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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":" ge^ copy.\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nIP\nVOL. 3\nNBLSON B. C.  SUNDAY APRIL 8 1905\niERMANY HAS\nDEEP MOTIVE\nEvidently Determined to Have Finger\nin Moroccan,Pie *\ntiatlons of any sort heen begun or proposed.\nWashington, April 1.\u2014It is declared\nat the state department that there have\nboen no exchanges whatever between\nGermany and America respecting the\nmaintenance of the open door in Morocco. %\nNORTH FORK BOOMING\nASSURANCE OP  RAILROAD   SUBSIDY\nBOOSTS MINING STOCKS\nglares There is no Predominating Influence There-Difficult to Measure\nWhat is His Purpose\niBerlin, April 1.\u2014Behind the attitude\n, the German government toward Mot->\nco are diplomatic motives which are\nit easy to measure. Germany is disclined to see Prance spread further\nto northern Africa and will check and\nlay Indefinitely if possible that policy\n\"peaceful penetration\" which would\n| Id. strength to Prance. Probably also,\nsrmany ia willing to embarrass France\nid gain an important victory while\nunce's ally is engaged eleawhere.\n| lese motives, are, however, absurd,\nie obvious thing Is that Germany does\nt consent to have ber old relations\n.th Morocco modified by an agreement\nwhich she Is not a party and after\n\u25a0maining passive for a year chooses this\npment to object by diplomatic activity\nJ Fe,i!*\n\u25a0Privy councillor Rosen, now special\n\u25a0voy of Germany at the court of king\nTenellk of Abyssnla, will, it is unoffl-\ntlly reported, be Getman minister to\nloroceo in succession to the deceased\n\u25a0ran von Mentizlgen,\niHerr Rosen began a dragoman to the\nprman*consul general at Smyrnla, serv-\nat Teheran and was consul at Jeru-\ntlem. When emperor William visited\nat city, Herr Rosen was tranferred to\ne foreign offlce. He has the great gift\nspeaking several foreign languages\n[eluding Arabic.\nThe correspondent of the Vossische\nIltung at Tangier gives another ver-\n)n of emperor William's performances\nere. He says the emperor replying\nthe address of the members of tbe\nferman colony, said:\n*'In an independent country such as\ni*occo, commerce must foe free. I\nI do my best to maintain its political\nlomlc equity. There is no predom-\ning Influence here.\"\nhe emperor'B significant words have\nIticed a lively impression here. The\n:al Anzelger, In a despatch from Tan-\n, says that ln replying fo the mem-\n. of the German colony, emperor\nHam said be was glad to make the\nmlntance of the pioneers of Germany\nforocco and that they bad done their\nr. They must continue to fulflill\nr duty under the emperor's protec-\n. Germany had great commercial\nrests In Morocco. Her trade was\ntneing gratlfyingly. The emperor\nId make it his duty to promote this\ne as far as possible. His, the em-\nvislt, was a recognition of this\ndependence.\nThe speerb. the Lokal Anzeigcr adds,\nanted an immense Impression in tbe\nreign colony at Tangier and especially\nfiong the natives who now refer to the\niperor as tbe protector of the Inde-\nndence of Morocco.    Great political\nITgniflcance,   It  is further   assured, is\nitached to the fact   thai the   German\nlarge d'affaires accompanied the Ger-\nan emperor to Gibraltar.\nThe German side of the Moroccan con-\novorgy Is founded upon a treaty   of\nhlch article one reads:     \"Continuing\nlid exchanging friendship  shall  exist\nptween his majesty, the German emper-\n, and his majesty, the sultan of Mor-\n:co, and also between their empresses\nid their subjects.   Freedom of trade\nstween both countries shall continue. !\naeb shall endeavor to secure to the\ntbjects of the other all rights, and prlv-\njges held by the most favored nations.\"\nThis is the treaty of 1891 which under i\ns terms might have been revised in '\n196 but was not revised nnd runs with-\nJit limitation ami without    provision\nr its denunciation.    Such a contract\n1th Morocco cannot, of right be dissolv- !\nJ or Impaired, It   is asserted   hy tlie\nerman government, by Ihe agreement\nstween Prance and Great. Britain to\nany declines altogether to recognize j\nranee as having \"any more dominant\nraltion in Morocco than Germany.\nAs to whether Franco Informs Ger-\nlany of the agreement with Great Brit-\n| tn has been fully   discussed   In   the\nrench and British press.   The German\n>reign office regarded foreign minister\neicasse's conversation with prince von\nadolin, the German ambassador, as be-\nig little more than \"tea table   talk,\"\nery interesting but as not supplying\ntie place of an official communication\nrhlch would have called for an official\neply.   Prince von Radolln's passive at-\nltwde towards M. Delcasse, cannot it Is\naid at the foreign offlco here, be ac-\nepted as the German government's as-\nlent to the France-Britain agreement.\nRermany   does not trust to France to\ntrotect German   trade.     She   prefers\nfather to deal with the sultan.\nr The German ambassador to the TJnlt-\nJed States, baron von Speck   Sternberg\nhinder Instructions from the foreign of-\nIflct> has explained to the-state department at  Washington  that    Germany\nIstands for the open door   In Morocco.\n\u25a0Germany has   not asked   the   United\n|&tates to do anything nor have nego-\nGRAND   FORKS   EXPECTS   PROSPEROUS SEASON\n(Special to The Dally News)\nGrand Porks, April 1\u2014A telegram was received here yesterday from George A.\nFraser, M.P.P. to the effect that the desired subsidy for the building of the north\nfork railroad had been passed by the government caucus. Aa a result of the wire\na sudden movement of mirth fork mining\nstocks lias taken place, about 100.000 shares\nof Pathfinder alouk having changed hands.\nMany enquiries art- made for any kind nf\nnorth fork stocks. It Is conlldently expected that with this new railway line built\nand the extensive works contemplated ut\nthe Granby smelter, this year will be a\nvery prosperous one for Grand Forks,\nAt tlio meeting of the I.O.O.F. held here\nlast evening a handsome stiver medal was\npresented to D. D. Munroe, who is a high\nofficei1 In the order. The presentation was\ndue to the fact that Mr. Munroe, wMjjLWas\nii former resident here, had accepted a\nposition elsewhere, which will necessitate\nhis severing hia connection with the lodge.\nHenry White uf Spokane, is visiting in\nthis city. Mr. White is an old time prospector and mining man In lhe Boundary.\nHe was the original owner of the Knob Hill\nand Ironsides mines, now owned by the\nGranby company. He was also one of the\noriginal owners uf the Columbia townslte.\nHo Is now a capitalist, having made Ills\nwealth In this district.\nParties who have recently purchased\nlive and ten acre tracts of land on the\nCovert ranch are now commencing to build\nhomes on the newlly acquired premises.\nThe present prospects are that in the near\nfuture there will he a large settlement on\nthe Covert property.\nCONCESSION FORFEITED\nVENEZUELA, .HOWEVER,    WILL   INDEMNIFY  CAULE CO.\nTELEGRAPH   LINES  CASTRO   WANE'S\nCOST A, MILLION   DOLLARS\nWashington, April 1\u2014Minister Bowen has\ncabled from Caracas to the state department that the Venezuelan supreme court\nhus decided against thu French Cable company hi that part of the suit involving the\nforfeiture of the company's concessions but\nthat It has decided adversely to the government In its clulm for damages because thu\ncompany did not live up to Its concession,\nlt Is not expected thut u final decision has\nheen rendered because the right of appeal\nlias not been exhausted und it may be\nweeks or even months before that stage is\nreached.\nParis, April l\u2014Official advices from Cura-\nens say the decision of the Venezuelan\nsupreme court cancelling tho French Cable '\ncompany'^ concession, was accompanied\nby a recognition of the principle of paying\nan Indemnity for the cancelled Interests.\nThis Is considered as relieving the court's\naction from arbitrary confiscation. The\nview prevails that while Venezuela is recognized as a sovereign slate she can .supervise or acquire cable rights. This would\nnot permit the seizure or cutting of the\ncables or other acts of confiscation, but so\nlong as Venezuela pays an indemnity for\nthe cables taken, the question is considered\nto be mainly one of fixing un adequate f\nIndemnity.\nIn the meantime tho company hus cabled\nM. Brun, Its manager at Caracas, to appeal\nto president Castro within five days. The\ncompany asserts that it has not given assistance to the revolutionists, hut that following the. advice of the French government It Issued a clrculnr to all agents ordering them to keep clear ot the revolutionary entanglements. The company adds that\nthe cables Unking Cnmiero and Lagulra\nand Goro and Muraeublo, which president\nCastro seeks to acquire, cost $1,000,000.\nA SMELTERJ0R FRANK\nCANADIAN METAL CO.'S PLANT GOING UP FAST\nFIRST OP ITS KIND IN CANADA-IMPROVE\u00a9 TYPE\nA visitor from Frank reports that rapid\nprogress is being made In the construction\nof the smelting plant of the Canadian Metul\ncompany at that place,\nThe office building Is already finished\nand will be ready for occupancy this week.\nThe foundation of the InilUllng which will\ncontain the -assay ofllce and the laboratory\nIs practically finished. The pottery group\nbuilding Is even nearer completion. The\nfoundation Is finished and the brick walls\nare well under way. The building Is 220\nfeet long ahd 36 feet wide, aud has a wing\nattached which Is 80 feet long and 2b feet\nwide, lt will contain the sampling works,\nblacksmith shop and machine shops.\nThe main building will be toll feet long\nand r* feet wide. A force of men Is now\nengaged on the foundation of tlie building.\nIt Is to contain the furnace und rousting\nhouse.\nThomas Jones, a smeltermnn of many\nyears experience Is manager of works and\nIn charge of al the buildings. All will ho\nbrick and stone. The company is employing about 80 men on the construction, and\nnearly as many more are employed by subcontractors.\nThe stacks to be erected will be comparatively low, as high stacks are not required under the circumstances. A flume\nand pipe Hue is to he constructed In thu\nnear future from Gold creek to the smelter\nto ensure an adequate supply of water.\nA force of men will be put on this work\nin a few weeks. The smelter will be the\nflrst of Its kind in this country. It Is\nclaimed to be a distinct Improvement upon\ntho gas llred furnaces of tho Belgium type.\nSTAGE LINB TO WASHINGTON\nService  Established    Between  Chesaw\nAnd Phoenix.\n(Special to The Dally News)\nPhoenix, April 1.\u2014A contract was let\nthis week tor furnishing the timbers\nnecessary for raising the PIrBt street\nbridge ten feet to conform to the grade\nof the adjoining avenues. W. H. Bar-\nneet secured the contract, there being\nAve bidders.\nCharles D. Hunter, secretary of the\nHnnter-Kendrlck Co., the largest merchandise concern in the Boundary, has\nreturned from several   weeks* trip to\nCalifornia and the Sandwich islands.\nHe was accompanied by his brother,\nJames Hunter of Rossland.\nThe British Columbia Telephone Co.\nis preparing to rebuild its line from\nCascade to Phoenix, a distance of some\n25 miles as the line runs, and requiring\nabout 1200 poles.\nThe flrst through stage from Chesaw,\nWashington, 32 miles distant, arrived\nhere this morning, to connect with the\nGreat Northern passenger train here.\nDally trips will be made hereafter by\nJ. F. Royer, the proprietor, connecting\nboth ways with the Great Northern for\nthe accommodation of passengers to and\nfrom Greenwood, Midway, Rock creek,\nChesaw and points beyond.\nBOUNDARY MINING NEWS\nPROSPECTING   SHOWS    ORE   BODY\nGOES DEEP IN IRONSIDES\nDEVELOPING   OPERATIONS   START\nSOON ON STEMWINDER.\n[Special to The Dally Nowsl\nPhoenix, April 1.\u2014This week the\nnight shift was laid off at the Rawhide\nmine, and hereafter it is the intention\nto work tbe ore quarry on ibis property\n(by daylight as far as possible.\nAt the bottom of the winze from the\n300 to the 400 level of the Old Ironsides\nmine, ci'osscutting of the ore zone has\nbeen going on steadily for some time,\nand Is proving the existence and size of\ntliat great body of ore at a lower deptli\nthan--ever before except possibly by diamond drilling.\nThis week the newly Installed brl-\nquettlng machine nt Iho B. C. Copper\nCo.'s smelter was started in operation\nfor the flrst time, It thus being able to\nhandle the valuable (Hue dust from the\nfurnaces in a more economical and satisfactory manner.\nThis week the Great Northern has\nbeen running two ore trains dally from\nthis camp, amounting to from 1000 to\n1200 tons per day. The C. P. R. Is\nalso taking out about tbe same amount\nof ore daily from here.\nThe new incline shaft at the Emma\nmine, Summit camp, operated by the B.\nC. Copper Co., Is now down about 75 feet\nand In the same camp the development\non the Rathmullen Is said to be producing good results, the intention being\nto begin-shipments to the smelter within a short time.\nWithin a few days active development\noperations are expected to be started at\nthe Stemwlnder mine, adjoining the\nBrooklyn, and which has always had tbe\nreputation of being one of the highest\ngrade mines in this camp. Extensive\niprellminarjMVork has already been done\nto get this property In shape for further development and shipping.\nNO 300\nHIS SHIPS   ARE  FOUL\nROJESTVENSKY'S  VESSELS   IN  TOOR\nSHAPE TO FIGHT TOGO\nDEATH   RATE    SO    HEAVY   SAILORS\nHAD IDEA WERE BEING POISONED\nNew York. April I\u2014AcconlliiK to a Paris\ndespatch to the Tlmen. Information reaches\nthere that when admiral RojeatvanHhy'a\nsquadron left Madagascar the bottoms of\nhis ships were so font with barnacles and\nseaweed that their speed diminished by\nnearly two knots. The death rate was so\nheavy that the sailors thought they were\nheing poisoned. It Is believed In Paris\nthat Rojestvensky Is making a tremendous\nbend south lo avoid Uie Japanese and get\nInlo clear water, where he will clean bis\nships.\nTURBINE A SUCCESS.\nAllan Liner Victorian Arrives at Halifax\n\u2014Boilers Bothered.\nHalifax, April 1.\u2014The new turbine\nRteamer of the Allan line, which arrived\nhere this morning, logged a total of 2519\nmiles between Movllle and Halifax. The\ndaily runs were 21)5, 288, 233, 305, 352,\n393. 318, 357. The Victorian's engines\ngenerally, worked well, but there was\ntrouble from the hollers priming, whleh\ncaused steam to be reduced and speed\nslackened several times. The absence\nof vibration was very' noticeable. Tlie\nsteamer behaved well in the sea.\nCaptain McNichol] expressed entire\nsatisfaction wilh the turbine system,\nand said he was confident that the Victorian will easily average 17 knots after\na couple of voyages.\nROSSLAND ORE SHIPMENTS.\nRossland, April 1.\u2014The shipments of\nore for the week were as follows:\nLe Hoi     2,325\nCentre Star   2,080\nWar Eagle   1,410\nLe Roi No,  2      40\nSpltzec     120\nWhite Bear        50\nWhite Bear (milled)       300\nTotal  for the week  C325\nTotal for the year, 88,020 tons.\nPHOENIX BANK SOLD\nSt. Louis, April 1.\u2014The stock of the\nPhoenix National hank of New York\nhas been purchased hy J. P. Morgan &\nCo., August Belmont, A. E. Marshall\nand his associates of the National Bank\nof Commerce in St, Louis, and E. B.\nSwinney, president of the First National\nbank of Kansas City. Mr. Marshall\nwill be president of the re-organized\nhank.\nCONGER SAYS FAREWELL.\nPekln, April 1.\u2014Edwin H. Conger,\nAmerican minister to China, who has\nbeen appointed ambassador to Mexico,\nantl will be succeeded here hy W. W.\nRockhlH, chief of tho bureau of American republics, was received In farewell\naudience todas* by the emperor and\ndowager empress.\nABSORBING\nQUESTION\nGermany's Advent in Mediterranean Topic of the\nDay in Paris\nFrench Officials Hardly Know What to\nMake of it-Take Calm View of Situation for the Present\nParis, April 1.\u2014Germany's advent in\nthe Mediterranean as shown by emperor\nWilliam's visit to Morocco and chancellor von Buelow's speech is the absorbing question of the day. Heretofore\nFrance has dealt with Germany on tbe\nnorth but now for tbo first time Germany makes hep appearance in the\nsouth, and asserts tbat she has strong\nInterests in the territory bordering on\nthe Mediterranean. The Latin nations,\nnamely, Italy, Spain and France have\nthus far considered the Mediterranean\nus their special sphere of activity although Great Britain's control of the\ntwo gateways, Gibraltar and Suez, also\ngives her a commanding position in the\nMediterranean. Naturally therefore,\nGermany's appearance upon this exclusive field is as unexpected us was her\nappearance at Klo Chou, China, as a\nfact, or in tbe Chinese territory question. Tlie fact that Germany has uot\na coast line on tbe Mediterranean, while\nthe Latin nations bave extensive coasts\nadds significance to Germany's entering of tbe Mediterranean sphere.\nOfficials here continue to view the\nsituation calmly. They are specially\ndesirous of having other nations, particularly the United States, takes a sympathetic view of France's policy and\npurposes ln Morocco. This leads to expressions of much satisfaction In the\ncourse of the Uulted States some months\nago which indirectly recognized France's\nparamount position in Morocco. This\noccurred during the PertUcaris case when\ntbe United States sought the good offices\nof France. The American action in\nthus turning to France was widely\ncommented upon at t... time, as constituting an American endorsement of the\nAnglo-French agreement, moreover,\nFrance's recent activity in Morocco is\nlargely the result of indignation over tbo\nPerdlcaris case. A general cry was then\nraised that Morocco was in such a state\nof anarchy that France ought to adopt\nenergetic measures. Perdlcaris camo\nhere and personally solicited the government to take strong measures. Franco\nfinally adopted plans for restoring order\nand developing the country. Therefore\nshe naturally counts on the sympathy\nof the United States as her policy is\nlargely the outgrowth of American Interests.\nThe sequel to the present complication arouses considerable solicitude. It\nis maintained that Germany's claim to\nhave the open door indefinitely prolonged would result In giving Germany commercial privileges exceeding those of\ntlie other powers and tbat It would probably lead other powers to ask for a\nsimilar indefinite extension of the open\ndoor, thus requiring Morocco to surrender ber commence without any return.\nTherefore the policy of France seems to\nhe to give Germany adequate assurances\nof the same treatment in Morocco,^ as\ntbe rest of the world, bnt no privileges\nibeyoml 'those heretofore accorded to\ntbe other powers.\nBeneath the external calm, considerable irritation prevails In government\ncircles he>\u00ab. However, this does not\nshow a menacing tone. The attitude of\nlhe press also Is free from menace.