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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":" VOL. 5\nNELSON, B. 0., THURSDAT, AUGUST 2, 1906\n\u2014\n.NO, 87\nDEATH OF\nCOLBAKER\nCablegram Announces Demise of a Keotenay\nPioneer\nWas for YcanMemberor British Ct lunbte\nLf<iilalure and Held Jtvmil Cabinet Positions\n(Special to The Dally News)\nCranbrook, B. C\u201e Aug. 1.\u2014This evening about 8.80 Mi-.   V,   Hydo   Baiter,\nwhen on his way down town to attend\n' a meeting of the'clty council, received a\ncablegram announcing the sudden death\nof bis father, lieutenant colonel James\nBaker, yesterday at Parltstown, Dorsetshire, England, by heart failure,\nsupervening an attack of-1 pneumonia\nfrom which Mr. Baker had information\ntbat his father had practically recovered, Ou being informed of the contents\nof the cablegram, the city council at\nonce adjourned as a mark of respdot to\nOxa memory of colonel Baker who pro-\nbably, more than any other man, was\nIdentified with tho -upbuilding v of the\n\"prosperity of .Bast Kootenay In which\nhe was vary largely interested. He was\nassociated prominently with the early\n, history of tho development of the coal\nIndustry II East Kootenay and to him\nmay be attributed Jn a large measure tile\nconstruction of the C. P. R. through the\n' Crow's' Nest   Pass. \u25a0 He   represented\n\u25a0 Cranbrook, called after the name of the\nold Baker home du Dorset, in the British Columbia legislature from the time\nthe city had a name up to 1900, aud was\nprovincial secretary ln the Turner government   He occupied -many offices o!\n1 trust and responsibility in the British\nColumbia government and was a man to\nwhom the province as, a whole owes a\nheavy obligation of   gratitude. .   Tbe\nj keenest regret .is expressed by represen-\n' tatives of every class here for the comparatively early, demise of colonel Baker\nwho was In the prime of his Intellectual life In bla 72nd year.\nMr. V. Hyde Baker and lord Cobhiun\nare executors of the will of the deceased\ncolonel, under which Mr. Baker, It is\nunderstood, wlll benefit very largely.\nThe funeral wlll take, place tomorrow.\nMr. and Mrs. V. 'Hyde Baker leave\nfor England (Immediately.\nby hosts of friends from one end of the\nprovince to the other. His was a charming personality and no one who came\nmuch in 'contact with him, either socially or in his publio capacity, could\nfall to admire and respect his many estimable qualities of head and heart.\nColonel Baker resided ln this province\nfrom 1884 until 1900 and of these 16\nyears 14 were spent in active public life.\n' James Baker was a son of Samuel\nBaker, Gloucestershire, England, and\nwas born January 0, 1830. He was educated at the college school Gloucester,\nand at Cambridge university, from which\nbe graduated in 1861. He entered the\nIndian navy and subsequently transfer-\n.ed to .the army, serving in the Crimea.\nUpon' his return lo England he was actively connected with the volunteer service, retiring lu 1875 with the rank of\nlieutenant-colonel. In 1884 he came lo\n-\u2022last Kootenay and engaged iu ranching\nin Bast Kootenay. In tho general else*\ntlons of 1886 he was elected to the legls*\niature for Kootenay and was re-elected\nat each succeeding election until his\nvoluntary retirement from public life in\n1900, after the dissolution of tho legislature upon the defeat of Ihe Semlln\nadministration.\nColonel Baker held office under Hon.\nTheodore Davie aud Hon. J. H. Turner,\nentering the cabinet of the former as\nmlnlHler ot education and immigration,\nsubsequently becoming provincial secretary. On the formation of the Turner\ngovernment on March 4, 1895, colonel\nBaker was sworn ln as minister of mines,\neducation and immigration, offices he\nheld until the defeat of the ministry ln\nthe general elections of 1898.\nColonel Baker was a fine type of the\nEnglish gentleman. A kindly, polished\nman of the world, a scholar and keenly\nInterests In sport of every description.\nProm the'day of his arrival ln this province until the day of his departure he\nwas an enthusiastic believer In the potentialities of British Columbia. He invested his all in East Kootenay and for\nmany years saw little or no return for\nhis Investment. He never lost faith snd\nultimately, due largely to his personal\nexertions and unconquerable belief In\nthe resources of the district he succeeded In putting through the deal which resulted In the construction of the Crow s\nNest Pass railway, the opening tip of the\nooal fields and the springing Into existence of tiie numerous thriving towns\ntnd villages that now make East Kootenay district one of the rlcheBt and most\nprogressive sections of the province.\nColonel Baker was a conservative In\npolitics, but during his long public service party lines were not recognized in\nprovincial affairs and lis \u2022 numbered\namong his supporters men of all shades\nof political feeling. He was never a\nbitter partisan and both On the platform\ntnd on the floor of the house, whether as\na member of the government or as on\noccupant of the opposition benohes, he\n-Ms ever courteous and considerate and\nheld the esteem of every member of the\nlegislature.\nTVhilst his public life In this province\nwas not signalised by any conspicuous\ntUlmlnlstnatlve or legislative wortc M\ndevoted himself assiduously to his duties\nand as minister ot education quietly\n\u25a0Seeled rtidny reforms of great value.\n, His death will be sincerely mourned\nAFTER WORLD'S HONORS\nCANADIAN SOULIER CHALLENGES\nOBOROE TOWNS   .\nEDDIE DURMAN ANXIOUS TO IMITATE JAKE OAUDAUR\nToronto, Aug. 1\u2014OBddie Durman, the\nToronto.sculler, Is after world's champion ship honors. He believes he can\nbring the premier sculling title back\nto the land where Jake Qaudaur so\nlong kept lt At any rate he Intends\nto make an attempt it Towns, the new\nchampion will meet him. Durman\nsaid today:  ,\n\"I wlll Issue a challenge at once to\nrow Towns In England for 13500 a side\nand the championship.\"\nDurnan can get plenty of booking\nhere, and .If the champion Is willing\nto meet the Canadian some big Side\nwagers will be made.\nThe recent race on the Paramatta\ncourse,, marks the passing of Stanbury\nas a sculler. He is a big raw boned\nfellow, with very little style, but great\nspeed for a short distance, and the\nstrength to the last distance. He first\ncame into prominence when he won the\nworld's championship In 1891 from J,\nMacLean, who had been handed the,\ntitle by P. Kemp. Stanbury beat Tom\nSullivan and Wag Harding, and then\nfell before the Canadian, Jake Gamtaur,\nJust ten years ago.\nFive years ago George Towns, a medium slied, well built Australian of 30\nyears of age, come, over to Canada wltn\nhla tutor, Top Sullivan, alter several\nyears spent In England, and on the\nlake at Rat Portage defeated Jake Gau-\ndaur, the time for the three miles being\n20:32. Towns displayed a very nice\nstyle, gameness and endurance, tnd his\nvictory was comparatively easy.\nTowns held the lihamplonshlp until\nlast year, when he met Stanbury on the\nParamatta course, and was beaten In\n20 minutes and 35 seconds. Last Saturday's race was the second meeting between the pair, and Towns won In 19\nminutes and 63 1-3 seconds, by about\n20 lengths. The course Ib down stream\nand a wind at their bocks would easily\naccount ton the unusually fast time.\nThe championship record since Edward\nHanlan won world's honors Is as follows:\n1883\u2014Hanlan beat Wallace Robs.\n1884\u2014Hanlan beat Laycock.\n1884\u2014W. Beach beat Hanlan.\n1885\u2014W. Beach beat Hanlan.\n1885\u2014W. Beach beat Neil Matterson.\n1886\u2014W. Beach beat Jake Qaudaur.\n1886\u2014W. Beach beat Wallace Ross.\n1887\u2014W.  Beach beat Hanlan.\n1888\u2014P. Kemp beat T, Clifford.\n1888\u2014P. Kemp beat Hanlan twice.\n1888\u2014H Senrle beat Kemp.\n1889\u2014P. Searle beat W. O'Connor.\n1890\u2014P. Kemp beat Nell Matterson.\n1891\u2014J. Stanbury beat J. MacLean,\n1892\u2014J. Stanbury beat T. Sullivan.\n1896-J. Stanbury beat C. R. Harding.\n\u25a01896\u2014J. Gaudaur. beat-J. Stanbury.\n19M\u2014At Rat Portage, G. Towns beat\nGaudaur.\n1905\u2014J. Stanbury beat G. Towns.\n1906\u2014George Towns best J. Stanbury.\nERIE MINING HEAL.\nCanadian King Group Acquired By\nHastings iKxploration Syndicate.\nA mining deal ot considerable Importance was closed yesterday whereby the\nHosting (B.O.) Exploration Syndicate\npurchased the interest of William Connolly, of Erie, lessee of the Canadian\nKing group of four properties, adjoining tlie Arlington mine, at Brie.\nIt Is also slated that the Hastings\nsyndicate has obtained a bond on the\nproperty for two and a half years from\nthe owners, who reside at Decatur,\nMichigan. The price mentioned Is sold\nto be a satisfactory one but details are\nlacking. The Hastings syndicate will\nwork the new property as well as tbe\nArlington and 15 per cent of the net\nsmelter values received is to be applied\nin payment of purchase money.\nThe Canadian King Is well supplied\nwith machinery and up to date about\n100 tons ot $60 to the ton ore, has heen\nshipped to the Hall Mines smelter.\nMUTINEERS\nSURRENDER\nA Shell From Battleship\nBlows up Powder\nMagazine\nIii Gobi of Ibe Fortress are Silenced ui\nIkeRelMbYltldlolni-crial\nFortes\n***************i************\n\u2666 Viborg, Aug. 1,\u2014It Is reported < \u2666\n\u2666 here   that,   the   Russian    Beet \u2666\n\u2666 flotilla stationed at Mango, Fin- \u2666\n\u2666 land, has mutinied, imprisoned \u2666\n\u2666 the ofllcers, and   sailed   to the *\n\u2666 assistance of   the mutineers   at \u2666\n\u2666 Sveaborg. \u2022\n***************************\nHelsingfors, Aug. 1.\u2014(5 p.ra.)\u2014There\nhas been continuous sharp cannonading\nat Sveaborg since noon. The smoke\nfrom burning buildings Is visible here.\nDuring the afternoon a rain of shrapnel was poured Into the sea In the\nvicinity ot Lonnan Island whero a cruiser ls stationed. Troops are pouring\nInto Helsingfors,\nHelsingfors. Aug. 1.\u2014At 7 o'clock this\nevening tbe battleships Csesarevitch and\nBogatyr opened lire on the mutineers at\nt distance ot 50 coble lengths. The mut-\nneers replied but tbeir shots seemed to\nfall short. The firing ceased at 9 o'clock\nand the boats were seen leaving the\nisland with wounded.\nHelsingfors, (Aug. 1.\u2014(8 p.m.)\u2014The\ncannonade at Sveaborg continued during all the afternoon. The powder\nmagaslne in the possession of the insurgents has exploded. It is impossible\nto determine how this wlll effect the\nmutiny.\nHelsingfors, Aug. 2.\u2014(1.30 a^m.)\u2014The\nwhite flag bos been hoisted at one of\nthe Islands, but It is premature to say\nwhether the revolutionists there have\nsurrendered. In any event, however, the\nfire from the battleship Slava and another warship undoubtedly had its effect. The mutineers report that the\nSlavs was struck several times by their\nfire. During the afternoon a boat put\nout from Sveaborg and was bombarded.\nThe occupants, members of the Red\nGuard, were arrested.\nThe mutiny flrst broke out Monday In\nthe Sapper battalion which had been\ndisarmed In the fortress. The artillery\njoined in the revolt and together tbe\nmutineers took possession of the fortress. The commander of the fortress\nappealed personally to the mon, but his\nwords were unheeded. The mutiny\nspeedily assumed an aggressive character. The commander of the Sapper battalion was fired on by his men and\nwounded. He was then stoued to death\nand thrown into the sea. A midshipman named Dellvron attached to one of\ntbe torpedo boat destiupers wont out\nand hauled down tbe red nag from\nSkatudden fortress while the mutineers\nwere firing on him. lie received four\nbullets In the breast end died iu a hospital during the night.\nITS PASSAGE IS SURE.\nPass\nHelsingfors, Aug, 2.\u2014(2.50 run.)\u2014The\nlatest news from Ihe fortress tends to\nconfirm the previous report that the\nmutineers have surrendered. They undoubtedly had the upper hand until the\nbattleships Slava and Csesarevitch arrived on the scene and commenced to\nbombard with shells so effectively that\nthe central magazine was blown up and\nthe biggest guns in the hands of the revolutionists were rendered practically\nwill make the department more than maintain Ua record. Many realdencea will ae\nstarted thla month, the owners having\nwaited for the price ot lumber to full, ana\nnow, finding thnt there la no assurance or\nthla, will, begin work at once to complete\nbefore the clone of tno season.\nCommander Toget and 2000 loyal Infantry, then surrounded the barracks.\nThey were under continual flre from the\nrevolutionists, and to which thoy could\nnot reply. The men undoubtedly were\nled to surrender by their lack ot big\nguns, their need of provisions, and the\narrival of the warships.\nBUILPINO  VANCOUVER\nBritish Educational Bill Wlll\nHouse of Lords.\nLondon, Aug. 1.\u2014In the house of lords\ntoday lord Crewe moved lhe second\nreading of the education bill. The debate indicated that the house had no\nIntention of rejecting the bill but the\narchbishop of Canterbury, tbe duke of\nNorfolk .ond others declared the bill\nmust be amended drastically.\nDISPUTE WITH UNCLE SAM.\n(Special to The Pally Uml\nOtow.a, Aug. 1.\u2014Canada and the United Slates have arranged to submit the\ndifficulties between both countries In\nregard lo the St. John river, New Brunswick, to a commission. It Is likely two\ncommissioners will be appointed by\neach. .\t\nMRS. THAW YIBLDS\nNew York, Aug. 1\u2014Yielding to the\npersuasion ot her son. Harry Thaw,\nnum. William (Thaw May dispensed\nwith the services of the firm of Black,\nOlcott, Onieber nnd Boynge, whom ste\nhad engaged to conduct the defence of\nthe young man on the charge of mur\nderlr* Bltlltrta White.\nPermits for Seven Months of TOO Pass\n\u2022\".IM.OW\nVancouver, Alia*, l-'l'he total value ot\nthe buildings authorised to bo erected la\nlhe clly durlnff tho seven months closing\ntoday has posed lhe two million mors,\nand It Is confidently ospeeted thnt'wItMn\nthe next month the totul record for ino\nyour 1W16. whleh was a banner one, will\nbe equalled In tho llrst olght monlns oi\nlhe present year. The iielual amount to\nilato Is $2,\u00ab59\"10, as ngnlnst *I,4H,\u00b0\u00bb 'or tno\nrorreaponillng period ot Inst yenr. Kor Ibe\nentire yenr of IW, the nssregnto was R-\nrt\u00bb,3l\", nnd In this Is Included lhe cost or\niho new federal building, the Inmost slnglo\npermit ever given out by the department.\nFor the month ot July lhe showing 1\u00bb a\nhandsome one. Bwrrogntlns *SS6,*ra. as\nagainst 1189,200 for the corresponding month\n\u25a0r ui*.\nBuilding Inapoclor McBpadden snys tbo\noutlook for the month of August Is most\npromising In this field\n\"I can count as certain on the Issuance\nof perm\"s amounting to 1300,000 within n\nshort time,\" he snld. \"There In the Hums'\nabattoir, $100,000; McLennan, AloKeely block\n1100.000; Mount Pleasant Methodist church,\nHVOOO; Buacombe bloek. 140,000 and the\nBuni.ya.de hotel,* Besides these there will\nbe tha usual number of residences, whloh\nROBERT HUME DROWNED\nSAD ACCIDENT ROBS NELSON HtWUO\nOP A HAPPY  HOY\nUNIVERSAL   SYMPATHY   EXTMNDWU\nTHE  BEREAVED   -PARENTS\nOne of the' saddest fatalities that ever\n\u25a0befel this community happened a little\nafter 10 o'clock yesterday morning Juat\nacross the lake, when young Robert irvtne\nHume\/ the eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. j.\nFred Hume, wns drowned while bathing\nIn the lake hi front of his parents', summer residence situated midway between\nthe Hoover and the Halkett homes und\nalmost directly opposite the Humo hotel.\nThe hoy had been in the habit of \u25a0bathing\nin the shallow water near tho shore, but\nIn order to prevent a possible accident always wore & life preserver. vesterday\nmorning, hi company *wlth three other\noung-ohlldrcn, Mr. Hume's hoy went in\n\u25a0bathing and apparently the life preserver\nBllpped down and became entangled about\nthe little fellow's feet, and his head was\nforced under water. He must have remained In this position for a few moments,'\nlong enough to becoitfe unconscious and\nthen, as the life preserver, loosened by his\nstruggles, floated away, rank to Ito bottom,\nThe boy's playmates. Jn seeing win*. \u00bbnd\nhappened, shrieked for-1id, Lilt it llrst\ntheir cries attracted no attention, ns tncy\nhad been shouting and laughing Whilst at\nplay. One of the party than ran lor help\nand C.P.R. conductor Andrew Halkett,\nwho Is living aenws the lake Jttst now.\nwas speedily-brought to the spot. Mr. Halkett at once dived into the water and\ncommenced searching for the boy. but\ncould not find him. Halkett wus quickly\nJoined by J, Fred Hume, who rushed to the\nscene when he saw from his house Hil-i-m\nat work, and know ->ome icclleiit had\nhappened. Between the frantic efforts ot\nthe \u2022fjo-'men the little body was located\nand brought to shore. Mr. Hume at mice\n\u25a0began tlte work of attempted resuscitation,\nwhile Mr. Halkett came to the city ror\nmedical aid. Dr. Hall.lon being phoned\nfor. came down to the bifet house and was\ntaken to the scene, Imt.M-h the efforts of\nMr. ,ftumo and' the suDsScj-bent work of\nthe doctor were unavailing; the vital spark\n\u25a0was extinct and all the prolonged efforts\nmnde to revive the little fellow failed to\nproduce any sign of life. From the Hrst,\nonce he had examined the hoy, Dr.\nHftll had no hop* of successfully reviving\nhim, but he went to work manfully and ror\na long time strove hard, by every known\nmeans lo restore th* lad, once more a living reality to the distracted parents. Finally the hopeless task was sorrowfully\nabandoned and the hoy was carried up\nto Mr, Hume's summer residence.\nLater on Mr. and Mrs. .Hume nnd the\nwhole household came ovor to the city,\nbringing with them all that was left or\nwhat had been a few hours before, a\nmerry, winsome ten year old boy, the Joy\nof his parents, a manly little rellow beloved by all his playmates and a ravoritc\nwith all Who knew him,\nJohn Bunynn prepared the little body\nfor burial ond It was taken to the family\nhome on Victoria street last evening.\nThe funeral will take place this afternoon\nat 3 oclock, from the family residence and\nRev. R. Newton Powell, pastor of the\nMethodist ohureh, will hold a short service\nnt the house.\nMr. and Mrs. Hume have the sympathy\nof tho whole community, and of everyone\nIII the province who learns the sad story,\nIt Is not their first bereavement in Nelson,\nas live years ago they had the great misfortune to lose their oldest born, a daughter, who lies burled ln the cemetery here,\nand beside whoso remains those of little\nRobert wlll be placed this afternoon.\nThere is some little doubl of Just exactly\nhow yesterday's sad fatality happened,\ntfut the theory lhat tho life preserver slipped down and was the original cause of\nthe accident is generally believed to bo tne\ncorrect one, When Mr. Halkett first malted to the scene his earnest elTorts failed\nto locate tho Utile body, lying motionless\nnt the bottom of the lake, because the\nchildren, wildly anxious to help, were not\nQuite certain of iho exact spot where the\nboy was last Been, and precious moments\nwere lost in tho frantic search that followed. When at last found the body was\ndetached from the life preserver, and It Is\nunderstood that the latter was subsequently found floating In the water nearby.