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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":" CLASSIFIED ADS\nI CENT A WORD\n6est CeP{\n^ Leg\/s\/af\/1\nJUL!\n??U\nfc#\n?\nJHT PAQE6-\n60 CENTS A MONTH\nVOL 10\nNELSON. B. C.. MONDAY MORNING, JULY 10,1911\nCanadian Troops Are Also on\nBoard\nWILL ADDRESS\nMEETING TONIGHT\nSir Frederick Borden and Hon.\nL. P. Brodeur Accompany Premier\nQUEBEC, July 9\u2014'As the ocean liner\nEmpress of Britain swung Into her dock\nthis evening, the band of the coronation contingent played \"0 Canada,\" and\nthe large crowd of people which had\nassembled on the dock sent up three\nhearty cheers of welcome to the soldier\nboys of the contingent who had been\nrepresenting Canada at the crowning ot\nKing George. The cheers were answered with a will by the bronzed crowd\nwho swarmed over the forward decks.\nThey looked perfect pictures of physical\nmanhood and seemed delighted to be\nonce more In Canada, even though their\nexperiences on the other side have\nben most noted and where they have\nbeen almost overloaded with kindness\nand honors,\n.   Premier on Board\nThere*was a double interest in the\narrival of the Empress for on board\nwas the Canadian premier. Sir Wilfrid\nLaurier returning from the Imperial\nconference and from the coronation\nfestivities. With Sir Wilfrid were Sir\nFrederick Borden and Hon. L. P. Brodeur. The Liberal leaders landed immediately after the ship had docked\nand were given a reception. Sir Wilfrid was met by Sir Lomer Gouln, provincial premier, Mayor Drouln of Quebec and other notables. He was at\nonce escorted to the carriage of Lieutenant Governor Langelier who drove\nwith the premier.\nSir Wilfrid will address a big meeting here tomorrow night, which prom*\nIses to be an Imposing event. -The\nmeeting will take place on the terrace\nwhere a special stand is being erected\nwhich is being handsomely decorated\nwith lights and flage. An address will\nbe presented on behalf ot the city and\nanother from the Liberal clubs of Quebec.\nSunny Smile\nSir Wilfrid is looking in splendid\nform, and his sunny smile was much\nIn evidence ub .he acknowledged the\ngreetings of friends and admirers. The\ncoronation contingent was dismissed on\nboard the boat and the men at once\nproceeded to the various trains which\nare to convey them to their homes in\nall parts of the country. The men all\nappeared to be In a cheerful condition\nand seemed to have enjoyed their trip\nthoroughly. They had lots ot work to\ndo, but they also had lots of pleasure\nand were well treated by the people on\nthe other side. Sir Wilfrid la a guest\nat the Chateau Frontenac where he was\njoined by Lady Laurier.\nFALLS INTO GLORY\nHOLE AT GRANBY\nMiner Has Narrow Escape Prom Death\n\u2014Is Taken to Insane\nAsylum.\nPHOENIX, B. C, July 9.\u2014P. Cloune,\nemployed at the Granby mine, had a\nnarrow escape from serious injury and\npossible death yesterday when he fell\nInto the glory hole, a distance of 30\nfeet, then rolled into a shoot in No. 2\ntunnel. When assistance reached him\n'he was found to be injured about the\nhead and body. He was rushed to the\ngeneral hospital and given Immediate\nattention. His condition today Is improved.\nWilliam Farren, who had been employed at one of the mines until recently, was taken to the asylum at New\nWestminster today, insane, in charge\nof J. H, Hartley. Farren, It was noticed, began acting strangely a few\nmonths ago, but not much attention\n.was paid to the man, until within a\nfortnight ago.\nTELLS OF\nDEWDNEY TRAIL\nEx-LieutenantGovernor Dewdney in City,\nSAW BONNINGTON\nHALF CENTURY AGO\nLARGE SECTION OF EGANS-\n\u2022      VILLE DESTROYED BY FIRE\nOTTAWA, July 9.\u2014Two-thirds of\nEgansvllle. Ont., 60 miles west of here,\nwas wiped out by a fire of uijcnown\norigin today. The damage Is (250,000.\nTwenty-five houses, three church, two\nflour mills and a sawmill were destroyed.\nLOCKOUT IN SWEDEN.\nSTOCKHLM, July 0\u2014Forty thousand\nbuilding workmen in Sweden, who have\nrejected the arbitrators' award in the\nlabor dispute, will be locked out tomorrow.\nPassed Site of Nelson Before\nFirst Log Cabin Was\nBuilt\n\"There Is certainly a great change\nin the Kootenays since I first- came\nup the Kootenay river In 1SG5. At that\ntime, of course, there was hardly a\nwhite man In the country with the\nexception of one lonely settler af Grand\nForks and some score of placer miners\nat Wild Horse creek, near where Fort\nSteele Is now located,\" Bald Hon. Edgar Dewdney, builder of the great\nDewdney trail, ex-member of the provincial house for Kootenay and ex-\nlleutenant governor of the province, at\nthe Hume last night\nat was In April of 1865 that Mr.\nDewdney, then chief civil engineer for\nthe crown colony of BritiBh Columbia,\nleft New Westminster, which was then\nthe capital, and proceeding to Hope,\ncommenced that trail blazing trip of\nhis with a party of four white men.\nand 18 Indians which was destined to\nhe marked with white stones in the\nhistory of British Columbia. The trail\nopened up a country which had hitherto been a terra incognita; a land of\nmighty rivers and almost impassable\npine clad mountains known only to\nthe deer, the bear aud other native animals, and a few scattered bands ot\nIndians. Its mineral resources were\nonly indicated, by'. a few placer deposits, lode mining was unthought of;\nits timber was not needed, and it was\nyet 30 years before. the adaptihilitlea\nof Its fertile soil to\" fruit .was discovered, v r\nThrough this country -Mr... Dewdney\ncommenced to survey the' great trail,\nin all over 300 miles in length, which\nextended from Wild Horse creek to\nHope and there connected with a road\nto the coast, from which all supplies\nbad to be drawn. The actual number\nof miles of trail, hewn out of the virgin\nforest, was 211, and the cost to the\ncountry waB $7-1,000, a trifling sum\ncompared with the difficulties of the\nwork and the advantages that accrued\nto the province, that are still, In certains sections falling to the lot of the\nBritish Columbian.\nBonnlngton Forty-Five Years Ago.\n\"I explored the country between the\nArrow lakes and the Kootenay river,\"\nsaid Mr. Dewdney last night, \"and\nfinding that it would be necessary for\nme to come up the river, I sent two\nof my party with some of the Indians\nout toward Grand Forks, then called\nGrand Prairie, and wishing to obtain\na boat I despatched one of my Indians\nto the mouth of the Kootenay river\nwhere It joins the Columbia... At that\nspot there was a large Indian village,\nruled by Chief Gregolre, one of the big\nchiefs of the Kootenay tribe. He supplied me with a canoe, and after I had\nmade the trip to Fort Colvllle, on the\notber side of the boundary line, for\nsupplies I commenced the trip up the\nKootenay river.\n\"It was no picnic. We made 14\nportages in all and at some places had\nto go miles from the river to find a\ndeer trail through which the Indians\ncould carry my boats and supplies.\n\"I remember my first sight of the\nBonnlngton falls. We were making a\nportage and although some distance\nfrom the river I heard the sound of the\nwater. I asked an Indian what it was\nand he replied \"Hyas Skookum Marie,'\nand told me to look. I made my way\nto the river and saw what I then considered and In fact, still consider, the\nmost beautiful falls In the world. The\nscene was magnificent,\n\"Following the river we* passed\nwhere this elty now stands, and I\nwent on to Wild Horse creek in East\nKootenay. There I found a number of\nminers washing gold from the alluvial\ndiggings, some ot which are being\nworked today, and after determining\nupon the route for the trail to Hope\nI succeeded in obtaining between 60\nand 70 men and placed them In charge\nof William Fernie, the fine old-timer\nwho discovered coal in the Crow's Nest\nand after whom the city of Fernie is\nnamed.\n\"By the middle of September we\nhad the trail built through our own\ncountry, over which was subsequently\nsupplied all the food and other ma-\nterinlB renulred in tho early development of the Interior.\"\nIndians Didn't Like Cash.\nThere were troubles other than\nphysical with which Mr. Dewdney had\nto contend tn building the trail. The\nIndians, he said, .were good workers,\nbut they would not accept money in\npayment For this there were two\nreasons. One was that all the money\nin the interior, which wbb not of any\ngreat amount, was American, and the\nIndians bated the Americans as they\nhated soap and water, and would not\ntake their money. English money,\nwhen they had learnt Its value, was all\nright, aB they liked \"King George men\"\nas they called the English, but tobacco, articles of clothing and powder\nformed the most acceptable payment\nthat could be made to them.\nThe Dewdney trail commenced at\nWild Horse creek, passed through\nCranbrook, which was then called \"Pea\nVine Prairie,\" to Moyie, and then down\nthe Goat river and across the divide to\nthe Kootenay flats. From there it\nwound Its way up Summit creek, passed where Ymir now Is, down the Pend\nD'Oreille and then along the Pend\nD'Oreille to Fort Sheppard, a Hudson\nBay post. The next point was Trail\ncreek, from where lt passed in sight\nof Bed mountain, where the Le Rol\nmine was later discovered and where\nRossland has since been built, to\nChristina lake through Grand Prairie\nto the Boundary country and up Rock\ncreek. The trail then followed the\nSimilkameen river to Keremeos and up\nto Princeton, where it connected with\na road which . had been built from\nHope.\nPrevious to embarking upon what\nmay be regarded as the \u25a0 greatest\nachleyement of his life, Mr. Dewdney\nsurveyed the townslte of ,New Westminster, the capital of the colony of\nBritiBh Columbia, which until 1866 was\nseparate from the Colony of Vancouver island, which had Victoria as its\ncapital. He also explored along the\npresent route of the G.T.P. and was up\nthe Skeena, Omineca and Babine rivers\nopening a route to the Omlnica country, which was consuming a great\namount of supplies owing to the placer\noperations in that district.\nLater Mr. Dewdney waB elected\nmember for Kootenay and took part In\nthe memorable debate on March 9,\n1S70, when it was decided that the\ncolony should join the Dominion confederation. From 1892 to 1897 he was\nlieutenant governor of the province-\nToday, with Mrs. Dewdney, he is going\nup to J. J. Campbell's ranch, and tomorrow will go to Princeton In connection with a timber deal. Mr.\nDewdney has great faith In the future\nof the Similkameen country and has\nIts mineral, timber and farming resources at his finger tips.\nSTEADY PROGRESS\nON STEWART MINES\nThree   Strikes   Have   Been   Recently\nMade\u2014Three Hundred Prospectors at Work.\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nSTEWART, July 9.\u2014-A despatch says\nthat although this is a year of reaction\nfollowing the boom of last summer,\nsteady progress in proving mines of\nthe district is being made. Inhabitants\nin and around Stewart number just\nover 1,100. Of theBe Portland Canal\nand Redcliffe mines account for close\non 100; railway and Its construction\nparties, ^00; engaged on road work in\nand around the own, 70; the business\npopulation of Stewart, 300, with, women and children. This leaves 300 engaged in prospecting and development\nwork, not including some 30 prospectors In the Nass valley, nor the inhabitants of Portland city, United\nStates, who are dependent on Stewart\nfor their livelihood.\nMining progress, considering the difficulties of transport, is satisfactory,\nand three recent strikes deserve\nspecial mention. On Salmon river\nMessrs. Bunting and Dillward have\ncut through a 15-foot reef of galena,\naveraging $35 In the lead to the ton.\nThis property 1b eight miles within\nthe Canadian boundary. At present it Is\nreached by a very Inferior pack trail.\nOn the Lakeview mine, Messrs. McKay and Bibeu, while doing assessment work, have got into high grade\nsilver sulphide carrying gold values\nand running $200 to the ton. This\nproperty is seven miles from town.\nOn tbe Old Chum mine, nlno miles\nfrom town, .up Bear river valley, a\n16-foot seam of, silver-lead has been\nencountered.\nill   E\nRELEASED ON BAIL\nCRANBROOK, July 9\u2014A colored woman named Jennie Howard, appeared\nbefore Magistrate Ryan charged with\nkeeping a disorderly house. She was\nreleased on $600 ball to appear before\nJudge Wilson. Two colored inmates are\nalBo out on ball.\nSANDON MEETING\nOBJECTS TO SCHEME\nReception of King and Queen\nin Ireland's Capital\nSTAND DAUBED\nWITH WET PAINT\nSpontaneous Enthusiasm\nPoorest District\u2014Nationalists Leave City\nin\nText of Resolution Forwarded to Pro\nvlncial Government\u2014Aid to Re*\nbuilding  Railway.\nThe following preamble and resolution was unanimously adopted at a\npublic meeting held at Sandon on\nJuly 3:\nSandon, B. C, July 3, 1911.\nTo the Honorable Price Ellison, minister of finance and  agriculture,\nVictoria, British Columbia.\nSir,\u2014-In October of 1908 when the\nKaslo & Slocan railway ceased to\noperate that portion of their line which\nconnects Sandon with McGuigan, owing\nto the unsafe condition into which the\nroadbed had been allowed to degenerate through lack of needed repairs,\nthe residents of Sandon and its immediate vicinity joined hands with the\nsister city of Kaslo in an effort to\ninduce the Great Northern Railway\ncompany to put the section in proper\nshape for traffic.\nTo this petition the Great Northern\nhalf heartedly, but inefficiently, acceded.\nLast August when the forest fires\nwhich raged over this whole section\nalmost accomplished the ruin of the\nline, we supported Kaslo In Its appeal\nto the provincial government that the\nlatter should assist them by its influence or by subsidy to procure a resumption of traffic between the two\ntowns, feeling quite naturally that unless a satisfactory railway Bervlce was\navailable and maintained the tributary\ncountry would be seriously handicapped. It If would not be put out of commission altogether. Subsequent negotiations developed a plait whereby a\nprivate syndicate composed of some ot.\nthe citizens of Kaslo, aided by the\npromise of a substantial subsidy from\nthe -provincial government, for the purpose of putting into operation that portion of the line .that lies between Kaslo\nand McGuigan, and thus by depriving\nthe Slocan towns of the direct communication that they had a right to expect, divert to Kaslo the business that\nproperly and geographically should belong to them.\nThe Kaslo mining district extends\nwestward for about 20 miles along the\nline of the railway to the divide at.\nBear lake, where it adjoins the Slocan\ndistrict. If their plans materialize, it\nis the intention of the local syndicate\nwho have purchased the Kaslo and Slocan railway to cross the divide and, by\nproceeding westward about three miles\ninto tbe Slocan district, wrest the traffic that our citizens have as much a\nmoral right to expect to reap a benefit\nfrom as they would from the custom\nthat lies within the immediate limits\nof the district, Such an eventuality\nwe view, with anxiety and alarm, and\nwe protest most vigorously against any\nmeasures taken that will make this injustice possible.\nWhen the Canadian Pacific railway\nhad announced their intention of building a spur to connect the Lucky Jim\nmine, which lies'practically on the dividing line of the two districts, with\ntheir station at Three Forks, an agita--\ntion was set on foot by those interested\nin the success of the Kaslo owned project, with a view to dissuading tbe\nCanadian Pacific from carrying out\ntheir plans.\nWith what success their efforts In\nthis direction has been attended we\nare unable to say.\nThe plea that the abandonment of\nthe C.P.R. spur in favor of the K. &\nS. project would be in the best inter-\n< Continued on Page Five.)\nJULY 10, 1911. \u2022\nCoupon No. 1. \u2022\nThis coupon, with  one from e\neach of the other issues of The *\nDaily News of the week ending r\nJuly 16, and 10 cents, entitles ?\nthe holder  to   a   photogravure r\nreproduction of Fred  Morgan's c\npicture \"London Bridge is Fall- f\nlng Down,\" or Edouard Bisson's r\n\"La Cigale.\" Coupons and money \u2022\nshould   be   presented   at   The *\nDaily   NewB   office   any   time e\nafter Saturday next.   If pictures \u2022\nare to be mailed 5 cents must *\nbe added to cover postage. \u2022\nLONDON, July 9\u2014King George and\nQueen Mary received an enthusiastic\nwelcome when they landed in the state\nbarge at Kingstown and touched Irish\nsoil for the first time yesterday. A\nvast crowd thronged the wharves and\ncheer after cheer went up as Viceroy\nand Lady Aberdeen greeted their majesties, while the fleet thundered a welcome from the bay. With the King and\nQueen were the Prince of Wales, Princess Mary, the Duke of Connaught and\na brilliant staff.\nAs their majesties stepped ashore\nthe chairman of the Kingstown council presented an address to which the\nKing replied briefly. His brief speech\nwas received with great cheering and\nwas taken as an indication of the\nKing's good will towards Ireland. The\nKing then Inspected the naval guard of\nhonor. The Queen and the Prince of\nWales and their party were presented\nwith beautiful boquets after which the\nparty entered the state landeau and\ndrove through cheering crowds on their\nway to Dublin, ,\nNo Civic Welcome\nNo official civic* welcome greeted\ntheir majesties upon their arrival in\nDublin, the news of tbe row in the\ncouncil over the manner of the King's\nwelcome having reached his majesty's\nears and caused him to send word that\nLord Mayor FarreU's presence would be\nembarrassing. \u2022 Lord Mayor Farrell Insisted last week that he would welcome\ntheir majesties In the name of the city,\nand this resulted in such a row in the\nDublin city corporation that the council\nhad taken steps to remove tbe mayor\nshould he persist in his attitude. This\naction and the wishes of the King kept\nthe lord mayor from being present at\nthe welcoming exercises but he was\npresent later at Trinity college as a\nmember of the reception committee of\nthat institution.\nDaubed With Paint\nLord Mayor Farrell had announced\nalso that he would present an address\nto the King but bis plan was blocked\nby his opponents plentifully daubing\nwith fresh pain the stand erected on\nLeeson street bridge just at the edge\nof the city.\nThe entry into the city was informal.\nPreceded by a detachment of Irish constabulary and escorted by the Fifth\nRoyal Lancers, the royal party was\ndriven to Dublin castle. At Monkstown\nchurch and Ball's bridge addresses\nwere presented by local reception committees but in these two instances there\nwas an entire absence of civic or other\nrepresentative officials. After luncheon\nat Dublin castle the King and his party\nwere driven to the royal college of science, which his majesty formally opened,\nAt Trinity College\nLater he visited Trinity college where\nhe received au address of welcome\nfrom the university authorities. Dublin\nhad been decorated for tbe occasion by\na non-political committee, which was\nsupported by the citizens. The Nationalists adopted a passively friendly\nattitude but did not participate in tbe\nofficial receptions. The occasion was\ntreated generally as a holiday and the\nstreets were crowded. Students from\nTrinity college gathered in force at\nthe college and gave their majesties an\nenthusiastic welcome. It was noticed\nin the great crowds that lined the\nstreets that the majority of the on*\nlookers did not raise their hats. Members of the Sinnfein society in order\nto avoid the appearance of giving their\napproval to the welcoming of the King\nand Queen went by train to the grave\not Wolfetone, in the churchyard at\nBolenstown, where they held a meeting\nto protest against the reception to the\nEnglish King and Queen in Dublin,\nLoyal Reception\nAmong other affairs which the King\nattended was the opening of a play\ncentre in the poorest district in Dublin.\nIt was a time of the greatest anxiety\nfor the police before the Kings' arrival.\nThe police and the crowd had several\nencounters in one of which a sergeant\nhad an arm broken. Troops were\nbrought up but were not required. As\nsoon as the King appeared the people\nwho are perhaps the poorest of his\nsubjects were carried away with enthusiasm and gave him by far the most\nloyal welcome of the day. Men and\nwomen who had been jeering the police\nand soldiers broke into hearty cheers,\nwhich continued throughout the district. The King and Queen, although\ntired showed their great pleasure at\nCENSUS   EXTENDED\nONE DAY\nOwing to the fact that the\ncensus enumerators in Nelson\nhave found sufficient additional\nwork to keep them occupied for\nanother day, the HstB will not\nclose until tonight\nThe publicity bureau will\ntherefore be open to receive\nnames of those who have not\nbeen counted until 6 o'clock\nthis evening.\nSaturday a large number of\nnameB were obtained through\nthe efforts of the publicity commissioner, the enumerators and\nothers, and It iB expected that\nby tonight fully 150 will have\nbeen added to the count through\nthis final campaign.\nmw;:\n\u2022I\nthis ovation,, which was entirely un'ex-\nepcted in this quarter.\nAttend Service\nDUBLIN, July 9\u2014The citizens of\nDublin continue to give ample evidence\nof their affection for and loyalty to\nKing George. The King's movements\nare watched everywhere by enthusiastic crowds. This morning their majesties attended service at St .Patrick's cathedral where they were received by\nthe Most Rev. Joseph Ferguson Peacock, Archbishop of Dublin-\nLiberal Wins\nLONDON, July 9\u2014In the iWestham\nby-election, Baron de Forest, Liberal,\nwith 6.807 votes defeated Ernest Wild,\nConservative, who obtained 5,776 votes.\nPremier. Ward, D, C. L.\nLONDON, July 9\u2014Birmingham university has conferred the honorary\nD.C.L. degree on Premier Ward, who\nhas asked that New Zealand's congratulations be sent to the Rt. Hon. Joseph\nChamberlain on his 75th birthday today.\nHome   Rule  Contribution\nJohn Redmond has received a cable\nfrom New Zealand stating that the contribution to the home rule fund will\nprobably be \u00a3100,000.\nBoy Scouts Entertained\nThe Boy Scouts last night dined with\nCol. Durland at the Holborn restaurant\nCol. Mindon Cole eulogized the kindness\nand hospitality shown them.\n.-''wtoarty Par\u00abwail ,\nLIVERPOOL,. July 9\u2014The Winnipeg\nHighlanders and Canadian naval contingent were given a hearty send off on\nthe Victorian. The Highlanders were\nplayed to the ship by the Liverpool\nScottish pipers.