\nFEARED A COLLISION. \u2666\nof the soft coal operators of central\nPennsylvania, who met here today, the\nthreatened strike of-ihe bituminous\nminers has been avoided. The mine\nowners in secret session decided to grant\nthe demands of tbe men by renewing\nthe wage scale in effect last year, the\nbasis of which is 62 cents \"a ton for pick\nmining. A meeting of tho joint scale\ncommittee of operators and miners will\nbe held at Altoona next Tuesday when\nthe schedule will be adopted. The United Mine Workers of America fixed\nWednesday, April 5, as tbe last day on\nwhich they would treat with their employers, announcing that a suspension\nof work would take place on tbat date\nif the operators failed to meet their demands.\nMacdonald, and many, other members of\nthu executive An effort is being made to\norange a meeting for some evening early\nthla week.\nIN INTEREST OF YUKON\nGOVERNMENT HAS PLANS TO FURTHER MINING INDUSTRY\nREDUCE LICENSE FEE AND REMIT\nROYALTIES\u2014OTTAWA NOTES\nBut Paris Entertained German Students\nWithout Incident.\nParis, April 1,\u2014It was feared that the\narrival here today of a large delegation\nof German students might lead to an\nincident In regard to tbe French-German\ncontroversy over the Moroccan question,\nThe students, however, were cordially\nreceived and banquetted although objection was made to Ihelr currying German Hags for fear of inciting tlie populace.\nQUIT MANCHURIA AND KOREA\nRussia's Peace Terms According to\nBourse Rumors.\nSt, Petersburg, April 1.\u2014According\nto tho peace reports circulated on the\nBourse today Russia will cede the southern portion of the islands of Sakhallan\nto Japan and agree that Manchuria and\nKorea are permanetnly outside the Russian sphere of Influence and the eastern Chinese railway will be turned over\nto the Japaneso for cession to China or\nto an International syndicate,\nWILL BE NO STRIKE.\nBituminous Coal Operators Agree to\nRenew Old Scale.\nPhiladelphia, April 1.\u2014-The soft coal\noperators late this afternoon stated they\nhad practically agreed to renew the old\nwage scale. This will prevent the strike\nof 70,000 miners in* the bituminous district. A joint conference of the operators and miners will be held in Altoona\nApril 4th to complete the agreement.\nPhiladelphia, April 1.\u2014By the action\nTHEATRE OF WAR DARK\nOMINOUS  SILENCE    HANGS  OVER\nMANCHURIAN BATTLEFIELDS\nIS THOUGHT THAT JAPS ARE MAKING WIDE TURNING MOVE\nHarbin, April 1.\u2014Business Is paralyzed and a general lack of confidence is\nshown. A majority of the female population is leaving Harbin, it is believed that the Japanese are preparing a\nbold tunning movement, probably to\ntbe eastward, and the Russian cavalry\nis operating widely in order to avoid a\nrepetition of the surprise at Mukden.\nGunshu Pass. April 1.\u2014All Is quiet.\nContradictory reports are being received\nfrom Chinese fugitives, mose of whicli\nindicate that there is a constant, movement of Japanese northeast as though\nwith the intention of effecting a turning movement, at Klrln to cover the\nbeginning of an attack on Vladlvostock.\nChinese report that tbe construction\nfcf a railway from Slnmintin to Mukden\nhas begun. Snow has fallen and the\nroads are softening into mud aud are\nIn a wretched condition.\nCUSTOMER GOT THE GEM\nWOMAN FOUND PEARL IN OYSTERS\nRESTAURANTER CLAIMED IT\nSINGULAR CASE DECIDED BY THE\nCOURT AT HAMBURG.\nHamburg, April \u00a7_!.'\u2014The supreme\ncourt here today rendered a decision in\ntho case of a,pearl valued at over $750\nfound In her mouth by a woman who,\naccompanied by a male escort, was eating oysters in a restaurant. The proprietor of the restaurant sued to recover\ntbe pearl on the ground that shells like\nchicken bones were by tradition left by\nthe customers and were a source of profit to the proprietor.\nThe court decided tbat tbe pearl did\nnot belong to the woman who found it\nnor to tbe proprietor of tbe restaurant,\nbut to the man who had paid for the oysters. In rendering its decision, the\ncourt pointed out that if tiie ownership\nof the pearl wero to repose in the restaurant proprietor instead of tho person who paid for the oysters, then its\nownership might*as well be carried\nback to the oyster dealer who supplied\nthe restaurant proprietor with the oysters, and thence to the fisherman who\ntakes the oyster from Its bed.\n(Special to The Dally News)\nOttawa, April 1.\u2014There are a number\nof proposals before the government to\nfurl her tbe mining interests in the Yukon. Thero is to be a reduction of tlie\nfee for free miners* licenses aud ten\nyears' remission will be given of the\nroyalty on copper and gold from quartz.\nTills is wltii a view to encouraging\nquartz mining. Discovery claims will\nbe enlarged from 500 to 1000 feet and\nplacer claims from 250 to COO feet. It\nhas also been decided to make a hydro-\ngraphic survey of tbo Klondike and Indian rivers this season.\nPhoenix and Osoyoos have been established sub-ports of entry.\nApplication will be made at tbe present session of parliament for an act to\nextend tbe time for the completion of\nthe railway of the Kaalo-Lardo-Dunean\nRailway company.\nGreorge William Hadloy, of Brandon,\nManitoba, hotelkeeper, will apply next\nsession for a bill of divorce from Ills\nWife, Isabella Clarke Hadley of Winnipeg.\nMOVEMENT\nIS POPULAR\nProposal jor Greater Freedom of Church Meets\nHearty Response\nInfluential Russian Clergy Seconds Proposition-Agitation is Aimed at Procurator of Holy Synod\nIT KEEPS INCREASING\nOUTPUT OF BOUNDARY MINES ONCE\nMORE   BEATS  RECORD,\nTOTAL FOR PAST WEEK, 22,132 TONS\n\u2014WEEK'S SHIPMENTS\nDOINGS  IN  MANCHURIA\nPresent\n,ii ha\nToklo Sends Minor Details of llii\nSituation\nTokio. April l\u2014The following r<\nbeen received  from headquarters or me\nJapanese   armies   Ut   (lit-   t't'OUl:\n\"Our forces lu the dlreotton of Blngking,\nabout wt miles east of Mukden, report that\naccording to Information received from tho\nmiUvu.syiL force of Russians and mounted\nbandits under colonel Madolltoff, which was\nassembled ut Hal Lung, bus returned to\nthe north. According to othor natives,\nKlrln seems to be the place for tho enemy's\nassembling.\nour force at Welhulnpomen, 85 mlloa\nnortheast of Tie pass, reports that there has\nbeen mi change iii thf enemy's positions\nin ihe vicinity of Manhuachlch.\nThen' is somo Rusalan Infantry and oav-\nalry about 88 mlloa northeast of Kaiyuan.\n2G miles from Tie pass.\nOur force ut Changtu, 40 mlloa above Tie\npush, reports that the pava(ry outpostB\nretreated 26 miles north or Changtu, after\nburning the ruilrond Million at Soustalozu.\nOur forces at  Pakomen, 80 mile;: north of\nTie push, .reports thnt cavalry outposts\nof ihe enemy have heen osbefved 30 mlloa\nnortheast of Uiut placo uini thai mixed\nforces of tbe enemy occupy Fenghau, 66\nmiles north of Fakomen, Pomtoiichong,\nabout 15' miles west of Fengliau and their\nvlslnlly.\nJap\nMISREPRESENTED AS USUAL\nPrisoners Did Not Suicide, nnd Are\nWell Treated\nSt. Petoraburg, April 1\u2014At Uie bureau\nestablished to look after the JupanoHO\nprisoners, the story or tho suicide of tho\nJapanese Imprisoned at Medvld Is ontolally\ndeclnred lo lie entirely misrepresented. The\nInformation received at the bureau is to the\n(tot that on of n batch of 126 now arrivals\nwho was Invalided became very melancholy\nand took bis life, No complaints of ill treatment have been received. Two Japanese\nsurgeons who \"wore confined at Medvid\nwere released and toduy were escorted to\nthe frontier by American vice-consul White.\nLACROSSE CLUB'S DIFFICULTIES\nDellclt From Hockey Season to be Covered\nby Supporters\nThe Prospects of lacrosse in Nelson this\nyeur are not very bright.   There is gonoral\ndissatisfaction among the supporters of\nthe club wliich is shared by many of tbo\nmembers, it seems thnt the hookey department bus run the lacroBse-hookay club\nInto debt lu  spiti' of u suoeesful season.\nAt tho eluse of the lacrosse season last\nyear tho club was In good financial condition. At the beginning of the winter the\nhockey club hud funds In hand, Now, ln\nspite of the fact that the trips to Uosslund\npaid expenses and the games at home\nwere generally well patronized, the club's\nfunds are exhausted, nnd debts amounting\nto over $200 have to be mot.\nA meeting was called for laHt Tuesday\nevening but bad to bo postponed owing\nto the absence of tho president,  w   A\n(Special to Tlie Daily News)\nPhoenix, April 1.\u2014This week's output from Boundary mines exceeds that\nof last week a little which was a new\nrecord at that time. Tbe tonnage sent\nfrom cloven mines and tbe treatment at\nthe three district smelters was as follows:\nGranby mines to Granby smelter.13,140\nMother Lode to B. C. Copper.. 4,250\nBrooklyn to M. & B. smeller.... 2,702\nRawhide to M. & B. smelter.... 1,551\nMountain Rose to M. & B     108\nEmma to Nelson smelter      132\nOro Denoro to Granby        (16\nElkhorn to Trail         20\nLast Chance to M.   & B       27\nSkylark to Granby         20\nB. P. U. to Trail         20\nTotal for the week  22,132\nTotal for year to date, 238,240 tons.\nThe smelters treated ore aa follows:\nGranby smelter  12,476\nB.,C. Copper smelter    2.738\nMontreal & Boston smelter  4,423\nSt.  Petersburg, April 2.\u2014(2 a.m.)\u2014\nThe movement for greater freedom for\nthe Russian church and tho demand for\nthe convocation of a general council to\nconsider reforms  in  the spiritual  and\nadministrative life of the church, voiced\nin tbe manifesto of a group of St, Petersburg priests, finds support in the Influential clergy, not. only in the capital,\nbut In the provinces and is to be regarded as another manifestation of a general revolt in Russia against tiie domination of lite bureaucracy which Is equally\npredominant in church and political administrations.\nIt Is a mistake lo suppose tbe movement Is directed against tbe emperor\nwith whose position as divine representative and viceroy upon earth the whole\nbelief of tbe Russian church Is bound,\nbut It is against, the subordination of\nchurch to civil authority, aims which'\nhave been steadily growing since the\ninstitution by Peter lhe Great of the\nholy synod, \u00bb\nThe manifesto wus followed yesterday\n1) va letter from bishop Dmitri, of Novo-\ngorod, one of the Influential ptwlnolal\nbishops, In which he demanded freedom of\nthe church from the power of the Chono-\nvlks und the bureaucracy! and names tlie\nchief procurator of tho holy synod, both\nas an ofliclal whose power needs 'curtailment, ami who himself stands in the way\nof reform.\nTlie whole movement. In fact. Is aimed at\nprocurator general PobedonoBtefT and the\nchancelorle under his direction, which\nthough la essence a political organization\nhas attained such power that without its\npermission no pulpit can be occupied, and\nnot even repairs made to a church In tho\nremotest government can he undertaken.\n'Hie Influential journals are lending support to the movement within the church,\ntho Novoe Vremya dee1 a ring that Urn\nchurch Is lying In paralysis, Its voice no\nlonger heeded, because of the predominance of the bureaucracy, wliich has mado\nthe otllee of Metropolitan nothing, und that\nof procurator of the holy synod everything.\nHIGHEST IN THB WORLD\nTotal for the week \t\nTotal for the year 230,239 tons.\nGOSSIP  jm   PARIS\nRUSSIA ORDERS ROLLING STOCK FOR\nSIBERIAN    LINE\nNOTABLES BEE WILD  WEST SHOW-\nMONUMENT TO JULES VERNE\nParis, April 1\u2014The Russian government\nl)OS ordered 2m) cars and 170 locomotives\nfrom the St. Etlnehe Iron Works, u is\nunderstood that* they are intended for Increasing tlie military equipment of tho\ntrtins-Slborlan i o id.\nThe shah or Persia will arrive in France\nshortly to take a provincial water cure.\nThe arrival here or king Alfonso at the\nend of tlie month Is leading to elaborate\npreparations fur his entertainment,\nRepresentatives of president Loubet, ser-\neral cabinet ministers and many members\nof diploma tie corps, attended the Bala\nopening of the wild west show this afternoon on the Champ de Mars. The cowboys\nand rough riders were enthusiastically received.\nTho Inhabitants of Amiens have opened a\nsubscription to erect a monument to the\nmemory of Jules Verne. Already a large\nsum has been subscribed.\nBridge Over the Zambesi River. Soutii Africa Nearly Finished\nLondon. April 1\u2014Tlie British South Afri-\nIoan company hnve received a cablegram\nfrom Victoria Fulls, anouncing that tho\nbridge over tlie Zambesi river, the highest\nIn   the  world,   was  linked   up at  7 o'clock\nthis morning, thus completing another link\nin the chain of the Capo-to-Calro railway.\nINJURED  BY  BOMB.\nLodz, Russian Poland. April 1.\u2014S.\nZarbalovlcz, police commissioner of the\nsecond district, was seriously injured\nthis afternoon by a bomb which was\nthrown at him on the street.\nZarbalovicz wns proceeding to his offlco on loot, accompanied by a policeman, ami met a poorly clad man carrying a bnsket. Suddenly the man hurled\na bomb which exploded with terrific\nforce blowing off Zarbalovicz feet and\nseverely wounding him in tlie breast. It\nis feared bis wounds will prove fatal.\nThe policeman drew his sword and\nwounded the commissioner's assailant\non the head, He is reported to be dying.\nPARCELS POST WITH ENGLAND.\nWashington, April 1.\u2014The parcels\npost treaty recently concluded between\nlhe United States and Great Britain became affective today. Tbe agreement ts\nlu nearly all respects similar to tbe\ntreaties previously arranged with Germany, Denmark and several other countries of Europe. The maximum weight\nallowed is four pounds and six ounces.\nThe rate fixed Is 12 centa a pound or\nfraction of a pound in this country und\n2s a panel In England, The movement\nfor a parcel post arrangement with\nGreat Britain began many years ago,\nanil a substantial Increase in postal business is expected to follow its operation.\nCHEAPER OCEAN RATES\nSan Francisco, April 1.\u2014J, Stubbs\nand R. P. Schwerin, on behalf of the\nowners of rail and trans-Paclllc steamer\nlines, have decided upon some changes\nIn steerage passenger rates. A rate ol\n$51 Asiatic steerage to Chinese and Japanese ports has been agreed upon for the\nCanadian Pacific steamers at Vancouver,\nthe Hill steamers at Seattle and the\nHarrlman steamers at. this port. The\nJapanese line at Seattle and the Boston\nSteamship company at the samo port\naro allowed to charge a rate of $43.50.\nSTEAMER ON BEAM ENDS.\nCrescent City, Calif., April 1.\u2014The\nsteamer Manda Lee, bound from this\nport for Monterey, while leaving the\nharbor today, shifted her cargo and Is\nnow on ber beam ends Just outside\nRound Rock. It Is believed she can be\nrighted hy throwing overboard her deck\nload of lumber.\nSMITH DEFEATS JUDGE\nDenver, Colorado, April 1.\u2014Martin\nJudge of Scranton, was defeated In the\nsixth round by Smith or Denver, before the Denver Athletic club, ln the\ntlflh round Judge was knocked down\ntwice and in the sixth look the count\nfive times. The bell saved him from a\nknockout, He was so badly beaten,\nhowever, that he was unable to continue\nwhen lhe gong sounded for the seventh\nround.\nMARCH   LAND SALES.\nWinnipeg, April 1.\u2014The following\nare the C. P. R. land sales for tbo\nmonth of Marcli, 1905: 1,590,661 acres for\n$85,576.\nThe following are the land sales mado\nby the Canadian Northwest Land company during the month of Marcli: 58,001)\nacres for $42,000.\nIN   THE  GAZETTE\nIn the last number of the provincial Gazette, George Cunningham of Greenwood,\nmining recorder, is appointed acting government agont, during the absence on\nleave of \\V. G.  McMynn.\nAn order In council approves of the elty\not Nelson's plans, as filed,, to construct a\npower plant on the south side of the upper\nfulls ol the Kootenay river tor the purpose\nof \"Ihoroaslng the supply of electric light\nand power within the limits of tlie said\ncity.\" The estimated cost or the undertaking is 1145,000.\nNotice is given that tlie sitting of tlio\nYmir court of revision Is postponed from\nMay 1st to June Bth,\n'Hie Second Relief Mining company, operating In the Ymlr distrlel, is Incorporated\nas it limited company, capital $600,000 In $t\nshares.\nNotice is given of the winding up of tho\nAthabasca-Venus. Limited, and the ap-\nppolntnient ot J. J. Campbell as provisional\nliquidator.\nSUPPLIES FOR VLADIVOSTOCK\nSt.   Petersburg.   April   1\u2014More   than   ten\ntrains stocked with provisions and war material are leaving St. Petersburg daily foC\nVladlvostock.\n f?e^ C<^.\nTHE DAILY NEWS   SUNDAY APRIL 2 1908\nfresh Creamery Butter\n56 lb. Box at 28c per lb.\n28 lb. Box at 29c per lb.\n141b. Box at 30c per lb.\n1 lb. Bricks  35c\nThis Butter is Guaranteed First-Class\nStrictly Fresh Eggs 35c per doz.\nGranulated Sugar\n14 pounds for $1.00\nImperial Bank of Canada\nCAPITAL   PAID-UP.\nHead Office:   Toronto.\n.J3.000.000   REST\n R00O.00O\nT. R. MEHRITT, President.     D. JI. W1LKIE, Vice-President and Gen. Man.\nBranches ln Provinces of Ontario, Quebec,   Manitoba,   British   Columbia,\nNorthwest Territories.\nSavings Department\nDeposits received and Interest allowed at current rales from date of opening account aud credited half-yearly.\nREVELSTOKE\nA. E. Phlpps, Manager.\nCRANBROOK\nJ. P. M. Plnkliani, Manager.\nARROWHEAD\nE. K. Boultbee, Manager.\nTROUT LAKE\nT. B. Baker, Manager.\nNELSON:  J. M. Lay, Manager.\nTHE CANADIAN BANK\n*    OF COMMERCE\nPaid-up Capital, $8,700,000 Reserve Fund, $3,500,000\nHEAD OFFICE, TORONTO\nB. E. WALKER, General .Manager        ALEX. LAIRD, Assl. Gen'I Managw\nBANK MONEY ORDERS\nISSUED AT THE FOLLOWING RATES:\n$5 anil under    3 cents\nOver $5 and not exceeding $10......   6 cents\n\"   SlO       \" \" S30  10 cents\n\"   $30       \u00ab \u00ab S50   15 cents\nThese Orders are Payable at Par at any office in Canada of a Chartered Banlt\n(Yukon excepted), and at tlie principal banking* points ia the United State*.\nXEGOTIAJILK AT A MXBD RATE AT\n* THE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE, LONDON, PNG.\nThey form an excellent method of remitting small sums of money\nwith safety and at small cost.\nFrench Standard Liqueurs\nMarie Brizard's\nOF BORDEAUX\nBstalill.ihed 1755.\nPortland Cement\nPortland Cement\nWhite\nCondor\nAlpena\nFiro Bricks\nGarteraig\nSt. Louis\nFlre Clay\nSeo tcli\nPlaster Paris\nHlllsboro\nWe carry a very large stock or the\nleading brands of Portland Cement,\nScotch Fire Brick, and Flre Clay. We\nare prepared to quote very low figures\n-. on these commodities. Your correspondence will receive the promptest\nattention.\nJ. H. Ashdown Hardware Co., Limited\nWHOLESALE  AND  RETAIL\nIt Pays\nMACHINISTS\nCARPENTERS\nPAINTERS\nPLASTERERS\nPLUMBERS\nETC., ETC., ETC.