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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":" TOR DAILY NEWS\nVOL. 1.\nTHE DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C, SATURDAY, 8EPTEMBER 6, 1802.\nNO. 116\nREPORT ON THE YMIR MINE\nLEDGE IS IMPROVING IN THE 1,000-\nFOOT LEVEL.\nIMPORTANT     ECONOMIES     HAVE\nBEEN INTRODUCED.\nTho report of Edward Hooper upon\nthe Ymir mine has been issued to the\nshareholders of the company, and, in\nview of the rumors which have been\ncurrent for tho past two months, it is\npleasant to learn that Mr. Hooper's\nreport is reassuring.\nIt is enclosed In a circular letter from\ntlie secretary of the company in which\nthe main features of the report are\ntouched upon, us follows:\nDealing with the development at the\nmine and the appearance of the property, Mr.  Hooper  suys:\n\"The vein has been proved from the\nsurface to a vertical depth of about\n1,000 feet, the payable portion varying\nfrom 2 1-2 feet to 42 feet in width.\nThe length of tho pay chute at No. 1\nlevel was about 440 feet; at No. 2 level\ntlio lateral extent of the vein worked\nby the stopes Increased to 470 feet, but\nat No. 3 level tho \"chuto\" shortens to\nnbout 350 feet, and at No. 4 level the\npayable ore is only found, so far, to\nhave a length of ahout 200 feet although\nthe assays for the last 70 feet of the\nwest drift (which is not included in\nabove measurement) would seem to\ndouote that a certain amount of ore\nexists between that distance. The limits of tho pay chute at No, 5 level have\nnot as yet been fully determined though\npresent appearances indicate a decided\ntendency for it to pitch to tlie eastward,\nand a length of ahout 120 feet on this\nlevel, east of the shaft, has beea proved\nto be payable.\nAt levels Nos. 0, 7 and 10, no amount\nof payable ore has yet been found, and\nall work at theso points is suspended\nuntil connection has been made with\nthe main shaft of level No. 10. This\nlast-mentioned work Is of great importance with regard to the extraction ot\nore below No. 3 level.\nThe presence of bunches or seams of\nzinc-blende, galena or iron pyrites In\ntlio quartz has hitherto heen regarded\nas tlie chief indication of the presence\nof sufficient gold and silver in the ore\nto render it payable. That the occurrence of theso minerals in tho ore is no\ncriterion as to the accompanying precious metals, is sufficiently borne out\nhy tho recent developments In No. 10\nlevel, where the quartz carries ahout\nthe same quantity of sulplmrets, and a\nselected sample taken here gave a value\nof $7.51. which Is a higher result than\nany hitherto obtained. This is un-\ndoVibiuuiy a tavorahte imilcuVIon and\ncoupled with the fact thai, the pay chute\nin tlie upper levels has shown a decided'\ntendency to pitch to the east, gives one\nevery encouragement for continuing\ntills level to the eastward.\nThe ore is chiefly composed of quartz,\nwith which is associated about 8 to 10\nper cent, of sulplmrets of lead, iron and\nZinc- The gold evidently occurs for\nthe most part in a freo state, over 60\nper cent, being saved by amalgamation\niu the stamp mill, and about 15 per cent\nby concentration ovor the vanners, the\ntailings being about $1.75 per ton of\nore treated.\nThe concentrates shipped to the\nsmelters from the commencement of\noperations by the company to 31st December, 1901, contained the average of\n3.01 oz. of gold and 12.22 oz. of sliver\nper ton, and over 20 per cent of iead.\nCyanide operations commenced In\nMarch last, and up to the 30th June,\n11,120 tons of tailings had heen treated.\nAccording to the asays of the tailings\nand residues about 835 oz. of gold nnd\n3,116 oz- of silver have heen saved\ntheoretically (see tabulated statement\nE) although the actual results, which\nare not yet obtainable, will undoubtedly\nhe considerably less.\nThe operation of cyanidlng has naturally heen attended at the outset with\nmany minor difficulties, and the average cost per ton of the tailings treated,\nviz.. $0.03, is high, and should still be\nreduced.\nIn calculating the amount of ore\nblocked out, 11 cubic feet have been\ntaken as equivalent to a ton of 2,000\npounds.\nTons.\nBetween surface and No. 1 level..  210t\nLevel Nos. 1 and 2      6,460\nLevels Nos. 2 and 3   32,540\nLevels Nos. 3 and 4  ,'... 41,152\nLevels Nos. 4 and 5  26,116\nTotal amount ore blocked out.106,368\nIn calculating the above mentioned\nquantities, an allowance of from 10 per\ncent to 30 per cent has been made for\nthe waste or poor rock, which should\nhe eliminated from the ore before being\nsent to the mill.\nThe ore blocked out can safely be\ncomputed to have a value of $7.50 per\nton. and should, by the aid of further\ndevelopment work at No- 6 level, and\npossibly also at No. 7 level, be considerably augmented, although It cannot be\ndenied that the work done at Nos. 4\nand 5 levels points to a shortening of,\nthe chute in depth, but whether this is\nof local occurrence or not future developments must show.\nThe total gross product and value of\nBame to the 30th June, 1902, is set forth\nin tabulated statements A and B, and\nit will be seen that the avorago gross\nvalue of tho metals recovered has\nfallen from $11.94 in 1899 to $0.84 per\nton dui'li.2\" 1002. This decrease in\nvalues was rendered more apparent than\nreal by the extraction and shipment to\nsmelters during 1899 of a considerable\nquantity of rich carbonates and crude\nores. At the same time It cannot be\ndenied that a lower grade of ore Is being\nworked than hitherto.\nDuring the pnst six months the falling off In tho values   has been most\nmarked, and this may be partly attributed to the milling of ore from Nos. 5,\n6 and 7 levels, without any previous\nassorting thereof, for it is plain from\nthe sampling that the whole vein as\nmined will not pay to treat\nThe proved continuity of the vein In\ndepth, and so highly mineralized, is undoubtedly a favorable feature, and engenders confidence for a recurrence of\nthe gold and silver values, although this\nis a fact which only further development can demonstrate.\nTills development shejufld primarily\nconsist ot- the foliownig work, viz.:\n1. To continue the work of upraising\nfrom level No. 10 to connect with Ymir\nshaft.\n2. To continue driving level No. 10 to\nthe east\n3. The extension of levels Nos. 6 and\n7 to the west as well as to the east.\nTHE FRENCH-CANADIAN LINE\nMAY NOT MATERIALIZE FOR LACK\nOF CAPITAL.\nSIR WILFRID LAURIER SAID TO BE\nIN POOR HEALTH.\nMontreal, Sept. 5.\u2014The Star's London cable says: The opinion is expressed here that the attempt to establish a French-Canadian line of steamships will fall owing to the hesitancy of\nthe French capitalists to respond to the\ninvitation to invest In the venture.\nSir Wilfrid Laurier, despite his appearance, is not well, and Intends to\nseek an interval of rest in Switzerland\nfor a week or two before going to Rome.\nHe may prolong his stay in Europe for\nsome weeks.\nLECKY TO RETIRE.\nThe Noted Author Will Shortly Resign\nHis Seat in Parliament.\nLondon. Sept. 5.\u2014There Is general\nregret in political circles over the announcement that William Edward Hart-\npole Lecky is about to retire from parliament. For many years Mr. Lecky\nhas been a familiar figure in the house\nof commons as the representative of\nDublin university. What the world of\npolitics will lose, however, by Mr.\nLecky's retirement, will be a gain to\nthe world of letters, for, freed from his\nparliamentary duties the celebrated historian will undoubtedly devote more\ntime in future to his literacy work.\nMr. Lecky is regarded as. one of the\nbrightest scholars that scholarly Ireland has produced. Although a unionist, he Is iu thorough sympathy with\nhis race and his country, and bis works,\nespecially his History of England, have\ndone much for the advancement of the\nIrish cause. Mr. Lecky wrote that famous book, \"History of European Morals,\nFrom Augustus to Charlemagne,\" and\npublished it in 1869. It became a classic\nupon its publication, and no historical\nwork ranks above it. Akin to this\ngrand performance of the pen is his\nHistory of the Rise and Influence of the\nSpirit of Rationalism in Europe, a book\nthat is considered by some to be of\nmore importance than his popular masterpiece. He has written a little library on the history of Ireland, chiefly\nvaluable to statesmen and statists, and\nhe has also written a History of England in the Eighteenth Century\u2014a work\nwhich has taken high rank and which\nhas been translated Into German. Man:\nof his other works have also been done\ninto various languages. Mr. Lecky is\nnow nearing his 65th year.\nREAL STAGE TRAGEDY.\nActress Shoots Her Lover and Then\nCommits Suicide.\nLondon, Sept. 5.\u2014A dispatch to the\nDally Chronicle from Vienna gives the\ndetails of the tragical deaths on Wednesday last of an Austrian actor and\nactress at Samon-Ujuvar. Transylvania,\nHungary, as follows: \"Julia Pokey and\nJulius Bardos had been engaged, but\nthe latter had broken the engagement.\nTho two were acting the part of lovers\nin a performance in which Julia was\nsupposed to fire at Bardos. She charged her pistol with bullets and shot him\ndead. The curtain was lowered Immediately, but the llrst persons who arrived on the stage found that Julia had\ncommitted suicide by opening her\nveins.\nIN WEST VIRGINIA.\nCoal Strike Reported Declared Off\nToday.\nCharleston, West Virgina, Sept. 5.\u2014\nIt is rumored here that the Kanawaha\naud New River strike was declared off\ntoday, and that tbe Chesapeake & Ohio\nrailway has ordered all equipment\nrushed back into the coal fleldB.\nTHE ENGLISH EDITORS.\nRevelstoke, Sept. 5.\u2014(Special to The\nDaily News.)\u2014Tbe English editors\nreach here Sunday morning and proceed\nsouth to Rossland, Boundary and Nelson. They will probably reach Nelson\nWednesday evening. The editors are\nreported to be greatly annoyed at the\nsuggestion that they were not desirous\nof visiting the Kootenay districts. They\nsay they are most anxioiiB to learn all\nthey can concerning the mining Industry, and hope to be able to devote all\ntheir time in Kootenay to the examination of the mines and smelters.\nSLOCAN ORE SHIPMENTS.\nOre shipments from Slocan City division for the week amounted to 120 tons,\nof which the Arlington shipped 40 tons.\nThe remainder was from the Enterprise, which sent 60 tons of zinc to\nNelson and 20 tons of concentrates to\nTrail. For the year tbe total is 4,505\ntons.\nWRANGLING   OVER  THE   HOSPITAL\nCity Council Has Disclosed Nothing Against the Management and Doubtless Will Not\nTbe meeting ot the city council held\nyesterday morning to investigate the\naffairs ot the Kootenay Lake general\nhospital, could hardly he considered a\nsuccess. While there was a good attendance of the parties' Interested, no one\nseemed prepared to take the Initiative,\nand while many statements were made\nby both sides reflecting on the present\nand past management ot the Institution,\nnothing was arrived at In the way of\ndefinite charges. About tbe only clear\nthing brought out was that the feeling\nbetween the hospital board and the\nmajority of the city doctors was anything but amicable, but as that had\nalready been brought out a number of\ntimes before, It could scarcely be considered new information.\nOf tbe city council, besides mayor\nFletcher, aldermen Hamilton, Selous,\nMorrison and Irving were present, and\ncity clerk Strachan, The hospital\nboard was represented by J. M. Lay,\nJ. Dover, H. Byers, F. W. Swannell,\nDr. Hawkey and secretary George Johnstone. Drs. Hall and McLennan, besides Dr. Hawkey, represented the medical profession. Two stenographers and\na reporter of The Daily News were the\naudience.\nIt took some time lor the proceedings\nto get started, and after some desultory conversation, alderman Irving suggested that it would be better to adjourn till next Wednesday evening,\nwhen a report of the hospital could be\nbrought up and considered, as It appeared that at present they had really\naothing to work on. \u2014\nAlderman Selous did not approve of\nthis. For himself, he had been there\nsince 11, and he supposed it had put the\nother gentlemen who were present to\nconsiderable inconvenience to come,\nand they at least had better know definitely what they were going to do next\nWednesday.\nMayor Fletcher did not see auy\nobject in adjourning. They had met to\nhold an Investigation, and if there was\nanything to Investigate they might as\nwell do It.\nAlderman Hamilton said that as'far\nas he was concerned he understood that\nno statement of hospital affairs had\nbeen published during the past year,\nand he was at sea as to how the institution stood. The council, as a body\nwho wero largely contributing! to'the\nInstitution, wanted to know how everything was being run and for that reason\nhad called for an investigation. He\nconsidered it right that a statement\nshould be published.\nMr. Johnstone did not see what klud\nof a statement the council wanted.\nBach year the hospital treated a large\nnumber of patients for the city which\notherwise would have to handle them\nitself. In return the council had acknowledged the obligation by making a\ngrant of an amount wnlch was small in\ncomparison with the expense they were\nsaved. As the council had conceded\nthis the board asked for their grant\nThe government allow the hospital $1\nper day for each patient treated, if it\ncosts $175 a day to treat charity patients, and the government only allows\n$1, either the city or individuals nave\nto come up with the money or the institution must stop. There are no endowment or other funds to draw from.