\nGuests of Duke\nSHEFFIELD, July 9\u2014Overseas members of parliament visited several large\nworks and were dined at Outrey hall.\nSenator Smith responding to the principal toast of the day. They lunched\nyesterday at Chatsworth with the\nDuke of Devonshire anj at night dined\nat Carborough where they spent Sunday,\nFreedom of City\nEDINBURGH, July 9\u2014Messrs. Morris and Fisher yesterday received the\nfreedom of the city of Edinburgh.\nMorris anent tbe conference said the\nDominion had now been admitted to\nfull partnership in the empire and\ntherefore she must assume full responsibility regarding contributions to the\nempire.\nChamberlain's Birthday\nLONDON, July 9\u2014The birthday of\nempire as colonial secretary,\nthe Rt. Hon. Joseph Chamberlaia, Mas\ncelebrated here on Saturday by a series\nof meetings held in connection with the\nwork of tho tariff reform league. Many\ncablegrams were received from the\noverseas dominions which mentioned\nMr. Chamberlain's services to the empire as colonial secretary.\nWILL DECIDE\nCASE ON MERITS\n^Qua\nFOR RECIPROCITY\nCummins and Simmons A-\nmendments Voted Down\nFINAL VOTE IS\nDRAWING NEAR\nNumerous Petitions in Favor of Italian\nWoman Giving Offence at\nOttawa.\nOTTAWA, July 9.\u2014The unprecen-\ndented campaign in the United States\non behalf of Angelina Neapolitano,\nsentenced to death at the Canadian\nSoo for the murder of her husband,\nand the consequent deluging of the department of justice with petitions\npraying for clemency Is provoking unfavorable comment in Ottawa. The unfortunate physical condition of the condemned woman has elicited widespread\nsympathy, but it may be Btated with\nauthority that Sir Allen Aylsworth will\ndecide, the case absolutely upon its\nmerits and without regard to the efforts of the thousands of well meaning\npetitioners. It is quite likely that an\nexamination of tbe court records by\nthe minister will reveal aspects of the\ncase which will amply Justify a commutation of the sentence, but the extraordinary interest manifested in the\nwoman's predicament will not weigh\nwith the department. Cases of this\nsort, in which the life of the prisoner\nIn the balance, are decided by the\ncovernor-in-counctl on a report from\nSir Allen AyleBWorth and must then\nbe r ^proved by the governor general.\nProposals   to  Add   Various\nCommodities to  Free\nList With Canada\nWASHINGTON, July 9\u2014A lively\nclearing of the ways for the eventual\npassage of the unamended Canadian reciprocity bill was made by the voting\ndown of the Cummins and Simmons\namendments to that bill. Continued discussion and action on other provisions\nin connection with the bill will keep\nthe senate busy all this week. While\nthe house which will meet on Wednesday and quickly adjourn until Saturday,\nwill be active only in its committees.\nThe amendments proposed by Senator Cummins of 'Iowa, insurgent Republican, would add steel and iron, coal,\nlumber, wool, and other Canadian products to the free list from Canada. The\namendments proposed by Senator Simmons of North Carolina, Democrat, are\nsomewhat similar in nature. These\nare expected to be bowled over during\nthe \"legislative day\" of tomorrow,\nwhich term under the agreement for a\nvote might extend the day into the\nnight or for several calendar days if\nnecessary. After the voting of these\namendments, the Benate will proceed\nwith the consideration of the reciprocity bill and amendments by Senator\nLafollette and Matters will be put before that body for action.\nERECT NEW GRANDSTAND\nIN RECORD TIME\nV7NNTPHC; July \"fcvrhat tbe-giamt-\nBtand will be completed In time for the\nexhibition on Wednesday next Is the\nassertion made by the directors. Before the ashes had cooled on the night\nof the fire a gang was at work prepar- '\nlng for the new grandstand which will\naccommodate 9,000 people. The seating capacity will be more than ever.\nPOLICE  CELL TO  ALTAR\nWINNIPEG, July 9\u2014From a police\ncell, where he was being held for murder to an altar where he took Marie\nEugenie as a wife is the quick move\nmade by Gaston Monsoison, who four\nmonths ago shot to death Nicholas\nGnvini, In the bar of the Roblln hotel. The happy couple will leave for\ntbe Twin Cities tomorrow.\nLIBERAL MEETING\nTHIS EVENING\nMinister   of   Mines,   Dr.   Clark,   John\nOliver and M. A. Macdonald to\nSpeak on Reciprocity\nA delegation of the Liberal party members went down to the depot last night\nto meet the speakers who aro to give\naddresses In favor of reciprocity at the\nmass meeting which Is to be held in the\nopera house this evening.\nAmong those who are announced as\nspeakers are Hon. William Templeman,\nmfnlster of mines; Dr. Michael Clark, M.\nP. for Red Deer; John Oliver and M. A.\nMacdonald. Mr. Templeman and Dr.\nClark aro at tho Hume, while Mr, Macdonald is expected to arrive from Cranbrook on the Crow boat tonight.\nThe meeting will open at 8 o'clock with\ntho president of tho Nelson Liberal association, H. C. Hall, In the chair. Seats\nwill be reserved in the front rows for\nladles and their escorts.\nHARVESTING  CROPS   WILL\nCOST  FIFTY  MILLIONS\nWINNIPEG, July 9.\u2014According to\nthe Tribune over $50,000,000 will be\nspent by the farmers of the western\nprovinces In harvesting the crop. It\nsays binders will cost $9,600,000, twine\n$9,100,000, wages $9,172,000, threshing\n$16,000,000, and that another $10,000,-\n000 must be added for threshing machines, wages, bags, cleaning machines\nand other incidentals. These figures\nare supported by a number of supply\nmen in the city by interviews.\nFIRE  AT  SARNIA.\nSARNIA, Ont., July 9.\u2014Fire In the\nlumber docks along the St. Clair river\ntoday did $150,000 damage. The combined efforts of the Sarnia, Point Edward, Ont., and Port Huron, Mich.,\nfire departments, and two tugs, were\nrequired to extinguish the flames. The\nprincipal losses are to the LeBel Turn-\nbull Lumber company, $80,000, and F,\nMcGlbbon $60,000. Two firemen weri\u00bb\novercome by heat and smoke hut it\nIb not thought that their condition Is\nserious.\n Cije Bail? fifoa.\nh&k OPH\nMONDAY  JUUY 10\nLast Chance for These Great Pictures\nBeautiful\nPhotogravure\nReproductions\nEach 22 by 28 inches\nLa Cigale\n\"The Grasshopper\"\nThis is one of the greatest\npaintings of the modern\nFrench school. It embodies\nLa Fontaine's fable of \"The\nGrasshopper and the Ant.\"\nThe summery figure shivering in the wintry wind emphasizes the nobility and necessity of labor. :\nThe picture is painted by\nEdouard Bisson, who died\nwithin the last few weeks.\nLondon Bridge\nIs Falling\nDown\nThis beautiful picture by\nFred Morgan is worthy of a\nplace in every home, but es-,\npecially where there are children or those who love children.\nNever Before Sold\nfor Less Than\nI. $2.50Each\n\"La Cigale\" (The Grasshopper).   By Edouard Bisson.\nMany of our readers will be glad to learn that we have been able to secure a few more of these beautiful\nphotogravures. The number at our disposal is limited, but while they last they can be had on the same liberal\nterms as before.    Readers of The Daily News may have them\nFor Only 10 Cents and Six Coupons\nfor each picture.    Coupons to be taken one from each day's issue of The Daily News.   When ordered by mail,\n15 cents must be sent to cover postage.\n\"London Bridge Is Falling Down.\"   By Fred Morgan\nPUBLICITY FAKIRS\nDRAIN ON BUSINESS\nMakes Living by Sucking Life Blood of\nLegitimate Business\u2014Publicity\nGold- Bricks.\nThe following article, writen by John\nT. Hall, publicity commissioner of Lethbrldge, and published in the Lethbrldge\nHerald is applicable and interesting to\nNelson:\nImitation.\nThere is an old proverb that imitation is the slncerest form, of flattery\nand there always follows in the wake\nof successful and legitimate publicity\nand genuine advertising, a horde of\ncounterfeits, whose whole stock in\ntrade consists of monumental gall and\nnerve and the goods that they deliver\nare only a reflection or shadow of the\ngenuine article.\nEvolution.\nDuring the laBt twenty-five years,\nthe advertising of large mercantile and\nmanufacturing Institutions including\ntbe modern department store, has been\nundergoing a process of evolution\nand has passed through the various\nstages, from chaotic Intermittent and\nabortive methods, until lt has reached\na point of prefection, and is placed upon a scientific basis, thoroughly systematized. The advertising and publicity\ndepartment of large mercantile or manufacturing establishments has become,\nin this process of evolution, the most\nimportant branch of their institutions.\nLarge salaries are paid to experienced\nmen, who have the training, and the experience to enable them to select such\nmediums and channels of advertising\nas will give tbe best possible results\nfor the least possible expenditure\u2014and\nin order to get a full dollars worth for\nevery dollar expended they must have\nthe faculty of separating Hhe chaff\nfrom the wheat\u2014the counterfeits from\nthe genuine and fully recognize the\nfact that In no branch of their business can more money be frittered\naway needlessly than through ignorance or inability to detect and separate\nthe counterfeit from the genuine article in advertising mediums.\nEliminate the Fakir.\nIn the cities of western Canada as\nevery where else where there is a\ndesire on the part of the public to\nmake more generally known the natural resources and advantages of a\ncity or community ,they must be on\nthe lookout for the publicity shark\nand the professional fakirs who are\never on the alert with some elaborate\nand pausfble scheme, that may appeal\nvery strongly to those not fully\nconversant with the wily and slns-\nter methods of the publicity green-\ngoods man, and presented by them in\nthe most tactful and alluring form.\nEliminating and blotting out the fakir\nIn civic advertising, can only be accomplished by excersing horse sense\nand applying cold blooded business\nprincipals.\nHall Fellows, Well Met.\nThey are generally hail fellows, well\nmet, glib ot tongue and vivid of Imagination, who blow into your town\nwith a scheme to paint the advantages\nof your city on the \"Sun by day\" and\nthe \"Moon by night\" and with one\nmaster stroke of brilliant genius, keep\nbefore the entire universe, the name\nof Lethbrldge in capital letters and at\nthe same time contributing to the\nscientific world a satisfactory solution\nof the problem of perpetual motion\nas applied to civic publicity, they\npaint in glowing colors the material\nbenefits that will accur to your city\nif you will only accept their proposition and they often succeed In convincing the uninitiated that they are\nactuated solely by philanthropic motives. And to their credit be lt said\nthat they often depart with a big fat\ncontract tucked away in their breast\npocket, and you learn when It is too\nlate that you have been gold bricked\nbuncoed and stung. And In passing,\nIt is worthy of note that some reputable magazine writers of note, are\nnot above leading their names to this\nliterary confidence game.\nThere are several cities in western\nCanada that we could name that have\nbeen easy marks for the wily and astute advertising fakir and they have\nbeen relieved of thousands of dollars\nand the results derived from this\ncounterfeit publicity would be on a par\nwith what a pork packing establishment would get from advertising in a\nJewish Journal, or baby clothes in the\nHarwnre Review.\nPrinters Ink.\nWe have no desire to underestimate\ntbe value of printers Ink in legitimate\nadvertising, as we have often made\nthe statement \"It is the greatest medium on earth to make the wants of\na man or community known.\"\nIt Is the fakir\u2014the parasite\u2014who\nmakes his living by sucking the life\nblood out of a legitimate business, and\ngiving nothing substantial In return,\nthat we are after.\nWestern Canada seems to offer an\nexcellent field for the man with tbe\npublicity \"gold brick.\" It is the new\ncountry of magnlficant distances and\nImmense possibilities. Its people are\nanxious and willing to spend money In\nmaking known its resources and future\noptimistic enthusiasm regarding the\n.development of the entire country-\u2014\ntheir slogan being, 'Everybody pull\ntogether for western Canada.\" On account of this enthusiastic spirit, they\nare all the more apt to fall into the trap\nset by the foxy and wily publicity fakir,\nwhose only object and aim is to\nseparate! you! IJrom your money by,\nsome plausible scheme, that in nine\ncases out of ten, will be barren of results.\nThis Is where an experienced man\ncan save a city thousands of dollars\nannually. He has the advertising fakir\nmarked and wastes neither time nor\nmoney upon him. He is the \"green\npnotfs\" man of modern publicity and\nshould be stamped \"counterfeit\" or\nplaced behind the bars for receiving\nmoney under fnlse pretenses.\nThe principles involved In the fore-\nSpecial Clearance Sale\nof All Summer Stock\nLadles' summer dresses In fine muslin, lawn and silk mull, lace\nand embroidery trimmed, regular S5, J6, and J7.50 dresBes sale price\n$3.50. .    .\nAll ladies blouses at sale price to clear.\nAll Summer Muslins, Prints and Ginghams\nat Cost Price\nBargains in ladies' under mu slins to clear.\nSpecial clearance prices on all ladies' millinery.\nAll Trimmed and Pattern Hats from\n$3.50 Each Up\nLadles Summer Goats, half price to clear.\nBargains in all our children's dresses and odds and ends to each\ndepartment\nFred Irvine & Co.\nReciprocity\nPublic Meeting, Opera House,\nNelson, Monday, July 10,1911\nAddresses by Dr. Clark, M.P., Hon. Wm. Templeman,\nMinister of Inland Revenue, John Oliver, Pres!\nP.L.A., M. A. Macdonald, and others.\nDr. Clark made some of the most notable speeches in the recinro-\nclty debate in the house of commons and his address should be Lartt\nby all interested in this widely discussed question\nEveryone welcome.   SeatB reserved for ladles.  Chair taken at 8-ik\nsharp.   Auspices NelBon Liberal association. w*a*rtaj.en at 8.15\nH. C. HALL, President H. E. DOUGLAS, Secretary.\nGOD 8AVE THE KING\ngoing apply with equal force, to the\nadvertising of the local merchant, and\nhe should excerclse great care and\njudgment if he desires to get best re*\nsuits.\nOne illustration will be sufficient\nto make our point clear (hundreds\ncould be given). Last week in one of\nour print shopB, we picked up a letter\nhead that was being gotten up for one\nof the hotels., It was on cheap paper\nand on the back contained the business\ncards of about 12 of our retail merchants whose business is entirely local.\nThey evidently did not consider that\n95 per cent of hotel stationery goes to\ndistant, outside points that are not\nbuying 'Lethbrldge groceries or dry\ngoods.\nProm the hotel point of view it Is\nnot good advertising, it lookB cheap\nas if the house found it necessary to\nsell advertising space In order to provide their guests with stationery.\n.We do not know who wrb responsible for the scheme, but\u2014it has all\nthe ear marks of the fakir.\nCONCERT AT FRUITVALE.\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nFRUITVALE, B. C, July 9.\u2014On Tuesday evening a social gathering, which\nwas attended by fully 100 persons, was\nheld at the school house, under the auspices of the Church of England. Proceedings started at 8:30 with a short\nconcert at which the following ladles\nand gentlemen assisted; Mesdames\nColebrook and Greenwood, Miss Jones,\nMessrs Colebrook, Rumau, Shlmser,\nRoyauder and Kennedy. After the concert sandwiches, cakeB and ice cream,\nkindly supplied by the. ladles, were\nhanded round, and the evening was concluded by a short dance, music being\nsupplied by Mrs. Colebrook at the organ\nand MiHsrs Palmer and Scott violinists.\nA very enjoyable evening was spent.\nand it is hoped that another gathering\nwill be arranged in the near future.\nBRITISH  COLUMBIA MINING\nAND ENGINEERING RECORD\nThe current number of the BritiBh\nColumbia Mining and Engineering Record contains among other matter articles on the Consolidated Oil Fields of\nCalifornia, concerning which there has\nbeen much discussion in the British\nfinancial press; proposed operations of\nGranby Mining, Smelting and Power\ncompany at Goose bay; Dust explosions In coal mines; Use of safety\nlamps in estimation and detection of\nfire damp in coal mines; Work or dominion mines department; and exhaustive account of the discoveries of minerals, including coal, in the Skeena and\nOmenlca mining divisions. Annual\nmeeting of western branch of the Canadian mining Institute; account of a new\ncoal field discovered at Queen Charlotte Islands; results of development at\nRambler-Cariboo mine; and notes on\nPortland canal.\nMany broad, circular collars are\nfashioned in hoods at the back. A\nstunning blue silk suit for a young girl\nhad a collar of white Bilk which drooped\nInto the monk's hood and was trimmed\nwith white silk cord and a tassel.\nThe striped coat sets are in any\ncolor that one wishes, not necessarily\nto match the suit. The collar ts quite\nlong, deep at the back and finished with\nan edge of Cluny lace or a hem of colored muslin or linen to match the\nBtrlpe.\nThe sailor collar has evidently not\nonly come to stay, but has Increased\nits influence. The skittish little over-\nthe-shoulderg effect has now grown to\nthe really stunning waist-length style,\nand has made its appearance on coats,\non  blouses  and on one-piece' frockB.\nWhy let that headache spoil your day's work or pleasure? Tike\n25c. a Box at your druggist's. ^\u2014\u2014 ,   .^\nGuaranteed to contain no morphine, opium or other poisonous drugs, by the   30\nNational Drug tod Chamlcal Compinr of Canada, Limited MontraaL\n MONDAY \u25a0\nJULY 10\nm>t Baa? jit**\nNews of Sport\nMAGDALEN BEATS\nJESUS COLLEGE\nWin Grand Challenge Cup In Finals by\nOver Two Lengths\u2014 Diamond\nSpulis.\nHENLEY ON THAMES, July 9.\u2014A\nheat wave passed over Henley yesterday. Thousands upon thousands of\npeople were oq the river and the Ottawa\ncrew enjoyed a well earned rest after\ntheir ardouB work of the past 10 days.\nThe Stewards' Challenge cup final was\nwon by the Thames Rowing club, who\nbeat Trinity Hall, Cambridge, by one\nlength in the good time of 7 minutes\nand 35 seconds.\nThe Diamond Sculls final was won\nby last year's winner, W. D. Klnnear,\nwho defeated Powell by one and a half\nlengths tn the fast time of 8 minutes,\n14 seconds outside the record for this\ndistance and eyent.\nMagdalen college, who beat the Ot*\ntawa eight, beat Jesus college in the\nfinals of the Grand, Challenge cup.-\nAfter starting in the Grand Challenge\ncup final, Jesus took the lead, and the\ncrews were level at a quarter mile. At\nthe three-quarter mile mark Magdalen\ntook tne lead and went away, winning\nby two and a quarter lengths. The half\ncourse was done in 3 minutes and 24\nseconds, which Is four seconds slower\nthan Ottawa's time in Friday's race.\nIn- the second half of the course Magdalen made a great spurt and won in\n7 minutes and 2 seconds, which is Blow\ntime compared with the race against\nOttawa, who rowed the course in G\nminutes 55 seconds.\nEton college won the Ladies plate, defeating the first crew of Trinity college, Cambridge, by two lengths in\ntbe record time of 6 minutes 66 seconds,\nfive seconds faster than the record\nestablished by Eton in 1897.\nMATT VVELL8 SORE\nAT WOLGAST'S SNUB\nNEW YORK. July 9.\u2014Matt WellB, the\nclaimant of the English lightweight\nchampionship, who is preparing near\nhere for a battle with Dick Hyland at\nAlbany, N.Y., July 20, Is rather \"cut\nup\" over the ignoring of his challenge\nto Wolgast as he has signified his willingness to fight the American champion at 133 pounds, weigh in at 3 p.m.\nWells' manager, George McDonald, is\nof the same opinion. \"Wells is entitled;\nhe says, \"to some consideration in this\ndiscussion about lightweight honors,\nand I cannot see why Wolgast should\nact thusly to Wells. At any rate Wells\nwill have, and should have, considerable\nto say about any match If it Is for the\nworld's title.\"\n\"Here's a health unto His Majesty 1*\nDRINK IT IN\nlKjn$ George IV\"\nseo&n'l     Liqueur WhfcKy\nTHE RULING BRAND,\nnot only throughout the Dominion,\nbut the British Empire over-seas.\nProprietors: THE UlSTILLERS\nD\u00ab\nI VO.. Ltd.,\nEDINBURGH.\nUifUt Scotch Whisky DUtUler. fa t\u00bb. World.\nCplUl employed am \u00a33,000,000.\nAtntst  R. V. R1THBT ft CO.. LTD., VICTORIA, B.C\nWanted, Everybody to Get Familiar with the\nK.C. Brand\nproducts, which will be noted (or purity\nand excellence and manufactured only\nby\nThe Kootenay-Columbia Preserving Works\nManufacturers oi Jans, Jellies, Bottled Fruits, Etc.\nP.O. Box 192, Tel 166\nNelson, B.C.\nROBERT C. TEVIOTDALE,\nSecretary-Treasurer.\no\nTraOel the Northern rim of the\nUnited States\u2014through\na seenic country on the.\nGreat Northern\nRailway\nH. B. DOUGLAS, City Passenger Agent  Nelson, B.C.\nThe Nelson Wine & Spirit Co.\nW. R. THOMSON, late C.P.R. Boat Bars, Manager and Proprietor.\nBeggs Loohnagar-Balraoral Scotch.\nD. & J. HoCallum's Perfection Scotch.\nRenault's Pure Grape Brandy.\nPabst Blue Ribbon Beer.\nEast Thro9 Boundaryland\nSTORE, VBRNON ST.\nP. O. Drawer 1099   J\ne JOHNSON TO FIGHT e\n\u2022 LANG AT SYDNEY, e\ne   e\n\u2022 LONDON, July 9.\u2014Jack John- e\ne son has signed to fight Bill Lang e\ne at Sydney, N.S.W., Easter Mon- e\ne day, 1912. e\nETON DEFEATS HARROW.\nLONDON, July 8.\u2014Eton defeated\nHarrow In their annual cricket match\nat Lords yesterday by three wickets,\nSPORTING SPOTLIGHTS\nFirst baseman Tim Jordan of the Toronto team is leading the Eastern\nleague in batting;\nPitcher Karger of tbe Boston Red\nSox, is out of the game on account of\nan injured arm.\nEarl Mack, son of Connie Mack, manager of the Athletics, Is playing with\nthe HarriBburg Tri-State league.\nFielder Jones, former manager of the\nWhite Sox, Is scouting for the St.\nLouis Browns on the Pacific coast.\nOwner Comiskey says that bis White\nSox have the class and will make a hot\nfigbt for the American league honors:\nowe nearly $5,000 on my home, and\nCarl said he'd pay the mortgage with\nhis wlnlngs.   it's as good as paid.\nI've been a selfish woman all my\nlife, staying at home with my children\nand depending, on them for news of the\nworld, but now I'm trying to learn, so\nI can talk to Carl about fights when ha\ncomes to see me.