\nTo Use First-Class\nTools\nWill find our stock most complete and of the best quality\nonly. Try us IE you need a new\ntool. i\nWood-Vailance Hardware Co., Limitd\nNELSON\nWholesale and i{etall\ndelayed dividend. In the case of the\nWar Eagle the dividend stage is not\nlikely to be reached for some time, but\nat least the next annual report should\nshow a very marked Improvement in the\nmine's condition from a dividend paying standpoint.\nJust what, effect the changed conditions for the better will have on the\nmerger proposition, when it Is taken\nup again later ou, remains to he seen,\n'but unless the Godderham-rfftickstock\npeople have largely their own way, there\nwill not be any merger.\nEDITORIAL NOTES\nThero will he no dei^y in reaching\na conclusion in the autonomy debate at\nOttawa, but. judging from Ihe announced long list of speakers yel to come, a\nvote will not be tnken for about another\nfortnight, and meantime tho hill will be\ndiscussed from day to day until the debate Is ended. Whatever the final division may amount to, it. Is now conceded\n(hat the measure will pass in its present\namended shape by a large majority.\nTlio evidence before tiie special house\nof commons committee on telephones\nshows that the postmaster general has\ntaken up Ihe question of a municipal and\ngovernment, telephone system, none too\nsoon. Independent telephone systems\nin Ontario have to do battle in the\ncourts and before parliamentary committees In order lo get their rights, and\nthen not infrequently do not get them.\nThe postmaster general proposes a system of local municipally owned telephones, with government control over\nlung distance linos, connecting the former. Government contro] of telephones\nas outlined is the first step To government control of the telegraph. They\nWill both come in time and they cannot\ncome any too quickly.\nLAW, YOUNG & CO. .Montreal.\nSole Agents for Canada.\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPublished nt Nolson every morning\nExcept   Monday,   by\nF. J. UKANB\nROSSLAND MINES\nThe continued illness of T. G. Black-\nBtock of Toronto, vice-president and\nmanaging director of tlie War Eagle-\nCentre Star mines, was the cause of thu\npostponement last week of the annual\ngeneral meeting of the War Eagle company. After the re-election of the old\nhoard of directors for llio ensuing year\nthe-meeting adjourned pending Mr.\nBlackstock's recovery.\nReferring to the long talked of amalgamation of the Le ftoi mine, with the\nWar Eagle-Center Star and other Rossland properties, which has been under\ndiscussion since last summer, the Canadian Mining Review or Montreal, says\nthat the hindrance to the consolidation\nmove comes largely from tbe divergent\nviews of Mr. Watorlow and Mr. Black-\nstock regarding the situation of the head\noffice of the combination. Naturally,\nMr. Waterlow and associates desire the\nhead offlce In London, equally naturally, Mr. Blackstock is reported' as in\nsisting that the head ofllce shall be on\nthis side of the water, and available for\nquick communication with the mining\nproperties. Wo are distinctly of Mr.\nBlackstock's opinion, says the Review,\nhaving always believed that the executive offices of a mine should be situated as closely as possible to the property\nitself.\nReferring to a rumor that W. H. Aidridge would be the probable manager\nof the consolidated mines if a merger\nIs accomplished, the Review sayta that\n\"Mr. Aidridge Ih understood to be quite\ncontent with the position which he now\noccupies, and it is reported that he is\nignorant of negotiations looking to his\nassuming the management of the consolidation.\"\nWhen James Cronln ilic recently\nelected director of the War Eagle-Centre Star companies passed through this\ncity a fortnight ago he stated that the\namalgamation scheme waa practically at\na standstill owing to Mr. Blackstock's\ncontinued Illness, and added that probably nothing more would bo done In\nthe matter until Llio Toronto mining\nman recovered his health sufficiently\nto take up busines affairs once more.\nIn the meantime manager Cronln has\nbeen making many changes at the Rossland mines and it will not be surprising\nIf within the year the shareholders of\nthe Centre Star company receive a long\nSays the Toronto News: \"A correspondent informs us that he will continue\nto tuke our paper because of matters to\nwhich he strongly objects. He desires\nto have his blood warmed up by a\nhealthy exasperation. This is good\nsense. We welcome him to our list of\nreaders, and will endeavor to accentuate Ihe objectionable features to whicli\nhe refers.\"\nThe captain of the Allan liner Parisian certainly deserves to be congratulated upon tho success with whicli he\nnavigated his vessel Into port last week\nafter tho experience with tbe Incoming\nGerman steamer Albano. A cool, collected commander Hie captain must be,\nor there would have been loss of life,\neither through panic or through failure\nto reach the wharf in time. Tlie Allan\nline is fortunate in that it is conducted\nWilli great care, and that, as a result,\nthe maximum of safety is reached.\nHEADS CANAL COMMISSION\nWashington, April l.\u2014Tlie announcement was made today that T. P.\nShonts, president ot* the Toledo, St.\nUniis nnd Western railroad hud decided to accept the chairmanship of tho\nIsthmian canal commission.\nRHEUMATIC PATNS QUICKLY\nRELIEVED\nThe excruciating pains characteristic of\nrlicumattani and sciatica, arc quickly relieved by applying Chamborlaln'ii Pain\nJiaini. The great pain relieving power ol\nthe liniment has been the surprise and delight of thousands of sufferers. The Quick\nrelief from pain which it affordq is alone\nworth many times its cost.   For sale by\nall druggists and dealers.\nPruning and gratftng of fruit trees, etc.,\npromptly attended to. L. Pogue, Victoria\nstreet, opposite City Hall. Orders should\nbe promptly sent In,\nTHE DEAD LINE OF FORTY\nWHAT HR.  OSLHR   REAttiY   SAID\n' AT   BALTIMORE\nARTICLE THAT HAS CREATED SO\nMUCH COMMENT\nDr. William Osier's references to the\n\"dead line of forty\" in his last address\nat John Hopkins university, have aroused much critical comment. The address was his valedictory on leaving the\nBaltimore university to tako charge or\nthe medical school of Oxford university.\nHe wenl lo John Hopkins at Hip age of\n\u202210 and is now fill. Tlie text of Iho portion of his address, on tbe topic of .the\nworld's work being done by young\nmen and cutting short of the careers of\nthe old afler sjxly years, is given herewith.\nI am going to he bold and .touch upon\nanother question of some delicacy, hut\nof Infinite importance in university life,\none that has not been settled in this\ncountry. I refer to a fixed period for\nthe teacher, either of time of service or\nof age. Except in some proprietary\nschools. I do not know of any institutions In which there is a time limit of,\nsay. twenty years' service, as in some\nof the London hospitals, or in which a\nman is engaged for a term of years.\nUsually tlie appointment is aut, vltam\naut eiilpam, as Ihe old phrase rends. It\nis a serious matter in our young universities to have all of Ihe professors growing old at the same time. In some\nplaces only nn epidemic, a time limit or\nan age limit, can save the situation.\nI hnve two fixed Ideas, well known to\nmy friends, harmless obsessions; with\n\"which I sometimes bore them, but which\n\u2022have a direct bearing on 'this important, problem. The first is the comparative uselessness of men above 40\nyears of age. This may seem shocking\nand yet, read aright, tho world's history\nbears out the statement. Take the\nsum of human achievement in action,\nin science, In art, in literature\u2014subtract the work of the man above 40,^and\n\u25a0while we should miss great treasures,\neven priceless treasures, we would practically be where we are today. It is\ndifficult to name n great and far-reaching conquest of llio mind which has not\nbeen given to I lie world by a man on\n\u25a0whose back the .sun is still shining. The\njeffecWve, moving, vitalizing work of\nthe world is done between the ages of\n25 and*40\u2014these fifteen years of plenty,\ntho anabolic or constructive period, In\nSOME NIFTY\nGOODS\nLamb's    Tongue,    Cooked    and\nPickled. Glass jars, each 65 cents.\nLunch    Tongues,     Cooked    and\nPickled, Glass Jars, each i>5 conta.\nSliced Boiled Ham, l ih. Glass\nJars, each 46 cents .\nChicken Tn males, Mexican style,\nput up In husks, per tin 29 cents.\nThose are a few of Llhhy, Mae-\nNcill'H specialties  nnd  wc can  as-\nsure you they are elegant guodM.\nTry them,\nToye & Benedict\ncinocEns.\nPHONE  NO. 7.\nBuilding Brick\nfor Rale In any quantity.   p\u00bbr prices apply to Castlegar Brlok Works, Castlogar,\nSILVER KINO MIKE)\nwill pay the lilglicst cash prico (or all kinds\nof second hand goods, will buy or sell\nanything from an anchor to a needle. Furniture, Stoves Carpets, Cooking Utensils\nbought In household Quantities. Also cast\noff clothing. Cull und see me or wrlto.\nAddress Silver King Mlka, Box 'ki, H*U\nwhicli there Is always a balance- ln the\nmental bank, and the credit is still good.\ntn the science and art of medicine\nthere has not been an advance of the\nfirst rank which has not been Initiated\nby young or comparatively young men.\nVesalius, Harvey, Hunter, Bichat, Laen-\nneo, Virchow, Lister, Koch\u2014the green\nyears were yet upon their heads when\nthoir epoch-making studies were made.\nTo modify an old saying, a man Is sane\nmorally at 30, rich mentally at 40, wise\nspiritually at 50\u2014or never. The young\nmen \"should be enconarged and afforded\nevery poslble chance to show what Is in\nthem. If there Is ono thing more than\nanother upon which the professors of\nthis university are to be congratulated,\nlt Is the sympathy and fellowship with\ntheir junior associates, upon whom\nreally ln many departments, in mine\ncertainly, has fallen the brunt of tbe\nwork. And heroin lies the chief valuo\nof the teacher who has passed his climacteric and Is no longer a productive\nfactor; he can play the man midwife,\nas Socrates did to Thosetetus, and determine whether the thoughts which\nthe young men are bringing to the light\nare Silse Idols or true and noble births.\nMy second fixed Idea Is the uselessness of men above 00 years old, and the\nincalculable benefit It would be ln commercial, political, and In professional\nlife If, as a matter of course, men stopped work at this age. Donne tells us\nin his \"Biathanatos\" that by the laws\nof certain wise states, sexagenari were\nprecipitated from a bridge, and in Rome\nmen of that age were not admitted to\nthe suffrage, and they were called de-\nponati, because the way to the senate\nwas per pontem, and they, from age,\nwere not permitted to come hither. Tn\nthat charming novel, \"The Fixed Period,\" Anthony Trollope discusses the\npractical advantages in modem life .'f\na return to this ancient usage, and the\nplot hinges upon the admirable scheme\nof a college, into which, at 60, men re-\nHEALTHY PLANT8\nIi \"!)\u25a0>\u25a0\" 'he M\u00b0\"> Careful Attention u\nWell as Good Soil.\nDid you ever see a rosebush which\u2014\ndespite the most beneficent environment\nof soil\u2014of sunshine\u2014and of atmosphere,\n-seemed never to achieve a healthy\ngrowth.\nA ton of manure will not help a plant\nthat has a canker eating out Its heart.\nTon must destroy the cause before you\"\ncan remove tho effect.\nYou ennnot cure Dandruff and Baldness by rubbing on hair lotions, and\nTubbing in vaseline, etc.\nYou must look to the cause of the\ntrouble\u2014It's a germ at the roots of\nyour hair which causes It to fall out.\nNewbro's Herplclde destroys the germ,\nand benlthy hnlr Is the sure result.\nSold hy lending druggists. Send lee. In\nstamps for snmple to The Herplclde Co..\nDetroit   Mich.\nCANADA DRUG ft BOOK COMPANY\nSpecial Agenta.\nNEW CROP\nTEAS\nJUST RECEIVED.\nFresh and Fragrant\nBlack or Green\nAS ALWAYS\nTHE BE8T\nPrices moderat* by tha pound or orl\u00bb\nlnal packaga.\nKootenay Coffee Go.\nPhone 177.  P.O. Box lit.\nFRUIT LANDS\nFOR SALE\nIn 10 acre blocks; In JO ten blocks\nBeveral Improved ranches.\n). B. ANN ABI.B. Nalaoa. \u00bb. O\nViolinist and Pianist\nMra. Mclntyre and Mrs. Whitley ore\nopen for engagements, dances or other\nentertainmeiHB. No objection to engagements out of town. Apply Mrs. E. C. Mclntyre, Nelson, B. ii\nH. D. ASHCROFT\nMINERS' LIVERY AND FEED BTABU\nTeaming and Packing don*. Saddle\nBona* (ot Hire. Hacks, Burgles and\nCotter* on call day or night StablM oa\nStanley Street, between Blllca and Carbonate    Telephone 67    P. O. Box IBS.   Nelaon\nTENDERS WANTED\nTlie Canadian Bank of Commerce Invite\ntenders for tho construction of a brick and\nstone bank building to bo erected at Cranbrook, B. C.\nAll lenders must be In the hands of P.\nC. Malpas, manager of the Cranbrook\nBranch of tlio Bank, by April 14th next.\nPlans and Bpoolfleatlona may be seen at\nthe offlco of tho Bank ln Cranbrook. The\nlowest or nny tender not necessarily accepted.\nSOCIETY CARDS\nABERDEEN HIVE. No. It U O. T. M.-\nMoeta 2nd and Id Wedneaday, 7:10 p.m.\nnf each month In K. of P. Hall. Vomon\nStreet, next to poat offloa. Vlaltlni mem-\nbora cordially Invited.\nMARY MATTHEW, L.C.\nMINNIB RITCHIE, Record Keeper\nCIRCULAR\nFOR RAW FURS\nTo MCMILLAN FURS WOOL CO.1\ntired for a year of contemplation before\na pointful departure by chloroform.\nThat incalculable benefits might follow\nsuch a scheme is apparent to anyone\nwho, like myself, is nearlng Lhe limit,\nand who hus made a careful study of\nthe calamities which may befall men\nduring the seventh and eighth decardes.\nStill more when he contemplates the\nmany evils which they perpetuate unconsciously and with, impunity. As it\ncan he maintained 'that all tho great\nadvances have come from men under\n40, bo the history of the world shows\nthat a largo proportion of tho ovils may\nbe traced to the sexagenarians\u2014 nearly\nall the great mistakes politically and\nsocially, all of tho worst poems, most\nof the had pictures, a majority of the\nbad novels, not a few of .the bad sermons and speeches, It is not to bo\ndenied that occasionally there is a sexagenarian whose mind, aa Cicero remarks, stands out of reach of the body's\ndecay. Such a one has learned tlio secret of Hermlppus, that ancient Roman,\nwho feeling that the silver cord was\nloosening, cut himself clear from all\ncompanions of his own age and betook\nhimself to the company of young men,\nmingling with their games and studies,\nand so lived to the age of 153, puoror-\num halltu rcfocillus et educatus. And\nthere is truth In the story, since it Is\nonly those who live witli the young\nwho maintain a fresh outlook ou the\nnew problems of the world.\nThe teacher's life should have thr'e\nperiods\u2014study until 25, investlgatioft\nuntil 40, profession until (10, at which\nage 1 would have him retired on a double\nallowance. Whether Anthony Trollope's\nsuggestion of a college and chloroform\nshould he carried out or not, I have become a little dubious, as my own time\nis getting so short. (1 might say foy\nthe benefit of tho public thnt. with a\nwoman I would advise an entirely different plan, sinco after (10 her influence\non her sex may bo most helpful, particularly if aided by those charming accessories, a cap nnd a fichu.)\nNEW BANK BUILDING.\nThe Canadian Bank of Commerce Is\nadvertising for bids for tbe construction of their new bank building that is\nto be built on the corner just west of\nthe Herald building, in Cranbrook. The\nstructure is to be brick and stone, two\nstories high and modem in its finish.\nThe building will he the best In Cranbrook und an attractive ornament on the\nprincipal business Btreet and one of lhe\nvery best corners in ihe town. As soon\nas the bids are accepted work will he\npushed as rapidly as possible as the increased business of the bank renders ll\nImperative tliat. the slaff shall have\nrfiore commodious quarters.\nCHAMBERLAIN'S COUGH REMEDY\nTHE BEST AND MOST POPULAR\n\"Mothers buy it for cr'oupy children, railroad men buy it for severe colda and elderly\npeople buy It for la grippe,\" Bay Moore\nBros, Eldon, town. \"Wo sell more of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy than any other\nkind, It seems to have taken the lead ovor\nBeveral other good brands,\" There Ih no\n(lucMilon about this medicine being the best\nthnt can be prooured for coughs anil colds,\nwhether It be n. child or un adult llml Is\nafflicted. It always cures and cures very\nquickly.  Sold by all druggists ami dealers.\nFor flrat class cord wood, also cedar\nfcr kindling, ring up Yale-Kootenay let\nCm.. Telephone 141\nGRAND HOTEL\nCor. Howard and Main Sts . Spokane\nBritish Coluinblc People\nWill And a home In Spokane at the\nGrand Hotel. Recently remodelled and\nrefurnished.\nUnder the management of E. B.\nPhair, late of Hotel Phair, Nelson, B. C.\nAll British Columbia papers on file.\nEuropean plan. Rates 75 cents to $2.00\nper day.   Freo bus moots all trains.\nTHE MAN WHO\nSMOKES\nour special Mixture smokes a pure ano\nfragrant tobacco, as choice a thing aa\never tempted you.\nTHURMAN\nTOBACCONIST\nSunnyside Hotel\nNBLSON, B. O.\nRATES \u00bb1 PBR DAT\nThe Sunnyside has nicely furnished bed\nrooma, lighted with electricity and thi\ntame II the heat ln Nolson for tho price.\nThe hotel Is on Baiter street, one bloc!\nfrom the C.P.R. and O.N.R. union depat\nwn ajauftra ant on thu pramjaaa\t\nIf you have your\nPICTURES FRAMED\nat the Queen studio thoy will be done In\na manner that will please you and stilt\nthe picture. Picture framing and pictura .\nwaking la our business. .\nFor Sale\nA choice residence and \\y_ lots oa\nMill street, containing 7 roo^s and all\nmodern conveniences! only $500 down,\nbalance in easy payments.\nA four roomed cottage and 3 lots in\nthe Fairvlew Addition. Lots fenced:\naud fruit trees in bearing; price $900.\nTerms.\n3000 Beatrice shares at 25 cents each.\nThese shares in a little while will bo\nworth double this price.\nR. J. Steel\nSharp & Irvine\nMINING BROKERS.\nREAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE.\nAGENTS.\nContinuous quotations by private wire.\nWe will pay the market\nprice for\n300 Northwest Coal.\n2,iHJ0\"<3re!tt Northern Mines.\n1,000 Rambler-Cariboo.\n0 S. A .War Scrip.\nS.O00 Sullivan. '   .\n1.000 War Eagle.\n1,000 Centre Star.\nWe will sell\n100 Northwest Coal.\n3.1)00 Yale-Kootenay Ice.\n2,000 Keco (ox. dlv.)\n1,000 International Coal.\nPhone i io\nTurner-BoecK Block\nTHE\nNELSON\nCAFE\nBAKER STREET, NBLSON\nWill be supplied with all tbe delicacies of the season. None but\nwhite help employed. Bar ln connection.\ni\nBowles & Halliwell\nProprietors\nMcLeod Hotel\nCORNER\nmun AND SECOND AVENUB\nYMIR. B. C.\ncentrally located, rebuilt ana refumlibef\nthroughout All modern Improvement!.\nSample Roomi In connection. The only,\nOnt class hotel ln Ymlr.\nRATES FROM Jl.W UF\nVUflbAY MoTjKon. ProDrivMr\nTHE QUEEN'S HOTEL\nNELSON, B. O.\nB. C. CLARKE, Proprietor\nEdgkted by Electricity. Heated by Hot lh\nRATES (2.00 PER DAY\nFlrat class Dining Room.     