In Stock.   Estimates Given\non  Stone.  Brick,  Concrete and  Frame  Buildings.\nMAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.\nBOX 134. PHONE 178\nHunters--\" Attention!\"\n.,   Wader.,\nGun Cases\nWe can outfit you complete with \"Duxban.\"    Corduroy clothing, Leggings,   Caps,   Boots,   Wadert,   Stock*\ningi, Qunt and Ammunition.\nSTEVENS\nDouble Barrel Shot Guns\n$25.00 and $20.00\nIn \\2 and 1G gauge\nSingle Barrel,', 12 gauge\n$13.00 and $7.00\nStevens' 30-30 nnd 35-cal-\nCarbine  Rifles     $25.00\nWc have In stock Winchester Leader Sheila,  28  grain Balllitltt,\nspecial duck load.\nidge Belts\nWinchester \"Repeater\"  Shells, Dominion \"Imperial Shelli, Dominion   \"Regnl\" Shells. _\nRevolver\nHolsters\nIn .32 and .3*\nThe Nelson Hardware Co.\nPhone 21. SPORTSMEN'S  HEADQUARTERS Drawer lOiO\n FRIDAY 0CT0BEI1 31\nClje Balls JMos\nUOH\nPAGE RVt\nTHE BELL\nTRADING CO.\nPhone 56\n[Hallowe'en\nParties\nWill be In full swing tonight.\nAPPLES\n;!,'   Koay red Wealthies for bohlilng.\n*4 lbs    25c\nCORN FOR POPPING\n2 lbs 25c\nNUTS TO CRACK\nWalnuts, lb 25e\nBraiils (new), lb 30c\nAlmonds, Hi 25c\nISYRUP FOR  THE TAFFY PULL\nConfection Brand.\n;*2-ib. tin :....'....20c\n'Mb. tin : 35c\n, CANDIES\n.;   A large assortment of pure confectionery.\n' Regular '15c.   .Inst for today... .25c\nIt Is true thnt the Thames\nValley nutter costs a trifle more\nthan ordinary butter,   \u25a0\nBut-\nButter\nIt's\nDelicious,    sweet,    creamery\nhutter that makes it, a delight\n\u25a0    to eat.\nLb 45c\nYoung Man-'\nh\nA box of our Fancy Chocolates\n[*', will  keep that young lady sweet\nwhile you pop the question.   Three\n,' delicious kinds,  put up  In attrac-\n| .1 tlve boxes.\n1 For full pounds ......75c and $1.00\nTHE BELL\nTRADING CO.\nThe Dp-to-Date Grocers\nBaker Street\nSilver King Hotel\nBaker Street\n! Under new management;.\n;      Well furnished   rooms,   $1.00   a\nli day   and   up.    Best 25c meal lu\ni Nelson. Best brands of liquors and\n'  cigars, served by union men,\nH N. McLEOD. Proprietor.\nII\nWhen Taking\na Vacation\ngo   to  tlie   Great   Halcyon   Hot\nSprings, where you can secure not\nonly rest, but at the same time\nhave the benefit of the best medicinal watera on tbe continent, un-\nequaled for rheumatism and kindred ailments. The springs are easy\nof access to travellers and the\nhotel has been fitted up and Is\nconducted with a view to the maximum of comfort and convenience\nfor guests.\nRates: $1? and $15 per week, or $2\nper day and upwards.\nHalcyon Hot Springs\nSanitarium\nWM. BOYD, Proprietor.\nHalcyon Arrow Lakee\nI Kootenay and Boundary\nHOTEL ARRIVALS OF A DAY\nThe Hume\nTable d'Hote and a la Carte\nHIUME.\u2014#\u25a0 W. Rawsoni L. W.\nSlade; A. D. Morrow, .1. S. I^tycoek,\nVancouver; B. W. Flack, Ottawa; Ed-\nJV.n DeConrsrey, New York; J, E.\nlones, Toronto; M. Wllen.ce, Winni-\n*\u2022**-\u2022 C. T. Archibald, Salmo; T. U\nMiunro, Vniir- A, s. Williamson, Lon-\nion; Jt-scph Ryan, Cranhrook; M. L,\n'uvage,   Montreal;   R.   Walker.   D.   P\nwoodf EV C. Bollfrltflcli, Btrotford:'\nMr, and, Mrs, A. L. Mftcphee and\nboy, SUveston-Chester Mott J, B.\nChadwick, Spoka.no; Major J. S,\nGooch, Crawford Bay; D. Donaldson,\nYmlr; R, C. Klrkpatrlck, Revelstoke.\nSILVER KING.\u2014C. L. Patrick. New-\nLV McLeod, Alfred Houds, Hay H\n'Warrie.\nNelson House\nEuropean Plan\nf W. A. WARD, Proprietor\nCAFE\u2014Open day and night\u2014BAR\nMerchants' Lunch 12 to 2\ni Phone 97 P. O. Box 597\nNELSON.\u2014J. O. Ryan. Henry Harar,\nk\\. M. Meyers, Spokane; B. Thompson,\nJAlmira, N. Y.j- A. Tipping, Detroit:\n-,A. C. O'Neill, Ymir; li. T. Franklin,\n\u2022D. B. McC-utcheon, Hugo Junjr.Renatai\n:a. w, Y-oung,\nA Home for the World at $1.00 a day\nLakeview Hotel\nCorner Hall and Vernon Streets.\nRenovated and refurnished throughout, nest of Wines, liquors and\ncigars served In the bar by Union\nBartenders.\n\" -Klondyke Hotel\nVernon Street\nHeadquarters for miners, Smel-\ntermen, loggers, railroad men.\nRates. $1.00 per day up,\nNELSON & JOHNSON, Props.\nKLONDYKE.\u2014O. Waklund, Crawford Bay A. Cuthberison, A, Sutherland. Creston; Gnat Osklund, O. S.\nOlson. Taghtlin \u25a0  J. Mclnnes, Koch's.\nGrand Central Hotel\nOPPOSITE   POSTOFFICE\nAmerican and European Plans.\nH. H. P1TT8, Proprietor.\n1 GRAND CENTRAL.\u2014A. G. Berg-\nstrom, Cranbmok; R. Vitso, Castlc-\ngar; Jama Stewart, W. i*\\ Stewart,\nYmir; Charles' Bridge, r. m. Lull), K.\nR.   Lafh,   Sheep   ('reek;    O,   I*.   Dale.\n1 Wh'tewater, W, Hossion, Proctor; IL\nDmehepnay, City; .1. A. Scolt, Grand\nKorlf-: M. Wight. London; W. A. Tal-\n1 hot, HnloVon.\nSHERBROOKE.\u2014E. Richardson, A.\n'While. D, Tomans,*.r. Glgolinl. Her-\nmali MacK.ee. New Wes*tmlnster; H.\nMmIbw H. A. Lalnp. -Bn-Sliatobnj\nJame^ Ramsay, Glasgow.; 11. Beck.\nSlocan.\nF B. WHITING. Proorietor.\nSTRATHCONA.\u2014H, C, Hanning-ton\nV. M, Sutherland, Victoria; J. H.\nchoriela. Trail; C, U. Noilh, H. V.\nftud-d, City; s. s. Powje'r, Rlondel;\n\\lihn Francis Shoemaker, New York;\nr. B. tiffany, Calgary; K. C. Mack.\nBuffalo; W. H. Fisher, J. Erfrp, II. W.\nDavidson, Montreal; W. A. Fallen,\nSalt;   H.  J.   Mclntyre;.  Detroit.\nQueen's Hotel\nBaker Street\nA. LAPOINTE, Proprietor\nRenovated throughout. Sixteen new rooms added, nil elegantly furnished. Steam heat\nin every room.\nQUEEN'S.\u2014F-, L. Allen, E. .1. Haal.\ntf; Emery Spokane; <*. F. Schmidt,\n'Ity;   p.  o. Meacham, D. n. Curiis,\nMarcus;    A.   Llndgfen;   K.   DeCoursey,\nCalgary;  J, o,  Kelffe,  Korthport;  f\nTalbot,  Halcyon.\nMEETING   OF   BOSWELL\nUNION WELL ATTENDED\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nBOSWELL, B.C.. Oct. -.0.\u2014Thero\nwas n well attended meeting of tho\nBoswell Kootenay La!*o,un!on on Sun\nday afternoon last, when much bus!\nness was transacted. One of tho main\nitems centered in a resolution urging\nupon the authorities the necessity of\ntelephonic communication being pro\nvlded at an early dat.e.      , -\nAn invitation.rw.'*s also.forwarded to\nS. E. Bradley of Creston lo visit Boswell at nn early date to meet members of the union and discuss matters\nrela-tiiiK to the stiles of produce for\nthe season and make arrangements\nwith regifrd  to next season.\nM. ,T. Qulnn and family left Boswell\nInst Wednesday for Nelson en route\nfor Spokane, where they will remain\nfor tho winter.\nT. S. Palmer of the forestry department hns been surveying the timber\nIn the Snnea nnd Goat creek districts,\nF. J, Oatts of Boswell accompanying\nhim on the trip. Mr, Palmer returned\nto Nelson hy the Crow boat on Tuesday evening.\nR. L. Wilson left for Nelson on Sunday evening en route for the coast,\nspending a day In Nelson In order to\nvisit his siBter, who is on the stnff\nat the Nelson hospital.\nD. B. Crowther returned to Boswell\nby the Crow hont on Tuesday evening, after a five weeks' visit to Spokane. -\"'\nThc Sanra ranchers some little time\nago sent forward a petition to the\npostmaster-general requesting that a\npost office he opened at that point,\nand It is anticipated that this will\ntake place shortly, Mr. Spence undertaking the duties of postmaster.      \u25a0*\u25a0\nThe Boswell social club are holding\nmasked Halloween revels In the school\nhouse on Saturday evening next, when\na merry time is anticipated. On this\noccasion the children are being Invited\nto join in the fun,   *\u25a0'\u25a0\nTht* Canadian Pacific railway\nsteamer Moyle made a special trip\ndown to Boswell last week with lumber for the new wharf which the government are going to erect to replace\nthe one wrecked early this year.\nWork will commence here upon completion of the wharf at Willow Point.\nMrs. Taylor nnd Miss F. Shannon\nof Willow Point spent Sunday In Boswell.\nRev. J. S. Mahood conducted divine\nservices on Sunday In Boswell. He\nspent tlie week-end as the guest of\nA. Coomher, who has located his\nhouseboat Ivy in Lewis Bay, haying\nreturned from Midge creek, where he\nhas spent the summer.\nG. H. Bnrtley is at present building\na large barn and stahle for Major P.\nRigby.\nA. Mackle, J. Wilson and F. J. Oatts,\nBoswell competitors at the Creston\nValley Fruit, fair, each secured prizes\nwith  their exhibits.\nthe Trainmen's Auxiliaries of Canada\nand tho United States, held thia year\nIn Chatanooga, Tenh.\nThe bachelors' dance in St. Francis\nball last Friday evening was a great\nsuccess.\nAt tho Women's Missionary meeting papers on tho work in Quebec\nwero read by Mrs. Laing and Mrs.\nRoss.\nThe Women's Canadian eluh are\npromised an address by Dr. Chown\nthis week.\nMrs. T. Kilpatrlck, accompanied by\nher son Donald, left on Sunday for\na week or two In Vancouver.\nGIRL  GUIDES  ENTERTAINMENT\nAT  TRAIL A SUCCESS\n(By'^Daily News Leased Wire.)\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct. 30.--The concert\ngiven by the girl guides on Wednesday evening at the Star theatre lo a\npacked house wna a new venture foi\nTrail, nn-' a very creditable, performance, Th\" concert opened with u flag\ndrill by ten girl guides. This was foi\nlowed by two moving picture reels,\nwhen A. J, Wheeler sang a solo. A\nDutch dance an-j song, \"The Pntter or\nH Little Wooden Shoos,\" by twelve\ngirl \"-nldes was the \"cxt item and\nwas very pretty. Th(i girlj* looked the\npart and this number was much en\nJoyed. Mrs. A. L. Larson renderii\n\"Non. Aver\"' 'in a most artistic and\nfinished manner. She was loudly\ncored and sang in -rt'si-onse \"The\nCradle Sons\" hy G*'icg. A song by\nfive guides f-r!sho<i the first pnrt of\nthe, program.      \". \"\nIn the second pnrt the nursery play\n\"Mother Goose\" was put on and splendidly carried through by the girls.\nFollowing Ih lho caste-. Mother, MU\u00ab\nIa Thompson; child. Miss Marjory\nSlhbold; Mother Goose, Miss Marian\nSkill; Old King Cole, Miss Pearl Cnrr;\nfiddlers three, Misses DOrrls Haywood,\nSusie. ROSemon ali,| Sllibold; Pudgeo,\nMisses Doris Maskell and Affiles AUS-\ntcd; Mls4 Milffet, Mijjfl Heidi Camp,\nbell; Mistress Mary, Miss Lillian\nCarr; \"Three Flowers,\" Misses Doris\nHaywood, Susie Roseman and M. Hib-\nbokl; \"Where Are You Going, My\nPretty Maid?\"-Misses Lilian Carr\nand Ada Taylor; \"Jock Bpratl and\nWife\"\u2014Misses Vivian Caniphell. and\nMarjory Mil-hold; \".lack ftp,* .Till\"\u2014\nMlpses Helen Cumpliell and Fanny\nButorac; \"Conic, Losses and Lads'\nsix girl guides; \"Clock,\" MIs^ Fthel\nCarr; hoIo\u2014Mrs* Larson,\nAt the close of the play Mrs. Larson again favored Hie' audience with\nan aria and an encore. Mr. Warren,\non behalf of the girl guides, presented a huge Union Jack lo Maynr Thom\nfor the use on the city hall,. Dr. Thom\nheartily thanked the girls for the\nterost   shown   and   for   Hie   handsome\nCredit is due not \"lily thfi gul(\nbut the ladies who have worked for\nthe past two months hi .making\ncostumes and teaching the various\nsongs, drills and dunces and in staging lhe little play.\nA. Bro'derlfik ha.* relurned from\ncoast   where he,has been for,lhe\npast   month.\nDr. CoKhlin returned home on Tuesday night after spending a month's\nvacation  in  Manitoba.\nT. Dunn. C. H. Wallaee and Mur-\ndock McKenzIe. were visitors from\nRossland during the week,\nMr. and Mrs. .i. c. Grummet accompanied b'* their'little sou sni-ut\nWednesday   ufternoon   in   Rossland.