\nAlderman Selous said that as far as\nthe council was concerned, the grant\nmade each year by the council was\nlargely Influenced by the report of the\nhospital board as to the number of\nindigent sick sent to the hospital by\nthe mayor. The council as business\nmen fully recognized that this hospital\nlike 99 out of 100 similar Institutions,\ncould not be run as a payiag concern,\nas it was supposed to be for charity.\nHowever, he would uke to know how\nmany patients had been treated for\ncharity during the past year.\nGeo. Johnston\u2014During the past six\nmonths there have been 718 days of\ntreatment given such patients. As to\nthe hospital being supported by donations from charitably Inclined persons,\nthe donations during the past year from\nsuch sources amounted to about $5.\nAid. Hamilton\u20141 quite agree with\nwhat Mr. Johnstone said as to the city\ncouncil's attitude in the matter of a\na grant, but at the same time it Is the\nright of the public to know what Is dono\nwith certain funds received from the\ngovernment and city alike. We are\ntold that there are so many patients, so\nmuch due from paying patients, and\nthat so much is lost on contract patients\u2014something we never heard of in\nthe past. I for one would like to see\nthe items.\nGeo. Johnstone\u2014If the council would\nfurnish blanks, like the provincial government do, with questions asked that\nthey wish answered, we will furnish\nthem with anything they wish In the\nway of information, Till we know ex-\nuctly what you want it is impossible\nfor us to satlBfy you.\nJ. M. Lay\u2014It Is the custom of the\nhospital board to furnish annually\nstatements of their affairs, and 1 think\nalderman Hamilton must be making a\nmistake when he says that ho has seen\nno such statement this year.\nGeo. Johnstone\u2014Mr. Swannell was\nsecretary of the board last March, at\nthe usual time to issue the report, and\nr presume made the ,-eport as he had\ndone In the past.\nMayor Fletcher\u2014The report was published as usual.\nAlderman Irving\u2014How about all this\namount we hear of as owing from paying patients? What do you do with\nsuch accounts; write them off as bad\ndebts, or carry them on?\nGeo. Johnstone\u2014Generally write them\noff as bad debts and keep on trying to\ncollect them. The accounts differ from\nordinary business in several ways. A\npatient can not tell how long he may\nbe in as a paying patient, keep on paying perhaps a month or two months,\nas long as his money holds out, and\nthen as he Is broke it is impossible for\nhim to keep on paying. We have two\ncases at present where patients have\nbeen iu for over five months, their\nmoney being exhausted long ago. These\nand similar cases are very bard to deal\nwith. There are very few people In\nthis country, especially working men,\nno matter how saving they may have\nbeen, who can stand a drain like that\nvery ions.\nAlderman Selous\u2014Would It not be\nbetter to turn them over to the common ward, so that the hospital would\nat least be getting the benefit of the\ngovernment grant?\nGeo. Johnstone\u2014The grant from the\ngovernment this year was. a lump sum,\n$2,000, so it would not have made any\ndifference.\nF. W. Swannell\u2014Even when the grant\nmade by the government was a per\ncapita rate, no distinction was made as\nto whether a patient was a paying or\ncharity case.\nMr. Swannoll had just come in before\nalderman Selous asked his question and\nas soon as he had finished replying\nmayor Fletcher asked him if a report\nhad been published by him this year as\nsecretary.\nMr. Swannell\u2014Yes. During the years\nthat I have been secretary there has\nbeen a report published every year, ai'.d\nI have copies that I can show you if you\nwish to see thein.\nAlderman Morrison\u2014I move that a\nstatement lie issued up to the end of\nAugust, showing in detail the number\nof patients treated, charity patients,\npaying patients, and full arrears, so\nthat we may be able to make an intelligent comparison. The motion was put\nand carried unanimously.\nAlderman Irving\u2014It seems to me that\nit is not a matter of receipts and disbursements at ..11, but one of the way\nthe hospital is run. The directors apparently want to run it one way and\nthe doctors. auo 'icr.\nAlderman Hamilton \u2014 Notwithstanding what has been said, and while I\nhave the highest respect for the directors individually, it cannot be denied\nthat the hospital has not the standing\nthat it had a year ago with the majority\nof the people. It Is common talk\naround the city, and I think that it is\nfor the benefit of the hospital board and\nthe directors to have the matter thoroughly threshed out. 1 have heard that\nthe directors are not running the hospital at all, but that Dr. LaBau is really\nthe director. I am not going behind\nthe buck of nny of the directors with\nthis, but um saying it openly here so\nthat if It is Incorect It may' be righted.\nIt Is said that while Dr. LaBau had contract patients at the hospital there was\nnever any talk about contract patients\nnot being profitable, but that as soon as\nhe had none there then came the kick.\nThe institution was doing good work\nup to 1091. People then had a great\ndeal ot confidence in it, but now you do\nnot hear much in favor of it.\nAlderman Selous\u2014We are here to investigate, and alderman Hamilton has\nmade some remarks that can at least\nform the nucleus for an investigation,\nas it Is something tangible.\nAlderman   Hamilton 1 am simply\nrepeating what is common talk of the\ntown.\nGeorge Johnstone\u2014I don't think you\nwill ask sensible business men to investigate common tittle-tattle around\nthe town. Can you mention any responsible man who will make such statements? It so, let them come manfully\nup and support them. But to pay\nattention to talk\u2014this Is not a meeting\nof the ladies' guild.\nAlderman Hamilton \u2014 That is all\nright. I want to see the statement or\nthe hospital up to August 31st. If certain things are now run at a loss that\nonce were profitable, I want to know\nwh:'.\nGeo. Johnstone\u2014We took over a liability of $4,000 from the last board of\ndirectors which we have paid off.\nF. W. Swannell\u2014It was actually\n$3,100 on building account, outside of\nthe bills tor February and March maintenance, the last of which are usually\ncarried over, and to meet that there\nwas a grant of $3,500.\nAlderman Irvlnu\u2014Would not the;\nfinancial statement show that?\nF. W. Swannell\u2014The previous board\npaid $2,800 out of its earnings on the\nbuildings in its last year, and $1,800\nthe year before.\nH. Byers\u2014In the years Mr. Swannell\nspeaks of there was a large amount of\nrailway building In progress, and tlio\nhospital wus full.\nF. W. Swunnell\u2014There were more\npatients treated in 1901 than In 1900.\nH. Byers.\u2014I would llko to see the\nstatement,\nP. W. Swannell\u2014I mado up the\nstatement and showed it to the board\nat the usual tlmo.\nAlderman Selous\u2014A statement was\nmade by tho recent secretary that the\nhospital was losing on Its contract\npatients. To the lay mind, If that Is\nthe case, the only way to remedy It Is\nto change the term, ot the contract.\nThat is one of the points on which the\npublic would like to bo enlightened,\nGeo, Johnstone\u2014Originally  It  was a\nflat rate of $1 per week. This was finally changed to a sliding scale, and now\nfor one patient the doctor would he\noharged $12 per week, for two patients\n$11, and tor three or more $10 per week.\nPractically It has amounted to a $10\nper week payment by the doctors. As\nit is costing $1.98 per patient per diem,\nyou can see whero we come out.\nAlderman Selous\u2014If I had made a\ncontract that I was losing on each case\ntreated I would terminate it as soon as\npossible and raise the rate.\nDr. Hall\u2014One point that has been\noverlooked hy all speakers so far is\nthat the hospital is getting 50 cents per\nday from the government per patient,\nwhile they also got a lump sum.\nGeo. Johnstone\u2014You see from that\nthat the hospital hoard have been dividing thetgrant up with the doctors.\nAlderman Selous\u2014The hospital is receiving then $13.50 per week per contract patient.\nF. W. Swannell\u2014That hardly gives\na fair Idea for the contract putlents\nshould make up the deficiency of the\ncharity cases.\nGeo. Johnston. \u2014 The government\ngrants Its allowance to the hospital and\nnot to the doctors.\nDr. Hawkey \u2014 Taking the whole\namount of the grant. It takes three\ncontract patients' allowance to pay for\na charity patient.\nAid, Morrison\u2014The government does\nnot look at It In that way.\nAlderman Selous\u20141 am trying hard\nto get this down to a strict business\nbasis. It Is entirely In the directors'\nhands to say whether the amount is\nsufficient or not.\nDr. Hall\u2014In regard to this cIbbs\nof patients, it is not correct to say It\nmakes no difference in the cost to the\nhospital which classification a patient\ncomes under. The patients who are\ntreated in the general ward are cheaper,\nas six could be looked after by one\nnurse, while a patient in a private ward\nwould require one nurse.\nGeo. Johnstone\u2014The only possible\nadditional cost would be for the nurse,\nand she would probably be one of the\nprobationers, who would be there anyway.\nDr. Hall\u2014I must take exception to\nthe statement made by Mr. Johnstone.\nI as as capable ot judging what the costs\nof treating a patient al au hospital\nwould be as any member of the board\nof directors. One of the great causes\nof friction between the present board\nand tbe physicians has been thnt the\ndoctors have never been consulted regarding any of the changes made in the\nworking arrangements of the hospital,\nand many important changes have been\nmade. In somo Instances if tho advice\nof the doctors had been taken, considerable exponse might have been Baved.\nMayor Fletcher\u2014What was the difference In cost between running the old\nhospital and the one handed over to the\nnew board of directors? What was the\nadditional cost of the detached building for the year? It was $1,200. II\nwas the fault of the old board that the\nbuilding wns built bo Isolated from the\nmain hospital, and the new board had\nto bear the expense.\nH. Byers\u2014The doctors were asked to\nattend on several occasions ut the\nmeetings of the board.\nDr. Hall\u2014That was not till after the\ndoctors had nsked to attend- We were\nthen nsked to leave before the meeting\nclosed.\nMnyor Fletcher\u2014If the doctors had\nmade any suggestions they would have\nreceived consideration.\nDr. Hall\u20141 hardly thin* they would\nagree with you. We wero practically\ntold to mind our own business.\nDr. McLennan\u2014We were not even\ngiven the courtesy that is common\namongst gentlemen.' We do not recognize tho right of the ooard to appoint\na physician who they Bay shall have the\nright to visit our patients without our\nconsent\nAt this stage of the proceedings tlio\ndiscussion became genernl and Dr. Hall\nand Mr. Byers engaged in an argument\nanent correspondence between the doctors and the board, the purport of which\nIt was difficult to follow.\nAlderman Ilnmllttln suggested that\nIt would be better to adjourn the meeting till a later date, and then, after\nhearing the report, decide whether the\npresent board is mnnnglng the hospital\nas economically as the old board.\nDr. Hall 1 think the trouble lias\nboon largely caused by a misunderstanding- As regards contract patients,\nIf tho doctors did not take any, the hospital would have to nandlc ten times\nthe number of charity patients that\nthey do now. It is lurgely to tbe general interest of the hospital board that\nthe doctors have as many contract\npatients us possible. Thut Is ono of\nthe points that should be appreciated!\nby persons who understand hospital\nmatters.\nAlderman Irving\u2014Those patients you\nspeak of you collect $1 per month from.\nIf the doctors were not In the contracting business it would come to the hospital direct. All the troublo comes\nfrom tho friction between tlie directors\nand the doctors. It therefore amounts\nto this, that either the board must\nwork with tho doctors, or else get along\nwithout them.\nDr. Hall-Carry lhat n little further\nand soo If the hospital could be run Oli\ntho contract system. It Is the only one\nin the province where It exists.\nAlderman Irving\u2014If it Is a charitable Institution and tlipy can get\nonotigh grunts to look after the char\nity cases that Is the extent of their\nduty. The doctors have now got an\nhospital ot their own.'\nDr. Hall\u2014The doctors have not got\nan hospital of their own. An hospital\nhas been started by some ot the former\nnurses of the general hospital and it is\npatronized by the doctors.\nThe question as to where the majority of the patients came from also\ncame in for some discussion. It was\npointed out that the hospital was not a\ncity hosptal, although at present nearly\nall the patients came from Nelson\nItself.\nAlderman Morrison appealed to the\nmembers to get down to a business basis\nand to discuss what they had In hand.\nJ. M. Lay\u2014As far as finances are\nconcerned, there seems to be a misconception. The hospital was never in\nbetter shape than It Ib at present Of\ncourse we have had a split. We are\nemploying a resident physician, who\npractises in the city, which Is not satisfactory to the balance of the doctors.\nBy thnt, however, we are saving considerably, as for the $75 per month we\npay now. before we had to pay $160 for\na non-practising^ doctor.\nAlderman Morrison\u2014If the present\npolicy is wrecking the institution I do\nnot see where the saving comes in.\nSome wrangling on this point took\nplace, and finally Jacob Dover said that\nhe had understood that a motion had\nbeen brought up and carried that a report be issued to be considered at a\nmeeting later, and he did not see what\ngood they were doing now.