{"@context":{"@language":"en","AIPUUID":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AIPUUID":[{"@value":"7117dfe3-943f-4fe1-8fc2-d3ef8f0236e9","@language":"en"}],"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2019-07-22","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1902-07-27","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0381404\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" TH\n\u2022rovlnoUi Lioru'y \u00a331 at\nC\nDAILY NEWS\nVOL. 1.\nTHE DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. 0., SUNDAY, JULY %f, 1902.\nNO.  81\nNELSON WORSTED\nIN THE SPORTS\nVancouver Wins in the Lacrosse and\nRossland at Ball\nFiremen's   Races  the   Only Events\nThat Local Men Capture\nThe Nelson team wus again defeated\nat lacrosse yesterday, the score standing 5 to 3 at the close uf as hard a fought\ngame as had been witnessed hy the\nspectators.\nThe previous match against the Van-\ncouvers seemed to have acted like a tonic\non tlie home team, hut the fortunes of\nthe game went aaglnst them.\nTho goal keeping of Nelson in the\nfirst part of the game was weak and at\nthe end of the first half Rutherford waa\nchanged off with Blackwood.\nThe honors of the day for Nelson were\nchiefly with Joe Thompson, who, though\nlaid out a number of limes, played a-3\nstrong aa ever. Perrier and Taylor\neach distinguished themselves all\nthrough the game. Hawkins had been\nexchanged for Peard, who is a quick and\nshrewd passer. Archibald, as on the\nfirst day, did good work in runs and\nchecking, and both the Jeffs played an\neven stronger game than the day before.\nBlackwood, as goal keeper, stopped several nasty shots, but did not have the\nwork that Rutherford had, as in the\nlast half the ball was In the neighborhood of the Vancouver flags most of\nthe time.\nWilliams played a stendy, good game,\nand made the ball travel frequently towards the enemy's flags.\nOf tho Vancouver team the honors\nwero with Norman, as goal keeper. The\nNelson team had learned several lessons from the previous day's match in\nthe way of passing, and especially in the\nlast half kept the ball travelling up tn\nthe goal pretty steadily, but whether\nIt came from front or side Norman was\nthere to meet It. In the fourth quarter\nhe was changed off for a few minutes\nwith Reynolds, but the latter, although\none of the best men out on the field,\ncould not compare wilh Norman for\ngoal keeping, and after Nelson made a\nsecond score, he was changed back\na sain.\nYork and Morrison on tlie defence\nwere strong, but were not able to check\nthe Nelsons as they had been on the previous day. Matheson, next to Norman,\ncontributed most to Vancouver's success. His play was tireless, and his\neye for the ball was remarkable. When\nopposed to Taylor, whose play was\nsomewhat similar to his own, lovers of\nlacrosse were given a treat Barr, Shoemaker and Wright all distinguished\nthemselves during the game. Cao and\nGodfrey .who handled the ball most frequently in the neighborhood of Nelson's\ngoal, made a number of splendid shots,\nand were hard, fast players throughout.\nAt the commencement there was considerable anticipation us to how the defeat of the previous day had affected the\nNelson boys, and It did not take long\nto show that it had only strengthened\nthem. The holding the hall too long\nwith such a strong team opposed, which\nhad been occasionally noticed lu their\nplay the dny before, and which had been\nacquired in playing with weaker teams,\nhad entirely vanished, and their passing was in no way inferior to the Vancouver's.\nThe game opened with a rush towards\nNelson's end, which was checked hy\nJeffs and McNicholl, the latter passing\nto Perrier, who was checked by Cao, the\nball going over the embankment at the\nwest end. For five minutes after the\nface-off it was Impossible to distinguish\nwhich were getting tlie best of it, and\nthen It was passed from Reynolds to\nShoemaker, who ran with it aud threw\nto Godfrey. The latter, though checked\nby Archibald, got a straight shot for\ngoal ,but it was stopped by Rutherford.\nThe play swung away again from the\nNelson goal for a time, but finally the\nball waa passed from Barr to Shoemaker, and from him to Hermann, who\nnt tho end of a run, cleverly shot the\nball In from above, The time on this\nwas 11 minutes straight.\nIn the next game the special feature!\nwas a run by Taylor, passing to C. Jeffs\nwho shot for goal but was Intercepted\nby Reynolds. Nelson fought hard to\nkeep the ball at Vancouver's end and\nNorman's ability was put to a severe\ntest, but he was equal to It each time.\nTime was called without either side\nscoring after 9 minutes of heavy play.\nAfter time the Vancouvers went In to\nwin, and back and forward the ball\npassed In the centre of tho field, but\nfor several minutes it was kept away\nfrom both goals. Then It was worked\n\u00abp to Vancouver again, shot by Peard,\ncaught by Norman, who passed to Morrison, Shoemaker and Godfrey, who\nwent down in a scrimmnge with Archibald. The struggle was keen close to\nthe Nelson flags, then Godfrey took the\nball and shot it in. The time on the\nsecond goal was 7% minutes since play\nhad been started.\nThe next game was made in five minutes by Vancouver, the hall being shot\nIn by Matheson, after a series of wild\nscrimmages close to the goal. This was\nabout the only inning in which there\nwns the slightest weakness shown by\nNelson, some unnecessary hunching lak\ning place, depriving the defence of some\nof Its strength.\nThere was now three to zero against\nNelson, and the boys started In with a\nI   (letermlnation that drove the Vancouver\ndefence hack and roused tho enthusiasm\nof the spectators. Thompson and Archibald did some good work in this,\nalthough tlie team worked as one man.\nThe end came swiftly. Taylor sent the\nball to C. Jeffs, who ran, and when\nchecked by Matheson passed the ball to\nThompson, who threw lo McNicholl,\nwho .with a heavy drive, sent it straight\nbetween the flags, even Norman's\nlightning stroke not being quick enough\nto intercept it The time was 40 seconds.\nThe Nelson rooters' spirits rose after\nthis and the uproar for a time waa\ndeafening. With the opening \u25a0 of the\nnext game the play, though swift, was\nnot as heavy as In the previous game,\nthe men spreading out more and some\ngood runs being made by Perrier, C.\nJeffs, Williamson and Fox on the Nelson\nside, and York, Shoemaker and Matheson for the Vancouvers. Taylor and\nMatheson were opposed several times in\nthis Inning, nnd showed some splendid\nhandling of the ball. Blackwood and\nMcNicholl passed one very warm hall,\nwlhich the former intercepted when\nthrown by Reynolds. A succession of\ngood runs, with equally good checking\nhy the defence at both ends were\nbrought to an end by the call of time.\nThis concluded the first half, the score\nbeing 4 to 1.\nBefore play was called again Blackwood was placed on goal, Rutherford\ntaking his place outside. At the start\nTaylor, Archibald and Thompsiu did\nsome lively juggling with the ball and it\nwas kept steadily at Vancouver's end.\nstrive as they did to force it back. But\nalthough It got that far it seemed Impossible for it to go through the flags.\nIt sailed over the top, went across the\nface, but always was checked in the\nnick of time. During the whole of the\nthird quarter no goal was scored.\nAt the commencement of the fourth\nquarter Reynolds and Norman were\nchanged. In this game Thompson was\nInid out several times, having also had\nan uncomfortable experience In tlie\nformer quarter, and there were but few\nplayers who escaped a bruise. Thero\nwere several little squabbles, two of the\nVancouvers being ruled off for live minutes for fouls, one for using a square\ncheck and tiie other for striking a man\nunnecessarily. Godfrey, for the Vancouvers, got a severe cut across the head\nbut most of the blows that were coming along stopped on Thompson, who\nthough bruised and cut, played a splendid game to the end. Williams, who\nthrough the game had done some very\ngood work, tn this quarter surpassed\nhimself, and made a number of clever\npasses.\nNelson played \\o. magnificent gjame\nthroughout the second half, and the\nfriends of the Vancouver team acknowledged after that they were very doubtful of the result till the last. Thompson\nand Archibald did some very good passing In this, and Peard, when the ball\ncame in his neighborhood, passed it to\nTaylor, who sent It to C. Jeffs, who, al\nthe end of a run drove it In. The time\nwas 2% minutes.\nBefore the next game was called\nReynolds and Norman wero again exchanged. Nelson played up in good\nshape, and near the last the ball was\ntwice driven up to the Vancouver flags,\nand when it was checked, the excitement of the spectators, who knew that\nthere was only a few more minutes to\nplay, increased. This game lasted 13^\nminutes, of actual playing although Vancouver scored in two minutes after the\nlast face-off. Hermann made the lucky\nshot that scored, aud during the last\nminute and a half of play no more scoring was done.\nVancouver, Nelson.\nS. Norman Goal .. D. Rutherford\nL. York Point A. Jeffs\nReynolds ... Cover Point .. Archibald\nMorrison .... 1st Defence .. Blackwood\nM. Barr 2nd Defence ... A. Taylor\nShoemaker.. 3rd Defence .. Williamson\nWright Centre ... J. Thompson\nG. Morrison .. 3rd Home ....A, Perrier\nC. Hermann..2nd Home .... McNicholl\nMathowson ... 1st Home C. Jeffs\nC. Cao Outside Homo  Fox\nGodfrey .... Inside Home.  Peard\nSpringer   Captain Hawkins\nBASEBALL BY COURTESY.\nNelson Team Puts Up a Game Without\nan Equal.\nRossland took a very ragged game\nfrom Nelson yesterday In the baseball\ntournament. There were five Innings\nIn tho game which were Interesting, but\nthe rest of it was very trying on the\nnerves of those who like presentable\nball. Thero were two new men In the\nNelson uniform, One of these was Powell, who was imported to take McAs-\ntocker's place in the box. He was not\nvery effective, save In ti\\e first part of\nthe game, when he had a number of\nthe Rossland batters afraid of him,\nwhile Gibson, who was not the least\nimpressed with Powell, added to the\nfright of the others by batting in hard\nluck for tho first six innings. But in\nthe seventh the visitors commenced to\n(Continued on Fourth Page)\nJAMES BAY CREW THE VICTORS\nVictoria has reason to feel proud of\nthe crew that It sent to the eleventh\nannual regatta of the N. P. A. .A. 0.,\nwhich was rounded out on the lake.yesterday afternoon, and it is tho opinion\nof most judges of oarsmen, who followed them during the two events in which\nthey were entered, that in them Victoria\nhas the material from which can be\nshaped up the best crew that ever carried the colors of the James Bay Athletic Association.\nIt is not often that It falls to the lot\nof a green crew to carry off the honors\nin both the junior and senior class in\ntheir first year, but this is what the\nVictoria hoys did, and fast as their time\nwas yesterday It does not mark the\nlimit of their speed by any means. They\nare a much stronger crew now than they\nwere when thoy arrived in Nelson, and\nwith the confidence which their victories have given them they will be much\nharder men to beat when they enter in\ntheir next race.\nThey were the favorites for the senior\nfours yesterday, chiefly owing to the\nfast time they made in their race with\nthe Nelson juniors, a time so fust that\nit has given rise to a suspicion that a\nmistake was made In the laying out of\nthe course on Kootenay lake, or that the\nstrength of the current In the lake has\nbeen very much under-rated.\nNot only were the boys in the dark\nblue the favorites of the men who pride\nthemselves on their ability to size up\noarsmen, but they were also the popular favorites. On the day previous they\nhad led the way for the green and white,\nand Nelson people had reasoned it out\nthat it would take the edge off their\ndisappointment If the crew which won\nfrom the local boat should demonstrate\nits superiority over lhe senior crews as\nwell.\nThis feeling found Its expression in\nthe ovation tendered the Victoria boys\nas they commenced to paddle down to\nthe stake boats. Cheer after cheer went\nup for them, and they doffed their caps\nin acknowledgement.\nThe Victoria men were confident, but\nis was easy to see that they were somewhat nervous. They would have gone\nbroke backing themselves if it had been\nnecessary, but at the same time they\nknew that they were going up against a\nnew which last year led the way to\ntheir seniors at Shawnigan lake, and\nthey had not yet accustomed themselvea\nto thinking that they were a better crew\nthan the mon who last year had been\nmasquerading as seniors with the qualifications of juniors. As they moved off\ndown towards their stake boat they received shouts of encouragement from all\nsides, and if they required any heart\nfor the stern business which they had\nin hand, they received it.\nThe Victoria men drew the same position that thov had In the junior event,\nand were at their boat several minutes\nbefore the Vancouver and Portland\ncrews arrived, the former having the\nnorth course, and the latter the smith.\nThe boats got away together, all three\ncatching the water at the same time.\nThe Victorias started out with the same\nstroke that had carried them to victory\non the previous day, a good strong 36.\nPortland was pulling the same, but\nVancouver started In to set the pace\nwith a killer of 40. As they swept on\ndown the lake, every man of the twelve\nstraining to make his strength tell, they\npresented a thrilling sight, and the\nmyriad of steam and gasoline craft set\ntheir whistles shrieking to tell the\ncrowds at* the other end of the course\nthat they had been sent away, and that\nthe big event of the regatta was now\nbeing fought out, for the winning of\nwhich the contestants had for months\nbeen undergoing the most rigorous\ntraining and preparatory work.\nComing abreast of the shipyard, which\nbrought the crews close upon the end of\ntheir first half-mile, the Victoria boat\nbegan to forge ahead, and Vancouver\nfinding that it could not secure the lead\nwith Its rapid stroke, dropped down to\n36 also. There was a puff of wind down\nthe lake, and the Portland and Vancouver boats seemed to be affected by it, in\nthat they commenced to splash a little.\nUp to this point they had been rowing\nmuch the prettiest race.\nThe wind went out as the crews shot\npast the half-mile mark, and Victoria\nwas then seen to be showing almost a\nfull length to tho good, but they had no\nclear water, and Portland and Vancouver\nwere following on abreast. The Victorias did not retain their advantage,-\nhowever, and appeared to have lost that\ncontrol of their boat which had marked\ntheir performance of Friday. They were\nrowing the same strong stroke, but\nbegan to cut across the course first to\none side und then to the other. Poor\nsteering was their chief characteristic\nfrom the half-mile till the sampling\nworks were reached, and they lost much\nof the energy they were putting into\ntheir work. Here, however, they pulled\nthemselves together and straightened\ntheir boat up.