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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":" Threaded\nnt>i\nEIGHT PAGES\n60 CENTS A MONTH\nthe Wtifa Ifehj\nCLASSIFIED ADS\n1 CENT A WORD\nID j\nVOL. 12\nNELSON. B. C. WEDNESDAY MORNING. JULY 9. 1913\n^>-rjr~7x N072\nftfflEI WNJO ATTEMPT\nCITY ASSESSMENT\nSHOWS INCREASE\ni Gain in Local   Land Values\nIs Proved by Actual Sales\nFOUR HUNDRED\nTHOUSAND GAIN\nValuations on  Roll Are All\nAdvanced but Are Below\nMarket Price,\nProof that the nsscsHtncnt on real\nestate in Nelson Is generally very\nmuch lower thnn the actual sale value\nof Iho property was furnished at the\nmeeting oflhe court of revision of the\ncity assessment roll yesterday morning, when some protests were entered.\nFor this year the total assessment\nIs $4,321,396, against a total of $3,883,-\n180 last year, nn increase of $138,216,\nmade up chiefly of Increased land\nvalues. Assessment on land this year\ntotals $1,886,271. and the total aSBCSSUO\nvalue of Improvements Is $2,135,125.\nIn replying to protests made by\nHarry Bird regarding the assessment\nof Baker street property, W. K. Wasson, city clerk and assessor, explained that the assessment on property on\nthe main business thoroughfare had\nbeen increased at the uniform rate of\n$1,000 per 25-ft. lot At llle far ends\nof tills street the Increase was proportionately less. On Victoria and Vernon streets tho basis of increase had\nbeen $250 per 25-ft. lot, while the uptown district valuation!) had been raised 10 per cent.\nValue Justifies Large Increase.\nMr. Illnl claimed that Baker street\nwas paying too great a proportion of\ntho total tuxes of the city, and tn\u00ab;\nthe increase this year was unfair. Ho\nprotested against nn assessment of\n{8,700 on tot 4, block 10, Baker street,\nwhere his office la located, and declared that an Increase of 33 per cent had\nbeen made in two years.\nMr. Wasson replied that the Increases made had hesirimsod on actual\nsales which hud taken place, and remarked that there was no doubt that\nvalues of real estate in Nelson had\nvery materially increased, particularly\nin tho business district. As instances,\nho quoted a property consisting of a\nportion of three lots on Victoria street\nwhich had sold last fall for $14,000; n\nSO-ft. lot across the street from Mr.\nBird's building which had been sold\nfor $10,000; lots 1 and 2 In block 6\nwhich had sold for $24,000; the corner\nof Hall and Baker, a 60-ft. lot, which\nhad been disposed of for $21,000, and\nquoted the value of the improvements\non each lot to show that the assessment in each case was equitable.\nTho board decided that the assessment on lot 4 was fair, and refused lo\n. grant the appeal.\nOn lots 0 and 10, block 6, at the corner of Baiter and Hall streets, the\nboard, on the application of Mr. Bird,\nreduced the total assessment of $ll,40y\non the land by $1,000. Although the\nassessment against which protest was\nmade was shown to be on the same\nbasis as that of other property in tho\nsame block, the board, afler a lengthy\nargument, agreed to make the reduction, Mr. Bird laying stress upon the\nfact that although the property was\non a corner the side street was blind\nand consequently of little benefit.\nSale  Prices Above Assessment.\nMr. Wlrd also protested against the\nassessment of lots 20 to 24, block 86,\n'Baker street, on which is built his\nresidence, claiming that $7,415 for the_\nfive lots waa t*i high. Mr. Wasson\"\nquoted the sale of two lots In tho\n.same block at $7,000 with a house, of\none lot with a shack at $3,750 and of\nanother with a shack at $4,000 in support of the assessment, und the board\ndecided that It should stand.\nMr. ISlrd's protests against an assessment of $3,800 on lots 7, S and 0,\nblock 87, Baker street, owned by Mrs.\nBarbura Robertson; an assessment of\n$14,500 on the land only of lot 11,\nblock 0, a 50-ft. lot on which is built\nthe Mara block, und against an aii-\n(Contlnucd on page tour.)\nKING PETER OF SERVIA\nWhose forces are reported to have sustained disastrous defeats at the hands\nof the Bulgarians.\nNATIVE UNREST\nStrike Situation  Improving\nin Johannesburg\nMORTALITY IN\nMINES TERRIBLE\nRecall   of Governor   ar\nWithdrawal of Imperial\nTroops Demanded.\n(By Dally Vewn Leased Wlw.)\nJOHANNESBURG, July 8.\u2014The\nstrike situation continues to Improve.\nThe few outbreaks among the natives\nwhich have occurred have been dealt\nfirmly with by the police and In most\ncases tho natives are returning to\nwork.\nMany arrests have been made In\nconnection with tbe pillage and Incendiarism nnd several prominent agitators are now In the bands bf the\npolice.\nWidespread Discontent.\n(Bv Dally News Lenned Wire.)\nLONDON, July 9.\u2014The Johannesburg correspondent of the Chronicle\nIn a long Interview of tiie situation\nfrom the miners' standpoint declares\nthat the strike In the Hand district\nIs a symptom of deep-seated and\nwidespread discontent with the capitalist regime, In which the Botha\ngovernment and the mining houses\nare regarded as co-operating against\nthe workers.\nAs the entire press Is controlled by\nthe mining magnates, the correspondent adds, all attempts to obtain redress by constitutional means have\nbeen a failure. The principal grievances of tbe men were tbe terrible\nmortality in the mines, the attempts\nto cut prices, refusal of a minimum\nwage, refusal to recognize the union,\ntho unsatisfactory piece work system\nand the insecurity of employment.\nThe correspondent Is very severe on\nt*.:ti caiu.dynicht of troops, whom, he\nBuys, fired on crowds which, with very\nfew exceptions, were absolutely orderly, standing up unarmed to bo\nshut at.\nNatives Join   Strike.\nJOHANNESBURG, July 8.\u2014Six\nthousand native black laborers from\nthree of the. large gold mines on the\nRand joined in the labor upheaval this\nmorning. Should tiie disaffection\namong them spread to the other 260,-\n000 native employes on the reef it will\nmean the white Inhabitants will be\nconfronted again with tho \"black\nperil\" which has been quiescent for\nHome years. The natives refused to\ndescend the mines unless granted an\nincrease of wages, nnd 1.000 employed\nin one mine broke out of their compound. They were, however, awed by\ntho levelled rifles of the troops who\nhad been posted to deal with tbls\nserious development, nnd they returned to their quarters.\nMost of the white strikers have returned lo work.\nDemands  Recall  of Troops.\nI'RRTOIUA, July 8.\u2014The provincial\ncouncil today adopted a resolution Introduced by Councillor Ware, a Labor\nmember, sympathizing with the relatives of the men, women and children\nshot at Johannesburg. Mr. Ware gave\nnotice that he would Introduce tomorrow a resolution condemning the action of the government in depriving\nthe people of Johannesburg of the\nright of free speech and to hold public meetings, and demanding the recall\nof Viscount Gladstone, governor-\ngeneral of the Union of South Africa,\nfor the part he took In causing the Imperial troops \"to shoot and kill innocent, InoffendlnR and defenceless men.\nwomen and children,\" and the immediate recall of the Imperial troops from\nSouth Africa because they wore used\n\"only to coerce the working classes\nand protect the privileges of the favored few.\"\nThe railway men, who wore out on a\nsympathetic strike, resumed work to-\nday.\nLIQUID RESTORES BEATINGS\nOF HUMAN HEART\n(By  Dally  News  Leased Wire.)\nPARIS, July 8.\u2014Before the Academy of Science last night Dr. Bouchon\nread a paper describing experiments\nwith a liquid with which he was able\nto restore the heatings of the human\nheart after it had been removed from\nthe body. The academy will Investigate the facts related by Dr. Bouchon,\nwho says that in the meantime he\nwishes to keep the composition of the\nliquid a secret\nWIFE IN ENGLAND\nBUT NOT, IN FRANCE\nLONDON, July 8.\u2014Comtesse Kate\ndWIontnnge waa granted a divorce\nfrom Comte d'Montange. Desertion\nand misconduct were the grounds\nfor the petition. There was no defence. Sir Samuel Evans, In hie Judgment, said that the husband at the\ntime of his marriage was a Frenchman and came to the conclusion that\nhis wife remained a French .subject.\nA curious situation was that the petitioner was his wife in England and\nnot Ih France, because the marriage\nhad -been annulled In France. He\nthought the best way out ot the difficulty was to grant the decree nisi.\nWOMEN WHO FIGURE IN THE NEWS DISPATCHES\n.LADY FORKS ROBERTSON\n\u2022 KNOWN TO PJ.AVGOCR3  AS\nGERTRUDE ELLIOT. ACTKlii\nund ivifi <* roRBts RoatRTaom\nI  .     \u25a0\nLADf DAU\"l*MY\nDAUBHTCH or LORD GOR5VENOR\nBorn snt and urn musbamp'\nARE   GREAT    RACfGOCRS\nROSE. SAHARZt,.\ndancer who mav w\u00a3d\nfritz von fwant.ziu5\nChicago broker. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nTHREE CASES IN\nFAVOR OF STATES\nInternational Claims Tribunal Makes\nAwards\u2014British Subject Al*\nlowed Demurrage.\n(By Dallv NSWS Leased Wlro >\nWASHINGTON, July 8.\u2014Tho United States won three out of the first\nfour cases to be decided by the American and British claims tribunal which\nrecently completed Us Initial sessions\nat Washington and Ottawa. These\ncases involved four of the numerous\nclaims against the two governments,\nwhich their respective legislative\nbodies were unable to adjust. The\nmost Important point decided In favor\nof the United States was involved In\ntho case of William Harmn, a British\nsubject who lost property nt Slboney.\nCuba, when that town was destroyed\nby American troops during the Spanish war. Tho court held thut the destruction of Harran's property along\nwith that town was a necessity of\nwar, but recommended that congress\ngive tiie claimant some consideration.\nTiie court refused to allow claims\nagainst the United States for the payment of crown dues of %\\ per 1,000\nfeot. on timber purchased by the war\ndepartment from a contractor for the\nbuilding nf n fort, in Alaska, and for\ncompensation for the use of a steamer,\ntho King Robert, for the transportation of coal for the nnvy department\nA British claimant was awarded demurrage amounting to about $150 on\naccount of it collision between the\nBritish steamer. Llndesfafne und the\nUnitcj States army transport Crook\nin Now York harbor.\nHUNDRED THOUSAND\nMEN MAY STRIKE\nConductors   and   Trainmen   Vote   for\nStrike to  Enforce  Demands\u2014Forty-\nFive   Railways  Implicated.\n(By Daily  News  i,e.'isc.l   Wire\/)\nNEW York, July 8,\u2014-Peace overtures   ceased   here   today   between   \u2022!\">\neastern railroads and loo.ooo riiemuers\nof the Order of Railway Conductors\nand the Brotherhood of Railway\nTrainmen, afler tbe employes repre-\nHcnatlves in conference with ftie railroad managers announced that 91 per\ncent of the men had voted to strike\nfor increased wages. Final action on\nthe proposed lie-up remains with the\ngeneral committee of 1,000 of the conductors and trainmen's organisations,\nand a meeting has been called for\nSaturday, it Is the unanimous opinion In operating circles thai the strike\nvole will be ratified unless the companies meanwhile offer to pay more\nwages, or are willing to submit the\ndispute to arbitration. During the negotiations today the Erie railroad una\nits two subsidiaries, tho New Jersey\n& New York and the Susquehanna &\nWestern withdrew, leaving 42 roads in\ntbe conference. The Erie claims that\nthe increase demanded represents an\nannual cost to the three roads of li,1-\n100,000, and that system in paying this\nsum would suffer in safety uppliances\nnnd equipment.\nThe conference committee of managers will meet next Monday to consider the decision of employes general\ncommittee. The railroads are then\nexpected to Issue their ultimatum.\nIt was said today that at no time\nduring the session was the Erdman\nact mentioned, but comment among\nrailroad officials nnd union representatives tonight showed a general expectation that the men would appeal\nfor arbitration before defiantly deciding to walk out.\nRAILWAY WILL\nPRESS APPLICATION\nReport  That  Canadian   Pacific   Will\nRevive Request for Authority\nto Issue New Stock.\n(liy Dally News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, July 8.\u2014The Evening\nCitizen says: \"While no move has\nbeon made toward the matter, according lo Information secured in official circles, the rumor Is again going strong that the Canadian Pacific\nrailway will this autumn press its application for authority to issue $60,-\n000,000 of new capital stock. Tbe application was made a year ago, but\nwas not pressed. Instead of doing so,\ncertain rights were exercised of issuing common stock in lieu of debenture stock. This was done at $175.\nThe application to the government has\nnot been withdrawn and there is reason to believe that when the ministers return It will he pressed to make\nextensive improvements, stating the\nMISS JX)ROTHYB1GELOW\n\u2022577-lfi IN \"PfGMALION AND\nGALATEA\"Done. iNLonoon\nt?\u00a3C\u00a3fVTJ~Y BY AMATEUR\nexpenditure contemplated by the corn-\nDaily, In cabinet circles It Is Btated\nthnt no developments have taken\nplace for a year in respect to the application. Any new move, of course,\nmust emanate from the* company.\nTHREE KILLED IN\nFIERCE STORM\nFifty Thousand Dollars Damage\u2014City\nin  Darkness-\u2014 Street Car Trafflo\nBlocked,\n(By Dally >-'\u00ab<vs Leaned Wire.)\nELGIN, III., July 8.\u2014Throe men were\nprobably killed nud property damage\nestimated at $.10,000 was done by\nelectrical storm here today. Kour\nstores were unroofed by tho wind, the\nsteeple of a church was blown down\nand much 'damage done   to telephone\nand telegraph wires. Arthur I'eterson,\nson of a wealthy fanner, four miles\nwest of here, was utruck by lightning\nand Instantly killed. Two men are re\nported killed at Plngree Grove, when\nthe barn in which they were seeking\nShelter collapsed. This city was\ndarkness tonight owing to damage to\nthe electric light plant. The- street\noar traffic on several streets was\nblocked liy fallen Irees.\nReports from Dundee and Sycamore,\nnearby villages, say both Were damaged by the \u00ab,vlnd.\nTwo Members of Crew\nDrowned in Columbia\n(Special to Tbe ^allv Newa.)\nINVBIIMEKE, II. 0., July 8.-A\ndrowning accident happened early\nyesterday evenir.g (n tile Columbia\nriver at Athnlmnr, when two of tbe\ncrew of the steamer Nowitka lost their\nlives, the victims, both from Golden,\nbeing Frank Hamlin, uged about 28, a\ndeckhand, and his attempted reBcuer,\nJohn McClennan, a fireman. After\nsupper Hnmlin nnd a deckhand named\nWeston went In for a swim. Weston\ncame on shore, when he noticed Hamlin having difficulty. He was preparing to go to his aid, when McLennan\nvolunteered   and    plunged   In.     He\nreached Hamlin, when Iho lattei\ngrabbed him and both sank in swift\nrunning water. Tbe bodies were recovered shortly afterwards, and efforts made by two doctors to resuscitate them wore without avail. An Inquiry was made by the coroner, who\ndetermined that an inquest was unnecessary. The opinion is that Hamlin had taken crumps. Roth bodies\nWere Shipped to Golden, where further disposition and enquiries will bo\nmade.\nDave Tinpasket, a Sbuswap Indian,\nwas dangerously shot at Athalmer by\nu small rifle he was.examining, He\nis now in the hospital.\nGolden Boy Fifst in\nEntrance Examinations\n(Special to the Dally Newa.)\nVICTORIA. li. C\u201e July H.\u2014Ralph\nSpencer of Golden ranks lirst in the\nrural high school entrance examination results just published. He obtained S21 points out of a possible\n1,100. Other results follow:\nArrowhead\u2014 William J.  Lightburne,\n447.\nComnpiix\u2014Vera Sutherland, GB1.\nFerguson\u2014George A. Houston, 718.\nHalls Landing\u2014W. N. M. Girling,\n5 S3.\nWin derm ore\u2014-Muriel M. Pitts, 082,\nGolden\u2014Railib Spencer, 821; Kenneth Moore, G7'>: Dorothy Clipping-\ndale, tiiiu; Judith Larson, 040; Hob\nHambly, 633; Francis McGowan, 821,,\nMarjorie Hambly, 003; Wilfred Good,\n5H5;  Matthew L. Poll, 501.\nUurtondale\u2014William J. Eudes. 710.\nNakusp\u2014Kutlicrino A. Bulger, fiOl;\nEugene Lovlque, 593; Leslie Walker,\n501.\nCranbrook\u2014J. W. Pye, 691; Vincent\nH. Fink, 07;'.; Wanda E. Pink, 675\nGrace E, K. Illggins, 674; Jessie Hunter, 667; Francos P. Drummond, 662\nHazel B. Taylor. fil!9; William 10. Lea-\nman, 625; Dorothy li Mackay, 612\nMarion A. Leitch, 580; Edith T. Maedonald, 575; Prank 15, Bamford, 573.\nCreston\u2014Jennie M. Nichols, 640;\nZalla Johnson, 567.\nGreenwood\u2014C. V. Elllen Jakes, 730;\nGeorge M. (*. Bales, B00{ Mayme Lewis,\n574; Robert Smith, 550.\nsloean City\u2014Florence Beck, 757;\nClifford Swan, 741; Robert li. Covington, 603.\nNew Denver\u2014Richard C. Harris.\n056; Henry R, C. Avlson, fit-'U,\nV\n>'. BULGARIA N RCX\/,?\n|   RoijMHiwrH-JB*r -*-->V       r*'J    \u2022 MS?\nh fi\n\/Mi\nRcr*cxnN6nVl*V\nOPECO:SERy\/Mf-\n... moors D\/y\/neo at\niSHBtoetu ar\/-\n^evusMtiANS.'    \u00a3\nWAR AGAIN IN THE BALKANS.\nA map indicating the location of tho r.cent  desperate engagements  between\nthe Bulgarians and their recent allies,   tho Greeks nnd the Servians.\nSir William Lever's House\nBurned by Arson Squad\nMISS PANKHURST\nGOES TO JAIL\nQueen's Hall  Meeting  Demands Withdrawal of Cat\nand Mouse Bill.\n(B- Dally N\u00bbws Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, July 8.\u2014An arson squad\nof militant suffragettes burned down\ntho country residence of Sir William\nIi. Lever, founder of Port Sunlight\nand chairman of the Liverpool School\nof Tropical Medicine, early this morning. The mansion, which Is called\n\"The Bungalow,\" Is located at Rlvlng-\nton, near Norwich, Lancashire. It was\nnot occupied liy the family, but contained valuable paintings and other\nprecious objects, all of which were\nconsumed, A message was left by\nthe Incendiaries stating that If Sir\nWilliam Lever had been as loyal to\nthe suffragettes as Lancashire was to\ntiie King, who Is how paying a visit\nto the industrial centres, the fire\nwould not have happened.\nThe damage to Sir William Lever's\nresidence amounted to over (100,000.\nMiss Sylvia Pankhurst, In the How\nstreet police court today, was found\nguilty of inciting people to commit\ndisorders on June ~'.K when she led\na molt to Downing street to raid the\nofficial residences of the premier and\nthe chancellor of the exchequer. She\nwas ordered by the magistrate to find\nsurety in ?12,000 for good behavior for\na year or as an alternative to go to\nprison for three months. Miss Pankhurst refused to find bonds nnd elected to go to Holloway jail, declaring\nthat she would at once start a hunger\nstrike und also go without water,\nChristobel Angry.\nChrlBtobel Pankhurst is angry over\nthe .statement published in tbe continental edition of the Daily Mall re!\native to the decadence of tho militant\nmovement, which was summarized in\na Western Associated Press despatch.\nShe telegraphed to London as follows:\n\"I noticed the libellous statements In\nthe Dally Mall, This Is another ex-\nample of the scandalous tactics used\nagainst the suffragette movement\nfrom its early days till now. The union Is splendidly strong financially and\nin every other way. These untruthful\nand malicious statements will stimulate our friends to further service.\nRvll will turn into good. Coercion and\nhostile newspaper tactics, us always,\nchallenge a renewal of acts which will\nstrengthen the union,\"\nIncendiary   Released.\nMiss Kitty Marion, a BUffragetb\nwho was sentenced on July 3 to threi\nyears penal servitude for selling llr<\nto the stands of the Hurst park raci\ncourse, was released frmn prison to\nnight on license. She was in a ver:\nweak condition. When sentence wai\npronounced after her trial at Ihe assizes Miss Marlon said:\n' 'I shall hunger strike and I shall\nrefuse to leave prison under the 'cat\nand mouse' act. I shall insist upon\nstaying there until dead or be released a free woman.\"\nDemands Repeal.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, July 8.\u2014A big meeting\nwas held In Queens hall tonight to\ndemand the repeal of the \"cat and\nmouse\" bill. Similar meetings will\nbo held throughout the country. The\nKing has sent a message of sympathy\nto Sir William H. Lever, whose country residence near Norwich was\nburned by suffragettes.\nMINERS STRIKE\nWORK RESUMED\nFifteen Hundred Men Lay Down Tools\nat  Sydney   Mines\u2014No   Horses\nSupplied.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nSYDNEY, N.  S.,    July    8.\u2014Fifteen\nhundred miners at Sydney mines went\nout   on   strike   this   afternoon.       Th\ncause of the strike is that no horse\nare  bclns supplied    in  some of    the\nmines and practically all of the work\nof hauling ears, shovelling and filling\nfalls on the men.   Three of the col\nlleries are worked by the provincial\nworkmen's association, which took tli\ninitiative in the mailer.   Manager T.\nJ.   Drown  assured   the men   that   the\nmatter would be laid before the dlrec\ntors today. The men will resume work\npending the decision of iho directors.\nNORTH COUNTRY WELCOME\nFOR  KING AND QUEEN\n(By Dallv lVews Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, July 8.\u2014Tho King and\nQueen received a real mnih country\nwelcome at Warrington, Lancashire\nyesterday, when they began their great\ntour of nearly 50 Lancashire towns.\nBoth Kins George and Queen Mary\ntalked freely to Iho workers and\n'.\u2022epted several gifts. They will be\nguests of Lord and Lady Derby nt\nKnowlsey hall, near Liverpool, for\na whole week, and last night they were\nentertained at a vandevU'o perform\na nee (here.\nAT MEDIATION!\nFormal Declarations of War\nIssued\nGREEK LOSSES\nARE ENORMOUS\nTwo    Thousand    Officers\nAmong Casualties\u2014Rou-\nmania Will Join War.\n'I..\n(Hy Dally Xews Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, July 8,\u2014The Balkan war\nhaving now been regularized by formal declarations, It Is understood that\nthe powers will make no attempt to\nmediate. The official gazette at Belgrade, published tonight notice of f\nformal declaration of war against Bu.\ngaria.\nMilitary news was lacking toda;\nServian despatches admit that\nstrong Bulgarian column has invadi\nServla at Konagevalz. which toj\nthey occupied after setting fire to I\nadjacent villages. I\nCholera hns been brought to   I\ngrade by two wounded men. I\nOfficial Greek despatches claim\ngreat victory at Doiran, where tht>'\nHulgarlans, recently reinforced, were\nin superior strength to tbe (.reeks.\nThe latter assert that a whole division ot Bulgarians was completely destroyed and that the Bulgarians fled\nin such a precipitate manner that they\neven left loaded guns behind. This\nvictory Is considered of great Importance, because Doiran was the Bulgarian victualling centre and all tho\nprovisions fell Into the hands of the\nGreeks. It Is reported from Sofia\nthat the tenth Bulgarian division,\nwhich relnformed Gen. Ivanoff, was\nbrought from the Tchatalja district.