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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":" CLASHED ADS\nI CENT A WORD\n-U,\nVOL. 10\nNELSON. B. C. TUESDAY MORNING. JULY 11,1911\n{\/&\nj,.  \\ ^^EIQHT PAGES-\n\"7           V\\ 50 CENTS A MONTH\nty,, Ls-i \u25a0\t\nNO. 7\nARE VOTED DOWN\nReciprocity Bill Makes Progress in Senate\nVOTE SMALL FOR\nAMENDMENTS\nLeaves Bill Much Nearer to\nFinal Passage\u2014Power\nto Terminate Treaty\nWASHINGTON, July 10\u2014The Canadian reciprocity bill emerged unscathed tonight from the most serious\nordeal It has yet experienced In the\nBenate. The amendments by Senator\nCummins and the two by Senator Simmons of North Carolina all trying to\nincrease the number of manufactured\narticles that will be allowed to enter\nfrom Canada to the United States free\nwere voted down by large majorities.\nThe rote in favor of these amendments\nwas so \u25a0mall that Senator Cummins\nasked for only five roll calls although\nhe had previously announced his Intention of asking for at least 10. The\nmaximum vote for his amendments was\n14 compared with a maximum vote of\n53 against\nThe defeat of the Cummins amendment dears the situation In the senate\nand leaves the reciprocity bill much\nnearer final passage. Senator Bailey\n'today offered an amendment to the\nhouse woollen tariff bill imposing a\nduty of 26 per cent on raw wool. He\nwill ask for the consideration of this\namendment and of his farmers' free list\namendment in the near future.\nSenator Lafollette has not Introduced\nbis amendments of which there are probably a considerable number but these\nare expected within a short time. Senator Cummins after the first roll call on\nthe vote on bis amendments today expressed the conviction that lt was the\nintention of the senate not to change\nthe agreement In any particular and\nthat it was useless to press the senate\nfor further votes. He finally allowed\nthe remainder of his amendments to\nbe voted on together without the formality of a roll call. On the proposal\nto put flour and cereal products on the\nlist of articles which the United States\nwill admit free from Canada, Senator\nCummins was defeated 62 to 14. On\nthe proposal to put agricultural implements on this list be waB defeated 61\nto 12, and on the proposal to put lumber on the list he was defeated 51 to\n12. Other amendments voted down\nproposed to admit free from Canada\nwithout demanding like treatment of\nAmerican products,' automobiles, iron\nore, pig Iron, coal, rubber, cotton wool*\nlen, leather and silk goods. Senator\nBrlstow demanded a record rote on the\nrubber amendment, but senators would\nnot Join In the demand.\n\"This Is a case where the full tariff\nduty is reserved for a trust controlled\nproduct,\" said Senator Brlstow. \"It is\nevident that the senate does not care to\ngo on record on this matter.\"\n\"Oh, wait a while,\" said Senator\nStone, Democrat, with a wave of bis\nhand towards his Democratic colleagues.  '\nSenator Smith of Michigan, who had\npreviously announced his opposition to\nthe reciprocity agreement as a whole,\ndeclined to vote for any; of the amendments to lt, whloh sought to put more\narticles on the free list\nPrevious to the vote on the amendments Senator Thornton, Democrat,\nsaid he had voted for the Cummins\nfree meat amendments on Saturday and\nbad expected to vote for the other\namendments today. \"But I am convinced of the utter futility of attempting\nto pass any amendments and I do not\nwant to continue enacting a part in a\ncomedy here, so I will not vote at all.\"\nThe amendment that secured the\nheaviest favorable vote was one separate from the tariff features of the\nagreement tt gave the president power\n' to terminate this country's part of tbe\npact if Canada should abrogate her\npart. Senator Cummins, Senator Hey-\nburn and others ,sald that as the bill\noame before congress Canada could terminate her part of the agreement while\nthis country would be compelled to\ncontinue the reciprocity rates on Canadian goods until congress could repeal\nthe bill. Senator Lodge and Senator\nBacon, insisted that Canada's regard\n\"for the good faith*1 of the agreement\nwould prevent any such contingency.\nTIGHT\nMESS OF POTTAGE\nA. S. Goodeve Delivers Splendid Address-at Revelstoke\nGIVE EVERYTHING\nNOTHING IN RETURN\nDisadvantages of Reciprocity.\nThrowing Away Tradeof\nThree Continents\n(Snoelal to The Dally Newa)\nREVELSTOKE, B. C., July 10.\u2014Before one of the largest audiences that\never greeted a public speaker In this\ncity, A. S. Goodeve, M.P., tonight delivered an appeal to the electors of\nirtevelstoke on the subject of reciprocity, characterizing it as one of the\ngreatest question that ever came before\nme people of Canada, since, confederation, and urged them to oppose its\npassage In every way.\nMr. Goodeve dealt with tbe question\nfrom three standpoints: the coldblooded business Bide, whether it 1b\nbetter for Canada aB a nation, and its\naspect in regard to imperial connection. As a matter of dollars and cents\nthe speaker produced a mass of figures\nconvincing in every way to prove that\ntbe much boasted 90,000,000 market to\nthe south is nothing more than a myth,\nand that the United States have covetous eyes on the great prairie provinces\nas a dumping ground for their surplus\nfruits.\nTime was, he said, when reciprocity\nwould have been a good thing for Canada, but then the United States stood\noff and tried to force ub to our knees.\nThen we needed her money to develop\nour resources, hut since, all unaided,\nwe have grown to be the most prosperous country in the. world, and now\nthey come to us and plead to be allowed in on terms they once rejected. Two\nmen went from this country and attempted to sell our birthright .for a\nmess of pottage, giving everything\naway and asking nothing in return.\n\"Are we going to be dominated by\ntwo men?\" the speaker asked. \"They\nsay they are opening to ub the trade\nof a continent, but I say rather let ub\nnot throw away the trade ot three continents which we have developed east\nand west to waste our. resources on a\nmyth of a market to the south that\nproposes to give us nothing in return.\"\nThe speaker's address was vigorously\napplauded at every point. Accompanying Mr. Goodeve waB Hon, Thomas\nTaylor, who briefly introduced the\n.speaker as \"one of the coming great\nparliamentarians of Canada.\"\nCITY FATHERS\nSEE POWER PLANT\nHOSPITAL ATTENDANT IS\nINJURED BY MAD PATIENT\n, OAIiLOPAS, Ohio, July. 10\u2014Several\nattendants and a number of patients\nwere badly' Injured'in a riot which\nbroke out tn college \"I\" at the Ohio\nhospital for epileptics today. Five Insane patients started the trouble. Attendant B. h, Kennlson of this county\nwas terribly beaten and bitten In several places by mad patients. He Is\nprobably fatally injured. Persons In\ntbe vicinity came to the aid of the hospital guards and the riot was quelled\nafter half hour's uproar.\nLiberals Address Meeting\non Reciprocity Issue\nHon. William Templeman and Member for\nRed Deer Speak in Favor of Agreement with United States\nWith Heads of Departments Make Trip\nof Inspection\u2014Everything running\nPerfectly, Says Mayor.\nThe mayor and all the members of\nthe city council, together with the city\nelectrician, the city engineer and the\ncity clerk, yesterday went down to the\npower plant at Bonnlngton Falls and\nmade an Inspection of the newly repaired second unit which is now running In perfect condition.\nWhile being shown over the plant by\nthe city electrician the city fathers\nwere treated to a demonstration ot the\nease with which the production of\npower can be changed in about two\nminutes from one unit to another.\n\"The plant with its new coat of paint\nand general appearance of cleanliness\npresents a much more attractive appearance than when I laBt visited It,\nand seems to be running perfectly,\"\nsaid the mayor last night.\nNAMES MAY BE ADDED\nTO LIST TODAY\nAll the censuB enumerators in the\ncity completed their work laBt night\nwith the exception of William Ebbs,\nwho will continue until this evening.\nThe publicity bureau will be open to\nreceive names of those who have not\nbeen counted until 6 o'clock.\nWILL MAKE OFFER\nTO UNIONS\nSpecial to The Daily News.\nVANCOUVER, B. C\u201e July 20\n\u2014Independent contractors of\nthe city held two committee\nmeetings yesterday.' It was decided to make an offer to the\nunions, which, it is expected,\nwill bring about a settlement of\nthe strike. They are not pre*\npared to publish their offer until they know what action the\nunions will take.\nA fairly large audience greeted Hon.\nWilliam Templeman and Dr. Michael\nClark, M.P. for Red Deer, at the Liberal\nmeeting in tbe opera house laBt night.\nBeth speeches were ciiiei'ly arguments\nin favor of tbe reciprocity pact though\nthe minister of mines touehed upon\nthe Oriental question and upon the\nefforts that are being made in his own\ndepartment to solve the zinc problem.\nH. C Hall, president of the Nelson\nLiberal association, was in the chair\nand amongst those on the platform\nwere A. B. Docksteader, E. A. Crease,\nAid, Madden, W. Rutherford, D. A.\nMcDonald of Greenwood, Dr. E. C.\nArthur and E. Ferguson. John Oliver\nand M. A. Macdonald, who were also\nannounced as speakers, were not\npresent.\nMr. Templeman said: The Issue of\nreciprocity has been precipitated on\nthe country, or rather the possibility of\na general election on that issue, by the\npolicy of the opposition in delaying the\nprocedlngs of parliament and obstructing the progress of supply. After a\nsix months' session, with a recess to\npermit the premier to go to the coronation .'and the imperial conference,\nwe, my friend Dr. Clark \u25a0 and I, who\nwere not bo fortunate as to go to England, have availed ourselves of the\nopportunity to discuss in several of the\nprincipal cities of British Columbia\nthis question of reciprocal trade relations with tbe United States. During\nthe six months that parliament has\nbeen in session lt has been the policy of\nthe oppostilon to obstruct and delay\npublic business. I read yesterday the\nspeech delivered here by Mr. Goodeve\nsome weeks ago, and I see that he then\ncomplained that during that six months\nnothing has been done, no Important\nmeasures dealt with, and that this was\ndue altogether to the mismanagement\nof the government'and the lack of\nbusiness methods of the premier and\nhis following. No statement could be\nfurther from the facts. A great deal\nof business has been dealt with, important public measures have been furthered, over 100 very important public\nbills received the assent of the governor in council. But it is nevertheless\na fact that tbe session has been unduly delayed by the obstructive tactics\nof Mr. Borden and his followers. I\ndo not say the opposition have discussed reciprocity at undue length, but\ntheir obstruction has been in respect\nof other matters, particularly In regard\nto supply and the passing of estimates\nfor carrying on the public business of\nCanada for the next year. So that if\nyou have here and there in this district public works that bave not yet\nbeen started although provision has\nbeen made for them in the appropriations, it is because by reason of these\nobstructive tactics the entire amount\nhas not yet been voted by parliament\nand tbe minister of public works laid\ndown tbe rule at the adjournment that\nhe would not begin any such works until the full amount had been voted,\notherwise it might become necessary to\nhave the work stopped while In progress.\nReciprocity Issue\nNow the issue of reciprocity Is embodied In an agreement between Canada\nand the United States and I should\nlike to explain in a plain and simple\nmanner what this agreement is. It is\nnot a treaty, a tr-Zaty is a hard and fast\ncompact between two nations for a specific length of time and to be repealed\nonly after notice is given; it Is a binding thing, neither party is free to depart from it. This is a simple agreement, on the part of the United States\nto amend their tariffs by removing the\nduties on certain lines of goods, principally agricultural products, coming\nfrom Canada, and on the part of Canada that we will remove our duties on\nsimilar articles coming from the United\nStates. There 1b also another schedule\nIn which the duties although not entirely removed, are reduced and the agreement in both cases Is entirely reciprocal. For many years it* has been a\ngrievance tn Canada that the duty on\nour goods going into the United States\nwas very high, in some cases two or\nthree times the duty imposed on the\nsame articles on the Canadian side, and\nour people bave clamored for many\nyears to have these American duties\nreduced. They have said whenever\nmore friendly relations with the United\nStates have been talked about: \"Let\nthe United States first reduce their\nduties to the Canadian level.\" Mr.\nFielding and Mr. Paterson met the delegates from the United States and made\nan agreement whloh has been ratified\nby congress and only requires now the\napproval of the senate of the United\nStates and of the parliament of Canada\nto become law\u2014our advices are that it\nwill undoubtedly pass the senate at\nWashington within the next two weeks\nand if it ever gets to a vote in our parliament I can assure you it will certainly pass by the full majority of tbe\ngovernment, or nearly bo, and the effect of that agreement is exactly In\naccordance -with that demand. As I\nhave said it is a simple agreement\u2014it\nmay last forever, it may last one day\u2014\nwe can repeal it whenever we please\nwe can amend our tariff whenever we\nwish to do so, but of course It is presumed that having given full consideration to the matter this agreement to remove or reduce the duties on certain\nproducts will remain in force for a\nconsiderable time, being as we believe\nin the interests of both countries.\nLet us consider for a moment its\neffect on a few articles and see how it\nworks out. I wild select articles that\nare moat familiar to everyone. On\ncertain agricultural products the duty\nhas been removed; on others reduced.\nOn agricultural machinery there is a reduction of from 2 1-2 to 6 per cent;\nbut on no other line of manufactured\ngoods Is the duty reduced, so our manufacturers have no cause to fear. Take\ncattle; at the present time the duty on\ncattle coming into' Canada Is 25 per\ncent\u2014that 1b wiped out. On cattle going into the United States the duty has\nbeen 27 1-2 per (cent\u2014that is to be\nwiped out and both will be free. Take\napples, that I believe Is a live question\nhere. At present the duty coming into\nCanada is 40 cents a barrel, going Into\nthe United States 75 cents a barrel.\nBoth are wiped out . So on through\na large list of agricultural products,\nthe duties on both sides are wiped out.\nIn almost every case the present duties are higher going into the United\nStates than coming into Canada. On\nthe articles included in that list the\nduties according to the importations of\nlast year amounted to $2,500,000\u2014that\nmeans we are removing from the consumers of this country a tax of $2,500,-\n000 a year and in the same way the,\nUnited States Is removing a tax upon\ntheir people of $5,000,000 because their\nduties were twice as much. That briefly stated is the agreement, and it Is\none that to my mind will appeal to the\ncommon sense and business Instincts\nof the people of this country, and I\nfeel Confident that not only will parliament ratify It but if are required to go\nto the country during the coming fall\nor a year from the coming fall the\npeople of Canada will ratify it by a\nvery large majority.\nEffect on British Columbia\nLet me Indicate briefly what I believe will be the effect of this agreement on some of the principal industries of British Columbia, because I\nam more familiar with this province\nthan with the rest of Canada. Take\nfirst the question of fruit\u2014I confess\nthere seems to be more alarm in the\nminds of the fruit growers than there\nis In any other industry. They seem\nto fear that the larger fruit growers\nof Washington and Oregon may prejudicially affect the British Columbia\ngrowers' markets. Having studied the\nmatter to the best of my ability and\nwith the information at hand I am\nbound to say that while here and there\nthere may be a slight disturbance of\nconditions I am convinced that on the\nwhole a benefit will inure to the fruit\ngrowers of British Columbia. In the\nfirst place British Columbia grows better fruit than the country Immediately\nto the south, It has a better climate and\nbetter soil for the production of apples.\nAt present lt has a limited market In\nthe prairie provinces; growing rapidly\nIt Is true. British Columbia fruit production has increased enormously in\nthe last five or six years but it Is not\nyet supplying the market of the northwest\u2014I question if it is even supplying\nthe market of BritiBh Columbia itself.\n1 have In my hand a statement by an\nexpert fruit grower, tra officer of the\nprovincial government which I shall\npresently read as to the enormous possibilities of the northwest market. Here\nin British Columbia we have better\nsoil, better climate, as cheap labor and\nfar cheaper land than they have south\nof the boundary. Then lf under this\nagreement we have opened to us the\nmarket of the entire United States as\nwell as the market of Canada, surely\nthe fruit growing industry Is able to\nhold Its own and will be greatly benefitted by the wider market   Mr. Bran\nJULY 11, 1411.\nCoupon No. 2.\nThis coupon, with one from\neach of the other IssueB of The\nDaily News of the week ending\nJuly 15, and 10 cents, entitles\nthe holder to a photogravure\nreproduction of Fred Morgan's\npicture \"London Bridge Is Falling Down,\" or Edouard Bisson's\n\"La CIgale.\" Coupons and money\nshould be presented at The\nDally News office any time\nafter Saturday next.   If pictures\nare to be mailed 5 cents must\nbe added to cover postage.\ndrith, who has been for years In charge\nof exhibitions of the fruit grown In this\nprovince throughout the east and elsewhere on behalf of the provincial gov-\ni ernment in an interview in Winnipeg\nsaid: \"If all the land in British Columbia of which we now know as capable\nof producing Iruit were planted In\nfruit of all sorts, in 20 years from now\nthe whole area would not produce more\nthan is necessary to supply the market\nof the northwest if the population continues to Increase at the present rate\nand to the capacity of the country.\"\nThat statement was made a few years\nago. The population of the prairie\nprovinces has Increased since then at\na very much greater rate than when\nthat prophecy was made. Mr. Bran-\ndrith was asked the other day if he\nwould maintain that statement and he\nsaid: \"Yea, If every acre of land suitable for fruit growing In BritiBh Columbia were put under cultivation it\ncould not produce more than enough\nto supply Alberta and Saskatchewan\nalone.\" And surely with the removal\nof the duty of 75 cents a barrel on the\nUnited States side, with our superior\nadvantages we can find a market in the\nUnited States also, at least for our surplus and better quality fruit Hon. J.\nH. Turner, our agent general in London, has referred to the agreement in\ntills way: \"My view of the situation Is\nthat the large fruit growers of British\nColumbia have got so far advanced and\nso control the market that they will\nnot suffer materially from reciprocity\nand as I think it is generally conceded\nthat the fruit grown in British Columbia Is of better quality than that grown\nin the country to the south the farmers\nof the province may look for continued prosperity.\"\nPrice of Land\nIf land In the United States In somewhat similar position to land In the\nImmediate vicinity of 'Nelson Is sold at\nprices at least 100 per cent higher than\nhere, as I am advised by many good\nauthorities Is the case, have you anything to fear from reciprocity? I understand that recently a ranch was\nsold in the Immediate vicinity of Nelson at a price representing about $750\nan acre.\nA Voice\u2014Give the name.\nFoster's ranch. Does that look as\nif reciprocity is going to ruin the fruit\ngrowing industry? I will give you another illustration. I have It on good\nauthority that Mr. Martin Burrell, the\nfruit expert of the Conservative party\nin this district\u2014and a very capable one\nhe Is\u2014had a ranch near Grand Forks\nthat he had offered for sale for some\ntime before this reciprocity agreement\nwas arranged, and he could not sell it\nBut since-the announcement of the reciprocity pact he has sold It for $10,000\nmore than he had offered it for before.\nI think there was some American capital went into that purchase, and Mr.\nBurrell was able to make the deal because of this agreement going Into effect. Therefore the result will be that\nland values In the neighborhood of Nelson will rise to the same point as land\nvalues In the neighborhood of Colville\nand the owners of these lands will be\nbenefitted in that measure.\nEffect on Lumber Industry\nNow, another Industry that I think\nwill derive enormous benefit from this\naorangement is'the lumber business.\nAt present there Is a duty of $1.25 per\nthousand againBt the Canadian lumberman who Bhips his product Into the\nUnited States. A very large portion of\nthe cut in eastern Canada especially\ngoes into the United States. Will not\nthe removal of this duty be a great\nadvantage to the lumbermen of Canada? Ever since the prairie provinces\nbegan to fill up, from the time the Liberal government came into power In\n1896, It has been the cry of the British\nColumbia lumbermen that theirs waa\nthe only industry that was not protected, for there had been no duty on\nAmerican lumber coming Into Canada\nfor 18 years; the duty was taken off\nthen by the Conservative government\nin the Interests of the farmers of the\nnorthwest and the present government\ndid not feel warranted in relmposing\nthat duty. The British Columbia lura-\nibermen said: \"We have to pay duty\non our supplies, our machinery and we\nalone have no protection. If you can't\nput a duty on American lumber for\ngoodness sake get them to take their\ntax off ours so we have a chance to\nget Into the United StateB market\"\nNow, that Is exactly what has been\ndone. British Columbia haB the best\nlumber in the world, particularly the\nbig fir lumber of the coast. Much of\nIt Is shipped into the United States\nnow notwithstanding the duty\u2014surely\nBritish Columbia lumber will find a\nready market there when there is no\nduty against it. I read in a Seattle\npaper where the Puget Sound lumbermen were strongly opposing this feature of the agreement, pointing out that\nat present California is a great consumer of Puget Sound lumber but with\nthe removal of the duty and the shipping facilities the British Columbia\nlumbermen enjoy they would absorb\nthat entire market.