\nPortland by this time had dropped to\na 33, and with their characteristic stroke\nwere shoving their boat through the\nwnter at an astonishing rate, while\nVancouver commenced to drop behind.\nComing up to the hospital Victoria le\";\nout a little burst of speed, nnd got at\nleast two lengths of open water between\nthemselves and the Portland men.\nThen Portland called up its reserve,\nnnd tried to cut down the lead. They\nquickened their stroke to 38, and throw\ntheir entire strength into the work.\nVictoria was not taking any chances,\nhowever, and they strove their utmost\nto maintain the advantage they had secured. It was a desperate struggle from\nthis point to the finishing line, and as\nthe two leaders came abreast ol the city\nwharf the cheers and snouting from the\nsteamers and irom the shore were deafening. Victoria was being pressed hard\nlo hold Its lead and they commenced to\nsplash again, It was a brave finish. The\nPutlaud w**jfl |iiuiln-u die puce lu their\nlimit, to retain their honors, but they\ncould not succeed in cutting out any of\nthe water that separated them from tlio\nleaders,, who reached the line with three\ngood lengths to tho good. The Vancouver crew were some distance behind\nthe second boat. The time of the heat\nwas given at 7:57 1-10.\nAlthough the lime was a shade slower\nthan that made In the rnce with tho\nNelson juniors, the pace was really\nfaster as the winners lost a great deal\nby the erratic course they steered for a\nportion of the distance; and the game\nspurt which the Portlands made In the\nlast stage worried them the more because they did not know just what there\nwas behind it.\nCheer after cheer went up for the victors as they brought their boat about\nand started for tlie club house, and their\nirrepressible trainer \"professor\" Foster,\ntook a jump into the lake to express to\nall and sundry just how he felt over the\nway the race had ended.\nLAPSTREAK FINALS.\nThe final heat in the four-oarcd lapstreak, for the championship of Kootenay lake, brought out a nice race between the Jesse and the Macrae crews.\nBoth started out with a 36 stroke in tho\nfuce of a rather stiff breeze. The Jesse\ncrew eased off in their work after they\nhad travelled a short distance, hut Macrae kept his men to It, and at tho\nsampling works had somewhat the best\nof the race. The steering of his boat\nwas at fault for a while, and the stroke\nfell off to 34. Meanwhile Jesse was\ngoing strong with a stroke of 32, and\nho was keeping his boat well up to the\nline. At the hospital Macrae had a\nclear length of a lead. The bow oar\niu the Jesse boat then commenced to\nlag and Macrae increased his lead. Coming opposite to the wharf both crews\nspurted, their stroke going back to 36.\nThere a stiff breeze was blowing now\nand it started a rather choppy water,\nbut the boys hammered away at their\nwork and gave the spectators one of the\nliveliest finishes of the regatta. Macrae\ngot to the line first and had a good\nmargin. The time of the heat was 6:06,\nwhich ts very good considering the wind\nand the lumpy state of the water for a\nportion of the course.\nJUNIOR DOUBLES.\nThe Junior doubles proved to be a good\nrace, with a very close finish. E. H.\nGrubbe stroked one boat with A. King\nin tho bow, and R. A. Lamberson stroked the other, with E. McGowan as bow\noar. They started their race with an\neven stroke of 32, nnd came down the\ncourse well together. Lambtrson was\nsteering the best course, and gradually\nworked his boat to the front. He held\nthe advantage he had gained throughout\nthe race. Grubbo spurted as he approached tho finish, and although ho\nbrought up upon almcs.t even terms,\nLamberson finished first. The time was\n9:19 1-2.\nTHE OTHER WINNERS.\nC. B. Winter was the victor in the\nsingle canoe, with Macrae a close\nsecond.\nThe gentlemen's singles went to Gloss,\nof Portland.\nIn the gentlemen's doubles, with lady\ncoxswains, Messrs. Pollock and O'Reilly\nfinished first, with Messrs. Hodge and\nGloss second.\nREGATTA NOTES.\nThe officers of the N. P. A A. O. who\nwere present at the regatta all agrci\nthat Nelson offers the best course of any\npoint at which the association has been\nin the habit of holding its meetings, and\nfurther that they experienced less difficulty In keeping the Nelson course clear.\nThe medals which were presented to\nthe winners in the regatta last evening\nare all genuine souvenirs of Nelson in\nthat they were manufactured In the\njewelry establishment of Jacob Lover.,\nof this city.\nThe regatta smoker given in the evening was a success. The large assembly\nroom In Fraternity hall was filled, and\nall joined in making the occasion a\nlively one. Supper was served lu the-\nearly part of the evening, after which\nthe prizes were presented to the winners by W. A. Macdonald, K.C. There\nwas no Bet programme, but toasts were\ndrunk to all the teams and crews that\nhad taken part, and to a laige number\nof other individuals connected witli the\nin e\u00abjll n g.\t\nLE ROI NINE IS CRACKING\nGeneral Superintendent Dunkle is Killed in the Squeeze\nand Fifteen Miners are Believed to be Imprisoned in\nthe Stope in the 500-Foot Level where the Crack\nwas First Noticed and Slight Hope is Now Entcr-\n\u2022    tained That They Will be Brought Out Alive\n\u2022 Rossland, July 27.\u2014A very serious cave-in of one of the slopes In the 500-foot level of the Le Roi mine was\nnoticed shortly after midnight last night. In tlie slope In which the cracking occurred there were fifteen men\nemployed.   A number of them escaped, but how many it is Impossible to say nt this time.\nWhen the cracking first occurred word was taken to superintendent Dunklp. He went at once Into the slope\nand is known to he in there. Two others that are known to lie in the stope are W. L, Mackenzie, vice-president of\ntho miners' union, and a miner named Dan Gunu.\nThe latest report of the mon who are engaged on tlie rescue work Is thai they enn lienr McDonald and Gunn\ntalking, but no word can be had of superintendent Dunkle. It is believed that both McDonald and Gunn are injured\nby their cries, and from the sound it Is believed that they arc against the bulk-head.\nThe latest report from the hill is that the mine Is cracking at tho 700-foot level but that all is quiet at the\nCOO and 500-foot levels. The mine commenced to crack about the time that tlie mon were changing and fortunately the majority of the men of both forces were not In the mine. All tho available men on the hill are working to effect the rescue. This Is rendered more difficult as. the skip bus been hound by the cracking and cannot\nhe worked.\nDoctors McKenzie and Campbell were sent for as soon as the nature of the accident became known. Thoy are\nnow in the skip and will go down to the sceno of thu accldont as soon as tho skip can bo got to work.\nJust how far the cracking of the mine will go Is a matter of speculation. Secretary Wootlsiile, of the miners'\nunion, who is familiar wilh the Le Roi and its workings, gives It as his opinion that the mine will now crack all\nthe way from the 700-foot level to the 450-foot. The skip has been got lo work and tho doctors are now down In\nthe 500-foot.\n4.20 a. m,\u2014The rescuers have been able to reach McDonald and Gunn and they have been brought to the surface. They have been injured but the extent of their injuries is not known. Tho body of the general superintendent Dunkle has been located but it Is Impossible to get at it. At the present time no one seems to know just how\nmany men are In the stope, but the number Is generally placed at 15.\nTho working of the skip will greatly facilitate the rescue, nnd if the slides of the stope do not settle further\nIt will be soon possible to clear the stope with the force of men engaged In the work.\nWAS IT A FIGHT\nOR ONLY A FAKE\nSensational Story That the Big Fight\nwas Fixed\nJefferies and Fitzsimmons Deny It\nMost Emphatically\nSan Francisco, July 26.\u2014There Is a\nwide (inference of opinion In Uii3 city\naa to the character ot the Jeffries-Fltz-\nsimmons fight The charge that the light\nwas a fake does not meet with general\nbelief, although there Is no doubt that\nmayor Schmidt was warned lhat the\nlight was to end In the eighth round.\nEven those who charged fraud admit\nthat it was a magnificent light while It\nlasted. Fitzsimmons was hitting Jeffries almost at will, but while his blows\nstruck they did not seriously Injure the\nchampion. Fitzslmmons when seeu\nthis morning was apparently much distressed at -the charge of fraud. He declared that he had fought his best but\nthat he could not stand Jeffries' body\nblows. Jeffries also denies that tho\nfight was fixed. He says that Fitzslmmons gave him the hardest fight ho over\nhad. His face was sore today, but otherwise he was feeling well.\nThe trainers on each side resent any\nchsrgo of crookedness, but the fact remains that Information was given to\n\u25a0Mr. Naughton, of the Examiner .the\nday before the fight, that It would end\nin the eighth round. Naughton's information came from some one who was\nwith Jeffries at Hardin Springs. Bets\nshould be made on Jeff to win iu the\neighth, it was said; notwithstanding\nthis, however, there Is no evidence of\nheavy betting, most of the wagers made\nhere being small.\nConcerning the charg e of \"lying\ndown\" in the fight, Fitzsimmons today\nmade the' following statement: \"Had\n.\u2022 been a fake I could have made a fortune. If I had been accused of faking\nbefore there might have been some excuse, but here I was to make a last\nstand before retiring from the ring forever. I was offered, In my fight with\nCorbett, $750,000 to throw it, and I was\noffered |100,000 to queer the fight with\nSharkey, but I have always been square.\n\"I fought last night Ihe bott fight of\nmy life. I punched Jeffries as I never\npunched a mnn before. 1 split bis car,\nI broke his nose, I cut his face, and to\nsay that I was faking,\" and Fitzsimmons\nunable to restrain himself, broke into\ntears. He did not leave bis bed until a\nlate hour this morning. He complained\nof his left arm hurting, and a severe\npain under his chest, the result of Jeffries' terrific body blows. Fitzsimmons\ndeclares he is ready to turn over the\nloser's end of the purse to the mayor to\nbe given to charity if there caa be produced any evidence of a fake.\nTho receipt of last night's fight amounted to more than |30,000.\nTrainer William Dclaney this after\nnoon Issued tho following statement la\nbehalf of Jeffries: \"The fight is over.\nJeffries won, but not without a struggle.\nI never did like Fltzslmomus, but his\nactions Inst night won me over. I admire him ns a fighter and sympathize\nwith bim that ho should have been subjected to the accusation of faking. Taking age and weight into consideration,\nhe made a marvellous showing. If he\nis a fakir we are willing to admit ourselves to be In his class, tor 11 Is the\nkind of faking that wins glory and\nchampionships.\"\n\"I have been before the public for a\nquarter of a century, and have never\nbeen accused of participating in a dishonorable contest and I am perfectly\nwilling to let the people judge fur themselves of last night's fight I like courageous men or animals, and when I see\na man wbo fought ns Fitz. fought last\nnight, accused of throwing friends, I\nam compelled to do something 1 havo\nnever done before\u2014rush Into print in\ndefence of tbe honesty ot the fight I\nwas connected with. To defend Fitz.\nfrom the accusation Is to deteud the\nprinciple In the greatest pugilistic encounter the world has ever seen, I\nthink tho story Is the brightest leather\ntn Fitz's wing.\n\"It has had the effect of making me a\nwarm supporter of a man whom I never\nliked, and I venture to fay it will have\ntho same effect on others. liven the\nspectators do not know what a bad fix\nJeffries was In. His cheek was laid\nopen, and he had a bleeding, broken\nnose. These wero not the things wo\nfeared most One of his eyes was cut\nbetween tho eyebrow and the lash aud\nwe were afraid that tho flesh of the eye\nwould fai land blind ntm. His other\neye was also \"blown out\" for a moment I think Jeffries demonstrated ho\ncould tako as much as ho could '.rive.\nPeople near the ring will agree with- mo\nin this.\"\nMayor Schmidt mode the following\nstatement In regard to tho fight: \"1 saw\nthe exhibition, and up to the time the\nblow that settled the flght was struck,\nIt seemed to be' a fair and creditable\nlight, but at the time tbe blow was delivered by Jeffries, Fitz appeared to be\nentirely off his guard. Perhaps so much\nstress would not be placed on this fact\nwero It not for the Information given to\nmo on the night before the exhibition\nthat the flght would end !n favor ot\nJeffries in the eighth round. I am loath to\nbelieve that the promoters of this exhibition were in a conspiracy to defraud\nthe public, and believe that they know\nnothing at all of a prearranged fake.\"\nEDINBURGH HONORS LAURIER\nCONFERS FREEDOM OP CITY UPON\nCANADA'S PREMIER.\nTO UNITE FRENCH AND ENGLISH\nIS HIS ONE ENDEAVOR.\nEdinburgh, July 26.\u2014The freedom of\ntho city of Edinburgh was ceremoniously conferred on the colonial premiers today. Sir Wilfrid Laurier, thu\nCanadian premier, ir. responding, said\nDie only merit he claimed, was his endeavor of bring French and British eec-\nllons in Canada to love and respect each\nother and be true British subjects.\nNEW KOOTENAY RIVER MILL.\nCranbrook, July 20.\u2014(Special lo The\nDully News.)\u2014A. W. McVItlle started yesterday for the Kootenay valley to survey\nUmber lands for parties here who will put\nIn a large mill ut u point un the Kootenay\nriver.\nGeorge W. Mull, general manager of the\nSullivan smelter, arrived from Spoknno\ntoday on his wny to Maryavltle, Ho will\nreturn to Spokano next week. He had\nnothing to give out as to the affairs of tho\nSullivan company or as to what was going\nto lie done nt the smelter.\nIt in said thiii a deal tins gone through\nwhoroby a number of tlio Baker mountain\nIron properties have been bondod to English parties.\nDr. Raymond, of Minneapolis, bus been\nIn the district for the last few days looking nt some of the properties on St. Mary's\nprairie In which he Is Interested, ho expresses himself us much pleased with tho\nshowings.\nVISITING THE MINES.\nPhoenix, July 20.\u2014(Special to The Dally\nNews.)\u2014A largo party of officials and\nshareholders in the Granny Consolidated\nMining, Smelting & I'ower company, were\nhere yesterdny on a tour of inspection of\nthe mines and smelter of the company,\nmost of them coming from the province of\nQuebec. The party consisited of S. li O.