\nRossland News\nMadden House\nE, C. CLARKE\nCor. Baker and Ward Sts., Nelson.\nTremont House\nBaker Street, Neleon\nRANSOME 4 CAMPBELL\nProprietors\nEuropean plan, 50c up\nAmerican plan, J1.2B and $1.60\nMeals, 35c\nSpecial  Rates per Month\nTREMONT.\u2014(J; MoDougull, Ri\"n-\nUel: ,T. Oublne, City; D, Campbell,\n[Casio; R. 1., EHovenson, (I. D. Rork,\nQAronsi T. R. M.'l'enk, Grcston; A.\nGrirrln, Halcyon; T. R. Quaifi.. Ori-n-\n\u25a0ont Valley,\nKootenay Hotel\nTwo Doors from Postoffice\nVernon Street\nRates $1.00 and $1.25 per day.\nEvery convenience given to the\ntraveling puhllc. Electric piano and\nunion bar in connection, where the\nbest of wines and liquors are kept.\nMRS. MALLETT, Proprietress.\nKOOTENAY.\u2014John Shatka, Martin\nHenley, Wanda; Anthony Doueotte,\nReglna;   R. N'elderman,  Needles.\nWhen at Nakusp Stop at\nTHE LELAND\nNewly refitted and remodeled.\nThe ciiislno is the host. Large and\ncomfortable rooms, steam heat all\nthrough tho house, Large, warm\nand well-lighted sample rooms ln\nconnection. Yours for comfort and\nours for business. The best to be\nhad at a modernte price. The nearest, hotel to the depot.\nRemember the Lelnnd  Hotel.\n.     T. H. BOHART, Prop.\n(Special  to The  Dally News.)\nROSSLAND, B. C, Oct. 30.\u2014Tlie\nKnights of Columbus are giving a\ndance in the armory on November 19.\nThe death of William Pryrni took\nplace this morning at 3 o'clock In the\nSisters' hospital. Deceased was IM\nyears of ago and had been suffering\nfor, the past two years with asthma.'\nMr. Prynn was one of Rossland'a old-\ntimers, having belonged lo the Miners* union In 1RO0. Word has been\nsent to hla daughtor-ln-law to make\nrrangemnnts for tho funeral.\nThere will he a sacred muslcale after\nthe evening service in St. George's\nchurch on Sunday next.\nJ. While of Trail spent the day in\ntown.\nMrs. J. Kemp and child are expected\nhomo, on Friday evening. Mr. Kemp\nleft on Wednesday evening and will\nmcot them In Revelstoke.\nMrs. Hardy, who has been away for\nthe past four months visiting friends\nin Victoria and other coast cities, has\nreturned.\nA meeting of the school board was\nhold last evening. Tho matter of.a\nseptic tank -was discussed. The bill\nwas partly paid, but aa Mr. Freeney\nwill not be able to complete the work\nuntil sprinir tho rest of the bill will\nnot he paid until then.\nTho Schubert Symphony club and\nlady quartet will give a concert in\nSt. Andrew's church on Tuesday evening, November 4.\nMrs. W. Trembath entertained a few\nyoung people last ovenlng In honor\nof MI3B Isabel Henderson of Revelstoke and who Is tho guest of MIsb\nEileen Long.\nThe hoys' Intermediate basketball\nteam will play the Trail biiBketball\nteam at Trail tomorrow evening.\nKELOWNA   CAFE~CHANTANT\n13   MUCH   APPRECIATED\n(Suecinl to The Daily News.)\nKKLOWNA, B.C.. Oct. 20,\u2014A novelty was presented to the Kelowna\npublic on Saturday la.st In the Term\nof a cafo chantant, the proceeds bo-\nIng devoted to tho funds of the Musical and Dramatic society, whose expenses in connection with the recent\nproduction of '.'San Toy\" proved so\noverwhelming.. An ..excellent display\nwas provided by means oi various\nstalls, competitions; wlioi>iof fortune,\netc., and a splendid Japanese tea garden, all of which were very well patronized. The gross receipts amounted to about $3-10, which represented\na. proffl of about $210, Que of the\nbest features of the concert was a\nsketch b.v Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Soames,\nwhich  was  excellenaly   received.\nR. B. Plowman of Rossland was In\ntown on Friday on business lit connection with the lodge which ho\nrepresents.\nADVOCATE FEDERAL\nPURE WATER BOARD\n(Continued from page one.)\nREVELSTOKE ITEMS\n(Special to Tho Dally News.)\nREVELSTOKE, B. C!., Oct. 30.\u2014Mr.\nMortimer and H* J. Dews are away\non a hunt for big game on the mountains near Three Valley.\nMrs. H. Bruce and Miss Edna Bruce\nreturned on Saturday from a trip as\ndelegates to tho annual convention ot\nhavo accrued from the non-existence\nof a federal department of health; this\nconference considers that the creation\nof a federal department of public health\nmight well receive the early attention\nof the Dominion government; the conference believes that finch a department would be of assistance in solving inter-provincial problems nn public health.\"\nOther resolutions wore passed com\nmending tho study now being madi\nthrough the meeting of lhe interna\ntional Joint commission of tho subject\nof tho pollution of the liitornationn1\nwaterways and also coinmendhi.;' th\nwork of G. II, Bradbury, chairman of\ntho special committee of the house of\ncommons, and expressing the hope\nthat tho committee would ho reappointed to continue its efforts.\nHon. Martin Burroli said Unit the\nmatter of a department of health in\ntho Dominion government had boon\ndiscussed at different, times, hut. there\nwere certain difficulties to ho cleared\nup and, although the government had\nmoved slowly in tho matter, that was\nperhaps better than acting without\nsufficient consideration. There wag\nthe fact, too, that tlie provinces claim\nfar-reaching powers in regard lo public health under tlio British North\nAmerica act.\nDr. Pelletier of tho Ouebee hoard\nof health proposed thai the conference\nBhould deal only with boundary\nstreams, but after a short discussion\nthis motion was withdrawn.\nBeforo the congress concluded Mr.\nHazen said that lho pollution of\nstreams was growing all the time and\ntbe matter should bo dealt with beforo\nthe country becomes much larger, n\nlesson beli|g learned from the polluted\nstrenms In Europe and the United\nStates. He was satisfied the commission could and would gather a mnss\not data from which conclusions could\nbo drawn for tho framing of legislation. The jurisdiction between the\nprovinces and the Dominion could bo\neasily worked out, although It was\nGreat Price Reductions\nIn Readg-io-Wear\nStocks Must Be Reduced\nOur Stock of Ready-to-Woar is a great deal too big for the timo of year, and it mutt be reduced, to bring\ntilings down to more reasonable proportions. We are offering many at cost and less, as we prefer to lose a\nlittle rather than a lot, which is what would happen if we had them left over. This is a great opportunity\nfor you.   Don't miss itl  ,\nSuits Regularly Sold up to\n$22.50, today $12.95\n. Fifteen Ladies' and\nMisses' Suits mado of\nTweeds and Serges, colors\ngrey, brown nnd navy\nonly. Sizes 1-1, 1-6, 18; 34\nto SH. The coats are made\nin the new cutaway style,\nstrictly tailored and lined\nWith satin. Skirts mado\nwilh high waist llne.some\nplain tailored others with i ,-q\ntho new drape. Regular\nvalues up to $22.1)0.\nSale   Price    $12.95\n$25.00 Suits for\n$15.95\nTwenty in  this lot, they\nare made of Fine French\nSerge,      Heavy      Cheviot\nSerge and   Mixed Tweeds.\nColors\u2014grey,  brown, navy\nand    black.      Coats    are\nstrictly     tailored     in     the\nnew   cutaway   style   and\nlined with either satin or\n,slllc serge. The skirls are\njmad.- in n, variety nf\nJ stylos, Nome plain tailored\nand  others  draped.    Sizes\n14, 18, IS, *1-| to :i*l. Regular    $25.lJn    and    ?27.r.n\nSale   Price\t\nBroken Sizes in Kid Gloves\nat 75c\nIf wo havo your size now is the opportunity to\ngot a Talr of Kid Gloves for 75c. They are good\nquality Italian Kid Gloves in black and tan only.\nMake a point of asking to see if we havo your size.\n$1.50 Suede Gloves for $1\nA Completo Range of Swede nnd Glace Kid\nGloves from one of the best Italian makers, a good\nfitting glove in black and tan only, Regular $1.50\nvalues,\nSale   Price    $1.00\nOdd Lines of Silk Waists,\nValues up to $9 for $1.95\nOdd lines of Silk Waists, mostly black ones', hut\nquite a few In colors. All sizes among tbe lot. To\ndear them out:\nAnyone  for\n...$1.95\nBargains in\nWomen's and Children's Hose\n.$15.95\n$35.00 Suits for $18.95\nNineteen of tlio Newest and Hest Suits we havo\never shown for tho money. Mado of lhe finest\nquality of French Serges or English Worsteds.\nStrictly tailored stylos. Coats in cutaway style, lined\nwith Skinner's satin. Skirls made in the new draped\nstyles, some slashed, others with pleat at tho side.\nNo.two alike in the Int. Sizes Hi io \u25a0!.'{. Regular\n$3r>.0') values.\nSale   Price    $18.95\nSuits Worth up to $57.50 for\n$33.95\nTwenty nf the Newcsl Suits shown this seiis.m.\nThey come in Woo] Repp, Boucle** Brocade, Riitlnes,\nVelvets and Fancy Velours. Coats aro made in a\ngreat variety of styles, positively no two alike. Some\naro made with small vest and rolling collar, others\niu Blouse effeets, cutaway in front. Skirts are beautifully draped, .some showing (lit: modified slash In\nside and fnini. Rogiilnr ''allies up to $r*7.fi0.\nSale   Price    ....$33.95\nCashmere Hose for\nChildren in plain and\nribbed, nice soft material, some with double\nknees, \".'fie values.\nToday        15c\nRlbbod      Wool      and\nCnHhinerc Hose, sizes C\nand' V& only, an extra\nfine quality.\nTo   Clear    20c\nExtra Quality Women's Heavy Ribbed\nCashmere Hose, Sizes\nM-i:,   !>,   8%.     Regular\nToday\n35c\nWe Have\nJust\nReceived\na New\nShipment\nof\nRoyal\nSociety\nNeedlework\nThree  Dozen New Silk and\nChiffon Blouses at Half\nPrice\nTlirrn P\"K\"ii Walata, made of fin-' soft *il'< or\nchirron over silk, some Willi loco trimmings, others\nin plain stylos, in 11*\u00bb> in! .hv sum.- handsomo crepe\ndo chene blouses. A full range of sizfs from III I\" \u25a0!-\u25a0\nRegular prices  from   jil.r.o  t., $12.00.\nOn  Sal. $3.25  lo $6.00\nSlightly Soiled Tailored Waists\nWorth up to $4.00 to Clear\nat 95c\nTailored Waists in plain White and Striped Vest-\nings, Rlack Sateen and Striped Flannels.   These have\ngot. slightly soiled   in  handling.\nTo  Clear Them   Out,   Anyone  for    95c\nMEAGHER & CO.\nThe Store for Style and Value\nBaker Street\nessential that, this should be done before legislation is passed.\nFAVOR NEW STREET\nRAILWAY PROPOSAL\n(Continued from Pnge One.)\ntho now proposition was coming from\nthe city council, which had feared the\nby-laws Involved in lho purchase plan\nwould ho defeated on account of the\nnmoilht called for aiAl hail suggested\nthe partnership proposal ns a means\nof securing municipal operation of the\nSystem  without    the expense   to   tho\ncity of buying lhe slock and without\nnecessitating the sale ->f ihe stock at\na .no per cent loss to those who had\nInvested  in   It.\nMayo,- Keefe was In the chair.\nOthers present were Aldermen .lames\nJohnson, a. a. Pcrrler, Edward Kerr\nand I A Austin; .1. K. Taylor. William Druehe, W. E. Wasson, E. C.\nWragge A. S. Horswill, Ur. W. ' >.\nRose and W. R. Maclean, M.P.P.\nWORKING  DAYS REDUCED\nTO  SIX  WEEKLY\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nCHICAGO, Oct. 30. -Notices wen\nposted today at tho plant of the Illinois Steel company in'South Chlcngc\nthat hereafter employes will worli\nonly Kix days  a week.   The ohle-'t ol\nth,-,  notice,  ii.\nis   to   keep   as\nmany   men as\nusslhle\nemployed dur-\ninn*  tho winter\nUndo\nihls  urrange-\nment it   may hi\npossih\ne to re-employ\nmam*   who   ha1\n,\u25a0    been\ndropped  from\nthe   payroll.\nFOURTEEN   BELOW  ZERO AT\nPEACE   RIVER  CROSSING\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nEDMONTON, Alia., net. 3\".