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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":" ?EIGHT PAGES\nSO CENTS A MONTH\nVXe\nCLASSIFIED ADS 1\n1 CENT A WORD j\nVOL. 12\nNO. 52\nTWO MINISTERS\nOFFER TO\nLloyd George and Sir Rufus\nIsaacs Tender Resignations\nDEBATE EXCITING\nON MARCONI REPORT\nWhitewash  Spread Thick-\nEverybody Is Exonerated\nby Report\n(By Daily New* Tinned Wlre.l\nLONDON, Juno 1G.\u2014The debate on\nthe Marconi committee report, which\nthe prime m'nlHter has fixed for Wednesday und Thursday in the houso uf\ncommons, is expected to be exciting.\nIn welt-Informed political quarters It\nIb asserted that both Sir llufus Isaacs,\nthe attorney general, nnd Davhl Lloyd\nGeorge, chancellor of the exchequer,\nhave ofrered to resign jf necessary to\nrelieve the government of embarrassment, but that Premier Asquith has\nrefused to consider such a solution of\nthe matter, folding thait If It Is serious enough to call for resignations\ntho whole cabinet must resign. Political gossip credits the government\nwith the Intention of proposing in parliament self-denying resolutions which.\nIf carried, preclude nny minister In\nfuture from holding a directorship in\nany public compnny or shares In any\ncompany contracting with the government.\nWhitewash  Too  Thick.\n(By Dally Newa ?__nnt>d wir-o\nLONDON, .lune lfi.\u2014Tlio opinions\non the report of the Marboni dommlt-\nteo on the whole fallow parly linen,\nbut even In Liberal quarters tho feeling Is pretty general that lho majority report should not hnve so completely exonerated the ministers involved. The Nation, a leading Liberal weekly, Bays: \"The view of a section of tho party is that Lord Murray should bo repudiated, that Sir\nBufus Isaacs should resign and that\nLloyd George should express his regrets. As to the future n goud many\nLiberals declare thnt much depends\non -Lloyd George's speech In tho\nforthcoming doliato in the house. Tt\nIs ceriuin thnt lhe debate will have\na powerful Influence either for good\nor ill, on the fortunes of iho party,\"\nRegret is expressed thnt the report\nof the Liberal chairman should have\nbeen thrown over by what was In effect n party vote nnd all the more\nso because mnny of Die rank and file\nof Liberals consider Sir Alhert Spl-\nccrs' a good report and In accordance With the evidence and think\nthat the report which has heen carried ngalnst him by Mr. Falconer.\nMr. Booth nnd the otlicr liberal\nmembers of tho committee nnd their\nallies, has boon of a loo obviously\nwhitewashing ohnrnctpr. Evan ns ii\nmatter of policy or strategy, there\naro Liberals Io be found who deem\ntho attitude adopted by the chairman\nwas far better for the Liberal party,\nIt mny be added that friends of the\nprime minister believe bis views to be\nthnt It Is his duty to carry out the\noperations of lho. parliament act In\nrespect to the bills now before parliament and not to l\u00bbe deflected from\nthat course hy nny personal Issues.\nWORKMEN BURIED\ni IN SUBWAY\nDynamite Blast C_uses Big Caveln\u2014\nFlvo Hundred Men Digging\nfor Victims.\n(By Daily Ncw\u00ab -Leased WirM *\nNEW YORK, June 15.\u2014Thirteen\nworkmen on the new Lexington avenue subway were buried under tons\nof fock and dirt by a caveln yesterday, A blast of dynamite waB let go\nand -immediately afterward n large\nsection of the excavation came down\non the workmen. Five hundred men\nWere put to work within a short thlie\ntrying to get out tbe victims. Three\nadditional bodies of last night's caveln on the new Lexington avenue subway were recovered today, making a\ntotal of nine known victims, with the\npossibility that sUll another may be\nburied beneath the fallen rock. Two\nmen dug out of the debris olive and\nterribly mangled, may dile. All the\nbodies recovered have been identified.\nThe laBt body recovered this evening\nWaa that of Patrick Hoyce, foreman\n6t the Bang -of men who were caught\nand crushed when the masses of rock\nfell upon them, 80 feet below the sur-\n. face. The others killed were drillers\nand laborers, all foreigners. An investigation to fix resiKjnslblllty for\nthe accident has been begun by Coroner HoltshaWB.\nCAR TURN8  SOMERSAULTS\nWOMAN   18  KILLED\n(By Dnlly News Leaned Wire.)\nMOOSE JAW, Sask., J :ne 15.\u2014\nWhile in an automobile at : .vlft Current with Dr. and Mrs. I!i; -k, Miss\nFuller, well known hero, was Instantly killed when tlio oar turned\nturtle through a broken tire. The\ncar made two   complete somersaults\n-\u2022and pinned Miss Fuller beneath lt.\nDr. Black had one of his legs so badly broken that it will have' to be\namputated,  and  Mrs.   Black  received\n1 a broken collar-bone.\nATLANTIC COAST\nCruisers and Transports to\n8e Built\nWILL BE OPERATED\nBY GOVERNMENT\nTo Create Great Shipbuilding\nIndustry-Royal Commission Probable\n(By  Dally  News  T-ensed   Wlre.l\nOTTAWA, June lfi.\u2014The Evening\nJournal says: \"The Dominion government Is taking Immediate steps to\nconstrued a marine yard on the Atlantic\nseaboard, which in size, character and\ncapacity will enable it to turn out\nsmall cruisers and other types of war\nvessels, transports and al] classes ot\nsteamers required in the government\nservice, The new shipyard will be\noperated by tlio government und Is to\nbe located at Charlotte.own, P. E. I.\nIt will be the first definite step to\ncarry out Premier Borden's, policy of\nbuilding in the Dominion n great shipbuilding industry, The whole question of shipbuilding in Cannda is now\nreceiving moBt careful consideration\nand It Is likely thnt a royal commission composed of experts will be appointed to inquire into everything vs.-\nsociated and pertaining to the matter.\nWILL MAKE MAP\nOF EAST KOOTENAY\nGuide Book for Rocky Mountain Park\nto Be Prepared\u2014Geological\nSurvey Work.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, June 15.\u2014Owing to the\nmeeting of the 'International geological congress in Canada this year the\nfield work of the geological survey\n..\"1 be somewhat curtailed, as many\nofficers are required for the work of\nthe congress, but the work will still\nbe comprehensive and extensive. Most\nof the parties have left for fcheilr respective fields. As has already been\nannounced, several officers have been\ndel ailed by the survey for the Canadian Arctic expedition of Stefansson.\nThe northern party will explore the\nunknown sens nnd lands north of the\nmouth of the Mackenzie, west of\nBanks and Prince Patricks land.\nThe southern party will Investigate\nthe region about. Coronation gulf, Including the Copper Mine river basin\nand Victoria lnnd. The occurrence of\ncopper-bearing rock in this region\nmakes the geological examination and\nmapping of great importance.\nThe cooper companies are interested In the possibilities of the region,\nas there are no physical difficulties\nthat would prevent mining. Should\ncopper be found In commercial quantities it would mean tne opening up\nby transportation of the whole Mackenzie river valley and the Arctic\nconst. B. Ross will continue field\nwork between Banff and Golden. He\nwill prepare a guide book for tho\nRooky mountain park at Banff.\nD. D. Calrnes wlH make a geological\nmap of the Whito river copper district nnd examine nnd report on copper deposits of Valdez island. He will\nalso examine the placer area southeast of TesMn lake.\nC. Camsell will spend the senson In\nthe Slmilkitmeen district.\nC. H. Clapp will continue research\nwork on Vancouver islnnd nnd examine the nlumlnlte deposits on Kyuquot\nsound.\nW. W. Leach will examine the area\nbeing investigated for oil at Sheep\ncreek, Alberto.\nH. RIcb will continue an investigation into the clay deposits of. western\nCanada. , :    ,,\nS. J. Schofleld will complete the\nmapping (geological) of Rust Koot-\nr-nay sections, extending them to\nKootenay lake,\nJ. Whi taker will make a preliminary\nexamination of the Cretaceous section in Escapement, west of Dawson\nbay Lake Wlnnlpegosls.\nR. A. Daly \"will spend the summer\ndoing field work between Golden and\nVancouver.\nB. B. Dowling will review the coal\ndevelopments iu western Canada.\nL. L. Lambe will continue investigation ,of beds containing vertebrae\nremains in western Canada.\nMOTHER KILLED  BY\nFOUR  YEAR  OLD  SON\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.>\nCOLLINGWOOD, Ont., June 14.\u2014\nMrs. James Cnlback was almost Instantly killed today, when her four-\nyear-old soo discharged a 22 calibre\nrifle at her. The little follow had\nbeen given the rifle to play with, ond\nfinding a bullet on the floor Inserted\nIt. Coroner McFauldc declared an\niwiucst  unnecessary.\nRUSSIAN OFFICIALS ASK\nPROTECTION FROM  INSULT\nST. PETERSBURG, June 36.\u2014A complete breach hns opened between tbe\nRussian government and the Duma.\nMembers of the cabinet announced today that neither the ministers nor the\nheads of departments will appear In the\nhouse \"until conditions are established\nunder which representatives of the government will tie secure from Insult by\nmembers of the Duma.\"\nBut Now It's the Fig\nTelephone Company to\nImprove Sloean System\nPlans have been completed for the\nrebuilding of the British Columbia\nTelephone company's plants at New\nDenver and Silverton, and for general\nimprovement to tho coriipuny'8 system throughout Sloean, aa well as\nplans   for the extending anil   general\nImproving  of   the   company's   outside\nwork  in and around Nelson,\nThe plans for the new telephone\nsystem at Kaslo have been approved .by thc city council of that place,\nand tbc district superintendent, A. B.\nGodfrey, will  have  this   morning  for\nthe main lake city, where he Will put\nmen to work immediately on the installation   of the system.\nThe high water along the west arm\nhas caused considerable trouble ti\nthe company's lines during the   pu\u00abt\nfew weeks, and every day men have\nbeen employed on this line trying to\nkeep up the service. It is the com\npsmy's intention to follow tin* road\nWith this lino as soon as It Is conv\npletod.\nGeorge 11. Ma lso of Vancouver,\nsocretary-treasurer of the British\nColumbia Telephone company, waa In\nthe city during the past week, and\nwhile here accompanied Mr. Godfrey\non a trip of inspection to points In\nlhe Boundary. \t\nFLOODS IN  INDIA CAUSE\nHEAVY   LOSS  OF   LIFE\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nBombay, Juno 14.\u2014Floods caused the lots of 300 lives today In\nthe Palitana district- on tho peninsula of Kathiawar, to the north\nof Bombay, on the Arabian sea.\nTht inundations were caused by\nheavy rains.\nFIVE HUNDRED DOCTORS\nEXPECTED AT CONVENTION\n(By Daily News Leaa__ Wlre.J\nLONDON, Ont, June 15.\u2014The 4fith\nannual convention of the Cannda Medical association will meet in London,\nOnt., on June 24, and will be attended by about 500 doctors from all parts\nof the Dominion. One of the subjects\ndiscussed nt the meetings is the establishment of a special department\nof public health in the federal government.\nBOURASSA MUST\nPAY DAMAGES\nEditor of La Patrle Secures Judgment\nAgainst Nationalist Orator\u2014Old\nTime Charge.\n(By Dally News Leased Wlr\".)\nMONTREAL, June IB.\u2014Charles\nRoblllard, editor of La Patrle, on Saturday secured judgment of $150\nagainst Henri Bourassa, editor and director of Le Devoir. Mr. Justice Archibald, who heard and disposed of the\ncase, announced the view that the articles complained of by the plaintiff\nand on the grounds of which he\nsought damages to the extent of\n$5,000, were defamatory and intended\nto create the impression In tbe public\nmind that the plaintiff had been guilty\nof cowardice as a soldier a generation\nago. Such references, ruled bis lordship, could not fall to have the effect\nof throwing discredit and to a certain\nextent contempt on the plaintiff.\nLOCK GATES CARRIED AWAY\nNAVIGATION   TIED   UP\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nST. CATHERINES, OUL, June IE.\u2014\nAn accident unprecedented In the\nhistory of Welland canal -occurred\nthiB morning*, when the four gates'at\nlock No. 1 were carried away by a\nsmall steamer bumping against .the\nfootgates while the lock was full of\nwater. AS a result navigation Will\nbe tied up for two days,\nEnormous Crowds Watch\nSuffragette's Funeral\nM\n(By Dally\nIRPETH,\nOategation of\nsands of spect\ntermeni today\nWilding Davis\nChurchyard,\nyesterday wait\ngreat demons\nhy suffragctt'\nclad wona-n ]<\ntached to the\ntho coffin res\nloaded wltll W\ncarriages wet*.\nNews Leased Wire.)\nEng., June 15,\u2014a large\nsuffragettes and thoU-\nators witnessed the *n-\nof the body of Emily\non in St. Mary's parish\n11 >**i* funeral at London\n: made thn occasion of\n(rations of sympathy\n\u25a0x. Todny four whlte-\n>d four black horses at-\nopert wagon on which\nted. Another wagon,\nreaths followed, and the\n-  wreathed  wltll I'loWcrs,\nEMILY DAVISON\nThe English suffragette who tried to\ngrasp the birdie of the King's horse\nin tht Epsom Derby race. 8he died\nof her injuries on Monday, and ths\nfuneral took place in Morpeth, Erg.,\non Saturday.\nAs the coffin WOS lowered il wns\ncovered with a pall inscribed; -Welcome tbo Northumberland hunger\nstriker.\"\nProcession in London,\nLONDON, June 15.\u2014The funeral\nprocession of Miss Emily Wilding\nDavison started from Victoria station at 2 o'clock on Saturday. The\ncoffin, covered with flowers, was in\nan open hearse drawn by four black\nhorses, The band.* played dirges,\nwhllo the members of the various\nwomen's societies fell into line behind\nthe hearse. Enormous crowds surrounded the station, making progress\ndifficult. The parade was divided\ninto 11 sections. The suffragettes\nmarched In fours, nil carrying flowers. The coffin wus in thc middle of\n(he procession, und lhe clergy of St.\nGeorge's church. Bloomsbury, marched nt the head. The rector of the\nchurch, Dr. B&umgarten, had issued a\nstatement that be was not a sympathiser with the women's militant luetics.\nFor the most part the crowds were\norderly and Sympathetic. A deal of\nconfusion and commotion was caused by the report that tbe police\nwould compel the iSaraders to proceed\nthrough secluded streets. There was\nno serious   trouble,   however.\nLeader Again Arrested.\nLONDON, June 14.\u2014Mra. Emme-\nHiie Pankhurst was arrested again\ntoday nnd token to Holloway street\nJail. She bad been released on\nlicense on May 30 owing' to Ill-health\nbrought about by a hunger strike\nwhile she was serving her three-year\nsentence of penal servitude. Mrs.\nPankhurst wus leaving the house\nwhere she hnd been staying since her\nrelease when two policemen arrested her. She was dressed in deep\nmourning, and was on the way to attend the  funeral of Miss Davison.\nJAPAN WILLING TO RENEW\nARBITRATION TREATY\nWASHINGTON, June IK.\u2014Viscount\nChimin, lhe Japanese ambassador, hns\nadvised Secretary Bryan that Japan is\nwilling to renew for another period of\nfive years her arbitration treaty with\nthe United States, which expires by\nlimitation on Aug. 24.\nIL PASSENGERS\nMany  Injured When   East-\nbound Train Derailed\nCAR DASHES INTO\nWAITING ROOM\nCrashes Through Station and\nUpsets in Waiting Room\n\u2014Many Injured\nCaptain and Crew Rescued-\nFight Among Immigrants\n(By Dally News I*n_i*_ Wlro.i\nSAfiKATOON, Sask,, June iri.\u2014A\nCanadian Pacific railwny onstbound\npassenger, train running _(i miles an\nhour was derailed just west of Purdue. Sask., on Saturday at 11:27 a.m.\nThere were nine cars on the train,\nbut   none     of     the     passengers   were\nseriously Injured, Several received\ncuts and bruises. A broken brake\nhanger caused the accident. Passengers bad miraculous escapes, being\nhurled In all directions, some or them\nbeing tin-own through car windows.\nThe express car was left at right\nangles across the tracks, with Its\ntrucks torn off and many yards away.\nThe first baggage car had a similar\nfate. In the ditch, lying on Its .side,\nwas   the   second   baggage   car.       The\nother cars were unly slightly damaged. The track was repaired aud traffic resumed on the line today.\nStation   Rammed.\n(By Dailv News Leased Wlrs,)\nMONTREAL, June IB,\u2014Three men\nwere Injured, damage was done to the\nextent pf several thousand dollars\nand a number of fatalities were narrowly averted tonight when a tank\ncar filled wltb coal tar .broke loose\nfrom nn engine on a heavy grade nnd\ncrashed into tbe Place Yiger station.\nThe' cur rammed through the side of\nthe building Into the waiting room,\nwhere many people were awaiting\noutgoing trains.\nAlfred Oi.boiy, 22 years old, was\ntaken to Notre Dame hospital suffering from a slight concussion of the\nbrain, general contusions and Internal Injuries. His condition Ih serious. Two others were taken to the\nhospital suffering from contusions,\nbut were later removed to their\nhomes.\nTho ear partially overturned In the\ncenlre of the waiting room, bespattering lhe Interior with the black\nliquid.\nOre Steamer Missing, Damaged in Collision\nSCHOONER BURNS\nTO WATER'S EDGE\nLABOR  AGENCIES  MUST\nTAKE  OUT   LICENSES\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nVANCOUVER, B, ('., Juno lit.\u2014A\nwire to tlie Dominion Immigration\nagent at Vancouver froftl W. D, Scott,\nsuperintendent of immigration al Ottawa, stated that no applications had\nyet been received from British Columbia employment agencies for licenses under thn new order-In -council,\nand -that further neglect would result In immediate prosecution. It\nwas further suggested that newspaper  publicity   lie   given   to   this   ruling\nof tho department, since then, however, the majority of labor agencies\nin Vancouver have made formal application for licenses. Any ot Iters\nOperating   ln   the   province   who  have\nnot yet applied are asked to take\nnote of this ruling of the department\nWRECK   COMMISSIONER   FOR\nBRITISH   COLUMBIA   APPOINTED\nfBy Dally News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, .June 14.\u2014John D. Mac-\npherson uf Victoria, R ('\u201e murine\nmaster, nnd an officer of the department of marine and fisheries, has\nlieen appointed    wreck commissioner\nfor British Columbia and examiner of\nmasters and mates, in place of Capl,\nJames   Guudin,   deceased.\nUNIONIST LEADER\nSTRUCK ON HEAD\nProcession In Leeds Leads to Disorders\u2014Woman Captures Flay\u2014Sir\nEdward Carson injured.\n(Rv  Daily   Nows   Leased   *\"VIr\u00ab0\nLEEDS. England, June 14\u2014Sir Edwar\"\nCarson, the leading spirit In the tight\nngalnst home rule for Ireland, wai\nBtruckon tlie uead by a missile tlirowi\nby an unknown person while ho win\nproceeding to the town hall tonight. .1\nprocession whieh formed <>n his arrival\nresulted     In    disorders.      The    Unionist\nleader was not seriously   Injured   on\"\nwill continue tlie campaign Which hi\nlias begun in the provinces against homi\nrate. A woman captured the Union\njack whieh one of the anti-home ruleri\nwas carrying in the pr-cesslon.\nLAW   STUDENT   DROWNED\nIN   GHOST   RIVER   RAPIDS\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nCALGARY, Alta., June IB.\u2014Maurice Malhiot, a law student, _0 years\nof age. was drowned at Ghost river\nrapids, 3ii niijes out on the How river,\ntoday. He was canoeing with two\nothers down the river, which was\nvery full und going at a terrific pace.\nThe canoe upset at the rapids. John\nEmery and Ross Hills, who wcre\nwith him. swam ashore, but Malhiot\nwas never seen again. The canoe\nwas found down stream, but there\nhave been no traces of the body yet.\nfBy Dally News Leased Wire.)\nCAUIMI'T, Mich., June 15.\u2014The\noro steamer .lesso Spalding, damaged\nIn a collision wilh lho coal Bteamer\nWiMltwn M. Snyder Jr., ia missing on\nLake Superior tonight somewhere, it\nis thought, in the vicinity of Keweenaw- point. Distress signals from th*\nSpalding ceased suddenly after tho\ncollision during a heavy fog this\nmorning and tlie Snyder Jr., which\nhod'backed clear, was unable to find\niho other Injured vessel,\nAftor a long search for the Spnldfng\nthe Snyder Jr.. which wns only slightly damaged above 'he water lino, set\nout to reach ils homo port\u2014Superior,\nWis. Sudden stoppage of tlie Spnld-\nins's distress signals, according to\ntake sailors, may mean that tbe ore\nsteamer's boilers were flooded. It is\npossible tho vessel was beached near\nIho scene of the collision, or that the\ncrew succeeded In mnking temporary\nrepairs and reached shelter.\nSchooner on Fire.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nPBOVIDBNOBITOWN, Mass., Juno\nII.\u2014The five-nutated schooner Palmer, bound light from Bangor, Mo., for\na coil] port. wn\u00bb burned to tho water's\nedge seven miles north of Race point,\n('ape Cod. lato today. Captain Allen\nand the crew were taken off by the\ncrew of Hie fishing schooner Rose\nDoherty, the winner of the Lipton cup\nfor fishermen for five years. Captain\nAllen, his wife and crew, with Miss\nKatberine Dunn of Boston, a guest,\nwere ll 'if'ed *ierr> tonight.\n'\" When tne schooner was first sighted by tho keeper of Highland light\nSmoke and flames were pouring out\nof tbo forward hold, having started\nfrom an unknown cause In the forward hold. Tlie fire gained headway\nrapidly nnd when the schooner was\nfivo miles northeast of the light she\nwas aflame from bow to amidships.\nThe two forward masts toppled over-\nsldo as the fishing schooner reached\nthe scene, and the crew bad taken to\nlhe small  boats.\nFight Among Immigrants.\n(Bv Dfilly News I-ensftd  Wire.)\nQUEBEC, June 16.\u2014When th0\nSteamer Mount Temple of the Canadian Pacific railway lines arrived here\non Saturday evening from Antwerp\nwith _,0D4 passengers on board, three\nmen were suffering from wounds, ono\nfrom a knife and two from it revolver,\nns a result of a row on board last\nThursday night, at sea. The immigrants on tlio steamer are principally\nfrom continental Europe nnd It wan\nimpossible to get information from\nthem regarding tho trouble. It Is\nthought, however, that the fighting\nstarted over u woman,\nWEST ARM WATER\nBEGINS TO'RECEDE\nFell  one  and One-Half Inches During\nPart    Two     Days,    According     to\nLaunch   Company's   Gauge.\nTl\nwale\nimcmced\nt  -iv  hon\nt &  Lnn\nlow   stun\nwest arm bus\n, and during tho\nllletl \\y_\\ Inches,\nye of the Nelson\niany, The water\n:\u2022 ft. tl In.\nFOUR   MURDE  RTRIALS  AT\nNEW   WESTMINSTER   ASSIZES\nVA Ml .OUV Kit, i'.. C. 3 une is._\nThere are four murder trials uud four\ncases ot attempted murder in the list\nfor   the   assizes   al   .New   Westminster\nbeginning oh Monday.\nQuite Comfortable\nThese Days\nis the man ur Woman who knows\nsomething nbout tiie art of warm\nweather dressing.\nSo many things arc planned for\nour comfort that it Is our own\nfault    it    we    don't   know    about\nthem.\nOn the one band we see people\nfr.-ttlng and hailing in great physical discomfort! while on the\nother we not. with envy cheer*\n(nl folk who are cool, comfortable, and contented.\nTlio reason Is that some persons are smaller than others la\nselecting their apparel for summer wear, a careful reading of\nthe advertisements appearing dally\nIn The Dally .Newii will teach any\none willing to learn all the up-to-\ndate tricks In summer dressing\nthat brains have devised lor the\nbenefit  and  comfort  of  mankind.\nThe \"nd-readlng habit\" will net\nyou gratifying returns If vou will\nfollow  It.\n \u25a0X PAGE TWO\nCfo Bail. fino*.\nMONOAV     JUNE  11\nModern Office Supplies and Appliances\nCARTON  PAPER AND TYPEWRITER   RIBBONS\u2014 Remington  band,  in\n\u25a0 II   color*,   guaranteed   in   any   and  .very  way to give satisfaction.\nRibbon. 75c each;  Carton  Paper,  per box   (100)    $3.00\nTYPEWRITER PAPER\u2014Boxed, 500 sheet, to the roam;  all weights, por\nroam    90c   to   $4.00\nSECOND SHEETS\u2014Manilla. 14 Ib. stock, per ream   60c\nEDISON     MIMEOGRAPHS\u2014Rotary  machine, $35.00.   Rotary  Self-Inking\nMachine   $52-50\nDUPLIGRAPH\u2014Penman  &  Sprang's  gelatine  device    $9-00\nDEED BOXES\u2014Shell steel, oval shooe, UxV\/zxZ1\/, inches: good lock $1.00\nCA8H   BOXES\u2014All  sizes    50c  to $9.00\nVERTICAL CARD TRAYS\u20143x5 inch, complete with cards and index 80c;\n4x6   inch,   complete   with   cards   and  index, $1.25; 4x6 inch, covered\ncabinet,   two   drawers    $3.25\nJACKDAW LEDGER\u2014Loose leaf, 8x11   inch, corduroy and  leather binding, steel  lock, flat opening, with leather taped  index   $7.50\nSheets in all ruling to fit above, ner 100  $1-25\nBLANK  BOOKS\u2014Special rulings in day, cash and journals, from one to\neight columns.   Synoptics, twelve  to twenty-four columns.\nWIRE TRAYS\u201414x9 inches, 35c;  Waste Bosket, tin  bottom   60o\nFILES,   INKS,  MUCILAGE,   BINDING  CASES,  _c,  4c.\nTHE  MOST COMPLETE STOCK  IN   INTERIOR OF   B.C.\nENGLAND SHOULD\nBEAR WHOLE COST\nCanada Drug & Book Co. Ltd.\nPhoie 81        Nelson's Pioneer Drug Store      P.O. Box S02\nAfentt lor tie Remington Tjfpewriter Hiil Orders i Specialty\nGoing to Build?\nll   it   a   wood  shed,   a   chicken  houso, an alteration or addition to the\nhouse;  perhaps  it  is a  nnw  house.