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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":" NEWS\n\/Q$\nQ^ilativo At,\nJUL8-M08\n10\n^TORIA.%\nVOL. 4\nNELSON, B. C, WEDNESDAY, JULY  5, 1905\nMUTINEERS\nDISAPPEAR\nOfficials Send Broadcast\nTheir Version of the\nAffair\nWhole Trouble Is Now Laid at the Doors\nof Russian Jews Whose Names are Suppressed for Political Reasons\nday. The special cars were decorated\nwith American flags .and at aa early\nhour the party, under the guidance of\n\u25a0Mr. Pearce, of Lhe C. P. R., visited the\nextensive irrigation works of the railroad company, They were astonished\nat the immensity of the project and the\nexcellence of the work. In the afternoon the party visited the polo match,\u25a0\nand At night were entertained at a ban-\nquetr at the Queen's hotel, where\nspeeches were interspersed with courses, The banquet was very successful\nand many eloquent speeches were made.\nTomorrow will be spent at Banff.\nAT HENLLMN-THAMES\nHOPES OF 'AMERICAN ROWERS ARE\nHIGH.\nSt, Petersburg, July 4.\u2014The admiralty says It is without information as\nto the whereabouts of the Kniaz Potemkine, but is inclined to believe that if\nthe mutineers have supplies enough ttiey\nwill not go to a Bulgarian or Turkish\nport but will head for Koli or Batoum\n\u25a0where the revolutionists might give tho\nmutineers succor and from whence they\ncould escape to the mountains* ol the\nCaucasus.\nThe seven column official report of\nthe occurrence at Odessa, which will be\nprinted all over Russia, contains no\nmention of the prominent part which\nithe governor reported the Jews took In\nInciting the rioting and in co-operating\nwith the mutineers on board the Kniaz\nPotemkine and Georgi Pobiedonosetz.\nThe Associated Press learns that general Trepoff himself forbade all reference to the Jews, saying that reference\nto them would only serve to excite the\npeople and perhaps lead to reprisals,\nnot only at Odessa, but elsewhere.\nToday's official reports from Odessa\nsay ttie factories are beginning to reopen but that there are thousands of\npeople idle and the general public Is still\nnervous and apprehensive.\nThe Slovo announces that the imperial proclamation, providing for the convocation of an imperial douma will be\nissued.\nSUNDAY OBSERVANCE.\nRunning Street Cars   is Questioned in\n*\" Manitoba.\nWinnipeg, July 4.\u2014The question of\nSunday cars is to be argued by the attorney general before the full court of\nManitoba. It Is an appeal of Fisher,\nwho keeps a poo] room at Carman, and\nwho desires to keep it open after hours,\nwhich Is not allowed hy local bye-law.\nFisher maintains tbe town has no power\nto limit hours und goes as far as to question their jurisdiction over his pool\nroom if lie desires to keep it. open on\nSunday.\nCliief justice Dubuc, before whom the\ncase was tried, decided In favor of tbe\ntown of Carman, but reserved the Sunday law point for the attorney general's\nruling. Fisher appealed to the full court\nand the attorney general will test the\npowers of tho province respecting the\nSunday law as viewed by the Manitoba\nbench In connection with the case.\nLOOKING MORE PEACEFUL.\nConditions at Odessa Are Approaching\nNormal Aspect.\nOdessa, July 4.\u2014The British steamer\nCranley, which was brought into the\nharbor under cover of the guns of a torpedo boat destroyer, has been released.\nThe general situation shows much\nsigns of gradual improvement. The removal of debris from the burned district has begun and general dock work\nand coasting service has been resumed.\nThe strikers are returning to work. A\nlarge number of troops have been sent\nto the summer quarters within easy\nreach of the city.\nThe Odessa chamber-of commerce has\npetitioned tlie fministry of-finance to\npermit an extension of fourteen days,\non notes falling due.\nFIFTY-FIVE MILLION BUSHELS\nEstimate Crop of Wheat of 1904 at\nWinnipeg\nWinnipeg, July 4.\u2014The Ogllvie Milling company gave out today the following figures showing the position of the\nwheat crop of 11)04 as on July 1, 1905.\nWheat crop, 1904, Inspected July 1, 35,791\ncars at 1030 bushels, 30,804,730 less that\namount Inspected twice, 213,000, netting\n36,651,730 bushels.\nNot inspected, delivered at Winnipeg,\nshipped west, sold and fed ou cars, 1,800-\n000; not inspected, in transit, 130,000;\nin store west of Winnipeg, 1,900,000;\nmilled west of Winnipeg to July 1,\n0,670,000; used for seed, 7,437,500; yet to\nmarket, 370,000;  total  crop, 55,028,230.\nAUSTRIAN TROUBLE.\nVienna's Premier Repudiates Separation From Hungary.\nVienna, July 4.\u2014The lower house of\nthe reichstag has rejected the urgency\nmotion proposed by the pan-German\nparty for the preparation of measures\nlooking to the separation of Austria and\nHungary, The premier emphatically\nrepudiated the attacks of the pan-German party on the crowds, and the remarks were greeted with great cheering.\nWASHINGTON JOURNALISTS.\nCelebrate the  Fourth   Royally  as Becomes Canada.\nCalgary, July 4.\u2014The glorlouB fourth\nwas right royally celebrated in Calgary\nt>y the Washington ^correspondents to-\nHOMJ3 PEOPLE FAVOR CHANCE OF\nLEAN1>ERS.\nHenley, July 4.\u2014The crew of the Vesper Boat club, Philadelphia, celebrated\nIndependence day in England by winning Its heat against the best university crew competing at Henley this\nyear, and by making the best time of\nany eight, indeed, all Henley seems to\nibe-celebrating the Fourth of July.\nAmerican flags were flying all over the\npretty Thameshead town and as the\nAmerican boat rowed to victory the stars\nand stripes were waved from the grand\nstands. The shores! were tilled with a\nrecord gathering of the elite of Great\nBritain, and American visitors.\nThe great contest between the Vespers and the Leanders' tomorrow will\nunquestionably be the most intensely\ninteresting event from the international\nas well as the oarsmans viewpoint over\nknown at Henley. The most expert\ncritics of rowing differ in their opinions,\nand the Englishman claim the American\nstyle cannot prevail over that of Lean-\nder ou the ground that Americans use a\nsculling style and fail to put in body\nweight. In today's results, however,\nwhen the club Natique of Belgium beat\nthe Thames Rowing dub by using much\nthe same style with short oars, the\nblades of which arc somewhat similar\nto thpste of the Americans, the theories\nof the rowing experts were upset. Tonight there is much guessing over tomorrow's struggle, which will decide\nwho will bo the winners of the grand\nchallenge cup, -though the successful\ncrew must row against tho Club Nati-\nque.\nCoach Dempsey, of the Vespers, said\ntonight that ho believed the American\nstyle to be much better than the British\nand hU belief is strengthened by observation of today's racing. Mr. Dempsey\nis confident of success und said that\nnone of the men were the worse for the\ncontest.\nDASH FOR THE POLE.\n-Ship\nPeary to Slart At End of Week-\nWill Be Well Equipped.\nNew York, July 4.\u2014Inquiry today\ndevoped the fact that lieutenant commander Peary will hardly be able to\ncomplete his preparations and start on\nhis trip to tilio tar north tomorrow as\noriginally scheduled. The Roosevelt,\nin which the polar journey is to be\nmade, is still taking on stores aud it\nwill perhaps be several days before she\nwill be ready to.sail. The departure,\nhowever, will-hardly be delayed beyond\niho end of this week.\nLieutenant commander Peary intends\nthat the Roosevelt shall bo belter equipped for the trip to the Arctic regions\nthan any previous ship. Even though\nthe date of sailing must be deferred he\ninsists that everything shall be perfectly\narranged before the departure. After\nleaving New York the Roosevelt will\nmake but one slop and that will be at\nSt. John, N. B. Leaving tbe latter\nplace the vessel will plunge immediately\ninto the region of polar boars and Icebergs. Arriving at Grant Laud, Mrs.\nPeary and their 12-year-old daughter\nwill be put ashore to remain In specially\nconstructed cabins while tlie husband\nand father endeavors to accomplish the\nlout siage of his great journey. The\nexpedition will consist of 70 men, several of them physicians and scientists\nand all of tho rest carefully selected\nhardy young sailors from Maine.\nSCHUYLKILL REGATTA.\nTitus Defeated By She'ppeard in Senior\nSingles.\nPhiladelphia, July 4.\u2014The annual\npeople's regatta over the national course\non the Schuylkill river furnished lino\nsport lor rowing enthusiasts today,\nThe greatest interest was centered in\nthe senior singles, won by Fred Shop-\npeard ol! Brooklyn, and the senior eights,\ncaptured by the Harvard varsity crew,\nunder the colors of the Craigie A. A.\nof Boston,\nThe defeat of Titus In the senior\nsingles was a surprise lo most of the\nrowing experts. Sheppeard led at tho\nthree-quarter mark, where Titus spurted\nand assumed the lead. At the mile post\nhe suddenly stopped rowing and hold\nhis side as though he had a cramp.\nSheppeard won easily.\nELECTRIC EXHIBITION.\nLondon, July 4.-gAmeiican manufacturers of electrical apparatus and supplies for electric and steam railways are\nwell represented in the International\nelectric tramway aud railway exhibition\nwhich opened today In the Royal Agricultural hall. This Is tihe third exhibition of the kind held In London and\nfrom present indications It will be even\nmore'successful than the two held previously. The establishment of these exhibitions was tlie direct outcome of the\nsuccess of the annual exhibitions of the\nAmerican street railway association..\nMAY VETO\nSTATUTE\nB. C. Act Imposing Tax\non Travellers is\nUltra Vires\n\"NO. 62\nNOT PAY WAR EXPENSES\nRUSSIA STILL THINKS TERMS MAY\nBE DICTATED.\nINTERESTING ADMISSION BY BARON ROSEN\" IN NEW YORK.\nOttawa Giving Province an Opportunity\nof Repealing Faulty Law-Quebec Has\nAlso Sinned in Like Manner\n(Special to The Daily News)\nOttawa, July 4.\u2014The federal cabinet\nhas about made up its mind with regard\nto the recent act of the British Columbia .legislature\u2014that of imposing a tax\nupon commercial travellers from other\nprovinces, iqjis declared to be ultra\nvires of the province and cannot, therefore, be allowed to remain in force.\nBritish Columbia will be given an opportunity to itself withdraw the act in\nquestion. Should it fail to do so the\ndominion will probably exercise its\nright of veto on the ground that the\nstatute violates section 91 of the British\nNorth America Act, which entrusts the\nregulation of trade and commerce exclusively to the federal parliament.\nThe same objection is said to exist\nagainst a recent enactment in the Quebec legislature tnxing British and foreign commercial travellers. This question, however, has not yet come before\nthe cabinet, although it will undoubtedly\ndo so later on.\nHURRICANE IN FRANCE.\nDestroys Tomorrow's Start For the\nBennett Cup.\nIjOs Champes, France, July 4.\u2014A tremendous hurricane broke over the\nAuvcrgne automobile course this afternoon causing very severe damage to the\nlight construction erected in connection\nwith the race for the Bennett cup, which\nwas to begin tomorrow morning. Every\ntent was thrown down, the roofs of the\nwooden buildings were carried away and\nthe garage for foreign automobiles fell\nin, without, however, damaging tlie machines so far as ascertained. The canvas weighing enclosure, the telegraph\nofflce and the stands were also unroofed. Only the solid woodwork of the\nstands remain intact.\nSENDS CONDOLENCE.\nNew Zealand Cables the United States\nSympathetic Message.\nWashington, July 4.\u2014The following\ncablegram was received at the British\nembassy today from the governor of\nNew Zealand:\n\"Tlie premier desires ou behalf of\nNew Zealand to tender tho United States\nlhe warmest sympathy and condolence\nat the loss of their greatest statesman,\ncolonel Hay, whose labors have profited\nthe world, und done so much to promote\ngood feeling between our emirrVe, its\ncolonics and America.\"\nSEEKING KNIAZ POTEMKINE\nMutinous Battleship Said to Have Attacked Italian Ship.\nBucharest, July 4.\u2014The Russian\ntorpedo boat destroyer Snieiilvy appeared off Kustenji today and signalled that\nshe was seeking the Kniaz Potemkine.\nIt is stated that the Kniaz Potemkine\nhas attacked an Italian vessel carrying\ncoal. There is much uneasiness among\nRussian vessels at Roumanian ports,\nQUELLING A MUTINY.\nSIII1\nSailors' of Georgi   Pobiedonosetz\nDissatisfied.\nOdessa, July 4.\u2014An attempt to revive the mutiny on the battleship Georgi\nPobiedonosetz was discovered loday. It\nwas frustrated by loyal sailors, who delivered six of the leaders to .the authorities.\nThe torpedo boals which remained\nhere have gone to sea.\nPEACE COMMISSIONER ARRIVES\nNew York, July 4.\u2014Baron Rosen, the\nnew Russian ambassador to Washington aud one ol' the two Russian plenipotentiaries to the peace conference arrived In this city today on the steamer\nKaiser Wllhelm n, accompanied by the\nbaroness Rosen and Miss Rosen, their\ndaughter.\nUOUERICH ELEVATOR BURNED\nGoderlch, Out., July 4.\u2014The Goderich\nTransit company's elevator was totally\ndestroyed by lire yesterday afternoon,\ntogether with tibutit :t20,000 bushels of\nwheat in store. The elevator was valued at $130,000 and was insured for\nf95,000,\nVECHA CREW SURRENDER.\nSt. Petersburg, July 4.\u2014It is slated\nthat lhe transport Vecha, the crew of\nwhich joined the mutineers in tho harbor of Odessa, surrendered loday ( In\nRussian waters,\nVANCOUVER PUBLIC BUILDING\n(Special   to Thf   Dully   NewB)\nOttawa, July 4.\u2014The contract for the\nVancouver public building Is said to\nhave been awarded to Kelly brothers of\nWinnipeg, for $430,000.\nNew York, July 4.\u2014\"Please deny for\nme that 1 have given out any interview,\"\nwere almost the Ilrst words of baron\nRosen, the new Russian ambassador to\nAmerica, to a representative of the Associated Press as the Kaiser Wllhelm\nII was moored to her dock in Hoboken\ntoday. \"When 1 received the American\nnewspapers,\" he said, \"1 observed that\na French news agency attributed to me\nan interview quoting me as saying that\nRussia is willing to pay the expenses\nof the war within certain limits.. I wish\nyou to deny this for me and also deny\nthat 1 have ever given out any interview\nor expressed publicly any opinion of a\npolitical nature. Please say that and\nnothing more, and 1 will be; much\npleased.\"\nBaron Rosen succeeds count 'Cassia!\nas ambassador for Russia to the, United\nStales and has also been named as one\nof Russia's peace plenipotentiaries. The\nbaron does not come to the United\nStates as a stranger, as he served his\ncountry as charge d'affaires at Washington during the first administration\nof president Cleveland, Since his last\nstay in America he has been minister\nat Tokio and had that post until the\noutbreak of the war.\nLEARNING\nNOTHING\nConservative  Opposition\nto Saskatchewan\nBill\nWant Exclusive Provincial Jurisdiction on\nEducational Hatters but are Decisively\nBeaten by Large Majority\nMAIMED ON THE FOURTH\nCARELESS HANDLING OF BIG GUNS\nBY REGULARS.\nONE    MAN    BADLY    INJURED\nPREMATURE EXPLOSION]\n\u25a0New York, July 4.\u2014By the premature\nexplosion ot a shell In the open breech\nof a five-Inch gun while a Fourth of\nJuly salute uf 45 guns was being 11 red\nat Castle William, on Governor's island\ntoday, private Cornelius Harrington of\nCompany \"H\", eighth infantry, was so\nbadly Injured that he may not recover.\nOne arm was lorn off, his right eye was\nblinded and he was terribly burned ou\none side ot his head and body. Sergeant Webb of lhe same company -was\nalso badly .hurt und it is feared will\niose the sight of one eye, but is expected to recover.\nSixteen men were grouped about the\nbattery of live-Inch guns while tlie salute was being fired at the moment\nwhe nthe explosion occurred, but only\nthose nearest the gun were knocked\ndown by the force of the explosion.\nThe gun had been fired once and under\nthe direction of sergeant Webb, Harrington had placed a new shell in the\nbreach of tho gun and was about to close\nit when something ignited the blank\nshell. It is believed that a spark from\nthe previous discharge set it off,\nHarrington was thrown 30 feet, his\nclothing was torn from his body und\nhis face was frightfully burned. Sergeant Webb was out of the direct line of\nthe explosion and escaped Its full force.\nFOURTH'S CASUALTY LIST\nqnd-   200\nphlladlerpttla ai!LS IFour Dead\nWounded\nPhiladelphia, July 4\u2014Four persons dead,\ntwo probably totally wounded, ami moie\nthan '200 others Injured Is tho result of tlie\nIndependence day celebration In this c ty\nup to lute tonight. Tho most sensational\ntragedy of the holiday was the killing of\na man by Albert Londgren, a policeman,\nwhile the former was resisting arrest\nThe dead ninn Is Michael Cleary, who,\nwith a friend, was celebrating the day,\nwhen they got Into a light with nn Italian.\nLondgren Btopped the fight nnd arrested\nCVkriry fcnd this (Rjnpandonf A crowd\npounced upon the policeman and were\nbeating him, when he shot into the crowd\nkilling Cleary.\nA   CHAMBERLAIN   WIN\nTld Scorns at Last to be Again Turning\nIn His Favor\nLondon, July l\u2014The parliamentary election at KIngawInford, Staffordshire, yesterday, caused by the death of colonel W.\nO. Webb, conservative, resulted In the\nreturn of Henry Stanley Hill, unionist,\nby u majority of 608 over the liberal candidate. 0\nKIngawInford is a district of 12,000 Inhabitants und colonel Webb was returned unopposed at the elections of 1900 and 11KK1.\nKEEPING THE  FOURTH\n(Special to The Dally News)\nPhoenix July 4-Por the tlrst time In the\nhistory of this camp excursion trains\nrunning into Uncle Sam's land, and both\nto toko excursion lata to 'celebrate the\nFourth of July. The Groat Northern run\na special low priced excursion; to Loon lake\nand some CO tickets were sold hero, the\nnumber being Increased to 75 by the time\nthe train readied Grand Forks, wh re\nmore excursionists Joined In  the outing.\nThe C.P.R., In connection with the Hot\nAir line, or Spokane and HrUlsh Colum-\niu railway, as il Is ofllcially known, operated un excursion from Phoenix to Republic, connections also being made with\ntrains from Midway, and Greenwood. The\ntrain pulled out of here with the Phoenix\nhose team, having 38 passengers, mid was\njoined at Eholt by the Gr< enwcod brass\nand, hose team, etc. At Republic an old\nfashioned celebration la being held,''\nRUHLIN-M'CORMICK FIGHT\nSan Francisco, July 4\u2014Jimmy McCormiclt\ntoday signed articles to meet Uus Ruhlln\nbefore tho Colma Athletic club on- August\n11, the winner to take 75 per cent of the\npurse. Billy Madden, Ituhlln's manager,\nhas wired his acceptance from New York.