\n..tlner, president, of Grnnby, Quo., wilh\nMrs. Miner ami Miss Minor; J. p, Graves,\ngeneral manager, of Spokane; A. C. Plum-\nmerfolt, assistant general manager, of\nVictoria; A. L. Whlto, secretary, of Montreal and New York; Gardner Stevens, a\ndirector in tho Eastern Townships Bank,\nof Waterloo, Que., with Mrs. Stevens; W.\nH. Robinson, of Granby, Quebec, with Mrs.\nRobinson and son, Wynn; Gordon McKinnon, son of Jnmos II, McKinnon, manager\nof tho Eastern Townships bank, Shcr-\nbrooke, Qupbec; C. H. Arnold, of Boston,\nMass., a prominent rubber goods manufact\nurer; W, H. Matlcy, secretary of the\nAmes-Holdcn Co., und auditor of the\nGranby Co.\nThe officials of the company were much\npleuscd with tho evidences of substantial\nprogress in and about tho mines. They\nwent out Inst night on a special train.\nTIIE  WIRELESS SYSTEM.\nTo Be Installed on United States War\nVessels.\nWashington, July 26.\u2014Tho navy department having decided to equip tho fighting\nships of the Amelcan navy with a wireless\nsystem of telegraphy, within a few days\na board consisting of live members will bo\nappointed to Investigate the whole subject\nto decide upon the system to be Installed,\naud to look up plans for the education and\ntraining of men to operate it aboard the\nships.\nTHE WINNIPEG CLOSED DOWN.\nPhoenix, July 26.\u2014(Special to The Dally\nNews.)\u2014The pumps ut the Winnipeg mlno,\ntwo miles from Phoenix, In Wellington\ncamp, havo been taken out, tho two men\nemployed for some time pnst discharged,\nand the mine closed down Indefinitely.\nSeveral weeks sinco the Winnipeg Mines,\nLtd., owning the mine, suffered a serious\nloss by tho burning down of- the shaft and\nengine house, which wore completely destroyed, wilh the compressor, etc. it was\nthen thought by Richard Plowman, managing director ot tho property, that the\nstructure would bo robullt, another compressor secured, and work resumed In a\nshort lime. Arrangements, however, havo\nnot yet been completed, and pending thai,\nlhe property will lie kilo. The Winnipeg\nhas shipped considerable oro to the different smelters In this section, most of which\nhas shown a fair prom. Mr. Plowman\nwill probably go cast shortly In connection\nwith the resumption of operations.\nLONG ISLAND YACHT RACE.\nLarchmant, X. J\u201e July 26.\u2014Cornelius\nVanderbllt's seventy-foot yacht. Rainbow,\ncovered herself with glory today by beating the fast Yankee one minute and 42\nseconds, anil August Belmont's famous\nMincoln two minutes four seconds, over a\ncourse of 32 miles ou Long Island sound.\nELECTRIC CARS COLLIDE.\nNew Haven, Conn., July 26.\u2014Two elec-\ntrls cars crashed together between cast\nHaven and Brantford tonight. It Is reported thnt two men were killed and 80\nInjured.\n THE DAILY   NEWS, NELSON, B. C,   SUNDAY, JULY 27, 1902\nHUDSON'S BAY\nCOMPANY.\nINCORPORATED   1670.\nTea Talk\nTetley's\nTeas\nIn i Pound\nand\n1-2 Pound\nPackages\nNOTHING CONTRIBUTES SO MUCH\nTO THE COMFOItT AND ENJOYMENT OF A MEAL AS A\nCUP OF GOOD TEA. THERE ARE\nSO MANY DIFFERENT KINDS OFFERED FOR SALE THAT A REALLY\nGOOD ARTICLE IS HARD TO GET.\nWE HAVE ALWAYS BEEN FAMED\nFOR SELLING GOOD TEA. AND CAN\nHIGHLY RECOMMEND TETLEY'S\nTEAS, AT 40c, 60c AND |1.00.\nThe Canadian Bank of Commerce!\nWith which Is Amalgamated I\nThe Bank of British Columbia. f\nHEAD OFFICE-TORONTO.\nPaid up Capital,  $8,000,000;   Reserve  Fund,  88,000,000;\nAggregate Resources Over 865,000,000.\nHON, CEO. A. COX, Prc.ld.nl. n. E. WALKEB, Ventral Manager. I\nSaving's Bank Department a^kJ**^- ??iI\u00bbta\u00abt *\u25a0\"\u00bb\u00ab*\nNelson Branch.\nPresent Hate 3 por cent.\nGRANGE V. HOLT, Manager, f\nA... Ass, t\u00bb\u00bbtmtiiiti,m tvAsksfc AAA! a. * s. *- iiaa-.xAAaaiAAAAAAA at,\n1 p^TTTtttTtttttt7Vtt\"tttTttTVVtTttttTtttVVttttttttT\nBANK OF MONTREAL:\nEstablished 1817. Incorporated by Act of Parliament,\nCapital   (all paid   up)  $12,000,000.00.        Rest   $8,000,000.00\nUndivided Profits, $165,856.09.\nHEAD OFFICE, MONTREAL\nKb. Hon. Lord Strathcona and Mount Royal, G. O. M. O., President.\nHon. G. A. Drummond, Vice-President, E. S. Olouston, General Manager,\nNclnon Branch-Corner Baker and Kootenay Street*,  A. H. Buchanan, Manager.\nZhe IRoval Bank of Canafca\n*\u25a0* Incorporated lRfiii\nIncorporated 1800\n$f,aoo,MM   I   Rest.\nBead Office, Halifax!\nGeneral Manager, Edson L, Pease, Montreal,\n\u2022 l,3M.Mt\nCapital Paid-up,    ,   .    ,\nThomas E. Kenny, President.\nBRANCHES IN BRITISH COLUMBIA-Grand Forks, Nanaimo, Nolson, Rossland. Vancouver.\nVancouver East End, Victoria.\nAccounts received on tho most favorable torms.  Interest allowed on spoolal deposits and on\nSavings Bank accounts. General Banking Business Transacted.\nGEO. KYDD, Manager Nelson Branch.\npiiiiiiniHiiiiniiniiininininiTinfnfiitnfHiHiiiiiiinjninnii\nB   YOU'RE SAFE WHEN I\nB YOU USE 3\nI BENNETT'S FUSE I\nCROWN BRAND\nBe Sure and Get the Genuine.\na\u00bb\u2014\ns=\na**-\nB   a\nI  The J- H. Ashdown Hardware Co.. Ltd.   1\nB Sole Agents, Nelson, B. C. 3\nIiiiuiuiiiiiiiaiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiuiiiuiiimmiimuaiiiiimuiiiiuiil\nDouble=Barrel Guns\n$9.50 $12.50 $14 $15 $16.50\nRemington Hammerless duns\n$37.50 $45 $55\nMauser 10-Shot Automatic Pistol $30\nGet Summer Catalogue\nGun Catalogue and\nWinter Catalogue\nAll for the asking\nThe Hingston Smith Arms Go.\nWINNIPEG, MANITOBA\nInternational Correspondence\nSchools. ScrantonPa.\nOrdinary Mechanics are plentiful; you\ncan be something better. Learn how. Call\non or address,\nRepresentative, W. II. McDougall, box\n180, Nelson, B. C.\t\nParties wishing- gait or any stockings\nknitted or footed can have them dons by\napplying on corner of Ward and Victoria\n\u25a0Vest, opposite postoffict.\nIMPERIAL HOTEL\nUnder new management.\nThe mnst commodious and up-to-date bar\nIn tho City.\nThe Dining Room la In the hands of an\nefficient start.\nLunch served dully from 12 noon to 2 p.m.\nRates from ,1.00 per day upwards.\n_    J. a Mcpherson, Proprietor.\nIMPERIAL  BANK\nOF  CANADA\nCAPITAL  (Paid  Up) .' }2,500,000\nREST    ?2,125,000\nHEAD OFFICE-TORONTO, ONTARIO\nBranches   In the Northwest  Territories,\nProvinces of British Columbia, Manitoba,\nOntario and Quebec.\nT. R. MERRITT President\nD. B. WILKIE...Vlcc-Pres. and Oen. Man.\nE. HAY Assistant Qen. Manager\nW. MOFFAT Chief Inspector\nNELSON  BRANCH\nA general banking business transacted,\nSavings Department\u2014Deposits received\nand interest allowed.\nDrafts sold, available in all parts of Canada, United States and Europe.\nSpecial attention given to collections.\nJ. M. LAY, Manager.\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPublished at Nelson every morning, except\nMonday, by\nF. J. DEANE.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES:\nDally, per month, by carrier % 65\nDally, per month, by mall    60\nDaily per year, by carrier 7 00\nDally per year, by malt  6 00\nDaily, per year, foreign 9 00\nTHE WEEKLY NEWS.\nWeekly, per half year $125\nWeekly, per year 2 00\nWeekly, per year, foreign 3 00\nSubscriptions Invariably in advance.\nADVERTISING RATES:\nDisplay Advertisements, $4 per Inch per\nmonth; Display Advertisements, 25 cents\nper inch each Insertion less than a month;\nLocals, 10 cents per line each insertion;\nClassified Advertisements 1 cent per word\neach Insertion; Wholesale Cards, $2,50 per\nmonth; Society Cards, $2.60 per month.\nTHE RED CROSS.\nNot tlie least of Canada's contributions to the late war In South Africa\nwas the Canadian branch of the Red\nCross Society. Under the direction of\nlieutenant-colonel Ryerson, afterwards\nsucceeded by lieutenant-colonel Biggur,\nboth of whom gave their services gratuitously, a noble work was done In the\ncare of the sick and wounded. General\nRoberts recognized the energy and warm\nhearted zeal these officers threw into\nthe work they had undertaken, and lord\nMethuen strongly showed his appreciation of the services rendered by the\nCanadian Red Cross.\nTho recently   issued   report of the\nsociety makes interesting reading.   The\nwork required skill, tact and steadfastness of purpose aud all these attributes\nwore found among those who had undertaken it.   Nursing the sick aud wounded in well equipped hospitals in cities\nand towns amid all the comforts and\nadvantages therein existing is a tax\nupon the strength and stamina of those\nengaged in it, but upon the held, where\nthe conditions are changed and many\naccustomed adjuncts are conspicuous by\ntheir absence, the strain is increased\nmany times over.    Under these conditions the Red Cross did its noble work\nand perhaps the success that attended\nthe efforts put torth was due iu part to\nthe splendid   co-operation of the sick\nand wounded themselves.   In his report\nmade before turning over tho direction\nof affairs to lieutenant-colonel liifegur,\nlioutenant-colonel Ryerson said;\nIt is characteristic of the feeling\nof personal independence of Caua- ,\ndians that some of the men refused\nany aid.   I had the same experience\nelsewhere\u2014men refusing underciolu-\ning,    etc.,    preferring to buy    it\nthemselves out of their slender resources rather than be indebted for\nit.   In some cases men would only\naccept money on being   told   that\nthey might repay it at any time they\nfound it convenient,   though they\nhad not received any pay for considerable periods.\nHISTORICAL, RECORDS.\nThe death, in his 72nd year, at the\nbeginning of this month of the sun of\nSimon Fraser recalls the part played by\nthe discoverer of the river bearing his\nname In the early history of tho province. Simon Fraser set out in May.\n1808, for the Pacific coast, with a party\nof 24, Including Stuart and Quesnel, both\nof whom are remembered by the places\nnamed after thorn, the former by Stuart's lake in the north of Cariboo, and\ntho latter by Quesnol lake and river\nand the town of the same name. It was\nvirtually a race for the Pacific, for\ntheir expedition was instigated hy tho\nfact that John Jacob Astor was then\nfitting out two expeditions, ono by land\nand the other by water, to the same\npoint and to engage, like the Northwest\ncompany, in the fur trade. Tlie journals kept hy Mr. Fraser have been preserved and to read his adventures, and\nthoso of all the crew of hardy explorers\nwho pushed tholr way into the unknown\nrecesses of tho west, is to read an account of marvellous exploits and hairbreadth escapes.\nThose who havo passed by wagon or\nrailroad through the Fraser river canyon, know tho dread nature of the current that tears and forces   Its   way\nthrough tlie rocky passage. Few of the\nmost intrepid of river men care lo risk\ntho trip through it and yet these pioneers of pioneers did It, not knowing\nwhat awaited them at the next turning. But they were working for a company which had the faculty of imbuing\nits partners and the men who worked\nunder them with an esperit de corps\nthat has rarely been equalled, unless by\nits great rival, the Hudson's Bay company. The work these men did ultimately proved to the advantage o[ the\nBritish people though not primarily\nundertaken with any other object than\nthe benefit of tiie Northwest, or the\nHudson's Bay company. Then, as now,\ncommerce led the way, and other influences followed. Britisn Columbia was\nthe last to receive the attention of the\ncompanies, and the landmarks left by\nthose forerunners of civilization are tue\nlast to endure. One by one even these\nare passing away, their significance is\nDoing lost to the rising generation and\nunless measures are tai.cn to keep alive\nsome of them, they may pass into oblivion altogether. But little effort has\nbeen made to preserve historical records in British Columbia or to make\nmuch use of tlie few that have been collected. Day by day the little army of\nearly settlers and company men is becoming less numerous and if any records of the experiences of the few survivors is to be had, they should he\nsecured now; tho opportunity will not\nalways remain.\nTHE McADAMS CASE.\nThe eastern newspapers all take a\nvery serious view, and rightly so we\nthink, of the action of the supreme court\nin sentencing William McAdams, editor\nof the Sandon Paystreak, to a term of\nnine months in jail for an offense\nagainst themselves. The Toronto Globe\ncomments pretty plainly upon the unwisdom of the court's action, and lu the\ncourse of quite a lengthy article upon\nthe subject says:\nHad the court possessed the saving grace of a sense of humor the\naffair would have ended with the\napology which he niuUt, aud it is to\nbo regretted that it did   not end\nthere.   Courts are not expected to\nbe vindictive on their own account,\nand an apology and retraction are\na'most invariably regarded as sufficient to absolve those charged witli\ncontempt. McAdams is a young man\nof good   parts, one of the   many\nfrom Ontario who   havo gone to\nseek their fortunes   in   the freer\natmosphere uf the mining camps of\nthe Rockies.   We   have   criminals\nenough in the   dominion   without\nimprisoning a young man who has\ncriticised a court and apologized,\neven though he did tlie former, in a\ntruly mining-camp style,   it seems\na case for executive   intervention.\nNo good purpose can be served by\ninflicting   such   punishment,    but\nmuch harm will result to the victim.   There Is a strong feeling that\ncitizens should have the right of\ntrial by jury for contempt   when\nsuch contempt does  not interfere\nwith the actual   proceedings of a\ncourt, and that feeling will certainly\nhe strengthened if there is even an\nappearance of vindlctiveness on the\npart of tho judiciary.\nThere will not only be a demand for\nthe trial of contempt cases by jury, hut\nassuredly, if the sentence In the McAdams case bo not quashed or at least\nvery materially mitigated, there will be\nsomo plain statements made by a number of papers In this province that will\ncertainly bring the judiciary into contempt   throughout tho dominion.   Wo\nhave never sought to excuse the language used by McAdams, for when he\nmado the general charges he did he\nwas, doing something that everyone with\nany knowledge of the facts knew to be\nabsurd.   But specific charges of unfitness for the   high office of supreme\ncourt judge   could be made,   and undoubtedly will bo made if a newspaper\nman Is to be the victim of the vindict-\niveness of a few men who have been\nplaced in authority more by chance than\nby reason of any special capacity for\nthe duties they have to perform. For a\nlong time post there has been a strong\nand growing sentiment fn the province\nthat our supreme court beucli was of\nquite inferior calibre.   This in itself Is\nn very unfortunate stato of affairs, and if\nas a result of the injustlco inflicted upon\nMcAdams the press of the provnee undertake to show the Impropriety of some\nof these judges trying contempt cases,\nthe state of affairs   will be Infinitely\nworse.