\nIt was suggested by Dr. Hall that a\ncommittee of three business men should\ngo into the whole matter and report\nbefore the next meeting. This was\napparently received favorably, but no\naction was taken on It.\nAlderman Selous during the meeting\nhud patiently noted down any points\nthat he considered should be investigated. They were as rellows: Finance\nstatement, contract patient system,\nresident or practising physician, and as\nto whether the hospital doctor should\nhave the right to visit a private ward\npatient without the consent of the\ndoctor who had oharge of the patient.\nThis latter point came up several times\nduring the meeting, Dr. McLennan,\nespecially, holding very strong views\nupon It. The directors hold that the\nphysician in charge of the hospital\nshould have the right at any time to\nvisit any part of the building at any\ntime, although as far as private ward\npatients were concerned, only In the\npresence of a nurse.\nThe meeting finally adjourned till the\nevening of Friday, September 12th.\nVICTORY FOR CARPENTERS\nBIG  NEW   YORK  STRIKfiALH \u00a3)S  IN\nTHEIR FAVOR.\nMASTERS CONCEDE INCREASE OF\nFIFTY CENTS PER DAY.\nNew York, Sept. 5.\u2014Eight thousand\ncarpenters of this city won the strlko\nfor an advance of 50 cents a day, when\nthe master carpenters' association late\ntonight, after a conference of several\nhours, granted the demand. The\nstrikers in addition asked the employers\nto agree not to employ non-union men.\nThis the employers refused and the carpenters accepted the 50-cent advance-\nThe men will return to work all over\ntho city and neighborhood tomorrow\nmorn in*.\nA TITLED ACTOR.\nEarl of Rosslyn Has Secured a New\nYork Engagement.\nNow York .Sept. 5,\u2014Following \"The\nNew Clown\" nt the Garrick theatre will\nlie presented captain Marshall's new\ncomedy, in which the earl of Rosslyn\nwill play the part of & young lover. The\nearl is now here taking part in tho final\nrehearsals of the piece. The titled actor\nwas seen in some amateur theatricals\nat Newport sevoral years ago, but so\nfar as the legitimate drama of the professional brand is concerned, his forthcoming appearance at the Garrick will\nmark his American debut Those who\nhave been privileged to see him act\ndeclare ho will surprise the public by\n\"making nood.\"\nThe prediction may be fulfilled that\nthe earl is full of surprises. He is still\nquite a young man\u2014he was born in\n1869\u2014hut he has filled about every posi-\ntioa in the ordinary walks of life. He\ninherited with his title a fortune of-\n$1,500,000, which lasted only the time\nabsolutely necessary to squander it. He\nhns worked as a clerk at $10 a week,\nacted as war correspondent In Africa\nbeen a drummer, and is the inventor of\na system to break the hank ot Monte\nCarlo, wblrh was so brilliant a failure\nin practice that it went down with a\ncrash, leaving empty pockets for a\nnumber of persons who had sufficient\nconfidence in tho scheme to back It to\nthe extent of several hundred thousand\ndollars. The earl's serious work on the\nstage commenced in 1898, when he appeared at the London Court theatre In\nPi nero's comedy of \"Trelawnoy of the\nWells.\" Later he appeared at the same\ntheatre In \"Ills Excellency the Govcr-\nA SET BACK FOR RALPH SMITH.\nNanaimo. Sept. 5.\u2014(Special to The\nDaily News.)\u2014The vote of the miners\ntaken at the pithead during the past\nthree days resulted In a majority of\nfour against the proposal to reconsider\nthe union's decision to sever its connection with tho Dominion Trndes Congress. This means that Ralph Smith,\nM. P., will have to resign his position\nns president of the congress unless\nsome other British Columbia trades\nunion elects him a delegate to the annual meeting.\nSLAUGHTER OF INNOCENTS\nBIOS ATTACKS A TOWN AND KILLS\nTWO WOMEN AND A GIRL.\nIS  LEADER OP  NATIVE  FILIPINO\nIRRECONCILIABLES.\nManila, Sept. 5\u2014RIos, the fanatical\nleader of the irreconcilable natives In\nthe province ot Tayabas Luzon, attacked the town of Lagulmanooz on September 3rd, at the head of 30 riflemen\nand 150 men armed with bolos. The\nband only killed two women and one\ngirl, and wounded several other persons. A detachment ot the native constabulary arrived unexpectedly at Lagulmanooz while Hios' men were there.\nThey attacked and routed the bandits,\nkilling several ot them, and have rounded up 700 men, many of whom are suspected of complicity In the attack. The\nguilty ones among the 700 men will be\npicked out and the remainder set at\nliberty. One of RIos' lieutenants, who\nwas captured, said RIos was a direct\ndescendant of God and that It was beyond the power of man to Injure him.\nThe constabulary have also captured\none of RIos' mountain strongholds.\nFresh detachments of constabulary are\nnow following the main band of outlaws.\nBOUNDARY ORE SHIPMENTS\nTOTAL FOR THIS WEEK NEARLY,\nDOUBLE THAT OF LAST.\nTHE SNOWSHOE AND B. C. REJOIN\nLIST  OF  SHIPPERS.\nPhoenix, Sept. 6.\u2014(Special to Tho\nDaily News.)\u2014Boundary ore shlpmeuts\nare once more getting back to something like the old figures prevailing\nbefore the coke shortage affected all\nthe local smelters. The total for thlB\nweek Is nearly double that of last week,,\nthe Snowshoe and B. C. mines once\nmore rejoining the list of shippers. In\ndetail the ore tonnage for the week is\nas follows: Granby mines, 4,9n tons;\nMother Lode, 2,176; Snowshoe, 480; B.\nC. mine, 300; Emma, 130. Total for the\nweek, 8,064 tons. Total for year to date,\n306.417  tons.\nThis week the Granby smelter treated\n5.022 tons, making a total for the year\nto date of 200,189 tons.\nPIOUS FUNDS CASE.\nInternational Arbitration Tribunal Formally Organized.\nTbe Hague, Sept, 5.\u2014The international arbitration tribunal which fa to\ndecide the Pious Fund Claims case, between the United States and Mexico,\nmet today and formally organized. The\narguments will be begun In about ten\ndays hence. Those in attendance ore\nsir Edward Fry, of England, and F.\nDo Martens, of Russia, arbitrators for\ntho United States; T. N. C. Asser and\nSavornln Lohnmann, of Holland, arbitrators for Mexico, and counsel who will\nconduct the arguments for the two parties to the dispute. The American counsel consists of judge William L. Pen-\nfield, solicitor for the state department; Jackson II. Ralston, agent for\nthe United States; Walter S. Penfleld,\nand Henry V. Amies, assistant counsel.\nThe Catholic church In America, which\nIs vitally Interested In the case, Is represented by archbishop Riordan, of San\nFrancisco, and Garett McEnerney, tho\narchbishop's attorney.\nAside from any importance attached\nto tiie Pious Fund Claims case In Itself\nthe proceedings of the tribunal will bo\nwatched with closest attention all over\nthe civilized world for the reason that\ntho case is the first to bo tried under the\nprovisions of the international arbitration ugreement formulated by The\nHague peace conference.\nPItOFESSOR VIRCHOW DEAD.\nlie Was World Famous ns a Scientific\nReformer.\nBerlin, Sept. 5.\u2014Tho evening papers\nhere print glowing eulogies ot professor\nVirchow, who died tbls morning, classing him as the world's greatest medical\nand scientific reformer, nnd saying that\nno other man had so deeply Influenced\nmodern medicine, and that no other had\nsuch a worldwide reputation, and bo\nmany followers in all lands. The papers\nalso praise his humanitarian activity\nIn Improving the Berlin hospitals and\nother sanitary institutions. The Liberal\norgans extol his political activity and\nunswerving Liberalism.\n(Tlio lato professor Rudolf Virchow\nwas born In Sclilvclbein, Pomcrania, In\n1821. Since 1850 lie had beon director\nof the Pathological Institute In Berlin.\nHo bad been a member of the Prussian\nhouse of deputies, and from 1880 to 1893\nwas a member of the relchstag.)\nCAUSED   BY   A  CIGARETTE.\nFiro on Toronto Exhibition Grounds\nCausing Heavy Loss.\nToronto, Sept. 5.\u2014Flro on the exhibition grounds this morning destroyed a\nshed containing tiie costumes of tho\nmale performers of the Kirnlfy ballet\ntroup. The fire started from a lighted\ncigarette left by one of tho performers.\nFour hundred costumes were burned.\nThe exhibition company had the place\ninsured for $10,000, but Kiralfy says his\nloss will bo $24,000- Performances will\nnot be interrupted.\nHIS SENTENCE CUT SHORT.\nKingston, Sept. 5.\u2014Robort Mackie,\none of the Napanee bank robbers, sentenced to ten years In the penitentiary,\nhas been released on parole, after fou(!\nyears In Jail.\n \\J\n\\\\\nTHE DAILY   NEWS, NELSON, B. C,   SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1902\nHUDSON'S BAY\nCOMPANY.\nINCORPORRTBD   1670.\nNew Fall Importations\nWe have Just received a portion of our An Inspection is   Invited.   YOU   WILL\nnew  goods consisting of   LADIES    COS- FIND EVERY ONE OF THEM A WORK\nTUMES,    LADIES    JACKETS,    LADIES OF ART.   PRICES RIGHT TO SUIT THE\nLONG COATS. TIMES. _ a    .,., .\nHudson's Bay Co.\nThe Canadian Bank of Commerce \\\nWith which Is Amalgamated\nThe Bank of British Columbia.\n\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab\u2022*\u2022\u00bb]\nHEAD OFFICE-TORONTO.\nPaid up Capital,  88,000,000]   Reserve  Fund,  12,000,0001\nAggregate Resources Over 885,000,000.\n\u25a0\u2022N. tlKO. A, COX, Preald.nl. B. E. WALKER General Manager. I\nSaving's Bank Department BBSfflrfS, eel1'\"*\u2122' Allowoi\nNelson Branch. GRANGE V. HOLT, Manager, f\nZhc IRoval IBank of (Eanaba\n*\u25a0* INCORPORATED  18Cil\nINCORPORATKD 1801)\n\u20229,nwo,WM   I  But,\nBead Office. Halifax I\nGeneral Manager, Kdson L. Peaae, Montreal,\n*lfTM,M*\nCa\u00bbllal rald-a*,    .     .    .\nThomas E. Kenny, President.\nBRANCHES IN BRITISH COLUMBIA-Grand Forks, Nanaimo, Nelson, Rossland. Vancouver.\nVancouver East End, Victoria.\nAooountfl received on the most favorable terms.  Interest allowed on special deposits and on\ntarings Bank accounts.   General Banking Business Transacted.\nGEO. KYDD, Manager Nelson Branch,\njfiitntniiiiiininiiiiiiiiiiniijinifniniiiiiniiiinininmniinii!^\ni   YOU'RE SAFE WHEN 3\n= YOU USE 3\nI BENNETT'S FUSE (\nCROWN BRAND 3\n\u2014\u00ab\n: Be Sure and Get the Genuine. 3\nThe J- H. Ashdown Hardware Co.. Ltd.   |j\n, Sole Agents, Nelson, B. C. st\niiiuituuiiuutiuiuiuiiuiuuuuiuiuluaiuuuiuiuutuuiui^\nH. BYERS & CO.\nHEADQUARTERS FOR\nScreen Doors   Window Screens\nPoultry Netting   Lawn Supplies\nTRUAX ORE CARS\nGIANT POWDER\nAGENTS\nMINING, MILL and\nHEAVY HARDWARE\nNelson\nKaslo\nSandon\nP. BURNS & CO.\nVHOLESALE AND RETAIL\nMEAT MERCHANTS\nHEAD OFFICE NELSON, B. C.\nBranch Markets in Rossland, Trail, Nelson, Kaslo, Sandon,\nThree Forks, New Denver and Slocan City.\nOrder. hj Ma'l I\" any Branch Will Bave rrampt aad Caeefal AltentKmi\nThe Mines Exchange, Limited\nMINING AND\nSTOCKBROKERS\n10,000 JUNO SHARES WANTED AT 1 1-2 CENTS.\nRoom 4, K. W. C. Block,     NELSON, B. C,\nTHE MOST FAMOUS HIGH POWER RIFLES OF\nTHE AGE ARE THE\nCerffjan Mauser ^ Austrian IV|ai.nlich,er\nOur 80 Pane Catalogue Rives a full description of these and lots of other modern weapons.  It can be bad for tbe asking\nCHARLES E. TISDALL\nVANCOUVER\nIMPERIAL BANK\nOF  CANADA\nCAPITAL   (Authorized) 11,000,000\nCAPITAL, (Paid Up) $2,600,000\nREST    J2.126.000\nHEAD OFFICE-TORONTO, ONTARIO\nBranches In the Northwest Territories,\nProvinces ot British Columbia, Manitoba,\nOntario and Quebec\nT. R. MERRITT President\nD. a WILKIE...Vlce-Pres. and Qen. Man.\nE. KAT Assistant Oen. Manager\nW. MOFFAT Chlet Inspector\nNELSON  BRANCH\nA general banking business transacted.\nSavings Department \u2014 Deposits received\nand Interest allowed.\nDrafts sold, available In all parts ot Canada, United States and Europe.\nSpecial attention given to collections.\nJ. M. LAY, Manager.\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPublished at Nelson every morning, except\nMonday, by\nF. J. DEANH.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES:\nDally, per month, by carrier $ IS\nDally, per month, by mail    60\nDally per year, by carrier , 7 00\nDally per year, by mall 100\nDally, per year, foreign  8 M\nTHE WEEKLY NEWS.\nWeekly, per half year 1125\nWeekly, per year 2 00\nWeekly, per year, foreign 8 00\nSubscriptions Invariably In advance.\nADVERTISING RATES:\nDisplay Advertisements, $4 per Inch per\nmonth; Display Advertisements, 26 cents\nper inch each insertion less than a month;\nLocals, 10 cents per line each Insertion;\nClassified Advertisements 1 cent per word\neach Insertion; Wholesale Cards, 12.50 per\nmonth; Society Cards, 12.60 per month.\n\u00ab\nHOSPITAL AFFAIRS.\nThe speclnl meeting of the city council\nheld yeaterday morning to' Investigate\nhospital affairs did not accomplish anything at nil. noteworthy. The fact, though,\nthnt a number of representative business\nmen devoted several hours to the consideration of ways and mens of placing that\ninstitution upon a thoroughly sound llnnn-\nclal basis should indicate a way out of the\npresent dlsngrenble Impasse to which the\naffairs of that Institution have reached.