\n(Special to The Dally News)\nOttawa, July 4.\u2014The house Cook up\ntoday the bill to establish the now province of Saskatchewan, the measure lining on the same tines as the Alberta\nbill.\nThe opposition merely proposed,\nwithout debate, the same amendments it\nhad offered on Ihe sister measure.\n\u2022Gorman's amendment to the second\nreading of the bill, was to provide full\npowers of self government, including\nexclusive jurisdiction in educational\nmatters, and was rejected by a majority\nof 53, the vote standing 00 to 37.\nRate, Independent, voted for the opposition amendment, Thompson, of\nYukon, independent, went with the government, and also Monk, Bergeron und\nPaquet, Quebec conservatives.\nreached an acute stage. Following the announcement of the Mineworkera thnt they\nwould call out the men working nt North-\neiild and Brechin unless tho Western Fuel\ncompany recognized the union, the Federation issued a notice today stating that\nthe Federation lias no grievance or labor\ntrouble with the company flt Brechin and\nall persons who could get work were at\nliberty to do  so.\nP. Kelleen, secretary, of the Federation,\nsaid in explanation that this notice wns\nissued because of the action taken by the\nMine-workers. The Federation considers\nIt absolutely unnecessary to Interfere with\nBrechin, as the trouble between the men\nand the company Is confined lo No. 1 mine.\nAs Jong as the conditions at Brechin are\nsatisfactory to the men, any action to stop\nwork there will only Infllot a hardship\non tlie families of miners, and It Is not\nJustified.\nA pithefld vole at Brechin was left to tbe\ndecision of the underground worker's, who\ndecided by 41 to 7 to continue working.\nDEVELOP MOLLY GIBSON\nCOMPANY  ARRANGE TO SPEND   170.-\n000 ON MINE\nMANAGER  TRETHEWAY CONFIDENT\nOF   FUTURE]   PROSPERITY\nKASLO NQTES.\nNew Launch Ordered\u2014News of the\nSurrounding Mines.\nIn about two weeks time Kaslo will\nhave another boat added to her neet of\npleasure launches. (J. \\V,. McAnn, K.\nC, has ordered from Ohio, an IS foot\ngasoline launch built entirely of steel.\nThe boat will carry ten persons and will\nhave a speed of nine or ten miles an\nhour and will be driven by a throe horse\npower gasoline engine. The boat has\nalready been shipped and is expected to\narrive in about two weeks time.\nThe completion of Hie Argeuta wagon\nroad this mouth will sec sOuib' activity\nup Hammi! creek, It Is understood that\nthe Argentu Mines, Limited, will commence the erection of a compressor plant\nand mill. The company have enough\nore in sight to keep a mill going an indefinite period. There is said lu be some\nlikelihood of the Lav inn group being\nworked as tlie new road runs within a\nshort distance of the properly,\nThe engagement is announced of R.\nMarpole and Miss Anna Holmes of Victoria. Dame Rumor says they are to\nbe married In the autumn. ML.s Holmes\nIs a daughted of colonel J. (!. Holmes,\nof Victoria, and a sister of W. J. Holmes, of Kaslo.\nA force of twenty men Is now employed at the Cork mill which is running\nsteadily aud giving satisfactory results,\nAt the mine ore is being broken down\nfor mill feed. In tho lower workings a\n'.strike of two feet of concentrating ore-\nwad struck recently which is in twenty\nfeet of concentrating ore and widening\nout.\nA crosscut is being driven on the Vera\nwhich is now in r>0 feet with 26 lost more\nto run before the lead is cut. A trail\nand bridge are also being built to this\nproperty. This property belongs to H.\nGiegorich, J. P, Miller and Clarence\nMoll ins.\nAdjoining the Vera, Louis Pratt, J, O.\nReagan and W. 13. Strathearn are working a group of three claims which have\nthe Vera lead. A tunnel is being run on\ntho vein. The Simcoe and Mis.-isquoi\nare tlie names of two uf the claims.\nFrank Helm and Win. Walton have\ntaken a lease and bond on Ihe Hell\ngroup adjoining the Gibson and commenced work last weak.\nLAMENTABLE   DEATH\nMr.*.  Dftmutln  atf   EtfisJhnd   IMJfiftakJonly\nTakes Carbolic Acid\n(Special to The Dally News)\nRossland, July 4\u2014Mrs. Emma Demuth,\nwife of Fred Demuth, manager of the\nWhite Bo;ir mine, was found ilncoiis 1 u-\nthis afternoon at U0, by her husband on\nhis return from the mine. Three physicians were summoned and worked two \\vn\\v~\nIn an effort to save her life. She hud taken\ncarbolic acid and died at 0:20.\nMrs. Demuth hud.been sick for two years\nand had nt times severe pains, it Is presumed she was attacked by pains and mistook the carbolic acid for her medicine.\nShe leaves a husband und eight clil'dn n\nto  mourn her loss.\nThe directors of tlie company now owning the property long known us the Molly\nGibson mine, have unlimited confidence In\nIts value. They have decided lo expend at\nonce on lis development |70,0.0. The con-\nlldenco is not misplaced, if the sale of\n60,000 shares on good terms and In one day\nis a fair criterion of popular estimation of\nthe value of the mine.\nT. Hi Tretheway, manager of tho property, arrived in Nelson lust evening.\nSeen at the Stralihcunn by a reporter of\nThe Daily News Mr, Tretheway said:\n\"Everything' is progressing favorably. Tlie\ncompany has put up $70,UW for development\nwork to begin at once. The reorganization\nof the coniivmy, of which 1 tod y iu th;\nlust time 1 wus here, was oomph ted on\nJune yo, tour days ago. The same day\ntHj,iH)o shares of stock lu the company, ihe\nLa Plate Silver Mining company, were\nsold.\n\"There Is now abundant capital for all\ndevelopment work. Everything ut the mine\nis going abend as 1 foreshadowed wlnn\nyou spoke to me lust.\"\nMr. Tretheway will remain in Neson\nfor several du>s. He Is well pleased with\nthe developments at the mine, und with\nthe iitiuudui arrangements of the oompany.\nHe is contltieut that tho Molly Gibson wl 1\nmaintain its position among the shipping\nand paying mines uf Kootenay.\nJUSTIFIES\nHIMSELF\nKing Oscar Makes Public\n\u2022 His Side of the\nStory\nMaintains Acts of 'he Storthing Were Un*\nconstitutional-Refuses a Bernadotle\nKing to Norway\nealy\nCELEBRATES THE FOURTH\nGivlllzed Now York Fires Revolvers in the\nAir\nNew York, July 4\u2014Despite lhe effoits of\nmany small boys nnd even big tVt.ows,\nfade 4th of July was comparatively quiet\nFire crackers exploded here and there\nand there were the usual number of casualties. In splto of ail regulations and police precautions, revolvers were fired Into\ntho air everywhere, the spent bullets doing\ntheir customary deadly work. More than\n100 men and boys were arrested for vMa-\ntlon of tho ordinance, Which f. rbids lhe\ndischarge of lire arms,\nWILL CONTINUE WORK\nWstern Federation nnd United Mine Workers DIsagreo\nVancouver, July 4\u2014A sptclal to th.i Province from Nannlmo says that trouble between tho Western Federation and tho\nUnited  Mine   Workers   at   Nunahno   has\nHOLDS   HEIt  OWN\nCanadian Manufacturers Surprised ut\nllsh Methods\nLondon. July 4-Tho Yorkshire post\nsome of our Canadian guests confess i\nthat we are much more alive iu our modernity than they had been ted to believe.\nIn the milling Industry this country has\nnothing to learn from Canada, - There another Industries In regard to which it Is\ncertain wo are not behind, and the fact\nthat so many Canadian Industries depend\nupon the existence of tunits while ours\nbold their own in the face of all fair and\nmucli unfair competition, shows wo are\nnut yet played out.\nTho Leeds Mercury commenting on lhe\nCM.A. visit, lays what In Cutiadi, in st\nImpresses Englishmen und Scotchmen is\nthe diffused well being of the mass of tlie\npeople. He sees squalor nowhere, never\nmeets a tramp or n beggar und everywhere he meets -pollieness, und nowhw\ncringing servility,\nTlie Sheffield Independent says Allen\nBaiter was held up to the scorn of the\nelectors as an alien from Canada. This Is\na pretty example of conservative admiration for the colonies to present tu our Canadian  visitors.\nCOLLAPSE] OF A BRIDGE]\nJamestown, July 4\u2014In a. rush to escape\nan Impending storm-, fit) persons were\nthrown Into the lake at l\u00bbrln at 10\no'clock tonight by the collapse of a sm.iil\nbridge over whcli the crowd wis hurrying,\nTen of them were taken to the hospital.\nOthers suffered   minor  Injuries.\nNEW RUSSIAN WAH MINISTER\nSt. Petersburg, July 4\u2014 Lieutenant-general Rldlger, chief of the chancellery of the\nwar office bus been appointed minister of\nwar iu succession to lleutenunt-gi n<ml\nSakhatoff, who recen'ly resigned, Lieutenant-general ru'.atzyu has heen appointed  chief of   the   general   stuff.\nARRIVES SAFELY\nNorfolk, Va., July 4\u2014The sloop Nomad,\nfrom the Brooklyn yacht club, which entered the Atlantic yacht races from Graves-\nend to Hampton Itoads, several days ago\nand for whose safely fivirs luul been expressed, arrived safely this afternoon.\nREVERB CYCLING HACKS\nRevere, Mass., July 4\u2014James Moran of\nCiie.Boa, today won the continued motor\npaced race begun last night at the Revere\ncycle track, making 12\\ miles and 7 hips In\nthree  and a half  hours  riding,\nFIRE COST $50,000\nBrahdford, Pa., July 4 \u2014 Ton business\nhouses and one dwelling at Roulette, near\nhere, were destroyed by an o\u201erly morning\nlire, entailing a loss of $50,000, The origin\nof the tire Is not known.\nSTOPPED THE FIGHT\nButte,   July   4\u2014The   sheriff  stopped   the\nHerieni-Neary    light   in    tire   Ilrst   round\nhere tonight.   Tho men weie schedulid to\ngo llu rounds.\nMORE BOMB THROWING\nPdelostok, KussUl, July \u2666-There was\nfiling In several streets today and n bomb\nwas thrown In tho centre of the town.\nIt Is reported, that several persons w.-re\nkilled.\nStockholm, July 4.\u2014The Associated\nPress Is in a position to state that an\norder for the mobilization of the Swedish army lias been issued and that a\nproclamation io this effect will probably be issued within a week.\nThe mobilization is intended as a\nmeans uf giving added force to any proposal for settlement which the special\ncommittee appolned by the Riksdag may\nmake to the Norwegian Storthing.\nKing Oscar granted a private audience\nto a correspondent of the press at the\nroyal palace today. Iu a lengthy conference bis majesty expressed his views\non tlie present situation, and said emphatically that he would never allow any\nuf his suns or his grandsons to accept\ntlie Norwegian throne. In speaking of\nthe attitude, of Norway, the king displayed deep emotion and expressed heartfelt\nsorrow at Norway's treatment of him\nafter 112 years of unceasing labor for its\nhappiness and prosperity,\nHis majesty said he wished to convey\nthrough the press his thanks for hundreds uf expressions of sympathy received\nfrom ihe United States. In the course\nof conversation, king Oscar reiterated\nhis official utterances regarding his position on the consular hill passed by ibe\nStorthing and the events which followed\nhis veto of it, and said:\n\"When the king of Norway considers\nthat the welfare of the country demands\nthat he shall veto a bill passed by the\nStorthing, his right to do so is unconditionally shbwfl in Norway's constitution, and be would be false to his oath\nif he does not exercise this right in accordance willi liis conscience.\n\"The constitution gives the Storthing\nthe power tu pass a measure over my\nveto, prescribing, however, that this\ncan only he done by the bill being passed by three consecutively elected Storthings. The consular bill was only passed by one Storthing.\n\"As king ol Norway, it was of the ut*\nmost necessity that 1 should always keep\nbefore my eyes the first article of the\nNorwegian constitution, which reads:\n'The kingdom of Norway is a free, independence indivisible and inallenabl\ncountry united to Sweden under one\nking.'\n\"-Therefore, it wus Imperative before\napproving a bill separating the consular\nsystems of Sweden and Norway that I\nshould consider ihe welfare and Interests of both countries, aud 1 had a perfect right as king uf Norway, to refuse\nmy sanction,\nThe refusal of the Norwegian cabinet\niu countersign my veto was inexcusable,\nas the constitution prescribes that the\nking may decide according tu his Judgment and that all Ills orders must be\ncountersigned by the cabinet.\n\"Thus tho Norwegian constitution, my\nown conscience and ray consideration of\nthe welfare ui both kingdoms led me to\nthe action of vetoing the consular bill.\"\nA .MILITARY CHAIN.\nOttawa, .Inly 4.\u2014At a banquet to the\nPeferlraro Rangers by tlie otllcers of fttie\ngovernor general's foot guards, at Ayl-\nmer, minister uf militia Borden said the\npolicy of tbe government was to establish a chain of military depots Erom the\nAtlantic to the Pacific, The dominion\nnow had strongholds at Esquimau and\nHalifax, and gradually the posts would\nbe established between to complete the\nline of defence across Canada.\nLIBERAL MEMBER ILL     -\nOttawa, July 4.\u2014Dr. Johnston, liberal\nM.P. for West Lttmbtoh, who is suffering from blood poisoning, was seized\nwilii a relapse yesterday. Very little\nhope of hia recovery is entertained.\nHAY'S IDEAL PLANE.\nSt. Petersburg1, July 4.\u2014The press,\nespecially the liberal organs, continue\nto pay high tribute to the late secretary\nHay as a man, a scholar aud a statesman, praising lhe almost ideal plane on\nwhich his'diplomacy was based.\nAGAIN DENY REPORTS\n\u00bb St. Petersburg, July 4.\u2014There is no\ntruth in the report published by the\nPetit Journal of .Paris of the mutiny of\ntwo Russian battleships ut Reval.\nWINNIPEG HIGHLANDERS.\nWinnipeg, July 4.\u2014A move is   being\nmade towards   organizing;   a Highland\nregiment In this city.\nTIPLIS  STRIKRS\nTin If, July 4\u2014The strikes are becoming\ngeneral hero, , ,,_. \u25a0 ,\u201e\nWOMAN'S   SUPPFRAQE\nPortland, July 4\u2014The Nutionul Woman's\nSuffrage   association   today   unanimously\nelected the*old otlie M, w.th the exception\nof vlce-prenldenl  at  laige and  auditor.\nAMONG THE PUQS\nButte,   Jiily 4\u2014Buddy   Ryan  of   Chicago\ntoday   knocked   out   George   Herbert  ot\nCalifornia In the 11th   i ootid.\n THE DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. 0., WE0NJ5SDAY, JULY 5, 1905\nWe are just unpacking a shipment of\nl)    U1UMKJHU1U)\nWe are showing all the latest designs and offer\nIn Dinner Sets, Tea Sets and\nOdd Pieces\nCombining the useiul with the ornamental, we\nhave a complete assortment of Jelly Glasses, in pints\nand half pints, Bean Jars, in half gallons and gallons,\nButter Crocks with lids, from 1 to 5 gallons, Flower\nPots, 4, 5, 6 and 7 in., Jem Jars, pints $1 per dozen,\nquarts $1.25 per dozen, half gallons $1.50 per dozen.\nHudson's Bay Co.\nImperial Bank of Canada\nHEAD OFFICE:   TORONTO\nCAPITAL PAID UP $3,000,000 REST   J3.000.000\nT. R. MERIUTT, President.    D. R. WILK1E, Vice-Pres. aud Gen. Man.\nBranches in British Columbia\nARROWHEAD, CRANBROOK, GOLDEN, NEI.SON,    REVELSTOKE, TROUT\nLAKE, VANCOUVER, VICTORIA.\nSAVINGS DEPARTMENT\nDeposits received and interest alio wed at current rates from date of opening account and credited half-yearly.\nNelson Branch\nJ. M. Lay, Manager\nTHE CANADIAN BANK\nOF COMMERCE\nPaid-up Capital, $8,700,000 Reserve Fund, $3,509,000\nHEAD OFFICE, TORONTO\nB. K. WALKER, General Manager       ALEX. LAIRD, Asst. Gent M&nagtt\nBANK MONEY ORDERS\n', M8UE0 AT THE FOLLOWINQ RATES I\nMend under    Seen*\nOver $3 and not exceeding $10    t centa\n\"   $10     \" \"        $30  10 centa\n\"   $30      \" \" $50  M centa\nThese Orders are Payable at Par at any office In Canuda ot a Chartered Bank\n(Yukon excepted), and at the principal banking points iu the United State*,\nMBOOTIABLI AT A PtXIU RATE AT\nTHE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE, LONDON, ENG.\nThey form an excellent method of remitting small sums of t\nwith safety and at small cost.\nSCHWEPPES\nThe Fnglish Soda Water and\nDry Ginger Ale\nM.W, YOUNfl & CO. .Montreal.   Agents for Canada and Newfoundland.   IWiK\nfHE DAILY NEWS\nPublished at Nelson every morning\nExcept Monday, by\nF,  J.  JMBANB\nDEFEAT OP MONOPOLY.\nThe dominion government, through\nthe minister of railways and canals,\nhaving definitely announced its policy\nregarding the V., V. & E. bill, It may be\ntaken for granted that the measure will\nnow become law without any further\nserious opposition. The representative!!\nof British Columbia in the federal parliament\u2014the seven members In the commons, and the three senators\u2014were\noblige dto make a long, desperate fight\nlor a competitive railway in southern\nBritish Columbia on terms that would\nhave been quickly and eagerly accepted\niby parliament in the ease of any other\nprovince. All the promoters asked\nfrom parliament was a valid charter,\nwith the right to make a southerly detour, crossing the International boundary line at the Slmilkameen river and\n\u25a0proceeding through Washington territory for a short distance and returning\ninto Canadian territory again,, east of\nlake Osoyoos, so as to secure a gradient\nof less than one per cont, an Impossibility if the line was to be constructed\nall on Canadian territory. It was\nAgainst that crossing   Into   American\nterritory the C. P. R. and Its friends\nin parliament made- such a vehement\nprotest. The impertinence of that protest is made plain, says the Globe, when\nit irf remembered that tbe C. P. It. itself crosses the boundary and gives as\ngood service to Seattle as to Vancouver,\nand that it was bonused hy the dominion\ngovernment to build across the state of\nMaine. The Canadian Northern dips\ninto the state of Minnesota in order to\nround the southern end of the Lake of\nthe Woods. There is not a railroad in\nOntario or Quebec or New Brunswick\nthat is denied, or would be denied, the\nright to croaa the bouudary und make\nconnections witb American roads.