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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":" :-.\"'\"   \u25a0'_\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nMAY 7 -1901\nani\nVOL. 5\nNELSON, B. C, FRIDAY, HAY a, 1006\nNO.   10\nMINERS ARE\nINDIGNANT\nPres. Mitchell Comments\nStrongly on Attitude\nof Operators\nDtchntltBor i Strike Hit Ben Stmt)\noff for a Di*- but b Regtrded at Ccr-\nuloly Coalig Very So-n\nScranton, May 3.\u2014Today's sessions ot\nthe .miners' district convention were unprofitable except In so far as they revealed that the sentiment ot practically\nall of the six hundred delegates in attendance la for a strike. Tonight It Is\nbelieved that nothing short ot a miracle\ncan prevent a strike from being declared\neither tomorrow or on Sunday.\nAt the conclusion ot the afternoon session president Mitchell made a statement, In the course ot which he used\nthe word \"strike\" for the Hrst Ume since\nthe present negotiations began. \"There\nto not much to say at this time,\" he said;\n\"as Indicated at the opening of the afternoon session, the sentiment seems\nstrong against accepting the conditions'\nand restricted arbitration scheme proposed by the operators, or renewing the\naward of the anthracite strike commission for three years, The strike feeling\nhas been intensified by the unfortunate\nand unjustifiable action of the state constabulary at Mount Carmsl, as well; as\ntheir conduct in other regions. It cannot, of course, be stated positively what\nthe vote will be; that will not be known\nuntil tomorrow or Sunday.\"\nAt the afternoon session the committee made Its first report, whloh was\nadopted, aod then Mr. Mitchell made a\nbrief speech, briefly reviewing the negotiations. He said the committee had\nperhaps gone even further than it should\nhave, In endeavoring to bring about a\npeaceful settlement of the existing dlfd-\nculties. He told of the proposals made\nby both sides and then said: \"We have\noffered to arbitrate all the demands we\nmade upon them. In other words, we\n\u25a0save offered to arbitrate the differences\nbetween us, either through the board of\nconciliation, with Judge Gray as chairman, or through the anthracite commission. We have made, the reservation.\nHowever, that It must be a full commission, not a part of It.\n\"That, gentlemen, la the status of affairs at this time and' I am sure I am\nspeaking the sentiment of every man\n-when I say that I regret that we have\nnot been able to make a report that\n\u25a0would be satisfactory to you. We regret\nthat we have not been able to make a\ntentative agreement that would secure\nfor you better wages and better conditions of employment\"\nA motion to adjourn was then made\nand discussed at some length. A large\nnumber of delegates were opposed tc\nadjourning and ln expressing their objection they gave an inBlght Into their\nfeelings as regards a strike. A delegate later In the afternoon moved tbat\nthe suspension be turned Into a strike,\nbut was not seconded.\nAt 6 o'clock an adjournment was taken\nuntil tomorrow, and aa far as could be\nlearned the discussion was general.\nJohnstown, May 3.\u2014Almost a score of\nminers were arrested at Wlndber last\nnight tor alleged participation In the\nriot at-Paint Creek on Saturday night\nand for tiding in the burning of the Bar-\nwind White Coal Co\/a property. The\nmoat Important prisoner la Charles F.\nShank, president of the Wlndber local\nunion of Mine Workera of America, The\nInformation charges Shank with setting\nnre to the house. The Barwlnd-Whlte\ncompany Issued a number of writs of\nevacuation today on striking miners occupying company houses.\nBOMB HXPUWION.\n\u25a0 Dynamiter  Is Blown Up  By His Own\nInfernal Machine.\nFurls, May 3.\u2014A bomb explosion occurred In the forest of Vlncannea at i\nr\/ctocl- thla afternoon killing a K\u00ab\"la\u00bb\nnamed Btrie and dangerously wound-\nworking about 12 men. It la estimated\nthat at present there are over 100 men\nworking between Orand Forks and\nFranklin camp. ,>.\nAt the extradition proceedings of B. B.\nStone, hla honor Judge Clement made an\norder of extradition, committing the accused to the provincial Jail at Nelson for\n16 daya, the statutory period before extradition ls effected.'\nThe management of the Maryland property on Pass creek, has made arrangements to start an aggressive form of development work,\nW. H. Itter, stationer of this place,\naccompanied by hla bride arrived home\nyesterday from California where they\nexperienced the San Francisco earthquake.\nINQUIRY INTO OIL TRUST\nSPECIAL  INVESTIGATION  BY   THB\nUNITED STATES.\nORAM) JURIES   WILL ' PROBABLY\n1DBAL WITH TUB MATTJER.\nWashington, May 3.\u2014Tbe statement\nla made that the department ot Justice\nwill immediately begin an Investigation\nof the relations of the so-called \"oil\ntrust\" aud a number of railroads with a\nview to determining whether there have\nbeen violations of the anti-rebate law.\nThe basis for this investigation will be\nthe Information recently submitted to\nthe president ln a report of commissioner Garfield of the'bureau ot corporations, which soon is'to be made public\nThis report, lt is learned, deals only\n, 1 with the Bubject of rebates, and does not\n-f go Into the questions of violations of the\nanti-trust law.\nIf it Is found that rebates have been\ngiven by the railroad and accepted by\nthe so-called oil trust, steps will be at\nonce taken, it Is asserted, to bring the\nmatter before the grand Juries ln the\nlocalities where the alleged violations\ntook place, with a view to prosecutions\nIn the courts. It is not thought that\nthe department of Justice iu conducting\nIts inquiry will require the services of\nany one outside the department proper\nand the United States attorneys and\nother officers under Its immediate direction.\nPARUAMENTARY NOTES.\nMining Code   For the   Yukon\u2014Lord's\nDay Act Conference\n(Bpsclal to The Dally Newt-\nOttawa, May 3.\u2014Hon. Frank Oliver,\nminister of the interior, Introduced   a\nbill lu ttie house ot commons yesterday,\nentitled an \"Act to provide a mining\ncode for Yukon Territory,\" which was\nread a flrat time.\nThe minister explained, ln reply to a\nquestion by R. L. Borden, that the act\nwas Introduced at the request of residents ot the territory who represented\nthat lt was dealrad to have the laws governing placer mining more in accordance\nwith the conditions now existing ln the\nYukon territory. He added that the bill\nwas practically dratted by a committee\nconsisting ot the Yukon council.\nAt a conference between Rev. J. 0.\nShearer and R. U. Macpherson ot the\nLord's Day Alliance, several objections\nto the Lord's Davy Obesrvance bill were\nconsidered. Mr. MoNlcoll, of the C.P.R.,\npresented' the same views that be expressed before the committee.\nMr. King suggested that Instead of\nprohibiting the handling of all freight on\nSunday some principle, should be reached the same as waa done in regard to\npassengers.\nRev. Mr. Shearer thought all way\nfreights and clearing up branch lines ot\nempty care should be prohibited.\nMr. McNlcoll agreed to prohibiting\nway freights which were not now run\nbut as to the other suggestion he would\nnot consent\nA discussion took place ou tbe necessity\nor otherwise of loading steamers on\nSunday. Tbe shipping Interests Insisted that lt would tie up the business\nand drive lt to tbe United States to stop\nloading freight at seaports on Sunday.!\nMr. McNlcoll also showed that steamers I\nwould have to stay over a day at Fort\nWilliam tf this was Insisted upon.\nThe conference failed to agree upon\nanything deflnlts, ao tbat the committee\nwill have to settle the matter.\nSLOCAN  HAPPENINGS.\nAdjudged   Insane   and   Bent to New\nWestminster Asylum\u2014Personal.\n(Special to The Dally News)\nSlocan, May 3.\u2014Joseph Blnnish, who\nhas heen for some time a patient at the\nnamed Btrie and dangerously wound-1 ____ w\u201e ,\u201e\u201e __\u201e \u201e_. \u201e \u201e.\u201e_\nlug a compauloh named BouaanoB; The   ^_*JT_,i\u00b0f.f\u00b0TJ ^L! *XE5iff '.\u00ab\n-**\u25a0\u25a0-\u2014.ii^^iin\u00bbthrou\u00abh the woods, I101** kojpl**!, has been adjudged In\n' \u25a0 \u2014\u2014 \"id has heen removed to the asy\ning a compamuu \u00bb\u00ab\u00ab \u00a5v\u2014\u2014\u2014.... _ _\nmen were proceeding through the woods,\ncarrying a bomb, with the' evident purpose of hiding them for future use.\nWhile so doing, the bomb whtch Btrie\ncarried exploded, killing him Instantly.\nBouBsoofl waa struck by fragments of\nthe bomb and fearfully lacerated. The\nremaining bomb has not yet been examined owing to the danger of handling It\nGRAND FORKS NOTES.\nRevival   ot   Interest In Mining In the\nEast\u2014Other Mining Notes,\n(Bpecial to The Dally News!\nGrand Forks, May 3.\u2014General man-\nasjer Bert Rea of the Betts and Hesperus mines on Hardy mountain arrived home yesterday from a month's trip\nto eaatern cltlea where he visited Chicago, Toronto and other places. He says\nthat at the present tune It Is comparatively easy to float any genuine mining\nproposition ln the east, there being quite\na rivlval of Interest ln mining.\nTbe Pathfinder mine la now working\nK rasa with two machine drills. The McKInley property In Franklin camp ia\n-to working * cool force, while ths\nGlouster mine In Glouster camp la alio\nsane, and haa been removed to the asy\nlum In New Westminster. The unfor\ntunate man haa been, for a long time, a\nsufferer from partial paralysis.\nMm William Clough recently arrived\nfrom the east, to Join her husband here,\nand both will reside in Slocan.\nMm J. A. Anderson left yesterday for\na visit to her parents In Manitoba.\nMiss Nettle Lucey, who has heen visiting her aunt, Mm George Garrett bas\nreturned to her name in Maple Creek.\nDan Hanlon la back In Slocan after a\nstay of several months ln Midway.\nThe organ recently raffled oft by J.\nD. O'Neill, was won by M. McFarland.\nEVILS OF IMMIGRATION.\nCrime in United Slates is Attributed to\nThis Source.\nNew York, May 3.\u2014The distribution\nof Immigrants was the subject of ihe\ngeneral meeting of the American social\nscience association here today. Former\nImmigration commissioner William Williams spoke on \"the sifting ot hnrnl-\ngranta.\" Ha said there Is need ot a secret serrtoe attached to tha Immigration\nbureau for the purpose of geetlng ac\ncurate Information for the exclusion ,ot\npauper (migrants.\nPrescott F. Hall, of Boston, author ot\nImmigration treatises, said the foreign\nborn population furnished more, than\ntwice Its normal proportion of Inmates\nof penal and charitable insinuations of\nthe country, and the alien population\nfurnished nearly ten times' Its normal\nproportion. Foreign whites are onco\nand a half as criminal as the native\nwhites and the children of these Immigrants are three times as criminal as the\nimmigrants themselves. In the Juvenile\noffenders, the foreign whites are three\ntimes as criminal as the native whites of\nnative parentage, and. the second generation* three and a half times aa criminal.\nThe most far reaching evil ot immigration ia its effect in diminishing the native birth rate. Among the other speakers were Dr. P. H. Bryce, chief medical\notlicer of the Canadian department of\ncommerce, and Cyrus L. Surburger, president of the society.\nOFFERS OF ASSISTANCE\nPRESIDENT   ROOSEVELT   THANKS\nVARIOUS NATIONS.\nHELP FOR SAN FRANCISCO GRATEFULLY ACKNOWLEDGED\nWashington, May 3.\u2014A special message was sent to congress today by president Roosevelt in whtch he explained the\ncourse of the government regarding the\noffer of contributions to the San Francisco flre and earthquake sufferers from\nforeign countries. The president saya\nthat where the contributions were made\nto the United States government he did\nnot feel warranted in accepting them,\nbut where they were made to tbe citizens' relief committee of San Francisco,\nno official action could be taken in regard to them. The message indicates\nthat the governments of the entire civilized, world promptly responded In messages of sympathy and many of them\nwith contributions and many offers of\ncontributions. The message is ln part\nas follows:\n\"Immediately atter the disaster at\nSan. Francisco, many offers of assistance\nln the shape of contributions wero tendered by foreign and civic corporations,\ngovernments and municipalities. The\nCanadian government, with Its Instant\ngenerosity, as a proof ot the close and\nfriendly ties which knit us together offered to pass a resolution appropriating\n1100,000 for the relief of the sufferers by\nearthquake and flre.'