{"@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":"4a5632b4-86cf-4bac-8002-908e1dafd73b","@language":"en"}],"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2019-08-30","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1907-06-28","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0382535\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" \u2022\n.HS\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nvlnclal\nffrn_f,i\nV0L6\nNELSON,  B. C,  FRIDAY, JUNE  28,   .907\nI.O. :.\nEXCITEMENT\nIN ROSSUND\nImportant Strikes on Consolidated Properties\nSuptrl_tMd.it Stewart Will Not C\u00abJim\n^Reports u_ Denies ttlit Sink Roaor\nof Rich Strike \u00abb War Etftle.\n{Special to The Dally Newt)\nRossland, June 27\u2014 Quiet' excitement Is\nprevul.-ng over the ciimip at the perslB-\ntent rumors of recent finds of good o e\nover aU propetlei belonging to the C'lti-\natllan Consolidated. Pocket samples of\n-ore a*re being shown from hand to Iwrul\nftnd If stories ate flnal.'y justift-d, lloss-\nland la on tbe verge of the biggettt boom\nyet enjoyed.\nStrkes have been made on the 7th r-nd\nUth levels of the Centre Star, native g->ld\nsticking out. On the War Engl* and Hed\nMountain similar1 finds have been made\nand ore 30 feet wide has bien mca'.ed on\nhte Idaho and Is now facing drifted for\nfrom the 4th level of the Clitre Star under\na surface outcrop.' The tunnel In the face\nof Cen.re Star gulch on the Idaho is muk-\nnlg a good showing on the same bedy.\nThe strikes culminated In a big strike mado\non Tuesday lust on the War Eagle, ore\nrunning between $900 and 11000. It '*. confidently Btated ln camp that the War Eagle\nalone hns o\u201e of tbt, clusa fir several\nyears. On the other hand superintendent\nStewart of the Consolidated, denies positively the statement of a recent strike In\ntbe War Bugle, He declares that ore has\nbeen found In tlie Centre Ctar rich In go.d,\ngoing *&. to the ton, but waa pockety and\nrapidly exhaust d. He declares the Idaho\ndevelopment not sufficiently advanced\nafter six months' wo k, and many tons\nshipped, to epeak positively as to the pros*\npoets of1 the mine. He _ay\u201e that last Saturday mucii of the ore struck on the flo r\nof tho War EVigle at the 1-J0 foot level,\nrunning $30 per ton, rapidly panned out to\nordinary values or lass. He regrets thut\nthe lower levels of tbe War Eagle are still\npockety.\nAsked am to the exact looition of the\nBtrlke which wus d-nltd to ex.*., Mr. Stewart refused to say In what part of the War\nRagle It existed. Stewart's denial Is not\ngcnemlly wedded here.\nSince the promised Increase In the miners' wages has been announced, to come\nInto force on July 1, many miners have\ndrifted back he.e from other camps, but\nat least 200 more men are required at once\nand still more will be requl ed. a lit le later\nARBITRATION THE ISSUE\nALL DELEGATES TO PEACE CONKER-\nENCE WORKING TO ONE END\nTO   RENDER   HAGUE   ARBITRATION\nTRIBUNAL PERMANENT\nThe Hague, June 27\u2014All the delegates to\ntlie Hague conference agree that the fl:st\nImportant sitting was that dea ing w th arbitration. Many of the powers, chiefly\nthe United S.ates, des'i* ti strengthen arbitration to such a point as to make It\nbecome an Institution which will gradually\nlead to the abolition of war among nation- Just as confidence In the justice of\nordinary courts ted to the abolition of\nduelling. .\nThe pilnclt-nl efforts In this direc.lon are\nconcentrated In an effort to re der the\nHague arbitration tribunal really permanent, giving it such -power, prestige and Influence and .ibove all, unspeakable Impartiality aa to command universal confidence. Effo ts are also being made to\nsimplify the procedure and 'essen the ex--\npense, thus miking it mo e accessible.\nProf Demartens has . mude proposl.lons\non the subject of good offices, mediation\nand on International comlssl n.i of enquiry, Including the draft ng of rue* and\nregulations for procedure In onset of ar-\nbltra.lon, as deduced from the experience\nof the past eight years. They are in reality a modification of the convention of\n1899 with lhe object of broadening arblt.a-\ntlon and trying to make it c mpulaory\nin as many cases as possible. They would\nalso further reduce the exceptions comprised under the terms \"national honor\"\nand \"vital Interests.\" s\nSeveral countries, Jnc'ud'ng Germany,\nGreat Brlta'n, the United States and I.aly.\nbave other propositions on the subject of\nHr-.lra.il n ready to be presented separate\nly or as amendments, all aiming to make\narbitration the ordinary course to be followed by disputants. In fact these proposl.lons try to generate a feeling that\nIt would be dishonorable to have recourse\nto force before appealing to the law. Tha\ngreatest difficulty Is the system t be followed In the election of tike Judges, tor\nupon their Integrity and high honor win\ndepend the success of the permanent arbitration court. The propo-iikn that each\npower select two praona of It., nationally,\nrecognized aa eminent1 jurists, la considered\nImpracticable, as It would t ansform the\ncourt Into a parliament of nearly 100 members.\nGeneral Horace Porter of the United\nStates, has several proposl.lon on the subject,\" but they -have not yet been an*\nnounced or definitely drafted.