\nEDITORIAL NOTES.\nThere being very little doing just now\nin Toronto, aud news being scarce, tho\nMail and Empire has started a story,\nor tho sea serpent variety, to the effect\nthat Immediately following upon tho\nreturn from England of sir Wilfrid\nLaurier thoro will be a dissolution of\nparliament, Tho Mail and Empire says\nthat the general electons will be\nbrought on three years ahead of timo\nbecause Tarto thinks that the present\nwavo of prosperity Is about to subside.\nThe chief tory organ must be very hard\npressed Indeed to resort to such hot\nweather yarns.\nA London cablo dispatch states thnt\ntho British Columbia government has\ndecided not to place the proposed loan\nyet awhile owing to the condition of tho\nmoney market   This means that tho\nenormous overdraft will have to be carried indefinitely at a very heavy expense to taxpayers for Interest, and that\ncertain proposed public works will have\nto be postponed. Perhaps it is just as\nwell that the large sum Intended to be\nborrowed will not be at the disposal of\ntlio government for tlie .present, Upon\npremier Dunsmuir's return from tlie\ncoronation ceremonies there will be several changes in the cabinet, and it may\nwell be that the reorganized government will be more capable of handling\nthe money.\nPRINTERS'  INK PHILOSOPHY.\nA business represented by printers'\nink is one that las,ts. Printers' Ink\nworks while you work and while you\nsleep. It is a salesman who never tires\nand never quits; one of whom your\ncompetitor cannot rob you; printers' ink\nis the one great artery ol commercial\nactivity. It is the medium through\nwhich the world is made to know what\nyou know and profess about your Individual business. It is oven possible, by\nthe aid of printers' Ink; to force the\nsale of an article without merit, but\nsuch prosperity is necessarily shortlived.\nThere are two kinds of advertising,\nthe kind that pays aud that which does\nnot. Still, there are many businesses\nwhich survive in spite of the latter,\nwhich tends to make tlio subject of advertising such a complex problem. No\ngreat national commercial success, however, has been achieved without printers'\nink. A prerequisite of good advertising\nis absolute honesty in every statement.\nFurthermore, to shoot over the heads\nof your readers is money and space\nwasted. To tell all you know in a single\nannouncement is like firing at a grizzly\nbear with a scattering charge of bird-\nshot, while the same load in one bullet,\nproperly aimed, will bring down the\nbear. By this is meant Unit one cannot\nadvertise, effectively, overcoats and\nshoes, for Instance, in lhe same breath.\nThe argument will he no stronger than\nits weakest point, no matter how much\ntime or thought may have been bestowed\nupon its production.\nflAKES\nYOUR BACK\nLAME\nto get out these dnys nnd dig around In\nthe garden, doesn't it?\nIt's good for you though. Good for tho\ngarden too, probably; your appetite grows\ndoubtless, and as for the lameness, one\nof our strengthening plasters\nMAKES\nYOUR BACK\nWELL\nIn a day and a night.\nIt costs you Only 25c nnd you feel like\nanother mnn. You will want to weed\ngardens all the while.\nCanada Drue; &\nBook Co., Ltd.\nPorto Rico Lumber\nCo., Limited,\nYARDS AT NELSON AND ROSSLAND ;\nMILL AT PORTO RICO SIDING\nRough and\nDressed   Lumber,\nShingles,  Mouldings.\nA-l White [Pine Lumber Always In\nStock.\nWe carry a complete stock of Coast flooring, Ceiling, Inside Finish, Turned Work,\nSash and doors. Special order work will\nreceive prompt attention. Mall orders soll-\ncltad.\nPorto Eico Lumber Co.,\nLiniTBD.\nHead  ofllce-Hendryx and Vernon St., Nelson, B. C.\nOUTLET HOTEL^e^\nPROCTER, B. C.\nTerms $2.00 Per Day\nCharming Bummer resort, twenty miles\nfrom Nelson, on Kootenay lake. Steamboats connecting twice dally with all\npoints.   Telegraph station and Postofflce.\nThe best trolling and fly fishing In the\nKootenays.   Big game hunting.\nBoats and Naphtha luunches, with attendants, at reasonable prices.\nCompletely furnished houso boat In connection, accommodation for six or more\npeople; terms $5.00 por day.\nFor further information apply to\nW. TELFORD,\nManager Outlet Hotel, Procter, B. C\u201e or\nT. 0. PROCTER, Nelson.\nREISTERER &  CO\nBrewers of Fine Lager,\nBeer and Porter.\nDROP IN AND SEE US.\nLatimer Street     -     -     -     Nelson, B. C.\nF. C. GREEN P, S. CLEMENTS\nGREEN & CLEMENTS\nCivil    Engineers    and    Provincial    Land\nSurveyors.\nAgents:    ROYAL SHOE STORE, Nelson, B.C.\nESTABLISHED IN 1890 =\nCONFIDENCE\nIS A POWERFUL FACTOR IN BUSINESS. IT IS THE FOUNDATION IN\nFACT ON WHICH BUSINESS SOLIDITY IS BUILT. WITH IT, SUCCESS\nIS ASSURED; WITHOUT IT, FAILURE IS CERTAIN. I HOLD THE\nCONFIDENCE OF THE JEWELRY BUSINESS TO A DEGREE PROBABLY UNPARALLELED. NOR IS IT MERE BLIND FAITH. THE PEOPLE BELIEVE IN ME BECAUSE THEY KNOW ME. THE BONDS THAT\nBIND THEM TO ME ARE RELIABLE GOODS, PROMPT SERVICE\nAND LIBERAL TREATMENT. THE LARGEST STOCK OF WATCHES,\nSILVERWARE, CLOCKS AND JEWELRY EVER BROUGHT TOGETHER\nIN THE KOOTENAY COUNTRY IS NOW AT THE SERVICE OF MY\nPATRONS. BUYING FROM ME MEANS RIGHT BUYING\u2014SAFE SALEABLE STOCK AT BEST PRICES.\nJACOB DOVER\nNELSON, B. C.\nTHE JEWELER\nBAKER ST.\nMall and express orders havo our prompt\nattention.\nPIANOS.\nSEWING MACHINES.\nDO YOU WANT A GOOD SHOT\nGUN OR RIFLE?\nTrgyifW-J1'** I\"*1******\n>>Hmm^*i^-^^%\nGreenor, Parker, L. C. Smith, Remington, ,    Savage,    Winchester,    Mnrlln,    Mauser,\nLefever, Clabrough, and Westloy Richards    Mannlleher,    Lee-Enlleld,    Leo   Straight\nshot guns. | Pull, and Remington Leo high power rifles.\nWE CARRY THE HOST COMPLETE STOCK OF\nFIREARM8 IN CANADA\nCHARLES E. TISDALL\nVANCOUVER\nP. BURNS & CO.\nWHOLESALE AND RETAIL\nMEAT MERCHANTS\nHEAD OFFICE NELSON, B O.\nBranch Markets in Rossland, Trail, Nelson, Kaslo, Sandon,\nThree Forks, New Denver and Slocan City.\nOnl.r. by Wall to any Brand, Will nave Prompt nnil rawjjjl Alirallom\nD. McARTHUR & CO.\nFURNITURE DEALERS AND FUNERAL\nDIRECTORS.\nLeaders of fashion In furniture.\nStyles change in these things aa well aa\nIn all others, and the newest and best\nproductions always reach this store first.\nCALL ON THE\nNELSON WINE CO.\nand try a bottle, a dosen, or a barrol of\nCALGARY BEER, as It Is the best and\ncheapest on the market. Also try our\nWINES, LIQUORS and CIGARS.\nFRANK A. TAMBLYN, Manager.\nTelephone A3    -    -     Baker St., Nelson.\nBAttTLETT  HOUSE\nFormerly Clarke House.\nHIGH GRADE COFFEE\nKootenay Coffee Co.\nRoasters of Choice Coffees.\nQuantities    to    suit   at   wholesale\nprices\nOur Java rand Mocha at 40c, and our\nChoice Blend at 25c.\nis the best value for the money.\nWe guarantee satisfaction if you\nbuy or order direct from us.\nPure Choice Teas\nAll varieties and grade.\nKOOTENAY COFFEE CO.\nWest Bailor St.  Tal 177. P O Box 182\nH.&M. BIRD\nREAL ESTATE FIRE AND LIFE INSURANCE-MONEY TO LOAN.\nCor, Kootenay and Victoria Sts., Nelson\nP. O. Box 145      \u2022      -      Telephone 261\nThe best $1 per day house In Nelson.\nNone but white help employed.   The bar\nthe best\nG. W. BARTLETT.  - Prop.\nJ. 0. GWILLIM,   B-, So.,\nMINING ENGINEER.\nLate of Geological Survey of Canada.  Six years experience in B. C\nminine districts.\nBAKER STREET,   NELSON.\nJOHN McLATCHIE\nDominion and\nProvincial^\nLand Surveyor.\n.    NELSON B C.\nWILLIAM A. BAUER\nDominion and  Provincial  Land\nSurveyor.\nSurveys of mines, miueral claims, orown\nlands, orown grauls  obtained  nnd as*\nsessments mnimRuil for absentees,\nCAMBORNE AND VANCOUVER.\n. FOR SALE.\nTwo Bargains\u2014A seven roomed house on\nCarbonate street and two good lots. The\nhouso hns all modern Improvements and\nis wired for electric light. Terms\u2014Two\nhundred dollars cash; balance In monthly\npayments of $!15.G0.\nA six roomed houso on Robson street\nand two Improved lots. Electric light and\nall conveniences. Terms\u2014Port cash; the\nbalance In monthly payments.\nFOR RENT.\njao.OO\u2014Six roomed house on corner lots on\nWater street.    Electric  light throughout.\nAll modern   Improvements,     Owner pays\nWater rate.\nMadden House B,k,rNsl\nNelson.\nDo you need a comfortable home? If so\ntry the Madden House. Well furnished\nrooms, lighted by electricity; first-class\nboard. In the bar you will find all the\nbest domestic and imported liquors and\ncigars.\n THOMAS MADDEN, Proprietor.\nDDRKEB ELECTEIG DMLL8\nB. C. RIBLET, Engineer.\n(Manufacturer and Agent for Canada.)\nNELSON, B. C.\nPatent Automatic Aerial Tramway\n(Rlblct System.)\nManufactured by\nBYRON C. RIBLET, Engineer.\nNELSON, B. C.\nMost economic system for the transportation of ores and other material. .\n THE DAILY NEW8, NELSON, B. C, SUNDAY, JULY 27, 1902.\nPROBLEMS OF EMPIRE\nA TIMELY DISCUSSION\nIn view of the Increasing interest taken\nin the discussion of the rolutions between\nthe mother country and the various branches of the British dominions beyond the\nseas, and of tho stimulus which this Is\ncertain to recelvo during the present year,\nLord Avebury (formerly sir John Lubbock,\nthe well known banker) nnd Hon. Geo. W,\nRoss, premier of Ontario, have concurred\nas to' the deslrabllllty of publishing the\nfollowing letters:\nHon. Mr. Ross to Lord Avebury,\nThe questions which now are occupying\ntho attention of Canadians particularly,\nand probably, though In a less degree, tho\nattention of the Australian commonwealth\nviz.: (1) The federation of the empire; (2)\nmore intimate trnde relations between the\ncolonics and the empire; and (3) lhe defence of the empire.\nAs to the question of federation my own\nopinions wero fully expressed in the two\nspeeches referred to. It will be seen, however, that 1 dwelt moro In these speeches\nupon the difllculties of federation than upon Us feasibility. In fact 1 am so much\nimpressed with tho difficulties concerning\nfederation that 1 cannot yet see my way\nbeyond occasional conferences, such as the\nexigencies of the relations of the colonies\nto the empire might call forth, While the\npresent relations uf the colonies with the\nempire nre agreeable and harmonious, I\nthink it would be good statesmanship to\nconsider somo way whereby an organic\nconnection can be established between tlie\ncentral authority of the empire In London\nand colonial outposts In different parts of\nthe world. Speaking for Canada, I might\nsay that while we feel our relations to the\nempire add to our prestige as well as to our\nsecurity, at present wo have no more than\nan Indirect Interest tn Its government. It\ncasts upon us a reflected light to which\nconstitutionally wo contribute nothing.\nWhy not put us in n position to contribute\ndirectly to that light ourselves? I need not\nargue us to tho advantages to both parties\nfrom such a federation. I say both parties\nbecause 1 believe tho empire would bo\nstrengthened if, as sir Wilfrid Lnurler said,\nthe colonies were called to Its councils and I\nbelieve the colonies would be more firmly\nattached to tho empire If they felt they\nshared directly in its legislation and in Us\ndefence.\nDOLLARS AND CENTS.\nTho question of better trnde relations\nwith tlie empire Is one to which Immediate attention should he given. The question Is, however, too largo for adequate\ndiscussion In such a letter as 1 um endeav-\n, orlng to write. Canada Is inevitably committed to a protective tariff, and, without a\ncomplete revolution in the policy of the\nUnited States, mnst remain so for many\nyenrs to come. No matter how ready we\nmay bo to accept the trade policy of the\nUnited Kingdom, on tho principle that self,\npreservation is the first law of nature, we\ndare not do so, at least so long as tho\nUnited Slates clings to a protective tariff.\nWe have already gone to tho utmost limit\n1 consistent with our Interests In giving the\n1 preference wo have given to British goods\nin Canada. We aro, therefore, unable to\naccept Mr. Chamberlain's suggestion of a\nunion of the colonies on a free trndo basis.\nOn tho other hand I ilnd public opinion\nhere strongly opposed to any radical\nchange of commercial policy, although the\nchancellor of tho exchequer has made a\ngreat departure from the traditions of freo\ntrade principles during the last session of\nparliament, The solution of tlio trade\nquestion, to my mind, Is only possiblo on\ntwo lines. First: Would the imperial government, for tho sake of consolidating Its\ncolonial empire, agree to modify Its trade\npolicy and give the colonies tho preference\nlu the markets of the United Kingdom; or\nsecondly: ns a war measure, and In order\nto rcllove the British taxpayer, would the\nImperial parliament agree to a moderate\ntax on foreign goods, assuming that the\ncolonies would impose a similar tax for the\ndefence of the empire? Now I may bo\nsomewhat optimistic, but you will permit\nme to say that on these two lines, and\nwith capable leadership, I believe within a\nfew years the public opinion of this\ncountry could bo educated to the desired\npoint so that legislation on tho lines suggested would not be a difficult matter. Indeed, I think the task would be an easy ono\ncompared with that undertaken by Bright\nand Cobden sixty years ago. Thirdly: In\nsubmitting measures, for the defence of\nthe empire; for public consideration, 1\nthink wo havo very nenrly reached the\npoint at which It may be assumed that the\ncolonies aro in duty bound to share the\nburden of maintaining tlie army and navy\nof the empire. While It Is so clear that we\nenjoy material udvantnges for the protection of our commerce and for maintaining\nthe Integrity of the empire, it follows us a\nmatter of course that we should not repudiate the obligations which those advantages Impose; hut from a colonial\nstandpoint, we of the colonies nro disposed\nto ask: (1) Should we be called upon, to\ncontribute for tho settlement of quarrels\nbetween the empire and foreign countries\nIn regard to which our opinion was not\nasked, and which might have been entered\nupon without any reference to our existence, and without any responsibility on our\npart, direct or indirect: (2) Where the empire has been put to no expense or where\nthe commerce which exists between the\ncolonies and tho empire has been developed\nalmost, If not entirely without nny assistance from tho omplre, why should tho empire cnll upon us to defend thnt which wo\ncreated ourselves? Our trudo with Great\nBritain is greater today than ever not because of anything the British government\nhas done for us, but because of our own\n.enterprise and the investments of our own\ncapital; (3) If Canndian commerce Is to bo\nattacked upon tho high seas, by whom? As\nCanadians we have no power to negotiate\nour own treaties or really to sottte any\ncommercial misunderstanding that we\nmight havo with any nation. If any misunderstanding then arises It must bo between tho Imperial government and the\nforeign nations concerned. Why should we\nbe called upon to pay for the expenses of\nsettling disputes to which we were not\nprimarily a party?