{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0386553":{"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP":[{"value":"6d467b96-14e8-4124-a260-61ce94e9d217","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":"2019-11-26","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1915-09-02","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0386553\/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":" DAILY   NEW8\nCLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS\nArc An Effectivs Selling Fere*\n6e&l-&W\nt%H\nFULL     LEASED     WIRE    8ERVICE\n_ of th\u00ab\nWE8TERN     ASSOCIATED     PRESS\nOL.   14     No.  119\nNELSON, B. O, THURSDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 2, 1915\n50c. PER MONTH\niLLIES DEFEAT TURKS IN\nlake\nPoint   Commanding:\nAnafarta Valley\nMl IS ALSO\nSCORE SUCCESSES\neavy Losses Inflicted on\nnj!vln88elmans, Much Booty\nIs Captured\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\n\u25a0ONDON, Sept. 1.\u2014Sir Ian Mamll-\n,cnmmnnder-ln-chiof of the allied\n'Ices operating on Ihe Gallipoll pen-\n'ula, reported tonight on some re-\nt operations in the Franco-British\njjort to open tbe Dardanelles. Severe\n\u25a0nd to hand fighting on Aug, 27 and\nhe said, resulted In furl her pro-\n^s. An Important laclical polnl\n\u25a0nmanding tbe Anafarta. valley has\nin captured, lhe fact constituting a\niBlderahlo forward slop. Tho Aus-\nlasian forces here have also made\nii appreciable gain of ground,\"\nijleaVy losses were Inflicted on the\nIrks.\nFighting Is Hand to Hand\nLONDON,   Sept.   2.\u2014Further   gains\nthe ollied  forces  on   the Gallipoli\nilnsula,  are  reported  In  an   official\ntemont received  from (len. Sir Ian\n.milton, nommnnder-in-chief of the\nItlsh   forces  operating  against   the\n;rks.   The report snys:\nFurther fighting on Aug. 27 and 2S\nthe northern section of tho'lino has\nnliod in the onphir**** of an fmport-\n.   tactical    point   commanding   tlie\nvuk Aanfnrtn valley to the oast and\n\u2022th, nnd an  appreciable    gain    of\nund occupied by the Australian and\nw Zealand troops.\nThe fighting was  almost  entirely\nnd to hand nnd of a severe character.\njjftvy  tosses  wero   inflicted \"on   the\nij;rks  and   three   of   their   machine\nyis, three trench morlars; 300 rifles,\n|p bombs  and  a  large  quantity  of\njail arms ammunition were captured\nMis.\"\nMill OPERA\n1\nlister of Lands Receives Favorable\nReports on Lumber from Nel-\n.   son  District,\nVICTORIA, B. C, Sept. 1.\u2014Reports\nrho minister of lands from the Nel-\ndlstrlct    show that small saw-\noperators are of the opinion that\ni(ng to the low stock now hold by\nny prnirio  yards  there will  be  a\nd demand this fall for lumber.\n>ne    interesting    order   from    the\ntes, namely, white pine for match\nflk, is being partly supplied  from\nber killed  in the 1910 fire. Seven\n3 companies are shipping and yard-\npoles  and   heavy   shipments  are\nAS made to the States, although at\now price.    Until the advent of the\nvailing hot weather, tho season has\nn exceptionally good for land clear-\nand     slash-burning   operations,\noh rond .slash in particular having\nn cleaned up.\n,ENCH OCCUPY ISLAND\nOFF COAST OF SYRIA\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\n[ ARIS,   Sept.   1.\u2014An   official   com-\n'Hcation issuod by lhe ministry of\n\u25a0iue tonight says:\n.The island of Rund (Syria), .lying\n\/ween 'Latakiyeh and Tarablndas,\nii been occupied by a detachment\n\"ii the French squadron which holds\n'. blockhouse and the Syrian shore.\n| French flag was hoisted nt !>\nJ.oek this morning. There was no\nji'-stance and the population accord-\nthe troops a warm reception.\"\n\u2022\u25a0\u2022ho Island of Ruad lies two miles\nI'tho coast of Syria. Its population\n\u25a0;somo 3000 Is largety engaged In\nligation and sponge fishing.\nTO IHE EMPIRE\nTrainng of Next Generation a Privilege   in   Hands of  Women,  Says\nSpeaker at Conference.\nThat the supremacy of the British\nEmpire, and particularly the welfare\nof the Dominion of Canada., depends\non tho careful physical and menial upbringing and education of the children,\nwas the keynote struck by Mrs. Gardner of Nakusp in nn address oa eugenics delivered at the first session of\nthe conference nf tho Koolenay-Bnim-\ndary Women's Institutes, which was\nheld yesterday morning in lho council\nchamber at tho city ball, Nelson.\nWith tho tremendous loss of live** en.\ntaaled by the. war, lhe speaker declared\nthat it is of vital importance to train\nthe younger generation nnd particularly by Iho boys, to lake the places oT lhe\nmen who havo boon, and will be, killed In the conflict In Europe. Tho poo-\npie of Canada, must look lo the future,\nshe said; much of the best manhood of\nthe country had boon wiped out and\nthoir places must be filled and it is\ntho solemn duty\/of fathers and mothers to see that the rising generation\nshall -be mentally and physically\nequipped to carry on the great work of\niho Empire,\nThe.principals of right living and of\nright thinking' should be inculcated\ninto the children from birth and the\nresponsibility rosiing upon parents and\nteachers could only be properly assumed and discharged if they wero in\nthemselves, examples of lhe standard\nthey were endeavoring to set, said Mrs.\nGardner.\nMrs. W. V. Davies of Chilliwaek,\nchairman of the provincial advisory\nboard, who was in the chair, replied\nto a short address of welcome tendered\nher by Mrs. James Johnstone and expressed the regrets of W. E. Scott, deputy minister of agriculture and superintendent of Ibe institutes, who was\nunable to attend the meeting, owing to\nthe press of official business at Vic\ntoria. In a, short address Mrs. Davies\nspoke of the work of the institutes in\nIts various branches and touched upon\nthe energetic nnd effective efforts of\ntho members-throughout the provinco\nin lending assistance to many of the\npatriotic causes, including tho Red\nCross society, tho Canadian Comforts\ncommission and the Queen Mary nee\ndie work guild. One great factor in\npractical patriotism, Mrs. Davies de*\nblared, is tho proper education and development of the young people. The\nwork of the institute in Inspecting\nschool libraries and supplying wholesome and Instructive books to the pupils, she said, was of tho greatest value\nto tho country. Tho aim of the institute to cultivate sound minds and bodies in {.he coining generation, sho said,\nwas a great work and one which\nshould call out every energy on the\npart of the members.\nThe preliminary business of the conference was transacted, 11 reports of\nthe institutes In the district were rend\nand the resolution committee appointed\nMrs. Hector McKenzie ns secretary of\nthe conference. Thirty-two delegates\nwere present.\nDuring the evening session, nt which\nMayor J. J. Malone welcomed the delegates in a short speech praising the\nmembers for the work they had done,\nsome interesting and valuable papers\nwero read by visling delegates. Mrs,\nMacmlllan of Burton City presented a\npaper on the subject of \"What a Woman Can Do for the Empire.\" O-en.\nSir Robert Baden-rowetl, she said, had\ndeclared that the war would be decided tn 11)35, meaning that not until\nthat ycar would the result of tho conflict be known, in the lessons taught\nby the war bearing fruit in tiie generation, who, now being children, would\nITALIANS EXPECT\nAUSTIN MOVE\n(Continued on Page Six.)\nMOUNTED REGIMENTS TO\nGO TO FRONT AS UNITS\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, Sept. 1.\u2014Two mounted\nrifle regiments, the Sth at Bnrrlefield,\ncommanded by Col. J. R. Munroe, Ottawa, and the 12th at. Calgary, commanded by Cot, G. Macdonald, have\nbeen selected to go on overseas service\nas\" complete units.\nThis is a mounted regiment from\neastorn Canada and one from western\nCanada and they were selected after\ninspection of the mounted troops by\nGen. Lessard,\nOTTAWA SCHOOL CONTROL\nAPPEARS STILL DIVIDED\nI (By Dally News Leased Wire,)\nJvTTAWA, Sept. 1.\u2014The new school\n^mission and the old separate school\nted of Ottawa divided honors this\nl[*nlng In acting in an official capa-\nat the reopening of the separato\nbols of tho city after the summer\natlon, during which the old board\nin the'intention of the provincial\njfernment,   superseded   by   the   ap-\nument   of   the   new   commission,\nch was .empowered to take charge\nhe schools and seo that tho regulars of the department of education\nobeyed in the teaching of the Eng-\nlniigunge.    In the schools where\nmajority  of   pupils   are   English\n(faking the commission was recog-\n?d by the teachers, but In the sec-\ns   where     the     French-speaking\nlis are strongest the old board was\n[arently in   undisputed  sway.    No\n-ationnl scenes developed.   In only\nInstance was there a clash, Secre-\nDoyle ot   the   new   commission\nwent to a school in the lower town to\nseo that two teachers appointed by\nthc commission were safely installed.\nHe found In possession lay and clerical\nsupporters of the recalcitrant majority\nin the old board. Mr. Doyle was taken\nby the arm and led from \"the building.\nThe two appointees of tlio commission\nwere nol allowed to take up the positions.\nThere were approximately 7500\npupils in attendance at the separate\nschools today, of whom about 3000\nwero English speaking children. The\nteachers number 73 English speaking\nand 114 French. Of the former 26 are\nlay teachers and the others nuns. In\nthe French schools there are 33\nbrothers, l\u00bb7 nuns and 11 lay teachers.\nAccording to the French teachers they\nhave signed no agreement either with\nthe board or commission, but expect\nto get their salaries, though unable to\nsay from whom. Seventeen of the\nschools are English and IS French,\nFresh Troops Eeplace Those\nin Trenches\nCANNON FIRE DRIVES\nFOE FROM POSITIONS\nNight Assault Is Repulsed\non Carso Front During-\nViolent  Storm\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Sept. 1.\u2014A clmngo In tho\nsituation on tho Anstro-Itnllan front\nwns forecasted by nn Italian commun-\nInntlon tonight Tho arrival of fresh\ntroops in tlio Austrian trenches was\nreported, tho official statement con\neluding with the suggestion that, the\nunacctistoniorl activity shown hy the\nenemy \"In nrlillery and rlflo fire seems\nIntended In mask a movement of\ntroops.\"\nDrive  Austrians  Out.\nnOMU, Sept. 2.\u2014The following of\nficial   statement  wns   Issued   tonight\n\"On the npper None rlvor onr ar\ntillery opened fire on the enemy on\ntrenchmonts constructed opposite the\nposition recently conquered .by us at\ntho head ot the Slrlno valley. Well\nplaced shells damaged tbo entrenchments and compelled tbe defenders In\nabandon a portion of them.\n\"Tbo enemy artillery on Monto\nFanarotta In ValsUgana renewed tlie\nbombardment of Bqrgo, now deserted,\nand hatterels posted in the environ!\nof Chora. ;ff tlio Cm-dovole 'valley,\nopened fire on Caprio, damaging the\nhospital.\n\"In the riezzo basin our adversary\nhas thrown a, number of inflammable\nshrapnel shells on tho houses, causing\nfresh fires.\n\"During the night of Aug. 31 the'\nenemy began an attack on our positions nn the slopes nf Bomhon, but did\nnot go beyond directing an intense artillery and riflo fire on them.\nFresh Troops Arrive.\n\"On thc Carso frcuit late on tbo\nnight of Aug. 30 during a vollent storm\nthe enemy made two attacks by tho\nlight of volleys of brilliant rockets.\nOur troops wero ablo, thanks to a woil\ncontrolled fire, to repulse both attacks. During reconnalsance pushed\nwell up to tho enemy's lines, we woro\nablo to observe that tbe enemy wns\nengaged in replacing tbo mon lining\ntho trenches by fresh troops which arrived during the last few days.\n\"Tho unaccustomed activity shown\nby the enemy in the form of artillory\nand riflo fire and bomb throwing\nseems Intended to mask a movement\nof troops.\"\n'\u2022> .        VON TIRPITZ  ILL. -j>\n(By Dally News Leased Wire,) <S>\nLONDON,   Sept.   I.\u2014IK.   des- Hj\npatch  to   the  Exchange   Tele- \u2022\"\u2022>\ngraph company from  Amster- <*>\ndam says reports received thero \u25a0\u2022\u2022\nfrom Berlin nre to the effect *\nthat Admiral von Tirpitz, tier- <i>\nn\u00abm minister ot marine, Is 111 *\u2022\nfrom overwork and exhaust Inn 4>\nand on the. advice Of bis physl- <s-\nclan intends to leave Berlin for \u2022\u2022-\na -holiday whioh    will    extend <V\nover ^several weeks. 0\nFORTRESS OF LUTSK FAIL\n5*\nWill Not Sink Passengei\nShips \"Without Warning\nISH WIN TOWN\nCapture Gashoka in Kameruns\u2014Enemy\nForced  to  Retreat and   Offers\nNo  Opposition.\n(By Dally News Loaded Wiro.)\nLONDON, Sept. j, 8:20 p.m.\u2014Recent\nsuccesses by British forces In opera-\nlions In fclve Kameruns, a German colony In western Africa, where both\nBritish nnd French troops arc operating, Is reported In an official statement today that reads:\n\"The town of Gashnka, in the Kameruns, was occupied by. us on Aug. 1(1,\nwithout, opposition, On Aug. '2ft an\nenemy position near Oasehnka was\nsurprised and the enemy forced to retreat. Our casualties were one native\nkilled and two wounded. The enemy\nis reported lo bare lost one officer and\nfive men of the ranks-killed.\n0 0 0 0 0 00000000 0 0 0 0 0\n\u00ae WOULD NOT TAKE 0\n\u00ae GERMAN   NOTES 0\nto  0\n0 (By Daily Nows Leased Wire.) 0\n0 AMSTTCBDAM,      Sept.      2.-*- 0\n*> Thirty Warsaw bankers who re- 0\nto fused to accept German prnmis- 0\n0 sory notes have been arrested 0\n0 nnd  interned in Germany,  nc- 0\n0 cording  to  Information   reach- 0\n0 ing hero today. 0\n0 0\n0000000000000000 00\nPAIN OF WOUND DROVE\nFARMER TO SUICIDE\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 1.\u2014With reference\nto tho death of Robert ,T. Logon, a\nfarmer of Oilbert rinins, Man., whose\nbody, with gunshot and knife wounds\nwas found near his farm early this\nmorning, Coroner Harrington, Gilbert\nPlains, has declared that an inquest\nis unnecessary.\nHis opinion of the case is that Logan's gun necldcnlally exploded and\ntho charge struck him in the chest beneath tho right shoulder. Tho pain\nof tho wound must have nffectod his\nmind with tho result that whilo In a\ncrazed state Logon drew his knife and\nslashed l\\|8 throat.\nROBLIN REMANDED\nUNI\nRIOAY\nNew Magistrate Appointed Because Sir\nHugh John Macdonald Was on\nRoyal Commissoin.\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 1.\u2014Ex-Premier\nRoblin and Messrs. Howden, Coldwell\nand Montague today appeared in the\ncity police court to answer to charges\nof conspiracy to defraud the province\nof Manitoba. They were remanded until Friday, Sept. 3.\nPolice Magistrate Muedonuld occupied the bench today, but will not preside at tho preliminary hearing, Sir\nHugh having been one of the commissioners who brought in the finding upon which the present charges wero instituted. The new magistrate has not\nbeen officially announced, but it will\nin all probability be P. A. Macdonald,\nwho wus yesterday appointed police\nmagistrate by an order in council and\ntoday sworn in. Mr. Macdonald was\nrefereeand master ln equity tn ihe\ncounty court and has a wide judicial\nexperience.\nToday's proceedings were purely\nformal. The ministers were not asked\nto plead, nor were the charges, which\nwere laid by W. J. Elliott, provincial\nchief of police, read to them. A discussion arose between counsel as \"to\nthe extent of any remands asked for,\nR. A. Bonnar, K.C., counsel for the\nproscution, stating that he would oppose any undue delay, as the case\nshould pass through the preliminary\nhearing In time to como upyut the\nfall assizes.\nBritish    Foreign    Office    Shows    that\nBerlin  Charge Against   Russia\nIs Baseless\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Sept. 2.\u2014-In reply to recent Gorman statements relating to the\norigin of the war the British foreign\noffice has Issued the foliow4ng:\n\"First .the Germans maintain that\nthe reason which led to tho rejection\nof lho proposal for a conference was\nthe mobilization of Russia. In paper\nNo. -13 of our white hook, Sir F.\nGoschen, British ambassador at Berlin, reported a conversation with tbo\nGerman secretary of state, refusing a.\nconference.\n\"Tho secretary said that the suggested conference would practically\namount io a court of arbitration and\ncould not, in his opinion, be called together except at the request of Austria and Russia, He maintained that\nsuch a conference was not practicable.\nHe further said that if Russia mobilized against Germany the latter would\nhave to follow suit. As when he refused a conference he referred to tlie\npossibility of Russian mobilization it\ncannot now be maintained that the\nreason for the refusal was the fact that\nRussia was mobilizing.\n\"As a matter of fact, the proposal\nfor a conference was made July 20,\ntftl-1, and was refused by Germany\nduly 27, BI14; while it* wns not until\n-Tuly 31 that orders were Kivon for a\ngeneral mobilization in Russia. .On\nthat day Germany presented an ultimatum to Russia, requiring nn understanding that within 12 hours the Russian forcos should be demobilized.\n\"Second, doubt is shown in Germany\nin tho assurance we gave Belgium in\n1013 that we should not land troops\nin that country except iu lhe event, of\nviolation of Its territory by another\npower.\nGrey  Never  Made  Statement\n\"Assurance was not only given io\ntho Belgian minister hut Sir E. Villiers\ngave Sir Edward Grey's record of it.\nto the Belgian governmenl at lhe time.\nThis assurance appeared in Ihe eol\nlected diplomatic documents. Why ii\nit doubted? It is because the Germans\nhave not allowed lhe reproduction of\nthe document which is so damning to\nIheir caso.'\n\"Third, the final interview between\nSir Edward and Prince Lichnowsky,\nGerman ambassador at London. This\nInterview, purely private, was held at\na private houso and no record wns\nmade of It. But Sir Edward Grey is\ncertain that he never made thc statement quoted by the North German\nHazel te with regard to tho decisive\nfactor in Great Britain's participation\nin Hie war; nor did he speak of mediation in favor of Germany, if need\nbo, a fuller statement will be made in\nparliament on the subject.\n\"Fourth, the immediate cause of this\nwas was the dispute between Austria\nand Servia, which then turned into a\ndispute between Austria and Bussia.\nYet it is worthy nf note that it was\nGermany which declared war against\nRussia and France. The Austrian ambassador remained in Petrograd after\ntho German ambassador left. Germany declared was on Russia on Aug.\n1 and Austria on Aug. ft. 1014.\"\nIY\nSeems Recognition of Fundamental   Principle\nContended for\nCRUSHED TO DEATH.\n(By D.ally News Leased Wire.)\nMOOSE JAW, SasK., Sept. 1.\u2014Harry Goldsmith, city workman, was\ncrushed to death this evening while\nworking with a gang laying pipes near\ntho government elevator,\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nWASHINGTON, Sept L\u2014Strained\nrelations between the United States\nand Germany over submarine warfare\napparently passed into history today\nafter Count von Bernstorff, German\nambassador, informed Secretary of\nState Lansing in writing that prior to\nthe sinking of the Arable, bis govern\nmen! had decided that Us submarines\nshould sink no more liners without\nwarning.\nOral assurances to this effect bad\nbeen given by the ambassador last\nweek hut it was not unlil Count von\nBernstorff, after a call at the state\ndepartment today, returned to the embassy and sent a letter to Mr. Laps\nIng, quoting instructions from Berlin\nconcerning an answer to be made lo\ntho last American note on tbe sinking\nof the Lusitania, that officials frankly\nadmit led their gratification over thc\nchanged* position of the German government.