\u2014From\nmessages received from various points\n'n the Peace River country, It can bo\nsafely said that winter has sot in. At\nPeace River Crossing Ibis morning tho\nmercury registered 14 degrees below\n*-*ei*i<. Them nre four inches of snow\nand the river has a thin coating of\nii-o.\nSOME EMBLEMS OF HALLOWEEN    <   -.; r,l j; J | \u00a3>( 6 ,0| *| fr',o',fifj<f'^i-fJr),- |.; |s|(bJ\n Cfce laftij ^etos\nOCTOBER 3f\noi' go;\nPolish Your\nFurniture with\n3-in-One oil\nPut a few drops of\n3-in-One oil on a\nsoft^ doth wrung\nout tn cold water,   'flu\nwipe your piano, mantel,\ntable, chair, nny veneered br var-V*\"-*-?'\nniihed furniture. All grime, (jrcaBe\nand finger marks diiappeai.\nThen poliih wilh dry cheese cloth,\nnibbing with the grain ol the wood\n(not in circle*-}.\nOriginal Lustre ia Restored\nbefore youi very cyei, wilh no disa-\ngieeable vainiin odot;   no gieaie lo\nQ   rub off on youi clothes.   No acid oi    q\n\u2014   alkali\u2014-.nothing to  injure anything.    -**'-\nRub leather sua, back-, elCy with a <!iy\ndolh moiitencd wilh a litlle 3-in-Onc oil.\nIt pTctervei thu leather, making it toll and\npliable; prevent! icttina nnd crack ins.\nMoWN\nFALL and CHRISTMAS\nEXCURSIONS\nTo the Old Home In Scotland, England  and   the  Continent   can   be\nmado at tho lowest cost.\nLarge, New  Rtonmers.\nWeekly sailings. Reserve accommodations now. For full information ask any railway or steamship\nagent, or\nH. E .LIDMAN, General Agent,\nMain St. Winnipeg, Man.\nsBagas^fc-i^y-v \u2022 13111111111?\nFOR YOUR CONVENIENCE\nMoney Orders issued.\nLetters of Credit for the convenience of those who travel.\nSavings) Department. One\ndollar opens a savings account.\nEstablished  1875.\nHEAD  OFFICE:\nTORONTO, ONT.\nCapital   (paid   up)     $6,925,000\nReserve  and   Undivided   Profits      8,100,000\nD.   R.  Wilkie,   President  and\nGeneral  Manager.\nHon. Robert Jaffray, V.-Pras.\nNelson   Branch,\nJ.  H.  D.   Benson,   Manager.\nStandard Furniture\n-=Company=\nC. J. CARLSON, Undertaker\nUndertakers Embalmers\nand Funeral  Directors\nThe finest and njoat up to date\nundertaking parlors and chapel in\ninterior of B.C. Lady attendant for\nwomen and children.\nDay Phone 85.\nNight Phone 252 and L64\nT-\nFREE\u201412 Beautiful Letterheads\nand envelopes and sample los-\nson in Shorthand to those who\nfill out and mall this coupon at\nonce.\nSPOKANE   EXPERT   SCHOOL,\nSpokane,  Wash,\nI iim interested in Business\nEducation. Please send me full\ninformation about\n\u2014Bookkeeping\nS_k#(C   \\   \u2014Typewriting\nf\\\\m\/j  \u2014Shorthand\n\u2014Penmanship\nI can begin a course about\t\nName    \t\nAddress   \t\nNEWS OF THE MARKETS\nQUINCES ARE ON\nLOCAL; MARKET\nPoatoes   Mav   bB  Obtained  Wholesale\nat Twenty-two Dollars\nper  Tori\nQuinces ai> now on the -market for\nthc first llm* this season, ami In the\nvegetable line the wholesale price of\nnolaliiPM now ranges from ?22.00 a\nloll.\nToday'.; quotations arc:\nFoodstuffs.-\nB. -ft K. Bread Plouir ..\"...$ LOO\nLuke of the Woods, hag., 2.00\nRoyal  Household     l.{)0\nKing's   Quality   \u25a0 ,\" i.fio\nPurity   Flour  1.90\nRobin  Hood   ..\u2014  1.90\nGold   Dion  Flour     1.85\nMother's   Favorite  1.75\ntfudson's Bay Co,, iiiinfririnn     1.76\nDairy Products.\nButter,   Creamery,   per   \\b.W%J$ .40\nButler, dairy. :i lbs. for .. 1.00\nCurlew  butter,   per  lb.   .. .50\nButter,  fresh;  Hafsclwodei .60\nButter, New Zealand, per lb. ,45\nCheese.   Canadian,   per   lb.    .20<it .25\nCheese, Stilton, per lb.  .. .25\nCheese, Swiss, per lb S6J? .-10\nICjigs new\" lajd per doz. .. ,fll*j\nEggs,   eastern         \u201e        .-10\nVegetables.\nParsley, per bunch     .05\nDry Onions    .05\nJabbagdi local,  per lb.   .. .03\nLocal new potatoes, 1Q0lbs 1.7B\nNew carrots, per lb  ,03\n\\ew   heels,   pe,.   lb  ,118\nNew   parsnip*-.     .04\nSweet  potatoes,  -I  Ibs.   ... ,25\nCitron     .04\nHubbard's  Squash     .08\nVegetable  marrow, each..    .IO\u00ae .15\nCauliflower,  rrom     .15\nBrussei Sprouts   .26\nCelery       .06\nFruits.\nApples,   new.  box,  from   .. 2.00\nOranges,   Valencia    50\u00ae .CO\nBananas, per dost  .40\nLemons,  per doz  .1)0\nI-lonoy, Comb', per lb  .25\nHoney,   1-lb.  jars    25% .:t5.\nPears.  3  lbs  .25\nTokays, per basket   1-00\nPears, local,  per box   .... 2.2*5\nCranberries, 2 lbs. for \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nQuiheea il lbs  .25\nMeats,\nBeef   wholesale    \\\\Vji\u00ae .1*1\nPork,  wholesale    Ufip .18\nMutton,   wholesale    15\u00a9 .18\neal,   wholesale    lOifi) .20\nFresh   hilled, beef    retail..    ,10\u00ae  .28\npork    rt-t-iCj    18(g) .25\nMutton,   retail     10@ .25\nVeal,  retail    i8@ .35\nHams,   retai]     25f*>  .28\nBacon   retail SBfiJ .35\nLard   'retail     16\u00ae .20\nChickens,   retail    22\u00ae .28\nSausagSs,   retail    18\u00ae .25\nTurkey,   nth  lb 82\u00ae ,85\nGeese   pe- Ib 25\u00ae .28\nDucks,   P'er   Hi 25\u00ae .30\nSugar.\nGranulated     P..    C,     Cane\nHlffflh. \"bneks     G.flO\nLump  sugar,  2   lbs  .25\nOrannlaled    Ii.   <*.,    20-lb!\nBrown sugar, 8% lbs. ... .25\nSyrup,   maple    bottle     -(!0\nSyrup,   gallon     2.00\nThe B. C. Assay and\nChemical Supply Co\nLimited,\nAssayers' and Chemists' Supplies.\nBalances and Weights ot precision\nPhysical and Chemical Apparatus.\nChemically pure Acids and Chemicals\nPlumbago   and   Plumbago   Crucibles\n567 Hornby Street, Vancouver, B,C\nNOTICE\nThe strike at the Oueen mine Sheep\nCreek. B. C\u201e is slill on. All 'working\nmon are warned to ..stay away until\nthe strike is settled.\nBy order of the Ymir Miners' union\nW. B. M'ISAAC.\nNEW YORK METAL  MARKET\n(By Daily News Lease,]  Wire.)\nNEW YORK, Oct. 30.\u2014Copper quiet\n\u2014standard spin unquoted. November,\nDecember ami January Hi.25 offered.\nElectrolytic 10.87: Lake 17.00 to 17.25;\ncasting 15.50 to 1*3,75.\nTin easy\u2014Spot and Oelobe-- 39,80 to\n40.00, Xovombe,. 39,85 to -10.00; December  39.00  to  -10.15.\nSpelter quiet, 5.30 to 5.-15. Iron quiet\nantll  uliHiangeil,\nLondon copper quiet\u2014Spot \u00a373 IO?\nOd; futures E72 7s 6d. Tin quiet-\nspot \u00a3182 10s; futures .C1S3 15s.\nSpelter   .120   12s   0(1,\nIron\u2014Cleveland   warrants   51s   3d.\nNEW  YORK.   Oci.  30;\u2014Silver   58-54.\nLONDON,  Oct.  SC\u2014Silver 27%.\nLead  -C3B 12s fid.\nMONTREAL   PROVISION    MARKET\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nMONTREAL,    Que.,    Oct.    3<l.--The\ntrade !n butter Ib fair'- active and the\ndemand  for cheese -\u00bb00d.\nCheese\u2014'Flnesi westerns, 13 to 13%;\nfinest easterns, 13%   to 12%.\nButter-\u2014Choicest crenmery, 27Vi tc\n27'.'.-  Seconds, 20  to 27.\nEggs\u2014Seleoted, 32* No. I Stock 28.\nPork--Heavy   Canada     short    mesF\nbarrels. 35 to 45 pieced 31;   short cu'\nback hairelj*. 45 lo 55 pieces. 30.\nWK a.\nJuno 27lh, IDlSi\n5-tf.\niCHANGE WILL COST $700,000.\nMap showing London &. Port Stanley\nrailway, which will be electrified at a\ncost of $700,000. The city of London\nvoted in favor of Hon. Adam Beck's\nplan. The map also shows the South\nwestern traction line, the formidable\nrival, whose owner naturally opposed\nthe bylaw vigorously,\nSTOCKS\nNEW  YORK   PRICES   LOWER\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nNEW YORK, Oct. 30.\u2014So far as net\nresults go today's trading in stocks\naccomplished little. The market' offered resistance to accumulating bearish Influences and during, tho forenoon the record of prices shc-Ved small,\ngains among the representative\nBhares, Later in the day tlie list gave\nway, and at the close the speculative\nfavorites were well under yesterday's\nfinal .quotations.\nReports of the banking troubles in\nBerlin, the break in the London copper metal market, and a poor statement Tor September by Southern Pacific, were other bearish Influences\nof the day. Southern Pacific reported\na decrease ih net earnings of $150,0(10.\nLondon trading as a whole was unusually light.\nThe followin * New York stock market quotations atv auprlied'-by Osier,\nHammond & Nan-ton,  Winnipeg:\nOct. 30.-\u2014 Open Close\nAmalgamated   Copper       i-l1,**.    7-s-W\nAmerican Car Foundry    \u25a0    \u25a0M!i6\nAmerican   Locomotive        29'4\nAmerican Smelting   ,84       fi3V&\nAmerican  Sugar   107\nAmerican   Tobacco    230\nAnaconda     35%\nAtchison     'Hi\/,   98J6\nBaltimore & Ohio   it-iw   94\nBrooklyn   Rapid  Transit   \u25a0    %1%    87\nCanadian   Pacific    22'*,% 220\nChesapeake & Ohio     58        :<!%\nChicago' & Alio,,        i(j\nChicago, Mnpls. & St. Paul  .... Hit 74\nChicago &  Northwestern     127\nCon.soli(!.ii,*d    Oas      12914\nDelaware &  Hudson ]f,\u00ab 155\nBrio   28 21%\nBlrle,   lst   preferred      43% A2%\nKile. 2nd preferred   33.\nGeneral   Electric  1.40\nG-rea'i   Northern' Preferred 123-Mi 123%\nGreat Northern Oi'q   32%\nIllinois   Central     .-  11,;\n\u25a0Ihterboro   ,;....,....\/..,...  1-1% i+tt\nKansas Cltv Southern   ....  24% 24%\nLehigh  Valley    151% 1*50%\nLouisville ft, Nashville   ...111% I31fl*a\nMnpls, St.  I'. & S. Ste. M  129  .\nMissouri,   Kali**;iK  &   Texas     20^\nMissouri    Pacific        L'8-Ti > 28%\nNew  York Central     ytfU\nNorthern   Pacific    107% 107%\nPennsylvania 109% lo'Dtt\nRc-ntflnfe*    101% 100%\nSonihern   Pacific      87% 87'4\nSdutherll   Railway       28 22%\nTennessee Copper     \u25a0'8%\nTeJtas   Paolfln     14*A\nTwin    Cltv      104 \"\nUnion   Pacific    ir,i% 1511%\nUnite-'  States  Rbbhet*     58%\nUnited States Stee|    58 50%\nc. s. S-teel, preferred   106% I0O3J\nUtah   Coppe).     saw r,2**4\nWabash  3*2\nWestern Union    1:3%\nWisconsin   Corttral     .\\.\\\nTotal   sales\u2014171,1100.\nWINNIPEG STOCKS\n(By Dnily News Leased Wire.)\nHid Ash\nn. L&hded  \t\nn.   Kir\nm\nLonr.\nEmpire   Loiin     ii*jw\nO.   W.   Life     255\nG, W. Perm  120\nHome  Investment     135\nMan. &  Husk.  Coal     87\nNorthern crown   90\nNorthern  Mortgage,     10:1\nNorther,,   Tnis-t     128\noccidental  Klre     105\nSumdaid   Trusts   \t\nI'liinn   Bunk     137\nWinnipeg Lund &  Mort\t\nWinnipeg patInt & Glass ..\nTORONTO  STOCK  SALES\n(By Daily Ne\u00ab*3 Leased Wire\nTORONTO.   Oct,  30.\u2014Thp.  folio\nwero   lodtry'i-   stock   sales; ' Hraz\n505 shares nt 85%.\nSteel Corporation, fiCfi Bhares\nto  39 \"4.\nCanadian   Pacific   Railway!. 1:\n20%to  220V,.'\nToronto Railway. 105 &\\ 110%  t\nGeneral Electric. 100 nt 107.'\nUlllinger,  ISfi  at   17.00   lo  17.50\nHUtoU  &   Erie. 200 at 203%.\nKtee] of Canada, preferred, 125 \u25a0\nCan. Perm, 50 at 185%.\nCnlisted stock:\nTemlskamlnir   200 at  KP',\nGould. -100 at 3-y.\nMcKlnley. 100 \u201et 130.\n)\nwine\nMian,\nSPOKANE MARKETS\nReported by St, Denif- & Lawrence.]\nSPOKANE.   Wash,,   Oct.   30.\u2014\nBid      Asked\nB. C, Copper\nCaledonia ...\nCanadian    ....\nGranby    \t\nInternational\nLucky Jim .,\nMeomivray .\nNugget .....\nRambler ....\nExtension ...\nSnowstorm   ..\nStandard    \t\n.9 2.50     $ ;\n.      .32%\n. -80.00\n.   71.00   \u25a0\n     1.33\n      1.00\n\u25a0s    8(10 Ramble,, nt 23.\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\nfSpeclal  to Th-  Dallv  N*VWB.i\nVANOOl'VKR,  B. P.,  Oct. 30.