\nUSE SURPLUS POPULATION.\nTheso are somo of tho phases of Imperial\ndefence which require consideration. Now\nall of these can be settled In two ways: (1)\nIf the Imperial government, Instead of allowing Its surplus population to drift to\nthe United States, or other foreign countries, made concentrated effort to divert\nthis population to tho colonies, tho dofenco\nof tho empire would bo provided for In the\nmost substantial way practicable. Assuming that Canada contained ten or twenty\nmillions of people, It requires no argument\nto show that we were all but Immune from\nany attack from tho United States. Placo\ntho Australian commonwealth lu a similar\nposition, and what clangor need she fear?\n1 cannot speak too strongly on the subject\nof emigration to the colonies. It is, to my\nmind, the key of the situation, commercially and defensively. It would furnish a\nfresh basis of food supply, because we\nhave millions of unproductive acres ready\nfor tho settler. It would strengthen the\nbonds of tho empire, as ft would furnish\ntlie best recruiting ground possible for the\narmy and navy In any emergency; und if\nto these wero added the trade preference\nIn the British market, wo would have a\ndefence trade fund common to the colonies\nand the empire, the advantages of which I\nhave already discussed.\nCANADA SHOULD BE A FACTOR.\nThere remains but one consideration. I\ndo not expect the league as a league, can\ncommit itself to the views which I have\nhero propounded, nor do 1 know whether\nthe Canadian branch of the league would\nenter upon a propaganda, either In this\ncountry or at home, in order to give effect\nto these views, provided It met with the\napproval of my colleagues on the Canadian council, or with the leaders of public\nopinion outside the council. 1 am confident, however, that they nro generully\nsound und practical, and my anxiety Is\nthat the league, so successfully launched\nnnd having ulrendy accomplished so much,\nshould be continued on practical Hues, and\nthat Instead of being merely mnce-bearers\nin an Imperial procession, It should be a\npractical and potential voice In shaping the\npolicy of the empire, and making It In\nthe future, even more so than It has been\nin tlie past, the greater power for good In\nthe civilizing agencies of the world.\nLORD AVEBURY'S REPLY.\nTho question you raise is one, It seems\nto mo of vital importance to tho whole\nomplre. While the people of these islands\nare, I feel sure, ready to make every\neffort and all possible sacrifices for the\ncommon good, It is Impossible for any part'\nof tho empire, even with tho best wishes,\nto support tho responsibilities of the whole,\nIn the unfortunate South African troubles we considered that our suzerainty imposed on us the obligation of supporting\nthe just claims of the Uitlunders, not merely of Englishmen, but Germans, French,\nItalians, und indeed, citizens of almost ail\ncountries, against tho corrupt oligarchy\nwhich, under Mr, Kruger, while burdening the Uitlunuers with most onerous taxation und other (Ingrnnt exactions, denied\nthem the elementary rights of citizens, and\nin order to maintain this unrighteous\ntyranny, carried fire and the sword ut a\nfew hour's notice Into Natal nnd tho Cape\nColony.\nWHO THE GOLD BENEFITS.\nEuropean newspapers, with some honorable exceptions, huve gone so fur ns to\nstate that our action wus Influenced by a\ndesire to enrich ourselves by tho possession\nof the Transvaal goldllehls. They appear\nto suppose that, like Rome and Athens of\nold, and some Europenn countries still, we\nderive n revenue from our colonies, and\nthey are not aware that the gold found In\nour colonics, that of Australia for instance, is entirely at tho disposal of the\ncolony, and does not contribute to our\nrevenue. We entered Into the war with\nthe greatest roluctance; we could not expect that the Transvaal would ever be\nublo to repay us the whole expenditure\ninvolved by tho war, but tho Cape and\nNatal were quite unprepared and under\nthese circumstances we took upon ourselves the heavy tusk of repelling tho Invasion. We have borne these sncrllices ungrudgingly; but It Is evident that it would\nbe Impossible to make such efforts often;\ntho strain oven on such resources as those\nof these islands would be too great.\nTROUBLE MAY ARISE ANYWHERE.\nIt remains then, to be seen whether it Is\npossible to devlso any plan under which\ntho responsibilities of empire can be undertaken by tbc empire at large. The present\ncircumstances nre eminently favorable.\nAt present no one can say when tho next\ntrouble mny arise. It might bo somo German or French claim in the Pacillc; some\nquestion between Franco and Newfoundland; between Canada and the United\nStates; between China or Japan and Australia as regards yellow Immigration; between Russia and India. Our diplomatic\nquestions with France have principally had\nreference lo Africa and Newfoundland;\nwith Russia to India or China; president\nCleveland's threat arose from our support\nof tho rights of British Guiana. In fact,\nmy impression is that there Is very unlikely to bo nny trouble on any question specially affecting the home Islands.\nBRITAIN PAYS THE FIGHT.\nNevertheless as things stand, the whole\ncost of our army and navy falls almost\nentirely on the people of the old country,\nand though we should be anxious to assist\nany part of the empire the primary duty\nof our army and navy, as long ns we bear\nthe whole cost, is naturally the defence of\nthese Islands.\nTlm word \"Imperial\" Is, Indeed, sometimes used In two senses; sometimes os\nreferring to the whole of the empire, sometimes to the United Kingdom. We have,\nIn fact, no Imperial forces, and no tmperlul\nexchequer, Our forces nnd our funds belong to special parts of the empire, not to\nthe empire as a whole.\nThe present state of things, then, Is not\nsatisfactory, and I concur with you that It\ncannot be permnnont.\nCOUNCIL OF THE EMPIRE.\nNo doubt the question Is difficult, but\nsurety tho wisdom of our statesmen will\nenable them to work out a solution whon\nonce the necessity Is recognized. For my\nown part, I should be prepared to support\nany well-considered plan by which our foreign mlnlstor might hnve a council representing tho colonies to advise him on the\nforeign relations of tho empire and even\nperhaps, as you suggest, ultimately to preside over legislation of an imperial character, that Is to say, affecting tho empire.\nAny definite suggestion by which somo\nrenlly lmperlnl fund could be created for\nImperial purposes would, I feel sure, be\nrespectfully and carefully considered by\nthe British empire league; and It mny be\nthat tho best plan would bo to set nslde In\neach case a certain proportion of the customs revenue; but I doubt whether It\nwould ho wise for nny part of the omplro\nto Impose duties on food or raw materials.\n.,      EMIGRATION QUESTION.\nAs regards emigration, I believe the mint\neffective way of attracting our countrymen\nto Canada would be for Canada to adopt a\npolicy of free trade as soon and as fnr ns\npracticable, i. e\u201e with due regard to Inter-\ni ests which havo grown up In certain man\nufactures under the existing system.\nI regret lhat you see no prospect of this\nbeing done, because I am satisfied that It\nwould give an Immense Impetus to the\nprosperity of Canada, Ono trade can only\nbe protected at the expense of others, and\nevery pound gained by the Industry which\n. Is fostered costs something moro than a\npound to those which are unprotected,\nwhile protection all round (including excise duties) merely mcuns thu taxation of\neverything.\nYou say it is Impossible for Canada to\nadopt free trade as long as tlio United\nStates are protectionist. Would it not, on\nthe contrary, be difficult for the United\nStates to maintain their protective system\nif Canada adopted free trade?\nAt any rate, the present restrictive tariff\nof the United States appears to me, on the\ncontrary, an additional reason why you\nshould benefit by freo trade. Along the\nborder the Canadian farmer would have a\ngreat advantage over the United States\nfarmer. The Canadian would buy everything ho required for less, while he would\nsell his products for the same price as the\nAmerican. The Canadian farmer would\nhave so substantial an advantage that a\ngreat Impetus would be given to Canadian\nagriculture. Immigration from the United\nStates would be encouraged, and this again\nwould benefit Canadian shopkeepers, merchants and manufacturers. The loss of\ncustoms revenue; If any, might be made up\nus in Great Britain, hy taxes on alcohol,\ntobacco, and successions, or In other ways,\nSuch uctlon on the part of Canada herself\nwould I believe, foster immigration far\nmore than any action we oould take. Still,\nI am sure the league would carefully consider the suggestion you put forward, as\nwell as any others calculated to draw Into\ncloser relation the world wide constituents\nof this great empire.\nThese letters nre   contained   in a pamphlet published by the Cobden club.\nTHE GOSSIP OF GOTHAM\nMOVING SIDEWALK TO TRAVERSE\nBROOKLYN BRIDGE.\nDEVERY'S FIGHT FOR LEADElt&HIP\nOF TAMMANY.\nNew York, July 20.\u2014One of the llrst\nthings visitors to New York ask to see,\nas a general rule, is Brooklyn bridge.\nIf there ure other sights of so much Interest they are either Grant's tomb,\nCental park, St. Patrick's cathedral, or\none of the many famous residential\ndwellings on Filth avenue; but in nine\ncases out of ten Brooklyn bridge will be\nasked for first. This famous structure\nwill become of increased Interest to\nvisitors, If a moving platform is Installed on the bi'idge as has been proposed.\nEverybody will want to take at least one\nride on a moving platform two and a\nhalf miles long, for ubat would be its\nlength in crossing the bridge and Its\napproaches twice. The proposed platform would be in three parts. The outer\nrim would move very slowly. The traveller would step on tills first, and then\nto a middle section running twice as\nfast. From this It would be easy to\nstep to the last section, running ten\nmiles an hour. If the plan is carried out\nseats and shelter will be provided, also\nposts by which the timid and Infirm\nmight steady themselves in passing from\none moving section to another. Arrangements are hoped to be made by\nwhich the trolley cars will withdraw\nfrom the bridge, but with such a close\nconnection that the cost ot transportation may be covered for the same five\ncents.\nSpeaking of Brooklyn, that borough\nis the field of operations of a gang of\ndesperate burglars who he.ve thus far\nbeen successful In eluding capture. The\ncitizens have good reason to complain,\ntoo. There are only 1,628 patrolmen m\nBrooklyn, which has a population of\na million and a quarter, or ono to every\n770 Inhabitants. Other boroughs of\nGreater New York that have not one\nquarter of Brooklyn's population have\nnearly half as many policemen, and this\nis causing bitter protestation on the\npart of Brooklynites.\nThe coming Republican stnte convention of New York will find itself forced\nto take a stand almost unprecedented\nin its history owing to tho adoption of\ncertain resolutions In other states of the\nunion. New York Republicans will he\ncompelled to endorse president Roosevelt for renomlnatlon in 1904, for a failure to do so after the explicit and warm\ncommendations of the president by seven\nor eight leading states would be regarded\nas distinctly hostile to Mr. Roosevelt.\nThe Republican convention of the president's own state to be held In September, will, therefore, endorse him.\nMuch interest has been excited here\namong all classes of politicians in ex-\nchief Devery's campaign for Tammany\nleadership In the Ninth assembly district Devery Is making a picturesque\nfight and his friends say that he will\neventually work up to the place of boss\nheld by Richard Croker for 17 years, but\nsenator \"Tlm\" Sullivan, who is about\nas slick a politician as the city possesses\nis throwing his entire inllueuce aganst\nDevery, and Intends to put him effectually \"out of the game.\"\nBy fall It Is hoped that electricity will\nbe Installed on all of the elevated railroads of the city. Certainly the \"electrification\" of the Manhattan elevated\nrailway system is progressing steadily.\nExcept during the rush hours in the\nmorning and evening, steam has been\nabolished completely from tho Second\navenue line, On tho Third, Sixth and\nNinth avenue lines the third rail is\ngoing on rapidly, cms aro being built,\nand autumn will find theso lines equipped with the electric system.\nA subscription has been started by\ntho National Arts Club, of New York,\nin uld of tho reconstruction of the old\nboll tower on the l'lnzzl, of San Marco,\nVenice, which fell recently. A committee of five with Spencer Trask, the\nbanker, as tho treasurer, has been\nformed to solicit subscriptions iu tills\ncountry.\nTHE DEADLY CHOLERA.\nLondon. July 25.\u2014The total number\nof rases of cholera nt Cairo and Moucha\nsince July 15th hnve beon 307, with 227\nfatalities.\nThoro were 78 cases of cholera reported In Manila yesterday, the largest\nnumber since tho outbreak.\nMYSTERIES OF MILLINERY\nCOLORED VEILS HAVE REGAINED\nTHEIR POPULARITY.\nLATEST VAGARY IN SASHES MADE\nIN TWO SECTIONS.\nNew York, July 26.\u2014Just now the llrst\nprices of the season are being cut so\nthat the stocks ou hand may be sold to\nintake room for advance fall fashions,\nand it Is possible to obtain some very\nsmart novelties for a nominal sum. Real\nlinen lawn shirt waists which two\nmonths ago were considered cheap at $5\ncan be had for less than half that sum\nand they are certainly as smart looking\nas when first Introduced Into the fashionable world.\nMany women, therefore, with an inclination to be economical, are purchasing several of these designs and will\nwear them until late in the autumn with\ntheir chic tailor made gowns, which are\nyet to come.\nBut not only are there bargains in\nshirt waists; the daintiest muslins and\nlawns can be procured at the same reduced prices and never before were these\nmodels prettier.\nNext to the all-white frock comes lhe\none with a white ground and the merest\nsuggestion of a contrasting tint in a\ndelicate figure. For Instance a line of\nsheerest textile has the surface covered\nwith most delicate sprays of forget-me-\nnot blue in natural color; or the same\nground may be sprinkled with polka\ndots In eau de uile, maize, corn flower,\nblue or something equally pastel in\neffect.