\nThe promoters of the enterprise are\nprepared to build the new line without\none dollar of public money or one acre\nof public laud or in fact, any favor of\nany kind. For years tbe people of the\ndistrict to be served by the new line\nhave been struggling to get railway facilities and with the unanimous support\nof all the accredited representatives of\nBritish Columbia, it would have been an\noutrage, had the opposition to the project succeeded in blocking tbe scheme as\nthey attempted to do. The battle has\nbeen practically won and great activity\nwill now ensue in that section of tbe\nprovince through which the new line\nwill run.\nOne pleasing aspect of the struggle\nnow happily drawing to a close, la the\nalmost unanimous way in which the\npress to tbe east of the Rockies came to\nthe aid of the western representative*\nThe final passing of the bill is now\nassured.\nThere is no Argument\nsslf m coatlnolng M the evidence of youreyes.\nThat is why\nI want you to see\nMy stock of High Class Clothing for men\nand Boys to be sold at coat.\n250 Suits Must Go At Once\nYou owe It to yourself and pookctboolc\n.to Inspect my pneea.\nJ. A. Gilker\nPOCKET KNIVES\nWe have In stock the finest assortment of Pocket Knives\never shown In Nelson, including a choice selection in the two\nmost iiopular grades.\nGeo. Wostenholm & Son,\nH. Boker & Co.,\n\"IXL,\" Brand\n\"Tree\" Brand\nalso a complete Une  of  general   cutlery,   Carvers,   \"Roynl\nOak\" Scissors, etc.\t\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co., Limitd\nNELSON\nWholsule arid Retail\nAuvergne course on which the international automobile race for the James\nGordon Bennett cup occurs tomorrow.\nAll the leading contestants have arrived, including Thiery, the winner of the\nHamburg race of last year, and Janltzy,\nwinner of the Irish course in 1903.\nSix countries are represented In the\nevent, Prance, Germany, Austria, Great\nBritain, Italy and the United States.\nThe race Marts at 6 o'clock tomorrow\nmorning. The course, which is about\n350 miles long, is divided into laps of\n87 miles each. It abounds in many\nbreakneck turns, making it unusually\ndangerous. About 7000 soldiers have\nbeen assigned to police the course.\nHeather\nLinen\nla the name of a correspondence station^\nery which is put up In tlio newest shape\nand tun s and finished In the linen texture\neffect which Is so popular Just now.\nAt a Very Moderate Price\nW. G. THOMSON, Bookseller and Stationer\nPHONE 34.\n; SHORTEST   SESSION\nCouncil Advances Fire Bylaw and Passed\nTramway Payroll\nThe city council's session yesterday morning was probably the shortest on record.\nIt lasted about five minutes.    The work\naccomplished  was  useful   though  not of\ngreat volume.\nThere were present, tho mayor, nnd ald-\njermon   I'.Snl,   M&cdouiuUd,   Annable  pud\nGlllett.\nOn motion of aldermen Annable and Glllett, the bylaw No. 159, for tho administration of the fire department, was read a\nthird time by title.\nCity treasurer Wesson presented thespay-\nroll for June for tho employees of the\nStreet railway system. The payroll wns\npassed and checks were ordered to bo issued In tho usual way.\nAlderman Annable gave notice Unit at\nthe next regular meeting he would niovo\nthat bylnw 159 be reconsidered, finally\npassed and adopted, Tha council then adjourned to Monday, July 17.\nHALF HOLIDAY SPOUTS\njust returned from a visit to several of\nthe best gardens in the valley, especially\nthat of A. D. Morrison, who has ra.sed\nevery concelvuble kind of fruit and vegetable with succtsi. Sp aklng of the tomato crop Mr. Morrison said; \"I have raised tomatoes here for years and never had\nany difficulty In ripening them.' Anyone\nwishing to eco a beautifully arranged vegetable and llowor garden should not fall\nto visit some of the residences within the\ncity limits,\nLittle Linda McRae, the eight year old\ndaughter of Peter MeHae, who was recently operated on for appendicitis, is rapidly\nrecovering. Br. Kingston who performed\nthe operation says the patient will be\naround   again   very  shortly.\nTho Oddfellows' excursion to Curlew was\na most enjoyable affair. The management\ncommittee  deserves great credit.\nWHOLESALE HOUSES\nPRODUCE\nBTARKEIt & CO., WHOLESALE DKAL-\ners la Butter, Eggs, Cheese, produce and\nFruit Houston Block, Josephine Street,\nNelson. B.C.\nGROCERIES\nA. MACDONALD & CO.-WHOLESALE\nGrocer* andi Provision Merchants.\u2014importers of Teas, Coffees, Spices. Dried\nFruits, Staple and Fancy Groceries, Tobacco*, Cigars, Butter, Eggs, Cheese and\nPuking House Products. Office and\nWarehouse, corner of Front and Hail\nBtreets.   P.O. Box 1095.   Telephone a\nEDITORIAL NOTES.\nReferring to the approaching provincial bye-election in Nanaimo the Victoria Times says that the fight will he\nbetween \"two residents of the most\nstrenuous political centre in the province, and will be worthy ot tbe political\nreputation of the base from which it\nWill be carried (on,\" proceeds to twit the\npremier on his evident anxiety to defeat Mr. Aitkeu, the liberal candidate,\nat all cost. Tbe forces which will be\narrayed against Mr. Altken will be\nstrong and determined, says the Times.\nThe government of Mr. McBrlde yearns\nwith exceeding earnestness ,we believe,\nto free Itself from the yoke of socialism\nthat hangs so heavily around Its neck,\nThe premier and Ills colleagues feel that\nthey are offending hcyong the point of\nforgiveness against conservative sentiment In preferring office to the sacrifice\nof the real interests of the province as\nthe one condition upon which office can\nbe retained. Consequently the forlorn\nhope of casting off tbe bonds so deftly\nwound by the socialist leader will impel\nthe premier to labor with desperation\nfor the defeat of Mr. Aitken. But the\nliberal candidate is resourceful and of\ntireless energy. He is a clever speaker\nand an nil-round campaigner, trained\nIn the school from which Ralph Smith,\nM.P., graduated, That in itself is a\nguarantee of something out of the ordinary In campaign work.\nThe American competitors in the\nathletic sports at Stamford Bridge, England, last week were badly beaten, only\ntaking ono event, the 220 yard dash.\nTbe usual form of the American was\nconceded to equal that of any of the\ncompetitors, but bard luck appeared to\nbe lheir lot. Had our Yankee cousins\nwon, the Canadian Associated Press,\nfrom its American supply would have\nbanded out half a column of Interesting\ndetails, to the Canadian newspapers. As\nit was not a line was sent about the\nseveral contests.\nIn celebration events here hardly\nenough is made of the lake as the city's\nbest asset from a celebration view point.\nPeople residing In nearby towns-not so\nfavorably situated In this respect always look for water sports and a trip\non tbe lake and the fact should be remembered when future plans are being\nmade. The launch races could be considerably improved and popularized by\nhaving a triangular course laid out on\nwhich the racing boats would always he\nin sight of spectators at'the starting\npoint. As it is the smart little crafts\nmake a very pretty sight, as they start\noff up the lake, but as they disappear on\nthe two and a half mile course, interest\nin their further movements Is lost by\ntho spectator. A triangular course as\nsuggested would sustain the interest\nand popularize the regatta.\nBIG POLITICAL STRIKE\nTo Be Undertaken to Show Sympathy\nWith Mutineers.\nSt. Petersburg, July 4.\u2014The   executive committee of the   social   revolutionists has issued   a stirring   appeal,\nsumming workmen and all classes of\nsociety, Interested In the overthrow of\ntliB present regime to show sympathy\nwith nil those who hud fought for freedom at Lodz, Warsaw, Odessa and\nat other places, as well as the sailors\nwho mutinied at Odessa and Llbau, by\nInaugurating a political strike.\nTho workmen's leaders here have supplemented this by proclamation calling\nfor a general strike for Thursday next.\nOver 25,000 men are already out and\nmore or less disorder lias occurred.\nBOUNDARY MINING.\nStrikes ou the   Seattle   Miue   and on\nBonanza Mountain.\n[Speclui to The Dally News)\nGrand Fortes, July 4\u2014Fred H. Knight\nof the Green wood-Strath more, and Free-\nmont high grade properties Is at present visiting his brother C. W. Knight\nat Vancouver. He will remain at the\ncoast for several weeks.\nRobert Clark of the Seattle mine, was\nin town yesterday and stated that the\nlong looked for ore body bad just been\nstruck in the 340 foot tunnel which has\nbeen run on that property. The width\nof the vein Is some three feet, and in\ncharacter it is a rich copper ore. This\nnew strike is considered of great importance by the management. The Seattle\nproperty was one of the original locations on the north fork and for over\nfour years was in litigation. Finally\nthe title was cleared and the property is\nowned by the Clark-Seattle Gold Mining company. It was some time ago\nbonded to the Trail smelter company\nfor 1100,000 hut the bond' was\nthrown up. A few months ago it was\nagain bonded to Messrs. Pemherton and\nHunter for a large sum, and considerable work in the form of tunnelling has\nbeen accomplished.\nOluff Johnson, proprietor of the Gem\nrestaurant here, left today for Midway\nwhere he will open another restaurant.\nE, Spraggett, provincial road supervisor, left here this morning with a\nforce of men for the upper north fork\ndistrict for the purpose of continuing\nthe work on the Franklin camp wagon\nroad.\nThe Grand Forks volunteer lire brigade composed of eleven picked firemen,\nleft here this morning for Republic\nwhere they will have li hose reel contest\nwith tlie Phoenix and Republic teams,\nThe contest will consist of a hub and\nhub race, and a wet test. The prizes\nwill be $50 and $25.\nE. R. Knight, who has mining interests on Bonanza mountain, some 15\nmiles from here, has just brought some\nexceptionally fine ore specimens In,\nThey were taken from' the Fairview\nclaim ou bVmanza mountain. Fully\nthree feet of this ore has been struck.\nNative copper has also been found in\nconsiderable quantities on the property.\nPEACE NEGOTIATIONS\nGreat Britain is Not Interfering In the\nMatter\nSt. Petersburg, 5uly 4.\u2014In diplomatic\ncircles it is felt that Great Britain-could\nrender service by timely advice to her\nally but so far as known she Is not supporting president Roosevelt's efforts.\nShould the president be able to successfully arrange the preliminaries it appears certain that negotiations for an\narmlstico will be concluded directly between field marshal Oyama and general\nLlnevltch on tbe battlefield In Manchuria.\nFRENCH AUTO RACE.\nCourse is Very   Dangerous\u2014Contest la\nRepresentative.\nDeschamp,   France,   July 4.\u2014Great\nanimation prevails here and along the\nAssociation Football Arranged for Athletic\nMerchants\nTho old opponents, the grocers nnd dry\ngoods men, having exhausted the possibilities of lacrosse and baseball, are pre*\npared to try conclusions at association\nfootall tomorrow afternoon. The grocery\nmen feel confident that they have at last\nfound n game at which they can wreak\nvenReance for the two defeats they have\nBuffered.; A, Pool of tho Bell Trading\ncompnny, Is manager for the grocers; J.\nH, Wallace and Dr. Hall will organize\ntlie forces of the dry goods men and their\nallies.\nTho hour for beginning the match\ncould not be determined yesterday. There\nlire several athletic attractions for Thursday afternoon. A baseball game \"Is announced for 2 o'clock: and the y,ost|>omd\ncricket match between the boat club and\ntho Nelson cricket club-was fixed fur 4\no'clock. Doubtlessly arrangements enn he\nmade for all three events to take place.\nBIG COAL BLOCK\nC. N, P. Coal Company Send Exhllt to\nPortland Fair\nTlio Crow's Nest Pass Coal compnny\nhas prepared a novel exhibit tor the Lew's\nnnd Clark exposition at Portland, It Is a\nhuge block of coal the dimensions of which\narc 3x1x7 feet. The block wns mined in\nNo. 2 mine, Conl Creek. The work of getting it out and placing It ou ft car for\nshipment was rather difficult, but It was\nsuccessfully done without breaking or\ncrumbling. Thlfl block of cool will doubtless create a sensation at the big fair.\nThere is no better coal mined than that\nof No. 2 mine, Coal Creek.\nThe company Is also sending a fine\nsample of Fernie coke, weighing in all\nabout 300 pounds.\nCAN GROW ANYTHING\n(Special to The Dally Newa)\nGrnnd Fork?, July 4~A goneralNmpres-\nBion has prevailed that although the Kettle\nriver valley mn successfully raise all\nkinds of fruit In abundance, It wus almost\nnext to Impossible to rlpon tomatoes here\nowing to the condition of the atmosphere in\nthe  early  fall.    Your correspondent hns\nUNHAPPINESS DISPELLED.\nMen anil Women Unanimous About It.\nMany women weep and wall and refuse\nto be comforted because their once magnificent tresses have become thin nnd\nfaded. Muny men Incline to profanity\nbecause the flies bite through, tho thin\nthatch on their craniums. It will be good\nnews to tbe miserable of both sexes, to\nlearn that Newbro'a Herpiclde lias been\nplaced upon the mnrket. This Is tho new\nscalp germicide and antiseptic thnt nets\nby destroying the gorni or microbe that\nIs tho underlying cause of nil hair destruction. Herpiclde Is a now preparation, made after n new formula on an\nentirely new principle. Anyone who hns\ntried it will testify ns to Its worth. Try\nIt yourself nnd be convinced, Sold by\nlending druggists. Send 10c; In stamps\nfor sample to The Herpiclde Co., De-\ntroll, Mich.\nCANADA DRUG ft BOOK COMPANY\nSpecial Agents.\nCLAJSTOEIIR\nR. D. Evans, discoverer of the famous Cancer Cure, requests anyone\nsuffering with cancer to write him.\nTwo days' treatment will cure any\ncancer, external of Internal. No\ncharge until cured,\nR. D.  EVANS, Brandon, Man.\nLAUNCHING OF THE KATORI0\nLondon, July 4.\u2014-Prince and princess\nAii'usugawu, of Japan, attended the\nlaunching of the battleship Katori at\nBarrow on Fumess today. The Katori\nis one of the most powerful battleships\never launched in this country.\nCAMP   AND    MINERS'    FURNISHING*\nA. MACDONALD & CO.-WHOLRSALB\nJobbers in Blankets, Underwear. Mitt*,\nGloves, Boots, Rubbers, Overalls, Jump*\nera, Mackinaw s and Oilskin Clothing.\nCamp and Miners' Sundries. Office and\nWarehouse, corner of Front and Hall\nStreets.     P.O. Box 1086.   Telephone 88.\nASSAYERS' SUPPLIES\nTHE QUEEN'S HOTEL\nBAKER STREET\nMRS B. C. CLARKE, Proprietress,\nRATES 93 PER DAY.\nLarge  and   comfortable  bedrooms  and\nfllrat class dining rwm.   ouitiyitj iwm for\ncommercial moo.\nDEATH\n\u2022 On the 2nd instant at Nelson, British\nColumbia, Canada, Agnes, the dearly beloved wife of William' Blakemore, and\nsecond daughter ot the late Joseph\n.Tenks, of Wolverhampton, England.\nInterred at Nelson, July 4th.\n(Eastern Canadian and English papers\nplease copy.)\nlifebuoy Soap\u2014disinfectant\u2014is strongly\nrecom mended by tha medical profession u\nr uafeguard against infectious diseases.     w\nArrow\nLake.\nB.C.\nHalcyon\nHot\nSprings\nSanitarium\nUNDER NEW MANAGEMENT\nharry Mcintosh\nOf the Hoffman House, Rossland,\nPROPRIETOR.\nTHE B.C. ASSAY ft CHEMICAL SUPPLX\nCo., Ltd., Vancouver, B. C\u2014Importers\nand Dealers lu Assayers' Supplies. Sols\nagents in British Columbia for the celebrated Battersea Crucibles, Scorlflera sjhV\nMuffles and Wm. Ainsworth & Co.'s fins\nBalances, Chemical and Physical Apparatus, C. P. Acids and Chemicals, Phv\ntinum, Sodium and Potassium Cyanide,\nQuicksilver, carbonate and Bicarbonate\nof Soda, Borax, Borax Glass, Sliver Free\nLead and Litharge.\nMINING   AND   MILL   MACHINERY\nWASHINGTON MACHINERY A SUPPLY\nCO.\u2014Dealers in Engines, Band and Circular Sawmills, Atkins' Haws, Wood and\nIron Pulleys, Ley nor Compressors and\nDrills, Pumps and Hoists. Prompt attention. Reasonable prices. Courteous\ntreatment.   Spokane,  Wash.\t\nThe most complete health resort on\nthe continent of North America Accommodation for 100 guests Good Ashing, boating and hunting.\nTerms $12.00 to $18.00 per week, according to residence in hotel or villas\nA doctor in attendance.\nRound trip tickets, good from Friday\nto Monday, ?5.80; good for SO days,\n$7.50.\nFor further particulars apply to\nHarry Mcintosh\nPROPRIETOR.\nHALCYON HOT SPRINGS.\nWe Will Sell\nCheap\n5000 Yale-Kootenay Ice.\nThis block of stock must\nbe sold at once, as the\nowner is in need of money\nMarconi Stock\nWe have both American\nand Canadian Marconi\nStock for sale in any\nquantity.\nSharp & Irvine\nBROKERS\nBox 1083 Nelson, B.O.\nTHE\nO.K. BAKERY!\nIs hero to stay, and If you nave   e\nnot given us a trial ring up \u2022\nPhone 165\nThere   can   be   no  mistake,\nevery loaf Is stamped\nO.K.\nCrawford & Hay\n^Stanley  Street\nFOR RENT\nROOMS and ofllces K.W.C. block for rent.\nH. M. Brydges,\nFURNISHED Rooms suitable (or light\nhouse keeping, Macdonald block, over\nr*\u00ab Dully NewB office.\nFURNISHED room to let, bath, for lady\nor gentleman in private family.  Close In,\nX.Y.Z., Dally News. \u201e_\nASSAYERS\n3. W. WIDDOWSON, CHEMIST AND A3-\nsayer, Nelson, B. C.-Gold, sliver or lend,\n$1 each; Copper, $1.50; Gold-Silver, II.GO;\nZinc, $2.50; Qold-Sllver-Copper, 12.50.\nSamples arriving by mail or express will\nreoelvo prompt attention. P.O. drawer\n1108; Phone A 07.\nCLEANING AND  PRESSING\nGENTLEMEN'S suits repaired, cleaned,\nand pressed. Goods called for and delivered. Agent for Crown Tailoring company,\nsuits from $15 up. A, j. Driscoll, opposite\nQueen's Hotel.\nFOK SALE\nOLp CURIOSITY SHOP- If you want to\nbuy or aell anything go to the Old Curiosity Shop. Always In stock a full line of\nCrockery, Furniture and Glassware.\nFOR SALE\u2014Assay outfit, including scales,\nvery cheap.   Apply to P.O. box 63, Siocan City, B. c.\nWHY go to your neighbors to do your\nSewing when you can rent a first class\nmachine with all modern attachments from\nthe Singer Sowing MacMnt Co. for |3 per\nmonth, Oil, 15 cents por bottle; needles,\n25 cents per dozen. Singer Sewing Machine\nCo., Baker street.\nFOR SALE\u2014Half Interest In the SandoK\nDairy, situated half mile from town, best\nlocation In the country, no opposition,\neverything In Ilrst class order, a good bargain to tlie first comer. For particulars\napply to P.O. box 171, Sandon, B.C.\nFOR SALE\u2014Gasoline launch, 10 feet long,\n2 1-2 horse power engine and boat house.\nApply box 184, Nelson, B. C.\nIMPROVED ranch for sale, close to town,\nno reasonable offer refused. 8. M. Brydges.\nWANTED\nvnusrvM Employment Aeency.\nWANTED\u2014Pinner, setter, edger, sawmill\nmen, laborers, bushmen.\nNURSE\u2014Maternity nurse open for engagements;  do   not   mind   light   housework.\nCommunicate   Mrs,  J.   F.   