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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":" \"\u00a3e&l- CPpj\\\n35*\nVOL. iS\nttSSSfe\njF.M^M\nNELSON. B. 0., SUM DAT, APRIL 14,\n1907\nENORMOUS\nPENALTIES\nMay be Imposed Upon the\nStandard Oil Co.\nof Indiana\nLiable to Fine of Over Twenty-nine\nMillion Dollars For Receiving Rebates on Oil Shipments\nANOTHER DIVIDEND.\nRowland, B.C., April 13.\u2014The\nusual quarterly dividend of 2ft\nper cent on the capital stock of\nthe Consolidated Mining ft Smelting company of Canada was declared on Friday, and is payable\non May 1st. The dividend\namounts to about $120,000.\nThis is the sixth dividend declared by the company and up to date:\nIt has disbursed dividends aggregating a little over $700,000.\nChicago, April 13.\u2014The Standard Oil\ncompany of Indiana, which has been on\ntrial for six weeks before Judge K. M.\nLandis, of the United States district\ncourt, tonight was found guilty on.\n1463 counts of receiving rebates from the\nChicago ft Alton railroad, on shipments\nof oil from Whiting, Inrt., to east St.\nLouts, Illinois. There were originally\n1903 counts In the indictment, 440\ncounts failing on errors. If the. verdict\nbe sustained the oil company is liable\nto a maximum fine of $29,270,000. The\nElkina' law which, the Indictment charges the company violated, provides a\nOne of $1000 to $200 for each offense.\nPending a new trial, which John S. Miller, chief counsel for the defense announced would be applied for Immediately, no penatly will be fixed by the court.\nEach count related to a carload shipment When the case came to trial the\nattorneys for the defense endeavored.to\nhave all the counts in the- indictment\nthrown out on technicalities, but the\ncourt ordered that each count be taken\nup and considered separately, which was\ndone. The 440 counts on which errors\nwere found were dropped. The defense\nthen put forth all its efforts toward\nproving that they were unaware of the\ntact that the six cent rate had not been\nfiled with the interstate commerce commission as provided by the Elkina law\nEvidence was offered by the government showing that It was the duty of\nthe company's officials to see whether\nthe rate was in the hands of the interstate commerce commission.\nTouching upon this point judge Landis,\nIn his charge to the jury said: \"The indictment alleges that the defendant accepted a concession knowingly. To sustain this averment the proofs need not\nestablish that the defendant had actual\nknowledge of the lawful rate. It was the\n\u2022duty of the defendant diligently to en*\ndeavor in good faith to get from the\n'Chicago ft Alton Railway company the\n\u25a0lawful rate, by applying to one of the\nrailroad companies officials. In making this endeavor defen.'an m pre iftu-\nn\\ to have known that the ra'lrc il company would be guilty of a mn'.\u2022'm-aiwr\nif it gave the defendant a rite on inn-\n\u00bbtate traffic which was not set down on\n'paper and a-copy of the schedule fllei\nwith the Interstate commor a cormn's\nEton.\"\nIn regard to an assertion mads by thh\ndefense that the Standard Oil company\ndid not know of the existence of the\ntariff on which the Indictment was based,\nJudge Landis said the case submitted by\nthe government went to show that there\n-was a department in the Standard OH\n\u25a0company which dealt with oil lots of\nless than one carload and that it apparently would have been necessary for\n\u25a0the head or this department to be familiar with the tariff In'question. The\nJury was out less than three hours and\nreached the verdict on the first ballot.\nFRUITGROWERSMEETlNG\nJ QUESTION OP AFFILIATION   WITH\nPROVINCIAL SOCIETY\nj REVISION    OF    BY-LAWS    UNANIMOUSLY CARRIED.\nThere was an Interesting session of\nthe Kooiuuay Fruit Growers' association\nyesterday afternoon at a special meeting\nof the society, the specified object of\nthe meeting being the amendment of\nthe bylaws of the institution. There al-\n. so came up, however, the question of the\n1 affiliation of the local society with a\n[[ reorganized provincial society which\nwould look after the Interests of the\nfruit growers of tho#whole of this province with regard to the marketing of\nthe fruit In the northwest. Incidentally\ncame up the Lord's Day Act and the\nfreight service utid rates. These gave\ngeneral dissatisfaction and, In fact, It\nwas proposed that the association run\na small steamer to pick tip the fruit\nThe changes in the bylaws are as follows: (1) Date of annual meeting\nchanged from January to first Wednesday In November; (I!) the president is\nwell as the directors shall be appointed\nby ballot at the annual meeting; (3) the\nvice-president and secretary-treasurer\nshall be appointed at the first subsequent\nmeeting of the directors. Articles four\nand Ave are unaltered, dealing with quorums and quarterly meetings, but In\narticle 6 the election of a director to\nfill a Tpcancy shall bo made by the\nboard upon, eight days' notice, not one\n, month. Articles 7 and 8, dealing with\n! the duties of the chair, are practically\nunaltered. In article 9, touching the\nrtutlea of the secretary-treasurer the\nclause stating (hat no payments an to\nbe made without the written consent of\nthe secretary and president Is expunged\nand the alteration makes the firing of\na bond by the secretary optional with\nthe board. Article 10 transfers the duty\nof passing of accounts from a finance\nQUESTION OF\nDISARMAMENT\nTo Be Pressed by British\n.Delegates to Hague\nlonference\ncommittee to the board of directors.\nArticle 11 deals with exhibition stands.\nArticle 12 conferring certain privileges\nupon associate membership on payment\nof an annual fee, is revoked. Article\n13, now 12, mikes the financial year end\non October 31 and not December 31.\nArticle 14 now 13, as to audits, is unaltered. Article 15, now 14, dealing with\nchanges in the constitution is unaltered.\nIn dealing with these revisions of the\nbylaws there was no exception taken by\nthe meeting until article 9 was reached,\nwhen, by an amendment the letter book\nof the association was thrown open to\nany member of the board of directors.\nNo other change was proposed.\nJames Johnstone then urged the adoption of a further bylaw by which each\nmember of the Kootenay Fruit Growers'\nassociation pays one dollar annually to\na central association, the B. C. Fruit\nGrowers. Mr. Johnstone declared' that\nother local associations were affiliating\nwith the provincial association and there\nwould be the advantage of cheaper buying of supplies to say nothing of a better organized market.\nIt was explained that the central association would apportion the markets'\nso that local salesmen of the various\nlocal associations would not be sending\nfruit to the same place, unless the supply\nwere unequal to the demand, when notl-\n\u25a0ication would be made by the central\nboard. \u201e\nThe question of the legality of charging a member of a joint stock association an annual fee for such a purpose\nwas mooted\nThe mater was then dropped for th\u00ab\nmoment and the bylaws as altered' were\npassed as a whole.\nJames Johnstone moved and T. Morley-\nseconded, that the action of the board\nof horticulture In enforcing the cleaning\nof orchards be endorsed. Mr. Johnstone\nsaid that on a recent visit to the coast\nand island he had seen many orchards\novergrown with moss and infested with\nall kinds of pests. This carried unanimously,\nJames Johnstone moved and J. Hyslop\nseconded, that delegates be sent to a convention of provincial fruit growers to beheld at Sloamous on April 25 and 26,.\nwith a view of regulating the market In\nthe northwest and appointing agents-\nthere to receive and distribute produce.\nIn future, Mr. Johnstone explained, the-\nB. C .association membership would Derestricted to local associations and Individual members would no longer be<\npermitted. There would bo no obanec-\nof getting everything arranged tor the\ncoming strawberry season.\nThis carried and T. Morley was appointed delegate,\nA resolution was then passed, moved:\nby T. Morley and seconded by T. M.\nSturgess, authorizing the affiliation of\nthe Kootenay Fruit Gravers' association with the B. C. Fruit Growers, and\nthe payment by the local to the provincial society of a per capita charge per\nannum not to exceed- one dollar, the\namount to he Bxed by the B. C. Fruit\nGrowers.\nJ. W. Ford wanted the association to\ntake up the matter of the Lord's Day\nAct, which If It were enforced would,\nprevent the picking of fruit on Saturday\nas It could not be shipped on Sunday,\nand as no berries could be picked on\nSunday none could be shipped on Monday. Hence no fruit could be shipped\nfrom Saturday to Tuesday.\nC. W. Busk pointed out that according to the C. P. R. arrangements fnitt.\ncould not be shipped In that Interval.\nSome discrepancies wore pointed out as.\nto the flat rates on fruit obtaining locally and a committee was directed to b\u00bb\nappointed to take up the whole matter\nwith the transportation company with a.\nview of finding out what were their proposed arrangements for the summer.\nANOTHER C. P. R. WRECK\nOttawa, April 13.\u2014The westbound'\nCanadian Pacific transcontinental train.\nJumped the tracks at Sondpolnt. S6 mll<w\nwest of Ottawa, about 4 o'clock this\nmorning, as a result of a broken rail.\nThree passengers In the tourist car,\nJohn McBr'de, and Charles Burr, ot Montreal, and G. Belanger, address unknown,\nwere badly cut and bruised, but beyond\nthese three, no one elso was injured, although the passengers were badly ehak\nen up. The train was Blowing up, coming Into a station, which accounts for\nthe comparatively small injury. Thei\ndining oar and sleeper did not leave the\ntrack.\nWrecking crewB from Ottawa and'\nChalk river Immediately rushed to th>\nspot to clear the tracks.\nFATAUTYAT MICHEL\nMichel, April 13.\u2014Fred Kubn'.a, a Slav-\nonion boy, about 14 years old, aviw fatally Injured at noon today ami died two-\nhours later. The deceased was employed\non his first shift as brakeman on a motor\nId No. 9 mine. When hauling out a\ntrain of loaded oars he threw the switch\nwrong and was caught by the cars, 2\u00bb\nloaded care passing over Mm; both leg*\nand one arm and his head being frightfully mangled. He was taken to Michel\nhospital but was beyond -human aid and\ndied \u2022hortly after. To* Interment will\ntake place at Michel cemetery on Monday. Deceased's father, John Kubaia.\nresides hen.\nGreat Britain Has No Hapc of Achieving;\nMore Than, a Moral Success\u2014Germany Ktieats Raising of Question\nLondon, April 13.\u2014The delegates who\nwill represent Great Britain at The\nHague peace conference have been selected, and their names will be announced in a few days. Considering the prominent part Britain will take in the conference, In view of her proposals for the\nreduction of the expenditures on armaments, there is little public interest\nshown' here in the approaching meeting.\nThis Is largely due to the belief among\npublic men that the discussions will have\nno result so far as the more important\nsubjects are concerned, owing to the\ngreat divergence in opinion among tho\npowers; and the decision of several governments to abstain from partlcipiatlng\nin the discussion of any articles of the\nRussian program which they believe will\nnot lead ot useful results. The same\nopinion is held to a certain extent in official circles here, but nevertheless the\nHrUiPli delegates will be instructed- to\nbring up the .question of the reduction\nof expenditures on armaments. They\nwill broach the subject immediately after M. Nelldoff's opening address, in\nwhich the chief Russian delegate will\nexplain the progruni, if the subject is\nuot included In that program.\nGreat Britain is taking this stop not\nbecause of the belief that the powers\nwill agree to reduce their armaments but\nbecause she believes the discussion will\nhave a good moral effect between the\npeoples of the various countries.\nThe British government, therefore,\ndoes not understand why Germany\nshould dissent from the proposal to\nbring up the question, as to nullify it\nher delegates would simply have to vote\nagainst It.\nMEN WANT.OQUT WoRK\nGREAT UNEASINESS AMONG FER-\nN1E BUSINESSMEN.\nFBRNIE'S CUSTOMS RETURNS FOR\nMONTH OF MARCH,\n(Special to The Daily News)\nFertile, April 13.\u2014The seriousness 01\nthe differences between the mine operators anil miners Is the chief topic of conversation here at the present time, and\nthe teeung amongst businessmen Is one\nof great uneasiness.\nThere can be no doubt that the vote\ntaken on the 11th In Fernle expressed\nthe feeling of the men throughout the\ndistrict, and also showed that the otfl-\ncers of the union could not control tnem\nfor any length of time in their desire to\ncease work until their demuuds were acceded to.\nVive-president Lewis of the United\nMine Wurkers of America, Is expected\nhore on Wednesday and until his arrival\nnothing of u definite nature will be\nknown as to what action the men will\ntake. It is understood that the mine\noperators have appealed to the government lor an investigation by a committee of inquiry under the new Conciliation\nAct, and the public will then have an opportunity of seeing what the act will be\nable to accomplish when put to the test..\nThe returns Issued today by the local\ncustoms office for the month of March\nare as follows:\nValue of imports, dutiable  $30,-133\nfree     2,214\n$38,647\nWEEK'S ORE SHIPMENTS\nMARKED    IMPROVEMENT    IN    TUB\nBOUNDARY DISTRICT\nLATENESS    OF    SEASON    OPERATES\nAGAINST SLOGAN\nThe chief news of the week is the payment of yet another dividend by the Consolidated Mining and Smelting company,\npayable on May 1, This In the sixth dividend since the formation of the company.\nThe Boundary mines are snipping more\nfreely and the smelter at Greenwood has\nmade a record week. Large as are the\ntotals they will be yet further increnaed\nwith the completion of the Improvements\nnow in process of Installation at the properties of the B. C, Copper and Dominion\nCopper companies. Unless there Is a hitch\nin the fuel situation there Is every likelihood of a record summer in mining in\nthe Boundary* This also applies to the\nRosaland district, where the taking over\nby the Le Rol of the Spttiee, gives an\nearnest of work on what Is lecat y regatded\nas a promising property.\nNearer to Nelson it may be noted that\nthe Queen Victoria la about to Instal machinery with a view to ah increased output, and that the La Plata mill this week\nwlil increase its output 25 per cent. The\nseason has hardly opened as yet In many\nparts of the Slocan and Lardeait but there\nIs every preparation for extended work\nthis summer. In the Vmlr and adjoining\ndistricts capital is Investing more largely\nthun heretofore and the outcome wll. probably show In the shipments' before the\nend of the year.\nAppended wll. be found the ore sh'pmpnts\nand smelter receipts in detail for the past\nweek and year to date in tons\nBOUNDARY SHIPMENTS\nMINE Week     Year\nGranby  17,630     1BSSH\nMother Ixide  4.86S      46,841\nBronklyn    1,\u00bb6       23.103\nSnowshoe  1.497      18.057\nRawhide  1.KB      17.721\nBunBet       896       7,3t\u00bb\nBmma        22\u00ab        2,718\nMountain RoBe         03        1,665\nB.   C      16        1,346\nIdaho      513 61H\nOro Denoro     176 Ii6\nMorrison        1W 310\nOther mines   656\nTotal  *.29.\u00ab2 3.7,646\nROSSLAND  SHIPMENTS\nLe  Roi    2,\u00ab8 37,337\nCentre Star  1.O06 23874\nLe Rol  No. 2      KB 6,2fc\u00bb\nWhite  Bear        207 428\nOther mines   l.\u00bbW\nTotal     42* 6MW\nKOOTBNAY-SLOCAN SHIPMENTS\nSullivan  ; 'WO M\u00bb\nLa Ptatft    77 1,131\nLa Plata, milled  435 6.376\nSt. Eugene   668 3.M7\nQueen     28 IS*\nQueen,   milled   186 2.776\nSecond, Relief, milled   146 2.1B\nHunter'V  W. 1.M\nEureka   1* \u00ab0\nWhitewater  :   \u00bb M\nQueen Victoria  38 872\nWhitewater Deep   18 W6\nLone Bachelor  27 184\nOther mines    \u20144.W\n.$1,008.57\n.. 7311.35\n.. 116.40\n,.     165.01)\n'*\u25a0      t\nDuty collected\u2014$8,771.43.\nInland Revenue\u2014\nSpirits\t\nMalt\t\nCigars \t\nLicense fees \t\n$2,626.32\nA. Berrldge, late colliery accountant of\nthe Coal Creek mines, has been appointed head bookkeeper at the head office in\nFernle of the Crow's Nest Fosb Coal\ncompany, and R F. Ambery of the operating department becomes cashier of the\ncompany.\nSNOW BIXKJKS TRAINS\nUnprecedented State of-Affairs in Old\nQuebec.\nMontreal, April 13.\u2014It Is almost an\nunprecedented thing for trains to be\nblocked in snow drifts almost In the\nmiddle of April, but this has occurred\nrepeatedly during the past few days n\nfew miles east of Quebec, The Intercolonial railway was the worst sufferer,\nUs litre running through St. Charles,\n34 miles east of Levis, where the storm\nwas at its height. Tracks were covered\nwith drifts twelve feet deep, and train\nafter train was stalled, being hung up\nIn snow for 24 hours. Passengers from\ndelayed trains, which reached Montreal\nyesterday, state that there were drifts 42\nt\u00abt deep of snow atom? toe tracks while\nin the village of 9t Charles, snow was\nriled up between nouses fully thirty feet\ndeep,\nTotal    2,474      M.264\nThe total shipments from the mines in\nthe above districts for the past week were\n36,530 tons and for the year to date 380,408\ntons.\nQRANBY RECEIPTS\nGrand Forks, D.C.\nGranby  17,(30     1582*1\nEmma       210 979\nOther mines   143\nTotn|       17.840 159.5+5\nB. C. COPPER CO. RECEIPTS\nGreenwood, B.C.\nMother Lode  4.W 46.841\nSnowshoe      480 J,\u00ab0\nn    0                            16 1.346\n      16 1,249\nEmma\nMorrison\n  100\nNapoleon    ***\nOro Denoro  l'6\nOther mines  \t\nTotal\n.v.-  5,911      59,bb\"\nDOMINION COPPER CO, RECEIPTS\nBoundary Falls, B.C.\nBrooklyn    1,888      22:03\nRawhide  1,953      17.721\nSunset       896       7,268\nMountain Roue         96        1,599\n513\nIdaho\n512\nTotal    &\u25a0***\nTRAIL SMELTER RECEIPTS\nTrail, B.C.\nCentre Star \t\nLe   Rol   \t\nSnowBhoe   *\u2022\u25a0\nLe Rol NO. 0 \t\n8t, Eugene \t\nUi Plata      (\u00bb\nEureka \u2022\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\nWhite Bear  \t\nQueen Victoria\t\nLone Bachelor        \u00ab\nQueen  \u2022      **\nother mines \t\n4e,:M\n1,006\nS3.S74\n1,0*'.\n20,171!\n1.017\n8.1*7\nKB\n6,2.'#\nMS\n2,!\u00ab\n77\n1,131\n149\n480\n207\n428\n38\nMl\n3,243\nTotal .\n.\u00bb...     4,795 67,4St\nHALL, MIKES SMELTER RECEIPTS\nNelson, B.C.\n    loi est\n      18 l\u00abi\n      10 Tl\n  4,41?,\nHunter V.\t\nWhUewater Peep\nWhitewater \t\nOther mines \t\n138\n\u00b0 LE ROI: SMBLTBR RECEIPTS\nNorthport, Wash.\nL.R01  >\u2022\u00ab\u2022\nKlrst Thought        fo\nOther mlncB\nTotal\nTOaWLY\nFOR BAH\nDecision of JhaW's Counsel Which Will' Be\nFought by Jerome\nMo Intends [to Press Cbarte M Murder\nii First Degree\u2014Ontario's premier\nComment* <m the Trial.\n. 1,467\nu,:ci\n17.000\n1,183\n1,240\nnvas\nMARYSVILLB SMELTER RECEIPTS\nMarysvUle, B.C.\nSullivan .,     600        9,004\nThe total amount of reeetptt reported\nfrom the local and forelfn mlnea for the\npant week were ,18,090 tons end for the\nyear to dale M9,fl56 tnnn.\nNew York, April 14.\u2014Setting * t rest\nail rumors as to their present Intentions,\nJ. Russell Peabody, associated with! Del-\nphln M. Dehnas, chief counsel for Hi irry\nK. Thaw, said late today, after a 45 iiin-\nutes conference with the prisoner, \\\\ iat\nan application, for Thaw's release would\nbe made. As to -what steps would fcue\ntaken he declined to say. There were\nvarious rumors during the day that habeas corpus proceedings\/might be brought*\nand It was said that the Thaw family\nstands ready to furnish ball In almost\nany amount to secure the young man's\nrelease.\nDistrict attorney Jerome announced\ntoday that he would vigorously oppose\ngranting of bail to the prisoner and added that he intended to prosecute hint- for\nmurder in the first degree. This latter\nassertion was In reply to a suggestion\nthat he had compromised with the defendant's counsel on a plea of Insanity,\nand would agree to send Thaw to Matte-\nwan.\nThe next Interesting development of\nthe day was when Mr. Peabody left\nThaw, after a. late visit, and said, In reply to questions as to stories that Thaw\nhad changed his counsel.\n\"Mr. Thaw authorized me to say that\nup to the present time he has made no\nchange of counsel. You may say that as\nemphatically as you please. Of course,\nwe do not know what will transpire next\nweek.\"\niMr. Delmas held a long conference\nwith Thaw today, and Mrs. Harry K.\nThaw saw her husband during the visiting hour.\nA somewhat sensational development\nof the day was the publication of a letter said to have been written by Howard\nNesblt, \u25a0EvelytoThaw'ir brother;1 explafti-\ning his position- In the case! and asking\nfor money from Thaw.\nAltogether Thaw spent a quiet day In\nthe Tombs. The Influx of mall at all\ndeliveries which has kept him busy since\nhe first went to a cell, was somewhat\njess today. Instead of the one hundred\nletters which he recel\/d every morning\nup to the day of the verdict, but twenty-\nnine came In this forenoon and the other\ndeliveries also fell off.\nMrs. Harry K. Thaw was somewhat\nwan and worn when she appeared at the\nTombs today, but seemed in good spirits.\nOther members of the Thaw family'remained at their hotel,\nToronto, April 13.\u2014Premier Whitney,\nwhen asked what he thought of the\nThaw trial and its conclusion, said:\n\"I read practically all the proceedings or the Thaw trial from the beginning. In my opinion Thaw should have\nbeen convicted of murder In the 'first degree. I have no time nt present to go\nInto details and give reasons In full. The\nJury were a very intelligent body of\nmen and seem to Iruvc considered the\nmatter from a proper standpoint. All\nthe talk about the high law and the\nunwritten law was disregarded by the\njury and very properly so. I was very\nmuch struck by the ability and patience\nshow by the judge, who evidently desired to prevent a miscarriage of justice.\n\"Mr. Delmas, counsel for the defense.\nIn my opinion, showed very great ability in conducting his case in a manner\nso as not to antagonize anybody during the whole trial. I was, however, a\nlittle disappointed in his address to the\njury, and it would seem there is a similar feeling among the professional men\nill New York. I think tho district attorney's management of the prosecution admirable. There are many other points\nIn connection with the trial which I\nmight dilate upon, but I have not time\nnow.\"\nThe disagreement of the Thaw jury is\nthe main topic on the streets here and at\nthe clubs. Opinion Is diversified as to\nwhether Thaw is insane, but there is o\npreponderence of opinion that Thaw\nshould have been sent to the chair.