\nThis seems to indicate compliance\nwith the Turkish demand that the Bulgarians evacuate Turkish territory.\nThe Bulgarians are taking the offensive against Nlsh, according to announcement from Sofia.\nWill Evacuate Coast\n(By Dally New* Leased wire.)\nCONSTANTINOPLE, July 8.\u2014Bulgaria has replied to the request of the\nsublime porte, agreeing to evacuate\nthe Marmora coast. Bulgaria, however, stipulates that Bhe must have\nan assurance that the Turkish troops\nwill not attack Bulgaria.\nFierce Attack.\n(By Dally  News  Leased  Wire.)\nLONDON, July 0.\u2014The Bulgarians\nare fiercely attacking Pierot, on the\nBelgrade-Sofia railway, according to\na Belgrade despatch to the Mall. A\nSofia despatch to tho same paper says\nthat the Bulgarian army captured 10\nguns at Konaghvatz, north of Nlsh.\nThe third army has destroyed between\nVrana and Leskovatz seven bridges on\nthe railway connecting Macedonia and\nBelgrade. It Is reported that the fifth\narmy, marching from Eustendll, has\nsucceeded in joining the forces near\nKotchana.\nA Sofia despatch to a London news\nagency says that heavy fighting occurred on Monday, the Bulgarians attacking the Servians. The engagement extended from a point weBt of\nZletovo to the heights of Kotchana,\nthe Servians being repulsed with very\nsevere losses.   The Bucharest corre-\n(Contlnued  on page four.)\nSpecialization\nA great deal Is said in a disparaging way about the modern\ntendency toward specialization.\nThe time was when barbers\nwere also doctors, when you\ncould get a. man who would pull\nyour tooth or shoe your horse\nwith equal willingness; when a\nwoman, wanting the ruffles for\nher underskirt \"pinked,\" would\ntake them to thr undertaker to\nbo done.\nThere may have been a certain unqiuo charm about such\ncombinations of occupations,\nbut tbe quality of the service\nrendered must have been somewhat uncertain.\nNowadays practically every\nman and woman tn tho productive business world, works along\nsorno certain well-defined line.\nThe result of this specialization\nIs shown in the immense ad-\nvance there has been In the\nquality and variety of articles\nput into the market for general\nconsumption.\nThe medium through which\nthe public is informed of the\nbest of these articles and their\nplace of sale Is the advertising\ncolumns of the reliable newspapers.\nLocal dealers should co-operate with Ihe \"hustle\" for the\nmanufacturers who use local\nnewspaper advertising to ex-\nploit the products they handle.\nThe Bureau of Advertising,\nAmerican Newspaper Publishers Association, World Building,\nNew York, solicits correspondence with dealers and manufacturers interested in newspaper advertslng for nationally\nsold merchandise.\n r   PAOI TWO\n%\\ft Bail]) \u00a3eto*\nWIDNMOAV JUtVf.\nWHY DO YOU FEEL\nSOVELWTY?,\nSummer Drug Specials\nParis Green\nGuarante.d Pur., Government Standard, in tins  25c and 50c\nMosquito Oil\nA preventative of Mosquito Bites; soothes and heals old bites 25c\nFly Repulser\nA convenient Antiseptic Paste for preventing the bites of Black\nFlies  and   Mosquitoes    2So\noot Powder\nNa-Dru-Co, brand\u2014something that positively relieves tired, tender, sore, itching or sweaty feet. Prevents footed perspiration.\nLarge size tin   25c\nBathasweet\nA dainty scented powder to put in the bath; sweetens, softens\nand scents the water and bather.    Per tin   35c\nSponges\nCoral  Island Picking.   25c to $3.50\nTHIS IS BOX STATIONERY WEEK.   SEE OUR WINDOW FOR\n35c SPECIALS.\nCanada Drug & Book Co. Ltd.\nPhone 81        Nelson's Pioneer Drug Store       P.O. Box S02\nAfento lor the Remington Typewriter Nail Orden i Specialty\nNelson Opera House-One Night Only\nWednesday, July 9\nThe\nMajestic Musical Comedy Co.\nA WESTERN RURAL MUSICAL COMEDY, A CURE FOR THE BLUES\nIN TWO PART8, ENTITLED\n\"The Flower of Arizona\"\nUNDER THE PERSONAL DIRECTION OF FRED A. WALTERS.\nPRICES\u201435c, 50c and 75c.\nBAYNES FARMERS'\nINSTITUTE STARTED\nAgricultural  Commission  Take*  Evidence\u2014Irrigation Supply Guaranteed by Company.\nespecial to the Daily  Nt\u00abws..\nBAYNES LAKE, B. C, July 8- On\nFriday Baynes Lake Farmers' institute\nwas Inaugurated with a Hat of more\nthan 40 members. There was a downpour at 2 p.m., the Hour fixed for tbe\nopening. Consequently there was\nonly Imlf the expected turnout, but\nthe proceedings were none the less\nenthusiastic. The committee Is a\nBtrong one, including J. Radford, Samuel Morrow and Mr. Agnew of Elko.\nThe two lectures on poultry and live\nstock, under tbe auspices of the Cranbrook Farmers' Institute, were not attended at all, and the two government agricultural demonstrators had\ntheir trip for nothing, u the function\nwas practically not advertised.\nOn Wednesday, July 2, Messrs.\nCampbell and Shannon were due to\ntake evidence on behalf of the provincial agricultural commission. Some\n-ft or 30 people, some from as far\nsouth as Gateway, attended punctually\nat 2 p.m., but through a motor mishap the section of the commission\ndetailed for Baynes did not arrive till\nall had gone away disappointed. As\nsoon as they arrived they got to work\nwith one or two witnesses from the\nImmediate district, notable J. Radford,\nrancher and hotel keeper, a prominent\ncitizen of Baynes, whose evidence\nclearly and impartially set forth the\nmeasure of responsibility of the East\nKootenay Irrigated Lands company for\ntbe unsatisfactory state of agriculture\nIn the vicinity. At the same time he\ngave full credit for the present ef*\nforts of tbe company to straighten out\nmaltei's as far ub possible through\ntheir solicitor, Mr. Welsh, who is also\na shareholder In the company. Mr,\nWelsh came out especially from England with this object, and had succeeded In arranging matters fairly to\nthe satisfaction of the great majority\nof the ranchers, but some eight or 10\nwere seriously dissatisfied still and\nproposed to appeal to the government\nto appoint some suitable men to Investigate fully the conditions under\nwhich a practical deadlock In agricultural progress had come about.\nChief of these was C. Barnard. The\ncommissioners took his evidence at\ntbe evening session, beginning at 7:30\no'clock, at which 15 people attended.\nAt this session J. J. Campbell briefly\nand clearly defined the scope of the\nenquiry.\nMr. Barnard said he came out from\nEngland In March, 1911, having signed\na contract there to take up 10 acres\nat flBO an acre as irrigated land. He\nhas now cleared by his own efforts\n7\u00bb\u00ab acres. In August, 1911, the company gave him enough water to serve\nfor one row of potatoes, but this soon\nceased, and In the fall the company,\nthrough Its secretary, admitted Us in-\nYour Hair Needs\nParisian Sage\nUse It as a Dressing\u2014Banish\nDandruff \u2014 Stop Falling\nHair and Scalp Itch.\nPARISIAN Sage, the delightful and\ninvigorating hair tonic, is a true hair\nnourishcr. It penetrates into the scalp,\ngets to tho roots of the hair, kills the\ndandruff germs, and supplies the hair\nwith just the kind of nourishment it\nneeds to make It grow abundantly.\nSince Its Introduction Into Canada\nPARISIAN Sage has had an immense\nsale, and here are the reasons:\nIt does not contain poisonous sugar\nui* lead, nitrate of silver or sulphur or\nany injurious ingredient.\nIt cures dandruff In two weeks, by\nkilling the dandruff germ.\nIt stops falling hair.\nIt promptly stops itching of the\nscalp.\nIt makes the hair soft, glossy and\nluxuriant.\nI* gives life and beauty to the hair.\nIt is not sticky or greasy.\nIt Is the daintiest perfumed hair\ntonic made.\nIt Is the best, the most pleasant\nand   invigorating hair dressing mad*\"?.\nMade only in Canada by the R. T.\nBcoth Co., Ltd., Fort Brie, Ont. The\nprice is only 60 cents at drug stores\nand counters where toilet goods are\nscid.\nTho Poole Drug Company, Ltd.,\nguarantees it.\nTRAIL\nFine Level\nFruit Lands\nClose to city.   $12.50 to $50.00 per\nacre.\nOwn something worth while.\nGet our proposition. This is LAND,\nnot a rock pile.\nEasy terms to smeltermen.\nMcQUARRIE &\nROBERTSON\nTRAIL, B. C.\nWholesale Tract of Fruit and Dairy Land\nFirst class soil, good water, attractively situated, very  light clearing, boating and fishing available. 1,800 Acres\nat $17.00 per Acre.   Railway and Government Road.   Guaranteed sound investment\u2014will double in value within\na couple of years.   Excellent terms ean be given.\nMcQuarrie & Robertson\nPHONE 68.\nNELSON, 8, C.\nability to do more. This company was\nan American venture operating from\nSpokane. A Mr, Devoran got an option on the land held by the company,\nwhich lie sold to an English syndicate,\nwhich sent out Mr. Welsh in the\nspring of 1913. He got 22 of the settlors to agree not to prejudice the formation of a new company In consideration of $1,500 and <!00 shares in It\nfor distribution among them. The\nnew company promised to InBtall an\neffective irrigation scheme without\ndelay by July, 1912. They contracted\nwith Americans to do this, and a Mr.\nEdwards was Installed as manager.\nWitness and others pressed for Information as to when they might expect\neffective Irrigation after this date\npassed with no irrigation, but only\ngot Indefinite replies and finally no\nanswers at all. At last they were totd\nthat the scheme would work by grav*\nIty and pumps, but only those places\nwould be irrigated which gravity\ncould supply. As a last recourse witness and others wrote to tho company\nIn England, hut got no reply. After\nthe first payment, which witness and\nothers made before leaving England,\nno second payment was to be made\nuntil the Installment of satisfactory\nIrrigation. Meanwhile a land association was formed in 1911 In the Interests of the ranchers, which witness\nand several others did not join. In\nthe spring of this year Mr. Welsh\ncame out again and dealt with the\nquestions at Issue through this association. Practically up to spring this\nyear no effective Irrigation was Installed on the holding, and now Mr.\nWelsh refused to treat with anyone\noutside the association, and held out\neviction us the only alternative to\nwitness and others who stood with\nhim In retuslng to pay any second Installment failing effective Irrigation;\nand at the same time were willing to\npay a reasonable price for their land\nns uncleared and non-irrigated land,\nthe price to he fixed by government\narbitration. Witness waa very pleased\nwith his land and wished to stay under any reasonable conditions. The\ncommissioners were here asked to define what was meant by \"satisfactory\nirrigation.\"\nMr. Campbell said, speaking as a\nplain man and as one farmer to another, hut'not as giving an authoritative pronouncement for the commission, he would say it meant the provision of such an amount of water as\nwas required to supplement the natural rainfall in order to produce good\ncrops from what was planted from\nyear to year.\nWitness said he had spent $1,500 on\nhis ranch, not counting his own labor\nfor two years. Speaking as an engineer by profession, he did not consider any attempts to provide Irrigation\nmade by the first or second company\n30 far made offered any prospects of\nreal success.\nAfter the witness retired Mr. Campbell spoke on the measure of aid the\ngovernment was prepared to give in\npromoting co-operation In the disposal\nof produce. They would send down\nan expert, who would first explain\nthese matters, and then come down\nat intervals to foster any organization\nspringing out of their united efforts.\nThe government was prepared, after\nsatisfactory Investigation,' to advance\nSO per cent of the cost of providing\nbuilding and plant, to improve railway\nfacilities, storage, etc., taking these\nbuildings and sidings as security,\nMr. Bridge, who had earlier asked\nfor a definition of \"satisfactory irrigation,\" elicited some interesting\nitems from Mr. Campbell re the \"monkey stumper,\" operated by hand\npower.\nSamuel Morrow, rancher and mill\nworker, next was sworn. He said ho\ncame from Ontario and was raised on\na farm. Ho had worked on a fruit\nranch nine years in the Okanagan valley, and had been ranching here over\nsix years. He was sure mixed farming would be a certain success hero,\nlie also instanced the failure of the\nlegitimate aid which ought to he given hy tho government to encourage\nand help out farming by consistently\ngiving employment to local farmers'\nteams In road work Instead of using\nthose from lumber companies at a\ndistance and contractors not interested In agriculture at all- He also spoke\nof a large tract of government land\nIn BayncB behind the depot, lately\nsurveyed Into 10 and 20 acre lots for\nfuturo auction. He knew as a fact\nthat many local families now dependent on mill work only would only be\ntoo glad of the chance to form homesteads on such lots were they thrown\nopen for pre-emption instead of auction. Such families would remain and\nprosper by direct agriculture In the\ndistrict long after lumbering had\nceased there.. At present they had\nto pay rent for their houses in work\nor money, and the mill owners had\nto build these houses with the eventual prospect of their being worthless\nwhen logging ceased. These things\nhindered future and present local agricultural development and hampered\nthe mill owners now. It was elicited\nthat this was a district eminently suited for small fruits rather than apples, as far as experience goes.\n. The commission rose at 10 p.m.\nOn Friday, June 27, a basket dance\nwas given at Waldo in aid of the\nschool. The attendance was very\nsmall, through bad weather, and at no\ntime were more than 20 couples on\nthe floor, hut $120 was taken in aid\nof the school.\nThe Waldo bridge, recently swept\naway, Is to be temporarily replaced\nfor traffic by cables connecting tbe\nSpecial July Economy Sale\nIn this sale we feature Carpets, Rugs and Mats, also\nDrapery and Housewares, with exceptional bargains. It\nwill be greatly to your advantage to visit our store now.\nThere are so many articles which we are unable to mention here, that are of exceptional value.\nTAPE6TRV RUGS.\n9 x 12 Ft.\u2014R.gul.r Prie. W2.60.\nSALE PRICE 117.50.\nBRUSSELS RUG8.\n4 ft. 6 in x 7 ft. 6 In\u2014R.gular Pric. S10.00.\nSALE PRICE I7..35.\n6 ft. 9 in. x 9 ft.-R.aul.r Pric. $1100.\nSALE PRICE 112.76.\n\u2022 ft. x < fU-R.gular Pric* W0.00.\nSALE PRICE 116.60.\nBRUSSELS RUGS.\n9 ft. x 10 ft. 6 In\u2014R.gul.r Pric. 124.00.\nSALE PRICE $19.60.\n9 ft. x 12 ft.\u2014R.gul.r Price $28.00.\nSALE PRICE $22.00.\nWILTON RUGS.\n4 ft. 6 in. x 7 ft 6 in.\u2014R.gul.r Pric. $16.00.\nSALE PRICE $12.75.\n6 ft. 9 in. x 9 ft.\u2014R.gul.r Pric. $26.00.\nSALE PRICE $19.60.\n9 ft. x 10 ft. 6 in\u2014R.gul.r Pric. $4640.\nSALE PRICE $35.60.\n9 ft. x 12 ft.\u2014R.gular Price $50.00.\nSALE PRICE $39.50.\n\/   A\nt\n?*.    ,'\\\n^\nr><       \/T\n\u25a0   X i\n4 A &&AIA\nTAPESTRY CARPET\u2014R.gul.r Pric. 76c.   Sal. Pric, p.r yd. ...60o\nBRUS8ELS CARPET\u2014R.gul.r Pric. $1.90.   Sal. Pric, par yd. ..$1.60\nWILTON CARPET\u2014R.gular Pric. $3.00.   S.I. Pric, par yd $2.36\nTHESE PRICES INCLUDE SEWING.\n250    Yards \u25a0  SCRIM\u2014R.gul.r    25c.     Assorted    Deigns.     8al.\nPries, yard   12\/\u00bbe\n300 Yarde ITALIAN  SCRIM and    BUNGALOW    NETS\u2014R.gular\nPrice 60c and 60c per yard.   Sale Price, per yard  26o\n600 Yards MADRA8, ranging in prices from 30c per yard to $1.25\nper yard.   8.I. Price, p.r yard     18c to 60c\nLACE CURTAINS.\n$2X0 CURTAIN\u2014Sale Price   $1.26\n$3.60 CURTAIN\u2014Sale Price $240\n$6.00 CURTAIN\u2014Sale Pric  $4.50\n26 PAIRS ODD LACE CURTAINS\u2014WHILE THEY LAST\nONE-HALF PRICE.\nStandard Furniture Co.\nComplete House Furnishers\nNelson, B. C.\nremaining piers, on which a suspension roadway will be built.\nTrail News\nTRAIL, U, C, July 8.\u2014Following Is\nthe list of prize winners at the Trail\nrose show, which was held on Friday\nof last week: Hybrid perpetual, Mrs.\nSchofleld; display of 15 blossoms. Mrs.\nSchofleld; display of six blossoms,\nMrs. Blnns; display of six blossoms,\nMrs. Wilmes: display of 10 varieties,\nMrs. Schofleld; best six Caroline teat-\nout, Mrs. Schofleld; 2nd, Mrs. O. F.\nWeir. Best three Frau Kran Drusch-\nki, 1st, Mrs. Mrs. Weir; 2nd, Marion\nSkill; ;trd, Mrs. Schofleld. Best three\nKUlarney, 1st, Mrs. Blnns; 2nd, Mrs.\nSchofleld. Best three, Mrs. John\nalng, 1st, Mrs. Stlmmel; 2nd, Mrs.\nMeasly; 3rd, Mrs. Schofleld, Best\nthree Ulrlch Brunner, 1st, F. Brown.\nBest three Paul Neyron, 1st, Blnns.\nBest three Baron De Bonstettln, 1st,\nMrB. Carlson. Best three Alfred Co-\nlamb, 1st, Mrs. Black. BeBt three\nGrus uu Teplitz, 1st, Mrs. Blnns, Best\nthroe Margaret Dickson, 1st, Mrs.\neesly; 2nd, MrB. Stlmmel; 3rd, Mrs,\nSchoficld. BeBt three General Jack,\n1st, Mrs. Weir; 2nd, F. Brown; 3rd,\nMrs. Randall. Best three any other\nvariety, 1st, Mrs. Weir; 2nd, F.\nBrown; 3rd, MrB. Carlson. Best one\nbloom pink, 1st, Mrs. Carlson; 2nd,\nMrs. Carlson. Best one bloom, red,\nMrs. Black. Best one bloom any other\ncolor, Mrs. Black. Basket of roses,\n1st, Doris Bingay; 2nd, Mrs, Weir;\ncommended, Mrs. Wllmeg and Mrs.\nRandall. Vase of roses, 1st, Mrs.\nWilmes; 2nd, F. Brown; Hrd, Miss F.\nBlnns; commended, Mrs. Randall.\nTable of roses, 1st, Mrs. Wilmes; 2nd,\nMrs. Blnns; 3rd, Mrs. Black.\nWild Flower Awards.\nDisplay of foliage and flowering\nplants, Mrs. Rutherford. Bouquet of\nwild flowers, 1st Mrs. Rutherford;\n2nd, Lillian Carr; 3rd, Olga Anderson. Display of any one species of\nwild flowers, Mrs. Rutherford, Collection of wild flowers with common\nnames, 1st and 2nd, Louise Schnea-\neble.\nGarden Flowers,\nRed foxglove, Mrs. D. H. Chapman;\nwhite foxglove, Mrs. D, H. Chapman;\nCanterbury hell, Mrs. D. H. Chapman; nasturtiums, Mrs. L. C. Strachan; dlanthas pink, Mrs. G. F. Weir;\nsweet peas, Mrs. G. F. Weir; honeysuckle, Mr. McLean.\nSpecial mention should he made of\nthe splendid display of wild flowers,\ntastefully arranged, by MIbs Louise\nScbnaeble. There were 41 varieties\nin all.\n\u25a0Mrs. Daniel Thomas of Rossland and\nE. Grlzzelle of Nelson were the\nJudges.\nMr. and Mrs. G. C. Brown have left\nfor a trip to the coast cities. They\nwill be away for three weeks.\nDr. Dickson of Stanford Leland university, San Francisco, accompanied\nby his wife, are visiting Miss and Mr.\nDlckBon.\nMrs. (Dr.) McNaughton, with her\nsister, Mrs. Lendrum, of Rossland,\nwere visitors to Smelter hill on Sunday evening, Dr. McNaughton going\nthrough to West Robson to meet his\nmother from Vancouver.\nMrs. John Peverley of North Bay\nIs a visitor to Trail. She will be the\nguest of her daughter, Mrs. J. H. Schofleld, and Mrs. F. 15. Dockerill.\nMiss Morris spent Sunday in Nelson.\nDr. Carl Smith of Spokane Is visiting his sister, Mrs. B, A. Stlmmel.\nMrs. George Giles, manager of the\nVancouver Engineering works, Vancouver, 1b In Trail.\nJ. H. Schofleld, M.P.P., returned\nfrom the Sloean pool with a nice\nbasket of trout.\nS. Paterson of Rossland was a visitor to Trail on Monday.\nMIbs Thompson,, who has been\nteaching school at Newtonla for the\nlast term, loft on Sunday evening for\nSloean City, She will visit her sister\nhere for a month before going to her\nhome in the east.\nThe following pupils will write on\nthe first year high school examination, which will be conducted by Miss\nR. Thorn, principal of the public\nschool: Roy Weir. George McKay,\nEthel Carr, Frank Grummet, William\nBlack and Clara Austed.\t\n\u00ab\u00abABS0RBHEJK.r7\nRwnllcn, Varicose Veins, Itort Leg* I\n- Uultnt, wen,Uaut nnd KI.enntf.tlo lie* I\npoults. Hprwlnn unit JlrnlMS w\u00bbPyB*|\nA NifK.lK-iillntt.iitiiiihinR.anilitiiptlelliilB.. \u2014 _\nt tint ui-nctru tt\u00ab to i tin*i'at of trouble kudu I\nititf naturo to makn pcinnaooDt Tfcqnrf, I\nAUiiyJi pain and inUutuuintlon, wild and I\npl.-auanl tn i\u00bb\u00bb\u2014quickly nhsurlwd Into til-1\n' mum. .Sumi*^ j&whi'r muoi, whr not Is I\n --\"'-\u2022* or dullt\/orcd. Book iOflM I\nOOttle  ntittuirslMKO\n445 Lrtnan'a Built.,*.*, Montr*.*.!, PJ\nThe Ladles' Aid of Knox Presby-1\nterian church intends holding an lc\u00bbl\ncream social oh the church lawn dur-1\ning the afternoon and evening of July f\n15.\nOn Tuesday evening at the Trail I\nlodge room Enterprise lodge No. 43, f\nI.O.O.F., will hold a joint installation 1\nwith Rossland lodge and Rossland Re*\nhekahs. A banquet and dance will I\nbe held at the conclusion of the cere* \\\nmonies.\nDISESTABLISHMENT\nBILL PASSED I\nLONDON, July 8.\u2014A motion to re-1\nject the Welsh Disestablishment bill I\nwas defeated tonight in the house of J\nenmmons by a vote of 347 to 224. The |\nbill passed Its third reading.\t\nThe Damper Doeslt\nWhen surplus gas accumulates in the Sunshine\nFurnace   the automatic\ndamper releases it into the smoke\npipe. When pressure is relieved\nthe damper closes automatically.\nIf you install a \"Sunshine\" you\nwill never be troubled\nwith furnace gas  in\nyour house.\nA Sunshine Fumaco possesses many other exclusive\nadvantages. Fay our agent a\nvisit or write for booklet to\nnearest branch.\nMcClaiyfc\nSunshine Furnace\nLondon   Toronto    Montreal    Winnipeg   Vancouver   St. John, N.B.\nHamilton    Calgary   Saskatoon   Edmonton 338\nWRITE YOUR LETTERS ;__\nOn tha newest and bait papers.   Our com pitta Una, just opened pro v ids t juat exactly what you want and good\ntaste dictates.\nWe oarry tha finest lines of Writing Tablets, Papers* Envelope* and Boxed Stationery that It is peasibla to\nahow.   Wa would Ilka you to look those over.   Make thia store your \"Stationary Store.\"   Prica, quality, ~\nall characterize our atook.   You are aura of getting just \"what'a right\"\u2014Stationary.\nCITY STATIONERY CO.\nNELSON\nOur Mail Order business ia growing rapidly.   Are w* getting yours?   Prompt, efficient aarvice.\n 4     WEDNESDAY ... JULV f.\nClje laflj ^rtw,\n7W\nr\n\u2022...-. to*    *j a? '\n*\u00abg.'i\nk**?3\n'\u00ab\n:asi$2\n'm\nTrunks,\nClub Bags\nAND\nSuit Cases\nAT\n121-2 Per Cent\nOff\nRibbed Cotton\nHose in\nTan Only\nSIZES BV'a to 0'\/2.\nSale Price\n20c Pair\nWomen's\nCotton Hose\nRegular 26c.\nSale Price\n5 pairs for\n$1.00\n35c Silk\nRibbons\n7 INCHES WIDE.\nSale Price\n25c Yard\nSuede\nHandbags\nRegular Values to $1.90.\nSale Price\n95c\nOIR      w       GREAT\nJULY CLEARANCE SALE\nCommences Tomorrow, Thursday, at 8.30 a.m.\nFollowing out our general policy of not carrying goods over a season, we stop at no price sacrifices to\neffect that end. We meet this \"clearance\" period with large stocks of summer goods. They must be\nmoved\u2014sold quickly. A number of items have been marked to sell at half-price, others even less; and\nbuyers who come early will secure some of the most remarkable values that have ever been offered by this\nstore.   See our window display.\nJuly Clearance of\nBoots and Shoes\nWhen you tako into consideration\nthat at regular prices our Shoes are\nthe bost values obtainable in this city,\nyou will readily appreciate these\nClearance reductions.'