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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" THE DAILY NEWS\nVol. I.\nNelson, British Columbia, Friday, May 16, 1902\nNo. 22.\nEASY MONEY\nFOR PROMOTERS\nSome Startling Statements In\nthe Prospectus of Maple\nLeaf Go.\nMontrealers Asked to  Put\nMoney In Richest Mines\non Earth.\nThe prospectus of the Maple Leaf\nGold Mining and Development company hns made its appearance in the\nMontreal Dally Star, aud ia probably\nthe most entertaining production of\nits Kind that has been given to thu\npublic .since tho days of the lever ish\nwild-catting which preceded tho\nbreak of the Rossland boom. From\nthe prospectus it would appear that\nthe Maple Leaf mineral olnim, situate\non the eut bank of Forty-Nine crock,\nand Wflich was loi-ated by Andy\nRoevosbeok in the spring of 1804, is,\nwith the exception of some thirteen\nother properties which the company\nowns, the richest mine in the province\nof llritish Columbia.\nThe prospectus starts out with tbe\ninference that by investing in Maple\nLoaf stock there is an opportunity for\nsecuring gold dollars for pennies, and\nfrom this, with tbo assistnnca of\ncrutches In tho shape of the Le Roi\nmine's pnyroll, nnd the Ymir mine's\ndividends, the prospectus ambles on\nto say that thero is $3,000,000 worth of\ngold ore in light io tbe Maple Leaf\nmineral claim; and that the other\nthirteen properties of tho company are\njust as valuable. Just think of it.\nThree million dollars of gold ore, exposed within rive miles of Nolson, has\nbeen passed over unheeded yoat after\nyear by sucti experienced prospectors\nas Mike Keeloy and Mickey Monag-\nhan, as well as by the provincial\nmineralogist.\nTho one thought which will Impress\nitself upon tho careful reader i* the\nadvantage nf residence in Montreal, if\nono is inclined to invest in mining.\nHero is thu Maple Leaf company,\nowning fourteen properties, the ore in\ntight upon which aggregates in value\n112,000,oiw, which is capitalized for\nthe modest sum of $ 1,000,00ft and\noffered to the public at fifty coots on\nthe dollar. Someone assuredly is to\nget rich quickly, that is if tuny do\nnot find themselves gold-bricked.\n(trout and promising as the othor\nthirteen claims ownod by the company aro said to be. with their ft'.*,-\n000,000 worth of ore, tbey nte treated\nwith scant courtesy and permitted to\nmasquerade through tho prospectus\nwithout even the empty honor of a\nname. It iB tho Maplo Leaf alono\nthat.is deemed worthy of individual\nmention. Concerning it some further\nparticulars aro furnished. Thero have\nbeon sone \"official\" assays made\nfinrn ore samples taken from tbe\nMaple Leaf, and they are reported to\nhnve varied from *M to $20MO per\nton.   This should be rich enough.\nTho directors of tbe Maple Leaf\nUold Mining and Development company are given as: Hon. James D,\nllyrnos, of Sao Mateo, California;\nMonsignoro Henry Eumolen.Okanagan\nMission, representing the holdings of\nthe Diocese of New Westminster; J\nFrank McQuaid, who is described as a\n\"practical\" mining expert of Nelson,\nE. 0.; D. M. Caflhin, Han Francisco;\nand Hon. Patrick Egan, New York.\nAnother noteworthy feature of the\nprespectui is that Monsignore Henry\nEumcleo, wbo figures on tho board as\nvice president, considers it incumbent\nupon him to give his fellow directors\na certificate of character to Hon. Patrick Egan. This he docs in most unqualified terms. There ore also other\nloiters purporting to come from\nBishop Durien, of the diocese of New\nWestminster, nnd priests of the\nCatholic church in different parts,\nassuring intending investors that they\nmay accept the statements appearing\nin tho prospectus of tho company, but\nwhether these u\u00absuinncos apply to the\nndveristoinonts appearing In tho Montreal Star is not quite clear. One of\ntwo things is clear. Either tbo peoplo\nOf llritihh Columbia arc on the eve of\na groat discovery, respecting undroamt\nof mineral wonlth, or tho peoplo who\nbuy the allures of the Maple Loaf Gold\nMining nnd Development company\nwill Hnd that tbey,nave been guld-\nJbrlekod.\nFather Fenand of Nelson has very\npronounced views upon the Maple\nLeaf flotation,. Be characterised the\nwhole thiog as shameful, and spo iking to a reporter of The Daily New s\nsaid; \"We have written to the Montreal Star about tho matter, as it is\nvery wrong that the names of priests\nwho are dead should be used to advertise such a thing. Some years ago, I\nknow, bishop Durien was approached\nregarding tbe scheme, and was told\nthat the promoters wishing to help on\na cause which he had an much at\nheart, tba cstibHshiog of a mission\nschool for Indian boys, would give\nhim some shares for tbat purpose. He\nknowing nothing of such matters\naccepted the shares with delight believing in the promoters tiuthfulness,\nand that the'mine'was all that waa\nclaimed of it. Now since bis death,\nhis name is being dragged into  it in\nmost unwarranted manner, and\nthose of other priests tvtioso names\nwere secured to (tie list in a similar\nmanner.\"\nFatbor Ferland feels the matter very\ndeeply and is doing all io his power\nto nave it brought to the attention of\nthe priests concerned so that it may\nbo explained as fully as possible.,\nCONTRACTOR'S TROUBLES\nUUICK   WORE   IN  THE FEDERAL\nBUILDING MAY   HAVE   TO\nBE TAKEN DOWN.\nWork on the federal government's\npublic buildings in this city baa\nbeeu stoDpod again, and the prospect\nis that it w!U be a week or ten days\nbefore another start Is mado.\nThe trouble tbis time is between\nthe contractors and the public woiks\ndepartment, over the class of pressed\nbrick to be used in the building.\nThe specifications call for a red\npressed brick,but in April last tbe contractors started putting repressed\ngranite bricks in tbe wall, Histoid of\ntho red bricks as called for. Their\nexcuse for so doing was tbat no red\npressed brick, np to tho standard required by tho department could bo\nfound this side of Ontario, and tho\ncost of transporttioo pot them ont of\nconsideration.\nWhen tbe contractors commence I\ntbe laying of the granite brick they\nwore advised by James A, Mcdooa Id,\nthe federal government's clerk of the\nwork, that they were not complying\nwith tho speci Beat ions, but Contractor\nLoMolno said he know what he was\ndoing, and would take his chances of\nsquaring matters with the department.\nMr, Macdonald at onoe wired tbe department of tbe departure thut had\nbeen mnde from the syecilieattors and\nasked for instructions. No response\nwas received to this communication\nuntil Wednesday evening, when word\ncame that the terms of tbe specifica\nt'ons must bo lived up to. lo tbo\ninterval the laying of tho granite\nbrick had proceeded, and when the\nword was received that tbey would\nnot bo accepted fully one half of the\nbrick wero in the wall.\nWhen advised of the nature of tbo\nmessage from Ottawa contractor Le\nMotrin shut down the work at once,\nand started over tho Crow's Nest for\nOttawa. Be still hopes of being able\nto satisfy, the department with tho\nsubstituted brick, but docs not feel\ninclined to take any additional risk\nby laying any more brick. Should the\nOttawa authortieB insist upon red\nbrick the contractors will be out at\nleast fl,A0O. This would be made up\nof |S00 which represents the value of\ntho labor and mortar in the wall, and\nthe rest made up the loss they will\nsuffer in disposing of tbe granite\nbrick.\nSo far as tho relative merits of the\ntwo classes of brick go it is said to be\nmerely a matter of choice. The red.\npressed brick would present a striking\ncontract to tho local marble, of which\nthe first story of tho structure is built,\nbut tor the granite brick it is claimed\nthat it would harmonize well.\nLONG STRIKE\nIN PROSPECT\nCoal Miners Decide to Fight\nThe Issue Out With The\nOperators.\nFeared That  Trouble Will\nSpread To Other Eastern\nIndustries.\nIlazelton, May 15,\u2014Tho anthracite\nmine workers in convention late this\nafternoon decided to continue tho\nstriko of the 150,000 men against the\nmine owners, and to fight it cut to\nthe end. Tbe mattor of calling out\nthe engineers, firemen and pump runners will bo decided by the delegates\ntomorrow. The vote to continue tbe\nsuspension was as follows total vote\ncast 811, for Ptriko 461, against strike\n350.   Majority for strike 111.\nTbe fct<>p take by the minors after\npractically considering tho matter for\ntwo months, has wiped out the uncertainty of the situation and it is\nfreely predicted that the most serious\nlabor struggle in the history of the\ncountry ia about to begin. That is\nthe view taken hy nearly every\nminer. While tbe loaders aro cautious\nand will not forecast their actions it\nis not unlikely that the miners fight\nwill be carried into the bituminous\ncoal regions and into other flelds of\nindli try. Mine workers for eighteen\nmonths have boon looking forward to\ntho strike tbat is now upon them.\nThey have saved their money and are\nconsidered to bo in better stinpo\ntoday for a fight than tbey were In\ntbo great strike r.f 1900, tbat struggle\nended in the mine owners giving the\nmen a ten per cent, advance after a\nsix weeks suspension.\nThe operators are on record at\nbei.-g unalterably opposed to grant\ning the men any concessions and they\nbave positively informed the mine\nworkers leaders of thnt fact. Work'\nmen fear that tho present fight may\nmean the destruction of their organi\n\/ntion because they believe that the\nmine owners arc bent more on wrecking their union than they are in op\nposition to the demands for higher\nwages and shorter workdays.\nPresident Mitchell's advice to the\nminers was peace and he gavo It to\nthem in the plainest and moat forceful of lanugagu. He was ably ns.\nsisted by President Fahey and Secretary Hartley of tho lower district,\nand Secretary Dempsey of the upper\nterritory. President Nichols of the\nfirst district was tbe great champion\nof the sfiko advocates. Mr. Mitchell\nwho was the last to speak was lis-\ntened to with the greatest attention,\nIt was said thut a telegram was rend\nfrom the American federation of labor\nagainst a permanent suspension. But\nthe delegates would not listen nnd\namid considerable suppressed excitement, the voto was taken.\nDaily News.]\u2014While Ottawana may\nexpect an earthquake shock at any\ntime, there is absolutely no danger cf\nvolcanio eruption of the nature of that-*]\nrecently experienced at St. Pierre.\nThis statement made by Dr. Bell of\nthe Geological survey.\nAMERICA WILL\nGIVE RELIEF\nA MILLION DOLLAR DEAL.\nEnglish Capitalists Diokering for tbe\nFamous Stomwinder Property.\nViotoria, May 16.\u2014[Special to Tbe\nDaily Newa.J-It ia statod on most reliable authority that tbe Now lair-\nview Corporation,limited, has received\nan offer of a large sum of money for\none of their properties, the well known\nStemwiudor mine, from an English\ncompany which hue been looking\nabout for a well developed mine in\nBritish Columbia. Tbe price offered\nis elose on to 11,000,000. In all probability tbe offer will be accepted by\ntbe corpoartion within the next two\nmonths.\nCalamity In the West Indies\nBrings the two Countries\nTogether.\nCLOUB GOING DP\nToronto, May IS.\u2014Tbo milium hero\nhave advanced  prico of  Hour twenty\ncunts a barrel.\nBRIGGS WINS AT OTTAWA\nTUB SUPREME COUUT OF CANADA\nGIVES BIM TDK INTEREST\nHE, CLAIMED.\nMERRITT IS SUPERCEDED\nCHARGED THAT HE WAS UNDER-\nMINING EVANS AND MAY\nRE RECALLED.\nKASLO HAPPENINGS\nKaslo, May 14.\u2014[Special lo Tho\nDaily Nows.J-The force of the men\nat the Rambler who wero laid off on\naccount of tbo slide last week wont\nhick to work today.      t\nH. M. Stevonsoa, mnnagcr of tho j\nHighlander mine at Ainsworth, waa\nin Kaslo yesterday and reports a new\nstriko of four feet of solid galena, tho\nore carries H2 por cont. lead.\nThe Trail baseball team have wired\nto the offect thnt thoy are coming here\noo the 24 th prepared to put up n good\nfight either against tbe Kuslo or\nNelson team, or both.\nOttawa, May 15.\u2014[Special to The\nDaily News. J\u2014The minister of militia\nsays thero is no truth in tho story sent\nout from Halifax, that tne war office\nhns asked for 3,000 moro troops for\nservice in South Africa.\nA cable fron South Africa says that\nMcrritt, second in command to colonel\nEvans, has boon superceded by\nColonel Cameron. Mcrritt, who it\nsaid to have been undermining Evans,\nmay bo recalled.\nNapoleon St. Denis, Riiantyman,\njumped over Chaudjore bridgo this\nmorning, nod disappeared in tho falls\nbelow.\nPremier Lnurior was presented in\ntbe Commons chamber today nitfl an\noil painting of himself, given to him\nby admiring Liberals mui friends. A\nlargo number of ladies woro present,\nus wcrs also the loaders of the opposition and several prominent Conservatives. In reply Premier Lnurior said\nhe would act, while in England, as\npremier of Canada, trying to represent all sections ol the peoplo, In\nroferring to Artist Forbes,he said the\ngovernment had not done enough to\ncnuotirage art.