\nRAID ON GAMINGHOUSE\nCANADIAN STOCK AND GRAIN CO.'S\nROOMS VISITED.\nSEVEN  ARRESTS    MADE    BY THE\nPOLICE\u2014INSTRUMENTS SEIZED\nWinnipeg, April 13.\u2014The rooms of\nthe Canadian Stock & Grain Co. were\nraided again this afternoon by the police\ndepartment and seven men were taken\nInto custody, upon the charge of keeping and frequently a gaming house.\nThe men arrested were George W. C.\nWood, Dale A. Smith, Pm] McGIll, H. '\nL. Sohtvan, George Westaway, H. A. j\nWeetaiway, H. A. Nichols, and Thomas\nNorth, and after waiting about the police\nstation for a time for the preparation\nof the necessary papers, they were arraigned before magistrate Daly and were\nadmitted' to ball la the sum of 1200 each\nMINISTERS* PAY RAISED\nHalifax, N.S., April 13\u2014Salaries\nof the members of the Nova\nScotia government will hereafter\nbe $6000 annually, In addition to\ntheir sessional indemnity of $500\nas members of the legislature and\nthe premier will have $1000 extra.\nA bill to give effect to this has\nbeen Introduced in the house of\nassembly.\nto appear for trial later.\nThis is the second visit of the police\nto these rooms and upon the occasion of\nthe prior call the books of the firm\nwere seized and have since been in the\npossession of the law department of the\nprovince and were used in a prosecution which had been pending against legal transactions la stocks. This time\neverything in the offices were taken,\nsuch as instruments used In gaming, and\nunder the law these goods are forfeited\nto the crown If the charge be sustained.\nThrough his counsel, Mr. Bonmor,\ndefendant Wood has claimed that the\nmoving spirit In the prosecution is malice and desire for revenge.\nFully 1000 British Immigrants arrived\nIn the city during the night, almost rivalling the record of last week end when\nsom 1300 people arrived. Of these immigrants 300 crossed the Atlantic on the\nCart liege n Ian, 150 on the Kensington,\nand 550 on the S. S. Champlain. A\ngreat many will proceed further west to\nlocate on farms, while many are coming out to work on railway construction.\nDISTRESS GROWS WORSE\nAWFUL     INCIDENTS     REPORTED\nFROM CHINA FAMINE DISTRICTS\nFEVER   AND   SMALLPOX   ADD TO\nMISERIES OF PEOPLE.\nShanghai, April 13.\u2014Telegrams received by the relief committee here today\nfrom additional famine districts, report\nthat the distress is growing worse.\nSome of the sufferers are contending\nagainst fever or smallpox in addition to\nlack of food.\nMany startling incidents are reported,\nsuch as a father knocking his head on\nthe ground as a sign of thankfulness for\nthe relief brought by a visitor, the man\nbeing to weak to rise. The face of a\nboy who applied for aid was so plump\nthat at first assistance was denied but\nthe. lad. was..afterwards stripped and it\nwas seen that his body was greatly\nemaciated the plumpness of his face being due to starvation. A starving man\nchoked himself to death by swallowing\nalmost a whole biscuit which had been\ngiven him by a visitor. A woman with\nthree children was found weeping on a\nbridge where her husband had fallen\ndead from starvation. A husband, wife\nand their five children were found in n\nhouse starving to death huddled together, clothed In rags and eating the bark\nof trees, their only'helief. A woman\ncame to headquarters of the relief in\nthe field and said her husband had died\naf starvation and begged for food for\nherself and her few days' old baby.\nCONFIDENT Of SUCCESS\nPEARY PREPARING FOR ANOTHER\nNORTH POLE QUEST.\nWILL FOLLOW SAME PLANS AS ON\nIUSt LAST TRIP.\nPortland, Me., April 13.\u2014Speaking or\nhis forthcoming attempt to find the\nNorth Pole, commander Peary today sai-1\nhe expected to arrive among the icefields\ntiie middle of July.\nHis equipment and crew, he said,\nwould be practically the same as on his\nrecently completed expedition. He will\nbuy 200 dogs when he arrives in Greenland. He anticipates that the trip might\nbe made In about the same length of\ntime as the 1905 trip, which required 16\nmonths.\n\"In relation to my plans,\" said commander Pearj'. \"I shall follow almost to\nthe letter those of my last trip. I guess\nit won't be necessary for me to go Into\ndetails about those, as they are too we'l\nknown. I shall go as far north as possible with the Roosevelt, and after securing'the dogs from my Esqulmo friends,\nI shall start over the btg ice fields on\nsleds. While en route we will establish sub-supply stations or caches, to be\nti*ed In case the provisions we carrv,\nshould give out. The main source of supply will be the Roosevelt\n\u2022i at c->rndent that ' will be succesB-\nlul In this search for the long sought\n\u2022.\u25a0on' ?. t any rate it will be the supreme\neffort of my life and if I am.not successful I may be ready to say that the pole\nIs beyond the reach of man.\"\nI.C.R. TRACKMEN'S DEMANDS\nSt. John, April 13.\u20141. C. Ri trackmen will convene In this city early in\nMnv for the purpose of placing their\nclaim for wage Increase before the management. The trackmen are receiving\nmuch higher pay than at any time in\nthe past, but are asking for a still further increase, and Hon-, r, Emmerson\nintimated to the trackmen some time\nago, that it was Ws desire to see their\nwages Increased at the close ot the fiscal year.\nF. J. Brcoio befrs to thank th\u00ab various\npeople and organisation! which have h\u00ab1ped\nhim In his recent troublt. ll> is leaving\nfor England In the morning and care has\niippn taken that he will have nome funds\non bin arrival,\nNEWMINES\nAmerican Syndicate's Offer\nto Finance Phoenix\nCopper Company\nPrepared to Pat Up $350,000 for Develop*\nmeat Work\u2014Boandary Falls Smeller\nmen Get Increased Pay\n(Special to The Dally News)\nPhoenix, April 13.\u2014If' the presenl\nplans of the Phoenix Amalgamated Copper Mines, Ltd., work out as expected,\nthe company-will shortly be starting development with a fund of $350,000 assured, to put the properties of the company in shape to maintain heavy ore\/\nshipments.\nThe company owns \u00ab, block of nhi*\nclaims in this camp, adjoining the mines\nof the Granby Consolidated on the soiuh,\nand having 210 acres of mineralized territory, being what was known as tho\nWar Eagle and other claims In this\ncamp. The War Eagle was worked some\nyears ago, and still haB an nir compressor and general machinery plain.\nAbout a year ago the new company was\nformed, also taking in two other companies and purchasing several adjoining\nclaims as well.\nPresident P. P. Buck, of the Phoenix\nAmalgamated, from the head ofllce aL\nSherbrooke, Quebec, has notified shareholders <that the company has had an\noffer for a large block of shares, which\nthe board of directors think it wise to\naccept. The company has 500,000 snares\nof $10 each, of which 200,000 shares are\nin the treasury. A New York and Boston syndicate of monled men has offered\nto pay $1.75 per share for these 200.000\nshares of treasury stock, amounting to\n$350,000, payable as follows: $-15,000\nwithin 40 days after deposit of all the\ncapital stock of the company with the\nEastern Townships Bank, of Sherbroola',\nQue., as trustee, and tihe balance of\n$305,000 from time to time, as required\nto prosecute the work of development\non the company's claims, work to be\nstarted within 00 days niVr the deposit\nof the stock as stipulated. A further option on 200,000 shares of suarenolders\nstock it also to be given at $1.50 per\nshare, of which 50,000 shares shall be\npaid for in 18 months and the balance\nwithin 24 months.\nThe directors have favorably considered this proposition, and are now gathering the stock to act upon It. It Is anticipated If the deal goes through, that\ndevelopment will be started at an early\ndate, and thus add substantially to the\npayroll of Phoenix camp. Mr. Buck is\nexpected to arrive here before the end\nof April, to make preliminary arrangements, if all goes well.\nBeginning April 1 the Dominion Copper Co. has raised the wages of the employes at the smelting works at Boundary Palls to the level of that agreed\nupon last December between the British\nColumbia Copper Co. and its employes\nat the time of the difference that occurred at those works. At that Hnle, win1\"\na new agreement was made for two\nyears, the new scale between the BiiUIsh\nColumbia Conner Co, and Its BineJtormen\nwas raised somewhat above thai then\nbeing paid * the Dominion Copper t'\u00bb>.'*\nworks, and the management of I'tae latter has now voluntarily leveled up Us\nsmelter woge scale with the former. In\ndollars and cents it means 'that the men\nemployed at Boundary Falls will now\nreceive about $1000 more per irnntn then\nhitherto.\nAnnouncement is also made that W.\nC. Thomas, smelter superintendent of\nthe Dominion Copper Co. since the company came under the present management, has been promoted to the position\nof geneial local manage,- of the company.\nhaving charge of both its smelting and\nmining operations. L, K. Druuimoml,\nthe local manager up to last week, having been transferred to the NlpbBdng\nmine at Cobalt, by M. M. Johnson, consulting engineer for both the Dominion\nCopper and Nippissing companies.\nMr. Thomas has made many friends\nsince coming to the Boundary front Salt\nLake City, not quite two years ago, and\nthe appointment meets with general satisfaction from residents of the Boundary, as well as with those having direct\ndealings with the company.\nThe last carload of delayed pan* and\nfixtures for the enlargement of the Dominion Copper Co.'s smelter, arrived at\nBoundary Falls this week, and the work\nof getting the new giant furnace in operation is now rapidly nearlng completion, and early May should see It In operation, when the reduction works are\nexpected to be running through some\n1400 tons of ore per day.\nRIOT IN RIGA JAIL.\nTroops Called in and Seven Mutineers\nWere Killed.\nRiga,. Russia, April 13.\u2014There was a\nserious mutiny In the local prison today\nThirty-three inmates attacked and overcome the superintendent and wardens of\nthe establishment. Troops were then\nsummoned, and the conditions were such\nthat they bad to fire. Seven of the mutineer* were killed and 12 were wounded.\nNine soldiers sustained wounds during\nthe affray, which lasted an hour. The\nsuperintendent of the prison was badly,\nbeaten.\n \u25a0\u25a0\nvan* toAiitl 8i#s, aitioti ft. o., sOSum, apbil it ttoi\n1 Prospectors', Lumbermen's, Miners' j\nand all Canipers' Supplies       |\ns\nTENTS In all slses and weights.\nRUBBERS and OIL SKIN CLOTHINO.\nOVERALLS and JUMPERS.\nUNDERWEAR at all prices .\nHUDSON'S BAT BLANKETS and CAN-\nOVERALLS and JUMPER.3\nSOX, MITTS, etc, etc.\nGROCERIES AND  PROVISIONS.\nHAY,  FLOUR and FEED.\nIn all these lines we otter excellent quality at very reasonable prices.\nS\nI\nI \t\n{ The Hudson's Bay Stores\n\u2022 NELSON, B.C. ]\nI mperial Bank of Canada\nHEAD OFFICE:   TORONTOt\nOAPITaL paid up\t\n0. E. W1LKIB, President.\n.14,730,000   REST $4,730,000\nHON. ROBT. JAPFRAY, Vice-President.\nBranches in British Columbia\nARROWHEAD, GOLDEN, NELSON, REVELSTOKE,\nCRANBROOK, VANCOUVER, VICTORIA.\n8AVINGS DEPARTMENT\nDeposits received and Interest allowed at highest current rate from date of opening of account and compounded quarterly\nSetson Branch\nJ. M. Lay, Manager\nThe Canadian Bank of\nCommerce\nCapital hid up, 110,000,010.\nnnt, 16,000,000\nHEAD OFFICE: TORONTO.\nB. B. WALKER, President ALEX. LAIRD, Qcn'l. Manager.\nBBAHOBBS THBOUOHOUI CANADA AND IN\nTHB UNITED SIAIBB AND BNOLAND\nAceaeral Banking Business trsasaoted. Accounts mar be opened and eoadaotsa\ntv sail with all branches of this bank.\nSAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT\nDeposit! of H and upwards received, and interest allowed at current rates. TJw\ndepositor la subject to no delay whatever In tho withdrawal of the whole or any\nportion ef the deposit.\nJ. L. BUCHAN, Manager,        NELSON BRANO\nBANK of MONTREAL\nISTABI.1SWED 1817\nCAPITAL, ALL PAID UP.. .114,400,000   REST  |11,MO,000\nHtSAI)   OFFICE,   MONTHrAL.\nBt Boa. Lord Strathcona and Mount Royal, O. C. M. O., Hon. President\nI  ,    Hon. Sir George Drummond, K. C. M. 0\u201e  President\n( df^ajaSBB. 3. Clouston, Vice-President and General Manager.\nBRANCHES IN  BRITISH  COLUMBIA\nArmstrong, Enderby, Greenwood, Kelowna, Nelson, New Denver, Nicola, New\nWestminster, Rowland, Summerland, Vancouver, Vernon, Victoria, Chllllwack.\n' Nelson Branch: L. B.  DeVeber, Manager\nWe Will Sell Subject to Confirmation\n1000 Belcher   .'..   .43\n100 B. C. Copper  $8.00\n2000 Cariboo-McKinney ' 0314\n100 Dominion Copper  15.75\n4000 Diamond Vale 28\n2000 Giant  (Ross.)    0314\n1000 International.Coal  62%\n1500 Nicola Coal Mines 06%\n2000 Rambler-Cariboo 32\n5000 Sullivan      .08%\n200 Western Oil Con $1.75\n6000 White Bear (non-assess)...   .10\nWe sell all New York curb stocks on margin.   Write for information.\nB. B. MIGHTON & CO.\nDrawer lOtS\nBrokers, Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 110\nTHE DAILY NEWS\n\u25a0abUakei at Nelson Bverr Hernlng Bk-\neept Monday, by\nT. 1.  DfflANH\n- ASCRIPTION BATH |\nDear, pet year  __ ___.\u201e.*\u00ab\nDally, per menu ..\u2014..\u201e_ ............ M\nAll suoacnptloni parable kt uveas*,\nCOSTLY MR. COTTON.\nAmong the items that go to make np\nthe $800,000 of unauthorized expenditures by the McBride government, during the interval betwen dissolution and\nthe elections, ia one of $15,000 for pub-\nMa works in Richmond riding, This Is\nthe constituency represented by the\npresident of the council, Hon. F. Carter\nCotton, the brains of the administration.\nNo man in tbe legislature knows better Una does Mr. Cotton the impropriety\nof a government expending pubtlc monies without tho .consent of the legislature, hot probably no mam realised more\nkeenly than did Mr. Cotton that without generous expenditures in his con\nstituency he could never have been reelected. As It was, in spite of this extra outlay of $15,000, Mr. Cotton only\nsecured a majority of 6. It may be taken\nfor granted, therefore, that the president of tbe council will vote approval\nof this unauthorlzol expenditure. The\ncountry might have lost his services bad\nthe money not been expended. Is not\nthat a sufficient Justification for the unauthorized expenditure of a much vaster\nsum than $15,000? Where would the\nMcBride government have been without\nits one brainy member?\nAnother notable feature In connection with these unauthorized expenditures, is that, whereas the finance minister had originally estimated that only\n$4000 would be required tor public works\nin the Chllllwack constituency, he found\nit necessary to allow an Increased expenditure In that district of $22,000. Under\nthe circumstances, It la really remarkable that Charley Munro saved his deposit The electors of Chllllwack evidently are not of the class that can bo\nInfluenced against their own best Interests by the expenditure of public moneys.\nThe supplementary estimates for 1908-\n07 clearly demonstrate that nnarfce minister Tallow's original estimates for\nthat period were framed more with a\nBALK\nJ. G. PROCTER\nFOR\nSALE\n30 Acres on Kootenay Outlet, opposite Procter, nice river front. 10 Acres\nunder fence and In orchard; seeded down to clover\u2014ground well fertilized.'\n600 3-year old trees la first class shape. Balance of land mostly cleared, ready\nfor plough. PRICE! $4000. REASONABLE TERMS. Steamboat connections-\ntwo boats each way dally. Post office and telegraph station within 1-4 mile.\nApply\t\nT. G. PROCTLR, Owner, .Nelson, B. C.\nJust What You Have Been Looking For\nHERB   IT  IS\n14 Acres of the finest fruit land situated at Thrums, Would make an Ideal\nranch for a man of limited means.  This will go cheap.\nImproved fruit ranch, 35 aorear 4 acres cleared and In trees; good frame;\nhouse; 1 good work horse and a com plete outfit of farm Implements. This.\nIs one of tbe best buys on the market and Is at Thrums.\nOne small cottage Just across the lake, with an acre of land. An Ideal spot\nfor the summer, and can be bought at a bargain,\nClayton & Clayton\nBASKETS\nA FRESH CONSIGNMENT JUST RECEIVED\nWe have a very complete range of\nLUNCH BASKETS,   SHOPPING BAS KETS (In Satchel Style). TRAVELLING\nBASKETS (In Club, Gladstone and Telescope).\nAH sizes in Chip, Bamboo, Cane and Wicker. ..jiutfilaV\nPRICES\nChip Lunch BaBkets at 20c, 25c, and 45c. - \u2022    \u25a0 \u00ab\u2014\u25a0*\u2022\nBamboo Lunch Baskets. This make s a very strong, serviceable basket, 60c,\n75c, $1.25.\nCane Lunch Baskets ,70c, $1.20. $1.90 ,\nWicker Lunch Baskets. A very handsome basket, and durable, 85c, $1.15,\n$2.00, $2.25.\nSatchel Shopping Basket (or hand b ag) 35c, 40c, 50c, 65c, 70c, and 80c.\nClub Bag Style (for shopping or tra veiling) 26c, 4oc, 60c, 80c and $1.00.\nTelescope Basket (for lunch or trav elllng)   75c, $1.00, $1.50. $2.00. $2.50.\nGladstone Travelling Basket, 90c, $1,85, $1.75, $2.26, and $2.05.\nW. G. THOMSON ?AefendStofe\nview to impressing the public with a\nfalse notion of the government's economy than with any intention to attain\naccuracy.\nIf Ills estimates for the current year\nprove as much at sea as did those for\nthe past fiscal year, the anticipated deficit of some $60,000 Is likely to attain\nproportions nearer the quarter mUMon\nmark. ,\nOur advices from the Crow's jlcst\ncoal fields are to the effect that very\ngreat difficulty is being experienced by\nthe union officials In restraining the men\nfrom at once ceasing work until such\ntime as the operators accede to their demands. We are Informed that the men\nview with suspicion the new Industrial\nDisputes Investigation Act, thinking,\nwrongly we believe, that In Its enforcement undue consideration will be given\n.to technicalities raised by the,operators\nand it,is largely because of this distrust\nof the new law that the men are unwilling to wait the appointment of a\nboard of investigation and the result of\nthe enquiry. Nothing would do more\nto ease the present situation than \/prompt\naction by the labor department, an Immediate acquiescence In the demand of\nthe men for an investigation free from\nred tape and regardless of any quibbles\nthat may be raised by the operators.\nEvidence that the law is to be enforced\nwith absolute impartiality and that no\ndelays are to he tolerated by reason of\ntechnical objections would restore confidence and in a large measure reconcile\nthe men to the delay that must necessarily ensue. \t\nMintrd's l.n..n\u00bbnt Ourm lurni,    Ho.\na. woman\"tblls how to relieve\nrheumatic pains\nI have been a BUfferer from the dreadful\ndisease, rheumatism, for a number ot\nyearn. 'I have tried many medicines but\nnever got much relief from any of them\nuntil two yearfl ago. when I bought a bottle\nof Chamberlain's Pain Balm. I found relief before I had used all.of one bottle, but\nkept on applying It and soon felt like a\ndifferent vrtman. Through my advice\nmany of my friends have tried It and can\ntell you how wonderfuly It has worked.\u2014\nMrs. Sarah A. Cole, 140 8. New St., Dover,\nDel. Chamberlain's Bain Balm Is a liniment. The relief Iron, pain which it affords Is alone worth many times Its cost.\nIt makes sleep possible. For sale by all\ndruggists and dealers.\nExpert piano tuner and rafulaur, B. o.\nWindsor. Loava orders with Canada Drug\nand Book Co.. or phone m. P. O. box W\nMintrtfi Uqlmwtt Mltm Nturalghi\nCLARK'S VEAL LOAF\nwill  please you;   no  other  can, compare\nWith It.   Always ready to eat; perfectly\nseasoned.\nVERY EASY TERMS\nWILL BUY\nCOSY COTTAGE\nFour roomB and veranda on a perfectly level lot.igood lawn.'Jrutt trees and\nflowering shrubs, splendid woodshed,\nchicken house and run. One block from\ncar line.\nPrice $850; terms $160 cash, balance\nIn monlhy payments of $20 per month,\nTOYE & CO.\nFRUIT LAND, REAL ESTATE\nBaker St. Nelson, B. C.\nTo whom it may concern: This is to cer-(\ntlfy that I have used MINARD'S- LINIMENT myself an well as prescribed It in\nmy practice wliere a liniment wa\u00bb\nquired and have never failed to get the\ndesired effect.\nC. A. KINO, M4D.\nSTOCKS FOR THE WEEK\nADVANCE IN COPPER SECURITIES 18\nLOOKED FOR\nAPPROXIMATE QUOTATIONS FOR THB\nPAST SIX DAYS\n(Reported by B. B. Mlghton, & Co.)\nThe market for the pant week has ahown\nan Improvement, being' more brisk and\nwith more interest displayed. The Spokane exchange also reports a batter trad\nIns- in both Coeur d'Alene and B.C. \u00bb\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\nentitles. Cobalt stocks on eastern exchanges appear to havo become less active than formerly, but a resumption of\nlarge tradings is expected again shortly.\nInterest was divided between the graet decline In the coal sharea and the demand\nfor coppers.. Alberta Coal and Coke, having so few shares In the hands' of the\npublic, was not affected to any great extent. International Coal, on the other\nhand, being so largely held all over the\ncountry, was sold lower than for seven or\neight months, large blooks changing hands\nat from 62 to 63 cents, and showing every\nindication of a greater decline. Brecken-\nrtdge-Lund Coal was also affected slightly,\nbut not to the extent of the International.\n, C. and Domnilon Copper remained\nvery steady, with largo buying orders,\nparticularly from the weal.   Aa advance\nWe Will Sell\nGO British Columbia Copper $8.50\nGO Dominion Copper .'. $0.75\nMcDERMD & McHARDY*\nin these securities will In all probability\ntake place very shortly, uncss the coal\n.-situation should affect their suply. Consolidated Smelters aro weak, with but Htj\ntie interest displayed. Rambler remained\nunchanged, and is not expected to advance\nvery much before shipments begin. White\nBear was offered freely and showed a\nslight weakness.\nThe following ore the approximate quotations for the week ending yesterday;\nAaked Bid\nAmerican Boy  f ,1%    S . 1%\nAlberta Coal  33 .ft)\nBreckenrldbe-Lund Coal  ..    .60' M\nB. C. Copper    8.00 7.62%\nConsolidated Smelters  1SO.0O      110.00\n.7\n\u25a0 3fc\nfi.25\n-K7\n1.50\nCanadian Ooldfields .\nCariboo-McKinney ..\nDominion Copper ....\nDiamond Vale Coal\nFurnace Creek \t\nGiant $\nOntnby   160.00\nInternational Coal 61\nLa Plata Mines 19\nNicola  Coal  Mines    6\nNorth Star 13\nRambler  \u2022 31\nSullivan *H\nSnow Storm  i,W\nWesiern Oil Con  1.85\nWhite Bear, 9 l-2c. paid 6%\nTel-Kwa Mines  17\n.5%\n.3\n6.1)0\nl.iO\n.16\nWalter Delaney who has for the last\nnine months been employed at the barber\nshop on Ward street, next to Rutherford's\ndrug store, can now be found at Fife's\n\u25a0barber shop on Bnkcr street, where ha\nwill bo pleased to meet his former friends\nand customers. 303-1\nNEW ARMORED CRUISER\nI-aAUNCHED YESTERDAY FROM THE\nELSWICK SHIPYARDS\nONE OF THREE LARGEST CRUISERS\nIN THE WORLD.\nNewcastle, April 13.