{"@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":"645b8780-9072-43ee-9fb8-82a738caf57e","@language":"en"}],"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2019-08-06","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1905-09-03","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0382007\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" Iff\nTHE DAILY NEWS\ni1\nSEP 6 .1908    &\\\n''_Tomh,+_\nVOL. 4\nIMOVilH\nlnl Library.\nNELSON, B. C, STDNDAY, SEPTEMBER  3, 1905\nZINC QUEST\nBEGINNING\nField Work Will Open at\nSandon Early This\nWeek\nP. Argall and A. C. Garde to Collect Data\nfor W. R. Ingalls* Report-Outline of\nProgram to be Followed\nThe field work that will form the first\nfltep In the investigation of the zinc resources of BriltBh Columbia undertaken\nby the Canadian government will begin\nduring the present week. A. C, Garde arrived Jn the city from Ottawa Thursday\nnight and now awaits the arrival of Phlllin\nArgall of Denver, whom he Is daily expecting to join him.\nMr. Argall Is one of the best known mining engineers of western North America,\nand has had many years' experience In the\nstudy of zinc deposits and their treatment,\nHe has lately been engaged in lhe study\nof zinc mines in Now Mexico. He has\nnot yet readied Nelson Inn will probbbly\ndo so tonight.\nThe plan outlined Is that P. Argall and\nA. C, Garde shall visit, tlie zinc mines in\nthe province, examine the ores, make the\nbest possible estimate as to tlie extent,\nlearn the cost of transportation and treatment In each ease, and forward numerous\nand large samples, as thoroughly representative as may be, to Denver to W, R.\nIngalls, who will thoroughly test them.\nLater Mr. Ingalls will visit the province\nhimself and will then make a full report\nto the minister of the Interior, through\nDr. Haanel. superintendent of mines of\nthe dominion.\nThe report will deal with the following\nmatters:\nK'l, Examination of present development\nof mines and npprlximatc determination\nof tonnage of ores Immediately available;\noccurrence and character of the ore and\nfuture access, together with the cost of\nmining.\n2. Examination of present methods of\nmilling.\n8, Investigation of adaptability of the\nores to the new methods of concentrating\n! -magnetic, electrostatic, and so forth.\n' 4, Study of conditions affecting marketing of concentrates, including the question of smelting In British Columbia or\n'elsewhere   In   Canada.\n5, Investigation of the desirability Of\nutilization of zinc ore with silver content.\nSeen by a reporter of Tlie Daily News\nyesterday Mr. Garde said:\n\"Tho government's Intention evidently\nIs that the work shall be thoroughly done.\nWe are Instructed not to spare time, labor\nor expense in collecting Information on all\ntho points that have been raised. Mr.\nArgall and 1 shall start out as soon as\npossible.\n\"Yes, our program is already arranged,\nIn outline at least. As il Is already late\nin the season we shall visit ihe mines at\nthe highest altitudes first, and endeavor to\nget through with our work ou them before\nthe snow comes. Afterwards we shall\ntake the districts at lower levels In order\nof convenience. We shall go first to Sandon by way of Kaslo. Ainsworth being\nat a low level and warm may safely be\nloft to near the last.\n\"We shall take numerous samples of zinc\nore from each mine, getting representative specimens of all kinds. We shall\nhave them assayed here hy competent men\nand tabulate the results. Sample shipments\nof about 500 pounds eah will also be sent\nto Denver for a thorough test at the smelter there whicli Is specially equipped for\nanalysis and treatment of all kinds of\nsine ores.\n\u25a0 \"Mr. Ingalls will visit Kootenay later to\nreview the work done by Mr. Argall and\nmyself, and will have all the results collected by us for bis use In preparing hi^\nreport to the government. He and Mr.\nArgall have often collaborated before aad\neach thoroughly understands the other's\nmethods.\n\"The report asked for by the government\nts a most comprehensive one* special importance Is attached to tlie economic and\ncommercial aspects of the zinc mining and\nmanufacturing industries. The Investigation means full compliance with the requests repeatedly made by mine owners'\nassociations and boards of trade. Tiie object Is to make possible the profitable mining and treatment of British Columbia\nzinc, so tbat it may bo independent ot\nforeign   tariffs   and   foreign   trade   condl-\n\"There Is not thc slightest doubt that\nthis province bos great zinc deposits. Heretofore the wealth in zinc, whicli should\nbe a magnificent asset iu Itself, has been\na detriment. The presence of zinc in sllvei\nlead ores has Incurred a penalty at all\n\u25a0meltera. The problem calling for solution now Ib that of devising methods and\nmeans to make the zinc deposits a TOurce\nof wealth Zlno In worth about 20 per cent\nmore than lead and ls not nearly so de-\nepudent for its value, as lead is, on the\ntrade  conditions   of  other   countries,\n\"A favorable report from Mr. Ingolia\nwill meHn much to the mine owners ot\nKootenay us well ns to the whole country.\nIt will add a new Industry of great pofl-\n\u2022abilities, and enhance tho value of more\nthan half the mining properties.\n\u00bbI earnestly hope thnt the owners and\nmanagers of mines containing .zinc ore,\nwill facilitate our work by allowing us\nprompt and easy access lo the properties.\nWe shall, as far as possible, let them\nknow, as nearly as wo can know ourselves\nof tlie probable date of our arrival In each\ncase.\n\"I was greatly Impressed by what 1 saw\n7 during my stay In eastern Canada.   It Is\na land of plenty nnd prosperity.   It seems\nto me to be the country  just  now  with\nthe most  pomlslng  future.\"\nCRANBROOK'S CELEBRATION.\nTomorrow To Be  a Great Day In East\nKootenay.\n(Special to The Dally News)\nCranbrook, Sept, 2.\u2014The people of\nCranbrook are preparing for what they\nbelieve will be the greatest day ln the\nhistory of East Kootenay, ao far as celebrations are concerned. Since Labor-\nDay 'has been established as CranbrooU's.\nannual holiday each year has brought\nforth a better program aud larger\ncrowds. The committee this year have\nbeen exceedingly industrious, and have\nprepared a program that is conceded to\nlie the best lu the line of sports ever\npresented to the people of this district,\none of the leading features aud the oue\n'in which greatest interest is being luaii-\nJfested is Uhe hose'reel race between the\nlire companies of Moyle and Cronbrook.\nOrainlbrook won the trophy at Moyie on\nDominion day and Moyle is making\nevery effort to win back the laurels lost\non tbat occasion. The two militia companies of Fernie will be here in 'full\nforce, accompanied by a band and not\nless than 200 citizens of that enterprising town. All industrial institutions of\nthe district will be closed down on Monday to permit the employees to come to\nCranbrook to celebrate. Already the\nHotels ot this city have heen deluged\nby applications for rooms on that day,\nand a conservative estimate places the\nnumber of visitors for Labor Day at\nfrom 1200 to 1500. The citizens of\nCranlbrook appreciate the interest that\nis being manifested and are fully prepared ito take care of the great crowd of\nvisitors that are sure to be here. The\nparade will include militia companies,\nlabor organizations, the lire companies\nof 'Moyie and Cranbrook and floats representing the milling and commercial\nindustrial districts. Fair weather is all\nthat ls needed now to make Labor Day\nat Cranbrook this year an unprecedented success.\nConsiderable interest is shown lu\nCranbrook for tlie forthcoming fair at\nNelson and It is possible that there will\nbe entries in all the various departments\nIncluding the baby show.\nThe beginning of the 'hunting season\nwas celebrated in this district by a large\nnumber of the local nimrods going forth\nearly In the morning and as a rule they\nmet with most satisfactory success.\nNO. 112\nACTIVITY IN BOUNDARY\nTWO IDLE MINES JOIN THE LIST OF\nPltODUCEKS\nTHE   ELKHORN    ANt>    THE   JEWEL\nNOW   TO   BE   WORKED\n(Special to The Dally News)\nPlMenix), Sept. 2\u2014Work has recently\nbeen resumed on two Important Boundary\nmines that have been Idle for some time,\nbut which have heretofore been well known\nproducers.\nOn the Elkhorn, in the high grade belt,\nadjollning tbe Providence, whioh lately\ncame into the limelight of publicity through\nthe quarrels of tlie shareholders, development has been resumed, and a new shaft\nis being sunk. Some months ago the Elk-\nhorn was incorporated as the Boundary-\nElkhorn Mines, Ltd., Phil McDonald and\nJames Sutherland, two old times of Greenwood, being the chief owners. These\ngentlemen developed the Elkhorn for years\nand brought it to the producing stage.\nevery foot of work belnK paid for from\nthe rich silver lead ore dug out of the property, and leaving them a handsome balance besides paying all costs and the price\nof tho property Itself, ns well. It ls believed confidently that the new shaft will\nmake the mine a producer to such an extent that tho new company will realize\nsufficiently from the output to pay for\na new machinery plant, soon to be installed\nif all goes well. In tho past the Elkhorn,\nlias shipped over 800 tons of ore that has\ngiven results of over ?1W> per ton.\nThe Jewel mine, In Long Lake camp hns\nalso recently resumed operation-* after\nseveral years' shut down. The property\nis owned by the Jewel Gold Mines, Ltd.,\nan English corporation, and it is the most\nprominent clnim in the camp mentioned,\nbeing about six miles from Eholt. In the\npast some 1300 feet of development work\nhas been done on the Jewel, and about\n2500 tons of free milling gold ore was sent\nto the smelters. The property ia*equipped\nwith a machinery plant and J. H. Smith\nIs at present in charge of the work being\ndone. The Jewel was recently examined\nby engineers on behalf of the Le Roi No.\n2 company at Rossland.\nTHOUGHTFUL JAIL BREAKER\nWrites a Consoling Nate to the Press nnd\nExplains Matters\nRushvllln, Ind., Sept. 2-Oliver O. Jones,\nformer cashier of the defunct bank of Arlington, ln jail charged willi embezzlement,\nand an Italian, under (arrest charjgod\nwitii burglary, broke jail here early today\nby sawing the boards from a window on\nlhe   second   floor.\nJones left a note behind for tbe press,\nIn which he said: \"In order to save myself\nand my reputation and credit. 1 have gone\nto a place not far off. where I may soon\nbe able to satisfy and protect those who\nwere the cause of my being tn jail. If I\nam given my liberty for a few months. In\nlens than a ymtr from this I will be able\nto return and make good ngaln.\"\nSENTENCED A GRAFTER\nPittsburg, Sept. 2\u2014Ex-captaln James Wilson of the Alleghany police departnient,\nconvicted on charges of graft in the recent crusade ngain?t illegitimate resorts\nIn this city, was today sentenced to serve\na term of bIx months In the workhouse.\nThe case was appealed.\nTO SAVE TIIE VICTORIAN\nSt. Johns, Nlld., Sept. 2\u2014A number of\nsteamers are fitting out here to proceed to\nthe stranded Allan liner Victorian In Belle\nIsle strnlts. Three flailing steamers have\nbeen lost In tlio straits. The crews escaped,\nROOSEVELT\nISMODEST\nHis Name Will Not Appear\nin the Treaty of\nPortsmouth\nThe Document is Practically Ready and\nWill be Signed Tomorrow-No More\nMeetings Will be Held\nPortsmouth, Sent. 2.\u2014With the exception of a single portion of the text, the\n\"Treaty of Portsmouth\" was completed\nthis afternoon at a conference in baron\nKomura's room, aud, it is believed, Willi\nhe signed on Monday. It consists of 17\narticles.\nTonight at 9 o'clock M. Witte and Mr.\nde Maartens and boron Komura and Mr.\nDennison began treating of the text.\nThe treaty will not be engrossed by the\ntwo caligraphers sent hy the state department. At the last moment, it was\ndecided to have the attaches of the two\nmissions perform this work.\nThe articles pertaining to the non-\nfort iiiwition of the island of Sakhalin,\nand La Parose straits, and the evacuation of Mauchurla were settled. Both\nparties bind themselves not to fortify'\ntlie island. La Parose is to be open and\nJapan agrees not to erect works to command the straits.\nThe article relating to the evacuation\nof Manchuria provides that thc troops,\nimmediately on the execution of the\nfinal ratifications, aro to be withdrawn,\nrespectively, lo the lines of Mukden\nand Ilanbin, and the number of \"railroad guards\" in ordinary times is limited, hut provision is made for the despatch of troops for the protection of\nlines'In case of disorders, after the army\nhas ended its mission.\nThe last point in dispute was arranged at a meeting of the Russian and Japanese plenipotentiaries which ended at\n11 o'clock tonight.\nAs the plenipotentiaries were leaving\nbhe conference, iboran de Rosen was asked if a final agreement had been reached.   He did not answer.\n\"Will there be another meeting?\"\n\"No,\" 'he replied, \"there is no necessity for one; the clerks can do the rest.\"\nlt Is understood the treaty will consist of 17 articles, preceded by a short\npreamble in which it is asserted, on\ngood authority, no allusion will bo made\nto the action displayed .by president\nRoosevelt In the arrangement of peace.\nGERMAN CHOLERA SCARE\nSCIENTISTS   SAY  EVERY  CARE   IS\nBBINU TAKEN.\nAMERICANS   FRIGHTENED     OVER\nLATEST REPORTS.\nBerlin, Sept. 2.\u2014The ministry of the\nInterior, has issued a notice assuring\nthe public that there is no reason for\nanxiety on account of tlie appearance\nof cholera in Germany. The government\nhas long reckoned on the present situation. A circular despatch was sent by\nthe imperial department of the interior\nto the confederated states in January\ncalling attention to the possibility of\ncholera and requesting them not to he\nunprepared for the infection.\nThe record itonight stands at 51 cases\nof cholera and 111 deaths, a steudy increase and a nigh percentage of mortality.\nTlie most uneasy news for America is\nthat a second case exists at Hamburg.\nIt was officially reported this evening\nthat a laborer in St. George's hospital\nwhere the Russian emigrant died, has\ncholera, but it is added that thc seizure\nis of a milder form than the previous\nones. Two of the other fresh cases are\niu east Prussia, Indicating that the dn-\nfeoted area has widened. Tho imperial\nhealth ofllce, as shown by the statement\nmade today to tlie Associated Press, is\nconfident that lt has the disease in hand.\nThe most recently reported victims are\namong the Russian rivermen.\nGermany'.*-; two greatest ibajL'tetflolo-\ngists, professors Koch and K. Von Ley-\nden, aro out of the country, one lu Africa and the other in the Tyrol. Professor Adolph Kafka, also an eminent\n\u25a0man, is professor Koch's successor as\nhead of t'he institute of infection, and he\n\u25a0has gone to the infected districts direct to take measures to confine the disease.\nThe Institute of infectious diseases\nusually will he open all night examining secretions taken from the digestive\ntubes of persons who have died under\ncircumstances suggestlvo of cholera.\nFrom time to time, corpses arrive from\nsome parts of Germany, with portions\nof bodies done up hermetically.\nTho ministry of the interior has issued an order covering all Prussia, requiring physicians immediately after the\ndeath of any suspicious cases to sond a\nmessenger with secretions of the alimentary canal to tho institute of infectious\ndiseases.\nThe Interval between death and the\nmedical decision is less than twelve\nhours.\nProfessor MetcUlnltoiT has expressed\nthe most positive  conviction   thnt the\nGerman authorities could cope with ithe\ndisease and prevent its spreading in\nEurope. Metohinkoffs position as chief\nof tlie Pasteur laboratory during Its\nmost, famous \u2022contributions to science,\nand liis own works, give him a recognized place as one of the foremost authorities of the world upon cholera and\nother epidemics.