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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":" H__*4\nProvincial Library.\nLY NEWS\n.,....- _\u2014...._\u2014\u00ab\n^3\nVOL. 4\nNELSON, 11. <X, TUESDAY, JUNE  27, 1905\nNO. 55\nCAPITAL'S\nPIONEERS\nThe Institute of American\nMining Engineers\nArrive\nAre Paying a Visit to Nelson and lo the\nContributory Mining Districts-Will be\nEntertained Royally in the City\nhearing before a board of   which he\nwas not a member.\nThe dealing with these two Cascade\nlicense applications has created great\nInterest for the last ten days, as both\napplicants have many friends who were\nall anxious to see their champion win\nout.\nABANDON THB SHAMROCK.\nThe touring members of the American Institute of Mining Engineers will\narrive In this city by special train this\nmorning between 7 anil 8 o'clock. At\n10J30 they will board the steamer Kaslo,\nwhich has been chartered for the occasion by local mining engineers aud\nmine managers, for a trip to Procter\nand Kootenay lake. Returning to the\ncity about 4 o'clock this afternoon they\nwill take a special train for Bonnington Falls, still as guests of the local\nmining meu. There a picnic supper\nwill bo served about 5:30. Further stay\n-will depend to some extent ou the\nweather. Tho return to the city will\nbe made about 9 o'clock, so tliat the visitors may havo several hums rest before their departure for Rossland at\nIT o'clock this evening\nTlio annual summer excursion is the\nchief gathering of the institute. The\npractice has beeu observed for many\nyears, and care has always been taken\nby the executive committee to secure\nvariety by selecting for succesdiveyears'\nstudy widely differing districts. Among\nthose previously visited are Colorado,\nNew Mexico, Montana, California, Michigan and the northern states of old\nMexico. The trip planned for this summer with Dawson as tbe objective point,\nis the longest ever undertaken by the\ninstitute.\nThe session at Victoria will occupy\nfive days. A long program has been\nprepared, conslstiug tu tbe main of exhaustive treaties by specialists in subjects relating to mining, engineering,\nand many other kindred eciences.\nWhile at the capital the party will\nbe entertained by the officials of the\nprovincial department of mines.\n\u25a0The visiting engineers include Dr. R.\nW. Raymond, C. T. Olcott, mining engineer, P. S. King, construction engineer, M. H. Harrington, A. Harrington, L. Holbrook, G. D. Barron, president and genoral manager ot the Tezuil-\nton Copper Company, and Theodore\nDwight, asslstnnt secretary of the Institute, all of New York; _ V. il'Invllllers,\nmining engineer and geologist, W. S.\nPilling, J. R. Pilling nnd 0. P. Pilling,\noi Philadelphia: P. H. Clyner, mining\nengineer, and W. R. Mcllvnln, president\nof the Reading Gas Company, of Reading; W. C. Aguew, president und general manager ot tbe Mahoning Ore and\nSteel Company, ot nibbing; .1. W. Al-\ndrlch. coal operator, ot Birmingham;\nW. B. Cogswell, vice-president and general manager of tbe Solver Process Company, of Syracuse; B. S. Cook, president\nof the Warwick Iron and Steel Company, of Pottstowu; F. .1. Campbell,\nmanager of tho Vindicator Gold Mining\nCompnny, of Denver; .1. IS. Cullum, vice-\nprosldeut* of the Her bison-Walker Company, of Pittsburg; B. F. Tackenthal,\npresident ot the Thomas Iron Company,\not Boston; E. L. Ford, general manager of the Youngstown Steel Company,\nof Youngstown; R. W. Hunt, construction engineer, of Chicago; S. F. Klrkpatrick professor of metallurgy, Queens\nUniversity, Kingston, .1. Lilly, lawyer,\nof Lambei'Vllle) J. P. Pardee, president\nof the Hazleton Iron Works, of Hazle-\nton- S. F. Bamberger, mining engineer,\nof Salt Lake; A. 13. Carlton, J. C. Kilter,\nmajor C. Lydeclter, C. F. Rao, F. W.\nLayman and W. Brlggs.\nAbout 40 ladies and chlldjen accompany tho party. A letter 8f welcome\ntram the board of trade will be presented this morning by the preside!! .\n^The^is'ltors will spend Wednesday\nin Rossland, and then leave for Victoria\nbv way of Vancouver.\nA trip to Dawson will be mado during\nJuly and August. ReturniM to Vancouver the excursionists will make te\neastern trip over the main line of the\nC. P. R. ,\nCASCADE LICENSE SETTLED.\nCommissioners Decide In Favor of\nCharles Thomas.\n(Societal to The Dally New!)\nGrand Forks, June 26,-An adjourned meeting of the Boundary Creek Licensing Commissioners was held last\n_S morning in tlte gov\u2014\noilice for tho purpose of finally dis-\npc ins of the Cascade liquor license\nouestlon. Between tbe contesting app I-\n_?,.._ Charles Thomas and J. Bortols,\n___ their .ollcllor.. things have been\nke.t warm here for the lost week. At\nthis meeting the commissioners grant-\nIra renewal to Charles Thomas and\ndeclined   to   \"enew   the   license   tor\nBE\u00b0Miller, chairman ot the board,\nstated It Mr. Bertols contemplated taking further proceedings by way of petition for a re-hearing of his case, that\nhe would resign as commissioner, as he\nhad aMed on a previous occasion as\nsolicitor for Mr. ThomaB and he considered lt would be more proper under the circumstances, to have the re-\nVessel a Danger to Navigation on\nLake Michigan.\nAlpena, Mich., June 20.\u2014Captain Morgan and crew of six meu of tbe steamer\nShamrock were brought here today on\nthe tug R. T. Roy, which took them from\nthe steamer Peshtigoo off Thunder Bay\nIsland. The Shamrock became waterlogged live miles off Presque Isle aud\ntho crew were driven to the rigging\nfrom where tliey were rescued by the\nPeshtigoo. The Shamrock was abandoned and is floating down the lake, a\ndangerous menace to navigation.\nDRIVEN TO DIVORCE.\nBecause Her Husband Would Not Obey\nthe Court's Decree.\nLondon, June 20.\u2014The divorce court\ntoday granted- lady Grey-Edgertoa\n(formerly Miss May Cuyler, daughter\nof major Wayne Cuyler, U. S. A.) a divorce on the grounds of the desertion\nof her husband, sir Philip Grey^Edger-\nfou. Tbe suit is a sequel of a previous\ncaso, when tbe wife sued for a restitution of her conjugal rights aud obtained\na decree which, however, sir Philip refused to obey.\nTRAIN HITS ROCK SLIDE\nWEST BOUND PASSENGER HAS ACCIDENT  NEAR FRANK.\nFIREMAN    GEORGE     GRANT    HAS\nBEEN BADLY SCALDED.\n(Special to The Dally News)\nFrank, June 26.\u2014Westbound passenger\ntrain, No. 3, conductor T. A. Correy,\nrunning Lwo hours late, ran Into a rock\nslide four miles east of Frank, at 7\no'clock this niorning.\nThe engine jumped elenr oil1 the track,\nrolling down un embankment of 20 feet.\nGeorge Grant, the fireman, wis plnnel\nunderneath the locomotive and was\nbadly scalded hy the escaping stciini, .o\nbadly, in fact, that he may not recover.\nEngineer J. H. Caslake had a marvellous ascupe. heing thrown eWan through\nthe cab window and yet got olf without\na scratch on his person.\nTlie mail and baggage cars were hndly\nwrecked but not a pasianger was injured.\nNORWAY AND SWEDEN.\nCommittee Arranged to Form a Modus\nVivendi.\nStockholm, June 26.\u2014As n result of\nthe negotiations between the different\ngroups of the rlksdap it has been arranged that-a special committee to consider the Swedish-Norwegian question\n(\u2022httll lie appointed tomorrow lo consist\nof nine conservatives and three moderates from the flrst chamber and five\nliberals, five agriculturalists and two\nreformers from tlie second chamber. It\nIs anticipated tbat the government's\nproposal to settle the crisis by arranging\" a modus vivendi between the two\ncountries, will be evenlually attacked\nin Ihe upper chamber nnd generally\nsupported In the lower chamber during\nthe debate tomorrow on the subject.\nTOUR OF ENQUIRY.\nDelegates of Women Workers' League\nCome to America.\nNow York, June 20.\u2014Fifty delegates,\nrepresenting the Women Workers of\nGreat Britain and Ireland, are expected\nto arrive within a few days for a tour\nof the leading American cities. Tho\ndelegation comprises women who worked wilh the countess of Warwick in endeavoring to better conditions among\nthe working women. They are coming\nto make a careful study of the conditions here and ascertain if there are\nany features of environment or of method here, which may be adopted with\nadvantage to their sex in Great Britain.\nGOVERNOR  FOLK AGAIN.\nDetermined to Keep Order Upon the St.\nLouis Dclmar Race Track.\nJefferson City, Mo., June 26.\u2014Governor Folk in an interview today declared that either the Missouri national\nguard or the Su Louis police department would ui directed within the next\ntwenty-four hours to raid the alleged bookmakers at Delmar race track.\nThe governor has discovered that flection 14 of the St. Louis charter gives\nthe city of St. Louis the same powers\nIn the country as in the city.\nFEARS AN  INVASION\nFrance Strengthening Formications on the\nNorth\nLondon, June 2G\u2014The Brussels correspondent of tho Dally Mall snys France, fearing a sudden attack through Belgium,\nhas nfllelnlly warned the Belgian mlnlsteu\nat Paris of tlie necessity of rendering effective tho forttflcntlons of Antwerp und\nalong tho river Muese.\nTENTATIVE\nSELECTION\nHeadway Apparently Made\nToward Negotiations\nfor Peace\nRussia Has Nominated Ambassadors Rosen\nand Nelidoff and Japan Baron Kamura\nWith Ambassador Takahira\nWashington, June 2G\u2014Russia lias gtven\nnssurances of hor Intention In tlie peace\nnegotiations by placing president Roosevelt in possession of tlte tentative selection of her plenipotentiaries as follows: si,\nNelidoff, Russian ambassador to Paris, und\nbaron Rosen, newly appointed Russiun ambassador to Washington,\nIt is'believed that Mr. Takahlna, the\nJuimnese minister, during bis cull at the\nWhite House today informally told president Roosevelt that Japan's selection .ilso\ntentative wero buron Kumuru, the Japanese minister of foreign affairs, und himself.\nBoth missions will consist of many advisors, including the army and possibly\nthe naval officers and ofliclals from the\nforeign offices ut Toklo and St. Petersburg.\nIt Is expected tbat altogether each mission\nmay number ten or twelve.\nIn recognition of bis services during tho\npreliminary negotiations and in vew of the\nblgli official rank of Russian plenipotentiaries, it is believed that the ollleal announcement of Mr. Takahlra's appointment\nwill be followed by hia election to tbe rank\nof ambussador.\n_nitei*st ivgardJng an 'arnnlsttce lias\nlargely diminished during the last few\ndays because of the report tbat tbe rainy\nseason bus set In In Manchuria. It Is believed hero that this will servo the purpose of un armistice. Moreover, tho informal soundings Initiated by president\nRoosevelt at Tokio uud St. Petersburg\ndid not yield much hope for successful negotiations working to nu armistice, until'\nthe ptenlpotctillarlea meet. If Japuu Is\ntben convinced of the serious desire of\nRussia for peace, she will readily consent\nto ua armistice.\nSTRENGTH   OF   OVAMA\nArmy Numbers Well Over Half a Million\nMen\nSt. Petersburg, June 26-The Russky Invalid supplies an argument for peuco In an\nestimate of the lighting strength of tlie\nJapanese army, which it places at from\nfi_O,_0_ to GOO.tMW men, Including tbe forces\noperating in Korea.\nIn the five Japanese armies opposing\ngeneral Linevitcb, exclusive of cavalry\nund artillery. It estimates tbat there nro\nfrom _.0,00l> to 150.000 bayonets, which gives\nmarshal Oyunta u decided numerical superiority over tbe strength usually nlloted\nto Llnevlteli's army. The Japanese forces\nIt says are divided us follows: General\nKuroki, ii5,ooo to 200,000 bayonets; general\nOku, 110,000 bayonetsO general Nogi, :*0,OJO\nto 90,00a bayonets; general Noilu\/., 45,0l)J\nbayonets; general Kawutnuru, \\;\\,.99 to .;\u2022\n000 bayonets.\nNET   IS   TIGHTENING\nFurther Evidence al Senator Mitchell's\nTrial\nPortland, June 20\u2014Harry Robertson, who\nlias been private secretary to senator\nMitchell until recently, testified toduy.\nDuring the examination, which was damaging to the accused, Mitchell writhed in Ids\nchair, protested, lo the \u2022at'torneys and\nshowed evidence of intense mental agitation.\nRobertson Udd how Mitchell bad cursed\ntbe prosecution, bad cursed nnd shaken\nhis list at him, and bad asserted anything\nwas justifiable to defeat the action being\nbrought. Robertson idea tided the letter\nhe delivered to the district attorney lust\nwinter, und gave olher damaging evidence.\nTHE  RELIANCE\nMill and Cyanide Plant Running Very\nSmoothly\nA H Kelly, president and managing director of tbo Reliance (Job! Mining company, returned to lhe elty last evening\nafter spending tbe day at the company's\nproperty\nTo a repoiter of The Daily News list\nnight Mr. Kelly said tliat be was pleased\nat the progress being undo. Tho mill and\ntbe Hendryx cyanide plant are ln full\noperation and working smoothly and very\nsatisfactory. The returns from the cyanide plant are quite equal to expectations.\nDROWNED WHILE BATHING.\nToronto, June 26.\u2014George Lalng, 24\nyears old, a Scotch stonemason, was\ndrowned in the Don river yesterday afternoon, He went In bathing with two\ncompanions and was trying to follow\nthem across the river when he sank.\nHe leaves a wife and daughter in Scotland. J\nPROFESSIONAL   RULES\nCanadian Athlotlo Association Lowering\nthe Bars\nMontreal, June 26\u2014At a meeting of the\nCanadian amateur association tonight It\nwns decided to remove the restrictons prohibiting lacrosse teams from playing wilh\nteams playing professionals. The meaning\nof this resolution is that professional amateurs will now be able to play honestly as\nprofcsslonuls.\nPAUL MORTON AT WORK\nNew York, June _U\u2014Aa chairman of tbo\nEquitable Life Assurance society's board\nof directors, Paul Morton bus begun legal\nprceedlngs to recover money alleged to\nhave in en wrongfully taken fr. m the society nnd he has also cut off certain perquisites* In  the society,\nMONTANA FIGHTER WORSTED\nPhiladelphia,   June   20-Jack  Johnson   of\nCalifornia   had   much   tho  belter  of  the\nsix round bout with Jnclt Munroe of Montana here tonight.  The light wns lv*rd awl\nfast. The Californiari did his best work\nIn the tiflh and sixth rounds when he lilt\nMunroe utmost at will. In the last round\nJohnson caught Munroe hard on the face\nseveral times but was unable to deliver a\nknockout blow.\nTERRIFIC   WIND   STORM.\nNew York Visited by Tail End of\nHurricane.\nNow York, June 28.\u2014A storm of cyclonic proportions accompanied by a\nterrific deluge of rain, parsed over Harlem and tlie Bronx this afternoon, causing widespread havoc.\nA building in the course of erection\non 112th street, near Riverside drive,\nwaa demolished; John Lawler, foreman\nof the bricklayers, being crushed to\ndeath. The storm appeared to break\nalmost simultaneously in the Bronx and\nHarlem, and the wind readied a velocity of 43 miles an hour, accompanied\n'.iy blinding sheets of rain. Plate glass\nwindows were shattered, ami trees aud\nchimneys were blown down.\nAt the Hebrew Orphan Asylum, on\nAmsterdam avenue, four chimneys were\ndemolished and several windows ward\nblown out. No one wns injured, however. The sturm which started so suddenly, after venting Us fury, stopped as\nsuddenly as it began within 15 minutes.\nREVOLT IS\nSPREADING\nRussian Troops in Poland\nAre Reported as Disaffected\nWalla Walla. Tills waa Imposed on him\nlaat March by Judge Griffin under the\nnew cumulative sentence law. The tlmo\nlias expired for appeal.\nWARD  IS  DEFEATED.\nBEGINNING TO OUTFLANK\nTURNING    OPERATIONS    STARTED\nAS BEFORE INDICATED,\nOYAMA      GETTING       PERILOUSLY\nNEAR   RUSSIAN  CENTRE.\nGunshu Pass. June 20.\u2014Vague dispatches reaching here through the official paper edited for the army, make\nthe conditions under which peace is to\nbe reached indifferently understood.\nAlthough generals Linevitch and Kuropatkin express the conviction that Russia is drifting toward peace, no action\nlooking i. oan armistice has yet been\ntaken. On the contrary, the commanders appear to regret that at the time\nwhen ihe army has reached its maximum strength, it is likely lo be deprived of victory.\nNumerous sninll bodies of Japanese\nscouts have appeared in the regions of\neither Russian Hank, and It is feared\nthai they were intending lo screen the\nturning operations of the Japanese as\nbefore the battle of Mukden. Chinese\nreport the flanking movements have already begun, but the Russian staff denied this. Traders coming from BedOUO\nsay that the Japanese are advancing In\nthai direction.\nJAPANESE  ON  OFFENSIVE.\nCompel Linevitch Again lo Move to the\nRear.\nSt. Petersburg, June 26.\u2014Two telegrams were received today by emperor\nNicholas Trom general Linevitch, dated June 24th, and June 25th, respectively und referring to tlie movements of\nJune 21st and June 22nd, On Ihe latter\ndate a Japanese attempt to dislodge ihe\nRussian outposts In tbe valley of the\nKao was repulsed, while the Russians\nIn the Pailungchen district dislodged\nthe Japanese outposts at Nanshancheng\nand advanced southward of that, place.\nThe Russians operating near Ufan-\nglu retired alter unmasking many of the\nJapanese batteries. The latter pursued\ntiie Russians and occupied Yulantzu,\nThe Japanese resumed the offensive\nnear Shlmiatos, conl inul rig a frontal\nattack and making an energetic turning\nmovement; The latter threatened to\ncut off lhe Russians who consequently\nretired.\nTroubles Are Widening All Over Poland to\nMiddle Russia and Beyond to the\nCaucasus and to Georgia\nAFFAIR OF OUTPOSTS\nJapanese Army Forces Hack tho Russian\nTroops\nToklo, June 20\u2014Tha following de-pa'clt\nbus been received from tho Japanese headquarters lu Manchuria;\n\"The enemy holding tlio northwest entrance or Manchezoil, was attacked nnd\ndislodged on tbe afternoon of June 22, but\na portion of them holding tbe bills to tbe\nwest offered a stubborn resistance and the\nhills wore finally taken by asmutt Another force of tho enemy holding tbe bills\nduo nortli was attacked from tbe front and\nwe simultaneously resorted to a turning\nmovement from ihe northeast, Interrupting bis retreat and (musing him heavy\nloss. The enemy la confusion hoisted tlie\nHod Cross flog, but this did not stop our\nfiring, cud be lied In disorder. His strength\nIn cavalry and Infantry was some 3000\nmen and several guns. Fifty corpses were\nleft on the held. Then enemy's loss waB\nfully 200.    Our loss was Insignificant.\"\nA BELATED REPORT\nSingapore, June 20-The British steamer\nIkbona of tbe India Steamer Navigation\ncompany, was sunk by lhe Russiun cruiser Terek on June G, lBn miles north of\nHongkong. The crew was lauded here tonight by the Dutch steamer Ponlak, which\nthe Torek mot June 10. Tbo Ikhona was\ncurrying malls and rice from Ragoon to\nYokohama,\nENGINEERS ION ROUTE\nSpokano, Juno _i.