\n\"With a generosity equally marked\nand equally appreciated the republic of\nMexico, our nearest neighbor to the\nsouth, voted to appropriate (30,000, and\ntbe republic of Guatemala voted to appropriate 110,000 for the purpose, the\ngovernment of China offered to send at\nonce money to be used for Chinese sufferers In San Francisco; the Japanese\ngovernment Immediately offered to send\nacross the ocean one of their 'beautifully\nequipped hospital ships to be used ln\nany way for the sufferers and also offered 200,000 yen to the relief committee\nln addition to more than 100,000 yen\nsent by Japanese subjects. The government of Martinique voted 1000 francs,\nthe municipality of Edmonton, Canada,\n3100. Many municipalities, corporations\nin England, Germany, France, Japan,\nChina, and other countries immediately\nproffered aid. *\n'Where these offers of aid were made\nto the private relief committees, organized to deal with the distress in San\nFrancisco, I have, of course, no ofnclal\naction to take concerning them. Where\nthey were tendered to me in my official\ncapacity I do not feel warranted ln accepting them, but I am certain I give\nutterance to the feeling of all our countrymen when I express my lively appreciation ot the warm-hearted generosity\nand eagerness to help us ln the time of\nour affliction, Bhown by these governments, municipalities, corporations and\nIndividuals mentioned above. We are\ndeeply grateful to them and we are deeply grateful for the way In which they\nshowed the spirit of brotherhood among\nthe nations.\"\nThe president then gives a list ot those\nwho sent most kind and welcome messages of sympathy and concludes;\n\"Appropriate expressions of gratitude\nto these friends have been returned hy\nthe stats department or by myself, but\nIt seems to me that the real depth ot\ngrateful feeling awakened in our people\nby all these evidences of genuine sympathy and friendship should be expressed also by formal action of the supreme\nlegislative power ot the nation. I recommend the passage by the congress\not an appropriate resolution to that effect.\"\nATHLETES CONGRATULATED.\nAmericans Will Now Visit England to\nTry Conclusions.\nAthens, May 3.\u2014President Roosevelt\nhas telegraphed to Mr. Sullivan, manager of the American team at the Olympic games as follows; 'Hearty congratulations to you and the American\ncontestants. Uncle Sam is all right\n(8gd.) Theodore Roosevelt.\"\nMinister Jackson will give a reception\ntonight'In honor of the American\nathletes. Tha Americans are already\ndispersing. James D. Lightbody, Hugo\nFriend and Robert E. Edgreen havo\nstarted for England, and Chas. N. Bon-\nhag and Paul H. Pilgrim, Prlnsteln and\nH. W. Kerrigan will follow. They will\ncompete In Held sports ln the United\nKingdom.\nSTEAMSHIP .ARRIVALS   YKSTEBUAY\nNew Tork\u2014Battle, Liverpool.\nHflJIfnx-TCartharenlrin;  Liverpool,\nUvornool-Caronls, Nsw York; Kensington, Portland: Montcalm, Bt. John.\nHavrar-Ls BMtatns, New York; Mmer-\nsnlan, Halifax; La Bavolcf, N\u00abw York.\nSITUATION\nUNSCTTLED\nSerious Unrest Prevails\nGenerally all Through\nFrance\nStrike CondltloM Show Evidence* ol Oil-\n\u2022option-Troops Still Freely Used Is\n'  theKt-f.plni.ofOrder\nParis, May k\u2014The general Btrlke\nshows further evidence of disruption,\nhut the men belonging to a number of\ntrades still refuse to return to work until their demands are granted. A squadron of dragoons Ib drawn up In the\ncourtyard of the prince Eugene barracks\nln the place de la Republique, prepared\nto respond to the call of the police.\nTho latter continue to be massed in\nconsiderable force in the neighborhood\not ths labor exchange and occasional arrests are made but there Is no disorder.\nThe centre of the city is entirely quiet,\nbut troops continue to occupy strategic\npoints. Tbe basement of the bourse ls\noccupied by a squad of soldiers aud the\nmilitary are in charge of other public\nplaces. Pickets of republican guards are\nalso scattered through the suburbs and\nothers are stationed at Btreet corners\nand at Pasain and other residential\nquarters as a precaution against the appearance of scattered bands of strikers.\nThe latter are relatively quiet. The\nminor disorders reported are confined to\nthe outlying factory dlsrlcts.\nRepresentatives; ot numerous trades\nmet at the labor exchange during the\nday and resolved to continue the Btrlke\nbut there were no disorders. The building and furniture trades are most affected. A number of leading automobile\nfactories In the suburbs have locked out\ntheir machinists owing to their continued demand for reduced hours. Several\nthousand men are: affected.\nThe resumption of work is general ln\nthe mining districts. With the exception of the explosion of a dynamite cartridge ln front of tbe house of a non-\nstriking miner which shattered the door\nand walls, no further outrages have been\nreported.\nNEWS OF THE DOMINION\nYESTERDAY'S   HAPPENINGS    ALL\nOVER CANADA.\nRECENT   OCCURRENCES   OF VERY\nOENERAL INTEREST.\nPembroke, May S-Hon. Peter White,\nM.P. for North Renfrew nnd former speaker of the home of commons, died at CMf-\nton Springs^ N.T.. this morning*.\nWinnipeg1, Mny 3\u2014Salvador Macrl waa today committed for trial for ttie murder or\nO. Roma nil I.\nSlntaluta, Man., May 3\u2014On Monday the\nlittle daughter of George Pollock picked\nup a carbolic add bottle and drank a -portion of the contents, sho died yesterday\nin great agony,\nNewcastle, Ont., May 3-A home Boy.\nabout 15 years of age, while harrowing' on\ntho farm of Samuel Turner, about two\nmiles north of here, was struck by lightning yesterday afternoon and instantly\nkilled. The team he waa driving were also\nkilled.\nMontreal, May 3-The Hochelaga mill of\nthe Dominion Cotton company of this city,\nhas closed down and 1100 cotton operatives\nare idle as a result. The strike of the card\nroom employees and weavers cawed tne\nclosing down of the entire mill. An early\nsettlement Is expected.\nOwen Bound, May 3\u2014The tug Clipper,\nbelonging to the Spanish Boom company,\nsprung a leak yesterday oft Bustard's island and sank within a hundred yards ot\nshore. Captain Mcintosh of French River,\nEd. Flesher of Cutler and a. man named\nJohnston of Midland, were drowned, me\n-fourth man on the-tug got ashore. The\nbody of Flesher was recovered and brought\nhere.\nSt. John, May 3-Word has been received\nhero of the kiling of four men on Aroostock\nriver, near Uie Maine border, by dynamite exploding. They were employed in\nblowing out Ico in n piece of dtnd Water\npreparatory to beginning log driving, and\nwhile thawing the dynamite for the purpose it exploded. Three of the men belonged to New Brunswick and the fourth\nto Maine:   Two leave families.\nPrince Arthur of Connaught spent yesterday afternoon In Bt. John and left\nlast night tor Quebec. Everywhere toe went\nin tho city he was accorded a hearty welcome.\nGlace Bay, May 3-Alexnnder McGlli.vray\na machinist, went to an out of the way\npart of the Dominion colliery on Monday\nmorning to attend to his duties, when some\nprops came down and with them came some\ncoal-end clay. The props fell across hw\nlegs and the coat nearly burled him, head\nand shoulders alone remaining out. To\nextricate himself was Impossible, He was\nIn this position for 29 hours before being\nrescued. He describmi hl& ejf-pcrlcnce oa\nmoat terrible, death hovering over him in\nthe shape of unsupported stone on tne\nroof. His absence was not noticed until\nabout noon yesterday, when the aearcn\nparty waa organised and he was extricated, Injured but not seriously,\nMANUFACTURBRfl'\nLIS*\nInsurance Commission Continues Its in-\nvwUgfttkms\nToronto, May S-The ftllure of the policies of the Manufacturers' htte to pay profits which It wae estimated they would\npay when they were Issued, were inquired\nInto *\u00bby Mr- mealey, tovernment counsel,\ndn the Inquiry today. Mr, Shepley bas an\nexpert actuary at his elbow and another,\nUr. Polbbs, of the Manufacturers' Life, ln\nthe box.\n, Mr. Shepley asked Pa-bbs as to what extent policy holders were affected by the\nheavy expenses ln connection with tne\ncollection of first year's premiums of poll-\nodes; In other words, how are large commissions paid to agents and others for new\nbusiness obtained. Paibbs admitted that a\npulton of the cost of collecting flrst prem-\nlinns fell upon other po-Ucy holders and\nthatt the large expense ratio had to some\nextent an effect on the prollts.\nMr. Pabbs was of the opinion that recent\nlegislation In the New York state legislature to remedy certain Insurance conditions would be a good thing If adopted in\nCanada.\nRATIONS RUNNING SHORT\nFEEDING OF SAN FRANCISCO IB INCOMING A PROBLEM\nABLE BODIED MEN FORCED TU\nWORK ON flTRBErTS\nBan Francisco, May 3-Curtallment ot the\nrelief list;* together with the decision ot\nthe police to arrest aa vagrants ail awe\nbodied men without visible means of support who refuse to work, auued to ttie\nnumber of men engaged in cleaning away\nthe debris from the recent earthguake and\nflre. There la not yet an adequate flow ot\nwater In case of flre. Cooking Js carried\non lit the streets.\nAll of tho banks resumed business today\nin temporary quarters und reported mat\nthe deposits excuded the wltnurawals in\neach onse. Five hundred tailors are now\nopening ln new quarters,\nCity engineer Woodward today submitted\na compi-tmenslvo plan ror rebuilding tne\ncity. It Includes the broadening ana extension of many street!*, the purpose being\nto insure better protection ug<iinst iii-j\nspread of flre.\nQeneral Greeley advised the ftnance committee today that he had only seven days'\nrations on hand; thut the aimy -could nut\nfui-nlMi an ounce of food beyond tnui\nwhich had already been {purchased, or is\nin sight, and that the feeding of the people V a question which demand-- immediate\nattention. Outside donat.ons on Wednesday\namounted to f-7,000 and local contributions\nto fS.OUO, making a total for the day ot\n(102.000, or a grand total since April in ot\n(4,780,000..\nThe action of certain rotallers in advancing the prices of commodities beyond\nreach was considered today by tho general\ncommittee. Borne llrnis axe now asalng\n92.b0 a barrel for limes, which, they soiu\nbefore tho flre for ;o cents. Mayor Scumiu\ndetailed every member of the committee\nto report as promptly us possible. C, E.\nLoss, who was awarded the contract to\nreconstruct the Geary street ca'oio railroad as a municipal electric conduit system, today said that lt was Imprucucaoic\nto build a conduit system in San Francisco.\nThe experience of the United \"Runways in\nthe earthquake showed that while the bit-\ncorporation wus able to operate ovornuiu\nlines within a few days after the earthquake, It will be montiie- before any of the\ncable lines will bo started.\nThe committee appointed by mayor\nSchmltz to prepare p-imb for tne reconstruction of tlie city met today, hi. ii.\nHarrlman, who was chosen vice-chairman,\nsatd; \"1 believe that we ought to get to\nwork; we should tulk less and do more.\n1 don't care If mistakes ore made, It is\nbetter to be doing something than to remain Idle. If you want men to work, i\nwill pay a man to do It, If I can get him;\nbut If 1 cannot, 1 will go Into the streets\nand pitch bricks myself.\"\nMr. Harrlman said lt would be futile to\nattempt to raise money unless it waa den-\nlikely decided to what use the money was\nto be put. ilo declared it would be impossible to go to the money market with a\nhazy idea of what the money was to be\nused for.\nNIAGARA WATER.\nReport Being Submitted by the International Commission.\nBuffalo, May 3.\u2014The agreement reached by the international water commission on the questions involved ln taking of water from Niagara river by the\npower companies at Niagara Falls and\nthe Soo was signed today by the members and forwarded to the secretary of\nwar at Washington and the minister of\npublic works at Ottawa.\nThe commission then adjourned, subject to the can of the secretary. The\nChicago drainage canal was involved tn\nthe falls question as affecting the water levels. As lt also Involves the levels\nof the chain of lakes lt was decided to\ntreat lt separately, and it forms no part\nof the agreement It and the question\nof the level of lake Erie will be taken up\nin tbe near future.\nRUSSIAN ELECTIONS.\nRevolutionary Members Are Being Returned to the Douma\nSt. Petersburg, May 3.\u2014Several more\ndistricts held their election for members of the national parliament today.\nIn the Baltic provinces the results were\nfavorable to the constitutional party,\nwhile Poland elected candidates of allied parties, who, however, are subordinating all other issues to the one of\neconomic.\nEvidence of the spirit reigning among\nthe members elected ls foreshadowed in\nthe despatches from Vietk. Friends of\nthe representatives went by the steamer to the prison in front of which they\nstopped and hoisted a red flag and sang\nthe Marseillaise. Tbe prisoners smashed\nthe windows ot.the jail, waived red\nshirts and joined In.