\nCoal and Coke\nAnother industry that concerns us is\nthe production of coke and coal as\nwell. At present there iB a duty on\ncoke entering the United States of 20\nper cent or about $1.20 a ton. Last\nyear we shipped into the States from\nthe Crow's Nest and Alberta 60,000 to\n70,000 tons\u2014not a very large quantity\nbut the reaBon was owing to the 20\nper cent duty. Now with our inexhaustible fields of good coking coal and\nthe duty removed, surely that is a trade\nthat will grow enormously and greatly\nbenefit this province.\nFisheries\nBut on the fishery question I believe\nthat greater benefit will accrue to this\n(Continued an Page Four.)\nON LAKE SUPERIOR\nThree Members of Crew Lose\nLives\nOTHERS HAVE\nNARROW ESCAPE\nDaughter of Drowned Steward\nPlays Part of Heroine-\nVessels In Collision\nSAULT STE MARIE, Mich., July 10.\n\u2014Three persons lost their lives and\n33 others had hairbreadth escapes from\ndeath today, when the steamer John\nMitchell of Chicago sank In Lake Superior today. The Mitchell collided\nwith the William H. Mack of Cleveland\nIn a dense fog off Vermillion point.\nSecond Mate Archie Causely, Steward\nA. L. Clemens and Watchman George\nAustin, of the crew of the steamer John\nMitchell, were missing when the Mack\narrived here with the survivors of the\nMitchell, and it Is believed they were\ndrowned.\nBesides her crew of 27, the Mitchell\ncarried the wife and daughter of\nSteward Clemens, who were listed as\nMitchell helpers, and seven passengers\nfrom Cleveland, Mrs. William Grant,\nMiss Alberta Grant, Mrs. O. S. Smith,\nMrs. A. A. Willlcut, Mrs B. Grant, Miss\nClara Bundachus and Mrs. Grant. All\nthe passengers and the rest of the\ncrew climbed to the deck of the Mack\nby means of a ladder from the stern\n,of the Mitchell, most of them escaping\nin their night clothes and losing their\npersonal effects. Three men and three\nwomen, however, left the Mitchell In\na boat, which soon capsized, Miss Fay\nClemens, daughter of the lost steward,\nproving herself a heroine in the rescue\nof her fellow passengers In the Bmall\nboat Miss Clemens called to the crew\nof the Mack to throw fhem a line and\nfastened lt to the opposite side of the\nboat in such a way that the Mack\ncrew, on the other end of the line,\nwere able to pull the yawl right side\nup.\nAmong the six, all of whom were\nincluded In those saved In the wreck,\nwas Miss Clemens' disabled mother,\nwhose leg had been broken when she\nwas struck by a small boat when it\nwas being lowered to the Mitchell's\ndeck. The Mitchell was struck amid-\nship on the port side and sank in\nabout seven minutes after the collision,\nand the Mack had a 20-foot square\ntorn In her bow. Tbe Mitchell was\nloaded with coal bound for Superior,\nWis., and the Mack was bound down\nthe lakes with a load.\nNO FEAR OF TROUBLE OVER\nMOROCCAN DIFFICULTY\nPARIS, July 10\u2014While the strictest\nsecrecy is being maintained as to the\npour parlers between France and Germany in the case of Morocco and the\nsending of a German warship to Aga-\ndir, it Is understood that they are progressing favorably and there is no fear\nat present of strained relations between\nthe two powers. In addition to the\nwhole-hearted support of Great Britain,\nRussia has spared no efforts in behalf\nof France. On two occasions at St.\nPetersburg and Berlin respectively Russia bas made known her complete\nagreement with the French point of\nview. Moroccan Minister Mokhri, who\nis now in Paris said in an interview\ntoday that tbe German, like the Spanish\nintervention in Morocco was not justified. On the other hand the dispatch\nof a French column to Fez was neces-\nBary.\nRailway Outfit for Building\nCanadian Northern\nMANY CAMPS ON\nBANKS OF FRASER\nGrand   Trunk   Pacific  Also\nMaking Progress\u2014No\nScarcity of Labor\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nVANCOUVER, B. C, July 10.\u2014Burn3,\nJordan & Welch, subcontractors for\nbuilding the 14-mile section of the\nCanadian Northern from Yale to a\npoint 14 miles eastward, shipped from\nVancouver today the first consignment\nof its outfit, including horses, graders\nand dump carts. The first construction\ncamp will be established tomorrow and\na few weeks will see nine others located at different points on both sides\nof the Fraser river. In order to provide access to the grade the Fraser\nriver will be crossed by wira suspension bridges, which the contractors intend erecting at their own expense. A\nnumber of these bridges will be strong\nenough to sustain the weight of horses\nand grading outfits. The Hope-Kam-\nloops division alone is expected to result in the circulation of $1,000,000 a\nmonth in Vancouver for the next 12\nmonths.\nGrand Trunk Pacific.\nColllngwood Screiber, the government engineer, has returned to Vancouver from an official trip of inspection over the route as far as a point\n12 miles east of Hazelton. He Bays\nfaster progress of construction work Is\nnow being made owing to the increased\nsupply of labor. Over 75 per cent cf\nthe grading between Copper river and\nHazelton has been completed. Kails\nare expected to reach Hazelton early\nin December. AH sections between\nHazelton and Aldermere are now under\nconstruction.\nMr. Screiber proceeds via Edmonton\nto the Yellowhead pass and Te'.e\nJuane Cache to inspect the work. The\nline will be graded to Tete Juane Cache\nby December from the Yellowhead\npass. Ralls have been laid to Athabasca river, 200 miles west of Edmonton, and less than 30 from the Yellowhead pass. There is no scarcity of\nlabor, over 2,500 men being employed\nby various subcontractors.\nFoley, Welch & Stewart are also engaged building a branch from the main\nline of the Grand Trunk Pacific near\nEdson to the Brazeau coal fields. The\nrailway company expects to build COO\nmiles of brancn lines on the prairies\nthis year.\nSIR FREDERICK BORDEN\nTO  BE HIGH COMMISSIONER\nOTTAWA, July 10\u2014Sir Frederick\nBorden arrived in Ottawa this evening\nfrom London, but would not say anything as to the report that he will be\nthe next Canadian high commissioner\nIn London. It is understood, however\nthat Sir Frederick has practically decided to accept the post and his appointment as high commissioner will\nnot be long delayed.\nSEARCHING FOR  BODY\nKENORA, Ont., July 10\u2014Search still\ncontinues for the body of Fireman B.\nStevenson, who was crushed to death\nin the wreck at the washout a few miles\neast of Hawk last Saturday. After\ngreat difficulty the engine and tender\nhaB been brought to town. Sand and\ngravel in large quantities slid down\nthe siding aB they were being raised\nand it is feared the remains of the unfortunate fireman were buried in the\nslide that took place. A diving outfit\nwas dispatched to the scene of the\nwreck today and returns are hourly\nexpected that the body has been found.\n\u2022 POTT8VILLE WIPED OUT \u2022\n\u2022 BY BUSH  FIRES..*\n\u2022                              \u2022\n\u2022 COBALT, Ont, July 10\u2014Bush \u2022\n\u2022 fires, breaking   out   yesterday \u2022\n\u2022 afternoon, wiped out practically \u2022\n\u2022 all Pottsville, in Porcupine, 20 \u2022\n\u2022 buildings falling victims to the \u2022\n\u2022 flames, with a loss totalling at \u2022\n\u2022 $20,000.   The heaviest losers are \u2022\n\u2022 Dr. H. Moore, and the Porcu- \u2022\n\u2022 pine Assay company, who lost \u2022\n\u2022 til their equipment. \u2022\nMILLION DOLLARS\nFOR IRON PROPERTY\nDuluth   Syndicate  Purchasers  of Valuable Deposits\u2014Represent Billion\nDollar Corporation.\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nVANCOUVER, B. C, July 10.\u2014The\nPuget Sound Iron company has sold\nthe famous magnetite Iron deposits on\nthe northwest coast of Tuxeda island\nto Duluth parties, who are said to have\nacted on behalf of the United States\nSteel corporation. The consideration\nwas $1,000,000, final payments having\nbeen made within the past six weeks.\nThe Duluth syndicate, headed by ex-\nSenator Hawkins, have acquired by\nlease 20,000 acres of iron lands in\nComox district from the E. & N. railway, and has been developing them\nfor over 18 months. The senator and\nhis associates, accompanied by a Pittsburg mining expert, returned last week\nfrom an inspection of the.holdings and\nstate that development to date has\ngiven a tonnage In sight of at leasL\n\u00a3.000,000 tons. Work Is still in progress. The impression prevails that the\nDuluth people also represent some\nbillion dollar corporation which is\ncredited with the lntentiou of acquiring\nthe principal iron areas In British Columbia with a view to ultimately establishing iron works on this coast.\nMr. Hawkins declined to give any\ndetailed Information of his plans respecting the proposed steel-making\nplant. The Iron deposits on Texada\nIsland were acquired 35 years ago by\nthe Puget Iron company and nre described as the most extensive in the\nprovince.\n MM TWO\nChe latlp jlrtiw.\nJULY   11\nLast Chance for These Great Pictures\nBeautiful\nPhotogravure\nReproductions\nEach 22 hs 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 especially where there are children or those who love children.\nNever Before Sold\nfor Less Than\n$2.50 Each\n\"La Cigale\" (The Grasshopper).   Bg 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.\nNEW POTATOES IN\nPEND D' OREILLE\nMore  Land  Purchased for Orchards-\nFamily Reunion\u2014Lectures Are of\nMuch  Interest\n(Special to The Dally NewB.)\nWANETA, B.C., July 10\u2014Early potatoes are ready for digging and it is\nexpected that shortly the first carload\nwill be shipped out.\nThere is a good crop of cherries in\nthe valley this year. Strawberries are\nbeing spoilt by the frequent ralnB and\nthe unusually wet season is hindering\nhay making.\nWilliam Reith and James Maclauch-\nlan aro each taking weekly Into Trail\nwagon loads of fresh killed meats, butter, eggs and vegetables.\nP. Burns and company's Trail branch\nIs widely advertising the fact that at\npresent they are selling nothing but\nprime Pend d'Oreille beef, veal, pork,\nmutton and Iamb,\nMrs. Davis of London and Harry Turner of Dorkings, England, are among\nlate arrivals in the valley.\nJohn P. Vroom, customs officer has\nreturned after an absence on official\nbusiness.\nAt tbe Reith homestead a pleasant\nfamily reunion is being held to attend\nwhich the following have arrived: Mrs.\nDr. Stewart and two little daughters\nfrom Battle Creek, Mich.; Mrs. Som-\nmers and baby, Mr. and Mrs. Clemens\nand Miss Ella Reith, from Spokane; Dr.\nJohn Reith, Mrs. Reith and Harold\nReith from the coast. Mr. and Mrs.\nReith, Sr., were among the earliest Bet:\ntiers in the Kootenays, having brought\ntheir family here from Ontario nearly\n20 years ago.\nAndrew Adie is in Calgary visiting\nthe big fair.\nFred Adte has sold a good piece of\nland to Nelson parties for fruit growing purposes.\nAt the late meeting here (of the\nSouth Kootenay Farmers' Institute the\nlectures by the government experts\nwere of more than usual interest and\nmuch appreciated. Mr. Terrys' lecture\non poultry contained many pointers of\nreal importance to ranchers, while Prof.\nThorn's lecture on the origin, composition and qualities of soils could not fall\nto be of theoretical interest and practical value to his hearers.\nTimber cruisers are at work estimating the stand on the limits up 15-\nMile and Ifi-Mile creeks.\nIt will Interest some readers to learn\nthat the rubbing In of any of the following remedies has locally been found\nto mitigate the ill effects caused by\ncontact with poison oak or sumach, viz.,\nsoda, sweet nitre, Japanese oil, a weak\nsolution of lye.\nFred Irvine & Co.\nSpecial Clearance Sale\n\"London Bridge Is Falling Down.\"  Bv Fred Morgan\nTO HEAR CHARGES\nAGAINST OFFICER\nW. H. Bullock-Webster Appointed Com*\nmlssloner to Sit at Princeton Tomorrow Week\nFor the purpose of enquiring into certain charges and complaints made\nagainst Nigel B. Ewart while provincial\nconstable at Princeton, the lieutenant\ngovernor in council has appointed W.\nH. Bullock-Webster, stipendiary magistrate, here as commissioner under the\nPublic Enquiries act,\nMr. Bullock-Webster, according to an\nannouncement in last week's Gazette\nwill hold his first sitting at the government office at Princeton on Wednesday\nmorning, July 19, at 10 o'clock. The\nnotice invites all persons interested In\nthe investigation to attend the hearing.\nSTRAY TOPICS\nOF NEW YORK\nTen Million   Dollars  Appropriated for\nSchools\u2014Police Constables Are\nFound Unreliable.\nNEW YORK, July 11.\u2014The city government has at last taken a step In\nthe direction toward making the school\nfacilities of New York more adequate.\nOwing to niggardly and altogether Insufficient approplations the board of\neducation, for many years, has been unable to build enough schools to accommodate the constantly increasing number of children in the various Bectlons\nof the city. Two years ago only $1,590,-\n000 was appropriated for new school\nbuildings, a sum altogether insufficient\nconsidering the tremendous Increase In\nschool population, last year more than\n$0,000,000 was appropriated for that\npurpose, but even that sum was Inadequate. This year the appropriation will\nbe more than $10,000,000 and it 1b\nhoped that by a judicious distribution\nof that sum the overcrowding of the\nschools two years hence will be greatly mitigated, although not entirely prevented.\nPolice Commissioner Waldo a has\nlearned a Bad and discouraging lesson.\nIn former years it was the custom to\nsend out inspectors in plain clothes to\nmake the rounds of the various pre-\ncints for the purpose of ascertaining\nwhether or not the police officers were\ndoing their duty. Commissioner Waldo\ndid not like this system of espionage,\nwhich, in his opinion, was degrading.\nWhen he was placed at the head of\nthe police department he promptly\nabolished the so-called \"Shoo-fly\" squad\nand placed the roundsmen and other\npolice officers upon their honor. The\nother night the commissioner made a\ntour of the city to find out how his\n\"honor plan\" worked out. His disappointment was great and, as tho result\nof that, single trip, 60 complaints against as many policemen and higher police\nofficers were filed by him. The outcome will probably be a shake-up in the\npolice force and the restoration of the\n\"Shoo-fly\" squad.\nThe New tork police force max not\nof All Summer Stock\nLadies' summer dresses in fine muslin, lawn and silk mull, lace\nand embroidery trimmed, regular $5, $6, and $7.50 dresses sale price\n83.50.\nAll ladies blouses at sale price to clear.\nAll Summer Muslins, Prints and Ginghams\nat Cost Price\nBargains in ladles' under muslins to clear.\nSpecial clearance prices on all ladies' millinery.\nAll Trimmed and Pattern Hats from\n$3.50 Each Up\nLadies Summer Coats, half price to,clear.\nBargains in all our children's dresses and odds and ends In\ndepartment\nFred Irvine & Co.\nA. G. LAMBERT & CO. Ltd.\nManufacturers of and  Dealers In\nROUGH and DRESSED LUMBER\nShingles, Lath, Sashes, Doors, Mouldings, Building Paper, etc.    Sole agents\nfor  Ru-ber-oid Hoofing and  Manitoba Gypsum Co.'s Hardwall and Wood\nFibre Plaster.\nTelephone 82 Nelson B.C. P.O. Box 1066\nbe as efficient as it might be, but lt\nwould be unjust to place all the blame\nupon the men. The system, which enables too many cooks to meddle with\nthe broth, is to a great extent responsible for existing conditions. The men\nare expected to fulfill many duties, tri-\nval in nature, but taking so much time\nthat other, far more important duller,,\nfor instance the ferretting out and arrest of criminals, are neglected. Another serlouB handicap consists in the\nfact that in many caseB the police magistrates are unwilling to uphold the\npolicy of the police department.\nBlack Hand Outrages.\nIn the King's county hospital are two\nwomen who were driven Into hopless\ninsanity by the persecution of their\nfamilies by the black band. The misdeeds of the black hand are outrages,\nand It is a disgrace to the city that\nthe blackmailers, murderers, thieves\nand robbers carrying on their nefarious\nbusiness under the name of the black\nhand, are allowed to continue their\nwork. It is true, a few of these criminals have been caught and punished,\nbut there are hundreds more, as dangerous as the others, still committing\ncrimes of every kind without fear of\ndetection by the police. \\\nWith a large, an overwhelming majority, the stalwart burgherB of Ho-\nboken have declared themselves against the commission form of government. They do not believe In this newfangled system and put down their ponderous feet upon the proposition of the\n\"reformers.\"\nA young man, elegantly dressed, attracted considerable attention the other\nevening by stopping in front of the big\nstores in the shopping district and\nbeating with his cane upon one of the\nbig plate glass windows until the latter\nbroke and jingled upon the sidewalk.\nThe Btofe was closed at the time and\nthe action seemed to be prompted\nmerely by a desire to find amusement.\nHe was arrested and taken to the nearest police station, where he intimated\nthat he was the son of an English lord,\nwhose name, however, he would not divulge . The police officials are of the\nopinion that the young man Is Insane.\nThe notions some people have concerning the duties of tne police are\nrather amusing at times. The other\nday a woman sent a complaint to the\npolice department that somebody had\nstolen*her evenim* paper, for which she\nhad paid one whole penny. She demanded that the detective force of the\ncity be sent out to investigate the case\nand to trace and arrest the thief. However, neither the detective force nor\nthe police reserves of the precinct were\nsent out on the case.\nAn Italian girl had a serious quarrel\nwith her Italian beau the other day.\nThe case was really aggravating and,\naccording to Italian notions, called for\nthe' shedding of blood. The girl had\na revolver, every chamber was loaded.\nShe pulled the weapon from beneath\nher skirt and pointed the gun at her\nuntrue lover. For a moment, but only\nfor a moment, there was a prospect\nthat the Italian colony would be reduced by one bad member. But it was\nnot to be. The man took to his heels\nand the girl, pursuing him, began to\nshoot. Unfortunately not one of the\nfljulletls hit the sprinting miscreant,\nbut when the smoke cleared away,\nthree Innocent passei-s-by. who lhad\nbeen hit by as many bullets, were scattered along the road and had to be\ntaken to the hospital for repairs.\nOf all the pupils graduated this year\nfrom public school 110, Broome and\nCannon streets, a blind boy, Benjamin\nApplcello, carried off the highest honors. His general average was close\nto 97. What makes the success of the\nboy even more remarkable is the fact\nthat he could speak but little English\nwhen he entered the school two years\nago and that he completed the work\nof four years within less than a year\nand a half. It is the boy's ambition\nto become a lawyer. In the fall he will\nenter the De Witt Clinton high school.\nSenator Gore, the blind member of the\nUnited States senate, Is taking great\ninterest in the boy. The boy has a\nletter from Senator Gore, in which the\nlatter advises young Applcello to study\nlaw. The boy treasures that letter\nand is determined to win success at the\nbar.\nSECOND   RUSSIAN   DREADNOUGHT\nST. PETERSBURG, July 10\u2014The Poltava, the second battleship of the dreadnought class to be built for the Russian\nnavy, was successfully launched today.\nThe Poltava Is a sister ship of the Sevastopol, which was launched (several\ndays ago. Bach ship has a displacement\nof 23,000 tons and la designed to have\na speed of 23 knotB an hour.\t\nNA-DRU-CO\nDYS PEPSI AiABLETS\nenable yon to eat hearty meals ot wholesome\nfood and property digest ihem. They banish itomach troubles\n50c a box at all dniggnt.'.\nNational Drag * Chemical Co. ol Canada, limited\n TUESDAY       JULY  11\nChe \u00a9attj? jHeim\n(blO\nPAGE THREE\n\"A Few Dollars Invested Monthly in the Right Place Will Earn More Than Any Man\nCan Save From Labor.\"\n\u25a0MMHMajaaiiNHMttciitakv-NuSBSRiu!\nThe Right Place Ss Burnaby\nWe do not believe there Is another place In North America where valueB will Increase as rapidly.\nLast year the building permits alone on the peninsula amounted to almost twenty million dollars.\nAdd to this the amount expended by the eitles and other municipalities, government, railway, electric lines,\npower companies and great manufacturing enterprises and it would exceed thirty millions.\nOne hundred and fifty millions in five years, only figuring present rate of expenditures.\nThis immense amount will be Invested in Improvements Immediately surrounding the lots we are now\noffering you at only $360, $20 down   and $10 per month.\nPopulation and development make values. Those who are especially Qualified to Judge, estimate the increase in population on the peninsula at 200,000 in five years.   Now study the position of these lots.\nNot Away Out on the Edge of a Prairie Town Spreading in All Directions,\nBut Right In Between the two fastest Growing Cities in Canada\nOnly three miles between the two city limits. Right in the course of the greatest development. What\nwill they be worth in five years. At leaBt' ten or twenty times the price they are today. It win be solidly\nbuilt up 15 this locality by that time.\nAre you going to be one of tbe winners? Or are you going to be telling what you might have made?\nDo not wait In six months at the rate things are now going there will be nothing available for subdivision between the cities.  We can never offer you the same terms and prices again.\nNow Is the Time\nThe Wright Investment Co., Ltd. Nelson\u00bbBC-\nCapital paid up  $175,000\nAssets    $260,000\nNews of Sport\nIMPORTS TWO\nFINE BULLDOGS\nAlec Cheyne Will Make Hobby of Dog\nFancying\u2014Animals of Prize\nWinning Strain.\nAlec Cheyne on Sunday night received\nfrom England a pair of bulldogs, \"Alice\nGrey of Wearmouth\" and \"Duchess of\nPenfold.\" Both are bred from Champion\nRodney Stone, one of the most famous\nof the prizewinning bulldogs, and are\nsplendid specimens of their kind. With\neach came a lengthy pedigree which\nshows that the animals are descendants of a long Hue of the famous\n\"Stone\" family.