-Tho special train over\nthe Qreat Northern railway, bearing the\nlouring members of tho American Mining\nInstitute on route lo BrltlBh Columbia for\nthe annual outing, reached this city about\nmidnight  and  left for Nolson.\nThe party was Joined bore by W. F.\nRobertson, provincial mineralogist of Victoria who will have clwirgo of the distinguished visitors during their stay lu II. C.\nA DESTRUCTIVE FIRE\nBellKlffham, June 20-Tho mill and stock\nof lumber and Shingles of the Bolllngliom\nLumber compnny were destroyed by firo\ntoday at Geneva lake, Whatcom county.\nLoss $20,000, Insurance small. Tho plant It-\nmIC was worth about $8000,\nSt. Petersburg. June 27.\u2014These are\ngloomy days for the government of\nRussia. Elvery new dispatch accentuates the seriousness of the situation In\nPoland and the Caucasus, where a state\nof almost open war exists and reports\nof strikes and agrarian disorders aro\npenning in from many parts of Russia\nproper, as though tbe volleys fired at\nLodz bad been the signal lor au outbreak of general disorders.\nFor the present, St. Petersburg and\nMoscow have not. been affected, but if\nmobilization is to be attempted In the\ntwo capitals ils reported, a renewal of\nformer tumults may lie precipitated,\nAnother danger spot Is Georgia, the\nwarlike Inhabitants of which are deeply\nincensed over [he affront to their clergy,\nsome of whom, while meeting to discuss\nquestions of church and state were attacked by Cossacks who dispersed them\nwith knouts.\nDispatches from Poland continue to\nbe meagre and unsatisfactory. Apparently there bas been no reoccurrence of\nthe disorders on the scale of the Lodz\nbattle bul a slight cause may precipitate collisions between the troops and\npeople In Lodz, Warsaw, Kalish and\nother Polish towns at any moment wilh\nlarge deatli lists.\nWarsaw, June 20\u2014 The general strike\nwhich began today was preceded last\nnight by attempts at red Hag demonstrations but the Co.s.-acl;s charged and\ndispersed the rioters with their whips.\nLodz, Juno 2fl-Slnco the proclamation of\nmartial law the situation has become\nquieter, The rumor of an approaching\nmassacre of Jews hns caused 20,000 Jews to\nleave lho town.\nScattered eases of Holing as a result of\nthe Insurrectionary spirit continue, on_\nof those occurred loday In the old Protestant cemetery when a patrol w.is fired\non from behind a wall. The patrol charged\nand killed 13 persons, five men, four women and throe children, Business Is at a\nstandstill and nil tram.! has beon Btopped.\nA case of disaffection among tho truops\nwas reported today when tho ofilcers of a\nregiment Informed their commander thut\nthey would refuse to fire upon defenceless\npeoplo. The regiment was at once trans-\nfried to another place,\nErivan, Transcaucaslu, June 28-This city\nIs outwardly tranquil but the situation Is\nexceedingly tense on account of encounters between Mohammedan nnd Armenia\nbands in tho country districts. The Mohammedans ot Persia are planning to cross\nthe border and eomo to the aid of tlieir\ncoreligionists being hindered thus far from\nso doing only by the fact that the Erevan\nrlvor is Hooded and the authorities have\nseized all the boats.\nRostoff, Jmie 26-Tho police liave discovered thai largo quantities of arms and\nammunition lave been purchased here and\nare being shipped to the Cnusasns.\nBaratoff, Juno 28-Troopa have hurriedly\nbeen dispatched to suppress agrarian disturbances.\nSt. Trlsta, \"June 20-RevolutIonlsts from\nTver. Central Russia, nre scattering proclamations broadcast among the peasantry\ncalling on them to rise. The proclamations are apparently signed by fathi r\nGapon and bis name Is believed to have\nbeen  forged. .\nMinsk', June 20-The peasant tflstru-\nhanees in  this vicinity  are spl ling,\nEkaterlnoslav, Juno 20-A semi-pnnio has\nbeen created here by the distribution Ol\nproclamations by thugs ond rowdfej calling on the people to light against treason\nand fears are expressed thai lhe lowest\nclasses of the l-eoplo are being InoiWd I J\nthe  polico  againsi  the  educated  elates.\nBALFOUR  IS SUSTAINED.\nVote of Censure Defeated by Majority\nof Seventy.\nLondon, June 28,-The house of commons tonight defeated lhe opposition\nmotion of censure on the government\nlu connection wltii the army stores scandal in South African war by a vote of\n325 to 255, afler a long debate. Tbe government acted mainly on the defensive,\ndisclaiming responsibility and rather\nlaying tho blame on lieutenant-general\nsir W. Francis Butler, chairman of the\nwar uffico committee, for the publication of the report on this matter, issued Juno 4th.\nlu tho course of the debate premier\nBalfOUf, secretary lor war Arnold l?ors-\nter aud Indian secretary Brodrick (former war secretary) underwent a Ilerce\ncioss-oxamlnatlou, which they adroitly\nsustained.\nNothing Important was attached to\ntho debate In view of the recent appointment of a commission with liberal\npowers to inquire Into the matter.\nMUST SERVE POR  LIFE.\nBut the American Players Show to Good\nAdvantage.\nLondon, June 26,\u2014The defeat of Hol-\nconibe Ward, the American national\nlawn tennis champion aud the winner\nlasi year of the city of London championship, in the flrat round of the all-\nEngland tournament at Wimbledon,\ntoday, brought much joy to the British\ncamp. The contest In which S. H.\nSmith, the Welsh champion was victorious was probably the fastest ever\nseen in England. Ward was not Quite\nup to his last week's form, attributable\nperhaps to the stiff work of the last two\ndays, but it is conceded that Smith\nnever played a better game. He appeared to be able to stand the extreme pace\nbelter than Ward who serves several\ntimes failed to break effectively. W.\nA. Lamed, Beals C. Wright and W.\nClothier, Americans all won the second\nround, Larnod especially showing good\nform, but In no case did tlieir Opponents call for particular extension.       ,\nMOROCCO\nQUESTION\n  <\nGermany Standing Firmly\nto Proposal of a\nConference\nDeclines to Admit French View or the Matter-Answer ot Berlin to French President Has Arrived in Paris\nOLD NEGIIO STORY.\nWhole Circus is Suspected at Boberval,\nQuebec.\nQuebec, .lime 20.\u2014Several colored men\nof Lemon's circus liave beeu arrested\nat Grand Mere and the whole circus\nis under survillance by tbe militia and\npolice as result ol un outrage committed\non a young girl ut Koherval ou Saturday.\nGRANARY OF DOMINION\nVISITING JOURNALISTS IMPRESSED\nWITH WINNIPEG.\nTHINKS   UNITED   STATES   SHOULD\nSEND IN EMIGRANTS.\nWinnipeg, June 26.\u2014The parly of\nWashington newspaper men who are\nenroute west to inspect, tbe vast fertile\ndistricts of Manitoba, Saskatchewan\nand Alberta, were driven about the city\nthis afternoon, aud this evening entertained at a abnquet at which many leading public men were present. The party\nwill leave tomorrow morning for western points.\nR. L. Jones, assistant editor of Collier's Weekly was _een by a reporter\nand proved particularly enthusiastic\nabout the visit to Fort William. Hj\ndeclared that elevator B, which the\nparty was shown through at that place,\nwas one of the most magnificent ele- j\nvalors he had ever seeu.\n\"1 am Interested iu the elevator business,\" said Mr. Jones, \"and have visited the largest elevators in every state\nin the United Stales and I confess that\n1 liave seen nothing liner in tliis line\nthun that what we inspected at Fort\nWilliam.\" Mr. Jones said the correspondents would be able to send nothing\nbut glowing stories of Canada to their\nnewspapers.\n\"There is an enormous future for\ntliis country, which Americans do not\nfully realize,\" Mr. Jones went on, \"and\nthey should know more about it. They\nhave an idea that it is a sort of frigid\nzone up here and iu reality your climate from Winnipeg, a long distance\nwestward, is identically with that In\nthe bulk of the Russian and German\nempires. In fifty years 1 do not see\nwhy the Canadian west should not have\na population of at least forty or fifty\nmillions of people. Eastern Canada\nhas fewer advantages than western Canada, because the future of any country\ndepends largely on the products of the\nsoil. Eastern Canada is bound to be\nthe manufacturing centre, while western\nCanada will bo the crop raising part of\nthe Dominion. The United States ought\nto encourage emigration io Canada and\nespecially to the west. American farmers make the besl kind of settlers here,\nas they have gone through the pioneer\nschool, and Canada needs the best farm-\nera, because farming operations are\ncarried on here on such a gigantic scale.\nAn incrense of American emigration to\nCanada will doubtless Increase the commercial Intercourse between the two\ncountries and will be advantageous to\nall concerned.\"\nParis, June 20.--A strong Impression\nprevails that Germany's reply to the\nFrench note regarding Morocco reached\nParis this morning, and that it will be\npresented during an interview between\n1 rince Radolln, the German ambassador and premier Rouvier loday. The\nofficials neither confirm or deny the report that the reply haa been received.\nAmong tlio diplomats gathered at a reception given by the British ambassador,\nthe opinion prevailed that, the reply was\nin the hands of the French officials and\nthe view was taken that the situation\nhad undergone appreciable improvement.\nAlthough it was considered that the\nGerman response would not solve all\ndifficulties, yet It. was thought tho\nground would be cleared for a definite\nunderstanding.\nThe Figaro this morning says definitely that the reply has arrived from\nBerlin and claims to be able to declare\nthat Germany does not fall Into the\nFrench view regarding a preliminary\narrangement relative to the scope of\nthe conference. It thus is holding to Its\noriginal standpoint that no two powers have the right to lay down points\nfor discussion at a conference called by\nthe  sultan  of  Morocco.\nHERREROS AGAIN.\nDefeat Germans in a Pitched Battle and\nCapture Their Supplies.\nCapetown, June 26.\u2014The rebel leader,\nMarengo, attacked and defeated a German force, commanded by captain Sle-\nbert at Aniens, lu the Karas mountains,\nGerman Southwest Africa. The German\nammunition and supplies were carried\noff by the rebels. Losses are reported\nto havo been heavy.\nNotorious Criminal at Last Gels His\nDeserts,\nSeattle, June 28.\u2014John King, the notorious criminal, who has caused the\npolice of Washington and British Columbia untold trouble, must serve a life\nsentence In the slate penitentiary, at\nMONTREAL CARPENTERS STRIKE.\nMontreal, June 2D.\u2014At a meeting of\nthe carpenters' lodges tonight It was\ndecided to go on strike tomorrow morning. The carpenters demand an ln-\nct'ease in the minimum wage from 22 1-2\nto 110 cents per hour. Fifteen hundred\nmen are affected.\nTWO DROWNED WHILE BATHING.\nLanark, Out., June 26.\u2014John White,\nof Lanark, and Isaac Menar, of Darling township, were drowned yesterday\nwhile bathing In the Clydo river, two\nmiles from here.\nDROWNED WHILE  PLAYING.\nVictor I a\"Habor, Out., June 26.\u2014Earl\nBrown, ten years old, and Willie Evans,\nthirteen years old were drowned while\nplaying on log booms lu the river here.\nGREAT NORTHERN MOVING\nGrading Line in Phoenix to tbo Granby\nMines\nPhoenix, June 2ti \u2014 This morning tiie\nGreat Noi thern rullway began work on\ntbe finishing uf the grado ou Dominion\nuvenue and school street, ln tlie heart Ot\ntills olty, whloh wan not completed bust\nwhiter ul the time the company was putting its trucks In here. The work Is done\nIn accordance witli arrangements made\nwitli the city council nearlly two yeara agj\nby which tha railway company was allowed\nto change tin* direction ami grade of the\nHtreets named In order tbat access could\nbe bad with the railway tracks to the No.\n4 tunnel of tlie Granby company,\nVV. H. Fisher bas charge of the work\nnow being done by the railway company,\nuud will probably have to move iiuoo or\n4909 cubic yards of material lo complete\nthe contract, which will require about a\nmonth. Both Btroeta are to hv consider-\nably widened.\nTWICE   ON   FIRE.\nChair Factory in New York is in Hard\nLuck.\nNow York, June 26.\u2014For the second\ntime within six weeks the chair factory\nof P. Derby &. Co., occupying a six\nstory building ou Canal and Mulberry\nstreets, was damaged by lire, nearly a\nhundred thousand dollars damage being done today. All the hundred or\nmole employees got out safely.\nDENIES   THE   REPORT.\nSt. Petersburg, June 26,\u2014The French\nconsul-general   denies   the   report  that\nthe French reservists have been ordered\nto get ready for active service.\nROOSEVELT AT HARVARD\nWnsliiiiKti.ii. June 30\u2014President Roosevelt left Washington this afternoon by\nspecial train over the Pennsylvania railroad\nfor Cambridge, to attend the commencement exercises at Harvard university. The\npresident from Cambridge will go lo Oyster Bay, whore he will spend the hot season ut bis Bummer residence at Sagamore\nHill. \u2022>\nGROUND  TO   PIECES\nPortland, June 26\u2014Joe Rlggs, aged seven\nyears,   Jumped   oft'  the  steps  of  an   Ice\nwagon this morning, landed In front of an\nelectric car and was ground to pieces.\nCUSTOMS   OFFICIAL -HURT\nBelllngliam,   fJui\u00bb>  20\u2014Fraser   York;   a\nCanadian cu stoma ofHcta] was dangerously\nWOUhded while hunting .,u Sunday and Is In\na critical condition at the hospital here.\nCHICAGO STItlE CONTINUES\nChicago, June 20\u2014By a ui.inlmous vote\nthe striking teamsters tonight refused to\naccept tlie terms recently offered by the\nemployers and the latest peace prospect hi\nthe strike has vanished.\nCOLLIDED WITH A TRAIN.\nLiicknow, Out., June 26.\u2014William\nWalker, 115 years of age, a Kinloss farmer, is dead from injuries sustained by\nhis team colliding with the side of a\ntrain.\nJUDGE IS HONORED.\nToronto,  .June 20.\u2014Mr.    justice McLaren has beeu elected president of the\nInternational Sunday School Union.\nDEATH OF G-EORGE MACKLIN.\nPhiladelphia, June 26.\u2014George B.\nMacklln, general manager of the Pressed Steel Car Company, of Pittsburg,\ndied today at St. Joseph's hospital ot\nconsumption.\n______\n_m\n \u25a01\nTHE  DAILY  NEWS, NELSON, B. C, TUESDAY, JUNE  27,  1905\nDelicious\nCreamery\nButter\nOur own Brand.   Shipments every three\ndays direct from the Creamery.\nPrices Right\n1 lb Bricks\n14 lb Boxes\n33 lb Boxes\nSet* that each brick is marked:   \"Put up expressly\nfor the Hudson's Bay Company, Nelson.\"\nImperial Bank of Canada\nHead Offlco:   Toronto.\nCAPITAL PAID-TIP ......3,600.000  RE3T  \u00bb3,000,OM\nT. R. MERR1TT, President.     D. R. WILKIB, Vice-President and Gen. Man.\nj      Branches In Provinces of Ontario, Quebec,   Manitoba,   British   Columbia,\n|      Northwest Territories,\nSavings Department\nDeposits received and interest allowed at current rates from dato ot opening account and credited half-yearly.\nREVELSTOKK\nA. E. Philips, Manager.\nCRANBROOK\nJ. P. M. Pinkham, Manager.\nNBLSON:\nARROWHEAD\nE. K. Boultbee, Manager.\nTROUT LAKE\nT. B. Baker, Manager.\nM. Lay, Manager.\nTHE CANAD\nOF COMMERCE   '\nPaid-up Capital, $8,700,000 Reserve Fund, $3,5Qf_,0QQ\nHEAD OFFICE, TORONTO\nB, E. WALKER, General Manner        ALEX. LAIRD, As .t. Gen . Manngw\nBANK MONEY ORDERS\nISSUED AT THf. FOLLOWING RATES-\n$5 and under ,,,    3 cent*\nOver S5 and not exceeding $10 ,   6 cents\n*   $10       M \" S30  10 cent*\n\"   $30      * * $50  15 centa\nThese Orders are Payable at Pnr fit any offlce in Canada of a Chartered &*___<\n(Yukon excepted), and at the principal banking points in the United States*\nME.JOTIAUI.E AT A PIXtD RATR AT\nTHE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE, LONDON, ENG.\nTiiey form an excellent method of remitting small sums i*i' moauy\nwitli safety mid al small cost.\nThe English Soda Water and\nDry Ginger Aie\nLAW, YOUNG St CO. .Montreal.   A_ent\u00bb for Canada and Newfoundland,\nThere is no Argument\nhalf bo convincing as (lie evidence of your eyes.\nThat Is why\nI want you to see\nMy stock of High Clasa CKfthing for m.<n\nand Boys to bo sold at coat.\n__50 Suits Musl. Go At Once\nTou own it  t'i yourself nnd poekotboolc\nto Inspect my prices.\nIlker\n\"m-m_mskm>s___w_m-_^..______  :   :..:r3s_m\nas any provision ' therefore granting\nsuch powers is inconsistent with the\nrailway act, 1903, and this act and the\nsaid actB, chapter 89 of the statutes\nof 1S9S, chapter 111 of the statutes of\n1902, und chapter 137 of the statutes\nof 1904, and Ihe railway act, 1903, shall\nhereafter, except as aforesaid apply to\nthe said company and tho undertaking\ninstead of tho act of the legislature of\nBritish Columbia aud tho British Columbia railway act.\n2.   Nothing in this act shall affect\nin any mannei' any case decided hy or\npending before any court of justice.\n\"G. L. B. P.\"\n(\"Or. I,. B. F.\" Is George L. B.\nFraser, one of the law officers of the\nminister of Justice department.)\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPublished nt Nolson every morning\nExcept   Mondov.   by\nF. J.  DEANE\n_____fflttos\nWELCOME.  TO  NELSON.\nTlie touring members of the American\nInstitute of Mining Engineers, and their\nfriends will arrive In this city Ihis\nmorning. The Incident is well worth\nrecording as one of the events of lhe\nyear. The well known high standing\nattained hy Ihe Institute as a body ihe\nworld ovor, lend.s additional Importance\nto the visit of today.\nThe lisl of visiting mining engineers-;\ngiven in another column oi this issue\ncontains ninny names well known to all\nKootenay mining men. The Information concerning this country o'jinlned\nat first hand by the members of such\nan important organization as our visitors represent, can not. fail lo he of\ngreat benefit to the mining Industry of\nBritish Colombia at large,\nThe mombers of tho Institute and\ntheir friends, Including the many ladies who accompany the party are\nheartily welcomed to the Queen Clly\nof the Kootenays.    It is a matter of\nregret that the visit must necessarily\nhe of brief duration, The Daily News\nis merely voicing the sentiments of this\ncommunity In cordially welcoming tho\ndistinguished visitors nnd ln expressing lho hope that their short stay in\nthis city will leave a pleasant impression, and create a desire to return here\nat some future date.\nTHE V. X. & l_. BILL,\nThe vigorous flght made by all the\nmembers for tills province in the commons on behalf of the V. V. & E. bill,\nbefore the railway committee bas attracted attention all over tho Dominion and almost without exception the\nstand taken by Duncan Ross and his\nsupporters is warmly approved by tbe\npress.