{"AIPUUID":[{"label":"AIPUUID","value":"828e46a8-7005-4e68-b6e6-4d6258fd943d","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP","classmap":"oc:DigitalPreservation","property":"oc:identifierAIP"},"iri":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP","explain":"UBC Open Collections Metadata Components; Local Field; Refers to the Archival Information Package identifier generated by Archivematica. This serves as a link between CONTENTdm and Archivematica."}],"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"label":"AggregatedSourceRepository","value":"CONTENTdm","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:dataProvider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who contributes data indirectly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"DateAvailable":[{"label":"DateAvailable","value":"2016-07-26","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DateIssued":[{"label":"DateIssued","value":"1909-07-17","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"Description":[{"label":"Description","value":"The Nakusp Ledge was published in Nakusp, in the Central Kootenay region of southeastern British Columbia, from October 1893 to December 1894. The paper was subsequently published as the Ledge both in New Denver, from December 1894 to December 1904, and in Fernie, from January to August 1905. The Ledge was published by Robert Thornton Lowery, a prolific newspaper publisher, editor, and printer who was also widely acclaimed for his skill as a writer. After moving to Fernie, the paper continued to be published under variant titles, including the Fernie Ledger and the District Ledger, from August 1905 to August 1919.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:description"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An account of the resource.; Description may include but is not limited to: an abstract, a table of contents, a graphical representation, or a free-text account of the resource."}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"label":"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord","value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/disledfer\/items\/1.0182779\/source.json","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:aggregatedCHO"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The identifier of the source object, e.g. the Mona Lisa itself. This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"FileFormat","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"FullText","value":" m\nIndustrial Unity is Strengptb\nThe Official Organ of District No. 18, U. M. W. of A.\n\u25a0x-.xw\nV*\nPolitica.1 Unity is Victory\ni-\nVOL. IV. No. SO\nFERNIE, B. C, July 17tli, 1909\n$1.00 a, Year\nSOLDIERS TO SJAY\nWHILE TROUBLE IS ON\n\\\nGlace Bay Kicks on Expense But to\nNo Purpose\u2014Powers That\nBe Show Their Hand\nI*\nGLACE BAY, July 14\u2014The centre of\ninterest tonight was the town ha'.l at\nthe council's weekly meeting wh :n\ntho presence of the militia came up;\nThe town council chamber aad hails\nwere reinforced, by the crowd in tlie\nstreet.' It was expected that some\naction would be taken by the council.\nCouncillor McDonald moved'a r.-solu\ntion, a final clause, stating that In the\nopinion of the council, it will be necessary to retain the soldiers -until the\ncause of the disturbance has been removed. , _\u2022,.\nAs'soon as the resolution was beforo\nthe, meeting Councillor Tobin. 'arose\n-and' said that he was going to object,\nto the motion being put as it would\nha~ve to be treated as a notice of motion, but-it went ahead. Deputy, Mayor Tobin objected to the way in which\nthe riot act had been read,,the sheriff\nhaving been brought to Glace. Bay in a\nspecial train the night before and the,\nRiot Act having been read in broad day\nlight when- they was apparently little\nnecessity.\nHe spoke of the hardships \u2022 endured\nby the women last winter and extolled\nthem for their bravery. He said the\nsoldiers cost $1000 a day. The soldiers\nwere too much under the thumb of the\nCoal Company. *\u2022 Finally he moved an\namendment, that a meeting of ratepayers be called to consider the resolution and the question of cost.'-\n0\nap-\nCouncillor McDonald said it was all\nnonsense about the cost of the soldiers being one thousand dollars a day\nand gave figures to show that the cost\nto the town was no more than two hundred and fifty dollars a day.\nThe town's 181 special police\npointed by th mayor wll cost iain, evidently\n'' The regular meeting , of the City\nCouncil was held last night, at the conclusion' of the tug-of-war between the\nBurns Company*and the brewery, the\nmayor and\", aldermen, who are only\nhuman after all, refusing to, attend the\nmeeting until they saw the conclusion\nof that sporting event.\n.All members were present and considerable * business was put through.\nThe Imperial bank, Mrs. Jennings and\nthe 41 Meat Market were,given sixty\ndays extension on their temporary\nbuildings.'' It was decided to make\nthe watenyorks bridge over the Elk\nriver four feet wider than the original\ndesign, and the contract for this alteration, was given to Broley and Martin\nat $575. The provincial government\nis to pay half of the cost and upkeep\nof the bridge. ,\nAir. A. J. Farquharson was appointed fire warden for two months at a salary of ?75 a month. , The Elk Lumbor company will share the expense\nequally with the city.\nMajor James Sheppard, the, good\nroads man, sent out by the governmen*\nwill address the council shortly on; the\nsubject of the proper construction 0\u00b0\nstreets and roads.' - \u25a0\nTHOUGHTLESS ACT\nDROWNS YOUNG MAN\nYoung Men Canoe Racing-Drawing Alongside When Upset\nBody Not Found\nasked, if he h&d7anything to\n:*rett replied: ^Yes, ' I 'would\nANOTHER ACCIDENT\n\u25a0 FORT WILLIAM, Ont. July 12\u2014 C.\nCoombes, a fireman on board the Sa-\nronic, was drowned in the Kaministi-\nquia yesterday -morning opposite elevator C. Co'ombes had been on short\nleave the night before and had missed\nhis steamer.in the morning which had\ngone to \"Isle Royale. He then went\nto'visit a former mate working 611 the\nRosedale and it was this ship that\nhe fell into the water. As he never\nrose from the water it is surmised that\nhis - head must have hit the side of\nthe boat probably rendering him un-'\nconscious before reaching the water.\nThe body was recovered after grappling for it for an hour and a half.\nCHANGES IN LEGAL CIRCLES\nSeveral changes have, taken \u25a0 place\nrecently in legal circles in aUiis city.\n\u2022Mr. Alexander of Ross & Alexander\nMsJ3\u00a3en_ai)piLinIed_goxexnman*Lagent\"\nand has ceased to be a member .of the\nfirm. -Henceforth W. R. Ross K.C,\nM.P.P.; will continue to handle the\nWINNIPEG, July , 15\u2014Fred Dixon,\nan exhibition visitor from Kelwood,\nManitoba, lost his life on the Red river yesterday through being upset in\na canoe a short distance below Norwood bridge. .Dixon was a slnglo.\nman 25 years of age and came 10 this\ncountry from England 12 years ago\nHe had resided for a number of years\nin ihe Kelwood district and was employed on the farm of Albert llearn,\nwitli whom lie came into the city on\nMonday to visit the exhibition and take\npart in thc Orange celebration.\n' Yesterday morning Dixon,' llearn,\nand a party of other young men went\non the river in, a row boat and returned safely. Dixon suggested that in\nthe' afternoon they should take the\ncanoes anil have some fun and challenged Cliff,, another member* of the\nparty,-to a race.' . -\n-After dinner Dixon, Cliff, Hearn ami\nDuncan McTavlsli accordingly hired\ncaones from the boathouse at Norwood\nbridge and paddled down stream, Cliff\nand Dixon leading. About 200 yards\nbelow the bridge Cliff and Dixon were\nclose together and Cliff reached \u2022 our\nand took hold of Dixon's canoe to>pulI\nit closer alongside hisowir. As he did\nso both canoes* were upset, but both\nmen were good swimmers and had no\ndifficulty in-getting hold of their-ca*.\nnoes. ' - .\nCliff asked Dixon if he was'all right;\nand Dixon, who appeared to be enjoying the mishap called out: \"Yes, I am,\nall right.\" _ \u00bb\nCliff then struck out for the St.\nBoniface shore, which is only about\nforty feet away but before he reached\n(he land he heard his companion shout\nfor help and he swam back to his assistance. \u25a0\n\u25a0 Dixon had in some way lost his hold\nof the canoe and was In difficulty and\nCliff swam to him and endeavored''io\nhelp him ashore. He got hold of the\ndrowning man but both wore their usual street clothing and shoes he wa:;\ni,i,able to effect a rescue.\nThe' two men saik tw:'3 and \"Jiff\nthen lost his hold and-Dixr.n disap\npeared, while Cliff, win\": xim, by this\ntime much exhausted, ^ ..ggl-'d for\nthe shore.\nThe body has as yet noi, boen p'Civ\neied.\nDROWNING AT MELITA\n.MELITA, Man. July 12\u2014A sad\ndrowning accident took, place this af- \u2022\nternoon at River park. Two boys,\nDouglas Hay and Roy Badgley were\nswimming in the river near the railway bridge when the latter' got beyond his depth and was drowned in,\nabout four feet of water. He was 9:\nyears of age. His' father is at present about 80 miles west of,Moose Jaw\nSask., but has been wired for. ,.s\nHADN'T RIGHT OF WAY\nWILEYS, Colo. July ,1,1\u2014Nineteen\npersons riding on a hand car and a\npush car, collided on a curve In Platte\ncanyon, on the Colorado and Southern\nrailway last night with a freight train.\nTwo persons were killed, two wore\nfatally injured and all were seriously\nhurt.\nEDMONTON, July 14\u2014Up until\nmidnight last ovoning after fifteen\nhours of riding tho country, to Iho\nnorth of the city, tho posRes of Mo'inl-\nod Police, and penitentiary guards had\nfulled to dlficovor any trace of tho\ntwo convicts, Johnson tho big negro,\nand Atchison, tlio Mooso Jnw criminal who mado tho Bonsiitlonnl escape\nfrom tho penitontlnry yards yesterdc.\"\n\u2022\u25a0fioriilng, whon tlioy climbed ovor tlio\ntop of n high bonrd fonco HiiiToiiiHllnr,\nlho ground** niul got away Into tin\nIjiihIj boforo the fonco ruiu'iIb, whoso\nrll'h'H jammed and sovornl tlmoR re\nfiiHO.I to go off could glvo the warning\nto the offlclnlH limlilo.\nDuring llio afternoon n roport cnmo\nto lho ponltentlnry that llio (wo\nci'lmlniilH Iuul boen night ed by tlio on*\ngltinoi' of tlio packing plant crowing\ntlio big H'owt'i' which niiiu from tlio\nplant to lho rivor and heading oiihI*\nwnnl, ,\u25a0 Tlin Honrch wiih bout In thnt\ndirection nnd for iiovcrnl lirinrij unlil\nhint ovoning Mounted Polico Honrch*\ncd ovory liicli of Dw ground to tlio\nen nt of tlio packing plant Imi without\nHiicciiHH, mul when Dw pohhoh return*\nii*(i(1.< \u2022\u2022 Tl i \u2022 \u25a0 ' '\n(Iiir ho, Hint tlm r-'iifimi tbey repudiated [ Stockott nt HoHiuer on Kridny, but no-inn-* e,,ii.ni*|(n< \u00bbt \u00ab.\u201e-,,,..*'\u25a0,.\u2022.\u25a0 \u25a0*,\nStM*. Treat**. A. J. Carter and Org-\nnnlwr T. Jnm*** left for Uof-mc-r end\nHlllerent Inxt nlffhf on offlrlnl bun*\nInftti,\na.'riuu.it uiutuiK m iiu-'UUio the llulereiil\niiiuiiiiRouieiit did not open tlio mine,\n(.Ride from the pSI!;.r\u00ab, aftt.r the\nUKieenioiil. wiih hIkii- 'I, hh did all tho\nother compiinlen. but declared Hint\n.ifi.ie.-. t-.mil rtowii mm. inn men iikm-hjI'iu'.v would not open ihe mine nt nil\nOne Girl Slipped DraKeing the\nOthors With Her\u2014-Tide\nCarries Bodies Out\nVANCOUVER, July lii\u2014Holdlnu;\neiirh oilier hy the hand and attompi'UK\nto wiulo into deep wnter to swim. .Mini\n(iertrude AnkorH and four of hur pu-\npIlH of the llrownvlllo nebool near N'i w\nWeistiiilnt'iei', wen* drowned yoHii.-iduy\nafternoon.\nThe flvo were ini'inherH of a Sunday\nHchool picnic puity, and had been three\nIioiii-h on thn bench of lliirrnrtl Inlet, 12\nmllcH from Vancouver, when they decided to ko In hnthiui*. All donned hn-\ntiling siiltH and with the 1 earlier In\nHie centre I hoy walked out KiwnrdK th.-\ndeep Wlllef, ,\nSuddenly a ulil un the end Hllppeil\nover n leilKe liuil lorn her fooling in\ndeep wilier. She pulled tbo oiIhth one\ntiller nniiihei' and nil were carried off\nby I lie tide,\nTheir Hcrciiiiui hinit'-ht a number uf\nbather*, from a illiilance, but hy the\ntime they raiclied tlm place the \u25a0.-li'li*.\nhad i1Ih[i|ijii>'ii'ci], .\nMinx Afild'I'H liudy wiih I'eciiveicil ;d\nter hall' an hum Imi mme of the oiliein\nlilt.\" heen (iiIIImI\nThe four clijii'iij. iioid me Annie\nmul Mny .Murphy n-jyil 17 niul If. re-\nhpeclUelv, MlnlelM: ,\\l:ce |'iil|Nu|i :it;eil\nI*.' aiid SU-nl Illicit, hki'iI Hi,\nMIhh AulidH win* about LTi je.n-s nt\nane and ihe oui*. diumbii'i- of a \u00abt*>-\nemploy e,\nShi' iih well iih the Mi-iHcH Mm ph.*\nwere unlive daiit-MciM of New WtM-\nKm* nolbtliK definite Iiiih I-c'.-ii decided, i would probably nut recover. \"I'm _\nHomo Hfioctiliitfon will be Indulged In |left nn Tluirtniny cvchJuk'h river for!\nas.to how UiIh tiiiii ft nffaliij will nf-jihere. He took bin wife and cliil.tre,.! JUMPED OVERBOARD\nfoci Hie 1.1'inU'iix net in the event of; with him, nn he expect., to he awtiv j N,':w YOIIK, July l'l--Knrl'w' \\*l\"\u2122vM\u2122\\\u2122\u00bbr\\ntm rail nml \u201e life buoy wan !,\u201e\u201e,.\u201e,.\ndny ,,lRln by H.-v. It. W. l.-e. U!-.,,,., ^ \"\"^ \"'^ ,,,,!'-;,'l,U '\" '\"* ^ '\u00bb\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0 ; \u00bb\"'-\u00bb)\u25a0 M.n.wi, lo nun. tolli.wcl by Ihe\n*d by Rev Wllllnmion mid I 'V |I,,\",,,,\"H ,ho ^\u00abrftl''\u00bb\"\u00ab'. \"\"'I Dw il>'vll;iniinr|i|nR of n life boat, which tondn\nby\nOulnney\n**-o<(k j tafa-o the clinlr and the prr*r.*.*dii an\nI\n\u2022KnlolHtH. Itl'V lll'llllt w|Jtl\nat our e:,tV'und luii-ii,, !\u201eue ,,ll I..-.-ii.ih-i| iih m-iitcIi for i,>-.iily an hour itml\nworkiiiK on cem.iii mlxInt.* thU week, j never once rhi Klia-lii of blm. Soniody\ni-tolnK dcvoied ,\u201e ,be buillim,- fu.-d. ^\\ \"5\" rf \"\u00ab '\" U% \"\", \"? \"\"'V\" \u00bb \"\u00ab'\u00abm. c.f Au.-iiu aud wa. I\u00ab*\ntamplo ot what naynen can do In tfiej j. <;. Mrrall.m. pf Cr-inbrooV win ial^mo Hhould miss H,Ih .rot, \u2022,,,...*,,. \u25a0!\" ''\"* \u201e \u00b0f h,;'r, \",f,\"> \u00bb\"\u25a0' \"-\"\u2022\u00bb'\"\"'-jtl-v.-.I frmn hi. a.ii.ms ,\u201e..\u201e\u201e,\u201e tll\n.h\u00abp\u00aborBrowln\u00ab. A cucutnber about SJFornlo on Tuc'Iy * t\u00abH \u00ab\u00bbd tav. a pl,...ni le ur \u201e,\u201e- a\\^U' \"'\" \"\u00b0 \"\"\" *\u00ab'rkm'\" (\" '\u00bb' !ro,nm.\u00abtl,iK ,l,e d-cl.to *,.\u201e,. b,,u Im\n.halt ot i-ntcrtnlninont.\njthere\n'\u25a0\u25a0'*\u2014-* \u25a0\u25a0**-\u00bb..\u00ab,\u25a0\n' tt\nPAGE TWO\nTHE DISTftlCT LEDGER,'FERNIE, B. C. JULY 17 1909\n*W>&&*&&&mt&9!l>*&&&tt&'m<3L*&l893gt!&t\u00bblGlS'^*&^'& t^eTt>^99^9i*^*9<99*WtS*'\nLIBERTY\n' There is much discussion nowadays\nconcerning freedom of speech and\npress.\nWe are witnessing today the birth of\na new tyranny.\"\nCapitalism is reaching its height and\nis endeavoriiiK. like all past tyrannies,\nto deprive the people of their rights.\nOne can hardly take up a paper these\ndays without Anility*; some instance of j\nRovernmcnt oppression and editorials | not secure\ntook from the Americans in his railway\nspeculations.\n. Warren Hastings did, . not despoil\nHindustan of as great treasure as Ryan\nand Belmont looted from the traction\nlines of New York.\nLucillus spent 8,500 dollars on a single feast and was considered extrava\ngam, but now that much is often expended for the single matter of flowers\nat swell parties.\nCaesar when he conquered Gaul did\n:is great tribute as .1. P.\nthereon. \u2022 ! Morgan secured from manipulation of\nThose wise editorials declare we' ihe. stock of the Central railway in\nshould of course, insist upon freedom! Georgia.\nof speech, of press, and of assembly,. Sulla levied a tribute of 25,000.000\nlint ihai does not mean freedom to at- dollars on-'tho conquered cities of\ntack the government, Iho authorities Greece, but the sugar trust in one year\nof the ruling class.\n, They declare, we should of course\nhave freedom to speak and write, but\nnot to preach anarchism, socialism or\nother subversive doctrine.\nApparently in the minds of most\nAmericans there is much' confusion.\nOne is constantly surprised to find certain people tacitly approving the action, of a lawless public in denying to\nsome unpopular person the right to express his or her views.\nBut if liberty of speech and of press\nmeans anything, it means that any\nAmerican citizen has the right to say\nwhat he pleases.\nHe may. attack the government, criticize public officials and advocate any\nreform, revolution or doctrine.-'-\"'\nlie has the right to believe in any\nreligious, political, or economic doctrine.\nBut freedom of speech and of press\ncarries with it a responsibility.\nIf any man says that* which causes\ninjury to another, he may properly be\n' held responsible for what he ha!s said.\n\u2022 If he urges violence and someone is\nmurdered as tlie result of his words;\nhe maybe held responsible.\nIt \"lie utters a libel, wrongly accuses\nanother man he may bee held responsible.\n_^Me___arfi_assu_rcd freedom of action,\nbut- if, I\"commit a theft,-, assault or\n''murder another,'I am held responsible.\nThat does not infringe upon any liberty which I should wish to possess.\nUnder thc constiution of the United\nStates a man may believe what lie\npleases, preach what he pleases and\nwrite what he pleases, But If what he\nwrites or preaches causes another to\nlose,life, property or reputation, that\nindividual has the right to take action\nagainst the preacher or the writer in\n\u25a0 question.\nOur police, army and various state\nexecutives have no right whatever to\n\u25a0 interfere with any man who expresses\nhis or hor views upon any subject\nwhatsoever.\nThey aro criminal and lawless when\nthoy attempt to Interfere with the\nfreedom guaranteed under the constitution of the United Stales.\nFor tho polico to stop Emma Gold-\nmnn from sponklni*, and lo hound hor\nwherever sho goon Is for tho polico to\nact. us hoodlums and lynchers.\nThe postal authorities net ns criminal!* when they refuse tho malls lo\ncertain political publications.\nTho president, of the United States\nIs a tyrant, when ho drums up absurd\n(iliUfgoH to crush a pnper which opposes his political views.\nIl Is moiiHli'iious that any American\ncitizen should applaud lho police when\nll forces Its wny Inlo a hall lo censor\nlho speech of any man or woman In\nthis country.\nTho niitborilloH have power to net\nwhen Injury Is done.\nIf n Soelnlim libels nny man ho can\nhe held responsible. If ho goes forth\nInto llio si reel ami prom-lien Insurrection lie can be held responsible.\nThe lnw provides a perfectly lentil\nmul hod nf proleciliiB Ihe rlglils of\nany elll\/en Injured,\nThe IhkiiI method, however, does not\nant Inly l|ie mttlint'itlcH.\nlevied a greater tribute than that on\nthe people of the United States.\nPizarro did not secure by torture of\nthe Incas of Peru as much as Harriman\nhas recently gotten from the people of\nAmerica, and the sufferings entailed\nby his worlc, exceeded the sufferings\ncaused by Pizarro.\nCleopatra dissolved in wine a pearl\nvalued nt 400,000 dollars, and the\nworld wondered at her wicked extravagance; but in New York it Is comparatively common to squander as much\nat a supper and nothing is thought of\nil.\u2014Exchange.\nin him. A man of the loftiest type of\npatriotism, etc.\" \u25a0\nWhat's this to do with the-tariff?\nNothing. And .Mr. Wage Slave, who\nreads this, the tariff has nothing to do\nwith you. It's your master's business.