\n\"I can assure you,\" he said, \"from the\nenquiries I have made and from personal familiarity with the cholera cases\nin Germany that there Is no need for\nanxiety relative to a general outbreak\nof cholera, or its spread through Europe. This opinion Is based on knowledge\nof the extremely rigorous and effective\nmeasures the German authorities .have\nadopted to prevent its spread. Therefore there is no reason to believe that\n'the disease will become epidemic as in\n1892.\"\n\"Can there he any danger to tho United States owing to the steamship lines\nconnecting Hamburg and America?\"\nwas asked.\n\"1 do not think so,\" was the reply.\n\"Everybody in Germany is on the alert\nto prevent a spread of the disease, and\nit-Is my opinion that extraordinary precautions will not be necessary in the\nUnited States.\"\n\u2666\n\u2666\n9\n\u2666\n\u2666\nf\n\u2666\n\u2666\n\u00bb\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2022\u2666\u00bb\u2666\u2666\u00bb\u2666 \u2666\u2022\u2022\u00bb\u2666\u2666\u2666\u00bb\u2666\u2666+\nROSSLAND'S  ORE  OUTPUT.\nALBERTA ELECTIONS.\nEdmonton, Sept. 2.\u2014A. C.\nRutherford, the liberal leader in\nthe new province of Alberta, was\n'today called upon hy lieutenant\ngovernor Bulyea to organize the\nfirst government for Alberta.\nIt is expected that the first elections will now be held almost\nImmediately.\nWill Show an Increase Over Last Year.\nThe Week's Shipments.\nRossland. Sept. 2.\u2014The production\nof the mines continues steady aud the\nweek's output was 0,540 tons.\nThe total output for the eight months\nof the year ending August 31 was 225,-\nt>53 tons, aud should the shipments keep\nup for the last four months uf 1905 at\nthe same ratio as for the past eight\nmonths, tho total .shipments for the year\nshould reach a total of 348,479 tons.\nThis would be a slight Increase over the\noutput of 1904 when It wah 342352 tons.\nIt will he somewhat larger and should\nreach at least. 300,000 toriiB, as the mines\nwill produce more in tlie last four\nmonths of the you. than tfic\\y did in the\nfirst four months, aud the Crown Point,\nwhich has not produced any ore for\nseveral years joined the list of shippers\nthis week aud sent a carload to the\nsmelter which will be followed by others.\nTlio shipments for the week ending\n\u25a0this evening were: Le Roi 2050 tons;\nCentre Star, 2250; Le Roi No. 2, 150; Le\nRoi No. 2, milled, 400; Spitzee, 120;\nCrown Point. 30; Jumbo, 400; total lor\nthe week, 0540, and for tihe year 225,055\ntons.\nAN INFANT MURDERER\nLittle Indian Boy Shoots a Playmate\nand Will Be Tried For Murder\nVancouver, Sbpt. 2.\u2014A young Indian\nboy named Makiaulu was brought down\nhere today under arrest ou a charge of\nmurder, his victim being an eight-year-\nold Indian girl named Klabalaswege.\nThe scene of tlio tragedy was Mera-\nkomiis, a village on an island, some\nmiles up the coast, The little girl was\nplaying with some dolls on the beach,\nwhen Makiaula came down there and\ncommenced kicking tlie dolls about. The\nlittle girl ran, crying, to the house to\ntoll her father, being followed by Makiaula. The latter evidently thought he\nwould i;oi into trouble, and threatened\nto Bhooi the girl. Two brothers of the\ngirl were (present hut did not thin 1c Makiaula would carry his threat Into execution, lie appeared soon afterwards\nwith a gun. Which he deliberately discharged at the girl. The charged entered her breast and killed her instantly.\nMakiaula has been committed for trial\nat lhe fall assizes here. He Is only\nabout 12 years of age.\nDROPPED DEAD.\nWell Known Victoria Merchant Expires\nVery Suddenly.\nVictoria, Sept. 2.\u2014Michael Baker, the\nwell known produce merchant of this\ncity, and a prominent worker in agricultural affairs throughout the province,\ndropped dead this morning, Mr. Baker,\nfeeling faint, stepped Into a store to rest,\nand the spell having parsed off he started for the streets again, but dropped\ndead before he reached the door.\nDEPARTMENT OF MARINE.\nVancouver, Sept. 2.\u2014Colonel Anderson, engineer in chief of the department\nof marine, arrived hero today from Ottawa on departmental business.\nLOCAL NEWS OF THE DAY.\nJ, Fred Hume J. <!\u25a0 Unnyan and J.\nTeague nre on n hunting trip at thu north\nend or Pass valley. The country is Bald\nto lie full of game of nil kinds.\nA. C. Onrdo reoolvud a letter from 1'.\nArgit.ll last night stating that he would arrive In Nelson this (Sunday) evening from\nSpokane. Messrs. Argall and Garde will\nstart out on their tour of Inspection on\nTiifwlny morning*.\nDr. O, A,   B. 'Hall  bus  received  notion\nfrom the deputy provincial secretary that\nthe lieutenant governor tn council has r\u00ab-\nHelmled the order In council appointing him\nphyslolan to the provincial gaol at Nelson.\nDr. Hall does not know who 1& to succeed him.\nNATIONAL\nASSEMBLY\nRussian Thanks Pouring\nin From All Classes and\nAll Regions\nMove Forward Now Generally Apprtved\nThroughout the Empire-Elections\nOver by December 15th\nSt. Petersburg. Sept. 3.\u2014Though\ntho national assembly, during the Ilrst\nday's issuance of the emperor's manifesto calling for tho assembly, was given more adverse criticism than praise,\nand the press took a far less favorable\nview of the assembly than did foreign\nnewspapers, the value of the assembly,\nthe extent of Its powers, and tlie move\nforward it marks in the path of reform,\nis now being generally recognized\nthroughout the empire. A Hood of addresses of thanks is coming in from all\nclasses and from all regions.\nTho project is being taken up for careful study and consideration, and inuoh\ncriticism is wearing away, and the talk\nof boycotting 'the assembly by the liberals is no longer heard. Public discussion of the assembly and the steps\nthat are ltteln.fi taken to put It into effect are bringing to light minor defects\nand impracticable provisions In the project, and tho ministry of tlie interior is\nbusy answering questions and furnishing interpretations of doubtful points.\nIt is apparent some modifications, either\nby imperial direction or hy the douma\nitself, will be necessary before the assembly becomes a practical working\nbody. One of the principal complaints\nwaa lhat the border provinces were not\nto be represented in tho first assembly,\nbut this has been removed by the action\nof the Solsky commission for the elaboration of a scheme in these districts,\nIn which the system of local organization prevails in the governments of Russia proper, and lhe machinery of which\nwas appropriated by lhe Bouligan commission for election purposes Is nonexistent. Reports to the contrary are\nabsolutely without foundation. The\nelections in 'the empire must he ended\nby December 15th. \u25a0\na steel~raFbounty\nCLAIM   AND    COUNTER    CLAIM  IS\nBEING MADE.\nihearas, joice girders, or bridge building,\nor structural rolled sections, and on\nother rolled shapes not round, oval,\nsquare or Hat, weighing not less than 35\npounds per lineal yard, and also on flat\neye bar blanks, when sold for consumption in Canada, a bounty of three dollars a ton.\"\nTiie contention was raised by the Lake\nSuperior Corporation and subsequently\nupheld that the words \"and other rolled shapes not round, oval, flat or square,\nweighing not less than 35 pounds per\nlineal yard,\" clearly meanL that the\nihoiinty of $8 por ton applied to ateel\nrails.\nPHOENIX BUILDING BOOM\nCHy Hall, Opera House and New Hotel\nTo Be Erected.\n(Special  to The Daily News)\nPhoenix, September 2.\u2014This week\nplans were drawn by Frank Knott for\nthe new oity hall for this city, and the\ncorporation is now ready to receive tenders for the erection of the building. It\nI will be a two story structure, with ample\nfacilities and rooms for the city clerk,\nchief of police, flre department, aud have\nthree strong cells, lt will be located In\nalmost the centre of the corporation, and\nis expected to cost somewhere in the\nneighborhood of $4000.\nExcavations for the new miners' union\nopera house and hall, which have been\ngoing on for a month, are now practically finished, and a force of carpenters\nis now framing the timbers for the\nbuilding. In the excavations some 2000\ncubic yards of rock and earth have\nbeen removed. The building when completed will cost in the neighborhod of\n$10,000 and will be complete in every\nway\u2014a building that has been much\nneeded here.\nWork on the new Brookyn hotel, being built on the site of the building of\nthe same name, destroyed hy fire last\nFebruary, is in an advanced state, and\nMessrs. Marshall and Runrberger, the\nproprietors, are pushing it as fast as\npossible. The plasterers and painters\nare now In charge, and the furniture\nwhich will be of the best, is on the way\nfrom the east. When completed and\nfurnished and ready for business, the\nnew Brooklyn, which occupies one of\nthe best building sites on Dominion avenue, will havo cost the owners more\nthan $20,000.\nKEEPS UP\nEMBARGO\nBritish Government Will\nNot Alter the Cattle\nRegulations\nDeclines to Admit, However, That Any Discrimination is Existing Against Canadian Cattle in Particular\nTHE SHOOTINCi  SEASON\nWHOLE ACT NEEDS A FULLER INTERPRETATION.\n(Special to The Dally News)\nOttawa, Sept. 2.\u2014Tlio new auditor\ngeneral, .lolm Fraser, has withheld lhe\nbounty ol $01,000 due the \"Soo\" Steol\nCompany on structural stent which was\nproperly earned, until such lime as a\ncompetent court has given ilnal judgment as to whether or uot the $61,000\npaid tho same company s\"me months\nago (or bounty on steel rails was a proper payment under the Act.\n.1. L. McDougall disputed the payment, but passed the amount under the\nadvice ot A. 13. Aylesworth, K.C, who\nsaid that under the Act It would have to\nhe paid.\nThe department of justice reported\notherwise and an order In council afterwards was passed against any more\npayments of bounty on steel rails. There\nIs a heavy enough protection on Canadian steel rails at $7 a ton, apart from\n-tlie bounty.\nTho steel companies arc claiming the\nduty and the bounty.\nThe now auditor wants tho $01,000\nwhich was wrongfully paid returned to\nthe treasury aud expects to succeed.\nThe Act will no doubt be made clear at\nthe next session of lhe parliament as to\nany bounty being paid iu future on steel\nrails.\nA Montreal paper referring to the\nmatter says:\nThe bounty on steel rolls which has\nbee iiia effect up to this time, amounts\nlo j:i per ton, and as the works at tbe\n\"Soo\" are manufacturing rails at thc\nrate of 500 tons per day, and the works\nnt Sydney at thc rate of 350 tons per\nday, the loss In revonue to tbo two companies in question hy the chango will\napproximate $2560 dally.\nThe Act under which a bounty of ?.l\nper ton on steel rails was claimed and\nsuccessfully maintained iwhs brought\ndown on August I, 1903. At the same\ntime a bounty was also provided on\nother manufactured articles such as\nwire rods, beams, Joist channels, etc.,\nns well as upon pig Iron and steel Ingots.   The Act rends as follows:\n\"The Goveiuor-In-Councll may authorize the payment of the following\nbounties on the undermentioned articles\nmanufactured In Canada from steel produced In Canada from Ingredients ot\nwhich not less than Hfty por cent of the\nweight thereof consists of pig iron made\nln Canada, viz.: On rolled round wire\nrods, not over throe-eighths of an Inoh\nIn diameter, when sold to wire manufacturers for use In making wire ln their\nown factories In Canada, a bounty of\nsix dollars per ton.\n\"On rolled   angles,   tees,   channels,\nGood Hugs .Made at Grand Forks\u2014Local\nHappenings.\n(Special to Tho Daily News)\nGrand Forks, Sept. 2.\u2014Yesterday being the first day of the shooting season,\na good percentage of the male population were out gunning at daybreak.   It\nis estimated that many hundred 'birds\nwere shot within a radius of ten miles\nof the city.\nGrand Forks has just been visited by\na succession of showers for the last\nthree days, which has done incalculable\ngood in extinguishing the llerce forest\nflres raging In this vicinity.\nThe centrifugal pump recently installed by the city has failed to indicate tbe\npressure guaranteed hy the Fairbanks\ncompany, under the repeated tests made\nupon it.\nG. W. Tripp, manager of the British\nAmerican Trust company here, left yesterday for Payette, Idaho, where he will\nbe married to Miss Wood of that place.\nThe marriage will take place on the 6th\nInst., after which the happy couple will\nreturu to Grand Forks to reside.\nDr. Frank, dominion veterinary inspector of Victoria, arrived here yesterday and will likely ho located here permanently.\nThe dominion government Is calling\nfor 'bids for the erection of a large stock\ncorral near the C. P. R. depot. It ls\nestimated that it will cost over IJ3000.\n^Special to The Dally News)\nOttawa, Sept. 2.\u2014There Is no chance\nof the British embargo on Canadian\ncattle being removed. A despatch to\nthe state department from colonial secretary Lyttleton makes this clear. The\ndespatch was In reply to protests prepared during the last session of the Canadian parliament and forwarded to the\nimperial authorities.\nIt states that the matter has heen reported upou by the British board of\nagriculture and the British government\nhas given it the fullest consideration,\nand regrets it is unable to propose to\nparliament any amendment so as to\npresent a law which required the slaughtering of cattle immediately upon arrival.\nThe memorandum of the British iboard\nof agriculture on which the government\nacted is given. It states the regulation\nis no obstacle to the development of a\nlarge caitle trade and gives statistics to\nprove this. The cable declares the \"existing law does not cast any stigma on\nCanadian cattle as it applies also against\nthe United States, the Argentine, Australia and other colonies.\" It Is discredited as only a sanitary law. As\nexperience has shown how rapidly the\nfoot and mouth diseases spread when\nonce introduced, it adds: \"The enormous losses which British agriculture\nlitis suffered in the last 30 years, mainly\nby reason of increased pressure from colonial and foreign competition, makes it\nmore than ever necessary that precautions should he taken against the introduction of diseases, consistent with\nthe requirements of colonial producers\nand tbe interests of consumers at home.\"\nSTRANGE PHENOMENON\nTHAT LICENSE TANGLE.\nSupt. Hussey Trying to Straighten Out\nMatters at Grand Forks.\n(Special to The Dally News)\nGrand Forks, Sept. 2.\u2014Supt. Hussey\nof the provincial police has been paying\nnn ofllcial visit to Grand Forks and\nCascade district. License commissioner\nA. E. Rainey is authority for the statement that Mr. Hussey is acting on behalf of the attorney general's department, and is Investigating into the Cascade license question. Mr. Rainey added that lie had received letters from the\nattorney general stating that his compulsory resignation was the result of a\nmisunderstanding, and that the department would endeavor to straighten out\nthe entanglement later on.\nTIIE  USUAL CHARGES.\nPetition Is Filed   Against   Return   of\nAlbernl Member.\n(Special to Tlie Dully News)\nVictoria, Sept. 2.\u2014A petition against\nthe return of Manson, the conservative\ncandidato in Alberui,   was   filed   this\nmorning at the court house here on the\nusual charges of corruption and Impersonation.\nAMERICAN SOLDIERS IN TORONTO.\nToronto. Sopt. 2.\u2014The 74th regiment\nN.Y.N.G., arrived here from Buffalo,\nN.Y., this morning, accompanied 'by a\nband of CO pieces. Tho visiting guards\nwho carried their arms nnd complete\nmarching outfit, wore received by an enormous crowd which cheered them when\nthey stopped from tho train. The officers of the Queen's Own regiment wore\nassembled at the station and gave the\nAmerican officers a hearty welcome.