\nEverything  you'll  \u25a0    nt from   roof  to  floor   in   rough   or  finished\nlumber we can supply you with. \u25a0\nWall seasoned pine, fir and cedar.    Cut in our own mills.\nSlowly dried by nature in our yarde.\nOur experts will advise you free.    No obligation.\nWrite,   phone   or   call.\nForest Mills of B. C. Ltd.\nLate DOMINION  SAWMILLS   & LUMBER, LTD. '\nPHONE  16. \"*\u2022 -  BO\"  10M I\nllTllll^iUMSritAW^CAiDA\nSAILING   EVERY   TUESDAY   FROM\nMONTREAL. QUEBEC. LIVERPOOL.\nNEW S.S. LAURENTIC    \u2014    15,000 TONS    \u2014    NEW S.S. MEGANTIC\nFirst Class, $92.50.   Second  Class, $53.75.   Third Class, $32.50,\nTWIN-SCREW  STEAMERS.\n8.S. TEUTONIC-582 FT. LONG. S.S. CANADA-514 FT. LONG.\nONLY ONE CLASS  CABIN   (II.) $50-00\nAND THIRD CLASS, $31.25 AND UP   CARRIED.\nTor sailings and llluHtrnted booklet! apply Company's office, 019 Second Ave..\nSeattle, Uii'*-e ilooix from Cherry street, or      \u25a0\u2022    _.___.me._.   ._____,.  n   __\nW. E. KETOHDM,  Agent G. N.  Rv., D.  SMEATON, Agent, C. P.\nC.   N.   HABRIMAN,   D.T.A.,  C.P. Ry.\nny\nWANTED\nLOW   GRADE   CUPPER   AND   IRON   SULPHIDE    OR   LOW   GRADE\nIRON  PYRITES   CARRYING   GOLD;    UoDY   NECESSARY.\nCONSULT  ME  FOR  GOOD INVESTMENTS  IN  MINING  STOCKS.\nSUMMER  COTTAGES    FOR   RENT,    Al.SG    SUMMER  RESIDENTIAL\nSITES   FOR  SALE   ON   KOOTENAY   LAKE.\nLIFE,  ACCIDENT,  LIABILITY,   FIDELITY,  FIRE INSURANCE,\nCONTRACTORS  PONDS, StO.\nFRED A. STARKEY\nirpERIAL BANK BLOCK.\nP.O. BOX 552.\nHenri Bourassa Addressee Public\nMeetings on Prairies\u2014 Independence\nAlternative  to   Present  Condition.\n(By Dally News Leaned Wire.)\nOA1-QAHY. Aim.. June 15.\u2014Tn lhe\nlargest gathering the Canadian dub\nnf Calgary linn ever held, Henri Hour-\nussa, iho NutloniillMt leader frnm\nQuebec, cm Saturday gave an exposition of hla position in Canadian iind\nImperial politics. Contrary to all expectations and forecasts, Mr. Hour-\nliana had not merely a respectful\nhearing, hut he was wnrmly received,\nand his telling pi-Hods Were louilly\ncheered. 1-teforrhis In humorous\nstyle to the scandal caused anions\nthe devoted Imperialists who held nl'\ntlielr hands in horror at tin- thought\nthat BourasBn, the rebel, should\nspeak In Calgary, Mr. UouniKKu wild\nIt wan at limes a good thing to hear\nwhat tho other fellows had to sa>,\nwliiI,- lie* would he lacking In every\nquality of manliness if he did not Bay\nln Calgary what be wild in bis home\nprovince. The remainder of nh\nspeech followed two thoughts\nTliere should he no contribution li\nimperial defence without a say in Imperial poll He., and the foreign pollc)\nof the empire. Canada (should seoh\nt3 dey^'.iji her own nationality along\nCanadian lines. So many foreigners\nhern could not really he expected to\nhave the regard for Kngland timt on\nBnglander hnd, and all that could be\nasked of them was to hn good nnd\nloyal , Canadians. MriKlanders ami\nScots, at the same time, -should he\nmindful of the fact lhat even In a\nhumble way at home ihey had their\nsay   la  imperial  politics.     Onco    in\nCanada, they were no longer Eng\"\nlanders hut colonials, and had no\nmore to say. The old motto should\nIn- kept up, \"Once a British subject,\nalways a British subject, nnd wherever a British subject, always u British subject.\"\nSpeaks in Edmonton.\nfBy Dally News Leased Wire.)\nEDMONTON, June ID.\u2014That Canada's national obligation*- should be\nmeasured by the extent of her national privileges and liberties and lhat as\nlho sole control of thc army and navy\nlay with the British parliament, England should bear the whole cost of\nimperial defence, formed the basic\nprinciples of the nationalist conception of imperial relationships as defined by Henri Hournssa, the Nationalist leader at a public meeting\nheld in thc Empire auditorium on\nFriday, Canada and the other self-\ngoverning colonies, said Mr. Bourassa, had absolutely no control nnd\nno voice in the government of lhe\nempire. The people of the United\nKingdom, through their parliament,\nwere the sole and absolute master;-\nof the empire. Did n question of external policy arise Cannda was imt\nconsulted, the decision lying solely\nwith the British parliament. Matters\nnt' foreign relations were arranged hy\nlOnglisb diplomats and settled by the\nEnglish parliament, none'of the colonics being consulted.    An the  Urllish\npeople absolutely controlled ihe army\nami navy Mr. Bourassa maintained\nthat they should he responsible for\nthe entire cost of its maintenance.\nCannda, Mr. Bourassa added, had nol\neven the power to legislate on Iier\nown copyright, on extradition or nn\nnaturalization, all affaire vitally affecting her local policies.\nOolng on to deal more particularly\nw!tb the Borden naval policy and tin*\nRailway Station at Fort Fraser, B. C.\nMoro than 1,500 poople imuglit lots In Port Fraser netoro any **\u00bb\u00bbn,nm\ncould !\u00bb\u25a0 Blven them thai the town would havo n railroad Motion. Amonii\ntin-,. IniviTi an. bankers, bnslnnss :i nd nrofrarfoiml mon who oro aware ot\ntho ireatnoM ot lho Interior ot Brit Isli Columbia,\nFort. Fronor, by o recent decision ot tho Hallway Commission, will have\nample in-lBht and passenger acoom modutlon und this makes Fort Fruser\ntlio best town lo tlie Interior.\nA Bood lot con bo bought tor M  little as 110 por month, without Interest.\nInquire of\nDominion Stock and Bond Corporation, Ltd.\nWINCH    BUILDING VANCOUVER,   B.   C.\nLEAVES LARGE BEQUESTS\nTO  PUBLIC  INSTITUTIONS\n(Speclnl to The Dnllv News.)\nTORONTO, June  15.\u2014Hon.  James\nYoung of Gait, former provincial treasurer of Ontario, who died recently, loft\nan estate of $1T4,8_5. To the town of\nGait lie left $15,000 and bequests to\ncharity figures largely. Thirty thousand dollars goes to church funds and\nfor a mortuary chapel in Gait cemetery is left. $25,000. The .real goes to\nthe family and relatives.\t\nParisian Sage\nImitation'of\/This Great Hair\nInvigorator Are Abroad in\nthe Land. Look for thi\nGirl with the Auburn Hair\non Every Package.\nPARISIAN SAGE--ask fur it by\nname when yuu want the real hall\ngrower and dandruff cure.\nThis Is n plctnrt\nof the carton lr\nwhich eaoh bottleof\nPARISIAN' SAGE Ih\npacked.\nPARISIAN SAGE\nwill banish dandruff, stop falling\nhair and itching\nscalp, and promote\na new growth of\nhair If the hair root\nis not dead. It is a\nclean tunic und contains no poisonous\nlead or other clanger,\nous substance. lt\nWill put Indian!\nbeauty Into dull, faded, lifeless hulr, and\nas a dainty hair\ndressing for women\nIt cannot bo matched.\nGet a 5<i-cent bottle of PARISIAN\nSAGE today. If it doesn't give complete satisfaction, your money will be\nreturned. Sold by the Poole I>rug Co.,\nLtd..  and   dealers  everywhere.\nLake Frontage Fruit Land\nClose to LOCKHART BEACH, the new Government Summer Home Townsite\u2014 Twenty-five acres of\nexcellent soil, which was selected when the settlement was first opened, in attractive position, with sandy\nbeach frontage. Two acres cleared, abundance of water for irrigation and domestic purposes. Three-\nroomed Cottage, Stable, Implements. Price asked of $3,000 is, on the lowest valuation, fifteen hundred\ndollars under its worth, and is a snap either for ranching or as an investment. Owner is most anxious\nto sell, and will give full consideration to nearest offer to prtet asked. Detailed particulars can be had at\nour office.    We shall bo glad to show the property to any  interested party at any time.\nNationalist resolution** for opposing\nMr. Bourassa stated that Canada's\nseaborne trade was Britain's trade\nand the United Kingdom was Just as\nmuch interested fn protecting It In\ntime of war as was the Dominion.\nDepending as she did on the overseas dominions for the greater part\nof her food supply Britain waa much\nmore vitally interested in purchasing Canadian foodstuff* in time of\nwur, than was Canada in selling\nthem.\nRight of Piracy\nIn support of his eontention that\nCanada'l obligations should bc measured hy the standard of her influence,\nMr. llourassa stated that had it not\nbeen for the action -if British representatives at the seennd Hague conference Canadian merchant ships\nwould have been enfe in time of war\nand there would have been no bogey\nto raise of the danger lo Canadian\nmerchandise. Without consulting\nCanada Mr. Bourassa said, the British representatives had refused to\nagree t<> the Immunity of seaborne\ntraffic In time of war. Such an agreement'would have rendered Canada's\nmerchandise absolutely secure, but\ntlie British \u25a0governini-nt, confident In\nthe supremacy of the British fleet,\nhad perikted In pressrvlng the right\nof piracy. What claim, asked Mr.\nBonreasa, had Brllain to solicit aid\nfrom Canada, so long as she main\ntalned tin attitude detrimental to the\nInterests of tbe Dominion?\nMr. Bourassa maliiluinefl that tin\n\u25a0ry fact of the British governmenl\ncontinuing to recognize the right to\nseize merchant vessels Implied that\nthe British fleet was supreme, and us\nlong an it was assumed that British\nnaval power wa\u00ab Impregnable, there\nwus no need for Cnnnda to offer her\nassistant. Thut any benefit which\nCanada might receive from the imperial navy was simply obtained hi\nnn Incidental manner was contended\nby Mr. Buunisaa. Britain, he suld,\ndid not keep a nuvy for the protection of Cannda, but for their own defence, a fleet being necessary to keep\nthe seas open. Once a blockade were\ndeclared said Mr. Bourassa, and no\nfood allowed to enter the country,\nBritain Would he brought to subjection in a very few days through starvation. Any protection whloh Canada   might   receive  merely accrued  as\na consequence of that situation.\nMaintaining that England had con-\nnuered Canada and kept ft as they\nhad done tlie rest of the empire,\nmerely for ber own self-interest, Mr.\nBourassa stated that Britain owed\nnaval protection to tbe Dominion as\na duly. Tho only duly devolving\nupon Canada he added, wns tlio protection of her own territory as the\nonly portion of the | empire over\nwhieh she exercises nny real control.\nTbis position of affairs would continue to exist as had been stated by\ntiie Hon. c. J. Doherty in lflio, \"su\nlung as the United Kingdom alone\nhas exclusive control of the foreign\naffairs of ihe empire\".\nMr. Bourassa went on to contend\nthat tliere had been no alteration in\nC:uuidn\"s position since Ifltrt. At the\nimperial conference uf 1911 he said,\ntlie prime minister, tho Right Hon.\nll. II. Asquith, had emphatically\nstated that the power of deciding\nmatters of imperial importance could\nnol be shared by tlie colonies. Mr.\nBourassa proceeded to demonstrate\nthat the so-called Canadian representative <m (the committee of imperial defence would he merely an\nornament who would be useful In taking back the orders of the British\ngovernment to Canada. On Jan. 17\nlast, said Mr. Bourassa, tho Right\nHon, L, Harcourt, colonial' secretary,\nhad stated positively that the committee of defence was purely an advisory body und could not under any\ncircumstances become a body deciding on matters of policy. The final\ndecision) Mr. Harcourt added, on all\nmatters of foreign policy must always remain the sole prerogative of\ntho British cabinet. In view of such\nan assertion Mr. Bourassa contended\nit was futile for the Conservative\nparty to state that Canada Would\nhave any say In the destinies of the\ndreadnoughts which It was proposed\nto contribute. The Canadian repre-\nsentatlve on the imperial committee\nmight make statements ud Infinitum\nregarding Canada's desire ln any given matter, but tho English cabinet\nwould he at liberty to carry out tlieir\nown designs as though Canada was\nnon-existent. So long ns the British\ngovernment did not recede from the\nhaughty attitude which they had\nadopted In appointing themselves tho\n\u25a0solo arbiters of the fate of the em\npile, Mr. Bourassa stated lt wus be\nneath Canada's dignity as self-re\nspooling peoplo and against the spirit\nof the constitution of the Dominion\nto devote u single cent to Imperial\narmament In the form suggested by\neither political  party ut Ottawa.\nMr. Bourassa contended that Can\nada's part in empire building lay not\nIn the providing of armaments of war\nbul by building up the grent peaceful Institutions of tho country. Mr.\nBourassa fully approved of adequate\nprotection of Canadian territory and\nadvocated the putting of tjio sea\nshores and harbors of the Dominion\nInto a fair slute of defence, but hi\nemphatically protested against the\ndonation of money for a purpose with\nwhieh Canada had no concern. Rath\ner than throw away a huge sum in\nthis manner,  he   said, let the money\nbe devoted to completing the wurk\nof peace so urgently needed by the\nfarmer and the trade and commerce\nof the Dominion. Works of national\nimportance and Imperative urgency\nwould require all the efforts, skill\nand patriotism of Cunudinns fur many\ngenerations to come. The development of the huge natural resources\nof the country he added, for scores of\nyears to come, would Involve more\nexpenditures und more taxation or\nthe people of Canada than the English paid for the upkeep of their\nnavy, their army and tbe whole diplomatic service of the empire.\nIndependence Next\nForecasting the policy wliich Canada would adopt in regard to imperial relations in the future, Mr. Bourassa maintained that It would be advisable that the present relationship\nshould remain undisturbed. Should\nany alteration be effected independency, with or without the link of a\ncommon crown, but on a firm basis\nof friendly relations with England,\nthe United States und France was\nthe form of government considered\nmoat desirable by Mr. Bourassa,\nConsidering tho idea of closer relationship between lhe mother country and Canada hi opposition to the\npossibility of an Independent Canada,\nMr. Bourassa contended that any tie\nbetween Kngland and the self-governing colonies should be one formed\non a reul partnership and a true\nequality, Canada and the other overseas Dominions should be granted\na voice in the governing of India and\nthe' crown colonies, and in the deciding or foreign affairs us well as of\nimperial defence. No solution of the\nhuge problem of imperial relations,\nsaid Mr, Bourassa, had yet been attempted and should it be tried, the\npartners could -hardly stand the\nstrain of rivalries In trude and Other\nmatters arising out of the wide differences In needs and interests and\neven in social and political aspirations which divide the scattered portions of the empire. The partlier-\nhip, Mr. Bourassa forecasted, would\nprobably end In strife and bitterness.\nBven with ail Its snares and dun-\nycrs full-fledged imperial partnor-\n\u2022hlp was considered liy Mr, Bour-\nsan io be preferable to the low, un-\nllgi^fied -Jingo Inspired alternative\n'ffered tu the Canadian people by\nthe present government. Despite Its\ndangers, said Mr, Bourassa, full Imperial partnership was inspired by\nhigh ideals of national equality, while\nthe policy of the Burden government\nwould simply result In self-abnegation of the Canadian people. Thut\npolicy meant that Canada accepted-\nan imperial policy over which she\nwas denied by the British government\nthe  slightest   share   of  control\nThe Empire auditorium waa filled\nto capacity and Mr. _our__aa received un enthusiastic reception.\nFRENCH   FORCE  SUFFERS\nDISASTER  IN  MOROCCO\nrrSynnv'Iy,New' LonSD*1 Wire.)\nLONDON* .June U.-TU, situation\n:n Morocco IB generally thought to\ncritical, After the disquieting .,-\npurls from the Spanish \u201eone comes\nnews of fighting on the part of\nthe French, The Chronicles' Burls\ncorrespondent telegraphs last night:\nA French force has been ambushed\nand seriously eut up tn Morocco.  The\nolumn under Col, Mangln which has\n'\u2022\u2022en onerating in the Tablu region\nbout 100 miles from Alarrukesh was\nsurprised by n large force of the enemy near Kfjga and before the column\ncould extricate Itself it suffered a\nkiss of ii - dead und iort wounded. Col.\nM-iugm had for some time eslublish-\n\"'1   his  headquarters at Mndak.\"\nMcQuarrie & Robertson\nPHONE 68.\nNELSON,  B. C.\nTRAIL\nFIRE INSURANCE\nKeep fully Insured and see that y\u00b0ur\npolicy is written by be Yorkshire Insurance company of York, England.\nClaims      paid      exceed      $30,000,000,\nAgcntg\nMcQUARRIE &\nROBERTSON\nTRAIL, a. C.\nBUILD NEW ROADS\nAT GRAND FORKS\nTwenty Mile* Will Be Added te Highway  System   in   Boundary   Riding\nThis    Year\u2014Btg    Fruit   Crop.\nTwenty miles of new automobile\nroad will be built in the Grand Forks\nriding this summer, and many men\nare employed upon Improvements to\ntlie existing highway system in that\ndistrict, stated R. Spra^gett, prcvln-\ncial road superintendent for that\ndivision, who was at the Hume lost\nnight.\nIn the Grand Forks dlstrfrt an exceptionally heavy crop of small fruits\nis assured, and prospects for a record\ncrop of apples are excellent, stated\nMr,   Sprusgett,\nEDITOR OF GLOBE\nINJURED  AT PORT  ARTHUR\n(By Dally New- Leased Wire.)\nPORT ARTHUR, June 15.\u2014The injuries to Dr. J. A. Maedonuld, editor\nof the Globe, who wus among the\nmembers of the Detroit party which\nwas more or less hurt in the collapse\nof a staircase at the Superior Pulp\nmills, Snult Ste. Marie, nre nut nearly ho serious as were at first reported. Dr. Macdonald was up this morning, though he still has to walk with\nthe aid of a crutch on account of the\nstrain to his left lower limb, His\nother injuries are of quite a trivial\nnature, and although he suffered\nfrom the shock and shaking up, hc\nwas sufficiently recovered to go for\nan automobile ride, Mrs. Macdonald\nis expected to arrive here In n day\nor so, when the patient will be quite\nsufficiently recovered to continue his\ntrip  to tlie coast.\nher recent mishap, after her trial\ntrip, but within everything was found\nshining ond bright and the verdict\nwas general; \"She is more sumptuously fitted thun the Olympic, though\nperhaps not as majestically arranged.\"\nTO  ENLIST  RECRUITS  FOR\nPOLICE  IN   ENGLAND\n-.*-\u2022\u2022?** ,\u00a3ft.,Iv Kbw\"  LeaBed Wire.)\nOTTAWA,   June   lfi.\u2014Cupt.   Fortcs-\n\u25a0e,  comptroller of  the Royal  North\nWest   Mounted   Police,   left   yesterday\nur Kngland for a trip extending over\neveral weeks, While In the old land\nthe captain will endeavor to secure a\nnumber uf recruits for the force, us\nthe usual difficulty Is being had In\ngetting sufficient men lie Canada to\nP the  force  up   to full strength.\n\"BRIDGIE\"  WEBBER   STABBED\nwraS? DS1,y ii01tm **\u00abww Wire.)\niNKW KIRK, June 15.\u2014\"BridglG\"\nWebber, the gambler, one of the\nprincipal witnesses in the Rosenthal\nmurder case, was stabbed in the back\non an Fast Side street early yesterday morning. Shortly before 1\no**clock a man whose Identity was\nthen unknown, walked up to the policeman ut the corner of Ninth street\nand Broadway and complained that\nhe was suffering from loss of blood\nas the result of a stab wound. He\ndescribed himself as Louis Harris, a\nbroker, 35 years old, but when he wus\nremoved to the hospital detectives\nrecognized the wounded man us\nWebber. The man refused to tell the\npolice who stabbed him or any of\nthe circumstances, it was said at\nthe hospital at 8:30 o'clock this morning thnt tiie man would recover.\nShortly after the conviction of Police Lieutenant Becker and four gunmen as the murderers bf Herman\nRosenthal there were many rumors\nof plots against witnesses, but this Is\nthe first known Instnnce of harm thn\nbas come  to any of them.\nWILL  STOP  WORK\nON GREAT NORTHERN\nCBy Dally News Lreasral Wire.)\nSt, Paul, Minn., June 15.\u2014Orders have been Issued by Jamas\nJ. Hill, stopping all work on the\nGreat Northern railroad lines that\nis not absolutely necessary, according to an announcement last\nnight at the general offices of the\nroad. It was said that the action\nwas taken as a result of the recent supreme court decision in\nth\u00ab Minnesota rate case. It was*\nintimated' that the policy of retrenchment would be continued\nuntil the effect of the recent decision   is  known,\nGERMAN   BOAT  NOT  AS\nHANDSOME   AS   BRITISH\n(Hy Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, June 16. \u2014 The new\nHamburg- American liner, Imperotor,\narrived tit Southampton on Friday en\nroute to New Tflprk, Several hundred curious Hrltons wer.-t out ln\ntenders to view the German product\nWliich takes away the Olympic's title\nas the largest vessel In the world.\nThe lord mayor of Southampton\nnnd his staff lieuded the delegation\nWith the mayor's brother piloting the\nliner on her run to Cherbourg. As\nthe leviulhan came up the Solent\nIhe general remark was that she did\nnot look as large as the Olympic on\naccount of having only three slacks\nand ber generally squatty appearance. She is not built on such graceful lines as the I~.nglish boat. As she\ncame nearer she was declared to no\nthe dirtiest new boat ever seen. Her\nsides   were   searred   and   rusted   frnm\nTRACK  BEING  BALLASTED\nAT  BEAVER CANYON\nFRUITVALE, B. C, June 16.\u2014The\nGreat Northern railway ure ballasting the track at Beuver Canyon. On\nSaturday lost the largo contingent of\nDoukhobors wus rushed from here to\na wash-out neur Noi'thport, and are\nback at Columbia Gardens, preparing the road bed from that point\nsouth   fur ballasting.\nThere was a mishap to a Oreat\nNorthern freight train un Wednesday\nbetween Waneta and Columbia Gardens, when several uf the cars left\nthe track and toppled over into the\nColumbia river, but no one was injured.\nFred Young journeyed to Nelson on\nSaturday and returned on Tuesday a\nhappy  benedict.\nMiss Gertrude Hyslop, who was\nthe guest of Miss Brewster, has returned  home after a pleasant visit,\nIt. A. Aldersmith, the newly appointed sub-col lector ut Waneta, wus\na visitor at Fruitvale on Wednesday.\nRod Woods left on Wednesday for\nSouth Sloean to attend the wedding\nof Miss Bell.\nR. A. Cartwrlght has returned\nhome   for   a   holiday   from   Castlegar.\nA. Larsen, road foreman, has started on tbe new road to Trail. When\nfinished It will save several miles in\ngoing   to   that  city   from  here.\nMessrs. D, A. Macfarland and John\nFraser paid a two days' business trip\nto Fruitvale this week.\nThe assessor from Nelson was hero\nfor the past week overlooking the\nranches and  raising the assessment.\nMiss L. Dunton of Columbia Gardens was the guest of Miss May Bush\nlast   week-end.\nTRAINMEN WILL DEMAND\nPAYMENT   FOR   WAITS\nMOOSH JAW, Sask., June 15.\u2014\nTrainmen on the central and western\ndlv'stons of the Canadian Pacific\nrailway will meet in Winnipeg tomorrow, delegates passing through tho\ncity yesterday. After a meeting they\nwill wait on officials of the company\nand demand that they be paid for\nvarious waits for which they now get\nno remuneration. This concession\nhas recently lieen granted on tho\nPunn-Mr-**!   Northern   railway.\n8ALARIE8 TOO SMALL\nMINISTERS   IN   DEBT\nTORONTO, June ir>.--SaIuriea tot\nsmall, salaries so much In arrears\nthat ministers have to run Into debt,\nantiquated methods of raising funds,\nobstinate finance boards blocking\nprogress, are some of ihe conditions\nwhich the ministerial salaries committee of the Methodist church reported to the conference yesterday\nthrough the chairmun, J. W. Flavclle.\nTo remedy these conditions they recommended that weekly offering envelopes be universally adopted; that\nthc stewards on each circuit be\nprompt With their payments, that\nfinance committees be established\nand volunteers be nsked from each\nconference to hMp the mlnlstrial salaries committee. An exceedingly\nprosperous year, was reported for the\nMethodist book room. With a capital of 1629,000 and an increase of\n$685,000 In the turnover the book\nroom this year hands over (23,000 to\nthe superannuation  fund.\nSomething New\nThe well-known table beverage,\nPOSTUM, now comes in\nNew Form\nCalled\nInstant Postum\nA delicious drink\u2014absolutely free from\nthe drug, caffeine, in tea and coffee.\nA level teaspoonful of Instant Postum in an ordinary cup of\nhot water dissolves instantly and makes it right for most persons.\nA big cup requires more and soma people who like strong\nthings put in a heaping spoonful and temper it with a large supply\nof cream.\nExperiment until you know the amount that pleases your\npalate and have it served that way in the future.\nPostum comes in two forms.\nRegular (must be boiled).\nInstant Postum doesn't require boiling, but ie prepared instantly by stirrinn a level teaspoonful  in a eup of hot water.\nCanadian   Postum   Cereal Co.,  Ltd.- Windsor, Ont.\n <~    MNMY  JUNE It\n%\\K Ball? jirtw.\nmoe tmr\u00ab\nIp3.\n_Veu;s of Sport\nLacrosse and Foothall\nWednesday Attractions\nThe lacrosse 'season - lin? como for\nfair at last, and after -*i l'Wis w.iii\nth\u00bb lacrosse fans'. i**f Iho city wilt tp--\nthe resumption of* tfi'e \"Ini\"\u00bb i-rii*\ngames on Wednesday afternoon nexi,\nwhen the RoKsland twelve will be\nhere. The Rossland _ footballers will\nalso he here 'aa tlio guests of tne ld-\ncai district league eleven, and during thc afternoon u doubleheader Will\nbe pulled off. Al U oVIoek the lacrosse teams will cross sticks, ami\nth'iy **VI1I lie followed at 1 o'clock by\nthe football hoys.