\nFIRE AT FERNIE.\nGreat Northern Station Gutted\u2014Freight\nSaved.\u2014Office Contents Bruned.\n(Special to The Dally Mews)\nFernle, May 3.\u2014A bad fire occurred\nat the Great Northern railway depot\nhere this morning The building was completely gutted but most of the freight\nwas saved, but all the contents of the\noffice were destroyed.\nLOSS OF TUG CLIPPER.\nOwen Sound, May 3.\u2014The tug Clipper\nand all her crew, wtth the exception of\none man, were lost off the Bustard islands on Monday morning. The Clipper\nleft here on Sunday morning and early\non Monday morning she sprung a leak\nnecessitatis beaching. The men sought\nsafety In a email yawl which capsired.\nAll managed to get back to tho sub\nmerged tug, the house port of which remained above water. Albert Beatty got\nashore on a raft made of a door and\nwandered on the Island until next morning when he was rescued by a tug. The\ntug went to the rescue of the wreck but\nall the men had disappeared. Fletcher's\nbody was found alongside of the wreck.\nNo doubt the others perished.\nADMINISTERS A REBUKE\nSHAUGHNESSY CALLS DOWN BRITISH\nSTATESMEN\nSAYS THEY SHOULD KEEP IN TOUCH\nWITH EMPIRE\nMontreal, May 2-A special cable to the\nStar from London says that on tlie principle that a half loaf is better than no\nbrea^, sir Thomas Shaughnessy, president\nof the Canadian Pacific railway company,\nwelcomed the announcement of the colonial\nsecretary made at the Canada club last\nnight, that tlie Canadian PacUlc Empress\nsubsidy from tbe British treasury will toe\ncontinued for two years. Sir 'inomas in\nlus speech, which was too late to be re-\npot-ted, created some stir by the outspoken\nway In which, in the presence of the colonial secretary, he commented on tbo\nneglect of British ministers and prominent\nomcials to visit and 'become acquainted\nwith the actual conditions of the empire\nthey were charged to govern, referring\nespecially to the permanent head of tne\nCanadian department of the colonial oiilce,\nwho was present. Sir Thomas SnttUglinossy\nexpressed astonishment that he had never\nbeen In Canada, and said that It \"should\nbe incumbent upon a man holding such a\nposition to spend at least three monttiB in\nCanada every year.\" .(General cheers).\nAnd that \"it was recently stated in the\nCanadian senate that no British minister\nhad ever visited Canada.\" Theae were\nconditions requiring attention.\nSir Thomas proceded as follows: \"A few\nyears ugo when trade question-- were discussed betwen Canada and the United\nStates, we were treated with something\nin the nature of contempt. Are we going\nto permit the Rockefellers, Carnegles, Hills\nand other men who lniluence tne United\nStates, to force upon Canada trade relations that may lead to most complicated\nresults in future? Are we to sit supinely\nby and let them determine what shall be\nCanada's future career I do not know\nby what means we can prevent them from\ncarrying out their objects, but whether by\nfree trade or fair trade, or a combination\nof free trade and fair trado, we must attempt tu do it.\"\nLord Struthcona in his speech was equally frank. As regards tlie Canadian Atlantic Bton-mers he said he waa not satis-\nfled and would not be sullalled until the\npassage from land to land was mad*- uy\nCanadian steamers inside of four days.\nPLANS   OP   DREADNAUGHT\nRumor of Thc-lr Theft Is Denied by American Officials\nLondon, May 3-United States ambassador.\nReld and lieutenant commander John N.\nGibbons, naval attache of the American\nembassy here, emphatically deny the allegation cabled to New Vork that the\nplans of the British battleship Dreadnaught\nwere stolen by an official of the British\nadmiralty nnd sold to the  United States.\nAs a matter of fact the main outlines ot\nthe plnns were already known to the representatives of all the powers who attended\nthe launching at Portsmouth, they having\nbeen allowed to examine them freely. The\nlords of the admiralty and the ohlef secretary are absent in the dockyards, but\nthe Associated Press Is assured by the under officials that there is no truth in tne\nreport.\nANSWERS PROTEST\nBritish Government r\/ick-j Newfoundland Fishing Laws\nLondon, May a-Great Britain's position\nregarding the fining of American fishing\nvessels by Newfoundland magistrates tor\nviolation of the colonial fishing regulations\nIs that American vessels must obey the\nregulations of the colony which do not\nconflict with their rights under the treaty\nof 1818. This Is the answer the Associated\nPress 18 Informed wns sent to Washington in reply to the protests from American\nfishermen. \t\nTHE KING IN PARIS.\nParis. May 3.\u2014King Edward dined today at the palace of the Blysee with\nprealdent Faltleries. The president toasted the king, saying: \"Your majesty's\nfrequent visits are a precious pledging\nof the cordiality of the relations between France and England. Both are\nhappy to sincerely act together for civilisation and peace. King Edward expressed the pleasure hla visits to France\nhad afforded him.\nRAILS FOR C. P. R.\nFort William, May 3.\u2014The steamer\nAgawa unloaded 6000 tons of rolls today being the largest cargo every\nbrought to thla port. It will require 300\ncars to transfer thorn west for the C.\nP. R.\nHELP FROM CONGRESS.\nWashington, May 3 the California delegation in congress have received assurance that the house committee on appropriations will provide for the restoration and repair of large buildings whloh\nsuffered ln the recent earthquake.\nWINNIPEG WANTS LAURIER.\nWinnipeg, May 3.\u2014Premier Laurler\nwill be asked to open an Industrial show\nhere tn July and the premiers of Ontario and the other three western provinces\nwill also be invited to be present.\nMISSING FATIFJ5R GAPON\nflt Petersburg, May 3\u2014M. Margolin, tho\nattornoy for Father Gapon, who recently\nreceived a mysterious pattkiige from Berlin,\ncontaining several of th\u00ab personal belongings of the missing man, today published\na statement that he possosses positive\nproof that Gapon was not murdered by the\nrevolutionaries.\nCAPITALIST'S SUDDEN DEATH\nSt. Louis, May 3\u2014Corwln H. Spencer, a\nleading grain trader capitalist, president\nof the World's Fair and former president\nof the Merchants' Exchange, collapsed today while watching the atock quotation\nboard and died soon afterwards.\nPACIFYING PHILIPPINES\nManila, May 3\u2014Next week a force of const ubulry acting In conjunction with governor Bchack of the province of Cm-it*\nwill begin a movement to capture uente-\nlon and his band, now located south of ths\nTeal volcano.\nWITTE MAY\nNOTJRETIRE\nCzar Nicholas Apparently\nStill Vacillating as to\nHis Course\nNo Official Notifi ation Yet Published of\nthe Reslgaatlon-Slate for New Ministry is Being Prepared\nSt. Petersburg, May 3-Much myaUilcn*\n\u25a0yon has ben aroused by tho fact tbat tna\ncsar haa not ytt, in definite words, adopted count \"VVltte's resignaUon as premier.\nIt seems that Witte received a letter from\nthe czar thanking him for his .zealous ana\nable services In tho past and Wlttee accepted tills In connection with the pror-\nfered resignaUon. and thc report of Al.\nGoremykln's appointment to the promier-\n\u2022Wm as being tqulvalent to dismissal.\nTho nonappearance of the rescript fte-\nceptfng WItte's resignation is further cnum-\nfor comment, and the theory is advanced\nthat tho czar is still hesitating in view oc\nthe general expression of opinion in regard\nto M. Goremykln, to discard the oid premier. At tho same time It is known po'sl-\ntuvely that Interior minister Duknovo'-i\nresignation has been tendered.\nThe immediate organl*sation of the new\ncabinet Is now anticipated. AH the ministers aire understood to have placed then-\nresignations In the hands of the czar. Besides M. Goremykln as premier, the sliLtu\nis said to Include M. Stolypfn, the governor of Saratoff, for minister of the interior;\nM. Kokovsoff, as minister of Unanc ;\nprince GaJittln, professor of physics at th\"\nacademy of science, as minister Of ways\nand communications; M. von KHUfman, <*\u25a0\nmember of the council of tho empire, as\nminister of education; prince Sherinsky\nShakmatoff, as procurator of tlie hoiy\nsynod^and M. Stlthegloveroff, a\u00ab minister or justice.\nAU are bureaucrats, but rather colorless.\nThe future poVlcy of the government Is s\u00ab\u00bb\ncarefully guarded that the papers are nonplussed as to whether count WItte's downfall means a reversal of the latter'*- policy\nor the possibility of reaching a common\nground In parliament. Tho majority of tii\"\npapers attribute the fall of the oibinet to\nthe bad reception of the draft of the fundamental laws. The retirement of the\nministry has also Involved the withdrawal\nof the latter, which Is believed to be a.\nhopeful sign,\nSt Petersburg. May 4 \u2014 3:30 a,m.\u2014The\nNovoe Vremya which under the new regime\nresumes Its old relations with the government, prints this morning what purports\nto be an authoritative statement of tnu\nGoremykln ministry, coupled with an intimation that the official announcement\nmay not be given out before the convocation of the national -parliament. The ministry, howover, which contains several unexpected names, ts likely to tlnd lar less\nfavor with the liberal majority in the popular branch of parliament than the Wltte\ncabinet. The object of postponing the announcement of the new ministry is nard\nto fathom.\nA remarkable feature of tho slate is the\nselection of count Ignaticlf as .procurator\ninstead of, as anticipated, M. siiinnsky\nSliakcaftoff, and M. Stishinsky, au ntvii\nreactionary and notorious aide of the late\nminister of the Interior Plehve, as in.ulster\nof agriculture. These two names alone-\nare enough to put the new ministry under\neternal ban with the liberals.\nLater developments increase tho Importance of the Russian expedition to Mongolia, under colonel Nevltesky, which is\nto leave St. Petersburg the middle of May\nto survey the hitherto unexplored regions\nbetween the Manchurian frontier ana\nUrga. lt Is now announced that tho expedition will consist of not less than t>0\nofficers, and that Us flrst work will bo to\nmake further surveys for a r-illro;id trom\nKlakhta to Kalgan, and another route\nfrom Urga to MJrin, by which the oasteru\nportion of Mongolia will toe thoroughly sur-\nIn this connection despatches from Pekin\nregarding the possibility of an Anglo-Bus?\nslan understanding on the fcasls of hands\noff Greater Britain In Tibet, and for Hus-\nsla in Mongolia, are regarded with inter .st.\nIt is recalled that the Russian expedition\nto Tibet which startrd tho -strife for LhasBa\nwas Hrst announced, Ifko this one, to be\npurely for scientific purposes.\nLondon, May 1-The reference In tlie foregoing despatch from St. Petersburg to a\u00bb\nAlnglo-Russlan agreement nn the basis\nof Russian non-lntorference In libot and\nBritish non-Interferent-c In Mongolia. Is, according to a statement made at tho Bruisn\nforeign otnee, founded on misinformation.\nBuchan agreement ls improbable, as Japan\ncertainly would object^\t\n'FRISCO FIRE LOSSES\nHartford Companies' Liabilities Over\nThirteen Million.\nHartford, May 3.\u2014The estimated net\nlosses of the Hartford Insurance companies In the recent Sau Francisco flre\nas given out today are as follows: Aetna,\n$3,000,000; Hartford, 15,750,000; National, $1,500,000; Orient $700,000; Pheonlx,\n$1,500,000; Scottish Union and National\n$1,000,000.   Total, $13,150,000.\nTHB KING'S HEALTH.\nParis, May 3.\u2014The British embassy\nhere ridicules the alarming London reports concoruing the condition of the\nhealth of king Edward, wbo Ib here. Hla\nmajesty's secretary said today that the\nking never waa hotter. He went to visit\nfriends yesterday evening and lunched\nwith some friends today.\nWILL NOT HELP TURKEY.\nLondon, May 4.\u2014 The Standard this\nmorning says it understands that count\nFold Metterulch, the German ambassador, has Informed the British government that Turkey cannot rely upon German support In the event of a quarrel\nwtth Great Britain.\nA CLERICAL MURDER.\nMurcla, Spain, May 3.\u2014Abbe Morales\ntoday murdered the Jesuit father Marline* tn the sacristy of Banto Domingo\nchurch and then committed suicide.\n THB DAILT HHWS, HBLBOH, B. C, FRIDAY, HAT 4, 1900\nTHE\nSSI\nHUDSON'S BAY STORES\nThis space is invariably used (or the beneflt ot tlie public, by\ndrawing attention to good things,\nToday the very best thing we know of, and ln which all should\nand do, take keen interest, Is the\nNelson 20,000 Club\nIt Is well managed on up to date methods and practical, gratifying results have already been shown.\nLet all help lt along by patronizing, and inducing their friends\nto patronize the\nGrand Concert\nwhich will take place at the Opera House on next Monday the \"th\ninstant.