\nMen's Tan, Gunmotal, Vici  Kid nnd\nPatent Oxfords.    Regular $5.50 values.\nJULY SALE PRICE $4.43.\nMen's Patent, Tan and Gunmetal\nBoots.   Regular $6.00 values.\nJULY SALE PRICE $4.65.\nMen's White Canvas Oxfords and\nBoots, Goodyear welted.\nSALE PRICE $3.15 and $3.35.\nMen's Ranch Boots in Black, Chroma\ntanned and Tan leathers, at $2.70, $2.95\nand $3.15.\nLadies' White   Canvas    Oxfords, all\nsizes ZVz to 7.    Regular $1.50 to $2.00.\nSALE PRICE $1.15.\nLadies' White Nubuck Pumps\u2014Regular $3.50 values.\nJULY  8ALE  PRICE  $2.85.\nLadies' White Nubuck Button Boots\n\u2014This season's atyles.\n8ALE PRICE $3.85 and $4.50.\nLadies' Tan, Calf, Gunmetal and Patent Button Boots, Goodyear welt\u2014\nRegular $5.00.\nJULY SALE PRICE $3.75.\nAll lines in Boys', Youths, Misses'\nand Cbildron's Sandals, Slippers and\nOxfords at\nSPECIAL PRICE8.\nSaving Prices on\nHousefurnishings\nWILTON  CARPET  SQUARES.\nSize 9-0 x 10-6\u2014 Regular $36.00.\nJULY 8ALE PRICE $23.75.\nSize 9-0 x 12-0\u2014-Regular $43.50.\nJULY 8ALE PRICE $31.60.\nSize 9*0 x 12-0\u2014 Regular $50.00.  -\nJULY  SALE PRICE $36.50.\nBRUSSELS   SQUARES.\nSize 9 x 9\u2014Regular $19.50.\nJULY 8ALE PRICE $15.95.\nSize 9 x 10-6\u2014Regular $22.50.\nJULY  6ALE  PRICE $18.50.\nSizo 9 x 12-0\u2014-Regular $25.00.\nJULY SALE  PRICE $21,90,\nUNION WOOL SQUARES.\nOnly a few of these. They represent\nthe overatook of tha aeason'a fast selling* They come in nice floral and conventional designs in colors of Blue,\nGreen, Crimson, Tan ' and Brown\u2014at\nthese reduced prices:\nSize 9-0 x 9-0\u2014Clearance Price ..$4.75\nSize 9-0 x 10-6\u2014Clearance Price $5.75\nSize 9-0 x 12-0\u2014Clearance Price $6.75\nPrelnventory\nClearance of\nWomen's\nReady-to Wear\nOur policy of clearing out all\nWomen's Suits and Coats in July\nand January is well known. This\nyear the clearance will be equally emphatic, and those who\nhave been waiting this opportunity to purchase will realize\nmost extraordinary  bargains.\nWomen's Suits\nMade of fine quality 8arg\u00abB,\nWhipcords, Bedford Cords,\nFancy Tweeds,, etc., in every\nwanted color. Every Suit Is\ntailored to perfection and possesses tho correct lines or\nfashion.\nRegular Values to $21.00.\nSALE  PRIUk    $12.95\nRegular Valuta,to $25.00.     ,\n'     SALE  PRICE    $14.95\nRegular Values to $30.00.\nSALE  PRICE    $17.50\nWomen's Coats\nMado from quality Serges, Whipcords, Panamas,\nEponge, Lightweight Tweeds, Shantung Silks, etc.. This\nseason's very latest styles and colorings.\nRegular values to $13,50.   Clearance Sola Prioe  $ 9.50\nRegular values to $16.50,   Cloarance Sale Price  $10.95\nRegular values to $20.00.    Cloarance Sale Price $12.95\nRegular values to $25.00.   Clearance Sale Price  $14.95\nExtraordinary Values in Wash\nDresses\nWomen's Muslin\nDresses\nRegular V.lu.a te $6.75  CO QJ\u00bb\nFOR   %J>\u00abJ.\u00ab7\u00bb)\n18 Only. Women's beautiful Whit.\nDresses in Muslins, Pique, Bedford\nCord, etc. This season's latest New\nYork styles. Regular values to\n$675.\nJULV CLEARANCE   PRICE $3.95.\nWashed-Out Prices\nfor Wash Goods\n15c PRINTS FOR  12140\n1,000 yards Imported English Prints\nin neat floral and stripe designa on\nlight or dark grounds, 32 inches wide\nand guaranteed fast colors. Regular\n15c.\nJULY SALE PRICE Ityfco YARD.\n15c GINGHAMS FOR   10c\nA large range of patterns to choose\nfrom in stripes, checks and self colors.\nRegular 15c,\nJULY SALE PRICE 10c.\n20c GINGHAMS FOR  14c\n750 yards beautiful Scotch Ginghams\nin stripe, check and plaid effects.   Our\nactual 20c values.\nJULY  CLEARANCE   PRICE  14c  YD.\n50c AND 60c WASH GOOD8 FOR 39o\nSome great bargains will be found in\nthis  lot.    It  includes  Bordered  Voiles,\ni Whipcords,  Lorna     SilUs,   -Silk  stripe\nCreponu,  etc.,  etc.    Splendid  range  of\ncolorings.    Regular 50c and 60c values.\nCLEARANCE PRICE 39c YARD.\nGood-Bye Prices on\nSummer Millinery\nMisses' and Women's\nWash Dresses\nReg. Values to $4.50. (I Qff\nTO CLEAR AT   \u00ab|>l.aO\nOnly two doz.n in this lot. Made\nfrom pretty Percales, Ginghams and\nZephyrs, in plaid or polka dot effects, also in plain color.. Some\nhav. collar, and cuffs of white\npique, oth.rs are trimmed with\nstrappings of plain shades. Size.\n14, 16, 18 and 34 only. Regular\nvalue, to $4.50.\nWHILE THEY LAST AT $1.95.\nGirls' Wash Dresses\nRegular Value, to $1.50 Off a\nFOR    OOC\nCome in Serge, to fit 2 to 6 y.ars. They are mado of\nserviceable Chambrays, Muslins, Print., etc., in stripe, spot,\nand check affects; also in White Muslin. Regular values\nte $1.50.\nJULY CLEARANCE PRICE 85c.\nGirls' Wash Dresses\nRegular Valuee to $2.25 Q.  nm\nFOR    eJ>I.OD\nMade of splendid quality Ginghams. Percales, Linenes,\n\u2022to., in .trip, and plaid .ffeots, also In plain colors; trimming, include strappings, washing braids, etc., etc. Sizes to\nfit 6to 12 years.   Our actual values to $2,25.\nJULY CLEARANCE PRICE $1.35.\nJuly Sale Prices on Men's and\nBoys Clothing and Furnishings\nTalk about big values. We have juet put prices on\nreliable furni.hing. that ought lo crowd then .action, with\nbuyers from morning till night.   R.ad:\n15 Only Men's Suits    \u00abQ eza\nTO BE   CLEARED   AT           ^F*f\u00abVW\nThese are not old ateok,\nbut odd sizes of this season's best sol lore, and\nbeing such they must\nmove out. The materials\nare fine imported Tweeds\nin the new shades of lun\nand Brown, cut in the season's latest styles and finished with good quality\nlinings. Remember there\nare only 15 in the lot, so\nbe on hand early if you\nwould be sure of getting\nyour size. All one price.\n\"Yd (JlEAR  AT $9.50.\nMen's Suits\nReg.  Values to Oil Aff\n$17.50. FOR . fllwy\nThis season's latest\nstyles, with three-button\nsaoque coat and finished\nwith best quality linings.\nThe materials aro imported   Tweeds  and   Worsteds\nc*t>.      ^-^BBaH 'n tvtry desirable  pattern\n^\u2022\/f-^ffl^B ant*    weave    that   a   man\nh  If\/\/\/ T&f     \"^&\u00a3e\\m%' would  want.     Our   actual Msf'\n'IWjImfx x\\^ july sale PR,CE *11,M\nA A Phenomenal Clearance-25\nI\\ Doz. Men's Shirts\nWr        a\"?marchout 95c\nOur entire stock is included, nothing Shirts that sell in the regular way at $1.25, $1.50 and\nreserved. Smart Ready-to-Wear and $1.75. Included in the assortment are. Negligee Shirte witn\nPattern Hats, with trimmings of Flow- stiff cuffs and soft bosoms, Outing Shirts with soft turners, Malines, Chiffons, Aigrettes, down collar and cuffa. Come in fancy atripas and plain\nPlumes, etc., at these prices: colors; alio a number of Working Shirts in Ceylons, Drills,\nReg. values to $8.50\u2014Sale  Price $3.75 Sateans, etc.   Our regular $1,25, $1.50 and $1.75 values.\n'*    \u2022<\u2022.\u00ab\u2022.    \u00bb t    a \u2022      *:** CLEARANCE PRICE 95c.\nReg. values to $10.50\u2014 Sale Price $4.95\nReg. values to $12.60\u2014Sale Price $5.95 Mftrt'c    DaiHAAafc\nReg   value, to |1U0-U. Price $795 MMI S    KaiMCOatS\nR.gular $14.50 to $17.50 Valu.. fl>Q Qff\nSlashingReductions F0RA h   ,   t \u00ab,,     i 7,'\"I 7 .\n40 A chance to get a first class, up-to-date Raincoat at\non Sunshades      i,m than \u00b0\u00b0\"pric*'Thar* *r* \u00b0nly 1S in tha iot'but *\"\nBizes are represented from 34 to 44. Made of splendid qual-\n100 Women's Sunshades in all the ily Cravsn.tt. in Chesterfield style) or with convertible col-\nnew style, and designs, including pl.m Co|or> ^ d op mixtur\u201e ,nd  ltrip.\nand fancy silks, stripes, checks, eta. \u25a0   '        - F\neffects. The cheapest Coat in tha lot sells regularly at\nReg. value, to $1.50. for 75c     $,4W mi ,\u201e,,,, m othepl a, )16M and y7x\nReg. value, to $2.50, for $1.66 JULy CLEARANCE pmcE ,,Q5,\nReg. values to $3.00, for $1.75\n\"::;.:::: ::\u00a3:;;:: ::::::::::&. Great Bargain in Boys'   0\n<6l*n Waletc  fnr     SuitS a* ^\ntpl.OU     Wdiol.9     I III Ev.ry Suit is this .ea.on's stylo, made of strong    tm>\nAe. portod  English  and   Scotch Twssds.      Coats are double- '\nvJw breasted and the Pants are bloomer style:  well lined and\nBeautiful Lingerie Wai.ts, with em- t\u00bb\\[tf finl.hed.   Come in light and dark .had., of Brown,\nbroid.red fronts, collar and cuff, in- Gr.y, alio mixed effect..   Size, 24 to 30.\nset with Val.nci.nn.. Insertion or with JULY CLEARANCE PRICE $3.25.\nalternate rows of tucks and Cluny in- -_  _A  .\u00ab__,_   \u25a0>._\u2022..-  c~- Ol  Bl\\\nsertion, high   neck   and   long   sleeves, $2.50  MeiTS PSIltS fOr $1.50\nor low neck and elbow .Lev...   Reg- About 50 pairs Men's odd Pant. In good quality Tweed,\nular $1.50. and Worsteds.   All sis...   Regular valuee to $2.50.\nSALE PRICE 95c. JULY CLEARANCE PRICE $1.50 PAIR.\nFancy\nBoxes Soap\nRegular Valuee te 50c.\nSale Price\n35c Box\nI Men's fancy\nCotton Socks\nRegular 35c Values.\nSale Price\n5 Pairs for\n$1.00\n50c Men's\nNeckwear\nSale Price\n3 for $1.00\nWomen's\nNeckwear\nRegular Values to 50c.\nSale Price\n25c\nDamask\nTable Cloths\nRegular Values to $5.00\nSale Price\n$2.45\nWomen's Silk Waists\n$2.95\nRegular Values td $5.BD\nFOR\t\nOdda and ends of the season's best sellers. They are\nthe latest New York styles in Robespierre, Pater Pan,\nRem!-Tailored and Novelty effects. Come in shades of\n'Cream, Tan, Alice, Navy, Grey and Black. Regular values\nto 15.50.\nWHILE THEY LAST AT $295.\ns Bay Company\nIncorporated 1670\nIncorporated 1670\nWomen's Silk Dresses\n$8.50\nWorth te $15.00\nFOn   \t\nStylish New York Dresses for Summer or afternoon\nwear in niee quality Foulard Silk. Three different stylas\nto chooee from in colore of Navy, Brown, Copenhagen and\nBlack, with polka dot or small figured design in white.\nWorth to $15.00.\nJULY CLEARANCE PRICE $8.*0.\n I-\nMM FOUR\nChe Batlp i&euui\nWEDNESDAY .\nChe Bail; JJcuw\ntSWahod  at Neleen   Every   Morning\nI Except Sunday, by\nThe News Publishing Company,\nLimited.\nW. tt. POSTER. Editor and  Manager\n'   ' LEGAL   AND  OFFICIAL\nADVERTISING.\nEffective  en  and After Jan.   1,  1013.\nLarfol Advertising (Includes municipal\nand government notices) \u2014 12c\nper line for the first Insertion.\nand sight cents per line for all\nsubsequent Insertions.\nIn certain cases, however, for the\nconvenience of the public, flat\nrates have beon set, as follows:\u2014\nApplications far Liquor Licenses: \u2014\nOnca per week for four weeks.\n$5;  dally for month, $30.\nApplleationa  for Transfer of   Liquor\nLicensee: - Once    per week    for\nfour    weeks,    $7.60; dally    for\nmonth, $46.\nLand Purehaae N otic as:\u2014Once per\nweek for 60 days, $?.\nLand Lease Notices.\u2014Once per week\nfor \u00abQ days, 17.\nCertificate   of  Improvement   Notices:\n. \u2014Once   per   week   for   60   days,\n$12.50.\nDelinquent   Co*ownorahip    Notices:\u2014\nOnce p?r week for 90 days, $21,.\nDuplicate Certificate of Titlo Notices:\n\u2014Four   Insertions,   $S;    eight lu-\njj aertions, $14.\nWater     Application     Notices.\u2014Foui\n* Insertions   up   to  100   words,   fti;\nover 100 words In proportion.\nWhere, any  of  the  above  applies-\nIt Ions contain more than one application or notice,  each    application    or\npolice will be charged for as a separate advertisement.\nWEDNESDAY, JULY 9.\nAN    ANOMALY   THAT   CANNOT\nREMAIN.\nNow that the question of Senate reform Is to the fore in Canada some\ndiscussion has nrlsen as how this can\nbe brought about. The task Is not\nquite so easy as many might suppose,\nAlthough at the same time there arc\nno Insurmountable difficulties in the\nWay. The consent of the Senate urn.\n\u2022 the House of Commons, of course.\nmust be obtained. There would also\nhave to be ratifying legislation by the\nImperial parliament, and some go so\nfar as to say that the consent of the.\nvarious provinces would nlso have to\nbe obtained.\nAmong those who hold this last view\nIs' Senator Belcourt of Ottawa, a law\nyer of more than ordinary ability, who\nhas made considerable study of con\nslltutlonal law. In a recent statement\non the subject he says:\nAny of the provinces would he\nentitled to challenge any essential change or amendment not\nmade with the consent of all the\nprovinces, and accepted by the Imperial authorities as a breach of\nthe whole agreement (the terms of\nConfederation), and would, therefore, have the unquestionable\nright to withdraw from Confederation.\nNo change could be made without the sanction of the Imperial\nauthorities. And the latter would\npe recreant to their duly and their\n. ^-obligation and their trust If they\n'gave their sanction to an amendment not accepted by ull the parties.\n\u25a0While It will be apparent that no\nchange can he made without a lot\nof necessary preliminary negotiations,\nit.Is safe to say that the provinces and\nthe people of Canada would offer no\nobjection to such amendment as would\nat least make the ....per house a representative body. And perhaps ii\nwould not be wide of the mark to \u00bb\u00bb.>\nthat there would he little, If any, opposition from the provinces or the\npeople of Canada to a measure\nabolishing the Senate altogether.\nBut whether there may be strong or\nweak opposition to any measure\n, which may be advanced for the reform\nor-the abolition of the Senate some\nchange along either one of these two\nlines is bound to come within the next\nfew years, whether the Borden govs' eminent remains In power or not. The\nSenate as at present constituted Is an\n. anomaly which cannot continue to\noxlst In a young country enjoying representative government as docs\nCanada.\nwhich will be paid over for the support of his wife and children.\nIn Seattle they arc trying out tbe\nplan. A fortnight ago what Is known\n\"The Lucy Husband's Law\" came\nInto effect there. When a man Is too\nlazy to work, or when he deserts his\nfamily, he la proBeruted under this\nlaw, and put to work and wages paid\nto his family. Some distance outside\nthe city is a tract of sixty-five acres\nof wooded and rocky land, on which\nthese men are placed under guard.\nTheir tusk is to clear it up and adorn\nit with stone fences. It Is useful work,\nneeds doing, and produces results\nworth paying for. Men who do not\nsupport their families are thus compelled to do so, which is a much more\nsensible way of dealing with them than\nmerely shutting them up while those\ndependent on them ure left without\nBupport.\nWhat  the Press Is Saying\nRule and Woman.\nThe following Btory seems appro*\nprlate to the wild times we live In,\nand the wild women that make them.\nThe clever Duchesse de Bourgoyne\nonce asked Louis XIV. of France why\nEngland was so well ruled. In spite of\nthe fact of their being no Salic law.\nWell,\" said the king, \"because the\nwomen who rule In England are advised and ruled by men. So that In\nreality the country Is guided by men.\"\n\"Then .why Is France so badly ruled,\nwhen only men are allowed to reign?\"\nnaked the duchesse.\n\"Because the French sovereigns aro\nalways under the Influence of women,\" answered the monarch, \"and the\ncountry Ib therefore ruled by\nwomen.\"\u2014The Sphere.\nHot Weather Advice.\nAdvice for the hot weather period\nIs banded out by a New York doctor\nas follows: \"Eat as little as possible,\navoid Ice-cold drinks and don't keep\nwatching the thermometer.\" The Injunction against eating heartily will\nhe received with acclaim by the overworked housewife, also by the June\nbride, whose cooking Is In tbe ex*\nperl mental stage\u2014and the June\ngroom.\u2014Ottawa Journal.\nPublicity That It Healthful.\nPresident Woodrow Wilson not only\nbelieves In publicity, but fully understands the great gain arising from the\ndissemination of correct information.\nMore than any president that ever sat\nIn the White House, he has systematized presidential publicity. The\npresident receives all of the accredited\nnewspaper and press association cor*\nrespondents every Monday morning\nat 10 o'clock, and every Thursday\nafternoon at 3. The meeting 1b without formalities, and any one Is at\nliberty to ask all sorts of questions,\nwithin the canons of good taste.\u2014\nSt. John Telegraph,\nYea, It Repeats What It Hears.\nGooderich has a crow that talks\npolitics. And no doubt It talks as Intelligently as some of the humans that\nmight be named. N.B.\u2014The refer,\nence. of course. Is to the fellows in\nthe other party.\u2014-Woodstock Sentinel*\nReview.\nCold Storage\nshe\nTHE LAZY HUSBAND'S LAW.\nToronto has a jail farm and the Province has a prison farm, and they ure\naway ahead of the old system of cell\ndetention, says The Toronto Star. The\nmovement Is In the right direction, but\nwe have a step or two to go yet. In\nthe end we must work out a system\nwhereby the prisoner will make wages\nTom\u2014**'I   don't   know   whetl\nsings or nwt^-   .\nJack\u2014\"She doesn't. I've heard her.'.'\n\u2014Puck.\nYoung Doctor's Wife (to husband\nat work in garden)\u2014\"Oh, Jack, just\nfancy! There's a patient In Ihe sitting room.\"\n\"All right, dear, I won't he a moment, Just run and lock liim in.\"\u2014\nLife.\n\"I see they have operated on n\nPhiladelphia boy's head in order to\nmake a better boy of him.\"\n\"That isn't where my dad used to\noperate on me to make a better boy\nof me.\"\u2014-Houston Post.\nChlorlnda\u2014\"How can you dream Of\nmarrying a man who writes such\nstupid love letters?\"\nMar'.gold\u2014\"But just think, dear\u2014\nhe can write such beautiful checks,\nand that's the main thing after one's\nmarried.\"\u2014Judge.\n\"t understand the new Brasilia],\ndance, the mnchuza, is becoming\nquite the rage.\"\n\"Indeed!\"\n\"Yes, society will take it up formally at the  blf dinner dance tonight.\"\n\"Then I suppose the police will take\nit up officially tomorrow.\"\u2014Cleveland\nPlain Dealer.\n\"Don't go near that old fellow in\nthe pasture, sonny,\" the farmer warned the fresh-air child. \"He's terribly\nfierce.\"\n\"I tried him out a'ready; the lad\nreplied. \"He ain't half as fierce as\nan automobile m the city. Got any\nbears or lions around here?\"\u2014'Buffalo\nExpress,\n\"So you depend on recognition from\nposterity?\" said Mr. Dustin Stax.\n\"Yes,\" replied Mr. Pen wiggle, \"Another generation will recognize my\ngenius.\"\n\"But how a**e you going to know\nwhether the opinion' of a future generation is any more trustworthy and\ndesirable than that of the present\npublic?\"\u2014Washington Star.\nft. wide, und 9 ft. 10 in. in depth.\nThey are constructed of steel plates.\nand contain 8 ft. depth of water, or\nabout 1.300 tons in each. The lock\nproper work* automatically, and Ibe\nlockage of a vessel e.in be pprfnrmi'il\nin six or eight minutes, the actual\n\"lift\" taking hut one and a half\nminutes. Twenty-wlx thousand barrel* of ceiWht werp used to make the\nsubstructure of the lock, which Is said\nto be \"the largest monolithic ma\u00abR of\nconcrete In the world.\" The coat of\nthe whole structure amounted to a\nhalf million dollara.\nThe Weather\nTORONTO, July 8.\u2014The weather\ntodfly haa been fine and warm\nthroughout Canada. A disturbance\nnow developing throughout the lake\nregion promisee thunderstorms during\nIts passage across Ontario.\nMIn.   Max.\nVictoria        60 72\nVancouver        60 72\nKamloops        48 78\nBattleford        56 76\nPrince   Albert         66 70\nCalgary        48 74\nMoose Jaw        46 8A\nReglna       47 TZ\nWinnipeg        66 80\nPort Arthur    ,.    62 K\nParry Sound        62 78\nTendon        BO fit\nToronto        67 7\u00bb\nKingston        68 72\nOttawa        60 72\nMontreal        54 72\nSt.  John        64 fit\nHalifax         52 70\nCITY ASSESSMENT^\nSHOWS INCREASE\n(Continued from Page fins.,\nsessment of $17,000 on the two lots on\nwhich Is the Semaphore building were\nnot sustained, the hoard allowing the\nvaluations to stand.\nSold After  Making Protest.\nIn connection with these protests\nMr. Wasson quoted lot 8 in block 12.\nJ. O. Patenuude hud been assessed\n$5,000 for this lot, said the city clerk,\nand had entered a protest, but hud\nwithdrawn it last week when he solo\nthe lot for $7,400. Another protest\nmade by Mr. Bird, which was not sustained, was that against a valuation\nof $13,500 on the Canadian Pacific railway office property at the corner of\nBaker and Stanley.\nAt the request of the assessor the\namount assessed against the Improvements on lots 13 to 17, block 100, owned by the Canadian Pacific railway,\nwas reduced by $1,600, an error having\nbeen made. E. D. Ireland appeared for\nthe company.\nThe assessment on the improvements on lot 19, block 86, Baker street,\nowned by L. N. Anderson, was reduced\nfrom $2,000 to $1,500. The valuation\nof $1,426 for the lot was sustained.\nQ. A. Hunter appealed against the\nassessment made on several pieces of\nresidential property, but none of tin\nprotests   were   sustained.\nMrs. N. B. Peacock, William Qob\nnell, John Towler, Mrs. J. J. Campbell.\nJ. A. Knauff and N. M. Cummins entered unsuccessful complaints against\nassessment on residential property.\nThe valuation of improvements on the\neast half of lots 0 and 10, block 41s,\nowned by George Anderson, wns reduced $500, making the total assessment on the property $1,450.\nThinks Railway Assessment Too Low.\nEll sutciiffe protested unsuccessfully\nagainst the assessment of $2,500 on a\nlot on Vernon street, and of $1,250 on\na lot on Victoria street, near the An*\nliable block.\nThe Cunudion Pacific Railway company thought that an assessment of\n$1,000 per acre on the land on which\nare located Its yards and shops wa\ntoo high, and also protested against\nan assessment of $S0u per acre on tho\nbalance of the 100 odd acres which the\ncompany owns on the waterfront, but\nthe board expressed the opinion that\nthe valuations, if anything, were\nridiculously low.\n,1, J. Campbell protested against an\nassessment of $2,400 on lot 6, block 3,\nVernon street, but the board decided\nthat It should stand.\nThose present were: Mayor Keefe.\nAid. A. A. Perrler, Aid. John Bell, Aid\nEdward Kerr and Aid. James Johnston e.\nWILL LOOK INTO \u00a3\nFACTORY ACT\n\"SALUDA\"\n\u25a0 IS,\nTEA AT ITS BEST\nIt* garden froth\u2014il\n\u25a0\u25a0\u2022. fer\u00bb fUnvin\nprotected   by  Ih*\nwhich   keep*  th*\ntmidimi fat, and all\nBLACK, MIXED & GREEN.\nown the natural resources of the\ncountry, and was glad to see that Nelson had already control of a great\nmany of her municipal necessities,\nsuch as the electric light and water\nsystems. He pointed out with what\ngreat success municipal ownership\nwas carried on in Port William, and In\nconclusion he said that he was sure\nthat what could be carried on with\nsuch great success in the municipalities could be curried on by the provincial and Dominion authorities.\nNO ATTEMPT\nAT MEDIATION\n(Continued from Page One.)