Delancy,  Now\nDenver, B. C.\nWANTED\u2014Summer boarders; gentlemen\nrequiring change of air will find comfortable quarters across the lake, Excellent\ntable; 15 minutes from boathouse. Apply\nMrs. Adams, box 508, Nelson.\nFOR RENT\u2014Success club furnished. bedrooms,   newly   renovated.    Terms   very\nmoderate, apply Mrs. Altkman, caretaker-\nhouse opposite Success club.\nWANTED \u2022\nApply H.,\n\u2022 Girl for general housework.\nDally^ News.\nWANTED-Some clean nags at once,\nply Tlio Dally News offlce.\nWANTED-About   eight   gentlemen   for   a\nprivate mess,    Apply Mrs. Blood, back\nof Hudson's Bay store.\nWANTBD-Posltlon hy technical graduate\nIn electrical engineering four years' experience with direct and alternating current. Address Electrlca, care Dally News.\nWANTED-Girl to asfdst In general housework and  care  of child.    No  washing.\nApply   Mrs.   Fullerton,   Carbonate   street,\nabove Hendryx.\nSOCIETY CARDS\nABERDEEN HIVE. No. U, L. O. T. sf.-\nVeeti 2nd and 4ft Wednesday, 7:80 p.m.\nof each month In K. of p. Hall, Vernon\nStreet, next to post office. Visiting members cordially Invited.\nMARY MATTHEW, 1*0.\nMINNIE RITCHIE, Record Keeper\nNELSON LODGE, NO. 59, INDEPEN-\ndent Order of Good Templars, meete\nevery Thursday evening at 8 o'clock In\nFraternity hall. Visiting members are\ncordially invited to attend.\nW. H. CALDER, C.T.\nG. KING,  Secretary.\nPLUMBING\nWe tse prepared te do all kinds el\nplumbing, steam and gas fitting, on tM\nshortest notice. Estimates given. B. X.\nStrachan   ft   Co.,   Baker   Street   Nelson\nCAMPION & CARTER\nCommission   and  Real   Estate  Agents,\nNELSON,  B.   C.\nWe have several eholce blocks of fruit\nland on Kootenay river and lake, In lots\nfrom 10 to 220 acres, Improved and unimproved, prices reasonable. Some good bargains.\nA. R. HEYLAND\nPROVINCIAL LAND SURVEYOR.\nPOPLAR AND KASLO\nADDRESS P.O. BOX 107, KASLO, B. ft\n HUM DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C, WEDNESDAY, JUNE B, 1905\nmm\nFor Going Away.\nThere is comfort fa every fibre\nof Fit-Reform Outing Suits\nFor the summer home and the\nsummer resort\u2014for seashore and\nmountains\u2014there is nothing dressier\nand more serviceable.\nReal Irish Homespuns\u2014light, thin,\nsturdy -- woven expressly for Fit-\nReform.\nThat means uncommonly well lnade-\nand exclusive patterns.\nCoats and Trousers (2 pieces) .... $12 up.\nOuting Suits . $15 up.\nThis trademark identify, every genuine\nFit-Reform garment.\nLook for label with\ntrademark and price\nas fixed by maker*.\nTag Ml) Fit-Rilim Wardrobe bin It\nEmory & Wallcy,   Nelson, B.C.\nWe are desirous that our Monthly Stock\nSheet should go regularly to every Mine Manager or Superintendent in British Columbia and\nAlberta. If you do not receive a copy already\nwe would be glad to add your name to our\nmailing list. \t\nThe Jenckes Machine Co., L,\n'imited\nROSSLAND\nWman\nfie HILL MINING\nNELSON, B.C.\nPurchases\nLead, Copper\nand Dry Ores\nProcter's Bargains\nFor Sale-\nFor SuIg\u2014Throe Improved ranchca\non   Weat   Arm   of  Kootenay   lake.\nThat  well known summer  reaort\nknown :u> the Outlet Hotel.\nREAL   ESTATE   and\nINSURANCE BROKER\nFor Rent\u2014\nPor Rent\u2014The property known aa\ntho Macfnrlnnd residence, large\nroomy house and grounds.\nStoro on Baiter street, now occupied by J. P. Weir. For terms.and\nparticulars apply\nT. G. Procter\n\u2022\"*\u25a0<\nP. BURNS \u00a7 CO.\nWHOLESALE AND RETAIL\n:m:b.a.t 3wtBRaia:-A.3srTS\nHEAD OFFICE NELSON, B. 0.\ntraneo Harkata tn Rouland, Trail, Nelaon, Kaslo, Baudot), Tiro* Fork*,\nNew Denver and Siocan City.\nOrttora by Mall to any Branch will hare Prompt and Careful Attention.\n.W.G. GILLETT\nCONTRAOTOR AND BUILDER\nSOLE AGENT FOR THE PORTO RICO LUMBER CO.. Ltd., Retail Yards\nRough nnd dressed lumber, turned work and brackets, Coast lath\n-and shingles, aasli and doors.   Cement, brick and lime (or nalo. Automatic grinder.   Yard and Factory Vernon street, east of Hall.\nP. 0. Box 232.\nTelephone, 178\nNelson, B. 0.\nbough LUMBER vm&m\nft**.*. Wli-dow, Moulilnfi, Bnlnstui, Turned Work and Brackets,\nM sasttfeta an*, up-to-date stock alwayi on band. Mill arasu pro\u00ab\u00bbUy tttantsfl U>\nA. C. LAMBERT <t CO.\nFernie Foundry and Machine Worlds\nRepairing and lob Work a Specialty,  Brass Caatlnga Hade to Order.\nBEAN BROS.      KSSVa\nBERRY CMP A BUMPER\nLAST YEAR'S   YIELD   MORE THAN\nTRIPLED.\nDEMAND  IS FIVE TIMiES AMOUNT\nOF SUPPLY.\nThe output of berries has received a\ntremendous Impetus this year through\none cau^e and another, the shipments\nbeing three limes as large as those of\nlast year aud yet a fifth of the demand\nIs not being supplied V Next year there\ntwill be a large addition acreage laid\ndown in berries along the shores of\nKootenuy lake from Bonulngton Falls,\non tbe lower river, to Kootenay lauding,\nat the south end of tlie lake, fifty miles\nabove Netsou. Un Sunday morning last\na trip on the Crow boat, the Kokanee\nwas interesting. The twenty mile run\nto Prater, at tbe entrance of Kootenay lake, occupied some three hours.\nAs each little bench or piece of Hat or\ngently sloping foreshore was approached as surely was to be seen a white flag\nwaving. A lauding was made and a\nnumber of crates of berries were found\npiled up, from five to 2(111. By the time\nProcter was reached over 400 crates had\nbeen taken in. The same amount, rather larger iu fact, was taken up yesterday aud will be taken up for a week to\ncome as has beeu the case for the past\nten days. Then the number will begin\nto dwindle but during the six weeks of\ntbe season It Is estimated that the yield\nwill be upwards of lu.OUU crates, netting\nthe producer about $2 per crate.\nLast year tho yield was 4000 crates.\nThe year before 2000, at which figure the\nshipments had beeu more or less stationary tor several years, since the introduction of the berry some six years\nago by captain Seaman, who by the way\nis now running the Kokanee.\nThe borrles are grown partly by white\nsettlers and partly by Chinese, or by\nChinese working for white people. They\nare picked by the Kootenay Indians,\nwhose tepees are now to be seen scattered all along the lake aud who pick\nthe berries for 30 cents the crate. There\nwas some trouble experienced in getting\nthe Indians this year as last year tbey\ncommitted some infractions of the game\nand forest laws and being promptly\nrouuiled up, quitted the snores of the\nlake In disgust. But now Ihey say the\nlake ranchers are \"heap good.\"\nThe total product is about equally\ndivided between Chinese and Caucasians\nwith the former rather in the majority\nlor the present, but as new settlers\ncome in the prepondereuce Is likely to\nbe reversed in short order.\nThere is yet plenty of room left on\nthe lake for fresh settlers and land la\nstill tu be had, selling from $20 to $3(1 to\n$70 the acre depending largely upon the\nvicinity to Nelson, although the C. P.\nIt. service Is about equal to any place\nalong the lake, or river. Seeing the\ndemand the ranchers have all declared\ntheir intention ot pulling In a much larger acreage in strawberries, using for\nthe most part, laud now uncleured for\nthat purpose.\nThe dealers declare that they have orders aggregating in the whole uot less\nthan 3000 crates a day but that they are\nrarely able to supply more thau 600 but\nnoxt year tbey hope to have a different\nslory to tell.\nWhat has helped out in a very great\nmeasure is the placing of a fruit refrigerator car upon the run by the Dominion\nExpress company. A car load lot can\nbe made up Iu a couple of days, easily\neuougu as a car will only take from 700\nto 360 crates and the berries are .sent\nInto Winnipeg, 1401) miles, without any\ntrouble und arrive in good condition.\nL.ist year, shipping the wrong kind of\nberry, wtongly packed, short in weight,\nWithout the refrigerator car, meant the\nspoiling of thousands of dollars worth\nof berries. Winnipeg dealers were disgusted aud so were the home growers\nami tho business came near having a\nserious setback. All this is now altered.\n1 iio crates are packed Lit the approved\nboxes or pans, they are up to weight,\nthe dealers' agents, Messrs, Brewer and\nCarter, opening and repacking and rejecting faulty crates, the refrigerator\ncar began running on Saturday last for\nthe first time und will be running regularly now two or three times a week\nund tho growers, Instead ol contenting\nthemselves with the pale colored, but\nlargo and soft New York berries, are\ngrowing berries of'a durker color, not\ntoo large to serve for a breakfast berry,\nof a llrut texture, aud of good shape,\nthat will ship well without turning color\nand consequently the prospects before\nthe tuuehers are good indeed.\nAmi this Is not half the story about\nthe fruit. The strawberries are only\ni;oing out when the raspberries are coming In. There Is a magnificent crop of\nroijpbiiries now under cultivation, Mr\nE-iVier declarlnt; lhat one rancher n\u00bb:ir\nthe outlet of the lane, having us finj a\ncrop as any In the whole province. And\nthere are also gooseberries, currants\nand cherries coming ulong. Cherries\nare doing wonderfully well and a small\nshipment or two has already been made\nThere are lens of thousands of fruit\ntrees planted, cherries and pears and\napples, prunes and plums, nnd the\nrancher Is mostly cultivating the small\nfruits while his orchards are growing\nup.\nThis district has been most noted for\nIts mining in the past and while that Is\ndestined to grow to a much greater volume than it at present attains, yet the\nfruit industry is going to establish itself second. The local market Is about\nfifty crates dally and that Is wholly supplied by the near by ranches and this\nproduction Is not reckoned in the shipments of which account is here being\npartially made.\nZtNC AND LEAD ORES\nThere Is QuicK Relief From\nTORPID LIVER\nin Fruit-a-tives.   And they are a positive cure for constipation and all\nblood impurities. Those who have used these marvelouslittlefruitliver\ntablets are the ones who praise them warmest.   Here is one of hundreds of\ntestimonials from those who owe their good health to Fruit-a-tives :\u2014\n.... \"We tried Fniit-n-tives ami like them exceedingly. We happened to need sncti it\nmud and harmlessI liver tpnic and Ishall keen Fniitn-itves by me always, flow that! have\nused them and find they do me so much good.\" \u201e,\u201e M, ,,. \u201e1CHAR11S, Calesry, N.W.T.\nor Fruit Liver Tablets,\n50c. .1 box.   At druggists. Manufactured by Frult-a-tlves Limited, Ottawa.\nj Porto Rico Lumber Co., Ltd.\n2 Manoracturers of and Wholesale Dealers In\n\u2022\n\u2022 RODQH AND DRESSED LUMBER, iHJNOLBB AND MOtHJJINQS. BAND-\n\u2022 .AWN AND THBNBD WORK.   AN  UP-TO-DATs) DRY  KIHI  IM  COH-\n\u2022 sMCWOH.\nMILLS AT YMM\nPorto Rico Lumber Co., Ltd.\n\u00bb\u00bby\u00bb > \u00bb\u2666\u2666\u2022\u00ab\u2666\u00bb\u2666#<\nL\/it\n\u2666HMIMMM 4\nduty of 30 cents per ton fur zinc ore has\nbeen collected. The Missouri and Kansai\nZinc Miners' association lias appointed and\neent before the treasury department at\nWashington four men from that section,\nwho have now returned, and will r< emu-\nmend that an attorney be appointed and\nalso an advisory board to assist hlin to\nbrills* the subject more properly before the\ndepartment. These gentlemen were received by scretary Shaw at Washington to\nwhom thy mude their objections to the\nway the law was being carried out. Tliey\nInsisted that under Its provisions an ad\nvalorem lux of E0 per cent, should be\ncollected on the nine value of the imports\ninstead of ono and a half cents por pound\nfor its metallic leud value. The committee\nfigures that If proper restrictions are made\non the Importation of Canadian ore that it\nwlli .increase the value of the Missouri-\nKansas output fully $15,000 per week. The\ncommittee proposes to bring tho matter\nbefore tho congressmen by brief memoranda statements of the existing conditions\nand Implore their support to have the\nmatter brought to a satisfactory termination, favoring tho homo product. Tho\nCookrel Zinc company has asked and been\ngranted a hearing by the department, und\nit developes that other reduction works\nare opposing tlie plans of ucitou taken by\nthe zinc ore producers of the two states.\nIt is stated that representative Grosvenor\nof Ohio, one of the fminers of the bill, has\naddressed a letter to tho treasury department espousing the desires of the prodtie-\nors and urging an Investigation of the original Intention of the bill. The treasury\ndepartment has decided upon an Investll-\ngation of Its own without taking into\nconsideration the pie.us of either of the\ncontending parties. The parts of the bill\naffecting the ore most particularly reals\nas follows; Iu section lsl, \"Lead bearing\nore of all kinds shall bo tuxud ono und ono\nhalf cents per pound on all load contained\ntherein.\" In section 183 is found, \"Metallic mineral substances In a crude form\nund metals unwrouglit, not necessurlly\nprovided for In this act, shall be taxed\n20 per cent ad valorem.\" So far tlio treaa-\nury department has ruled against placing\nzinc Importations under section 1&I, but\nthe future course will depend on the investigation now being made hy the department and the heurlngB to be had by tho\ndepartment during tho next few days. Iu\neither wise, whichever way tho department\nmay conclude tu rule, the matter is likely\nto go through the courts for final settlement.\nlater on. It Is the samo in buying Chamberlain's Colic1, Cholera and Dia\u00bbrhoea\nRemedy. It costs but a fe wcents but a\nbottle of It in the house often saves a doctor's bill of several dollars. Por sale hy\nall druggists and dealers,\nJames Band, proprietor of the Grove\nhotel, Palrvlew, has had that favorite\nsummer resort nicely fitted up. It Is con-\nvenlently locnted within half a block of the\nstreet car line and good meals and the best\nof liquors and cigars make it a popular\nhouse of call. Drop In any time when\npassing and sample BomB of those choice\nthlrit uuencherB always on tap.\nCANADIAN\nPACIF1\nRAILWAY\nCHOLERA INFANTUM\nChild Not Expected to Live from Hour to\nHour, but Cured hy Ohamberliln's Colic, Colera, and Diarrhoea Remedy.\nRuth, the little daughter of E. N.  De-\nMvey of Agnewvllle, Va., was seriously ill\nof cholera Infantum   last  summer.    \"We\ngave her up and did nut expect her to live\nfrom one hour  to another,\"  he says.    \"I\nhappened to think of chamberlain's Colic,\nCholera and Diarrhoea Remedy and got a\nbottle of It from the store.    We kept on\ngiving It and before she hud taken half of\nsmall   bottlu   she   wns   well.\"     This\nremedy  Is  for sale  by  all  druggists and\ndealers.\nBASEBALL  TOMORROW\n mm\nAmericans Want to TnjrB. C. Ores Going\nInto the United States\nConsiderable comment hns heen made In\nthe Missouri-Kansas district during the\nlast few weeks on the Question of competition of British Columbia sine and lead\nores coming tn competition with the product of that section almost free of duly,\nsays the Chicago Mining World. Tho law\nunder which shipments have been made Into the United States from this district, a\nPractice Game by Local Teams to Get\nReady for Rossland\nThe Nelson baseball club has arranged\na practice match for tomorrow afternoon\nat 2 o'clock, In preparation for the game\nwith Rossland on Sunday afternoon. The\nteams will be selected from the following\nplayers: A, Bishop, H. Bishop, Blewett,\nDavison, Doyle, Quay, Oatcs, Sharps, Mal-\nlette, Kelly. Loring. Parrot, Steel. Vlgneux,\nDavison, Turner, Foiherlnghum, Travis,\nHolland and Houston. The personnel of\nthe team to meet Rossland on Sunday will\nhe decided after Thursday's grnno.\nThe Rossland team It Is understood Is arranging for a special excursion train to\nNelson, as many Rossland sportsmen wish\nto see the game,\nA week from today the Nelson baseball\nteam will leave for Cranbrook where they\nare schedulod to play on Thursday, July\n13.\nSummer .\nExcursions\nEast\nNelson, Rossland, Trail,\n90 Day Limit\nJune 28, 29, 30\nAshliury Park       8E.35\nBaltimore        81.2G\nJuly 5\n\u2022Buffalo         7C 2Fj\n\u2022Portland, Maine      92.70\n\u2022Selling dates to bo announced later.\nCorresponding rates from all Kootenay points.\nFor further particulars call on local\nagents or write,\n3.  B.  CARTER,               B.  J.  (JOYLB,\nD.  P. A. A. O.   P. Agt.\nNelson. B. n. Vancouver. B. C.\nNelson Steam Laundry\nP. O. Bui U   Telephone Ma,\nAll kinds and all colon of Ladlee' ut\nOuts' Ololhlng\nCLEANED AND DYED\nFlannels, Blankets, Curtains, Bilks, tttc\na specialty.\nGloves renovated to look Ilk* new.\nSteam Carpet Gleaning\nYeur patronage solicited.\nPAUL NIPOU, Prop.\nST. ANDREW'S COLLEGE\nTORONTO\nLAKEVIEW\nHOTEL\nComer Ball ul Yemen Street!\nTwo blocks from City wharf,  Tka I\n\u2022allar a day house In Nelson,\nho oaiNiittii mtpbOYan\nPROPRIETOR.\nSunnyside Hotel\nNELSON, B. C.\nRATES II PER DAT\nThe Sunnyside has nicely furnished bedrooms, lighted with electricity and U\u00ab\ntable Is tho best in Nolnon for the price.\nThe hotel Ib on Baker street, one Mock\nfrom the C.P.R. ana G.N.R. union depot\n\u25a0\u25a0* itauoro void on the Drwnlsw\nTREMONT   HOUSE\n\u25a0tmOPBAN AND AMERICAN PLAN\nMBAIJ) Bo.    ROOMH H'HOU *0 TO H.a>\nMA.LONS ft TREOILT.CS, Proprtat.nl\nBaker Street. Nelaon\nBABTLETT   HOUSE\n(Formerly Clarke House)\nThe beat 51.00 per day house in Kelson\nNone but white help employe*.   The V:*\nla the best\na. W. BARTLETT - Prop.\nmm OEnTnAL HOTEL\nOpposite Courthouse and new Poatofflai.\nBest 2&e meal In town. European and\nAmerican plan. Only white labor employ-\nML   Tint close bar.\nMcLeod Hotel\nCORNMt\nITCS9T AND   SECOND  AVSNITB\nYSVSIR. B. O.\nCentrally located, rebuilt ana refumianaa\nthroughout All modern improvements.\nSample Rooms in connection. The enlv\nfirst eiaas hotel In Tmlr.\nRATES FROM U.M UF\n glrn^AY MnLKOn, Propria**'\nGRAND HOTEL\nCor. Howard and Main sts\u201e\nSPOKANE\nBritish Columbia People\nWill And a homo In Spokane at the\nOram] Motel. Recently remodelled and\nrefurnished.\nUnder the management of H. B.\nPhalr, laic of Hotel Phalr, Nolson, B. C.\nAll British Columbia papers on file.\nEuropean plan. Rates 75 cents to J2.00\nper day.   Free bus meets all trains.\nROYAL HOTEL\nTrcr.rcpiioNE 5a\nMRS. WM, ROBERTS, Proprietress\nThe best meals tlint enn be provided in\nthis market, cooked under ihe supervision of tho proprietress, who is a faraous\ncaterer,\nNice nlry rooms, newly furnished; bath\nfor guests.