\nIt must he assumed that the gentlemen\nwho grew so warm over tho discussion of\ntho rights and wrongs of tho somewhat\nvngue charges going tho rounds regarding\nthe efficiency or otherwise of the hospital\nmanagement wore, and always have been,\nactuated solely by public spirited motives,\nby a desire to assist to the utmost of their\nability In the successful conduct of what\nis largely a charitable institution. Certainly\nnone of the gentlemen who talked and\nargued at such grent length yesterday\nmorning has any personal ends to serve In\nhis defense of, or attack upon existing conditions, It may reasonably be assumed\nthat but ono motive actuates them all\nand Unit is to secure for Nelson a hospital\nthat will be a credit to the city, and in\nevery particular up to the requirements of\nthe community. In these circumstances\nwould it not be possible to select from the\nnumber of those who in the past have do-\nvoted much time and energy to the welfare\nof the hospital, a committee which would\nhave the confidence of all concerned, and\nentrust them with the task of formulating\na plan for tho future management of the\nInstitution?\nIn this way a fresh start could be made,\nand an end put to the bickering that only\nresults In bringing the hospital Into disrepute with the general public.\nTHE TRUST PROBLEM.\nThe trust question Is of such Importance\nthat tho consideration, in brief, of some\nof its phases may fittingly ho undertaken\nat this time, especially since president\nRoosevelt's action in the railway merger\ncase and in that of the meat packers, has\nrevived public Interest In what Is always\nan interesting problem.\nNo ono will question the rights and\nclaims of consumers; It is generally admitted that they are paramount; nor will\nanyono deny that they are not entitled to\nthe cure and solicitude of the legislature.\nIn whnt way have trusts Interfered with\nthese rights and claims, tills care and\nsolicitude?\nPresident Schwab of tho United Statos\nSteel corporation says that the new trust,\nthe corporation of corporations, Is founded\non the principle of lowering prices, increasing production, eliminating waste and Improving quality, But how many existing\ntrusts really do this? Has not lhe experience rather beon that production has been\nlimited nnd prices raised? A trust Is\nsimply a means to ninke money hy forcing,\nand so far as history has lo tell the trusts\nhavo curried out this idea lo the letter.\nIf economy and efficiency form the fundamental basis of trusts, Independent manufacturers could not exist, but they do exist\nand a struggle for a continuance of exls-\ntanco has resulted. In other words tho\ntrust has In a certain degree stimulated\nrather than paralyzed competition,   Frcin\nthis it Is not unreasonable to infer Unit the\nclaim made for the trust that it eliminates\nwaste and promotes efficiency is as unfounded us that of lowered prices and\nIncreased production. Ah a matter of fact\nthe trust is In Us experimental stage und\nwhile the result of the experiment yet\nremains to be seen, though promising\ndisaster nud extortion to the small competitor and the consumer, it may eventually be lhat tho trust will provide Its own\ndownfall. But the problem will take a\nlong time to work out to this end, though\nIt will Inevitably do so. In the meanwhile\ntho consumer Is to suffer the loss thut tlie\nIrust may gain. That Is the present position. Is there no remedy? The natural\none is to discover the cause and by neutralizing It provide the cure. There Is no\ndoubt that one of tho chief causes that\nhave made the trust a possibility is a high\nprotective tariff. If the protective duties\nwero removed from the trust-con trolled\nIndustries they would collapse. Legitimate\ncompetition would prosper ns it should.\nThe formation of trusts cannot be prohibited and this being so the next best\neffective method of dealing with them Is to\nmake them impossible as revenue producers. This would by no means prevent the\nprotection by suitable tariff of new Industries, and It Is to this class protection\nshould be llmlte.d, if there Is to be protection at all. When the period of Infancy Is passed there Is no need for such\nprotection. Trusts are mude up of only\nsuch concerns that huve censed to be\nweaklings. To restrict the protective tariff\nto only infant Industries would not work\nany hardship on the independent business\nmen who have successfully withstood the\ntrusts, for If they could do that they\ncould hold their own under a moderate\ntariff. As Already enunciated the interests\nof the consumers are tho first consideration and when we are obliged to chooso\nbetween a high tariff for the sole benefit of\na few manufacturers, and reasonable prices\nto the consumer, there can be no room for\nhesitation.\nEDITORIAL NOTES.\nThe Slocnn Drill remarks that the Improvement In business in the Slocan district\nIs made obvious by the absence of Idle\nmen and the Increased ore shipments. All\nthe Kootenay papers tell the same story\nof brighter conditions.\nMr. John Griffin, of the firm of J, Y,\nGrillln & Co., one of Winnipeg's most\nprogressive business men, has heen spending a few days in town. Before leaving\nfor home he had a little talk with The\nDaily News nncut conditions here. The\npurport of his remarks nppears elsewhere\nIn this Issue, and will rtfpuy careful consideration. Mr. Griffin lias excellent opportunities of obtaining reliable information,\nand few men are In a better position to\nform a sound opinion of the prospects of\nany western town or district thnn he. Tho\nimmense and ever growing business of his\nfirm brings him into close touch wilh tho\nfinancial and trade Interests of the west,\nand when nfter close observation he expresses such unbounded confidence In the\nfuture of tho Kootenay district at large,\nand of Nelson In particular, his Judgment\nshould be given great weight. His admonition to some of our local business men to\nbe a little more hopeful is timely and to\nthe point.\nWINNIPEG WIRINGS.\nWinnipeg, Sept. 5.\u2014R. L. Borden nnd\nparty were welcomed by a large body of\nthe faithful this morning at the C. P. R.\ndepot on their way through to the const.\nSir Mackenzie Bowel! nnd Mr. Ward, M.\nP., bagged 100 ducks at Inke Wlnnipegosls\nyesterday. They left this morning for\nBrandon and Calgary.\nW. Molson Macpherson, of Quebec, and\nJames Elliott, of Montreal, are in the city.\nBoth gentlemen are widely known In\nCanadian financial circles. Molson Macpherson being president of Molson's bunk\nand Mr. Elliott its genernl manager. They\nare on a combined business and pleasure\ntrip and go through to the coast on Sunday.\nLight rain fell around Winnipeg today\nbut the weather has cleared and harvesting\nand threshing are In progress. Some 800\nharvesters arrived today bringing the\ntotul up to 10,000 out of the 20,000 desired.\nNew wheat has been received at Fort\nWilliam and graded. No. 1 hard. Tho\nmovement of wheat will  commence next\nNOTICE.\nThe Engineers Examinations Will Be Held\nIn the Court House at Nelson Commencing  Tuesday,   September\nOth  at 10 a.  m.\nSection 35 of the act says:\n\"No person shull employ another as\nengineer, and no person shall act as engineer of any steam planl operating under\nthe provisions of this act unless the person so employed or acting holds a certificate of competency or a temporary certificate, granted under the provisions of this\nuct:* Provided, however, that in case of\nIllness or other unavoidable cause, the\nengineer in charge Is absent from duty,\nwithout fault or collusion of the owners\nor of any person interested, then such\ndeficiency may be supplied until un engineer holding such certlllcute enn be obtained, and the Chief Inspector shall forthwith be notified of the temporary change;\nund further provided that this section shall\nnot come Into force until January 1st,\n1002, Temporary engineers must not be\nemployed for more than ono month without tho consent of the Chief Inspector.\"\nMINING STATIONERY-The Dally News\nJob Department makes a special feature\nof ruled work.   Get samples and prices\nbeforo placing your next order.\nweek In earnest. Threshing returns aro\nnow coming in from nil purls of the\nprovince,\niooo Men Wanted\nWith or without families to call and Inspect tho values given In groceries at the\nundersigned. Prices flat but goods uniform\nIn quality and quantity.\nMorrison; & Caldwell\nBAKER STREET\nPOCO\nCAMERAS\nPhoto Fiends I\nWE ARE OFFERING\nOUR STOCK OF\nCAMERAS\nAT SACRIFICE PRICES\nTO REDUCE OUR STOCK\nCanada Drug & Book Co.,\nFOR RENT\nFOR RENT\u2014Cor. Hall nnd Vernon streets,\nflat, six furnished rooms and kitchen;\nwill rent whole flut or rooms separately.\nApply above grocery store, Room 1 on\npremises.\nAdvertisements Inserted under this head\nat the rate of one cent a word per Insertion. No advertisement taken for less than\n26 cents.\nROOMS \u2014 Furnished   cr   unfurnished,   by\nday, week or month, rates from $6 to $10\nper month.   Apply to Mrs. Scott, Room 41,\nK. W. C. Block.\nPIANOS and sewing machines for rent or\nBale at The Old Curiosity Shop.\nFIRST-CLASS   board   and room, 15.60 per\nweek,   Silica  at., second  door  west  of\nWard.\nFOR SALE\nFOR SALE-Cheap; 40 acres of Innd with\ngood buildings and first class waterworks; two greenhouses, each 20x40 ft.; two\nacres of strawberries, all Irrigated; all improvements, etc.; good markets. For further information apply to Frache Bros.,\nSayward, B. C.\nFOR SALE-Smlth-Premler typewriter, in\ngood condition, cheap;   a   snap.   Apply\nThe Brackman-Ker Milling Co.\nUNION MEETINGS.\nNELSON MINERS' UNION, NO. 96, W. F.\nM.\u2014Meets every Saturday evening at 7.30\no'clock. Samuel L. Peacock, President;\nJames Wllks, Secretary. Visiting breth-\nern cordially Invited.\nWANTED\nJ. H. LOVE.\nNelson Employment Agency.\nP. O. Box 405. Phone 278.\nWanted\u2014Laundress for hotel.  Teamsters.\nDeckhands.   Bell Boy,\nHELP of all kinds wanted and furnished.\nWestern Canadian Employment Agency-\nLarge warehouse for storage; call At\nProsser's Second Hand store, Baker street,\nwest\nMINE MANAGERS-Wnen you want mining blanks, pay sheets, vouchers or anything In the way of boojf-bindlng, ruling,\nor stationery, write to The Dally News*\nBook-binding and Job Printing department,\nNelson, B. C.\nWANTED\u2014Baker wanted at once.   Apply\nat Palace Bakery, Stanley street,\nWANTED\u2014A lndy, middle-aged, wishes n\nposition In the upper country, as general\nhousekeeper to two or three gentlemen or\nwidower with one or two children. Apply\nP. O. Box 172, Victoria, B. C.\nWANTED\u2014Mother  nnd    daughter    want\nemployment as cook and waitress.   Mining camp preferred.   Apply X, News office.\nWANTED\u2014Two sisters want positions an\ncook and chambermaid or waitress.   No\nobjection   to   leaving  the  city.    Address,\nA. L,, Tho Daily News ofllce,\nWANTED\u2014Mnn oh stoker.   Apply at onco\nto gasworks.\nDARRISTERS-Thero is no need to send\nyour law Journals oast to be bound. At\nTho Daily News bindery this clnss of work\nIs well nnd promptly done, nnd at prices\nthat meet eastern competition.\nLOST\nLOST\u2014Between Hume Hotel and Nelson\nFreight & Transfer stables, on Vernon\nstreet, a Bhort gray overcoat. If finder\nwill kindly leave It at the office of The\nDally News he will be rewarded.\nCLERKS   OF   MUNICIPAL  COUNCILS-\nHavo   your   assessment   rolls   ruled   nnil\nbound nt The Dally News bindery.\nCOMMERCIAL^\nBOOKKEEPING, Shorthand nnd Typewriting efllclently taught at tho Business\nSchool, opposite the City Library, Victoria\nstreet. Custom typewriting solicited. M.\nL. Rattray.\nSUBSCRIBE   FOR   TIIE   DAILY  NEWS.\nTHE 33rd DEGREE.!\n\u25a0I*      ^*\nFoot fitting is a matter of degrees I\nThere are 1716 degrees in Slater fit.\nThese degrees are represented by 26\nshapes,\u2014in J J sizes,\u20146 widths\u2014and 83 styles.\nThis enormous variety, carried in The\nSlater Shoe Stores, and authorized Agencies,\nadmits of no excuse for misfit.\nMakers price stamped on the shoes,-$4.00\nand $5.50-insures value.\nCatalogue on postal request,       \"\nAgents:  ROYAL SHOE STORE, Nelson^BJC.\nANOTHER CARLOAD OF_\nPEACHES\nWATERMELONS\nWE EXPECT THIS WILL BE THE LAST   OF  THE   SEASON\nJ. Y. GRIFFIN <& CO.\nThe Queen's Hotel\nTROUT LAKE, B. C.\nFirst    Class    Accommodation.      Nearest\nHotel  to Slcumbont Landing.\nABRAHAMSON    BROS.\nPROPRIETORS.\nm\n%titm hU\n-a*si\nMadden HouseB,k,rNseL0.\nDo you need a comfortable home? If so\ntry the Madden House, Well furnished\nrooms, lighted by electricity; first-class\nboard. In the bar you will find all the\nbest domestic and Imported liquors and\ncigars.\nTHOMAS MADDEN, Proprietor.\nBOTLETT  HOUSE\nFormerly Clarke House,\nThe best (1 per day house In Nelson.\nNone but white help employed.   The bar\nthe best\nG. W. BARTLETT  - Prop.\nTREMONT HOUSE\nEUROPEAN AND AMERICAN PLAN\nMEALS, 25c.  ROOMS, FROM 26c TO \u00bb!.\nMALONE & TREGILLUS, Proprietors.\nBaker Street, Nelson.\nIMPERIAL HOTEL\nUnder new management.\nThe most commodious and up-to-date bar\nIn the City.\nThe Dining Room Is In the hands of an\nefficient staff.\nLunch served dally from 13 noon to 2 p.m.\nRates from $1.00 per day upwards.\nj. r. Mcpherson, proprietor.\nHIGH GRADE COFFEE\nKootenay Coffee Co.\nRoasters of Choice Coffees.\nQuantities    to    suit   at   wholesale\nprices\nOur Java and Mocha at 40c, and Our\nChoice Blend 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 O Box 182     :\nB. C. RIBLET, Engineer.\n(Manufacturer and Agent for Canada.)\nNELSON, B. C.\nSUNNYSIDE\nHOTEL\nReopened under new management. First-\nclass room and board $1 per day.\nWHITE  HELP ONLY.\nMRS. P. CAREY, Proprietress.\nFOR SALE\nTHE PIONEER HOTEL\nBEATON, B. C.\nProprietor  Is   forced  to  dispose  of  his\nbusiness on account of HI health.\nFor further particulars apply to\nISAAC  BATE,\nBeaton, B. C.\nREISTERER & CO\nBrewer, of Fin. Lager,\nBur .nd Porter,\nCROP IN AND SEE OT.\nLatimer Strut    \u25a0    \u2022    \u2022    N.Uoa, B, a\nPatent Automatic Aerial Tramway\n(Riblet Syatem.)\nManufactured by\nBYRON C. RIBLET, Engineer.\nNELSON, B. C.\nMoat economic system for the transportation of ore. and other material.