\nAll of these combinations take prettily to black, velvet ribbon being run\nthrough on embroidery beading or a\nheading of Valenciennes lace.\nGowns that are made very plain are\nembroidered with all sorts und conditions of exquisite fichus and collars,\nOne oddity in this line Is a collar made\nof embroidered silk. The foundation is\nwhite outlined in robin's egg blue silk,\nso as to form small blocks about an\ninch square. At the corner of each\nblock is a French knot. Circular pieces\nof blue satin, a deeper shade than the\nsilk, are set on each side of the collar,\nwhich tapers down to tiie waist line in\nTront. Around each of these circular\npieces tiny laurel leaves arc embroidered, and the centres have a spray of\nwhite rosebuds shading to shell pink,\nheavily embroidered. The edge of the\ncollar has tiny scallops of white silk\nbeaded with a blue cord .\nFoulard gowns trimmed with band'\nof plain silk the color of the background of the foulard are very smart.\nThese bands are put on in fanciful design and stitched with thread corresponding with tho tone of the figures iu\nthe silk. The effect is unique aud helps\nto gain the elegant simplicity noted in\nthis season's models.\nThe newest aud most striking novelty accompanying the foulard gown is\nthe foulard hat. This hns a low crown,\nvery broad and somewhat on the tnni-o'-\nshanter order. The brim is wide and on\nits stiffened edge are sewn two bias frills\nof foulard stitched with white silk. The\nhat is very effective and requires but\nlittle trimming, a chiffon veil dotted\nwith whlto or green being all that is\nused.\nRed and white foulards seem to be\ntaking the place of the blue and white\neffects. The red is soft in tone and there\nare so many tints that It is possible lo\nsuit almost any complexion. One of a\nseries of designs ordered for the Newport season is trimmed with collar and\ncuffs of Irish lace and clever touches\nuf narrow blnck velvet. Accompanying\nit is a hat of coarse brown straw,\nwreathed with red currants and dotted\nhere and there with the softest little\nrosettes of red satin ribbon.\nLarge red hats iu satin straw are\ngrowing popular. They are worn Willi\nlong riding coats of pure white -taffeta\nand make a charming picture. Tlio hats\nare trimmed either with sweeping claret\ncolored ostrich plumes ,or with the same\nshade tulle veils twisted once around\nthe neck and knotted at the side. They\nhave a cobweb pattern upon them and\nthe meshes of the net arc very large.\nIt is remarkable how sentiment\nchanges with the fashion. Once a style\nbecomes fixed, all the old-time prejudice\nvanishes and its former detractors become its most ardent advocates iu many\ninstances. This is particularly true of\nveils. It is within the recollection of\nnearly everyone when colored veils were\nconsidered the acme of vulgarity. Now\nthey are the height or fasfhlon\nand worn by tho best people. The\nfavorite tints are blue in a light and\ndark tint, bronze and golden browns,\ncastor, poppy red, maroon and the new\nyellow-green or green-yellow\u2014the arbiters of fashion have not yet been ablei\nto decide which\u2014over which everyone is\nraving just now.\nTho shade Is really very delicate amd\ndainty. Indeed, it is mure than tiiat, it\nis artistic. Paradoxical as it may seem\nin its aesthetic description, it hi the\nexact tint of a toad's waistcoat and\ntakes exquisitely with materials that\nare adaptable to lights and shades.\nIn a sash for a wiiite gown it Is\ncharming. The latest vagary lu sashes\nis made in two sections. One Is a very\nwide crush which goes around the waist\nnnd is pinned invisibly at one side. The\nother section is in the shape ol' another wide fold, which is loosely carried\naround the waist, right under the arms,\nand fastened with a big double rosette\nwith a fancy pin in the middle.\nTho vogue for low necked and short\nsleeved bodices has resulted in tlie wearing of much Jewellery this season.\nCoralB have been revived and the most\nbeautiful strings of the stones are been,\nalternated with beads of Roman gold;\nothers aro combined with silver, and\nstill others considered by many the most\neffective combination, are .strung on\nstrands of burnished steel, the steel\nbeing knotted between eacli cluster of\ncoral to heighten tho elfect.\nJewelled combs that resemble Haras\naro displayed in many Hhops and \"genuine\" novelties from South Africa made\nfrom American mined gold ure among\nthe costly trifles of the wardrobe,\nMy lady fair lias never before had\nquite so many novelties in tho line of\nfans. This season she waves away the\nheat of summer with tlie daintiest trifles of chiffon decorated in every con-\n' colvahlo fashion.   Very expensive mod\nels are hand-painted and really the imported works of European masters;\nothers are intricately interwoven with\nmedallions of real lace; then there Is the\nluxuriously extravagant affair of shirred\nsatin encrusted with jewels.\nLess expensive designs are composed\nsimply of gauze with phe monogram embroidered in raised effect in the centre.\nThis is an era of monograms, you know,\nand. the initials must be woven Into\neverything from hosiery to headgear.\nPossibly owing to the successful imitator, there are few novelties introduced\nwhich cannot he duplicated with excellent results at less than half the original cost; in consequence there are exquisite laces of Inexpensive guipures\nthat can only be branded as counterfeits\nhy experts in the art of lace making.\nMAUDE GRIFFIN.\nAN  ABUSE   EXPOSED.\nBritish Columbia is less populous\nthan the city of Toronto, and it is a\nsolemn fact that the lawyers, whom\nmerit or the accident of political favor\nhas exalted to the judiciary of that\nprovince aro in a position lo ruin-a\nman's property and deprive him of his\nliberty for the period of 21 months.\nTheir lordships, the king's justices for\nBritish Columbia, have exposed an abuse\nby their exercise of a power. There is\nmore law than liberty in Canada when\na man can be haled before three judges\nand committed to prison for 21 months\nwithout a chance to plead to an indictment or Without trial hy a jury of his\npeers.\nIt Is essential to the efficiency of justice that judges should have power to\npunish slander. There should be limits\nto this power. The luw might leave the\njudges with summary power to inflict\nimprisonment up to three mouths or a\nfine of $500. An offence which cannot be\nadequately punished with imprisonment\nfo rthree months or a fine of $500 is serious enough to entitle an accused person\nto the right of trial hy jury.\u2014Toronto\nTelegram.\n\"BOBS' \" LITTLE LECTURE.\nLondon, July 25.\u2014Lord Roberts addressed the cadets at Sandhurst today.\nHe told them he had been too lenient\nin the past. They had behaved very\nbadly, he said, not at all like soldiers.\nAfter the Investigation ,all but two\nof those who have been rusticated would\nbe reinstated.\nA QUESTIONABLE COURSE.\nOttawa, July 25.\u2014The brotherhood of\nlocomotive engineers will oppose sir\nWilliam Mulock's bill for the compulsory arbitration of all disputes between\nrailway companies and employees,\nTHE KING'S HEALTH.\nLondon, July 25.\u2014King Edward spent\nHie day in the sunshine on tlie deck of\nthe royal yacht at Cowes. During the\nafternoon he went out for a cruise. He\nis progressing finely.\nALBANY'S COSTLY BLAZE.\nAlbany, Now York, July 25.\u2014As a result of the flro early this morning, one\nfireman Is dying, and a number are seriously injured. The loss is estimated at\n$500,000 to $750,000.\nLORD DUNDONALD ARRIVED.\nMontreal, July 25.\u2014Lord Dundonald,\ntho new commander-in-chief of the Canadian militia, arrived here today from\nEngland.\nOIL IN TRINIDAD.\nKingston, Ja., July 25.\u2014Oil hns been discovered In largo quantities In the Island of\nTrinidad   and    is  being   worked   under\nCanadian auspices. *\nGOVERNOR-GENERAL RETURNS.\nNow York, July 25.\u2014Tho earl of Minlo,\ngovernor-general   of   Canada,   nnd   lady\nMlnto, R.  F.  L. H. Dohcrly,  the English\nWest Transfer Co.\nTELEPHONE  33.\nAll kinds of Teaming.\nGood Dry Wood, all lengths\nAtlantic S.S. Sailings\nFrom Montreal:\nHeaver Line, Luke Simcoc August 14\nBeaver Line, Lake Manitoba August 21\nAllan Line, Ionian August 3\nAllan  Line,   Parisian August 1(J\nDominion Lino, Dominion August 2\nFrom Portland;\nDominion Line, Colonian August 2\nFrom Boston:\nDominion Line, Commonwealth..August 13\nFrom New York:\nWhlto Stnr, Celtic August 6\nWhite  Star,   Germanic August 13\nCunard,  Etrurla August 9\nCunard,  Campania August Id\nAmerican,   Philadelphia August fi\nAmerican, St. Paul August 33\nContinental sailings of French, North\nOerman Lloyd, H. A. P., and Italian Lines\non application.\nRATES\u2014Saloon fares, $55.00 and upwards.\nSecond, $35.00 and upwards according to\nsteamer and location of borth. Slecrage\nquoted on application. Prepuld pasauges\nfrom England and tho continent at lowest\nrates.\nII. L. BROWN,      W. P. F. CUMMINOS,\nCity Agt,, Nelson.    Gen. Agt., Winnipeg.\nPATENTS, TRADE MARKS ind COPY\nobtained In all countries\nROWLAND BRITTAIN,\nRegistered Patent attorney, Mechanical\nEngineer and Draughtsman. Hank of B.\nN. A. building, Hastings St., Vancouver,\nB. C.   Write for full particulars.\nSILVER KING MIKE\nWill pay tho highest cash price for all\nkinds of second hand goods. Will buy or\nsell anything from an anchor to a needle.\nFurniture, stoves, carpets, cooking utensils\nbought in household quantifies, Also cast\noff clothing. Call and see me or write.\nAddress Silver King Mike, Box 200, Hall\nStreet, Nelson. B. C,\ntennis player, and captain Henry Harford,\nthe British consul at Manila, were passengers on board the Cunard liner Lucanla,\nwhich arrived In port tonight from Liverpool and Queenstown.\nTHE BISLEY CONTESTS.\nLondon, July 25.\u2014The Canadian scores\nfor the second stage of the King's prize\nwere: Captain Rennle, 182; captain Mitchell, 181; major McRobble, 180. Corporal\nKerr, of the 1st Dumbarton regiment, won\na silver medal In the second stage of the\nshooting for tho King's prize at Bisley\ntoday.\nBUSINESS LOCALS\nDrink Marata Tea.\nWe want you to try Marata Tea at SS\ncents and 45 cents por pound. The People's Cash Grocery, corner Hall and Baker\nstreets.\nWHOLESALE HOUSES.\nNELSON, B. C.\nAERATED AND MINERAL WATERS.\nNELSON SODA WATER FACTORY-M.\nM. Cummins, Lessee\u2014Every known ra-\nrlety of soft drinks. P. O. Box 88, telephone No. 31, Hoover steet, Nelson. Bottlers of the famous St. Leon Hot Springs\nMineral Water,\nGROCERIES.\nA. MACDONALD & CO-CORNER FRONT\nand Hall Streets\u2014Wholesale Grocers and\nJobbers In blankets, gloves, mitts, boots,\nrubbers, macklnaws and miners' sundries.\nFRESH AND SALT MEATS.\nP. BURNS & CO.-BAKER STREET,\nNelson \u2014 Wholesale dealers in fresh and\ncured meats.   Cold storage.\nWEST KOOTENAY BUTCHER CO.-\nWard Street, Nelson.\u2014Wholesale dealers\nin fresh and cured meats.\nHARDWARE AND MINING SUPPLIES.\nTHE J. H. ASHDOWN HARDWARE CO.\nLtd.\u2014Baker Street, Nelson.\u2014Wholesale\ndealers In hardware, miners' supplies,\nsporting goods, etc.\nH. BYERS & CO., WHOLESALE DEAL-\ners In Hardware, Miners Supplies and\nSporting Goods. Branches at Nelson,\nKaslo and Sandon.\nM'LACHLAN BROS.-BAKER STREET,\nNelson. \u2014 Dealers in hardware, mining\nsupplies, glass paints, Portland Cement,\nfire clay, and Scotch Ore brick. Agents\nfor Wllkins & Co. celebrated steel wire\nrone.\nNELSON HARDWARE CO. - BAKER\nSTREET-Whotesale paints, oils, and\nglass; mechanics tools, Ashing tackle and\nsporting goods a specialty.\nLIQUORS AND DRY GOODS.\nHUDSON'S BAY CO. \u2014 WHOLESALE\ngroceries and liquors, etc., Baker Street\nNolson.\nLUMBER.\nNELSON SAW & PLANING MILL-\nOfllce, corner Hall and front streets, Nelson, \u2014 Lumber, celling, flooring, and\neverything in wood for building purposes. Get our prices. Correspondence solicited.\nUNION MEETINGS.\nNELSON MINERS' UNION, NO. M, W. F.\nM.\u2014Meets every Saturday evening at 7.30\no'clock. Samuel L. Peacock, President;\nJames Wllks, Secretary. Visiting breth-\nern cordially invited.\nLODGE MEETINGS.\nNELSON LODGE, NO. 25, K. OF\nP.\u2014Meets in K. of P. Hall, Odd\nFellows' block, every Tuesday\nevening at 8 o'clock All visiting\nKnights cordially Invited,\nWM. IRVINE, C. C.\nHUGH STEVENS, K. of R. & B.\nFOR RENT\nAdvertisements Inserted under this heod\nut the rate of one cent a word per Insertion. No advertisement tuken for less than\n25 cents,\nROOMS \u2014 Furnished   or   unfurnished,   by\nday, week or month, rates from $5 to $10\nper month.   Apply to Mrs. Scott, Room 41,\nK. W. C. Block.\nPIANOS nnd sewing machines for rent or\nsale at Tho Old Curiosity Shop.\nFOR RENT \u2014 Four   up   to   date   houses,\nclose In, cheap.    See Amiable.\nFIRST-CLASS   board   and room, $5.50 per\nweek,   Silica   St., second   door   west   of\nWard.\nROOM  TO   RIGNT-Well   furnished,   bath;\nGood location.   Address, Y. T., The Dally\nNews.\nWANTED\nJ.'H. LOVE.\nNelson Employment Agency,\nP. O. Box 405. Phone 278.\nHELP of all kinds wanted nnd furnished.\nWestern Canadian Employment Agency.\nLargo warehouse for storage; call at\nProsser's Second Hand store, Bnker street,\nwest.\nWANTED\u2014Chambor   work,   work by the\nday, week or month, by an experienced\nwoman.   Address H, S., Tho Dally News.\nBAKER wanted  at once.\nBakery, Stanley street.\nApply   Palace\nMINE MANAGEHS-Wnen you want mining blanks, pny sheets, voucher! or anything In tho way of boolj-blnding, ruling,\nor stationery, write to The Dally News'\nBook-binding nnd Job Printing department,\nNelson, B. C,\nVVANTED-Tenders for making type written copies of City Bylaws. Tenders stating charge for llrst nnd second copies to\nhe sent to the City Clerk.\nFOR SALE\nFOR SALE-A first class grocery and delicatessen   business   on principal street In\nVancouver, B. C,   can   bo purchased at\nonco.  Apply P. O. Box 88, Vancouver.\nCANADIAN\nPacific\nRAILWAY\nWORLD'S SCENIC ROUTE\nDIRECT LINE\nEAST WEST\nWINNIPEG WESTMINSTER\nTORONTO VANCOUVER\nOTTAWA VICTORIA\nMONTREAL SKAGWAY\nST. JOHN DAWSON\nHALIFAX SEATTLE\nBOSTON PORTLAND\nNEW YORK SAN FRANCISCO\nLAKE ROUTE\nFrom Fort William, tho favorlts summer\nroute, to all eastern points,\nVIA SOO LINE\nFor St. Paul, Duluth, Sault Ste. Maria,\nChicago, etc,\nTHROUGH TOURIST SLEEPING OABJ.\nEAST\nLeaves Dunmore Junction dally for St\nPaul; Kootenay Landing Tuesday and\nSaturday for Toronto, Montreal and all\neastern points.\nWEST\nLeaves Revelstoke dally for Seattle and\nVancouver.\nThrough   bookings   to   Europe   via  all\nAtlantic lines.\nPrepaid tickets at lowest  rates   Issued\nfrom all European countries.\nFor rates and full particulars apply te\nlocal agents, or\nCITY TICKET OFFICE.\nE. J. COYLE, A.G.P.A., Vancouver.\nJ. S. CARTER, D.P.A., Nelaon\nNONE BETTER.\nSOLID YE8TIBULED TRAIS8.\nPALA0E D1HING AND OBSEKVATIOH\nOABS.-MEALS a 1a OABTE.