\nThis evening then* will he a prec-\ntlpo of tlio soccer players of the city,\nwhen two teams will be picked from\nwhich the* team to meet Russian*] oif\nWeflncsduy w'll lie chosen.   There\nquite a Jolt alieadv for Lhe scleetloll\ncommittee, it is aald1, nnd a strong\nlearn will assuredly wear lho gr\nand white against Rossland.\nAn even harder Jul' I ton before the\nLOCAL SUPPORTERS\nFOR COEUR D'ALENE\n\u25a0election     committee   of   the   UcfMSe\nli-am,   say   the  enthusiasts,  us  Nultion\nhas not had su nuiL-li lovfume talent\nfor a  long  lime, and  to  pitk  tlie host\ntwelve will taho somo choosing.\nHowever, one. thing Is certain, and\nthat Is lhat \"Kcotty\" WllUnitiSOn will\neaj'italil tho local foothall uud lacrosse\nlearns, In both of whieh' tie is the\nmainstay of  the defence,     Tlie  la-\ncroHse team will be finally chosen on\nTuesday night after u last light\nwork-out.\nWith Crunbrouk and Pernio\ngontsed, H Is pjcpoated that there will\nhe further lacrowcl gamea in the neur\nfuture, and them will doubtjew'bo u\nlarge crowd out on Wednesday ti\nget a Hue on Notion's leiiresentallves\nwho arc said to lie so strong ln boil\nattack aud  defence,\nTlckcia   have berll   Issued     for    till\ngame, and may be secure- from an)\nof the mem hern of tile lacrosse ol\nfootball clubs.\nCunadlan I'aeiflc, Waters, Wilkinson\nand Jones.\nYesterday the tables were turned,\n:ind the Skinners\u2014as a local nine\nha.'e dubbed themwlves-\u2014administered a beating to Ibe hardware team\nby  the score-of Vi  runs to eight.\nArmstrong started on the mound\nfor the hardware boys, hut was found\neasy hy the Skinners, nnd hud to he\nreplaced by Whitehead. But the\nchange was too late, for the Skinners bad already won the game, and\nttie BQpre at the end was: Skinners.\nVi;   Hardware.   8.\nTlie batteries were: Skinners,\nBrennan and Hush; Hardware, Armstrong, Wh'teheud and Allan.\nc\nNORTHWESTERN.\nSTANDING OF CLUBS.\nRUNAWAY MATCH\nIN LAST HALF\nSTOHIo ...\nVancouver\n1'urt.lalHl .\nVictoria ..\nTacoma . \u2022\ngpoliano  \u25a0.\nWon\n.\".30\n..\u201e .\n..28\n21\n24\n34\n30\nP.C\n.1111\n.11110\n.4111\n.469\n.451\n.3110\nSUNDAY GAMES\nRIONDEL DEFEATS\nKASLO EASILY\nArrangements Will  Be Made for Accommodation   to  Those  Who   Hand\nNames   to    Rowing   Club.\nA large conmigi-nt\nI supporters   have     aire\n1 their Intention of am\nI local crews   to  (he Cu\nIgatta on .Inly\nf rooters and\ndy expressed\nupa living the\nur d'Alene n-\n\u2022l, where   the\nI local rowing clubovfll he represented\nI in the four** and junlo*^ and uumu*\nslngles and doubles.\nThere will be six clubs represented\nIln the, water sports of Ihe Aim-ri-'Hii\nI city, and since it Is expected thnt\nI large crowd:' will he 'n attendance at\nI the regatta, the executive of the local\n\u25a0 rowing blub wish all the local sttp-\nI porters who intend io accompany the\nfimys  to Coeur d'Alene to hand  Iholr\nhold\n\u25a0d and\nat  one\nclub\nI names lulo tlie elub, so that\nI accommodation niay tic Becut\n1 the Nelson people be located\n| headquarter;'.\nInterest     in     the    outcome   ol\n\u25a0 American   regatta  grows   keenrr\n\u25a0 keener every, day in local rowing\nI circles, nnd Hie work of the roprt\nltatlvo crews  Is being closely watched\n\u25a0 by their supporters.\n\u25a0 OUTSIDER  13 WINNER\nOF FRENCH  DERBY\nPARIS. June tr,.\u2014The Prix du\nI Jockey Club\u2014the French Derby\u2014was\n| riiil at the Chnntilly course today nntl\nI won liy I'lrfimond Blanc's Dagor, a bay\nI colt hy Plying Fox, nn outsider hi the\nI betting. M. I.. Olry-Hoederer's Hal-\nI dauqin finished second, with M, R Do\n1 Saint Alry'8 Brenttmur th'rd. A fair\nI day and prospects of an especially in -\nIteresting race brought together one\n\u25a0 of the most brllllnnt nw-embhifies of\n\u25a0 yenrs, There were m starters\u2014an\nlunsua'Iy fine set of colts\u2014with little\nItb choose between them. M. Ati-\nImunt'e Nimbus and Ecouen were fn-\nIvcorltes,   but.   both   were   unplaced,\n\\ Dagor winning hy two lengths.\nSoon afte rthe start W. !<\". Vamler-\nbillt.'s Pirplrlo] and Mine. Chereme-\n...'.\"_ Albania fell. H. B. Duryea's\nBlnrnoy, August Belmont's Vitlcnn VI.\ni J. B. Wldener'n Klo do L'Or nlso\n| rnn.\nThc Prix iiu Jockey Ctul>, a aitnkc\nBfor three-year-olds, and one mile and n\nihnlf, was worth thia year $:t7,(IOO.\nHtavywoighta   From   Blue   Bell   Too\nMuch   for   Opponente   and   Win\nBy Five to Nil.\n(Special to thn Dally Ncws.J\nKASLO, It. ('., June lfi,\u2014It tool,\nnndel 1 hour 10 minutes Io admin*\n!<\u25a0:\u25a0 ii beating to Ka\u00bbl0 at foolbul\ni .Saturday night, The home lean\nlowed lack i.r practice, and nevci\nit In once, while the victors scorei\nvo goals,\nBlonde)'* combination was good,\nn! their attack wan vigorous and\nsustained, fifteen rooting fans accompanied the victors In launches,\nLine up\u2014Rlortdcl: Atkinson, Kearney, Podd, MatthoWB, Gill, Stanton,\nDenhani,    Wohdcnholnio,    Murray ;ind\nO'Donnell, Kaslo; Harrison, Chanfl-\nler, Gough, Bojjtoch, Carney, Bacchus,\nHarrison, MoslynJ White, Cody,\nAt Seattle.\u2014Be\nBcuttle  \t\nVictoria  \t\nBatteries\u2014Knllc\nf'adman;  Smith ;\nR.   II.\n7   111\nrlnn,    Mclver\nn;l Shea.\nFirst gnme; ll.   H,  IC.\n  5     it     5\n  4    10     3\nMeflliinlty\nKraft   and\nAt -Spol-ntie-\nTacoma\t\nSpokane   \t\nBfltl erics\u2014 Kaufnnnn,\natid VL HaiTlfll Toner\nHannah.\nSecond  game; It.   H.  B.\nTacoma     7   *\"     2\nSpoltiine     -     \"     4\nllalierles\u2014Bedford aud Harris; Co-\nvaleskle and Hannah.\nIt.  It.  K\nTwo Vancouver Stars Incapacitated\u2014\nFourth Game New Westminster's\nby Good Margin.\nIBy Dnllv New* X.*a_-id Wire.)\nVANCOUVER. B. C, June 15.\u2014To\nend Hie first period with the wore .!-W\nhi tlielr fuvor. only to finish the game\nwith the depressing tally of nine goals\nto four chalked' up against them*, was\nthe Tate of the Vancouver lacrosse\nteam In the fourth game of the Minto\neup sohednled nt Hastings park on\nSaturday afternoon. The green shirts\nled ofr v*lth a dash that promised t<i\ncarry the Salmon Bellies off their feet,\nbut the effort proved a sporadic one\nami the last hair of the match resolved Itself into a runaway game for\nNew Westminster. Three Vancouver\nmen, Ulonde, Carter and Matheson,\nphiycU brilliantly, but they had no\nsupport and whe-i Hoivurd cut Uilonde\ndown in tho second <|unrter and Carter was laid down by Ronnie the homo\nteam was completely outplayed, Westminster rolling In enough goals to\nmake Jt look like a runaway. Tlie\nRoyals played with their usual dash,\nhome players giving displays of combination seldom seen here.   Uneup:\nVancouver-\u2014lleas, goal; Griffith,\npoint; West, cover point; Pickering,\nHirst defence; Pringle, second defence;\nIon, third defonen; Matheson, centre;\nfiorman, third home; Alien, second\nhome; Carter, first .home; l_ilonde,\noutside home; Adainson, inaide home\nNew Westminster\u2014Clarke, goal;\nHoward, point; Marshall, cover point;\n11. Keiiufe, first defence; G. Ilennle.\nsecond defence; Gifford, third defence; J. Feeney, centre; W. Turnbull,\nthird home; Wintemule, second home;\nC. Spring, first home; L, Turnbull.\noutside home; G. Spring, inside home.\nReferee\u2014Lester Patrick. Jmlgo of\npiny\u2014Leo Sweeney.\nVancouver\nPortland *.\nButton! os\nMays and ;\n-Clarke\nlurray.\n17      1\nKouncck;\nHARDWARE TEAM\nBREAKS EVEN\nGive   Eeating   to   Railway   Boys,   But\nSki-mere   Turn   Tables   on   Them\nin Gcod Games.\nDuring the wei-k-crtd the hardwaro-\nbaseball repicscnlutives took part in\na doubl.-hondor In whieh they broke\neven. On Saturday they aBtnlnlBter-\nert n beating to the Canadian I'aeiflc\nrailway boya, and yesterday \u25a0 the Skinners reversed matters, and touk a\nfull out of them,\nOn* Saturday lhe hardware boys\nhud tlielr hatting clothes on, and\nsimply landed on the hall at will,\nWhile the railway boys could not connect with l-orl Whitehead's twisters,\nTho game ended with Ihe score al\n30 runs to 10. The butteries were:\nHardware,     Whitehead     and    Allan;\nSATURDAY GAMER\nFirst game (II Innings)\u2014Vancouver\n, Portland a.\nSeal He 5. Victoria 3.\nSpokane f>, Tacoma 4,\nTORTURED WITH\nTERRIBLE ECZEMA\nM To War Kilter Woks Until\n\"Fnil-i-ti\u00abs\"Cire*IHer.\nGrande Licnh, Que., Jan. 2ttd. 19.10\n\"My wife was troubled for three years\nwith Eczema on the hands, whirh made\nher hands almost useless. The doctor\ngave her several ointments to use, none\nof which had any effect. He alio advised\nher to Wuar rubber gloves (she wore\nout three pairs).\nI persuaded her, ai a last resort, to try\n\"Pruit-a-lives\". The effect w;is marvellous. Her hands are now enrol. We\nboth attribute our present good health\nto' 'Fruit-a-tive**\"\nN. JorilKKT\n\"Frnit-a-livc;*.\" positively cures all\nSkin Troubles Inrnusc it is thc greatest\nblood purifying medicine in lhc world.\n5ocal>ox, G f -r }l.__o\u2014 trial ttlte, 2_c.\nAtdealcrsor trom l'Yutt-a-lii us Limited,\nOttawa.\nAMERICAN TEAM 3\nRETAINS TROPHY\nAMERICAN  ASSOCIATION.\nSATURDAY GAMES.\n(By Dally News Leased Wlre.l\nMinneapolis      ii   11\nLoutSVltHa       7    12\nItitttoricH\u2014oimstcad    and    Owoi\nI.oudennllk und demons.\nSecond   Runic\u2014'Score: Tt.  II.\nMinneapolis   S    17\nLouisville      3     G\nItnlteries\u2014lturns   and Smith;   G\nden and Sevbroid.\n3\nind   O'Connor;\n[ WONDERS TAKE DOUBLE-\n-       HEADER   BALL   GAME\nTwo   eat\ninyed on\nen'le ball wore\nI played oti Saiurditv. when tbe TVnnd-\nlers defeated the _.ttttmn_ Pets and\nlForln's All Stars, taklnj,-* holli same*-\nI of a double-header. The flrat same\nIwns won by the score of. five runs to\n\u25a0 four, and the second by the score of\nlelsht runs to four. Thr batteries in\nItho first Kainrv wore: I'cls, Phllbcrt\nl^fcid Wilkinson; Wonders, Carrie,\n\u25a0Jordan and  Xotnian.\n| ADDITIONAL SPORTS\u2014PAGE FIVE\nCANADIAN BOWLERS\nLOSE FIRST GAME\nDefeated by Berkshire Club at Reading on Saturday\u2014Given Civic\nWelcome.\nfBy TlnHy News Leased Wlre.l\nLONDON, .June IB.\u2014Tlio Canadian\nbowlliij*; team played the opouin-*;\nniiUch or their tour at Heading on Saturday, beliiB defoated hy the Berkshire club by 18 points. The scoro3\nwere; Berkshire, 125; Canada, 107.\nThe nuiyor of Heading gave the visitors a civic welcome and entertained\nthem to a launch ttrip and luncheon\nyesterday. Sir Thomas Upton ulso\nentertained them, driving them down\nto his residence at Southgate. Thc\nlord mayor of London welcomes the\nvisitors at the Mansion house tomorrow morning.\nKaiiHiis  City   \t\n'liid'iAupolls\t\nHatteries--Vilu^hun\nWoi*l;s and Colter.,\nSt.   Paul    \t\nC6lutnb\u00bbs    \t\nHatteries\u2014 Leroy   an\npie and   Smith.\nMilwaukee      3    10\nToledo      2      \u00ab\nHatteries\u2014Slapnlcku   und IIu.*;hc\nCiCor*;\u00ab and IX-vogt.\nWESTERN CANADA LEAGUE\nSaskatoon '.'>, Modioli\nFlr.it game-\nHat 10,\nSecond gtnnc\ncine Mat _.\nAt Edmonton.\u2014Score;\nCalgary  \t\nEdmonton \t\nFirst game:\nMooso -law \t\nHo-j-ltia  \t\nSecond gamo:\nMoose .law \t\nRegina \t\n-Saskatoon 3, Medi-\niii'KH both from lhe blow uud heal\neon-tinued desperately until the end\nThe mishap to Mr. Frenke and thi\nfall of Devcreaux Mijburn from hi;\npony in the seventh period Were tilt\nonly accidents of the gume.\nTho   two   foulfl,  one  of   whloh     wa;\n\u25a0ailed upon each ganio, were Imposed\nn   accordance   wilh     tho   rule   wl\ntlml players shall not crtwa\nlarue into\nother   ;il\ngilt\nlea because \"f\nTiill when   this\nthe\nIC'Cl\ndang\nIH.     T\nir o\nhis\nf\n\u2022il\nmost    carefullj\no\niBorvc\n1    1\ntennis,\nh roughI\ndue  to\n'XCOpt   i\npeualt\nthe   \"p:\ni lb\nek\"\no two\naad\nPlay\ntin\nwhi\n\u2022h\nbad\npre-\nventeti  ihe opponents from reallalnB\nthnt ihey wen- fouling until the ruin\nhad been broken. The effective play\nhy ItJtson was a safety stroke made\nat lho expense of one-quarter poini,\nwhen tho only way to prevent\ntin American score wus lo put the\nhall out of piny by driving It across\nhis own line by a safety shot.\nNATIONAL\n\"1\nH.   K.\nS      0\nBRANDON ROAD RACE\n(By Pnlly Nows Leased Wlro.)\nBltANDON, Man., June 14.\u2014.loo\nKoepor of the Winnipeg North End\nAthletic club was first in the Sun 10-\nm'le road mco this evening tin the\nslow time of (il minutes 19 4-5 seconds; Gettln_s of Winnipeg was second and Moore of Brandon third. The\nwinner gets the Sun silver cup and\na gold medal. A record crowd witnessed the race.\nThe Canadian bowling team, which   played the opening match of Itn English\/tonr at RE-adlng oti Saturday:\ntop row. from loft\u2014-Jdlin Anthony,  Toronto; George Chapman, Guelph;   ,1. s. Wood, St. Catharines: R. B, Rice,\nToronto; C. O. Knowles, Toronto; W. C. Brent, Toronto; Chitrles 9, Robin son,  Toronto;   Dr.  Gallanough,  To-\nIronto; T.iS.-Forrt, Mitchell.\n3i\u201e*ed, ifiiiWIo row, from left\u2014J. A. Ogilvle, Brantford; R. Kirltpatrick. Hamilton; R. ,1. W. Barker, Toronto;\nFl-l L. Rat-liff, Toronto; W. O. MeTaggart, Toronto; Alex Paill, S-tratford; John Rennle, Toronto; Dr. E. G.\n\\V68$. Tbrohlo; Howard Thompson,  Rodney.\nSeni**(I> on ;= round\u2014George A. McLenn. Tnrnntn; J. S. Axmltnse, Paris, nov. J. W. Tediey, Toronto; Tom Rennle. Toronto (captain); Dr. T. H, Wylle, Toronto; H, B. Wettlaufer, Berlin,*\nEnglish  Polo Team  Defeated  in  Final\nBy     One-Quarter     Goal\u2014Crowds\nWild With Excitement.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nNKW STORK, June It.\u2014Hy the narrow margin of bne-ciuarter ~t a goal\nthe Amerlcnn polo team won tlie set;\nmd and deciding gume of tlie International cup series ut lhe Meadow-\nelub this afternoon, and thereby retain the trophy i'or al least anther year. The score was -IV6 to 4VJ.\nTho alight advantage of the United States four over the Ifrltlsh\nchallengers at llio, end of ono hour of\nthe most desperate kind of play is\nfully indicated by the trifling difference In the Hcores of the teams. The\nspectacle thrilled tho crowd of 36,000\npersons until tho dignified asaoinbl-\nago was fairly carried away and\n\"rooted\" lllto a typical baseball crowu\nduring ihe final period of play. The\nshrill shrieks of the feminine portion\nof- the throng rose high above .the\ndeeper notes of encouragement from\ntheir male escorts.\nWhen finally the thousands realized thai England's invasion had tfono\nfor nuught there was a rush of cn-\nIhtisitiHtie spectators from stands\nthe field that fairly engulfed tho\ncompeting players, while from out\nside the enclosure there arose a tor\nrifle din of automobile horns aud sirens proclaiming another American\nvictory in an international ci\nNever for a moment did the action\nlag, and the game was' a continuous\nrush, first In the direction of th.\nAmerican goal and then toward th\npoles of the Union .lack. In this (\u00bb0\nminutes meld' thr. English showed a\nletter attack than the cup defending\nfour and their ponies, loo, played the\ngame as though thoy knew the International Importance pf It. It was\nonly by daring flashes' of individual\nplay that the Americans wore finally\nable to emerge victorious by a scoro\nof \\%  to   1'\/,  goals.    The  substitution\nor L. E. Stoddard ror \"Monto\"\nWalorbury made necessary by tho\nact-Ideal on Tuesday, und the moving\nback of \"hairy\" Watcrbury to No. 2\neuused u nolU-eablo break In tho\nteam piny of tlie Meadow-brook \"Big\nFour.\" Neither Watcrbury nor Stoddard appeared to get In combination,\nand repeutodly missed the halts passed to them by Whitney and Mllhurn.\nTo offset thin lhc forward eventually\ncut loose with such desperate individual play lhat thoy effectually overcame lhe defect of lack of team work,\nand won on merit a game which will\nprobably stand for years as a polo\n\"thriller.\" The English four, on\/the\nother hand, benefitted by the change\nWhich brought F. Af. J-Veako into the\ngame In place of Capt. A. Noel Edwards. The veteran Inlernatlonalisl\nproved a lower of strength, teaming\nup with both Captains Cbeapc und\nR'tson In a mannc*- which opened tho\noyos of thoso who had scon the opening performance of tho dial I engine\nfoiir. Capt. ClieaiJe fairly outdid\nhimsoir with Iiih efforts to turn do\nfeat Into victory, and both RItson and\nFroake played polo strokes fore and\nhack hand lhat astonished tho spec\ntntors. The assemblage was fully In\nkr.ejj'ng Willi lhe play thnt deve!opo*i\nThe list of prominent box holder*?\nand grand stand patrons Included\nhundre's of men und women\nstanding In both American POL-ial\nofficial I*fe. To -these must he adderl\nhundreds nvho'Bg names, titles\ndistinctions assure them a -welcome\nto*.the royal courts of.-England and\nCont'iienlnl   Europe.\nWhile tbo English foip- and their\nsupporters were chagrined thrut the\nchallengers should have lost the final\ngame hy such a narrow margin, they\nwere frank in expressing their opinion that ihe hotter team had won, an.l\npraised thp treatment accorded them\nboth off and on the field. They woi'e,\nhowever, far frnm convinced that the\nsame result would develop in nnother\nseries, and expressed tho opinion thai\nanothor challenge and series might\nbo oxpOcted next yeai*. utilCsit unt'or-\nseon   obstacles  should   arise.\nTho terrific heat Undoubtedly bothered tho English ponies ns well aa\nthe players, and Air. Froake was\ntemporarily shinned by a mallet blow\nduring fho play. TTo'soon recovered,\nand although  complaining  of  dizzi-\nSTANDING\nOF C\nPliltodelplita  \t\nWo\n...32\nVow York \t\n...28\nClllcapo  \t\n...28\nnrooklyn  \t\n...24\nI'iUslmm   \t\n...21\nHoHton   \t\n...21\nSt Louis'\t\n.. .211\nCincinnati  \t\n...19\n.500\n.500\n.471\nSUNDAY GAMES\nCARDINALS COME  TO  LIFE\nfBv  Dnllv  Nnws  Leased  Wlro.1\nST.   LOUIS,  .lune   15.\u2014AHer   four\nsuccessive defeats St. Louis came to\nlife this afternoon nud heat Philadelphia, -1-3.    Score: It.  H. K.\nPhiladelphia     :i     fi     t\nSt. Louis  4     (1     0\nBatteries\u2014Mayer. Brenmin and\nDoolu; Grlniu' and \\Vingq,,\nREDS AGAIN VICTORIOUS\n(By  TDntty  Newp  Leased  Wirt\" 1\nCINCINNATI, .lun(; 16.\u2014Cincinnati\nwon the last, game of the series frmn\nBoston today by better all-round play\nII.  IS.\nIng, _-l.   Score: \\ n.\nBoston   ,  1     s     :\u2022\u25a0\nCincinnati    2     '\u25a0*     I\nBatteries\u2014Mess and WlinliiK.\nBrown, Benton and Clarke.\nDODGERS OUTPLAY CUES\nfttv Inllv  News  T_!\u00abRerf  Wire.)\nCHICAGO, -lune 1'.\u2014Brooklyn outplayed Chicago today and won. 0-2.\nScore: R.  H.  B.\nBrooklyn    0    13     U\nChicago     2     !'     I\nBatteries\u2014Allen, Wagner and Miller; Toney, Leifiold*, Rlclilo and D_\u00bb\nnahan.\nSATURDAY GAMES.\nAt St.   Louis.\u2014Score: B,   II.   I'\nPhiladelphia    1   7     S     (1\nSt.   Louis     0     B      I\nBattorles\u2014Sealnn, .Moore and Dooin; Geyer and Winnow.\nAt   Cincinnati.- -Score:      H.  ll- E\nBoston        1      S      1\nCincinnati       I     8     E\nBatteries\u2014Jamos, Tyler and Whaling;  Brown, Ames and Clarke.\nAi  Brooklyn.\u2014Score:\nBrooklyn    \t\nChicago   \t\nBaliterlos-Curlis, Rnga\nand Erwin; Fischer, La\\\nBresniihun.\nUnloading Sale\nIt Takes More Than Talk\nTo make a success of a sale, especially when it is only\na case of overstock.    People expect to j;ct more for\ntheir money than under regular conditions.\nBrown & Co. Have Nade Good\nTHAT IS WHY WE ARE THE MOST POPULAR STORE IN TOWN.\nPEOPLE ARE TALKING ABOUT OUR BARGAINS, OUR VALUES,\nOUR COURTESY AND, ABOVE ALL. OUR GOODS. SATURDAY\"\nBUSINESS WAS BETTER EVEN THAN OUR MOST SANGUINE\n\u25a0HOPES COULD ANTICIPATE.\nBigger Bargains This Week\nA  few  Iort ot our L'iicclal  11.60\nBlurts. Take than at 95c\nMen's BMjc* Saloon working\nSliirta. formerly priced ot 96c nn<l\n$1.00  75c\nIlcKiiliu- 75c boy*.1 t'.iliis. now 45c\nCotton Cloves  10c\nWe plciisc particular people in\nneckwear; nlso hose. BVorytblnj\nralural In price.   Come nnd se\".\nUnloading Sale Prices All This Week\nBrown & Co. *\u2022*\u25a0*\u25a0\u2022-\u25a0\u25a0**\u25a0-\u25a0\nQuality and Low Prices\nand Agna*v; Colllnga and curlttran.\nAt t'lilladelpliln.-\nClcvalnnd ....\/...\nPhiladelphia   \t\nrjntlerlos- - Orca\nHush and Bchang,\nAt New  YihIc   *\nD.glroll    \t\nNew   Yorlt   \t\nUntlcrlos\u2014WUtatt, Hi1\nKoo; Mcronncll, Clnrlt,\nKweonoy.\nure:   II.  II.  I*.\n  a      1     0\nINTERNATIONAL   LEAGUE.\nAutomobiles\nFor Hire\nSTANDING  OF CLUCJ3.\nBuffalo ....\nNewark ....\nRochester .\nProvidence .\nJersey tMly\nBaltimore ..\n\u25a0Montreal ..\nToronto  .. .\nWon   Lost   P.C.\n,.;,10      l'^      Ji7i;\nSUNDAY GAMES\n(\u00bby Dally News I.i\nProvidence   \t\nMontreal  \t\nllallorlcs\u2014l-a Title\nMai tern and Madden.\nWnsncr\nlor   and\n[   AMERICAN   1\nSTANDING  OF CLUOO.\nWon Dost P.C,\nPhilfulL'Iphlii    30 ia .7fi5\nClevclaml _(! IS ,066\nWashiiiston     29 IM, .547\nGliifjiffo     2fl 20* .637\nUu-ston     26 \"\u25a0< ..\"i!)'i\nDetroit     22 H4 .893\nSt.- Louis     l'l 88 .It:,'\nNew   York    13 37 .260\nSENATORS FIND THEM EASY\n'By  Daily  N'ows  I-pnnotl   Wiif.l\n(.r-I_VBLAND, June 15.\u2014Inof^ctlvf!\nbitchitngi poor fielding and bad base-\ntunning  by  Cleveland   made  today's\ngnme an easy victory for Washington,\nR.  IT.  B.\nWashington    10   13     I\nCleveland     5   10     :'.\nBatteries\u2014Boeh ling, Hughes and\nHenry: Kohler, Cullop, Gregg. Blim-\ndln aad Land, Carlsch.\nSATURDAY GAMES.\nAt   Washington.\u2014Seore:       R. TT.   TO.\nChlc-iso       3      9      1\nWnsliinston        S   1-1      0\nHatteries \u2014 Seolt, White ami\nSolinllt;   Johnsnn :ln(]  Alnsmith.\nAt   Boston.\u2014-Score: R.   II. _E.\nSt.   T-niiis     1      il     a\nTtnslon       S    11   Mi\nBatteries\u2014Slune,    MUchell,   Tuweli\nted wirci\nIt.   II.  K.\n... 5   12     1\ni_\\     Kochor;\nit.   II.  E,\n... i    r>    o\nAt nil hours, .lay or nlglit. Carry |ins-\nsongors to and from bouts nn*] iralnu,\nDealers tor Uu-. Whito Motor TrtioW\nmid Touring Cam.\nSend for Catalogue and Literature,\nNelson Auto Garage\n605  Vernon  Street Tel,  116\nNewark   \t\nToronto     \"      H      '\nBttttorlefl \u2014 Leo and HlgglnBl\nHeaiiie, llrnnt and Graham.\n'Irst game: R.  'I* E.\npuftolo    r>   1-     -\nJersey City  B   1:;    \"\nHa I lories\u2014Holmes and Lalonge;\nDoescher, Brandon and Well**.\nSecond game: R.  FT. E.\nBuffalo   n   i\"    -\nJersey City   8     0     0\nBatteries\u2014Jamleson, Qei*vals and\nr_ilonge; Manper, Brandon and Blair.\n(Called end _ev_nth).\nSATURDAY GAMES\nfBy Daily News Leased Wlre.l\nFirst name: R. H. 1*\nToronto      B    1\"     \"\nMontreal     B   13     1\nBattorles\u2014Brown an I Gn-hnm-; Mason. Dale, Smith and Madden,\nSecond game; R. n. B,\nToronto    \u25a0'\u2022   1\"     :*\nMontrKil     (1   12    0\nHaiteVie*- -- Lush and Graham,\nSmilth and Hums.\nH.  Il-  BN\nNewark    3     D     1\nProvidence     \u25a0     !l     \"\nBatterlea\u2014Burger, Bnzniann and\nHigglns; Bailey a'id J. Onslow.\nR.  II.  E.\nBaltimore \u2014\\*  .   I\"    \"\nJersey Olty   \"     7     2\nBatteries\u2014Roth and ISgan; McDWfl\nand Wells.\nAt Buffalo.\u2014First game: R.   H.   E.\nBuffalo    9     9     3\nRochester   3     \u00bb    -\nrit.terifiS \u2014 Frill .   and Lalonge;\nHughos, Wlllti'lin ami Joe_!U\u00abch.\nSecond ganio: Ft;  11. 13.\nHiiMalo     0     3      *l\nRochostor   ii   Lil     Q\nBtittorios\u2014Ftillonweldcr    and   Laj\nlonge; Koefo and Jai-I'liifn'j.\nNORTHERN   LEAGUE.\nSUNDAY GAMES\nit.   II.   E.\n \u25a0'  ta   o\nWinnipi\nWinona\nSuperior ..\nSt. Paul ...\nft.  II.  E.\n17     5\nIf.\n rt\n. , . .  '!\nFirst -\u2022anu*: R. 11. E.\nDuluth     x !\u25a0\u25a0 (\nMlnnoopoU.    \" \u25a0\"' 'J\nSecond gamo: it. M. E.\nMinneapolis    \" ;! \"\nSATURDAY GAMES\nluperii\nDuluth  .\nVirginia\nR.   II.   E.\n::   11     rt\nVICTORIA ELIMINATED TROM v\nMANN CUr ftACG\n(By Dallv Notre LonBefl Wlre.l\nMEW \\V139TMINSTER) 1!. C-, -'\"\"o\ni -, _ -v.\"-..:ie the New Westminster pro-\nT\"' ' *;mls were defeating Vancouver\n;i the Terminal City oh Satur.'ay the\nRoyal City Blmon Pnres wero handing\nrut a 9-i defeat to Victoria on the\nlocal grounds. The re suit just about\neliminates Victoria rrom the ' nice;\nVancouver has an unbroken repord lo\nd'lte aud shmilil \\-y.-;-n the Mann OUpj\nTO submit to a headache Is to w.xite energy, time and comlorl.\nTo stop It at once simply lake\nNA-DRU-CO Headache Wafers\nYour Druggist will confirm our statement that they do not contalh   ?flC\u00a3\nsnything that can harm heart or nervous system.    zSfc, a b^it.\nNATIONAL DRUQ AND CHCMiCmL CO. OF CANADA, LIMITED.   124\n MOI MUR\nCt* Safl? j&rtu*.\nJOHt M.     1\nd* a&up &m_\nPublish**   at  N.IMn   Evtry   Morning\ntxotpt Sunday, by\nf    Tha Nawa Publishing Company,\nLimited.\nw\u00bb **\u2022** *\u00a9\u2022!*\u00ab, Editor and Managar.\nLEGAL  AND   OFFICIAL\nADVERTISING.\nEffaetfva an and  After Jan.  1,  1918.