\u2014\nHid Aske\nNtiggel\nKootenay\nDominion\nB. C. Pern\n100    110\n....   123\nGRAIN   PRICES  LOWER\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nWINNIPEG, Man., Oct. 30.\u2014Kollow-\ning thp heavy trading yesterday wheal\nwas qiiliM, and prices reacted on lower Liverpool cables and poor demand.\nLnU'r, Hearing the close, prices advanced, caused by shorts covering in\nChicago, which wan reflected here,\nWinnipeg opened 14 to %e lower ami\nclosed   '\/,   lo  %c down.\nCash outs closed unchanged. Cash\nria\\ closed I\"\/-- lower and practically\nl%c. lower in nil options.\nWinnipeg closes; Wlieat\u2014Octobei\nBfi%; November 82% Vi   Ueeeniho-. 82*4,\nMuy ar%.\noats\u2014October 84, November 33%,\nDecember 33%, May 38.\nKlax \u2014 October lift*\/,, November\n115%. Deeomber 115%, May   122.\nMinneapolis cloPO: Wheat\u2014December 83'\/4.  Mny  SS 14.\nChicago close: Wheat\u2014December\nK%, May 90%,\nA  CHIC  DRESS\nCostume for Misses and Small Women\nWith  Long or Shcrt  Sleeves.\nKing's blue chainiense with trimming of shadow luce and tucked chllTon\nfor vest Is here shown. Velvet piping\nIn a shade of burnt orange and fancy\nbuttons lend an artistic finish. The'\ndesign is siiilable for serge, velvet,\ncorduroy, prunella, satin, silk or\nbroadcloth. The palU-rn 'Is cut in four\nsizes: 14, 10, 17 and IS years, H requires 5 G-8 yards of SB-Inch material\nfor a lil'-year size'.\nA pattern or this illuslraiinn mailed\nlo any address on rccelpl of 1.0c Hi\nsilver or .stamps.\nHEIR  IS BORN TO\nSIR  ROBERT BADEN  POWELL\nLONDON, Oct, 30.- Boy seoul.-\nthi-ougbout Britain hoard with a\nihrill of rileasurf. yesterday -that 11 son\nhad been born to Uie chief Scout, SIi\nRobert and Ladv I'-iilen-I'i-woII. B.v\n11 hnoov coincidence lho Joyful event\nnt thelj- residence, Kwhursl. Sus-ie.v,\noccurred on lhe flrsi anniversary ot\n\u2022their wedding.\nCORPORATION   OF   THE   CITY   OF\nNELSON.\nBY-LAW NO, 264.\nA  by-law  to raise Fifty  Thousand\n($50,000.00) Dollars for the purchase\nof the undertaking known as the\nNelson Coke and Gas Company,\nLimited.\nWMRREAS   il   is  deemed\nfor   the   City   of   Nelson   to\nthe undertaking known u\nCoke and Gas Company.\nAND   WJIKRKAS   in   1\nit   will   bc   u<\nexpedient\nto  purchase\nl  the  Nelson\nLimited,\nrder  thereto\nDebi-h-\niss;\nlures of the City of Nfelson lo raise\nfunds to be applied for tho said purpose,  *\nAND W1HCRKAS it is deemed expedient to borrow the sum of Fifty\nThousand (*f5o,ooo.(l0) Dollars for thc\npurpose afbresafd,\nAND WHKRK.AS gas rates or\ncharges of the City of Nelson arc en-\nforclble under Hie provisions of thc\nMunicipal Act and Amending' Acts.\nAND WHKRKAS the estimated\namount of gas rules or charges of tV\nCity of Nelson, .chargeable for the\nyear of Our Lord 191-1 is Eleven Thousand Five Hundred (?ll,r,00.00) Dollars.\nAND WHEREAS there is no\namount of money already charged\nupon the said gas rates or charges.\nAND WHEREAS the said debt of\nFifty Thousand ($50,000.0(1) Dollars is\ncreated upon the security of the snid\ngas rates or charges.\nAND WHEREAS  the estimated  d'\nficieney    in    lhe   snid   gus    rates    1\ncharges   required   to   make   up   annually the amount of Interest and sinking Tund upon tho said proposed debt\nis nil.\nNOW THEREFORE the Municipal\nCouncil nf the Corporation of thc City\nof Nelson In Council assembled, enacts as follows: ,\n1. It shall and may' he lawful for\nthe Mayor of thc Corporation of the\nCity of Nelson to borrow by Debentures upon thc security of tbe said gas\nrates or charges a sum of money not\nexceeding Fifty Thousnnd ($50,000.00)\nDollars and to cause all such sums so\nraised or received to be paid into the\nhands of the Treasurer of the said\nCorporation for the purpose and' with\nthe object hereinbefore \u25a0 recited.\n2. It shall be lawful for the Mayor\nof the said Cntporatlon to cause any\nnumber or \u25a0 Debentures to be made,\nexecuted uhd Issued for such sum bi\nsums as may liaM'bqiilred tne Uu\npurpose and object afWsafd, not exceeding, however, the sum of Fifty\nThousand ($50,000.00) Dollars, each\nof the said   Debentures,   being of the\nOne Thousnn-\nnnd all such De\neiiicd-wilh the sea\nand signed  by  tin\ndenomination \u25a0 r\n($1,000,110) Dollai\nbcnlurc.s shall be\nof the Corporath\n-Mayor thereof.\n3. Tho   said   Debentures   shall   hear\ndale    the   lst   day    of   January,   A.D.\n1911, and the whole of lhe debt hereunder  and \"the   said   Debentures .shall\nbe payable in firty (50) years from the\n\u2022\u25a0aid dale, tn lawful money-(if Canada;\nat the orficc of tbc Dank 6r Montreal\nin  Nelson', aforesaid, which\" said  place\nof payment shall be designated by tli\nsaid Debentures which shall havo al\nInched  to them coupons for the paj\nment  of  Interest,   and   thi*  signal arte tha Interest coupons may be eith*\nwritten,    stamped,   printed   or   litlu\ngraphed.\n4. Tho said Debentures shall bear\nInterest at thp rate of six (C) pe\ncentum per annum from thc dat\nthereof, which interest shall be payable semi-annually, at said office of\nllic Bank of Montreal In Nelson afore\nsaid, in-lawful money of Canada on\n(he 1st diiy of July and thc 1st day of\nJanuary, respectively in each y\nduring the currency thereof, anil II\nshall be expressed In sithl Debentures\nand coupons to be so payable.\n5. Tbe   specific   sum   necessary   for\nthe  payment  uf  interest  during   tbc\ncurrency of the said'. Debentures wjll\nhe~ tbe sum of Tto**iE-\u00bbw Thousand\n($3,000.00) Dollars and tjie specific\nsum to- be set aside annually for the\npayment of the debt incurred by the\nsaid Debentures will bc thc sum ofThree\nHundred and Eighty-One Dollars and\nsixty-eight cents ($381.08) and ther-j\nIs hereby set aside each year out of\nthe gas rates or charges of the City\nof Nelson the sum of Three Thousand ($3,000.00) Dollars for the payment of the annual interest on the\niroposed debt and the sum of Throe\nHundred and Eighty-One Dollars and\nsixty-eight' cents ($881.08) for the\npayment of the said debt incurred by\nsaid Debentures. Such sums shall\nfrom month to month and as the said\nrateB or charges are collected, be\nplaced in a special account with the\nBank-of Montreal at. Nelson aforesaid,\nsuch .account to - be; kfoown as the\n\"Gas Works interest and Sinking\nFund Account\" and all rates or\ncharges for said purposes received by\nlho City of Nelson shall he placed In\nlhe said account, and the snme shall\nhe set aside and withdrawn from the\nannual revenue of tho Municipality of\nthc City of Nelson, and so long as\nany debt continues by virtue of the\nDebentures to be issued hereunder the\nsaid gas rates or charges shall noi\nform any part of the annual revenue\nof the Municipality of the City of\nNelson. , Provided always that any\nmoneys which may have to be advanced or which may have to be paid\nhy tbo Municipality of the City of\nNelson under the guarantee given\nhereunder and any surplus beyond the\nsum annually required for such iu-\nletest and sinking fund shall from\nlime to time be transferred from lhe\nspecial fund hereby directed nnd refunded to the account of tjie annual\nrevenue.\n\u00ab. It. shall be lawful for the Municipal Council to re-piirohasc any of\nthe said Debentures upon such terms\nas may he agreed upon wilh the legal\nbolder or'boldei-s thereof or any purl\nthereof, cither at the time uf sale or\nany subsequent lime or times, and all\nJb-jbontHrcs so re-'purchased shall\nforthwith be cancelled ami destroyed\nmid no re-Issue of Debentures so repurchased shall he made in conse-\nquencft of -sneb ro-purcbaso. . -y-\n' 7, 'Mu ?O,r|)0i*ntio,; of Ihe'Oily of\nNelson unconditloiiaUy guarantee\npayment of all moneys, principal, and\nInterest; secured by the \"Debentures\nproposed to bo issued under this Bylaw. The Debentures shall contain a\nguarantee in tho following words or\nwords to the like effect: \"And the\nMuhctpallly at large guarantees pay;\nment of the said sum together Willi\ntbe Interest thereon.\"\nH. This By-law shall lake effect on\nlhe lst day of January, A.D. 1914,\n0. This By-law may bo clled for atl\npurposes as the City of Nelson Gas\nWorks Purchase By-law  1018.\nDone and passed In Council assembled Ibis day uf\nAA).   UU    .\nMayor.\nCity Clerk.\nNOTICE,\nTake notice that the above Is a Irue\ncopy of tbc proposed By-law upon\nwhich the vole of the Municipality\nwill bo taken at the City of Nelson on\nthe' Eighth day of November next between the hours of 9 o'clock a.m. and\n7 o'clock p.m., for the East Ward at\ntbe City Hall, corner of Front and\nWard streets, and for the West Ward\nat the Band Room, 509 Kootenay\nsireet. -.\nW. E. WASSON,\nCity Clerk.\nNelson, B.C., October 2Sih, 1913.\nDAILY NEWS\nCLASSIFIED AD RATES\nOn\u00a9 cent a word per Intertlon, foui\ncentt a word per week, fifteen centi \u2022*\nword per month when cash accompanies the order. Otherwise one cent\nper word per imertion straight. Ne\naccounts opened for Want Ada. Minimum charge 25 cents.\nHELP WANTED.\nNt-LtON    EMPLOYMENT   AGENCY\nP. A, Newell, ManaQar.\nWELP PROMPTLY  FUBNIBHBD.\nUlinx'l.'    (Vrn nnvr      .\u00ab\nPHONE 278\nBOX  ttS\nTHE     WORKWOMAN'S     EMPLOYMENT AGENCY*.\nGET IN   SOUR  WANTS.    W. Parker,\n312 Baker.   Phone 283.\nFOR BENT\nKOR BENT\u2014Young Men's Christian\n\u2022Association, VUUorbi' and Stanley\nstreets\u2014rooms with shoWor baths;\nmodern conveniences; membership required.   Uatej, reasonable. 170-lf\nFOR    RENT\u2014Furnished    room.\n\u2022\"oil   BENT\u2014Furnished   housekeeping\nrooms.   515 Ball street. *107-C\nTWO    ROOMS   AND    BOARD;    also\nmeals.    Mrs,   MacKay,. 912   Vernon\n-\"treet. \u25a0'107-1\nYOUNG  WOMEN'S  CHRISTIAN AS\nsedation, H2-1 TOlorja street, rooms\nand hoard. Information bureau, phone\nM2. *i05-G\nFOR     RENT\u2014Furnished    room    wilh\nhoard. Seeond  street,   l-'alrvicw, on.\nblock   from  cur  line,    pox  5217   Dull\nNews. \u2022186-0\nFOR BALE.\n\u2022FOR SALE-^Good working horse, 8\nyears old; weight 1,400; drives\ndoublf. or single. Also light buggy.\nO.'A. G. MOKenzie, Sunshine Bay,\nProctor. P. O       ' *170-6\nTO RAISE CASH must sell two corner lets in  South Vancouver;   $500\ncash.    Box  5208 Dally News.    \u2022164-0\nFOR SALE\u2014fl-roomed house, corner\n(two lots) on car line-; all modern\nconveniences. Price $2,500; $600 cash,\n$1,000 mortgago can be asBtimed; balance as rent, Nelson Messenger Co.\n.   \"leo-G\nMR.   AYORKINGMAN,   thia   Is   your\nchance:    six   acres   on  lake  front-\nonly $100 cash;   balance in easy payments.   R, H.Ford, Needles, B.C.   \"169-0\nFOR SALE \u2014 Empire Typewriter;\n\u25a0ludicully new; cheap bargain.\nApply 1'  O. Box 30-1, Nelson, B, C.\n*    *107-6\nKOR SALE\u2014Cow;   good  milker.   Apply P. Cemullnl, Lemon Creek, B.C.\n\u2022108-0\nKOR    SALE    OR    RENT\u2014Improved\nranch,   90   acres;   half   rich   bdtiom\nland;   balance   finc   fruit   land.    John\nOraham, Perry Silling.    '. I59-20*\nTHOROUGHBRED   registered   Berkshire pigs.   Harry Anderson, Birch-\nbank. *150-52\nFOR SALE\u2014A number, of S. C, W.\nLeghorn breeding hens at $2.00 each.\nThree S. C. W. Leghorn cocks, prise\nwinners, $5 and $10 each. S. C. white\nLeghorn pullets $2 each. Also a few\ncockerels (E. A. Orr's famous strnln)\n$5 to $10. Cornish Indian game cockerels $-1 each. Money returned If\nnot satisfied. E. If. Sinter, Cranbron]\nB.   