\nBesides the proposlt'bn regarding arbitration, Italy will present a proposition\nagainst that of Great Britain on the laying of automatic floating and submarine\nmines to defend her BOOO ml es coast. She\nwill also present an amendment to the\nFrench proposition of the op.nlng of hostilities and will nt agree to any delay between a declaration of war and the opening of hostilities.\nAt the meeting of the sub-committee on\nthe bombardment of harbors, etc., general\nHorace Porter's prop _:t!.ii ln regard to\nthe bombudment of unfortif.ed towns waa\nchief;,-, dealt with. Js.ph H. Choate, general Ptrter, David HM and James Scott\nwere present. Dr. H-gerup, p.eside it of\nthe sub-commit lee. Bald that the quest'ons\nreferring to the bombardment of undefended Lowru. and the laying of mines, alth- Ugh\ntechnical, have also a jud'e. <l eh racier,\nwhich must be defined In a humanitarian\nway, thus helping the c..u_e of peace.\nCount Toenhlll, Italian and M. Tclinry-\nkoff, Russian, announced prepositions on\nthe subject of the bombardment of harbors and Italy, Japan, Bras!, and Hoi* and\nannounced amendments to the p < p-sition,\nreferring to the laying of mlnea and torpedoes. The sub-commit ee also dlttcussed\nthe application of tho Red Cross convention to naval warfare.\nTBIAL OP JUDGE LOVING.\nHouston, Va., June 27.-\u2014Judge Barks-\ndale ,who U presiding over the trial ot\nformer judge Loving for the murder\nof Theodore Bates .today deolded against\nthe admissibility of evidence by the\nprosecution tending to disprove the\nstory of mistreatment told to her father\nby Miss Elisabeth Loving, ruling that\nthe truth or falsity of the story had do\nhearing on the case.\nSeveral witnesses then testified that\nwhile they had regarded Loving as high\ntempered, they never had heard it suggested that he waB insane until the\npresent trial began. ,\nThe taking of evidence In the trial\nof ex-judge Loving in the circuit court\nof Halifax county for the murder of\nyoung Estes In Nelson county last Aprtl,\nwas concluded today. The court then\nadjourned till tomorrow morning when\ntlie Instruction- to be given to the\njury will be argued before judge Barks-\ndale,\nAttorney Daniel Harmon, for the prosecution announced today that he would\nh .re witnesses to show that the story\ntold by Hiss Elisabeth Loving to her\nfather that ahe was drugged and assaulted by Estes was a falsehood. Late\ntoday a hypothetical question was propounded by the prosecution to an ex*\npert on Insanity, Dr. J. S. Dejarnette.\nsuperlntendent of the western state hospital at Staunton. ThlB question was\nlike the one asked Dr. Emmons of Washington yesterday by the defense. It was\na review of Loving's physical history\nand the Incidents of the Estes tragedy.\n\"What effect do you think such experiences would have on the mind of this\nman.\"\nTbe witness replied: \"I think he\nwould be very angry from the provocation of the thought that his daughter\nbad been ruined bv the young man re-\nferred to, but not Insane.\" Dr. Dejar-\nuette testified that at the western state\nhospital he haa had under his care 4500\npatients suffering from brain diseases.\nThe prosecution then announced that it\nrested its case.\nLAURIER  IN   PARIS\nr.\n*\n*\n*\n*\n*\n*\n*\n*\n*\u25a0\n*\n*\n*\n\u2666\n\u2666\nA\nHOUSTON'S LATEST.\nVictor!*, June 27\u2014John Houston, ex-M. U A. (or Nelson, will\nstart publication ot a newspaper\nin Prince Rupert In the next few\nday*. Houston ha* been In Qoldfleld, Nevada ,ln the rati eaUte\nbualneu ,*nd came back to Vlotorla a short time *fo. He haa\nbought a small plant and will go\nnorth In * Jew daya. He sayt\nbe will land at Prince Rupert or\nas near al he I* allowed, and will\ndesignate hla new venture the\nPrince Rupert Empire.\nNeffotJflt'n* Commercial Treaty Arrangements Be.ween Canada and France\nParis. June 27-Slr Wilfrid Laurler, the\npremier, W. 8. Fielding, the minister of\nfnance and L. P. Brodeur, the minister of\nmarine of Oinada, have returned he.e\nfrom their trip to Italy and were entertained at luncheon by president Falleiies\nftt tbe E-yeee paface today. Fore'gn minister Pichon wns also prieent. During tbe\nluncheon there was a lengthy exchange\nof vlewe regarding advantageous comme--\ncial arrangements between CVuiarta and\nFrance, negotiations for whleh can now\nbe regarded as officially begun.\nThe Associated Pies, lenrne that Ihe\nvisit of the Canadian sta esmen to Italy\nwas unproductive of results. They have\nabandoned also the Idea of oomlng to any\nagreement with Be'glum and Germany at\npresent, but they st'll hope to acoompiah\nsomething here. The French government\nls too bulst. engaged .o proceed with negotiations with thp Canadians just now.\nW. 8. Fielding, the minister of finance,\nwill therefore rema'n here until parliament takes a recess. Premier Laurler and\nMr. Brodeur will reave Paris for London\non June 30. .\nTENNIS CHAMPIONSHIP GAMES\nLondon, June 27-In tbe _1-Englamt lawn\ntennis championship games at Wimbledon\ntoday, May Sutton of Calif- rnia, defeated\nMiss Lowoock 6-2, 6-0. o. P. Rhodes, Anr-\nerloan, defeated T. D. Stewart, 6-1, 2-6 6-4\n6-1. Karl H. Behr, Tale be*. J. P. Ren-\ndell 6-2,  >-7, 4-6,  6-3.\nED. BOYCE RELATES HISTORY OF W. F. OF M,\nFirst President Tells of lis Birth in Jail and That Prosecuting Attorney Hawley\nWas first Legal Adviser-Bill Easterly Flatly Contradicts Orchard's Statements Implicating Him in Vindicator\nFxplosion and Other Crimes.\n(Special to The Dally News)\nBoise, Idaho, June 27.