\nSecretary Lansing said in a formal\nstatement that the letter \"appears lo\nbe a. recognition of the fundamental\nprinciple I'or which we havo contended,\"\nlie immediately sent the communication to the White House and discussed it in cheerful vein wilh his\ncallers. Everywhere in administration\ncircles there was. a visible relaxation\no'' tbo tension which had existed ever\nsince the Lusitania tragedy, though\nlessened by the. earlier assurance of\nCount von Bornstorfi' and Ambassador\nGerard as to the altitude of officials\nin Herlin.\nTo Disavow Arabic Sinking\nTho next stop, it is believed, will be\na. formal communicalion from tho\nGerman government, wilh a disavowal\nof the destruction of the Arabic and\ntendering regret and reparation for\nAmerican lives lost in lho disaster, if\nthe attack were made by a, Germnn\nsubmarine, Even if ihe submarine\nwhich torpedoed the liner subsequently\nwas sunk by a British warship, as hns\nbeen suggested both from Berlin and\nLondon, the Berlin foreign office is\nexpected to send its disavowal as soon\nas a reasonable time has passed without a report from its commander.\nOnce the situation growing out of\nthe Arabic incident has heen disposed\nof tho response to the long unanswered\nAmerican note on the Lusitania. case\nwill be despatched and if Hermany's\nexplanations and proposals in this easo\nare accepted by the United States, both\nofficials and diplomats here expect the\nway to be cleared for a completo understanding between the two governments on the subject of freeilnm of the\nseas. In German circles it is freely\nadmitted that in Berlin a hope prevails that stich an understanding\nwould be followed b.v insislont action\nby the United Slates to stop interference with neutral commerce by Great\nBritain and its allies which ,it is said,\nproven ts Germany from importing\nfood supplies for its civil populalin\nuse uno\nKEEP OUT DISEASE\nHon. Martin Bun-ell Speaks of Canadian Problem Which Is Accentuated by War Conditions.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, Sept. 1.\u2014In his annual report of the work of tho department of\nagriculture Hon. Martin Burrell calls\nattention to tbo fact that the quarantine service of his department will probably be called on to exercise much\ngreater vigilance when the soldiers begin to come back after tho war and a\nnew tide of European immigration sets\nin. \"History tells us,\" says Mr. Burrell,\n\"thnt war is ever accompanied and\nfollowed by pestilence. The present\nwnr with its carnage quite unprecedented in the history of tho world and\nits enormous aggregations of troops\nalready proving the truth of this in\nspite of tho advances of modern sani\ntary science. Cholera, plague and typhus fever are reported to be spreading steadily. There Is for this country\ntho immediate danger of disease being\nbrought by Invalided or other soldiers\nreturning from the war zone. There\nis also to he apprehended the danger\nfrom the return of our forces at large\nwhon the war is over and demobilization takes place and from the large immigration that will follow after the\nwar.\"\nMr. Burrell points out that during\nthe post year Canada was saved by\nwatchfulness at ports of entry from\nthe  Inroads of any epidemic disease\nBEFORE Mm ARMIES\nDECLARE COMPANY\nANXIOUS FOR STRIKE\nStreet Car Men at Coast Say Situation\nCritical\u2014Officiols   Assert   Men\nWant  Strike   Pay.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nVANCOUVER, B.C., Sept. 1.\u2014Unless thero ia a decided' change in tho\noutlook of negotiations union officials\nbelieve there will be a street railway\nmen's strike in full force In Vancouver\ntomorrow morning. A mass meeting is\ncalled for midnight, lon-lght and the\nlathering will include men from New\nWestminster and the Interurbnn lines.\nA union official said tonight that\nlho position had assumed a critical\nstato and nothing short, of a change\nin iho company's aitiiude between now\nand tonight's meeting iould prevent a\ncessation of work. Nominally the reason for tho strike that will probably be\ncal les Is that the. men refuse a reduction of 8'\/i por cent in tho wage scale.\nTho mon declare, however, that the\ncompany is more than half willing to\nseo a strike in order to do away with\na working agreement which from the\ncompany's viewpoint has been irksome; while on its part the company\nsuggests t hat the Vancouver union\nhaving iu years past, paid more than\n$100,000 in strike dues to the International union now wishes to get something back in lhe way of strike pay\nand is therefore more than anxious lo\nhavo a. strike.\nMen Call Meeting\nVANCOUVER, R. C, Sept. 2.\u2014The\nmeeting of the motnrmen and conductors of tho British Columbia Electric\nrailway has .just commenced to consider whether the men will accept the\naward of the conciliation board made\nlasl week. The attendance is large\nand representative of the city and district. Although nothing official can\nso far be obtained, it is believed that\nthe men will vote for striking.\nBRITISH  MADE SURE OIL\nDID  NOT  REACH TURKEY\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nNEW YORK, Sept. 1.\u2014The American tanker Gargoyle, -formerly Ihe German tanker Pennoil, which was held\nup in tho Mediterranean May 31 by a\nFronch cruiser, arriveel today. Oflfeers\nsaid the Gargoyle was taken at Malta\nwhere a British officer and six men\nwore placed aboard and the tanker allowed (o proceed to Alexandria.\nIS ONLY PARTIAL\nLondon  Papers Refer to German  Declaration to United States on    ub-\nmarine   Warfare.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Sept. 2.\u2014The London\nmorning papers, while recognizing that\nPresident Wilson has secured an important concession from Germany with\nregard to Germany's submarine warfare, express the belief that the president will not be content with it, but\nfrom the point of view that Count von\nBornstorff's nolo to Lhe secretary of\nstate indicates that Dr. von Sethmann-\nHnllweg, tho Herman Imperial chancellor hns a freer hand, they express satisfaction over tho improved outlook of\nthe situation.\n\"It is difficult to imagine,\" says the\nTelegraph in an editorial, \"that President Wilson will accept Count von\nBernstorff's proposal, siiwe such a\nsettlement would leave merchant sailors under an American or other flags\nexposed to tbe peril of submarine piracy. If thero i.s any whittling away of\nthe broad principle for which the United Slatps government has been eon-\ntending tho world will be confronted\nwith murderous conditions at sea as\na permanent menace in time of war, for\nGermany has no monopoly on submarines.\"\nTho Telegraph contends that nothing\nhut a complete abandonment of Germany's submarine policy will be sufficient. It. argue>s that International\nlaw recognizes no difference between\npassenger vessels and cargo boats and\nsays that. Germany itself acted in accordance with this principle as long\na,s U had n. warship or a merchantman at sea and   only threw  it over\n(Continued on Page Four.)\nMay Compel Russ Retreat\nin Galicia\nMUSCOVITES FIGHT\nWAY OUT OF CIRCLE\nSurrounded Regiment Cuts\nThrough and Annihilates\nHun Battalion\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Sept. 1.\u2014The minor fortress of Lutsk, which with those of\nDubnn and Rovno, forms a fortified\ntriangle on Russaln territory just\nnorth of tho Gallcaln frontier, was\ncaptured by the Austrians today, according lo the official report from\nVienna. It is in this direction that Iho\nAuslro-Oermaii offensive has been the\nmon!. aggressive during the past few\ndays, (he object being to separate tho\nRussian army which has been retreating through the 1'ripet marshes from\nthat operating in Galicia and which\nyesterday Inflicted a aecero defeat on\nHie Teutons.\nThe capture of Lutsk, however, Is\nlikely to compel the Russians, 'Respite\ntheir victory, to evacuate that part of\nGalicia still held by thorn; otherwise!\ntheir flank Ihere would be seriously\ntlirea toned.\nRussians Firm in North.\nAlong the rest of (be front, except\nin the centre, where tho Austro-Ger-\nmans^eonHnue to make an advance,\niho <ttussians appear -io bo holding\ntheir own. They have I hus far prevented -the Germans from crossing\nlbo Dvina at Friedrichstadt, where a\nbattle has been In progress for several days; they have arrosted the German offensive hetween that point and\nthe gulf of Blffa, and are still holding their ground between Kovno and\nVilna and before Grodno, although the\nGermans have approached tho outer\nportion of Grodno fortresses.\nTn the opinion of military writers\nhere tbo Hnssians now stand a good\nchance of winning tho race Tor time.\nWithin a few weeks the autumn rains\nwill begin and it is pointed out unless\nthey can succeed iu gaining a decisive result hefore that time the Austro-Germans can hardly hope to catch\ntho Russian armies before, under cover of tho long winter, thoy are reformed and re-oquipped.\nLosses Are Enormous.\nAl present the Austro-Germans nre\nstraining every nerve to win this decision, but thoy have been greatly delayed by the intensity of tho Russian\ncounter-attacks and the stubbornness\nwith which the Russian troops hold\nthe positions protecting their retreating comrades. The Russian losses, of\ncourse, have been enormous. According to Berlin tho Russians have lost\n1,000,000 men in prisoners since May\n2, the date on which tho drive commence,! in western Gallcai, while during August alone the captures included\nover Ur-O.OOn men and 2300 cannon. The\nAustro-German losses, too, have been\nheavy in killed and wounded, while\nthe strain on tho Iroops has been terrific. They still have, according to\nPetrograd estimates, about 2,000,000\nmen on the eastern front, 300,000 being\nin the Riga region, more than 1,000,-\n000 in the centre ad from 600.000 to\n700,000 in Galicia.\nAnnihilate Hun  Battalion.   \u25a0\nPETROGRAD, Sept. 2.\u2014The following official communication was issuod\nby the war office tonight:\n\"On the Riga-Dvinsk front tho enemy during the course of Aug. 30-31\nonly showed activity iu the region of\nFriedrichstadt, whero there Is no Important   change   in   lho   situation.\n\"On the right bank of the Villya wo\nhave continued to advance successfully\nand during Aug. 30 captured four gun\u00bb\nnnd machine guns from tho Germans.\nBetween the Villya and tllp Niemen\nthe enemy, developing its offensive,\noecupid Ornay.\n\"On the right bank of the Moretchan-\nka river the fighting it still of the same\n(Continued on  Page Three.)\nFRENCH POUR A VALANCHE\nOF SHELLS ON GERMANS\n(Continued oa Pago Four.)\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Sept. 1.\u2014For a week the\nFrench have been pouring an ava\nlanche of shells into the Germans in\nthe west. It is not believed this a\nmunition would be used simply for the\npurpose of damaging the German\ntrenches and therefore an early general offensive is looked for.\nArtillery  Active.\nPARIS, Sept. 1.\u2014Tho following official communication was issued by the\nwar office tonight:\n\"Artillery actions have occurred in\ntlio sector to the north of Arras in the\nregions of Roye and Queenevlres.\n\"The enemy haa thrown some shells\non Soisons and Reims and our artillery\nhas directed an effective fire against\nthe enemy trenches on the front of the\nAisne and Champagne.\n\"ln the Argonne tho Germans during the course of the day bombarded\nour front on sevoral occasions with\nbombs and guns of various    calibre,\nparticularly between lhe ravine ot La-\nhouyetto and Lafontnino aux Oharines.\nOur batteries and trench guns relpled,\nsilencing the guns of the enemy.\n\"In ihe Vosges there has been a\nrather vollent cannonading in the Ban\ndo Sti.pt\n\"On the night of Aug. 28-23 our\naeroplanes bombardeel Ihe Gerana.n\ncamps at. Ostend, the cantonments\nat Middlewerke and the station at\nThorout.\n\"Enemy aerolpanes have dropped\nbombs nt Luneville. It is reported that\nthere are some victims among the\ncivil population.\"\nEDWARD CAHILL  DEAD.\n(By Dadly News Leaaed Wire.)\nHANLET,   Sask.,   Sept.   1.\u2014Edward\nCahlU, Winnipeg, manager of the Grey-\nCampbell company,  died suddenly of\nhoart failure on a train ihere today.\n\u25a0\u25a0\n tCt)e Sail? Jlrtos\nTHURSDAY,   SEPT.   2,   1916.\nLEADING HOTELS OF THE WEST)\nWhere tho Traveling  Public May Find   Superior   Accommodations. I\nNews of Sport\nk\nTHE\nHUME\nA la\nCarte\nTable d'Hote\nGeorge Benwell,  Prop.\nSpecial   Da\nly   Lunch,   35c\n*\nHUME\u2014Mrs. Cooke-Hurle, Long-\npeach; Mrs Major, proctor; .1. .1. Blrins\nKnslo; Mabel A. Roberts, Cranbrpokj\nHazel Faulds, D. P. Hayden, Kaslo; C.\nF. Sherwln. B, T. Eastman. Rlondel:\nWr. von Beckenratht, Eunshlne Hay; F.\nA. Maurer, Slocan City; E. H. Grant.\nSlocan City; Alfred McMillan, North-\nport; F. Perry Smith. Wallace; A. W.\nMcCune. A. W. McCune, Jr., M. M. Mc-\nCuno, H. S. Emelaw, Salt Lake City;\nJames Decker and wife Mrs. G. C.\nBrown and daughter, Kootenay Landing; Mrs. W. T. Johnson; Proctor; W.\nT. Stapells and wife. Jean l-'. Paterson,\nO\\*io**to; F. C. BuBOis, Fernie; Ti. .T.\nMartin, Spokane; SerKt.-Ma.inr O. B.\nMatthews, Serfft. D. B, Gillespie, Lance\nSergt. J. Quin, Pte. ,T, J. Cowan, 54th\nbattalion, Vernon; F. P. Dawson, Willow Point; IT. A. Lowe, Harrop; Mrs.\nDavies, Chmiwaek; Miss Kldd, Miss\nJjeighton; Miss Shaw, City; Mr. and\nMrs. ohren, Rossland; Mr. Argyle, Miss\nAstley, City; Mrs. Major, Proctor; C.\nJO. Richardson, Air. Allen, Alex. Lelth,\nCity; .Mrs. Cross, Willow Point; Mr.\nWilliams, Vancouver; Miss 1 Juggins,\nBraemar; Mr. Vroom, City; Mr. Bod-\nd-'ngton, Salmo; Mrs. Collingwood Gray\nUpper Bennington; M. S. Middleton, B.\nJ. McKenzie, C. Duncan, City; Mrs.\nApplewhalte. Willow Point; Mrs. H.\nBoss .Miss Ross I'. W. Appleyard, J.\nParker. Mr. Rennie, Mr. Metcalfe, Mr.\niNetherby, E. C. Wragge, city; Corp. B.\nM. Rhodes, Vernon; F. J. .Towman,\nCity.\nI The Strathcona\nK James   Marshall,   Prop.\n.STRATHCONA -Mrs. C. S, Siillin-a.\nJtohson; A. C. Rome, City; Mi', and\nMrs. R F. Weir, Ballymena; S. .1.\nSchofield, Ottawa; Jessie. E. Taylor,\nIMnneapolls; c. II. Cook, Salrao; O. 10.\nJ.cRoy, Ottawa; !\u2022'. J. Johnstone, Seattle; P. .r. McKlnney, Montreal; C. P.\nKnight, Toronto; o. c. Johnson, New\nYork; Philip R. Freelnnd, Phoenix; K.\n].. Jackson, Mrs. B. Hackwood, Vancouver; Mr. und Mrs. Barrlngton, Victoria; (i. II. I.. Tramblay Nxbrldge; .1.\n\"Wardninn Brandon; I.. F. Campbell,\nTielroit; S. Stevenson. Naaimn; A. If.\nnHarrlson, Victoria; l'te. II. B. Smith,\nVernon.\nQueen's Hotel\nSteam Heat in Every Boom\nBusiness   Lunch,   3lic\nRates:  $1.50 and $2.00  Day\nQCEENS\u2014-.1. 0. Metropolis, Crescent Valley; C. Rutherford, Northport;\nMrs, 13. ,i. Turner. Vancouver; Mrs.\nAppliby, Fry creek; Mr. and Mrs. If.\nB. Smith, Vancouver; Pie. .1. N\\ Mc-\nAndrr-w, Corp. T, il. Dnlrymple, D.\nDrtvla F.. Dallen, Vernon.\nGrand Central Hotel\nOPPOSITE    POSTOFFICE\nAmerican   and   European   Plans\nJ.  A.  ERICKSON,  Prop.\nW. .1. BRODIE, Manager.\nGRAND CENTRAL\u2014S. Xorris, Ainsworth; S. Matthews, H. 10. Brown, J.\nJohnston, S. Young, Crescent Valley:\nJohn Feeney, Salmo; Frank Untried,\nSheep creek; P. D. MoNaughton, Vernon; H. C. Crosby, Bonninglon; F.\nAndrews. Vernon.\nMadden House\nE.  C.  CLARKE\nCor.  Baker and  Ward  Sts.,  Nelson\n000000000000000000\n0 0\n\u25a0   NATIONAL LEAGUE. 0\n0 0\n00000000000000000\u00ae\nMAT>DEN\u2014C. P.. Clarke, Winnipeg;\nII. ('. O'-Nelll, Vmir; .Mr. and Mrsi\nClough and family, Slocan City; J.\nMcDoUguIl, Ottawa.\nA WORD TO |\nThe Languid, Weak, Nervous,\nRun-Down-in-Health\nMan or Woman\nYour constitution Is overtaxed If\nyou do not receive complete rest and\nrelaxation, ln a short time you will\nbecome a physical wreck. Take advantage of the opportunity we offer\nyou and let us attend to your every\nwant, give you every care and comfort and restore to you your natural\nself and a life worth living.\nWe have the greatest health retort on the continent. Open all the\nyear. Natural hot water, 124 degrees\nof heat,. Natural hot water in baths.\nThe medicinal value of thse hot\nwater baths, etc., are beyond de-\necriptlon.    Let ua convince you.\nRates: Only $2 per day and up\nor $12 to $15 per week.\nHalcyon Hot Springs\nSanitarium\nNelson House\nEuropean   Plan\nW.   A.   WARD,   Proprietor\nCAFE\u2014Open Day and  Night\u2014BAR\nMerchants'   Lunch   12  to 2\nPhone 97 P.O. Box 597\nNELSON\u2014R.   ii.   Neiswomler,  15.   B\n.Smith, Marcus,\nNew Grand Hotel\nBest Place in Town\n$1.00 a day  up\nPhone 9 Sample  Rooms\nBooms Reserved by Wire or Phono\nCrown Point Hotel\nA. MclJerrnott, Prop.\nTRAIL,   B.C.\nWe Pay Special Attention to Commercial  Travelers  and the\nPublic in General\nHotel Castlegar\nCastlegar, B.C. W. H. Gage, Prop.\nExcellent accommodation for\ncommercial men. Boundary train\nleaves here 8:-15 a. m. Mon., Wed.,\nand Frl. Trains between Nelson\nand Rossland stop for breakfast,\nlunch and dinner,\nLeland Hotel\nH. BOHART, Proprietor.\nReasonable Bates.   Every Attention\nPaid lo Travelers.\nNAKUSP, B. C.\nKootenay Tennis Tournament\nKoot\nenay Lake Hotel\nBALFOUR, b!c. 110tel\nMake Reservation.  Week- End Terms I\nDuring  Tournament   Discontinued    I\nArrow Lakes\nHotel\nEdgewood, B. C.\nconditions make Iii\nnjoyable.\nROSSLAND HOTELS\nThe Hotel Allan\nComfortable Rooms\u2014Splendid\nTable\nSMITH   &   BELTON\nProprietors\n'\u00ab\u00ab*\u00bb\n\u00bb FEDERAL  LEAGUE. \u00ab\nNEWARK LOSES 10\nBUNKED BY REDS\nPittsburg   Pirates Split   Ev*n  in  Double-header\u2014New York Outpoints\nPhiladelphia.\nLeague  Standing.\nWon.    Lost. Pet.\nPhiladelphia    ftft 52 .559\nBrooklyn    fill ii? ,:,21\nBoston    63 Bfl .529\nChicago    58 '''\u2022ft -498\nSt. Louis    til) nr. .480\nNew York     5-3 81 .4711\nPittsburg  59 C\u00ab .472\nCincinnati    65 (17 .451\nBoston  Easily  Defeated.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nBOSTON, Mass., Sept. 1.\u2014Toney had\nthe Braves at a. loss to hit his delivery today and Cincinnati won 4 to 0.\nThe visitors hit Ragan conseeutively\nin the fourth inning for three runs,\nR.   H.   E.\nCincinnati   4     s     l\nBoston     0     I      1\nI'.alleries:     Toney  and   W,lngo;   Ragan, Tyler and Whaling, Gowdy,\nCardinals Take One.\nP1TSB.UBG, Pa., Sept. 1,\u2014Pittsburg\nand St. Louis split even In a. double-\nheader today, each gelting a shut nut.\nSt. Louis won the first 4 to ft and the\nPirates the second 7 to 0.\nFirst game\u2014 R,   IT.   E.\nSI.  Louis      4    tO      1\nPittsburg  i\u00bb     \u25a0\"'     1\nButteries: Sallee and Snyder;\nAdams,  Cooper and  Murphy.\nSecond *,rame\u2014 R.  H.  E.\nSt. Louis   ft     2     0\nPittsburg    7   IB     1\nHatteries:       Perdue,    Neihaus    and\nGonzales;     Harmon    and    Gibson.\nWon in Eighth.\nNEW YORK, Sept. 1.\u2014New York\ntook the first game (,f a five-same\nseries from Philadelphia loday ii to 4,\nthereby cutting down the hitter's lead\nin lhe pennant race. The Giants won\nthe gnme with a four-run rally in the\neighth Inning, when they knocked McQuillan ou(  of the box.\nR.  II.  E.\nSt. Louis Takes The Game Easily from\niPttsburg\u2014Brooklyn Defeated by\nBaltimore.\nLeague Standing,\nPhiladelphia  \t\nNew  York   \t\nBatteries:     McQuI\nStroud and Kclinng.\n000000\u00ae0000\u00ae00000<\n0 K\n$     INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE.     \u00ab\n\u2022 <\n$00000000000000004\nTt.\nIf.    F\nProvidence   \\.