\nDavid Harum says that the loss of a\nchild is a sorrow all by itself, and that\ni lils Is pulnfuiy true only parents who havo\nsuffered, know. Robert was an exceptionally bright little chap, known the city over\nand honestly liked by every one ,who possessed the faculty of loving children. With\nthe many guests at the Hume tho >uoy was\na great fncorlte and his tragic passing\naway yeBterday was Iho sole topic of sympathetic utterance*, not only around the\nHotel but in every homo in city.\nBOUNDARY'S\nPROSPERITY\nObservations of E. Jacobs\nEditor of B. C. Mining\nReview\nExtcasive DcvclopmcDls md Improve-\nments in Mlnlnt*. SBKltiog and Rail-\nWay Construction\nPILLS POISON CHILD\nVancouver. Aug. 1-A police Investigation\nIh iirobafolo ns n rosillt of tho fuel that one\nof the little children of a well known resilient waa Inst week at denth's door ns tlie\nresult of nicking up nnil eating from n\npacknge of rnnnll pills which him been lett\nat the door of Ihe resldonco by nn advertising ngent. *-*     ,\nThe pnrent making the complaint Is \u00ab*.\nJ. Marshall of IW (leorgln stret, who\nsoys thnt upon hla return from his vacation last Biitiirday, he was Informed by\nhis wife thnt hla baby child had been at\ntho point of death during his nbsonce as\nthe result of eating ll number of pills\nwhich hnd been left on tho verandah by\nn distributor. The little one waa taken\nwith violent pains and hor sufferings were\nao ncuto that tho urgency of the case was\nInstantly seen. Lr. A. 8. Munro was called\nnnd tho parent slates It waa only due to\nhis Instant and energetlo action that the\nlife of the child waa saved.\nE. Jacobs, editor of tlie B. C. Mining\nRecord,' came In on last night's train\nfrom Rosaland, after having spent -a\nfortnight in the Boundary anil Rossland\ndistricts. He states that in both camps\nthere ls general satisfaction with the\n\u2022mining outlook, and important development and additions to plant and machinery are being made, with the object\nof considerably Increasing the production\nof ore.\nIn the Boundary especially the mining\nand smelting Industries are in a prosperous condition. Concerning this district he stales that at the British Columbia Copper Co.'s smelting works the\nInstallation of tho large smelting plant,\nlo have a treatment capacity of 1500 to\n1800 tons of ore per day, Is well forward,\nand it is expected that about Iwo months\nhence It will be practicable to resume\nsmelting there. A scarcity of lumber\nis somewhat delaying the construction\nof the high railway trestles into the\nworks and the new ore bins,\u2014the latter\nto have a capacity of about 10,000 tons-\nhut .the manager, J. B. McAllister, who\nlast week returned from a visit to the\ncoast, has made arrangements to tide\nover the difficulty until the present\nshortage from district mills can be remedied. Praotlcally all lhe Heavy excavation work and building of substantial\nmasonry foundations for the big furnaces, motors, blowers, etc., is. completed; some of the machinery ls arriving, the extension of the streel-fFimed\nbuilding for the converters, etc., Is being proceeded with; the new machine\n\u25a0hop is anished and power tools installed- Ihe water supply has been re-arranged; and tank storage for high- pressure system increased to about 180,000\ngallons. .   ,      ,\nAt the company's Mother Lode mine\nthe main working shaft haB been deepened to 476 feet, and a station opened\nat the 400-ft level, with a big ore pocket below. By the time the* smelter\nshall be ready to treat oro the mine-will\nbe in a position to supply 800 to 1000\ntons per diem. Thon some 250 tons\ndally will be. obtainable from the company's Oro Denoro mine, 150 tons from\nthe Emma, 100 tons trom the Napoleon,\nnear Marcus, and custom ores will make\nun more than enough to keep the works\ngoing at their full capacity. Electric\npower will be used almost altogether at\nboth mine and smeller, this to be obtained from the West Kootenay Power\nAt Boundary Palls, the Dominion Copper Co. ls enlarging lis assay office aud\nadding lo Its laboratory equipment, erecting additional bins for hoth coke and\nore puling In a Janckes-Farrel crusher\nwllh a capacity of 1000 lo 1200 tons per\nday (one 8-hour shift), building a new\nfurnace 255 by 44 in. with 22 3% In\nuyere*. aud provided with Cllrous; hot\nblast (lhe nrat ot lis kind In British\nColumbia), adding a No, t-Otamm \u00a3\nblower to he run by two 100 H.p., Allls-\nChalmers-Bullock induction motors, and\nproviding for requisite increases in\nsampling mill capacity, railway trackage, water supply, etc.\nAt this company's several mines development and production are both Increasing. The main ore supply has been\ncoming from the Brooklyn, from which\na tonnage of 10,000 to 12,000 tons per\nmonth has been obtained, with a record\nof 14,000 tons for one month. The\nStemwinder la sending down 1500 tons,\nthe Rawhide about 8000 tons, the Sunset about 3500 tons, and the Mountain\nRose ls contributing a little. The Idaho\nwlll soon have railway connections made\nmat wlll admit of its Joining the ore\nshlppers* An air compressor has been\nordered from the Canadian Rand Drill\nCo, for this mine, to be operated by a\n400 h.p. Westlnghouse motor. Othei\nJlant to being put in where needed\nThe company Is employing about 400\nmen In all et Its mines and sme ter.\nSo much has been published in The\nDaily News of the extensions of development work nnd additions to plant an-1\nmachinery at the OrulV ft-\u00bb \u25a0'\u25a0'\u00bb**\nthat there is litle to be added. The\nthree-compartment shaft, which Is lo be\nthe main, working shaft of the mine, is\nbeing proceeded with. The opening up\nof the Oold Drop Is progressing, some\n8 to 10 cars ot ore being shipped dally\nfrom this mine. These mines ware not\nvisted by Mr, Jacobs this trip, but he\nwas Informed that they wlll be easily\nable to supply the larger tonnage for\nwhich preparations are being made at\nthe company's big smelting works at\nOrand FY>rka At the latter two of the\nold furnaces have been rebuilt and enlarged to a dally capacity ot 500 tons,\nmaking with the two last-built \"tacks,\nfour furnaces each having a treatment\ncapacity of 600 tonB . The remaining\nfour furnaces are to be similarly enlarged, so that a total capacity of nearly\n4000 tons wlll soon have been provided\nfor. Two more large \"Jumbo\" blowers,\nsimilar lo the one described by The\nDally NewB In Its last Annual Review of\nMining,, bave been ordered, and, for\ndriving these blowers, four 160 h.p.\nWestlnghouse motors, two for each blower, have also been ordered, the Installation of a third converter stand Is Just\nabout completed. All about the works\nthere are signs of progress, and tbe great\nimportance of this big industrial establishment to the district becomes more\nevident as each month passes. Tbe company ls employing about 300 men at its\nsmelting works and 400 at its mines.\nThere ls much more connected with'\nmiinng and smelting in the Boundary\ndistrict that Mr. Jacobs would like to\nhave spoken of, but as he did not reach\nNelson until midnight, it was too late\nto go into these matter last night. He\npointed out, though, that although there\nIs not much stir noticeable in the Boundary towns tt is plainly evident that the\ndistrict is making very substantial progress, since railway, mining, smelting\nand power companies are together expending money iu construction work,\ndevelopment, equipment, etc, to an extent that in the aggregate amply demonstrates their full confidence that a\nprosperous industrial future of the\nBoundary is fully assured.\nRECORD FOR HANGING\nNEORO IS TRIED -AND EXECUTED\nIN FIFTY MINUTE8.       '      \u2022\nTWO BLAOK  MBN PAY THE PENALTY FOR ASSAULT.\nMaylielil, Ky, Aug. 1.\u2014The hanging\nof Allen Matthles, the negro who criminally assaulted Miss Ethel McClay last\nWednesday night, took place at 8\no'clock last night In a legal manner, In\nthe yard of the county Jail. Fully 10,000\npeople were on the scene, but only a\nfew hundred could sen the execution,\nalthough almost tbe entire fence surrounding the scaffold had been torn\ndown, while the tr.al was going on. It\nwas only 50 minutes from the time the\njury was sworn in till the negro was\npronounoed dead.\nAtlanta, Oa\u201e Aug. 1.\u2014Floyd Carmlchael, a negro, about 22 years old, after\nbeing lilentlfled by Miss Annie Poole, as\ntho man who had assaulted her early\nyesterday, was shot to death in sight ot\nhis victim late ln the morning by a\nposse, who had captured him.\nJUMP THEIR BOARD BILLS\n(Special to The Dally Newa)\nPhoenix, Aug. 1.\u2014An epidemic of\nJumping board bills, which has ben more\nor less prevalent of late, ls now likely\nto lake a favorable turn owing to an\nIncident that has Just happened in the\nBoundary, and one young fellow has secured a full month in which to consider\nthe matter.\nU. S. Clark was employed at the Brooklyn mine here and boarded with Mr. J.\nH. Graham. Last Saturday he drew his\ntime, wont to Greenwood and thence to\nMidway, to take tbe train tho next morning for Spokane, and thence to Pullman,\nWash, where lie has a brother In business. Mr. Graham became suspicious,\nhowever, on learning that Clark was in\nGreenwood, and on ascertaining tbat he\nhod drawn hie wages at the mine, told\nchief of police Flood of the case. Sunday morning the chief took the Phoenix\nGreat Northern train to Grand Forks,\nknowing that the Midway train over the\nsame road must come into Grand Forks.\nWhen the Midway train pulled Into\nGrand Forks. Clark jumped off, and\nseeing chief Flood on the platform, he\nstarted to run, with the chief after him.\nThe chase led as far as the C. P. R.\nstation or thereabouts, but tbe chlof\novertook Ills man, and cume back with\nhltn to Phoeulx that night. When arraigned betore police magistrate Williams tho next dny Clark was given a\nlecture by the Judge and sentenced on a\ncharge ot vagrancy to spend the next\nniunth in the Nelson Jail to think the\nmatter over while at work for the province.\nNOTES i'ROM FERNIB\n(Special to The Dally News)\nFernle, ^ug. 1-The local brunch of the\nHome Bank of Canadn, opened their doors\nfor business todny In their largo nnd commodious offices ln Iho Henderson block on\nVictoria avenue. James II. Marshall, lor\nmany years the popular accountant of tne\nC. N. P. C. company, le malinger; H. S.\nBanwell, accountant, nnd they are assisted by J. F.  Hudnlckl and T. Coraan.\nMrs G. C. Bockfort, who has been visiting her parents, Mr. nnd Mrs. Balleny of\nNelson, has returned lo town.\nCoal C'rcok vs, Fernle and Colcmnn va.\nMichel, aro tho football games scheduled\nfor Saturday next In the competition for\nthe handsome silver cup donated by the\nFort Steele Browing company.\nConl creek, from which the town ot For.\nnle draws Its water supply, ls lower tbnn\nIt .has been for months, nnd unless lhe\nPuss Is favored with n plentiful supply 01\nrain soon, the water problem will be a\nserious one.\nHAWniORNTJIWAITrc AT YMIR\nYmlr. Aug. J-Uist evening III the Miners' union hall, wllh Andrew Burgess ln\nthe chair, J. H. llawlhornthwultc, M.L.A.,\nnddressed a smull and unenthualaatlc num.\nenee. Very little interest was taken In\nthe meeting, none or llie miners coming\nIn to hoar the speaker. .Ills aiUlress wns\nIn tho usual stereotyped form such us .ho\nhas been delivering around Ihe country.\nA short lime ngo\" Sam Bensle was appointed deputy lire warden for thla dls-\ntrlct-an ofllclnl lhat wus badly needed In\nthis section-but seemingly he will bo or\nllttlo uso us he hus to report all Urea lo\nlhe tiro warden at Knslo or Vlotorla, before\nhe will have authority to engage men.\nOllmnn Brown, consulting engineer ot\ntho \u00a5mlr Oold Mines, Ltd, ls at the k'mlr\nproporly, consulting with manager Hand.\nEASTERN LACROSSE.\nBrookvlile, Ont., Aug. 2.\u2014Capitals vs.\nCornwall, a tie, 4 to 4.\nUEADM\nLocal Fruit Growers Urge\nAdmission of Chinese\nLaborers\nPus Rcsolalion Requesting Doafnlon Car*\neminent to Remove Restridtoa\nAgainst Orientals\nA special meeting or the Kootenay\nFruit Growers Association was held In\nthe board of trade rooms at li o'clock\nyesterday morning, called at th#-instance of H. E. Croasdaile and others\n'to consider the question of Chinese\nlabor In relation to ranching.\nThe notices calling the meeting were\nseat out by the acting secretary, in Mr.\nAnnable's absence at Winnipeg, and by\nsome oversight tlte. press was not notf-\nflfed of the meeting at all, and The Dally\nNews had no representative on hand.\nAccording to some of those wbo were\npresent 40 persons attended the meeting, all of whom with four or fire exceptions, were members of the association. A resolution, proposed by H. G.\nCroasdaile and seconded by T. Morley,\nwas carried, asking that the system of\npractically excluding all Chinese immigration by a prohibitive head tax, be\nmodified so that Chinese engaged aa\ndomestic servants or agricultural lab- \"*\norers,_ be admitted to Canada free of\nduty. G. O. Buchanan, who Is not a\nmember of the association, was by consent allowed to address the meeting but\ndid not vote.\nAt least four persons spoke strongly\nagainst tbe resolution, F. J. Sammons,\nCecil and Crozier Bourke, and J. W.\nFord.\nOn a division being taken the resolution was declared carried by a vote of\n16 to 6. This would leave present but\nnot voting, Borne 18 or 19 persons, there\nbeing an attendance of about 40.\nAppended will be found the text of\nthe resolution carried and an account\nof some of the speeches made favoring\nthe reeolutlpn, kindly furnished The\nDally News by Mr. Croasdaile:\nMeeting of the Kootenay Fruit Growers* Association held at tlie board of\ntrade rooms to discuss the Chine.--,- labor\nquestion.\nMeeting called to order by James\nJahnstone, president of the association.\nMinutes of the previous meeting read\nby the secretary, J. E* Annable. Minutes\nndopted as read.\nMr. Johnstone\u2014This is a very busy\nseason of the year to have a general\nmeeting of the association, but there are\nseveral Important matters coming before us and I have been requested by\na deputation, at least a paper signed\nby several of the members, to call thin\nmeeting. I will now call Mr, Croasdaile\nwho was one of the principal parties\nwho desired this meeting, to make a\nstatement.\nMr. Croasdaile\u2014Mr. President, I desire to move this resolution:\n\"Whereas, the Kootenay Fruit Growers'\nAssociation. Mmited, hns been formed ror\ntin- purpoHo of foatering nnd encouraging\nthe fruit growing Industry in this district;\nand.\n\"Whereaa, for the siKVP.isful proaeeutlon\nuf thc Indutitry, It is essential lhat an\nadequate supply of Inbor be secured; and\n\"Whereas, the slight cxperienco, nlreatty\ngained has demonstrated that the: necessary labor is not now available, a considerable quantity of berries having gono\nto waste last year for the want of pickers, with the consequence that some growers who propose engaging in the culture\nof small fruits and berries are now hesitating to do so; and\n\"Whereas, thero Is no prospect of any\nsuch accession through the ordinary medium of immigration of suitable white labor as wlll meet the requirements of the\ncase, nnd we have therefore the prospect\nthat the Industry will be dwarfed and\ncramped Instead of growing and expanding\nInto the dimensions which our remarkable-\nu-liinvtaget- of soil and climate hud giveu\ntts reason to expect; nnd\nWhereas, the Chinese have shown them,\nselves to be efficient pickers, and are good\ngeneral workers on fruit farms:\n\"Therefore, be lt resolved, That white\nregretting the necessity of taking a stand\nantagonistic to the vlewi* of many fellow\nprovincials, this association, In furtherance\nof the objects of Its incorporation, Is compelled to recommend that the policy of\nexclusion of Chinese labor by the imposition of a prohibitive tax be modified to the\nextent that Chinese engaged as agricultural laborers or domestic servants be\nallowed to enter tile dominion free of head\ntax, a system of supervision under the\nauspices of the dominion government to be\nInstituted to ensure that Chinamen so admitted are not allowed to engago In other\nlines of labor.\"\nThe resolution I move ls based on the\nfact that tbere is a scarcity of labor. 1\ndo not wish to say that it Is at present\nacute, but there ls undoubtedly a considerable amount of loss caused by want\nof labor and as time goes on that lack\nof labor Is bound to be felt more arid\nmore as the trees come into bearing and\nas more land is cleared and planted. 1\nbelieve the fruit industry wlll receive\na serious check If the difficulty is not\nfaced at once;. If we do not try to obtain such assistance from the legislature as will allow us to get In the necessary labor.   The industry Is growing\n(Continued on Third Page)      .^\n THB DAIM NBWS, NELSON, JB. 0., THCBBDAT, AP0P8T 8, 1906)\n(ttifll\nTHE HUDSON'S BAY GO.\nTHE\nFresh Goods\na full assortment of\nHuntley j* Palmer's Biscuits\nand a shipment of    ,\nPure Maple Sugar j|\nhas just been received\nHudson's Bay Go.\nNELSON, B.C. -^f*\u2122^       _\nI\n________________________________ m 1MUkm\u2014ama\u2014l\u2014mm\u2014\u2014mm-m\nROYAL BANK OF CANABA\nTOTAL AS8BT8, 116411,676\nHEAD OFFICE:   HALIFAX, N. S.\nCapital ..13.000000   ''        Reserve Fund J3.437.162\nSAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT\n\u25a0i    , \u25a0\nMs-sat* tat Inns ud Individuals opened \u00abtha mott favorable UiM-\nThirteen Branches In Brltlah Columbia.\n,   Special attention to out ot town business.\n?. IIHOIT, President, BUIlu.      a.. U PBASB General Manager, Mont-ssl\n\" A W. HYNDMAN. -tatmt. NELSON BRANCH.\nThe Recent Serious Accidents\nRemind us of the advisability of being insured. For\nthe latest and best class of accident policy and lowest rates,  Apply at once to\nT.G.PROCTER\nReal Estate and Insurance Agent Nelson, B. C.\nM^ COSTUMES, DRESS SKIRTS \u00a7\nWe are Clearing Out Our Summer Lines of Millinery, Costumes, Dress\n\u2022 Skirts and, in Fact, all Our Su   irier Stock of New Goods.\nWe never carry over any of our stocks trom season to season.   We prefer to clean out all bur-Meg twice 3\na year and put In a complete new stock.   We have a fine line of summer goods now on hand and as our fall stock\nwill soon lie arriving, these must be cleared out at once.  We are going to cut the prices and every day wlll be\nbargain day.  Don't delay but come early while the lines are complete.    , .     ,.'\nThe Store ror\nswell Novelties.\nFred Irvine \u00a7 Co. I\njuiuiuiiuiiiuuuuuuiuuiiiiiiiiuiuiiiiHaiiiiniiiiuiuiiiiiui\nImperial Bank of Canada\nCAPITAL PAID UP ......\nIB. WiU-A\nHEAD OFFICE:  TORONTO!