\nLet him worry ovei; it aiid fight about\nit. I have mentioned it only to show\nyou, who deserted the party of your\nclass and voted for the political servants of the capitalist class, what you\nvoted for, and how little you \"can expect from them.\nYou will got a subsistence wago,\nwhen' employed, and charity or starvation when unemployed, whether that,\naugust body of senators , doubles the\ntariff rates or abolishes them entirely.\nTariff debates, corporation tariff, and\nother rot of like character, tend to take\nour minds otf the only issue before the(\n'working class now, and' that issue is\nthe abolition of the capitalist system.\nWork for it! Vote for-it!\nREVISION DOWNWARD\nBy Horace S. Reis in Chicago Daily\nSocialist.\nThe approved Republican method of\ngetting elected to office is' to promise\nthe voters something. It doesn't matter, afterward, if the promise is forgotten, the foolish votes having been\ncast.\nMr. Taft a strict, party regular, followed this plan when he was a candidate-for the office of president last\nyear.\nHe promised to have the tariff revised\u2014 downward. He got many .votes\nfrom those who believed in him, and\nwho,thought that a revision of the tariff, downward would make 'cheaper tlie\"\nthings they must buy.\nVoters who did not understand that\nthe function of a class government is\nto protect the interests of the ruling\nclass. The antics of the senate, at th''*?\npresent writing are teaching these\nvoters that the capitalist class wants\nthe senate to revise tlie tariff, upward .\nAnd Taft's campaign promises? Oh,\npshaw, what's a promise anyway. The\nonly use for his old last year promises now Is to furnish a few words of\nargument to Senator Beverldge why he\nwants a peculiar schedule lowered. As\nfor Senator Oildrlch\u2014bogjiis pardon\nAldrich\u2014and the majority of the senate, they'proceed calmly on their way\nto the upward revision, coolly Ignoring\ntho pledges of their party nnd its last-\nyear's standard bearer.\nSays Collier's Weekly, editorially, In\nIts Issue of June 19: \"It la President\nTaft, not tho senate, that must mnko\ngood to tho peoplo. The fionnto made\nno promises. President Taft must olth*\nor voln llieblll to prove to the pooplo\n.... that tho tariff bill which he\nsigns is a substantial revision downward. , , , Let there be no mlslako\nnbout the facts. In the sonnto tho\nlnriff Is not being revised downward. '\nIJut President. Taft will nol velo the\nbill. IIo'h instructed. Ho Is not qunr*\nrolling with Aldrich, tho senator who Is\nbroil-ting his promise foi' him, but. no-\ntuiilly (IIhciibsIii*** with Aldrich somo\nfenltires of Dm bill,\nlie knows whose monoy eloeied lilm,\nMR. GOMPERS SAILS TODAY\n' Robert Hunter: Samuel Gompers is\nto sail today for a trip through the\nchief countries of Europe to attend several important congresses of labor.\nHe will be.treated with consideration\nand respect by the labor, and Socialist\nmovements of Europe, because he represents two million' of American work\ningmen.\nThe journey should be an instructive\none. From the time he touches for\neign soil until the day he sets foot in\nNew York again he will find no work\ningmen with caps in'their hands.\nIn England he* will see one million\nfive hundred thousand trade unionists\norganized for \"political action. He will\nsee men from field, factory and workshop fighting Liberals and Tories, determined to lake government in' iheir\nown hands and to run it for the common weal. ' \u25a0 **\nIn the chief cities of Great Britain\ner he'will meet face to face a single\ninjunction, and' from one end of Bur-\nope to the other he will not find a sin*\ngle trade union discussing or considering the voting of money to employ\nlawyers to fight, losing battles in an\nenemy's court.'\nWe are glad Mr. Gompers is going\nabroad. We trust he will meet tho\nchief trade union leaders of Europe.\n.We hope he will discuss with them the\nmethods they are now employing for\nthe emancipation of labor.\nThere is a crisis in this country. La-\nhoi* lias nothing ahead of it but irritation, anguish and defeat, unless It\nadopts new methods of warfare. .\nThe American Federation of Labor\nis'now the only large body of workingmen left ln any white man's country accepting voluntarily political servitude.\nA BUNCH OF QUOTATIONS\nThe following quotations are made\nfrom Plechanoff's work entitled \"Anarchism .and Socialism.\" Unless otherwise stated the paragraphs are written\nby Plechanoff himself,\n\"There are many of the younger or\nof the more ignorant comrades-who\nare inclined to,take words for deeds,\nhigh sounding phrases for acts, mere\nsound and fury ,for revolutionary activity,' and who are young and too\nignorant, to know that much sound\nand fury, indicate nothing.'!\u2014Eleanor\nMarx Aveling.\n* * *\nNeed for Industrial Organization\n\"Recent events in the labor movement in Belgium, France, Russia, Italy\nand America have made all thinking\nSocialists realize that revolutionary organization on the economic field is,\nto say the least, equally, as essentia! as\nrevolutionary organization on the political field. But, the two methods of\ncombat are not antagonistic, ,but mu-\nhe will find trade unionists sitting on j Uia-->' supplementary. They must be\nthe boards of aldermen. In London he'.uscd simultaneously and it is not ne-\nwill visit the house of commons and he. C(?SSill,J'.. ,to harmonious co-operation\n.thaLthere_s_hould__be organic \u25a0 connec-\ntion between the apolitical and economic organizations*of the proletariat.\",\nPage 2 introduction, Robert'.Rives La-\nMonte \\.\n> , '\u25a0 \u2022\"\u2022*\u25a0*# *' v\nMethods \u2022\n\"All,weapons are good which accom-.\npllsh our aim, and if the ballot prove\na failure we shall not hesitate to resort\nto other weapons, even to powder, lead\nand dynamite\n- * * *\nThe Utopian\n\"The Utopian is ono who, starting\nfrom an abstract principle, seeks for\na perfect social organization\"\n* '\u2022* *\nHuman Nature\n\"It Is not human nature which explains tho historical movomont; it Is\nIhe hsltorlcal movomont which explains human naturo.\n+ * *\nThe Basis\nThe gront revolutionary pnrty of our\ndny, tho International Soclnl Demoe*\nracy, Is baBOd not upon somo new con*\n\u25a0wiiniTO~th\"ereTam-er\"s~gas\u2014workersr\nengineers. ,-.\nCrossing'the channel into-little Bel-\nglum he will be received everywhere in\nhandsome spacious \"Houses,, of the\nPeople.\" He will attend meetings\nheld in halls owned by the people; frequent cafes owned by the people; be\ntaken to theatres owned and conducted\nby the people. He will find the workers of Belgium owning shops and factories, ond producing for themselves,\nand selling to themselos the necessaries of lifo. He will find alongside a\nstrong trade union a political organization controlling mnny towns and send\nIng a brilliant fighting force Into' tho\nparliament li^ Brussels.\nIn France he will find the workers\nwinning groat vlctorlos. He will visit\nn hundred or more towns in Franco. He,\nwill visit a hundred or more towns In\nFranco, He will be presented with\ntho key to thoso towns by trade union\ncomrades, In Pniis he will find n\nhost of brilliant men .fighting for thn\nrights of lnbor In ono of the Inrgost\npnrllnmentH of Europe, If ho chooses\nho may nit down aftor tho day's worl\u00ab|coPt,on of 1,uninn natu,,\u00b0- \"or \"I5011 ftI'**'\nand talk with Gustnv Delory, a man mb-atract principle, but upon a sclent.-\nwho iwo years boforo ho wns elected tlci*'-*v demonstrable economic nticoss\nAGED COUPLE\nFOUND DEAD\nLooks Like Murder-Burned to\nHide First Crime\nNEW YORK, July 13\u2014An aged couplo who lived on the outskirts of Dw.\nvillage of Patchogiie, L. I. supported\nby a weekly allowance from a son in\nNew .York, wore burned to death in\ntheir bed early yesterday.\nThe victims were Townsend Our-\nrity. aged 79, and his wlfo Cy,.lhia.\nwho was ust SO.\nThe police are disposed to believe\nthe old people were the victims of a\nrobbery and Incendiary, but neighbors\nthink that a lamp which Mr. and Mrs.\nGarrity kept burning in their bedroom, all night may have started the\nfire.\nWhen the firemen arrived from the\nvillage, a quarter of a mile away,\nthey found Peter Zetklatich, the landlord, who lived on the first floor, outside the house and the doors locked.\nHe was arrested and will be held till\nthe case is cleared up, although his\naccount of the fire and his escapo by\njumping through a window is accepted as a creditable explanation.\nATTEMPTED TO SLAY FAMILY\nST. LOUIS, Mo., July 13\u2014Deranged\nfrom insomnia, Gustave Krause, aged\n56 years attempted'.to.exterminate his\nfamily early'today and then committed suicide.,\n, Declaring he-would' slaughter,his 9\nyear old son, Krause tied him to \u00bbs the\nbedpost and thon beat his wife into\ninsensibility with the butt of a rifle.\nThe boy managed to free himself and\nescape from the house while his father\nwaTTRa^lfliri^SlrsrKrause: *\"*\t\nWhen he thought he had killed his\nwife Krauze leaped on the muzzle of\nthe gun and discharged it with his toe\nkilling himself instantly' \u00bb .\nMrs. Krause regained consciousness\nand staggered into the yard' where\nshe was found by neighbois who had\nbeen summoned by the \u25a0llltl.-Tboy' She\nwas taken to a hospital and is in a-eri-\ntical condition.\nSteam heated throughout*\nHot and cold Baths.\nThe King Edward\nFernie's Leading Commercial Hotel\nRates $2.50 and upwards'\nJ., L. GATES, PROP.\n*\nA. .Rizzuto\nJ. Ckaivford\nFernie Livery, Dray & Transfer Co.\n\" i\nICE FOR SALE\nContracts Taken' '-\nIncluding Stump Pulling, Land Clearing and Ploughing. Lot us\niiguro on ymir next job\nRubber Tired Buggies, New Turnouts\nmeaW*a&a______w*mw\nRlZZUTO & CRAWFORD\nAFRAID OF INDIANS\nVICTORIA, 13, C. July 11\u2014Rev. A,\nE. Green, inspector of Indian schools,\nwho arrived here today says residents\nin tho Skeena district regard the discontent of tho five hundred Indians ln\ntho river villages as likely to \u25a0 cause\ntrouble when tho rivor navigation enda\nand the majority are preparing to send\ntheir womon and children oiit,\n '-mt**. L,\t\nTHE JULY HOME JOURNAL\nmayor of the groat city of Lille was\nbreaking stones for tho pavements of\ndial city. ,\nIn Swodon, Domini ik anil Norway lio-\nwill find ri movomont littlo short of\nmarvelous, I He will find tho trillion\niiiiIoiiIhih inllltan', and till of them\nSocialists, flllod with n passion for hu\nmini advancement and working-with\nand why Teddy took lo Iho woods, I nc rod! ble energy and ability\nHaving boon a judgo ho Ikih lonrned\ntohiiPPOHslty of furnishing aniplo tariff and otlinr protection for liifant. industries like tho oil trust and the Htcnl\ntrust. ,\nNot that hc'ii obliged to tlii'Hi-\ni'i'iihIh In any wny for IiIh olocllon; oh\nporlKh llio wli'kod thought! Hni ho\nIn ordi'i* to crush one wlinni Dwy iloj wo-n'i I'h'.lit tin1 m*niili\\ tlio liiiiimviilih\nnot Ilii\", llioy filvi* 'un*'.r i\" li'Mi'in* wi'iniio, tin'Hiuinii'thnt ii'ituilliili'H hlin\nIty\"\nRIP VAN WINKLE\nlu IiiwI.'sm iiiiiI criminal ni.'il'ul.i.\nHut thoy know nol wim'.|lii*y do,\nLllWll'HHIH'HM lll'Oi'llH lllWluKHIli'HH, II-\nt'i'iiK<\\ llri'iiHo, iiiiiI when niii'KOvi-nijiu*\niiiilliui-|i|i'S *\u25a0\u25a0'*'' I'lHlroly mn nl' linud,\ntlll.y Will CIIII.HI* till' HHIIH- I'i'IK'liflll In\nlhiii .\u25a0otinlry Hint Iiiih oxIkI-'iI\nduriii*.' llio hint ilui'iidtm.\nIn Kii'ihIii\nmid his word to tho pi-npli*, Ami If Mr.\nTiifi Ik In (licit iiifri'Miioiit with tlmt\nbill wink of iln- iriiKlH nnd if iik ii con-\nHi.'i|iionri' IiIh uonl lux nines a litit--.li-\nIiik Hloek nnd a Juki' we un.' forced to\nIlii\u00ab cimi-'liiiilon Ihnl Mr. Tiift Ih hiiIIk-\nfli'll lo lldV\" It so,\n11' tin.' wilier uiuU'i'i* ii promlm* niul\nIn Gci'iniiny !io will find moro trndo\nunionists than ho has ever soon In one\norganization, and alongside tho trad.)\nunions ho will find a Hoclnllst party\nDiado up of lho hii inn mon working In\nporfocl ciHiporntlon, for,tho political\naiid.ilniliiHlrlal iiilvnnc.oniont o f labor.\nIn evory town ho visits ho will find\nki-oiii.'SoidiillHl uowi'pn'piirH, publishing\nIioiihoh, and all die otlinr iwiicIch Hei\ncoHsiiry for thn inoiilal and moral iln*\nvelopni'itit of the worlsei'H.\nIn Austria ho may vlnli Vlclor Ad\nler, oil'*- of the ureal men now living,\nwho Iiiih unitod the iriuln union nud\nHoiiIiiIIhi. fori-OH Into one fl-jlnlm*. body\nHint knows no illffoi'iuu'on. Iln will\nfind nil llm iialloiifilllles lu that coun*\nThe people have Hover resorti'il to; Infer dneii nut |-['i'|i It, or even try to (try united undor one flag, fighting (<\u25a0\u2022\nkeep II then the writer Is n lliir,\nIr Mr, Inn uimn:**. \u00ab tiM.w..\", !\u00ab\u25a0\u2022'..\nill,.*., .tin. !.''<\u25a0'' '.<\u2022\" '' \"\"t Veep It. or\n\"\u2022\u00bb\u25a0'\"\u2022 until\u25a0 force has hi'i'll liotH'H'.'iry, ;\nXiir have ihey fulled to uso fni*(.;u i\nwin- in tm giiveniini'iii. iiui.fiuiiii.'i, Inm;.\nilmiiiw'lveH lieioiii\" liiiidoi'K and \/'-inn*iovi.-ii .illi-.'iiiil to )'''<'l' It. dicn Mr. Tnfl\n\u2022 'iiteib of lattli'.sMie.-.:; and lyranny. - ' Ih n good Unpnlillcnii and n gentle-\nliy Robert limner lu llm ('hlcugo Dully!mini,\ntir-Hiili**!'-! ! If the writer were to run for nfl'lc'.\n . m. .\u2014 , .mill li> lliitniHK )n.\u00ab\"*a ,\u2022\u2022'\u2022\"-' \"-'\nTHE LOOTING OF AMERICA, tfie-**, and hiler Ignore Ilium' pidmlseH,\n- .... Ihe would bo guilty of plnylm; mtieii\ngolhnr for lho omn.icip.Ulon, lntol1.-i!\n1.,..'. ,.;.! :i:!il'\".'!'.il *''f Mm ilMnWIioil\ni\nline'.'.\nIii Italy ho will discover Just ono\nprogroHHlvo foreo\u2014tlio KikiIiiIIhih nml\ntho trndo unionists. Mom too lie will\nfind loopiiratlvi-'s and powerful un*\nI..,,..- .,\u201e.t\u201ei,r-tiui riu-nl workers*, nf ihe\nlinnl,\nIndeed In no place In Mtirope will\nUlp Van Winkle roturned from his\nlong sloop looking' fresh ns n daisy,\nand made his wny to tho vlllngo bnr*\nbor shop, not only bocauso ho noodod\na hair cut and slmvo, but also becnuse\nhe wished to cat oh up with Iho nows.\n\"liOt's soo,\" snld ho lo tho harbor,\naft or ho was wifely tucked In tho chnlr\n\"I'vo boon fisleup for twenty years,*--\nhavnn'l I?\"\n\"Yos.\"\n\"Have I missed much?\"\n., \"Nope; wo bin hIiiihIIii1 put.\"\n\"I Inn Cnngi'OHH done anything yut?''\n\"Nol a thing,\"\n\".loromo done nnyihliiK?\"\n\"Nope,\"\n\"Plait resigned?\"\n\"Nope.\"\n\"I'liiiatnii (,'niml liulll?\"\n\"Nope.\"\n\"llryiin been elected?\"\n\"Nopo.\"\n\"''\u2022irimglo poor?\"\n\"Nope,'\n\"Ferule post offlfif- built yot?\"\n\"Nopo,'\n'Weil hii),' \u00ab.ilil U!i\u00bb, '.W.'.-.n in IV\nchilli, \"i.eviT mind htinvlntr the other\nside of my face, Im going hack lo\n\u00ableep itKnlii.\"\n\u2014- Hucposs,\nThero Is such an abundance of good\nthings in the July Homo Journal' that\nIt is difficult to say just what tho O'U*\nstanding features aro.\n\"Tho Dominion of To-Day\" tolls of\nthc wonderful growth of Canndn from\n1807 to moo. The now serial'story,\n\"Tho Mystery of Harry Ingram\" by\nAnnio S. Swnn, stnrts In this number,\nTho oponlng chapters glvo promlso of\nIts bolng ono of tho host stories over\noffered to Cnnndltm rondors,\n\"The Awnkenlng\" Is an ox'bolloin\nshort story of n dream that cnmo true.\nMany girls havo ambitions to become)\nwriters. Tliolr IrouhloB and porplox*\nItleu aro told In brief In \"The fllrl Who\nWants to Wrlto.\"\nWomon nro coming to tho front, as\noxplorm'H and n short, sketch of lho\ntravels of Miss Agues Dnans Cnnmron\nIn Northorn Canndn Is very mitoi'lnlu*\nIng, \"Wanted, a Homily Comhlim,\"\nIs ii splendid nrllclo ad vocal lug tho retaining of lho nnturnl homily of our\ntnwiiH and villages' II. Is nxcolliMidy\nIllustrated with photogrnphH.\nTlio whole Ihsiio Ih prol'iisoly lllu-i-\ntrilled. Tlm cover Is an excellent re\n\u25a0proline!Inn In colors of \"Tho Violet\nLndy\" by ('uniidn'H foremost ail 1st, W.\n(Jooili', who also contributed iho \"Summer dlrl,\" whicli Is printed In colors In*\niildo.\nThis magaxliio tins Improved recent*\nly ne lwii'li Mini mnny lonillnir ftnn*\nnillnn women nro rending tho Homo\n.lnuriijil In preforonco lo foreign pub*\nllcnllons.\nHARDWARE\n\u2022A full line of .shelf and heavy '.Hardware in stock together with1 a\n' complete range \u2022 of Stoves\nFurniture Department\nOur Furniture Department embraces the\nmost unique and up-to-date lines.\nCome .in and have a look \"*\nJ. 3D. QUAIL\nFERNIE, B. C.\nTHK\nPOLLOCK WINE\nCO., LTD.\nWholesale Liquor Dealers\nA PUI.t. 1.1X15 ALWAYS IN STOCK\nNORTHERN\nHOTEL\nWin, Eschwig-, Proprietor\nNew and up-to-date\nHandsome Cafe Attached\nOPEN DAY and NIGHT\nSUBSCRIBE FOR THE LEDGER,\nAlberta S\u00a5ow\nCase Works\nMnimfiK'tiu'ei's of\nSTORE FIXTURES\nCalgary, Alta.\n\u2014^\u2014^\u25a0m.\n\u2666\u2666\u2666 +\u25a0<*+++++\u25a0++++-&*>'+\n!\nFernie Dairy I\nFKESH MILK\ndelivered to all\nparts-} of the town\nDOBSON & WILLINGHAM .\nI PROPS. \u2666\nK9mbXlt*tX*A*,$4\".4kia***e ,*i4m~*-f*t' tw****\nMum-in lmn ii.oi'c money In nn iuul | in>llitcn. lie would be ft clicnp\ntiiii|f|iililcii iimn mi,v pluio.ni! In I'i-iih , Wlu-n Mr. Tiifi run for llio\npoMii'SHcil. Iili-m-y, tiiHl'Ing public promlm-H'ln lho\n.lulin Hni'i'i-MI.-r!-, annual lncomo U '\"'\"''\" nf mul by Dw rulvlcc of IiIh par-\nliirgiml, fortuno of an ji>* Mint Dw iiirlff ivoiilil be i.\".l;;cil\nliliiM'iiwni'il lie wns clerti'il. He\nini\n111! \u25a0\u2022\u2022\u25a0!\u25a0 I llllll Km .\n|(l( t \u25a0\u25a0,,,],,, ' iliiwnwni'il In* wns clerti'il. Df nud liln\nAlexander Ktilnod Iobh liy hit* <:oii-jln\u00bbuoMibl<' vntty will nm \u25a0\u2022vi-n mi.-mpi\n.,,,.. ,,.'\u2022 M-v-t Hum ili\u00ab* Vftiiili-rlilli.il ilowiiwnnl nh|m\u00bbI. Munu.\/.iitiinj'-n brnadmln-lort. fnlr. Iinpiuilul num.\nnt Riich km-iii in-null*.-. U-Vafuy Ctinlil 'with Dw btdltltl Icr-ipi-rniriciiMiitifircii*.\nlar. j Mr. .(tntiipoi'H flm.'hii orwiilxnlloii ho\npniHl-j lidplcHH iih Ihul which Im Iiiih left lm\nlilml lilm In ureal. free Anierlcu.\nTito cnpltiillHtH Ium-i.1 nro (ylnu lilm\nband mul foot, jjIih-Jdk Ma nn-ii In\nlalitn'kli'H, li'KlKlntlvc, Juillclnl iuul executive, , \u2022 |i\n.Vowlioro In .'.itrop'i will ho flrul llm\nworl.liisiiicn Kcndlnt' tlii'lr ropn-Honln*\nthen tn pitrliiiiiifiit, lo Iiok. hut tu\nliutiil. for IcrIhIuHvi- JllHtlCO.\nFrom one oml of Kuropo lo tlio old\n\u00a3E&!&I\u00bb IH IM I***\n,*\u25a0' '\nGreat Northern Raily\nFast Time and\nGood Connection\naaaa-m-nmm-m-maMmwmmm-*aa-mmmmm-mmm-^\nTo All Points East and West\ni i.i i nn \"i --iniun - inn\u2014i -~\u2014-~\u00bb\u2014 i-OTrT-rOTiir^****^^ '\nLeave Fernie 1.00 p. m.\nArr. Spokane 11 ,,\nOnly 24 hours from Fernie to Seattle and Vancouver\nH. L. BLACKSTONE, Agt\nERNIE\nJ\nAYER'S HAIR VIGOR\n(tops fFaOIing Hair\nAycr'x Ihlr \\'l\u00ab'\u00ab* l\u00bb compojed of lulphur, jlyccrln. qulnln, wdluni\nchlnrlil, c-.~p-.lcum. naite, nlcohol, water, and perfume. Not a tingle\nInjurloiii liHiri'dK'nt I.i tills lif.t. Atk your doctor If this It not to. .\nFollow hit -ulvlce. A hair food, n hair tonic, a hair dreitln-Z.\nPromptly diccks falling hair, Comr't-lMy detlroyt ail dandruff.\nAYER\u00bbS HAIR VIGOlt1\nDoes molt Color thc Hair\nJO.\n(Tt* (V>V*1WT, T***ll. MMi.\nutancjrjrxmm\nSinger Sewing Machines Co.,\nFornie, B. C.\nMMN\u00abMM**att^^\nII\nWhy be without a Sowing Machine when you\ncan get one for $3.00 a month ?\nJ. P. HOULAHAN. Agent, opposlto Goal Co.'s oflico, Pollnt Avo. l .'