\nRochester   \t\nFirst pmp-\nMontreal \t\nRichmond:   \t\nSeeond game\u2014\n.Montreal  \t\nRichmond   \t\nFirst game-\nBuffalo   \t\nJersey  City   \t\nSecond same\u2014\nBuffalo   \t\nJersey City  \t\nCalled in seventh:   rain,\nFirst game-\nToronto   \t\nHarrisburg\t\nSecond game-\nToronto    \/\t\nIliirrisbnrg\t\n$0000000000000000\nNORTHWESTERN    LEAGUE.   0\nKootenay Hotel\nR.   \\V.   TIMMS,   Prop.\nReasonable   Rates\nFirst   Class   Rooms   and   Board\nROSSLAND.    B.C.\nWM,\nHALCYON,\nBOYD, Prop.\nARROW LAKES\nOKANAGAN PEACH\nCROP IS MOVING\nProduction     Below     Average\u2014Ontario\nApple   Output   Small\u2014Buyers\nAre Becoming  Active\nOTTAWA, Sept. L\u2014The semi-weekly frail report of the department of\nagriculture, Issued today, states that\nIn tbe < ikanagan. district Wealthy\napples are now being shipped.\nMcintosh Reds are expected to be\nready by the last of this week. Tlie\nmarket is demoralized for all varieties\nof crab apples. Early Crawford\npeaches are now moving. BJlbertas\nand latp Crawford? will move b.v the\nend of Ihis week.    The crop is short,\nIn tbe Kootenay district warm\nwealher is causing fruit tn rippn\nquickly. Fruit is small with snihe\nscab.\nIn the Lake Ontario district. Diiclulss\napples were practically shipped dut\nlast weeli. Wet weather is causihg\nconsiderable scab, especially In Fani-\neuse and .Mcintosh. Apples will average about. 40 per cent of last year's\ncrop.\nApples in many unsprayed orchards\nare only fit for the evaporator. Some\nhave, sold from $2.50 to ?1!.75 r|er\nbarrel f.o.b.\nIn Niagara district thc weather continues wet but cooler. Triumph\npeaches have rotted before rlpeningjn\nall sections. Buyers nre offering frOm\n$1,40 to $2 for No. 1 and No. 2 on the\ntrees for mixed varieties of apples.\nBuyers are active.\nIn western Ontario the crop is lljjht\nand of poor quality, except in well\ncared for orchards where apples look\nwell. Buyers are moving cautiouldy\nbut one salev is reported at $1.10 per\nbox., 75 per cent No. 1,\n\u25a0> \u00ae 0 \u00ae 0 0 00 <\n> \u00ae \u00ae \u00ae 0 \u00ae \u00ae 0\nLeague Standing\nWon.    I\nPittsburg ...\nNewark\t\nChicago\t\nKansas City\nSt. Louis ...\nBuffalo\t\nBaltimore ...\nBrooklyn   ...\n53\n83\nPet.\n.a Bfl\n.521)\n.528\n.401!\n.432\n.402\n.4 r.7\nPeps Lose to Buffalo,\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nBUFFALO, N.Y., Sept. 1.\u2014The Buffalo Federals hit George Kaiserling\nhard and often and registered a 5 to 2\nvictory over Newark In the second\ngame of the series today. Five double\nplays featured  'he game,      R.    II.    .10.\nNewark   2      7      1\nBuffalo  5    12     4\nBatteries: Kaiserling and Rariden;\nSchltjg and  Allen.\nBaseman   Hit.\nI'lTTSIMJRG, PO., Sept. 1,\u2014St. Louis\ndefeated Pitlsbut'g by a score of 7 In\n2. Walsh, third baseman secured from\nBaltimore, playing his first game wlt'll\nSt. Louis and in the second inning was\nhit on tbe ear With a pitched ball,\nbursting a blood vessel. He was forced\nto leave tho game, R.   II.    13.\nSt.   Louis        7    12      0\nPlttshurg    2   io     a\nBatteries: Davenport and Chapman!\nRogge, Hearn and Ferry,\nBrooklyn Shut Out.\nHRnOKLYN, N.Y., Sept. 1.\u2014The locals   went   down   lo  defeat   by   H   lo\nbefore  Baltimore  here  today\nR.   H.\nBlaltmore    \u25a0 ft   tl\\\nBrooklyn     4     G\nBatteries} Leclair, Bailey and Ogdo\nFnlkenlierg, Willie and -II.  Smith.\n0000\u00ae0\u00ae\u00ae\u00ae0\u00ae0\u00ae<\nAMERICAN  LEAGUE.\n000000\u00ae\u00ae00000<\nDETROIT TIGERS\nI\nWashington VictorioMs by  ''mall Mar.\ngin\u2014Cleveland Shut Out St,\nLouis\u2014Boston Wins.\nLeague Standing.\nWon\nBoston  \t\nDetroit ...)'.\nChicago ....\nWashing-ion\nNow York ..\nCleveland ..\nSt. Louis ...\nPhiladelphia\nPot.\n.Ii73\n,400\n.38S\nAnnouncement Extraordinary\nLADIES,\u2014We have just opened up all our Fall arrivals of\nSUITS AND COATS FOR YOUR APPROVAL\nThese are all of the latest designs, entirely up-to-the-minute for my lady's wear tbis fall.\nAN    INSPECTION    RKQUEfiTED\nSUITS\nour Soils for this fall came in\nprincipally Broadcloths, Serges\nand  Tweeds;   all  popular colors\nNavy, Black. Browns, etc., being the leading colors in New\nYork opinion for ibis year.\nWe anticipate a large business\nIn Suits and Coats this season,\nas already the demand has far\nexceeded our expectations so\nearly in the season.\nSuggestion.\u2014We advise an\nearly selection while all lines and\ncolors nre complete.\nCOATS\nThese Coats arc mostly of\nRussian and Military effects,\nhaving set-in sleeves, narrow\nshoulders being featured for this\nfall, the majority flare from the\nshoulder down. Tbe popular\n(-(dors for Ibis year's wear are\nNavy, Black, Brown, Green and\nMixtures. Exquisitely tailored\nand Semi-Fitting, trimmed witli\nBraids. Collars and cuffs of\nPlush and Velvet; collars high\nnnd controvertible. These individual styles should npponl to\nthe mosl   fastidious.\nALL   OF   THESE   CCATS  AND   SUITS  ARE   SPECIALLY   PRICED  FOR THIS FALL\nWE   BID   YOU   WELCOME   To   OUR   STORK   To   SEE   THESE   LATEST IMPORTATIONS   DIRECT\nFROM THE  LABQE EASTERN  CENTRES   WHERE   STYLES   THAT ARE CORRRCT ARR CREATED\nSmillie&Weir\nLADIES'\nmmmm\nWEAR   SPECIALISTS\n\u00ab, SPORTING  N0TE8. \u00ab\u25a0\n<i> 1>\nOutfielder    Cham\nBaseman McCarthy\nare n, he snlil in ih\nEddie   Onslow,   fi\nProvidence  Internal\ndl\nmil     Second\nBoston cluh\nton Red Sox.\ncluh\nrewer\nenter-\nlllWS\nTl\nhas\n3  Royal\nirranged i\nhe  next\n36\n.:inr,\nSpokane\nSeal lie   .\nTacoma\n.noil\n. no i\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nSpokane   \t\nSeattle   \t\nBatteries: Noyes ai\nund Cadman.\nVancouver-Tacoma,\ngrounds.\n    I     7      4\nil Minimi:  Mails\n<->*Ji(S>\u00ab\u00ae\u00ae\u00ab>\u00bb's>\u00ae-s><!>'!5\"S><\n\u00ab\n\u00ab COAST LEAGUE.\n\u00ab\n<S>*j>\u00ab**\u00bb<8>\u00ae<l> \"*>\u2022\u2666#*\u00a9'!\nIt.\nOakland    10\nSalt Lake      S\nR.\nPortland      it\nS:m Francisco  ii\n11.\n11\nVernon    ...\nLos Angeles\nTo You*\nAdvantage\n- if you phone in your\nWant Ad. Today.\nUndoubtedly you are aware\nthat there is a wave of prosperity passing through our\nterritory, mine.-* are opening\nup, lumber industries \"will\nsoon be running to full capacity and Xelson will be the\ncentre of activity.\nNow is the time to advertise. Keep up with the pro-\n, cession and get what ynu\n, want  when   and   where   you\nwant It by using the \"Want\nAds.\"\nYesterday is dead-forget it.\nTomorrow does not exist- -don't worry\nToday is hew-USE IT\nWashington Beats New York.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nWASHl'N'OTON\", Situ. 1.\u2014Shank's\nsiiiRle, aandil's sacrifice, a. passed l.nll\nhy Niiii.ama.ner and a sacrifice Hy {,-uve\nWashington a 3 to 1 victory over New\nYork here loday. _      11.    II.    10.\nXew York    '   1      4     ll\nWashington     3    7     li\nBatteries: Caldwell unit Nunamakcr;\nAyres and Henry.\nAthletics Lose By Six.\nPHILADELPHIA, Pa.. Kepi. 1.\u2014Foster was In gnud form and was given\nperfect support. Boston defeating\nPhiladelphia fi to II. The visitors made\ntheir runs Iiy bunching hits with passes\nhy Wyckoff and hy hunting on N>-\nhor, R.   II.   13.\nBoston  li     ii     li\nPhiladelphia   o    3     -l\nlatteries-\/,:  Foster and Cady;  Wye-.\nkoff, Nebor and Lapp.\nTigers Win Again.\nDETROIT, Mich., Sept. 1.\u2014Detroit\ndefeated Chicago in another erratic\ngame today. 5 to '. A error hy Weaver\nIter Burns ihod driven out a three-\nliaso hit in the eighth, gave the Tigers\nthe winning run. R.   H.   13.\nChicago      -1   10     -1\nDetroit   li   10     2\nBatteries: Scott, Benz and Schalk;\nCovetesltie, Boland and Staage.\nCarter Holds St. Louis.\nST. LOUIS. Mo;, Sept. 1.\u2014Cleveland\ntook sixth place from SI. Louis by winning today's game, fi to 2. Carter, a\nrecruit, pitched for the Indians, was\nstrung in the pinches and held St.\nLouis scoreless until tlie eighth.\nR.   II.   B.\nCleveland   fi   10     2\nSt.   Louis      2      S      4\nBatteries:  Carter and O'Neill; Knoll\nand Severoid.\nYacht cluh\nsvenl mi the\nsummer's program a cruise from Montague harbor in Plot Top island, Gab-\nLabor day.\nKmilin Pahnern, a lefi-handed pitcher uf lhe Rochester International league team, was signed b.v .Manager McGraw l\" pitch  for tlie. New York Na-\nmnls in  191(1.    Palermo's contract is\nill   to   stipulate   that   he  will   nol   tie\ntnsferred  to any minor league club.\n>' will report at the end nf Hie season.\nMcGIn\nMermo\n\u25a0nn and Sliss Galloway\n1 Swimming cluh were\nlh,. first twn Vancouver girls tn win\nihe certificate and hron'\/e medal (nr\nlife-saving wlien they passed lhe test\nat English Bay. under Examiners Hand\nanil Cutter. Tlie examinations were\nunder the auspices nf the Royal Life\nSaving society. Both of Ihe girls were\nInstructed in the work ny Miss Davis,\ncaptain, win, won tlie certificate for\nInstructor.\n\/.,      AMERICAN   ASSOCIATION       <S>\n* <$\n*\u00bb\u00ab\"\u00bb#\u00ae-\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb<\u00bb#<\u00bb\u00ab\"*'i\nImlli\nnin\nlike\nM\nSt.   Paul    ..\nFirst gun\nKansas Cll\nMinima pnlb\nSecond g\nKansas Oil\nrvfinneapolii\nfirst\nClevelfi\nIt.   II.\n3     1\nIt. H.\n.12   10\n.11. II.\n13.\n1\n1\n13.\n1\nG\nE.\n1\n(J\nme\n.. 2 11\nIt. H.\n.. r, 10\n..10 10\nR. II.\n..12 II\n..   I 10\nCALGARY TRIMS EDMONTON.\n).M\n1NTON, 'Alta., Sept. 1.\u2014The\nteam looked like the provincial\nin tonight when It defeated the\non team, I'linmiun nf northern\nhv  a   score   of  9   lu  3.\nKASLO   BASEBALL   TEAM\nTO   PLAY  SILVERTON\nALEBRTA   DEFEATS   SASKATOON.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nFRINCR ALliERT. Sask..  Sept.\nBefore a crowd of 1100 the local h.\nhall team defeated the Saskatoons\nfi today.\nKASI.l\nball lean\nhe playei\nNew Hen\nAug.\n< plan\n.--The base.\n; a mutch li\nrton  loam u\nBlackburn, Free Press, London, secil\nvieepresident; ,C. V. Cranrtall, H|\nMontreal, secretary-treasurer. DIr|\ntors\u2014,T. II. Woods, Herald, Calgal\nE. W. MeCready, Telegraph, St. .loll\n.1. U. Robertson. Telegram, Toronf\n.1. E. Atkinson, Star, Toronlo; .l.f\nMackay. Globe, Toronto; W. I''. K|\nLeader, Reglna; O. F. Pearson, Chrf\ninil Echo, Halifax;   E. Prince,\nPresse.  Montreal;   P.  D.   Ross, .lc\nmil, Ottawa; F. .1. Bird, Province, Vil\ncouver, and It. I.. Richardson, T\nWinnipeg.\nARRCTVV\nCOLLAR 2for25\nCluclt. P.nbaar L Co., Inc. MalnrB. Sain Dipt. Mon\nCANADIAN PRESS MEETS.\nTORONTO, Sept. 1.\u2014The annual\nmeeting nf the Canadian Press was\nhelil today, when officials for the year\nwere elected. There were only four\nchanges. C. F. Randall ot the Montreal star was elected treasurer in\nsuccession lu John Lewis of the same\npaper, who is leaving un overseas servile.    Following are the officers elect-\nI'-. Sla\nI; li I\ng,    fir\n\u25a0k, Gazette, Montreal, pres-\nMaeklin, Free Press, Win-\nt     vice-president;     W.     J.\nNipou Auto Transf\nPHONE 146.\nAutomobiles for hire, any hour i\nor night.    Baggage and light frel\ntransferred     at     moderato   cban\nAgents fur the White Aulomoblle\nMolor Truck Company.\nTO HOLD TENNIS\nAT\nFourth  Annual  Event Will  Opon This\nWeek\u2014Patriotic Fund to Be\nAssisted.\nThe fourth annual Kootenay tennis\ntournament will he bold' at the Bdlfour\nhotel courts on Sept. 4 5 and 6. The\nevents will be: Men's singles cham\nplonshlp men's handicap singles, men'\ndoubles (open), mixed doubles (open),\nwomen's singles (open), women's handicap singles, women's doubles (open.)\nTho money taken in, less expenses,\nwill be given to tho Canadian Patriotic\nfund, ln order to make this sum as\nlargo as possible the only prizes which\nare to be awarded are the ones which\nhave heen played .for In previous years,\nNo club in America has a pitching\nstaff the size of the Boston Red Sox,\nThere are nine slabmen on the payroll, yet less than half eome anywhere\nnear'earning their salaries.\nTwo Old Favorites\nand a New One\ngVERY expert knows NITRO CLUB-the celebrated Speed Shell, its steel lining and extra\nspeed add many a bird to tlie bag\\ The swiftest\u2014\nstraightest\u2014hardest-hitting shell in the world.\nNEW CLUB has been the favorite Black Powder Shell for more\nthan 30 years. World-famed as an all-round black-powder field shell.\nREMINGTON\u2014The turn, high-grade, low-priced smokeless shell.\nLoaded with Standard Powders\u2014primed with No. \"J3 primer\u2014unusual value at moderate cost.\nYour dealer carrien REMINGTON-UMC skulls\nto meet, your needs.   Ask him about them to-day.\nRemington Arms-Union Metallic   Cartridge   Company\n(CWrar-o\u2122 tu the Britteh Imiinrialaitil Colonial Cotiernmentii)\nLondon, Eng. WINDSOR, ONT. New York, U.S.A.\nNelson Steam Laund\nFrench Dry Cleaning and Dyein\nPAUL NIPOU,\nP.O. Box 48, Nelson.\nProp.\nPhone\nGolden West Clear Hav mi\nand W. B. Cigars\nStandard for 20 Yeari\nA. M. JOHNSON,  MAKER,\nROSSLAND,   B.  C.\nJ. A. MacKinno\nProprietor Trail's popular lea crea\nantl confectionery parlors.\nStationery,   magazines,   mewspap-*\ncigars, tobaccos,\nTRAIL, B. C.\nLe Roi Beer\nIs Handled by D. Priore at Tra\nBottled and Draught Always on Ha\nLE   ROI   BREWING   CO.,\nRossland, B. C.\nThe New Way\nDYERS.    CLEANERS.    TAILOR\n' Have your Huits, Sillts, Dresst\netc., dry cleaned the New Way,\nmafces them so clean, dives new 11\nto every fihfo,\nButler Houston  C<\nPhon 355. P. O. Box 83\n(ill*.'\/. Baker St., Nelson,\n g>e^4- CoP|\n\u20221<&\nTHUR8DA1\",   8$PT,  2,  191*1 \"3\nC&e latlP i&eto*.\nPAGE THREE\nAPPLES\nTEN   B0XE8\nDuchess Apples\nSPLENDID   QUALITY\nBoi $1.25\nFOUR    BOXES\u2014SPECIAL    LOT\nBox    .j. S1.00\nPLUMS\nFIFTEEN   BOXES\nFANCY  TABLE AND  PRESERVING   PLUMS\nBasket  ,..-25c\n..Crate .\n90c\nBell Trading Co.\nBAKER   STREET\nThe Home of Goad Groceriet\nPHONE   66\n$l}icUts\nREALLY DELIGHTFUL\nTHE DAINTY\nMINT-COVERED\nCANDY-COATED\nCHEWING  GUM\nAlways Tempting\n\u2014Refreshing and\nSatisfying-there\nis nothing \"just as\ngood \" as\nCbicUb\n\\Kootenag and Boundary\nLAN CO\nMo. 4645\nIs the winning number la our\nweekly drawing for a pair of -$5\nShoes. Holder of this ' ticket\nplease call.\nAsk for ticket with your purchase.\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLEADERS IN FOOT FASHION.\nFORTRESS OF LU\nN\nLOSS SHALL\nIE\nIf rovince Will Have Output of 123,000,\n000 Bushels\u2014State Purchase Proposal Impracticable*\n(By Daily Newa*LeaBed Wire.)\nUEU1NA, Sept. 1.\u2014That\" the yield of\nheat Jn Saskatchewan will thia year\nital  123,000,000 bushels and  that the\nop has only suffered through hail to\n*ie extent of about $400,000, which la\n_uly about half tho damage sustained\ni 3,913, was the statement mado this\n-veiling by J. E. Muselman of Moose\n\u25a0 tw,   secretary  of  the  Saskatchewan\n\"Vain  Growers'  association,    who    is\nlending a few days here.\n'.Asked for his  opinion  of the pro\ni >sal  of the  Calgary grain  men that\nlie  imperial  government  should  pur\nmse Canada's wheal, crop, or falling\n,ils that the federal authorities should\n\u2022ke.it over, Mr, Muselman remarked:\n\"Neither   of   these   proposals    was\nade by any responsible leader of the\n\u25a0\u2022ganlzed  farmers and  both are im-\n\u25a0acticable.    The imperial government\n\u25a0uld not take over our wheat to the\n'jiclusion   of  other  wheat,   especially\nithin the Empire, nor would It wise-\nexdude Russian wheat to favor ours.\nhas extended Russia enormous cred-\n*' und will be glad to take Russia's\noduce in part liquidation of that In-\nbtedncss.   Aside from that, England\nIkes large quantities of wheat from\nher  nations  in   liquidation  of  their\nibilities to England.\"\n-    Weather Still Warm. '\nSASKATOON,   Sask.,   Sept.   1.\u2014The\neather continues propitious for har-\nWlng operations.    At midnight the\ni mporature was 00.\ni Won't Jake $3  Per  Day.\n\u25a0, CALGARY, Alta., Sept. 1.\u2014Shortage\n' labor with scores of men idle on\nig streets refusing to take $3 per day\n| r   shocking   wheat   wus   complained\n'.' by employment agencies in the city\n\u25a0day.   One firm alone had 350 appll-\nLiita for  help  from farmers  on  its\nit.    Hundreds more binders entered\n'\u25a0io  fields   In   this  district   today,  an-\ni.her ideal day for both ripening and\nfirvesling.\nFine and Mild After Storm\nMOOSE XaXW, Sask., Sept. I.\u2014There\nas a generous shower of rain this\n;teruoun which If It delayed the slart\n, the threshing until tomorrow helped\nmake general conditions cooler after\n'e continued warmth of weeks. It is\n'ie and mild tonight.\n,'GHT CASUALTIES ARE\nANNOUNCED AT OTTAWA\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nJ OTTAWA, Sept. 2.\u2014Eight casualties\nthe Canadian overseas forces were\n.'.ported  in  a list  given  out by the\n| illtia  department at  midnight\u2014four\naths, two wounded and two missing.\nPte. R. L. Sutherland of Toronto is\n\u00bbJjported killed in action on Aug. 15.\nJj-.-le. R. O'Dowd of Winnipeg is unofficially reported.killed in action.  George\nf ites of Port Coquitlam, B. C, is stat-\nI to have died of peritonitis and P.\n*. Tucker of Sherbrooke, Que., from\n)unds.\nTwo men In the 10th battalion have\n,en missing since April 22 and May\n. respectively, H. Findlay of Van-\n' uver and J. P. Clemen ton of Nor-\npod Grove, Man.\nThe list follows:\n8th Battalion\nKilled   in   action,   Aug.    15\u2014R.   L.\n;therland, Toronto.\nUnofficially  reported   killed  in ac*-\nm\u2014R. O'Dowd, Winnipeg .\n10th Battalion\nWounded\u2014W.  Tlte, Bishop's  cross's. Quo.\n16th Battalion\nMissing since May 20~-J. F. Clemen-\nn, Norwood Grove, Man.\n-Mlasing   since   April   22\u2014Hamilton\nndlay, Vancouver.\n29th Battalion\nDeath\u2014G.   Bates,   Port   Coquitlam,\nI C.\nPrincess Patricias\nDied   of   wounds\u2014P.    w.    Tucker,\njerbrooke, Que.^\n2nd  Field  Artillery   Brigade\n(Wounded and suffering from shock\n\u00a3 j, Faujjht, En\u00a7lel?art, tyfa\nFALLS TO AUSTRIANS\n(Continued from Page One.)\nSK\ndesperate character, One of our regiments -which had been surrounded by\nthe enemy broke through and annihilated a German battalion, taking 70\nprisoners, including one officer,\n\"In tho district west of Grodno on\nAug. 31 we repulsed a series of vigor\nous attacks by the Germans.\n\"On the remainder of the front there\nis no important change.\n\"In the direction of Lutsk and In\ndalloia we are holding the enemy while\nWithdrawing to a less extended front,\nbut at the same time Inflicting heavy\nlosses on the enemy troops,\nWin Hand to Hand Combat.\n\"The toll of Austro-Germans made\nprisoner exceeds 100 officers and 7000\nmen, of whom one-third arc Germans,\nincluding some dozens of subalterns,\n\"The enemy made most stubborn attacks during Aug. 30-31 In the districts\nof Radziechow, Zolvtcheff, Zberow and\nBourkanoff on the Stripa and Bout-\nchatch. The enemy was repulsed everywhere, suffering enormous losses.\n\"In the region of Zberow the enemy made a series of repeated attacks,\nwhich were followed by counter-offensives on our side. The fighting in\nthe region of Bourkanoff and Bout-\nchatch also has been remarkable for\nits fierceness.\n\"Here we repulsed the enemy with\nfire and bayonet, The enemy was unable to stand the hand to hand fighting and withdrew to its trenches, leaving prisoners in our hands.\"\nAustrians Take Lutsk.\nVIENA, Sept. 1\u2014 Thc Russian fortress of Lutsk has been captured by\nTeutonic forces, it was officially announced today by the Austrian war\noffice.    