\nThey are imported by Mr. Cheyne\nfrom from Capt. James B.. Leask of\nDpckmouth, Sunderland, England, and\nwere chosen by T. Stevenson of the\nwell known Horsforth Kennels, Leeds,\nwho is himself a noted breeder and\nfancier of bulldogs.\n\"It is my Intention to make bulldog\nFIG PILLS\nCURE BACKACHE, BLADDER AND\nKIDNEY TROUBLE\nSold with a positive guarantee.   At all\ndealers, 26 cents per box, or The Fig PU\nCo., St. Thomas, Ont.\nbreeding a hobby,' said Mr. Cheyne last\nnight, \"and I have commenced with the\noeat animals I could get.\n\"The dogs arrived in splendid condition after their long journey. They\nwere brought across from tbe other Bide\noy the Dominion Express company, to\nwhom great credit is due for the way\nthe dogs were handled and cared for.\"\n\u25a0'Alice Grey of Wearmouth\" and\n\"Duchess of Penfold\" are valued at\nover $500.\nBOTH  SIDES  CONFIDENT\nLONDON, July 10\u2014Great interest la\nmanifested in London in the field and\ntrack sports which will take place tomorrow afternoon at the Queens club\nbetween teams sent from the universities of Harvard and Tale, representing\nthe United States and teams from the\nuniversities of Oxford and Cambridge,\nrepresenting England.\nBoth teams bave been training hard\nfor the event. The Americans are confident they will win six of the nine\nevents, while the Englishmen believe\nthe odd event will determine the victory ,as they expect to win four. England is confident of winning the 100\nyard dash, the 880 yard run and the\none and two mile events and also has\nstrong hopes of capturing one and perhaps two of the other eyents. America\nis considered superior in the high jump,\nthe broad jump and the hurdles. Both\nare regarded as having an equal chance\nin the quarter mile event and the hammer throw.\nThe games tomorrow will be the\nfourth International contest between\ntbe universities. Of the three previous\nmeets the United States has won two\nand England one. Contrary to most\nsimilar games, only first places count,\neach victory registering one point\nEngland won the first meet held and\nthe Americans the next two.\nFILMS SHOW THAT\nBOTH FOULED. FREELY\nWanted, Everybody to Get Familiar with the\nK. C. Brand\nproducts, which will be noted for purity\nand excellence and manufactured only\nby\nThe Kootenay-Coliuibia Preserving Works\nManufacturers of Jams, Jellies, Bottled Fruits, Etc.\nP.O. Box 192, Tel 166\nNelson, B.C.\nROBERT C. TEVIOTDALE,\nSecretary-Treasurer.\nFor Sale\nThree lots, 9, 11 and 12 acre, partly cleared, at 4-Mile, West Arm.\nOne of the moat beautiful and deWrablo locations on the lake.\nWolverton & Co., Ltd.\nReferee  Jack   Welsh   Did   Not   Fulfil\nDuties\u2014Pontypridd Scrapper After\nWolgast's Scalp.\nSAN FRANCISCA, July 10.\u2014Whether\nAd Wolgast did or did not knock out\nOwen Moran here with a foul blow In\ntbe groin fight fans will soon be able\nto decide for themselves. The pictures\nof the fight, which- have been privately\nexhibited here, are the best taken of\nany recent contest. They show the\nblows in the fatal thirteenth round\nclearly and also establish the fact that\nboth Moran and Wolgast fouled repeatedly from the opening gong. The\npictures will be shown both on the Pacific coast and In the east.\nFreddie Welsh's Bet.\nDenouncing Cheroke Tom Jones, manager of Ad Wolgast, for misrepresenting his attitude on the proposed fight\nof Labor day and hinting broadly that\nWolgast Is trying to \"run out,\" Freddie\nWelsh, the Pontypridd scrapper, today\nIs doing his best here to cinch the\nmeeting,\nJones, before leaving for Los Angeles,\nspread the Impression that the Wolgast\nJJ10.000\u2014the side bet for the Welsh\nfight\u2014was up in the hands of, Stakeholder John T. Clark, but that Welsh\nhad not \"come across.\" Clark today declared that he held $1,000 In cash for\neach party; that the managers had\nagreed that it should go as a forfeit,\nand that the remaining $9,000 of the\nside bet, for which Jones has put up\na cheque, should be posted with him\n30 days before the match.\nNow Jones demands that the Welsh\n$9,000 be put up within 10 days. To accommodate him, Welsh has cabled bis\nCardiff backer, Harry. Marks, for an\nImmediate draft. He says he is determined that Wolgast shall not be alloW'\ned to dodge.\n(Additional Sport on Page 5)\nGood For You\nYou can't have a clear brain,\nactive muscles and firm\nnerves, if your bowels are\nsluggish; but see what a help\nto you will be a few doses of\nSCECHAMS\nPILLS\nSold Everywhere. In boiei Ma\nLACROSSE GAMES\n'  WITH ROSSLAND\nMatch at Golden City Saturday and Return Game Arranged\u2014Practice\nThis Evening.\nEager for a game after a long ah\nsence from matches but in good form\nfrom long practice, the Nelson lacrosse\n'earn will meet Rossland at the Golden\nfifty on Saturday next during the Miners'  Union  celebration.\nManager Blackwood therefore desires\nthat every member of the team will\nturn out for a hard practice work-out\nthis evening at 6.30 o'clock.\nRossland has agreed to n return game\nhere on Wednesday, July 2(1. As there\nhas so far this season been very little\nof Canada's national game in the Kootenays it is expected that both matches\nwill draw a big crowd of fans.\nINITIAL CRICKET\nGAME TOMORROW\nMarried vs. Single Will Clash for Hon'\nors on  Local  Sod\u2014Possible\nI Players,\nTomorrow afternoon at 2.30 o'clock\nthe first cricket match of the season,\nwhich will be In the nature of a preliminary before the annual cricket week,\ncommencing on July 25, will take place.\nThe teams will be Married vs. Single\nand will be selected from:\nMarried: L. Craufurd, J. D.' Kerr, A.\nC. Butler, D. A McFarland, A. B. Bennett, F. Belcher , W. Rhead, F. A.\nStarkey, H. V. Rudd, W. R. Campion,\nA. CornlBh, E. Lupton, E. W. Widdow-\nson, A. Wilkinson, A. Tregillus, W. F.\nMawdsley, B Edwards, J. V. Johnson\nand E. Pownder.\nSingle: J. Irving, W. Brown, G. Wilkinson, J. Banks, S. Jarvls, C. Hacking,\nJ Breson, A. BateB, F. Goucher, H. W.\nGoodall, A, Stubbs,, Harold, Beeson and\nClark.\nSPITBALL THEORY SEEMS\nTO BE EXPLODED\nThe theory that the use of the spit-\nball is harmful to a pitcher's arm seems\nto have been exploded. This claim was\nmade when Jack Chesbro was found to\nbe suffering with a weak arm, yet the\nchances are that his trouble waB from\nan entirely different cause. Surely big\nEd Walsh does not seem to bave been\naffected by the spitter, for he is; still\none of the best pitchera in the circuit\nand relies almost entirely on bis spit-\nball to win bis games. Cy Morgan of\nthe Athletics Is another who uses the\nmoistened delivery, and Morgan has\nbeen pitching for some years and the\nspitter is his strongest forte.\nWith the lively ball in use the pitcher who can prevent' the ball from hitting squarely will get away with his\ngame. The use of the spitter makes\nIt very dlfficut to guage a ball as lt\ncomes toward the plate and It would be\na wise move for the most of the pitchers to adopt this delivery. The time\nwhen a pitcher could rely on his fielders has long since passed, for with the\nnew ball In use when it is hit squarely\nthe fielders cannot reach lt,\nMOTORCYCLE CHAMPIONSHIPS.\nBUFFALO, N. Y., July 10\u2014The palmy\ndays of the League of American Wheelmen, when thousands ot devotees of\nthe old \"high wheel\" were wont to\ngather for their annual national assembly, will be recalled in Buffalo this\nweek by the national meet of the Federation of American Motorcyclists,\nwhich bids fair to become as widespread In Its membership as the old\norganization which flourished a quarter\nof a century ago. The entire week Is\nto be given up to the meet. The arrival of the delegates, nearly all of\nwhom are \"chug-chugging\" their way\nto the convention city, many from\npoints as far distant as Boston and\nChicago, will occupy the first three days\nof the week. Beginning Thursday and\nlasting until Saturday night there\nwill be business sessions, races, parades\nand numerous features of entertainment\nto keep the visitors busy.\nBIG WHIST TOURNEY.\nNIAGARA FALLS, Ont., July 10.\u2014\nWhist players representing the clubs\nthroughout the United States and Canada have gathered nt the Clifton hotel\nhere to take part in the twent-flrst annual congress and tournament of the\nAmerican Whist league. The tournament opened this afternoon with the\nfirst rounds of play for the Brooklyn,\nHamilton club and Minneapolis trophies. The program covers six days\nand calls for whist playing morning,\nafternoon and night.\nTWO CANADIANS WIN.\nLONDON, July 10.\u2014At the HIghgate\nponds on Saturday the King Edward\ncup, presented to the Royal Life Saving\nsociety , was won by E. Flnlay of\nAustralia. In the overseas visitors, 110\nyards, handicap, G. J. Johnson of Canada was first and C. Draper of Canada\nsecond. Johnson won by a yard, the\ntime being 1.30.\nENGLISH CRICKET.\nLONDON, July 10.\u2014Essex beat Leicestershire by 37 runs; Nottinghamshire heat Sussex by 8 wickets; Worcestershire beat Leicestershire by 3\nwickets. Surrey drew with Warwickshire.\nNORTH DAKOTA TENNIS TOURNEY\nGRAND FORKS, N. D., July 10.\u2014The\nannual lawn tennis tournament to decide the North Dakota championships\nopened on the Town Club courts here\ntoday with an entry list that gives\nproiritee o' some koen ccmpc'itlcuc. The\nThe Hudson's Bay Stores\nThe Stores of Satisfaction for Value and Quality\nThe Great Clearance Sale\nNow On.    All Reductions Are Genuine\nOur stock must be reduced prior to taking inventory on the\n31st, on account of the close of our fiscal half-year. So\nprices are cut. And please remembes these are standard\ngoods from our regular stock, not cheap stuff bought for\nsale purposes.\nQuick March Prices in Good Shoes\nMEN'S  PATENT LEATHER BOOTS\nAbout a dozen pairs in the lot size's 6 1-2, 8 1-2,\n9, 9 1-2, and 10 only, Regular 11 to }6. fan rn\nClearing Sale Price u)t. 0 U\nMEN'S BOX CALF BOOTS\nWaterproof Boles, Goodyear welt, sizesi 6 1-2, 9,\n9 1-2 and 10 only. Regular price $6.00. fan r\\C\nClearing Sale Price ipu.yO\nMEN'S BOX CALF BLUCHER CUT BOOTS\nGoodyear Welt, sizes 9 1-2 and 10 only, fa n r-n\nRegular (4.50, and $5. Clearing Sale Prlc {pu.uU\nMEN'S DONGOLA KID BLUCHER BOOTS\nDull topB, Goodyear Welted on a good fitting last.\nSizes 6, 7 1-2, 8 1-2, 9 and 10 1-2 only, fan nn\nRegular (4.50.   Clearing Sale Price ipdiUU\nMEN'S  ALL   PATENT  BLUCHER OXFORDS\nMcPherson make, this season's styles. All sizes\nIn this line. Regular price $5.00. fan j r\nClearing Sale Price..., VDU.T'O\nLADIES' PATENT  BOOTS\nSll-Kid and Empress makes, only about two dozen\npairs in the lot, sizes 2 1-2 to 5 1-2; reg-*n rn\nular ?4, $4.50, J5.   Clearing  Sale Price   Jp^.QU\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 .\n$1.95\nLADIES'CHOCOLATE KID  BLU.  OXFORDS\nNeat round toe and medium heels, made by tbe\nJno. McPherson Co. Sizes 2 1-2 to Gaa ap\nRegular $4.00.    Clearing Sale Price .... y\u00a3aQQ\nSUMMER SHOES\nSplendid reductions on all other lines of these.\n10 per cent off all TRUNKS AND VALISES dur-.\nlng this sale.\nMost Astonishing Values in Chinaware\n100  PIECE  LIMOGES  DINNER SET\nGenuine French Limoge s In the well known Violet .\nPomp Pomp pattern, regular price $60.00.      a a r-\nClearlng Sale Price 3)40\n44 PIECE CHINA TEA SET\nGood quality China, regular price  $18.00. An r\\r\\\nClearing Sale Price vpy.UU\nWHITE AND GOLD CHINA TEA PLATES\n12 doz., regular price $2.50. '    Clearing\nSale  Price\n.$1.25\nFRUIT SETS, 13 PIECES\nA $2.50 set reduced to $1.00\nAnd a $4.50 set to 2.50\n3 PIECE PUDDING SET\nA $3.50 set for $1.40\nCAKE PLATES\nA GOc. plate for  36c\nAnd a $1.25 line Is now only    76c.\nBISCUIT JARS\n$2.75 value for $1.75\nFLAT DISHES\n10-in.,  regular 40c., now., 20c.\n14-in., regular S5c, now    45c.\n12-in.,  regular 60c, now.. 30c.\n16-in. regular $1.15, now 60c.\nAll other China and crockery specially priced during this sale though lack of space does not permit\ndetailed description.\nStock Up Now for Future Needs\nGent's Furnishing Specials Ladies1 Blouses Going Cheap\nMEN'S   SHIRTS\nYou know what good values we always have In\nshirts. We are offering fifty dozen from the best\nmakers in assorted Btyles and patterns fifiP\nusual prices up to $1.75.    Clearing Sale Pry|JO\nMEN'S STOCK TIES\ncollars attached usual price 60c.   Clearing Sale Price\t\nIOC\nYOUTH'S TWEED SUITS r*r^-\u25a0\nLong Pants, sizes 31 to 34, only  six In  the lot.\nUsual  price   $10.00    C learing      Sale\nPrice   \t\n$5.95\n$1.50\nBOY'S TWO PIECE NAVY SERGE SUITS\nNorfolk jackets, sizes 24 to 28, usual\nprice $2.50.   Clearing Sale   Price   \t\nMEN'S STRAW HATS\nYour choice at half price.\nCHILDREN'S   STRAW   HATS\nAll go at half pr'.ce.\nSave 20 Per Cent on Men's Suits\nA complete range to chose from, all up .o die minute in style and pattern. Ail at one fifth off rhe\nregular prices. {$\u00a3\u25a0.\nMuslin, Embroidered Fronts and Shirtwaists\n30 dozen to choose from, colored and white, regular   price   up to $1.25. Clearing        Sale      nr\\r\\\nPrice    yUU\nOthers worth up to $2. Clearing Sale Price. .$1.10\nWhite Linen Skirts and Suits\nLINEN   SKIRTS\nNicely made, trimmed with pear] buttons, 2 dozen\nto select from; usual price  up to $1.50.    ai   in\nClearing Sale Price tplilU\nAnother line, regular price $2, at  $1,40\nLINEN SUITS\n3 only, 2 pink, 1 white, sizes  34,  38, 38 a j   r- r\\\nregular price $8.50. Clearing  Sale  Price Jj)4i!DU\nColored Dress Linens\nAM shades, 36 inches wide,   usual   price      nnn\n35c.    Clearing  Sale  Price    fcUu\nCOLORED REPPS AND COTTON CREPES\nAssorted   colors,   regular     price     25c.      nr>r\\\nClearing Sale Price C\\j[j\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\nplay will continue until tbe end of the\nweek and simultaneously with the state\ntitles will be decided the Red River\nValley championships.\nCENTRAL ROQUE TOURNAMENT.\nPHILADELPHIA, Pa., July 10.\u2014The\nsecond annual tournament of the Central RoQue association opened today at\nthe courts of the Quaker City Rogue\nclub and will continue through the\nweek. The contestants Include many\ndevotees of the sport from varioas\npoints In New York, Pennsylvania, New\nJersey, Maryland, Delaware and the\nDistrict of Columbia.\nNIAGARA FALLS RACE MEETING\nNIAGARA FALLS, Ont., July 10.\u2014\nThe initial meeting of the Niagara Falls\nRacing association opened on the new\none-half mile course here today and\nwill continue for six days.\nSPORTING SPOTLIGHTS.\nA strong soccer team Is being formed\nfrom the city and Poison Iron Works\naggregations to meet the Rossland\neleven on Miners' Union day in the\nGolden city.\nWickwire, who put up such a fine\ngame for Nelson as second baseman at\nTrail on Sunday, Is one the war horses\nof ball In Nelson, having played in\nsenior baseball in Vancouver 10 yeuni\nago. His performance at tbe Smelt >r\ncity Indicates that neither his hand nor\nhis eye has lost nny of their cuimtnz.\nIf Lanz could cut out that soft stuff\nwhich he Bends down occusslonaliy, he'd\nLower\nArrow Lakes\n1440 aores of bench land, west ol Benata, where young orchard land is\nsoiling at J600 per acre. This would m ake a good subdivision and sell well.\nTwo creeks through property and several springs. Soil a rich, deep, sandy\nloam.\nA Chance lor the Right Party at $10 per Acre\nB. C. United Agencies\n Real  Estate and Fruit Lands\n311  Baker St., Nelson. '  15 Armstrong Block, Calgary.\ndevelop Into as fine a pitcher as nil}\nIn the Kootenays. At his 'isst 'ie hus\nthe majority of batters frazzle-], but\nduring those off moments of his n\npublic school boy could swat him over\nthe fence.\nThere is a possibility of a baseball\ngame here between the Maroons and\nTrail this week, while on Monday next\nCranbrook will meet the local nine.\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nMaternity Branch\nPatients are now received at the following rates:\nPrivate ward patients, week $20,00\nSemi-private ward patients, week 15.00\nAddress applications  to matron  at\nhospital.\n PAH POUR\nChe Bail? jleuw.\nJULY 11\nChe \u00a9ailu J&rtDS,\nPublished   at   Nelson   Every   Morning\nExcept Sunday, by\nThe News Publishing Company. Limited\nW. G. FOSTER Manager\nTUESDAY, JULY 11\nLAST   NIGHT'S   MEETING.\nIt is to be hoped that the Liberals\nof Nelson are satisfied with last\nevening's meeting. If they are their\nopponents certainly should be. There\nwas not a single reason advanced why\n, the people of the Kootenays should\nchange their views on reciprocity,\nwhile Mr. Templeman's remarks showed that the fight for a white British\nColumbia is still with us.\nOf the speakers of the evening, It\nmay be said that Mr. Templeman's remarks were neither weighty nor particularly enlightening. He waB given\nan attentive hearing but certainly not\na particularly appreciative hearing.\nOn the other hand Dr. Clarke's address\nwas enjoyed by everyone present, Liberal and Conservative alike, and there\nwere perhaps as many members of the\nlatter party as of the former present\nat the meeting.\nDr. Clarke Is an old country free\ntrade doctrinaire of the most pronounced type. He believes free trade\nhas done great things for Great Britain\nand he believes it will do equally great\nthings for Canada or for any other\ncountry that adopts it. With him free\ntrade is a fetish. That he was in earnest last night no one would deny, but\nthat he is mistaken a large proportion\nof.those present last night.believe as\nfirmly as he does the opposite. Thi^\nhowever, did not prevent one and all\nappreciating his earnestness, while his\nadroit manner of making many of his\narguments and the many flashes of\nhumor were thoroughly enjoyed by\neveryone present.\nWIRE  WOUNDS\nMy mare, a very valuable one, was badly\nbruised and cut by being caught In a wire\nfence. Some of the wounds would not heal,\nalthough i tried many different medicines\nDr. Bell advised me to use 4^.^aHD S\nL.INAMENT, diluted at first, then stronger\nas the sores began to look better, until\nafter three weeks the sores have healed,\nand best of all, the Hair Is Browing well,\nand Is NOT WHITE as is most always the\ncaBe In horse wounds. F. M. Doucet,\nWeymouth. \u2022 -\nSmall\nHouse\nRush Sale\nOwner Leaving\nTown\nThis lour room house Is one\nblock from the car line, has\ncity water and electric light\nand has been quite recently\npainted and thoroughly renovated. Owner leaving town In\na few days must sell. Is lur-\nnlshed and at\n$900\nwe consider It a very good buy.\n$200\nWill Handle It\nand the balance to suit purchaser. Don't delay but look at\nthis today.\nMcQuarrie &\nRobertson\nReal Estate and inturanee\n..-..-If.;   .,.,.\u00ab.     -,.,1-T    .-?'.   , \u00a3'''YVV\n419 Ward St. Nelson.\nEDITORIAL   NOTES.\nDr. Clark last evening annexed all\ntlie credit for the growth of Canada's\ntrade during the past fourteen\nyears for the Laurier government,\nstudiously avoiding the view that the\ncountry's wonderful resources and\nchanged world conditions might have\nany bearing on the matter. But even\ngranting he is right, there were a number of things which he might have explained. Why for example was Canada's trade In 1905 less than in 1004,\nand why were the total imports and\nexports of the Dominion In 1909 nearly\neighty million dollars less than in 190S,\nthe figures in each of these cases being taken from the same authority as\nquoted from Dr. Clarke last evening.\nThe Laurier government was in power\nin both 1005 and 1909 but still, to use\nDr. Clarke's expression in regard to\nother years, Canada's trade grew backward In each of these years.\nIn his speech last evening Dr.\nClarke undertook to deal with Mr.\nGoodeve's figures relating to Canada's\nImports from the United States of\n$223,000,000 during 1909 and quoted a\nfew items in an effort to show that\nthere was nothing to Mr. Goodeve's\ncontentions in this respect, Why did\nnot Dr. Clarke go through the wliole\nlist instead of selecting a few picked\nItems?\nDr. Clarke talked glowingly of what\nfree trade means to a country, but he\nforgot to tell his audience that Great\nBritain under the system which he so\nmuch admires is making far leBs progress In the matter of trade expansion, relatively speaking, than is any\nother nation or country in the civilized\nworld except France and Norway. To\nhave referred to this fact would have\ninterfered with his argument.\nIn his long argument In favor of free\ntrade last evening Dr. Clarke did not\nexplain how reciprocity would benefit\nthe fruit growers of the Kootenay.\nThere was probably a good reason for\nthis In the fact that everyone present\nlaBt evening knew that It will not\ndo so.\nHon. William Templeman was guilty\nof a deliberate and coldblooded falsehood last evening when he Btated on\nthe public platform in the opera house\nthat the Conservative candidate in\nVictoria in the last Dominion general\nelection had forged a telegram from\nMr. R. L. Borden in order to win the\nelection. It waa not any telegram,\nforged or otherwise, but the desire of\nthe people of Victoria to get rid of\nhim that was the cause of Mr.\nTempleman's defeat on that occasion.\nHon. William Templeman told with\ngreat unction last evening that the\nDominion government had not given its\nassent to the Japanese treaty which\ncomes into effect a week from today\nand studiously gave the impression\nthai this was as a matter of policy on\nthe part of tbe government. For Mr.\nTempleman's information The Daily\nNews desires to say that a colleague\nof his has written to the Japanese\ngovernment saying that the present arrangements regarding Immigration are\nsatisfactory and that Canada Is prepared to continue the arrangement.\nThe matter of the treaty has merely\nbeen left over temporarily.\nDespite anything that Mr. Templeman may say to the contrary the fact\nremains that the Japanese government\nfixes the number of Its people who\nshall come to Canada each year. In\nother words control Is in the hands of\nJapan and not of Canada.\nMr. Templeman admits that the\ngovernment is considering the handing\nover of control of Chinese immigration\nto the government of China as has\nalready been done In the case of the\nJapanese.\nLast evening's meeting did not contain much evidence of popular feeling\nin this city or district in favor of reel'\nproclty.