\nThe visiting soldiers marched, with\nthe 'band playing martial airs, to their\ncamping ground, and all along the line\nof march they were cheered by the\ncrowds,\nPeculiar Light Observed on Beach of\nThe Atlantic.\nKittery Point, Me., Sept, 2.\u2014A phenomenon attributed by many persons to\ntile recent earthquakes iu Maine and\nNew Hampshire, was observed on the\nbeach directly In front of a local summer hotel during last night. When the\ntide wus half way In a brilliant whlto\nlight covered tho wholo beach from a\nheight of about six inches.\nAt the same time a strong sulphurous\nodor was emitted from tho same locality, It being so offensive that it wns necessary to closo tightly all doors and\nwindows in tho hotel. The light and\nodor asted for about two hours, disappearing with the full tide.\nBOUNDARY SHIPMENTS.\nOver 10,500 Tons Were Sent Out During\nLast Week.\n[Special to The Dally News]\nPhoenix, Sept. 2.\u2014The oro shipments\nfrom tho mines of the Boundary for tho\nlast week were:\nGranby mines to Granby smelter, 12,-\n065 tons; Mother Lode to B. C. Copper\nsmelter, 3816 tons; Emma to Nelson\nsmelter, 288 tons; Oro Denoro to Granby smelter CO tons; Crescent to Trail,\n30 tons; Providence to Trail, 60; Mavis\nto Trail 20 tons. Total shipments for\ntho week, 16,635 tons; total for tho year\nto date, 587,642 tons.\nThe Boundary smelters this week:\ntreated as follows: Granby smelter,\n12,895 tons; B. C. Copper smelter, 4,097\ntons. Total treatment for the week,\n16,992; total treatment for year to date,\n602,526 tons.\nJAPAN AND CANADA.\nCongratulations   Sent to Komura   and\nInvitation Repeated.\n[Special to Tlie Dally News]\nOttawa, Sept. 2.\u2014The secretary ot\nstate ou behalf of the Canadian government has sent congratulations to baron\nKomura and at the same time has re-\n-newed the Invitation to visit Canada ou\nthe termination of tho (proceedings at\nPortsmouth.\nCANADA'S POPULATION.\nGratifying Increase   Since Last Census\nIn 1901.\n(Special to The Dally Newa)\nOttawa, Sept, 2.\u2014The census department places Canada's   population    at\nover six millions,   the lucrease   since\n1901 being 802,215.\nEASTERN CABLE SERVICE\nNew York, Sept. 2.\u2014The   service to\nJapan by the Formosa route wns resumed today, hut the wires   are   working\nslowly.\nSTRIKE AT REVEL.\nRevel, Russia, Sept. 2.\u2014A general\nstrlko has been proclaimed here as the\noutcome of the recent movement.\nMeasures have been taken to prevent\ndisorders.\n THE DAILY  ITEWS, NELSON, B. C, StJNDAT, SEPTEMBER 3, 1905\nWe are just unpacking a shipment of\nl,    U1UWWIIU1U|\nWe are showing all the latest designs and offerl\nIn Dinner Sets, Tea Sets and\nOdd Pieces\n^T Combining the useful with the ornamental, we\nhave a complete assortment of Jelly Glasses, in pints\nand half pints, Bean Jars, in half gallons and gallons,\nButter Crocks with lids, from 1 to 5 gallons, Flower\nPots, 4, 5, 6 and 7 in., Jem Jars, pints $1 per dozen,\nquarts $1.25 per dozen, half gallons $1.50 per dozen.\nHudson's Bay Co.\nImperial Bank of Canada\nHEAD OFFICE:   TORONTO\nCAPITAL PAID UP $3,500,000 REST     13,500,000\nT. R. MERRITT, President.    D. R. WILICIE, Vice-Pres. and Qen. Man.\nI\nBranches in British Columbia\nARROWHEAD, CRANBROOK, GOLDEN, NELSON,    REVELSTOKE,\nTROUT LAKE, VANCOUVER, VICTORIA.\nSAVINGS DEPARTMENT\nDeposits received and interest allowed at current rates from date of\nopening account and credited half-yearly.\nNe'son Branch      J. M. Lay, Manager\n~THE CANADIAN BANK\nOF COMMERCE\nPaid-up Capital, $8,700,000        Reserve Fund, $3,500,000\nHEAD OFFICE, TORONTO\nB. K. WALKER, General Manager       ALEX. LAIRD, Asst. Gen 1\nManafaT\nBANK MONEY ORDERS\nISSUED AT THE FOLLOWING) RATES\n$S and under    9 centt\nCm $3 and not exceeding $10    8 centa\n\u00bb   $10      \" \"        $30  10 centt\n\u00ab   $30      \" *        $50  l! centt\nTbeae Orders are Paynble at Par at any office In Canada or a Chartered Eta*\n(Yukon excepted), and at the principal banking; points ill the United Sratoa.\nMIDOTIABLK AT A PIXUD KATK AT\nTIIE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE, LONDON, ENG,\n% bey form an excellent method of remitting small Bums of uton\u00abV\nwith safety und ut siual! enst.\nGORDON'S LONDON DRY\nGORDON'S OLD TOM\nGORDON'S SLOE GIN\nbAW, YOUNO & CO. .Montreal.   Agents tor Canada and Newfonndl\nIHE DAILY NEWS\nPublished at Nelaon every mornlnf\nExcept Monday,   by\nF. J. DEANE\nSLOW SIGHT\nNaturally bright children with 1 rreguhvr vision often appear stupid\nand Inattentive\u2014not recognising words quickly. This defect we remedy with glasses  Do not deprive your child of best possible vision.\nJ. J. Walker\nMall orders promptly attended to.        Jeweler and Optician\nSelected\nSmithing\nCoal     w\u00ab\nWc have received another car of the celebrated\nLILLY BLACKSMITH GOAL\nIf you have boon using the coal, you know Its superior qualities. If\nyou have been lining aome other and have not had satisfaction, let us\nsend you a trial shipment.\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co., Limits\nNELSON   Wholesale and Retail\nIMPROVED RANCHES FOR SALE\n1 have three of the best dividend paying ranches\non the Outlet, between Procter and Nelson, for sale\nPrices from $1,500 to $4,500.\nThese are the oldest and best improved places\non the river.\nFor further information apply\nT. G. Procter\nMining and Real Estate Broker\nNELSON\nThe Complete Kino Jin .litsu\nThe complol\ntaken from  life an\nAlso contains a\nwhich the Japanese\nfrom which lite ret\nvictim,   Price $6.00.\nby   it.    IR.VINCI   HANCOCK   and\nKAT8UKUMA HIGASHI\noursa comprising 180 tricks   illustated   by   over   500   illustrations\nml   four charts.\ni chapter on ICUATSU, whicli explains the wonderful methods by\nto life those who have been reduced to \u00bb state of coma\nof medical Bctence would  he powerless  to rescue  the\nW. G. THOMSON, Bookseller and Stationer\nPHONB 34.\nwhose organizer nover enjoyed undisturbed authority in tho execution of his\nplans. It has been said that Kuropftt-\nkin woe a schoolmaster and not a field\ngeneral. Tihat may he. lt was bis misfortune that he hud to teach his troops\nln face of the enemy the tilings which\nthose who would win in war against a\ntrained foe must learn in peace.\nEDITORIAL NOTES.\nTogether the Standard Oil company\nand the United States Steel Corporation paid last year dividends aggregating $60,319,677, whicli will surprise many\nof their foreign competitors, and, Incidentally, interest economists who are\nmaking a close siudy of the distribution\nof wealth.\nThe special   correspondent   of   the\nLondon Times with the first Japanese\narmy writes ,that the highest praise that\nKuropatkln has received comes from the\nJapanese.    It expressed itself iu their\nobvious delight when they   heard   the\nname of his successor.   The old Russian,\ncommander had a strong hold upon the\nsympathies of tihe Japanese people be-'\ncause he was reputed to be opposed to\nthe war;   upon the Japanese   staff because no one could appreciate as well as\nthese past masters of the profession of\narms the extent ot his difficulties. Their\narmy was made; his army he had to\nmake in tihe field.   Against what was,\nperhaps, the most thoroughly prepared\nforce for its ohject in history was arrayed  a force  of   incongruous  parts\nPROVINCIAL  POLITICS.\nAbout a year ago lhe MeBride government, acting under strong pressure,\nsought a way out of the East Kootenay\ncoal and old lauds tangle, Mr, Green,\nthe chief commissioner of lands and\nworks, Issued a special form of license\nfor the lands in question, which, while\nJt extracted double fees from applicants,\nguaranteed them practically nothing in\nreturn, except perhaps tiie right to enter\nupon costly litigation.\nBy throwing tlie burden of settling up\nthe conflicting olaima upon these lands,\non the applicants, possibly the government imagined that the courts would\nsettle the matter and that the different\nmembers of the cabinet might be able\nto turn their attention to the many\nother urgent problems that are calling\nfor action. Mr, justice Martin's decision made dt clear that the chief commissioner had no power to issue, any\nsuch special license as he attempted to\ndo and it was thought that the government would abandon Its former tactics\nand \"come out of the woods.\" But apparently Mr. MeBride has no intention\nof grappling resolutely with the East\nKootenay lands, any more than he has\nany apparent desire to tackle any of the\nseveral other matters that call for\nprompt administration, the prevention\nof forest fires, for instance. The premier prefers to let the coal and oil lands\nquestion drag on its weary length\nthrough the courts rather than take iu-\nBtaut action and dispose of the matter\nqnco for all, as eventually ho.will be\nforced to do.\nIn the meantime one of the richest\nsections of the province is 'being held\niiuuk. and capital Is kept out of the country, all because of the procrastinating\npremier's want of energy and business\nadministration.\nBut if Mr, MeBride is slow to act In\nsome matters he is developing rapidly\nIn others.\nDr. G. A. B. Hall, who has beon the\nprovincial jail physician here for some\nyears, has received notice that his services are no longer required by the provincial government. No cause has been\nassigned for this sudden cancellation of\nDr. Halls appointment, and very naturally the move has caused a good deal\n' of local comment. Has premier MeBride decided lo Instal the spoils system\niu Its entirety In British Columbia, just\nas premier Whitney is now accused of\ndoing iu Ontario? The removal of Ur.\nBall without any assigned cause, in it-\nsell' may be a matter of small importance\nto the community at large, ibut if the\ndoctor has been thrust aside (because of\nhis well known liberal leaning in politics, just to make way for a conservative nominee, the fact should be speedily made clear.\nCANADIAN  CELEBRITIES\nGENERAL MANAGER OF THE GRAND\nTRUNK   PACIFIC\nHAS    AB1LV    FILLED    ANY    NUMBER\nOF IMPORTANT POSITIONS\nThe popular notion of a general manager,\nills* work and Ills woy of doing it Is us far\nfrom the \"llfo\" as the operatic soldier Is\nfrom tlie real thing. Tlie public regards\ntlie railway ofllcial as a sort of hereditary\nlord, tlie line his empire nnd the employees\nhla subjects, How hard seems the lot\nof Larry, tho track walker, in comparison\"\nto that of the general manager. One travels iiln section on foot, the other rocks over\nthe rond in a private car, cushioned,\nruilated and varnished.\nTlie general public doCB not know thnt\nthe G.M. wakes earlier anil worka hours\nafter Larry's day is done; that while the\ntrack walker smokes his pipe In peace,\nforgetting utterly low Joints and high\ncentres, Happing fish plates and loose\nlocking bars, tlie general manage'a brain\nis busy with the multitudinous problems\nthat confront him~a score or more, each\ndemanding Immediate attention. How hard\nthe lot of the man with the ecoopl   And\nyet, when lie reaches the end of his run\nho drops off and goes his way with never a\nthought of the 97, until the culler cornea to\ncall him for the next trip.\nBut if you watch the general manager,\nyou will see him .swinging down before\nthe car comes to a slop, and If you follow\nhim he will lead you to tlie general offices. His basket is piled full of papers\nanil upon his desk there are a dozen documents that might well be marked \"perishable.\" Some nre important letters that\nmust now he answered by wire before he\ncan think of rest. The pressing matters\ndisposed of lie dismisses his secretary ami\npicks up half a dozen letters marked\n\"Private\" or \"Confidential..\" Some of\nthese aro acknowledged by wire, others\nanswered In hla own hand. Now he leans\nback, lights his cigar and begins to think,\nthink, think, \"Today\" is done and he is\nalready doing tomorrow.\nAlmost, we may say, as the tall lights\nof today disappear in the west the head\nlight of tomorrow looms on the eastern\nhorizon. There Is the schedule made out\nby his chief clerk, or assistant to the general manager. It opens at 9 a.m., when'\nhe must receive the deputation of leading\ncitizens who come to ask him to elevate\nhis tracks. At 10:30 tlie member for Sque-\ndunc wants to see him on a personal matter. At U the grievance committee will be\nhere with an ultimatum, And so runs the\ntale often with bit ten or llfteen minutes\nbetween dates. By tlie lime lie itas finished\nreading the bill of fare his cigar has burned up close to his moustache. He scorns\nto look at tiie clock but he knows his head\nis weary and now ho remembers that he is\nmarried (or ought to be) and that somewhere in the roaring city dinner awaits\nhim. Then comes a late dinner with cranky\nservants, another cigar, a passing glance\nat the evening paper, and that's the general manager's day's work.\nAnd you who mny envy Frank W, Morse,\nwho, the day he wus forty entered upon\nhis Important duties as vice-president and\ngeneral manager of the Grand Trunk Pa-\nIfic may find comfort in the fact that\nwhile you miss the gain and glory of this\ngreat job, you also side-step the work\nand worry that must necessarily go with\nthe building and management of one of\nthe most gigantic and Important railway\nprojects ever undertaken on this continent,\nMorse is a good name. Wherever the\nrailway has reached Its thin fingers Where\never the thin strands of steel have been\ntrailed over the sear Sahara, through the\nsand dunes of the south country the mountain fastnesses of the far west or the wilderness of the north\u2014that name is known.\nFor wherever the railway runs there runs\ntiie telegraph and wherever the click of\nthc key is heard men have heard of the\nMorse System, Somewhere in New York\u2014\nin 28rd street, I believe\u2014there is a stone\nset in the wall of a house and upon this\nstone is chiselled the name of Morse.\nDoubtless that house was once tlie home of\ntho famous Inventor.\nHowever all this, I fancy has little to do\nwith the. remarkable success of this young\nman who Is to manage the Grand Trunk\nPacific. Ho had In him the elements of\nsuccess. He also hod the advantage of\na good general education, supplemented by\na technical education ln his chosen field.\nMr. Mrose's mother comes of the famous\nfamily of Seamans, well known In. the\nnewspaper world. From her sldo ho inherits his critical eye, his artistic taste,\nhis keen Judgment and love of literature.\nFrom hla father, we may assume, ho has\nhis mechanical genius, his love of \"doing\nthings.\" He enjoyed work and was a\nstranger to the dock.   Sundown and pay\nday wero only Incidents to him\u2014llko sleep\nand a good cigar.\nThis side of 10 he had filled a number\nof Important positions, eaoh a little better than the one he had left.' Though always apparently content he was ever\nready to quit If a wider field opened, with\nmore work and better pay. But upon this\nGrand Trunk problem 1 believe he has set\nhis heart, and it would probably take a\ntempting otter to Win him away from tills\ninteresting bit of empire building. It\nmay sound absurd lo speak of a man of\n40 as building his monument, and yet if\nhe succeeds in bridging the continent hero\nin the north, he wilt have helped to build\nJiomos, not for hundreds but for hundreds\nof thousands of tho homeless of earth.\nIt Is a task over which the greatest of our\nbuilders might well enthuse-thla linking\ntho Atlantic with the Pacific, putting a\nnow crimp In the cosmos, and shrinking\nthe sphere by  half a   thousand  miles.