\"\nMrs. Morris ceased taking the leading daily paper here because it roasts\nher son, who haB lived in the state\nmost of his life. This is a sample of\nOklahoma \"boosting\" Morris gets.\nTELLS WHY LAN6F0RD\nCAN BEAT CHAMP\n\"CARL CAN WIN BECAUSE\nHE TOLD ME 80.\"\nOKLAHMOA CITY, Okla., July 6.\u2014\nIf Carl Morris ever becomes champion\nheavyweight, he will not, like many\nmen of note, olalm Ohio as his birthplace. Morris Is a product of the blue\ngrass, and if he meets Jack Johnson\nhe will carry the Inbred \"race supremacy\" Into the ring.\nMorris is one of a family of giants.\nHis sire weighs 250, his mother, at 57,\nscales 246 and Is five feet ten, while\nseven brothers and sisters weighed 200\nere they were 20.\nI told Carl it was a mistake to quit\nthe road for prize-fighting, but that\nIf he must fight I wanted him to be\nchampion and remain as honest as he\nhas been,\" said 'Mrs, Morris to a Tribune reporter.\n\"'Carl fights because he loves it,\"\nshe continued, \"The only people who\never whipped him were his teacher\nand myself. He almost wore us out\nlicking' htm for fighting. He fought\nbecause he loved lt. I whipped Carl\nfor fighting and Mb brothers for getting licked by other boys.\n\"Carl isn't vicious. He's the best\nboy that ever lived, and no son could\nbe better than he has, been. If he's\nbeaten It will be by a better man, not\nbecause he didn't do his best. It makes\nme mad when they question his honesty.\"\nAccurate news from Morris' camp Is\nhard to get, and Mrs. Morris depends\nupon Carl's letters for information.\nShe knows little about sport, but Is\nmightily Interested In Carl's proposed\nfight with Jim Flynn.\n\"I know Carl must fight harder to\nbeat Flynn than he ever had to, but\nI don't fear the result. He says Flynn\ncan't hurt him, and that he'll win. He\nnever lies, so I know he will win.   I\nIs Thinness\nEmbarrassing\nUndoubtedly It Is to Many a .Maiden\nand Youth\u2014While Even Those well\nAlong In Years Prefer well Rounded\nFigures.\nPrescription Increases Weight\nA scrawny, gangling youth or maiden\nIs almost Invariably slighted, overlooked\nor ridiculed in any social gathering\nThere la something about a plump or\nwell proportioned figure which attracts\nnot only friendship, but love and adulation as well.\nPeople with a proper amount of flesh\nare favlred In all walks of life, while\nthe thin are unbiassed, unwelcome and\nfrequently miserable for life. The difference lies In the power of the digestive\nfunctions and the ability or the blood and\nnerves to absorb and distribute over the\nbody the nutrition extracted from the\nfood eaten. i \u2022    ,\nThe thin person is abnormal and lacks\nthe power to absorb and retain the flesh\nand fat elements which the gastric\njuices In the stomach and Intestines\nshould extract or separate from all kinds\nof food and drink.\nA recent accidental discovery has\nproven that tincture cadomene when\nblended with certain other drugs, will add\nfrom one' to three pounds if flesh per\nweek during treatment, white the general\nhealth and strength also ifproves wonderfully.\nGet In a half pint bottle three ounces\nof essence of pepsin and three ounces\nof syrup of shubaob; then add one\nounce compound -essence cardlol; shake\nand let stand two hours; then add one\nounce tincture cadomene compound (not\ncardamon). Shake well and take a tea-\nspoonful before and after meals, drinking\nplenty of water between meals and when\nretiring. \u00ab\nJoe   Woodburn   Says   Tar   Baby   Is\nYounger And Harder Hitter Than\nJack Johnson.\nA great many people ask me each\nday why I think that Sam Langford\ncan beat Jack Johnson, and in answer\nI can only say. that Langford, in beating the old champion, would only do\nwhat Walcott always did to all the\n'Mg fellows that he met, says Joe\nWoodburn.\nLangford Is younger and a much\nharder niter than Johnson, and while\n1 have to admit that Johnson Is a\nmost clever defensive fighter, be certainly can't stop all of Longford's terrific punches. If Johnson is so sure\nhe can beat Sam on account of his\nsize, why don't he take him on and\ngather In that money which has been\noffered him so many times. It must\nremembered that what Johnson\nwould get for his end is more than\nmost of the purses that have ever been\ngiven.\n\"No, It isn't that Langford is so easy,\nit Is because Johnson fears Langford.\nHe surely remembers what Langford\nwas doing to him in the one go at\nChelsea some years ago, and if that\ncontest had gone a few rounds longer\nJohnson would not be the champion\ntoday.\nLangford's record shows that he Is\nlike Walcott in many ways, that Is in\nthe way he has beaten down all of the\nmen he has fought the last five years,\nall of whom has weighed at least 26\npounds more than he, with two exceptions (Dixie Kid and Jeff Clark).\n\"Langford, In being so short, has a\nmuch better chance with Johnson\nthan he would lf he were taller. Johnson will have to be punching a great\ndeal straighter than he has ever before\nto beat Sam, as most of tbe champion's\nfights have been won with either hooks\nor uppercuts.\n\"Perhaps if Tommy Burns had been\na bit more careful he would still be in\nthe running. Burns, It will be remembered, was not knocked out by Johnson, and declared that he could have\ncontinued. Burns never was much of\na puncher. Burns Is Just a bit bigger\nIn every way than Sam.\n\"Langford and myself are so sure\nthat he can defeat1 Johnson that we\nare willing to let the champion name\nthe terms. I am In hopes that while\nJohnson Is In England that some of\nthe promoters will sign him to fight\nLangford.\nWANTED TO FIGHT RIVAL\nWITH   ONLY ONE  MAULER\nGeorge Contas, better known as\n\"Knockout\" Brown, a young Chicago\nGreek, has been dubbed the Jim Flynn I\nof the light middlewelghts. The!\nBrown person Is about as gentle In\nthe ring as a mature bull that' has\nbeen prodded In a tender spot with a\nmeat axe. Brown Bits In his corner\nand, when the annunciator peals the\nbattle cry, springs at his opponent\nlike a terrier at the command of \"sic\n'em.\" The Insomnia doctor, who declares that he can produce luscious\nsleep with either paw, Is a fighter.\nThat's his calling and, after seeing\nhim in action, one can readily understand why he feels at home in the\nsquared arena.\nNot many months ago Brown made\nthe proud boast that he wasn't afraid\nof any creature on two legs that\nweighed within 10 pounds of his\nweight. Probably the \"Knockout\" boy\nhas forgotten those words, or he has\nrepented such a hasty declaration. Ask\nKid Broad about Brown and he will\ntell you that Mr. Brown has been eating crow for some time and that he\n(Board) it was who Berved the unpalatable dish.\nOffered One-Handed Go,\nBroad avers that Brown Is afraid\nof him and 1b so nutty to meet him\nthat he offered to fight K. O. with one\nhand the other day. It happened in\nChicago, which place Broad also claims\nhome. His Kidleta (swept, down on\nBrown one afternoon and tried to brush\nBrowh's hair up the wrong way. Fighters have hair like ordinary human\nbeings, but this time Brown didn't resent the action. Mr. Brown stated\nplainly that there was nothing doing\nand this so riled the pugnncious Kid\nthat he offered to take the ferocious Mr.\nBrown into a private gymnasium and\npush his nose Into his left ear. At this\nhighly interesting point Mr. Brown produced a disabled fin, aald fin having\nrudely been pushed against a hunk of\niron, or a fighter's jaw (one and the\nsame thing), and declined the invitation. Mr. Broad then proposed to sacrifice one of his own cleavers, but hostilities ceased when a battalion or two\n\"cops\" surrounded   the   scrappy citi-\nFor Sale\nThree lots, 9, 11 and 12 acre, partly cleared, at 4-Mile, West Arm.\nOne of the most beautiful and desirable locations on the lake.\nWolverton & Co, Ltd.\nitb'p\nPAGE THREE\nThe Hudson's Bay Stores\nThe Stores of Satisfaction for Value and Quality\nThe Great Clearance Sale\nIs now on. Our stock must be reduced prior to taking inventory on the 31st, on account of the close of our fiscal\nhalf-year. We are offering astonishing values, and you have\nthe Hudson's Bay Company's guarantee that\nAll Reductions Advertised Are Genuine\nGent's Furnishing Specials\nMEN'S   SHIRTS\nYou know what good values we always have in\nshirts. We are offering fifty dozen from .the best\nmakers in assorted styles and patterns \u00abnp\nusual prices up to $1.75.   Clearing Sale PrJjUO\nMEN'S STOCK TIES\ncollars attached usual price 60c.\nlng Sale Price \t\nIOC\nYOUTH'S TWEED SUITS\nLong Pants, sizes 31 to 34, only six in the, lot.\nUsual price $10.00 Clearing Sale Ar #\u2022*,*-\nPrice    iJD.yO\nBOY'S   TWO   PIECE   NAVY SERGE SUITS\nNorfolk jackets, sizes 24 to 28, usual ai rrn\nprice $2.50.   Clearing Sale   Price   1 U)li0U\nMEN'S STRAW HATS\nYour choice at half price.\nCHILDREN'S  STRAW  HATS\nAU go at half pr'.ce.\n20 Per Cent. Off Men's Suits\nA complete range to chose from, all up .o tbe minute In style and pattern. All at one fifth off r.he\nregular prices.\nLadies' Blouses\nMUSLIN, EMBROIDERED FRONTS, SHIRTWAISTS\n30 dozen to choose from, colored and white, regular   price  up to $1.25. Clearing       Sale     QflP\nOtherB worth up to $2. Clearing Sale Price. .$1.10\nWhite Linen Skirts and Suits\nLINEN   SKIRTS\nNicely made, trimmed with pearl buttons, 2 dozen\nto select from; usual price up to $1.50.    ai ir\\\nClearing Sale Price      vplilU\nAnother line, regular price $2, at ... *.... .$1.40\nLINEN SUITS\n3 only, 2 pink, 1 white, sizes  34,  30,  38aj  r-rj\nregular price $8.50. Clearing Sale  Price vP\"T,0U\nColored Dress Linens\nAll shades, 36 inches wide,   usual   price\n35c.    Clearing Sale  Price   \t\n20C\nCOLORED   REPPS  AND COTTON CREPES\nAssorted   colors,   regular     price      25c.      Oflp\nClearing Sale Price tUu\nSunshades in Latest Styles\nA large range In all colors, at  tremendous  reductions.   Grouped in three lots:\nUp to $1.75 values going for  $ .90\nUp to $2.25 values going for    1.60\nUp to $5.00 values going for        2.50\nSome Startling Shoe Values\nMEN'S PATENT LEATHER BOOTS\nAbout a dozen pairs in the lot sizes 6 1-2, 8 1-2,\n0, 9 1-2. and 10 only, Regular U to $5. *n Cfl\nClearing Sale Price ipc.UU\nMEN'S BOX CALF BOOTS\nWaterproof soles, Goodyear welt, sizes, 6 1-2, 9,\n9 1-2 and 10 only. Regular price $6.00. <h<J OK\nClearing Sale Price vpUiwO\nMEN'S BOX CALF BLUCHER CUT BOOTS\nGoodyear Welt, sizes 9 1-2 and 10 only. *n r- r\\\nRegular $4.50, and |5. Clearing Sale Pric JpO.OU\nMEN'S DONGOLA KID BLUCHER BOOTS\nDull tops, Goodyear Welted on a good fitting laBt.\nSizes 6, 7 1-2, 8 1-2, 9 and 10 1-2 only, \/ho nn\nRegular $4.60.   Clearing Sale Price .... .ipO.UU\nMEN'S  ALL   PATENT   BLUCHER OXFORDS\nMcPherson make, this season's styles. All sizes\nin this line. Regular price $5.00. An AC\nClearing Sale Price $0.40\nLADIES' PATENT BOOTS\nSil-Kid and Empress mnkes, only about two dozen\npairs In tbe lot, sizes 2 1-2 to 5 1-2; reg- An rrn\nular $4, $4.50, $5.   Clearing Sale Price   {|>\u00a3,0U\nLADIES' TAN BLU. OXFORDS\nJ. & T. Bell's make, on a  neat  fitting  last:   sell\nregularly   at   $4.00   per pair. Sizes 3, 3 1-2 4 1-2\n5   1-2   and   6   only.     Clearing      Sale.\nPrice\t\nLADIES' CHOCOLATE KID BLU. OXFORDS\nNeat round toe and medium heels, made by the\nJno. McPherson Co. Si zee 2 1-2 to 6. An nr\nRegular $4.00.    Clearing Sale Price . ...vPtiDD\nSUMMER SHOES\nSplendid reductions on nil other lines of theBe.\n10 per cent off all TRUNKS AND VALISES dur-.\nlng this sale.\n$1.95\nA Few of the Snaps in Chinaware\n100  PIECE  LIMOGES  DINNER SET\nGenuine French Limoges in the well known Violet\nPomp .Pomp pattern, regular price $60.00. a . i-\nClearlng Sale Price  ......... SjAR\n44 PIECE CHINA TEA SET\nGood Quality China, regular  price  $18.00.\nClearing Sale Price\t\nWHITE AND GOLD CHINA TEA PLATES\n12 doz., regular price $2.50.  '     Clearing\n$9.00\n $1.25\nFRUIT SETS, 13 PIECES\nA $2.50 set reduced to  \u00ab1 go\nAnd a $4.50 set to  .'.\"..'.'!.....'.'. 2.50\nSale  Price\n3  PIECE  PUDDING SET\nA $3.50 set for $1.40\nCAKE  PLATES\nA 60c. plate for  35c\nAnd a $1.25 line Is now only   75c.\nBISCUIT JARS\n$2.75 value for $1.75\nFLAT DISHES\n10-in., regular 40c, now 20c.\n14-tu., regular S5c, now 45c.\n12-in.,  regular  60c,  now 30c.\n16-ln. regular $1.15, now 60c.\nAll other China nnd crockery specially priced during this sale though lack of space does not permit\ndetailed description.\nzens. Mr. Broad oozed all over himself, spat out a \"toot\" and made the remark that sooner or later he would get\nMr. Brown.\nNot Old Kid Broad.\nYears ago there was a lightweight\nby the name of Kid Broad, one of the\nhandiest of the hardy men and the\nhomeliest boxer that ever jumped\nthrough the ropes, but it will be pleasing to local fans to learn that it is\nnot the old timer who Is coming here\nto box Mike Gibbons next Tuesday\nnight.\nIn a letter Charles Lavine explains\nthis point as follows: \"Now, you\nmust not confuse Kid Broad with\nthe old Kid Broad of years ago. This\nfellow Is one of those rip tearing and\nsmashing boxers who will please any\ncrowd. He is a youngster, only 23\nyears old and is one of the best\npieces of boxing machinery seen around\nChicago. Board can do 140 pounds\nwithout trouble. I will guarantee\nthat Broad against Gibbons will provide\nWinnipeg fans with one of the best\nbouts of the season. I am trying to\nmatch him with Packey McFariand at\n138-140 pounds.\"\nFASHIONS.\nThe lingerie robe is made all in one\npiece, and sometimes waist and skirt\nare skirt are put together with lace,\nSometimes with fine mull embroidery,\nsometimes with headings.\nThe tapestry handbag, with a pointed flap, is called an \"envelope bag.\" Its\nedges are bound with linen tape or silk\nribbon, and is fastened either by a button, and loop or. by a patent clusp.\nLower\nArrow Lakes\n1440 acres of bench land, west of Renata, where young orchard land is\nselling at $600 per acre. This would m ake a good subdivision and sell well.\nTwo creeks through property and several springs. Soli a rich, deep, sandy\nloam.\nA Chance for the Right Party at $10 per Acre\nB. C. United Agencies\nReal  Estate and  Fruit  Lands\n311  Baker St., Nelson. 15 Armstrong Block, Calgary.\nMany of the new top wraps are\nmade with tiny directolre jackets,\nwhich have immense revers In front,\nand slim, scant skirts, which are put\non to the jackets under a thick satin\ncord.\nPicture hnta f\u00bb?e trimmed with\nheavy bows composed of close circles\nof coral, topaz or emerald beads; while\ncnbochons show checks like a chessboard of two or four different shades,\nto correspond with the hat.\nSaxe gloves, perfumed and pale of\ntint, long and loose are one of the\ncrazes of the hour. To bo sure they are\nextravagnut for they soil at once, but\nthey are liked well and are worn universally; they are chic.\n \u25a0>AOE FOUR\nCDe Batty $etoJ.\u00bb\nMONDAY i\n!JULY W\nCfce \u00a9atlp iacUDB.\nPublished   at   Nelson   Every   Morning\nExcept Sunday, by\nThe News Publishing Company. Limited\nW. G. FOSTER Manager\nMONDAY. JULY 10\npetitions which have been presented\nin the woman's behalf Is still possible.\nIf, however, anything can be done to\nstrengthen the case now before the\nminister lt should be done and that\nwithout delay.\nTHE CASE OF ANGELINA NEAPO-\nLITANO\nThe case of Angelina Neapolitano,\nthe Italian woman who is under sentence of death for the murder of her\nhusband at Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, is\nstiil engaging attention. The date of\nher execution, it is true, has been postponed until approximately a month after the expected birth of her child, but\nunless the executive clemency is 'exercised In the meantime she will then\ngo to her death on the scaffold.\nThe Daily News lias.already referred\nto this case, but some of the facta\nma\/ again be mentioned. The woman\nadmits killing her husband but says\nthat the crime was committed aa a result of his efforts to force her into a\nlife of shame. The husband, it waa\nproved was a drunken scoundrel, who\nfrequently beat his wife and generally\nill-used her besides neglecting to provide for her or her family of three\nchildren.\nIt will appear to most people that\nInstead of postponing the date of her\nexecution the woman should have been\npardoned, or at the very least that the\nsentence of death should have been\ncommuted. The matter, of course, Is\nstill before the department of justice\nand a favorable outcome of the many\nWIRE WOUND*\nMy mare, a very valuable one, waa badly\nbruised and cut by being caufbt In a wire\nfence. Some of th* wounds vtHOlA not-aaal,\nalthough x tried many different medietas*\nOr. Bell advised mo to um.i\u2014aBDb\nIJNAMENT, diluted at first, then attonwr\nas the sores began to look better, until\nafter three weeks the sores have healed,\nand best of all, the nalr is growing well,\nand is NOT WHITE as la most always the\ncase in horse wounds. F. M. Doucet,\nWeymouth.\nSmall\nHouse\nRush Sale\nOwner Leaving\nTown\nThis four room bouse ia one\nblock from tbe car line, has\ncity water and electric light\nand has been quite recently\npainted and thoroughly renovated. Owner leaving town In\na lew days must sell. Is furnished and at\n$900\nwe conslder.lt a very good buy.\n$200\nWill Handle It\nand the balance to suit purchaser. Don't delay but look at\ntbii today.\nMcQuarrie &\nRobertson\ni BjM*.*--*^*1* and lnaiir*ne\u00ab \" *\n41* wiufW1''''''''\" \"\" Nttten.\nUNDER NO MISCONCEPTION\nThe Fernie Free Press says:\nThe good people of Nelson are\nevidently laboring under a misconception of the duties of Dr.\nGordon as chairman of the conciliation board. Dr. Gordon Is not\na royal commission to enquire into\nthe retail prices of coal throughout the west. He was sent by the\ndepartment of labor to endeavor to\neffect a resumption of operations\nin\/the collieries of this district by\nmediation between the operators\nand miners.\nThe Nelson people became impatient because the doctor's pronouncement was so long delayed.\nTet at the same time their strictures would lead one to believe that\nthe investigation had not been\nbroad enough.\nIn reply The Daily News desires to\nsay that tbe people of Nelson are laboring under no delusion in regard to\nthis matter. They know full well that\nDr. Gordon was not appointed a royal\ncommission to Inquire Into the retail\nprice of coal throughout the west, but\nthey know also that lf the evidence\ntaken had not been suppressed, and\nDr. Gordon la not blamed for this suppression, the public would have been\nput in possession ot some facta which\nwould have assisted them in reaching\nsome conclusion aa to the reason for\nthe high price of coal in the west.\nIt Is quite true, the people of Nelson\nfeel that the Investigation was not\nbroad enough but they realize quite\nfully that. In regard to the publication\nof the evidence, the board of conciliation was in the bands ot the two disputing parties, and that one of these,\nthe operators, baring objected to the\npublication of evidence which they considered lt was not in 'their interests\nshould become the property of the people generally, it was only natural that\nthe other side should do the same.\nTbe people of Nelson, that is those\nreferred to by the Free Press, believe\nthat the whole question of coal production and marketing and the prices\nwhich are being charged should be the\nsubject of a most searching Inquiry,\nwith a view to discovering who Is responsible for the present high price of\nfuel In this country.\nEDITORIAL NOTES\nThe Dally Newa Is In receipt of a\ncopy of the Bpecial Coronation number\nof the Cranbrrok Spectator, which Is\ncertainly one of the very best that has\never been issued in the interior and\nwill compare favorably typographically\nwith any that has been issued in any\npart of the province. While it Is called\na Coronation number, and aB such deals\nwith the ceremony of June 22 in Westminster Abbey, the number also takes\nthe form of a booster edition for Cranbrook and vicinity. One of the features\nof the Issue is the number and the excellence of the Illustrations, the cover\nbeing creditably executed in three colors.\nThe Phoenix Pioneer says: \"Walter\nCook, who has been working during\nthe last six months at Athabasca Landing, near Nelson, was In town during\nthe week, renewing old acquaintances.\"\nThe Pioneer is surely a little rusty on\nits geography.\nFRANTIC WITH\nNEURALGIA\n\"FRUIT-Jl-TIVES\" WILL ALWAYS\nME TUB TnDDBU\nNeuralgia Is really blood poisoning.\nTo treat it with opium, morphine,\ncocaine, \"headache powders\" and other\n\"pain-killers\" is a crime.\nThe only possible way to cure Neuralgia is to purify the blood by making\nthe Kidneys, Bowels and Skin do their\nproper work in nature's owu way.\nTliisisthe way \"Fniit-a-tives\" cures\nNeuralgia. \"Fruit-a-tives\" prevents the\nformation of Uric Acid\u2014keeps the whole\nsystem strong and active\u2014and will\nalways cure Neuralgia, Rheumatism and\nHeadaches due to poisoned blood.\n50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, or trial sice,\n15c At dealers, or from Fruit-a-tives\nLimited, Ottawa.\nmade at*Nelson last season won 1,130\npoints out of a possible 1,200\u2014a very\nrespectable showing indeed\u2014but why\nnot make It a full count this time. The\nbest fruit In the country, can be grown\nIn the Kettle valley and with the hearty\nco-operation of all ranchers of the district Grand Forks can honestly win the\nhighest honor conferred by tbe Nelson\nfair on any fruit growing district of\nthe province.  Let us all pull together.\nCOMMUNICATIONS\nPend d' Oreille Lands\nHAVE THE8E ADVANTAGES\n(1) Soil which experts agree has no peer in B.C.; (2) mildest ell*\nmate; (3) Abundant water; (4) easy clearing; (5) excellent roads; (6)\nfree range for cattle covered with excellent feed.\nBut most Important of all'is the price.    We have listed with ub\nsome of the best land in the valley and we can offer blocks from 20 to\n640 acres at prices varying from\n$12 to $50 per Acre on Easy Terms\nThe prices will Infallibly double as soon as construction commences\non the new railroad.\nP. J. Gleazer & Co.\nP. O. Box 316\n412 Ward Street\nNelson, B.C.\nNelson Brand SJSS1\nMade from Kootenay fruit and cane sugar by Canadian workmen. If\nyou are farseelng and have an eye to the future, as well as the present\nyou will ask your dealer for Nelson Brand Jams.