-T*_tay'B proceedings In the Haywood case did not\ndevlop anything of a sensational character. The evidence taken was rather\nunimportant. The feature of the day\nwas the examination of Edward Boyce,\nformer president of the Western Federation of Miners. Through him the defense sought to establish the character\nof the Federation and also to show that\nit had been opposed vigorously by the\nmine owners of various sections.\nThrough this line of testimony ran the\ntheory ot the mine owners' conspiracy,\nextending through many states, out of\nwhich the outrages in Colorado and\nIdaho grew.\nMr. Boyce told of having been annoyed by detectives working for the mine\nowners. These sometimes ransacked his\ngrip and often broke his desk open. At\none time he was not permitted to get\nfood at the camps which he had visited\nfor the purpose of organizing unions.\nWhile Mr. Boyce was testifying, the\nquestion of the scope of enquiry wai\nraised. He was asked to tell about other\nstates than Colorado and Idaho, the state\nobjected on the ground tbat such matters were not involved in this caBe. After a sharp argument tbe court ruled\nthat enquiry should be limited to those\nlocalities that were the scene of events\nalready entering into the case.\nW. F. Davis was still on the stand\nwhen court opened, under .cross examination. He was questioned closely about\nconditions in Cripple Creek, particularly\nabout his statement that everything was\nquiet there before the troops were called\nIn.\nThe witness said he knew Orchard\nlike any of the other members of the\nunion. He had met him a good many\nUmeirHe said he had never been at Orchard's house, but he knew Ills wire.\nHe could not remember where he first\nmet Steve Adams. On November 21,\n1903, the witness said he lived about\none half mile from the vindicator mine\nand about one quarter mile from the Orchard home. On June 6, 1904, the witness said he was ln Denver; said he\nlost his family and had no placo of residence. He )iad stopped with his sls-\nter-in-law not far from hts old home.\nOn the night of the explosion ln the\nVindicator mine, the time Beck and McCormlck were killed he was at home.\n\"All the evening?\"\n\"Well, no, I was at a union meeting.\"\n\"Who with?\"\nSEATTLE TRAIN DITCHED\nC. P. R. FLYER OFF THE. TRACK AT\nSUMAS.\nORBBN VERSUS WORLD LIRBL SUIT\nOPENED AT VANCOUVER.\n(Special to The Dally News)\nVancouver, June 27.\u2014All shipments\npf cattle by P. Burns _ CO. to the Yukon are held up by the demand of the\nAmerican customs officers, that the U.\n8. Inspection be made before landing at\nSkagway. Since there are no Inspectors either here or at Skagway .appeal\nhas been made to Washington for acceptance of the Calgary Inspection certificates. In the meantime the steamer\nHalvard Is held up here waiting the\n. cislon.\nThe C. P. R. train for Seattle was\nditched this morning near Sumas, owing to a misplaced switch. The engine\npassed over safely but the succeeding\ncars ran into a ditch. The mail car\nturned completely over, the clerk, Drummond ,and baggage master Baker, being\nslightly Injured.\nO. J. Bury, assistant general manager\nof western lines, C. P. R., left on a special car attached to a freight tonight on\nan inspection tour of Kootenay branches.\nThe libel suit of R. F. Oreen, ex-chlef\ncommissioner of lands and works against\nthe World ,as a result of the publication of the alleged Caron deal during\nthe provincial campaign, came up this\nmorning on application for a demand\nto answer to a series of questions,\nMr. JUBtlce Morrison ruled tn order\nqueries as to the ownership of that Journal, circulation, etc., but ruled out a\nquestion as to the Individuality of the\nwriter ot the article and heading.\nThe latter point will be argued.\nA**************************\n\u2666\n*****t\nDAILY  TRFAIN\nPhiladelphia, June 27\u2014In a'f^HH-on on\ntbe PennjotaMdA railroad df-*' Cynwyd,\nWtweof .wSibmmo-'l-nvtmln aj_ a\nfreight' loooSS-ve, Ihe engineer, ollvor\nRenert, of tiie passenger train, was killed\nand several passengers were Injured.\n\u2666\n\u2666\n\u2666\n\u2666\nI*\nTHE COMING CELEBRATION.\nWhile the lacrosse matches between Vancouver and Nelson on\nJuly 1 and 2 will be the star attraction for next week'B celebration, all other lines of sport have\nbeen carefully provided for and\nthe whole program ls easily the\nbest ever offered In the Interior.\n\"Sherman Parker and others.\"\n\"Was Orchard there?\"\n\"I don't remember,\"\nThe witness denied he had gone to Orchard's home that night.\nHe said he walked home with Sherman Parker.   They had mlsaed the car.\nHe denied that to his recollection he\nhad seen Orchard at all that night.\n\"How long, prior to the explosion, bad\nyou seen Orchard?''\n\"I don't remember,\"\n\"Did you see Easterly the night of the\nexplosion \"\n'tf may have, I don't remember.\"\nThe witness said he did not know\nwhere Steve Adams lived at tbat time.\nDavis said he remembered an assault\nthat had been made upon an old man\nby the name of Stewart, a carpenter.\nHe said he had heard of lt,\n\"Did you hear about J. T. Hawkins\nbeing beaten up?\"\n\"That was before the trows came In.\"\n\"Yes, he was a Justice of the peace.\"\n\"He was a non-union man, wasn't he?\"\nHere an objection was made by Mr.\nDarrow to the line ot cross examination.\nDarrow said: \"Your honor, this witness\nhas made the claim that all was quiet\nand peaceful before the soldiers were\nbrought In.\"\nThe witness had heard of a nan-union\nman by the name of Karris suffering\nsome indignation before the soldiers\ncame in.\nThe witness said he knew \"Stan\"\nCampbell.