\u2014The British\narmored cruiser Invincible was launched\ntoday from tbe Elswick shipyards. She\nIs one of the trio of largest cruisers In\nthe world, of which tbe first. the Indomitable, was tauncued March Ititli. Under\nthe admiralty order the greatest secrecy\nwas observed in order to provont any\ndetails regarding the new warship leaking out. Her dimensions are the same\nas those of the Indomitable, namely, she\nIs 17,250 tons, is 530 feet long, exceeding\nthe older armored cruiser by GO feet,\nhas turbine engines and is expected to\nattain the high speed of 25 knots an hour\nThe armament of these three cruisers\nIncludes eight 12-inch guns almost equaling the main battel y of the Dmuhmught.\nWELCOMED TO ENGLAND\nARRIVAL OP  PREMIERS   LAURIER\nAND BOTHA.\nEX-BOER      GENERAL     HEARTILY\nCHEERED EVERYWHERE.\nLondon' April 13.\u2014General Botha, ex-\ncommander In chief of the Boer army\nand now first premier of the Transvaal\ncolony under British rule arrived here\ntoday to attend the conference of colonial premiers. The reception accorded the\ngeneral at Southampton and in London\nwas remarkably hearty, Great crowds\ncheered wherever he appeared. At Southampton he was officially welcomed by\ntbe mayor and corporation of that city,\nand In reply to the address general\nBotha humorously referred to a previous\noccasion, when, on the battle field, he\nhad been surrounded by Englishmen\nagainst his will. The general added ho\nwas tnankful now that he was in a position to allow himself to be surrounded hy any number of Englishmen without fear of consequences.\nLiverpool, April 13.\u2014The lord mayor\nof Liverpool and many representative\ncitizens, welcomed sir Wilfrid Laurler,\nthe Canadian premier, and sir Frederick\nBorden, Canadian minister of militia, on\ntheir landing here today on their way\nto London, where they will attend the\ncolonial conference.\nLondon, April 13.\u2014Premier Laurler\nand his party arrived In London this\nevening and were met at the railroad\nstation hy the earl of Elgin, secretary\nfor the colonlea, lord Strathcona and\nMount Royal, the Canadian high commissioner, and other officials.\nHEAVY SENTENCES\nWoodstock, April lit\u2014Justice Brltton today sentenced Jnmes Curry to Bevon years\nend Charles O'Brien to ten years imprisonment In Kingston penitentiary, the Jury\nhaving returned a verdict of guilty to\nCharges of rape ond burglary committed\nNov. 7 last on Mrs. Castler of this city.\nCurryi turned king's evidence.\naJES\u00a32E3=S\u00bb\naas^.\ns&aai\nCLUB HOTEL\n\u25a0TTJROBON  * (HUNT, Proprietors.\nThe BigSohooner of Beer\nor Half and Half\n10c\nThe only glasa of* good Bear la *N\u00abi\u00aba.\nHot*! accommodation! second to atoe U\nBritish Columbia.   Rates C par day.  tip*\n<Hai ft\u2014 i\u00ab woMtktv bMrfltw*\nNOTICE\nNOTICE Is hereby given that the International Coal and Coke Company. Urn*\nlied, will, upon May 1, 1W7, pay a dividend of one per oent on Its Issued and\noutstanding capital stock. Bald dividend\nwill be paid to registered shareholders\nonly, and the transfer books of the company will be closed from April 16, ISM, to\nMay 2, 1907. both dsys Inclusive, All unregistered shareholders should send their\nstock before the first meoiloned data to the\nsecretary at the office of the company,\nrernwell bullilini, Spokane, Washington.\nDated at Ipokane, Wiihlagton, March\n\u2022V INI.\nHAVE A LOOK AT OttR\n$1.00 Sonjbs\nJ. J. WALKER\nJeweller and Optician, Baker St.\nPhone 333 -       Box 157\nI Improved Fruit  Lands\nX FOR SALE\nn The Tnle-Kootenay Ice, P rult and Fuel company have decided to soil\nX their valuable fruit ranch, M rror lake,  Koslo, The property Is one ot\n3C the finest on tho lake, and has-been surveyed into 10 and 15 acre lots,\nv each having lake frontage, and sortie having 8-year old trees In full\nmm hearing.   Full particulars at the Company's office,  Corner Baker and\nQ Ward Sts, Nelson, B. C.\nXXXXXKKJfiXXXXXXXXXXXXXKKKXi\nNOTICE\nNOTICE Is hereby given that at a meeting of the Board of Directors of the I3va\nCold Mines, Limited held this day, the\nfollowing stock was declared forfeited in\naccordance wLli Sections 23 to 33 ineluHlve\nof the Articles of Association of the Com-,\npahy: ,\nShares numbered 11457 to 11506; 13CW to\n13270; 14633 to 14682; 14S33 to 14&G7; 29787 to\n2SS6; iSKK to 29664; 31620. to 31540; 41,961 to\n43130; 5176(1 to &1790; 55416 to 55915; 74390 to\n74404; 74839 to 74868; nil Inclusive.\nBy Order, ,\nW. C. BAYLY, Secretary.\n'Kelson,  B.C.,  April 13th, 1907.\nNOTICE\nIn the matter of nn application for the\nIssue of a duplicate of the Certificate of\nTitle to Part (73 3-10 acres) of bock \"A,\"\nof Lot 1S39. Group 1, in the District of\nKootenay  (Map  <ul) ,\nNOTICE Is hereby given that It is my.Intention to issue ut the expiration of one\nmonth after the first publication hereof,\na duplicate of the Certificate of Title to\nthe above mentioned lands In the nuine \u2022>'\nJ. P. Mnnhart, which certificate is dated\nthe eth day of July, A.D., 1900, and numbered 3317K.\nH. F. MACLEOD,\nDistrict Registrar.\nLand Registry Office, (Nelson, B.C., 12th,\nApril,  1907. * [\nNOTICE  OF   DISSOLUTION\nNOTICE Is hereby given that the partnership heretofore subsisting between us,\nthe undersigned, as Dry Goods Merchants,\nIn the City of Nelson, has been this day\ndissolved by mutual consent. All debts\nowing to the said partnership are to be\npaid to Meagher and Co., ht NelBon, aforesaid, and nil claims against the said part*\nnership nre to be presented to the said\nMeagher and Co., by whom the same will\nbe settled.\nDated at Nelson,  this 9Lh day of April,\nA.U., 1907. 1\n(Rd.) ALEX.  J.  KJERR.\n<8d.) W. J. MEAGHER.\nWitness:  (Sd.)  E. A. CREASE.\nNotice to Creditors\nIn tho  Matter of iRdward  E.  Richards,\nInsolvent.\nNOTICE Is  hereby given  that  the abova\nnamed insolvent, Edward E. Richards.'\nof Nelson, B.C., carrying on business as\ngrocer at Nelson aforesaid, has this day\nmade an assignment of his estate to mej\nfor the general benefit of his creditors,\nunder the \"Creditors' Trust Deeds Act,\nMM.\"\nThe creditors are notified to meet at my\noffice, Baker street, Ne son aforesaid, on,\nthe 22nd day of April, 1907 at two o'clock)\nIn the afternoon for the purpose of re-j\n\u25a0\u2022clving a statement of the Insolvent's af-\nfalrs and for giving directions with reference to the disposal of the estate. .\nAll persons claiming to be entitled to\nrank on the estate must file their claims\nwith me on or before tho 15th day of Mny\u201e\n1907. after which date I will proceed to dls-,\ntribute tho assets thereof, having regard,\nto these claims only of which I shall then\nhave received notice. 1\nDated at Nelson this 10th day of Aprll^\n1907.\nE. B. McDERMID, Assignee.\nTENDERS\nTenders at a nominal figure are desired\nby the Agricultural and Industrial association for the printing of the prize list\nfor the fruit fair this autumn. Tenderers\nmust print according to the specifications\nwhich are with the secretary of the asso-\ncation, must give a bond to complete the.\nwork by July 15 next, the advertising rates\nbeing at the discretion of the tenderer.\nAH tenders- must be sent In sealed ana\nwill be opened on Tuesday next at noon i\nat the office of the secretary.\nD.  C.  McMORRIS, Secretary.\nKOOTENAI HOTEL\nfor Miners. Smelter-\nmen and Lumbermen\nBTvery    convenience.      Eleotrto    plaosv\nRates 11 per day.\nICR8. MALLKTTE. Proprietress\nA few reasons why good housekeepers\neverywhere, use\nMoffet's Best Flour\nFOR BREADMAKING\nI.   \"BEST\" Is a local product\nII.\u2014lis strength and purity aro unrivalled.\nIII.\u2014For the sake ot economy.\nIV.\u2014\"BEST\" has proven all its claims.\nV.\u2014Every pound Is guaranteed.\nFor sale by good grocers everywhere.\nColumbia Flouring Mills Company, Ltd.\nENDERBY, B, C\nThe Cloth That Pleases You\nThe Style that pleases the fashion\u2014and the workmanship that pleases\nua\u2014make a combination that ought to Interest every wearer of\nclothe*-a combination that ought to\u2014and will\u2014bring yon here again\nand again. \\\nA select line of goods to malm choosing easy for you\u2014and every\nprice as low as ever the best work waa sold for.\nYou're Invited' to call.\nH. F. MORTENSEN\nTHB MOW TAIMn\nADVDRT18EII OP FACTS)\nl\n jrSPT\n^\nk\nataagM\nWomen in Our Hospitals\n\u25a0\u25a0awn Hi \u25a0 i Hia.lw.n.^i^am.aMHrW)\nAppalling Increase in the Number of Operations Peiv\nformed Each year\u2014How women May Avoid them.\nGoing through the hospitals in our\nlame cities one is surprised to find euuh\na large proportion of the patients lyin;\non those enow-white beds women am.\ngirls, either awaiting or recovering from\niierioua operations,\nWhy should this be the case? Simply\n\u2022because they have neglected themselves.\nFemale troubles are certainly on the\nincrease among the women of this\n\u25a0country \u2014 they creep upon them unawares, but every one of those patients\nin the hospital beds had plenty of warn*\ning in that bearing-down feeling, pain at\nleft or right of the abdomen, nervous exhaustion, pain in the small of the back,\ndi.uineM, flatulency, displacements of the\n\u2022organ* or irregularities. All of these\nisymptoms are indications of an unhealthy\n\u2022condition of the female organs, and if\nnot heeded the penalty has to be paid\n'     \u25a0 \" -\u25a0'-        \"\"      tliw\n[symptoms manifest themselves, do not\ndrag along until you are obliged to go to\nthe nospital and submit to an operation\n\u2014but remember that Lydia K. Pink\nham's Vegetable Compound bus saved\nthousands of women from surgical\noperations.\nWhen women are troubled with irregular, suppressed or painful periods,\nweakness, displacement of ulceration of\nthe organs, that bearing-down feeling,\ninflammation, backache, bloating (or\nflatulency), general debility, indigestion,\nand nervous prostration, of are beset\nwith such symptoms as dizziness, lassitude, excitability, irritability, nervousness, sleeplessness, melancholy, \"all-\nigone\" ano-\"want-to-be-left-alone\" feet-\nlings, they should remember there is one\n\u25a0tried and true remedy.\nMil. Fred. Seydel, 412 N. 54th Street,\n'West Philadelphia, Pa., writes\nj*\nDear Mrs. Pinkhura:\u2014\n\"I was ma very serious condition when\nI wrote to you Tor advice. I had a serious\nfemale trouble and I could not carry a child\nto maturity, and was advised that an operation was my only hope of recovery. I\ncould not bear to think of going- to the hospital, so wrote you for advice. I did on yon\ninstructed me and took l.ydla E. PinkhunVs\nVegetable Compound; and I am not only a\nwell woman to-day, but have a beautiful\nbaby girl six months old. I advise all sick\nand suflerinp women to write you for advice, as you have done so much forme.\"\nMiss    Lilian    Martin,   Graduate   of\nIntining School for Nurses, Brantfo\nOnt, writes:\nDear Mrs. rinkham:\u2014\n\"While we are taught tn the training\nschools through the country to look down\nupon patent medicines, and while the doc-\nton in the hospitals speak slightingly of\nthem to patients, I have found that they'\nreally know different. I have frequently\nknown Physicians to give Lydia B. Pink-\nham's Vegetable Compound to women suffering with the most serious complications\nof female trouble* displacement of orgnns,\nand other disorders. They would, as a\nrule, put It in regular medicine bottles and\nlaw it \"tonic\" or'otlier names, but I knew\nit wus your Compound and bare seen them\nfill It in prescription bottles.' Inflammation ami ulceration hnvubecn relieved and\ncured in a few weeks liy its use, and I feel\nit hut due to you to give Lydia ID. Pink-\nham's Veget*Mo Compound proper credit.\"\nLydia 13. Pitikbam's Vegetable Compound at once removes such troubles.\nItefuse to buy any other medicine, for\nyou need the best,\nMrs. Piiikliam, daughter-in-law of\nLydia K. Pinkham, invites all sick women to write her for advice. Her advice\nand medicine have restored thousands to\nhealth.   Address, Lynn, Mass.\nE. rliktua's Vegetable \u20ac\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 Siceeeds Where filers rail.\nN0 l mmss*^   NO HONINO\nGRINDING\nTHE    RAZOR    \u00a9F    PERFECTION\nEVERLASTING SHAVING COMPORT\nNO RAZOR TROUBLES POSSIBLE\nThese razors are tempered at hard at flint by our exclusive\nsecret process of electricity. You can obtain one on 80 days trial\nfrom your dealer without obligation to purchase.\nFirm of A. L Silbersteir)\n276 Broadway, N. J.\nPuyope\nAll flavors, and\n'WHF.'lrry'l\nfull .strength guaranteed\nR>r3ale by ^twdGrocen*\nEverywhere.\nAsk for EMPRESS BRAND\"\n-_JJ\nTut'\\m by\n%H(WIV\u00bb.B.C\nkootenay Engineering Works\nFOUNDERS AND MACHINISTS\nj MANUFACTURERS OF THE CRAWPO BD AERIAL TRAMWAY\nRepairing and Jobbing a Spec alty\n\u25a0etmeUl Work, Castings, Builders' M aterial and Mining and Milt Machinery.\n10NE 204.\nOffice and Works\u2014Foot of Park Street.\nB.O.TRAVIS\nMANAGER.\nNELSON. B. a\n\u25a0sssagsasaswsi\nOP INTEREST TO MINERS\nT|t\u00ab t^rra \"plgraenta\" properly In*\neludes all. coloring matters used in the\npreparation of paints. They are colored\npowders' which, when mixed with water,\noil or other fluids, in which they are insoluble, form paints. They are distinguished from dyes and washes by their\nentire Insolubility in tbe media in which\nthey are mixed. Insoluble colors, when\nused in printing textile fabrics* are distinguished as pigment colors. The sources of materials available as pigments\nare numerous; many are native colored\nearths; and as this series of articles\ndeals with subjects \"of interest to miners,\" only, It is Intended to restrict this\nsubject, as far as possible, to those pigments that are obtained from natural\nsources. At the same time It would be\nas well to mention that apart from the\nnatural resources there are several\nmethods of obtaining pigments from\nminerals; notably, those separated from\n.the native metallic compounds and artificially from inorganic\u2014principally metallic\u2014sources. The greatest point to lie\nconsidered witn pigment is the \"body*'\nor covering power of it; that is the property of fully covering and concealing\nwltltan opaque coating the surface over\nwhich It Is spread. Many mineral pigments contain or carry with them Ingredients exactly suitable for mixing\nwith certain fluids, so that they can\neasily adapt themselves, so to speak, to\nthe different circumstances.\nThe pigments obtained from the mineral kingdom are few In number, but\nimportant on the score of abundance,\ncheapness and permanency. The most\nimportant are baryiee, ochres, smalts and\numbers; these will be given In this\norder:\nBarytes\u2014Barytes or sulphate of. barium, tbe most important of the Baits of\nbarium, Is found native in large quan-\nouii asws, MHisoa, a, a, nvxoii Ahtu ti, ttoi\n'Wslia^nBaWaWgsteJI^^\nCoat\n^ Shirt\nOpen all the way down the (root\nSkpi on and off like a coat\nThe bosom fits better and doesn't get\nrumpled.\nMade in stylet for burineu or draa\nwear.\nDoesn't coat any more than the old\nuncomfortable kind. 301\nFwt color* u the acwot pattens or plain white.\nMakers,   Berlin,   Canada\nIn a correspondence coloumn. Roughly\nspeaking In blister copper, the copper\nIngots are treated electrically, the copper being deposited upon fresh anodes,\niNM.uiu, ib ivuuu umitu >u inific H\u00ab....- . whilst the gold, silver and oUrt metal\ntitles, forming a species of mineral that \\ fall to the bottom of the vat; from here\nis commonly called heavy spar on ac- j they are collected and melted down,\ncount of its weight; its specific gravity * and whilst In a molten state chlorine gas\nbeing 4.3 to 4.6.   It is a brittle mineral,    Is passed through It, forming chlorides\nhaving an uneven fracture. When pure it\nIs colorless, but more often than not; It\nvaries considerably In color owing to\nimpurities; Its colors range from colorless, to white, yellow, blue, red and\nbrown, according to the different minerals present. Usually It has a vltreaous\nor glassy luster,- Inclining to reBlnous,\nsometimes it Is pearly. It always has a\nwhite streak, and varies from transparent to opaque as .he circumstances alter.\nNow and again a specimen Is found that\nwhen rubbed with another piece from\nthe samo source, It emits a fetid odor.\nBarytes occur In many different forms\nand combinations. The \"ordinary\" kind\nusually occurs in broad and stout crystals, sometimes very large, weighing\nupwards of 100 pounds per crystal;\nagain it la found In very slender needle\nlike crystals. Apart from the \"ordinary\"\nIt is found in a \"crested\" form; \"col-\numnla.\" \"globular,'! \"radiated\" as in the\nBologna stone; \"lamellar,\" \"granular.\"\n\"earthy,\" \"compact.\" and star shaped.\nThe massive variety found In Derbyshire. England. Is commonly called\n\"cawk\" by the miners; this Is nearly always white In color, though occasionally It has a slight reddlBh tint which\ndoes not affect Its value to any great extent When ieated this mineral occasionally has phosphorescent powers to a\ngreat extent.\nThe pure pigments (barytes) Is a\nheavy white powder , Insoluble In water\nand all other rolnslrua. It Is prepared\nby heating the native mineral, grinding\nIt to powder, and well washing It; first\nwith dljuate sulphuric acid, in ordor to\nremove any traces of impurities, and\nifterwards with water. It Is then levigated or \"floated,\" the llghest particles\nbeing the most valuable, and known as\n\"Boats.\" The white powder Is afterwards thoroughly dried. The demand\nfor this pigment Is not very great, otherwise great quantities could he produced.\nIts present market value Is from $14.50\nto 121 for ordinary ground barytes.\nwhilst the floated brings from 122 to \u00bb83\nper tori. It Is principally used as an\nadulterant of white lead, and to form\npigments known bb \"blanc fixe\" or permanent white. For these purposes, (he\nnative mineral, ground and washed as\nabove described Is commonly employed. It will be seen that, for these purposes, the mineral should be as free aB\npoaBlble from Iron, copper and other\nstains; It should also be free from\nquartz, as quarts seriously injures the\nplates or discs by which barytes are\nground. Should the barytes he stained\nto any great extent, or contain other\nimpurities It Is useless as a commercial\nproduct. A good white color being absolutely essential for Its usefulness.\nBaryles Is also used In the maniiaflciire\nof pottery. Whilst dealing with the\nsubject of baryles. it might be as well\ntn draw aUenllon to other minerals\nwhich have barium as their principal\nmetal. Baryta which can readily ho obtained from hnrytes Is largely used In\nthe manufacture of \"beet sugar.\" It Is\nused to separate the crystalline sugar\nfrom the molasses. Tho carbonate or\nbarium (withorlte) is used In the msn-\nufacture of certain glasses, principally\nplate glass, and lo a corlaln extent in\nflint, Mass. One of the chief colors in\nwall papers owes Its origin lo this metal,\nthat Is, Cssscl's green, which Is a man-\nganate of barium; this salt is sIbo used\nfor many other coloring purposes. Tho\nnitrate and chloride of barium arc largely used by chemists In their analytical\nwork. The latter le largely used In the\ndetermination of sulphur. -\n0OKRB8PONDBNCE\nW.,Nelson, B. 0.\u2014Magnesium metal Is\nvery similar to aluminium, but whiter\nand lighter. Its specific gravity being\nonly 1.74. It melts at 760 degrees C.\nand bolls at about 1100 degrees. It Is\nmore oxldliable than tine. The wire\nand powdered metal are used In photography, the chief use for magnesium;\nthough It Is sometimes used to alloy with\nother metals; for Instance, magnallum\nIs an alloy composed of 100 parts aluminum and from 10 to 30 parts magnesium,\nM. Q., Salmo, B. 0.\u2014The yellowish\npiece of rock you send Is a species of\nquartette.   It may carry a Irtle told.\nV. O.. Greenwood, B. C\u2014The process\not refining gold from copper matte and\nblister copper Is too lengthy to go Into\nof all metals except gold, platinum and\nsome rarer metals. Should any of these\nlater be present the bullion will have to\nbe treated by a more extended process.\nWHEN ALL ELBE FAILS\nThe Special Order Department of the Big\nMontreal Concern\n\"Setnl-renuy\" physique type proport'oiis\nare not a cure nil. They will meet every\nrequirement that cornea within the sphere\nof normal and disproportion -to man. Thoy\nare so arranged to provide for unequal\nheights of shoulders and unequal lengths\nof leg. In fact, there Is no man who can\nbe fitted with clothes who cannot he fitted\nat a eSmi-ready tailoring store. For the\nspecial order department of the Semi-ready\nsteps In when the oddmun In. a thousand\nfalls to.find hut fond pattern. Semi-ready\nmade a pair of trousers for a Sherbrooke\nman who weighed 450 prunds, In two\nmonths they filled two special measurement orders for the Yukon, and over ew\nfrom British Columbia.\nJ. A.  anker,  Agent, Nelson.\nTAMNG'S\nbanned Heats an Sailafvlnr    Try them\nWindsor table; salt\nit prepared, packed and shipped\nwith every care. Il travels straight\nto youi table in absolute purity.\nVLAJ\nMinneapolis\nand St Paul\nBurlington Pervlot\nto Chicago and Si Louis Is\nstrictly first class and of the\nstandard that has made that\nroad a noted carrier of\ntravel between the east and\nthe west. Three dally trains.\nThe Club train\nFrom St. Paul In the morning.\n-'Finest train In the world\n,   From SI. Paul In the evening.\n\u25a0 The late night train\nFrom St. Paul after arrival\nof connections.\nYou cannot miss It If your\nticket reads BI'RUNOTON.\nLet us help you along.\nA. B JACKSON\nTrav.  Pass.  Agent\n610 Riverside Avenue\nSpokane, Wash.\nREAL E8TATE\nCHARLES J. HURT, MEMBER OF THE\nInterstate Investors' Association, has unrivalled facilities for the wide advertising of farm, and fruit lands. Box w\nPhone 308. Nelson, B.C.\nFOUND\nPOrKr>7-l.ai)>-'fl unit shawl. Owner csn\nHave same on proving property and paying\nfor thin advertisement. Apply Tho Dnl)>\nNow* of floe. *tt-t\u00ab\nFOR SALE\n- Twenty-one agrea first clans soil; 4 aorwu\nplants fn tr^ lf*ef,> 2 acrtB in bearing, H\nacrea pajtly dpared. Cultivated land titiB\nbeen richly' t'tsrtjiized; almost entirely tree\nfrom atone; fivP fPlntft,;s walk from school,\n20 minutei walk from center of town, railway station an4 steamer landings. Beautiful location.\nPRIOB, ISOQO\nA. J. CURLE KASLO, B.C.\nf.RAND CENTRAL HOTEL\nThis hotel has been completely renovated\nand newly furnished with all modem equip.\nthents.    Hot  water  heating  throughout\nRATES: Rooms,   no.   upwards; meals,\nSo.; special  rates by  the reek.\nJ. A. ERICKSON, Proprietor\nTelephone, So. Opposite Court House sue\nPoatofflc. Nelson.  B.C.