\nThe best wines,, liquors and cigars can\nbo obtained at the bar.\nTERnlS: $1 AND $1.60 PER DAY\nCOR. STANLEY AND SILICA STREETS,\nCars pnss tho door\nMadden House &&,*&\nDo yon neod a eomiortable hornet If w\ntry the Madden House. Well furnishes\nrooms lighted by electricity; first class\nbeard, in the bar you will find all tfci\nbest domestic and imported liquors ai *\nclff&ra.\nTHOMAfl MADDEN,  Proprietor.\nMINISTER PREVOST SWORN IN\nQuebec, July 3\u2014J, B. B, Prevost, member\nfor the provincial legislature for Terrebonne, was sworn In today as minister of\ncolouizntlon, mines and fisheries, a new\nportfolio,      t \\[\"     j \u2022\nONE DOLLAR SAVED REPRESENTS\nTEN DOLLARS EARNED\nThe average man does not save to exceed\nten per cent of his earnings. He niunt\nspend nine dollars In living expenses for\nevery dollar saved. This being the oaBe he\ncannot be too enrcful about the unnecessary epxonso. Very often a few cents properly expended, like buying seeds for the\ngarden, will save several  dollars outlay\nA   RESIDENTIAL   AND   DAY   SCHOOL\nFOR  BOYS\nUpper and lower school.    Hoys prepared\nfor Matriculation and  Royal Military College.  Separate Junior residence, Handsome\nnew buildings, opened In September; thoroughly modern; attractive in appearance!\n24 acres of playtleld, situated In North\nRosedele, Toronto's healthiest district.\nChurch street car line.\nAutumn terms commences Sept, 12, 1005,\nWrite for Information.\nREV.   D,   BRUCE  MACDONALD,   M.   A.\n Principal\t\nFRUIT LANDS\nFOR SALE\nIn 10 acre blocks, In 20 acre block*;\nseveral Improved ranches.\nJ. E. ANNABLE, Nelson. B. P\nFrederic S. Clements\nCIVIL ENGINEER\nDOMINION   AND   PROVINCIAL   LAND\nSURVEYOR\nAgent for obtaining Crown dranti, mine\naurveylng, etc.\nRoom 16, K.W.C. Block\nP. O. Box 1 Nolson, B.C.\nOxford Cafe\nNEXT    DOOR    TO    OFFICE ffiALOON,\nWard Street\nMerchants Dinner from 12 noon to 2:30\np.m., 25 cents.\nShort order meals at nil hours, Open day\nand   night,\nFrank Lin Lun\n Manager and Cook\nFRANK C. GREEN\nCIVIL ENUINEBK\nDominion anil  Provincial Land Hur*ey\u00abr\nP   O   Roy 'W     ''tinnf *n p\nCor.  Kootenay nnd Victoria SK, NolH-m.\n\"\"rSffi?-.?' \"V'ationa for Diaooaal aa\ntShWL\u00b0& ^mmion Lands In ManS\nYukon TerteMt Terrl\"\u00bb',M \u2122\"^5\ntnVoll m'\u2122r,i ha,v|nK discovered mineral\n\u00bbr gactlon.   The fee for recording a clali\nhaving a eurvtw \u2122Sj2 '\u00b0cator  may,  upon\not thoTocati\u21220' the M\"\u00bb \u00b0' \"\u00bb \u00bb\u2122\"\u00abti\n\\ln'>.  re-fl. Jo[\u00a3,renewable yearly.\nfoot sauare:\nWMm\u00ae\ntomb o \u25a0flv\u00bbm!?,'X may \"\u00bb'\u00bbln only two\nSpp^ol^aa\nall   persons   who   have    of 55.   \u00ab2fi\n,JJ.1, f,\"?M \"ha\" have a dredge In opera,\ntlon within one season from the dote oftK\nlease for aaoll rive miles, hut wherefa neS\n\u2022on or company has obtained mora ffiS\none lease imo drcdKe for earkft\u00bbu? ~vS\nannam0'!?\" 'S \u2122<\u00bb\u00b0'\u2122t.\"t'tuVB\nannum for each m le of river leaant.\n?r,a,tv\u201ent.1^ rat0 \u00bb' \u21225 and a halfSr\ncent eolloctcd on the output after I. Sk.\nceeds  Jlo.lKK). wiupur. alter It es*\na\u00b03n SaaSRfor *,e\u2122\u00bb' lajsss\nThe lessee's right is confined to tie atib-\nSSlCJnboi\u00b0,,'i.bar\u00bb '\" \"\u00bb river below low\nwater mark, that boundary to be fried b\u00bb\nta position on the Ilrst day of Auirurt li\nthe year of the date of theTleaaeV^ \u25a0\nnl'\"; ,'?^M.sllail hava one dredge in opera-\n1 i'i!.\"jv,\"f\" \"J\"\" the\"tIaXoTtE\nwmfi'n \u00b0Si ?2Ldr?\"ge \"\"\u2022 \u201eeac\" flve mile!\niii \u2122. ii*\"J\u2122 ^r\"ro \"\u00bbca onte. Rental\n5n\u00abpf\u2122m\"0if\"r t,'ie nrat >,Mr and fio per\nmllo for each subsequent year. RoyalEr\nsame as  placer  mining. \u00abuyru\u00bb\n\u201e''accr Mining In the Vuknn Territory-\nCreA. gulch,  river ami  hill claims \u00abKut\nih'J h,redi.a\" \"'e, ln ,\"\"\u00ab'1' \"\"Sired1 S\nthe base line or  gonenil direction of tha\nto \"wi'W01;,,11\";,wi,it!' '\"-'I'\"t 'rom m\nbe \u00bb test \"a A\u00b0thw 1,\"\":er clttlma \u2022\"\u2022\u00bb\nClaims are narked by two legal posta.\n\u00b0\u2122 \" <\"\";'! pad, bearing notices JtatS\nI\" i .'\"' \u00bb1;'\"I\"L>.! within ten days, If tS\n\u00bb . ? \"\u201eW\"\"S '''n mllc?s \"' a M|n'\"K R*\u00bbS\n5.f,\"     tS' \u00b01\u00b0 e*lr\" Say la allowed for\neach additional ten mllea or fraction.\nm\u201e?t\" i!\"7ison ,\u00b0r company staking a claim\nmust hold a n-en, miners cerllllcate.\n,\u201e \u2122 i fov,Sr.\u00b0' \" new mlne Is entitled\nto a claim 1000 feet ln length, nnd If tM\nparty consists of two, 1600 feet altogether,\nin the output of which no rnvaity shall\niLms'miiy.       \"*\" \"' the party \"dinar?\nEntry fee J10. Royalty at tho rate of two\nand a half per cent on tlio value of tka\ngold shinned from tho Yukon Territory\nto be paid to Ihe Comptroller,\nNo free miner shall receive a grant of\nmure than one mining claim on each sen-\narate river, oreek or gulch, but the same\nminer may hold any number of claims by\npurchase, and free miners may work their\nclaims in parliiershlp by illlng notice and\npaying fee of K. A claim may bo abandoned ami another obtained on the asma\ncreek, gulch or river, by giving notice and\npaying a fee.\nWork must be done on a claim aaok\nyear to the value of at least ;200.\nA certificate that work has heen dona\nmusl iw obtained each verti\" I. not, the\nclaim shall lie deemed to be nliiiridoned', and\nopen to occupation and entry by a free\nminer.\nTlie boundaries of a claim may be de-\nflnril absolutely by having a survey made\nand publishing notices In the Yukon Official\nQnzette.\nPetroleum\u2014All unappropriated Dominion\nLnnds In Manitoba, the Northwest Territories arid within the Yukon Territory are\nopen 10 prospecting for petroleum, and the\nMinister may reserve for an Individual or\ncompany having machinery on the land\nto be prospected, an area of 1920 acres for\nsuch period as be mav decide, the length\nof which shall not exceed three times tha\nbreadlb. Should tho prospector discover ell\nin paying quantities, and satisfactorily establish such discovery, an area not exceeding tMO acres, Including the oil well, will\nbe sold lo tho prospector at the rate of\nIt nn acre, ami tbe remainder of the tract\nreserved, namely 1280 acres, will be abld\nat tho rate nf \u00a3] por acre, subject to\nroyally at such rate aa may be epeelflad\nby Older ln Council.\nW. W. CORY.\nDeputy of the Minister of the Interior.\nDept.   Interior.   June 30, U04\n..June\n..Juno  I\nThis store, will close Thursday\nafternoons during Jine, July\nand August.\nWest Kootenay Butcher Co.\nMlantio S,S, Sailings\nC. P. R. ATLANTIC 3. 8. LINB\n(From Montreal)\nL. Manitoba. Juno lb.  ciiam|ilain..Ju. II\n(To   London   Direct)\nMt,   Temple..June   W Montrose\nALLAN  LINH\n(From Montreal)\nBavarian ....June  WVIotorlan   .\nDOMINION LINE\n(From Montreal)\nDominion    ..June    III Ottawa    June  I?\nATLANTIC TRANSPORT LINB\nMinneapolis..June   10 Minnehaha..Juno  17\nAMERICAN LINW\nSt, Louis ....Juno 17 New York....June It\nRED  STAR  LINE\nVauerutnd ....June 17Finland   June 10\nCUNARD  LINE\numurln  Juno 10Caronla   ....June   11\nL\"*-'\u00ab\u00bbla  June U\nWHITE   STAR LINE\nMajestic  ...June   14Oceania  June .1\nialtic    Juno   vwcedrlo    June   U\nFIUSNCH   LINH\nLa Savolc,...junu  l;\u00bbLa  Timralne..Jun\u00ab I\nHAMBURG AMERICAN\nMollke    Juno   l&Bleinjher   ....June   I\n(Mediterranean Service)\nPrlnz Oscar jUI10 n\nPrlnz Adalbert  June V\nNORTH GERMAN LLOYD\nKaiser Wllhelm u  junB u\nGroHHcr Kurfuerat  June W\n(Mediterranean Service)\nKolng Allien  June W\nKonlgln   Lulso   juno M\nAll continental rntes and aalllnffB on application. If you are contemplating taking\nan ocean voyage drop us a lino and wt\nwill be plenaed to furnish you with full In\u00ab\nformation promptly.\nJ. S. CARTER,        W. P F. CUMMINS,\nD.F.A., HeUtR,      0*B. *\u2014    \u2014\u2014.\u2014\n THE DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. 0., WEDNESDAY^ JULY  5,  19o\u00a3\nESTABLISHED 1878\nINCORPORATED 1897\nHENDERSON\nDIRECTORIES\nPUBLISHERS OF GAZETTEERS\nAND BUSINESS DIRECTORIES\nManitoba and Northwest Gazetteer and Directory\nBritish Columbia Gazetteer and Directory\nCITY DIRECTORIES\nWinnipeg, Victoria. Vancouver\nLAND NOTICES^\nTAKE NOTICE-Sixty days after data\nI Intend to apply to the Hon. the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Worka at Victoria for permission to purchase the following described land, beginlng at a post\nnear the north bank of the Kootenay river,\nWest Kootenay District, marked W. Clayton's southeast corner, thence west 40\nchains, thence north 40.chains, thence east\nforty chains, thence south 40 chains to\npoint of commencement, containing one\nhundred and sixty acres more or less.\nW.   CLAYTON.\nThrums Siding, May 24th, 1905.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that 60 days\nafter date I Intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works at Victoria, to purchase 160 acres of land In\nWest Kootenay District, and described as\nfollows: Commencing at a post placed\nabout half a mile north of the 3rd mile\nboard south of Castiegar and marked\nJ.A.C. S.E. corner, thence west 40 chains,\nthence north 40 chains, thence east to Columbia and Western railway, thence aouth\nalong said railway to place of commencement.\nMay  24th,  1906.\nJ.  A, CRYDERMAN.\nTIMBER NOTICES\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I Intend to apply to the\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, situated In the Little Siocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked S.E. corner C. Hair-\nsine, running west 80 chains, thence nortn\n80 chains, thence east 80 chains, thenco\nsouth 80 chains, to point ot commencemw.l\nC. HAIRSINE.\nF. PROVOST, Agent.\nLocated May 24th, 1905.\nHenderson Publishing Co.\nLimited Liability,\nVancouver, B.C.\nJAMES HENDERSON,\nManaging Director.\nHenderson Directories,\nLimited,\nWinnipeg, Man.\nJAMES HENDERSON,\nPresident.\nJAMES SELBY HENDERSON.\nManager and Secy-Treas.\nMembersj)i ^Association of American Directory Publishers.\nrf'f'fHfHfMf^^\nLEAVE THE WEST ALONE\nPARLIAMENT    HAS    THE    POWER\nBUT NOT THE RIGHT.\nTORONTO    NEWS    ON    MEDDLING\nWITH THE WEST.\nThe literature circulated iby tlie lobbyists against the Victoria, Vancouver &\nEastern railway project Is patriotic iu\nthe highest degree. \"\u2022Canada for Canadians\" Is their motto. The people of\nBritish Columbia may imagine that the\nnew railway will be tor their benefit,\n\u25a0but the broader Interests must be considered and a Canadian policy adopted.\nMr. Hill's policy is \"to run many\nbranches from his main trunk Hue to\ntap the mineral wealth Of Canadian territory, enrich American cities, and in\nthe process impoverish Canada.\" Does\nanyone suppose that the Canadian Pacific, the Grand Trunk or the Canadian\nNorthern would refuse profitable American business because they feared that\nSome Canadian interest would suffer?\nif any such saciillce were demanded,\nthey would answer that they were run\non business principles, lhat they had\n-powerful rivals in transportation, and\n\u25a0COUld not afford to neglect any means\nof .strengthening their position.\nThe dominion parliament Is under no\nobligation lo supplement tho protective\ntarl fflby discouraging railway communication between the two countries.\nThe protective tariff Is the same for the\n\u25a0whole dominion. If we were to adopt a\npolicy of supplementing protection by refusing charters for railways crossing\nthe border such policy must be made\nuniform. There must be no bridges\n<across the Niagara, and no tunnels under the Detroit river. We have no\nrlghi to impose on the western provinces\na policy that we are not willing to adopt for ourselves. There is no test except the Question whether the people of\n\u25a0British Columbia, or Alberta, or Saskatchewan want a particular railway.\nFancy the people of British Columbia\nassuming to dictate ln these matters to\nus, and telling us that by refusing permission to railways to cross from Michigan to Ontario We could convert Windsor into a city like Detroit.\nTbe notion lhat the Western provinces are wards, or dependencies, or colonies of ihe eastern provinces, and must\nbe subjected to a benevolent despotism\ndies hard. Parliament Is exercising a\nfatherly control over Alberta and Saskatchewan in educational matters. It\nis now asked to stand between British,\nColumbia and a railway company that\nis willing to give it additional railway\nfacilities without a dollar of subsidy.\nIn past years tbe attempt was made to\nrestrict Manitoba in both ways. Lo\nCanada calmly lays down tlie law that\nMr, Haultain, the premier of the territories .must not be called upon to form\na government for either of tbe two new\nprovinces. Mr. Monk wants to force\nthe use of French as an official language on the new legislatures. The conservative members of tbe Railway Committee seem to be anxious to take a\nhand in the work of coercion. What is\nthe basis of this idea that Canada from\nthe lakes westward Is in a state of tutelage? As population grows, the west\nwill be able to laugh at this ridiculous\nassumption of superiority. At present\nwe have the power, but not the right,\nlo meddle with the affairs of our partners in tbe confederation.\u2014Toronto\nNews.\nTALKS   TO   RETAILERS\nMaking Sure of Results From General\nAdvertising\nMr.   General Advertiser!\nThe first tangible return from your\nmoney,   when invested   In   space,   whether\nthat space be rilled with '-general advr-\ntlslng\" or witli \"mull order advertising\"\nIs an  Inquiry for your goods,\nThat Inquiry mny he verbal to a clerk\nover the counter, or it mny be by mull In\nwritten, stamped and posted letter.\nHut in either ease it Is just an Inquiry\nfor tho goods, of one sort or another, It\nla tlie first practical evidence Unit the\nmoney spent is earning something tangible  for you In return.\nNow, it may take twice or three times\nns much conviction In copy to make a\nconsumer write nn Inquiry for goods, and\npost It, as It would have taken to maka\nthe same consumer Inquire verbally for\ntho poods advertised, when passing a store\nthat should sell them.\nHut, when he does Inquire verbally from\na retailer there are twice or three times\nas many chances of substitution, of \"don't\nkeep it\" or \"here's something belter,\" as\nthere would lie had the same consumer\nwritten direct for It by mail.\nTherefore the udverilsement that sends\nconsumers to retailors, should be ns full\nof conviction as the successful mail order\nadvertisement ln order to fortify tlio consumer against substitution, etc.\nBecause, If tho advertisement falls to\nfortify the consumer with \"reason why\"\nand conviction, it may simplly s nd him to\na retail store, to be switched onto a competing line of goods With which the retailer\nis heavily stocked or which the clerks favor\nthe sale of in preference to ours.\n. In that case the advertising we pay for\nwould sell tlie goods of our non-advertising competitors,\nHalf the money spent to \"Keep tlie name\nbefore tlie public\" results today in th s\nsubstitution of non-advertised articles for\nthe articles advertised through general\npullolty.\n\"General publicity\" copy, when- tested\nIs found in almost every instance too\nweuk to sell the goods profitably' by mull.\nAud any copy which Is not strong enough\nto sell goods by mall, Is not strong enough\nlo make the consumer resist substitution\nand the \"don't keep that kind\" Influence\nof retail conditions.\nIt must therefore give him better reasons\nwhy ho should buy our goods than lie is\nlikely to hear from tho retull salesman for\ntha competing goods that salesman may\nwant   to   substitute.\nAnd it must give him these reasons why\nin such lucid thought form that ho can\nunderstand without effort, so Impressively\nthat he will believe our reasoning claims.\nIt must also do this In spite ot his natural\ndistrust of all udvertlsed statements.\nThis means that wu must put Into general advertising copy the precise qualities\nthat would bo necessary to sell goods profitably by mail.\u2014Printers' Ink.\nNOTICE is hereby given that 60 days\nafter date I Intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and WorkB at Victoria, to purchase 160 acres of land in\nWest Kootenay District, and described as\nfollows: Commencing at a post placed on\nthe west side of the Columbia and Western railway, about 200 feet south of the\nfourth mile post south of Castiegar and\nmarked J.H.R.C. N.E. corner, thence west\n40 chains, thence south 40 chains, thenoe\neast to tlie Columbia and Western railway,\nthenco north along said railway to place\nof beginning.\nMay   24th,   1906.\nJ. H. R.  CHRISTIE.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that 60 days\nafter date I Intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works at Victoria, to purchase 100 acres of land In\nWest Kootenay District, and described as\nfollows: Commencing at a post placed on\nthe west side of tlie Columbia and Western\nrailway, about 200 feet south of the third\nmile board south of Castiegar, and marked\nP.W. N.E. corner, thence west 40 chains,\nthense aouth 40 chains, thenoe east to\nsaid railway, thence north along said\nrailway to place of beginning,\nU*y   24th,   1806.\nPETER WARREN.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that 60 daya\nafter date I Intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works at Victoria, to purchase 160 acres of land ln\nWest Kootenay District, and described as\nfollows: Commencing at a post placed on\nthe west side of tho Columbia and Western railway, about 200 feet south of the\nthird mile board south of Castiegar and\nmarked H.F.A. S.E. oorner, thence west\n49 chains, thence north 40 chains, thenoe\neast to the Columbia and Western railway,\nthence south along the said railway to\nplace of beginning.\nMay   24th,   1905.\nH. F. ANNABLE.\nNOTICE is hereby given that we, the\nYale-Columbia Lumber Company, Limited,\nof Nnkusp, B. C\u201e Intend sixty days from\ndate, to apply to tho Chief Commissioner\nof Lauds und Works for. permission to purchase the undermentioned truct of land:\nCommencing at a post on the South Limited of Columbia & Western Railway,\nabout one half mile enst of Westley Station, marked Yale-Columbia Co.'s northeast corner, running thence south 20 chains,\nthenco enst 80 chains, thence north 20\nchains, more or less, lo the south Limit of\nthe Columbia & Western Railway, thence\nwesterly along lhe said railway 80 chalnB\nto place of commencement.