\nA popular cause, popular songs, and popular music, by popular\ntalent.\nHave we a man with soul so dead,\nWho ne'er to himself hath said:\nNelson, thou fairest ln the land\nI'll \"boost you up to beat the band.\"\n*******AAA*a a ****aa******4\nImperial Bank of Canada\nHEAD OFFICE:   TORONTO}\nCAPITAL PAID TIP $3,900,000\nD. R. WILKIB, President .\nRESERVE FUND  13,900,000\nROBERT JAFFRAY, Vice-President\nBranches'in British Columbia\nAMOWHBAD, OEANBROOK. OOLM1N, NBIiJON,   MTV1LJTOBI, *\n\u2022****\"\u25a0*'\"      .jmHrr Ll___ti VANOOOTBE, VICTORIA.\nSAVINGS DEPARTMENT\nJ*tf Deposits rewired At* intareat allowed at onrreit ratal from data tl .,'\n______    r-       ^ '\u201e|,,ilg aetout and credited hall-yearly.\nNelson Branch    \u00ab J- M. Lay, Manaeer\nThe Canadian Bank of\nCommerce\nCapital Paid up, $10,000,000.\nHost,\n.34,600,000\nHEAD OFFICE: TORONTO.\n\u25a0OK. O10*M\u00bb A. COX Piwtdont.     B. M. WALKER. Oeneral Manager.\nSavings Bank Department\nDeposits ot 11 and upwards received and interest allowed at current\nrates MONEY MAY BB DEPOSITED AND WITHDRAWN BY HAIL.\nAmount* received In tbli war will be promptly acknowledged. Interest cred-\nlted halt yearly.\nNELSON BRANCH,        J. L. BUCHAN, Manager.\nWe will Sell\n..I . 9\nlo00  Denoro  Mines    *     H\n1000 Highland Gold \u2022\u25a0\u2022\u2022\u2022.\u2022\u2022   \\Z.\nWoo oroat Northern Mines     \u2022\"\u00bb\n100 Hurst  Switch   *\u25a0\u2022\",,\n1000 Kootenay Coal    :   \u2122\n2000 Lardeau Mines \t\nWe will arrange an exchange on any active stocks for you.   Write us tor particulars. ;        -\nWe will Buy\niVg\nBOW Yale-Kootenay Ico \t\n10M Apex, Wash     .si\n1000 International Coal   \u00bb\n10GO Hunter V 12%\n10 Canadian Consolidated  12&.W\n6000 Olympic  a\nSHARP & IRVINE\nDrawer 1082\nNelBon, B. C.\nBROKERS\nDrawer 1761\nSpokane, Wash.\nTHE DAILY NEWS\n-pTAbUBii-rt at Neiton Every Moraine,\n' \"onday by\nDBANB\nF.\" J. DB\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nDally, par  year   Ift.O\"\nDally, per month   \u2022  ' *ev\nAU subscriptions payable in advance.\nA TRADES UNION VICTORY.\nThe bill that bas been accepted by\nthu British houae of commons, by the\n\u2022emphatic vote of 416 to 66, to exempt\nlal or unions from suits for damages, ca.ua\n\u2022st! by strikes, has occasioned a great\ndeal of comment, and many of the press\nutterances are openly hostile to the government for abandoning the ministerial\nmeasure and adopting the one proposed\nby the representatives of the labor organizations.\nThe ministerial measure did not go to\nanything like the same length as that\nproposed by Mr. Hudson, a representative of railway brotherhoods, although\nin practise It would have exempted the\ntrades unions from damages upon a plea\nof non-responsibility being entered.\nFeeling over tbe bill has been aroused\nto such a pitch that some papers are urging the bouse of lords to throw tt out.\nTo this proposal, the Outlook, although']\nlt does not approve of the bill ln ita\npresent form, says, \"If tho bouse of\nlords commits itself to a struggle with\nthe people upon a direct labor issue, lt\nWill ruin Its power to Intervene with ef\nfect upon subsequent imperial and educational questions, and it may Imperil\nIta existence.\"\nThe'strongest defense of the bill, outside of the labor organs, is put up by\nFrederic Harrison, who, writing In the\nPostlvisit Review, says:\n\"There are two grounds on which 1\nJustify what, on the face of it, is a somewhat strong demand. First, an exceptional law is required to meet the exceptional and peculiar character of trade\nunions. They are not corporations; they\nare not organized trading societies stall.\nThey are loose and casual benefit clubs,\nworked, not by business experts for profit, but by untutored day laborers for\nmutual protection. It ls unjust to apply to them the complicated rules of\nagency which are fair tn the liabilities\nIncurred by a railway company or an\niron corporation. 'Common sense' Is\nsometimes uncommon injustice. 'Equal\njustice' may become gross oppression.\n\"The aecond ground for exemption Is\nthat these quite exceptional clubs of\nworkmen are adjudicated by tribunals\nwhich are never really Impartial and\nare often bitterly prejudiced against\nthem. With very rare exceptions lawyers are, as a class, committed to defend the lights of property, to protect\nthe Interests of trade and capital generally. It is no business of the law to\nraise wages; lt is often the business of\nthe law to Interpose that dividends may\nnot be reduced.. Lawyers are hardly ever\ncalled In to secure any benflt or Improvement of condition to laborers as a class.\n. .. Owing to the complexity of the law,\nthe Ingenuity of lawyers, and the more\nor leas unconscious prejudice natural to\nJudges and juries we do not see how\nthe law can be amended, except by plainly exempting trade unions from actions\nat law, until they are fully made real\ncorporations, with all tbe rights and\nqualities of corporations,\".\nIt Is suggested ln some quarters that\n(n demanding so   much,   and ln using\nTHB\nROYAL BANK OF CANADA\nTOTAL ASSETS, $36,378,616\nHEAD OFFICE:   HALIFAX, N. S.\n..... .$3,000,000 Reserve Fund S3.437.162\nSAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT\nCapital\nAccounts ot Unas and Individuals opened on tha moat favorable\nThirteen Branches ln British Columbia.\nBpecial attention to out ot town business.\nT. B. KENNY, President, Halifax.       B. L. PEASE Oeneral Manager, Montreal\nA. W. HYNDMAN. Manager NELSON BRANCH.\nBANK\u00bb MONTREAL\n..110,000,000\nESTABLISHED 1817.\nCAPITAL, ALL PAID UP... .*H,400,000        REST \t\nHEAD OFFICE:  MONTREAL\nRt. Ron. Lord Strathcona and Mount  Royal, O. C. M. O., Hon, President\nHon. Sir George Drummond, K.C. M. O., President,\n\u25a03\u00a32\u00a3-'**\u00a3~; R B. Clouston, Oeneral Manager. .tWal!\nBranches in British Columbia\nArmstrong, Enderby, Greenwood, Kelowna,   Nelson,   New   Denver,   Nicola,\nNew Westminster, Rossland, Vancouver, Vernon, Victoria,\nNelson Branch:\u2014Le B. DeVeber, Manager.\nGARDEN   TOOLS\nASD\nRANCH SUPPLIES\nPRUNING SHEARS\nSPADES\nHOBS\nRAKES\nSPADING PORKS\nGARDEN HOSE\nLAWN SPRINKLERS\nThese are only a tew leaders hut we are prepared to'supply all\nyour wants.\nWood-Vallanoe Hardware (to. Limited.\nNBLSON: Wholesale ud Retail.\nMRmmmnH.Mi.nr\nI! hod want\nINSURANCE\nFRUIT LANDS or\n      LOTS NEAR\nCITY PARK\nGet a seat in the bald headed row at the 20,000 Club\nconcert, there I will meet you.\nCorner Ward and\nBaker Streets\nT. G. PROCTER\nLook at our snaps on\nPicture\nFrames\nFrames that were $2.75 now 12.00\nFiames that were $4.25 now  13.60\nFrames that were $6.00 now  $6.10\nFrames that were $2.00 now $1.25\nFrames that were $1.00 now ,; 75\nFrames that were $1.25 now $1.10\nFrames that were $5.50 now  $3.10\nFrames that were $6.50 now  $5.60\nW. G. THOMSON tt.tondState\nANOTHER WONKR OF SCIENCE.\nBlolosr  ha.  Proved  thnt  Dandruff Is\nCaused by a Germ.\nScience Is donlg wonders theso days In\nmedicine as well ns in mechanics. Since\nAdam lived, the human ruco has been\ntroubled with dandruff, for which no hair\npreparation has heretofore proved a sue*\ncessful cure until Newbro's Herpicide was\nput on the market. It is a scientific prep*\noration that kills the germ that makes\ndandruff or scurf by digging Into the\nscalp to get at tho root of the hair, whore\nit saps the vitality: causing itching scalp,\nfoiling hair, and Anally baldness. With-\nout dandruff hair must grow luxuriantly.\nIt Is the only destroyer of dandruff.\nBold hy lending drug-gists. Send 10c.\nln stamps for sample to The Hsrpl.\naids Co., Detroit, Mich.\nCANADA   DRIJO  A   BOOK   WMf.M,\nSpecial Agents, k.w.l. fcho-uc\ntheir parliamentary strength to compel\nthe government to assent to their demands, the labor unions may find that\ntheir victory has been dearly purchased.\nWhilst public opinion undoubtedly favored some modification of the law regulating the responsibility of trades unions,\nlt did not favor placing them above the\nlaw, snd the passsge of this bill may\nhave a reactionary effect and lead to a\ndemand for legislation In the Interests\nof organised capital that will defeat the\nalms of the trades unionists.\nTo exempt the trades union from all\nresponsibility for damages sustained by\nreason of the action of a member or\nmembers of such trade union does appear to be going altogether too far.\nTime alone will prove whether or not\ntbls Is the case. If the trade unions\nshow the proper appreciation of the confidence thus Imposed In them, it may\nbe that the new law will work no hardship, but It Is certainly incumbent upon them to exercise the utmost constraint over their members In times of\nIndustrial strife.   Any   disposition   to\ntake undue advantage of thla legislation will surely result In Its repeal, or\ndrastic amendment, and the cause of\ntrades unionism would sustain a setback\nof a very serious nature. A weapon that\nmay prove very dangerous to organised\nlabor has been placed tn the hands of\ntrades unionists and It la up to the leaders to see that it Is handled with the\nutmost delicacy.\nEDITOR fah NOTES.\nSumming.up her conclusions on ths\neffects of woman suffrage ln New Zealand, a writer. In. the Empire Review\nsays: \"Political women, like the members of the various leagues and societies,\ncertainly spend some considerable' share\nof their time In public work. But even\nwith them lt is not nearly so absorbing\nand so destructive of home lite as the\ncommon round of social gaieties. And\nmost of these amateur politicians are\nmature women of experience, and their\nchildren are long past the age when\nthey require all ot a mother's leisure.\nThey are the exception rather than the\naverage women, and are gifted with a\nsurplus energy. Politics is regarded by\nmany of them as a more effectual means\nof philanthropy than charity haa yet\nproved. So far the franchise bas not\nbrought about any revolution. It has\nIncreased their Interest tn politics, and\ncertainly promoted the introduction of\nhumanitarian legislation Into the house.\nIt haE not affected homellfe perceptibly,\nand lt has not altered the character of\nwomen. Many prophecies ot evil have\nproved false and many hopes have been\ndisappointed. Politics have not been\nraised to a higher standard. But the\npeople are more effectually represented\nthan they had ever been before. Women; without ohataglnf their domestic\ncharacter, have become cltizena equally\nwith men, and life already has a larger\nfyrMrnta 20,000\nClub Concert\nMay 7th\njiiiniBiiiiiiiniinniininnininininiinfnnifnntntHinn^\nNEW STORE AND NEW 8T00K\nA Fin,\u00bb Programme\nFar Concert\nMay 7th\nDry Goods\nNotions\nMillinery\nBAftGAIN DAY^FRIBAY\nWe wilt sell on Friday next, 100 Ladles' White Lawn and Muslin Blouses,\nRegular prices 11.00, 11.25 11.60, at 7Bc each.\nnne Scotch Gingham and Wash Zephera, regular 15c lino at 10c yd.\nSee our window for the\u00b0e goods; thla price only good on Friday.\nlett local Talent Will\nTake fart Oar-cert\nHa. 7th.\naiUlUUlWlUlUeUsUU^\nM. J. Henry's\nNurseries and\nSeed Houses\nVanoouver, B.C.\nHeadquarters for PACIFIC COAST\nGROWN Garden, Field and Flower Seeds.\nNew crop now in stock for distribution.\nAsk your merchant for them In sealed\npackets. If he does not handle them we\nwill send go sample packets garden and\nflower seeds post paid for It Our selection\nsuitable for B.O. gardens.\nB. C. Grown Stock of Fruit and Ornamental Trees now ready for spring delivery.\nNo expense, loss or delay or fumigation\nor inspection. Let me Price your list before placing your order.\nGreenhouse Plants, Floral Work, Bee\nSupplies. Fruit Packages, Fertilisers, etc.\nCatalogue free,\nM. J. HENRY\niW Westminster Road Vancouver\nFREE\nI FOR\nROYAL CROWN\nSOAP\nWHAPPEQS\nDrop em a pott \u00abWd aeUhf (or e eat*-\noutlook tor them. But still In New\nZealand, as elsewhere, lt Is only the\nrarer exceptional women who devote\nthemselves to politics. The greater out\nstanding result of the enfranchisement\nhas been the strengthening of the popular party.\"\nThe publication of a dally newspaper\nin Nelson that Is read upon the day of\npublication by thousands of people\nthroughout the Kootenay and Boundary districts ought to prove of some\nconsiderable beneflt to the business men\nof Nelson. Is that beneflt commensurate\nto the cost of producing a daily paper\nthat people resident in the surrounding\ndistricts will subscribe for and read?