C. 156--I2\nIMPROVE  YOUR  STOCK.    S.  C.  W.\nLeghorn Cockerels $2.00 and up. In-\nspectlo,) invited.   R. B. HaV.     150-12*\nCITY   &   FARM   LANDS,   LTD.\nSuccessors to\nWestern   Canada   investment  Co.\nREAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE.\n\u25a0 John K. Taylor, Mannger,\nKOR SALK\u201411 acres very good fruit\nland,  well (denied, mile from  town.\nSmall bouse uud clearing. *10fi-3\nFOR SALE\u2014Two good building lots,\ncleared, plowed, fenced) cheap. Part\ncash.\nWe. have teniim-- for two neiil  mod-\nrn  6  or o-rooined. Jroust's.   Clo.Ho  in\n\u25a0     CITY  A  FARM   LANDS,  LTD.\nComer  of  Bakep and   Josephine   Sis.\nFinancial Agents.\nSafety Deposit  Ro*en  for  Rpnt\nKOR SALE\u2014In P\n\u25a0nd d'Orelllp valley,\nexcellent fruit I\nmd.    Clearing light.\nCheap.    Terms.\n\\  0.,Box 065, Nel-\nson.\n147-tf.\nKOR SALE\u2014Strawberry plants, 100\n70c; 1000, $5. Rhubarb, 10c. Raspberries, 12. 50c. Currants, 10c. Choice\ncollection fierrenial flowers, $1. Plant\nnow. Express prepaid. Chas. provan\nLangloy Fort. 118-52.\nWANTED\u2014MISCELLANEOUS\nApply\n'ED\u2014A good I've agent to sell\n; in a dividend paying business.\nBox *210   Daily   News.        169-3\nTHIRD CLASS- ENGINEER, B. C.\npaper, wanted to run plant for\nsteam lanndrv in Southeast Kootenay.\nMust, be an active worker and willing\ntn Invest $I.U00 for -quarter itUerest!\nAfldrosH Box 24S Daily News.      170-12\nWANTED\u2014Position   as   general   servant.    924  Fall street. *!70-3'\nWANTED    BY    LADY\u2014position    as\nstenographer or general ofi'ie,, work-1\nThoroughly     experienced.      Box     253\nDally  News. *170-li\nDOMESTICATED     ENGLISH     LADY\nwants oosltion as companion and to\nhelji   in   liouftn   generally;    good   cook\nApply Box 252 Dally News.        \"170-6\nWANTED\u2014Two     wattle\nQueen's hotel.\nApply\n10'i-6\nl-'CBNISIIED  HOUSE wanted to rent.\nNo    children.      Particular---    to    X,\nMARRIED MAN  wantj* employment\u2014\nstore,     office     or     outside;     quick,\nsteady   worker;   any   temporarv  Work\nacceptable.   W,   News  ofrhy   ' *jr,7-x\nWANTED\u2014A glH at Club hotel. \"lON-l\nWANTED\u2014Ice maker tor Trail skating anil curling rink,   state ealary,\napplying to  P. Dhlikerly, Trail,  B.\/C.\n*l!iS-3\nWANTED-Giri  t0   help   wilb   housework  and   children.   211   Mill  streel\nWest. U68-0\nWANTED\u2014Canvassers    (both    sexes).\nChristmas   cards\u2014represent   manufacturers.    Commissions   good.    Room\n7. 2339 Main sireet,   Vancouver, B. C.\n\u25a0MfiK-O\nWANTED\u2014Position  by young woman\n--Canadian.    Capabln   housekeeper;\nstore   experience.    Reply   p,   o.   Box\n1017. \u2022107-6\nWANTED\u2014A    team    of    oxen,    well\nbroken,   with  yokP or hurncss complete.   Stuto nge and lowest cash price\nto A. North. Sirdar,  It. c. \u00bbl';5-G\nWANTED\u20141'ulletH ant]  rabbits.   Slate\nage,  breed and   price  to  P.  O.   Box:\n373. n67-fi\nKEMALE COOK WANTED.   Apply to,\nlb,, matron ot the Victorian hospital\nof Kaslo.  B. C. 'lliO-O\nWANTED-Housekeeper  seeking   per-.\nmnnont   home for board nn,i wages.\nFamily of Children; (rood homo,  Apply\nBox   221   Dally   News. **160-f\nWANTED\u2014Horses    for   grazlog\nWlnter koe*p.    Baker &  Co.,   Baker's\nLanding,   Pilot   Bay,  n.  c. \u20221,6\nFOR   RENT-Nlc(t.v   furnished   front\nroom.   820  Victoria  streel.      '103-12\nFURNISHED    ROOMS    FOR    RENT\n517 Vernon street. \u2022lOti-12\nFOR  RENT\u2014Kurn'shed   housekeeping\n'\u2022ft\"\"'*-'. 506 Viefwia-strcct..    *140-12\nFOR RENT\u2014l^urjiish-jd    suite,    with\ndishes, cooking ulciislls and all linen\nsupplied.    Kerr Apartment   block.\n _^^_ i\u00ab-ir:\nFOR RENT\u2014S'x roomed house, close\nin. $25 mo,nth.   j. w. aalWher   ion\nBaker Street. *134-2(i\nOFFICE    TO    LET    In   back   of   i\\t\nWard street.   Also warehouse room\nin basement, 143-tf.\nKOR RENT\u2014When In Vancouverstaj\nat Cambifl Rooms,  100 Camble, cor-\nner Water street.    K. K. BJerkticss.\n*114-52\nKOR   RENT\u2014Snllo;   clean,   well  furnished    housekeeping    rooms\u2014dishes,\nsilver,   linen  supplied.    Ei07  Silica   SI.\n\u2022109-6\nLOST\u2014Between F- O. (ind Pllbllo Library 11 hunch \u00bbr Jteys.  Finder please\nreturn ta Librarian.\" \u2666170-1\nMISS    E.   HODGE,    Dressmaker,   717\nVicloria street.   Clothes cleaned am\npressed; *165-l\nHOJELTJim\nSHERBROOKE HOTEL\n. Nelion, B. C,\nOne minute's walk  from C.P.R.   _\ntion.    Cuisine  unexcelled;   wen  hav\nand Tentllated.\nLAVIGNB ft DUNK.\nBusiness Directory J\nA^WYERS\"\nB.   W.   W1DDOWSON.   ASSATER^nI\nChemist.     Bait   A1108,   Nelson,   B.  \u25a0\nCharges:   Gold, Silver, copper or lei\n11  each;   go! il-silver,   $1.W;   sllvcr-lei\n$1.60,    Other metals on application.\nAUCTIONEERS\n\"WATWRMAN * CO--P.O  BOXltj\nVEt-SON AtTCTION. MART-W u _m\nT.ER, licensed auctioneer, Auction al\noale 1 roomi.   fi\u00bb Ward street. Phon* \u25a0\nGROCERIES\nA?lrtACDC-r-JAMn^^\nQroi-eri and Provision Merchant**-. -\u2014\n\u2022oorteri of Teas, CoffeAi, Spl\u00abi*s, Drii\nFruits, Staple and Fincy Groceri*\nTobaccos. Cigars, Butter, *EB;g\u00ab, cne**.\"\nmnd Packln* Horn* Produce. OIK\nand warehouse corner of Front r\nHall utrfiets. P. O. Bo* IM. T\u00ab!\nuhones 88 and 9-\nWHOLESALE  PRODUCE\nA7n8TriORSWltX^ft\"cO\u2014WH O LBH AlJ\nImporters and Manufacturers' Atonq\nProduce. Fruits, Flour and Feed. P. 1\nPot M. Nolsnn. P.C.   Phona til      W-*|\nELECTRICAL   SUPPLIES\nJ. H.\"mNmtO^ET\u00abrBAKEprSTrBBl|\nBlock. I nut a nation of electrical mJ\nchlnery, telephone plants, house wlrlni\nRe.ialr work. Supplies carried. Phonl\nA2T7.    P.  O.  Box 165. tMM\njmj sejJLjiAjWNQ^\nWINDOWS,   CARPET  AND   CHIMNB\n\u2022Ii-Hiiiug. House cleaning ourspeclaltjl\nAwnings, new Uhd repairs. Vacuuil\nCleaning Company, Phone 418, Box IG*|\n. *m-t|\nPROFESSM^Umi\nGREEN BROS., BURDEN & CO.J\nCivil   Engineers.    Dominion   and   B.\nLand Surveyors.\nSurvoyi   of   LandB,   Mines,   Townsltei\nTimber Limits, Etc. '\nNelson. (518 Ward Street; A, H. Greeil\nMgr, Victoria, 114 Pcmberton Bldg.j M\nC. Green , Ft. George, Hammond Btreea\nF.  P. Burden.\nWILL   HALDANE,   ARCHITECT,   fill\nWard   sireet.    Plans,   specification^\nand estimates.\na. l. Mcculloch\nHydraulle   Englnaar\nProvincial Land \u2022urvaya*\nP.  O.  Bux  41.\nOffice phone, L86t residence pbone, Rtl\nOffice.  Suite 6.   MeCulloch   Bids.\nBaker Street. Nelson. B. C.\nVOICE PRODUCTION\u2014 MRS. e lift\nTroby, Heale. Studio 500 Ccdnl\nstreet.    Tuesdays. \"'149-t*\nT    M.   RIXEN,    AUDITOR    AND\ncountant.   Room IS. K.W.C.   ^loca.\ntn-tt\nI.     PERRT    LEAKE,    CONSULTING\nEngineer, Nelsoh, B.C. 800-tfJ\n\u2022YNOPSIS OF  COAL\nMINING   REGULATION*^\nCoal mining rights of the Dominion, _\nManitoba, Saskatchewan, and AlbertaB\nthe Yukon Territory, the North-weiff\nTerritories, and In a portion of the proT\nvlnce of British Columbia, may be leas-vL\nfor a term of twenty-one years at arl\nannual rental of tl per acre. Not mor*f\nthan 2,660 acres will be leased to ont]\napplicant. 1\nApplication for a lease must be mad*\nby the applicant In nerson to the Ageni\nor Sub-Agent of the district of it:*..*\nthe rlKhts applied for aro situated.\nIn surveyed territory the land must L._\ndescribed by sections, or legal sub-dlvll\n\u25a0Ions of section*-, and In unaurveyed terl\nrltory  the tract applied    for   shall   \"\nstaked out by the applicant himself.\nEach application must be accompanleL.\nby a fee of tE, which will be refunded ll\nthe rights applied for are not available!\nbut not otherwise. A royalty shall bl\npaid 00 the merchantable output of tbT\nmine at the rate of five cents per tonL\nThe person operating \u25a0 the mine shall\nfurnish tho Agent with sworn returns atT\ncounting for the full quantity of merl\nchnntable coal mined and pay the royaltfl\nthereon. If the coal mining rights arl\nnot being operated, such returns \u25a0houll\nbe furnished at least once a year.        1\nThe lease will Include the coal mlnlnfl\nrights only, but the lessee may be perl\nmltted to purchase whatever aVnllablS\nsurface rights may be considered neceiB\neary for the worklng.of the mine at tba\nrato ot $10.00 an acre. ,       \u25a0\nFor full Information application shoultl\nbe made to the Secretary of the Depart!\nment of the Interior, Ottawa, or to aa*\u2122\nAgent or Sug-Agent of Dominion Landi\nW. W. CORY,\nDeputy Minister of the Interior.\nN.B.\u2014Unauthorized publication of ttrl-fl\n\u2022flvprtlSAment  wilt  not  hp   r>Bin   fnr\nLQDGEJ^OTICES\nKOOTENAy LODU- NO. W, I.O.O.FL-J\nMeets -nvery Monday night lo uaol\nfellows' hall at B o'clock.\nQUEEN     CITY     REBEKAH     LOI^-j\nNo. 1*.  I.O.O.F., meets first and tmrj\nTuesdays, Oddfellows' hall, 7:30 o'clocsT\nNELSON ENCAMPMENT NO. I, I.C\nO.F., meets stscond and fourth Thurs\ndays In Oddfellows' hall at 8 o'cloak!\nCANTON CORONA NO. 7 meets e\"W\nsecond Tuesdar In Oddfellowa' hall 1\n8 o'clock.\nKNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS MEET TUE__\nday nights Id k. of p. ball. Eagll\nbuilding-\nLOM\nNELHON Lodge No. L_\nmeets 2nd and 4th Thurll\nday at 8 p.m. In Eagll\nhall. ^\nF.O.E.\nNelaon Aerie No. ll meet*!\ntnd and 4th Wednesdays I\nEagle Hall.\nWANTED\u2014Pole    makers    at    Porto\nRico Siding on G. N. R.    Churchill\nCedar Co. -\"162-12\nWANTED\u2014A** few men to cut womi\nandtclear land in cxchaiiRp for good\nfruit Inmi.   .John Graham, Porrv Siding. 16B-26*\ncompetent   :stfinograpliGr    desirop\nposition;   seven   years'   experience.\nApply W., P. O. Box. 853, Nelson.\n\u202214H-211\nNOTICE.\nIn lho Matter of an Application for\nthe Issue of a. Duplicate Certificate\nof Title* lo L\u00bbts I arid 2, Block fi, Nelson City, Map 480.\nNotice is Hereby Given that It Is\nmy Intention to issue at the explra-\n\u00ablon of one month after the first l\u00bbnh-\nllcation hereof a Duplicate of the Cer-\nlil'leate of Title t<> thp above-mentioned tot In tup name of Clara, 'Arnolil\nwhich certificate Is dated tha 12th\nday    of   July,    1012.    and    numbered\n\u25a0num.\nS. R. ROE,\nDistrict Registrar. '\nNolson, B.C. 8th October, 1913.\nlGl-2aw*4w'i*;B\nA.O.F.\nCourt  Royal    Nelson   NoL\nK04   meets   on fnd and ttm\nMondays   each     month\nK.P, hall at 8 p.m.   Ladl_\ncurt meets .imt and third Wednesday!\nC.O.F.\nCourt Kootenay Belle mcefaj\nInd   and    4th    lYIdays\nK.   P.   Hall,   Eagle   Block!\nCLAN JOHNSTONE 212 MEETS IN\nI.O.O.F. hall first and third Friday*-!\n8 n.m\nNELSON LODGE NO. 5, B. P. O. 51\nmeeta first and third Thursdays aff\n8 p.m.. In lho Englc hall. All so-l\nJournhm members invited.        130-tt|\nCITY  OF  NELSON\nNOTICE\nI am instructed to notify* all those!\nin nrronrs fop liffht.nr water rates thai\nif the nmountf- owing to the 1st Sep-^\ntember last are not pnicl on -jj*-Ik\nthe 1\u00bbt November instant. Hip sendee]\nwill bo dlscnninued forlhwith.\nHy order. W. E. WASSON,\nCity Clekl\n\u25a0 Dated at Nelson. Tl. C, th|H 2Sf-J\nday of Octofier. 1!>15.\nDally N.vi. Wint Aa.. |.t r.aull..\n I\nFRIDAY  OCTOBER 31\n\u20ac%e\niiio\nFAGE  SSVEM.\nPhone 10\nThe Star Grocery Co.