Large anal\nComfortable Bedrooms. Bample Rooma fee\nCommercial Ken.\nBARTLETT  HOUSE\n(Formerly Clarke House)\nThe best 11-00 per day house ln Nelson.\nNone but white help employed.   The bai\nIs the best\nfl.W. BABTLETT - Prop.\nTREMONT  HOUSE\nEUROPEAN AND AMERICAN PLAN\nMEALS 260.   ROOMS FROM Bo TO UN\nMiiLONB & TREOILLUB, Proprletera\n Baker Btreet Nelaon.\nof the best quality\nWest Kootenay Butcher Cc\nNelson Steam Laundry\nP. O. Box _.   Telephone UI.\nAlt kinds and all colore of\n(lentil' Clothing\nCLEANED AND DYED\nFlannels, Blanketa, Curtalna, Bilks, Bt*..\na apecialty.\nGloves renovated to look Ilka new.\nSteam Carpet Gleaning\"\n, Tour patronage solicited.\nPAUL NIPOU. Prop.\nT. SPROAT\nBUILDERS AND CONTRACTOR*\nShop at rear of Tribune OfOoe,\nNELSON, B.C.       ,..*\n THE DAILY NEWS   SUNDAY APRIL 2 1905\n==\u20147\nIndigestion\nIt isn't always tne stomach's fault tliat food is\nnot digested. Torpid liver brings Constipation. Bile\ngets in tlie stomach. The kidneys become affected.\nThe whole process of digestion is weakened. No\nwonder you feel so uncomfortable after eating.\nWtftfrW\n\u00bb     or Fruit liver Tablets\nmake digestion complete by making the liver strong\nand active. They cause more bile to be excreted,\nthus effectively curing Constipation. They tone up\nthe stomach, regulate the kidneys, build up\nthe whole system. Made from pure fruit\njuices, their medicinal action is intensified\nby a secret process of combining them.\nIn tablet form, 50 cents a box.\nAt all druggists.\nFRUITATIVES, Llmlud.\nOTTAWA.\n._mm%]__M_m__~______E~_m\n6\nCOUPONS now with\nevery pound of\nTEA\nBeginning at once, card inside each end marked\nas 1 Coupon will count as 3 Coupons, making 6 in\nevery pound, or 3 in half pound pkg.\nThis makes the tea coupons count up very quickly\n\u20143 times as quickly as before.\nAsk for Blue Ribbon Tea; write for Premium List\nand send in your Coupons.\nBLUE RIBBON, Dept. N. Winnipeg.\nJACKSON HAND POWER\nROGK DRILL\nOVER 1000 IN USE\nOne mnn with thla drill can do aa much\nas threo inon using hummers. Two men\noperating drill can do work of Cour men\nwith hammers. Heaviest part of drill\nweighs only 86 pounds. Can bo packed\nany where and Bot up ami handled by one\nDinn. Does not uso nearly so much steel\nas hand drilling. Entire drill is. made of\nsteel nnd is guaranteed, against breakage\ntor two years,\nWRITE FOR CATALOGUE 0. 17.\nDRILLS HARDEST ROCK.\nHOLES CAN BE DRILLED IN\nm  ANY DIRECTION.\nMOUNTED ON TRIPOD,\nTUNNEL OR CROSS BAR.\nH. P. Grippen Mfg. Go.\n25 Broad St. New York\nIe HALL MINE\nNELSON, B.C.\nPurchases\nLead, Copper\nand Dry Ores\nGood desirable homes, best locations and\nreasonable t>rlces:\nFor Immediate Sale\nOn Silica streot, near Stanley\u2014io rooms, stone basement, furnace, Good\ngarden, 2 1-2 lots.\nOn Silica street, also close to Stanley street--7 rooms, 3 lots, splendid\ngarden.\nOn Stanley street-* room cottage, partly furnished, with piano. A splendid\nbargain.\nSeveral   smaller  well   tocated   houses In different partB of the city,\nTho above can be purchased on reasonable nnd easy terms.\nLotB ln Fairvlew, the coming residential portion of the city. Ranch properties on the West Arm. \u2122,     -_     \u2014^\nWARD STREET, NELSON, B. C. I \u2022   Us    -TTOCiST\nBRITISH TRADE UNIONS\nBILL TO RELIEVE PENALTIES INFLICTED BY COURTS.\nCOMMENT OP LONDON PAPERS ON\nSECOND READING.\nA bill is pending before the British\nhouse of commons calculated to protect\ntrade unions from the results of some of\nthe recent judicial decisions, notably\nthe Taff-Vale judgment. The bill recently passed its second reading by a\nmajority of 122. Tlio English papers\ncomment on the terms of tho hill pro\nand con. Appended aro, extracts from\nsome of Uie leading journals,\nlu view of the declaration of J. H.\nHawthornthwalte, M.P.P., mado recently in the local legislature that tlio\nusefulness of the trade union was gone,\nthe views of leading English papers on\nthe admitted Importance of the union\nwill lie found interesting.\nTho Daily News:\u2014\"The house of commons was engaged yesterday in an attempt lo restore trade unionism to the\nposition In which the legislature placed\nit 30 years ago, and which recent judge-\nmade law has demolished.' Tlio loss of\nthis right of effective combination is\nono of tho Erupts of the reaction through\nwliich the country has been passing; . .\nNo doubt it is easy enough for ihe lawyers to contend, as the attorney-general\ndid yesterday, (hat in asking for protection against actions for damages\nthe unions are seeking a position of\nprivilege. That is not so in reality. An\nemployer or association of employers\nhas no more grievance against a union\nwhich, subject to the observance of\ncontracts, withdraws or threatens to\nwithdraw its members' labor, than a\nunion has against employers who may\nchoose to enforce a lock-out. Yet who\nevery board of a labor organization\nseeking an injunction or bringing an\naction for damages against an employers' federation in the latter ease? Tho\ninjury done to tbe workers and their\nfamilies may be extreme, and the coercion brought to bear upon employers to\njoin In the lock-out excessive, but no\nunion ever dreams of importing tin\nlaw of conspiracy into such a case\nNothing but a gross confusion of ideas\ncan give oven a colorable warrant to\nthe doctrine that, a voluntary associa\ntlon of wage-workers acting ln its own\ninterests ought to stand to bo shot at\nunder the pica tbat Its action is duo to\nanimus or has resulted In pecuniary injury. In asking for a restoration of\ntho old order of things the unions are\nnot seeking for a privilege, but for\nwhat common-sense ami experieno\nteach us is a right. It may be, as Mr,\nAsquith suggests, tliat the wording of\nMr. Whiftaker's bill calls for some\namendment, but It Is substantially on\nthe right lines, and we are delighted\nthat It has secured its second reading\nby an immense majority.\"\nTho Daily Chronicle:\u2014\"The bill embodies tbo policy of tbe Trades Union\ncongress, and seeks at removing the\ndoubts as to tlie law of trade disputes\nwliich have reFulted from the recent\ndecisions of tbe house of lords, nnd at\nputting the trade unions back into the\nposition they held before those decisions were given. It legalizes 'peaceful persuasion.\" It amends the law of\nconspiracy by enacting that 'an agreement or combination by two or more\npersons to do or procure to be dime any\nact in contemplation of furtherance ot\na trade dispute shall not lie ground for\nan action, If such act when done by ono\nperson would not bo ground for action.'\nTheso points seem to us to embody tho\ndemands alike of justice and expediency,\nA third clause, proposing that ' an action shall not he brought against a\ntrade union for the recovery of damage\nsustained by reason of the action of a\nmember or memhers of such trade unions\/ raises a more disputable point.\nTho protection of the sick anil provident funds of trnde unions Is, indeed,\nclearly desirable, and tho responsibility\nof unions for tho acts of their members\nneeds careful definition. But wo much\ndoubt whether the sense of justice In\nthe house of commons, or In tbe genoral\ncommunity, will agree to the enactment\nof a proposition that for wrongs done\nby tho responsible agents of a powerful organization no liability for damages\nshould attach (o it. The manner in\nwhich, without going so far as this, the\nfunds of trade unions may properly ho\nprotected Is. however, eminently a matter for such careful and unprejudiced\ndiscussion in committee ns the bill will\nnow, we hope, receive.\"\nTho Westminster Gazette:\u2014\"Objection is taken to tlie bill because it gives\nworkmen something over and above\nwhat the common law gives them. Tills\nis undoubtedly lhe case. Tbo deliberate Intention In the 70's was to equalise\nconditions as between employers and\nemployed. This could and can only bo\ndone by giving to tbe workmen tlio\npower of collective bargaining and the\nmot hod of milking that, bargaining effective\u2014the peaceful strike. Recent decisions of the courts have made a Strike\n\u25a0practically Impossible. In tho interests of social order and of economic\njustice this is to lie deplored\u2014not, as wo\nneed hardly add, becauso wo want\nstrikes, but because without tbe right\nof striking tbe workman is in reality\nhelpless against the employer.\"\nTho Times:\u2014\"Tho division In tbe\nhouse of commons on the second reading of Ihe bill to amend the law relating\nto trade unions and trade disputes, certainly suggests that tho mercury of tho\npolitical barometer Is falling towards\nthe point at which a dissolution of parliament la no longer regarded as a remote contingency. ... On both sides of\ntbo houso, and from tbo Hps nf almost\nevery speaker in tbo debate thoro was\na consensus of testimony to tho valuo\nof trades unions as Industrial bodies,\nand to tbe benefits which havo been\nproduced hy the establishment of organizations with which it is possible for\nemployers to deal In security. Major\nBancs, notwithstanding bis general opposition to tho bill, declares his conviction that tho unions, carried on In a\nJust and proper manner, havo heen a\ngreat help in redrosslng many grievances, which, without thoir aid, would\nhave proved dangerous to tbo country\nat largo,   it soems alBo to bo generally '\nCOLUMBIAN COLLEGE\nFounded 1KB\u2014Incorporated lh&j\nNEW WESTMINSTER, U. O,\nProvides a Christian home for stut\/ents\nof both sexes nt moderate rates. Itis a\npreparatory blasa Cor junior students, doing\ngrado public school work, Does nigh\nschool work, confers nil high school i>riv-\nileges, and prepares for teachers' examinations. Teaches all branches of a frae-\ntioal Business Course unit gives Diplomas.\nGives a liberal education In Its Collegiate\nCourse and In tlie LadlGB' College Course\nfor M.K.L. nnd ALL.A. in University\nwork. Can take Btudents through the\ncomplete Arts Course and tlie dogree or\nB.A. can bo obtained from Toronto university, with which the college is in run\nI afllliatlon.\nFor fuller Information nnd terms wrlto\nRev. W. J. Bipperoli, B.A., B.D., Principal; or Rev. J. P.   Lowell. BUT***.\nr'HENRY'S * KURSERlVs :\nNew   Crop   of   Homo   Grown   Oftfl\nImported\nGarden, Field and Flower Seeds\nWholesale and Retail\nThousands of l-'ruitnnd\nOrnamental Trees\nRhododendrons,    Roses,    Greenhouse and hardy plants for Spring\nPlanting, Cut Flowers, Fiorni wont.\nFertilisers-^Beo    Lives   and   Su*h\nplies,\nEnstern prices or less. Catalogue\nfree.   No agents.\nM. J. HE^RY\n3010 Westminster Road, Vancouver.\nWRAPPER\nDrop uh a post card asking for a catalogue of premiums.\nconceded that tho larger tbo unions,\ntho greater thoir collective stake In Ihe\nprosperity of the country and of the industries which they represent, tho loss\nlikely aro tliey lo abuse any powers\nwhich tho legislature may entrust to\nthem, and the more certain to be amenable to reason, and to bo prepared to\nrender necessary submission to Industrial conditions which, although adverse to them, may none the lens bo for\ntho time unalterable. NothwilliPtnml-\ning all tbo good which may be snld of\ntho Unions In this way, it surely follows from the first principles of human\nnature that no organization of ibe kind\ncan safely he permitted to he a judge in\nIts own case, or to be released from obligations which aro binding on all other\nsections of the community. A multitude of persons acting in combination\nmust always be greatly more powerful\neven than the aggregate of tho units of\nwhich it Is composed: and liberties\nwhich are properly withheld from tho\nunits cannot safely be permitted to the\ncombination.\"\nThe Morning Post:\u2014\"The purpose of\ntho bill now before tho houso of commons la to give trado unions a privileged position\u2014one in *whlch they may\ndo grave injury to other persons, and\nyet bo free from all risk of being held\nanswerable to the extent of their means\nfor the losses they may havo caused\nThat such a bill should have passed ils\nsecond reading by a majority oC 122 Is\namazing. . . . Some members have no\ndoubt soothed their consciences by reflecting that a measure designed to override tho law hag no chance of passing\ntlirough all the necessary stages in tho\npresent parliament, They vote for It\nor hold aloof with an eye upon the electors, whose favor thoy desire lo retain.\nFor.much the same reason the government, which fools constrained to condemn tho proposals of the bill, refrains\nfrom oxorcislng authority over members to secure Its rejection, in both\ncases tbe action Is unworthy.\"\nWHAT THE PEOPLE REAP\nINTERESTING INVESTIGATION RECENTLY MADE.\nLITERATURE    OF    AN    EASTERN\nAMERICAN  VILLAGE.\nAn investigation was recently made\nn a community which comprises a small\nvlllago ln an eastern state and a considerable portion of agricultural and grazing country, with a view to ascertaining what literature Is read. The district contains three hundred and forty-\nnine families, and boasts four churches\nwith three resident ministers, and five\nschools with seven teachers. The report of the Investigation (published In\nThe World's Work, March) is devoted\nalmost entirely to the circulation of\nperiodical literature, but contains this i\nparagraph on tbe reading of books:\n\"There is a library containing more\nthan three' thousand volumes of well-\nselected hooks. This is supported by\na small endowment and by private subscriptions. Its circulation is confined\nalmost exclusively to flotlon and to\nmagazines. Its more serious books\u2014of\nwhich It has an excellent stock, though\nthere are hardly any of recent date\u2014are\nvery rarely called for. During the year\nthere were taken out of the HDrary 1001\nvolumes hy 96 patrons. Of the 1001\nvolumes more than 900 were fiction\u2014an\naverage of over nine to each patron.\nBurring two or three homes, tbe purchase of books of any kind Is practically\nnil, so that this circulation represents\nwithin a very small margin the total\namount of book-reading in the district.\nTlie report, places the district far ahead\nof many of its size, but Is should ho\nobserved that not more than a fourth\nof the families are reached by the library.\"\nIn the matter of periodical literature,\nit T.*as found that seventy-nine different\njournals wore taken. The character of\nthe papers and their circulation are Indicated by the following classification:\nDally and Weekly Papers  323\nHigh-class weeklies (such as Harper's  Weekly,  The  Independent)     7\nA weekly paper   described   as \" a\ncross between    The PoliM News\nand a regular newspaper)    43\nReligious   Papers     127\nTemperance papers       7\nAgricultural   papers       G5\n\"Dollar Magazines\"     C9\nMore expensive monthlies    13\nPeriodicals devoted to   Interests of\nwoman and tho home  119\nThe Saturday Evening Post, Tbe\nYouth's    Companion,    and    The\nAmerican Boy      2E>\nHumorous papers       1\nMonthlies varying from 15c to 50c a\nyear: sheets which contain \" a\npretty fair amount of literary\nhash\" and \"the worst scum of the\nadvertising world\"     56\nTotal   855\nThe World's Work \"Investigator\"\nenlls attention to the fact that \"hardly more than one-fourth of the homes\nregularly receive tbe hest, as well as the\nmost popular periodicals.\" He goes on\nto comment:\n\"The conclusion derived from this situation Is that the constant increase of\nmagazine circulation and the establishing of new magazines In not doing a\ngreat deal to reach the great mass of\nthe people in our country communities.\nA great opportunity for good service\nawaits the man who can devise ways\nand moans of reaching the vast multitude which clearly Is yot untouched by\nthis rising flood of good periodical literature.\"\nTaking up the last qun'.ort sentence,\nthe New York Evening Post suggest1!\nthat \"a far greater opportunity for better service nwnits the man who can devise ways and means of keeping the\nmultitude untouched by this rising flood,\nand can persuade them to try the most\nentertaining nnd tbe most stimulating\nfiction, poetry, essays, biography, and\nhistory.\" Tbe Philadelphia Press observes:\n\"What needs to bo remembered in\nwalling ovor the reading of this borough is that, a hundred years ago this\nvillage would havo had less than half\nof Its population able to read at all.\nDoubtless much read Is poor, but these\nlives when Ihey were left without even\ntho wider horizon of periodical reading\nwere worse sllll. The books now consumed aro so much completely to the\ngood.    So Is tho better part of these\nperiodicals\t\n\"It Is the custom of tho literary Sa-\nduceo to find fault with successive\nstages, because they are not taken In\na day, and to weep over the advance\nbecause It Is less rapid than men desire\nwho aro Ignorant of everything but\nbooks, Life Is necessary to literature,\nbnt literature Is not necessary to life,\nand only by slow degrees ran the general mass be schooled to the higher\nletters as tho general mass is being\nschooled now as never beforo. More of\nthe better and best is needed. Without\nit lands perish. Put much of the reading condemned, like some crops, Is\nplowed under and Inst, preparatory to\na better and more golden harvest.\"\nBOWLING ALLEYS. BILLIARD TABLES\nFOR SALE - BOWllhg alley equipments,\neomplote.     Write   for   prices,    Also   billiard   tables,   etc.    We   aro   the   leading\nmanufacturers of the world. Catalogue\nfree. Brunswiok-Balkd'Ooltondor Co., ID.\nFerguson A Co., AgcntB, Nolson.\nCHURCH SERVICES\nAnglican\u2014St. Saviour's church, corner of\nWard   nnd   Silica   street.   Fourth   Sunday\nin Lout.     Holy   communion,   8   a.  in.;\nmorning prayer and holy comumnlon, n\na.in,; Sunday school, 2:30 p.m.; evensong,\n7:30 p.m.   Rev. F. H. Graham, rector,\nCatholic\u2014Church ot Mary Immaculate,\ncorner of Ward and Mill streots. Low\nmans at 8 a.m.; high mass at 10:30 a.m.;\nevening service, 7:30 p.m. Rev. Father\nAltholT, priest.\nSalvation Army\u2014Barracks on Victoria\nstreet, west of Josephine. Tho following\nservices will be hold today; Knee drill,\n8 a.m.; holiness meeting, 11 a.m.; a prulse\nmeeting ut 3 p.m.; Salvation meeting at\n8 n.m. '\nItuptlst church\u2014Stanley streot, near Mill.\nMorning service nt 11 a.m.; evening service nt 7:30; Sunday school, 2:30 p.m. Rev.\nG. Morton Walker, pastor.\nPresbyterian church\u2014Bt. Paul's, comor\nof Victoria und Kootenay streets. Morning\nservice, 11 a.m.; 2:30, Sunday school; 7:30,\nevening service. Rev. J. T. Ferguson,\npastori\nMethodist church\u2014Corner Silica and Jos-\nophlne streots. No morning service] evening Hervico, 7:30 p.m.. Sunday school, 2:30\npin. Hey, W. W. Baer, pastor. The evening service will be choral, rendered by the\nregular  choir assisted  by  other  soloists,\nHmmumiol Congregational church\u2014E. H.\nli. Holtnan, pastor. No services will bt\ntold today. 