\nThis Is a question that Bhould receive\nsome earnest and immediate attention\non the part of those who claim that NelBon is rightfully the distributing point\nfor southern British Columbia and the\nchief industrial and commercial centre\nof the Interior. Tbe Dally News has\nproved that a daily paper can be published in Nelson that will find ita way\ninto the homes of the great bulk of the\npopulation of southern British Columbia,\na newspaper, that ln effect Is \"Uie dally\"\nfor the entire Kootenay and Boundary\ndistricts. To prove this has cost a lot\nof money and to continue to hold the\nfield -means permanently heavy operating\nexpenses. Now the point ls as to\nwhether or not it Is worth while continuing to circulate such a paper from Nelson, and that Is a point that must be\ndecided by the commercial interests of\nthe city. The Dally News Is delivering\nthe goods so far as news service and circulation are concerned, but it ts not receiving in return support adequate to\nmeet operating expenses. This condition of affairs indicates that Nelson has\nnot yet arrived at tbe daily paper stage\nln its growth and, consequently, that\nthe publication of a dally paper Is an\nunfair tax upon the community, serving\nrather to hinder than to promote prosperity.\nCOUNTY COUHT CHAMBERS\nIn chtiniberfi before hla honor judge Forin\nyeHtrnJuy morning two applications tor\norders wen* mado and grunted, -both In\nconnection with one suit which will probably be tried in Nelson at the spring an*\n-dscH, thc case of Blakemore und Taylor\nagainst Tuttle and Ironsides.\nThe plaintiffs are tho executors of the\nwill of Mrs. XV. Blake more, the defendants\nare xv. XV. Tuttle, proprietor of the Royal\nhotel, Fernie and W. Ironside-*, who holds\na mortgage on the hotel,\n. The twit is for en accounting of revenues\nof the hotel and of money, proflts of the\nhotel, Invested In Pernle real estate. The\nplaintiffs claim that Mrs. Ulakemore invested money In the hotel and that her\nestate 1s entitled to a half Interest In ail\nproceeds, The defendants reply that any\nclaim lapsed by non-fulfilment of an agree*\nment. i  '     > i 1\nH. C. Hall, for L. P. Eckateln, obtainM ,\nan order for the -wrftmlfutlon ot W. Blakemore before the supreme' court registrar\nat Victoria. .0. 8. Taylor, K.C, was\ngranted an order for the examination of\nFOR SALE\nSix hundred aores at Crawford Bay,\nthe best fruit land ln Kootenay district,\nIn 20 acre blocks or any larger area to\nsuit purchaser. Particulars on application.\nE. APPLEWHAITE\nF. O. Box 606\nNelson, B. C.\nDon't Fall\nTo attend the 20,000 Club concert in aid\nof the 'Frisco Red Cross Fund.. All the\nQueen Studio's patrons will be there.\nBRICKS   BRICKS\nBest produced In the Kootenay dlstrlot.\n*\u00b0.M per thousand In large quantities,' at\nkiln; kiln run. , .\nM0.ro par thousand, In small quantities,\nat kiln; kiln run.\nHelton Brickyards.     Wm. HuoMk\nNOTICE TO RANCHER8\nOn Monday, May 7, Allan Lean of the\nQueen studio, will leave Procter on a\nlaunch and on the tray down the Outlet\nwill protograph every ranch on the river.\nLook out for the launch with the red and\nblack flag.\nOhina Hall and\nSecond - Hand\nComplete line of new Crockery and\nChina. Second hand -goods of all kinds,\nbought, aold or stored, ,\nP.O. Box 588, Baker St. Weat, Nelson, B.O,\nC. P. R. TENDERS\nFor Enlarging Moyit Tunnel\nSealed tenders addressed to the undersigned will be received until 12 o'clock\nnoon on Thursday, May 10th, 1906, tor\nenlarging Moyie Tunnel. Contractor 1 to\nfuroiHh all plant,.labor, etc. The company\nto establish an operator at Tunnel. Further information may be had at the othco\nof the Resident Engineer, Cranbrook- 'lenders must be submitted on printed rorms\nfurnished by tht company. The company\nwill not be bound to accept the lowest or\nany tender.\nDated this 3rd day of May, 1WU,\nH. Y. PARKER,\nResident Engineer. Cranbrook, R.C.\nCITY POUND NOTICE\nJJOT1CB Is hereby given that I have Impounded three horses:\nOne gelding, sorrel, white stripe on face,\nbrand \"2U\" on left hip, and  \"K.a.'Von\nright hip.\nOne Gelding, sorrel, pony, white tatea\n.and saddle marked.   ! ;\nOne black gelding; pony, branded \"22\"\non left shoulder.\nUnless the same are in the meantime\nredeemed by paying alt coats as fixed by\nPound-Dog Tax Bylaw, No. 80, 1 will sell\ntoy public auction at the city pound, at\nthe northwest corner of tho Recreation\ng-rounds, on Wednesday, May 9, WOO,-at\nU o'clock in tbe forenoon.\nW. R. JARVIS, Chief of VQljce.\nNOTIOE\nThe annual shareholders' meeting of the\nLucky Boy Mining 4 Development tlo.,\nLtd., will be held at the company's ohtct,\nin Brie, B.C., on May 3, UM, at the hour\nof 1 p.m.\n8. L. MYBB8, President.   ,..\nW. W. Tuttle helore the registrar at Hernia.\nLONGSHOREMEN'S STRIKE.\n.Cleveland, Hay 3.\u2014So tar aa could he\nlearned today there was no disposition\noa the part ot either the lake Carriers\nor the officers ot the Longshoremen's\nunion to take any steps with a view- of\nterminating the present marine strike.\nAlong the river and lake front docks\nthere waa little sign of life today, the\nstrikers evidently believing It best to\nremain away during the continuation ot\nthe strike. Of the big fleet ot steamers\nwhich was lying outside yesterday comparatively tew remain, the boats betng\ngenerally ordered to Brie bay during the\nstrike.\nOPPOSE MONDAY PAPERS.\n' Victoria, May 8.\u2014Typographical union\nNo. 201 at a regular meeting unanimously resolved to. go on record aa opposed to the Lord's. Day Observance hill\nand the proposed change from a Sunday\nmorning to a Monday morning paper.\nMIMral UP|i*M*iC UM**M**-**Ji \u2022 FnMWi\n\u201e__ of Qoamer Btana earnm rruiti\ntrouble. Can be had at all groom at a\nFlour! Flour!]\nFlour!\nHaving had several years' experience\nIn the baking business, I can recommend\na flour to my customers with confidence,\nknowlag that the flour will Justify my\nrecommendation.\nSo when JOT says try\nPremier Hungarian Flour|\nTRY IT.\nFox.aale at\nJoy's Cash fpoeepj\nCorner ot Josephine arid Ball streets.\nTelephone \u00bb.   NBLSON, B. C\nNelson Opera Hoi\nFriday and Saturday\nMay 4 and 5\nMackenzie-Glovei\nCompany\nIN CONCERT, COMEDY AND DBA\nTBE MOST UNIQUE\nTHI* MOST CHARMING\nTHB MOST TALENTED\nCombination of Humorous and Dramatic\nPower on Tour.\nmiss jesshTglover\nOrandaughter of Edmund Glover, Scot-|\nland's greatest Tragedian.   Shakespearian  Actress,   and  Peeress\nof all Scottish Artistes.\nMr. William Mackenzie\nLate Prlmo Baritone Charles Turner's\nRoyal   English   Opera   Co.,' rail\nthe Scotsman's Ideal Vocollst\nand Humorist.\nMadame Claire Rosseau\nMontreal's popular Pllnlste\nBit-hard Von Ravensberg\nThe Young Actor and Vocalist, lata of|\nDrury Lane Theatre, London.\nThe press and public with one volcs|\ndescribe   this  organisation  aa\nproached by any other company.\nAdmission (0 centa.   Reserved seata,|\n75 cent*   Children is oenta.\nPlan of seats at Rutherford's.\nDIGGING SODS!\n' Fine shoes ud slippers, pant*, ova\nall, Jumpers, shirts, hats, clothing, ready!\nmade or made to order.   In tact about!\neverything t, worklngmen needs to wear,|\nat lowest poelhle prices.\nThe WorKingmaa'8 Star\nW. PARKER\nP.aBtm\nTO WHOM IT MAY CONCUR**.\nAll accounts due the Arm of ftwert tfroaf\n.must he paid on or boron May t\"*n,i\u00bbw.l\nEvery account remaining Unpaid alter thlel\ndate #111 be placed in the hands ot attor-|\nta- for -Mi      -.<&__mt.\nB. A. BWBRT.\nNelson, B, C, May 1st, U0t\n m\nVm DAlM  HKWS, HMiSOR, B. C, FRIDAY, MAY 4, 1906\nSchool Children's Eyes\nSupply llieir Intellect\n- Detective eyes stunt the mind; can\nyou expect tair progress In school or\nsuccess ln business it so handicapped.\nExamination ot children tor glassies is\na special feature ot our Optical Depart-1\nment\nJ. J. WALKER\nJEWELER AND  OPTICIAN\nPorto Rico Lumber Co., Ltd.\n\" Miiifietjrtr*. tf in wtwitHic Oct'en ii\nmush amp cnumtro wnamt, tantat\u2014t asd Motm-mot, ****\u00bb''\n1AWN AND -\u2014HMD WO**-   All UF-TO-DAVB Dkl UU DI O0a\u00bb\n...\nHEAD  OFFICE:  NELBON,   B.C.\nMills at  Ymir and Moyie,   B. C.\nSash -and Door   Factory   and    Yard at    *-*\u25a0\n*-,..... Moose Jaw, Bask,\nPorto Rico Lumber Co., Ltd\nSTRIKES IN BOUNDARY\nMEN OUT IN TWO PIECES FOR INCREASED WAGES.\nASK THREE DOLLARS FOR A DAY\nOF NINE HOURS\n(Special to The Dally News)\nGreenwood, May 3.\u2014One hundred\nconstruction men went on strike at the\nBritish Columbia Copper Co.'s smelter\ntola morning for |3 for a nine hour day.\nSeventy of them are working tor W. V.\nTlerney at J2.50 per day of ten hours\naud are portectly satlshed. The remainder, were getting *3 for nine hoars\nfrom contractor Creeinuvn since May 1\nand struck ln sympathy. Creelman'a\nmen have no grievance. Contrator Tlerney stated tonight that he would not\ncomply with the demands.\nThe men at the Anaconda substation\nof the British Columbia Construction\nA Distributing company are also out. No\neettlsment has yet been reached. Tto\nmen also ask ts for a nine hour-day.\nFIRST FOREST FIRE.\nBlase Spreading Up Mountain Side-on\n.   North Side of Arm.\n.The flrat forest flre ot the season in\nthe neighborhood of Nelson was visible\nfrom tbe city.all day yesterday and all\nevening. The flre began some distance\n.from the north shore of the arm near\nthe Lakeside, residence of James Johnstone. From there lt burned slowly up\nthe mountain ln a deep draw, but apparently spreading far to either side.\nin reply to a telephone inquiry late\nlast evening Ur. Johnstone said that the\nlire had undoubtedly begun on or very\nclose to his premises, but could not say\nfrom what cause, except, that It waa not'\ndue to clearing operations. He added\nthat the flre had been fought all day,\nand that although lt was spreading\nnorthward up the mountain side, there\nwas no danger then apprehended to any\nfarm property.\nThe flre, which commenced about 11\no'clock, attracted a great deal of attention ln the elty and aa tbe day passed\naway and the dense clouds ot smoke rolled up the mountain side marking the\ndestruction of the treeB and shrubbery\nwhich cover the hillside the local comment was tar from complimentary concerning the originator of the lire. It\nwaa not the destruction of timber nor\neven the possible danger to nearby fruit\nranches that made people talk, but the\nresult of the flre from a scenic and residential stand point. Some years ago\nthe whole mountain side was cleared ot\nevery green thing by lire and people who\nlived here then recalled the look ot the\nbare hill and the Intense heat caused\nihere by the bare rock reflecting ths sun's\nrays, mlrror-llke, upon the city. No\ndoubt the flre will result ln making a\nHot on the scenery, even If lt does no\nmore serious damage. The provincial\npolice have taken the matter up and an\nInvestigation will be held when it will be\n- ascertained who waa responsible for letting the flre get beyond control. Provld.-\nlng the matter can be brought within the\n.terms ot the act regulating bush' fires,\n. Mme one ia liable to be punished tor\nyesterdey'a blase.\n'\u2022*-*JCK-RAKBR8\"\n* President's Expressive Phrase Has Cain-\nMuch Comment.\n{President Roosevelt baa succeeded, to\nJudffe from the newspaper editorial*,\nin fastening upon the magaalne expos-\nem of corruption the expressive name\not \"muck-rakers.'' That la w|i\u00bbt they\nare being styled all over the country.\nOne Chicago paper haa received so\n*\u2022 many Inquiring letters from readers bewildered by the phrase that it finds it\nnecessary to explain to the people ot\nthe western metropolis who*John Bun-,\n\u2022ran waa, what book he wrote, Ad all\nabout the \"man with the muck-rake.\nAnother Chicago papsr BUggesta \"a\nmuck-rate party\" In 1908 with the proprietor ot McClure's Magasine as the\nstandard bearer; while Mr. Hearst's\npapers seem to take the president's\nspeech as something almost personal,\nand reply In,long double-column editorials In several styles of large true, reminding him that \"where there Is a\nI muck-rake tbere Is muck,\" and asking\nhtm which he praters. The president\nmade It clear ln hla speech that he balled as a benefactor every expoaer ot corruption who Is \"absolutely truthful,\"\nbut believed that \"even la the case of\ncrime, If tt le attacked In sensational,\nlurid, and untruthful fashion, the attack\n' any do more damage to the public mind\nthan the crime Itself.\" Thus the hearer\nIb left to Infer which, \"muck-rakers\" the\n\u25a0\"\"fif\u2122* would hall as benefactors and\nwhloh ones-he would condemn. It seems\nto be the general opinion, however, that\nhe must have Bomebody In mind or he\nwould not have considered such a speech\nnecessary. \u00bb\nMost papers agree with hla almost\naxiomatic proposition that truthful exposure of wrong Is commendable and\nuntruthful exposure la harmful. The conscienceless and notoriety-seeking \"muck-\nraker\" la \" a stumbling block In the way\not progress toward real reform,\" declares\nthe Milwaukee Wisconsin, aud so think\nmany other papers. \"People are sick of\nthe muck-rate,\" and \" a healthy reaction has begun,\" believes the Philadelphia Press; and the Washington Star\nthinks the president's speech was made\nnecessary by the preposterous claims of\nacme of the \"muckrrakers\" that they\nwere raking with presidential sympathy\nand support.