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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","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":"Full Text","value":" THE DAILY NEWS\nVol. i.\nTHE DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C, SATURDAY, JUNE 14, 1902.\nNO. 46.\nMILITIA IS WITHDRAWING\nFROM PAWTUCKET.\nSHERIFF  TAKES   HIS  DEPUTIES\nOFF OARS AND BETTER\nFEELING PREVAILS.\nPawntuckot, Pennsylvania, Juno 13.\u2014\nAction, which the authorities hope\nmeans tho heglnnlng of the end of the\nreign of lawlessness incident to tne\nstreet railway strike, was taken today\nhy Sheriff Huntor C. White, In removing\nhis deputy-sheriffs from the street cars.\nHe did this on representations made to\nhlm lhat the deputies accomplished no\ngood purpose, hut incited the crowd to\nacts of violence. After the withdrawing\nof these men the city hecume quiet.\nTlie 1500 trops ordered out hy Gover-\nThe 1500 troops ordeered out by Gover-\nhut if matters warrant,, they will be\nwithdrawn gradually, the first installment leave tomorrow. Thero was no\nrioting during tho day, Seven men were\narrested for misdeamors committed on\nPawnticket avenue. None of the lines\nof tho Pawnticket city system of the\nunltod traction company were in operation, and the lines In Central Palls,\nCumberland, and Albln suburb town\nwore tied up. Tomorrow lt is proposed\nto reopen tho city system under the\nprotection of the police, assisted by the\nmilitia. It now devolves on Mayor\nFitzgerald and the police to maintain\norder, and If this plan Is successful the\ntroops will he sent home.\nThe hoy who was shot in the neck by\na deputy is still alive tonight. This afternoon Mayor Fitzgerald ordered all\nthe saloons closed, to keep down any\npossible disturbances during the evening, The proclnmntion issued by Governor Kimball, asking the citizens to maln-\ntnin law and order, wos posted conspicuously throughout town today, and later\nMayor Fitzgerald issued a proclamation\nto the public.\nSTORMY TIME IN AUSTRALIA\nCAPITALISTIC  FORCES  BEING ORGANIZED AGAINST LABOR.\nAGITATION WAS STARTED TO EFFECT ECONOMIES.\nA movement for economy and retrenchment is under way In much-governed Australia. Australians hnve been\ntaught much by the consummation of\nfederation, snys a Melborurne correspondent of The Daily Chronicle. They find\nthat nil the most important legislative\nwork of the commonwealth is boing\ndone by the house of representatives of\n75 members and a senate of 3t> members.\nYet they say that in the states they aro\nsaddled with fourteen houses of parliament, consisting of 751 members, to\nmanage the state affairs of 3,750,000 citizens. They see, too, that they have on\nthoir backs a national debt of \u00a3200,000,-\n000, which lias to be borno by 1,000,000\nbread winners, of whom one man in\nevery eight is a civil servant. They waited patiently for u year and a half for\ntheir state parliaments to reduce their\nnumbers to limits commensurate with\nthe new perspective created by the institution of a national legislature . . .\nStrangely enough the ball has been set\nrolling in Victoria by an obscure country district, Kynbrnm. A group of men,\nled by a Mr. Goddard, hero propounded\nn programme which would effect the\nfollowing substantial reductions In the\nparliamentary mnchlne:\nAt present. Proposed\nMinisters          8 5\nM. P.'s       143 69\nMember's snlory 6300     \u00a3200\nBut though this programme would ensure a saving of over \u00a350,000 a year, It\nleft the entire constitutional and admla\nIstratlvo trouble out of the question.\nIt needed, therefore the powerful advocacy of the great radical dally, The\nAge, to raise the entire crusade to n\nhigh platform. Adopting Lord Rose-\nbery's cry of efficiency, The Age published n series of \"Papers for the Times\/'\nIn which tho utter rottennes of state\npolitics was exposed with fierce truthfulness which was positively startling In\nits operation on the minds of tho electors,\nThe Age proved that the Victorian\nstate railways are being run at a loss\nof \u00a31,000 a day! that no less than\ntwelve Victorian royal commlslons arc\nroaming the country at public expense,\ndoing work that should fall to the lot\nof tho responsible and highly paid ministers; that, as compared with the American and Canadian states, and every\nEuropean country, Victoria is the most\nextravagant democracy In the world;\nthat, despite the fact that the great departments of the postofllce, customs aud\ndefence have passed to tho federal government, tho wages bill for the civil service has gone up from \u00a31,142,781 In\n1809 to \u00a31,312,720 In 1902, or an increase\nof \u00a3109,930; and, finally, that tlio entire state administration has become\nparalysed by the Inefficiency of ministers nnd tho absence of an alternative\ngovernment. This expose led to the\nimmediate and spontaneous formation\nof reform leagues throughout tho state.\nFor throe weeks past there has boon a\nseries of crowded meetings In every\nlarge centre, at which resolutions demanding retrenchment and reorganization have beon passed with hardly a\nhandful of dissentients.\nTho correspondent points out that this\nmovement Is In some measure associated\nwith \"the Anti-Socialism wave of reaction now passing over Australia.\" He\ngoes on: The labor party in tlip two\npremier states has, mistakenly, I think,\ntaken up an attitude of opposition to\nthe reform plus reduction crusade. Instead of utilizing tho popular clamor the\nparty leaders in Sydney and Melbourne\n\u2014usually 'cuto and tactful men\u2014have\ngiven color to tbe idea that they dread\nthe fruits of a policy which must result in the creation of larger constituencies, and, therefore, of increased difficulties In the patli of labor candidates.\nThere Is, however, something to be said\nfor their position in view of the ominous\ncombination of capitalists and employers now in process of formation, with a\nview to test the strength at the next\nstate elections. This combination,\nknown In Victoria as the Employers'\nFederation, has just unified all the employing interests, and this week issued\na manifesto in which state parliamentary reform Is likened with the most insolent Toryism nnd the most antiquated\neconomics. The federation declares It\nwill fight the re-enaction of the Victor-\nIan factories act tooth and nail, especially the minimum wage clauses; nnd\nthat it will oppose generally all that\norganized labor holds dear. The manifesto opens, significantly, thus:\n\"For many years the employers nnd\ncapitalists of Australia have stood\nmostly on the defensive against tho aggressions of socialistic legislation, which\nhas so long swayed our parliament; but\nthe time has now come when this must\nbe actively combated and opposed.\"\nIn these circumstnnces it is not to bo\nwondered ut If advanced labor men see\nIn the reform agitation their old enemy\nthe \"freedom of contract\" individualist\nin a new garment\nNEWMAN WAS BANQUETTE!)\nTRAINMEN   ENTERTAIN   ONE   OF\nGRAND OFFICERS.\nTHEIR HOSPITALITY IS SHARED BY\nLARGE COMPANY.\nThere was u great gathering of railroad\nmen ut the Humo hotel last night, tlie occasion buiug a supper given la honor ui\nthe visit uf W. T. Newman, ur Cleveland,\nOhio, fourth vice-grand master of the\nBrotherhood uf Railway Trainmen, by tho\nofficers and members uf Kootenay lodgu\nNo. 658. B. It. T. J. P. Wells pros Id wi.\nAmong those present In addition to members of Kootenay lodge, wore ropreseniu*\nlives of sister organizations, railway of-\n(Iclals, representatives uf thu medical fraternity, the nitiyur and u number of leading citizens.\nThe spacious dining room uf the Hume\nwas prettily decorated fur the occasion,\nand u first-rate orchestra was lu attendance. After ample justice had been dune\nio an excellent repaat the toast list was\nproceeded with, \"The King\" was of course\nllrst un lhe list, nml it was honored in due\nfurni by the singing uf the national anthem. Next lu order eaine \"Grand Lodge\"\ncoupled with the name of tho guest of the\nevening, \\V. T. Newman. Jn responding\nto lhe toast, Mr. Newman expressed the\npleasure he had experienced In visiting\nNelson and la meeting the members of\nKootenay lodge. lie also appreciated as\nan American citizen the privilege of Joining in the first toast. Speaking of the order uf railway trainmen, Mr. Newman said\nfew In Canada realized from what Insignificant beginnings It had grown intu its\npresent vast proportions. Twenty years\nago seven brakemen had met together nnd\noutlined a plan uf organization which today Is represented by the Inrgest railway\norganization on earth, numbering In Its*\nmembership upwards of 57,000 men. The\nrelations existing between the organization\nand the various railway corporation^ were\nof the most harmonious nature. The goneral managers of tho railways realized today that It was not the object of their organization to foment trouble, but rather\nto assist in every honorable way to advance the best interests of the companies,\nAt the snmc time they expected to share\nIn the advantages secured by the companies through their efforts. Mr. Newman\nwent on to compare tho conditions prevailing todny with those prevalent twenty\nyears ngo. Thore Is now no arbitrary resort to strikes, followed by sullen return\nto work after their money bad run. oul\nand the beer was nil consumed. Grievances\nwere today systematically Investigated,\nnnd where a member hnd been disciplined\nfor mlscondccl the action of the railway\nofficial would be upheld. The Brotherhood\nnow consisted of fB9 lodges, and nt the last\nconvention a resoluilon was adopted favoring arbitration und conciliation as the\nbest method of adjusting nil labor dlfflc-\ncullies, lt was the policy of their order to\nQXh'aust every honorable moans of settling\ntheir grievances before resorting to u\nstrike. This policy had proved eminently\nsatisfactory to all concerned and had\ngiven iheir order an Influonco fur good\nthat could hnve boen obtained In no other\nway. Mr. Newman described the method\nIn force of dealing with all difficulties that\narose affecting nny member of the order.\nTho chief rule being that there must be\nno precipitate or aggressive action, lie\ndescribed tho Insurance und beneficiary\nfeatures of the order, nnd nlso told of the\nmethods of conducting the business at\nhendquarters In Cleveland* Inclosing Mr.\nNewman congratulated tho Canadian\nbrethren upon the success thut had Invariably attended their efforts to adjust\nIheir grievances with the C. P. II.. His\nvisit hud not beon In connection with any\ntrouble, but simply a social one. \"Our Officials\" the next toast was responded to\nhy J. a. Lawrence und ,1. Hamilton. Mayor\nFletcher responded to the toast of \"Our\nCity.\" For \"Kootenny Lodge No. 658\" the\nspeakers wore J. S, Irving und A. Ilalltett.\n\"Sister Organizations\" was responded to\ntiy Messrs. McNnb, on behalf of the li.\nh, K. and 13. L. I<\\, I). McKay for I be O.\nH. C. nnd A. II. Lewis nnd M. H. Frasor\nfor tho O,   R,  T..    Tho other toasts  thnt\nwero given were to \"The Ladies,\" \"Tiie\nPress,\" and to \"Our Host.\"\nThe hour wus late when the proceedings\nterminated with \"Auld Lung Sync\" and\ntho national anthem. \u2022\nMr. Newman leaves for Vancouver this\nafternoon.\nANOTHER ROW STARTED.\nOpposition Accuse Eberts of Trying to\nKill Bodwell's Chnrter.\nVictoria, Juno IB.\u2014(Special to The Dally\nNews.)\u2014The three million loan hill was\npassed, and assented to by the lieutenant-\ngovernor toduy.\nThere was a wrangle tonight over a bill\nfrom attorney-general Eberts, striking out\nthe antt-allen clause in a number of railway hills passed last session, as otherwise\nthe Dominion would disallow them. From\nthe list of bills cited the Victoria Terminal\nrailway bill, represented by Bodwcll, was\nomitted, tho opposition charged tlie government with deliberately doing so, to\ncause the disallowance of bill, und Intimated thut they would light the measure\nin consequence.\nFRANCHISE IS WIDE OPEN\nPROVINCIAL,  LEGISLATURE  GIVES\nTHE BOYS A VOTE.\nWOMEN SUFFRAGISTS FAIL TO SECURE A MAJORITY.\nVictoria, June 12.\u2014(Sneclnl to\nTlie Dally News.)\u2014Tho legislature sprung another surprise upon the province todny. It enmo\nwhile the house was considering\na bill to amend the Provincial\nElections Act, when an amendment wns offered changing the\nago nt which the franchise ban\nbe exercised from 21 to 18 years.\nThose who were instrumental in\nsecuring the change doubtless\nsounded a number of members\nbefore the amendment was introduced, as the vote was overwhelmingly In its favor, standing 22\nto six. The vote is surprising in\nthat nothing was heard of nny\nagitation for a change, and the\nnows thnt it has been mado will\ndoubtless be the first. Intimation\nthat most people will have that\nthe change was even contemplated.\nThe friends of the woman's\nfranchise were not so successful.\nYear nfter yenr the advocates of\nthla change have conducted n\nlobby to secure tho amendmont\nto tho olection act thut they desire, and on one or two occasions they have secured a sufficient number of promises from\nthe Individual members of tho\nhouse to secure a pnssnge of\ntheir fancied reform, but when lt\ncame to the Ana) vote their converts Invariably fell away. Tho\namendment wns moved ngain today, but it was three votes short\nin a slim houso, being defeated\non a division of 15 to 12.\nIt is expected now thnt tho business of the present session will\nbe concluded on Wednesday.\nThis will make tlie present sitting ono of tho longest in the history of the province, nnd it has\ncertainly been the most lively,\neven It it has not been very profitable for the province.\n\u25a0I*\n*\n*\n+\n*\n\u25a01,\n.J. .[. * .{. .J. -J..[. + -J. + ,). .{. .j, .j. + .[. .j.\nAMERICANS 13ANQUETTED.\nGeneral Joseph Wheeler Talks of America's Debt to England.\nLondon, June 13.\u2014A dinner of welcome wns given tonight to General Joseph Wheeler, H. Clay Evans, the newly\nappointed consul in London from America, and Congressman English, of Indiana, at which many representative Americans nnd Englishmen wore present.