\nWe are not trying to make Nelson Brand as cheap as we can, but as\ngood as we can; a little less profits today perhaps, but with thoroughly\npleased customers means bigger sales and more profits tomorrow.\nNelson Jam Factory\nThe Sanitary and Up to Date Jam Factory\nJ. A. McDONALD. Proprietor.\nTHE SLOCAN MEETING ,\nTo the Editor of The Dally News:\nSir\u2014With reference to the somewhat\nIrrelevant and irresponsible effusion\nwhich appeared in your last Frtday*a\nIssue, purporting to be an account of a\nmeeting held at Slocan Junction to\nconsider the advisability of erasing a\npublic hall at that place, there am one\nor two points on which I would like\nvery much to have enlightenment from\nyour misled correspondent, whom I am\ngiven to understand was the chairman\nhimself at that meeting.\nFirstly I would ask what had the object of this last meeting In any way,\nshape or form to do with what took\nplace at the general church meeting\nheld at Slocan Junction on June M?\nThe chairman (Gerald Ashby) tells \u00aba\nthat this last meeting at which he presided had been called for the express\npurpose of considering the erectloa of\na public hall in the neighborhood. What\nthen does he want to drag In rambling,\ninaaccurate and misleading statements\nof what took place at a general church\nmeeting held some time ago? Speaking\nfor myself I fall to see the connection\u2014\npossibly your correspondent can.\nSecondly, I would very much like to\nknow what are the strong views referred to and so darkly hinted at\u2014of the\npeople of Bonnlngton and Slocan Junction\u2014the bishop's concurrence with\nwhich would .according to your correspondent, bring about the speedy erection of the proposed Slocan Junction-\nBonnlngton church.\nLastly, I would ask what grounds\nyour correspondent has for making the\nstatement that the omission to send In a\nreport of the general church meeting on\nthe 26th inst., had given rise to the\n'erroneous impression\" that the church\nbuilding scheme had been dropped?\nKnowing the large circulation which\nyour paper enjoys, a clear, concise and\n\u25a0categorical reply to each one of the\npoints raised would afford tho v-nder-\nsigned infinite satisfaction.\nAUBRY V. DURRANT.\nSlocan Junction, B.C. July ?\nPress Comment\n(Clinton News-Record)\nThe drovers\u2014which Included at least\none from Clinton\u2014who had cattle on\nthe Toronto market on Monday bad to\ncompete with stock from the United1\nStates, several carloads from Michigan\nbeing on aale. This competition has set\nour drover athinklng, and as a resBult\nhe is not so confident as he was a\nmonth ago that reciprocity would be\nan unmlzejd blessing for the farmers of\n(Montreal Star)\nSpeaker Walker of the Massachusetts\nlegislature, urged bis party the other\nevening to \"stand back of President\nTaft\" \"There should be ultimately\nfree trade between Canada and tbe\nUnited States\/' he went on, and he gave\ngood reasons for his opinion which\nMontrealers might consider: He said:\n\"We have begun a great development\nof our port With this great development end with free trade with Canada\nnever again will our position aa the\nMooaA great port In this country be\nmOMnmW Montrealers might, bower prefer to sea Canadian trade employed to build up tbe \"great port\" of\nHontresuv-to sax nothing of Quebec, St.\nJohn and Halifax.\n(\u00abrand Forks Gazette)\nThe communication from the Nelson\nAgricultural association appearing in\nanother column hardly needs any comment Tbe ranchers of the Kettle valley have set their minds on winning the\nJohnstone trophy, which 1b awarded,\nthe best display of fruit.from any '\ntrict made at the Nelson Yrult fair.'\n\u25a0handsome cup has been-won by Kettle\n\u25bcalley fruit for two years, and It only\nremains for us to win this year to retain the cup altogether.    The display\n)\nYour sewing machine will last long\ner and run more easily lf, especially\nafter working on woolen  goods,  you\nI have the Nelson selling rights for the unique park and boulevard\nsub-division laid out by Mr. F. L. Hammond (formerly ot Nelson) now\nattracting wide attention as\nBOULEVARD HEIGHTS\nIt is one and one-third miles from the postoffice of Moose Jaw,\nSask. Over $50,000 worth was bought in two weeks\u2014largely by Moose\nJaw people for their home sites.\nIn the grain growing area of Southern Saskatchewan last year 10,*\n001 homesteads were taken, embracing 1,744,160 acres, which will yield\nannually $20,000,000 new wealth. Moose Jew Is the strategic point\nof rail transportation In and out\u2014beside the \"Soo\" and C.P.R. It will\nhave nine new railways, four now building.\nMoose Jaw has 17,000 population; new street car line starting Aug.\n1; no boom; exceptionally low land values.\nBuying lots In Boulevard Heights 1b not speculation\u2014It le investment; with our. \"non-forfeit of payment\" plan it Is like a savings bank,\nIf purchaser is unable to complete payment for any cause whatsoever.\nLots $100; $10 down. $10 a month. No interest, no taxes\nI have the utmost faith in this proposition and recommend It for\ninvestigation.   Get map and full information. .\nD. A. McFarland\nKeeteney Orchard Association\nWard St. Nelson, ac.\nSummer Reading\nat Thomson's...\nWe have a very, large stock of selected titles, especially suitable for summer reading.\nReprint editions of popular novels, the very cream of the publishers1 lists. In cloth binding, identical with tbe original 11.25 and\n$1.5o editions, 75c. each.\nEnglish Sixpenny Novels\u2014All  books  of  merit by  well  known\nauthors, paper binding, 20c. each, 3 for 50c.\nW. G. THOMSON\nBookseller and Stationer\nPhone 34\nNelson, B. C.\nclean out the feed -plate. Take out the\nscrew that holds it down and lift it off;\nthen, with a long pin, pick out tbe line\naud   clear the needle slot.\nWhen, after much service, a broom\nbecomes shorter on one side than the\nother, and the ends of the straws aB\nsharp as needles, dip lt in hot water,\nand   trim lt down   quite evenly with\nthe shears.   The result will be a broom\nas serviceable as when new.\nDid you ever try applying\nmixture of Epsom salts and vinegar\nto bathroom windows or others which\nyou wish to give a frosted appearance.\nTo make the frosting permanent give\nlt a coat of white varnish after it is\ndry.\t\n^\nBooks You Should Take\nWith You On Your\nSummer Vacation\nWe can recommend any of these.   They are all good.\nMEMBERS OF THE FAMILY, by Owen Wlster, (author ot the Virginian) J1.25.\nTHE STORY GIRL, by L. M. Montgomery, author of \"Anne of Green\nGables,\" \"Anne of Avonlea,\" and \"Kllmenny of the Orchard.\" The previous hooks by this author have all been good but this is the best.\nOnly $1.50. .  - '   .\nADVENTURE, by Jack London, fl.25.\nWHEN GOD LAUGHS, by London, J1.25.\nTHE WOMAN HATERS, by Llncpln, author of \"The Depot Master,\" \"Oy Whittaker'B Place,\" etc, J1.25.\nTHE PRODIGAL JUDGE by Vaughan Kester. Don't fall to rea'd\nthiB one as it is a dandy.   Get one now, $1.25.\nLook them over.   We have a II tne late ones.'\nCanada Drug & Book Co. Ltd.\nPhone 81        Helton'* Pioneer Drugstore      P.O. Box 502\nMail Orders a Specialty\nVEjN\nVICTOR RECORDS\nQfwr on aria)\nFOR JULY\n(H\u00bbw m Safe)\nSSS GEORGE M. COHAN SSBKi\nSING HIS OWN SONGS\ncall tat mm rjMMsr dialer and enjoy a deal treat.\nDa at* fa& to haw Sasss aid tha many othsr records wMeh anay srJerast *\u00abaj.\n^oG\u00a3fe~ ' i   t\/m ii'~m *\u2022\u00bb\"-\u2022\u2022\nHas**.\n\u25a0aai\nWrit. I\ni ibHIihii \u00abi ear I\nBerliner Gran-o-phone Company, Limited  -   - Montreal,,\n_\u25a0 ,\u25a0;\u25a0.;    \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0    tOUJ WUJJL \u00bbT VICTOR TALKING IIACIllr^^ ,,     ,     .;   V'^.y,\nW. a THOMSON, BOOKSELLER AND STATIONER, NELSON, B. C,   DISTRIBUTING AGENT.\nTheCanadianBank\nof Commerce\nSIR   EDMUND   WALKER,   C.V.O,\nLL.D, D.C.L., President\nALEXANDER LAIRD, Gen. Marnier\nC.nlt.1 ..110,000,000\nRest ........':.. ,b,ooo,doo\nTraveller.' Cheque.\nIssued by The Canadian Bam at Ooo-\nm.rc. we th. meet ecmjtfeatnraj\nwhich to esnT money when traTOUiaay\nThey are negotiable everywhere* ealf-\nUentUflni, ana th. exact amount pey-\ntbl. in the principal foreign eottaWee\nb printed 01 th. (see ot ererr cheque.\nThe cheques ere leeued l\u00bb deaoasme-\ntlon. of\n110,120, ISO, 0100 and MM.\nand may be eMaaud on oppHoatloa tt\nth. tank.\ni Maneetloi with Its Tr.TeUtre'\naheques Tbe Canadian Sank et Commerce has Issued * eoekljt .nutled\n\"Information ef InUrast to these .bout\nto trsreV'^whlcb^wlU ko sent free to\nS. Munro, Mm'\nanyone opplrhtjr (or tt.\nNelson Branch, J.\nBank of\nESTABLISHED 1117\nCapita) AH Paid-up ......$14,400,000\nRest   WflQQ&X\nHEAD OFFICE:* MONTREAL\nRt. Hon. Lord Strathcona and Mount\nRoyal, G.C.M.G., Hon. President\nR. B. Angus, President\nSir Edward 8. Clouston, Bart, Vice.\nPresident and General Manager.\nBranches In British Columbia\nArmstrong, Chllllwack, Cloverdale\nEnderby, Greenwood, Honmer, Kelowna\nMerrltt. Nelson, New Denver, Nicola,\nNew Westminster, Penticton, Prlnca\nRupert, Rossland. Summerland, v an\ncouvor, Vernon, Victoria.\nNelson Branch, L. B. DeVeber, Man.\nImperial Bank of\nCanada\nHEAO OFFICE: TORONTO '\nCapital Authorized 110,000,000\nCapital Subeorlbed I 5,\u00bb13,000\nCapital  Paid-up | 5,793,000\nReserve Fund...\"\". t 6,703,000\nD. R. Wllkle, President\nHen. Robert J.flray, Vice-President\nBranches la British Columbia:\nArrowhead, Chase, Cranbrook, Fernie,\nGolden, Kamloops, Michel, New Mlohel,\nHoyle, Nelson, Revelstoke, Vanoourer,\nVictoria and wilmer.\nSAVINGS DEPARTMENT\nIntereet allowed on depoetta at ear-\nrent rata front data ef deposit\nNeleon Branch: J. M. Lay, Manager.\nThe Royal Bank\nof Canada\nINCORPORATED    IBM       '\nCapital Paid-up \u2022 6,2M,000\nReserve and Undivided Pro*\nlite    \\.....$ 7,200,00\nTotal Assets 192,000,000\nHEAD OFFICE:  MONTREAL\nH, S. HOLT, President ,\nE. L. PEASE, Vice-President and\nGeneral Manager\nOne hundred and sixty-five branihei\nIn Canada and Newfoundland, 14\nagencies In Cuba and Porto Rico; five\nagencies in British West Indies. London\nEngland, 2Bank BIdge., Prince* Street,\nB. C; New York City, 68 William street\nBusiness accounts carried upon favorable terms. Savings departments at all\nbranches.\nNelson Branch, A. B. Netherby, Man.\nHigh Grade Building Materials\nW. have always In atock lime and cement, common brick, pressed brick,\n(Ire brick, (In clay, plaster of parte, wood fibre, crystal flnlah. All Undo\nand alias ot window (learn,  See us for prices on all kinds of building material.\nJOHN BURNS & SON NELSON, B. C.\nDry Batteries (j\nhave a food not .park for your motor\nboat During tha races It will ran deter.\nJust receired shipment of Sapid Rre\nCalls, direct from the) factory. Brery\ntall tested before leering the store and\nguaranteed to register from It to 36\nmperea.\nThomts Sargent\nMotor Boat Supplies\nP.O. Box 172 TeL 44\nKt Stanley Et, rlek*\u00bb\nHoly Nana Academy **i Kvr-\n\u25a0dScMforYn*Wwa\nTrader the dJroeuo. of the Mam\net the Heir Nina ei fees, aad\nVary, First etas, beardlag and ear\neebooL, Primary and .laminar amis.\nState eeerodlted high seheeL Advanced normal eeune .ef rm reel.\naccredited ay the Mate et weakliianoa\nState dMemae seafmsl. Haste ead\nart studio.\nBuamlas tea fee*\nWo attend to lew\nPLUMBING\npromptly and waa\nB. C. Huang ft Heitbr. ft.\n\" Victoria Btteet, star Opera Hens.\nTelephone HI,.,': ^\".'''\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nB SB trnTel In comfort and etyla.\nOoata no more for tha beet\nLow Retmi Rates\nKowtotOeet. lletaea on sale\nluly 1\u00bb, a,, M, 17, J8. August and\nether aale. gladly furnished on\naspUeatloa. Tickets are good rla\nCroWe Neat or Berelatoka routae.\nGood on Greet Lakes steamships.\nBtop oTara allowed within limlta.\nTon ema rary your rant, returning.\n\u25a0Mm the direct way.\ntor farther parttoalais apply to\nft. K. \u2022CARLETT, City Tlel\nW, HAYMENT, Oepot Tf\nW. J. WELLS, D.PA, Nelson, B.C.\nXMtfMT Lake Geaenl H**ital\nMaternity \u25a0rerun\nPatJeatn are sow receired at the following rates:\nPritate ward patl\u00abta, week... .129.00\nBemi-priTate ward petleMaV week 18.00\nAddress stsaoattnna to matron at\n MONDAY-\nJULY 10\ntitle Satlp J\u00a3eto&\nPAOE FIVE\nWl\nBell Trading Co.\nOur\nWeekly\nTalk\nWe are right In the midst of the\nberry  season.    Strawberries  are\nwell on, raspberries are starting,\ncherries,\/both sour and eating are\ncoming in fast\nHousekeepers\nshould commence In earnest preserving strawberries and sour\ncherries early In the week. I.et\nss hare\nYour Orders\nfor Fruit\nWe era la touch with the beat\nsf shippers and, hare a large\n;S\u00abMk Of,; ... ..'... y    ,...\nfruit Jars\nRubber Rings\nparafln wax\njar Covers\nEtc.\nJust for\nToday\nBananas, dozen..... .25c. and 36o.\nOranges \u2022\u2022**\u00ab\u25a0 \u25a0\"\" **\u00ab\u25a0\nfruit\nriawbenisS  \u00ab\"*\u2022\natrawbarrlea i..\u00bb. -W*. snd Ho.\nQocaeherrlea ';\u00ab.. .\u2014 \u25a0* far \u00bbo.\nSour Cherries ...*... .2 far 25c\nSweet Cherries it \u25a0? *\" \u00bb*\u25a0\nBig Binge, ft...\u00abrif,\u2022\u2022;.>-\u2022 SS;Mc-\nOanlelopes'........Mc...and '25c.,\nFresh Vegetables\nTomatoes 20c to 25c\nCukes 2 for 35c.\nLettuce, lb n,1*\u00bb>\nGreen Onions\nBeets, 3 bunches  10c>\nCarrots, 3 hunches  1\u00b0c\nGreen Peas, lb We.\nYoung Turnips,  lb     4c.\nCabbage  16c and 20c\nNew\nBiscuits\nTwo shipment* ot fancy and\nplain biscuits from reliable shippers.\nChristie's\nMcVlttie & Price\nSocial Teas' '\n\u2022\u25a0shame\nOatmeal\nOaten Wafera\n\u2022sit RecpL Wafers. .\nMilk Biscuit\nVanlla Wafers\nWadding\nAlmond Craaaa\nSultanas\nPhlloaess\nAcorn <\nShertsrea.\nPale '   \u2022'\nMilk\n\u25a0'\u25a0'aSilteHSra \u25a0\nOxford ringara\nMttt tea Oresae rowdsssl far He\nan\n.Wo. can\nBell Trading\nCo*\nTpe Up-te-Date\nHOTEL ARRIVALS OF A DAY\nThe Hume\nTable D\"Hote and a la Carte\n, Hume\u2014C. A. Sampson, Toronto, Thomas\nHarbin, H. a. Wining, Winnipeg; Richard\nHalferi, Vernon; I. W. Smyths, Cranbrook;\nFrancis Harding:, Moyie; Mr. and Mrs. W.\nB. Simpson, Victoria; H. E, Walker, Calgary; Mr. Petty, Vancouver; Allan. Coom-\nber, Boswell; L. Leaby, Fort William; P.\nB. French, Vernon; vV. Z. Macdonald, H.\nG. Ganson, W. J. Linton, Vancouver; B.\nH. .Clarke, Spokane; A. Fisher, Milwaukee; F. W. McDonald, H. W. Coulter,\nCalgary; S. F. Covert, San Francisco;\nHon. E. Dewdney, Mrs, Dewdney, Vic*\ntorla; Mrs. R. F. Lennford, Kootenaj\nBay; Dr. and Mrs.. S. Bnghorn, S. R,\nCairns, Montreal; Mr. and Mrs. F. B,\nHolstead, Winnipeg; Mr. and Mrs. Webster, II. Slsney, W. Slsney, Mr. and Mrs.\nSlsney, F. W. Irvine, Mr. and Hn, lies-\nHe Cranfurd, R. M. Balmer, B. H. S.\nPhipps, H. Douglas, W. Irvine; W. F.\nMawdsley, city; J. Harrison, Kokanee; 8.\nT. Bateman, Bonnlngton; F. W. Smith,\nHarrop; Gordon A. Duncan, Boswell; John\nB. Winlaw, Winlaw; William Waldle, castlegar; P. Gordon, R. M. Lambert A. 8.\nPetty, A. H. Gracey, Vancouver; Dr. Morrison, W. GoBnell, city; B. C. Nicholas,\nHon; W. Templeman, Victoria; Dr. W.\nClark, Olds; W. Hatfield, C, B. Draws.\niM. A Drews, J. A. Conway, Edgewood; W.\nH. Halket, San FrancUeo; Mr. and Mrs.\nB\u00bb  Douglas,   Redven.\nStrathoona-Mrs. Q. M. Stewart, Miss\nStewart, Belleville; Gordon Blrchenough,\nR. A. Wicks, F. C. Thomson, Victoria;\nMr. and Mrs. McDonald, F. Taasell, England; A. H. Graoey, Seattle; William Watson, New Tork; Mr. and, Mrs. Cochrane,\nF. C. Williams, Spokane; A. J. Becker,\nLucky Jim; Burns Macdonald, San' Francisco; George J. Smith, Richard Kltbum,\nT. J. Gerrard, Vancouver; F. B. 81m-\nmonds, Saskatoon; - E. S. O'Sassue, Mr.\nand Mrs. G. R. McKee, Francis Cambee;\nMrs. T. Sanders, Winnipeg; E. C. Treves,\nNew Westminster; W. Falls Headloy,\nProctor; Mr. and Mrs. Prltohard, W. A.\nMontgomery, Jean Flutop, Montreal; W.\nA. Wright, Cranbrook; J. 'W.'ForaY Edge-1\nwood; A.\"I*. Llttig, R. C. Campbell, M. T.\nWilliamson, Vancouver; A. E. Rand, Edwin   Rand, .New   Westminster.\nQueen's Hotel\nBaker Street\nA.  LAPOINTE,  Proprietor*\nRates: $1.50 to $2,00 per day.\nMeal Tickets, $7.00 per week.\nBusiness men's lunch, 35c.\nQueens\u2014S. W. Hayward, Vancouver; J.\nW. Hudson, P. ; Parry. Brookty, Wash;\nH. Coleman, I. Coleman. Midway; J. W.\nSherblnin, Brilliant; H. B. Landls, Pass\nCreek; Dr. B. R. Ilsley, Vernon; M. D.\nOrford, 8. P. Crawford, Cranbrook; Mrs.\nMae Grather, B. Wahton, Scotland; J. B.\nMcLeod, Grand Forks; W. P.- Rayen,\nSpokane; Mrs. Ida M. Harney, Hossrer;\nJ. H. Reid, Sun Baker, Grand Forks; X.\nW. Sullivan, P. La Prairie.\nMadden House\nThee. Madden, Pros.. Saner St.\nRates: 11.50 to 11.011 per day.\nHeal Tickets, I7.0S ear week.\nA Cemf.rt.blc Hem\nHadden-H. Hill, William Clnaacott,\nKoch's Siding; Mrs. R. Swift. FruttTale;\nCharles Husband, Sayward; Mary Caldwell, Soetland; I. H. W. Lcgcr. Edmonton;\nWilliam Uarsh.lt, Sault Ste, Mario; J. I\u00bb\n.-Kane, Kane; T. I. Weill. Renata:\nThomas Powell, Teahum.\nTremont House\n\u25a0iker Street, Neleoa,\nRANSOMS  A CAMPMUt\nPrsprletere\nBareiMaa ytaa. Ha aa\nAdwlia tkiTlUl hIM\nALL WHITf LABOR.\nSpecial Ralee Par Mentti\nTremont-U Tramer, P. H. Gllmore,\nWm. Brown, M. -dx McLeod, city; P.\nMoTavlsh, A Anderson, J. Cameron,\nProctor; George Priest, M. 'rran, Cat*\ngary; i>. Pehn, Fernie; R. A. 8. B. Phillips, city; R. McLean, Coryell, a McICin-\nnies, olty; T. Mayne, Wasa; T. Elmore,\nMoyie.\nRoyal\u2014H. Andrew, olty; M. Battman,\nMolly Gibson; F. E. Clement, Victoria; P.\nB. Ashbrldge, Eholt; O. B. Johnson, Sun*\nderland.\nSherbrooke-J. Sides, J. Woman, Slocan;\nJ. Petercan, Grand Forks; J, Curley, Spokane; E. Galop, Vernon; | A. Linden,\n.Davenport, Wash.; S. Watson, Sirdar\nC'lLlndan, Midway; J. Delanay, -Davenport; F. Whitman and wife, Arrowhead;\nN. 8. Millar, Pinchor Creek,\nBest on the\nContinent\nThat li what authorities say regarding the medicinal qualities of\nthe water at Halcyon Hot Springs\nThe Sanitarium is now under\nnew management and has been r*\nmodelled from top to bottom and\nnow offers every facility for the\ncomfort and convenience of natrons.\nRates $12 and $15 per week or\n$2 per day and upwards.\nHalcyon Hot Springs\nSanitarium\nWM. BOYD, Proprietor\nHaloyon, Arrow Lakes, B. C.\nSt. Leon\nHot Springs\nHotel\nARROW LAKE\nThis splendid hotel is sow sav\nnew Management and guests i\nassured every comfort.\nRates: (2 per Say; (12 par we\nH. COUSINS, Proprietor.\nGrand Central Hotel\nOPPOSITE POSTOFFICE\nAmeJcaa and European Flaas,\nH. H. PITTS, Proprietor\nGrand Central\u2014L. Walter, Granite; W.\nJ. Wilson, Athabasca mine; J. McLeod,\nHotly Gibson; J, B. Werner, Salmo; E. G.\nWilliams, 8. Wnson, Koch; G. ColUen,\nGreenwood; T. Cam, Salmo; J. Crace,\nRevelstoke; J. w. Idell, Smelter Junction;\nJ. Cook, Spokane; W. Wilson, J. Thomas,\nSpokane; L. E. Nlckeruon, Proctor; H.\nC. Simmons, Koch Siding; W. McLeod\nand wife, Winnipeg; W. A. Colder, Edge-\nwood; J. A. GilUs, Kaslo; J. 8. Kane,\nKaslo; W. Hutchison, Keelo; W. H. Bor-\nthierks, Roesland. \t\nUnion Ken, when In Nekw\nPatronise .     .\nLakeview Hotel\nCor. Hall and Vernon Straits.\nNAP. MALLETTE, Prop.\nWhite Union Help Employed\nOnly\nLake View\u2014II. S. Wilson, Sheep Creek;\nJ. Conway, Vancouver; T. Ramsay,\nPhoenix; G. Burns, i. Lynch, M. W.\nWhalen, G. Baker, G. Cristle, Creston,\nSilver King Hotel\nBaker St.\nUnder new management\nWell furnished rooms; $1 a\nday and up.  Beet 25c. weal In\nNelson.\nBest brands of liquors and\ncigars served by union man,\nN. McLEOD, Proprietor\nSilver King\u2014Sweeny, T. Campbell, Dig-\nby, Coad, city; P. Cole, J. W. Macdonald.\nMcLeod, Slocan; M. Casperson, St Marie;\nF. May, St Marie; W. Broadstock, W,\nRichardson, R. MoRae, Paulson; P. McNeil, W. Armstrong, Slocan; F. EUott,\nTrail.\nKlondyke Hotel\nVernon Street,\nStrictly   Union   House\nHeadauarters tor miners, Bejel-\ntermea, logcere, railroad nets.\nRates: |1.M per Say a*.\nNELSON S. JOHNSON, Preaa.\nKlondyke-A. Lundeberg, Granite; C.\nOlson, Holly Gibson; F. Smith, J. Adams,\nSalmo; J. McVeigh, Spokane; T. Jenkins,\ncity.     -\nNelson Cafe\nL\u00abrf\u00ab Md Cammadfow DMitg\nRoam\nPrasaavt aai Ooarteoos Serrtsa.\nMaale Served tit all Hours\n\u25a0tacantly furmlshei reams tn\nataamaetlon; fl.00 a day and ia>\nA. AUDET, Proprlaior\nNelson\u2014m. MeNamara, eity; J. Board-\nman, Coal Creek; A. S. Clark, H. Hed-\nborg, W. J. Russell, Spokane; S. Weuter-\nholm. Boundary Falls; A. J. Blaney,\nHalcyon; A. Krobn, city* J. M. Boyd,\nCranbrook; I* McCraney, H. Thompson,\nCalgary; L. S. DavtdBon, W..J. Lewie.\nManhattan Saloon\nHtu been renovated throughout,\nand tha bar li at all times stocked\nwith tha best wlnee, liquors and\naigari. Large glass of beer II eti.\n, Wa have oomfortable, well fur*\n\u25a0 nlihed sleeping rooms In eonnee-\ntloa, by day, week or month.\nBARTON ft McKAT,  Proprietors.\nNELSON WINS\nGAME IN FIRST\nTally    Five    Runs    In    First   Spaam\nAgainst Trail\u2014Moore Makes\nGood Showing.\nHard, timely hitting in the first Inning, when they chalked up five runs,\ngave Nelaon the baseball game yesterday against Trail at the Smelter city.\nThe final ecore was 7-4. Foran, the\nRossland twirler, who was in the box\nfor the smelter aggregation, was hard\nhit In the early part of the game but\nstrengthened up and managed to hold\nthe opposition down well toward the\nend of the match.\nMoore, Nelson's first baseman, played a fine game, accepting seven\nchances without an error, while Wick-\nwire, at second, also put up a fine\ngame. s\nOn the whole, tbe Trail aggregation,\nwith five new players, showed up considerably stronger than at the game\nhere, but the Maroons found the soft\ngrounds somewhat of a handicap and\na big disadvantage in running and\njudging ground balls. Manager McLean's nine state that they were treated very well by the home team and\nare looking for a third match with the\nsmelter boys.\nThe score by Innings:\nNelson ..50   100100   0\u20147\nTrail   ...00   0   00   40   0   0\u20144\nNelson had 10 hits to their credit and\nTrail 6. The batteries were Lanz,\nChapman and D. Phillips, and Foran\nand Parrott\nYESTERDAY'S BALL GAMES\nNATIONAL.\ndub\u2014 Won. Lost PcL\nNew Tork'  4S 29     .608\nChicago     48 28     .605\nPhiladelphia \u2022 \u00ab  \u00ab 90\nSt Louis  43 St\nPittsburg    \u00ab  41 St\nCincinnati \u00ab 31 40      .436\nBrooklyn  \u00ab*>......\u00bb.... 27 45     .875\nBoston    \u00ab. *  17 W     .234\n(There were no games In the National\nleague  yesterday.)\nAMERICAN.\nClub*-                               Won. Lost Pet.\nDetroit  50 2,\nPhiladelphia .......,\u00ab.*.