\nUNNECESSARY ASSURANCES\nOttawa,   May   15.\u2014[Speoial   to Thu\nWord was received from Ottawa yesterday tbat a verdict for tbe plaintiff\nhad been rendered in tho appeal of\nBriggs vs. Nowswander before thi,\nsupreme court of Canada,\nOn June IStb, 1000, the plaintiff,\nBriggs, wns tbo owner of tne Two\nKids nnd Monarch mineral claims ou\ntbe south fork of Kaslo creok, nnd at\nthnt time the defendants, known as\ntbe Flentot syndicate, staked tho same\nground as the Cork and Dublin, and\napplied for a crown grant. Briggs had\ntbe prior location and he won about to\nenter adverse proceedings when tho\ndefendants entered into a written contract with him of purchase, agroelng\nto give bim $M)0 in cash and to promote a company to tnue over his\nclaims and give him a reasonable\namount of tbe shares. The contract\nwas drawn up b tbe solicitors of the\nFlentot syndicate which Briggs objected to, and be tnen wrote out another contract. Roth documents wore\nexecuted at tho same time and delivered as one. Tbe defendants then re-\nfriso to incorporate a company, and\nallowed Rrlggs' claims to lapse\ncrown grunting the ground under tbe\nlocation of tbe Cork nnd Dublin.\nBriggs Drought action claiming\nfraud and asked to have tbe court set\naside to him in lieu of the shares tbat\nho was supposed to get a certain un\ndivided interest io the property, Tho\naction went to trial before Mr, Justice\nIrving in this city on February ltitb\n11001, when judgment was given dis-\nI missing the action, tho judge stating\n' that he \"did not tbink that defendants\nbehaved properly, out tbe agreement\nwns so drawn that it could not be\nascertained bow much the plaintiff\nshould recover, and as bis agreement\nwas indefinite tbe court could not give\noffect to it.\" The plaintiff then appealed to tbe full court at Vancouver\nthe appeal being heard during tho\nJuno sitting of 1001, and on July\n8th, tbo full court gavo a verdict dismissing tbo plaintiff's appeal with\ncosts.\nFrom tbis judgment the plaintiff\nappealed to the supreme court of\nCanada, claiming that the contract\nwas emorceablo and that tho court)\nshould bave stated what interest he\nwas rightfully entitled to in view of\ntho trend of tne contract of tbe\ndefendants.\nYesterday tbe following 'nlegram\nwas received: \"Briggs appeal unanimously allowed with costs of all\ncouits. Plaintiff given one-quarter\ninterest in both claims, and an\naccount, witii all costs and moneys\nto bo a charge upon defendant's interests in lho property until paid.\"\nTbo counsel in the cane were S. S.\nTaylor for the plaintiff and E. P.\nDavis and C. W. McAnn for tho\ndefendants.\nPresident Roosevelt's Offer\nCreates Good Impression\nIn Britain.\nWashington, May IB,\u2014fly direction\nof the president, Secretary Bay oo\nMay 12th sent the following cablegram to Ambassador Choate at London: \"Express to British government\nthe sympathy of the president and\nthe people of tbis country, in the\nuUliction which has befallen St.\nVincent, nnd our desire to share in\ntho work of aid and rcsoue.''\nLondon, May 15.\u2014Two messages\nexpressing sympathy regarding tbe\nloss of life at St. Vincent have been\nreceived at the foreign olllco here\nfrom tbe United States government.\nOne was private, and the other\nofllcial. Tbo former was verbally\npersented by Mr, Choate, the United\nStates ambassador, whom Lord Laos-\ndowne, the foreign secretary, warmly\nthanked In an official messago which\nonly reaulied Mr. Chamberlain tbis\nafternoon. He immediately wrote to\nthe foreign oflice as previously cabled\ndesiring Lord Lanldowno to very\ngratefully acknowledge it, and to accept President Roosevelt'B offer.\nKingston, Island of St. Vincent\nMay 12.\u2014Scientists, who have come\nhere from the llritish island of Trinidad, predict another volcinic o-uption\nou St. Vincent witbin a short time.\nThe damage done to St. Vincent by\ntbe volcanic eruptions is now known\nto be considerably greater than waa at\nSrst estimated. Tho present unonsi'\nnosa of tbe iobabitans of tho islands\nis increased by tho continuous agita\ntions of the volcanic craters. Friday\nmorning, May Otb largo stones and\nvolcanic dust fell in the neighborhood\nof Georgetown, for two hours, terrifying tbe people there. A cloud of not\nvapor then passed over tbat port. Two\neruptions of less magnitude than the\nfirst occurred Saturday, May loth and\nfrom then until today fire and smoke\nhave been ascending at Intervals from\nthe craters. Owing to the great heat,\nit is still Impossible to approach thu\nSoufriere volcano from tho leeward\nside*\nInteresting discoveries havo been\nmnde in regard to tbe physical changes\non St. Vincent resulting from the\neruptions. Several fissures have boen\nobserved on La Scufriore. Tiro estate\nof Walibou has disappeared nnd has\nboen replaced by an inlet of tho sea,\nupon his return from England,whither\nho goes on May 3lat to attend coronation conference.\nTHE GUILDS ENDORSED\nCarleton Place, May 15.\u2014At tho\nPresbvterino synod of Montreal and\nOttawa, in progress here, rocommeo-\ndutious were adopted yesterday suggesting tho guild form for young\npeople's societies. It was announced\nthat the synod had subscribed $175,-\n000 to tbe common fund of the century\nfnudtand stood first among the synods.\nM'BRIDE M^KES\nA STATEMENT\nSTEPHEN GOES TO TORONTO\nToronto, May 15.\u2014Be*. John VV.\nStephen has been called tc the Church\nof the Covenant, Presbyterian, from\nSt. Adman'k, Winnipeg. Begradu.\nated a year ago from Kcox college,\naud has done niusiunary work In\nItiitisli Columbia,\nDOWN ON 8DOW POSTERS\nToronto, May 15.\u2014The Ireabyterlan\nsynod of Toronto and Kmgttnn bos\npiiBsod a strong resolution appealing\nto tho authorities to suppress immoral\nposters.\nM'GULLOGH'S CLOSE CALL\nWENT OVER COTTONWOOD CREEK\nDAM AND FELL FIFTEEN\nFEET  BELOW.\nMETAL QUOTATIONS.\nLondon, May 16.\u2014Load \u00a311, 13. Od\nNew  Yoik,    May  15.\u2014Bar   silver\n51 l'8c; Copper, stoatly,   Lead,   quiet\nASK FOR ONTARIO'S HELP\nCity Engineer McGullooh bad a narrow escape last evening from being\nsw\u00ab pt through tbe canyon on Cottonwood creek to certain death. As it\nwas be went over tho dam, and waa\nseverely liaised and shaken up, tbe\nfull extent of his Injuries not being\nknown aB yet. Alter tho boom broke,\nbringing down on the dam an immense weight of logs and general\ndebris, the engineer with a small force\nof men went out on tbe dam to try\nand break tbe j\u00bbm which had lorrncd\nat iBe ertgo, nnd so relieve tbe f.train.\nThore was a heavy ovcrflov* and tbe\nworkers hnd to get ahng on the driftwood. In the darknesa Mr. McCulloch\nslipped and went down between the\nlogs, to bo drawn over the crown of\ntho dam the next moment by the swift\ncurrent. The first fall was about\nfifteen feet, and tbe engincor brought\nup on the timber and rock of tbe\napron, forunately grasping a projecting stick which prevented him from\nbeing swept into the rushing tnael\nstrom below tbo narrow ledge oi\nwhich he hnd fallen.\nAftor tho creek passes this ledge it\nsweeps in uncontrollable fury to th\nedge of tlio canyon a hundred feet\nbeyond, where it takes a leap of sixty\nlect, and ibo rnpida and fill succeed\neach other till the level of the bottom\nnear tbe railway yards is reached\nMr. McCulluoh retained sufficient\nstrength to creep out, being close to\nthe edge, and was taken home. His\nescape was a remarkable one.\nIn tho darkness the men nbove\ncould not sco what had happened and\nso were unable to render any assistance In somo manner the report\nreached the railway yards that Ye hnd\nbeen swept through the canyon and\nseveral men wero quickly on the spot\nsearching for the body along the\nbanks, which they fortunately wore\nunable to find.\nGovernment Asked to Drop\nRailway Bill and go to\nthe Country.\nIf This Is Done Business of\nSession Will Be Rushed\nThrough.\nVlctorls, May IS.\u2014[Special to The\nDally News. J\u2014In tbo house this afternoon McBride,leader of ths opposition\nid that erroneous reports wore appearing in, tho up-country papers tu\nthe effect that the opposition wero\nprolonging the session to that\n1'remier Dunsmuir could not go'to\nLondon. He said he would, in a few\nwords, announce his position. The\nopposition policy was not ono of obstruction. They had no desire to prevent the province being suitably rep*\nresonted at London, or to obstruct\nproper legislation. If the government\nwould restore the reserve on tbo foreshores and go to the country immediately on tbe railway p illcy, tbe opposition were willing to permit enpply\nto be voted and necossury legislator) to\nbe passed, Tbis would also permit of\nNorth Victoria being represented, and\ntie felt sure would gratify thu country\nat large. If the government wonld\ngive those two guarantees, tbo opposition would readily assist in the\npassage of supplies und tbe legislation necessary.\nThere war loud applause at this\ndeclaration of tbe opposition principles, but tbe government gave no\nanswer.\nTbe government bad a lergthy\ncaucus this morning when railway\nmatters are understood to have bcon\nup for consideration.\nTonight, Manager Mo Donga 11, of\nOlalla Copper Mining and Smelting\ncompany, will arrive in the city fiom\nNew York. As proof of tbe bona fides\nof his company, he has authorized its\nrepresentatives here to make a definite\nproposal to the government, nnd this\nproposal was filed with tho chief cun-\ninissioner oi lands and works this\nmorning. It is understood to he a\ndefinite undertaking on tbe part of tbo\ncompany that, in return for tbe cash\nsubsidy sought, tbey will commence\nconstruction within sixtv days, irrespective of dominion aid, and nutting\nup ample bonds for tho completion of\ntbe road.\nKAMLOOPS    HOARD    OP   TRADE\nSUBMITS LEAD TARIFF TO\nTBE CONFERENCE.\nWHAT MANUFACTURERS WANT\nToronto, May 15.\u2014Tho executive of\ntbe Canadian manufacturers today\ncompleted tboir report on the resolutions to be suggested ns to the stand\ntaken by Canada at thu coronation\nconference. The manufacturers wnnt\npreferential Undo relations within\nthe empire, and preferential treatment for colonial, goods In tho Brit.\nish market.\nIvnmloopH, May I.'.. \u2014(Special to The\nDaily News,]\u2014At the quarterly gen-\ntrul meeting of tbo Inland Board of\nTrade last nigh, tho following resolution was unanimously adopted among\nothers, for submission to tbe confer-\nenco of boards of trade of tho dominion to be held in Toronto in June.\nThat, whereas repeated efforts\nbave been made by tho boards of trado\nof Kootenay and Kamloops to secure\nfrom tho dominion government\npromise to readjust tbo tariff on manufactured imports of lead products{\nand whereas no action has been taken\nIn tho matter; resolved that this hoard\ninvites the cooperation of the conference In securing such a rcadjustinent\ncf the tariff in respect to importu lead\nproducts as will meet tho requirements of tbo silvcr-lund mining industry in British Columbia.\"\nHAMILTON'S BIGULANDfiRS\nHamilton, May 16,\u2014Thfl project fur\nthe establishment of a Highland regl\nment has been revived here, nnd a let\ntor received from the minister o\nmilitia to lion. T. W. Wood, nays he\nwill take up thu matter  immediate!}\nNELSON EASY VICTORS.\nTho lacrosse game yesterday between tho Grand Forks and Nelson\nteams resulted In an eony victory for\ntbo borne player**. The Nelson team\nwas unfortunate in thu matter of\nweather, but considering the uncer\ntalnty as to whether it would he\nnossiblo to pull tho match off between the showers, tho attendance\nwas very encouraging. The condition\nof tho ground was not favorable to\ngood play but the homo mon had\nmuch tho best of it, scoring six\ngames tu tbe visitors cyphor. A\nsmoker at tlio opera house lust overling, wound up thu reception to tbe\nvisitors, and, judging by the hearty\napplause that greeted all the numbers in a long nnd well selected programme, wnB thoroughly enjoyed.\nThe opera houso was well filled, and\nthe ovening passed oh* without a\nhitch, R. s. Connie n\u00abttd as matter\nnf ceremonies and introduced tho\nvarious performers. The Nolson team\nwill just about break ovon on the\nexpenses of tbo rnnleh nnd dosiro to\nthank all who contributed to thin\nvery desirable financial condition.\nSTILL IN ERUPTION\nKingston. Island of St. Vincent,\nMay 15.\u2014No person has yet boen ablo\nto approach within eight miles of lho\nnew crater of the Soufriere volcano\nbut judging frcui what can be seen\nfrom a considerable distance the lake\nat tho summit of the mountain hns\ndisappeared. The numerous fislores\nin the mountain sides continue tu\nthrow out vapor, During the afternoon of Monday, n dense volume of\nsteam and smoke arose from the\nvolcano, and the wholt island was\ncovered by a peculiar mist. The\ninhalation of obnoxious vapors is Increasing tbe spread of siekno^s. An\nambulance corps from thu island cf\nBarbados has arrived here. Starvation\nthreatens the nopujneo of the afflicted\ndistricts. Mutilated bodies are tied\nwith ropes and dragged to tho trenches\nwhere tbey aro buried. Sometimes\nbodies are cremated. The local government is feeding and sheltering about\n3,(XX) refugees. Subeciiptions for (be\nrelief of tlie sufferers aro being raised\nin   all   the    llritish     West     Indian\nislands.