\nThe dinner was originated by Lindsay\nRussel, and his first idea was to confine\nthe guests to Americans In London who\ncame from tlio southern states, hut the\nidea was gradually enlarged until the\nhost sent invitations to Americans from\nall parts of the United States, and the\nguests of tho ovening Included many\nprominent Englishmen. The dinner\nwns followed by speeches and toasts and\nmany tributes wero pnld to those present. King Edward nnd President Roosevelt were toasted with much enthusiasm. Responding to a toast, Goncral\nWheeler snid tlie United States could\nnever forget tho debt ot gratitude, they\nowed England for the lattcr's attitude nt\nthe time of the Spanish American war.\nCORONATION DAY AT VICTORIA,\nThere will be 2000 Men In Line at Naval\nnnd  .Military  Review.\nVictoria, June lit.\u2014(Special to Ttie Dally\nNows.)\u2014The naval and military review lio-\nfore tho lieutenant-governor and admiral.\non coronation day, will bo great speotaclo,\nthe government grant estimating 20WI ho|-\ndlors and sailors In lino.\nTho students of tbo University of Minnesota, under professor McMillan, will re-\nSUtnO BlUdlOS on tlio west const of tho Inland  111   a  few  weeks.    They  spout   tholr\nholidays thoro last summer, Btutlytng ma*\nrlao life.\nSTBIKEBS' GAINS\nACTIVE VOLCANO IN HAWAII.\nHonolulu, Juno 3.\u2014(Via San Francisco,\nJune 13.)\u2014The volcano KUnuoit, op Hawaii,\nIs notlve. According lo n report received\ntoday by steamor, flames nnd smoko are\nrising above the crater. The outbreak occurred on June 3rd and up to the time of\ntho Inst report, dnted yesterday, It was\ncontinuing. The outbreak has heen foro-\nshiidowcd   many   days.    There   also   have\nbeen Blight earthquakes.   No oruptlons of\nlava or ashes have occurred os yet.\nENGINEERS AND PUMPMEN\nNEARLY ALL OUT.\nTHOSE WHO REMAIN IN AFTER\nTODAY TO BE BLACKLISTED\nBY UNION.\nWilkesbarre, Juno 13.\u2014The work of\nthe strikers in attempting to bring out\nthose who aro Btill In the employ of the\ncoal mines, goes on. Their campaign\nagainst the engineers, firemen antl\npumpmen is nearly over, most of these\nmen being out, and the union.Is now\npaying more attention to the flrebosses,\nclerks, and others who have taken the\nplaces of those who quit. Quite a number of fire bosses throughout the region\nhavo already stopped work, but they had\nbeen asked to take the strikers places,\nand at a meeting hold here this evening about a dozen more consesutcd to\njoin the strikers union.\nThe miners union is now planning to\nexpel all engineers, firemen and pumpmen who have not yet obeyed the strike\norder. They hnvo been given until tomorrow to join the strikers, and if they\ndont quit thoy will be expelled, and their\nnames published throughout, the region\nlis \"unfair\" workmen,\nNothing developed here today which\nin any way changed tho strike situation.\nPresident Mitchell had nothing to give\nout regarding the West Virginia situation.\nLEGISLATURE  ON RECORD\nHOUSTON'S RESOLUTION HAS BEEN\nADOPTED.\nASKS FOR INCREASED DUTIES ON\nLEAD IMPORTS.\n\u2022 Victoria, June 13.\u2014(Special to \u2022\n\u2022 Tho Daily News.)\u2014In the legisla- t\n\u2022 turo   yesterday   the   resolution \u2022\n\u2022 moved by   Houston,   of  Nelson, \u2022\n\u2022 directing tlio attention of tlie fed- \u2022\nt oral authorities to the necessity \u2022\n\u2022 for increasing tbo Import duties \u2022\n\u2022 ou lead imports, was unanimous- \u2022\n\u2022 ly adopted. The resolution reads: t\n\u2022 \"Thnt it is desirable, in tho In- \u2022\n\u2022 terests of the silver-lead mining \u2022\n\u2022 and smelting industries of Brit- \u2022\n\u2022 ish Columbia, that the duties on \u2022\n\u2022 pig lead ami the products thereof \u2022\n\u2022 imposed by the Dominion of Can- \u2022\n\u2022 nda should be so increased as to \u2022\n\u2022 protect the capital  invested  in \u2022\n\u2022 these industries, and encourage \u2022\n\u2022 the investment of capital In the \u2022\n\u2022 establishment   of   the    various \u2022\n\u2022 manufactures  of  leud   products \u2022\n\u2022 within tlio dominion.   And be it \u2022\n\u2022 further resolved, that a copy of \u2022\n\u2022 the above resolution be forward- \u2022\n\u2022 ed by tlie provincial secretary to \u2022\n\u2022 tlie governor-general  in council \u2022\n\u2022 nt Ottawa, and to each member \u2022\n\u2022 of tho  house  of commons and \u2022\n\u2022 senate.\" e\n\u2022 \u2022\nFAMINE IN SIBERIA.\nPeople  of Siberia  Afltlctod   With   Several\nDisastrous Plagues.\nSt. Petersburg, June n.-Tho famine In\nSiberia is spreading with Increasing Intensity. Reports from Irkutsk show that an\nenormous number of famine stricken people are flocking to the cily. They are\ncamped lu the open, without shelter of any\nkind, are clad In rugs, and are dependent\non private charily, which Is quite Inadequate to cope with the distress. Crop reports from the western, northern and\nsouthern central Russia show the conditions  in   those  parts  nf  ihc?  empire  to  be\nflourishing. Reports from Orel, KleiT, Kazan and the provinces In the northwost\nare satisfactory. On the other hand, the\nconditions are very bad in tho Trancasplnn\nterritory, owing to drought and locusts,\nwhich will necessitate government relief\nund resowlng to tho amount or $250,000, A\ncattle plaguo also prevails In tho stricken\ndistricts.\nJOCKEY DONEQAN KILLED.\nSt. Louis, June U-Jockoy Donegan wns\nkilled lu the llrst nice al tho fair grounds\ntoday, ids skull being crushed in a collision between his mounl and nnothor horse,\nThe horses, Pcttljohn find BIza, collided,\nthrowing their jockeys Donegan and Mat-\nthows.   Pettljohn's hoof struck Donegnn's\nskull, crushing It.    The Jockey died sunn\nnfter being taken from the truck.   Matthew was  badly  hurl.\nWRITS FOR IRISHMEN.\nDublin, June 13.\u2014At tiie instance of\nLord Defrrync, a writ has been Issued\nagainst many of the Irish parliamentary\nparty on the charge of conspiracy In\nconnection with the tennant troubles\non the Dofroyno estate, Roscommon\ncounty. Among the defendants wero\nJohn Redmond. John Dillon, W. O'ilrleii,\nJ. O. Swift McNeill, and Connor O'Kelly.\nLA QUAYARA'S TROUBLES.\nKingston, June 13.\u2014Tho British\nsteamer Trent, which arrived here today from West Indian ports, brlnga papers and loiters from Venezuela Of June\nitli. but they did not contain anything\nregarding the report from Berlin of the\nbombardment of LaQuayara, although If\nwas known that President Castro had\ndecided upon extreme measures to re\ngain possession of Quldada, Bolivar and\nother towns captured by the rebels.\nBusiness is at a standstill, and especially at LaGuayara, Caracas and Valencia. Much indignation has been created in the republic by tho Imprisonment of General Fonseca, in. consequence of his failure to meet President\nCastro's call for $200,000, and also by\nthe president's call on the widow of\nGeneral Blanco, former president, for\na similar sum. The new cabinet,, with\nGeneral Garrldo as war minister, is\nmore unpopular than its predecessor,\nand Is gaining increased sympathy for\nthe revolutionary party.\nTHE GRANBY OUTPUT.\nGrand Porks, June 18.\u2014(Special to Tho\nDully News',)\u2014During the week ending: todny, the Granby smelter treated 8326 tonjj\nof ore. The total amount treated to date\nis iiK.-im; tons.\nALEXANDER CITY WIPED OUT.\nMontgomery, Alabama, June 13.\u2014The\ntown of Alexander City was almost completely destroyed hy tire tills afternoon.\nAn appeal for succor for tho destitute hns\nbeen made.\nVICTORIA MEN SELECTED\nCAPITAL HAS A GOOD CREW FOR\nTHE REGATTA.\nONE  CREW  WILL  ROW   IN  BOTH\nb     EVENTS.\nThe James Bay Athletic Asso- *\\*\nciution of Victoria  hns  selected *h\nthe men who will represent It In -V\nthe approaching rogatta of the \u2022!\u2022\nN. P. A. A. O.   in   this  city  In +\nJuly next. This year ibo Victoria *\nassociation will   have   but   one -I*\nfour, and It will row In tlie junior -j*\nns well   as   the   senior  events, *\\*\nThe men selected are well bal- *\nanced and  their past perform- \u2022I-\nances indicate thnt thoy will give 4*\na good account of themselves, *\nThe crew is made up of W. Wil- \u2022!\u2022\nson, stroke; C. Kennedy, 3;  H. *\nBriggs, 2; and L. Gill, bow. *\nW. Wilson, it will be remom- *\\*\nbored stroked the Junior crew In \u2022!\u2022\nthe regatta at Shuwnigan  lake \u2022;\u2022\nlast year, and also the victorious *;\u25a0\njunior four at the association re- \u2022r*\ngalta on May 24th.   Ho possesses 4*\na very long reach, nnd thore Is \u2022!\u2022\ngreat power in his long sweep- *I\u00ab\ning stroke. *b\nC. Kennedy,   who   Is   to  row *\nthree, is looked upon as a dark *\nhorse.   Ho has no string of vie- 4*\ntorics to his credit, but has been \u2022!\u2022\ndoing very effective work in tbo \u2022f\nthird sent this season. *,-\nH. Briggs, who is to row two, *\nwas in tho same seat in the local \u2022!*\u25a0\nVictoria regatta on May 21th. \u2022!\u2022\nL. Gill, the bow oar, was In the *\njunior boat at  Shnwnlgan  last -i*\nyoar, and also rowed throe In the -.\u2022\nrogatta on May 24th. *\nThe weights of tho men are *\\*\ngiven us   follows:     W.   Wilson. *t*\n171  pounds;   C.   Kennedy,   175 *h\npounds;  II. Briggs, lift pounds; *\nand L, Gill, 172 pounds.            ' -I*\n-H-M^-i-M-M-M- 'I\"M-M\"t\"l\"M\"H\"l''l'\nBIO FIR 13 IN PHILADELPHIA.\nEmployees EBcnped by Leaping Into Nets\nHeld by Firemen.\nPhiladelphia! June 13.\u2014Fire today destroyed tbe novelty manufacturing uf n.\nM. Rosenblatt & Co,, a four story brick\nstructure, at Second und oxford streets,\nmid resulted In injuries to seven persons.\nThe John Moffet public school, opposite\nthe leather works, was damaged, three\ndwellings adjoining the factory were destroyed, and nine others were slightly\ndamaged, The rapid spread of tho names\ngave rise to rumors that a number of tho\nemployees bad met death in the building.\nbul these reports proved to bo erroneous.\nA member of ihe llrm of Rosonblalt K-\nCo. said tonight Unit at) of the employees\nhad been accounted for. There wore many\nsensational and narrow escapes, most of\niho inn men and women employed In the\nfactory saving their lives by leaping from\ntho windows Into nets held by flromen.\nMr. Rosenblatt estimates his loss at $160,-\n000, partially Insured and the loss on the\nother properly Is estimated at $16,000,\nMEN REFUSED TO FIGHT,\nTho Sheriff Had Got Away With lhe\nReceipts of the Box Olllce.\nPhiladelphia) June 13, \u2014 The six-round\nboxing contest between Jack Root, of Chicago, and Kid Carter, of Brooklyn, scheduled   for   the   Pennsylvania   Athletic   Club\ntonight, did not take place. After the preliminary  bad  been disposed  of thn man-\nngemont announced the box olllco receipts\nhad boen attached for the payment of un\nold account, the sum or JtlU-i being appropriated by the sheriffs officers, Rooi unci\ncarter hud been guaranteed $3000, and as\ntho amount was not represented In lhe ad-\nnilssfrjns  they  declined   to  enter  the  ring.\nSPECULATING ON HONORS.\nLondon, Juno 13.\u2014Many circumstantial rumors are current as lo tho forth-\ncoining coronation honors. Obviously\nthey ure the merest conjectures, the secret being well kept belween the sovereign and his ministers directly concerned. There is all sorts of talk about the\nhonors to lie showered on colonial premiers and other ropresonlal Ivo colonials.\nCanada's P. M. il. according to the\nsame, will return to Canada \"Sir Wil*\nHum.\" Premier Lnurier, another report says, will lie made a baron, but then\nIt is all guess work.\nThe annual dinner In celebration of\nDominion dnv will tako place Oil Tuesday, the 1st of July, at the Hotel Cecil.\nLord Strathcona is lo preside on the\noccasion. Lord Mlnto, Sir Wilfrid Laur-\nier, antl several of the visiting premiers\nfrom tho other colonies, it Is. expected,\nwill be present.\nCONDUCTORS' GRIEVANCE.\nThere Is a movement on foot among\nthe conductors of tho Canadian Pacific\nrailway, aiming at the presentation ot\na demand for increased remuneration\nand other concessions. The general\ncommittee of tho order Is In session in\nMontreal completing and perfecting the\norganization, and deliberating upon the\nrevision of tlie schedule of wages which\nis now in force, somewhat after the manner of tho trackmen and telegrnphers,\nwho recently obtained an advance in'tho\nscale of pay. The meetings thnt are\nbeing held are private, and the committee have hnd little to say on the subject of their deliberations. Up to the\npresent the conductors have not made\ntheir demand upon the company.\nGOSSIP OP KASLO.\nKaslo, June 13.\u2014F. h. Groenough ot Montana, owner of the Great Britain mine,\nwith Robert Angus nnd D. D. Hurke of\nSpokane, are In Kaslo on business connected with iheir property. Thoy leave tonight\nfor the Lardo. It Is understood that Mr.\nAngus will act aa manager and thai work\nwill shortly be commenced.\nJ. J. Gritlltlis of Trout Luke Is also In\ntown purchasing supplies, und as a side\nIssue making tho necessary arrangements\nfor tho Dominion Day excursion from\nKaslo aud Nelson. Trout people arc anxious to make thoir celebration one of\nmarked success this year.\nTho owners of the Pontine and Other\nmineral claims on Woodberry creek aro\nbusily engaged In packing In large supplies\nand preparing to go uhend with extensive\ndevelopment.\nCANADIANS FOR CORONATION.\nMontreal, June 13.\u2014The Allan liner Tun-\nslnu sails tomorrow for London with the\nCanadians hound to see the coronation.\n.Major O'Grady llaly, the Blsloy team, ami\nHong Kong contingent are passengers.\nOthers on board are linns, Fielding, Mul-\nock and Patterson, senator Gibson, and\nCalvert, Logan and McLaren, M. P.s, New-\ncomb, deputy minister of justice, bishop\nSwoetmun, of Toronto, sir James Grant,\nof Ottawa, nnd A. F. Gait, Montreal. Most\nOf the latter ure accompanied by' their\nfamilies,\nLAST COURT OVER,\nLondon June R\u2014King Edward nnd lhe\nqueen held the tit'th und final court of the\nseason at Huckinghniri Palace tbis evening. It wns raining hard, and a cold wind\nwas blowing, and the weather worse, if\npossible, than Inclement nights of previous\ncourts. The scene Inside Hneklugliani\nPalace was very brilliant, however, as the\nJapanese and Korean cmhussys to the coronation, who have Just arrived In England,\nund who attended court, were quite as\nsplendidly attired as the Indian princes.\nTho latter will be a feature of this, as\nthoy hnve been of previous courts. The\nroyal party Included the princess Victoria,\nand the prince of Wales.\nSTREET CAR STRIKE.