4\nAll iSoap is not Pure Soap\nI That is the reason why $5000.00 reward will be paid by Lever\nBrothers Limited, Toronto, to any person who can prove that\n\u2022Sunlight Soap\ncontains any form of adulteration whatsoever, or contains any injurious chemicals.\nShrunken woolens, frayed linens and sore chapped hands are\nevidence that ail soaps are not pure soaps.\nSunlight Soap is guaranteed to be a pure soap. Dealers are\nauthorized to return purchase money to any one finding cause for\ncomplaint.   Sunlight Soap is equally good in hard or soft water,\nLEVER BROTHERS LIMITED, TORONTO 1001\nFOR THB\nP\nU\nN\nC\nH\nE\nA hole PUNCHED in\na   Rubber   indicates\nthat it is a\nFactory Imperfect\nor\nOut of Style\nor in some way inferior\nand   liable  to   prove\n'unsatisfactory.\nR\nU\nB\nB\nE\nR\nS\nN     \" J\nIn \" order that\" these\nmay be distinguished\nfrom perfect goods\nthey are PUNCHED\nas indicated in illustration shown herewith,    i\nPurchasers of Rubber\nFootwear should see\nthat goods represented to them as perfect,\nand up-to-date, are\nNot Punched.\niCHED\nRUBBERS\n\u2666-*-*-\u2666-\u2666*-\u2022>\u2022*-*-*\n6-fr-\u00bb-#-*-4-\u00ab.-#-\u00ab-#\nPorto Rico Lumber Co,, Ltd.\nMaiwfacturers of and Wholesale Dealers In\nROUGH AND DREH3JID LUMBISH, BHINOT.ES AND MOULDINQB, HAND-\nSAWN AND TUttNBD WORK. AN UF-TO-DATB DTIT KIIi* IM COK-\nNXCTION.\nBRILLS AT Y^SiR\nPorto Rico Lumber Co., Ltd.\nm**ima*K-&_S3B__m<l_a\u00bb__W___HmK__WKB_W>tWWLU__Bl^t,\nP. BURNS is CO.\nWHOLESALE AND  RETAIL.\n,y*ZTE HEAD OFFICE NELSON, B. 0.\nBranch Markets ln Rossland, Trail, Nelson, Kaslo, Sandon, Three Forks,\nNow Denver nnd Slocan Cltj.\nOrders by Mall to any Branch will have Prompt and Careful Attention.\n_-W-_wm_____u__uw_\\\nROUGH   LUMBER DRBS*B\u00bb\nDow\u00ab, Windows, Mouldings,  Shingle, Turned Work and Bracks*,\nI and up-to-date stock always on band.  Mail ardors promptly ftttuM H\nA. G. LAMBERT & CO,\n THE DAILY .'NEWS: SUNDAY APRIL 2 1905\nSynopsis  of  Regulations   for  Disposal of\nMineral  on  Duminion   Lands  tn  Manitoba, the Northwest Territories and tha\nYukon Territory.\nCoal-Coal lands may do purchased at SU\nper acre for soft coal and t'29 for anthracite,\nnoi inure Diun ,;.'ti acres can be acquired\nby  one  Individual  or  company.    Koyalty\nat the  rate of ten cents per ton of 2000\npounds hhull be collected on the gross output.\nQuartz--Persons of eighteen years and\nover and j\"int stock companies holding freo\nminer's ceitltlcatea may obtain entry for\na mining ii.'Miion.\nA free miner's certificate Is granted for\none or more years, not exceeding live, upon payment tu advance of $7.5u per annum\nfor an Individual, and from $50 to $uw per\nannum for a company, according to capital.     , m\nA free miner, hnving discovered mineral\nIn place, iii.ij locate a claim 1&WX1500 feet\nby marking out tlie same with two legal\nDoata, bearing location 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 tr.iiilng recorder's office, ono additional\nday allowed fur every additional ten miles\nor fraction. The fee for recording a claim\nIs $5.\nAt least $100 must be expended on the\nclaim each year or paid to the mining recorder In lieu thereof. When $StW has neon\nexpended or wild, the locator may, upon\nhaving a survey made, and upon complying with other requirements, purchase the\nland at $1.00 per acre.\nPermission may Iks granted by tbe Minister of the Interior to locate claims containing iron and mica, also copper in the Yukon territory, of an area not exceeding 100\nacres.\nThe patent for a mining location shall\nprovide for the payment of a Royalty of\n2 1-2 per cent of the sales of the products\nof tho location.\nPlacer Mining\u2014 Manitoba and the N.W.T.\nexcepting the Yukon Territory\u2014Placer mining claims generally are 100 feet square;\nentry fee, $5; renewable yearly, On the\nNorth Saskatchewan River claims are\neither bar or bench, the former being 100\nfeet long and extending between high and\nlow water mark. The latter includes bar\ndiggings, but extends back to tlie base of\nthe hill or bank, but not exceeding 1000\nfeet. Whore steam power is used clalma\n200 feet wide may be obtained.\nDredging in the rivers of Manitoba and\nthe N.W.T., excepting the Yukon Territory\u2014A free miner may obtain only two\nleast's of live miles each for a term of\ntwenty years renewable In the discretion of\nthe Minister of the Interior.\nTho lessee's right Is confined to the submerged beds or bars of the river below low\nwater mark, and subject to the rights of\nall persons who have, or may receive\nentries  for bar diggings or bench  claims\nexcept on the Saskatchewan It I ver where\n\"redge to lilgl\neach   alternate   leasehold\nthe lessee may dredge to high water mark\nThe leasee shall have a dredge In operation within one season from the date of the\nlease for eacli five miles, but where a person or company haa obluinud moro than\none lease one dredge for each fifteen mites\nor fraction is sufficient. Rental $10 per\nannum for each mile of river leased.\nRovalLv at the rate of two and a half per\ncent collected on the output after lt exceeds   $10,000.\nDredging In the Yukon Territory\u2014Six\nleases of five miles eucli may be granted\nto a free miner for a term of twenty years.\nats\u00bb n novaWe.\nThe lessee's right Is confined to the submerged bed or bars hi the river bolow low\nWater mark, that boundary to be fixed by\nUs position on the first day of August In\nthe year of the date of tho lease.\nThe lessee shall have one dredge In operation within two .veins from the date of the\nlease, and one dredgo for each five miles\nwithin six years from such date. Rental\n$100 per mile for the first year and $10 per\nmile for each subsequent year. Royalty\nSame  as  placer  mining.\nPlacer Mining In the Yukon Territory-\nCreek, gulch, river and hill claims Bhall\nnot exceed 250 feet in length, measured on\nthe base lino or general direction of the\ncreek or gulch, the width being from 1000\nto 2000 feet. All other placer claims shall\nbe So feet squure.\nClaims are marked by two legal posts,\none at each end, bearing notices. Entry\nmust be obtained within ten days, If the\nclaim 1 \u25a0 within ten miles of a Mining Recorder's ofllce. One extra dny is allowed foi\neach additional ten miles or fraction.\nThe person ur company staking a claim\nmust hold a free miner's certificate.\nThe discoverer of u new mine Is entitled\nto a claim 1000 feet in length, and If the\nparty consists of two, 1600 feet altogether,\non tho output of wliich no royally shall\nbe charged, the rest of lhe party ordinary\nclaims only.\nEntry fee $10. Royalty nt tlie rate of two\nand a half per cent on the value of the\ngold shipped from the Yukon Territory\nto be paid to the Comptroller.\nNo free miner shall receive a grant of\nmore than one mining claim on each separate river, creek or gulch, but the same\nminer may hold any 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\npaving a fee.\nWork must be done on a claim each\nyear to the value, of at least $200.\nA certificate that work lias been dune\nmust be obtained em\u00ab.h v*>p<-. if ,i0t. the\nclaim shall be deemed to be abandoned, and\nopen   to occupation   and  entry  by   a Tree\nThe'boundaries of a claim may be defined absolutely by having a \u00ab\u00bb\u25a0\"*\u00ab*_ made\nand publishing notices in the Yukon Official\napeU'oleum-AU unappropriated Dominion\nLands In Manitoba, the Northwest Territories and Within the Yukon Territory are\nopen to prospecting for petroleum, and the\nMinister mav reserve for an individual or\ncompuny having machinery on the land\nto be prospected, an area u 1920i acresfor\nsuch t'erlnd \u00bb\u00ab \u00bb\"\u00bb mav deride, the length\nof which shall not exceed three times the\nbreadth. Should the prospect* r discover oil\nIn paying minntlt es. and satisfactorily establish 4'h discovery, an an a not exceeding 640 acres,  including the ol   well, will\nfSyau! at Such rato us may bo BJMOlSio\nby order in Council. ^   CQ__\nDeputy or lhe Mlnlstor of the Interior\nDept.   Interior. June 3). 1\u00bbH.   ^\nAtlantic S.S. Sailings\n.April 22\n.April\n\u2022ch 80\nC   P   R. ATLANTIC H. 3. LINE\n\"    '     (From St. John)\nT,   rhnniplnln..Al>.   SI,. Erin ...\n(For London Dlr.-ct)\nMount Temple  Al\"\" \"\nALLAN LINE\n(FroraSt.JohrQ\nParisian  April ivlctorlan   .\nParisian \u201e _^__ g-^-- UNB\niFrom Now York)\nxmimm \u2022\u2022SoMmib'N'Lmir\n(From Portland)\nDominion  ....April  IVancouvor       April s\nATLANTIC TRANSPORT LINB\nManitou  April lMlnnenpolls ..April U\nAMERICAN  LINE\nPhiladelphia ..April 1 St.   Paul April   S\nRED  STAR  LINE\nKroonlnml ....April lZeelayfl    April  8\nCUNARD LINE\nCampania ....April SCuronla  April l.>\n-   P        WHITE STAR LINE\nTeutonic  ....Aprlll   BCeltlc    April   7\nOceanic  \"''\"' '\u25a0\nUC FRENCH   LINE\nLn Lorraine \u2022***\u00ab\ni n Tnnm one April 1.1\nPretoria  April   lBleucher ......April 12\n(Mediterranean Service)\nPrlnzesaln Victoria Lulse -Aprll 4\nPrins Adalbert  April JJ\nNORTH OKHMAN LLOYD\nKaiser Wllhelm der Grosse   April\nGrosser Kurfirjrst April 11\n(Mediterranean Service)\nKonlB Albert  April 8\ntonlgln Lulso April 16\nAll continental rates nnd salllngB on Application. If you are contemplating taking\nan ocean voyage drop us a line and we\nwill be pleased to furnish you with full Information promptly.\nJ. 8. CARTER,        W. P F. CUMMINS,\n0.FA., Nelson.     Oen. Aft., Winnipeg\nent   Will\nWomen1\nSBS^a^aSKfcjafflBHBHB\nthat a flour is all right, if she can't make good bread with it\nThe one argument that wins every woman in favor of\nROYAL HOUSEHOLD FLOUR is, that it never fails\nto turn out the lhost beautiful Bread and Cake and the most\ncrisp and delicious Pastry when used according to the very\nsimple \"Royal Household\" recipes. That one fact outweighs all the theories of two thousand years.\nNo other flour has ever made so many intimate friends\namong Canadian women in so short a time.\u2014Perhaps it's\nbecause \"Royal Household\" is made by the new electrical\nprocess\u2014that makes a wonderful difference in flour.\n, Your grocer sells \" ROY AT, HOUSEHOLD \" and you can have tlie\nrecipes by simply sending your name and address to The Ogilvie Flour\nMills Co., Limited, Montreal, and mentioning Ihe nkme of this paper.\nWipe\nRope\nA\nWe Hnve On Hand\nAT NELSON\nlarge stock of Wire Rope and\nWire Rope Fittings\nWe cany the HERCULES brand of Wire Rope for\nhoisting, acknowledged to lift the best in the market\nSend us your Wire Rope specifications for quotations.\nRiblet Tramway Co., Nelson, B.C.\nAllis-Chalmers-Bullock\nLimited\nBuilders of complete Electrical and Mining Plants.\nWorks, Montreal. HNeIfs\u00b0noffi,c;:\nHouston Building.\nTURNING ONM LIGHT\nAMERICAN      GREED,      PARALYSIS\nAND CORRUPTION.\nA CAPITALISTIC, MORAL AND POLITICAL EXPOSURE.\n. Tho story or tho handing ovor of tho\nRapid Transit in Now York City \\o n\nprivate monopoly which Mr. John Do\nWitt Warner contributes to Tlio Independent, la, all in all, tho most remarkable chapter yet written in the history\nof capitalistic greed, moral paralysis\nami political corruption In America.\nThe exposure of the Tweed ring by lhe\nNow York Times a generation ago revealed the possibility oF a purely criminal exploitation of a city. Charles\nFrancis Adams's \"Story of Erie,\" foreshadowed Miss Tarbell'S history of the\nStandard Oil monopoly as an exposition of the method hy which unscrupulous finance controls corporation politics, state legislation and the courts.\nMi*. Warner's articles renders the far\nmore important, service of turning the\nsearchlight upon a supposedly moral,\nrespectable, substantial element In tho\ncommunity, and exposing its full responsibility for a shameful betrayal of\nthe people.\nNo men In New York City are hold,\nand deservedly held, in higher honor\nhy the public than the men who compose the Chamber of Commerce. There\nare no men against whose fair name the\nbreath of suspicion could more idly\nblow than the gentlemen that havo served on the Rapid Transit Commission.\nThero is no man whoso character is\nmore unhesitatingly conceded by political friends and political foes alike to\nbo of unimpeachable Integrity than the\nhonorable Seth Low. Yet those men,\nwhon  It was absolutely    within   their\npower to give lo Now York city a system\nof rapid transit, that should be successful as a means of expeditiously trans?\nporting a vast population at reasonable\nprices, and at the same time a source\nof vast revenue to the city, deliberately\nhanded It over to private interests and\nsaddled upon tho public an extortionate\nmonopoly, which will coin untold millions of dollars from the people's necessity and which has already assumed\ntlio attitude of opposition to any further extension of subway traffic until\ntho people are made to stand and deliver, Mr. Warner does not advance this\nproposition as an Item of \"information\nanil belief\" leaving the public to guess\nwhether ho knows any more about the\nmatter than those whose interest it\nwould be to deny his assertions. He\ngives to tho reading public Ihe documentary proofs of his charges.\nThe article ts remarkable also for another reason: By Curther documentary evidence Mr. Warner establishes\nhis assertion that the element in the\ncommunity which from llrst to last, has\nclearly seen tho true public. Interest,\nhas formulated it in unequivocal language ami lias battled for it in tlie forum of public opinion and in the legislature, has been the despised and maligned labor unions.\nIf these revelations applied to New\nYork City only they would he serious\nenough, Unhappily they are hut examples of conduct and conditions that\nprevail in all the great cities of this republic, and probably In most of the\ntowns and villages. A gigantic struggle\nis on between capitalism, bent upon\nHie utmost extortion that can be practiced, and a peoplo that is becoming\nthoroughly aroused and wrathful with a\nsense of outraged right. In this struggle the \"respectable\" business men,\nwhose duty it is to take broad and\nsound views of the public welfare, and\nto stand firmly by the principles of\njustice and honor, have thug far with\n\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666I\n\u2666       \u25a0_____      \u2014mm   \u2014- 1\nDIAMOND\nDYES\nFOR\nPERFECT\nHOME\nDYEING.\nEASY TO USE, BBIGHTEST AND BEST.\n\u00ab A8K FOR VHB \"DIAMOND.\" \u00ae\nAll Druggist, and DeaMM.      \u00ab>       TAKE NO OTHERS.\nl*********************#r**************************\ncomparatively few exceptions allowed\nthemselves tlirough prejudice, narrow-\nmindedness and selfishness to play Into the hands of the most unscrupulous\nmanipulators of economic forces lhat\nthe world has ever seen.\nWo do not propose to waste hrealh or\nink In mere preaching on this theme.\nWe shall merely point out to these estimable gentlemen, these \"conservative\"\nindividuals, these champions ot \"safe\nand cautious\" progress, who utter\nwords of solemn warning against agitators and inveigh against the dangerous\nIfieU^ity of labor organizations, Vat\nthey, the respectable, substantial citizenship of the nation, are the men who\nnre undermining tho foundations of\nAmerican society, endangering the republican scheme of government and\nstoring up for themselves wrath against\nthe day of wrath.\nTho avidity with which the people\nhave devoured the recent exposures of\ncorporation politics and finance should\nhe to men who can read the signs of tho\ntimes an all sufficient warning that tbe\nday of reckoning is at hand. Happily\nwe havo in America the universal manhood suffrage, and the people can do\nwhat they will wilh the business system, for the business system has come\nlo rest upon corporate powers and privileges created by lhe slale. What the\npeople will do with their power Is purely a question of what the people happen to think or believe about' conditions that affect the general welfare.\nSo far as the political outcome is concerned it matters not nt all whether a\nslory like Lawsou's \"Frenzied Finance\"\nis in the main true or In tho main false\nIf tbe people happen to believe that it is\ntime. A few documents like those that\nMr. Warner contributes to popular enlightenment will convince some tens of\nthousands of voters that, whether true\nin deall or not, the writings of Law-\nson, Miss Tarbell, Lincoln, Stelfcns and\nothers have not told the half about the\nreal greed and corruption that have\nbeen ruling with a high hand in American business and political activity.\nWhen this conviction is once established in the popular mind no fear of free\nsllvor or of populism will dolor the\npeople from throwing In their lot witli\nthe Bryan type of democracy.7 They\nwill stop at \"safe\" or conservative restrictions of corporate power. They\nwill feel that the positions taken hy\nlabor organizations, populists and oven\nsocialists more truly express the real\ninterests of tlie people than do tho\nleadership and \"practical judgment\" of\nthe business classes.\nIf the business classes wish to retain their leadership and influence they\nwill have to reform their \"views\" and\ntheir ways radically and promptly and\ntbo sooner they set about It the better\nthoy will fare. When popular revolt\ngets under way It will not stop with the\n\"governmental regulation\" of corporate activity. It will proceed through\nschemes of taxntlon nnd otherwise to\nbring about a redistribution of wealth\nby a confiscation of property.\"\u2014The\nIndependent.\nHOW MENJMOSE WIVES\nCOLOR OF EYES AND THE LENGTH\nOF FOREARM.\nLONDON SCIENTIST SAYS ARE DETERMINING FACTORS\nNew theories of unconscious selection\non the pnrt of man and wife\u2014like mating with like\u2014as opposed to Darwin's\nidei that men and women depend upon\nthe perceptive and Intellectual faculties\nm choosing each other, were propounded hy professor Karl Pearson, of the\nuniversity college, London, recently nt\ntho Royal institution, says the London\nMull:\nHe maintained that the man has nn\nunconscious tendency to select a wife\nof nis own height with eyes of his own\ncolor, a proportionate span from forefinger, a forearm corresponding to his\nown, and a constitution of like physical vigor.\nThc!,e theories ho expounded by moans\nof tables and diagrams.\nAmong every thousand men the color\nof the eyes Is divided as follows: Blue\n363, green 312, hazel 127, brown 94.\nThe eyes of   women   are   generally\ndarker, only 286 of them in every thousand having blue ones. If iheso iilue-\ncycil people married at random, the result would be that they would mate at\ntho^ra\/te of 104 por thousand; but he\nhad discovered that the actual number\nof marriages per thousand of blue-eyed\npersons was 140, or 36 above the random\naverage, thus proving that the blue-\neyed man and Mile-eyed woman aro un-\ncoiisclou?ly attracted toward one ant ther.\nIn the same way, men with greenish\ngroy o.r hazel eyes tend to marry women with eyes of like color.