\nThis Dag in\nCanadian History\nPeterborough, on the Otonahee\nriver, has a unique claim to distinction In the tact that it possesses an\nengineering work which Is the largest\nof its kind In the world. This Is the\nhydraulic lift-lock, one of the works\nof the Trent canal (so-called, though,\nas In the case of the R'deau canal, a\ngreat portion of the waterway consists of natural lakes and rivers).\nThe lock was opened nine years ago,\non Julv 9. 1904. The height of the\nlift is 65 ft; and the two chambers\ninto which the vessels enter to he\nraised or lowered are 140 ft. long, 33\nTrades Council Appoints Committee to\nInvestigate Conditions in\nNelson.\nA committee composed of John Nol-\nmun, C. Johnson and Fred Chapman\nwas last evening appointed by the\ntrades and labor council to fnvestigau\nthe working of the Factory net and\ninterview the employers of young women and girls concerning the alleged\nworking of them over the number of\nhours stipulated In the act.\nAid. I. A. Austin. Mr. Kotman and\nR. Randall were appointed to approach\nthe Employers association In an endeavor to arrange a final settlement\nbetween them and the trades council\nas to the application of the recent settlement reached by the arbitration\nboard setting a common wage of 39 %\ncents per hour for building trudes laborers, cement mixers and bricklayers\nand Btonemasons helpers.\nA resolution was passed authorizing\nthe secretury, Mr. Notman, and the\npresident, William Johnston, to sign\nall checks for the trades and labor\ncouncil.\nAid. A. H. Dennis of Fort William, a\nmember of the Independent Labor\nparty In that city, was the guest of\nthe trades and labor council at last\nevening's meeting.\nAid. Dennis delivered a brief ad\ndress, explaining labor conditions In\nhis city. He was very much pleased\nwith this country, he said, and went on\nto urge upon the union men a mure\nregular and larger attendance at their\nmeetings in order that they might become more closely In touch with eaui\nother.\nHe enlarged on some of the hardships of the working classes, and ex-\nplained where he thought many\nwrongs might be rectified.\nHe advocated that the people should\nBpondent of the Mall says that a member of the government Is authority\nfor the statement that war between\nBulgaria and Roumanla Is Inevitable.\nThe Post's Bucharest correspondent,\nreporting that the mobilization of the\nRoumanian army will be completed on\nWednesday and that a few days more\nwilt be required to get the army In\nmotion on the frontier, Intimates that\nUoumunia Intends to fight In order\nto prevent Bulgaria from crushing\nServia and Greece, and that the most\nIntense enthusiasm for the struggle Is\napparent among the Roumanians.\nLosses Enormous.\n(Bv Dally News leased Wire.,\nLONDON, July 0.\u2014A despatch to\nthe Times from Doiran dated July 7\nsays: \"King Constantino and his\nstair hare removed from headquarters\nhere and are encamped on the lake\nside. The Greek losses to date are\nenormous. They Include 2,000 officers, but the majority of the wounded\nare not In a serious condition and\nwill Boon be able to rejoin the ranks.\n\"The Creeks continue their rapid\nadvance along the whole line. The\nBulgarians are u'nahle to offer effective resistance and their position Is\ncritical.\"\nKing's Proclamation,\nfBy Dully News-Leased Wire.,\nBELGRADE, July 8.\u2014King Peter\nlias issued a proclamation to his people, announcing war, In the course of\nwhich he says: \"The Bulgarians, forgetful of the Servians' brotherly help\nand the blood of the heroes who fell\non the Thrnclan fields, have given\nthe Slavonic nations and the civilized\nworld an abominable example of ingratitude and greediness. This Ull*\nbrotherly action has caused me the\ndeepest pain anj hurt my stneerest\nSlavonic feelings and the responsibility for that crime against Slavdom\nmust fall upon those who committed\nit.\"\nAn official despatch announces that\ntiie Servians have repulsed the Bulgarians at Zetarh, on the frontier, with\nheavy losses, and also at Vlaslna.\nHorrible Massacres.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nSALONIKL July 8.\u2014Father Michel,\nsuperior of the French Catholic mission at Kllklsh, confirms the report\nof massacres committed In that district by Bulgarian Irregulars. In one\ncase they burned to death 700 men\nbelonging to Kurkut by Imprisoning\nthem In a mosque, under which they\nexploded bombs, setting the building\non fire. They had previously assembled the victims' wives and daughters around the mosque to witness the\nspectacle. Even more terrible scenes\nwere enacted at KllkiBh, Planltza and\nHaynovo, women also being burned\nto death. Father Michel asserts that\nIn the ranks of the lrregu!?rs responsible for these atrocities were business\nand professional men and sei'vnntH\nfrom Sofia.\nBulgarians Annihilated.\nBELGRADE, July !).\u2014According to\nauthoritative private Information the\nBulgarian    forces,    nine    battalions\nstrong, which Invaded Servla at\nKniarsevatz, are entirely annihilated.\nThey met the Servian forces and engaged in a desperate battle at the entrance of Zajetzar pass.\nEABEEST0NT0D0\nPUBLICITY WORK\nIs Appointed for Balance of This Year\n\u2014Arrangements    Made   to    Keep\nOffice Open Daily.\nThe publicity committee has appointed E. K. Beeston, secretary ol\nthe I Mia rd of trade, as secretary of the\nbureau for the balance of this year.\nMr. Beeston, who formerly carried\nout the work for some years, hus already taken charge of the bureau, und\nMfsH .Vshton has been engaged as\nstenographer, arrangements having\nbeen made for the office to be open\nfrom 9 o'clock in the morning until fi\no'clock in the afternoon daily.\nAt 8 o'clock this evening there will\nbe a meeting of the committee, at\nwhich will lie discussed the work of\nthe bureau.\nDRAWS PLANS FOR\nWEST ARM HOUSE\nDr. Nealo Will Build\u2014John Hamilton\nto Construct  Bungalow at\nFour-Mile Ranch,\nAlex Carrie, the architect, is at\npresent working on plans for a residence for Dr. Neale of Five-Mile, and\ntoday tenders will close for the construction of a handsome bungalow\nfor John Hamilton at his ranch at\nFour-Mile.\nWill Haldane, the architect, returned on Monday evening from a visit\n\u25a0to Kaslo and reports that good progress is being made with the construction of the new school there.\nNEW DENVER NOTE8.\n(Special to the Dally Nmvs..\nNEW DENVEH, B.C., July 8.\u2014Mr.\nand Mrs, A. 11. Sanderson and family\nof Handon are spending a vacation In\nthe Atherton cottage In New Denver.\nRobert J. and Mrs. Kirkwood spent a\nfew days in Nelson last week.\nMrs. and Miss Heathcole of Berkeley, Cat,, arrived on Wednesday to\nVisit Mrs. Henthcote's sister,. Mrs. M.\nS. Davys.\nW. B. Will made a business trip to\nNelson this week.\nMr. and Mrs. Angus McGIHvary and\nMiss Isenor of Sandon were visitors\nin town on Wednesday.\nC, Barber, who has been on the staff\nof the Bank of Montreal for the pas.\nfour months, has resigned, und left for\nEngland on Wednesday morning.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Coulthard of Nan-\nalmo are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Tbomlinson.\nGeorge 6, Nesbltt, manager of the\nBank of Montreal, returned on Monday after a six-day's visit to the coast.\nHe wns accompanied on his return by\nMrs. Nesbltt's sister, Miss Whitehead\nof Vnncouver.\n.1. a. McCully of the Van Rol minu\nloft on Wednesday morning for it holiday in Vancouver,\nC. J. Campbell made a business trip\nto Nelson the first of the week.\nC. .1. Vultance left for Spokane on\nMonday.\nTORONTO  LAWYER  DEAD.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nTORONTO. July 8.\u2014Edward V\nO'Sulllvan of the legal firm of Day\nFerguson & O'Sulllvan died this nfler^\nnoon as a result of a paralytic stroke\nwhich seized him suddenly on June 30.\nAlthough still tinder 30, Mr. O'Sulllvan\nhad taken a prominent place In hi!\nprofession and acquired considerable\nmeans In business.\nFRECKLES\nNow Is tha Time to Get Rid of These\nUgly Spots.\nThere's no longer the slightest need\nof feeling ashamed of your freckles,\nas the prescription othlne\u2014double\nstrength\u2014is guaranteed, to remove\nthese homely spots.\nSimply get an ounce of othine\u2014\ndouble strength\u2014from Poo!e Drug\ncompany and apply a little of It night\nand morning and you should soon see\nthat even the worst freckles have begun to disappear, while the lighter\nones have vanished entirely. It Is seldom that more than an ounce is needed lo completely clear the Hkln nnd\ngain a beautiful clear complexion.\nBe sure to ask for the double Btrength\nothlne, ns this lu sold under guarantee\nof money buck if It falls to remove\nfreckles.\nRemoval Notice C. W. Appleyard\nJULY* ^|\nJ H-f\nCIRCULAR TOURS\nVIA\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nAND CONNECTING LINES\nTHROUGH      SPOKANE,     PORTLAND,     SEATTLE,     VANCOUVER,\nVICTORIA AND RETURN  TO  NELSON,  B. C.\nVIA PORTLAND OTHER ROUTES\n$34.50 $30.00\nVERY LOW RATES.\nLIBERAL   STOPOVERS.\nFINAL  RETURN   LIMIT  OCT.  31st.\nFor particulars write\nJ. V. MURPHY,\nDistrict Passenger Agent,\nNEL80N, \u25a0. C.\nThe Canadian Bank\nSIR EDMUND WALKER, C. V. 0.,\nLI. D., D. C. L., President.\nALEXANDER LAIRD, Qan. Mgr.\nCapital   \t\nRett  \t\n 115,000,000\n $12,500,000\nPlace your Securities, Title*\nDeeds, Mortgages, Insurance Pol.\ncles, Wills and other valuables it\none of our Safety Deposit Boxes\nwhere they will be secure from\nloss by fire or otherwise. Rentals\naccording to sis* of box.\nNelsnn  Branch, J. 8. Munro, Mgr.\nBank of Montreal\nESTABLISHED 1617\nCapital authorized |2\u00bbW\u00bb*0*\nCapital   all   paid-up IIMWH\nRett    \u00bb1o^00M0l>\nHEAD  OFFICE:   MONTREAL\nRt.    Hen.    Lord   Strathcona   (net\nMount Royal, G.C.M.G, Hen. Free.\nR. B. Angus, E.q, President.\nH. V. Meredith, Esq,\nVleo-President and Oen. Manager.\nBranches In   British  Columbia\nArautrons,   Athalmer,   \"\"\"\"\u2022j*'\nmer, Kamlooiia, Kelowna, Hen\u2122.\nN.l.on, New Denver, New WeeJJJJf\n\u2022ter. Nicola, Penticton. Port AJJJ\u2122.\nPort nanny, prince Rupert, P\"\"\u2122-\nton. RosKlann\", Summerland, VI\nver, Vancouver (Main street), Y<\nVictoria.  West Bumm.rland.\nNelaon Branch, L. B. DeVeber, Mgr.\nJohn Burns & Sons\nGeneral Contractor! ]\nand BiiMen\nNELSON  PLANING MILLS, SASH AN-5 DOOR FACTORY.\nVERNON STREET, NELSON, B. C.\nEvery Desci'ption of Building Material Kept In Stock.   Estimates Given\non  Stone,  Brick, Concrete and  Frame  Buildings.\nMAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.\nBOX 184. PHONE 17S.\nThe Jenckes Machine Co., Limited\nBOILERS.\n1-\u00ab0 Inch., x 16 fl. H. R. T.\n1\u201440 H.P. Locomotive.\n1\u201430 inch.. X 0 ft. Vortical.\n2-36 inch., x 8 ft. Vertical.\n2\u201442 inch.s X 8 ft. Vertical.\nHOISTS.\n1\u20148 x 10 Friction Drum.\n1\u20147 x 10 Friction Drum.\n2\u20146 x   8 Friction Drum.\nIN STOCK IN NELSON\nENGINES.\n2\u20149 x 12 Horizontal.\nPUMPS.\n2\u20143 x 2 x 3 Snow Duplex.\n1\u2014No. 2 Cameron Feed.        '\n1\u2014No. 7 Cameron Sinker.\n1\u20146 1-8x3x8 Moore Sinker.\n2\u20145 x 5 Goulds hand.\nBLOWERS, BUCKETS, SUPPLIES\nTHE NELSON IRONWORKS, LIMITED.\nPabst Blue Ribbon Beer\nMAGI WATER\nAGENT\u2014\nThe Nelson Wine and Spirit Co.\nBAKER STREET\nNEL30N, B. C.\nHave amall bunches of very attractive Mining Shares for Salt-*-\nSlocan  Star, Standard  and  many others.\nPine showing cf Sloean Star Ore at Office.\nI am It. \u00a3 position to, place good properties of merit for development\nSubmit yours.\nAttractive Summer Residential Sitae on West Arm for Sale.\nLota in Collingwood Division, Viotoria.\nI respectfully solicit your Insurance, covering Life, Accident, Liability, Fidelity, Fire, Contractors Bo.ids, etc.\nFRED A. STARKEY\nI' PERIAL BANK BLOCK.\nI P.O. BOX 652.\nDaily News Want Ads Get Results\nC. W. APPLEYARD\nwishes to announce that he has removed to the office lately occupied\nby Mr. C. F. McHardy.\nNo. 505 Baker Street.\nINSURANCE\nand\nCITY PROPERTY.\nNew Office\n505 Baker Street.\nTelephone 444.\nGoing to Build?\nla  It  a  wood  shed,  a  chicken house, an alteration or addition to the\nhouse;  perhaps it ia a new house.\nEverything you'll '    nt from  roof to floor  in  rough  or finished\nlumber we can supply you with.\nWall seasoned pine, fir and cedar.   Cut in our own mitts.\nSlowly dried by nature in our yards.\nOur experts will advise you free.   No obligation.\nWrite,   phone  or  call.\nForest Mills of B. C. Ltd.\nLet. DOMINION  SAWMILLS  \u00ab LUMBER, LTD.\nphone is. p. o. box ioea\nSPECIAL\nWE WILL SELL FOR\nThree Days Only\nTHE\nJaeger .Vacuum\nCleaner\nFOR\n$10^\nTHIS   IS   THE   MOST   EFFICIENT   VACCUM   CLEANER  ON  THE\nMARKET, AND SELLS IN THE STATES AT \u00bb10.00,\nIT DOE8 THE WORK.     WE GUARANTEE IT. \t\nCALL EARLY.\nNelson Hardware Co.\nPhoneys Nelson, & Cf\n 1(0\nWEDNESDAY JULY I.\n%\\H Bail? jfceto*\nTHE BELL\nTRADING CO.\nMack's\nNo-Rub\nIs anxious to get to work. It arrived on Saturday last. Tn: a washing. Will save you a lot of need-\nlees work.\nOther New Lines\nArrived on the same freight.\nNORDEN'S  POTATO   FLOUR\nPacket      Me\n| MAPLE SUGAR\nNew season's pure sugar.\nj 2 cakes 25c\nKELLOGG'8 WHEAT BISCUIT\n2 packets 25c\nEIFFEL TOWER LEMONADE\nPOWDER\n| Tin  25c\nPERSIAN 8HERBERT\nPut up according   to   a   genuine\nArabian Kecipe.\n! Tin    25c\nECONOMY JARS\nECONOMY TOPS\nMASON JARS\nGOLDEN STATE JAR8\nSCHRAM TOPS\nAll at market prlco.\nRUBBER  RINGS\nBlack rubber, dozen 5c\nRed or white, 3 for  .26c\nParowax, li>     ... .20c\nWhen Taking\na Vacation\nto ti tho croft* Haloyo* Bot\nSpringe, where 70a can Mean not\nonly rest, but At too mow time\nhave tho benefit of tho boot medl-\neloaJ waters on tht continent un-\n\u2022qualed for rheumatism nnd kindred ailments. Tho springs nro easy\nof access to travellers and the hotel\nban boon fitted up and la conducted with a view to tho maximum of oomfort and aonvenlsnn\nfor guest*.\n|1I nnd HI nor week, ar V\npar day an* upwardo.\nHalcyon Hot Springs\nSanitarium\nWM. BOYD, Proprietor.\nHalcyon Arrow Lakes\nBOTH ARRIVALS OF A DAY\nThe Hume\nTable d'Hote and a la Carte\nLocal Fruit\nFroali every day.\nCHERRY CURRANTS\n2 baskets  2Bo\nGOOSEBERRIES\n2 baskets  25c\nCOOKING  CHERRIES\n2 baskets  ...25e\nTABLE CHERRIES\nLb 25c\nSTRAWBERRIES\n2 for  25e\nWe are particular on our\ncbolce ot trult. Wo buy the\nbest.   You get the quality.\nPicnic Basket\nCome to us and have It filled.\nCampers, no store in the Interior\ncan look after you as woll as m\ncan.\nTHE BELL\nTRADING CO.\nPhone 56\nThe Ip-to-Date Grocers\nMadden House\na C. CLARK*\nCor. Baker and Ward Bte.. NeUon.\nMADDEN\u2014K. \"Walton, W. Cnlllnir-\nW'tid. Proctor; W. Martin, G. Foster,\nVancouver; c. H McCailum, Wlnlnw\nMrs. w. H. McDonnell. Cranbrook;\nMiss Sibyl McDonald.\nTremont House\nBaker Street, Nelion\nRAN80ME e\\ CAMPBELL\nPropriotora\nBurcpean plan, 60o up\nAmerican plan, |1.25 and 11.19\nMeats, SCe\nSpecial Ratee per Month\nTREMONT\u2014Dell   Deacon,    Solmo;\n| A. D. Cameron, Crahbrook;    A. Mc-\nl Leod, Marblehead; J. C. Stags, Croston; Frank H. Deaaon, Robert Davis,\nA. Blncklowskl. Trait.\nKootenay Hotel\nTwo Doom from Poatoffloo\nVernon Street\nRataa 11.00 and $1.26 per day.\nEvery convenience given to the\ntraveling public. Electric piano and\nunl'-n bar In connection, where the\nboat of wlnea and liquors are kept\nUR8. MALLETT, Proprietress.\nKOOTENAY\u2014J. Monzeon. A. Friday, Curmi; C. Carprano, Trail; W.\nBlair, Satmo; P. Penslck, J. (Mackny,\nW. Menztea, E. 'Weigh, Phoenix; H.\nBentley, Vancouver; A. J. Nelson,\nVernon;  Frank Ryan, Revelstoke,\nKlondyke Hotel\nVornon Stroot\nHeadquarters for miners, Smel-\nUrmen, loggers, railroad man.\nRatss. tLOO psr day up\nNELSON * JOHNSON, Props.\nKLONDYKE\u2014W. JaOobson, G. iR.\nKeriey, T. Nellan, Sandon.\nSHERBROOKE\u2014Joseph McKay, F.\nLewis, Willow Point; P. Wood, C.\nJones, Greenwood; D. Davidson, Slo-\ncan'Clfy.  ' _    ,\nHUME\u2014Mr. and Mrs. G.R.Thompson nnd daughter, Smelter, T. H.\nLong. G. U l.un,,' Rossland; E. H.\nMurphy, D. M. Robinson, M. F. Hill,\nJ. P. King, G. J. Smith, 0, N. Beebe,\nW. B, Braddlck, W. A. Montgomery,\nVancouver! g. a. strong. J. o. W\u00bbdc,\nSpokane; M. A. W. Ormond, Mnclcod;\nA. Amos, Seattle; George Amos, Alnsworth; E. D. Campbell, Margaret\nFraser, Crawford Bay; C, F. Olson\nand son. Alnsworth; Mr. and Mrs.\nAnderson, Kuslo; R, T. l.ranod, Seattle; J. W. Fokner, Medicine Hnt;\nMiss J. Maedonald, Kaslo; Thomas\nMeNeish, Sloean; A. Bl&kO, steamer\nMoyio; T. C. Peck, Midway; Mr.\nand Mrs. Ellis Le Masters, Spokane;\nE. ,T. Sale, Toronto; C. L. Burtch,\nNorth Vancouver; Dave Pfittlgrcw,\nE. S. Vnndervoost. Vancouver,\nHotel Touraine\nSPOKANE\nA centrally located hotel opposite Review Bldg., halt block\nfrom new Monroe Street Bridge; a\nfull view down Riverside Ave. from\nlobby.\nRates reasonable\u201450 cents a day\nand up.  Give us a trial.\nWM. SNOW, R. H. SNOW,\nProp. Mgr.\nCentral Hotel\n\"\"\"        AINSWORTH, B. C.\nThis house has heen refitted and\nrenovated throughout. The water\nIrom tho famous Hot Springs haB\nbeen piped In and Is now at the\nservice of the public for baths,\nLoungo In connection. Natural\nwater temperature 118 deg. Hotel\nservice of the best. Bar supplied\nwith all the finest brands of\nliquors and cigars.\nJ. DEARIN, Prop.\nLeland Hotel\nNAKUSP, B.C.\nWhy not spend your vacation at\nNakusp? An ideal place to spend a\nweek. Rowboata and motor boats\nfor hhe. Beat of fishing In one of\nthe nicest lakes In the province.   For\n!;ood weather and fine fishing Nakusp\nBUS,\nThe   Leland   Hotel   solicits   your\npatronage.    It offers the best to be\nhad at a moderate price.   Rates 12.00\nper day.   Family rates on application.\nT. H. BOHART. Proprietor.\nHotel Outlet\nproctor.\nFishing, Boating, Bathing,\nTourist   and   Commercial   rates\nweekly and monthly.\nQ. A F. SNOW, Proprietors.\nCHARLEY MAGLIO\nTO RUN HOTEL\nP. B. WHITING. Proprietor.\nSTRATHCONA\u2014F. Smith. R. L*n-\ngan. R. Cobb, Calgary; A. B. Calhoun,\nRossland; Mr. and- Mrs. Angus W.\nMlshaw. Toronto; Joseph F. Potter,\nMiss E, E. Potter, London; H. Ries,\nOttawa; Mayor anil Mrs. A. B. Carey,\nVictoria; Henry Ratyer; Paulson; E.\nStlnson, Vancouver; Miss Staples,\nSpokane;  M, S. Davys, New Denver.\nQueen's Hotel\nA.  LAPOINTE,  Proprietor\nRenovated throughout. Six-,\nteen new rooms added, all elegantly furniBhed. Steam heat\nIn every room.\nQUEENS\u2014Georgle Henderson, S.\nA. \u25a0 Featherston, Sloean City; w. B.\nSmyth, ValUcun; L. McLean, Kaslo;\n15. B, FJrinessey, Marcus; N. Hust-\nwayte, Frultvale; Mrs, Cuddeford,\nGreenwood; Mr. and Mrs, J, Davidson, Edgewood.\nA Home for the World at $1,00 a day\nLakeview Hotel\nCorner Hall and Vernon Streets.\nt\nRenovated and refurnished throughout.      Best of  wines,  liquors and\ncigars served In the bar by Union\nBartenders.\nLAKEVIEW\u2014S   Archibald,    Crawford Bay; J, Lloyd, J. Sullivan.\nGrand Central Hotel\nOPPOSITE  POSTOFFICI\nAmerican and European plana\nH. H. PITTS, Proprietor\nGRAND CENTRAL\u2014B Beauchamp,\ncity; W. Davidson. New Denver; A.\nShilland, I. Jameson, Sandon; W. E.\nRiley, Ymir; T. Christy, Sloean City;\nAlex Thompson, Miller Mack mine.\nNelson House\nEuropean Plan\nW. A. WARD, Proprietor\nCAFE\u2014Open day and night\u2014EAR\nMerchants' Lunch 12 to t\nPhone 17 P. O. Box 817\nNELSON\u2014Alfred Anderson, Summerland; Owen Owens, Bluebell; A.\nErlckson, W. J. Lewis, Marcus; J. D.\nSnyder, F. H. Moss, Grand Forks;\nC. Carlson, T. Llvermore, L. Copac,\nCreston.\nVANCOUVER   SELLS   INQERSOLL.\nVANCOUVER, U. C, July 8.\u2014Bob\nlngersoll, regarded as one of the best\npitchers In the Northwestern league,\nhas been sold by the Vancouver club\nto tho Cincinnati Nationals for $3,001),\ndelivery to be made next' fall.\nWill  Ask Commlaalonera to Transfer\nGluepot Saloon License to Homo\nand  Occidental,\nCharley Maffllo, proprietor of the\nGluepot saloon, has decided to apply\nto tho board of llienae commissioners\nfor permission to transfer the license\nof the saloon to the Occidental and\nHomo Temperance hotels, which he\nproposes to remodel. The application,\nwhich is the first of the kind In Nel\nson under tho section in the Municl\npal act which abolishes all saloons In\n\u2022January next but makes provision for\nthe transfer of such licenses, with the\nconsent of the commissioners, to other\nbuildings which are to he conducted\nns hotels, will come before the board\nnt a meeting at the city hall this\nmorning, \u00ab \u25a0\u25a0#|<Sff\n\u25a0Mr. iMaglio who, In addition to he\n!ng proprietor of the Gluepot, Is well\nknown as a hotel man In Nelson,\nhaving for some years been -Manager\nof the Kootenay hotel, proposes to\nbuild In the space between the Home\nand Ocldental structures in order\nthat  the  buildings  may become one.\nAccording to Mr. Meglio's plans he\nwill use tho centre space as a dining\nroom, thus giving increased space in\nthe present buildings for rooms, etc.\nHo expects to have about 45 rooms In\nthe  remodelled  building.\nLEAVES FOR COAST.\nDr. Willson leaves this morning for\nthe const on business and will be\naway for a week.\nPASSENGER STEAMER FIRES\nGUNS ON  TRIAL  TRIP\n(\"By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, July 8.\u2014The White Star\nline's new Australian steamer Ceramic arrived In the Mersey yesterday\nafter a successful trial trip, on which\ntwo 4.7 Inch quick firing guns were\ntested at distances from 1,300 to 5,500\nyards. This is the first time hlg guns\nhave been discharged from a White\nStar passenger steamer.\nNews of Sport\nDOUBLEHEADER\nBASEBALL TO-DAY\nHungry Nina and All*8tara to Meet-\nHardware Boys Will Play Dally\nNews Team.\nThis afternoon a double-header will\nbe pulled off at the ball grounds, when\nthe All-Stars and Hungry Nine and\nThe Daily News and the Hardware\nbaseball teams will meet. The first\ngame la scheduled to commence at -\no'clock sharp and the second one at\n5 o'clock. Both games are expected\nto be pretty lively fixtures. Tbe\nteams will line up as follows:\nAll-Stars\u2014Brennan, catcher; Richardson, pitcher; Garde, first base; J.\nGrant, second base; T. Bush, third\nbase; J. Mlddleton, shortstop; W. Hoskln, left field; D. Lyonnals, centre\nfield; R. Talt, right field.\nHungry Nine\u2014Darrough, pitcher;\nJones, catcher; Whitehead, first base;\nGlbbs, second bane; Van Horn, short*\nstop; Pitts, third base; Wolverton,\nleft field; Svoboda, centre field;\nBlanchard, right field.\nDally News\u2014Grfzzelle, catcher; Cur-\nran, pitcher; Whitehead, first base;\nDill, second base; McCandllsh, third\nbase; Blancbftrd, centre field; O'Gen-\nskl, shortstop; McDonald, left field;\nStanley, right field.\nHardware \u2014 Allan, catcher; B.\nWhitehead, pitcher; Ames, first base;\nSharpe, second base; R. Riley, shortstop ; Boyes, third base; Harrison,\nright field; Jackman, centre field; W\nRiley, left field.\nMANY COMING FOR\nBIO TRAP8H00T\nAnnual Meet to Be Held In Nelson\nThis Week\u2014Entries Are Already\nBeing Sent In.