\nToronto, June 11\u2014There Is every likelihood of a strike of the Toronto streot rnil-\nway men who demand tho recognition of\ntheir union. President Mackenzie refuses\non Die ground thai lhe union is an American  organization.\nLIBERALS REFUSED RECOUNT,\nWalkcrlon, June 13,\u2014An application for\na recount was made today In Ccptro Uniee,\nnu behalf of Dr. Stewart, tbe defeated Liberal candidate. Judge Klein decided it\ncould not he granted us Dr. Black, returning ofllcer, had made his return before the application for u recount wits\nmade to the judge,\nST. LOUIS DERBY TODAY.\nSt. Louis, June 13.\u2014The great St. Louis\nDerby will bo run at tlio fair grounds tomorrow. The prizes to be contested for\nwill bo worth $16,000, A Held of nine horses\nwill go to lhe post. Including some of lhe\nbest 3ycar*olds In training  In   tho west.\nTerra   Flrniu  is the logical winner of the\nPROTEST AGAINST M'KAY.\nToronto,   June- 13.\u2014Conserve Uvea   havo\nentered   an   appeal   against   tlie  election   of\nA. C. MeKny, Liberal candidate In North\nGrey. The recociil reduced bis majority\nfrom nine to live and the Conservatives\nclaim  that after the appeal is heard Boyd\nwill have a majority of nine.\nMARCONI'S LATEST INVENTION.\nLondon, June 13.\u2014In the course of a lecture tonight, before the royal Institution\nof Great Britain, William Marconi announced that he had Invented a Highly\nsensative magnetic detector ol oteotrfe\nwaves, by which il was possible to read :pl\nwords per minute In wireless telegraphy.\nKASLO BOATS BARRED.\nMr. Hodge, of Nelson, has Informed II,\nI,. Lindsay, the Kaslo boatman Dial bis\nrow bonis are barred from racing at Nd-\nson on regalia day. The reason given Is\nthat Mr. Lindsay's boats are far superior\nlo those owned In Nelson. They carried\noff the llrst prizes easily lu the races last\nyoar,- Kaslo Koolonntnn.\nMETAL QUOTATIONS.\nLondon, June lit.\u2014Lead C11 5s.\nNew York, June IX\u2014Bar silver, 62c;\ncopper, easy; lead, quiet,\nCOPERRINO COLLEGE HONORS.\nBaltimore Juno U.\u2014President Ira Rom-\nsen, of lho John Hopkins University, Is on\nhis way to lhe University of Toronto, to\nbe the former's representative nl tho lat-\nlor's commencement. At tho quarter catenary of John Hopkins hist winter, president Loudon or Toronto, was given tho\ndegree ot LLH., iiih) thai honor will now\nhe conferred upon president  Rcmaen.\nFABBBHAPPY\nMANITOBA'S   CROP   OUTLOOK IS VERY BRIGHT.\nCHANGES   ABE   THAT   CANADA\nWILL HAVE   ANOTHER\nPROSPEROUS SEASON.\nWinnipeg, June 13.\u2014Crop bulletin No.\n60 wus Issued tonight by the Manitoba\ndepartment of agriculture, and Is compiled from returns received by the department up to June 11th from all\nparts of tho province. Reports Indicate\ntbat the germination of seed has been\nperfect, and thut wherever tho seed\nwus muddod in, and farmers had difficulty In drawing seeders off the flelds,\nthe prospects are surprising. Farmers\nhave done their work as well as could\nbe expected under tho conditions, and\nfrom tho past experience It Is only natural to expect a good harvest. Seeding\ncommenced in some parts of the province as early ns the llrst of April, but\nwas not general until nfter tlio 15tU.\nIn most parts of tlie province wheat\nseeding was not finished until May 24th.\nOats and barley und other crops wero\nsown up to the end of the first wook in\nJune. Flax was sown as late as Juno\n10th. Seeding was greatly retarded in\nall parts of the province by a heavy rain\nfall throughout the month ot Mny.\nThere was more ruin during Bcedlng\nthan farmers desired, resulting In a few\ncases in a decreased acreage In wheat,\nbut this has been anipiy compensated\nby tiio wonderful rapid growth which\nall crops have made. A feature of tho\npast season was tlie heavy rain fall In\nMarch, there being nn average of 1.75\nInches. April wns light In contrast, being only .21 Inches for the points reported. Tlio rainfall for May was tho\nheaviest record for tbnt month, being\niM. as compared with .91 in 1901.\nGrass, like grain crops, hus mnde remarkable progress under the prevailing\nfavorable Influences, and pastures uro\nin the finest possible condition. Hay\nmeadows nre now flooded, and If they\ndry sufficiently by haying time, tbe crop\nwill be equal to that of last year in\nquantity, and superior In quality.\nCorrespondents nre almost unanimous\nIn their reports that all kinds of live\nstock nre In prime condition. Tho abundance of foder nf all kinds, nnd courso\ngrains, has enabled fanners to feed liberally. The only unfavorable reports\nnre to the effect that the cold wot spring\nand heavy work of seeding* has somewhat reduced the condition of horses.\nIn most localities fanners have a surplus of hay on band owing to the early\ndate at which cattle were turned on tho\nHAS LOST BOTH HIS EYES\nJ.   M'CLUSKY   WITHOUT   FRIENDS,\nMONEY OR SIGHT.\nDISTRESSING RESULT KNOB HILL\nEXPLOSION.\nPhoenix, Juno 12.\u2014(Special to\nThe Daily Nows.)\u2014A few days\nago two men wore hurt nt the\nKnob Hill mine, while springing\na deep hole (in that property. J.\nMcCIusky was loading the hole,\nliiid pul In tho powder, and lighted the fuse, and was pouring iu\nwater when the Idast went off.\nHlB eyes were almost blown nut,\nand his partner. A. Redmond,\nnot SO close to tho blnBt, escaped\nwith small damage. McCIusky\nWOB taken to tho Phoenix hospital, recently opened, and this\nwei'k the surgeon In charge\nfound it necessary to take out\nwhat remained of both eyes.\nThe case Is peculiarly sad, ns\nMcCIusky has no friends or relatives that are known. He Is a\nsingle man of about 10 years and\na native of Quebec, and is now\nloft without Sight and without\nmeans of support. No blame is\nattached to the management ot\nthe mine for the accident, McCIusky having been specially\nwarned jusl before be commenced loading the hole.\nTHAT CUSTOMS UNION.\nAgitation of Colonics May I'reclpnlo\nAnother Gonorai Election.\nToronto, Juno 13.\u2014A London cablo to the\nM^ii nnd Empiro sayBi it would not bo\nsurprising ir tho mooting ot tha colonial\npremiers and tholr Insistence on n customs\nunion should proelpltnte n goneral olection\nIn this country. Wo should then havo to\nface an Issue ns gravo as that which Mr.\nKruger tlirusl upon us, The fntegrlty of\ntho ompiro may onoo mure be the paramount question\u2014when wo are ashed by lho\ncolonics to reverse our free trade policy,\nami s.-i up n Kollvoreln nr customs union\nwithin ihc empire. Considering that tho\nhulk nf the Conservatives aa well ns tho\nLiberals of OrenJ Flrttaln, nnd all ow\nloaders of commorco without distinction nf\nparty arc convinced froo traders, the trmk\nof making n colonial opinion prevail in ob-\nvlously a ill (lieu It ono, ami ns it involves\n.the good will and unity which might to\nbe maintained at all runts botween the colonics nml ilm mothor country, It ounht not\ni<> bo lightly undertaken. Tho outlook la\ncausing gravo anxiety to nil sincere im-\nporlallstS) whn nr*- afraid thnt Greater\nBritain linn not yet realised how deep aro\ntha roots of the freo trade system Ir*\nEngland.\n THE DAILY   NEWS, NELSON, B. C,   SATURDAY, JUNE 14, 190V2.\nHUDSON'S BAY\nCOMPANY.\nINCORPORATED   1670.\nMen's, Boy's and Youth's\nSUMMER CLOTHING SALE\nWE   OFFER\n15 Only Vouths Drill Suits, fancy\nand white sailor collars. Regular\nprice $1.00 to $1,50, discount\nsale  $t.oo\n35 Pairs Boys and Youths odd pants\nassorted sizes and colors, discount\nPrice  $1.00\n25 Only Men's odd Coats and vests,\nneat  patterns,  Price  Below Cost\n22 Men's Blue Serge Suits, good\nmaterial, and well made and lined,\nYour choice 25 per cent, discount.\nBoy's Yoke Suits, Boy's Norfolk Suits, Child's Sailor Suits\nBIG REDUCTIONS\nThose Prices are for Cash Only- .\n\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022a \u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\nTppt7pl'<;   Violet Toilet!\nleeueis   Ammonia :\n\u2022\nA delightful and refreshing addition to water for\nthe skin and complexion.\nPRICE\n25cts per Bottle.:\nPttsr W. P. TBETZEL 8 CO, Druggists, TV: 5\nP. BURNS & CO.\nWHOLESALE AND RETAIL\nMEAT MERCHANTS\nHEAD OFFICE NELSON, B C.\nBranch Markets in Rossland, Trail, Nelson, Kaslo, Sandon,\nThree Forks, New Denver and Slocan City.\nOrdjtj l.y WMI Its ttssy Ilrnnrli Will liny** Prompt Mul r-irffiil Atlrnllpn.\nThe Canadian Bank of Commerce\nWith which I* AiuolgAmalod\nThe Bank of British Columbia.\nHEAD OFFICE-TORONTO.\nPaid up Capital,   SS.OOO.OOl,;   Itcscrvc   Fund,  83,000,0001\nAggregate  Resources Over J05.0OO.OOO.\niiok. i;i:o. a. fox, rn*\u00bbiii\u00ab*ni. n. v.. walkek. (icnernl .-Hnnnarr.\nDeposits Received mill Interest Allowed.\nPresent ffato :t per eert.\nSaving's Bank Department\nNelson Branch, GRANliE V. HOLT, Manager, f\nt **9**9 t**9*Hi **v***v\n\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666******************** ***************** ********\n| BANK OF MONTREAL\nJ'M-iil'lislied 1817.   Incorporulcd hy Act of I'arllnmunt, T\nCapital   (all paid   up)   $i2,ooo,coo.oo.      Rest    $8,000,000.00\nUndivided Profits, $165,856.09.\nHKAD OFFICE, MONTREAL\nIU. Hon. I\/irrt SIriitlicotia and  Mount Koj-nl, O. (J. M.G., President.   Hon. G. A.\nDrummond, Vlcu-Pronldonl,  K. ti. OlotlBton, General Manngor,\nNrlHon Branch--Torn it linker and lioolennj* tit*.  A. II.  lEiirliiuiim. Knniigrr*\n\u2666 \u2666\u2666\u2666\u00bb \u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u25a0\u00bb\u2666\u2666\u00bb\u25a0\u00bb\u2666\u2666\u2666\u00bb\u2666 \u00bb\u2666\u2666\u2666-\u00bb\u2666\u2666\u2022\u00bb\u2666\u2666\u2666\u00bb\u2666\u25a0\u00bb\u2666-\u00bb\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2022\u00bb\u2666\u2666\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0*\u2022\u2666\u00bb\u2022\u25a0*\u2022\u2666\u2666\u2022\u25a0>\u00bb-\u00bb-\u00bb\u2666\n^be1Ro?alS5ank ofCanafca\nIncorporated 1H69.\n\u00bb\u00bb,0OO,M0. I BCHt,\nHead Oflice, Haliraxt\n\u00bbI,JOO,OM\nuononu MivniiKor, Edhon L, Poaee, Montreal,\nrapltal faldoupi    1\nThomas K. Koniiy,  I'rwldont i\nBRANOHB8 IN BRITISH COLUMBIA- Grand Porto,  Nanaimo, Nolaon, Rosaland. Van-\ncon ver, Vancouver Kunt Knd, Victoria.\nAocountarcooiTOdonthomoil favorable lorrm. Interest allowed on kpccIiiIiIqpohIU, and on\nSavings Hunk accounts, Goooral Banking Baslnon Trtuwotod-\nGEO- ODD, Manager, Nelson, Branch\nAsk Your Grocer For It\nGRIFFIN BRAND\n____:\nFANCV\nCreamery Butter\nSPECIALLY PACKED\nFOR SELECT TRADE.\nIMPERIAL BAM\nOF  CANADA\nCapital (Paltl Up)\nRest\n$2,300,000\n$1,850,000\nHKAD OFFICE, TORONTO, ONTAItlO.\nBrnnohoa in Northwest Tcrritorlct*. Provinces\nof Iliiii.h Columbia, Manitoba, Ontario mid\nQuebec.\nT. It. MRKI1ITT President\n1). II. WIl.KIIO, Vlco-Proslilont nml Gonorol\nManngcr\nB. HAY AssistantGonorai Slnnnsor\nWMoll'at Ohio! Inspector\nNELSON  BRANCH\nA general bunking buslnoiw tranaaoted.\nSavings Department-Doporita recoived nnd\nIntoroHt allowed.\nl>r\u00abfis sold, available In all parts of Canada,\nUnited Stafcpa nnd Europe.\nSpouiul ailcntioii Khun ta collections.\nJ. M. LAY,\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPublished at Nolson evory morning, except\nMonday, by\nF. J. DEANB.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES:\nDnlly, per month, by carrier $  C5\nDnlly, per month, by mall     GO\nDally per year, by carrier 7 00\nDaily per year, by mall 5 00\nDally, per year, foreign 9 00\nTHE WEEKLY NEWS.\nWeekly, per half year ?1 25\nWeekly,  per  yenr  2 00\nWeekly,  per year,  foreign  'A 00\nSubscriptions invariably in advance.\nADVERTISING RATES:\nDisplay Advertisements, $4 per Inch per\nmontli; Display Advertisements, 25 cents\nper Inch each insertion less than a month;\nLocalB, 10 cents por line each Insertion;\nClassified Advertisements 1 cent per word\neach Insertion; Wholesale Cards, \u00a52.60 per\nmonth; Society Cards, $2.50 per month.\nBUNION\nEXTENSION   OF  THE   FRANCHISE.\nRetail Price 35c. Per Pound.\nThis to he a memorable session of tho\nlegislature. On top of reckless squandering of public money and public land on\nrailway promoters conies tho announcement tbat by a vote of 22 to G our legislators have extended tho franchise In\nprovincial elections to all males over\n18 years of age, who would otherwise\nbe qualified to voto. This Is an Innovation, aud, wc think, quite uncalled for.\nThere has boen no agitation looking to\ntbo granting ot tho franchise to youths\nbetween tbe ages of 18 and 21, aud it is\nvery questionable whether these youths\nwill appreciate the privilege, apart altogether from tbo very important consideration of tbeir lltuess for exercising it.\nThe franchise should not be lightly\ntampered witb. Manhood suffrage bas\non tho whole worked satisfactorily, and\nonly a few reactionaries would today\nseek to have limitations placed upon it.\nHut to extend that privilege to youths\nis a very serious move, und one that\nshould not have been hastily decided\nupon. Everyone wbo lias had anything\nto do witb political campaigns knows\nbow dlillcult it is to Interest many\ngrown men in the issues at stake. AU\ntoo frequently tho experience is that a\nlarge portion of tho electorate gives no\nthought to tho politics of the respectives\nparties, and votes blindly In support of\nsome party name. By this extension of\ntbo franchise the proportion of voters\nwbo will take llttlo real iutcrest in\npublic affairs bas been materially increased. It is no unjust charge to make\nagainst the youth of the province to say\nthat tbey will not exercise their franchise Intelligently. Iu tho nature of\nthings they cannot he expected to have\ntho grasp of legislation and the principles of public administration that alono\nqualifies a man to vote Intelligently.\nThere Is another aspect of the question\nthat our legislators probably never gave\na moment's thought to. By granting to\nyouths of 18 the franchise they are also\nburdened with all the responsibilities of\ncitizenship. This is fair neither to tbo\nyouths nor to their seniors. The age of\n21 has heretofore been considered time\nenough for the assumption of these responsibilities, and wc are nut inclined to\nthink that British Columbia will ever\nhave occasion to rejoice over tlie innovation that a fool legislature has thrust\nupon it unawares. The thing is done,\nand the best must be made of the situation. British Columbia boys aro bright\nenough and quite as precocious as those\nof any other county. Tbey may rise to\ntbo occlusion, and set their elders an example by the wise exercise of a privilege\nol inestimable value.