\nThe saving of a full day's sail Is of Itself vastly more important than would\nappear at a passing glance. But still more\nImportant to Canada and Canadians is\ntlie development of the 'west. When the\nGrand Trunk Pacific is finished Canada\nwill have more railway mileage than ling-\nland. This dream will come true in less\nthan ten years. All the west wants Is\nmileage and lots of it. The Canadian wesl\nIs further advanced than was the territory west of the Missouri when the last\nspike was driven at Promontory, Utah,\ncompleting the first bridge across the continent. That was less than forty years\nago. See what an empire lies west of the\nBig Water today. Our children will still\nbe young when this \"Last West\" has furnished homes for 50,000,00\" people. Of this\nI am absolutely confident, and equally confident that one of the chief factors ll) this\nupbuilding of the dominion will be the\nGrand Trunk Pacific.-Cy. Warman, in the\nCanadian   magazine   for   September   .\nALL PRIZEUO BLANKS\nEVERY BABY IN KOOTENAY MAY WIN\nREWARD OF MERIT\nPRESIDENT ROOSEVELT WILL BE INVITED  TO AID GOOD  WORK\nIf any Nelson baby falls to win a prize\nat tlio baby show In connection with the\nfair It will be because of the neglect of\nparents lo enter It. \"All prizes and no\nblanks\" will be offered for competition.\nMrs. Harris has met with great success\nin her canvass which has not by any means\nbeen confined to Nelson. Every town in\nKootenuy bas been Informed that the show\nwill be held and that any British Columbian baby is eligible for championship\nhonors. Incidentally all have been invited to contribute to the prize list.\nThe first reply was received from mayor\nHodder of Kaslo, who assured Mrs. Harris that the enterprise would receive support from there. He promised to do his\nbest to secure financial support nnd suggested that several Kaslo ladles should\nsee about sending a good representation\nof prize babies. He also added i In- suggestion that E, E. Chlpman, gold commissioner and government agent of Kaslo.\nwould till a position on tho Judges* bench\nmost acceptably.\nMrs. Harris Is strusk with the suggestion\u2014which had already occurred to hernial president Roosevelt would be pleased\nto receive foreign recognition of his distinguished advocacy of tlie full cradle and\nhla efforts In lis behalf. He will certainly\nbo invited to aid iu discouraging race suicide in Kootenay.\nJ. A. Gibson has gallantly kept his promise and has secured funds for tlie endowment of a special bachelors' prize, which\nwill bo one of the best features of the\nshow.\nThe hot el keepers have contributed band-\nKEEP YOUR HEAD UNCOVERED.\nThe Constant Wearing ot n Hat Propo-\naSiti'-.i Dandruff Germs,\nThere aro many mon who wear their\nhats practically all the time when awake,\nand arc blessed with a heavy shock of\nhair; yet if tho scalps of those same mon\nonco becamo infested With dandruff\ngerms, the parasites would multiply all\nthe quicker for lack of air. Baldness\nwould ensue as the final result. Newbro's Herpiclde kills these germs and\nstimulates unhealthy hair to abundant\ngrowth. Herpiclde Is a pleasant hair\ndressing as well as a dandruff cure and\ncontains not an atom of injurious substance. 'Sold by lending druggists. Send\n10c. in stamps for sample to Tho Horpl-\nclde Co.. Detroit. Mich.\nCANADA DRUG ft BOOK COMPANY\nSpecial  Agent*.\nTHE R3AN WHO\nSMOKES\nour Bpeclal Mixture smokes a pure ane\nfragrant tobacco, aa choice a thing xt\never tempted you.\nTHURMAN\nTOBJlCC0N!\u00bbT\nFRUIT LANDS\nFOR SALE\nIn 10 acre blocks, In 20 acre block*\nseveral Improved ranches.\nI.  B. ANNABLE. Nelson, B. P\nFrederic S. Clements\nCIVIL  ENGINEER\nDOMINION   AND   PROVINCIAL   LAND\nSURVEYOR\nAgent for obtaining Crown Granta, mini\nsurveying, etc.\nRoom 16, K.W.O. Blook\nP. O. Box 1 Malana. B.O\nPLUMBING\nWe an prepared t* do all kind* el\nplumbing, \u2022team \u2014A gai Sttlng, on ta*\nahorteet notice. Eellroatee given. \u25a0 I\nStrachan * Co.. \"\u00ab\u25a0\u2022\u2022* \u00abre\u00bb. aftuaa,\nPbone M.\naflioaf\n^HOTELS\nUNION   H OTElT ARRmviIEAD-w7T\nLIghtburne, Manager.   First class and up\nto date in every respect.   Finest brand!*\nof Wines, Liquors and Clears\nsomely and their prize will he a credit to\ntheir  liberality and  public spirit.\nMany others have promised to contribute but have not yet decided upon tho form\nor the special destination of their prizes.\nMrs. Harris wishes all who have promised assistance to communicate with her\ndefinitely as soon as possible. When all\navailable prizes are known Mrs. Harris\nwill prepare a special prize list with the\nclasses for competition, regulations, prizes\nand all other Information on the subject.\nShe has been careful fn atl her canvassing\nto nvoid hurting thc prospects of collections for the general exhibition fund. So\nwell has she performed the task undertaken tbat the baby show bids fair to be\na source of considerable revenue to tho\nfair while it will Itself be absolutely self-\nsupporting*.\nEntries may be made with Mrs. Harris\npersonally or with secretary Annable at\nhis ofllce on Ward street, it Is important\nthat entries be made early so thnt ample\nprovision may be made for the comfortable\naccommodation of babies and mothers In\nthe opera house on the morning of the\ngreat event.\nGoing tor Chamberlain's Colic?\nCholera and Diarrhoea\nRemedy.\nDon't pot yourself in this man's place,\nbnt keep a bottle of this remedy in your\nhome. There is nothing so good for\nColic, Cholera Morbus, Dysentery and\nDiarrhoea. It is equally valuable for\nSummer Complaint and Cholera Infantum and has saved the lives of more\nchildren than any other medicine in uses\n4,When reduced with water and sweetened it is pleasant to take.\nYou, or some one of your family, are\nsure to need this remedy sooner or later\nand when that time comes you will need\nit badly; yon will need it quickly. Why\nnot buy it now and be prepared for snen\ntn emergency!  Pritp, 1)5 cento. ,\nLASTCALL\nKootenayLake Excursions\n1905\nLABOR DAY\nMonday, Sept. 4\nS. S. KOKANEE\nLeave City Wharf 8 a. m.\nReturn Fares\nProctor$1.00   Kaslo$1.50\nLardo $2.00\nChildren 542~HaIf Fare\nArrive Back at Nelson 6 p.m.\n13. J. COYLE, J. S. CARTER,\nA.G.P.A., Vancouver,     D.P.A., Nelson\nThis store will close Thursday\nafternoons during June, July\nand August.\nWest Kootenav Butcher Co.\nFRANK C\\ GREEN\nCIVIL ENGINEER\nDominion and Provincial Land tiwrvmyxr\nP. O. Box 146.    Phone Ml B\nCor.   KMtftnRT mnd Vlotorla Bttt.. ftoixnm\nDREWRY & TWIGG\nMINING ENGINEERS\nDominion and Provincial Land Surveyors.\nNEW DENVER, B, C.\nT.   G,   Procter, Agent,  Nelaon,  B.  C,\nDOMINION HOTEL, PHOENIX, B C-\nMrs. P. L. ajpKelvey,, proprlotros.*., The\nnewest and most modern first cla^s hotel\nIn the city; lately furnished und with\nall conveniences. The bar, iindor tha\nmanagement of Mr. j. Wright', is supplied with the finest brands of wines,\nliquors and cigars.\nHOTEL BALMORAL, PHOENIX, B. C-\nTlie leading hotel of Boundary's leading\nmining camp. Strictly .first class, centrally located. John A, MeMnster, Proprietor.\nWINNIPEG HOTEL, GRAND FORKS,\nB. C\u2014Under tho management of Scions\nNelson, late of Nelaon, B. C. First class\nin every respect. Largo comfortable\nbedrooms. Bar In connection supplied\nwith the best wines, .liquors unci cigars.\nWHGLEWALfc  HOU-SEtt\nPBODUCH\nSTARKEY & CO., WHOLESALE DBA**\nera In Butter, Eggs, Cheese, Produce am*\nFruit Houston Block, Josephine Street,\nNelson. B.C.\nGROCERIES\nA. MACDONALD & CO.-WHOLESALa\nGrocers and Provision Merchants.\u2014Importers of Teas, Coffees, Spices, Dried\nFruits, Staple and Fancy Groceries, Tobaccos, Cigars, Butter, Eggs, Cheese and\nPacking Houae Products. Omoe and\nWarehouse, corner of Front and Hall\nBtrgeta.    P.O. Boi 1095.   Telephone '&\nCAMP    AND    MINERS'    FURNISHINGS\nA MACDONALD & CO\u2014WHOLESALE\nJobbers in Blankets, Underwear, Mitts,\nGloves, Boots, Rubbers, Overalls, Jumpers, Macklnaws and Oilskin Clothing.\nCamp and Miners' Sundries. Office and\nWarehouse, corner of Front and Hail\nStreets.      P.O. Boi 1095.   Telephone 28.\nASSAYERS' SUPPLIES\nTHE B.C. ASSAY &. CHEMICAL SUPPL1\nCo., Ltd., Vancouver, B. C\u2014Importer!\nand Dealers in Assuyers' Supplies. Sole\nagents in British Columbia for the celebrated Battersea Crucibles, Soorlflers 1,116\nMuffles and Win. Ainsworth & Co.'s tint\nBalances, Chemical and Physical Apparatus, C. P. Acids and Chemicals, Pla-\ntlmim, Sodium and Potassium Cyanide,\nQuicksilver, Carbonate and Bicarbonate\nof Soda, Borax, Borax Glass, Silver Pre*\nLead  and  Litharge.\t\nMINING   AND   MILL   MACHINERY\nWASHINGTON MACHINERY & SUPPLY.\nCO,\u2014Dealers In Engines, Band and Circular Sawmills, Atkins' Saws, Wood und\nIron Pulleys, Leyuer Compressors and\nDrills, Pumps and Hoists. Prompt attention. Reasonable prices. Courteous\ntreatment.    Spokane,   Wash.\t\nASSAYERS\nE. W. WIDDOWSON. CHEMIST AND AS*\nsayer, Nelson, B. C\u2014Gold, sliver or lead,\n11 eaoh; Copper,. J 1.50; Gold-Silver, $*..&&\u25a0*\u25a0\nZinc, 12.50; GoMSllver-Copper, $2.50.\nSamples arriving by mall or express will\nreceive prompt attention. P.O. drawer\nIM;   Phone A HI.\nBILLIARDS    AND    ACCESSORIES\nWE MAKE BOWLING ALLEYS ! ND\naccessories, billiard and pool tables und\nbar fixtures. Catalogue free. We don't ,\nbelong to the trout. Goods union made.\nCharles Passow and Son, Chicago, T.\nBurdett, 290 St. Paul street, Montreal,;\nsole ascot .\nCLEANING AND PRESSING <\nGENTLEMEN'S suits repaired, cleaned,\nand pressed. Goods called for nnd delivered. Agent for Crown Tailoring com party,\nsuits from $15 up. A. J. Drlscoll, oi'poslts\nQueen's Hotel.\nDAIRY\nFOR FRESH MILK AND CREAM TELE-\nphono No. 217. Nelson Dairy.\nFOR SALE\nOLD CURIOSITY SHOP- If you want ta\nbuy or sell anything go to the Old Curiosity Shop. Always ln utoJk a full line oE\nCrockery, Furniture and Glassware.\nPOR   SALE\u20141   have   some   Improved   ten\nacre ranches on the West Ann, for sale,\nreasonable   terms   nnd   prJjbes.     \\lt.    W,\nBrydges.\nFOR   SALE   -   Eighteen   foot   Peterboro\ncanoe, built rowboat, good condition.   G,\nW. Tackabury,  Nelson, B.C.\nFOR SALE - The Armstrong hotel ln\nGreenwood. This Is the best hotel property in the Boundary country. Will ba\nsold for ono half of Its valuation. This\nhotel must be sold. For further Information apply to J. A. Griffith, Trout Lake or\nGaunce and  Wlckwlre, Greenwood.\nSINGER Sewing Machines for rent by\nweek or month at low rates. The Singer\nIs acknowledged to be the lightest running\nand most convenient of any. Try one and\nbe convinced. Only at the Singer Store.\nLook for the red \"S,\" Baker street. Nelson,\n FOR RENT\nI~F You want \"to buj\"Tfi7e~oTTmve built' to\norder a good light running boat, try H.\nL. Lindsay, livery at rear of Ice Co. ofllce.\nROOMS furnished for  house keeping, upply Room 1, over Dally News.\nTO    RENT\u2014Ofllces   a nd   rooms    K. Wi. C.\nblock  for rent.    Apply S.  M.   Brydges,\nor to Mrs. Motley, third flat.\nWANTED\n'\u2022*'i*T^o*v Employment AtrcDcy.\nWANTED\u2014Laborers, $2.50; busrmen, sawmill men,  woman cook wants situation.\nWANTED-In a  nice   homo,  board   for a\ngirl  going  to school,    Address,   Custer,\ngeneral delivery,\nSOCIETY CARDS\nABERDEEN HIVE, No, II, U oT T. M.-*\nMeets 2nd and AVu Wednesday, 7:80 p.m.\nof each month in K. of P. Hall, Vernon\nStreet, next to post office. Visiting mem*\nben cordially Invited.\nMINNIE A. RITCHIE, D.S.C.\nMARY C. MATTHEW, L.C.\nMARGARET SQUIRE, R.K.\nNELSON LODGE, NO. 59. INDEPEN-\ndent Order of Good Templars, meets\nevery Thursday evening at 8 o'clook In\nFraternity hall. Visiting members are-\ncordially Invited to attend. .\nJ.   E.   LACKEY,   C.T. 5\nO, DANGERF1ELD, Secretary.\n THE DAILY.  NEWS, NELSON, B. C, SDNDAV, SEPTEMBER 3, 1905\nISO\nThero la nothing like Sunlight Soap for Household Utensils,\nWhen you have to use hard water it is not an easy matter to wash\nhousehold utensils. To do good washing you should have good soap\nand soft water (rain water). If you use hard water you must have\ngood soap, ancTthe best soap yoii can get is Sunlight Soap because it\nsoftens the hard water and makes a copious creamy lather. Use Sunlight Soap Tor all household purposes and the results will surprise you.\nSunlight Soap\nASK FOR THE OCTAGON BAR,\nSunlight Soaj> washes the clothes white without injuring the hands.\nLEVER BROTHERS LIMITED, TORONTO. 6a     .\nVaai\u2014 i ,  J\n*******m*?**\u00abi\u00bb\u00bb*m**\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb*\u00bb*\u00bb?*\u00bbm*ma\nBest Mining Machinery\nConcentrating plants, gold and silver mills, gyratory rock\nami ore breakers, lead and copper converting plants, hoisting\nengines, roasting furnaces, stamp mills, rock drills, air compressors', electric light and power plants.   .\nAllis \u25a0 Chalmers - Bullock\nBranch Office\u2014Nelson.\nLIMITED.\nPorto Rico Lumber Go,, Ltd,\nMaw?actnrers of and Wholesale Dealers In\nROUGH AND DRBBBBD BUMBBB, SHINOLEB AND HOCLDINOB. BAMD-\nJAWN AND TUBNJ1D WORK. AN UP-TO-DATE DRT KILKI IM COM-\nWHCTION.\nMILLS AT YMIR\nPorto Rico Lumber Co., Ltd.\nThe HALL MING\nCOMPANLLimited\nNELSON, B. C.\nPurchases\nLead, Copper\nand Dry Ores\nKootenay Engineering Works\nFOUNDERS AND MACHINISTS\n\u2022j,      MANUFACTURERS OP THB CRAWFORD AERIAL TRAMWAY.\nRepairing and Jobbing a Specialty\nSheetmetal work, castings, builders material and mining and mill machinery.\nPHONB 204\nOffice and Work* Foot ot Park Street.\nB. C. TRAVIS\n' '\u25a0\u25a0_'\u00a3  MANAGER\nNELSON, B. 0.\nLeading Dressmakers |\nand Ladies' Tailors use Belding's Silk on their smartest suits, |\ngowns and waists.   They know that * 5\nBelding's Spool Silk\nsews smoothly and evenly\u2014is free of knots and kinks\u2014runs freely\nin thc highest speeded sewing machines without breaking.\nThat is a hint worth following\nto those who sew at home.\nEvery desired color, shade and\ntint for hand aud machine stitch-\n*\/ _\u25a0!\u00bb-\u2014\"'\"''''T   iDS aud embroidery.\n'    ~~  ' Leading stores nenwhere sell Belding's SUk.\nNEW YORK FASHION LETTER\nNew York, Sept, 2\u2014There are certain materials whicli never go out of fashion.\nLace Is one of theso. It seems as If this\never popular material is to be more the\nrage than ever this winter for gowns nnd\n\u2022wraps.\nA gown made entirely of lace Is not always effective and as a consequence the\ndressmakers are combining it with other\nmaterials or with some other lace. The\nsmartest effects are obtained In this manner. Kmbroidored batiste or linen combined with lace is always charming. Two\nkinds of lace, a heavy and a light quality\nWill produce somo beautiful results und\nchiffon with lace Is still popular.\nAa said before, simplicity is to be the\nkeynote of this season's fashions arid in\nlace gowns marks the smartest models of\nthis season. Tin- lines are long aud rather\nsevere and the trimmings are on the acme\norder. A very charming model was made\nof what Is known as all over lace. The\nskirt Ib gored and finished with a medium\nwidth flounce and Is slightly fuller in the\nback, forming a short train. The waist is\njust as simple, closing ln the back, collar-\nless and with short puff sleeves. The only\ntrimming Is appliques of heavier lace in\nlong lines down the skirt,\nA decidedly novel coat to be worn with\na citron colored cloth costume, is made In\nprincess style. The coat Is cut off like a\nman's cutaway, llts tightly at the sides\nand in the back and Is held together by a\nrosette of black satin ribbon. It Is cut\nwith a low neck effect and filled in with\na gulmpe IE lace and lingerie. A wide\ncollar of embroidered satin outlines the\ngulmpe, The sleeves are shirred to the\nelbow and have a turned back cult of embroidered satin with the frilled sleeve so\nfashionable now, reaching Just below the\nelbow.\nAccording to the Intcst reports from Paris\nstriped materials are to be extremely\nfnshlonable. The stripes nre to be had In\nall widths, from the barely visible pin\nstripe to the conspiramis widths that will\nbe worn by the extremists. The color\nschemes are generally light.