Thc text  says:\n\"Tho fortress of Lutsk is ih our\nhands. Tho 40th infantry at the point\nof the bayonet ejected the Russians\nfrom tho railway station and entered\nthe town at the same time with the\nenemy. The town yesterday evening\nwas cleared of the enemy.\n\"Near Bialy-Kamien in northern\nGalicia the army of Gen von. Boehm-\nErmolli broke through the enemy's lino\non a front of 20 kilometres.\n\"The double defeat forced the Rus-\nsions west of the Stryj to retreat behind the river.\n\"The army of Gen von. Bohlmer yesterday captured Zbreow. Fighting on\ntho Stripa is proceeding. North of\nBuczacza a counter-attack was repulsed.\"\nThe number of prisoners captured\nin the last few days In Galicia and\neast of Vladimir-Volynksy rose to 36\nofficers and 2000 men.\n\"The total number of priosners captured in August by the allied troops\nunder Austro -Hira-gar Ian command\namounts lo 190 officers and 53,290\nmen. The war booty taken was 3-1\nguns and 121 machine guns.\n\"The total of priosners and booty\ncaptured by theso forces since the beginning of May amounts to 21000 officers and G'I2,'500 men and 394 guns\nand 1275 machine guns.\"\nGermans Near Grodno.\nBERLIN, Sept. 1.\u2014German troops\nfighting for Grodno are now in front of\nthe outer line of the forts of thai\nstronghold, according to today's official statement from German army\nheadquarters.\nNDED IN LEG\nBELLINGHAM   MINING\nMAN   SHOT  NEAR   LILLOOET\nBELLINGHAM, Wash., Sept. 1-\u2014\nProf. C. R Hoyden.of this city, a mining engineer, was killed. Sunday afternoon, 20 miles north of Harrison lake,\nB.C., when a shotgun carried 'by J. B.\nElllnger, a member of tho party, accidentally was.discharged, the loads of\nboth barrels entering Hayden's side.\nDeath was instantaneous. Ellinger In\ntelephoning here said that Prof. Hay-\nden was killed in a slide. News of the\naccident was reported by Provincial\nConstable Barber at Mission.\nThe parly was returning on horseback and it was whon Prof. Hayden\nattempted to pass Mr. Elinger on the\nrather narrow trail that tho hammers\nof the double barreled gun which Mr.\nElilnger was carying across his saddle\ncaught in tho -horn of tho saddle, discharging both barrels.\nWANT CROP MARKETED\nAS SLOWLY AS POSSIBLE\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 1.\u2014There was an\nimportant meeting today of the various\nofficials of the farmers' organizations\nto discuss the question of marketing\ntho crop. A circular has been drafted\nand will be distributed to the press\nand to every member of the organizations urging that the crop be marketed\nus slowly as possible in order that the\nBoswell   Man's   Recovery   Delayed   fay\nBlood Poison\u2014R. Millward Receives\nCommission in England,\n(Special to The Daily Nows.)\nBOSWELL,\/B. C, Sept. 1.\u2014Word\n1ms been'received \"from Alan Coomber\nthat he'was'wounded in the thigh and\nwould have been back at the front \"but\npoison set In. He t expected to >bi\nback on duty, however, before his let\nter reached here,\nR., MUward, who left here last fall\nto join the Worcestershire national re\nserve and was later made sergeant in\nthe railway corps, has recently been\ngiven a lieutenant's commission.\nR. YullI and Murdock McLeod of\nLockhart Beach, are away on a pros\npecting trip In the hills.\nThere was a large attendance at the\nmonthly meeting ofthe Boswell Koote\nnay Lake union. A suggestion from the\nFarmers' institute of Crawford bay\nthat the various lake points should ap\npoint delegates to meet at Proctor for\nthe formation of a mutual council to\ndiscuss and arrange both buying and\nselling of goods and produce was favorably entertained and' a delegate will\nbe in attendance should other points\nagree to the scheme.\nTwo important resolutions wero endorsed by the meeting, the first being\nthe resolution with reference to the\nregulation of commission houses and\nthe second the resolution passed at the\nrecent British Columbia Fruit confer\nence at Calgary, asking for the ap\npolntment of a commission of inquiry\nwith the object of discovering means\nby which the fruit trado may be organized and conducted more economically and efficiently.\nStrong complaints were made with\nreference to excess charges made by\nthe Dominion Express company\nfruit shipments from Boswell and also\nagainst tbe Canadian Pacific railway\non the subject of freight. These are\nbeing taken up with headquarters in\nboth instances.\nThe question of the necessary repairs or alterations to tho Boswell\nwharf are also being taken up with the\nDominion member and the district en\ngineer.\nLeslie Wilson and Wallace Wilson\nvistied Nelson over the weekend.\nThe blackberry crop here bus been\nexceedingly good this ycar and heavy\nshipments have been mado to prairie\npoints daily for tbe last three weeks,\nMiss Saunders of the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital, Nelson, is staying\nwiib Mrs. James Coupland at Boswell.\nMiss Kennedy collected $S,50 on tag\nday in Boswell.\nROCK CREEK NOTES,\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nROOK CREEK, B. C, Sept. 1.\u2014Mrs.\nA. Andrews of Midway is visiting Mrs.\nA. Tanner at Kettle Valley.\nMiss May Tanner is leaving for New\nWestminster this week to attend school\nin that city.\nMajor F, E. Glossop of Rock Creek\nis at Rhyl, North Wales, preparing\nvarious regiments for musketry. Major\nAnderson and Col, Welstead are still\nat the Dardanelles. Commander Lewis as at Sheerness with the aerial division. Miss Welstead is helping in a\nhospital at Balham, England. H, King\nhas returned from the trenches in\nFrance to his home at Highgate for\nthe second time. He hopes soon to\nbe able to rejoin the London territorials at the front.\nLast Saturday a number of Rock\nCreek and Kettle Valley residents paid\na visit to Christina lake. Among those\nwho motored down with T. Hanson\nwere Mr. and Mrs. II, Martin, Mrs.\nH. Whiting, P. Fox, Palcy Wilson, J.\nHarper and Jasper Cave. The parly\nreturned the following day. Several\nalso loft Rock Creek by train for\nChristina. All were charmed with the\nbeautiful scenery in the vicinity of the\nlake.\nT. Cave and J. Ellis have joined the\ncontingent at Grand Forks.\nDonald Stevenson and J\\ Larden,\nwho were with Rev, A. M. Lloyd at\nKettle Valley, are buglers in the eamp\nat Grand Forks.\nThe Ladles' circle will hold a meeting Saturday at Larsen's hall to mako\narrangements for a bazaar in aid of\nthe Red Cross.\nKASLO   NEWS  NOTES\n(Spocial to The DallyV^cws.)\nKASLO, B. C\u201e Sept. 1.\u2014Charles\nArcher, Henry Giegerich, Basil Palmer\nand Basil Porrlt went up Campbol!\ncreek Sunday and brought back 91\nmountain trout, the largest one being\n18 Inches long.\nT. A. Garland, who has been hero\nvisiting his son, A. T. Garland, for the\nlast two weeks, left yesterday for his\nhome at Aauaconda, B. C.\nMrs. Callahan has arrived from Burlington, Wash., on a visit to her sister,\nMrs.  Giegerich.\nJ. ,T. Street and family have returned home after spending the summer at\nWhitewater.\nMiss Hazel Floener left her for Minneapolis yesterday morning after a\nvisit of two months with her parents,\nMr. and Mrs. A. B. Fleener.\nWord was received here today from\nNew Glasgow, N. S., that little Douglas\nFaulds, aged six years, who loft here\nAug. 9 and traveled all alone across\nthe continent, arrived safoly.\nDEER PARK NEWS.\nDEER PARK, B. C, Sept. 1.\u2014-Rev.\nDr. Ferguson, western superintendent\nof Presbyterian mlssolns, spent Tuesday In Deer Pai*k, accompanied by\nRov. C. McArthur of Edgewood. They\nwere guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Hill.\nWhile here Dr, Ferguson christened\nthe Infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Hill.\nJ. Morley and S- Romanek left on\nSunday for the prairie harvest fields.\nA forest fire of unknown origin hus\nbeen causing the settlers here considerable anxiety, it is spreading into\nyoung timber of considerable value.\nI. A. Hill left on Tuesday 'for \"\u25a0\ntrip lo Trail. .  . , '   ,\n\u00ae\u00ae\u00ae0\u00ae0\u00ae000000000<i\n\u00ae 0\n0 ROSSLAND   NEWS. 0\n0 0\n00 0\u00ae \u00ae0\u00ae0000000 0000\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nROSSLAND, B. C, Sept. 1.\u2014Miss\nHarriet Stephens is spending a week at\nMarble, Wash.\nJ. A, Caley haa entered the law office of C F. R. Pincott here. Mr. Caley\nformerly pursued his studies with\nJoseph Martin. K.C. He is a gold rfied\nalist of Ottawa university and while\nthere won the Canadian debating\nchampionship.\nMr. and Mrs. Harry Smith and Miss\nRarhfir left for Spokane today.\nMrs. O. Swanson left today on an\nextended trip to Lincoln, Neb., and\nSon Francisco.\nMr. and Mrs. Alkman and son who\nhave been visiting Mr. Aikman's mother here, returned to their home In Spokane today.\nLeo Hnggerty, who spent a fow days\nIn the city vlsitlnp- his cousins, Mrs.\nJ. G. Murray and Mrs. Ward, left foi'\nhis home at Scranton. Pa.\nSunday evening In St. Andrew's\nchurch Rev. W, Robertson will preach\non \"Lal)or problems.\"\nLabor day celebrntlon will be held\nin Rossland on Monday under the nos\nnices of the Fraternal Order of Easles.\nRossland Aeri'e No. IC. Ther* wil' b<\na grand parade, sports of all kinds.\nbase1ia.ll nnd an Eagle ball at Miners*\nl.'nion hall. Music for the day will be\nprovided b.v the Eagle band.\nMiss Marlon Skill i.s spending a, few\ndays In the city as the guest of Miss\nLouise  Campbell.\nMOYIE NEWS.\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nMOYIE, B.C.. Sept. L\u2014Miss Snider\nind Miss Pearl Hllliard left Monday\nfor Cranbrook.\nMiss Phillips and Miss Helen Hol-\nHnger are hero from Bonner's Ferry,\nIda.,  visiting Miss Bates.\nMr. and Mrs, Besegh and family visited Cranbrook Saturday and Sunday.\nA Canadian Pacific railway freight\n(rain killed a cow belonging to Mr.\nNordman on Monday.\nTRAIL   NOTES.\n(Special to The Daily News,)\nTRAIL, B. a, Sept. 1.\u2014A. W. Jaok\nof Hediey, formerly In the Trail branch\nof the Bank of British North Amer\nlea, has enlisted at Hediey in the 54th\nbattalion.\nAll arrangements are well in hand\nfor the basket picnic of tbe Trail Mill\nand Smeltermen's union at Deer Purlr\nm Monday, A record crowd is exptet\nd to attend.\nSTONY HOI\nCanadians Forded Creek Under Heavy\nFire, Lost 850  Men, But\nTook Position.\n. (By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 1\u2014How four western officers met death in action at\nFestubert was told by Corp. Alan Carl\nStewart of Moosomln, who has returned on a four months' sick leave\nwith 20 pieces of shrapnel in his body,\nhis right armpit wrenched by a dumdum bullet and a slight gangrene following frost bite on his left foot. Corp.\nStewart told of the desperate struggle\nfor Stony mountain in which the 5th\nbattalion put up such a dauntless fight\nthat afLer the engagement only 150\nanswered tho rollcall.\nFour of the names whicli went unanswered were those of four officers,\nCapt. C. A. McGee, former secretary\nof the Moose Jaw electric railway;\nCapt. 11. Hopkins, of Saskatoon; Capt.\nCurrie and Lieut. Muudell of Moosomln, Corp. Stewart describes their last\nfight as follows:\n\"We were expected to lake a position\nknown as Stony mountain. We took it\nilright, though our follcal] after the\nfight wjftn responded to by 150 out of\nthe original battalion of over 1000.\nThere was a creek at the foot of Stony\nmountain, but tbe engineers had been\nso heavily .shelled that they had been\nunable to bridge It and we had to hunt\nplaces to ford. It was this operation\nwhich proved so costly, for German\ninachinog uns took fearful toll. Capt.\nCharles McGee of Moose Jaw, a splendid officer, was leading one of the companies when he waa bit. He fell into\nthe creek, was seen to go under, but\niio one ever caught sight of him again.\nGermans Ran Fastest.\nCapt. Currie also fell in this charge,\nwhile Lieut. Muudell was killed on\ngaining the position. When our men\nnoticed the awful slaughter many\njumped into tho creek and crossed,\nholding their rifles high and their\nheads subtriprgp.fi, O\" reaching the nur\nrow portion the remainder of the bat\ntalion crossed and continued In a wild\ncharge. The Germans trained their\nmachine guns on us but it did not\nstop the charge and when they saw us\ngetting closer and closer their gave up\nthc position and retired.\n\"Thoy were able to run faster than\nus and many escaped 'but we took\nsome prisoners and machine guns. Tho\nposition was a veritable fort.\nI was about 120 yards from Stony\nmountain when struck and I crept\ninto a shell hole whore I had to remain\nall day because of the German snipers\nand at dusk I was able to crawl into\nthc new trench. It took me an hour\nto do that crawl. Before I left the\nshell hole; however, Capt. Hopkins\njoined mc. He got a little tired of being cramped and tried to change his\nposition. Ho was killed by a German\nsniper before he got five feet away and\nhis body fell on those of four others\nwho had all been targets of the snipers. We -kept the position until reinforcements came and then our 'battalion left it to them and returned to\nreorganize.\"\nCorp. Stewart says be, saw a largo\npdrtion of the second Canadian contingent before leaving England. All aro\nwell and many nf them have been sent\noxu ia -Franco. ;\u00bb dini'ts,   ;      ^\nNew Fall Suits\nand Coats\nNavy Cheviot Serge Suits at $27.50\nEDITORIAL\n\"OFF WITH THE OLD AND\nON WITH THE NEW,\"\nBeautiful though the Summer styles undoubtedly are,\nthey have had their reign\u2014\nthey have become commonplace and uninteresting in the\nface of the splendid new Fall\ncreations. The sentiment of\nevery well dressed woman\nnow is \"off with the old and\non   with  the  new.\"\nThat has been our motto\nfor several weeks\u2014Summer\nthings have been disposed of\nto make room for the more\ninteresting and timely Fall\ngoods. Clearance has been\ncompleted\u2014the store is now\nresplendent in its Autumn\nattire 1\nHaven't you, too, caught\nthe spirit of \"Off with'the old\nand on with the new?\"\nCAUTION!\nAs you know, many trashy\nstyles are brought out at the\nbeginning of each new season which are represented to\nyou as being correct. That\nthey find temporary favor is\nadmitted, but they soon give\nway to the genuinely meritorious modes. Therefore it\nis advisable to use caution in\nselection at this early date if\nyou are to do your purchasing\npromiscuously.\nThe methods we employ in\nselecting our stocks tend to\nc x c I u d e unauthoritative\nstyles. We purchase from the\nmost reliable makers only\nwho construct their wares in\ncompliance with the dictates\nof the highest Fashion authorities. You can be sure\nthat the models on display\nhere now can be worn\nthroughout the season without being objects of criticism.\nImported Cheviot Serges*\nin plain tailored effect. Coats\nsemi-fitting and nicely satin-\nlined. Skirts circular and\npleated.    An especially good\nsui!.?! $27.50\nSmart Tweed\nSuits at $33.50\nIn the new Norfolk styles.\nCoats 31 inches long. Cloths\nare green mixtures and Scotch\nheather mixtures, splendidly\ntailored and well lined. A\nsmart suit at      <|JQQ 't\\(\\\nSemi-Military Suits at $40\nExtra Fine quality Serges and Broadcloths.\nCoats 31 inches long, with or without velvet collars,\ntrimmed with buttons to match. Skirts plain or\nslightly pleated. Colors black or navy. <|>\/i A\nExcellent value at     \u25a0ip'iv1\nNEW COATS\nIn Fancy Tweeds, Serges, Plaids, Velours,\nCovert Cloths; all newest models at prices ranging from\n$15 to $40\nCall and see them.\nMEAGHER & CO.\nTHE   STORE   FOR   STYLE-\nTHE   STORE   FOR   QUALITY\nPool    Formed   to    Enable   Province   to\nSecure Orders in  Big  Markets\nof  World _\nVICTORIA, P.. c., Sept, I.\u2014The majority of the large lumber producing\nfirms in British Columbia have united\nunder a central association for the\npurpose of advancing thc interests of\nthe provincial timber industry. The\nor-jraiiinatloii was completed at a\nmeeting of the BriUuli Columbia\nLumber Manufacturers' association\nheld in Vancouver on Tuesday. A result of the Interests being pooled thore\nis an assurance of a duily production\nof ],0l)u,0u0 feet. The association has\nsecured the services of one of tho largest firms of lumber brokers in the\nworld, with head offices -in London,\nand through this means will have a\nguaranteed rate of freight and delivered prico to any part of the world without necessity of negotiating with Han\nKraneiseo charterers.\nAt the meeting British government\norders totaling 3(1,000,U0O feet wore distributed among the various firms eon-\ntrolled by the new organization and\ntonnage has been secured to insure\ndelivery. As a result of thc experience of the past six months it was\nrealized b.v British Columbia, manufacturers that unless the mills were\nunited it would be impossible to tako\ncare of the volume of business offering or compete successfully with\nAmerican   firms.\nThe new organization ha$ entered\ninto a contract wilh the Canadian\nTrading company, which has been appointed agent for the associated mills,\nand an assurance has been given this\ncompany that British Columbia will\nbe ablo to produce 1,000,000 feet of\nlumber daily in mooting what over\ncontracts may be secured. The London representative agrees on each and\nevery Inquiry submitted to uuute a\nguaranteed rate of freight so that thc\nmills tan quote a delivered price. It\nwill thus be possible to Inform buyers\nwhat the lumber will cost landed at its\ndestination. Heretofore the mills, in\nmaking quotations, have been hampered by having to negotiate through San\nFrancisco for all tonnage required. All\nlumber shipped hy the new association will be advertised and branded as\nthe product of British Columbia.\nThrough the agency of II. R. Mac-\nmillan, trade commissioner. British\nColumbia will nOw get thc preference\nover American firms in the award of\nBritish government war eontracts for\nlumber. The initial orders already received through-this agency have led\nto-the employment of 4000 men in the\nlumber mills of the province. Through\npooling their resources the lumbermen\nare optimistic of greatly increased\ntrade and the connection with a London brokerage firm of unrivalled\nstanding means that British Columbia\nWill have the first call on all unchartered tonnage headed R>r the I'acU'k.,\nIT   IS   DIFFICULT   TO    GET    A   MEAL   MORE\nNUTRITIOUS   THAN\nFernie Beer\nWITH   GOOD   BREAD    AND   CHEliSli\nBuy British Columbia Products\nTHAT IS  WHAT YUU ARE DOING   WHEN   PURCHASING   VOUR\n.MEATS  AND   PRODUCE  FROM   US\nShamrock and Dominion Brands\nALWAYS    RELIABLE\nP. Burns & Company, Ltd.\nNO SI6N  OF  EXPLORER.\n(By Daily Nows Leased \"Wire.)\nNOME, Alaska, Sept. 1.\u2014The steam,\ner Corwin arrived today from a trip\nto Cape Serge, Siberia. The natives\nalong the Siberian coast had heard\nnothing of Stefansson, the explorer,\nwho with two companions left Martin\npoint, west of the mouth of the Mackenzie river, March 22, 1014, going\nnorth over the ice in search of new\nlaud and who expected to reach Banks\nland.\nIt was almost the last hope of their\nfriends that the men might have been\ncarried to Siberia on the ice, but there\nwas still a chance that thoy had reached Wranffet island, northeast of Si-\nbei-ty,  un this isluna the sun-Ivors of\nthe Stefansson ship Karluk found refuge until rescued. The rescue party\nleft on the island caches of food and\nsupplies.\nTWENTY-THREE  YOUNG\nCHURCHMEN  ENLIST IN BODY\n(By Daiiy News Leased Wire.)