\nBRITISH COLUMBIA IRON.\nAn excursion party went from Victoria to Irondule, on PUget Sound, last\nSunday to look over the iron works established thoro. The most peculiar feature of tho affair Is that the Iron ore\nand the fuel used at tlie Iromialo works\nare obtained from this province, so that\nwe aro us a matter of fact allowing our\nnelgbors to the south to enjoy the benefits that should be ours. There Is something Incongruous In such a condition of\naffairs.   It Is absurd lo think that al\nthough we possess every requisite for tho\nmaking of pig iron and steel, no attempt\nis made to do so, hut that the material\nIs actually shipped out of the country\nand, In a foreign laud is made Into a\nproduct for which there is a great demand by those with whom we are striving to build up a trade. It is simply\nplacing a powerful weapon into the\nhands of one of our most energetic competitors for tho very same trade. Were\ntho situation less serious it would almost be ridiculous.\nWhy do we not produce our own pig\niron? There is nothing peculiarly essential to the process, about the climate\nof the Sound that makes It a specially\ndesirable spot for Iron works. Just as\ngood a result would follow were tho\nblast furnaces erected on this side of\ntho line. Presumably it Is a question of\nmoney, the same old cry of people who\nare too lacking in enterprise to grapple\nwith the problem in investing their own\nmoney In such an enterprise. The capital required for the erection of blast\nfurnaces Is large, hut if it will pay on\ntbe Sound it should surely be no less\nremunerative on the island, nnd if there\nis no other way of raising tho money\nfor the establishing of iron works in\nthe province surely It would not bo an\nimpossible undertaking to form a company and secure the needed capital by\nthe sale of shares. Tbe question Is a\nvery serious ono. Every yonr the blowing In of our own blast furnaces is delayed tho firmer the foothold obtained\nby our competitors in tho foreign markets. The measure introduced into the\nlocal houso for the encouragement of\nthe iron industry is an indication that\ntho Importance of the matter Is not unrecognized. Tho groat need Is for immediate action.\nEDITORIAL NOTES.\nJ.N. Greenshields, K. C, upon his\nreturn to Montreal informed the public\nthat his mission to British Columbia\nbad been very successful. He is well\nsatisfied with tlie cash subsidies voted\nfor tho construction of the Canadian\nNorthern, nnd well be may be for his\nclients will receive over $3,000,000 for\nwork that tbey would have been compelled to do even If our legislature had\nnot voted them n five cent piece. But\nMr. Greenshields is not very grateful\nfor the generous treatment be received\nat Victoria. Ho told tbo people of Montreal that business was unsatisfactory\nIn British Columbia. Surely be found\nbusiness pretty good. Of course ho may\nhavo been forced to pny fairly heavy\ncommissions and Is feeling sore. To\nexplain the cause of the alleged unsatisfactory condition of business in this\nprovince Mr. Greenshields resorted to\nthe usual fiction, lie stated that there\nIs considerable unrest over tbe labor\nquestion. Mr. Greenshields knows\nnothing of any labor question In this\nprovinco beyond that involved In working through tho legislature a bill to\nbonus a wealthy syndicate of railroad\npromoters. Possibly that labor question\ndid causo him some unrest but ho did\nwell enough, and could bave afforded to\nhavo kept silent regarding the long\nhours ho put in sparring with attorney-\ngeneral Eberts for points. Mr. Greenshields in talking about unrest over labor questions simply sought to mislead\ntbe people of Montreal. If business bo\ndull In tills provinco the cause Is nearer\nto men of the stripe of Mr. Greenshields\nthan to any labor question. Fool legislators, land grabbers, charter mongers,\nand company promoters have worked\nmoro Injury to British Columbia than\nany labor trouble ever has or ever will.\nThe fortyVthird annual meeting of\nthe Eastern Townships bank was held\niu Sherbrooke, Que, last week. Tho\nfinancial statement shows a net profit\nfor the year's operations of ovor a quarter of a million dollars. A dividend for\ntbo year of 8 per cent hns been paid, or\nwill be by the 2nd proximo. The reserve fund has been strengthened by an\nadditional $150,000, bringing that account up to $1,200,000. Mr. Hcncker,\nthe president, in his address stated that\nthe results from the British Columbia\nbrunches at Grand Forks and Phoenix\nwere vory satisfactory. It Is pleasing\nto note this reference to business in\nthis province, for of late eastern financiers havo been in a very critical mood\nwhen discussing British Columbia affairs,\nMany easterners who put a few dollars\nInto fake mining schemes foisted upon\nthem by their fellow townsmen, because\nthey bavo not made millions go about\nabusing the province. British Columbia\nIs all right, and offers better opportunities for Investment than any other province in the Dominion, but 2 cent shares\nIn $5,000,000 companies cannot be considered gilt edged investments.\n.T. ,T. Hill, president of tho Groat\nNorthern railway, was tho principal\nspeaker at a recent dinner of the Illinois Manufacturers' Association. He bad\nsomething to sny about \"trusts,\" and\noffered this suggestion:\n\"Tlio only serious objection to so-\ncalled trusts has boon tho method of\ncreating them\u2014not for tho purpose of\nmanufacturing any public commodity in\ntho first place, but for tho purpose of\nselling sheaves of printed securities\nwhich   represent   nothing   more   than\ngood-will and prospective profits to the\npromoters.\n\"if it is the desire of tho gcscrnl government, through congress, to prevent\ntho growth of such corporations, it has\nalways seined to me that n simple remedy was within their reach.\n\"Under the constitutional provision\nallowing congress to regulate commerce\nbetweon tho states, all companies desiring to transact business outside of the\nstnto in which they are incorporated\nshould be held to a uniform provision\nof federal law.\n\"They should satisfy a commission\nthat their capital stock was actually\npaid up In cash or in property, at a fair\nvaluation, just ns the capital stock of\nthe national bank is certified to be paid\nup.\n\"With that simple law, the temptation to make companies for the purpose of selling prospective profits would\nbe nt an end, and, at the same time, no\nlegitimate business would suffer.\" A\nlaw upon similar lines in Canada would\nput a stop to a lot of fake mining company promotions which havo done and\naro doing incalculable harm to legitimate mining undertakings.\nSCRAPPY POLITICIANS.\nVienna, Jnno 12.\u2014There was n scene of\nwild disorder In the reicherath today du-\nrliTff the debate on the Danube navigation\nagreement. Herr Sohooneror, a lender of\nthe pan-German party, nnd Dr. Wolff,\nniKjther lender of the same party, exchanging insults nnd finally boxed each other's\noars. It was necessary for friends of tlie\nrival lenders'to drag them apart, nmld\ncheers and jeers from the galleries.\nGREAT NORTHERN\nRAILWAY.\nNONE BETTER.\nSOLID YESTIBULED TRAINS.\nPALACE D1NINQ AND OBSERVATION\nOARSi-MEALSalaOAETE.\nClose connection Bast and Went*\nbound ut Spokane with trains of the\nSp -kium Fulla nud Northern Railway,\nD rect connection at St, Paul without change of depot with all trains for\nChicago, Toronto. Montreal, New York\nand all points  East and South.\nLoaves Spokane daily for East at 9:10\u00bb m\nLeaves Spokane daily toi West at 7:20 a-m\nLeaves Spokane daily tor Vest at 800 pm.\nWest-bound trains make direct connection for Victoria and Vancouvor,\nPortland, San Francisco, and all points\non the Sound,\nDuring the season of navigation East\nbound traius connect at Duluth with\nthemagnincontBtoamships North* West\nand North-Land of thuNorthcrn Steamship Company Line, operated in con>\nnection with tbe Great Northern Hallway.\nFor further information, aps, fold\ners, etc., apply to any agent of Spokane\nFalls k Northern Ky., Kaslo tc Slocan\nRy., Kootel al Railway k Navigation\nCo., or to\nH. BRANDT,\nCity Pass, and Tkt  Agt, W 70l W,\nRiverside Ave,, Knokanp, Wash.\nO. K, TAOKABURY. Local Agent,\nNelson. 11 O\nWILLIAM A, BAUER\nDominion nnd  Provincial  Land\nSurveyor.\nSurveys nf mines, miuernl oluimB.orown\nlands, crown grants obtained aud assessments managed for absentees.\nFERGUSON and VANCOUVER.\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nRAILWAY\nSUMMER\nVacation Excursion\nEAST\nJune 29th, July 2nd, 3rd, 4th\nTo Minneapolis\nChicago\nDetroit\nToronto\nMontreal    -\n$ 44.50\n64.50\n77.00\n89.30\n100.50\nSpecially arranged\nTours to all points\n- on application. -\nFor tickets mil complete Information\nnpply to local ng.'nts,\nJ. 8. (JAHTKR, B. 3. OOYMf\nDis. Posb. Agt. A. 0. P. A.\nNelson VunocnMr\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n\u2022**\u25a0*\u25a0-\n\u25a0\u25a0_\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n\u00a3\n$\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n**&\n*\u25a0\u00bb\n3\nJob Printing\nAs a Work of Art.\n\"  \"\" ~ m\n\u2022si?\n^%\u00a3-'*^.g%*g|S\nr%_____]i{$\nThis is the standaid which the\nDaily News Ji b Rooms intends to\nset fur the Commercial Printing of\nSouthern Kootenay. The Nuws\nJobbing Department is to be fitted\nup with this end in view. None\nbut the best of workmen will be\nemployed, and it is the intention to\nCover the\nEntire\nField of\nCommercial\nPrinting.\nThis is well worth bearing in\nmind, as the quality of the stationery used by a business man or firm\nis often taken as an index to the\nenterprise ard standing of the user.\nFor this reason it will pay you to\nget the best. First-class work\nand competitive prices at\ne\nS\n**.\nft.\nft\nft\nft\n&\nft\nft\nft\nft\nft\n&\nif\nft\n\u25a0\u00ab\u2022\nft\nft\n&\n&\ns\n&\n&\n&\nft\nw\nft\nft\nft\nft\nft\nft\nft\nft\n1 THE DAILY NEWS\nI       Job Rooms.\nWest Kootenay Butcher Co.\nALL  EINDH OV\nFresh  and   Salted  Heats\nWHOLESALE AND RETAIL\nFisn and Poultry in Season\nE.  G.   TRAVES.  Maraubr.\nK.-W.-C   Block, Ward Street, Nju.son.\nOrders by moil receive careful and prompt attention\nWhy\nALABASTINE\nShould be\nUsed for Tinting1 and Decorating Walls and Ceilings.\n1. II IS SANITARY.  Phnldani uy \"Th\u00ab will, of a room lo In biatlby oust btuha.' AU-\nbullne being a po-ou, cement, permit. Ihe free pats-lit! of air.\n3. IT IS PERMANENT, and birdcni Willi age, entirely different from kalsiimine preparation!.\n8. EASILY APPLIED.   Anyone can brink It on\u2014no one can rub It off.\n4. CONVENIENT, as II ti ready for me by the addition of cold water.\n6. IT IS ECONOMICAL, costing for material less than one cent per square yard for plain tinting.\n0. LABOR SAVING, as It admits of re-co-itine from lime to time as is necessary to renew, doing\naway with lhe nasty muss ol washing off hnlsomines nnd scraping off wail paper.\n7. HANDY TO GET. as It Is for sale by hardware and paint dealers everywhere.   Never sold Id bnlV.\nPainters, write for our froo ofTar \"Two Good Things\" and book of Instructions\n1 howtouso aLABASMNE. Address\nTHE ALABASTINE CO. Limited\nParis, Onto\nJ. 0. aWILLIM, B., So.,\nMINING ENGINEER.\nLate of Geological Survey of Can\nada.    Six years experience in D. C\nmining districts.\nBaker 5tre\u00ab Nelson. B C\nNOTICE\nTO DELINQUENT CO-OWNERS\nTo SII.AHH. GROSS, or to nny pu\nHim ur persona tu whom lio muy have\n\u2022iriuii'tVni'il his luturest in the  Harvy\nJoy Mineral Claim, mtuatnon Morn*\niiiK Mountain, uliout 11-2 iuIIab we**-\net'ly fiom thu Silver King Mine, iu\nthe Nelson Mining Division uf West\nKooteuay l)inti*ii:i, I). C.\nVOU or any of you aro hereby notified that I hnve expi-mled ouo hundred\nand two dollars ond fifty cents in labor aud Improvements upon the nbove\nmineral claim, under the provision of\nthe Mineral Act, nnd if within ninoty\ndays from the date of this notice you\nfail or refuse to contribute yoar proportion of suoh expenditure together\nwith nil coats of advertising, your interest in snid elaim wilt bucumo the\npropeity uf the Huham-ibct- under sectiou 4 of nn Ad entitled An Act to\nAmend tho Mitn-rid Aot Mil),\nDated this Mth dnv nf March. 10()2\nJ.K. OKAHSTON.\nJOHN McLATCHIEI\nDominion and\nProvincial'<^\nLand Surveyor.\nNELSON b c\nHotel for Sale\nAt Comapllx, B.C.\nA Rood paying business. Premises furnished throughout. I have\nlo dispose of the properly, and am\nprepared to make a sale on very\nfavorable terms. Write me for\nfurther particulars.\nR.  G. McLEOD,\nComaplix, B.C.\nV. O. GHKKN       V. 8. OLBMBNTg\nGREEN & CLEMENTS\nCivil Engineer* and Provincial Und\nSurveyor!.\ncor. Kootenny a Viotoria Sts. Nelson\nP, O. Box 141 Telephone 261\n THE DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C, SATURDAY, JUNE 14, 1902.\nJEWS DRIVEN INTO EXILE\nFORCED OUT OP ROUMANIA THEY\nWILL SETTLE IN CANADA.\nUNFORTUNATE HEBREWS FORBIDDEN TO WORK OR TALK.\nThe nntl-forclgncrs' law soon to bo put\nInto operation will drive iWO.OOO Roumanians from Carmen Sylvn's kingdom. Theso\nnatives will be sent across tlie frontier\nlike so many barbarian invaders, because\ntheir religion differs from tho accepted\nfaith, and tho majority of them are coming to Canada,\nFor tho anti-foreigners' law is really an\nanti-Jew law. This legislative act forbids\nJews to engage In manual labor of any\nkind. They are neither allowed to bo artisans nor to till the soil.\nRussia excused her persecution of Jews\non tho ground lhat they refused to engage in agriculture; Roumanla goes the\nbig sister empire one better and says Jews\nshall out engage In nny honest work\nwhatever. It Is like binding a man hand\nand foot and pushing him out of doors to\nstarve. Rut that isn't all, for in addition\nto being robbed of the use of his limbs he\nIs muzzled.\nThis government, pledged to destroy\nthe Jew, hns suspended the constitution\nas far as he is concerned; the right of free\nspeech is taken away from him, and respectful protest against the contemplated\noutrage Is styled \"high treason,\" Wherever in Roumanla Jews come together in\npeaceful assemblage to talk over the dread\nSituation they arc liable to arrest and punishment by court-martial.