^-  4B 28\nChicago    \u00ab   87 83\nBoston   89 SS     .530\nNew Tork ..' .88 B5\nCleveland   88 48\nWashington   27 4B\nSt. Louis \u2022\u2022  19 59     .273\nAt St Ltmlsv- R-  H.  B.\nSt   Louis   ......s--.M^#.a\u00bb-\u00ab....3     8\n\u2022Boston   f. 8    12\nBatteries\u2014Nelson, Hamilton, George and\nStephens;- Soott and  Williams.\nAt Detroit- B. H.\n\u25a0Detroit ........Ji.ii.'^..tw.,,.sv. ?6   12\nWashington   \u2022>'..*. .7   10\nBatteries\u2014Hltohell, Willis and Stanase;\nJohnson and Henx**,\nAt Chicago\u2014 R.  H.\nChicago    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\"     5     1\nNew  York    6    U      8\nBatteries\u2014Young, Walsh and Sullivan;\nFord and Sweeney.\nAt Cleveland- R. H.  E.\nCleveland    1     4     0\nPhiladelphia 0     4     o\nBatteries\u2014Krapp and Plslier; Morgan\nand Thomas.\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION.\nAt Toledo\u2014First game\u2014 R. H.  El.\nToledo    6    U     1\nLouisville    .8     7|     1\nBatteries\u2014Baekette and Carlsch; Pfelet-\ner and Miller.\nSecond game\u2014 R* H.  B.\nToledo    8   11     2\nLouisville  2   12     2\nBatteries\u2014Swenn, Boskette and Carlsch;\nSlagle and Hughes.\nAt Minneapolis\u2014 R* H. H.\nMinneapolis   13   18     -\nKansas City  8     9     2\nCavett and Smith; Hodges, Slefaert and\nBowerman.\nAt St PauV- R- H. B.\n8t  Paul  \u00ab 8     7     1\nMilwaukee    *     \"     \u00bb\nBmtterlw-O'Toole and Kelly; Vlebaum,\nNloholeon end MhrshalL\nEASTERN LEAGUE.\nTORONTO, Ont, JuIsj \u00bb.-Eastsrn Sunday games: , R.  H. B.\nPro-ridencs   \u201e\u201e\u00ab\u00ab..\u00ab\u00ab- 0    4     8\nJersey Ctt*f  ...\u00ab.\u00ab ^.\u2122.......f     6     \u00ab\nVICTORIA JUNIORS WIN\nFOURS AT PORTLAND\nflow City Oarsmen Grab Other Events\nat North Pacific Regatta\u2014Van-\necuvsr Made Poor Show\n(SpstaUl to Tbs CWlT News.) '\nPORTLAND, Ore., July 9.\u2014PorUond Saturday won the lion's shape of events in\nthe first day of .the North Pacific association twentieth fuuesj csgatts, tho\noarsmei from tha Portland Rowing club\nwinning three oft -tbs four events.   James\nBay Athletic association, Victoria, won\nthe other race.. The Portland men took\nall the sculling events, winning the junior\nsingles, the junior1 doubles and the Intermediate doubles,\nVictoria won the most Important event\n.of the day In the junior four-oared race.\nThe Vancouver Rowing club was not\nplaced, its crew being the lost In the\nfour-oared race. The conditions for rowing were good.   Results;\nJunior Binglea, one and one-half miles\u2014\nA. Pfunder, Portland Rowing club, first;\nF. H. N. Whiting, Vancouver Rowing\nclub,  sjr.ond.    Time, 11:10 2-6.'\nJunior doubles, one and one-half miles-\nPortland rowing club, first; James Bay\nAthletic   association,   second.    Time,  9:27.\nInterme.l'ote doubles, one and one-half\nmiles\u2014Pcri'.and Rowing club, first; Vancouver Rowing club, second. Time, 9:41 4-6.\nJunio,* fours, one and one-half miles\u2014\nJames Bay Athletic association, first;\nPortlanl Rowing club crew No. 3, second; Portland Rowing club crew No. '\u00a3,\nthird; P\/.tland Rowing club crew No. 1,\nfourth; Vancouver Rowing club, fifth.\nTime, fit\nThe hu?ln< ss meeting of the association\nSelected Victoria to be the scene of the\n1912 annual regatta. The following officers were elected: President O. O'Sulli-\nvan, Victoria; vice president; F. R, McD.\nRussell, Vancouver; secretary-treasurer,\nH. W. Kent, Vancouver.\nEASTERN LACROSSE\nTORONTO. July 9.\u2014Lacrosse yesterday\nafternoon: Toronto, 6; Montreal. U-\nShamrocks, 0;  Teoumsehs, 10.\nKootenay Hotel\nea*vi*s 4ssn aTajjia\nMM. lUIsURTi rwnaletiaBs.\nKootenay\u2014L. Klovance, J. McNary,\nYmlr; F. Murphy, B. Stein, H. Berllng-\nnett, B. Fuvero, m Fravort, Vancouver;\nIt. McLeod, city; A. H. Newton, Kenalo;\nL. Jackson, L Wolvera, A. Berton, Mission Junction; S. White, F. Wilkinson,\nNorth Bend; L. BHengson, B. Ramce,\nRevelstoke; A. Ramastad, J. Land, F.\nJonson, B. Dastrom, Norway; W. Bolton,\nCalgary; Mr. and Mrs. Burns, Edmonton.\nMlnard's Llnlmsrrt Cureo Dlphthsrla.\nSANDON MEETING\nOBJECTS TO SCHEME\n(Continued from nags on*\nests of those in need of tho service, Is\nsopheistey and not In accordance with\nthe facts.\nin  Interest of Kaslo.\nThe Interest of Kaslo alone is Bought\nand the benefit of Kaslo alone would\nresult, and this would be achieved at\nthe expense of, and by an Injury to the\nresidents of the entire Slocan district.\nIn this connection we wish, respectfully but emphatically, to protest\nagainst the proposed action of your\ngovernment In assisting financially any\nproposition that, whilst lt might benefit some, would undoubtedly injure a\ngoodly number of fellow citizens.\nNot under any circumstances do we\nwish to be construed as opposing the\nIssue of any help than can with justice\nbe extended tp our neighbors, but to\nanything that savors of discrimination,\nor that for the benefit of the few\u2014\nhowever worthy\u2014sacrifices the bread\nand butter of the many, we are opposed. We would submit to your\ngovernment that. the \u2022 abandonment of\nthe proposed spur from Three Forks\neastward to Bear lake, In favor of the\nrebuilding of the Kaslo & Slocan to\nMcGuigan, would Impose an injustice\non this district and inflict a hardship\nthat is as unreasonable as it la unnecessary.\nThe construction of the Canadian\nPacific spur and the placing of the\nterminus of the Kaslo & Slocan nt\nBear lake would give a through line\nof rail connection between Slocan\npoints and Kaslo. If, on the other\nhand, the Kaslo & Slocan terminus be\nat McGuigan and the C.P.R. spur be\nabandoned, there will be a break of\nabout five miles between termini, and\nwe will be in exactly the same position\nin respect of mail facilities, freight and\npassenger transportation aa we were\n\"before the occurrence of the forest\nfires of last year. Then again, the\nfreight rates from Bear lake via the\nCanadian Pacific railway will be GO\ncents per ton less than that formerly\ncharged by the Kaslo & Slocan; furthermore, the Kaslo & Slocan railway\nhas of late years refused to accept ore\nshipped In bulk from the month of\nNovember to the month of April, on\naccount of its freezing In the cars,\nthus practically curtailing the output\nduring a large part of the year, whereas, via the standard guage of the Canadian Pacific railway, the matter 'of ore\nfreezing In the cars would be obviated, they (the Canadian Pacific railway) being willing to accept ore loaded In bulk all the year round. The\nresult is plain.\nWe would also point out that the\nKaslo and Slocan railroad has tn the\npast been outside of ''the jurisdiction\nof the board of railway commlsloners\nof Canada, by reason of their having\nno physical connection with any railroad for the betterment of Canada, and\nwe have no reason to believe that lt\never will be otherwise.\nResolution.\nWhereas, we, the citizens of the\nSlocan, represented by residents of\nThree Forks, Sandon, New Denver,\nRosebery and Sllverton, assembled at\nSandon, have fully considered the proposed rebuilding of the Kaslo ft Slocan\nrailway beyond the normal district\ntributary to Kaslo, and\nWhereas, ire know that mcti rebuilding, would be against the tntersata of\nour district In every way; shape and\nform, and\nWhereas, the building of the projected spur by the Canadian Pactfle\nrailway from Three Forks to Bear lake\nwould far better and more satisfactorily and economically conserve the Interests, mining and otherwise of this\ndistrict, and >'\nWhereas, It Is public knowledge that\nthe government of British Columbia\nhave been carrying on negotiations\nwith a Kaslo syndicate regarding the\nrebuilding of the railroad from Kaslo\ninto this electoral district, and have\nproceeded to great lengths In this matter, even to promising to subsidize this\nvery questionable project, and therefore be It\nResolved, that we most emphatically\nprotest against the unfair methods\nadopted by the Kaslo syndicate in attempting to dissuade the Canadian Pacific railway from  building the spur\n| S!i Meagher & Co. jgj\nJuly Clean-Up Sale\nAll Summer Goods Selling at\nReduced Prices to Clear\nOur free gift sale is over but wo are still selling all summer goods\nat leduced prices, and at this store as usual you will find the best selections and the best values.\nClean-Up Prices for Wash Goods\nWorth Up to 20c, Sale Price 10c\n8,000 yards Wash Muslins, Ginghams and Prints, In light\nand dark colors, In plain, flowered, spots, stripes and check designs, with an enormous rarlety of patterns to chose from These\ninclude lines regularly selling way op to 20c. a yard. In this sale\nall go at the one price\u2014a yard 10c\nWorth Up to 30c, Sale Price 15c\n1,000 yards of Muslins and Scotch Zephyrs, in beautiful designs; this season's newest patterns, that regularly sell at various prices up to 30c. All at the one price\u2014a yard, 15c.\nwstrupins^^\n1,000 yards of Muslins and Cotton Voiles, also cotton crepe\neffects and silk mixtures. These are regular values up to\n75c. a yard. For this sale all are marked at the one price\u2014a\nyard, 35c\nW. B. Corsets\nOn Tuesday and the following days we will have a lady demonstrating the advantages of the W. B. Corset. Call In at any time and the\natyle best suited to your figure will be shown you and expertly fitted.\nfrom Three Porks to Bear lake; and,\nbe it further\nResolved, that we urge upon the provincial government the wiBdom of refraining from extending the funds of\nthe province to further the interests\nof any particular section, when such\ncourse, if adopted, will Inevitably be\ndetrimental to another section of equal\nimportance, and entitled to just such\nconsideration.\nTake old net curtains, (fishnet will\ndo) and dip them in a tubful of soapy\nwater, then in a tub containing a solution of 10 cents worth of copperas. Repeat and hang up to dry. The result\nwill be a beautiful deep burnt-orange\ncolor, which gives a Bunset effect in\nthe darkest room.\nTo keep flies from the house dip a\nsponge in boiling water and place it in\na Baucer. Pour on thiB half a teaspoon-\nful of oil of lavender, which for some\nreason or other is very obnoxious to\nfiles. The sponge requires moistening\nwith boiling water about twice a day,\nwith oil about once a week.\nTo protect the ruffleB of petticoats\nfrom the inveitable wear and tear, bind\nthe edge of the outer .ruffle with rick-\nrack braid, and the dust rutrie with tatting braid, which is coarser. Not only\nwill the lace and lawn be protected\nfrom harm, but the appearance ot the\n.ruffle itself will be improved.\nTo dry-clean a white coat lay the\n\u2022oat on a table and cover it with a\nmixture of powdered borax and French\nchalk. Leave It for half an hour or so,\nthen take a clean cloth and rub tt well\nall over. Let It lie 24 hours, then\nshake and brush It well, when lt will\nprobably look quite fresh.\nOne of the moat satisfactory ways\nto hasten the cure of mosquito bites or\nof bites of other Insects, or of cold\nsores Is to open the akin over the sore\nso as to let the poison fluid escape.\nThen the affected spot is really only\na wound, and Is susceptible to treat-\n\u25a0sent with antiseptics and healing lotions,\nMas* your curtains with hems of\nequal width at top and bottom. After\nwashing them, hang them upside down,\nslipping the rod through what was before the bottom hem. This equalizes\nwear and tear and prolongs their life.\nBe careful not to make such curtains\nof a material whose figures are not reversible in position.\nA good \"way to waish white silk\ngloves: Rub them well in luke-warm\nwater to which a little ammonia has\nbeen added, and rinse quickly in clear\nwater of the same temperature. Hang\nthem where they will dry rapidly, and\nthen put them between sheets of white\npaper and under ;i weight. Treated\nin this way they will not turn yellow.\nWall paper may be \u25a0 successfully\ncleaned with stale bread. A loaf of ordinary size ia used. The bread should\nbe two days old. Dust the paper with\na soft cloth wrapped about a broom\nUso light strokes in order not to\nstretch the paper. When the dust has\nbeen removed, cut the loaf of bread\nInto four parts and sweep down the\npaper with  a  light,  steady stroke.\nA very effective method of catching\nflies Is to take a square of stiff paper\nor cardboard and cut a small hole in\nthe center. Cover it thickly on the inside with treacle, taking care to put\nplenty of treacle around the opening.\nThen place the cardboard, treacle side\ndown, over a bowl of soapsuds, when\nthe files, attracted by the treacle, will\nfall Into the suds. This fly-trap is\nespecially good, as no poisonous compound Is used.\nMlnarcTa Liniment cores Garget In cows\nParisian Sage\nAn Ideal Hair Tonic\nParisian Sago Is compounded on the\nmost advanced flclentJfio principles, and\nnothing on tho market today e\u00abn compare with It. It accomplishes so much\nmore than the ordinary tonics and docs\nIt bo quickly that users are astonished,\nParisian Sage hills the dandruff germs\nand eradicates dandruff, stops falling\nhejr, Itohln* of the scalp and spltttlng\nbalrs In two weeks or ws will refund\nyour moner-\nParisian Sage tlves a faestnaUrig lustra\nto women's hair and makes It beautiful.\nIt makes the hair grow tuxurlaatly, It Is\nthe daintiest and most rsfreshlng hair\ndressing that science has produeed, and\nhas not a particle of grease or stickiness\nIn it. Parisian 8age costs SO oenta at your\ndrugglet or postpaid from the proprietors.\nThe Glroux Mfg. Co., Fort Brie, Ont.\nThe Girl with the Auburn hair la on ersry\npackage. Sold and guaranteed by Poole\nDrug Co., Ltd.\t\nExtra Good Buys\nOfl THE) BLOCAN VALLBT-\nM0 acres choice land suitable for mixed farming; 13 acres cleared and\nseeded to timothy hay; 80 to 100 seres more suitable for hay growing, easily\ncleared. Balance of land suitable for fruit growing. Buildings consist or\nlog house, stable for nine head of cattle, chicken house. Implements .oon-\n\u25a0totlng of plough, tooth and disc harrow, mowing machine, seeder and other\nsmaller tools.   Price \"32.60 per acre, 12,600 cash, balance one and twe years l p.c\nHOW8ER I-.AKB\u2014100 acres adjoining Howser townslte. Gdbd land, 0)\npar acre.   Terms.\nin acres, In good locality.   A real good buy,$ 12.60 per acre.   Terms.\nIneuranoe\nTimber and Mines\nNELSON, B.C.\nFruit and Farm Lands\nCity Property\nSOS BAKER ST.\nD. St. Denis\nP.O. Bex 497\n PAGE  Sl>\nCije \u00ab3atlj jlrtw.\nWill You\nTrade?\nWe have 39.80 acres of land\non. the Columbia river,\nbounded on one side by C.\nP.R., and Rock creek on\nanother. One mile from a\nstation, and adjoining school\nand ranches the owners of\nwhich won't sell for less than\n$200 per acre. Our client\nwill take in trade vacant lots\nor any city property to the\nvalue of $1000. This is a\nbargain for someone. Call\nand see location and blue\nprint of property.\nShort Summer\nSeason This\nYear\nAre you prepared for the\nwinter with a nice comfortable house of your own? We\nhave another snap\u2014not an\nimaginary one\u2014on Victoria\nstreet, near fire hall. Two\nfine lots with excellent view.\nThe lots are worth $800,\nand the stone work is worth\nanother $300. The cottage\nis surely worth $700. Come\nin and let us show you this\nplace.\n$1,800 on Easiest\nTerms\nWestern Canada\nInvestment Co.\nRed Estate, Fire Insurance\nand Investment Brokers\nJ. E. TAYLOR, Manager.\nALEX. CHEYNE, Secretary.\nOffice Baker St, Nelaon, B.C.\nPhone 254 P.O. Drawer 1042\nBANQUET MEMBERS\nAT EDGEW00D\nCarpet Cleaning\n10e PER SQUARE YARD.\nWork called for and delivered promptly\n: Clothes of all kinds cleaned, renovated\ndyed and repaired.\nGent's Suits cleaned and pressed, 75o to $3;\ndyed, J3.\nliadlen* Skirts cleaned, $1; dyed, f&\nGloves cleaned, 26c to 60c,\nSpecial rates for hotels, restaurants aw\nsteamers.\nFamily washing, rough dry, 35o do-sen.\nNelson Steam Laundry\n601-603 VERNON  STREET.\nTelephone 146. PAUL NIPOU, Prop.\nStriking Speeches From A. S. Goodeve\nand J.  H. Schofleld\u2014Function\nIs Great Success.\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nEDGEWOOD, B. C, July 9\u2014Under\nthe auspiceB of the Edgewood nnd Fire\nValley Conservative association a banquet was given to A. S. Goodeve, Dominion member for the Kootenays, and\nJ. H. Schofield, the Ymir member, on\nTuesday night In the Edgewood hotel.\nIn response to a cordial invitation, J.\nH. Schofield arrived from Trail by the\nearly morning boat, and A. S. Goodeve\nIn the evening from the north. A\ndeputation consisting of J. W. Ford,\npresident, A. W. Calder, vice, president,\nand J. Cockle, secretary, of the Edge-\nwood and Fire Valley Progressive association, received him, and after breakfast h. C. Morrison, president of the\nConservative association, arrived with\nbis team and took him for a tour of\nFire valley and district, lasting several\nhours. J. W. Ford and W. Williams,\nSr., were in the party. All adjourned\nto the Dairy ranch for an excellent\nmeal at noon. J. H. Schofield visited\nmany old friends, and expressed himself aB delighted with the prosperous\nstate of the valley.\nThey returned in time to welcome A.\nS. Goodeve, assisted by a representative\nbody of residents, Including B. Groome,\nsecretary of the Conservative association. After light refreshments, daintily\nserved in the Edgewood hotel, A. W.\nCalder drove the Dominion member up\nthe valley, J. H. Schofield accompanying\nthem. Seven miles up Mr. Goodeve\nvisited Mr. and Mrs. J. Bangs, the oldest\nsettlers In this district. The party was\nloaded with roses and the old gentleman persisted in presenting Mr. Goodeve with a. crate of excellent vegetables. Lack of time prevented further\ncalls, and the party hurried back to\nEdgewood.\nAt 8.30 p.m. the banquet was served\nin the new dining room of the Edge-\nwood hotel, 60 guests sitting down to\nan excellent repast. The room was\ntastefully decorated with flag3 and\nJapanese lanterns, a big Canadian fiag\nforming a fitting background to the\nchairman, L. C. Morrison, and tne\nguestB of the evening. They w:.e supported by F. G. Fauquier, president of\nthe Ranchers' union; J. W. For:!, provident of the Progress association. W.\nA. Jowett, Sr., Nelson, and Welford\nBeaton, Needles.\nThe tables looked exceedingly prettv,\nfull of roses and other beautiful Ilowers,\npresented by Mrs. F. (}. Fauquier. The\nmenu consisted of cream of tomato\ntoup, lobster salad, chicken fncasee,\nnew potatoes, early peas, fruit salad,\nice cream, coffee. The to.asts of the\nevening were duly honored. Dave and\nRobert Calder, Be't Conway, Angus\nMcintosh and J. Kelly were kept busy\ntitteuding to the wants of the guest*\nwith the wine anj. cigar3. Bert Smith\nenlivened the wait with some brilliant\nselections on the piano and ptoved an\nO'le accompanist dicing the concert\nthat followed, assisted by Dr. L.\nHeaton.\nJ. W. Ford, In a well chosen speech,\nproposed the \"King and Empire,\" which\nwas drunk with enthusiasm.\nToast to Premier.\nF. G. Fauquier proposed the Hon.\nRichard McBride and the Province, referring to him as the coming man of\nthe Dominion, and of the empire, and\nalso to the fact that this is the banner\nprovince of the Dominion, which will\nmake its mark within a very few years.\nL. C. Morrison then briefly proposed the\nhealth of A. S. Goodeve, pointing out\nttom personal experience how the\ndistrict had gone ahead during the last\nthree years, and assuring the members\nof support in the prospective Dominion\nelection next fall. AU rose and gave\nthree cheers and a tiger for the subject\nof the toast, concluding by singing vociferously \"For He's a Jolly Good Fellow.\"\nMr. Goodeve said: I congratulate\nyou on the success pf the evening, and\nthe excellence of your arrangements,\nwhich are equal to those of much older\ncommunities. This is my first opportunity since last election to thank you\nfor returning me. You pioneers, you.\nmen of muscle and grit who open the\ndoors of this mighty country, mighty\nin  its   mountains  and  vast   solitudes,\nUnion Men, Why Don't You Isc . . . .\nPride of Alberta Flour\nThe only flour In Canada tha carries a union label on every flack.\nQuality of flour unsurpassed. Pice $2.00 per 49 pound Back. It you\ncan't get this from your grocer c ,11 or write.\nTaylor Milling & Elevator Co.\nFront Street Nelaon, B.C.\nmust keep this a white man's country.\n(Cheers.) I came not to talk ordinary\npolitics, but to meet those who are\ndoing this pioneering. This is a social\ngathering, not a dry political meeting;\nbut I feet it my duty to show you why\nI opposed reciprocity. At first sight it\nseemed to us a freerer market with\n91) million people. Canada has a population of 8,000,000. In 1910 the United\nStates Imported only half of what we\nimported from the States, We are the\nnatural garden of the vast area east of\nthe Rocky mountains. Owing to their\ntopographical position the prairie provinces cannot grow fruit. Oregon, Washington and California have vast areas\nand better transportation facilities.\nThey can get their fruit on the market\none or two weeks earlier than we can,\nand want to exploit us.\nWe exported $4,000,000 worth of fruit\nto England last year; we only exported\n$29,500 worth to the United States. Our\nlumber has always been shut out from\nthe latter country by a prohibitive\ntariff. Owing to waste and trusts the\nStates wanted fir lumber. They said,\n\"We will exploit Canada, and we will\ngive free rough lumber In exchange for\nwood pulp.\" England 1b paying S per\nwit more, under preference, than the\nUnited States, but Mr. Fielding pledged\nCanada to a preference to the old\ncountry under her fiscal policy, and\nbroke that pledge. (History showB that\nall great nations were founded on\nPrinciples of Christianity and morality,\nnot on dollars and cents. England\nwants our market; England has faith\nin us, (cheers). England loaned us\n$3,000,000 to build the Intercolonial railway to the maritime provinces. The\nUnited States wants to annex us. If\nwe cannot have free trade we will\nhave fair trade; big broad men in both\nparties are determined on this point.\n(Renewed cheering.) From 1900 to\n190S all felt that reciprocity was given\nup. There may be weak men who say:\n\"Let us turn to the bondage of the\nfiBCal policy of the United States,\"\naB the children of Israel murmured in\nthe days of old, when Moses showed\nthem the promised land and said \"Let\nus turn back, the responsibility is too\ngreat.