\n\"Did you know of his having killed\na woman a few days before the troops\ncame In?\"\nDavis said he knew of the incident,\nbut he thought It was after the troops\ncame in.\nThe witness disclaimed any knowledge\nof trouble with non-union men at the\nGolden Cycle mine prior to the coming\nof the troops.\nDuring this line of cross examination\nsenator Borah and attorney Darrow\nsparred almost continuously.\nSenator Borah sought to show that\nwheras the witness had said the Cripple Creek district was as quiet as Boise\nbefore the troops came, there was a\nreign of lawlessness.\nDavis Insisted the district was quiet\nand declared he was willing to stand\non tbat statement. He admitted, however, that he knew of some non-union\nmen being beaten.\nAt the convention in Denver, Davis\nsaid he stopped at the Belmont rooming\nhouse. Sherman Parker had a room with\nhim. Davis could not remember whether the Belmont was over Pettlbone's\nstore or just near there. He could not\nsay whether he saw Orchard at the Belmont or not. He remembered of seeing\nOrchard at the convention hall. He saw\nPettibone In the convention hall. Davi.\ncould not say how long the peace committee had been back from the district\nbefore the explosion. He thought th-\ncommittee had reported before the ex\nplosion. He could not remember whether or not the report was In writing or\nverbal.\nDavis could not remember how long\nhe remained In Denver after the explosion.   He thought It was several days.\nW. W. Rush, locomotive engineer, who\nran a nenglne on the Florence & Cripple Creek road was the next witness.\nHe testified about the attempted train\nwreck\nFrom D. C. Scott, he said, he received\nword of the second attempt. Scott said\nthat there was a probability that there\nwould be another attempt to wreck a\ntrain between the Economic mill and\nVictor, probably a mile (rom the Victor\ndepot. He asked the witness if he\nknew of a place along the track where\nIt would be a good place to wreck the\ntrain and Rush tbld him.\nWitness said: \"Scott said they would\nattempt to throw the train Into the\nditch near the overhead crossing. I\nsaid I didn't think they could throw me\nthere because I could see the place too\nfar. Scott then asked me If I knew of\nanother good place along there to wreck\na train. 1 Bald It might be done at the\nsecond left hand curve east of the overhead crossing. Scott repeated the location after me. On the 11:55 trip to Bull\nHill that night Scott got on the train\nand told me to stop near the second left\nhand curve. I did so and two men dropped ott tbe rear of the train. One was\ntall and the other was short.\"\n\"Is Scott a tall man, and K. C. Sterling of the mine owners' association a\nshort man?\"   Interrupted Darrow?\n\"Yob, sir. It was early on the morning of the 15th of November when the\ntrain reached Victor on the next trip,\nScott and Sterling were there. 1 saw\nSterling at the depot He came up to\nthe cab and said: 'They have done It.'\nI asked what, and Scott aald: 'They\nhave moved a rail at the Identical point\nyou thought they would,' Scott and\nSterling said they saw the men at work.\"\n\"When we struck the curve 1 got off\nand walked (head to where nine or ten\nspikes had heen taken from a rail, It\nwas still In place, however.\" \/\nOn cross examination file *ll\u00abess .aid\nthe point where the Bplkes were pulled\nwas unquestionably the moat dangerous\non the road.\nEdward Boyce, taking the stand, gave\na sketch of his life. Saying he was born\nIn Ireland In 1802. and came to the\nUnited States In 1882. He worked as a\nrailroad grader .getting into the mines\nsometime later. He was arrested In 1892\nin connection with tlie Coeur d'Alene\ntrouble of that year.\nContinuing he said: \"I belonged to\nthe Wardner miners' union. There waB\nno Federation at that time. I was corresponding secretary of Wardner at one\ntime but not at the time I was in jail.\nI was arrested by reason of an Injunction Issued by Judge Beatty forbidding\nunion men to trespass on owners' property. I with 12 others, came here to\njail for contempt of court. I Berved my\nlime. The others were released by order of the United Slates supreme court.\n\"Who was your attorney?\"\n\"JameB H. Hawley.\"\n\"He got the olhera out of jail?\"\n\"Mr. Hawley did excellent work for\nus as attorney.\"\nBoyce told ot himself and friends\nwhile in jail discussing a plan to organize a federation of miners' unions.\n\"I could not say who first spoke ot\nthe plan. I remember Mr. Huwley talked\nwith us about a unification of miners'\nunions. He told ub that was the only\nthing we could do If we wished to perpetuate our unions. He said the mine\nowners were already organized.\"\nBoyce said he was not ut Butte w_en\nthe federation wus organized, 'lhe\nWestern Federation of Miners, the witness said, always looked out for suffering members, their widows and children. The Butte untpn alone, up to five\nyears ago, paid out a million and a\nquarter dollars In sick benefits and charity. Uo member of the union had gone\nto the poor house since the Federation\nwas formed.\nBoyce said that prior to the organization of the Western Federation uf\nMiners, miners and smeltermen were re\nquired to work 10 and 12 hours a day.\nHe described graphically the hardships\nof .the smeltermen, saying he had Buffered himself from many Ills and phyi-\nical disabilities growing out of such\nwork. The wages avernged about $2.50\nper day. The Federation has frequently\nemployed lawyers he said to fight for\nJlght hour law and all such laws that\napplied tu mining have been passed In\nIbe west Blnce the organization of the\nI-deration.   