\nCommencing with a practice shoot\ntomorrow and continuing over Friday\nand Saturday, the big annual shoot of\nthe Nelson Gun club will take place.\nTbls shoot annually brings large numbers of crack shooters from all parts\nof the northwest to the city and the\nshoot this year promises to be If anything more successful than any of tbe\nannual events yet held.\nOn both days the shoot commences\nat 9 o'clock In the morning and entries should be handed In to the secretary, W. A. Ward, before th\u00a9 firing\ncommences In any of the events,\nA splendid program has been arranged for tbe shoot nnd already its\npopularity Is testified to by the fact\nthat many entries have been received\nby the secretary.\nGAME POSTPONED\nThe district league football game\nbetween Rossland and Nelson, which\nwas scheduled for today in the Golden\ncity, haa been postponed for one week,\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION.\nR.  H. E.\n.472\n,15     0\nToledo  \t\nIndianapolis\nMinneapolis-Milwaukee   postponed;\nrain.\nR. H. E.\nLouisville   9   15    1\nColumbus    1    7    ft\nR. H. E.\nSt. Paul 2   10     I\nKansas City  7   11    1\nWESTERN CANADA LEAGUE.\nSaskatoon\nCalgary  ..\nMedicine Hat .\nReglna \t\nR. H.\n2 4     2\n3 9     U\nR.  H. E.\n.4'     9-   B\n.585\nNATIONAL\n8TANDING OF THE CLUBS.\nWon Lost P.C.\nNew York  48 23 .07\u00ab\nPhiladelphia   41 27 .602\nChicago    40 35 .533\nBrooklyn  35 34 .507\nPittsburg    35 38 .479\nSt. Louis  31 42 .424\nBoston    30 41 .422\nCincinnati  28 48 .368\nR.  H.  E.\nChicago    5   13     4\nNew York   6     8     3\nBatteries Lavender and Archer;\nTesreau, Marquard and Meyers.\nR.  H. E.\nClnclnnatt   2     6     1\nBrooklyn    1     7     3\nBatteries\u2014Ames and Clarke; Allen\nand Miller.\nR.  H.  B.\nSt. Louis   2     0     1\nBoston     6   10     3\nBatteries\u2014Grlner and Wingo \u25a0 Tyler\nand Rariden.\nPittsburg    fi' 13    0\nPhiladelphia   4     9    0\nBatterieB \u2014 Camnltz, McQuillan,\nCooper, HendrJx and Simon, Coleman;\nMayer, Seaton and KlUlfer.\nR.  H. E.\nEdmonton   6    8    2\nMoose Jaw   0     3     3\nCOAST LEAGUE.\nPREMIER WILL APPOINT\nPOET LAUREATE\nfBy Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, July 8.\u2014Tho discussion ns\nto whether the office of poet laureate\nshall be nllowcd to lapse with the\ndeath of Alfred Austin has been set\nto rest hy the premier's announcement,\nin reply to a question in the commons\nyesterday. He said he Intended to\nmake an appointment to the vacant\noffice, but was nfrald he could not accept the suggestion to enlarge the\nscope of the office by making It a lnur-\neateship of literature.\nJOSEPH CHAMBERLAIN CELEBRATES   BIRTHDAY\n(By Daily Newa Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, July 8.\u2014Right Hon.\nJoseph Chamberlnln celebrated his\nseventh-seventh birthday today. Only\nfour members nre still In the house of\ncommons who were there when \"Joe\"\nChamberlain entered in 1876, viz.,\nRight Hon. Arthur Balfour, Lord Claud\nHamilton, Henry Chaplin und Thomas\nBurt.\nAmongst the several distinguished\ninvalids at the present time are Walter\nLong, who has undergone an operation,\nEarl Mlnto and Sir E. Carson, who is\nsuffering from neuritis.\nSilver King Hotel\nBaker Street\nUnder new management\nWell  furnished  rooms,   91.00  &\nday and up.   Best 160 meal la\nNelson.   Best brands of liquors end\nolfara, served by union men.\nN.  MoLEOD,  Proprietor\nBIIjVBR KINO\u2014W. Quirk. O. MeLeod. N. Walsh. W. Bowler, C. V.\nJakl, Owen Qrlffltha,\nAt Portland.\u2014Score:          R. H. B.\nVenice    1 11 0\nPortland     2 9 0\nAt Los Angeles.\u2014Score:   R. H. E.\nOakland   3 a 1\nLos Angeles  5 6 1\nAt San Francisco.\u2014Score: R. H. E.\nSacramento  (1 11 1\nSan Francisco   H ti 1\nNORTHERN  LEAGUE.\nAt Wlnnipeg.-Score:        R. H. E.\nDuluth    16 3\nWinnipeg    2 5 4\nR. H. E.\nWinona   2 4 2\nSuperior  4 G 2\nR. H. E.\nVirginia   2 6 1\nGrand Forks  5 S 3\nR. H. E.\nSt. Paul   fi 9 8\nMinneapolis   2 (I 0\nNORTHWESTERN.\nSTANDING OF THE CLUBS.\nWon Lost P.C.\nVancouver  50 32 .609\nSeattle  60 34 .696\nPortland  43 34 .668\nVictoria  40 43 .481\nTacoma  37 49 .430\nSpokane    27 65 .329\nAt Vancouver.\u2014Score: U. H, E.\nSpokane  4 ,13    3\nVancouver    6    8    1\nBatteries\u2014Harden and Hannah;\nClark and Konnick.\nAt Seattle.\u2014Score: R. H. E.\nVictoria   9. 10    2\nSeattle  6 11    2\nBatteries\u2014Kantlehner and Shea;\nMclver and Cttdman.\nAt Tacoma.\u2014Score: R. H. E.\nPortland   2    6    0\nTacoma   0    6    2\nBatteries\u2014Easterly and Williams;\nBelford and Grindell.\nLEWIS JOHNSTONE WINS\n8INGLES FROM ELLIOTT\nLewis Johnstone, one of the crack\nscullers ot the Nelson Rowing club,\ncontinued the great success which rewarded his efforts at the Dominion\nday regatta of the club when he recently won the single aculllng honors\nIn quite handy fashion, defeating F. F.\nElliott In the final heat of the ruce,\nwhich was postponed from the First of\nJuly.\nDaily News \"Want\" Ads. Get Results.\nINTERNATIONAL   LEAGUE.\nSTANDING OF THE CLUB8.\nWon Lost P.C.\nNewark  53 24 .688\nRochester    46 34 .569\nBuffalo    40 40 .500\nBaltimore  37 42 .468\nProvidence    337 42 .468\nMontreal   35 40 .466\nJersey City  34 42 .447\nToronto   30 47 .389\nR.  H. E.\nToronto   6   15    :(\nBuffalo     2     9     0\nBatteries\u2014Lush and Graham: Ful-\nlenweider; Jamieson and Lalonge.\nR. H. E.\nMontreal    4   13    0\nRochester   5   13    2\nBatteries\u2014Mattern and Madden:\nKeefe and Jiicklltscli.\nR.  H. E.\nBaltimore    5   11    2\nProvidence    6   11    1\nBatteries\u2014Taff and Egan; Mitchell\nand Onslow.\nR. H. E.\nJersey City   0   10    2\nNewark    7   14     1\nBatteries\u2014Thompson and Blair;\nAtchison and Higgins.\nTO SHOOT TODAY.\nThis afternoon at 2 o'clock tho\nLegion of Frontiersmen Civilian Rifle\nassociation will hold a shoot over lliG\n800. 900 and 1.000 yards ranges. All\nthose who Intend shooting arP asked\nto notify the club captain. D. O.\nThomas, anil obtain their ammunition\nfrom him.\nRAILWAY INTEREST\nIN CONSERVATION\nLarge Traffic Obtainable From Timber   Districts\u2014To   Prevent\nFires From Engine*.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nWINNIPEG, Man., July 8. \u2014 At\nthe forestry convention today J.\nS. Dennis, chief of the natural\nresources department of the Canadian\nPacific railway, spoke of the interest\nof the railways In fire protection and\nsaid that on account of the enormous\nconsumption of lumber by the railways, fully 5,000,000,000 feet of timber being in the equipment of the\nCanadian Pacific railway at the present time, and because of the benefits\nwhich will accrue to the country from\nwhich the railway draws its traffic,\nthrough the lumber Industry, the water powers and Industrial development,\nami the countless other benefits which\ncome througli the maintenance of a\nforest cover, the railways will always\nbe keenly Interested in the proper\nmanagement ot the forests.\nW. p. Dutton, president of the Great\nWest Lumber company, spoke on central western forest conditions and,\nviewing the question of the division\nof lands into agriculture and forest\nlands, concluded that It Is very necessary to keep settlers out of districts\nwhich are of their nature forest areas.\nR. J. Daley spoke on behalf of the\nprovince or Alberta and emphasized\nthe value of the forest cover on the\neastern slope ot the Rockies as a con-\nHappg Week Sale\nStriking Bargains\nThat Should Make\na Busy\nWednesday\nMorning\nAs the Btore closes today at 1 o'clock, we are putting on wme ex-^\ntraordlnary hurgains\u2014FOR THIS MORNING ONLY\u2014that should, by\ntheir merits, crowd enough business Into the morning for a whole day's\nwork, 4\nDon't think you can come down on Thursday morning and get these\ngoods at the same price as we are advertising them for today only, as\nyou can't.   The wlue will act AT ONCE.\nLadies' White Dresses Worth up to $12. For\nThis Morning Only, $5\nA nice selection of nice cool, becoming White Summer Dresses.\nAll of them up to the minute In style. This Is an opportunity to save\nmore than half of the price of a dainty Summer Dress, which won't\noccur ugain.\n20c Ladies' Summer Vests.    You Can Bug\nThem Today but Not Tomorrow for 10c\nLadies' Summer Vests of fine Egyptian Cotton In plain weave or\nribbed style, short sleeves or sle eveless,\n25c Cotton Hose.   This Morning, 15c\nLadles' Cotton Hose, extra fine thread and nice soft finish, full\nfashioned and perfectly fast dye. Regulur 2Gc vnlues. Will be sold for\nKm- a pair for this morning only.\nLadies' White Skirts Worth up to $3.75.\nToday, $1.45\nLadles'White Skirts, made of Linen, Repp or Indian Head. All\nsizes, but only one or two in some, so come early if you want one, as\nthis price Is for this morning only.\nMEAGHER & CO.\nThe Store for Style\nBaker Street\nserving influence on the water flow\nfor the wheat crops of the prairies.\nMalcolm Ross, representing Saskatchewan, urged the extension of tbe\npublic understanding of forests and\ntheir problems, and especially through\nthe establishment, of reserves Into\nwhich the people can go for recreation.\nDr. Hugh P. Parker of the College\nof Forestry, Syracuse university, outlined the work being done in his state\nwith regard to the creation of a strong\npublic sentiment In favor of reforestation and the activities of the forest\nschool In educating good forest engineers and rangers.\n\"Natural resources, potential and\nactual, Is the greatest study of governments and of Individuals,\" said\nVice-President George Bury of the\nCanadian Pacific railway, who addressed the convention on railway and\nforest protection. \"If governments on\nthis continent could be made to take\nthe same interest in the preservation\nof natural resources of the domain\nthat Is being taken by Individuals imbued with only the love of country,\nthe face of this continent would be\nchanged in a, generation. Your association exists because you believe that\nevery man, woninn and child In the\ncountry should understand the need\nof preventing the needless waste of\nthe timber resources, and a search of\nthe records of this company will show\njust how the executive officers sympathize with you in the undertaking.\n\"The Canadian Pacific railway, outside of the government of Germany,\nhas probably made the most elaborate study of the preservation of forests of any organization In the world.\nThe privately owned forests of Germany are nurtured with all the care\nthat highly educated forest experts\ncan give, and that Is what our company is doing hy having the forest\ntracts it owns guarded and patrolled\nby the most elaborate system that can\nbe suggested.\n\"Study of the natural resources of\nthe country has been made by this\ncompany with a two-fold purpose: to\nestimate the amount of traffic that\nmay be derived from year to year in\nthe territory adjucent to the line, and\nwhat production can foe made from\nthe timber and still preserve it to\nsuch an extent that 100 years hence\nforestry preservation and timber production will be bo advanced that the\nyield and revenue will be greater in\nthe same territory than today.\"\nMr. Bury went on to explain the\nelaborate precautions taken to prevent\nlocomotives starting fires, and added\nthat the federal and provincial governments must go further in this direction than has yet been done.\n\"It has heen estimated that the rev-\nenue derived by a railway from the\nproduction of one acre of heavily timbered land is equal to the accumulated\ntraffic of an acre of agricultural land\nfor 30 years,\" said Mr. Bury. \"You\nwill thus see what the preservation of\nforests adjacent to its lines means\nto a railway. The opening of timber\ntracts by a railway is followed by an\nInflux of trappers, prospectors, surveyors and settlers, each Intent upon\nhis own interests, and without the restraint of organized authority.\"\nForest Taxation.\nAfter detailing what the company\nhas been doing to safeguard its timber and the reserves in British Columbia, Mr. Bury concluded hy advocating an equitable system of forest\ntaxation, calculated to encourage corporations and Individuals to acquire\nand afforest landB for agriculture.\nSlash Danger,\nH. R. Macmillan, chief forester of\nBritish Columbia, In his paper on \"Forestry Progress In British Columbia,\"\ndwelt on the question of slash disposal and claims that the great proportion of forest fires in the Dominion\ncomes from the slash In the woods, ot\nwhich he said 673,000 acres were cre\nated every year. '\\\nHe paid a warm tribute to the power\nof the Canadian forestry association\nIn creating the attitude 'Which will\nbring about proper management of\ntimber lands.\nSTRAwiERRUROP\nHEAVY AT ROBSON\nOver Two Tons Shipped in Five Day*\n\u2014School Board to Elect Trustee\nand  Auditor.\n(Special to Tha Dally News.)\nROBSON, B. C, July 8.\u2014The crop ot\nsmall fruits for this season has been\nfairly heavy. For five days of last\nweek the net yield shipped out was\n2,170 lbs., aside from locul sales. Tha\nstrawberry plants have been most\nprolific. In one Instance a row 20\nyards in length yielded a full pall. The\nlatter end of the present week will see\nthe finish for the most part of the\nstrawberry crop.\nMrs. Charles Lindsay returned- to\nNelson on Saturday uigiit.\nThe annual mnetlng of the Robson\nschool board will be held on Saturday\nnext, at 10 a.m., at which time a trus-!\ntee for three years and an auditor will\nrequire to be elected. The returning\nofficers, both of whom are eligible for'\nre-election, are James Fowler and\nGordon R. Brown.\nAllan Ross of Nelson was a Robson\nvisitor on Friday.\nA. D. Clyde spent Sunday In GranS\nForks in the interests of the work ot\nthe Sunday school for the district.\nLinton Lundy, who is engaged tit\n6uildlng operations at Trail, spent the\nweek-end at his home here, returning\nto Trail on Sunday evening.\nMiss S. Lynch of Minneota, Man,,\nwho has been teaching tho publlo\nschool at Thrums for the yost year, returned home on Sunday evening. During the past week Miss Lynch wns a\nRobson visitor, the guest of her aunt\nund uncle, Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Clyde,   *\nMrs. Arthur Lundy and her little\nson Ernest spent Monday in Nelson. |\nB. O. Ballard, secretary of the\nSyrlnga Creek school board, spent\nMonday In Robson.\nAnglican service was held on Sun*\nday morning last. Communion will be\nheld In connection with the Baptist\nchurch service on Sunday next.\nLONDONERS SHIVERING.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLON DON, July 8.\u2014London Is\nashlver with cold. Overcoats hav\u00ab\nbeen in evidence on the streets and\nfireplaces have been called Into service. When chided yesterday for the\nweather, the superintendent of meteorological bureau sought to excuse the\nvagaries of July by a reminder of how*\nfine June had been. He said, also,\nthat the high pressure appeared to be\nmoving eastward from mid-Atlantic,\nund held out hopes of better weather\nto come.\nVESUVIUS STILL ACTIVE.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nNAPLES, July 8.\u2014The activity of\nVesuvius, which became pronounced\nlast spring, is growing more accelerated. Studies of Prof. Mercalll, director of the obaervatory, show that\n'the volcano from 1700 -to date waaf\nnever tranquil for a time surpassing\nseven consecutive years. At the end\nof the seven-year period which corresponds with the present year, th*\u00a3\nlength uf time having elapsed since\nthe eruption of 1906, the volcano enters an eruptive state. Prof. Mercalll\nsays, however, that this does not\nmean that a violent eruption necessarily Is Imminent. The cttrtor \u2022\u25a0\nemitting a quantity of vapor composed of chloric acid.\nDaily News \"Want\" Ada. Get Result*.\n PAQI MX\nffr'BaaiTJlriD*'''\nWEDNESDAY JULY I.\nJOHN  E. TAYLOR,\nGarters! Managtr.\nALEX. CHEYNE,\nSsc.-Tr.ae.\nCity and Fann Lands, Ltd.\nHEAD  OFFICE:\nNELSON, B. C.\nBranches at' Vancouver, Lethbridg., Moose Jaw\n8ucc\u00abssors to\nWESTERN  CANADA  INVESTMENT CO.\nREAL ESTATE\nFINANCIAL AGENTS\nLOANS\nSAFETY DEPOSIT BOXES\nFOR RENT.\nNEWS OF THE MARKETS\nPRODUCE\n\"1\nRASPBERRIES IN\nFROMLOCALRANCHES\nNew  Laid  Eggs Now Sell  at  Forty-\nfive Cents per\nDozen, i\nThe first local raspberries of the\nseason arrived in the hands of the\nlocal retailers yesterday and before\ntiiu vnd of the week they are expected\nto be on tl|e market In large quantities. New luld tggs have gone up In\nprice and are now retailing at 45c\nper dozen. There has been a general\nreduction in the price of vegetables\nduring the past Week and quite a\nnumber of fruits aro on the market.\nToday's quotations are as follows:\nFoodstuffs.\nLake of the Woods, bag. .$ 1.90\nRoyal Household   1.85\nKing's Quality   ,  1.90\nPurity  Flour     1.90\nRol.In   Hood     1.90\nGold Drop Flour  1.85\nMother's Favorite    1.75\nBig Loaf Flour   l.fjj\nDairy Products.\nButter, Creamery, per |b,,S7*\/i<8) .40\nButter, Dairy, Pr,\nCurlew  butter,   per  lb.   ..\nButter, fresh, Hazelwood\nCheese, Canadian, per lb,\nCheese, Btllton, per lb...\nCheese, Swiss, per lb. ..\nHugs,   new   laid,   per doz.\nBiggs, eastern \t\nVegetables.\nLettuce, per lb\t\nParsley \t\nDry Onions, 4 lbs. for ..\nCabbage, local, each  ....\nPotatoes   \t\nRadishes, 4 bunches for .\nAsparagus   \t\nIthubnrii, 8 Tor \t\narson Onions', 3 for ....\nCucumbers,   each   \t\nCalifornia onions, 4 lbs...\nNew potatoes, 4 lbs '\nTomatoes,   per   lb\t\nNew carrots, 4 for \t\nNew Ucets, 4 for \t\nFruits.\nApples,  per box   \t\nOranges,   Valencia   \t\nBananas,  per doz\t\nLemons,  per doz\t\nHoney, comb, per lb.   ...\nHoney, 1-lb.  jars   \t\nLocal  strawberries,  box..\nLimes, per doz\t\nPlums, per doz\t\nTeaches,   per  lb,   \t\nRaspberries, % pis, 2 for\nPie cherries, 2 boxes ....\nTtthle, white, box   \t\nTable,  black,  lb\t\nCantaloupes,  each     ,20\nWatermelons,   lb  ]o8\nMeats.\nReef,   wholesale    12% (ft .1(1\nPork,  wholesale ir.if?  ,ir\nMutton,   wholesale    15\u00ae .18\nyea],   wholesale    15*7I> .20\n\u25a0Fresh killed beef, retail.,    .iOfli   28\n.25\u00ae -30\n.40\n.40\n.20fi  .25\n.209 .25\n,ZB& .40\n.45\n.30\n.15\n.05\n.25\n.101\u00ae .15\n.76\n.10\n\u25a012%\n.25\n..10\n.15\u00ae .25\n.25\n.25\n.25\n.10\n.10\n.7501.25\n.COftj) ,C0\n.40\n.50\n.25\n.25\u00ae .30\n-12H\n.20\n.15\n.20\n.25\n.25\n.10\n.Hnms, retail   \t\n.22 (ffl'.25\n\u25a0Bacon,   reliiil   \t\nMat ,as\nLard    retail   \t\n.ififfl .sn\nOHlokens   retail  \t\nflriusflffes. retnll  ........\n1QiSi   \u2022>-;\nTurkey.   tier lb\t\n.32 <Hi  .35\nrtneue.   per   \u2022*-\t\n.Pfifil    98\nDucks, per lb.   \t\n,25\u00a9 .30\nSugar.\nGranulated, n. c   Cnne,\n100-lh   snekq  \t\n0.30\nGranulated   R.   C\u201e   20-lb.\npnek   \t\n1.35\nLimin suiwr, 2 lbs   \t\n9k\nRrnwn  siurnr   3'-'.  His.   ...\nT,\nfivrnri,  mn\u00bbte   bottle   ....\n.no\nSyrup, gallon   \t\n2.00\nMONTREAL  PROVISION   MARKET.\nfttv nntiv News Teased wire.) '\nWONTP'PAT,. July S\u2014Rutter is\nrillicr otilet and the undertone eosv,\nChf.eCo |j, nnleter nnd th\" ^elln-' Is\n'neiined tn be easier. Eggs, active\nnl\"' Pteadv.\nCheese, finest wtVaffirns, laW\u00a9*ill%!\nfln\u00ab\u00bbJt   enptnrno    13^1!ltAe.\nTinner. ebM-wt ereamery, 2firtt2fi M:\naer.-.nfl\u00abj. 9r,H(S)9r,a'.e\nWi*<-V fresh.   22^n3C.\nPork, hpnvv Cnnfiflq, ?\u00bb>nrt r\u00bb\u00ab\u00abJt\nhirr-do, rffi\u00ae45ft; nlnmi. 8nn; shift\nbl*t bock barrels, 45^650;   pieces, 29e\nSTOCKS\nWINNIPEG  STOCKS.\n(By Daily Newa LeasM Wire.)\nRid      Asked\nCanada Fire, F,P  155\nCom    Loan            110\nF.mpir*, Loan    112%    110\nn. p. Permanent    130       I3n%\nHome Investment    134       140\nNor. Canada Mort 115       135\nNor. Crown 'Rank       35 80-4\nNor. Mdft.    1H2       107%\nNor   Truct ... .\u25a0  120\nOccidental Fire  103       110\nPtnndarrt Trust            170 \"\"\nUnion Rank   108%    140\nWlrniineir r. * 0         106\nS. A. Warrants         11(10\nSales:   1  Union Rnnk. 140';  15 Nor.\nCrown. SCVi;   17 Nor, Trusts.  122.\nNEW YORK MARKET STEADY.\nfBy Dally News Leased Wlre.l\nNEW YORK, .luiy 8.\u2014Although the\nstock market was subjected to further depressing influences today It\nmaintained a fair degree of steadiness. Union pacific was the only\nimportant stock which at its low Price\nof the day showed a loss of as much\nas a point. Government bonds showed Further heaviness. The 2s. which\nrecently broke below par for the first\nthne, today sold at the recent -bid\nprice of'99, a decline of a point from\nthe lost previous sale. The 4s sold\nat 113. the price recently bid, and\nthen were offered at 112%, a decline\n\u25a0 of Vi'-oit call on the day.\nThe   bond   market   in   general   wns\nIrregular with a lower trend.\nTotal sales, par value, 11,668,000,\nThe following New York stock market quotations are supplied by Osier,\nHammond   &   Nanton,  Winnipeg.\nOpen   Close\nAmalgamate\". Copper  \u2022\u2022    63%      63\nAmerican Car Foundry\nAmerican Locomotive\nAmerican  Smelting   ..\nAmerican Sugar   \t\nAmerican Tobacco  ...\nAnaconda  \t\nAtchison   \t\nBaltimore & Ohio ....\nBrooklyn   Rapid   T.   ..\nCanadian Pacific\t\nChesapeake & Ohio  ..\nChicago & Alton\t\nChicago, M. & St. Paul\nChicago & Northwestern\nConsolidated Gas  ...\nDelaware & Hudson  .\nErie \t\n13rie, 1st pfd\t\nErie, 2nd pfd\t\nGeneral   Electric   \t\nGreat Northern, pfd\nGreat Northern Ore'.\nIllinois Central   \t\nInterboro \t\nKansas City Southern\nLehigh Valley \t\nLouisville & Nashville\nM. St. P. & S.S.M. (Boo) 122%\nMissouri, Kanniw & T...    21\n-Missouri Pacific\n61%\n.    95%\n86%\n214%\n.    52%\n' 102%\n24%\n30\n2C%\n144%\nNew York Central  \t\nNorthern  Pacific  \t\nPennsylvania   \t\nReading   \t\nSouthern  Pacific   \t\nSouthern Railway \t\nTenn. Copper \t\nTexas Pacific  \t\nTwin City   \t\nUnion  Pacific   \t\nC. S,  Rubber   \t\nU.  S. Bteel   \t\nU. S. Steel, pfd\t\nUtah   Copper   \t\nWabash   \t\nWestern  Union   \t\nWisconsin  Central\nTotal sales:    131,100.\nSPOKANE   MARKETS.\n(Special tn The Dallv Newa.l\n(Reported by St. Denis & Lawrence.)\n97\n107%\n111\n156%\n!'2%\n28\n52%\n104 U\n41%\n27\n61%\n107\n206\n31%\n95%\n92\n86%\n214\n52%\n8\n102\n127\n129%\n150\n24%\n38\n31\n137%\n123\n31\n111%\n13%\n26\n144%\n130%\n121%\n20%\n29%\n96%\n107%\n111\n156\n92%\n20%\n27%\n13%\n102\n144%\n60%\n52\n104%\n41%\n2%\nfio%\n44\nR.  C. Copper   ....\nCaledonia   \t\nCan. Consolidated\nGranby \t\nInternational Coal\nLucky Jim \t\nMoGllllvray  \t\nNugget  \t\nRambler-Cariboo   .\nExtension \t\nSnowstorm \t\nStandard  \t\nStewart   \t\nUtlca   \t\nRid\n.? 2.00\n.      .17%\n,  70.00\n.  54.00\n.      .34\n.       .05%\n.      .13%\n.      .20\n.      .29\n1.1S\n1.18\n.12\nAsked\n% 2.50\n.21 %\n80.00\n55.00\n.38\n.07%\n\u25a0 14%\n.30\n1.35\n1.54\n.18\nTORONTO STOCKS.\n(By Daily Npwh Leased Wire.)\nBrazilian,   84%\u00ae84.