\n-UCfORVl FUND *J,6W,6M\nEOBBET JAimtAT, Tlw-Pr\u00abUa-A\nBranohesTin British Columbia\nuaunauD, cti-anmoo-c. oolmn, mblbon. u\nTBOOT LAO, TAKOOOVn, VICTOBLA.\n8AVINGS DEPARTMENT\nNMtMtui liter*** allowed at tanaa rates ttmt \u00abMt tj\nI Ud treated saU-yearly.\nJ. M. Lay, Manager\nMelson Branch\nThe Canadian Bank of\nCommerce\nCapitalP\u00bbid up,IIO.OOO.OW. %\u00bb*_.... 14,600,100\nHEAD OFFICE: TORONTO.\nB. 1. WALKBR, Oeneral Managur. AUB3*. LAIBD, Ant Oen'l Ifanafsr\nBBAHCHE8 TBB0UOH0UT CANADA AND IK\nTHR.OH1TBD STATES AND BNCH-AND\nBANKING BT MAIL\nBusiness may tw transacted by mall with any branch ot the Bank. Account!\nmay be opened, and deposit! mad* or withdrawn by mall. Every attention\nla paid to out-of-town accounts.\nJ. L. BUCHAN, Manager,        NELSON BRANCH.\nIF\nW. G. THOMSON\nQUALITY AND STYLE\nIn your Correspondence Stationery\ncount for anything with you, our lines\nwill please you.\nHeather Linen Is one of our big Favorites. It is a fabric finished paper of\ngood quality at a moderate price\u201435c a\nbox.\nFor finer grades we have Highland\nLinen\u2014fabric finish\u201450c a box.\nTwotano Linen\u2014fabric finish\u2014*35c a\nbox.\nFor style, finish and beauty of tint\nthese papers cannot be surpassed.\nBookseller and Stationer\nBaker St., Nelson.\nPhone 34\nWe Will Buy\nWe Will Sell\n2000\nGOIil)\nSOW\n5000\nmini\n2000\nInternational    62\nQlaut  01\nVirginia   0314\nMonte Orlsto     .01*4\nNortli Star 07\nReferendum  Hon\nWrite for further particulars.\n5,000 Pathfinder    .0'<4\n10,000 Sullivan  0314\n6,000 White Bean  08\n5,000 Nicola, Coal 05\n1.000 Western OU  15\n600 Diamond Vale  23\nUNHAPPINESB DISPELLED.\nIlea and Wemem Vauutmeau, About It,\nmany women weep and wall and refuse\nto be comforted because their once magnlilcent tresses have become thin and\nfaded. Many men Incline lo proEanlty\nbecause the dies bite through the thin\nthatch on their cranluma. It wlll ba good\nnewa to the mlaerabl* of both aexea, to\nlearn that Newbro's Herplclde lias been\nplaced upon the market. Thla Is the new\nacalp germicide and antiseptic that acts\nby destroying the germ or microbe that\nla the -underlying cause of all hair de-\natruction. Herplclde la a new preparation, made after a new formula on an\nentirely new principle. Anyone who has\ntried It will testify as to Ita worth. Try\nIt yourself and be convinced. Hold by\nleading druggists. Send 10c. In stamps\nfor sample to The Herplclde Co., De\ndroit. Mich.\nCANADA DRUO A BOOK COHTANT,\nSpecial Agents. K.W.C. ids a.\nB. B. MIGHTON & CO.\nDrawer 1082\nNBLSON, B. C.\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPublished at Nelson Every Morning Bx-\ncept Monday, by\nF. 1. DEANE\nSUBSCRIPTION RATM\nDally, per  year   \u2022 .-.\nDally, per month   ....\nAll .ubK-jIptlons nerable in edvaaee\n\u25a0P\nCHINESE  FARM LABORERS\nBefore dealing with the resolution\nadopted at yesterday's meeting of the\nKootenay Fruit Growers' Association\nrelative to the employment of Chinese as\ntarin laborers, we must register a com*\nplaint at no notice of the meeting having been given to the press. A question\nof far reaching Import, one of vital interest to the whole province, was to be\ndiscussed and yet the press was given\nno opportunity to have representatives\npresent\nThe Dally News is Indebted to Mr. H.\nB. Croasdaile for a partial report of the\nmeeting. He had m stenographer ln attendance to take down the remarks of\nthose wbo spoke Is favor of his resolution and a transcript ot these notes waa\nsupplied us and appears elsewhere In\nthis it-sue. Of Uie remarks of those who\nopposed the resolution, The Dally News\nhae no record.\nIn effect the resolution of the Kooce-\ntlc purposes. Chinese thus admitted are\nto be prohibited from.engaging in any\nother lines of labor. A system of Indentured labor is to be established and\ntbe dominion government is to. provide\nmachinery to enforce the contracts.\nOttr fruit growers, or those of them for\nwhom the Kootenay Fruit Growers' As-\n|socie**on speaks, would Inflict upon\nCanada the trouble now being experienced In South Africa.\nIf It be necessary for the development\nof the resources of this province lo import Chinese coolies, we should very\nstrongly protest against anything in the\nnature of indentured labor. If the white\nrace cannot get along in thla country\nWithout the assistance of Mongolitane,\nwe can see no justification for the creation of servile conditions. Let the\nChinese oome in as tree men, at liberty\nto engage ln any Industry they wish td.\nWe believe this wlll be the view\ntaken by most men who will give the\nquestion a moment's consideration.\nBut are conditions such as to warrant\nthe assumption that Chinese labor le\nessential to the prosperity ot the fruit\ngrowing industry, or that ot any other\nIndustry In British Columbia, or any\nother province of the dominion?\nIt la true that we are confronted today by an unusual scarcity ot labor and\ntor the moment It Is impossible to say\nhow the demand Is to be supplied.\nBut do unusual conditions of this character Justify recourse to   tb* proposed\nabandonment of the agricultural Industry of Canada to the Chinese?\nI    The ultimate effect of   the   proposal\nsSSSSS.-Sls^.'ssssr\ntry almost wholly into the hands of\nChinese. A few large landowners might\ncontinue to operate farms with Chinese\nlaborers, but the small farmer, the cultivator of the Ave, ten and twenty\nacre fruit farm or market garden, would\nsoon be driven out ot the business.\nWhat do we want,\u2014our fruit lands to\nbe the homes of white people, permanent residents, participating In the political and social lite of the country, or\nto be the scene of operations of migratory bands of Indentured laborers who\ncan have not part or parcel In our national lite and whose presence in our\nmidst will be a constant source of economic unrest?\nWe cannot believe tbat the members\nof the Kootenay Fruit Growers' Association have given this question serious\nthought They are confronted with admittedly trying conditions and ln seeking the easiest way out they demand\nfree and unlimited entry of Chinese\nlabor.\nThe Industrial problems that confront\nBritish Columbia will not be solved in\nthis way and the Kootenay Fruit Growers' Association may as well dismiss the\nidea without more ado.\nTo say that the fruit growing industry cannot be carried on In this province without Chinese labor ls to assert\nthat which cannot be substantiated by\nthe records. The Industry Is comparatively in its Infancy. Owing to the\nsuperior advantages of climate and soil\nIt has been established that we can grow\nfruit equal to the best produced elsewhere and superior to much that is\ngrown in other parts of the American\ncontinent. These conditions have\nbrought about a big demand tor fruit\nlands, not so much by those wh> propose permanently to engage l:i the fruit\ncrowing Industry as by those who hope\nto sell these lands at a profit The Immediate effect is that there ts a scarcity of labor to clear and cultivate these\nlands. No real effort hag been made to\nsecure labor for that purp-je. The efforts so far put forth have been to And\npurchasers for Uie lands, regardleu rf\nwhether or not the purchasers Intended\nto culUvate thetn. It was not to be expected that tbere would be a supply of\nlabor hanging around waiting tot employment on these lands.\nTha same remarks apply to the >l.oit-\nage of labor fn the new provinces.\nThere, on a greatly Increased scale, similar conditions prevail. There has been\na rush for land, settlers have Hacked ln\nand for the Ume being there is a shortage of labor, a shortage that nothing\ncould prevent and that only time will\nregulate. Some effort was made to provide labor ln the new provinces, but\nnotwithstanding these efforts there Is\nsUll unavoidably a grave deficit between\ndemand and supply. In thts province\nno such efforts have been made. Months\nago The Dally News called attention to\ntbe question of labor supply (for our\nfruit farms. We pointed out that the\nentirely wise decision of the people of\nCanada to put a stop to tbe immigration of Chinese coolies had necessarily\ncut off one source of supply and that it\nwas the duty of the provincial authorities to take steps to promote an Influx\not settlers to this province from whose I\nranks might be drawn the labor requlr-1\ned for the clearing and cultivation of\nour fruit lands. The provincial authorities have made no effort to replace\nChinese labor by white labor. We know\nthat there' are practically unlimited\nsources to draw ilium ln the old world.\nWe know thai nothing would more materially and permanently beneflt British Columbia than to attract within its\nboundaries settlers from the United\nKingdom and northern Europe. We have\nthat to offer, which If properly made\nmade known, would lure them here, and\nyet nothing has been done. Conditions\nin the United Kingdom have driven\nthousands from the agricultural districts to the big titles In search of employment It is nonsensical to say that\nthese people are not as capable of cultivating our fruit lands as are the Chinese.\nGiven the opportunity, the farm laborers\n'of England, Scotland and Ireland would\nprove every bit as useful as the Chinese and would ultimately become Canadians in. every sense of the word, willing and able to take upou themselves\nthe responsibilities ot citizenship and\nthus help to make of British Columbia\na truly great province.\nThe course proposed by the Kootenay\nFruit Growers' Association, if acted upon, would be Uie worst setback Canada\ncould possibly experience. -Some temporary relief might be provided by the\nimportation of Chinese laborers, an immediate difficulty might be overcome,\nbut the ultimate result would be wholly\nand unqualifiedly evil.\nC. C.  RICHARDS A CO.\nDear 81rs-I have used MINARD'S LINIMENT'In my atabla for over a year,- and\nconsider It the very best for horse nesn\nI can get and strongly recommend It.\nOEORGE HUUUH.\nLivery Stables, Quebec,\n\/\u2022'\nhelp.   We believe their position is entirely Indefensible and that upon mature\nconsideration the sober heads tn the\norganization will come to the same conclusion.   The mine managers of the\nSlocan do not employ Chinese kitchen\nhelp ln preference to white help.   The\nmine managers have been only too anxious 'to secure good white help and It\nIs only as a last resource that Chinese\ncooks and Chinese kitchen help have,\nbeen employed.  The mine managers are\nnot Importing Chinese tor kitchen purposes, they are ln the country, they are\navailable and give satisfaction. Neither\nls tt a question of cheap labor.   Mine\nmanagers ore prepared to   pay   good\nwages to kitchen help, but lt ls essential to the comfort dt the employees\nthat this help should be reliable and the\nexperience ln too many cases in the\nSlocan bas been tbat white kitchen help\nhas not proved reliable.   When the unions can guarantee the mine managers\nreliable white kitchen help we believe\nthey will have no further occasion to\ncomplain of the employment of Chinese,\nbut unUl they can do this Ihere is no\nJustification for any attempt to prevent\ntbe operation of a mine simply because\ntbe management does employ Chinese\nkitchen help.  With special reference to\nthe sltuaUon at Sandon,   we think the\nminers union should manifest some re-'\ngard for the Interests ot  business men\nof tbat camp and for the enterprise ot\nthe men back ot the Last Chance and\n(Surprise mining ventures, .who bave\nput up cash to make the resumption of\noperations possible.   For a long Ume\npast Sandon has been a pretty dull eamp.\nThe business men must have been hard\nhit, and we should Imagine that many\nminers and mine laborers would be only\n'too glad of tbe opportunity the resumption of work at the Last Chance   and\nSurprise affords to get on to a payroll\nagain.   A good cause can be overdone\nand Bandon Miners' union will certainly\nnot help the cause of organized labor In\ntho Kootenays hy Its present attitude.\nThe Action of a Piano ls to the Piano what the Nerves are td the <\nHuman Body.             * ',\n\u2022'   If the AcUon of your Piano Is not right than the Piano ls not right\nIf YOUR Piano Is a v I\nMason & Risch Piano\n-fou can then feel assured that you have the best that brains and money\ncan build. -      -\nEasy terms to suit purchaser from 110.00 per month.\nMason & Biseh Piano Company, Ltd.\nShow Room-SUnlaid Fsrnltun ts., tttrn \u00ab\u2022        Wot-loc-m I, Hsdm ky Hook.\nA GOOD WATCH\nIs an absolute necessity. We can supply watches\not all prices but with one standard -of quality\u2014the\nbest. Our watches are guaranteed. Prices from\nIH up.\nWATCH REPAIRING\nIs carefully attended to by our expert repairman. It\nyour watch Is not keeping good time, bring it to us\nand if it ls not beyond repair, we will put It In\ntlrst class order for you.\nJ. J. WALKER\nJswtlltp    -   -    and    -    -    Optician\nTOBACCO\nAll brands to suit\nall smokers. A full\nline of smoker's supplies. :\nTHURMAN'S\nTHE TOBACCONIST\n\u25a0\nEDITORIAL NOTES\nThe Kootenay Fruit Growers' Association haa dealt with one phase of the\nChinese labor question, Sandon Miners'\nunion deals with another, and for our\npart we must confess equally as strong\ndisapproval of the decision of the latter\nas of tte former. Whilst we do not want\nto see the doors thrown open to Chinese\nimmigration for any purpose whatever,\nwe believe that the Sandon Miners-\nunion display very poor Judgment in\nattempting to prevent the operation of\ntbe Last Chance and Surprise mines\nsimply on the grounds tbat the management propose to employ Chinese kitchen\n\u25a0\nTha Kootimy Diwlopnwitt Frandi and\nThe Daily News notes wiih pleasure\nthe announcement tbat prompt attention\nls to be paid by the provincial govern*\nment to the complaint of the Baltoui\nranchers. That the complaint Is based\nupon a real grlenancs there can be little\ndoubt, for the published names of 'hose\nwho have signed the petition form an\nample suarantee of good faith.\nTftAMWAY  TRAFFIC\nIncrease In Number of Pasengors Carried\nlti July\u2014Slgnltlcant Figures\nTin- number of passengers carried by\nthe street railwuy for the week ending\nJuly .9 waa 4083, as Hg.iln.-it 29l'i for the\nsame period lent year, showing an increase\nfbr the week of 201'A iwissengcri*. The cash\nreceipts were 1210.70, as against (IW.iU.\nThe receipth ror the month of July wero\nflow.is, as HgulnHt 966-t.xb for the month ot\nJuly, vm.\n'Ah already noted tire steady Increase\nmonth by month of the tramway returns\nof passengers carried and cash received.\nIndicates the healthy growth of the city\nbeyond nil question. In addition It may be\nBald lhat people are using the curs more\nthan they did a year ago. Thc outcome\nalso proves that lhe council acted wisely\nwhen they decided to run the service upon\nthe present terms. The tlgures for July\nare the best in the history of the service\neither under company or civic inaiuiK**-\nment.\nPRAIRIEI C1TIE8 INSULTED\nWinnipeg, Aug. 1\u2014There Ib sure to be a\nprotest from the Albertu cities following\nthe publication of the census bulletin from\nOttawa which gives Calgary's population\nas 11,783 and Edmonton as 11,631, * As n\nmatter of fact, Calgary ofllclals bellevf\nfrom the assessor's figures their population\nIs well over -\u00bb,\u00abw.\nROimDINO UP THaU'U-LAJANlsa\nManila, Aug. 1-Oencral Lee, commander\nof the American forces on the Island ol\nLeyte, haa telegraphed to general Wood\nthat he has G00 regular troops besides n\nnumber of scouts and constabulary, ready\nto begin the movement to .\"round up\" the\nrebellious Pulajanes. The municipal police\ncharge that the recent outbreak was caused by the action of governor Davey in dis-\nReports on quarts mines, counsellors on\nexploitation, sales of properties and stocks,\norganisation of companies, real estate and\nlands. Correspondents of French financial\npapers.\nOFFICES-Parls, France, P. J. Maria,\ndirector; Nelson, B.C, P. Nlpou; V. *'\u2022\nMarls, mining engineer, assayer and an*\nalytlcitl chemist. (From. High tk-tiooi,\nParis.)\nP.O. Box 78. 'fclMtLfc\n'Phone lie.\nTO   WORKINQMEN\nNOTICE.\nWhereas, at the Last Chance and Bur pi Iho\nmines, Chinese kitchen help is at present empoylod, to the exclusion of White\nlabor.\nTherefore, be lt resolved that this organisation, Sandon Miners'  union No. 81 ot\nthe W. P. of M. reaffirming its opposition\nto the employment ot Orientals within Its\nJurisdiction,  strongly condemns the Position taken by the management of the properties in question, and counsels working-\nmen everywhere and those favorably disposed toward organised labor to bo governed by this action.\n8ANDON MINERS' UNION\nA. SH1LLA-ND, Secretary.\nbanding the municipal police of many\ntowns, thus leaving the homes of the people practically unguarded.\nMAY SUTTON WINS\nNewcastle, Aug. 1\u2014Miss May Sutton of\nPassadena, Cul., who postponed her departure for home In order to ugaln try con.\nelusions with Mlsa Douglas, the British\nchampion, played in the Northumberland\ncounty tennis tournament. In the singles\nMiss Sutton beat Mis Atchison by 6-3, \u00ab\u2022*>.\nKA1SBR BACK HOME\nSwlnemuende, Aug. 1\u2014Emperor William\nreturned   here  yesterday  from  his  four\nweeks' cruise In northern waters on board\nthe  steamer Hamburg.\nSSAiNGWILL IJBADS THE JBWB\nLondon, Aug, l\u2014The International council of Jewish tentorial organisations Is In\nsession here under the presidency of Israel\nSSnngwill. Tho proceedings are private but\ntlio main subject for discussion Is the gen-\noral proposition to establish an exclusively\nJewish  territory.    The   tjnlted Slates Ib\nTonight's Dance\nThe second dance at the Tramway\nPark Pavilion under the auspices of tbe\n20,000 Club, will be held tonight.\nTickets SO cents, Including ear tare lo\nPark and return and admission to dance,\nIrwin's Orchestra. Last car leaves\nPark at 12,10. ,\nrepresented by Cyrus Sulzberger and the\nRev. C, Llpklnd ot New York. Germany,\nFrance, Russia, Bwltierland and Belgium\nare all represented, aa are all the British\nJewish aooletles.\nTRANSVAAL IB IM.BASRp\nJohannesburg! Transvaal, Aug! 1.\u2014\nThe proposals ot the BrltlBh government\nfor the establishment of a constitutional\ngovernment were received here with a\nfeeling of relief and were regarded as\nbeing reasonably democratic. It is anticipated that all tbe parties will accept\nthe constitution and loyally try to make\ntbe best of It. The margin between\nBritish and Boers Is ao narrow that it Is\nimpossible to forecast who will obtain\nthe majority In tbe flrst legislature.\nB. C. CO.'S SUCCESSFUL TBNDER\nWinnipeg,  Aug,  1-The B.  O.   Uenerai\nContracting company, has secured the contract to build the normal school at Calgary\nat a coat of tlS0,<K\u00bb.\n  \u2014>\nBmooth-on Is a chemical Iron compound prepared\nln pow-tri* t--*\u00aba\u00bb4-M**4bymlxlnfWltb water to Uw\ncoiu-lsienor** a stiff paite, Wben awd In this stats lt\nIt yrlll met\u00bbl\\Ua in p'tim boats and become part of ths\ncasting to which It la applied. Valuable for stopping\nlsawr,orstWw,\u00bbot or eol* water, and many othsr\nmechanical uses We sell It\nWood-ViKnioi Hardwirt Oo., Limited.