\nWINNIPEG, Sept. &\u2014Tweijty-thrcc\nmembers of the Young Men's club of\nSt. Giles' church today enlisted in a\nbody with the university squad of the\n61st battalion and will enter into training at Sewe'll eamp this week. Another\nhalf-dozen members are going to Join\nthe colors and when they do so tho\ncontingent will be one of the largest\nto volunteer for active service from\nany single organization in Winuil\u00bbog,\nMM\n\u25a0M\n PAGE POUR\n%\\)t \u00a9all? J&etos\nTHUR8DAY.   SEPT.   2.  1918.\nC|je \u00a9ailp j&rtua\nPublished every morning except\nBunday by the Newa Publishing Company,  Limited, Nelson, B.C., Canada.\nKOBE SUTHERLAND,\n, Editor and Manager.\nBusiness letters should be addressed\nand checks and  money orders made\npayable to the News Publishing Com\npany, Limited, and In no case to individual members of the staff.\nAdvertising rate cards and sworn\ndetailed statements \u201et circulation mall\ned on request, or may be seen at the\noffice of any advertising agency recognized by the Canadian Press Association.\nSubscription rates ED cents per\nmonth; $2.50 for six months; |5 per\npear.\nTHURSDAY,   SEPT.   2.   1915.\nFIGURES   ELOQUENT  OF  BETTER\nTRADE CONDITIONS\nAuthoritative information as to\nshipments of products of the three\ngreat basic industries of this section\nof the Interior of British Columbia,\nwhich The Dally News publishes this\nmorning, bear striking testimony\nthe improvement in conditions which\nhas taken place.\nThe fact that agricultural produce\nsent out of the district will this year\ntotal approximately 3000 eailuudt-j, exclusive of express and other small\nshipments, points to tho remarkable\ngrowth which has taken place in this\nindustry during the past four or five\nyears. It is not many years since the\nInterior was congratulating itself upon\nhaving increased its total export of\nfruit, vegetables and similar produc\nto 100 carloads.\nThe outstanding features of the min\nIng industry are the record shipments\nof the Rossland camp, the record re\ncelpta at Trail smeller and the fact\nthat, despite the low price of sliver,\nshipments of ore from (he Slocan district exceed those of last year. In tho\nBoundury country tbe smelters at both\nGrand Forks and Greenwood aro in\noperation and are increasing their output.\nThe news that stocks of lumber at\nmountain mills have been reduced by\n165,000,000 feet to 35,000,000 reet since\nJune 30, 1914, Is illustrative of improved conditions in this industry. In\norder to replenish \u00bblocks in anticipation of a heavier demand during the\nfall and winter practically all the Important mills have recommenced\noperations.\nBUY   BRITISH   COLUMBIA\nPRODUCE\nThe people of British Columbia\nshould insist upon being supplied wilh\nBritish Columbia fruit and other farm\nproduce.\nTo do so is to the ultimate best advantage of the consumer. It is an\nelementary principle of economics that\nthe prosperity of the majority of individuals is dependent upon the prosperity of the community in which they\nlive.\nGreat sums of money are annually\nbeing sent away to foreign ranchers\nfor farm produce which is being raised In British Columbia. If only r>0 per\ncent of this money were kept at home\nit would make an enormous difference\nto business and employment conditions in this province.\nAlmost every day the consumer Is\ngiven the opportunity to choose between spending money for the benefit\nof the ranchers in his own community\nand that of ranchers in foreign countries. Patriotism and self-interest alike\npoint to the course which should be\nfollowed.\nagree to comply with the law of\nhumanity which demands that a warning shall be given before any merchant\nship is attacked, in order that passengers and crew may escape.\nBerlin has promised that in future\nIt will not attack passenger liners\nWithout first Riving warning but offers\nno pledge that it will observe the laws\nof humanity when attacking freight\nvessels.\nThe change in the German attitude\nwill probably be hailed as a moral\ntriumph. In the real senso of the\nphrase It is nothing of the kind. Germany lias conceded a point to the\nUnited States not because the American case is just but because Germany\nrealizes at last that it cannot enforce\nits will upon all the world and fears\nto add to the strength of the moral\nand material forces to which It is opposed. Germany has backed down not\nbecause 11 has undergone a change of\nheart but because it is afraid to do\notherwise.\nTurkish reports that the allied\nforces at the Dardanelles have suffered severe reverses fall rather flat\nIn the light of the report of Sir\nIan Hamilton ot tho capture of important positions at Gallipoli peninsula.\nThe British foreign office has again\nspoken in reply to German sophistries\nconcerning the cause of the war and\nhas once more left Germany no opening to reply with other tnan the in\nventlon of a fresh line of argument.\nWarsaw bankers have been Interned\nfor refusing to accept German pro\nmissory notes. They chose the lesser\nof two evils. Any good banker would\nrather undergo internment than\nchange real money for \"scraps of\npaper.\"\nBecause of the dye shortage it will\nsoon be difficult to secure bright\ncolored clothing, according to eastern\nreports. Won't it bo terrible if Paris\nnext spring decrees that bright colors\nshall be fashionable'*' It will be\ncase uf breaking hearts or purses.\nThe proposal that the grain crop\nshould be marketed as slowly as possible will put many thousands of dollars into tho pockets of the prairie\nfarmers if they are able to carry.it out.\nThe old problem of the lack of gran-\nerles and need for ready money has,\nhowever,  to be contended with.\nAmerican papers are laughing at the\nBoston woman who charitably donated\n$1000 for the relief of blind pigs in\nWest Virginia. But tbe Hub keeps its\nlose in the air and asks how could a\nesldent of the greatest centre of culture in the United States be expected\nto know that what the common herd\ncalls a blind pig Is not a sightless hog.\nWc Cannot Control thc Law\nof Supply and Demand and thus secure tea at\na Setf price but we can and will control the\n\"SM.ADA\"\nFor 25 years the Standard of Excellence m teas\nhas been SALADA and come what may, it shall\nnever deviate from that standard. bsi\n00 00000000000 0 0000\n0 COMMUNICATION. \u00ae\n0 0\n0000 0 000000000000\u00ae\nJUDGE  BROWN   URGES\nRECRUITING MEETINGS\nTo the Editor of The Daily News:\nSir: I have noticed that within lho\nlast month recruiting meetings have\nbeen held in various parts of the Dominion addressed by leading men of\nthe two great political parties. These\nmeetings have to a large decree been\nsuccessful in Inducing young men to\nenlist, particularly in thc province of\nOntario, which, taken as a whole, had\nnot responded any too well to the\ncall of King and country up to .July 1\nlast, ultlioufeh ttuint* cities and towns\nhad   done   fairly  well.\nBrillsh Columbia has made a better\nshowing in regard to enlistment than\nOntario In proportion to its population,\nlargely owing to the fact that the proportion of British-born Is larger in tho\nPacific province than In tho eastern\none. Thore are, however, in this prov-\ninco thousands of men of military age\nwho either havo not heard the call of\nKing and country or who havo turned\na deaf ear to It. \"'ho call is strong\nand insistent and the need never was\ngreater In the history of the British\nEmpire. To maintain even the contingents Canada has in the field\u2014and\nwe ought to place moro thore\u2014at full\nstrength and up to the standard of efficiency tens of thousands of Canadians will bo needed.\nI respectfully suggest through your\ncolumns, Mr. Editor, that the leading\nmen of all political parties in this\nprovince, and others, if need be, hold\nrecruiting meetings In all all the cities\nand towns within its borders and place\nthis supreme question squarely before\nall its citizens. If the native-born Canadians of this provlnc'e appreciated\nthe situation would they be less loyal\nto Canada than the young Germans are\nto Germany'*' And yet they ought to\nknow that If they refuse to flight In\nFlanders or France they may, in the\nnot distant future have to fight, and\nprobably fight a losing* light, in Canada itself.\nThe press of British Columbia has\ndone a good work in urging enlistment, but 1 think that work would be\nhelped materially by meetings of the\ncharacter  I  have mentioned.\nJ. B. BROWN.\nGrand  Forks,   Aug.   31.\n<\u00bb<\u00ab><$><3><\u00a3<\u00a3<\u00a3<S>^<\u00bb^*$*<$><S><S>$><\u00bb<3>\n0 0\n0   THE WAR ONE YEAR AGO.   0\n0 0\n0 0 00000 0000000 0000\nOn Sept, 2, 1014, three German\naeroplanes hovered over Paris, but\nwore driven off.\nTho Russians changed the name of\nSt,   Petersburg  to  Petrograd.\nThe Russians admit a disaster to\ntwo army corps in East Prussia, including tho loss of three generals.\nThe Servians were preparing to attack and invade Austria,\nThe Montenegrins defeated the Austrians near Bilek in Bosnia and marched in pursuit of them.\nBritish cruisers succeeded in capturing thc Kronprinz Wilhelm.\nThc French announced that the seat\nof government was to be moved from\nParis to Bordeaux.\nA fierce battle was raging In Galicia\nsouth of Lubln and east of Lemberg.\n0000 00000000000 0 00\n0 s>\n0 THE WEATHE. 0\n0 0\n0000000 00000$ 00000\nMin.   Max.\nNelson  45      69\nDawson $8\nPrince 'Rupert    4R\nVictoria 52\nVancouver       \u25a0->\u2022\u25a0*\nKamloops   M\nCalgary     \u2022\u2022* \u25a0\u25a0\u00bb*\nEdmonton ....   ^\nBattleford    r,u\nMedicine Hat     50\nRegina     43\nMoose Jaw    \u2022 ^\nMlnnedosa  ^\nWinnipeg  5<>\nPort Arthur     6ff\nParry Sound    ^\nLondon  43\nToronto    49\nKingston $\\\nOttawa    **\nMontreal *?\nQuebec 44\nvSt. John    60\nHalifax   66\n1$\nONLY PARTIAL\n(Continued from Page One)\nPROGRESSIVE   FORCE   IN   THE\nLIFE  OF  THE  PROVINCE\nThe delegates who aro in Nelson this\nweek in attendance at tbe Kootenay\nand Boundary conference of Women's\ninstitutes represent one of the most\nactive and effectual of the progressive\nforces which are working for tbe advancement of British Columbia and its\npeople.\nThe Women's institutes are fulfilling splendidly the purposes for which\nthey were established by the provincial department of agriculture. The\nmembers have shown themselves eager\nto take advantage of the courses of\nlectures and demonstrations which are\nprovided by the government and thoy\nhave of their own initiative Inaugurated many movements of first importance to the districts in which thu\nvarious  branches aro located.\nIn addition to undertakings of a provincial or local nature tho activities\nand discussions of the Women's Institutes havo been extended to cover\nmatters In which a fine spirit of\nbroad patriotism has been displayed.\nIn work for the soldiers and in furthering educational propaganda looking to the betterment of the British\nrace the women have a record of accomplishment which has earned for\nthem the wholehearted gratitude of the\npublic.\n0 0 00 0 00 00000\u00ae\u00ae\u00ae\u00ae\u00ae\u00ae\n0 \u00ae\n0 WHAT THE PRESS IS SAYING: 0\n0 0\n0\u00ae000 00 00 00\u00ae000\u00ae\u00ae0\nNo Exception.\nUnited States could not fil-jht out\na struggle affecting the destinies o\"\nthe south half of this continent with\nout dislocating the economic and industrial life of Europe in general, and\nBritain in particular. Britain and her\nallies cannot figUt out a struggle affecting the destinies of Europe and the\nworld without dislocating the economic\nand industrial life of other nations,\nUnited States not excepted\u2014Toronto\nTelegram.\nCementing the Alliance.\nThe German navy, 'by its attack on\nthe Russian shores, give tho British\nnavy the opportunity of doing battle\non the sea, and of furnishing the Russian people wilh visible evidence of\nthe strength of the alliance. The German diplomats were trying to sap the\nfoundations of the alliance by tellin;\nRussia lhat she was deserted. The Ger\nman navy found to Its cost that British sailors were eager to .become the\ncomrades of Russian sailors.\u2014Toronto\nStar.\nUSE VIGILANCE LO\nKEEP OUT DISEASE\n(Continued from Page One)\nfrom abroad. At tho various quarantine stations 253\/80S persons were inspected and a total of 543 persons were\nquarantined. Asiatis cholera is reported iu extraordinarily violent form\namong the troops In southern Austria\nand northern Hungary, while typhus\nfever is said to be rasing in Servia\nand Austria. The deatlis from it among\nthe soldiers, says Mr. Burrell, are already said to exceed 50,001).\nReference is made in tho report lo\ntho fact that there are in the lazaret\nat Tracade, N.B., Hi patients, seven\nmales and nine females. This is the\nsmallest number in years. Amelioration of symptoms and .sufferings is\nclaimed to be following the system of\ntreatment now being- carried out at\nthe lazaret and two former inmates,\ndischarged in 1912 still remain \"cured.\"\nA Great Triumph.\nCanada has been suffering from a\nfinancial depression for a few years,\ndue, no doubt to her great expansion\nwithin recent times. But Canada has\nconquered many great dificultles, the\ngreatest of these being perhaps her\nInternal indebtedness; In 1913 the\nbalance of trade of this country was\nunfavorable to us to the extent of\n$.100,000,000, that is, we imported $;i00,-\n000,000 more In goods than we export\ned. Today not only have we overcome\nthis deficiency in our commerce, but\nhave actually brought about an in\ncrease In favor of our exports. And\nthat Canada should have been able to\naccomplish mueh In less than 'three\nyears speaks volumes for the inherent\nstrength of this country.\u2014Montctary\nTimes.\nNO SAFETY DEVICE TO\nPREVENT TROLLEY  ACCIDENT\nCHANGE   IN   GERMAN   ATTITUDE\nNOT MORAL TRIUMPH\nGermany's partial acceptance of the\nprinciples of international law Insisted upon by the United States is a\ncomplete reversal, as far as it goes, of\nr policy from which Berlin up to this\ntime has truculently refused to recede.\nI^ess than two months ago Germany\npcorned every suggestion that it should\nLAURIER   AND   FOSTER  TO\nADDRESS  RECRUITING  MEETINGS\n'OTTAWA, Sept. 1.\u2014Sir Wilfrid\nLaurier and Sir George Foster leave\ntogether Thursday morning for Napa-\nnec, where they will address a large\nrecruiting meeting to be held in the\nafternoon.\nBRITAIN HELD DESPATCHES\nFOUND   ON   AMERICAN\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Sept. 2.\u2014According to the\nCentral News, James F. T. Archibald,\nan Ameiicnn newspaper correspondent\nwho was apprehended by the British\nauthorities when the steamer Rotterdam, bound from New York for Rotterdam, put into Falmouth a few days\nago, was carrying despatches to Berlin\nand Vienna from the German and Austrian embassies m Washington.\nIt is asserted by the Central News\nthat Mr. Archibald was charged with\nperforming' an unneutral service. He\nwas subsequently released *by the despatches were retained by the officials.\nST. CATHARINES, Ont., Kept. 1,\nPreliminary hearing in the case of E.\nDickson, general manager and vice-\npresident of the International railway,\ncharged with negligence in collection\nwith the Queenston Heights trolley disaster on July 1, when 14 lives were lost,\ndragged through the entire day beforo magiestrate Campbell and was adjourned until tomorrow at 10 o'clock.\nLittle evidence additional to that adduced at tho inquest was offered. Only\nsix witnesses were examined today, all\nbeing officials or employees of the\ncompany.\nMichael Brennan, crown attorney, is\nconducting thc prosecution and M. J.\nMeCarron of St. Catharines appears\nfor the defense.\nMotorman Boyt, one of the principal\nwitnesses, is still ill and will not be\nable to appear.\nTho first witness called was A. H.\nHennlng, superintendent of tho lines\nof the Park & River railway.\n\"If a car got away from a motorman\nnear the top of the grade,\" he said, In\nanswer to a question \"an accident could\nnot be avoided.\"\nHe believed, he said, a car ought to\ngo around the curve where the accident occurred at 2i\u00bb or 30 miles an hour\nwithout mishap. Where a motorman\nlost control there was nothing to avert\naccidents at this point.\n\"There was nothing on the car or\ntrack to prevent an accident if a car\ngot beyond control,\" asked the crown\nattorney.\nThe witness did nut see bow it could\nbe averted.\nwhen British naval power asserted its\nsway by legitimate means.\nNo Middle Course.\n\"The sobering: truth to the Germans,\ntho 'Telegraph continues, \"is that they\naro confronted by an embarrassing\nsituation where something must bo\ndone. Two alternatives only are open\n\u2014either Germany must persist in its\npolicy of outrage and murder or call\noff Its submarines. There is no middle\ncourse, unless the United States is to\nrecede from the position which It has\nhitherto calntained.\"\nIn conclusion the paper says that\nwhile it Is believed Count von Bernstorff is trying to obtain minimum\nterms it sees hope in the apparently\ndiplomatic illness of Admiral von Tirpitz, the German minister of marine,\nWhich it declares will give Chancellor\nvon   Bethmapn-Holwog  a   free   hand.\nThe Graphic in an editorial takes\nthe same view as the Telegraph. It\nsays the announcement of Germany's\nposition with regard to the submarines\nIs a greater triumph for Dr. von Beth-\nmann-Holweg than for President Wilson\n\"It is a clover concession,\" says the\nGraphic, \"which costs Germany nothing because its power to repeat such\natrocities as the sinking of the Lusitania has to a large extent been destroyed by the heavy toll Great Britain\nhas taken of Its submarines, If President Wilson is really in earnest, however, he cannot be satisfied with such\na partial concession.\"\nMade Virtue of Necessity.\nThe Times says it awaits with much\ncuriosity the disclosure of the full instructions given to Count von Bernstorff and expresses (he belief that the\nmotive for the capitulation of Admiral\nvon Tirpitz to tho politicians \"who are\nnow so eager to display respect for\nAmerican opinion, may be foundl\nGreat Britain's numerous captures of\nGerman submarines and thc consequent\ndifficulty in providing nn adequate\nsupply of trained submarine crows,\nwhich the paper says \"may have induced Germany to make a virtue of a\nnecessity.\"\nThc Times supposes that the \"failure of the submarine policy will 'be\nhidden from the German public under\ncover of a now agitation against British policy\u2014this time about cotton.\"\nTho Chronicle points out that while\nthe concession made by Germany is\nquite insufficient to satisfy the prin\nclples laid down by President Wilson';\nfirst note respecting tho Lusitania, it\nmeets tho last note in which the prin\nciples were, greatly whittled down, only\ndiffering In confining to liners what\ntho president claimed for all merchantmen.\n\"With President Wilson's eagerness\nto catch at any straw that may preserve poaco, It is plain that he will not\npress tho differences,\" says the paper,\n\"and yet some of tho cases which most\nunfavorably impressed American opinion wore those of cargo boats and the\npossibilities of Inhumanity which the\nGerman formula loaves open are great\n;ind obvious.\"\n64\n68\n68\n68\n60\n74\n72\n76\n76\n77\n75\n74\n76\n86\n74\n73\n75\n68\n72\n74\n70\n66\n72\n>0000000000000<\nCOLD STORAGE\n>000 00 0000000<\nPassing through a military hospital,\na distinguished visitor noticed a private in one of thc Irish regiments who\nhad been terribly wounded.\nTo the orderly the visitor said:\n\"That Is a bad case. What are you\ngoing to do with him?\"\n\"HtVs going back, sir,\" replied tho\norderly,\n\"Going back,\" said the visitor In\nsurprised tones.\n\"Yea,\" replied thc orderly. \"He\nthinks he knows who done it.