\nBlack, always fashionable, is to be especially smart this winter. A black gown\nalways looks distinguished ami has the\nadded advantage of being the most economical in the long rim. A black costume\nfor eveiulng wear trimmed with bands of\nhandsome jet, Is the most effective gown\nfor a matron.\nLa Mode effects styles In lingerie as well\nas the outer garments and the tendency\nhere as In the case of gowns Is towards\nsimplicity. The numerous frills, berthas\nand numerous other fluffy trimmings are\nno longer used on night gowns, chemise\nand corset covers of the up to date woman.\nPetticoats are the only piece of underwear\nwhich still have billowy llounces and frills.\nThe finest French batiste and nainsook\nare the materials chosen for the finest\nunderwear ami the coarser but more durable cambric is seldom seen. What Is\nlacking In trimming Is made up lu the\nshceniess   of   the   material.\nThe chemise which was pushed Into\nthe background for a time has regained\nIts place hi popular favor and appears lu\nsomo very pretty designs. A line of beading or Insertion and lace holds the smartest chemise over the shoulders and sometime thi> shoulder strap Is made of ribbon. This Is especially suitable for wear\nin JLlic evening with decollete dresses but\nIs also seen on models intended for every\nday use.\nUmpire gowns are the most popular for\nchi-mises and \"night gowns with the short\nwaist line detlued by a band of broad beading just below the bust. Ribbon is run\nthrough the beading and lied with long\nends and loops lu front.\nThe use of ribbon Is one of the distinctive and extravagant features as well as\nthe stylish lingerie. After one has bought\nthe ribbon necessary for the beading, the\nbows and knots used so lavishly on modern underwear, this item of expense Is\nquite  a  large one.\nThe lovely designs in embroidery, insertion nnd flouncing are pressed into service for trimming some of the smartest\nunderwear. However these are better for\npetlieoats, night gowns and drawers than\nfor  chemises  and   corset   covers.\nIBmbrolderQd medallions may be used for\nlace and are easier handled than the other\ntrimmings. An effective trimming may be\nmade by buying little embroidery butterflies In various sixes and setting them\naround the neck of the chemise or corset\ncover with the tips of the wings touching\nand a narrow edge of valenelennea frilled\nInto the Irregular line made by these embroidered motifs.\nTiny squares of very flue embroidery are\nalso set Into fine lingerie with valeiiclenncs\nInsertion or with beading monograms or\ninitials set into the garments with lace and\nlooking as if embroidered to order.\nESTI3LL13  CLAIKEMOiNT.\nm\n\u00ab\n8\nNELSON FAIR\n1905\n*\nm\nm\n$9\nm\nGRAIN AND STOCKS\nThe New York stock market opened\nsteady and held strong throughout the\nsession today. The opening prices showed\na slight advance over last night's close.\nC.P.R. opened at 100, the low mark for\nthe day and closed at Id 1-2, the high\nprice, this shows a good rally after paying\na dividend on Sept. 1; Amalgamated Copper opened at 82 3-4, gaining an eighth,\nBold down to 82 1-1, and closed at 82 3-1;\nU.S.S. common, opened at Uti 3-8, sold Up\nto 3C 3-1, broke to 35 7-8 and closed at\n3D 1-4, preferred opened at 103 5-8, gained a\nquarter, sold down to 102 78, and closed\nstrong at 103 5-8; St. Paul opened at 178,\nadvanced 8-4 and again touched 178, closing\nweak at 178 1-1; U.P. opened at 181, sold\nup to 131 5-8, the close, the low price of the\nday was 130 7-8; Atchison held very steady\nand did not have Its break with the other\nBlocks earlier In the week, today It opened\nat Sit) 1-1, sold down to 89 5-8 and closed at\nOU   1-8.\nlirnin-Uvci'pool closed 1-8 higher. Our\nmarket oponed steady and held strong\nfrom the opening. September wheat opened 79 1-1 <a 3-8, closed 79 C-S; another break\nof four or five ceiiis Is looked for In wheat\nsoon.\nf  Reported by I. C. Major and Company,\nNelson, Sept. 2.\nNext Monday, Sept. 4th will be the first\nof a series of dances which will be held In\nFraternity hall. This popular hall has been\nleased by Mrs, Wclntyre for the coming\nsenson and it ls the Intention to put on a\nweekly dance. Thc price of admission will\nbe one dollar for gentlemen, ladles with\nescorts free, The dining room has been\nfitted up and refreshments will be served\ncontinuously from 11 o'clock. It will be\ntho aim to make the weekly dunces a\npopular success. The music will be the\nbest   the  city  affords.\n'\u2022__\nm\n99\nw_\n\u25a0m\n\"Wonderfully Good.\" That Is always\nthe unanimous verdict of the countless\njuries of Intelligent people who use Quaker\nBrand canned fruits nnd vegetables. Thoy\nare the best to be had. Your grocer keeps\nI them. Give thorn a trial; you'll enjoy tbem.\nUNDER THE AUSPICES OF\nThe Nelson Agricultural\nAND\nIndustrial Association\nOf British Columbia\nTOIBE HELD:AT\nNELSON, B.O.\nSEPTEMBER\n20, 21 AND 22, 1905\nEntries close Saturday, September 16th, 1905.   For\nfurther particulars address\nJ. E. ANNABLE,\nSecretary, Nelson, B.C.\nw??' J#* S# lf#IS\n\u25a09_\n\u25a09*\nm\n\u25a0m\nw_\n\u2022#\n\u25a0P\nw\nm\n\u25a099\n99\nm\nm\nM\n1\n\u25a09k.\nm\nm\n9<4r\n\u25a0__\n\u25a099\nm\n\u25a09<<r\nm-\n9kr\n9_\n\u25a09*\nm-\n\u25a0m\nm-\n\u25a0$_\n*&\n*$*\n99\nIS\ni*\n9%\n\u25a0P\ni&\nM\nm\n\u202299\n***\nM\n\u25a099\n*\u2022#\n*&\n9%\nM\n?\/$\u2022\u25a0\nM\nm\n\u25a0m\n THE DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 3,  1905\n-* Jfey Cdnu4s -MM \/n \/utTic edz ebvir em, \/\u00a3& _____\\ tf\n7daAye,7uA[t(t7^&\nevd tv fauxX 4\/tnu\/L, t -rh*%yf yjut^y\n0~U\/ Ctyd\n7&*v nxiA \/HdtAyfteAiL.   0*4* \u2122es \/\u00a3__ \u00a3<m^~ Q\/muUx\/. .\nBackache\n[\nCarnefac Stock Food\nIS THE\nBEST\nThe Oxford Chancellor coal range gives a continuous\nand plentiful supply of hot water. This is a point that should\ninstantly appeal to every householder.\nThe Oxford Chancellor is fitted with an extra powerful\nwater-front which is so placed in the front of the fire-box\nthat   it  gets  the   direct  and   immediate  benefit   of   tlie  fire.\nOxford\nChancellor\nRange\nPlenty of hot water is an excellent feature in a range,\nbut it is only one of many that make the Oxford Chancellor\ndo such excellent work. We would like to send some of our\nliterature which tells the whole story. Wou't you write for\nit?   A post card will do.\nTHE GURNEY FOUNDRY CO., Limited <,\n151 Kingston Street, Vancouver\nToronto Montreal Winnipeg Calgary\nOR \"FRUIT LIVER TABLETS\"\nA pleasant liver laxative made from fruit with'tonics added\nNature's   remedy fur  constipation,   headaches,    biliousness,\nkidney anil skin diseases.\nI[llave lu.lLlvfr Trouble for ten;yr;irs. ami Iriwi different remedies\ntliiuk iTint-a-'iv.'s are the best.   Icaunot praise tbem too highly.\"\nAt Druggists\u2014fiOc. a box.    Mr.s, JOHN CUKE, Aylmer, Ont,\n Manufactured by FRUIT-A-TIVES Limited, Ottawa.\nSeptember 27th to October 7th, 1905\nUnder the auspices ot the Royal Agricultural and Industrial Society.\nNew Westminster, B.C.\nStupendous aud comprehensive array of exhibits   representing   the\nresources of all  Canada. *\n$100,000.00\nIN PRIZES AND\nATTRACTIONS\n$100,000.00\nEnlarged grounds, new, handsome and spacious hulldlngs.\nWorld's Championship events In Rowing and Lacrosse Horse Racing, Broncho \"Busting,\" Military Parades and Exercises.'\nRoyal Irish Guards and other famous bands.\nGrand Water Carnival\u2014Parade'of Fraser River Ashing fleet\npatrol boats H. M. Warships, Indian war canoes, etc    Indian Sports'\nFor all Information write W. U. Kcary, Secretary and Manager'\nNew Westminster, B. C.\nTHE FAIRJPRIZE LIST\nELEVEN   DISTINCT    CLASSES  ARE\nOFFERED EXHIBITORS.\nALL   ENTRIES   TO BE   IN BY ICth\n.  SEPTEMBER\nThe prize list for   the Nelson Fair\nwhich will open on September 20th and\nremain open for tho two following days\ncontains 11 distinct classes enumerated\nas follows:\nClass A\u2014Poultry\u2014J2S5.00 ln  prizes.\nClass    B\u2014Fruits\u2014|S(J3.00    ln    cash\nprizes besides sliver cup and diplomas.\n-   Class v;\u2014Vegptanles\u2014Class D\u2014Field\nProduce---HSU.on In cash prizes for tbe\n. two classes.\nClass   E.\u2014Miscellaneous\u2014150.00   In\ncash prizes and 17 diplomas.\nClass F.\u2014Floral\u2014For amateurs only.\nClasa a,\u2014Painting.\nClass H-Work by children under IS\nyears of a,ge.\nClass J\u2014Fine Arts\u2014Lace work embroidery, etc., for work that has never\ntaken a prize at any exhibition.\nClass K.\u2014For fancy work, etc., done\nsince October 1, 1904.\nSpecial prizes\u2014A list of which will\nbe given later.\nIn Class A.\u2014Poultry\u2014Tito cash prizes\namount to $M5. All poultry must be\non the grounds not later than 8 p.m..\nSeptember 19th, and no birds will be\nallowed to compete for more than one\nprize. Birds competing In their own\nclass cannot be shown In the collection.\nJudging takes place betweea 8 and 10.30\no'clock on September 20th.\nFirst, second and third prizes aro\ngiven for tho following entries:\nBest pair Turkeys, male and female,\nbronze or black.\nBest ualr of Turkeys, male and female, white.\nBest pair of Geese, male and female.\nBest pair of Ducks, male and female.\nBest pair ot Dark Bramahs, male and\nfemale.\nBest pair Light Bramahs, male and\nfemale.\nBest pal\" Buff Cochins, male and female.\nBest pair of Partridge Cochins.\nBest pair of Langshans.\nBest pair Barred Plymouth Rocks.\nBest pair White Plymouth Rocks.\nBest pair Silver Laced Wyandottes\nBest pair White Wyandottes.\nBest pair Golden Wyandottes.\nBest pair Black Minorcas.\nBest pair White Minorcas.\nBest pair Polish .any kind.\nBest pair Brown Leghorns.\nBest, pair White Leghorns.\nBest paid Buff Leghorns.\nBest pair Rose Comb Leghorns, any\nkind.\nBest pair Hambttrgs, any kind.\nBest pair B. B. Red Game.\nBest pair Cornish Indian Game.\nBest pair Duck Wing Game\nBest pair B. S. Game.\nBest pair Red Pyle Game.\nBest pair Pit Game.\nBest pair Andalusian.\nBest pair Black Spanish.\nBest pair Orphingtons, buff.\nBest pair Bantams, Black Breasted.\nBest pair Bantams, Duck Wing.\nBest pair Guinea Fowl.\nBest pair Turkeys, bred In 1906, any\nbreed.\nBest pair Geese, bred in 1905, any\nbreed.\nBest pair Ducks, bred ln 1905, any\nbreed.\nBest pair Anconas.\nSix best developed chickens, any\nbreed, not less than three being pullets.\n(Each to compete in their own class,\nviz.. American, Asiatic and Mediterranean.)\nThe association may pay prizes of $1\nfirst and 75 cents second for the best\nCockerel and Pullet in each class.\nFirst, nnd second prizes will be given\nin the following:\nPIGEONS.\nBest pair Fantalls, white.\nBest pair Fantalls. black.\nBest pair, any other variety.\nCAGE BIRDS.\nBest Canary, green cock.\nBest Canary, yellow cock, free from\nblack marks.\nBest Canary, cresled cock.\nBest Canary, splashed cock.\nBest collection of Canary Birds.\nBest other Songster.\nBest Parrot,\nBest Cockatoo.\nORNAMENTAL.\nBest pair Pheasant, any variety.\nBest pair Quail, any variety.\nBest pair Swans, any variety.\nRABBITS.\nBest pair Lop-eared Rabbits.\nBest pair common Rabbits.\nBest pair Belgian Hares.\nEGGS.\nBest Hens.  Eggs, fresh, one dozen,\nwhite, heaviest.\nBest Hens' Eggs, fresh, one dozen,\nbrown, heaviest.\nBest Turkey Eggs, fresh one dozen,\nheaviest.\nBest Duck Eggs, fresh, one dozen,\nheaviest.\nSWEEPSTAKES.\nTo the exhibitor showing the largest\nand best display of poultry, $15; $10; $5.\nMINERAL EXHIBIT.\nThis department ls under the direction of the president of the association,\n'James Johnstone.\nAwards will be given for district exhibit for gold ore specimens, silver and\ngold-copper ore. All mineral in competition must be the product of British\nColumbia.\nTwo special prizes are donated by E.\nW. Widdowson, Nelson, as follows:\nOno gold medal for best mlneralogl-\ncal sample displayed at exhibition.\nOne silver medal for best display of\nmineral from any one district.\nSpecimens winning the above medals\nto be displayed in Nelson for 30 days\nafter the lair.\nIn connection with the mineral exhibit a special prize will be given for the\nbest cabinet of ore specimens.\nDISTRICT PRIZE.\nThe president of the association has\ndonated a silver cup to be known as tho\npresident's cup. This is put up for the\nlargest and best dislay of Fruits and\nVegetables, and for this purpose the\ncountry bas been divided into eight districts and the association has selected\none man in oach section to look after\nhis district, who will be paid for any\nexpense he may be at up to $15.00 for\neach district.\nDistrict No. 1 comprises all the country cast of Kootenay lake, including\nCrawford Bay, Creston and Rykerts. J.\nE. Houghton and Fred Little ln charge.\nDistrict No. 2 comprises Ainsworth,\nKuslo and points north of Kaslo. G.\n0. Buchanan ln charge.\nDistrict No 3 comprises the country\non the north side of the arm of Kootenay lake from Hoover's ranch to Ainsworth.   J.  Hyslop and A. B.  Shan-\n1 non ln charge.\nIs more than tiredness. Hard\nwork does not bring sharp,\nshooting pains. And a dull,\nnagging pain\u2014that a night's\nsleep won't drive away\u2014i3 never\ndue to weariness.\nNine times in ten, backache\nsays Kidney Trouble. Pain is\nnature's way of telling you that\nyour Kidneys  are  weak\u2014that\nthey cannot do nature's work-\nthat they want help to get well\nand strong again I\nGIN PILLS\nare the greatest help that sick kidneys cia\nhave. They relieve the pain, itrciigthci\nthe weak parts, and completely cure alt\nKidney Troubles. They are prepared solely\nto cure the Kidneys. They do that one\nthing\u2014do it quickly, thoroughly, completely.\nWe know what wonders GIN PIW.S are,\nThat's why wc authorize any druggist to\nrefund your money if they fail,\n50c box, 6 boxes for $2.50. at your druggist \u2022\nor direct from\nTHC BOLEDRUQ CO.. WINNIPEG, mam\nDistrict No, 4 comprises the country\non the south side of tho arm of Kootenay lake, from Procter to Ward St.,\nNelson.   J. A. Kelly in charge.\nDistrict No, 5 comprises the country\nfrom Ward St., Nelson, to the Columbia\n.river, Siocan river and Kloican lake\nsection.   .lames Williams in charge.\nDistrict No. 6 comprises the country\nnorth of Castiegar, on A now lakes and\nFire Valley.   Itobert SMeU in charge.\nDistrict No. 7 includes what Is known\nas the Boundary country. Including\nGrand Forks, Greenwood, Midway, etc.\nJ. D. Honsberger In charge.\nDistrict No. 8 includes the country\nsouth of Castiegar, Trail, Waneta and\nRossland.   D. F. Jelly in charge.\nCHURCH SERVICES TODAY\nAnglican\u2014St. Saviour's church, corner of\nWard mill Silica St. EJijveiith punflay nfter Trinity; holy communion, 8 a. m.J\nmorniiifr prayer and holy cummunion, 11;\nchildren's service, 9:30 a.m.; evensong, 7:30.\nRev. li, A. St. G. Smyth of Windermere,\nwill preach at both services.\nCatholic\u2014Church of Mnry Immaculate,\ncorner of Ward and Mill streets. Low\nmass at 8 a.m.; high m\u00bbH9 nt 10:30 a.m.;\nsvenlng service, 7:30 p.m. Rev. Father\nAlthoff, priest.\nSalvntlon Army\u2014Barracks on Victoria\n\"\u25a0tM.et., west of Josephine. The following\nservices will be held today: Knee drill,\n8 a.m.; holiness meeting, 11 a.m.; a praise\nmeeting at 3 p.m.; Salvation meeting at\nB p.m.\nBaptist church\u2014Stanley street, near Mill.\nMorning service at 11 a.m.; evening service at 7:30; Sunday school. 10 a.m.. Rev.\n12. H. Shanks, pastor. Evening topic,\n\"Social Parasites, or the Value of Man\/'\nPresbyterian church\u2014St. Paul's, corner\nof Victoria and Kootenav streets. Mornlnp\nservice, H a.m.; 12.30 Sunday school; 7:80\nevening service, Rev. ,I. T. L-Yrguaon,\npastor.\nMethodist ehurch\u2014Corner Silica and Josephine streets. Morning service 11; Sunday\nschool,   2:30  p.   in.;   evening service,   7:30\nLAND NOTICES\nNotice Is hereby given thai two months\nafter dnte I Intend !<> apply lo the Ciller\nCommissioner of Lands and Works at\nVictoria, for permission to purchase the\nfollowing described lands in West Kootenay:\nCommencing \"i a posl marked .!