\nThe New York Times, however, recalls that some of these much-maligned\nrakers \"have been builders ot reputations at least as much as they have been\ndestroyers of them,\" and \"evil hag been\nattacked with a constant care to recognise virtue wherever It was to be found,\"\nso \"lt is very far trom true that this\nwork has all been destructive, all heen\na calling of attention to filth and wickedness.\" And the Indianapolis. News\ndefends them thus:\nHt any freely be granted that thero\nhave been excesses In certain publications of a baser sort But the general\npropriety and correctness ot the exposures of business irregularity and political rascality are abundantly proved: (1)\nby the fact that many men have been\nconvicted by the courts of the evils and\ncrimes charged; (2) by the fact that the\nlaw-making bodies ot the country are\nseeking, by new laws, to prevent the recurrence of the grave scandals of', the\nlast few years; and (3) by the fact that\nwhile, If not true, the publications: In\nnewspapers and magailnes have been\ngrossly libelous, the men of vast wealth\nand political power that have been the\nsubjects of the exposures have not\nbrought suits against the publishers.\"\nMACKENZIE-PLOVER COMPANY\nFirst Performance at the Opera House\nThis Evening\nThe Mackenile-Olover company will give\ntheir flrat performance at the opera house\nthis .evening. The program is a varied and\nexcellent one and a* treat is in store, lor\nall lovers of song, comedy and drama.\nMr. Mackensle Is inimitable 111 Hcottlsh\nhumor, and patriotic song, and be it ungual*, Irish or Scotch delineations he is\nalways  a favorite with the audience.\nMiss Jessie Olover'a portrayal ot Stinkes-\nperlsn character ranks with the best.\nMadame Cairo Rosseau and Richard von\nRavensberg, who are members ot the organisation come with excellent reputations.\nComplete one act comedies and- powerful\ndramatic scenes add greatly to the evening'! entertainment.\nA recent press notice of the performance\ngiven by the company, says: \"The Maolren-\nste-Glover oompany run over the whole\ngamut of human feeling, at ono moment\npathetic tears, the next, shouts ot laughter,\" Ths plan ot seats tor tonight ono\nSaturday are now open at Ruthertora'a.\nNOT if AS RICH AS ROCkE\u00bb*E*t,UBR\nIf you had all the wealth ot RooMfeUer.\nthe Standard OU magnate, you oould not\nbuy a better medicine tor bowel complaints\nthan Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and diarrhoea Remedy. The most eminent physician can not prescribe a better preparation\nfor collo and diarrhoea, lor both children\nand adults. The uniform success ot this\nremedy has shown It to be superior to an\nothers. It never- fails; and when reduced\nwith water and sweetened, la pleasant to\ntake. Every family should be supplied\nwith lt.  Bold hy all druggists and dealers.\nMINING RECORDS\nFive certlncates of assessment work and\none location were, recorded in.the nelson\nmining offloe on May 9.\nCertificates were issued to James A.\nRyan; on the Wild Horse, Ryan and Colt,\nall situated on Goat Mountain, and James\nA. Tujo on the .Silver Queen and May\nFlower, both situated on Duck mountain.\nRichard Henderson recorded the silver\nHill, situated two and a half miles west\nof Kitchener, south of tho C.P.R. line,\nlocated April gth.\nIT IS DANGEROUS TO NEGLECT A\nCOLD.\nHow often do you hear It remarked! \"It's\nonly a oold,\" and a few days later learn\nthat the man Is on his hack with pneumonia. This Is of such common occurence\nthat a cold, however slight, should not be\ndisregarded . Chamberlain's Cough .Remedy counteracts any tendency of a cold\nto remit Ih pneumonia, and has gained its\ngreat popularity and extensive aale hy Its\nprompt cures of thts most common ailment. It always cures and Is pleasant to\ntake. For sale by all druggtats and'deal-\n\u25a0 ars. \t\nNinir-1'i liniment lumbirmu'i Friend.\n%9^^ertM*v^xtiSfuivA\nBook company.\nNEWS OF THE OLD LAND\nCUPPINGS   FROM RECENT   BNUU8H\nNEWSPAPERS\nTHE HEALTH, BEAUTY AND TOUAST\n'   EXHIBITION\nIt Ib unae-ratood tfiaf.'a fl\u00abet of American warships will visit Portsmouth '11118\nRummer.\nMr. Balfour addressed the annual demonstration of the Primrose League at\nthc Albert hall on May __.\nK-elr HJu-dle Jrecently entew-aaned tne\nlabor party and others to dinner in the\nhouse of commons.\nThe socialists have been utterly routed\nat the Edmonton district council election\ntoy the. moderates.\nvT,cil1,b^Jiftve be\u20acn '*\u00bb*med at Tilbury and\nNorth Woolwich exclusively for the ' dae\nof Japaneee sailors. \u2022 * * r\nThe king has consented to open the new\nbuilding of the Hearts of Oak Beneflt Society on Saturday, May 26.\nFifty thousand tonB of. coal, believed to\nbe for the use of London gasworks, will\nshortly be shipped to London from Rotterdam.\nAs a result of swallowing a half penny\nfimout a month ago, Beresford Drake, a\nlittle boy of eight, died In the Bristol infirmary, i |\nRotherham borough council declined by\n20'votes to 9 to reinstate Miss Turner,\nthe pupil teacher who refused to take on\nher engagement ring.\nAt every event In the point-to-point races\nat Duhallow, Cork, there were casualties.\nTwo horses were killed and a gentleman\nrider sustained concussion of the brain.\nAt tradesman named Whitehouse was\nfined for obstruction at Rowley. When -ne\nwas served with the summons he exhibited\nIt in his shop window for four days,\n\u2022causing further obstruction.\nAt West Mersea a Roman watchtower\nwhich was discovered some time ago, Ib\n-being broken up and the massive bricks\nof which it Is composed are being used tor\nborders for gardens and even for metalling\ngarden paths.\nPostage on letters from this country -to\nBechuanatand and Rhodesia has been reduced to ld. the half ounce, but at present no reduction will be made for letters\ntravelling In the opposite direction.\nAmong the articles left in trains on tne\nS. E. ft C. railway, which are now being\nsold by auction, are seven leopard skins,\na bow and arrows, a portable pulpit, a\nbookmaker's platform and several bottles\nof champagne.\nTo get rid of the plague of mts whicn\nstill continues at the Eton Union workhouse, the wife of a bishop has suggested\nthat the master should procure a mongoose, an animal which had effectually\ncleared the bishop's palace of a similar\nplague.\nAfter lord Robert Cecil had addressed\nthe East Marylebone Constitutional union\na motion regretting his vote ln the free\ntrade debate was adopted by 24 to 13 votes,\nagainst an amendment that his vote waa\nconsistent with his election addresses,\nwhich was defeated by 1? votes to lb.\nChased by a fiery tempered turkey cock\na woman living near Kcary, county Armagh, fell Into a depe well nnd would have\nbeen drowned had not assistance arrived.\nHaving received from a lady a claim for\n,tho loss of n goose by \"drowning,\" Tavistock rural district council have appointed\na committee to inquire into the circumstances.\nAs compared with the 15s. formerly earned dally by each horse drawn omiUbim\nbetween Nottingham anil Sneinton, tne\ncorporation's new motor omnibuses 9am\nabout \u00a38 10s.  each.\nMr. Balfour has been indulging In a\n\"rest cure,\" at his \u25a0 residence in Carlton\nGardens, shut away froij\\ everyone,* with\nthe exception of his doctor, nurse and masseur for three long weeks. He has doubtless Indulged In philosophical reveries\nwhich will mean the publication of a new\nvolume In the not far off future. A fashionable novel by Miss Elisabeth Robins\ngives a graphic description of the treatment during a rest cure. I do not mention\nthe name of the book, for while lt deals\nwith medical themes, it Is yet one ot those\nvolumes not calculated to Improve the\nworld for which lt Is written\/.\nEvery woman in London who has any\npretentions to fashionable oeplrtalons is\nflocking to the Health, Beauty and Toilet\nexhibition, at tho Grafton gallcrlrs. Which\nwas opened 'by lady Colin Campbell. As\nfar as the \"health\" portion of the exht-\nibitlon is concerned lt Is Intensely inter*\nestlng. The nursery department Is W\u00a911\nworth going to see. Bo-by carriages built\nwith a view to lessening the Jar for the\nttny occupants; baths of every site and\nshape, which prevent fatigue for mother\nor nurse in \"tubbing'' baby; patent foods;\nscientific clothing; the dressing and undressing of infants, and an endless array\nof \"sdentific corsets\" come under this\nhiod, But tho toilet exhibition means,\none Is Inclined to believe, the \"giving\naiway\" of many and diverse secrets of te-\nmlnlne beauty, to the sex to whom \"mystery\" Is the chief lure. One rather marvels\nas to how fashionable women manage to\ncultivate their minds when they devote so\nmuch time and thought to the care of their\nprecious bodies. The expenditure on toilet\naccessories must be enormous, for all these\nItems cost double what their hulk and\nquality would warrant. Massuge, manicure\nand bath powders to soften the water evidently play an Important part in the list.\nof expenses. Deportment experts are (frying out for straight backed chairs ln place\nof tho comfortable upholstered arm chairs\nof the modern drawing rooms and are looking askance at the luxurious fittings ot\nmotor cars.\nIn Chelsea, that historical quarter ot\nLondon, ls to be found a school of \"Dames\nand Dams-fa,\" where 'fifty pupils call\n\u25a0themselves students of the \"simple life.''\nAll classes are represented in this curious\neducational establishment where they learn\neverything bearing upon the art of simple\nliving\u2014washing, Ironing and cooking, languages, elocution and Shakespearean reading. Talking of Shakespearean reading,\none realises how decided Is the revival ol\nthe Shakespearean cult In London when.\none learns that scores of clubs and organ*\nliations are to hold \"Shakespeare birthday\" celebrations on the 23rd of May,\nwhere the songs, the poems and the Plays\nof the \"Great Master\" are to form the\nItems on the bills of fare provided. Miss\nEllen Terry has received many invitations-to be the guest of honor at these\nfestivities , but so far It Is not announced\nwhich has been the fortunate organization\nto Bccure her presence. The queen has\npresented this popular (actress with a\n\u25a0beautiful Jeweled pendant as a Jubilee gitt\nand-the newspapers are reviving thc memory of past successes. But It ts Pltltui\nto see so great an actress sun obliged to\nappear on tho stage, when her memory \u00bb\nrapidly falling. The members of tho com*\n-panies In which she plays have to *\u2022\u2022-\u00bb*\u00bb\u00bb,\n mpter in _   '     \"\"\"     * *  \"\n\"cues,\" but her \"linoh   ....\u00ab -.\u00bb\u2022-.- -\nthing curiously reminiscent of her Ophelia.\n._x.. ^.t_i___\u201eM\u201e __t hor demeanor.\nefalng. So It -will be now. Men will listen, curiously to Mr. Carnegie; gaping\ncrowds will stare at the man of millions;\nBorne university authorities, more anxious apparently to honor money- than\nreal achievement, will confer their honorary degree; and then public opinion\nwill -remember the Pittsburg miners and\ntheir miserable lives; the abuse of a late\nrevered sovereign hy thts representative\nof the most flagrant Americanism; and\nthe fact of his clew self-advertising ln\nlibrary construction coupled with the\napparent absence of all heart and sentiment In his public utterances or public giving.\"\nOALLIHER TO THE RESCUE\nWatching Special Interests of Kootenay\nin Lord's  Day Legislation '\nW. A. Galllher, M.P. for Kootenay, has\nreplied to the communiatlons addressed to\nhim. by the Nelson hoard of trade' and\nthe Kootenay Fruit Growers' Association,\non the subject of modifications of the proposed Lord's day observance legislation,\nshowing that he Is alive to the special\nrequirements of the Industries of Urltlsh\nColumbia, and especially of his own constituency.\nThe following telegram was received from\nMr. Galllher yesterday by P. Staikey.prest-\ndent of the board of trade:\n\"I have pointed out the differences ot\nconditions between Ontario and British Columbia fruit growers to the committee on\nthe lines Indicated In your telegram. 1\nhave also filed the telegramB received trom\nyourself and Mr. Johnstone.\n(panies in wim-u an** i\".<j.. ..-.- \u2014\nthe prompter in giving her not only her\n\"\"Ues,\" but her \"linos\" nnd ihere ls some-\ning curiously reminiscent of her Ophelia,\nln tho gentle helplessness ot her demeanor.\nMBEDLY CURIOUS.