\nThe average height of a man he gave\nas from 67 inches to OS inches, that of\na woman as 62 1-2 inches, and he contended that the average tall man has a\ntall wife, and the average short man a\nshort wife.\n'One could hardly imagine a man\nchoosing a wife by measuring her from\nforofinger to forefinger,\" said the professor; yet his diagrams demonstrated\nthat as the span of one increased so did\nthat of the other. A like result was\nproduced in the measurement of thousands of forearms, his figures showing\nthat thore was a distinct tendency on\nthe part of men with long forearms to\nmarry wives with proportionately long\nforearms.\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 is\naffected, dizziness, headache,\ndull, listless feeling, shooting\npains in the back, tell that the\nkidneys are in trouble, and a\nneglect of nature's warning\nmeans uric acid poisoning and\ndreaded Bright's disease.\nGIN PILLS\nmake kidneys healthy. They instantly re.\nUeveall Kidney Troubles\u2014clear, heal, pur*\nHy, strengthen-put the Kidneys In perfect\ncondition to perform their work a* nature\niutends.\nWe have such Implicit confidence in the\nvirtues of Gin Pills that we authorise druggist! to refund the money If they fail to\ncure.\nAt ell druggists, 50c box, 6 boxes for (2.50\n\u2014or direct irotu\nThe BOX.S DRUG CO..Winnipeg,Man.\nGRAIN  AND  STOCKS.\nSlight Advance In Railways\u2014Wheat \"Weak\n(Aa received by Sharp A Irvine.)\nYesterday the stock market at the early\npart of the session acted as If there was\nmore of a demand for stocks. However,\nthere was no material Rain In any of the\nHat except People's Gas of Chicago, which\nadvanced from 111 7-8 at the opening to\n114 1-8 at the close, on news that several\ncases pending In the court hnd been dismissed. Dealers feel that there Is a alight\nrally due, and if such does take place ad-\nylgg  Uie  sale of  stocks   for  good   profits.\nTaking C.P.R. and St. Paul, U.P., Erie,\nL. & N. and Pennsylvania, there was an\naverage gain of about a quarter of a dollar\nper share for the day.\nThe Chicago grain market was considerably weaker than yesterday, the May option opening at 113 1-2 and selling down to\n112 7-8, however, there was a rally at the\nclose, due to profit taking by short Interests and this option rallied back, closing1\nut 113 3-8. July offered at 88 1-8 and sold\ndown to 87 1-4, but closed at 87 5-8 in sympathy with May. Dealers think July will\nbreak the easier of the two during the next\nweek,\t\nj Carnefac Stock Food\nIS THE\nBEST\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nHas complete facilities\nfor the execution of high\nclass book, job, and newspaper printing.\n*\nMagazines, catalogues\nand commercial work.\nRuling of every description a specialty.\nBook Binding\nWE CAN RULE, PRINT AND BIND\nANY KIND OF\n;hotel registers\nblank books\ncity assessment\nand tax rolls\nWE CAN BIND IN REGULATION\nSTYLE\nLAW JOURNALS\nAND REPORTS\nWE MAKE A\" SPECIALTY OF\nPUTTING UP IN NEAT, STRONG\nAND INEXPENSIVE COVERS\nMUSIC\nMAGAZINES\nTRADE JOURNALS\nPAPERS AND\nBOOKS\nWe Guarantee First-Class Work\nIn Bvery Department\nH\nPHONB\nH4\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nNBUON\nB.O.\n THB DAILY NEWS: SUNDAY APRIL 2 1905\nitf\nI.'1\nThe Invalid finds in\nBOVRIL a Food that adds\ndaily strength. There is\nnothing to equal it for the\nconvalescent. \u2022 It builds up the\nsystem, being nothing but pure\nnourishment. In acute sickness,\nfeversjnd the like, the physician finds it better\nthan mere stimulants, which simply brace up the\nflagging energies for the passing hour, whereas\nBOVRIL strengthens, invigorates and stimulates\nJ\nwith the minimum of reaction.\n\" Bovril is Liquid Life.\"\n!i\u2014Sfeti\nOVERSHADOW THE WAR\nAGRARIAN RISINGS IN RUSSIA BECOME! MOST SERIOUS\nRENDER      MOBILIZATION     IMPOSSIBLE\u2014AUTHORITIES IMPOTENT\nNew York, April 1.-\u2014A St. Petersburg\ndespatch to tlie Herald says lhat agrarian risings throught Russia are assuming such serious proportions tliat Uiey\novershadow the war. These organized\ndisorders are the results of the spread\nof revolutionary literature urging that\nBueh risings are tlie only means of preventing the bread winners being sent to\nthe war. As a matter of fact the troub-\nreuder the proposed mobilization\nImpossible.\nAround Riga tbo land owners have\nbeen told by the authorities that they\nare unable lo semi them help. Serious\nrisings aro reported from the Borpat.\nDunuliurg, Soukaum. Warsaw. Blalystok,\nOrel, Smolensk, Voshreseush, Bubllt and\nAVenden districts.\nA nuinbor of Frenchmen claim 150,000\nroubles for damages to their property\nin Ibe Yalta district.\nSt. Petersburg, April 1.\u2014The latest\noutbreak of peasants Is In the Werra\ndistrict of Lithuania, northeastern Poland. Regular mobs ot peasants are\nmarching through the country pillaging\nand demolishing tbe bouses of tbe land\nowners. One proprietor was shot. The\npeasants entered Werra, wrecked the\nvodka shops, became drunk and terrorized \"the Inhabitants. The police were\nhelpless and troops were called for.\nThe telegraph nnd telephone wires were\ncut und communication with the outside\nworld is severed.\nSTRATHCONA TO RETIRE.\nPresident of Bank ot Montreal Will Be\nSucceeded hy Drummond.     -,\nMontreal. April 1.\u2014It is reported that\nafter a service of upwards of seventeen years, lord Strathcona will, ere\nlong, retire from the presidency of the\nbank of Montreal, the vacancy thus created to be tilled by sir George A.\nDrummond, who for a.long time past\nhas been acting in the capacity of vice-\npresident.\nTlio Bank of Montreal Is applying for\npermission to create an honorary presidency, and to this position lord Strathcona will, Il is understood, lie elected.\nFor some years back lord Strathcona\nhas resided almost entirely in England,\nthe consequence being that little of the\nactive management of Canada's first\nfinancial Institution fell uponhls shoulders, hut, on the contrary, was assumed\nalmost entirely by sir George A. Drummond, vice-president.\nAt tbo bead office ot tlie bank of\nMontreal, the officials state that for the\npresent, at. least, there is no confirmation of the report of lord Stratbcona's\nresignation. At tho samo time the fact\nis very generally tnken as conclusive\nthat his lordship will, when necessary\nlegislation is passed, become the honorary president, and fhat sir George A.\nDrummond will, In the natural course of\n\u00a9vents become president.\nThis advancement would leave the\nvice-presidency open, and it Is rumored\nthat E. S. Clouslon, who for years has\nheen general manager, will lake up the\nvlco presidency, ind It is further slated that Mr. Vincent Meredith, assistant general manager, will then ho advanced to tho general managership. As\nbefore stated, however, these are but\nrumors, and cannot at present be confirmed at   headquarters.\nSir George A. Drummond has for a\ngreat many years been Identified with\nthe hank of Montreal. He became a\ndirector In 1SS2, and was elected vice-\npresident in 3887, at tbo same time thai\nlord Strathcona, then sir Donald A.\nSmith entered upon his term of offlco\n_j president. Lord Strathcona succeeded C. F. Smlthers as president, that\ngentleman having occupied the post\n(com 1881 to 1887.\nOXFORD WINS ONCE MORE.\niWlns Annual Boat Race From Cambridge In Easy Style.\nLoudon, April 1.\u2014 Oxford today won\nthe sixty-second annual boat, race between tbo university of Oxford and\nCambridge, defeating the latter by three\not four lengths. The race wns rowed In\nbeautiful wcathor.\nCambridge won lhe toss-up and selected tho Surrey side of the river. The\nJioats got away to a splendid start nt\n11.34 a.m. Bucknall sot. the dark bluoB\n((Oxford) a slashing stroke ot 36 to tho\n(minutes, and almost immediately estab*\nllshi'd a lead which was never lost,\n(Time, 20 minutes, 35 seconds.\nWHOLESALERS' OUTLOOK\nG.   NUNN   MAKES   A   CONSERVATIVE\nFORECAST   OF SEASON\nMERCHANTS EXPECT BUSY SPRING-\nDEPENDS  ON  MINES\nA visit to the wholesale dealers of Nolson\nyesterday afternoon found the managers\ngenerally or the opinion tlmt It is still too\nenrly to attempt u forecast of spring trade.\nAll report business In the city to he fair\nbut the demand for goods in the tributary\nwholesale territory will depend upon tho\nextent of operations to be undertaken, and\nabout them there is still uncertainty.\nGeorge Nunn of A. Macdonald & Co.,\n'said: \"X can tell you better in a month or\nso, The winter months have been just\nabout as usual. Jnn tin ry and February\nwere even quieter wllh us than last year,\nbut Marcli brought the three months' trade\nup to the average. 1 haven't heen over the\nwhole district lately. Any forecast I make\nis likely to bo modified. Tho Boundary\nlooks well. Jt was the best district last\nyear and will probably be again tills year.\nTiie Ymlr district seems likely to be better\nthan It has been foi1 several years. Tlie\nSloean Is quiet and I seo no ground at\npresent for expecting an early Change. 1\nhaven't been In East Kootenay lately.\nTlia^rade there will probably depend to\n.son\u2122oxtent on the lumber industry.\nJ, A. McDonald who intends to go into\nthe wholesale fruit business exclusively, reported that the trade In trull was extensive\nand showed no sign of falling off,\nManagers of companies dealing In other\nlines expressed practically the saint- opinion\nas Mr. Nunn. The wholesale trade of Nelson contracts and expands as activity In\nmining and lumbering decreases or increases. This outlook lor most of lhe mining districts ia hopeful, hut until hope is\nconverted Into certainty, wholesale companies will uot count upon it.\nANOTHER  ZINC  SHIPPER\nBell Mine at Whitewater Sends Out Two\nCarloads to Kaslo.\nThe flrst shipment of zinc ore from\nthe Bell mine, at Whitewater, has arrived in Kaslo and is being tested at the\nsampler, says the Kootenalan. The\nshipment Is of two cars and Is expected\nto run very high in zinc, some of it\ngoing 60 per cent. This mine promises\nto become one of lhe biggest zinc properties in the country. The property\nis under lease and bond to Eckert, Holmes and Elzi and lies directly above the\nJackson mine in Jackson basin. The\nore which is being shipped Is all being taken out of an upper tunnel where\n12 feet of solid zinc has been exposed\nwhicli averages between fifty and sixty\nper cent. Work on tlie showing has\nbeen stopped for the present owing to\nsurface water and a lower tunnel Is being extended for 30 feet which is expected to tap the ore at a depth of over\n60 feet. When this Is completed the\nlessees expect to ship an Immense quantity of ore. The ore besides being very\nrich in zinc is Interspersed with bunches of very rich galena and gray coppef.\nThe lessees expect to ship enough ore\nto be able to take up their bond by the\n1st of AugUBt,\nABOUT RHEUMATISM\nThere are fow diseases thut Inflict more\ntorture thnn rheumatism und there Is probably no disease for which such a varied\nand useless lot of remedies liavo been suggested. To say that it can be cured is,\ntherefore, a bold statement to make, but\nChamberlain's Pain Balm which enjoys\nan extensive sale, has met with great success in ihe treatment of the disease. One\napplication of Pain Balm will relieve tho\npain and hundreds of sufferers have testified to permanent cures by Its use. Why\nsuffer when Pain Balm affords sueli quick\nrelief and costs but a trllle? For sale by\nall druggists aud deulcrs.\nREAL ESTATE ACTIVE\nPROVINCIAL ESTIMATES\nSOME    FURTHER   FIGURES   FROM\nPUBLISHED STATEMENT\nREVENUE    AND     RECEIPTS    FOR\nFISCAL YEAR.\nA telegraphic summary of the provincial estimates was given in last Wednesday's Issue ot The Dally News. Appended will be found some further details.   *\nThe estimates of expenditure have already been given ln full. The following is the estimate of revenue and receipts for year ending June 30th, 190(1:\nDominion of Cnnada, Annual .\npayment of\u2014\nInterest at 5 per cent $   29,151.00\nSubsidy   to   government\nand legislature   35,000.00\nGrant per cap on 178,057. 142.925.00\nLands conveyed   for Ry..    100,00.00\nLand  Sales  100,000.00\nLand Revenue   MO.OOO^OO\nTimber royalty and licenses 325,000.00\nRents (exclusive of land).. 200.00\n(Survey fees   1,200.00\n, Timber  leases     ,  75,000.00\nFree   Miners,  Certificates.. 00,000.00\nMining receipts general.... 110,000.00\nLicenses    75,000.00\nManage licenses   7,000.00\nReal property tax  250,000.00\nPersonal property tax   150,000.00\nLand taxes\u2014wild land, coal\nand timber land  100,000.00\nIncome tax    100,000.00\nDyking Assessment Act,1905 20,000.00\nTax on unworked   crown-\ngranted mineral claims.. 15,000.00\nTax sale deeds   200.00\nRevenue tax ...:  150,000.00\nMineral tax   85.000.00\nRevenue service refunds... 500.00\nFines and   forfeitures   and\nsmall  debt court fees.... 10,000.00\nLaw stamps   12,000.00\nProbate fees   11,000.00\nJReglstry   fees     10(1,000.00\nFees under Game Art  2.000.00\nBureau of mines   700.00\nHospital for the insane  .. 18,000.00\nProvincial home   1.000.00\nPrinting ofllce receipts  ....      2.000.00\nSale of Govt, property  500.00\nReimbursements In ajd .... 4,000.00\nNew   \"Westminster   bridge\nreceipts     25,000.00\nInterest  on   Investment of\nsinking funds   50,000.00\nInterest, miscellaneous  \u2014 4,000.00\nChinese    Restriction     Act,\n1884 (Horn. Govt, refund) 1,000.00\nSuccession   duty     30,000.00\nRoyalty and tax ou coal.. 120,000.00\nMiscellaneous receipts   .... 70.000.00\nCity  Itesldciicu  Property Is  lu flood  Demand\nReal estate Is maintaining (lie activity\npredicted for It by local agents ut the beginning of the year. Purchases arc frequent, and good prices are generally realized. The purchasers of city properly In\nnearly nil cases are new residents.\nYesterday McDermid & McHnrily closed\nthe snlo of lots 11 und 12 In block 70, on tlio\ncorner of Edgwood avenuo nnd Park street\nto George W. Hart. The lots and residence\non them wero tho properly of V. Hyde\nBaker of Cranbrook.\nC. F. McHurdy snld: \"There Is far more\nmovement In real estate than there has\nbeen at any time during the pnst live years.\nWhether the nctlvlty will continue or not\ndepends upon tho number of people who\neomo to the city this spring and that ln\nturn depends on other conditions. But just\nnt present real estnte Is certainly nctlvo.\"\nSharp &Irvlno also report nctlvlty and\nfrequent Inquiries for residence properly.\ni\t\nTHF.    BEST    REMEDY    FOR    BOWEL\nTROUBLES-NO   FAMILY   CAN\nAFFORD TO BE WITHOUT IT\n\"In regard to Chamberlain's Colic. Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy us one or tho\nvery best remedies for bowel troubles,\"\nsays Mr. J. W. Hanlon, editor of the Do-\nsputch, Ocllln, Georgia. \"1 mako this statc-\ni^meiit nfter hnvtlig used the modlclno In\nmy family for several years. I am never\nwithout It\/\" No family can afford to bo\nwithout a bottle of this medicine In the\nhouse. It ts certain to be needed sooner\nor later. For salo hy all druggists and\ndealers.\nTotal     $2,559.37(1.0(1\nSome of the appropriations for roads,\nstreets, bridges and wharves are:\nColumbia district $ 7.000.00\nCranbrook  district      5,000.00\nPernio district     0,000.00\nGrand Forks illstr ct.     5,000.00\nGreenwood  district      3.000.00\nKaslo district  10.000.00\nOkanagan     12.000.00\nRevelstoke district      9.000.00\nSlmllkameen districl 12,000.00\nSlosan district     8,000.00\nYale district      8.000.OC\nYmlr d strict   10,500.00\nBear Ck. (contribution of lin.tr)   4,000.00\nSettlers road, Columbia river\nsouth (conditional)     .1,200.00\nWoodberry Ck wagon rond (to\ncomplete)     1,000.00\nFisher Maiden road (half cost\nconditional)       1,100.00\nElk river road, north of Michel   1,000.00\nMable lake road     1,500.00\nWest Fork. North Fork Kettle\nriver road (refund)     1,200.00\nLightning  Peak  Mines  sleigh\nroad       1.000.00\nGoat river, Port Hill road....   1.0011.00\nHall Ck. trail (conditional)..   1.500.00\nFlathead Valley trail      3,000.00\nBridges  throughout province. 35,000.00\nUnder the   heading,  \"Miscellaneous\"\nthe following items are selected:\nTravelling Library   ? 760\nFruit Growers Association    l.BfaT\nIn aid of Fanners' Institutes.... 1,500\nIn nld of Militia        750\nIn aid of Provincial Rifle Asso... 1,000\nPoultry  shows        300\nFighting .forest Ores     1,600\nTho following   are  taken from the\nsupplementary estimates:\nVAlRKS AND BUILDINGS\nSchools (construction and repairs (additional to $25,000\nvoted)   $21,500.00\nTrout Lake oificc,   vault (re\n-vote)          809.00\nYnlo,     (additional   to   $0000\nvoted)          000.00\nOkanagan, (additional to $7000\nvoted)          500.00\nSlmllkameen,   (additional    to\n$7000 voted)      2,000.00\nRevelstoke, (additional to $8000\nvoted)       1.500.00\nRoad, West Fork Keltic river\nre-vote)  J..     888.00\nBridges generally, maintenance nnd repairs (additional\nto $10,000 voted)        3.000.00\nMISCELLANEOUS\nLibrary, travelling (additional\nto $600 voted)          300.00\nAgricultural societies (additional to $4750 voled)      215.00\nPoultry  shows(  additional to\n$300 voted)         300.00\nRefund of licenses nnd taxes\non real property to Corporation  of Fcrnlo     1,909.52\nCompensation to A. Ewen for\nsurrender of timber least at\nCreston     7,000.00\nMiscellaneous not detailed in\nestimates (additional to\n$10,000 votedl     1,000.00\nNEW YORK FASHION LETTER\nNew York, April l-Lihons. mercerized\ncotton* eotton and silk mixtures, Ihln\nsilks and light wools, make up a long and\nInteresting tale or summer fain-leu for the\nmother und her girls. Colors are, many and\nBeautiful, fitted to evory ocenHlon and complexion. But a casual survoy of the new\nspring goodH \\s likely to leave one with\nn fixed eonvlctlon that greens and browns\nhead tho color list of tho season. Tho\ngnjoiiB most modish are soft willow, the almond shades and the silvery grey green of\nollvo leaves. The greens wllh a dash of\nsliver or cream in them are never crude\nand garish aud uru essentially cool. In\ncombination with while, the.se greens aro\nat their best, and the greous with white\ncheeks, stripes, etc., found in such profusion among silks and -linens and cottons\naro usually becoming us well as restful\nand summery, hut .the samo greens In solid\ncolor or one tone matcriuls are distinctly\ntrying and should be shunned by tlio average woman.\nSomo of tho smartest of the new street\nsuit models aro in lightweight broadcloth,\nPanama, henrielta aud other spring woolens, in the light grey greens; but pretty\nus they are, they would make nine oul of\nten wearers look pule and sallow.\nTho summer browns must be chosen as\ncarefully as tho greens. Here too, one Ilnds\nthe color at its best when mixed with\nwhite, but the great fault with solid brown\nis its hot look, and the brown dress for tho\ncommlng summer must be selected with\nthis danger in mind.