\"\nVICTORIA CROSS OF DEAD\nHERO SENT TO PARENTS\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nMONTREAL, Sept. 1.\u2014Tho Victoria\nCross won by tbe late Lance-Corp. F.\nFisher of the 13th battalion, ut St.\nJulien, whore he received fatal wounds,\nhas been received by the hero's parents. Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Fisher of\nWostinount, accompanied by a letter of\nappreciation from the British war office. The deceased soldier earned the\ndecoration by gallantly assisting with\na machine gun in covering the retreat\nof a battery and later bringing his machine gun into action under heavy fire\nin order to cover the advance of supports. It was while doing this he received his wounds. He was 20 years\nof age.\nLOUGHEED CANNOT CONFIRM\nREPORTED SHELL ORDER\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, Sept. 1.\u2014Senator Lougheed, acting minister of militia, says\nthat he has no personal knowledge in\nregard lo tho report that thc Canadian\nWestern Foundry & Simply Company,\nwith plants in Alberta cities, has received an order for $11,000,000 worth of\nshells. Presumably tbo order is a portion of largo orders secured by eastern firms from tho British government,\na portion of whici is being transferred\nto western factories.\nMADE\nIN\nCANADA\nINSURES PERFECT\nBAKING RESULTS\nGUARANTEED TO BE. MADE\nFROM INGREDIENTS\nSHOWN ON THE LABEL\nAND NONE OTHER\nMagic\nBAKING\nPOWDEfl\nMAGIC\nBAKING\nPOWDER\nCONTAINS\nNO    ALUM\nMADE IN CANADA\nE.W.filLUTTC0.LTD.\nTORONTO ONT\nWINNIPEG      MONTREAL\nUnion Brewery\nTRAIL,   B. C.\nManufacturers of\nDraught and Bottled Beer and Artificial Ice.\nTHURMAN'S\nCarrr a full line ot til HIgh-Gr\u00bb<l\u00ab I\nTobaccos and BBB Piped. [Try a UaJ\not Thurman's Mlxttire,\nTHURMAN'S CIGAR (TORE\nTHORPE'S\nDRINKS\nA\" Birks\" Wedding Ring\nIs the Neatest, Most\nPopular Ring Manufactured\nToday\nDun't imy a greater prico lor an\nout of date stylo. Write lor our\ncatalogue ana choose your wedding\nring from tlie illustrations shown.\nPrices range according to size and\nweight. All our Wedding Kings are\nmade In IS carat gold.\nHenry Birks & Sons, Ltd.\nJewellers and Silversmiths.\nVANCOUVER, B. C.\n_JhiMn^_DirMtoij_|\nAS8AYER8.\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, ASSATER AND)\nChemist. Sox Alios Nelson, B. C.f\nCharges: Gold, silver, copper\nlead, JI each; gold-silver, |1.50;' sil-l\nver lead, {1.50. Other metals on ap-|\nplication.\nAUCTIONEERS.\nC. A. WATERMAN & CO., Opera Wfcl\nWM. CUTLER, AUCTIONEER,  BOX\n474; phone IS.\nGROCERIE8.\nA. MACDONALD & CO., WH\nsale Grocers and Provisions\nchants. Importers of Teas, coffees;\nSpices, Dried Fruits, Staple ami\nFancy Groceries, Tobaccos, Cigars!\nButter, Eggs, Cheese and PackinJ\nHouse Products. Office and ware-1\nhouse, corner of Front and Hall Stal\nP.O. Box 1095; telephones 28 and 231\nINSURANCE AND   REAL  ESTATEl\nARE TOU TAKING ADVANTAGE OH\nthe reduced rates on your fire lnsur-l\nance offered by G. A. Hunter? It nol\nsee him before renewing. His com-f\npanies are absolutely reliable.\nCivil Engineers, Dominion and B. C|\nLand Surveyors,\nSurveys of Lands, Mines, Townsltei\nTimber Limits, etc.\nNelson, 616 Ward street, A. H. Gree\nMgr.; Victoria, lid Pemberton BIdj\nF. C. Green; Fort Georgo, Hammonl]\nstreet, F. P. Burden.\nSt. Joseph's\nBoarding and Day\nSchool\nLOCATED  CENTRALLY  IN\nNELSON    -   B. C.\nAND\nconvenient  lo  the  East  Kootenay\nand Boundary District.    Course ot\nInstruction   includes   English   and\nCommercial Subjects.\nAttention given to Music,\nFrench, Embroidery, Plain\nSowing, Stenography, Bookkeeping,     Typewriting,     etc.\nPREPARATION THOROUGH\nIN ALL DEPARTMENTS\nFor terms apply to\nThe Sister Superior\nLocal Ranch Eggs\n$9.00   PER   CASE\nBOX 92, CRESTON.\nKoken Hydraulic Barber's Chair\nIn good order\nFOR SALE AT A BARGAIN.\n0. K. BARBER SHOP,\nA. L. Wilson, Prop., Nolson, B. C\nNELSON    LAND    DISTRICT,    DISTRICT OF WEST KOOTENAY.\nTake nolico thnt Joseph Edgar Road,\nMerchant, intends to apply for permission to purchase tho following described land: Commencing at a post\nplanted at the S.E. corner post of Lot\nNo. 7709, thence west 20 chains; thence\nsouth 20 chains; thence east 20 chains\nthenco north 20 chains to place ot\ncommencement and containing forty\nacres, more or less.\nJOSEPH EDGAR READ,\nPer M. C. Donaldson, Agt\nA. L. McCULLOCH,\nHydraulio Engineer.\nProvinoial Land Surveyor.\nBaker St, Nelson, B. C.\nLODGENOTICES\nKOOTENAY LODGE NO. 16, I.O.0\n\u2014Meets every Monday night in (\nfellows' hall, at 8 o'clock.\nQUEEN   CITY   REBEKAH   LODGE\nNo. 16, I.O.O.F, meets first and tblrig\nTuesdays,    Oddfellow's   ball   at\no'clock.\nNELSON ENCAMPMENT, NO. 7, lit\nO.F.,\u2014Meets     second     and   fourtfl\nThursdays in Oddfellows' ball at\no'clock.\nCANTON  CORONA,  NO. 7.\u2014MEBTJ\nevery second Tuesday In Oddfellow\nhall, at 8 o'clock.\nKNIGHTS    OF   PYTHIAS     MEETl\nTuesday nights ln K.   ol   P.   hal|\nEaglo block.\nA.   O.   V.   COURT-   ELLEN\u2014MEETi\nfirst and third Wednesday In IC of 1\nhall at S o'clock.\nCLAN JOHNSTONE, 212, MEETS :\nI. O. O. F. hall first \u00bbnd third B*.\ndays at 8 p. m,\nS. O. E.\u2014Meets first and third Mon|\ndays in K. of P. hall at 8 p. m.\nJohn Burns & Sons\nPRAIRIE   FIRE THREATENS\nCROPS   NEAR   WINNIPEG\nWINNIPEG. Sept. 1.\u2014This morning\nit was reported from Stonewall, Man,\nthat a prairie fire was raging about\n12 miles northeast nf that town and\nthnt all the farmers and other residents\nin the district were fighting it. It was\nreported tfnat many of tiie farmers will\nlose their hay, grain antl cattle. Milton\nOnod has already suffered the loss of\nsome cows, which were suffoentpd by\nlbo smoke.\nGeneral Contractors\nand Builders\nPLANING   MILLS.\nSASH   AND   DOOR   FACTORY. NELSON\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.\nP.O.  BOX 134 PHONE  178\nLEAVES  FORTUNE TO\nWOMAN, THEN SHOOTS HER\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nMINNEAPOLIS, Minn, Sept. 1.-\nThe woman to whom he had bequeath\ned all his property in a crudely drawn\nwill today was shot and wounded 1>y\nEarnest Carlson of St. Paul, who then\nBhotand killed himself. The scene of\nthe tragedy was in Minneapolis. Carlson had the will in bis pocket at the\ntime of thc shooting. The woman, Mrs.\nCarolina Anderson, 408 Fourteenth\navenue, south, was shot in the left\nside. Though painfully wounded she\nis expected to live.\nCarlson, who sent a bullet through\nhis brain when he was pursued, died\ninstantly.\nThe shooting occurred after Carlson\nhad threatened Mrs. Anderson because\nshe refused to go away with him, according to her story to the police, who\nvisticu her at the hospital.\nCOAL   HANDLERS  QUIT.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nHALIFAX, N. S, Sept. 1.\u2014Over 100\ncoal handlers struck here today, demanding increased pay. They had\nbeen getting 30 cents an hour for day\nand 35 cents Tor night work, nnd ask\n35 and 40 cents, respectively. They\nalso demand some changes in working\nconditions; ' .._\n0'Cedar Polishes\nWE HAVE JUST OPENED UP\nANOTHER LARGE SHIPMENT OF\nO'CEDAR GOODS. IT IS JUST THE\nTHING TO KEEP DOWN THE SUMMER DUST.\ng..--vt .7j,-p..^Thi y\nWhy Not\nUP\nGET YOUR SUPPLY NOW AND CLEAN\nThere Is Nothing Better Than\nO'CEDAR   POLISH\nPrices on Polish...25c, BOc, $1.25, $2.50 and $3.00 eaoh\nPrices on Mops 75c, $1.00, $1.25 and $1.50 eaoh\nNelson Hard ware Co.\nPHONE 21\nWHOLESALE   AND\nNELSON, B.C.\nRETAIL\nFor Results!\nNews\nDisplay\nAds\n3YNOP3IS OF COAL\nMINING REGULATION!\nCoal mining rights of the Domtnio\nln Manitoba, Saskatchewan and\nborta, the Yukon Territory, the NortlJ\nwest Territories, and in a portion\nthe province of British Columbia, maj\nbe leased for a term of twenty-orj\nyears at an annual rental of *}l p-i\nacre. Not more than 2,560 acres wlj\nbe leased to one applicant.\nApplication   for   a   lease   must\nmade by the applicant in person to th]\nAgent or Sub-Agent of the district i\nwhich the rights applied for are sltt)\nated.\nIn surveyed territory the land mul\nbe described by sections or legal sutf\ndivisions of sections and In unsurvevd\nterritory the tract applied for shall I\nstaked out by the applicant himself, j\nEach application must   be   accon\npanied by a -tee \u00b0* $5 which will be a\nfunded if the rights applied for \"\nnot available, 'but not otherwise.\nroyalty shall be  paid on  the mei\nchantable output of the mine at tlj\nrate of five cents per ton.\nThe person operating the mine flhal\nfurnish the Agent with sworn rotunj\naccounting for the full quantity\nmerchantable coal mined ahd pay til\nroyalty thereon. If the coal miniq\nrights are not being operated,\nreturns should be furnished at lea\nonce a year.\nThe lease will Include the coal mid\nIng rights only, but the lessee ma\nbe permitted to purchase whatevl\navailable surface rights may 'be cof\nsldered necessary for the working\nthe mine at the rate of $10 an acre.\nFor full information applicati-d\nshould be made to the Secretary of ti\nDepartment of the Interior, Ottawa, \"\nto any Agent or Sub-agent of Doml|\nion lands,\nW. W. CORY,\nDeputy Minister of the Interior.|\nN. B.\u2014Unauthorized  publication\nthis advertlaonuri WM not be S*ljl *l\n ite\nTHURSDAY,   SEPT.   2,   1915.\n%ty Batty jMus;\nPAGE  FIVE\nGet Your\nPreserving Peaches\nNOW\nWhile Ihey are nt Iheir host.\nElbertas and\nCrawfords\nPor crate  $1,00\nNaynard Plums\nFor tlio table. Basket\n\u25a0 25c\nStar Grocery\nPHONE  10\nStore  of  Quality\nMarkets - Mining - Finance\nPrivate   Hospital;,\nLICENSED   BY   PROVINCIAL   GOVERNMENT.\nWe give particular attention .to all female troubles, home-like   apartments\nfor ladies awaiting accoticbment,\nHighest     references;      reasonable\nterms;   Inspection  invited.\nMRS. MOORE, Superintendent.\n| THE   HOME   PRIVATE    HOSPITAL,\nFalls and Baker Sts., Nelson B.C.\nP. O. Box 772.\nPhone 373 for Appointment,\nGET   OUR   QUOTATIONS   ON\nFeed, Grain\nand Hay\nJ. H. RAHAL & CO.\n619 Front St. Nelson, B. C.\nPhone 232. P. 0. Box 315\nThe Popular Scotch line\nMONTREAL TO GLASGOW\nT.S.S. ATHENIA  Oct. 4\nT.S.S. \"CASSANDRA..Oct. 11\n\u2666Carries cabin passengers only\nRATES\u2014Cabin, $52.50; 3rd\nClass, $33.75.\nPREPAID TICKETS\nFrom Scotland, issued at lowest rates. Full information\nfrom any railway or steamship agent, or\nH. E. LIDMAN, Gen. Agent,\n351   Granville   Street.   Phone,\nSey. 3199, Vancouver.\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nLabor Day\nSeptember 6\nExcursion Fares\nFare and  One-Third\nRound Trip\nOn sale Sept. 3, I, 7, and Oth. Good\nto return till Sept. 8.. Tickets from\nAgents ami Pursers. Cpnductors\nwill sell excursion tickets from fhig\nstations.\nJ. S. CARTER, D. P. A., Nelson.\nWHEAT STRONGER\nON HEAVY BUYING\nShorts Cover Hastily on Lack of September  Deliveries\u2014Seaboard   Interests also Buy.\n(Bv Daily News Leased Wire.)\nCmCAOO. 111., Sept. 31.\u2014Wheat\nclosed Htronfr at an advance of %\n'ie. tndny in a buying spurt from shorts\nwho were uneasy owing to the fact\nthat for the first time In the history\nof tho exchange there was no delivery\nof wheat on Sept. 1. The September\noption closed at ftft^i and December\nwas at 93%  to  %,\nOats closed y, lower to % higher\nand provisions finished weak at net\nlosses  of  7%   to 30Vj.\nWheat at the opening was nervous,\nvarying from -ja higher to 1% lower.\nSeptember soon took the lead on hasty,\ncovering by shorts but offerings were\nso generous that tlie market soon re\nacted. A heavily oversold condition\nthen developed and strong houses with\nseaboard connections camo into the\nmarket as buyers. The result was an\nImmediate upturn which lasted with\nsteadily increasing gains till thc end\nof the session. When the session advanced and no grain had been deliver-\nd   In   settlement   of  September   con-\nicts a scare spread among the shorts\nthat produced a few minutes of excited buying of the September option\nand this month occupied most of the\nattention of tiie wheat pit. till the close\nof lho market. Another feature that\nhelped ho uplift was an improved ox-\nport demand, both for domestic and\nCanadian wheat.\nOats had a firm tone most of the\nday. Heavy liquidation on September\ncontracts weakened provisions through\nout the list. The close was near tlie\nweak point, with pork off 2ft to 3(1\ncents. Lard was 7i\/& to 22V^ and ribs\nan to 17% off.\nNew   York   Tone   Becomes   Bullish   on\nSubmission of Berlin to View of\nWashington.\n\u25a0XEW YORK, Sept. 1.\u2014Rate debasement of the British, French and Italian\nexchanges to the lowest quotatlosn ever\nofficially recorded was counterbalanced\ntoday in the speculative mind by the\nnews that Germany had complied with\nthis country's protests to the extent of\nabandon ing its policy of submarine\nwarfare. This added evidence of Germany's conciliatory attitude seemed to\nbo the mure important factor and was\nfollowed by a sharp rebound of prices.\nIn hanking circles, however, thero\nwas no disposition1 to minimize Ibe\neffect of the increased demoralization\nin credit, Demand bills on London fell\nto 4.50, an overnight loss of {,% and\nParis checks at t!.0!i represented a loss\nof 5c under any rale hitherto quoted,\nwhile lires at ft.'ift, fell fie under all\nprevious records. In the afternoon a\nmarked improvement was noted, sterling octunlly recovering in full at one\nlime, while francs gained 5c to $.10,\nItalian exchange hardened in sympathy\nbut tho days developments offered\nfresh proof of the immediate need for\nremedial measures.\nThere was a marked increase of\nbond and stock sales for foreign account, this factor being logically in\ncomparison with the interntional situation.\nExcept for tlio first hour when prices\nwere lending downward and in the\nfinal dealings whioh witnessed another\nmeteoric rise in motors and kindred issues, trading was light and devoid of\nactual significance. Railroad shares\nderived fresh stimulation from favor-\noble statements of earnings and the\nspecialties rose on a, mixture of war\norder rumors and manipulation. United\nStates Sleel sold Up to 75%, 2 points\nover its early low, Total sales were\n1178,000 shares.\nBonds were irregular, due largely to\ntlm heavy foreign offerings. Total\nsales par value were $3.7&5,00O. United\nSlates bonds were unchanged on call.\nEXCHANGE  RATES.\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 1.\u2014The Royal\nRank nf Canada gives the following\napproximate sterling rate or exchange\nin Canada today:\nCables, 4;52; demand, 4.52; IKI-days\n-1.57.\nNew York exchange oil Canada is at\n1-1(1  premium.\nThe Consolidated Mining and Smelting Co.\nof Canada, Limited\nOfrices, Smelting ami Refining Department\nTRAIL;   BRITISH   COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPurchasers oi Gold, Silver, Copper and Lead Ores\nTRAIL BRAND PIG LEAD AND BLUESTONE\nTHE NELSON IRON WORKS, Limited\nPARTIAL   LIST  OF  SECOND-HAND   MACHINERY   FOR  8ALE\nENGINES\n1 6 x 24 Surfacer and Matoher.\n1 100 h.p. High Speed Ball.\n1 13 x 18 90 h.p. Slide Valve.\n1 12 x 10 75 h.p. Slide Valve.\n1 40 h.p. A. C. Motor, 2,000 volts.\n1 8 x 10 Mine Hoist.\n1 4M x 2% x 4'Duplex Pump.\n1 No. 3 Centrifugal Pump.\nt 20 h.p. Vertical Boiler.\n1 No. 1 Simplex Ore Crusher.\n1 Small ci.-i.ich Crusher.\n1 Gates* Grinder.\nSeveral large Gyratory Crusher\/*.\n1 Hydraulic Elevator.\nAND   MUCH   OTHER   MATERIAL-SEND   US  YOUR   INQUIRIES\nFOR   ALL   PEOPLE,   FOR   ALL   TIMES   AND   FOR   ALL   PURPOSES\nDaily News Display Ads\nFRANCE CAN PAY\nU.S. DEBT\nN GOLD\nCould   Send   $300,000,000   B  t   Interna*\ntional Dealing Is Not Carried on\nThat Way,  Says  Senator.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nPARIS, Sept. 1.\u2014-France eould send\nbefore the end of the war $300,000,000\nsold to the Unite dStates without affecting its financial position in Europe,\nsaid senator K. Almond today. Senator Almond Ih an eminent authority on\nfinancial questions and spoKesman of\nthe  finance committee  of  the senate,\n\"Whilo we can do this, and will do\nit If America insists, he continued, \"\non this side consider that the greatest\nservice which can he rendered France\nIs to co-operate In establishing the ex\nchange market which the Americans\ncan do to their own advantage as well\nas to ours by granting a loan, the pro*\nreeds of whicli would pay for supplies\npurchased in America. The only alternative is tn submerge American\nbanks with gold to meet all payments,\nThis we can do as easily \u00bb<\u25a0\u2022 was done\na few years ago when the Bank of\nFrance sent $20,000,00 (Mo relieve the\nsituation in Wall street.\n''Gold is flowing from individual\nFrench purses into tiie Bank of Franco\nat the rate of ?lf!,000,0fl0 a week, whil\nthe peasants aro subscribing to the\nnational loan at the rate or f2,260,000 a\nmonth.\n\"There remains a balance against, n\neach month of about MO,000,000.\n\"France has besides the gold slock\nof -$86,006,000 in the Bank of France,\nanother gold reserve of $1,000,000,000\nin private hands. No pressure has\nheen brought t bear upon, these private stocks to bring them into,the national service but every gold piece can\nbe mobilized.\n\"Fn to tlie present tliis has not been\nnecessary. The government had not\nbee nnhiigod to call upon the Bank of\nFrance for any advances during the\npast three months The situation of\ntho finances of tho country notwithstanding the greal efforts during tho\nl.'I  months  of  war,   is  admirable.\n\"Although France can send $300,0.00,-\n000 of gold tn meet obligations near\nto that amount now outstanding, tho\neffect In the United States rrilgh be\nsomewhat tiie same as that upon tlie\nmythological person who was choked.\nby his own riches. Business is not done\ntoday without but with paper and what\nthe finances of both countries need is\nthai their paper be maintained by the\nequilibrium of exchange values.\"\nSuch is tho confidence of the French\ngovernment In its financial position\nthat It is understood it will consolidate\nal Jits war loans in one issue which\nprobably will be announced next\nmonth.\nMAKES S\nIE ON\nMAR\nEN\nKaslo   Man   Uncovers   Rich   Ore  After\nMany Years of Development Work.\n(Special tn\nKASLO, B. C.\n\"f the Mnrten\nfori; of Kaslo ci\nof labor hns u\nvarying    in    w\nIndies.    It I\nnf  711   feel,\ncent lead nn.\nsilver.\nS. W. Cle\nto   Zwlclty\nsmelter.\nexp\nTl\n-tie Daily News.)\nSept. l.\u2014.1. A. Carter\ngroup on the south\nelt, afler many years\ntovered a pay chute\nHi from four lu IS\n'Keel for n distance\nore carries 77 per\ngh as 1711 (unices in\nis packing tlio ore\nnsportntlon  1..  the\n>\u00ae$$$\u00ae<S>$\u00ae$$<\n.. METALS\nMETAL   QUOTATIONS.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nNEW YORK, Sept. 1.\u2014Lend: At St.\nLouis, A.ViM; at New York, 4.S2%; at\nMontreal, 6.-S5; at London,   C22 lis 3d.\nAt London:   Speller,   .C72.\n\u00ab>\u00ab>e\u00ab><S><8><S><S><\u00bb-s><8><s><5><S.'S>'S><s,<S>\n\u00a9 \u00ab\n<S> GRAIN -s>\n<8>-$<S>$\u00ab.\u00ab>\u00ab>e><&$><s>\u00ab><s><S><8>iS>.S>-$\nCLOSING GRAIN  PRICES.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nWINNIPEG, Kept. 1.\u2014Wlieat: Oct.,\nS8'\/,; Dec, 88%: May, 04%.\nOats:  Oct., 34!4.\nFlax: Oct., $1,431*,;  Dec., (1.4314.\nMinneapolis: Wlieat: Sept., 02; Dec,\n!l2';i; May, 87Vf,.\nChicago! Wheat: Sept:, 91194; Dec.\n!)3%l  May, 1)7%.\nCHICAGO STOCKYARDS.\n(By Dally News Leased Wiro.)\nCHICAOO, Til., Sept. 1.\u2014lions, receipts, 22,0110; steady to fie h'gher; bulk\n11.50 at 7.00; light, 7.70 at 8.15; mixed,\n0.40 at 7.00; heavy, (l.tri at 7.75;, rough,\n0.15 at 7.55; piss, 7 al 8.25.