\"\nMen of Edgewood, think of your\nprestige, and of your heritage, this\nfair land of ours; set apart party politics; do not stand one man against\nanother. Let every man live for Canada first, and the empire always. (Loud\ncheering.)\nJ. H. Schofield.\nW. A. Jowett, Sr., of Nelson, then\nbriefly proposed the health of J. H.\nSchofield, referring to him as a personal friend of many years standing;\nhow he was affectionately referred to\nby many men as \"Jim,\" and how his\nhigh position In the Masonic fraternity\nas provincial grand master proved his\nworth In the eyes of the world as a\ngood man. The cqmpany then drank\nhis health and gave him three cheers\nand a tiger.\nJ. H. Schofield in his reply said: Be\nit Socialist or Liberal who asks a\nfavor of me in this district, I will do\nit, personally or through the Conservative association. (Cheers.) The Conservative association is not Tammany.\nEvery injustice shall be remedied.\nWith regard to appropriations in my\nelectorate this year; $2,900 was appropriated for bridges (cheers) in Edge-\nwood; $2,500 was appropriated for the\n_ cut, finished In the spring, which\nleads up to the waterfall, and $2,000 was\nused. For the general district vote\nhere $2,500 has been appropriated. I\nmake you, gentlemen, a tentative promise that it shall be spent before the\nfall, and I will see that lt is spent\neffectively.    (Renewed applause.)\nWith reference to fire protection, the\nnew fire commissioner, Mr. McGregor,\nhaB been sent out from Ontario, where\nthe Toronto Globe, a Liberal organ, recently spoke highly of him. The minister of public works is supposed to\ntake advice from him about our forests.\nThe abolition of permits from July 1 to\nSept.l may seem hard, but in flat\nbench lands the timber that covers the\nhillsides causes springs, and the levels\ndry up after fire.\nIt gives me much pleasure to be\namongst you all again, and I thank you\nfor the very cordial reception you have\ngiven me and my fellow member.\n(Cheers.)\n\"I beg to endorse A. S. Goodeve'B remarks on reciprocity; we muBt look at\nthe question from the commercial\nstandpoint. Friendship follows trade;\nlove follows friendship. No man of this\ngeneration fears annexation by the\nUnited States, but we must think of our\nchildren, and of our children's children.\nWe are glad to have United States\nimmigrants. I have lived alongside\nAmericans, and always find them good\nfellowB. The words British empire\nmean an Anglo* Saxon confederation.\nReciprocity does away with this. As\na Canadian, aB a British Columbian, as\na Britisher, I am opposed to reciprocity. It costs BritiBh Columbia 60\nto 65 cents to produce a box of apples;\nit costB the United States only 40 cents;\nlabor 1b 25 per cent cheaper in America,\nFor 10 years to come we have our markets in our own country.\nJ. W. Cockle then proposed the toast\n\"AT IT HERE SI11CE 1900V\n\u25a0VW^f\nrcb.uBT\nyOU WORK,  \u201e\nMflKEMfl MONET\nWORK TOO.\nBiprmroyoiiRjwirS)\nvimu$Tnnmi,nmr\n42 KHTERC3T WHICH\nWECREPrriiOiTTHL'y:\nrwrwne:HSREroim>\nrlBlEONPEMfUlP\n\u00ab QUICKLY rt J THErVIL)\nC1I1 CfWRV IT. \u25a0\nPEOPLE JUST lis CflRDU\nrHWOJUTIOU'rlS\nVOUCfjriBE,\n\/IRE WELL PLErtSEPi\nAND THOROUGHLY''\nSATISFIED,\n\u00abHTHTHEWiyiHW\u00abKH\nour Business is\nTRrlNSrHTEP-rl BliSineU\nMMtteD BY PEOPLE OF\nMrtTUREPEXPEIWe\nSlflfliESTinTEfiRITX\nn posm.sivinG\nyOUR N1ME SrlPPRBSS\nVCItirPROMPTLy BRirkfiYOU\nrUU- INFORM\/TOON.\nWRITE T\u00ab\n5HWLP YOU HIVE fW\nPIMNGML BUSINESS in\nVANCOUVER \"VICiniTy,\nRENTS TO COttECT.\niKMEEMENTSPORSrlLE\"\nMOrtrOrtGESTOeOMrTER\nAHV COU-ECT.\nriREINSVRfln&TOrUGEj\nLET US ATTEND TO ITJ\nWE flRB PLEflSinO\nOTHERS VrfiWIIrBB SURE,\nTO Pt.BrlSBJ'OU..;\nOnwIpuCrLTO\n321 Cambue Street,\n^Vancouver B.0.^\nWANTED\nSmall Fruits of Every\nVariety\nstrawberries, raspberries, currants, gooseberries, blackberries.\nAlso all kinds of tree fruits. Satisfactory prices offered and same\ncan be obtained on application to\nthe\nKOOTENAY - COLUMBIA\nPRESERVING WORKS\nNEL80N, B.C.\nFruit Land Investments\nImproved and unimproved lands.   Write for our list of\nproperties.   Plans, photos and full particulars furnished.\nWholesale and retail dealers.\nToye & Toye\nWholesale Dealers in Fruit Lands\nPhone 325 : Box 147\nof \"Our host and hoBtess,\" Mr. and Mrs.\nGrant Davis, congratulating them on the\nsuccess of their efforts for the enjoyment of all present, and on the enterprise\not the proprietor of the Edgewood hotel\nas evidenced by his recently completed\nextensions, compared with his modest\nbeginning of two years ago.\nDave Calder in a neat little speech,\nconcluded the toast list by proposing\nthe health of \"The ladles of this district,\" regretting that there were not\nmore of them.\nThe following entertained the company during the evening, the piano being kindly lent by Mr. and Mrs. Robert\nCalder: song, \"She Was a Grand Old\nLady,\" Bert Smith; recitation, \"Julia\nPlant on Lake St. Pierre,\" Angus Mcintosh; song, \"Treasures of the Sea Are\nBuried Today,\" Robert Calder; song,\nEnglish, Irish and Scotch,\" George Old;\ncomic song, \"O'Orady's Goat,\" A. W.\nHobbs; recitation, \"Blasphemous Bill,\"\nAngus Mcintosh; step dance, Dave\nCalder, with violin accompaniment by\nT. Burns; comic song, \"I'm an Idler,\"\nBert Smith. Angus Mcintosh made the\nhit of the evening with his Habitant\nspecialties, for which he is famous.\nA little business was combined with\npleasure, J. W. Ford reading a resolution to the guests about the proposed\nEdgewood to Vernon road. J. H. Schofield, in reply, made a tentative promise\nthat lt would be cruised this fall, and\nrecommended the association to send\na copy of this resolution to Hon. Price\nEllison, member for the Okanagan. He\nmentioned how such a road would encourage tourists, who were the best\nboosters a district could have.\nA vote of thanks to A. S. Goodeve\nfor his good work In securing the appointment of mall clerks on the Arrow\nlakes, elicited the reply that they\nwould work simultaneously with the\nrunning of the steamer Bonnlngton.\nF. O. Fauquier then proposed a hearty\nvote of thanks to the two members for\ntheir visit, which was seconded by J.\nW. Ford and carried unanimously.\nAmong the visitors from outside\nnolnts, excepting those previously mentioned, were F. B. LucaB, L. Parent,\nMONDAY :,.:.-....:..:      .. JULY 10\nHELP WANTED.\nNELSON EMPLOYMENT AGENCY\nC. F. Hutton, Manager\nHELP OF ALL KINDS\nPROMPTLY FURNISHED.\nTHE WORKINGMEN'S EMPLOVMEN-\nAND  REAL  ESTATE  AGENCY.\nhousekeepers. $30; girls for general\nhhousework, $25; a good tie job In sight.\nW. Parker, 313 Baker street.  Phone 283.\nB. C. UNITED AGENCIE8\nReal Estate Employment Agents,\n311 Baker St., Nelson\nBox 232 Phone 391\nWOMEN'S     EMPLOYMENT    OFFICE\nPretty cottage for sale, Mill street.\nWaitress wanted.\nOver Pool. Drug Store.\nEntrance: Josephine Btreet\nFORT GEORGE  LAND CO.\nReal EBtate    . Employment Office\nP.   O.   Box  888.\n! Baker Street, Nelson.\nBusiness Directory\nAUCTIONEERS\nC. A. WATERMAN & CO.-P. 6.~box~225.\nW. CUTLER, LICENSED AUCTIONEER.\nAuction rooms and warehouse Ward St,\nnext opera house.   Box 474, Phone is.\n20-tf.\ncollection aqencie3\nwT^jutlerT'coT^^\nkinds.   Returns promptly made.   Ward\nBtreet, next opera house. 20-tf.\nCARPENTERS AND BUILDERS\nbuilding homes. Delighted customers our\nbest advertisement. P. O. Box 1G5. Phone\n101. 27-tf.\nCARPENTERS-Persons wanting good\ncarpenters apply to United Brotherhood\nof Carpenters, Box 202, or at regular\nmeetings, Wednesday, 8 p.m., Miners'\nUnion hall.\nMARTIN, ROBB & THOMPSON-BUILD-\ners and Contractors, Victoria street, next\nopera house, P. O. Box 490. Special attention given Jobbing and repair work.\nEstimates given. 66-tf.\nA8SAYERS\n3. W. WIDDOWSON, ASSAlfER AND\nChemist Box A1106, Nelson. B.C. Charges\nGold, silver, copper or lead, $1 each\ngold-silver, $1.60; silver-lead, tf.W. Price*\nfor other metals on application.\nPRIVATE   MATERNITY  HOME\nNIC^LOCALITYr>^rVND^Hb^^\nforts.    For terms and particulars write\nP. O. Box 763, Nelson. B.C.\nWHOLESALE  PRODUCE\n8TARKET. ft CO., WHOLESALE DEAL\ners In Butter, Eggs, Cheese, Produce and\nFruit Houston Block, Josephine street\nNelson, B.C.\nOB8TETRICS\nMRS. KENNY WILL BE PLEASED TO\nreceive maternity patients at her home.\nExcellent testimonials. 224 Observatory\nstreet   P. O. Box 173, telephone A54.\n20-tf.\nMRS. GOLDFINCH RECEIVES MATER-\nnlty   patients   at   719 Josephine   street.\nPhone 460. 70-26\nHOU8E CLEANING.\nVACUUM CLEANING, WINDOW CLBAN-\ning. Chimney Cleaning. Don't worry\nabout spring cleaning. Let us do it for\nyou. Terms moderate. Satisfaction guaranteed. Nelson Vacuum company, Stanley\nstreet   Box 168, Phone 18.\nFOR   RENT.\nFOR RENT-Cottage.    Apply to William\nGoaneli, Brewery office. 16-tt.\nFOR RENT-One furnished front bedroom.\nInquire ttoom g, Aberdeen block.       62-tf.\nFOR RENT\u2014Housekeeping rooms.   Apply\nJ. W. Gallagher, 102 Baker street    66-tf.\nFOR     RENT \u2014 Furnished     housekeeping\nrooms,   706  Hall street   between   Baker\n\u25a0\"'-        68-6\nand Victoria Btreeta.\nFOR RENT-Large bedroom, with use of\nbath. Apply 201 Silica, 68-6\nFOR RENT-Nlce large room, with board.\nApply 912 Vernon it\nFOR RENT-Wlth or without board, furnished bedroom.   616 Victoria st.\nWANTED\u2014MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED\u2014Salesmen Hoi Salesmen want\ned to sell tbe most complete line of\nnursery stock in the Northwest. Cash\nweekly, capital City Nursery Company,\nSalem, Oregon. 272-tf.\nWANTED\u2014Salesman, exclusive territory.\nComplete line Taklma Valley grown fruit\nand ornamental stock. Steady position.\nCash weekly. Outfit free. Toppenlsh\nNursery company, Toppenlsh, Wash.   61-tf.\nWANTED\u2014Salesman to sell our complete\nline of guaranteed nursery stock; good\nterritory;   terms liberal.    Yakima  Valley\nNursery company, Toppenlsh, Wash.   67-tr.\nWANTED\u2014Several men, single or double,\nto buy- first choice main lake fruit\ntracts, 6 aores up. One-quarter down,\nbalance easy terms. 800 aores east of\nMirror Lake to select from; (50 to 1160 per\nacre according to location. Give references,\nnationality and amount you have to Invest. Honeymoon riace, Kaslo, B.C.    62-tf.\nWANTED\u2014Land   to   clear   on   contract.\nLowest estimate for slashing, stumping,\neto.     Address   Kemp   &   Ashforth,   con*\ntractors, Willow Point     ' 70-6\nWANTBD-School girl, about 17 years, to\nhelp  with housework In summer holidays.    Apply   I,   c.   Campbell, willow\npoint         66-tf.\nWANTED-Good   general  servant,   email\nfamily.   Apply 808 Carbonate street. 68-tf\nWANTED\u2014Principal   for   Hume   School.\nAddresB Secretary, Box 656, Nelson.   68-6\nWANTED\u2014Furnished   cottage  of 4   or  6\nrooms, close In; or three furnished housekeeping   rooms,   well   furnished.   Address\nW. B. R, Dally News. dh\nWANTED\u2014LesBons   given   in   shorthand\nand    other    subjects.     Apply    \"Tutor,\"\nNews, 60-8\nWANTED\u2014Circular saw filer wants position;   steady,   sober and  10 years'   experience.   Address L. E. Nlckerson, Proctor, B. C. 69-12\nWANTED\u2014Bookkeeping  to   do   in   spare\ntime.   Apply A. C.  C. 70-6\nWANTED-Grader. Man familiar with\ngrading pine lumber under Mountain association rules wanted at once. Must\nthoroughly understand shop grading. The\nNicola Valley Pine Lumber Co., Canford,\nB. C. 70-6\nWANTED\u2014Immediately, a few active lads.\nNot under 14.    Apply Kootenay-Colm.i-\nbia Preserving works. 69-tr\nWANTED\u2014Oentleman stenographer familiar with  lumber nuamess   and    office\nwork.    Apply   British   Canadian   Lumber\nCo., Crescent Valley, B. C. 71-tf\nWANTED-Offlce   boy.\nstating references.\nApply   Box   1116\nFOR   SALE.\nFOR SALE-Don't overlook the Grey\nCreek Fruit Land Sub-Division, which Is\nsome of the finest fruit land In B. C.\nWe are the locators and are not asking\nfancy prices. Six lots sold last week to\nlocal purchasers. Apply Lindsay Launch\n& Boat Co., room 8 Griffin block.     72-tf\nJJOm^IRECTO^\nNELSON HOTEL BAR\nBaker Street Nelaon, B. c. 1\nINK ft WARD, Props.\nGin Rlckeys.   Only place carrying Limes.\nSHERBROOKE HOTEL\nNelaon, B.C.\nOne minute's walk from O.P.R. it*\ntion.   Cuisine unexcelled: well heated\n\u2022nd ventilated.\nBoyer Bros., Proprietor*\nROSSLAND\nTHB HOFFMAN ANNEX, ROSSLAND,\nB. C.-Green & Smith, Props. CfcntralS\nlocated. European and American olaa\nCommercial travellers will nnd light\ncomfortable temple rooms, a special dining' room and excellent accommodation!\nat the Hoffman. Baths, bowline alley.\n\u25a0team laundry. \u25a0\nPHOENIX\nHOTBI, BROOKLYN, PHOENIX, B. O.-\nThe only up-to-date hotel in Phoenix.\nNew from cellar to roof. Best sample\nrooms in the Boundary, Bath room a\nS\u00b0nneotion. Steam heat Opposite Great\nNorthern depot  James Marshall, Prop.\nGRAND FORKS\nGRAND FORKS HOTEL, GRAND FORKS.\nA\u2122;^Pineit Sr\u00ab,proof hot** to BoundaiX\nAmerican and European plan.   Commer\ncial travellers will find light oomfortable\n\"f\"\"\" \u2014   M> Frankovltoh, Prop.\n\u2022ample rooms.\nYMIR\nYMIR HOTEL, YMIR, B. O.-MOST\nmodern and up-to-date hotel 1 in Ymlr:\nlocated directly opposite depot; best aa-\ncommodatlon possible. Dming room la\nconnection.   J. B. Bremner, proprietor.\nCA8TLEGAR\n'HOTEL CASTLEGAR,\" CASTLEGAR\nJunction. All modern. Excellent accommodations for tourists and drummers.\nBouirfary train leaves hera at 0.10 a.m.\nige. Proprietor.\nPUBLISHERS AND PRINTERS\nNEWS PTJiBLlSHING COMPANY, LTD.-\nPirtllaheni of Th* Daily News: subscrip-\n^nJ?..p,^\/w bl \u2022*\u00bb\u2022\u00ab\u25a0. * P\u00ab y**r\nby mail. Commercial Job printing of ail\nUnas neatly and promptly executed, m\n-*-\u2014-*   * - p.. Phon\u00bb iM\nBaiter e(r\u2014t. M\u00ab1f.w\nFOR SALE\u2014Fruit lands, 320 acres in famous\nPend d'Oreille valley, about 6 miles from\nWaneta and 8 miles north of international\nboundary on interprovinclal highway; admirably adapted for fruit raising; excellent\nland: plenty of water; admirable climate;\nrapidly developing district; large proportion\nof land can be plowed without preliminary\nclearing; $35 an acre for block or would\nsell In parcels of 20 acres each; terms. This\nIs a snap and great chance to make money.\nWrite Box 065, Nelson, B.C.\nFOR  SALE-B00 acres,  subdivided   tracts,\nfirst selected fruit lands.  Harris, Honey-\nmoon Place, Kaslo, B.C. 12-tf.\nFOR SALE-At a saennce, a brand new\nvner desires partli\t\nAddress E. L. F.\nparticularly to sell\n\u2122 > Dally New*.\nU-tf.\nFOR SALE\u2014A beautiful level 30 acre tract\nof land below city of Rossland. Soil 1b\nAl and plenty of good water: one-half of\nit Is in good state of cultivation. If taken\nat once, price low and terms easy.\nto J. R. Cranston, Rossland, B.C.\n*8$l\nFOR SALE\u2014One Brunswick Balke-Collen-\ndor pool table; cues, balls and table in\nfirst class condition.   Worth J\u00bb0, will Bell\nfor H75 caah.   Apply D, Dally News.    68-6\ntlonally fine tone, reasonable price. Apply to Captain Peterson's cottage.. High\nstreet 68-6\nFOR SALE\u2014Launch, with house and complete accessories.    Very moderate price.\nGeo. H. Playle, 408 Baker street 63-6\nFOR   RENT-Large.   airy,   well-furnished\nrooms with use of bath.   601 Hall street\ncorner Baker. e- \u2014\nFOR RENT-Three   furnished   rooms   for\nhousekeeping, 013 Silica street.\nFOR RENT-Comforable bedroom, 1\nservatory street\nFOR RENT-Nlcely furnished rooms, 712\nJosephine street. 70-6\nFOR RENT\u2014Two comfortable rooms with\nuse of telephone and bath.    Apply  412\nHl\"\"\" 71-6\nFOR   RENT-Unfurnished   housekeeping\nsuite In desirable locality, close In; large\nfront room, 2 bedrooms and Bmall kitchen\n'\u2022'\"\"   svuiss,   *   ucuiuuius   I1IIU   H111U1I\nReasonable  rent  to   right   party,\nto P. O. box 1118.\nApply\nFOR     RENT - Furnished     housekeeping\nrooms.   Apply McDonald block. 72-6\nSHERIFF'S SALE\nUnder and by virtue of a writ of fieri\nfaclaB Issued out of the supreme court of\nBritish Columbia In an action wherein\nThomas G. Frost and Howard H. Nieman\nare plafntlffB, and the Yankee Girl Gold\nMines, Limited (non-personal liability) la\ndefendant, and to me directed, \u2022 I have\neelzed and taken in execution all the right,\ntitle and Interest of the said defendant;\nthe Yankee Girl Gfold Mines, Limited\n{non-personal liability), In a large quantity of mining tools, Implements and supplies, bunk and boarding house furnishings, one five-drill compressor plant, with\n66-Inch Pelton wheel, with many tools and\nappliances, and the building with corrugated- Iron roof in which they are contained, assay balances, furnaces, grinder,\nair tank, gasoline storage tank, air pump,\nchemicals and other necessary assaying\naccessories; all of which I shall offer for\nsale at public auction at my office In the\ncourt house In the city of Nolson, B. C,\non Saturday, the 16th day of July, A. D.\n1911, at the hour of 12 o'clock noon.\nTerms of sale\u2014cash.\nAn Inventory of the goods and chattels\nto be sold may be seen at my office on\nand  after Tuesday,  11th  July, 1011.\nDated at Nelson, B. C\u201e 8th July, 1811.\nS. P. TUCK,\nSheriff of South Koonenay,\nFOR SALE\u2014Seventy-five acres of 'choice\nland on the banks of the Slocan river,\none mile from the postoffice, railroad\nstation, school house and saw mill employing 126 men. Never-falling mountain\nstream, easily accessible; good house, 1%\nstories high, 80x26; good hen house and\nemail barn; 12 acres cleared, 20 that can\nbe cleared for 820 per acre, and the balance for $30 per acre. Land Is free from\nrocK and every foot workable. 100 young\nfruit trees and 10 aores in clover. Price,\n\\%> per acre with terms. Apply to C. W.\nLester, Crescent Valley, B. C. 69-3\nFOR SALE-18 foot launch, new;   si\n9H miles; price moderate.   Apply to I\nbox 12, Nelson.\nFOR SALE\u2014Nearly new pair ranchers'\nboots, size eight, Dayfoot solid leather,\nhigh tops,' cost $8, Bell for $6, express\npaid. Pair packs, else eight, good order,\n$2.    Box T,  Dally News. 70-6\nTRAIN AND STEAMER TIMETABLE\nC.P.R, trains leave Nelaon for:\nBoundary and Intermediate point* at 8\na.m. daily, except Sunday, *\u2022\u2022\u00bb\u25a0\u00bb\nSlpoan City and Intermediate points at\n8.80 a.m. daily, except Sundw.\nRoasland and Intermediate point* 8.80\na.m. and 7.* p.m. *\u2122w **w\nVancouver and intermediate point* 7.88\np.m. dally.\nGreat Northern train* leave Nelaon for:\nSpokane and all Intermediate potauTni-\nchidlng  flalmo and  Sheep cSeet  tIb\n\u201e  a.m. dally, except Sunday. ^^\nC.P.R. boats leave Nelaon for:\nKootenay Landing, connecting with all\npoints eaat \u00ab a.ni! dally\u2122^ TOn \"\"\n7^ Kfl\u00a3rl0 P1* -ntonnediate points\n7 a.m., Mondays, Wednesdays and\n*TiQays.\nKaslo and Intermediate points 7 a.m.\nTuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays.\nCrawford Bay and Intermediate point*\n3 p.m., dally, except Sunday. '\nC.P.R. trains arrive In Nelson from:\nBoundary   and   Intermediate points 1\nP.m. dally, except Sunday?     ^^\nSlocan   City   and   Intermediate   points\n6 p.m. dally, except Sunday.\nRossland and intermediate point* U.Off\na.m. and 9.36 p.m. daily, \u25a0\nVancouver and Intermediate point* 9.85\n\u201e .?;?\u25a0\u2022 daily,\nKootenay Landing, oonneoting with\nbrains from ail potnte east at 7 p.m.\nI^rdo, Kaslo and Intermediate points,\n6.80 p.m.,  Mondays,  Wednesdays and\nr nuaya,\nKaslo and intermediate points, 8.80 n.m..\nTuesday., Thursdays and Saturtoys.\nCrawford Bay and Intermediate potato,\n9.30 a.m., daily, extept Sunday. *^^\nGreat Northern train Arrives from!\nSpokane and intermediate point* S.46\n.    P.m. daily, except Sunday.\nFOR SALE\u2014Household effects, including\nrange, carpet mission rockers, sewing\nmachine, kitchen cabinet, bedroom furniture, etc. Apply Capt. Patterson's cot-\ntage, High street,  opposite Andrews. 70-6\nFOR QUICK SALE\u2014New six-roomed cottage; bearing: fruit trees, one block from\ncar line   Reasonable price.    Apply \"Cottage\/* Dally News. 71-6\nFOR SALE\u2014SNAP\u201420 acres, 7 acres\nslashed, balance very light clearing.\nGood boat service, postoffice, store,\nschool. Soil excellent. No rock. Can be\nhad very reasonably. Owner leaving coun-\ntry.   X, Dally News. \u25a0 71-6\nFOR SALE\u2014Sutton's prize celery; strong\nplants, 60c per 100, $1.00 for 800.   W,  G.\nKennedy,   Willow Point 72-2\nPOULTRY  AND   LIVE 8TOCK\nF9? ^^SM5ll? 5\u00b0*^ >-*\u00bb\u00bb old, weighs\nabout 1800, well broke tn to work. Apply\nto M. Hints, Trail, B.C. sSIu.\nGeorge Old, Needles; Tom Passmore;\nG. Ferguson, G. Manson, J. Bates, Apple\nGrove, All were glad to see again\nJames O'Reilly, an old-timer of Edge-\nwood, just returned from Steamboat\nMountain, Wash.\nFOR SALE\u2014First class saddle pony, 9\nyears old, sound and broken to harness:\nwill weigh around 860 lbs. Price, 880.\nTelephone B 171. C. W. Lester, Crescent\nYalley. 71-6\nFOR  SALE-Belglan   harea and  Flemish\nGiant  rabbits.    M.   B.  Edwards, Hume\naddition. 72-26\nWanted, Bid* for Packing From Utlca\nMine on 12-MUe from Mine to Rail,\nroad.\n^\"\u25a0ted.  bjd*  for packing 100 ton* ot\nbar and part of October before rawhidiner\ncommences, and for rawMdlnJ LOW Jin*\nduring the months of November: December\nJanuary and February from the Utlca\nS^n2Ln* u-BWie \u00ab*** taithe rallroalt\nSl^^tSlJ,!Lhun?r*- wUI oe allowed for\nTh\u00abe iima flrat.0lftM swernment trail, all\n\u00a30Wn.hlI]| \"Su-ar srade from U to U1 per\ncent. In first class condition. Comfortable\nh^VL1?0*11 \u00ab\"*<\u00ab<* the routeToK\n&m\u00a3. aiJeAA \u00b0? W8l\u00bbh\" J*' \u00bb\u00bb\u25a0<* from\n126 to 135 pounds per aacfc Lowest bid\nnot necessarily accepted. A guarantee ol\n!ne\u2122?n,ou,l.t, of ora wl\u00bb \"\u2022 -WUhed and\nfrft^hnab&gu5raa&e J?1\" \u00bb\u00bb exacted\nnn\u00b0-.m \u00a3Mdder for Ihe '\"\u2022'illment of hto\nnart. ,2f the contract The packing and\nrawhlding bids will be let indepenlsnto\nm\u201eBT\u00b0hh tothK0r- * A\" blds t0* rawhlding\nby July is.   Contract* awarded within a\nh!2! \u2666\u00a3*\u00a3 &ttw> I1* 01Jroln* o*\u212211* \u00bb\u00bb\u00abt\nbias to be sent to\nC. P. CALDWELL.\nKarto. n.n. ****\"ftll\nNOTICE DELINQUENT CO-OWNER\nNotice to W. C. Wells\nNotloe Is hereby given that L George R.\nDevlin, oo-owner togetner with V?. a\nWell. In the \"DerUli Lode\" mineral olalm.\nsituated on Sheep creek and recorded on\nthe anddjy of July, uoa unless you, \u00aba-\nIn . period of M day. from the first pubn-\neatlon of this advertteamonE pay & 5.