\nBoth browns and greens are well represented In the check effects so numerous\namong other materials. In everything from\ncotton to silk the check Is ublqutous, often\nIn combination with other designs, but appearing In every Imaginable form. Probably we sliall be tired of cheeked materials\nbefore the summer is over, but It is an\nunquestionable fact that the majority of\nthe prettiest novelties in all materials save\nevening gown fabrics, have .some suggestion of the check.\nAmong the silks there are checks of all\nSizes from inch checks to half inch squares\nand a choice between them Is a mere matter of persouul preference. The silks with\nsolid grounds marked ofl Into checks by\nhair lines of contrasting color are newer\nthan the shepherd's plaids, but the checks\nin the shepherd variety are modish, and the\nblock check of while and color, much larger than the conventional shepherd's plaid,\naro considered exceedingly smart for the\nmorning shirtwaist frock, being less common than tlio shepherd's plaid.\nlu messallne, foulard, taffeta and surah,\nono Ilnds tlie inevitable checks; but the\nsoft llnished taffetas, glace or dull, are In\ntho lead, and shot effects or tiny broehe\ndesigns sprinkled over tlie checked surface are popular variations upon the plain\nchecks.\nTho sack cont Is, if Indications are to\nbe trusted, to have greaior vogue than it\nhas enjoyed for several seasons past, and\nsome exceedingly piquant effects are secured In these short coats, straight in front\nand straight or more frequently s'eml-fltting\nIn the back.\nFor the moment the woolens with White\nground or grey while ground, barred off\nInto checks by lines of black or color, are\nprime favorites, and since thoy arc rather\ntoo delicate to be practicable for constant\nrough wear, ll Is possible that they may\nnoi become so common us the shepherd's\nplaids.\nA word as to children's frocks. Everything seems to figured In one w:ty or another,   espeelnly   for   I hem.     When    plain\nmaterials are used ihey are often furbished\nwith hands, straps, yokes, belts arid tun's\nof cheeks or mixed ones, Here again lhe\ncheeks prevail. In fact, big and Utile, old\nand young, are taken with cheeks'. At this\nrate, unless the tide turns, checked Waists\nand plain skirls, checked skirts and plain\nwaists, nil checked costumes trimmed with\nplain materia I. and all plain costumes\ntrimmed with checked materials, will he\nas plentiful as thai dangling green veil of\nsickening memory a couple of years ago.\nLook oul for the style that Is a craze in\nthe early spring. It Is tlio one to be done\nTo death by June. Plaids aro used in ihe\nsame way as checks hut are not quite sn\npopular. Many of the grown up gowns thai\nhave checked waists and plain skirts, or\nvice versa, have suspenders of one shade or\nanother that mntoh the skirls. These suspenders are a pretty style. There Is a way\nof running them over tlie bolt in the back\nIn becoming little tubs over lhe top of the\nskirt.\nPique Is back In favor with linens, and\nwill he as much used as the latter for summer frocks for children ami adults, A\ngreat deal of embroidery and lace arc employed ou summer dresses, and chemisettes and gtiltnpes arc as Important in a\nmother's wardrobes as gulmpes are hi her\nlittle daughters.\nThe children's clothes literally revel In\nribbons.   The ribbons which come provided\nwitli cords to draw them into single, double\nor triple frills ami Into rosettes, are fiir-\nblshlng both  frocks and hats.\n'Hie lovely Ilowered and pompadour sash\nribbons are worn with dresses of plain\nfabrics, while witli flowered materials\nshaded ribbons or two shades uf ribbons are\ncombined to match the ground work, or\nmoro often the flower or foliage.\nESTKLI.E t*l,A I REMONT.\nIt will pay you to keep Chamberlain's\nColic Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy In\nyour house. It only costs a quarter. Sold\nby all druggists and dealers.\nLever's Y-Z (Wise Head) Disinfectant\nSoap Powder dusted in the bath, softens\nthe water aud disinfects, 38\nLAKEVIEW\nHOTEL\nCorner Hall and Ternm Street!\nTwo block* from City Wharf.   TH\u00a9 beat\ntollar a day house ln Nelson.\nHO   CHINESE   EMPLOYED\nAugust Thomas\nPROPH1BTOK.\nROYAL HOTEL\nUBS. WILLIAM ROBERT*\nProprietress.\nThe bast meals that can be yrovldsd a\nthis market, cooked under the auperfls\nIon of the proprietress, who lv a famoui\ncaterer.\nNice airy rooms, newly furnished; bati\nfor guests.\nThe beat of wines, Uquon and cigara ou\nbe obtained at the bar.\nTERMS:   fl AND fl.Bf A DAT.\nCorner of Stanley   and   Silica   stmts\nHtreet ears pass the door.\nFRANK C. GREEN\nCIVIL ENGINEER\nDominion and Provincial Land Burreysr.\nP. O. Box 146.   Phone 261 B\nf!or. Kootenay and Victoria Htm.,  Nairn*\nOpening in Ferguson, B.C.\nt0r good general store. Only one store hi\ntown. Good building to rent 24x80 feet,\nwith fixtures, olectl-lc lights, corner lot\nnext to postoffleo, rent reasonable. Apply\nPostmaster ;\t\nFrederic S. Clements\nCIVIL  ENOINERR\nDOMINION   AND   PROVINCIAL   LAND\nBURV1DYOR\nAgent for obtaining Crown Grants, mine\nsurveying, etc.\nRoom 1G, K.W.C. Block\np, O. Box I Nelson, B.C.\nWHOLESALE HOUSES\nPRODUCE\nSTARKEY A CO., WHOLESALE DEAL\nera in Butter, Eggs, Cheese, Produce am\nFruit. Houston Block, Josephine Street\nNelson. B.C.\nGROCERIES'\nA. MACDONALD & CO.-WHOLESALE\nGrocers and Provision Merchants.- importers of Teas, Coffees, Spices, Dried\nFruits, Staple and Fancy Groceries, To\nbaccos. Cigars, Butter, Eggs, Cheese and\nPacking Houkc Products. Office and\nWarehouse, corner of Front and Hall\nBtreeta.    P.O.  Box 1095.    Telephone 38\nCAMP   AND    MINERS'    FURNISHINGS\nA. MACDONALD & CO.-WHOLESALE\nJobbers In Blankets, Underwear, Mitts,\nGloves, Boots, Rubbers, Overalls, Jumpers, Mackinaws and Oilskin Clot bins\nCamp and Miners' Sundries. Office and\n.Warehouse, corner of Front and Holl\nStreets.     P.O. Box 1086.   Telephone 28.\nASSAYERS' SUPPLIES\nTHE B.C. ASSAY & CHEMICAL SUPPLY\nCo., Ltd., Vancouver, B. C\u2014Importers\nand Dealers In Assayers' Supplies. Sole\nagenta in British Columbia for the celebrated Battersea Crucibles, Scoriflers and\nMuffles and Wm. Ainsworth & Co.'s fine\nBalances, Chemical and Physical Apparatus, C. P. Acids and Chemicals, Platinum, Sodium and Potassium Cyanide,\nQuicksilver, Carbonate and Bicarbonate\nof Soda, Borax, Borax Glass, Silver Free\nLead  and Litharge. ^^^\nMINING   AND    MILL    MACHINERY\nWASHINGTON MACHINERY & SUPPLY\nCO.\u2014Dealers in Engines, Band and Circular Sawmills, Atkins' Saws, Wood ana\nIron Pulleys, Loyner Compressors and\nDrills, Pumps and Hoists. Prompt attention. Reasonable prices. Courteous\ntreatment.    Spokane,   Wash.\t\nASSAYERS\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, CHEMIST AND AS-\nsayer, Nelson, B. C. Gold, silver or lead\n$1 each; gold-silver or silver-lead, (1.50\neacb. Samples received by mail dr express will receive prompt attention. P.O.\nDrawer litis.\nO. P. MOORE & CO.\u2014SPOKANE Assay oflleii aud ore testing laboratory. Gold\nand silver, $1; gold, silver and lead, ti;\ngold, sifter and copper, ti; gold, silver,\nlead and copper.    Spokane, fcVVasn,\nDENTIST\nDR. A. MILLOY, DENTIST.   SUCCESSOR\nto Dr. Stoddart.   Olilce room 7, Aberdeen\nBlock, Baker Btreet, phone 109.\nCLEANING   AND   PRESSING\nLADIES' skirls and gentlemen's suits repaired, cleaned and pressed,   (loads called\nfor and delivered.  Satisfaction guaranteed,\nA.  J.  Di'lscuil,  opposite tjueen'H  Hotel.\t\nROOMS AND HOARD\nCOMFORTABLE   rooms  and   board,   Bast\nBaker Street,   opposite   Kootenay  Steam\nLaundry.  \t\nWANTED\nWTOTPON Employment Agency.\nWANTED-Rallrond  laborers,  :\nsawmill,  waitress.\nWANTED\u2014A live man with some capital,\nto bundle a Canadian patent of a new\nautomatic quartz mill, guaranteed to give\ntbe highest and most satisfactory results.\nAddress V.A.R., The Dally News. Nelson,\nB. C.\nWANTED-B. C. Gazettes for ION, to bind\nneatly and strongly, at small cost. Apply The Daily News olilce.\nWAiNTED-Plnoe   In   sloro   or,   ofllce   by\nyoung man; can   use live languages. AV.\nV.   \\V. Daily News.\t\nFOR SALE\nOLD CURIOSITY  BHOP-lf you want '\/\nbuy or sell anything go to tbe Old Cl r\nlosity Shop.   Always In stock a full lis* v\nCrockery, Furniture and Glassware.\nFOR SALE\u201470 acres of land of excellent\nquality, situated on Slocan river, 5 miles\nfrom sloean junction. Price WOO, half cash;\nF. C. Green, corner Victoria and Kootenay streets.\nFOR SAJ.10-Thoroughbred Plymouth Rock\nnnd Brown Leghorn eggs, it per Betting.\nBox lb, Salmo, B. C\nFOR SALE-Pleroo gasoline launches, the\nlaunch that has been Hied, tested and\nproved superior to till others. Parlies wanting delivery before tho 1st of July should\norder Immediately.    C. E.  Miller.\nTHE Singer Mfg.  Co. gives free Instructions on all kinds of tancy work to purchasers  of machines.    Machines sold   or\nInstalment payments.   Only $3 per month.\nThe  Singer Mfg.   Co, Nelaon. ^\nFOR SALE\u2014Strawberry plants, Kellog's\nearly August Luther, one of the sweetest,\nbig red berries grown, very prolific. Raspberries, the Golden Queen and Louden, the\nbig, red sort, sturdy canes, splendidly\nrooted.   C. E. Miller.\nRANCH for sale\u2014 280 acres, -10 acres cleared,\ngood buildings. Chabourn A McLaren,\nFOR SALE-Hlack Minorca eggs for hatching, $1,60 por setting. Mrs. T. J. Reddle,\nHall  Mines road,  Nelson.\nFOR SALE-Two South African War Land\nScrip,    Eimjiire   and   make   Offer   E.   M.\nKiunear, 1717 Dean avenue  Spokane, Wash.\nFOR 8ALG-A second hand\n12x14 engine at\nArrowhead.    1   10x20 srtufl\nv bed engine\nat   Nelson.    Hugh   B.   Glln\nour,   MolsonB1\nBank building,  Vancouver.\nFOR   SALltJ-A   good   ranch   of   about   US\nacres, poclally adapted for fruit raising.\npoultry or cattle, big range, splendid timber1, Irrigation, climate the bcBt, no spring\nfrosts, a good cottage furnished, log house\nand  chicken  house,  splendid  fishing and\nhunting. Situated at Deer Park, lower\nArrow lake, Immediate possession can be\nbad. Apply lo Fred G. Hamblln, Burton\nCity, B. C,\nFOR RENT .\nFOR RENT\u2014Store on Baker street, tho\nbrick store nt present occupied by J. A.\nKlrkpatrick A Cu., as a grocery storo will\nbe for rent on tho 1st of April next. Size\nof store 25x75 feet, with a largo frost proof\nbasement, approximately 8000 feet square.\nGas and electric light fixtures Installed,\nPlato glass front.   Beer Bros.\nCOMFORTABLE rooms nnd board. Reasonable. East Baker street, opposite the\nKootenay Steam Laundry .\nPLUMBING\nWe um prepared to do all klnda ei\nplumbing, steam and goa fitting, on the\nshortest notice. Estimates given. E. K\nStrachan A Co., Baker Rtre*t nhsoo\nPtmn\u00ab ItJ \t\nMASSAGE\n^eilTflcntnl ~ Miis^ensi'.    I'honV JTTiA',''\nA. R. HEYLAND\nPROVINCIAL LAND SURVBYOB\nPOPLAR AND KASLO\nADvitMt r. 0. sox in, uiu>, m. m.\nSpokane Falls & Northern Hallway\nCHANGE  OP  TIMB  BETWEEN\nSPOKANE. THE  KOOTENAY,  BOUNDARY AND REPUBLIC.\nEFFECTIVE SUNDAY, MARCH 6, IM\nBuffet cars between Spokane and Nelson.\nLeave Arrive\n0:30 a.m .Spokane 6:20 p.m.\n10:55 a.m. Rossland 4:55 p.m.\n8:20 a.m Nelson..... 5:30 p.m.\n11:20 a,m Grand Forks... 3:40 p.m.\n0:50  a.m Phoenix 5:20  p.m.\n8:00 a.m Republic 8:30 p.m.\nSAVE TIME\nALL THE TIMB\nby  using\nIP*\nTO\nSEATTLE,   TACOMA   AND   ALL   PACIFIC   COAST   POINTS\nST. PAUL, CHICAGO. HEW YORK AND\nALL POINTS EAST\nPalace and Tourist Sleepers, Buffet, Library cars. Modern Day Coaclies, Dining\nCars, Meals a la Carte.\nBEST MEALS ON WHEELB\nTWO  FAST TRANS   EAST AND   WEST\nDAIIY\nPor rates,  folders  and  full  Information\nregarding trips, call on or address an agent\nof tlie S. F. St. N. Railway or\nH. A. JACKSON li. BRANDT,\nG. F. & P. A., C. P. & T. A.,\nSpokane 701 W. Riverside Ave.,\nWash. Spokane, Wash,\nCANADIAN\nPacific\nRAILWAY\nThrough Tickets\nEast and West\nIncluding Ocean Tickets to\nEurope, China, Japan, Hawaii\nAustralia, South Africa\nFast Service, Up-to-\nDate Equipment\nFor particulars B. C. Coast Service\nto Port Simpson and Skagway, at which\nlatter points connection is made for all\npoints In Alaska and Yukon Territory,\napply to local agenta or write\nS.  CARTER,\nD.  P.  A.\nNolson, B. C.\nE.  J.   COYLE,\nA. O.  P,  Agt.\n\u25a0Vancouver, B. C.\nKOOTENAY RAILWAY A NAVIGATION\nCOMPANY, LIMITED\nKaslo and Slocan Railway Company\nInternational    Navigation    and    Trading\nCompany,\nTIMB CARD\nof   local   trains   and   steamers   effective\nMarch  7th, UM\nKASLO-HANDON\nDally Dall?\n1:30 p.m. Lv Sandon Ar 10:26 a.m.\n2:12 p.m. Lv....Whitewater Ar MO a.m.\n3:4b p.m. Ar Kaalo Lv. &m a.in,\nKABLO-NELSON\nDally Dally\nEx. Sunday Ex. Sunday\n(1:80 a.m. Lv Kaslo Ar  0:15 p.m.\n7:30 a.iii. l.v Ainsworth....Ar.   8:16 p.m.\n10:00 a.m. Ar Nelson Lv 5:45 p.m.\nCalling at all  way   landings on signal.\nNEL90N-SANDON\n6:45 p.m. l.v Nelson Ar 10:00 a.m.\n19:2b a.m. Ar Sandon Lv. 1:30 p.m.\nThrough   dally   freight   and   passenger\nBorvice  between  Nelson and Sandon.\nFor further Information and full particular* caU on or addresa\nROBERT IRVING,\nMgr. K. R. and N. Co, MA\nKaslo, B. C.\nV.  K. TACKAVlURY. Local A*ont\nNOTICE\nNotice Ih heroby given that thirty (30)\nuaysjafter dato the Canadian Paclflo Hallway Company Intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands nnd Works fur a\nleast; of 2.41 acres more or less of u portion\nol  i lie  foreshore and  land  under water of\nthe West Arm of Kootenay Lake, opposite\nLot 58 A. Group 1, Kootenay District, more\nparticularly described as follows:\nCommencing at the northwest corner of\ntliat part of suld Lot 68 A, whleh Is tho\nproperty or ihe Canadian Paclflo Railway\nCompany; registered in the Nelson Land\nRegistry Offlce aa number \u00bb795A, thence\nfollowing ilio northwesterly boundary of the\nsaid part of Lot b3 A belonging to lhe Canadian Paclflo Railway Company produced\nnorthwesterly into the waters of Kootenay   Lake   360   feet,    thence   northeasterly\nat right angles, 300 feet, thence southeasterly 350 feel to the northeast coiner of the\nsaid part of Lot. GS A. belonging to the\nCanadian Pacific Hallway Company, thence\nsoutheasterly 300 feet to the point or commencement\nIt.   MARPOLE,\nGeneral Superintendent.\nVancouver, B. C, April 2nd, 1905.\nFOR SALE\nTHE MOLLY GIBSON MINING COMPANY, Limited, Non-Personal Liability,\n(in Liquidation.)\nNOTICE FOR TENDERS\nTenders will be received by the undersigned liquidator up to noon of the 10th\nday of April, A.D., 1905 for tho purchnso\nof the personal property of the company,\nconsisting of tools, horses, wagons, harness and mining implements, now ut tlie\nMolly Gibson Landing and mine, en block\nor In lots to suit the purchaser, an inventory\nthereof and Che chattels mentioned therein\nmay be Inspected on appllvatlon to.\nBRUCR WHITE, Nelson, B.C.,\nLiquidator of tho above Company\nPOLE TENDERS WANTED\nTenders will lie received by tho B. C.\nTelephone company for the supplying of\n1250 moro or less cedar poles, 30 feet long,\n8 Inch tops, either F.O.B., or on road between Cascade nnd Greenwood.\nG. C. HODGE, Diet. Bupt,\nNOTICE\nAll person concerned are hereby given\nnotice that the folowlng Summons was\nIsfued on the 24th* day of February, A.D.,\nIN THB SUPREME COURT OF BRITISH\nCOLUMBIA\nIN CHAMBERS\nIN THE MATTER of the Land Registry\nAct and Amendments thereto.\nAND IN THE MATTER OF Registered\nPlan No. 735, Registered In the Land\nRegistry Ofllce at Nelson, B. C. being\na plan of West Fernle Townslte of\nProvincial Lot 6455 in East Kootenay\nDistrict.\nLet al! parlies concorned attend the Judge\nIr Chambers at the Court House in the\nUly of Nelson, in tpe province of British\nColumbia, on Monday, the 27th day uf\nFebruary, A.D., 1905, on the hearing of\nan application on the part of the Elk Lumber and Manufacturing Company, Limited,\nfor an Order that lhe above registered Plan\nNo.J3u, registered in tiie Land Title Ofllce\nof Nelson, British Columbia, being a plan\nof West Fernle Townslte of Provincial\nLot G455 in East Kootenay District of British Columbia, be amended so as to close\nWilson street, shown on said Plan between\nMcLeod avenue and McDonald avenue- and\nalBu lo close all that, part of McDonald\navenue east of a point Gti toot east of that\npoint where the West side line of Lot 2,\nn Block 2, as sliown upon the said Plan,\nintersects the Northerly Boundary or said\nMcDonald avenue; and also to close all\nthat part of McLe^t avenue east of the\npoint where tho Easterly side line of Wilson street intersects Ihe suid McLeod\navenue; and also to open up a new street\nto be called Mill street between McDonald\navenue and McLeod avenue, of a width ot\n66 feet, being the most westerly 66 feet of\nLot 2, in Block 2, as shown on the said\nPlan 735; and for an order for such other\nchanges incidental to the above named\nchanges as may be necessary to be made\nfu the said Plan 735.\nDated this 24th day of February, A.D.,\n1K6.\n\"GORDON HUNTER,\" C.J.\nThis summons was taken out by James\nO'Shea of the firm of Taylor A O'Shea,\nagents for Messrs, Ross A Alexunder, solicitors for the Applicant.\nThe allldavit of S. S. Taylor sworn on tho\n2-lih day of February, A.D., 1S05, and the\nallldavit of William It. Ross, sworn on the\n33rd day of January, AD., 1005, and filed\nherein with Exhibits thereto annexed; the\nconsent dated tlie 23rd day of January,\nA.D., 1003, of Fred G. Waters and others\nwill be read in support of the above application.\nTo ull parties concerned.\nNelson, Feb. 25, 190-1, Registry Supreme\nCourt.\nSpecial Leave, C.C.D,, D.R.\nB.C.  Law Stamps 80 cents.\nS.C, B.C.. O.C.D., D.R,, L.S.\nNelson, February 25, 1905, Registry Supreme Court.\nAnd the following Order was made by\nIhe Honourable Mr, Justice Duff on the\n27th day of February, A.D., 1905.\nIN THE SUPREME COURT OF BRITISH\nCOLUMBIA\nIN THE MATTER OF the Land Registry\nAct and Amendments thereto.\nAND IN THE MATTER OF Registered\nPlan No. 735, Registered in the Land\nRegistry Oilice at Nelson, B. C\u201e being\na Plan of West Fernle Townsite, ot\nProvincial Lol 5155, in East Kootenay\nDistrict.\nTN CHAMBERS\nBeforo the Honourable Mr.  Justice  Duff,\nMonday, the 27tli day of February, A.D'.,\n1905.\nUpon the application of the Elk Lumber\nnnd Manufacturing Company, Limited, for\nan Order thnt tlio above Registered Plan\nNo. 735, registered in the Land Title Offlce\nof Nelson. British Columbia, being a Plan\nof West Fernie Townsite, of Provincial\nLot 6J55, in East Kootenay District of\nBritish Columbia^ be amended so as to\nclose Wilson street, shown on said Plan,\nbetween McLeod avenue and McDonald\navenue, nnd also to close all tliat part of\nMcDonald avenue, east of a point 60 feet\neast of that point where tbe West side line\nof Lot 2, in Block 2, as shown upon the\nsaid Plan, Intersects (he Northerly boundary of said McDonald avnue; and also\nto close all that part of McLeod avenue\neast of the  point  where the  Easterly  side\nline of Wilson street Intersects the said\nMcLeod avenue; and also to open up a new\nBtreet, culled Mill street, between McDonald avenue nnd MoLeod avenue, of a width\nof 60 feet, being tlie most westerly 66 feet\nof Lot 2 , In Block 2, as sbuwu on the said\nPlan736; nnd for an order for such other\nchanges Incidental to the above named\nchanges as may be necessary to be made \\n\nlhe said Plan 735.