\nClose connection East and Westbound at\nSpokane with trains of tho Spokane Falla\n& Northern Railway.\nDirect connection at St Paul without\nchange of depots, with all trains for Chicago, Toronto, Montreal, New York and all\npoints East and South.\nLeaves Spokane dally for East at 9.10 a. m.\nLeaves Spokane dally for West at 7.30 a. m.\nLeaves Spokane daily for West at 8,00 p. m.\nWestbound trains make direct connection\nfor Victoria and Vancouver, Portland, San\nFrancisco, and all points on the Sound.\nDuring the season of navigation, east-\nbound trains connect at Duluth with the\nmugnlflcent steamships North-West and\nNorth-Land of the Northern Steamship\nCompany's line, operated in connection\nwith the Great Northern Railway.\nFor further information, maps, folders,\netc., apply to any agent of the Spokane\nFalls & Northern Railway, Kaslo & Slocan\nRailway, Kootonal Railway & Navigation\nCompany, or to\nH. BRANDT,\nCity Passenger and Ticket Agent, W 701 W,\nRiverside avenue, Spokane, Wash.\nG. K. TACKABURY, Local Agent,\nnelaon, B. C.\n\u2022la 4*\n*b  KOOTENAY   RAILWAY   &  NAVI-  \u25a0*\u2022\n*     GAT10N   COMPANY,  LIMITED,     +\n\u2022J. OPERATING +\n\u2022j- INTERNATIONAL NAVIGATION +\n4- & TRADING COMPANY, LIMITED. +\ni      KASLO & SLOCAN RAILWAY.      *]>\n8:30 a. m. Lv....KASLO Ar. 4:00 p. m.\n10:55 p. m. Ar....SANDON....Lv. 1:46 p. m.\n.J. _ ,j|\n\u2022b  INTERNATIONAL     NAVIGATION  *\n* St TRADING COMPANY, LIMITED. *\n\u2022j. KASLO-NELSON  ROUTE. +\n*   *\n6:10 p. m. Lv NELSON Ar. 7:00 a. m.\n9:10 p. m. Ar KASLO Lv. 7:00 a. m.\n\u2022b Connecting at Troup Junction \u2022{\u2022\n\u2022!\u2022 with Nelson & Fort Sheppard Rail- *J*\n\u2022b way  both   to  and  from  Rossland,\n<b  Spokane,   etc.\nTickets sold to nil parts of United *C\n\u2022I- States and Canada via Great North-\n\u2022b ern and O. R. & N. Company's lines, \u2022fr\n\u2022r> For   further   particulars   call   on H*\n\u2022b address, if*\n\u2022b ROBERT IRVING, Manager, Kaslo, +\n* G. K. TACKABURY, Agent, Nelson, if\n* +\n\"l\"r  \u2022l\"b*b*l\u2014\nSPOKANE FALLS & NORTHERN\nRAILWAY\nNelson  to  Vancouver 26 hours\nNolson to Seattle 21 houri\nNelson to Victoria 28 boure\nLeave DAY TRAIN Arrive\n0:20 a. m Spokane 7:16 p. m.\n12:25 p. m Rossland 4:30 p. m.\n10:30 a.  ni Mountain....5:59 p.  m.\n0:40 a.  m Nelson 6:46 p. m.\nH. A. JACKSON,\n\u2022b General Passenger and Ticket Agent \u2022\u00a5\n<b     Spokane,  Washington. \u2022{\u2022\n\u2022%>                           Q. K. TACKABURY, +\n*                             Agent, Nelson, B. C. *f>\n\u2022I* 4*\n*** 'M\u00abM\"I\"M\"1\"1\"M\"1\"I'\nCITY OF NELSON.\nCOURT OF REVISION.\nNotice Is hereby given that the final\nsitting of tho Court of Revision of the\nMunicipality of the City of Nelaon wilt\nbo held In the council chamber, city hall.\nNelson, on Thursday, the 31st day of July.\nlfW2,at 10 o'clock a. m., for the purpose of\nhearing complaints against the assessment\nas mado by the assessor, and for revising\nand correcting tho assessment roll. By\norder,\nJ. K. 8TRACHAN, City Clerk,\nNelion, B. C., June 28th, IKS,\n THE DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C, SUNDAY, JULY 27, 1902\nBIATTA PHOTOS\nWe have a fine line of Photos of the\nRegatta, specially taken for us, by an ox-\npert Photographer. \"*\"\"\"\nWe are offering them at prlcos that will\nsuit everybody.\nMorley & Co.\nBooksellers and Stationers, Nelson, B. C.\nShow Rooms for Mason & Rlsch Pianos.\nNELSON'S NEWS OF THE DAY\nA petition was circulated yesterday\nand signed by the wholesale merchants\nand others whoso teams use Vernon\nstreet, asking for the finishing and grading of the road. The petition Js to be\npresented at the meeting of the council\non Monday evening.\nterday. Their horso bolted, capsizing the\nbuggy and throwing them out ut the roadside. The buggy was badly damaged, but\nthe occupants escaped without serious Injury, although Mrs. McLalne had one of\nher wrists sprained.\nGovernment agent W. G. McMynn has\nreturned from a trip to Casoade in connection with the annual improvements and\nrepairs to tho main roads between that\ntown and Grand Forks on the west and\nGladstone on tho cast. Much better results\nmay be looked for from tho present method\nof doing more permanent work on the main\nroads of the district rather than simply\nmaking temporary repairs, as had been\nthe custom In too many instances in previous years.\nCANADIAN   PRIZE  WINNERS.\nW. H. Bullock-Webster, chief of the\nprovincial police, who returned to the\ncity last evening after a prolonged visit\nin Fernie, states that there iu no change\nin the situation there, and that everything is orderly, no further trouble of\nany sort having arisen.\nTho cayuse race was pulled off yesterday afternoon on Vernon street, the\ncourse being from Josephine street to\nCedar. There were three entries, Richard James, Bert Steeper aud an Indian\neach putting in a horse. Two heats were\nrun, the Indian winning both.\nA game of ball will he played at the\nrecreation grounds this afternoon between the Nelson and Rossland leams.\nThe Nelson management will cut out the\nImported players and put men In their\npla-ces who will contribute more to the\nbase hit column and less to that on the\noutside of the table.\nIn the Final Stage of the King's Prize\nContest.\nLondon, July 26.\u2014In the final stage\nfor the King's prize, Mitchell, McRobbio\nand Rennle, of tho Canadian team,\nsecured the National rifle association's\nbadge, and Mitchell won a prize of JJ12.\nand McRobbie and Rennle each won a\n\u00a35 prize, with respective scores of 2S0,\n270, and 268 points.\nLAWSON WILL BUILD.\nNew York, July 26.\u2014It is learned\nfrom a very authentic source that an\norder for a set of blocks for sir Thomas\nLipton's Shamrock III. has been placed\nwith the Colemans, Providence block-\nmakers, who furnished blocks for the\nColumbia!, Confetltuoion, Iridepetidencp\nand Shamrock II. For some weeks\nrumor has been Hying about connecting\nthe name of Thomas F. Lawson with tho\nbuilding of another big boat for the defence of the America's cup, should sir\nThomas Lipton challenge this year. The\nstory is that Mr. Lawson is to furnish\nthe greater part of the funds for building the boat, and that Charles Francis\nAdams, second, will be managing owner.\nIf such is the case ,Mr. Adams can enter\nall the New York club races, including\nthe trial event, hy virtue of his membership in the club,\nNELSON WORSTED IN SPORTS\n(Continued from First Page)\nPowell, and the\nIt was had enough for Rossland to\nskin Nelson at baseball In the most\nragged game of many seasons, and the\npeople were content to accept the defeat\nadministered to them by Vancouver at\nlacrosse, but it is iubbing It in when\nan Indian can bring a cayuse to town\nand win from the best blood In Nelson'i\nBtables. SKUilJlli\nProfessor McEwen's sensational drive\nthrough the streets of the city yesterday\nblindfolded attracted much attention. Iu\nthe carriage with him were George Johnstone, collector of customs; T. G. Procter and J. McPhee, of the Enterprise\nmine. Before he started G. A. Carlson,\nof Kaslo, took a book and selected a\nword which was told to one of the members of the party In the carriage. Carl-\nnon then took the book and after some\nwalking bid it in the Hudson's Bay\nstore. McEwen drove along Victoria to\nKootenay street, dowu Kootenay to\nBaker, and along to the Hudson's Bay.\nThere he made his way to the place\nwbeie the book was, and opening it,\nfound the word selected. In the evening\nlie gave a very good entertainment at\ntho opera house before a large audience. Among many other interesting\nand curious features lie ran needles\nthrough tbe flesh of the hands of a\nnumber of people in the audience, none\nof whom felt the slightest feeling of\npain,\nPERSONALS\nTHE CHOLERA IN EGYPT.\nLondon, July 26.\u2014In n dispatch from\nCairo, Egypt, the correspondent there\nof the Dally Telegraph says that the\nutmost consternation prevails owing to\nthe terrifying progress of cholera. All\nhope of localizing the disease has been\nabandoned and there is no doubt that\nEgypt will have to meet a devastating\nepidemic .\nThe disease appeared on Thursday in\npractically every quarter of Cairo, 42\nnew cases being recorded. Several natives fell dead at their work. Temporary hospitals are being erected. The\nBritish regiments at Cairo will leave to\ncamp in the desert nt the earliest moment.\nSlightly better reports, according to\nthe Telegraph's correspondent, have\nbeen received from upper Egypt.\nMrs. J. T. Stewart, of St. Paul, Minnesota, is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Kel-\nlar, of Nelson.\nMiss Kate Donnelly and Miss May\nCollins were among the arrivals from\nVancouver yesterday.\nW. J. Mussulman, of the Mines Exchange, leaves tomorrow morning for\na six weeks' trip through the east.\nA. F. Rosenberger returned last evening from Camborne, where he was looking over the properties of the Northwestern Development Syndicate.\nAT THE HOTELS.\nHume\u2014J. S. Deschamps, Rossland; R. I.\nKfrkwood, Slocan; H. Roy, Rossland; J. P.\nBlack, New Denver; H. M. Sanford, New\nYork; A. D. Mars, Spokane; H. Snell, Vancouver; G. E. Fish, Portland; R. Plummen,\nRossland; W. H. Stevens, Vancouver; J.\nAstlcy, Rossland; G, H. Pearlin, Victoria;\nJ. F. Staller, L. J. Klttredge, Rossland.\nPhalr-G. A. CarlBon, Kaslo; J. P. Harper, Rossland; Miss E, M. McLean, Dr,\nReddick, John Barreton, L. Barreton, W.\nW. Cone and wife, Rossland; Sidney Norman, W. S, Busby, Spokano; W. T. Telford, Leduc, Alta.j E. C. Enrle, wife and\nchildren, S. Briggs, London, Eng.\nENGLISH CAPITAL fOR LARDEAU.\nMessrs. KIrby and Walker, representing the English syndicate who have\ninvested so heavily in the Larueau.\nthrough Messrs, Pool and Young, by going into the Nettie L., and Silver Cup\ngroups, have purchased the interests in\nthese properties of Messrs. Pool and\nYoung. The deal went through on Monday and was favorable to the latter gentlemen. G. S. McCitrter acted for\nMessrs. KIrby and Walker, and W. de\nV. lo Maistre for Messrs. Pcole and\nYoung. The properties have been fully\nreported on by G. Attwood, M, E., ot\nLondon and South Africa, and it is intended to go ahead with mining operations. Air compressors and tramways\nwill be put In both mines as soon as\npossible.\u2014Revelstoke Mail.\nTOO MANY TRACEY3.\nSalem, Oregon, July 2li.\u2014The men\nseen near Wood burn last night and believed to be Tracey and companions,\nwere again seen by Levi Herren, a farmer, at Turner, south of Salem, this\nmorning. Herren says the men are deer\nhunters, en route to southern Oregon,\nAlthough young Pickens asserts that he\nsaw three armed men, one of whom was\nTracey, last evening near Wood burn,\nnothing has been seen or heard of the\noutlaw today. Tlie prison authorities\ntook the precaution to place a number\nof extra sentinels around the prison\nduring the night, but they believed the\nmen seen by young Pickens wero\nhunters.\nBartlett\u2014W. Wilton, Bayonne mine; E.\nMorton, Fern mine; E. O. McDonald, W.\nCotlom, Fern mine; J. Hamilton, Spoyanc;\nJames Anderson, Erie; D. Lyons, D. McLaughlin, Fern mine; C. Collom, F. B. Wilson, D. McDonald, Geo, Rabee, .J, McCreury, B, Jordan, A. McDonald.\nQueens\u2014Mrs. N. Kneelands, Miss F.\nKneelands, Ymlr; Mr. and Mrs. J, Morrison, Trail; F. Ritchie; P. H. Murphy, Sandon; W. Wright, Portland; H. McLarty,\nYmir; H. L. Jackson, Ymlr; A. Forester,\nCastlegar.\nGrand Central-J. White, Slocan; F. D.\nMlddleton, Vancouver; Mrs. Mansfield,\nMiss Ivy Reese, Granlto Siding; R. Lock-\nhart, West Robson.\nMadden\u2014J. Bromner, Slocan City; G. R.\nPayne, S. Gabriel, Fernie,\nGREENWOOD GOSSIP.\nGreenwood, July 20.\u2014(Special to The\nDally News.)\u2014A number of the stores\nyesterday Initiated what It Is to be hoped\nwill be made a weekly Friday half-holiday\nduring the summer months that are suitable for outdoor sports. This enabled those\nemployed In the stores to either participate In the baseball game or to otherwise\nenjoy themselves in the open air.\nAn accident happened to Mr. and Mrs, F.\n,W. McLalne when driving at Midway yes-\nANOTHER RAFT READY.\nPortland, July 26.\u2014The Robertson\nraft company will have a huso raft of\npiling ready to he towed to San Francisco from Stella, Washington, about\nAugust 15th, according to captain Jp. W.\nRobertson, who arrived here today from\nStella. \"This raft is lhe largest we\nhave yet constructed,\" he said, \"as it is\n750 feet long, 50 feet beam and 20 i'eetr\ndeep. It contains 8,000,000 feet, lumber\nmeasure, which is about equal to four\nlarge ship cargoes of lumber.' The logs\nhowever ,are not to he pawed into lumber, but are to be used as piles.\"\nROSSLAND ORE SHIPMENTS.\nRossland, July 26.\u2014Shipments of ore\nfrom the Rossland camp for the week\nending tonight were reduced by the\ntying up of one of the railroads earlier\nin the week. This prevented several of\nthe mines from shipping their normal\noutput, and reduced tho aggregaite\nsomewhat.\nThe Lo Roi sent out 4,300 tons; Le Roi\nNo. 2, 1,200, and tho Giant 60. Total,\n5,560. Total shipments for year to date\n184,9:16 tons.\nTHE SEALING CATCH.\nVIctorin, July 2(5.-The sealing schooner,\nCity of San Diego, returned today from\nCopper Islands with 021 skins. She reported the Nattle with 780, South Bend 280,\nand Casco COO. The Saucy Lnss, tho other\nschooner of the Vancouver Island fleet, has\nnot been reported and there is somo\nanxiety for her.\nWINNIPEG'S OARSMEN.\nWinnipeg, July 26.\u2014The Winnipeg\nrowing club's representatives for the\nC. A. A. O. regatta, leave today for\nBrockvllie. The four-oared crew is represented by Riley (stroke), Johnston,\nBole and Richards (bow). The oarsmun\naro in good condition and have high\nhopes of returning with honors.\ntake liberties    with\ncharm was broken.\nThe other importation was Budde, who\nundertook to look after things at short.\nHe might better have been left at home\nas he could neither play in the field nor\nhandle himself at the bat. He got as\nfar as first once, but this was upon u\ncharity which be drew from Costeilo,\nand In the field he got three errors out\nof four chances.\nThe only redeeming feature of the day\nfrom the local point of view, was the\nplaying of McCreary and of Houston.\nThe former played most of the game\nhimself, and the error charged up to\nhim was excusable. At the bat he was\nbetter than he has been for some time,\nhitting the ball every time he came up,\nOne of these was a pretty hit into deep\ncentre, on which McCreary travelled\nto third before the ball could be returned, and another was a scratch hit he\ngo over the third bag, and reached first\nsafely.