\nA drink of good llaaot\nH a very fool tUaf\nII will kolat ip your (atrtH\nAnd mom you to Mali\nand the best place la ftnm\nTo temple you Ha\nII it Archie Bala's laaxttH\n\"Thp No Place Inn\"\nJAMES   MALCOLM\nHona ShMlng, Carriage Wot%\nCaaeral Blaoktrnttliing\nI have secured the services of a first\nclass wheelwright and painter, 35 years'\nexperience, and am now prepared to do all\nclasses of carriage work and wheelwright-\nIng.\nI have been appointed agent for the well\nknown STUDEBAKER WAGONS and have\na car on the road, expected to arrive\nshortly. I am also agent for the Oliver\nPlow.\nHALL ST.,  NELSON,  B.   C.\nPhone 321 P. O. Box 163\nPROFESSIONAL CARDS\nA. L. rkCulloch\nCIVIL ENGINEER\nPROVINCIAL LAND SURVEYOR\nP. O.  Box 41\nOffice Phone B88., Residence Phone, 74B\nOffice, Baker 8!. Nelson, B. C.\nW. J. H. HOLME8\nIVIL ENGINEER ft MINI BURVHO*\nPROVINCIAL kAND   8URVBIOB\nitn years experience In the Kootenay.\n.onor graduate, an. Royal HUltaiy Cat\n<ft at Canals, KlnptoB, Oat\nKA8LO, B. C.\nJOSEPH RYAN\ntANCB    AND TOUT    UlHM.     OtO\nOR* COAL LAND*\nM Million Heat \u2022tanalnt Timber\n3tg mi Crenbrook, B.\u00ab\nMURPHY & FISHER\n;\u25a0 OTTAWA\nBarristers, Solicitors, etc.\nParliamentary, Departmental and Pawn\nOmoe Aieatt, practice before Raiiwaj\nCommission.\nMutual HURPHT   HAROLD IKj\u00bb\n8. S. FOWLER\nMINING ENGINEER\nNELSON, B.O.\nFREDERIC S. CLEMENTS\nfeAMD\n..^ till Ik L\njt)MINION ASD    PROVINOA*\n\u2022URVaiOR\nAgent Mr obtalalM Ciwwa Oraata, asm.\neamylH, eto.\t\nRoom A., X.W.O. Keek\n\u2022 a Box 1 MoUcm, \u00bb. C\nr. c. Oreia   F. P. Burden   A. B. Oreea\nGreen Brothers & Burden\nCIVIL ENGINEERS\niMmlnlon. end   British   Columbia   Lent\nSurveyors\nP. O. BOX Ml PHONB SKUf\nOar. Victoria and Kootenay street!\na. o.\nMcKAY & RAHAL\nte D. A.\nHorse ihealns, Cartas* Walk u* Oes>\nral Blaoasmlthlng.\nP.O. Bex IM.   Pkeae AIM\nWart Street tfalasa. \u25a0.\u00ab\nA. J. DRISCOLL\nOpposite Queens' hotel, Baker street.\nQcntiemen's Suits repaired, cleaned and\noressed. Goods called for and promptly\n..silvered.\nIHI DAILY MWS CLASSIFIED ADS\n?\u00bb\u00bb beat and ehteptat sstant \u00bb\u00bb retching lt\u00bb wool, \u00ab \u00ab,, Koolonavs   a im.ii\nadvertisement lit these ooi\u00bbmM ^u bring buj aSuiti; \u00bbo\u00bb\u00bbnwe, a small\nIn natancT^- ^ \"\" \"\"\" \"*' '\"\"\"\" * *\"mU\u00b0M 'W \"\" \"*\u00bb \u00b0< \"\u00ab' >' *\u00bb\">\nCtaasif^d^b. \u00ab\u00abl,ed for Inaariloa \u201e\u201e,\u201e , o^cloci, on the\nFOR 8ALE\nOLD CURIOSITY SHOP-If you want to\ntray or Mil anything go to tbe Old Curiosity Shop.  Always la stock, a full Una of\nCrockery, Furniture and Glassware.\nFOR SALE\u2014Well equipped assay office In\nbeat part of B.C., good reasons for selling, only those meaning, business, need apply.   H.H., Dally News. \u00ab-tf\nTOR HIGH   CLASS   MAQOON STRAWBERRY  PLANTS    APPLY    TO    J.  J.\nCAMPBELL. -     871-tf\nFOR 8ALE\u2014Complete S da F.iuntaln, with\nsylinders, syrup cabinet, etc., ready for\nuse. Used two seasons. Original cost f8W;\nquick sale, $2G0, terms. Canada Drug and\nUook Co., Nelson. 300-tf\nFOR SALE-Complete drug store fixtures,\nshow cases, wall cases, shelf bottles.\nEverything complete; inventory, <K\u00a3S5;\n$1000, third cash, balance 3 and 6 months.\nCanada Drug and Book Co. S00.tr\nFOR   SALE-Eggs\nPlymouth   Rocks.\nSilica street^\nfro  hatching,\nMrs.   C.   E.\nBarred\nMiller,\n301-6\nAS8AYER8\nCopper, Gold or Sliver H.to\nAny two above, one sample  1.60\n\\ny three above, one sample  2.00\nLead   l.M\nLead and Silver, one sample  1.00\nLead, Silver, Gold, one sample I.G0\nControls, 60 per cent extra; umpires, 100\nper cent eitra.\nDiscount\u2014Twenty samples or over, per\nmonth, K per cant.\nWrits tor free sample envelopes to\nCLAUDBT &-WYNNE\nROWLAND, B.C.\nFOR SALE\u2014Two pool tables and one combination billiard and pool table, everything complete and in good condition. Apply 8. J. Mighton, Tobacconist, Cran-\nbrook, B.C. 276-tf\nFOR   SALE\u2014Good   ranch   horse,  cheap;\nweight   1400   lbs.    Apply   R.   E,   Allen,\nSlocan City. rffl-8\nFOR SALE\u2014Three good horses, weighing\nubout 1400;   would exchange  for heavy\ndraught.' MJUer-MoNalr Lumber Co., Cres-\nton, B.C. 299-tf\nFOR BALE\u2014Eggs for hatching from the\nfollowing breeds that win and produce\nwinners: Barred Plymouth Rocks, Butt\nOrpington, White Wyandotte and White\nMlnorcas, J2 setting; Black Leghorns and\nSilver Spangled Hamburg, S3 a setting. H.\nM. Read, Creston, B.C. m-&\nFOR SALE\u2014Eggs for hatching, Black Minorca and White Wyandott eggs, 11.60\nper setting, 16 eggs; 17.60 per 100 in Incubator lots. Prise bred Pekln duck eggs,\nJ1.60 per setting II, eggs. M. B. Edwards,\nHume Addition, P.O. box 274. 288-20\nFOH. SALE\u201475 acres unimproved land,\nclose to Nelson, on wagon road; |16 per\nacre; easy terms to genuine settlers. Apply \"Owner,\" Dally News. S98-6\nFOR SALE\u2014Why pay fanoy prices for\nKootenay fruit land when you can buy\ntho best land In the country at locator's\nprices. Ranches from 40 to W0 acres. Will\naUo guide mountain climbers land seekers\nand fishermen. Apply at or address Lindsay's boat house, Nelson, B. C. M-li\nFOR SALE\u2014Thirty foot gasoline launch,\nspeed about seyen miles.   Hurt's boat-\nhouse; box VH. Nelson.  ' rW-li!\nFOR SALE\u2014Eggs for hatching; purs bred\nS.C. Buff Orpingtons, Buff Leghorns tnl\nWhite   Wyandotte,   S3  per  setting;  nine\nchicks guaranteed or order refilled at halt\nprice. D. Wadds, Crawford Bay. ist-hj\nFOR SALE\u2014McCIary range, No. 10, suitable for hotel or camp. Box 356, Nelson. KKi-u\nFOR SALE\u2014.Tomato plants, May delivery.\nF. M. Blacks' ranch.   Phone A377.    302-tf\na ... SALE\u2014Thoroughbred Airedale Terriers. (Pedigree) six months old. Address\nJ. Devln, Revelstoke, B.C. 299-10\nFOR SALE\u20148econd hand safe.   Apply S.,\nDally News. OO-O\nLAND   FOR  SALE\u2014*C.   D.  W.   Balleny,\nland and estate agent, Nelson, B.C.  301-0\nWHOLESALE HOUSES\nPRODUCE\nSTAHKBT & Co., WHOLESALE DEAL-\ners In Butter, Efts, Cheese, Produce ana\nFruit. Houston Block, Josephine Street,\nNelson, B.C.\nQROCERIES\nA. MACDONALD A CO.\u2014WHOLESALE\nGrocers and Provision Merchant..\u2014Importers of Teas, Coffees, Spices, Dried\nFruits, Staple and Fancy Groceries, To\nbaccoa. Cigars, Butter, Eggs, Cheese and\npacking House Products. Office and\nWarehouse, corner of Front and Hall\nStreets.   P.O. Box 1005.   Telephone St.\nCAMP   AND    MINERS'    FURNISHINOS\nA.     MACDONALD    &    CO Wholesale\nJobbers in Blankets. Underwear, Mitts.\nGloves, Boots, Rubbers, Overalls, Jump*\ners. Mncklnaws and oilskin Clothing,\nC'inp and Miners' Sundries. Office and\nWarehouse corner of Front and Hall\nStreets,   P.O. box Idas. Telephone a.\nASSAYERS'  SUPPLIES\nTHE B.C. ASSAY <s CHEMICAL SUPPLY\nCo., Ltd., Vancouver, B. C\u2014Importers\nand Dealers In Assayers' Supplies. Bole\nagents in British Columbia for tho celebrated Battersea Cruiclble, Soorlflers and\nMuffles and Win. Alnsworth ft Co.'s tine\nBalances, Chemical and Physical Apparatus, C. P. Acids, and Chemicals Platinum, Sodium and Potassium Cyanide,\nQuicksilver, Carbonate and Bicarbonate\nof Soda, Borax, Borax Glass, Silver, Free\nLead and Litharge.\nMINING AND MILLING MACHINERY\nWASHINGTON MACHINERY ft SUPPLY\nCo.\u2014Dealers In Engines, Band and Circular Sawmills, Atkins' Saws, Wood and\nIran Pulleys, Leyner Compressors and\nDrills, Pumps and Hoists. Prompt attention. Reasonable prloes. Courteous\ntreatment.   Spokane, Wast),\nLIQUORS\nB.    FERGUSON   ft   CO.,   WHOLESALE\nLiquors and Cigars.   Aetata tar Mast\nBeer.  Vemeej St., Ntlsea, i.O.\nHELP WANTED\nNELSON EMPLOYMENT AGENCY\nJ. H. LOVE, Manager\nWANTED - Machlno miners, tlmberman.\nbusnmen, sawmill men, teamsters carpenters, stone masons, waitresses, chnm-\nbermaM, construction laborers, section men\nllemalrerB, shingle bolt cutters.\nWANTED \u2014 Waitress at Queen's hold\nComapllx, B.C. ;tftlf.\nWANTEiD-iEnglneer for pinning mill nl\nElko, third class certificate, wages 13.60\nper day. Must be sober and capable, itc-\nPly to Geo. P. Wells. Secretary, Nc'son.\nB,C' \u00bb\u00ab\nIWAiNTBD-<!ompctent   clerk   In   clothing\nand gents' furnishing goods wants n position.  Address R., P.O. box 38.      ,   3113 3\nWANTBD-An engineer for small sawmill plant, wages 176 per month anil\nboard for good man; stcudy work. Only\nsober, reliable men need apply. The Jew -it\nLumber Co..  Ltd.,  Jaffrny. sej-tl\nWAiNTBD\u2014Fox  terrier.    Address Baxter.\nMolly GibHon ranch.  Knkanee,  IUV 803-1\nWA1NTKD\u2014 Immediately,  room  and   boar.\nfor lady and gentleman; close In.   li\\T.\nDally News.\nWANTED-Flrst class salesman; good opening for right mnn; young, ambitious,\nepexrlenoed man preferred. Address M\u201e\nDally News. mjjj\nWANTED\u2014Young girl to help with children.   Apply Mrs. Harry Houston,  City.\n300.11\nWANTED\u2014At  once,  planerman.    China\nCreek Lumber Co., China oreek.     278-tf\nWANTED\u2014Capable chambermaid;  alsc  a\nhead waiiress.   App y strathcona hotel,\n_____^ 398-1\nWANTED\u2014C'ompetent~hursc~flve children\nChinaman   kept.    Apply  box m, Ornn-\nbrook, B. C. 282-tt\nWANTED-JJotel porter,\nto Royal hotel.\nApply at once\n290-tf\nWANTED-OIrt   for  general   housework.\nApply   Mrs.     T.    J.    Bosnian,   Stanley\nStreet. m.tt\nWANTED\u2014Coatmaker.    Address   Knight\nand Devlne,  Revelstoke. gM-lu\nWANTED\u2014Fruit lands In blocks from 100C1\nacres up. No fancy figures considered.\nApply H.O.. Dally News, by letter.     K\u00bb-tf\nWANTED\u2014(Experienced   help.    Apply   ot\nMrs, Flints' dressmaking parlors,     299-tf\nWorklngman'a Employment Bureau\nWANTED \u2014i Cooks, eookees, waitresses.\nlaundresses, chambermaids, and glrlo for\nhousework, men for mills, steel sharpeners,\nmen for mines and lumber Jacks.\nPositions wanted by clerks, bookkeepers\nand office men.   W. Parker, phone 383.\nWANTED - MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED\u2014Men aad women to learn barber trade In eight weeks; tools free. Graduates earn \u00ab1S to tx weekly: help aecure\npositions; secured over 10,000 last year for\nour graduates In U.S. Catalogue tree.\nHoler Syetem Collates, Ht Front avenue,\nSpokane, Wash. \u2022 sftl\nOORDWOOD WANTED \u2014 We waat te\nmake a contract tor deliveries of oordwood\nte begin at once at the rate ot one oar\nweekly. Ball Mining ft gaitltlng Co..\nLtd. JH-tt\nWANTED\u2014To purebs.., large, clean cotton rata. Pnesreem, Dally News.\nWANTED\u2014By a young man .position tn\na store.   Apply box 30, Dally News.  Sr7.lt\nWANTED\u2014To rent a five or six roomed\nhouse, unfurnished.   Offers to P. Q. Eb-\nbutt. P.O. Nelson. ai.-a\nFOR 8ALE\nFOR SAU3-.\"2 acres of first class land,\nnenrly 10 acres cleared, good water rights\nand good buildings, either the whole or\nIn blocks of 10 acres. Apply Louis Schea-\nvon, Tnrry's. B.C. 3O0-tl\nA88AYER3\n3.   W.   W1DDOWE.ON,   CHEMIST   ANU\nAssayer, Nelson, B.C.\u2014Cold, Silver, lead\nor Copper, |1 t'luili; Oiild-Sllver, $1.60:\nBllvor-Lead, fl.So, Zinc, $3; Oold-Sliver,\nwith Lead or Copper, I2.G0. Samples arriving by express or mall will receive\nprompt attention. P.O. Drawer, i\u00abw,\nPhone AST.\nL08T\nLOST\u2014Brown  leather  hand  satchel,  containing oJbout $10.   Reward at Daily New*\noffice. MUM\nLOST\u2014A gold waten on Wednesday night,\nhunting case, has initials \"M.S.\" engraved on front. Lost either on Baker or\nWard streets. Finder pleas\u00a9 return ft\nThe Dally News office and reci>lvp ro-\nward. 302-6\nFOR RENT\nTOR^ISfoXT\u2014One furnlrihod1'iroom.J\nH.B., Dally News.\nApply\n.1U0-U\nMISCELLANEOUS\nTo Poultry Keepers and Piggeries\u2014Sufficient food to keep a dosen pigs and\n100 poultry all the year round can be obtained free for taking away. Apply at\nStrathcona bote). 283 tf\nI WILL PAY $50 to anyone for Information\nof a store. 30x100 or 60x100 feet more or leu,\nIn good location, on or near the main.\nstreet of Nelson. Address M. Adams, KX.L\nNinth St..  S.,  Forgo,  N.D. X'U\n tlia tiikLT MWS, MBMOK B. 0.. SUf*t>AY. APRIL til   ISOf\n\u25a0 iif\" i'1' V'aVjMillT\n$200.00 IN CASH\nsaaa-ss&i. given away free\nNot One Cent ol Your Money Required.     Read Carefully if You VIA\nto Earn Part of the Above Amount.\nCan you arrange\nmil-1 ii'bo you car\n\"pltfcnc* and pwwanes you\nof mi\u00abd.ltum tte-iKiftrf^lS'\n, well known wild anL\nli k no ea*Y \u00bb\u25a0*\u00bb \u2022*\"\n- man iencta ,\u00ab.\u00ab.., .\u201e\t\nii' ao you can slime in the distribution of the above Pme; Try :  ..\n--\u2022. \u25a0\u00ab \u201e\u201e\u201e can probably find litre* or four.\\  It means money to you to\nV. the Mtson who find\u00bb the largest\n1       ftfflS in Cash.. T? the perton\nDollars \u00ab\nwber nf names, we will give the sum of One Hundred\nn who finds the second Urges! number we will give the\nTo the person who find. \u25a0\"- >\u25a0>\"\"' L\t\nivgnuau.w...j la Cash.   Totnepertoii *..\u00ab \u00bb.\u2014..        \u00ab=... .\u2014    -\nsum of Fifty Dollars ($SO.O0) in Cash. To the person who finds ilte third largest number wt\nwill give the sum of Thirty Dollars ($30.00) in Cash. To thejkim>\u00bb who finds the fourth largest\nnumber we will give the sum of Twenty Dollars ($20.00) in Cask Should two persons semi in\nequally correct answers for the first prite, the fiiM two prim will be equally divided between\nthem, each receiving the sum of Seventy-Five Dollars. (J75.00) Shont'd three persons send in\nequally correct answers the first three priics will be equally divided between them, each receiving the sum of Sixty Dollars ($60.00). Should four persons send in equally correct answers the\nwhole sum of Two Hundred Dollars ((2000fl)will be equally divided between them (each receiving Fifty Dollars ($50.00). And so on in like proportion*. In order 10 help you a little we.\nhave put a mark under the first letter of each name.\nHef\nCHEAPNESS IN TEA ISN'T\nEVERYTHING\nTea Made from Prairie Hay Would be Cheap j\n\u2014But Would You Care to Drink It?\nfuM^n\/\\\nTea costs a few cents a pound\nmore than coarse, broken \"leavings,\" but It Is easily worth the\ndifference. Besides It Is really\nmore economical, since three\nspoons of it will make more and\nbetter tea than four of the cheap I\nstud.   Blue Ribbon tea has the J\nrichness and   strength    of the\nchoicest teas grown   In Ceylon\nand India.   60c   a   pound   and\nworth, more.\nComplete Mining Plants\nnew york Fashion letter\nNew Yolk, April 13\u2014From the very beat\nauthorities, comes tho news that the separate waist la no longer fashionable:.that\nevery smart gown must ho finished with\na waist and skirt to match, and yot ngnln\nis fashion proved to be wrong tn no i r ns\nthat 'never were there so many models for\nseparate waists as there are thin season,\nand these can be worn with any kind of\nsuit\u2014the  tallormade,   the   more   e'nborote\nveiling and even wLh the silk skn.   The\nlingerie  blouses  are exquisite;   if   jussblfi\nmore exquisite thnn last year, m:re elaborate   and   extremely  attractive   wl.Ue   the\nembroidery is of the finest.   Then once\nagain hns come Into style iho boned and\nfitted  waists of silk and lace.   In fact,\nthere does not seem to be any material\nthat cannot be combined with one or two\nothers, while the variety of colors is endless.   Just new the blouse of the coming\nseason and tho blouse of the past season\nJostle each other in the shops.  The southern   season   has  forced  tho  former Into\nprominence and the Annual spring sales\nhave lowered the prices of the latter and\nbrought them forward in the Bhape of bargains.   After all the dIoubo of rtio summer\nand of the winter is much alike nowadays,\nwhen many women wenr cobwebby blouses\nof lingerie stuff umi lace and embroidery\ntin* year round, but It is not the lingerie\nblouse that Is figured among the marked\ndown goods.   It, If attractive enough, will\nstand its chance, even after spring and\nsummer demnnds are in full blast; but the\nhosts; of silk and lace and chiffon blouses\nmade for accompaniments to winter coat\nand skirl costumes, or for house wear with,\nlight skirts, are being Included in the sales\nand one may find excellent bargains among\nthem, '\nLace and guipure blouses although the\nwindows are full of them, Heem.lesB necessary to the wardrobe than was the case\nlast year. The blouse that Is correct today\nis really a part of the gown nni> Is so\ncovered by some form of drapery as to\nshow little except gulmpe and understocks\nIn many cases it is decorated with the\ntrimming on the gown. ,\nOne of Die season's favorites Is the embroidered dross goods. There aro pongees\nthat are embroidered In self color and\nwhich aro as smart ob they can be. In\nthis list can toe mentioned a pongee ot\nthat shade of brown known as old apricot.\nThis is nothing like the apricot to which\nwe have been accustomed for seasons. It\nis a very pa!e brown; It la sofi. bright and\npretty.\nlivening clo ks m:d. of (Xtct'y UMutne\nmaterial as the dress they accompany, are\ntlif latest fad. To each dress one cloak,\none underskirt, one pair of shoes Is the\ntheory and practice of real elegance. To\nthese, exigencies will be added that of the\npossession of a stripped sunshade to harmonize with the patterns on the dress.\nThis Is the season of novelties, and the\nterm can h*i applied to the new foulards\nwhich have a nurfnce which resembles\ncrepe, yet which nro really foa'nril lit texture and  coloring,\nPattyempnterlos, used bo much now, aro\nso fine and much like colored laoe \u00abl)Rl |t\nIs difficult to teil them apart,   \"-\nJUST ARRIVED\nmay happen) ,\t\nGET READY for emergencto.\nBuy a bottle of\nFellows' Leeming's\nEssence\nFor Lameness In Horiei\nOnly 60c. a bottle\u2014and eaves\ndollars worth of time by curing\nlameness of every description.\nAt deslers, or from -\"; '\u2022\nl National Drue\" * Chemlcl Co* Limited,\nMONTREAL\nFresl] Dairy Butter\n30c. per lb.\nJoy's Cash (tary\nPhone II, ow. ot JoMphlu and Ward Sto\nJoy will meet you at tbe door.\n_\u25a0\u25a0'\". '-''w-.aggjff\nHOTEL DIRECTORY\nPHOENIX.\nHOTBU. BALMORAL PHOENIX B. C-\nThe leading hotel ot Boundary'! leadlni\nmining camp, Strictly tint class, ceo\ntrally locate* John A MoMaaUr. Pro\nprinter.\nHOTEL BROOKLYN, PHOKNIX-THD\nonly up to date hotel In Phoenix. Me*\nfrom cellar to roof. Best sample room*\nIn the Boundary. Bath rooms In connection. Steam heat. Opposite Great Nona*\nera depot  Jaa. Marshall, Proprietor.\nNELSON CAFE\nFirst Class Meals.   Furnished rooms\nla connection.   Open day and night.\nFirst-Glass iui\\ch\nfrom 12 hood\nto 2 -i. m.\n8PE0IAL\ntssMbv Dinner trem I te I \u00bb.ss.\nFOR SALE\nA 6-room modern house\nin good repair and three\nlots, on car line. Price\n$1750.00. Terms, $500.00\ncash, balance $15 00 per\nmonth with interest.\nR. J. STEEL\nBolt Aleut\nBaker St.\nPhone 275\nA. AUDET, Prop.\nFOR 8ALF\nIn Falrvlew, 4 lots cleared but not\ncultivated, with small frame house.\nPrice 1876.00.\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nRAILWAY CO.\nReduced Rates\nATLANTIC SbABOA D\nTO\nKOOTENAY POINTS\nEffective for Trans-Atlanilc passengers\narriving on or subsequent-to April 28th.\nGEO.\ng. McLaren,\natktrmwt\nVMIR.\nWALDORF HOTOL, T1UB, B. C.-HKAO-\nquaters for Mining and Commercial men.\nHost comfortable hotel In tbe District\nSample looms In connection.\nGBOEQE COI.BMAN, Proprietor.\nGRAND FORKS.\nHOTEL   PROVINCE,  GRAND   FOHKft-\nThe neado.au.rt ..m (or tourist.. 8atutae>\nHon guarantued. Kmll Larsen (late at\nNelson) Propuetor.\nARROWHEAD.\nWorks at\nMontreal\n\"Allls-Chalmers\"  Mining machinery.\n\"Lldgerwood\" hoisting engines.   \"Inger-   nPanoh Of-\nsoll\" rock drills, air compressors, and\ncoal cutters,  \"Bullock\" motors and gen-   nce Nelson\ncraters. ,      ( ..   . , ^jaj\nALLIS-CHALMMLIM, LTD.\nSPECIAL  FOR CAMP  AND  HOTEL USE\nHeavy Hams\nLean, mild cured. The very best of Canadian Goods\nP.  BURNS & CO.,Limited\nNELSON,    KASLO,    ROSSLAND and  BOUNDARY.\ni\u00bb uiiiHiu.^ ....   Ornamen\ntation of this kind must he the exact shade\nof  the  gown.\nJudging from the models Ihc tailors have\nto show gtvy and white striped wool if\nto be the preferred material. Ev* ry smart\ntailor has it, but as a rule he controls hut\none pattern no it may not ibcooma common.\nOne model hns n skirt showing a narrow\napron lyhepft Hie stripes fnrm Y'si Thfl\nrest of the skirt Is \"en forme\" nnd trimmed with bias bunds. The Jacket Is in vest\nshape, ending on the hips and curving Just\na bit to the waist lino. Velvet trims the\ncollar and the three-quarter s owes are\nfinished  in  the same  way.\nCATHERINE MANN-PAYZANT.\nTHE UNION HOTEL ARROWHEAli-\nSpeclal attention given to commercla\nmen and tourists. First clans sampls\nrooms. Finest scenery In British Columbia, overlooking upper Arrow Lake. W.\nJ.  Lghtburne,  Proprtetei.\nMorrison & Tollington\nREAL ESTATE\nRooms t and It       K.W.C. Moon\nBEE OUR LIST  OF\nChoice Fruit Lands\nNelson Steam laundry\nP.O. Box \u00ab.   Telephone 146\nAlt kinds .and all colors of Ladles' and\nDents' Clothing\nCLEANED AND DYED\nFlannels, Blankets, Curtains, Silks, Etc.,\ni specialty.    -\nGloves renovated to look like new.\nSteam Carpet Cleaning\nYour patronage solicited.\nPAUL NIPOU, Prop\nMADDEN HOUSE\nBAKER STREET, NELSON. B.C.\nDo yon need a comfortable hornet If so\ntry tba Madden House. Well furnished\nrooms lighted with electricity; with baths:\nfirst class board. In tbe bar you will find\nall the beat domestic and Imported liquors\nand cigara.\nTHOMAS MADDEN, Prop.\nMin,ard's Liniqent Relieves Neuralgia    <\nCURED OP RHEUMATISM\ny Mr. Writ. Henry or Chattanooga, Tcnn.,\nhad rheumatism In hop left arm. \"The\nstrength seemed to have gone, out of the\nmuscles so that It was muse'es so that It\nmuscles so that it was useless, for work,\"\nhe ays. \"I applied Chamberlain's Pain\nHalm and wrapped the arm In flannel ut\nniffht, and to my relief I found that the\npain gradually left me and the strength\nreturned. In three weeks thu rheltmntlsm\ndisappeared and haR not since returned.\"\nIf troubled with rheumatism tty a few applications of Pain Balm. You -re certain\nto be pleased with the relief which It affords.   For sale by all druggists nnd deal-\nW. G. GILLETT\nCONTRACTOR] AND BUILDER\nBOI.E AOTCNT FOR THB PORTO  RICO LUMBER OO., Ltd., Retail Yards\nRough and dressed lumber, turned work and brackets, Coaat lath an!\nshingles, sash and doors.  Cement, brick and lime for aale.  Automatic\ngrinder.   Yard and Faotory Vernon street, east of Hail\np. O. Box asa. Telephone, 171 Nelson, B  C.\nThe HALL MINE\nAND SMELTING\nCOMPANUiited\nNELSON. 8 C.\nPurchases\nLead, Copper\nand Dry Ores\nNELSON  IRON WORKS\nCorner of Hall and Front Streets.\nI. A. ISAAC \u00ab. W. NlfiTON\nengineers and Contractora, Founder* and Maohinjits\niiraalrlnr ami Jobbing uvecuted wltn Despatch, Sheet Metal Work,  Mining\n\"epB-\"-\"\u2022      Manufacturers of   Ore Cart, H. B. Contractors' Cars.