\nCanadian readers mny well doubt that\nsuch is possible In a civilized country In\ntlie heart of Europe, The other day a\nband of 2U7 native Jews passed through\nBucharest) en route for Hamburg, and\nothers, bound for German, Italian and Belgian ports, may be met daily on the railways and roads leading to the frontier.\nWith one or two exceptions every man was\na Roumanian citizen by birth nnd education. Some hnd grandfathers and greatgrandfathers living or eurled in this country long beforo the present dynasty emigrated to Roumanla from Sigmnrlngen.\nAs to their occupation, tho majority were\nArtisans, brleklnyers, carpenters and joiners, tailors, bakers, nnd the like; thirty or\nmore were small farmers; 150 had worked\non farms\u2014not a saloonkeeper, horse dealer\nor petty banker among them.\nCOMING TO CANADA.\nThe badly frelghtened and heart-broken\nmen nnd women snld they imped to reach\nthe Hirsoh colonies in Northwestern Canada by the middle of June, Numerous\nfriends and compatriots of theirs are nlso\ngoing there before and aftor tho law\nagainst Israelites takes effect. All carried\ntestimonials of their former mayors or vil-\nliage elders proving good conduct. None\nhad been fined for mlsdcmennor even.\nFurther written testimonials by tho authorities showed thnt the average wngc of\ntheso peoplo was about twenty cents n\ndny; the women got eight to nine cents for\ntwelve or fourteen hours' work In the flulda\nnt harvesting time.\n\"On tills we could live, ns we hnd our\nhomes; we even added to our snvlngs yearly,\" snld a patriarch, who neted ns spokesman. \"Hut the government in Bucharest\nthought we were getting too rich. As n\nmatter of fact, wo were no better off thnn\nour Christian neighbors, though wc were\ncompelled to work harder. And so they\nsent us away.\"\nThe poor people hod to sell their huts\nnnd furniture for a mere pittance. Only\nthe well-to-do of each community carried\ntheir household linen along. The rest had\nto part with that also to pay their debts\nnnd obtain traveling expenses. They looked like a badly nourished crowd; their\nclothes were the most primitive. The women were even moro emaciated than the\nmen. And such poor babies ns they have\nnre ordinarily found only lu the cily workmen's quarters,\nThe writer asked tho rabbi If they had\nbeen allowed to carry away lhe \"Ark of\nCovenant,\" nn Imitation of which Is kept\nIn the synagogues.\n\"We never possessed the blessed Ark,\"\nhe answered. \"All we ever had Is this\nTnrnh supposed to lie n thousand years\nold.\" The Tornh, a copy of the Old Testn-\nment, written on parchment nnd rolled on\nn staff of ebony, is probably tho most ancient now In existence outside of tho museums. If these poor peoplo would only\npart With It they might sell lt for a price\nthat would start overy one of them In\nbusiness on the othor slfte. But when It\nwas suggested io the rabbi he turned awny\ndisgusted. \"They robbed us of our livelihood, our home, our country,\" he snld.\n\"Shnll we now give up our God, too?\nNever! This Tornh speaks to us In the\ntongue of our Lord. Thero Is even a saying that one of the prophets indited lt with\nIlls own hands.\"\nONLY ONE HUNDRED FRANCS EACH.\n\"Yes we have had an application from\nRoumanla to provide for und settle a hundred families in Cnnuda,\" snld Air. W. H.\nRaker, superintendent of the Huron de\nIllrsch Institute today.\n\"That Is all I know regarding the matter\nbeyond the fact that we were informed the\nImmigrants would probably average about\n100 francs nplece, which as you know\nis utterly useless to help these people. We,\nof course, hnve no funds to assist them\nwith, so we have referred the matter to\nthe head olllce, of the Institute In Paris.\nBo far as we know no agent of tho Institute\nhns been appointed to accompany them.\n\"Wero you notified of the expected expulsion of theso Roumanian Jews?\"\n\"No, we knew there wns some trouble\nbrewing, that Is all. But tho matter has all\nheen referred to tlie head office of the\nBaron do Illrsch Institute In Purls, which\nwill denl with It.\"\nThe ngent of the Bnron de Hirsch Association accompanying the emigrants snld\nthat he had to travel ahead and under nn\nassumed name to avoid meeting the crowds\nof poor Jews who desired to bo taken\nalong, though entirely destitute. \"Take us\nas servants,\" they cried; \"wo will work\nfor vou In America until our passage money l* paid If it takes ton years,\"\n\"Doi't leave us to starve,\" wailed wo-\nmo an] children,  \"there will bo  nothing\nleft foi ns hut thnt when the new law\ngoes InU effect.\"\nTho age,t nays:   \"Tho Situation cries to\nheaven, lithe grent powers who confirmed lloumnnhn Independence nt tho Berlin\ncongress ullov this outrage, they will for\nfeit their claim to civilization and Christianity,\n\"Though I have travelled all over Roumanla, I have yet to lind a muyor or police\npresident wlio says that the Jew is not a\ngood citizen. Why, in some districts the\nnumber of criminals among Jows is from\nGO to 5 per cent less In proportion to population than among persons of other denominations. Yet they hnvo to go, because a narrow-minded law won't allow\nthem to live if they remain.\n\"Among those characterized ns foreigners by the new low are native Roumanians\nwhose families lived nnd thrived here when\nthis territory was still a Turkish province.\nNumerous Jew families, now driven out\nas strangers, received their very family\nnames from tho princes whom King Carol\nsucceeded   as   sovereign.\"\u2014Montreal   Star.\nJACKING UP THE COUNCIL\nBOARD OF TRADE REQUESTS A RELIEF FOR FERNIE.\nSTEPS BEING TAKEN TO   SECURE\nTARIFF AMENDMENTS.\nAt the board of trade meeting Inst evening there was n lively session, In which J.\nDover, F. Starkey and A. J. Marks had\nsome warm words with secretary Swnnnell.\nThe trouble urose over a letter which hud\nbeen sent out by the Vancouver board to\nNelson, endorsing the action of the latter\nboard in endeavoring to secure Increased\nduties on lead. This letter was received\nby the secretary two days after the lust\nregular meeting, and had been Shown Informally by him to a number of the members soon after its receipt, but he had not\nbrought It to the meeting, which action\nwus resented by tho members in question.\nOutside of tills the meeting was nn Interesting one, and considerable business was\ntransacted.\nThose present were Messrs. W. W, Beer,\nHugh R. Cameron, C, Morrison, J. McDonald, H. Black, George Nunn, H. P.\nUyers, J. Dover, F. Starkey, A. J. Marks,\nW. G. Glllett, H, Goodeve, Rowley, W. R.\nMcLean, nnd H. Laing.\nIn the absence of the president, the chair\nwas tuken by Mr. Morrison. After various\nroutine matters of huslnes had been attended to a letter was read from the Fernie Board of Trade regarding the late disaster at that town nnd asking the Nelson\nhoard to take action on the matter. Mr.\nSwannell announced that at a meeting of\nthe council of the board of trade a recommendation had been drafted that the board\nshould request the Nelson city council to\ndonate not less than WOO to the Fernie relief fund. On motion of Mr. Rowley, seconded by Mr. McLean, a motion to this effect was passed unanimously, to be forwarded to the council nl its next meeting.\nTho secretary then read letters from tho\nVictoria and Vancouver boards endorsing\nthe letter sent out by the Nelson board\nregarding tho necessity for an Increased\nduty on  lead.\nMessrs. Black and Robertson, who hnd\nbeen appointed a committee at the last\nmeeting to draft a letter to be sent out\nto the retail dealers of the Kootenays reported thnt they had completed the letter,\nwhich wos accordingly read by tbo secretary. The letter after briefly reciting the\nfacts regarding the present depression existing through the silver-lead districts und\ntho causes, asked that each denier who received lt should forward a personal letttor\nto nt least ono wholesaler lu the oast telling them of the condition of affairs, and\nasking them to use tholr Influence with\ntheir member of parliament lo have the\nnecessnry legislation passed that would put\nan end to such condition of affairs ns at\npresent exists. A few statistics were given,\nto be quoted in the letter sent out by the\nretailer, who was also nsked to write the\nsecretary of the Nelson hoard for any further Information required,\nOn motion of Mr. Cameron, seconded by\nMr. Murks, tho report of the committee\nwas adopted and It wns decided to hove a\nuslllcicnt ncmber of copies of tlio letter\nprinted to circulate among nil retailers,\nAlso that the committee should be continued to nssist the secretary In circulating\nlhe lettera.\nMr. Robertson mnde a short speech In\nwhich he suggested that each member of\nthe bonrd present should mnke it n point\nto sec at least one retail denier of Iho city\nnnd get him to send one of tho letters, as\nit was only by using every possible means\nthnt tho mnttcr ctmlil he brought up\nstrongly enough before the Dominion house\nto secure nny results.\nDRADSTREKTS TRADE REVIEW,\nBusiness Throughout the Dominion Shows\n\u25a0 Much Improvement Over Last Yenr.\nNew York June IU.\u2014The following are\nsome of the weekly clearances, as compiled\nby Brndstreets, for the week ending June\n12th, with the percontagos of increase nnd\ndecrcuse, as compared with the corresponding week Inst yenr: Montrenl, $23,520,-\n6M,- Increase 317; Toronto, $10,701,741$, In\ncrease C8.2; Winnipeg, $3,'\u00ab'0,*175, Increase\n61.2; HalKax, 11,7(19,168; Vancouver, $1,667,-\n190, incrense 3S.5; Hamilton, $908,918, In-\nCroase 25; St. John, $890,566, incrense 10.9;\nVictoria, $623,644, decrease 14.1; Quebec,\n$1\u201e455,289, decrease 1; Ottawa, $1,800,264.\nHradsircets will say of the Canadian\ntrade: Cooler weather has quleled trade.\nToronto reports lhe retail nml Jobbing\ntrade quieter for the week. Staple goods\nare In better demand from western buyers,\nhowever. Implement manufacturers have\norders ahead for seven months. Strikes arc\nfewer, and old troubles nro being settled.\nCotton mills nro busy, and confidence In\na good fall trade Is general.\nVictoria nnd Vnucouver report large\nshipments to the Klondyke, and a heavy\ncanning pack Is looked for.\nAt Winipeg, business Is good, and the fall\noutlook Is promising.\nFailures for the week number 12, against\n17 last week, and 17 hi this week a year\nago. Clearances aggregate $68,674,877, an\nincrease of 2.0 per cent over Inst week,\nnnd of over 40 per cent over tho somo\nweek a yenr ago.\nPRINTERS' INK PHILOSOPHY.\nIt Is a great mistake to conclude you\ncan get along without advertising. The\nman who decides to dispense with advertising sliould naturally expect his business to grow less and less. The whole\nmatter rests on the subject of whether\nhe expects to continue to live long\nenough to outlive the prosperity whieh\nIlls past exertion may force upon him.\nIf he Is able to get along without advertising this year he will be able to get\nalong with less help next year and each\nyear will see a decrease in the volume\nof his transactions. If he is wise ho\nwill keep up his advertising as strongly\nas possible in order that he may reap\nin the end the results which come as a\nsatisfaction to the man who has individuality enough to stop experimenting.\nSticking to it is what counts In advertising. One advertisement one day\nmay, and often does, produce results,\nhut people have many things to look at\nand think of. To Impress them permanently with any one article takes persistent and continued hammering.\nIt Is a mistake to suppose a thing has\nbecome sufficiently well known to need\nno moro advertising. The public has a\nstrangely short memory, A firm which\nhad for twenty years spent $50,000 a\nyear in mnking a particular article public, tried the experiment of reducing\ntheir outlay to $25,000 per annum. But\nthe next year it took $100,000 to restore\nthem to their position. Enormous fortunes are massed by those who advertise largely, judiciously and incessantly;\nhut all who hnve had experience in the\nmatter will confirm the statement that\nthe latter is the one preat point. It does\nnot do to relax In exertion.\nSHERIFFS SALE\nProvince    of    British   Columbia,    Nelson,\nWest Kootenny, To wit;\nRy virtue of a writ of Fieri Facias Issued\nout of the Supremo Court of British Col-\numbin, at the suit of William C. E, Koch,\nPlaintiff, and to mo directed ngainst the\ngoods nnd chattels of Thomas A. Noble,\nDefendant, 1 have seized and taken In execution all the right, title and interest of\ntho said defendant, Thomas A. Noble, In\nthe mineral claims known us nnd colled\n\"Iron Horse No. 2\" and \"London Fractional\" both situate about seven miles up Ten\nMile creek, flowing Into Slocan lake, nnd\nrecorded In tho olllce of the mining recorder for tho Slocan City mining division\nof West Kootenay district, at Slocan B. C,\non the 2nd day of Muy, 1K95, nnd the 15th\ndny of June, 1000, respectively: tu caoovor\nthe sum of twelve hundred nnd seventy-\nsix dollars and fifteen cents ($1,276.15) and\nalso interest on twelve hundred nnd seventy - two dollars nnd sixty-live cents\n($1,372,(0) nt live per centum per annum\nfrom the 7th of June, 1992, until pnyment.\nbesides sheriff's poundage, ofllcers fees nnd\noil other legal Incidental expenses; nil of\nwhich I shnl! expose for sale, or sutllcient\nthereof, to satisfy said judgement debt\nnnd costs, at my Office, next to the Court\nHouse, in tho City of Nelson, B. C., on\nWednesday, the 25th day of June, 1902, at\nthe hour of eleven o'clock In the forenoon,\nNOTE\u2014Intending purchasers will satisfy themselves ns to interest and title of\nthe sold defendant.\nDated at Nelson, B. C, 10th of June, 1902,\n8. P. TUCK,\nSheriff of South Kootenay.\nLonger leather life!\nFeeds its fibres-\nrestores flexibility.\n\"Shines\" promptly,\nwithout coating or\ntinny glisten.\nA mellow, rich\nlustre.\n\u00ab\u2022\u2022\nSLATER SHOE\nPOLISH\n'\u25a0JootywrWeM\"\nBRYDGES,      BLAKEMORE\nCAMERON, LTD,\nFire Life nnd Accident Insurance,\nBnnl Estate and Financial Agents,\nCorrespondence solicited.\nHouston Block, Ward Street.\nNcLotl, - B. C.\nPook pii)dii)g ai)d RUliqg\nOf EVery pescriptioi)\nBlank Books to Order\nMining Blanks   '\nPay Rolls\nAssay Forms, Etc.\nMagazines and Music\nNeatly Bound\nAt\nThe Daily News\nPINPE^Y\nBOERS BECOMING FRIENDLY\nONLY    BITTERNESS    IS   AGAINST\nFRANCE AND GERMANY.\nWAR WAS PROTRACTED IN HOPE\nOF THEIR INTERVENTION.\nPretoria, Wednesday, Juno 13.-In nil\n11,225 Boers hnvo surrendered up to date.