\nLa\u00ab\u00abl   Advartiaing (includes municipal\nand     government     notices)\u2014 Vic\nI\u00bbr.llne   for   the   firm inaertion,\nj      and  tight  cents   per lino for all\nsubsequent   insertions.\nIn curtain eases,  however, for th*.\nconvenience   of    the    public,   -fia*.\nrateii have lieen set, as follows:-^\nApplications   for    Liquor   Lictmes: \u2014\nOnce   per   week   for   four   weeks,\n*5;   dally for month, |30.\nApplications   for  Transfer   of   Liquor\nLicenses:-  i \u00bb-,--.>     ,,er    wook     tot\nfour     weeks,     $7.50;     dally    for\nmonth, |45.\nLand    Purchase    Notices:\u2014 Once\nweek for 60 days, |7.\nLand Lease Notices:\u2014Once jicr week\nfor 80 days, 17.\nCertificate   of  Improvement   Notices:\n\u2014Once   per   week    for   CO   days,\n$12.50.\nDelinquent    Co-ownership    Notices: \u2014\nOnee per week for \u00bb0 days, $25.\nDuplicate Certificate of Title Notices:\n\u2014Four   insertions,    $S;    eight  In-\n.  surtlons, $14.\nWater      Application      Notices:\u2014Four\nInsertions up to 100 words, $6;\n: over 100 words in proportion.\n-Whore any of the above applications contain more than one application or notice, each application or\nnotice will be charged for us a separate advertisement.\ngeography of -the country and Its\ndiversified Interests make the ta_k a\nmuch mure difficult one than it would\nbe perhaps In any other part of\nCanada.\nBOURASSA! 8M,\nper\nMONDAY, JUNE  16.\nBRI^ISrl    COLUMBIA'S    ADDI-\n. TI^N-JL  REPRESENTATION.\nThe question of how the 13 seats\nto which British Columbia will be\nentitled In the next parliament are\nto be apportioned Is already the subject of some discussion at the coast\nAt present the representation ot\nthe province nt Ottawa is seven, so\nthat the membership is to be practically doubled.\nThe Vancouver News-Advertiser,\ndlBcusslnR the matter, claims threo\nseats for that city, or two of the ad\ndltlonal members. It Ib too early to\nsay whether or not this claim will be\nsustained when the redistribution Is\nmade. The parliamentary riding\nVancouver, as at present constituted,\nembraces not only the city people,\nbut also Soutli Vancouver, North\nVancouver and Point Grey, all separate muni el pal Hies. These have a\ncombined population of 123,002, according to the census. As the unit\nof population Is approximately 30,000\nIt will be seen thut If Vancouver riding continues to embrace Its present\nterritory the claim for three representatives, Instead of one, Is not hy\nany means unfair. In this connection It muy be pointed out that It is\na recognized rule In Canada that in\ndetermining ihe representation of the\nprovinces a larger unit of representation is used in urban centres lhan in\nrural districts.\nThe question that remains is where\nthe otlicr four seats are to go. Victoria, witli 31,660 population, and\nNanaimo, with 31,882. cannot hope\nfor any additional representation.\nComox-Allin's population was 12,263\naccording to the census. According\nlo Mr. H. S. Clement, M.P. for that\nconstituency, this territory will likely\nbe divided into two seats. Tills appears a reasonable proposition, although both would be comparatively\nsmall from a population standpoint.\nThe mainland territory covered,\nhowever, is being rapidly developed\nas a result of the construction ot the\nGrand Trunk Pacific, and will probably be entitled to more than two\nmembers by thc time the next census\nIs taken.\n.If the figuring of the News-Advertiser and Mr. Clements is correct\nthree of the new members will go to\nNew Westminster\u2014Yale-Cariboo and\nKootenay\u2014that Is, these three constituencies will return six Instead of\nthree members. The population of\nthe three constituencies is as follows:\nNow Westminster. 55,870; Yale-Cariboo. 50,382; and Kootenay, 50,772\u2014a\ntotal of 162,983 upon the census\nshowing. The three constituencies\nadjoin one another, Kootenay and\nYale-Cariboo, however, running north\nto beyond the line of the Grand\nTrunk Pacific. Just how the three\nridings will be carved to provide for\nthe increased representation is some:\nthing which the future must decide.\nMany ways of making lids division\nwill   probably   be    suggested,   for   the\nAt Ottawa, in the University of\nToronto, and in certain sections of\nthe Liberal press, says the Toronto\nNews, there has been and Is a sustained effort to suppress natural British Bentiment and the promotion of\nImperial ideals amongst the Canadian\npeople. This reactionary and injurious movement is of a piece with\nthat carried on by Mr. Bourassa and\nother Quebec Nationalists. At the\nFederal Capital we have had the surrender to Mr. Tuft's reciprocity overtures\u2014a surrender, which, to say the\nleast, revealed a marked carelessness\nregarding national and Imperial interests. We have witnessed Sir Wilfrid Laurier's fight for a semi-neutral\nnavy, and the refusal of a partisan\nSenate to let Canada assume a direct\nshare of what should be the common\nburden of Imperial defence. We have\nhoard Mr. Emmerson read the American Declaration of Independence, and\nanother Liberal member ask for a\nCanadian Fourth of July in a jeering\nHouse of Commons.\nAt Toronto we have witnessed an\nextraordinary outbreak against the\nemployment or British professors in\nthe Provincial University. The men\nbehind this bizarre propaganda In Ontario and Quebec are apparently prepared to -jo any length to check and\novercome British sentiment throughout Confederation. Mr. Bourassa\nhimself Is about to carry his evangel\nInto the Western Provinces, and it is\nevident thnt the conspirators have attached to tlieir cause all the enemies\nof British connection between the two\nseas.\nThe Dominion has heen peopled by\nEnglish. Scotch. Irish, Welsh. United\nEmpire Loyalists and their descendants, as well as by French Canadians.\nIts liberties and traditions are the\nglorious liberties and traditions of\nBritish freemen, and the attempt of a\nfew agitators who represent no considerable element of the population,\nto prevent the expression of British\nsentiment borders on sheer Impudence. One thing is certain. The\nmass of Liberals, just ub well a. the\nmass of Conservatives In the English-\nspeaking Provinces, i8 averse to domination hy Mr. Bourassa and bis Toronto satellites.\nSmall's Tailoring Satisfies\nNo firm in town can show you as good \u2022 line 0f fashionable fabric*\n\u2014-no firm in or out of town puts more conscientious work into a suit\u2014\nno firm out of town can pretend tJ fit you at will at long range as we\nCffB who are right on the spot. We consider every peculiarity of shape,\nlino and size, and build your suit accordingly,\nDave Small & Co.\nPHONE 849. MERCHANT TAILORS.      ANNABLE BLOCK.\nEDITORIAL NOTES.\nfive you  bought  your tickets\nHose  show  yet,   If  not,   do\nThe Canadian Bank\nof Commerce\n\u2022IR EDMUND WALKER, C. V. 0.,\nLL. D., D. C. U President.\nALEXANDER LAIRD, Gen. Mgr.\nCapital    $15,000,000\nRest    112,500,000\nPlaco your Securities, Titles,\nDeeds, Mortgages, Insurance Pol*\ndes, Wills and other valuables p\none of our Safety Deposit Boxes\nWhere they will be secure from\nloss by flro or otherwise. Rentals\naccording to alz\u00ab of hox.\nNelson  Branch. J.  8,  Munro,  Mgr.\nBank'of Montreal\n-*\u2022\u25a0\nESTABLISHED 1817\nCapital authorized $25,000,000\nCapital   all paid-up $16,000,000\nRest    $16,000,000\nHEAD  OFFICE:   MONTREAL\nRL    Hon.   Lord    Strathcona    and\nMount Royal, G.C.M.G., Hon. Pros.\nR. B. Angus, Esq., President\nH. V. Meredith, Esq.,\nVice-Prosldsnt  and Gen.  Managtr.\nBranches in   British   Columbia\nArmstrou. Athalmer, cnilllwaM.\nCloverdale, knd.rby, (Jreenwood, woe-\nmor. KamloopH, Kelowna, Merrltt,\nNelaon, New Denver, New Westminster. Nleols, Pentlcton, Port AlOerni,\nPort Haney, prince Rupert, i-fince-\nton, Rossland, Summerland. vaneou-\nver. Vancouver (Main street), Vornon,\nVictoria, West Summerland.\nNelson Branch, L. B. DeVeber, Mgr.\nJour the InfHinuutt I.i- I*ontiv, an un-\nucrupulouH imiiii' kiii in the garb of a\npriest, had collected a number of Ada*\niliiirn*, whom he hnd In --.nil* .1 ami forced\nto  leave   their   limn.---   under  Die   KiikIImIi\nflan; ami wiuti tlu- place wu.h attacked\niiy a considerable number of British mid\nNew Englanders, led by Col, Monckton,\nthese country folk, groatly alarmed by\nihe sheila thrown Into tne fortress, began to desert The commandant of\nHcuuKeJour, Do Vergor was not amongst\nthe  heroes  who  fought  l\"  Save  I'anudu\nfor l'ruiici*, but was one of Bigot's creatures, more eager for train thun tor\nlienor or glory; and despite all Ue [.-outre could do to Btiraulute the defendftra\nof the fort to n bold reslstenco, !)\u25a0\u2022\nVergor decided, before the British hnd\ngot their cannon Into position, tu Bur-\nrender. Tin; garrison wns allowed to\nmarch out with the honors of war.  The\nflag of Kngland floated from tin* rain-\nparts, and Fort Beauoojour became Port\nCumberland,\nThe Weather\nof thp\nTORONTO. June IB,*\u2014Warm weAtt.\ner has prevailed throughout Canada,\nand especially In Ontnrio, where maximum temperatures of 90 degrees have\nbeen recorded In some localities.\nThunder storms have occurred in Ontario and western Quebec, but elsewhere In the Dominion the weather\nhas been fine.\nMln\nNelson           37\nVictoria       38\nVancouver       4*8\nMax.\n64\n111\nOne day last week Premier Asquith,\nIn the British House of Commi\nrefused the request of the Labor wing\nof h!s supporters that taxes on food\nbo abolished. And still there an\npeoplo fn Canada who argue there are\nno taxos on food In the Old Country,\nWhat   the Press  Is Saying\nMost people would be\nbenefited by the occasional use of\nNa-Dra-Co laxatives\nGently, thoroughly, and\nwithout discomfort, they free\nthc system of the waste\nwhich poisons the blood and\nlowers the vitality. 25c. a\nbox, at your Druggist's.\nN-Um-I Drag o\u00bbd -hemic! Co.\nof C\u00ab_.d_, limit*.,     176\nHow Many?\nHow many of tho senators who nre\nao anxious to send the government\nback to the people could be Induced\nto resign their own seats and submit\ntheir recent course to the Judgment\nof the electors? More than a score\nof those who killed the Navy bill wen*\nrejected by the electors who knew\nIhem  best     when     tliey     last   offered\nthettiHGlvou to lho people, How would\nthey  like  trj  repeat   the experiment?\u2014\nVancouver    News-Advertiser.\nMr. Pugsley, For Example.\nThe Tories do not want to go to\nthe country, they say, because H\nwouid \"hurt business.\" There are\nlots of men who would like to be back\nwhere tliey were in a business wuy\nIn  September,   lflll.\u2014Toronto  Globe.\nCold Storage      j\nCOLD  STORAOH   \t\n\"Does Itlnks know his limitations?\"\n\"If he does,  he fails to regard them.\"\n\u2022J'ur'ulo Express,\nA wise wife soon learns to manage hor\nhusband, while 11 wlBo husband never\ntries to manage his  wife.\u2014-Life.\nGriggs\u2014\"Did   thnt   little  deal  of  yours\nim out n paying investment?\"\nBrlggs\u2014\"Oh,   yes,   only   I   wasn't    the\npayee.\"\u2014Boston Transcript.\nPassenger (In London tram ear)\u2014\"You\nre   very   clumsy   with   vour   teat,   conductor.\"\nfondue tor\u2014\"What d'y' expect for a\n\u2022alt-penny  a  mile?   r_vloyer?\"**-Punch,\nClarence\u2014\"As I undnhstund It, me\nboy, old Qrotox first told you that you\ncould have Ills daughter, and then went\nback on bis word?\"\nWilly\u2014\"That's Just 'bout th' size of It,\nball Jove.\"\nClarence\u2014\"Then deuce It, old chap. I\nshould lust sue him for non-support,\nthat's all.\"\u2014Puck.\nAttendant (at sanitarium)\u2014\"Therfe patients want'to know what kind of baths\nto  take.    What  shall   I tell  this  man?\"\nDirector\u2014\"What's   his   occupation?\"\nAttendant\u2014\"He's   a  speculator.\"\nDirector-\u2022\"Tell lilm to take a plunge.\"\nAttendant\u2014\"And  this woman?    She's a\nSeamstress.\"\nDirector\u2014\"Show her to the needle\nbaths.\"\u2014Baltimore   American.\nThis Day in\nCanadian History\nthe  fall\nThis day In Ihe year 176B t\nof the French fort Benuseji\nIsthmus which connects Nova Scotia and\nXew Brunswick. It stood on on,? side of\na narrow stream nod the Kngllsh Fori\nLawrence atood on the other. At Beau-o-\nKamloops   42\nI Battleford    BO\nI Prince Albert v, \u00bb,.. Til\nCalgary   r.'.V.V.'.. '.'.' * 5fl\nMoose Jaw   40\nQU'AppellQ      Ii-\nWinnipeg   02\nPort Arthur   50\nParry Sound  E>8\nLondon     01\nToronto    54\nKingston     60\nOttawa   48\nMontreal   t,t\nQuebec    40\nHalifax    14\nAll west\u2014fair and warm.\nafter an Illness of three weeks and will\nshortly leave for his home In Uraod\nForks to further recuperate before returning 10 his duties wiiii the Canadian\nPacific  railway at tills point.\nw, ifl. Worden haa enhanced the appearance and value of his residence on\nArmstrong avenue  by  the audition of a\nlarge verandah- \u201e\nThe Fin Mercantile company have disposed of tlieir grocery stock to Ira\nManning.\nMonroe's cafe, ail Joining the Crows\nKeys hotel, will In niliiiv he run ilinlei*\nthe hotel management us a dining room.\nThe frank filch company on .Saturday\nnight concluded a week's engagement at\nthe opera house and left 011 Sunday al\nnoon for Kelson, Tliey enjoyed While\nhere   good   houses  and  prov\"\nentertainment   At the com\nFriday evening Show they gave n cllOHIf\ngirls concert in which Miss Dot Bernard\nin an Irish girls costume took first pi\u25a0!\/\u25a0\u25a0\nnf |I6 with her selection \"Willi Ills\nLittle Cane ami Batche  In i'ln Hand\";\nDorothy Raymond, with her .Scotch\ndances, was swarded second prize. Lhe\naudience was the Judge, tlie winner being thu one to receive tlie  heartiest ap-\nThe 'secretary \u00bbf the Twelfth of July\ncelebration at Creston has written here\nendeavoring to arrange '\" baseball match\nTor that day between the senior ball\nteams of Nelson and Cranbrook.\nTbe city band gave nn open air band\nconcert on SiinUay  afternoon.\nCharlie Jewell of Bull liiver ts spending it   few days hero.\n.\\irs.   Woehr   of    WUVllle,  Wash..  Is\npaving an extended visit to her son, J.\nHay Thompson,\nJoseph Ilyan returned on Saturday\nfrom u brief business trip to Klko.\nMr, and Mrs. M. A. I'cale have returned from a vacation spent with Mrs.\nRoaio's parents at the coast.\nMajor Kcays of India, who has boon\nthe guest of Mr. and Mrs, IMward Im*\nwell, left yesterday to*** England.\nLABOR COMMISSION HOLDS\n78 MEETING AT F'ERNIE\nCRANBROOK    NEWS\nBUDGET.\n(Sprelnl  to T\u00bb,\u00ab Dull\nCRANBROOK, B.C., June IB.\u2014tJuncnn\nMcFarlane, of the Taylor Lumber company, Klmberley, H.C., spent Sunday in\ntown  with  his family.\nMessrs. Truman Horsman, Percy Scntt\nand Arthur Scott, of the government\nroad gang near Wasa. B.C., spent part\nof Saturday and Numlm- In the elty.\nMrs. Peter Matheson left this week\nfor a vacation with relatives at Pitts-\nburg,  Mass.\nCornelius Cumin, manager of the\nKitchener hotel, Kltelien-.r. B.C., Spent\na couple of days In town this week.\nMrs. Wolfe of Fort Btele, and tor\nmany years a resident of Cranbrook,\nspent  part of  the  week  here.\nfirst lawn social of the season\nlook place on Wednesday evening on tho\nlawn of Mr. aud -Mrs. II00U, Armstrong\navenue, being under the auspices of the\nLadles' old of the Methodist church,\nThe church orchestra furnished music\nthroughout the evening. Ice cream,\nslrawherries and other delicacies were\n\u25a0d at little tables Spread over the\nlawn, which was nicely decorated with\nChinese lanterns, and over the gate and\nverandah was the word \"welcome\" In\nlarge, colored letters,\nA. J. Tteburn. recently operated on for\nappendicitis and gall stones, was able\nlu   leave     the     Hospital   to lav   fSiin>lii> i\nfSp-tclal **> Tbe Dally Nrwu.l\nFBRNilH, ll. C, Juno IB.\u2014The lahor\nconiinisBion appointed by tho provincial government held a Bitting here on\nThursday and Friday. Among those\nwho gave evidence were W. R. Wilton, manager of the.prows Nest Pass\nCoal company; It. M. Young, secretary of tho company; A. Klnuer, chief\naccountant; John Shanks, superintendent of the Conl creek mines; T.\nUphill, secretary of Gladstone local of\ntho United Mine Workers of America;\nA. J. Carter, secretary of district IS.\nand D. ItePHo.\nIt Is probable that some chnnne will\nbe recommended Ih connection with\nemployers' liability and workmen's\ncompensation. Tlio members of the\ncommission present were: H. G. Parson, chairman, und Messrs. Beghle,\nHarper and McNaniara, the last mentioned being lhe secretary.\nRev. D, M. Perley, R.A., and Mrs.\nPerley arrived on Thursday from\nBelleville, Out., and Mr. Perley has\nassumed charge of tho Methodist pas-\nlorate here in place of Rev. J. F. Dim-\nmick, who Will leave for Prince Rupert about the last of the month. Mr,\nPerley will preach at. both morning\nami evening services next Sunday.\nA sidewalk nnd fence are being constructed for the coal company In front\nof their offices on Pellatt avenue by\nCharles Waldo, who has finished nils\nwork in connection with the fencing in\nof the grounds surrounding the provincial government offices.\nThe Morrlasey. Fernie & Michel\nrailwav. which connects the mines \u00abt\nCoal\nwill h\na con\nordei\nworks\nMrs\nter, .\\\na trt|\nWIND  AIDS   EFFORTS\nOF  BUCKET BRIGADE\n(1\nN\nT'\nthn\nder.\ntha\nb info Ll 1\ngad\nComing and Going\nTT-IE smooth, clean, economical concrete road is\ncoming\u2014as certainly as the railroad, the steamship and the telegraph came.\nAnd the muddy, sticky, deep-rutted dirt and macadam road is going\n\u2014as surely as the stage-coach, the sailing ship and the spinning-wheel\nhave gone.\nIt's simply a question of which communities will take advantage of\nthe better, modem way of building roads now\u2014enjoying its benefits from\nnow on\u2014and which ones will continue to \"get along\" in the poor old\nway until forced by competition to .avail themselves of science's latest\ncontribution to public convenience.\nConcrete Roads\nare not experiments. There is no \"chance\"\ntaken wilh their adoption. They have\nheen quietly proving their value for twenty\nyears. Concrete roads built twenty years\nago, when concrete construction was nothing like so far advanced as it is to-day,\nare still giving absolutely satisfactory\nservice.\nConcrete roads have proven themselves\nbest\u2014under all sorts of conditions, from\nthe standpoints of both service and economy. Their first cost is near that of good\nmacadam, their service is greatly superior,\nand their final cost\u2014the only one to consider in comparing roads\u2014is a great deal\nless.\nThese are strong statements. They\nmight be stronger and then not over-state\nthe truth. Concrete roads \"back them\nup\" with fads\u2014facts lhat prove concrete\nto be die best and cheapest material for\nroad construction\u2014either for city streets\nor country highways.\nMany Canadian counties and cities are\nalready using concrete pavements. Many\nothers are preparing to do so as fast as\nthey can.\nThey will be enjoying the many advantages that good roads bring, while others\nwho stand by the \"poor old way\" with\nits mud and ruts and expense and repairs\nare waiting\u2014for what?\nEvery citizen should have the information on concrete roads which we will\nsend free upon request.\nAddress Good Roads Bureau\nC&nada Cement Company\nLimited\nMontreal\nIf ynu wiidi your city Included In tbo Itinerary nf one of our\nOend (loads lectures, write nt once, tih-kp lectures, illustrated\nwith photographic sterooptlcan siiilrn, aro delivered fron of charge\nto town uiiinoHs, road commissions, good roads fiHsnclutinns, or\nother bodied uf clilzina interested in mad Improvements. Full\nparticulars Will bo sent upon request.\nreek with the town of Fernie.\nive two new locomotives here in\nle of months, as these have been\nd from the Baldwin Locomotive\nin Philadelphia.\nVV. W. Brown and her datlgtt-\nrs. M. A. Knstner, have left for\nto Vancouver ami Victoria,\nDally Newa Leased Wire.)\nbury,      Vt.,      June      14.\u2014\nnty-ong     buildings,    including\ne  stores,     a     hotel   nnd   regies,  wore     dor-troyed     by i fire\ncwrpt   the   village   of   New-\n\u25a0   tonight.       The  flames   were\nht by a voluntoor bucket bri-\n1,    which     worked   with   little\nc{ess    until    a    shift    of    wind\ni  back  the   blaze and  saved\nlarger    portion of the town\ndestruction.   The   total   loss\nlietwcen $200,000  and   $250,000.\nDnitv N<?wB \"Want*' Ads.  Get  Results.\nJohn Burns & Sons \"ZlmlT\nNEL80N  PLANING MILLS, SASH AN*> DOOR FACTORY.\nVERNON STREET, NELSON, B. C.\nEvery Deioi'ption of Building Material Kept in Stock.   Estimate, Given\non Stone,  Brick, Concrete and  Frame  Buildings.\nMAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.\nBOX 134. PHONE 178.\nTHE NELSON IRON WORKS, LJD.\nSecond-Hand Machinery in Stock\nHORIZONTAL  ENGINES.\nMINING HOIST.\n1\u2014 7 X   8.\n1\u20148 1.4 x 10\u2014Link motion.\n1\u201411  X 18.\nBOILERS.\n1\u201412 X 16.\n1\u201448 In. x 12 ft. H.R.T.\n1\u201413 x 18.\n1\u20146 x 24 Surfacer and Matcher.\nVERTICAL ENGINES.\n1\u2014Saw Carriage\u20143 block.\n1\u20145 in. x 6 In.\n1\u2014No. 4 Soule Steam Feed.\nCONTRACTOR'S HOIST AND\nPUMPS.\nBOILER.\n1\u201410 x 6 x 10 Duplox.\n1\u20147 x 10\u20143 drum.\n1\u20144 1-2 x 2 3-4 x 4 Duplex.\nChildrens' Waggons\nWE   HAVE   OPENED   UP   A   LARGE   SHIPMENT   OF   CHILDREN'S\nWAGGONS-ALL     SIZE8\u2014ALL    PRICES-FROM\n$1.00 to $8.50 Each\nFl OM   THE   CHILD'S   TOY   WAGGON   TO THE  HEAVY DELIVERY\nWITH WOOD WHEELS.\nBest Prices in the City\nNelson Hardware Co.\nPhone 21\nNelson, B.\"C.\n I\nMONLAY        JUNC  It\ndie Mil iUtoa.:_\nUti\nTHE BELL\nTRADING CO.\nFleishman's\nYeast\nIs another specialty we have added\nto our big stock. We believe thie\naddition will bo a boon to house-\nkeepers. Always ready for hot\nrolls for breakfast, aud can be used\nin a hundred ways.\nFree Full-Sized\nSample\nand directions for use. Phone 56\nand we shall be glad to send one to\nyour address.\nGrape Fruit\nSPECIAL!\n(toney Florida*; 2 for    25c\nTea\nOur customers are telling their\nfriends ubout the quality of our\nteas. We save you money\u2014no\nmatter what price\u201425c, 35c, 50c\nand _0c Ib.   But we emphasize on\nKootenay Indian\nBlend\n50c, or 3 lbs. for  $1.35\nB-lb. tin $2.25\n_ Extra\nFine California\nOnions\nRed\nTHE BELL\nTRADING CO.\nPhone 56\nThe Up to-Date Grocers\nKlondyke Hotel\nVernon  Street\nHeadquarters tor minor*., Smel*\ntermen,  loggers, railroad men.\nRates, 11.00 per day up\nNELSON * JOHNSON, Props.\n,%!$W\\K'r\"m    \"\"\"*\"\u25a0    Christina\nI-ili... ]i\\ Ancl,;r\u00aboii, c. l.'i'iiiH-lHti, (JnMI,|\n_____>-, August Bess, Oin Rolnoli, Anton\nHunson, ana Lunil,  Altrhi Strang,\nTremont House\nBaker Strut, Nalaon\nRANSOME A CAMPBELL\nProprietors \u2022\nEuropean plan, 60o up\nAmerican plan, $1.26 and $1.11\nMeals,  35a\nSpecial RatH par Month\nTRIOMONT-W. ft. Hobertson, 13. J.\nDavidson, Phoenix; M. Barker, M.\nBeadle-, Monde); V, Seolt. Molly OibflOMJ\nDull Deacon, Sulmo; Wllllnm Woods,\nttlty; B. ISddowB, m. Johnson. Q, Gibson\nRossland; L.  ufckhart,   Fetor notion,\nVancouver;  ('buries  Mlank, ('. Jones unci\nwire, silver King; Miss Dorothy Raymond, Marlon Raymond, Cranbrook; a.\nE. Wcljb, Allstn.\nA Homo for tho World at $1,00 a day\nLakeview Hotel\nCorner Hall and  Varnon Streets.\nRenovated and refurnished throughout Best of wines, liquors and\nclears served in the bar by Union\nBartenders.\nLAKipviKW-S. Archibald, A. Clark,\nPlioem*; P. Archibald; Erie; Hammel\nBrabray, R. Walsh, J. Zucco, Calgary,\nNelson House\nEuropean Plan\nVV. A. WARD, Proprietor\nCAFE\u2014Open day and night\u2014BAR\nMerchante' Lunch 12 to 2\nPhone 17 P. O. Box 817\nWhen Taking\na Vacation\nco ti th. gmft H_l_ja\u00bb Hot\nSpring*, wbara yoo md mean not\nonly rest, bat at tbs asms tlms\nhava tha benaftt of tha baat madl-\nelnal waterrron tha continent, ua-\naqualed for rheumatism aod kindred ailments. Tba springs ara eaay\not access to travellers and tha hotel\nbaa been fitted up and la hb-\nducted wltb a view to ths ____!-\nmum of comfort and aonvenleaaa\nfor guests.\nRates!   \u00ab1I and HI par weak, er If\npar dav an_ upwards.\nHalcyon Hot Springs\nSanitarium\nWM. BOYD, Proprietor.\nHalcyon\nHOTEL ARRIVALS OF A DAY\nThe Hume\nTabl* d'Hota and a la Carta\nHUM1S-D. Gordon, J. B. (Jottstein,\nAngus Hunt, h. ii. Karri J. a. Dobw,\n\\v. a. Aioouy, Vancouver; id. Bpraggett,\nGrand  1'orlts;   C.   I..   .Saniiit-i,  .Montreal;\nu. i*. _uiit-.iii-.tn, (Spokane; J. ii. King,\n.salmo;  Mrs,   Kickanls,  Willow  1'oliu;   J.\nic. ititua, ii. i-*. i\u201eik\u00abjB, Denver; ai. _*,\nShaw, Vmlr; b\\ L, McNeill, New York;\nAlex LUCOS, AgiiBHiz; J. J. Kidmen, Vcr-\nluui; ti. -liuliiiuii, tiluvvrdulu; W. Duncan, L'umtii; C. 11. Clnistensen, F, Al.\nCulice,   Victoria;   J.   J.   Campbell,   city;\nj. w. Heltni, Lethbridget Mr, and Airs.\nI,. JJ. StcpliciiBon, city; -,- C. Peck*\nMidway; A.  J.  Carney,  Calgary;  L,  M.\npelbrldge, a.