\u25a0 \u2022'\u25a0\nGrady, S.W. posl, planted al the northwest\ncorner of Lot 812, of the Knslo and Siocan\nrailway lands, near Goat river canyon,\nthence north 20 chains; thenco wesl 20\ncluihis; thence south 20 eliiiliro; thencp\neast -'0 chains to the plaoe of commencement, containing 40 acrea, more or less.\nDated ihls fill, duy of August, IHO.'..\nJ. J. GRADY.\nTIMBER NOTICES\nTThlrly days nfier dale I Intend lo apply to tlie chief Commissioner of Lands\nand Works for a Bpeclal license to cut\nond carry away timber from the following\ndescribed lands in Wesl Koltenay;\n(1) Commencing ai a post planted -0\nchains wesl or llie N.E. corner of the\nKaslo nnd Siocan railway company's lot\nNo. 812, at the rast boundary of W, li.\nWhlmster'a South African War Scrip purchase, thence easl 20 chains, thence south\n45 chains; tbence east 40 chains; thence\nnorth 40 chains; tlienceensl \u25a0JO chains;\nthence nortbh -10 chains; thence west 120\nchains; thence south 40 chains, lo place of\nbeginning, containing 640 acres.\n(2) Commencing at n point 20 chains\nnorth and 120 chains cast uf the S.W. corner of my timber notice No, 1, of even\ndate, thence south 20 chains; thence east\nHJO chains; thence north 40 chains; thence\nwest 100 chains; thence south 20 cholna,\nto place of beginning, containing C10 acres.\nDated this IDth day of August, 1905.\nJ.  J.   GRADY.\nfill a long felt want, and that want\nIs \"Better Boots for the same\nmoney.\" The Logger, tbe Prospector, the Miner and the man who\nworks out o' doors will find these\nALL LEATHER Boots the beat\nthat money can buy.\nEvery pair have the Trade Mark\nstamped on tho sole.\nAll dealers.\nWHOLESALE BY\nJ. Leckie Co., Ltd.\nVancouver, B. C.\nEQUITABLE LIFE SOUND\nSO DECLARES THOMAS F. RYAN, THE\nMAN IN CONTROL\nPENDING    INVESTIGATION    SHOULD\nAPPLY  TO   OTHERS\nSeattle, fiept, 2-Tbomns F. Ryan, tho\nfinancier of New York city, who recently\nacquired the controlling interest of the\nEquitable Life assurance society of New\nYork, in an Interview here today with the\nAsKuuiaied   Press,  srnld;\n\"Aa to the Equitable Life, my purchase\nof the control of the stock and Inducing\nMr. Morton lo take the presidency was\nonly a public duty whioh any number of\nother men would have readily performed\nhad they been aware of thc consequences\nof n continuance of the dissensions among\nthe old officers nnd directors. I happened,\nfrom my relations to some of the parties\nengaged tn the conflict, to have a better\nview of the situation than some of the\nothers.   Thnt was all.\n\"Thee is not lhe slightest doubt about\ntho strength of the Equitable. It is as\nsound as the bank of England. It will\nhereafter be run as an insurance company\npure and simple, with an eye singly to the\nwelfare of the policyholders. As to the\nInvestigation by the New York legislature\nnothing could be better for policyholders\nof the Equitable, Mr. Morton will afford\nthe committee every facility, and will aid\nIn every way, to tlie end that a full and\nthorough Investigation shall be made. If\nanybody connected with tlie company has\nbeen guilty of wrong doing lie should suffer, ami If anyone has anything In his\npossession belonging to the company, he\nmust give it back. We insist however that\nthe committee shall demand from all other\nInsurance compnj'les that lhe committee\nbe given the same facilities for nn Insight\nInto their management as tho Equitable\naffords. We feel Uuu It is not only fair\nbut clearly in ihe Interests of ail policyholders. The matingeniont of all great\ninsurance companies must become an open\nbook, or confidence, which Is the very foundation on which they exist will not soon he\nrestored. The federal government should\nhave practically llie same supervision ot\ninsurance companies as tt has over nation-\nal banks. The otllcers and managers of\nthese companies have in their keeping a\nmost sacred trust, and they slejuid not ob-\njocl i\" ih'1 best Interests of their business.\nI am quite sure that president Roosovoll\nhas given this mailer much thought, and 1\nhope he will express Ills opinion;; 1\" Congress In his usual vigorous and straightforward way.\"\n\"I supiiose yon are not pleased at the\nadverse comment of some of the newspapers regarding your purchase of control\nof the Equitable?\"\nDR. CHARLES\nFLESH FOOD\nFtp tha form and CompUxlon\nMti bias saccesrfally \u00abMd fay leidlaf\nactrtwes, singers xxi warn** of Uifalan fai\nman tbto 96 yaaxa.\nWhcrcrtr \u25a0ppllfdtt b UeUotly ibforbtd\ntkroHih tka ports *t tk* akla tod lu wm-\ndirfsfautrtlwa feeds lb* waiting dusts.\nREMOVINQ WRINKLES\nu if by aula, MM SMUeattea *iUl showing\na \u25a0 \u2022M.rkftSla laprsrtSMnt.\nDr. Charles Pitik Woxi 9 poilt.Mly tka\n\u2022sly \u2022rtMn.tiM known to audlctl icUic*\ntka I will round sut kollswa la tke sick tnd\nftaixox Urn, hsaluj Insh m till ckt\u00abk>,\neras ud tend*.\nft  F#r D-tTd.op.or tht Burt\nsr trtMt\u00bb, shrank* afrom annlag , It sts tfct\nkl|keit lndmeatat tf phyilclina. Two\nktttt art tftta tufftclanl It auka Ihfc kutt\n1ltm, large xxi ktaatH.-.l.\n1KH.D \u00abV DSrAKTMBHT tTOftXI AMD\nDRUG-HITS.\nfcaffuftr pritt, &M x tea, tat tt ill who\nivaaUn _\u00ab *\u25a0\u2022\u25a0 aMClAL OFFJ3Q\nV*\" T1 **\u25a0 ?\"\u25a0** SHa.*1 wiU mu* *\u25a0*\u2022 W\ntak\u00ab tdvaattit\n\u00ab*d wad' -\u2014-- \u25a0\nkf\u00abH,U\nFRF*   _mmfh_a**xixmrtatk,'*Anal\nrn&T, >UaaaM.N My Mlattn-ttd, wti %*\nwain \u00bb <mm 9 tap pa\nWNtitT*\nIt ffM A axy My XaaiiX\nHtf a-MllIac. AM***.\nDR. CHARLES CO.\n\u00bb%\nCoffee\nalways tlie best varieties\nROASTED DAILY\nSee samples of green and\nroasted genuine\nMocha and Java\nin our window\nAll orders receive prompt attention. Goods delivered in town\nKootenay Coffee Co.\n\"Oh, that can't be helped, it win all\ncome out right in the end, when they see\nthat tho directors, Mr. Cleveland and bis\ncotrustees aro electing men to stand by\nMr. Morton hi his determination to havB\na thorough house cleaning and put the\ncompany on an economical basis, reduce\nthe cost of Insurance to the policyholders\nand manage the company in their interest,\nand with due regard to public sentiment.\nThe new management must In this way appeal to the public conscience; it will then\ncommand confidence everywhere.\"\nBJ. O. Windsor, the regular, Independent\npiano tuner is In the city. Leave orders\nfor him with the Canada Drug and Book\nCompany.\nMisB Jessie Blekemore's MndergarteTi\nwill reassemble In St. Saviour's church\nmission room on Tuesday next, September\n6th.   Terms on application.\nM.J. HENRY'S\nNurseries and Greenhouses\n3010 Westminster Road Vancouver..\nMain Nursery for Fruit HtocK,\nSouth Vancouver, one mile south\nof city. Branches lat viaorta\nand Matsqui for seeds and nursery stock growing. Kxtra large\nplanting  for  fall   delivery.\nOne year apple, 4 to C feet, HO\nto   ?12   per 100.\nTwo year apple, 2, 3, and 4 years\nold,   $1S  to (20  per  100,\nMaynard Plum, $1 each.\nLarge importations of Japanese,\nFrench and Holland bulbs for\nfall, planting.\nSpecial prices on your list. Bet\nme price It before placing your\norders.\nGarden, field and flower seeds in\nseason. Greenhouse and bedding\nout plants.\nCut flowers and floral designs.\nFertilizers and Bee Supplies.\nCatalogue free.    White labor.\n\u2022\nGreat Northern Railway\nSpokane Falls & Nortbero By.\nLow Rates East and West\nWINNIPEG and return  $62.60\nST. PAUL and return   62.60\nDULUTH and return    62.60\nCHICAGO and return    64.00\nST.  LOUIS and return     60.00\nBUFFALO and return    80.00\nTORONTO nr.d return     88.80\nMONTREAL and return  100.00\nOtlicr Eastern points at proportionately\nlow rates.   Limit 90 days.\nROUND   TRIP   VICTORIA.   VANCOUVER, SEATTLE, S23.75.\nPortland $21.15\nFor full  particulars call on or address\nH. A. JACKSON,    Q. K. TACKABURY,\nQ.F. & P.A. General Agt.\nSpokane. Nelson, B.C.\nSpokane Falls & Northern Bailwaj\nTIME OF TRAINS\nBetween Nelson, Boundary, Republic and\nSpokane\n**&*&__?__%__\nlKffir^^^n-1^3\nn^ l'J* \"ffiWrt 'certificate la granted to.\none or more years, not eiceedlS SI. JX.\non payment ln advance ol \u00bb7*6U Mr annSi\nJin,^ \"SSVWU\". and from (B.*tSr(StfJS\n\u00abuuun lor a company, aMorolni ti ap?\nA.\",.!11,6 \"\"? \u00b0,f \"'\u2022 ^n or vein. *\nKalrlf^itiona^r:^\nor traction. The lee tor recording m clal?\nclaim'Sk *i\u00b0\u00b0\u201e mml \"\" \"Ponded on tot\nMrhh\naTKSS \u00aeErft&\u00a3*W 3\nThe lessee's right Is confined tn thA ...k_\nmerged beds orXars ol t\u2122?Wer beloW low\nwater mark, and subject to the rlaThta of\nall   persons   who  have,   or  Say   riSlS\nu\u00abnt\" \u2122r,.bara'\"?'\"lne3 \u00b0r bm'b claim!\nMcept on the Saskatchewan River wker!\nthe lessee may dredge to high water nark\n\u25a0\"\u25a0m.6\";11  alternate leasehold\" *\ntlJiftiSS\"\" \"bM have a dredge ln opera.\nriw,\"?ln \"!\u00ab Mason from th? date oltba\nlease lor each Ave miles, but where \u00bb oar.\nson or company has obtained more tSK\"\none lease one dredge tor each Hlteeii rSSS\n\"fraction Is sutllclent. Rental \u00a3lI \u25a0\u00a3\nannum  lor each mile ol  river leiaJSi\n\u00a3ny.aleviiat,tS'' ratV *\u00bbo and\" hSjlMT\ncent collected on the output aftert. *\"\"r\nceeds (10,000. o\"ioui alter it ex.\nits 5 J\u201ee\u201eKier. *or a ,e\"n\u00ab Wif-SK\nmThe lessee's right Is confined to tke aub-\nmcrgod bed or bars In the river Imu\u00bb km\nwater mark, that boundary to be fixed hi\nIts position on the first dSy ViSSt B\n\"a:\"\" ot the date ol the leaseV^\nni \u00b0 l!!*8* \"Ila\" naye one dredge In ooera-\nta5.v\"\u201elJin tw\u00bbJ\u00b0ars Irom theTa e Tffi\nartSS'i'Jj \u00b0ne i'e.il\"' for \"\"* five milea\nwithin six yeara Irom such date.   RenS\nEn\u201e*>5Lml\"'k'\"r lhe*fit year ind \u00bblo par\nmile for each subsequent year. RojalS\naante as placer mining. \u00ab\"jaiw\npSatMr..^'!.''nB:. '\" th0 Yuao\"> Terrltorr-\nCretk, gulch,  river and hill claims ahali\nthe' El,*\" \"\u00bb' ln M>. SSSJaffS\nnSLj\"\"8 \"\"'or genera   direction ol tba\nto^ooo0f8etu,1!*',,tieK*'ld'!1 beln\u00ab- <\">* m\nbe M tot*-.,^'r,\u00b0tl,W Placer 0Mm' \u25a0*\u25a0\u00bb\nClaims are marked hy two legal poets.\nn?,f\u00bbath *\"& f \"dJ bearln* notice!. ISS\nmust be obtained w thin ton days 11 tha\n5% ,s\u00ab!\u25a0\"u\"', ~ \"lies ol a MiXg RecX!\nJ^h\" \"fi' \u00b01e.Mtrn OW Is allowedlot\neach additional ten miles or traction.\nm\u2122? J?.rfon .or company staking a claim\nSS.' n.?,d a frM miner's certificate. ^^\n\u25a0Tha discoverer of a new mine Is entitle*\nto a claim 1000 lest In length, and It UM\nSart.yh\u201ecoTiBt\".0'.tw!'.1MO '\u00bb* altogether,\non the output ot which no royalty shall\nc?almsaron?y.'h(> rMt \u00b0' \"\"* part*' \u00b0\"1\"1\">'\n.^r\"ryv'e,'l ''\"\u2022 Royally at the rate of two\n\u2122?a a J!alf J16*; oenl \u00b0\" tn8 value ol tka\nf\u00b0ld_ \u2022\"\u25a0fira* Jr\u00b0m **\"\u2022 Yuk\u00b0\"  Terrltorr\nBuffet Cars Between\nNELSON AND SPOKANE\nLeave Arrive\n9:10   a.m Nelson 6:35   p.m.\n9:46  a.m Mountain fi:03  p.m.\n11:05 a.m Rossland 4:55 p.m.\n7:00 a.m Republic 6:30 p.m.\n10:00  a.m Plioenlx 5:30  p.in.\n11:30 a.m Grand Forks 3:50 p.m,\n9:45 a.m Spokane C:20 p.m.\nConnecting at Spokane with the\nPhone 177   Box\nThe comfortable way to Seattle and an\nPacific coast points. To St, Paul and\nall points east.\nTwo Through Trains Daily\nEast and West\nCompletely and comfortably equipped.\nFor rates  folders  and^fuli  Information\neffardlns trips call on or address an agent\nof the S.  F. & N. Railway or\nH. A. JACKSON,     G. K. TACKBURT,\nG. F. & p. a\u201e General Agt.\nSpokane,   Waati. Nelson.\nKOOTENAY RAILWAY A, NAVIGATION\nCOMPANY, L1MIT13D\nKmIo and Siocan Railway Company\ntoUrnatlonal    tfavlgatitm    an*   Tradlif\nCompany,\nTUB CARD\nxt   laaal   trains  and   steamers   sCattlTt\nMarch 7th, 1904\nKA8L0-SANDOK\nDaily Dally\n1:30 p.m. Lv.,....Sandon Ar 10:26 a.m.\n2:12 p.m. Lv....Whitewater Ar 9:40 a.m.\n3:45 p.m. Ar Kaslo Lv. 8:00 a.m.\nKASLO-NUL80N\nDaily Dally\nEx. Sunday Hz. Sunday\n6:00 a.m. Lv Kaslo Ar. 9:16 a.m.\n7:80 a.m. Lv AlnBWorth...,Ar.   8:15 p.m.\n10:00 a.m. Ar Nelson Lv6:46 p.m.\nCalling at all way landing* on signal\nNHLSON-SANDON\n6:45 p.m. Lv Nelson Ar 10:01 a.m.\n10:25 a.m. Ar Sandon Lv. 1:80 p.m.\nThrough   dally  freight  and  passengar\nservice between Nelson and Bandon.\nFor further Information and full partial!\ntan nal) on or addran\nP.  H. WALSH, Supt. K.  R.  & N. Co.,\nJv'iHlo,   B.   C,\nG. K. TACKABURY, General .Agent, N\u00ab-\n\u25a0on, B\u00bb c.\nETC  \u2022>UiMy\\n*  ,irui\"   \"ie   xuicon   Ten\nto be paid to the Comptroller.\nNo free miner shair receive a grant ot\nmore than one mining claim on each separate river, creek or gulch, but the sama\nminer may hold any number of claims by\npurchase, and free miners may work their\nclaims In partnership by filing notice and\nSaying fee of $*>, A claim may be aban-\noned and another obtained on the earns\ncreek, gulch or river, by giving notice aai\npaying a fee.\nWork must be done on a claim aaaa\nyear to the value of at least 1200.\nA certificate that work has been loot\nmuHt be obtained each vear: if not, tlM\nclaim shall be deemed to be abandoned, and\nopen to occupation and entry by a frM\nminer.\nThe boundaries of a claim may be defined absolutely by having a fm.*vey mods\nand publishing notices ln the Yukon Official\nGaiette.\nPetroleum\u2014All unappropriated Dominion\nLands In Manitoba, the Northwest Territories and within the Yukon Territory ara\nopen to prospecting for petroleum, and tha\nMinister may reserve for an Individual of\ncompany having machinery on the land\nto be prospected, an area of 1920 acres for\nsuch period as he may decide, tbe length\nof which shall not exceed three times the\nbreadth. Should the prospector discover #U\nIn paying quantities, ami satisfactorily establish such discovery, an area not exceeding 640 acres, including the oil well, will\nbe sold to the nrosnector at the rate of\nbe sold to the prospector at the rate of\n|1 an acre, and the remainder of the tract\nreserved, namely 1280 acres, will be soli\nat the rate of 13 per acre, subject to\nroyalty at such rate as may be speallai\nby Order ln Council.\nW. W. CORY.\nDeputy of the Minister of tha I*-tertw.\nT>*zit   TmaHgr   ___v____ \u2014'. t*M\nAtlantic S.S. Sailings\nC. P. R. ATLANTIC 8. H. LINB\n(From Montreal)\nL. Manitoba Sept. 14   L. Erie ....Sept. 1\n(To   London  Direct)\nMt. Temple ..Sept OMontrOBe   ..Sept.   21\nALLAN LINlfl\n(From Montreal)\nVictorian   ....Sept   lBavarian  ....Sept. 9\nDOMINION LINB\nKensington   ..Sept.  2Canada    Sept.   9\nATLANTIC TRANSPORT LINB\nMinneapolis  ..Sept 2Mlniieliuha  ..Sept, 9\nAMERICAN LINE\nSt, Paul  Sept 2 New York  ..Sept, 9\nRED STAR LINB\nFinland  Sopt. 2Vadcrland ....Sept. 9\nCUNARD LINE\nCampania ....Aug. 26Caronla  Sept, I\nWHITE STAR LINE\nCeltlo   Sept.  lOceanic  Sept. 6\nMajestic ....Sept.  13Cedrlc    Sept.   lfi\nFRENCH   LINE\nLa Lorraine..Sept. 7La Bretagno,,Sept 14\nHAMBURG AMERICAN\nFurst BiBmarck  Sept, 9\nDeutschland  Sept. ia\n(Mediterranean Service)\nPrina Adalbert  Sept 13\nNORTH GERMAN LLOYD\nKaiser Wllhelm de\u00ab Grosse ..,, ....Sept. 6\nKaiser WHholm II  Sept,13\n(Mediterranean Service)\nKonig Albert  \u00abept. 3\nKonlgin Lulse (Sept. \u00bb\nAll continental rates and sailings on an.\nplication. If you are contemplating tahlna\nan ocean voyage drop us a Ila* and wx\nwill be pleased to furnish you with'fall Sm\nformation promptly.\n9* m. C.4RTER,        W.Ff.l\n IS I\nTHE  DAILYJJ-NEWS, KELSON, B. C, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER  3, 190\u00ab\nS      Chests of Sterling Silver      f\n2 For Wedding Presents.\nPerhaps the most prized heirloom ln your home ls the Old Silver\nhanded down from generation to generation.\nThe chest of New Silver that you are thinking ot giving now\nwill be prized and handed do wn ln the same way.\nSETS IN OAK OR MAHOGANY\nCHESTS $45.00 AND UPWARDS\nEWERT BROS.