\nand Mill Macllnery\nTHE QUEEN'S HOTEl\nRAKUR STREET\nMRS, E. C. CLARKE, Proprietress\nRATES |2 PER DAY\nLarge  and  comfortable  bedrooms,   and\nfirst class dining room.   Sample rooms for\ncommercial men.\nTHE GREAT WES1\nfuel & Trading Co., Ltd.\nAT FRANK,  ALBERTA.\nWholesale Dealers In snd Agents  tor\nCROW'S NRST COAL\nSteam nnd Domestic.\nX .\t\nLIMB\nWrite us for price, anil freight rates.\nSHERBROOKB\nHOUSE\nNELSON, B. C.\nOne minute's walk from C.P.R. station.\nCuisine unexcelled; II rooms, well heated\nand ventilated.\nBOYERBROS.\nPROPRIETORS\nCHURCH aERVICBS TODAY\nTlv services announced for today in tne\nchurches of Nelson are aa follows:\nAnglioan-St. Saviour's church, corner of\nWard and Silica streets. Second Sunday\nafter Easter; holy communion, 8 a. m.;\nmorning prayer und litany, 11 a.m.;\nSunday school, 2:90 p.m.; evensong, 7;%*\nRev. F. II. Graham, rector.\nCatholic-Church of Mary Immaculate\ncomer of Ward and Mill streets, ixtw\nmass, 8 a.m.; high msas, 10:3d; evening\nservice, 7:30.   Rev, Father AlthofF, priest.\nSalvation Army\u2014Barracks on Victoria\nstreet, west of Josephine. Special services\nwill be held today. Knee drill, 7 a.m.;\nholiness meeting, U a.m.; praise meeting,\n3 p.m.; evening mee.iiig, 8 o'clock.\nBaptist cburoh\u2014Stanley street, near Mill.\nMorning service, U a.m.; evening service,\nat 7:30; Sunday school, 2:30 p.m.; Rev.\nE. H. Shanks, pastor. Owing to the Illness of the pastor, E. Chave will take the\nmorning and J. Lalng Stocks the evening\nservices. The choir will render special\nmusic at the evening service.\nPresbyterian Chureh-Mt. Paul's, corner\nVictoria and Kootsnay streets. Morning\ntier vice, 11 a.m.; Sunday school, 1:30 p.m.;\nevening service, 7:30 p.m.; Rev, J. T.\nFergiiKon, pan tor. At the evening service\nMiss Richardson will sing Van de Water's\n\"The Good Shepherd.\" '\nMethodist church-Comer Silica and Jose.\nphi no streets. Morning service, 11 a.m.;\nSunday school and pastor's bible class 2:30.\nFriends and visitors cordially welcomed.\nRev. R. N. Powell, pastor. Morning topic,\n\"Tho Children of China,\" a chalk talk to\nthe children. Evening topic \"Houses of\nCedar nnd Temples of Canvas. Mrs, Thur-\nman will sing \"The Resurrection\" at the\nevening Be.rv.ee.\nROYAL HOTEL\nTKbEPHONSa\nMRS. WM. ROBfatfU'K, Propristoraat\nThe beat meals that can be provided tn\nthis market, cooked under tbe supervision\nof the proprleteress, who la a ftvonu\noarterer.\nNice airy rooms, newly furnlabad; bath\nfor guests.\nTh# best wines, liquors and cigara eu\nbe obtained at tbe bar.\nTERMS: II AND tl M PER DAT\nCOR ITAMLEY AND SILICA BTRBWIt\nOars Pas* Mm r>n\u00ab*\nCOAL! WOOU\nWe now have a stock\nof IGALT COAL\nPhone 265\nYALE-K00TENAY  IGE, FRUIT\nFUEL & POULTRY CO., LTD.\nOffice: N.E. Cor. Baker & Ward Sts.\nMlaanft Llnliqwrt Own Sunn, Etc\nPurs, Clean, wholssasts\nTAING'S\nNELSON  B. O.\nP. O. Boi 10F.9\nCaafltd Ifeeta\nLAKE VIEW HOTEL\ndraw Ball and Vernon Itreeta\nTwt Maokt tram city wnert n\u00bb Mf\nteUat a Ut kaatt la Heist*.\nMO\nGeorge Harrison\nFOR SALE\nThoroughbred Strawberry Plants\nPlants from. KelloKS's pedigree stock\nfor sale. Clark's Seedling, Michael's\nEarly, Enormous, Parson's Beauty, etc.\nPrice $8 per 1000\nApply\nJ. Lalng-Stocks, Nelson\nFOR SALE\nflood Upland prelrlt Bar for tale at\nat tar ton, f.o.b. Cayiajp, Altv\nCIUI. H. BOWAUD,\nKootenay Steam\nLAUNDRY\nGoods Called far and Dtlirered rrae.\nThe latest modern appuanoea now la twt\nat thla laundry-\nRaker itrael Melwn, B.e\nBARTLETT   H0DSI\n(Formerly Clarke House)\nThe best II per day house In Nelson.\nNona but white help employed. The best\nIs tho best\n8. W. BARTLETT - Pr p.\nFARM PRODUCE\nBuy your farm produce direct from the\nproducer. The Cowley local of the Alberta Farmers' association Is prepared to\nquote prices to any reliable party. Ad-\ndress A. H. OUNN, Secretary-Treasurer,\nCowley, Alt*.\nGEO. M. GUNN\nward trnunr    nbab poroivioi\nHaaufaotursr and dealer In Men's tin.\nItoetweer. Beaelrlaf pranntlr eras.\nW.\"\"\" 1*4   ..-.\nSptl-SMiKu^Ld.\niMHastlr\u00absli.W, VtMMner.\n_    Bookktevhui, Onn tad Fitttan\n| \u25a0wrtnand, Ttftfraaky tX \u25a0\u2022\u00bb\u2022\nuuuuuuuu\nmiii.lil\nEight Ttachtrt\nForty-Flva Ttptwrlttrt\nQswast ty Mall\nBttpttttatt Itditasn tttwU It*\nI R. J. fPHOTT, \u00ab, \u00bb., Prindptl\nITTTffTTWIHHWTTw'\nwmmmm\nColonists Rates\nFrom points Ontario. Quohec, Maritime\nProvinces, St. 1'aiil, Chicago and united.\nStates.   On sale daily till April  30,\nSend for your friends while the rates are\nlow, Full purlieu aia on application 'to\nlocal agent or writo\nJ. 8. CARTER,\nD.P.A., Nelson.\nB. J. COYLB.\nA.O.P.A., VsmoottTtt\nIf you want to buy Frutt\nLand see me.\nThat is my business.\nJ. E. ANNABLE\nM1LKM, & a\nWEST KOOTENAY\nBUTCHER CO.\nWholesale and Retail Dealers Is\nFRESH AND SALTED MEATS\nNothing but fresh   and   wholesome\nmeats and supplies kept In stock.\nMall orders receive careful attention\nE. O.TRAVBS, MANAGER.\nAtlantic S. S. Sailings\nC.P.B.   ROYAL  MAIL 8T&AMSBIM\nSt. John (West St. John), Liverpool\nL. Champla'th..Ap. UfL. Erie  Ap. rT\nKmp.  Ireland..Ap. 18*Emp. Britain..May I\nALLAN LINS ...\nFrom St. John From HaUlag\nParisian  April li Virginian   ....Ap.   IS\nTunisian ....April  ZUVlctorian  Ap. 27\nDONALDSON LINE\n(From West St. John, N.B.)\nSalads   Ap.  iiCassandra  ....Ap. U\nDOMINION   UN*\n(From Portland)\nKensington   ..Ap.   SDomlnion. Ap. II\nATLANTIC TRANSPORT Ll.< K\nMinnetonka Ap.  GMinneapolls....Ap.  U\nAMERICAN LINK\nKroonland  ....Ap.   6Vadcrlsnd ,...AP., II\nRED STAR LINK\nCeltic    ....Ap. CNcw York ....Ap. lSl\nCUNARD LINE\nLucanla   ....April   6Umuria   An.  181\ncaronla  Ap.  SCampanlu Ap. to\nWHITE STAR LIN\u00bb \"\u2022\nllnllli.   Ap. ltlMujHSllo    AP.  11\nFRENCH LINE\nLa   Brotagne..Ap.   SLa Sovole ....Ap. U\nHAMMlRQ-AKEBiCAN LIMB\nGraf Waldersee  April I\nHlcuclier April U\nNORTH OERMAN-LLOTD\nKaiser Wllhelm II  April I\nRhelh  April II\n\u2022This sailing may be from Quebec.\nAll conuiiental rates and sailings on as*\nolloatlon. If you are oontemplatlaf taking\n.n ocean voyage drop us a Una and wt\nwill be pleased te furnish yon witty tall ls>\n.\"ormstion promptly,\nJ. S. CARTER,   W. P. F. CUMMJNQH,\nP.P.A. Haaut      OtB. Aft, Wttntpts]\nKootenay Fruit Lands\nfor sale in 10, 20, and 46\nacre blocks.\nI have a few bargains\nnow, write for my lis\nI. E. ANNABLE\niouon, a m.\n\"BURBANK8\"\nSeed Potatoes\nCommonly known as Ashcroft Potatoes\n2000 Bushels at Bonnlngton Rancb..\nFor sale.   Apply to\nC. CAMPBELL\nManager\nIAN.\nFrolt Tree Pruning and Granting\nDone by L. Pogue, Victoria St-, Nelion.\nOrders should he sent In Early.\n.A fltnek of Slorii, or tree cuttings (or\ngrafting kept on hand, of the he\u00bbt annual\nbearing trees.       \u2014\nOUTtET HOTEL, Proctor\n^n\" ideal location for fishermen and tourists; ' good sandy beach for bathing; ail\nboats stop at the hotel, special attention\nto ladles and children.\n0. & J. SNOW, Proprietors.\nSynopsis of Canadian Homattead\nRegulations\nANT ar\u00bb Jible Dominion Uoli within t*\u00bb\nHallway bolt In Britten Columbia, nay N\nnomeoteaded by any poraon who to the\nnolo bead of a family, or any mala \u2022\u00bb\u2022*\u2022\n18 yoani \u00abf ago, to Uw ottant of oae-o*r>\nter section of 100 acres, mora or law.\nEntry must be mad* personally at (a*\nlocal land offloe for tho district In whlei\nthe land Is situate. ,\nThe homesteader Is reaui\u00ab-\ntht oondltioas connected tberawlth ondw-.\non* of the following plana:\n<1> At least six months' realdeao* wmb\nant (s'Jltlvatlon of tho land In eaeh vattr\nfor three yearn.\n(3> If the father (or mother, If tho SMfen\nIs deceased), of tho homeataade'r rfalds*\nupon a farm In tho vicinity ot tho land\nentered for, tho requirement* aa to real-\ndeuce may be satisfied by ouch pmon\nresiding with the father or motitor.\n(1) U the settler has his permanent rem\ntence upon farming land owned by aim\nIn the vicinity of bis hemeatoad, the ro\nqulramanta aa to resldonce may bo satis\nfled by residence upon the said land\nSix months' notice In writing should be\ntven to the Commissioner of \"wnlnhr\nLands at Ottawa of Intention to tntly tm\nCoal lands may bo purchased at \u00abe \u00bb\nacre for eett ooal end 130 for anu^i\u2122\nNot more than 320 acres can be acquired\nby ono Individual or company, Royalti\nat tho rate of 10 cento dot ton of *IuJ\npounds shall be collected on the grow ant-\nDeputy of the Minister of tho lntarioi\nN.B.-Unauthorlsed publication af thtf\nidverUiement will not bo paid flay.\nTO   WORKiNGMEN\nNOTICE\nWhereas, at the Last Chance and Surprise\nmines, Chinese kitchen help Is at present employed, to the exclusion of Whfta\nlabor.\nTherefore, be It resolved that thla organisation,  Sandon  Miners'  union  No. 81, of\nthe W. F. of M. reaffirming Its opposition\nto the employment of Orientals within Its\nJurliidlatlon, strongly condemns the position\ntaken by the management of the properties in question, and counsels worklngmen\neverywhere and those favorably disposed\ntoward organised labor to be governed by\nthis action.\nSANDON MINERS' UNION\nA. BHILLAND, Secretary.\nCut Flowers\nIn any quantity ready now and for Easter offerings. Carnations, assorted, single\nand double, Daffodils. Hyacinths, white\nand light blue Narcissus, white Uoellcus\nAlliumi White, Palms, Ferna and Rubber\nPlant*   B. QRIZZKLLB, Florist, Nelson.\nCERTIFICATE OF IMPROVBMBNTB\nBlack Prince  Mineral  Claim,   situate  Ik\nthe Nelson  Mining Division of  West\nKootenay District Where located: on,\nQueen Victoria mountain, near Beasley,\nSiding.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, Frank C. Qreen..\nacting aa agent for Aaron H. Kelly, Free-\nMiners Certificate No. BM0, and Thomas*\nBrown,   F.M.C.   No.   B668,  Intend,   sixty;\ndays from the date hereof,  to apply tot\nthe Mining Recorder for a Certificate off\nImprovements, for the purpose of obtaining \u25a0\na Crown  Grant of the above claim.\nAnd further take notice that action, under section 37, must be commenced before\nthe issuance of such Certificate of Improvements.\nDated this 18th day of January, A.V.,\nINT.\nF. C. GREEN, Nelson, B.C.\nCERTIFICATE OF IMPROVEMENTS\nThe Eye, Exe and Ell Fraction Mineral\nClaims; Mtuate In the Slocan Division'\not West Kootenay District\u2014Looated on\nRobinson erode. .\nTAKE NOTICE that I, J. Murray McGregor, Free 'Miner's Certificate No.\nI'Miiii, Intend, sixty days from the date,\nhereof to apply to the IWiIng Recorder\nfor Certificates of Improvements for the\npurpose of obtaining Crown Grants of the\nabove claims.\nAnd further lake notice, that action\nunder section 37, must be commenced before the issuance ot such Certificates ot\nimprovements.\nDated tbls and day of April, 1907,\nM J. M. McOREGOH.\n 15-eSl-\nnaiLf mwI MiiBOHi a. C:j sundai, ah\n\u25a0a^SSS^^n\nFine Tailored Garments for Men\nSPRING SUITS READY\n' SPRING OVERCOATS READY\nEvery clothier In the country has the same Btory to tell\u2014his. spring clothing has arrived and he is after your or tier. But, make a note of this, every\nclothier In the country cannot offer you   the celebrated\n20th CENTURY BRAND CLOTHES\nbecause they are sold by only one merchant In each town. We are exclusive\nagents for this town and vicinity, and have just placed in stock, a large Shipment of these stylish, carefully-tnllored and llne-iluing clothes. We solicit\nyour order on the absolute quality and merits of the garments,\nBOYS' QUALITY SUITS at the lowe st possible prices. We have a. Targe\nselection of boys' suits of good material and choice fabrics.\nSHOES! SHOES! SHOES! Our stock of spring shoes is complete, .the\nprices lean your way, the quality is t he best v\nBZEtCTWTSr & oo.\nSharp & Irvine Co.\nBrokers, 108 Wall Street, Spokane, Wash,\nWe wish to sell all or part of the follov\/ing\nstocks at the prices  named,\nsubject to prior sale\nMO Alberta Coal and Coke 32\nGOO International Coal 66\n2000 Nicola Coal  06\n500 B. C. Amalgamated Coal  Bid\n50 Dominion Copper    $6.25\nMO B. C. Copper  Market\n.100 Kendall (Mont.) *2.00\n'   100 Snowstorm  *3.00\n100 -Stewart  |2.T'\nInternational Coal at tbe present pr\nIs aft excellent purchase. This stock Is\ncent.\nKendall Is cheap at |2.00. It pays r\nshare. This company has paid over $1,\nblocked out to assure dividends for two\nSnowstorm Is aho a good buy. This\nper share monthly, and has paid $225,\nThe three above stocks will show a\nFor further Information write us at\nIce or In fact any price under \u00abo cents\npaying quarterly dtvldenda of qne per\ncgular monthly dividends of 3 cen ts per\n250,000 in dividends, and has enough ore\nyears to come.\nstock is paying dividends of 3 cents\n000 to date.\ngood advance during the next (SO days.\nonce.\nSHERMAN'S   OPERA   HOUSE\nONE   NIGHT  ONLY\nThursday, April 18th\nThe Nelson Amateur Dramatic Co.\nwill present\nThe Private Secretary\nBY WILLIAM GILLETTE\nPRICES\u201450c, 76c, $1.00. Seat sale opens at Rutherford's Monday.\nColumbia River Fruit Lands\nFOR SALE\nLarge areas unimproved, with plenty of water; adjoining good orchards\nbearing line fruit In season. Improved farms and homeB paying profit from the\n.start, on easy terms. '\nSea Dovltt If you want lands or timber.   Actual settlers wanted.\n\u25a0P\"\nSTAR vs. WHITE APPEAL\nCROSS-EXAMINATION   OP FOWLER\nBY BODWBLL.\nEVlDKN<JafoT5WIOKV ATn) MStE-\nMAN W. GBSORQE CLARK.\n(Special Correspandence)\nVictoria, April 10.\u2014The appellants\nclosed their side of the case today In the\nhearing betoro the full court of the Star\nM. & M. Co. vs. the Byron N. White Co.\nOutside of the photographs identified by\nMr. Fowler, and the evidence of that\ngentleman and Mr* Sizer, on the new\nwork done under the order of the court,\nMr. Davis brought out nothing start-\nllnigly new but relied on the evidence\nfirst taken plus what is disclosed by the\nnew work. Mr. Bodwell evidently takes\ntho case very seriously as now framed\nsince ho spent the better part of today\ncross examining S. S. Fowler, M.E., of\nNelson, on his story as to what the new\nwork showed up. This was further evidenced when Mr. Davis closed his case\nthis afternoon alter calling W. E.\nZwicky, of Kaslo, and George Clark, of\nSaudou, the two men, who hud charge ot\nthe new work as manager and foreman,\nrespectively, and Mr. Bodwell commenced I1U1 side of the case In support\nof the learned chief justice's Judgment.\nThe counsel declared the now work had\nadvanced the case no further than when\nit was last on trial, but he made an address of some length before calling his\nfirst witness and it became known that\nthe views of Max Bochmer, a well known\nAmerican expert were to be submitted\n10 the court,, not merely on the new\nwork, but on the whole case, Mr. Bochmer starting from the commencement of\nthings and just getting fairly underway when the court adjourned. It further transpired that the defendants\nbave done further work on their own\naccount and that they will offer evidence\nas to this.\nMr. Justice Martin unnounccd that he\nregarded the present hearing as practically a new trial uud he personally\nhoped the parties would submit all the\nevidence they thought would be of any\nuse to the court.\nIn reply to Mr. justice Irving, Mr.\nBodwell and Mr. Davis agreed in stating\nthat the evidence would probably be all\nIn on Friday afternoon, but how long\nIt would take to argue the case neither\ncounsel could say.\nOn his cross-examination this morning, Mr. Fowler told Mr. Bodwell how\nhe took or superintended tho taking of\nthe numerous photographs put In. The\nwitness declined to put any Interpretation upon the discovery of the \"hidden\ndrift,\" referred to' In his examination\nin chief. The drift looked, judging from \u25a0\nthe age of the timbers, as If it had been \u25a0\ndone .two or three years ago. He did not\nauk for any explanation about tbe drift\nbeing lagged, or walled up. ft struck\nbin, as a suspicious circumstance.\nIt was tbe concealment that struck\nhim at the time that made him suspect\nthat there was something in the drift\nthe defendants wanted to hide. What\nthat something was he did not know.\nHe believed that tbe concealment was\ndone purposely to prevent those having\na right to Inspect (lie workings seeing\nwnat was there. Ho thought tho main\npoint It waa Intended to conceal was the\nfact that the porphyry Intrusion waa not\nencountered until the face of this 130\nfoot drift was reached. That fact, the\nwiness thought bad a distinct bearing\non the defendants' contention as part\nof their case. It would, in the witness'\nopinion, injure the defendants' case If\nit was shown where the porphyry intrusion actually came In at tho concealed\npoint. The bend of the Slocan Star vein\naround the mass of porphyry Intrusion,\nwas the point Involved. A long discussion betwen witness nnd counsel followed on the state ot the extreme west-\nem workings in the Silversmith, tho existence of a vlcn of ore, drag ore or ore\nIn place, being Involved. The witness\ndenied the existence of a vein, or of ore\nIn place, tne oro found bolng strictly\n\"dragged ore\" from where. Mr. Fowler\nsaid, he could\" not say. The expert's\nview, of course, directly contradicts the\nevidence of the defendants' experts, who\nhave sworn and will no doubt swear\nagain, that a vein Is plainly to bo found\nat the workings in the section of the\nclaim In question, that ore Is In place\nthere, that It Is not drag ore, and that a\nlarge tfuantlty of ore has actually been\nmined and taken out In the course of\ndevelopment. Gradu-Uy the examination\ndrifted Into a bat,. between the lawyer and the expert as to the geological\nformation of the country through which\nthe Slocan Star vein, and the black Assure ran through. Both participants In\nthe struggle had the advantage of going\nall over the question in court at the trial\nand when this general examination came\nto a close honors were about even. Mr.\nFowler having maintained his position\nwithout any serious loss of prestige.\nThe mass of porphyry, said the witness,\nW. J. DEVITT.C.P.R.Lands Agt., Trail.B.C.\nFor Sale\nTWO CORNER LOTS In business section of Baker St. occupied by frame\nbuildings bringing In good rentals;\na good Investment as It now standi:\nor would be Ideal site for a stone\nor brick building (suitable for first\nclass hots! or theatre and stores.)\nRESIDENCE In best contral locatlon-\nBlx rooms and bath. Good cellar.\nCOTTAGE\u20144 rooms and bath, 2 lots,\n)  good location.\nRESIDENCE\u20147 rooms and bath.   Fine\nview of lake.\n60 ACRES overlooking West Arm Kootenay lake, situate In the midst of Improved ranches.  100 trees (6 yrs.);\n200 trees (8 yrs.); bushes, etc.\nLAND\u2014Fire Valley, Pass Creek, near\nBurton City, ate.\nF. B. LYS\nRBAL ESTATE AOENT\nWest Baker St. Nelson, B. 0.\nexisted before we formation ot tho Star\nvein, though probably not In Its present condition so tar as the surface la\nconcerned.\nDid the porphyry mass offer equal resistance with the Slocan Star slate?\nWhen the porphyry mass waa cooling,\nwhat took place? What pressure existed at tho various stages df the earth's\nformation? were gone Into over and\nover again. Tho point Involved, of\ncourse being, did the Slocan Star vein\nturn and bend around the porphyry intruding mass or was a Assure formed'\ncutting off the vein abruptly. As a geological demonstration the work of the\nmorning was highly Interesting, but the\nquestions involved were treated wholly\nfrom a technical standpoint.\nIf porphyry ts found In the Slocan\nStar vein, It would mean that the porphyry was there Arst. If the porphyry\nwas mineralised, it might have become\nso before it got Into the vein, but probably was mineralized at the same time\nthe vein was formed.\nTurning to the new work at the extension to the south, the witness was\nasked about the stringer of ore found\nthere. It was drag ore, not ore In place.\nIt was shnved oft a vein nearby, probably the Slocan StaT vein, and brought to\nIts present position In the black Assure,\nby movement. At the hoist on No. '5\nlevel, the Slocan Star vein on the Aoor\nof the lead was approximately 80 feet\nwide, where It butted up against tbe\nblack Assure. No. 2 vein was located\n145 feet. away, and the witness was asked\nhow far ore could he dragged. It could\nbe dragged and probably was dragged\nfrom the Slocan Star vein 145 feet away,\nlite witness said. Thla concluded Mr.\nBodwell's examination and it can fairly\nbe said that he left the expert pretty\nmuch Just where he found him.\nTo Mr. Taylor, Mr. Fowler went fully\nagain Into the question ot drag ore and\nwhere It was usually found, and the\ncause of Its appearnnce. Turning to the\nformation of the porphyry inlruslon the\nwitness explained that two kinds of\nporphyry were found lu the workings\ncaused by some of the mass cooling more\nrapidly than the other. Nothing that\nhe had seen or heard to dato had altered\nor modlAed his original expressed opinion that the black Assure cut off abruptly the Slocan Star vein at Its westerly\nend.\nMr. Davis then called W. B. Zwicky.\nthe mining engineer ot Kaslo, under\nwhose direction the new work recently\ndone was carried out. Mr. Davis originally contended that the court should\nrail this witness, ho being more or less\nan ofAccr of the court. The court, declined to call the witness and Mr.\nDavis now put him in the box. Mr.\nZwicky said he superintended the work\ndirected by the court. He had not consulted with olther of the parties to tho\nsuit He had never given evidence In\nthe action before. He carried out the\ninstructions of the court as set out in\nthe order. He described running the\ncrosscut In the southern extension and\nsaid he stopped when he came to the\nwall. Where the wall was reached there\nwas a radical change in tie material encountered. Continuing the witness went\non to describe the other work done on\nHie southern extension, giving a minute\ndescription of the material encountered\ntill the wall was reached at this point.\nThe witness said the new work showed\nthe extension of the black Assure to the\nsouth. He had no hesitation on this\npoint, but answered positively. Turning\nto No. 2 vela the new work done there,\nhe said, he found In tlu> 50 feet run.\nshipping ore and quartz. 'The walls were\nIn place. Ho was satisfied that he was\nfollowing a vein as far as 'he went. At\nthe northern extension the' new work\nshowed the extension of the block assure\nIn a northerly direction. He proceeded 13% feet and stopped when he reached tho wall. What he crosscut at this\npoint was tho same Assure that he crosscut at the southern extension already\nreferred to. He was manager of the\nRambler-Cariboo, American Boy and\nsome Ainswoi'th properties.