\nPATENTS, TRADE MARKS and MR18BI8\nobtained In all countries\nROWLAND BRITTArN,\nRegistered Patent attorney, Mechanical\nEngineer and Draughtsman, Bank of B.\nN. A. building, Hastings St., Vancouver,\nB. C.   Write for full particulars.\nKING'S COLLEGE SCHOOL\nSelect private boarding school for boys.\nModern methods, Accomllshed masters.\nExcellent table. Home care. Refining influences. Large, airy bedrooms. Specially\nbuilt class rooms. Cricket, football, boating, swimming, military drill. Patronized\nby the beBt. Highest references. Prospectus. Rev. C, J, Brenton, M. A., Vancouver. B. C.\nSILVER KINO MIKE\nWill pay the highest cash price for all\nkinds of second hand goods. Will buy or\nsell anything from an anchor to a needle.\nFurniture, stoves, carpets, cooking utensils\nbought In household quantities. Also cast\noff clothing. Call and see me or write.\nAddress Silver King Mike, Box 200, Hall\nStreet. Nelson, B. C.\n THEDAILY NEW8, NELSON, B. C, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1902.\n\u2022JPK?\nRICES\ncream\nBai<ino  Powder\nIs the Most Economical\nGreater in leavening strength, a spoonful raises more doughy or goes further.\nWorking uniformly and perfectly, it\nmakes the bread and cake always light\nand beautiful, and there is never a waste\nof good flour, sugar, butter and eggs.\nWhen outfitting for camp always take\nDr. Price's Cream Baking Powder for\ngood health and good food. It makes\nthe finest flapjacks, biscuits and bread.\nPrioe Baking) powder Oo.,\nChicago.\nNever go into the woods away from a\ndoctor with a cheap alum baking powder\nin the outfit. You want the best baking\npowder in the world\u2014and it is most\neconomical in the end.\nVALUING AND SMELTING ORE\nTHE   PROCESS    DESCRIBED    BY   DR.\nDR. GOODSIIALL OF MICHIGAN.\nAN    IMPORTANT    STUDY    FOR    ORE\nSHIPPERS GENERALLY,\nIt Is a matter of very greut Importance\nto miners to know something about the\nmethod of valuing ores and lhe process of\nsmelting them, In no oilier business docs\nthe producer rely upon the buyer's estimate of the value so entirely us in the selling of ores, so It is absoutely necessary\nthut the miner shoud deal with smelting\ncompanies which have a reputation for\nwhat is known in trade ns \"square dealing,\" us It is a well known fact that smelling companies have grown rich rapidly by\ntaking advantage of the trust reposed by\ntheir customers.\nTiie process of valuing and smelling ores\nas given by Dr. Goodshall, an expert smelter of Grand Encampment, Michigan, Is\nvery interesting and of importance as a\nstudy for ore shippers generally.\nNaturally lhe first step In connection\nwith the ore Is lo llnd mil the weight of\nthe shipment. To get this correctly the ore\nis weighed iu Fairbanks wagon scales as\nIt comes in, and tlie weight so obtained te\ncalled the gross or net weight, as all the\nore taken out of lhe ground contains moisture. To determine how much water is\nIn the ore an average sample is taken from\nthe whole shipment. This is culled tho\nmoisture sample, nnd is put into a pun and\ncurefuly weighed and then put iiitu a steam\ndryer, where il is kept at us high u temperature as dry steam can make It for\ntwenty-four hours. The difference In weight\nis represented by the water dried out of\nthe ore. A simple calculation will now\nreduce this to per cent, and from this we\ndetermine lhe actual dry weight of ihe ore.\nThe next slop is to determine tlie value ;\nof the contents of the ore ns represented\nby tho  four metals\u2014copper,  gold,  silver\nnnd lead, and this Is accomplished ns follows:\nThe oro is sampled In what Is termed a\n\"lot,\" which is simply a certain amount\nof ore sampled nt one time. This Is to avoid\nsampling each wagon lond as it Is delivered. The ore Is shoveled Into bins until the\nproper amount Is In each bin, usually not\nless than twenty-live to fifty tons to the\nlot. It is then taken from the llrst bin,\ncalled the receiving bin, and passed through\nthe crusher, which is a 8x15 Blake crusher.\nFrom the crusher it drops into a short\nelevator, which In turn discharges il into\na set of rolts which crush it a little liner.\nThe material from the rolls is discharged\nInto another elevator, which delivers it lo\nnn automatic sampling machine. There are\ntwo automatic samplers in the sampling\nmill. Each takes out 10 per cont of whatever material is pnssed through it; nnd tlie\nmanner In which this Is done is us follows:\nThe crushed oro Is dlschnrged from the\nelevator through a spout nnd iron hopper,\nthe hitler being a part of the automatic\nsampler. The 10 per cont is tnken out with\na clip attached to an iron cone, which revolves, nnd with each revolution the cup\npasses directly through the stream of ore;\nnnd as the diameter of lhe cup is just in\nper cent of the totnl length of lhe circumference of the cone, It follows that the cup\nmust be just 10 per cunt of the tlmo directly underneath the stream of ore, nnd\ntherefore must tnke out 10 per cent of the\n\u25a0whole weight, The nre taken out by the\ncup passes through it and Into a' separate\nspout, while the 90 per cent falls into the\nmain ore spout. The ]0 per cont which has\njust been taken out Is now delivered to\na revolving drum, which It enters at one\nend and Is passed out at the other. Tlie object of passing the ore through lhe drum\nIs lo thoroughly mix this 10 per cent so ns\nto have all of It uniform In character.\nAfter leaving the revolving drum or\nmixer, the 10 per cent Is discharged into\nanother automatic sampler, precisely ike\nthe one above described, where 10 per cent\nof this stream of ore Is again taken out;\nbut as we had only 10 per cent of the original ore at this point, nnd taking out 10\nper cent, we now have only HO per cent of\nthe original weight. Tho 00 per cent Is\npn.^ed through the mnln oro spout and is\nautomatically delivered Into one of the different bins.\nTho 10 per cont, which Is now the nccu-\nrato sample of tho entire shipment, falls ,\ninto a twelve-inch set of roils, where It\nIs ground again, and then delivered automatically to the wheelbarrow or sampling\nHour, There it is quartered down, which\noperation consists of piling tiie material\nIn the form of a cone. Through the apex\nof this cone two divisions are cut at right\nangles lo each oilier, and the two opposite\nquarters kept as the sample and the other\ntwo rejected. This quartering down Is repealed several times until the sample hus\nbeen cut down to twenty-five or thirty\npounds, when it is ugnm passed through\na small sample grinder, after which it Is\nmixed on a sampling cloth, und again\nquartered down until the sample weighs\nabout fifteen ounces. It Is then cut into\nthree different parts to be assayed.\nOne pari should go to the shipper, one\nIs assayed by the smelter and tlie third is\nput away to be used only lu cuse of dispute between the assays of the shipper and\nthe smelter, in which case lhe third pari\nis sent to an independent nssayer, who is\nmutually satisfactory to both parties.\nHaving now determined the dry weight\nas well as tho assay of the ore, a simple\ncalculation will give the number of pounds\nof copper or lead contained, as well as the\nnumber of ounces of silver and gold. The\nprocess of assaying is understood by, every\none. The only thing to remember in tills\nconnection is that If a few grains of material contain a certain amount of valuable\nmetals, a simple proportion will tell the\namount of precious metals contained in a\nton of the same material. After having determined lhe exact amount of valuable\nmetal present In the ore, the value of the\nore Is determined by lhe actual market\nquotations for tlie different metals, from\nwhich basis tho ore is bought, deducting\nat the samo time the cost of smelling,\nwhich depends on the character of the ore\nand the conscience of tho smelter.\nThe next step after sampling or determining the value of the ore, Is the smelting\nof It, which Is the process of extracting\ntho valuable metals from the worthless\nrock. There are two factors in connection\nwith smelling, which, when understood.\nWill make the operation seem quite simple.\nThese factors are heat und tlie proper mixture of materials. Heat Is obtained by\nburning coke mixed In certain proportions\nwith the material to be smelted. The combustion of this coke is accomplished by\nmeans of a forced draught, which outers\nthe column of ore, coke nnd (luxes near the\nbottom. As the forced draught reaches\nthe coke, lhe latter is burned up and stif-\nliclent heal is generated to melt everything\nsurrounding it. After melting, tlio mass\nbecomes liquid and separates Into two\nclasses of material called matte and slag.\nThe former is waste rock, originally present witli the ore, mixed with the proper\namount of fluxes; the latter contains the\nvaluable metals and a certain proportion\nof impurities. The metals being so much\nheavier than the rock, it follows that thp\nmatte will settle to tbe bottom and separate from the slag In a similar manner\nto the separating of water and oil when\nplaced  In the same vessel.\nTo hnve the melting or smelling of ore\nproceed In a proper manner, It is necessary\nthat the Ingredients bo mixed In certain\nproportions, as putting them Into the furnace In a haphazard manner would soon\nresult in serious trouble. For this reason\nevery barrow of ore put Into the furnace\nis carefully weighed, so that only known\nproportions nre used. After the matte and\nslag have sepnrated, the former Is tapped\nfrom the bottom of the settling receptacle and put Into moulds and shipped to the\nrefiner, while the latter overflows at the lop\nand Is thrown over the damp.\nIn shipping Ihe matte to the refiner, lhe\nsame process is again gone through between smelter and refiner as described\nabove in lhe sampling of the ore, the\nmatte being weighed, sampled nnd assayed, nnd tho smeller pnld for Its contents\nHi a manner similar tn that In which the\nminer Is paid for his oro,\nLE ROI PROFITS.\nRossland, Sopt. 5\u2014The report of tho\noperations of the Le Roi mlno for\nAugust, ns forwarded by manager John\nH. Mackenzie to tho London directors,\nstates thnt th eshipments of first-class\nore during August were 1G.0OO tons,\npftroncl-clung ore. 1,(100 tons. The nro-\nIlts are placed at $75,000. July shipments from the Le Roi aggregated\n18.177 tons, nnd the estimated profits\nfor that month were an even hundred\nthousand dollars.\nNOT OF MORGAN'S MAKING\nA   \"SWEETHEARTS\"   TRUST   FORMED\nIN NEBRASKA.\nYOUNG MEN OF DOUBTFUL MORALE\nTO BE BOYCOTTED\nFremont, Nebraska, September 4. \u2014 A\n\"sweethearts' trust\" has heen organized\nby the young women of Fremont, and us\na result there Is consternation among ihe\nmen. The new \"trust\" Is known us the\nYoung women's Reform Union, and Miss\nElizabeth Mackenzie is ut Its head.\nHereafter If u man who is known to\nthem is seen entering a saloon or is caught\ndoing anything against tlie moral code of\nthe \"trust\" he will be Immediately blacklisted by his lair ussociutcs.\nThis blacklisting means that his best girl\nwill refuse to huve anything to do witli him\nunless he immediately mends his ways,\nHe will also be barred from parties und\nwill be snubbed If he meets any of the\nmembers of lhe union on the street.\nThus far the \"trust\" has been getting\nalong Willi remarkable success. It bus\nbeen In existence only a week or so, yet\nin that time a dozen men classed us mural\ndelinquents have been outdoing themselves\nIn their efforts to have the blacklist against\nthem removed,\nThe \"trust\" was formed as the result of\na revival meeting held here recently. The\nRev. Mr. Williams, who conducted the\ngatherings, hurled his entire vocabularly\nut saloons and drinking men.\nAt the conclusion of tlie revival Miss\nMackenzie concluded thut the young women of Fremont should start a reform crusade that would have some effect. So she\nissued a call for a meeting, and when it\nwas opened fifty young women of Fremont\nwero present.\n\"It doesn't do any good to simply tell\nthe men that they must quit drinking,\"\nsaid Miss Mackenzie. \"We must compel\nthem to do It. Your sweethearts will promise you until they nre black in the face\nthat they will cease entering saloons, yel\nthey will continue doing so and you are\nnot\" one whit the wiser,\n\"Now, my plan Is lo form an organization, make It our business to watch the\nmen whose habits are questionable, and,\noven though thoy arc our own swoethenris,\nboycott them until they mend their ways,\nIf they won't reform, why we shall simply\nhave to forget all ubout them.\"\n\"But 1 am afraid that would be a very\nhard thing to du,\" protested it blushing\nmaiden. \"Now, 1 know of a girl,\" and\nhere she blushed still more us a titter went\nabout the room. \"I say, I know of a girl\nwho hus a sweetheart who drinks just a\nlittle. Must she give him up If he Is seen\nentering a saloon?\"\n\"She mosi certainly must,\" said Miss\nMackenzie, with great emphasis, \"But first\nshe must warn him that unless he quits\ndrinking she will cease going witli him. If\nhe does not care enough for her lo stop\ndrinking, why, all I enn say Is that the\ngirl is very fortunate In having found this\nout before she married him,\"\nA ripple of applnuse went through the\nroom at this utterance, and when It hud\nsubsided  Miss Mackenzie continued;\n\"Of course, those who do not want to\ngive up their sweethearts because of their\nmoral failings are privileged not to do so,\nbul thoy cannot belong lo this organization which 1 propose forming.\n\"If there are any who aro not thoroughly\nin sympathy with my plans I would suggest lhat they depart from the meeting\nright now, because we are going to proceed to the business of plaiting against\nthe  men   who  are   moral  delinquents.