\nMany are youngsters of 11 years old and\nupwards, The majority nre under 30,\nthough somo nro septuagenarians, Advices from all the districts say thnt tlie\nburghers nre increasingly friendly. The\nonly bitterness observable among tlie leading Boers hero is against France and Qer-\nmnny. They declare tho war waa protracted unnecessarily owing to hopes held out\nby the French nnd German press. Somo\nof the Boors nre so Incensed that they\nhavo expressed tho hope thnt some day\nthey will fight on the side of the British\nngnlnst one of these powers.\nThe antlolpnted friction between the surrendered Boers nnd their former comrades\nof the Natal scouts has not materollzed\nto any extent.\nThe Boers admit they received nmunition\nthrough Portuguese  territory.\nGoneral Dewet snys tho youngsters were\nhis best fighters, nnd frequently held positions nfter the old burgers hnd cleared\nout.\nThe Boers of (he Ornnge River Colony\nnre handing only a smnll percentage of\ntheir ammunition. They explain thnt they\nused most of It hunting game since the\npeace agreement was signed.\nESTIMATES FUBNISHED      THE DAILY NEWS, NelSOIl, B. C.\nSUPREME LODGE A. O. U. W.\nInteresting Reports  Presented nt Session Being Held In Portland,\nThe supreme lodge of the Ancient Order United Workmen   for   the   United\nStates nnd Canada is now convened in\nPortland, Oregon. Supreme Master\nWorkman A. C. Hnrwlck, of Buffalo, N.\nY., called the lodge to order.\nAftor an address of welcome by W. M.\nColvig, of Oregon, the master workmen\nappointed the usual committees nnd adjourned until afternoon.\nFour hundred members aro in attendance from all parts of tiie country, and\nit is expected the lodge will be in session two weeks. Tho superior lodge\ndegree of honor wns in session a short\ntime today and transacted routine business.\nThe annual report of tlie supreme recorder, W. M, Sackett, submitted gives\ntho following summary of the year 1901:\nTotal number of lodges on January 1st,\n11)02, G,1G2, an increase for tho year of\n102; total membership, January 1, 1902,\n427, 42(i; members admitted during 1001,\n53,236; members suspended and withdrawn, 51, 728; members wlio died, 5,071;\nnet increase in membership for 1901,\n9,806; amount recoived on benoficinry assessments for 1901, $9,81(1, 274; amount\npaid on death losses, $9,473, 274; total\namount of beneficiary fund on hand,\nJanuary 1, 1902, $235,397; protection In\nforce January 1, 1902, $772, 314,000,\nThe annual report of Elizabeth E. All-\nburn, superior recorder of superior lodge\ndegree of honor, shows: Total number\nof lodges, January 1, 1902, 1,550; increase for tlie year, 130; total membership, 77,290; increase for the yoar, 7,258.\nDuring tlie yoar $180,851 was paid to\nbeneficiaries, leaving a balance on hand\nof $10,893.\nENGLISH BREAD TAX,\nBecomes a Very Serious Imposition on the\nBritish Poor.\nTlie Cobden Club lias Issued n leaflet on\nthe subject of the bread tax, showing how\nthis Impost affects ttie poorest clnsH in\nGreat Britain. This is tlio \"under-fed\nclass,\" the dimensions of which In the\nUnited Kingdom nre enormous. One-fourth\nof the town population are either III the\nplight of not having fond enough to keep\ntheir bodily powers In good working order,\nor nre on the border line between a sufficient and an Insufficient supply. This appalling foot hns lately been brought ont\nby the researches of Mr. Charles Booth\nand Mr. Rowntroe. Now, the bread tax\nIs estimated by the chancellor of the ox-\nchequer to produce about $13,000,000, But\nthis does not represent lhe full amount\nthat will be paid. The price of groin\ngrown In the Unltod Kingdom will be Increased in the same proportion us that of\nthe imported article, This will add hair\nas much more lo the burdens of lhe consumer, bringing the total up to $20,000,000,\nBut tills docs not tell the whole story. The\nlinkers ure not going to pay tills sum out\nof their own pockets. They will charge it\nover to the purchasers of bread, and the\nextra cost Is estimated to 1)0 oqual to half\na farthing a loaf. As there Is no hucTi\ncoin as half farthing, the extra charge lo\nall who buy a single loaf-that is, to the\nvery poorest class\u2014Will bo a whole farthing. Therefore, tho heaviest burden will\nfall Upon those least able to bear it.   Tills\nusually happens in the adjustment of Indirect taxes. The Cobden Club intends to\nlight against It, whether the war In South\nAfrica continues or not, The leaflet says\nthat the buttle will bo waged, not on tiie\ngrounds of froo trade merely, but for the\nwelfare of the most helpless purl of the\ncommunity, and especially for the Utile\nchildren of the poor who suffer most from\nthe bread tax.\nTO ENQUIRE INTO THB WAR,\nLondon June 13. \u2014The war secretary, Mr.\nBroderick, announced in tho house of commons today that it was tho intention of\nthe government t<> appoint a small royal\ncommission and institute a general Inquiry\nInto the South African war.\nPARASITES CAUSE ALL HAIR\nTROUBLES.\nNine-tenths of the diseases of the scalp\nnnd hnlr are caused by parasite germ.\".\nThe Importance of this discovery by Professor t'liiia of the charily Hospital, Hamburg, Germany, can not tic ovorostlmated,\nit explains why ordinary hair preparations,\neven of tho most expensive character fail\nto cute dandruff] because they do not, and\nthey cab not kill the dandruff genu. Tho\nonly hair preparation In the world thnt\npositively destroys tho dandruff parasites\nthat burrow up ihc sculp into scales called\nscurf or dandruff Is Nowbro's ilerpieide.\nin addition lo lis destroying the dandruff\ngerm, Ilerpieide Is also a delightful hnlr\ndressing, making the hnlr glossy and soft\nas silk.\nN. E. T. CO.\nForty minuto oar service on ordinary days\nExtra cars ia lliu afternoon, ou Sundays and\nholidays\nTIMB TABLE\nI.KAVK STANLEY ST,\n7:(0 n.111. s:S0 u.ni.\ntku0n.ni. l>:IUain,\n10:20 a.m. WOO a.m.\n11:40 a.m. li!:'n pm.\n1:0) pm. l:l*i p.m.\n2:20 p.m. 3:00 p.m.\n3:10 pm. f:ll pm.\nfi:WI p.m. ;i;|ll p.m.\n(120 pm. 7:00 p,m,\n7:10 p.m.   8:20 p.m.\n!\u00bb:(\u00ab p.m.   !>:((> p.m.\nLKAVfl nociURTow.v\n8:0\" tun.   8:10 a.m.\n0:2) a.m. 10:00 a.m,\n1\u00ab:10 n.m 11:20 a.m.\n12:00 ni.    12:i0 p.m.\n1:20 p*in.   2:00 pm,\n2; 10 p.m.   3;20 p.m.\n4:00 p.m.   4:10 p.m.\n.'.'I'll p.m.  (1,00 p.m.\n0:40 tun.   7;V0 p.m.\n8;i)0 p.in,  8;40 p.m,\nD;2j p.m.\n10:10 TltAlN-Tho 0:16 car from Stanloy\nleaves Bogustown on arrival and ruturns to 0.\n1*. It. Dopotj WOflting 10;10 p.m train, then runs\ntin Stanley, makingJast trip to Bogustown at\nabout 10 20 p. in.\nPf\\rt>*2   10 TICKETS PPIt W CKNTfl\ni aica io cents cash\nA. V. MASON, Monglng Secretary.\nPorto Rico Lumber\nCo., Limited,\nYARDS   AT   NKLSON- AND HOSSLAND\nHILL AT PORTO RICO BIDING\nRough and\nDressed  Lumber,\nShingles, Mouldings.\nA-l White Pine Lumber Always In\nStock.\nWo carry a complola (.look of Ooast Flooring\nC'ellloK. IohIiIo Kinit-li, Turno-i Work, fionh and\nDoors. Special 0'ilor work will roculvo prompt\nattention'  Mull ordcrri HOllotled.\nPorto Eico Lumber Co.,\nHead OfHofl\u2014Hondrvx nnd Vermin flo., Nol\u00abc\nIMPERIAL\nHOTEL\nUndor now mamgoment\nThe most coinniodiuiiH nml up-to-date bar\nin the City\nThe dining rnom will bo opened on tint-\nunl.iy, .luin. Till. An elllclcnl Mull' has\nbucu tngagou.\nLunch dally from 12 noon Ut',2 p. tn.\nHate- from 91 per dny upwards\nJ. R. Mcpherson,     \u2022     Proprietor\nBILVEB KING MIKB\nWill pay the highest cash prion for all\nkinds of Beooud band goods. Will buy\nor sell anything from an anchor to i\nneedle. Furniture, stoves, oaipert*.\ncooking utensils, bought In household\nquantities. AIbo oast off clothing.\nCall and aoo me or write. Address\nSilver Kind Mike, Boi 800 Bail\nStrftet, Nelson.  R. 0.\nHIGH GRADE COFFEE\nKootenay Coffee Co.\nRoasters of Choice Coffees-\nQuantities   to   suit   at   wholesale\nprices\nOur Java and Mocha at 40c, and Our\nCholco Dlimd at 25c.\nis the best value for the money.\nWe guarantee satisfaction if you\nbuy or order direct from us.\nPure Choice Teas\nAll varieties and grade.\nKOOTENAY COFFEE CO.\nWest Baker St. Tel 177. P 0  Rnx 1S2\nPATENTS, fim MARKS and C0PYR16HTS\nobtained in all countries\nROWLAND BRITTAIN,\nRegistered   Patent   Attorney,   Mechanical Engineer and Draughtsman.    Bank of B. N A. building,\nHastings St., Vancouver,  B    C\nWrite for full particulars.\nMRS. D.B.MURRAY\nGraduate in Vooal nnd Instrumental\nMusic, is piepui'.'il in receive pupils in\nVoice Culture nnd Piano, Latent Conservatory Methods (aught. Fur jurrber\npnTlloulnil apply ut titudtn room fi, Mc-\nDonald Itlock, Corner Josephine and\nVernon Htiwte.\nREISTERER & CO\nBrewers of Fine hagev\nBeer and Porter,\nDUO!' IM AND HKK OH\nOftLL ON  THI\nNELSON WINE CO.\nnml try n boi Ho, a dozon, or n barrel of\nCALGARY DEER \"\" It I\" \"!\u25a0\u00ab' bout and\nohoApOHt on 11\"' miirkut. AIho try 0'ir\nWINES, LIQUORB -wl OIOARF.\nPRANK   A. TAMBLYN, M.......\nTolepmifiQ tn RakorSU Nolson\nParties wishing golf or any stockings\nknitted or footed enn hnvo thorn dono by\napplying on cornor nf Wnrd and victoria\nstroot, optioslta postolllco,\nH. BYERS & GO.\nHEADQUARTERS FOR\nScreen Doors   Window Screens\nPoultry Netting   Lawn Supplies\nTRUAX ORE CARS\nGIANT POWDER\nAGENTS\nMINING, MILL and\nHEAVY HARDWARE\nNelson\nKaslo\nSandon\n^!!!!!!!!nin!fn!!!!!!f!!!n!!mi!f!!n!!!!tnt!!!!HH!ni!!lnHimniK\n| Lost Opportunity.\nEVERY time a package goes out of\nyour store which does not contain\nsome   advertising matter,  you are\nlosing an opportunity to make your\nstore the store of the town.\nEach package you send out is proof\nthat a sale has* been made. Every sale is\nsupposedly of goods that are going to give\nthe customer full value, and arc going to give\nsatisfaction.' This will create a favorable\nimpression. Every sale proves that some\nperson has shown a disposition to trade\nwith you,\nNow this disposition is either great or\nsmall. In either case it can be made\ngreater. And one of the most effective\nmethodsjto bring about this desired effect is\nto place the advertising matter in the packages you send out.\n5~      AT.\n=3\n\u2014*\n=3\n\u2014\u00ab\n\u2014*\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n=3\n=3\n3\n=3\n3\n3\n3\n\u2014\u2022\n3\n\u2014\u2022\n=3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n| THE DAILY NEWS 1\nB JOB OFFICE Eg\ng\u00a3     A specialty is nuule nf tnrnirg nut \" AdvertlBlug Matter.\"   It will    ^3\n\u2022E pay miy store-keeper to adopt the siiKKraticm offered ubuve. =3\n^iiiiiiiuiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiil\nFOR RENT\nAdvo\ntlBoments\nInsert!\nil undor\nthis\nh\n\u25a0nd\nnt tho\nrnto\nof ono cont\nn word\npor\nIns\nor-\ntion. N\n> a.l\nerttsc\nm.'in takon Tor Iuhs than\n25 cent\nROOMS \u2014Furnished  or  unfurnished,   by\ndny, week or month, rntoa from |3 to $10\npor month,  Apply to Men. Scoit, Room n,\nK. W. c. Blook.\nTO LET\u2014Pleasantly furnished front room\nnear  postontco- $S a month,   Inqulra  at\nTho Dally Nows,\nPIANOS ami sowing machines for runt or\nsalo at The Old Curiosity Shop.\nFOR RENT \u2014Four  up   to  iinte   houses,\nl-Ioho in, choap.   Sco Annnbto.\nPIANO for rent, J\"> per month.   Apply Tho\nDully Nows olllco.\nFURNISHED ROOMS-Largo furnished\nrooms wiiii homo comforts, suitable for\ntwo genttomon or man nnd wife, Reasonable terms. Apply Room 1, McDonald\nblock, cornor Joscphlno and Vornon mn.\nFl RST\nCLASS\n1)0\non\nond\nrnnnl\nri.r.11\npor\nweek\nSilica\nSt.\n'C'Mld\ndoor\nwest\nof\nWnrd.\nTo RENT\u2014Room, unfurnished, for $10 por\nmonth.    Apply   Brydgos,   Blakomoro  &\nCnmoron, Ltd., Houston itlock.\nFOR  RENT \u2014 6-room   furntshul   cottage,\npiano,   Mill sit i. throo doora west of\nCedar stroot. Apply on premises mornings,\nFOR SALE\nWIRE ROPE For Sale\u201429,000 fool of now,\nEnglish wlroropo, ono Inch diameter, six\nslrnmls, Lang lny, mado from host crucible Btool, Apply to j. \u00bb. Qlfford, Manager\nSilver King mino, Nolson, It. C.\nVOU SALE \u2014NVw bonne and ono acre of\nground, clonrod nnd cultivated, 15 minutes wnlk from the postolflce. N'\" oity\ntaxos. A snap al $7f-n. Apply it. M, Macdonald, solicitor, Nelson, B, C.\nrun SALB-A good brush brooking plow.\nbrand new. Address, x. v. '\/.., Tho Dally\nNows oiiicc.\nWANTED\nJ. H. LOVE, '\nNolson Employment Agency,\np, 0. Box I'm. Phono 2\nWanted \u2014Two womon cookH.   Waltroi\nciiri for housework,   Nurse girl,\nHOTEL proprietors, you can got rcglsto\nat Till' Dally NOWS bindery, Nolson, B.\nWANTKD-A Situation ns housekeeper f\u00ab\na wldowor with ono or more ohltdron, 1\nIn a ttmall family.    Address, HoUSokoepo\nThe Dally NOWS OfllcO.\nHELP of all kinds wanted nnd furnished.\nWestern Canadian Employment Agoncy.\nLarue   warohouso   fur   Btorngo;   call   at\nPressor's Socond Maud store, Wnrd street.\nWANTKD-To   purriiase   a   second-hand\nsawmill,   Apply stating condition of machinery and price.  C. w. Domorost, Cranbrook, it. c\nWANTED-A girl to help in dining room\nand kltchon at Silverton,  Enquire at The\nDally News.\nWANTED  Mngnxlnes and music t\" put 1111\nlu neat and strong covers at The Dally\nNews bindery.\nWANTKD-Hotel    cook,    man\"   for    milk\nranch, girl for housework, woman cook.\nWANTED\n.mine MANAQERS-Wnon you want min-\nIng blanks, pay sheets, vouchers or anything In the way of book-binding, ruling,\nor stationery, write to Tho Dally News;\nBook-binding and Job Printing department,\nNolson, it. <-'.\nFOUND\u2014An overcoat, which was left In\nThe palm lunch room. In the pocket\nwas a loiter written from Lothbrtdgo 011\nJanuary EOth, nddresscd to \"Bob*' nud\nsIbikhI \"Ernest,\" Owner can have tho\ncoat by* proving property and paying for\nthis  advertisement.\nTO RENT.\nTon-roomed furnished flat, with bathroom, hot antl cold water, completely and\nsuitably furnished for tlie underletting of\nrooms.   Tramway block.\nLargo warehouse and office. Ground\nHour Tramway block.\nOffices,    Clement block,  Haker street.\nCottngo on Mill street.\nFOR SALE.\nBuilding hits <.n easy terms on the car\nline.\nApply f.ir particulars\nNBLSON   ELECTRIC   TRAMWAY   CO.,\nLimited.\nTramway Block. Vernon Street.\nALL WANTS In the Hue of book binding!\nmining blanks, pay rolls, assay forms,\netc.. can lie BUpplled nt The Daily News\nHonk Binding and Job Printing department. Nolson, B, c\nWHOLESALE\nHOUSES\nNELSON, B. C.\nAERATED AND MINERAL WATERS\nN'KL-iON   BODA    WATKR   KACTORY-\nN. M, Cummins, Los\u00bboo\u2014Rrory known\nvariety of M)fi drink*.   