-.J*\nm\nI'iPi\nTHE DISTRICT llEDGER, FERNIE, B. C. JULY 17 1909\nPAGE THREE\nI\n\\\nXT)\n\u25a0v\nA\nA'\nMB\u2014\u2014I\n^r Made from\n;cream \"ol tartar, derived solely\nfrom grapes. All the ingredients\nof Dr. Priced Baking Powder\nare printed on the label They\nare pure\/ healthful aiid proper.\n, \"a\nWhen baking powders are peddled or\ndemonstrated, examine their labels. You\nwill find they are not made from cream\nof tartar. You \u00ab. don't want them\nPrice's\nCream\n8aftii]gf\nIn what way will Jesus judge the\nworld? , y\nVerse-32.\u2014 Why did., some mock-\nwhen they heard of the.resurrect'on*?\nVerses 33-34\u2014Did all who were u\\ie\nto God accept Paul's message, anil\nwere all untrue to God who rejected\nit? ' - \u25a0 '\n:, Lesson for Sunday, Aug. lst, 1909.\n\u2014Close of Paul's Missionary Journey.\nActs xviii:l-22.\nBIBLE STUDY COMPETITION\nNO SIGN OF A\nSETTLEMENT\n*\n\u00a3\nfn Jl Ci 7 i Suggestwe *\nt ounaay school options -.\u00a7\nOn the Lesson by the Rev. Dr. Linscott for the International\nNewspaper Bible Study Olub. \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2022\u2014\u2014\u2014\u00bb=\u2014\u00ab\u2014\u2014\u25a0\n\u25a0K\n\u2022K \" *\nkirkkkkkkkkirkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkirkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk\nJULY 18, 1909\nPaxil's Second Missionary Journey\u2014\nTli'ossalonica- and Berea. Acts xvii:l-\n15.\nGolden Text\u2014Thy word liave I hid\nin my heart that I may not- sin\nagainst thee. Ps. cxlx.ll. \"'\nVerses 1, 2\u2014Is church going a good\nN habit, and \u201ewhat do those lose whc\nhave not formed it?\nHow many, times a day should a\n, person attend church?\nWhat is the value of. a good habit,\nand how are good habits formed? \u00b0\n\u25a0\u25a0 Verse 3\u2014Did Paul mean to say that\nit was necessary for the Jews' to have\nput Jesus to death, and if not what did\nhe mean? (This question must be an\n\u2014rs were d \"I n\"\"w r i t i ntp'by \"m e m b e rs~of ~t h e*\ndub ) ' ' \"\n' (The position tal.en, by the present\n\u25a0writer is, tthat the Jews ought to have\n, accepted \"Jesus, and that tlioir putting\nhim to death is the colossal'crime\n\u25a0of history, aud the calamity of calamities that, lias befallen the Jews, That\nthere are two distinct lines of contingent prophecy In the Old Testament\neither one ,of which being fulfilled,\nwould cancel the other*; nnd that the\nprophecies concerning the perpetuation of the Jewish nation ancl. tho\nthrone of David,_ with unparalleled\nsplendor, wero cancelled by the fulfillment of those concerning the, rejection of Christ. God sent Jesus In\ngood faitli nnd they voluntarily rejected him, when God's first and beat,\nplan was that thoy should nccept lilm,\nGod then proceeded to do through tho\ndentil of Christ, thnt which would\nhavo been done more Hpeodlly by hia\nlife) ,\nIs It nccoHsnry for us to adopt all\nPaul's opinions In order lo bo woll-\nplcuslnp! to God?\nWero all Paul's opinions correct, con\ncoming the time of tho second coming of Christ?\nIn whnt sense was lt. truo \"1,1ml\nChrist, must, nooils lmvo Buffered?\" Soo\nT.nlco xxlv:20, ,Ior. xxlll:5*G, Mich. v. 2,\nMutt. ll.-l-O.\nIn what, wny tlo tho Old Tostnmoiit.\nScriptiiro\u00bb boar testimony that. Johuh\nIh tho Christ?\nVoi'boh \u2022!, \"i\u2014How do you account for\nIs Hint tho snmo fuels and ronsonliiR\nwhich convert a some only serves to\nhnrdon otlioi-R?\nHow Is It thnt women nro Ronornlly\nIn tho innjorliy In ClirlHt'n convorlH?\nWhy wero tho .Town moved with\n. jealousy?\nCun n Jealous mnn, nl llio tlmo,\noil hor ho n I rno mnn or n coitucI roii^\nHonor? .i\nHow do you ohuinolorlzo n pornon\nwho Ih Jniiloiw of another In doing\nHood worl-H?\nIluvo wi> nny modern example of thn\nwny (Iioho pooplo net oil?\nVow) 0\u2014Ih Hie world loilny upiildo\ndown, or rlnht Hlilo.up?\nIn llio world uotlliiB bottor or woi'hd?\nVoi'ho 7\u2014Whon peoplo oppoxu tho\nwork of God, do thoy Kuiiunilly i-onflii'1\nthoniBolvoH. lo tho tdu.i) In tliolr objections, or ||lo thoy over confine tliom-\nHflvoH to thn truth?\nDo ohjoctoiH to tho truth knowlnxly\nfalsify or do thoy do it. lu blind tenor-\nunco, or throiiKli i)i'0jiullce7\nVurncH 10-12\u2014Ih thero ever nny vlr*\ntllO 111 OXPOHIUK OUI'HI'lVOH |tO dllllKOI',\nwhon It Ih not nocou\u00abnry In tho inter*\nohIh of llio truth?\nWhnt wnn tho difference liotwonn\ntho rollgloiiB peoplo of Thoimalonlo'i,\nnnd those of lloron?\nIn n truth Beokor miro to find It?\nIh It over right to oppOBO tho truth\nli*. the li.tevc-.sl.-. of the Kingdom of\nGod?\nV\u00abiHun l?,*ir\u00bb\u00ab- What la U which\npromps mon to work no hard, nnd\npersistently In oppoBlnR whnt thoy\nknow to ho tho lruth?\ni Lesson for Sunday, July 25th, 1909\u2014\nPaul's Second Missionary Journey. \u2014\nAthens. Acts xvii: 16-34.\nJULY 25, 1909\nPaul's Second Missionary Journey.-\nAtllens. Acts xvii: 16-34.\nGolden Text:\" God is a Spirit, and\nthey that worship'Him must worship\nHim in spirit and in truth. \u25a0 Johniv:\n24.. ' ' ' \u25a0\nVerse 16.\u2014Can any true man, at\nthis time, see the folly and sin which\nthousands so eagerly \u25a0 follow, wihout\nhis spirit being stirred?' -\nVerse 17\u2014Notwithstanding that we\nall, necessarily,\"have trades and call-\n_! nne \u2666 \/a_ra\u00bb\u00ab pel m elan,,!,-! Jlrt\u00bb4_ela,\\, > [H nat _\n-i..ua~,w \u2014 ^aai a4a.44, \u2014 wi.waaaa,,\u2014 V, \u2014 a,, ia4a, i a. \u2014 >.a4a,-\nour .chief concern be the tremendous\nissues involved in ^spiritual truth, and\nwhy? (This question imust be answered in writing by members of the\nclub.)\nVerses 18-21\u2014The Epicureans tind\nthe Staoics had a contrary philosophy\nof life, state briefly what they each\ntaught. \u25a0 a-\nWhich brings the more lasting happiness, and develops the, nobler character, a life, devoted to the pleasures\nof sense, or a life devoted to service\nfor others nnd to self denial?\nWhat,' as a matter, of fact, Is tho substance of what J'inil tauglit?\n\u25a0 Should we lend a respectful car to\nall new theories of life, and eternity,\nor reject, them without examination?\nVerse 22.\u2014 Which is the hotter\nman, an active sceptic, or an indifferent iind thoughtless Christian?\nWhich Ib preferable to be ever speculating about God, or to have no concern for him?\nIs a belief In nud a longing for God\npeculiar to Christianity?\nMay a heal hen who, has never\ncomo Into touch with Christianity find\nout. and know tho true God?\nWhut then Ib the adantngo for n\ntruo honrled heat lion coming Into con*\ntact with Christianity? ,\nVerse 23\u2014Can one mnn who knowH\nGod, ho tho moans of ImpnrtliiK thnt\nknowledge to nnotlior who doHiroH lo\nknow lilm?\nVorso 24\u2014How do wo know that\nGod made nil thiiigH?\nGod iIooh fill hoavon and onrlh with\nhis proHonce; but dnofl lio not nlso\ndwell In lomploH thai, nro mndo In\nwhleh lo worship lilm'.'\nVoi-ho 25,\u2014Whilo God dorm not nood\ntho Hiippnrt of mnn'H liniidH iIooh ho\nnot lll-Bll't) toll WOl'HllI]) nnd lovo of\ninon'H henrl h?\nHow (Iooh God glvo to ull \"lifo mul\nbroulli und nil UiIiikh?\"\nWill wo It) Inmvoii lm nblo lo hoo\nGod, In nny dtffori'iit wny from lho\nwny In which ll Ih our privilege to noo\nlilm now?\nVoi-ho 20.\u2014Wlml Ih tlio nvlikiiiii*.'\nHint nil rncoH of men Hpning from Hu-\nHlltllO Block?\nHuh (loil liml anything In do with\nlho nntloiiiil and googniphlcnl iIIvIh-\nIohh of tho globa> a\u00bb thoy oxIhI to-\ndny?\nHnH God anything to do with our\npn-Hont individual condition.*, I*\nVorHOB 27-2S\u2014Whnt Ih both llio\nciiler Joy and object of life?\nIn It poHHlblo for ovory mnn lo find\nGod If ho will Imi. hooIc him, nnd\nwhut Ih tho only condition ol b-.-l-Iouk\nHim.\nHow do you conceive of tho thou'tlit\nHint \"In him wo llvo mul movo nnd\nhnvo our bolng?' Cnn you llhiBtrnto\ntho thought with iir, Hint Ib both In ub\nand round uu?\nVorBo 20.\u2014Cnn nny worlc cf nrt. \u00ab\u25a0->\u25a0\nvcHuul *God to uny practical mlv.ini\n11 KO?\nVorflo .10-31\u2014 Whnt mnkoB tho nocl\nfor roponlnnco? \nClaims Strike Broken\nINVERNESS, July 13\u2014Manager Beaton of the mine, here, expresses the\nopinion that the strike is broken at\nthe Inverness mine as there are today 408 men at work out of, tho 606\nformerly employed. There have been\nno disturbances.\nDepartment of Labor's Position\nOTTAWA, July 13\u2014The Department\nof Labor today gave out the following\nofficial definition of its attitude regarding the strike of the miners in\nCape Breton., ,\n\"The dispute at Glace Bay between\ncertain of the employees of the Dominion Coal Company, members of the\nLocal Union of the United Mine Workers of America, and the said company\nhas already been subject to government intervention, by reference under\nindustrial disputes investigation \" act\nand the report of the board appointed\nhas been given to thepublic\u201ein accordance with the provisions of the said\nact.\n\"Were parties Jo. industrial disputes\n\"5Tn*\u00bbyffi,ir^^d J!i*t?fiib%ir~i ira*3f Intel y-tTr-tifs*\nP. BURNS & CO.,\n, LIMITED\nWHOLESALE and RETAIL MEAT MERCHANTS\nAlways \"n choice supply of Hoof, Pork, Veal,\nMutton, and Lmib on hand. Hams,\nBacon, Lard, Butter and Eggs\nc\nOur Specialties\nFresh, Snioked and Salted Fish, al ways a good\nassortment. Try our Mince Meat,\nSaurkraut and Oysters.\nee__*^mt^a_t \u2022*\u00a3\u2022-\u2022\nI The 41 Meat Market Limited \\\n|----- Wholesale and Retail Butchers |\nWomen Stripped Man\nGLACE BAY, July 12\u2014At Dominion\nNo. 2 a crowd of women chased a\nbig husky- indivadual howling \"scab\"\nand other names not fit to print.\nThey hurled all sorts of missiles after\nhim until he turned and a ho \u2022\u25a0 loo \"Aw\ngo home and mind your kids?\"\n\"We'll give you kids,\" yelled tho women as they closed in on the man, who, j prolong rather than minlmi74e\nalthough he mnde a desperate fight, period of Industrial strife.\"\ngovernment for intervention, or given\nreas'ons - that the findings of boards\nappointed expressly for the purpose of\nenquiring * into existing troubles,\nwould be subject to further revision\nby the minister or other officers of\n\u25a0>\nthe department.,of labor it would ser-\nI, *-*\niously prejudice the effectiveness of\nthe worlc of boards appointed under\nthe act and the value of their findings,\nand might only serve, having regard\nto Industrial disputes generally, to\ntho\n%\nStores in all the Principal Towns in British Columbia and Alberta\nPhone\n,Veal\nPork\nMutton\nBeef\n41\nHams\nBacon\nSaurkraut\nSalt Fish\n\u2022\nWE ONLY SELL THE BEST OF EVERYTHING\nOur Motto \"Civility, Cleanliness and correct weight to all\"\nF. G. WHITE\nFire and Accident\n\u00bb\nInsurance\n\\\nTAX THE BIBLES\nCalgary News: It will he of interest,\nto somo of our i*eadors to lenrn that,\nln tho new American tariff, Bibles aro\ntaxed while playing cards aro on the\nfroo 11 Bt. It'H a clear case of high, low\njack and tho game.\nKINDLY ACT OF C. P. R.\n''' VANCOUVER, II. C. July 12\u2014In connoctlon with lho hold-up of train 07 at.\nDucks on lho ulght of Juno 21, on uc*\ncount of wlilch Countable Docker lost\nhin lifo In an effort lo capture two of\ntho mon has resulted In Iho C. P. 11,\nplacing wllh iho ltoyal Trust Company\nof ViuicouviM' tho mini of $2000 to ho\nUHod.lu coiinoelloii with tho education\nof CoiiBlahlo Doukor'B soil. TIiIh not*\nIon on tlio purl of tho rnllwny company\nIh purely voluntary nnd cntlrqly apnrt\nfrom tho reward offorod. Tho rowm-d\nromiiliiH uh linforo,\n\\\\'*is severely handled.. The lrato fe-_\nmales-* soon had every stitch of clothing torn from his back and he had to\nfliid his way home naked followed by\na jeering crowd numbering fifteen hundred people.\nFemales Fight One Another\nAt No. 3 the wlfo,of a workman at\nthat pit indulged In a flow of Billingsgate in'which she told tho strikers-\nwives just what, sho thought of tho**.!\nand tliolr lolgo lords' methods of do\nIng business. ,\nThe tlrado hiKiod for hoiiio ten mil),\nules whon tho sirlkors wives executed\na comhinod assault on the toriniigriinl\nnnd literally tore her clothing to ribbons. It wiih scarcely an edifying\nsight, to see a undo woman hreuklng\nfrom tho cordon of shrieking females\nand run desperately for sholtor, Sovornl of tho women are lu Jail charged\nWill). UHBIUllt,\nKILLED BY AUTOMOBILE\nHin.UNOTON, VI, July lll-dovur*\nnor l-ioiiiy'H chiiuffoiir, W, II, Bon*\nwuh1, wus iiiTt'Hli'd today on u I'hiirKu\nnf iiiiiiiHliiughlKi' lu I'oiinncllon with\nlliu ilotilh liuil iiU-hl of Hector Mong*\neon ol' SI, Hyacinth**, Quebec. Moiik*\niiiiil, who (Jiinifi hero to ixllond lliu Tor*\ncniiti'imry colohnitlotiH faatlvKloH, wnn\nrun down mid killed lutu uigm uy uu\niitl'.oiiwi'jli'.; iiil\u00ab;h>.,i in Utlii: In.ii: ill hull\nby llonwiile, Governor J'roiily w\u00abh\non tlio oppoHlti* hUIo of the lako nt (ho\ntlmo nnd lho authorllloH nny his drl-\nvoi\" wuh UHlng tho machlno without IiIh\n,uiov*.i-.dii**.\nSHOULD BE\nSKINNED\nINVERNESS, C. B. July 12\u2014This\ntown has asked for military assistance\nln preserving the peace and tlie request has been compiled with. On Saturday work stopped at two in the nf-\nternoon and at that hour tho men began coming out, . The conduct was\nunruly, especially on the part of tlio\nwomen, to provent. others from going\nto work.\nGLACE HAY, N. S. July 11\u2014 Thn\nfirst, encounter between soldiers and\ncitizens took place last night at No, r\n1 colliery, according to a Hlaloment of ft\nlho company's officlnls. A workman jjj\nwho was ontorlng the gates aftor dark if\nwas challenged by the sen lino], Ilo 6\ndid not hnll. when rociucHlcd and the $\nHontry ralHud IiIh rlflo tho point enter- ly.1\nIng tho woikmrin'H breast. The mans jji\nconirndoH ran away nnd loft, him lying j*}'\non lho ground, lie wuh not seriously , W\nInjured, 'h\n :fr\n i,i\nP.\nBeck Block\nRoom 3\nFernie\n1 j\n'l Andy Hamilton I\nTinsmith and Plumber\n8\nWe can furnish you with estimates in\nanything in our line\nAmerican Officer Refuses Admission to Dying: Man\nmnn remained on board the Hti'iunor, ; \u2022>!XXXXX.O''XW:M\nFinally Chief IiiHpoclor Buchanan \"-*'\"*' ' \"\" \"\"\" \"\"'' \" '\nIH|)(:\nrc-iit-hcd and coiiKetit, was given to\nbring Scoplc iihIkii'o undor n guanuitiHi\nfrom Iho local hospital surgeon thai\nho woul duo! Iiccoinn a public churKo.\nAt uluo o'clock UiIh morning li wuh\nHiiid that Kcnpic wiih bolng opoi'iito,!\non, hut that tlioy woro unable to Hpoak\nOf IllH CllllllCOH,\n8HOOT6 DRIDE\n' NIA'SAIIA l-'Al.l.W, Inly I'.'- Tho\ni wiiIIh of ii ilowottoil Infant grooilm* thi*\nioiii'k (if a iiilllimiiu hMiiit'lit. nliont tlio\nii,llnu vI1.uk-* Um-ior wuh hurrying in u i dlKcovory today of n iniinlor nud hiiI*\nllilffnlo liOHpllnl Iiihi night fnr Ironl-; oldo nt No, L'l'i'i Whirlpool HI reel. II.\niiioni liml mlglii hiivo hiH lifo iuul wlio f IOiikIiiihI :io ,voiii*m of iiuo, biiikoiiiiin, In\nwiih roniHCil pcnnlHHlon to land from ||J\"! \\^h\\ l,,(.,11 ?\"\",!. \" '.\"'^V ^T.1?1\ntho oxourHlou Htciimor. Aniurlciirin. wim I ^^ M\u201enn',l no-wo'.,,,, didn't\niiorily liufuru I o'oliii'U\nHill*'FA 1,0, N, Y. July Ll-Fritul* ll.\nHcoplo of Ski'ii'-Mon, Dm, whom a ('nn*\nHOTEL FERNIE\nTho Hotol of Fornio\nI'Vriilo's l,oiuliii(j* a'umiiieivliil\nmul TuiuiM IIhiim-\nS. F. WALLACE. Prop,\nCROP8 AHEAD OF LA8T YEAR\nIUSaiNA, firiM*. July 13\u2014A snmplo\nof oatfl Bit Inches long and fully headed\nout, wat* brought Into tho city today hy\nJnmoH GrnnRlch. It wan grown on a\nfluid two mlli'ii from UckIiui. Crops ou\ntlin wholo are looking Hno and It lu\nclaimed Unit thoy aro a week nhond of\nInst, your,\nliiouglii iiHliun.'\nUiIh morning.\nScoplc liad h\ngnmo of duck\nway Out., tlirc\nCryHtal Uoiicli.\na skull friHlurc,* In n\non the rock ut. Itliliio*\nMilieu Inland from the\nNo ado(|u-iio lri'iitHiorit\n' hnvo Hiippcr ready. Tho bubo liolnngoil \u2022\nI to the wniruin'H dead hIhIci*. j\ncmil(] ho glvon him I horo nnd hu wiih\nput on hoard Uio excursion ntonmor\nAmericana which pllnH between tlm\nlioacli uilid llilffnlo,\nWhon lho Htonmor arrlvod horo, Immigration Im\u25a0\u25a0loffnr Hparklln rofunoil\nto allow tli\nDAD ATTACK OF DY3ENTRY CUR*I\ntu\n\"An honored clilzon of tIiIh town wim\nftufforlng from n hovcio attack of iIjth*\nontiy, Ho told a frlouil If ho could\nobtain n bottle of Cliiimbi'ilalns Colic,\nCholera imd Diarrhoea llomody ho\nKING'S HOTEL\nHni* hiipjiliril willi tlio t>i*.| Wine*.,\nfolt confident of being curod, ho hav\ndoctor lo brlntz Hconlri'\"-* ,,s\",, \",,M ro\",w,y '\" l]w mM' II(i! \u25a0'\u2022NIN(i\nnocior io nriif, Hcopu. wna Mm( . , \u201e j(i vwvV ftni, |\nuulioru un Hi. ground Hail, ho wau u,, , ,, ,n ob,_-..,.,..,, ,,, ..,.., wnft\nl.i(||uuK iiiiiI .'itrar-.\n\u25a0I\nnnn.M I.N .'ONNI.i'TION\nillHahlcd allin.\nFor flvo hourH the ambulance Blood\nIdl)' nt !)\u00bb\u2022 dock nml lit** wounded\nprrimptl.v i-iirod,\" Hiiv-i M. J, I.onrh,\n(lrupglf't nf Wolrott, Vt. I'or t-aln by\nall ilriiRRlHfH.\nROYAL\nHOTEL\nFERNIE\nraitoi*******^^\nBar Unexcelled\nAll White Help\ni\nEverything\nUp-to-date\nCall in and\n.I\nsee us onco\nJOHN PODBIELANCIK, Prop.\nI!' C. W. DAVEY & CO.. Props.\n.-. PAGE FOUR\nTHE DISTRICT LEDGER,.FERNIE, B. C. JULY 17 1909\n&i)e iitehwl \u00a3&$\u00a3%\nfl.OO a year in advance. Address all (.ommunica-\ntions to the \"Manager\" District Ledger, Fernie B. C.\nRates for advertising on application. ' .\nWe -believe, through careful enquiry, that all the\nadvertisements in this paper aro signed by trustworthy\n^persons, and to prove our faith by words, we will make\ngood lo actual subscribers any loss incurred by trust\ning advertisements that, prove to be swindles; but we\ndo - not attempt to adjust trifling disputes between\nsubscribers and honorable business men who advertise,\nnor pay the debts of honest bankruiiis. '._\nThis offer holds good for one month after the\n\u2022ransaction causing the complaint; -that is we must\n...nave notice within that time. Jn all cases in writing\nto advertisers say \"I saw it in The Ledger.\"\nW. S. STANLEY,\n- Phone 48; Residence 9 '' Manager\nthe eity of Kamloops .since that (.lay, and now, the\npublishers think it safe to launch into a real live\nfour page daily.' The proprietors and the City\nof Kamloops are to be .congratulated on this move,\nand The Ledger wishes The Sentinel the very best\nof.success.\"\n\nTlio District Hoard met at Frank and decided\nnot to accept the finding of Kev. II. Grant re the\nHillcrest pillar work. The Hoard was absolutely\nrigid . The idea ot! asking the men to take twenty\nper cent loss for their Jiard labor when (lie company\nis getting a higher price for its coal, and milking\nthe men pay 20 (d 30 per cent, more for theii- house\nrent. Hill has always been a-bone-of contention,\nas he tries to grind down Uio men al I'vcry stage\nand they will not si a nil for it.\nA postcard was mailed in Toronto to a Fernie\naddress, minus the necessary stamp.y It reached\nFernie, from whence it was sent'to the dead letter\noffice .at Vancouver. Tlie addressed party in Fernie is then notified that by sending the sum of one\ncent in legal currency the 'post card will be forwarded to the owner, otherwise it* is kept in pound\nNo doubt this may.be proper and the correct method of procedure but to ordinary folks it looks like\na lot of rubbish.\nI would like .to ask Mr. Crawford if\nI did any other work such as he did\u2014\ndig ditches, pack- timbers, work double shifts.or. dig .coal\"when the men\nwere looking for their rights. I -say\nno, W. N. Reid never asked Mr. Crawford to a smoker that the membev.s of\nMiddlesboro local union were holding,\nbut I asked him to a smoker that was\ngott,up by outsiders as well as members of different locals. It seems to\nme no matter what petty position any\nman may hold he can act,fair to hid\nemployer and the employees without\nprejudice. . I have said this much iu\nexplanation of my position.