\n\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022a**\n\u2022\nFARMERS' INSTITUTE \u2022\nDATES ARE CHANGED c\nFollowing   are    the   revised \u2022\ndates for the Farmers' institute \u2022\nmeetings in this district, which \u2022\nare to be addressed by   J. R. \u2022\nTerry and J. F. Carpenter: \u2022\nPerry     Siding,     Wednesday, \u2022\nJuly 12, at 12.30;   Slocan June- \u2022\ntion, Wednesday,   July   12, at \u2022\n7.30; Thrums, Thursday, July 13, \u2022\nat 1;  Taghum, Thursday, July \u2022\n13, 7.30; Harrop, Friday, July 14, \u2022\n10; Willow point, July 14, Crys- \u2022\ntal hall, 7.30; Boswell, Saturday, e\nJuly 15,   10.30;   Proctor,  Satur- e\nday, July 15, 7.30; Granite Ro.vl, \u2022\nMonday, July 17,  1.30;   Nelson, \u2022\nMonday, July 17, city hall, at *\n8 o'clock. \u2022\nADDRESS MEETING\nGN RECIPROCITY\nCOMMUNICATIONS\nTHE SLOCAN MEETING\nTo the Editor ot The Daily News:\nSir\u2014With reference to the letter signed Aubrey P. Durrant In your issue of\nJuly 10,1 beg to say that the statements\nIn my report of the public hall meeting\nare true In substance and fact, and I decline to enter Into any newspaper cor-,\nrespondence with Mr. Durrani \u2022\" '\n\u00bb.' GERALD ASHBY,\nChairman Public Hall Meeting\nMlnard'a Liniment Cures Diphtheria.\nInsures\nperfect\nBAKING\nRESULTS\nCONTAINS\nNO ALUM\nMagic\nBAKING\nCBVSAMJU.naJ II\nMADE IN\nCANADA\nCOMPANY\nTORONTI\nmimsmsmsmm::: :\u00a3\/m;u:> .tev-HssssEESiaia\nf Continued  from   Pace  One.)\nprovince than in the ease of any other\nindustry. How it is that hitherto all\nthe halibut caught, with the exception\nof a few hundred tons, finds its market\nin the United States? Halibut is caught\nin enormous quantities in our waters\nby American fishermen, but I do not\nthink that lately there have been more\nthan one or two Canadian vessels catching halibut for the Canadian market,\nwhile sailing out of Seattle there are\nvessels large and small\u2014many small\nof course\u2014over two 200, whose cargoes\nall go to tbe American railways. The\nNew England Fish company under an\narrangement with the Canadian government\u2014they were pioneers in the Industry\u2014make their port at Vancouver and\nhave the privilege of shipping their\nproduct in bond over the Canadian Pacific to Boston. Their trade means n\ngood deal to tbe city of Vancouver and\nthe earnings of the C.P.R. from the\nexpress charges on their fish which\nhave averaged for the last ten years\n$300,000 or $400,000 a year. And all the\nfish they caught is about 20,000,000\npounds, but in the city of Seattle there\nare vessels catching three or four times\nthat amount and taking it all to Seattle.\nNo Canadian company catching fish In\nCanadian vessels can send it into tho\nUnited States under the present tariff\nunless they pay one cent per pound\nduty.\nA Voice\u2014They can send lt into Canada can't they?\nYes, my friend, but you must remember In Canada there are some 8,000,000\npeople and In the United States 90,000,-\n000. Also they are not as well off for\nfish as Canada. Now what will the removal of this duty mean to British Columbia? Of course the American ves\u00ab\nsols can continue to fish as they have\ndone heretofore, but it will he unprofitable for them to do so for this reason\n\u2014the distance from Seattle to the hall\nbut banks Is from 500 to 600 miles,\nfrom Prince Rupert it is less than 100\nmiles. A vessel running from Seattle\nwill take two^ or three days to reach\nthe fishing grounds; they can fill up in\na couple of days or less and then it has\nto run back. Canadian vessels can run\nfrom Prince Rupert In a few hours,\nconsequently they can catch several\ncargoes In the time the American ves-\nls taking one. In a few years I\nbelieve Prince Rupert will be the great\nfiBhlng port of Canada, rivalling Grimsby in England. Under these conditions it will be I believe Impossible for\nthe American fishing vessel to compete with ours in the halibut trade;\nconsequently I predict that within a\nyear or two after this pact comes into\neffect there will not be an American\nleft; they will either change\ntheir register and come to British Columbia or the British Columbia fisherman will take over the work of supplying the great American market with\nfish. There are many other similar Industries. For instance at the coast\nwe have a very profitable whaling\ntrade that has grown up -within tbe\nlast few years\u2014we are sending whale\noil to New York at the present time,\nagainst a duty of eight cents a gallon\nand still it is profitable to us. Under\nthis agreement that duty will be removed, therefore those engaged in that\nIndustry will stand to make hundreds\nof thousands of dollars profit when\nit comes Into effect\nThese, ladles and gentlemen, are a\nfew instances of the results of the reciprocity agreement to Canada. Why I\nam astonished that any Conservative\nin Canada should oppose it For 40\nyears past the Conservatives of this\ncountry have been clamoring for this\nvery thing. Resolution after resolution\nhas been passed asking for reciprocity\nIn these very things, every tariff that\nwas introduced that contained a clause\nsetting forth that Canada would remove the duty on those articles Just as\nsoon as the United States would do\nthe same. In the great National policy\ntariff of 1879 there was a standing offer of reciprocal trade with the United\nStates in natural products whenever\nthey were prepared to do the same for\nCanada, How comes lt then that at\nthe eleventh hour they decide to oppose\nlt (they had to caucus themselves several times before deciding it.) They\nare simply seizing It as an exeat* to\ntry to work the country up In order\nto get themselves Into power. They\nare quick change artiste anyway\nYou remember two years ago on the\nnaval question Messrs, Borden and\nFoster on the one side and Sir Wilfrid\nLaurier on the other agreed to a strong\nresolution in favor of a Canadian navy,\nbuilt in Canada, controlled by Canada,\nthe resolution has been quoted hundreds ot times, yet the next session Mr.\nBorden repudiated that resolution altogether and opposed the Canadian navy\npolicy. I submit that no.political party\ncan play fast and loose with great political questions as the Conservative\nparty has done with these two great\nINTEREST  NOT  KEEN   IN\nUNIVERSITY   CONTEST\nLONDON, July 10\u2014Harvard and\nYale will meet Cambridge and Oxford\nin the athletic contests tomorrow on\nthe grounds of the Queens club in West\nKensington. The public Is so excited\nwith coronation events that there is\nfar less interest in the Intervarslty con-\ntest, however, than would otherwise\nbe taken. Members of the Queens club\nhave made application for a large number of tickets and there has been a\nconsiderable sale to the general public\nso with good weather the attendance\nshould be large. The two teams are\nclosely watched and it will not be surprising if the victory was won by a\nsingle point\t\nPend d' Oreille Lands\nHAVE THESE ADVANTAGES\n(1) Soil which experts agree has no peer in B.C.; (2) mildest climate; (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 us\nsome of the best land in the valley and we can offer blocks from 20 to\n0-10 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 816\n412 Ward Street\nNelson, B.C.\nBooks You Should Take1\nWith You On Your\nSummer Vacation\nWe can recommend any of these.   They are all good.\nMEMBERS OF THE FAMILY, by Owen Wisterj (author of the Virginian) $1.26.\nTHE STORY QIRL, by L. M. Montgomery, author of \"Anne of Green\nGables,\" \"Anne of Avonlea,\" and \"Kllmenny of the Orchard.\"  Tbe previous books by thiB author have all been good but thiB is the best\n' Only $1.50.\nADVENTURE, by Jack London, J1.25.\nWHEN GOD LAUGHS, by London, $1.25.\nTHE WOMAN HATERS, by Lincoln, author of \"The Depot Master,\" \"Cy Wbittaker's Place,\" etc., $1.26.\nTHE PRODIGAL JUDGE by Vaughan Kester.   Don't fail to read\nthis one aB it is a dandy.   Get one now, $1.26.\nLook them over.   We have all tne late ones.\nCanada Drug & Book Co. Ltd.\nPhone 81        Nelson's Pioneer Drug Store      P.O. Box 502\nMail Orders a Specialty\nNelson Brand MSttE\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.\nWo 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.\nMore New\nSheet Music\nAnother large consignment just received.\nA selected list representing the best,\nand the most popular of the new popular music, 25c. a sheet.\nCall at Thomson's and look It over.\nThe July records are In and on sale.\nGome in and hear them.\nWe can Bave you money on machines\nand records.   Let us tell you about it.\nW. G. THOMSON\nBookseller and Stationer\nPhone 34\nNelson, B. C.\nquestions and retain the confidence of\nthe people of Canada.   \u2022\nMr. Goodeve's Speean\nNow, I would like to refer for a moment to one or two points in Mr. Goodeve's speech in Nelson and I am hound\nto say I think Mr. Goodeve 1b an adept\nat stating half truthB, that leave a\nwrong Impression on the audience. Now\nhe dealt at considerable length with the\noriental question, that has always been\na live question in BritiBh Columbia\nand politicians like Mr. Goodeve seem\nto find it to their advantage to keep\nit burning. Mr. Goodeve spoke at some\nlength regarding a treaty made between Great Britain and Japan, some\n13 years ago and adhered to by Canada\nI think In 1904. He argued that in\ndoing ao Canada had surrendered control over the Immigration of Japanese\ninto Canada, handed it over to the\nJapanese government Isn't that the\nimpression he conveyed? It certainly\nis if the speech Is correctly reported.\nNow that Is absolutely a misstatement,\na half truth. No lt is not a half-truth,\nIt Is inaccurate In every respect. Let\nme explain. There are two treaties with\nJapan, or at least there Is a\ntreaty, and an agreement. A treaty of\ntrade and commerce made between\nJapan and Great Britain several yea\u2122\nago in whloh among other things lt was\nprovided that the citizens of one country should have the right of free entry\nInto the other, and have the same\nrights and bo on. Then in addition\nthere was a short schedule of reduced\nduties on certain products of each\ncountry going into the other country.\nAfter that treaty had been In force\nsome Blx or seven years Canada became a party to It, having come to the\nconclusion that by not doing so we\nwere under certain disadvantages. This\nis the treaty that expires on the 17th\nof this month, it has been put an end\nto by Japan giving notice to Ores'\nBritain that such 1b her Intention, at*\nprovided for in the treaty.   Since that\ntime Great Britain has negotiated an-\n\u25a0other treaty with Japan which will\ncome into force on the 17th of the present month. Canada has refused to adhere to tliis new treaty so that for the\npresent Canada will not have any of\nthe advantages or disadvantages that\nmight result from it So much then\nfor the treaty of trade and commerce.\nTreaty With Japan\nNow, after the Japanese riots In Vancouver a few years ago the Hon. Mr.\nLemieux went to Japan and made an\nagreement with the authorities there\nwhereby the immigration of Japanese\nInto Canada was never to exceed 400\na year; that has been a binding solemn\nagreement for four years and remains\nso still. But Mr. Goodeve told you\nwe had turned over the control of this\nImmigration to the government of Japan. That statement is false. The\nJapanese government gives emigrants\npassports, that 1b the way they exercise\ncontrol, and lf more than 400 were allowed to come to Canada, Mr. Oliver\nthrough the Immigration officials would\n-turn them back, Japan exercises control by not letting them leave the\ncountry, we exercise control by not\nletting them enter the country if they\ncame. Mr. Goodeve Is'reported to have\nsaid that a Japanese had more right\nto enter here than an Englishman, or\nwords to that effect. Now that la outrageous. The immigration laws are\nenforced of course against the Englishman or the 'American or any other\nnationality: we do not admit the die*\neased or the unfit from any country.\nOriental Immigration\nNow what has been the effect of our\nImmigration policy? It is not very long\nago you had the Natal act passed In,\nthe legislature of this province year\nafter year, only to ee disallowed by\nthe federal government, because! the\ncity of Nelson might Just as well have\npassed such an'act, or an act prohibiting people from coming into this province.   It was known that such an act\nThe Canadian Bank\nof Commerce\nSIR    EDMUND* WALKER,    C.V.O.,\nLL.D,   D.C.L.,   President\nALEXANDER LAIRD, Gen. Manager\nCapital  $10,000,00\nRest       8,000,000\nTravellers' Cheques\nIssued by The Canadian Ban* of Commerce are the most convenient form In\nwhich to carry money when traveUIng.\nThey are negotiable everywhere, self-\nIdentlfylnp, and the exact amount payable In the principal foreign countries\nIs printed on the face of every cheque.\nThe cheques are Issued In denominations of\n$10, $20, $50, $100 and $200.\nand may be obtained on application at\nthe bank. ..    .\nIn connection with Its Travellers'\nCheques The Canadian Bank of commerce, has Issued a booklet entitled\n\"Information of Interest to those about\nto travel,\" which will be sent free te\nanyone applying for It\nNelson Branch, J. 8. Munro, Man\nBank of Montreal\nESTABLISHED 1817\nCapital All Paid-up ......$14,400,000\nRest  $12,ooo,oo<\nHEAD OFFICE:  MONTREAL\nRt. Hon. Lord Strathcona and Mount\nRoyal, G.C.M.G., Hon. President\nR. B. Angus, President\nSir Edward S. Clouston, Bart, Vice-\nPresident and General Manager.\nBranches In British Columbia\nArmstrong, ChilUwack, Cloverdale\nRnderhy, Greenwood, Hosmer, Kelowna\nMerrltt, Nelson, New Denver, Nicola,\nNew Westminster, Penticton, Prince\nRupert, Rossland, Summerland, van\ncouver, Vernon, Victoria.\nNelson Branch, L. B. DeVeber, Man.\nImperial Bank oi\nCanada\nHEAD OFFICE: TORONTO\nCapital Authorized $10,000,000\nCapital  Subscribed. $ 5,913,000\nCapital  Paid-up $ 6,793,000\nReserve Fund $ 5,793,000\nD. R. Wllkle, President\nHon. Robert Jaffray, Vice-President.\nBranches In British Columbia:\nArrowhead, Chase,  Cranbrook,  Fernie,\nGolden, Kamloops, Michel, New Michel,'\nMoyie, Nelson, Revelstoke, Vancouver,\nVictoria and Wilmer.\nSAVINGS DEPARTMENT\nInterest allowed on deposits .t eur\u2014\nrent rate from date of deposit\nNelson Branch: J. M. Lay, Manager.\nThe Royal Bank\nof Canada\nINCORPORATED    1869\nCapital  Paid-up    ....$6,200,000\nReserve and Undivided Profits $ 7,200,00\nTotal Aesete $92,000,000\nHEAD OFFICE:  MONTREAL\nH. S. HOLT, President\nE. L. PEASE, Vice-President and\nGeneral Manager\nOne hundred and sixty-five branches\nin Canada and Newfoundland; 14\nagencies to Cuba and Porto Rico; five\nagencies in British West Indies. London\nEngland, 2Bank Bldgs., Princes Street\nE. 0,i New Tork City, 68 William street\nBusiness accounts carried upon favorable terms. Savings departments at all\nbranches.\nNelson Branch, A. B. Nether by, Man.\nJOHN BURNS & SON JKffi.\nNelson planing Hill, Sash and Door Factory-Factory and Yards 708-12 Vernon Street\nDoors, Sash, Mouldings In Stock and to Order. Coast Lath and Shingles. Turned\nWork and Brackets. Cement Brick and Lime Always In Stock. Automatic Knife\nGrinder\u2014All Kinds of Grinding Done. Store Fronts and Office Fittings, etc., a Soee-\nlalty. Estimates Given on Stone, Brick and All Kinds of Work. Moving and Ralshu\nBuildings and Betting Plate Glass. Guaranteed Against Damage. P. O. Box 1M>\nTelephone 17t\nwas beyond {he authority of the provincial government; your supreme\ncourt bo declared, yet it was passed\nyear alter year, simply to inflame the\nminds of the people against the Dominion government\u2014and no doubt lt succeeded to some extent I think I am\none of the victims of it, when In the\ncity of Victoria the Conservative candidate thought it not beneath him to\nforge the name of R. L, Borden to a\ntelegram saying he was in favor of the\ntotal exclusion of orientals which It. L.\nBorden denounced in the house of commons as a false statement. But what\nhas been the result of this government dealing with vrlental immigration\u2014hasn't lt been to restrain and\nminimize lt? Previous to the last four\nyears of course there was a large Influx of Japanese from the Hawaiian\nIslands, over which the Japanese government had no control. But four\nyears ago the Lemieux agreement was\narranged and that has been rigidly lived up to and I am here to say that we\ncan prove that more Japanese have\nleft Canada than have entered lt during that period.\nA voice\u2014How about Japanese fishermen?\nWell, they are in the country, they\nhave been for a long time, and lots of\ntbem are British subjects.\nHow many?\nI am sorry to say I do not know.\nTake Hindoos. A few years ago they\ncame here In large numbers, they were\ncitizens of the British empire. It was\na hard question to deal with. A member of the government went to England\nand arranged with tbe British government to Influence tbe Indian authorities to minimize or reduce the immigration of Hindoos to Canada. Mr.\nOliver passed what is called, the\n\"Direct passage regulation, by which\nonly those who came In a direct ship\nfrom India could enter Canada.   Tbe\nWe attend te your\nPLUMBING\npromptly \u00bbnd wsU.\nB.C. Pluabiif & Besting Co.\nVictoria Street, near Opera House\nTelephone 181\nresult of these arrangements waB that\nlast year only one Hindoo and no more\ncame to Canada. In respect to\nChinese, the question is a little differ*\nent again. It was the Liberal government who imposed the $500, head tax,\nlf that Is to their credit\u2014some people\nthink that it is not a nice way to deal\neven with Chinese, but let me point\nout that it goes to pay a lot; of your\ntaxes. During the last 12 months the\nDominion government has paid to this\nprovince $1,250,000 as your share of\nthe Chinese bead tax. At $500 a head\nthat would indicate 5,000 Chinese came\ninto our country laBt year. But I do\nnot think that all those Chinamen stay*\n\u00abd in British Columbia; some ot them,\nperhaps most of them, scattered ;Wjat.;\nSome, I Imagine, found the imder-\nground route to the United States.\nHowever, those figures seem to show\nthat the Chinese are coming in in large\nnumbers. Then comes the question, Is\nthe $500 head tax the best thing, or\nwould lt be wiser to make an agreement with the Chinese government\nsimilar to that made with the Japanese\ngovernment, for the restrlctipu .of immigration to Canada. That proposition\n'Was tentatively mentioned by the pre-\n< Continued on Page Five.)\n TUESDAY ;\n3ULY If\nChe Sail? Jlem\nfeif\nBell Trading Co.\nAre You\nGoing\nTo the Picnic,\nWednesday,\nJuly 12\nThe Work of the Picnic Basket Can Be\nCut in Two\nHere are a few ideas In\nReady-to-Eat\nGroceries\nNoel's  Salatine   Meats  In   Glass\nChicken and Tongue  60c.\nTurkey and Tongue  60c.\nCrosse *  Blackwell's\nChicken and Tongue 65c.\nSliced Beef in glass  25c.\nVeal Loaf. 25\u00b0.\nHam Lost 25c.\nBeef Loaf 25c.\nWhole Chicken  . 45c.\nBoneless Chicken 45c.\nJellied Veal 25c\nFANCY RED SALMON\ny, lb, 2 for 25c.\n1 lb. tor 20c.\nNEW   SEASON'S   LOBSTER\ntt lb 30c.\nX  lb. 55c.\nOur two leaders in Sardines, imported in pure olive oil.\nSea Pearl : 2 for 25c.\nBaley {for 25c.\nPORK AND BEANS\nVanCamp's .......'.,15c., 25c,  35c.\nHeinz  i.. 15c, 25c, 35c.\nClark's ...\"  10c, 15c, 25c.\nSAUCE AND CATSUP\nBlue Label  20c and 35c\nHeinz 35c.\nDainty Sweet Gherkins   to   fit\nthe picnic basket\nHolbrook  .25c\nHeins   i. 40c\nStephen's Sour Pickles, 15c, 25c.\nCooling\nDrinks\nBig Wheel 'Lemonade Powder\nper tin   26c.\nSherbert, tin  ..25c\nVictoria   Cross   Pun   Lime\nJuice, bottle 35c\nMonseratt Lime Juice, 45c and 75c'\nGrape Juice, pints 35c, quarts 60c\nDalton'a Lemonade, bottle... .15c\nTomatoes, lb.  ...25c.\nBananas, dozen  40c.\nOranges ..........25c, 35c, 50c\nCherries, basket 15c\nCucumbers ...2 for 36c.\nBiscuits\n,. A splenldd range put up in tt\nlb. packets, 2 for 36c\nChristie's\nPut up in 1 lb. tins, Social Teas,\nElite, Graham, Oatmeal, etc,\nWe. (Jr.\nRaspberries\n25c Basket\nBell Trading\nCo.\nThe Up-to-Date\nGrocers    .\nHOTEL ARRIVALS OF A DAY\nThe Hume\nTable D'Hote and a la Carte\nHume\u2014Mrs. A. M. Weatwood, New York;\nMr. and Wfrs. J. B. Anway, C. B. Wren,\nEdgewood; Mr, and Mrs. W, J. Eastman,\nMrs. Macdonald, Koch's Siding; A. Hey-\nmann, Vancouver; J. Donald, Sheep Creek;\nA. P. McConnell, Winnipeg; W. H. Cush-\nlng, Calgary; T. H. Kent, D. McMillan,\nMacleod; C. M. Hoiaen, Victoria; Mrs.\nW. A; Barrett, Fruitvale; Mr. and Mrs.\nPerTy George, Philadelphia; Mr. and Mrs.\nD. Mcintosh, Trout I>ake; I.\" McCallum,\nGrand Forks; A. C. Mesker, Midway;\nThomas Gough, Granite; Mr. and Mrs.\nH. C. Hall, A. H. Gracey, W. C. Bailey,\nMr. and Mrs. W. Irvine, Master Irvine,\ncity; C. A. S. Atwood, Grand Forks; Major I. W. Evatt, London; w. J. Milne,\nPoplar.\nStrathcona\u2014A. J. Becker, Lucky Jim;\nE. F. Caldwell, Kaslo; C. G. Westhead,\nMrs. Thomas Morley, Sweetgrass; Rev.\nand Mrs. M. F. Hilton, Greenwood; Oscar\nSpltzer, New Tork; J. L. Retallack, Kaslo; Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Crane, Miss F. V.\nBuchanan, Mrs. William Maxwell, Miss\nMargaret Marshall, James Maxwell, Russell Maxwell, London; Mr. and Mrs. E. R.\nVlchery, Taber; Mr. and Mrs. Wealther-\nton, R. A. Richards, F. W. Campbell, C.\nR. McLeid, Ernest Samuels, Winnipeg; J.\nM. Doyle, A. R. Wilkinson, Spokane; W.\nZ. Morley, Richard Whlteman> St. Paul;\nDr. J. T. and Mrs. Ferguson, F, A. Starker, city; Rev. S. H. Phlllimore, Nakusp.\nQueen's Hotel\nBaker Street\nA.   LAPOINTE,  Proprietor\nRates: |1.50 to $2.00 per day.\nHeal Tlcketi, $7.00 per week. '\nBusiness men's lunch, 36e.\nQueens\u2014S. Huffman, O. Frisk, Marcus;\nN. Tomlnga, S. Sonogama, S.' Nuelchird,\nSalmo; P. McCallum, Grand Forks; T.\nWiley, C. Turner, F. A. Jewett, Vancouver; T. B. Narsh, Mrs. Silk and\ndaughter, London; H. B. Landls, Brilliant; R. Barron, Tmir.\nMadden House\nThot. Madden, Prop., Baker St.\nRates: $1.50 to $2.00 per day.\nMeal Tickets, $7.00 per week.\nA Comfortable Home\nMadden\u2014J.   M.   S.   Freull,   Tarrys;   Dr.\nD. N. Ross, Winnipeg; E. T. Roos, Queen's\nBay; W. Cameron, M. Cameron, Slocan;\nP. H. Schomberg, Perry Siding; H. A.\nMcMillan, New Denver; W. Gray, Salmo;\nE. H. Herbert, Fred Wetter, Fruitvale;\nFred Harrison, Marcus; S. T. McKay,\nCreston.\nTremont House\nBaker Street, Nelson.\nRANSOME  e\\ CAMPBELL\nProprietors\nEuropean plan, 50c. up\nAmerican plan, 11.26 and H.M\nMeals 86c.\nALL WHITF LABOR.\nBpecial Rates Per Month\nTremont\u2014C. O'Brien, W. McLaren, Sllverton; H. Proper, M. MoGllvra, Molly\nGibson; J. McKey, Moyie; J. McKay,\nScotland; R. Spencer, Grand Forks; H.\nTangen, Minor Lake; J. Mulholland, Salmo; H. G. Hlgby, Spokane.\nGrand Central Hotel\nOPPOSITE POSTOFFICE\nAme.lcan and European Plana.\nH. H. PITTS, Proprietor\nGrand Central\u2014W. D. Ridge, Harrop;\nG. Long, Sllverton; Mrs. P. Nlckelby, Miss\nH. Nlckelby, Koch's; J. C. Moen, Fern-\ndale; A. McDonald, Ymlr; J, Johnson, A.\nErlckson, J, Kinney, Republic; H. J. Her-\nvln, Salmo; T. Matassa, Erie; W. E. Law-\ndell, Fruitvale; O. Swanaon, Castlegar; A.