\nTbo Toronto News says editorially:\n\"The promoters of the V. V. & K Co.\nhavo been so fur successful In their\nfight before the railway committee.\nWhy the division should he a party one,\nand why a solid conservative voto\nshould bo arrayed against Ibe bill is\none of the mysteries of party politics.\nIt is certain that British Columbia cannot bo prevented from obtaining conned ion with the American railways.\nTho western provinces must be left as\nfreo In this respect as Ontario and\nQuebec. There will be more communication between llio new countries in\nlho west than in the east owing lo ihe\n___..,, _: ='i-j.\n_________b\nSummer Necessities\nGarden Hose and Lawn Mowers and\nNo-jles Clippers\nSCREENS FOR DOORS\nAND WINDOWS\nLawn Sprinklers\nWatering: Pots\nWood-VallanoQ Hardwsrs: \u201e. i-mM\nNELSON\nWholesale end (Jf\nI have a Lending\nLibrary\nIt Includes all my stock of paper covered\nbooks. Over 1500 titles. Given you lhe\nreading of nil lho best of the now books\nus   they   come j out.\nAsk fm -particulars, It living* out ot\ntown, write.\nW. G. THOMSON, Bookseller and Stationer\nabsence ol! natural divisions, antl to\ntry to prevent it is to run our heads\nagainst a.brick wall.\"\nTho Globe in a long article under the\nbeading of \"Lining Up With Monopoly,\"\ndeclares that \"all the representatives\nfrom British Columbia are pledged to\nsecure the competition the V. V. & E.\nrailway would afford, Public opinion\nin their constituencies is not only unanimous but urgent.\" Tho Globe concludes by asserting that \"tbe men who\nline up with the monopoly are no\nfriends of the public rights.\"\nThe Winnipeg Free Press congratulates lhe (.'. r. I., on making their\nfight in tho open and commends lining railway tor ils frankness in the\n'miilUer. The article concludes: \"If\nnn American railway wished to build\na line into tlte eastern provinces there\nwould he not the slightest objection\nfrom anybody. Nor would the people\nof tbe Territories or ot Manitoba tol-\nerato the assumption tbat they must\nfor their own good lie limited in their\nchannels o\u00a3 communication with the\nsouth. The idea, however, that British\nColumbia .should be a preserve for one\nrailway dies hard.\"\nThe light before tlie committee will\ngo on again this week aud notwithstanding the organized opposition of\nthe C. P. H., the bill will pass and be\nsent ou Io the commons.\nEDITORIAL NOTES,\nNo doubt thoro will be some very\nInteresting developments resulting\nfrom Hit; transfer ot the Goodei'bam-\nBiackstock mining interests to C. P.\nIt. directors. Just what the (irst move\nwill ho is not known, but It may be\ntaken for granted that important\nchanges will shortly be announced.\nPresumably there will bo a consolidation of tbe War Eagle, Centre Star and\nSt. Eugeno mines under the management of James Cronin. What .mining\nmen would most like to know at the\nmoment Is tbe probable capitalization\nol' tbe new concern. The effect of tho\nsale has been to advance the price of\nall three stocks on the strength of the\nassurance given in the initial dispatch\nthai, shareholders outside of the control\nwould bo protected and would get a\nfair showing in ihe reconstructed company.   Details are awaited with interest.\nKino weather alone Is wanted to\nmake the Dominion nay celebration\nbeie a marked success. Those in charge\nof tho details of the affair bave taken\na great deal of trouble in preparing a\nn.ost excellent program for tbe two\ndaya and ono that should result in\nthe attendance of many residents of\nnearby towns. The efforts of tbe committee should be loyally supported by\nthe citizens at large. Flags, bunting\nand decorations generally should be In\nevidence everywhere on Friday and\nSaturday. Thero should be no blank\nspaces along tlio business streets.\nWAIISAW ALSO IN REVOLT\nJewish Districts nro In Riot nnd Outbreak\nIb   Fonred\nWarsaw, June JtfMTlio Jewish districts\nare now In full revolt. Tho shops and\nstores \u25a0: closed, and traflio haa ceased.\nThe Btix-iti wire have been overturned to\nform it nucleus for barricades. Great\ncrowds nro assembling In tho sireots ad\nthe ugly temper of the populace and iho\ntroops threatens to break out in bloodshed\nat nny moment.\nThirty-four battalions only arc .stationed\nIn tho town; infantry and Cossacks are In\nthe streets, and patrols are circulating\nbevrywhere. Barricades have been erected at llio corner of Ogrodowa and Fee-\nlussa streets and occasionally i;:c crack of\na rlflo ts\u00bb hoard as the strikers shoot at\nmen going lu work.\nMR. GALLIHEH WAS RIGHT.\nEditor, The Daily News: The following is from the Nolson Tribune of 17th\nJune: \"W. A. Galllher figured anything hut well when ho stood up and\nsaid that ihe legal difficulty under discussion had been passed upon by tho\ndepartment of jusi Ice and approved; and\nMr. Fitzpatrick, the minister of justice,\npractically denied tho statement, and\nsaid thai, ho was not satisfied on the\npoint.\"\n1 enclose you the memo, from the justice department which 1 read to tho committee. The clause therein contained was\ndialled by that department and is the\nclause in iho bill then under discussion.\nI will leave it to your readers io judge\na_ to whether 1 was Justified in tlte\nstatement I made, viz., that Hie matter\nhad been passed upon hy the department, i havo made it a rule not to discuss matters of policy; upou which\nthere may be an honest difference of\nopinion, in public newspapers, nor do\n1 intend Lo vary tliat rule lu tliis case.\n1 havo alwaya been, able successfully to\ndefend any act\nHe matters nt.\nno doubt I en\ncalls for ii.\nHouse of ('<\nTin; memon\nGalllher in hi\nMemo for t!\n1 have exaii\nference in thi\nlew in\nould\nhe :\nlatlon. i ;\ntho necessa\nvision will\nNu. 34 ut\nNicola,   K\nthink be i\nhill and in\nlitigation,\nAn act n\ntoria and\ngatlon\nWhereas,\nand Eastern\nCompany, be\npolitic creau\nlature of the\nbta, chapter\nand referred\nment of Canada, chap\nutes of 1898, chapter\nutes of 1002, and chap\ntiles of 1901, and hei\nas the said company,\nprayed tlfa   '\nvo taken uu pub*\ni\" proper time and have\ndo so again it occasion\nnus truly,\n.\/. __. GALLIHER.\n!. ions, Oltawa, June 21.\ndum referred iu by Mr,\nletter is as follows:\nMinister.\nled and verified lhe re-\nmemo, and 1 concur in\nay doubts there may be\ned by declaratory legis-\na draft bill containing\novlsions. A similar pro-\n.timd in clause . ul! bill\njession respecting the\n;])._ and ;*.iiiiili_aiueon\nay Co. There should I\nng clause both In this\nso. ,il of matters now in\nump;\nng the Vancouver, Vic-\n:u Railway and Navi-\n. Vancouver, Victoria\nRailway and Navigation\nng the budy corporate and\n.\u25a0(I\nthe\nInco\nt the\niu  tl:\nact of the legis-\n>f British Colum-\nstatutes of 1897,\n.! acts of parlia-\n_r 89 of the statin o\u00a3 tho stat-\nir 1-1 of the stat-\nafter referred to\nhas, hy Its peti-\nenacted as here\ninafter set fcrtti   and ii Is osped;\ngrant the prayi\nTherefore bl\nacts as follows:\n1. The said\nIs hereby; d'ech\nbeen since the\nchapter 89 of\nbody corporate\nlegislative autl\nof Canada, wli\nstruct, eriuip, ii\nrailway and ol\ntbo act of Iho 1\nnmbia mention\nwith all the\nof tiie said\nmajesty, etc\n3 tit:\nlaid ai\n1M1S,\n: imi ;i iHlic, within the\nhorily of Uie parliament\nii power to lay out, con-\naialntain and operate, the\nither works described in\nlegislature of British Col-\nted'in iho preamble and\nI her powers set forth ln\nANGLICAN HOME MISSIONS\nStilling Appeal Made by tlie   Blshopa of\ntho Dominion to Clergy and Laity\nA stirring appeal has been road within\ntho last couple of weeks all over the dominion of Canada,  addressed by tlte-bls-\nhopg of tlie Anglican church to the various congregations scattered all over the\ncountry, -appealing for the support of the\nhomo missions.   In lieu of a sermon this'\nappeal was read from the pulpit on Sunday morning by the rector of St. Saviour's\nchurch,  Rev.  F. H.  Graham.\nTho address deals generally with church\nconditions over the various provinces and\ni.s asking for help for the establishment of\nproper means of accommodation for the\nchurches of tho west, whero a large ininil-\ngrujion ia now taking placo fiom lho old\ncountry and from tlio United States. Tho\nfigures relative to llda, given by tho address, aro Interesting. They set forth that\nduring tin; yenr MM, not less than 60,000\nsettlors camo from tlio British islos and\n45*000 from lho United Slates, nnd a third\nsection from almost every nation under\nthe sun numborlng 30,000. The immigration for tiie live years previous to 101)2\nwas but an average of 11,000 a year, but\nsince that dale it increased rapidly and in\n1004 upwards of 125,000 came. Among these\nManitoba 'has (absorbed SO.OOW. Among\nthese arc numbered, at nn extremely conservative estimate, 20,000 who belong to\nthe communion of tlie Church of England\nand for them adequate provision must bo\nmade.\nReferring to the diocese of Kootenay,\ntlie address has tho following to say:\n\"Tho diocese of Kootenay, whicli embraces tlio eastern half of tlie province of\nBritish Columbia, is a notable example of\nthe development of missionary enterprise,\ncoincident with the lines of settleaemt.\nThe country is almost altogether mountainous in character, nnd tlie settlement\nnaturally follow the lines of railways, iho\nriver,  tiie lakes and tho valleys.\nTiie determining feature of Ihe work is\nthat it is largely In a mineral region.\nTho new settlements are as a consequence,\nof rapid growth, and compact la form,\ndemanding prompt action in tlio way of\norganization, but making supervision com-\nivmillvely easy, and producing unrivalled\nopportunities for early self support. In\nthis respect Kootenay possesses a record\nwithout a rival in tho Held of Canadian\nmission work, and well worthy of imitation on tho part of others.\n\"Ton short years ago thero were only\nfour struggling missions in wlwit is now\ntlie diocese of Kootenay, and no thought\nof a separate diocesan organization. But\nsince tlie year 1S00 such places as Rovel-\nstoka, Hossland cranbrook, Fernie, Grand\nForks, Greenwood and Trail have risen\nas if from the ground and are today self-\nsupporting parishes. All the other missions\nwith ono uxeeptlon, havo been opened within tho past few years. The authorities\nhave mado every possible effort to occupy\ntlio now fields and havo been most careful to develop tlie local resources in establishing missions. Thero is perhaps no\ndiocese in the dominion which has received so little outside help, and this foot,\ncoupled with their faithful attempt to do\nall ln their power to provide the moans\nof grace, furnishes a splendid plea to\nchurch people to come to their assistance\nin tlieir efforts to open new stations and to\nkeep open struggling missions. It musf\nbo remembered In this connection that\nmany of the missions aro ovor .9 miles In\nlength and llv.it the work of tho mission'\narles often consists in visiting Isolated\nsettlements.\n\"In a district so new to settlement, which\na few years ago was uninhabited save by\nlho wild beasts and occasional hunters,\nbut Which has tlie splendid record ot eight\nBolf-supportlng parishes and 63 stations,\nmlnstering to Urn spiritual needs of somo\n,5000 church people, who liave themselves\ncreeled 22 churches and seven parsonages,\nand who voluntarily contribute $10.0.0 a\nyear for'church work, we have objects of\nGod's goodness which ought to stimulate us\nto further effort. There is a population\nof somo -10,000 souls nnd there are many\nplaces which are bi-ing rapidly settled,\nfurnishing a, call to tbo church for men\nnnd means to carry on tho work of God.\nIt Is of special Importance to occupy the\n(leid at once in the mining camps, as tho\nmissionary is a tremendous Influence for\ngood, where there is so muoh to bo met\nin the way of temptation by the men engaged In tlio mines.\nJUST WHAT EVERYONE SHOULD UO\nMr. J. T. Barber of Irwinvllle, Ga.,, always keeps a bottle of Chamberlain's\nColic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy at\nnana ready for Instant use. Attacks of\ncolic, cholera morbus aud dlarrohea come\non so suddenly tbat there Is no time to\nhunt a doctor or go to the store for medicine. Mr. Barber says: \"I havo tried\nChamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy which Is one of the best\nmedicines I ever saw. I keep a bottle ot\nIt in my room as I,have had several attacks of colic nnd it has proved to bo the\npest medioine I ever used.\" Sold by all\ndruggists  and  dealers. ______________\nsaid last mentioned act, except in so f*r\nA. R. HEYLAND\nPROVINCIAL I_.N1. SUItVBIOll\nPOPLAR AND KABLO\nil l-llB\u2014r T. B. \u00abM5 UI. at MM. __ \u00bb\nJ. E. ANNABLE\nNELSON, B.C.\nBTABKE1 _ CO., WHOLESALE DKAlr-\nera Id Butter. Egga, Cheeae, Produce and\nFruit. Houston Block, Jo_e. klne Street\nNelson. B.C.\nfrWt and\nfarm\nLands\nfor Sale\nIn the\nFamous\nKootenay\nValleys\nI can sell you choice fruit\nlands in 10, 20, 40, 80 or WO\nacre blocks at\nGround\nFloor\nPrices\nI do not offer Tor sale any\nfruit land that I have not personally examined. I guarantee\nevery hlock to he as good as\nrepresented, and having sold a\nlarge portion of the land now\nheing brought under fruit culture In this district. I would ho\nsafe In offering any man his\nmoney hack with 10 per cent\ninterest, who Is not satisfied\nwith his purchase. Not one\nwould do it, because they can\ndouble their money,\nI have nice fruit lands across\nthe lake from Nelson only one\nmile from the city. I have\nchoice lands in the famous\nCrawford Bay\nDistrict\nOn Kootenay Lake\nOn Kootenay River\nOn Slocan River\nOn Slocan Lake\nOn Arrow LakesI\nOn Columbia River\nIn Fire Valley\nand Creston\ndistricts, and several partly Improved farina. Wild land suitable for stock ranges, and timber lands that I have cruised\nmyself. Write me for free pamphlet and terms of payment, and\nDon't Buy\ntill you\nSee Me\nJ. E. ANNABIE\nNELSON, B. O.\nWHOLESALE HOUSES\nPRODUCE\nGROCERIES\nA. MACDONALD A CO.-WHOLESALH\nGrown, and Provision Merchants.\u2014Importers of Teas, Coffees, Spices, Dried\nFruits, Staple and Fancy Groceries, Tobaccos, Cigars, Butter, Egga, Cheese and\nPacking Houae Products. Office and\nWarehouse, corner of Front and Hall\ngtregto.   P.O. Pox lOflS,   Telephone 28\nCAMP   AND    MINERS1    FURNISHINGS\nA. MACDONALD A CO\u2014WHOLESALE\nJobbers in Blankets, Underwear, Mltta,\nGloves, Boots, Rubbers, Overalls, Jumpers, Mackinaw s and O link in Clothing.\nCamp and Miners' Sundries. Office and\nWarehouse, corner of Front and Hall\nStreets.      P.O. Box 1095.   Telephone 28.\nASSAYERS' SUPPLIES\nTHE B.C. ASSAY 4 CHEMICAL BUPPLT\nCo., Ltd., Vancouver, B, C\u2014Importer*\nand Dealers' in Assayers' Supplies. .Sole\nagents ln British Columbia for the celebrated Battersea Crucibles, Scorlflers an**\"*!\nMuffles and Wm. Ainsworth & Co.'s flat\nBalances, Chemical and Physical Apparatus, C. P. Acids and Chemicals, Pla*\ntinum, Sodium und Potassium Cyanide,\nQuicksilver, Carbonate and Bicarbonate\nof Soda, Borax, Borax Glass, Silver Free\nLead  and  Litharge.\t\nMINING   AND   MILL   MACHINERY\nWASHINGTON MACHINERY & SUPPLY\nCO.-rDealers In Engines, Band and Circular Sawmills, Atkins' Saws, Wood and\nIron Pulleys, Leyner Compressors and\nDrills, Pumps and Hoists. Prompt attention. Reasonable prices. Courteous\ntreatment.    Spokane,   Wash.\nASSAYERS\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, CHEMIST AND AS-\nsayer, Nelson, B. C\u2014Gold, silver or lead,\nsi eauli; Copper, $1.50; Gold-Silver, $1.50;\nZinc,     $3.50;    Gold-Silver-Coppcr,     $2.50.\n\u25a0 Snmptcs arriving by mall or express will\nreceive prompt attention. P.O. drawer\n1103;   Phone A 67.\nCLEANING AND PRESSING\nGENTLEMEN'S suits repaired, cleaned,\nand pressed. Goods called for and delivered. Agent for Crown Tailoring company,\nsuits from $15 up. A. J. Drlscoll, opposite\nQueen's Hotel.\nFOR SALE\nOLD CURIOSITY SHOP- If you want to\nbuy or sell anything go to tiie Old Curiosity Shop. Always in stock a full line Ot\nCrockery,  Furniture and Glassware.\nFOR SALE\u2014Ono fresh milch oow, one cow\nduo to culf on September 15.   A.iply A.\nL. Park, Houston street.\nWHY go to your neighbors to do your\nsewing when you can rent a llrst claw\nmachine with all modern attachments from\nthe Singer Sewing Machiat Co, for $3 per\nmonth. Oil, 15 cents per bottl^ needles,\n25 cents per dozen. Singer Sewing Machine\nCo., Baker street.\nFOR SALE-One pf the nicest homes ln\nRoaslund. Seven roomed house, fully furnished, In best residential part, all modern\nconveniences, 3 lots full of fruit trees in\nbearing, lawn and garden tools. Bargain\nfor quick sale, $300 cash and $20 per montk,\nwould exchange for good fruit lands.\nC. E. Miller.\nFOR SALE\u2014Five roomed house, 3 lots ln\nFerguson, B. C\u201e eleotrlo light, water,\netc, stable, wood-abed, well rented prico\n$1200. $200 custi, balance eitsy monthly payments,   c.  E. Miller.\nFOR SALE\u2014220 acres cliolceat fruit land\nout of doors, facing Okanagan lake, will\nho sold In 70 acre blocks, $25 per acre, easy\nterms, no stone or scrub, and 5000 acres\nexcellent range land can bo taken ap at\nrear.   C. E. Miller.\nFOR SALE-Half interest in the Sandon\nDairy, situated half mile from town, best\nlocation In tlio country, no opposition,\neverything In first class order, a good bargain to the flrst comer. For particulars\napply to P.O. box 171, Sandon, B.C.\nFOR SALE-Qnsollno launch, 10 feet long,\n2 1-2 horse power engine and boat house,\nApply box 181, Nelson, B, c. t\nFOR SALE\u2014Will sell <j. neros Iruit land oa\nKootenay river, seven miles below Nelson.   For particulars apply p. o. Box 'SUA\nNelson, B.C.\nIMPROVED ranch for sale, close to town,\nno reasonable offer refused, S. M. BrydgeB.\nFOR SALE\u2014Trout Lake Dairy, with 10\nhead of fresh mlloii rows, bottles, tins,\netc. Good goneral delivery wagon, no\nopposition, stable right In town. Will sell\ncheap to first comer, Dairy Is complete.\nApply A. M. Craig, P.O. box 36J, Trout\nLake,   B.C.\nWANTED\nWJ.IPON Employment Aqcncy.\nWANTED\u2014Bush   foreman,   men for   lumberyard,   waitress,  laborers.\nWANTED\u2014A strong 10 foot row  boat in\ngood condition.    Apply box 518,   Nelson.\nNURSE\u2014Maternity nurse open for engagements;   do   not   mind   light   housework\nCommunicate  Mrs.  J.   F,  Delaney,  Now\nDenver, B. C.\nWANTED\u2014Summer boarders; gentlemea\nrequiring chango of air will find comfortable quarters across the lake. Excellent\ntable; 15 minutes from boathouse. Apply\nMrs. Adams, box 508, Nelson.