\nTo Mr. Bodwell. the witness said the\nstringer ho encountered In the southern\nextension was on the footwall of the\nAssnro. The footwall of the No. 2 vein\nwas not well deAned. Pressed on some\ngeneral questions as to the rest of the\nworkings outside of tho three points\nwhere the new work was done, the witness asked to be excused from expressing an opinion. He did not \"look\naround\" when passing In and out of the\nmine.\nWilliam George Clark, of Sandon.\nminer, foreman for Mr. Zwicky In doing\nthe new work ordered by the court, waa\nDON'T OVERLOOK THIS\n320 Acres of\nFirst-class Fruit Laqd\nwith lake frontage, 22 acres cleared,\n15 acres ploughed, 6 acres planted with\nassorted fruit trees, 1 acre In small\nfruits. Frame house 12 ft. x 16 ft. and\nfurniture, plough, harrow, cultivator.\nHot spring on land, which is of Immense value aa regards fruit growing,\nnnd three good streams on property.\nThis land Is situate on the east side of\nthe Arrow lakes. Price $30,00 per acre.\nEasy terms; or will sell 160 acres of\nabove property (the unimproved half),\nall FIRST CLASS LAND, easily cleared,\nfree from rock, well watered, with lake\nfrontage, for $20.00 per acre. TermB\nVn cash, balance on time; or will subdivide above at slightly Increased price.\nR. J. STEEL\nFREE\n1 PORE\nROYAL CROWN\nSOAP\n. WRAPPERS\nDM* \u25a0 a test sari aektai fir a seta\nAUCTION SALE\nArnot's Stock of Dry\nCommencing Monday, 15th April, at 2 p.m. at Store, corner or<a\nand Josephine Streets.    We have . been instructed by D. Arnot 4o^\nout his entire stock of Dry Goods,  Hats,  Boots and Shoes,   Clothln\u00bbj-\nEtc..   Sale every afternoon and evening\u2014at 2 p.m., and 7.30 p.m. untlll\nentire stock is sold.   TERMS CASH.'\nCHAS. A. WATERMAN & CO, AuctJ\nROUGH   LUMBER  DRBSSBD\nDoom, Windows, Mouldings, Shingles, Turned Work and Brackets. Otmpleta tat\n\u2022 U date stock always on hand.. Hall orders promptly attended t*, ,' **\nA. C. LAMBERT & CO.\n=F\nthen called by Mr. Davis. He started the\ncrosscuts in the south extension from\nthe footwall of the Assure and stopped\nwhen he came to tihe wall to let Mr.\nZwicky see if it was all right. He described the material he went through,\nagreeing with the former witness as to\nthe make up. He was on duty while\nall the work was done. He found a\nstringer of ore in the lootwall of the\nfissure.\nThe witness declined to express any\nopinion as to the result of what was\ndone at any of the points where the\nwork was done, arid Mr. Bodwell in his\ncross-examination got very little information except as to the actual work\ndone.\nAt 3.30 Mr, Davis announced his case\nfor the appellants closed, and Mr. Bodwell opened the case for the respondents. Mr. Bodwell said Mint the result\nof doing the qew work was exactly what\nhe anticipated it, would be when the\nplaintiffs asked to have it done. There\nwas atlll the same balance of opinion to\nbe struck between the experts. The defendants', counsel said, had in mi way\naltered their ease and would urge now\nexactly what they did before the learned\nchief justice, that the Slocan Star vein\nas shown on the model and map was\none continuous vein and was not cut off\nby the black fissure, the latter having\nno existence. What tho plaintiffs' claimed to have found by the new work, has\npractically never been denied by the defendants. A Assure continuing to the\nnorth and south 88 shown, does not in\nany way affect the defendants' Invariable\ncontention. The Assures claimed by the\nplaintiffs are simply \"sympathetic\ncrocks\" caused by the Blooan Star vein\nbending around the porphyry mass and\ntaking the winding course It does, ak\nto No. 2 vein, It la still another question\nwhether It Is a branch vein or not. The\nnew work has proved nothing that was\nnot known before. There Is nothing before the court that will assist it to do\nanything olse than t'he chief juatlpe did,\ndecide the myth or falsity of the two\nexpert opinions advanced-\nMr. Bodwell called Max Bochmer, mining engineer, a new witness Introduced\nfor the Ar.u time in the case. The witness said no was educated tn Germany,\nand had practiced his profession for\nmany years In the states and hail examined and reported, on many mining\nproperties In the west during the past\n28 years, He had recently examined the\nworkings of the Slocan Star carefully for\nthe purpose of this trial. He had examined practically the whole mine. It\nwas necessary to examine the workings\nevery few feet In order to speak Intelligently. The witness first examined the\nsurface outcropping of the Slocan Star\nvein which, he said, followed a most\ntortuous course, one of the most twisted\ncourses he had ever seen.\nThe witness explained that he had had\nsome work done on his own account and\nthen Mr. Davis made a strong objection\nlo fresh evidence nnd a new expert being offered to the court. He thought it\nmost unfair If the defendants could,\nwithout notice to the plaintiffs, do any-\nwork they pleased, and then bring witnessed here.\nMr. justice Irving\u2014The form of the\norder made covcrB the case.\nCorporation of (he City of Nelson\nNOTICE\nNOTICE is hereby given that under the\nprovisions ot Bylaw No. 80, \"Pound and\nDog Tax Bylaw,\" It Is unlawful for any\nperson to auffer any horse, mule, bull,\nor cow, sheep, goat, pig or other cattle, or\npoultry, to run at large within the limits\nof tho City of Nelson.\nEvery owner of a dog In the City of\nNelson la required to pay. annually a tax\nof two dollars for each dog owned by him,\nNo person shall suffer or permt his dog\nto run at large In the City of Nelson for\nwhich such person has not paid the tax\nreulqred of him and unless \u00abucb dog shall\nahve around his neck a collar or strap to\nwhich shall bo attached a metallic plate\nto be supplied by the city on payment of\nthe said tax,\nWarning le hereby given that any person guilty of an Infraction or violation\nof any of the provisions of the above\nnamed bylaw is in addition to the fees and\ncharges set forth therein, liable upon summary conviction to a pennlty of One Hundred Dollare and the costs of prosecution,\nand In default of payment to Imprisonment for a term not exceeding two months.\nBy Order,\nw. n. WAsaoN, city otern.\nNelson, B.C., April I, 1KB,\nMr. justice Martin\u2014I should like to\nunderstand the matter. It seems peculiar.\nMr. justice Irving\u2014At present the ruling is that under the court's order, this\nevidence Is admtssable.\nThe witness then proceeded to describe his inspection of the surface of the\nledge and the new pits he bad made.\nHe found the vein continuous across the\nfull length of the two claims. The general geological formation of the mountain was gone into In detail. The way\nin which the Slocan Star vein met the\nporphyry dyke and passed around it resumed its line of original dip after passing the porphyry mass, was described at\nlength. Turning to the makeup of the\nSlocan Star vein the witness said that\nIn length, nine-tenths of veins were barren, the rich sections only occasionally\noccurring, so that the barren sections in\nthe StaT vein need exoite no comment\nIt |s what might be expected.\nThe Star . vein followed a crooked\n00111*86, but the witness knew of others\nstill more crooked, the winding course\nwas unusual but not surprising. Coming\ninto No. 5 level, the witness declared\nfor a now state of things, or rather his\nexplanation of what caused tbe apparent'termination of the vein against the\nAssure, differed a good deal from anything so far alleged on either side. It\nwaa the same story as that told by Mr.\nBlmendorf at the trial but told In a different way and advancing different reasons for cause and effect He took his\nevidence largely from the upper levels\nwhich have been worked out In place\nof the lower level used chiefly by the\nother witnesses. He was satisfied he\nsaid that the Slocan Star vein bent\nround the porphyry mass and that the so\ncalled black fissure Is not a fault fissure at all.   Has no existence In fact.\nAt this point the court rose for the\nday.\nWHOOPING COUGH\nI have used Chamberlain's Cough Remedy In my family in cases of whooping\ncough, and want to tell you that It la the\nbesti medicine I have ever used,\u2014 W, F.\nGaston, Pasco, Ga. This remedy Is safe\nand sure. For sale by all druggists and\ndealers.\n\"Meats  that satisfy.\"\nTAING'S\nCanned Meats\nNOTICE\nAll members of the Industrial Workors\nof the World are requested to attend the\nmeeting on Tuesday, lfith, at 8 p.m.\nImportant business,\nE. MASON, Pre*.\nJ. H. MATHESON, Sec.\nFOR SALE\nHotel   Hume,  2  lots and  furnlt\u00abre..|6t),0tiu\nBlock V., Balfeur ,12 lota ... '    760\nLot 3 and E 1-2 2, block 1. with holdings,   partly   rented,   %V>  month   ,. 10,000\n7 tots block 44D.. bearing fruit trees 2,600\nLots 7 and 8, w half 9, block 1< With\nfi-room   dwolllng     4,000\nX lots, town of Bllverton   1,000\nHalf Interest 200 acres Slocan Lake.. 750\nQuarter  interest Trout  Lake ttty.. 2,600\nLot Atlln City  ...^   360\nHalf Interest 160 acres near Kaslo.. 760\n1G0 acres Pass  valley   6,000\nHalf Interest 70 acreB, 3 miles uf Cottonwood Creek \u201e  369\nJ. FRED HUME\nM. J. HENRY'S\nNUBBKBIE8 AND SEED HOUSES\nHeadquarter! for Paoifio Coast grown\nCardan, Hold and Flower Seedt\nLarge stock of HOME-GROWN Fruit\nand Ornamental Trees now matured (or\ntuture planting.\nNo expense, loss or delay ot fumtfa-\ntlon or Inspection.\nBEE SUPPLIES, Spray Pumps, Spraying Material, Greenhouse Plants, Out\nFlowers,\nWe do business on our own ground*\n\u2014no cent to pay and an prasars*) to\nmeet all competition.\nCatalogue Ira*.\nM. J. HENRI\nRIO Weatmlnster Road. Vancouver, B.. O,\nNOTfl\naftci\nCommil\ntor!*,  fl\nlowing \\\ndistrict:\nT. BurgeJ\nsouth ofl\nline of tiiL\nohalns, mol\npre-emptlonT\ntine to rigll\n(railway;  thl\nmenaement,\nless.\nStaked this\nJ.\nGEO.\nNOTICE is hereby gU\nafter dato I intend to apply 1\nChief commissioner of Lands arL\nVictoria,  for permission to purca^\nfollowing   described   lands:   Comm?\nat a post  marked   \"John   D.  AtchlsS\nN.E.  corner,\"  planted  near   K.   and  ^L\nblock 823, at foot of North bay of HowBrn^\nlake, thence south 40 chains; thence, west.\n20 chains;  thence north 40 chains; thenro\n20 chains more or le\u00bbs along shore of bay\/\nto   point   of   commencement,    the   wln.it*\ncontaining SO acreB, more or lesB.\nJOHN D, ATOHISON.\nFRANK FLETCHER, Agent.\nNOV.  26.  1900. 34-!)\nNOTICE- Is hereby given that 60 days a titer date I Intend to apply to the Hon.\ntho Chief Commissioner of Lands and\nWorka for permission to purchaee the following described lands In Kootenay district, B.C.: Commencing at a post mnrrteit\n\"J. Cameron's S.E. corner post,\" said pout,\nbeing on the west side of Upper Arrow\nlake, opposite Nakusp, and at the N.K.\ncorner of lot 7310, running thence west lo\nchains; thence north 60 chains; thenco\neoat 7 chains; thence following the lake\nBhoro In a southerly direction 60 chains,\nmore or leBs, to point of commencement,\ncontaining 00 acres, more or leBS.\nDated this nth day of March, 1907.\nJ.   CAMERON.\nNOTICE} Ib hereby given that GO days atter\ndate I Intend to apply to the Hon. tho\nChief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor permission to purchase the following\ndescribed lands situated on the south, short)\nof the West Arm of Kootenay lake, nine\nmiles from Nelson, and Joining lot 4401:\nCommencing at a post marked \"M. SI.\nWinter's N.W. corner post,\" tb\/nce eaai\n80 chains, more or less; theuce south 1U\nchains, more or less; thnnce west to the\nlake shore ,and thence fallowing the lake\nshore to the point of commencement.\nDated this 9th day of February, 1907.\nM.  M.  WINTER.\nNOTICE is hereby given that 60 days ar-\nter date I Intend to apply to the Hon.\nthe Chief Commissioner of Lnnds and\nWorks for permission to purchase the following described land, situated on the west\nside of Kootenay river, and covering all\nof A. L. Stewart's abandoned pre-emption No. T;Vj .and about one-eighth of a\nmile north of Angus Curry's pre-emption:\nCommencing at a post marked \"Sidney J,\nCummlnga' southeast corner pout,\" thenco\nnorth 40 chains; thence west 00 chains;\nthence south 40 chain!); thence east W\nohnlns, to place of commencement, containing 240 acres more or less.\nDated this 28(h day of February, 1907.\nSIDNEY J.  CUMMINOS.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that 00 days\nafter date I intend to apply to tlio Hon.\nthe Chief Commissioner of Lands and\nWorks for permission to purchase the\nfollowing described lands, situate In West\nKootenay District: Commencing at a post\nmarked \"M. E. M, Rogerson's land\" and\nplanted about five miles up Little Slocan\nRiver, on tbe west side, running so chains\nsouth: thence 80 chains west; thence 80\nchains north; thence So chains east, to\nplace of commencement.\nM.   E.   M.   HOOERSON.\nC.   R. CUTTJJN,   Agent.\nMarch 27, 1007.\nNOTICE Is hereby given fh;it sixty days\nafter date I Intend lo apply to the lion\nthe) chjef commissioner of Lunds and\nWorks for permission to purohtue the following described lands, situate In West\nKootenay district: Commencing at a post\nmarked by name \"Gerald Itecs' N.E. corner post,\" at the northwest cornor of the\npurchase claim staked April 20th, 1906, by\nD. A. Boyd and 1*'. J. Sainmons. thence\n80 chains west along the C.P.R. right or\nway: thence W chains south; thence Ed\nchains cast; thence 20 chains north, to\npost of commencement, containing 40 acres\nmore or less.\nNelson,  B.  C\u201e April 1. 1907. >\nQ.   S.   REES\nNOTICE Is hereby given that 00 days\nafter date I ln:end to apply to the t'htet'\nCommissioner of Lands nnd Works, at\nVictoria to purchase 100 acres of land on\nthe east side of tho Arrow lake, on Dates\ncreek, and described as follows: Commending; at a post marked \"W.W.'s S.W. corner,\" and plnnted at the southeast corner\nof lot 6003, thence 40 chains norlh; thenco\n40 ohalns east; thence 40 chains south;\nthenco 40 chains west, to place of commencement, containing isi acres more or\nleas.\nDated. March 77, 1907. 4-U\nW.   WALTON.\nFRANK ORANOR,   Ixwator,    ,\n I\n\u00a3\nI\nFine Tailored Garments for Men\n8PRING SUITS READY\nSPRING OVERCOATS READY\nEvery clothier In the country has the same story to tell\u2014his spring clothing has arrived and he is after your or der. But, make a note of this, every\nclothier In the country cannot offer you   the celebrated\n20th CENTURY BRAND CLOTHES\nbecause'they are sold by only one merchant in each town. We are exclusive\n.agents for this town and vicinity, and have just placed in stock a large shipment of these stylish, carefully-tailored and fine-fitting clothes. We solicit\n.your order on the absolute quality and merits of the garments.\nBOYS' QUALITY SUITS at the lowe st possible prices. We have a large\n\u25a0.selection of boys' suits of good material and choice fabrics.\nSHOES! SHOES! . SHOES! Our stock of spring shoes is complete, the\n\u2022prices lean your way, the quality is t he best.\nBBO'Wir <te CO.\nSharp & Irvine Co.\nBrokers, 108 Wall Street, Spokane. Wash.\nWe wish to sell all or part of the following\nstocks at the prices named,\nsubject to prior sale\n500 Alberta Coal and Coke 32\n500 International Coal     .56\n2000 Nicola Coal    .06\n600 B. C. Amalgamated Coal ....Bid\n50 Dominion Copper   $6.25\n150 B. C. Copper  Market\n100 Kendall (Mont)  $2.00\n100 Snowstorm  $3.00\n100 Stewart  $2.75\nInternational Coal at the present pr ice or in fact any price under 60 cents\nis an excellent purchase. This stock is paying quarterly dividends of one per\ncent\nKendall is cheap at $2.00. It pays r egular monthly dividends of 3 cents per\nshare. This company has paid over $1,250,000 in dividends, and has enough ore\nblocked out to assure dividends for two years to come.\nSnowstorm is also a good buy. This stock is paying dividends of 3 cents\nper share monthly, and has paid $225,000 to date.\nThe three above stocks will show a good advance during the next 60 days.\nFor further information write us at once,\nSHERMANS   OPERA  HOUSE\nONE   NIGHT  ONLY\nThursday, April 18th\nThe Nelson Amateur Dramatic Co.\nwill present\nThe Private Secretary\nBY WILLIAM GILLETTE\nPRICES\u201450c, 75c, $1.00. Seat sale opens at Rutherford's Monday.\nColumbia River Fruit Lands\nFOR SALE\nLarge areas unimproved, with plenty of water; adjoining good orchards\nbearing fine fruit in season. Improved farms and homes paying profit from the\nstart, on easy terms.\nSee Devltt if you want lands or Umber.   Actual settlers wanted.\n*W. J. DEVITT, C.P.R.Lands Agt., TraiLEC.\nstar vs. white Appeal\nCROSS-EXAMINATION   OF FOWILER\nBY BODWELL.\nB?I&#b, S; &,<\nkffitiki* iPaii;\nEVIDENCE OP ZWICKY AND FOREMAN W. GEORGE CLARK.\n(Special Correspandence)\nVictoria, April 10.\u2014The appellants\nclosemheir side of the case today in the\nhearing before the full court of the Star\nM. & M. Co. vs. the Byron N. Wlhite Co.\nOutside of the photographs identified by\nMr. Fowler, and the evidence of that\ngentleman and Mr. Sizer, on the new\nwork done under the order of the court,\nMr. Davis brought out nothing start-\nlinigly new but relied on the evidence\n.first taken plus what is disclosed by the\nnew work. Mr. Bodwell evidently takes\nJhe case very seriously as now framed\nsince he spent the better part of today\ncross examining S. S. Fowler, M.E., of\nNelson, on. his story as to what the new\n[work shoved up. This was further,evidenced wne& Mr. Davis closed his case\nthis afternoon after calling W. E.\nZwicky, of Kaslo, and George Clark, of\nSandon, the two men, who had charge ot\nthe new work as manager and foreman,\nrespectively, and Mr. Bodwell commenced his side of the case in support\nof the learned chief justice's judgment.\nThe counsel declared the new work had\nadvanced the case no further than .when\nit was last on trial, but he made an ad:\ndress of some length before calling his\nfirst witness and it became known that\nthe views of Max Bochmer, a well known\nAmerican expert were to be submitted\nto the court, not merely on the new\nwork, but on the whole case, Mr. Bochmer starting from the commencement of\nthings and just!* getting fairly underway when the court adjourned. It further transpired that the defendants\nhave done further work on their own\naccount and that they will offer evidence\nas to this.\nMr, justice Martin announced that he\nregarded the 'present hearing as practically a new trial and he personally\nhoped the parties would submit all the\nevidence they thought would be of any\nuse to the court.\nIn reply to Mr. justice Irving, Mr. j\nBodwell and Mr. Davis agreed in stating\nthat the evidence would probably be all\nin on Friday afternoon, but how long\nit would take to argue the case neither-\ncounsel could say.\nOn his cross-examination this morning, Mr. Fowler told Mr, Bodwell howj\nhe took or superintended the taking of\nthe numerous photographs put in. The\nwitness declined to put any interpretation upon the discovery of the \"hidden\ndrift,'.' referred to in his examination\nin chief. The drift looked, judging from\nthe age of the timbers, as if it had been\ndone two or three years ago. He did not\nask for any explanation about the drift\nbeing lagged, or walled up. It struck\nhim as a suspicious circumstance.\nIt was the concealment that struck\nhim at the time that made him suspect\nthat there was something in the drift\nthe defendants wanted to hide. What\nthat something was he did not know.\nHe believed that the concealment was\ndone purposely to prevent those having\na right to inspect the workings seeing\nwnat was there. He thought the main\npoint it was intended to conceal was the\nfact that the porphyry intrusion was not-\nencountered until the* face of this 130\nfoot drift was reached. That fact, the\nwiness thought had a distinct bearing\non the defendants' contention as part\nof their case. It would, in the witness'\nopinion, injure the defendants' case if\nit was shown where the porphyry intrusion actually came in at the concealed\npoint. The bend of the Slocan Star vein\naround the mass of porphyry intrusion,\nwas the point involved. A long discussion betwen witness and counsel followed on the state of the extreme western workings in the Silversmith, the existence of a vien of ore, drag ore or ore\nin place, being Involved. The witness\ndenied the existence of a vein, or of ore\nin place, tne ore found being strictly\n\"dragged ore\" from where, Mr. Fowler\nsaid, he could not say. The expert's\nview, of course,- directly contradicts the\nevidence of the defendants' experts, who\nhave sworn and will no doubt swear\nagain, that a vein is plainly to be found\nat the workings in the section of the\nclaim in question, that ore is in place\nthere, that it is not drag ore, and that a\nlarge quantity of ore has actually been\nmined and taken out in the course of\ndevelopment. Gradually the examination\ndrifted into a battle between the lawyer and the expert as to the geological\nformation of the country through which\nthe Slocan Star vein, and the black Assure ran through. Both participants in\nthe struggle had the advantage of going\nall over the question in court at the trial\nand when this general examination came\nto a close honors were about even, Mr.\nFowler having maintained his position\nwithout any serious loss of prestige.\nThe mass of porphyry, said the witness,\nFor Sale\nTWO CORNER LOTS in business section of Baker St. occupied by frame\nbuildings bringing in good rentals:\na good investment as it now stand*\nor would be ideal site for a stone\nor brick building (suitable for first\nclass hotel or theatre and stores.)\nRESIDENCE In best central location-\nsix rooms and bath. Good cellar.\nCOTTAGE\u20144 rooms and bath, 2 lots,\ngood location.\nRESIDENCE\u20147 rooms and bath.   Fine\nview of lake.\n60 ACRES overlooking West Arm Kootenay lake, situate in the midst of improved ranches.   100 trees (6 yrs.);\n200 trees (3 yrs.); bushes, etc.\nLAND\u2014Fire Valley, Pass Creek, near\nBurton City, etc.\nF. B. LYS\nREAL ESTATE AGENT\nVest Baker St. - Nelson, B. 0.\nexisted before \u00bb.ue formal\\M of the Star\nvein, though probably not in. its- present condition SO far as til\u00a9 surface is\nconcerned.\nDid the porphyry mass otfar equal resistance with the Slocan Star slate?\nWhen the \u2022 porphyry mass was cooling,\nwhat took place? What pressure existed at the various\" stages of the earth's\nformation? were gone into over and\nover again. The point involved, of\ncourse .being, did the Slocan Star vein\nturn and bend around the porphyry intruding mass or was a fissure formed\ni cutting off the vein abruptly. As a geological demonstration the work of the\nmorning was highly interesting, but the\nquestions involved were treated wholly\nfrom a technical standpoint.\nIf porphyry is found in the Slocan\nStar vein, it would mean that the porphyry was there first. If the porphyry\nwas mineralized, it might have become\nso before it got into the vein, but probably was mineralized at the same time\nthe vein was formed.