\nStewart, Creston; R. Matassa, England;\nG. Hooper, F. Simpson, Phoenix; R.\nDewar, Hall's; A. C. Waters, Crescent\nValley; J. Scott, Gerrard; J, Hogberg,\nE. Arbeau, Blueberry; J. Rosstow, Spokane; G. Banbury, Kaslo.\nRoyal-G. 8. Ford, city; M. Cook, Sllverton; L. Meads, Paterson; Miss A.\nJones,  Coal Creek.\nSherbrooke\u2014F. Corrlgan, Kaslo; W. A.\nStock, Midway; W. Jones, Sllverton; N\u00bb\nMclnnls, J. McLaren, Blueberry; A.\nBollean, G. McLeod, W. UlUer, Plneher\nCreek; J. Dtarln, Ainsworth.\nBest on the\nContinent\nThat Is what authorities say regarding the medicinal qualities of\nthe water at Halcyon Hot Springs\nThe Sanitarium is now under\nnew management and has been remodelled from top to bottom and\n.now offers every facility for the\ncomfort and convenience of patrons.\nRates $12 and $15 per week or\n$2 per day and upwards.\nHalcyon Hot Springs\nSanitarium\nWM. BOYD, Proprietor\nHalcyon, Arrow Lakes, B. C.\nSt. Leon\nNot Springs\nHotel\nARROW  LAKE\nThis splendid hotel is now under\nnew management and guests aro\nassured every comfort.\nRates: $2 per day; $12 per week.\nH. COUSINS, Proprietor.\nUnion Men, when in Nelon\nLakeview Hotel\nCor. Hall and Vernon Streets.\nNAP. MALLETTE, Prop.\nWhite Union Help Employed\nOnly\nSilver King Hotel\nBaker St.\nUnder new management\nWell furnished rooms; $1 a\nday and up.   Best 25c. meal In\nNelson.\nBest brands of liquors and\ncigars served by union men.\nN. McLEOD, Proprietor\nSliver King\u2014L. Davis, C. Norsum, J.\nLellwyan, Molly Gibson; M. Chamberlain,\nShieds; K. Munro, Tunnel; C. Crossley\nR. Toung, city; W. H. Campbell, Lardo.,\nKlondyke Hotel\nVernon Street.\nStrictly   Union   House\nHeadquarters for miners, smel-\ntermen, loggers, railroad men.\nRates: $1.00 per day up.\nNELSON  & JOHNSON, Props.\nKlondyke-O.\nGreenwood; A,\nNordman,      E.      Quist,\nAlmqulst, M. Miller.\nNelson Cafe\nLarge and Commodious Dining\nRoom\nPrompt and Courteous Service.\nMeals Served at all Hours\nElegantly furnished rooms in\nconnection; $1.00 a day and up.\nA. AUOET, Proprietor\nNelson\u2014H. W. McNamara, A. Krohn,\nolty; A. J. Blaney, Slocan; J. Bradshaw,\nA. S. Clute, Vancouver; H. Bridge, Michel;\nH. Hedberg, J. O'Connor, Marcujs; D.\nWilliams, J. J. Polick, D. F. Wilson, G. M.\nSperam, Marcus;  Heren, Kaslo.\nKootenay Hotel\nTwo doors from postoffice\nVernon Btreet.\nRates tl.OO and $1.26 per day.\nEvery convenience given to tbe\ntravelling public    Electric piano,\nand   Union   bar'    In   connection,\nwhere tho best wines and liquors\nare kept\nMRS. MALLETT, Proprietress.\nKootenay\u2014C. Llnder, J. Sedland, T.\nTroupe, Banks and wife, Bucknert and\nwife, E. Phelps, M. Brown, R. William,\nK. Moody, Midway; P. Davis, W. Harey,\nGrand Forks; J. Capponl, J. Wilson, Hall;\nJ. Hanson, city; J. SahlU, J. Elliott, J.\nBrown, Greenwood.\nManhattan Saloon\nHas been renovated throughout,\nand the bar ts at all times stocked\nwith the best wines, liquors and\ncigars.   Large glass of beer 10 eta.\nWe have comfortable, well furnished sleeping rooms in connection, by day, week or month.\nBARTON ft McKAT, Proprietors.\nMURDER\u2014NOT SUICIDE\nWINNIPEG, July 10\u2014It Is now rumored that William Eddleston, who was\nreported to have committed suicide on\nJune 1, was carried bound and gagged\nin an auto to a, point south of the city\nwhew be was murdered. The rumor\ngained credence through stories ot child\nwitnesses who saw the auto and the\nman struggling In it The police w*\nInvestigating.\nADDRESS MEETING\nON RECIPROCITY\n(Continued from Page Four.)\nmier, and then Mr. Goodeve, the other\nnight, made all kinds of charges to the\neffect that we were going to hand over\nthe control of Japanese immigration\nto the Japanese, and the same thing\nwith China. I say that matter waa not\nrepresented to the people of Nelson\nfairly by Mr. Goodeve.\nNothing New.\nNow some friends In this city today\nasked me a question In reference to\nmy department, concerning the matter\nof zinc. Well, I have not very much\nto say at present on that subject that\nis specially new. I have some knowledge of the zinc question, and also of\nlead. Some years ago we gave a\nbounty on the production of lead which\nhas still a year or two to run. But\nwhat to do with our zinc ores has been\na question with the miners of this\ncountry for years. At the request of\nthe people of this city we took up the\nquestion of electrical smelting of zinc\nore. I had $50,0000 set aside for carrying on experiments, and those experiments are still going on. I secured the\nservices of W. R. Ingalls of New York\nwho is said to be the greatest expert\nin zinc on this continent. We also submitted certain problems to be solved\nin the laboratory of McGlll university\nby Prof. Stansffeld, a young electrical\nengineer, who has made great progress\nIn the study of such problems, and the\nreport of Dr. Haanel is that these experiments are meeting with considerable success, and he hopes at an early\ndate to be able to make a report\nthat will satisfy the mining interests\nand that something definite will be\nachieved. PJowever, I am frank to say\nthat trying to discover a new process\nof zinc smelting is something that no\none can say is certain to succeed.\nIt has been suggested, why didn't we\nnegotiate an agreement with the United\nStates for free admission of our zinc ore.\nNowthat Is something I am fully in favor\nof, until such time as we are able to\nsmelt lt successfully in Canada. Let me\ntake you Into my confidence and say this,\nthat Mr. Fielding at my request pressed\nthat very point on the American representatives but was unable to get them to\nagree to admit zinc ores and lead, the\nInterests on the - other side were too\nstrong. So we are still trying to discover\na method of smetlng our own zinc, ores,\nand I hope we shall succeed, we Khali\nkeep on till the whole $50,000 is spent anyway, and we have not spent very much\nof it yet\nAnother local question; when the premier\nwas here last year a delegation from the\nboards of trade here and from various\npoints on the Columbia river south of\nthe boundary met him in your court\nhouse and submitted, a proposition to make\nthe Columbia river navigable from the\nmouth to Revelstoke ' Or beyond. They\nasked as a preliminary step that Canada\nshould make a survey \"of the river from\nthe International boundary north, and the\npremier promised that that should be\ndone. I have to say also that It will be\ndone, there Is a sum of $6,000 in the estimates for the put-pose of ascertaining If\nIt can be made navigable, and the cost.\nBut It seems to me that If there are\nay people In this neighborhood opposed to\nreciprocity they must be against that\nscheme; why should we make the Columbia navigable If you don't want to trade\nnorth and south? We should throw obstacles In the way, not remove them. I\nthink, however, that leaving party feeling\naside, the people of this district are opposed to that fair reciprocal arrangement, at any rate if we have an election\nand if you will just vote on that simple\nIssue, leaving out any side Issues that\nmay arise, I feel sure that reciprocity will\ncarry the matter by a very large majority. ,      H.M-U n.\"\nDr. Clarke's Address.\nDr. Clark opened his speech by dwelling upon the way in which the reciprocity\nquestion was dominating the mind of the\npeople of Canada. It was a great advantage, he said, for there to be such a\nclean-cut Issue between the two parties.\nAttacking the speech delivered on the\nsame stage a few weeks ago by Mr.\nGoodeve, the member for Red Deer, he\nstated that Mr. Goodeve had sold that the\nprosperity of Canada dated from the year\n1878' with1 the Conservative government\nIn power, whereas he could prove by\nfigures that the real growth in the wealth\nof the Dominion had commenced in 1896,\nwith the advent of the Laurier government\nThe four greatest nations of modern\ntimes were the United Kingdom, Germany, the United States and France,\nwhich were also the countries with the\ngreatest international foreign commerce,\nwhich he considered the true test of\nprosperity. In 1883, said Dr. Clark, when\nthe \"National\" policy had existed for five\nyears, Canada's foreign commerce totalled $230,000,000; 10 years later, when the\nsame policy bad ruled for 15 years, the\nfigures had only risen to $217,00,000; In\n1894 the total hod dropped to $240,000,000,\nand In the following year, 1896, fell still\nfurther, to $234,000,000, \u00ab,0O0,00O less than\nin 1883.\nSave Country's Prosperity He Says.\nIn 1896, continued Dr. Clark, began the\nreal prosperity of the Dominion. In 1886\nthere was a decrease both in the number of new settlers and In the number of\nhomesteads taken; Canada was doing\nbusiness In the back lanes of the world.\nBut after the change of government the\nforeign commerce rose in 1899 to $321,000,-\n000, and, Increasing year by year, In 1910\nnearly reached 1800,000,000. All the steps\ntaken by rttfio Laurier government toward tbe prosperity of the country, he\nsaid, had been opposed tooth and nail by\nthe Conservatives, the hereditary opponents of progress. He would ask his audience to trust a government which had\ngiven Canada prosperity.\nNational Question.\n..Reciprocity, continued the member for\nRed Deer, waa a national and not a local\nquestion.    Blake had  said that  Canada\nneeded men, money and markets, and the\nDominion felt the same need today. Clifford Slfton had devoted ihis attention\nwhile minister of the interior largely to\n.attracting immlgrajnts from the United\nStates. Hon. Frank Olive*, on the other\nhand, was directing the energies of his\ndepartment toward the British settler.\nThe two nations formed a good mixture,\nsaid Dr. Clark, and would produce good\ncitizens for Canada \"with the same flag\nflying above us as now.\"\nMr. Sifton had brought In the immigrants and Sir Wilfrid had brought In the\nBritish preference In order to obtain a\nmarket for Canada's products. The Conservatives had opposed it, but it was ratified and the Canadian farmer had been\ngiven a market for his produce In Britain.\nReciprocity would not harm the British\npreference. When the pact had been ratified by the house, no it would be, and\nwhen it had increased the trade of the\n\u25a0Dominion, as he believed it would, Great\nBritain would still bo on the spot and do\nas big a business with both Canada and\nthe United States.\nSurplus  of  Wealth.\nIn the prairies there were, said the\nspeaker, 300,000,000 acres of splendid table\nland of which only 20,000,000 acres were under cultivation. In British Columbia even\nthe fringe of the natural resources had\nnot been touched. He asked his audience\nwhat they * were going to do with the\nenormous surplus of wealth which would\nbe produced In the prairies and this\nprovince. They must sell It not only in\nthis country, but to foreign nations. The\nBritish market was limited, whereas J. J.\nHill and other well-known public men\nhad stated that In 1916 the United States\nwould be importing foodstuffs. He argued\nthat it was the duty of Canada to get on\nthe ground floor of this great market It\nwas a matter of plain common sense, he\nsaid.\nMr. Goodeve had made a most curious\nstatement when he had said that the\nAmerican market was a myth and had\nquoted figures showing that the Importations to Canada were $223,000,000, while the\nexports were only $112,000,000. Part of\nthis excess In the imports from the United\nStates was In coal, which amounted to\n$27,000,000. Mr. Borden had told the\nprairie farmers that $29,000,000 worth of\nfarm products was being imported into\nCanada from the United States. An\nanalysis of this amount would Bhow, he\nsaid, that $3,250,000 was for raw leaf tobacco; $4,600,000 was for Indian corn; $1.-\n000,000 for raw silk; $2,000,000 for oranges,\nlemons and limes, and $1,600,000 for bananas, all products which were not raised\nIn the prairies. They were all goods which\nwere not In competition with those raised\nby the Canadian former.\nLower Protective Walls.\nHe said that the attitude of Great Britain was In favor of the free trade, which,\nhe claimed, had built up the empire, and\nthat the feeling In the United States was\nstrongly In favor of lowering the tariff\nwalls. He said that this was Indicated by\nthe landslide which occurred In the elections last fall and pointed to the two\ncountries as examples to be followed by\nthe Canadian lawmaker and voter.\nThe cry from every country where protection existed, said the member for Red\nDeer, was the high cost of living. It\nwas a syBtem which only made the rich\nricher and the poor poorer; the only\nthing it manufactured was millionaires.\nHe ridiculed the idea of annexation and\nsaid with regard to the lines of railway\nIn the country being deflected from east\nand weBt to north and south that railways\nshould run in all directions, north and\nsouth and east and west and obliquely.\nNEW OFFICERS\nARE INSTALLED\nAncient   Order  of   Foresters   Present\nPast Chief Ranger McDonald With\nCertificate and  Ribbon\nA very pleasant evening was spent yesterday at he meeting of the Ancient Order\nof Foresters, when the following officers\nwere installed for the ensuing term:\nP. C. R., Charles R. McDonald; C. R\u201e\nS. H. Ratclffe; S. C. R., E. Litchfield;\ntreasurer, F. Deacon; secretary, I. A. McCarthy; 8. W., S. L. Marshall; I. W., F.\nA. Martin; S. B., M. O. Rich; J. B., A.\nMclnnls.\nOn a certificate and ribbon being presented to retiring Chief Ranger Brother\nMcDonald, a most hearty vote of thanks\nwas extended him for the efficient manner in which he had discharged the duties\nof his office. In the course of his reply\nMr. McDonald dealt enllghtenlngly with\nthe history of Ancient Forestry, which,\npropounded to the members present In his\nable manner, proved most interesting.\nSS Meagher & Co. K\u00a3\nCome and Have\nYour Corsets Fitted\nby an Expert\nMadame Dougherty, who is conceded\nto be one of the greatest authorities in\nAmerica on the little secret arts of\nbeautifying the form feminine, will\ngive a series of demonstrations of the\nfamous W.B. Corsets at our store every\nday this week, commencing today. We\ninvite all our friends and visitors to the\nstore to come and share these beauty\nsecrets and consult Madame Dougherty\nas to their corsets or other feminine\nneeds.\nThe W.B. models shown are absolutely\nthe daintiest examples of corset craft\nthat we have ever seen, and we are\nsure that our friends will be delighted\nwith their dainty, shapely beauty.\nThey work wonders in perfecting\nfigures that require improvement, and\nare the equal of any custom made\ncorset.\nthat treaty passes, the Canadian parliament, or whether it fails to pass, the\nmischief is done, and our great Dominion statesmen have begun to lealize\nhow extraordinarily they are hampered\nand how they are going to be hampered\nin all their external relations. Even\nnow if the reciprocity treaty were\nthrown out and if the mother country\nsaw some way to that kind of an arrangement, which Mr. Chamberlain so\nardently desired, it would be possible\nto carry out to the full the advantages\nhe foresaw and to avoid all the perils\nwhich beset any course rigidly and uncompromisingly directed upon the old\nline of so-called orthodox free trade\nany an old system, which must go.\"\nMAKES FREE TRADE\nIMPOSSIBLE\n'A. J. Balfour Refers to Canadian Reciprocity Treaty\u2014Mlsohief Is Done\n\u2014Birthday Celebration.\nLONDON, July 10.\u2014Rt. Hon. A. J.\nBalfour, speaking at a dinner last\nnight given in honor ot the birthday\nof Rt Hon. Joseph Chamberlain, said\nthat everything that had happened in\nCanada, everything that waB happening\nat the present time, and everything\nthat was going to happen with regard\nto the great complex International\ntreaties was going to cause Incomparable trouble to. the British foreign\noffice in the future, and the abrogation\nof these treaties, he affirmed, was go\nlng to make Britain's free trade policy\ntotally Impossible.\n\"I don't say,\" asserted Mr. Balfour,\n\"that this was foreseen by Mr. Chamberlain, aB it could not possibly have\nbeen foreseen by anyone, but If the\npolicy which he advocated had been\nadopted In time, and If we, as a nation,\nhnd understood our opportunities pnd\nhad realised then a policy of imperial\npreference would bave saved us from\nthese complications.\n\"What happens to the reciprocity\ntreaty In Canada,\" continued Mr. Bat-\nfour, \"please remember that whether\nNORTHWESTERN LEAGUE.\nClub\u2014             \"'\" \u25a0' H       \"Won. Lost. Pet.\nSpokane    62 M .m\nVancouver    60 35 .6S8\nTacoma   60 34 .595\nPortland     40 \u00ab .487\nSeattle     38 42 .476\nVictoria     20 63 ,247\nAt Vancouver\u2014 R. H, E.\nVancouver    4     8     4\nTacoma .w. 7   II    1\nBatteries\u2014Clark and Lewis; Schmltz an\nHall and Burns.\nAt   Spokane\u2014 R. H. E.\nSpokane    \u00ab   10     3\nPortland    1     2     8\nBatteries\u2014Holm and Splesman; Tonnes-\nman and Harris.\nAt Seattle- R. H. E.\nSeattle    0     3     2\nVlotoria   2     7     1\nBatteries\u2014Fullerton and Shea; McCreary\nand Devoght,\nTWO WOMEN INCLUDED\nIN SPOKANE DELEGATION\nSPOKANE, Wash., July 11.\u2014Spokane's delegation of 10 representatives\nand five senators In the state legislature ot 1913 will include two women, if\nthe plans outlined today by officers\nof the Women's Non-partlzan Political\nleague and the Political Equality league\nof Washington is successful. The candidates probably will be Mrs. A. P.\nFassett, president of the first named or-\nganlzatlon, and Mrs.  May  Arkwrlght\nHutton, wife of a millionaire mining\noperator, who gave material assistance\nin securing the ballot for the women\nof Washington at the last state election.\nMrs. Fassett announced that members\nof the organization have studied the\nlaws of the state and will make their\ncampaign on issues affecting woman's\nstatus and juvenile legislation. Mrs.\nFassett added it is too early to make\na definite announcement of her candidacy, but said that the state Federation\nof Women's clubs at a recent meeting\nendorsed the plan to support women\ncandidates as state representatives\nduring the coming campaign.\nHUDSON'S BAY STORE TO\nCOST MILIpN. ANp HALF\nVANCOUVER, B. C, July 10.-ThB neflf\nstore that the Hudson's Bay company will\nerect in Vancouver will cost 11,600,000 and\nwill occupy the remaining half of their\npresent block on Granville and Georgia\nBtreeta. It will be tho largest store west\nof Winnipeg.\nTOWN OF KELSO  WIPED\nOUT BY FIRE\nTORONTO, July 10.\u2014Serious bush\nfirea are still working havoc among\nthe towns of northern Ontario. Yesterday two buildings were destroyed\nat Pottsville, near Porcupine. Ttiis\nafternoon the town of Kelso, on the\nTemiskaraing railway, was practically\nwiped out by fire. There was a loss\nof about 1250,000.\nORANGEMEN WILL CELEBRATE\nCALGARY, Alta., July 10\u2014This year\nthe Twelfth of July will be celebrated\nby the Orangemen of tho province at\nRed Deer, when trains will run from\nCalgary and other points to that place.\nAn elaborate program wilt be observed.\nIt Is estimated that 1,000 persons will\ngo from Calgary along.\t\nDr. Matters Female Pills\nEIGHTEEN YEARS THE STANDARt\nPrescribed and recommended for wo\nmen's ailments, a scientifically prepar\ned remedy of proven worth. The re\nsuit from their use Is quick and per\nmanent   For sale at all drug stores.\nExtra Good Buys\nIN THE BLOOAN VALLEY-\n1M sores choice land suitable lor mixed farming; IS sows cleared and\nseeded to timothy hay; 80 to 100 acres 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 .consisting of Plough, tooth and disc harrow, mowing machine, seeder and other\n\"\"^iSLSS!' .viJJ. 'Ki60 p\"r a\u00b0If' ,160\u00b0 cn8h' balance one and two years \u00ab P.C\nHOWSER LAKE-100 acres adjoining Howser townsite. Good land, tjo\nper acre.   Terms.\n107 aores, In good locality.   A re.i good buy.J 12.60 per acre.   Terms.\nFruit and Farm Lands ~~\nCity Property\nSOS BAKER ST.\n ,.       ._    --\u00bb,    BWWU     UU,1|,    14,.uu    JIU\nD.St. Denis\nInsurance\nTimber and Mines\nP.O. Box 497\nNELSON, B.C.\n C*e ^atty #etos.\nTUESDAY   JULY  11\nWestern Canada Investment Co.\nReal Estate, Fire Insurance and Investment Brokers\nJ. E. TAYLOR, Manager.\nALEX. CHEYNE, Secretary.\nOffice Baker St. Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 254 P.O. Drawer 1042\nANNUAL REPORT OF\nBUREAU OF MINES\nNet Increase in Value of Output Nearly\nTwo Million Dollars\u2014Coal\nNotable.\nThe annual report of the minister\nof mines for British Columbia for the\ncalendar year ending December 31,\n11)10, which is the official account of\nthe years mining operations in the\nprovince, is issued. As usual, it is\ncomprehensive, systematically arranged\nand very well illustrated.\nIn particular many engaged in, or\notherwise concerned about mining in\nBritish Columbia are well pleased to\nhave thus placed at their disposal the\nprovincial mineralogist's annual survey of the condition and progress of\nthe industry, based partly on the personal observations of that official and\npartly upon the reports sent in to the\nbureau of mines by gold commissioners and mining recorders, together\nwith the important addition of statistical and other Information derived\nfrom returns supplied by the bureau\nby owners or other operators of mines\nand smelteries in the province.\nThe statistics of production, carefully complied from the most reliable\ndata obtainable and presented in tabulated form so as to clearly exhibit the\nposition from a comparative point of\nview, are of much practical value to\nthose using the Information thus made\nconveniently accessible. Prom some of\nthese it la ascertained that the net Increase in value of the production of\n1910 as compared with that of 1909 Is\n$1,934,041, the respective totals for the\ntwo years being $26,377,066 and $24,443,-\n025. Incidentally, it may here be mentioned that last year's total value was\nthe greatest of any year in the history\nof mining in British Columbia, the previous highest record having been that\nfor 1907, with a total of $25,882,260. The\nproportions of the several minerals in\neluded in last year's total of production, and the respective increases and\ndecreases, are shown in the following\nexcerpt from one of the tables:\nMineral. Value.   Inc. or Dec.\nGold,  placer  J    540,000    I.   