The organization has also\n0 BIND BROKEN H. ARTS\nBIRRELL    INTRODUCES     EVICTED\nTENANTS BILL.\nELOQUENT PLEA FOR SUFFERING\nIRISH PEASANTRY.\nLondon, June 27.\u2014Mr. Blrrell, chief\nsecretary for Ireland, In introducing the\nevicted tenants bill in the house of\ncommons today, said:\n\"Rain is falling pitilessly in the west\nof Ireland, the turf is rotting and sea\nweed, used as manure, is wet as when\ntaken from the sea. Such a measure as\nthis will be taken by that population\nas a token of good feeling. It will\ndo much to bind up many a well uigU\nbroken heart and in some measure\nstaunch bleeding wounds.\n\"There are two thousand tenants to be\nreinstated and the government wants\nto make a clean job of lt and must acquire land compulsorily.\"\nKILLED BY LIGHTNING BOLT.\nNew _ork, June 27.\u2014A death dealing\nelectric storm yesterday afternoon following the sweltering heat, soaked with\nhumidity, swept over the city and surrounding country .Injuring several, causing many fires and doing considerable\ndamage, In this city the only places\nstruck were two churches. The steeples\nof both were torn into fragments by the\nlightning bolts.\nJ. A. McKenna, of Newark, N. J., and\nhis two young daughters, were caught\nIn the storm, near Union, N. J. They\ntook refuge under a tree .which a few\nminutes later was struck by a lightning\nbolt. The younger girl was killed outright and the father and older daughter\nBeverely shocked.\n'BBBBBwwWwBBW\n9 NELSON'S BEST ASSET. \u2666\n\u2666                        \u2666\n9 The water sports on July 1 and \u2666\n9 2 promise to prove very attrac- \u2666\n9 tlve.    The launch races for the \u2666\n9 first tlnie will be run over a trl- \u2666\n+ angular course,   the   competing \u2666\n\u2666 boats being always In full view \u2666\n\u2666 and the Illuminated parade of nil \u2666\n\u2666 the water craft, with the added \u2666\n9 flreworkB, will make a very spec- \u2666\n9 tacular scene well worth witness- 9\nvn* \u2666\ndone much to secure Increased wages for\nminers. The doing away with the uys-\ntem of paying off in scrip at the company's stores, the adoption of safety\nappliances, etc.'   '\nBoyce went at Borne length into the\ndangers of mining, saying the mine owners seldom if ever voluntarily adopted\nmeans of preventing accidents. The killing of men, he said was so common in\nhis own experience as to be almoin uu-\nnoticeable.\nMr. Boyce said that during the term of\nbis presidency the Federal increased\nIn membership from 7uUU or .dtHi to\nabout 30,000. He said It ha. a. -.ays bien\nthe policy of the Federation to defend\nany members of the org-.n._A.iou who\nwere arrested on any charge.\nBoyce said he was arrest-d In 1S96 in\nLeadville. He was president oi Ue\nFederation.\nHere followed the argument aud ruling on the point of cove_.ug localities\nother than those\" already in.\nRegarding blacklisting of men, Boyce\nsaid: \"I was denied employment In tho\nmines of the Cour d'Alenus because I\nwa. a u.iou man. In the town t f Starka-\nville, Colorado. I went there to oi_an-\nIze a union and I was denied food because I was presiding officer of tho\nWestern Federation of Miners. I had\nto go four miles to Trinidad to got fool.\nThe mine owners there were the men\nof the Colorado Fuel & Iron companj.\nAll that time in-1890 I think they were\nmembers of the mine owners' association.\"\n\"Boyce told of difficulties placed In\nhis way, as he testified, by the mine\nowners while he was going from camp\nto camp in Colorado organizing unions\nin 1890 and 1897. He also told of many\nminers being blacklisted both in Idaho\nand tn Colorado, but was not allowed\nto tell what he knew about blacklisting\nIn other states.\nBoyco said he Yrd never known Har y\nOrch. rd, that ito had never c-ime to live\nin Butte or nnywhero fl-klng for a duplicate membership card for one he had lost.\nMo hrid often been pusued by d.tectlves in\nthe employ -of the m'ne owners. His grips\nhad been opened anil gone through many\ntimes and three times his d.-l. had been\nransacked.\nOn. cross-examination, Boyce admitted\nirnklng this statement at the mooting of\nthe fulenit'on In lift.: \"E.'fery in !\u25a0 n \u00abho. Id\nhave a rl.le club. I strong y atlv'se J\"*1\"\nto provldo every membe. with th: latest\nimproved rifle, ll can l;e obtain* d frou the\nmanufeature.- a( a nominal \u25a0_ st. I on-\ntreat you to take ao Ion on tit's Importenl\nquestion s> that in two yerra we can heir\nUie mi-.llt-l trend of _5,0 Q armed men In\nthe ranks of labor'.\"\nAsked  what   he nn'Mit by  thnt,   t'_   f> id\non redirect exom.nat'on: \"I contended that\nthe mlnei- had as much r-ffht to have title\nclubs as nny cfass of a j_t~- at \u25a0. ' H1-?\nsaid he had Been erne-] an if so'-dicrs In\nColorado and in the Co.Ur d'A ene..\nJmr.es Matter of Hu te, who w:_\\ secretary of tho federation wMte B>yc> was\npresident, testified briefly, He said no\nmoney had been paid mil for unlawful pur-r\n]fO-__, The fedrr-ti n pad the expenses\nof lhe Corcoran trial la ISM.\nW. B. Easterly wa. the lost witness ot\nthe day and-his direct examination was\nnot  concluded  when  court  adjourned.