\n' . Yours truly\nQ W. N. REID:\n' The miners are an awful mean class of people.\nThey kick when llioy have to work in a mine where\nthey get drenched in *'wet places.\" They kick when\nthey' are in Tf room that.-is so chuck full of gas that\ntheir lights go out, and when their rooi' is faulty or\ntheir chutes flat. Now you do not find their\n-friends, the operators, kicking when they have\nto'work in a richly furnished ami thickly carpeted\noffice where they have all the conveniences that\nmoney can buy. Oh no. the miners are terrible.\n.* \"When a strike is on. the employers stop at no\nend of expense in housing scabs, hiring special detectives, and put up with all sorts of inconveniences\nwith materially decrease their output and earniirgs\nAll told these extras run' into enormous sums. Yet\nwhen honest and competent workmen ask for increases, the total of which would be a mere trifle\nin comparison to the sum wasted in fighting them\nthey a're invariably refused. Yet this is called\nsplendid executive abililv. ' , \u25a0\nElsewhere is published an account of another\npostal gravel train delivery. The surrounding if\nihe case were such that immediate and prompt delivery was essential,, To make a long story short\nthe fact is that this letter was at the local post-\noffice from June 27 to July 14. Another letter\nwas there from June 2!) to July 1-i. 'Ihe geniu-\nman to whom the letters were addressed, has a\nbox in the office, and also inquired daily for letters. Just how this seemingly glaring neglect can\nbe explained is hard to imagine. , A rigid examination is in order.\n.The city-recently purchased a street sprinkler,\none of the latest design, and all that, but during\nthe dusty weather it is used very sparingly.. hei.\nif be kept going by all means. Tt is certainly not\nmeant to stand by the fire hall as an ornamenL\nwhile the dust is being driven around the streets\nmuch to the annoyance of pedestrians and business\nmen. (! .\nThe action of the City Council in appointing a\nfire warden to patrol the section at present being\ncleared is timely*and commendable. Prevention\nis always \"better than cure, and the fact that half\nthe expense is defrayed by the Elk Lumber Co.\nmakes the cost small .indeed to the city. This\nsame policy if carried out tinder government auspices during the dry season to a greater extent,\nwould certainly curtail Ihe intent of damage done\nbv bush fires. \u2022, -\nJuly\nHat\n-. Much has been made of the, fact that the Canad\ninn Typographical union has sent word to the P.*'\n-\\\\--wU\u2014i n-Ga pe-B re Ion,- en eour agi n g-them-to- con-i\ntinue tonight the U. M.'\"Wr. of A. ' =\u25a0 Let it be j\nthoroughly understood that the Canadian Typogra\nphical union has no connection with the great International body, hut is composed of a few malcontents who jumped from the I. T. U. when the\nassessment was on for the eight hour fight. They\nhave no standing, no prestige and their good will\nor otherwise counts for nothing.\nThc approach of August 1 brings to mind the\nfact that as yet no definite arrangements.have been\nmade to mark in some way the0advent.of that day\nTrue the Hoard of Trade have taken some steps,\nbut whether they have been followed up or not is\nnot .known. ., The day should be marked in some\nsuitable way, not necessarily bv a holiday or cclc-\nn The Itfland Sentinel of Kamloops is the latest\nto appear as u daily. The Sentinel was first established in 1H84 ns a weekly. It thrived year\nafter year and in'July ..8!)7, it increased to a\" semi-\n.weekly. It has done well for its.management and\nbration, but by some means this, our Lst mile.post\nin the, growth of New Fernie, should be acknowledged and honored.'\nThe accounts that these days fill columns of\nthe press in regard to drowning accidents, ''got beyond his depth,\" \"rocked, the boat,\" and other\naccidents, seem bound to be part and parcel ol the\nannual summer seasoii. The same holds good in\ntho \"sane\" fourth of July \"celebration. The possibility __ of such catastrophes coming home never\nseems to enter the minds of certain individuals\nuntil they themselves are victims of some such\naccident,\nLetter Box\n\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2022\u2666\u2666 \u2666-*\u2666*-\n(Tho Editor doeH not liold himself\nruHponslhlo for Ihe oplnlono oxpruHsed\nll)' ooiTcspoiidoiilH.)\nAN EXPLANATION\nEditor of The Ledger:\nDour Sir: In tlio Ilosmor notes of\nyour Inst, Satiuday'H Ihaiio you say: \u2014\n\"Wo would llko to call the attention of\ntlio Coal Compnny to iho Injustlco\ndone iho IIohiihu' tonm by tlm conductor of Iho train, who nftor IoIIIiir us\nto not on tho irntii, Iuul lho gull lo\ncomo and ask uh for 215 coiiIh for trnln\nfaroH, etc,\" As I nm tlio conductor\nidfiirri'd to, nnd an tho iici'ounl given\nIn your pnpurlH licit \u25a0thn ronl fiicts,\nI miiHt. rcKpectfully iihIc tlmt you glvo\nnu> Hpaco in your paper to place heforn\nDw public my vcrnloii of Mm affair.\nllHWO-.'ll -I .UO llllll !i p,l||, the lldH-\nnii'i* Icfiin iippronclii-il mc und nuked\nif I had iiiiy liiHti'iicllmiH lo \/-h-i* Dwin\na free riilc to Conl Creok, I Inhl iliein\nI iuul lint, and gave tliem tin* milium\nof iIioki* in whom tlmy hIiouIiI apply\nfor piiHuen. Wtn'ii my train hlnili'd\n111 T, o'clock 1 tit-itlced Mint (he Imini\nwiih aboard,\nconcerned. Your,account also says\n\"Wq think wo havo a personal grlovanco. as not nnotlior club in tho Pass\nhas boen nskod to pay n slnglo conl. to\ngot, to Coal Crook.\"\nAll I can say in reply lo this state\nment Is that such parties must havo\nproduced passes or havo taken tho ne\n'\u2022esimry steps lo Intro official instructions handed to tho conductor of tho\ntrain or tlioy certainly would have\nboon nskod for their faros In tho samo\nway as tho Hosmer loam woro asked\non July ,'lrd,\nAh to thoir having; boon on strike for\nthree montliH or, any othor clrcum-\nBtnnrnH of thoir position I hud nothing\nto do with. I nm only a conductor\nand iih such wiih cnvryln-j out my duties ,'u ecu (IhiK to I iik* ructions,\nTh nnk I iik you in nntlnlpntloii for\npublication of UiIh letter,\nI hop, to romnin,\nYouth truly,\nCO.VDUCTOK.\nWould you, or any othor man, con-\nalder David Gray fair to organized labor when he locked two timber pack-\nera tools up fu a cupboard ho had fn\ntho office nt the mlno, and when they\nwont for thom thoy could not find\nthom,' Ilo thon turned around and\ntold thom that If llioy could not look\nafter (heir toola thoro wiib no work for\nthorn, Ho also assisted in holplng to\nbreak tho agroomont wo had nlgnod\nand drawn up with Mio N. V. C. ft C.\nCo. He also iiBslHtcd In pulling down\none of our worklnf-mon'8 Iioiihoh, who\nwuh living nonr, No, 2 mlno. If a man's\nprinciple Ih changed when ho IioUIh a\npotty poHltlou hiicIi tin pit Iiohh, to\nwhat Ih staled ahovo, I* think you\nmiiHt agree, wllh' mo that no mntt or\nwhat local he mny have belonged to,\nho Iiiih boon unfair lo orgnnlzml lnbor\nhorn.\nYours truly,\n\"W. N. 111311).\nSTILL ANOTHER\nImnr Sir:\nIu HiiHWur to Mr, Ii, Crawford, ll\nhi iiIho nppiinuil Ihnl lie lum nol nci'ii\ntho coridi'ilnii In lho Ledger iik to tin*\nIocnl to which lm belonged. I think\nevery one lu tlm dlHirlcl know Mr,\nCrawford win! flro Iiohh In Miihllimhoru\nmllu', nml wliollii'!* or not, iIk-i** Ih no-\nihIiu, In the coiiHtllulloii of tlm U. M.\nW, of A. to prevent lilm bolng a member, and ihoro novor wnH n rcHoliitlon\n! iuimhiiiI burring flroIkihhoh from hecom-\nj lug iiKinilicrii tit thin local, nnd Mi*.\n| Crawford, not being u mombor, hooidh\nI to Know (|iiiic ii loi oi (im allium ol\n..',',\u00ab; l.i, ,D. ih: ,\u2022.).\u2022>.\u2022 ,,).'. I \u00ab.-.*,\u25a0, Dial '.)..\n. wiJi'ltliiKiimii were Idle lor thu purpi-m;\n(if having (heir union recngiil\/ed. Thin\nHtnli'inciit Ih fnlso, an Dw minor-* were\n, locked out, I wnn noting uh fire Iioh.i\n11(111 Illlllnlia' ,1 111111*1 Ull till:, '..Ilii 1 ,1.in i,.in imi. a\\ *. v, t una, \".i... i,,,m ui \u2022.,\u00ab.,., 1,1,-\u00bb i\/i-xr.nitjrl lihuli at!*-; Ilitu l,\\ n.\nAN EXPLANATION\nMlildli'Hboro, July ID.\nHil 11 or of the Ledger:\nKir: It uppi-ni'H io me Hint. Mr, David Hi ay coi'li! mil havo l-oou' roadliig\nyour impel' or he would have hoi-ii Hie\n((iri'oi'llnii In I'l'imnl to Hie local lie\nbelonged to. Il would Hcem xi'vy\nhIiiiiii-o tn me ur uny union mini thai\n.Mr, I), (liny would draw a cleiiiaiice\nFollowing out the iiriiiiI ! card from Mcn'Mi local union fifieen\ncoui'No of my iIiiU'-h I went through j moiillm ngo nml curry ll around In IiIh\nthe lo.'irln'H In roller! fit res I'l'oin ill! | iiohhchhIimi all UiIh time, without Mini-\nwho were not provided with a trnln | lug It Into the dlHirlct. or niiHoiiiil sec\nrticcl; or a (i;is,s, 1 as'ieil (lie Htm iieiniy ami (lieu conn* neie aim joiii\n1111*1 fuutiiiiij ii'alll) Dn: .inllic .In,) ,..\u2022* i i im ,J S,l, .Vi\"..' hitil Dt'H it,}\/,:!', lh ii}.-,,l\niiHkeil oiliei'N ami the only iiiihivci I.iiiik.s iuii why he kIiouM he put on tin:\ngot \u2022\/.\u25a0:*.!\u2022 \"Ob, 1-hr.ri.-'* II up lo Dw Coal unfinlr li\u00abl. VW1J. Mr. I'Ml.or. \"Vi'vytino\nCreek foul hull club\" Tliolr miuuiei:, la aware that ho won pit Iiohh or lifting\nHhowed ihnl Ihey wen* without (|u-\u00bbh*;wi nl the beginning nf Kebrunry, but\nYou may have defem-d getting a\nhat til).now, or you may want'\nanother. Hero lire suiiio uncommon bargains that will be interesting to every ludy.\nShapes for street wear at .35\nto .75 each.\nFine chip and dross shapes at\n.75 to 1.25 each.\nSold In the regular way at 2.25\nto 3.50 each\nrieautil'ul Dress hats in the best\nand latest styles, at 4.50 6.00\n,'Almost a give away, price for\nsuch beautiful millinery productions as .these, but0 come\ncurly for the prettiest of th-mi.\nLawn waist specials, . worth\n1.00 to clear at .60\nSilk Braid Belts reg. .40 at .25\nLinen suits just arrived, in nat-\n, uriil and white at 6.00 to 10.OO*\nTHE\nMisses Euler\nM.A. Kastner\nINSURANCE AND\nREAL ESTATE\nFire! Fire! Fire!\nThe anniversary, of the great\nlire of August I, 100S, is drawing licar. Lot us draw your attention to the fact that we represent 11 llniinchilly strony, old\nestablished nnd woll known\nHoard Fire Insurance companies. iiIho agent for the\nSun Life Insurance\nCompany of Canada .\nWe Iihvo Mivcral tmapn in\nBusiness and Residential\nProperty\nin illll'otent partw of thu city\nAgent 0\nNew Oliver Typewriter\nMachine given out on trial\nNo Charge\ntherefore compelled m Htop the train\nand lell ihem Jn got ott. When lho,\ntrain 1'i-nUrteiI they jumped on n'\npiiHti (iir at the rear of the trnln. anil\nfor iheir own wifely iih much na for-\nnnyMiltii' flee, r .ifoppcil fin*' train nnd*\ntold thein plainly tlint tlioy would,\nl'\u00ab'-r Tu '(\u2022'\u2022\u2022-\u25a0p \"\"livir An n mn'tf\"' nt.\n(V,( i H.'i, Mum' push cur di', 1'imp llm\ntrack before wo renrlioil Coal Crnok. \\\nTli I ft I* it Hhort and truo outllno of,\nwhnt actually occtirord no far at I am {\nIiIh pnpeiH In April, nml tlm pit lum.-.,\n.Mr. Hugh ''Ulci'ile Klgucrf nil mine report h iih pit boHK while I wnH net Ing\nnn the Iiohh In I-Vbruary. Mr. Hrny\nnlno Hnyn Ihnl Die D. M. VV, or A,\nIiiih no liirlHdlftloti over him, Mr.\nUiilil Cray Hhoiilil leiuemlmr (lm ob|i-\nen I lelii lie Ifirilt U'hen lie lolneil I lie\n17 M. YV, of A., on two occiiHloiiH,\nnnd It dot'H nol mailer whothor ho win*\nnn official of tlio Nicola Valloy Co. or\na common working plug.\nlocked out, Thero wiih work only for\niimi-unlon mon, I got pormiKHlon from\nMlddloHboro local In continue at work,\nbut only an flro Iiohh, which I did. Mr.\nCrawford did not link wlmtlicr he\nHhould work or Hot, and he did more\ntlmn flro Iiohhok iIiiiIch. Ho dug n\ndllcli In ,\\Vi. I mine niul wince linn dug\ncoal, wlillo Hit-mi disputes lmvo lmcti\ngoing on.\nI would llko to \u00ab\u00bbk any union ..man\nIf thai Ih fair to organized labor, and\nC. P. R\u00bb\nExcursion Rates\nI ) 1 \u25a0*\u2022\u25a0\u25a0. I \u00bb! II\"!\t\nFernie\nTo\n$25.30\nTIckclH on .Sale Daily '\nMiiyjnili t\u00ab Oct. ii\nFilial return limit 16 (lay*,\nhut not later than Oct. HI.!\nVer emni'lot'i Inforiiiiitloil nee AgnntH\nor write\nJ, K. PnoorolT. D.P.A.. Oalgary\nAFTER THE POLE\nNEW YORK, July 12\u2014Mene ^Wallace the discontented and homesick Es-\nquimax lad, who sailed today for N.\nGreenland to rejoin . his own people,\nissued a farewell statement today to\nthe effect that on reaching his, destination he will organize an expedition of\nnatives and start with them in search\nof the pole. He believes that he can\nsucceed where white men have failed. . - * .. \u25a0\"\n' He carries with' him a set of scientific instruments which were given to\nhim by friends here and which he will\nuse.\nCOME FOR REPAIRS\nEVELYN WILL STAY .\nNEW YORK, July 12\u2014Evelyn Nesbitt Thaw is expected to be a witness\nfor her. husband, Harry KrTha'w, at\nthe inquiry into his present; mental\ncondition resumed before Justice Mills\nin the supreme,court at White Plains\ntoday.\nAlthough she had intended to ' be^\ngin a vacation in Maine today she informed Thaw's attorneys that ' she\nwould gladly, postpone her trip in' or'\nder to be present to testify for 'hei*\nhusband. ,\" n* _\n\"Then I shall stick by him as a wife\nshould stick by her husband as I have\nalways stuck by him; 'it is my duty\nand I shall'not shrink it now.\" 7\nVICTORIA, July 13\u2014Tlie Norwegian\nsteamer Eir, which bumped on the bar\nat Gray's harbor on'Sunday morning,\nand returned to Herquam damaged, is\nto come to the Esquimalt drydock U-\nbe surveyed and repaired according to\narrangements which were made here\ntoday. * \u25a0 '\nNOTICE\nThe partnership' hitherto existing\nbetween Messrs. Rinnan, Kaminski &\nAlbert Lund has this day been dissolved by mutual consent, Albert Lund continuing the business. All debts due\nthe firm are to- be paid to the said\nAlbert Lund and he will defray^ all liabilities.\nDated at Fernie this 15th day of\nJuly 1909. ...\nBlack\nWatch\nRemarkable for\nrichness\nand\nv.\"'. pleasing\nflavor. The big black\nplug chewing tobacco.\n2207\nFOUND GUILTY OF MURDER\nTROY, -N, Y. July 13\u2014Beecher Fab-\ner was convicted of murder ih the first\ndegree at Lake George on, Saturday,\nthe jury finding him guilty of killing\nMaud\nago.\nRyan at Glenfalls some timo\nNOTICE OF DISSOLUTION OF PARTNERSHIP\nNOTICE is hereby given that the partnership . heretofore existing- between\nWilliam R. Ross and J. S. T..Alexander, under the name of Ross & Alexander )ias been dissolved-as at J.una lst,\n1909.\nMr. W. lt. Ross will continue tha\nbusiness at the old offices, ; ,\"\nDated this &th day of July, A., D.\n1909.\nCalgary\nCattle\nCo.\nAll kinds of\nROAST MEATS\nGive us a trial\nA complete line of samples of\nFall Suitings arid\nOvercoatings\n--Wo-rsteds^Serges-\nand Tweeds\n\u25a0at '\nUp-to-date Workmanship\nModerate Prices\nJ.C.KENNY\n\u2022 J. M. AGNEW & GO\n| ELKO, B. C. '\nWc. are jiust unloading a car con tain ing\n2 Mowers,, 2 Hay Rakes, 6 Buggies, 2 Lumber Wagons, 1 set Farm Trucks, 6 Plows, (breakers and\ngeneral purpose), 1 Stump Puller, 3 Lever Harrows,\nWheel Barrows, Garden Cultivators, Etc.\n- The nbovo now gives us a complete stock in all lines ,\ni\n\u2022 Fernie Cartage & Construction Co, \u2022\n0\nThe Fernie Cartage & Construction Co.\nbeg to inform the citizens of Fernie\nthey are prepared to carry out all\nclasses of work. Heavy Draying,\nExcavating, Buildinig and Concreting a speciality. Estimates given on\nall Contract work. All work guaranteed satisfactory.\nO. N. ROSS, Sole Proprietor\n\u25a0 \\ - \u25a0\u25a0\nbejBteBtr&%j&*9>GB;e2&eMGS>^iI3tQ&eMte.\n9\n\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\n| I SAY TO YOU I\nO\nt\nt\nt\nO . \u2022\n>\u25a0\n >\u25a0\nkickickickkkk*kinckkkkickk^^\nMiss Betsy Beeswing was down . to\n.'Elko from.Triwood Monday,with'her\n_7hair \"fluffed out so airily! thai it ai-\n,-most lifted her,!off her feet.\nNorman Broley of Fernie was lii\n, Elko several days, this week cutting\n'the masts for-the Dreadnoughts' we\nread so. much about.\nChief of Police' Sampson was down\n' .to Elko between trains on Saturday.\nBig Bill Leacey, the man with the\niron grip, was transferred from Elko\nto Coal Creek; Constable Gook of Victoria to Elko. Bill will make'good\nwherever he Is. * ' ,'\n.\/ Tom Prentice of tho A. Macdonald\n\u2022Co., Fernie, told the gosh darndest\n.fish story in Elko Saturday 'we've\nheard' this summer. Honest to grandma we always'* knew'Tom, to'be somewhat of an Ananias, but .so help my\n\u25a0 .'Josephine 53 In 3 hours-and his Pal\n, Johnston 49 made us feel like putting\nanotlier film In our moving picture ma-\n, -chine. ' \u25a0 \u2022 .. \u25a0 ' \u00bb\n' Constable Gook made a trip'to*Nol\nson-this week with a traveling finan*\n\"\u25a0cier.- \u2022 .\n,' v E.- H. H'. Stanley, the Pooh-Bah of\nBaynes Lake, passed through Elko on\nSunday on his way to Fernie. He confidently told the writer that,the mos-\n.quitoes were sticking every visitor to'. Minneapolis, Minn\n*\u00bb*. .\nM'r..E. H. H. Stanley' returned to\nFernie after a few' days stay at home.\n\"\u2022 We were remembered-by S. J. Morrow with a treat of fine cucumbers\ngrown by him on his Kootonia tract.\nHe has tomates as large as hen's eggs.\nWe are pleased to learn that Baynes\nis at last to have, a school the'coming\nyear. The next.thing will be to gee\ntogether'and elect trustees' and provide a,suitable,,place to liave school.\nW^ understand the Kootenay River\nLand company, will'give a .sight in. a\ndesirable location.\nj H.C. Goda'rd has been spending the\nj first of the week with the Ross and\nj Telford families and, left Friday for\nBaynes, Lake for drinks; wearing a\n...smile the width of a saddle blanket\nwhile' he told it. * The presence of\n.some'men is as good as a tonic.\n'The'Thaten Duo,, who have \"been\n\u25a0filling'an engagement near Elko, re-\nThe Waldo Whist club held a spec\nial meeting at the home of Mrs'. Cof\nfee for the- purpose of electing officer.3\nfor the new .series., It was suggested\nthat the old -officers' serve through the\nnext series and a motion was carried\nto' that effect. ' ,\"\u25a0\u2022..-'\nturned to'Fernie with some brand nex^ Ml\\ AdolP.h *\u25a0> left>;Monday for\n' - \u25a0 \u2022\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 \"* | Toronto and other pints in the east\n\u25a0songs, and dances. - -, . ;top a visit\/7'He will also go'\"to \"ind-\n' On account of the rain Sunday there ,;iana- before returning.' * .. -< ': *'\n; was. no excursion from, Feriiie. no ball' The. little Richards * and McNab 'chil-\ngame\/music festival,'not even 'a\"'dog!.dr*? of.cranbroolc'are spending a'fe-v\nfight\".:'\" \u2022 \"' '\"\u25a0-:-'*#\u25a0 j weeks at the* Morrow-home. .'\n\\'~a'''f'n\u201e l'*\" ' ' y ,\", ' ' ,'w W.7M.'Fraser dro'ppedvin aridVu*.\nMarr.of Corbin passed through,\u201e \u201e tw'f.;n nt \u00bb\u201e \u25a0 \u2022 ,,\n- \u00b0 Dr.\n\u2014'Elko from-Waldo.