\nWHOLJMAL-i\nMriUaa\n 5*\ntil DAILT NEWS, NELSON, B. 0., THURSDAT, AUGUST  2, 1906\n'-*\n'G<x)dyt\u00bbr Certainty*;\nThe only certain\nway to get a genuine Goodyear\nWelt Shoe is:\nBuy only the \"SLATER\nSHOE.\" It is made by no\nother process and therefore\nmust be Goodyear Welt.\nSlater Shoe\nFor Men g'JJ\nFor Women ^'M\nAll the Latest Summer Style\nR. Andrew & Co., \"The Royal\"\nFOE  S-^IjIE\nChoice, residential  property,  Silica street east.    Stone\nfoundation, refined design, superior construction.\nFIRST   FLOOR \u2014 Parlor,     Diningroom,    Bedroom,\nKitchen, Pantry, Hall and Verandah.\nSECOND FLOOR\u2014Two Bedrooms and Bathroom..\nAll modern  improvements and conveniences.   Pleasant\nlocation.   Apply to owner.\n:f. o. \u25a0wiitkx.be\nW. G. GILLETT\n00NTRA0T0R AND BUILDER\nMLB A01NT TOU TBS POBT0 BIOO LUMB1K CO.. Ltd., etetall TsH*\n\u2022Rough sal drssssd lubsr, tnmsd work and btaomts. Ooast latk\n\u2014a shingles, sash aod Joots. Cesnsat, brick sal Urns for sals. Atrts-\n\u25a0atie irlndar.  Tint aad History Tsraoa stmt, asst at SMB.\nP. 0. Box Ul\nUl\nH-aSO*, & 0.\nPorto Rico Lumber Co., Ltd,\nNiufictirm et Ml wklcnte Deiltn li\nmum am dmssbd Minn, \u25a0*\u25a0*\"*\u00bb*\u00ab\u25a0 am) MotnsntN. nam*-   .\nU\u2014tt AMD TDJOfBD WOHC.  AM ***MO*ea-**i HI MB* 01 ***\u25a0\u2022    3\nREAD OFFICE: NELSON, B.C.\nMM. at Tmlr and Moyle, B. *.'.\nSua and Dow   Factory   and   Hard at\nMoose Jaw, Bask..\nPorto Rico Lumber Co. Ltd!\nKootenay Engineering Works\nFOUNDERS AND MACHINISTS\n\u25a0U***OTAOTT*j*******t\u00bb OF TBI CRAWFORD jUntlAl* TRAIIWAT.\nRepairing and Jobbing a Specialty\nwart, tawttita, btUMsrs aturisl ul mining aal mill aiaeUaarj.\nMas aal Works Hoot of Park Mrssl.\nB. C. TRAVI8\n\"mm m\nKANAOMR\nN1U0H. a. 0\nST. n-UNBTJ-\"'\u2014 SCHOOL\nBURNHAM, 80MBR8ET, ENGLAND.\nA high class school for boys between the* e*ee ot seven and fourteen, preparing\nfor the Royal Navy and for Clifton, Cheltenham, Rugby and other English public\nschools, *\nBurnham Is situated, on the Bristol Channel. It bas a Western aspect and Is\nbracing and very healthy.\nThe.fees are 75 guineas (Wt>) per annum for hoard and tuition.   Special arrangements made for the holiday  months, If desired.\nCanadian  Reference; Proprietors K. H. BIRD, M.A., Cantab.\nLeslie  Craufurd, Esq., Neleon B.C. E.  N.  N.  SGLLMAN, M.A., Oxon.\nHEAD TAX ASSAILED\n(Continued From Flrat Past)\nInto an Important ons, and while I admit Ui-j good this association has don*\nin obtaining cheaper boxes and cheaper\nmarketing of fruit, I wait tb see ths\nassociation make It tbeir fined policy to\ntake Uiat up as One of their principal\nobjects In the future. Now, many\nobject to the Chinese, there Is si stronc\nfeeling In the Province against Own,\nbut I cannot sea any other souros from\nwhich we can expect to obtain labor at\na reasonable price, or, In fact, obtain\nlt at all. The wage of the Chinaman\nhss tone up in the last two or three\nyears from >26 to $40 a month or over\nIn some esses, and that Is a very good\nevidence of the growing sosrcenesB of\nlabor. This, province from Its earliest\ndays has bees dependent on Chinese\nlabor. The mills on the ooast have always employed a number of Ohlnamen;\nthe salmon canneries bave always employed Chinamen. The Arst manufsc-\ntury started In Victoria-* boot and shoe\nfactory. Heathorns, -it-awards bought\nout by ths Ames, Holden On-that shoe\nmanufactory was started entirely with\n-Chinese labor. The province would not\nhave advanced as It baa done If It had\nnot been tor the ability'to secure Chinese labor. There was no other labor to\ntake their place and what I maintain ls\nthat in tbls dlstrlot in the fruit Industry then Is no labor to take the place\nat Chinamen to any extent, and the demand Is continually growing. The present tax of 1600 Is, of course, prohibitive.\nI believe no Chinamen are coming ln\nunder that prohibition. We have got to\nbear In mind that tax was put on mainly\nat the Instigation of people In the province who do not oome In contact with\nthe Chinese tn any way, and who are\nnot employers ot Chinese labor, but\ntbey brought their Influence to bear and\ngot the government to place this tax\nupon them. It made no difference to\nitiem whether the Chinese came in or\nnot. I saw by yesterday's paper Mr.\nScott, the premier of Saskatchewan, Is\nadvocating the abolition of the tax, because he thinks lt Is .essential to the\nNorthwest to get cheaper labor from\nAsia. 1 do not advocate Interfering with\nany person's rights or privileges or business Interests, but I think we have every\nright to obtain legislation In the interests of our Industry. 1 think my resolution wlll In opposed, but the more It\nIs ventilated the better. It Is a matter\nthat has to be faced it we want to make\na success of our Industry.\nI will ask that those who will discuss\ntbe matter In opposition to my view,\nwill do so from the standpoint of members of' this association, not from an\noutside standpoint\nI claim, Mr. Chairman, that we have a\nright to demand that we should not be\nhandicapped In our industry and I claim\nwe have a tight to resent the interference of anybody who has no interest in\nthe matter.\nJ. J. Johnstone\u2014J have tried all sorts\nof labor here. When I came here flrst\nI was very much opposed to Chinamen\nfrom sentiment, from what I wss told.\nI was told they would steal and I was\nbitterly opposed to them. I worked for\nthree years dr so with getting young\nfollows who would come out to; this\ncountry to make a start I was always\nwilling to help them and after I had\nInstructed them to clean out brush aud\ntake care of certain trees, I would And\nthat the trees were cleaned out and the\nbrush left After enduring this for\nsome time\u2014It being impossible to And\nan experienced young Englishman or\nScotchman\u2014then I employed Chinamen\nand since then I bave never bad anything else. I do not think I shall ever\nbare anything else. The ones I have\nhad have been experienced men and\nWhile they are dlfflcult to understand\nand will do things In their own way,\nand there may be objectionable features,\nstill I know of no better help. I have\nletters all the time from young fellows\nwanting to know If they come out here\nif tbey can get work on a ranch. I\ndon't want young Inexperienced men. It\nwould bs all right If young men of experience would come out here. But It Ib\nnot this sort of men who are applying.\nIt is men who know nothing about a\nranch; don't know a pear trom an apple.\nIn making the suggestion that Ohlnamen\nshould be admitted, I believe they\nshould be restricted to those who are experienced gardeners In China and we\nshould get an absolute guarantee that\nthey are such. If we can get an experienced Chinaman he will do better\nthan you would yourself, but we wish\nto have it thoroughly understood before\nwe take ott the tsx so ss not to have\nthe oountry overrun with Chinamen. I\nknow of no class who will go ahead except Ohlnamen. I bave thought of the\nIndians who come in from Alaska, but\nthey are unsatisfactory and require\nwatching all the Ume, and unless you\nstand over them they are thieves. I\nam sure of that because I know a good\ndeal about Indian life; and the Japanese\nars not as reliable ss the Chinese. II\nI oould see any other way of advancing\nthis Industry\u2014\n(Voice-Try a Canadian.)\nI would gladly try a Canadian, If experienced. I would be very glad to hear\neome one else talk. That Ib my opinion.\nI wish 1 could see asy other way of getting a satisfactory solution, but 1 do not.\nThos. Morley-I bes to .second tho resolution that Mr. Croaadiille haa put Forward. I am very glad to hear the remarks\nthat you have made. I have been (or many\nyears here now employing labor on a small\nranch. I have tried white men and all\nkinds of labor that could be sot, including\nJapanese, and found them most unreliable.\nThe average white man knew absolutely\nnothing about tha work he was required\nto do, although he would*Votrte lo me with\nfull assurance that he knew It all. Many\nmistakes and blunders. One man in par*\ntlcula-r\u2014to give an example-knowing that\n1 wanted a man stated that he would accept tlo a month and all the milk, butter\nand eggs hts family could got away with.\n1 asked him If he understood pruning\ntrees, and he said: \"Yes; uny fool could\ndo that It was only cutting off thc\nbranches.\" . After several years' experience, I have found it the best way to gel\nthe best help was to pay a good price und\nIn that way you get the best valuo ror\nyour money. Three years ago I was paying 126 a month; the following year 1 was\npaying 130, and a little later In the season I was paying 133. Tbls yeur I huve\nbeen paying HO and have been paying one\nman tto a month. You cannot get a Chinaman, now to stay with you unless you pay\nthem t4a a month. The effect of the prohibitive tax will prevent all chlneso rrom\ncoming In and the Chinese labor here will\nbecome moro scarce and' more expensive\nall tho time. We .cannot get the class of\nlabor wo want to have. We read ot people\ngoing to the new territories. They are all\nlooking for a little bit of land of their\nown, whether tbey have money .or not.\nTou hear the cry all through the oountry\nand In the United States where the prohibitive tax ia on Ohlnamen. All through\nOntario the cry Is going up In the same\nway, and in the territories the wheat la\nspoiling because they cannot get labor.\nThe large Influx Is In Alberta and Saskatchewan along tbe lines of the new railways, and therefore we cannot get the\nright help. The only way we can get It\nla' to ask the government to remit the tax\non Chinamen.\nJ. J. Campbell-It seems to me that In\ntalking about this subject we are really\nsetting wide of the mark, when we dls-\nouas the reapeotlve merits of the young\nEfigUahmsn and Canadians and Chinamen.\nThere are food and bad of all kinds. The\nquestion la. whether Ws can carry out\nwhat we have started to do. For my pan\n1 do not think that the greater freedom In\nGin Pills Help You\nAs Nothing Else Will\nONTARIO PROOF\nGIN PILLS cure all Kidney Ills from\nsimple backache to diabetes pain in the\nsmall of the back and through the hips\n\u2014swollen feet and hands\u2014burning urine\n\u2014constant desire to urinate\u2014dizziness\u2014\nheadaches\u2014spots before the eyes\u2014with\nloss of appetite, sleeplessness and nervousness \u2014disappear under the healing,\nsoothing powers of GIN FILLS.\nMen and women -who have any kidney\nor bladder trouble are throwing away\ntheir one chance of health and happiness\nby not writing for a free aample.\nOWBif Souhd, Out., March loth, 1905,\nHevlnr used a wimple box of Giu Pills, ind\nfinding them give me great relief, I sent my\nfather-in-law, A. MeDermld, of Keady, a box;\nhe having for years been used up wltn kidney\n\u25a0nd bladder trouble, and unable to get relief\nfront the urlnnry remedies used.  The Giu Pills\nBve him relief before half the box waa used,\n\u25a0 is now entirely cured, aud I believe Gin\nPills a great cure.\n* JAMBS LODGE.\nDo as Mr. Lodge did. Simply write\nus for a free sample box of GIN FILLS\nand try them at our expense. If you\nfeel better in every way, and know that\nGIN FILLS are doing you good, surely\nyou will continue using them until\ncured. That is why we will send you\na free sample box if you write and tell\nua in what paper you saw this offer,\nGIN PILLS are sold by druggists\neverywhere, 60c a box, or 6 for $2.50.\nTHI aOLC DRUG CO.      -      WINNIPEG- HAN.\nWilson's\nFLY\nPADS\nTBI OULT\nTHING THAT\nKILLS THEM ALL\nAVOID POOR IMITATIONS.\nSail fey sll Druggists and GantsalMsrts\nand by mall.\nTIN CENTS PERPACKET IttOH\nARCHDALE WILSON\nHAMILTON, ONT.\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nEXCURSION\nTRIPS EAST\nSioux Olty\n$52.50\nSt Paul\nKansas City, 158.25       St. Louis, 160.00\nChicago, |\u00ab.M\nOn Sals August 7, 8, 9, September 8,10.\nFinal limit October IL\nTORONTO $76.65\nOn Sale Sept 8, 9, 10.    Limit Nor. 30\nMILWAUKEE $62.20\nOn Sale August 7, 8, 9,    Limit Oct. 31.\nThrough rules all stations, Ontario,\nQuebec, New York, New England, -Maritime Provinces on application.\nB. J. COYLE, J. S. CARTER,\nA.O.P.A., Vancouver.    D.P.A., Nelson\nFARM FOR SALE\nI will sell ten acres ot my form two anil\na hnlf mllea south from Kuslo. There ts u\ngood road to town and a good Hteumboat\nlanding; 22T> fruit trees, muny bearing, good\nspring of vicar water uml u water right\nfor-Irrigation, Cabin chicken Iiouhcs nnd\nBtableH ready for occupancy. Hay put up\nand another crop ready to rut. To visit\nthe property take the Katilo boat and ask\nto be put off at Archer'-* landing, Uooil\nsoil not rock.    Price 11000.\nJOHN  ARCHER\nP. O. Box 3W Kaslo. B.C.\nVIOLIN LESSONS\nAnyone wishing to learn the violin eall\non Mr. I). \\V. Curtln, rooms over Lud-\nwlg'D Ilurni'ss Store, on Hull Atreet\nMr. Curtis has Just recently come to Nelson nnd Is highly recommended by the\nlocal muslclnns. He studied under several\nof the greatest masters In New York nnd\nBoston nnd hns had 13 years' experience\nns a teacher nnd performer ln the large\ncltli** of the United States nnd Canadn.\nMr. Curtis may be heard encli evening nt\nthe Strathcona hotel during the dinner\nhour.\nTHE COMrORTAILC WAY*\nCOMMENCING\nSUNDAY,\nJULY 22nd\nthe Spokane train will leave at\n8:30 a.m., returning will arrive at\nNelson at 7:35 p.m.\nSteamer Kaslo will leave Nelson\nat 6:45 p.m., returning will arrive\nat 9:10 a.m.\nH. E. DOUGLAS,\nCity Passenger Agent\nS. Q. YERKES,\nA. G. P. A., Seattle.\nAtlantic 8.8. Sailings\n(Bt Lawrence Sailings)\nCan.  Pae.  Royal Mall Steamers\nEm.  Ireland..Aug.  913m. Britain ..Aug. m\nL. Kile Aug. Uti. Chunipluin*.Sa*>(, 1\nALLAN LINK\nTunisian  Aug. a Ionian  Aug. si\nVictorian   ....Aug.  lti Virginian   ..Aug.   'AV\nDOMINION  LINK\nOttawa   Aug.   11 Southwark  ..Aug.  :\u2022;'.\nDominion ....Aug. lfcCanuda   Sept.   1\nATLANTIC TRANSPORT UNE\nMesuba  Aug. 11 Minneapolis* ..Aug. IK\nAMERICAN LINB\nPhiladelphia,.Aug, list. Paul  Aug. is\nRED ITAR LINE\nSSeeland   Aug. iil***roonland,...Aug.  12\nCUNARD  UNE\nUmbriu   Aug.  liCampanla ....Aug. lti\nCamilla    Aug.  lJEtrurin    Aug. 2b\nWHITE BTAR titUb,\nMajestic   Aug. SOceanlc  Aug. lo\nCeltic   Aug.   luTculonlc  Aug, *\u00a3.'\nFRENCH  LINE\nLa anseogne   Aug. It\nLa Bratugne  .Aug. 16\nHAMBURG AMERICAN\nBleucher  Aug. 9\nli. Augusts Victoria  Aug. lti\nNORTH GERMAN  tiiAJiD\nKaiser Wllhelm  der Urosso   Aug. 1\nOrosses Kurfuerst Aug. 14\nAll continental rates and sailings on ap*\nplication, If you are contemplating taking\nan ocean voyage drop us a line aad wa\nwlll be pleased to furnish you wltk full\nInformation promptly,\n3. S. CARTER W. P. F. CUMMINOH,\nD.P.A., Nelaon.       Gen. Agt., Winnipeg\nNOTICE\nFrom and after this date the Reoreatlon\nGround! will be closed to the public. Those\nwishing to use them for practices, games\nor exhibitions, must first get permission\nto do so at tha olty offices.\nNelson, B.C., July 9, 1906.\nW.  G. OTLLRTT. Mavor\nNOTICB OF TRANSFER OF LICENSE\nI hereby give notice that I Intend to apply to the license commissioners for the\nolty of Nelaon at the next meeting held\nafter thirty daya from date hereof, for a\ntransfer of the retail liquor license now\nheld by me for the Club hotel, situate on\nLota Jl, B. B and 24. Block 14, Nelson,\nB.C., to Mrs. Mary E, Curran.\nDated at Nelaon, B.C., tbe 6th day of\nJuly, 1W6. Aug. 7\nm.  J.   CURRAN.\nSynopsis  ot  Regulations   Governing   tne\nglapoaal of Dominion Lands Within tne\nRailway Belt in the Province of British Columbia,\nA license to cut timDer can be acquired only at publio competition. A rental of 15 per square mile ts charged lor\nall Umber berths, excepting those situated west of Yale, for which the rental\nIs at tbe rate of 5 centa per acre per annum.\nIn addition to the rental, dues at Ua\nfollowing rates are charged:\nSawn lumber. 50 cento per tnouaani\nfeet B. M.\nRailway ties. 8 and I feet long, l 1-J\nand 1 3-4 cents each.\nShingle bolts, 26 centa a cord.\nAll other products, fi per cent on the\nsalea.\nA llcenae Is Issued ao soon as a berto\nIs granted, but in unsurveyed territory\nno timber can be cut on a berth until the\nlicensee  hon  made  a survey thereof.\nPermit-! to cut timber are also grantee\nat public competition, except in the case\nof actual settlers, who require tho timber\nfur their own  use.\nSettlers and -others muy also obtain\npermits to cut up 100 cords of wood tor\nsale without competition.\nThe duos payable under a permit are\n11.50 per thousand feet B.M., for square\ntimber and aawlogs of any wood except\noak; from 1-2 to 1 1-2 cents per lineal\nfoot for building logs; from Vi 1-2 lo 25\ncenta per cord for wood; _ cent tor fence\nposts; 3 centa for railway ties, and 99\ncents per cord on shingle bolts.\nLeases for gracing purposes are issued\nfor a term of 21 years at a rental of .\ncents per aero per annum.\nCoal lands may be purchased at 110 pet\nacre for soft coal and 120 for antiiracite\nNot more than 320 ucres may be acquired\nby one Individual  or company.\nRoyalty at the rate of 10 cents per ton\nof 2,000 pounds Is collected on the groat\noutput,\nEntries for land for homestead pur\nposea may be made personally at the lo\ncal land office for the district In which\nthe land to be taken la situated, or If the\nhomesteader deslree, he may, on application to the minister of tho Interior at\nOttawa, the commissioner of Immigration\nat Winnipeg, or the local agent roi the\ndlstrlot within which the land Is situated,\nreceive authority for some ono to make\nentry for him,\nA fee of $10 Is charged for a homestead\nentry. ,\nA settler who has received an entry tor\na homestead Is required to perform tae\ncondition*- connected therewith under one\nof the following plans:\n(1) At least six months* residence upon\nand cultivation of the land In each year\nduring the term of three yeara.\nIt Is the practice of the department to\nrequire a settler to bring 15 acres under\ncultivation, but If he prefers he may substitute stock; and 20 head of cattle, to be\nactually his own property, with bulidingi\nfor their accommodation, will bo accepted Instead of the cultivation.\n(2) If the father (or mother, If the fa*\nthnr Is deceased) of any person who la\neligible to mnke a homestead entry under\nthe provisions of th Act, resides upon a\nfarm In the vicinity of the land entered\nfor by auch person as a homestead, the\nrequirements of the Aot aa to residence\nprior to obtaining patent may be satis-\nfled by auch person residing with the father or mother.\n(3) If the settler haa hla permanent residence upon farming land, owned by blm\nIn the vicinity of hla homestead, the re*\nqulrementa of the Aot aa to residence\nmay be satisfied by residence upon the\n\u25a0aid land.\nApplication for a patent should ba made\nat the end of three yeara before the local\nagent, sub-agent or a homeataad ta-\napeotor.