\nHe sad lit* was tr'endV with Orel, rd as\nhe was wltb all o:her members. Speaking\nof conditions at C Ipple creek n 1003-0.,\nhe said: \"Thero was mire disorder than\nbefore the ..oi..t_ came; more deeds of\nvlofeueo, mure bar room scraps, fights,\netc\" During this time he sill lie saw\nOrchard frequently, hut didn't observe Orchard's actions any moo thai those of\nany other union man. He p.s'tlvely de-\nnlcd that On lund ever mentioned a word\nabout a bomb io tilth or thai he had eve\nmode any experiments with O chard He\nhad nevor talked with Orclvrd all ut exploding powder hi the Vlndlc iter mine.\nHe positively denied .verythln. tha O.-\ncliard had stated whoh had in a.y way\nconnected him with nny enue. At the\ntlmo of the expl-slon In tb<- VindcaUr\nmine,   l__ister!y said lie was In Altman.\nRING'S BIRTHDAY HONORS.\nLondon, June 28.\u2014The list of king|_\nblrthday honors, which ar eusually con-\nfrered as a reward of political and civil\nservice ,is more interesting than Is usually the case because of the recognition\naccorded art, science and literature,\nFour new peers have been named by tht\nking. Sir J, .lames Kltson, lord mayor\nof Leeds, sir James Blalth, who bas de-\nvotedvoted his wealth to fit'-niiir tuberculosis, sir Samuel Montague .md Alex\nBeckover, bankers. Among the promo?\nlions In the various orders of the bath\nof St. Michael and St .George are s!r\nWilliam MacGregor, govern, r of Newfoundland, Hon. Charles Fitzpatirck,\nchief justice of Canada, omtfttn R. H.\nAnsthurther, senior t aval Officer In Aiw-\nfotindland waters and sir Thoiiait\nShaughnessy, president of the C. P. R.\nFIELD FOR\nINVESTMENT\nBritish Capitalists Are f e*\ncoming iMcr.stfd in\nWestern Canada.\nIN MEMORY OP McKl.Vl.!.y\nBuffalo, June 27\u2014Canada -.-111 piy h*-r\ntribute to the la e lamented Will * m McKlnley on Saturday morn Inc. when the\ngovernor general's footguiw-dB of Ottawa,\nwho cam* to Buffalo as the giics s nf the\n7-th tt'glmant. will lay a v-roi'h on he\nMcKlnley monument. The Canadian soldiers hnve expicsscd a desire to honor thfl\nmemory of the martyred ppafddeit, On\nlhe arrival pf the guards Ihey will marcli\ndown Ma'n Btreet to Gene_\u00abee, thenee to\nthe MoKlnky monument where the Impres-\nsive service will ho performed.\nIHO MILLING COMPANY\nKewatin, June _7\u2014V. a. II;is lugs, general ir.nnngfr of the Lake of the Woods\nMil'lng company, said t dny that their no.v\nmill started grinding yesterday and iu tied out 3000 tarrefs, \"Wc expect in a day\nor so to be running 5010 to rels dally. Al*-\nthough tho machinery ha- been running\nfor seme days thu wheat wns no: turned\nin until yesterday,   The now mill n w\nmakes-the Luke of tlie Wood.. Milling Co.\nthe fifth largest of any mil Ing company\nla tbe Brills), empire.\nSplend'd C-irpi^n o Publicity Ci rV.d\ninttiiti-hMc. bylhii FiankOivtr\nB arirg ft ih fruit.\n\u25a0Edmonton, June 2a\u2014Han, C. E. CO-fl,\na-.ti-.-ni-y general of Albcr a, re.ur.r.d t\u00bb\nEdmonton last night after ti two _n.:i:hu\"\nabsence in England and Eur-pe, who c hs\nwent for tlie purpose <f consul!i*,g a specialist regard ng ids t'.roa , which has fj?\nsoine time given him cons do... I. trouble.\nWith respect to Immijr tl'n aad his ob-\nareyationa in the od country, Mr. Cr~_3\nsays ihe immlgratkn f om the ir tish l.*.n\nto Canada hn_ only Just begin ai,; Can dl\nis be-ieud by tie p oplc \u2022\u25a0 nd the government to le the r, o. t piomls rg fit Id for\ncolonisation.\nBritish captt_lls's aro be.mini lnt.r-\nea ed :n western Can da ns a i id of se-\n\u25a0tire and prof \u00abble Investmeit au a land\nof bounds-SB possibilities. H*j attrlbut d\nthe interest or Ecgllsh setter- n Cajtada\no the In UM gent : nJ energetic immlira-\ntlon policy cf tlie p ei, nt m'nMtr o.' the\ninterior, Hon. Frank O Iver. A _tre*jn of\nsettlers from Great tritn n s i-et li g In\nthis city In i greater v lurr.c than I. s be n\nClOwlng over thy C.inad an b td r fn m\nthe United S.nt'-s t.u>I g t'e 1 st eight\nyear... What Hon. Mr. S fion did t. a -\nyertise Canada li the United SUUej, Hon.\nMr, Oliver lias done to advertise he western i\u00bb'ovln_.'_ in Great Britain a\u00bb- Ireland. \"Onec rtiirted,\" sad Mr. Cr ss,\n\"this strdm of Immigration wil- contlmi?.\nbringing thousands tf he ve y b _t sot-\nitera to western Canada.\"\n\"When I loft England,\" said Mr. Cross,\n\"the weather was oold and wet. It waa\ncold- r than wns rep rted from Edminton.\"\nWeather condition- in France were a\nmouth behind no nml condTons this year\naccording to Mr. Oroya' s < ry. Fruit tieos\nand foliage of the Me.iU r a. ea.i wee\nfrom three to four week, behind former\nyea rs.\n\"In fact.\" said M . Gross, \"the weather\nhas beeu backward all over the wo Id and\nfrorn whit I can learn Albe.ta gal s in\ncomparison wi h oilier countries, nnd fa.\nBurpasaea Engimd and many provinces of\nEurope.\" Mr. Cros- also sad that com.\nplaints were g neral aa to the cond tion\nof the winter wheat crop In eastern\nEurope,\nSLANDERER SPROULE.\nTory Leader Indulges in Unqualified Attack on French Canadians.\nCalgary, June 27.\u2014-In an Interview thla\nafternoon, Dr. Sproule, M. P., sovereign\ngrand master of the Orange l^odge of\nCanada, made an attack upon the French\nmembers of parliament, charging them\nwith selling patronage charging for appointments and grafting iu the mout\nopen way. Dr. Sproule, when asked\nabout the election, said that sir Wilfrid\nLaurler had promised or half promised\nthat there would be no election until\nalter another session. He did not place\nmuch faith lit tihat statement, however,\nfor he had noticed lhat the premier did\nnot always keep his promises, and tho\nmatter of elections would be a matter\nof expediency. He did uot know thnt.