\nConsumers <ivas. 173.\nWinnipeg, 100%fi]l90.\nSpanish River, 48.\nTwin  City,   102%ffil02.\nBollinger, 16\u00ae16%,\nImperial, 211.\nMaple Loaf   pfd.   81%\u00ae>fll,\nCanadian Gil (.fields, 4%.\nDome Lake,  75.\nLONDON     MARKET    UNSETTLED\n(\"Rv   TJnlly   New*,   T.onsed   Wlro 1\nLondon. July s.\u2014The commenee-\nment of the mining settlement restricted Impfneqs on the stoeit ex-\nrhnnge today but tbe market Imd nn\nunsettled *on\u00b0 on account of the\nRilknrt situation and fV'rs of the\nRand labor trouble spreading to tbe\nnatives. The Int'or wns responsible\nfor weakness in gold mint\", nnd\natihr'An in which Par's iq Interested,\nRritlsb qecurttieo were mimiorter. hut\nmost of the Other se'-tlons firmed\nlower-. American pAOurltta moved 1 r-\n\"ei-it1;ir!\u00bbF flm-i-iff th\u201e Qnf|v (rN.ilnrr\nT,nter  the   hank   TnHnr-   in   PUtsblirrf\nl\">rl    n    rUn-PwUr    of font    f,n,l    (),n    ]|\u201et\nslowly declined.  The closing was dull.\nMoney and dlsroiim rates were qulfx\nMONTREAL  PRICES SAGGING.\n\/Bv   TV,Mr   fl\ne*\u00bb-   T,en\nit\nr.VTTJTTM,\nJulv    0\n\u2014Pri\u00bb\u00ab,\n'nue.l   tn  see-  '.n\nth,.  lne\na]   r'neV\nl*et\n'odnr      The\n,nnn wa\nr, rteflW\niei\n)\\v    fill    tl-f\".\n\"h       (ho\nIIpI    -he\nfDI\nn-he\u00bb   he\nw^. thn\n'\"n\nPott-.,    sir\n'.\u25a0\u00ab      (ho\nn-i'^-r,\n*,f-\n1 to 71 and\nthe common ?\n*ViTt     ennt'mieo\ntr      hot\n1     Its    r*T\n\u25a0lot\n'\u00ab\"  nt   *t.   P\n\"rl    Detr\ntill   renn\noil-'--    tnqe    of    li     no\n\"-t        T\u201e\n'\u25a0tired Mntitr-onl\n\"V,OT,re,l\n'mr.-o..o\nho\nrecover'\"     f\nIh\"      In\not     *- \u2014\nhigher to 228 on purchnspp of a few\noh-**ft^ Vm\u2122 eseot'o rni| inev 1 tn ft\n\u2022in.T Tioyni. (.nnr*  out  In   broken   lot-\nMETALS\nNEW YORK METAL MARKETS\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nNEW YORK; July 8.\u2014Copper\u2014\nNominal. Standard spot, 13.75f@14.30;\nAugust, 13.751(14.25; \u25a0September, 13.62\n014.80; electrolytic, 14.50fl>iE.00; lake,\n14.C2fliil5.25; casting, 14.50 AM 4.75.\nLondon, easy. Spot, \u00a363 3b ltd; futures,   \u00a363 5s. .\nTin\u2014'Weaker. Spot, J}39.20<fi-3!\u00bb.r.0:\nJuly, $39,050:39.30; August, $39.00(fp\n39.25. London, easy. Spot, \u00a3178 10s;\nfutures,   \u00a3179  5s.\nSpelter\u2014Firm. $5.30#5.4O. London,\n\u00a320  His.\nIron\u2014Dull. Cleveland warrants in\nLondon, 55s 10%d.\nGRAIN\nWHEAT MARKET WEAK.\n(Bv Datlv News Leased Wire.)\nWINNIPEG. July 8i\u2014-Wheat markets were generally weak again on\n-thc improved crop conditions and a\ncontinued liquidation since Monday,\nWinnipeg July was firm on short\ncovering, closing unchanged. Winnipeg opened %'3'%c lower and closed\nunchanged to %c lower. Minneapolis opened %-Si%c lower and closed\n%\u00aeTic lower.    Chicago opened  %c\nlower to V' higher \"nd closed '\nlower. The cash demand for all\ngrades of wheat continues dull with\nOfferings fairly liberal, while export\niiiiiulry. Is dull. Cash prices closed\nunchanged  for  contract  grades.\nMats and flax were weaker in sympathy with wheat. Cash oats closed\nunchanged, options unehaiiKud to %<\"\nlower. Cash flu* closed %flilc lower\nund options %&Ii4cHower.\nWinnipeg, wheat, close\u2014July, '.'Sc;\nOctober, 91%r;   December, 90%c.\nMinneapolis, wheal, close\u2014July,\n8S?tc;   September,   91%c;   December,\nChicago, Wheat, close\u2014July, S8c;\nSeptember, 88V';   December. 92Vi<\\\nWinnipeg, oats, close\u2014July, 85c;\n1 ictober, 37   c,\nWHEAT CROP IS    '\nEQUAL TO BEST\nCanadian Northern Well Prepared to\nHandle Bumper Crop\u2014Reports\nUniformly Favorable.\n(By Daily News Leased Wlre.1\nTORONTO, July 8.\u2014\"There Is every\nindication that the wheat crop this\nyear will l\u00bbe equal to the best yield\nIn the past and the Canadian Northern railway will be in better shape\nthan ever before to take care of it.\"\n\u25a0 This Is what Sir William Mackenzie,\nwho has returned from a tour through\nthe west, suid today about prospects\nout there. \"I was not through the\nwhole country myself,\" he went on,\n\"but the reports of our officials\nthroughout the west are uniformly favorable,   I expect a very large crop.\n\"We shall be In good shape to handle a bumper crop. We have more\nrolling stock and our lines are In better condition. Our terminal facilities\naro excellent. If we find the strain\nat Port William getting severe we\ncan switch over to Duluth, By the\nmiddle of the winter I expect we shall\nbe able to move grain right to Montreal by rail. The connecting lines\nare rapidly approaching completion.\nAt -present, of courBe, the Canadian\nPacific affords the only means of shipping grain east, but In another few\nmonths there will be three\u2014the Grand\nTrunk Pacific and our own line us\nwell.\"\n\"Do you expect the present financial stringency to affect the movement of the crops unfavorably?\" ho\nwas asked.\n''No, I don't think bo. The banks\nalways seem to be able to scrape together enough for that.\"\n:t.mi;il storkhuhhTK meeting, to fill a\nvacancy. Ho represents approximately 163.0QU shares held by Assets\nKializtftion company, as collateral for\n1 Hited Copper company $1,000,000\nloan.\nOrganization meeting for the new\ndirectorate will probably be held next\nweek in New York.\nIt Is understood that the Helnse domination of thc Ohio company has\nvirtually ended, and there it; doubt as\nto whether he will be re-elected chairman of the executive committee.\u2014\nBoston News Bureau.\nMINING  CONGRESS TO   MEET.\nThc next annua) meeting of the\nAmerican Mining congress will be\nheld in Philadelphia the week of Oct.\n20. Secretary Gallbreath promises an\nunusually Interesting program, aiiiosg\nother featureK of the meeting will be a\nmining machinery exposition, at which\nIt Is expected all tiie leading mumi-\ntacturers will have exhibits.\u2014New\nYork Mining and Engineering World.\nMINING   NEW8.\nTO DISCUSS NEED\n;    FOR COMMISSION\nNelson Board of Trade Receives Letter From Premier Regarding Proposed Mining Enquiry.\n\u25a0In reply to a letter from the Nelson\nboard of trade advocating the appointment of a commission to Investigate\nthe needs of the lead and zinc mining\nIndustries of Canada, Premier Bordon\nhas written stating that he has submitted the matter to the federal minister of mines. The board of trade\nwill discuss the question nt the monthly meeting at 8 o'clock tomorrow evening.\nASK COMPENSATION\nFOR MINER'S DEATH\nRelatives  of   Manus   McShane   Make\nClaim for Fifteen Hundred Dollars From Bluebell Company.\nActing as.an arbitrator under thc\nWorkman's Compensation act, Judge\nPorin will this morning hear presented a claim for $1,600 on behalf of the\nrelatives of Manus McShane, who was\nsuffocated at tho Bluebell mine at\nRiondel on April 2, 11)12. Alexander\nMacnell of Ferula will appear for the\nclaimants und the mining compnny\nwill be represented 'by C. R. Hamilton, K.C.\nMAY MAKE CLAIM\nAGAINST COMPANY\nLetters of Administration   of   Estate\nof Employe of mother Lode Mine\nOrdered Issued.\nLetters of administration in the\nestate of the late John Ghnderson\nWerner were ordered to he issued to\nW. B. Melsaac. secretary of Ymlr Miners' union, by Judge Forin In chambers yesterday morning on application\nof Alexander Macnell of Fernle. The\nlate Mr. Werner died on March 25\nlaBt following an accident at the\nMother Lodo mine at Sheep Creek.\nHe left ri*o property, the application\nyesterday being the forerunner of a\nclaim against the Mother Lode Sheep\nCreek Mining company for damages.\nThe deceased is survived by a mother,\nwho lives in Norway.\nHEINZE LOSES CONTROL\nOF OHIO COPPER\nThe election of Walter I. Badger,\nwho for years represented the late\nHenry H. Rogers in his Massachusetts\ngas litigation, and who subsequently\nacted In a legal capacity for F. A.\nHelnze, to the directorate of the Ohio\nCopper Mining company is understood\nto have been effected because of hla\nlarge personal stock ownership In the\ncompany, and not as a Helnze representative.\nWalter C. Lewis, also a new director, represents Walker Bros, of Salt\nl<ake, who are understood to have been\nInterested prior to Heinzt-'s acquisition\nof control.\nJohn W. HcKInnon became a director a few days prior to Wednesday's\nFRUITVALE NOTES.\nfSosdsl to Tiie Dallv Newa.l\nFRi'ITVALI':, 1!. C July S.- -Mr. and\nMrs Varseveid of Frultvale, B.C.,hav\nannounced the engagement of their\ndaughter, Miss Anna C. L. Van Varseveid, to Albert J. Until of Frultvale.\nson of Albert R Hath of Brighton.\nEngland.\nJohn Hislop and    Miss    Edna ii\nvisiting here today.\nJohn   Hngelen,   who  is  leaving  thin\ndistrict for thc  prairie,  Is giving\nfiii'ewell  dunce  nnd  social  evening  on\nThursday, July 10, :it the achool house,\nSLOCAN MEMBER\nVISITS GLENBANK\nWilliam   Hunter   Addresses   Glenbank\nImprovement  Association\u2014Road\nAllowance Appropriated.\n\u2022\"Special to Tbe Dallv N\u00bbwO\nGLENBANK, 1;. C., July B.-William\nHunter, M.I'.r. for the Sloean riding,\nviflted Glenhaiik on July 2, and, accompanied by Murdoch McLean, wa*\ndriven through tho ranching district,\nInspecting roads on which tho government lias already done work, also\nseveral where Improvements have been\nsuggested. Mr. Hunter expressed hlm-\nseir as greatly surprised with the\ngrowth made since his last visit some\ntwo years ago,\nA meeting of the Glenbank Improvement assoelatloii wan held on Wednesday evening in the school building\nwith about 30 present. G. H. Gardner\npresided.\nWhen called <m, Mr, Hunter gave a\nbrief outline of the government's policy In helping the farmer, both directly and Indirectly, The speaker alsr\nannounced definitely that a :t3-ft. road\nallowance had been appropriated fr\nthc Peters properly, and would be put\ninto fairly good Condition during the\nprcseni season, thus* connecting the\nsettlers on the Brouse road with those'\non Victoria .road, The fact that this\nland, an old erywit grant, had never\nbeen registered, made It possible for\ntbe government to take over anything\nunder one-twentieth of the original\nquarter section. .\nSeveral oja'slions regarding detain,\nof road-making, toed supply, etc., were\nanswered satisfactorily, and on the\nmatter of cheap money being brought\nUp, the member spoke at some length\nof the government's side of the question and the difClcullfeH of framing n\nbill which would benefit the actual\nsettler rather than the real estate man.\nMr. Hunter expressed tbe opinion that\nsuch a bill could In time be evolved.\nLocal marketing conditions were\nthen discussed, and the meeting adjourned.\nAt thc eloping of the Glenbank\nschool for the summer vacation certificates of honor wero given to Hunter\nGardner for proficiency; to Jacob\nWeins for conduct, and to Peter Pauls\nfor regular anil punctual attendance.\nMr. and Mrs. LaRue, Sr., arrived on\n.lime 30 from Ontario, and arc the\nguests of their son, Robert LaRue.\nFive acres on the front of the Rata-\nShave in Comfort\nv* 70a \u00ab\u00abbi <j uirktr \u00abiiar. |>tMMn\ntar rhtTM IbaniH arnr li*dtc(or\u00abI I\nU* j00 vant to kwji jour faM In Ih* |\nFinkof oondilion, fruvfiom i-iini'li'*'\n\u2022net-owing hain, Kralcliw or tut*!\nTli*n honajoar raiorSO In at our\n\u2022\u25a0(\u2022\u2022nt* on \u25a0 \u2022'#'loral*d Bon*.\nTakajonr fin*at tiliwleor juar tHMrett ;\u2022\nfivoit* favMroliMor bona all duj,i\n\u2022*MU,l*ill ba (ha aame\u2014upcrfaciaharv-\nThe Perforated Hon* lathe only bona niode^\nthat can !\u00bb\u25a0 wnA br th* ordinary man ; \u25a0\nbarber'* akill or experience being required.\nTbf \u2022mall deftly rounded bole* In tbi\u00bb new boosj\nal-tt,lm*!> di-pi\u00bb* of thin hacking, pulling, Ini* I\ntatiugedge which Bo amount of old-fashioned I\nhoning could erer remove. Tbe picture ahowa how I\nTh* bole* Prevent Wlr\u00ab*Kdi\u00bb nnd natomtvl\ntically prodoce*i\u00abrf*ctkeen*ba*lngedge.Tbo f\nPerforated Hon* ia made from nn eicept-\nionallr Sue natural -.tone, found la Britiih\nOotumbia. It lie-UM lifetime. If jour de\ncannot aapplj ron, eend mbl* lame and i\nDollar and wawill .nnd jeu at once, all\nchuruaa prepaid n Tarf orated Hone\npacked in a neat pocket cane. '\nTry It Thlrlr Daya FHV.K.l\nVnlcHWioa find itlMreavmoothf\ncuiting flee on >ourratorthatw\nfeela like ailk oa xonr I uce, return!\nit nt our eipunKH Bud get yonr \\\nmoner hack Immediate lr.\nSend toduy for FHKE\nBooklet .Th* Sacral\nol Eaar Khavlnf,\nTOE PI'ItFOKATKlJ It ONE CO.\n3 Power llulldlng., Wnlknrrllle, Ontario, 4\nMtjeriiiimt Til. Ktiyul Bank of Oaitada.\nHIL1> WANTKfc\nNtLSON   IMPLOVMENT   AOINCV\nP. A. NswsJI, MaMfW.\n\u00ab\"WEgOJpTLT FURNISHED.\nPHONE 171 BOX Ml\ntin' place have been sold hy P. Tenner\nto parties who are expected from    the\nprairie daily,\nJohn Peters, Sr*, has purchased a\nBye-passenger high-power tuurlng car,\nl lie only one of which the district can\nat present buaut.\n.Miss Harriet Holder arrived on July\n\u25a0 troiu Saskatoon, and is the guest ot\ntits. Fletcher Kirk.\nMAN'S THROAT SLASHED\nFROM  EAR TO EAR\nVANCOUVER, ii. 0., July 8.\u2014Supposedly u case of suicide arrived to-\nuay in this city on board the steamer\nbeima from north waters, the body ot\na man whose throat was slushed trom\near to car. An envelope In the pOO-\nttci bore Hie word \"intnean.\" Tne\nman was pickeu up at i'oweil river.\nTHE WORKINGMAN'S EMPLOYMENT AGENCY.\nWANTED\u2014Circular sawyer: circular filer; 2nd class engineer; railway graders. Italians; mother and\ndaughter, cook and waitress, summer\nhotel: waitresses, ISO, $35 and HO;\nwoman cook, small hotel: chambermaid.\nW. Parkar, 312 Baker St., Phone 288.\nELFOnp BOAT COMPANY. LIMITED\nBoat Bullderg and Livery.* 5nK SUB-\nMles,    oars,    paddles,    batteries,    spark\ntroit Gray, Tuonan stationary motora,\nWisconsin detachable lfc horse power\nraw bout motors. Write for catalogue.\nHhone ltk any hour day or nlsht for\njaunch trip. '     r     *\"jfJS\nWANTED-QIrl\n-\u25a0;-.' \u25a0 \"n\u2014Jlrls    at    Nelson  Jam   and\nCanning factory. E0-tf.\nWANTED\u2014A   mold   for   general   hoUBC\nWork.    Wftiies  H5   per   month.    Apply\nJo   K   R.   Ttrry,   corner   of  Ward  and\nCarbonate -irtet. sj_.tf.\nHOUSE FpK EXCHANGE In Kitsllano,\none of the besi residential sections in\nVancouver, for residence In Nelson.   W.\n1.   Newcom.'c,  Baker street, (successor\n|o Fred Irvlni & Co.) fi-tt.\nWANTED\u2014Laying hens.    Give full par-\nticulari as to breed and price.   Apply\nto^boj*. 868, Nelson, B.C. 02-tr.\nDAILY NttWt        r\nCLASSIFIED AD RATH\nOn* Milt a wtrrf psr Insertlsn, f\u00ab|\nosnts \u25a0 word psr wssk, fiftson \u00ab\nword   psr  month  when  cash  \u00ab...\npsnlssj tho Sfslsr.   Othsrwiw on* \u2022\npar word  psr Inssrtien strsight\nseoaunts apansd fsr Want Ads,   Mill\nmum charge tt cents.\t\nHOTEL DIRECTOF\n\u2022HER1ROOKE HOTEL\nNatsan, \u25a0. C.\nOno minute's wslk from C.P.R,  .-\ntion.     Culsln*   unexcelled;   well   besaj\nand ventilated.\nLAVIONB A DUNK.\nBusiness Directory]\nAMAYERS\n3. W. WIDDOW80N, A8SATER All\nChemist. Box Allw, Nelson, B.J\nCharges: Gold, silver, copper or le\/\nIl each; gold-silver, fl.EO; allvur-lei\nII.M.    Other metals on application. I\nAUCTIONEER!\nC. A. WATERMAN ft CO.-P.O. BoSl\nNELSON   AUCTION, af ART-W . _\nLBR, licensed auctioneer.   Auction i_\nsalsa rooms.  s\u00bb Ward street. Psoas I\nWANTED-Laundry work to toko home.\nTerms reasonable.    Phono L114.       \u202267-C\nWANTED\u2014Man   nnd   wife,   Scotch,   de-\nHire  employment    Used   to  farming  In\nall branches; over two years lu Canada;\n\u00a32  r?m.Uyi,i{iber'  rehfthlc.    Apply Box\n\u00abw. Dally News. ao-c\nWANTED\u2014By married man. work on\nranch     or    anything;    elae,    Apply\nM.E.D., Dally News. *>70-6\nWANTED\u2014Thirty   funny   sacks   or\nmoss, free from sand nnd dirt  State\nPrice per sack.   Ed. GriMclIe, Florist,\nN'n'Hon- _^^_ 70-lf.\nWANTED\u2014Competent       teacher     at\nBull    River   Bridge   school.     Apply\nSecretary    School   Board,   Bull   River\nBridge  School  District. 71-6\nBiliousness-\nis certainly one of the most disagreeable ailments which flesh is heir to.\nCoated tongue\u2014bitter taste in the\nmouth\u2014 nauf ca j\u2014 dizziness \u2014 these\ncombine to make life a burden. The\ncause is a disordered liver\u2014the cure\nDr. Morse's Indian Root Pills. They\ngo straight to the root of the trouble,\nput the liver right, cleanse the stomach and bowels, clear the tongue and\ntake away the bitter taste from thc\nmouth. At thc first sign of bilious*\nnesstake\nDr. Morse's   M\nIndian Root Pill*\nDaily News\nJob Department\n.Bookbinding\nRuling\nPrinting\nOf All Kinds\nEverything You Need\nin These Lines\nPrices and Samples on\nApplication to\nDaily News Job Dept\n\\ Nelson\/ B.tC^ \"\nWATER NOTICE.\nNotice Is hereby given that tfredec-\nIck iicioliicKMon ur Nelson, D.C., will\napply ior a license to take and use\nuvii nniiL-rs mencs ot wator out ot\nAnderson tire'ekj which (Iowa In u nor-\nliieny   uutiCMon   uiiouxn   lot   J\u00bbi   unu\ncinpuee unu west arm of Kootenay\nlake,   near  Clui.   shipyards.   Nelson,\nu.u.\nihe water will be diverted at block\n81, lot UT, mid will be used lor agricultural unu domestic purposes on\nthe land described as bloOKS 30 ana\nIB, Lot U7, Kootenay district,\nThis notice was posted on the\nground on the 8th day Ot July, litis.\nih\u201e application will be filed in the\noffice 01 the water ftettorder at Nel*\nBOIl,   0,0,\nUbjoctiona may be filed with the\nsaid Water Iteeorder or with tho\nComptroller ot Water Rights, parliament   buildings,   victoria,   li.O.\nl-'UEDEltK:k >IENl>JtI(JKSON,\nApplicant.\nBy Thorold hulls,\n73-la,w-4. Agent.\nENGlNEIOIt WANTED\u2014With third\nclass B, C. papers, Must he thoroughly competent. | For pnrllcuhirB\nwrite p(lrt(l Rico Lumber Company.\nLimited,  Moyie,  R.C. 71-5\nMORTGAGE   SALE   OF  VALUABLE\nRESIDENTIAL PROPERTY\nIn   the   Supreme   Court   of   British\nColumbia,\nBetween the Oivat-West Life Assurance\nCompany, Plaintiff;\nEmily Olivia Stewurt, and Emily Olivia\nStewart as Executrix or the Estate\nof Henry Alexander Stewart, Deceased,   Defendant.\nunder arid by virtue of the judgment\n\u00bbr the Honorable Mr. Justice Morrison,\ndated the (ith day of November, 1912,\niVul ill\u201e, nur8U<-ii^ or said jiiUBment,\ntttere will be offered for sale nt public\nauction by Samuel Parker Tuck, Sheriff\nfor the county of Kootenay, on Friday,\nthe IStli day of July, 1913, nt the hour\nor 12 o'clock noon, at the office of the\nsaid sheriff In the courthouse: at tho\ncity or Nelson, B.C., the following property, namely:\nLots 10, 11 and 12, In Block 26, according to official plan Or subdivision or\nAddition \"A\" to the city of Nelson,\nregistered In the land replstry office at\nBald city,  and numbered 349.\nSaid property is Bubject to a reserve\nbidding and leave lias been granted to\nthe plaintiff herein, tho mortgagee of\nsaid property, or an agent on its behalf, to hid at the sale.\nTwenty per cent of purchase money\nto be paid In cash nt the time or sale\nand the balance in accordance with the\nconditions  or sale. \u2022   \u25a0\nSaid conditions of sale may bo Inspected at tho time or the sale or on\napplication to:\nSAMUEL  PARKER  TUCK,\nsheriff of the County  of\nSouth  Kootenny.\nOr to:\nMESSRS.   HAMILTON   &  WRAGGE,\nNelson. B.C.\nOr to the Solicitors for the Mortgagee:\nMESSRS.   WOODWORTH,   CltEAQH,\nBANTON   &   FISHER,\nRoomB 710-1B Bower  Building,\nM Granville St., Vancouver, B.C.\nThe above Is the form of the advertisement as approved of and settled by\nMessrs.   Woodwortb,   Creagh.   Banton   &\nFisher,  Solicitors for the Plalntirf.\n - 57-12\n1696-12\nMORTGAGE  SALE  OF  VALUABLE\nRESIDENTIAL PROPERTY\nIn   the   Supreme   Court   of   British\nColumbia,\nBetween the Great-West Life Assurance\nCompany,   Plaintiff;\n\u2014and\u2014\nAllan M. C. Lean, Defendant.\nUnder and hy virtue of the judgment\nor tho Honorable Mr. Justice Morrison,\ndated the fith day of November, 1912,\nand In pursuance of said judgment,\nthere will be offered for sale at public\nauction by Samuel Parker Tuck. Sheriff\nTor tho county of South Kootenay, on\nFriday, the 18th day of July, 1913, at\nthe hour of 12 o'clock noon, at the of*\nfire of the said sheriff in tho courthouse\nat the city of Nelson, B.C., the follow-\ning property, namely:\nLot -tt. in Block 7, In Buhdlvlslon of\nLot 150, Group 1, West Division Kootenay district,  aceordlng to Map M9.\nSaid property Is subject to a reserve\nbidding and leave has been granted to\nthe plaintiff herein, the mortgagee of\nsaid property, or an agent on its behalf, to bid at the sale.\nTwenty per cent of purchase money\nto be paid in cash at the time ot sale\nand the balance in accordance with the\nconditions  of sale.\nSaid conditions of Bale ntny be Inspected at the time of the sale or on\napplication to:\nSAMUEL PARKER TUCK,\nSheriff of  the County  of\nSouth  Kootenay.\nOr to:\nMESSRS.   HAMILTON  & WRAGGE,\nNelson. B.C.\nOr to the Solicitors for the Mortgagee:\nMESSRS.   WOODWORTH,   CREAGH,\nBANTON   &   FISHER,\nRooms 710-15 Bower Building.\n543 Granville St., Vancouver, B.C.\nThe above Is the form of the advertisement as approved of and settled by\nMessrs.   Woodwortb,   Creagh,   Banton   &\nFisher, Solicitors tor tho Plaintiff.\n-.-\u2022..       . '   . 67-12\nWANTED-Work   by   gainers     by\nhour or day;   also general housework by hour by experienced woman.\nWeaver, 721 Stanley. \u00bb72-0\nWANTED-Posltlon as chambermaid\nor  housekeeper.    Box  S. L\u201e Dally\nNews. >7a-8\nFOR RENTrfurnlflhed aulteT\" \"with\nJSSXA c\u00a3okln* utensils and all 'infill\nsupplied. Kerr Apartment block. Iffl-tf.\nFOB RENT-Summer homo, goodliouBe;\nIdeal location, only 1% miles from city\nwater frontage, boat house, |loo for Bea-\nBon.   Apply Box 1083,  Nelson. 63-tf\nGROCERIES\nA. KAODONALD St OT.. WHOL\u2014-\nGrocers sod Provision Merchants.\nporters of Teas, Coffees, Apices, Dl\nFruits,   Staple  and   Fancy  Oroo.nl\nTobaccos, cigars. Butter, Eggs, cnsjPJ\nand  Packing  House  Produce,   onf\nand  warehouse corner of  Front_\nHalt   streets.    P.   O,   Box 1M.\nphones U snd >\nWHOLESALE PRODUCE\nATiTlKHUnSlLL'^^\nImporters snd Manufacturers' At\nProduce, fruits, flour and Fssd.\nBot M. Nelson. B.C.   Pbons UL\nELECTRICAL   SUPPLIES\nJ. HT1\u00abNOTOsiri\u00bbM^a^^\nBlock. Installation of electrical mir\nchlnery, telephone plants, house wlrlnL\nRcislr work. Supplies carried. Phot]\nATT. ' P. O. Box 165.\nHOUSE CLEANING\nWINDOWS,   CARPET   AND   CHIMN'\ncleaning.   House cleaning our apecialt]\nAwnings,   new snd repairs.     VaciWi\nCleaning Company, Phone 438, Box MX\n- '.  in-tl\nPROFESSIONS^\nOREEN BROS., BURDEN A CO.\nI Civil   Engineers.    Dominion  snd   B.\nLand Surveyors.\n..   Lands,   Mine-\nTimber Units, 1_\nNelson, 816 Ward Btreet: A.  H. Or.\nMgr.   victoria, 1M Pemberton Bid\nC. Green . Ft. George, Hammond I\nF. P. Burden.