\nBefore making an application for a patent, the Mttler mum give six months' notice In writing to the Commlmrtoner of\nDominion Landa at Ottawa, of hla intention to do ao, W. W. OORT,\nDeputy of tha Minister of tb* BKartof,\nOttawa, February lath. IM.\n\"HARD JO-DO THIUCS\"\nMost things sre \"hard to do\" It\nyou try to do them Id ths hsrdest\nways\u2014and there's t hsrd wsy to\ndo most everything!\nThereare Several Hsrd Ways to\nfind tenants;\nqetservants\nsell property\nlook for work\nsecure office help\ninfluence investors\nRENT FURNISHED ROOflS\nDISPOSE OF \"OLD THINOS\"\nLOCATE LOSERS or FINDERS\nsnd there is ons way ot doing\nthese things whleh\u2014while, possibly, not \"easy\"\u2014Is, st sny rate,\nleast-hard\u2014the sensible, persistent use ot\nDAILY NEWS\nWant   Advertising\nPUBLICITY!\nOne Cent Per Word Per Issue.\nI uuui*uu....iii-mii-.*i-**..........*......\nKootenay Coffee Co'y\nWe are receiving another\nshipment of\nCHOICE\nTEAS\nWe can suit you in quality\nand price\nInspection and trial\nsolicited\nKootenay Coffee Co.\nFLOUR^FEED\nWe have opened a Flour and\nFeed store next door to the\nKootenay Coffee Co., Baker st\nOur leader will he the famous\nWybourn Flour made trom No.\n1 Hard Wheat\nLAURIE~& SON\nPhone 244.\nONB OF THB NICEST WAYS TO BUY\nButter\nIs by the tub, and more people are finding lt out every day.'\nGet a good tub ot butter and you are\nsure ot good butter till It ls gone.\nJoy's Dairy Butter comes iu 29, 30\nsnd 40 lb. Tubs, at 24c per pound.\nPHONE NO. 19.\nJoy's Cash Grocery\nCor. Mill and Josephine Sts,\nLadies' and Gent's\nDress and Working\nBOOTS and SHOES\nMade to order on abort notice\nAll grade* of leather and first claaa workmanship.      Material     and    workmanship\nguaranteed.   Repalrlnc quickly and neatly\ndone.\nMall orders recelv* prompt attention.\nTHE SHOE SHOP\nHALL 8T. NELSON\nEUGENE PULLAN0\nICE CREAM IOE CREAM SODAS\nFRUITS OOID DRINKS\nBest ln ths city.\nCor, ot Victoria and Ward Streets.\nBRICK FOR 8ALE\nBest quality of Brick In the Province.\nPrices right     Apply to\nWM. HANCOCK\nNELSON BRICKYARDS.\nSprott-Shaw\nBusiness Institute\nLimited,\nsae Haatlnf. St W, Vancouvar.\nTEAOHER8'\nSUMMER\nCOUR8E\nBookkeeping, Shorthand, Telegraphy\nand Insineerlng Courae. by Mail.\nR. J, SPROTT, B, A\u201e Principal\nNelson Steam laundry\n*. O. a\u2014 a  Ulaaai.l m.      \"\nAD tttta as* all mm\nteats- nothing\nCLEANED AND DVED\n.\u25a0JSgSJj_\"\u25a0\u00ab\u00bb**\u2022\u00bb ***teiis*ss, suss, mm,\n\u2022novo, renovated ts tm* 10a ae*\nSteam Carpet Cleaning\nMeet pottoomto aoUtritoi.\nPAUL NIPOU. Prop..\nCOAL TAR\nPitch, Paints and creosote\nWs are the only producers\nof coal tar In the Koots-\n\u25a0ays.   Write us tor prices.\nNelson Coke and Gas Co'y\nFOR SALE.\nA furnished Hotel and two lots. Ths\nbuilding Is 60 ft. z 25 ft with lean-to\nkitchen, also wood shed and ice house-\nLiquor license paid up to 31st December,\n1906. A large supply of Ice on hand.\nBuilding and furniture ln good condition.\nPrice for cash, 11200; or on terms as\nfollows: $600 cash and 1200 every three\nmonths for four payments.\nFor full particulars apply to\nR. J. STEEL\nFOR SALE\nTen and twenty acre blocks on wagon\nroad, $25 per acre.\ngeo. g. mclaren\nK. W. C. BLOCK.\nPROFESSIONAL CARDS\nCMBRYANT&CO.\nCaoU  M  Bryant,  A.R.8.H..\nProvincial Asaayer\nTha Vancouver Aaaay Offlat\nEatabllahed UW\nUmprle and Control Aaaaya\nComplete Analyse* fita.\nita for  Casael'a Cyanide Pre\nContracts made for Aaaaya\nWrite for Pricea, ate.\nVANOOUVER, Ea\nF. M. CHADBOURN\nWIHINC OPERATOR\nMlnea examined and reported on\n-Thorough Knowledge of Kootenay Mlnea.\nOre Sampling Witnessed\nNELSON. B. O.\nVV. J. H. HOLMES\nCIVrL ENGINEER A MINE SURVEYOR\nPROVINCIAL LAND SURVEYOR\nTen yeara experience ln the Kootenaya.\nHonor graduate, 1S91, Royal Military college of Canada, Kingston, Oat\nkaslo. a. a-\nJOSEPH RYAN\nBANCH   AND   FBUIT   LANDS,   WON\nORB, COAL LAND8\n\u25a000 Million Feet Standing TUnner\nBas M Cranbreok. B.G.\nS. S. FOWLER\nMINING ENGINEER\nNELSON, B.C.\nFREDERIC S. CLEMENTS\nOJV1L ENGINEER,\nDOMINION   AND   PROVlNCIAb   fcAHU\nSURVEYOR\nAgent for obtaining Crown Oranta, mtas\nsunsylng, ete.\nRoom If, K.W.C. Woo*       _,.\nP. O. Box t walaMLmu.\nCLEANING  AND PRESSING\nGENTLEMEN'S      SUITS      REPAIRED.\ncleaned and prasaad.   Ossds oalled for\nsnd dsllnred promptly.   A. t. Drlsooll,\napposite queen's Hotel, Baker street,\nSAMUEL  A.   WYE\n\u25a0BATING ENGINEER\nand\nPLUMBING\nfirst olass beating plants and rs-oaera\nlunar; sppllanoaa.   Twenty years' sa>\nBSjjj-h, nmw goass Bis,, l-.o am \u2014\nDREWRY & TWIGG\nMINING ENGINEERS\nI and Prorlnalal Land I*\n ' DBNTMR, B. O.\nFRANK C, GREEN\nCIVIL ENGINEER\nDominion and  Provincial Land Bu.rr.ror\nP.O. Box Mi. Phons IBB\nOor. -toeteaay aal Vlotorla Sts. MUSIS.\n THB DAILT)!NBW, NELSON, B. C, THURSDAT AUGCST. S, 1906\nTHE SUNLIGHT.\nWAY\nRINSE   WEU\nSunlight Soap is better than\nother soaps, but is best when\nused in tlte Sunlight way (follow\ndirections).\nHard rubbing and boiling are\nthings of the past in homes\nwhere Sunlight Soap is used at\ndirected. <\nSunlight Soap wl not injure\neven the daintiest fabric or the\nhands, and the clothes wiU be\nperfectly white, woolens soft\nand fluffy.\nThe reason for this is because\nSunlight Soap is absolutely pure,\ncontains no injurious chemicals\n- indeed, nothing but the active,\ncleansing, dirt-removing proper-\nties of soap that is nothing but\nsoap.\nEqually good with hard or\nsoft water.\nYOUR  MONEY  REfUNDED\nby tilt ,Kiili*r from whom yon\nImv Ktntllulit. Sniiii if you nnd\nmiy cause fur complaint 153\nItVER BROTHERS IIMITED, TORONTO\n\"MONEY WILL MAKE THE POT\nBOIL THOUGH THE DEVIL POUR\nWATER ON THE FIRE\/' ^ -# -#\nND MONEY\u2014invested in Publicity\u2014will make\nthe store prosper, though assailed on all sides by\n\" hoodoos,\" \" bad luck,\" or murderous competition !\nThat \" Money is Power \" has J)een conceded\nsince the first coin came from the first mint.\nBut it has remained for the present generation to\nlearn how to most effectually harness power and make it\ndo the world's work\u2014how, by putting money to work,\nto make it a useful and a tractable power.\nChanged into Newspaper Publicity, money reaches,\nperhaps, its highe-st effectiveness.\nNewspaper advertising will send store-crowds where\nthey were never before seen will overcome the bad location\nhoodoo\u2014will do away with \"dull days\" and \"slow\nstocks \"\u2014will batter down, finally, every obstacle to complete store-success\u2014and increasing store growth and\nprofits.\nIf your Advertising Campaign is big enough, peris-\ntent enough, intelligent enough\u2014if it embodies a \" Selling Plan \" for everything you have to sell\u2014your business\nwill prosper no matter how many of your friends or\nenemies try to pour water on your fire !\nA good medium is an essential pari of a good advertising campaign.\nTHE DAILY NEWS\n<$  FILLS   THE   BILL   fr\nMININ& AND ENGINEERING DEVELOPMENT 00.\nCONSULTING   ENUlNK-fcHH  -106-409 Fennnell Block, Spokane, Wail).\nCorrect and concise report* ol examinations made upon the Physical, Technical\nand Flnanclal status of mining properties  and  upon  Agricultural,   Mineral and\nLumber Lands,\nWe have customers for properties that wilt \"stand up\" under examinations,\niiank reference!.\nThe Jenckes Machine Co., h-\u00bb-\nBUILDERS UNDER CANADIAN LETTERS PATENT.\nTHE FARREL-BACON STYLE \"B\"\nORE AND ROCK CRUSHER\n<\". I THB STANDARD OF THE WORLD\nWRITE FOR CATALOGUE ffis\nBRITISH OOLTJHBIA   OFFICII:    ROSSLAND   AMD   VANOOUV****.\nWorka uul Heal Otto:   SHERBROOK**, \u00abUE*w,\u00abw      i\nWe have the best facilities in the Kootenays for\nsupplying\nCured Meats\nduring the summer weather.    Wholesale and retail.\nWrite for price list.\nP.  BURNS & OO.\nNelaon, B.O. ud Branch*.\ngetting other classes of labor will lessen\nthe demand for young Englishmen. If 1\ncould not have Chinese labor I am out ot\nthe .business -absolutely. As It Is 1 am\nemploying four white men. 1 could not\nemploy the white men if 1 did not employ\nthe Chinese. Remove the Chinamen, take\nthorn out of the country, and where are\nwe at? Mr, Burke may be able to continue\nIf he Intends to work himself and has sons\nto work for him, 'but how much trult\nranching could you do and how many men\nwould Invest money on .the chance of their\nbeing able to carry on fruit raising and\npicking their fruit. Would Mr. Burke plant\nten acres of strawberries on the chance\nof getting English labor? I bave been\nicjfltyilaedl upon my\/ jowa pastiness - ana\nwarned, being asked where l am to get\nthe labor to pick my own trult. Wrongs\nprobably right themselves und after 1\nhuve lost a crop or two through lack ot\nlabor, a grievance of that kind wlll be\nremedied. It iu not us though we had a\nsystem of protection ugulnst labor. We\nare\" offered Doukhobors, Slavs and Hungarians, but thero is oue class of man\nwho can be got here and that partlcuiur\nman Ib marked and we who need him\ncannot get him. That 1b not fair play.\nIf It is a question of having Chinese ana\nhaving Englishmen and cSotchmen that\nwould be different, but I contend lt Ib uot.\nIf we had no Chinamen, we would have\nno-fruit Industry here toduy, and the extent of that Industry ls more limited by\nthe supply of labor available than any\nother cuuue you can name. There ure any\nnumber of us who would be willing to\nclear up more land and for every Chinaman you employ you warn another white\nman. There Is other work that the white\nman Is needed for. The packing of fruit;\nthe plowing, work thut the Chinese are\nnot physically fit for. They don't compete,\nbut supplement the work of the white\nman. For myself I think we have rather\nmore Chinese than white men.\nNow as to the valuation of our farms.\nWe all have from ten to live mum ml\nacres or more. Take away our Chinamen\nand 1 would write mine off aB a loss; tor\nthat reason 1 would vote for Mr. Croasdaile's resolution. We are not opening up\nthe big question as to the Chinese affecting everybody else. 1 would agree witn\nIt as a member of this association in Us\nlimitation, whatever11 might do outside et\nthis association where thu que\u00bbtlon was\nupon broader lines. I might feel as a\ncitizen that the opposition did not arise\nfrom purely disinterested motives. 1 have\nhad Chinese for house servants. I huve\nnot found them dishonest. 1 have had\nChinamen working on the same ranch wltn\nwhite men and found them competent,\nquite sober, honest ln their work, and in\nbringing them supplies from town I found\nthey apent a greater portion of their\nwages.\nI think lt ls essential that we should\nmoke ourselves heard and the government\nof the country should not get the impression from our silence that there is only one\nside to thc case. The loss of revenue has\nbeen .930,000. It will mnke labor us nurd\nto get and as dear as possible. The railways, mines, smelters and everybody are\ncrying out for labor, Wc will give work\nover at the smeller to 30 men at 92.7*1 and\n$3 a day for white men, tf you have got\nthem, and net put them In the fumes, but\nput them at ordinary everyday labor. We\nare not running half our furnaces because\nwe cannot get labor and our yard Is full\nof ore for which wo are paying hundreds\nof dollars for demurrage, if $2.50 or *-'\nIs not fair wages, that is it different matter. When you get wages at a higher price\nthan the raw material is -worth It simply\nclones down every business and docs not\nhelp the country nor the mnn trying to\nmake a living out of lt.\nG. O. Buchanan\u20141 can hardly agree with\nthe  remark made by  tho mover of the\nresolution In which he said the situation\nwas not at present acute.  I think it is\nacute.  The fact that we have not hud this\nsummer a hundred car loads of .strawberries to pick and may not next summer,\ndoes not prevent the situation from being\nacute.   It is acute In the respect that people  wlll not put In   large quantities of\nplants and bushes when they know there\nIs no prospect of their being uble to get\nhelp to pick the 'berries, and those who\nhuve most emphatically opposed the resolution know that more assistance must be\nforthcoming.   Instead of seeking relief tn\nthe form proposed in this resolution, Hnd\nout what you can get from other countries,\nKind out what you can do.   The government has an exceedingly uctlve immigration bureau, but these Immigrants insteuu\nof relieving   the situation   on  the  labor\nmarket cause it to become more stringent.\nI understand from Mr. Annable that they\nare wanting 30,000 men In the Northwest.\nThe bonus offered by the government ot\nfree  homesteads here  as  well  ub In  the\n^rflhw-fU   terrltOriiesHboiindietw .-extent-*\nof free land offered every mun\u2014attractions\nlike these do not relieve the labor market.\nI have heard remurks since 1 came into\nthe meeting  to the effect that If  those\nwho could not get labor at f2.ro would\npay |3 they would be able to obtain it.\nWhen will berries stand $3 a duy for labor.'\nYou are not likely to get what you are\nasking for at the first time of usklng. . . .\nThe opportunities  of  the  white man  for\nbuying land are so great that unless some\nmeans Is found of relieving the situation\nthe country will not make the progress\nthat It otherwise would. . . . There is a\nrestriction against the Chinaman.   Atter\nall what difference Ib there In principle\nfrom some modifications of that and what\nhaa been suggested and proposed.   We arc\ninvited  to go and  ransack all countries\nfor labor. . . , Ib there any such difference between  the  Chinaman   and  these\nother races to make tt a matter of principle that one ls to be allowed to come\nIn freely and the other ls not?  It tt not\nthat the one Is available to meet the requirements and the other Is not. (Hear,\nhear).    Labor will ultimately bo distributed and nnd its proper place. , . . The\nobjection Is to any class that wlll come in\nand break  down  the exceptionally  high\n{rate of wages, ... I am proposing at the\npresent moment to buy land and engage\nin fruit raising In Kootenay, . . . but I do\nnot aee any sense ln buying fruit land and\nplanting berries with the prospect of having a large amount of that work to do.\nI do not aee where you are to make any\nmoney If there ls not going to be some\ndefinite supply of labor available, nor is\nthere sufficient encouragement to start in\nbusiness.\nMt, Croasdaile\u2014There la one thing In your\nown remarks Mr,. Chairman, us to only\ntrained Chinamen being admitted free of\ntax. That Is not my view In the resolution 1 am presenting. The people are wanting large tracts of land cleared, an'd people who are considering the question ot\ncoming Into this country and acquiring\nland wlll have large tracts to dear. Tbey\nare wanting to know about labor.  There\nis a large area of fruit land ln this district and that area seems to be growing\nevery day and wo want .to provide some\nmeans for bringing that land under cultivation, it is not a question merely of\nthe land already under cultivation.\nWith regard to Mr. Burke's remarks as\nto removing the tax, I have seen the time\nwhen there was no tax. I have seen 7000\nChinamen brought In on the coast to work\non the construction of tho C.F.A., and\nmy experience is thnt the supply regulates\nItself to the demand. When the contract\nwas over for building the railroad those\nChinamen went back to their own country, though thero was aome hardship for a\nnumber of thein before they wont away.\nI do uot think Mr. Burke need anticipate\nany difficulty In this respect. We have\ngot to Bay what our requirements are and\nwe have got to show that we are not interfering with anybody else's interests or\nrights, I am sure the meeting win agree\nwith me that tills question has brought\nforward a very Interesting debate.\nONE HEART WAS DEAD\nBUT STILL THE   MAN WITH   TWO\nLIVED ON.\nWAS ONOE CELERATED FREAK IN\nBARNUM'S SHOW.\nNew Vork, Aug. 1.\u2014A special to The\nWorld Irom Salem, Oregon, .says; After\nliving for two weeks with one heart\ndead, George Llppert, ul years old,\nwhose two hearts, three perfectly formed\nlegs and sixteen toes made him one of\nthe wonders of p. T. Barnuni's shows, is\ndead from tuberculosis.\nSurgeons who performed an autopsy\ndeclare that had it not heen for the consumption, which already had the upper\nhand, the death of Llppert'*-! right heart\nwould not have materially affected the\nlike organ on the left side and that he\nprobably woulld have lived for years.\nUntil seven years ago Lippert's life\nhad heen spent In the show business.\nHe could speak live languages and any\nnumber of dialects. A globe-trotter's\ncareer is not conducive lo saving and\nLippert had only a 20-cent piece when\nhe found himself sick and homeless in\nOregon. Mrs. Mary Rlggs, a florist,\ngave him a home and he quit the show\nbusiness for good, making his home\nthereafter with his benefactress, ln\nwhose house he died. He was visited\nhere by many showmen.\nBesides Lhe usual two legs, a third\none grew out of his right side nnd .va*\nsomewhat thinner than Uie other two,\nbul pcl'ectly formed. In a French traiu\nwreck Llppert sustained a fracture of\nhis third leg and had his nose broken.\nThereafter he was never abe to use his\nleg, but would not. consent to an amputation.\n* Llppert last fall contracted a severe\ncold, which developed into consumption.\nWhen he apparently was near death two\nweeks ago one heart ceased beating,\nbut with the other he clung tenaciously\nto life until the white plague killed htm.\nMinard'i Liniment Cures Garget in Cowl\nM. Mecklenburg, M.A., the celebrated eye\nspecialist is ut the Canada Drug and Book\nstore, Nelson and will remain Until Aug.\n9. You'll save your eyes by consulting this\neminent  und long  experienced specialist.\nNELSON CAFE\n(Under Hew Management.)\nFirst-Class\nLunch.......\nS?ST 25 cents\nSPECIAL\nSunday Dinner from 6 to 8 p.m.\nBOARD and ROOMS from tl.00 per\nday np.   The roomi bate been\nthoroughly renovated and\nrefnrnialed.\nA. AUDET, Prop.\nWadden House rsoi\nDo iw mm a Mn-tettaate *_\u00bb^J___\\\nity ti. Madden Houm.   Well ___*m\nnoma lighted by electricity;   \u00ab*** *\u2014\nboard,  to the bar ran \"ll ***_?\nMat domeetto and unpsrud muow\ntiara.\nTHOMAB MADPMN, rtomua*\nTHE QUEEN'S HOTEL\nMM \u00ab. O. CLARK*. Pr  netteee,\nRATES \u00bb PBR}*-if.\nUw and coralortaMt  aedrooaaa  la\ntint elaw dining ron\nFor A Good Roast or\nTender Steak\nRing up Phone No* 6\nWest Kootenav Butcher Oo.\nTRANSFER OP RETAIL UQUOH\nLICENSE\nin the Matter of the Municipal Clauses act\nAnd ln the matter ot an application (or\nthe transfer of the retail liquor license for\nthe Wilson Houae, situate In Slocan, B.C..\nfrom A. E, Teeter to Qeorge Stoll,\nNOTICE Is hereby given that the under*\nsigned will make application to the board\nof License Commissioners tor the olty ot\nBlocan at the next setting of such board,\nfor the transfer of the retail liquor license\nto sell liquors on premises known as tha\nWilson House, situate on Lota 6 and 1.\nBlock A., tn tha said City ot Slocan, B.C.