\nJEWELERS AND ENGRAVERS\nNELSON\nROSSLAND\nTRAIL    9\nP. BURNS is CO.\nWHOLESALE AND RETAIL.\nMEAT MBBC5A1TTS\nHBAD OFFICE NELSON, B. C.\n\u2022rames Market! In Rossland, Trail, Nelson, Kulo, Bandon, ThrM Tottt,\nNew Denver an\/. Siocan City. i\nOrdera by Hall to any Branch will havi Prompt and Careful Attention.\nThe Jenckes Machine Co,, L\nBUILDERS\nCOMPLETE STAMP MILLS\nINCLUDING POWER PLANT.\nSTAMP MILL REPAIR PARTS ALWAYS IN STOCK\nWRITE FOR BULLETIN 1100-K. v\nimited\nB.C.\nOFFICES:    ROSSLAND AND VANCOUVER.\nWorks:\u2014Sherbrooke, Que.\nW. G. GILLETT\nCONTRACTOR AND BUILDER\n80LE AGENT FOR THE PORTO RICO LUMBER CO.. Ltd., Retail Yard!\n\u2022Rough and dressed lumber, turned work and brackets, Coast lath\n-and shingles, sash and doors.   Cement, brick and lime for sale. Automatic grinder.   Yard and Factory Vernon street, east of Hall.\nP. 0. Box I\nTelephone, 178\nNelson, B. C.\nROUGH    LUMBER  DRBSSED\nDoors, Windows, Mouldings, Shingles, T urned Work and Brackets. Complete and\nup to date stock always on hand.   Mall or ders promptly attended to.\nA. O. LAMBERT \u00abJL CO.\nPROPOSEDJAR SERVICE\nREGULATIONS       SUBMITTED     TO\nRAILWAY  COMMISSION.\nIMPORTANT TO ALL SHIPPERS AND\nFREIGHT RECELVERS\nTlie attention ul! the boards of trade,\nmere-hauls, and business men generally\nIs directed to the proposed ear service\nrules Which have beeu submitted to the\nboard of railway commissioners for\nCanada.\nThe board is of the opinion that any\nrules which may bo adopted should, as\nfar as c ire urns tauces permit, be of uniform applicatiou throughout the dominion.\ni he board will hear any evtdeneo a\u00a3-\nfectlug these rules at New Westminster\non September Will. The proposed rules\nare as follows:\n1. All Height In carloads, or less,\nhandled by shippers or consignees, is\nsubject Lo a service charge ot ?i per\ncar, per day of twenty-four hours, or\npart 'thereof, IE not loaded or unloaded\nWithin 48 hours.\nException\u2014Twenty-four 'hours' additional will be allowed ou cars loaded\n\u25a0with coal aud coke in bulk, boards aud\ncitais.\n2. Cars delayed under load beyoud the\nfree time, for any reason for which\nshippers or consignees are responsible,\n\u2022will be subject to the car service charge.\n3. On cars placed before 12 o'clock\nnoon, free time begins at noon; If placed\nafter 12 o'clock noon, free time begins\nat 7 o'clock a.m. following.   Oars to bo\n. accessible at all 'times during tho period\nallowed for loading and unloading.\nTime lost through interruption, for\nwhich the railway la responsible, to be\nadded to the free time allowance.\n4. No charge will be made for Sundays\nor legal holidays.\nG. When, owing to wet or stormy\n-weather, loading or unloading is temporarily impracticable, agents will extend tlie free time allowance so as to\ngive atogether the full free time period\nof suitable weather.\nAgents must immediately report particulars to the manager, and nole In\ntheir daily reports \"Waived Rule 5\" opposite each car affected, giving dates on\n\u2022which the car service   charge   has not\nbeeu assessed.\n\"*-\u00bb * %      li.   When, owing to 'Irregularities   In\n\\ transportation, cars have been \"bunches\" and ore tendered to the consignee\nIn numbers beyond his ascertained reasonable ability to   unload   within   the\nauthorized free time, he shall be allowed such additional time as may be necessary to unload the cars so in excess,\n, by the exercise of due am) usual dili\ngence,   The agent must at ouce report\nthe particulars to the manager and obtain ratification.\n7. When both cars and tracks are\nowned by the same private party, no\ncharge will ho made.\nS. Consignees must bo promptly notified of the arrival of their freight, and\nwill be held to have boon notified wheu\nnotice of arrival is given at their address\nor place of business, or if notice is\nmailed to the address given on the waybill, consignee will be held to have been\nadvised at 7 a.m. of the day following.\n9. Twenty-four hours will be allowed\nto consiguees after notice of arrival, In\nwhich to pay charges, If any, and give\norders for special placing of delivery.\nIf not ordered wlthia that time car will\nhe considered as for public team track\ndelivery and will be placed accordingly,\nand tf not unloaded within the free time\nwill be subject to the oar service charge.\nTweuty-four hours addtlonal will be\nallowed for clearance of customs, where\nthe destination is a port of entry.\nWhere the destination Is not a port of\nentry, 48 hours wilt 'he allowed for\nclearance at thc outsiide port of entry.\n10. The extra time after notice of arrival for paying charges and ordering,\nwill not apply on cars for which agents\nhave previous standing orders or arrangement for placing for regular deliv-^\ncry ou designated tracks or private*\nsidings.\n11. The delivery of cars to private\ntracks shall be considered to have been\nmade either when such cars have been\nplaced on the tracks designated, or\nwhen they would 'have heen placed but\nfor somo condition for which shipper or\nconsignee is responsible.\n12. If, after placing, cars are ordered\nto another siding on the same road .to\ncomplete loading or unloading by the\nsame shipper, or the same consignee,\nand no switching or * reconslgulng\ncharge is made, the free allowance will\nbe computed from the original placing,\nless tho tlmo occupied in replacing the\ncar.\n13. If car Is reshlpped or reconslgned,\nthe original consignee shall pay $1 per\ncar per day, or part thereof, for all time\nln excess of the period allowed by these\nrules, so that 48 hours free time may\nremain to the party taking delivery.\n14. Should a switching road give notice that It Is unable to receive cars for\nprivate sidings, owing to conditions for\nwhich shippers or consignees are responsible, then any railway having cars\nfor such consignees   must   so   advise\nthem. Car service will accrue until\nthe cars are accepted by the switching\nroad and will he collected by the road\nwhich ia holding them.\nIB. Cars held in transit for Inspection,\ncleaning, bagging, completion or change\nof load, change of destination, etc., and\ndetained over the time allowed for such\npurpose, will be subject to the car service charges, which must be billed for\nward as directed by the accounting department. If such shipments are transferred to other cars, the car service\ncharges will follow on the cars to which\ntransfer is made. Tho forwarding\nagent, or in tbe case of change of destination, the agent by whom arranged,\nmust make tbe following notation on the\nbill of lading, \"Subject to   car service\ncharge at .\"   The amount must\nalso be inserted in the \"back charges\"\ncolumn of tbe bill of lading, when practicable.\n16. So-called Industrial, logging or\nprivate roads handling cars for themselves or other parties, must be charged\ncar service on all cars delivered to them\nfrom the time placed upon the interchange tracks until returned thereto,\nallowance being made for the time necessary to perform the switching service\n(not to exceed twenty-four hours), In\naddition to tlie free time herein authorized.\n17. Cars must not be held short of\nthe destination for the purpose of evading these rules. Loaded cars held back\nfor cause must be reported to the manager.\n18. When cars are delayed or refused\nby consignees because of alleged incorrectness in the railway weights or\ncharges, car service must be collected\nIf charges or weights are found to be\ncorrect.\n19. Agent must in all cases collect car\nservice charges as soon as accrued,\nShould payment be refused, agents will\nwithhold delivery, either by sealing or\nlocking car or placing it where it will\nnot be accessible.\n20. When the contents of a car are\napparenty not worth the combined\nfreight and car servce charges and consignee fails to take delivery, the agent\nmust wire the manager for instructions.\n21. All complaints, disputes and uncertainties which may arise under these\nrules must bo referred at once to the\nmanager. The manager may reduce or\ncancel the charges should he consider\nthat the circumstances justify suoh action.\nClaims should be filed with the manager direct, and must be accompanied\nby receipted bills for the amounts paid.\nTELEGRAPHIC TICKS\nJapanese In the United States dislike\nthe peace terms.\nFriction is developing in the Scandinavian negotiations.\nTurkey objects to tho scheme of the\npowers lor the autonomy of Macedonia.\nSt. Petersburg declares that there is\nno cholera in Russia.\nGlenwood the racing stallion has been\nsold to English breeders for $22,000.\nThe conversion of lord Dunraven to\nRoman Catholicism is announced at\nRome.\nFrance wants an Indemnity from Morocco for the imprisonment of an Algerian subject.\nPot hunters near Victoria have killed\na dog and filled Evan Cameron full of\nGet Above The\nOrdinary\nWhat's the use of pulling\nup with anything less than\ntho best. After all lt is the\ncheapest, and bhe purchase\nof a good thing Is never\nregretted.\nOUR NEW f ALL\nSTOCK\nIs all In and includes every\nshade and fabric sanctioned\nby the unwritten law of\nfashion.\nSee us about your new\nFall Suit,or Overcoat. An\norder left with us means\nthat your clothes will be\nabsolutely correct.\nTaylor & McQiiarrie\nNELSON,   B.   C.\nWe Will Buy\n10000 Referendum.\n2600 Rambler-Cariboo,\n1600 St. Eugene,\n2000 Centre Star.\nlOOO War Eagle,\n5000 Sullivan.\nluoo  international   Co\nWe Will Sell\nSO Marconi.\n100  Do  Forest.\n100 Northwest Coal.\n500  International   Coal,\n200(1 Yule-Kootenay Ice.\n1000 Reco.\nBOO Siocan   Star.\n5000 Fisher Maiden.\n60U0 American  Boy.\nSharp & Irvine\nBROKERS\nBox 1082 Neleoa, B.O.\nbuck shot.\nA neutral zone 'has been arranged,\npending an armistice, between the armies in Manchuria.\nElectric lines are projected between\nChicago and Cincinnati and between\nChicago and New York.\nHamburg has refused the embarkation\nof Russian emigrants because of the\nprevalance of cholera in Russia.\nA severe typhoon In the China seas\nhas done much damage to Shanghai and\nhas disturbed the cable service.\nA marriage Is projected between\nprince Ferdinand of Bavaria and Maria\nTeresa, sister of king Alpbonso of\nSpain.\nA CLOSE ESTIMATE\nVancouver, Sept. 2.\u2014The pack of\nsockeyes at 36 canneries on Fraser river during the season Just closed Is estimated at 782,442 cases, according to correct count. The canners bad prepared\nfor a pack of 800.000 cases.\nMISS SUTTON BEATEN.\nCincinnati, Sept. 2.\u2014May Sutton met\ndefeat for tho Ilrst time in the Cincinnati tennis tournament when M'lss\nMyrtle McAleor and Helen Houston\nHonians beat Miss Sutton nnd Miss\nLulah Belden In the championship event\nin the ladles doubles.   Score 6-1, 6-3.\nHalcyon\nUnf Arrow\n\"Ul Lake,\nSprings B,c\nSanitarium\nUNDER NEW MANAGEMENT\nharry Mcintosh\nOf the Hoffman House, Rossland,\nPROPRIETOR.\nThe most complete health resort ol\nthe continent of North America Accommodation for 100 guests Good fish\ning, boating and hunting.\nTerms $12.00 to $18.00 per week, according to residence In hotel or villa*\nA doctor in attendance.\nRound trip tickets, good from Friday\nto Monday, $5.80; good for 30 day*\n17.60.\nFor further particulars apply to\nHarry Mcintosh\nPROPRIETOR.\nHALCYON HOT SPRINGS.\nMadden House SSi.'SS\nDo yo. need . comfortable home? If \u00bb\ntry tha Madden Houae. Well furnlane4\nrooma llfhted by electricity; flrat elaaa\nbc\u00abrd. In tba bar you will Und all Ua\nbeat  domeatlo  and  imported   liquors tti\n\u2022inn.\nvnowjia MATkiiaN   T*r\u00ab\u00bbrlat\u00ab.\nREMOVED\n1 have moved my\noffice from the K.\nW.C. Block to\nRoom No. 7\nHudson's Bay Block\nREAL HSTAT15 AND INSURANCE\nCM. BRYANT & CO.\nCecil   M   Bryant,   A.R.S.M.,\nProvincial Assayer\nTlie  Vancouver Assay OMce\nEstablished 1890\nUmprio and control Assays\nComplete  Analyses  Etc,\nAgents   for   COBsal's   Cyanide Prooesa\nContracts mado (or Assays\nWrite for Prices, etc.\nVANCOUVER,  B.C.\nNelson Steam Laundry\nF. O. Box 41.   Telephone IM.\nAll kinds and all color* of hxAlmt au\nGents' Clothing\nCLEANED AND DYED\nFlannels, Blankets, Curtains, Bilks, Mm.\nGloves renovated to look Ilk* nt*.\nSteam Carpet Cleaning\nttftur patronst\u00bb aoilclted.\nPAUL INIPOU, Prop.\n$50,000\nWorth ef Dry floods\n\"\"Slaughtered.\nWe have decided to retire from business, and are offering our entire\nstock of Staple and Fancy Dry Goods, Millinery, Men's Furnishing, Carpets, llouse Furnishings, Etc. AT COST.\nDress   Goods\nAll Wool Cashmeres in white, red, sky and\nnavy blue, brown, pink, old rose and black.\nRegular price 75c.    Sale price  ,45c\nBlack Figured Mohairs. Regular price 75c\nand $1.00.    Sale price. 40c and 65c\nLadies Costume Cloth in suit lengths, 6 yds.\n54 inches, in black and  navy.    Regular  price\n$1.25.    Sale price 85c\n, Same as above in navy, black, brown, cardinal and lawn. Regular price $2.25. Sale\nprice $1.50\nBlack Surges and Tweeds, 40 inches wide.\nSale price, per yard 35c\nBlack and Colored Voiles at, per yard, 50c\n75c, $1.00 and $1.25.\nA large assortment of evening wear Dress\nGoods at cost price.\nFlannel and Wrapperettes\nin stripes, plain and fancy patterns. Regular\nprices 20c and 25c.    Sale prices 10c, 12 lie and\nHosiery\nA special line of Ladies' Black Cashmere\nHose.    Sale price 35c.\nMisses', Boys' and Children's Hose at 20c,\n25c and 30c. per pair.    Splendid value.\nJackets\nWe have just received a shipment of llie very\nlatest styles of Ladies' Fall and Winter Jackets\nwhich will also be sold at COST, running al\nS5.00, 8.00, fo.oo, ]2.oo, 13.50, I.S.OO, 20.00\nand 25.00 each.\nRaincoats\nLadies' Raincoats at S5.00, 6.00, 7.50, 10.00\n12.50 and 15.00.\nTailor Made Suits and\nSkirts\nLadies'Tailor Made Suits at 10.00, u.oo\n15.00 and 17.50 each.\nLadies'Ready Made Skirts at $2.50, 4.00,\n5.00, 7.50, 9.00 and 10.00 each.\nMen's Furnishing\nDepartment\nFine White Shirts. Regular price $1.50.\nSale price $1.00 each.\nEvening Dress Shirts. Regular price $1.75\nSale price $1.00 each.\nMen's Fancy Colored Shirts at Coc, 75c,\n$1.00 and 1.25 each.\nMen's Underwear at $1.00, 2.00, 3.00, 4.00\nand 5.00 per suit.\nBoys' Underwear at 50c, 60c and 75c per suit.\nMen's Cashmere Socks. Regular prices 35c,\n50c and 75c.    Sale prices 25c, 35c and 50c.\nHouse Furnishings\nDepartment\nWe have just a very line assortment of Carpels and Rugs from the well known firm of\nEdward Hughes & Sons of Kidderminster,\nEngland, comprising Wiltons at $1.35, Velvet\nat $1,251 Brussells at 85c, $1.00 and $1.25,\nTapestry at 50c and 75c. All Wool at 85c and\n$1.00 and Union at 50c and 65c per yard.\nLace Curtains\n200 pairs of Lace Curtains to be sold at pricee\nrunning from 50c to $6.00 per pair.\nA SPLENDID LINE OF LADIES' SILK\nBLOUSES AT COST.\nFred Irvine Co.\nLIMITED.\nLAKEVIEW\nHOTEL\nCorner Hall and Vernen fttreeia\nTwo block! from city Wharf.   Tb* 1\njaUar a day house In Nelaon,\nHO  CmiNMl   EMPLOYM\nAugust Thomas\nPKOFRIITOat.\nFOR SALE\nIu Hume Addition, two lots, fenced,\nfruit trees and small fruits; four-roomed house and chicken house 40 feet ln\nlength, free water; $150 ln cash, balance on easy terms. Will consider any\nreasonable offer.\nOn Siocan river, 108 acres, 70 acres\nof this is flue fruit and vegetable land,\ndeep soil free from rock nnd stone. A\nspring of good water. The land has beeD\nlogged and burned over.   No bulldlngB.\nPrice ?500; $300 cash, balance to suit\npurchaser.\nGeo. Q. McLaren\nK.W.C. BLOCK\nH. D. A8HCROFT\nA. B. MAKK.I\nBLACKSMITHS\nAshci-oR and Harks, experienced blacksmiths, wheelwrights, and expert horse\nahoera, are doing bualneea on Hall street.\nIn tbe premises previously occupied bj\nGrant McLean. First class work In trery\nMwtlsataf guaranteed.\nWhen   in   Grand   Forks\nput up at\nHOTEL PROVENCE\nThe headquarters for tourists. Satisfaction  guaranteed.\nEMIL LARSEN, Proprietor. Late of the\nWinnipeg Hotel, Grand Forks and Neleon,\nB.  