\n\u25a0 Jack Kennedy and,; his \"celeDrateJ\npainters in oil, ' are ' in Elko put*\nting the rainbow touches on jthe1 new\n* steel bridge at Irvine's B'ech.0-1 ^\n-Next to\" the sunlight of heaven is a\n\u25a0cheerful face. \u25a0 ..., ,\nThe annual school meeting wus\nheld In the school hoihti S>ut.irday ev\nenlng'when two now tru iters and at*\nauditor were appointed. The meeting\nwas one of the most representative\never held In Elko and everything passed off pleasantly, The teacher left for\nhor'home,at tho coast and the.children are enjoying the holidays.\" At the\nclosing exercises prl7.es were given to\nthe dlfforont scholars, but we can't\n, say whothor It was the first prlzo or\ntho diploma tho hoy got for tho following composition on \"Pants.\" Pants\nare made for'men and not for women,\nWomon are mado for mon and not for\npanls. When a man .pants for a woman arid a woman pants for. a man\n' thoy are a pair of pants. Such pants\n\u2022 don't last. Pants aro liko raolassos\u2014\nthoy aro thinner In summer and.nro\nthicker in wlntor. Moil aro ofton mistaken In pan'tB, audi mistakes aro call*\nod breechOB of promise. Thoro lino\n, beon much discussion whothor pants\nIs Blnuiilnr dr plural. It scorns to mo'\nwhen mon wear pants It's plural and\nwhon thoy don't U'b singular, Men go\non a,tear in tliolr pants and It is nl*\nright; whon tho pnntB go on a toar it\nis nil wrong. If you want lo mnko tho\npan Ib'Inst mako tho coat and vout\nfirst,\nFishing Is good aud flBhlng partlos\nnro. hnving success with pur fishing\ntackle, Don't forgot whon you como\nlo BlUo. wo carry tho bost. Our\nquartet to of homo mndo HIoh can't bo\nbo boat, ,\nTho Iluttoi'BCOtch fly tlclilos thoir\npnlato;\nTlio Bnlcor doon 'om brown\nTho Druggist physics 'om\nAnd iho llutchor iIoob tlio killing,\nWo curry nn assortment of ovory fly\ntho find will tnlco in those wntors, full\nline of fiHliiiig tncklo nnd full Information at to tho whereabouts of tho fish\nwarden suppllmj with ovory purohuHO.\nTho nowly nppolntod govornment ng*\nent Iiiib boon seen In Elko sovornl\n'limns bIiico IiIh nppoliilmont, mul wo\nsincerely hope for the sake of Hid Hon.\nH, Alciindo lie will make good, nnd\nDint .,\u00ab.- uuii't -j.ui.ai-jk tlio Mi*, rivor\ngrado, nnd put it In a Biifo condition,\nwhich II hon novor boon In slnco It was\nmnde. The* bad condition of thnt\ngrado In tho big draw bade to tho sol*\nibuiuu.. vl xJu'aX XMXLW.y \u00ab,buUi Ol the\nElk river, nnd any man who pohbossos\nsufficient brains to fill a ponnut can\ni;soo tho dangor nnd tho drnw back thnt\ngrndo Is to tho most fortllo country In\nsautlmaBt Kootenay, Good roads bono\nfit fho fnrmor, frull grower, tlio morchant, tho horos and tho proporty nd.\njncent to thom. Wo liopn Ihnt Mr,\nAlexander will, bo tho rl\u00abht mnn lu\nthe right place snd a credit (o tho I).\nJ. Government. *\ni v, n.y-.u'\nai!*iiial'\nto.some business. .' \u2022\"*\n'' Don*t' forget Labor 'day\". Bring, a\nwell filled basket vand have a picnic\niii' our' beautiful woods.' -' A\\ rate - will\nbe secured, so all will be able tocome.\nDo not forget the date, September 6th.\n\/Wallace of tlie Free Press was' a\nbusiness and social cajler In Baynes on\nTuesday, , -' 7\nA\" number of land buyers were .in\nthe past week having a look around.\nAll wero of the,opinion that this place\nwould become ono of the, finest fruit\ndistricts In B. C.\n***********************+*+\n| HOSMER , |\nkickkkkirkkkick'kirkkkkkkkk ft***\nAccording to your sports editor Hos-,\nmer had vory littlo chanco of getting\novon a decent show In1 thoir gamo with\nMlchol, but ob It turned out Mlchol was\nlucky to got two points out of the\ngamers Ilosmor put up a great game'\nand only tliolr customary bad luck\nkept, thom from nt' lonst making ii\ndraw. Owing to an Injury rocolvod\nnt Conl Crook Ilosmor hail to cry off\nbo tho Hosmor team was Hutson, Dickie, Watson, Roberts, Cllmlo, Ovorsby,\nGordon, Thomson, Steol, Da'vlB, Moyes,\nRoforoo: Caufield of Coal Crook.. Tho\ngiimo Btartod at C.20, Captain Hut'\nson won tho Iobb and olocted lo play\nwith tho wind nnd hill In our favor,\nMlchol kicked off but woro booh on thb\ndofoiiBlvo until McQuoon Inlorvonod\nwith a nice pass to the outBldo loft,\nwho Hhot piiKt, From* tho goal kick\nHoHinor forwards took tho ball Into\ntho Mlchol llnoH but could only got a\ncornor whicli wan nlcoly placed, hut\ntho tall ciidors cnBlly cleared, Tho\ngnmo wnB now fast nnd furious, tho\nbnll travailing from ond to ond, hut it\nwiib mostly n enso of dofonco ngnlnst\ndofonco, tho, forwards on cither aide\nbolng oiiHlly iiccountoil for,, Hnlf llino\narrived with a draw of no gonls, v On\nt'OHiiming IloHtnor RijrprtRoil tlionmolvou\nnnd everyone oIho by I heir smart, worlc\nnnd with n littlo luck nt all ought to\nhave scored. The tonm nn n whole\nworo now working bettor nguiiiHt tho\nwind thnn wllh It, but tho Michel do\nfonco mood firm and used all tho\nweight Hint tlioy cnrrlod. Whltohouso\nespecially Boomed to dullRht in jumping nnd piiHlilnir lho nmnll mon who\nworo agnlnst him nnd roforoo Cnufleld\nfind to glvo froo non t iouIh ngnliiRt him,\nHowovor, this hnlf wns bolng contested\nin a determined manner, nud of courso\nour unlucky Htar, was In tho aacend*\noncy nnd Gcorgo McQueen scored thc-\nonly goal of lho gnmo for Michel with\nn nlco \nImporlnl bank of Ciinndn, at Fornio.\nAll tondors to bo boiiIoiI nnd ciidoi'H-\nod nnd hciiI lo iho, architects, und\nmusl, rout'li thom on nr'before ThurH-\ndny, 22nd .Inly, 1H0I1,\nThe HiiccoHsful t.iiidni'oi- will ho\" ro-\nfin I rod lo deposit with the nrcliltnclii\nn HiitlH'm'tory bond for Imi pi-i* com,\non tho amount of IiIh contriicl,\nThe lowest or any tendei- not iicckh\nHnrlly nrceptod.\nI'lntiH nnd specif lent Ions mny ho obtained on nppllcnlloii to lho Manager,\nImperial llnn'< of Cnnndn, .-'ornlo 11. v.,\nnr from tho nrehllortn,\nMessrs. Hodgson & Dstes\ni-> i i n. il ii. .\ntt.it.,,,.\u201e',. ,,,..ni..t(j,\nr*,l*',u\\v. Mtn\nImperial Bank of Canada\nHEAD OFFICE, TORONTO\nCnpltnl Authorized $10,000,000\nCapital Paid Up $5,000,000 Reserve $5,000,000\nO. R. WILKIE, President HON. ROBT J*AFFRAY, Vlce-Pres.\n' BRANCHE8 IN DRITI8H COLUMOIA\nArrowhead, Cronbrook, Fernie, Golden, Kamloops, Michel, Myie, Nelson\nRevelstoke, Vancouver and Victoria.\nSAVINOS DEPARTMENT\nInterest allowed en deposits at current rate from date of deposit.\nFERNIE BRANCH. , GEO. I, O. OEI.L, Manager\nFernie Opera House\n' \/. 7\nG. L, TASCHEREAU, MANAGER\nFirst class\nMoving\nPicture\nShow\nProgramme\nChanges\nThree Times\nA Week\nVaudeville\nSinging awd\nDancing\nFERNIE\nCONSTRUCTION CO.\nCONTRACTORS & BUILDERS'\nIliislncsH Mocks, Chiii'diim\nSchools, nnd heavy work a\nHp-'ciiiUy' . ,\ni .\u2014\u2014\u00bb\u00bb- . _^_^\nP.O. BOX 153 FERNIE B.C.\nAkj-iiU for Kdiimnlnii I'lviahi'd HHck\nmul IIiuiiI Point ,(.'oiiiiiii)ii nml\nI'i'im-hk! lli'lel'. KhiliimtiiH fur.\niilxlii'rt friii!\nPHOTOGRAPHY\nIN ALL ITS BRANCHES\nELITE STUDIO\nSTONB AND RODDIS, PROPS.\nTry ui lor good Portmltura, Prlco*\niMi\u00ablnrnt\u00ab, Ad-Iron Pnllutt Avniinn\nnp'pOHITK THI-*,, HOSPITAL\nOn Thursday July Ut. Mr. John\nllniiMlnn. Mio fninulor nf Tli** K-nrilri.\nhid ndleu In Vvlncc Hn.ioi-t nml \"inn-'od'\nfor Mexico, In liln ilciitirttiic nn ulilc!\nmnn Is loot to tin* communllv. NVx'\ni' I\nonly did\/lid niiilm Tin* Kiiiiilro n iinwcrj\nIn llrltlHh f'nliimhln. Imi In* wnn tenr--\nloss,- .-HurKi'lIr, lidiicst nud icHotiiccfill\nboth In his lU'WHimiu-r worlc und In IiIh\noltlxuiislilp. Wlioii tlu* dny nrrlvim\nfor wrllliiK in history of Prim.-- Hii-h-ii,\nwo prodlet Mint thu nnmi, of Jno. Moiih-\nKiii will loom up In no .mri-rtnlii tninij*\nnor. In wIhIiIiik lilm future prosper*. jj\nliy In whutever sphere he mny i-binw, \\ _\nwn fen) wo nre hut eeholtiR tho sentl\nmeritR of n Inr-s'e perrentsge of the ro\nMldetit's of Northern DrltUh ColuinMi.,\ntmv*\nGEO. BARTON\nEMPRESS TRANSFER\nDraying\nFiirnlfiiw** M-wIni*** t <,neelnltv\nWOOD OF ALL KIND8\nl.c.ivi- Oiilcr*. with \\V. Kcny\nPHONK TH\n9\nit***************!****)*}!.**\n1-\n, l'\ni\nI-\nI-\n\u00bb\nI-\n>\u25a0\n)\ni\n............. . .\u00bb\nkkkkkkkktckkktttike.kke.kkkkirkk\n.\u2666\nIll every liuiiii* there hIhiiiM\nIm< a 'Mteel Hnnire\"\nWASHING MACHINE\nWeight '.il Him., no nolne,\niliil'l i.tii limit. Try i-m* .tint\nIm-inlivlllieil. l'l'IM* HII0.IS\u00bb\nf. (i. li., Hitvtii-f) bike, ll. \u2022'.\nD.W.HART v-V-\nPAGE SIX\n'.,>'.'*.\u25a0''\u25a0 -\u25a0ryU-'yi'\"'-'\" '\"' * .\"''\u201e'\u25a0'\".\" \" 7 ^v7-^^^,'^r-^r!.;'''\\y-'i\".'\/:\u25a0>'\nTHE. DISTRICT LEDGER. FERNJE, B.C.'JULY 17 1909 ; -\u2022 V= .\" 7^ a%.Vf '\na *-*}-j ' -'~ .. -\n\u2022if _-_ \u25a0\n...\n' '-\u25a0'\u25a0-i'l.--' \u2022'\"',' ?' \u2022\n-.----.. -'\u2022\"^ -. \"~: '-\nFootball; Lacrosse and Baseball.\nFOOTBALL\nThe Crow's Nest Pass football\n' league was advanced another stage on\nSaturday last and the result In, one\nmatch'at least had an important-bearing on the championship. * I refer to\nthe Frank and Coal Creek encounter.\nFrank falling down in this game, the\nscore being 2 goals to 0 against them.\nCoalCr<-*ek now step into second place\nand are only three points behind the\nleaders with two games in hand. It\nappears at present as if tho race will\nbe between the old rivals Michel and\nCoal Creek. Coal Creek deserve every credit for their meritorious win\non , Saturday. The day was not\nfavornblo for a good display of football,\nand it gays much for'the teams engaged that such a good exhibition was served up. Frank have still a fighting\nchance for the championship, but a\ngreat deal'will depend on todays game\nbetween Michel and Fernie'.. Should\nMichel fall .the championship would\nstill be an open question, as Coal Creek\nhavo still a long way to go. They have\nfive games on their card yet, and some\nof these are stiff encounters. Hosmer\nseem fated to take' the wooden spoon,\nas they have-not .yet a point to their\ncredit, and it .seems lo me that they\ncannot escape from the bottom posit;\nion. The result of their gamo with\nMichel indicates an improvement, as\nthey only fell by the odd goal. They\nhave shown considerable'pluck in hanging together in the face of adverse results, and it is to.be hoped that they\nwill get their reward when the Fort\nSteele cup ties come on.. \u201e\nThe position of' the different clubs\non the league table up to and including\n, July 10 are here given.\n>1. Wn. Lst. Dr. Pts\nBASEBALL\nMichel ..\nCoal Creek\nFernie ...\nFrank ...\nColeman .'\nBellevue .\nHosmer '.\nTwo points for a win ana one for\ndraw.-\n]5\n12'\n'11\n8\n' S\nt\n5\n0\na\n\u2022t sr____ i*=^ \u00ab=\u25a0*\u25a0*-\namson was forced to put past. From\nthe corner kick McGechie got the ball\nand placed well up the field, Petrie\nfastened on and racing ahead-had a\nfine shot,which Horrocks saved.' Mid-\nfield play followed' until the-interval\nwhen neither side had scored again. ,\n' Play was-resumed without, either \"of\nthe teams leaving the field. The Frank\nteam's chances now looked rosy as\nthey had tlie hill in their favor..They\nsoon, became the aggressors, and the\nthings looked bad' for Coal Creek but\nAllan cleaved his lines and Manning\nlet Hartwell away on the left. He forced a corner of Fagan which was well\nplaced, but Cardie cleared. McFarlane\nand Cardie by strong play took the ball\nwell afield where.* Chambers secured\npossession, and a timely pass let Ad-\nlum away with a clear field. He waited too long before getting in his shot\nand McFogan forced him to kick past,\na really fine chance toeing lost. Franl-\nstill hovered around - the Creek goal,\nniade headway and Manning forced a\ncorner off Fagan. This was well placed by Hartwell but Smith cleared, the\nbail .landing at the feet of McFegan,\nwho took-a long drive. .The ball had\nAdamson beat all the way and went\nthrough at the far post, registering the\nfirst goal of the* match. The Frank\nboys, nothing daunted, took play to the\nother end, and Adlum with a fine shot\nsent, right across the goal mouth, but\nno one was up to' take advantage and\nthe ball'went past. The Creek were\nnext to make headway and from a\nlong drive up field Manning hustled\nthe backs, and getting clear through\nscored a second goal for Coal Creek,\nshooting well out of Adamson's reach.\nOnly 12 minutes of this half had gone,\nand, Frank now made desperate efforts to reduce the leeway.1 Flukey play\nby McFegan aided them but Horrocks\nsaved from Hutton and play was in\nraidfield again. McGechie was very anxious to win against his old club, but\nat times could not resist the temptation to try and walk aroUnd.his opponents. This did not help his side, and\nhe did not always come out best. Coal\nCreel*, seemed to be'\u201etiring and Frank\nforced tho game, b\u00abt coujfl not beat\ndown the opposing defence. * From a\nscrimmage in Coal Creek goal.Manning\ngave away a comer but- it was - sent\n\u2022 \u201e On wet grounds that made fast, ba'-l\nout of the question the Commercials\ngatliered in a loose, game' -from^ D.n\nCarpenters on Monday evening. Bruce\ntried but another pitcher, likewise* a\nnew backstopper. ', They.were there\nall right, but it's biit of the question to\nwin. a game with a good battery, and\na dead field. . Hichie and Gates were\nthe battery for the Corns .and put up\na-good consistent, game.\nCommercial \u201e\nR.H.E.\nGlover. '.\/\t\n 0\ni\n0\nGates c \t\n.. .. 1\n0\n3\nMcKellar lst \t\n 1\n1'\n0\nHilchie ' ;\t\n2\n1\nGillespie '2nd \t\n 0\n0\n1\n\"McLeod c f \t\n f'O\n.0\n0\nElliott 1 f\t\n.... 0\n0\n0\nSmith. 3rd\t\n..... 0\n0\n0\nRoss r f ...-. :...\n 0\n0\n0\nDavis s and 2nd\t\n....: o\n0\n0\nNELSON'S SUN 7\nBEGINNING TO SET\nTHE-GREAT'DANE ALMOST GETS\nHIS' IN A TEN ROUND .\n*\" \u2022*. 7 .'BOUT \u25a0\"\u25a0-*-\nAUTO RAGES\nDR. WRIGLESWORTH. D.\n& .7 . , 'dentist.\nDl S.'.\nNow , doing business at the Johnson-\nFaulkner Block.' Office hours 9-12.30\n1.30-6. ' .-f*7'.' 7 7*-'7-'' '- ~ ...\n4 3 4\nHall c .'.,\t\nK \" 1\n.,*,.. 0\n 0\n1\n0\n0\nn\n o\n0\n'fl\nBruce If ..... 7 .\n 0\n0\n\"0\nCoarureek\nTlie line up of the teams follows:-\nCOAL CREEK FRANK\nHorrocks Adamson\nAllan '..'.. Fagan\nMcFegan '. Smith\nSwe'enie .' McFarlane\nParnell ..;. ' Cardie\nJohnson McGechie\nThornton .. :.. ..' '. Carson\n**0. Jolson ... .'' ' Hutton\n' Manning \u25a0 \/Petrie\nP, Jolson Chambers\nHartwell \u2022 Adlum\nReferee: J. Johnson, Fernie.\nThis game was played at Coal Crook\niri unfavorable weather, rain falling\nat'the start, and the ground being vory\nslippery.- Coal Creek; opened with\ntlio hill in their favor nnd right away\ntook up the attack, and cnmo within\nan nee of scoring'in thn first minute,\nAdamson rather luckily saving from\na shot closet In. Coal Crook continued\ntlio pressure and Manning shot past\nby Inches' only. Frank grndunlly got\ntliolr feot nnd tho gnmo opened out,\nHutton and CarRon on tlio right look\n' the bnll well up t.ho field, but McFognn\ncleared nnd mid flold piny followed for\nn time. The linlfB on both aides\nwero plnylng n strong gnmo, mid nH n\nroRiilt tho forwards could nol. settle,\nTlio rain wns now coming down In torrents and thoTofuroo stopped tho gnmo\n\u2014a wise doclslon In our opinion, The\nspectators rushed for Hholtor to thoir\nhomos nrtd tho pnlyors mndo for tho\nClub houso'. After nn Intervnl of lfi\n1 minutes pl'ny wiih resumed, tho ruin\nhaving censed. Then: was at ill 17\ninlnnlf'8 of this hnlf In go nnd Coal\nCrook strove hard to score. The\nground wns very slippery und plnyurs\ncould not control (ho hnll. Conl Cr-ncdc\n.\u2022(\u25a0nln* luilf Iuul ii flno drive which wns\n(*i|iifilly well saved by Adamson.\n('hniiilioi'H und Allium Iuul ii brook\nnwny on Frnnk left mid forced ii corner. Till)** wns w(iH placed but' It\nwiih nicely clenred liy Hweenln nml pluv\nwas trnuhferriMl to the other end.\n(Initwell had u flue (tohh mid Ad*\npastT^-^ErQm_thfi_gOAL_WcLP^Xileil\nStruck out by McDonald 8. '\nCarpenters\n . \"r\"ii.e.\n0\n0\n0\n0\n1\n0\n1\n1\n1\n2 3 .4\nStruck out by Hilchie 9. D\n'* Umpire: kastner*.\ni ., * * * *\nStung Again! '\nMessrs. Glover of the Commercials\nand Star Third Baseman Brown of the\nCoal Company team took some players\ndown to Hosmer on Wednesday to .try\nand beat that citys fast players. They\nreturned with sour faces however and\na hard kick story. The score was 1\"\nfor Hosmer and 5 for Fernie.\" ,Mc-\n\u2022Intyre of Fernie got a badly smashed\nthumb' in the game_._The following was\nthe Fernie line-up: _:\n\u25a0 \"Gates,0catcher'.' '. ' .\n' Hilchie p. and c.f.\n\u25a0 Mclntyre c.f.. and p.' **\u2022 v 0\"\nNeil McKellar 1st.. \u25a0 ' -\"*\n. McCurdy,'2nd. \u2022*..-\n\u2022 Glover, ss.*\"- . ' \u2022-..\n, Brown 3rd, '\" \u25a0 <7\nElliott r.f. - \u2022.'\"_* \u2022'\u25a0' ' *\n- 'Lepard l;f' * '\u2022*..'\nPier .c.f. ' , .\nplaced well out to Thornton who. crossed nicely and Peter Joison scored a\nfine goal. * Tho whistle had previously gone for an; off side'against Thornton so the point was disallowed. Frank\nnext had an. Innings and a- series \u25a0 of\nmisklcks in Coal Creek goal gave them\na fine chance to score, but Allan ultimately cleared'. The fast pace and\nthe heavy ground were now telling and\n(both sides were tiring.\nFrom a cross by Hartwell Thornton\nscored but, the referee rightly adjudged lilm offside, Midfleld play was tho\norder to the close, and no further scoring took place, ,\nFinal result: Coal Creok 2; Frnnk 0.\nThe gnmo all through wns hotly contested, but piny was spoiled considerably by the .rain and footing wns vory\nInsecure, Tho teams are -evenly\nmulched and given .good weather conditions should glvo a flno display of\nthe game as it, ought to bo plnyed.\nThe home loam secured tliolr win by\ntaking ndvnntngo of their chances in\nnonr goal. Thc winners all plnyed\nwoll and tlio only fault of the visitors\nwns their poor finishing.\nTlio result of the gamo played nt\nIlosmor wns much closer than was\ngonornlly oxpoctod. Michel jusl sue\nceoded In winning nl. the poHt, securing\n(ho only gonl of tho match clone on\ntlmo, Ilosmor'Is to ho congratulated\non the showing nnd It Ih .to bo hoped\nthat lho notlconblo Improvement In\ntliolr piny will bo permanent.\nThe gniiicn for today nro:\nnollovuo vh Conl Crook nt Bollovuo,\n.Michel vh Fornio nt Michel.\nTho gnmo nl Mlchol should prove In-\nlorcKlliiK nnd tlio Iocnl tonm Intonil lo\nput up n good fight for the polntH, It\nwiih liile'nded In run n special irmii\nbut wo unrit-rstimd ari'iin^emonlH fell\nthrough owing to lho hick of Niippnrt\ngiven the coniinllton. In I hin nnicrprlHO.\nThu guiiie ul I'ellovuo Hhould result\nIn the visitors' fnvor hut tho homo\ni en ui will' f in f up n good fight,\n' Mr. Jep .Scott, has come' to .the\nfront with another idea for a fielders'\nmit that resembles either a hay loader\nor a coal bucket.. It .Is \"guaranteed\nto catch' all flies driven to the deep\ncentre garden. He is sure to havo\na ready sale for his latest. He intends to use one himself.\n*\"*\u2022,',\nCleaned up Michel\nA team picked up from Fernie players journeyed to Michel on, Tuesday,\nnnd plnyed n game with the nine bf\nthat town, winning from' them by tho\nfinal of G to 1. The game was a\nfirst class exhibition of tho groat summer game, nnd the boys rcporthaving\na fine timo. Tho Fernie line up was\nns follows:\n, Hall: c and 2nd. _ \u25a0\nWalters p, nnd c.f,\nMcMillan 1st.\nMcDonald 2nd nnd p.\nSpllmnn 3rd.\nMcDougall ss nnd c, \"\"\nHondorson l.f. H\nL. Mills, c.f.\nHicks r.f. and ss,\n* * * \"\nThe Fast.Juniors\nThe Fornio Juniors took a fall out\nof tho Intermediates on Tuesday ovoning at BasobnII park. The Juniors\ndid somo flno playing and nro, showing Improvement In ovory gnmo. Thc\nscore wns 10 to I and tho following\nwns the lino up:\nJiitcTinodlatos: I.)