\nthe .urn of JH.60, money expended by m.\ntapetiotmlng the assessment work; tt-\ngather with half the oosts of tr.v\u00abUln. to\nand from the olalm, and together with all\nthe oojt. of thK adverttoSStT yw? to-\ntore* In the said olalm will becomeTvested\nto \u25a0SfLj*1\"' oo-owner, who ha. nude th.\nrequired expenditure on th. HldmUleM\nottm under section at of tt, \"Mineral\nnil. notloe la published under section\nKB of the \"Mineral Aot.\" \u2122\naM-ll-Wa. QBOROE R. DEVLIN.\nFOR SALE\u2014Three pair work horses.   Enquire P. L. Churchill, Rossland, B. C.\n' 70-12\nLOST\u2014Black leather pocket book containing engineer's certificates, valuable only\nto owner.   Finder please return to Dally\nNewa office and receive reward .       69-6\nHAIR DRESSINO AND MANICURING\nMRS?TTiTTlomSiNO\\TLtIR^DRESS^\nlng and Manicuring. 710 Josephine street.\nPhysical Culture, Etc.\nLesson*. In the above given by a\ncompetent Instructor. For particulars\napply\nInstructor. P.O. Box 637. City.\nSHERIFF'S 8ALE\nUnder and by virtue of a writ o( fieri\"\nfaolas Issued out of the supreme court of\nBritish   Columbia   In   an   action   wherein\ntLEA ?ambJy J\"  Pla|n\u00ab\" and Fred C.\nElliott is defendant, and to me directed,\nL. !lUra&i flnd W*n ln execution all\nthe right, tltfe and Interest of the said\ndefendant, Fred C. Elliott, in the' mineral\nclaim known aa and called \"Copper Chief,\"\nBltuate on the east side of Trout creek\nabout six mlloa from Trout Lake, and recorded in the office or the Mining Recorder for the Trout Lake Mining; Division of the West Kootenay District on\nthe 10th day of June, A. D. 1887, and shall\norrer the said interest for eale at public\nauction at my office In the court house In\nthe city of Nelson, B. C, on Friday, 21st\nday of July, A. D. 1911, at the hour of U\no clock in the forenoon.\nTerms of sale\u2014cash.\nIntending purchasers will satisfy themselves as to the interest and title of tho\nsaid  defendant, Fred  C.   Elliott.\nDated at Nelson, B. C, 8th July, 1011.\nS. P. TUCK,\n\u25a0 Sheriff of South Kootenay.\n [glob\nMONDAY ..JULY 10\nChe Bail? JJetM.\nPMAUMtH\nCALGARY\nSafety and Profit for Small Investors\nThe'only REAL investment in the world is REAL ESTATE\nLand  is wealth \u2014 above accident   and  beyond   business'1 risk\nIn the next few years Calgary must even Burpass her own unparalleled records of growth and her suburban real estate 1b sure to double and treble in value. Population and land values move together.\nDrop ub a Hue today\u2014right now\u2014so we may write you a personal letter explaining the unusual merit of our proposition.\nWestern Provinces Co-Operative Realty Co., Ltd.\nKenneth Campbell, Managing Director.\nHarold  Brett, Secretary-Treasurer.\nRoom 15, K.W.C. Block,     Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 188      P.O. Drawer 1107\nINVESTITURE OF\nPRINCE OF WALES\nGRANBY EXCEEDS   >\nHALF MILLION\nWith  Uit Week'a Shipment* Panes\nThat Mark\u2014Shipments and Re*\ncelpts for Week and Year\nWith a shipment of 15,805 tons last week\nthe Granby mines passed the half million\nmark for the year to date and the Rawhide mine has exceeded the 100,000 ton\nmark by some 4,000 tons.  The Centre Star\nEmpire Theatre\nAlumlnlzed 8ere.n\nLatest' films and best pictures\nshown in Nelson.\nPROGRAM   FOR TONIGHT\nVitograph   Feature\u2014Auld   Robin\nGrey.\nS.llg Comedy Drama\u2014Widow of\nMill Creek Flats.\nBlograph Comedy\u2014Happy Jack, a\nHero.\nTurning the Tables.\nPictorial Planlate, Mis. Frances\nJsynea.\n10c   ADMISSION   10c.\nWatch for the Empire's special\nannouncement.\nWhen You\nGo Fishing\nbe sure to take along a supply of\nN.B.C.\nBottled Beer\nit will add immensely to the enjoyment of your lunch. Being an\nabsolutely pure beer, no bad effects on the stomach or system\nwill follow its use even In the\nhottest of weather.\nFor out of town family trade\nwe put it up in cases containing\ntwo dozen bottles.\nNelson Brewing Co\nTelephone 24, P.O. Box 732, Nelson\nAuction Sale\nThursday, July 13, 716 Carbonate 8t.,\n2 o'clock sharp\nWe have, received instructions from\nB, J. Harding, Esq., to sell by. public\nauction at the above address, all his\nvaluable household furniture, consisting of three bedroom suites, iron and\nbrass rail bedsteads, iron cot, spring\nand mattress, mahogany parlor suite,\nsolid oak sideboard, new kitchen range,\nupholstered couch, dining room chairs,\nkitchen chairs and utensils; the above\ngoods are all new, In ubo only two\nmonths.    Goods on view morning of\nTERMS: CA8H.\nW. CUTLER\nAuctioneer\nhas also exceeded 100,000 tons for the year,\nhaving shipped 104,624 tons to the Trail\nsmelter up to date. Following are the ore\nshipments and smelter receipts for the\nweek and year to date:\nB. C. COPPER CO.'S RHCBIPTfl\nGreenwood, B.O.\nMother  Lode    6,182 170,741\nJackpot     ;.     440 16,890\nRawhide    4,980 101,140\nAthelston        225 8,344\nNapoleon       252   3,429\nUnnamed        244 76*\nOther mines  33,262\nTotal    11,323 822,650\nGRANBY SMELTER RECEIPTS\nGrand Forks, B.C.\nGranby    4 15,805 612,460\nCONSOLIDATED  CO.'S  RECEIPTS\nTrail, B.C.\nCentre  Star   3,069 104,524\nSullivan       890 17,762\nLe Rol No, 2     645 14,461\nSt.   Eugene        127 3,627\nRichmond-Eureka         32 1,377\nVan-Rol         63 423\nLe  Rol    ;     501 7,030\nFerguson           34 293\nRambler-Cariboo          31 654\nKnob  Hill        878 2,311\nEmerald         27 938\nHope         39 327\nOther   mines     36,160\nTotal 3,237 209,037\nROSSLAND  SHIPMENTS.\nCentre  Star   3,069 104,524\nLe Rol No. 3    646 14,461\nLe Roi   601 7,030\nLe  Rol No. 2,  milled     300 8,100\nOther mines  428\nTotal    4,416 134,643\nBOUNDARY SHIPMENTS.\nGranby    16,806 612,460\nMother   Lode    6,182 170,741\nJackpot        440 16,890\nRawhide    '. 4.9S0 104,140\nAthelston        226 8,344\nNapoleon         262 3,429\nUnnamed       244 764\nOther   mines     83,252\nTotal    27,128 846,010\nRLOCAN-KOOTENAT SHIPMENTS.\nSullivan        396 17,762\nSt.   Eugene,   milled        420 16,996\nRichmond-Eureka         33 1,377\nVan-Rol,   milled        800 12,249\nFerguson          34 293\nRambler-Cariboo          31 954\nKnob   Hill        373 2,311\nEmerald         27.     938\nHope         29 327\nQueen,   milled        420 11,130\nGrant te-Poorman,   milled        250 6,760\nNugget,   milled        110 2,970\nOther   mines     5.166\nTotal    2,922 78,223\nMARKETS\n8POKANE MARKETS.\n(Reported by Sharps & Irvine Co.)\nBid Asked,\nB.   C.   Copper      15.00     J6.60\nCaledonia    64        .71\nCanadian Consolidated     40.00     63.00\nGranfcy       38,60    42.00\nContinental   * 64%\nInternational   Coal 63        .6614\nLucky Jim  16%    .21%\nNugget    68        .73\nRambler-Cariboo    50%     .50\nSnowstorm        '..26%     .27%\nStandard        1.75\nStewart    92      1.01\nSales-Granby, (38.25; 1,800 Snowstorm at\n20%o.\nMETAL MARKETS.\nNEW YORK,  July 9.\u2014Silver.  52%c.\nLONDON,  July 9.\u2014silver,  24%.\n18 NEW TRUSTEE\nOF HUME SCHOOL\nGeorge   H.   Keys   Was   Unanimously\nChosen Saturday\u2014Another Meeting Next Monday Night\nG. H. Keys was unanimously elected\ntrustee of the Hume school at the annual meeting of the ratepayers of that\ndistrict on Saturday morning, filling the\nposition on the board left vacant by\nthe expiry of A. S. Horswills' term, Mr.\nKeys' election Is for three years.\nOther matters in connection with the\nschool were discussed, the question of\nthe enlargement of the building to meet\nthe growing population of Fairvlew and\nthe Hume addition being the chief\ntopic, No action, however, was taken\nnnd it was decided to hold another\nmeeting on Monday evening, July 17\nin the school room at 8 o'clock when\na decision will be arrived at.\nBraids of many widths from sou-\nfur-he to the half-yard-wide bands are\nstill prominent, the bands seldom en-\n\u00b0nt or any of its parts,\n\"but appearing In sections or panels or\nhalf-bands just where they are most\nuseful in accentuating .the good points\nSPEAK ON POULTRY\nAND IRRIGATION\nSubjects for Farmers'  Institute Meeting on West Arm and Kootenay\nRiver This Week\nCommencing in the Eagle hall\nWednesday evening next a series of\nFarmers' .Institute meetings will be\nheld on the west arm and at points\nalong the Kootenay river to Thrums\nand Perry's siding. Each meeting will\nbe addressed by J. R. Terry, poultry\ninstructor for the department of agriculture, and J. F. Carpenter, assistant\nhorticulturist, who will speak on Irrigation and the successful culture of\nstrawberries as well as other timely\nmatters in connection with the growing\nof small fruits. Mr. Carpenter is well\nacquainted with conditions prevailing\nin the strawberry districts of Ontario,\nWashington, Vancouver island and the\nlower mainland and it is expected that\nhis lectures will prove of very deep\ninterest. \u2022 \u25a0 \u25a0  < \u25a0 -\\ --i\nMr. Terry is well known in 'Nelson,\nhaving addressed meetings on poultry\nraising here on another occasion, and\nIs eminently a practical poultryman.\nWherever possible be will illustrate\nhis lectures with practical demonstrations and at all evening sessions the\nvarious addresses will be Illustrated\nwith lantern slides.\nThe list of meetings in this district,\nfollowing the one In Nelson next Wednesday Is as follows:\nBoswell, Thursday, 2 p.m.\nProotor, Thursday, 8 p.m.\nHarrop, (Friday,  2:30  p.m.\nWillow Point, Friday, 8 p.m.\nWilliams' Siding, iSaturday, 2 p.m.\nGranite, July 17, 2 p.m.\nThrums, July 17, 8 p.m.\nPerry's siding, July 18, 11 a.m.\nCROWDS ENJOYED\n' FINE SCENIC TRIP\nOverhauling of Motor Generator Delays\nService Yesterday but Evening\nBusiness Was Heavy\nThat the people of Nelson \"have got\nthe habit\" as far as travelling on the\nstreet railway is concerned Is Indicated\nby the interest which was taken in\nthe service yesterday when owing to\nthe caTs being out of operation until\nthe afternoon while the overhauling\nof the motor generator in the BUb-sta-\ntlon was tn progress Superintendent\nIngram and J. E. Taylor, president\nwere overwhelmed with enquiries as to\n\"when the cars would be running.\"\nThe overhauling of the motor generator commenced at midnight Saturday\nand It was owing to the fact that the\nwork occupied a greater leugth of time\nthan was expected that there was no\ncar service In the morning.\nWhen the two cars resumed tho service in the afternoon they were\ncrowded and the system did a great\nbusiness, a large percentage of passengers making the whole circuit of\nthe line in order to eijoy a snooic and\nfresh air trip.\nOne of the most favored trips is the\n\"loop the loop up Stanley street and\nround the new extension. On this run\npassengers enjoy a unique view. From\none. Bide of the car at different portions of the line they may obtain a\ngrand panoramic view of the city while\nat others, In rapid succession, are to\nbe seen the winding Kootenay river as\nIt passes between, the rugged mountains\nto the west; the mountain heights of\nCottonwood creek and the mountains\nand lake to the north. Looking backwards the passenger in the car sees\nfar away up the west arm to the\nBnowcapped Kokanee peak. Nearer at\nhand, on both sides of the upper portion of the track, above Cedar street,\nare a number of small but fertile and\npicturesque, ranches from which much\nof the vegetables and fruit consumed\nIn the city are produced.\nFrom the heart of a great importing house comes the Information that\nmany new skirts for fall are showing\n\"bunchings\" or drapings in the edges\nof the gores, some of ,tho InmchlngB being at each side of the front, or below\neach hip, or at the back\u2014quite in the\nold-fashioned styles of a decade long\nsince past.\nStately Ceremony at Carnavon Castle\nWIN Almost Equal Coronation\nIn Splendor.\nLONDON, July 9.\u2014No stranger relationship between father and son exists\ntoday than between King George and\nthe heir to the English throne. Prince\nEddy is the victim of a double-edged\ndiscipline, private and public. In his\npalatial home, his royal father's word\nIs law. Outside the palace the young\nhopeful of the imperial blood 1b caught\nin the meshes of a wide, beautiful\ntyranny.\nAnother Ceremony Awaits.\nAt the beginning of last month King\nGeorge dressed his eldest son in the\nstately robes of a Knight Commander\nof the Garter, when the'young prince\ngot his first real experience of antique\nsplendor. A still more elaborate ceremonial awaits him on July 13, when hlB\nInvestiture as Prince of Wales takes\nplace at Carnarvon castle.\nNext to Coronation.\nNext In importance to the coronation,\nthis great state function, alike for Ub\npatriotic significance and spectacular\nbeauty has stirred tfhel enthusiastic\nheart of the Welsh people to its depths.\nProof of this widespread sentiment\ncame early , from the Merionetshire\nminers, who offered to provide the\n42 ounces of gold needed for making\nthe Insignia, while all the money required, $250,000, has been contributed\nby the citlzenB of the gallant little\nprincipality.\nWill Sing Praises.\nSong Is the universal mode of expression throughout the length and\nbreadth of Wales, as every tourist\nknows who has heard the Welsh miners singing their way home from the\ncoal mines. While the English sover-\nlngs are still engaged In exchanging\ngreetings with the Irish people at Dublin, Investiture week at Carnarvon will\nhave its harmonious opening on Monday, July '10, ,when 1,500 children's\nvoices will sing the praises of Wales.\nTbe following day sees the first production of a WelBh patriotic play, and\non Wednesday, the mayor and corporation of Carnarvon will hold an Immense\nreception with the investiture choir of\n4000 picked voices and a military band\nas chief attractions.\n10,000 Troops to be Present.\nBy this time every available corner\nof accomodation will have been secured by visitors, Including tourists\nfrom America and every part of the\nBritish colonies, while the town will\nbe In tbe possession of 10,000 troops.\nColor will be lent to the crowd thronging Carnarvon and district tbe night\nbefore the investiture by the presence\nof English jackies from the Dreadnought fleet moored In Carnarvon bay.\nAs the lights of festivity die out\nfrom tbe houses and the dawn of the\neventful morning covers the east, the\n\"Victoria and Albert\" will be nearing\nthe Welsh coast with the royal party\non board, eventually to drop anchor\noff Holyhead.\nRoute Well Guarded.\nSoon after their arrival their majesties will proceed by train from Holyhead to Griffith's Corner station, to\ndrive thence to the castle square at\nCarnarvon. The route of the royal\nprocession is two miles long, and will\nbe guarded by 10,000 troops, 1,500 police\nand 2,000 boy scouts, all drawn from\nWales.\nAfter receiving an address of welcome from the mayor and corporation\nof Carnarvon, and donning their, robes,\nKing George, Queen Mary, and their\nsuites will proceed to the Water gate\nof the ancient castle, within the pre-\nclnts of which the investiture ceremony takes place. The actual site\nIs a raised platform in the center of\nthe great Inner courtyard and Beatings'\nto accomodate 15,000 Invited guests\nare to be provided on especial constructed stagings around the interior\nwalls.\nOur Trousers\nWe have trouserB for all purposes.\nGood, reliable, perfect fitting trousers\n\u2014made by a maker that has won a\nreputation for making the best.\njTrousers for Business\nFabrics of new spring patterns.\nTrouserB equal to the exclusive tailor's\nbest productions, $4, $5, $6 to $8.\nTrousers for Work\nWorklngmen's Trousers of the most\ndurable, neat fabrics\u2014put together to\nstay.   Cut roomy, $1.75, $2,50, $3 to $5.\nTrousers (or Play\nOuting Trousers to be worn with\nbelt. Neat, stylish, cool fabrics. With\nor Without cuffs, $2.50, $3, $3.50 to $5.\nIf there is any Trouser size or any\nTrouser requirement that we can't fill,\nwhat Is lt.\nEmory & Walley %\nWhy Carry\na Watch?\nthat does not keep time bring it\nto us and we will guarantee satisfaction. I f you cannot leave\nyour repairing yourself send it\nby mail or express.\nJ. J. Walker\nOPTICIAN  AND JEWELER\n\"\"\"GEM\nLatest and beat films shown\nin Nelson\nOverture, Orchestra\nTanhauser Feature\nGet Rich Quick\nImps\nThe Grind.\nThe Chicago   Stockyards Fire.\u2014\nGreat scenic picture.\nChampion  Feature\u2014Gen. Marion,\nthe Swamp Fox.\nCoronation   pictures  will  be\nshown on Wednesday and Thursday at matinee and evening performances.\n10c.   ADMISSION   10c\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\n8PORTS AT KIMBERLY.\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nKIMBERLY, July 19.\u2014People came\nby automobile, rig and saddle-horse\nfrom far and near to witness and take\npart in the Dominion day celebration on\nJuly 1. Never before in the history of\nthe mining city have there been such\ncrowds, and all appeared to have a\ngood time. W. H. Drew, of the North\nStar hotel, left not a stone unturned\nfor the accommodation of the public. A\nball game was played between Kimber-\nly and Sullivan mines, which resulted\nin a victory for Kimberly by 11 to i).\nThen came tbe sports, which H. Webb\nof Marysville, and J. Donahou of Sullivan mine did well. The winners were:\n100 yard3 dash for men; J. Donahou,\nfirst; H. Webb, second. Fat men's race\nA. Mellon, Marysville, first; H. Gamble,\nsecond. Ladies race; Mrs. Geo. James,\nMarysville, first; Mrs. Geo. Hawkes,\nsecond. Standing jump; Donahou, first;\nWebb, second. Hop, step and jump;\nWebb, first; 34 feet 3 inches; Donahou,\nsecond; 38 feet 9 inches. Boys race;\nEd Handley, first; Ed Lundin, second.\nBoys race under 10; P. Mellon, first;\nA. Handley, second. Putting tho Bhot;\nJ. Morrison, first; J. Donahou, second.\nThe log loading contest was won by\nMcDonald and McVennie of the Taylor\nLumber company. Sawing contest;\nJacob Bellck and Luke Verlshia, first;\nKennedy and McVennie, second.\nChopping contest; Luke Verlshia,\nfirst; McDonald, second; after the\nsports came the dancing which was a\nlittle too crowded to be comfortable:\nthe first prize for the best lady waltzer\nwent to Mrs. Flemmlng; and first for\ngentlemen to J. Donahou, this competition was a keen one. Two other couples danced equally, well, but failed to\nchange .places when called upon. The\nHome Sweet Home waltz was danced,\nand the party broke up at midnight\ntired but happy. Much praise is due\nto Messrs Drew, Gamble and Buck\nfor the successful day.\nThere will be no meeting of the city\ncouncil tonight.\nJudge Wilson returned Saturday evening from East Kootenay.\nO. S. Rces, who lias been on a trip\naround the world, is expected to return\nto Nelson on Saturday next.\nMembers of the Nelson Improvement association are reminded of the important\nmeeting which Is to be on Tuesday evening next In the board of trade rooms at\n8 o'clock.\nThe change of trainmasters jn the Nelson and Revelstoke districts of the C. P.\nR. came into effect Saturday, H. W. McLeod going to the main line and W. M.\nAnsley of Revelstoke  coming here.\nThe general meeting of Court Royal\nNelson No. 9ZW, A. O. F., will be held at\n8 o'clock tills evening In K. of P. hall,\nEagle block, when the officers for the\nensuing six months will be Installed.\nThe hospital directors will meet on Tuesday evening at S o'clock. At this gathering a report will be presented on the\nprogress of the new building fund and\nthe regular monU>!> business will be\ntransacted.\not'\nBe convinced of the superior quality\nCurlew   Ice   cream.     The  strawberry   Ice\ncream   Is  flavored   with   the  fresh   fruit.\nC. H. Bean, the Palace Confectionery.\nfH-tf.\nFor Watering\nLawns\nIs your lawn service In order for\nuse this hot weather?\nI can supply all your requirements, including hose, nozzles,\ntaps and sprays.\nE.K. Strachan\nPlumbing and Heating\nTelephone 262 313 Baker St.\nWe Tailor for\nBusiness Men\nEspecially for those who appreciate correct styles, with the suggestion of Individuality, and the easy\nand graceful fit only to be had\nin custom made suits.\nFor this style of suit we would\nsuggest the smooth faced worsteds\nof which we have a fine range for\nyour selection.\nDave Small & Co\nMerchant Tailors\n507!\/2 Baker St. Nelaon\nJIBSiSElE\nPERFECT\n111111111\nDelicious and Appetizing\nTHE   PALACE   CONFECTIONERY\nC.  Hi BEAN 414 BAKER 8T.\nhave been Invented for summer wear\nespecially when traveling or motering,\nis a turban of colored horse-hair. The\nFrench call this material by the name\nof crln, and it is woven out of such\nsilken thread that it has practically no\nweight.\nMany tight skirts are buttoned nt\nthe side-front or over the hip from the\nWaistline down, with possibly a corresponding row of buttons on the opposite hip. The buttons used are as large\nas a nickle or a quarter dollar.\nThere Never Was\na Day    ,\nsince we began selling groceries .when\n.this was not tbe beat grocery for you\nto deal with regularly. You want good\ngoods at a reasonable price consistent\nwith quality.   We bave them.\nHazelwood .Butter, 2 lbs. 75c.; Gilt\nEdge Butter, 3 lbs. $1; Dewar and Watson's sweet pickles, per bottle 35c;\nextra large tin of nice juicy pineapple,\n35c; Jacobs' Kiel Finger biscuits, per\npkt 20c\nJoy's Cash Grocery\nThe Little Store with the Big Stock.\nCorner Mill and Josephine Sti.\nPhone 19 P.O. Box 637\nRanches for Sale\nEighteen acres on West Arm, 400 to 600\nfruit trees In bearing; five acres under\nperfect cultivation; good water; no house.\nPrice 15,500. Terms 12,500 cash, balance in\none, two and three years, interest at 7 per\ncent.   Lake frontage.\n120 acres, 12 cleared; good creek; some\nfruit trees planted; good house; chicken\nhouse and barn. Price $2,600 cash, or $1,000\ndown, balance In one and two years, Interest at 5 per cent.\n8% acres unimproved, on West Arm, 1200\nper acre, one-half cash.\n11 acres close to above, on wagon road,\nH50 per acre. Good water on both properties.   Terms offered.\nR. J. STEEL\nRoom 7. Griffin Block,\n8TREET RAILWAY TIME TABLE\nDown\nLT.\nStanley &\nInnea.\n6.30\n7.30\n9.30\n10.30\n11.30\n12.00\n12.30\n1.00\n1.30\n2.00\n2.30\n3.00\n3.30\n4.00\n4.30\n6.00\n5.30\n6.00\n6.30\n7.00\n7.30\n8.00\nLt.\nWard &\nBaker.\n6.40\n7.40\n8.40\n9.40\n10.40\n11.40     .\n12.10\n12.40\n1.10\n1.40\n2.10\n2.40\n3.10\n3.40\n4.10\n4.40\n6.10\n6.40\n6.10\n6.40\n7.10\n7.40\n8.10\n8.40\n9.40\n10.40\nLT.\nShip\nYard.\n7.00\n8.00\n9.00\n10.00\n11.00\n12.00\n12.30\n1.00\n1.30\n2.00\n2.30\n3.00\n3.30\n4.00\n4.30\n5.00\n6.30\n6.00\n6.30\n7.00\n7.30\n8.00\n9.00\n10.00\n11.00\nUp\nLt.