I'll Hex 88. Telephon\nNo. 31, Hoover Stroot, Kelson. H<miurnof th\nf mains St, I*'jii Hoi Springs Mineral Water\nGROCERIES\nMACDONALD & Co.-Cornor Fron\n.*.*.# me! Hull SWMtS\u2014Wholesale Krocor\nnnd jobber* hi blanket*, jtlnve*-, mitt*, boot**\nrubbers, unu-kiiiitw* ami miners' sundries.\nFREtUl AND SALT MEATS\n1>  BURNS A: Co.-Bakor Stroot, Nelson-\n\u2022   Wholesale dealers la frosa a    curod\nmeith.   Cold aionttte.\nWEST   KOOTENAY   BUTCHER  CO,\nBaker Street. Nelson\u2014Wholosalo doa\non in frosli and oureu moats.\nHARDWARE A MINING   SUPPLIES\nf   AWRKNC.K   HARDWARE   CO - Unite\nI '  Htreot,  Nelson \u2014 Wholosalo dsalan lr\nhardware,  inlnerH'  supplies,  xpurtiiiK  KOOdH\nuto\nM'LACHLAN BROS. BakerStroel Nelson,\nH. O.,\u2014Boalors in gonorai harhttare,\nmining supplies, glus, pants, Portland 1*0-\nneiit, lire clay and Scotch  tire brick.   Agent*\nfor Wiiklnsand Oo,*S celebrated steel wire tope\nNfELSON   HARDWARE   CO.-Wholesale\nI      pi'tnl-, oil'*   inn;  '.;,**\u25a0; r-,rclianie-i    tools\nFishing Taokie and Spoiling Goods a ipoohuty\nLIQUORS AM) DRY GOODS\nII\nUDSON'S HAY Co.- Wholesale Krocerio:\nand liquors OtOt, Mnker Htreot, Snlson,\nLUMUER\nNKLSON HAW AND PLANING MILL-\nOlllco cornor Hall and  front Streets\nNelson\u2014Lumber, oolllfiSi flooring, and ovory\nLnlng tn wood for building purposes, Oct out\nprices. Correspondence ipifolledi\n THE DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C, SATURDAY, JUNE 14, 1902\n*S**M**WA.*V>\nACT\nPICTUBES\nW-'V'WWW\nThere are some\nvery pretty things\nto be seen in our\nwindow that will\nappeal to all\nLOVERS OF ART\nThey comprise some of Landseer's\nmasterpieces, also celebrated works\nof the Paris Salon\nThat Panel\n\"A MOTHER AND CHILD\"\nIs worth n lot of mon*.yn\u00bbawork ofart. but\nwo nro ..kins only Ononis for It,   liioro m\nothinmS volSiil.li> Hut raw bopuratawd\nfor Koto By I bo way. wlmt o c over sorira\nof Bkotohra llioso Coon l'lctuic* nrcl Havo you\nhooii 1111*111\/\nMORLEY & UINQ\nBooksellers, Stationers\nNELSON. B.G.\nShow 800m for Mason A Risch pianos\nNELSON'S NEWS OF THE DAY\nIn tlie twenty-four bourse ending nt\n3 p. m. yesterday the lake fell six inches.\nThe Lavinn group, in the Lnrdo, made\nn shipment this week of cighty-ftve tons.\nIt wns consigned to the Trail smelter.\nA meeting of the finance committee of\nthe council was held last evening to go\nover a number of accounts owing to\nthe city.\nIn the Nelson Quoit club series yesterday Bradley beat Newltt 31-38, and\nNunn beat Bradley 31-27 in the second\nround.\nThe steamer International yesterday\nbrought In three cars of Slocan Star ore,\nconsigned to tlie Puget Sound Reduction\nCompany, of Everett.\nThe proclamation appears in the Can-\nnda Ga\/.ettc enjoining tho observance of\n26th June as a day of general thanksgiving and rejoicing'throughout Canada, i jjnaiJd4t&\nA number of the local members of\nthe Grand Lodge of Masons will attend its session next week at the coast.\nDr. Qulnlnn, one of the delegates, left\nlast evening, and the others will go at\nthe beginning of noxt week.\nC. W. West has sub-divided his\nranch at Six-mile point on Kootenay\nlake Into two-acre lots. The lots will\nhave a frontage of 200 feet on the lake.\nThey will be paced on the market short-\nThey will he placed on the market short-\nwood.\nThe steamer Moyie will be launched\nfrom tlie C. P. R. shipyards this afternoon at 3 o'clock. As the shipyards\nare close to the terminus of the tramway those who desire to witness the\nlaunching will bo able to do so without\nin convenience.\nWord wns received last evening to the\neffect that J, J. Campbell will roturn\nfrom Phoenix today. HIh injuries are\nnot serious. He has ono rib broken, and\nIs somewhat bruised, so that aside from\nboing laid up for a few days ho will not\nsuffer from the effects of his accident.\nThe fishing yesterday In the lake was\nthe best so far of tho senson. Lar^e\nnumbers of trout wero taken off the city\nwharf, besides whlteflsh and a few char.\nThe day previous a small boy, fishing\nwith a five cent line from tho wharf\ntook a five pound char, nnd landed It\nwithout gaff or landing net.\nD. B. Murray and wife, accompnnlcd\nby their youngest daughter, left yesterday for Port Colborne, Ontario. Mr.\nMurray lias boen suffering from parnly-\nKis for some time and lt is expected that\nthe Change of climate will bo beneficial.\nMiss Ethel Murray has heen appointed\na nurse at the Kootenay Lake General\nHospital.\nThe Nelson juniors will piny the Juniors of Hossland on the rcrcntlou\ngrounds this afternoon. Tho youngsters\nsay they will put up a good gnmo and\nthey would like to see a large turn out\nOf people wlio hnve the price of admission, as there Is no other way thut\nthey can break even on tlio oxpenscs\nconnected with tho match.\nThe summer schedule of the C. P. R.\nwhich comes Into effect on Sunday next\nmakes three changes In the local service. The train from the Boundary and\nthe main line, which formerly arrived\nat Nelson nt 10:10 p. m. will now get In\nat 9:35 p. m. The train for Slocan City\nwill have at !t a. m. Instead of 10 and\nthe Kokanee will make three trips a\nweek to Lardo, Instead of two, leaving\nNelson at I p. m. on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays.\nfornior citizen of the United States;\nCharles Prank Schorf, of Elko, a former\ncitizen of the United States; and Hans\nHuge, of Kuskonook, a former citizen\nof the United Stales.\nRev. EJgerton R. Young, D. D., a\nnoted missionary, traveller and author,\nwho has an.international reputation as\nn preacher and lecturer, and whose\nbooks on life In the northwest are to be\nfound in most Sunday school libraries,\nis spending a few days in the city. Dr.\nYoung will preach in tlio Methodist\nchurch on Sunday evening and lecture\nIn the same place on Monday night.\nAnother drawing of the rinks of the\nNelson Bowling club bas been made\nwith the following results: Forin vs\nFletcher, P. E. Wiison vs Dover, Tamblyn vs J. G. Wilson, Booth vs Wright,\nBeer vs H. F, Macleoil, Miller vs Walsh,\nHume vs Macdonald, Wallace vs Neelands, Nolan vs Qulnlan and Ramiuel-\nmoyer vs McOreath, Tho play in this\nseries will be commenced as soon as\niiossible.\nCaptain West, of tlie Ilalys, who came\nin on Thursday from Balfour, brought\nwith him an Indian suffering from n\nsevere wound on his arm, which he had\nreceived in a most remarkable way, He\nhad been hunting, armed with a shotgun, and happened to come unexpecedly\non a large buck at close quarters. He\nfired both charges of shot, and tlie deer\nturned on him suddenly. He drew a\nhunting knife he was carrying, but was\nknocked over beforo lie could use it,\nand falling on the knife severed one of\nthe arteries of his arm. He crawled part\nof the way to West's ranch, and was discovered on the trail nearly dead from\nloss of blood. Captain West bound Up\ntho wound as well as possible, and\nbrought him In for medical attendance.\nThere aro forty-six cases os the Hut\nfor the session of the county court\nwhich opens at tin* court house on Monday. A number of these are actions for\nwages brought by miners against the\nowners or lessees of properties. There\noro three such eases against P, .1. Nichols, who Is working the Kern, for wages\nAggregating $570, and a number against\nThomas II. Noble and tho Burlington\nMining company for work performed on\nthe Iron Horse property on Ten-Mile\ncreek, in the Slocan. The claims In these\nthose suits aggregate $615.\nThere are five applications of naturalization to come before Judge Forin on\nMonday. Those who nro anxious to become British subjects are: Frank Troz-\nzo, of Slocan, formerly of Italy; August\nMount, of this oity, a former resident of\njUcrnmny; Fred Cogle, of Pilot Bay, a\nAt the police court yesterday morning\nJohn Hughes was tried on the charge of\nstealing ?44 from the person of T. Ait-\nman. The prisoner pleaded guilty and\nwas remanded until this morning for\nsentence. The case reflects credit on the\npolice for the quick finding of the guilty\nparty, as the charge was only laid tlie\nprevious afternoon. Aitmaii had not\ntho sligliest suspicion of Hughes but\nsuspected another man, although\nHughes had been with him about the\ntime the affair occurred. A slight circumstance, however, caused Hughes to\nbe watched, and finally searched, when\none twenty dollar note, with three\nlives, wero found on him. The money\nstolen had consisted of a twenty, four\nfives, and four ones. As it was known\nthat Hughes had been without money\nthe day before, and as ho could not give\nany satisfactory explanation of how he\ncamo into possession of it he was arrested.\nDIAMOND MINES OF AFRICA\nDUTCH  FARMERS SOLD  DIGGINGS\nFOR TWO DOLLARS.\nWORLD'S  DEMAND   USES   UP   $15,-\n000,000 ANNUALLY.\nis hoisted on the surface and haulod out\non floors, on which It Is spread, making u\nlayer or abouL one foot in thlokhoife, It\nItcH. there for several months, water being\napplied from time to timo by means uf a\nhose. This process pulverizes the ground.\nWhen the stuff [S ready it is passed\nthrough revolving screens and sent to a\npun with a large amount of water. The\ndiamonds settle nt the bottom of tlio pan,\nwhile the matrix, being lighter, is carried\naway over the side of tho pan. Tlie diamonds, together with the heaviest part or\nthe matrix, aro taken from the pans, placed on tables nnd sorted.\nAT THE HOTELS.\nThe diamond deposits of South Africa,\nbrought prominently to notice lately on account of the death of tho diamond king.\nCecil Rhodes, are all lying within a radius of one und one-half miles. They have\nthe world famous Do Boors mine as the\ncenter and are grouped together. St Augustine mine, Klmberloy mine, Town of\nKlmberloy, Lu Beors mine, DutoltSpan\nmine,  liulfontelii mine.\nIt Is claimed that tlie first diamond was\nfound lu 1867 by a farmer's boy, at a place\ncalled Hope Town, and situated about IK'\nmiles south of Klmberloy. Two years\nluter u Hottentot found the famous \".Star\nof South Africa,\" which was sold for WO,-\nooo. Such a discovery started a mad rush\nund the year JS70 saw the banks of the\nVuul rvlor covered witli tenia and huts\nof every size and shape, lu tho river the\nmen, ball\" naked, panned, rocked cradles\nand searched the products of tha rockers,\nBut thu result was very disappointing.\nAt lho same time many Dutch farmer.-'\nbegan to dig on their farms, lu the hope\nof limlhig diamonds. This diamond digging did not attract much attention at\nllrst, but after a few months, however,\ntho frequent finding of Diamonds caused a\ngonorai stampede from iho river to the\nfarm Du Tottspan, which was thrown open\nto the diggers, to whom tho owner sold\nclaims 'Al feet square for $2, Then tlie diggers went to the Do Beers farm. In July,\n1871, thu Kl ni bur ley mine was found, aud\nthe farms were bought by thu government\nof thu Cape Colony for J50.LWJ. The mines\nure held by the payment <if a license by\nthu owners or their successors. Jn ISTA\nKimbcrley had grown to a town of 26,000\nInhabitants, For many years tho valuo of\nthe diamonds extracted amounted to $60,-\n000,000 a. year, and about three-quarters of\nthis amount came from tho Klmberloy\nmino alone.    Of late years all  the mines\nhavo been consolidated Into a trust, which\nprevents the forcing down of the prico of\ndiamonds by too many of thorn being\nplaced on tlie market. It is claimed that\ntlio world's market can absorb as much aw\nJir.,U00,WW worth uf diamonds each year,\nwithout any material falling off in price.\nOutside of the fields of South Africa\nBrazil and India arc tho two countries\nwhich produce diamonds in commercial\nquantities, in the middle of the sandstone\nof the Was the diamond mines appear as\nvolcanic necks, from 'COO to 0u0 feet in diameter.\nTIIE   KIMHKKLKY   MINE.\nThe doposlt of diamond-bearing ground\nIs oval. Tlie giingus of thu ore or blue\nground was a red and sandy soil, forming\na    low    knob    above    tho  SUrfaCO    of   the\nground.  The first diamond is said to have\nbeen found 20 foot deep. The mine has\nbeen worked as on open quarry down i\"\na depth of BOO feot, nml a prospecting shaft\nhas since been sunk in the bottom of tho\nmine. The general opinion Is that the formation of the diamond-bearing deposits\nwas due to aqueous rather than Ignoous\nagencies, and that It Is possible something\nlu the nature of a.mud volcano.    A very\nImportant fad la the variety of diamonds\nnot only In different mines, but oven in different parts of a mine the diamonds are\nperfect octahedrons, while in another part\ntho cryslnl teal Ion  Is more  imporfeel,   in\noiie part thO stones will bo whito, While\nIII another the majority of the Stones will\nbo yellow,\nTHE DE BEERS MINE.\nThis  mine  Is BOCQMl  lO   lhe   Kimbcrley 111\nrichness nnd value, ami is larger than lho\nKimberiey. There nro iwo concentric rings\nof Igneous rocks, surrounding, more or less\nthe blue ground. This ground has the same\ncharacteristics in tho uo Beers as in tho\nKlmberloy,\nTiie other mines are of the same type\nas the two already described,\nTO  caleb   the diamond  tho  blue ground\nQueens\u2014W. G. O'Brien, Lardo; W. II.\nWulbey, Kaslo; M. Manloy, Slocan; Rov.\nThos. Beveridge, wife and family, Manl-\ntou; L. A. Anderson, Victoria; A. G.\nCrofter, Rossland; C. LaMoine, Pembroke.\nGrand Central\u2014W. Hall, Jamestown,\nOal.j D. Gilflllan, Ymir; Mrs, Sarah In-\nman, Fort Steele; T. Sutherland, Olivia,\nMinn.; J. S. Holland, Silver King mine;\nS. Marshall, W. Jordan, Ymir; J. Lynch,\nH. Clifton, Phoenix,\nHume\u2014H. Mackay, Kaslo; 0. W.\nBusk, Kokanee creek; G.' W. Allen.\nRossland; G. A. Mctntyre, Vancouver;\nW. T. Newman, Cleveland; J. E. Brooke,\nSeattle; E. Duthic, Rossland, F. A. Rces,\nWinnipeg; J, E. Claughlcy, Portland; R.\nS. Irwin. Nakusp.\nPhair\u2014A. 11. Esch, Whitewater; J. L.\nIrving, Rossland; J. J. FInucane, Greenwood; E. Hooper, R. Popkiu, London,\nEng.; S. S. Fowler and wife, Vancouver;\nW. N. Stevens, E. C. Cole, jr., J. R. Sinclair, Spokane; H. B. Palmer, Portland;\nMiss Varkey, England; Mrs, W. H. M.\nMay, Toronto.\nImperial\u2014J. Lalonde, Winnipeg; J.\nLoffer, RosBland; G. II. Player and wife,\nVancouver; Mr. antl Mrs, Farrell, Granite; W. A. Seaman, W. A. Chosley,\nLnrdo.\nBartlett\u2014Dr. McLean, Minneapolis;\nL. A. Bhenam, St. Paul; A. J. Stewart,\nMinneapolis; J. Benny, Sirdar; W. Bar-\nhour, Bayonne.