\nWAN'I'ED\u2014Five good  brick layers at the\nGranby   smeller.   Grand    Forks, wages\n$5.50 per day, apply Geo. S. Hill, Grand\nForks.\nFOR RENT-Success club furnished bed*\nrooms,   newly   renovated.     Terms   verit\nmoderate, npply Mrs. Altkman, caretaker,\nhouso opposite Success club.\nSQCIETY CARD3\nABERDEEN HIVE, No. 12, L. O. T. M.~\nMnets 2nd and _th Wednesday, 7:10 p.\u00bb.\nof each month In K. of p. Hall, Vernon\nStreet, next to post office. Visiting m\u00abu-<\nbert cordially Invited.\nMARY MATTHEW, L.C.\nMINNIE RITCHIE, Record Ketper\nNELSON LODGE, NO. 59, INDEPEN-\ndent Order of Good Templars, raets\nevery Thursday evening nt 8 o'clock in\nFraternity hall, Visiting members are\ncordially invited to attend.\nW. H. CALDER, C.T.\nG, KING,  Secretary, J\n THE DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C, TUESDAY, JUNE 27, 1905\n.~7~-\/\u2014\/\nSunlight\nHousehold utensils can be made to look os good as new hy washing in ft\nRuddy solution of Sunlight Soap. They will shine and glitter thus helping ta\nmake llio home bright and inviting.\nSunlight Soap means less than half the labor required in washing with common soup\u2014and makes everything spotlessly clean.\nSunlight Soap is made of pure oils und fats, contains no ingredient injurious\nto the hands or clothing.\nASK FOR THE OCTAGON BAR\nSunlight Soap Washes the Clothes White and won't Injure ihe Hands\nLEVER BROTHERS LIMITED, TORONTO 8a\nThe \"Little Jap\" Hammer Drill\nThis little machine drill will do its work with no olher mountings\nthan the man who holds it. So compact it may ho operated In a space\ntoo small for a hand drill. One man with a \"Littie Jap\" can equal the\nwork of 10 or 12 hand drillers.   Nelson sales office, Houston Building.\nAll is-Chalmers-Bullock\nLimited\nImmediate Delivery From Rossland Stock\n3   No. 5 CAMERON PISTON SINKING PUMPS.\n1   No. 7 CAMERON PISTON SINKING PUMP.\n1   CAMERON  PROSPECTORS'  PLUNGER PUMP.\nStation, Boiler Feed, Centrifugal and I_:in_ Pumps In Stock as well.\nThe Jenckes Machine Co., L\nROSSLAND AND VANCOUVER\nimitcd\nWORKS: SHERBROOKE, QUE\nP. BURNS is CC\nWHOLESALE AND RETAIL.\n_-Z_-__1} __C_Q_ZG-?--_~<rr-'&\nHEAD OFFICE NELSON, B. 0.\nBranci) Markets In Rossland, Trail, Nelson, Kaslo, Bandon, Turn _\"____,\nNew Den.er and Siocan City.\n-Titers li. Mall to any Branch will have Prompt and Careful  Attention.\nG. GILLETT\nCONTRACTOR AND BUILDER\nSOLE AGENT FOR THE PORTO RICO LUMBER CO.. Ltd., Retail Yards\nRough aud dress_d lumber, turned work and brackets, Coast lalli\n-and shingles, sash and doors.   Cement, brick and lime for sale. Automatic grinder.   Yard and Factory Vernon street, east of Hall.\nP. 0. Box 232.\nTelephone, 178\nNelson, B. C.\nProcter's Bargains\nFor Sale-\nPor S.ilc\u2014Threo improved ranches\non   West   Arm   of   Kootenny   lake,\n, Thnt  \u25a0well  known  summer  resort\nknown ns tho Outlet Hotel.\nREAL   ESTATE!   and\nINSURANCE BROKER\nFor Rent\u2014\nFor Rent\u2014Tlio property known aa\ntiie MacCarland residence, largo\nroomy house and grounds.\nStore on Baker street, now ocou-\nplcrt by 3. V. AVoir, For terms anil\nparticulars apply\nT. G. Procter\nFernie Foundry and Machine Worlds\nRepairing and Job Work v.. Specialty.-\nBEAN BROS\nBrass Castings Made to Order.\nBOX 237\n\u2022 FERNIE B- C.\nBOUGH   LUMBER  DRBSSBD\nSKWi-i,  Wlnflowf, Mouldings, BWngles, Turned Work and Brack*!**.\nII \u00abj\u00bb5&l*ts aw* up-to-date stack always  0j_ band.  Mall nrde.ru promptly aitem-MI *\u25a0\u25a0*\nA. C. LAMBERT A DO.\nCAMPION & CARTER\nCommission   and   Real   Estate  Agents,\nNELSON,  B.   C.\nWo have several choice blocks of fruit\nJand on Kootenay river and lake, ln lots\nfrom 10 to 220 acres, Improved and unimproved, prices reasonable. Somo good bargains,         __ j _,.(j ,j _i_t ,\nTHE QUEEN'S HOTEL\nBAKER STREET\nMRS E. C. CLARICE, Proprietress,\nRATES 53 PER DAY.\nLarge and comfortable bedrooms nnd\nHirst class dining room, Sample room for\ncommercial men.\nGIANT EAGLE WAS SHOT\nSTEAMER MINTO  CAPTURED YOUNG\nBIRD ALIVE\nSTORY OF SUCCESSFUL VENTURE ON\nARROW LAKES\nAnother eagle of kingly proportions has\nbeen shot on Arrow lake. Near the narrows between the upper and lower lakes\nthere seems to be a- favored haunt for\neagles. A few months ago a very large one\nwas secured by the united effort* of the\ncrew of the steamer Kootenay. Last Saturday two parent birds wore shot and a\nyoung eagle captured liy the crew of tlie\nBteamer -Minto. The male bird Is bigger\nthan any previously reported In Kootenay,\nmeasuring seven feet six Inches from tip\nto tip. The young bird will probably be\nadded lo Fred Bosquet's menagerie; The\nshunting and capture was a thrilling incident.\nLast Saturday morning as the steamer\nMinto, with captain Fraser in command,\nwas approaching Fire Valley, about \u00ab\no'clock, watchman Douglas saw two gigantic eagles circling round a tall cot-\ntonwood tree on the loft of western shore\nof the lake. Ho promptly called the attention of lhe captain and every available\nlire arm on board was used, the catptaln,\nthe mate, the purser, Baptists, who was\nthe hero of the last battle with eagles, nnd\nseveral others taking part. Tlio first successful shot was made by tlie Phot, Walter Wright, who brought down the female\nbird.\nThe male bird_ disappeared hut by tills\nlimo the nest had been discovered In the\nlop of a Cottonwood tree, 7u feet from tlio\nground. Mate McCarthy put on a pair\nof climbers and got up about 30 feet, when\nlie .-.lipped and fell to the ground, fortunately without sustaining injuries. Assistant engineer Swan Peterson next essayed the task, and succeeded in reaching\nthe nest. There he found a young bird\nwhich ho threw dowa to his comrades\nwho secured it uninjured.\nPeterson's descent was tho most exciting feature of the whole adventure. He\nwas weary from his climb when he began\ntho return. Ho had made about 20 feet\nand was still 50 feet from the ground when\nhis strength gave out. At that height the\ngirth of the tree was too great for him\nto support himself by encircling it with\nhis arms, and he remained there helpless.\nAs soon as his danger was recognized, all\nlhe boat's ladders wero lashed end to\nend and placed against the tree. From\ntlio top ono of the crew succeeded in throwing u rope to-Peleraon, who made lt fast\nover a short branch. He then slid down the\nrope and was assisted tu lhe top of the\nladder, from whloh he easily reached terra\nilrma   exhausted   but  unhurt. '*\nAs the crew returned to the strainer the\nmale bird reappeared and circled round the\nempty nest. Again the firearms were\nproduced and aftor many shols the eagle\nfell to the big rllle of Captain Fraser.\nThe bird was secured and found to measure seven foot und a half from tip to tip.\nAs the fatal bullet had struck it In lho\nneck the body and wings wero unharmed.\nTlie female had been shut ln the body and\nadmaged. The male bird was shipped to\nVernon Saturday night to be dressed and\nmounted by W. C, Pound, taxidermist.\nwhen returned wll ladorn the cabin of\nthe   Minto.\nTlie captive young bird Is sfill on board\ntlie Minto, R. Irwin, port steward and\nJames Neeiands are negotiating for Its\npresentation to F. Bosquet as an addition\nto the leading monngorlo of tho KootenayB,\nTill. TRAMWAY PARK\nEditor The Dally News\u2014ll may be that\ntho clly council has neither the disposition nor tlie authority to deal with the\nTramway park matter, but whether It lias\nolther or neither, the most ordinary tact\nor judgment, to say nothing of courtesy,\nwould have dictated a decent reply to my\nletter of tho Oth lnst., in lieu of which\nboth myself and the company I represent,\nhave been made the subject uf a number of\npositively false, illogical and malicious\nstatements by the mayor and his too\nclever correspondent, \"for reasons,\" let\nus say, \"best known to thomselves.\" But\nhowever, effective and gratifying the mayor might lind such tactics to prove in\nsume oases, the present difficulty will not\nyield to thai sort of treatment; Indeed Its\ncontinuance but aggravates the situation.\nI havo said that I shall permit no wll-\nFrederic S. Clements\nCIVIL, ENGINEER\nDOMINION   AND   PROVINCIAL   LAND\nSURVEYOR\nAgont for obtaining Crown Grunts, mine\nsurveying, etc.\nRoom IC. K.W.C. Block\n\u00bb o   B_, 1 N\u00ablso\u00ab. ao\nThis store will close Thursday\nafternoons during June, July\nand August.\nWest Kootenay Butcher Co\nFRUIT LANDS\nFOR SALE\nIn 10 aero blocks, In 20 acre block*;\nseveral Improved ranches.\nJ. K. ANNABLE, Nelson, B. fl\nAshcroft and Marks, experienced blacksmiths, wheelwrights, and expert horse-\nshoers, nro doing business on Hall street,\nln tho premises previously occupied by\nGrant McLean. First class work In every\n_M_rtiu\u00abiajr guaranteed.\nR. D. Evans, dlseoverer of tho famous Cancer Cure, requests anyone\nBuffering with cancer to write him.\nTwo days' treatment will cure any\ncancer, external of Internal. No\ncharge until cured.\nR. D. EVANS,  Brandon, Mnn.\nPLUMBING\nWe mm prepared te do all kinds \u2022!\nPlumbing, steam and gas fitting, on thl\nshortest notice. Estimates given. B. K.\nStraohan a Co.. Baker Iti-eet N4\u00bbo\u00bb\nVEOEA ML   .;,..    .      _-*-______\nfully flagrant violation of tho company's\nrights and I meant It. If llio people aro\ndesirous of tho uso of the park, tho sooner\nthe matter Is taken up regardless of tlie\nmayor's vindictive: attitude tha better,\nF. J. MUSS ELM AN.\nNelson, June 20.\nNEARBY   MINES\nDeal Pending at New ben ver\u2014Slocan Star\nMlno and Mill Busy\nThe following mining notes are taken\nfrom the last issue of the Sandon Mining\nReview.\nA deal 1b pending In New Denver for tho.\nMollle Hughes and California mines.\nGerman caplUil is behind it and tho outlook Is very favorable for its consummation\nThe figures are not known.\nNew York parties are after the Hewitt\nmine nenr Silverton, one of the beat developed mines In the Slocan. Over four\nmiles of tunnels have been driven and\nthere are fully 100,000 tons of treatable\nstuff in sight blocked out. If the right\nprocess Is installed, the Hewitt would be\nable to run out 100 tons of ore daily. A\ncheap transportation method could easily\nbe installed from tho mine lo the lako\nand this mlno would serve as the backbone of any process lhat would locate un\nSlocan lake for the purpose of treating\nthe ores of this district. There Is a bonanza. In sight nround this part of tho\ncamp for sume process tlmt will handle llio\nore economically, and be able to pay tlie\nproducer a living price. Tho mines of\nSilverton arc rich but the ores nro cpillo\nIntimately mixed.\nTlie American Boy Is shipping two cars\nof zinc ure, whleh was taken out in development work. Thero Is a large tonnage\navailable In the mine, and it only -awaits\ntho payment of living prices to turn out\nthe ore.\nThe Slocan Star Is pounding out 25 tons\nof zinc ore daily. Good progress is being\nmade at the mine, und tlie mill ts work-\nCANADIAN\nPAQifgij\nRAILWAY\nLow\nReturn\nRates\nTO\nPortland, Oregon,\nExhibition\nNelson, Rossland, Boundary\n$23.75\n30-DAY-LIMIT\nVia Vancouver, Victoria\nCorresponding rates from all Kootenay points.\nFor full particulars first class or tourist sleeper reservations   apply to local\nagents or write.\nJ. B. CARTER,    \"*        E. 3. COYLE,\nD.P.A., Nelson A.G.l'.A., Vancouvor\nSpokano Falls & Northern Railway\nPortland *m Return\n$23.75\nAccount\nLewis and Clark\nExposition\nFor particulars call on\nG. K. TACKABURY.\nNelson, B. C. General Agent\nKOOTENAY RAILWAY ft NAVIGATION\nCOMPANY, LIMITED\nXislo and Slocan Railway Company\nInternational    Navigation    and    Trading\nCompany,\nTIME CARD\n\u2022t   loeal   trains   and   steamers   sff-Mtlrt\nMarch 7th, ISO.\nKASLO-8ANDON\nDaily Dailf\n1:30 p.m. Lv Sandon Ar 10:26 a.m.\n2:12 p.m. Lv....Whitewater Ar 9:40 a.m.\n3:45 p.m. Ar Kaslo Lv. 8:00 a.in.\nKA8L0-NBL80N\nDaily Dally\nEx. Bund&J Et. Sunday\n6:00 a.m. Lv Kaslo Ar. 9:16 a.m.\n7:30 a.m. Lv Ainsworth..,.Ar.   8:15 p.m.\n10:00 a.m. Ar Nelson Lv 6:46 p.m.\nCalling at all way  landings on signal,\nNELBON-SAN DUN\n5:46 p.m. Lv Nelson Ar 10:00 a.m.\n10:26 a.m. Ar Sandon Lv. 1:30 p.m.\nThrough   dally   freight   and   passenger\nservice  between Nelson and Sandon.\nFor further information and full parties*\nIan oaU on or addreM\nROBERT IRVING,\nMgr. K. R. and N. Co, Mf,\nKaslo, B. o.\n-K h\\ V&JKASSB_xrt Local Agtat,\ning -smoothly, while the prospects are\nbright for an increased tonnage Tor tho sea-'\nson. Water Is plentiful and tlio large tonnage of concentrating ores on hand will\nkeep the mill nt work to Its full capacity\nso as to dispose of It.\nTho Slocan Star mlno Is turning out\nzinc concentrated at the rate of 750 tons\na month. It Is the samo grade as shipped\nto Pueblo lost winter, viz., 35 por cont zinc,\n45 ounces silver and under 5 per cont lead.\nAbout 250 tons of lead concentrates and\ncrude oro are being shipped per ponlh.\nThe Slocan Star mine Is one of the mines\nin lhe camp lhat does not do its mining\nin the stock market, nor la It run by stoek\nmarket mining engineers.\nSome of the most beautiful crystals we\nhavo seen, ore In the possession of Dr.\nGomm. They onmo from tho Lucky Jim\nmine. The oro is coming from tlie winze\nnow tn process of being sunk, Is of exceptional purity. It is not often a mino\ncan sink 50 foot in crude ore and have only\nta few shovelsful of waste matter In tho\noperation.\nMINING RECORDS\nAt lhe mining recorder's olilce on Monday certificates of work Were Issued to\nFred Adie on the Nevada; to C. E, Dew-\nrosier and partners on tlie Guinea fractional, lhe Undor and tho Dominion; to Joseph\nChipman on the Last Quarter; to John VV.\nHnrkness on the Gold Crown and tiie Midday; to William Allen on the Zula King\nand tho Doll In Vurdcn nnd lo Mrs, Janet\nStewart on tho Iron Cliff.\nJ, A. Sullivan recorded the location of\ntlio Sullivan Iron on Gcat mountain nnd\n13. de Roy tho location of tlie Mountain\nPeak on tlie north  fork of ltt-MUo creek.\nMc.ktT* Brand Soap makes copper like\ngold, tin like silver, crockery liko marble.,\nmm! windows liko crystal. \u00ab\/_\nJUST RECEIVED.\nFresh and Fragrant\nNEW CROP\nBlack or Green\nAS ALWAYS\nTHE BEST\nPrices moderate by tht pound or _rUr\n!\u25a0_! package.\nKootenay Coffee Go.\nF__ne 177.  P. O. Box 181.\nTHE\nO.K. BAKERY |\nIn here to stay, ond If you havo \u2022\nnot given us a trial ring up \u2022\nPhone 165 j\nThere  can   be no   mistake,  as 9\nevery loaf is stamped \u2022\no.k. :\nCrawford & Hay    j\nStanley   Street. a\nPhone 165. c\n4\nFOR SALE\n..ft foot lot and building, south side of\nRaker street, rented constantly, easy\nterms, price on application.\nIn Ilnmo Addition, four roomed house\nand  lot,   JC00  on   monthly   payment   plan.\n2 aero ranch one mile from Nelson, W\nfruit trees, 150 email fruit, furnished cabin,\n1350.\nIn Hume Addition, corner lot, fruit trees\nnnd small fruits, witli 1 room cottage,\nabout {700, good terms.\nChadbourn & McLaren\nK.W.C. BLOCK\nRanches For Sale\n6, 8, 20 and 35 aero ranches closo to the\ncity.\nA choice 20 acres on tlie West Arm or\nKootenay lako, about U miles from city,\nanly $350.\n135 acres, well watered, with good house\n20x24 feet, and 7 acres cleared, price 13150.\nHouses Por Sale\n7-roomed house, centrally located, 2 lots,\na bargain, $2300, terms.\nG-roomed house on Stanley street and t\nlots, all modern convenienses, t'M9, terms.\n70\nR.J.5teel\nNelson Steam Laundry\nP. O. Box tt.   Telephone IM,\nAll kinds and all colon of Ladle*' aaf\nOentn' Clothing\nCLEANED AND DYED\nFlannels, Blanket*, Curtalni, Bilks, Bt*.\na specialty.\nGloves renovated to look Ilk* ne-ff.\nSteam Carpet Cleaning\nTeur patronage __ll_lt__.\nPAUL NIPOU, Prop.\nHOTEL\nCornor Hall and Verntn Streets\nTwo blocks from City Wharf.   The \\\nibilar a day houae ln Nolson.\nKO   CHINEHH   hlffPLOTJEU\nAugust Thomas\nPROPRIETOR.\nunnyside Hotel\nNELSON, B. O.\nRATES 11 PER DAT\nThe Sunnyside has nicely furnished bedrooms, lighted with electricity and th.\ntable Is tho best In Nelson for the price.\nTho hotel Is on Baiter street, one block\nfrom the C.P.R. and G.N.R. union depei\n**-\u2022 Mrauors unlit on tb- r>r\u00abmlp\u00ab*\nTREMONT   HOUSE\nSOKOPBAN AND AMERICAN PLAN\nHOALa So.   BOOMS -'ROM ao TO \"_.*\n\u00ab____ONE _ TREOILLDS, Projirleter.\nBiker Btreet. Nelion.\nBAETLETT   HOUSE\n(Formerly Clarke House)\nThe best 11.00 per day house In Nolans\nNone but white help employed.   Tb\u00ab 1>\"\nUi thb bett\nG. W. BARTLETT - Prop.\nGRAND 0EHTRAL HOTEL\nOpposite Courthouse and new PostoOs-t,\nBeat 2&o meal in town. European ani\nAmerican plan. Only white labor employee,   Hrst class bar.\nr-ortV*.* a, -mwrnwrnnvf  p-_\u00bbh******\nMcLeo'd Hotel\nCORNER\nruurr and second avenue\nYMIR, B. C.\nCentrally located, rebuilt ana refurnishes\nthroughout All medern Improvement*\nSample Rooms In connection. The enls\nl\u00bbt class hotel ln Ymlr.\nRATES FROM U.M UP\nFINLAY VabDOD. Prnwi-n*-**\"\nGRAND HOTEL\nCor. Howard and Main Sts.,\nSPOKANE\nBritish Columbia People\nWill find a home in Spokane at the\nGrand Hotel, Recently remodelled and\nrefurnished.\nUndor the management of B. B.\nPhair, lale or Hotel Phair, Nelson, B. C,\nAll British Columbia papers on file.\nEuropean plan. Rates 75 cents to ?2.00\nper day.   Free bus meets all trains.\nROYAL HOTEL\nTELEPHONE 148.\nMRS. WM, ROBERTS, Proprietress\nThe best mealH thnt cun he provided tn\ntliis market, cooked under tho supervision of tho proprietress, who is a I'mnou..\ncaterer.\nNice airy rooms, newly furnished; bath\nfor guests, .\nThe best wines, iiQuorf. nnd cigars c:in\nbo obtained at the bar.\nTERMS; |l AND $1.60 PER DAY\nCOR. STANLEY ANI) SILICA STREETS;\nCurs pnss the door\nMadden House ^.VSfc!\nDo you need a comfortable fcomeT If h\ntry the Madden Houso. Well furnishes*\nrooms lighted by electricity; flrst class\nbeard. In the bar you will find all th*\ntest domestic and imported liquors ai**\nclears.\nTHOMAS MADDKN. Proprietor.\nOxford Cafe\nNEXT DOOR TO OFFICE SALOON,\nWard Street\nMerchants Dinner from 12 noon to _:3t)\np.m., 25 cents,\nShort order meals at all hours, Open day\nand night\nPrank Lin Lun\nManager and Cook\neynopBis Of Regulations for Disposal *fl\n- Mineral on Dominion Lunda In MatU*\ntob;i, tho NortluvL'st Territories and tha\nYukon Territory.\nCoal-Coal lamia may tie Durenased at IU\nper aero for soft eoal and 120 tur anthracite.\nNot more t.'i.m ro a.n-.i can be acquired\nby one Individual or company. Royalty\nat the rate of ten .cents per ton of 2001\npounds i.hall bo collected on the gross output.\nQuartz--PertioTiB of elgliteon years an-fl\novor und j-.iint stock companies holding (re*\nminer's Le* uiic.it\u00ab. nmy obtain entry fo*\na mining location.