\nARRESTED FOR THEFT\nToronto,May ir,.-,lninCH Alexander,\ntreasurer of the Toronto opera house\nwas arrested lart night, charged with\nthe theft of 81,500, lie t* abort is bis\nncr mints to thai extent,\nASSIZE COURT\nIn lho ease of Briggs vs. Trust Mia\ning company which came up for henr-\n\u25a0ng yesterday judgment was reserved\ntill Saturday. The caso is nn adverse\naction offect ing tlio 10 to i and Stars\nand Stripes mineral claims near\nKaslo.\n'J lie case of Agnefl West vs. Waterman has been postponed by consent to\nthe next sitting of the court, costs to\nbu costs in the ensc.\nThis morning the ense of Dickinson\nvs. Felt, tne last cn*o on tho list will\ncome up for homing.\nIn tho interpleader Of Cinsset vs.\nFred Irvine nnd Co., the judge tetter*\nday stated that he would pronouneo\njudgment on Saturday.\n The Daily News   Friday,  May 16, iqoj\n\u25a0 \u25a0\nMEN\n\u25a0 \u25a0\nYou are aware that we keep the best and most up-to-'late stock of Men's\nFurnishings in the City ami that our prices are right,\nFine nil Wool 0o6liino.-o Hoso, double\nlipcl nnd toe, tnst colors, 4 pr tor $1\n.Fine double thread Bnlbi'ig^un uu-\ndorwo&r, iioiitly linisbed, all hi\/x*b, per\nsuit $1\nMen's Hue Onmbric soft front shirts*,\nnsHorted colors, all sizes 3 for tl\nMen's White Cambric dress shirts,\nsingle nnd double plont, linoti bosom\nspeoiiil $1\nMen's Pvjiiinns, Sue Ceylon Flnnnol\nsilk stripe, custom made, per suit ft\nMen's Hats, New York styles in Fedoras und  SLilfn,   in the fnsliionablo\nBlue,\nshades  Oaks,   Qrevp,   Elrotrio\nBrown, Black, S2, 4i.&),12.76.\nMen's colored Shirts, English makes,\nsoft front, Potter's best Cambrics,\nprice, $1.25\nMen's Sweaters, the celebrate! Turn-\nbull make, white, navy, brown, till\nsizes, 52.25\nMen's onmbrio N'ght Kobes, plnin\nand twilled, noally trimmed, well mnde\nspeoinl SI\nMen's Wash Tics, Toi'livs, Four\nHand, many designs, 2 for 25o.\nMen's Linen Dollars, a variety ot\nstyles, 8 for 50o.\nTrunks, Valises, Travelling Bags, Telescopes, Trunk Straps just received.\nSEE OUR WINDOW.\nHudson's Bay Co.\nSilver\nWare\nFor\nWedding\nPresents\nWHEN you are in search of something attractive in the way\nof Wedding Presents, you\nshould make an inspection\nof my carefully chosen lines\nof Silver Ware, Cut Glass\nWare, Statuary,and Silver\nNovelties of all kinds.\nThese were purchased at\nprices which enable you to\nsave money and me to\nmake it. Special Bargains\noffering in Sewing Machines, the Wheeler & Wilson at $50.   See them.\nJACOB DOVER\nBAKER ST.. NELSON. THEJEWELER.\nHail and Express Orders Receive Prompt Attention.\nI Teetzel's vj,olet Toi*let\nAmmonia, i\nJ  the skin and complexion.\n\u2022 -  \u2014\n\u2022 Prepared\nA delightful and refreshing addition to water for\nPRICE\n25c per Bottle.:\nW.F. TEETZEL b CO. Druggists, W\u00b0i\nNelson,\n...\nThe Canadian Bank of Commerce\nWith Which U Am.li.m.lca\nThe Bank of British Columbia.\nHEAD OFFICE-TORONTO.\nPaid up Capital, 18,000,000;   Reserve   Fund,  (3,000,0001\nAggregate Resources Over SOB,000,000.\nHON. GEO. A. HOX, President.      B. E. WALKER, General Maun\u00ab\u00ab\nn-iDn.lt. Recfllvnl .nil Interest Allowed.\nI\nSaving's Bank Department HKr\u00a3teTp\u00ab c.\u00bbr\nNelson Branch.\nGRANGE V. HOLT, Manager.\nTLbelRo^alSSa nfc ofGanaba\nIncorporated 1869,\n\u2022t.Mt.tN.M 1 Bent,      \u2022\nHead Office, llallfnst\n\u2022    \u2022     \u2022  $I,IM,HMb\nuunumT Managor, KtlhOn L Venue, Montreal.\n\u2022 aylUl Pild-.ii*,     ,\nThomas E. Kenny, President;\nUltANCHKS IN IlKITISH COLUMHIA-Omnd Forkfl,   Nanaimo, Nolson, ItoHsliwd. Vancouver, Vnncotivur Knst Knd, Victoria.\nAccount** received on tbo imi-l fttxorablo terms.   Inh-ir.-l nlloweit on Hpcclaldoposltfl and on\nSaving Hiink accoutiUt.   General ItaukliiK Uunim-HM Transacted,\nGEO- KYDD, Manager, Nelson, Branch\n\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666 \u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666 ******************** ********\u201e*****+*+m (>v,\nBANK OF MONTREAL\nJ KwtiibllHlicd 1817, Incorporated by Act of I'arllaiinint,\nCapital   (all  paid   up)   $12,000,000.00,      Rest    J;,rcc,crc.fo\nUndivided Profits, $876,531.64.\nHKAD OFFICE, MONTKKAL\na    Itt. Hon. I\/inl Hlmthcotia and Mount Royal, Q, C. M.O., IVcnli1ent.  Hon  O  A\n1 Drummond, Vlco-Prosldoiiti K. s, OlotiBton, Gonontf Managor*,       '    '\n\u2666     \u00bbIn jii .:rniirli   rtirnrr Ituhrr nml Kmtlriui) HN.   A, II,  Kurhltnan, Wnnnnrr.    <]\n\u2666^\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666^\u2666\u2666\u2666^\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u26661\nJ. T. WILSON\nGeneral te&mlngi A Bpeoialty of moving Furniture sod Pianos. No l Dry\nWood, all lengths. Orduni left Bt the\nWestitraOnnadlan Employment Ageuoy\nreceive prompt nnd careful ntteuliun.\nTELEPHONE 2S4B\nAbout tbat second-hand article of\nyours You'll aell it if you'll advertise it In Tile Daily News,\nMRS. D, B. MURRAY\nGrnrtimto In Vocal and Instrumental\nMusic, Is prepared to receive pupils in\nVoice dull lire nnd Pinna Lntert Con-\nlorviitory Methods lunula. For furilior\nparliciiliira apply nt Studio rooin B, Mo-\nJonalil Mock, Onrniir Joscpliino and\nVernon Streotfl.\nCustom   blanks al Tlie Dnilv How\nofllco.\nIMPERIAL BANK\nOF CANADA\nCapital (Paid Up) - $2,300,000\nRest     ....      J 1,850.000\nHEAD OFFICE! TORONTO, ONTAUIO.\nBranched In Northwest Territories, Provtncofl\nof l.rlllsli Colmnbla, Manitoba, Ontario and\nQuebec.\nT. R. MEItUITT. President\nD. It. WILKIE, Vlco-frosldont und Ucncral\nManagor\nK*. H A Y Assls-iint Gontmil Munnxer\nVV Moffat Chiol Inupcotor\nNELSON  BRANCH\nA gonornl banking bunln-nss transacted.\nSavings Dopartmoiit-DopoBiU received and\nInterest allowed.\nDrafts Hold, avallablo In all parts of Canada,\nUnited SIiiI'-h mid Kurope.\nSpecial attention Khun to collection*.\nJ. M. LAY, Manager.\nThe Daily News\nPubHwlicd      Nclnon evory morning, oxcop*\nMonday*, by\nF. J. DKANK.\n\u2022SUBSCRIPTION HATHiSl\nDally per month, by oarrier \u2014   65c\nDally, per month, by mail    fiOo\nDolly, per year, by oarrier. 17 00\n\u2022'tally, por yew, by mull   5 00\nDally, por year foreign.  900\nTHB   v7RJ\u00a3Kby NKWS.\n.Voekly, per half year  \u201e 1125\nvVoekly.por yoar  3 00\n'Voekly, per yow, t jrelgn , 8 00\n\"nbscriptiODB iu variably In advanoe,\nADVERTISING RATES\nDisplay Advertisement.*. *H per Inch pc\nmonth; Display Advert IsemontH, 25 eontfl po\nInch each insertion leu* than month; Locals, l\ncents per lino each Insertion; ClafslAod Advor-\ntlriomenU), 1 cent per word each insertion;\nWholesale Cants, $2.60 por month; Society\nCttrdu, 12.60 por month.\nparticular line of business, or erect\ntheir 6wn lines and bocome tbe competitors of private enterprise. In\neiihev ease tliere would of necessity be\na large initial outlay, but after this\nthe cost of extend it g tbe system could\nbe met out of the earnings provided\ntbe rates were not cut too fine. We\nhave, la a measure, tho experience of\ncheap postage toguide tw. There was\na time when it cost a shilling or more\nto send a letter a comparatively short\ndistance. When tbo rate was reduced it\nwas with fear and misgiving, but the\nresult cleared all that nway. When\nthe penny postage was inaugurated\nthe timid again had douh'.s, but again\nthe result justified tbe reform. The\npost oflice business increased to an\nenormous extent.\nWith cheaper telegraphs, this means\nof communication will be more generally used and the less the rate, the\ngreater will be the number of telegrams Bent, nud by reason of this io-\ncrane the margin of profit, out of\nwhich to construct a reserve fund,will\ngrow. If the^federal government can\nbe induced to take up this subject aud\nsecure possession of existing lines and\noperate them at a mimimum charge\nthero would be no need for questions\ninvolving a cjmplaint against prohibitive rates. With the telegraph\nsystem under government control the\ntariffs ouuld be so reduced as to throw\nthem open to general use of thousands\nwho now only use tbis means of communication ut rnte intervals. The\nresults that would follow would be to\nthe undoubted advantage, iu every\nnay, both from a social and^commer-\ncial point of view, of all concerned,\nIt is tbe duty ol a government to perfect the control and operational all\npublio utilities, and tbo only way to\nperfect the telegraphs is for tne (statu\nto own them.\nWESTERN DEVELOPMENT\nTbe Iminigratnn statistics for the\nfirst three months of tbis year show\nthat tbe tide of homeeeekers in tbe\nw\u00abst is on tho flow and thut Canada,\nand especially that part cf it to\nwhich tbe bulk of the settlers are\nmailing tbeir way, will io a very\nabort time add very materially to the\namount of farm produce, grain, and\ncattle Canada puts upon the market,\nDuring the month of April no fewer\nthan 7,343 settlers entered Canada\nfrom the (J.S, and the \"old country,\"\nmaking a total of 10,009 this yoar,\nAnd still the tide flown on. Some of\nit is reaching tho Pacific co\u00bbt and a\npart\u2014but a very small part is coming\nto this province. Tho Iuland Ssntinel\nhas called attention recently to tbe\nadvisability of reaching out for a\nmore liberal share of tbitt western im\nmigration and is of opinion that by\nthe adoption of tbe proper Byatem of\nirrigation works much of the objection raised against the dry belt, be'\ncause of an alleged shortage of water\nfor irrigation purpose?,would bo overcome and tbe settlement ot those\nlands encouraged.\nThat audi would be the natural\nsequence no one can gainBay. The\noffect of bringing into use and undor\ncultivation the large arena of arid\nlands of tbo interior would be of more\nthan local import only. Hy tbe increased production of farm and dairy\nproduce for which Kootouny is the\nnatural market these supplies would\nbe cheaper in the mining camps and\nthus what would result in good to\nthe dry lands In tho valleys of the\nThompson and upper Fraser rivers\nand their branches, wonld also tc-\ndound to the welfare of this section\nof tlie country. The interests of many\ndistricts are very closely interwoven\nand the best intorests of ono are often\nbest served by assisting in all tbat\ntends to promote the welfare of another. Thero are in the valleys lu the\nKootonay district many areas that\nwould benefit by a system of irrigation and we would be doubly repaid\ntor any assistance and support given\nto the scheme of a well planned Bye\ntern, as the Sentinel suggests. Our\ncontemporary Is doing good work by\nendeavoring to arouse interest in a\nsubject tbat is of paramount impcrt-\nanco to a very extensive portion ot\ntbe province.\nMoney spent hy the government in\nputting an efficient plan ot irrigation\ninto operation would do more for the\nactual development of llritish Columbia thnn by throwing it broadcast\nwithout proper safeguards into the\ncapacious maw of the railway promoter. There ate more ways than one\nto develop tl... reeources of the prov\niuce and while tho necessity for rail\nway construction is undisputed the\nbenefits that accrue from tho cultivation of the soil aro so material that by\nrendering a larger urea available for\ncultivation tbe very foundation for the\nnpbuilding of n prosperous people is\nlaid.        ___^___\nSTATE OWNED TELEfJRAPHS\nState ownership of telegraphs in\nComma would mean one of two\nthings, oi au admixture of both ; the\ngovernment would either have to purchase tbe rights, stock, and good will\nof existing companies engaged in thnt\nThe 10th Annual\nEXCURSION\nof Kootenay Lodge No-161.0,0. P.\nwill he ran\nTO KASLO\nVICTORIA  DAY\nSaturday, May 24\nThe pfllntiul\nS.   S. KASLO\nwill leave the City Wharf,\nNelson at 8.30 a. m. arriving at Kaslo at 11.30\na. m. Returning will\nleave Kaslo at 7.30 p. m.,\narriving at Nelson at\n10,30 p.m.\nEDITORIAL NOTE?.\nTbe provirciiil government lias re-\nfusod to oorao to the assiiitance of tbo\ncity of KoKBia-i'l to tbe exttmt.of giv\nlug tbe citv \u00bbd additional grant ot\n83,701), tbo amount of the climated\nilnflcit for echool purposes for tbe current year. Insteadjjthe government has\nexpressed ita willingness to amend\nthe Municipal act, so that tbe cily\nmay increase the school tax rate from\ntwo to five mills. There is therefore\nnothing for it hut an increase of the\nthree mills io the Rossland tax rate,\nBEER\nBEER\nBIG SCHOONER\nlOo.\nClub Hotel\nThe only Good Beer in\nNelson.\nE. J, CURRAN. Prop.\nHalf and Half, all the\nsame, 10 cents1 -\nIMPERIAL\nHOTEL\nLATE SILVER KING HOTEL\nFinest and Bust Bar In th< City.\nThs beat Brands of Liquor.\nand Cigars.