\nReferring In advance to the coming of\nCarnegie to Toronto\u2014the visit  is  now\nQver\u2014J. Castell Hopkins ln Comments\non Current Affairs,   In   the   Canadian\nGraphic, says:    \"Curiosity will crowd\nthe luncheon room of   the Canadian\nclub and any place or function which he\nattends; upon a principle very similar\nto that which once made Mr. Pierpont\nMorgan a centre of observation ln Toronto, almost equal In attractiveness to\nthe archbishop of Canterbury himself..\nBut In the latter case It did not last]\nlong.  From the man   of  money,   the'\ngrasping genius ot financial manipulation, the .Interest and attention and respectful consideration Quickly passed to\nthe mail of freest'purpose and honest\ndevotion to duty and the public well-\nTRAMWAY RECEIPTS\nThe returns from the street car system\nfor the week ending April 29, were; *n*a.*to\nfrom 2523 passengers, as against 191,70 from\nK.9S 'passengers for the corresponding weed\nof 1906. The receipts for the year to date\nare (1166.60 against $1613.06 to the same date\nof last year.\nAt the present rate of increase the loss\noccasioned by the closing down of the service in January and February of the present year will be made up betore the end\nof August As the expenses of operation\nwere reduced during the period of Idleness,\nit Is reasonable to expect thut the city's\nloss on the operation of the system tor\n1906 wilt be considerably less thiin It was\nduring 1905,\nMinard's Linimfti\\t it uied by Miyilelup.\nPicnic parties can buy nil their supplies\nexcept Whiskey, at the Dollar Orocery,\nCabbage plants in Jersey Wakefield ano\nGerman Wakefield, 50 cents per 100; %t per\n1000. Snowball Cauliflowers, lb cents per\n100,   E. GrlKolle Nurseries.\nInHaki \u00a7et_ to bstter thai other wait,\nrmtis best wfcn** vet* ia the laalight way.\n\u25a0.ia* sunlight Nop ______________ jjgsjkhfc\nREGISTERED TRADE MARK\nUnion Made\nGarments\nfor :: ::\nWorking-men\n\"BUCK BRAND\" Working Shirts\nand Overalls (our own manufacture).\nSplendid Socks and the most\ncomfortable underwear.\nOur Smocks, too, are a little\nstronger than anything you have\nseen heretofore.\nWe also handle Juat as good\nheavy Gloves.\nThess lines are tor sale retail hy\nall good dealers.\nWHOLESALE BY\nWm. J. McMaster & Sons. Ltd.\nMANUFACTURERS\nVANCOUVER, B. 0.\nASK  YOUR  DEALER TOR\n\"Kurtz's Own\"\n\u2022\u2022Kurtz's Pioneers\"\n\"Spanish Blossoms\"\nUNION MADE CIGARS\nManufactured by\nKURTZ'S PIONEER\nCIGAR FAOTORY\n148 Cordova St.,  W.,\nVANCOUVER    -    -    -    B. O.\nGRAND FORK8\nTOT UP AT\nHOTEL PROVENCE\nThs headquarters for tourists.   Batlsru\ntlon (ruarantped.\n______ LARBHNflato of _______ woprnioi\nS. S. FOWLER\nMINING ENGINEER\nNELSON, B.O.\nFREDERIC S. CLEMENTS\nCIVIL ENOINEBR\nD01BN1ON   ^^voto'ii\"0****'  ~W\"\nAaent tor oatatalai Crown Oraau, mini\naurveyuur Mo.\nHood It, \u00ab*.W.O. V__\nF. O. P*> L ****\u2022\u2022*-. *\u2022.*->\nClARK'S\nCorned Beei\nis just fine Corned Beef\n\u2014boneless and wasteless\nand very tasty. With\nClark's Corned Beef in\nthe house au appetizing\nmeal is ready-to-serve at\nany hour. It saves time,\ncoal and trouble.\nOrder some now from\nyour dealer.\nWM. OLARK,  Marat.\nMONTREAL. S'l*t\nTHURSDAY, MAY\nKootenay Cole Co'y\nTea Tips\nAn Expert's Recipe\nfor Preparing\nIced Teas\n\"Use a tea of good quality, Infuse\nwith boiling water in an earthen jar or\nteapot, allow it to stand 10 minutes at\njust under boiling heat, pour off Into an\nearthen or China jar. After allowing\ntime to cool, add broken ice.\"\nOur 30c,. 40c or 50c blend of tea used\nas above will give you tha best results.\nKootenay Coffee Go.\nPhone 177   Box 182\nNELSON CAFE\n(Under Hew Management.)\nFirst-Class\nLunch\t\nFrom 12 oood   -yr .\nto 2 p.m.      -43 cents\n8PECIAL\nSunday Dinner from 5 to 8 p.m.\nBOARD and BOOMS from $1.00 per\ndaj np.   The rooms have been\nthoroughly renovated and\nrefurnished.       .\nA. AUOET, Prop.\nCOAL TAR\nPitch, Paints and reosote\nWe are the only producers\nof coal tar ln the Kootenays.   Write us for prices.\nNelson Coke and Gas Co'y\nF. M. CHADBOURN\nMINIM OPER-JOR\nMines examined and reported on\nThe aecretary Invites all Nelson to tne\n20,000 Club Concert, next Monday.\nNELSON, B. C.\nSAMUEL  A.   WYE\nHEATING ENGINEER\nand\nPLUMBING\nFlrat class heating planta end moaeri\nsanitary   appliances.    Twenty   years'   experience.\nPtMin# Ml. Ot>\u00abm HOttjjg BUT. P.O   Bgjj ___\\\nGRAND CENTRAL HOTEI\nOpposite Courtlioua* and new PostofBo.\nBeat *o meal In town.    European en\nAmerican plan   Only wklte labor enypv\n\u2022A   Flrat claas bar.\ni \"\u00bb-. 4   *u*rr\"fraa'\nPRANK C   OREE***\nCIVIL ENGINEER\nDominion  nnd  Provincial  Land  surveyor\nP.O. Box Ui. Phone 261B\nCor. Kootanay ond Victoria Sts,, Nelson.\nDREWRY & TWIGG\nIIININO  BNOINBOTW\nDominion and Prorlnolal Und aV\nH-JW DIN******, 8. O.\nfl, \u25a0 rrastar, I\nJ. t ANNABLE\nNELSON, B. a\nFRUIT\nAND\nFARM\nLANDS\nFor Sale\nIn the\nFamous\nKootenay\nValleys\nI can sell you choice fruit\nlandB In 10, 20, 40, 80, or 160\nacre blocks at\nICround\n1 Floor\nPrices\nI do not offer for sale any\nfruit land that I have not personally examined. I guarantee\nevery block to be as good aa\nrepresented, and having sold a\nlarge portion of the land now\nbeing brought under fruit cultivation tn this district, I would\nbe safe ln offering any man hts\nmoney back with 10 per cent interest, who is not satisfied with\nhis purchase. Not one would\ndo it, becauss they can double\ntbeir money.\nI have on my list many choice\nlocations.\nOns 13 acre lot near Nelson,\npartly Improved.   Price $660.00.\n5-Acre lot two miles from the\ncity, $260.00.\n10-Acre lot, partly cleared,\nwaterfront Price $60.00 per acre.\nThree 20- acre lots near Slocan\nbridge.   Price $26.00 per acre.\n70 Acres at Beasley Siding at\na bargain.\nImproved farm of 100 acres,\n$7600.\nSeveral choice locations on\nSlocan river.\nNine choice locations at Creston; good land near the station.\nTwo good locations on the\nColumbia river.\nFour 40-acre blocks on Arrow lake.\nI can give you choice, selected\nlands.\nOn Kootenay Lake\nOn Kootenay River\nOn Slocan River\nOn Arrow Lakes\nOn Columbia River\nIn Fire Valley\nand Creston\nDistricts, and several partly improved farms. Wild land suitable\nfor stock ranges. Write me for\nfree pamphlet and terms of\npayment, and\nDon't Buy\ntill you\nSEE ME\nI bave a fruit farm of my own\nlocated on the Kootenay river\non which I have 1600 fruit trees,\nsome of these are bearing. This\nIs not for sale, but I bave had\nexperience in selecting lands,\nclearing lands, planting and\npruning trees and I am prepared\ntn make reports on land as to\ntbe location and desirability for\nfruit culture.\nJ. E. Annable\nNELSON, B. C.\nLAKEVIfcit\nHOTEL\nCorner Han aat tfamon.-rtnah\nTwo blocks from City WHarf,   fas I\ntollar a day bousa la \u25a0alsoa.\nMO CHQrm *niFLOT*H>\nAugust Thoiqas\npROPwarrok\nROYAL HOTEL\nTHiLDiPtlUiMIJ. U\nMRS. WM. ROBOK'n, Fropr*-we\u00bb\nThe beat aaeals tamt een be pmm&od\nthla market, cooked wdar the npern-\nlon of tbe proprietraaa. wfto ta e taao\nNloa airy noma., Mirtr fiu-nJi****; p.\nTbe beat wines, uqoato and cr-fai*\noa obtained at tho bar.\nTERMS: 11 AND tU6 PEB PAi\n'OR. STANLEY AND **TLICA '^ftm~\n Care paaa tha Aoor\nGROVE   HOTEL\nFAIRVIEW\nThla hotel is entirely under neff nuuiai*---\nment and will be run as a strictly tin*\nolaas hotel. Oood accommodation? It-\nsteady boarders. The bar supplied \u25a0*\u25a0'\u25a0\nthe beat of liquors,  cigars, eta\nJ. W. CROW, Prop.\nbits of tbe Arlington Hotel. Slocan Utl\nCLUB HOTEL\nThe Big Schooner ot Beer\nor Half and Bali\n10c\nThe only glass of good beer In Neison\nHotel accommodation second to none ir\nBritish Columbia. Rates 21 per day. ttpe-\nclnl  rates to  monthly  boarders.\nCORNER STANLEY & SILICA STRBbiTb\nSHERBROOKE\nHOUSE\nNBLSON,  B. C.\nOne minute's walk from C.P.R.  .tatloi\nCuisine unexcelled; St rooms, well neau-\nand ventilated.   Batna ln congestion.\nRATEB-C per day.\nJ. BOYER\nPROPRIETOR\nJUST LOOK AT THI8\n\"The No Place Inn\"\nUP-TO-DATE BAR\nOnly the best of everything on hand.\nOriginal und only maker of \"ticotcn\nPunch.\" an absolutely glit-edj-'ed drink.\nFree and easy every night. Drop In arid\nsee. If you take Scotch Punch, you will\nnot need lunch.\nIt's easy enough to be pleased.\nWhen life Rows by  like a song\nBut the man worth -while.\nIs the man who wilt sing.\nWhen  ho drinks at  \"No Place Inn.\"\nARCHIE F. REID, Proprietor.\nTHE QUEEN'S HOTEL\nBAKER RUfl\naenfl a. C. CLARKE, Propriatraai\nKATES 13 PBR DAY.\ntiarge   end  comfortaUa   bedrooms   \u25a0>'\nflint olast dining room,   mz-.--.-i-i raem tm\n(W-nemia) mra\nFREMONT   HOUSF\nEUROPEAN AND AMERICAN FUJI\nKHALB So.   ROOMS   FROM ZCc TO It-.\nMALONE A TREQILMIS, ProfrlStSn\nBakar (Ureal. Nauwa\nMadden House ^\u2022\"\"^,\nNalsoa, **.*-.\nDo yon nwo a \u2022omMrtaMe Hornet It aa,\ntry tha Madden Housa. Well (umlaM*,\nrooms llshted by alastrlolty; drat clan\nboard. In tha bar yoa will and all to.\nnest domestic and Imported liquors aat\ncigars.\nTHOMAS MABDKN, Proprietor\nWalker House\nTORONTO, ONT.\nCuisine unexcelled. Two hundred ire.\nventilated, steam-heated bedrooms, a num\nber with baths. British Columbia, Sauna.*\nohewan. Alberta patronage opeclatly ao\nhotted- Strict attention to It .lea and eWir\nren.    Rates |3 to |3 per day.\nOKO. WRIGHT ft CO., Prop.\nLate of Brandon and Winnipeg\nT. H BATMB. Manager.\nWaldorf Hotel\nVM.R. B C\nHeadquarters  for   Mining  and  Com\nmerclal men.\nMost comfortable hotel tn the District\nSample rooms In connection.\nGEO. COLEMAN, Prop.\nBARTLETT   HOUSE\n(Formerly Claras Houss)\nTee bast COO per day kouse la Noise.\nNona but wilte belt. \u25a0aUr.yi*.   Taa ter\ntotba Vast\nO.W. BARTLETT - Pro*.\n THB DAIW mWB, SOLB0H, B. 0., FBI DAT, MAT 4, MOB\nCrawford Bay\nLand in blocks of \"40\nacres and upwards for\nsale on Easy terms.\nThis is the best fruit growing\nland in the district.\nRE. CROASDAILE\nOAce Next door Can. Bank of Commerce.\nPhone ttt       Nelson, B.C.      P.O. bag tm\nGAIT\nGOAL\nAMD WOOD Or Atl\nWi P. Tlerney\n\u2022star tttreot. Nets*.\nQ*\u00bb****a\u00bb*\u00bb*w**<*\"*A**\nGLOTHI\n*at**aw*s\u00bbw>-*l\nCLOTHES OF\nTHE HOUR\nTo be of the world-a part of it,\na man must be in step with the\ntimes. Clothes are one of the most\nimportant factors In the makeup \u25a0\nof the inftn today, with the traditions and customs to -whloh so\nmany mnkera of clothes still cling\nwe have no concern.\n>      WE'DE CLOTHIERS\nOF TODAY\n\\\nj In our spring suits are incorporated every knack and trend ot\nfashion. Handsome new fabrics\nthat arc different.\nIE Emory & Walley\nHUB\nTHB STOBE OF tJOAUTY\npj\/ma*J* *\u00ab-Vw****V-\u00bb\u00abaV--i**3\nPBtOB Of MBIALa\nNew York. May 3-Bar silver, as M; casting copper, 18; lead, Vi.Ul.\nLondon. May D-811vcr, 30 u-18; leud,\n\u00a318 ls. 3d.\t\nNELSON'S NEW8 OF THE DAY\nJ. E. Annahle yestefdny sold 113 acres\nof fruit landa near Lancaster apur to John\nTorey of  Winnipeg.\nThe resident cnglncor of the C.P.R. nt\nCranbrook is advertising In this issue tor\ntenders for enlarging the Moyie tunnel.\nThe eternal fitness of things calls for a\nbig frame for a big picture, a big coat\nfor a big man, and a big advertisement tor\na big store.\nJohn McNeill, an employee of the China\nCreek Lumber compnny had a, leg broken\nby n fulHng log and was brought to the\nHome hospital yesterday morning.\nAt 2:30 Wednesday morning a small tire\n\u2022started in the big wood -pile at the Trail\nFiiielti-r and before it was extinguished U\ndid some damage to some of the smelter\nbuildings.\nIt you allow any of them to grow cold\nthr clianco-3 are that you will have \"too\nmany Irons In the flre.\" If you have any\n\"Irons\" to sell try n business opportunity\ntut. \t\nJ. A Montgomery and oompany are opening a rt-iii.il ice cream, soda water and\nrandy store on Baker stret in the west\nhalf of the premises heretofore occupied\nby XV. G. Thomson.\nThe Kaslo celebration committee has\nissued posters for the Victoria day celebration. The program includes a baseball\nmatch with Kelson and all kinds of sports.\nA grand ball will wind up the affair.\nSilver and lead both advanced on yesterday's metal msrkets. Silver gained\ntwo points on each market and Is now\n66 1-4 cents an ounce. Lead advanced one\n\u25a0point on the London market and Is now\n\u00a346 ls.   3d.   a ton.\nThe excellent work done in preparing the\nMoor of the opera house for dancing for\n\u25a0'ii- Mnsonlc ball, should have been crdlt-\ned to W. M. Walker and not alderman\nH. C. Selous, as stated In the account of\nthe dance In these columns.\nThe sale of the Nelaon Iron Works by\nJ. A. Honeyman to B. A. Isaacs, reportea\nIn yesterday's Issue, was made through H.\n\u00a51, Croasdall-*, who also reports the sales\nof some I960 acrea of fruit lands during the\nmonth of April. These lands were chiefly\nsituated In the Crawford bay district, but\ninclude IM acres at LynchvUle, and Kf\nacres opposite Procter.