\nA free mlior's certificate Is granted tot\nono or moro veara, not exceeding live, upon pfiyinrut i,i ndvaru'fl \u201e_ J7.60 j,er annum\nfor un Individual, and from JBO to $100 pai\nannum for a company, according to capl>\nA free miner, -having discovered mineral\nin place, may locate a claim lSOOxl&Oo feet\nby marking out tbo same with two legal\nponta, bearing Juration notices, one at each\nend on the line of the lode or vein.\nThe claim shall be recorded within fifteen days if located within ten miles of\na mining recorder's olilce, one additional\nday allowed for every additional ten mllea\nor fraction, The fee for recording a claim\nis $5.\nAt. least 5100 must be expended on tha\nclaim each year or paid to the mining recorder in lieu thereof. When tbW has been\nex'i'Jiidi-d or Dald. the locator may, upoi\nhaving a survey marifc, ind uf.on complying with other requirements, purchase tfisi\nland at $1.00 per acre.\nPermission may bft granted bv the MliL-\nIsler oi' lhe Interior to locato claims containing iron and mica, also COpDW in the Yukon territory, of un area not exceeding ltt\nacres.\nThe patent for a mining location sball\nprovide for the payment of a Royalty ot\n2 1-2 per cent of the Sales of the product*\nof the location.\nPlaner Mining\u2014 Manitoba and the N.W.T.\nexcepting tho Yukon Porrliory\u2014 placer mining claims generally aro 1(10 feet square;\nentry fee, tb; renewable yearly. On the\nNorth Saskatchewan River claims are\neither bar or bench, tho former being 100\nfeet long and extending between high and\nlow water mark. The latter includes bar\nclji;*_-itij;.-\u25a0. but extends hack to the base of\ntin- hill or bank, hut not exceeding 1000\nfeet. Whero steam power Is used claims\n200 feet wide may be obtained.\nDredging In the rivers of Manitoba and\nrJ-e N.W.T., excepting the Yukon Territory\u2014A free miner may obtain only two\nleases of five miles each for a term of\ntwenty years renewable in the discretion of\ntho Minister of the Interior.\nThe lessee's right fs confined to the submerged beds or bars of the river below low\nwater mark, and subject to the rights of\nall persona who liave, or may receive\nentrlen for bar dfgfc'ing.*. or ben\u00abh claims\nexcept, on tlif Saskatchewan River where\nthe lessee raay dredge to high water mark\non   each   alternate   leasehold.\nTbe lessee shall have a dredge In opera-i\ntlon within one season from the date of the\nlease for eaeh live miles, but where a person or company has obtained more than\none lease one dredge for euch fifteen miles\nor fraction ia sufficient. Rental $10 per\nannum for each mllo of river leased.\nRovaltv at thn rate of two and a half per\ncent collected on tbo output after it e\u00bb>\nceeda J1U.&J0.\nDredging In the Yukon Territory\u2014Six\nleases of five miles eaeh may be granted\nto a free miner for a term of twenty yeare,\nTiie lessee's right Is contlned to the submerged bed or bars In the river below low\nwater mark, that boundary to bo Hied by\nIts position on the llrst day of August la\ntbo year of tlie date of the lease.\nThe lessee Bhall have ono dredge In operation within two years from the date of the\nlease, and one dredge for each tlve miles\nwithin six years from such dato. Rents!\nfbO per mile for the flrst year and $10 P*r\nmile for each subsequent year. Royalty\nsame as   placer  mining.\nPlacer Mining in the Yukon Territory\u2014\nOreik, gulch, river and hill claims Bhall\nnot exceed 2fi0 feal lu length, measured en\nthe b;iso line or general direction of the\ncreek or gulch, the width being from 100\u00bb\nto 2000 feet. All other placer claims shall\nhe 2b9 feet square.\nClaim.*, are inn iked by two legal posts,\none at each end. bearing notices. Entry\nmust hv obtained within ten daya, if tbe\nclaim Is within ten miles of a Mining Recorder's otllee. One extra day Is allowed for\neach additional ten miles or fraction.\nThe person or company staking a claim\nmust hold a tree miner's certificate.\nThe discoverer of a new mine Is entitled\nto a claim 1000 feet fn length, and If tne\nparty consists of two, 1500 feet altogether,\non the output Of which no royalty shall\nbe charged, the rest of the party ordinary\nclaims .inly.\nEntry fee (10. Royalty at the rate Of two\nand a half per cent oa the value of the\ngold   shipped   from   the   Yukon   Territory\nto be paid to the Comptroller,\nNo rreo miner sliall receive a grant of\nmore than une mining claim on each separate river, creek or gulch, but the same\nminer may tmid auy number of claims by\npurchase, and free miners may work their\nclaims in partnership by filing notice and\npaying fee of $2, A claim may be abandoned and another obtained on the same\ncreek, gulch or river, by giving notice and\npaying a fee.\nWork must be done on a claim eton\nyear to the value of at least 1200.\nA certificate that work has been done\nniiiKl bfl nhtnlned envh v..- If not. the\nclaim shall he deemed tn be abandoned, and\nopen to occupation and entry by a fret\nminer.\nThe boundaries of a claim may be defined absolutely bv having a survey made\nand publishing notices in the Yukon Official\nGazette\npetroleum\u2014.All unappropriated Dominion\nLands In Manitoba, the Northwest Territories nnd wllhln lhe Yukon Territory are\nopen to prospecting for petroleum, and the\nMinister mav reserve for nn Individual or\noompany having machinery on the land\nto be proBpected, an area of 1920 acres for\nSUCh period ps he mav decide, the lengtn\nof which shall not exceed three times the\nhreadth, Should (be prospector discover eU\nin paving quantities, and satisfactorily es-\ntabilsb such discovery, an area not exceeding WO aoreB, Including the oil well, wlu\nbe sold fco the prospector at the rate \u00ab\nJl an acre, and the remainder of the tract\nreserved, namely 1280 acres, will be sold\nat tbo rato of 13 per acre, subject to\nroyalty at such rate as may be ep-eelfl-M\nby Orrtcr In Council. ^ eoRT\nDeputy of the Minister ot tlie Interior.\nDeut.   Interior.  June 30.  1*0+ \t\nT. SPROAT\nBHIUDERB AND CON-R_._TO___\nyliop at rear of Tribune oi__e,\nnbi_k>n. a. a.\nFRANK C. GREEN\nCIVII. ENGINEER'\nDominion anil Provincial Land Burrerar,\nP. O. Boi _K.   Phone an B\nOr. KMttui: _\u25a0_ yitterta \u25a0__,\nAtlantic S,S, Sailings\nC. P. R. ATLANTIC 3. 8. LINB\n(From Montreal)\nL.   Manitoba..June  IL,   Champlnin..Ju. U\n(To   London   Direct)\nMt   Temple...luno  20 Montrose   ..Juno   M\nALLAN   LINB\n(From Montreal)\nBavarian ....June lOVlotorlan   ....Juno I\nDOMINION  LING\n(From Montreal)\nDominion    ..June   ID Ottawa    Juno M\nATLANTIC TRANSPORT LINB\nMinneapolis..June   10 Minnehaha..Juno   II\nAMERICAN LINE\nBt.  Louis ....June 17 New York....Juno lt\nRMD  STAR LINK\nVaderland  luno 17Finland  June 10\nCUNARD LINH\nUmbrla    June  10 Caronla   ....June   IS\nLueania  June 11\nWHITE STAR LINH\nMajestic    lime   WOoeanlo   June   .?\n3&1U0    Jane   2U Cedrlc    June   U\nFRENCH   LIND\nLa Savoi*a,,..June lDLa Touraine..june I\nIIAMJ-URC. AMERICAN\nMoltke    June   16Bleuohor   ....June   I\n(Mediterranean Service)\nPritiz Oscar June si\n1'rin\/, Adalbert  June IB\nNORTH  OKK.MAN   LLOYD\nKaiser Wlllielm H  June u\nGrosser Kurfuerst  June*)\n(Mediterranean Service)\nKolng Albort    June 17\nKonlgln   Lulse    June   'li\nAll continental rates nnd sailings on application. If you nre contemplating: taking\nan ocean voyage drop us a lino and ws\nwill bo pleased to furnish you with full ln-\n(orinntlon promptly.\nJ. 8. CARTER, W. P P. CUMMINS.\nD.P.A., NtilSR,     Q\u00aba_ *tt\u201e WHuUMff\n_____________^_________m\n THE DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C, TUESDAY, JUNE 27, 1905\n^4M>ii'M^'M4*4Hl^4i4i444'M'M^\nESTABLISHED 1878\nINCOBPORATED 1897\nHENDERSON\nDIRECTORIES\n_______________________= LIMITED _______-__=-__^=\nPUBLISHERS OF GAZETTEERS\nAND BUSINESS DIRECTORIES\nManitoba and Northwest Gazetteer and Directory\nBritish Columbia Gazetteer and Directory\nCITY DIRECTORIES\nWinnipeg, Victoria. Vancouver\nHenderson Publishing Co.\nLimited Liability,\nVancouver, B.C.\nJAMES HENDERSON,\nManaging Director.\nHenderson Directories,\nLimited,\n.      Winnipeg, Man.\nJAMES HENDERSON,\nPresident.\nJAMES SELBY HENDERSON.\nManager and Seoy-Treas.\nMembers of Association of American Directory Publishers.\n,      feiX^\/^\/ !^'\/fc.^fal ^\nThe HALL MINING\nNELSON, B.C.\nPurchases\nLead, Copper\nand Dry Ores\nSPECIAL CARE FOR FRUIT\nWILL   RUN   TWICE   A   WEEK   FROM\nLANDING TO WINNIPEG!\nRESIDENT PEST  INSPECTOR  ASKED\nBY   ASSOCIATION\naa,,,,,. ,a,a**a,..........   *MiiiMMminMMMtn*i\nPorto Rico Lumber Co., Ltd.\nManufacturers of and Wholesale Dealers la\nROUGH AN- DREB8BD LUMBER, RHINOI.EH AND MOULDING-, BAND'\n\u25a0AWN AND TUBNBC WORK. AN UP-TO-DATE DRT KlUt IK COM-\nNKTION. ._        _     _.\nMILLS AT YMIR\nPorto Rico Lumber Co., Ltd,\n49-9999 \u00bb\u2022\u2022\u00bb*\u00bb\u00bb*\u00bb**\u25a0*\u25a0\u2666\nKootenay Engineering Works\nFOUNDERS AND MACHINISTS\n| MANUFACTURERS OP THB CRAWFORD AERIAL, TRAMWAT. _f|j\nRepairing and Jobbing a Specialty\nfllicetmetal work, casting., bullderi material and mining and mill! martlner..\nLANDJ^OTICES\nTAKE NOTICE-Slxty days after date\nI Intend to apply to tho Hon. the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works at Victoria for permission to purchase the following described land, beglning at a post\nnear the north bank of the Kootenay river,\nWest Kootenay District, marked W. Clayton's southeast corner, thence west 40\nchains, thence north 40 chains, thenco east\nforty chains, thenco south 40 chains to\npoint of commencement, containing one\nhundred and sixty acres more or less.\nW.   CLAYTON.\nThrums Siding, May 24th, 1905.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that 60 days\nafter date I intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works at Victoria, to purchase 160 acres of land ln\nWest Kootenay District, and described as\nfollows: Commencing at a post placed\nabout half a mile north of the 3rd mile\nboard south of Castlegar and marked\n3.A.C. S.E. corner, thence west 40 chains,\nthenco north 40 chains, tlience east to Columbia and Western railway, thence south\nalong said railway to place of commencement,\nMay   24th,   1905.\nJ. A. CRYDERMAN.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that 60 days\nafter date I Intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works at Victoria, to purchase 1C0 acres of land In\nWest Kootenny District, and described as\nfollows: Commencing at a post placed on\nthe west side of the Columbia and Western railway, about 200 feet south of the\nfourth mllo post south of Castlegar and\nmnrked J.H.R.C. N.E. corner, thence west\n40 chains, thence south 40 chains, thence\neast to the Columbia and Western railway,\nthence north along said railway to place\nof beginning.\nMay   24th,   1905.\nJ. H.   R. CHRISTIE.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that 60 days\nafter date I Intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works at Victoria, to purchase 160 acres of land ln\nWest Kootenay District, and described as\nfollows: Commencing at a post placed on\nthe west aide of the Columbia and Western\nrailway, about 200 feet south of tha third\nmile board south of Castlegar, and marked\nP.W. N.E. corner, thence west 40 chains,\nthense south 40- chains, tlience east to\nsaid railway, thence north along said\nrailway  to place  of beginning.\nMay   24th,   1005.\nPETER WARREN.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that CO days\nafter date I intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works at Victoria, to purchase 1G0 acres of land in\nWest Kootenay District, and described as\nfollows: Commencing at a post placed on\nthe west side of the Columbia and Western railway, about 200 feet south of the\nthird mile board south of Castlegar and\nmarked H.F.A. S.E. comer, thence West\n40 chains, thence north 40 chains, thenoe\neast to the Columbia and Western railway,\nthence south along the said railway to\nplaco of beginning.\nMa\/   24th,   1905.\nH. F. ANNABLE.\nNOTICB is hereby given tliat we, the\nYale-Columbia Lumber Company, Limited,\nof Nakusp, B. C, intend sixly days from\ndate, to apply to the Chief Commissioner\nof Lands and Works for permission to purchase the undermentioned tract of land:\nCommencing at a post on the South Limit tut nf Columbia & Western Railway,\nabout ono half mile east of Westley Station, marked Vale-Columbia Co.'s northeast corner, running thenco soulh 20 chains,\nthenco east SO cliains, tlience north 20\nchains, more or less, to the soutli Limit of\nthe Columbia & Western Railway, thence\nwesterly along the said railway 80 chains\nto place of commencement,\nTHE YALE-COLUMBIA. LUMBER CO.,\nLimited.\nJ. G.   BILLINGS,  Secretary.\nMay   25th,   1903.\nable to irorm you that after correspondence\nand several Interviews, I have a promise\nfrom tht; Dominion Express company that\na special'frutt car will ho run twice a week\nfrom Kootenay Landing to Winnipeg. The\nc impnny expects to lose on it tlie (Irst\nyear, nnd possibly the second, but is prepared to stand that for the sake of assisting in tlie development of the district. Somo of tlie oastern ofliclals were\nsurprised to-learn that we had any fruit\nThe announcement was received witli\ngreat satisfaction. Another meeting will\nbn held as soon as secretury Morley hears\nfrom tho provincial association its plans\nfor tho meeting hero on July 15.\nBROTHERHOOD OK ST. ANDREW\nPHONE 204\nOffice and Works Foot of Park Street.\nB. C. TRAVIS\nMANAGER\n?! -'NEfctMON. B. C,\nThe urgent necessity for the Immediate\nappointment ot a resident fruit peat Inspector is appreciated by loeal fruit growers. Frequent strong representations have\nbeen mado to the provincial department of\n\u25a0agriculture. Tlie only reply so far received\nis that Inspector T. Cunningham Will in\nfuture pay more attention than formerly\nlo Kootenay, is nol satisfactory. It is contended that an inspector wllh headquarters\nat the coast cannot possibly exercise efficient supervision over the Nelson and\nother Kootenny fruit districts, The secretary of the Kootenay fruit growers' association is constantly in receipt of letters\nfrom isolated ranchers asking that efforts\nhe made to have an Inspector appointed\nWhose   headquarters   shall   be   In   Nelson.\nThe   Dominion  Express  compamy   haw\nmade definite arrangements to have a car,\n\u25a0specially suited for the shipment of perishable fruit, run regularly twice a week\nduring the summer from Kootenay Landing\nto Winnipeg,\nBoth matters camo up yesterday afternoon at a special meeting of ihe Kootenay\nfruit growers' assciatiu held In the city\nhall at 3 o'clock. Tho meeting was well\nattended. Its special purpose wus to arrange for Hi*' reception and entertainment\nuf the members of tlie provincial association who will be here for the convention\non July 15. No action could bo taken as no\ndefinite Information has been received as\nto ibe time or tlieir arrival. It Is known\nthat T. Cunningham, provincial fruit pest\nInspector, will bo In the district long\nenough to make ofllclal trips to all the\nneighboring fruit districts.\nMany letters were read on the subject\nof pest Inspection and It wns resolved that\nefforts to secure the appointment of a\nresident   Inspector  should be renewed.\nAn interesting lettor wns received from\na farmer of Fort William, who wants to\nbuy 100 acres of fruit land. He is willing\nto clear It himself but objects to paying\n$50 an acre for It unless it Is well timbered.\nPresident Jamk-w Johnstone 'then announced: \"Gentlemen I am pleased to bo\nTIMBER NOTICES\nNOTICB Is hereby given tbat thirty\ndays after date I Intend to apply to tho\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from tlie following described\nlands, situated In the Little Slocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and murked S.E. corner C. Huir-\nslne, running west 80 chains, thence north\n\u00a30 chains, thence east 81) chains, thence\nsouth 80 chalnB, to point of comraenceniei.i\nC.   HAIRS-NE.\nF. PROVOST, Agent.\nLocated May 24th, 11)05.\nNOTICB Is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I intend to apply to the\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, situated In the Little Slocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked N.E. corner M. Pro*\nvost, running south 80 chains, thence west\n80 chains, thence north 80 chains, thence\neast W chains, to point of commencement.\nIf. PROVOST.\nV. PROVOST,  Agont\nLocated May 24th, 1905.\nFourteenth Dominion Convention at\nOttawa, October 5-8.\nTho fourteenth dominion convention\not lhe Brit lierhooil of St. Andrew will\nbe held in tlie city of Oltawa from October 5th to Sth next, both inclusive.\nThe Brotherhood of St. Andrew Is an\nInstitution composed oC men of the\nchurch of England banded together for\nthe one and only object of promoting\nthe spread of Christ's kingdom among\nmen, especially young men. There is\nlittle doubt probably in the mind of any\nthinking man that there is a real necessity in these rushing days to introduce\na little more practical religion Into the\naffairs of every day life; and laymen in\nthe church have found that they can, on\nBrotherhood lines do a work which the\nclergy unassisted can hardly hope to accomplish. Although the church Ig the\npast has not been without her devoted\nand active laymen, still their efforts\nhavo lost much through being Individual, and the discouragements of unassisted work liave to ofteu forced them\nentirely io desist. In the Brotherhood,\nhowever, these same men have found\nall the helpfulness and encouragement\nof ti mutual co-operative society, with\nthe added stimulus of the knowledge\nthat large (lumbers of men the world\nover are working along the same lines\nanil in Lhe same order.\nGreat preparations are being made\nfor the convention while the dominion\ncouncil at headquarters in Toronlo Is actively engaged in preparing a program\nwhich It is expected will contain the\nnames of a number of the leading bishops and clergy, and prominent laymen\nof the church. Delegates are expected\nfrom the majority of the 200 active chapters scattered throughout the dominion,\nwhile large numbers of visitors will attend from many of the parishes not having chapters.\nOttawans are noted  for hospitality,\nNOTICB Is hereby given that 30 days\nafter date I intend to apply to tho Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works for a\nspecial license to out and carry away timber from the following described lands,\nsituate on Lemon creek, West Kootenay,\nDistrict, B.C., commencing at a post planted about seven miles from the mouth and\nmarked Paul Martin HE. corner, running\nwest 80 chains, thenee north 80 clialns,\nthence east 80 clialns, tlience south 80\nchains, to point of commencement,\nl'AUL MARTIN.