..McLeod 2nd; F,\nDunlnp 3rd| Hondorson 1st; A, Dun*\nInp p; ll, ForgUHon c f;,R, Kirkpatrick\nr.f.; J. MoDougnll o; A. Wnldo s.s.;\nM. Duthlo l.f.\nJuniors: 13, Dudley c.f.; It, Gldd*\nliiRMH.s.; G. Dudley- r.f.: I\\ Homlur*\nson 1h(; L, Dudley 2nd; McLaughlin\n:)nl; M. OlddlngH \\r, H. McLeod c. II,\nDiiiliesHo l.f.\nI.en Dudley iniide n throo Iuihu hit\nwith three men on bin-on,' bringing nil\nIn.\ni\n\u2022 LOS-ANGELES, Cay. July 13\u2014Wolgast of, Milwaukee, despite\" the fact\nthat he weighed five pounds less than,\nBattling Nelson of Chicago, gave the\nterrible Dane a'thorough whipping iu\na ten round \u25a0 bout' before the Pacific\nAthletic club tonight. After .an even\nfirst, round Wolgast waded in' and had\nthe'best of, 6 of-the remaining rounds.\n.The champion, did not have a single\nround in his favor, an even break being the best he^ could get. '\nNelson's face was swollen and blood\nstreamed from the nose and mouth at'\nthe close bf the fight. Wolgast was\nunmarked'. It was a terrible-fight from\nthe start anil-It was not until the 10th\nround that Wolgast succeeded in stopping Nelsons rushes.\n- -, Round 1\u2014Nelson met Wolgast in his\nown corner and followed his usual tactics of advancing slowly to his opponent. Wolgast put'\"-a right to Nelson's\nface and took' a right and left to the\nface in return. -A ripping left reached\nNelson's jaw.'1* * Thoy exchanged-body\nb'lows'ln a clinch and Nelson renched\nthe face with a straight right. Wolgast\nsent la right across to the jaw in return. Even round.\nRound 2\u2014Wolgast. reached the head\nwith a right'and went into a lively mix-\nup in the centre of the ring. Wolgast\nfought very ferociously but was backed\nto the, ropesX, Nelson fought his way\nto-the centre bf the ring with body\npunches. In closo quarters Wolgast\nsent a right and left to the head.. Blood\nflowed from Nelson's' nose and Wol-1\ngast sent'1 two right uppercuts lo the\njaw in return. .Evan round.\n\u25a0 Round .3\u2014They went at it hammer\nand tongs,, Wolgast landing right and\nleft to the head and body..- Wolgas*:\nthen sent-a light left to the face and\nfollowed with a hard right to the jaw.\nWolgast then sent a right swing to tho\near, landed left and right to the head I\nand put another left to the body and,\na right to the face. Wolgast showered\nNelson with rights1 and lefts-to tiie\nhead and Nelson, fought back for tho\nstomach. Wolgast landed repeatedly\nto'the face and body.' At close quarters Wolgast *had the' better of the\nmilling and' had* a'big lead at the end\npf the round. - ' \\ ' ,- \/\n\" Itcfiuid 4.\u2014Both missed right swings\nNelson' being'- first,to .land, -.getting a\nleft to the stomach. At close quarters\n\u2022Wolgast sent two swiff rights to the\nfac\"eT\"Neisou's-left-eye-began-to.swelL.\nNelson was missing and falling short.\nWolgast sent' a terrific right to the;\nstomach and landed half a dozen lefts.\nand rights to the face without any re\nturn. -'\u2022' . \"\u2022\u2022 \u2022-\u25a0 \u25a0'\".*\u25a0-.\n- Round 5\u2014Wolgast continued to ba-*k\naway at'the start. Nelson landed several effective,rights to the body. .In\na mix-up Wolgast chopped Nolson wl+h\na right and left to the body.\nRound C\u2014Nelson continued to1 forco\nhis .man. They\"exchanged lefts to the'\nface and Wolgast, put in two rights to\nthe head.* Nelson reached WolgaRt'j\nface with a right upporcul, Nelso-i forced Wolgast to the ropes but did not\nland effectively. Wolgast swung a\nleft to the head and sent Nelson back\nbut he camo on fighting hard.\nRound 7\u2014Wolgast put a left to Nol\nson's oyo. With head down Nelson bored ln but Wolgast continued to land a\nnumber of blows. Nelson's nose and\nlips were badly swollen,\nRound 8\u2014Thoy fought and clln'-lied\nabout tho ring ln closo quarters. Nelson landed hard right and left to the\nface, Wolgast camo back with r'ghls\nand lofts to tho body. Nolson put iln.\nright nnd loft to tho head and Woignst\nreached tho onr with n right, Wolgnst\nshot a loft to' the head .and than his\nright to tho noso.\nRound 0\u2014From tho gong'thoy fought\nround tho ring, Wolgast Inn ling Ihiee\nblows to Nelson's one Wolgast vuiui*\nod in with a Htineincr rustic to tho fnvo\nand Inndod nn ovnrneail right lo the\nhead, Wolgnst sent Nw'en-i bnck \u2022.\u00bb\u2022\u25a0\u25a0 h\nn loft swing to the '.wa una swuni* a\nhalf dosion blovvn lo llm hond,\nRound 10\u2014Nolson fell short with a\nright nnd Wolgnst smothered him with\nrights nnd lefts. WolgnBl hnmmorod\nNelson's stomach and fought him to\ntho ropos. Another loft Inndod sqi'iiro\non Iho stomach, Thoy wero fighting\nIn Ihe conl ni of tho rlriK whon tho\nKOiii; Hounded.\nThe lnw does not allow a decision,\nhut WolRiist hnd llm bolter of lho nr*\ngum-out (ill through.\nOne With Broken Neckr-The\n. Other Horribly Mangled\n\".MONTREAL, July.9\u2014C. K. Bachel-\nder of \"Newport and J.'Twohey of-Montreal-were killed at .the second annual\nraces of the Canadian Automobile, club\non the Blue Bonnets track-, this- afternoon.-\" :y,\/'y _ .-.--.\nBachelder was driving a sixty horse\npower Stearns car in'the ten mile open\nrace for stock** touring- cars, Twohey\nacting as his mechanic. On the 8th\nmile rounding onto the back stretch;\nBachelder pulled out,to pass Burman.\nWhat then, happened-nobody knows.\nThe machine was seen* to \"dash into the\nfence, - fly over the embankment and\ncome to a stop forty yards,beyond. The\ntwo .occupants were thrown into the\nair. When assistance arrived Twohey\nwas found dead,with bis neck broken.\nBachelder was sti^l \"breathing, but was\nhorribly mutilated, one stake' having\ntorn out- his bowels and another tore\na1 great \"gash in his chest. He was\nplaced in' an\\ ambulance and rushed\nto the Royal \u2022 Victoria hospital whero\nhe died just before being admitted.*\nThe car was .the. property, of Lome\nHale. His entry was refused last'\nnight, but today- when he secured the\nservices of Bachelder, who ,was a science graduate of McGill, it,was accept\ned. , . ', .7, .\nrernle'\nB.'C.\nW,R. ROSS kx.;\nBarrister and.Solicitor\nI .. 4\"\npernio, B.,C.\n\u25a0 \\\n7 ' Canada.\nL, P. Eckstein\nD. E.:McTaggart\n\u25a0I ECKSTEIN & McTAGGART \u2022\nBARRISTERS. SOLICITORS, ETC,\nCox Street\nFernie B. C.\nF. Ci Lawe\nAlex,. I. Fisher\nLAWE & FISHER\nATTORNEYS\nFernie, B. C.''\nBLAMES FASHION FOR THIS\nH. W. HERCHMER\nBarrister and, Solicitor\nT. BECK BLOCK\nFERNIE BvC.\nDR. J. BARBER, DENTIST\nOffice Henderson Block, Fernie ,B.C. \u2022\n- Hours 9 to 1;.2 to 5; 6 to'8. \u25a0\" _.\n- Residence 21 .Viotorla Ave. ,\nNEW YORK, July, 12\u2014A Berlin despatch to- the Times says the present\nfashions ,in. women's attire, denounced\nby the Vatican organ, are responsible\nfor a remarkable divorce just granted\nby tlie courts of Silesia, \u25a0 On the representation of the husband that his\nwife had become intolerably thin a to\naccommodate 'her figure, to modish\ndress, a decree of divorce has been\nawarded to a Silesian judge, .and the\nrespondent has been declared guilty\nin the eyes, bf the law. *\u00ab - v *\nThe petitioner declared that' when\nhe married hei* his wife was \"naturally\na good figure, biit this year she suddenly decided that she must be thinner\nto'keep pace-with the fashions. She\nbegan therefore, \u25a0. a strenuous ' cure,\nwhich, reduced her weight 31-pounds\nin'three months.\nShe rode horseback three hours each\nmorning.'played tennis two hours, and\ntook'several^daily-walks-lasting-severs\nal hours and ate-like a bird. Hei-habitual rosy complexion. gradually gave\nway to a chronic paleness under this\nI'egime.\"She dwindled away in weight\nand though she was 5 feet ten inches\nIn height she weighed only 133\npounds;\n\\ She attained her ambition however\nand could1 wear a fashionable gown.\nWhen the judge* forbade his wlfo to\ncontinue fading away she defied him.\nIn tho divorce proceedings the judge\ncontended thnt his wife hnd deceived\nher, husband becalise. he had bargained to marry, a lady of natural ample\nproportions. Had sho been 111, It\nwould have been his duty to watch her\ngrow thin uncomplainingly, but as she\nsacrificed' herself merely ln response\nto tho dictions of mad Impulse he now\nclaimed that ho had the right to be rid\nof her. ,\nAftor a fiery attack on the curront\nhnrbarlc styles by tho judgo's counsel, tho divorce wns granted, \u25a0\nW. A. CONNELL. ,\nPioneer Builder and Contractor of\n--. '.Fernie \"\n. ESTIMATES FURNISHED.\nm EERNIE\nLUMBER ;M;\n. ''*-*'-\u25a0 14. \" ' '--' -i '.-\n, y..L McDoiig*all,,Mgr..\nTT ' __ ,\".\u25a0',?\u25a0\" .-' 7 . *' .. '-;\u25a0>.*\nManufacturers of and Deal:;\n.ers in all kinds of Rough\nand.Dressed Lumber,\/\n' . ,a \u25a0 -. '< ' '*- ' .'*.-\" ' '. *\nSend lis your orders\n**'.\nic-.-\nKENNEDY & SIANGAN\nLumber Dealer\nAM kinds of rough\"mul dressedInuilici\nVictoria Ave.\nMortli Fertile\nSecretaries of Local Unions\na. *\u2022 .\u25a0 \u25a0' ' \u2022*\u25a0 < 1\nDISTRICT 18 U. M. W. of A.\nBankhead No. 29\u2014James Fisher.\nBellevue No. 43,\u2014R. Livett. \u201e '\nCanmore Park Local 1378\u2014James A.\nMcDonald.\nColeman,\nham.'\nNo. 2633\u2014William .Gra-\nWHO SAID FIRE?\nW did.\nWe are firing away at the\n^ old business ' \u2022 .\nCREE & MOFFATT\nt++++-&++<\u00b1+>+'+-4>+-'e>\n,DRAYING TRANSFER _\nBaggage ilelivercd- to*, any,-\n.piirt of the city.\n.Carbonado No. 2688\u2014James Hewitt..\nCardiff No. 2387\u2014A. Hammond. -\n\u2022 Cardiff No. 27.9\u2014F. K. St. Amant \u00b0\ni - r * v i i m i, t\nEdmonton City No'2540\u2014A. Matt-.,\nhews, P.O.' 1314. -, *. \/.\n' Edmonton No.\n2 Frazer.Flats.\n1329~ASt. Julian,\nFernie, No. 2314\u2014T7 Biggs,\n\u2022 f . -\u2022 \u25a0: *.\nFrank, No; 1263\u2014Walter Wrigley.\nHgsmer No. 2497\u2014J. W. Morris\n^inci-eit.No.^105,8\u2014J. O. Jones. ;'\nN.D.\nLEAVE ORDERS AT INGRAM'S.\n\u2022W-^^^W \u2666\u2666-\u00bb\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2022\u2022\u00bb\u2022*\u2022*\u25ba\nBUTTER FROM PEROLEUM\nOfficial City League Baseball Schedule\nCHICAGO, July 12\u2014A special despatch from Alton, 111., to Uio Record*\nHorald pays:\n\"Tho flrat. roll of potroloum biittor\ntho Standard Oil's IiiIorI producl, Ib\nto ho turned out al tho Wood refinery\nnoai' horo, Preparations aro holiiR\nmade to manufacture tho produce hero\nand tlio machinery has boon shipped\nto start work, The now producl will\nbo known iih \"petrol buttor,\" It is\nsaid to bo of the namu conslBtoncy as\nlacteal buttor, but !\u00bb brown, If lasts a\ngroat, deal longer than real buttor lt\nIs Hnld, and docs not bocomo rancid.\"\nQueen's Hotel\nMOST MODERN AND UP-TO-\nDATE HOSTELRY IN THE\nWE8T. ' \u2022\n'Built expressly for \u25a0'\nWorkingmen's\nTrade\nIt's a dandy, como and sen b .\u201e\nROBICHAUD, ROSS BROS.\n\u2022 & CO. Proprietors\n(W. A. Ross, Manager.)\n-Kenmare\nLansberry.\n. Lethbridge,\ncock.'\n-No. 2850\u2014J. E.\nNo. 574\u2014Charles Pea-\n\u2022**\u2022\"\u2022\nWRECK ON SUPERIOR.\nCLUB\nCOMMIUWIM.\nCOMAII'.I.CIAI.\nThs\nu*.ik;i.k\n...\nDistrict\nAUGUST 18\nAUGUST 2\nJULY 26\nAtaUST It\nFAT M...V\nAiitA *.,\u2022\nAI'dUHT 18\nLedger\n,ii*i,y n\nAUGUST 0\nAlinVflT 4\n!\ncoai,'Co,\nAlii CUT C\n\u25a0AUGUST 2\n' -I*-\nJULY 19\nFor\nI\ni\nj\n'AUGUST 13\n!____\nIrm.Y ts\n1\nBCOllTH\nCARJ'ISXTKIIB\n r ;.\nAUGUST 10\nAUGUST 11\nAUGUST 4\nJULY .M.\nU'.l.rir.U 1\nl\nI\n,IUI,Y 2\\t* ia* to\ncfittfiijr,\nZam-Buk It mad* from \u2022J\u00ab*rt\nherbal m-MCM. No **ulm\u00abI fat*-\n\u00bb\u00a9 mineral peUeitt. VlnMthMlMrt\nI>tn, i.t,.t m* Slam tivrvkm.\nBAUI\/T 8TH. MAUII'., July ...\u2014Tin\nrrtliiutoH after the Hlool hiciuiioi'h Isaac\nM. Scott, and ,lnlm 11, Unwlo, hnd ci.)\nllildd In lako Superior early thin mont'\nInn, about a mllu and a half off will'*.'\n: l-'lsh Point IlKhthoiiHo, tho Cowlo vent\n,io (ho bottom In Ml feot of water, cur\nJrjlng wllh lior foiim-ou niumbui, uf\n;ilio crew.\nj The ScoH nlllioui*-.. badly dtimaun'1\nput. bnck (o this port whoro hIiu arrived this afternoon with purl of I'ao\ncrew of tho Cowln, A heavy fon wns\nresponsible for tho collision. Tho S\u00ab;-iit\na new boat, up fho Iukcm, nun jum ,.i,.<.i.-\nliur nmi'iaui r.ilp .iii.J },t\u201el i.Mi,i-i) iJji-\nllfFlitlioiiHo ul White FIhIi Point nnd\natrnlRh'ened out hor rnnrsfi up flu*\nlake when suddenly lho John Cowlo\nloomed ftp through the fog, broadside\nOil 1.111 ttWi'lV rtUv. Xi.W) a xx.*, .'v-s it\".\nTho Cowlo wob down hound with 800d\ntons ot Iron ore In tho hold, The\nScott crashed Into the Bide of tho heavily ladon Cowlo. For lf> feat hor how\npenetrated. Tons of water rushed\nfhro-i-t-h fho ureal bnli* Into tho Cowle\nand In throo minutes the boat was ui\ntho boltom ot thn lake. Immediately\nafter the collision a line was thrown\nto tbe deck of tho Cowlo And three of\ntha crew escaped In this way, Tli<3\nrest of the crew who wtna saved jump-\nMi Into th*? Ukc, fom\u00ab without life pre-\nHf*rvi\u00bbri\u00bb snd wero picked up by tho\nstoamor'' Goodyear, which was a short\ndistanco astern of Iho Scott when tho\nolllslon occurred. Captain RoBors of\ntho Cowlo wob ono of those roscuod by\ntho Goodyear. Until ho Is hoard of\nIt Is lmposslblo to secure the names\nof tho men who perished. Survivors\nsay that both engineers, tho four firemen, four deckhandB, tho second cook\nporter ond an oiler named Pottor, aro\nlost. Tho Scott rocolvod Injuries In\ntho collision which would probably\nhavo sont hor to tho bottom had she\nbeen loaded.\n.Lille No. 1233\u2014J. T Griffith\n''\"ni * 'a\nMichel,'No 2334~Charles Garner'.- -\n.Maple Leaf ,No. 2829-i-H. Blake.\n, -* (via Bellevue)\nMerritt Local Union, No. 2627\u2014Chas\nBrooks,' *\nMiddlesboro1 872\u2014W. N. Reid\nPassburg, No, 2352\u2014J. Covach. ,\nRoyal Collieries, No., 2589\u2014Wm.\nWhyte.\nRoclio Percee No. 2072\u2014Lachlan McQuarrlo.\nTabor No. 102\u2014Wm, Russell\nTaber No. 1959\u2014Wm. McClare.\nTaylorton, No. 2648\u2014H. Potter,\nKenmare N.D. No. 2850\u2014H. Potter\nporblh No. 2877\u2014W. Ryan\nPaoaburg, No. 2352\u2014A. 8waneton.\nWOODPECKER, No. 2291): William\nLOWO. ,\nKILLED PLAYING BALL\nLKTIIIIJIIDOJ*\"., July 8\u2014Vroil Jones\nund anothor boy wero plny.nK *\u25a0<\u2022\u2022' \u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\nTabor when the former was struck on\n\u00abho tomplo by a ball and Instantly kill-\niid.\nWaldorf Hotel\nNOW IN NEW QUARTERS\nTHB TROUBLE\nfi@N\nTable Unexcelled\nllm1 Mii|>|\u00bbHi'i. with the Hnci-l\nlll'ltllllH (if Wllll'1**, 1,I(|U()1H \u25a0\ni\niuul CiK'H'**\nMRS. S. JENNINGS, Prop.\n(Formerly of Ci'iilinl Holt-.)\nHe-Th* -only way to keep ter*\nvsnte It to noogniu them **\nequals.\nShe\u2014But my isaok would nevet\n-Koognlee tile w ber equal J\nNOTICE\nTAKB notice that I Intend to apply\no iho Board of Licensing Coromiss*\nnnors for thn City ot Fornio at thoir\n\u00abi slttlhf*** In open court ontltled to\n\u201eoar ahcIi application, lo tihis u****.*\nice of tho retail Liquor Llcenso now\nliul'l by mo In respect, ot tho licensed\nnremUoB known ns tho Northern lfot*rt\nklti'tiaO on Lou \u00bbIx (\u00ab) and sovon (7)\nmock 14 City of Fernio, to Wlllam\nV*',rith\u00abU.\nDated at Pernio D.C. this Sth d*y\net June, 1303.\nJOHN 80RK1IS.\nADVERTISE IN THE LEDGER \u25a0 >-***\u2022\u25a0 ***** \u25a0umc-f-u \u00ab\u00abu\u2014\nWSWMIIUI\"*!**\"\n-yy^'i--yyyy\n*\u2022'.\u25a0.- s *-*.*-;\nTHE DISTRICT LEDGER, FERNIE, B. C. JULY 17 1909 * \u2022 t\nPAGE SEVEN\n!-,\nOUT FOR A,\n7G00J|Mt\n.. Man and Wife - Meet^Str'angers\nJ,Ending in.Fatal RowJ -\u00a33.\n\\ ^SEATTLE, July 13\u2014Carousing with\nchance male,acquaintances\"in-the Sce-\n- nie bar and cafe led to a quarrel, that\nresulted iii the death bf Mrs, Elizabeth\nT.-:Fife in the Olympic apartments\nearly1 this morning. . ,' _\"', \u2022\u2022'. *\nJames A. Fife, her husband, occupies a cell in the city jail, and will'be\nheld.pending a rigid investigation of\nthe woman's death.. V The ' body iof\nthe woman is,at the,undertakers cov*\n7 ered with, cuts and bruises'. Coroner\n.J. C.-Snyder will hold\/an inquest on\nMonday. * - , , \u2022,\n. At the city jail Fife, who also admits\nusing the name of James F. Foster,\n.admitted that both he and his wife,\n* had been drinking with other men at\nthe Scenic cafe yesterday.\nLate last night Fife learned that his\nwife was drinking with other men, at\n. the' Scenic cafo and Immediately went\nthere.* He ordered his wife to leave\nwith him and after some argument the\npair left.for their apartments at'the\nOlympic house. '\n\u00b0, About an hour later Fife rushed to\n-the office and informed the clerk that\nhis wife was dead. ,\" ,\n1 Dr; J..-F. Deane was called but the\nwoman was beyond human aid.\nANTHONY MOPE\nAuthor of \"The Ppisooer ofZenda\n. ' ' '\n-\u25a0 pooooooooooooooeooooo\n: Cci^yright.wa-i.Aiithony Hope Hawkins\nhad made personal .inspection'of the\nstate of Al. Zerkovitch's fire!\n\"Good night,\" captain. By the wa*7\nthe king continues well?\" >\n. \"Dr.' Natcheff says, sir, that.he doesn't\nthink his majesty was ever better 'in\n.his life.\" \" i>' \u25a0' _. ;\u25a0. \u25a0\n, The prince looked at him for just a\nmoment, .with a reflective smile. .\"Ah,,\nund a trustworthy . man,. Natcheff!\nGood night!\" , \" *_ %> . \\\n.< Markart did not see much reason to\nthink that the question, the look, tho\nsmile and the comment had any significance, but there would be no harm\nin submitting, the point to General Stenovics, Pondering over this, he forgot\nto, count the prince's, paces this time:\nIf be had counted the sum would have\n,beou Just four., M. Zerkovitch's fife\nneeded anottier royal Inspection, It\nneeded it almost till the break of day.\n\u2022 \"The king's life hangs by a hnir and\nyour crown,by u thread.\" That was\nthe warning which Lepage- bad given\nnnd Zerkovitch hnd cnrrlod through the\nnight. \u25a0. ' . ' * '\nr\nPITIFUL PLIGHT\nSAN FRANCISCO, July 12--Held on\n-a charge of murder,*Mrs. Laura Mac-\nDonald, who killed her baby son Kenneth and attempted to end her own\n\u2022 life', a \"few weeks ago is-In the city\n, prison herei today. ,\n\\ Members of, the Waitresses Union\nhave interested themselves in the\n-cause of the accused woman and will\n\u25a0 * fight her case for her'in the superior\n*, court. '\u00bb ''. '\nMrs. MacDo'nald's story, is one of\n'misfortune: At the age of 17 years\nshe became the wife of John Morrison\nMacDonald, son of a wealthy \"man In\nNova ScOtia.\n, * They lived at Morenci, Arl7.ona, for\na year and was then deserted\" by her\nhusband and left to care.for.her ten\nmonths,old child. .\nThe woman went to Los Angeles,\nwhere she met Edwin Crawford, ,a\n-cook, who brought her. to San Franci's-\n- -co. She was deserted by him -here,\nlian(Lin_aJiLofIde.s.po'ndericy she decid-\n,ed to kill herself and her 'child. ' She\nshot the baby and drank poison .her-\n\u2022self.- The child died but she recover-\nI ed, and now faces a charge of murder.\n\u2022**\u2022\nWIDELY KNOWN EVANGELIST IS\n, .: , '\u25a0\u2022' DEAD\nLONDON, Ont. July 12\u2014Cyrus Bush\nknown all over Canada and a good part\nof the.northern Unitod States, 'died\nhere yesterday. He was()80.\"years of\nage and for many years was a travelling preacher, proclaiming himself as\nJohn the Evangelist. It was his custom to drive about tho country with\na flag attached to tho end of a polo\nproclaiming his mission,\n100 tons of good\nUpland\nBaled Hay\n\u2022ntrmm\nW. E, Barker, Cayloy, Altn,\nC.Kap'ber.\nIwei^one\nP. Carosella\nWholesale Liquor Dealer\nam**********\nDry Goodi, Groceries, Boots and Shoes\nGents' Ftirnlsliinifi\nBAKER AVENUE\nBRANCH AT HOSMER, B.C.