\nTHE YALE-COLUMBIA LUMBER CO.,\nLimited.\nJ. G. BILLINGS, Secretary.\nMay 25th, 1905.\nBUY   IT   NOW\nNow  Is  the  time   to  buy   Chamberlain's\nColic, Dlarrohea and Cholera Remedy, It la\nIMPROVED\nFarm Lands\nSituate near Midway, the point from\nwhich the lines to the Similkameen\ncountry start.\n500 ACRES\nYoung orchard, easily irrigated, well\nfenced, good buildings. Stock can be\npurchased nt a valuation.\nFor price and terms apply\nFrederic W. Maine,\nAgent for C.P.R. Lands, Greenwood, B.C.\ncertain to be needed sooner or later and\nwhen that lime comes you will need It\nquickly. Buy It now It may spve life,\nPor sale by all druggists and dealers.\nMIXING RECORDS\nAt the mining recorder's ohlce on Tuesday the Active Cold Mining company recorded the locution of the Magly on the\nsouth fork of Porcupine creek. Robert\nMcCormick recorded the location of the\nTogo fraction on the southwest slope of\nthe hill between Bird creek and the cast\nfork of Rover creek.\nCertificates of work were issued to G. R.\n0. O'Drlscoll on the Royal Irish and to\nSam Thomas on the Roderick Dhuc.\nA transfer was recorded from Hugh\nSutherland of Winnipeg and John A. Gibson of Nelson to C. R. Holmes ami A, H.\nNell of New York of a twenty-fourth interest in the Annie G., Tamarack, Storm\nKing, Robber King and Nowell, on white\nGrouse mountain. In tlie Goat river country.   Consideration nominal.\nA transfer was recorded from J. F. Blair\nof Fernie to R. R.Shmm of Vmlr, of a\nhalf interest in the Buffalo and Good Hope\nminora! claims on the south fork of Porcupine creek.     Consideration, |187.65.\nMusical evening, Baptist church, Wednesday evening. First class program and\nstrawberries and loe cream.   Admission 36c.\nNOTICE is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I intend to apply to the\nChief Commissioner of Lands and WorkB\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, situated ln the Little Siocan, West\nKootenay-District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked N.E. corner M. Provost, running aouth 80 chains, thence west\nSO chains, thence north 80 chains, thence\neast 80 ohalns, to point of commencement.\nIf. PROVOST.\n9. PROVOST, Agent.\nLocated May 24th, 1805.\nMusical evening, Wednesday nt Baptist\nchurch, Admission 35c. Including refreshments,\nNOTICE Is hereby given that 30 days\nafter date I Intend to apply to the Cliief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works for a\nspecial license to cut and carry away timber from the following described lands,\nsituate on Lemon crock. West Kootenay,\nDistrict, B.C., commencing at a post planted about seven miles from the moni.ii and\nmarked Paul Martin S.E- corner, running\nwest 80 chains, thence north 80 chains,\nthence east 80 chains, thence south !i0\nchains, to point of commencement.\nl\u00bbAUL MARTIN.\nV, PROVOST Agent\nLocate* May 27th, 1806.\nTIMBER NOTICES\nNOTICE Is hereby given lhat 30 days\nafter date I Intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works for a\nspecial license to cut and carry away timber from the following described lands,\nsituate on Lemon creek, West Kootenay,\nDistrict, B.C., commencing at a post planted one mile west of Oro and marked Cailex\nBray N.W. corner, running east 80 chains,\nthenco aouth 80 chains, thenco west SO\nohalns, thence north 80 chains to point of\ncommencement.\n.SALLEX BRAY.\nS\\ PROVOST Agent.\nLocated May 29th, 1996,\nNOTICE Is hereby given that SO days\nafter date I Intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works for a\nspecial license to cut and carry away timber from the following described lands,\nsituate on Lemon creek, West Kootenay,\nDistrict, B.C., commencing at a post planted on the south line of Oro, marked Zotl-\nque Ls Blanc S.E. corner, running south\n80 chains, thence west 80 chains, thence\nnorth 80 chains, thence east 80 chains, to\npoint of commencement\nIEOTIQUE LE BLANC.\nr. PROVOST Agent.\nLocated May 28th, 1905.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty days\nafter date I intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Worka for a\nspecial license to cut and carry away timber from tlio following described land in\nthe Siocan district: Commencing at a post\nmarked T. Muivey's northwest corner post\nand planted on the north side of Robson\ncreek, about three miles from Siocan City,\nthence southeast 80 chains, thence south\n40 chains, thence west SO chains, thence\nnorth to point of commencement.\nT. MULVEY.\nLocated,  May 24th, 1905.\nNOTICE is hereby given that thirty days\nafter date I Intend to apply lo the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands und Works for a\nspecial license to cut and carry away timber from the following described land in\nthe Siocan district: Commencing at a post\nmarked J. W. Crow's southeaat corner\npost, planted on the north side of Robson\ncreek, about Ave miles from Siocan City,\nthenco west 80 chains, thence north 40\nchains, thence east 80 chains, thence to\npoint of commencement.\n,r. w. crow,\nT. MULVEY, Agent.\nLocated,  May 24th,   1905.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty days\nafter date I Intend lo apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works for a\nspecial license to cut and carry away timber from the following described land in\nthe Siocan district: Commencing nt a post\nmarked D, J, Graham's southeast corner\npost, and planted on the north side of\nRobson ereek, about four miles from sioonn\nCity, thence west SO chains, thence north\n40 chains, thenco east 80 chains, thence\nsouth 40 chains to the place of commence-\n\u25a0Mttta\nD. J.  GRAHAM.\nT. MULVEY, Agent,\nLocated, May 24th,  1906,\nKOOTENAY RAILWAY ft NAVIGATION1\nCOMPANY,  LIMITED\nKislo and Siocan Railway Company\ninternational    Navigation    ant    Tradlm\nCompany,\nTIME CARD\n\u2022t   loeal   trains   and   steamers   \u2022ttoctlvi\nMarch 7th. 1904\nKASLO-SANDON\nDally Ball)\n1:30 p.m. Lv Sandon Ar 10:25 a.m\n2:1'2 p.m, Lv....Whitewater Ar 9:40 a.m\n3:45 p.m. Ar Knslo Lv. 8:00 a.m\nKASLO-NBLSON\nDally Da\"?\nEx. Sunday Ex. Bunda)\n6:00 a.m. Lv Kaslo Ar. 9:15 a.m\n7:30 a.m. Lv Ainsworth....Ar.   8:16 p.m\n10:00 u.m. Ar Nelson Lv 6:46 p.m\nCalling at all  way  landings on  signal\nNELSON-SANDON\n5:46 p.m. Lv Nelson Ar 10:00 a.m\n,0:25 a.m. Ar Sandon Lv. 1:30 p.m\nThrough   dally   freight   and   pasaenge1\nlervlce between  Nelson and Sandon.\nFor further Information and full parties\ntn call on or address\nROBERT IRVING,\nMgr. K. R. and N. Co, ItU\nKaslo, B. C.\n\u00bb  \u00abt VACEAUTTMT. fcoosJ AsW*\nMrfL WOOD\nIt will pay you to keep Chamberlain's\nColic Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy In\nyour house. It only costs a quarter. Bold\nfest nil dmgjlsts and deslsrs.\nFOR SALE CHEAP - \"Bravo\" Diamond\ndrill und small Rand Compressor plant.\nApply to Essex Grlfflth, Rossland, B.C.\nFOR SALE-Oreen 4 foot slabs In lots of\nfive cords or more nt $2,25 and up according to place of delivery. Ten. cord lots\nor up at $2.15; green short slabs, 16 Inch,\nIn lots of five cords or more, $2.60 Large\nquantity of dry short and 4 foot slabs\nalways on hand. Prompt delivery. Terms\noash.   Kootenay Shingle oompany,\nNOTICE la hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I intend to make application to the Honorable the Chief Commissioner of Lands and Works.for one special license to cut and carry away timber\nfrom tho following described lands, situated on the east side of the Little Siocan\nLake, In tlie West Kootenay District,\ncommencing at a post planted on the\neast bank of tne aforesaid lake, about 120\nchains from tlie head, running north 80\nchains , thence east 80 chains, thence\nsouth SO chains, thence west 80 chains,\nto point of com men cement.\nGEORGE   SOUSEY.\nSiocan, B. C, May 24, 1905,\nNOTICE is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I Intend to apply to tire\nCliief Commissioner of Loads and Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, situated In tho Little Siocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked N.E, corner Clair\nMabee, running south 80 chains, thence\nwest 80 chains, thence north 80 ohalns,\nthence east 80 chains, to point of commencement,\nCLAIR MABEE.\nF. PROVOST, Agent.\nLocated May 24th, 1906.\nNOTICE ls hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I Intend to apply to the\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to out and carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, situated in the Little Siocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked S.E. corner A. D.\nHurdle, running west 80 chains', thence\nnorth 80 chains, thence east 80 chains,\nthence south 80 'chains, to point of commencement. '\nA. D. HARDIE.\nF. PROVOST, Agent\nLocated May 24th, 1906.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that 30 days\nafter date I intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works for a\nspecial license to cut and carry away timber from the following described lands,\nsituate on Lemon creek, West Kootonay,\nDistrict, B.C., commencing at a post planted one mile east of Oro and marked W.\nLeduc S.E- corner, running west 80 chalnB,\nthenoe north 80 chains, thence wist 80\nchais, thence south 80 chains to point of\ncommencement,\nW. LBDUC.\nF. PROVOST Agent\nLocated May 28th, 1906.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I intend to apply to the\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, situated in the Little Siocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked N.E, corner E. R.\nMabee, running south 1C0 chains, thence\nwest 40 chains, thence north 160 chains,\nthence east 40 chahu to point of commencement\nE, K    MABEE.\nF. PROVOST, Agent\nLocated May 24th, 1906.\nNOTICE is hereby given that thirty\ndays after dato I intend to apply to the\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, situated in the Little Siocan, Weat\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked N.E. corner Ell Provost, running south 80 chains, thence west\n80 chains, thence north 80 chains, thence\neast 80 chains, to point of commencement.\nELI   PROVOST\nF. PROVOST, Agent.\nLocated May 24th, 1906.\nNOTICE ls hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I Intend to apply to the\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, situated ln the Little Blocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing nt a post\nplanted and marked N.E. corner Fred.\nCooper, running south SO chains, thence\nwest 80 chains, thence north 80 chains,\nthence east 80 chains, to point of commencement.\nFRED COOPER.\nF.  PROVOST, Agent\nLocated May 24th, 1906.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I intend to apply to the\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from tho following described\nlands, sltunted in the Little Siocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked S.E. corner William\nCurrle, running west 40 chains, thence\nnorth ltiO chains, thence east 40 chains,\nthenco south 160 chains, to point of commencement.\nWILLIAM   CURR1E.\nF.   PROVOST, Agent\nLorvrt May 24th, 1906.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I Intend to apply to the\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a Bpecial license to cut and carry\naway timber from ihe following described\nlands, situated ln the Little Siocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked S.W. corner Joseph\nSaulter, running north 80 chains, thence\neast 80 chains, thenct south 60 chains,\nthenco west 80 chains, to point of commencement.\nJOSEPH  SAULTER.\nF.   PROVOST,   Agent\nLocated,   May   24th,  1906.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that 30 days\nafter date I Intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Worka for a\nspecial license to cut and carry away timber from tho following described lands,\nsituate on Lemon creek. West Kootenay,\nDistrict, B.C., commencing at a post planted about ono mile east of the first falls\non Lemon creek, and marked Alexander\nMartin N.E. oorner, running south 80\nchains, thence west 80 chains, thence north\n80 chains, thenco east 80 chains, to point\nof commencement\nLocated May 27th, 1906.\nALEXANDER MARTIN.\nF. PROVOST Agent\nNOTICE Is hereby given that 30 daya\nafter date I Intend to apply to tho Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Worka for a\nspecial license to out and carry away timber from the following described lands,\nsituate on Lemon creek, West Kootenay,\nDistrict, B.C., commencing at a post planted two miles east of Oro and marked\nPeter Leduo N.E. corner, running south\n80 chains, thence west 80 ohalns, thence\nnorth 80 chains, thenoe east 80 chains to\npoint of commencement,\nPETER LEDUC.\nF. PROVOST Agent,\nfeoeated May IRfc, I*.   4< j ZJIBtaX:\nTIMBER N0TI0E8\nNOTICE is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I intend to apply to tha\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from tlie following described\nlands, situated in the Little Siocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a pott #\nplanted and marked N.E. corner Raul Provost, running south 80 chains, thence west\n80 chains, thence north 80 chains, thenct\neast SO chains, to point of commencement\nRAUL  PROVOST.\nF.   PROVOBT,  Agent\nLofietfU May 24th, 1905.\nNOTICE is hereby given that thirty\ndaya after dnte I intend to make application to the Honorable the Chlof Commissioner of Lands and Works for one special license to cut and carry away timber\nfrom the following described lands, situated on the enst side of the Little Siocan\nLake, ln the West Kootenay District,\ncommencing nt a post planted on the\neast bank of the aforesaid lake, about 1M\nchains from the head, running south 80\nchains, thenoe east 80 chains, thence north\n80 chains, thence west 80 ohalns, to place\nof  commencement\nJAMES  M.   FARRELL.\nSiocan, B. C., May 24, 1906.\nNOTICE is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I intend to make application to the Honorable the Chief Commissioner of Lands and Works for one special license to cut and carry away timber\nfrom the following described lands, situated on tho east side of the Little Siocan\nLake, ln the West Kootenay District,\ncommencing at a stake planted 00 chains\nfrom the foot of Little Siocan Lake, running north 80 chains, thence east 80 chains,\nthence south 80 chains, thence west 84\nchains, to place of commencement,\nJ.  1ft.   KAB,\nSlooan, B. C, May 24, 1906.\nNOTICE ls hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I Intend to apply to tho \u2014\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, situated In the Little Slooan, Weat\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked, N.E, oorner Joseph\nLalonde, running south 80 ohalns, thenos\nwest 80 chains, thence north 80.\nthence east 80 chains to the point Of t\nmencement,\nJOSEPH   LALONDE\nF.   PROVOST, Agent\nLocated May 24th 1906.\nNOTICE is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I Intend to apply to tho\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from the following deecrlbed\nlands, situated in the Little Siocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked N. E. corner Frank\nFrench, running south 80 chains, thenos\nwest 80 chuliin, thence north 80 chains,\nthence east 80 chains, to point of commencement. *\u2022\nFRANK   FRENCH.\nF.   PROVOST,  Agent.\nLooted Mny 24th, 1903.\nNOTICE is hereby given that\ndays after date I intend to apply to the *\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, situated ln the Little Siocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked N.E. corner Charles\nProvost, running south 80 chains, thence\nwest 80 chains, thence north 80 ohalns,\nthence enst 80 chains, to point of commencement.\nCHARLES   PROVOST\nF.   PROVOST, Agent.\nLocated May 24th, 1906.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I Intend to apply to the\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, situated In the Little Siocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked N.E. corner Narclse\nLegrod, running south 60 chains, thenoe\nwest 80 chains, thence north 80 chains,\nthence east 80 chains, to the point of\ncommencement.\nNARCTSE LEGROD\nF.   PROVOST, Agent\nLocated May 24th, 1906.\nNOTICE is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I Intend to apply to the\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a speclnl license to cut and carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, .sltunted In the Little Siocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a poet\nplanted and marked S.W. corner H. A.\nMcMillan, running north 80 chains, thenos\neast 80 chains, thence south 84\nthence west 80 chains, to point of <\nmencement\nH. A. McMILLAN.\nF.   PROVOST,  Agent.\nLocated May 24th, 1906.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I Intend to apply to the\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from the following described\nlands, situated in the Little Siocan, West\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked N.W. corner Percy\nMillnan, running east 80 chains, thenco\nsouth 80 chains, thence west 80 ohalns,\nthence north 80 chains, to point of commencement.\nPERCY MILLMAOl\nF.   PROVOST, Agent.\nLocated. May 24th, 1905.\nNOTICE ls hereby given that thirty\ndays after dato I Intend to\" apply to tho\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from tho following described\nlands, situated In the Little Siocan, West ,\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked N.E. corner Joseph\nMartin, running south 80 chains, thence\nwest 80 chains, thence north' 80\nthence east 80 chalnB, to point of\nmencement\nJOSEPH MARTIN.\nF.   PROVOST, Agent\nLocated May 24th, 1905,\nNOTICE Is hereby given that thirty\ndays after date I Intend- to apply to us\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor a special license to cut and carry\naway timber from the following deaorttoed\nlands, situated In the Little Slooan, West .\nKootenay District, commencing at a post\nplanted and marked N.E. corner Peter\nLablanc, runlng south 80 chains, thenos\nwsot 80 chains, thence north 80\nthence east 80 chains to point of >\nmencement\nPETER LABLANC.