\nThe blushing maiden arose and left the\nroom. She Is the daugnter- of a prominent\nmerchant, and her sweetheart is a young\nbusiness man who is known as \"sporty.\"\nHe is by no meuns a drunkard, but he\nfrequently Is seen around saloons. After\nthe merchant's daughter hud left Miss\nMackenzie proceeded to outline her plans,\n\"In the first place,\" she suid, \"we must\ndevise means for watching tlie men. 1\ncould name ten or twelve men right now\nWho go In lhe best society, yet whose habits ought to cause them to blush with\nshame. Then again, there ure men who\nare suid lo be bud, but who may be lhe\nvictims of gossips,\n\"If wo bunded together and appointed\ncommittees to watch all the men we know\nwc could very soon llnd out all about them.\nThe work will not be pleasant, but It will\nprove a great thing for us and for the men\nus well.\n\"I know several men with wild habits\nwho If they thought their sweethearts\nknew of their shortcomings would hasten\nto reform. These men can be reclaimed\nwithout nny trouble. Then there arc others\nwho might not yield to our warnings. They\nare the ones that we must sit upon.\n\"I want to warn nil of you that for a\ntimo thero will be heartaches among you\nand that you will feel llko leaving our\nunion, but if you will only stick 11 out you\nwill find In the end thai this union has\nbrought about more good than anything\nelse could havo done.\n\"This organization will be conducted exactly along lhe lines op which a trust is\nrun. For instance, suppose that I have a\nsweetheart who does not conduct himself\nas I think he should, and I warn him thnt\nho must reform or part company with me.\n\"Suppose that ho then says, 'All right,\nI shall court Miss Jones or Miss Smith.'\nHe begins calling upon either one of them,\nbut they cut him, for they are members\nof our union and know of his habits.\n\"Eventually he Is left high and dry, for\nnone of tho girls will havo anything to do\nWith him. Then lie begins to think that\nafter all I was right In lecturing him and\nbnck he comes. Of course, this is simply\na hypothetical case, but it Is an excellent\nIllustration.\"\nThe young women became quite enthusiastic over Miss Mackenzie's speech, and\nthey voted unanimously to enter In upon\ntho work of the \"trust\" at once. Their\nllrst move was to draw up a set of bylaws,  among which  was  the  following:\n\"Men wilh the following habits aro to bo\nboycotted: Smoking to Iho extent of being\ncigarette cigar, or pipe fiends; gambling,\ndrinking, swearing, chewing tobacco, stealing or keeping late hours or lying.\n\"Every man who Is reported to this union ns having any bad habits shall ho\nwatched by a commltteo appointed by tho\nunion, If this commltteo finds that ho Is\nguilty Of the things charged against him\nthe girl with whom ho associates shall lie\nInstructed to warn him that he must reform. If ho falls to reform ho shall then\nbe blacklisted.\n\"A blacklist shell mean that n man convicted of having bad habits shall not be\nInvited to any enlerlainineiils, thnt the\nmembers of this union shall in no wny associate  with   him  nnd   that   he  shall   bo\nsnubbed if met upon the street.\n\"If u man who has been blacklisted\nmends his way and a commltteo from this\nunion is satisfied that he no longer has\nany habits upon which the organization\nhas placed a ban, said bluckllst shall be\nremoved aud he shall he eligible to attend\nuny of the entertainments given by the\ngirls belonging to the union, or to pay attention to any of said girls.\"\n\"We expect to do great things,\" said Miss\nMackenzie, in explaining the objects of the\n\"sweethearts' trust.\" Every man of our\nacquaintance shall hnve a rating, Just as\nbusiness men are ruled by mercantile\nagencies.\n\"This rating will be bettered or lowered\nus the reports of tho actions of the subject\njustify. We shall spare no efforts In finding the 'black sheep' and then throwing\nthem overboard,\"\nSome of the young men of Fremont are\nInclined to take the \"trust\" as a huge\njoke, and they predict that the girls will\nsoon find themselves without sweethearts.\nNevertheless, the organization Is now In\nfull swing nnd tho majority of the young\nmen who are known as \"wild\" are becoming panic stricken.\nH\nNelson Conservative Association\nNOTICE   OF   MEETING.\nThero will be a public meeting of the\nConservatives of Nelson on Tuesday evening next at 8 o'clock, in the Burns block\non Baker street, to select delegates to\nattend a convention of the Conservative\npurty to be held at Revelstoke on Friday\nand Saturday, the 12th and 13th Instants.\nNelson will be entitled to one delegate for\nevery 20 persons In attendance at the public\nmeeting. All those who wish to affiliate\nwith the party are invited to be present.\nFRED.  STARKEY, President.\nC.   MORRISON,  Secretary.\nNelson, September 4th, 1002.\nH.&M. BIRD\nREAL ESTATE FIRE AND LIFE INSURANCE-MONEY TO LOAN.\nAgents for Mutual Life Insurance Co. of\nNew York; Ocean Accident and Guarantee\nCorporation of England; Insurance Company of North America,\nFOR SALE ON INSTALMENT PLAN\nA seven roomed house and two good lots\non Carbonate street; all modern Improvements, wired for electric light. Price\n12,050. Terms $200 cash, balance in monthly\npayments of $35.\nFOR RENT,\nHouses In all parts of the town at reduced rentals.   Call and see our lists.\nA. G.  GAMBLE\nReal Estate and\nInsurance Agent\nGflSCflDE\"\nThis is the name of the\nmost perfect Beer ever\nbrewed in British Columbia. None better is brewed anywhere in the world.\nIt is brewed in Vancouver from the pure waters of a mountain stream.\nIt is brewed upon the\nmost scientific principles,\nby the most modern of\nprocesses in a perfectly\nequipped brewery.\nThe reputation, the capital, the skill, the experience and the whole of the\nforces of\nTHE VANCOUVER\nBREWERIES, LTD-\nof Vancouver are at the\nback of it,\n\"Cascade\" is low-priced\nenough to enable the poorest citizen to enjoy it\u2014it\nis good enough to merit\nthe sincerest approbation\nof the king of connoisseurs, of all first-class\nliquor stores, saloons and\nhotels.\nAtlantic S.S. Sailings\nFrom Montreal.\nBeaver Line, Lake Champlaln Sept. 4\nBeaver Line, Lake Ontario Sept 11\nBeaver Line, Lake Erie Sept. 18\nAllan Line. Pretorian Sept. 6\nAllan Line, Parisian '...Sept. 18\nAllan Line, Numidian Sept 20\nFrom Portland.\nDominion Line, Colonlan Sept 6\nDominion Line, Californlan Sept 20\nFrom Boston.\nDominion Line, Commonwealth Sept 10\nDominion Lino, Merlon Sept 17\nFrom New York.\nWhite Star Line, Majestic Sept 3\nWhite Star Line, Celtic Sept. 6\nWhite Star Line, Germanic Sept 10\nCurnard Line, Etruria Sept. 6\nCunard Line, Campania Sept 18\nCunard Line, Umbrla ...Sept 20\nAmerican Line, St. Paul Sept. 3\nAmerican Line, St Louis Sept 10\nAmerican Line, Philadelphia Sept. 17\nContinental sailings of French, North\nGerman Lloyd, H. A. P., and Italian Lines\non application.\nRATES\u2014Saloon fares, $86.00 and upwards.\nSecond, $35.00 and upwards according to\nsteamer and location of berth. Steerage\nquoted on application. Prepaid passages\nfrom -England and the continent at lowest\nrates.\nH. L. BROWN,      W. P. F. CUMMINGS,\nCity Agt, Nelson,    Qen. Agt, Winnipeg.\nCANADIAN\nPacific\nRAILWAY\nWHOLESALE HOUSES.\nNELSON, B. C.\nPRODUCE.\nrAKER STREET,        NELSON, B. C.\nF. M. OHADB0UBN\nSampling Agent\nOre Shipped to Nelson for Treatment\nWill Bo Carefully Looked After.\nP. O. BOX 664.\nA. R.SHERWOOD\nReal Estate\nInd Insurance Agent\nNOTICE TO CONTRACTORS.\n(School,   Creston,   Kootenny.)\nSealed tenders, Indorsed \"Tender for\nSchool, Creston,\" will be received by the\nundersigned up to noon of Saturday, the\n20th September, 1002, for the erection and\ncompletion of a one-room frame school-\nhouse at Creston, Kootenay.\nPlans, specifications, forms of tender nnd\ncontract may be seen on and after lhe 3rd\nSeptember, 1902, nt the offices of tlie Secretary of the School Board, Creston, the\nGovernment Agent, Nelson, and at the\nLunds and Works Department. Victoria.\nTenders will not be considered unless\nmude upon tho printed forms supplied fur\nthe purpose, and the agreement lo execute\na bond appended to the form of louder Is\nduly signed by tho contractor himself mid\ntwo other responsible residents of the province In the penal sum of $300 for lhe fullh-\nful performance of the work.\nTlie lowest or any tender nol necessarily\naccepted.\nW. S. GORE,\nDeputy Commissioner of Lands & Works.\nLauds and Works Department, Victoria.\nB. C, 30th August, 1902.\nSTARKEY & CO., WHOLESALE DEAL-\ncrs in Butter, Eggs, Cheese, Produce and\nFruit, Houston Block, Josephine Street,\nNelson, B. C.\nABRATED AND MINERAL WATERS.\nNELSON SODA WATER FACTORY-M.\nM. Cummins, Lessee\u2014Every known variety of soft drinks, P. O. Box SS, telephone No. 31, Hoover steet, Nelson. Bottlers of the famous St Leon Hot Springs\nMineral Water.\nWORLD'S SCENIC ROUTE\nDIREGT LINE\nEAST WEST\nWINNIPEG WESTMINSTER\nTORONTO VANCOUVER 1\nOTTAWA VICTORLt j    I\nMONTREAL SKAGWAY ;       \u2022\nST. JOHN i       DAWSON T.   1\nHALIFAX SEATTLE '\nBOSTON PORTLAND\nNEW YORK SAN FRANCISCO\nLAKE ROUTE\nFrom Fort William, the favorite summer\nroute, to all eastern points.\nVIA SOO LINE\nFor St  Paul, Duluth, Sault St..  Maria,\nChicago, etc\nTHROUGH TOURIST SLBEPINO OAR*\nEAST\nLeaves Dunmore Junction dally for It\nPaul; Kootenay Landing Tuesday and\nSaturday for Toronto, Montreal and all\neastern points.\nWEST\n\u2022Leaves Revelstoke dally for Seattle ant\nVancouver.\nThrough   bookings   to   Europe   via   all\nAtlantic lines.\nPrepaid tickets at lowest rates Issued\nfrom all European countries.\nFor rates and full particulars apply to\nlocal agents, or\nCITY TICKET OFFICE.\nE. J. COYLE, A.G.P.A., Vancouver.\nJ. 8, CARTER, D.P.A., Nelson\nGROCERIES.\nA. MACDONALD & CO-CORNER FRONT\nand Hall Streets\u2014Wholesale Grocers and\nJobbers In blankets, gloves, mitts, boots,\nrubbers, macklnaws and miners' sundries.\nFRESH AND SALT MEATS.\nP. BURNS ft CO.-BAKER STREET,\nNelson \u2014 Wholesale dealers in fresh and\ncured meats.  Cold storage.\nWEST KOOTENAY BUTCHER CO.-\nWard Street, Nelson.\u2014Wholesale dealers\nIn fresh and cured meats.\nFOR\nPoint\nSALE\u2014Acreage  lots  at  Six-Mile\nJOHN 0H0LDITCH & CO.\nWholesale\nGrocers\nPROPRIETORS OF \"MARATA\" TEA IN\nHALF AND ONE POUND PACKAGES\nAN   EXCELLENT    LINE    OF    CHEAP\nBLACK TEAS NOW IN STOCK.\nNOTICE\nTo let contract for the cutting and delivering of from\n1,000,000 to 5,000,000 feet of\nlogs at Salmo, B. C.\nJ. A. SAYWARD,\nNelson, B. C.\nP. C. GREEN F. 8. CLEMENTS\nGREEN & CLEMENTS\nCivil   Engineers    and   Provincial    Land\nSurveyors.\nCor. Kootenay and Victoria Sta., Nelson\nP. O. Box 145 Telephone Ml*\nJ. 0. GWILLIM, B., Sc,\nMTN'NG ENGINEER\nLate of Geological Survey of Canada.  Six years experience in B. C\nmininjr districts,\nBAKER STREET,   NELSON.\nJOHN McLATCHIE\nHomiuion and\nProtfnciaL-O\nLaDd Surveyor,\nNELSON R C.\nWILLIAM A. BAUER\nDominion\nLand\nand   Provincial\nsurveyor.\nSurveys of mines, mineral claims, orown\nlands, orown grants  obtained   and assessments mnnnRnd for absentees.\nCAMBORNE AND VANCOUVER,\nMORTGAGEE'S   SALE   OF   VALUABLE\nMINING  PROEPRTY.\nNotice Is hereby given thut under and\nby virtue of the powers of sale contained\nIn a certain indenture of Martgagc bearing\ndate of Kith day of March, litis, mudu by\nthe Kaslo-Montezuma Mining und Milling\nCompnny, (Foreign.), to the undersigned\nJohn A. Whlttler, Robert McLean and\nHamilton Byers, the undersigned will, default having been made iu Iho payment of\nthe monies secured by lhe said mortgage,\nsell the following mentioned und described\npropjerty, that Is to say:\nThe Montezuma, Mexico, Vera Cruz,\nBuena Vista mineral clulms, situate on the\nsouth fork of Kaslo Creca, four miles from\nthe Kaslo & Slocan Railway and twelve\nmiles from Knslo, British Columbia, und\nconnected with the said railway by a good\ngovernment wagon road of easy grade.\nAbout 2,000 feet of development work, all\nIn good condition and exposing good showings of pay ore, have been done on the said\nclaims, and In the course of such development about seven hundred tons of ore\nestimated at a value of $-12,000.00 hnve been\nmined and marketed. Crown grants hnve\nbeen Issued In respect of the said Montezuma and Mexico mineral claims, and the\nothers arc hold as leasehold claims from\nthe crown. An abundance of wood and\nwater Is available.\nAll that parcel of land situate near the\nsouth fork of Kaslo Creek upon which\ntho concentrator of the said company Is\nerected.\nA concentrator of a dully capacity of 100\ntons, run by water power and lighted by\nelectricity nnd In good repair, having been\nused only three months.\nA tramway about two miles long, and\nconnecting the said mineral claims with\nthe said concentrator,\nA fully equipped two drill air compressor\nplant, run by water power.\nAlso a largo quantity of other mining\nplant consisting of ore cars, rails, hammers, drills, blacksmith outfit, etc.\nOn the said mineral claims and at the\nsaid concentrator nro commodious offices,\nbonrdlng nnd bunk houses.\nTerms of snle: One-third cash, balance\nIn equal payments nt one nnd two months.\nBids for tho purchnse of all of the said\nproperty en bloc addressed to McAnn St\nMackey, Barristers, Kaslo, British Columbia, and marked \"Montezuma Tender,\"\nWill be received by (he undersigned mortgagees up to and Including ihe 16th dny of\nOctober, 1002. The highest or nny tender\nnot necessarily accepted. Prospective purchasers will be allowed ample opportunity\nto Inspect tho property and further particulars will bo furnished on application to\nsuid McAnn Ss Mackay,\nH,  BYERS,\nR. McLEAN,\nJ.   