\nThe game did not open well for Nelson. Houston went out on a short hit\nto McDonald, and was followed by Eacritt and Budde, who contributed strikeouts. McCreary opened the second with\na hit to centre on which he reached\nthird. He crossed thu plate by beating\nthe ball out on the throw in from left,\nafter Vaughan had caught Sheere's long\nfly. Whittct got to first on a fumble\nby Costeilo, but was caught at second\nby Costello's fielding of McAstocker's\nhit to him. Campbell followed with a\nshort hit to third, but Powell rendered\nit profitless by a strike-out.\nNelson got a couple of runs in the\nthird on a hit, three errors and a base\non balls. Houston started in with a nice\nhit to right, and at once stole second, a\ntrick, by the way, which Lougheed appeared powerless to prevent throughout the game. Eacritt got to first on\nan error at third, and Budde went out\non a fly to Vaughan. McCreary reached\nfirst on an error by Worth, and Sheere\ngot there on an error by Holland. This\nfilled the bases, and as Whlttet was allowed to walk by Costeilo, Eacritt was\nforced across the plate. With the bases\nfull, and hut one man gone, things\nlooked well for Nelson, but the weak end\nof the batters was up and nothing resulted. McAstocker forced McCreary\nout at the plute, and Campbell forced\nMcAstocker out at second.\nIn the fourth none of the Nelson men\nreached first, Powell and Houston\nstruck out, and Eacritt followed with\nan easy ball to third which McDonald\ngathered in and had over to Gibson before the batter.\nA ghastly error by Leigh ton at centre\nwas responsible for another run in the\nfifth, and McCreary got around to the\nthird cushion. Sheere got in a safe hit\nto left, and McCreary crossed the plate.\nThe Nelsons, who had been leading\non a fumble of Buddc's, Holland went\nhalf of the eighth with a score of 12 to\n4 against them. Whlttet got to first on\na fumble of a ball by Gibson. McAstocker went out on a foul fly to\nLougheed, and Campbell then forced\nWhlttet out at second. Campbell stole-\nsecond and got to third on an error at\nfirst, which made Powell a base runner\nfor the first time during the game.\nHouston then contributed his third hit\nof the day and Campbell scored.\nIt was a case of 14 to 5 when Nelson\nwent in for its half of the ninth. Budde\nwas given first by Costeilo. He stole\nsecond, and was advanced to third hy\nMcCreary's hit to McDonald. McCreary\nstole second and both crossed the piate\non Sheere's lilt to centre, Sheere going\nto second on the play to cut the runner\noff at the plate. Whittet then fanned\nout and McAstocker gave Gibson an unassisted put-out, Sheere getting around\nto thiid on the play. Campbell hit\nWorth, who made a bad throw to first\nand Sheere jogged home. Campbell\nmade a neat steal to second and tried to\nget to third by the same method, but\nwus cut off by McCreary .and the game\nended 14 to 8.\nRossland got three hits in tlie first\ninning, hut poor base-running prevented them from' scoring, Holland and\nVaughan being caught between the\nbases, and Worth going out on a fly\ncatch to centre. What they failed to\nget on hits they got on a string of Inexcusable errors in the third, four of\nthem -allowing Holland to get around\nthe bases, und the score stood 1 to 3 in\nNelson's favor.\nNelson wont up In the air in the sixth,\nwhen three errors, two passed balls, a\nwild pitch, a base on balls, a hit, and a\nsacrifice constituted tho ingredients of\nthree runs and the score was tied.\nThen came that nightmare, the seventh innings, McDonald went to first\non a fumble of Budde's. Holland went\non an error of Sheere's. Vaughan went\nout on a Hy to Whittet Gibson then got\nthe ball he was waiting for and cracked\nit out for two bases, McDonald and\nHolland crossing the plate. Lougheed\nwas allowed to go to llrst on fielder's\nchoice. Worth then struck the ball, and\nIt caught umpire Petty on tlie foot, putting It out of reach oi the Nelson fielders. Worth went to first and Gibson\ncrossed the plate, Then a row started.\nRossland claimed it was a hit, and Nelson wanted it classed as a block or dead\nhall. Petty did not know what to do,\nand In the end he split the difference.\nHe allowed Wortli to take his base, but\nbrought Gibson hack to third.\nCosteilo then hit to left and Gibson\nscored. Campbell was too slow In\nhandling the ball and Lougheed also\ncrossed the plate. Then there was tho\nusual procession of errors. One came\nto Houston, who was not playing his\nposition and allowed Newdell to reach\nfirst, and Worth to score. Leigh ton waa\nallowed first to prevent the base-runnera\nfrom advancing. McDonald then hit the\nball fairly over Eacritt's bag, hut lie\nlet It go by, and Costeilo and Ncwdcll\nscored, and a hit to right by Holland\nbrought Leighton In. Holland was\ncaught napping at first, and Vaughan\nclosed the Inning wi,th a fly to ffiac-\nritt which he caught by way of variety.\nThis made the score 12 to 5 when\nRossland went In for their half of the\neighth. Gibson went out on a short fly\nto the infield. Lougheed bunted and\nbeat the ball out. Worth got first on an\nerror of Eacritt's, which together with\na fumble by Powell of Costello's hit\ngave the visitors another couple of runs,\nFor the visitors, Costeilo pitched a\ngood game, retiring Ion Nelson bailors\nat the plate,\nThe score follows:\nA13\n. Nolson.\nHouston, lb\nEacritt 2b   5\nBudde ss  4\nMcCreary c    5\nSheere, Sb   5\nWhlttet, rf   4\nMcAstocker cf .. 5\nCampbell if   5\nPowell p   4\nH  PO\n3     8\nTotals    42\nRossland Al\nHolland  2b   .... 5\nVaughan If   5\nGibson lb   5\nLougheed, c   5\nWorth ss     5\nCosteilo p   4\nNewdell rf    5\nLeighton cf ..., 5\nMcDonald 3b ... 4\nR   H PO   A   E\nTotals     43   14     9   27   II\nBy Innings-\nNelson    0120 100 1!\nRossland     0 0 100362'*\nFIREMEN'S  SPORTS.\nNelson Wins One First and Divides the\nSecond One.\nIn the firemen's races yesterday Nelson siiowed up in good style, winning\nLhe hub-and-hub, and tieing with Rossland in the wet test.\nIn the hub-and-hub race the course\nwas from the corner of Josephine and\nBnker streets to a point near to the\nAshdown Hardware company's warehouse. There were three teams in the\ncontest, Rossland, Greenwood and Nelson. Tlie race was a spurt from start to\nfinish for all the competitors, but Nelson\nwas a little too swift for the visitors\nland won out with six feet to the good\nahead of Greenwood. Tiie Rossland\nboys made a fair third.\nin tlie wet test the first to run was\ntlio Rossland team, who made the splendid time of 25 1-5. There was great\ncheering from their friends and supporters, who considered the race as\ngood as won. When Nelson started a\ncollie dog ran out in front, necessitating Henderson jumping to clear him,\nwhich he did, however, without any loss\nof time. As the water passed Die nozzle\nfive stop watches were clicked, the owners of them being surprised to see that\ntho tlmo had tied within tlie fifth of\na second, both teams having made the\nrun in 25 1-5.\nGreenwood ran next and they made\nit in good time. There was a diversity\nof opinion as. to exactly what it was,\nJ. Dover making it 25 3-S seconds, aud\nthe others 20 seconds.\nIt was thought inadvisable by the committee to run the tie off, and the money\nfor the prize was divided botween the\ntwo first teams.\nThe Nelson team was composed of W.\nDouglas J, Thomson, 11. Houston, Jack\nNunn, J. Chambers, .1. Henderson, Geo.\nEckert, C. McBeath and chief Lillio.\nRossland\u2014Gus Rabee, captain; C.\nCollins, F. Wilson, Ben Jordan, H.\nWilcox, J. Martin, D. McDonald J. McDonald and P. Lougheed.\nGreenwood\u2014C. W. Wilson captain; C.\nE. Merritt, A. D. Hallett, J. Wilmot, R.\nStewart, L. B. Hodge, E. McArthur, W.\nM. Frith and A. Munroe.\nThe Nelson boys distinguished themselves in tiie run which was as steady\nas could be desired. Tins was particularly noticeable in the wet test and in\nthe coupling While water spurted from\nthe hydrant between tlie threads of tlie\ncoupling with both Rossland and Greenwood  Nelson's  coupling was perfectly\ndry and the handling of the hose as cool\nas on practice. The team Is a strong\none and the boys should be able to meet\nany team in the province.\nThe time made in all the runs was remarkably good, beating all previous records at other celebrations in tlie Kootenays. The time for hub-and-hub was\n14 4-5 seconds, and wet test 25 1-5. )In\n1000 at Greofuwood when tlie sai'i|e\nteams were competing in tho hub-and-\nhub race, Nelson won with a time of 16\nseconds. In the wet test at tlie same\ncelebration Nelson won with a time of\n29 3-4 seconds, Rossland being disqualified, and Greenwood failing to make the\ncoupling. In Nelson the same year, with\nGreenwood, Grand Forks and Nelson\ncontesting, Nelson was victorious with\na time of 17 1-2 seconds in the hub-and-\nhub and the wet test in 25 3-5. The\nGreenwood team which ran first in the\nwet test on that occasion, made the run\nand connection in 27 2-5, which was\nthought to be a certain winner.\nCHURCH SERVICES TODAY\nPresbyterian\u2014St. Paul's, corner of Victoria and Kootenay streets. Morning service at 11; evening service at 7.30; Sunday\nschool Immediately after the morning service. Tlio special music will be, in the\nmorning a solo by Mr, Clark, and In the\nevening the aiitliom \"Be still and know\nlhat 1 am God,\" Marston, and solo, \"Tho\nvoice of Jesus,\" Sutcllffe, by Mrs. Young.\nRev. J. F. Campbell, D.D., Presbyterian\nmissionary at Rutlnm, India, will preach\nat lhe evening service on \"Our missions in\nIndia.\"\nMethodist\u2014 Corner Silica and Josephine\nstreets. Morning service at 11; evening service at, 7.30; Sunday school at 2.30. The\npastor, Rev. J. H. Whlto will conduct the\nmorning service, and Rev. R. Robinson, of\nMinnesota, the evening.\nBaptist Church-Stanley street near Mill.\nMorning service nt 11; evening service nt\n7.80; Sunday school at 2.30 p. m. Rev. C.\nR, Poole, of Pullman, Wash., will conduct\nboth services today.\nRoman Catholic\u2014Church of St. Mary Im-\nmuculnte, corner of Wnrd and Mill streets.\nLow mass nt 8 a. m., high mass at 10 a. m.,\nbenediction at 7.30 p, m. Rev. Father Ferland, priest.\nChurch of England\u2014St. Saviour's, corner\nof Ward and Silica streets. Ninth Sunday after Trinity. 11 a. m. morning prayer;\n2.31) p. m.., Sunday school; 7.30 p. m., evening prayer.   Rector H. F. Graham,\nCongregational\u2014Emmanuel, corner of Silica and Stanley streets, Rev. D. H. Reid,\npastor. Morning service nt 11; evening service nt 7.30; Sunday school Immediately\nafter the morning service. Tho pastor will\npreach In the morning on \"Walking with\nJesus,\" and Rev. William Munroe, former\npastor of the church will preach In the\nevening.\nDISASTROUS CLOUD BURST.\nElmlra, July 20.\u2014At 7 o'clock tonight\nHornellvlllo and Canto, N. Y., were visited\nby a cloudburst which flooded the country\nfor miles, washed out the Erie railroad\ntracks for miles, and wrought untold dam-\nngc. All trains on the Erie road from tho\nwest are stalled at Hornellvllle, but west\nbound trains are sent via Coming, over\ntho Rochester division of the Erie & Buffalo. The fall of rain wns like the roar of\na cataract at Niagara. The Erie railroad\nexpects lo have lis tracks restored tomorrow.\nNOT EASILY ALARMED.\nSan Jose, Costa Rica, July 20.\u2014The official report of the commission appointed tc\ninquire Into the recent eruption of the\nCosta Rlcnn volcanoes, Miruvattfe and\nRincond de la Vleja, eighty and sixty miles\nrespectively southeast of Lake Nicaragua,\nIs ularmlng. Professor Putlles says: Wo\nare In tlie same conditions as the island of\nMartinique.   No alarm, however, is felt.\n^\\l\/\\l\/\\*\/Wnl\/iilAj\/iln*\/i<\/\\J\/iJ\/il) \\lAlAlii\u00bb\/\\li\\*\/U\/\\l\/\\lAl\/\\li\\l*^\n9\n%\n9\n\u25a09\n9\n\u00a3\n9\n9\n\u25a09\n9\nI\n\u00a3\n\u25a01\nJob Printing \\\nAs a Work of Art.     I\nThis is the standaid which the\nDaily News Jt b Rooms intends to\nset fvr the Commercial Printing of\nSouthern Kootenay. The News\nJobbing Depanment is to be fitted\nup with this end in view. None\nbut the best of workmen will be\nemployed, and it is the intention to\nCover the\nEntire\nField of\nCommercial\nPrinting.\nThis is well worth bearing in\nmind, as the quality of the stationery used by a business man or firm\nis often taken as an index to the\nenterprise at d standing of the user.\nFor this reason it will pay you to\nget the best. First-class work\nand competitive prices at\n\u00ab\ns\n6\nSi\n1\nfr!\nIf:\nS\nS\n*\nS\nft\nS\nS\n\u00a7\nSi\ns\ns:\nS\nSs\nSi\nS\n1\nS:\ni\ns\ns\ni\n*\nS\n6\n1 Fred Irvine k Go.\nSpecial Bargains During\nRegatta Week\nWe will offer special bargains in ladies'\nkid and silk gloves, sunshades,\nmuslin whitewear, summer dresses, silk waists, silk\nskirts, muslins, silks, dress goods and laces.\nSmall lot blouse waists at half price\nHouse furnishings, carpets and curtains at\na large discount\nFRED IRVINE & Co.\nKXKKJOOOSKXXX50S 85\u00bb0<XXXXSO\u00abHXxR\nBBftKB&KB&KB&KB&KB&KB&KB&KB&KB&K\nTHE VICTORIA BOYS\nARE WINNERS\nNative Son Victorians\nBROUGHT UP ON\nROLLED OATS\nB &K B &K B & K B &K B&K   B&KB&KB&KB&KB & K w\nH. BYERS & GO.\nHEADQUARTERS FOR\nScreen Doors    Window Screens\nPoultry Netting   Lawn Supplies\nTRUAX ORE CARS\nGIANT POWDER\nAGENTS\nMINING, MILL and\nHEAVY HARDWARE\nNelson\nKaslo\nSandon\nNOTHING SO COOL AND REFRESHING\nTHESE WARM DAYS AS\nTeetzers Violet Ammonia I\nIN YOUR BATH\nW. F. TEETZEL & CO.\nBY SPECIAL APPOINTMENT DISTILLER TO\nHIS MAJESTY KING EDWARD VII\n3\n8\nJOHN BEGG'S\nROYAL\nL06nNflGfiR\nSCOTCH WHISKY\nExclusively Supplied to all the Royal Palaces\nSince 1848\nTHE FINEST WHISKY ON THE MARKET\ns\nFOR FIFTY,YEARS DISTILLER\nTO HER LATE MAJESTY QUEEN VICTORIA\nLawn Supplies\nRubber and Cotton Garden Hose, Lawn Sprinklers, Garden\nShears, Lawn Mowers, Lawn Rakes. See our Ball Bearing California Lawn Sprinklers.\nThe J. H. Ashdown Hardware Co., Ltd.\nSuccessors tolLawrenoe Hardware Company\nWest Kootenay Butcher Co.\nAll kinds of\nFresh and Salted Meats\nWHOLESALE AND RETAIL\n] THE DAILY NEWS\nI        Job Rooms.\ni\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bbWWftff*\u00ablMMRi \u00bb fMMlMM^ffll#flM^ | E. C. TRAVES, Manager, K.-W.-C. Block, Ward Street, Nelson, B.C\nOrders by Mall receive Careful\nand Prompt Attonli n\nFISH AMD POULTftl IN SEASON\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1902_07_27","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0381404","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.493333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.295833","@language":"en"}],"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.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Nelson, B.C. : F.J. Deane","@language":"en"}],"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","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1902-07-27 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1902-07-27 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Daily News","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0381404"}