\nCntlle\u2014Receipts, 6000; strong to 10c\nhigher; native beeves, 0.25 at 10.35;\ncows and heifers, 3.15 at 8.115; calves,\n8.50 at 0.25.\nSheep \u2014 Receipts, 10.000; li I\" 10n\nlower; wethers, 5.70 at 0.30; ewes,\n3.7fi at 0.50; lambs, 7 at 9.30.\nPRICES TURN  UPWARD\nON  MONTREAL EXCHANGE\nLONDON, Sept. 1.\u2014Local stocks developed some activity and strength this\nafternoon wlien prices turned sharply\nupward, Bridge and Ames-Holden\ncommon providing tlie principal features. The morning trading was dull\nand prices were wractically at a standstill except for some fractional Improvement In iron and Steel of Canada,\ntoward noon, after both stocks bad\ndisplaye dearly heaviness. New buying In tho afternoon seemed to givo\nconfidence, Iron moved to 43Vi and\nclosed at 43% bid, against an early\nlow of 42 and 42% at noon. Bridge\nrose from 142 to 143 and -finished at\nthe best with a gain of 1&.\nA 9 Per Cent. Investment\nWE HAVE   BEEN- ASKED TO OFFER FOR SALE ANY\nPART pi? TEN  SHARES\nGREAT  WEST   PERMANENT   LOAN    COMPANY\nA    STRONO    CANADIAN    COMPANY   DOING  BUSINESS  FOR\nWER  THIRTEEN   YEARS\nPaid   Up  Capital  and   Reserve   $3,079,326.00\nHas    Paid     Dividends     Semi-Annually     Since     1908    at\nNine   per   Cent   per   Annum\nThere Is over (60,000.00 worth of this  stock  held by\nNelson people.\nWE   OFFER  THIS  STOCK   AT   $100.00   PER   SHARE\nST. DENIS & LAWRENCE\nWARD   STREET\nNELSON,   B.C.\nWHEAT PRODUC\nIS MUCH\nTotal  in Countries Available to  Allies\nI      Is   Over  400,000,000   Bushels\nGreater Than Last Year\n(By Daily; News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, Sept. I.\u2014A cablegram received by the department nf agriculture today from the International institute of agriculture gives (he following crop reports;\nRumania\u2014Wheal production, 108,-\n773,nnn hiiRbfiln, nn inc.rpn.Rfl of 135 per\ncent over last year; rye, 3,150,000, increase of til per cent; barley, 23,700,-\n000, decrease of 'I per cent; oats, 24,-\n6-10,000, Increase of 3.4fi per cent; corn,\n110,232,^00, practically tlie same as last\nycar.\nTiie total production 61 wheat in\nSpain, Greal Britain and Ireland,\nItaly, Russia In Europe less Poland,\nSwitzerland, United States, Canada\n(wlnlcr wheat only), Tunis, Japan, India, Denmark, Netherlands and tin-\nmania is 2,703,000,000 bushels, compared with 2,231,000,000 bushels in the\nsame countries last year. Rartel, same\ncountries, less India, and Canada-,\nl,01R,fl08,000. an increase of 17,8 per\ncent over last year. Oatf-J In tlie same\noouritries, as for barley, less Japan,\n2,li7'1,1)00,000, an increase of 28 per cent.\nRye in the same countries* as for oats,\nless Kngland, Scotland and Tunis,\nl;Otil,7(M,0OO, au increase of 18,7 per\ncent.\n0 00 0 0 0000 0000000 \u00ab>\n0\nPRODUCE 0\n0\n0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0\nEGGS ElflM.\n(By Dally News Loased Wire.)\nMONTREAL,   Sept.   1.\u2014Butter   unchanged; eggs firm at yesterday's quotations;  cheese steady,\nCheese\u2014Finest    westerns,    12%    at\n13%;  finest easterns, 12% nl  13.\nButter:   Choicest  creamery,   28%  at\n\u25a07i; seconds, 2iy., at %.\nIdgffSi Fresh, 27 al. 2X; selected, 3G,\nPork: Heavy Canada short mess, 29;\nshort cut back, 28%.\nBUYING GENERALLY SMALL\nAND  FOR  INVESTMENT\n(By Daily News Leased Wire,)\nTORONTO, Sept, 1,\u2014The diameter\nof the trading; in stocks locally is unchanged, Aside from a. few issues tlie\ndealings are in small lots for investment. Slight declines were noted in\nDominion Steel, Scotia and General\nMice trie, -while bears covered to a\nsmall extent ln Steel of Canada. In\nWall street war issue;\nand this had some inftii\nCanada closed at \\ or a\n1  point for the day.\nCanadian Pacific clos\n150% bid. Consumers'\nat 183 to 184. Mackay\n78 and Russell preferre\ntber advance of 1 point.\nMoney is quoted at li\nTotal   business  aside\nshares,   amounted   to   1\ngainst 1220 yesterday,\nstrong\nnee.   Steel\nel advance\nvA lower at\nis was firm\n\u00bbscd firm at\nide a  fur-\nii call.\nin   mining\nshares  as\nin*\nPROSPERITY RETURNING BUT\nMUST NOT GET CHESTY\nRailroad Vice-president Urges Moderation\u2014Big  Rush of Wheat Middle\nof This  Month.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nWBNSNEPJflO, Sept. l.-~-\"We havo a\ngood crop and prosperity for the west\nis returning. Now there is one thing\nthat we havo to watcii and that is to\nseo that we do not get too much wind\non nur chests. That is what troubled\nus before and see tho result. Let the\ncountry go ahead as it should but do\nnot let us get tlie idea that there is\nno other country on earth.\"\nThese were a few of the remarks\nmode by Morley Donaldson, viee-presi-\nlent and general manager of the Grand\nTrunk Pacific this morning on his\nreturn from a. iTdo-milc trip through\ntlio west,\nMr. Donaldson was optimistic about\ntbe crop and indicated that the bad\ncrop nloiitf tho Grand Trunk Paciflo\nwould not amount to a, 1-100 of 1 per\nent.\n\"Tbo Grand Trunk Pacific is now In\nsplendid condition to take care of the\nrush,\" said Mr. Donaldson. \"We have\n10 per cent more cars actually placed\nin the west now than we bad last year\nmd we are gelling more extro cars\nfrom tlie government all tho time. Wo\nalso have 40 per cent moro motive\npower with  which  tn  move the crop.\n\"The big rush of wheat will start\nllmut the middle of September, for\nnow threshing is going on all through\nManitoba and they aro getting started\nIn the other provinces.\"\nDIGNIFIED   RECEPTION\nFOR  PREMIER  BORDEN\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, Sept. 1.\u2014Plans for the\nception of Premier Borden on his\nreturn to the capital ore going ahead.\nMayor Porter has secured the cooperation of tin' board of control, the\nmembers of which are al! agreed that\nsome formal welcome should be given\nSir Robert.\nJn connection with this reception,\nhowever, there will he no noise or\nblaring of trumpets. The members of\nthe board believe that the premier under tbe existing circumstances would\nirefer that it should be a dignified\nand quiet function,  V^\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\nTlio teachers' meeting of St. Paul's\nPresbyterian church will not be held\nthis week,\nTlie long vacation ended Tuesday\nand tho office of the registrar .,f the\nsupreme and county courts at. tlie court\nbouse is now open from lft o'clock to\n\u25a0l o'clock.\nJ. Page, Shoe Repairer, Stanley SI.\n(1302)\nTaylor,   tbo   Tinker,\nshop 315 Baker St.\neneml   repair\n(1378)\nMiss Minnio F. Flebhor resumes\nlessons 1n Music, Kindergarten and\nPrimary, Sept. 14, 107 Baker St. (11152)\nNelson Brand jam is made from Hie\nbest Kootenay fruits and B. C. sugar\nby British Columbia labor. At. all\ngrocers. (1245)\nTho Ladies of Hie Maccabees wil\nmeet tonight, at 7:110. The Lady Com*\nmandor requests a full attendance, oi\nil. is election  ur officers (1392\nMiss Maud Fletcher will resume her\nclasses in pianoforto and theory on\nSept 1 Pupils prepared for Conservatory College anil University examinations lies, ftftft Kdgewood avenue,\nBiif.no J1--128 (1355)\nPRISONERS   IN   GERMANY\nIN   NEED OF  FOOD\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Sept. 1.\u2014By F. A. Mc\nKenzie\u2014 Returned prisoners have as\nsured me that \"tiring the final weeks\nthey regularly received all package\nsent. Ibem. Other responsible author\nli.s tell mo the German Red Cross\nnow LakiiiK great earn iii insure ii\ndelivery of prisoners1 packages, evi\nreturning many packages which ai\nmisdirected. Everyone agrees that li\ngifts of foodstuffs are absolutely n.-c*-;\nsary if tho prisoners arc to havo sui\nfioient to eat. Tliis is most sinking]\nborne out by the emaciated conditio\nof the men returned here.\nAdvance Showing of\nFall Suits and Coats\nThe early arrivals are like the first roses of the\nsummer, always the most beautiful and most perfect.\nOur New Suits and Fall Coats are the creations\nof New York's best modistes. As you know, we are\nbig buyers and when our entire power enters the\nmarket we get prices that are correct and styles\nbeyond reproach.\nThis means that you get a better deal, an easier\nprice and the rich cream oj the market's best.\nOUR   SUITS   HAVE   THE   ARTIST'S   IDEAS   PORTRAYED\nTHE    BREATH    OF   JUST   SOMETHING   DIFFERENT\n' %.\nOur Coats Are Superlative\nTITEY  ARE NOT  ALL  HERE  BUT   WHAT THERR  IS  WILL\nBE   WELL   WORTH    A  QUIET INSPECTION\nSUITS--$<5.00,   $22.50,   $25.00,   $27.50\nc6ats\u00bb$5,66,' $to.66,' $*5.oo, $20.00\nDaily News Want Ads\nRates for\npor\n.15\nClassified Want Ads\nAdvertisements   Under-   Any   Heading:\nMinimum   charge    25c\nfino insertion, per word   I*'\nSix    consecutive    inser\nword \t\n20     consecutive     inserl\nmonth) per word  \t\nBirth, one insertion   SOo\nMarriages,   one   Insertion    BOc\nDeaths,  one  Insertion 50c\nCard or Thanks  n<io\nEach subsequent  Insertion   25c\nDeath and funeral notice  $1.00\nAll condensed' advertisements are\ncosh in advance, otherwise ono cent\nper word per insertion straight.\nIn computing the number of words\nin a classified advertisement count\neach word, dollar mark, abbreviation,\ninitial letter and figure as one word.\nAdvertisers are reminded that it i.s\ncontrary to the provisions of the Postal\nlaws to have letters addressed to initials only, therefore any advertiser desirous of concealing his or her inden-\ntity may use a box at this office without any extra charge.\nTiie News reserves the right to pass\non any copy submitted for publication.\nAdvertisements ordered (T.F.) till\nforbidden, must be cancelled or slopped\nin person or by written order.\nSITUATIONS   VACANT\u2014MALE.\n(Say you saw it in Tlie NewsO^^\nNEI^n^T!M%T6YM\/.NT AGENCY\u2014\nW. Parker. :{(J!) Baker St., phone 283.\nWANTED\u2014Setter,    general   servants,\ncountry;   roan   to  tally and  grade;\nporter.\nSITUATION      WANTED\u2014MALE.\n(Say you saw it in The News.)\nMATUUKD S~WIKK, first class slock\nand dairyman, good teamster and\nrider wants situation Tor Nov. or would\nwork on shares. Apply box 1380, Dally\nNews. 0\u00bb>\nFURNISHED  ROOMS TO   RENT.\n(Say you saw it in The News.)\nCarbonate\n(1351)\nmJHNlSTIED   riOOM\nstreot.; central.\nFOR   KENT \u2014 Suites    of   furnished\nhousekeeping    rooms    la    Annablo\nblock.   Enquire room .12. (12-13)\nFOR RENT\u2014Clean,   nicely   furnished\nhousekeeping rooms;   gns   and  coal\nstoves;   terms   reasonable.    507   Silica\nstreet. (1293)\nK.   W.   C.   BLOCK \u2014 Housekeeping\nsuites and  rooms for rent.    Terms\nmoderate.   A. Macdonald & Co. (1244)\nFOR RENT\u2014Furnished  housekeeping\nrooms. Apply over Poole Drug Company. (13-1\")\nFOR   RUNT\u2014 Three   nicely   furnished\ni nis. sleeping porch and bathroom.\ngns,  etc., Hl't  Victoria street.    Phone\nFURNISHED SUITES for rent.   Apply Kerr Apartments. (1212)\nWHEI! REPliYINQ TO ADVHRT1SE-\nmrnls in Condensed Columns, kindly\nmention you saw It tn The Nows\u2014it\nwill  help you.\nTO RENT\n(Say you saw it in The News.)\nFOR RENT\u2014House, four rooms. Sin\nley street, seven dollars month, B\nim. Daily News. (13E\nPOP. RENT\u2014Six room lu\n210 Victoria St.\niKisr,\nMOTOR  BOATS AND  LAUNCHES.\n(Say you saw it in The News.)\nrOR SALE\u2014The Presbyterian mission\nlaunch on Arrow hikes, 21 ft. long,\ngood 5 h.p. motor. Apply Alex Sinclair,\nBurton City. (1357)\nIF YOU WISH TO P.irv or sell row-\nboats or launches, see ns; we arrange satisfactory prices. Boats and\nlaunches for hire. Motor repairs. Elford   Livery,   Nelson. (1300)\nWHEN REPLYING TO ADVRRTISE-\nments ln Condensed Columns, kindly\nmention you saw it in The News\u2014it\nwill help you.\nWANTED TO TIIADR\u2014Deeded property In New Westminster or Calgary for Trail city property. What\nhavo you to trade? Apply Nicholson.\nPocupine, B.C. (1354)\nFURS.\n(Say you saw it in The NewsO\t\nc. GLASER, Manufacturing Furrier,\nlias removed to 410 Ward SI. Now is\nthe best timo to have new fins mode\nup and old furs remodelled or repaired. You can get a considerable reduction during the summer,\nyour skin and fix your head.\n, tan\nWHEN REPLYING TO ADVERTISE-\nments In Condensed Columns, kindly\nmention you saw tt la TH- News\u2014it\nwill help you.\nPROPERTY FOR SALE.\n(Say you saw it in The News.)\nh^l^^VLlP^Uen'eral   store   and   lot.\nApply J. H. nines, Columbia Gardens, B.C. (1252)\nHORSES  AND  CATTLE\n(Say you saw it in The News.)\nWANTED\u2014Milch cow, Jersey preferred,  young.    Particulars,  W.  Rlxen,\nBox SOS, Nelson. (1372)\nWANTED\u2014Good ranch horso 1200 to\n1400 His; age 0 to 10 years. Give\nprices to W. Jacobs, New Denver,\nB.C. U3SS)\nFOR SALE\u2014Shetland pony,  suitable\nfor children   to  ride and   broken  to\nharness.   Apply Cooke-IIurle, Hnrrop,\nB.C. (1301)\nPOULTRY  AND   EGGS.\n(Say you saw it in The News.)\nFaU^S^Ud^X^w^imr^        young\nBuff Leghorn Cockerels at  $5 each.\nM. A. Annetits, P.O. box 14, Silverton,\nB.C. U354)\nSITUATIONS   VACANT\u2014FEMALE.\n(Say you saw it in Tlie News.)\nGIRL for general housework, 521 Car-\nonaln street. (1350)\nWANTED\u2014Girl    for    general    housework-.    Apply  52n  Carbonate street.\n(1371)\nWANTED-  General help, small family,\ngood i k;  sloop homo.   Apply sin\nSilica street. (1373)\nSITUATION WANTED\u2014FEMALE\n(Say you saw  it in The News.)\nYoTuNGTLAl5Y^wdTir~gt^\nand knowledge of shorthand wishes\nposition quick at figures. Box 1383,\nDally Nows. (13S3)\nWOMAiN\u2014Good plain cook and economical caterer wonts position :is\nhousekeeper, caretaker, etc. G I references from last employer. Apply\nbox   1290,   Doily   News.                 (1300)\nSITUATIONS VACANT.     ^^\nWAN-I'RD\u2014Mari-lcd   couiilo\" for   small\nhotel,  woman  as  cook  and   housekeeper and man as porter.    Particulars box 1350, Daily News. (1350)\nARTICLES FOR SALE.\n(Say you saw it in The News.)\nFOR*^SALE^--Rowhoat, new; Remington N'>. II typewriter, with tabulator,\npractically new. $73; Bllck typewriter,\nperfect, only $27.50. Musi sell. Write\nbox 201, Nelson,  B.C, (1301)\nFOR SALE\u2014From  1  to 2 Ions of well\ncured onions, medium sine; make me\nan    offer;    r.o.1).   Deer  Park.    Apply\nM.E.H.,   I \u25a0   Park. (1383)\nGET WISE nnd cut out, the middleman,\nSave thai Si.nn per thousand; buy\ndirect from llo- Arrow Lake Shingle\nCo., Nukusp. They deliver them anywhere. (1370)\nARTICLE\" WANTED^^^\nWANTED\u2014Good  camera and  22  repealer, musl he cheap and good condition.    BOX 1348, Daily News.    (1348)\nBUSINESS   PERSONALS.\n(Say you saw it in The News.)\nnTolsT un\"m1oss hn cnoiT^a^nSggago\nniul   express.    Prompt   and   reliable.\nDay and night.   Phnne 242.\n10. K. STRACHAN, 120 linker street,\nplumbers' supples, estimates free;\nwork guaranteed.    Phone 202.\nMISCELLANEOUS.\nWANTED\u2014To   rent    I   or   5 roomed\nfurnished   house,   modern.     Address\nbox 18-63. News. (1303)\nWANTED\u2014To  hire  piano,  good  tone,\nState terms.   Apply box 1301, Daily\nNews. (13(111\n'   ILL EXCHANGE Saskatchewan properly, monthly rental $30 for Fair-\nview property.'    Apply City  &  Farm\nLands, 002 Baker St., Nelson, B.C.\nl-iLfcLA ,   U3M41\n -\u2022 <A\nCtie Baa? fitm\nTHURSDAY,   SEPT.  2,   19\nUnequalled for General  Use\nW. P. TIERNEY, General sales agent:,\nNelaon, B, C.\nCars supplied to all railway points\nWe Extend\na Cordial\nInvitation\ni   \u25a0\nTo thc Woolen's Institute Delegates to our cily. Wo also\nask you to use our store as a\nresting place and to meet your\nfriends.\nCanada Drug and\nBook Company\nThe Drug Store that Is Different.\nF. J. BOLES, Mgr.\nMail Orders Filled Promptly.\nPHONE 61.\nLADIES',    MEN'S,     CHILDREN'S\nSunshade Hats\n20c. 25c. 35c\nTHE ARK\nNew  and   Second   Hand   Furniture.\nCheapest in the City.\nJ. W. HOLMES, Mgr.\nPhone L395 606 Vernon St.\nNelson, 13. C.\n\"   The earliest nt the good and the\n'best  of lhe -early.\nGolden Bantam Corn\nPer dozen   25c\nYellow Freestone Peaches\njper croie .., S1.00\nSweet Potatoes\nPer pound  IOC\nEgg Plant\nTor pound   IOC\ntomatoes\nTer bosket   25c\nCitron\nPer pound   4C\nJoy Bros. Stores\n416 Ward St. and Corner Josephine\nand Mill Streets.\nTelephones:\nWard  St., 149,       Mill St., h. 19.\nP. 0. Box G37,\n3kat\ncomes only when the \\ -\u00ab* nv\nEycfjlass Clips bold ttHhtVSajL  \\\nwhen you smile or whea ^r\"   \\\nyou frown \\\nAccurate Eye Test. Properly Ground\nLenses. Special Care to Fitting.\nThis work done by an\nEXPERT OPTICIAN.\nWe do not keep you waiting, We\nhave a fully equipped grinding plant\nand can do all work  promptly.\nJ. 0. Patenaude\nEYE  SPECIALIST.\nManufacturing Jeweler and Watchmaker.\nPAYS TRIBUTE TO\nCOL. KEMBALL\nSoldiers   of  5-lth   Battalion   Return   to\nHomes in Kootenay on Short\nLeave.\nThat in Col. Arnold Kemball tho\nKootenay Cougars have iho bout commanding officer in ihe province, in fact,\nin thc whole of Canada, was the ox-\n\u25a0preased opinion of one of tbe mem-\n<bors of tlie Tilth Kootenay battalion,\nwho arrived iu the city last night on\nlive days' leave of absence from the\ncamp at Vernon. The statement made\nin thp company of a number of his\ncompanions Wns met with applause.\nThose who are on leave and arrived\nin  the city last night are:\nLieut. t>. a. McQuarrle, Sefgt. W.\nA. Curran, Sergt. L. A. McMillan.\nJ,ance-C'orp. It. M. Rhodes, Privates\nD. D. Davies, W. Klfr.nl, ,1. Fisher. D.\nftk-Xnughlou, A. C. Butler, II. Andrews,\nF. jr. Dalyry'mplo, M. Bostw.lck, A. A.\nMasandrew, D. .1. Morrison, W. Cunningham, p. C, Bland, Corp. .1. II. Ens\nland. Sfirgt. D. f). Gillespie, Privates\nJ. S. Thompson, Sr., ,1. S. Thompson,\nJr.. E. T. Dallcn, II. D. Smith, F.. Hay-\ndon, J. J. Cowan, Kanec-Sergi. J. Quin\nand Sergt.-Major O. R. Matthews.\nThc following ha.ve gone, on to Ross\nland: Privates O. J. Lee, T. W. Scan-\ndon, A. Lcighton, E. Cooper, .1. Lee, C.\n1\\. Clay. \\V. pates, T. Hanna, W. B,\nWyles1, \u00a3>. Hunt, ,F. -Humphries, G.\nOdy,   N.   RnrierieU and M.   Bnrtgnn.\nBuglers .1. H. Radcllffe and T, Shen-\n\u25a0don of R company have gone to Fernie.\nCorp. R. Stevens and Pie. T. Memley\nihave gone to Slocan. Pte F. Moral\nhas gone to Marblehead, Pte. M. Camp-\nibell  has gone to Arrowhead and  Pri-\nOwner's Sacrifice\nThe owner of a half interest in\npiece of Inn-dness properly on Raker\nStreei has informed us lhat he cannot meet his nhligaliohs and will\nsell bis half inleresi in this property for $1,000.00.\nThlc property is revenue hearing\nand sold two years ago for\n$4,750\nSince wo have heen in business\nwe liavo never heen able to offer\nsuch a sacrifice and consider that\neven when prices return to normal a\npurchaser should easily bo able to\ndouble his money. Call and get\nparticulars and look over the properly yourself. You will agrco with\nus that this is a great snap.\nNcQuarrie & Robinson\n511 WARD ST.,\nNELSON, B. C.\nvales G. Lingaid and\ngone to Kaslo.\nA. La in ont have\nFARMING WONDERS NOT\nIN  HEAVEN, BUT KASLO\nTho caso of a woman who owned\nthree lots on which she had rasied\nsufficient garden stuff, fruit and other\ntruck to supply herself and family\nwidi all tho fresh as well iw canned\nproduce she needed, beside keeping a\ncow antl chickens and having- enough\nleft over tn make $250 through the sale\nof it, was cited at thc conference of\nthe Kooienya-Boundary Women's institute last night. Tbe delegate ro-\nsonsible for telling nf^this result was\nMiss Twiss. I'pou the conclusion of\nher narrative Mrs. George Howe of\nXelson arose and begged to be allowed\nto ask a question, The request heing\ngranted by the chair, Mrs. Howe asked\n\".Where nre those lots situated\u2014ii\nheavenV\"\n\"Xo,\"  replied Miss Twiss, \"in Kas\nlo.