\nAND UPON reading tlie allldavit of S. S.\nTaylor, sworn on the 24th day of February,\nA.D., 19(i5, and the affidavit of Wm. R.\nRosa, sworn on the 23rd day of January,\nA.D., 1905, nnd tiled herewith with Exhibits\nthereto attached; tlio Consent, dated tho\n2Srd day of January, A.D, 1905 of Fred G.\nWaters aad others; AND UPON hearing\nS. S. Taylor, K.C, of counsel for the sold\nApplicants.\nIT IS ORDERED that this application\nstand adjourned until Tuesday, the 9th\nday of May, A.D., 1905, at tlie hour of 111:30\no'clock in the forenoon, then, or so soon\nas counsel can be heard, to come on lor\nhearing before the presiding Judge in\nChambers, at the Court House In the City\nof Nelson,  British Columbia.\nAND IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that\nthe applicants bo at liberty to serve tho\nsummons herein and a copy of this Order\nupon all parties owning, occupying or\nclaiming any right, title or interest in any\nlot or portion of lot in Blocks 1, 2, and S\nof the said Townslte of West Fernle, OS\nmapped on the said Plan No. 735, by serving, personally, or as may be hereafter ordered, all registered owners of lots In safd\nBlocks one (1) and two (2) wilh a copy of\nthe summons and of tills Order and by\npublishing a short notice of the said summons together wilh a copy of this Order\nfor thirty (83) days In the \"Fernie Freo\nPress,\" a newspaper published and printed\nin the City of Fertile, Province of British\nColumbia, and in \"The Dally News,\" a\nnewsaper printed and published In the City\nof Nelson, Province of British Columbia;\nand such service so affected shall be good\nand sufficient service of the said summons and of tills Order upon each and all\nof the said parties owning, occupying or\nclaiming any right, title or Interest In any\nlot or portion of a lot in the said Blocks\n1, 2 and 3.\nLeave to all parlhs to apply.\n\"LYMAN  P.  DUFF,\" J.\nB.C. Law Stomps $1.90.\nNelson, Feb. 28, 1005, Registry Supreme\nCourt.\nEntered Feb.  28, at Nelson.\nS.C., B.C., L.S.\nMadden House \u00a3\u00a3\u00a3.\"\u00a33!\nDo yo\u00bb need x comfortable home? M \u2022\u2022\ntry the Madden House. Well furnlshe*\nrooms lighted by electricity; flrst class\nbeard. In the bar you will find all tke\nbtst domestic and Imported Uquon art\ncigars,\nTHOMAS  MADDSN.   Proprietor\nGRAND CENTRAL HOTEL\nOpposite Courthouse and new Postoffltt,\nBest 26c meal ln town. European ant\nAmerican plan. Only white labor emiploy*\nM.  first class bar.\nraoiu\u00ab a wucsaov, rrwum\n FOR SALE\nA WELL BUILT\nSIX-ROOMED HOUSE\nALSO BATHROOM\nWith electric light and sewerage.\nPrice Very Low\nOnly $200 cash required, balance bn\neasy terras at low lntereBt t     '\nImmediate possession.      '.,'\nApply to \u25a0\nE. IGBOASDAILE\nClements-Hillyer Block\n' Ofllce Upstairs\nCOAL\nAND \"WOOD OF ALL\nKINDS\nTerms Spot .Cash\nW. P. Tlerney\nTelephone 265\nBaiter Street, Nelmm\nmoB or METALS.\nNew Ybrk, April 1-Bar^llver,. 55 3-4;\nquotations,\nNSsofs NEWS OF THE DAY\n^ntSot^^^\u2122\nFrederic S. Clements, civil engineer and\naim iK-ami provinoiul land \u00ab\u00abw\u00abJ\u00ab\nopened tin olilce In room 11.. K.W.C . MOCK.\nBorn a't'the residence ol Mrs. Mary Parks,\nObservatory and Park snoots, on Friday,\nMarch 31\u00b0tho wife ot H. B. Smythe, a son.\nTho Kaslo firm ot Archer & Hodder'has\nliti! dissolved by mutual consent. Mr. Hodder will continue the business under tho\nold name. \t\nH D Curtis, J.P. ami formerly connected\nwtui the Arlington mine Is eavlng Slocan\nnnd with his wife and family will shortly\nmove to Cranbrook.\nThe sicmment of tlie Lord's Supper will\nbo colon.tod \"in St. Paul's Presbyter on\nohurolt this evening ut the closo of the\nregular serivco.   \t\nThe Association football club had a practice on the recreation grounds yesterday\nafternoon and will meet hereafter evory\nday when weather conditions permit.\nThe regular weekly rehearsal of the Rose\nMa don cantata by 'he Nelson choral society will be held In the K. ot P. hall, Ver\nnon street tomorrow evening at 8 o ciock.\nThe Sloenn Drill ha\u00bb Just completed the\n1lflh year of residence 111 Slocan. Ihe Dull\nsays it Is the oldest paper ln the district\nand lias been fortunate In enjoying me\nlasting  good   will   of   the  sheriff.\nTho examination In the enso of the Lanyon zinc company against the Eayne Minna company, was concluded yesterday\nafternoon. M. - Grtamett and a. J.\nHansom left at once for Sandon via K.isio.\nKootenay lodge No. 10. I.O.O.F. will hold\nn. social at their regular lodge meeting In\nFraternity hall on Monday night, when a\nfull attendance of memhers Is ronuest.-u.\nAll visiting members are cordially invited.\nHis lordship bishop Dart of New Westminster and Kootenay dioceses, arived from\nthe coast Inst night. Ho wlllpreaoh In St.\nSaviour's church this morning, and tills\nevening will perforin lhe rite of confirmation.\nI TV. Cockle, serr lary ot the Ka lo board\nof trade, has received word from tlie post-\nudlce Inspector that the matter of a change\nin the carving of mails for Kaslo and\nSandon Is being taken up by tlie Inspector\nof the railway mail service.\nF \"W. Peters, assistant freight trnfiic\nmanager ot the western lines ot the C.P.K..\nand E J. Travis of Winnipeg, and II. H.\nAbbott of Victoria, arrived at the Slratli-\neona last night. They will leave tomorrow\nfor a trip over tiie Boundary Hue. Mr. Peters is making an ordinary trip of Inspection.\nTwo liovs, nged 1! years, went nsl'ing\nalong Cottonwood creek yesterday.   O io lcll\nInto tlie ei k and would probably hove\ndrowned, had not his companion gone to\nhis assistance. The rescuer then partly\nassisted and partly carried his comrade a\ndistance of several miles to his home In tno\ncliy.\nTlie character and works of Thomas Cnr-\nlvlc will be the subject of a discussion at\nthe Success club tomorrow night. Rev. J.\nT Ferguson will Introduce the subject ln\nwhat is expected to be In the nnture of a\neulogy. A debate will follow, as somo who\ndo not admire the seer of CralgenputtoOK\nhave given notice of thoir Intention to\nmake remnrks.\n  \u00ab\nDuring the afternoon and evening of\nThursday, April ii. the ladies of the Methodist church wll hold a sale of work In the\npremises lately occupied by J. G. Simpson\n& Co.. tn tlie Trcmoal block on linker\nStreet There will he offered for sale\nhandkerchiefs, collars, aprons and children's dresses, and home mado candy. Afternoon tea wll he served nt Which all the\neatables offered will be home made.\nIf you hnve not bought a cako of Stma>\naons 'chemical erosive soap you have not\nmnde the best Investment offered. It costs\nby 25 cents nnd Is the most useful article\non the market for taking out stains of any\nkind from clothing, laces, linen goods, etc.\nIt takes the grease out of coat collars.\nAll Sizes\nThis week we are selling them\nat reduced prices\n25c, 35c, 40c Per Doz\nThey are the finest\nT. S, McPherson\nPHONE NO. 10.\nGroceries and provisions\nTHE DAILY tfEWSt SUNDAY APRIL 2 1905 _ J*\nsafes i ' =a3\u2014aaa^i\nFOR SALE\nHouse and two lots In good position on\nLatimer' street. The house contains\nthree 'rooms, bathroom, pantry and\nfull plumbing. The lota are fenced and\nwell cultivated.\nPrice, $875-Part Cash\nH.^M.Bird\nPoultry\nNetting\nlh rolls of 50 yards or by the yard,\nfrom 12 ln. wide up to 72 In; It\nyou require a wire fence or chicken\ncoop let us give you quotations.\nMCLACHLAN BROS.\nNELSON, B. C.\npur Optical Jhipar^i^^\njs, again ppen.andproud wc.are of such, a lepnrtraent. It Is second to\nnone anywhere, and Nelson can boast of being most up-to-date, as.\ninany larger western cities have not1 th s advantage.'0 We' can fill\nyou prescription tlie same day wc receive it, and being done by an\nexpert of over eighteen years experience i asi ,\\a v. MANUFACTUHINU\nand REFRACTINQ OPTICIAN, is a positive guarantee of satisfaction.\n:vl,JH,l!'-       riff?\nPATENAUDE BROS.\nMANUFACTURING JEWELLERS, WATCHMAKERS, OPTICIANS\nPHONB ns\nKXKt!\nsmnHiitnmtnninimtii!!!!!! m inminnwmnroiniinnmiB\n| Spring and Summer\nSuitings and\nCostume Fabrics\nYou can get it at the Canada Drug A Book\ncompany's stores, Nelaon, B. C.\nIIUME-T. Morley, Glfntlioriio; .1. IT.\nTaylor, i*. R. Melllsh, .1. Osborne, A. J.\nBates. B. w. IClnloyaldo. Vancouver; H,\nH. Plcrco. Montreal; J. ll. Murpliy, Port\nArthur; W, P. Garvin, New York; S. P.\nTolmie; Victoria; J. P. Vroom, U'finetn;\nB. N. Rollly, .1. -\\I. Doyle, M. Vatter, Spokane; J. M. Sheppiird. Hossland; 9. B, F.\nStein, Guolph; J. A. Grlliitli, Trout Lake.\nSTRATHCONA-A, T>. Wheeler, Ains-\nworth; it. ll- Jameson, Victoria; VV. Pearce,\nCalgary; Kisiiop of Kootenay, tieyt west-\nminster: (3. Bruder, Sandon; II. II. Abbott.\nVictoria; 13. J. Travis, F. W. Peters, Winnipeg.\nGRAND CFiNTRAT,~C\\ A. Prober and\nwife. Arrowhead; J 0 Moen, 6-MUoj C W\nHarrlrtg, Procter; J. W. Harrill, Farron;\nA\\'   1-'.   Untdioson, Eholt.\nNELSON\u2014P. L, McConnnck. CnHtlegar;\nR. Brown, Spokane.\nMADDBN-J, J. Tandy, Calgary; E. H.\nJulton, Ymir; J. . tJenneasy. B. Ensile,\nMidge creek; H. Bayer, Bonnington.\nroyal-.). Wtllard, Portland, Mm Mul-\nhem, Burton Clt?.\nBARTLETT-C. M. Stewart, RelUngliam;\nB   McNicol, Yahk; a. Smith. Lethbrldge;\nF,   Whltaker,   Denver;   J.   Ellott,   Owen\nQUEENS-73. A. Brown. St. Louts; L,\nTIMIlK\"\". G. Moffat, Ymlr; W. J. HllUgas,\nC. HilllRas. Parcst.\nTRJDMONT\u2014Or. Woods, Denver; .1, Bray,\nYmir: F. Edwards, Powder Point; 1, Brown,\nNakusp. \u25a0 ,    _\nLAKI-;VIEW--J. Leoliy, Cascade; A. E.\nGi'Igff, \\V. Brldgeford, Bonnlngion.\nMuke your selection now while you can\nhave first clioire of everything in the niar-\nkfit. Taylor A McQuarrle, Nelson's up to\ndate Tuilors.\nLever's Y-Z (Wise HencI) Disinfectant\nSoap Powder is belter than other powders,\nas it is both soap and disinfectant     ftj\nT0REDEEM DEBENTURES\nCITY COUNCIL RESOLVES TO PAY OFF\nOLD DEBTS\nCAPTAIN   M'MORRIS   GRANTED   TWO\nMONTHS'   LEAVE\nIn a special meeting yesterday morning\nthe city council resolved to redeem $16,000\nof debentures of former issue, granted the\ncity clerk two months' leave of absence,\nappointed an assistant to the city treasurer\nwho will have double duty to do, and reappointed alderman Malone acting mayor.\nThe meeting was arranged for Friday\nevening. There were present mayor Houston and aldermen Bird, Annable, Malone,\nKirkpatrick and Macdonald.\nThe mayor Informed the council that ho\nwould leave tlie elty twain next Tuesday.\nAlderman Malone was elected acting mayor\nin his absence.\nOn motion of aldermen Macdonald and\nKirkpatrick, the city clerk .captain McMorrls, was granted two months' leave of\nabsence on account of Illness and was voted\n$'19 a month during leave.\nCity treasurer W. E. Wasson was then\nappointed acting city clerk during Captain\nMcMorrls' absence, and E. K, Beestdn was\nuppolnted assistant to Mr. Wasson at a\nsalary of }90 per month.\nThe mayor then reported having received\nan offer on behalf of the city of tlie privilege of redeeming $5000 of debentures which\nhave still 12 years to run. They were sold\nat 98 and can bo redeemed at 90 3-4. There\nIb also, he reported, an offer of the right\nlo redeem $10,000 of other debentures not\ndue for 10 years. These may be redeemed\nat tlie price of Issue.\nThe discussion that followed showed that\nthe city would gain $150 a year by redeeming tlie bonds. Tlie interest paid annually\non the bonds Is $700, while only $000 Is de-\njlyed In Interest on tbo $15,000 oi' sinking\nWnd which will be required to redeem them,\nOn motion the redemption of both sets of\ndebentures waa authorized. The council\nthen adjourned.\nANNOUNCEMENT\nI beg to announce that I have purchased\ntho business of Morley A Co., nnd Purpose\ncontinuing the business. Pending the sale\nof tlio buslneaa by the Mortgagees, no\n.purchases have been made except such as\nwere absolutely necessary and In a few\nlines customers have not been able to get\ntheir wants supplied. I have already placed\norders for goods to fill up the lines that\naro short and to sort up the stock generally, and In a few days will have a complete and well assorted stock of everything\nIn the Book nnd Stationery and Fancy\nGoods line, including Toys, Wall Paper,\netc. I trust to be favored with a continuance of the generous patronage which has\nbeen accorded this store In tbo past, and\nwill endeavor, by moderate prices and attentive service, to show my appreciation\nof I lie same. There are certain lines In\nwhich the stock Is too heavy, and some\nlines that I want to closo out altogether.\nI Intend to offer some very Interesting bargains In these lines to reduce or clean them\nout. Watch for some Interesting announcements in my regular advertising space.\nW. G. THOMSON.\nGo-Carts\nAuto-Gear\nBail-Bearings\nPRICES FROM $5 UP\nStandard Furniture Co.\n( Successors to D. McArthur & Co.)\nAGENT3\nMASON ft RISCH\n.      PIANOS\nFuneral Directors\nBA'MRNEET and Embalmers\n, Your Clothing, If ordered from us Is\nbuilt to (it you\u2014not someone else\u2014nnd it\nholds Its shape as long as ft lasts, Tnylor\nA McQuarrle, Nelson's up to dale Tailors.\nB\nB\nB\nB\nChemical Fertilizer\nOur Btock has arrived and Is going Ilka\n\"hot cakes.\" We would advise those who\nhave not handed us their order to do bo\nquickly before we are sold out.\nMr Doble the Vic. Chemical company's expert will be at our\nofflce on April 4th. He will be prepared to answer any questions\nand give advice as to using these goods. If Interested we would\nbe pleased to have you meet him. '<\u2022 _\nThe Brackman-Ker Milling Co., Med\nIT PAYS TO DBAI< WITH RUTHERFORD\nWriting\nPads\nIn connection with our postage stamp\nsales there has developed a good demand\nfor writing pads and envelopes.\nWe offer good values. Note Pads, 15c,\n2 for 2Gc; large Pads, 25c.; very fine Pads,\n35c Envelopes, 10c. package, 3 for 25c.;\nEnvelopes, 5 packages for 25c; very fine\nsquare Envelopes, 15c, 2 tor 26c.\nWm. Rutherford\nStore closes at 8 p.\nDRUQQI5T\nNelaon, B.C.\nWe have just received tbe finest selection of these goods ever\nshown In tlie Kootenny, ln all the very latest weaves, colors and\nshadings. Cloths and Tweeds In all shades, ladles' embroidery dresses\nIn navy, cream, tan and grey,\" only one of each shade.\nNow black Sateen Petticoats with pleating and frills at $1.25,\n$1.5(1, $2.00 and $2.CO.   Special values.\n.A very line line of new Waists and Shirt Waist Suits. Shirt Waist\nSuiting in cream, navy, black, mohair and brllllantlne at 40, 50, 65,\naud 75 cents per yard.\nA splendid lino of new spring Coats In Covert Cloth at very low\nprices. liiii&i\nNew spring wash goods just in, figured Organdy, Cotton Voiles,\nln all colors.fnney spot Muslit.\nMillinery\nJust opened up, charming new models of Spring Walking Hats, a\nvery fine assortment.   Call and see them.\n3\n3\n3\nst\n3\nst\n\u2014\u2022m\n3\n3\n3\nIS\nB\nB =\n| Fred Irvine Co., Limited f\nI       The Big Cash Store        j\niuiuiiiuuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiila iu uiiUiiiiuiUiuuiiuuiuiuuul\nASK FOR\nAND\nBE SURE\nYOU GET\nGRIFFIN BRAND\na^ftggj!\n\/\nm\n1\n1\nP\noi\/\nHAMS\nBACON\nLARD\nNOTHING NICER\nJ. Y. GRIFFIN & GO.\nLIMITED.\nHigh Class\nDress Goods\nSeo Baker street window; the newest\nin Dress Goods.\nSee Ward street window for white\ngoods; our stock is complete.\nTailor-Made Skirts\nSee our Skirt stock at $4.50, $5.00,\n$5.50, $0.00, $0.50, $7.00, $8.00 and $10.\nQualities, fit and style,\u2014the very Jjest.\nKerr & Co.\nWe Can Sell It\nLIST YOUR REAL\ns\nESTATE WITH US\nFOR  KENT\u2014Nicely furnished, 5-roomed Cottage, block from Baker St.\nMcDermid & McHardy\nA Pew Plums\nWe offer for the ncx^ ten days a stock\nof ties at 25 cents, worth double the\nmoney. The styles are varied and neat,\nto suit any trade.\nAlso a lot of boys' and children's felt\nhats, worth 50c, at 25c to doar.\nMotflers Remember\nthat wo keep a stock or imyb' knickers\nfrom 35c to $1.25.\nA large slock of umbrellas for the\ncoming wet season, $1, $1.26, $1.50, $2,\netc. Also stock of men's union made\nSuits.\n*#\u00ab**##***# \u2022 m \u00ab#** ***\u2022**<\nWhat is Sweeter Than Honey\nCalifornia Comb Honey, each %,,',\nV--~ V\u00ab.\u00ab\u00ab* \"Cf* Wild Rose, 1 11) g!ans jur I\nIVeep YOUr CyC Wlld Rose, 3 Ib. glass jar  75\n\/-v      tt Ontario, 1 Ib. glass jar  25\nUn   US Ontario,   b   Ib.   Una    75\nOntario 10 lb;  Una  1.60\nBell Trading Company\n************ * * * *****\u2022\u2022***<\nLook for tbe sign of the hlg Elephant.\nJ. H. WALLACE\nKIDN'1 OUTMTTBB\nA Card\nIn retiring from the retail Confectionery and Fruit Business in\nNelson, 1 beg to tender my thanks to all my customers In the past,\nand to bespeak for my successor, S, ,H. Seaney, who takes over my\nretail business tomorrow, the same consideration and patronage that\nhas been extended to me by the citizens of Nelson\nj. a. Mcdonald\nCor Josephine and\nVernon Sts., Nelson, B. C.\nWholesale Fruit and\nConfectionery Dealer\nThe Eye\nIs the window of\nthe soul\nrightly says one of our great philosophers. Protect your eyes from disorder\nby getting a pair of Glasses that will\nmake and keep them strong. Our graduate optician can fit you with a pair at\na reasonable cost\nmm }* )> WALKER 0PTICIAN\nNELSON, B. C.\nPaints .-d Oils\nWe have received this week a straight car of Paints from one of the\nbest Paint Manufacturers in Canada, including all the latest colors of\nready Mixed Paints, Paste Paints, Oil and Varnish Stains.\nCHURCH'S ALABASTINE\nAlso a full stock of Linseed Oil, Bro. Japan, Varnishes, Turpen-\ntino, Hard Oil, Dustless Floor Oil, Putty, Etc. Mall orders solicited. Ask\nfor color cards.\nBAKER ST.\nNELSON HARDWARE COMPANY\nPHONE 15\nNELSON, B. O.\nIf You Want\nA Nice, Nobby and Up-to-Date Suit\nGo to Gallagher's\nJ. W. GALLAGHER\nBox No. 248 BAKER ST. Telephone IM\nHeadquarters 8\nWe aro headquarters for  A,| fl^ tf ^l^fo ^\nFlower Seeds\nboth Steele, Brlggs and D. M. Forrys.  We carry the largest and best\nassorted stock In the Kootenays.\nSweet Peas, Morning Glory, Asters, Foreget-Me-Nots, Lawn Grass\nSeeds, White Clover, Etc.  Mall orders receive prompt attention,\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. 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Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : F.J. Deane","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1905-04-02 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":"1905-04-02 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. 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To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}