\ni Store of Quality\nSTwo New Lines\nAlaska Salt Herrings\n$1.25 per Pail\nStock Fish\n25c per lb.\ntStar Grocery Co.\nPhone 10\nf     XL-ITE\n1 \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\nft     Now ready for business.   Can till orders on short notice, from une case\ncto a cur load.\n;XL-ITE NO. 1 For Heavy Rock Work\nXL-ITE No. 2 For Stumping\nA   TRIAL   ORDER   SOLICITED\nNever freezes.    Nu dangerous fuses.   No headaches; always ready for\nie.\nPRICES ON APPLICATION\nThe Kootenay Explosives Co., Ltd.\njFACTORY: GRANITE, B.C.\nNELSON, B.C.\nGoing to Build?\nIs it a wood shed, a chicken house, an  alteration or addition to  the\nhouse; perhaps it Is a new house.\nEverything you'll want from roof to floor In rough or finished\nlumber we can suppply you with.\nWell seasoned pine, fir and c*:dar.   Cut In our own mills.\nSlowly dried by nature in our yards.\nOur experts will advise you free.   No obligation.\nWrite, phJne  or call.\nForest Mills of B. C. Ltd.\nLate DOMINION  SAWMILLS   &   LUMBER   CO.,   LTD.\nPHONE 15. P. O. BOX  1068\nl^sjjojCKJ for *\n*\"ie Leather\nIt keeps out\nthe. Weather\nftoodlortli-iSlinesSHOE POLISH\nGoodfortheShoes\nCheaper Fire Insurance Rates\nBefore renewing or placing your tire insurance, see me as to the rate\nOf a non-board company. They are nil fully authorized to do the business\nand will save you money.\nG. A. HUNTER - Agent\nCanadian Allis-Chalmers, Limited\nHead  Office,  Toronto,  Ont,\nMill and Mining Machinery\nof All Descriptions\nDistrict  Sales  Office, 306 BAKER STREET, NELSON, B.C.\n(Sullivan  Machinery Co'y\nRock Drills Air Compressors\nDiamond Drills    Quarry Machinery\nLARGE STOCK OF DRILLS AND PARTS CARRIED IN NELSON.\nV\/RITE  POR  PARTICULARS OF SULLIVAN  8TOPER.\n(USED BY MOST OF THE MINING  COMPANIES  IN  THE  DISTRICT.\nAGENTS\u2014\nThe Nelson Iron Works, Limited\nTEST STEELITE\nWITH HEAVY ROCK\nGood    Results    Are    Obtained    from\nBulldozing Trial\u2014Ten-Ton Plant\nUnder Construction\nA test of the strength of Hteellte\npowder was made yesterday across lhe\nlake In some exceptionally heavy rock.\nTwo large rocks were bulldozed, one\ncontaining about 35 cub. yds. of rock\nand the other about 40 cub. yds., with\nlaihs. and Gibs, of Steellte respectively. Thc powder did exceptionally\ngood work, considering the conditions\nunder which it was tested, which were\nvery unfavorable, there being no suitable place In which the powder could\nbc confined. However, it broke large\nquantities of the smaller rock and\ncracked thc larger one. A small lest\nwas also made with the powder under water. Those present were: D. C.\nFraser, A. Lapointe, .T. Miller, P, .1\nGallagher, L. Barker, J. O. Patenaude, T. A. Nault, George Ferguson.\nW. R. Maclean, M.P.P., George Bartlett, Thomas Ireland, J. P. Houlabun,\n.lames O'Shea, H. Brett and several\nothers.\nTho company has completed building its factory at Mill creek, opposite\nNew Denver, B.C., and as soon as thc\nnecessary machinery arrives the plant\nwill be put In full running order. '.\nplant will have a capacity of 10 tons\nper day to commence with, and arrangements arc hclng made so thai\nthc capacity can be doubled at a very\nsmall cost. This powder, It is stated,\nis very good for use in thc mines, and\ncan be used In poorly ventilated tunnels, air pumps not \"being required,\nas It gives off no noxious fumes. It\nis not affected by water, heat or cold,\nund is entirely safe in its use. Thc\ncompany, while manufacturing powder for all kinds of rochworlt, also\nmanufactures a fine grade of stumping powder. There is already a ready\nmarket for the entire output of the\nplant,  tho company has found,\nNELSON NEWS OF TBE DAY\nSmith uf Greenwood is at Hie\nHead Daily News Want Ads for Bargains\nF.  W.\nII time.\nT. II, Munro of Ymfi- is a guest at\nthe Hume.\nD. St. Penis returned lust night\nfrom Cranbrook.\nC. It, Hamilton, K. C., returned last\nul-'it. from Cranbrook.\nMrs. ft. ,1. Smith and son Warren\nreturned last evening rrom a visit lo\nSpokane.\nJ. II. Schofleld. M.P.I'.. of Trail,\nwas a visitor to Nelson yesterday,\nregistering* at the S'trathcoim.\nJoseph Ryan, police magistrate \"t\nCranbrook, came in on the Crow boat\nlash night and registered at tho Hume.\nH. C, Hunnliifflon of Victoria, inspector of legal offices, came in last\nnight and registered at the Strathcona.\nMrs, May lock and Mrs. ,1. W.\nHolm's arc lhe visiting delegales for\ntho Charity organization for the cumin*,' month.\nT. M. Sutherland of Victoria, superintendent of telephone line construction fo> the forestry department,\n;s at the Strathcona.\nAt the mectliiK: of tb0 charity organization on Wednesday it was decided to hold nu iinnuii! ball o\\\\ Tuesday, Dee. \u25a0>, in Eagle hall.\nThere will be a .sowing meeting of\ntlio Ladies* Aid ot St. Paul's Presbyterian church in th,, church parlors\n.his afternoon  at --30 o'clocf\nTomorrow being'the'festival of All\nSaints, 'there will be in,, foJ16'wlnK services at K-t. Saviour's chufeh. 7.30\nnum., Holy Communion; 10.30 n.m.,\nHoly Communion.\n11. B, Douglas, who has boon coil-\nriliod in a, hospital at Winnipeg with\nan attack nf typhoid fever, is considerably hotter and is now able to\nleave his bed for a .short time each\nday. according to a letter received by\nil Nelson friend yesterday. It will be\nabout a month, th,, lottor states, before Mr. Douglas will ho completely\nrecovered,\nMrs. ,D, C. Kuril* hus pri-si-iiu-,* the\nfollowing iumks to the library!  \"rciu-\nslvo Isahollo\", by Juiiucs Futrelle;\n\"My Lady Cinderella,\" bv Mrs. c. N.\nWilliamson; \"Manv Slurs,\" by JJ M.\nLane; \"Ncdra,\" bv G. It. McCUtchr\/on;\n\"Sir Porclval,\" by .1. II. Shonlhouse;\n\"Theo,\" bv V. H. Burnett and \"When\na Man   Marries,\"   b.v   M.   It.  Rinehart.\nA  WINTER COAT\nOf coltskin, enriched with black fox\nHALLOWE'EN IS\nEVE OF MYSTERY\nAncient   Religious    Festival    Will   Bc\nObserved Tonight\u2014Many Entertainments  Here.\nTonight throughout Uie Christian\nworld will he celebrated Hallowe'en,\nthe eve of the festival of All Saints.\nHallowe'en is associated iu the popular imagination wit]* the prevalence ol'\nsupernatural influences anil is clearly\n'die of pagan times, lu the north\nof England, Hallowe'en is known as\n'nut-crack\" night, while in the rural\ndistricts of Scotland tiie cei'einouieh\nof tho evening assume a highly imaginative and superstitious lif;!!t. . The\nprincipal object of the evening at one\ntime was that of loukhi..- into tliu future and mainly to discover who was\nto ho one's partner in life. Popular\nbelief ascribes to children boni on\nHallowe'en the faculty of perceivlns\nand holding converse witli supernatural beings.\nAt-the present time, though ghosts\nuud witches are Impersonated aud\nthere Ib an air of mystery surrounding the entertain men is of the evening,\npeople do not take on such a. serious\naspect over the Halloween revels.\nThere will he numerous private entertainments with till the appropriate\nBettings lor the occasion In Nelson\nthiB evening, and the residents of the\ncity aro asked to beware of the pranks\nof the boys of tiie city, who generally\nlook upon the evening as a lime for\noutdoor revelry and mischief,\nClan Johnstone will celebrate the\nevent by holding -\u25a0 big concert, supper and dance at liagl'e hull.\nThe\nowner Of a child's pocket book\nlUiiiniin*- a small sum of money\nwhich Wii.s picked up by Sergt. ,1. D\nWlghtman on Sunday, mav secure It\nat tho cltv police office by proving\nowncn-hl-i of tlie property.\nFIRE.\nFIRE.\nFIRE.\nFIGHT FIERCE IN\nNEW YORK CITY\nMonster   Meeting   in   Madison   Square\nGarden\u2014Statements and  Denials Fly Fast.\n(Wy Daily News Lea*SCd Wire.)\nNBW YORK, Oct, an.\u2014lilh thus! asm\nfor the municipal ticket beaded by\nJohn Purroy .MiU-ueli reached its\nheight tonight hi a monster mass\nmeeting iu .Madison Square garden,\nAn audience which packed the his\namphitheatre heard the mayoralty\ncandidate \"'himself, former Mayor Sot))\nLow, who once led a fusion cause to\nvictory; Oscar S. Straus, former ambassador to Turkey, and others attack Tammany flail, Edward E. Mc-\nCall, its  m'ayornlty    candldnte,    and\nDon't have.\nPhone   438   for   chimney\nNelson Vacuum company.\nStarland inusi-ueradp ball in Eagle\nbull Wednesday night, Nov. fith\nPrizes will ba awarded for thc lies'\ncostumes. Admission\u2014Gentlemen, $1'\nladies. 5Cc: balcony for spectators. 2pc\nDancing ii u, 2.  Refreshments,   1G7-P\nGo to Morswill &. Co. for all kind*-'\n0\" feed\u2014wheat oats. corn, barley, bean\nshorts, linseed meal, beef scraps\noyster shell, alfalfa meal\u2014all kind.. V\nchopped   feed. 109-7\nSUPRRINTENDENT  OF\nEDMONTON  SCHOOLS  RESIGNS\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nKOMONTON. Attn.., Oct. 30.\u2014.In*\nMeCalg, M.A.. for seven years superintendent of Edmonton schools tendered his resignation at the board nn*\u00abl-\nIne* tonight ami was accepted. Por\npome time past there ha** been determined opposition lo lhe hoard superintendent. The last school board ol<*\"-\ntion was lnrtrely fought out on the\n\u2022\u2022ueptlon of th**- suoerlntendency *i\u00bb*'\nMcCflltf cumortern elected a mn'ovilv\non the hoard. During the nnst tev\nweek.** the agitation hns been renewed.\nir*\"1* il was believed flint the o\u00ably noil-lion wns the resbTnatlon of the\n(*unertnten>dent. Mr. M<*Cnb*- is sec-\nrer\/ir** of the Alher'n School Triis*<*p<*'\nosflocln-tlen and se-oretnry of the Provincial Educational council. Ho !\u2022\nalso a momher of the senate of thr\nuniversity of Alberta.\nA Splendid Program of Shopping\nAttractions for Friday and Saturday\nFor Friday and Saturday we offer our patrons a list of bargains without precedent in the annals of\nretailing in this city. The lines are- specially selected, with a view of drawing the greater response. Items\nfrom every section of the store join to make the program one of the most interesting in our history and a\ngreat money saving we promise you. We want to make every minute in tho day a busy one, and to do it we\nare willing to sacrifice profit.\u2014You   will benefit.\nWomen's and\nMisses'\nFall Coats\nREGULAR VALUES TO (14.50\nTO SELL FOR ONLY\n$5\n00\nirk   gri\nblac\nid\nChi\nid gn\nDiagonal Tweeds, etc. l-'nll\nlength styles with large collars\nand turn back cuffs, finished\nwiib fancy buttons. .Some are\nlined to waist. In sizes 1*1 to\n\u25a012. Our actual values to $.14.50.\nOn Sale Friday and Saturday\nfor    $5.00\nA Great Sale of Women's\nCloth and Silk Dresses\n$12.95\nREGULAR  VALUES  TO  $24.50\nTO  CLEAR   AT   \t\n.lust .\nill   IS\njf th\n1th,\nsuch a saving ull tin* prli\nlot  will  ln> all sold in a  I\nllns,   Taffeta   Silks,   l-'n-i\nor low   neck  and  long a\nbuttons ami pipings in i\nlace collars nnd cuffs oi\nChoose from such populi\nbrown,   navy,   saxe,   black, nnd shot colorings,    our\nactual values to $2*1.50.\nReduced for  Friday and Saturday's  Selling  at $12.95\nfinished wilh self\nig shades. Dainty\nf film Uretbnnc net.\nide:\nWomen's\nWinter Coats\nVALUES   UP  TO  J20.00\nTO   SELL   FOR\n\u201e, .  $io-00\n\/\ni\/fi   . Here's a Coat Bargain that li\n\/j.|\u00a7 sure   lo   meet   with   more   than\n\/]]\u00a7U usual response.    