\neo VEAtts*\nCXPERIENOE\n*y\n:R\nYtMDC Marks\nOCtKlN*\nCoWRMHT* AC\nScftittifie Httttrjca\nl jaetamttf \\U*Mt*t*AveH.tr. hanakem*\n' Sir ataeuubeUmiiA, tuma M\naree>.ft>im*r**r*ia. eUter\n\u2022^WSSdBftl\nTHIS storm bud passed. The day\nbroke culm und radiant over\n; the castle of Praslok. -. Sun*\n. shine played caressingly on the\nlake and on the hills. *\nMarkart bad breakfasted and paid n\nvisit to his horse.' He wanted to be off\nby 9 o'clock and waited only for the\nprince's letter. He was returning from\nthe stnblcs, sniffing the morning air\nwith. a most vivid enjoyment of the\nchange of weather, when' he saw; Sophy coming along the road. She bad\nbeen for a walk.- Her eyes nud cheeks\nglowed with' exhilaration. She: woro\nher sheepskin tunic, her sheepskin cap\nwith, its' red cockade and .her short\nblue'sklrt over high boots. She walked\nas though on the clouds of heaven,.a\n.wonderful lightness in her tread. The\nred star signaled the'exaltation of her,\n'spirit-- TheVgiad \"sound of the, trumpet\nrang In her heart!. '\"''\u2022', \"'\nHer cordial greeting to Markart was\nspiced with raillery, to which;he responded as well as'his Ignorance al*,\nflowed\" He was'uncertaln\".hOj*Limuch_\nshe knew of the real situation. \/But if\nhis tongue was embarrassed his eyes\nspoke freely. He could not keep them\nfrom her face. To him. she sepmeda\n. queen of life and joy that glorious\nmorning. *\n\"You've recoverod.frofh your fright?\"\nshe asked. \"Poor M, Zerkovitch Is still\nsleeping bis off, I suppose! Oh, the\nstory's all over the castle!\" .\n. \"It'll be all over thc country soon,\"\nsaid Markart, with a rueful smile.\n, \"Well, after all. M. Zerkovitch Is a\njournalist, and journalists don't spare\neven\" themselves, you know. And\nyou're not a reticent person, arc you?\nDon't you remember all tbo Information you gavo mo once?\"\n\"Ah, on tbo terrace of tho Hotel do\nParis! Much has happened since then,\nbaroness.\" '\n\"Much always happens If you keep\nyour oyos open,\" said Sophy,\n\"If you keep yours open nothing happens for mo but looking at thom,\"\n' She laughed-merrily. A-compliment\nnovor displeased Sophy, and sho could\nbear lt vory downright\n\"But If I woro to shut my eyes, what\nwould you do then?\"\nHo looked doubtfully at her mocking\nfaco. She meant a littlo moro than thc\nIdle words naturally carried.\n\"1 dou't think you'll glvo mc thc\ncbanco of considering, baroness,\" no\nIndicated hor costume with a gesture\nof his hand. \"You'vo entered tbo service, I see,\"\n\"Yos, Captain Markart, tho king's\nservice, Wo aro brothron, You servo\nhim too?\"\n\"I havo that honor,\" Markart flush'\nod under hor laughing scrutiny.\n\"Wo fight shoulder to shoulder, than,\nWell, not quito Pm a -runner, you\nnoo.\"\n\"Minus your guns at present!\"\n\"Not for long!\" Shu turned round\nand swept hor arms on\\ toward tho\nlnko and the ti 1 Iln. \"It's n'dny to think\nof nolhlng-Just to go riding, riding,\nriding.\" lior laugh rnnpr out tn merry\nlonging, u\n\"What provonts you?\"\n\"My military dutlon por Imps, cap<\ntain,\" she answered. \"You'ro lucky,\nYou hnvo a longrldo. Don't spoil It by\nthinking!\"\n\"I think? Oh, no, bat-one**)*! 1 only\nnboy my ordow.\"\n\"And thoy novor mnko you think?11\nlior glanco wan quick* nt him for an Instant.\n\u2022There's danger In thinking too\nmuch, even for Indira,\" he told hor,\n8ho looked nt lilm moro gravely, for\nliln oyer* woro on her now, with a kindly, perhaps o romorsoful, look.\n\"Yon mean that for mo?'* sho nsked.\n\"Hut If I, foo, only obey my orderar.\n\"WUlt nil luy li.'ur, I Uoue tints \u2022\"*\u2022\"\nload you Into no iintig\u00abr.\" he sold,\n\u25a0Tboro'f only oni\u00bb dnniror In all tho\nworld- lonlnjr what you lo'ro.\"\n\"Not somotlmcs \u2022gaining It?\" ho ask-\neA nnlrklf.\n\"HUH, tlio only danger would be of\nlosing It again.\"\n\"Thero'n lifo, too,\" ho remarked, with\na ahnig.\n\"Sir, wo'ro \u2022oMIonr* aha cried In\nmerry reproof.\n\"That doesn't prevont me from prising your Mfe, baron*--**, in tho .ntcroati\nof a world not too rich In what yon\nioutrllmt* to it.\"\nSophy looked at blm, a subtle roer*\nrimmt In her eye*. \"I think, Captain\nMarkart, that If yon were my doctor\n\u25a0yoo'd ad?la* mo to try a change of tbt\nmalok ia too aiotUnf. la that lt\u00bb Bat\n1 torn* \u00abenia-**w\u00abU, far fran nUs-\ntna*. you VBovr\n'-.' \"The Kravoniah climate as a*whole,\nbaroness\"\u2014 _ . \u2022 .- ','\n'\/. \"Ohj no, no; that's too much!\" slie\nInterrupted, Then she said: \"It's very\nkind of you\u2014yes, 1 mean that-^nd it's\nprobably^-1 don't know\u2014but probably\nagainst your'orders. So I thank you.\nHut I can face even the,rigors,of Kravonia.\". ' - i, - ' ; *\/- ..'- .\n\\ She held out her hand! He bent and\nkissed it \"In fact I hadn't the least\nfight to say if he confessed. \"Not the\nleast from any point of view. It's your\nfault though, baroness!\"\n', \"Since I'm party to' the crime I'll\nkeep the secret.\" she promised, with.a\n\u2022decidedly kindly glance. To Sophy admiration \u25a0 of \u25a0 herself always argued\n.something good lu a man. She bad\nnone, of that ungracious scorn which\noften disfigures the smile of, beauty.\nSho'gave a little sigh, followed quickly\nby.a smile. * * . * :\n\"We've said all we possibly can ..to\nono another, you and I. More than wo\nshould perhaps! And now,to duty!\" She\npointed to the door of the castle.\n\u25a0 The prince was coming down the\nwooden causeway. He, too, wore the\nVolseni sheepskins. In his hand he\ncarried a sealed letter: Almost at the\nsame moment a,groom led Markart's\nhorse from the stables.. The prince\njoined them and. after a bow.tb Sophy,\nbanded tbe letter to Markart. \"\u2022 ,\n\"For his majesty. And you remember my message to General Stenovics?\"\n^'Accurately, sir.\" ' .\n\"Good!\" He gave Markart his hand.\n\"Goodby! A pleasant ride to you, captain\u2014pleasanter than last night's.\" - His\ngrave face broke into a smile.\n\"I'm not to have M7 Zerkovitch's\ncompany this time, sir?\"-\n\"Why, no, captalp! You see, Zerkovitch left the castle soon after 6 o'clock.\nRather a short night yes, but he was\n.In a hurry.\" '\nSophy burst Into a laugh at the dismay on Markart's face. \"We neither\nof us knew that, Captain Markart. did\n'we?\" she cried. \"We thought he.was\nsleeping off the fright you'd given\n\u25a0him!\"'** '- \\ '\"'.'; ; 4- \"\n\"Your' 'royal highness gives me\nleave\"\u2014 stammered'Markart; bis eyes\non his horse. '\u2022 [ ' -\n\"Certainly, captain. But don't^ be\n..vexed. There , will' be' no invidious\n; comparisons. * Zerkovitch doesn't propose to report himself to General Stenovics immediately- on his arrival.\"''\nGood natured Markart 'joined in the\nlaugh at his own expense. \"I'm hardly\n_awakejyet_He_m\\ist-be_made_of_iron.\n\u25a0 She saw that they must wait It was-\nimpossible to approach the king on tbe\nmatter of, Sophy.7-If cut dead, at .the,-\nheart of his apabltion. It would be a\nshock' as great j as -, the discovery of\nCountess- Ellenburg's ambitions, lt\ncould not be risked. - r \u25a0-\n\"But if under Stenovics' influence the\nking'dbes refuse to see you?' she asked-\"Refuses to see you and repeats\nhis orders?!'' -',' \\\nThe'prince's face, grew,very grave,\nbut his voice .was'firm. \"* , \u25a0 -\n\"Not even the\" king\u2014not even my father\u2014can make \"me throw away the Inheritance, which, is mine. The hand\"\nwould be'the king's, but the voice,the\nvoice of Stenovics.. 1 shouldn't obey.\nThey'd have to come to -Volseni and\ntake me.V \u25a0 '_.\"' V * \u2022 \u2022 ' o -.- \"'\nSophy's eyes'; kindled. \"Yes. that's\nright!\" she said. \"And for today 7\"\n\u2022 \"Nothing will* happen today unless\nby chancei the thing which \u201ewe uow\nknow may happen any day, and of that\nwe shouldn't hear .'till evening!' And\nthere's nu drill even. 1 sent the men to\ntheir homes on- fprty-eigbt hours',' furlough yesterday . morning.\" HLs face\nrelaxed In a_smile. \"\"1 think today we\ncan have a holiday,' Sophy.\"\nShe clapped her hands ln glee. \"Oh,\nmonselgneur, a- holiday!\"\n\"It must be the last for a long time.\"\nhe said, \"so we, must enjoy lt.\"\nTliiSi dny\u2014this holiday which might\nbe the lust\u2014passed--In a fine carelessness and a rich Joy ln llvlug. Tho\ncloudless-sky and the glittering waters\nof Lake Taltl - were parties to their\npleasure, whether as they rode far\nalong tho s.bore or sat\nand ate a simple meal\non,the rock strewn margin. .Hopes and, fears,\ndangers and stern resolves, were forgotten.\nEven of the happier issues -whicli the futuro\npromised or dangled before ' their eyes there\nwas' little thought, or\nspeech. The blood of\nyouth flowed briskly. The heart of\nyouth rose high. , The prince joked,\njested , and paid his court. Sopby's\neyes gleamed with the fun as not even\nthe most exalted, and perilous adventure could make them sparkle,\n\"Ob. It's good,\". she cried-\"good to\nlive and sou tbe suiii! aMonsPlgneur. I\nbelieve I'm a pagan\u2014a sun worshiper!\nWhen he's good enough tn warm nie\nthrough and to make the water glitter\nfor me and shadows' dance ln such a\ncunning pattern'on the bills, fbeir I\nthink I've done'something that he likes\nI and that he's pleased with me!\" Sbe\nsprang to her feet and-stretched out\n\u25a0 her' hands toward the sun.- \"In the\ngrave.U believe, I shalLremember.the,\nglorious light . My,-memory of that\ncould surely neverdle!\"\nHis was the holiday mood too.. He\nfell in with her extravagance, meetiug\nIt with banter. ,; - - *. **_ \u2022 \u25a0\n- '\u201eTt's only a lamp,\" he said, \"just*a\n' lamp, and it's hung-there for the sole\npurpose of showjng Sophy's eyes: When\nshe's not there\" they, put It out. tor\nwhat's the use o'f'it?'.' * '\n' \"They'\u2022'put it out when I'm,'iiot\n\u25a0flipj-fi?\" -,-,.'\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0.'''\"\u25a0 - 7 . * .-\nLATEST IN\nFIREBUGS\nAlarm\" Clock- Does Successful\n\u25a0 Turn at Incendiarism\nA Clean Man\n'It's \u25a0 flood,\"\nshe 8a.d,\\\"i*o\nsee the sun''\nVANCOUVER, July \\2\u2014With an ingenious mechanical' de**. ice, Dake and\nBelmo'nC partners in a-jew.elry business at Bnderby, B.VC.,-started an incendiary fire in their store early on\nthe morning of July 2 according to a\nconfession made by Belmont\" today.\nWhen the store -was burned the' police\n\u25a0> -\nmade an-investigation which resulted\nin the arrest of Belmont. His confession came soon afterward and Dake\nhas since been apprehended.\n\u25a0 Belmont says that he and Drake rigged up an alarm clogk in such a way\nthat it would turn an emery wheel.\nThe conspirators for insurauce money\nthen placed matches against the wheel\nand underneath these scattered shavings saturated with oil..\nThe alarm was set for 1.30 on \"the\nmorning of July 2;j It went off on\nscheduled time. .-Belmont and Drake\nwent to the nearby town of Armstrong\nand listened to the fire alarm whistle\neight miles away.\nThen they returned ,to the scone of\nthe blaze. .The stock was insured\nfor $2500. . *' -\nOutside cleanliness is less than half the battle.' A man may\n,4- scrub himself a dozen times a day, and still be unclean. Good\nhealth means cleanliness not only outside, but Inside. , It means\na clean stomach, clean bowels, clean blood, a clean liver, and\nnew, clean, healthy tissues. The man'who is .lean in this way\nwill look it and act it. He will work with **nergy and think\ndean, clear, healthy thoughts. . .,,.. rj --.-'.'\nHe will \"never be troubled with liverj' lung, stomach or blood\ndisorders. Dyspepsia and indigestion originate in unclean stomachs.: Blood diseases are found where there :s unclean blood.'\nConsumption and bronchitis mean unclean lungs.\n.'\u25a0-.- i \u2022 - . '\nDr.. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery\nprevents these diseases. It makes a man's insides clean\nand healthy. It cleans' the digestive organs., makes pure,\nclean blood, and clean, healthy flesh.\nI\n.nil\/i\n1\/\nIt restores .tone to the nervous system, and cures nervous ezhaustion and\nprostration. It contains no alcohol or habit-forming drugs.\nConstipation is the most unclean uncleanliness. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure it.- They never gripe: Easy to take as candy.\n X l : i\t\nLOGGING CONGRESS\nBe gave Marknrt his\nhand.\nthat Zerkoyltch!\" . -\n* * \"Quicksilver!\" smiled the prince.- As\nMarkart r mounted he added, \"Au ,re-\n,voir!\" . -,\nMarkart left the-two standing side\nby side\u2014the prince's serious face lit up\nwith a rare\nsmile, Sopby's\nbeauty radiant\nin merriment\nHis own face\nfell as he rode\naway. \"I half\nwish 1 was ln\ntho other camp,\"\nbe grumbled.\nBut Stenovics'\npower held blm\n-and tho fear\nof Stafnltz. Ho\nwent back to a\nwork ln which\nhis heart no\nlonger was, for bis heart bad felt Sophy's spoil,\n, \"You can havo had uoxt to no sleep\nnil night, monselgneur,\" said Sophy in\nreproach, miugled with commiseration,\n. \"J don't need It. The sight of your\nfaco refreshes mo. Wo\" must talk.\nZerkovitch brought news.\"\nIn low, grnvc* tones bo told hor tho\ntidings and thc steps which he and\nZerkovitch had taken.\n\"\"I understand my father's reasons\nfor keeping mo In tbo dark. Ho moant\nIt woll, but ho was blinded by this ldoa\nabout my marriage. But I boo, too,\nhow It fitted in with Stonovles* Ideas.\nI think It's war botwoon us now, and\nI'm roady.\"\nSophy was almost dazed. Tlio king's\nlifo was not to bo rolled on for a week\n-for a day\u2014no, not for an hour! But\nsho listened attentively. Zerkovitch\nhad gono bnck to Slavna on a\\frooh\nliorsonnd nt top apcod. Ilo would hnvo\nmoro than two hours' load of Markart.\nIlls first duty wns to [open communlca*\ntlous with Lopngo and arrange that the\nvulct Hhould send lilm all tho Information which cnmo to hli oars and any\nImproRHlons which ho was ablo to gather In tho palnco. Zerkovitch would for*\nwnrd tbo roporla to Praslok Immcdlato*\nly ho lona ns thr' prlnco rcmnlnod nt the\ncnstlo. Hut tlit> prlnco was pursuadod\nthat his father would not refill*..- tn seo\nlilm now that he knew tho true stato\nof tho oaio. \"My father Is really attached to mo,\" ho said, \"and If I soo\nlilm I'm confident that I can pcrsundn\nhim of tho liir-xii-Mllt'iK-y of my lonvlni*\ntho kingdom Just now, A hint of my\nsuspicions with rt'ininl to tho caiiiiti*NH\nnnd Ntcnnvies would do It, bnt I'm ro-\nlucthnt to risk giving blm such n nhock,\nI think I cun wnniiile him without.\"\n\"Bui Is It enfe tor von to trust- vonr*\nsolfnt Slavna tn tho palsce and alone?\"\n\"tf iiiu*, fink Urn pn.uctj uioue, und\nI'm not much afraid. Stonovles might\nito tn war with mc. but I don't think\nho'd fnvor nssasi-lnntloii. And to Slav*\nnn I shn n't ito nlnno. Our gunnun will\n\"n wllh tm Scnhr We tttive nr\u00bbWB nf\nthe ffim*. holns on the way. Thero will\nho nntlilnij utrnnw In my nisrchlnff\ntlio giiiincrs down to moat thom.\nThcy'rn only half trained *\u00bbven In drill,\nbut they're brim follows. Wo'll tako\nup our qiiartr-r* with them In flulel*\nman's towor. I don't fear all Rlavna If\n1 hold Hulclmnn'H tower with 30p Vol-\nsonlsns, Stsfnltr. mny do hi* worstP\n\"Vim*,, j \u00ab,\u00bb*,'\u2022 \u00abh-\u00bb nnnwered thought*\nfully, \"I can't mine with yoo to Unlet-\nman's town, though.**\n\"Only if there ore \u00bblims of dinger.\nThan yoa and Marie must com*. If all\nIs quiet yea can etey In twr ban*** W#\neon meet often, ss oftsn u poutbU.\nVn* van rwt wt most wslt-\n\"I've noticed It happen a do7.en tlmea\nof late.\" ..\n\".It lights\\up again when \u25a0 I como,\nmonselgneur?\" . \u25a0 *\n\"Ah. then I forget to look!\"\n\"You get very little sun anyhow,\nthen!'*,', ' .,\n\"I've something so much better,\"\nIt Is pathetic- to read\u2014pntbetlc that\nshe should have set lt down ns though\novery word of it were precious-set It\ndown as minutely as she chronicled\nthe details of the critical hours' to\nwhich fate was' soon to call ber.'\nThey rodo homo together as the sun\nwas .setting\u2014a sun of ruddy gold, behind It one bright purple cloud, the sky\nbeyond blue, deepening almost Into\nblack. When Praslok camo ln sight\nsbe laid ber hand on his, with a long\ndrawn sigh.\n\"Wo havo been together today,\" sbe\nsaid. \"That .will bo thero always. Yes,\ntho sun and tho world woro made for\nus today, and wo bavo boon worthy.\"\nUo pressed ber band, \"You were\nsent to teach mo what Joy Is\u2014the worth\nof thc world to men who llvo in It.\nYou'ro tbo an go! of Joy, Sophy. Boforo\nyou came I bad missed tbat lesson.\"\n\"I'm very glad\"-thus bIio ends hor\nown record of this dny of glory-\"that\nI'vo brought Joy to monselgneur. ne\nfaccH his fight Joyful of heart.\" And\nthen, with one of her absurd, deplorable, Irrcslstlblo lapses Into tbo morcst\nordtnnry feralnlno, she adds, \"That rod\nbadge Is Just tho touch my sboopskln\ncap wanted!\"\nOh, Sophy, Sopbyl What of tbat for\na flnnl reflection on the ovo of mon-\nsolgnoiir's light?\nSUMMER REDUCTIONS\nPRICES IN OUR ENTIRE STOCK\nWo will ofl'er ourcntlro stock to thc public cont^Ibtine nf tlio most up to rtalo\nClothing, Shoos, Huts, Cups, and Uiulerivcitr,, Etc, Everything for men to wear\nTho very bchtuiKl up lo doto suits\nFormerly 8ollin*\u00a3 for 810.00, 315.00 and $18.00\nNow Sellluer for $6.00, 97.50 and SI a50\nIf you buy om-fchoos, the l-'uinousHmiHl anil tho latent htylcs you can save from\n25 to 35 per cent. Overalls and Workininncn':! Shirts at rcdncwl prices\n; Give us a trial and you will always be witinfled\nKEFOURY\nNoxt to ltoclioii'8 Cnudy Storo\nBROTHERS\nNext to Northern Koto!\n\" SEATTLE, July -14\u2014Lumbermen\nrom all parts of the United States,\n\u2022epresenting Interests that control the\nentire timber wealth of the country,\nwill congregate at the Alaska-Yukon-\nPacific exposition from Monday July\n19 to Wednesday July 21.\nThe Logging Congress' which will be\nheld in Seattle at that time is' one Of\nthe greatest annual * industrial congresses now held in the United States.\nThe western lumbermen consider this\nas the\" most Important event' ever\nknown to the lumbering interests, of\n-he Pacific coast.\n\"The \u25a0 meetings will be held in the\nJoo Hoo building whicli was built on\n.he exposition .grounds especially for\n.his-congress. The structure was put\nlp at a cost of ?10,000 by-a number of\nSeattle lumbermen. The amount to\nbe spent for entertainment will bring\nthe amount to oyer $25,000.\n- The Hoo Hoo building , itself has\nbeen-designated as ah exhibit of what\nthe \"west can do in lumber'. The pur*\np08e\"\"of~therIumberriierrTjf\"the-statens\"\nto familiarize the visitors-with western timber. It is expected that it\nwill, do more to,advertise this great\nresource of the west among tlie investors of the east than any other event\nCOUld. \"' r\nKeppet were among the guests. Mrs.\nVanderbilt was wearing on her corsage ' a big diamond ornament which\nattracted much attention and excited\nthe especiaUadmiration of. Mrs. Kep-\nPet- ' ,\u25a0 . .\n\"I am so glad you like it,\" murmured Mrs.'Vanderbilt. \"Won't, you\nplease accept it as .a token of my appreciation of your good taste?\" and\nsuiting the action- to the word, sho\nunfastened the ornament and handed\nit to Mrs. Keppet. Tlie king was near\nand seemed somewhat astonished at\nsuch generosity for the ornament was\na huge affair with big diamonds and\nworth a considerable sum. .\n\"I could not think of taking it,\"\nsaid Mrs. Keppet, but, Mrs. Vanderbilt insisted and eventually Mrs. Keppet accepted the gift.