\nF. PROVOST, Agent,\nKnotted Hay Htk, im,     ^0B\u00a3\u00a3-J&\n THE DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. ft, WEDNESDAY, JULY  6, t\u00bbOfl\n131\nI     OUR SPECIALTY     *\nWe make a specialty of two rings\u2014the\nDiamond Solitaire Engagement Ring and the\nPlain Gold Wedding Ring. The former binds\nthe bargain and the latter ties the knot. If\nyou have the girl we have the ring.\nEWERT BROS.\nNELSON\njewelers and engravers\nRossland\ntrail\ntmmwmm** \u00ab \u00ab#*#\u00ab#\u00ab#*#\u00ab*\u00ab*\nNELSON'S NEWS OF THE DAY\nThe Sons of England will meet tomorrow\nevening In the K. of P. hall.\nJ. W. Templeton of the Kootenay Steam\nLaundry, left yesterday morning on a\ntrip to Calgary.\nThe members of Ben Hur Sanctorum of\nthe order of Humility and Perfection hold\ntheir regular moon feast this evening.\nOil company In British Columbia, has returned from a trip through East Kootenay.\nS. J. Speak, formerly manager of the\nYmir mine, who has been staying at the\nBtrathcona for the past few days, leaves\nthis morning on a trip to England.\nA SLAV ANIMUS MONEY\nCAUSE   MUCH   TROUBLE   AND   A.\nWRONG ARREST.\nFEKNIiE    COUNCIL    HELD\nCOAST LAWYERS.\n\u2022 (Special to The Dully News)\nFernie, July 4.\u2014At. a meeting of local\nunion No. U314, United Mine Workers\nof\"America, on Saturday night, the following officers were elected for the ensuing term: President, Hopkin Evans;\nvice-prealdent, Win. Moore; secretary-\n\u25a0treaaurer, Thomas Higgs; recording\nsecretary, John Burton.\nMartin Rappez is a Slav, and a resident of Michel.   He follows the occupation of a coal miner and has been so successful and thriftj|as to save some $700.\nThis money he had on deposit is one of\nthe banks at Fernie.   He had made up\n-  flits mind lo pay a visit to his friends iu\nthe old country, so one day lust week,\n'he paid a visit to Fernie, withdrew the\nmoney from the bank and returned   to\n(Michel.    Before purchasing   his ticket,\n\u25a0however, he remembered    the miners'\nannual picnic would take place on Dominion day, so he thought   he   might\n\u25a0wait until that date, visit Fernie, und\nmeet his countrymen und bid them good\nIbye before starling on his long journey.\nWhen the duy of the picnic arrived it\nsuddenly occurred to him that it would\nnot be wise to carry such a large sum\nof money on his person to Fertile, so he\nsought out his landlady, a Slav, Paulina\n'Suriuiwi, hy name, and   deposited   his\n$700 with her for safe keeping.   On the\nmorning of tho   first, Rappez   boarded\ntbe west hound train und in   a short\ntime stepped off ut Ferule.   On the picnic grounds he met many of his friends,\nand lu their company,\u2022 enjoyed himself\nso much that be determined upon passing the night In Fernie and returning\nto Michel on the morrow.   In the meantime Paulina Surinna, his landlady, hud\ntrouble with some   of   her   boarders.\nThey wished to have a keg of beer iu\nthe house with which to celebrate Dominion Duy.    The Slav lady objected,\nhut the boarders persisted, and in a tit\nof disgust she packed her trunk, bought\na ticket, and awaited the arrival of the\neast bound train on which   she would\ntravel as far   us Winnipeg.     On   this\ntrain she expected   Martin   Rappez to\nreturn to Michel, but Rappez   did not\nmake his appearance and Paulina Surinna, seeing her boarder's sou on lhe\nstation platform, handed him the money\nwhich Rappez had entrusted her with\nin tho morning, and In a few moments\nshe  was  speeding    on  her  east\/bound\njourney.   Next day Rappez met a young\nman who had just arrived from Michel,\nwho Informed him of Paulina's sudden\ndeparture  for the   eust.    Thinking, of\ncourse, that his money was that which\nfurnished the woman with   means   of\nmoving about, he at once sought the advice of a lawyer uud with him paid a\n-visit to the office of the provincial police, when an information wus laid and\na warrunt issued for the arrest of Puul-\nina.   In a few moments   the energetic\nofficer who presides over tlie provincial\nforce In Fernie had ascertained the number of Pnultna's ticket, and of the fact\nthat she wus still in the train, nnd rapld-\n. ly approaching Hegina, and the mounted\npolice there were asked   lo arrest and\ndetain her in custody. \u25a0 In   the   meantime hy some means iL became   known\nthat Huppez's son had his $700 just us\nthey were banded him by Paulina in the\nmorning, and word was Bent to the provincial officer at Michel to   bring   tbe\nson and money lo Fernie where an explanation wus given by tlie son as to\nthe manner in which he became possessed of his father's cosh.   Word was then\nimmediately wired to the authorities at\nReglna to discharge Paulina from custody.\nOn Monday night five children ranging in age from three to 12 years, became possessed at Chicalo, of a railway\npush car, the property of the Crow's\nNest Pass Coal Co. Placing the car upon the main track of the C. P. R. the\nchildren climbed on 11 and started at a\nlively pace on tho down .grade towards\nFernie. Soon the east bound express,\none hour and a quarter late, came thundering along. The children had barely time to get off the cur and scatter In\ndifferent direction when the car wns\nstruck, and reduced to matchwood. The\nchildren were subsequently arrested by\nthe police. Yesterday they appeared he-\nfore the police magistrate at Fernie,\n(hut the case was adjourned to Wednesday. , ,\nAt last night's meeting ot the municipal council a leLter was read from F. C.\nLawe\/'stating that unless the salary of\nthe city solicitor was raised from $25 to\n|50 a mouth, he would not accept the\nposition. On motion the position was\noffered to him at his own figure. A letter was also read from Messrs. Ross &\nAtaxamler, enclosing another from tho\nArm of Messrs. Wilson, Senklcr &\nBloomfleld, banisters, of Vancouver, ln\nreference to their account against the\ncity for appearing ln the suit of the B.\nC. Telephone Co. vs. City of Fernie.\n[The letter stated that the firm enclosed\ntheir account after taxation, and a reduction of $210 thereby, against the city\nfor $918.09, and after the manner In\nwhich they had heen treated they demanded payment of the account In Vancouver by the 4th of July or they would\nenter suit for its collection. The letter\nwas dated at Vancouver on 28th June,\n-was received by the city clerk on the\nevening of the 30th. Several aldermen\nexpressed their indignation at the peremptory manner of the demand. A motion was subsequently made that as it\nwas almost impossible to pay the money\nin Vancouver on the day stated, that it\nshould be paid Into the hands of Messrs.\nRoss & Alexander, the agents of the\nVancouver law firm.\nThe council subsequently adjourned in\na body to meet Mr. Lindsey on the subject of the water supply.\nA team from the boat club will p'ay a\nmatch with tho Nelson cricket club tomorrow aflernoon on the recreation grounds.\nStumps will be pitched at 4 o'clock.\nThe subjects of examination for the high\nschool pupils today are arithmetic In the\nmorning and composition Jn the afternoon.\nThe examination will last until next Tuesday at noon.\nA. E. Stevens, formerly C.P.R. train\nmaster here has been appointed chief train\ndespatoher at Vancouver, In place of Mr.\nOoodfellow, now on the E. and N, branch\nat  Victoria.\nCOUNTY   COURT\nSittings Lasted All Yesterday-Two Cases\nDisposed of\nHis honor Judge Porta presided over tho\ncounty court sittings yesterday. Not much\nprogress was made although an evening\nsession of the court was held in addition\nto the all day one.\nTwo casea only were heard, both actions\nagainst  tlio C.P.R.\nAll the naturalization applications..were\ngranted except thsjt of Fredericks of\nYmir, which stands over for better particulars,\nTho judgment summons and tbe adjourned cases list was not gone Into, all the\nactions standing over.\n. Wlnlaw vs. tho C.P.R., an action for\ntelegraph poles supplied, was heard and\nargument postponed until a day to be\nagreed upon S. S. Taylor, K.C. for plaintiff; W. A Macdonald! K.C, for defendants\nMoore vs. the C.P.R. occupied the balance of the day. This was an action by\nWilliam Moore, n rancher residing near\nBeasley sld.ng, claiming $309 damages for\nthe destruction by lire of his wood chute\nvalued at tM, the platform at the siding\nat $100, and four cords of wood,1 $!> Tlie\nplaintiff alleged that on the 7th of September last whllo burning ties nnd brush on\ntheir right of way, near his pioperty, tne\ncompany allowed the tires so started to\nspread and destroy his property. The\ndefence denied any responslllity and chimed tlio prevalence of bush fires at tho tlmo\ncaused the trouble. The case lasted all day\nand an evening srsslun commencing at 8\no'clock was held. At the conclusion of the\ncase judgment wns reserved and by eon-\nsent his honor will visit and personally\nInspect the scene of the fire.\nThe learned judge leaves tills morivlng for\nEast Kootenay to hold court, returning\nSaturday evening.\nMany parties of fishermen, were out yesterday, up and down the lake. No record\noatches were made, but several anglers\nsaid that bites were more frequent than\nthey have been for the last month.\nThe program for the musical evening at\nthe Baptist ohurch tonight, promises a\nsplendid treat. Solos, Instrumental selections and recitations will be given. Miss\nCrowley, Mrs, Mclnnes, Miss Oliver, and\nMr. Grlzzelle will sing; Mr., Bodmer will\npresldo at the piano and present special\nselections; Miss Newcombe and Mr. Shanks\nwill recite. The refreshments are to be\nstrawberries and  ice cream.\nLARDEAU STRIKES\nFUNERAL OF MRS. BLAKEMORE\nLast Rites Yesterday at St. Saviour's Pro\nCathedral\nThe funeral of Mrs. Blakemore, took\nplucc yesterday afternoon at 2:;>0 from the\nfamily residence to St. Saviour's church\nnnd thence to the cemetery. Many friends\nwere present at the services In the church.\nRev, H, A. Solly preached n brief funeral\nsermon from the text 1st Corinthians\n15:20: \"Thanks be to God, who hath given\nus tlie victory,\" A full choir sang \" Lead\nKindly Light,\" Jesus), Lovor of My Soul\"\nand Psalm XC, to the setting of Hopkins.\nW. A. Jowett wns nt the organ during the\nservice. H. S, Bodmer ployed the Dead\nMarch as the funeral cortege left the\nchurch.\nThe pall-bcnrera wore G. Johnstcno, R.\nR. Hedley, T. Q. Procter, W. P. Dickson,\nI G, Robertson and R. H Ley\nThe principal mourners were W, Blakemore nnd his five daughters, Mrs. A, D,\nMoBae of Halifax and the Misses, Jessie,\nClnTWe, Barbara and Gladys Blakemore,\ntogether with, Gordon MeMurtry of Montreal, Dr. La Ban and S. S. Taylor.\nThe casket was covered with (lowers together with cards of sympathy, which were\npresented by a host of friends and sympathizers Including a large cross, by tho\nfamily, and wrpaths and bouquets sent\nby Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Blakemore, Waller\nJenks of Pittsburg, Mr. and Mrs. W. A.\nMacdonald, Mr. and Mrs. R. R Hedley,\nMr. and Mrs. S. S. Fowler, Mr and Mrs\nJ. M. Hedley, Mr. nnd Mrs T G Procter,\nMr. and Mrs. H. Bird, Mrs. Elliott, Mrs.\nH. C. Cummins, Dr and Mr* La Unit,\nMr. and Mrs. S, S. Taylor. Miss Baldwin,\nMr. and Mrs, A. W Dyer, Mr nnd Mrs\nGeorge Johnstone, Mr. and Mrs. R. M.\nMacdonald, tho Misses Broadwood, Miss\nGladys Hill. Mr and Mrs. George H ir-\nstead, Mr. nnd Mrs. J. J. Campbell, Mr.\nand Mrs. M. S Davys, Harold Selous, W P\nDickson, R. H. Ley,\nCARD OF THANKS\nThe family of the late Mrs. W. Blakemore express their heartfelt thanks to the\nmany kind friends whose messages of loving sympathy helped them grently In their\nhour of sore distress. They nlso desire\nespecially to acknowledge their Indebted?\nness to Dr La Bail for tho unremltt'ng\ncare nnd skill which greatly lessened the\nsufferings of their denr ono through a long\nand painful illness; to Miss Gracey for\ndevoted nursing nt the most critical st,ige;\nto Miss Evans, matron* of the Kootenay\nLake general hospital, for valuable help\nln an emergency; to the Sister Superior of\nSt. Joseph's convent for keeping the last\nvigil nnd affording aid ln the supreme\nmoment; and finally to their steadfast\nfriend, George Johnstone, who with unfailing sympathy relieved them of all the\nresponsibilities of the occasion.\nMechanics, Formers, Sportsmen.\nTo heal nnd soften the skin mid reaov\u00ab\ngrease, ail and rust stums, paint and earth, etc,\nuse The \" Muster Mechanic's\" Tar Bus..\nMbatt Toilet Soap Co., Mfra.\nImportant Discoveries Recently Made-\nMining Notes\nNot since the big strike or free gold\non. the Lucky Jack at Poplar has there\nbeen such excitement as has been mused\nby the uncovering on the Smith and Rogers property of a showing that as far as-\nrlchness is concerned, equalB anything aver\nuncovered lu the country, says the Lar-\ndi.au Mining Review. Samples brought to\ntown, some of which weighed 40 pounds,\nwere pruetically solid arsenical Iron, which\nwhen roasted wus fairly blistered with\ngold. About 200 pounds were brought down\nand when spread out to tho gaze of the\nonlookers fairly glistened wUh the precious\nmetal, This is an entirely now strike and\nwhen taken in conjunction with lhe showings In tho leads already lurgely developed, makes the properly a bonanza, Tlio\nAmerican Eaglu Mining company has a\nbond on the property und under the direction of F. J. Eltol of Seattle, a good force\nof men will be put on to thoroughly exploit the claims.\nMessrs. Porter und Glen of Spokane have\ntaken a bond on the Morning, Homestake\nand Pauline claims ou Rapid creek. The\nproperty is owned by J. Simpson uud has\nhad considerable work done on it. The\nprice is (10,000.\nMarquis and Gilbert have uu offer of\n$10,000 ca.s-h for their property at Poplar.\nThe Copper Chief will be a big mine.\nMalcolm Alathleson Is down highly elated\nover the way In which the pioperty Is\nturning out. A strike made during the previous week sets at rest any doubt as to\nthe richness of the pro] erty. The strike\nconsists of tho opening up of a well dt>-\nlined ledge of quartz with n paystreak of\nsix Inches. Tlie ore da I r.cs in oy copper\nIn largo quantities. The work of sacking\nore is proceeding merrily and Malcolm\nsays he will ship a cut-load at an eur.y\ndate.\nWork is being pushed vigorously oil lhe\nSuiishinu tunnel of the Silver Cup, A large\nquantity of air piping was hauled up by\nfreighter Daney during the week, it is\nreported that a nice body of ore has been\nstruck. Some crcssoutting will be done\nand a 'raise made lo connect with the\nw nse sunk from the upper working, which\nis down 150 feet. The vertical doplh from\ntho bottom of the bottom of the winze\nto the present workings Is over 250 feet,\nthus giving over 400 feet of virgin ground\nto work ,on, through which ore has been\ndemons I rated.\nColonel Brayton is expected in next week\nto open up the I.X.L. group, lately purchased from Dr. Mllloy by Minnesota\nmen.\nThe Beatrice Is making a shipment of\n40 -tons of high grade oro this week,\nThe Triune sent out ISO tons of its usual\nhigh grade ore the end of last week.\nTip makers of\n* 'The Leekie Boot\"\nAre \"Old Timers\" of the West\nThey know to a nicety, the.\nclimatic and geographical conditions that call for a special\nclass of footwear to meet these\nconditions.\nEastern shoe men cannot\nknow these things from mere\nhearsay.\nThey must live \"out west\"\u2014\nget \"the local color\" as it were\n\u2014'become steeped In western experience and knowledge obtainable only by living the life of a\nWesterner, before they can hope\nto make satisfactory footwear\nfor the strenuous life of the\ntoiler in western forests, fields\nand mines.\n\"THE! LECKIE BOOT\" Is a\nWestern product for western\npeople.\nLook for the trade mark upon the sole.\nMANUFACTURED BY\nJ. Leckie Go., Ltd.\nVancouver, B. C.\nNelson Opera House\nTuesday, July 4th\nAthletic\nExhibition\n(Everybody's Club)\nBoxing\nTumbling\nContortion\nBar Work\nBag Punching\nTickets 50c\na well known remedy. He says: \"it gives\nme pleasure to recommend Chamberlain's\nColic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy,\nhaving used it myself and In my family\nwith the best results. In fact J believe It\nto be the best Temedy of the kind ln existence.\"   Sold by all druggists and dealers.\nROSSLAND MINING STOCKS\nThe Montreal Star hi its financial review\nof stocks Bays, regarding Rossland mines:\n\"There Is some Interest being tukeii\naround the \"street\" In the mining merger\nbut there is comparatively Utile stock\nnow changing hands. No War Eagle was\nreported sold here, but in Toronto a little\nchanged iiands nt -'-. a decline of a cent\nand a half from the day before. Since\nthe merger announcement transactions in\nCentre Star and St. Eugene have been, few\nand far between, Indlutiliig that tney uro\npretty closely Watched. Centre Star is\nquoted at 35 bid and 40 asked, with St.\nEugene strong at 47 1-2 bid and 49 asked.\nThe War Eagle shareholders are beginning  to  sit up and  notice  things.\nThere is not likely to be any buom in the\nshares, but the people who have written\nthem off in their books as dead losses are\nfeeling better.\nCANADIANS DECORATED\nThe London Official Gazette publishes a\nlist of those honored on the occasion of\nthe king's birthday. Following are the\nCanadians who are] decorated: C.M.G.,\nJ. W. Robertson, commissioner of agriculture in Canada; ordinary member of tho\nmilitary division, general Laurie; companions of the Imperial Strvlae order,\nLaurence Forteseuo, Northwest Mounted\nPolice, lieutenant-colonel Jarvls, depait-\nment of agriculture; Arthur Newbury,\nclerk   of   the   executive   council  of   F.E.I,\nCHAMBERLAIN'S     COLIC,     CHOLERA\nAND DIARRHOEA REMEDY\/-THE\nBEST IN EXISTENCE\nT,   M.   Wood,   manager   of   the   White\ncounty News, Beebe, Ark., is a representative southern business man, who does not\nhesitate ln expressing his good opinion of\nDOUBTFUL RUSSIAN VICTORY\nBoth Sides Claim to Have Won the Engagement\nToklo, July 4\u2014Tho following ofllc'al announcement has-been made from the headquarters of the Japanese Korean army:\n\"AT dawn on July and, 400 of ,th enemy's\ncavalry with artillery approached Noio-\nmok, on Puryorg road, six miles north of\nYusyong. Our force engaged and repulsed\nthem north inflicting heavy rossfs. Meantime our detachment made a detour far\n\u25a0to the northward for the purpose of cutting off tho enemy's retreat, and engaged\ntheir Infantry at noon about 14 miles north\not Yusyong. Anojther d\/etaahmentt jit-\ntacked and scattered liio enemy's cavalry\nretreating from Noromok.