\n(rom the said undersigned to George Stoll.\nDated at,Blocan, B.C., thla llth day ot\nJuly, A.D..II08.\n..\u25a0'\/ A. E. TEETER.\nHOTEL DIRECTORY\nPHOENIX.\nDOMINION HOTBL, PHOBNIX, B. C-\nMrs. P. I>. McKslver,, proprietress. Ta.\nnewest and moat modern flrat clasa hots!\nIn tks ally, lately tarnished and wltb\nall convenience!. Th. bar, under Uu\naunaiemsnt ot Mr. J. Wright, la supplied with the best brands ol wines,\nHOTBL BALMORAL, PHOBNIX, B. C-\nThe leading hotel of Boundary's leading\nmining camp, strictly nrst olass, eon-\ntrally laoatsd. John A, MoMansr, Proprietor.\nHOTBL    BROOKLYN,    PHOBNIX-THBi\nonly jp to date hotel In Phoenix. r.ew\nfrom cellar to roof. Rest flample rooms\nIn the Boundary, Bath rooma ln connection. Opposite Qreat Northern depot.\nJames Marshall, Proprietor.\nYMIR,\nWaldorf Hole)\n\\MIR, B.C.\nv'\nHeadquarters lor Mining ud Corp.\nmerelal men.\nMoat comfort***'* hotel tn tka Dtatr\nBample rooma In connection.\nGEO. COLEMAN, Prop.\nVALLEY HOTEL, NEAR YMIR, BETTER\nknown aa the Halfway Hotel; la now\nopen for business. Travellers to the\nmines wlll receive the beet of attention.\nPatrick J. Mullen, Proprietor.\nGRAND FORKS.\nWHEN IM\nGRAND F0RK8\nPUT UP AT\nHOTEL PROVENCE\nThe headquarten for tourlata.\ntlon guaranteed.\nBMIL LARSENOate of Nelaon) proprietor\nHOTEL WINNIPEG, WINN-IP-EG aV\u00bb\u201e\nGrand Forks\u2014Thoroughly renovated and\nnewly furnished throughout. Large bedrooms, baths, ete. First chine dining\nroom'. Best brands of Wines, Liquors and\nCigars at the bar. Everything iirst-\nolass.   McBean A Johnson, Props.\nARROWHEAD.\nTHE UNION HOTBL ARKOW.HKA.D-\nSpeclal attention given to commercial\nmen and tourlats. First claas sample\nrooms. Finest scenery in British Columbia, overlooking upper Arrow lake. w.\nJ. Ughtburne, proprietor.\nFERNIE.\nIMPERIAL HOTBL, FERNIE, B. \u00ab.\u2014\nWhen you get oft at Fernie try the imperial hotel, it Ib only fl.GO per day and\nyou are well, need: * Try It once just to\naee. It ls only 10 steps trom the depot\nJoseph Jean, Proprietor.\nTORONTO, ONT.\nWalker House\nTORONTO, ONT.\nCulilne unexcelled. Two bundled we*.\nrentUated. steam-heated bodrooma, a bubs\nber with baths. British Columbia. Baattat\n\u2022bewail. Alberta patronage specially ao\nlloHed. Strict attention to lnulas and eaiu\nren.   Rates 12 to 13 per day.\nGEO. WRIGHT A CO., Proo.\nLate of Brandon and\nT. II BAYNB, Manager\nA drink of good liquor\nIb a very good thing\nIt will hoist up your spirits\nAnd cause you to sing;\nAnd the beat place ln town\nTo sample your gin\nIs at Archie Reid's quarters\n\"The No Place Inn\"\nKOOTENAY HOTEL\nVernon Btreet, Neleon\nCentrally located, three doora from\npoBtotllce. Newly renovated. Bar well\nstocked with all latest brands ot wines,\nliquors and cigars. Rates one dollar\nper day.\nMRS. M. MALLETTE, Proprietress\nSHERBROOKE\nHOUSE\nNBLSON, B. O.\nOa. minute's walk trom C.P.H. et*'\nCuisine unexeelled; It rooms, well he\nand ventilated.  Batha la seeittwHeii,\nrates-*- vat dar*\nJ. BOYER\nPROPRIETOR\nCLUB HOTEL\nThe Big Schooner oi Beer\nor Half and Ball\n10c\nIbe only ilass ot food besr In Meiaem\nHotel accommodation aecond to none U\nBritish Columbia.  Ratea tl Mr day. sate\ndal ratea to monthly hoarders.\nCORNER STANLEY * BIUCA aT*UUC-al\nROYAL HOTEL\n-rauPHom h\ntout \u2014a. *__*\u25a0 rtmtnanm\nThs hast meals thai em M pnmdaa t,\nthai marks-, sooted mar \u2014t mam**\nkm et the propriMnsa, axes- a a taeaew\nmoe airy motes, I\nThe best wines, masts aat safer. SB.\nht oktalned at the bar.\n-I-HtMl: B AMD JUS \u2014\u2014 Ml\nCOB. aVAKUDT AND tBI-lCA WHWrr*\nOars mm the tew.\nTHE DAILY NEWS CLASSIFIED ADS.\nThe best and cheapest means of reaching the people of the Kootenays, A small\nadvertisement In these columns will bring big results.\nRATBS-One cent per word per Issue; six Insertions for the price of four If paid\nln advance.\nClassified ads. will be received for Insertion until 9 o'clock on the evening pre*\nvlous to publication. Phone 144.\nFOR SALE\nREAL ESTATE\nFOR BALE-66 aorea, some Improve-\nmente lu the way of buildings, olearlng,\netc, 11000; halt cash, half easy Installments; 45 acres or thereabouts meadow\nland, the balance trult land. FortynM\nacres adjoining, all Improved, tt aorea nay\nmeadow, 20 acres first-class trult tanoj\nplace well Improved, tlSOO; railway running\nthrough both places.  Apply L. A. Snyder.\nFOR BALE\u2014-14 acreB near Blue Bell mine,\n12000, some lake front; also 118 acres near\ncity power plant, BOW. Enquire at the\nCabinet Cigar store. M-tf.\nFOR BALE-Modem six-roomed residence\non Stanley street, two lots with fruit\ntrees and garden, at a bargain.   Terms,\nW. \"G. Brown.  a-a'\nMISCELLANEOUS\nOLD CtJRIOSITT SHOP-lf yon want to\nbuy or sell anything go to tks Old Curtoa*\nIty Shop. Always ln stock, a full Un. ol\nCrockerv, Furniture and Glassware.\nFOB SALE\u2014Twelve back number ot Low-\nbry'B claim and a copy of Float oent to\nany address for 11. Address B. T, bowery, Nelson;, B.C.           '\nFOR SALE\u2014One Pease complnatlon heat.\n. Ing furhace, good order, cheap. O. IS,\n'Miller, City.  W-H\nHOTELS\nFOR SALE-Complete furntshlnga tor 26\nroom hotel, wtth privilege of renting the\nhotel, good business. Furniture consists\nof 18 bedroom aultea, dining room, kitchen\nutensils, carpets, bedding, sideboards, and\nlounges. Apply Sunnyside noted, Baker\natreet \u2022        tO-tt\nFOR RENT\nSEWING Machines to rent, 13 per montn.\nSlngvr Sewing Machine Co.\nFOR RBNT\u2014Seven room house. Union St.,\nHume Addition, -12 per month. G. Q-. McLaren, K.W.C. Block.\nFOR RENT-Kurnlshed rooms with UM ot\nbath. Apply \"Room,\" Dally Newa.     78-tf\nARLINGTON HOTBL. SLOCAN CITY,\nfor rent, completely furnished. Haa excellent location and Ib large and well arranged. Apply to Gethlng and Henderson,\nSlocan City. W-tf\nFOR RENT\u2014Pleasant room, good location,\nall conveniences.  Address \"House,\" care\nDally News. So**\nFOR RENT\u2014Nicely furnlBhed rooms, with\nuse ot bath. Apply \"Victoria,\" care The\nDally News. \u25a0       '     8*-a\nFOR RENT-FurnlHhed house on Victoria\nstreet.    Apply . ut    Rutherford's    drug\nstore. WM\"\n80CIETY CARDS\nABERDEEN HIVE, No. 11, ta. O. T. \u00ab.-\nMeets and and tth Wednesday, 1:10 Ptn*\nof eaoh month ln K. of P. Hall, Vemoa\nStreet, next to postofflc.. VlslUag asesa-\nwa cordially Invited.\nMINNIE D. RirCHISL D.S.C.\nMARGARET SQUIRE. B.C.\nMRS. ELIZABETH ROW. L.C.\nBOAT BUILDER\nB. *.. LIND&AT, Builder ot ant Dealer ia\nwoata aad kaunohaa  Phone \u2014t\nCUSTOMS BROKERAGE\nI have opened an offloe In the Nelson\nElectric Messenger Despatch bulldlftg*\nStanley street, where I shall conduct a\ngeneral customs brokerage bualiess. Tele*\nphone 44.  A. K. Wattle. .\nL08T\nLOST\u2014A  gold watch,   open   face,   Kigin\nmovement,   Initials  '\"iU.il.\"   engraved\non Inside.   Finder wlll receive reward by.\nreturning to Dally Newa ofllce. S---J\nGEO. M. GUNN\nWARD STREET      NEAR POSTOFFICE\nManufacturer of and dealer In Men's Fine\nFootwear.   Repairing promptly done.\nHOTTO-Llve and let live.\nBAJtTLETT  HOUSE\n(Fermsrlj Clarke Bora.)\nTk. beat tun par day hcua. ta Malaos\nHon. but white help saajlDill  Tka Ml\ntat-Ml-ML        ~\nS.W.BARTLETT - Prm.\nQUeei) Studio\nPhotographer* and <\nPlotup* Framara\nNBLSON      -      -      -      B.O.\nLAKE VIEW HOTEL\nCorner Hall and Vernon Btreeta\nTwo blocks from City Wharf  Tha bsst\ndollar a day house In Nelson.\nNO GHINEBE BUPLOTBD.\nCeorge Harrison\nPROPRIETOR\nGRAND CENTRAL HOTEL\nOppeslt. CourthouM and aaw PostoaV*\nBeat Mo meal In town. BarotMan aat\nAmerican plan. Only wktle saber ssaslay.\n.\u00ab,  first ehus bar.\na. A. IBICMsMI. rriirtetea.\nHELP WANTED\n**fJ?K. PS1.** I* *\u00bb\u00bb \u00ab wiu not w\nlong until \"Things are coming your way\u2122\nNELSON Bropioynent Agency\n\u25a0WiANTBD--Cook,  waiter and dlahwaaher\nfor  mine, edgernian, dogger,   sawyers,\nswampers,.teamaters, men for stonm shovel\nuna maBon gang, millwrights, waitresses.\nWANTEp-Men and wui.*\"*r >o learn tur-\n_?\" trade In eight weeks. Graduates earn\nWi to ft per week.  Cat. free   Mole? sys-\nAOENTS WANTBD-Vc sul superlo\/ high\n!kS!r ii*ti. \u00ab*h weekly: write tod lor\ntan! Oregon?     \u00b0**p     \u00b0\"\" Nu*\"\"* \u25a0***\n,\u2014 \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\nWANTED-Waltress, apply Royal Hotel,\nNelson.. \u25a0\u25a0,', \u201e.\u201e\nAOBNTS to Introduce the greatest hortl-\ncultural' wonder-Burbank'a new Stoneloa\nPlum; miracle: big pay: permanent position.   Chtoo Nursery Co., Salem, Ore\nWANTED-A reliable  woman for nurse.\nApply Mrs. B. W. Monk, Silica St     81-1\nWANTED - Bricklayers, 16.60 per day.\nBaynes and Hdrie, contractors, Vancouver, B.C. (a.,)\nWANTED-Flve men to pile lumber and\nload cars. C. E. Miller, Creston.     tH-tt\nAGENTS WANTED-To take orders for\nmen's made to order clothes. Best com-\nmlsalon ever offered, 'strictly high class\ngoods. Union label. No experience re.\n.quired. Rex Tailoring Co., Limited, To-\nrente . g(.s\nAOENTS WANTED - To sell the host\ngrown nursery -stock on the coast, including Burbank's new pltlcss plum, Miracle.\nCommission advanced weekly. Write quick\nfor choice of territory. Albany NurBerles.\nAlbany, Ore. _.\u2022&\nWANTED-Sawyers, axemen and swampers nt Crow's Nest Pnsa Coal com-\npnny's camp, Wardrop's Filling*. Apply to\nA. Cnmpbeil, foreman, Wardrop's Billing,\nnear Sparwood, B.C. gD-s\nWANTED - MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTBD-A, Small holler, about is h.p.\nlow pressure. C. E. Miller.\nWANTED-Clean  cotton rags. Pressroom\nDaily News.\nXVm.\\au,D \u2014 Small house, two or three\nrooms, near lake front, with or witiiout\nsmall piece of land and within short distance of Nelson. State price to \"Residence-\nDally News. 8*1.4\nWANTED-Por Zoological parks, Urissly\nBear oubs, Inland White bean, marten,\notter, Beaver, Rocky mountain goat, wild\nswans, geese, eranca and other animals and\nbirds. Dr. Cecil French, naturalist, Wash-\nIngtony P.O. \t\nWHOLESALE HOU8E8\nPRODUCT\ntTARKIl A CO., WHOLESALE DEAIr\ntt:\u00aba!,*ft^\u25a0\u2022ft,*,\u2022*t--\u25a0-\u2022-,\u2022\nWetson B.C.\nORCCERDM\nA.  MACDONALD * CO.-WHOLBSAM\nOrooara and  Prevision HwohanU.\u2014ta-\nRiters of Teaa, Coffeea, Spices, Drtsf\nulta, Staple and Fancy Orooenea, To*\nbaaaoa, Clnn, Butter. Bins, Cosmo aal\nFast-lag Houae Products, ostaa aat\nWarshoua*, oorner at Front aad Hall\n      P.O. Box low.  Telephone \u25a0\nCAMP   AND   MINERS'   FtlRNUHINCM\n_.  MACDONALD   *   CO.-WHOUESALB\nJobben ta Blankets, underwear, Mtrta,\nOlevM, Boots, RubDm, Overalls, 'unu.\nan, Maokloawa aad OllaktnOloUitas.\nCamp and Mlnara- Sundries. Otace aast\nWanhouae, oorner ot Front and San\nP.O. Boa ion. *ftlephone at.\nAS8AYERS' SUPPLIES\nTHE B.C. ASSAY Jt CHEMICAL BUPPbT\nCo., Ltd., Vancouver, B. C.-lmporttrn\nand Dealers In Assayers Supplies, sol.\nagents In British Columbia tor the celebrated Battersea crucibles, ScoiUera and\nMuffles and Wm .Ainsworth A uo-'a una\nBalancee  Chemical  and  Physloal  AD-\n^ratus, C. P. Adds and Chentlcais, Plav\num, Sodium and Potassium uyanaM,\nQulokaUvsr, Carbonate and Blt-aiMnate\nof soda, Borax, Borax Olass, Stiver, *tm\nLead aod Litharge\nMININNO AND MILL MACHINERY\nWASHINOTON MACHINERY * SUPa-i.T\nCo.\u2014Dealera la Engines, Band and areolar Sawmills, Atkins- Saws, Wood ana\nIron Pulleys, Leyner Compressors ana\nDrills, Pumps and Hoists. Prompt attention. Reasonable prices. \u2014 ~*\u2014\"\ntreatment.  Spokane, Wash.\nCONTRACTOR ANO BUILDER\nJAMES COL1.INO. CONTRACTOR AND\nBuilder, successor to Wm. Park. Shop\nVernon etreet, next to Nelaon Transfer.\nJobbing promptly attended to.        Jy-ta\nASSAYER\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, CHEMIST AND AS-\naayer, Nelaon, B.C.-Oold, Silver, Load\nor Copper, $1 each; Oold-Buvor, U.M:\nSilver-Lead, it.*; Zinc, Hi Oold-Sllver,\nwith Lead or Copper, ***(*. BatnplM arriving by expreoa or mall will reoalv.\nprompt attention. P.O. Drawer, tics;\nPhone A*7. *\nORE SHIPPERS' AQENT8\nE. W. WIDDOWSON * CO., NELSON.\nB.c.-Sampllng of ahlpmenta of ore carefully attended to at all tha amslters\nln the Kootenay by thorfughly competent men. Pereonal supervision given to\nshipments to tha Hall Mlnea Smelter\nNelson, Entire charge taken It so desired. Writ, tor terms to P.O. box UM,\nor -phon. ft. ^\nC, S. RA8HDALL, FOR If YEARS A\nresident of W\u00abt Kootenay, will attend\nat the Hall Minn smelter en behalf al\nshippers and sm ta weighing and sampling ot ons consigned to tha smelter.\nAddress P.O. Boa iM, Nelson, B.C.   .\n Pi\nSf*:\ntPX DAILT SEWS NKLSON, B. C, THURSDAY, ArGUST 2. 1906\nr\nBreathes there a womaii with soul so dead,\nWho never wished to make good Bread?\nThis wish shall be yours within the hour\nIf you insist on getting\nRISING SUN FLOUR.\ni\n| The Brackman-Ker Milling Co.\nWholesale Distributors tot\" Nelson\nFop Sale by all Grocers.     Manufactured and Guaranteed by\nThe Western Milling Co.\/Ltd.,-Calgary\nP. G. Dawson\nWholesale Agent for B. C, Vancouver\nA great saving\nSteam or air drills made by Allis-Chalmers-\nBullock, Limited, do. the. work of 6 to 15\nhand drillers at one-sixth the cost. See Catalogue 81 V. Works Montreal, Branch office\nNelson.\nIn drilling rock\nBOMBARDING SVEABORG\n\u2666' \u2014-\u2014-\u2014\nIM'PBRIAL TROOPS MAKE DESPERATE EFFORTS TO REGAIN FORT\nMUTINEERS HOLD THEIR GROUND\nAND REVOLT IS SPREADING\nSI. Petersburg, Aug. 1.\u2014(2.p.m.)\u2014\nThe .greatest excitement prevails here as\na result of .tlie elnrtllng news froin Sveaborg and there la the deepest apprehension regarding the situation at Cronstadt, as there ls little doubt that the\nrifling of tbe garrison of the .\"Gibraltar\nof the Baltic,\" was a premature attempt\nto excite a widespread military conspiracy, which involved the seizing of\nthe fortresses ot Sveaborg, Cronstadt,\nand Sevastopol, as bases for revolt In\nthe Black Sea and Baltic fleets. Both\ntelegraph and telephone communication\nwith Cronstadt and Sevastopol waa cut\noit during the night, but no sound ot\nfiring has yet been heard. Although lt\nis learned that a summons to revolt was\nIssued there, the chlet point now ln\ndoubt Is where the main part of the\nBaltic fleet, consisting ot a battleship\nand three cruisers, ls at present. It was\nsent to Helsingfors upon the receipt of\nthe news that the mutineers at Sveaborg had Joined ln the revolution. The\nsquadron is expected, tb be under the\npersonal command of grand duke Alexander Mlchaelovltch, brother-in-law of\nemperor Nicholas.\nA telegram claiming to be from the\ncommander of the fortress has been received here but Us meaning ls not clear.\nThe despatch sayH-. \"The entire crews\not four warships have mutinied. The\ncrews of the torpedo boat destroyers\nand other ships on tiie spot have revolted,\" while still another despatch says:\n\"For a time, with a portion of the crews\nlocked below decks, the loyal members\nof tbe crews Ural upon the mutineers,\"\nIf the royal squadron joined the mutineers there ls little hope ot regaining\npossession of Sveaborg fortress, where\nit Is claimed, six companies of loyal\ntroops are holding out under commander\nEstanil against the mutineers on Michael Svaska, Artillery, Engineer and\nother iHlands composing the 'group on\nwhich the fortress ls built The commander ot the artillery, general Aggrift,\nwas a prisoner during ihe night The\nCossacks and troops ashore at Helsingfors have regained entire possession of\nSkatudden Island. There is no exaggeration ln saying that the blow coming\nthus suddenly (rom an unexpected quarter has caused dismay ln government\ncircles and the feeling of alarm is increased by the bad news from the Interior.\nThe strikes are. spreading rapidly.\nThe whole of the Donets basin, the center of the mining and smelting industry,-is in the grip of the strikers, 20,-\n000 walking out at Usvaka last night,\nwhile from the vicinity of the Caucasus\nthe garrison of the Dishlagar, commanding the famous iron gate at Der-\nbent, received the news of the dissolution of parliament by rising, killing\naiielr commander, Installing themselves\ntn complete control of the city and placing their sentinels before, the post,\ntelegraph and other government buildings. \u25a0*-\nThe revolutionists are wildly jubilant.\nAlthough the mutiny .at Sveaborg occurred unexpectedly, bhey instantly de-\nelded they must take advantage of It\nand try Immediately to precipitate the\ngeneral engagement between the government and the people for which they\nhave been prepared. They express the\nmost supreme confidence that the military supports of the government win\nbreak where they are least expected and\nthat the government will And, when\nthe test comes, the army divided against\nitself and that units supposed to be\nloyal will fight on the aide of the people.\nThe workmen's councils here and at\nMoscow have already Issued warning!\nto the workmen's organisations through\nthe country to hold thmeslves in readiness to strike and the revolutionary military committee Is acting-with energy.\nThey declare that the crews of the warships at St. Petersburg are ready and\nthat if the Cronstadt squadron mutinies\nall the ships in the Baltic will soon be\nin their hands.\nHelsingfors, Aug. 1.\u2014(2 p.m.)\u2014Heavy\ncannonading Is ln progress at Sveaborg,\nshowing that the light for the possession ot the'main fortification Is still ln\nprogress, lt Is Impossible from the-*\nshore to ascertain the exact situation.\nThe only re-lnforcementa which have\narrived here are two companies of the\nFinnish regiment, which, came today.\nGeneral, baron Saltaa, commander of the\n22nd army corps, Is un his way here\nfrom Villmantrand.\nThe fight between the mutineers and\nthe loyal troops was waged during most\nof the post night The cannonading was\nheavy, the Bring of the guns furnishing\nan awful and Inspiring, spectacle to the\nthousands lining the points of. vantage\non Observatory hill. The loyal minority seemed to command the forts on\nNicholas Island which was engaged In a\nduel with Sanhama's formidable masked, batteries. At 10 o'clock this morning they were still exchanging broadsides at 10-mlnute Intervals. The casualties, transferred to Helsingfors, number less than SO of whom 15 are dead.\nBut thus far the number ot killed or\nwounded in the Sveaborg hospitals has\nnot been ascertained.\nOrder has been restored at Skatudden\nIsland where 110 sailors and 11 civilians\nhave been disarmed. From the civilian\npoint of view the local situation Is easy.\nNo cruisers are visible. . Troops are expected here but the destruction of the\nbridge near Rlhimaekl railroad station\nand the tearing up of the permanent\nway at several points delay the arrival\nof re-inforcements.\nThe socialists are on the alert and\nthe townspeople are In fear ot a cannonade If the naval squadron arrives here.