\"\nVISITING  SOLDIERS  TO\nSEE   RESERVES   PARADE\nIt has heen announced by Judge\nKorin, commandant of tlie Nelson volunteer reserve, that the members of\nthe Tilth Kootenay battalion >vho are\nat present in the city on leave will attend the parade on Friday night at the\narmory. The reserves paraded last\nnight 50 strong, the drill being in\ncharge Of Sergi.-Major Keith in tin*\nabsence of tbe commandant, who was\ndcuJned   out   or tlva  city  on  official\nbusiness.\nTho regular monthly meeting of the\ncouncil of the board of trade will be\nheld in the board rooms this afternoon\nat -1 o'clock,\nA FEW SPECIALS\nProson-inK   reaches\u2014Elberta--.   anil\nCrawfnrdH, -per crate  ....$1.00\nPlums, different varieties, ner\nbasket    :.,25c\nFresh Tomatoes, per liaskcl... 25<*.\nDuchess Apples, per box; $1.00\nFresh Torn, per ,dozen....... 25c\nCuCUtnbprfl, 2 dozen 25c\nPure II. G. Honey, per jar..\n40c\nJ. A. IRVING & Co.\nTHE GREAT SUPPLY HOUSE\nBaker   Street\nPhone   161\nGalvanized Iron\nIF   YOU   ARE   GOING   TO   BUILD   A\nBoat House\nCOVER    IT   WITH    GALVANIZED    CORRUGATED    IRON    AND    BE\nPRACTICALLY   FREE   FROM    FIRE   RISK\nWe Carry in Stock 6 ft., 8 ft. and 10 ft. Length!\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nWHOLESALE AND  RETAIL\nNELSON, B.C.\nI kelson News of the Dap\nOUTPUT GROWS FROM BASIC\nINDUSTRIES OF INTERIOR\nKootenay-Boundary     Lumber     Milts,\nFarms and  Mines Send  Out\nIncreased  Shipments.\nThose closely 'connected w!ith the\nchief basic industries upon which depends the prosperity of the Kootenay\nand Boundary district point out that in\nthe products of agriculture, mining\nand lumbering a heavy increase In\nshipments is tailing place.\nKstimates based upon the movement\nof agricultural produce of all kinds,\nincluding fruit and garden truck show\nthat before the season closes nearly\n3,000 cars will have been shipped from\ntho district to the prairies and the\n<-nast markets. A large proportion of\nthis will be shipped from the Okanagan valley, it is said. Tho number of\ncars already shipped is well over the\n1000 mark. Of this amount it is estimated that 75 per cent of thc shipments\nhavo come from the Okanagan district.  .\nTho largest individual shipments\nhavo come, it Is snld, from the Coldstream ranch at Vernon, whereas the\nheaviest shipment of vegetables,\namounting to about \"\"\u00bb per cent of the\ntotal, have come from Armstrong,\nabout IB miles noilh of Vernon.\nHay Production Increases.\nIn addition to the fruit and garden\nproduce shipments, another farm industry has developed extensively dnr-\ningthe last two years. It has 'been\nfigured lhat at least 2ftft ears of hay\nwill he Shipped from various points in\nIhe Okanagan and iCootonny-Boundary\ndistricts ihis season. As a result of\nthe embargo placed upon United States\nbay by Ihe government last, year, the\nranchers Ibrnughoul the province found\na market which had hitherto been undeveloped owing to tlie large fpi.'inl dies\nof hay that bad heen coming across\nthe lino.\nThis hns enabled the Brilish Onhim\nIda farmers io meet much of tbe bom\ndemand for hay with a prbducl which\nhas proved as satisfactory as the feed\nimported in tho past from the United\nStales. As a, result of ihe conservation of the Canadian market for lho\nCanadian farmer it is eslimated that\nlho shipments this year will show al\nmost a 100 per cent increase over the\nsamo period in Ifill. A hay market\nhaving been established it is expected\n(hat further efforts will be made by the\nfarmers of the province to supply Ihe\ngrowing demand nnd it is hoped lhat\nthis industry will lake its lace among\nThe most important activities nf ibe\nagriculturists of the interior.\nRossland Ore Ontpot Grows.\nOre shipments to the Consolidated\nMining company's Trait smelter from\nthe mines at itossland in June and July\nare estimated as being over 10,000 tons\niu advance of the shipment^ during the\nsame months of last year. During the\nseven months of 1014 ending witli July\n111, irifi,057 tons of wore wore shipped\nlo the Trail smeller whereas for the\nsame period during the present year\nit is estimated that L'32.ftftft Ions were\n.shipped, showing a total Increase of\nTS,r\u00bb22 tons to the end of July.\nFor the entire -district ii is figured\nthat tho total increase of ore shipped to\n'frail to the end of July amounted to\nover (10000 tons overt-he same period\nlast year.\nshipments from the Slocan properties, ii is staled, wero about. (iuO ions\nin excess -of last year at the end of\n.Inly. Tbis in ln spite or the fact that\nless concentrates are being shipped\nand that some of the largest shipping\nproperties in the district wero closed\nfnr somo months earlier in tho year.\nIn the Slocan it is claimed that mining activity has reached a greater\nhelghl than ever before. It is reported ihat at Sandon the payrolls of the\nmining camps inthe vicinity hicludo\nnearly 400 men and for tbe firsl time\nsince the fire which wiped out most\nof the town at the end of the big boom,\nthe hotels arc -finding it necessary to\nplace beds forthelr overflow guests in\niho parlors and halls,\nA largo amount of development work\nis being done with gratifying results\nand the mines lhat aro shipping regularly show a greater average tonnage\nthan at this time last year. Zinc shipments have tumbled considerably, but\nthis, it is pointed out, is explained by\nthe inability of thc zinc producers to\nget thoir concentrates treated in tho\nUnited States, the high price prevailing for the mineral having set all\nall United States mines to working at\ncapacity with the result ihatthe plants\nhitherto treating Canadian concen\ntrates on the other side arc loaded up\nwilh shipments from their own mines.\nCrops Help Lumber Business,\nIncreased activity on a large scale\nis looked forward to in the Kootenay-\nBoundary lumber camps in the near\nfuture as a result of the general loos*\nening up of the money market and tiie\nsplendid crop reports from the prairie\nprovinces. It is siatedthat many mills\nare getting into shape to turn out\nlarge quantities of lumber to meet the\ndemands of the farmers on the prairies\nwho will be compelled to undertake\nmore or less extended building opera-\nLions in the nature of farm buildings\nand Eranneries.\nWith almost all the important lum\nber companies working\", it is stated\nthat shipments of lumber during the\nyear ending Juno 30, 1915, have reduced the supply of lumber on hand hy\nlor-,000,000 feet, leaving only 3nt000,-\n000 feet on hand wilh which to meet\nthe expected increased demand. A\nstatement of the output of the principal\nmills during the months of April, May\nami June should give a fair idea of\ntlie volume of increase that Is being\nanticipated hy the lumbermen throughout IIr- disU'ict.\nTho Columbia Itivcr Jauntier company at Cascade cut and shipped G,-\n000.000 feet, the Otis-Staples company\nshipped 11,000,000 feet and the Crow's\nNest Pass company at Wardner ship-\npod 1,000,000 foot.\" The Adams Kiver\ncompany at Chase cut and shipped\nduring tbe three months a little over\n7,r.oo,ooo foot and the Okanagan Sawmill company at Knderby sent out\nit.t'.OO.OOO feet of commons,\nIt Is expected that for the three\nmonths ending Sept, 30 the shipments\nwill show a largo increase and extra\nmen are now heing put to work In\nmany of thc mills. The Otis-Staples\nmill, at Wycliffe, near Cranbrook,\nIs said to have put on a night crew. At\nCastlegar the Edgewood Uimbor company winch w*as closed down during\nJune ami July, having cut everything\nin sight, has resumed operations, as\nhas the Crescent Valley Lumber company, which has a capacity of 100,000\nfeet por lii-hom- day.\nThe bulk of this lumber goes to\nAlberta, Saskatehekan and Manitoba.\nHome Is shipped lo Ontario and a little goes to the United Slates. Certain\nmodifications of [lie American lumber\ntariffs recently placed in effect have\nenabled British Columbia, pole men to\noblnlii a market for their long poics\nin the middle western slates and a\nlarge number of cars aro now moving\nregularly via Portal and the Dakotas.\nSocial and Personal   \\\nS. A. Williams will leave today on\nthe const train for  Vancouver,\nA. If. Green left yesterday on the\nCrow boat on route to Edmonton.\nJudge Forin arrived in the city last\nnight from Itossland.\nrhilip B. Freoland of rhoenlx is registered at the Stralhcona.\nJames H, Grant wil> leavi* this morning for a visit to Creston,\nPLe. Scotty Thompson of the Kootenay 'battalion is In Xelson on leave\nfrom Vernon camp.\nThomas Huocalo of Perry Siding will\nleave on the Crow boat tbis morning\nfor Monsimin, Bask.\nMr. and Mrs. \"W. T. Stapolls of Toronto niy> visiting the city nnd are\nstaying At  tho  Hume.\nE. Af Maurer of Slocan City arrived\nin tho city last night and is slaying\nat tho Hume.\nMiss Mackay of Now York arrived in\nthe city to take charge of the millinery department at Smlllle \u25a0& Weir's\nstore.\nWilfrid Allen, for thc past five years\non the staff of the \"Wood-Vallance\nHardware company at Nelson, will\nleave this morning for Stavoloy, Alta,,\nwhore ho will take charge of his lath-\nNOTICE\nWI! WISTI TO NOTIFY THE PUBLIC THAT TRESPASSING on our property at .seven mile point,\nWHERE OUR magazine is located, ir forbidden.\nWE ARE COMPELLED TO  TAKE THIS ACTION DUE\nTO DANGER FROM FIRE.\nCanadian Explosives, Limited\nHouses to Rent\nFive*Roomed House, Modern, Latimer Street  .,..$15.00\nFive-Roomed House,  Modern, Carbonate Street, close in. ..$15.00\nFiv\u00ab-Roomed  House,  Modern, Carbonate Street, close in...$20.00\nFive-Roomed   House,  Modern,  Fairview   $18.00\nFive-Roomed  House,  Modern, Fairview, close in $12.00\nSEVERAL OTHER GOOD  HOUSES FOR  RENT\nYour   Inquiries   Respectfully  Solicited.\nCharles F. McHardy\nGREEN BLOCK, PHONE 13!. NELSON, B. &\nA.S.Horswill&Co.\nNELSON, B. C.\nOUR BULLETIN CONFIRMED.\nWe sell Wheatlotts, 10 lbs. for.4bC\nCornmeal, 10 lbs. for  40c\nGolden Ese Noodles, 2 pliers . \u2022 -25c\nWe carry all kinds ot Flour and\nFeeds; also   International   poultry\nFood and Remedies.\nPROMPT DELIVERY.\nPhone  121.\n\\ \"Makes more\n|       bread\nand better bread\nPURITY FL'QU\nThe Brackman-Ker Milling Co., Ltd.\nSEND   US   YOUR\nWE    GIVE    THEM    OUR     PERSONAL    ATTENTIOl\nGRADUATES   DISPENSE  THEM.\nOnly the  Best Drugs  Used\u2014Prices  Right.\nAGENTS   FOR   KODAK   SUPPLIES-FILMS,   PArERSj\nPLATES,   ETC.\nMAIL    ORDERS    GIVEN    PROMPT    ATTENTION.\nPRESCRIPTIONS\nf*ITV   flDIIP   Ofl    .ForDRUGS,STATIONERY,Neilson's\nIII I  I    UllUb   l*Us     Chocolates, Phonographs, Etc.\nNELSON'S BUSY STORE  PHONE 34 P. 0. BOX 1083\n8 wfir\nHotpoint Iron $3.50\nWe nro agents for all Hotpoint\nappliances, Mail orders promptly\nattended to.\nKootenay Electric Co.\nANNABLE   BLOCK.\nPhone 211. Ward St.\ncr's business. Tho staff of the Wood-\nVallance store Tuesday presented Mr.\nAllen with a handsome walrus hng as\na token of their esteem. For several\nyears ho hus heen secretary-! i-ensurer\nof tlie Nelson Rowing club, of which he\nwa.s ono of the most active memhors.\nIn 1012 he was one of the Nelson crew\nthat rowed at Victoria.\nMrs. Jessie E. Taylor will leavo to-\nlay Cor Minneapolis.\nMrs. William Saunders of Seattlo is\nvisiting tho city nnd is a guest of her\nsister, Mrs. M. H. .McQuarrle.\nMrs. S. O. Squires of Robson is n.\nvisitor to tiie city and is a guest at\nthe Stralhcona.\nO. F. Lei-toy of tlio geological survey\ndepartment, Ottawa, arrived In tho\ncity yesterday from tlio Slocan valley\nand is slaying at  tho Strathcona.\nMrs. John La mon t and her* daughter\nfsabel lefi this morning on tlie (.'row\nMont for .Moose Jaw where they will\njoin Mr, Lamont.\nA, W. McCune. A. W. McCuno, Jr.,\nand M. U. McOime of Salt Lake City\narrived in tho city yesterday and are\nstaying at   the  Humo.\nA. V.. Stanley, editor of tho ITerlloy\nGazette, reached Nelson last night and\nmet Mrs. Stanley, who came In from\nCreston, Mr. Stanley's former homo.\nThey will leave for Iledloy this week.\nON TAXES\nLnrgo Amount of Money Was  Paid in\nat City Hall\u2014Tax Sale Next\nMonth.\nYeatorday was discount day at tlio\ncity hull for ISM (axes nnd a large\namount oC money wns paid In by properly owners.\nPayments during August of taxes\nfor 111] and 1012 liavo also lieen heavy,\nUio total received having pleasantly\nsurprised officials at the city hall.\nThe nnnotmcement that a lax salo\nwill he \"acid on Oct. 'li for arrears I'or\n1912 and 1913 brought nn immediate\nresponse and lhe list of properties\nwhich nro to be offered has been reduced to a comparatively small one.\nROSSLAND NINE WANTS\nLABOR DAY GAME HERE\nThe members of tbe llossland oily\nb'md naturally possess groat musical\nability; Hut their lalcnl does not end\nthere. Sufficient ot its memhors to\ncomprise a good team claim to bo boll\nplayers of merit. They want a gamo\nwith a Nelson nine on Labor day. Of\ncourse they anticipate victory. There's\na chance of a gnmo on the local diamond and the local fans say it Is up\nto a. Nelson nine to cinch it.\nThe , choir of Trinity Methodist\nchurch will meet tonight iu tlio church,\ninstead of Friday.\nTbo Nelson Library board will moot\ntbis afternoon nt 5 o'clock in Ibe library buildings Instead of Friday.\nTho Nelson bugle bnnd will hold n\npractise at (ho armory nt 7:30 o'clock\ntonight. An invilntion has been extended to any new members to attend,\nIt. has been announced that the Ross,\nland cily band will visit Xelson ol\nSaturday and remain in the city ove'.\nthe holiday on Monday. Concerts have\nbeen arranged for during its stay, one\nof which will be given at the city park\nSaturday afternoon and anoLher on\nthe bandstand on Vernon stret on Labor <JW.\n*   Automobiles For Hire\nTill) to Balfour or Thrums nnd return  SI5.00\nTrip'lo Cily Power Planl, Crescent Valley, Shoreacres or South\nSlocan  and   return    S 10.00,\nTrip to llonnington Falls and return 88,00\nTrip tn Taghum Bridge and return   S4.00\nPassengers to or from Bonis and Trains, por passenger SOo\nPOTt   FURTHER   INFORMATION   INQUIRE   AT\nNELSON TRANSFER\nPHONE 35      CORNER OF VERNON AND STANLEY STREETS |\nWOMEN'S SERVICE\nTO\nTHE EMPIRE\n(Continued from Page One)\nthen he men and women. It was not\nso much, she said, the gains in territory on the hatlefield lhat spelled sue\ncess in war, hut the kind of men who\naro to core for the Empire after the\nwar is over.\nTlio task of preparing those men, she\naffirm-ill, was (oi^c ' of fllid |grea)test\nwhich lay in the hands of the women\nof the Empire. The tnsk of saving\ntiie children is a woman's task, she\nsaid, and it was a great privilege that\nwomen had the powor to do this thing.\nIt matters not whero a child comes\nfrom, or where it is -horn, that child\nmust be saved and educated and trained to liecome one of tho supports of\nUio Empire, said lho speaker.\nThero is also a. wide field outsldo of\nI lie homo for organised work, snid Mrs.\nMacmillan. Sho pointed out that since\ntlio development of Women's institutes\nworking as an organized body thero\nhad been loss and loss \"parochial cat-\ntiness\" which she said was a malignant\nform of local jealousy caused by various organizations working in tho same\nommunity, all trying for one result,\ntut hindering one another for the sake\nof individual credit. Women today, she\nkiimed, were carrying on thoir work\nn a systematic manner and on business principles, each body eo-operating\nwilh the other. The Women's institutes, she declared, were on organized\nmachine for handling social problems\nof all kinds.\nAnother way in whicli the women of\ntho Empire might help win the war,\nsaid the speaker, was by practising\neconomy. This is a real task, she said.\nA country lives and carries on its activities by means of the money which\nthe people save, and at a timo of this\nkind every woman should study economy in the household, in her dross and\nin her amusements. Tlie woman who\noeonomlzes, said the speaker, is pro-\nvidinfc the \"silver bullets\" which will\nwin the'Var.\nJn concluding Mrs. Macmillan said:\n\".Lei us not be among tho parasites\nwho selfishly take thoir comfort and\nsafety from the unselfishness of others. Women must encourage their husbands and sons to enlist, we must not\nhold them hack and cling to the safety\nof our loved one. We must lay out'\nmen on the altar of freedom and liberty for tho sake of the generations\nlo eome.\" W i*''il\nA paper on business methods for\nwomen was read by Mrs. Oonldwell of\nCranbrook in which she urged upon\nevery woman to run her household affairs on a business basis. She said\nthat: every woman should have her own\nbank account and issue her own checks.\nMany women, she said had incomes of\ntheir own derived from tlie salo of\nvarious produce raised by themselves.\nThe yshould, she said, manage .this\nmoney themselves. She also advised\nall women to learn something of la.w,\nto know how to draw a will and obtain\na knowledge of other matters of a\nlegal nature. Tho speaker pointed out\nthe value io a woman of being self-\nsupporting before marriage. Such\nwomen are the ones who ma.ke the\ngreatest success of domestic management, for having had money of their\nown on which to keep themselves they\nknow just how far a certain sum will\ngo, she s-aid-\nA number of delegates made reports\nStarland Theatre!\nYOU   CAN'T* RESIST   THAT\nLITTLE TWIST OF QUALITY\nThanhouser\nTwo-Reel   Drama of Mystery\nThe Menacing Past\nKeystone Comedy\nFor Better But Worse!\nDrair\nIn the Vale of Sorrow!\nTomorrow\u2014Eighth Chapter of\nTHE DIAMOND FROM THE SKY\nRED MITE KILLER\nExamine youl' poultry house toil\ntiioso posts, rid mites\u2014don't Wa$\ntill somo of your poultry dies.\nOur Red Mite Killer!\nhas proved to be the best, as.well ai\nthe cheapest,   Full directions.\nPint bottles        21\nQuart  hottles    ...5l\nPull imperial gallon\nsi.\nPoultry Lice Powdc\nFor lice on poultry etc., there 1!\nnothing hotter.\nIn large packages, each   35l)\nAlso Insect Powder, Powder GunJ\nBlue  Ointment.\nMAIL ORDERS FILLED\nPROMPTLY.\nRutherford Drug\nNELSON, B. C,\nDO YOU KNOW\nlhat tho balance wheel of y8Wc\nwatch makes moro than 150,000,00ft;\nrevolutions yearly?\nTHINK OF ITI\nIn time the oil gums tho delicate!\nboaiing\u00bb, their hlsh finish and pelS!\nfool fit, thus rulnlnir an accurst*\ntimo piece.\nYour watc hshould ho oiled on^l|j\nyoar.\nA. D. Papazian\nWATCHMAKER,  JEWELER  AND&\nOPTICIAN.\nconcerning the patriotic and\nwork done by the institutes durin;\nwar, showing that largo quantity\nelothos, hospital supplies, comforti\nthe soldiers and money had been\nloolod hy the various bodies and i\nnated through many of tho diffl\nsocieties handling sifts.\nThe two concluding meetings\nmstituto -will he held today, thi\nat 9:30 o'clock and the other\no'clock. An invitation has be-\ntended to the general public\ntend these meetings.\nCamping, Hunting, Outinf\nANX> FOR ALL. SPORTS\nSWEATERS   ARE   THE   THING\nfDlICK SEASON IS NOW OPEN |\nWE  HAVE   THE  SHAWL COLLAR, Tlj\nPULLOVER   OR   THE   STRAIGHT\nCOLLAR   SWEATERS\nSEE   OUR   WINDOW   POR ~SWEATI3I^|\nMADE  IN  B.   C.\nEmory & Wallej\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1915_09_02","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0386553","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights":[{"value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Nelson Public Library.","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"}]}}