\n\u2022'That \u25a0 ends the story but there,is a\nsequel. \u25a0 Tho noxt' night at another\nparty Mrs. Keppet was wearing the\nornament. \"What a beautiful thing\nit is,' said a friend. \"Where did you\nget it?\"' ,. ,\nA GREAT TIME\n(381T.\nGREAT HOSPITALITY\nNEW YORK, July 12\u2014London . despatches to the Times sny that society\ncircles in London are nil agog., over\nthe story of an Incident which occurred at a dinner recently given for\nKing Edward at which Mrs. Frederick W., Vanderbilt and Mrs, George\n\u2014SEATTra-~Jui*f^3=^ara\"det's*-\u2014pic--\nnics, .music, fireworks and sporting ev-,\nents will mark the celebration of Farmers day at the Alaska-Yukon-Paclfic exposition! September 8.\nG. D. Wilson of Poag, 111., has been\nappointed director general of the day\nand Is preparing an elaborate program\nin which all farmers of the northwest\nwill be interested. At both the St.\nLouis and Jamestown expositions nil\narrangements for the day set aside for\ntho farmers were made by Director\nGoneral Wilson.\nThe morning parade at the Exposition on Farmers day will bo participated in by agriculturists from Washington, Idaho, Oregon nnd British Colum\nbia.' Then will come the address of\nwelcome by President Chtlberg. Shortly after 12 o'clock the farmers will assemble on the grounds near the shore\nof Lake Washington for a' basket pio\nnlc. ' \u2022 \u25a0\nDuring the afternoon it Is proposed\nto,hae an unusual feature known 03\ntho Bells of Christendom in which 700\nyoung girls from various parts of the\nUnited States will take part'. Wire\nconnections will be made with bells In\nSeattle and about the cities of Puget\nSound and at a given signal the young\ngirls will press electric buttons ring-\"\ning hundreds of bells.\nThe rainbow banquet in the evening\nwill be an international affair, for iri:'\nvitations are to be sent to foreign\ncountries to have representatives present on Farmers day.\nFarmers from all over the Northwest will come to Seattle In great num-,\nbers for the celebration' of farmers\nday and September 8 will no doubt be\na banner day in the history': of tho\nPacific World's fair. \u25a0-\" ' '.\nCASTRO PUTTING UP FUNDS\n Vl-lAGLMVfmiaT T.al.._1_9 Tn.\u201ea_t\"\u201e..\u2122.\t\n^\u2014' ,. r^ajii ,naj Wiay\u2014., uij\u2014J.,J J.\"licav.~ Al*. Ill\"-\nr President Castro of Venezuela is fur*;\nnishlng funds for the,- revolutionary *\nrepublic of Colombia, is the latest rumor received ln Washington from S:\nAmerica. \u25a0\nVague rumors reported to the state\ndepartment allege that Castro, wishes\nto make use of the revolutionary forces\nof Colombia,as a means of reinstalling\nhimself ln Venezuela. Information\nhns been received at the department\nthat Colombian troops have been' dispatched to Honda, a town, on the\nMagdalona river, ostensibly to Intercept any revolutionary forces ascending\nthe ' rivor up towards Bogota, the capital.\n(how oo\nDOLBY\u25a0\nDOLBY'S DOUBLE\n>. f \u2022 T\") OON'f KNOW'iT'vE.-a.YKb' IFORGOT S ^W\/OiLK RI\nIIKUH was a stir In Slavna,\nKxclloincnt wai jfrodually\nRrowlnir, not unmixed with un-\nnnslnt-Rs, (lon-dp wait buiy at\ntho Hotol de Carls and at tho Ooldon\nLinn. Mon ciimtorcd In group* and\ntnllccd, wlillo thoir wlvai said they\nwould In* hot tor at homo, mlnrtln**; thoir\nbiiftlnoM nnd Icttln**- politic** nlono.\nKnowIodRO wna fnr to nook. Tlumors\nwore plentiful, Dr. Nntchnff might bo\nan reni-Kiirlmr nn lie plonnod. hut he hnd\nc-pont tho night at tho palnco! All won\n>,(i\/t.a in Die a-fiji, but new* cam* of (no\nforco thnt wat Mnn ralaod io Toltonl,\nand tho iIm of tho fore* loot nothing\nan tho roport \\tttteA from month to\nI in In. i-i.iii.ini,\n-WISE.\n1,1. AVE\nIT \"TO\nDI5\nChick er*\/.\nY\/l'LL ACYMAb AND OHDUR\nYOU VO URAVC, -VOU &AV\n'OLD QALD HCAD-IDEfV\nr KNOW\n.i trm\nWed with whooping eough,\u00bb' ^,y* Mr***\nA. Ooia of Dtirand, Mich. I'or aale bj\nall dniggtaU. *\nCOPYRIGHT, 1909. BY THE NEW YORK EVEHINQ TELEWUU (NEW YORK HERIIO COJl if tyti\nRELEAiC JUNE -25- ^^..u\u00abw^.^ . * - Arrive Fernie\nNo. 213 West \\. .8.48\nNo. 214 East v.'..*a17.55\nNo. 236 Local East .......... S.48\nNo.' 235 Local West '.'..' 20.50\nNo. 7 West Flyer 10.40\nNo. 8 East..Flyer. ..\u2022 ,. 20.08\n'\" Change takes effect Sunday June 6.\nNO. 252\n10.65 \u25a0 l'\n11.13\n11.25\n11.50\nG. N. TIME TABLE\nFERNIE\nHOSMER\n\\ . -OLSON\nMICHEL\nNo,\n, 251\n1.00\n12.35\n12.27\n12.(1)5\nLocal News\nWanted\nClean rags wanted. Apply Ledger.\nWanted: Small,'cheap gasoline engine. Apply Ledger Office.\n* For sale\u2014Two well situated lots in\nthe Annex.:Apply L. P. Eckstein.'\nFor Sale\u2014Flowers' for planting out,\nstocks, astors, balsams, _ pansles,- daisies, marguerites\/etc, 30 cents per\ndozen. John McLachlan West Fernie\ngreenhouse. ' 7 _ '\nImportant Notice: Write to the Le-\nduc Produce Company,for prices ' on\ncreamery and dairy butter also fresh\neggs. Proprietors of Lakeside Creamery, Leduc, Alta. \u201e\n\u00bb Housekeeper wanted: Must be good\nplain cook, middle aged. Good wages.\nApply between 10 and 11, and 3 and 4.\n' Mrs. H. W. Herchmer. - -\n-For Sale: Ladies bicycle. English\n. make, Dunlop tires, necrly new, \u2014a\nbargain. See J.W. Ringham at Trites-\nWood. \u25a0. * - \" .,\n\u2014-LosU\u2014Gtl\u2014July 1st, n, snuart* gnliT\nwatch key. Initials K. A. on fnco.\nReturn to Dr. Anderson and receive\nrewar.d. * * .\nFor Sale: Thoroughbred bull terrier\n,-pups. Apply Robert Fdlrclough, Fernie\nP. O. a \u201e ' ' 49-2t\nFor Sale'.\u2014Hons with chickens.' Apply T. Mott. Cokato. \u2022 \" *\n\u25a0\u25a0 For Sale\nGo to Rochon's for ice cream.\nDo not forget that Mrs'. Todd's sale\nis on all next week. .\nGet your fishing tackle\" at Suddaby's.\nW.' F. Muirhead & Co. have moved\ninto their now premises.\nReach's Baseball goods at Suddabys.\nMrs. W. S. Keay, wife of W. S.\nKeay, returned to Fernie on Friday.\nR. h. T. Galbraith of Fort Steele\nwas in Fernie on business this week.\nLarge variety of-hammocks at Suddaby's.,\nMr. L. A. Potrin has left for a few\nmonths to look after his land at North\nPortal. - \u201e .\nD. S. Currie and Frank Cremin of\nWaldo were in Fernie on business\nthis week.\nLatest designs in wall papers at\nSuddaby's. (\nAl Rizulto is removing the old\ncity restaurant to a site in the lower\npart of the city. , -\nFinest in the land\u2014Ingram's bath\nroom.\nThe How. Foon block is nearing completion. It will be one of the finest\nblocks in tho city.\nNo place in town just like it. Ingram's pool room. \u201e,'\n\" 13. J. Gook, provincial constable, of\nKlko, lately chief of city police here,\nwas in Fernie this week. - <,\n. Beef, mutton, pork, veal, hams, bacon, \"ard, etc.,'only of the very best,\nPhone 41. c*\nThe roller rink will be closed for a\nfe-av weeks'during the midsummer, but\nwill open again for' the fall term.\nt I a' '\nWhile following his\u00b0occupation as a-\ndigger at No. 5 mine Coal'Creek, Jack\nPatterson received severe bruises.\nit - '\nWork on the new government build-\nGo to Rochon's for'ice cream.\nMiss Stewart of Toronto is visiting\nMrs, R. W. Wood.- . * \u2022\u25a0\u2022___ <*\u25a0\n\"C. D. McNab of Waldo'paid Fernie\na visit on Tuesday. .'\"\n. If you are a particular smoker get\nyour smokes.at Ingram's.-\no-Dr.-Marr of Corbin was in .Fernie\nseveral days \"this week.\n\" 'Furniture is just as cheap as screen\ndoor's at' Trites-Wood Co.\nMrs.' Todd's whitewear sale* commences today \"at'8.30 a.m. .\nMrs. C. Heaton of Kallspell, Mont.,'\npaid Fernie a visit this week. \u2022'-,-\u25a0\nSpecial sale of post cards now on at\nBleasdell's.\n\u25a0 Mrs. H. L. Blackstone visited at\nElWover Sunday with Mrs.' Olands.\nDr. Hagan of Blairmore called here\non his way from \"the'Seattle exposit-.\nion. -'\u201e-.'\u201e.\n- Believe me\u2014the cheapest place on\nearth to buy a stove.is at Trites-Wood\nCo.\nM. W. Morton, inspector of the\nBank of'Hamilton, paid their branch\na visit on Thursday.\nA. W. Bleasdell, agent for Draper's\nPermanent Indistructable - acid proof\nink.,\nMr. W. C. B, Manson,\"manager of\nthe Home Bank of Canada spent Wednesday in Now'Micehl. a\n\u2022 II!\" Shepherd'of Victoria, of the,Mining Examining board .visited Coal\nCreek mines this,week.*\nFor a good comfortable smoke get\nDorenbecker's brands, They - are\nhome-product.\nA glass of iced \"Salada\" Tea will be\nfound most refreshing this warm weather. As cooling as a summer breeze.\nSee Rochon, the.Kandy Kid,\nBargains never before ehard of will\nbe the order of the day aCMcDougall's\nbig shoe sale. Rubber goods at ' and\nbelow cost.\nW: G'. Bruce will hold tlie last saie)\nof boots arid shoes at McDougall's on\nMonday-afternoon and'evening next at\n2.30 and 7.30. .\nThe ,Napanee tug-of-war boys will\npull any team in the city for money,\nchalk, marbles or white .seal...Cleats\nto bo used. Apply to Tom Whelan; ,\no i . \u25a0\n\u25a0Mr. Claus Sleinbart of Milwaukee,\nhas arrived to take up a position in\nthc Fort Steele Brewing Co. \u2022 He will\nno doubt be welcomed in- social and\nMr. E. ,-J. Gook, the terror of evildoers and the joy of them.that do well\nin Elko, ran into town' Wednesday to\nsee the Lodgerput it all over the Fat\n-Men on the\" baseball'diamond, and returned to\" Elko bitterly, disappointed,\nthe next, day. , -. \u25a0 '\nI** ' - a a1,\nS. M. Newton has taken over-the\nI\nVEGETABLES AND FRUIT\nA \u25a0\u2022?,\nI\n- 7? \"vNice and Fresh in .This Morning . '\u25a0iyiy-\nOnions, Radishes, Cucumbers, Lettuce,\nv Rhubarb, Strawberries, Oranges .. *\nand Bananas '\u25a0'\nW. J* BLUNDELL . oive \"s \"aii\n'\" ' 7- \u25a0*>! '\nCr6ws, N est \/Trading ;0.d. v\n;! General Merchants 7;? \"_ \"\nThe Store of Good Values\nX \u25a0 ... U'v\nVictoria Ave.\nFernie, B.G.\nl\ni\nSTARTLINGBARGAINS\nI N;uW HI TlWE A.k\n\u25a0M*s\u00bbiss*M*''^^\nCommencing Saturday 17th. & continuing all week.'\nCorset Covers Trimmed Luces ifc Embroideries from :.'*.... .25\nLadies Drawers, fancy laces \u00abfc insertions from\u2014-...'..... .25\nNight dresses, Mother Hubbard yokes & low necks from 75\nA special lot of White Skirts best value oyer offered.; Soiiie.,\nare slightly' soiled, therefore bought at big discount 50\nAll those who pin chased in the January whitewear sale will' find\n' this wlnrewear still better value, .\nSALE COMMENCES AT ,8:30 SHARP.\nCome earl)- und get a good selection ,;\u2022 *' ,\n! STRICTLY CASH\nI\nMRS. E. TODD\nThe Fernie Pressed Stone & Concrete \u2022\nSewer Pipe Company '-\u2022 -\nAll kinds of concrete work clone, excavating, sewer ditches, concrete side walks, iron fences, and concrete lawn rollers,- also. -\nFire Proof Dwellings from $1,000 up\nOver 70 different designs to choose from. Before building have\na look'at our designs and prices, .' _- .*\u25a0_._-\n^P. O. Box 256 W. M. DICKEN, Mgr. Fernie, B. C.\nWe carry a full line\nof Boots and Shoes,\nHats, Hose, Suit's,0\nShirts, Collars, Ties,\nEverything \u25a0 for men\ning is progressing very favorably7The\nheavy concrete foundation is being\nrushed. . '\nThe buildins of the Methodist church\nis' progressing satisfactorily. \"It is expected that It will be ready by October* lst.\nMr. George Ellis, wo are pleased to\nThe best'paying pi*oposl->\"sUUe' is out oi tho hospital, and-will\ntion In Fernio. $2500 cash. Apply Box\n13, Fernie B. C.\nWanted\u2014Girl to help around ,the\n\u25a0 house, Apply to Mrs. A. A. Gillespie!\nMr. George McLeod from \"Cross-\nfields,\" north of Calgary, .visited our\ncity Sunday ami'Monday. He Is on\na tour through B. C\u201e and expressed\nhlmsolf much surprised at the progress\nFornio had mndo'since Iho fire.\n' Johnny ..Uovtui, employed at ,Vo, \"i\nmine, had somo of his ribs broken by\nfalling off a horso. Johnny, who Is a\nhid, was riding down bohlnd another\nrider when ho fall off on to n rook.\nJIo was taken to tho hospital nt Fornio.\nWatchman Furrol of tho M. l\\ and\nM. It. II. (Ionics' tlmt ho was iibIoop\non Sunday of last wook at 5,30 p. m.\nwhen his Imml was hurt, aH our cotom\nrathor brusquely stated. He wus noar\nthe rail and wuh hli on tho head by ii\nchunk of conl Unit foil from tlio ton*\ndor whon'(ho train started um Ho\nthrew his loft Imml out to support\nhlmuolf whon two of his flngors wont\nci'uhIh-iI by lho engine whocd.\nsoon be around the customs office\nagain.,\nFred J. Scotti representing Hendersons Directories wns in town this week\ngetting tho necessary statistics for his\npooplo.\nTho draw for the K. P. ring will be\nheld In the K. .p.* hall on Tuesday ovoning, July 20th, All those holding\ntickets are cordially Invited to be\npresent.\n\u2022 The minors at a special mooting 'in\ntheir liuil last .Sunday'decided to raise\nthoir contributions to Ihe doctors from\n$1.00 lo $1,50 por month.\n.Mrs. Jos. Lane and two chlldron\narrived from Trodegear, England, to\n.loin hor husband, Mr. Jos. Lano, who\nwas fire boss somo whilo ngo.\n' Somo clnss to this. A ball bearing sowing machlno fitted with nn\nautomatic lift and guarantood for 10\nyonrs, Special $31,50 at, Trites-\nWood Co.\nPi'osldont. Powoll arrlvod In the city\non Wodiionday from lllllcrost, Thurs*\nday ho rocolvod a telegram from Pro*\nhI-Ioiu Stoukcitl of lho Operators lo\nmerit hlin In Mnclood, Ilo loft for thero\nTlmrfldny ovoning.\nLOTS FOR SALE\n400\nChoice Building Lots\nPrince Rupert Empire. We do not\nkno\\v_Mr. Newton, but-the first issue\nunder his management and editorship,\nlooks good to us, and Ave wish iiim all\nsuccess possible. * In referring to the\ndeparture of John Houston, he says:-'\nMrs. McDonald, the wife of A. Mc-\n,1 \u2022\u00bb\nDonald, of the firm of Herchmer and\nMcDonald, arrived in'the city Tuesday\nmorning, and has taken a residence on\nRogers street. Mrs. McDonald is\naccompanied by her sister, Miss1 Young\nof.Glencoe, Ont.\nDr. .Barber and Mrs, Barber left oi*.\nTuesday for the Seattle fair. While In\nSeattle the doctor will attend the\nWashington State Dental convention;.\nHe will return nt the end of tho month\nMrs.\" Barber 'will tour Portland, Vic,'\ntovla, Vancouver. In all she will bo\naway for two months.\nMr, J. S. Rankin, inspector of the\nLiverpool .and London and Globe1 Ins.\nCo,, spent.Wodnesday in Fernio, Mr.\nHunkln will be remembered by many\nof tho citizens of Fornio as ono of tho\ninsurance men who camo in after the\nfiro and adjusted Iossob, He hopes to\nho In town for the anniversary of tho\nflro, hut wo hope, not In his official\ncapacity,\nTho TJuniB-Johnston fight was put\non at tho opera house on Thursday\nnight to a good house. Tho pictures\nworo splondld\u2014In fact tho host of tho\nkind soon horo yot, Thi) ontlro fight\nwiih glvon, also tho surrounding nml\nboth participanth In training quarton*,\nProbably novor boforo could o Fornio\nnudlonco ronll\/.o tho linmenso hnndlcnji\nihnl Tommy lluriiH was up against In\nhis bout with .Johnston, nnd tho giuno\nmiinnor In whicli ho fought buck \\vnii\nfully npprnt-liUud,\nR OGRESS IVE\nF\nERNIE\nA.A.Gillespie :\u25a0: Fernie\n> PROFUSELY ILLUSTRATED\n\u25a0 t ' \u2022 \u25a0 \" - \"'\n100 :\":. : PAGES :':-':\u2022 100\ntn the new\nWANTED AT ONCE\nVonng mon to got. thoir cioMiob\n(.loaned ami repaired al Nlfiy niH'H,\nlho Tailor. A, Uncle block.\n\u25a0\nFernie Annex Extension\nnow on the Market\nREASONABLE PRICES EASY TERMS\nFor Prices ancl Particulars apply to\n$ Crow's Nest Pass Electric Light & Power Co. %\nFop Sale\nSix head rejected\nI\nHorses:\nThis book shows the wonderful\ngrowth of the City of Fernie in\n, . , i -. ;\u25a0>\noriei-year and deals exhaustively\nwith its advantages, etc., etc.\nREADY IN AUGUST\nORDER FORM\nFill in this form and place orders in advance, Price\n50 cents. Return this order form to The District\nLedger, Fernie. B. C.\n,.,,\u2014 -\u2014-\u2014\u25a0 i \u25a0- . \"*\"\nTHE DISTRICT LEDGER, FERNIE, B.C.\nI v\nPlease reserve for me ,. .copies\nof \"PROGRESSIVE FERNIE\" at SO cents per\ncopy, for which is enclosed $\t\nMens' Natural Balbrigan'Uuderwear\n'$'.\u25a0!\nMen's Black Cashmere 1-2 Hose\n!*\u00ab\u2022\u00bb\u00ab\u25a0*'\u25a0*\u25a0\u00bb\u2022*\u2022\u2022\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb i*\u00bbi triwub uaisl al.'^.a. a,..-,!',-,,;::\nW'lnnliioB and Vancouvor. Fortilo's ox*\nclimlvo Hhon Htoro. W, V. Mulrhend\nA Co.\nWANT TROOPS WITHDRAWN\n\u25a0<}Q^Q$<^$Q$<*>^<>$ \u25a0\u00bb*\u00bb-\u00bb-\u00bb\u2666\u25a0\u00bb\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666 **\u2666\u2666*\u2666\u2666\n8PANI8H MINE ACCIDENT\nPARIS, July H\u2014A upeclnl doupiitch\nfrom I.lahon roporm i# ncrloim <*xiiio\n\u00bblon of flro damp in a coal rnlno nt BM*\nmet, Spain. Severn, hundred \u25a0mli-\u00bb'i\u00bb\nnre nnld to bo entombod. l'-ffot*\/* at\nroBciio Bro being madi and 42 Iwliia*\nnr.d 17 dead tthtttiy have b\u00aben r\u00ab'*c\ncd.\nnt apw tuv M. ft* .Tiilv 13\u2014In the\nwee bourn of tho mornin\u2022? ono of the\nHom-attoiiH in connoctlon with thu bii*\nconl Htrilco was BprutiR uoi n tho dlffci'-\n\u00abnt dlHtrlctH Involved wliuii tlio Tradcw\nnud Lnbor ConKrouu of Canada, ropiiv\npontlTiir 40,000 trtulcm unloulutu In direct nfflJIatlon nnd 100,000 In lndlroci\naffiliation, endorsed tho Unitod Mlno\nWorltors In thoir fight ngulnBt tlio Lie*\nminion Conl Compnny nnd tho P. \\V.\nA., and demanded tlio -withdrawal o*\ntho troopB from tho colllorlou,\npet* pair\nMens' Summer Shirts, Soft Collar\n90c to $3.25\nMens' White and Fancy Vests\n$1.25 to $5.00\nThe Big\nDepartment Store\nTrites-Wood Co.\nLIMITED\nFKRNIE\nB. C\nTho tennis club of tho MothodUt\nchurch hnve boon playlni-, on thoir biio\non tho old rocroation grounds this\nwook., A tournament will bo held In\ntha near future. All Intending members nro requested to glvo tbolr names\nIn to Mr; C. Westtoy Owens,\nYou Don't Need a Town Crier\nto emphasize tho morita of your buoinosu or announsu\nyour special sales, A straight story told In a atralfiht\nway to ths readers of this paper will quickly reach\ntho cars of th-tt thoughtful, Int-illf-jent buying-publio,\nthe people who have the money In their pockets, and\nthe peoplo who liuton to rea&on and not uolio. Our\nbooks will show you a list of the kind of people you\nappeal to. Call and see them at this office.\nThe District Ledger, Fernie\nA","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"GeographicLocation","value":"Fernie (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."},{"label":"GeographicLocation","value":"Fernie","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"District_Ledger_1909_07_17","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"IsShownAt","value":"10.14288\/1.0182779","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.504167","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-115.062778","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"Preceding Title: The Fernie Ledger
Frequency: Weekly","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Fernie, B.C. : W. S. Stanley","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Digitization Centre: http:\/\/digitize.library.ubc.ca\/","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"Series":[{"label":"Series","value":"BC Historical Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","classmap":"oc:PublicationDescription","property":"dcterms:isPartOf"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"SortDate","value":"1909-07-17 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1909-07-17 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title","value":"The District Ledger","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}