\nFOR RBNT-Bitat house.    Apply Camp-\nbell's Art Gallery or Phone 48.      62-tf.\nFOB RENT-SIx roomed house, close In,\n$25 month.   J. W. Gallagher, 102 Bnker.\n\u2022M*8\nFOR RENT-Rooms,  with board.    Btre^\nbar, Willow Point. Apply Mrs. Roberts,\nPhong  K-Hil. 67-c\nFOR RENT\u2014Furnished housekeeping\nrooms, with gas stove.    Cheap.   filR\nHall Btreet.    ' *71-6\nFOR RENT\u2014Board  and  room.    Mrs.\n_Maekny,  ill.2 Vernon street,        *71-C\nl\u00bbOR SALSL\nFOR SALE-Chotce fruit land. 121 acres\nIn fertile Pend d' Oreille valley. Close\nto route of now railway. Would sell part.\nVery easy clearing. Snap. Apply P. O.\nhot 966. Nelon- 2M-tf\nFOR SALE-W-foot steamboat, with engine and boiler complete, cheap.   For\nParticulars    apply    to    Foreat Mills of\n.C Limited, Bos 1068, Nelson, B.C.\n  S-tf.\nFOR SALE\u2014Cheap, 1,280 acres of practically level raw land, lying in direct\npath or proposed new railway. Ono fruit\nranch shipped two carloads apples last\nyear besides small fruit; also one lumber yard nnd building contracting business in growing town. For particulars\nwrite Box 321, Dally News. \u202207-6\nFOR SALE-Hall of a double boat\nhouse. Anlil? Campbell's Art Gallery,\n715 Baker BlMM, or Phone 40. 62-tf,\nFOR SERVICE\u2014Two   registered   Berkshire boars,    N.  Luse,  Eholt, B.C.\n\u202264-26\nFOR  SALE\u2014Good  paying cbbIi  grocery\nbusiness in fine locality. A snap, quick\nsale.    Address P. O.  Box 414, Nelson.\n\u202207-6\nFOR SALE\u2014Baby chicks, Leghorns, etc.\nPrice    list   on    application.     Charles\nProvan, Langley Fort. *68-24\nFOR SALE-Fumlture of a five-roomod\nhouse, piano, organ, violin, kitchen\nutensils, washer, etc. Must sell tills\nmonth, leaving country. Tailing, Proctor, B.C. \u00ab69-(\nFOR SALE\u201425 ft. speed gasoline\nlaunch,' 10 horse power, 2-cylinder\nLeafy engine. Speed 12 to 14 mites.\nNearly new. No reasonable offer rer\nfused.   Box 421, Kaslo.. B.C. *70-0\nFOR SALE\u2014Collapsible buggy, now.\n.Mrs. Whitehead. 512 Hendryxstreet.\nNelson. ->7I-3\nFOR SALE\u2014Two swarms pure Italian\nbees, complete with frames, |5; queen\nbees, selected and tested, (1,50 each;\nuntested, $1 each. C. H. Laehnert;\nNelson. *62-e.o.d-6\nFOR SALE\u2014Young pigs, 7 weeks old,\n?6 ench; also one Chester white\nboar and one O. I, C. boar; weight\nabout 300 lbs each. Watson Bros.,\nWlnlnw. B.C. \u00bb72-4\nLOST.\nLOST\u2014At West Robson, evening or\nJune 30, between steamer Bonnlngtoii\nand Nelson train, a lady's gold wristlet\nWatch, date on back. Finder fully rewarded.    Apply Dally News. \u2022G7-6\nLOST\u2014-Fountain pen, between Canadian Bank of Commerce and Queens\nhotel;  ?2 reward.    Return to Queens.\n . \u00ab72-2\nNOTICE.\nTake notice that the undersigned\nhas been granted power of attorney\nby James P. Johnson to sell and dispose of lots 1, t and 3 of block C,\nportions of the subdivision of lot 8068,\nGroup 1, Kootenay district, B.C., situated on Arrow lake.\nLARS   P.   NELSON.\nKlondyke Hotel. Nelson, B.C., July\n8th. 1013, 72-la.w-8\nThe B. C. Assay and\nChemical Supply Co.\nLimited.,\nAssayerB* and Chemists' Supplies\nBalances and Weights of precision.\nPhysical and. Chemical Apparatus,\nChemically pure Adds and Chemicals.\nPlumbago and Plumbago Crucibles.\n567 Hornby Street, Vancouver, B.C.\na. u Mcculloch\nHydrsulle Engineer\nProvincial Land Surveyor\nP. O. B01 4L\nOffice phone, LBS: residence phone, Hit\nOffice,  Suite 6,   sfcCulloon   Btdg.\nBaker Street, Nelson, B. C.\nT.   M.   RIXEN,   AUDITOR   AND    \\C\noountsnt   Room U, K.W.O, Blocs.\nH.     PERRY    LEAKE,    CONSULTING\nEngineer. Nelson, B.C.\nCHA8. MOORE, C.E.\nProvincial    Lind    Surveyor.    Arch I-J\ntect.    Land   subdivision,   timber   ami\nmine surveying.    Plans and spectftcafj\ntlons.   Alan block. Nelson, B.C.    Cl-tffJ\nSHORTHAND, TYPEWRITING BOOK!\nkeeping nnd all commercial subjects\ntaught by qualified and experienced!\ntutor. For terms apply 613 Ward street!\nnext City Cab company. Private tultiorf\nensures success. fia-M\nSYNOPSIS OF COAL\nMINING  REGULATION^\n\u25a0 Coal mining rights of the Dominion,\nManitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberti\nthe Yukon Territory, the! North-wei.\nTerritories, and In s portion of the province of British Columbia, may be less '\nfor s. term of twenty-one years St l_\nannual rental of ft per acre. Not mon\nthan t,660 meres win be leased to oar\napplicant\nApplication for a lease must he rnsdel\nby the applicant lo person to the Agenn\nor Sub-Agent of the district of whloK\nthe rights applied for- are situated.\nIn surveyed territory the land must t._\ndescribed by sections, or legsl sub-dlvll\n\u25a0Ions of sections, and In unsurveyed tar*,\nrltory  the tract applied   for   snail\nstaked out by the applicant himself.\nEsch application must be accompanied.\nby s. fee of 16, which wtll be refunded lfl\nthe rights applied for are not available^\nbut not otherwise. A royalty shall br\npaid on the merchantable output of tin\nmine at the rate of five cents per toiv\nThe person operating the mine shall\nfurnish the Agent with sworn returns ar\ncounting for the full quantity of ma\nchantable coal mined and pay the royaltj\nthereon. If the coal mining rights \u00bbri\nnot being operated, such returns sbour\nbe furnished at least once a year.\nThe lease will Include the coal minim\nrights only, but the lessee may be per-1\nmltted to purchase whatever avallsbw\nsurface tights may be considered necesj\nsary for the working of the mine at tha\nrate of $10.00 an acre, r\nFor (uh Information application should\nbe made to the Secretary of the Depart!\nment of the Interior, Ottawa, or to\nAgent or Bug-Agent \u00b0-Ld^1\u00ab\u00b0vrt'\nDeputy Minister of the Interior.\nN.B.\u2014Unauthorised publication of tMj\n*dvi>.tlSMn*nt will not he mid for\nLaODGEJJOJJCI\nfellowa' hall at B o'clock.\nQUEBN     CITY     REBEKAH     LOl^iM\nNo. M. I.O.O.F.. meets first And tair\nTuesdays. Oddfellows' hall, 7:10 o'cloclu.\nNELSON   ENCAMPMENT   M>.   7.   l.U\nO.F., meets second and fourth Thurs.\ndura In Oddfellows' hall at s o'clock.\nCANTON CORONA NO. J meets tJWI\nsecond Tuesday In Oddtellowar Ull \u2022\n\u2022 o'alook.\nKNtOHTS OF PYTHIAS MEET TDM.\nday nlthta In K. of P. hall, B '\nnulidimr.\nL0.0.N.\nNELSON Lodge No. l_.\nmeets kid and tth Thurs.\nF.O.E.\nNelson Aerl. No. B BMta\nInd and tth WednMdajri la\nEule Haa\n1 A P C?tM Royal Nelson No,\nA II F \"\" .\u25a0\u00bb\"<\u2022 on tnd and \u00abU\nHsV.l. \u00ab\"\u00a3days each month u\nK.P. hall at Iw LadUa\ncturt meets first and third Wrf\nc.a.F.1\nCourt Kootenay BallemMti\n14   and   tth   Fridays   h>\n:\u25a0 P. BaH.Bskl.JBJjok.\nILAN JOHN8TONE 91 mast. In I.O.O.\nW. aadl first ut Ulrd Fridwa. I >?\u25a0\u00a3\n WEDNESDAY  JULY 9.\nC&e Battp Jktaa\n7<(\n\u2022-       PAGE SEVEN     1\n     Phone 10\nThe Star Grocery Co.\nStore of Quality\nStrawberries\nFor Prc-\nservi ng\n$2.50\nPer\nCrate\nThe best that money can buy\nStar Grocery Co.\nPhone 10\n\"ELKS\"\nilVoI\nNELSON LODGE\n\u25a0 Tho Grand Organizer having been\ncalled as Fraternal Delegate to a\nmeeting of the Grand Lodge of the\nUnited States at Rochester, N. Y., the\nInstitution of the local lodge has been\nfurther postponed until July 22nd. Until that date applications will bo received at the office of the local organiser.\nSpecial rates have been secured on\nthe C.P.R. from Rossland and intermediate points for the occasion, and a\nlarge delegation from the Grand Lodge\nwill be present to assist in tbe ceremonies.\nTHE ELKS\nAre purely a fraternal Order, and not\norganized for gain, Insurance or profit; they do, however, voluntarily aid\nmost fully wherever the needs and\ncircumstances require. It stands preeminent among Organizations where\nthe Lodge and Club privileges are\nJoined; it Is neither sectarian nor political, building solely upon Its social\nmerits, and as such is justly recognized as most fully meeting the wants\nof the Twentieth Century business\nman, the professional man, and the artisan. The fact that it is Dominion\nwife In Its scope, affording to its\nmembers the fullest extension of social courtesies wherever Elks' clubs\nexist, Is one of the reasons why it has\nbecome the leading Order of Its kind\non the North American continent today.\nApplications received at the office\nof F, A. Starkey, or evenings at the\nHume Hotel.\nFEE $20.00.\nG. E. BLINN,\nDeputy Grand Organizer,\nWe \"Get Down\"\nto Business\nQuickly when sent for in such cases\nof emergency as the Illustration\nshows. Thus, wo save our customers\na deal of damage, and \"make good\"\nthe leakage In a short time. Send for\nus to do new or old plumbing and you\nwill get the best and most conscientious work, done In a thoroughly practical way for a very reasonable charge.\nE. K. STRACHAN\nBAKER STREET\nNELSON\nImperial Bank of\nCanada\nEstablished 1878.\nHEAD OFFICEi TORONTO, ONT.\nCapital  (psid up) 16,770,000.00\nReserve fund  6,770,000.00!\nD. R. Wilkis, Pros, and Gsn'l. Mgr.\nHon. Robert Jaffray, V!oo-Pree>\nSAVINGS DEPARTMENT.\nAn account can be opened with fl\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 drafts sold,\nnegotiable In all parts of the world.\nBank money orders issued, payable\nthroughout Canada, the United States\nsod Great Britain at the following\nrates: |5 and under, 3 cento; over 16\nto 110. 6 cents; over 110 to 130, 10 cents;\nover MO to 160, 15 cents.\nOut of town customers csn transact\ntheir banking; business by mall snd\nart given every attention.\nNotion Srsnoh. J. H. D. Benson, Mgr.\nTHORPE'S\nDRUNKS\nExpert\nGasoline\nEngine\nRepairs\nAshton&Smedley\nP. O. Box (08\nPhon. 141\nEnglish Pansies\nLarge plants, 25c per dozen.\nGypsophllla Paniculate, Begonia and\nother plants.   Prices on application.\nERNEST TOWNSEND\nFlorist.\nNakusp, Arrow Lakes, B. C.\nmum\nJust What You\nWant\nLow rates, good service, up-to-\ndate steamers. The Donaldson lino\ncan offer all three. Only one class\nof cabin nnd third-class passengers\ncarried to or from Europe Don't\nbook before asking our rates.- Any\nsteamship or railway agent can tell\nyou,\nH.   E.   LIDMAN,   General   Agent,\nPhone MG312, 319 Main St., Winnipeg.\nBRUNOT HALL\nBoarding  and   Day  School  for  Girls.\nSpokane, Wash.\nCertificate admits to Smith, Welles*\nJey, Vnasar and other colleges. Music\ndepartment under the best foreign\ntrained teachers. Fine art studio.\nWell equipped laboratories and gymnasium, domestic science department.\nFaculty composed of experienced\nteachers from the best colleges. Ideal\nclimate for study. For further Information address prlnctpnl.\nBRUNOT HALL\n22(H) Pacific Avenue, Spokane, Wash.\nAutomobiles\nFor Hire\nAt all hours, day or night. Carry passengers to and from boats ana trains.\nDealers for the White Motor Trucks\nand Touring Cars.\nSend for Catalogue and Literature.\nNelson Auto Garage\n\u202205  V.rnon  Sires, T.I.  146\nWithout\nExtra\nCharge\nIf you intend holidaying outside\nthe city you can have The Dally\nNewa sent to you without extra\ncharge.\nWhile on vacation bent, keep In\ntouch with condltlona at home.\nDrop a card or phone 144.\nThe DailyiNews\nA MESSAGE FROM A\nWQMANTOWOMEN\n\"Enry Woman Should Take\n\"Fruit-a-tives\"\nLakelet, Ont., May 12th. 1911\n\"Kindly publish this letter of mine\nIf yon think it will benefit other women\nwho might be afflicted with tbe diseases\nI have had in tbe past, but am now,\nthanks to \"Fruit-a-tives\", completely\ncuredof. It is uiy firm belief that every\nwoman should take \"Fruit-a-tives\" tf\nshe wants to keep herself in good health.\nBefore taking \u2022'Fniit-s-tives\", I was\nconstantly troubled with what is commonly known as \"Nerves\" or severe\nNervousness. This Nervousness\nbrought on tbe most violent sttscks of\nSick Headache, for which I was constantly tsking doctors' medicine without\nany permanent relief. Constipation was\nalso a source of great trouble to me snd\nfor which the Doctors said \"I would have\nto take medicine all my life\", but\n\"Fruit-a-tives\" banished all these troubles and now I am a well woman\"\nMrs. FRED. GADKE.\n50c a box, 6 for $2,50\u2014trial size, 35c.\nAt dealers or sent prepaid on receipt of\nprice by Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa.\nNELSON NEWS OF TBE DAY\nMrs, C. F. McHardy haa returned\nfrom a week's visit to Shoreacres,\nMrs, M. H. Roberts, Plnoher *?reek,\nAlta., \"le   visiting   her   mother,    Mrs.\nBissctt, Cedar street, Nelson.\nThere will be a meeting of the\nhoard of license commissioners at\nthe city hall at lti o'clock thlH morning.\nThe monthly meeting of the Nelson\nLibrary association will be held on\nTuesday evening, July 15, at 8 o'clock\nin the library room, and not on Tuesday, July 8, the usual date of the\nmeeting.\nMr. and Mrs, Anthony Madden and\nfamily of Sloean City will leave on\nth0 Crow boat thiB morning on an\nextended trio to Bceton, Ont., and\nother eastern points. Before returning they Intend visiting Quebec,\nJ. V. Murphy, district passenger\nagent for tho Canadian pacific railway, and H. W. Brodle, general passenger agent at Vancouver, paid n\nvisit to the Kootenay Lake tourist\nhotel at Balfour yesterday.\nSay!   Our new Phone number Is 4\nVacuum Cleaning company,    Box HK.\n39-tf.\nParkeB   and    Roach    will    open    a\ntelephone     messenger    service     next\nMonday on Ward street   Phone !i03.\n\u202272-2\nTho Presbyterian church Sunday\nschool will hold their annual basket\npicnic at Proctor nn Wednesday, July\nlllth. The steamer Kuskanook has\nbeen   chartered   for   the   occasion.\n72-tf,\nThere will be n special meeting of\nQueen City Rebekah lodge No. 11\nthis evening at 8 o'clock in I.o.O.P.\nhall for the purpose of Installing the\nofficers for the current term. All officers and members are requested to\nattend, after which a social evening\nwill be spent. 72-1\nNOTICE\nThe strike at the Queen mine, Sheep\nCreek, B.C., Is still on. All Working\nmen are warned to stay away until thu\nstrike is settled.\nBy order of tint Ymir Miners' union,\nW.   B.   M'ISAAC.\nYmlr, B.C., June 27th. 1013. 65-tf.\nThe great semi-annual pre-inven\ntory sals at the Hudson's Bay Stores\nfor which so many have been waiting,\nwill start on Thursday next and continue till Saturday the 19th. The\ncartful buyer will save big money by\ndelaying purchases until then, when\nextraordinary reductions will bo made\non all lines in general dry goods,\nmen's furnishings, ladies' ready-to-\nwear millinery, boots and shoes, and\ncrockery. 71-2\nSUCCESS TIPS.\nHow many careers have been\nblighted Just because the opportunity\nfor success has never been presented\nIn the right way, if at all!\nTho Want Columns are daily brimful of opportunities for scores, if they\nwere only watched with the care they\ndeserve. The wide scope of the Wants\nmakes them possess chances for men\nand women in every walk of life, and\ntheir neglect ofton times means disappointment.\nIf you are a young man, or a young\nwoman, looking for a career In life,\nget the Want Ad habit\u2014read the\nWant Columns daily and grasp every\nopportunity that presents itself. This\nmethod will pay in the end, for, if\nyou nsk your successful friends,\nmany of them will tell you that they\nfound their best chance through tho\nWants,\nThe Dally Newa Want Ads have\nmeant success for hundreds of young\nmen and women.\nCRESCENT    ROAD    PROGRESSING\n(Special to Ttte Daily News.)\nKASLO, B. C, July 8.\u2014The Crescent road has been completed to the\nsite of the new schoolhouse. The\nmason work is progressing, tbe excavation Is all done and three sides of\nthe,foundation is built up level with\nthe surface of tbe ground. The footing stone is of concrete, the walls are\nof local building stone. The superstructure will be of brick and marble.\nBorn, July 7, to the wife of\nOordon Hallet. at the Victorian hospital, a daughter.\nMrs. Henry Giegerich was the\nhostess at a delightful lawn party on\nSaturday afternoon. The spacious\ngrounds around the Giegerich residence were thrown open to the guests\nfrom 2 to 6 p.m. and hundreds of\nguests came. The party was in aid\nor St. Marks guild. The tennis court\nwas available for the use of those who\nplayed the game. Ice cream and\nstrawberries, tea and coffee were\nserved and Instrumental music was\ndiscoursed during the afternoon.\nDISCUSS QUESTION, |\nOF D0UKH0B0RS\nMember for Ymir Expresses Sympathy\nWith Settlers* Views\u2014N0 Douk-\nhonors on Road Work.\n(Special to Thu Dallv New*.)\nSOUTH SLOCAN, July H.-Great interest was evinced In the general\nmeeting of tbe Kootenay River Conservative association, held here on\nSaturday. Owing to delay in delivering tbe secretary's communication to\nJ. H. Schofleld, M.P.P., advising as\nto hour of meeting, it was not received by the latter until after the\ndeparture of the morning train from\nTrail, with the result that the meeting scheduled for 7:30 p.m. was postponed until 'J .30.\nOf some H'U members, representative ot every settlement within the\nsphere of the association, assembled\nIn anticipation of some definite pronouncement in connection with thc\nDoukhobor question, only between 30\nand 40 were able to remain to greet\nMr. Schofleld.\nThe patience of these was rewarded by tbe two most effective speeches\nthe association has yet had the privilege of hearing\u2014those of the local\nmember and K. L, Lee of Bonntngton-\nHoutiiie' business was summarily\ndisposed of to permit discussion of\nthe main Issues, This Included tbe\nelection of 11 new members and,\nthrough the remission of office for\none cause or another of their predecessors, three executives. Those chosen were John Kay, representing Granite district; William Simms, Crescent\nvalley, and G. H. Ashby, South Sloean.\nTbe president stated that the meeting had been convened and Mr. Schofleld asked to attend In consequence\nof resolutions passed at a. special\nmeeting of tbe association a fortnight\npreviously. The principal of these\nrecommended the exclusion of Douk-\nhoborn from public works and the pre\nvention of their further encroachment\non the district. The member and thc\nsuperintendent of roads had shown\nthemselves in accord with the views\nof the members by instructing the\ndismissal of those now employed\u2014an\naction greatly appreciated, He asked\nthat Mr. Schofleld give the meeting\nhis views on this subject.\nMr. Schofleld replied that it afforded him much pleasure to have this opportunity of stating his convictions he-\nfore the association. At no time had\nthe present government of British Co^\nInmhiji permitted the employment of\nDoukhoborB or Chinamen on public\nworks, and in every instance preference bad been given to British subjects. It was true that, up to the\npresent, Doukhohors had been employed In the capacity of tcamBters\non the roads. He doubted whether\nthe government was within Its rights\nIn dictating to tbe owners of teams\nwho should or who should not handle\nthem. Naturally the owner would\nwish to use his own discretion in the\nchoice of a teamster and would choose\nthe man best adapted to that purpose,\nIrrespective of his nationality. Still,\nnt the.express wish of this association,\nhe had asked Mr, Benney to instruct\nthe removal of the.men In question,\nHis statement was met with hearty\napplause.\nHe fully realized the handicap under which ranchers and others were\nworking in competition with communal and Independent Doukhohors,\nStill theso people had established a\nfooting In the country and under the\nlaws of the province were entitled to\nthe same degree of protection as any\nother individuals. His sympathy was\nmost heartily with those responsible\nfor this protest, hut It was useless to\nregard the issue from other than a\npractical standpoint and on what\ngrounds could the government legitimately uproot and deport these people.\nB, Turner Lee followed with a telling speech, frequently punctuated by\napplause, Briefly sketching the origin and history of the Doukhobor\ncommunity up io their arrival In this\nprovince, he made apparent, the main\nreasons for which It was Impossible\nfor local ranchers to work and live\nIn unison or to compete with thc\ncommunity. Already there were tangible results of the evil this system\nwas working. British settlers had\nceased to come, to the district. Ranch\nproducts were raised and disposed of\nby the community at priceB with\nwhich no other rancher could contend.\nHe instanced potatoes, now selling at\n$5 por ton delivered. He deprecated\nthe action of tile government In permitting their entry to the province.\nHe called upon them now to provide a\nremedy. ^\nMr. Schofleld took decided Issue\nwith the speaker at this point. Mr.\nLee, he said, confused a federal with\na provincial issue. It was Liberal\nmisrule of the previous regime they\nhad to thank for the emigration of\nthe Doukhohors to Canada. Not one\nDoukhobor had entered the Dominion\nsince Premier Borden took the reins\nof government, ami his hearers could\nrest assured they would he rigidly excluded henceforward. He would like\nto suggest that the association ask R.\nP. Green, M.P., to Include the head*\nquarters at South Sloean in his itinerary of the riding next month. The\nmember for Kootenay had an established reputation as a conscientious\nfighter in any good cause, and there\nwere none in the house today who had\nthe welfare of their constituents more\ntruly at heart.\nThe president thanked 'Mr. Schofleld\nfor his courageous and straightforward expression of his views. The\nquestion was one which peculiarly affected this locality and anyone with\nforesight must realize that eventually\neither the citizen or the Doukhobor\nmust go. With all good will to Peter\nVerlgln and his lieutenants, be would\nprefer to remain subject to the present government of British Columbia.\nInto this the choice must eventually\nrefine itself.\nOn the motion of Charles S. Brock-\nIngton the secretary was instructed to\nwrite R. F. Green asking him to meet\nthe association and assuring him a\nmost hearty reception from his constituents here.\nMr. Schofleld promised his good offices In this connection and In the\nevent of Mr. Green acceding, promised\nto be also present.\nThe member then dealt with the\nquestion of supplementary appropriations for road construction between\nSouth Sloean aud Taghuni bridge and\nHE SAlD-\"\"This salt is nice and dry. Yesterday the salt wu m\ndamp that we couldn't get it out of the shakers. Did you put it ia\nthe oven tnd dry it r\"\nSHE SAID-\u00bbNo. This is \"REGAL\", made from WINDSOR\nSALT. Our grocer told me about it. He said it would stay dry and\nfree running at all seasons of the year.\"\nHE SAID\u2014\"He is right.\nsalt is perfectly dry.