* a. Gammon, j. t. Irving,\nG. 11. Booth, Winnipeg; W. U. Miller,\nScuttle; Mr. mid ins. A. li. Johnson,\nDr. antt Mrs. M. J. Vigneu*-, MrB.\nSliiij-iiiii,   City;   .Mr-*,   Jteliwick,     J.     11.\nI'MriiuiniMoii, Vancouver; Mm. - a, ii.\nNoakes, Balfour; Harry Cornell* firank\nnidi Company; w. a. wiimot, Fernle;\nii.  Robinson,   riioenlxi   I'.   Chapman,\nWinnipeg; tt. Chapman, Montreal; It, A.\nBrandon, Toronto; A. W. Davis, llous-\nliiiul;   ii.   llulin*.'!*,  Revelstoke,\nMen's        !\nButton\nBoots and\nOxfords\nIn\nAll Lsathers    .\nTan\nPatent\nGun Metal\nat\nTfce Royal ShoeStore\nLeaders in Foot Fashion\nR, Andrew A Co., Prop.\nVegetables, Plants,\nFlowers\nOf all kinds. Autumn Giant Cauliflower. Strong plants. 75c per\n100; |5.00 per 1.000.\nTOMATOES\nKiirlliiiina, 11.00 per 100; $7.00\n1,000.\nBRUSSELS SPROUTS\n50c per 100; 13.50 per 1,000.\nLATE CABBAGE\n50c 100.\nAll kinds \u00bb( lieddlng plants, C\ndozen assorted, postpaid $1.00.\nWatermelons, Muskmelons, Cantaloupes, Plants 50c dozen. Cash\nwltll order.\nW. G. KENNEDY\nNurseries, Willow Point,\nLeland Hotel\nNAKUSP, B.C.\nWhy not ipend your vacation at\nNakusp ? An Ideal place to spend a\nweek. Rowboats and motor boata\nfor hlie. Bent of fishing In one of\nthe nicest lakes In the province. For\ngood wMLiior and fine fishing Nakusp\nleads.\nThe    bemud    Hotel   solicits    your\nEatronag*    It offers the best to be\nad at a irodctuto price.   Rates f3.00\nper day.   Family rates on application.\nT. H. BOHART, Proprietor.\nF. B. WHITING. Propriator.\nSTRATHCONA-_r. nml Ml-, 9. Si\nFowler, Rlondel; Goorgo BroWn, Rossi\nland; Frank 0. Poarco, Paulson) o. M.\nShore, Vancouver; Mr. mid Mrs, A. P.\nwheeler, Ainsworth; George BJ, Winn,\nDenver; O.   M.  Vincent,   Huffulo;  C.   F.\nRobinson,    Tu w,   AllBhotiso,   Summit\nUike;   It.   ,T. nionser,     Seattle:   Stanley\nBrock, Winnipeg! s. Bennett, PortHopo\nF. T. Wnverloy, J. Pant, Victoria*. O.\nB. Wllllaiila, Kaslo; J. McOee, Frank\nParry, Toronto; CT. T. Brown, T. C.\nHrown, Socorro; T*. (J. Rowand, New\nYork; R, ,T(. Paul, Denver; Miss Bren-\npon, Calgary; s. Phlpps, Mr. nnd Mrs.\nBelmont', Vancouver; Jock Clark, l*on-\ndon; Mr. and Mrs. 11. Cut heart, Victoria.\nQueen's Hotel\n\u25a0 Bakar Straat\nA, LAPOINTE,  Proprietor\nRenovated throughout. Sixteen new rooma added, all elegantly furnished. Steam heat\nln every room,\nQUE13NS\u2014Rtollurd Wilkinson, Phoenix;\n.r. P, Power, Knnnlugtnn; A. S. Mac-\nitult.v, Silverton; llarvoy McLaren, Ymlr\nX. B. Chapman, 1*. M. Wlllltiton, G. H.\nWatson,   Spokane;   R.   N.   Ross,   Crun-\nbrookj w. Moore Jackman, Mlua Agney\nrtfjsa, Vancouver; F, 1). Bremnor, J. H.\nPlumer, city; John Corah, Trail; R. O.\nMcKwau, Goorgo Kins, Fernle; -J. H.\nAnthony, Winnipeg; F. ll. Cunninghahi,\nWillow J'olnt; H. H, Green, 11. Gordon\nParkes, Vancouver.\nNJ3LSON\u2014C*. Avray,. 13. K. Smith F\nBaurer, .Marcus; M. C. Avray, Spokane;\nOuy Knight, A. E. Batson, city: P. W.\nHarris, Rehatai\nSilver King Hotel\nBakar Street\ntinder new management\nWell  furnished   rooma,   $1.00  a\nday  and   up.    Beat   25c  meal  ll\nNalaon,   Beat brands of llquora and\nclgara, served by union men.\nN.  McLEOD,  Propriator\nSILVER KING-W. A. Edwanls, C. S.\nHourke, S. Lubln, J. G. Minor, H. H,\nGrnnuB, R. A. Ibbotson, M. MoKehslo,\nR. McKenzle, A. McCormack, U. Suytor,\nTaghum: James McKenzle.\nHotel Outlet\nproctor.\nFishing, Boating, Bathing.\nTourist   and   Commercial   rates\nweekly and monthly.\nQ. A F. 8N0W, Proprietors.\nGrand Central Hotel\nOPPOSITE  P08TOFFICE\nAmerican and European plana\nH. H. PITTS, Propriator\nGRAND CENTRAL-M. .Smith, Castor,\nAlta.; J. M. Frame, Taghum; J. Hotelier, Grnnd Forks; A. Nelson, Golden; T.\nC. Cliaotos, J. Metropmilos, Wlnlaw;\nMiss Shannon, Willow Point; E. Boyd,\nCranhrook; Miss Milburn, Calgary; G.\nR. Scaver, city.\nMadden House\nB. O. Ctu-RKB\nCor. Baker and Ward Sti\u201e Nehkm.\nMADDBXT\u2014Thomaa Hclae, Balfour; H.\nfi. Clark, Seattle; J. X. Dibble and wife,\nCasttejeur; James I. Russell, Russells\nLanding: Norman Coleman, Bonnlngton;\nGeorge D. O'Nell, Ainsworth; G. C.\nReeve, Willow Point; C. Hamilton, Porcupine; Coleman Shaw, Calgary; 8.\nBlower, J. T. Wilson, city; G. R. Johnson, .Idaho; Bert Olin, Cranbrook; John\nSweeney, La France creek.\nDaily Newa want ada 1. cent a word.\nHotel Westholme\nVICTORIA, B.C.\n\"Home of tha  Kootenay  Boys.\"\nFree Bui\u2014Ratss $1.00 por Day and up.\nF. F. TROTTER, Managar.\nHotel Touraine\nSolicits youi   patronago while In\nSpokane.\nEUROPEAN PLAN\nRates. !)fl cents and  up,    Reasonable\nRates bv Week or Month.\nHalf Block from Postofflce\nNear new Monroe St. Bridge\nFull   view   down   Riverside   Avenuo\nfrom Lobby,\nWm. Snow R. H. Snow\nProp, Manager\n8POKANE\nKootenay Hotel\nTwo Doors from PoBtotfloe\nVernon Streot\nRataa 11.00 and 11.26 per day,\nEvery  convenience given to tho\ntraveling public. Electric piano and\nunion bar In connection, where the\nbeat of wlnea and llquora ara kept\nMRS.  MALLETT, Proprietress.\nKOOTENAY\u2014L, Mon tenia rro, F. Dent,\nP\\ Hraley, Casttegafj J. P. Crnnna, S.\nCarrol, J. Morns,' Creston; W. Mcnzles,\n10. Weir. Galloway; John Olund, G.\nOlson, I'aulnon; Steve Uzulnc, M. Poz-\nnanoyltch. Silver King; A. Clarlt, Pltoe-\nnex; H. Beeohnm, h. Poroaa, j. Mlgu-\nhara, Cranbrook.\nSHERBROOKE-.Tnmrs Miller, John\nCarlson, T. Woods, Grand Forks; Joseph\nBeaudlon, Rlondel; George Sandon, Los\nAngeles; .L. Hlltestonl, E. Bray, Farron;\nA. Law, J, Ferguson, Alphohae Cyr, J.\nC. Mclnnis, J. Netherton, Morrltf; W.\nGrniiam, Smelter.\nRossland News\nROSSLAND, B.C., June 15.\u2014At the\nregular meeting nf the Knights of\nPythias last Friday tlie rank of page\nwas conferred on one candidate.\nThn Girls' Athletic, rltib will give a\ndance on Friday In Miners*  Union hall.\nMrs. VS. Turnbull of Trail Is a visitor\nIn town.\nThe Woman's Parochial of st, Georges\nchurch will givo a strawberry social on\nJune 28 In the next store to the Crescent.\nMr. and Mrs. G. Dolman were \"at\nhome\" to about 80 guests on Thursday\nevening, the occasion being a china nnd\nlinen shower In honor of Miss Cecilia\nMerry. The evening was Bpent In music\nand games and after refreshments the\nguests dispersed, wishing tho brlde-elecl\nalt good wishes.\nThe Tllllciitn club pleasantly entertained tlielr friends on Friday evening at\ntbe home of Mrs. T. H. Long, about V>\nbeing present. The amusements for the\nevening were Whist and a peanut contest, after which there was an abundance of refreshments. Those winning\ntbe prizes for whist wcre Miss Ruby\nDoney, ladles first; Thomas Tnlhot,\ngentlemen's first; Alice Malcolm nnd A.\nNewltt the consolations. For -the peanut contest the prizes were .won by;\nFirst, Evelyn Wallace; second, Gladys\nNicholas; consolations, Eileen Plncott\nand Milton Treverrow.\nH. Q. Grant of this city received the\nnews that his brother, Samuel J. Grant,\nwas killed in the mine at Unite. Mont.\nNothing further Is yet known. The deceased Is well known In Rossland as lie\nresided here until recently. He leaves a\nwife and child, a father, four brothers\nand five sisters to mourn his loss. H. Q-\nGrant left yesterday for Butte.\nJ. Trembath left on Friday morning\nfor Kellogg, Idaho.\nA large crowd attended the regular\nmeeting of Rossland aerie No. 10, F.O.E.,\non Thursday evening, when four condl-\ndates were Initiated, after which a few\nsocial hours were spent. J. Bolton took\nthe choir ond a fine program was rendered, the Eagles' quartette being in\ngood trim. Refreshments were served\nduring the evening and tho smoker wns\nbrought to a close about midnight.\nSport\nLOCAL HUNTERS\nFIND BEARS LOW\nBring    Horn*    Five    Nic*   Specimen!\nAfter a  Successful Trip to Lirdo\nand Kokanee.\nJ. 8. McGregor and Thomas Powell\nreturned on Saturday from a 17 daya\nhunting trip to Lardo and points\nalong Kootenay Lake. They brought\nback with them four brown and one\nblack bear.\nThe black Ibcar weighed about 400\nlbs., and waa the only one they obtained while at Lardo, where they\nhunted for 10 days.\nAt Kokanee, on thc west arm, they\nhunted for a week, and succeeded in\ngetting four brown bears, ono of\nwhich was a large specimen, the\nweight being estimated as fully 500\nlbs. During their stay tip the lake\nthc hunters found that the bears this\nyear are much lower down the mountains than usual, and It Is for this\nreason they .believe that they only\nlanded one specimen In the Lardo,\nwhere tliey hunted high up In the\nhills.\nCOAST LEAGUE.\nSUNDAY GAMES\nAt   Oakland    (morning    game*)-\u2014\nH. H. B.\nSan Francisco 4   10     0\nOakland   2    7     1\nAt San Francisco (afternoon game)\nR. H. E.\nSan Francisco  4   10     2\nOakland   3    3     1\n*At Los Angeles (morning game)\u2014\nR.  H. K.\nVenice   3     6 0\nSacramento   fi   11 3\nAfternoon game:               R. H. K.\nVenice  1    3 1\nSacramento  0    4 2\nAt Portland (first game)\u2014R. H. E,\nI .oh Angeles   1 3 2\nPortland  2 8 0\nSecond game;                  R. H. E.\nLos Angeles 0 0 0\nPortland  ,. 0 4 1\n(Called In sixth, account rain).\n8ATURDAY GAMES\nSacramento 4, Venice 3.\nSan Francisco 7, Oakland fi.\nFRENCH   CANADIAN   LACROSSE\nFANS   SURPRISED\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nMONTREAL, Juno 15.\u2014An unpleasant surprise awaited French\nCanadian lacrosse fans on Saturday\nafternoon, for thc Nationals, usually\nInvincible on their own tot, were de-\nfeinted by the Toronto 12 by a score\nof 4-3. It wns a good exhibition of\nfit tho national ganje\u2014cieiiri, \"Well\ncontested and fast, except for a por.\ntion of thc first ijunrter, when the\nvisitors looked like a slow coniblna.\ntlon. They \u00aboon showed -that they\nwore in the game, however, and In\nthe second and third quarters plied\nup a lead which tho home team could\nnot overcome. The veterans of the\nNational attack wore ineffective be.\nfore lho steady play of the Toronto\ndefence, and despite many changes in\nthe offence players, the locals found\nthc visitors practlcnlly Impregnable.\nThe Nationals secured a one-goal\nleud in the first quarter, which end\ncd 2-1, but in the second and third\nthey could not touch the Torontos,\nwhile Pnmleiio, Barnott and KallB\nran In three fnr the visitors. In the\nlast quarter the Nationals secured\none only. Torontos remained on the\ndefensive, and did not tally. The\ngame was tho oleahoat seen here this\nyear. \u201e\nCLEVELAND SLUGGER  HAS\nHIGHEST BATTING AVERAGE\nfBv Tlallv New**. Teased Wire..)\nCHICAGO, .Tune 15.\u2014Joe Jackson hns\npassed Ty Cobb find Is leading the hitters of the American league, according\nto this week's figures. Tbe Cleveland\nslugger's average is .435, while Ty has\ndropped to .'03.\nMONTREAL  CRICKET  TEAM\nWINS  GREAT  TRIUMPH\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nMONTREAL, -Tu'n0   IB.\u2014Australians\n: First   innings,   287;   second   Innings,\n309\u2014total,  5flfi.\nAll Montreal: First innings, 85;\nsecond   Innings, 112\u2014totul, 197.\nAlthough tho AH Montreal cricketers did not succeed in heating the\nAustralian eleven, they gained* the\nunique honor of being the only Canadian team to get the redoubtable\nvisitors  out   In two Innings.\nSEVENTEEN   THOUSAND   DOLLARS  FOR   LIVE  FOXE3\n(Bv Dailv News Leased Wire.)\nPRINCE ALHERT, Sask.. June 1*5.\n Seventeen thousand dollars was received here yesterday by E. C.\nBrownfield   for 85 live, foxes.\nVIOLENT THUNDER STORM\n(TRy Dslly Newa Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Ont., June 15.\u2014Motorists\nand passengers on the Radial line between here and Port Stanley found\nthemselves in the centre of one of the\nmost furious electrical storms ever\nexperienced in these parts, which\nswept from the north and west into\nLake Erie this afternoon. Service on\nthe Radial line was tied up for about\nfour hours, owing to a bolt of lightning\nstriking the power house at Lambeth.\nNo other seriottB damage Is reported.\nWOMEN   JOURNALISTS CLIMB\nARE  STRANDED  AT   HAT\n{By Dallv Newa Leased Wire.)\nMEDICINE HAT, Alta., June 15\u2014\nA reporter on Inquiring as to the\nIdentity of the seven hatless nnd\ncoatless women who were being entertained by an eighth, found they\nwere members of the Women's Press\nclub which recently held a convention    at      Edmonton,-      Tliey     were\nSuccessful Is the One Word That Best Describes\n This Big White Sale\t\n Every day Bees new and extra value-giving* that is sure to keep thc interest of everybody up to the\nhighest pitch, and'more lhan convince our customers that this is the best store in town to do their purchasing of Summer White Goods aniTwhl'l^Wearl'\" Remember that everything offered in this Sale is new,\nseasonable and perfect, while the pnc3 arc so low~as*to make it imperative that you buy u supply for\nmonths to come. ;\nThe time left Is short, so make haste If you would take advantage of these great offerings. Every\nminute that yo'u let slip without attending this Big Sale means thc loss of Just so much money toyou.\nRead carefully the following; they will serve aa a mer**-* hlnt*aa to what*thlv Big Sale is offering:\nWhite Lawn at 15c Yard\n20 pieces  of fine White Victoria Lawn, extra\nquality, full 36 inches wide.\n15c.\nChildren's Drawers for 25c\nMade of fine Cambric, with frill of hemstitched\nself material.    Sizes 2 to 14 years.   Regular Wc.\nSALE   PRICE 25c.\nLadies Vests, 2 for 25c\n10 Dozen I-adles' Cotton Vests In short sleeve\nor sleeveless Htyle, made of soft combed Cotton;\nfull sizes.    Regular 15c.\nSALE PRICE 2 FOR 25c.\nBlack Cotton Hose 25c\n'GO dozen fast Black Cotton Hose, seamless feet\nand legs and full fashioned, perfectly fast colors;\nthe famous Pen Angle make.\n25c.\nScotch Chambrag at 12 l~2c\n500 yards of Scotch Chambrays in plaid, cheek\nand stripe patterns In all the good selling colors.\nGood washing material.   Regular 15c\n8ALE PRICE 121\/ie.\nFriction Patterns at 5c\nA large number of choice designs to choose\nfrom.\n20c Muslins for 10c\n\u2022100 yards of colored Dress Muslins in extremely\npretty designs on light or dark grounds. Regular 20c.\n10c.\nMillinery Sale Todag\nTrimmed Hats and Unirlmmcd Shapes r Iri ;_J1*\nthc late season's newest styles In straws and\nPanamas.\nALL   REDUCED  ONE-THIRD.\nVifhite Muslin Dresses $4.95\nWorth up to $10\nLadles' Muslin and Voilo Dresses-**-some pure\nwhite and some with a touch of color with high\nor Dutch neck,\nDresses Worth up to $22.50\nfor $9.95\nSome of beautifully embroidered Lawn und\nothers of Fancy Voile; good, stylish drosses, both\npretty find becoming.\nMEAGHER & CO.\nThe Store for Style Baker Street\nstranded here while their worldly\ngoods and sister scribes sped eastward  In thc club's special coach.\n\"Mountain muciness\" was tlie cause\nof thoir plight, said a Presbyterian\ncleric from Blalrmore, who Introduced tho male scribe. As soon as thc\nfact became known that he was a reporter dire threats of vengeance\nmade lilm refrain from revealing other than three names: Mrs. Nellie\nMcClung, Mrs. Arthur Murphy and\nMrs. Shirk. They implored that\nnothing be sent out by the Western\nAssociated Press of tlieir escapade.\nThey had gone Tor \u00bb walk, and when\nthey returned the train was gone. A\nmessage, however, brought their car\nhack  by tho next train.\nSERVIAN CABINET RESIGNS\nBELGRADE. June 15.\u2014The Servian\ncabinet, of which M. Pas-Itch was premier nnd minister of foreign affairs,\nresigned todny.\nAnother Arrest.\nCONSTANTINOPLE, .lune 15.\u2014A\nson or Klamll Pasha, ex-grand vizier,\nwas arrested today, charged with being implicated in the assassination of\nMahmoud Shefket Pasha.\nGreece Proposes Demobilization.\nSOFIA, Juno 15.\u2014The Greek government hns submitted io Bulgaria a\nproposal for demobilization similar to\nthat proposed by Servia.\nNew Cabinet Formed.\nI SOFIA, June 14\u2014Dr. Danoff. who\nwas head of the peace delegation at\n\u25a0London, has formed a new cabinet, he\nhimself taking the portfolio of minister of foreign affairs. M. Kovlat-\ncheff, the former .commander of the\nBhodope army, is minister of war; T.\nTheodoroff retains the portfolio of\nminister of finance, and Michael Mt-\ndaroff, the Bulgarian minister at London. Is appointed minister of the interior.\nLONDON   THE    LONELIEST   CITY.\n-London Is still very far from being, as Shelley prophesied, a habitation of bitterns, but Henry Cooper\nStates In the May \"Sunday at Home\"\nthat if one had a golden key giving\naccess to all Its attics, one would\nprobably find a larger number of\nlonely souls per acre than anywhere\nelse In Christendom. Mr. Cooper\ngoes on to point out that the city\nproper has scarcely any open space\nexcept here and there Its tiny strip\nof churchyard. The city also has no\nprivate gardens to speak of, although\nin former days it had them in abundance, chiefly on its northern side.\nBut private gardens can scarcely be\nexpected when the value of building\nsites varies from \u00a3200 to \u00a3600 the\nsquare yard. The reader might go ro\none spot In the city, stand upon It\nwith his feet pressed closely together,\nand the soles of his boots would occupy space to the value of \u00a350, A\ngeranium bed would swallow up a\nfortune.\nMINING ACTIVITY\nIMPRESSES VISITORS\nUnited  States  Mining  and  Smelting\nExperts Pay Visit to Weil-Known\nProperties and Trail Plant.\nImpressed by tbe extent of the mining\nand smelting operations in this district\nnnd greatly interested In tlie Ore body\nwhich hns been struck In the low level\nof the Sloean Star mine, the famous ore\nbody at tho Standard, the large bodies\nat the Bluebell and the new mill at the\nHewitt mino, C. T. Hrown and T. C.\nHrown of Socorro, N.M.: R, B. Paul of\nDenver, Colo., and Lewis G. Bowand of\nNew Vork, prominent United .States\nmining and smelting men, who nre particularly Interested in zinc propositions,\nhave completed a tour of tbe Sloean anu\nAlnsworth districts and a ylsit tn Trail\nsmelter and the Lucky Jim mine, and\nwill leave tbis morning for Arizona nnd\nCalifornia, Thev were at the Btrathcona\nlast nlRbt.\nGreat ebanges for I be better were\nnoted In tbe Sloean district by Mr,\nRowand, who was In tbis country about\n10 years ngo. He was particularly strnek\nwith thn activity around Silverton nnd\nby the Improvements which have been\nmade at Trail smelter.\nCOAL COMPANIES\nINCREASE PAYROLL\nBusiness Prosperous In Fernie, States\nVisitor\u2014Construction  of Todd\nBusiness Block Begins.\nwith tbe payroll of the big coal companies being steadily Increased as additional men are put on to aid in producing the larger output which wus\nforecasted for this year bv the annual\nreport    of   the    Crows    Nesl    Pass    Coal\nTrappers and Traders\nHighest Cash Prices\npaid for\nRAW FURS\nThe Hudson'a Bay Company,\nFur Department, Victoria, B. C.\ncompany, Pornld Is enjoying - prosperous summer, declared w. A, Wiimot of\nthut city, who reached Xelson last night\nand registered at the Hume.\nBuilding operations In Fernle ure fairly active, he said, tbe most Important\nwork a t present In progress being the\nconstruction of Ibe new Todd business\nblock, a brick structure, which has been\ncommenced,\nMINERS   COMPLAIN    BROUGHT\nBY   MISREPRESENTATION\n(Special lo The Dally Nows.)\nVANCOUVER, B. C, June 15.\u2014\nOver r\u00bbo of the miners brought from\nEngland to work at the Cumberland\nmines, but who remain here, have\nsigned an affidavit alleging that they\nwere  brought   by  misrepresentation.\nPROTESTING STRIKERS\nRETURN TO WORK\n(By Daily News Leased Wlre.l\nMILAN. June IB.\u2014A general strike of\ntho Workmen \u00bbt all trades, proclaimed\nhen* yesterday as a protest against the\ncondemnation to prison of is workmen\nwho were arrested for various offences\nduring tbe recent strike at the Ironworks, was called off at noon and moat\nofthcrmen returned to work.\t\nSummer Clearance Sale\nof Millinery\nFOR   ONE   WEEK,   COMMENCING   MONDAY,   JUNE   16,  I WILL\nSELL AT PRICES  TO  CLEAR.\nLADIES' SAILOR  HATS\u2014Each    75c\nALL  LADIES' TRIMMED  HATS\u2014Regular price. $5.50 to\n110.00;   to  cl\u00abar at    $8.75\nLADIES'   TRIMMED   HATS\u2014Worth   $10.00   to   $15.00;  to\ncl.ar   at    $4.75\nALL IMPORTED PATTERN HATS  TO  CLEAR   AT HALF PRICE.\nCHILDREN'*  HATS\u2014Your choic. to clear at   $1.25\nONE WEEK  ONLY.\nMISS SCHUPP\n412 Ward Street\n I' \u25a0 '     '\nmoi six\nCt* Stall? j-Utati\nMOrftMY\nJUNE 11 -*l\nTwo Corner Lots\nGiven Away\nA 2-atorey dwelling, 6 rooms\n\u2014$1,650 buys this on easy\nterms. The house could not be\nDuplicated today for the\namount. At thia price the lota\nara a gift\nThey are a double corner, all\ncultivated,   bearing fruit  trees.\nGood location, one block from\ncar line.\nSee us today.\nFor Rent\n8*roomed 2-storty\" dwellf\"-*,\nwith workshop, chicken bouse\nand runs. Cor. Nelson Ave. and\nCottonwood St. $22.00 per\nmonth, including water.\nLoans\n$750.00 wanted for good loan\nfor 2 years. Interest 9 per cent\nper annum, payable half yearly.\nGood security\u20144 cleared lots,\nnew dwelling 8 rooms.\nCall for particulars.\nCity and Farm Lands\nLIMITED\nSuccessor to Western Canada Inv.\nCo., Real Estate, Financial Agents.\nJohn E. Taylor,     Alex Cheyne,\nManager. Secy.-Treas.\nPhone 254. P.O. Drawer 1042\nNEWS OF THE MARKETS\nPRODUCE\n1\nPUBLIC  PRODUCE  MARKET\nPROVES GREAT SUCCESS\nttty Dally News Leased Wire:,\nWINNIPEG, June i.'.-1'iHinoted by the\n.Million for Manitoba league, of wbteh\nw. Banford Bvani it* president, and formally opined liy Sir Rod tn ond Kohlln,\nWinnipeg's new public produce market\n(Moved a groat success on it** initial day\nyeaterday, being heavily patronised by\nihe public, who took advantage ot low\nprices made possible by i-uuIiik out the\nmiddleman.    The   market   Ih   Situated   in\nthe market building and farmers deliver-\n\u2022nl tluit* truck at one ond While tint ultimate Consumer made hay wiili llm low\nprices at the other until long before evening, when the supply of offerings was\nexhausted. That It will materially.out\ndown the cost of ilvlnj- is lhe confident\nhope ot  Its promoter**.\nLIVE  STOCK   MARKET\n(Dy\nDally N\new\nI Leasod W\nra)\nWINN J\n\u2022EG.   Ji\nIS,\u2014Owing\nlo    bot\nanther\nradlng\nin\ntin* liv\n\u2022   Htl\nik mar-\n\u25a0t on Si\nlurday\nti quiet\nlor\ntil doss\n' Hloeliu\nexcept)\nfor ehi\nveil tin-\nbed   caj\nle, whi\nIt\nwere 8\na nt\nPrices\nl-lllf!\"').\n\u2022holce\nBtee\nloted.nt\nJ7.2.V.IS.\n0\nioIcocoi\ns ai\nl heifers\ntti.lW.fi\nid dfinn\nlid quit\ncelpts ci\nIbe  cxp\nmm\nnt t\nie heavy\nrado ror\n0  east\n\u25a0fling o\nit\nof   Blffh\nnt\npteseiit.\nwev.r,\nv>\nre  quot\nBd i\nt fi  but\nNorth Nelson\nN, Hoover, across the l'lfco, offers\nncrcuKc summer home property, being\na subdivision of tho Hoover Ranch.\nThe centre of the ranch, with seven\nhundred '7'irtl feet or lak_' frontage,\nupj|n wliich Lite .oiebnnls nnd resldenco pro located, comprises ubout 8\nacres\"br \u00a3uttlvnxe:t Ifind. Price for\nthis lo*, (Na. J-.li, \u2022**\u25a0,.-.ij<:i>. The hnlance\nof the Inko frontngo con_lsta of nineteen acre subdivisions, each acre having ono hundred feet on the lake.\nPrice of theso acres from three io\nten Hundred dollars each, in payments\nof one-third down and the bnlanee in\n1-2 years, at 5 per cent Interest.\nMessrs. J. O. Patenaude, jeweler.\nnnd J. Fred Hume nre referred to for\nany information in regard to the\nproperly.\t\nCOMMISSIONERS\nHOLD MEETING\nMembers of Police Board Issue Statement at Conclusion of Private\nSession on Saturday.\nMayor Keefe, Aid. James Johnstone\nnnd M, ll. McQuarrie, the police commissioners, held a private meeting In\nthe police office on Saturday aftor-\nnoon. aud after the meeting the following statement was Issued:\n\"The police commissioners called till\nthose who were reported to hav\ngrievances and noiic of them had an;\ncvidenco wbleb would substantiate\nnny charges. The principals supposed\nto be Implicated denied under oath\nthat there was anything in the state*\nmeats of Irregularities which have\nbeen mnde. No proor or nny Irrogu-\nhirity was brought forward,\"\nMYSTERY SURROUNDS\nCASE OF DROWNING\n(fBv Pally Newo leased Wlre.l\nNIAGARA FALLS. Ont., June 16.\u2014\nAssessor W. \u2022'. Davy is urging the\npolice io solve -the mystery surrounding the drowning of his sister. Maggie.\nwhoso body was taken from the nice-\nway of the International Paper company i'. week ago. Davy fears his sister was murdered and then thrown\ninto the raceway i*i order to conceal\nsome evidence of violence.\nDULGAplA  SHAKEN  BY\nSEVERE EARTHQUAKE\nfBy Dailv News Leased WlnO\nSOFIA, June !\">.\u2014A  heavy  earthquake\nwas   felt   throughout   Bulgaria   at   JlsfH\no'clock yehterday.    Heavy damage in reported  from  the central parts.\nDailv   Now*  Want   ha*, get nwiltw.\nDEPARTMENT OF WORKS\nNotice to  Contractors.\n.   \"Creston School.\"\nfor t\nn\nsolved by\n\u25a0>-\\u\u201e\nthe\nlintl'M\nthr\nnln\nof pnhli\nthe Mth day of .lune, 1*11.!, foi* t}\u201e. erection nud completion of a two-room ax-\nteiidion t'i the school-house at Creston\nIn  tho  Ymlr electoral  district.\nTho work to be started immediately\non acceptance or tender and finished and\nbanded over ready for occupation on or\nbefore  August 25th,  1013.