A.   WHITTIBR,\nMortgagees.\nDated at Kaslo, British Columbia, this\n4th day of July, A. D\u201e 1902.\nHARDWARE AND MINING SUPPLIES.\nTHE J. H. ASHDOWN HARDWARE CO.\nLtd.\u2014Baker Street, Nelson.-Wholesale\ndealers in hardware, miners' supplies,\nsporting goods, etc.\nII. BYERS & CO., WHOLESALE DEAL-\ners In Hardware, Miners Supplies and\nSporting Goods. Branches at Nelson,\nKaslo and Sandon.\nM'LACHLAN BROS.-BAKER STREET,\nNelson,\u2014Wholesale dealers in hardware,\nmining supplies, glass, paints, Portland\ncement, fire clay, and Scotch fire brick.\nAgenls for WUkhis & Co.'s celebrated\nsteel wire rope.\nNELSON HARDWARE CO. - BAKER\nSTREET\u2014Wholesale paints, oils, and\nglass; mechanics tools, fishing tackle and\nsporting goods a specialty.\nLIQUORS AND DRY GOODS.\nHUDSON'S     BAY     CO. - WHOLESALE\ngroceries and liquors, etc., Baker Street\nLUMBER.\nNOTICE.\nJim (Hip Chong) hns moved his laundry\nfrom Victoria street to C. P, R, flat, Slllcn\nstreet Anyone wanting washing done will\nfind him there.\nNELSON SAW ft PLANING MILL\u2014\nOfllce, corner Hall and front streets, Nelson. \u2014 Lumber, ceiling, flooring, and\neverything in wood for building purposes. Get our prices. Correspondence solicited.\nNOTICE.\nIn tho Supreme Court of British Columbia,\nIn  the matter of the Judgments' Act\nand Amending Acts, and In the matter\nof nn action between William Grutch-\nficld and .Manuel S. Blttcncourt, Plaintiffs, nnd John F. Hnrbotlle, Defendant.\nNotice ts hereby given that pursuant to\nthe order of His Honor J. A. Forin, locul\nJudge, made herein July 21st, 1902, scaled\ntenders will  be   received   by me at  my\noffice fn the court house,  Nelson,  B.  C,\nup  till  noon on  Monday tho Sth day of\nSeptember,  1902,  for tho purchase of the\nInterest of tho plaintiff, Manuel S. Blttcncourt In lots one, two, eight, nine nnd ten\nIn block four, Salmo, British Columbia, to\nsatisfy the defendnat's Judgment ngalnst\ntho plaintiffs for $527.85 and Interest thereon  from   tho 3rd dny of August,  1900,  nt\nfive per cent, per annum, together with the\ncosts of sale and all other costs Incidentul\nthereto Incurred subsequent to snld dute.\nDated at Nelson, tbls 27th day of August,\n1902.\nE. T. H. SIMPKINS,\nDistrict Registrar of the Supremo Court of\nNelson.\nNONE BETTER.\nSOLID YESTIBULED TKAINB.\nPALA0B DINING AND 0BBEEVATI0H\nOAilS.-MEALSftlaOABTE.\nClose connection East and Westbound at\nSpokane with trains of the Spokane Falls\n& Northern Railway.\nDirect connection at St Paul without\nchange of depots, with all trains for Chicago, Toronto, Montreal, New York and all\npoints East and South.\nLeaves Spokane dally for East at 9.40 a. m.\nLeaves Spokane dally for West at 7.20 a. m.\nLeaves Spokane dally for West at 8.00 p. m.\nWestbound trains make direct connection\nfor Victoria and Vancouver, Portland. Ban\nFrancisco, and all points on tbe Sound.\nDuring the season of navigation, east-\nbound trains connect at Duluth with the\nmagnificent steamships North-West and\nNorth-Land of the Northern Steamship\nCompany's line, operated In connection\nwith the Great Northern Railway,\nFor further Information, maps, folders,\netc., apply to any agent of the Spokane\nFalls & Northern Railway, Kaslo ft Slocan\nRailway, Kootenai Railway ft Navigation\nCompany, or to\nH. BRANDT,\nCity Passenger and Ticket Agent W 701 W,\nRiverside avenue, Spokane, Wash,\nQ. K. TACKABURY, Local Agent.\nitelson, B, C\n*u (ft\nA  KOOTENAY   RAILWAY  ft   NAVT- *\nA     OATION  COMPANY,  LIMITED. +\nA                                                          i .fi\nA                       OPERATING *b\nA  INTERNATIONAL     NAVIGATION *\nA  & TRADING COMPANY, LIMITED, +\nA      KASLO & 8LOCAN RAILWAY. *\n9.00a. m. Lv..KASLO..Ar. 3.15 p. in. A\n11.25 a. m. Ar.SANDON.Lv. 1.00 p. m. A\n . A\nINTERNATIONAL     NAVIGATION +\n& TRADING COMPANY, LIMITED. +\nKASLO-NELSON ROUTE +\n  A\n5.00 n. m. Lv.NELSON.Ar. 7.15 p. m. A\nA  8.40 n. in. Ar...KASLO..Lv. 3.35 p. m. *f>\nA      Tickets sold to all parts of United *b\na States and Canada via Great North-\n\u2022b ern and O. R. & N. Company's lines.\na For   further   particulars   call   on\n<b address,\na ROBERT IRVING, Manager, Kaslo,\n* G. K. TACKABURY, Agent, Nelson.\n*\n\u25a01. .f nfnT. .fiTlnt..tnf \u25a0\u25a0! \u25a0 \u25a0 11 \u25a0 1 \u25a0, t,\ni~i  iTITlTITri\nASSIGNEES SALE.\nBids for the purchnse of nil tho stock In\ntrnde, fixtures, etc., Inventoried at $931.00,\nof the estate of W. L. Dnvls of Kaslo,\ngrocer, addressed to Robt, F. Green, Kaslo,\nBritish Columbia, and marked \"Estate\nTender,\" will be received by the undersigned assignee up to nnd Including tbc\n10th dny of September, 1902; also bids for\ntho purchase of all the book debts of the\nsaid estnte, of tho nominal value of $1,400.00\nwill be received by tho said assignee up to\nnnd Including lhe 10th day of September\n1902.\nHighest or nny tender not necessarily\naccepted.\nTerms of snlo: Cash.\nDated nt Kaslo. British Columbia, this\n19th day of August, A. D\u201e 1902.\nR. F. GREEN,\nAssignee.\nLOST-There is no better wny of recovering lost articles thnn by advertising In\nTho Daily News.\n.;. .j. a .;. a a a a .;..;..;..;. a a a a a a\nA   SPOKANE FALLS St NORTHERN   ?\nA RAILWAY CO. tf.\nA   NELSON    Ss    FORT    SHEPPARD   *\n\u2022b\nRAILWAY  CO.\nWASHINGTON & G. N. RAILWAY.\nVAN. VIC.\nB. RY. & N. CO.\nThe only nil rail route between\npoints east, west nnd south to Rossland, Nelson, Grnnd Forks nnd Republic. Connects at Spoknno with the\nGreat Northern, Northern Pacific nnd\nO. R. St N. Co., for points cast,\nwest and south; connects at Rossland und Nelson with the Canadian A\nPacific Railway. Connects nt Nelson with lhe K. R. St N. Co. for\nKaslo und K. St. S, points.\nConnects at Curlew with stags for\nGreenwood nnd  Midway, B. C.\nBuffet cars run on trains between\nSpokano and Republic.\nEffective   Aug.   17th,\nLeave\n9.25 a. m Spokane....\na  io.30 a. m...Rossland\t\n\u25a0j*    7.15 a. m Nelson\t\n<b  11.07 a. m Millers\t\n(Grund  Forks)\n9.20 u. m Republic\t\n1902.\nArrlvo\n5.46 p. m.\n.5.10 p. m.\n..8.00 p. m.\n.3.58 p. m.\n.5.15 p. m.\nIT. A. JACKSON, Genernl Passenger  \u25a0$.\nAgent, Spokune, Wash. \u2022!\u2022\nG. IC TACKABURY, City Agent\nt\n* *\n* * * * * * * * * \u2022!\u2022 * \u2022!\u25a0** + \u2022!\u2022 + *\n THE DALIY NEWS, NELSON, B. C, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1902\nTo Amateur\nWe purpose closing out our stock ot\nPlate Cameras and have some bargains to\noffer you, as our pricea below will Bhow:\nprice. Reduced\nBunart Junior 3H*3\u00bb S 500        W.60\nRay 814x3)4  6.00        t6\u00b0\nRay E. Duplicator, 4x6 10.00 8.00\nRay No L Pony, 4x5 10.00        12.50\nGlencoe   B\u201e   acromatlc lena\n4x5 16.00        11.50\nGlencoe B., Dbl. R.R. lens.. 20.00 16.00\nGlencoe A, Dbl. R.R. lens.... 25.00 21.00\nPremo B, 6x7 23.00        18.00\nThere are only a few left and this stock\nwill not he replaced.\nMORLEY & CO.\nBooksellers and Stationers, Nelson, B. C.\n_   . . _ \u25a0 _ \u2022   AND WOOD OF ALL\nP AI T *     KINDS\nUnL I t Terms Spot Casl'\u2022\nO A AI \u2022 w p- Tierney\n|| IIA I   i Telephone 265.\nw w \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0\" \u2022   Baker Street,\nNELSON'S NEWS OF THE DAY\nGold Commissioner John A. Turner,\naccompanied hy his wife and son, re-^\nturned last evening from the coast\nThe. rank and Hie of the Conservatives will bo In evidence at the public\nmeeting In the Burns block on Tuesday\nnight just aB they are at the polling\nplace on election day.\nAlthough no further word has been\nreceived by the mayor as to when the\nEnglish editors will reach Nelson, it is\nlikely that if they come at all they will\nget here about Wednesday next\nAll Liberals are requested to attend\nMonday evening's meeting. There are\nseveral matters coming up of importance, and It is desirable that the attendance should be large and representative.\nArrangements are being made for the\nholding of another ping-pong tournament under the auspices of the Library\nsociety. No date lim. been Bet as yet,\nbut it is intended to hold It as soon as\npossible.\nIt was announced yesterday by the\ndoctor attending Jerry Roblllard that\ntbe old man will not likely last out today. Tbe news will occasion general\nregret among all who knew the genial\nold Frenchman.\nOwing to the growth of freight traffic In the Kootenays, the C. P. K. Ib\nordering a new Shay engine, which will\nprobably be used on the steep grade\nbetween Trail and Rossland, releasing\nthe engine at present used for service\nelsewhere.\nAn examination of engineers In accordance with the provisions of the provincial statute regulating the Issuance\nof certificates of competency will be\nheld in tbe court house on Tuesday\nnext Chief inspector Peck will arrive\nin town this evening, and applications\nmay be made to him.\nThe members of the new Nelson band\nwhich was formed a month ago, ore\npractising steadily In the basement of\nthe public 'school, and already the\nresults are most promising. It will he\nsome time yet before they make a\npublic appearance, but when they do\nthey will give a good account of themselves.\nThe new postofflce building Is now\nfast approaching completion, nearly all\nthe exterior work having been finished\nand a large proportion of the Interior.\nWhen finished it will be an ornament\nto the city, the only objection taken\nbeing that it does not stand on Baker\nstreet, or some place where the rear portion of the building would not be\ndwarfed by the grade of the street\nSeveral letters were received in the\ncity this week by wholesalers from\nbusiness men in the Trout Lake district In which appreciation was expressed ot the work being done here to\nsecure proper mall service for the\nupper country. Heretofore they have\nbeen in somewhat the same position\nthat Nelson was In 1890, when tbe mail\ncame In over the old Forty-Nine trail\non a packtrain.\nTho following are the officers elected\nby the Slocan City Miners' Union for\ntho enBulng term: President, W. H.\nDavidson; vice-president, W. H. Ferguson; financial secretary, D, B,\nO'Neial; recording secretary, Geo. F.\nClement; conductor, Ralph Gillette;\nwarden, C. Snyder; trustees, W. Ferguson, Fred. Carlisle, Geo. Nlchol; executive, G. Nichol, J. V. Purviance, R.\nWebster, D .B. O'Neall; finance committee, O. Nichol, T. H. Tobln, J. B.\nSkinner.\nSome dissatisfaction exists among the\nparents of scholars attending the high\nschool over the fact that an additional\nteacher has not been secured for that\nInstitution, as they consider that 40\npupils are too many for one teacher.\nAs Nelson's reputation as an educational centre stands high, nnd the\nsplendid showing made by tho high\nschool in the late examinations has resulted In a numbor of pupils coming\nIn from outside towns to attend, they\nfeel that no false economy should be\nexercised in tbls particular.\nAt the opera houso last evening manager Amiable gave his first exhibition\nwith the clnemetograph of the scenes\nof the coronation. This was also the\nfirst time these views had been Been In\nNelson, and the audience greatly en-\nJoyed the succession of moving pictures\npf London which were thrown on th.\nMORRISSEY, B. C.j\nTHE  GREAT  COAL  MINING AND INDUSTRIAL CENTRE\nOF CANADA.\nSituated on the CROWS NEST SOUTHERN  and  CANADIAN  PACIFIC\nRAILWAYS.\nHaving two transcontine lines of railroad MORRISSEY WILL BE  THE\nDISTRIBUTING CENTRE of this district.\nA DIVISIONAL POINT ON J. J. HILL'S ROAD.\nPLANS FOR THE ROUND HOUSE AND MACHINE SHOPS ARE NOW\nBEING MADE.\nDON'T  TAKE  OUR  STATEMENTS ABOUT    MORRISSEY, ASK ANYONE.\nCall on us, or write for information.\nMORRISSEY TOWNSITE CO., Thomas Crahan, Agent, Morrlssey, B. C.\nlarge screen. Besides this a large number of pictures of local scenery and life\nwero shown, and the whole exhibition\nwas one of the best that has been seen\nin the city. The performance will be\nrepeated tonight\nJohn Bryden, Tully Boyco and Peter\nLampman, the commissioners to enquire into the causes tt the recent colliery disasters, in the province, arrived\nin town last evening from Victoria, and\nleft on the Moyle this morning for\nFernie, where they will open tbe investigation. Mr. Bryden is chairman\not tbe commission, and Mr. Lampman\nwill act as secretary In addition to\nserving as one of the commissioners.\nR. Seymour accompanies the commission as official stenographer. The work\nof the commission is by no means confined to an enquiry into the recent\nFernie disaster. The object is to gather\nall the information available relative\nto all the recent colliery disasters, and\nif possible arrive at conclusions that\nwill have the effect, if put Into practice,\nof preventing the recurrence of similar\ndisasters. The commissioners expect to\nspent about eight days at Fernie. Upon\nthe completion of their labors there\nthey will return to the coast and bold\ninvestigations at Ladysmitb, Nanaimo\nand Union,\nA BUSINESS MAN'S VIEWS.\nMr. John Griffin Takes a Rosy View of\nNelson's Future.\nJohn Griffin, of Winnipeg, a member\nof the Arm of J. Y. Griffin & Co., who\nhas been in Nelson for tbe past week,\nleft tor home yesterday evening. Mr.