\"\nThis certainly is a damp day and this\nSHE SAID\u2014\"And this REGAL SALT comes in nice, clean wood-\nfibre cartons, coated with paraffin. That protects the salt from dust,\ndirt, moisture and odors\u2014which affect salt put up in bags. I certainly\ndo like Windsor Regal Salt\u2014and I like our grocer for telling\nme about it\"\nWINDSOR \"REGAL\" SALT\nALWAYS DRY-ALWAYS FREE RUNNING\nto the north to Kochs siding. He assured the meeting that he was doing\nall In his power to Influence the\nnecessary expenditures, but in the absence from the province of the minister he could venture no definite\nstatement. He fully realized the pressing need of these connections.\nRoad to Nelson.\nWith repaid to the Taghuni bridge\nthe contract had been let and construction would soon he under way.\nHis hearers could rely upon road access to N'elson at an early date.\nMany minor matters were dtectiuBed\nnnd after a hearty vote of confidence\nIn the member had been carried by\nthe meeting an adjournment was\nmade at 11:30 p.m.\nThe fortnightly meeting of thc\nWoman's auxiliary was held at the\nhomo of Mrs. R. Chamney, Upper Bon*\nnlngton. on Wednesday last, which\nwas well attended. Mrs. J. R. Kennedy iwaa appointed secretary-treasurer In tbe place of Mrs. Turner hoc.\nwhose resignation was regretfully accepted. The meeting decided to write\na letter of thanks to Mrs. Lee for the\nexcellent work she had done for the\nsociety.   A dainty tea was served by\nrs. Chamney, assisted hy Miss Chamney. The next meeting will he held\nat the hall. Sloean Junction, 011 Wednesday, July 16.\nJ. D. Yeatman of Braeside ranch\nleft on Thursday for Toronto to join\nhis wife and little son. Mi's. Yeatman,\nwho has been 111 for some months and\nis now convalescent, will, if well\nenough, return with Mr. Yeatman In\nAugust.\nJ. H. Schofleld, M.P.P., was the\nguest of Mr. nnd Mrs. T. A. Whelldon\nfor the weelt-end.\nMiss Bradshaw and Miss Taylor arrived on Thursday for an extended\nvisit to Mrs. T. A. Whelldon.\nMrs. H. Wood, who came out for\nthe dance, returned on Thursday to\nNelson,\nDominion day was celebrated by\nmany picnic parties to the pool and\ncanyon, several coming in from Nelson and oilier points.\nThe South Sloean tennis party went\nto Castlegar and played a match, losing by three points.\nJack Power left on Thursday for\nLe Pas, on the Hudson bay route, to\njoin a survey party.\nC. P, Jones, who has been on his\nranch at Sloean Park for the past\nthree months, visited the junction yesterday and leaves for Trail today.\nLarge quantities of strawberries are\nbeing shipped daily by the local ranchers to Nelson and prairie points.\nHALCYON  NOTES.\nfSoeelsl to Th* OslUr Newo.,\nHALCYON. B. C\u201e July 8.\u2014During m\nsevere thunderstorm on Sunday afternoon the lightning started a Are In h\npatch of dead lumber on the west side\nof the lake, which binned fiercely, hut\nwas extinguished by the heavy ruin\nwhich soon followed. A large party\nof guests, principally ladies and children, went to St. Leon In the launch\nnfter lunch, and were taught in the\nstorm lu returning.\nMrs. K. Edwards and daughter from\nRevelstoke have been here since\nThursday.\nMr. and Mrs. S. C, Curcary, Winnipeg, arrived  on   Friday  Cor a  week's\nstay, mid A. MeLeod, Midway) James\nEvans, Salmon Arm. spent a couple of\ndays here last week,\nMrs. R. Howson, Miss Myrtle How-\nson and Mrs. K B, Hooloy of Revet-\nstoke arrived on Saturday, and will\nstay till the end of the week.\nT. EJ, Downey, Canadian Pacific railway firewarden, was here on Saturday.\nThe steamer Rossland brought down\na number of Sunday trippers from\nRevelstoke and Arrowhead, who returned on thc Bonnington after lunch.\nMr. and Mrs. George 1,. ;;, Id and\nchild, Arrowhead, accompanied by Mrs.\nCraighead, Vancouver, arrived on Sunday for a short slay; also Mr. and\nMrs. Robert Gordon, Revelstoke; it. J.\nSheinon, Kaslo; and Mrs, A, C. Yoder\nand  Miss Voder.  Nakusp.\nPhilip McCarthy nnd J. Simonsun,\nTrail; mid S. K. Roe, Nelson, have\nbeen here since (lie middle of last\nweek, getting rid of rheumatism.\nP, A. O'Farrell leavos on Wednesday\nfor Vancouver and Victoria, but will\nbe back again in a fortnight.\nSLOCAN   PARK   NEWS.\n(Special to The Dailv News.)\nSL< >CAS PARK, July 8.\u2014A party of\nnine Journeyed to South Sloean on\nSaturday to attend a meeting of the\nKootenay River Conservative association, which resulted In nn influx of\nnew members lo that organization,\nNotification having been received\nfrom the. department ol education that\nthey will constitute the Park a school\ndistrict, It will now be necessary to\nelect three trustees, and a meeting for\nthat purpose has been convened for\nSaturday, July 13.\nRev. H. W. Stevinson has returned\nfrom bis visit to the east, and took\nthe service at the hall on Sunday.\nMrs. Stevinson accompanied him.\nDaily  News \"Want\" Ads. Get Results.\n r   Mat iiqht\n%fo 3BaU|> frto*\nWEDNESDAY .\nJULV I\nHEWS Of IE DAY\nA. B. Calhoun of Rossland is al the\nStrathcona.\nThomas McNi-ish of Sloean City is\nat the Hume.\n,   M. 6. Davys of New Denver Is at\ntht); Strathcona.\nMrs. Mallette left on the Great\nNorthern yesterday for Spokane.\nN\u00ab'laon aerie No. 22, F.O.E.. will\nbold their regular meeting in Eagle\nball this evening.\nMr. and Mrs. James Anderson of\nKalso reached Nelson last night and\nregistered   at   the Hume.\nMr. and Mrs. AngUH W. Mlshnw of\nToronto arrived in Nelson lam night\nand are guests nt the Strathcona.\nA. HIgginbotham reports picking\nraspberries at his ranch across the\nlake last Sunday. The variety was\ntho Herbert, one of the earliest and\nmost  prolific.\nAnthony Shllland of Sandon, secretary of District No. 6, Western\nFederation fo Miners, reached Nelson\nlast evening and registered at the\nGrand Central.\nThere was a fall of 2 In. In the\nwater of the west arm yesterday, according to the gunge of the Nelson\nBoat & Launch company. The water\n]s now 13 ft. t In. above, low water\nmark and about 6 ft. below this year's\nhigh mark.\nMr. and Mrs. R. C, Waterson will\narrive In Nelson on July 15 from\nFlorida and will spend the summer\nns guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. F. McHardy. Last summer Mr. Watd-son,\nwho Is a brother of Mrs. McHardy,\nrode on horseback from Nelson to\nVancouver in company with Mr. McHardy.\nAT THE  THEATRES.\nFred M. Gee, who accompanied Miss\n>Toye so sympathetically at lies former concert, |h coming from wfnni-\npog to assist on Friday evening. Tbls\nUnsquslltd for General Use.\nW. P. TIERNEY, Qsnsral Salts Agent.\nNelson, B. C.\nQsiW shlppM to all railway points.\nThe **\nEiisignette\"\nThe Firius Vest Pocket\nCamera\nJust Imagine a perfect little\ncamera so compact that it fits in\na vest pocket\u2014and yet it makes\npost-card  pictures.\nThe \"Ensignette\" Is a revelation\nIn camera construction. Come in\nand eee the remarkable pictures It\nmakes.\nIn limp leather case, $7.00.\nSpool of film, 15c.\nRutherford Drug Co.\nLIMITED\nSole Agents.\nWard St. Nelson, B.C,\nBargains\nBuy a Good\nCamera\nCheap\nSlightly used cameras sold for the\nfollowing prices:\nOne No. O Kodak, cost t&, sell for 13\nOne   Ensign    Folding    Camera,   cost\n111, for IS.\nOno m by Rfc English Camera, fitted\nwith   8   by   10   view,   lens,   three\nI double book holders, tripod and\ncase. Cort 185, for J25.\nOhe 6% by B& Century camera, fl double\nplate holders, fitted with Cook\nlens ana Thorton Packert shutters, with carrying case complete,\ncoat life,   for $63.\nFolding Camera, 4% by fi\u00bb\u00ab. fitted\nwith Bauch A Lamb Ziess Teaser\nlens and woollen sack shutter,\nworking three hundredth part of\none second, and 8 plate holders,\ncomplete with tripod carrying\ncase. Lost |13E, for quick sale 1100\ntakes \u00abt\n'The above are all in Al condition,\ngood as new. Other Cameras at bargains not listed here. Bear In mind,\nwe sell \/Urns to tit all film cameras.\nCampbeH'sArt Gallery\n,716 .Baker. Street East,   Phone 46.\nNext-Doer Kootonay Steam Laundry\nSummer Drinks\nCRAPE JUICE\n35c bottle.\nRASPBERRY VINEGAR\n35c bottle.\nLIME JUICE\n40c bottle,\nC. A. Benedict\nJOMphin. tt.\nStandard Furniture\nC. J. CARLSON, Undertaker\nUndertakers Embalmsrs\n\u25a0nd Funersl Directors\nThe finest and most up to date\nundertaking; parlors and chapel tn\ninterior of B.C. Lady attendant for\nwomen and children.\nDay Phone M\nNight Phones 852 snd LS4\nReady\nMade\nFarms\nWe have for sale the C.P.R.\n\"Morrison Colony\" ready made\nfarms, situated 20 miles cast of\nCranbrook. These farms are from\n12 to 27 acres, all fenced; each\nhas a house and barn, and the\nland has been slashed, stumped,\nplowed, disced and harrowed.\nThe terms are very easy. For\nfull particulars apply to\nH. & PL Bird\nNelson, B. C.\nFor Rent       For Sale\nCottage,  close   In,  all   modern;        Sev.ral   Inviting   properties  for\nelectric light and gas. occupation or Investment,\nThe Allen-Smith Company\nREAL   ESTATE.      INSURANCE.      LOANS.      AUDITING.\nIMPERIAL   BANK   BLOCK,  JOSEPHINE   8TREET.\nIs a long trip to make for one concert, but Miss Toye is anxious that\nthe people of Nelson feel that her\nperformance shall in no way fall\nshort of the high standard established. Miss Toye rol urns to Europe at\nonce, sailing from New York on July\n26, to take up Iter continental rn-\nKJitfemcntB. Her brilliant work has\nwon for her a high place In tho\nhearts of Canadian music lovers ami\nher stronK personality and apparent\ndelight in giving of her best have\nhelped to make her appearances '\u00bb\nCanada a series of triumphs. In\nEurope also, Miss Toye takes rank\nin th\u201e first flight of continental\nartists and has sens for many royalties, among them Kins George of\nEngland, ex-King Manuel of Portugal, King George of Greece, who waa\nrecently assassinated. Grand Duke\nrtoris or Russia, also Grand Dukes\nGeorge and Paul, cousins of the czar;\nInfanta Hulalle, mint of tho present\nking of Spain, and many others of\nlessor rank. Abroad as at home, Miss\nToye remains her unspoiled self and\nmuch of her OhoTm Ilea in her bright,\nbreezy yet modest demeanor, which\nmakes an appropriate setting for her\nsinging gifts. The reservation of\nseats goes merrily on nnd everyone\nseems to have the contented feeling\nthat a delightful evening Is In store\nas Miss Toye certainly has \"made\ngood,\" and another opportunity to\nhear her Is not to be missed,\nRossland News\n(Special to Tno Daily News.)\nHOSSL.AND, B. C, July 8.\u2014J. Bel-\nton,  proprietor of the  Clarendon saloon, has bought out George Green's\ninterest In the  Hotel    Allan.     The\n\"\u00bbGEM\nPictures Changed Dally.\nSELECTIONS ORCHESTRA\nEdison Feature\n77ie Risen Soul\nof Jim Grant\nA good subject by Bannister Mer-\nvln, well written and well played.\nSelig   Drama\n\"SEEDS OF SILVER\"\nA human interest drama, incidentally shows up the Ingratitude or\nhuman \"leeches.\"\nEssanay Comedy\n\"THE SAME OLD STORY\"\nA side-splitting, hilarious comedy\nIn which a female Impersonator\ncomes to the timely assistance of\nMr. Hubby.\nPathe Features\n\"THE MEXICAN'S DEFEAT\"\n\"PANAMA CANAL TODAY\"\nADMISSION  15c.   CHILDREN  10c\nWs Can  Help You to\nOut the  Flies\nSCREEN DOORS\nFour Qualities, In Various Sizes.\nADJUSTABLE SCREEN WINDOWS\nTo Fit Any Window.\nWIRE CLOTH\n24 to 40 Inches Will'-, Any Length.\n\u2014WIhUmJi and Retail.\nSAMILTON TORONTO\n*iCo.Ltd.\nNelson B.C.\nVANCOUVER WINNIPEG\nchange takes place ou tho 16th of thiB\nmonth and In future the Allan will be\nunder the management of Belton &\nSmith. Mr. Green, who Is largely interested in Green City, Intends to devote his full time to that property.\nMr. and Mrs. J. C. Robson lei t last\nevening for a two weeks' visit to Rev-\nelBtolte. From RevelBtoke they will\ngo to Vernon for a few days and then\nthey will go to Summerland, where\nthey will remain until the end of\nAugust.\nMrs. Apperson, who has been spending the past few days on the Doyle\nranch, near Northport, returned last\nevening.\nBorn, to Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Costello, on Tuesday, July 8, a son.\nAt the joint Installation of the Re-\nhekahs and the Odd Fellows on Tuesday, held at Trail, Miss Sarah Lee\nwas presented with the past grand's\njewel.\nMr. Curnow and children leave this\nevening for tbe old country.\nThere will be a business meeting\nof the St. Andrews Young People's\nBoclety on Wednesday evening in the\nchurch parlors.\nThe Rev. Mr. Serry will give a ster-\neoptic lecture on his travels in Europe\nIn thc St. Andrews church on Thursday evening, July 10.\nChief Long went to Nelson this\nmorning on business.\nThe meeting of the Methodist En*\nworth league last evening was in thc\nhands of the missionary department\nand William Couch was In the chair.\nHe read several passages from the\nBook of Truth, and Rev, Mr, Nlxou\nand Mr. Job also gave interesting ad-\ndresses,\nDally News \"Want' Ads, Gat Results.\nOPERA HOUSE\nFriday  Evening, July  11\nAt 8:30.\nSpecial Return Engagement\nMISS DOROTHY\nTOYE\nThe girl with Two Grand Opera\nVoices\u2014Soprano and Tenor.\nPrices:    ?2.00 to 76c.\nSeat plan open Thursday at City\nStationery Co.\nYour\nEyes\nWill be attended to to your greatest satisfaction. Do not wait. It\nIs time wasted.\nAccuracy\nQuality\nPromptness\nJ. 0. Patenaude\nOptician.\nStarland Theatre\nDYER'S STARLAND ORCHESTRA\nImp. Special Feature\nKing Danforth\nRetires\nKing Baggot In any kind of a picture Is an attraction. Surrounded\nby a very superior cast, interpreting a powerful dramatic story you\nhave the acme of motion picture\nproduction.\nPasquat Comedies\n\"polidor and his patient\"\n\u2022\u2022the magic carpet-\ntwo excellent fun producers.\nChampion Drama\n\"FOND    HEARTS    8AVES    THE\nDAY\"\nNestor Drama\n\"THE 8TRIKE BREAKER\"\nA real  western   picture   with   an\nabundance of life and action.\nADULTS 15c.\nCHILDREN 10c.\nComing   FrlJay,    the    CInrendon\nfeature lu two parts\n\"LIEUT.  ROSE   IN   THE CHINA\nSEAS\"\nCanadian Flake\nIn 5-lb, premium packags.\n\"B. e\\ K.\" WHEAT FLAKES\" j\nIn 2-lb. pbgs. and\nWHEATLETS\nIn 10-lb. sacks\narc seasonable Breakfast Foods.\nyour grocer for \"B. &, K.\" goods.\nThe Brackman-Ktj\nMilling Co.. Limitc\nHosiery, Vests\nand Corsets\n\"Ch.spen hi th. City.\"\nThe Ark\nNew and Second Hand Furniture\nPhone L3W 806 Vernon tt\nNeleen, B. C.\nUpper Duncan Launch Service\nThe   launch    BESSIE   will   make\nweekly trips, Howsor to Healy's Landing ana return, each Thursday,\nSIMPSON BROS.\nToilet Preparations\n1\nThe hot weather ia hers now and necessitate! tho use of many toilet preparations    for the prevention   of   FRECKLES,   TAN,   SUNBURN,   etc.\nWe have a complete full line of all the preparations of the best manufacturers, including OTHINE,\nthe great guaranteed Freckle Remover, and all the beat Creams for the Skin.\nSkeeter Skoot and Mosquito Talcum\nThese are two of tha greatest preparations for sale on the market today for uie In keeping off Mosquitoes.   No Summer Camp or Holiday Trip is complete without these necessities.\nTRY ONE AND MAKE YOUR HOLIDAY A PLEASURE. PRICE 25c.\nALWAYS AT YOUR SERVICE\nThe Poole Drug Co.\nTHE   REXAL.L  STORE.\nWE NEVER SLEEP\nBuilding Time Is Her\nSEE US FOR PRICES\non all kinds of\nBUILDING  MATERIAL\nSpecial attention to out of town J\nwork and orders.\nWaters & Pascoe\nBUILDERS AND CONTRACTOR)\nOffice snd Factory!\nJ FRONT STREET\nPRICES GOOD FOR\nHIGH GRADE FRUIT\nUnion Manager Sends Out Reports to\nVarious Districts\u2014Organization\nHas No Cherries.\nThe Kootenay Fruit Growers' union\nhas established n new system of com*\nniunicHtlng market conditions to its\nmembers. Whenever it Is felt that\ngrowers should be notified, a circular\nis typewritten and sent to the postmasters at 25 different offices In the district covered by the union and also\nlo individuals, who, living at a distance from tiie postofftces, might not\nsee them. It Is\" felt that growers ci .\nbe kept In close touch with the ever-\nchanging market conditions in tills\nway. The second of these notlceB waR\nposted last night and reads as follows:\n\"Strawberries have been arriving In\nNelson In very poor condition, and of\nshort weight. Present price $2. MrB.\nHowell and Messrs. Hallett, Ewertand\nBrooks have realized $2.50-3 for all\ntheir shipments, and will probahl;\ncontinue to do so. on account of the\nexcellence of their output. Approximate prairie price $2.2B f.o.b. shipping\npoint for first-class stock only.\n\"Cherries, sweet\u2014No locals on tho\nmarket. Americans selling $1.75 per\n10-lb*. flat, which size is preferred hy\nHouse Heating\nThink of It now and you can have\nit next winter.\nSee the\nB. C. Plumbing & Betting Co.\nfor prices.\nOPERA   HOUSE   BLOCK\nP.O. Box 485 Phona 181\nOffice on Baker Street\nto Rent\nAS I PURPOSE MOVING INTO MY NEW QUARTERS IN\nTHE OREEN BROS. \u00ab BURDEN BLOCK, WARD STREET,\nON SATURDAY, I WILL HAVE THE OFFICE I NOW OCCUPY\nTO RENT. THE FURNITURE CAN BE RENTED WITH\nTHE OFFICE,\nChas. F. McHardy\nBAKER STREET. NELSON, B.C,\nFIRE, LIFE, ACCIDENT,\n_ EMPLOYERS LIABILITY INSURANCE,\nthe local trade. Demand good for\ngood fruits.\n\"Sours\u2014?2-$2.25 per 24-lb. crate. Demand limited locally.\n'Gooseberries\u2014$2, with no local demand.\n\"Advise shipment,out of sour cherries and gooseberries, and If strawberries can be shipped out in first-\ndaBs condition they also should be\nshipped out. Shipments to the prairie\nshould bo made by express direct to\nour selling agents\u2014the Vernon Fruit\ncompany, Calgary\u2014but Invoices must\nbe sent as usual to the manager of\nthis union.\n\"The manager nsks that special\nshipments of fruit be made on every\nThursday morning trip of the Crow\nboat eastward bound, such shipments\nto be of the very choicest fruit only,\nas they will be orfered for sale on the\nKootenay stall of the Calgary public\nmarket by our agents.\"\nWARM WEATHER\nAIDS FLOWER SHOW\nGardens Begin to Bloom in Earnest-\nMeeting Will Be Held This\nEvening,\nSo favorable has been the weather\nof the past few days that flower gardens all over tho city have commenced\nto bloom in earnest .and the' management of the first annual Nelson rose\nfestival and flower show, which will\nho held at. the exhibition building next\nTuesday, anticipates that the number\nof exhibits will be very large.\nThis evening the Nelson Improvement association will meet at the\nboard of trade rooms at 8 o'clock to\nmake final plans for the festival, and\nit is expected that there will be a\nlarge attendance.\nExhibits of all kinds or flowers,\nboth of the cultivated and wild varieties, will be welcomed at the show,\nas It Is proposed to make the floral\ndisplays the most comprehensive ever\nseen in Kootenay.\nQueen Studio\nEstablished 1899,\nPortraits\nViews\nPictures\nPicture Framing\nALLAN  LEAN, Manager.\nP. O. Box 812. Phone 180.\nNelson, B. C.   ,\nAvoid Eye Strai\nHavo your eyj\nproperly flttj\nwith glasses j\nR.LDouglal\nTHE GRADUATE OPTICIAN\nCertified by a Provincial Doard j\nExaminers lu Optometry.\nRoom 18 K. W. C. Block.\nFire Insurance\nI solicit a share of your Fire Insurance business. All matters receive prompt, careful attention, i\nBoard Companies only represented.\nAbsolute security.\nH. E. DILL\n17 K. W. C. Block, Nelson,  B. C]\nplaced before the building committee.\nSeventy-eight thousand dollars Is\ntho estimated cost of the brick or\nstone fireproof building for which Mr.\nCarrie lias prepared the plans. Provision is made for 55 patients. The\nelevator will be sufficiently large to\naccommodate a patient on n bed, while\none of tho features of the modern\nequipment which it is proposed to install will be an ice-making plant which\nwill produce 192 lbs. of ice every 24\nhours at a cost, It Is said, of about\none-tliird that at present paid.\nIt wns proposed last night that tenders should be called sufficiently soon\nthis year to enable the successful contractor to make all arrangements for\ncommencing work next spring.\nThose present were the president,\nJ. A. Irving; the secretary, George\n.lolniBtone, and Aid. Edward Kerr and\nGeorge F, Motion.\nTHREE   HORSES   BURNED.\n(By Dally News Leasod Wlro.)\nMEDICINE    HAT,    July      8.\u2014Fire\nbroke out In a stable at the rear of\nSpragae & Williamson's grocery store\ntonight.     Three valuable horses per-\nHOSPITAL PLANS\nARE APPROVED\nNew Building to Be Modernly Equipped\u2014To Call for Tonders\nThis Fall.\nPlans of the proposed new Kootenay\nLake General hospital have been approved by Hon. H. E. Young, provincial secretary, and were last night\nsubmitted to an informal meeting of\nthe directors by Alex Carrie, tbe architect. Lost night was the date of the\nregular monthly meeting, but the\nnumber of directors present was not\nsufficient to make a quorum and It\nwas decided that the plans should be\nFor 10 Days Only,\n205 acres of land on Columbia\nRiver, 4 miles west of Castlegar,\none mile water front. $5 per acre\ncash.\nG.N.R. Steamer International\n(Recently Renovated)\nFurnished   and   equipped   with\nelectric light plant, engine, except\nboiler, Intact;  160 feet over all;\n$3,500, less 10 per cent.\nApply at\nCABINET^CIGAR STORE\nNelson, B, C.\nPanamas\nand\nSailors\nAre the hats for this season.\nWe're showing the new shapes\nIn both, and right handsome they\nare.\nSailor Hats\nAt $2.00, $2.50, $3.00 to $5.00.\nThe sailor hat Is always a gentleman's hat.\nPanamas\n$7.50, $8.00 to $12.00.\nStep In and test your looks In\none of our Panamas.\nEmory & Walley\n~\" OUTFITTERS\nDINNERWAR]\nWo are making a price on din-\nncrwnre that Is actually betterI\nthan you could think of making I\nfor yourself and we have it in|\nseveral grades of China; also semi-\nporcelain. The decorations are sol\ndainty that you could put any kind I\nof food on It, and it will taste]\ngood.\nCHINA HALL'\nA.   W.   MUNRO,  Prop.\nPhono  L-261 321   Baker St.]\nP. O. Box 588\nIshed, The blaze had made mucl\nheadway before discovered, and ttu]\nwhole place was totally destroyed.\nEver Miss\na Train?\nIt's mighty Irritating. il\nmeans a toss-of time, and iitnfj\nis money these days.\nA Howard watch will pay foi\nitself in time saved in a felf\nmonths. 'It will always got yoj\nthere on time.\nJ. J. Walker\nThe   Sole   Agent   for   Howard 1\nWatches.\nBaker St. Nelson, B.C\nWe Want\nTenants\nFor   several   desirable   dwellings,\nwell located.   Reasonable rentals.}\nWe Need\nMoney\nFor a client, who offers gllt-edgod-I\nsecurity and will pay good interest. \u00bb|\nWe Have\nBargains\nIn several good speculative and dividend-paying stocks.       .    .\nLet us give you further particulars.\nSt. Denis &\nLaurence\nMcculloch Building.      \u2014\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. 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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_07_09","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\/1.0385281","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":"1913-07-09 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":"1913-07-09 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":""}]}