\nPlans, specifications, contract, and\nforms ot tender may be Heen on and\nafter tlie Kith dav of June, l.'l.!, at tin-\noffice of Mr. \\V. F. Teettel, government\niiKent, welson; Mr. J. CrttfnntoB, sperp-\ntary tn the school boat***.' Creston; nnd\ntlie department of pnntic WOrlcs, Victoria.\nIntendinir tenderers can. for.the sum\nof ten dollars <tio>. obtain one oopv of\nthe pin mc mid specifications bv npnlylng\nto the uridorslgnecl. This sum win be\nrefmuled when the plana nre returned\nIn kooi! order. \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0\nKacb proposal must be accompanied\nby an accepted brink cheque or certificate or deposit on a chartered i.nnl! nr\nCanada, made payable to the Honorable\nthe Minister of Public Works, for a sum\ncriual to 10 per cent or tender, which\nHhnlJ be forfeited if the party tendcrinn\ndecline to enter Into contract when culled upon to do so, or If he fall to complete tbe work contracted for. The\ncheques or certificates of deposit of unsuccessful tenderers will be returned to\nthem upon tbc execution of tho Contract\nTenders will not be considered unless\nmade out on the forms supplied, signer!\nwith the actual signature of the tenderer, nnd enclosed fn the envelopes furnished.\nThe   lowest  or  nny  tender  not   necessarily accepted. ,\n,                             ,T.  K.   GRIFFITH.\nPuMic Works  Engineer.\nPepsrtment  of Public  Works,\nYictorla, n.c,, June Wtb, 1M3.        52-3\nju(-|is and mags.\nPROVISIONS  ARRIVING,\ntHy  Dally   Newa   Leased  Wire.)\nLONDON,     July     15.-Canadian    pro-\nVisions arriving here via  Denmark include bacon,  which  range- iu price from\nt:iw\u00bb7ii_ for long cuts and $6*pia for Bhort.\nCheese is quiet now, being quoted at\nG7****3Js ror old  and SSjpKfs for new.\nMONTREAL    PROVISION    MARKET\nItly  Dally  News Lcnscd Wire.)\nMONTBKAIi,    .lum*    14,\u2014Tliere  Is    no\nchange In butter, for which the demand\nis fair. Receipts for the week were\n_!,!'39 packages, an against 22,278 for tbe\nSame neck a year ago. Cheese la steady\nwith a fair amount of busim-sii passing.\nftefcelpts   ror  the   Heck   Were  IjO.SOll   boxes,\nagainst 72,908 for the same weok last\nyear. Eggs native and firm. Receipts\nfor   the   week   were  11,*JS cases,   against\n!'V.!i>\nest westerns,   1201314c;   finest\niilcvst   creamery,    _\u25a0\".',f-ti&vii'I\necolldS,   21 _\nEggB, fresh, 25c.\nPork, heavy Canada, short mess, bar-\n,.]h, :{5\u00abi-l.\".e; pieces, *JSi..c; Canada short\nut back, barrels, &_GGc; pieces, 2$C,\nSTOCKS\n]l\nTORONTO   STOCKS\n(Hy Pally\nTORONTO, .1\nascd  Wire.)\n:razlliall,  87ft.\nshowing an actual cash gain of about\nHl.OW.uw. The week-s loan In securities were reflected iu a iwallng down ot\nloaiiB and nearly >'.>,<W,m was added to\ntbe excels eaab reserves.\nIn tin* weekly trade reviews emphasis\nwas luld on various favorable features\nuf tbe week liicltn'liig Uie good crop report, the better tone lu thc money market and lessening of. tension in trade\ncircles.    Tbe  Pond  market  was firm.\nTotal salts, par value, H,2aT,tKW. fulled\nStales coupon ::.- advanced >_ and the\nregistered ;is \\_ on call on the wuek.\nThe following New .oik stock market\n\u25a0liiotatlons arc supplied by Otlcr, llain-\nmond & N'antoii,  Wlnnipe*';\nOpen Clous\nAmalgamated   Copper      MM    i*^i\nAuiericau   Car   Foundry      *i',    li**\nAmerican  Locomotive       -.'       \u2022*'\nAuierlcun   Smelting       tiJ'i    (BMi\nAuieiican  Sugar     W.-_   M\nAnaconda       \u00a3)\"\u25a0\u2022    31\nAtehlson       :\u2022:\u2022'\u25a0_    '.\u2022\u2022'\u25a0'-\u2022\nBaltimore t- ubio   UStf   wi\nUrooklyn  Itnpld  Transll      Kl       87%\nCanadian   Paolfie    :is!_  W -\nChesapeake &  __]*\u25a0     .\"-_*._    B7*f\u00ab\nGhlca_o a. Alton         s\nChicago, 11.  ,_ St.  Pan.    103     KB*\nChicago He Northwestern         126\u00bb\nConsolidated  Qaa   IS)    i:\u00bb\nDelaware & Hudson       150\nKrle     MK ffili\nEric,   1st   pfd  t*M ^T'j\nEric,   2nd   Pfd  SOU i\"1.\nUcneral    Klcctric      UU',, ]:_**\nUreat  Northern,  pfd\t\nGreat Northern uro \t\n.. 120'.,\n1SSU\nIllinois   Central\t\n112\n1nterboro   \t\n..   15\nHi\".\nKansas  City  Southern   \t\n..  25H\nLehigh   Valley   \t\n.. HM,a\ni mii\nLouisville  &   Nashville   \t\n.. Ll\"-!\n121I-.\n11. St. P. H: S. ti. M, ISOO) .\n.. mil\n121\",\n,.   20%\n21'\/i\n-Missouri   Pacific   \t\n. m_\n:ti\nNew   York   Central   \t\n..   WH.\nlOO'd\nNorthern   Pacific   \t\n.. 10.V,\nHKI'f.\nPennsylvania   \t\n- m'_\nWJ-.\nHeading    \t\n. iy>\\\n.  ittTi\n*\u2014-\u25a0\u25a0*\u2022\nSouthern   Pacific   \t\nSouthern   Railway    \t\nTenn.   Copper  \t\nTexas   Pacific   \t\nTwin   City   \t\nWl\nUnion    Pacific    \t\n. 115\n1tlV'i\nC.   S.   Rubber   \t\n58Ju\nV.   S.   Steel   \t\nC.   S,  Steel, pfd\t\nUtah  Copper  \t\nWabash\t\nstern   Union   \t\nWisconsin  Central   ....\nAmerican   Tobacco   ...\nTotal sales;   247,'i)0.\nMETALS\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nMOW VORK, June 11.-Silver, G9!i.\nLONDON,   June   11.-Silver,  27'\/*.\nNKW  YORK, June 12.-Silver, \"\u25a0)'\/*.\nUJNDON,    June    12.\u2014Silver,    27    6*1(11\nleud, X20 :..*.\nGRAIN\nStandard, 317H_fil6%.\nVlpond, 10.\nTwin  city,  nwdO:!'\/,.\nUrosd, 10ffifll4.\nIlolllngcr,   IB.10S_1B.80.\nCanadian  Permanent, 188%,\nVnllsltd:    Pearl  Lake,   10.\nSPOKANE   MARKETS.\n(Reported hy St. Denis & Lnwre\nBid\nII.   c.   Copper  \t\nntci\nall.\n,1(1\n73.00\nHARDENING TENDENCY\nON LONDON EXCHANGE\nfBy  Dallv  News  Leased   Wlre.l\nLONDON, .Tune 16.\u2014Tn lhc absence\nhardening\nand   r\u00ab\nlug, hill\n\u25a0*\u25a0' a_   with,   prices\nranging   from\nllscount   rates   wen\nnt Im,'   tn   .Ci'iO   was\nof  England on ha!\nmi   nu-  money,\neasy.     Bullion\ntaken    intn   tb\"\ninco today.\nMONTREAL   MARKET  STRONG\n' fBv Tlntlv Nowa _\u00ab*scd. Wlre.l\nMONTREAL. .Tune i:,,_T.oc.-ft stocks\nnsed tho week with a decidedly strong\nme. smart advances nn light buying\nrilfiwlnft further evidence of Improve-\ni.'tit in the New York market and enn-\ndenl expressions of opinion from that\nIreetloii that tlie improvement would\nc continued. C.P.R. was the elder renin*, rising *lt_ to 221. The mnrhel closed\nat tbo top. Business Was moderately\nro for a Saturday session, about\n3,650 Shares, but the advance in prices\ndisproportionate to the  v\/iiumc nr\npactions. Power rose 2 points to 212\nclosed at -I'J'.i with no stork offering under !13 on transactions in SS0\nes; purchased nf two lots of Shaw-\nInlean sent the pric* up 2 points tn 12*1\npellern were asklno Hill at the close,\nlcllcn   rope V\\   to 1P*i<;   on  ilcalings In\nihares.   RIchi\nlc  list,\nTh-'t\nnt\na fc\n.   She;\nirket ns a wboi-\nto   carry  out\nires, 950 wining,\nsome delav.\nTola)  bus!\n,5C0 bond-\nADVANCE IN PRICES\nCONTINUES   IN   NEW  YORK\nfBy Dnllv News Leased Wire.)\nNEW YORK. .Tunc ]5.\u2014The advance In\nocks Which followed the violent breaks\nirly in the weok went on unchanged\naster-day. Virtually every Important\nlock traded in shared in tlie day's rise,\nwhich added substantial amounts to the\nIns   .achieved   since   the   upturn\nbegan.\n__ York storks were carried above\ntheir price of a week ago, having sus-\na complete recovery rrom the\ndownward plunge which followed rendition of the -Minnesota rate decision.\nOperations for the Ions account were\ncarried more confidently today, tbe\ntraders lmvlni: been encouraged by tbe\nmarket's demonstration of firmness yes-\nti'nlay after tbe buoyant upturn of\nThursday. Concerted efforts were mnde\nto drive In the short Interest, which\nwas forced to retreat. The advance wns\ncontinued throughout tbe half day session without serious Interruption. Growing ease In money rates was an Important Inriu'-nce in broadening speculation for the long account**, Predictions\nof a large cash gain In tbe week by\nbanks were fulfilled, thc bank stutetnent\nRAINS  INSUFFICIENT\nWHEAT  QUOTATIONS  STRONG\n(By Dally News Leas'- Wire.)\nWINNIPEG, June IB.-Wheat markets\nwere generally caster on Saturday \"li\nlower Liverpool cables and scattered\nshowers at the opening and Immediately\nfollowing  prices  grow slniiig on  reports\not insufficient rains lu the needed <iis-\ntrlcts. The Weather map shows rain at\nis points, varying from .01 at Russell to\n.It at Moosouihi In a total of XI points\nreporting la thc three provinces. Winnipeg opened Sc higher to '\/('\"lower and\nclosed 9io higher for both months. Minneapolis opened V'C lower and closed %\n.rlV Higher.\nThe cash demand continues slow,\nmoderate offerings anilyjexport impilry\nnil. Cash prices closed WpRB^llghor for\ncontract grades.\nOats and flax were strong. Cash nits\nclosed unchanged to '\/,c higher. Cash\nflax closed unchanged,\nOn Friday 840 cars wen; Inspected and\n300   were  in Bight.\nWinnipeg, wheat, close\u2014July, W\/jc;\nOctober, D8T.C\n.Minneapolis, wheat, close-Jul*.', Dl*J4c;\nSeptember. ffiJT_o.\nChicago, wheat, close-July, M'.'ic; September, !i2'iic; Docembor, iii:}fcc.\nWinnipeg, oats, close-July, 3ti%e; October,  38c,\nMIDDLEMEN   NOT   RESPONSIBLE\nFOR   HIGH   PRICET\n(Bv Dally News Leased Wire.)\n\u25a0WASiIlINCTnN, ,.lune [ 14. \u2014The\nmiddlemen frequently charged with\n:li of the responsibility for tho In-\nised cost of ilvinu, escape Indictment in a report issued by the do*\ntnieni of nerioulturn which sny?\nthnt during lhe past 20 years of advancing prices the margin between\nlie producer's price nnd the con-\nlumer's price hns nol widened much\nr any. Comparing, the average m\nprices for the last 10 years, 1!I0.*1-\n1012, With tho prncedln.T TO years\n1803-11)02, It appears that whent CNo\n2 red Chicago) advanced *12 per cent\nthe wholesale price fff flour advanced 21) per cPnt nnd the retail price of\nflour advanced IS per cent, Hogs\n.\u25a0meed about 33 per cent The\nwholesale-price of hams. M net' cent.\nnil lhe retnll price or smoked haim\nbout 32 per epjit. Retail smokori\n\u25a0aeon no per cent, pork chops 41\ner Pent, tlie wholesale price of InrO\n31 per cent and the retail price about\nSO   per  cent.\nSteers (Chicago) advanced 24 Re'\n:ent, The wholesale price of bee*'\nidyanced 23 per cent, the retail price\nof sirloin steak, 10 per cent and rib\nroast 23. per cent. S'lu-np advancer'\nHi per cent and the wholesale price\nif mutton advanced 38 per cent\n'he retail price was not given.\nDuring the last 10 yenrs the averse fnrm price of potatoes In Dccem-\ner was about 26 per cent higher\nban for tho preceding 10 years\nvbereiiH the retail price advanced in\nlhe  same period about 20 per cent.\nMINING NEWS.\nBOUNDARY ORE\nOUTPUT HEAVY\nPasses Nln\u00ab Hundred Thousand Ton\nMark\u2014Number Seven Produces\nLargs Tonnage.     *\nLa.-t week's ore production In the\nBonndary district of Si,W3 tons bruiigbt\nthe total Tor tbe year to date past the\nU'Jo.OW-tou mark, the 'inure being iHXi.UU\nions. Qranby contrllnil.il \"\u25a0f;i,27!\u00bb tons of\ntbe i.ig total and tbc Mother Lode mine\not the British Columbia Copper company\nt*Kik second place with 1.11.\u00ab12 ions. The\nchief Wjishlngli.il iiiliic.-i lonirlbutiiiK to\ntlie total ure the Kuoh Hill. I.2&1 tons;\nthe lien Hur, 6,W0 tonn; the United Copper, 2.2.-J1 tons. Th.* Ne, 7 mine In the\nitoundary district, owned by the Consolidated Mining & **ia.-ltlng company,\nliiin sldjiped 3,-hlO ton- for Hu* year to\ndate.\nIn the Sloean nnd Ainsworth dlHtrlet\nthe beuvy shippers were llm Standard,\n2(8 tons; tbe Bluch<ll, 305- tons; the\nKambler-Carlhoo, 10;i tons and the No. 1,\nUK tons. #\nOre production In Uie Kootenay uml\nliniiuihiry district for the week was\n11,(109 tuns and for iln- year to date,\ni.H.i.Hl Ions, flim-h. i receipts for tho\nweek wcre 3S,CflS tons and for tbc yeur\nto date,  1,023,612 tons.\nOre production and smelter receipts hi\ndetail}\nWeek.   Year.\nBoundary.\nN'lcklc Philc milled \t\nQranby\t\nMother   I .ode   \t\nRawhide   \t\nNapoleon   \t\nUnnamed\t\nKnob   lllll   \t\nBon   Hur   \t\nUnited   Topper   \t\nNo.   7   \t\nUope\t\nOther mln*** \t\nTotul    36,l!\u00ab 300,11(3\nSloean snd Ainsworth.\nStandard,   milled        H\nVan-Rol.   milled         Ti\nItamlil. i  '--il    (ini-.. \u25a0          J\nliluehell,  milled      1,21\nItlchm -Kui-cka          J\nStandard       ~>\nlllueh.ll           'J\nBpstmount   !\nRamlilor-Cnrlb&o     b\nNo.  1     I'\nOther   nilin-H   \t\nTotal    ...\nLardeau,\nother mines  \t\nNelson.\nMother Lotlc, milled \t\ni'n* in,  milled  \t\nSocond Relief, uiiiicd \t\nQueen  Victoria   \t\nOther mines  \t\nPOB bale-cdo\u00bbc_ fruit land.  Ul sens\nIn fsrtlle P-sd d\" Oreille valley.   Clost\nto route ot sew railway.   Would sell part\nbos I\nMMf\nFOR BALE-K-foot steamboat, wltb engine  and  boiler complete, cheap.    For\nparticulars    apply    to    Forest  Mills   of\nB. C, Limited, Boi 1068. Nelson, B.C.\n* t-tt.\nPOR SALE\u2014Restaurant, doing best\nluislr.e** In town. Forty to GO at **acli\nmeal, 29 steady boarders. Will sell part\ncash, ImImici* as rent Reason for iisll-\nInc 111 i.:h!U'. Address Itestaunnt.\nBull River. B.C .\u2666\u00bb-\"\u00bb\nmLPWAjkTWtm,\nNIUON   IMPLOVMINT  AMNCY\nr. a. -\nmx3iTJ\u00a3WY-Vnjr ntanfanax\nphonb m. box m.\n. i.wo  m\n.3i,fi9i mm\n. A.KU 151,4li\n. 5,298 118,1*1\n!\"N\nTotal\nEast  Kootenay\nTotal     ...\nRossland.\n,e Hoi No. 2. milled  \t\nInland  Empire, milled \t\n1,--.)\n12.0S1\n12,41)1\n10,820\n767\nn'tisj\n8,400\nCel\nLe   Itol\n\u25a0-I-N\nther in Sinn     1B9\nTotnl    H,SK7  I11,\u00bbH\nGranby Sme'ter Reoolpts,\nGrand Forks, B. C.\nGranby     21,r,Hl   riii3r87u\nB. C. Copper Co.'s Receipts.\nGreenwood, B. C.\nMother   Led..      4.880   I61.4SS\nRawhide    o.T.ts  ii'i.iai\nNapoleon      2i\"i   lt_m\n\"   ceil    Vlctolln           'W      13,081\nnnnicd    I     ItW     3,2(W\nPREMIER GIVEN GREAT\nRECEPTION AT HALIFAX\nHALIFAX, June 1\",.\u2014Premier Borden, accompanied hy lion. Frank\nCochrane, minister nf railways, and\nF: T). Ciutellns. gonei-nl manager of the\nIntercolonial railway, arrived here on\nSaturday night. Mayor Bllgh, the\nmembers of tho board of control and\nrepresentatives of the local Conservative organization, received the premier\nit the railway station. Mr, Borden\nand party were escorted in automobiles by two hands, several pieces of\nfire apparatus and a dozen automobiles to the city hnll, where a brief\nreception was held, followed by an\naddress by Ihe premier, After assuring his hearers that without distinction of party lie regarded himself as a\nreprcBentnitive of the whole people,\nthe premier stated Lhat the proposed\nterm'iials will be of substantial benefit tn Halifax. Dartmouth, the province of Novb Scotia and the Dominion\noi Canada,\nTotal    j- 10,978\n302,(170\nConsolidated Co.'s Receipts\nTrail. B.C.\nKnob   11111          10\n1,251\nHen    Hur        415\nfi,r.m\nlulled   Copper        201\n2,224\nNo.  7     3.17\n\u00ab.4!W\nHone        Wl\n250\nliiehmond-Hureka        36\nBE8\n6,788\nIU.m1.cll      aw\n3.711\n'sstrtionnt        83\nFtamhlcr-Cnrlbod        I0\u00ab\n1,MI\n\\-o.  i      n\u00bb\n],B08\njuiiivnn       314\nM.S2H.\nl.c   Itol        3ftl\n27.021\nniicr mines\t\n11,807\n167,10:1\nRESUME WORK AT\nNOBLE FIVE MINE\nTo   Recommence  Operation, at  Sur-\nprlse-r-Ore Ready for Shipment\nFrom idaho-Alamo.\nNKW DBNVEIt, June 15.\u2014Thc new\nmill or tlie Silverton Mines, limited,\nto trent the ores or the Hewitt group.\nis wortotnK Bnitlsfiictorlly, and with a\nfew improvements, now being mnde,\nwill save the values of the Hulphide\nores on tlie property.\nW. H. Will Is clearing the trail to\ntlie Cnpclla mine on Goat mountain,\nand work will probably be commenced\nthis month. Some ot the highest grade\nore mined ln the district was taken\nout of the Caiiella some years ago, one\ncur of ore giving smelter returns of\n11(1.000.\n.1. H. Cory will go up to the Silver-\nHe group next week to take charge of\ndevelopment work.\nriive White. M.K.. has accepted the\nposition of superintendent on the\nIdaho-Alamo group. '\nHermann Clever has four men developing the Tlscr group on Silver\nmountain. At present they are driving In ore.\nHEWITT MILL IS\nSAVING SULPHIDES\nMineral Separation   PrtfctM   Proving\nSuccessful\u2014Clever Develop!\nTiger Group.\nNKW DENVER. Jura 15.\u2014Men ore\nbeing ptit to work at the Noble Five,\nNear Sandon. and the regular force\nWill be en-?a-red in development work\nIn the connie of a week or 1<* days.\nIt Is expected work will be rosnmed\nat' tlio Surprise, near Sandon, next\nweek. A few tneti are now at the mine\nputting tiling-* In order to commence\nthe season's development work.\nTwo cars of ore ui_ imined, ready\nfor shipment, at the Idaho-Alamo, and\nwill be hauled down to Alamo siding\nas soon as the repairs to the wagon\nroad, now under way, are completed.\nJoe Butler has struck it rich, he\nsays, on Goat mountain. No as_?ys\nhave yet lieen made.\nAle3- Ferguson started work this\nweek on his leaBe on the Convention,\nSliver mountain.\nMAY METAL AVERAGES\nLead in London in May averftged\nFOR   KALK-Furnllur-r*   of   liouwkeeplnff\nflat.       Apply     K.    Pollard,   McDonald\nlilock,  1.1.\u25a0phnrie  H'fiK. aU-12\nFOR SAI.E-A'fKiap.   Charmltifc summer\nhome,   cu   lite   north   ahore,   IMt  mllex\nfrom city \\vlmrf; new net-tine containing\npiped Into llOUM, lii'i,*'* verandah hut\nlooking the lake, good chicken hoiiKe\nand Ranleti wll phinteil, absolute)*- no\ndanger from high water. This property\nmust be sold nl once ua owner Is leaving\ntown. $1)00 i iis'li wilt handle this, balance\non easy terms, Apply A. Routh or telephone Iim 47-fl\nFOR 8ALR\u2014Walnut bedroom suite, overmantel bureau, bookcase, piano, organ.\nSewing mnehlne, man's bicycle. All\ngood KiibIIbIi made. Must sell, leaving\ndistrict.    Tarllnn,  Proctor. B.C,        \u202247-fl\nFARM FOR SAMS-ln Hrltish Columbia.\ntwo miles west of (Midway, on Great\nNorthern! 2\u00abl acres, DO acres cultlvatc-\nable- 26 under culllVHtlon, rest good\nrange, Well timbered and watered; threo\nacres bearing orchurd. small fruit. Iron\nwaterworks through orchard. Good\nstream recorded on property; all fenced.\nI'lve-roomcd house, good outbuildings.\nNo mnrtKHK'i'. Possession at once. Apply Mrs. K. Button, Midway. *17-fl\nfor SAMti-Flfty shares French's Complex   Ore   Reduction   company.      Maku\noffer.    P. O. Box 117, Victoria. B.C. *\n\u202247-fl\nFOR 8AIJ\"-\u2014Floating palace. Steamer\nInternational, wo ft. over all, fuinlshod\nand with electric light plant. All ma-\nchlnery, except) boiler, intact. Apply a.\nB. Matthew, Cabinet Cigar store.     48-tf.\nFOR   BALE-H-lntsman   piano,   reasonable   for   cash;   also   banjo   snd   hand\nsewing machine, Singer.    Apply Box 241.\ncity *49-12\nFOR   S.\\l.i:-rolli*]mible   baby   carriage.\nApply corner CedST and Silica.       *til-fi\nCITY OF NELSON\nNotice Is horehy given that tho annual\nsitting of tho Court of Revision of tho\ncity of Nelson, to hear all complaints\nagainst the assessment Tor thc year 1 tin\nas mado by the assessor, will bo held In\nthe council chamber, city hall, on Saturday, the 6th day of July, at 10 o clock\n\u00b0'\"1, W. E. WASSON,\nCity Clerk.\nNelson, B.C., .Time 6th, ttll -15-21\nLABOR COMMISSION\nSittings of tho Provincial Labor Cam-\nmission will ho held as follows:\nOranbrook\u2014Tuesday, June lQthj 10 a m.\nKlmberley, Wednesday, Juno 11th,\n2 p.m.\nKomle-Thursday, Juno 12th, 8 p.m.\nMichel\u2014Bat ti nla y, June 14tli, 11 a.n.\nCreston-Mnndny, June lfith, 8 p.m.\nKaslo\u2014Wednesday, Juno 18th, 2 p.m.\nNelson\u2014Thursday, June 19th, 4 p.m.\nQueen  Mlile-Friday,  June Mh,  1 o.in.\nSalmo\u2014Friday, June 20th, 4 p.m.\nSilverton\u2014Tuesday.  June 24th, 10:80 i.m.\nNukusp\u2014Wcdnesdny,  June aith, 2 p.m.\nThe i 'ommlsslon is empowered to inquire Into all muttcm affecting the conditions of labor in British Columbia. All\npersons Interested are Invited to att-ind\nand give evidence.\nH. G. PARSONS,\n__,\u201e_. Chairman.\nF. R, McNamara,\nSecretary. 11-20\n\u00a318.1123 per ton, compared Wilth\n\u00a31(1.500 in May, 1012.\nSilver in New York averaRed 60.361\ncents per ounce, ugainst U0.881 cents\nIn May 1012.\nLondon price of silver for May. 1013,\naveraged 27.825 pence, against 28.038\npence ln the same month of last yenr.\nThe price of electrolytic copper in\nNew York In May averaged* 15.480\ncents per pound, compared with 16.031\ncents in May, 1912.\nSpelter avePaged 5.256 cents per\npound In St. Louis in May, 1013, and\n6.520 cents in May, 1912.\nINLAND EMPIRE MANAGER\nLEAVES FOR PORTLAND\nFrank B. Ponrce, manager or the Inland Empire mine nt PaulBOn, will\nleave this morning on a htisfness trip\nto Spokane and Portland. Ho was a\nguest at the Strathcona yesterday.\nOFFICERS OF NATIONAL\nFRUIT GROWERS ASSOCIATION\nR. M. Winslow   Elected   Member  of\nCommittee\u2014Election of Officers\nby Letter Ballot.\nfBv Dnlly News Leased WlreA\nOTTAWA. June 15.\u2014At the last Dominion conference of fruit growers a\nmovement was started having for its\nObject the organization of the Canadian National Frulit. Growers' association. A draft constitution and provisional bylaws were adopted by ttie\nfconference and J. A. Rnddick, Domin-\ni'on dairy commissioner, was requested\nto undertake the work of organisation.\nTh-ft election of officers has been car-\nVied on by letter ballot and the list\nts now complete. Membership fn the\nassociation la limited to the officers\nof tbe provisional-fmlt growers' associations and each other person as mar\nVreafter be named by tbe association.\nThe officers elected are: President.\nRobert Thompson, St. Catherines,\nOnt.: vice-president, S. C. Parker.\nRerwick. N. S.: secretary-'ressurer.\nP. W. Hodgetts. Toronto: memhers of\ncommittee, W. C. Ricardo; Vernon, B.\nC; R. M. Winslow, Victoria, B, C:\nManning K. Erb, Port William, N. S.\nRAILWAYS AND GOVERNMENT\nDIVIDE   IMMIGRATION  WORK\n_t \"Dally News T,*n**t*-1 WirM\n'OTTAWA, .Tune 15.\u2014The business\nof attracting immigrants to -Canada\nhns heretofore been a combination\npropaganda on the part of the government and the railways. A new ar\nrangement is about to be effected\nwhereby the railways will confine\ntheir efforts to the tourist traffic, the\nmore profitable end of tbe business,\nand the government will alone attend\nto the propaganda. It will aiifpnent\nIts work*, however, to include not only\nhomesteaders, but factory men and\nmerchants. Heretofore the railwmys\nhave particularly looked after the latter cloas. .._...\nDally News \"Want\" Ads. Get Result*\nTHE WOMKlNCMANt EMPLOY-\n MINT AOCWCY.\nWANTKIMaiiniir allSrsirSBn;\nwoman cook, hotel, \u2022\u00bb; KitHway builders, fare advanced; women and girls,\nhousework; sawytrs; teamsters; sawmill laborers; Woman cook, summer resort; woman cook, without encumbrances,\nfor mine, 26 to \u00bb people, no better place.\n\u2022*\u25a0**   Parker; 312 Baker street, Phone^\nWANTED-MlSCELLANBOUi\nTf 52f.*_?T*a_9\u00bb\u00bbW. *\u2122**r Oomiwny,\nLlmlloJ,  Ea,t Calory.    We tan and\narea\" fur and hide* of avary deacrlpUon.\nworn   guaranteed   or   money   refunded.\ntan  leather.    Up-to-date  machinery.\nnrlces paid for hides.   Freight paid\nTop\n_.. ,.....a ,,mu iu. tiiaee.\nI'rlcn llgt  on  application.\na-M\nMEN WA,NTED-*ilary and c\u00bbpen\u00bbe\u00ab er\ncummlaalon. Musi he aetlve. amblu-\noub, energetic. Bplendld opportunity.\nIforlncr eipenlenee not neceasary. Write\nfor parlloulnra. El Creo Cigar Company.\nLondon, Ont. _-m\n*_!i!TED-airl for general housework\n\u00ab1 i?..1** a,ter on\" chM M\" \u00b0S\"\"I\nr. W. McLalpe. greenwood. B.C.    fl-lf.\n. MILV NSW*     '\nCLAMirilO AD RATIt\nOr* mm \u25a0 (Mr* Mr irmrtlon, for\nMnta \u2022 ward par writ. fifUM CMti \u25a0\n\u20226 Mr morrlk whM ant, aecam-\nnea she eroera OUierwiee enc eeifi\nIrtr word per inwrtion straight Ne\naaeeunte epensd fer Want Ada, Mini-\nmum ohawia P ewitfc'\nHOTEL DIRECTORY\nW__MTEEr)_en,w't'? teanwi \u25a0\u00ab Ya*r, to\n\u25a0hid  and   haul  poles.    Address  P.   I.\nChurchill, Ymlr. B.C. M.\nWANTKIJ-Hmployment   as   bookkeeper,\ntlmukeeper   or   ledger  clerk,   used   to\nInlPPlng and freight work.    Cutler. Whi-\nlaw, B.C.  \u00bb|7.([\nWAM'hD-Housekeepcr    who    jn    good\ncook,     englishwoman preferred,   ap*\nPly  Uox 18.,   Ually Tievm.        '        47-tf\nWANTKfi-tlood RGitural  servant.   Ap-lv\n__________ or Box 1106. ut'tl\nWANThD\u2014A good house girl for general\nboUHcwork.    Must bo good cook. Apply\nC. D. Hhlhbell, Greenwood. B.C.       48-tf\nWANTKD-SltuatSon as third class en\nglneer. Several years' B. C. experience, sawmills, mines, locomotives, electricity machinist. Available Ift few\ndaya.   Apply Box IB, Daily News.    *4M\nWANTICD\u2014A  cook.  Apply  Queens hotel.\n  40-6-\nWANTBD\u2014By   married   couple,   position\nas cook  and   helper,  camp preferred.