\nGriffin was much pleased with Nelson\nbut expressed his surprise at the pessimistic utterances that he had hoard\nfrom some of the people here and In\nother parts of the Kootenay. He is a\nfirm believer in the future prosperity\nnot only of Nelson but of the whole\ncountry, and thought if the grumblers\nInstead of making themselves and\nothers miserable would only take a\nlarger view of conditions here they\nwould better appreciate the immense\npotentialities of the Kootenays, especially the southern portion. Considering the tremendous disadvantages the\ncountry has been laboring under for the\npast year he thought that business conditions were remarkably good. It was\nundoubtedly the duty of the\ndominion government to take measures\nto alter the present mining conditions\nby the imposition of adequate duties\non lead, and tbe people here ought to\nkeep up a continuous agitation for\nsuch change until they got it The development of the Kootenays of recent\nyears had been so rapid that there were\nbound to be some setbacks. If, however,\nthe people here, Beelng how rich In natural resources the Kootenays were\nwould keep on Impressing outside people\nwith the fact, Instead of leaving the\noutsiders to find It out, they would\nquickly find that It had a reflex action\nand they would feel better themselves.\nThe re-opening of smelters and metalliferous mines would soon be felt, and\nwhen things started to pick up after a\ndepression it usually depended on tbe\npeople of a city or country how far such\nimprovement went\nAs regards the Noitnwest and Manitoba, Mr. Griffin said that business\nthere could not be any better. As far\nas their own firm was concerned, at the\npork packing factories at Winnipeg,\nworking everything to its fullest capacity they could not begin to keep up\nwith the local demand alone, without\ntouching outside trade, and other firms\nhad the same experience. With the\npresent record harvest assured, the\nImmediate future would see even\ngreater strides, and western Canada had\nindeed an era of immense expansion\nahead of it.\nTODAY'S REGATTA.\nThe fall regatta of the Nelson boat\nclub is to be held this afternoon, commencing at 3 o'clock, and if the weather\nis good an interesting series of races\nis promised. All races will be finished\nopposite the club house, and os this is\nbut a short distance west of the city\nwharf a good view is assured from the\nlatter place. Besides the main' events\nfor which the crews bave been steadily\npractising for some time, there will be\na number of canoe races, swimming\nand other contests, for which all entries\nare to be post. The officers in charge\nof the regatta will be: H. H. Playford,\nstarter; A. H. Buchanan, judge, and\nC. A. Waterman, commodore.\nThe four-oared race Is to be for the J.\nRoderick Robertson challenge cup.\nThe list of events will be as follows:\nFour-oared race, three crews. FlrBt heat,\nfirst boat, Winter stroke, Whealler,\nPullen and MacFarland; second boat,\nMason stroke, Eden, Ward and Ban-\nHeld. Bye, Macrae stroke, Blakemore,\nPlnkham, Lay. Tandem canoe race;\nsingle sculls; inrigged lupstrcaks; final\nheat of four-oared race\u2014winner of first\nheat and Macrae's crew; single paddle\ncanoo race; double gentlemen's sculls;\nVictoria Cross, swimming and canoe\nraces; tlltlnc match.\nTHE RICH MaY GROUP.\nUndoubtedly tlio biggest thing the\ncountry bus yet held fs the proposition\npresented by the May group, on Twelve-\nMile. As is now well known, a huge\nvein, 135 feet In width, wns uncovered\nduring the recent assessment work,\nbeing apart from the small and rich\nlead worked by the original ownerB. But\nthe values of the big lead now surpass\nanything In sight, nnd amount almost\nto the incredible. Yet, on the authority\nof Mr. King, a mining man Bent here\nfrom Salt Lake City by one of the Investors in the group, the Slocan Drill\ncan state that his samplings of the\nvein (and tbe assaying was done out of\ntown) showed 251 oz. silver and $19.20\nin gold per ton. Mr. King made that\nstatement, and it is assuredly a surprising one, ns the property must class as\na world-beater.\nNOT IMPORTING MEN.\nSupt. Stockett Says Crow's Nest Coal\nCo. Is Acting In Good Faith.\nThomas R. Stockett, Jr., superintendent of the Crow's Nest Pass Coal company's mines, In nn interview with a\nnewspnper reporter at Nanaimo the\nother day, regarding the statement that\nthe company was employing men in\nPennsylvania to work in the mines here\nsaid that ho knew absolutely nothing\nabout the attempt to hire men in Pennsylvania for th? Fernie mines, and if\nsuch an attempt was being made he\nwould know of it. At the present time\nhe was not needing nny men at Fernie,\nand only a few men could be given\nemployment In the other mines.\nSo far as the company was concerned they had made an agreement with\ntbe mon and were acting In good faith,\nand If at tbe expiration of two months,\na majority of the underground workers\nvoted to return to the old system, the\ncompany would comply with the request\nThe company was working in anticipation that the miners at Fernie would\ncontinue working, and had no Intention of milking an attempt to violate the\nagreement when the two months expired. In thus acting In good faith, the\ncompany expected the \u00abien were doing\nthe same, and if they would keep their\nbeads and act reasonably, he had no\ndoubt an amicable agreement would be\narrived at by which the miners and\ncompany would work harmoniously together.\nGREENWOOD-PHOENIX TRAMWAY.\nPhoenix, Sept. 5\u2014(Special to The\nDaily News.)\u2014The members of the city\ncouncil of Phoenix went to Greenwood\nlast night, by Invitation of the latter\nbody, to discuss the proposition now\nbeing agitated by the Greenwood aldermen to build a tramway line between\nthe two cities. Tho Greenwood people\nwish a franchise to enter and traverse\nthe streets of Phoenix, and it is possible\nthat some arrangement that Is satisfactory to both dies may be arrived at.\nThe Greenwood proposition Is to float\nbonds for the amount needed, somewhere in the neighborhood of $100,000,\nwhich thnt city will guarantee the interest on. Tbey would like Phoenix to\nfloat part of these bonds, and also hopo\nto enlist government aid in the proposition, as it is ono that they think will be\nof material benefit to the entire district.\nDrink Marata tea.\nWo want you to try Marata tea at 35\nand 46 cents per pound. The People's Cash\nGrocery, corner of Hall and Baker streets.\nAT THE HOTELS.\nHume-G. E. Templeman, Kaslo: A. W.\nSmith, Montreal; W. B. McCray, Hamilton;\nA. C. Lancy, O. D. Rivera, Winnipeg; W.\nE. Bole, Slocan; R. Roddick, Rossland; D.\nGrlllln, Rossland! H, L. McLoln, Kaslo;\nH. M. Burrltt, Vancouver; J. H. Gillard,\nRossland; J. A. Turner, wife and son, Victoria; M. II. Von Valkonburg, Mrs. Pope,\nToronto; T. Watson, Trout Lake; M.\nDuffy, Spoknno; T. Hotchklss, Northport;\nF. Kalsor, Eholt.\nImperial\u2014Miss May McNeil, Spokano; W.\nRoss, Miss N. McNeil, F. McLeod, Sundon;\nJ. D. McLeod, Kaslo; J. H. Murdock, Republic; W. Parkins, Butto; a. R. Reeves,\nGrand Forks.\nMadden-M.  L.  Cnrmlchael, J.  Murphy,\nGrand Forks.\nBartlett-J. Bentloy, J. Riley, Sandon.\nFRESH STORIES OF DISASTER.\nComo From tho Volcano Cursed Island of\nMartinique.\nCastries, Islund ot St. Lucia, Sept. 5.\u2014\nTho eruption of Mont Pelee on September\n3rd, was not remarkable, but thero was n\nterrific explosion from La Soufrlore, on tlio\nIsland of St. Vincent, Soptomber 3rd. The\ncaptuln of tlio stoamer Savnn, now hero,\nconfirming the report cabled to the Associated PreHS lost night Hint sho ran Into\ndense clouds of dust when 20 miles soutli-\nwcHt of St. Vincent at 2 o'clock In the\nmorning of Wednesdey, adds that absolute darkness prevailed soon afterwards\nund thnt he changed Ills course lo due west\nIn order to avoid tho ashes which wore\nfulling thick. Tho first officer could not\nsee the captain two foot away and only\nknew him by his voice. Tho stenmer Ynro\nfurther reports that several more valuable\nJ&\n^\u00abmO  H\nnow are your\nEyes\nfor this occasion?\nWE MAY BETTER YOUR\nBEOOED BY FITTING YOU\nWITH PROPBR GLASSES\nPatenaude\nBros.'^\u00b0Pticians\n\\\\i\nil\/\nit)\n\\\\>\ni!)\nili\niiv\niir\n\\tv\ngig?\nplantations were destroyed at the time of\ntho recent outbreak in addition to the\ntownships referred to in previous despatches and adds that the anxiety and dejection of tho surviving: population Is\ngeneral.\nWashington, D. C\u201e Sept. G.\u2014The state\ndepartment has received the following\ncablegram from U. S. consul Jewell at Port\nde Prance, dated yesterday, relative to the\nlatest eruption of Mont Pelee:\n\"Two violent eruptions of Mont Pelee\noccurred August 30th, destroying Morne\nRouge and devastating an area Including\nseveral small towns nnd villages. Estimated 1,500 killed; many Injured.\"\nTHE METHODIST CONFERENCE.\nWinnipeg, Sept. Jj.-The Methodist con-\nforence has got to work and a busy session\nthis morning was devoted to committee\nwork. The afternoon and evening sessions\nwere also devoted to committee work.\nTho committees will report next week, and\nIn the meantime are examining a mass of\ndocuments and pamphlets. It was learned\nthat the committee on memorials decided\nin favor of lady members of the church\nbeing allowed to voto In all church courts.\nTomorrow will be a day of visiting and\nreceptions. Many delegates will leave to\noccupy pulpits outside the city.\nCreat Reduction\nin Prices to any point\nin, the Kootenay\nFor ten dnys your choice\nof any Suiting in our window\nmade to order for 525. First-\nclass trimmings, union label\non all garments.\nWhy pay $18, $20 and $25 for\nready-made suits ? or send\naway for clothing when we\ncan save you money by having your clothing made In\nNelson?\nWest of England pantings\nto order, $G.50.\nH. M. VINCENT\nMerchant Tailor\nBaker Street. Nelson.\nCascara    ^-r\nTablets     ^2f)L\nFOR  CONSTIPATION.\nat Vanstone's\nDRUG STORE.\nH. J. PHAIR\nTOBACCONIST\nBtton%.c Queen Cigar Store\nWest Transfer Co.\nTELEPHONE  U.\nAll kinds of Teaming.\nGood Dry Wood, all lengths\nNELSON OPERA HOUSE\nSIX NIGHTS COMMENCING\nMonday,  Sept.  8th\nAND SATURDAY MATINEE\nCanada's Favorite Comedian\nHarry Lindley\nSUPPORTED BY LITTLE MYSTIC\nand Company of 14 Artists.\nChange   of   Bill   Each   Evening   From\nReportolro Comprising\nDORA       GOLDEN MINE        FANCHON\nDAVID HARUM,   ETC.\nIllustrated Songs\nVocnl and Tcrpsichorcan Specialties\nMarriott Bros.,  the Phenomenal\nBaton  Swingers,   Etc.,  Etc,\nPRICES AS USUAL\nJ. M. LUDWIG\nMANUFACTURER AND JOBBER\nLargest stock kept In British Columbia\nof Harness, Saddles, Collars, Saddlery,\nHardware, Sole Leather, Shoo Findings,\nTents, Etc.,\n,   Mall orders receive prompt attention.\nNELSON, B. C.\nTHURMAN\nTOBACCONIST\nSmoke Thurman Mixtures\nBAKER STREET,   NELSON,   B. C.\nD. McARTHUR & CO.\nFURNITURE DEALERS AND FUNERAL\nDIRECTORS.\nLeaders of fashion In furniture.\nStyles change In these things as well u\nIn all others, and tha newest and best\nproductions always reach this .tore first\nPorto Rico Lumber\nCo., Limited,\nTARDS AT NELSON AND ROSSLAND I\nMILL AT PORTO RICO SIDING\nRough and\nDressed   Lumber,\nShingles, Mouldings.\nA-l White (Pine Umber Always In\nStock.\nWe carry a complete stack ot Coast floating, Celling, Inside Finish, Turned Work,\nSash and doors. Special order work will\nreceive prompt attention. Mall orders aoll-\ncit.d.\nPorto Rico Lumber Co.,\nLiniTBD.\nHead  offlce-Hendryx and Vernon St., Nelson, B. C.\nFor the Best Bread\nTRY THE STAR BAKERY.\nChoquetto Bros,, Props,\nTelephone 210, Josephine Street\nWe keep In stock all kinds of confectionery and fresh candles.\nCALL ON THE\nNELSON WINE CO.\nand try a bottle, a dozen, or a barrel of\nCALQART BEER, as It la tha beat and\ncheapest on the market Also try our\nWINES, LIQUORS and CIGARS.\nFRANK A. TAMBLYN, Manager.\nTelephon. M    \u2022    \u2022      Bakar St, NalMa\nFred Irvine & 60.\nBargains in\nMen's Furnishings\nWe are offering special reductions in Men's\nWhite and Colored Regatta Shirts, Balbrigan Underwear, Natural Wool Sox, Shirts and Drawers, Ties\nScarfs, Collars and Cuffs. '\nFor Summer Wear see our Gents' Stock.\nI FRED IRVINE & Co.\nXXXXXXSMXXKXXXSSKKKiaeaiXKXXS!\nB&KB&KB&KB&KB&KB&KB&KB&KB&KB&:\nHA Y HAY HAY\nJust unloading llrst cars of NEW CROP\nTIMOTHY-quality is choice.\nIt is selling fast, but we hnve several\nmoro cars to arrive this week.\nGet our carload prices. \u25a0\nm The Brackman-Ker Milling\" Co., Limited *\nWHOLESALE  AND  RETAIL  HAY, GRAIN  AND   FEED. *\nB&KB&KB&KB&KB&K    B&KB&KB&KB&KB&K?\nNOTHING SO COOL AND REFRESHING\nTHESE WARM DAYS AS\nI*\nIN YOUR BATH\nW. F. TEETZEL & CO.\nWest Kootenay Butcher Co.\nAU kinds of\nFresh and Salted Meats\nWHOLESALE ANU RETAIL\nOrders by Mall receive Careful\nand Prompb Attention\nFISH AND POULTRY IN SEASON\nE. C.  TRAVES,  Manager,  K.-W.-C, Block, Ward Street, Nelson, B.C.\nLawn Supplies\nRubber and Cotton Garden Hose, Lawn Sprinklers, Garden\nShears, Lawn Mowers, Lawn Rakes. See our Ball Bearing California Lawn Sprinklers.\nT> J. H. Ashdown Hardware Co., Ltd.\nSuccessors tolLawrence Hardware Company\nThe GROUSE SEASON\nOpened on Monday, September 1st.\nBUY YOUR SMOKELESS SHELLS\nAT\nMoLACHLAN BROS.\nWe Keep Everything you want in lhe line of Ammunition\nTHE DOMINION WIRE ROPE CO, Ltd.\nMONTREAL\nManufeoturers of BEST STEEL WIRE ROPE.\nTramway, Hoisting, Mining Wire Rope.\nLang's Lay for Tramways and Underground Haulage\nLocal Stock carried, estimates furnished.\nH. E. CROASDAILE Agent Nelson.\nMoving\nPictures\nof the\nCORONATION\nat the Opera House\nTONIGHT\nNOTICE.\nA meeting of the Nelson Liberal\nAssociati6n will be hold in tho\nBoard of Trado rooms, Monday,\nthe Sth instant, at S.30 p. m.\nBusiness of tho utmost importance will como up for discussion,\nand every member is requested to\nbe present. , .:\nDB. HALL,    \u25a0 \u2022\"\nPresident\ni\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. 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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":"1902-09-06 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":"1902-09-06 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":""}]}