\nThere, was a panic all day long yesterday\namong the summer residents, on the islands of the archipelago owing to the\nfall of stray bullets and shells, which\ncaused a number of casualties on the islands and In the city. A man, sitting on\nthe verandah of the Yacht club, was\nmentally wounded, and a servant girl\nwas killed. For more than a week Russian revolutionists have been working\namong the troops distributing the laboring and group of toil manifesto. It\nis reported that on Sunday 1500 soldiers\ntook an oath to Dght on the side of the\npeople,\nSt, Petersburg, Aug. 1.\u2014The report of\nthe murder of M. Herzenstein, a member of the outlawed parliament, Is confirmed. He was assassinated at his\noountry house near Terlokl, Finland, by\nmen in the employ of the Black Hundred\norganization. While walking along the\nsea shore with his wife and daughter\nseveral shots were fired at him from.an\nunoccupied building. Two ot the shots\nhit him aud he fell dead. His daughter\nwas wounded In the hand. The murderers escaped. Three hours prior to the\nmurder a 'phone message was received\nat a newspaper offlce from Moscow asking for newB of M. Herzenstein, and saying that It was reported In Moscow that\nhe had been assassinated. H. Herzen-\nBteln was of Jewish descent and very\nWealthy. iHls attacks on the minister\nof finance and lower house of parliament\nattracted widespread attention. He supported, the constitutional, democratic\nplan for land appropriations. He was a\npractical banker, and tor a long time\nwas the secretary of.Moscow land bank,\nThe murder of M. Herzenstein, caused\nIntense Indignation In the liberal camp,\nwhere li la believed that he was selected\nfor assassination by the advocates of\na counter revolution because ot hla\nprominence as a Jew. ,,\nEmory and Walley are putting en a sale*\nof men's suits whloh should appeal to\nall careful buyers.,. -*\nRANCHERS IN EARNEST\nCONTINUE TO.PRESS   COMPLAINT\nABOUT BALFOUR ROAD, f\nINQUIRY WILL   BE HELD BY GOVERNMENT AGENT.\nAb a personal find effective reply to\nithe query put to The Dolly News yesterday by a correspondent who questioned\nthe veracity of a statement made In the\ncolumns of this paper to the effect that\nthe ranchers of Balfour were protesting to the provincial government agent\nagainst the maladministration of public\nroad moneys appropriated for Balfour,\nthe folliwlng signed statement was\nbrought to lhe Dally News office today:\n\"We, the undersigned ranchers of\nBalfour and vicinity, endorse certain\nstatements made lo the government\nagent by Messrs. McKay and Gray concerning the manner In which' the road\nalong the north shore Is being constructed and the waste of money on the same.\n'(Signed) Cecil J. S. Paddon, A. Cameron, Alex. McKay, H. Smellle, H. E.\nHolloway, F. A. Davie, H. Brlndle\n(agent lor S. S. Fraser), H. WIlllauiB,\nCecil M. and Wm. Bourke, H. H. Sewell,\nCrozler Bourke, Pete Blakley, Delbem\nDye, A. F. James*'\nTo this was added the following separate statement evidently made by men\nwho were not quite prepared to endorse\nthe whole complaint and yet who recognize the need of an enquiry Into the\ncircumstances:\n\"We would like an Investigation into\nthe above matter. (Sgd.) Charles W.\nBusk, G. W. Manuel, J. W. Ford..\"\nThat these men are sincere and disinterested cannot be questioned, for they\nInclude amongst their number. several\nwho have done a good deal of road\nbuilding at their own expense aud who\nhave at heart only the welfare ot the\ncommunity and wisest and most economical expenditure of public money.\nFor Instance, the cost of the trail from\nthe Molly Gibson road, near tbe landing, westwardly to the boundary or\nMessrs. Morley and Shank's land, totalling |125, was paid entirely by Mr.\nC. W. Busk; that of the continuation\nthrough Mr. Shank's land lo Apploion's.\nboundary by Mr. Shanks himself; moreover, private parties located the. road\nfrom A. L. Gray's home to Rock Bluff,\neasterly and offered to locnto it through\nlo Balfour.\nMr. Renwlck, the local agent af the\ngovernment, has decided that lhe Investigation requested shall be granted,\nand that Mr. J. D. Moore, road agent,\nshall hold the Inquiry.\nTHB   CHINESE   LABOR   QUESTION.\nEditor, Tbe Dally News: t have read\nIn this evening's paper the resolution\npresented by H, E. Croasdaile to the\nKootenay* Fruit Growers' Association,\nwhich 1 notice was backed by such\nprominent mining men at J. J. Campbell,\nJames Johnstone and G. 0. Buchanan.\nI I have carefully studied the resolution, and must say that looking at thd\nmatter from all directions, I cannot\nhelp but back up the stand taken by\nthe Messrs. Bourke and Ford. Considering that these gentlemen have not been\nIn BrltlBh Columbia very long, I think\nthat It Is to their credit that they have\nmade such a stand, and though their\nobjections were not sustained, I hope\nthat other associations wlll take the\nmatter up and successfully prevent the\nremoval of the tax upon Chinamen coming Into Canada.\nI notice that the resolution only asks\nfor the removal of the head tax from\nthose Chinamen that wlll be employed\naa agricultural laborers and domestic\nservants, but what Is to prevent them\nbranching out In other lines, such as\nmining, as In. the coal mines on Vancouver Island. Mr. James Johnstone ls\nquoted, in the papers within the last\nday or so, as saying that. 30 men could\nbe given employment at the tyelson smelter. If such Is the case and labor\ntrouble become acute what Is to prevent\nthese imported Chinamen lining these\npositions. One would think that Mr.\nJohnstone would know that by applying\nto the different agencies in Winnipeg he\ncould get hew arrivals from the old\ncountry sent out here to do any work\nlhat he requires to be done, but, and it\nis a very big \"but\" too, the men that\ncome out will not stay long on the mls-\nerable.wages offered by the fruit growers.' It will only be a few weeks before\nthey find that they can do a lot better\nIn other lines,' earning considerably\nmore as unskilled laborers. To counteract any influence that this resolution\nmay have, I would suggest that the\nTrades * Labor council, the Nelson\nbranch of tha B. O. Mining Association,\nand other Interested parties   take the\nmatter up without delay.\n\"MINING.\nNelson, August 1.\nWITCHELUN^ POLITICS\nprominent unionist may bb^ buy-\n\u25a0an'6 running mate\nl-ikbly to Be democratic nominee FOR VICE-PRESIDI3NCY\nChicago, Aug..,1\u2014The t*peclul correspondent of the Evening Post til Indianapolis,\nwirt's that paper uh follows, concerning the\nrecent mention of John Mitchell us a pos-\n\u25a0|nltilc vice-preBldontlal cnndlilnlo on the\ndemocratic ticket:\n\"Although Mr. Mitchell, as pit-nidi-nl or\ntho United Mine Workers of Amerlcu, ban\nusuully been too busy to deny any rumor*)\nthat hud to do with his pOBglblc politics,\nhis western friends ure surprised that he\nhus made no effort to kill Off tht- boom\nfor tho vlce-prcsidentlul nomination which\nwu.** started lu the anthrucite coal district\nsome time ago.\n\"The cry of \"Bryan and Mitchell,' which\nhas been heard In many sections, may be\nheard in other**. Now lhat the American\nFederation of hi bur and the United Mine\nWorkers of America have decided to go\nInto politics to bring \u00bblimit some of the\nreforms that both organizations believe\nare due to organized labor, they will looK\nover their own first to pick out the available' timber for public ofllce. . If organized\nlabor Is determined to capture the chair\nof the presiding officer of the senate, thereby placing a mat on the threshold of the\nWhite house, why should not this mun be\nJohn Mitchell? Indeed, he seems to ba\nthe logical candidate of labor.\n\"No labor lender is more favorably\nknown to the country generally than Mitchell, and his chnmpions declare he would\nbe as strong with the people outside the\nunion ranks as umong those within. Although this seems to be a Strong stntc-\ncent, Mitchell's history Justifies ll. Me has\nooiwlatently fought the socialist movement, and In the three national conventions of minors It wus his Influence that\nprevented the organization from wavering\nand partly committing Itself to socialism.\nThe socialists regard Mitchell as their\narch enemy, und have sent tbnlr delegates\nto the convention lime nnd again to counteract his Influence. But this has always\nfailed, *\n\"Miners of Indiana, Illinois nnd Ohio\nhavo not yei pui forward men for congressional nominations. Mitchell could hove\nhad iho congresHlounl nomination In tho\nJollet district of lllnois. In which Is Bprlng\nValley, his home, but when tt was offered\nhim he was too deeply submerged In the\nlight with the anthracite nnd bituminous\noperators to consider It, except to decline\ntho ofllce.\nQUEER WOMEN'S HOTBL OPiENhUI\nNew York, Aug. 1\u2014Tho new Throwmnrt\nInn, a hotel for young women under 35\nnnd earning at least 912 u week, was opened hero todny on Abingdon square, in what\nIs called old New York, it Is within a\nstone's throw of the business center\nwhence Its permanent guests wlll principally come from. The cost of a single\nroom for one person nnd Including breakfast and supper, with luncheon on Hun-\ndays and legal holidays. Is 9b per week.\nThose willing to share their room with a\nfriend, will have to pay \u25a0$1.50 a week each.\nXV, R. II. Martin, who built tho hotel,\nafter plans which he had matured tor\nmany years, was prompted by the desire tu\nfurnish a hotel to young unmarried women,\nhaving no homes nnd earning fair salaries,\nwhere they can live cheaply and comfortably and where they can find not only tho\nordinary comforts of a boarding house,\nbut amusement and entertainment with-**\nout additional cost. To that end he has\nsupplied a good sized library, contnlntng\nworks of referenco and good fiction, a\ngymnasium, n dancing hall with a mechanical ' piano, a sewing room with a\nnumber of sewing machines, flat irons and\nboards, to enable the young women to\nmako,  mend or press their own clothes.\nMinard'i Liniment Cum Cargit In Cows\nUNNECESSARY EXPENSE\nAcute attacks of colic and diarrhoea\ncome on without warning and prompt action must be taken. There Is no necessity of Incurring the expense of a physician's services In such eases If Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy Is at hand. A dose of this remedy\nwill relieve the patient before a doctor\ncould arrive. It has never been known to\nfall, even In the most dangerous cases\nAnd no family should be without it. For\nsale by   all druggists and dealers.\nTHORPE'S LITHIA cures and preventi\ngout.\nTHORPE'S LITHIA cures and strength-\n\u00abti the bladder ud kidneys.\nBOYS MUSMURN OUT\nPRACTICE    NECESSARY    FOR THE*\nGAME >VITH REGINA.\nTHOSE WHO DO NOT TRAIN WILL\nBE BARRED PROM TEAM.\nTho attendance at the nightly practice\nof the lacrosse team at the recreation\ngrounds last evening fell oft considerably from what it had been and the\nlacrosse club officials ask that it be\nmade known that players who expect to\ncatch a place on the team against Regina\nmust turn up for practice. No player\nwill be allowed on the team unless'he\nbe in good condition and this can only\nbe obtained by practice.\n' The following are the schedjile games\nin the N. L U. to be played next Saturday: Cornwall at Toronto; Montreal\nat Shamrocks; Nationals at Capitals,\nThe Vancouver and Maple Leaf lacrosse teams will play an exhibition\ngame on Wednesday afternoon next.\nThe teams are well matched and are\nproving a great drawing card. As the\nlacrosse excitement now runs high in\nVancouver, tbe teams are taking advantage of their chance to rake ln some\nextra money.\nThe Trail and Nelson junior baseball\nteams will play a game at the recreation\ngrounds next Thursday afternoon. The\nlocal boys promise a good game. The\nsame two teams met here on Dominion\nDay and the Nelson boys won out rather\neasily after a good game. Since that\ntime, however, the smelter boys have\nbeen practising steadily and are said\nto have a new battery and aro coming\ndown with a bunch of rooters prepared\nto wipe up the Nelson team.\nWhen the Portland rowing club's crews\nleft here last Monday morning for Spokane, It wus announced that their entry In\nthe big All-Amerlcau regatta at Worcester,\nMuss., opening on the llth, had ibeen withdrawn us thc boys had broken training\nhere und It would tuku too long to get\nthem back Into condition. A messngo from\nSpokane Iohi evening, however, con-talned\nhu Informullon that the senior four, ac-\n\u25a0ompunled by coach Murphy, hud left tor\nWorcester yesterday morning and would\nrow In the senior fours championship.\nThis eomes us somewhat of a surprise to\nlocal oursmen and If couch Murphy can\n\u25a0;--i the men back Into winning shape lor\nthe big regatta, ho is a marvel of a train-\nThe regime of the bout house during\ntraining had beeu severe and the Web-\nfooters were in line shupe while here but\ntho banquet on Saturday night gave them\na taste of luxuries they had not lusted\nfor weeks and they wanted more, Training\nregulations were forgotten during the rest\nof their stay in Nelson..\nsory and delay may prove fatal. For pale\nby all druggist-*- and dealers. .\nSUMMER DIARRHOEA IN CH1L.OHEN\nDuring the hot weather of the summer\nmonths the first unnatural looseness of e\nchild's bowels should hnve Immediate attention, so as to check the disease before\nlt becomes serious. All that Is necessary\nIs a few doses of Chamberlain's Colic,\nCholera and Diarrhoea Remedy followed\nby a dose of castor oil to oleanse -the\nsystem. Rev. M. O. Strickland, pastor ot\nthc flrst M.B. church, Little Palls, Minn.,\nwrites: \"We have used Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy for\nseveral years and find It a very valuable\nremedy especially for summer disorders In\nchildren. For sale by ull druggists and\ndenlers.\n* HISTORIC FIGURE GONE\nParis, Aug. 1\u2014Edmund Roubrc, a member\nof the French academy, who acted as\ncounsel for members of the commune in\n1671, is dead. Rousse was bom In Paris\nlu 1817. He attained distinction as a lawyer and after the uprising In Purls ot\nMarch, 1871. devoted himself courageously\nto the defense of tho cltlsens, who appealed\nto him for assistance. \u2022 Ho vainly tried to\nsave tho life of Oustave Chaudlck, the\nlawyer and Journalist, who was executed\nMay 25, 1871. The generous conduct of M,\nRousso won for him the cross of the Legion\nof Honor. Ho was elected a member ot\ntho French academy In 1BW.\n\u25a0\nMinard'i Linimwt Cum DiiUmpor   ,\nMAKK HAY WHILE THIS SUN BHINICS\nThero Is a lesson In the work of the\nthrifty farmer. He knows thnt the -bright\nmuishlne may last but a day and he prepares for the showers which are so*, liable\nto follow. Bo lt should be with every house,\nhold. Dysentery, diarrhoea and cholera\nmorbus may attack some member of the\nhousehold without warning. Chamberlain's\nColic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy,\nwhich Is the best known medlclife for\nthese diseases, should always be kept nt\nhand,  as immediate -treatment  Is neces*-\nALFONSO BECOMES A SPORT\nCowes. Isle of Wight, Aug. 1-Klng AI-\n\u2022fonwo und queen Victoria of Spuln arlved\nhero today on the Spanish royal yacht\nGcrnlda, escorted by the armored cruiser\nPrlnccssa de Austurias. Salutes were exchanged and there was a great display of\nbunting afloat and ashore, as a welcome\nto their majesties, who will remain hero\nover Cowes' yachting week. King Alfonso\nintends to -build a racing yacht to compete\nhere in 1907,\nSTABBED WIFE OVER 25 CENTS\nNew York. August 1\u2014During a quarrel\nat. their home In Harlem today. Marian\nSchnabel,'40 years old, a mail driver, probably fatally stabbed his wife with a carving knife. Schnnbel (led and has not been\narrested. Mrs. Schnabel said she asked her\nhusband for 23 cents lo repay a loan from\nit neighbor and the quarrel resulted.      \u2022\nWATER WAGON GETS A CHANCE\nChicago, Aug. 1\u2014The last saloon license\nthat will be Issued lu Chicago until the\ncity nearly doubles Its present population,\nwua given out yesterday, The license number Is 7X3. Under the HurKlu ordinance,\nwhich goes Into effect toduy, no more uu-\nIooiib wlll be permitted In Chicago until\nthe ratio Is one saloon tor every 500 people.\nU. S. FORKS OVER MONEY \u00bb\n\u2022Berlin, Aug. 1\u2014Thc United Htates government, hns paid Germany the awurd of\n$30,001) in tho Sumonn case. Ureal Britain\npaid her dumuges in lhe spring and the\nmatter Is therefore settled.\nMinard'i Unimeq-t Cures Distemper\nWe work all the tlmo to please more and\nget rid of oauses of complaint That's one\nreason why our trade Is io large. Canada Drug ft Book Co.\nTHORPE'S LITHIA cures rheumatism.\nBtmllght Bot a is titter then other soaps,\nbut is best wl m n\u00ab4 in the Bnnlight way.\nlay Bonlight Soup and fellow direottou\nWe stand back of everything sold tn our\nitores. If there Is any dissatisfaction we\nwont to know lt and mako It right Canada Drug ft Book Oa\nTHORPE'S   LITHIA   delivered   to   your\nhome. 2 doz. pints, .11.75.\nHOUSEWIVES\nAsk your grocer to send\nyou one of Griffin's Cooked Hams. Slice it up\nand it is ready for the\ntable. Just the thing for\nthis warm weather. Shipment from Winnipeg\nweekly. Always fresh\u2014\nalways good.     ' \u2022\nJ.Y.Griffin&Co.\nLAND NOTICES\nNOTICE is hereby given that M ttuys\nafter date I Intend to apply to the Jion.\nthe Chief Commissioner of Liir.n*- nnd\nWorks, at Victoria, for a special iWd-nse\nto cut and carry away timber ttoiu tho\nfollowing desoribed lands In West Knoic-\nnay dlstrlot: Commencing at a pt'st marked \"Forest Pelton S.W. conier,* plr-nled\non the north boundary of timber lennn i-oi\n435, and about 50 chains In a northnviv direction from the M) mile board on the N.\nA S. railway, thenoe north SO cnalns;\nthence east SO chains; thence smith so\nchains; thence west SO chains to p-nce oi\ncommencement.\nLocated June 29, 1906. M *\nFOREST PELTON\nNOTICE. Is hereby given that SO days nfter\ndate I Intend to apply to the Hon. the\nChief' Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor permission to purchase the'following\ndescribed lands on the southerly side ot\nthe Columbia river In the West Kootenuy\ndistrict of British Columbia: Commencing\nat a post marked \"Louis Borgat northoast\noorner,\" thence south 40 chains; thence\nwest 40 chains, more or lets to the . >'\nboundary ot lot 178; thence north following\nsaid boundary of Lot 373, 40 chains -more\nor less to tho Columbia, river; thenoe easterly following bank of Columbia river 40'\nchains more or less, to place of commencement, containing 160 acres more or less.\nLOUIS  BORGAT.\nKBNNETH L. BURNET, Agent.\nDated at Nakusp, B.C., this 15th day\n-of June, 1906.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that 00 days after\ndate I Intend to apply to the Hon. tho\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor permission to purchase the following\ndescribed lands In West Kootenay Dlstrlot,\nprovince of British Columbia: Commencing\nat a post marked \"Harry Houston's northeast corner,\" sold post being at tlio southeast corner of John Feeney's pre-emption\nclaim on the west side of the Columbia\nriver, about Ave miles below Nakusp,\nthence west 80 chains; thence south \u2022*<\u25a0'\nchains; thence eaBt 80 chains, more or lean\nto the Columbia river; thence following: tho\nColumbia river 60 ohalna more or less lu m.