S    63,0W\nGold,   lode       5,533,380    I.       609,290\nSilver       1,245,016    I. 5,746\nLead       1.386,350   D.       322,909\nCopper     4871,612  D.    1,047,010\nZinc           192,473   D.        207,527\nCoal      9,800,161    I.    2,177,496\nCoke       1,308,174   D.       244,044\nOther   materlala    1,500,000    I.       300,000\nTills production added to that of all\nprevious years brings the aggregate\nvalue of the mineral production of the\nprovince to the beginning of 1011 up\n$374,197,050. The proportions of\nthe various minerals are shown In the\nnext following table:\nGold,   placer    $  71,218,103\nGold,   lode       Ct).811,0G7\nTotal   gold     $182,024,170\nSilver     31,1195,170\nLead      24,045,608\nCopper    C0,74J,40o\nCoal and Coke  114,012,596\nBuilding stone,  bricks,  etc  10,59:1,100\nOther  metals,   zinc,   etc  1,083,172\nTotal  product  J26,377,066\nNet Increase    $1,9\nAggregate value   $374,197,650\nIn regard to the statistical tables\u2014\nan addition has been made to that\nshowing in detail the production of\nthe metalliferous mines, etc., separate colums having been included for\nzinc and miscellaneous minerals, respectively, so that this elaborate table\nnow shows details for the four last\nyears of all minerals produced except\ncoal and coke.\nOnly one more reference to the\nstatistical tables will now be made,\nnamely, to that comparing graphically\nthe out put of certain mineral products\nin British Columbia to that of simlllar\nproducts of in all other provinces in the\ndominion. ThiB shows that in regard\nto gold, silver, lead, copper, Iron, and\ncoal and coke, this province produced\nIn 1910 an amount equal to more than\n64 per cent of that of all the other provinces combined. It should be noted\nthat the Yukon is not included In this\ncomparison, and that not all the minerals produced, but only those above\nnarrated. and comprises In the\ntotals compared. The respective totals\nfor those minerals are as follows: British Columbia, $24,684,593; Yukon, $4,-\n550,000; all other provinces, $38,551,838.\nLarge Increase In Coal.\nThe most notlcable feature in the\nmineral production of the year was\nthe large increase in coal. The gross\noutput, \u2022 that Is including the coal\nmade into coke, was 3,139,235 tons\n(of 2,240 pounds). ThiB is the greatest production of this mineral made\nin the history of coal mining in the\nprovince. After deduction of 339,189\ntons made into coke, the net output\nof coat was 2,800,046 tons, which is\nan increase of nearly 800,000 tonB\nover that of the year 1909. As the\ngreatest net increase made in any\nprevious year was about 328,000 tons,\nwhich waB in 1909 as compared with\n1908, It Is very evident that a big advance was made last year. Before\nturning to other matters it will here be\nnoted that included In the full informa-\nWhan Company Drops In\nyou don't have \"to turn tbe house\nupside down\" to make something cool\nto drink\u2014if you have\nDalfon's\n\u25a0 CONCENTRATED      -\nLemonade\nin the house. Just add iced water and\nserve. It's a pure lemon product and\ncontains no other aold.\nA bottle makes 12 glasses and costs\nonly 15c.   Keep it handy.\nuw\nAt all Grocers and Druggists.\ntion given in tabulated form, showing\n(1) the output and the per capita production of -coal in several districts\nduring the last four years, and (2) analyses of accidents in coal mines in different districts during 1910. These\ntables give interesting data, especially\nvaluable for purposes of comparison.\nOther Noticeable Features.\nThe special reports included in the\nreport are those of the provincial mineralogist on Portland canal, Lillooet\nand Tatlayoko districts, and of the pro\nvincial assayer on part of Atlin mining\ndivision, Bella Coola and Valdez Island. Those on Lillooet and Tatlayoko\ndistricts are of more than ordinary interest since there has not heretofore\nbeen available much, If any, official\nInformation relative to them. These\ndescriptive articles are rendered more\ninteresting and valuable by reason of\ntheir being freely illustrated with some\nexcellent and representative views.\nThe reports of the various branches\nof work done by or under the bureau\nof mines also deserve favorable notice. These Include the practical work\nof the provincial assay office, that\nof the boards of examiners of assayers\nand coal mine officials, and of the chief\nInspector of mines and the several\ndistrict Inspectors under him. Especially is the information relative to mine-\nrescue apparatus provided, and mine-\nrescue training work. done, of deep\nInterest, to those concerned In the protection of the lives of coal miners.\nThe comprehensive nature and markedly advantageous arrangement of the\nlarge amount of information contained\nIn the report as a whole, reflect credit\nupon the provincial mineralogist, upon\nwhom devolved the work of preparing\nit for the printer and supervising Ita\npublication.\nNumerous Excellent Illustrations.\nThe varied Illustrations\u2014graphic\ntables, diagrams, maps and half-tone reproductions of photographB\u2014add materially to the general excellence of the\nreport, which has been well printed at\nthe provincial government printing office. Too much praise can scarcely be\naccorded for tbe artistic finish of the\nhalf-tones in printing which W. H.\nClark, foreman of the pressroom, has\nwell maintained his reputation for high-\nclass work. Most of the photographs\nreproduced were taken either by W. F.\nRobertson, provincial mineralogist, or\nhis assistant, Harold T. Nation. The\nsketch maps reproduced were complied\nand drawn by .Mr. Nation. While necessarily not strictly accurate In detail they\nwill doubtless prove very useful for the\nchief purpose for which they were prepared, namely, as a guide to prospectors\nand others going into the districts they\ncover. The zinc line blocks of cuts of\nthese maps used were made locally;\nthey are photo reductions of large\ntracings, and possess a new feature for\nthis class of work, having contours\nshown In colors, this being the first of\nthis kind of work done in British Columbia.\nThere are other praiseworthy features\nbut enough has been stated to make it\nclear that the 1910 annual report of the\nminister of mines for British Columbia\nis a decidedly useful and creditable\npublication, and It Is distinctive in that\nIt gives particulars of the largest total\nvalue of the mineral production in any\none year in the history of mining in\nBritish Columbia.\nElectric\nIrons\nWe quickly sold out the previous lot of theso but are expecting a new lot In any day now.\nThis is a special make which we\ncan sell at\n$5.00 Cash\nGuaranteed for two years.\nLeave your orders early.\nJ.H.RINGROSE\nElectric.]    Supplies\nPhone A227 P.O. Box 155\nStanley St. Nelson, B.C.\nNOTICE,\nIn the matter of an application for tbe\nIssue of a duplicate certificate of title\nto lot 8029, Group 1,  Kootenay district.\nNotice 1b hereby given that lt is my\nintention to issue at the expiration of one\nmonth after the first publication hereor\na. duplicate of the certificate of title to\nthe above mentioned lot In the name ot\nJohn E. Annable and Allan A. Burton\nwhich certificate Is dated 27th May, 190S\nand  numbered  6714A.\nSAMUEL  R.   ROE,\nDistrict  Registrar.\nLand Registry Office, Nelson, B.C., June\n29th,   1011.\nthe city. The annual session of the imperial council of the Mystic Shrine\ntakes place here this week and the\nmembers are arriving on every train,\nFrom all parts of the east, from the\nPacific coast, from Canada and from\nTexas and other parts of tho south the\ndelegations are arriving in large numbers. From every place of business\nand from all public buildings floats the\nStars and Stripes while bunting of red,\nyellow and green\u2014the colors of the\norder, are lavishly displayed. The electrical decorations are of the most distinctive and elaborate character.\nThe formal opening of the gathering\nwill take place tomorrow morning in\nConvention hall. The parade of the visiting temples tomorrow night promises\nto bo the greatest the city has ever\nwitnessed. Wednesday morning will be\ngiven over to visits to places of Interest about the city and in the afternoon\nthe review and the competitive drills\nwill be held. In the evening a magnl-\nficen water carnival will be held.\nHELP WANTED.\nNELSON EMPLOYMENT AGENCY\nC. F. Hutton, Manager\nHELP OF ALL KINDS\nPROMPTLY FURNISHED.\nTHE WORKINGMEN'8 EMPLOYMEN'\nAND   REAL  E8TATE  AGENCY.\nWANTBD^Teamster,  waitresses,  jSPwop\nhousekeepers,     530;     girls    for    general\nhhousework, $25: a good tie job In Bight.\nTV   Parker, 312 Baker street.   Phone 2S3.\nB. C. UNITED AGENCIES\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 Poole Drug Store.\nEntrance:  Josephine Street.\nFORT GEORGE  LAND CO.\nReal Estate Employment Office\n218 Bilker Street, Nelson.\nP.   O.   Box  8SS. Phone  134.\nBusiness Directory\nAUCTIONEERS\n<T\"a. ^TBRMA^r&^O^ToT^an\nW. CUTLER, LICENSED AUCTIONEER.\nAuction rooms and warehouse Ward St.,\nnext opera house.   Box 474, Phone 18.\n20-tf.\nCOLLECTION AGENCIES\nW?^CUTLEr7'cc1jl^\nkinds.    Returns promptly  made.    Ward\nstreet, next opera house. 20-tf.\nWANTED\u2014\"WBCIELLAN^OJJB^^\nWANTED\u2014Salesmen Hoi Salesmen want\ned to sell the most complete line of\nnursery stock in the Northwest. Cash\nweekly, capital City Nursery Company,\nSalem, Oregon. 272-tf.\nWANTED\u2014Salesman, exclusive territory.\nComplete tine Yakima Valley grown fruit\nand ornamental stock. Steady position.\nCash weekly. \u2022 Outfit free. Toppenlsh\nNursery company, Toppenlsh, Waaiv 51-tf.\nWANTED\u2014Salesman to sell our complete\nline of guaranteed nursery stock; good\nterritory;   terms  liberal.     Yakima   Valley\nNursery company, ToppenlBh, Wash.   67-tf.\nWANTED\u2014Several men, single or double,\nto buy first choice main lake fruit\ntracts, 6 acres up. One-quarter down,\nbalance easy terms. 800 acres east of\nMirror Lake to Bfllect from; $50 to $160 per\nacre according to location. Give references,\nnationality and amount you have to in-\nest; Honoymoon nace, Kaslo, B.C.   62-tf.\nWANTED\u2014Land    to    clear    on   contract.\nLowest estimate for slashing, stumping,\netc.     Address   Kemp   &   Ashforth,   contractors, Willow Point. 70-6\nWANTED\u2014Good   general   servant,   small\nfamily.   Apply 302 Carbonate street. 68-tf\nWANTED\u2014Furnished   cottage   of  4  or  5\nrooms, close in; or three furnished housekeeping   rooms,   well   furnished.   Address\nW. B. R, Dally News. dh\nWANTED-Lessons   given    In    shorthand\nand    other    mityects.     Apply    \"Tutor,\"\nNews. 60-*\nWANTED\u2014Circular saw filer wants position;   steady,   sober and   10  years'   experience.   AddresB L. E. Nlckerson, Proctor, B. C.  69-12\nWANTED-Bookkeeping   to   do   in   spare\ntime.   Apply A. C. C. 70-6\nWANTED\u2014Grader, 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,\n=   C TO-*\nCARPENTERS AND BUILDER8\nbuilding homes.  Delighted customers our\nbeet advertisement. P. O. Box 16S.  Phone\n1U. 27-tf.\ncarpenters apply to United Brother!\t\nof Carpenters, Box 202, or at regular\nmeetings, Wednesday, 8 p.m., Miners'\nUnion hall.\nMARTIN, ROBB & THOMPSON\u2014BUILD*\nera and Contractors, Victoria street, next\nopera house, P. O. Box 498. Special attention given Jobbing and repair work.\nEstimates given. 66-tf.\nA88AYER8\nRED FEZES AT ROCHESTER\nROCHESTER, N.Y., July 10\u2014The red\nfez worn by the nobles of the Mystic\nShrine is much in evidence In Rochester today and the regalia of the order\nis attracting attention in all parts of\nBiWtssfl-*-1\/**- \u25a0\u25a0'%\nji^\n1 HAMMER DRILLS\nTbe action of tho Telescope Peed Hammer Drill for up holes is far\nmore economical of power than that of th\u00a9 piston type.\nWith the \"B.C.-ll\" Telescope Peed Hammer Drill the steel Is held loosely\nIn the chuch and kept constantly against tho clean surface of the rock\nunder high pressure and is struck by tbe piston while this pressure 1b being exerted, giving a cumulative ef feet to the blow of the percussive force\nexpanded by the piston combined with the complete force of the air feed\npressure.\nContrast thiB with the piston drill where so much energy Ib wasted in\nreciprocating the steel In the rough drilled hole, partially clogged with\ndust and cuttings.\nCANADIAN RAND CO., LTD.\nVANCOUVER\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\nDYNAMITING OF TROUT\nON WHOLESALE SCALE\nVICTORIA, B. \u20ac., July 11.\u2014Reports\nare received from thoroughly reliable\nsources that the dynamiting of trout on\na wholesale scale is proceeding without interruption from the dominion\nauthorities, in the vicinity of Oyster\nriver. Similar violations of the law,\nalthough on a smaller scale, are reported from Seymour and Lynn creeks, in\nthe vicinity of Vancouver. Nowhere\nthis season or In the past, have the\nfederal authorities displayed any apparent activity in the protection of the\ngame fish of the province, an exceptionally valuable asset, although measures\nare taken tor the safeguarding of the\ncommercial fishes and the punishment.\nof those who transgress the laws provided for their preservation.\nINTTRNATIONAL GEOLOGICAL\nCONGRESS MEETS IN TORONTO\nThe International geological congress, made up of the geological societies of tbe world, and which meets\nevery three years , held its tenth session at Stockholm, Sweden, in 1910.\nThe next, or eleventh meeting, is to\nbe held in Toronto, in July, 1913, when\nIt Is expected not less than 2,000 geologists will attend.\nTo prepare for this important event\na meeting was called at the instance\nof the director of th\u00ab geological survey of Canada, attended by the Canadian geologists, mining engineers, representatives of the universities, the\ngovernment service, the royal service\nand the Canadian mining institute.\nDr. F. D, Adams, professor of geology, McGlll college, Montreal, was selected as president, and R. W. Brock,\ndirector of the geological survey, aa\nsecretary-treasurer, and an executive\ncommittee coasting of the two previously named gentlemen, A. P. Coleman, J. B. Tyrell, W. G. Miller, O. E.\nLeRoy, W. Mclnnes, T. Denis, W. A.\nParkes and G. G. S. Lindsey was chosen. They have power to add to their\nnumber, and this will be one of the\nprincipal matters of business at. the\nnext meeting of the committee.\nAt the first meeting of the executive\ncommittee it was decided that three\nseriea of excursions should be held,\none before the session In Toronto, another (short daily outings) during the\nsession in Toronto and a third after\nthe session of the congress.   These ex-\nHome\nDYEING\nI. th. way fo\nSave Money\nDress Well\nTijrHI\n\u2022sWMNni\nDYOLA\n|0HE\"\"\"AUKTOPS\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb\"1\nJUST THINK OF IT I\nD7f*5ftriv\u00a3?2.on stik\u00abMi\u00abdc\u00ab>dtr\u00ab\u00ab\u00abiif\n\u00bbf.bft\u00bbSAMEDye..Noch\u00abnccolm.iUkei. f\u00ab*\nand BmiKUuI Colore lt cam*, from your DrWlM or\n^\u2022laj.SMdfor&lorCirdindSTORYBoAlit *\u00bb\nTha JohiW>n.Rkh\u00bbrdKH. Co., UmHad. Mono\u2014J.\n2, W. WIDDOWSON, AflSAKER AMD\nChemist Box AH08, Nelson. B.C. Changes\nGold, silver, copper or lead, $1 each\ngold-silver, 11.60; silver-lead, H.60. Prices\nfor other metals on application.\nprivate maternity home\nnicb~loca!2tt^^\ntorts.    For terms and particulars write\nP. O. Box 763, Nelson, B.C.\nWHOLESALE  PRODUCE\ners la Butter, Eggs, Cheese, Produce and\nFruit Houston Block, Josephine street\nNelson, B.C.\nOBSTETRICS\nMRS. KBNNT^Sm2r^ETp;LBASBb TO\nreceive maternity patients at her home.\nExcellent testimonials. 224 Observatory\nP. O. Box 173, telephone A54.\n\u25a0Mf.\nMRS. GOLDFINCH RECEIVES MATER-\nnlty   patients   at   71* Josephine   street.\nPhone  460. 70-26\n^H0U8EJDL\u00a3ANINQ^\nVACUUM CLEANING, WINDOW CLEAN\nlng, Chimney Cleaning. Don't worry\nabout spring cleaning. Let us do K for\nyou. Terms moderate. Satisfaction guaranteed. Nelson Vacuum company, Stanley\nstreet   Box !\u00ab, Phone 19.\nFOR  RENT\u2014Cottage.    Apply to William\nGosneU, Brewery office. 46-tf.\nFOR RUNT\u2014One furnished front bedroom.\nInquire Koom 8, Aberdeen block.       62-tt\nFOR   RENT\u2014Large,   airy.   well-furnlBhed\nrooms with use of bath.   501 HaU street,\ncorner Baker. ffiJ-li\nFOR RENT\u2014Three   furnished   rooms   for\nhousekeeping, 912 Silica street 70-6\nFOR  RENT\u2014Nicely furnished rooms, 712\nJoBephlne street 70-6\nFOR RENT\u2014Two comfortable rooms with\nuse  of telephone and  bath.    Apply 412\nSilica. \\ 71-6\nFOR RENT \u2014 Unfurnished housekeeping\nsuite in desirable locality, close in; large\nfront room, 2 bedrooms and small kitchen.\nReasonable rent to right party. Apply\nto P. O. box 1118. 68-tf\nFOR     RENT \u2014 Furnished     housekeeping\nrooms.   Apply McDonald block. 72-6\nFOR  RENT\u2014Large bedroom, with use of\nbath.    Apply 201 Silica. 74-6\ncursionB will (pretty well cover the\nwhole of the accessible portions of the\ndominion.\nFor the Swedish congress there had\nbeen prepared a monograph on the\nIron resources of the world, and lt\nwas decided that the present congress\nshould undertake a monograph on the\ncoal resources of the world. The work\nsecuring and preparing the necessary material for this was delegated\nto a special committee consisting of\nthe president and secretary and Messrs\nG G. S. Lindsey (convener), D. B.\nDowling, James McEvoy, Charles Fer\ngie and Dr. Bonsall Porter. The monograph will probably occupy two large\nquarto volums and will be printed and\nready for the congress when It meets.\nAUTHORIZES SURVEY OF\nBANFF-WINDERMERE ROAD\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nVICTORIA, July 11.\u2014The provincial\nminister of works, Hon. Thomas Taylor,\nwho has Just returned from a six weeks'\nofficial tour of the interior, has authorized the immediate prosecution of a\nBurvey of the Banff-Windermere scenic\nroad by Mr. Haffner of Vancouver, approximately fiO miles of thiB work of\nhighway construction developing upon\nthe British Columbia authorities, while\nthe dominion Is building westward\nthrough the national park reserve to\nconnect with the provincial section.\nThe survey, It Is expected, will be completed during the present season, and\nno delay will be premltted to occur in\nthe carrying forward of the undertaking- ; \u25a0\u25a0   :, \u2022 , .   <    \u2022\nWANTED-Jmmediately, a few active lads.\nNot under 14.    Apply  Kootenay-Colm.i-\nbla Preserving works. 68-ti\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\nNELSON, B.C.\njraj^DIJECTOiRY_\nNEL80N HOTEL BAR\nBaker Street, Nelson,  B, C.\nINK & WARD, Props.\nGin Kickeya.   Only place carrying Limes.\n8HERBROOKE HOTEL\nNelson, B.C.\nOne minute's walk from C.P.R. station.    Cuisine unexcelled;  well heated\nand ventilated.\nBoyer Bros., Proprietors\nR088LAND\nTHE HOFFMAN ANNEX, ROSSLAND,\nB. C.-Green & Smith, Props. Centrally\nlocated. European and American plan.\nCommercial travellers will find light\ncomfortable sample rooms, a special dining room and excellent accommodations\nat the Hoffman. Baths, bowling alley,\nsteam laundry.\nWANTED-Gentleman stenographer familiar  with   lumber  nusmess    and    office\nwork.    Apply   BritiBh   Canadian   Lumber\nCo., Crescent Valley, B. C. 71-tf\nWANTED-Offlce   boy.     Apply   Box   1116\nstating references. 73-tf\nWANTED\u2014General storekeeper,  10 years'\nwholesale  and  retail  experience,   wants\nemployment at once.    Apply H.  Walker,\n507 Silica street 74-2\nWANTED\u2014Two good tents; state Blue and\nprice.   H. Shlpston, Perry Siding.     78-3\nWANTED \u2014 Chambermaids, housekeeper,\ndomestic,   waitress;   disengaged   woman\nfor day work, companion  help;  domestic\nto do cooking and housework. 74-3\nFOR   SALE.\nFOR SALE\u2014Don'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-tr\nFOR SALE\u2014Fruit lands, MO aores to famous\nPend d'Oreille valley, about \u00ab miles from\nWaneta and S miles north of International\nboundary on mterprovinoial highway; admirably adapted for fruit raising; excellent\nland; plenty of water; admirable climate;\nrapidly developing district; large proportion\nof land oan be plowed without preliminary\nclearing; $85 an acre for block or would\nsell In parcels of V acres each; terms. This\nIs a snap and great chance to make money.\nWrite Box HE, Nelson, B.C.\nFOR SALE-BOO acres,  subdivided tracts,\nfirst selected fruit lands.   Harris, Honeymoon Place, Kaslo, B.C.       12-tf.\nFOR SALE\u2014At a saonnce, a brand new\npiano.   Owner desires particularly to sell\nlt at once.. Address E. L. F., Dally News,\nU-tf.\nFOR SALE\u2014A beautiful level 90 acre tract\nof land below city of Rossland. Soil Is\nAl and plenty of good water; one-half of\nlt is In good state of cultivation. If taken\nat once, price low and terms easy. Apply\nto J. R. Cranston, Rossland* B.C.       44-tf.\nFOR   BALE\u2014Upright   Bell   piano,   exceptionally fine tone, reasonable price.   Ap-\nFOR SALE\u2014Launch, with house and complete accessories.    Very moderate price.\nGeo. H. Playle, 406 Baker street 69-t\nFOR SALE\u2014IS foot launch,  new; speed.\nDVfe mites; price moderate.   Apply to P. O.\nbox 12, Nelson.\nFOR SALE\u2014Nearly new pair ranchers'\nboots, size eight Dayfoot solid leather,\nhigh tops, cost 98, sell for S6, express\npaid. Pair packs, size eight, good order,\n12.   Box T,  Dally News. 70-6\nFOR SALE\u2014Household' effects, including\nrange, carpet, mission rockers, sewing\nmachine, kitchen cabinet, bedroom furniture, etc. Apply Capt. Patterson's cottage, High street, opposite Andrews, 70-6\nFOR QUICK SALE\u2014New six-roomed cottage; bearing fruit trees, one block from\near 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 rook. Can be\nhad very reasonably. Owner leaving country.    X.T Dally News. 71-6\nFOR SALE\u2014Bargain if taken at once;\n320 acres of choice sub-Irrigated land,\nexcellent for clover, timothy, grain, vegetables and fruit; sandy 10am clay subsoil; 2% miles from Greenwood and Phoenix, B. C, on government road; 40 acres\nIn crop, V& acres in berries; fair buildings, 4 running springs, running creek;\n1 team, wagon, sleigh, mower, rake, harrow and plows; all goes with place at $30\nper acre. Will sell all or part. Address\nW.   D.   Parker,   Anaconda,   B.  C. '     74-8\nFOR  SALE\u2014Baby's white   enameled  crib\nwith mattress and hangings complete; a\nbargain.    Apply  Box 1061. 74-3\nPOULTRY   AND   LIVE  STOCK\nFOR SALE\u2014One oolt, 3 years old, weighs\nabout 1800, well broke In to work.  Apply\nto M. Hint* Trail. B.C. 61-tf.\nFOR SALE\u2014First class saddle pony, 0\nyears old, sound and broken to harness;\nwill weigh around 860 lbs. Price, $80.\nTelephone B 171. C. W. Lester, Crescent\nValley. 71-s\nFOR  SALE\u2014Belgian   hares  and   Flemish\nGiant  rabbits.    M.   B.   Edwards, Hume\naddition. 72-26\nFOR SALE\u2014Three pair work horses.   