\nTurning to the new work at the extension to the south, the witness .was\nasked about the stringer of ore found\nthere. It was drag ore, not ore in place.\nIt vas shaved off a vein nearby, probably the Slocan Star vein, and brought to\nits present position in the black fissure,\nby movement. At the hoist on No. 5\nlevel, the Slocan Star vein on the floor\nof the lead was approximately 80 feet\nwide, where it butted up against the\nblack fissure. No. 2 velft was located\n145 feet away, and the witness was asked\nhow far ore could be dragged. It could\nbe dragged and probably was dragged\nfrom the Slocan Star vein 145 feet away,\nthe witness said. This concluded Mr.\nBodweU's examination and it can fairly\nbe said that he left the expert pretty\nmuch just where he found him.\nNTo Mr. Taylor, Mr, Fowler went'fully\n.again Mo the question of drag ore and\nwhere if was usually found, and the\ncause of its appearance. Turning to the\nformation of the porphyry intrusion the\nwitness explained that two kinds of\nporphyry were found in the workings\ncaused by some of the mass cooling more\nrapidly than the other. Nothing that\nhe had seen or heard to date had altered\nor modified his original uxppessed opin-\njion- that the black fissure cut off abruptly the Slocan Star vein at Its westerly\nend. ^fc.'\nMr. Davis then called \"w. E. Zwicky,\nthe mining engineer of Kaslo, under\nwhose direction the new work recently\ndone was carried out. Mr. Davis originally contended that the court should\ncall this witness, he being more or less\nan officer of the court. The court declined to call the witness and Mr.\nDavis now put him in the box. Mr.\nZwicky said he superintended the work\ndirected by the court. He had not consulted with either of the parties to the\nsuit. He had never given evidence in\nthe action before. He carried out the\ninstructions of the court as set out in\nthe order. He described' running the\ncrosscut in the southern extension and\nsaid he stopped when he came to the\nwall. Where the wall was reached there\nwas a radical change in the material encountered. Continuing the witness went\non to describe the other work done on\n'.he southern extension, giving a minute\ndescription of the material encountered\ntill the wall was reached at this point.\nThe witness said the new work showed\nthe extension of the black Assure to the\nsouth. He had no hesitation oh this\npoint, but answered positively. Turning\nto No. 2 vein the, new work done there,\nhe said, he found In the 50 feet run.\nshipping ore and quartz. . The walls were\nin Jjlace. He was satisfied that he was\nfollowing a vein as far as he went. At\nthe:' northern extension the new work-\nshowed the extension of the black fissure\nin a northerly direction. He proceeded 13% feet and stopped when he reached the wall. What' he crosscut at this\npoint was the sarnie fissure that he crosscut at the southern extension already\nreferred to. He was manager of the\nRambler-Cariboo, American Boy and\nsome Ainsworth properties.   .\nTo Mr. Bodwell, the witness said the\nstringer he encountered in the. southern\nextension was on the footwall of the\nfissure.. The footwall of the No. 2 vein\nwas not well defined. Pressed on some,\ngeneral questions as to the rest of the\nworkings outside of the three points\nwhere the new work was done, the witness asked to be excused' from expressing an opinion. He did not \"look\naround\" when passing in and out of the\nmine.\nWdlllam George Clark, of Sandon\nminer, foreman for Mr. Zwicky in doing\nthe new work ordered by the court, was\nDON'T OVERLOOK THIS\n320 lucres of\nFirst-class Fruit Lar\\d\nwith lake frontage, 22- acres cleared,\n15 acres ploughed, 6 acres planted with\nassorted fruit trees, 1 acre In small\nfruits. Frame house 12 ft. x 16 ft. and\nfurniture, plough, harrow,' cultivator.\nHot spring on land, which is of immense value as regards fruit growing,\nand three good streams on property.\nThis land is situate on the east side of\nthe Arrow lakes. Price $30.00 per acre.\nEasy terms; or will sell 160 acres of\nabove property (the unimproved half),\nall FIRST CLASS LAND, easily cleared,\nfree from rock, well watered, with lake\nfrontage, for $20.00 per acre. Terms\n% cash, balance on time; or will subdivide above at slightly increased price\nJEl. J. STEEL\nFREE\nifor.:\nROYAL CROWN\nSOAP\nWQAPPEQS\nDrsp m a post eard asking for a oat*\nCafnefae Stock Food\n \u00ab flatf\u2014\nIS THE\nBEST\nAUCTION SALE OF BALANCE OF\nUrnot's Stock of Dry Goods, Etc.\nCommencing Monday, 15th April,-at 2 p.m. at .Store, corner of Vernon\nand Jc^naJBe Streets. We have been instructed by D, Amot to close\nout hie entire stock of Dry.Goods, Hats, Boots and Shoes, Ctothin?\nEtc.   Sale every afternoon and evening-at 2 p.m., and 7.3ft n.m untii\nentire stock is sold.  TERM'S CASH.\n>gfea&&\nCHAS. A. WATERMAN & CO, Aucts.\nROUGH   LUMBER Mfi^BO\n\u2022\u00bb\u00bbsraVff.E^-i~ \u2014--\nA. C. LAMBERT & CO.\nLAND NOTICES\nNOTICE is hereby given, that sixty days\nafter date I Intend to apply to the Hon.\nChief commissioner of Lands and Works,\nVictoria, for' permission to purchase the\nfollowing described lands; Commencing:\nat a post marked \"T. W. Savary's N.E.\npost,\" and planted at the south boundary\nof K. and S. block 823, on the west shore\nof South bay of Howser lake, thence 40\nchains west; thence 80 chains south; thence\n40 chains, more or less east to shore of\nbay; thence along shore of bay to point\nof commencement, the whole containing\n220 acres.\nT. W. SAVARY.\nJ. R. EDMONDSON, .Agent.\nKaslo, Nov. 20, 1906.\nthen called by. Mr. Davis. He started the\ncrosscuts in the south extension from\nthe footwall of the fissure and stopped\nwhen lie came to the wall to let Mr.\nZwicky see if it was all right. He described the material he went through,\nagreeing with the former witness as to\nthe make up, He was on duty while\nall the work wag' done. He found a\nstringer of ore in the footwall of the\nfissure.\nThe witness declined to express any\nopinion as to the result of what was\ndone at any of the points where the\nwork was done, and Mr, Bodwell in his\ncross-examination got very little information except as to the actual work\ndone.\nAt 3.30 Mr, Davis announced his case\nfor the appellants closed, and Mr. Bodwell opened the case fop the respondents. Mr. Bodwell said that the result\nof doing the new work was exactly what\nhe anticipated it would be when the\nplaintiffs asked to have it 'done. There\nwas still the same' balance of opinion to\nbe struck between the experts. The defendants', counsel said, had in no way\naltered their case and would urge now\nexactly what they did before the learned\nchief justice, that the Slocan Star vein\nas shown on the model and map was\none continuous vein and was not cut off\nby the black fissure, the latter having\nno existence. What the plaintiffs' claimed to have found by the new work, has\npractically never been denied by the defendants. A fissure continuing to the\nnorth and south as shown, does not in\nany way affect the defendants' invariable\ncontention. The Assures claimed by the\nplaintiffs are simply \"sympathetic\ncrocks\" caused by the, Slocan Star vein\nbending around the porphyry, mass and\ntaking the winding course it does. As\nto No. 2 vein, it is still another question\nwhether it is a branch vein or not. The\nnew work has proved nothing that was\nnot known before. There is (nothing before the court that will assist it to do\nanything else than the chief justice did,\ndecide the myth or falsity of the two\nexpert opinions advanced.\nMr. Bodwell called Max Bochmer, mining engineer-, a new witness introduced\nfor the first time in the case. The witness said he was educated in Germany,\nand had practiced his profession for\nmany years in the states and had examined and reported on many mining\nproperties in the west during the past\n28 years. He had recently examined the\nworkings of the Slocan Stat carefully for\nthe purpose of this trial. He had examined practically -the whole mine. It\nwas necessary to examine the workings\nevery few feet in order to speak intelligently. The witness first examined the\nsurface outcropping of the Slocan Star\nvein which, he said, followed a most\ntortuous course, one of the most twisted\nv'ourses he had ever seen.\nThe witness explained that he had had\nsome work done on his own account and\nthen Mr. Davis made a strong objection\nlo fresh evidence and a new expert be-'\ning offered' to the court. He thought it\nmost unfair if the defendants- could,\nwithout notice to the plaintiffs, do any\nwork they pleased, and then bring witnessed here.\nMr. justice Irving\u2014The form of the\norder made covers the case.\nShoeMfr..\nBRANDQN*MA&\nCorporation of the City of Kelson\nNOTICE\nNOTICE is hereby given that under the\nprovisions of Bylaw No. 80, \"Pound and\nDog Tax Bylaw,\" it is unlawful for any\nperson to suffer any horse, mule, bull,\nor cow, sheep, goat, pig or other cattle, or\npoultry, to run- at large within the limits\nof the City of Nelson.\nEvery owner of a dog in the City of\nNelson is required to pay annually a tax\nof two dollars for each dog owned by him.\nNo person shall suffer or permt his dog\nto run at large in the City of Nelson for\nwhich such person has not paid the tax\nreuiqred of him and unless such dog shall\nahve around his neck a collar or strap to\nwhich shall be attached a metallic plate\nto be supplied by the city on payment of\nthe said tax.\nWarning is hereby given that any person guilty of iriYvJnfractlon or violation\nof any of the provisions of the above\nnamed\" bylaw Is in addition to the fees and\ncharges set forth therein, liable upon summary conviction to a penalty of One Hundred Dollars and the costs of prosecution,\nand in default of payment to imprisonment for a term not exceeding two months.\nBy Order,\nW. E. WA880N, City, Clerk..\nNelson, -B.C.; April 8, 1907. [\nMr. justice Martin\u2014I should like to\nunderstand the matter. It seems peculiar.\nMr. justice Irving\u2014At present the ruling is that under the court's order, thia\nevidence is admdssable.\nThe witness then proceeded to describe his inspection of the surface of the\nledge and the new pits he had made.\nHe fonnd the vein continuous across the\nfall length of the two claims. The general geological formation ot the mountain was gone into in detail The way\nin which the Slocan Star vein met the\nporphyry (Jyke and passed around it resumed its line of original dip after passing the porphyry mass, was described at\nlength. Turning to the niakeup of the\nSlocan Star vein the witness said that\nin length, nine-tenths of veins were barren, the rich sections only occasionally\noccurring, so that the barren sections in\nthe Star vein need excite no comment\nIt is what might be expected.\nThe Star vein followed a crooked,\ncourse, but the witness knew of others\nstill more crooked, the winding course\nwas unusual but not surprising. Coming\ninto No. 5 level, the witness declared\nfor a new state of things, or rather his\nexplanation of what caused the apparent termination of the vein against the\nfissure, differed a good deal from anything so far alleged on either side. It\nwas the same story as that told by Mr.\nEhnendorf at the trial but told in a different way and advancing different reasons for cause and effect He took his\nevidence largely from the upper levels\nwhich have been worked out in place\nof the lower level used chiefly by the\nother witnesses. He was satisfied he\nsaid that the Slocan Star vein bent\nround the porphyry mass and that the so\ncalled black fissure is not a fault fissure at all.   Has no existence in fact.\nAt. this point the court rose for the\nday.\nWHOOPING COUGH\nI have used Chamberlain's Cough Remedy in my family in cases of whooping\ncough, and want to tell you that it is the\nbest medicine I have ever used.\u2014sW. F.\nGaston, Pasco, Ga. This remedy is safe\nand sure. For sale by all druggists and\ndealers.\n\"Meats that satisfy:\"\n'AI JVC'S\nNOTICE\nAll members of the Industrial Workers\nof the World are requested to attend the\nmeeting on Tuesday, 16th, at 8 p.m.\nImportant business.\nE. MASON, Pres.\nJ. H. MATHESON, Sec.\nFOR SALE\nHotel Hume, 2 lots and furniture..Jtw.ouo\nBlock V., Balfeur ,12 lota   760\nLot 3 and E 1-2 2, block 1, with buildings,  partly  rented, $45 month  .. 10,000\n7 lots block 44D., bearing fruit trees 2,600\nLots 7 and 8, w half 9, block 11 with\n8-rwm dwelling   4,oou\n8 lots, town of Silverton ....  1,000\nHalf interest 200 acres Slocan Lake.. 760\nQuarter Interest Trout Lake Uty.. 2,500\nLot Atlin City   260\nHalf interest 160 acres near Kaslo.. 760\n160 acres Pass vaHey   6,000\nHalf interest 70 acres, 3 miles up Cottonwood Creek \u2022\u25a0\u00ab\u2022.... 366\nJ. FRED HUME\nM. J. HENRY'S\nNURSERIES AND SEED HOUSES\n\u201e ot for Pacific Coast frown\nCarden, Field and Flower Seeds\nLarge stock Of HOME-GROWN' TnH\nand Ornamental Trees now matured for\nfuture planting.\nNo expense, loss or delay of fumigation or inspection.\n- BEE SUPPLIES, Spray Pumps, Spraying Material, Greenhouse plants, Cut\nFlowers.\nWe do business on our own grounds\n\u2014no tent to pay and are preyaitt 16\n.meet all competition.\nCatalogue free.\nM. J. HENRI\nflttO Westminster Road, Vancouver, B.. C.\nNOTICE is hereby given that sixty days\nafter-date I intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works at Victoria, for permission to purchase the following, described lands in West Kootenay\ndistrict: Commencing at a post marked \"J.\nT. Burgess* N.E. corner, situated 100 feet\nsouth of the railway track on the east\nline of timber license 7821, thence east 40\nohains, more or less, to J. A. Sullivan's\npre-emption line; thence north. along said\nline to right of way of B. C. Southern\nrailway; thence west to place of commencement, containing 26 acres more or\nless. 24-2\nStaked this 15th day of February, 1307.\nJ. T. BURGES8, Locator,\nGEO. A. HUNT, Ageht.\nNOTICE is hereby given that sixty days\nafter date J intend to apply to the Hon.\nChief commissioner of Lands and Works,\nVictoria! for permission to purchase the\nfollowing described lands: Commencing\nat u post marked \"John D. Atchison's'\nN.E. corner,\" planted near K. and 8.\nblock 823, at foot of North bay of Howser\ni, thence south 40 chains; thence west\n20 chains; thence north 40 chains; thence\n4) chains more or less along shore of bay\nto point of commencement! the whole\ncontaining 80 acres, more or less.\nJOHN D. ATCHISON.\nFRANK FLBTC&ER, Agent.\nNOV.  26,  1906. 34-3\nNOTICE is 'hereby given that 60 days after date I intend to apply to the Hon.\nthe Chief Commissioner' of Lands and\nWorks for permission to' purchase the following described lands in Kootenay district, B.C.: Commencing at a post marked\n\"J. Cameron's S.E. corner post,\" said post\nbeing on the west side of Upper Arrow\nlake, opposite Nakusp, and at the N.E.\ncorner of lot 7310, running thence west 16\nchains; thence north 60 chains; thence\neast 7 chains; thence following tne lake\nshore in a southerly direction 60 chains,\nmore or less, to point of commencement,\ncontaining 60 acres, more or less.\nDated this lith day of March, 1907.\nJ. CAMERON.\nNOTICE is hereby given that 60 days after\ndate I intend to apply to the Hon. the\n'Chief Commissioner of Lands and Works\nfor permission to purchase the following\ndescribed lands situated on the south, shore\nof the West Arm of Kootenay lake, nine\nmiles from Nelson, and Joining lot 4401:\nCommencing at a post marked \"M. M.\nWinter's N.W. corner post,\" thence east\n20 chains, more or less; thence south 20\nchains, more or less; thence west to the\nlake shore ,and thence following the lake\nshore to the point of commencement.\nDated thto 9th day of February, 1907.\nM. M. WINTER.\nNOTICE is hereby given that 60 days after date .1 intend to apply to the Son.\nthe Chief Commissioner of Lands and\nWorks for permission to purchase the following described land, situated on the west\nside of Kootenay river, and covering all\nof A. L. Stewart's abandoned pre-emption No. 759 .and about one-eighth of a\nmile north of Angus Curry's pre-emption:\nCommencing at a post marked \"Sidney J.\nCummlngs* southeast corner post,\" thence\nnorth 40 chains; thence west 60 chains;\nt'hence south 40 chains; thence east 60\nchains, to place of commencement, containing 240 acres more or less.\nDated this 28th day of February, 190b\nSIDNEY J. CUMMINGS.\nNOTICE is hereby given that 60 days\nafter date I intend to apply to the Hon.\nthe Chief Commissioner of Lands and\nWorks for permission to purchase the\nfollowing described lands, situate in West\nKootenay District: Commencing at a post\nmarked \"M. E. M. Rogerson's land\" and\nplanted about five miles up Little Slocan\nRiver, on the west side, running 80 chains\nsouth; thence 80 chains west; thence 80\nchains north; thence 80 chains east, to\nplace of commencement.\nM.   E.   M.   ROGERSON.\nC.   B.  CUTTEN,  Agent.\nMarch 27. 1907.\nNOTICE is hereby given that sixty days\nafter date I intend to apply to the Hon..\nthe! chief commissioner of Lands andf\nWorks for permission to purchase the following described lands, situate in West\nKootenay district: Commencing at a post\nmarked by name \"Gerald Rees\" N.E. corner post,\" at the northwest corner of the\npurchase claim staked April 20th, 1906, by\nD. A. Boyd and F. J. Sammons,' thence\n20 chains west along the C.P.R. -right of\nway; thence 20 chains south; thence 20\nchains east; thence 20 chains north,' to\npost'of commencement, containing 40 acres\nmore or less.\nNelson, B. C, April 1, 1907. S\nG. S.  REES\nNOTICE is hereby given that- 60 days\nafter date I intend to apply to the. Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and Works, at\nVictoria to purchase 160 acres of .land on;\nthe east side of the Arrow lake, on Bates\ncreek, and described as follows: Commencing at a post marked \"W.W.'s S.W. corner,\" and planted at the southeast corner\nof lot 6903, .thence 40 chains north; thence\n40 chains east; thence 40 chains south;\nthence 40 chains west, to place of commencement, containing 160 acres more or\nless.\nDated, March 27, 1907. 4-11\nW.  WALTON.\nFRANK ORANGE, Locator.\n1\n that will\nPallor  made fel-\nRto   a   regular patron,\nfat (12, SIB, SIS, up to *a>.\nrEmory&Walley ]\nFIT   REFORM    WARDROBE   f\nPBIOB OF METALS\nNew Vork, April 13-Sltver 65 7-8; casting copper, 24 1-8; lead, $6.\nLondon, April 13\u2014Silver, 30 716.\nCOPPER STOCKS\n(Reported by  McDermid & McHnrdy)\nNew   York,  April  13\u2014The following are\ntoday's quotations   for  the  stocks   mentioned: Asked  Bid\nGranby    136      li'<\n(Dominion   Copper       5H     Jtr%\nB.  C.  Copper     1%      '7%\nNELSON'S NEWS OF THE DAY\nThere will be n m^etlnR' of the executive\nof the Churchmen's dub, this evening at\n9:16.\nThe Ladles' Aid of the Baptist ehuroh\nmeet tomorrow afternoon at 3 o'clock at\nthe resilience of Ml*. I>, Thompson.\nThere will he a meeting of the building\ncommittee directly aft<r the evening ser-,\n\u25a0vice In St. Saviour's church today. j\nAn orc-hcslral ami choral rehearsal of\nthe May Queen will lake place on Monday\nnight at the K. of P. hall.\nThere was a rehearsal of the \"private\nSecretary lust niRtu and the next rehearsal\nwill take place tomorrow. Tickets will be.\non  sale at   Rutherford's tomorrow.\nA diiHt storm uohercd In this, Sunday,\nmorning; lhe thermometer >-cst''Muy roue\nto K! degrees. With the advent of tho\nsprinkler Nelson people will Welcome toe\ndmlng  siimnn-r.\npeter Murphy, who was up to recently\nilrlver of the local fire team, has accepted\nn. position on the Pernio police force at\nSlu) a month. It having been offered him\nsome time  since. |\nResidents on Kootenay river, above the\nproposed dam to be bum by the West\nKootenay Power and Light company, ore\nInsisting that a fish ladder be paced in\nthat dam.\n0. A. Waterman & Co., the auctioneers,\ncommence an uuctlon sale of D. Arnot's\nBtock of dry goods, men's furnishings,\netc. tomorrow afternoon. Sale to continue\ndally until everything Is disponed of.\n31. Bullls Is leaving for Spokane this,\nmorning but will return at a later dnte to\nfinish up matters between his company\nAQd the city with reference to the power\nplant. Mr. Tlullis Is satisfied that the city\nwill lake over the power plant as It now\nStandi without any further alterations requiring his presence,\nTho result or the first of the ten consecutive Saturday shoots  for the I'.M.C.\nnUKM, B. 0., SDNflAX. APfclX 14. 1MI\n.E\nnflll do well to see\ntying elsewhere.   We\nKTt the freshest, brightest\nWb to offer; nothing old or\nrFor Saturday\nWe will have the usual complete line\nof greens on hand and can take care of\nyour every want.\nRobt N|. Hood & Go.\n\u2022\u25a0OCHinS art raoVISIONB.\nM. W. 0. IhOC* WLBON, \u25a0. 0.\n248 Aoros at good fruit land for Bale,\none mile south of Slocan Oily; small\nhouse; 5 acres cleared. Good stream of\nwater.  Price 14000.\n40 Acre blocks with water frontage on\nthe north aide of tbe West Arm. Price\n|75 per acre.\nFruit lands In blocks of from 60 to ISO\nacres In the Slocan valley, $15, $20 and\n$25 per acre.\nE&M.BIRD\nnelson, aa\n\u2666\u2666.\u00bb\u2666\u00ab*\u2666\u2666\u00ab\u2666\u2666\u00bb\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u00ab\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666.\u00bb\u2666\nGarden Tools\n..!\nj\n1\nThe advent of Bprlng Is always looked forward to as the season for t\n\u25a0 cleaning and preparing your hack and front gardens and   lawns for the *\n', summer.   To do this successfully you must have proper tools to do the work. I\nWe have everything required for this purpose from a garden plow to a *\ngarden trowel.   Our prices are right and we solicit your patronage. j\ni\nTbe J. H. Ashdown Hardware Co., Ltd. f\nNELSON BRANCH\ntrophy Is' as follows, the event being a\nhandicap, 50 birds being shot at on tach occasion: Bishop, handicap i,'30; ink, 36.\nscratch; Ward, handicap u. 34; Wells S3,\nscratch; Mnwdsley, handicap 4, .12: Gordon, handicap 6, 28; Choate, handicap 12.\n2S; Hunter, handicap U, 11. The results of\neach shoot Will be added together and the'\nmarksman who obtains the greatest aggro*\ngate will take the prize.\nThe regular meeting of the university\nclub was held last evening, there being ft\nfair attendance. Tito action of the committee In forwarding to Victoria n resolu-,\ntlon regarding the University Endowment\nbill was approved, Dr. Poteraky read the\npaper of'-tho evening, \"The Democracy or\nGreat Britain ;is eomnrod with that of tlio\nrolled states.\" this pnpir provofced Boma\ndiscussion but there was unanimity aa to\nthe claim'Unit the Brit s-h u nn of government was superior to tlmi of the I'nl ed,\nStates.