\nRATES\n$1.00 AND SI.E0 PEB DAY\nJOSEPH harwood, \u2022  Proprietor\nBMTLETT HOUSE\nFormerly Clarke Hotel,\nThe BfHi ifti per Hay IMunf In BfcUon.\nNone but white help employed, Tlio bar Iho\nbent, _____\nG. W. BARTTilTT, - Prop.\nTHE  PALM\nHEADQUARTERS FOR\nHAZEL-WOOD ICE CREAM\nWholesale and Retail Agents.\nR. M.   R,  BAND\nwill furnish music both going and coming.\nJob Printing\nAs a Work of Art.\nDon't tail lo sic the Nelson baseball team ' 'do up\" the Kaslo-Slocan\ncrack bat-wielders.\nRETURN TICKETS $1.80\nChildren, Half Fare.\nWALL\nPAPER\nOur New Stock is now open,\ncomprising,'\nA ftry Fi Duo of\nThe] Prices Will Suit the\nTimes.\nCanada Drug and\nBook Co., Ltd.\nPorto Rico Lumber\nCo., Limited,\nYARDS   AT   KELSON'AND ROSSLAND\nMILL AT FORTO RICO SID1NO.\nRough and\nDressed Lumber,\nShingles, Mouldings.\nA-1 White Plie Lumber Always li\nStock.\nWo winy ft complete Htook of Cowt Flooring\nCoiling. IiiHldo KinlHh, Turned Work, Swih and\nDoom, tipoclal O .ler work will rooolve prompt\nattention! Mali orders Bollolted.\nPorto RicoLumber Co.,\nLiniTRD.\nHead Offloa-Hendrrx nnd Varnnn \u00bba. Nd<*on\nd. nnn * co.\n11.MVXI mill (TOUH, KMHAI.MI.K*\nerai HEtuK in an\nFINEST PARLORS IN THE CITY.\nSpecial   prices   for  parties  and\npicnics.\nPhone 243.\nK.-tt.-CBIOCk.\nHIGH GRADE COFFEE\nKootenay Coffee Co.\nRoasters of Choke Coffees.\nQuantities   to   suit   at   wholesale\nprices\nOur Java and Mocha at 40o, and Our\nChoice Blend at 25c.\nis the best value for the money,\nWe guarantee satisfaction if you\nbuy or order direct from us.\nPure Choice Teas\nAll varieties and grade.\nKOOTENAY COFFEE CO.\nWest Baker St. Tel 177. P O, Box 182\nThis is the standaid which the\nDaiiy.News JrB Rih.ms intends to\nset for the Commercial Printing of\nSouthern Kootenay. The News\nJobbing Department is to be fitted\nup with this end in view. None\nbut the best of workmen will be\nemployed, and it is the intention to\nCover the\nEntire\nField of\nCommercial\nPrinting.\nThis is well worth bearing in\nmind, as the quality of the stationery used by a business man or firm\nis often taken as an index to the\nenterprise ard standing of the user.\nFor this reason it will pay you to\nget the best. First-class work\nand competitive prices at\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nJob Rooms.\n$\n&\n&\nSi\nI\nSi\ns\ns\ns\ni\ni\nS:\nS:\nS\nS\nS\nS\nSi\ns\ns\ns\ns\ns\nSi\ns\ns\ns\ns\ns\nS:\n1\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nRAILWAY\n24th May\nVICTORIA DAY\nEXCURSION\n$2 RETURN $2\n150 MILES ON THE COLUMBIA\nRIVER ON\nTHES.S.EOSSLAND\nFROM ROBSON\nLeave Nelson at 8 a. m., arrive\nback at io p. in.\nGREAT NORTHERN\nRAILWAY.\n\/g^ut\nrim\nNONE BETTER.\nSOLID VE8TIBULED TBAINB.\nPALA0E D1HIH0 AND 0B8EBVATIOS\n0AB8.-MEAL8\u00bbU0AETB.\n8 Hours at Deer Park\n4 Hours at Edgewood\nAn unusual opportunity to see\nthe famous Columbia river, Rapids,\nGlaciers and Waterfalls\nFull particulars from If cal Agents\nH. Ii. BROWN,\nOity Agent. Kelson\nSpokane Falls A\nNorthern R'v.\nClose connection Eaet and Westbound at Spokane with trains of the\nSpokane Falls and Northorn RnilwAy,\nD reet connection at St. Paul without change of depot with all trains for\nChicago, Toronto. Montreal, New York\nand all points East and South.\nLeares Spokane daily for Eut at 9:401 m\nLeaves Spokane daily lor West at 7:20 a-m\nLeaves Spokane daily tor Vert at 800 p-m.\nWest-bound trains make direct connection for Victoria and Vancouver,\nPortland, San Francisco, and all points\non the Sound,\nDuring the season of navigation East\nhound trains connect at Duluth with\nthemagniflcentateainshlps North-West\nand North Land of theNortbern Steamship Oompany Line, operated in connection with tbe Qreat Northern Bail-\nway.\nFor further Information, aps, fold\ners, etc., apply to any agent of Spokane\nFalls k Northern Hy, Kaslo ft Slocan\nKy., Kooteial Railway k Navigation\nOr., or to\nH. BRANDT,\nOity Pasa. and Tkt* Agt, W 701 W,\nRi- orsido Ave,, Spokane, Wash.\nO. K. TAOKABURY. Local Agent,\nN-.raon.BO\nNelson A Fort\nSheppard RY\nRed Mountain R'v.\nBUFFET  PARLOR\nCAR\nBetween Nelson and Spokane\nNelson to Seattle - 21 hours\nNelson to Vancouver . 26 hours\nNelson to Victoria      -     26 hours\nKootonay Railway and Ni\nCompany, Ltd.\nVICTOFtiADAY\nMAY 24.\nEXCURSIONS\nS. S. KASLO\nOddfellows' Excursion to Kaslo\nI.vKiilwnH9011.111, LrKuloRatora7.90p.in.\nRETURN FARE $1.80\nLeave DAI TRAIN        Anivi\n0:20 a.m Spokane 7:15 p.m\n12:31! p.m Rossland 4:30 p.m\n10:30 a.m.... Mountain Hip, ro.\n0:40 a.tn Nelson 6:45 p.m.\nH. A. JACKSON, O. P. * T.A,\nSpokane i Wanr\na. K, TAOKABURY.\nAgent, Nelion, B.\nS.  S.   INTERNATIONAL\nK. P. EXCURSION TO\nKOKANEE   PARK\nArrive NKLSON Leave\nII IS a. m .,..'.'. 0.00a. in*.\nI.Up. in Il.sun.m\n11*11. in  1.1011. 111\nI'Wli. in  4 90p. Ill\n10.30 p. a 7.MI11. in\nBOB1RT HIVWU\n*  .   \"\u2022\"Mir, Kaale.O, O\nO, K. Tioummi AxmIl Ntlm b. 0.\n The  Daily Nkws, Friday, May i6, 1903\nThe Story of\nthe Black Deg*\nBy C. K. BURROW,\nThe following mysterious story la taken\nfrom C. W, Burrow's now book, \"Patricia\nof the Hills.\" The narrator Is an\nelderly lady, Mrs. Charterla, who relates\nthe Incident as an example of Irish folktale, but who more than half believes It:\nMY grandfather, Patrick Gavan,\nof Fermoy, was a quiet man\nto look at\u2014slight, neither tall\nnor short, with a face that\nwas always pale, dead pale, and eyes\nthat never flinched from man or devil.\nBut, though he looked quiet, he was\nas wild a roysterlng fellow as ever\nstepped on two feet, ready to do the\nllrst thing that came into his head,\ngood or bad; It was his misfortune that\nthe bad came tbe easiest. He 'had a\nway with .him that made him welcome\nwherever he went, and many a man,\nand many a woman, too, rued the day\nthat Patrick Gavan's -black eyes first\ncrossed theirs. Well, he married at last,\nand took his bride to the bouse on the\nbanks of the Bfackwater. She was a\nlovely, sweet creature, gentle and timid, as you may sec from her portrait\nthere; they were as badly matched as\ntiger and fawn, and she soon began to\ndroop. He was not unkind to her; my\ngrandfather never Ill-used a woman;\nbut after a time he took to his old\nways, and she just sat down and\nwatched and wondered where It would\nend. He was a terribly hard drinker,\nbut his bead was so strong that he\nhimself seldom got drunk, and one of\nhis delights was to get together a\ndoxen of his wildest neighbors at a*\ngreat dinner, and see them go under\nthe tabic one WH^me. When this kind\nof thing wns going on, his wife would\nsit In her own room and listen and\ntremble; once she had tried to get In,\nbut the door was locked, which frightened her more than If she had seen the\npoor fools soaking their brains within.\nShe crept back to her little oratory and\nspent the night on her knees, praying\nfor herself, husband and the child that\nwas to call him father.\nWhen the child was born, and for a\nmonth after, my grandfather was quiet\naB a Iamb; that was the happiest time\nof tho woman's life, for he would carry the boy up and down, and up and\ndown, never tiring, while she watched\nhim from the bed she was too weak to\nleave. She thought to herself that her\nprayers were answered, and that Patrick was n changed man; and he saw\nwhat was in her mind nnd kept a tight\nhold on himself; but after a time the\ndevil got him by the throat again, and\nhe must needs be at the old tricks.\nThe fancy that took him was to have\none of bis dinners, and he arranged It\nmil without letting a word reach his\nwife; but, In case she should hear, he\nInvited Father Coghlan, the priest who\nhad christened the boy, with the rest.\nWhen the night came the poor sick\nlady was lying up in her room, and he\nwent to her before the guests arrived\n\u2014I dare say feeling remorseful at\nheart\u2014and sat down with the boy on\nhis knees.\n\"Is It cold?\" she asked.\n\"Yes, and with snow on the ground,\"\nsaid he.\n\"I'm sorry tor that.\"\n\"Why, mo chroidho?\"\n\"Nothing,\" she Bald, and stretched a\nthin hand to him across the bed. He\ntook It In his and kissed It \"It's a\ncold llttlo hand,\" he said.\n\"As cold as a snowflake,\" said she,\nand smiled softly, and asked for the\nboy. He laid him on her breast, the\nchild that was to be my father, and\nshe closed her eyes and seemed to sleep.\nThen he went down to receive the mad\nguests.\nAfter the eating was over and the\nwine carried In (those wero the claret-\ndrinking days, you must remember),\nmy grand lather locked the door, as\nusual, and clapped a brace of loaded\npistols on the table. \"The man who\nstirs from this room,\" said he, \"beforo\nthe last bottle's empty, knows what to\nexpect.\"\nEveryone there, except Father Coghlan, was used to this business of the\npistols. The priest looked from them to\nthe locked door and back at Gavan\nwith a queer light In his eyes, but he\nsaid nothing\u2014only rubbed his chin and\ndrew his under Up back over his tenth.\nWell, the drinking began, and went\non hour after hour. My grandfather\nsat pale nnd upright at the-head of his\ntable, while the air grew hotter antf\nthe fumes of the liquor recked stronger\nand stronger; the table was nil\nsplashed and dabbled with wine, men's'\nbeards were wet with It; some of them\nfell forward with spread arms and\nslept; others slipped to the ground and\n'lay there like logs.\nI know this Is hot a pretty story for\na woman to tell, but It's true, and I\ncan sec It all. God help the men, I\nsay, who did such things!\nThere Patrick Gavan sat, and his\nown glass was never empty; neither\nwas the priest's, but when he rat see?\nIt it was only to moisten his lips. All\nthe time he watched my grandfather,\nand ever his face grew harder, antf\ngray with a kind of bitter sadness. At\nlast Gavan saw that he was not drinking, and rose.\n\"Father Coghlan,\" he said, \"drink.\"\n\"A host does not command his\nguests,\" said the priest.\n\"I command mine,\" cried the other.\n\"I shnll not drink, nnd I bid you open\nlowed him. The dog's coat was dry,\nand his feet were dry, and he made no\nmarks upon the polished floor.\nThe creature ran around and sniffed!\nat the drunken sleepers, turned aside\nfrom the priest, and then paused before\nGavan, with his eyes shining like coals,\nand his tongue lolling out at the side\nof his mouth. It was no dog of my\ngrandfather's, nor had he ever seen It\nbefore.\n\"Go to hell!\" he cried, and flred full\nat Its head. The lock snapped, and\nthere \"the dog still stood, wntohing, with\nhis wicked eyes fixed on Gavan, and\nhis red tongue quivering. Just then\nthey both heard a cry, clear and shrill\nas the call of a peewit; the dog lifted\nhis 'black head, and in a second had\nJumped through the open window without a sound.\nThere was no need for the priest to\nspeak again; In a flash my grandfather\nhad the door open, and they both ran\nupstairs to the wife's room. She was\nlying dead, with the child asleep on\nher breast, and on her hand, as plain\nas letters in a book, was a red mark In\nthe shape of a dog's tongue.\nYou might have supposed that this\nwould change my grandfather's life.\nWell, It did, for Borne years. He looked\nafter the boy, taught him to ride as\nsoon as he could walk, gave him alt the\nfreedom that was good for him, and\nperhaps more, and saw him grow up\nInto a fine healthy lad who could hold\nhis own In any exercise of skill or endurance, and had a sound brain as\nwell. But I think it must be the hardest thing In the world for a man who\nhas once led the kind of life my grandfather was used to to leave It altogether behind him. When the boy no longer needed his personal protection, and\nthe occupation of teaching him had\npassed to other hands, he began to cast\nback to the old ways; and If these had\nbeen bad In the young man they were\nten times worse In the old. Yet he had\na curious delicacy In everything that\naffected my father, gave him good\ncounsel from the deeps of his own experience, and concealed from him the\nunsound plnces In his own life. But\nthe lad heard stories and kept his eyes\nopen, and knew many things which\nhis father would have given his heart's\nblood to conceal. The boy, however,\nhad a clean, upright soul, and his\nmother's strain to the good; and so\nescaped* the Are.\nOne day my grandfather rode back\nwith his horse all a-foam from a place\nsome twenty miles away, where he had\nbeen on no good errand. Times and\ncustoms had changed for the better,\nand there were no young men to All up\nthe place of the dead who had been his\nfellows In his wicked carousals. But\nthere were still Ave or six left, and\nthese he had bidden to a dinner; my\nfather, he thought, was away, but during the day he had returned, and, hearing what was afloat, had made up his\nmind to slip into the butler's little\nroom, which opened out of the dining-\nroom, when the servants were dismissed.