Enquire F. L. Churchill, Rossland, B, C.\n70-12\nFOR SALE\u2014Three mlloh cows,  one registered Jersey bull, one ox, works double\nor single.   Apply Banks & Flnken, Perry\nSiding. 74-6\nHAIR DRESSING AND  (MANICURING\nMRS.  J. M.  HOULDING,  HAIR DRESS-\nIng and Manicuring.   710 Josephine street.\nPhysical Culture, Etc.\nLessons in the above given by a\ncompetent Instructor. For particulars\napply\nInstructor, P.O. Box 637, City.\nPHOENIX\nHOTEL BROOKLYN, PHOENIX, B. C.-\nThe only up-to-date hotel In Phoenix.\nNew from cellar to roof. Best sample\nrooms In the Boundary. Bath room te\nconnection. Steam heat Opposite Great\nNorthern depot   James Marshall, Prop.\nGRAND FORKS\nGRAND FORKS HOTEL, GRAND FORKS,\nB.C.\u2014Finest fire proof hotel In Boundary.\nAmerican' and European plan. Commercial travellers will find light oomfortable\nsample rooms.   M, Frankovltch, Prop.\nYMIR\nYMIR HOTEL, YMIR, B. C.-MOBT\nmodern and up-to-date hotel la Tsalrt\nlocated directly opposite depot; best as*\neommodatloa possible. Dming room la\nconnection.   J. B. Bremner, proprietor.\nCASTLEGAR\n'HOTEL CASTLEGAR,\" CASTLEGAJ*\nJunction. AU modem. Excellent aooom-\nmodAtione for tourists and drummers.\nBoundary train leaves here at i.U a.m,\nW. H. Gage. Proprietor.\nTRAIN AND STEAMER TIMETABLE\nC.P.R trains leave Nelson fer:\nBoundary and Intermediate points at t\na.m. dally, except Sunday.\nSlocan City and Intermediate joints at\n8.80 a.m. daily, except Sunday.\nRossland and Intermediate peseta \u00bb.\u00bb\na.m. and 7.86 p.m.\nVancouver nnd intermediate points 7.80\np.m. dally.\nGreat Northern trains leave Nelson for:\nSpokane and an Intermediate points, to-\neluding salmo and Sheep cfeek, flfi\na.m, dally, except Sunday.\nC.P.R. boats leave Nelaon fer:\nKootenay Landing, connecting with all\npoints east, s a.m. .dally.\nLardo, Kaslo and Intermediate points\n7 a.m., Mondays, Wednesdays and\nFridays.\nKaslo and Intermediate points 7 a.m.\nTuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays.\nCrawford Bay and intermediate points\n8 p.m., dally, except Sunday.\nC.P.R. trains arrive in Nelson from:\nBoundary   and   Intermediate points 7\nS.m. dally, except Sunday.\nlocan   City   and   intermediate  points\n6 p.m. dally, except Sunday.\nRosfiland and Intermediate points 11.05\na.m. and 9.86 p.m. dally.\nVancouver and intermediate points 8.85\np.m. dally.\nC.P.R. steamers arrive m Nelson from;\nKootenay   Landing,   conneotfag   with\ntrains from ail potato east, at 7 p.m.\nLardo, Kaslo and intermediate points,\n6.30 p.m., Mondays, Wednesdays and\nFridays.\nKaslo and Intermediate points, 3.89 p.m.,\nTuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays.\nCrawford Bay and Intermediate pointo,\n9.80 a.m., dally, extept Sunday.\nGreat Northern train Arrives from:\nSpokane and Intermediate points 6.46\np.m. dally, except Sunday.\nWATER NOTICE\nNotice Is hereby given that an application will be made under Part V. of the\n\"Water Act, 1809,\" to obtain a license In tbe\nYmlr division of Kootenay district\n(a) Tbe name, address and occupation\nof the applicant: G. M. Annable, Winn,\nB.C., lumberman.\n(b) The name of the lake, stream or\nsource:   Hidden creek and branches, i\n(c) The point of diversion: Two miles\nup stream on Hidden creek from Salmon\nriver.\n(d) The quantity of water applied for\n<ln cubic feet per second): Five oubic feet\n(e) The character of the proposed works:\nDam, flume, ditches and sluceways.\n<\u00a3) 'Abe premises on which the water is\nto be used: Township 31, District Lot\n1243, Gl.\n(g) Tbe purposes for whloh the water\nIs to be used: Power, Irrigation and domestic.\n(h) If for Irrigation describe the land\nIntended to be Irrigated, giving acreage:\nSections 16, 16 and 17, 1,920 acres.\n(i) If the water Is to be used for power\nor mining purposes describe tbe place\nwhere the water is to be returned to some\nnatural channel, and the difference in altitude between point of diversion and point\nof return: To be returned at the mouth\nof Hidden creek, on Salmon river, difference In altitude 600 feet,\n(J) Area of Crown land Intended to be\noccupied by the proposed works:   None .\n(k) This notice was posted on the 8th\nday of June, 1911, and application will be\nmade to the Commissioners on the 10th\nday of July, 1911.\n(1) give the names and addresses of any\nriparian proprietors or licensees who or\nwhose lands are likely to be affected by\nthe proposed works, either above or below\nthe outlet: G. M. Annable, Winn, B.C.,\nGeorge Webster, Swift Current Sask., and\nthe Nelson & Fort Sheppard Railway Co.\nGEORGE MALCOLM ANNABLE.\nPer Geo. B. Campbell, Power of Attorney,\nWinn, B.C.\nWATER NOTICE\nI, R. G. Joy, merchant, of Nelson, B.C..\nrepresenting the St. Saviour's Sunday\nSchool Teachers' Guild, of Nelson, B.C.,\ngive notice that on the 12th day of July,\n1911, I Intend to apply to the Water Commissioner, at bis office In Nelson, B.C.,\nfor a license to take and use one-tenth\ncubic foot of water per second from Ward\ncreek, in Nelson division of West Kootenay\ndistrict. The water Is to be taken from\nthe stream 600 feet above Spokane Falls\n& Northern railway, and 18 to be used for\nIrrigation purposes on the Church of England cemetery plot ,ln the city of Nelson\ncemetery.\nR. G. JOY.\nDated June 12th. 1911. 60-80\n kli\nTUESDAY  JULY 11\nChe Bait? $eu\u00bb\nPAGE 8EVEN\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\"?.'.risk\nIn the next few-years Calgary must even surpass her own unparalleled records of growth and her suburban real estate is sure to double and treble in value. Population and land values move together.\nDrop ub a line today\u2014right now\u2014so we may writ\u00a9 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\nMARKETS\nDISAPPOINTING CROP REPORT\nCAUSES STOCKS TO FALL\nNEW TORK, July 10\u2014Disappointment at the government crop report\nwhich was issued shortly before tho\nclose of the market caused stocks to\nrecede quickly after a display of almost\nuniform strength from tho opening. The\nlosses thus sustained virtually cancelled tho gains of 1 to 2 points through\nthe list of the active stocks. The character of the crop report was offset to\nsome extent by the monthly statement\nof the copper producers and of the\nUnited States Steel corporation's unfilled orders which wore unexpectedly\nfavorable. United States Steel and copper shares, however, yielded with the\nremainder of tho list at the close. The\nfigures for spring wheat were usually\nabout 76 or 77 in place of the government figures of 73.8. The condition of\ncorn was 2 points under estimates. It\nwas pointed out, however, that since\nJuly l, the date to which tho government report refers, the lack of rain\nwhich was largely responsible for the\ndamage has been relieved in many sections and that present conditions are\nsubstantially better than those of ton\ndays ago when the official figures were\ncalled. The decline In stocks was due\nIn part to the expectations of the operators who had bought heavily in anticipation of a bullish statement.\nReports of rain over tho week encouraged buying this morning not only\nhere but In London, where American\nstocks advance! materially. The gains\nwere extended In tho local market. Tho\nincrease of 247,000 tons In the unfilled\norders of the United States Steel cor-\nIs rich in food value and\neasy to digest It is just\nCocoa, pure Cocoa, ground\nfrom the choicest Cocoa\nbeans.'\nNurses and Doctors recommend its\nuse in sickness or in health.      m\nDo You\nporation between June 11 and July 1\nIndicates an unexpectedly largo amount\nof new business, with tbe June figures\nsuggesting the largest gain which the\ncorporation has experienced since tho\nrevival after tho open market of 1909,\nthe Increase In business, which followed\nthe reduction in prices being estimated\nat 50 per cent or more on the basis of\ntoday's report and the known increase\nin shipments during June. The decrease of more than 8,500,000 pounds In\ncopper stocks was larger than was looked for, bringing down the total to the\nlowest point In several months, while\ndomestic deliveries were somewhat supporting, tho export movement was the\nlargest since last October and the\nstatement as a whole waB regarded as\ndistinctly favorable.\nGood reports on both the copper and\nsteel trade apparently had been discounted for the market -barely moved\non their publication. Almost the only\nexceptions to the strength exhibited\nthrough the greater part of the day\nwere Virginia Iron, which fell back 7 1-2\npoints and Virginia &Carollna Chemical\nwhich although it remained stationery\nwhen the unfavorable annual report\nwas published last week, declined one\npoint today.\nThe bond market was firm. Total\nsales, par value $2,415,000. U. S. bonds\nwere unchanged oil call.\nAuction Sale\nThursday. July 13, 716 Carbonate St.,\n2 o'clock sharp\nWe have received instructions from\nB. J. Harding, Esq., to sell by public\nauction at the above address, alt 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, diulng room chairs,\nkitchen chairs and utonBils; the above\ngoods are all new, in use only two\nmonths. Goods on view morning of\nsale.\nTERMS: CASH,\nW. CUTLER\n' Auctioneer\nWHEAT PRICES REACH\nLOWER FIGURE  IN WINNIPEG\nWINNIPEG, July 10.-Lower temperatures and scattered showers in the corn\nbelt, together with lower cables and some\nanxiety as to what the United States government report would be, which was issued today at the close of the market, all\ncontributed toward the fall ln wheat,\nwhich was so noticeable on the American side.\nWinnipeg, following the lead of the Chicago and Minneapolis markets, was down\nIn each month, October, which was stronger toward the close of the session, closed\n114c split lower, and December also\nclosed   l%c   lower.    July   oats   were   un-\nhaged and October dosed %c lower.\nThere was a fair demand for Nos. 4 and\n5 In cash wheat, but the export market\nwas quiet in both wheat and oats.\nChicago July fell %c >on the day and\nSeptember and December each dropped one\ncent.\nMinneapolis July closed %c lower; September no less than l&c lower, and December 1V6<: lower.\nChicago corn and oats were lower for\nall months. The weather map' of the\nwest showed that rains had been general\nover Manitoba and Saskatchewan, and\na few scattered showers had fallen ln\nAlberta.   Temperatures were lower.\nWarrants Still Rising\nWarrants are still on the up-grade and\ntoday saw another jump, the closlnr? price\nbeing 7G0@776, with one sale at 700 and one\nat 765.\nFutures and presents are at the same\nprice. Some activity was displayed this\nmorning In carbon oil, about five shares\nselling at Sic. the first sale In this stock\nsince May 10.\nListed- Bid. Asked.\nCan.   Fire      120     ...\nCom mere!al   Loan      101     105\nGreab   Western   Life      29G1     ...\nGreat   Western  Perm    120      123\nHome   Investment         166\nNorthern   Mortgage      114\nNorthern Trust     130     135\nStandard Trust   153     160\nUnllsted-\nEmp. Loan FP   108     112\ndo PP   110     112\nWestern   TrtiBt       110\nWinnipeg   Fire      105     H5\nContinental   Life      100     ...\nCent.  Con. Fire     100\nWinnipeg   Land 1  151     j...\nUnlisted stocks, banks-\nCrown,   GFE     88%    89\nNorthern,   CFE     04      07\nTraders'   Bank       145\nSterling Bank         90\nIndustrials-\nBeaver Lumber Co     03\nManitoba  Pressed   Brick      100\nTraders Building        10S\nWestern Canada Flour        126\nCarbon   Oil       A\u00bb     ...\nPortland Canal       15       16\nLucky Jim          26\nS.   A.   Warrants     760     776\nSales\u2014 \u25a0\n5 Carbon  OH    86\n2 Northern,   CFE W\n1 Warrant    W>\n2 Warrants    ]&>\n4 Great Western Life  800\nSPOKANE MARKETS.\n(Reported by Sharpe & Irvine Co.)\nBid. Asked.\nB. C. Copper    16.00 S6.60\nCaledonia    63 .78\nCanadian Consolidated    40,00 . 48.00\nGranby       88.00 40.00\nInternationa Coal   64 .68\nLucky Jim 10 .21\nNmrget    . W -\u00abJ\nRambler-Cariboo    61 .66\nSnowstorm    26     .28\nstandard    ii 1.40\nStewart    y, 92 1.00\nSales-200 Stewart at 05c.\nMlntrd's Liniment Cures Distemper.\nWILL ESTABLISH  INDUSTRIAL\nCOLONIES OF WOMEN\nWill Purchase Lands to be Developed\non Cooperative Principal\u2014Ask\nAid.\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nVICTORIA, July 11\u2014The acting\npremier of British Columbia, Hon. Dr.\nYoung, was waited upon by two especially active and well-Unformed members of the new and growing company\nof English gentlewomen ln business,\nthese being Hon. Mrs. Grosvenor and\nMiss Dorothy Davis, both of London,\nwho are visiting Canada for the purpose of studying (conditions with a\nview to the establishment in various\nprovinces of industrial colonies of women. Those at the head of the movement are in a position to furnish sufficient funds for the purchase of necessary lands, and it Is hoped to place\nupon these latter little communities of\nEnglish women with small capital who\nwill develop the holding to the greatest extent, preferably upon the cooperative principal.\nHon Mrs. Grosvenor and Miss Davis\nare now fully acquainting themselves\nwith existing industrial conditions in\nBritish Columbia, and their visit to the\nacting premier was principally for the\npurpose of ascertaining whether provincial aid might not be secured for the\nfurtherance of their undertaking.\nAlthough any such direct assistance\nwas held to be Impossible, Hon. Or.\nYoung pointed out to his visitors the\nprovision contained in one chapter of\nthe agricultural association's act of\nthis year, whereby it is made possible\nfor co-operative associations of 20 or\nmore engaged In dairying and kindred\nindustries to obtain assistance by way\nof loan being secured as a first charge\nupon the properties, and bearing Interest at five per cent.\nThe English visitors leave for Dun-\ncari, where they will pursue their investigation of the conditions under the ci-\nceronage of J. H. Maitland-Dougal, the\nresident government agent.\nFORTY-FIVE MILES OF\nROAD IN ONE DAY\nOTTAWA, Kaa.. July 10\u2014If the plans\nand expectations of leading citizens of\nCoffey, Osage and Franklin counties\nare fulfilled there will be constructed\nIn this section tomorrow, between sun-\nrlso and sunset, an improved highway,\n45 miles long. Practically every able\nbodied man in the three counties has\nvolunteered to aid ln the work. The\nroad will follow the old Santa Fe cutoff and will connect this city with the\ntown of Lebo.\nEAGLES   FLOCK   TO   HOQUIAM\nHOQUIAJM, Wash., July 10\u2014Hundreds of delegates, together with the\nstate officers, are here attending the\nstate convention of the Fraternal Order\nof Eagles. Today was devoted to the\nreception of visitors. The convention\nparade will take place tomorrow and\nWednesday the gathering will close\nwith the election of officers.\nThey keep the\nwhole system\nin the pink of\ncondition.\nTheir singular curative properties discovered by an Indian\ntribe\u2014Introduced to civilization\nnearly a century ago\u2014compounded since 1857 In the\nComstock Laboratories at\nBrockvllle, Ontario.\nDr. Morse's\nIndian\nRoot Pills\nhave a remarkable record (or\nconsistently curing constlpa-\ntlon,blllousnessandlndlgestlon,\npurifying the blood, banishing\nheadaches and clearing the\ntt      skin. 25c. a box everywhere.\nPASS AMBULANCE\nEXAMINATIONS\nEighteen Candidates Have Secured Certificates\u2014Valuable Assistance In\nCase of Accident\nA second class In connection with\nthe C.P.R. branch iof the St. John\nAmbulance association at Nelson has\njust passed a highly satisfactory examination. The following are the successful candidates: M. J. Mulrooney,\nCharles W. Hall, John Warr, Joslah\nSmith, H. R. Ades, John Paulson and\nGeorge B. Abbott. This makes a total\nof 18- qualified first aid workers who\nhave passed their examination after\nInstruction by Dr. W. O. Rose.\nP. B. Ashbrldge, travelling instructor\nfor the St. John Ambulance society has\njust returned from a visit to Eholt\nand reports having been successful In\nteaching the class there and expects to\nhave 10 men qualified at that point.\nThe travelling public greatly appreciates this movement, realizing that In\ncase of serious accidents the medical\nprofession has at easy call a staff of\nwell trained employees who can render\nthem intelligent assistance and who\ncan in the absence of a surgeon save\nmuch suffering and loss of life and\nlimb by their skill ln handling cases\nthat call for immediate attention. Mr.\nAshbrldge left last night for Revelstoke\nand other western points where he has\nthis work In hand.\nNOMINAL DAMAGES\nAWARDED SHAW\nJudge Wilson Finds for Applicant Who\nMay Ask for Larger Sum\u2014\nNovel Point\nHis honor Judge Wilson yesterday delivered his award in the case of Shaw\nvs. the C.P.R., in which he acted as\narbitrator under the Workmen's Compensation act, and allowed the applicant the nominal damages of five cents\nper week.\nHis honor, in his award, comments\non the novel feature of the case, the\nclaims agent of the C.P.R. having made\na settlement after the accident,, in\nwhich Roy M. Shaw lost three fingers\nwhile coupling a car at Moyie last\nfall, at the rate of \u00a510 a week, while\nFred C. Moffatt, solicitor for Shaw,\ncontended that this agreement was\nvoid on the grounds that the applicant\nat tho time lt was made was not aware\nthat he could obtain larger damages.\nThe award finds that Shaw was not\naware that he could obtain more than\n(10 per week but gives the respondents,\nwho were represented by B. C. Wragge,\nthe right to have a stated case placed\nbefore a supreme court judge.\nOn the other hand Judge Wilson\ngives the applicant the right to show\nthat ho had suffered injury through\nbeing unable to obtain work at some\nperiod after the accident and to show\nwhat loss he might have been occasioned by such inability, with a view of\nfurther damages.\nCosts in the case are awarded to the\napplicant.\nEIGHT HUNDRED\nARE NATURALIZED\nNumber Who Have Been Made British\nSubjects Since County Court Was\nEstablished Here\nWith the list of 23 certificates of\nnaturalization granted during the past\nsix months in the county court here,\nwhich has just been forwarded to Ottawa by T. M. Bowman, registrar, the\ntotal number of citizenship papers issued since the county court was first\nestablished In Nelson on Nov. 15, 1890,\nIs 838.\nThe first man to be naturalized In\nNelson was the late Alfred John Marks,\nformerly a subject of the United States.\nDuring the past six months the countries of birth of the various persons to\nwhom papers were issued were as follows: Italy, 3; United States, 6; Sweden, 9; Norway, 3; Switzerland 1; Rou-\nmanla, 1.\nJUDGMENT FOR\nEIGHTEEN THOUSAND\nFinal Judgment Given In Chambers in\nBank of B. N. A. vs. W. E. Cooke\nLumber Company\nFinal judgment for $18,870.48 was\ngiven by his honor Judge Wilson In\nchambers yesterday (morning on application of W. H. Bullock-Webster (E. A.\nCrease) in the action Bank of British\nNorth America vs. the W. E. Cooke\nLumber Co. H. C. Hall appeared for the\ndefendants.\nIn the estate of Bella Devlin, deceased, E. C. Wragge was granted an\norder for payment to creditors of money\ntn court, his honor ordering that such\naction should be advertised for two\nMr. Wragge obtained, in the eBtate\nof Amanda Smith, deceased, an order\nfor the release of the administrator and\nfor the fixing of remuneration.\nMETAL MARKETS.\nNEW     YORK,     July     10,-SiIver,    63;\nstandard copper, 12.10 A 12.80; dull.\nLONDON, July 10.\u2014Silver, Zi 7*16; lead,\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\nC. W. Wales Is spending a vacation at\nVictoria.\nMr. and Mrs.  Singer are leaving for\nMen Who Want the Best\nCome Here for Clothes\nHave you ever noticed that the best dressers In this locality come\nhere for clothes.\nWhy Is It?\nIt may be the quality of our clothes and then again, it may be\ntbe fairness of our prices. We're inclined to think it is a combination\nof both these important features.\nCome in, Sir, and allow us to show you our Fit Reform Suits and\nother outfitting\u2014our hats, shirts, neckwear, etc., etc. See our $15, $20\nor $25 suits, our $3 or $3.50 hats, our $1.25 shirts, 50c. neckwear and\na few other of our good things and we believe that you'll be quick\nto see why Men who want the best always come here for their clothes.\nJlThere Never Was\na Day\nsince we began selling groceries .when\nthis was not the best grocery for you\nto deal with regularly. You want good\ngoods at a reasonable price consistent\nwith quality.   We have them.\nHazelwood Butter, 2 lbs. 75c.; Gilt\nEdge Butter, 3 IbB. $1; Dewar and Watson's Bweet 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 Sts.\nPhone 19 P.O. Box 637\nEmory & Walley \u00bb'*:\"\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\nEmpire Theatre\nAlumlnlzed Screen\nOur pictures are superior to any\nshown In Nelson.\nThe Coronation\nPictures\nwill be shown on Wednesday and\nThursday, matinee both days at\n2:30.\nSpecial announcement in Wednesday's paper.\nan    early date.\u2014Hope-\n.Sheep  Creek    at\nSteamboat Nugget\nE. K. Beeston, secretary of the Kootenay Fruitgrowers' union, lins moved into\nlila new office ln the A. Macdonald warehouse.\nO. Sandy, late of the Central African\nIndustrial mission, will address the Young\nPeople's meeting In the Baptist church\nthis evening.\nThe Salmo Athletic club has arranged a\ndance for next Friday evening at the\nSheep Creek metropolis. A Nelson orchestra has been engaged for the occasion and\nthe best hall In the town secured. As lt\nIs one of the first dances of the summer\nat Salmo a big crowd Is expected.\nJames Brown and F. J. Smith were\ncharged In the city police court yesterday morning under the vagrancy act with\nsleeping In a, box car and were given a\nchance to leave the city. Tony Moore,\nconvicted of creating a disturbance, was\nsent down for CO days ln the provincial\njail.\nJ. T. Coomber, a rig driver, was summoned 'by tho police yesterday to attend\ncourt this morning to answer to a charge\nof contravening a bylaw by leaving his\nhorse and rig ion Bakqr street unat-\\\ntached to a weight, with the result that\nthe animal attempted to run away as a\nstreet car pussed and had to be caught\nby an officer.\nBe convinced of the superior quality or\nCurlew Ice cream. The strawberry ice\ncream 1b flavored with the fresh fruit\nC. H. Bean, the Palace Confectionery.\nM-tf.\nPlumbing\nIt pays to have your plumbing\nfixtures gone over now before the\nfall rush comes. Let me figure\non your requirements.