\nTHE KICKERS' COLUMN.\nWANTS   A CELEBRATION.\nEditor of. Tlie Daily News: In almost\nevery town and city of the British empire preparations are being mado to celebrate thu coronation, la Nelson, a city\ngenerally noted for Its loyalty und patriot-\nIsm lho matter Is being treated with\napathy only equal to the indifference with\nWhich the declaration of peace was treated.\nNothing Is done here to celebrate tho holiday given In honor of tlie empire's most\nglorious monarch\u2014Victoria Day. The grent\nDominion holiday, the 1st of July, thla year\nIs being passed over, and are we to allow\nthe coronation day lo pass over in the\nsame manner. If nothing else can be done\nsurely the day can bo made one that the\nyounger generation will remember. To lei\nthe children of tho city have a celebration\nthnt they will always remember should\nbe an easy matter. The projected smoker\nseems to hnve fallen through und It will\nho to Nelson's lusting disgrace if nothing\nIs done to celebrate au event uniiiue in the\nlives of most of us.\nOne of the socitfes In town had somo talk\nof holding a banquet open to nil British\nsubjects, thnt too for some unexplained\nreason hus been dropped,\nUnless something is done soon, the two\ngreat holidays in the yenr will pass unnoticed in Nelson. The regatta to be\nheld nt tlie end of July Is no doubt a greul\naffair, but should that bo allowed to prevent us celebrating tlie coronation of King\nEdward VII,     Yours truly,\nLOYALIST.\nTIIE NEW COMMANDER.\nDistinction dime to Lord Dundonnhl Very\nLate lu Life.\nThe Karl of Dundonuld, who Is coming\nto Cut i ml a in command of the Dominion\ntroops, has hnd a distinguished career in\ntho British army. Ho is not only a first-\nrate soldier, but his Inventions for military\nequipments, notably the Duudoiiald gun\ncarriage, have been valuable. Real military distinction came to Lord Dundonald\nrather lute in life, as he was 17 when the\nSouth African war broke out, and had\nhitherto been chiefly known as the belted\ncurl, wltli a commission tn the Second Life\nQunrds, the command of which regiment\nho relinquished lu 1889, Ho did excellent\nservice on the Nile, where he commanded\nthe detachment of the Second Life Guards\n\u2014ihe camel corps\u2014which went to the relief of Gordon. It was reserved for South\nAfrica (o make the name of Dundonuld as\nmuch n household word In the llritish\narmy us that of Cochrane has long been\nIn the navy. Lord Dundonald married a\nWelsh lady, an heiress , .Miss Winifred\n[foskoth, who owns a Welsh castle near\nAbergele, rejoicing in a name spelled Without any vowels, ut all, unless \"y\" be\ncounted and admitted ns u vowel. Gwyrch\nCastle Is a beautiful place, of which holy\nDundonald Is a delightful ehalelalne.\nand duchess of Marlborogh, duko and\nduchess of Wolllnglon, me Japanese minister, lho French ambassador, M. Paul\nCambon, Joseph Chamberlain, the colonial\nsecretary, and Mrs, Chumherluin, Mr.\nBroderick, the war secretary, Mr. Wyn-\ndham, tlio chief secretary for Ireland, lord\nand lady Loven Mulvill-Arlund, countess\nGrey, lord and lady BurgolesI, lady North-\ncote, colonel Fleetwood-Edwards, Raslid\nSadi Bey, Mr. and Mrs. William Eustis,\nJ. L. Saltonslall, Miss Choato and Mrs.\nBentinck. Tho dinner was followed by a\nmusloale.\nFERNIE BELIEF FUND.\nCAUSE OF CHINESE LOYALTY.\nMinister W'u Tliig-Fnng said, ut the\nGeorgia military college, that all efforts\nmado by Americans and other foreigners\nto guess the cause of absolute loyalty and\ndevotion of tlie Chinese subjects in time of\ntrouble had heen futile. He explained thai\nIl was dun to college training, ami was\nono of tlie live relations Inbred in Chinese\nchildren, viz., to honor father und mother\nlu life and ufler death, so us Io preserve\nunder all conditions devotion to tho sovereign power; to respect ago; to hallow tho\nrelation belween husband and wife, and\nnlso Unit between friend und friend.\nlie said no Chinese merchant hud ever de-\nfruuded a man out of a penny in business\ntransactions, and no parent's will hud ever\nbeen attacked lu China. He snys China\ndoes not have to be governed by the sword,\nbecause thi' principles of loyalty nnd dov->-\ntlon nre too thoroughly instilled In the\nyouth of the land, und thai this is due to\ncollege training as well as to other causes,\nlie said Ihe chief difference between college education in America and In China is\nHint here primary Importance Is given to\nIhe mental training, ami hi China moral\nimprovement is mnde of flrst Importance-\nWashington I'ost.\nTlio Daily News Subscription List.\nPreviously acknowledged  $357.25\nA. P      2.50\nBUSINESS LOCALS,\nDrink Murata Teu.\nSpring Chicken to order at Florence\nPark.   Telephone 277.\nCall up 33 if you want furniture or\npianos moved.\u2014West Transfer Co.\nTen  per cent discount ou nil cash purchases at MoLachlan Brothers tonight.\nAll kinds of express work, coal and\nwood.\u2014West Transfer Co.    Telephone\nWe wnnt you to try Marata Tea at 33\ncents and 15 cents per pound.   The Peo>\nplo's Cash Grocery, corner Hnll and Baker\nstreets.\nMadden House B\"\"rNs.!;,\nDo you need a comfortabte homo? If so\ntry the Madden 1 louse. Well furnished\nrooms, lighted by electricity; tirst-class\nboard. In the bnr you will And nil the\nbest domestic and imported lli|iiors and\nclears.\nTHOMAS MADDEN, Proprietor.\nANOTHER BIG FEED.\nLondon June 12.\u2014Joseph IT. Choate, tlntt-\ned Slates ambassador to England, enter-\nlalncd Whltelaw Held at dinner nt his residence tonight. The distinguished party\npresent Included Mrs. nnd MISS Held, the\nduke and duchess of Sutherland, lhe duke\nIN THE SUPREME COURT OF BRITISH COLUMBIA.\nIn the mailer of lho \"Winding Up Act,\"\nand Amending Acts; and In the matter\nof The Tribune Association, Limited.\nThe creditors of the above named company nro required, on or beforo the 2nd\nday of July, 1W2, to send their names and\nnddresses, and particulars of their debts or\nclaims, and the mimes ond addresses of\ntheir solicitors, If any, to A. G. Gamble of\nthe City of Nelson, British Colunibln, the\nofllcial liquidator of the snld company, and,\nif so re'pilred by notice In writing from\nthe said ofllcial liquidator, by their said\nsolicitors to come In and prove their said\ndebts or claims ut tbe ofllco of tho District\nRegistrar of tlie Supreme Court at tho\ncourt house, Victoria, B. C, nt such time\nns shnll be specllied in such notice, or In\ndefault thereof they will be excluded from\nthe benefit of nny distribution mnde before\nsuch debts nre yroved.\nMonday, tiio 14th dny or July, 19D2, nt 2:30\no'clock in the nfternonn, nt the said Chambers, Is appointed for the hearing ami adjudicating upon the debts and claims.\nDated this 2nd day of June, A. D. 1902.\nIIAUVEV COMBE,\nDeputy  District  \"Registrar.\nSPECIALS\nSEE OUR STOCK OF\nFireworks\nFlags\nKites\nLunch\nBaskets\nFishing\nTackle\nCanada Drug and\nBook Co., Ltd.\nH.&M.BIRD\nReal Estate. Fire and Iff' Insurant*\nMoney to Loan.\nFOR SALE.\n$800\u2014Fivo roomed house nnd two\nlots on Mill street, good garden,\nfenced, $400 easl), balance easy to. ms.\n$5fiO\u2014I louse and lot on Victoria\nstreet cast.\n$2,U()(i\u2014Six roomed house on Victoria streot, west, all modern improvements.   Easy terms.\nFDR BENT.\nI'hree cnltnircs iinross the lahe,\ndirectly opposite Nolson by the\nmontb or tot tlio bu minor. For particulars npniy at out office,\nLODGE MKKT1NOB.\nNKTjSON MINKltS' UNION No. OB, W. P.M.\nMeet even* Sal urday > veiling tit. 7:K) o'clock,\nSamuel I,. I'cncm-k, Prcs'dent; .Infiii'i WlUcf,\nSccrotary,  Visiting brethren cordially In-\nvlled.\t\nJ. T. WILSON\nGeneral tonmlng. A specialty of moving Kuriiil nre inirl Pianos. No 1 Dry\nWood, nil length-?. Order* left nt tho\nWcsutrn Canadian Employment Agency\nreceive prompt nn>l careful attention.\nTELEPHONE 254B\nBAKTLETT HOUSE\nFormerly Ulurko II\nThe ;\u00abMl $1 ver Day    oune In Nr lion.\nNone but white help emp    ed.  Tho bar the\nbest.\nG. W. BARTLETT, - Prop.\nGALT COAL\nFor domestic or steam use.\nA full  supply always on\nhand.\nRates to all railway and\nlake points\nW  P. TIERNEV,\nGeneral Agent.\nTel. No. 265.\nOffice \u2014 Two doors  west\nC.P.R  offices.\t\nJUST RECEIVED\nA carload of furniture, including the latest designs in high\ngrade goods. Dining chairs,\ndining tables, bedroom suites,\nladies' writing desks, rocking\nchairs, upholstered chairs,\nsi.'e boards, parlor cabinets,\nEverything to make a home\ncompletely furnished. Our\nprices are the lowest. Give\nus a call and be satisfied.\nP. Mc ARTHUR & CO.\nSpokane Falls A\nNorthern R'v.\nNelson A Fort\nSheppard R'v.\nRed Mountain R'v.\nBUFFET  PARLOR\nCAR\nBetween Nelson and Spokane\nNelson to Seattle - 21 hours\nNelson to Vancouver - 26 hours\nNelson to Victoria     -     a6 hours\nLeave DAT TRAIN Arrive\n9:20 a.m Spokane  7:15 p.m\n12:25p.m Rossland. ...4:30 p.m\n10:30 a.m....Mountain IS'SO p. in.\n0:4(1 u.m Nelson 0:45 p.m.\nH, A. JACKSON, G. P. b T.A.\nSpokane Warn\nG. K. TAOKABURY.\nAffent. Nfllinn, R.\nKootenay Railway and Na\nCompany, Ltd.\nOperating\nKASI\/O k SWCAtt RAILWAY.\nINTERNATIONAL NAV. k TRAD OO. LU\nSborteHt and quirked, routo Ut tho rnnl nud a\npoint* on .ho O. K. ft N nnd Northorn V.\nclll-! I.iillwiiyt* In WonhlnKUin, OroKOt) and\nSou thorn Butte.\nTime Card ffectlve Nov. 10.1901\nEaslo & Slocan By-\n:8:30 ft. \u00bbn. Lv. fKnolo Ar. 4:00 p\n10*65 p.m. Ar.        Handon I.v. VAC p.\nInt Nav* & Trading Co\nNELSON- KABLO ROUTE.\n(1:00 p. in. Lv. NoIhod        Ar. 10:30 a. m\n9:10 p, ra. An        | Kudo Lv. 7.-00 a. in'\nConnecting at Five Milo Point witb Nelson\n4 Fort v,hepp-ud Railway both to aud from\nItOKSiand, oto\nTlokotn sold to all part* In United St-atoo and\nCanada via Groat Northorn and O. It. K N\nCo.'i* linen,\nOooan atoatmhlp tlokota and rates vl  a\nUno-* will bofumlHhcd on application\nFor furthor particulars coll on or addrtM\nK. It. & N. Co.'* Rtontnor Arfiontft will nm\nfrom Kif-lo to Hull'** l,niultn-,; nl lliu licml of\niho Upper Dnnonn tuvoroii TuradayiJuneSrdi\nWi'.!. rutumlnK noxttlavund will call ut nil way\nlamilngH In bothdlrcctlmiH,\nSteamer leave* the City wharf nt 8 o'clock\na.m. \t\nAtlantic S.S. Sailings\nFrom Montreal\nPcnvcr Lino TMo Clmmplnln  .Juno 2d\nDcavor Lino Lake Ontario July 3\nDcnvor Lino l*ako Simcoo ,... .July 10\nAllnn Lino Mumldlan.. Jti'c28\nAllan Lino Ionian Julys\nAllan Lino I'm Man July 12\nDominion Lino Dominion....  AuKUHt2\nFrom Huston\nDominion Lino New Knulnnri July 2\nDominion Lino ('uimuotiwoaltli  July IU\nFrom Portland.\nDominion Uno Ciillforninn July 12\nFrom Now York\nWhilo PUr Lino Mnjoslio  July\nWhilo Htnr Linn Oormanlo  lulyll\n('iiinird LitieUmbrla Jiiim-A\nCunnrd Uno Lucnnia    Julyfi\nAmerican Lino Ht Paul \"\u2022 Juupitf\nAmerican Lino StLoulj       July 2\nContinental BnlllntfH of French, North Oor-\nmnn Lloyd, H. A. P. and Italian Liner on ap*\nplication.\nRATKH-Haloon fnww 155.00. and upwards\nHnconil $35 anil upwardB acconuiiK to Htoaino\nn\u00abd location of berth. Steo'iKto quoted on an\nplication. Propaid pnosaRcs from Juijiland and\ntho contlnont at lowest rates.\nII. L. BROWN,     W, P. F. CUMMING8,\nCity ArU Nolson.     -Uon.AROnfc Wirnltw*\nFred lrvine8Co.il\nJust received  a   lar^e assortment of\nlatest styles ladies summe\nOrgandil, Piijtrti), ai\u00bbd\nGrass Liijei) SUits\nA large assortment of ladies' Shirt Waists and\nSilk   Blouses,    Leading'styles and'materials\nWhite Pique Linen and Duck ready-to-wear\nskirts.    Prices exceedingly low.\nFRED IRVINE & CO.\npinilllllfninilt!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!^\nB YOU'REISAFE WHEN |\n\u2022~ VOI I  I ICC =S\nYOU USE\nBENNETT'S FUSE\nCROWN BRAND\nBe Sure and Get the Genuine.\n3\n| Lawrence Hardware Company |\nB Sole Agents, Nelson, B. C. _\\\n_w_____mmmmmmmm\nLawn Supplies\nRubber and Cotton Garden Hose, Lawn Sprinklers, Garden\nShears, Lawn Mowers, Lawn Rakes. See our Ball Bearing California Lawn Sprinklers.\nT\"e J. H* ishdown Hardware Co, Ltd.\nSuccessors tolLiwroncelHanlwiriCOompnny\n\u25a0j-p^-sr*'***-'^\u25a0***. -st--*.-      \u2022*\u2022*\u25a0*\u2022 ^\u2022^\u2022r+'jfxA\nI CHINA HALL.!\nti\nti\nti\nSELLING OUT\nSELLING OUT\n<t|i ALL THE STOCK MUST BE SOLD\n^ GREAT  BARGAINS     BIG REDUCTIONS\nti\nti\nti\nti\nti\nti\nti\nti\nW\nCOME EARLY\nS. Y. BROOKMAM\n\u2022\u00bb^3- 00- 00- 0*-*-0*        T*y^T^5r-*2r.5*\nAn Affair of\nPURE BUSINESS\n\u25a0*.).--,:. -,i, -.5.* .W-S-.--A, -.j.**rf.***,,\u00bb*'**vV*-*4'-A>***^t*<-A'\nAdvertising is not an affair\nof scntimant and favoritism.\nIt is an aflair of pure business, ol dollars and cents\u2014\nas much so as buying or selling goods. Advertisers are\nafter results. They want\nthe worth of their money.\nThey aim to reach not only\nthe greatest number, but also\nthe best class of readers.\nThey advertise whore they\nfind it pays to make known\ntheir wants and their wares.\nTo secure the worth of their money in Southern British Columbia, advertisers should use\nthe columns ol\nThe Daily News,\npublished at Nelson, every day in the week\nexcept Mondays.\nTHE DOMINION WIRE ROPE CO, Ltd.\nMONTREAL\nManufacturers ofBEST STEEL WIEE ROPE.\nTramway, Hoisting, Mining Wire Rope.\nLang's Lay for Tramways and Underground Hailage\nLocal Stock carried, estimates furnished,\nH, E- OROASDAILE Ageut Nelson-\n","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":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (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."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1902_06_14","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":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0381085","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":"49.493333","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":"-117.295833","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":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","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":"Nelson, B.C. : F.J. Deane","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 Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.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."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1902-06-14 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":"1902-06-14 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 Daily News","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":""}]}