\nWhen Patrick Gavan reached home\nIt was already evening; he had ridden\nhard and tar, and was In no condition\nto enter upon the night's work, but\nthnt fact made hlin the muru determined to see It through. He dressed\nhurriedly, and by tho time the guests\nwere to arrive he was ready. But the\nhour struck and passed, and no guests\ncame; and then, turning to the calendar, he found that he had made a mistake In the date, and that that day's\npreparations should have been made\nfor the morrow. However, he sat down\nto table, where all the covers were laid,\nand had every course served, and the\nwine brought In; and when the time\ncame, he sent tho servants away,\nlocked the door, and laid the pistols\nbeside him.\nIt was winter again, and the night'\nwas still and cold. The house was as\nquiet as an empty room, so that the\nsound of the Blackwater running at\nthe foot of the garden could be heard\nwhere my grandfather sat. He shivered, and threw more logs on the Are,\nwhich already blazed like a furnace;\nthen he began to drink.\nThe hours slipped by until It was\npast midnight, at which time Gavan\nrose and addressed each empty place\nIn turn, as though his friends were \u2022\nthere, asking them to drink with him;\nbut there were only six places laid, and\nhe called twelve names, and the last\nthat he called was Father Coghlan's.\n\"Father Coghlan,\" he cried, \"drink!'\"\nHe stood with his glass raised, and\nhis gaze fixed at the level of a man's\neyes, his pale face set In a grim smile.\nHe saw the priest before him as plainly as I see you, and he must have\nheard him spenk as well, for after a\ntime he said:\n\"I hear nothing.   Drink!\"\nAnd then, on a sudden, there came\na scratching at the door. The glass\nslanted In his hand and some wine\nsplashed upon the table; but he stead-\nled himself with an oath, drank, and\nsat down; still looking toward the place\nwhere the priest had sat. Presently\nthe scratching ceased, but a moment\nlater It sounded from beneath the window. At that, Gavan's Jaw dropped,\nand a sweat broke out upon his white\nface, but he did not stir. The scratching went on, low at first, and then\nlouder and fiercer, until It seemed like\na voice calling to him to open; after a\ntime It drew him to his feet and a few\npnees toward the window, and ns It Increased It drew him farther, until\nat last his hand was on the bar of the\nshutter; and he threw the shutter back\nand opened the window, and a black\ndog leapt Into the room. His coat was\nwet, as though ho had swum the river,\nand his head was wet, but he made no\nHis eyes wero\nblazing, and his tongue was lolling out\nsnld the !of bis mouth; but there wns no sound\nIn God's |of breathing nor any sign of moisture\nabout the Jaws.\nMy grandfather walked back to the\ntable, took up a pistol, and sat down.\nThe dog ran around the room, Boiitlng\nnt every vacant place, and then paused1\nbefore Gavan, He took a steady sight\nand pulled the trigger; the lock\nsnapped, and there the dog stood still,\nwith his wicked eyes on my grandfather's face.\nAnd thnn my father, who was watching all this from the little room, heard\nshrill   cry, though    whether\nClavnn uttered It he could not toll, nnd\nthe black dog ran past tho chair and\n. Tue Antiquity of Trousers.\nWOMAN'S ever-changing fashions In dress have afforded ths\nmen much amusement, and\nhave given the satirical writers any amount of material for their\npens. U is clearly a case of people living in glass houses and throwing\nstones. Men's fashions have passed\nthrough quite as many changes, and it\nIs doubtful If the petticoat Itself has\nhad a more varied history than have\nthose grim articles trousers. \"To tho\neye of vulgar Logic,\" said Buskin,\n\"what\" Is man? An omnivorous biped\nthat wears Breeches.\" There has never\nbeen a Petticoat Bible, yet In the year\n1560 an edition of the Scriptures was\nprinted at Geneva known as the\n\"Breedhea Bible.\" The name arose from\nan unusual rendering of Genesis IU. 7.\nAdam and Eve, Instead of making\nthemselves aprons of flg-leavcs, made\nthemselves \"breeohes.\" There is no re-\noord of Eve wearing petticoats, yet the\nfirst man Is reported to have worn\nbreeches. The ancients wore breeches\n\u2014divided skirts probably\u2014on horseback only, resuming their flowing draperies when they dismounted. Among\nthe Romans, trousers, which were\ncalled bnaccae, were worn only by the\nsoldiers who were exposed to cold\nnorthern climates. They were homemade, to Judge from the pictures, and\nnot In the least stylish. Among the\nGreeks such garments were confined\nto slaves, the swells reserving the chiton for themselves. The first faint foreshadowing of trousers as we now seo\nthem was In the time of Richard I. of\nEngland. In Spain, aa well as In tho\nLow Countries, trunk hose, mercilessly\nslashed, stuffed and decorated, were\nthe smart things among the elegants.\nThe story Is related of a luckless courtier who, having seated himself on a\nchair upon which was a projecting\nnail, was suddenly obliged to rise to\npay his devoirs to his sovereign. Instantly several pecks of dry wheat dust\ngushed out of his \"galloons,\" and the\nunhappy courtier stood there diminished to a spindle and cutting a very\nsorry figure. During the reign of\nOhnrles I. of England, when Vandyck'a\ninfluence was being felt, breeches became of uniform width, open at tho\nknee, where they were fringed or bordered with lace and fastened with ribbons. Trousers comes from Old French:\ntrusses, a kind ot hose, from trousse,\na truss. Pantaloons owes its origin to\nSt. Pantaleone, a patron saint of the\nVenetians. His name was commonly\nreceived at baptism hy the Venetians,\nand was by th\u00abm transferred to this\ngarment, which they very much affected. The tenn \"sansculotte\" originated\nIn France. It meant,, properly speaking, a fellow without breeches, and\nwas used as a term of derision by tho\narlBtocmttcal party for the popular\nparty at the beginning of the Revolution, but was later assumed by the patriots as a title of honor. Another term,\noni which has offended our ears and\nour sensibilities, Is pants. But good old\nOliver Wendell Holmes disposes of It\nwtth short shrift: \"the things namod\npants\u2014a word not made for gentlemen,\nbut gents.\"     Even among the poets\ntrouiinr.i hnve not boon considered  too\nprosaic to be put into song. The genial Tom Moore leaves behind him a\ncharming little Impromptu Inspired by\na pair of breeohes. It seems that the\nbard was obliged upon one occasion to\nleave a very pleasant party on account\nof not having a pair of evening trousers In which to dress for dinner. Ho\nscratched upon a fly-leaf the following:\nBetween Adam and me the great difference Is,\nThough a paradise  each  has been\nforced to resign.\nThwt ho never wore breeches till turn'd\nout of his,\nWhile, for want of my breeohes, I'm\nbanished from mine.\nthat door and let me go.\nMy grandfather caught and balanced {nar[t \u00bbPpn the floor,\none of the pistols In his hnnd. |  ,\"\" **'* \"\"   h,a *'\"\"\"\u25a0\n\"You  can't  frighten  me,\"    ~\"   \"\"\npriest.    \"I command   you,\nname, to open thut door, and let me\nleave this hell's kitchen!\"\n\"Drink!\" said Gavan, setting a hair-\ntrigger.\nAt that moment Fnther Coghlan lifted a warning hand,\n\"Hush!\" he said, \"I hear a cry!\"\n\"It's the wind.\"\n\"It's no wind, but a child or a woman.\"\n\"I hear nothing.   Drink!\"\nAs the last word left his lips, thero\ncame a hurried scratching at the door?  * c,(3ar'\na minute later It sounded  undor the\nwindow.   The two men looked at each\nWest Kootenay Butcher Co.\nAU,  KINDS OF\nFresh   and   Salted  Heats\nWHOLBSALB AND RETAIL\n^mmm!iT!n!!mTf?Tmm?mnfmmmf!Tfnmmn!mmmnT&:\n| Lost Opportunity. ff\nFisn and Poultry in Season\nE. O.  TRAVES.  Marauer,\nK.-W.-C  Block, Ward Street, Nelson.\nOuters by mail receive carefol and prompt attention\nP. BURNS & CO.\nWholesale and Retail Meat Merchants\nHEAD OFFICE NELSON. B. 0\nBranoh Markets in Rossland, Trail, Nelson, Kasi.\nSandon, Thrue Forks, New Denver and Slooan City\nOrden by mtU nm branch will bave canfnl and ar\u00abwt atteatloa.\nTHE DOMINION WIRE ROPE CO., Ltd.\nMONTREAL\nManufacturers of BEST STEEL WIEE ROPE.\nTramway, Hoisting, Mining Wire Rope.\nLang's Lay for Tramways and Underground Haulage\nLocal Stock carried, estimates furnished.\nH. E. GBOASDAHE Agent Nelson.\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nWANT  PAGE\nB\nB\nB\ns=\nE\nB\nB\nB\ns=\ni\nB\nB\nEVERY time a package goes out of\nyour store which does not contain\nsome  advertising matter, you are\nlosing an opportunity to make your\nstore the store of the town.\nEach package you send out is proof\nthat a sale has been made, it very sale is\nsupposedly of goods that are going to give\nthe customer full value, and are going to give\nsatisfaction. This will create a favorable\nimpression. Every sale proves that some\nperson has shown a disposition to trade\nwith you.\nNow this disposition is either great or\nsmall. In either case it ran be made\ngreater. And one of the most effective\nmethods to bring about this desired effect is\nto place the advertising matter in the packages you send out. \u2022\n3\n3\n3\n=3\n\u2014*\n3\n=3\n3\n=3\n3\n3\n=3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n=3\n3\n=3\n\u2014\u2022\n3\nI THE DAILY NEWS 1\n- JOB OFFICE 3\nB   A specialty is made of tnrnlig out \" Advertising Matter.\"   It will   3\ng- pay any store-keeper to adopt the suggestion offered above. \u20143\nWILLIAM A. BAUER\nDominion and Provincial Land\nsurveyor.\nSurveys nf mines, mineral claims, crown\nlands, oiown grants obtained nnd assessments managed for absentees.\nFERGUSON and VANCOUVER.\nFOR SALE OR RENT\nAdTBrtlwrawite loiwrted undor this head at\ntlio rule of one cont a word par Ineertlon. Ni>\nadvert Wment taken for less than Sfi oenU,\nSituation Wanted advertisements Inserted\nthroe times froo of oharKe,\nWELL   FURNlSuED roODQB  to ioi.t,\nelectric  lights and all modern conveniences, terms   reasonable.    Applv\n121 Haker street.\nWHOLESALE\nHOUSES\nP. a GREEK       V. 8. OLEMENTb\nGREEN & CLEMENTS\nCivil Engineer* and Provincial Land\nSurveyor*.\nCor. Kootenay a Victoria Sts. Nelson\nBt 0. Box US Telephone 201\nNELSON, B. C.\nAERATED AMD MINERAL WATERS\nTO f>ET\u2014Pleasantly   furnished front\nroom  nenr postotllce $8  a  month,\nInquire at Thu Dally None.\nFOR HALK\u2014Cheap,   two   large awnings -'.I feet long each, cost $7s, will\ntake $25; can be seen ou D. J. Robertson and Co.'b store linker street.\nPIANOS   and   tewing   machines   for\nrent or su'e at  The Old Curiosity\nshop.\nFURNISHED House   to\ntoria    street.      W,\nDruggist.\nicnt nn Vic*\nRut bor ford,\nRCOMS nnd Roard at Mrs. n.Iteilly's,\ntwo doors  pnst poi>to3!ce on  Ward\nstreet.\nA Toast to the Bachelor.\nA TOAST Is offered to the bachelor.\nNot to every bachelor, of course.\nNot all are twist worthy. Thero\nare plenty who ought to have married,\nbut were too timid, distrustful, lazy,\nself-indulgent, or Incompetent. Thera\noro those who were dazsled In their\nyouth by the spangles and gewgaws of\nlife, and stre tolled out for them hands\ntoo eager to detect the worthlessness of\nwhat they got. There are those who\nwere unlit to marry. Toast them In\nmoderation, because they didn't, provided they will give bonds to continue\nsingle. There are those who broke\nhearts, partly from faithlessness, partly from over-much calculation, partly\nfrom mere lack of grit. No, we may\nnot tonst nil bachelors. So much the\nmare tonst those whom we may! Maintainors of the unmalntained, bearers of\nburdens dropped by other men, providers for the unprovided for, succor-\nens of the distressed, defenders of the\nfatherless, bulwarks of the widow! Oh,\nwhat a good, an Indispensable man Is\nthat bachelor who can make a bigger\nliving than he needs, and Is always\nready to share his surplus; who counsels his nephews and fortifies them\nwith timely remittances; who surprises\nhis nieces with gowns and opportune\nhats; who has no serious troubles of\nhis own, and Is ready always to shoulder such troubles ns others bring to\nhtm! The trouble with Benedict la that\nhis hostages are given. There are\nclaims upon his heart, his time, his in-\noome. He must consider obligations\nand proprieties. He Is a mortgaged\nman, though he may be ever so good a\none. There Is no use of spending much\naffection on Benedict, for he can get It\nat home, and he en n't repay a large Investment In kind without Incurring domestic hazards. But a good bachelor,\nw-hat a groat property he Is, and how\ninestimably valuable to those who own\nMm! It Is a great calling to be a good\nbacholor, and nbout out; bachelor In a\nhundred makes a fairly satisfactory\ndemonstration that It Is his.\u2014\"Harper's\nWeekly.\"\nFURNISHED ROOMS.-Largo furnished rcoms with home comforts,\nsuitable for two gentleman or man\nand wife, Reasonable terms. Apply\nroom 1, McDonald block, cor. Josephine and Vernon streets.\nLAWRRNOK  HARDWARE CO-.Bake\nBtroot,  Nelson - U'liolcnilo dsatare Ir\nhardware, milium' suppUos, sporting goods\netc\nFIRST-CLASS Hoard and Room, 35.50\nper week, Silica st. 2nd door west\nof Ward.