C.\nMcLeod Hotel\nCORN!*\nWOWI AND BBCOND AVBMUM\nYMIR. B. C.\nCentrally located, rebuilt and refurolaiee\nthroughout. All medern Improvement*\nSample Rooms In connection. Ths salt\nirst class hotel ln Ymir.\nKATES FROM R.M UF\nTINLAT McUOD. PTOD-rt*^\nBARTLETT   HOUSE\n(Formerly Clarke House)\nThe beat 11.00 per day bouse In Nelsoa\nNone but white help employee   The bai\nla tae best\nG. W. BARTLETT - Prop.\nGRAND CENTRAL HOTEL\nOpaoeite Courthouaa an\u00ab new FoeWaaea.\nBeit 26o  meal In  town.    Buroiean \u2014*\nAmerican plan.   Only white labor ampler\n4.   First das bar. __\nMeanif*p j, wairwmvr. \u00bb   \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u00ab\u25a0\nTREMONT   HOUSE\n\u25a0DltOPBAM AND AMERICAN PUtH\nUAU Bo.   BOOMS PROM Be TO O.I\natALOWI at TREOILLUB, Proarltaars\nBaker Street. Nelaon.\nA. R. HEYLAND\nPROVINCIAL  LAND  SURVEYOR.\nPOPLAR AND  KASLO\nADDRESS P.O. BOX 107, KAILS, u, a\nSunnyside Hotel\nNELSON. B. O.\nRATES 11 PER DAT\nThe Sunnyside bas nicely furnished bedrooms, lighted with electricity and the\ntable le the best ln Nelaon for the price.\nThe hotel Is on Baker street, one block]\nfrom the C.P.R. and G.N.R. union depst.\n\u25a0** Mauoiw sold oa the xrmnlxm.\nTHE QUEEN'S HOTEL\nBAKER STREET i\nMRS E. C. CLARKE, Proprietress.\nRATES Vi PER DAY.\nLarge   and   comfurtable   bedrooms  and\nfllrst clasa dining room.   Dampie room for\ncommercial men.\nROYAL HOTEL\nTELEPHONE 63\nMRS. WM. ROBERTS, Proprietress\nThe best meals tbat can be provided in\nthis market, cooked under tbe supervision of the proprietress, who Is a famous\ncaterer.\nNice airy rooms, newly furnished; batn\nfor guesta. .\nThe best wines, liquors and cigar* can\nhe obtained at the bar.\nTERMS: $1 AND |l.b\u00bb PER DAT\nCOR. STANLEY AND SILICA STREETS,\nCar* pass the door\nGRAND HOTEL\nCor. Howard unit Main Sts..\nSPOKANE\nBritish Columbia People\nWill And a borne ln Spokane at th*\nGrand Hotel. Recently remodelled end\nrefurnished.\nUnder tbe management ot E. H.\nPhalr, late of Hotel Phalr, Nelson, B. 0.\nAll British Columbia papers on tie.\nEuropean plan. Rates 75 centa to K.H\nper day.   Free bus meets all trains,\n THB DAILY' NEWS, NELSON, B. 0., SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER  3,  1908\nTO RENT\nOFFICES AND\nLIVING ROOMS\noSioo'10 Kelson Elecirio Trarr)way Co.\nClements Block. Cor. Baker and Josephine\nStreet*\nGALT\nCOAL\nAND  WOOD OF  ALL\nKINDS\nTerns Spot Cask\nW. P. Tierney\nTelephone M\nBaker Street, Nelson\nNEW YORK STOCKS AND BONDS\nCHICAGO GRAIN AND PROVISIONS\nI. n. MAJOR & CO.\n{Only ' 'nnimi-r'ioii House in Kootenay)\nJ. F. MARION, Correspondent,\nOffice with Sharp and Irvine.\nSCHOOL\nDAYS\nAre here again and\nyour boy will need a\nnew suit\nI have still a few\nleft which I am offering at prices which\nwill interest you\nJ. A. Gilker\nPRIOR OF MBTALB,\nNew York, Sopt. 2\u2014Bar silver. CO 1-4;\neating copper, 15 5-10;  lead, $-1.85.\nLondon. Sopt. 2-Silver, 28 1-4j lead, no\nauotatlons.\nimSON'S MEWS QF THE DAY\nThe city band gave a very enjoyable\nconcert at tlie Ward street bandstand last\nevening.\nAll banks and other places of business\nwill be closed tomorrow, Labor Day being\na statutory holiday.\nMiss Blakemore'a kindergarten class will\nopen Tuesday morning in tho mission room\nof St.  Saviour's church.\nTomorrow being Labor Day the general\ndelivery at the Nelson post ofllce will be\nopen only from 10 to IS a.m,\nA concert at Lakeside park by the city\nband la announced for this afternoon,\nweather ami street ear service permitting.\nMiss Johns lias retui*ned to Nelson and\nwill again preside over the millinery department in the Enfield company's store.\nPercy F. Godenrath, travelling representative of the Victoria Colonist, and Mrs.\nJ. Godenrath, left last night for the coast\nand the Portland fair.\nThe winning ticket at the lottery for a\ncushion held in Kerr and company's store\nIs No. 167. The holder ls requested to call\nat the store and receive the prize.\nIn St. Paul's Presbyterian church today\nnt the morning service the choir will sing\nthe anthem \"Therefore With Angels,\" by\nNovello; In the evening Mrs. Melville Parry\nwill slug as a sole. Shelley's \"Abide With\nMe.\"\nThere will be the celebrntlon of the communion of tlio Lord's Supper in the Baptist church this morning, and the hand of\nfellowship to new members. This evening the pastor will deliver a labor address.\nSpecial  music will be provided,\nE. G. Smyth and Mrs. Smyth leave for\nHan Francisco this morning. Mr. Smyth\nwill enter the dental department of the\nuniversity of California which opens on\nMonday, Sept. 11. W, B. Shaw succeeds\nMr. Smyth In the C. P. R. telegraph office.\nRev. J. T. Ferguson, pastor of the\nPresbyterian church, returned yesterday\nafternoon from Six Mile point wliero he\nlias spent several weeks resting. He Is\ngreatly improved lu health and will take\nboth services In Si.  Paul's church today.\nEveryone who took in the Sunday afternoon sails on the Kokanee during the past\nsummer -A*ill easily recall how pleasant they\nwere. Tomorrow, Labor Day, a \"last\ncall\" for the season will be made- The\nKokanee will leave the city wharf at S\na.m. going to Kaslo, Lardo and way\npoints. Including Procter, and reaching the\nCrawford\nPeaches\nFor Preserving\nare now coming in and\nwe advise our customers\nto secure their requirements within the next ten\ndays. The price for this\nweek will be\n$125\nwhich we will guarantee\nagainst any decline. Now\nis the time to place your\norders;\nT. S. McPherson\nPHONB NO. 10.\nImproved Ranch\nFOR SALE\n275 acres in the Siocan\nvalley; six-roomtd frame\ndwelling, plastered throughout and furnished; one\nteam of horses, two milch\ncows, three heifers, 200\npoultry; incubator and\nbrooders; stump machine.\n10 acres cleared and\nplanted with fruit trees.\n75 acres of bottom land.\nA good stream of water\nruns through the property\nPrice $3500\nH.tyM.Bird\n\u00ab       i i Our Stock of\nOep. 1ST.   Quns ancj Ammunition\nis Complete\nSep. 1st\nFor the Opening of the Shooting Season\nOn September 1st.\nWe have passed into stock a consignment of guns of which we\nare deservedly proud, comprising Parker, Hollis, Clabrougb, Remington,\nWinchester, L. C. Smith. Stevens, Browning and Belgian guns. In\nloaded shells we havo Winchester, U. M. C, Kynoch, Ely and Dominion, in a great variety of loads. j      t_j__]\nCall and see us or send for our catalog.\nWE CAN SAVE YOU MONEY.\nJ. H. Ashdown Hardware Co., Limited\nWHOLESALE   AND  RETAIL\ncity again In the evening at (J o'clock. Specially low fares have been given for the\nround trip.\nA. Miller, manager of the LaFrance mine,\nreturned to Greenwood yesterday morning\nafter an extended visit  to the company's\nproperties. ,\ntrealj C. F. Caldwell, Kaslo; Miss V.\nWolfe; R, Parker, 11. p. Stevenson, Cranbrook.\nKaslo\nG-. O. Buchanan arrived\nyesterday morning and returned In the\nafternoon. He will uot be In Nolson again\nuntil he 1ms collected the mouth's bounty\nret inns.\nMrs. Molmtyre will give ihe flrst of her\nseries of dances In Fraternity hall tomorrow evening. The chief feature will be\nthe music. The orchestra will consist of\nMrs. Mclntyre, violin; P. Irwin, conet;\nLeon McCiindlish, Clarionet; Oscar Thompson, piano.\nMessrs. Thomas and Erlckson have div-\nvlded the hotel Interests held by them in\npartnership since 1808, The dissolution tool?\neffect at 6 a.m. on Friday, Sept. 1. CI.\nErlckson will In future control the Grand\nCentral and A. Thomas the Lnkevlew\nhotel. The division was for business reasons solely. Messrs. Erlckson and Thomas\nan; still partners in many mining interests.\nA. H. Gracey and Mrs. Gracey arrived\nfrom Camborne last evening. Mr. Gracey\nreports work going on steadily at the Eva\nand Oyster-Criterion mines. He Is here\nto attend the annual meeting of the Eva\nMining company, which will be bold on\nTuesday.\nP. Beltram was visited at the Royal hotel yesterday by a party of his countrymen, 1... Clpparlo. D. Vtncenzo. U. Del-\ngudice und E. Bertollno. to congratulate\nhim on his' recovery. All were accomplished musicians and enjoyed themselves\nplaying Italian airs.\nHUME-J. Barclay Moyie; C. Cnrrle; P,\nT. Moore, J. j, LouliL, K. N. Jones,\nVancouver; J P, Mason; .T. ,1. Blnns, O.\nH. Fraser, Winnipeg; J, Sharp, J, Goodwin, Toronto; J. R. Brown, Spokane; E.\nSterling. Greenwood; Mrs. H, Medlll, Nanaimo; G. H. Green, Green City; W. J. S,\nWalker, Trout Lake; T.  II. Brady, Mon-\nMASON f. RISCH PIANOS     MASON 4 RISCH PIANOS .\nPIANOS\nTHE PEOPLE'S CHOICE\nSTANDARD FURNITURE CO.\nNelson Agents.\nSTRATHCONA-5*. MeBeath, 0. E. Watson, Calgary; A. Miller, C. S. Galloway,\nGreenwood; II. W. Roberts, Seattle; E.\nW. Hendershot and wife. Montreal\"; A. H.\nGracey and wife, Camborne; S. Daney,\nFerguson; H. E. Fox, Albuquerque; L .3,\nVienna, R. T. Vienna, Paris; Mrs. James\nAnderson, Largs; J. Anderson, 0. O. Buchanan, Kaslo; T. II. Trethewey and wife.\nMolly Gibson mine.\nGRAND CENTItAL-G. A, Graham, L>.\nMooney, E. McCarty, Salmo; H. Oliver,\nLardo.\nNELSON-J. W. Harrltt, Spokane.\nMADDEN\u2014W. J. Hllllgoss, Ymir; F. T.\nBenson, Siocan; E, W. Bridgman, victoria;\nJ. Seraln, Mites' Ferry; T. Wall, LaFrance\ncreek;\nKOYAL-F. Lilly, Five Metals mine; E.\nW. Dynes, Greenwood; V. P, Wiesenthal,\nSpokane; C.  L. Gordon  Elloasburg.\nBARTLETT-E. Illtehens, W. Hair, Sloean; J. McMillan, Edmonton.\nTREMONT-S. J. Catliro. R. McCormlck,\nBonnington; S. Darby, Ymir; T. Rock,\nGrohman   creek; A.   Wood, Ten Mile.\nLAKEVIEW\u2014J Carfock, J. Atlamson,\nPhoenix; J. W. Wight, J. B. Fair, Midway; M. Cohn. Calgary; M. O'aLughlln,\nKlngsliridge.\nQUBBNS-L, .Minks, Winnipeg; H. Ferris, Calgary.        \t\nMrs. G. A. B. Hall and her children and\nMiss Pool returned last night from an extended visit to the coast  cities.\nDr. T. Gibson and Dr. E. W. Bridgman\nreturned last night from Victoria where\nthoy tried the povincial examination for\ndentists,\nNOTICE\nWe are retiring from business and beg to\nnotify those who are indebted to us that\nall accounts not settled by the 80th of this\nmonth (September) will be placed with our.\nsolicitor  for  collection.\nFRED   IRVINE CO.,   Ltd.\nDO YOU\nRealize\nJ. O. PATENAUDE\nManufacturing Jeweller, Watchmaker\nphonb 293. and Optician\ntSOOOOOSKKXXXXXX\nhow Important is perfect vision.\nDo you realize to what an extent defective eyes will cause damage?\nDo you realize that your eyes are falling you? If you do not realize these\nfacts you should make it your duty to\nInvestigate. We may open your eyes\nand give you most important knowledge\nconcerning your eyes.\nsinmniiHifflmmniiiiiiniin m minminmmmmmmmnit\niBROWN&CO's5\nts\nB\nA*-\nSS\nSS\nSeptember Sale 20th Century High-Grade\nClothing\u2014New Fall Suits\nBoys' School Suits\nMade from line English and d omestic Tweeds In assorted shades, neat\nBtripes and chic patterns, good linings and well made, sizes 22 to 33.\nPriced at $2.00, $2.50, $3.00, $4.00, $5.00 and $6.00.\nSale of Men's Suits\n\u00a3\u00a3 The goods are the best quality The prices are the lowest. For the\nEZ balance of this month we offer extra special inducements on many lines\nfc to clear. Suits at $5.00, $7.50, $10.00, $12.00 and $15.00. They are\nWz worth more, and it will be to your interest to look them up.\nB \t\nB\nB Hosiery at Cut Prices\nB      10c, 15c and 25c\nE\n|NEW FALL\nB   . \t\nSHOES\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\nS3\n\u20223\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\nValues the Best _\nSpecial Hat offer for $1\nworth $2.50 and $3\nNew Fall Underwear'\nMANY OTHER LINES AT\nBARGAIN PRICES\n*\nTHB PLACE WHERE YOUR DOLLARS BRING THEIR VALUE\nBrown & Co.\n\u00a7S Next Doop to Royal Bank    y^\ntfiuiuiuuiuuiuutuiuuiiuiu tt uiiiiiiiiiiiuaiitiiiiiijiiiuiuiK\n\"PREMIER\"\nHONEY-CURED\nBREAKFAST\nBACON\nThe purest, sweetest, largest, leading\n\u25a0article of cured meat that money can\nproduce\u2014your grocer haa it.\nJ. Y. Griffin & Co.\nLIMITED\nAuction Sale\nHOUSEHOLD FURNITUKE\nTuesday, September 5th\nAT 2 O'CLOCK P. M.\nActing under Inslrucllous from Mrs. I.\nM. McNally, we will on the above date\nBell by public auction all of her valuable\nhousehold furniture at her residence, Josephine street, between Victoria and Silica\nstreets, consisting In part of Steel Runge\nround Oftk Extension Tuble, Iron Budsteada\nEasy Chnfrs, Carpets, Rugs, Pictures, Curtains, Bed Linen Blankets, Heater, etc.\nIn fact a complete household. Goods' on\nview morning of sale,\nTERMS-CASH.\n0. A. Waterman & Co.\nAUCTIONEERS\nMake Your\nFeet Glad\nSEED GRAIN %$,-,\nNow In slock-Full Seed Wheat, Jonas\nTito Variety, and Fall Seed Rye. Also\ncomplete stocks of Timothy and Clover\nSeeds of lhe choicest quality. Let us havo\nyour orders early for Seed Grain; we will\nreserve It for you until required ifor\nseeding. f\nIhaBracKman-Ker Millii\nCOJ1PANV,   LIMITED.\n*\u00bb**#***\u00bb*$\u00bb 9 99 9* ti* **999*99\n_ Italian\nPrunes\nFull 20 lb. net* $1.10 per box\n\/pr 5 1.2c per lb.   This is a\nbargain.    Take advantage of\nit while it lasts.\nBell Trading Company\nWE HAVE FOR RENT\nA fine six roomed house on Josephine St. between Victoria and Silica Sts. Every convenience.   $22.00.\nA large, well built, seven roomed  house on\neast end of Victoria.   Good stone cellar.   All\nconveniences including furnace.   $25.00\nTwo small furnished houses, one on Silica at\n$17 and one on Hoover at $15.\nFOR SALE\u2014\/f small furnished house, one lot, east\nof Hall on Victoria street, for $500. Will yield\n20 per cent as an investment.\nMeDermid & McHardy\nYon all know the tllneoniforts of wearing\nshoes that do not lit. Our customers have\ntho jileasure of wearing comfortable shoes.\nYou never tire In the kind of shoes we\nsell and they never tire you. They are\nneat, well mode and durable. The prices\naro In your favor. You get 100 cents of\nservice for every dollar Invested.\nThe fall stock consists of shipments direct from many of the best Canadian and\nAmerican  factories.\nWe recommend the \"Amherst,\" uolid\nleather goods; especially good for boys.\nJ. H. WALLACE\nMaWt OUTF1TTJIB\nPeaches, Pears, Cantaloupes, Plums and\nTomatoes\u2014Car to arrive Monday, August 21 from Wenatchee\u2014Fancy, clean\nfruit.\nJ. A. McDonald,\nWholesale Fruits\niT PAY3 TO DEAL WITH RUTHERFOKD\nFor Pure Drugs and Medicines,\nFor Prescriptions Carefully Compounded\nAnd for Reasonable Prices Come to\nWm. Rutherford\nStore closes at. \u2022 p, m.\nMail orders filled promptly.\n1)RuaaisT\nNeUon, B.C.\nCOFFEE\nOn Friday and Saturday we will sell first-\nclass Fresh Ground Coffee for 25c. per lb.\nThis is a Special Offer to advertise our\nCoffee, and only holds good for these two days,\nTOYE & BENEDICT\nJosephine St. GROCERS Phone No. 7\nShooting Season Opens Sept 1\nFor 133.50 we will forward you: 1 high grade \"Ithaca\" D. B. Snot\nGun, 12 ge.; one set reloading tools; one box Smokeless Cartridges-\none hunting coat and vest; delivered to any Express office in B. C   '\nWe are headquarters for all kinds of Rifles, Shot tluns, Ammunition, Shooting Clothing, Belts, Kn ives, Etc.   Prices guaranteed.\nBAKER ST.\nNELSON HARDWARE COMPANY\nSPORTSMEN'S HEADQUARTERS   NELSON, B. 0.\nPHONB IB\nWhen You Want\nSTYLISH, FIRST-CLASS SHOES\nGo to Gallagher's\nWe fcave txtem ln all EStylea and Slzea.\nBox No   1(1\nJ. W. GALLAGHER\nBAKER ST.\nTelaphonii 1H\nFor Summer Complaints\nor Stomach Pains\nWe recommend the following;\u2014\nPreston's Extract of Jamaica Ginger 25c per bottle\nBole's Blackberry Brandy - - -25c per bottle\nAromatic Blackberry Compound -   - 25c per bottle\nCanada Drug & Book Co., Ld.\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1905_09_03","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0382007","@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":"1905-09-03 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1905-09-03 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\/1.0382007"}