\nApply Hox 7B, Dally News. \u00ab40-fl\nWAN'TMD\u2014Purchaser for, or agent to\nsell timber holdings and mills, running\nnow. Will sell nt what I consider half\nprice, JC0.O00. Thorough investigation\nInvited; 10 per cent paid purchaser o:\nagent closing deal Inside GO days. Ad\ndress Box *'J2, Hossland. B.C. \u202219-tf\nWA.N'TKli\u2014airl   for general  housework\nApply 421 Carbonate street. *49-tf\nWANTRD-To    purchase    good    Bccond\nhand furniture.   Will pay highest cash\nprice.   P. O. Box HM, Nelson. MM\nELFORD BOAT COMPANY, LIMITED\nMont Builders nud Livery. Boat supplies, oars, paddles, batteries, spark\nplugs- etc. Agents acrlpps. Hazard, Detroit dray, Hunan stationary motors,\nWisconsin     detacliablo   lt__   horse   power\nrowboat motors. Write for catalogue,\nPhone 148 any hour day or night for\nlaunch trip. f't-2*\nwanted\u2014A woman  to do housework\nhy the day. Apply 1*00 Carbonute street.\nKM\nWANTED-Girls    at    Nelson   Jam   and\nCanning factory.  60-tf.\nWANTED-To    contract     hauling    and\nukldilliig   ties.    Can   use   four   teams.\nI.  0,  Schermerhorn, Erlckson,  B.C.\n\u202250-12\nWANTI*l)-_eneral    servant.     Must    bo\ngood    clean    cook    ond   neat worker.\nWages t3U per month.   Write P. O. Box\n103.1, Nelson,  B.C. B2-tf.\nWANTED\u2014Buyer   f\u00bbr   establlnhod   artistic   business.    Good   Income,   1200   will\nhandle.    Apply Box 239, Dally News.\nFOR RENT\u2014Fdrnishcd ro_mu, 418 Carbonate street. \u202233-26\nFOIt     RENT-furnlshed     suite,      with\ndishes, cooking utensils and  all llnsn\nsupplied.    Kerr Apartment block.     itfl-tf.\nFOU RENT-Furnlshed  room, 411 Silica,\n\u202244-12\nFOR KENT\u2014Six roomed house, close In,\n128 month. J. W. Gallagher, 103 linker.\n\u202246-1\nRENT a Remington typewriter model\nNo. 7 three months for 15.   Visible writing Remington $3 per month.   Apply V.\nD. Doty, care Canada Drug & Book com*\npony, Nelson. 40-tf\nFOR RENT\u2014Five roomed cottage, part-\nfurnished; four roomed cottage, partly\nfurnished; also two rooms for light\nhousekeeping. Apply 009 Victoria street,\nPhone L114. '*47-fl\nFOR     RENT \u2014 Com fort ablo     bedroom\nCheap.  Dlfi  Water street. \u202248-tf\nFOR   rent\u2014Two   light   housekeeping\nrooms,   witli   cookstovcj   and   bath.    915\nWater street. \u202218-fl\nFOR   RENT\u2014Comfortable    front    room,\nfurnished.   715 Stanley street. \u2022ifl-fl\nFOR  RENT-Furnlshed    flat   for   light\nhousekeeping. Apply* 212 Vernon street.\n\u2022SO-tf\nFOR RENT\u2014Furnished four room cot-\n- tage on lake front, seven acres land,\ngood water, plenty wood, near school,\npostofflce, store and C.P.R hotel, Bal-\nfour,,. Apply   Tom Helse, Balfour, B.C.\nPV)R RENT\u2014Five-room brick flat.    All\nmodern.     Apply   to   William   Hancock,\nNelson  Brick Works.     *52-6\nFOR RENT\u2014Sin roomed  house, close In,\nUS month, J. W. Gallagher, 102 Bakori\n52-tf.\nPOULTRY ANO LIVI STOCK\nFOR SALE\u2014Five teams heavy horses,\nweighing from 2800 to 3200 pounds per\nteam. Will sell double or single. Can\nbe seen any time. Apply to A. E. Johnston Logging company, Valllcan, B.C,\n82-20\nFOR BALE\u2014fcay    horse,    1,060 pound's.\nPull single or double,  ride and nack-\n\"- ****      Apply   C.   Harm in,\n\u202241-12\nFOR SALE\u2014Baby rhlcks,  Leghorns, etc.\nPrice    lint    on    application.     Charles\nProvan, Langley Fort. \u00bb4'-24\nFOR   SALE\u2014Hens,   Rhode   leland   Reds\nand Burt Orpingtons.    Apply 301 Loti-\nmer Btreet. '\u25a0\u25a0_-,._\nFOR SALE\u2014Airedale puppies. Price$15.\n__^_iy__^orse_&_lK_._\u00b0r!__* B,C\" *47\"'2\nFOR SALE-One fresh, halFjersey co\\v.\nfive years old; four gallons inllk dally.\nBest family cow. Price *R5. Apply Mrs.\nB. Mcltierlck, Sloean Junction, \u202250-ft\nFOR SALE-Pekln duck eggs,, fi.fio per\nsetting.       D.     Cnmeron,     enre     Bell\nTrading company. \u2022si-o\n8HERBR00KE HOTEL\nNetaan, B. C.\nOn* minute's  walk  from  C.P.R.   station.     Cuisine   unexcelled;   well   heated\nand ventilated.\nLAVIGNE A DtTNK.\nBusiness' Directory\nA88AY1M\nB.   W.   W1DDOWHON.   ASBAYKR   AND\nChemist. Box A1108, Nelson, 11. C.\nCharges: Gold, silver, copper 00 lea-1,\n11 each; gold-silver, $1-60: silver-lead,\n$1.60.    Other mctala on application.\nWATIR NOTICE\nNotice Is hereby given that I, Thomas\nSkatbo, of Crescent Valley, B.C., \u00bbvjll\napplr for a license to tuke aad use' 20\nminers' inches of water out of a spring\ncreek, Which flows a short distance In\na southerly direction and ends In the\nground near the northwest corner of\nLot 11719. The water will be diverted\nat the spring and will he used for domestic and Irrigating purposes on the\nlnnd described as lot 11719.\nThis notice was posted on the ground\non the 22nd day of May, 1913. The application will be filed in the office of the\nWater recorder at Nelson, B.C. Objections may be filed with the said water\nrecorder, or with the comptroller\nof water rights, parliament bulldlncs,\nVictoria,  B.C.\nTHOMAS SKATBO,\n40-ia.w-i. Applicant.   '\nAUCTIONEER*\n'dX~WATBRIlA?Pft^^ BoMtmj\nmSLSON   AUCTION.  IfART-W . CUT-\nLER, licensed auctioneer.   AUctioa Uf\nGROCERIES\nA. KAODONALD \u2022_ OO.. WHOLBBAl-B\nGrocers and Provision Merchants. \u00ab\u25a0\u2022\nporters of Teas, Coffees, BpKes, Drle\u00abl\nJ-rutts. SUPle and Fancy QnxM*m\nTobaocos. Cigars, Butter, Eggs, CbMft\nand Packing Houss produce, ornej\nand warehouse corner of \u00a3t\u00b0b* a\u2122\nHall streets. P. O. Box UK, T(_\u00bb\n'  phones \u25a0 and fl.  ..\nWHOUEEALE  PRODUCE\n\"\"porters and 1\nProducs, fnilu, -*,\nWn __ _____ B.C.\nufactarers' Agents.\n\u25a0sa-Faea. P.U,\nPhmw UL    \u00bb\u25a0\u00ab.\nELECTRICAL   SUPPLIES\nJ. H. RINGROSE, 3M BAKER ST., REID\nBlock. Installation of electrical machinery, telephone plants, house wiring.\nRe ialr work. Supplies carried. Phone\nA2I7.    P.  O.  Box IK. 22-tf.\nW^NDOvv^T^A^PET^Al-Jri^ M N Et\ncleaning. House cleaning our specialty.\nAwnings, new and repairs. Vacuum\nCleaning Company, Phono 488, Box M.\n\u00ab7*tr.\nPROFESSIONAL CARDS\nQREEN  BROS., BURDEN 4 CO.\nCivil Engineers.    Dominion and  B.  C.\nLand Surveyors.\nSurveys   of   Lands,   Mines,   Townsltes,\nTimber Limits, Etc.\nNelson.  616 Ward Street;  A.  H,  Green,\nMgr.   Victoria, 114 Pemborton BIdg.; I.\nC. Green . Ft. George, Hammond Street;\nP. P. Burden.\na. l. Mcculloch\nHy-Jraulio   Engl near\nProvincial Land Survayar\nP. O. Box 4L\nOffice phone, IM; residence phone, RTL\nOffice.  Suite \u00ab.   McCulloch   BIdg.\nI     Baker Btreot, Nelson, B. C.\nT.  II.   RIXEN.   AUDITOR   AND    \\C-\noounUnt    Room IS. K.W.C  BlocB,\n00A\u00ab.\nH.     PERRY     LEAKE,    CONSULTING\nEngineer, Nelson, B.C. 300-tf.\nCHA8. MOORE, C.E.\nProvincial land surveyor and architect. Lnnd subdivision, timber and\nmine surveying. Plans and spoclflca'\ntlons.   Alan block, Nolson, B.C.     61-tr.\nFOR LESSONS IN THE FRENCH\nInngunge please apply to Ed. II. Leu.\ncertificated French teucher, care Y.M.\nC.A.,  Nelson. I 117-0\n8YNOPSI8 OP COAL\nMINING  REGULATIONS\nCoal mining rights of the Dominion, In\nManitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta,\nthe Yukon Territory, the North-well\nTerritories, and ln a portion of the province of British Columbia, may bs leased\nfor a term of twenty-one years at an\nannual rental of 0 per acre. Not mora\nthan 2,660 acres will ba leased to on*\napplicant. . .'\nApplication for a leasa .must be made\nby the applicant In perspfc-fto the Agent\nor Sub-Agent of tha district .of whloh\nthe rights applied for are situated.\nIn surveyed territory the land must be\ndescribed by sections, or legal sub-divisions of sections, and In unaurveyed ter*\nrltory the tract applied for shall be\nstaked out by the applicant himself.\nI Each application must be accompanied\nby a fee of 16, which will be refunded If\nthe rights applied for ars not available,\nbut not otherwise. A royalty shall be\npaid oa the merchantable output or thf*.\nmine at the rate of five eents per ton.\nThe person operating the mine shall\nfurnish the Agent with sworn returns accounting for the full quantity of mar*\nchantable coa) mined and pay tho royalty\nthereon. If the conl mining rights ara\nnot being operated, such returns should\nbe furnished st least once a year.\nThe lease will Include the coat mining\nrights only, but the lepsee mny bc permitted to purchase whatever available\nsurface rights may be considered necessary for the working of the mine at th*\nrate of $10.00 an acre. \u25a0     ,_\nFor full information application should\nbe made to the Secretary of the Department of the Interior, Ottawa, or to any\nAgent or Bug-Agent of Dominion Lands.\nW. W. CORY,\nDeputy Minister of the Interior,,\nN.B.-Unautborl**** puMlcatloa of tht*\n\u2022**)***rtr\u00ab-*m\u00abtnt win so*- \u00bb\u00bb\u2022 n*M *****' ,\nLQDGEJJOTICES\nfellows' ball at 8 o'clock.\nQUEEN     CITY'     REBBKAH    I\u00a3>L__B\nNo. U, I.O.O.F.. raoeta flrtt ana vur.\nTuesdays, Oddfellowa' hall. 7:30 o'clock.\nNBLSON   ENCAMPMENT  NO.   7,  f__\nO.P.. meeta necond and fourth Thun.\ndays 111 Oddfellows' hall at 8 o'clock.\nCANTON CORONA NO. i 1MU fJHI\nsecond Tuesday ln Oddfellows' hall u\n8 o'clock.\t\nKNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS MEET TUBS-\ndsy nlKbtn in K.  of P. Ball, Kails\nbulldlnn;.\nL0.0.M.\nNELSON   Lodge No. 81$,\nmeets 2nd and 4th Thurs-\nF.O.E.\nNelson Aerie No, a meeta\nInd and 4th Wednesdays la\nEagle Hall.\nCourt Royal   Nelaon No.\nIBM  meeta   on Ind and 4th\nMondays   each    month   ta\nK.P. hall at 8 ml   Ladl*.1\nCLWt meets first and third Wednesdays.\nAM\nC.O.F.\nCourt Kootenay Belle meets\nInd and \u00abh Fridays la\nK.  P.  BUI,   Eagle  Block.\nCLAN JOHNSTON** 2U meet. In I.O.O.\nr. hall (Int ua tlilrd Frldaya, I p.m.\n MONDAY       JUNE  11.\nCfte ftaflp Mfttm.\nPhone 10\nthe Star Grocery Co.\nStore of Quality\nSpanish Queen\nOlives\nIn Bulk\n60c per Quart\nStrawberries\nFrssh Every Morning.\n20c per Box\nCreamery\nButter\n, Fresh  Every Day.\nHazlewood  40o\nCurlew    40c\nAlberta Government   40c\nBrookfield, 2 for  75c\nGood\nPotatoes\n75c per 100 lbs.\nStar Grocery Co.\nPhone 10\nGOOD ATTENDANCE\nAT LECTURES\nImperial Bank of\nCanada\nEstablished 1875.\nHEAD OFFICE: TORONTO, ONT.\n| Capital  (paid up) 16,770,000.00\nReserve fund 6,770,000.00\nD. R. Wilkie. Pros, and Gen'l. Mgr.\nHon. Robert Jaffray, Vice-Pree.\nSAVINGS DEPARTMENT.\nAn account oan be opened with $1\nor more. Interest Is allowed at current rates from date of opening the\naccount and added to the principal\ntwice a year. .     '      ,,\nTravellers' cheques and draftB sola,\n, negotiable In all parts of the world.\nBank money orders Issued, payable\nthroughout Canada, the United States\nand Great Britain at the following\nrates: 16 and under, 3 cents; over $5\nto |10, 6 cents; over $10 to 130, 10 cents;\nover 130 to $E0, 15 cents.\nOut of town customers ean transact\ntheir banking business by mall and\nI are given every attention.\nI Nslson Branch, J. H. D. Benson, Mgr.\n'radical Plumbing\nfn all its branches, and including all\nmanner of repairs, Is undertaken by\ni oa the understanding that we give\nIierfect satisfaction or make no charge,\nIVe put in new plumbing of all kinds\npnywhere as desired, use only the best\nmaterials, employ only competent\nworkmen and ask only the most reasonable prices. A trial order will re-\npult in our being your plumbers.\n2. K. STRACHAN\nI9AKER STREET NEL80N\nSummer Homes\nLockhart Beach\nKootenay Lake   -\nB.C.\nThe Government of the province\nof British Columbia will offer for\naale by Public Auction at Nelson,\nP. C, June ICth, a sub-division\nsuitable for summer homes on the\nfamous Kootenay Lake.\nThe Lots vary from about one\nquarter acre to two and one half\nacres, and tho upset price has been\nplaced at $100.00 and $200.00 per lot,\non easy terms of payment.\nKootenay Lake, situate In the\nheart of the Selkirk range of the\nRocky Mountains, Is famous as a\nsummer resort, also for its fishing,\nhunting and boating.\nWrite for particulars to:\nW. P. TEETZEL,\nGovernment Agent, Nelson, B. C.\nTHORPE'S\nip_ ,        DRINKS\nmam\nIf You Expect     I\nTo Go\nUMMER PLANS.\nVacation tlme will be here before you know It. There's an\nadvantage. Jn being prepared for\nthe vacation time, well ln advance. In gettmy track of summer homes In tho country, in the\nmountains, at the shore, make\nyour planB early\u2014\nI8E THE DAILY\nIEWS WANT AD*. ]\u25a0\nAsk for rntcs by the Donaldson\nLine. It will surprise you how little the trip will cost. Large now\nsteamers, up-to-date service. Sailings from Montreal every Saturday.\nMake your reservations now. For\nInformation ask or write\nD. SMEATON, O. T, A., C. P. R.\nW. E. KETCHUM, C.P. & P.A., G.N.H.\n0,   N.   ilAKHlMAN,   D.T.A.,   C.P.R.\nH.   E.   LIDMAN,   General   Agent,\nPhono M5312, 349 Main St., Winnipeg.\nSUMNER\nEXCURSIONS\nReturn Rates from\nKootenay Points\nto\nWin\"ip\u00bbg    -, 60,00\n8'. Paul     60.00\nChicago      72.60\nTorl>nto     M.00\nM\u00bbntr\u00bbal     -o5.oo\nHalifax    129.3B\nNew York    _______\nBoston     1*o.oo\nCorrespondingly low fares to\nmany other Eastern points.\nOn sale dally May 28 to Sept. 30,\n1813. Final return limit Oct. 31.\n1013.   ,\nLiberal stop-over privileges.\nTickets and all Information may\nbo obtained from any C. P. It. agent\nor write\nJ. V. MURPHY,\nDistrict  Passenger  Agent,   Nelson,\nB, C.\nExpert\nGasoline\nEngine\nRepairs\nAshton &Smedley\nP., O. Box 608\nPlione 140\nSTENOGRAPHERS  MAY\nFIND EMPLOYMENT\nespecially at tills season of tile\nyear, when many changes arc\nmade by employers In their help,-\nBY PLACING A DAILY NEWS\nWANT AD TODAY\nGolden Gem\nAdding Machine\n$15.00\nMoney bnck  if not  satisfactory.\nCall and examine.\nF. 8. HALL\nP.O. Box 231. Nelson, B.C.\nSummer Residence\nFor Sale\nLake frontage, 1% miles from\ntown. TliU is a pretty little one-\nstory house in Al shape, having\ntwo bedrooms, large living room,\nkitchen, etc.\nFine, large veranda, with a beautiful view of tho lake, being situated\non ji half an acre, planted with\nyoung* fruit trees of various varieties. Eighty feet lake frontage. A\ngood -oathouse goes with the property. A snap at 11.750; $500 cash,\nbalance easy terms.\n~C. W. AppleyardT\n13 K. W. C. Block.\nRobson     Ranchers     Hear    Instructive\nAddresses on  Poult.y and Soil Cultivation\u2014Band    of    Hope.\n(Special to Th*. i)_lly News.)\nROBSON, B. L\\, June 13\u2014The\nspring meeting of the Robson Farmers' institute wub held in the school-\nhouse on \"Wednesday. Two speakers\nwere present\u2014\\V. M. -Wilson of Fruitvale, and A. K. Keffer of Arrow Park,\nthe former speaking on \"I'oultry\" mid\nthc latter on \"Soils and Soil Cultivation.\"    A. Mitchell  presided, nnd  there\nis a good attendance,\nMr. Nellson, In his opening remarks, thought that while there wus\na good attendance ot ladles present\nthat many more should have turned\n, as he ulwiiya considered that\nwomen were ho much more adept ut\npoultry raising in Its Initial stages\nthan men. and what he had to say\nwas largely to the poultry raiser ot\nsmullcr   dimensions.\nAftor dealing nt length on the necessity for cleanliness, he emphasised the necessity for setting rid of\nthe hack-door hen, or what is more\ncommonly known as the mongrel,\nThey eost more to keep than the\nwell-bred hen, and are slower to put\non flesh, besides being of no more\nvalue than  what  Ihey  will   bring per\npound when marketed,\nThe poultry business, said the\nspeaker, must be handled from a\npurely business standpoint Feed\nshould be bought lti lhe cheapest\nmarket, as should also all other poultry accessories, juiiu to fttoo frequently being saved by purchasing a carlo!, which could be done through the\nInstitute, There wore, he said, three\nclasses of poultry that one could engage In\u2014tho egg bird, the table bird\nand the fnnry bird. He did not ad-\nvine anyone to got into the Intter\nclass, nor was there much money In\nthe second, as the local market wus\nextremely limbed, bul lhe first-named, lhe egg bird, wns the chief end of\nUie business in this part or the province. He was of the opinion that\nthere was mora money in egg-laying\nlhan In either or belli of the other\nnamed classes of birds. He favored\nthe white leghorn, though he considered lhc white wyandotte and barred\nrock bulh good varieties. There was\nno reason to go outside the province\nfor good stock, u_ he considered there\nwas ns good stock in British Columbia for general purpose** as there was\noutside of it, iind thought that buyers should obtain what tliey wanted\nas near homo as possible, us especially in thc handling Of baby chicks,\nchills were experienced In transferring from boat to train and vice\nversa, It was essential that only\nhealthy stock should bo raised, for It\nwas surprising the amount of tuber-\neulosts there was in poultry. This\ncould, nml should be, eliminated; the\nflock kept in good healthy condition,\nlie Btrongly advocated an inspection\nOf eggs, and thought it should be\nmade illegal to sell bad Or rotten ones.\nHe advised beginners to Atttrt in with\na'peri'of f've hens and a rooster. Then\ncull out the non-layers, for \"the hen\nthat   lays   Is  the   lieu   that   pays.\"   If\nJUuna.WHY\nARE OUR\n\"BILLS\" SO\nSMALL   ?\nm-\n\"SALADA\"\nA RICH, FRA6RAWT\nTEA\n0*ylon'\u00ab Oholc-Mt Lwf\nMid Bud; th* FlnMt\nth\u00bb World PredueM.\nHALED  PMKITI ONLY.\nBlaok, tw art Mud.\n\\.\nIt is economy\nto use White\nSwan Soap for\nevery cake is\nthoroughly\nseasoned b e -\nfore you buy it.\nASK   YOUR\nGROCER\nPOR IT\nibis was followed up from year to\nyear, and only the layers kept, there\nwould be a great laying strain produced. Tho speaker cautioned his\nbearers on the advice of those who\nadvised going in for COO hens on a\nten-acre orchard. Blther the hens or\nthe orchard would naturally Buffer,\nas the hens alone would demand five\nor six hours uttentlon each day. More\nattention must be paid to the male\nbird tlmn is done on the average\nranch, If more attention was given\nto the selection of the male bird a\nmuch larger percentage or hatched\nchicks  would  result.\nSuccess wilh Incubators depended\nlargely on the person looking nfter\nthem, They should preferably be\nlooked after In the house or Dollar\nnnd at ji temperature of 104 or 105\nthe first three days, and quit turning\ntlie   eggs   on   the   17th   day.      Thicker\nshelled eggs require more sprinkling\nwilh water than the  thinner ones.\nIn reply to n question, the speaker\nsaid that eggs just laid were best for\nincubation, hut that eggs up lo three\nweeks old could he used, though he\nWould not advise any longer than\nthat lime.\nYoung chicks should not be fed for\nthe first three days as they hud\nplenty of rood in ihe yolk or the egg\nfrom which they came to last them\nfor that length of time.   Grit should\nbe fed first, Iheti hard boiled eggs\nfollowed by green food nnd beer\nscrap, Fresh waler should be given\nthree times a day. Use only dry\nmash for chicks and wet for the\nliens. Chicken lice can he cured by\nputting common sulphur on three or\nrour inches or wet soil. He advocated ihp use or a punch for marking,\nlhe birds in order to distinguish the\nstrain and breeds, The speaker in\nreferring again to the necessity and\nImportance of keeping the hen \"house\n-\u2022ban, stated a simple pltin to follow\nwould |\u201e. to first removte all the\n\"furniture,\" then In their proper order, spray, disinfect and whitewash\nand coal oil the perches, etc. The\nhousr* would then be perfectly clean.\nHe did not advocate the strenuous\n\"breaking up\" of n hen Hint so many\npeople resorted lo, but stated that if\ngiven a nest or china egg- to sit upon : for the usual period' the hen 'for\nthe balance or tbe year would lay\nmore eggs than she would under the\nmore vigorous treatment. Nature\ndecreed that hIic should have a rest,\nand this was most naturally provided\nfor In the former remedy.\nFor moulting early, in order to\nprocure early winter eggs, he advocated reducing the iced for about twu\nweeks, and then feed up on good\nnourishing food. The new quills\nwould thus speedily replace the old\nones. It paid, said ho, to put down\ncase eggs, as eggs laid over until\nnext winter would bring a much better price than those which prevail at\npresent. There were a number or\ngood egg preservatives on the market, but he recommended lime and\nwater. One pound of lime to a gal-\nIon of water and keep the eggs covered, and they would prove as good\nin six months as If newly laid, For\nthe production of winter eggs It Is\nnecessary to keep Ihe hen busy. A\nlitter or straw on the floor of the\nscratching pen from ono to two feet\nin depth was advocated, with the\ngrain burled deep. He urged thai\nafter coming off a roost a hen should\nbe warmed up to that degreo thai\negg-lay Ing was made possible, which\nCOUld baldly he expected If she was\nStiff and chilled. Ho would not feed\nmash until 10 or 11 o'clock, Hen\nmanure was excellent. It was rich\ntn potash and nitrogen. Trees did\nbetter where hens were running.\nThreo hundred liens would manure\nnn orchard of five or six ocres, and\nwas  thus   most valuable.\nThe next address was on \"Soils\nnnd Soil Culture,\" and proved a most\nInteresting and profitable one. Mr.\nKeffer pointed out thnt more pro-\ngross had been made In understanding soil culture in the last 12 years\nthan in tho previous 50. It must he\nthoroughly understood by tbe British\nColumbia rancher II tlie best results\nare to be obtained. He dwelt at\nlength on the various compositions of\nthe soil, and the methods used for the\nconservation of the moisture and the\nnecessity for proper cultivation, etc.\nMuch or which has appeared In previous  Issues  of Tbe Daily News.\nA hearty voto of thanks to the\nspeakers of the evening was tendered\nby Dr. A. P. McDiarmid nnd seconded by Rev. J. C, Hobson.\nThe regular meeting of the Band\nof Hope was held on Tuesday afternoon. A good attendance of both\nmembers and adults wore present. An\naddress on \"Seed Sowing,\" by Mrs.\nA. D. Clyde proved Interesting and\nInstructive and was listened to most\nattentively. A I tilde reading was\nread by Doris Mitchell and a song\nwas sung by Rose Watts. Tho meeting was in charge of Mrs. A. Mitchell.\nHereafter the meetings of thc band\nwill be held e1*i*y three weeks, instead of every two weeks as formerly*\nWhen a young man, nnxious to\nascertain to what extent the Columbia river was rising, was reaching\ndown to find the last previous mark,\nthe log on which he wns standing\nrolled, prec'.pituting him into the\nchilly waters  of the  river.\nTAKING RECORDS OF\nPEND  D'OREILLE  FLOW\n(Special to The Dailv News.)\nWANETA,    B.   C.,    Juno    15.\u2014On\nI\nm\n<-       MOI lEVfH    '\n*\nTuesday H. Biker, with Mr. Venables\nand C '-\u25a0 Richardson of the Dominion hydrographlc department of Ottawa, came in for the purpose of taking the records of the Fend d'Oreille\nat the different stations in the valley,\nleaving again on Wednesday, when\nthey drove through tu Trail.\nRev. Mr. Cillers, Church of England minister at Fruitvale, on Tuesday und Wednesday visited the ranchers In thc valley. He hopes to he\naid.- to arrange to hold regular fortnightly services here throughout the\nyear.\nLast month's average maximum\ntemperature was 03 degrees; minimum, 39 degrees. During the 22\nhours fn which rain fell __- Inches\nwere measured. There was one slight\nthunderstorm and 13 days were bright\nand cloudless.\nOn Sunday last Mrs. Adle visited\nMrs. Cooper, taking back with her\nMiss Hlngwell, who had been spending a few days with Mrs. Cooper.\nNELSON NEWS OF IDE DAY\nThe city council will meet at K o'clock\nthis morning.\nBer-fft. J. D. Wlghtman, of the city\npolice force, yesterday commenced Nm\ntwo' weeks' vacation.\nThere will lie a special meeting of tho\nFederal Labor union In Miners' Union\nhall at 8 o'clock this evening.\nThe provincial royal commission on\nlabor will hold sessions at Creston today and nt Kaslo on Wednesday.\nAll those who had tickets for sale for\nthe liospltul ball ure nsked to return unsold tickets tu Mrs. W. A. Ward as soon\nuh possible.\nJohn MeLeod, Dominion fisheries inspector, returned on Saturday from the\nHlman after u visit to thnt district and\nthe Arrow lakes.\nTheprovluclnl government auction sale\nof summer home sites at  Lockhart Beach\nwill  commence   at   10:-JO   o'clock  this\nmorning at the supreme courtroom of\nthe courthouse.\nQ. J.  Edwnrds,  W.  J.  Edwards and\nW. U. Jones will leave on the Crow\nboat this morning for Montreal, whence\nthey will Hull on June 10 by the Virginian for Liverpool.\nDressmaking nna miiiincry,   Moderate\nchurge**, tilt Annable block. *3T-22\nSay!    Our new  Phone number Is  *!.'S.\nVacuum Cleaning company.  Box VA\n39-tf.\nMr. Edward Peters, of the British Columbia Mining Exchange Agencleij, will\nspend Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday\nIn Ymlr und vicinity lu tbe interests of\nthe local Order of Elks, for which he\nhas   been appointed  lucul   organizer.\nOTTAWA AND HULL TO\nBE MODEL CITIES\nOTTAWA, June 15.