Made of Scotch\nfMlnffl Mixtures    in    color    effects    of\nWllSW - brown,   fawn,   grey   and   green..\njM||J A? Full   length   styles,   with   cui-\n!i|\\ M'-'Vi'l       \"\" away or square coiners.    Set-In\n\"\"* f.Tijl sleeves and collars that can bc\nworn   open   or   fastens  close   up\nto the neck.    Our regular values\nto  $211.00.     On   Sale   Friday   and\nSaturday   for    $10.00\n35 inch Pailette Silks\nTO SELL FOR ONLY   fl\u00bb I   (\\f\\\nPER   YARD    *pl.UU\nTills is exceptional value. Tliey are ueuutlful\nheavy (lliallly sill;;; in shades of aavy, cardinal,\ncream, sky, e-lnk, rcswlu, amber ami black. Simply\nIdeal silks for waists and  dresses,  because of their\nexcellent nppcarai  and service, \"*~SuId  ovcrywhoro\nal   $1.25  per yard.\nSpecial   Friday  and   Saturday    $1.00\nBlack Velveteen\nTO SELL FOR ONLY       C\/fl\nPER   YARD    .OU\nIM   V.inls  -VENICE\"    v.-l> n    in    black   only.\nComes --Ms Indies wide with   nice   pile   and   finish.\n-pecial   for  Friday and  Saturday   only,   per  yard   50c\nSale of Women's\nGood Suits\nREGULAR VALUES TO $37.50\n$25.00\nTO\nSELL\nFOR\nONLY\ns   in   b\nIII\nf\neffci\nts \t\nIII\nII-\nNIVl\n(5    Dt\nfi\n111\nMad\n\u25a0    Willi\nll!\n1\n$7.50    In    $12.50.\nSpeci\nally Reduced for Friday and Satur-\niay's   selling   for         $25,00\nHandbags at $1.75\nbundle.\nFriday  and  Saturday only\nMen's Mew Fall Suits\nREGULAR  VALUES  TO $17.50\n$12.50\nTO SELL\nFOR   ONLY\nThose Sniis iu\nstyles, cu I in Uu\nsacque style an\nbest quality Uu\nare fine Englisi:\nand   Worsteds\nI    finished    wilh\ndr;\nKn\nelt-..\ngive\nk effects. Oi\ngood wuirin-:\nlur values to ?17.\nand   Saturday   for\nOn   Sale   Friday\n $12.50\nMen's Neckwear\nREGULAR   50c   VALUES\n3 for $1.00\nAboui   lillgh\nMe\nKnitted Tii-s in all tin- ii\nlugs and dusigns. ltegulu\nFriday  and  Saturday   ,..,\nHudson's  Bay  Company\nIncorporated 1670\nIncorporated 1670\nA PARIS  MODEL\nStyle of dress which will be in vogue\nthis  season  at  dinner parties  and\nsooial  eveninos\n(Jharlcs P. Murphy, its loader.\nytraus aroused the great crowd to\na demonstration when lie denounced\nTaiiitnany Hull for what lie declared\nwas Hs recently displayed power to\nconduct its own recall and make and\nunmake a, governor.\nlleiiucssy continued his spirited\ncampaign tonight, his principal address being delivered at Cooper Union. Ho devoted the greater part of\nhis talk to Charles F. itturphy, reitur-\nuting charges he hnd made against\nthe Tammany leader, incidental ly\nhcaplug ridicule upon him lor his declaration that he returned to Anthony\nBrady, now dead, tlie latter's ?:if>,i'uu\ncampaign contribution.\nI Statements, denials of charges and\ntho continued use of \"The little black\nbook\" said to contain lhe record of\nconversations with ex-Senator Stephen\nJ. Stilwell in Sing Sing prison, whicli\nlyas turned over to District Attorney\nWhitman, were among the incident.1-;\nthat helped to keep the campaign in\nswift motion during the day.\nSHIP SOLD THEN\nLOST AT SEA\npank Contests Right of Seamen to br.\nPaid  From  Proceeds of\nSale\n(By Dully News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, ont., Oet. :\u00bb!\u00bb.\u2014In the supreme   court   this   afternoon   thc   appeal uf the Traders1   B^nk of Canada\nLockwoofi   was   taken   up.     In   the\npiater or thp Fort Oeorsf Lumber &\n'lafttion  company.  Lockwodd,  wns\nappointed   liquidator   and   found   g**\"-\nil asset.-*, of about  $S,00C  o-. ifl.OOO\nI  the ship Clilloo,  which  was sub-\nt  to a  inariliriio mnrl-g-flffp of $11.1)00\ncome minister of finance and\nagriculture, i^nd that W. W. Foster, his deputy, who is to run in\nthe Islands constituency by-election, will b:* taken into tbe cabinet\nas head of tbe public works department.\n.1'  wltteli\nileged   \u00abl\nKiV'en   ii\nOn   eln\nIMTS   Willi\ns ju-dgn\nurt   of\nMr.   .Ii\n<\\l  thai  Un-\nwith 111,, in\ni><   liquidalo\nSome Take Water\ntin\nrd.-r\nprouerlj\nla\n-ditut's and  Lhat Hi\nl lo -the whole $r.,'iu\nd   i\u201e   equity,   and,   :i<\nugrcemont which  wa\nRlluhiu K. U.\nolhint;  Ohryale\n') a\ntill\nELLISON   FOR  SENATE\nTAYLOR FINANCE  MINISTER\n(By Daily News Leased Wire-!\nVICTORIA, B.C., Oct. 30,-i\nThere is a rumor around the government building offices today\nthat Hon. Price Ellison's appointment to the senate is imminent,\nthat  Hon. Thomas Taylor will  be-\nbut we don't -not. in the Plumbing\nbusiness. We claim to do the most\nthorough, perfect, clean and satisfactory Plumbing work ot any concern in\ntlie town, and we buck ui our assertion hy proving It! We construct new\nPlumbing work, of course, whether it\nbe for a single room or a row 0\/\nhouses; but we are also expert repairers, and wo don't give the joke-\nmaker an opportunity to have fun at\neither delays or charges. \"Honest\nwork at an honest price\" is our motto.\nE. K. STRACHAN\nBiker St. Nation\n \u00bbABI IIQHT,\nClje BatU> jHctos\nF.'IDAY  :..','. OCTOBER 31-\nTELLS OF BATTLE\nIN PHILIPPINES\nBrother  of   Nelson   Man,  Sergeant  of\nUnited   States  Army,  Describes\nI Conditions\nThut some parts of the Philippine\nislands, although the United Stale;\ntroops have been successful In subduing most or thc Moros, are still\nln an unsettled and dangerous condition ls Indicated by a letter which\nhas been received by Charles A. Waterman of Nelson from his brother, It.\nC. Waterman, ordnance sergeant of\nthe United States army, who is stationed at Augur barracks, Jolo, P.I.,\nThe battle at liagsak, which was reported by the I Associated Tress, for\nwhich Sergeant Waterman is correspondent, wus the worst fight In\n\u25a0which the American troops have been\nengaged since the occupation and It Is\n\u00abtlll unsafe for anyone to leave the\ntown of Augur unless accompanied by\nan armed guard. The letter, whieh\nts dated Sept. 14, says in part;\nWhile this station is not lhe best in\ntho islands ll might be worse in some\nthings. We have been having a lot of\ntrouble with the Moros of laic, us perhaps you might have seen hy the\npapers, but at the present time everything Is quiet and with tho exception\nof a few hnd Moros, with a small following of the worst clement, the is-\nlnnd Is settling down to a normal\ncondition. The fight at Bagsak, In\nwhich I was engaged, in command of\none mountain gun, was a bad proposition, in fact the worst action in\nWhich the American troops have been\nengaged since the occupation and\nelnce then there has been continual\nfighting with small bodies of the\nfrncgade faction, but we now have\nthem pretty well subdued and I do not\nanticipate much more trouble from\nthem for some time to come.\n\"We are going out tomorrow to\nshell the last 'cotta' of whicli we havo\nUnequalled for General Us*.\nW. P. TIERNEY, General Sales Agent\nNelson, B. C.\nCar* ahlppfld to all railway points\nFor Chapped Hands\nand Rough Skin\nRose Witch Hazel Cream, hot...25c\nCarnation Cream, bottle 25c\nSpearmint Cream, new, bottle..25c\nAlmond Cream Toilet Lotion, for\nsoftening and whitening the skin.\nBottle   50c\nPerfect Cold Cream, in pots 25c\n\"Borofa***,\" the English wonder.\nCures redness of skin, etc.\nTube   25c\nAnd a complete line of all oilier\nseasonable toilet articles.\nMail orders filled promptly.\nRutherford Drug Co.\nLIMITED\nWard St. Nelson, B.C.\nAt Present\nWo have some real good secondhand articles, such as violin, clarionet, flute, coronet, accoidian,\ncameras, electric kettle, etc. We\nbuy, sell or store second-hand goods\nof all kinds. Our line of crockery,\nchina aud glassware is complete,\nCHINA HALL\nA.  W.   MUNRO,  Prop.\nPhona  L-261   , 321  Bakar St.\nP.  0. Box 588\nNelson Opera House\nTONIGHT:\nVerna Felton\nAND THE\nAllen Players\n\"THE DAWN OF A TOMORROW\"\nPrices:   70c, 50c and 25c.\nBale at City Drug Store.\nOur T. & B.\nBlend Tea\nBest Value on  Market.\n50c per lb.\nCa A. Benedict\nJosephine St\nOaily News \"Want\" Adt- Get Results.\nQueen Studio\nEstablished 1898.\nPortraits\nViews\nPictures\nPicture Framing\nALLAN LEAN, Manager.\nP. 0. Box 812. Phona lie.\nNelson, B. C.\nWe Have Some\nCheap Lots for\nSale On Easy\nTerms\nGood positions, situated in Addition A.\nAlso a few blocks in the C.P.R.\nSubdivision south of the old smelter site. Terms; One-fifth cash nnd\nthe balance In four annual instalments; interest at ti per cent.\nFor full particulars apply to\nH. & M. Bird\nNelson. B. C.\nThe Allen-Smith Company\nHave a few good buys in House Property.   Ask for further particulars,\nINSURANCE.\nFire,  Life, Accident,  Employers'  Liability,  Motor  Boat.\nOnly sound, prompt-paying companies represented.\nThe Allen-Smith Company\nINSURANCE,  REAL ESTATE, AUDITING.\nPHONE 251. IMPERIAL BANK  BLOCK.\n| Gentlemen's\nThin Model\nWALTHAM\n COLONIAL\t\nWATCHES\nThose neat, thin styles, in plain\npolished cases, with nold or silver\ndials. A watch that appeals to a\nman.     '\nIn the finest gold filled. $20.00\nand up.\nIn 14-k. solid gold, $46.00 and \u00abp.\nThe Riverside Waltham is another up-to-date model in 19 jewels,\n$48.1,0 and $50.ou.\nLeather boxes with every watch.\nThere arc many reasons why you\nshould buy a Waltham.\nJ. 0. Patenaude\nC.P.R.   and   G.N.R.   Official   Time\nInspector.\nHouse Heating\nThink of It now anil you can have\nIt next winter.\nBee tha\nB. C. Plumbing & Heating Co.\nfor price*.\nOPERA   HOUSE   BLOCK\nP.O. Box 485 Phone .18.1\nFORMER   FIGURE   IN\nBRITISH   COLUMBIA   DEAD\n-Cm* Dallv  News Leased Wiie.i\nLONDON,    Oct.    *i\u00bb.\u2014Arthur    .luhii\nStupley, who wus many year's a prominent figure' in itritlHh Columbia, died\nat Stum-port on Wednesday night:\nNOTICE\nCuinplaiuts having been made about\ntho Hallowe'en mischief of former\nyears in the cily, the police will' take\nmeasures to prevent a recurrence ol\nsuch wilful destruction of private property, nnd all persons so engaged will\nbe promptly arrested.\n\"B.&K.\" Bread\nThis brand of Flour is mukin\nfriends every dtiy.'\nAsk your grocer for it.   He t\nIt here as he requires it\nWith  proper shortening, It\ngood pastry, too\nThe Brackman-I\nMilling Co., Limit\nRanges, Pans and\nEnamelware\n\"Cheapest  in  the  City\"\nThe Ark\nNew and Second-Hand Furniture\nPhone L395 806 Vernon St.\nNelson, B. C.\nKootenay Electric Construction\nCompany\nGET OUR  PRICES  BEFORE GOINC\nELSEWHERE\nWard St, Nelson, B.C\nnny Information mi the Island, but we\ndon't ex peel much opposition.\nArmed Escort Needed\n\"This town Is one of lhe oldest\ntowns in lhe Philippine Islands, and\n:s surrounded wilh a high stone wall\nind one cannot go outside thc wall\nwithout an armed escort, which\nmakes it sort of confining to one who\n\u25a0ikes to lake long walks, like* I do,\njut there are other compensating eon-\nIt's Your\nMove\nTime to make thai move\nfrom heavy to medium\nweight underwear.\nLet us supply you with the\nnewest wrinkles in light,\nspringy ribbed undergarments .both separate and\nunion.\nWe have an Ideal assortment of the best makes at\nthe right prices,\nJ. A. Gilker\nGents' and  Boys' Outfitters.\nIVelson Opera House\nTWO NIGHTS ONLY\nCommencing Mon., Nov. 3\nJuvenile\nBoston ians\nMonday Night:\nIu an elaborate production of\n\"PRINCESS CHIC\"\nTuesday:\n\"THE ROSE OF BLANDEEN\"\n'rices:    $1.00, 76c and 50c,\nSule at City Drug Store.\nAre You Clearing Land?