\nIf. PROVOST Agent\nLocatM May 27th, 1805.\nNOTICB Is heroby given that 30 days\nafter date I Intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works for a\nspecial license to cut and carry away timber from the following described lands,\nsituate on Lemon creek, West Kooienay,\nDistrict, B.C., commencing at a post planted one mile west of Oro and marked Cailex\nBray N.W. corner, running east 80 chains,\nthence south 80 chains, thence west 80\nchains, thence north 80 chains to point of\ncommencement.\n1.ALLEX BRAT.\nIP. PROVOST Agent.\nLocated May 29th, 1905.\nNOTICE is hereby given that 80 days\nafter date I intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works for a\nspecial license to cut and carry away timber from tho following described lands,\nsituate on Lemon creek, West Kootenay,\nDistrict, B.C., commencing at a post planted on the south line of Oro, marked Zotl-\nque Le Blanc S.E. comer, running south\n80 chains, thenco west 80 chains, tlience\nnorth 80 ohalns, thence east 80 chains, to\npoint of commencement.\nIEOTIQUE LE BLANC.\nF. PROVOST Agent.\nLocated May 28th, 1905.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty days\nafter date I intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works for a\nspecial license lo cut and carry away timber from the following described land in\nthe Slocan district: Commencing at a post\nmarked T. Mulvey's northwest corner post\nand plnnted on the north side of Robson\ncreek, about three miles from Slocan City,\nthence southeast 80 chains, thence south\n40 chains, thenco west 80 chains, thenco\nnorth to point of commencement,\nT. MULVEY.\nLocated, May 21th, 1305.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that tlilrty days\nafter date I Intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works for a\nspecial license to cut and carry away timber from the following described land in\nthe Slocan district: Commencing at u post\nmarked J. W. Crow's southeast corner\npost, planted on the north side of Robson\ncreek, about live miles from Sloean Clly,\nthence west 80 chulns, thence north 40\nchains, thence east SO chains, tlience to\npolut of commencement.\nJ. W. CROW.\nT. MULVEY, Agent.\nLocated,  May 24th,  1005.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty days\nafter date 1 Intend to apply to tlie Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works for a\nspecial license to cut and carry away timber from the following described land in\nthe Slocan district: Commencing at a post\nmarked D. J. Craham's southeast corner\npost, und planted on the north side of\nRobson oreek, about four miles from Slocun\nCity, tlience west 80 chains, tlience north\n40 chains, thence east 80 chains, thence\nsouth 40 clialns to the place of commence-\n*_M__t>\nJD. J. GRAHAM.\nT. MULVEY, Agent,\nLocated,  May 24th,  1905.\nTIMBER NOTICES\nwhile the capital has a wide fame as an\nIdeal convention city. These facts with\nthe additional inducement of reduced\nrates on all railways will insure a largely attended and successful gathering\nwhen brown October comes \"around.\nSPRAINED   ANKLE,   STIFF   NECK,\nLAME SHOULDER\nThere are three common allements for\nwhich Chamberlain's Balm is especially\nvaluable. If promptly applied It will save\nyou time, monoy and suffering when\ntroubled with any one of these ailments.\nFor sale by all druggists and dealers,\nIn store for those who have never tried\nClark's Lunch Tongues. They are delicately seasoned, good to use,\nSIX MONTHS FOR THEFT\nJ. L, Deerlng, who was arrested by constable WlBhtman Friday evening for the\ntheft of personal property from the room of\nW. J. Bathgate at the Madden house, appeared before magistrate CrflftSe yesterday niorning for sentence,\nTho waterproof which bad not been recovered on Saturday was found by constable Wlghtman at tho Tremont A witness was produced who testified to peer-\nlug's previous good character and conduct.\nIn view of tho fact thnt nil of the stolen\nproperty was recovered nnd Hint Deerlng\nwas not evidently a professional thief,\ntlie magistrate imposed a light sentence,\nsix months In the provincial Jail.\nJames Band, proprietor of the Grove\nhotel, Fairvlew, has had that favorite\nsummer resort nicely fitted up. It Is conveniently located within half a block of the\nstreet car lino and good menls and tho best\nof liquors and cigars mako It a popular\nhouse of call. Drop in any time when\npassing and sample some of those choice\nthirst quenchers always on tap.\nNOTICE is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I Intend to make application to the Honorable the Chief Commissioner of Lands and Works for one special license to cut \"and carry away timber\nfrom the following described lands, situated on the eaat side of the Little Slocan\nLake, ln the West Kootenay District,\ncommencing at a post planted on the\neast bank of the aforesaid lake, about 120\nchains from the head, running north 80\nchains , thence east 80 chains, thence\nsouth 80 chains, thence west 80 chains,\nto point of commencement.\nGEORGE   BOUSEY.\nSlocan, B. c., May 24, 1905.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty\ndnys afler date I Intend to apply to the\nClilef Commissioner of Loads And Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, situated in the Little Siooan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked N.E, corner Clair\nMabee, running south 80 chains, thence\nwest 80 chains, thence north 80 chains,\nthence east 80 chains, to point of commencement.\nCLAIR MABEE.\n,   F. PROVOST, Agent.\nLocated May 24th, 1905.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty\ndays after dote I intend to apply to tho\nClilef Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, situated In the Little Slocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked S.E. corner A. D.\nHardle, running west 80 chains, thence\nnorth 80 chains, thence east 80 chains,\nthenco south 80 chains, to point of commencement.\nA. D. HARDIE.\nF. PROVOST, Agent.\nLocuted May 24th, 1905.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that 30 days\nafter dato I Intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works for a\nspecial llcenso to cut and carry away limber from the following described lands,\nsituate on Lemon creek, West Kootenay,\nDistrict, B.C., commencing at a post planted one mile east of Oro and marked W.\nLeduc S-E. corner, running west 80 chains,\nthence north 80 chains, thence east 80\ndials, tlience south 80 chains to point of\ncommencement.\nW. LEDUC.\nF. PROVOST A*ent\nLocated May 28th, 1905.\nNOTICE ia heroby given that thirty\ndays after date I Intend to apply to the\nClilef Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a speclul license to cut and carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, situated In the Little Slocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked N.E. corner E. R.\nMabee, running south 160 chains, thence\nwest 40 chains, thence north 100 chains,\nthenco east 10 ehal.)_t to point of commencement\nE. R.   MABEE.\nF. PROVOST, Agent.\nLocated May 24th, 1906.\nNOTICE is hereby given that thirty\ndnys after date I intend to apply to the\nClilef Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, situated In the Little Slocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked N.E. corner Ell Provost, running south 80 chains, thence west\n80 chains, tlience north 80 chains, thence\neast 80 chains, to point of commencement.\nELI PROVOST\nF. PROVOBT,  Agent.\nLocated May 24th. 1906.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty\ndays aftor date I intend to apply to tho\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special llcenso to cut and carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, situated in the Little Slocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked N.E. corner Fred\nCooper, running south 80 ohalns, thence\nwest 80 chains, thence north 80 chains,\nthenco east 80 chains, to point of commencement.\nFRED COOPER.\nF. PROVOBT,  Agent.\nLocated May 24th, 1905.\nNOTICE is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I Intend to apply to the\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut ond carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, Bituated In the Little Slocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked S.E. comer William\nCurrle, running west 40 chains, thence\nnorth 1C0 chains, thence east 40 chains,\nthenc.e south 1G0 chains, to point of commencement.\nWILLIAM   CURRIE,\nF. PROVOST, Agent.\nLorvM May 24th, 1906,\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I intend to apply to the\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from iho following described\nlands, situated ln the Little Slocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked S.W; corner Joseph\nSaulter, running north 8Q chalnB, thence\neast SO chains, thenct south 80 clialns,\nthenco west 80 chains, to point of commencement\nJOSEPH BAULTER.\nF.   PROVOST,   Agent.\nLocated,  May   24th,  1906.\nTIMBER NOTICES\nNOTICE Is hereby (given that 30 days\nafter date I Intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works for a\nspecial license to cut and carry away timber from the following described lands,\nsituate on Lemon creek, West Kootenay,\nDistrict, B.C., commencing at a post planted about one mile east of the first falls\non Lemon creek, and marked Alexander\nMartln N.E. corner, running south 80\nchains, thence west 80 chains, thence north\n80 chains, thence east 80 clialns, to point\nof commencement.\nLocated May 27th, 1905.\nALEXANDER MARTIN.\nF. PROVOST Agent.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that 30 days\nafter dato I Intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works for a\nspecial license to cut and carry away timber from the following described lands,\nsltuato on Lemon creek, West Kootenny,\nDistrict, B.C., commencing at a post planted two miles east of Oro and marked\nPeter Leduc N.E. corner, running south\n80 chains, thence west 80 cliains, thenoe\nnorth 80 chains, thence east 80 chains to\npoint of commencement. ..\nPETER LEDUC,\nF. PROVOST Agent\nLocated Maj \u00bb*, im,    . uJJffgE\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I Intend to apply to the\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, situated ln the Little Slocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked N.E. corner Raul Provost, running south 80 chains, thence west\n80 chains, thence north 80 chains, thence\neast 80 chains, to point of commencement.\nRAUL PROVOST.\n!F. PROVOST, Agent.\nLocated May 24th, 1905.\nNOTICE is hereby given that thirty \u2022\ndays after date I intend to make application to the Honorable the Chief Commissioner of Lands and Works for one special license to cut and carry away timber\nfrom the following described lands, Bituated on the cast stde of the Little Siooan\nLake, in tlie West Kootenay District\ncommencing at a post planted on the\neast bunk of the aforesaid lake, about 120\nchains from tlio head, running south 81)\nchains, thence east SO chains, thence north\n80 chains, thence west 80 chains, to place\nof  commencement.\nJAMES M.   FARRELL,\nSlocan, B. C, May 24, 1905.\nNOTICE is hereby given that thirty\ndays after dato I Intend to make application to the Honorable tin- Chief Commissioner of Lands and Works for one special license to cut aud carry away timber\nfrom the following described lands, situated on the east side of the Little Slocan\nLake, ln the West Kootenay District\ncommencing at a stake planted 90 chains\nfrom the foot of Little Slocan Lake, running north 80 chains, thence east 80 chains,\nthence south 80 chulns, thence west 80\ncliains, to place of commencement.\nJ.   M.   KAE.\nSlocan, B, C, May 24, 1905.\nNOTICE is hereby given that thirty\ndays nfter date I intend to apply to the\nClilef Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, sltualed In the Little Slocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post -\nplanted and marked, N.E. corner Joseph\nLalonde, running south 80* chains, thence\nwest 80 cliains, thence north 80 chains,\nthence east 80 chains to the point of commencement.\nJOSEPH   LALONDE\nF.  PROVOST, Agent.\nLocated May 24th 1906.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I intend to apply to the \u25a0\nClilef Commissioner of Lands and Work*\nfor a speclul license to cut and carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, situated in the Little Slocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked N. E. corner Frank\nFrench, running south 80 chains, thence\nwest 80 chains, tlienco north 80 chains,\nthence east 80 chains,, to point of commencement.\nFRANK   FRENCH.\nF.   PROVOST,  Agent.\nLocited May 24lh, 1905.\nNOTICE is hereby given that thirty\ndnys after data I intend to apply to the\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, situated in the Little Slocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and mnrked N.E. corner Charles\nProvost, running south 80 chains, thence\nwest 80 clialns, thence north 80 chains,\nthenco east 80 chains, to point of commencement.\nCHARLES   PROVOST\nF.  PROVOST, Agent.\nLocated May 24th, 1905.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I intend to apply to the\nChiof Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from tiie following described\nlands, situated In the Little Slocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked N.E. corner Narclsfl\nLegrod, running south 80 chains, thenoe\nwest 80 clialns, thonce north 80 chains,\nthence east 80 clialns, to the point of\ncommencement,\nNARCISE LEGROD\nF,   PROVOST, Agent.\nLocated May 24th, 1005.\nNOTICE is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I Intend to apply to the\nClilef Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, situated in the Little Sloean, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked S.W. corner H. A.\nMcMillan, running north 80 chains, thence\neast 80 chains, thenco south 80 ohalns,\nthence west 80 chains, to point of commencement %\nH. A. MCMILLAN.\nF. PROVOST, Agent.\nLocated May 24th, 1906.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I Intend to apply to the\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, Bituated In the Little Slocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked N.W. corner Percy\nMlllman, running east 80 chains, thence\nsouth 80 chains, thence west 80 ohalns,\nthence north 80 chains, to point of commencement\nPERCY MILLMAN\nF.   PROVOBT,  Agent\nLocated Muy 24th, 1905.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty\ndays after dato I Intend to apply to the\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, situated In the Littlo Slocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted nnd 'marked N.E. corner Joseph\nMartin, running south 80 chains, thence\nwest 80 chains, thence north 80 ohalns,\nthence east 80 chains, to point of commencement.\nJOSEPH MARTIN.\nF. PROVOST, Agont.\nLocated May 24th, 1905.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I Intend lo apply to the\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\nawny timber from the following described\nInnds, situated In the Little Slocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and mairked N.E. corner Peter\nLablanc, runlng south 80 chains, thenee\nwset 80 chains, thence north 80 ohalns,\nthence east 80 chains to point of co\u00bb\nmenoement\nPETER LABLANC.\nF.  PROVOBT. Agent\nfaOMted May Mth, IM.\n J6\nTHE DAILY  NEW.S NELSON, B. C, TUESDAY, JUNE  27,  1905\nChoosing a Watch\nChoose a watch as you would a friead\u2014slowly, carefully, wisely.\nIts a good plan to shop around\u2014visit all the jewelry stores tn town-\nlook up the pedigrees of stores and watches\u2014make a note of qualities\nand prices. You will find at our stores, watches from America's\nhighest grade factories\u2014you will find watches at the lowest reasonable prices\u2014You will find that our stores have a reputation as large\naa the Kootenays for square dealing.\nEWERT BROS.\nJEWELERS AND ENGRAVERS _\nNBLSON. ROSSLAND TRAIL   J\nWe Need\nMoney\nFor the next 30 days we will sell our\nentire stock of boots and shoes at cost.\nHere are some of our prices:\nMen's Box Calf, Goodyear welt, were\n14.00; sale price $3.00\nMen's Oxfords, were ?4.00, now |3.00.\nLadles' Oxfords, were $3.B0, now $2.50\nOdds and ends at less than cost, :\nHugh McCausland\nAU in One Piece\nKnlt-to-Flt Suits nre knitted all in one piece from neck\nto ankle. Knit to fit nnd they do fit\u2014easily, comfortable,\nperfectly, Evory Inch of u Knlf-toFlt Suit dings to the\nfigure like a second skin.\nCombination Suits\nare the best made\u2014best fitting, bt-st wearing, und altogether thy most sutlsfctory summer imdorgurments a wo\nman win wear. Sizes to perfectly fit every form\u2014in all fabrics from silk to cotton.    Ciitalogut; scnton application.\nMade by THE KNIT-TO-FIT HANUFACTURINa CO.\n613 Lagauchetierci Street, Montreal\nPATRIOTIC  ARGUMENTS\n\u2014j\t\nMONOPOLISTS ARE NO FRIENDS OF\nPUBLIC RIGHTS.\nCOMMENT  ON   FIGHT   AGAINST  V.\nV.  & E. BILL.\nUnder the heading of \"Lining Up\nWith Monopoly,\" last Saturday's Toronto Globe lias this to say about the\nC. P. R.'s light against the V. V. &\nB. bill beforo the railway committee:\n\"It is significant anil altogether characteristic that, wilh one solitary excep\ntion, the conservatives at Ottawa have\nbeen lined up in Btipport of monopoly.\nTiie vote in the railway committee yesterday and the earlier vote on Tuesday\nranged the supporters of monopolistic\ncorporations on one side and the defenders of the rights of the people on\nthe other. The conservatives, Mr.\nPringle, of Cornwall, alone excepted,\nwere solid in support of the C. P. R.\nmonopoly in southern British Columbia. Absent friends of monopoly- were\ncalled back to Ottawa from far and\nnear by constraining telegrams from\ntlie C. P. R. management and its lobbyists. Fifty-one conservative members\ngave tlieir votes yesterday for the ob-\nCream\nBaking Powder\nUsed in Millions of Homes.\n50 Years the Standard. A\nPure Cream of Tartar Powder* Superior to every other\nknown. Makes finest cake\nand pastry, light, flaky biscuit, delicious griddle cakes\n\u2014palatable and wholesome.\nPkice Bakino\nPowder Co.,\nCHICA-O.\nNever eo into the woods away from a\ndoctor with a cheap alum baking powder\nin the outfit. You want the best baking\npowder in die world\u2014and it is m_3t\neconomical in tho end.