\nnortherly direction, to the place of oom-\nm'enoement, containing 640 acres more or\nHARRY HOUSTON.\nKBNNETH L. BURNET, P.L.S., Agt.\nDated this 21st day of June, 1903.\nSixty days after date I purpose making\napplication to the Chief Commissioner of\nLands and Works for permission to purchase the following desoribed lands, vis:\nCommencing at a post placed on the oast\nshore of Lower Arrow lake, about SO chains\nsouth of Qeorge A. Thompson's pre-emption, Lot No. 7601, marked \"M. M. F.'n\nN.W, corner post,\" running thence 20\nchains east; thence 80 chains south; thenoe\n20 chains, more or less, west, to the lako\nshore; thence following lake shore to\npoint of comemncement, containing 160\nacres, more or less.\nDated   19th  May,   1906.\nM.  M.   FAUQUIER.\nF, O. FAUQUIER, Agent.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that 60 days from\ndate I Intend to apply to the Hon. the\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works,\nfor permission to purchuso the following\ndescribed lands ln West Kootenay District:\nWest side of Columbia river, commencing\nat a post marked \"William Smoot's S.E.\ncorner,\" planted nt the S.W. corner of\nLot 373, about 3-1 of a mile.west of the\nriver and about seven miles north of Burton City, thence north 100 chains, along\nthe west boundary of Lot 373.; thence west\n40 chains, thence south 1G0 chains; thence\neast 40 chains to point of commencement,\ncontaining G40 acres.\nWILLIAM  SMOOT.\nRALPH SLYE, Agent.\nDated this 31st day of Muy, 190ti.\nNOTICE la hereby given that sixty days\nafter date I intend to apply to the Hon.\nthe Chief Commissioner of Lunds and\nWorks, Victoria, B.C., for permission to\npurchase the following described lande:\nSituated on the west side of Arrow lake,\nabout three miles from the lake shore in\nthe Fosthall Valley: Commencing at a\npost marked \"H. Harlow's northwest corner post,\" thenoe south 80 chains; thence\neast .40 chains; tlience north 99 chalnB;\nthence west 40 chains to point of commencement; three hundred and twenty\nacres,  more or less.\nLocated this 26th day of May, IM.\nH.  HARLOW.\n2. Commencing at tho northwest corner\nof lot No. 4274, thence east 40 ohalna; thence\nnorth 80 chains; thence west 40 chains;\nthence south 80 chains to point of commencement; three hundred and twenty\naores, more or less.\nLocated this 28th day of May, 1906,\nJ.   R.   JAMIESON.\nSituate on the west aide of Upper Arrow\nLake, In the Fosthall Valley, commencing\nat the northwest oorner of lot 862, running\nthence north 80 ohalns; thence weat \u00a30\nchains; thence south 80 chains; thenco\neast 60 chains to point of commencement.\nContaining six hundred and forty acres\nmore or less.\nLocated this 29th day of May, 1906.\nR. NICHOLL, Locator.\n6. J. HARLOW, Agent\nSituate on the west side of Upper Arrow\nLake, In the Fosthall Valley, commencing\nat a post planted SO chains west of tht\nnorthwest corner of lot 863, running thence\nnorth 80 chains; thence west 80 chains;\nthence aouth SO chains; thence eaat **)\nchains to point of commenoemtnt. Containing six hundred and forty aorea more\nor leas.\n' Located thla Mth day of May, 1906,\nF.   WASHBOURNE,   Locator,\n8.  J.  HARLOW,  Agent.\nNOTICB Ib hereby given * that 60 daya\nafter date I Intend to apply to the Hon.\nthe Chief Commissioner of Lands, and\nWorks for permission to purchase the\nfollowing described landa, east of the\nColumbia river, ln West Kootneay dlatrlct:\nCommencing at a post marked \"M. Mak-\ninson'a S.W. Corner,\" thenoe 40 ohalns\neast; thence 40 chains north; thence 40\nchains west; thence 40 chains south, following T. M. Maklnson-s line, to place of\ncommencement, containing 160 aorea, more\nor. less. V\nKENNETH L. BURNET, P.L.B., Agt\nMAOOIE MAKINSON.\nDated at Nakusp, B. C\u201e thts Uth day,\nof June, 1106, ;\n THE DAILT NEWS, NBLSON, B. C.,. THURSDAY. AUGUST 2, 1896\nFRUIT LANDS\nFor Bale on mm T*\u2014m\n60 ACRES AT CRAWFORD BAY\nBoll and aapeet are tha beat.\nClearing light   Price low.\nH. L Croasdaile ft Co.\nOfflc. N<xt door Can. Bank of Ooa\nPhon. M>      nelson. B.O.     V.O.\nGait\nCoal\nAnd <*Mef all Kind*\nTwin* MOT CAM\nW. P. Tierney\nTeMwiwMI\nlater ttrnt, HUM\nLONELY\nSALE\nMei-4-.s klGif\nCLASS SUITS\n 4*\t\nOn or about the let August each\nyear Ihe Fit Reform agencies put\non what they call a Lonely Sale,\nAll the odd line* ot men's sulta are\npicked out and aold at greatly reduced prices.\nWe start our aale today and will\ncontinue tor 12 daya. Suits that\nsold (or 116.00.' \u00bb18.00 and tSO.OO a\nweek ago you can now buy (or\n110.00, 112.60 and $16.00.\nTHE HITJB\n1UOET   So   ~T\u2014JL&a\u2014\ntrnVOm Of MBTAM.\nNew York, Aug. 1-Sllv.r, tt; electrolytic\ncopper, 18 3*8; casting copper, 17 t__ lata,\n16.75.\nLondon, Aug. 1-I.eod, \u00a311 Ua. id.; silver,\nHI 1-16.\nNELSON'S NEWS^DF THE BAY\nHon. S. H. Macintosh cama In from Vlotorla last evening and registered at the\nStrathcona. The ex-governor Is In Uie best\not henlth and spirits and expects to remain here for the next tew daya.\nC*fpt. T. H. Tretheway, superintendent\nof the Ul Plata mines, leaves this morning over the Crow line, to attend a directors and a shareholders' meeting of the\nha Plata Mines, Ltd., at Sherbrooke, <&e.,\non Aug. 10 and 11. He expects to return\nwithin three weeks.\nThe* usual weekly half holiday wlll be\nobserved todny, the majority of the stores\nHosing down after the noon hour. The\nli-Ml.- to Procter and the -donee at tne\ntramway park this evening, announced\nelsewhere are the only two special events\non the amusement program.\nThe annual picnic of Ht. Saviour's Sunday school will be held to Procter today.\nThe Kokanee will leave the olty Whart at\n01:5 a.m. and 2 p.m., and returning wlll\nleave Procter at 7::\u00bb thla evening. The olty\niband wlll be In attendance and the scholars wlll assemble In the mission hall at\nJ-.-45 nnd march to the wharf.\nIn the long fought out ease of Htar vs.\nWhite, the learned chief Justice at Victoria hns adjourned the joint appeals ol\nboth parlies from the decision ot the local\nregistrar on the taxation ot costs, until\nafter tho vacation pending tbo main appeal\nof the Btar M. & M. Co. from the Judgment given at tbe trial of the action. The\napplication of the Byron N. White company for leave to sell the property of the\nSlur m. ft M. Co., to satisfy their Judgment for costs has been dlmntBsed upon\nthe Btar company tiling the deeds of the\nproperty In court. Apparently the end of\nthe litigation Is stil a long way oil*\nYesterday was the last day whleh tne\nA Uls-Chal mere-Bullock company has in\nwhich to ship the hydraulic machinery for\ntho city'* power plant at Bonnington falls,\nunder the temporary agreement reached\nisoine wt-t-kH ngo between the olty council\nnnd the representative of the company.\nwho (hen came here for the purpose. Tha\nmachinery was not shipped and the pen-\nfHISTOBB OF QUALITY\nJUST\nOPENED UP\nA (resh shipment of very fancy Biscuits manufactured Ity Peek, Frean A\nGo., London, England, containing many\nold favorite* and a good many new ones,\nDevonshire Waters.\nCherry Waters'\nFlorence Wafers.\nVenice Waters.\nVanessa\nCafe Nolr\nCoral Drop\nDinner\nFruit Water\nPata-cake\nOyster, 1-lb. and li-lb. tins.\nMadame, 1-lb. tins.\nCountess, 1-lb. tins. \u2022\u2022\nCome In and see them; I hey are\ndelicious.\nHood ft Teetzel\nOKOCER1BS and PROVISIONS.\nK. W. C. BLOCK NBLSON, B. C.\nPHONB 10.\nTwo story house\nand lot in Hume's\naddition \u2014 close to\ncity line. Five rooms\nand large basement\nundivided. \u2022 \" ~ \u25a0\nE&KBIRD\nSAWmUL GOODS\nRubber and Leather Belting.   Sheet, Square;\n;; and Round Packings.   All sizes and kinds.\nEngineer's Brass Goods, Mill Hose, Pink's \u2022\n:: Peavies, Cant Hooks, Pike Poles, Pickaroons, etc.;\n**- <\nPrompt Shipment Bight Prlo\u2014 <\niThe J. H. Ashdown Hardware Co., Ltd*;\nNBLSON   BRANCH !\nolty agreed upon of *50 per day Is now in\nforce. J. O. Olllice, the local representative of the company, stated yesterday that\nhe was expecting an explanatory letter\nfrom headquarters, which would -be handed to the mayor immediately on Its arrival\nThe whole matter will come betore tne\nolty council at its meeting on next Mon*\nday evening.\nThe dlrectora of (tne Kootenay ***rult\nGrowers' association held a brief meeting\nIn J. K. Annable's ottlce yesterday afternoon, there being present James Johnstone,\nIn the chair and J W Ford, O. Bourke, C.\nQ. Broadwood, H. H. Sewell, J. Hysiop,\nand P. J. Sammons. Mr. Annnble waa indisposed and not abb. to be present. A\nletter was read from Frank T, Shutt,\nchemist at the centrut experimental farm,\nOttawa, stating that he would be in Nelson\nshortly and would be glad to analyse any\nsoil ottered for the purpose and to give\nany' wanted Information in his particular\nline. Mr. Shutt wll) be In the city for\nthree days and Is expected here about\nSaturday. It was decided lo send an exhibit of fruit, etc., to the Moose Jaw fair\nand to IsBUe certlncates to shareholders\nat once.   The meeting then adjourned.\nThe 20,000 club wiU hold Ita second weekly\ndance at the tramway park pavilion this\nevening. Both cars wlll bo In commission,\nIrwin's orchestra wlll he In attendance,\nthe grounds will he Illuminated, and an\nenjoyable lime Is anticipated. Tickets for\nthe dance can be obtained on the cars entitling the holders to a trip out to tne\npark and return as well as admission to\nthe pavilion.\nA meeting of the exeoutlve committee\nof the diocese of Kootenay was held in\nthe mission hall of Ht. Saviour's church\nyesterday afternon, there being present:\nRevs, archdeacon Beer, F. ll. Uranam,\nHenry Steele of Grand Forks, C. A. Proeunler, Revelstoke, and E. A. Crease, G.\nJohnstone, J. M. Lay and Fred Irvine, the\nlatter acting as secretary in the place ot\nV.*. A. Jowett, who Is In .England. The\nchief business disposed of was the adjusting of the nnance-t ror special work done\nin the several parishes and the arranging\nof student missionary work during the atu.\ndent's vacation.\nflTRATHCONA \u2014 Mr. and Mrs. Moore,\nProcter; G. O. Buchaan, Kaslo; .P. J.\nMeade, J.'F. Gallagher, Cleveland ;H. C.\nCornish, 3. D. Anderson, Trail; F. F.\nHays, Spokane; Mrs. G. V. Holden, Deer\nPark; R, A. Rowe. E. Jacobs, C. H.. Macintosh, Victoria; O. C. Rose, Kelowna; C,\nWilson. Greenwood. \t\nPIANOS\nare an essential part' of the equipment ot every home.  The\nia the beat on the market. We sail\ntheae pianos on easy toma\u2014llu\ndown and $10 per month. If you\ncannot play fet a Pianola. It Is\nalmost a human piano player,\nThe STANDARD FURNITURE Co.\n\u2022;\u00bb,',   OOMPLtim   aWUM KnUTOUM AMD nUMUlTAKBIW.\nHUME\u2014Archdeacon Beer, E. E Chipman,\n~. B. Slrathearn, Kaslo; o. H. Ay cord\nSew Denver; R. Stewart, h. Camp, C. K.\nMelllsh, P. H. Simmons, Vancouver; N.\nT. Hutchinson und wife, Lethbrldgs; o w\nOrchard and wife, XV. A. Stewart,, Moyle;\n3. A. Sutherland, Ferguson; W, C. liay-\nward, H. Marshall, p. MacUiughlln, Vmlr;\nAirs. A.* Mcl-nrty, Portage la Prairie; A.\nHogg, New Tork; Mrs. E. Kester, Greenwood; S. Baxter, Victoria; G. F. nice,\nRcveif-toke.\nQUEENS - Ethel Blackman, Mrs. C.\nLoomis, Rosslnnd; T. D. Woodcock, Slocan; J, ll. Robinson, Minneapolis; J. Malum, Lanydon J. Hlrlsch. Cranbrook; Mr.\nund Mrs. Gammon, Montreal; H. Smith,\nJ. H. Hawthornthwaite, Ymlr; A l> West-\nby, Sandon.\nN.EL-SON-P. N, Dolally, Nakusp; Mr.\nand Mrs. Trowern and family, Brandon; H\nS. Luchvlgson, MaryBVille; A. McGIU,\nGrand Forks; P.- Shcran, P. F. Wynne,\nSpokane.\nGRAND CENTKA.L-L. Robinson, Bonnington; XV. E. Morgan, Trull, Mis M.\nWlgen. Miss H. Hagcn. Creston; J. Reld,\nGrand Forks; F, B. Lucas,,Slocan Junction; C. Necomen, Kaslo; H. Jackson,\nJ. Brain, Tmlr; J. Grant, A. Johson,\nGreenwood.\nMADDKN'-O. Stueben. Goldhlll mine; 8,\nPower, W. Ross, Shields; J. H. Uurrle,\nVernon;-W. Connolly, Brie; h. E, McFarlane, Grand Forks J. Cumin, ymlr 1*.\nWade, C, Heir, Eholt; R. Dolgllsh, Cascade; J. A. Teo, [.oon lake.\nKOOTOMAY-I. FUgus,  Rambler mine;\nSALT AND PEPPER\nSHAKERS\nJust arrived\u2014Cut Olass Salt and Pepper Shakers, Sterling\nTops, only\n\\ 75c A PAIR\nThese are exceptional value and should not be overlooked.   Our Out Glass values cannot be surpassed.\nJEWELRY MANUFACTURING\u2014In this department we\ncan repair your old jewelry and make lt as good as new.\nWe guarantee our work and do lt promptly. Old pieces pf\nJewelry are taken and made Into new articles. Mailorders\nreceive prompt'and careful attention,\nJ.O. PATENAUDE\nwhtch**w*m\nt-MUFMTUHItlC -tWIUi\nPHC-H* 183\nOHICIAH\n... Alaska Snowball Soda\nThis Is a very delicious egg drink, try\none.\nNice Bipe Watermellons\nA (resh shipment Just in.   Come early\nwhile they last.\nHAZLEWOOD ICE CREAM PARLORS\nPhone 206\nS. H. SEANEY\nSTILL ON\nOUR SPECIAL\nCLEANJNG-UP SALE\nIS STILL ON.\nIf you are open for a\nsnap in a pair of shoes\nnow is the time to p|ck\n'em up.\nRoyal Shoe Store\nR. ANDREW & CO.\nAgents (or Nettleton's, Slater's*, Bell's.\n'a~m\nWe carry a full and complete line and\noan accommodate the most particular\nsmoker. Our Bpecial line is the well\nknown and popular\nbut besides this line we are well stocked\nwtth Petersons and other well known\nmakes.   The prlceB are right.\nCabinet Oigar Store\nC. B. HAHHEW, Prop., Baker St.\nTODAY'S\nSPECIALS\nCanteloupes\nPeaches\nPlums\nCherries\nEating; Apples\nTomatoes\nCucumbers\nGreen Corn\nLONGHURST'S\nPhon* ag Baker at.\nREGATTA\nDAYS % %\nHave interfered with your cooking\nduties at home. Don't worry hut 'phone\nthe Star Bakery and we will supply you\nwith all the bread, cakes, pastry, etc.,\nthat you want It is made of only the\nbest materials and we can guarantee our\ngoods to be better than the best.\nNEW SEASON'S HAY\nOur atock of \"1906 Timothy is how\ncomplete and we will be receiving from,\nnow on regular Shipments, The quality\nIs choice. Let us figure with you when\nin the market, We sell tu any quantity\nfrom a BALD to a CARLOAD.'\nCm| Ship Straight Cars Promptly\n'The Braskman-Ker Milling Co., Ltd.\nFruit Jars    ,\nand\n*.\"\nJelly\nGlasses\nWe have the always reliable\nCROWN FRUIT JARS\nPints ...,T. \u00bb1.00\nQuarts .., -s..11.26\nHalf Gallons  .-.... .$1.50\nJEt,LY GLASSES\nHalf Pint, tin tops ,...:.lie\nRubber. Rings 10c a dozen.\nBell Trading Company\nNEW GOODS\n' Sponges, Loofahs, Toilet Soap and Talcum Powders. A New Supply of Gillette Razors and Blades.\nWhale Oil' Soap and Quassia Chips in large\nquantities.\nWM. RUTHERFORD\nNBLSON, B. C.\nCUT OUT THE LOSERS\n- -*s .\nIn your line of Candy. Warm weather has its own particular 'sweets\nand they have a delicacy all their own. We make them and they art\nalways fresh'.- '\nMcDonalds Exquisite Chocolates\nare a bigger favorite than ever, with the trade whioh knows quality.\nfiEtfi J. A. M\u00b0DONALDa^\nHAVE YOU 8EEN THEM?\nPONY   WASH   BOARDS\nIt's too hot to use a large wash tub and\nboard these days. Try one of our \" PONIES.\"\nThey can be used in a small hand basin.\nPrice 25c each.\nC. A. BENEDICT\nCorner Josephine and Silica Streeta. -Phone 7\n1 roniiroiimin wiw vim\\wimi\\wi\ni     A GENTLEMAN'S WANTS     !\nMARRIED\nBHOOKE-OA-TT-IN-On July 31. 1906, at\nSt. Saviour's church. Nelson, -B.C., by\n*Rev. P. H. Grnham, rector, Thomas\nCharles, youngest hod of Mr, and Mrs.\nH. Brooke of Cawdor, Robs, England,\nto Manle, eldest daughter of Mr. ana\nMrs. D. Catlln of Bedford, England.\nW. Bradley. Salmo; C. Smith, Moyle; O.\nBamer, Benton; C. Welby, Belgium; o,\nOleson, Sweden.\nBlABTLHTT-J. White, A. h, MacNeltle-r,\nSpokane; T. Wllon, Phnenslx.\nCLUB\u2014J. Mocha, Denver; B. Rowe, J.\nBrooks, Smelter Junction: T. Harris, Na-\nkttBp;  B.   F.  Poole, Shields.\nSii.j..uKOOKN-P. Sylvester, Wlnlaw; J\n\u25a0Flciln, Moyle C, XV, Robinson, R, C*\nMyers, T. Ireland, O. Davis, Ymlr; C,\nSolley, Vancouver; J. J. Regan, ttmerter\nJunction. *\nBOTAIr-W. J. Walker, Q. Hansen, Van-\ncouver; A. T.  Waters, Rossland,\nOUR ROBSON LANDS\nAre select, level, free from rock, easily\ncleared, excellent soil, beautifully located\non the Columbia river.\nExamine these iffids and you will want\nno others.\nCALL OR WRITE   FOR OUR BEAUTIFUL\nBOOKLET.\nricDermid & McHardy\nTh. star\nBakery\nPHONB 268\nCHOQUETTE BROS.\nBAKBR STRBBT\nNEW  CASH   STORE\nAUGUST\nWe clean up all llnea of Summer Dry\nGood*\nBargains  and Special\nCut Prices\nOn all Summer llnea.'\n_ Muslins\nClearing lines at about half regular price\nWash Shirts\nCut' (ram 14.60 to 13.00.   |7.60 Suite cut\nto 16.00\nDress Goods\n160 Yards Spot Luatre, regular 60c,\nnow 30c a yard. 100 tarda Tweed Lustre\nregular 650 now 40c a yard. Everything In Summer Goods must be cleared\nout, at Bargain Prices.\nStandard Patterns.\nKerr & Co,\nBAKBR ITRIU-T, MHJM*,\n= FOOT COMPORT\nZ is something thai, everyone Ik loolt-\nS Ing for.  Wo can fit you out with &\nC pair of -the comfortable Walkover\nm shoes and you will uot be sacrificing\n5 style either.   These shoes are the\nbest on the market.\ns NECKWEAR\n5 Distinctive--exclusive\u2014fi\u00abw .styles\nS and at prices about   a third   less\n\u00a3 than you would pay   elsewhere,\nS An excellent assortment.   See our\nS window.\nHATS\n\"Put on the Ud.\" Step In and get\na too new straw or Panama Hat,\nSylea galore.   Prices to suit.        \u201e ;\nSUITS\nSemi-Ready Clothing is known all\nover Canada. It Is just what It is\nnamed\u2014tailored clothing all ready\nto be fitted to the man and completed In a few minutes. Why pay\n130 for a made-lo-order suit when\n$16.00 will buy one made-to-fl* at\nour etore.\n\u25a0J. J-- C3rXl.\u2014Z\u2014~.\nS MBN'S FUENJ8HIN09\nBAKKE BTRBai \u2022\nI\n\u25a0r-JIMIIMill.lllll.llll.lll.il UUUliliU UiMiU iMMMMlMiiiimS\nA SNAP IN AN IMPROVED RANCH\n. Containing 167 acres of excellent (rult nil, within elx miles of Nelson; \u00bb\nacres of this ranch are cleared, 8 acres plowed; 20 acres tn Timothy. Also\napple, cherry, plum and pear treon pUnted. A good quantity of potatoes\nand all kinds of vegetables ln stock tor winter one. \u201e\nNew house, llx'ib feet; good Darn isxso feet; poultry house 12x20 feet.\nA good spring' of water right by the dwelling house.  Apply to\nTAYLOR * M\u00b0QUARRII\nSpecial Sale of Spectacles\nand Optical Goods\nEverything tn the optical line goes at half price, August 1-10,1906.\nTour eyesight properly, aclentlltoally and thoroughly examined, tested and\nfitted by M. Mecklenberg, M. A\u201ethe celebrated eyesight specialist, who,\nwill lit you with ths proper glasses even, after others have failed. Coma,\nsee and he'convinced. Perfect satisfaction warranted.\nCanada Onig ani Book Go's Stores\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1906_08_02","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0382306","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : F.J. Deane","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1906-08-02 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1906-08-02 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}