\"\nAnother despatch today says: \"At 8\no'clock on the morning of July 1, COO of the\nenemy's cavoJry advanced towards Klnnl\nriver, 13 miles northeast of Kanmpln, and\nwere repulsed there. On\u00ab hundred and\nfifty of the enemy's cavalry and mounted\nInfantry, with 13 guns simultaneously attacked Shlaklu, eight miles northeast of\nPlnnl river. Tho engagement lasted until\ndawn wlion the enemy .was repulsed.\nTheir casualties were over 400; ours were\n90.\"\nSt. Petersburg, July t\u2014General Llnovltch\ntelegraphing to emperor Nicholas under\ndate of July 3, reports the annihilation of\na Japanese battalion. Ho says; \"On July\n1 our force assumed the offensive against\nthe enemy, occupying a position near the\nvillage of Sauvuitse, Hi nilles south of Llao\nChoupon. At 7 in tlie evening after the\nartillery had prepared tho way the fortified position of tho enemy was stormed.\nand wo pursued them for three miles.\nOno Japanese Infantry battalion was destroyed.\"\nANOTHER NAVAL MUTINY\nCrew of Proul Rebel but Repent and\nRecant\nSt. Petersburg, July 4\u2014The minister of\nmarine has received the following telegram\nfrom admiral Kruger: \"The crow of the\ntransport Proul, when leaving Budnovo\nbay, mutinied, arresting the captain and\nother officers. Second lieutenant Estertse\nand a boatswain were killed.\nThe Proul has arrived at Sevastopol, and\ntho crow now is repenting. The officers\nhave been released and are begging them\nto assume their posts, The Proul has been\nordered to anchor in Kamesheval bay and\nan inquiry into the affair was begun,\nBIO COAL COMBINE.\nPittsburg, July 4.\u2014A combination of\n26 coal companies of Indiana, controlling\n29,000 acres of coal lands has been formed here under the name of the Addalla\nCoal company. The new concern has a\ncapital of $7,000,000. A. Mogle, of\nPhiladelphia, ls president.\n[HOTEL REGISTERS\nBLA*NK BOOKS\nCITY ASSESSMENT\nAND TAX ROLLS\nWE CAN BIND EN REGULATION\nSTYLE\nLAW JOURNALS\nAND REPORTS]\"\nWE MAKE A SPECIALTY OF\nPUTTING UP IN NEAT, STRONO\nAND INEXPENSIVE COVERS\nMUSIC\nMAGAZINES\nTRADE JOURNALS\nPAPERS AND\nBOOKS\nWe Guarantee First-Class Work\nIn Every .Department\nPHONE\n144\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nNELSON\nB.O.\nFOR SALE\n30 foot lot and building, south side of\nBaker street, rented constantly, easy\nterms, price on application.\nIn Hume Addition, four roomed house\nand lot, $600 on  monthly  payment  plan,\n2 aero ranch ono mile from Nelson, 80\nfruit trees, 150 small fruit, furnished cabin,\n1360.\nIn Hume Addition, corner lot, fruit trees\nand small fruits, with I room cottage,\nabout $700, good terms,\nChadbourn & McLaren\nK.W.C. BLOCK\nTHE MAN WHO\nSMOKES\nour special Mixture smokes a pure ant\nfragrant tobacco, as ebolce a thing at\noyer tempted you.\nTHURMAN\n         BMAOOONItrr\nTEAS\nJUST RECEIVED.\nFresh and Fragrant\nNEW CROP\nBlack or Green\nAS ALWAYS\nTHE BEST\nPrices moderate by tha pound or ortt\naal package.\nKootenay Coffee Go.\nPhone 177. P. O. Box III.\nH D. A8HCH0KT\nA. B. MAKKS\nBLACKSMITHS\nAihcroft and Marks, experienced blacksmiths, wheel weights, and expert horse-\nshoers, are doing business on Hall street,\nIn the premises previously occupied by\nGrant McLean. First class work ln every\nguaranteed.\nRANCH\nFOR SALE\nconsisting;ofl80 acres,  a good   house,\nand 7 acres c:learfid. '\nThis  Is one  of the most pleasantly\nsituated ranches on the west arm.\nPrice for ranch including launch and\nboat house, $2500,\nThis offer good tor one week only.\nR. J. Steel\nContractors Wanted\nThe undersigned will pay tho highest\nPrice for logs dcllverou\" at the Nelson\nSawmill, will let contracts and supply\nstanding timber. Contractor must supply\nhlmHelf with all necessary equipment. For\nfurther particulars apply to the\nKootenay River LuMir Company,\nnelson, a. c,\n THE DAILY MEWS, NELSON, B. 0., WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1005\nTO RENT\nOFFICES AND\nLIVING ROOMS\nSlfi\" Nelson tlectric Tramway Co.\nClements Block, Cor. Baker and Josephine\nStreets\nGALT\nCOAL\nAND WOOD OP ALL\nKINDS\nTerms Spot Cash\nW. P. Tierney\nTelephone MS\nBaker Street, Nelson\nAre you interested in how\nwe recognize and remedy\neye defects, or in the preservation of your siplil? If\nso, drop us a post card alio)\nwe will mail you without\ncharge our booklet \" The\nEyeglass Question.\" It is\nsure to interest you.\nJ. J. WALKER\nPB10B OF MBTALB.\nOwing to tho publlo holiday no metal\nquotations were I uucd at New York yea-\nterday.\nTho C.P.R. did not receive any metal\n(imitations from London yesterday,\nNELSON'S NEWS OF THE DAY\nA meeting of the Knights of the Golden\n3Ior?e Shoo will be held shortly to wind\nup the affairs of that brilliant but short\nlived organization. *\nThe recent contest for well kept lawns\n\u2022and boulevards has stimulated umbltlon,\nand will undoubtedly lead to greater efforts at neatness of premises,\n.T. A. McDonald and company shipped\nft second refrigerator carload of strawberries yesterday from Kootenay landing\nto Wir.n iipk and way points. The berries\nwere all ln prime condition.\nMickey Byrne, the first hack driver ot\nNelson, and a man of many experience?,\nls in the dry on a visit. He makes his\nheadquarters :it the Madden and Is look-\nIng ni' oid acquaintances,\nC. M .Hand, formerly of Butte, the new\nmanager of the Ymir mine, who has been\nspending the last two days In the city,\n\u25a0witli retiring manager Spunk, returns to\nYmir this morning to assume hfs new\nduties,\nTim members of ihe finance committee\nof tlie Dominion Duy celebration committee\nwill bo busy for a day or two co'le:ting\nsubscriptions, The flnnl meeting of the\nCommlttOC Will be held in the city hall\nFriday evening nt 8:30, It is already certain\nthat there will he a handsome surplus to\nbe handed ,ns already resolved, tu the fall\nfair directorate.\nBen Tomklna, manager of the Btrathcono\nhotel, being a patriotic citizen of the United\nStates, celebrated the 4th of July lust\ntJvehlliff ill gallawt style. He engaged Irwin's band to play tha \"Shir Spangled\nBanner,\" \"Hall Columbia,\" and other national airs, and engaged a pyrotechnic\nartist to disport tire American emblem,\nulie giant Are-cracker.\n,R A. Balnbrldge, resident C.P.R. engineer\nfor the Kootenay district, with headquar\ntera hi this city has been promoted to the\npost of assistant divisional engineer at\nVancouver. Ha leavfljs to. assume his\nnew duties in about a week. Mr. Balnbrldge has been in Nelson for tho past\nthree years and hie removal to tlie const\nwill be regretted. His successor has not\nyet  been  appointed.\nAssessor Alexander Lucas of Kaslo went\nup the lake yesterday In Frank Mussel*\nman's launch for the purpose of nasoHslng\nthe ranches along the north shore. Mr.\niAIca's got ns far as the Morley property\nami ityn returned to the city. This' morning Mr. Lucas accompanied by commissioner Renwlck, wilt take in the south\nshore nineties and expects to reach Procter and Balfour by this evening.\nJack Cameron, conductor on the Nakusp\nnnd Sandon railway, recently captured n\nfull grown grey wolf. He Intended to present ills prize to Fred Bosquet's Nelflon\nmenagerie, hut Ills captive grew so docile\nthnt he thought it quite safe to let him\nout  of his cage  for an airing.    Unfortu-\nWhat is nicer when out\ncamping than a nice tin\nof\nPork and\nBeans\nThis week we are making a special run on\nCLARK'S\nPacked in Chili sauce\n10c a Tin. 3 for 25c.\nThis is a Snap\nT. S. McPherson\nPHONE NO. 10.,\nH.&>M.Bird\nHeal Estate and Iosuraoee\nAgents, Baker St.\nDISTRICT AGENTS FOR C.P.R. LAND\nCANADA   PERMANENT MORTGAGE\nCORPORATION.\nMUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO., OF\nNEW YORK\nOCEAN   ACCIDENT & GUARANTEE\nCORPORATION.\nPHOENIX FIRE ASSURANCE CO., OF\nLONDON, ENGLAND\nLIVERPOOL &   LONDON   & GLOBE\nINSURANCE CO.\nBRITISH AMERICA ASSURANCE CO.\nLONDON   &   LANCASHIRE   INSURANCE (30.\nINSURANCE CO OF NORTH AMERICA\nCALEDONIAN   INSURANCE   CO.   OF\nSCOTLAND.\nMoney to Loan on Real Estate.\nLoans and Mortgage.1! negotiated tor\nInvestors.\nProperties managed and rents collected\n  I\nCOTTON GARDEN\nHOSE\nMany people have an Idea tbat cotton covered garden hose Is not as\ngood as the rubber covered article, Still it Is a fact that every fire department lu every city in Canada uses cotton covered hose.\nOur cotton hose is of exactly the same quality as high grade flre\nhose. We guarantee it to stand Nelson pressure for two years It is\nmuch lighter to handle and inexpensive.   See our east window.\nJ. H. Ashdown Hardware Co., limited\n8 ft $3      WHOLESALE! AND RETAIL\nnately the savage Instinct returned with\nthe consciousness of liberty, and the wolf\ndeclined to Improve the acquaintance of\nMr. Cameron,\n^\nHUME\u2014T, R. Frerfeh. Granite; J. Cal-\nlagimn, Winnipeg; S. F. Toimle, G. B.\nLowry, Victoria; A. J. Rates, wife and\nchild, A. H, Grant, Vancouver; J. M. Scott\nRevel stoke.\nSTRATHCONA-D. C. Johnson, Spokane;\nT. H. Huiens, Pittsburg; w. 11. Meagher,\nYmir; T. H. Tretheway, Molly Gibson\nmine; G, Lpwenburg, Alice Siding; W. F.\nM. Shepnorfli Montreal,\nGRAND CENT11AL-A. Sin-man, Molly\nGibson mine; W. C, Hall, Northport; W.\nMcKendry. Cascade; A. Davis, R. Shaw,\nSandon; R. McLcod, Ainsworth; H, Bitcht,\nSeattle.\nNEIjSON\u2014W. R. McRae, Calgary; H. A.\nCtorglll,   Perth.\nMADDEN\u2014W. J. Goodwin, Seattle; II\nT. Hims worth. Vancouver; J. J. Campbell,\nGranite; H, Rlppln, Sandy creek; C, G.\nBarber,  Siocan.\nROYAL-J. Nicholson, Whitewater; W,\nMoore, New York.\nBARTLETT-J. Sliorle. Reliance mine;\nJ, Perkins, P. Perklne, Anderson.\nQUEENS\u2014R. L. Law and wife, Moyle;\nMlsa A. M, Sherrlri, Portage la Prairie;\nMiss M. Clarke. Citrherry; Mrs. J. E.\nKennedy, Fernie; W. F. Wooll-uul, Duns-\nford.\nTREMONT-F. Campbell, Spokane; J. 11.\nMason ft Risch\nPianos\nfor sale by\nStandard Furniture Co.\nSee our stock of secondhand organs,    '\nAuction Sale\nHOUSEHOLD FURNJTUBE\nAlmost New\nThursday, July 6th\nat 2 p. in.\nActing under Instructions from H. L,\nGenest we will sell by auction at his\nresidence Carbonate street between\nStanley and Kootenay streets, all ot\nhis household furniture, which has been\nIn use only one year, consisting In part\nof Gurney Range, Kitchen Treasure,\nDishes, Heating Stove, Carpet Squares,\nIron Bedsteads. Extension Table, Chairs,\nRockers, Pictures, Etc., Etc.\nTERMS CASH.\n\\\nC. A. Waterman & Co.\nAUCTIONEERS\nHarris, Rossland.\nLAKEVIEW-T Spencer and wife, Kaalo;\n0, Kirkwall, Medicine Hat; J. Parker, Blocan; J. E.  Butler, New Denver.\nGREENWOOD  CUSTOMS\nFigures   for   tho   Past   Year\u2014Fourth,   of\nJuly Excursion\n[Special to The Dally News)\nGreenwood, July 4-Collcctor of customs\nMoCutoheon has furnished\" The Daily News\ncorrespondent with the following figures\nshowing the amount'of customs, duty and\nInland revenue collected at Greenwood for\nthe past year nnd for the full period Hip\nolllco has been under his charge.\ninland revenue\u2014For year ending June 30,\n1805, $14,668.73; from Sept, ISM to June 80,\nJJM15,   $78,092.15.\nCustoms duty collections\u2014For year ending June 30, 1903. $16,436.03; from Sept.,\n1899 to Juno 80, 19*3, $135,609.26.\nOver 100 people left here this morning\nfor Republic to assist tha Americans In\ncelebrating Independence Day. The train\nfrom here connected with the \"Hot Air\"\nexcursion to Grand Forks,\nNEW   AUTO RECORD\nNow York, July 4-At the second day of\nthe  national  championship  meet  of  the\nAutomobile association at Morris Park to-\nUSOOCX!\nNelson Souvenirs\nThe largest assortment of Souvenirs in the interior will be found\nat our store. Spoons, Blouse Sets, Cups, Hat Pins, Brooches, Beit\nFins, Flags also Quartz Jewelry and Nugget Jewelry.\nPrices 25 Cts. up.\nTou cannot fall to get what you want from our display.\nPATENAUDE BROS\nMANUFACTURING JEWELLERS, WATCHMAKERS, OPTICIANS\nPhone Mt ,\nIXX50OSX5\u00ab<>0fl\u00abKK>0O<XXX5QOO\u00ab\nOur Feed Oats\nstand the test\u2014because they are elevator\ncleaned, pure grain, no dirt, Put up in\n100 pound sucks at our own elevators on\ntho Calgary and Edmonton railway.\n' Can always make prompt shipments\u2014\nstraight or mixed cars. Write cr wire when\nIn the market.\n(LIMITED)\nWholesale and Retail Hay, Grain, Cereals,\nimmmwmfimin\u00abHfflnitH m mmmmn!mmmmm!\u00abniK\nSTOCK TAKING SALE\nE\nB\nB\nB     July is our stock taking month, and below 2\nB we enumerate some of the lines we wish to re- 3\nB duce, and will sell at the specially low prices 5\nB stated.   Mail orders receive careful and prompt 3\nattention.\nB\nB\nSain Tfl'ms at. Prices Quoted Ar\u00ab Strictly Cash\nWALL PAPERS\nAll the regular lines from 7c per\nroll to COc; reduced 1-4.\nCHiINAWARB\nGlassware aud Crockery. In this\ndepartment we show the Unest\nrange of goods in 13. C. Discounts range from 1-5 to 1-3 off\nthe regular price.\nPICTURES       ..   '\nFramed and untrained, and Photo\nFrames\u201425 per cent off.\nSOUVENIRS\nU00 Nelson Souvenir Tablets with\nviews of Nelson on each sheet,\nregular 50c, 35c, and 25c, Sale\nprice 2dc, 20c, and 15c.\nSTATIONERY\n204 Boxes of Stationery, containing 24 envelopes, 24 sheets of\nruled notenaper, pen aud penholder at 15c each.\nNOVELS ;\n2000 Paper Novels, regular 25c Z!\nline at 12 1-2 cts. each. \u00a33\nBOUND BOOKS 3\n3000 Miscellaneous Bound Books \u00a3\u2022\nat discounts ranging from 15 per 23\ncent to GO per cent off the regu- \u00a33\nlar prices. \u00a35\nSEWING MACHINES ~!\n3 Sewing Machines, new. Price ^3\n$05, at $25 each. g2\nPIANOS 3\n1 only Williams' Piano, new. Z\u00a3\nPrice $450. at $310. X3\n1 only slightly used Heintzman ~5\n& Co. Piano. Price new, $550; as ^5\ngood as new at $325. -;\nLEAD PENCILS =3\n324 Dozen Dixon's Lead Pencils, ^5\nNo. 270, regular 5c line at 15c 3\nper dozen. 3\nIT PAYS TO DEAL WITH RUTHERFORD\nLime Juice ^'j^>^a|\n'1 his iuice is imported direct and bottled\nfresh and pure by\nWm. Rutherford\n\u25a0tore olosea at I p. m.\nDRUOQIST\nNelson, B.C.\n|   Drug and Sundry Department   |\nSUMMER TONICS\nthe $1.00 kinds such as Peruvian\nTonic, Quinine Wine and Iron,\nBeef Iron nnd Wine, at 7Gc por\nbottle. 1 \u25a0,\nTOILET SOAPS\nOdd lots of various well known\nmakes, regular 25c nnd 35c per\npor box at 10c per boi.\nSACHET POWDERS\nRegular 50c per oz, at 30c por oz.\nRegular 75c per oz., at 50c per oz.\nPERFUMES\nColgate's Well Known Perfumes\nIn fancy bottles; tile $1 kind at\n76c, per bottle; tbe 75c kind at\n50c per bottle.\nCOLGATE'S SHAVING SOAP ~S\nCakes. To Introduce this unrlv- ~j\nailed shaving soap we will sell ^\nduring July two gross at 10c per 3\ncake,( the regular price Is and ^\nwill he 16c). 3\nHAND MIRRORS, IS\nHair Brushes and mauy other ^\nlinos of sundries at 25 per ceut -3!\noff' .....'. iJjjtiid Jt\nTOILET WATERS ^3\n(Plvers, France)  $1.75 per hot- IS\ntie at $1.25. =S\n=S\nLOOFAHS r!\nAn excellent substitute for a X3\nsponge, a real bathroom luxury, Z3\nspecial sale price, 5c each. TZ\nThis Sale is genuine.   We always do as we 3\nadvertise.   TERMS CASH.    , 3\nCanada Drug & Book Co., Ld. |\nluUUUiiUUUUiUiUiUUUIUU fll UiiUUIIUUUIUUiUUtiUUUuS\nday, Webb Jay made a new world's record for a mile from a (lying start. lie\ncovered tho distance In -is 4-5 aeconds.\nThe previous record was 52 1-5 seconds.\nCONFESSED TO DETECTIVES\nTrenton, July i-Gustnv Closson of Nols-\nvllle, Pa- was today taken to Doylestowu\nto answer to tlie charge of having poisoned\nhis 12 year old son, Walter, some weeks\nago. Clcssen la said to have confessed\nto the detectives who placed lilm under arrest.\nTO HAVE A THIRD FIGHT\nReno, July i\u2014Jack Root nnd Marvin\nHart have agreed to fight a third and do-\notstve battle Each man now holds- a victory over the other, Root having won his\nfirst fight against Hart in six rounds.\nThe regular meeting of tho Knights of\nPythias was held tn the lodge room Inst\nevening. Many degrees were conferred\nmind the session Initcd until an early hour\nthis morning.\nSnaps\n2000 International Coal     22 Cts.\n50 Northwest Coal,       60 Cts.\n1000 Yale-Kootenay Ice      9 Cts.\nMcDermid & McHardy\nAVHAT EVERY MAN\nMUST WEAR\nis ready for every man.\nALL LINES OP SUMMER CLOTHING.\nFancy Hosiery\u2014Lisle and light Cashmere, 25c and 35c a pair.\nDouble Thread Balbrlggan Underwear,\nGDc and 75c.\nFine light wool English Imported\nUnderwear, $1.00 to $3.00.\nNegligee Shirts\u2014White, plain, stripe,\nor colored stripes, special value, $1.00.\nFancy mesh, white and colored, $1.50.\nJapanese imported crepe cloth, $1.50.\nLeather and Canvas Belts, 25c to $1.00\nWhite and colored washing vests, $1.50\nto $3.00.\nMen's and Boys' Bathing Suits.\nSee our special Flannel 3-plece summer suit, price $8.00; others at $10 and\n\u00bb12.\nJ. H. WALLACE\nibn'i ouvnsra\n\\Tsk 1 on tOl Sk      To arrive Monday,\nV dlCMllsld  12th June,\" car Fancv\nOl*an0*6S    Valencja ORANGES,\n^^A ^\u2022'\"\u2022'S^S?    sweet, juicy and long\nkeepers;  an orange that will stand shipping.\nSend in your orders, they will have our careful\nattention. j A  McDonaldj\nWholesale Fruits\nA Bargain in Tomato Catsup\nWe have a limited quantity of good stock\nwhich we will sell at 2 Bottles for 25c.\nTOYE & BENEDICT\nJosephine St. GROCERS Phone No. 7\nDo you know\nThat\nWe carry Garden Hose.\nWe carry the heat.\nWe guarantee it.\nWe have it In % in and % in Cotton\nnnd Rubber.\nOur price is as low as for inferior\ngoods.\nWo also carry Nozzles, Couplings and\nMenders*\nNELSON HARDWARE COMPANY\nBAKER ST.\nSPORTSMEN'S HEADQUARTERS    NELSON, B. O.\nPHONE 16\nUSE\nBELLS TEA\nBell Trading Company\nWhen You Want\nSTYLISH, FIRST-CLASS SHOES\nGo to Gallagher's\nWe have them in all Styles and Sizes, ,.s j\u00bb -\nJ. W. GALLAGHER\nBoi No. Ml\nBAKER ST.\nTelephone 1M\nHAM z BACON\nWe have just placed in stock a supply of fresh Hams and Bacon which\nwe will sell at rock bottom prices.\nJ. Y. GRIFFIN & CO.\nWHOLESALE ONLY \u25a0-\nvmmmwkmmmmmm*\n.1\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1905_07_05","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0381943","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : F.J. Deane","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1905-07-05 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":"1905-07-05 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}