\nstructlon and defeat of the Vancouver-\nVictoria _ Eastern railway. That railway would break the monopoly which\nhas burdened British Columbia with Intolerable handicaps and blocked Its development, lt would open up districts\nbetween Vancouver aud Greenwood\nwhich the C. P. R. desires to hold, as it\nhas held other districts, as It owns\nspecial preserves.\nAll the representatives from British\nColumbia are pledged to secure the competition the V. V. & E. railway would\nafford. Public opinion in their constituents Is not only unanimous but urgent. Two successive campaigns have\ngiven emphatic voice to tliat opinion\nand yet, in the face of these undented\nfacts, men like Mr. Henderson, of Hal-\nton, Mr. George E. Poster, of North\nToronto, colonel Tlsdale, of Norfolk,\nand Mr. W. F. Maclean, of South\nYork, the loudest anti-monopolistic pretender of them all, are ready to play\nthe undisguised game of tlie C. P. R.\nand to block the only way out of monopolistic oppression at present open to ,\nthe people ln southern British Columbia.\nOntario tories, who know nothing about\nthe situation beyond what the lobbyists\nchoose to tell them, are the easy victims ot the C. P. R.'s \"patriotic\" arguments. But because of their gullibility,\nIs the province of British Columbia to\nhe made lo suffer? It Is a serious matter when a corporation, made wealthier\nand powerful by favors of parliament,\nbecomes In turn the master of parliament and, for lu selfish ends, Is able to\n\" call In the members\" to strangle the\nvery life of a young province.\n\"lt will bo the duty of the liberals,\n\u25a0in tlieir committee and ill the house, to\nstand guard against such collusive and\nbarefaced attacks upon public rights.\nNothing more Insulting to the intelligence and independence of palianiont\nhas ever been seen at Ottawa than tho\nlobby of the C. P. R. against railway\ncompetition- In British Columbia. The\nmake-belieVes of patriotism presented \\\nto the committee yesterday were loo J\nflimsy to deceive anybody. A corpora- *\ntion that has been bonused up to the\nhilt with money subsidies and land\ngrants, and every other form of public\nadvantage, deserves no consideration\nwhen It lobbies parliament to block\nthe construction of a competitive railway that asks for neither money bonus\nnor land grant. The men who line up\nwith tlie monopoly are uo friends of\npublic rights.\"\nTho Winnipeg Free Press says editorially:\nThe Canadian Pacific railway is putting up a stiff fight lu the railway\ncommittee at Ottawa to prevent tho\ngranting of tlie legislation necessary\nfor the building of the Vancouver, Victoria & Eastern railway, which is now\none of Jim Hill's enterprises. -A month\nor more of time has been spent over\ntho measure and it has not been reported to the house of commons yet.\nTho C. P. R. while not able to kill Uie\nbill have succeeded in blocking It un\none or two occasions. The parliamentary opposition to the measure includes\nalmost the entire strength of the conservative party with a considerable\nnumber of liberal members from Quebec. The western liberal members are\nto a man supporting the application for\na charter, and in view of their attitude\nit is not believed that tlie eastern members will go to the length of killing the\nbill however agreeable such a course\nmight be to them.\nThe C. P. R. aro making their light\nin the open, and are to be commended\nfor their frankness. The railway lobby\nhas been in operation for weeks and\nMr. Drinkwater ' has appeared before\nthe railway committee and fought the\nmeasure with vigor. Considerable literature, In the form of pamphlets, bearing on the question has beeu in circulation. These pamphlets have been\nmade up largely of articles reprinted\nfrom British Columbia newspapers\u2014\nehiefly the Nelson Tribune and the\nVancouver Province\u2014in wliich the C.\nP. R. side of the controversy is taken.\nThoir contention Is that It Is unpatriotic to permit United States railways to\nbuild lines in Canada. The Hill Interests proposo to extend tlieir present\nline in southern British Columbia to\nVancouver, operating under the V. V.\n_ E. charter. The line Is to run from\nPrinceton tlirough the Similkameen\ncountry und for the purpose of keeping\nthe grades low It dips below the boundary at one point and runs for some\ndistance through United Slates territory. The company gets no land grant\nor money subsidy; if simply asks for\ntho right to build the road. Tho load\nwill compete directly with the Columbia & Western, a C. P. R. enterprise,\nwhich has been bonused to the extent\not $20,000 a mile.\nThe argument that Unlled States railways must be barred out of Canada for\npatriotic reasons has been used time\nand time again in this province within\nthe past twenty-five years, but it hns\nnever had much weight with the public. It is but three years since the local government undertook on these\ngrounds to refuse a charter for the extension of the Northern Paclllc into\nManitoba; but they speedily recognized\nthat they had made a great mistake\nand hastened at the next session of the\nlegislature to grant the required legislation. The railway company has not\nacted upon the powers obtained by It\nbut this lt no reflection upon the wisdom of the course taken by the logls-\nbiture. -'-fl\nIf the Croat Northern wishes lo open\nup a part of British Columbia, not now\nserved with railways, by a road, to be\nbuilt without aid from tlie public treasury, which will bo subject lo tlie control of the railway commission there\ncan he no good reason for refusing Its\nrequest. The vigor wllh which tlie C.\np. R. is lighting tlie proposal Is pretty\nclear evidence that the new road will\ngive southern British Columbia and the\ncoast towns real railway competition.\nEven whero It does not affect rates the\npublic gains enormously by prompter\nnnd more efficient service. If an American railway wished to build a lino\nInto the eastern provinces there would\nhe not the slightest objection from anybody. Nor would the people in Manitoba or the Territories tolerate the assumption that they must In their own\ngood bo limited in their channel* u_\nGoing for Chamberlain's Colic,\nCholera and Diarrhoea\nRemedy.\nDon't put yourself in this man's place,\nbnt keep n bottle of this remedy in your\nhome. There is nothing so good for\nColic, Cholera-Morbus, Dysentery and\nDiarrhoea. It is equnlly valuable for\nSummer Complaint and Cholera Infantum and has saved the lives of more\nchildren than any other medicine in use.\nWhen reduced with water and sweetened it is pleasant to take. ,\nYon, or some one of your family, are\nBlue to need this remedy sooner or later\nnnd when that time comes you will need\nlt badly; you will need it quickly. Why\nnot buy it now and be prepared for such\nan emergency?   Price, 85 cents.\ncommunication with tlte south. The\nidea however, that British Columbia\nshould be a preserve for one railway\ndies hard.\nThe members from British Columbia,\nwho aro working like Trojans, have Issued the following circular to their\nfriends in the committee;\n\"Dear Sir: We, tbo members of British Columbia, are grateful to our\nfriends for thoir loyal support of the\nV., V. & 13. bill. Wo believe that a\nspecial effort will be made by the Canadian Paclllc Railway Company to defeat clause three o fthe bill on Tuesday next, and earnestly request your attendance at the committee meeting on\ntiiat day as our opponents are making\nevery effort to pair their absentees who\naro opposed lo the bill with our supporters, aud at the .same time are refusing to give pairs to our friends who\nwill be absent. We would also ask you\nto refrain from pairing unless it is absolutely necessary for you lo be absent.\nThe future of our province depends\nlargely upon securing the construction\nof a competitive railway through southern British Columbia, aud we earnestly\nappeal to you to continue your loyal\nsupport in order to insure final success.\nWe might add tliat the people of the\nprovince are intensely interested in\nthis question and every member of the\nhouse of commons and every member\nof the senate representing British Columbia is strongly supporting tills legislation.   Yours sincerely.\n\"W.   A.   GALLIHER,\n\"GEORGE RILEY,\n\"JA__B& B.   KENNEDY,\n\"RALPH  SMITH,\n\"WILLIAM   SLOAN,\n\"DUNCAN  ROSS,\n\"R. G. MACPHERSON.\"\nYM1U NOTES\nMining Company Incorpo.ate_-.0re Shipments\u2014A Snowfall\n(Siioclal to The Dally News)\nYmlr. Juno __-Last weeks' fiazfllo announces the Incorporation or tlio Salmon\nRlvor Plnoor Mining company, with a\noa.Ital of SW..KJ. divided Into -loo shores\nof siini each. The Incorporators are local\nmen nnd It Is tlieir Intention to work some\nplneer leases whloll they hold .it Hall Siding, from whleh sume excollont showings\nhave been obtained.\nJohn Boultbee of Rossland, has mnde ar-\nn_n_em.nits with A'tulreov mtmigeiss \u25a0!_'\npack a car of ore from tbe May Blossom\nclnlm at the head of Quartz creek to tho\nrailway. Mr. Boultbee bas an Interest in\nthe proporty. and should a smelter test\nprove satisfactory, some work will be done\non the claim In question.\nAt tlio Foghorn mino snow fell yesterday.\nEdward Peters was again re-elected lost\nSaturday by aeolnmntion as a school trustee. Mr. Pelers did not seek tlie position\nlt wns simply forced upon him. as be\nproved a worthy trustee during his post\nterm.\nOFFERS  MANV  MEDALS\nLord Grey Interested In Public Sebools-\nrertiuoaios Fxtended\nIlls excellency, tbe governor general or\nCanada announces through A, Robinson,\nsuperintendent of education for Brltah\nColumbia, Unit ho wlil. for each year of\nHis llvo years' term of ofllce, give a silver\nmedal for general piollclenoy to a pupil of\neach of the following schools: The lllgli\nschools of Victoria. Vancouver. New Westminster. Nanaimo. Nelson, Rossland, Kamloops, Cumberland, Grand Folks, Hovel-\nstoke nnd Vernon; and of Ibe nubile\nschools of each of tlio above named and\nalso Kaslo. Fernle. Ladysmlth and Trail.\nIlls excellency asks that n record bo\nkept eneh year of the conditions of competition nnd tho standard attained by\ntho winners of Iho medals. Ho wishes\nolso to bo Informed of tho progress of\neaeh school. Tlio flrst medals will bo\nawarded In August. 1306, on tho work of\nthe school yenr 1905-6.\nThe last number of the provincial Gazette\ncontains a notlco that all teachers holding\nthird class certificates expiring on Juno\n301I1. aro granted temporary certificates to\nDecember 81.\nOn Jnminry 1, IW, tho flrst \"advanced\nsession\" of the provincial normal school\nwill open for which only those who havo\nalready taught In lhe province nre eligible.\nIt is expected thnt those whoso temporary\ncertificates expire then, and also thoso\nwhoso certificates will oxpre at the end ot\nJune, 1906, Will attend tho advanced sos-\nsIimi ot the normal school.\nLAME SHOULDER\nThere aro three common aliments for\nwhich Chamberlain's Balm Is especially\nvaluable, if promptly applied It will sine\nyou tlmo, money and Buffering whon\ntroubled with uny one ot thoso nlltpcnti.\nFor sale by all druggists and dealer\".\nCURZON AND KITCHENER\nSlmlVi, India. Juno 20\u2014Tt ts freely rumored that viceroy Curzon has either tendered bis resignation, or shortly will do\nso, In consequence of tho decision of tho\nhomo govouilnont whereby lord Kitchener,\ncommandeBii-ehlef of lhe forces In India,\nhas been given complete control of the\narmy In India.\nNELSON'S NEWS OF THE DAY\nP.  Hawthorne  went   up  to  Kaslo  last\nevening.\nT. Morley lies consented to act as secretary of the flower show in the receiving ol\nexhibits,\nBorn, In this clly on Saturday, June 21th,\nto tho wife of Nlchola Maglio, Observatory\nstreet, a son.\nInspector of schools Wilson Is awny on\nschool business and will bo absent for o.\ncouple of days.\nS. M. Brydges wns taken to the Kootenay\nLake general hospital lnst evening to\nundergo an operation by Dr. La B;iu tliis\nmorning.\nThere will be a final rehearsal of the\nRose Maiden cantata beforo the production of the cantata ln tho exhibition building on Saturday evening next.\nA full attendance of the members of\nQueen City Rebekah lodge is requested\nfor a meeting In tho lodge room at 3\no'clock tliis evening. Tuesday, June 27.\nBelville Tomklns, the poplar manager of\nthe Strathcona, has got out a very neat\nsouvenir postcard of the hotel, allowing in\nfour views, the frcnt, ofllce, dining room\nand billiard room.\nRev. F. H. Graham of St. Saviour's\nchurch left for England yesterday morning on a two or three months' vacation!\nthe flrst the reverend gentleman lias had\nsince coming hero three years ago.\nThe decoration committee of tlie Dominion Day flower show began Its work yesterday afternoon, There is a lot of work\nto bo done, and volunteer assistance will\nbo cordially welcomed each afternoon at\n3 o'clock.\nGeorge IT. Ransom, manager of the Payne\nmine at Sandon, was In the oily yesterday on a flying visit. He returns home\nthis morning. He reports everything as\nprospering nt tiie big silver mine. Ho says\naltjo -that Saiulontit-es aro makUng big\ncatches of brook trout ln Bear lake.\nAn entertainment In the form of a smoker is announced by tht. members of Nelson Aerie, No. 22,. F.O.B., for tomorrow\nevening in their hall. The regular session\nwill be held at tho usual hour. 8 o'clock.\nTho program will begin at 8:15. Every\nmember of the aerie is expected to attend and Is Invited to bring his male\nfriends. The commit too In charge has\nprepared an attractive program Including\nsongs and bones by Edgar Mason; piano\nselection nnd comic songs by T. Harris;\nstep dancing by G. Murphy j buek-and-\nwing dancing, J. O'Connor; recitation, O.\nHorstoad; accordion selection, M, Ryhan;\ncomic reading, J. L. roller; clarlonetto\nsolo, Ii. McCandllsh; song, R. Thompson;\nspecialties by the Thompson brothers and\nmusic by un orchestra.\n1IAKD  SIGHT   AT   FflKNIH\nNine Carloads of Horses Undergo Extreme  Suffering\nNino carloads of horaes, many of. them\ndying, aud all Buffering the tortures of\nextreme thirst, passed1 through Pernio\non Saturday, the spectacle mousing the\nIndignation of the entire community. The\nanimals, 300 in number, had been driven\nseveral hundred miles from Snake river,\nMontana to Yalik and had been put on the\ncars In an exhausted condition. There appeared to have been no means of Wittering or feeding thein while on the way ami\nby the time they reached Pernio a number\nwero already dead and olhers were lying\nIn sheer weakness under the feet of the\nrest. Tho consignment were booked to\nCowley nnd the unfortunate beflsta had\nstill a dny of misery in front of them\nand tliat many more would be dead before\nthey reached their destination seemed inevitable,\nTiie men who owned the horses were on\nthe train, nnd thoy seemed utterly Indlf-\nfornt to tbo sufferings which they bad\ncaused tho  poor brutes to  undergo.\n\"Tho sight,\" said a spectator, \"was ono\nof tho hardest I ever saw for a long time\nand nothing would please mo more than to\nseo a little British justice dealt out lu the\nowners who cruelly packed the Urn-sea\nInto thut crowded space whllo they were\nIn  such   an   exhausted  condition.\"\nLEAVE COOKING BEHIND\nwhen you go for your holidays.   Clark's\nCanned   Meats   will   supply   you   With   a\nvariety   of   tasty,   wholesome dishes.\nFIRE IN GRAND FORKS\n(Special   to The  Dally  News)\nGrand Forks, June 26-Charles Tilly, an\nold resident here, Who has been residing\nln Spokano for tho last few mouths returned   home  Saturday.\nH. A. Henderson, an old hotel man or\nthis place, camo In from Nelson yesterday\nwhero he has been visiting for the last\nfew weeks. ,       ,    ..\nThe dwelling house of M. Bolton In the\nnorth ward, was considerably damaged\nby lire last evening, but the timely assistance of the flre brigade prevented the\nhouso from  being  totally  destroyed.\nPeter McRae, contractor, who Ins been\ntaking a short vacation here returned to\nColeman today. Mr. McRae says that\nthings  are   In   a  most   prosperous   conul-\nTlie undersigned will pay tho highest\nprico for logs delivered at tlio Nelson\nbViwmlll, will let contracts and supply\nStanding timber. Contractor must supply\nhimself with all necessary equipment. For\nfurther particulars apply to lho\nKootenay River Lumber Company,\nNELSON,   B.   C.\nIt will pay you to keep Chnmberlaln'i\nColic Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy In\nyour house. It only costs a quarter. Bold\nkm mil -IrwitflBti vid dealers.\nMILL WOOD\nFOR SAIjIK CHEAP\u2014\"Bravo\" Diamond\ndrill nnd small Rand Compressor plant.\nApply to E_\u00bbex Griffith, Rossland, B,c.\nFOB SALE\u2014Green 4 foot slabs iu lots of\nllvo cords or more at fl.'Sb and np according to place of delivery. Ten cord lots\nor up nt $2,15; green short slabs, 16 inch.\nIn lols of Ave cords or moro, $3,60 Large\nquantity of dry short and 4 foot slabs\nalways on hand. Prompt delivery. Terms\ncash.   Kootenay Shingle company.\nIt's the Kidneys\nClose the sewers of a city and\nan epidemic rages. The kidneys\nare the sewers of the body. Let\nthese vital organs become diseased and the whole system ia\naffected, dizziness, headache,\ndull, listless feeling, shooting\npains in the back, tell that the\nkidneys are in trouble, aud a\nneglect of nature's warning\nmeans uric acid poisoning and\ndreaded Bright's disease.\nGIN  PILLS\nmike kidneys healthy. They instantly re.\nlleve all Kidney Troubles\u2014clear, heal, purify, strengthen\u2014put the Kidneys io perfect\ncondition to perform their work as nature\nIntends.\nWe iinve such Implicit confidence In thl\nvirtues of Gin Pills that we authorise druggists to refund the money If they fail to\ncure.\nAt all druggists, 50c box, 6 boxea for fa.-jo\n\u2014or direct from\nThe HOLE DRUG CO., Winnipeg. Mia.\nThe  Marconi Wireless Telegraph Co.,\nof Canada, Limited\nIncorporated under the Laws of Ontario, Dominion of Canada.\nCapital Stock, $5,000,000\nFully  paid  and  non-assessable\nPar value of shares $5 each -     No bonds antl no preferred stock\nby\nOnly a limited amount of stock assigned to Nelson and District.   For sate\nT. G. PROCTER,\nSOLE AGENT FOR NELSON AND  DISTRICT.\ntion   nt   Coleman.