\nIt would bc expedient for an election to\nbe held before the coming session, but\nhe doubted It.\nThe Interviewer asked If it wa\u201e a fact\nthat French members opposed an eirly\nappeal to the country; Dr. Sproule _ad\nIt was so. It was always so. French\nmembers liked the sessional Indemnity,\n\"But.\" said he, \"that is only a small\npart o.\" It. The sescional indemnity is\ni*nly a fraction of what comes to the\nFrench members. By selling patronage,\nbv holding up contractors, by scllln..\nrecommendations to office, French members make many times more out of par-\nHflmenl than the sessional allowanco\ncomes to.\"\nnitlTT-NELSON FIGHT.\nSan Francisco, June 27.\u2014The Brltt-\nNelson fight, which was scheduled for\nJuly . rd, was postponed last night un'.ll\nJuly Met. There \\\\a_ no reaou given\nfor this action, only the i_iab;H<y of Nelson to continue his training on account\nof an nbsess in his ear. Th\u00ab referee for\nthe fight will be chosen by July 15th.\nBBBABwBBB*wB999< \u2666 \u2666< 9\\ *M \u2666\u2666< \u2666\n\u2666 CANADA'S CHIEF INDUSTRY.    \u2666\n\u2666   \u2022\n\u2666 Ottawa, June 27.\u2014According to \u2666\n\u2022> n census bulletin jUBt 1-sii-d Vie 9\nB premier manu'aHurlnt Indus'ry \u2666\n\u00ab- of Canada Is sawmllling. The \u25a0*>\n9 products are Bet down at 1-9 631 - \u2666\n\u2666 573 for 1906, as against $35,603.- *>\n*> 6fi6 in 1901, If the capital In- O\na Vested In lumber products Is add- \u2666\n\u2666 rd. the total would bo $119 fill,- \u2666\na 5.6. N xt a cor_:nst-> cap tali-'- \u2666\n9 tion come smeltln. with an in- \u2666\n\u2666 vestment of $R7,4S2,82- as com- \u2666\n9 pared with fl0..83112 ln 1931. *>\nB Electric light and power Invent- \u25a0*>\n| *\u00bb  merits noted   a*   ISO 393.445   ao  \u2666\n\u2666 again, t $11,-01,02. In 1901. <_\n THE  DAILY   NEWS,  NELSON,  B. C.  FRIDAY, JUNE  28,   1907\n4\n1\n\u00ab\u2022\u2022\u2022*_-\u00ab\u2022\u2022*\u00ab \u2022 BBBB BBBB wBBBi\n} Prospectors', Lumbermen's, Miners'\n|        and all Campers' Supplies\nTENTS lit all slsci and weight*\nRUBBBHS and OIL SKIN CLOTHINO\nOVERALLS and JUMPERS.\nUNDERWEAR at all prices\nHUDSON'S BAY BLANKETS and OAN\nOVERALLS  and JUMPER.S\nSOX, MITTS, etc., eto.\nGROCERIES   AND   PROVISIONS\nBAT, FLOUR and -BED.\nla all these Unci wa otter excellent Quality  at   vorj  reasonable  prices.\n| The Hudson's Bay Stores\nI NELSON, B. C. I\nImperial Bank of Canada\nHEAD  OFFICE, TORONTO\nCAPITAL PAID.UP   R_0,0_      KEST   \u00bb1.7_.0_\n.D R. WIL-IE, President. HON.  ROB-, JAFFRAV, Vice-President.\nBranches in British Columbia,\nARROWHEAD,  GOLDEN,  NELSON,  R_ V KI.STOKB,\nCRANBROOK, VANCOUVER VICTORIA.\nSAVINGS  DEPARTNEMT\nDeposits received and interest allowtd at highest current rate from dnte of opening\nof   account   and   compounded   quarterly.\nA good place to buy a Fruit Ranch or\nReal Estate in Nelson is at T. G.\nPROCTER'S OFFICE, Madden\nBlock, the oldest established\nfirm in Nelson\nNelson Branch\nJ M. Lay, Manager\nThe Canadian Bank\nof Commerce\nCAPITAL PAID  UP\n..\u00bb\u201e,0_.0_      REST    \u00bb5.U_,(J_\nHEAD OFFICE, TORONTO\nB .E. WALKER, President AT_1_X. LAIRD, General Manuger\nBRANCHES THROI-.U101.T CANADA AND IN THE\nUNITED   STATES   AND   ENGLAND.\nA general banking: business trims---.--d. Account- may be opened and conducted\nby mall with all branches of thin bank.\nSAVINGS  BANK   DEPARTMENT\nDeposit- of U and upwards received; Interest allowed at current rat.- and paid\nquarterly. The depositor la subject to no delay whatever iu the withdrawal of the\nwhole or any portion of the deposit.\nJ. L Buchan, Manager.\nNelson Branch\nB ATS Koi MONTREAL\nESTABLISHED 1817\nCAPITAL,   ALL  PAID  UP   fl'.-MUl     REST  tU.OOO.IWO\nH-\\__D  OFFICE   MONTREAL\nRt. Hon. Lord Strathcona and Mount Royal, G.   C.   M.  G.   Hon.  President.\n\u2022 Hon.   Sir  George   Drumnnmd,   K.C.M.G.- Pr-_ldent.\nE. S.  Clouston, Vice-Pre.ident   and  Gene ral ALinager.\nBranches in British  Columbia.\nArmstrong.   Enderby,   Greenwood,   Kelowna,   Nelson*.   New   Denver,   Nicola.   New\nWestminster,   Rossland,    Summerland,   V    ancouvcr,    Vernon,   Victoria,   ChlUwaek.\nNeleon Branch :   L. B DeVeber, Manager\nWe Will Buy All Or Any Part\n6000 International  Coal   % .77\n2000 Diamond Coal  57\n2000 Alber;a Conf, free   32%\n6000 Sullivan    IU\nd. B. MIGHTON & CO.\nMINING  _  INVESTMENT  BROKERS\nPhon.\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPublished  at  Nelson  Every Morning Except Monday, by\nF. J.   DEANE\nSUBSCRIPTION  RATES\nDally,  pi-r year,  by  mall   J6.0U\nDully, per month, by carrier ,.. 50\nAll Subscriptions Pnyable In Advance.\nWHOLESALE SLANDER.\nDr. Sproule, M. P., Is not satisfied with\nthe petty slanders of the tory muck-rakers. He uelleves in engaging in a campaign of whole-ale slander. He commenced In Vancouver with a vulgar and\nwholly lndefenslblo attack upon Roman\n-Catholicism In general and upon sir Wilfrid Laurler and Hon. W. H. Fielding,\nminister of finance, In particular. The\nforce ,if any, of his abuse of Mr. Fielding ls minimised by the fact that the\nfinance minister was not guilty of the\nhorrible charge preferred against him,\nof paying a visit to his holiness, the\npope. Men not steeped In religions fanaticism will.'posBibly not be able to And\nany great fault in a man, who takes\noccasion of a visit to Rome to pay\nhis respects to the pope, but in Dr.