\u2014Following up\nthe government's Hcheme of city planning, to embrace Ottawa and Hull, the\nfull text of the communJcation of the\nminister of finance to the mayors of\nboth cities was made public yesterday. Accompanying the letters was\nn copy of tho order-'ln-council, dated\nAn Attractive Showing of\nWomen's Summer Suits\nSummer Suits in Serges, Bedford and Whipcords, Panamas, Repps\nand Crash; ths season's latest models, smartly trimmed with galons. embroideries, buttons, etc., cut-away or roundtd fronts, box fitting backs;\ncheaper styles in Norfolk and Semi-tailored effects\u2014-sll wall lined with\nMassaline or Satin.\nPRICEO AT FROM J8.50 TO \u00bb40.00.\nThree Special Values\nSEMI-TAILORED   Dove-Grey   Serge   Suit,   with   rounded   fronts,\nslit pockets, wall   shaped   collar and   perfectly   finished;  skirt cut In\nfour-gore model with wide panel st back; lined grey satin.\nPRICE ONLY $25.00.\nSEMI-EMPIRE STYLE SUIT in lovely shade of fswn, whipcord,\ntrimmed white pearl buttons and satin piped button holes; square out\ncoat and empire effect from six inches above waist line; skirt to correspond;  lined  Maize Mescaline.\nPRICE ONLY $26.50. |\nBLACK    AND    WHITE    BEDFORD   CORD SUIT, with novelty\neffect In cross bands of material on collar, rovers, cuffs snd pockets;\nrounded fronts, fastened two large fancy buttons of blaok and white\nenamel;  two-piece skirt with inverted side pleats,\nPRICE ONLY $27.50.\nHave You Tried DFI TQIU GARTERS?\nIf not, get a pair today. Their superiority lies in th* fact that they\nwill not tear the most delicate stockings. The tension Is all around the\nleg, and not at any particular point or points. They ar* comfortable to\nwear, being no tighter than the top of the hose. They hold the corset in\nplace and improve the ligure. Come in black, white, red, sky, pink and\nhelio.      Pries only,  pr,:  pair    25c\nHudson's Bay Company\nIncorporated 1670\nIncorporated 1670\nJune 5, giving a general outline of\nlhe proposal.\nBriefly, an honorary commission of\nsix Is to be appointed, of which the\ntwo mayors are to bo members, and\nthe others city planners of recognized\nstaiuliii:,'. They are to huve plans prepared for the systematic beautification and development of the two cities\nalong moat modern lines, as regards\nparks, boulevards, location and design;\nof public buildings and facilities for\ntraffic and transportation. To this\nend, not only the two cities, but the.\ngovernment commission and tiie\ntransportation companies are expected1,\nto co-operate. Half the cost of pre**!\nparing the plans is to be borne by the\ntwo cities and the other half by thefj\ngovernment. If\nKeep Out the Weeds\nWeeds unchecked will ruin the crop.\nIt isn't sufficient to plough and sow well in\nSpring and Fall and leave file rest to nature.\nThcre are weeds to fight.\nThere are weeds in Business, too\u2014weeds of\ncompetition and opposition\u2014of public indifference from without, and of lack of enterprise\nfrom within\u2014weeds that unchecked seriously\nretard business growth.\nCultivation is the only effective weed-killer.\nKeep cultivating and the weeds never get a\n\u2022 chance to thrive.\nThere is a combination plough and harrow,\nfertilizer and spray, for every business\u2014an\neffective weed-killer that will keep out the\nweeds.\nIt is Advertising\nIt is not enough to plough and sow well with\n' advertisements in Spring and Fall and leave\nthe rest to human nature.,\n, Human nature and the respect your customers\nbear you are not proof against the Summer\nweeds that can thrive on rest and apathy,\nw\nYou must keep busy in the hot weather\u2014you\nmust keep cultivating.\nTurn Summer dullness into activity by Summer Advertising. Plan Summer attractions\nand plant for a crop of Summer profits, and\nthe Advertising cultivation will keep out the\nweeds.\n.*]\n\\\nKeep Cultivating\nKeep Advertising .\"       %t\nKEEP OUT THE WEEDS      \\\nAdvice regarding your advertising problems ts available through any -recognised Csnsdisa\nadvertising agency, or the Secretary of the Canadian Press Association, Room \u00a303 Lumaden\nBuilding, Toronto.    Enquiry involves no obligation on your part\u2014so write, if interested.\nIk=\n MOI EIGHT\nCfe Baity _\\m\u00a7.\nMONOAV    JUNC If.\nlE-SOIIIIEWSOFTIEDAr\nProvincial Constable McLaren uf Ymii\nIt  Ut   lilt'   *Ji;. in**.\nTlda  Ih discount  day  for electric  light\nrait-* ut the city hull.\niJ'ini.   on   June   lfi,   io   Mr.   und   Mrs\nWlllium   J\u201e\u00bbij*_uii,  Hall  street, u Hon.\nTlu* bible class of Rt. Paul's Hiiirch\nheld un outing un .Saturday ut l\"1v.*-\"*Uilf\npark.\nThe  agricultural  commission   will   sll\nat   liurtun  and   BdgOWOOd  toduy  uud   ul\nBakusp tomorrow.\niiih. k. j. Benwlck of Vancouver i*1\niiu* gunsi of Mr. and Un, a. D, -Tobn*\nton, Carbonate street    -\n\u25a0Mr. un\u00abj mih. s. ti. Fowler of Rlondel\nwen- vhdtoit* to NYl-ton on Saturday,\nmtstor'ng ut the Strathcona.\nITh\u00abrc will he n garden party at Mra.\nC, V.  Mcliurdy'H  residence on  Friday\nJrenlng in aid of Trinity church organ\nund.\nI Edward  Peters, aislstanl local orgah*\nfcer  for   the   EllCS   lodge,   Which   Ik   being\nIarmed here, will leave for Yu.Ir this\nloriihit*.\ni John Berry it* acting special oonstablo\nhn  the  city  polite  fore,*  during  tile  ah-\nOil      Vacation      of      Hergt,    J,     ]).\niVIelitrnur,.\n| Harry Cornell, manager of ths Frank\ncompany, which win ooen a week's\nengagement at tin* opera house tonight,\narrived iitsi nlghl and registered at tlu\nHume. Ho l\u00ab Well known hi Nelscji as\nh   former   leading   man   for   the   AJIon\nplayers.\nHenry Cathcart nf Victoria; chlof In-\n\u25a0Doctor or government subdivisions,\nReached Nelsoi] last nlj-iu with Mrs,\nDathcart an<l registered at the Btrathcona.  lie IN here for tin*  Lockhart Helieli\ne       Unequalled for General Use.\n0      f\nW. P. TIERNEY, General Sales Agent\nNelson, B. C.\nt  Cass shipped to all railway points.\nRed Mite\nKiller\nBetter and cheaper than coal \u00b0H\nfor the poultry house.\nUse  it very  week  this  weather.\nIn 2Cc and BOo bottles,\n'    Also Crude Carbolic Acid, In 2Gc\nand fiOc buttles.\nInsect Powder, 66c lb. Very best\nquality.\nTry our Poultry Lice Powder, '2r>c\nih.; lVj lb. packets 35c.\nSulphur, Blue Stone, Paris Gre.n,\nHellebore, Black Leaf 40 ana all the\nsprays, with full directions.\nHaid Spray Pumps, $1 each\nMull orderS filled promptly.\nRutherford Drug Co.\nLIMITED\nWard St. Nslson, B.C.\nDINNERWARE\nWe are mnking a price on din-\nnerware that Is actually bettor\nthan you could think of making\nfor yourself and we have it in\nBevenil grades of China; also _eml-\nporcelaln. The decorations aro so\ndainty that yon could put any kind\nof food on 4t, and it will taet*a\ngood.\nCHINA HALL\nA.  W.  MUNRO,  Prop.\nPhon. L-261 321  Baksr St.\nP. O.  Box 588\nHouse Heating\nThink of It now and you can have\nit next winter.\nSee the\nB. C. Plumbing & Heating Co.\n.' j for prices.\nOPERA   HOUSE   BLOCK\nP.O. Box 485 Phone 181\nSaturday Specials\nStrawberries\nCucumbers\nGreen Vegetables\nAll Kinds Procurable.\nC. A. Benedict\nJosephine St.\nStandard Furniture\n=Company=\nC. J. CARLSON,  Undertaker\nUndertaken Em bal mere\n\u25a0nd Funeral Directors\nThe finest and most up to date\nundertaking parlors and chapel ln\nInterior of B.C, Lady attendant (or\nwomen and children.\nDay  Phone SS\nNight Phonet 262 and LM\nHouses\n[For Rent\n105 Hines Road, six rooms, bath-\nroom and stone basement ...425.00\n107 Mines road, six rooms, bathroom ;iii,i stone basement ... $22.00\n1002 Front Street, six roomi,\nbathroom and runge $25.00\n614 Kootenay Street, four large\nrooms and bathroom (20.00\nBehnsen Street, eight rooms nnd\nbathroom, three lots with fruit\ntreeB    $35.00\nSix-roomed flat on Baker\nStreet   $25.00\nStore In Brick Block on Baker\nStreet  $65.00\nH. & M. Bird\nNelson, B. C.\nFOR SALE\nTWO   HOUSES\u2014Close in, will  net 12 per cent;  good  investment.\nLOTS   IN   FAIRVIEW\u2014Splendid  sites;, level  and  cleared.   Only  $350.00.\nBAKER   STREET\u2014Business  property;   returns  good   Interest;   will     increase con cider ably  in  value.\nThe Allen-Smith Company\nREAL   ESTATE.       INSURANCE.       LOANS.       AUDITING.\nIMPERIAL   BANK   BLOCK,  JOSEPHINE   STREET.\nr wiiinhK-r home bIU\u00bb, which will\nnice nt IU:8_ o'clock this morning\nsupremo courtroom uf tin* c t-\nAlex I.ueus, M.P.P, or Agassi*, J, J.\nKids ton or Vernon* ti. Shannon ofClo-\nverdale- W. Duncan of Comox, and J. J.\nCampbell of Willow Point, members or\nthe provincial royal cutmnifMion on agrl-\nuuiture, reached Nelson on Saturday\nnkiii nnd registered nt the Hume. They\nleft yesterday morning for Castlegar\nwhere ii session will he hcM today. The\nriniitulH.-jliui will retui'd on Thursday\nr\u25a0 \u25a0.:l\u25a0 t_ mid will hold u session in tin* city\ntniii ut 7i80 o'clock on Saturday evening,\nFour prisoners have l n brought In\nfrom East Kootenay to tin* Xi'm-n provincial Jail. They ore! Prod i\". Flint,\nsentenced lo one year by Judge Thotnp-\nwin for theft; Mike Leeasar, sent up for\none yenr for obstructing a COUrt of Justice; John   I'nhei'Kli,  wiio  was given  twu\nmonths   by  Thomas  Qaffrey,  J.Py  or\nWardner for vusninry, and Frank Law-\nI'fliee, .sentemed lo three innilths by J.\nIt. Burton, J.I'-, of Miehel, on a \u25a0 imihu\nchurge.\nConvicted\n\u00bbr thi theft\nof a  boltli\n1 ot\nbrandy\nnnd\na bottle i\u00bbr\nwind from\nthu\n*'ti!(HH.iJ,\noiiiii\nn   hotel    at\nVmlr,   Boy\nW.\nIMsetih.\n?rg \u00ab\nas si ni io ji;\nill  for une nn\nmill\nby   1.\nEl,   Hnaiie::   und\nO.  A.   Kent)\nlug-\nton.   ju\ni-*li-T:\nti   <.r   the\npeace,  or   1\nIrle.\nBoHonbi\n\u25a0.*l*g   was  airesii ,1\nway\nl*tW-l'\non  Vmlr and\nNelson by :\nPro-\nvliicial\nCom\n'table   II.   M\n,'ldiiei),  who\noii\nSnliifilu\nrought   tho\nprisoner  to\nthe\nN Bl win\nprov\nAT\nliKl.il Jail.\nTHE THEATRES.\nThe Frank Blob company nr musical\ncomedy entertainers arrived in tlio city\nlast night and tonight Iln- local thoiilre-\ngoers win see Hits clever attraction, Tonight's bill Ih tin* musical idyll In two\nacts with 18 Bong hits, with plenty of\nlaughing material furnished hy Oeorge\nA, Burton and Tommy Burns, Each act\nIs a   revelation of stage  Bettings  and the\noloctrlcal effects are u-i to tho standard.\n.\\ change or bin will be glyen nightly.\nami Eomorrow ovenlng tin* company will\nV\u00bb GEM\nSELECTIONS ORCHESTRA\nDon't miss this sootl cine\u2014Siicclal\nPathe Feature in Three Parts\nNotre Dame\nA beautifully colored film, hosed\non Vici.or Hiiro's literary masterpiece, \"Noire Dame (le Paris.\"\nThere la not a scone in the three\nreds that does not. hold tho spectator tensely expectant.\n'\"WARWICK CHRONICLE\"\nEnglish n6wa in pictures.\nADMISSION  15c,    CHILDREN  10c\nMake a nolo ot the following,\nwhich arc coming:\n\"THE     BEETLE'S    DECEPTION\"\n\"THE   BADMINTON   FOX  HUNT\"\nGeorge    Gro-smftli    and    Phyllss\nl-);ire in\n\"YANKO TANGO DANCES\"\n\"AS      PRESCRIBED      BY      THE\nDOCTOR\"\n\"THE SUFFRAGETTE  INCIDENT\nON THE DERBY COURSE\"\nLawn  Mowers\nIF YOU WANT THE MOST SATISFACTORY LAWN MOWER\nMADE IN CANADA BUY A\nWOODYATT  HIGH WHEEL\nWE CARRY THIS MAKE IN 14,  16  AND 18  INCH.\nWE CAN ALSO SUPPLY THE \"GREAT AMERICAN\" BALL-BEARING\n\u2014THE BEST AMERICAN  MACHINE\u201417 INCHES.\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co. Ltd.\nWholesale and Retail\nHAMILTON\nTORONTO\nVANCOUVER\nNelson B. C.\nWINNIPEG\npresent thu two-net -success, \"The Girl\nIrani Panama,\" another oxtravagania oi\nmerit. The targe chorus win he seen to\nadvantage In all tho presentations,\nCRAWFORD BAY IN8TITUTE\nHEAR8 GOOO LECTURES\n'Special to the Daily News.)\nCRAWFORD BAV. B. C, Juno 15.\u2014A\nmeeting of the Crawford Hay Farmers'\nInstitute was held hi the public liall on\nTuesday evening hint, with tlu- pruBl-\n.lent, .1. M, McdregOr, In the chair, nml\n30 im-mliers present. Thin in tha smallest number ever attending a meeting up\nhere when government lecturers have\nheen announced to Speak, uh at this\ntime of year farm life is loo strenuous\nTor those living any ilistuiR-o a wuy to he\nkeen on turtiliiK out ufter supper to\nattend n meeting uf any description.\nThose who did bo on this occuulon wero\namply repaid by hearing two ejicelletlt\nlectures by Prof. O. C. Thom of the\nWashington State college Oh \"Soil Cultivation,\" and hy II. EJ. Upton on\npoultry. Mr. Upton, who Bpolte first,\nat the outset invited the audience to\nask questions oil nny points where\nspecial Information wus required, und\nfull advantage .was taken of this. He\nthen proceeded to give a scries of most\nUseful pointers upon the following types\nof houses best suited to tho district: Incubation,  by  lioth  artificial  and natural\nmoans;  advantages of  various breeds,\nImpressing Btrongly that Strain was more\nImportant than tint breed; various teodfe\nsuitable to young chicks, laying liens,\nbreeding stock, ere: the prevention and\ncure of diseases. With regard to the\nlatter, cleanliness in all things, well\nlighted and ventilated houses being all\nImportant. He advised that when the\nlime sulphur spray is being used oa the\norchard that the iiisldes of the poultry\nhouses should also be given u goodly\nspraying, this being an excellent preventative of lice and miles. Another\nstrong point made hy the speaker was\nthe tibsoluto neresslty for co-operation,\nboth in the purchase of feeds, etc., and\nIn  the selling end of the Industry.\nProf. Thom reversed the previous\nspeaker's methods, by continually -pie**-\ntlonlng his audience throughout his adn\ndrOSS.   t1lUi<   keeping   them   tllol'ollKlily   i\u00bb-\nNelson Opera House\nWeek, Startiag Mon., June 16\nTlie Musical Show of Quality\nFrank Rich Company\n(Eastern)\nPresents the Musical Idyll In Two\nActs\n\"Variety Isle\"\nWith   GEO.   A.   BURTON   ana   IS\nOthers.\nChange of Bill Nightly\u201425c, GOc\nand 7Bc.\nJUNE\nMany a very hippy anniversary\nfalls in June.\nDo you ever get some memento\nfor your bett?r half on your \u25a0wedding anniversary?\nThink It Over\nand let the better port of yourself\nprevail, and inirchuse a remembrance for your hotter half, nnd\nIt will bring mutual hnnptaesfl.\nWe Can Help You\nHay We?\nJ. 0. Patenaude\nManufacturer   of   Artistic   Rings,\nWatchmaker and Optician,\nStarlandTheatre\nDYER'S STARLAND ORCHESTRA\nSPECIAL\nIllustrated Song\n\"WHEN     THE     WHIPOORWILL\nSINGS MARGUERITE\"\nBy C. Z<'ll_m-y.\nNestor Feature\nHome and Mother\nA touching and thrilling story with\nsome strong c'.taracier work.   Dorothy Davenport takes the leading\nrole.\nAmbraslo Drama\n\"SUNBEAM\"\nA    pathetic    titcme    handsomely\nstaged and most cleverly enacted.\nImp. Comedy and Educational\n\"HER LOVER'S VOICE\"\nPottery In-iistry.\nA corned:' that will provide plenty\nof mirth and merriment.\nTHE ANIMATED WEEKLY\n, News of the world In pictures.\nADULTS 15c.\nCHILDREN 10c.\nComing tomorrow\nSTARLAND DANCE\nBaglsa liall.\nEclair Two-ltcel Feature\n\"VENGEANCE OF A FAKIR\"\nPOULTRY\nSPECIALS'\nGrit eh, Shell Boxea, Drlnkln\u00bbl\nFounts, Wire Nests, Chick Founts, 1\nLima Nest Epjjs, Disinfectant Nut|\nEgss, Paper Cartons, etc.\nThe Brackman -Kcrl\nMilling Co., Limited!\nOveralls, Shoes\nand Socks\n-Cheapest In tha City.\"\nThe Ark\nNtw and Second Hand Furniture\nPhons  L3H MG  Vernon  Bt\nNolson,  B.   C.\nUpper Duncan Launch Service\nThe    launch    BKBSIH    will   make\nweekly trips, Ifowser to Henly'a Landing and return, each Thursday.\nSIMPSON BROS.\nMACHELA  TONIC\nThe resent and highly endorsed diicovory of a Celebrated Scalp Specialist for the Gleaming of the Scalp\nand th\u00ab promotion of a luxuriant growth of hair. Removes dandruff, cures itching scalp and prevents the\nfoiling of the hair.\nEach package contains a bottle of liquid Machela   and   a   packet  of   Machela   Dry   Shampoo\nPowder,     Complete Treatment,      Follow the directions closely.\nPrii\nice\n$1.00\nALWAYS AT YOUR 8ERVICE\nThe Poole Drug Co.\nTHE REXALL STORE,\nWE NEVER 8LEEP\nteffieted and alert. He led up to tins\ncultivation of the uoll by first bringing\nout Information n\u00bb to tlto composition\nof Hiiine und the plant foods necesj-itry\nfor tlie production of good cropa, the\nlatter being lime, which la necuaitary to\nthe whole plunt; potash, which provide*\nthe starchy matter in vegetables, fruits,\netc.; phosphoric acid, essential to tho\ndevelopment of the seeds, and nitrogen\nfor the stem nnd leaves. The three first\nnamed ure obtained from decomposed\nrock, whieh forms so large a purt of\nthe soli; potash Trom micu und schist,\nund tlie pin infill tit- h from grnnlte and\nlimestone; while the nitrogen Is got from\nthe air by gniwhiu leguminous crops and\nplowing same 'under. Ploughing and eul-\nUvfttlng lias tWo principal objects, keeping the soil In the proper physical condition, nnd conserving moisture. The\nreaBon for the latter wus not always\nclearly understood; It being to maintain\na continuul supply of the various plant\nfoods In a sn]u:iblc state, as no matter\nhow much of lhe latter muy be In the\nground, unless lr, a soluobie stnte, the\nroot hairs of ihe plant or tree could not\nabsorb sumo. Summing up, tho speaker\nstated that the chief essential for success  In  fruit  growing was lots of  work\nIntelligently nppiicd,\nIn reply to a hearty voto of thanks\nto the lecturers, Prof, Thom made sonic\nvery complimentary remarks as to tho\ndistrict.\nM. 8. Kltddleton and K. C. Hunt came\nlu on Tuesday's boat; the latter is conducting souit- demonstration spraying on\nseveral of the older orchards.\nVisitors to Nelson on Tuesday Included\nMajor Gooch. Mrs. Woolgar and son, H.\nDale, Miss Dale, 8. Webb and Q. A.\nMason.\nSOUTH SLOCAN NEWS,\n(Special to The Dally Newi.) ^_\nSOUTH SLOCAN, June IB.\u2014J. D,\nYcaiman returned on Thursday after a Bix months vlirft to the eastern\nKtulea, Mrs. Y eut man, who haa been\non thc sick list for some weeks, i.s\nnow convalescent, and le, with her\nI'.ttle son, staying behind on a visit\nto her parents In Toronto until Bho\nis well enough to travel, when Mr,\nYcatmnn will return for them.\nThe royal commission on agriculture will hold a session in the public\nhall nt South Sloean on June 26, at\n10 a.m. It Is hoped that tho ranchers will turn up ln full force to make\nthe gathering as representative ua\npossible,\nMra. S. A. .Whleldon entertained at\nlho 'tea hour on .Friday. The table\nwni    ver v    prettily    decorated    with\nFor Sale\nTWENTY-ONE    (21)   LOTS,    BOUNDED    BY    OORB    AND\nINNES.   HALL  AND   HENDRYX STREETS.   ON  CAR LINE,\nEASY TERMS, $2,100.\nSIX-ROOMED HOUSE, BOUNDED BY LATIMER STREET,\nKOOTENAY STREET AND MINES ROAD. MODERN, HOT\nWATER HEATING. THREE LOVELY LOTS IN HIGH\nSTATE OF CULTIVATION. FIRST \u2022 CLASS LOCALITY.\nEASY TERMS    .; ...\u00bb3,M0\nHave Two Furnished Houses to Rent\nChas. F. McHardy\nBAKER STREET, NELSON, B.C,\nFIRE, LIFE, ACCIDENT. f      v\nEMPLOYERS LIABILITY INSURANCE,\npinks and Columbines. Tlu* ffupsts\nwere: Mr. and Miss Power, Thrums;\nMrs. It. Fassmore, Shoreacres; Mr.\nand Miss Kennedy; Mrs, and Mii;s\nBennett, !3onn'ngton Fulls; Mrs, J.\nR. Kennedy, Mrs, C. 1'atey, Mrs, H,\nWood, Mrs. <>. Humphry.\nMr, and Mrs. O, W. Humphry .pent\nthe day In Nelson on Thursday, making arrangements for the advertisement dance which Is to be held In thc\npublic hall nt Slucau Junction un Friday,  June  87,\nCurtis W, Luster of Crescent Valley\nrclurned on Thursday night after* n\ntrip to the coast cities. Mrs. Lester\nslays behind for a short visit.\nMrs. 1'utey, Miss Janet and Maator\ni'iil Patey arc visitors to Nelson today.\nJ, W. Moore 1\u00ab spending u few days\nln Nelson,\n.1. 13. Annable and son of Nelson\nspent lhe day ut their ranch at\nShoroacretti\nELKO NOTES\nBy Fred Roo,\nOeorge II. Scott of Neleon la visiting bis b'g riwich this week ot\nRoosvllle, passing through the city pf\ngolden opportunities and sudden\nwealth Monday, travelling south wilh\nthe Great Northern Cold Molasses\nLimited   to  Gateway.\nMr. Madden, manager of the\nMerchants bank, Elko, wns cnlled to\nVancouver, if you wunt anylhing\ngood you will get It ln Elko, Elko\nturns out more senators, supreme\njustices, foreign ambassadors, captains of Industry, bank managers and\nbaseball captains tlitin any town In\nItrltish Columbia, und Madden was\nlhe CheBterfield of the bunch ond one\nof the beat drawing cards that the\nMerchants hank over had In their\nemploy, Hy speelal request we nro\nnot mentioning thp htindsomo presents he received from the hoard of\ntrade, the Conservative club, and-the\nQueen Uen'H of tho Ladles, aid, and\nothers. Muy Heaven's blessings pour\nupon him in Vancouver till he's snaked to tho skin, is the sincere wishes\nof everyone ln  Elko,\nMiss Molly Weasel Tail. Tobacco\nPlains reserve, whoso smile would\nbrace n hunch of wilted flowers, passed through Elko on her way io l'\"ort\nSteele, taking the IIoolncy-Koolenu.*\nSouttW line.\nThe spring chicken season Is now\non and Mies ,lonny Cukobrpml says\nlhe  pumpkin   pies arc  getting ripe.\nMrs, Hob Graham of the quarter\nclnde three ranch of HooHvllle valley,\nwnn in Elko this week. .\nSeveral travellers from Nelson,\nVancouver, Calgary and Victoria held\na reunion nt the Elk hotel on Wednesday ri'jjht, which was unite a\"\nswell affair. Deueon Ooosegrense\nwan toffstmaator and Jim ThlBllBbenk\ncalled of!' Ibe dnnce, while Jimmy\nWhite, who sells fleeco-Unod neckties nnd thunderstorm plaid shawls\nfor a Vancouver house spread the\nGospel of sunshine, and stated lhat\nthe reason Mary Qtfeeit of Scotland\nwas burn al Linlithgow was because\nber mother was staying there at the\ntime. The grilled saurkraut traveller\nsfing \"Locked in the Stable with the\nSheep,\" and the man whn sells the\nfinest shoes ever seen with the naked\neyeball, gave a recitation entitled, \"If\nWe Never Go to Eaven the Other\nPlace will Remind Me of Fernle.\"\nErnestine, the pink tea fighter, who\npeddles rolllngstoek cheese for ft Calgary house, dressed flashier than a\nhand on n cheap cigar, sang VOh that\nI were a Plrd\" and \"Rock Mc to Sleep.\nThe\nYoung\nFellow\nWho wants a Smart Suit\u2014\na Suit with snap and go to\nIt\u2014a Suit that's entirely different\u2014i downright classy\nSuit\u2014can find his ideal here.\nOur Young's Men's trade\nja the pride of our atore.     jj\nThere  are   no \"yesterdays\" in our Young   Men's  Garmente.\nWe've the Clothe* of -'Today.,'\nBetter    Or    more    reasonably    priced\nClethee  you can't findl\nSuite $16.50 to $35.00.\nEmory & Walley\nFit-Reform Wardrobe\nBuilding Time Is Here\nSEE US FOR PRICES\non all kinds of\nBUILDING MATERIAL\nSpecial attention to out of town\nwork and order*.\nWaters & Pascoe\nBUILDERS AND CONTRACTORS, |\nOffic* and Factory!\nFRONT STREET\nQueen Studio)\nE.t.bllih.d IMS.\nPortraits\nViews\nPictures\nPicture Framingl\nALLAN  LEAN, Managtr. I\nP. O. Box S12. Phon, 110.1\nNslson. B. C.\nThe B. C. Assay and!\nChemical Supply Co.\nLimited\nSupply   complete   equipment   foi\nAssay Offices and Laboratories, Chemical    and    Physical    apparatus    fn\nSchools and Collegei,\n567 Hornby Street.     Vancouver) B. i\nAsany  balance.\nAgents in B. C. for the \"KELLER\"!\nAlmost the rc'iulelte number of applications hns been received, but for\ntho benefit of tho8C residents of near*)\nby towns who desire to Join, the charter will hu kept open a few dayi\nlonger. Arrangements have _een made!\nwith the C.P.R. for special i*ateB byl\nrail nnd boat for the day of InltlatlonX\nApplications received and\" any lnfor-1\nmotion ln regard to lhe order may bel\nhad at the office of Ft A. Starkey, local|\norganizer.\nCharter Fee $20.\nMoi hoi*,\" and hu ming as If his word-l\nwort- diamonds am) lho Hiipjily short.J\nSpace forbids  iih giving a full reporlf\nfrom istart to finish, but wait while 1\ncome  hack   from  fishing. ^^^_^\nMr, WMIaniH and wife nf Texas are]\ncamping along the South Pork.\nAutomobile tnurlHtri arc pouring ln-j\nlo Klko like conns (o a cake walk.\n.fudge Ryan of ('ranbrook l\u00ab a guesfj\nof  thc  101k  hotel  this  week.\nDaily  News \"Want\" Ads. Gat Results.!\nWedding\nPresents\nLet your gift to the bride\ncombine beauty with utility. A\ncut glass berry set, a vase or \u00bb\nsugar and cream bought from\nus Is sure to please her.\nMall ordorB promptly attended to. A.\nJ. J. Walker\nJeweler and Optician\nBaker St. Nelson, \u25a0\nWe Have\nfor Rent\nVictoria S treet\u2014Cottage, 4 room.\nand bath, close hi and commanding flue view 920-00\nRailway Street\u2014Cottage, G rooms,\nbath and pantry, cement basement and fi'*e large grounds $21\nThe****, figures include water rates.\nFor Sji}g\nSeveral   very   desirable  dwelling! |\nIn different residential sections,\nASH us for full particular or let ]\nus show you the houses.\nSpecial\u2014WG trill sell  200 to R00 I\nStandard Sliver-Lead at $1.28 |\nSt Denis &\nLawrence\n'    MaCullaa-i BulMta*\nA\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_1913_06_16","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\/1.0385211","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":"1913-06-16 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":"1913-06-16 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":""}]}