\nGeorge Taylor, n local contractor, haa\nbeen awarded tlio contract for tending\nore from a nearby clnlm to tht> railway\ntrack, a distance of some four mllea. Three\nfour liorse teams will be employed on tbo\ncontract and the ore will be loaded on tlie\nenrs nt Paulson station, The property In\nquestion ia owned by Walla Walla capitalists, win) are represented at the mine by\nmanager GrlBwold, who expects the work\nto be carried on continuously,\nCUBAN DIARRHOEA\nU. S. soldiers who served In Cuba during\nlite Spanish war know what this dlseaae\nis, and that ordinary remedies have ntt:e\nmore effect than so much water. Cuban\ndiarrhoea Is almost as severe and dangerous as a mild attack of cholera. There is\none remedy, however, that can always be\ndepended on as will be seen by the following certificate from Mrs. Minnie Jacobs\nof Houston, Texas: \"I hereby certify thnt\nChamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy cured my hustand of a severe attack of Cuban diarrhoea, which he\nbrought home from Cuba. We had several doctors but they did lilm no good.\nOne bottle of this remedy cured him as our\nneighbors will testify. I thank <3od for \u00abo\nvaluable a medicine.\" For sale by all\n*iu_uds.s and dealers.\nKILLS WIFE AND HIMSELF.\nBangor, June 2b\\\u2014Elmer L. Keyes, of\nthe Main Central railroad at Great\nWorks near tills city, shot and killed\nhis wife, Isabel, at. midnight, and then\nflred a bullet Into his own breast. He\nwill probably die. The police attributes tho man's net to jealousy.\nTO KILL THE DANDRUFF GERM.\nIs the Ouly I'oMlble Way of Having\nAn I .ire.'live Cure.\ntf you see a woman or a man with luxuriant glossy hnlr, you may bo sure neither has dandruff to amount to anything.\nIn nearly every case whero women and\nmen have thin brittle hnlr, they owe It\nto dandruff. There are hundreds of preparations that \"claim\" to cure dandruff,\nbut not one but Newbro's Herpicide tells\nyou that dandruff is the result of a germ\nburrowing into tho scalp, and that permanent cure of dandruff and its consequent falling nh'fl baldness, can only ho\nhad hy killing the germ; and there is no\nother preparation that will destroy tliat\ngerm hut Newbro's Herplclde. \"Destroy\nthe cause, and you remove the effect.\"\nSold by leading druggists. Send 10c. In\nstamps for sample to The Herplclde Co.,\nD_A&Al0&RTJG * BOOK COMPANY\nSpecial  Agenta\nST. ANDREW'S COLLEGE\nTORONTO\nV   RESIDENTIAL   AND   DAY   SCHOOL\nPOR  BOYS\nUpper and lower school. Boys prepared\nfor Matriculation and Royal Military Col-\nego. Separate junior residence. Handsome\nnew buildings, opened in September; tlior-\nlughly modern; attractive In appearance;\nH acres of playfleld. Situated In North\nRosedalfl, Toronto's healthiest district.\nJltinch street car line.\nAutumn terms commences Sept. 12, lfiOu.\nWrite for Information,\n1BV.   D.  BRUCE  MACDONALD,   M.   A.\nPrincipal ____________\nFREE\nI FOR\nROYAL GROWN\nSOAP\nwhappehs\nDrop tts a post enrd asking for a cata-\n1 ______ __j premiums.\nCOLUMBIAN COLLEGE\nFounded 1892\u2014Incorporated ISM\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C.\nProvides a Christian home lor BtMwnU\njf both sexes at moderate rates. His a\npreparatory class for Junior students, totng\ngrado public school work. Doem high\ntchool work, confers all high school Jtriv-\nileges, and prepares for teachers' ex&mln-\nttlons. Teaches all branches of a Wac-\nIleal Business Course and gives Diplomas.\nQlves a liberal education in its Collegiate\nCourse and ln the Ladies' college course\nfor M.E L. and M.L.A, In University\nwurk Can take students through tne\neomplete Arts Course and the dogree ot\n0 A. can ho obtained from Toronto University, witli which the college Is In full\nifflllatlon.\nFor fuller Information and terms write\nRpv   W    T    ptoporell    B.A.,  P.D..  Jfrlncl-\nHri; or lUv. -J, P. Bowell, Bunar.\nHalcyon Ar\nHOt ^ke.\nSprings Bc'\nSanitarium\nUNDER NEW MANAGEMENT\nharry Mcintosh\nOf the Hoffman House, Rossland,\nPROPRIETOR.\nThe mast complete health resort on\nthe continent of North America Accommodation for 100 guests Good fishing, boating and hunting.\nTerms $12.00 to $18.U0 per week, according to residence in hotel or villas\nA doctor in attendance.\nRound trip tlcltets, good from Friday\nto Monday, $5.80; good for 30 days,\n$7.60.\nFor further particulars apply to\nHarry Mcintosh\nPROPRIETOR.\nHALCYON HOT SPRINGS.\nFRUIT LANDS\nFOR SALE CHEAP\nWe have JG0 acres good fruit anil\nranch land one half mile from Slocan.\nCity, four acres cleared, two acres in\ncrop, good timber and an abundance of\nwater, with a dnily express service to\nNelson, Sandon or Nakusp-\u2014;iu excellent market is assured for all produce.\nThe price of this property is $4.00 per\nacre, and we can arrange terms.\nSharp & Irvine\nBox 1082\nBROKERS\nNelson, B.C.\nTHE MAN WHO\nSMOKES\nour special Mixture smokes a pure and\nfragrant tohacco, as choice a thing at\neyer tempted you.\nTHURMAN\nTOBACOONUrr\nFOR RENT^\nBOOMS nnd offices K.W.C. block for rent\nS. M. Brydges.\nFURNISH KD    Rooms   suitable   for   llghl\nhouse   keeping,    Macdunnld   block,   over\n'l-ta* DhIIv  News office.\nWANTBD\u2014Experienced stenographer, rapid and exact.   Apply stating experience\nnnd -salary expected to box X, Daily News.\nFURNISHED room to let, batti, (or lady\nor Bsntleman In private family,   Close ln,\nX.T.Z., Dally News, ,__*^k.__~.-*\n THE DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C, TUESDAY, JCfME  27, 1905\nTO HEN\nT   OFFICES AND\nLIVING RO0N|S\nftSl,10 Nelson Fleotric Iran-way Co.\nClements Mock, Cor. Baker and Josephine\nStreets\nAND WOOD  OF ALL\nKINDS\nTerms Spot Cash\nW. P. TSerncy\nTelephone E65\nBakor Street, Nelson\nif9 \u25a0\nFinch Eyeglasses please\nparticular people.\nNote how these glasses are\nli n mJJcd.\nNo smearing of lenses.\nThey have all the security\nand comfort of the spectacle\nwith greater neatness than in\nany ordinary eyeglass. We\ncan adapt them to almost\nany nose.\nJ.J. WALK\u20acR\n*_____!______________,\nI'BXOE OF ME-ALg.\nNow York, June 28-Bai' Bllssr. 58 1-3\nmating copper, il 1-J>; olectl'olytlc copp.'i-\n35,  auleti   load,  U.60.\nLondon, June 2fl-ailvor, 21 lJi-l'i; lc\u00abl\nxu is. Sa.\nKELSON'S NEWS OF THE DAY\nThe grocery store of T, S. McPherson,\n\u25a0will be closed till next Saturday, Dominion Day.\nMrs. W. S. Pearcy of tlie public school\nstaff and her son, leave this morning for\nBoundary Fulls on a  visit,\nOwing to a smashup n&ir Frank yesterday no passengers or mall arrived In the\ncity from the Crow line yesterday.\nO. W. Hushes Sandon; John Keen and\no, o. Buchanan Kaslo wore among yesterday's arrivals at the Strathcona.\nTho Arlington mino at Erie hns temporarily . stoiigi'd o-to uhlpmtmls on account\nof the bud condition of the mine road.\nA. H. Tuttle, manager of the VVIIcox\n\u2022mine, near Ymlr, was hi tho elty on a\nbusiness trip yeaterday. He returns tu\nthe  mine   this  morning,\nC. Tturt, Kootenay [roiptlssontallV'e of\nFlther ;nid Leiser of Victoria, left for Now\nWestminster Sunday evening. He Will be\nabsent from Nelson about a month.\nEdward Balllio of Pophir WOS In tho city\nlast night on his way to Roasland. He\neays that borne prospecting and assessment\n\u25a0work I.s being done at Poplar, but generally the camp i- quiet,\nlhe Knights of Pythias paraded to tbo\ncemetery Sunday morning in nearly full\nstrength. Tlie graves or members uf the\norder wero decorated and a short memorial service wns held.\nThe demand In Manitoba Tot- Kootenay\nlake strawberries is steadily growing und\nthe leading local shipper feaya that the\nwhole crop can be profitably marketed\nthero Unfortunately shipments nre being delayed by unseasonable weather,\nll. M. Adams, tho newly appointed m-\nplrtani general trafilc manager for the\nGreat Northern railway ul Seattle and\nsuccessor tu J. C. Eden, waa nt tho Strathcona latdl night in company with 1*1. A.\nJackson. This Is Mi*. Adams' Hrst visit\nhere in his now capacity.\nThe handsome sterling silver cup presented by the Ashdown Hardware e.ia-\npany .to the Nelson gun club as one ot:\nthe prizes for the shooting tournament,\nWhich takes place on Friday ami Saturday\nnext, has arrived ami Is now on view, Tbe\ncup to a valuablo and artistically designed one.\nTbo Nelson twseball team met defeat\nnt Rossland Sunday afternoon by the st-oro\nof 8 to C. It was a good game. The homu\nteam was lucky In bunching Its hits, tbe\neight runs being made in three Innings.\nOatQB replaced Blewett on lho Nelson team.\nThe bitter suffered a serious aocidonl In\npractice before the game. While fielding\nn. fly In the outfleld he slipped on the w<*t\ngrarrs, falling on bis face and breaking his\ntow; i !>\u25a0 was attended to nt onoe nnd\nwas ablo to return with the te;im Sunday\nFor a Clean Sweep\nAd\nBroom\nWo havo just received a shipment direct from the factory. Lightweights and\nheavywoights, Maple haudles and Bara-\nbno handles, nOo, -10c anil 50c each.\nIf you rtee.i one let us supply It.\nPHOJ-TE NO. 10.\nStore closed Thursday afternoon.\nCheap Bogustown\nLots\n3 lots in the Chinese\ngarden north of the tram\ncar line on Nelson avenue\nbetween Davies and Sel-\nwyn streets. These lots\nmeasure 90x120 feet and\nare in the highest state of\ncultivation,have been used\nas a vegetable garden for\na long time. A good supply of water is fl timed on\nto the property.\nPrice for easy terms,\n$450, or a substantial reduction for cash.\nH.pLBirc\nCOTTON GARDEN\nHOSE\nMany popple have an idea that cotton covered garden hose Is not as\n\u25a0Rood as tlie rubber covered article Still it Is a fact that every flre department in every city iu Canada uses cotton covered hose.\nOur cotton hose is of exactly the same quality as high grade flre\nhose. We guarantee it to stand Nelson pressure for two years It i.\nmuch lighter lo handle and inexpensive.    See our cast window.\nJ, H. Ashdown Hardware Co,, Limited\nWHOLESALE AND   RETAIL\nBBM-HBB BHi\nnight The boys report having been moft\nhospitably treated by tlio Rossland players.\nAll baseball players are requested to turn\nout for practice this evening at ti o'clock\nor as soon .after us possible.\nAt lho regular meeting of lodge Nn. 10\nI.O.O.F., last night a full dress rehea^al\nwas held of the dramatized flrst degree\nwhich will be exemplified early nexl month,\nJames Neeiands wata elected a trustee to\nserve for the next three years. Grand lodge\nrepresentatives G. F. Motion and U. McLean, having attended the grand lodge\nof British Cnlumbla. held tn Ladysmlth,\nJune M and lb. reported accordingly. Term\nreports will be presented al the nexl moet-\nIng and the newly elected officers will be\ninstalled.\nA. B. Shannon of the Porndnlo ranch\n\"Willow Point brought to tho city yesterday\nsome splendid specimens of Kootenay lake\nstrawberries. A crate was plated on exhibition In the window of the Standard\nFurniture company. Three boxes and a\nbottlo of Jersoy cream wire kindly sent\nin to The Dally Nc-ws offlce with Mr.\nShannon's compliments. Tbo berries\nrun about 30 to the box, imported berries\nabout twice tliat number. Tbe fruit wa. In\nperfect condition and no better has ever\nbeen seen In Nelson.\nTIIE ROSE SIAIDENS\nThere was a successful practice of the\nRose Maiden cantata lnst evening under\ntin. leadership of it. M. IVTaodonald. Tho\nattendance was good and tho cantata is\ncertain of being even better rendered than\nupon (lie llrsl ocmslon, If possible thero\nwill ho a practice In the exhibition building\non Thursday evening, Hint is if the propa-\ntlona for the flower show do not preclude\nthla. it has beon arranged that tbo male\nononis will wwir black al thu performance\nwith white roHes ln tho lapels of the tenors' coats and yellow. In thoso Df the\nbass. Tho ladle.: will be titlired In white,\ntho sopranos euch wearing a pink rose uud\ntho   altos  a   red.\nE.   Lyons and  wife,\nCranbrook.\nun.MI'I-0. N. Mlllor, E: A. Baker, Vancouver; E. Baillte, poplar; A. ll. Tuttle,\nYnilr; (i. F.   Ransom,  W.  R  do Witt, G.\nMason 6 Risch\nfor sale by\nStandard Furniture Co.\nSee our stock of secondhand organs.\nSTRATIfCONA-C.   W.   Busk,   Kokanee;\nC. De s. Batchellor, L. Allabmigh, IX. a.\nJackson, Spokane; J. A. Wright, Montreal; Miss E, T, Paa'sons, Miss A. s.\nPatch, Miss K, Selden, Minneapolis; B, Q.\nMason, W. Bison. Greenwood; T. If. Tretheway, Molly Gibson mine; G. O, Buchanan,\nG. Alexander, J. Keen. Kaslo; G. VV.\nHughes, Sandon* J. Boultbee, Rossland;\nIT. Wright, Vancouver; T. Whitehead,\nProcter; W. O. Wright, London; J, G.\nBillings, Nakusp; H.  M.  Mnrlns,  Seattle.\nQUEENS-J. Boyd, Wlulaw; G. Malcolm,\nVancouver; M. Easton, A. L. Kabol, O-ik-\nInnd; F. R. Newman, Sloean; G. Gmilnnri\nand wife, 13. Gflllhltid, T'ortland.\nTREMONT\u2014J. IC. Ringham, Kokanee;\nY, Hoahl, Vancouver; A. W. drlffln, Sin-\ndon; J. Voiing, Sloean; Q. Jordan. Silverton; A. Behort, Spokane.\nL-AKIOVHSW-A, Fleck, Granile; W. H.\nHnrno, Cnscado, \/\nGRAND CENTRAL-TV. McCreath, Spokane; K IU, Weeks. Winnipeg; S. W.\nMakoosll, London; ]\\ Rogers, B. Ulan-\nchard, Silmoj F, McDonald, Kaslo; It.\nPowell, Ferguson.\nNELSON\u2014J\". Jefferson, Calgary.\nMADDKN--J. Mclsaac, Whitewater; T.\nB, Levasson, Rossland; C. T. Porter, C, L.\nGlenn, Spokane; Mrs. Case, Mrs, Mullen,\nTrout Lake; T. G. Saunders and wife,\nEureka; 3. 3. Hennessy, Midge creek,\nBARTLETT\u2014J. Perkins, J. S. Btaltain,\nG. A. Miller, Everett; W. Tennnnt, Ymlr;\nW. Walton. Kootenny landing.\nROYAL-P. Robinson, Duluth; W. Eger-\nton,   Calgary.\nCbAST   LACROSSE\n' At Victoria on Saturday Vancouver won\nby a score of (i to 2.\nAt Westminster tho home lenjn defeated\nSeattle 8 to B,\nHOW   THEY   STAND\nWon   Lost\nNew Westminster     8 0\nVancouver      2 0\nVictoria       1        H\nSea tlio       0        ;i\nI    Nelson Souvenirs\nj*3 The largest assortment ot Souvenirs in the interior will ho found\nffi at our store.   Spoons, Blouse Seta, Cups, Hat Pins, Brooches, Belt\nfa Pins, Flags also Quarts Jewelry and Nugget Jewelry.\nB Prices 25 Cts. up.\n53 You cannot fail to get what you want from our display.\nW       MANUFACTURING JEWELLERS, WATCHMAKERS, OPTICIANS\n&3 Phone HI\n^^xn^5^^soa:s\u00ab<i^_^_<x>o<s<K^\nP!!!!!l!H!H{l1!!!!im!!!!!!!!llll1ll!!nn!n!!n!l!!!Hl1l!!!H!H!!in!K\n120th Century Clothing JHJii!g}g|\nNever before were we bet- ^\nter prepared to show you 25\nthe very host in high grade \u00a3S\nClothing. You'd better see __3\nif we haven't just the suit \u00a33\nyou want. Warranted to re- \u00a35\ntain tlieir shape or money 25\nback. \u00a33\nMens' Fine Suits  3\n $15,  $18, ?20, $22.50 ~2\nWe are right In line witb \u00a33\ntbe best values possible.        S5\nMens12-piece Suits 2\nSuitable for hot weather, t-3\nPrices at $5, ?7. $10, $12 and ~3\n$15. ~*\nBoys' Clothing    =3\nSpecial values for this 53\nmonth, the kind that wear -jg\nwell. Values ?1, $2, $., $4, \u00a3*\n$5 and $G. They are the best ^S\npossible for the money, Spe- SS\nclal sale of Men's Straw __3\nHats.   The lowest ln prices. __S\nUndergarments for men. \u2014\nCom fori able,   seasonable.        S3\nBalbrlggan Underwear, \"^3\ngood value, per suit $1. 23\nFiner quality stripe Un- \u00ab3\ndcrwear, suit $1.50; Merino \u00a3\u2022>\u00bb\nUnderwear, Suit $2; fine jw\nfinality light weight wool, %\u00a3\n$2.50. *^g\nLittle Boys' Buster Brown Suits 3\nIn tho new Plain Brown, Blue and Fancy Mixtures; Knickerbocker '33,\npants ami White Linen Collars. Suita that should sell for $5 and $G; 2 1-2 \u00a33\nyear., to 7\/this week special for $4. Boy's Blouse Waist Suits, Percale S3\nCloth and Linen for $1 and $1.25. \u00a33\nShoe Department si\nIs overflowing with good bargains in Men's, Boy's and Ladies' and ^S$\nGirl's Shoes. Just received largo range Canvas Shoes, white and tan. \u00a3S\n.Prices tbe lowest.   The store whore your dollars bring their value.        SS\n& CO.  1\n^iiiiiliUUUtilUUiUl UUIUtUU ailliliUUhaiiiilUllhlliiiliiillK\nTuesday Specials\n10 PER CENT OP*.\nPARASOLS\n20 PER CENT OFF\nLadies' Shirt Waist Suits\n25 PER CENT OFF\nShower-Proof Coats\n10 PER CENT OFF\nWhite Blouses\nSeason's Fashions.\nPattern Hals\nYour choice at hall' regular price,\nKerr & Co.\nP. S.\u2014Thursday this week our slore\n\"Will ho opened on account of Saturday\nbeing July 1st.\nA Pure Wl|eat Gereal\nla the Idonl Summer Breakfast Food\u2014nothing better thaa our\n\"B|K\" Wheat Flakes\nJuat the pure grain\u2014no chemical flavoring. In 2 lb. packages and 60 lb, boxei.\nAt all Grocers,\nI\n(LIMITED)\nManufacturers of High Grade Cereals.\nCHERRIES\nAre a Short\nCrop\nBUY NOW-\nw\nWe are receiving, daily from a well\nknown local fruit grower some very fancy\nRoyal Anne and Black Tartarian Cherries,\niric for 1 J-4 lb cup; special pi-Ice for crate\nlots for preserving. Wc have only u few\nmore crates to follow, which-Will about\ncloso the season's supply.\nPull assort meat of Fruit. Jars, Jelly\nJars  and Rubber   Rings,\nBell Trading Company\n%%mm9m999i\nNew Vegetables\nCauliflower each\nNew Cabbage eaeh\nNew Spuds 7 lbs for\n10c\n10c\n25c\nTOYE & BENEDICT\nJosephine St. GROCERS Phone No. 7\nIT PAYS TO DEAL WITH RUTHERFORD\nLime Juice c\u00bbi-:'*&**>$\n1 his juice is imported direct and bottled\nfresh and pine by\nWm. Rutherford\nNclnon, B.C.\n_torn closes At I p. tu\nDRUGGIST\nNOTHING NICER\nJ. Y. ORIFFIN & CO.\nLIMITED.\nA Snap\nFifty Acres\nFruit Land\nAt Six-Mile Point on Kootenay Lake    An\n' irrigation ditch is built thfough the land.\nSOIL\u2014Especially adapted for fruit trees.\nPrice $500.00. *\nJust to hand\nA shipment of\nChildren's\nBare-foot\nSandals\n\\T\u00bb 1 t*YI *f\u00bbl S3      To arrive Monday,\nV C&ldllslcA-   i2th fune, car Fancy\nOranges Valenc?a.oranges,\n^\u25a0^ V*''m\"m-!S **\"** sweet, ] uiey and Jong\nkeepers; an orange that will stand shipping.\nSend in your orders, they will have our careful\nattention. j A McDonaldj\nWholesale Fruits\n*_\u25a0_\u25a0\u2014\u25a0\u25a0\nffi'^\u00bb1'^_\u00bbV^^*^V^W^^\u00bb*\u25a0^W^V^V^^\u00bb^\nWB BKI.I. PIT It\nThese ore nice nights to linger nt\ntlio gate, imi see to It thai you are\ncorrectly dressed, Well dressed men\nhavo learned to come hero for \"different\" things and always tlnd what\nthoy arc looking alter\u2014Shirts, Neckwear, Jloslery, Underwear, etc., that\nIs different from tho kind you lind in\nmost stores, How about a white or\nfancy vent.\nTHfc HUB    FiORY & WALLEY\nFURNISHING HOUSE      \u2022\"\"\u25a0\u00bb\" '    \u00ab   S?n__l___I\nWhen You Want\nSTYLISH, FIRST=CLASS SHOES\nGo to Gallagher's\nWo have Uiem In all Styles and Sizes.\nI'ox No. HI\nJ.W.GALLAGHER\nBAKER ST.\nTelephone IH\nVA8E8\nPrices from\n25c to $2.50\nMcDermid & McHardy ft?\nRoyal Shoe Store\nR. ANDREW & CO.\nSlater and Mettlaton Bh.ai.\nIf you are going to exhibit any flowers\nSee our vases before you buy any\nCanada Drug & Book Co., Ltd.\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1905_06_27","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0381610","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : F.J. Deane","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1905-06-27 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":"1905-06-27 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}