\nWard &\nBaker.\n7.15\n8.15\n9.15\n10.15\n11.16\n12.15\n12.45\n1.15\n1.45\n2.15\n2.45\n3.15\n3.46\n4.15\n4.45\n5.15\n5.45\n6.15\n6.45\n7.15\n745\n8.16\n9.15\n10.16\n11,15\n9.30\n10.30\n11.30     to\nCar barn '\nSaturday evenings and on any special\noccasion both cars will make one extra\ntrip.\nNotice will be given of any change\nIn time table,\nPROFESSIONAL CARDS\nGSEEN  BROS., BURDEN & CO.\nCivil Engineers.   Dominion and B. C. Land\nSurveyors.\nSurveys of Lands, Mines, Townsltea, Timber Limits, Eta.\n-Velson, 618 Ward St., A.  H.  Green, Hgr.\nVictoria, 1H Pemberton Bldg., F. C. Green,\nrt. George, Hammond St., F. P. Burden.\na. l. Mcculloch\nHydraulic Engineer\nProvincial Land Surveyor\nP.jO. Box 41\nOffice 'phone BS6; residence 'phone B74\nOffice: Over McDermid & McHardy\nBaker St.. Nelson, B.C.\nGEORGE  H   PLAYLE\nChartered Accountant, Auditor\nNelson, B.C.\nE. H. SMITH\nAccountant, Auditor and Fire Insurance\nRoom 7, Griffin Block, Nelson, B.C.\nR. H. LEY\nProvincial Assayer\nLate of tho Hall Mines Smelter.\nTwelve years experience in B.C.\nores.   Control and umpire work n\nspecialty.\n312 Ward St. Nelson,vB.C.\nOpposite Court House\nMrs. Fleuss receives boarders at her\ncomfortable bungalow, Balfour, B. C. 72-10\nDo you want a real treat for afternoon\ntea? Try Scott's home made Scotcli shortbread.   On sale at Elford's Boat company.\nPISHING WATER\nBoats for hire on Pool at Slocan Junction,\nmost famous fishing water of British\nColumbia. Fly fishing par excellence. Try\ngrasshoppers for the big fellows. All conveniences nt C.P.R. Creel Lodge. J. Kllley,\nlodgekeeper, 37-tf.\nThe great clearance sale of the Hud-\nsons' Bay Stores starts today. See\ntheir ad. on page 3 and take advantage\nof the remarkable bargains offered.\nPine muslin, chiffon cloth and marquisette are all used to make collar\nand cuff sets for short jackets. These\n\u25a0with eyelet embroidery batlBte have\ntaken the place of Irish lace, which\nseems at a discount these days.\nAmong the   comfortable  hats   that\nSHARP & IRVINE CO., Brokers 514-B17 Paulsen Bldg., Spokane, Wash.\nThe Time to Buy Good Stocks\nla when the market is dull and you k now they are worth the money. The\nfollowing stocks look cheap to us and should be bought to hold\u2014they will make\nyou big money.\nLucky Jim Zinc Stewart Caledonia\nInternational Coal McGIIHvrey Coal Granby\nFor further informaMon write or wire us.\nSTOCKS\nWE WILL BUY\n2 S. A. Scrip $725.00 10 Consolidated Smelters     40.01\nWE WILL SELL\n1000 Royal Collieries  $ .08% 2500 Luoky Jim 21\n500 Kootenay Gold Minos 1.25\nE, B.  McDermid\nBauer Street\nNc.son, B. C\n\u25a0\u25a0MM\nmaaM\nmum\n PAGE EIGHT\n\u20acU Bail)) j?euifi.\nMONDAY..\n,.Vi>.jr.W JULY 10\nFor Sale\n12,100 will buy you one of Nelson's most up-to-date homes\u2014rive\nrooms and bath. Small cash payment, balance can be paid In small\nmonthly payments, or terms to\nsuit purchaser.\nEight sub-divisions with lake\nfrontage, averaging 20 acres per\nlot; some partly improved. Large\nstream of water running through\nproperty. Close to steamer landing.   Price average $50.00 per acre.\nFive acres of lake frontage on\nWest Arm. Ideal spot Cor summer\nhome,   Price $500 on easy terms.\nCroasdaile, Nawdsley & Co\nBox 686 Nelson, B. C.\nSummer Home Sites\nOn Kootenay Lake\nHouses tor sale or rent.\nLots in city or suburbs.   Half,\none and two acre blocks near city\nlimits.\nLand on Kootenay lake, Slocan\nriver. Silver King road, Granite\nroad and Kootenay river.\nF. B. Lys\nGriffin Block) over Dom, Express.\nA\n\u2022 Beautiful\nProfile\ncan be entirely lost,\nunless the posing Is\nsupervised.by an artist This particular\npart of successful\nphotography has been\nthe object of - our\nearnest study.\nOur\nPortraits\nalways show pleasing\nresults. Our habit of\nproducing perfect\nphotographs has earn-\n[ ed for us an enviable\nf 34993! record.\nEconomy ST\nWide Mouth\nQuarts, per dozen  J1.75\nPints, pep dozen  1.50\nExtra tops, dozen 25\nAlso Mason's $1.25 and \u00a51.00\nC. A, Benedict\nGrocer\nNo Rough Edges\nWe have a special machine to\nsmooth down the edges on collars and shirt neck bands, ensuring greater comfort for our patrons. This is only one of the reasons why you should send your\nlaundry to us.\nCall up Phone 128.\nKootenay Steam Laundry\nBaker St, East\nFor Rent\nWe have tor. rent two up to\ndate dwelling houses, each\ncontaining three bedrooms, dining room, parlor, kitchen, pantry, basement and electric\nlight One ol these has an efficient hot air furnace and\nboth are well sieuated. These\nrent for 122 and $27 respectively Inclusive of water rates.\nWe have also several other\nsmaller houses for rent ranging from (12 to 120 per month.\nH. & M. BIRD\nNelson, B.C.\nCampbell's Art Gallery\n715 Baker 8t. Phone 46\nNext Door to Kootenay Steam Laundry\nFruit Salt\n85c. \u2022 bottle\nAs good as the best.   Try lt\nnext time.\nLime Juice\nPure and freBh,  25c, 40c\u201e\nend 50c. bottle.\nOntario Grape\nJuice\n65c. quart\nCitrate of\nMagnesia\n26c.  bottles,  and a complete\nstock    of    summer medicine.\nMail orders promptly filled.\nWm. Rutherford\nDruggist      Nelson, B.C.\nUse two pieces of glass and two\npictures placed back to back when pas-\nseparatoulng. Fasten the bangers to\nthe cardboard between the two pictures.\nThen, when tired of on\u00a9 picture, turn\nits face to the wall and enjoy the other.\nMlnard'a Liniment Cures Distemper.\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\nH. H. Tuttle of Ymlr Is at the Hume.\nJ. W. Ford of. Edgewood Is a guest nt\nthe Strathcona.\nWilliam Waldle came in from Edgewood\nflast night and is registered at the Hume.\nA. J. Becker, manager of the Luoky\nJim mine, Is at the Strathcona.\n. A. H. Gracey returned Saturday from a\ntrip to the south and Is a guest at the\nStrathcona.\nE. C. Traves, for some years manager\nof the West Kootenay Butcher company,\nand now of New Westminster, is in the\nolty and Is a guest at the Strathcona,\nThe water fell six inches Saturday and\nyesterday, according to the guage of the\nNelson Boat & Launch company, being\nnow 14 feet 4 inches above low water\nmark.\nA, England of New Westminster, who\nIs interested In the Athabasca mine, the\nDundee mine and ,the Toad Mountain\nConsolidation, came in last'night and Is\nat the Strathcona. He is accompanied by\nhis son, Edwin Hand, and expects'to be In\nithe district for several days.\nThere was a big turnout of Odd Fellows and Rebekaha at the solemnization of\nDecoration day yesterday, 60 wreaths and\nabout the some number of bouquets being\nlaid on the graves of the deported mem*\nbera of the lodges at the cemetery. W.\nSwannell, noble grand; W. H. Lemon,\ncbaplain, and R. H. Douglass were in\ncharge of the function.\nIn response to a telegram of inquiry The\nDally News' Ottawa correspondent wires\nthat the case of F. H. Taylor, sentenced\nby Judge Forin to two years' Imprisonment for attempted suicide, and on whose\nbehalf a petition for reprieve was largely\nsigned In Nelson, Is now being considered\nby the department of justice, but, as It\nIs the policy of tbe department to preserve strict secrecy In such cases, no Intimation of the probable decision can be\nobtained. It Is expected that the result\nwill be known In Nelson before lt is disclosed in Ottawa,\nThe management of the Gem theater\nhave Just Installed a new fan which can\nbe used either for sucking In fresh air or\ndriving out foul air, It is operated on the\nreversible alternating current principle\nand is absolutely noiseless. With a capacity of fi,000 cubic feet per minute, it\nis 24 inches in diameter and completely\nclears the auditorium of the Gem In less\nthan three minutes. On Saturday night,\nwith a large crowd in the building, the\nnew fan, which was' Installed by Ring-\nrose & Co., thoroughly proved Its efficiency, keeping the auditorium filled\nwith freBh, pure air throughout the evening.\n( NEW BOOKS ]\nAT THE THEATRES.\nThe following subjects, which are the\nlatest releases of the best makes handled\nby the Canadian Film Exchange, Calgary,\nwill be shown at the Gem theater this\nevening: \"Get Rich Quick,\" a Thanhouser feature; \"The Grind\" and \"The\nChicago Stockyards Fire,\" both Imp, the\nlatter being a good scenic. By pure good\nluck on \"Imp\" camera man happened to\nbo on the spot Just as the big blaze\nstarted. \"Gen. Marlon, the Swamp Fox,\"\nIs a ohamplon historical play.\t\nGet a Tent\nIf you cannot go camping\nPut It Up In Your Own Garden\nenjoy sleeping In the ouen. We stook all sizes up to 12 feet by IS feet.\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co. Ltd.\nWholesale and Retail. Nelson B. C.\nTORONTO HAMILTON WINNIPEG VANCOUVER\n\u25a0 I\nAmong contemporary writers of short\nstories of the light humor class there if\nno greater favorite among the reading\npublic than W. Pett Ridge. Whether\nfound in a magazine picked up to while\naway a dull hour or read en bloc in book\nform his stories never fall to interest and\nseldom fall to amuse; one can taste one\nor devour a score and still Retain a\nhealthy appetite, like Oliver Twist, for\nmore.\nDelightful Everyday Stories.\nMr. Pett Ridge Is an artist. He takes\nhold of a little incident of commonplace\neveryday lire, one or two commonplace-\neveryday people, interweaves with their\na few touches of uncommonly delightful\nhumor and gentle pathos, and from the\nwhole produces stories that the great Boz\nhimself could not have excelled, He has\nthe power of transforming the commonplace Into the unusual; he endows with\nsoul the most trivial human incident.\nHis new book \"Table d'Hote\" (The Mas-\nson Book Company, Limited) is the best\ncollection of short stories that he has yet\nwritten. It is a companion volume to the\nIrresistible \"Light Refreshment\" and its\n17 stories are divided Into courses, Into\n\"hors d'oeuvres,\" \"joints,\" \"sweets\" and\n\u25a0\"savourj-.\" And each course but Increases\nthe desire for the next.\nTwo of tne most amusing tales are\n\"Change of uovernment\"\u2014a history of a\nbrief but dramantlc domestic complication\u2014and \"Savolr Faire,\" a typical London lower middle, class yarn. There is\nphilosophy of a kind, of a very true, very\nunanswerable kind, in \"Time's Method,\"\n\"Irene Mercer\" and \"Magnificent Rem*\nVales,\" the last a satire on an attempt al\nhigher education, with a \"Deep Thinker\"\ntoo absorbed In the dark waters of speculative morality to be able to see or understand the human equation In the problem as a subject\nBut It Is not necessary to touch upon\never}* story. Each Is a gem of Its kind;\neach is Mr. Pett Ridge at his best. No\nmore delightful book to read on a warm\nsummer afternoon beneath a shady tree or\nin a canoe or beside a fire on a winter\nevening could be found.\nElfa  Will  Be Popular.\nA romance of a type tuat never falls\nto find eager readers Is \"Elfa,\" A. W.\nMarchmont's new novel (The Musson\nBook Company, Limited).\nWith the scenes laid among the mountains of the Austrian Tyrol and later in\nsome of the military towns ot that empire\nat a period of history when dress had not\nlost its color and variety; when the\nrapier, the pistol and the sword were\nthe last resort In questions of honor\nInstead of the divorce courts or a civil\naction for pecuniary satisfaction; when a\nstrong arm and a sure eye were of more\naccount than a subtle mind, with a\nbeautiful maiden as heroine, a man of\nwonderful physical prowess as hero, this\nbook is fully up to the standard of quick-\naction, thrilling novels that Is expected\nfrom Mr, Marchmont by his admirers.\nIt Is very much a \"physical\" story,\nFrom Mr. Marchmont one does not expect\nany deep phychology, any analysis of the\nicharacters upon which he rests the action\nRUBY RUBY\nThe Gem for July\nThose who In July ere born;\nThus they shall he exempt and free\nFrom all love's doubts and Jealousy.\nA beautiful assortment of fine ruby rings\nare on exhibition at moderate prices.\nJ. O. Patenaude\nManufacturer of Artistic Jewelry\nLime and Sulphur\nSpray\nUse 20 parts ot water to one ot spray\nfor summer spraying of apples and\npears. For peaches, plums, etc., use\n30 parts to one.\nWe hare the spray In gallon and\ntour gallon tins (Imperial.)\nThe Brackman-Ker\nHilling Co., Ltd.\nOnly a Few Pairs of\nOxfords Left\nAnd haying decided to discontinue our shoe department we an\nclearing these SS, $6, 86.50 values at t&SO.\nThe George A, Slater, the Astoria and the Walk Over, all In the\nnewest and most up to date last s.   Sizes ranging from 6 1-2 to t.\nJ, A. GILKER\nSole Agent for Semi-\nReadg Clothing\nBaker Street\nNelaon, B. C.\nLeave Your Orders Now\nFruit Ranching In B. \"C.\nMr. Bealby's New Book. Price $1.25\nThis hook is now on sale. We ex pect to sell hundreds, as it Is most\ncomplete. We are sole agents for this publication. Save time and write\ndirect to us.   Postage 10 cents extra.    We will reserve a copy for you.\nNelson's\nKodak House\nPoole Drug Co., Ltd.\nThe Rexall Store\nDruggists\nof Ability\nof the story. Mr. iiarchmont's readers\nwant action and to this quality all others, save romance, are made subservient.\nHe Is a facile writer and his books, after\nhe has concocted the plots, should not\ncause him any great mental stress.\nNeither are they intended to give nls\nreaders any reason for exercising their\nbrains. Perhaps he would not be as popular if they did.\nIn any event, \"Elfa\" is a splendid ro-\nsustalned from the opening chapter to\nmance of Its kind. The Interest is well\nthe final page and there is no dearth of\nexcitement, while there Is a strong love\nInterest\nBooks and Authors.\nGertrude Atherton oame back last week\nfrom Europe on the American \"Just to got\na place to do some work.\" It is all too\nbusy on the other side, she said, for a\nperson to get any Ideas on paper, and\nBhe waa returning to San Francisco In\norder to find sufficient peace for toll.\nShe said that after her next novel,\nrwhlch will be somewhat International in\ncharacter after the style of \"Tower ot\nIvory, she will deal with purely American themes, probably western.\nSpeaking of the place of women in society, and especially her place In the society of England, she said, \"Women of\nthe old order bad so much to do In the\nway of rearing large families and doing\nthe housework that they did not have a\nchance to Improve, but now the doctrine\nof smaller families and the improvements\nin vogue for doing all Borts of work have\nemancipated her. She has time to devote\nto study and to taking her real plaro\nIn the world.\n\"If I could return to England fifty\nyears from now I would find woman had\ncome Into her own and that all of ner\nrights had \u00bb:een granted to her. I regard Mrs. Pankhurst as having the best\nbrain I ever knew.\n\"The Conflict Between Religion and tho\nChurch\" is the subject of an article by\nCharles D. Williams, bishop of MUiiRan,\nIn the current number of the American\nMagazine. \"What Is the matter with the\nchurch and \"what la .the matter with\nAmerican- life?\" Mr, Williams asks, answering .the questions In vivid and stirring manner. That this Is a vital subject to the author and one upon which\nhe feels strongly Is Indicated not alone\nby his present thoughts, but by his hook,\n\"A Valid Christianity for Today,\" published a short time ago, wherein he takes\nup a similar line of thought, expanding\nto a greater length his ideas upon the\nrelation of the church to modern society.\nMany things are suspended during the\nsummer, but reading Is not one of them,\nfor though publishers do not aa a rule\nput out many books during the hot\nmonths the season Is nevertheless one of\nthe busiest in the whole year. This fact\nIs well shown In the reports of the recent activity of the spring fiction. Within\na very few days Owen Wister'a \"Members of the Family,\" Mark Lee Luther's\n\"The Sovereign Power,\" Josephine Das-\nkam Bacon's \"While 'Caroline Was Growing,\" Gustax FrenBsen'B \"Klaus Hlmrich\nBaas,\" and Joseph Altsheler's \"The\nHorsemen of the Plains\" have gone Into\nlarge second editions, while at the same\ntime Mrs. Pryor*s \"The Colonel's Btory\"\nand Mrs. \"Watt's \"The Legacy\" have\nstarted on their third editions, and Mrs.\nHubert Barclay's \"Tevor Lordship\" on Its\nfourth.\nCUNARD LINE\nCANADIAN SERVICE\nDo you know you can travel be*\nj tween Canada and England by the\nold reliable Cunard. line direct\nCanadian service, Baiting from\nMontreal, London and Southampton.? LOW RATES\nTo London, 3rd class ocean, $29.00.\nFrom    London,   3rd   class\nocean     928.75\nCabin (one class)... .$42.50 and up\nTho excellence of service for\nwhich the line la so well known\nIs being maintained in its Canadian aerrlce.\nFor full particulars apply to\nany Cunard line Canadian service\nagent or write to\nH.  E.  LIDMAN\nGen. Agent. Can. West\n445 Main St., Winnipeg, Man.\npany,\" vouchsafed Moore when arrested\nby Chief of Police Ferguson. He went\nto the woman's boarding house and opened\nfire. The bullets pierced her breast going into her heart\nFIRE!\nHaving just received from the printers a number of cards with latest correct list of fire alarm boxes In thiB city,\nwe will be pleased to send copy to any-\nno upon request\nNelson Transfer Co., Ltd.\nThe Store of quality\nTeat and Coffees\u2014We carry all\nthe standard brands and a splendid selection Imported In bulk,\nand can please the most fastidious.\nFruit Jars\u2014Our prices tor these\nare the lowest In the city.\nFruits and Vegetables\u2014We can\nsupply everything In season and\nyou will always find our prices\nright        ,\nGroceries, Provisions, Flour and\nFeed\u2014Our etock is .complete and\nour service Is always prompt\nTours for business.\nA. S. HORSWILL\nBaker St Phone 10\nSecure One\nof these tine West Arm improve d ranches.   They are among the best.\nAU revenue producing properties.\n13 1*2 acres on lake shore;, level, good supply of water; 4 1-2\nacres planted in good varieties ot apple, trees, etc. Price $4,000 on\nterms.\n12 acres, all cultivated, creek, 260 bearing fruit trees; small fruits,\ndwelling, large barn and stable; hen house. This ranch is offered as a\ngoing concern, including stock, poultry, implements, furniture, etc. Price\n$3,500, on terms,\n64 acreB, about 10 cultivated, 470 fruit trees, most of which are\nbearing, ample water supply, fine dwelling and lake frontage. Price\n\u00a57,360 on terms.\nLet us show .you these properties.\nE;B. McDermid\n505 Baker Street Nelson, B. C.\nFERNIE   HA3   EPIDEMIC, OF\nFALSE FIRE ALARM8\nFERNIE, B. C\u201e July 8.\u2014An electric\nstorm which did considerable damage to\nthe opera house and the switchboard In\nthe power house, passed over this city\nlate Friday afternoon. Ho persons were\ninjured.\nOwing to the numerous false alarms\nthat have been turned in recently, a reward of $50 has been offered for the apprehension ot the guilty parties.\nTEMPLEMAN PROPHESIES BIG\nMAJORITY FOR  RECIPROCITY\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nVANCOUVER, B. 0,, July 9.-In his address here on Friday night Hon. William\nTempleman made the prophecy that the\nreciprocity agreement would obtain a majority of from 40 to 46 In the commons,\nand added that If lt were necessary to\nseek a mandate from the people they\nwould also support lt Both Mr. Templeman and Dr. Clark declared the arguments of H. S. Goodeve and O. H. Cowan\nwere pure fiction.\nSAID WIFE WROTE HIM\nTHREATS OF MURDER\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nVANCOUVER, B. C, July 9\u2014Donald P.\nJ. McWaters has been committed for trial\nat New Westminster on a charge of forgery, one of the most singular In western\ncourt annals. He complained that his\nwife, Sophia McWaters, who does not now\nlive with him, - had sent him letters\nthreatening to murder him.. Now the\ncrown accuses him of writing them to\nhimself and forging her name. Upon the\nevidence submitted before Magistrate\nWalker of Burnaby he has found a prima\nfacie case made out and committed McWaters for trial. He is also charged\nwith perjury.\nFIFTEEN  THOUSAND  MINERS\nLOCKED OUT IN NORWAY\nCHRISTIANIA, July 9.-The dispute of\nthe mine owners and miners over wages\nand conditions of employment culminated\ntoday In a lockout of 16,000 men at various\npoints In Norway. If a settlement is not\nreached within a week 17,000 more employes will be shut out\nFruit Land\n8M acres on Columbia river on*\nmile o( waterfront, at a bargain,\n$7 per acre cash or 111 on terms.1\nGet busy and call up the\nCabinet Cigar Store\nG. B. Matthew\nPhone B114\nNelson, B.C.\nP.O. Bex aa\nJEALOUSY CAUSE OF\nMURDER   IN  TORONTO\nTORONTO, Ont, July 9.\u2014Jealousy this\nmorning led William James Moore, aged\n23, to murder a woman known as Mrs.\nMary King, whose real name Is supposed\nto be Scolle, 45 years of age.   \"Bad oom-\nEstabllshed 1898\nThe Sign of the Fish\nThe Fisherman's Mail\nOrder House\nEverything for the fisherman.\nE. SUf CLIFFE\n411 Batter St. Nelson, B.C.\nWINNIPEG  ASSIGNMENT.\nWINNIPEG, July 9.\u2014Dunn BroB.\nfirm of wholesalers in contractors'\nsupplies, well known throughout the\nwest, has assigned. The assets and\nliabilities are not at present known.\nAfter having a very..handsome piece\nof furniture badly scarred because ft\nvisitor rocked against tt, I turned my\nrug bo that the nap runs in tbe opposite direction. Now the chairs move\nmore away from the furniture and\nthere have been no more such accidents.\nTo sweeten Jars and cans which\nbave contained tobacco, onions or any\nthing else of strong odor, wash the\narticle clean, then fill It with fresh garden earth, cover it and leH* -stand for\n24 hours. Then wash it and dry it,\nand lt will be quite sweet and fit for\nPretty Teapots\nGood taste In your teapot Is ail\nImportant as good taste In your\n(tea.\nOur newest designs are durable\nand tasteful, charming colors,\ngraceful shapes. Tou can always\nget the full rich aroma of the tea\n(mm the old Brown Bettys.\nCHINA HALL\nMUNRO A NELSON\n321 Baker St P.O. Bex 688\nRugs\nCheapest tn the city\nThe.Ark\n'SOB VerneirSir- =       Pnone A395'\nNew and second hand furniture.\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_1911_07_10","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\/1.0384113","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. : News Publishing Co.","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":"1911-07-10 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":"1911-07-10 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":""}]}