\nother, the priest had gone aB pale as I around it, the pistol felt, and the crea-\ndeath, but he stood ready, with the I :\"rc was across the iloor nnd out of\nfingers of ono hand clasped tightly tne window quick as the shadow of \u00bb\nround a cross which he  wore.   The Hying bird.\nscratching went on, and my grand. Tnc boy broke out of his hiding--\nfather mo-ed to the window nnd Place, hot with terror. Patrick Gavna\nopened It, still carrying the pistol in wnfl doad. and on his right hand was a\ntilt hand. A black dog leaped ints, M ,11ilI'k In the shape of a dog's\nthe room, and * breath of cold air foU  MBffuq,\nWANTED\nJ. H. LOVK,\nNelson Employment Agency,\nP. 0. Hox 405. I'llone 278.\nWanted\u2014Woman cook |I8 per week;\ntbieo luorricti men for  steady quarry\nworn; wnitics**; lullndrotfl.\nWANfED-A pirl.   Apply Mra. A. It.\nHarrow, corner Josepliine aud Rob<\nson streets.\nWANTEIJ-A nurse to take cliamo of\ntwo young  bnhlos.   * An   elderly\nwoman preferred.   At'dreas P. 0. Hox\n000, city.\nNKLSON SODA WATER FACTOHY-\nN. M. CmiimliiH, Laauo\u2014Kvery known\nvariety o( soft drinks. P O Box 88. Telephon\nNasi. Hoover Street, Nolaon. Bottlomof th\nf slnoua SU Leon Hot Springs Minoral Water\nUHOOEKIES\nA MACDONALD * f!o.-Comor Kron\n\u2022 and Hall Slroeta\u2014Wholesalo grocer\nand Jobbers in blankota. -dove-*, mitt**, boot*\nrubboi-H. mookinaws and minors' sundrfoe.\nFRESH AND SALT MEATE\nP BURNS ft Ca-Bakor Stroot, Nelnn-\n*>  Wholesale dealers in fresh a     euro,\n\u2014,1*.  Cold Hioroxo.\nWBST   KOOTKNAY\n,    Bailor Biro\nera In tewh and ou;\nBaker SiiiSWlsoi?-wKSSueta*.\nired moats.\nHARDWARE & MINING 8UFPLIE6\nM\n'LACHLAN BROS. Baker StToflt NelMP,\nB. t'..-l)o.ilprf. In gonorai lisrhwnre,\nmining supplies, kIiiks pntibt, Portland Co\nmunt, ilruclay and Scotch (Ire brick. Agent*\nfor \\V ilklns and Co,'s celebrated Bteol wire rope\nNklJ&ON   HAItlJWAKK  CO.- Wholiwh\npaints, oIIh and rUbr; mechanics loo!\"\nFiHhlng Tock'o and Spoi ting Goods a specialty\nLIQUORS AND DRY GOODS\nHUDSON'S HAY (X-WbolesAlo grocerio\nand liquors eta, Baker HLroot, Nolson.\nLUMBER\nNEI\u00a3ON SAW AND PLANING MILL-\nOfllco corner Hall and Front, Stroets\nN'elson-Lumbor, ceiling, flooring, and evory\nthing In wood for building purposes. Get out\nprices,  UornMDondonco mmclted.\nLODGE tyEETINGS.\nLADY Wants situation as  llrst claBs\nhotel cook,   good wages.     Address,\nB.C., Nelson,   General delivery.\nWANTED-General   Servant,     apply\nMrs.Captain Core, Carbonate street.\nHELP of all kinds wanted and\nfurnished. Western Canadian Em\nployracnt Agency. Large warehouse\nfor storage; call at l'losser's Second\nHand store, Ward stcct.\nMISCELLANEOUS\nHAVE YOU any notion cf starting a\n^business of vour own ? If you havo\nyou will ilnd a big snap atJCCastlrgnr.\nA general store with postolllco in connection Is to bo sold. A fine stock of\ngroceries, boots and hIhips and cloth\"\ning, For further particulars address,\n.1. G, MftbbOtt) CuHtlcgar.\nGambling on the Atlantic.\nAn English paper charges that tht\nbig Atlantic liners are hotbeds of gambling, and supply an easy prey in tho\nshape of foolish young men to the\ncard-sharpers who travel to and fro,\nProbably there Is not a steward on\nboard who docs not know the faces ot\nhalf a dozen of those men, and doubtless the detectives of Liverpool and\nNew York know every ono of them.\nLiners should carry a detective ns they;\ncarry a surgeon and lifeboats; and a,\nquiet hint to the prey that Is walking\ninto the Bflara should be easy and effeo*\nUV, r-\nUKNtt nnd Spring Chiekons  (or  rale\nMiss Elvardf, Fairview Addition,\nParties wishing Golf or any stockings\nknitted or footed ean have them done by\nMnplylng  on   corner   nf     Ward  an\nVictoria street, opposite postofllce.\nv       NKLSON LOIMJK  No.IL K. of P\n\u25a0 teJSS K; of 5 hR,\"' Oddfellow, block\nJitovoryTuowiajr ovening at 8 tfttoekT\nyAU vhnUng knights cordially invito\nWm. Ihvink, C.O.\nHuoh Btkvenb. K. of it. and B.\nAtlantic S.S. Sailings\nFrom Montreal\nHeaver Lino Laio Ontario .May 2*\nHoavorlJtio Lake Hlmcoo Jim* A\nBeaver Line Lake Manitoba Juno 12\nAllan Lino Ionian May SI\nAllan Lino 1'ailrfan Juno 7\nAllan Line Tunisian Jure N\nDominion Lino Dominion Juno 21\nFrom Bonton\nDominion Lino Morion May 28\nDominion Lino New Knglnnd Juno I\nKrcm Portland.\nDominion Lino Callfornlan Juno 7\nFrom Now York\nWhito Star Lino Oceanic May 28\nWhite Wnr Lino MhJohIIo June 1\nCiuianl Lino Unibria .May 31\nCiinanl Lino Lnoinia June 7\nAmerican Lino Philadelphia May '*>\nAmerican Lino 8t Paul Junu I\nContinental sailing* of French. North German Lloyd. II. A. P. and Italian Lines on ap\nplication.\nItATKH-Baloon fares $H,00, and upward!\nHeroml 135 and upward*, according lontoainer\ninl location of berth. Htoorogo quoted on application. Prep-tid paHHagett from Kngland and\ntho continent at lowest rates.\nII. L. BROWN,     W. P. F. CUMMINGB,\nCity Agt Nelson.     Gen. Afloat Wlrnloeg\nSOME BACK\nLvmbigo, poiriH in the back or nldo, BOroncw,\niMvi'ilhf or Inflammation Ilnd no xlamlliig\ngrouim nfitrim (i|ij>linition ot GrlllltliH' Liniment- puuetrutCH In a minute. dlxnelH t he pain,\nKtops the Kiiircrlng. Yuu will find It butter\nthan i-laMi.rt*.\nMr. Mack White, well known tra.ncr of tho\nTorontoLacrosxn Club and O-tgnoile Football\n(\u25a0luhwiy*: \"(JrlflllliH' Mnimont In unoqtlOlk*d\nfornllilott'Northfmi) training, I ban ii\"od II\nwith the bofltpt IttOOM for \u00aboro batik, lUflnOA\nflorencftH, NprnliiH and all fornix of welling and\nnflnnumitlon,\nr or Bale by i, IL Vanitonu Nolson, U,C1\nNOTICE.\nAll persons having claims against Tno\nNolson Miner will please present thorn\nat once to Mr. D, A. McFarland (or sot\nMoment. All monies owing to Tlio\nNelson nincr are payable to the under\nsigned at the office of THE DAILY\nNEWS, formerly The Minor office.\nF. J. DEANE,\n,'Nolson, ii. 0\u201e April 21st, iyoa.\n0. GWILLIM, fi\u201e So-,\nMINING ENGINEER.\nLate of Geological Survey of Canada.   Six years experience in B. C,\nmining districts,\nBakeKStre* Nelsoi. B. C\nJOHN McLATCHIE\nDominion and\nProvinciaK*  .\nLand Surveyor.\nNELSON BC\nFOB  HURT rum  BUB MIDI  IIUOIB\n. and anon co to\nGEO. M. GUNN\nRepairing neatly and promptly done.\nSatisfaction guaranteed in all work,\nWant 8l\u201e Opponlle The Dally Kewa olUrr,\nH.&M.BIRD\nReal Estate. Flro and life Insurann\nMoney to Loan.\nFOR SALE.\n$SltB\u2014 Four roomed lioueo,  with fur*\nniturc,     outbuildings    and    garden,\nsouth cf smeller.\n$800\u2014Five roomed house and two lots\non Mill street, good garden, fenced\n$ 100 cahli balance easy tortus.\nflSO\u2014Four roomed nouse on C.I'.R.\nland between Cedar and Park stroetfl,\nFJR RENT.\n$22.50\u2014Six roomed houso on cornor\nlots on Front street. Modern conveniences and electric light. Owner pays\nwater rate.\n$8.00\u2014Four roomed house corner of\nWard and Gore streets. Owner nays\nwator rate.\n$22..'i0\u2014Furnished liouso on Carbonate street, good position.\nNOTICE\nTO DELINQUENT CO-OWNERS\nTo SILAS U GROSS, or to any p\u00bb,\nson or persons to whom he may have\ntrancferrcd his Interest in the Harvy\nJoy Mineral Claim, sittmle on Morning Mountain, abont 11*2 miles westerly from the Silver King Mine, In\nthe Nelson Miniug Division of West\nKootonay District, B. G.\nYOU or any of yon nre hereby notified thnt I have expended oue hundred\nand two dollars and fifty cents in la*\nbor and improvements upon the above\nmineral claim, under tbe provision ot\nthe Mineral Act, and if within ninety\ndays from tbe date of this notice yon\nfail or n fuse to contribute your proportion of such expenditure together\nwith all coBta of advertising, your interest in snid claim will become the\nproperty of the subscriber under section 4 of an Act entitled An Act  to\nAmend the Mineral Aet 1000,\nDated this 14th day of March. 10 02.\nJ. R. CRANSTON.\nCertificates of Improvements\nNOTICE\nKing Alfred nud King SoInmMi\nMineral Claims, sitnutu in the Nelson\nMining Division of West Kootenay District.\nWhere located\u2014On Iron Mountain,\nabout 5 miles from the month of the\nSmith Fork of the Hnlnwt. River.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, Fiancis J.\nO'Reilly, of Nelson, B. 0,, as agent foi\nK. W, Lewis, of Indianapolis Ind.\nU. S. A,: Freo M iter's Certificate\nNo. 2510, intend, sixty days from ihe\ndate hereof, to imply to the Mining Re*\nconfer for certificates of improvements\nfor the purpose of obtaining Crowa\nGtrnuts of the nbovo claims.\nAmi further take notice that action,\nurder section H7, must be commenced\nbefore tho issnancc of such certificates of\nimprovement*.\nDated this ISth diy of November\n1001,\nFRANCIS J. O'REILLY.\nCertificate of Improvements\nNOTICE.\nDrum Lommon Mineral Claim, situate in the Nelsor Mining Division\nWest Kootenay District.\nWhere located : On Craig Mountain,\nTake notico that I, J. I). Anderson,\nP, L. H., of Trail, II. C. agent for\nP. Barns, Free Miner's Certitl*\ncate No. Hrii.V-'.;,, intend, Bixty\ndays from tho date hereof, to apply\nto tbo Mining Recorder for a Certificate of Improvements, for the purpose of obtaining a Crown Grant of the\nabove claim.\nAud further take notico that action,\nunder section '.il mind, he commenced\nbefore the issuance of such Certificate\nof Improvements.\nDated this 11 th day of March\nA D. KKKI. '. D. ANDERSON\nCertificate of Improvements\nNOTICE.\nArmour Plate Mineral Claims situate\nin the NoImhi Mining Division of\nWest Kootenay District.\nWhere located : On Uiuotal Mountain,\nnear Erie, B, C\nTake notice that I, J.D. Andersor.P.\nD.B.. of Trail, B.C., ageut foi 11 Dalby\nMorkill, Eeq,j Free Miner's Certificate\nNo. B. 50110, intend, sixty days from\nthe dale hereof, to apply to the Mining\nReoorder for a Corlificate of Improve\nmeats for the purposo of obtaining a\nCrown Grant of the above claim.\nAnd further take notice that action\nunder section 117, must bo commenced\nbefore the issuance of such Certificate\nof Improvements.\nDated this 25th day of March, A. D.,\n1002. J. D. ANDERSON.\nCertificates of Improvements\nNOTICE.\nFree Silver, Royal, Fairview nnd\nRuby Mineral Claims, siluiito in the\nNelflon Mining Division of West Kootenny District.\nWhere located \u2014 North of Boulder\nCreek and about two and one half miles\nwest of N. kV. S. Ry.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, F. 8. Cle-\nmenlH, noting ns agent for P. N. Thompson, free miner's certificate II45,066, A\nM. Johnson, freo miner's certificate\nB50,(iil|, nnd M. L. Fennel], free miner'a\ncertificate B50,78.% intend, sixty duys\nfrom the date hereof, to apply to the\nMining Recorder fur certificates of improvements for tho purpose of obtaining Crown Grants of the above claims.\nAnd further take notice that action,\nunder section 87, must be commenced\nbefore tho issuance ot such certificates\nof improvements.\nDnted this 10th day nf April, A.D,\n1002 F. 8. CLEMENTS.\nCertificates of Improvements\nNOTICE.\nQueen, Niagara, Lewiston, and Burlington (Fractional), miuernl chuuis\nsituate iu thu f* elson Alining Division of\nWest Kootenay District.\nWhere located\u2014Ou Wolf Orooki 0\nbranch of Sheep Creek, wbicb is a rlbu*\ntary of Salmon River.\nTake Notico that I, William Waldfo,\nF, M. 0, U.'>oii.'*l, for myself and us ag-mt\nfor John A. Turner. F, M. O. BfxJlfiU.\nand Michael .Scully, Free Miner's Certificate No. B50000, intend do days\nfrom the dato hereof, to apply to tho\nMining Recorder for certificates of\nimprovements, for tho purpose of obtaining Crown Grunts of tbe ubovs\nclaims,\nAnd further tnko notico tbat action,\nunder section ;I7 must be commenced\nbefore tue issuance of such Certificates\nof Improvements.\nDated tbis 18th day ot February,\nA. D. 11102.\nWILLIAM WALTJIE.\nSILVER KING MIKE\nWilt pay the highest onsh price for all\nkinds of second band goods. Will bay\nor sell anything from an anchor to a\nneedle, Furniture, stoves, carport*,\ncooking utensils, bought In household\nonantitiea. Alto cast off clothing.\nCall and see me or write, Address\nStiver King Mike, Boi W. Hall\ntrout, Nelson, B. C.\n The Dail, Nhws, Fridw, May 16, igo\u00bb\nTRUNKS\nVALISES\nGRIPS\nWe are showing a new and\ncomplete line of these goods\nat prices that cannot be\nequalled in the city.\nM0RLEY~& LAING\nBooksellers, Stationers\nNELSON. B.G,\nShow Boom for Mason & Eisch pianos\niwmwwwwwvwww;\n\\ THE CITY\nTho lake rose 10 inches in the 24\nhours ending at 3 p.m. yesterday.\nA meeting of the Florecco Crittenden society is to be held tbia afternoon  at tbo Presbyterian rooms.\nTiu .steamer International yesterday brought Jn one car of Rambler-\nCariboo for the Selby smelter at San\nFrancisco and ono car of Whtcwater\nfor Trail.\nTho regular drill of the local company of U.M.R. will commence on\nWednesday evening next. The members of the company will fall in at 8\no'clock at the armory.\nThe Spokane Falls and Northern\ntrain Mas unable to get out yesterday\non account of the washing out of Ave\npiers of the Cottonwood bridge, which\ncrosses the south fork cf the creek a\nshoart distance below the lake.