\n(S\u00bb5\";iVr\ns4&''<m\\.   ''AtrWili\nWfeaO^''^\n\u25a0BsaaMisfe^r\nHl|\nT\\\nUSSBt^\ni\nSTRATIICO.VA\u2014\u25a0!'. II. Hlllnm. Crnn-\nbrook; C. 12. Coltam. Blooan; M. Church,\nSpokane; P. M. Kuhny, Wulkerton; J. B.\nHenderson and wife, Grand Forks. |\nROYAL\u2014A'. Kellogg and wife, Spokane;\n<C. A. Denton, Combo; 11. Marshall, W.j\nWalkden,   Fernle;   W.   Jones,   Slocan.      j\nMADDEN-J. Bllby, La Plata; R. John-(\nson, Cranbrook; J McDonald, Koch siding;\nJ. F. Tislar. Grand Forks; W. H. Page,\nFire Valley; J. C. Jumner, Montreal; E.'\nMartin G. Ferguson. Fernle;: O. Stewart,\nVancouver; A. F. Billings, Drake; L. C.\nJohnson, Bonnlngton Falls; G. Rowland,\nA. M. Rogers, S.ocan.\nLAKKIEW\u2014E. Wotrthfngton, J. Car-\nzana, O. Oulllo, C. Marizal, Beaslcy.\nKOOTENAY-Q. Favetta, G. Morlo, A.\nMerio, Wlnlaw; M. Foster, Halmo; R Mc-\nRae. Wardner; J. J.' Becker, E. Clellum,\nBonnlngton.\nDiversity of Filing\ndevices into a compact arrangement is a feature of the Globe-\nWernicke \"Elastic\" system\nappreciated by business men.\nLargest variety and highest\nquality. *\n*        K\u00abt SALK 2JY\nSTAND,-.*. ft -URE CO\nWe can furnish your\nHOUSE\nOFFICE\nHOTELS\nComplete\nStandard Furniture\nCompany\nUitdflrtal\\eri and Embalnpra\nAgents Maoi] ar\\d Risth\nHlUJllMN. Ohhholm and wife, Ains-,\nworth: J. W. Kerr, It. llelme. J. W. Col-\nIIr, A. J. BnteH. C. C. Small, Vancouver;\nII. F. Everett. Montreal; II. ,G .\\lacull..r,,\nBoston; T. H. Chapman, Grand ForkHj\nD. McDonoldj Crcston; N. J. Abbott, Winnipeg.\nQUEENS\u2014tA. H. Anderson, Vm|r; A. E.\nFletchyer, Bonnlngton; Mrs. A, M. Hutchison, Ladysmhh; W. J. Graham, 'Wln-\nlttwj F. Pinchbeck, C. Nordstrom, Slocan.\nUARTLETT\u2014W. Cole, Fcrnie; C. Noil!.'\nII.   Harris,   Vmlr; W.   Peters, Greenwood.\nCLUB-T. Foley, S'oean; J. Ilulard. B.\nChonuptte, Vancouver; E. Stewart. Ymtr;\nO.  Bers.  Wlnlawi  J.  McMillan. Croston.1\nGIIAND CENTKAb\u2014C. Gales, J. Hay-\nwurd. Sandon; J. F, Frnser, Bonnlngton!\nIt. Wllberg, New Westminster; H. F. An-,\nnable, II. Board. D, McMillan. Mocse Jaw-\nC. Nicholson, Coleman; W. W, Loch, L.\nSmith; F. S.uhmer. A. Rolka, Medicine\nHat; P. H. Busfleld, Daydsmlth; H. Insen.\nOlynek; W. Miller H. McDonald. Spokane;'\nO; W. Herch, Koch siding; D. L. Doyle.\nSlocan Junction.\nSHiERBROOKE\u2014W. Wilson. Chicago; J.\n.Stafford. Hartford; A. Hoflklns, New Vork;\nC. Benson, Boston; Mrs. H. Parker, North-,\nport; T. Gnuthier. Montreal, D. Loveland,\nD. Sullivan, Cameron. j\nNELSON\u2014J.   R.   Thomas,   Spokane;   P.\nDemorkl,   Rossland. !\nChina Hal!\nWe have a large, varied and\nuseful stock of\nCrooK\u00abry, Uinwart, Earthenware,\n'        Limp Coodi, Etc\nand at reasonable prices. Come\nand inspect. Second-Hand\nGoods of all kinds cheap.\n\\\nwmmmmmmmf!m\u00bbammmmmmmm\u00abtm\u00bbmam\nRings and Brooches\nOF ALL THE BIRTH GEMS\nTHE   DIAMOND   IS KING\nand this month being Diamond Month we\nare showing a very large line of Diamond\nSet Rings, ranging in price from $5.00, 6.00\n7.00, 8.00, 9.00, 10.00 to $700. Also a very\nfine line of loose\nBLUE-WHITE WESSELTONS\nSee our window display\nJ.O.PATENAUDE\nKMUFMTURINC Jtwtlll\nmom m\nOPTICIAN\nWAjeHsttnii\n\u00bb\u00abs^\u00bbsj\u00bbtititiia\u00bb\u00bbMM\u00ab\u00bbg\u00bbwwBSBaBaBac\u00bb\u00abasM8a\u00bbai^\nHORSES FOR SALE\nWe have just Imported a carload of select stock, weight from 1,100 to 1,500\nNELSON TRANSFER  CO.\nSutton's Seeds\nSELLING LIKE HOT CAKES\nWe also bare Steele-Brlggs' vegetable\nseeds la bulk, Simmers' r,c packages,\naad a full line of Grass & Clover Seeds,\nChemical Fertilizers, etc.\nThe Braetan-KerMing Co., Ltd.\nWe Sell\nThe Best\nof\nMens Shoes\nIt's a habit\nof ours.\nOui allocs nave character Just an\ninucli us lite man who wears them.\nChoice selected leathers, skillful shoe\nbuilding, correct stylos, all points or\ndPlnil well looked .after, serve to\nmtike our shoes shoes with n character.\nTHE ROYAL\nK. ANDREW < 00.\nRIPE\nTomatoes\n* At   850,   per   lb.\nRoman Beauty, Grimes' Ool-\nden. Spltzenburg. Minkier.\nGreenings and Walbrldge, |\nBunanas, Jumbo stse, W cents\nper  dozen.\nFancy California Oranges,\nfrom 30c. lo tiOc. per dozen.\nLemons 35c, per down. !\nS. H- SEANEY\nPhone 206    Baker St.\nAN IDEAL COTTAGE\nTour rooms and big ball\u2014frost prof cellnr; vcranrtnli on two sldp.i.\nFlue garden (2 lots) with eight bearing fruit treea of finest variety.\nOne-half block from car lino.   Quick sale as owner leaving town.\nPRICE $1600;  $700 cash balance terms.\nWOLVERTON  & CO., BAKER ST\nFor_Sale\n840 Acres, 21-2 miles from Nelson.\n400 Acres, Pass Creek.\n160 Acres, Columbia River.\n80 Acres, Columbia River.\n118 Acres, Power Plant\n114 Acres, Blue Bell.\nENQUIRE\niSabirjet Digar Store\nC I. MATTHEW, Prop., Baker St.\nAfter the long, cold winter, tone up the\nsystem with a bottle or two ot Beef, Iron\nand Wine, Syrup of HypophoBphltes, Malt\nExtract, or Cod Liver Oil preparations,\nall good tonies.   To be had at\nThe Red Gross Drag Store\nBaker St near Josephine, Nelson.\nMilk Cows For Sale\nWe are bringing from the East two carloads of\nhigh class stock and will have a few more than we\nwill require for our own ranch. These we will dispose of at reasonable figures.\nThe Sign of the Fish\nWe sell everything the Fisherman needs. Strict attention paid\nto mail orders.\nE. SUTCLIFFE, Baker St.\nTOBACCONIST\nncDermid & McHardy\nW.J.MEAGHER\n& GO.\nbeg to announce that\nthey have taken over the\nbusiness formerly eon-\nducted by Messrs. Kerr &\nCo, and trust the citizens\nof Nelson will extend to\nthe new firm the same\nkindness as was shown\ntheir predecessors. New\ngoods are arriving daily.\nPrompt service, courteous\ntreatment and low prices\nare assured.\nAll accounts owing to\nMessrs. Kerr & Co. have\nbeen taken over by the\nnew firm and an early\nsettlement by our customers will be greatly\nappreciated.\nW.J.MEAGHER\n&G0.\nAPPLES\nWe  have just purchased a nice lot of fancy\napples which we offer from $2.50 to $3.00 a box.\nWe expect this will be the last of the season.\nTHE BELL TRADING CO.\nBeef, Iron and Wine\nFor the weak there Is no finer tonlo\nthan our BEEF, IRON and WINE. Only\nthe best and purest ingredients are employed in Its making and its effects are\nimmediate and permanent. Keep a\nbottle in the house. For that tired or\nrun-down feeling there Is nothing better.   In large bottles, 75c.\nMall orders filled promptly.\nWm. Rutherford\nNELSON. B. C.\nFor Investors-City Property\n$!K!f&\u2014 Adeslrnblc residence property nn Stanley street, clone In. Two lots,.well improved, with a few bearing fruit trees. Will realize 10 per cent on investment for renting.    Half cash, btilnnce terms. '\n$1650\u2014 Five room house on Silica street, elose to Stanley. One lot, well Improved-1\nHnlf cash, balance terms. I j\nJITfiO-Five room dwelling on RobBon street, all modern conveniences. Two level,\nwell Improved lots; $1000 cash,  balance on mortgage. I\nThese   are all good   Investments,   and immediate possession con be given.\nMcMorris & Horstead\nFIRE AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE. PHONE    m.     EMPLOYMENT   AOBNTi.\nElliot Block, Baker 81., Next to Walker s Jewelry Store\n3\nDutch Onion Sett\nWe have just received a fill) slock of\nDutch Onion Setts; also a full slock at\nbulk and package seeds.\nPlanet Jr. Implements\nf\n1\n1\niNelson Hardware Company\nP.O. Box tB       IMPLEMENTS AND SEED  HOUSE. NEI\nI\n1W1W'n<K1W1!M'\u00ab..<tW \u00ab MMWIWftWMifltfli^\n\"DKR[\"\nPLOWS\nHARROWS\nCULTIVATORS\n\"The JOHN DEERE\" Plow Is the acknowledged standard of excellence the world over. We have been appointed\nagents for the well know manufacturers, Deere & Company\n.of Moline, 111,, and are prepared to supply rnncbers with\nagricultural implements.\nBuy the DEERE make If you wbh the highest grade,\nWcod-Vallanoe Hardware Go., Ltd.\nTaylor & McQuarrie\nHIQH.CLASS TAILORS\nA. & 0. Frleberg, Managers\nIslt Worth the Trouble?\nSome people think that It Is not worth the trouble and expense to\nprocure a beautiful head ot hair. But what fs a little trouble or expense\ncompared to a beautiful head of balr. Those who have used the Seven\nSutherland Sisters preparations and see what grand results they give cannot understand how they ever got along without them. It will be to your\nadvantage to call and consult with the Seven Sutherland Sisters' representative at the Canada Drug & Book Company's store, and to give the Seven\nSutherland Slaters' Hair Grower and Scalp Cleaner a fair trial.\nCanada Dpug & Book Co., Limited\nDruggists, Stationers, [Seedsmen\nCor. Ward and Baker St\u00ab.\n t&i Mitt 5k#K kblsok b o.. sl-noay, apiul 14 ipoy\n80 ACRES\nIn Crawford bay. on tbe wagon road, three-.\nI quarters of a mile from landing; every bit\nof this land is first class level land; five\nnrres cleared; good stream of water; very\n' light clearing; price $45 per acre.\nH. L Oroasdaile A Co.\nDffleo Next ioor C\u00bb. Ba\u00bbk \u00abJ\u00bb\u2122***\u00abL\nPhone HI       Ktl*>\u00bb. \u00bb\u2022\u2022\u2022      *** \"\u25a0 \u2014\nGALT COAL\nMined at LeihbVldge, Alia. Unequalled\nfor Bteam and domestic use. Car lots\nshipped to all railway and steamboat\npoints.\n\"W. P. TIBBNBT\nGeneral Sales Agent. Box 823.  Nelson, B.C.\n\\\nI\n{\nReady\nFor Your\nSpring Suit?\n- while\npleaso\nSplendid time to pick\nMake your selection no|\nthere is plenty of time i|\nyourself thoroughly onl\nfull season's wear on:\nsuit.\nThere is No Clothing:\nBetter than Fit Reform\nThey are\nconvert the\nlow\" into   !\ne kind that will\ntailor made fel-\nregular patron.\nSuits at $12, $15. $18, up to $36.\n!Emory & Walley\nFIT   REFORM    WARDROBE   >\nKr*\u00ab\nTHB 8T0BK OP QUALITY\nWe are showing some exceptionally\nMod values in\nEvaporated Fruit\nGood housekeepers will do well to see\nour stock before buying elsewhere. We\nhave nothing but the freshest, brightest\nand best goods to offer; nothing old or\nshopworn.\nFor Saturday\nWe will have the usual complete line\nof greens on hand and can take care of\nyour every want.\n*\nRobt % Hood & Go.\nTOOCEBIXS ail PROVISIONS.\nita ifcoci       * t lson , i. a\nPEONI VL\nFOR SALE\n248 Acres of good fruit land for sale,\none mile south of Slocan City; small\nhouse; 5 acres cleared. Good stream of\nwater.   Price $4000.\n40 Acre blocks with water frontage on\nthe north side of the West Arm. Price\n|75 per acre.\nFruit lands in blocks of from 50 to 160\nacres in the Slocan valley, $16, $20 and\n$25 per acre.\nE&EBIRD\nNBLSON, B.G.\nPRICE OF METALS\nNew York. April lKSilver 65 7-8; casting copper, 24 1-8; lead, $6.\nLondon, April IS\u2014Silver, 30 716.\nCOPPER STOCKS\n(Reported by McDermld & MoHardy)\nNew  York, April  13\u2014The following are\ntoday's  quotations   for  the  stocks   mentioned: Asked  Bid\nGranby        135\n(Dominion   Copper        6%     JM\nB. C.  Copper     7f\nNELSON'S NEWS OF THE DAK\nThere will be a meeting of the exeeulj\nof the Churchmen's club this evening\n9:15.\nThe Ladies' Aid of the Baptist chut\nmeet tomorrow afternoon at 3 o'clock\nihe residence of Mrs. D, Thompson.\nThere will be a meeting of the building\ncommittee directly after the evening service in St. Saviour's church  today.\nAn orchestral and  choral rehearsal  of\nthe May Queen will take place on Monday\nnight at the K. of P. lull.\n*   \u2666\nThere was a rehearsal of the ''Private\nSecretary last night and the next rehearsal\nwill take place tomorrow. Tickets will be\nOA sale at   Rutherford's  tomorrow.\nA dust storm ushered In this. Sun|\nmorning;'the thermometer yesterday\nto til  degrees.    WiUi^JJi*. advent I of\nSprinkler Nelson people wilr. Welcome\ncoming summer.\nM\n\u2666 \u2666Mot MM> MMIM MM* \u00bb\u00bbm\n<& Garden Tools <*\u25ba j\nThe advent of spring Is always looked forward to as the season for\ncleaning and preparing your back and front' gardens and   lawns for the\nsummer]\nWe have -\u25a0\ngarden trowel.   Our prices are right and we solicit your patronage.\naU V CULL    Ui    OJLIllUf,    \u00bbB    \u00bb\u00bb\"\u00bbi( ~    .vv\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb.  B\nand preparing your back and front' gardens and   lawns for the \u2022\nTo do this successfully you must have proper tools to do the tfbrk. I\nI' everything required for this purpose from a garden plow to a ,\n\\\n\\ The J. H. Ashdown Hardware Co., Ltd. \\\nNELSON BRANCH t\nrOph* Is \"as follows, the event being\nJandlcap. 50 birds being shot at on f-ach\u25a0\ncaslon: Bishop, handicap 4, 36; Ink.\nscratch; Ward, handicap 6, 34; Wells\nscratch; Mawdsley, handicap 4. 32; OJ\ndon. handicap G. 28; Choate, handicap\n28; Hunter! handicap C, 11. The results\neach shoot will be added -together and I\njrksman who obtains the fre*test agg\ngate will take the prize, j\n\\ \"\"The  r^guLaiv:m*eetij\nclub was held last eve\ng of\nthere being a.\nfair Attendance. The action of the committee In forwarding to Victoria a resolution regarding the University Endowment\nbiil was approved. Dr. Pete'rsky read the\n[paper of the evening, \"The Democracy of.\nGreat Britain as coroared with hat of the\nUnited States.\" This pop- v pW voiced some\ndiscussion but there was iinanimi y as to\nIthe claim that the Brit ah fc rm of givern-\nment was superior to. thai of tbe unl;ed\nPeter Murphy, who was up to recently\ndriver of the local fire team, has accepted\nA position on the Perni.' police force at\n(lOO a month, it having been offered him\nsome time since. (\nResidents on Kootenay river, above the\nproposed  dam' to  he   built  by .the   West\nKootenay Power nnd Light company, ore\ninsisting that a fish ladder be paced in\nL that dam.\nC. A. Waterman & Co., the auctioneers,\ncommence an auction sale of D. Arnot's\nstock of dry goods, men's furnishings,\netc. tomorrow aftetnoon. Sale to continue\ndally until everything is disposed of.\np Hll. Bullls Is leaving for Spokane this\nmorning but will return at a later date to\nfinish up matters between his company\nand the city with reference to the power\nplant. Mr. Bullls Is satisfied that the city\nwill take over the power plant as it now\n[ stands without any further alterations requiring his presence!\nTho\" result of the first of the\n'cuilve  Saturday shoots  for the\nen con-\nU.M.C.\n^Edfe\nfefflfa\nAl'lv-\n)lm  and\nworth; J. W. Kerr, R. Heine. J. W. ('\u25a0 1-\nlis. A. J. Bates, C. C. Small, Vancouver;\nII. F. Everett, Montreal; H. .Q MaoulLr.\nBoston; T. H. Chapman,.Grand Forks;\nD. McDonald, Crcston; N. J. Abbott, Winnipeg.\nQUEEN'S\u2014A. H. Anderson, Y-mir; A. E.\nFietchyer, Bonnlngton; Mrs. A. M. Hutchison, Ladysmhh; W, J. Graham, Win-\nlaw; F. Pinchbeck, C. Nordstrom, Slocan.\nBARTLETT\u2014W. Cole, fernle; C. Nell I,\nII.   Harris.   Vmlr; W.  Peters; Greenwood.\nci.rn-T. Pole\nlonuette, Vanco\nJ.  Badard,\nSTRATHCONA\u2014F. H. Hi 11am, Cran-\nbrook; C. E. Colt am. Slocan; M. Church\n.Spokane; P. M. Kuhny, Walker ton; J. B.\nHenderson and wife, Grand Forks.\nROYAL\u2014A. Kellogg and wife, Spokane;\nC. A. Denton, Combo; H. Marshall. W.\nWalkden,  Fernle;  W.  Jones,  Slocan.\n\u2022MADDEN-J. Bilby, La Plata; R. Johnson, Cranbrook; J McDonald, Koch siding;\nJ. F. Tialar, Grand Forks; W. H. Page\nFire Valley; J. C. Jumner. Montreal; E.|\nMartin G. Ferguson, Fernle; O. Stewart,\nVancouver; A. F. Billings, Drake; L. C.\nJohnson, Bonnlngton Falls; G. Rowland,\nA. M. Rogers, Slocan.\nLAKEIEW-.E. Wotrihlngton, j. Car-\nz-1 na, O. Guilio. C. Ilanzal, Beasley\nKOOTBXAY-G. Favetta, G. Merlo, A.\nMerlo, Winlaw; M. Foster, Salmo; R Mc-\nRae, Wardner; J. J. Becker.. E. Clellum,\nBonnlngton.\nDiversity 0\/ Filing\ndevices into a compact arrangement is a feature of the Globe-\nWernicke \"Elastic\" system\nappreciated by business men.\nLargest variety and highest\nquality, \u00ab\n*        WMt SAXR BY\nBTAND.a-.a.  . .'ju* , ORE CO\nW1\ne can\nfurnish\nyour\nHOUSE\nOFHCE\nHOTELS\nComplete\nO. Berg. Winlaw; J. McMillan, Crcston.\n.GRAND CENTRAL\u2014G. Gales, J. Hay-\nward, Sandon; J. F. Eraser, Bonnlngton;\nB. Wilbcrg. New Westminster; H. F. An-\nnable. II. Beard; D. Me Ml I an. Mo(se Jaw;\n|c. Nicholson. Coleman; W. W. Loch, L.\nSmith; F. S uhmer, A. Rolka, Medicine\nHat; P. H. Busfield, Daydsmith; II. Ir.sen,\nOlynek; W. Miller H. McDonald. Spokane;\nG. W. Herch, Koch siding; D. L. Doyle,!\nSlocan Junction.\nSWERBROOKE\u2014W. Wilson, Chicago; J.\nStafford. Hartford; A. Hoskins, New York;\nC. Benson, Boston; Mrs. Ii. Parker, North-\nport; T. Gauthier, Montreal; D. Loveland,\nD. Sullivan, Cameron.\nNBLSON\u2014J.  R.  Thomas, Spokane;  P.'\nDemorki,   Rossland. \\\nChina Hal!\nWe have a large, varied and\nuseful stock of\nCrockery, Gkssware, Earthenware,\nLamp Coeds, Etc.\nand at reasonable prices. Come\nand inspect Second-Hand\nGoods of all kinds cheap.\nRings and Brooch.es\nOF ALL THE BIRTH GEMS\nTHE   DIAMOND   IS KING\nand this month being Diamond Month we\nare showing a very large line of Diamond\nSet Rings, ranging in *price from $5.00, 6.00\n7.00, 8.00, 9.00, 10.00 to $700. Also a very\nfine line of loose\nBLUE-WHITE WESSELTONS\nSee our window display\nJ.O.PATENAUDE\nWATCHMAKEI\nMANUFACTURING JEWELEI\nPHONE 198\nOPTICIAN\nHORSES FOR SALE\nWe- have just imported a carload of select stock, weight from 1,100 to lj\nNELSON TRANSFER CO.\n500\nWe Sell\nThe Best\nof\nMens Shoes\nIt's a habit\nof ours.\nOut shoes have character just as\n\u25a0much as the man who wears them.\nChoice selected leathers, skillful shoe\nbuilding, correct styles, all points of\ndetail well looked after, serve to\nmake our shoes shoes with a charac-\nTHE ROYAL\nK. ANDREW A 00.\nRIPE\nTomatoes\nAt\nper lb.\nRoman Beauty,. Grimes' Golden. Spitzenburg, Minkier,\n.Greenings and Walbrldge.\nBananas, Jumbo size, 50 cents-\nper dozen.\nFancy California Oranges,\nfrom 30c. to 60c. per dozen.\n',; Lemons 35c. per dozen. !\nS. \u00bb|. SEANEY\nPhone 206   Baker St.\nAN IDEAL COTTAGE\nFour rooms and big hall\u2014frost prof cellar; verandah on two sides.\nFine garden (2 lots), with eight bearing fruit trees of finest variety.\nOne-half block from oar line.   Quick sale as owner leaving town.\nPRICE.$1600;\" $700 cash balance terms.\nWOLVERTON  & CO., BAKER ST\n.J\nFor_Sale\n840 Acres, 2 1-2 miles from Nelson.\n400 Acres, Pass Creek.\n160 Acres, Columbia River.\n80 Acres, Columbia River.\n118 Acres, Power Plant.\n114 Acres, Blue Bell.\nENQUIRE\nCabinet digar Store\nC B. HA1THEW, Prop-, Baker St.\nAfter the long, cold winter, tone up the\nsystem with a bottle or two of Beef, Iron\nand Wine, Syrup of Hypophosphltes, Malt\nExtract, or Cod Liver Oil preparations,\nall good tonics.   To be had at\nThe Red Cross Drug Store\nBaker St near Josephine, Nelson.\nStandard Furniture\nCompany\nUndertakers and Em,balrr.ert\nAgents W|iioq aijd Risen\nMilk Cows For Sale\nWe are bringing from the East two carloads of\nhigh class stock and will have a few more than we\nwill require for our own ranch. These we will dispose of at reasonable figures.\nThe Sign of the Fish\nWe sell everything the Fteher-  .\nman needs. Strict attention paid\nto mail orders.\nE. SUTCUFFE, Baker St.\nTOBACCONIST\nW.J.MEAGHER\n&C0.\nbeg to announce that\nthey have taken over the\nbusiness formerly conducted by Messrs. Kerr &\nCo, and trust the citizens\nof Nelson will extend to\nthe new firm the same\nkindness as was shown\ntheir predecessors. New\ngoods are arriving daily.\nPrompt service, courteous\ntreatment and low prices\nare assured,\nAll accounts owing to\nMessrs. Kerr & Co. have\nbeen taken over by the\n,new firm and an early\nsettlement by our customers will be greatly\nappreciated.\nricDermid & McHardy|w. J. MEAGHER\n&G0.\nSutton's Seeds\nSELLING LIKE HOT CAKES\nWe also have Steele-Brlggs' vegetable\nseeds In hulk, Simmers' 5c packages;\nand a full line of Grass & Clover Seeds,\nChemical Fertilizers, etc.\nThe Bpaetonan-KepMilling Co., Ltd.\nAPPLES\nWe  have just purchased a nice lot of fancy\napples which we ofter from $2,50 to $3.00 a box.\nWe expect this will be the last of the season.\nTHE BELL TRADING CO.\nBeef, lroi\\ and Wine\nFor the weak there Is no finer tonic\nthan our BEEF, IRON and WINE. Only\nthe best and purest ingredients are employed in its making and its effects are\nimmediate and permanent. Keep a\nbottle in the house. For that tired or\nrun-down feeling there is nothing better.   In large bottles, 75c.\nMall orders filled promptly.\nWm. Rutherford\nJj^SJf rmuGOJST NELSON, B. \u00ab.\nFor Investors==Cify Property\n$3250\u2014 Adesirable residence' property on Stanley street, -close in.' Two lots, well improved, with a few bearing fruit trees. \"Will realize 10 per cent on invefst-.\nment for renting.   Half cash, bal a nee \u2022terms. '\n$1650\u2014Five room house on Silica street, close to Stanley\/. One lot, well improved!--\nHalf cash, balance terms. |- jj\n$1750\u2014Five room dwelling on Robson street, all modern conveniences.   Two .level',,\nwell improved lots; $1090 cash, balance on mortgage.\n.  These  are all good  investments,   and immediate possession can be given.\nMcMorris & Horstead\nFIRBJ- AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE. PHONE   m.     EMPLOYMENT   AGENTS.\nElliot Block, Baker St., Next to Walker s Jewelry Store\n2>W si\nDutch Onion Sett\nWe have just received a full stock of\nButch Onion Setts; also a full stock of\nbulk and package seeds.\nPlanet Jr. Implements\niNelson Hardware Company\ne\nI\nm\nft\ni\nf\nft\ni\nP.O.  Box m       IMPLEMENTS AND  SEED  HOUSE.\niNELflON,   H.t     J\nPLOWS\nHARROWS\nCULTIVATORS\n\"The JOHN DEERE\" Plow is the acknowledged;- stanu*.\nard of excellence the world over. We have been appointed\nagents for the well know manufacturers, Deere & pompiany.\nof Mo]ine, 111., and are prepared to supply ranchers with\nagricultural Implements.\nBuy the DEERE make if you wish the highest grade.:.'-':'.'\nWqod-Vallanoe Hardware 6t., Ltd.\nWMOMMAMI\nTaylor & McQuarrie\nHIGH-CLASS TAILORS\nA. & Q. Fricberg, Managers\nIslt Worth the Trouble?\nSome people think that It is not worth the trouble and expense to\nprocure a beautiful head of hair. But what is a little trouble or expense\ncompared to a beautiful head of hair. Those who have used the Seven\nSutherland'Sisters preparations and see what grand results they- give cannot understand how they ever got along .without them. It will be to your\nadvantage to call and consult with the Seven Sutherland Sisters' representative at the Canada Drug & Book Company's store, and to give the Seven\nSutherland Sisters' Hair Grower and Scalp Cleaner a fair trial.\nk\n)\nDruggists, Stationers, [Seedsmen\nCor. Ward and Baker Sts.\n?fc\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_1907_04_14","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\/1.0382428","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":"1907-04-14 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":"1907-04-14 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":""}]}