\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\nln 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<\/a Baker St. Nelson\njiSKHE\nDelicious and Appetizing\nTHE   PALACE   CONFECTIONERY\nC. H, BEAN 414 BAKER 3T.\nMrs. Fleuss receives boarders at her\ncomfortable bungalow, Ealfour, B. C. 72-10\nDo you want a real treat for afternoon\ntea? Try Scott's home made Scotch shortbread.   On sale at Elford's Boat company.\nMessrs. I. & M. Leece, confectioners,\nWard street, wish to Inform their customers that on and after July 12th they\nwill close their store at 2 o'clock ln the\nafternoon   untU   further  notice.\nFISHING 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 at C.P.R. Creel Lodge, J. Killey,\nlodgekeeper. 37-tf.\nThe Hudson's Bay Stores are crowded with people who know a good thing\nwhen It comes their way. The great\nclearance sale Is going on merrily. See\nad. on page 3 and join the happy\nthrong.\nAT THE THEATRES.\nThe program put on at the Empire last\nevening contained the following subjects:\n\"The Widow of Mill Creek Flats,\" a\nwestern drama by tbe Selig Co.; \u25a0'Auld\nRobin Grey,'\" Vltagraph feature, and two\ngood comedies by the Biograph people,\nentitled \"Happy Jack a Hero\" and \"Turning the  Tables.\"\nThese films are furnished by the Canadian Film Exchange, Calgary, and patrons who enjoy seeing good pictures\nshould not miss these films. The Coronation pictures will be Bhown on Wednesday and  Thursday.\nT. C, Laybo, who has a reputation both\nin Canada and the United States as a\nviolinist, will be at tho Empire theatre\nthis week.\nRanches for Sale\nEighteen acres on West Arm, 400 to COO\nfruit trees In bearing; five acres under\nperfect cultivation; good water; no house.\nPrice $5,500. Terms $2,500 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 ln one and two years, interest at 5 per cent.\nSV& acres unimproved, on West Arm, (300\nper acre, one-half cash.\n11 acres close to above, on wagon road,\n$150 per acre. Good water on both properties.    Terms offered.\nR. J. STEEL\nRoom 7, Griffin Block.\nSTREET RAILWAY TIME TABLE\nDown\nUp\nLt.\nLv.\nLv.\nLv.\nStanley &\nWard &\nShip\nWard ft\nInnes.\nBaker.\nYard.\nBaker\n6.30\n6.40\n7.30\n7.40\n7.00\n7.15\n8.30\n8.40\n8.00\n8.15\n9.30\n9.40\n9.00\n9.15\n10.30\n10.40\n10.00\n10.16\n11.30\n11.40\n11.00\n11.16\n12.00\n12.10\n\u20221\n12.30\n12.40\n12.00\n12.15\n1.00\n1.10\n12.30\n12.45\n1.30\n1.40\n1.00\n1.15\n2.00\n2.10\n1.30\n1.46\n2.30\n2.40\n2.00\n2.15\n3.00\n3.10\n2.30\n2.45\n3.30\n3.40\n3.00\n3.15\n4.00\n4.10\n3.30\n3.45\n4.30\n4.40\n4.00\n4.15\n5.00\n5.10\n4.30\n4.45\n5.30\n6.40\n5.00\n5.15\n0.00\n6.10\n5.30\n5.45\n6.30\n6.40\n6.00\n6.15\n7.00\n7.10\n6.30\n6.45\n7.30\n7.40\n7.00\n7.15\n8.00\n8.10\n7.30\n745\n8.30\n8.40\n8.00\n8.15\n9.30\n9.40\n9.00\n9.15\n10.30\n10.40\n10.00\n10.15\n11.30     to\n11.00\n11.15\nCar barn\nSaturday evenings and on any special\noccasion both cars will make one extra\ntrip.\nNotice will be given of any change\nln time table.\nPROFESSIONAL CARDS\nG3EEN  BROS., BURDEN  & CO.\nCivil Engineers.   Dominion and B. C. Land\nSurveyors.\nSurveys of Lands, Mines, Townsltes, Timber Limits, Eto.\nNelson, 516 Ward  St.,  A.   H.  Green,  Mgr.\nVictoria. 114 Pemberton Bldg., F. C. Green.\nFt, George, Hammond St., F. P. Burden.\na. l. Mcculloch\nHydraulic Engineer\nProvincial Land Surveyor\nP. O. Box 41\nOffice 'phone B86; residence 'phone B74\nOffice: Over McDermid & McHardy\nBaker St.. Nelson, B.C.\nGEORGE  H  PLAYLE\nChartered Accountant, Auditor\nNelaon, B.C.\nE. H. SMITH\nAccountant, Auditor and Fire Insurance\nRoom 7, Griffin Block. Nelson, B.C.\nR. H. LEY\nProvincial Assayer\nLate of the Hall Mines Smelter.\nTwelve years experience in B.C.\nores.   Control and umpire work a\nspeoialty.\n312 Ward St Nelson, B.C.\nOpposite Court House\nIf You Are Interested In Mining Shares\nThat Will Make You Money\nwrite us for special quotations and Information on\nMcAllister Mining & Milling Co. Standard Mining Company.\nLuoky Jim Zinc Mines, Limited. Rambler-Cariboo Mines, lLmited.\nWo can offer any of these shares a t very attractive prices.\nSHARP & IRVINE CO., Brokers si4-si7 ruben Bid*., spok\u2122, w\u00abik.\nSTOCKS\n2 8. A. aorip .\nWE WILL BUY\n,. .1725.00 10 Consolidated Smelters     40.00\nWE WILL SELL\n1000 Royal Collieries  S .08% 2110 Luoky Jim 21\n500 Kooteoay Gold Mines 1.25\nBauer Street\nNe>son. B. C\nE. B. McDermid\n PAGE EIOHT\n\u20acfje Ban? J*eb\u00bb.\nTUESDAY  ..,...,.\u00ab,,.,< JULY 11\nFor Sale\n$2,100 will buy you ono of Nelson's most up-to-date homes\u2014five\nrooms and oath. Small cash payment, balance can be paid ln 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 $60.00 per acre.\nFive acres of lake frontage on\nWest Arm. Ideal spot for summer\nhome, t Price $600 on easy terms.\nCroasdaile,Nawdsley& Co\ni2\nSimmer Home Sites\nOn Kootenay Like\nHouses for sale or rent.\nLots tn olty 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 Black, ever Dom. Express.\nPure Ice Cream\nWe make lt ourselves from rich\ncream and true fruit flavorings.\nDrop ln and have a dish In our\ncool parlors. Or have some sent\nup to the house.\nCHOQUETTE BROS.\nThe Up-to-date Bakers and\nConfectioners\nS16 Baker 6t> Phens 258\nEconomy JAT\nWide Mouth\nQuarts, per dozen  $1.75\nPints, per dozen  1.50\nExtra tops, dozen .. 25\nAlso Mason's ...... $1.26 and $1.00\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 for rent two up to\ndate dwelling houses, each\ncontaining three bedrooms, din.\nlng room, parlor, kitchen, pantry, basement and electric\nlight. One of these has an efficient hot air furnace and\nboth are well sieuated. These\nrent for (22 and J27 respectively inclusive of water rates.\nWe have also several other\nsmaller houses for rent ranging from 112 to $20 per month.\nH. & M. BIRD\nNelson, B.C.\nStrawberries for Preserving\nWe aro getting ln strawberries daily, fresh from our own ranch.\nThey are at their best now and will not likely be cheaper we offer\nthem at\n$2.50 per crate\nWe can supply you also with Jars and sugar,\nJ. A. IRVING & Co^'iT wmp^\u00a3\nPhone 161\nRUBY RUBY\nThe Gem for July\nThose who In July are born;\nThus they shall be 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 of water to one of spray\nfor summer spraying of apples and\npears. For peaches, plums, etc., use\n30 parts to one.\nWe have tbe spray ln gallon and\nfour gallon tins (Imperial.)\nThe Brackman-Ker\nMilling Co., Ltd.\nOnly a Few Pairs of\nOxfords Left\nAnd having decided to discontinue our shoe department wo are\nclearing these $5, $6, $6.50 values at 13.50.\nThe George A. Slater, the Astoria and the Walk Over, all In the\nnewest and most up to date lasts.   Sizea ranging from 6 1*2 to 9.\nJ. A. GILKER\nSole Agent for Semi-\nReady Clothing\nBaker Street\nNelaon, B. C.\nFURNITURE\nWe have some good bargains in solid\nOak China Closets, Combination Writing Desks and Book Case and Ext.\nrabies, one medium site Roll Top Desk.\nOur crockery stock is complete.\n\u202213, 615, 617 Josephine tt\nOld Curiosity Shop\nHosiery\nCheapest in the citj\nThe Ark\n606 Vernon St. Phone ASM\nNew and second hand furniture.\nFruit Salt\n35c a bottle\nAs good as the best.   Try lt\nr-'.xt time.\nLime Juice\nPure  and  fresh,  25c,  40c,\nand 50c. botUe.\nOntario Grape\nJuice\n65c. quart\nGitrate of\nMagnesia\n25c  bottles,  and a  complete\nstock    of    summer medicine.\n.Mall orders promptly filled.\nWm, Rutherford\nDruggist      Nelson, B.C.\nNELSON NEWSJF TBE DAY\nJ. L. Hirsch has returned from a visit\nto Winnipeg.\nDr. D. N. Ross of Winnipeg la a guest\nat the Madden.\nMrs. W. A. Barrett of Fraltvalt la a\nguest at the Hume.\nJames O'Shea has returned to the city\nfrom a flying trip to Calrvy.\nBorn,  on July 7, to tha wife of R. A.\nBrown, Victoria street, a daughter.\nThe hospital directors are reminded of\nthe meeting which la to be held at 8\no'clock this evening.\nThere will be a concert by the city\nband at the stand on Vernon street this\nevening at 8 o'cock.\nRev. and Mrs. M. F. Hilton of Greenwood came in yesterday and are guests\nat the Strathcona.\nDr. and Mrs. J. T. Ferguson came In\nfrom the west arm last night and are\nguests at the Strathcona.\nA. Heymann of Vancouver returned lest\nnight from a visit of Inspection to the\nEureka  mine at Sheep  Creek.\nThe Ladies' Aid of the Church of Mary\nImmaculate intends giving a lawn social\nand afternoon tea on Thursday, July 20.\nOscar Spitzer of New Tork and John\nL. Retallack of Kaslo returned on the\nCrow boat last night and are at the\nStrathcona.\nJ. M. Doyle, assistant superintendent\nfor the Marcus division of the Great\nNorthern railway, Is registered at the\nStrathcona.\nJoseph B, Conway was married by Rev.\nA. E. Smith at the Methodist parsonage\nyesterday to MIsb Agnes Ruth Dreler of\nEdgewood.\nThe Knights of Pythias will.meet this\nevening at 7:30 o'cock in the castle hall\nfor the Installation of officers and for initiatory work.\nJohn Kirkup of RosBland has been appointed a stipendiary magistrate for the\nprovince, In connection with his recent\nappointment ln the Peace river country.\nA. B. Rand of New Westmlnst.fr went\nup to the Athabasca mine yesterday end\ntomorrow proposes to make a trip of Inspection to the Dundee mine, near Tndr.\nAt the residence of D. McLeod, 612\nLatimer street, yeBterday Henry McLeod\nwas married by Rev. A. B. Smith to Miss\nGet a Tent\nIf you cannot go camping\nPut It Up In Your Own Garden\nand enjoy sleeping in the open.   We stock all sMeB up to 12 ft. by 18 ft.\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co. Ltd.\nWholesale aid Retail Nelson B. C.\nTORONTO HAMILTON WINNIPEG VANCOUVER\nJanet Connell. D. A. McKay acted as\ngroomsman and Miss Agnes Carlson was\nbridesmaid.\nP T. McCallum, chief immigration of-\nflct-r for the Boundary district, with\nheadquarters at Grand Forks, was in the\ncity yesterday, registering at the Hume.\nThe water In the west arm fell three\nInches yesterday according to the guage\nof the Nelson Boat & Launch company,\nand is now 14 feet one inch above low\nwater mark.\nThe meeting of the Nelson Improvement\nassociation will take place at 8 o'clock\nthis evening ln the board of trade rooms.\nA big attendance of members of the association and of others interested ln the\nwork la expected.\nThe farmers' Institute meeting In the\nEagle hall tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock\nwill be addressed by J. R. Terry, provincial government poultry expert, and\nJ. F. Carpenter, who will speak on irrigation.\nLast year J. T. Bealby shipped three\nboxes of cherries to England with perfectly satisfactory results. This year he\nis shipping no less than 16 cases to the\nold country. Tbe same rancher Is also\nsupplying the provincial government for\nexhibition ln the prairie towns and in the\neast five times as many parcels of fruit\nas he supplied last year. The shipments\nembrace sweet and sour cherries, strawberries, gooseberries, red, black and white\ncurrants, apricots, peaches, plums, apples,\npears, crab apples and hothouse grapes.\nThe following have been appointed commissioners for taking affidavits for election  purposes:\nFernie electoral district\u2014T. G. Harries,\nA. s. Julian of Michael.\nCranbrook electoral dlBtrlct\u2014James Roberts. A. P. Mitchel, Marcus Martin, John\nTaylor, alll of Moyie.\nKamloops electoral district\u2014P. Giosden of\nSicamous.\nSlocan electoral district-Anthony Slill-\nland, L. R. Mclnnls, both of Sandon; F.\nLelbscher of  Sllverton.\nORANGEMEN WILL CELEBRATE\nTWELFTH  IN  CRESTON\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nCRESTON, B. C\\, July 10.\u2014Arrangements for tbe celebration to be held at\nCreston on July 12 by the Orangemen of\nCranbrook, Creston and other points have\nbeen completed.   Following the procession\nEverybody\nWatch Our Window\nIt Will Pay You\nThe Rexall Store\nP00LE DRUG CO., LTD.\nAgents Oliver\nTypewriter\nNelson'e\nLeading Druggists,\nFIRE!\nHaying Just receired from tbe print\nera a number of cards with latest correct list of fire alarm, boxes' la this city,\nwe will be pleased to send copy to any-\nne upon request\nNelson Transfer Co., Ltd.\nPhono 35\nto the park from the lodge hall, timed to\ncommence at 11:30 a, m., dinner will be\nserved on tho grounds and sports will\ncommence. The boys' and girls' races\nwill be followed by sports by men, in-\ncudlng 60 and'\" 100-yard dashes, 220 and\n440-foot flat races, standing and running\nhigh and broad jumps, pole vaults. There\nwill be needle and thread races, nail driving contests, and the ladles will compete\nln GO and 25-yard sprints. At this celebration the return match Cranbrook vs.\nCreston will be played and the followers\nof the association gome wil lenjoy play-\nof the association game will enjoy play-\nHuatcroft Camp vs.  Creston.\nE. Mallandalne, chief timber cruiser for\nthe C. P. R., Is building a handsome residence at Cranbrook and proposes to reside permanently at that place.\nCharles Moore, P. L. S., C. E., is building some extensive additions to his residence.\nMiss Alice. M. Opie, having resigned her\nposition as school mistress at tbe Alice\nSiding school, gave a farewell tea on\nFriday afternoon last to the ladles of that\ndistrict at Douglass Villa, She was assisted by Miss Margaret Moire and a very\nenjoyable time was spent Among the\nguests were Mesdomes Carr, Berry, John\nson, Pease, Long, Stace, Smith, Churchill,\nStewart, Noble, Butterfleld, Hagen, and\nthe Misses Wlgen, Johnson, Smith and\nStewart.\nBorn, at Creaton, on July 2, to Mr. and\nMrs. J. J. Miller, a son.\nBorn, at Creston, on July 1, to Mr. and\nMrs. Walter Corbett, a daughter.\nMrs. R. St. Cialr Smith returned home\nfrom the hospital on Tuesday's train and\nIs well on the way to complete recovery.\nThe members of the Royal Orange lodge\nmarched In a body to the evening service\nat the Presbyterian church last Sunday\nevening.\nCONCERT AT GUTELIUS,\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nGUTELIUS, July 10.\u2014A very successful\nconcert wsb held on Tuesday evening at\nG-uteMus.   The commodious hall was filled\nSecure One\nof these fine West Arm Improved ranches.   They are among the best.\nAll revenue producing properties.\n13 1-2 aores on lake shore;, level, good supply of water;   4 1-2\nacres planted ln good varieties ot apple trees, etc.    Price 14,000 on\n12 acres, aU cultivated, creek, 260 bearing fruit trees; small fruits,\ndwelling, large bam and stable; lien bouse. This ranch Is offered as a\ngoing concern, including stock, poultry, implements, furniture, etc. Price\n$8,500, on terms.\n54 acres, about 10 cultivated, 470 fruit trees, most of which are\nbearing, ample water supply, fine dwelling and lake frontage. Price\n$7,360 on terms.\nLet us show you these properties.\ns-yjyjL McDermid\n505 Baker Street Nelson, B. C.\nto its utmost capacity, the attendance\nbeing the largest in the history of the\nplace.\n' Rev. J. A. GHIam occupied the chair\nand a long and interesting program of\nsongs, recitations and dialogues was varied by games. A collection amounting to\nover 120.00 was taken during the evening\nand is to to be used for church purposes ln\nthe valley.\nROBSON   NEWS\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nROBSON, B.C., July 10\u2014The regular mooting of the Farmers' Institute\nwas held on Thursday afternoon last,\nwhen an interesting address waB given\nby J. R. Terry on poultry. A good number attended in spite of the fact that\nfruit picking 1b ln full swing. Raspberries are ripening fast, tbe first\ncrate being shipped on Wednesday last.\nThe annual school meeting was hold\non Saturday, W. T. WIckham being reelected trustee for tbe ensuing three\nyears and J. Johnson, auditor.\nMr. Bliss and bride aro paying a visit\nto Mr. and Mrs. J. Horn, the bride's\nparents, who gave a supper to a few\nfriends on Saturday.\nUSE SPRINKLERS\nFOR IRRIGATION\nAre Fastened to Small Sleds\u2014May Be\nUsed to Irrigate Rough\nLands.\nSPOKANE, Wash., July ll.-^Ranch-\ners, truck farmers and orchardlsts all\nover the United States are deeply interested in the plan of utilizing sprlnk-\nAsk The Ladies\nThey   One   and  All   Praise   Newbro's\nHerplcide\nIf ladles could know and appreciate\nwhat a delightful hair dressing Newbro's\nHerpiclde is, they would all have it on\ntheir dressing tables. It Is the most exquisite toilet article ever used and at tbe\nsame time one of the most essential\nIn order to have beautiful hair every\nlady should regularly apply Herplcide to\nher hair and scalp. This destroys the\ndandruff germ. By It the scalp is kept\nclear of dandruff and the hair stops\nfalling.\nHerplcide is free from grease, does not\nstain or dye and possesses an exceedingly\ndelicate  and  pleasing odor.\nNewbro's Herpiclde 1b just the sort of\na preparation that always appeals to a\nlady of refinement and cultured tastes.\nThere Is nothing that can take Its place.\nThere Is nothing Just like it, nearly like\nIt or \"Just as good.\"\nAU reliable druggists sell and guarantee Herpiclde ln one dollar size bottles.\nSend 10c for booklet and sample to The\nHerplcide Co., Dept. R, Detroit,  Mich.\nApplications obtained \\at good barber\nShops. The Poole Drug Co., Nelson, flpe-\nclal agents. .\u00ab..__\u2014\u2014\u2014\nEstablished  1898\nThe Sign of the Pish\nThe Fisherman's Mail\nOrder House    s\nEverything for the fisherman.'\n\u2014\u2014f. SUTCUFFE\n411 Baker 8t. Nelson, B.C.\nlers In applying water to growing\ncrops, judging by tbe scores ot Inquires received by Stephen O. Jayne,\nin charge of Irrigation investigations tn\nthe state of Washington for the United\nStates department of agriculture, following the publication of an interview\nregarding the experiments made with\nwhirling devices In this state,\n\"The sprinkler plan has been used\nsuccessfully and profitably during the\nlast 15 years at the Riverside farm, a\nfew miles east of Spokane,\" said Mr.\nJayne, on return from an Investigation\ntrip. \"It 1b the moat extensive irrigation system In the western country\nemploying sprinklers exclusively. R.\nA. Jones, the owner, abandoned his\nprofession as an engineer to develop\nthis tract, which embraces about B0\nacres. He installed the plant from\nstart to finish and has Improved it\nfrom time to time until today It 1b\none of the' show places in the Spokane\ndistrict.\n\"Mr. Jones' plant consists of a triplex pump, operated by a 20-borsepower\nelectric motor. Water is pumped from\ntbe Spokane river to a masonry reservoir of 40,000 gallons capacity, located\non an elevation higher than any of the\nfarm buildings. The main pipes, two\nfour-Inch, and one three-Inch, from the\npumping plant are tapped by latteral\npipes, ranging from two-Inch to three-\nquarters of an Inch, laid parallel about\n300 feet apart. These lateral pipes are\ntapped at intervals of from 16 to 21\nfeet and are provided with faucets\nfor hose connections. From these faucets the water is conducted by rubber\nhose to the sprinkler and thence sprayed over the crops and soil.\n\"The sprinklers, which were designed by Mr. Jones, are simple in construction, having no movable parts, and\nare efficient, throwing a coarse spray\nthoroughly and uniformly wetting\nan area of from 20 to 35 feet in diameter, according to the pressure head.\nThe pump is under 85 feet pressure.\nThe sprinklers are attached to galvanized Iron nipples of a length best\nsuited to the crop to be irrigated. For\nlow growing crops a short nipple la\nused, while a vertical nipple or pipe\nfrom four to five feet in height may be\nused where it la desired to throw the\nspray over tall growing shrubs or\nplants.\nFattened on Sleds.\n\"The sprinklers are firmly fastened\nto small sledB, which hold the pipes\nIn an upright position, and these sleds\nare moved back and forth and up and\ndown the rows In such a way as to\nproperly sprinkle flho ground. One\nman can handle 20 sprinklers In this\nway. To avoid the necessity of shutting off the water, when it Is desired\nto move the sprinklers, a long pike-\npole 1b used for pulling them ahead.\nOn the Jones place 30 or more sprinklers may be seen going at one time.\nTwo men do all the work and have\nsome left for other duties besides Irrigation.\n\"Although the sprinklers are used\nchiefly for the irrigation of nursery\nstock, the same method Is employed in\nwatering -crops of. all kinds on the\nfarm, from corn and potatoes to a\nmature bearing orchard, and under the\nconditions existing, Mr. Jones thinks\nthere could be no better wax.of-dojng\nIt.\n\"The coat of the Installation Is heavy,\nThe Store oi Quality\nTeas and Coffees\u2014Wo carry all\nthe standard brands and a splendid selection Imported In bulk,\nand can please the most fastidious.\nPruit Jars\u2014Our prices for 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 stock is complete and\nour service Is always prompt.\nTours for business.\nA.S.HORSWILL\nBaker 8t Prions 11\nSnap for\nDairyman\nOnly 2 1-2 miles from city limits.\non Cottonwood creek, 800 acrea,\nsome range, some easy clearing,\nenough timber on place to pay for\n, lt (Would make a tins dairy\nranch.\n$8 an Acre\nHalf cash, balance arranged.\nCabinet Cigar Store\nO. B. Matlhsw\nPhone B114\nNelson, B.C.\nP.O. Box i\nGome In ana try\nHazlewood Ice Creai\nand Jersey Buttermilk\nThey are a treat\nHsselwood  Ice Cream  Parlors\nPhone 208 508i\/2 Baker Stl\nand equipment required la large.    On ]\nthis SO acres there has been installed\nnearly three miles of pipe of various]\nsizes, and there Is between 4,000 and!\n5,000 feet of rubber hose.   Tbe hosef\nis bought in large quantities and cut\non the farm.   Wearing out of hose la |\nthe principal Item of depreciation,.but\na good grade will stand several year's\nservice.\n\"The land Irrigated 1b too rough to\nbe watered easily by the usual methods\nand it Is not of such a nature aa to\npremlt of grading, so It was a case of\ndo lt with sprinklers or not at all, and\nwhile It haB been expensive, it haB\nproved profitable. Mr. Jones says lf\nhe were to undertake the work again,\nhe would adopt the same system, but,\nof course, his experience bas shown\nwhere Improvements could be made ln\nminor details.\n\"It is an interesting Bight to Bee a\nlarge battery of these sprinklers ln\noperation, and lf one contemplates the\nInstallation of a sprinkler system it\nwill be found worth while to visit'the\nfarm.\" *      *\u2022    *\nMlnard's Liniment cures Garget In cows\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_11","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\/1.0384177","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":"1911-07-11 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":"1911-07-11 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":""}]}