\nWork will bo resumed in a small\nway next week on tbo May and\nJennie propeity by A. U. Kelly. It\nis understood that a comprehensive\nprogramme has been mapped out for\nthis season, but of tbis Mr. Kelly\nsaid he was nit piepared tj speak at\npresent.\nl'orcman Lindblad and bis gang of\nroad repairers returned from Forty-\nNine creek yesterday having com'\npleted the work on tho Nelson-Granite\nread for the summer. Thoy report that\ntbp road is low in good shape, the\nditches and culverts all having been\nfinished before the wet season set in\n|Vesterday morning the cellar of the\nHudson's Buy company's htoio was\nflooded by the overtlon of tbe sewer,\nwhich burs*, up through thu trap drain\nand did somo damage Wore it subsided. Tbe guods in the cellar were\nprincipally canned and case groceries,\nand beyond the discoloring of lacols\nand tbo spoiling of the appearance of\ntho cans no dumage to the contonts\nwill result.\nThe IojuI company of R, M. R.\nwill contribute onu repnuentalive for\nthe Canadian contingent which is to\nattend the coronation of King Ed\nward iu June next. The selection is\nto be made hy Captain II. E. Mac\nilonnel, and tho names of members of\nhe company who are cither anxious\nor williug to go in tho event of their\nbeing chofcon, should be handed iu to\nCaptain Macdonuel today.\nEarly yesterday morning Stanloy\nstreet was converted into the bed of\nmioature torrent and by 7 o'clock n\nlarge quantity of real estate from tbe\nupper part of the street had been deposited between Victoria and Baker,\nprincipally on tbe sidewalk. The\ntrouble was caused by some children\nbuilding a dam on a small stream at\ntbe corner of Houston and Ward\nstreet. Tbis stream had been ditched\nso far as Cottonwood creek, hut after\nttie building of the dam it cut acoss\nlots till titunlcy street was reached\nand then swollen by tbe heavy tain of\nWednesday night cut a ditch for itself\ntho length of the street. In places the\nroadway was cut down three feet.\nYesterday morning Alderman Irving, W. P. Tierney and James Mc-\nI'hee wulhod down to the Baker\nstreet bridge over Cottonwood creek\nto see liuw tho flume was working\nunder Hood conditions. Tbey climbed\ndown on the south bide it tho bridge,\ndhenssing what would happen to the\nlower railway bridge if a largo\nstump should come down tho creek,\n\u2022lust then u large dead tree came\nsurging down and tho throe men\nswiftly climbed the bank to try to\nsee tho ConBeqUdBCOfl when it did bit\nhe bridgo. Ihe log was travelling\ntoo swiftly for then,   however,  and\nteeing Aldcnnnn Hamilton crossing-\nfiom tbe ond of tho station platform\ntowards the bwor bridge they\nthouled to him to harry, pointing\ntowards tlio creek. lie thought thnt\nsome one had fallen in and went\nacross the intervening space ut a marvelous gait, hoping to reach the lonor\nbridge in time to save the unfortunate. Just as he ruashed the bridge\ntne Ing sttuck it a treinenduns thump,\nam' then dived under while Mr,\nHamilton after carefully examining\ntb\u00ab' creek for any sign of a human\nbeing went back fur an explanation.\nThe  Bed Knights of tbe Cross gavo\nan   cnterainme'at at  the S'slvau\nArmy barracks* last ovening to a large\naudience. The adopted children of\nMiss Booth wore also prusuut and took\npart in tbe programme.\nThe boom above the. electric light\ndam broke lust evening, releasing\nseveral acres of logs and stumps\nwhich bad come down from tbe uppu:1\nwaters of tbo creek. A number of the\nsmaller pieces of Umber were swept\nover tbe dam but tbo balance jammed\noo the orown. The dam last night\nwas standing the strain all right.\nThe Nelson board of police commissioners has got down to woric at last.\nWhen tho government appointments to\nthe board were announced it was,\nfreely stated there would never be any\nmeetings of the board us the members\ncomposing it wero known to be on\nrather unfriendly terms, but a way\nhas apparently been louud out of the\ndifficulty for on Tuesday a meeting\nwus convened which was attended by\nCommissioners Marks and Irving.\nThere waa little nr no business transacted at the meeting boyood the\narrangement for future and regular\nmeetings of the commissioners. In\nthis connection it was decided tbat\nregular meetings should be held on\nthe first Tuesday in oach month.\nOver three hundred feet of the new\nsteel pipe leading from Cottonwood\ncreek to the city's wutor system waa\nwashed out yesterday. The pipe had\nbeen prepared aB much as possible for\nhigh water, but the creek shifted its\nchannel right across the valley, washing out large quantities of rock and\ngravel till the pipe was undermined.\nThe Chinamen having ranches up the\nvalley also suffered much of tbeir gardens, which they had built up after\nlast year's tresbet, being swept away,\nNearly all the cabins above the oloc\ntrie lignt dam are inundatod, and one\nwas swept away yesterday morning\ncollapsing like a house of cards before\nthe onset of a big piece of timber\nwhich struck it.\nBUSINESS LOCALS.\nCall up 33 if yon v;ant furniture\nor pianos moved.\u2014West Transfer Co. '\nFOB BENT\u2014Four up to date   houses\nclose in, cheap.   See Annable,\nAdjustable window scieens to fit\nany size windows 25 to fit) cents each\nat   MoLachlau Bros.\nAll kinds of express work, coal and\nwood.\u2014West Transfer Co. lelephono\n33.\nKEDUC13D B\\TES\nGrand Lodgo Meeting, I.O.O.F.,  New\nWestminster, B.C., June 11th.\nFor the above occasion the Great\nNorthern railway, will make a rate of\none fare and one-third for round trip,\nproviding fifteen or more delegates,\nwho have paid railway fare aie in\nattendance.\nPATENTS, TRADE MARKS and C0PYR1GBTC\nobtained in aU countries\nROWLAND BRITTAIN,\nRegistered   Patent  Attorney, Mechanical Engineer and Draughtsman.   Bank of B. N. A. building,\nHastings St., Vancouver, B   C\nWrite for full naviculars.\nPERSONALS.\nE. E. Shepherd, editor of Toronto\nSaturday Night, passed thiough the\ncity last night on his nay homo from\na visit to tlie const citias, Ho nill\nremain over in I'ernie for a day to see\nthe coal mines.\nA. S. I'arifcll is back in Nelson\naftei spending three months in Viotoria. While in the capital he did not\nsee much of the lawmakers this trip,\nas bo did not consider himsolf equal\nto keeping up with their giddy flight\n\"Senator\" Jack ltao, who for some\nyears bas beon a contial tlgnre in Nel-\nBon's poliitual and spoiling | circles,\nleaves tbis evening for Edmonton\nwhore bo will make his home. That\nhe may have moro money than the\nEdmonton farmers havo hay, iB ttie\nwish cf a largo circle of Jack's Mel\n\u2022\u25a0on friends.\nAT THB HOTELS.\nHume\u2014C K Hardy, Nanaimo; E E\nChipman, Kaslo; J J Dorati, Mon\ntreat *, K MeUuirc, Molly Gibson\nlanding; Mr and Mrs It II Graves,\nTrail; K A Cameron, Vmir; F D\nNettlcton, Erie; S DosBrisay, A\nMuKeown, Ymir; T N Owld, Spo.\nkano; C A Uodfroy, W llolden, Vancouver; J M Knllmeyer, Toronto; I)\nT Dickson, Vancouver; il' L Coon,\nwife and child, Phoenix; TO Peck;\nT H Newman, Midway.\nOrand Central\u2014VV Olasson, Ainsworth; A WickoiaUam, Geo E\nDouglas, Ymir; G Gunderson, Slocau;\nA llrotnner, Ymir; W Itromner, Rosb*\nland; J Daly, Ymir; J W Cade,\nVorognu, Wis.; It Sheldon, Whoatley;\nJ Robncr, Rosslnnd; J Peters, Sandon ; Mrs L Clapp, Cranbrook; Mi\nMcEnon, Lethbri-lgi-; Miss L (Juer-\ntin, Toronto.\nPhair\u2014John Keen, Kaslo; Mr and\nMrs E C Preston, Dulnth; Q Esch,\nEaslo,\nIlnrtlett-D E Wallace, High River;\n!' Mopcll, Spokane.\nQueens\u2014Mrs J Allen, Kaslo; Mrs\nO'Donnell, Sandon.\nTHREE FORKS IS S.Otlk,\nThore is great indignation in Three\nforks football circles these days on\naccount of the refusal of tno Nelson\nsports to play'the Three Forks team at\nKaslo on the ; Ith. A challenge was\nsent to Nelson somo time ago, and the\nKaslo patrons of tho sport were ready\nwith a purse of J7r, towards cxponscs\nand the match looked like coming off\nuntil a reply was received from Nel\nson to tho effect that it would be \"too\nhot un -L-.-It-l.ri.tic.il day to play Three\nForks.\" Poliarps it would be. Tho\nThreo Forks boys reckoned on making\nit hot foi Nelson regardless ol the\nweather, but their hopes are now\nblighted. When the lakeside plnyors\ngo to Vuncouver to play on July 1st\nit may be advisable to inclndo sun-\nbonots in their iratllt, as tho snn\noccasionally shines in othor places\nbesides Kaslo,\u2014Tho Lodgo,\nOULL ON THI\nNELSON WINE CO.\nand try a bottle, a down, or a barrel ot\nCALGARY BEER wit Is the beet and\noheapest on the market. Also try o it\nWINES,   LIQUORS    and   CIQAR&\nPRANK A. TAMBLYN. M*\u00ab.t...\nTelaDbone 88 Bnknr 8b. NpIhoii\nExcursion Rates\nEAST\nCANADIAN\nPacific\nRAILWAY\nMay  26  and 30, June 29,\nJuly 2. 3. 4\nTJNNA DEFINES A CAUSE\nEuropean Skin Specialist Says Dandruff is Caused by Parasites.\nUpon that theory, provod beyond a\ndoubt, a cure tor dandruff was sought\nafter. Scentists, chemists, druggists\nand physicians all \"took a hand\" and\ntno successful issue is tho present\nproduct known as \"Newbro's Herpi-\ncido.\"\nThis remedy actually kills the parasites that infests the hair bulb, doea\nits work most effective and contains\nnot an atom of substaiiue injurious to\nany thing olso than tbe germ alono\nHerpieide causes tho hair to grow aB\nnature intended it should, soft and\nabundant.\nNOTICE\nR. G. Joy, baker, of Nelson, B.C.,\nhas tbia day sold to Uhoquutto Hros.,\ntbe business and premises known as\ntbe Star linker)'. AH liabilities of\nsaid firm to May 15th, 1002, will be\npaid by It. U. Joy and all assets due\nsaid firm to May 15th, 1003, to bo\npaid to R. G, Joy.\nDated this 1Mb dny of May, 1(903.\n(Sgd.) R. G. JOY,\nwator ll*o City does not require for\noperating its electric light plant, the\nsame to be taken from a point below\nthe electric light dam of the City of\nNolson on Cottonwood cioek.\nfl, A contract otnbodying the pro-1\nvisions hereof and a covenant on the!\npart of tho applicant to conform to\nand fulfill oil the matters and provisions beroby required of him shnll\nbo drawn and shall be executed by\nthe Corporation and the said Friel\nwithin ohe month from the final puss-\nage or this by-law.\n7, This by-lnw may be eited as\n\"Flour Mill Aid By-law,\"\nDono and passed in Council assembled this -      day of        1008.\nNOTICE.\nTake notice that tbo above is a true\ncopy of tbo proposed By-law upon\nwhich the vote of the municipality\nwill be taken at tho City of Nelson\non Thursday, the 22nd day ot May\ninstant,botween the hours of 8 o'clock\na.m. and 4 o'clock p.m., for the east\nward at the City polico court on\nJosephine street, between Baker and\nVictoria streets,and for tbe wost ward\nat the offh'O of Ward Brothers on the\nnorth side of Baker street, between\nStanley and Kootenay streets.\nJ. K, STRA3BAN,\nCity Clerk.\nNelson, B.C., May 8th, 1P02.\nNOTICE\nR. G. Juy wishes to thank his\nnumerous customers for their literal\npatronage during the period be has\nbeon in business and hopes that the\npublic will extend to bia successors\ntbe same liberal patronage he has received in the past.\nIt. G. JOY.\nFrom Hossland, Trail, INcl-\nson and intermediate points\nTo Minneapolis -\n$ 44.50\nChicago\n64.50\nDetroit\n77.00\nToronto\n89.30\nMontreal    -\n100.50\nCorresponding reductions\nfrom all Kootenay points.\nUsual diverse routes.* Meals\nand berths included on the C.\nP. R. lake steamers.\nFor tickets aul complete Information\napply to local iigriits.\nJ. S. Cartbb, E. J. Ooylk\nDis. rasa. Agt. A. 0. P. A.\nNelson VancriiTe\nCertificates ot improvements\nNOTICE.\nHover and Hiunliler Miner-ii Claims\nsitunto in the Nelson Mining Division\nof West -Kootenny dislriot.\nWhere located\u2014On East. :!de of Rov-\nnr Creek, 1 1-2 miles above Forks of\nWhitewater anil Rover Creek.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, Harold Selous\nFreo Miner's CertiUc'ite No. B.T.H71, intend, sixty days fiom the date hereof to\napply to the Mining Recorder for certificates of improvements for tho purpose of obtaining Orown Grants of the\nabove claims.\nAnd further tnke notice thnt action,\nunder section 37, must he commenced\nbefore the issuance of snob certificates of\nimprovements.\nDated tbis 12th day of Mny, A.D.,\n1008 HAROLD SELOUS.\nCertificates of Improvements\nNOTICE.\nVictm* nnd Porcupine mineral claims,\nsituate in the Nel-oD Mining Division\nof West Kootrnay District.\nWhore located\u2014South of Porcupine\nCreek and about tno miles east of N. &\nF. S. Ry.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, F. S. Ole-\nments, acting as agent for P. N. Thompson, free miner's certiflcnto .8-15,1)5(1, A.\nM. Johnson, free miner's certificate\nB50GDI, and M. L. Fennell, free miner's\ncertificate B50.783, intend, **!xty days\nfrom the date hereof, to apply to the\nMining Recorder for certificates of improvements, for tin; purpose of obtain*\ning Crown Grants ol the nbovo claims.