\nIf so we can supply you  with  the  necessary tools.\nSAWS\nMATTOCKS\nCROW  BAR\nAXES\nAL80 STUMPING POWDER, CAPS, FUSE\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co. Ltd.\nWholanle and Retail. Nalaon & C.\nilillons, bucIi as good sidewalks, water\nsystem and sewers which maki'S life\nmore pleasant here than In some other\nparts of the riiilippincs in which I\nhave been stationed. The country\naround hero is very productive, almost every known cereal and vegetable thrives here as it docs nowhere\nelse in the Philippines, which makes\nIt very nice for sueb of us exiles us\nhave to live here. We are very fortunate iu being abb; lo got good meats\nmid provisions regularly from Manila, whleh Is about 7r-0 miles north of\nus, and with Borneo but !>0 mile's1 and\nSingapore 600, we are very well supplied   Indeed.\nFOUR  ARE  CONVICTED\nAT FERNIE FALL ASSIZES\nOne   Man   Jumps   Bail   When   Grand\nJury Finds True Bill Against\nHim for Theft.\nNine cases were tried at the Fernie\nassizes, whicli came to a conclusion\nthis week, and four prisoners were\nconvicted, one jumped his ball after\ntlie grand jury bad brought in a true\nbill, in another case the grand jury\nfound no hill and three prisoners were\nacquitted. Of those acquitted two\nwere tried at the last Fernie assizes,\nwhen the juries disagreed. Fred C.\nMoffatt of Nelson acted as crown\nprosecutor. The cases and the results\nwere:\nHex vs Cutri, murder, convicted and\nsentenced to he hanged,\nRex vs Honta, wounding; grand\njury brought in no hill.\nHex vs Biggs, attempted Indecent us-\nult, acquitted. On two previous occasions this man was tried for tlie\nsame offense, the juries disagreeing.\nRex vs Vito Olovostro, attempted indecent assault, convicted, sentenced to\ntwo vears in the penitentiary.\nRex vs Godkin. theft from the Canadian Pacific railway. True bill found\nby grand jury, but tin* prisoner fled,\n11. Is believed to Spokane. A warrunl\nwns issued for his arrest. He was\nout on bail.\nRex vs Davidson, false pretenses,\nconvicted and sentenced to throe\nyears in tbe penitentiary.\nRex vs Rahul, murder. This case\nwas withdrawn from tlie jury with lhe\nonsent of the mown prosecutor,there\n>oiug Insufficient evidence to convict.\"1\nIt was charged that Rahul's wife had\ndied from the effects of a kicu administered by the prisoner.\nRex vs Burdangs, burglary, convicted and sentenced to one year in jail.\nRex vs Bahundar Singh, perjury, acquitted. This man was tried at Fernie\nast. year, but the jury then disagreed.\nNelson   Messenger   Co.    Prompt   and\nreliable. Phone 242. Open nights. 114-tf\nToilet Preparations\nFall is here again with Us skin chapping winds, necessitating thc usu of creams and lotions to overcome\nthe resulting rough hands and face, We havo a select and up-to-date line of Creams and Lotions, Including\nthose of all the famous manufacturers or the continent.\nWitch  Hazel  and  Elder Flower Cream, at      25\u00b0\nSoeloy Almonrose Cream, at : \u2022 56\u00b0\nPulford's Creames of Olives, at 50\u00b0\nHind's Honey Almond Cream, at ..... ' 50\u00b0\nNyal'a  Violet and  Witch  Hazel  Cream, at       2Bo\nTalcum Powders of all makes and odor.*, ranging in price from  Z5\u00b0 *\u00b0 S0o\nCold Creams from all the big manufacturing   houses,   ranging   In   price from   \u25a0\u25a0 25c to $1.00\nThe Poole Drug Co.\nWE  NEVER  SLEEP.\nREXALL STORE.\nALWAYS AT YOUR SERVICE.\nBuilding Time Is He]\nSEE   US   FOR   PRICES\non all binds of\nBUILDING   MATERIAL\nSpecial attention to out of tovj\nwork 'and or er\u00a7.\nWaters & PascoeJ\nBUILDERS AND CONTRACTOR\nOffice and Factory:\nFRONT 8TREET\nEye Specials\nTHREE HUNDRED\nHAVEJEGISTERED\nMore   Interest   Is  Shown   by   Householders\u2014List   Closes   Five\no'clock Today.\nWith but one day left in which to\nregister 'declarations of householders\nwere handed iu at the city hall in\nlarger numbers yesterday than at any\ntime Blnce the list opened on the first\nof the month. During the day nearly\n100 declarations were received, bringing Uie total on the list to over :i00.\nThis number, however, is still below\nthat of former years and unless there\nis a tremendous last, day rush today\ntho list will he one of the smallest in\nyeast. No declarations will be received at tlie cily hall after o o'clock this\nafternoon,\nTO SHIP CAR OF APPLES\nFROM  NELSON ON THURSDAY\nDefinite arrangements have been\nmade by R. T, Hickes, manager of the\nKootenay Fruit Growers' union, to ship\na car of apples from Nelson to the\nprairies on Thursday. November fi.\nThis ear will he made uu of fruit, from\nthe orchards of John ll. Hoyle and\nMajor Goode of Upper lloiiniugton;\nT. A. Airoy. of Cedar Point; W. T.\nBugglns nnd O. Bi Richards of Willow\nPoint, and Dr. Major and Holmes a\nCourt of Proctor,\nAT THE THEATRES\nThu most notable event of Lhe early\ntheatrical season hi Nelson will bo\nthe presentation by the ruinous Juvenile HoBloniaiiB Opera company, ut the\nopera house on Monduy, of the celebrated light opera success \"Princess\nChic,\" thc splendid new addition to\ntbe company's extensive repertoire, in\nwhich hns been scored Its greatest\ntriumph.\nThe feature hill of the Allen Piay4\nera' repertoire this season is a dramatization of lhat inspiring   story   hy\nWe Have Received Instructions to Sell Two\nNice Homes in Nelson\nOne, situated on Silica Street; 5 rooms, basement and all modern\nconveniences, $2,000.00 for Immediate purchase. This is a\nlow price and we can also give good terms.   . (\nAnother Situated on Stanley Street; 6 rooms, bathroom, and all\nmodern conveniences; also good garden. House is convenient to car line.    For quick sale, $2,100,00.\nCITY PROPERTY. FRUIT LANDS. INVESTMENTS.\nFIRE.     LIFE.     ACCIDENT AND EMPLOYER8\nLIABILITY INSURANCES.\nBOND8.       STOCKS.      SHARES. -\nChas. F. McHardy\nTHI OMEN BLOCK, NILSON, B. %\nFrances Hodgson Burnett, \"Tlie Dawn\nof a Tomorrow.\" Tho role of \"Glad''\nin this play was created to supply\nthe demand for further acquaintance\nwith the little child-woman so many\ngreat to love in ''Merely Mary Ann.\"\n\"Tho Dawn of a Tomorrow\" Is. a\ngreat play, one that makes the audience realize the elevating influence of\ntho drama. Manager Allen takes\npleasure in announcing the appearance of Miss Verna Felton and the\nAllen Players iu this play at the opera\nhouse tonight.\nThe Allen Players presented \"The\nSpendthrift\" to a crowded and delighted audience at the opera house last\nevening. The play was a plensing one(\ngiving ;\\Mss Felton and Mr. Fensler\nample opportunity to display their\nnowers in emotional drama. Miss Felton in the first three acts was mon'\nbecomingly and charmingly gowned\nund tbe play was staged with the elaborate attention lo detail that has made\ntbe company fnmou<* In their many\nproductions here. Mrs. Allen'K an-\npoaraiiee was tlie signal for rounds of\napplause, and \"Aunt Grelchen\" wits\nthe recipient or a handsome basket of\nflowers. The leading characters were\nexceilln*iiv well mnmorted.\nThis evening will he presented what\nMiss Felton say*-* is the company's\nstrongest, plav, \"Thn Dawn of u To-\nmorrow,\" and n great, dramatic treat\nis promised. Owing In the jftntrtb. o-\"\nthe bill this evi'iiiiiir tbe management\nsneelally request*- that, the audience\nhe seiiled hy Xr'SO as tile curtain will\nrise sliarblv at the hour mentioned.\n\"Cinderella\" will be given at the matinee tomorrow afternoon, and Nelson\"?\nfavorite dramatic company will close\nlheir week's engagement tomorrow\nnight with a roaring farce comedy,\n\"Nobody's Widow.\"\nDaily   News  Want  Ada.  Get  Results\nNELSON NEWS OFTflE DAY\nMr. and Mrs. G, ll, Colwell will\nleave on -the Great Nortliern -this\nmorning  for   Los   Angeles,   Cat.\nA Cor of feed and flour has arrived\nat South Slocnn for 'the Farmers' In'-\netltutp  and   will   be  'distributed   today\nand tomorrow.\nCkiHsi-.s '\"day at the Y.M.C.A, are:\nhigh school, -I io 5 o'clock; professional men, 5.10 to \u25a0' o'ulook; young\nmen, *S.1D lo ll) o'clock.\nThe new steam steering gear which\nwill be installed in the steamer Nasookln arrived in tbe city yesterday\nand was taken out to lh(. l'**iirvlew\nshipyards.\nErnest Richardson of Crawford Bay\nwill leave on lhe Great Northern ibis\nmorning fe-r New York, whence lie\nwill .--ail on Nov. G by the Lusilanla\nfor Liverpool,\nThe mcinbei'H o *!\u2022(* First Nelson\nCompany Bovs' Hrignde are invited\nto the church ball thin evening at 7\no'clock for fome Hallowe'en tun. Uniforms will not hg worn.\nUNRESERVED\nion Sale\nAt 616 Victoria St, City, at 2 o'clock\np.m. on Saturday, Ncv. 1st.\nA large house, being No', iJJ-1 Victoria St.    First class and up to date.\nAlso tilfi will he sold\u201410 roomsatid\na tenement hoiiso at rear nf lot.\nNow is the time to get a house at\nyour own price.   Terms easy,\nJACOB GREEN & CO.,\nAuctioneers,\nOSIERY\nFOR MEN\nEvery Man wants good, durable Hosiery. whon he buys\nhere that's what he gels! \"We\nhandle only the Best Makes.\nHard to make you appreciate our gveat variety. We have Men's Hose,\nthat don't\" fadeT\"diTn't\"i*odt7~do!i't stretch\" 1niid\"\"uTat~flt pei^ectl'^h'eavy\nmedium and light weight. ..\n!        COTTON,   MERINO,   LISLE,  CASHMERE OR SILK |\nI 25c,  35c  to  (1.00        i I\nInsured \\ Hosiery\nWe'll sell you  Hosiery thut wo will guarantee to wear fur months,\nand  we  \\V111   replace  without charge any pair that fails!\n36c and 50c\nEMORY & WALLET\nClothes That Satisfy\nR. L. DOUGLAS!!\nTHE GRADUATE OPTICIAN\nCertified by a Provincial ISoardJ\nExaminers in Optometry.\nRoom 18, K. W. C. Block,\nFairview Lots\nTwo corner lots, UO-foot frontaj\ni-map. Price W5(1. E\u201e8y terral\nNot far rrom. oily iIllo; conveuienl\nto ear. \u25a0\nH. E. DILL\n\u20227  K.  W. C. Blook,\nNELSON, B.C.\nMANICURING\nDon't you desiro to havo youi\nlinncls look nice at dance's,\nparties, dinners, teas, etc.? NothJ\nlilfi looks so ill-bred as badly kepf\nnails. 1\nLet us givo our expert care toj\nyour nails.   GOc a. manicure. I\nDon't wail, but sta'rt now to have]\nthem manicured.\nTHB icay; INSTITUTE\nOpposite Opera House.  Phone COll\nHOUSE\"SEKVMI4T8 Of-\nALL KINDS CAN.\nby reading and using Tho Dai\nNews Want Columns\nFIND WORK  AT\nALL  SEASONS.\nIt Doesn't\nPay\nto carry a watch th\nkeop lime \\vhon you\nrepaired by us and\nlor one year to keep\nOr if a new watch, is\n\u25a0wo can supply the\nmodern movement hi\nver enso at prices\ncomparison.\nlat-w'tll :\ncan l\nguaranlel\ngood tin!\nthe reineJ\nvery hq\ngold or e\nthat :\nJ. J. Walker\nJeweler and  Optician\nBaker St, Nelion, Bj\nFOR RENT\nHouse, ti rooms aud bath....$20.0t|\nCotluge, 5 rooms and bath...$20.(M\nHouse (furnished) ..........$35i0C|\nAll well located. Leases can bej\nhad If desired.\nSTOCKS AND-!\nBONDS\nWE WILL BUY!\n100-1000 Standard Silver-Lead.Offer]\n500-1000 International Coal ...   .271\n1000McGilllrfay Coal ........   .1*\nWE WILL SELL\nlooo Rambler-Cariboo 24|\n1000-2000Lucky Jim ...'....,\n1000 Silver Hoard 16l\n60 D. C. Copper ,  2.9tr~\nWe have an l interesting invost-t\nment proposition in municipal and!\nother bonds. Also bonds purchas-f\nable on small annual installments.)\nParticulars on application.\nSt Denis &\nLawrence\nMeCulloch Bldg., Nelson, B.C7'\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"}]}}