\nThe postofflce authorities have been advised that unpaid letters from Son f'rnn-\nclsco entering Canada for the nwtt ten\ndnj'H will be delivered (is if fully prepaid\nat San Francisco. This applies to sucn\nletters nddre**sed to all places within ttie\ndominion, and postmasters, receiving tnem\nwill deliver them free of charge. It \u00bb\nhoped that by the time specifled the Ban\nFrancisco \u25a0postofflce will have fuly recov-\nered from tho recent catastrophe, and an\nGreen\nGoods\nSpinnach\nRhubarb\nLettuce\nGreen Onions\nCucumbers\nAsparagus\nNice and fresh today\nHood & Teetzel\nGrooeries and Provisions\nk. w. o. block       NsaaoN. a a\nPHONB 10\nKootenay Valley\nRanch For Sale\n57K acres of fruit land on\nthe bank of the Kootenay River, _VA miles\nsouth of Slocan Bridge.\nThe land on both sides\nof this ranch has been\nsold and is being cultivated by resident owners. The railway runs\nthrough the property.\nPrice $1000. Terms one-\nhalf cash, or 10 per cent\ndiscount for all cash.\nH.&M.BIRD\nHot Weather Requisites\t\nSCREEN DOORS\nSCREEN WINDOWS\nHAMMOCKS\nGARDEN HOSE\nICE CREAM FREEZERS\nLAWN MOWERS\nORASS SHEARS\nREFRIGERATORS\nThese are some ot them but thtro are others which we have In abundance.\nJ. H. Ashdown Hardware Co., Limited\nWHOUWAU AND WAIL\nbranches   of postofflce   buslne-**.  will   be\ntransacted as usual.\nR. A. Balnbridge, chief construction en-\nglner of thc C.P.R. company in Hrltlsli\nColumbia, arrived from Vancouver last\nnight and  Is at  thc Strathconft.\nJohn Klrkup. present gold Mmmlssio'ner\nof Rossland and the hero of many romantic incidents of the pioneer days of Kootenay, spent yesterday in Nelson.\n' J. A. Mara and P. S. Barnard. ex-M.s P.\nfor Y-ale and Cariboo, respectively, arrived from Victoria Inst night nnd arc nt\nthe Strathcona. Both are financially interested in the welfare of Nnlson nnd are here\nto  look  over  thc  situation.\nThe attention of loml ranchers is particularly directed to the advertisement or\nphotographer Lean in this issue. Mr. Lean\n\u25a0Will come down the lake on Monday next\nand take photographs of every ranch en\nroute. Watch out for the launch with the\nml and black flag.\nIf store advertising merely brought people to your store It would pay\u2014but the\nright kind of store advertising brings the\nwoman to your store with her mind nine-\ntenths \"made up\" to make certain purchases; with the result that she makes\nnt least nine-tenths of the purchases one\nhad planned when she read your ad.\nIn connection with the launching of tha\nsteamer Kuskonook on Saturday atternoon.\ntho steamer Kanlo will leave the city wharf\nat 2:15 p.m. and make a trip to the shipyard, returning Immediately after the cere-\ninonv. Passengers will be carried free ot\ncharge on this occasion, and It will provide an excellent way of taking in the\nevent.\nVisitors to the shipyard on Saturday\nafternoon to view the launch of the now\nsteamer Kuskonook, arc requested to note\nthat only a certain number will be allowed\non the steamer, as lt will be difficult to\nbring them ashore when the vessel is in\nthe water, there being no wharf accommodation. Permission to hoard the steamer\ncan be secured from superintendent J. U.\nGore, the members of his office staff, or\nshipyard foreman, J. M. Bulger.\nMcOoverln, nllas Green, nnd Calhoun\nwere arraigned in the city police court\nyosterdav morning on a charge of defrauding the C.P.R. company. MoOoverin was\nremanded for eight dayB. Calhoun was allowed to go on his own rMopilmnce. Mc-\nGoverin or Green, is the man said tothe\nbadly wanted for n serious offenceJ*\u2122*\nthe border. After the remand wail\u00bb\u00abj\nyesterday he was removed for better \u00ab-\ncupity to the provincial jail from the clt>\nlOCltUp. _________________!---mm\n8HERBROOKE-M. Kewer, E. Kures*\nnlkl    Winnipeg;   P.   Cnprin;   O.   BejWI 0.\nR. Scott, Fernie; W. lttg.M\nharAh-L. J. Ryan, Northport; W, \u00ab\u25a0\nWhRIrj-mfc _\u2022 C Harrison, CranbrooK.\nWANTED-Man and wife seek employment\naTlst and 2nd cook.   Apply Boyd jgjg-\nArt Square*, Rugi, Table Linens, Qutlta,\nSheetB, and Sheeting, Lace Curtains,\nDrapes.\nJust unloaded a ear of up-to-date bedroom furniture, large range to select from\nJUST RECEIVED i Large Shipment from the Old ____!\nCarpets\nOf All Kinds.\ni     OUR PRICES ARE RIGHT.\n\"Ostermoor\" Hattraas.\nWe Are Agents for BSWa^r-:\nPianolas\nThe STANDARD FURNITURE Co.\nComplete House Furnishers and Undertakers.\nHUME-C, H. Pierce, A. Muchmorc, j.\nD. WAlsli, J. R. Roach, Rj H. Janus, tl.\nParsons, XV. H. Jackson. Vancouver; A.\nCrawford, Beaton) J. P. Weatmao and\nwife. E. XV. Connollv. Crnnbrook; J\" ti.\nRuttnn. Fernie; J Fyte, F.. Carroll, Victoria; J, A. Dlnsmore. Grand Forks; A.\nLUCES, Kaslo; A. A. Weble. N. P. McNaught, Silverton; IT. R. Stevenson, H.\nM. Stevenson, Midway; C, W. Welch.\nSeattle.\nSTRATHCONA-E. Robinson, J. Klrkup,\nJ. D. McDonald and wife. Rossland; ft.\nA. Balnbridge, Vancouver; Miss H. Munro,\nLondon; J. A. Mara, F. S. Barnard, Victoria; E. V. Dangerfleld. Calgary; A. H.\nHannls, B. N. White, Spokane; A. B. W.\nHodges,   Ornnd   Forks.\nQIIEHNS\u2014A'. .M. Lowe* VJctorlaj; W.\nHarris. Vancouver; A. Gowlng, 'JTout\nI.akc;  F.  ti. Carpenter, Sandon.\nBARTLETT-D. McKenzle, Sandon; ti.\nWraith. G. Kncobone. Silverton; J. Emerson, J,  Matherson, Ymlr.\nTREMONT\u2014D. J. McGilllvray. Sandon;\nG. B. White, Deer Park; J. AlcEwlng,\nGrand Forks.\nLAKBV1EW\u2014J. Lemmon, Rock creek;\nC. Furblshur, Rochester* J. \u25a0Levoeseur,\nCadillac.\nMADDEN-J. H. Luxton, Northport; A.\nMcKenzle,. E. Lnvell, J. Murphy, Spokane;\nG. Burns, Moyie;  D.  PJenor, Nakusp.\nNEI.SON-R. H. Bears, Skaro; P. N.\nMartin, Medicine Hrit; R. M. Holmes,\nRevelstoke.\nGRAND OBNTRAL--J T Smith, Wlnlaw;\nJ. A. Henderson, J. French, F. VV. Spencer, Vancouver; Mrs. Morris P. H. Roin-jy\nSpokane; A. McDonald, Procter; D. A. Mo-\nDonald, Cranbrook; R. W. Ueevor. Al-\nbertu; M, Fleishman. Vancouver; J. Lang,\nRossland;  J. J.  Worth, Calgary,\nCLUB\u2014R. B. 8aundcrs, Bonnington; j.\nXV. Wilson,  Phoenix.\t\nUS\niJ.^1        |   HEADQUARTERS\nfor   .      ...\nElgin and\nELGIN    Waltham watches\nWATCHES       \t\nm.m\nWe are offering exceptional value in fine Standard\nWatches and we carry only the best C.P.R. Movement!   .\nJ. O. PATENAUDE\nWATCHMAKER       MANUKACTURINQ JEWELER OPTICIAN\nPHONB Ml\nOCX&OSXXXXKX*!\nTUTs-sfli-s'nlc-A'O'-'a Consisting of Sour Orange, Forbidden\nmC-OOIUH\u00bby \u00bb *-rujt) Fro* n Pudding, Bitter Sweet,\nFreSh Brandy Cherry, Etc.\nChocolates ?*<>\u00bb\u00bb m.     S. H. SEANEY\nWe will Buy\nSubject to Confirmation.\n2000 International Coal ... .J 34*4\n2000 Western Oil and Coal 19\n3000 Diamond Vale Coal  20\n6000 .Cariboo 'MoKinney : 01*4\n1000 Oro Denoro    0814\nWe will SeU\nSubject to Confirmation.\n5000 Sullivan  .'.    .03*4\n10 Sullivan Bonds  174.00\n1850 Western Oil and Coal   .21H\n2S Canadian Marconi  $8.10\nSOO Dominion1 Copper  47\nCharles Morrison & Co.\nHudson's Bay Block.\nNELSON, B.C.\nWe are exclusive agents  for ttie\nKettfoon Shoe\nThe leather put Into Nettlcton thot*\nis specially selected, ami they are\ninadeto retain their shape.\nA shipment Just to hand.\nPrices 14.60 and IT.\nRoyal Shoe Store\nR. ANDREW & CO.\nAgents tor Nsttlstta's, Mates'., BaU*a\nPOTATOES\nWe have received another car same as last.\nFirst class for seed or\ntable  ::::::\nJ. A. IRVING & CO.\nPhon. 161\nHouston Block\nFERTILIZE\nYOUR      >\nGROUND\nEvery market gardener or fruit\ngrower should read tbls:\nWe can sell you high grade animal\nfertiliser made trom bones, blood and\nmeat scraps, thoroughly dried, etc, tha\nrichest and most productive fertiliser\npossible, at a very reasonable price.\nWrite tiB for particulars.\nThe Kootenay Fruit Growers' Association, from whom Information can ba\nobtained, are also agents for thla product .\nJ. I Griin & Co.\nLIMITED\nRANOH FOR SALE\n212 acrea, all good land, no rock.\n14 acres cleared, cultivated and fenced.\n10 acres In Oats and Clover.\n1 acre in Vegetables.\n90 fruit trees\u2014BO bearing. *\nCurrants,   Raspberries,   Strawberries,\nEtc., Etc.\ntag house 24s24 completely furnished.\nLarge cattle barn, poultry houses, wag-\no'tis, sleighs, mower, plow, harrow.,\nseeder; 24 head cattle, team horses, pigs,\npoultry, etc., etc.\nPrice $5000\nricDermid & McHardy\nMBU0N. \u25a0 O\nNelaon Mala Quartette's tint appearan tt, 20,000 Club Concert Monday neat.\nCadbUrg's\nChocolates\nLunch Chocolate  s and 10c\nA La Vanilla Chocolate  10c\nChocolate Cream Cakes S and 10c\nMilk Chocolate Couquetts.  lOo\nMilk Chocolate Drops, per lb 00o\nMilk Chocolate S, 10 and 20c cakes\nLonghurst's\nFruits and Confectionery\nPhone 25, Baker Street\n20,000 Club will celebrate\nMay 7th.\nAt Opera House. Be In it!\nKwong Wing (Hug\nTo the Ladies of\nNelson, B.C.:\nJust arrived a first class assortment of\n8UMN(ER GOODS\nincluding Fine Silks, Satin and\nLinen Waists.     Also some\nnew lines in Chinese and\nJapanese Curios.\nOorner Jotwpl-lM tnd Front Stroete\nNeat\nSuits\nFor\nBoys\nWe now bave a large assortment of\nneat patterns In suits for boys. .    -\nEither in three piece, or Norfolk\nmade, of goods that will stand the hard\nwear and tear that boys usually give\nthem.\nKnickers with double seat and knees.\nWe also have a nice range of summer\nsuits In two or three piece, sack, or\nNorfolks, for men, all at popular prices.\nWe will be pleased to skew you our new\narrivals\nNe* Door to Maieea\nJ. H. WALLACE\nSutton & Sons\nSeedamen by Royal\nWarrant to His\nMaJ\u00ab*ty\nKing Edward VII.\nROOT SEEDS\nOrow Button's Pedigree Hoot  \t\nproved germlnntlnff   power  If   ymi \u25a0\nthe beat results.   We have In \u25a0tockti\nCARROT -* Yellow -Intermediate, I\nWhite Belgian.\nMANQEtr-Mammotl) Long- Red,\nTankard.\nSWEDE\u2014Magnum   Bonum,   Purpld\nSUGAR  BEET-Improvprl.\nTURNIP - Purple Top Favwllc,-_\nTop Perfection, -Purple Top Manimnti\nThe Brackman-Ker Milling Co'y, j\nf W Ww. illf i\nThe most\nPopular Concert\nof the season\nMonday, May 7\nWe are making a cleanup of a few L\nlines of Flour which we offer as follow\n18 100-lb sacks Premier Hungarian,\nn 100-lb. sacks Ogilvie's Hungarian,\n15 GO-lb sacks Ogllvles Hungarian, ilJ\n8 100-lb.    sacks  Strong^ Bakers'.   <\nZ 100-lb.   sacks   Mottatrs   Beet,\n3 GO-lb sacks, Alplna, |1.25 per sack.\nThese prices are away below the marlfi\nprice and cannot be replaced.\nBELL TRADING GO.\nPhone ML  Mall <\nwoelva prompt aad careful attention.\n>\u2022#\u2022<\nIT PAYS  TO DEAL WITH RUTHERFORD.\nHarry Webb's clear Jujubes Fruit Flavored pastiles j\nChocolate Carmels, 6oc per pound.\nChocolate Creams, etc. in 25c, 50c, 75c and $1.00 box\nWARD BT8SBT\nWm. Rutherford\nDRUOOIST\nWe are not\npaid Headed\nbut we intend to meet Tom Procte\ntke bald-headed' row at the 20,000 <\nconcert on May 7th.\nIn' the mean time don't forget that]\nare offering (or sale a very tine line\nOlives and Plckes Ut hulk.\nOiant Queen Olives, per pint ...\nGerman Dill Pickles, per quart ,\nSweet Gherkin Pickles, par pint ,\nTOYE &.BENEDICT\nJosephine St GROCERS Phone No. j\nEvery Chocolate a Mouthful of Melting Deliciousne\nMcDonald's jgg| Chocolates\nNo use describing what It'a like, yon can't taste wosds.   Ask ;\ndealer for then ud take no other.   \u201e.\nIslion, B. 0.\nJ. A. M\u00b0DONALD\nKannfaotnring Confetti\nDO YOU\nWant a length ot garden hose thla Mason.   Something good\u2014sometl\nthat we will guarantee to you, tn hi or \"4 Inch, cotton or rubber.\nIF YOU DO\ndive us a call and we will he pleased to show you some, and\nyou attractive prion.   Mall orders solicited.\nNELSON HARDWARE CO.\nU NBLSON B. 0. P. O. Box I\nI ***A*AA**r\\\u00bb\\m*r*^^awWV**%lV*^*^^l*nnA*AAA*AArt*\nThe dlStrenoe between wearing yourj\nclothes tbat ars made (or you and wear\nclothing that le made (or no ons In\ntlcular, li that when they are flnlahed B\nla one man In this country thoy wit\nperfectly.\nTaylor<-MeQaame\n!\nHIGH CLASS\nT A TT DD 6 wear May 7, at  the 20,000\ni. t\\I.L.\\J I\\a ,,.,       benelt ooncert.\nOrder now and have It ready for yei\n-      \" Club's t\u2014\nw-\u00bbvvv\u00bbv>*s\u00bb*>\nThis is \"KODAK\" Weather\nREMEMBER TH*\n20,000 Club Concert\nHay 7th\n\"The Beat Ever\"\nTake one with you on your outing days.    We have\n\" Everything for the Kodak.\"\nCanada Drug and Book Co9yf Ltdj\nConn Baker and\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. 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Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : F.J. Deane","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1906-05-04 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":"1906-05-04 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. 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To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}