\nAnd further take notice that notion,\nunder section 37 must be commenced\nhefoiv the issuance of mch certificate\nof Improvements,\nDated this lOlh dny of April, A. I).,\n1IXJ2. F. 9. C JSMENTH.\nCertificate ol Improvements\nNOTICE,\nFiiinlinm Mineral claim situate in\nthe Nelson Mining Division of West\nKootenny District.\nWhero located\u2014Nenr the Ymir Minn\nTAKE NOTICE that I, Kenneth L,\nlliirnet, ngeut for John Dean,P.M.O.No.\nmmi) nud Martin Salmon, F. M. 0.\nNo. VliuWD, intend, slity days from tbe\ndnte hereof, to apply to the Mining He*\noorder for a certificate of improvements\nfor tbe purpose of obtaining a Crown\nGrant of the nbovo claim,\nAnd further tnke notice thnt action,\nunder section 87, must bo commenced\nbefore tbe issuance of such certificate ol\nimprovements.\nDated this 10th day of April, A, D\n1902. KENNETH UUURNET\nNOTICE\nWe tbe undersigned having purchased the business of R. U. Joy\nknown as tbe Star Bakery, situate at\ntbe corner of Josephine nnd Latimer\nstreets, also the branch storo situate\nin the Victoria block, corner of\nJosephine and Haker streets hope for\nthe same liberal patronage as our\nprerfechssor has received in tbo past.\n(Sgd.) A. and L. CUUQUfiTTR.\nMONEY TO LOAN\n$50,000 Trust Funds to invest in\nfirst mortgage security on Nelson\nreal estate at current rates. Apply\nto   W. A. MACDONALD,\nSolicitor, Burns Block, City,\nCorporation of the City of\nNelson.\nBYLAW NO-   112\nA By-law In regard to a Flour Mill\nto be established at Nelson.\nWHEKKAH ono I). Friel has ngrood\nto build and oporato a dour mill and\nelevator at Nelson, B.C., with\ncapacity of 100 barrels per 24 hours\nrun, subject to a grant ol $200,00, the\nprice of Lots 13 and 14, in Block 1U1\nNelson, B.C., and the privilege of\nusing tvhatuvur water the City does\nnot require for operating its electric\nlight plant, and the exemption from\nMunicipal taxation of the said industry so to be established and its property and effects nbicb may bo used,\nowned, occupied, requited or Incidental to the operation cf tbe said\nHour mill aud elovator for tbe poriod\nuf too years from the final passage of\nthis Bylaw.\nAnd wneroas in tbo opinion of tho\nCouncil such aid aud exemption\nshould bu granted and such real property is not required for corporate\npurposes.\nAnd wborcas the said industry or\nundertaking is not intended to compete with any industry *:r undertaking\nalready established carrying on its\noperations witbin tho Municipal\nlimits.\nTherefore the Municipal Council of\ntho corporation of tbe City of Nelson\nin council assembled enacts as\nfollows:\n1. That the Bald Corporation of tbo\nCity of Nelson be and they aro hereby\nempowered to sell and dispose of said\nLots 13 and 14 in Block 101 of tbe City\nof NolBon boing a subdivision of Lot\nnn, Urnnp 1, Kootonay District of\nBritish Columbia, and the Mayor aud\nCity Clerk are beieby authorized to\nsign, seal and deliver a proper conveyance of the same, subject to the\nlimitations hereinafter provided, to\ntbe said B. Friol or his assigns, and\ntbe said Council may accept in payment therefor either money or real\nproperty.\n2. It is further enacted that tho said\nIndustry so to be eitablisbcd, and thu\nreal and personal propeity occupied,\nrequired or incidental to tbe operation\nof tno said flour mill and elovator\nwitbin tbe limits of ihc City of Nelson, shall be exempt from Municipal\ntaxation for a period of ten years\nfrom tbe final passage of this by-law\n!i. The conveyance of lots 13 and 14.\nBlock 101 aforesaid shnll ho subject to\ntbe condition, that if tho said flour\nmill is closed or operations are not\ncarried on therein at any time for a\nperiod of two years, the land aforesaid shall revert to the Cily of\nNelson.\n4. Tho said B. Friel or his assigns\nshall commence tbe actual building,\nconstruction and equipping of the said\nHour mill and olevator in the City of\nNelacn on or before the first of July,\n1003 and such building, construction\nand equipping shall be carried on\ncontinuously and diligently thereafter\nuntil thu said dour mill and elevator\nnro complete and ready for operation\nwithin at least six muntliH after ttiQ\nsaid first of July, 1002, and the same\nwhen so complete and ready for operation shall be operated continuously\nas tbe season permits. This by-law is\npapscd on tho express condition that a\nfailure to ooservc said time limit\nshall render it void.\nft. (Subject to the conditions aforesaid, the Corporation agrees to convey\ntne said parcel of land to tho said\nFriel for the sum of fiiuO.OO, and to\ngive bim the absolute use of whatever\nCorporation of the City of\nNelson*\nBYLAW NO.  113\nA By-law to grant aid to lead manufacturing and lead paint works\nindustry.\nWhereas in tho opinion of the\nCouncil it is desirable that a manufacturing industry for thu purposo of\nmanufacturing lean aud pair.t should\nbe established witbin tne Municipal\nlimits of the City of Nelson,\nAnd Whereas there is no manufactory, industry, undertaking or enterprise alrendy established and earning\non its business witbin the Municipal\nlimits, that would compote with such\nindustry, manufactory, undertaking\nur enterprise.\nAnd Whereas the land hereinafter\ndescribed is not m tho opinion of tlio\nCouncil required for e< rporate\npurposes.\nNow therefore the Municipal conncil\nof the Corporation of the City of\nNelson in council assembled, enacts\nas follows:\n1. The Council mny grant aid by\nway of bonud for the promotion uf tbe\nsaid manufactory or industry of man-\nufaetoring lead and making paint to\nbo established within tbe Municipal\nlimits of tbe City of Nelson by a\ngrant of a sum net exceoding $10,000\nto any person or body corporate, so\nestablishing such industry, such sum\nto bo paid subject to such terms*, conditions and restrictions aa tho Council\nmay deem expedient.\n2. Such nid so graited shall be\ngiven on the distinct understanding\nthat thu pert on or holy corporate\nestablishing such manufactorv or\nindustry within tbe Municipal limits\nof tbe City of Nolson shall proceed\nforthwith with the nucosEnry Works\nand improvements and on tbe completion of the works, plant and\nmachinery, shnll carry oo the said\nindustry or manufactory continuously\nfor a period of five years, failing\nwhich (he aid hereby granted shall be\nforfeited nud tbe Municipal council\nmay recover the same as and tor\nliquidated damages in any court of\ncompetent jurisdiction.\n3. That the said Couneil be and\nthey are Hereby empowered to sell and\ndispose of a portion of the foreshore of\nthe west arm of Kootenay lake, being\ntbat pared or tract of land immediately in front of Block 77a, N^Iscn,\nB.C., having a frontage on snid Block\n77a of 300 feet with a depth towards\ntbo lake of 200 feet, being a sub-\ndivsinn of Lot Oft, Group 1, Kootenay\nDistrict of British Columbia, and tbo\nMayor and City Clerk are hereby\nauthorized to sign, \u00abeal and deliver a\nproper conveyance of the same, subject to tho limitations hereinafter\nprovided, and tho said Council may\naccept in payment therefor, either\nmoney or roal property.\n4. It ia farther enacted that tho said\nindustry bo to ho'cstablished and tbo\nreal or personal property occupied required oi incidental to tlio operation\nof the said lead manufacturing and\nlead paint works industry, within\ntbo limits of tho City of Nelson shnll\nbe exempt from Municipal taxation for\na period of ton years fnftn tho final\npassage of this By-law.\nft. The conveyance of thu land aforesaid shall bu subject to tbo condition\ntbat if thu said industry at nny time\nceases operations, or work is not\ncarried on therein for tbe purpose\naforesaid for a period of six months\nduring nny one year the land aforesaid shall revert to thu City of Nelson,\nil. A contract em bod ing tbo provisions hereof and all covenants on\ntim part of the person receiving tbe\naid aforesaid, tu conform to and fulfill all the mattora and provisions\nhereby required of bim shnll be\ndrawn and shall be executed by the\nCouncil and tbo sKid party witbin\none month aftor tho commencement of\nnny operations specified in tbis by-\nlnw for which such nid is granted.\n7. Tho manufactory, industry, enterprise, or undertaking so to bo aided\nas aforesaid shall commence on or\nbofore January 1st, 1003, nnd shall be\ncompleted within six months after tbe\nsaid date of ccramcucment nnd ready\nfor operation, and tho failure to\nobserve such time limit shall render\nthis by-lnw void.\nDone and passed in council assem\nbid, tbis       day of       1008,\nNOTICE.\nTake Notico thnt the above is a true\ncopy of tho proposed By-law upon\nwhich tho vote of the municipality\nwill be taken at tbo City of Nelson on\nThursday thu Mod dny of Mav\nInstant.bttwpen tbo hours of 8 o'clock\na.m., and 4 o'olock p.m., for the east\nward at tho City policu coort on\nJosepblno street, between Baker aud\nViotoria streetf.and for tho west ward\nat the offioo of Ward Brothers, on tho\nnorth H<le of Baker street, botween\nStanley and Kootenay streets.\nJ. K. SIBACHAN,\nCity Clerk.\nNelson, B.C., May Stb, 1002.\nAn Affair of\nPURE BUSINESS\nAdvertising is not nn affair\nof sentimunt and favoritism.\nIt is an affair of pure business, of dollars and cents\u2014\nas much so as buying or selling goods. Advertisers are\nafter results. They want\nthe worth of their money.\nThey aim to reach not only\nthe greatest number, but also\nthe best class of readers.\nThey advertise where they\nfind it pays to make known\ntheir wants and their wares.\nTo secure the worth of their money in Southern British Columbia, advertisers should use\nthe columns ot\nThe Daily News,\npublished at Nelson, every day in the week\nexcept Mondays.\nIXSOOttOOOOOCXKtS\nFred Irvine % Co.\nHOUSE FURNISHING GOODS\nWe nro showing \u2022 large assortment of\nLace Curtains in all the Latest Styles and Qualities\nat Prices Exceedingly Low-\nSpecial value In Ingrain, Wool, Tapestry, Velvet, Wilton, Axinin-\nstur mill Brussi-1 Carpets, n large UKsortmeut to ohoose from.\nAit Ingrain Wool nml Turkish Kugs, Window (.hades in all tho\nlending nhniles, Floor Oil Olotks, n largo assortment of patterns, Curtain Poles, at reduced prices.\nFRED IRVINE & CO.\n^KKKXKKKKXHKXtXKXXXXXXXXS\nLawrence Hardware Co.\nNELSON, B. C.\nThe Fishing season is now open and we invite our friends and patrons to\nInspect our large and complete stock of\nFISHING  TACKLE\nRods, Reels, Casta, Flies, Fly Books, Lines, Fishing Basketo,Trolling SpoouB\nGuns and Ammunition\nymmmmf!\u00ab!!mniTHTnmnTtmfiimmmmmtmiimmmii\n| YOU'RE SAFE WHEN\nB YOU USE\nI BENNETT'S FISE\nCROWN BRAND\nBe Sure and Get the Genuine.\n| Lawrence Hardware Company\nB Sole Agents, Nelson, B. C.\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\nNOTICE\nSubscriptions taken for Tlie Daily\nand Weekly News at publisher's\nprices by J. F. DELANEY, New\nDenver, B. C.\nREISTERER & CO\nBrewers ot Fine Lager\nBeet and Potter,\nDltOl' IN AND HEK OS\nN\u00bbl.nn B. O\nCertificates of Improvements\nNOTICE.\nElilerado Miuernl Clnini siltinlc in\nHie Nelson Mining Division of West\nKootenay District.\nWhere located- On Torn! Mountain\nnnd nliimt four miles south west of\nNelson.\n'1AKE NOTIOB thnt I, Edward T.\nH. Sinipkhi, free Miner's certiflcnto\nNo. HfiUHM, for myself nnd notiug ns\nin-i'iit fur Gi'o.'gc Hamilton Neelnnds,\nFree Miner's Certificate No. BG07IB, intend, sixty days from the date hereof,\nto upply to tbo Mining Recorder for\nit curtillcnto of improvements for the\npinpose of obtaining a Crown Grunt of\nthe above claim.\nAnd further tnke notice thnt aotion.\nunder section ,'17, mnst bo commcucuu\nbeforo tlio issuance of such certilleate\nof improvements.\nDoled this 32nd day of April, 1001!.\nE. T. Jl. BIMI'KIN.\nGALT COAL\nFor domestic or steam use.\nA full  supply always on\nhand.\nKates to all railway and\nlake points\nW   P. TIERNEY,\nGeneral Agent,\nTel. No. 265.\nOffice \u2014 Two doors west\nC.P.R  offices.\nCertificate of Improvements\nNOIICE.\nEmerald Mineral Claim, sltiiato in\ntho Nelson Mining Division of West\nKootenny District.\nWhore liwolcd\u2014South of Porcupine\nCreek nnd about two miles east nf N. &\nF. 8. lty.\nTAKE NOTICE Ihat I, P. S. Ole\niniiiits, noting ns agent for A. M. Joliu-\nson, freo miner's certificate B50,(\u00bb0I, E.\nO. Arthur, freo miner's certificate B50,.\n1181 and P. N. Thompson, free minor's\ncertiflcnto B4D,05C, Intend, sixty days\nfrom the dnto hereof, to apply to tlie\nMining Hecorder for a ccrtlilonlo ot\nimprovementa, for the purpose of oh.\ntiiluing a Crown Grant of tho above\nclaim.\nAnd further tako notico that action,\nunder section K7. must he commenced\niMifnro lho issuance of sne'n certilleate\nof improvements.\nDated this 10th dny of April, A. U.\n002, F. 8. CLEMENTS.\nr\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":"1902-05-16 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":"1902-05-16 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. 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To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}