\nSproule's eyes this ls an offense that deserves the severest censure. It appears\nthat not withstanding Dr. Sproule's\nabuse of Mr. Fielding and of the pope,\nthe former did not accompany sir Wilfrid Laurler on his visit to the Vatican\nand consequently did not merit Dr.\nSproule's vulgar abuse.\nBut to vilify the Roman Catholics of\nCanada and to sneer at the head of that\nchurch ls not sufficient for this tory\nlieutenant of Mr. Borden. He must vilify the whole French Canadian race. In\nan interview lie gave out at Calgary, on\nhis way home from Vancouver, Dr.\nSproule indulged in a bitter tirade of\nabuse of French Canadians, without the\nslightest cause or Justification. He\nmade no explicit charges .simply resorting to tlie now favorite tory method of\nindulging In wholesale slandar of men\nwhose politics they do not like. If Dr.\nSproule expresses the honest views of\nthe leader of the conservative party, R,\nL. Borden, In denouncing the entire\nFrench Canadian people as grafters; it\nIs the plain duty of R. L. Borden to\nmake a chief plank in his platform at\nthe next general elections the uMsfrftu-\nchlsement of the people of Quebec. But\nIt will be found that Mr. Borden will\ngo down Into the province of Quebec and\nFRUIT LANDS\nDo you -want good fruit lands?    Let ub know your wants\u2014we'can \"J\nyour requirements in lands.   Prices and terms.\nCLAYTON   & CLAYTON\nREAL ESTATE\nOffice:   Griffin  Block,   Upstairs.\nFRUIT LANDS\nthat It Is the very best colored minstrel\norganization that haa ever appeared hi\nthe Crescent city. \u25a0 The .Dallas Daily\nTimes-Herald in reviewing the first performance In that city Bald: \"The house;\n.was packed, theappiause was vociferous\nfrom the start.\" All the old time darky\nsongs were sung and- all the old time\ndarky dances with new time frills were\ngiven by the light stepping sons of Af-\nricanus. Burnt cork mlnfstrelsy Is \\\\l\nright, but these minstrels ' who were*\nmade black by the brush of. nature, are\nclose to first place as amusement and\nfun creators.\"\nThe Dandy Dixie minstrels will appear\nat Sherman's opera house on Monday\nevening.\nAre Your Glasses Right?\nThe glasses tlwu w-i.. Just right a tow\nyeara ago may be Alt wrong today.\nDon't Injure your eyes by wearing an\nold correction. It will cost you nothing to\nhave a new test.\nDOUGLASS, The Optician and Watchmaker\nJONES BLOOK     BAKET STREET\nClarion Records\nThe new disc record, 10 Inch,  75c,     Every record a gem.\nWe have also Just received a fresh lot of \u2022 EDISON OOLD MOULDED UE\nCORDS, 40c. each.\nFLOWER HORNS  for all cylinder machines $3.SO, $4 and 14.50 each.\nWo curry EDISON PHONOGRAPHS, \u00bb15, (S and !_ each.\nCOLUMBIA (disc) QRAPHOPHONES, J15, )_, Wi and \u00bb50 each.\nWe are Always pleased to have you co me in to try over these record, or hear\ntlie machines.\nWAGES GO UP .\nMarked Feature of Labor Statistics ot\n\u25a0 Past Month.\nOttawa, June 27.\u2014The reports to the\nlabor department show that the number\nof labor disputes during May were 49,\nan Increase of 12 over the corresponding,\nmonth of 190G. The loss ln working days\nwas approximately 88,130, as compared\nwith 45,676 In May last year. The !n-t\ncrease ls largely due to the strike of the\ncoal miners of the west and the long:\nBhoremen ln Montreal. There were\nabout 411 Arms and 11,697 employees affected by the various disputes.\nThere was a marked upward tendency\nln wages \"in nearly all lines ot Industry\nduring the month. The number of new\nagreements with respect to wages reported to the department was considerably in excess of that reported during\nthe corresponding period in any previous year since 1903. Nearly all new\nagreements were on the basis of higher\nwage schedules. In a majority ot cases\nthis Increase was obtained as a result\nof amicable negotiations and without\nfriction between the employer and employees. During May there were 287\npeople Injured in Industrial accidents,\nOt these 91 were fatal and 196 resulted\nln serious Injuries. Hallway accidents\nwere responsible' tor. 20 fatalities and\n30 Injured.\nWf_   THOMSON Bookseller and Stetionei\n\u2022   VJ\u00ab     1 lIV\/i\u00bblwV\/l\u00bb Baker Street, Nelson Phono 34\nask the French Canadian people to vote\nfor him and his party, although one ol\nhis chief (lieutenants has told the people\nof .the west that they are hopelessly corrupt. J\nIt Is astonishing that a long career\nin parliament ua_ not taught Dr. Sproule\nthe worse than folly of attempting to\nsttr up racial and religious strife.\nMen of his stamp are a curse to Canadian public life.\nEDITORIAL NOTES.\nThe legal quibbllngs in connection\nwith the Emmerson-Crockett trial may\nbe unavailable, or absolutely necessary\nin the interests of justice, but the general public, which Is deeply interested In\nthe speedy disposal of this suit will not\nregard In any very kindly spirit delays\nthat must result In keeping this malodorous case alive Indefinitely. Everyone hoped and expected that Mr. Emmerson would push the case vigorously\nand that tue falsity of the charges of\nImmorality on his part would be quickly\nexposed. It will be entirely unsatisfactory if by some juggling with the taw\nthe case never does get tried out. Whatever the outcome may be, the desirable end is that the case should be disposed of speedily.\nIt is unfortunately only too true thai\nvery little serious effort bas so far been\nmade to secure permanent record of the\nearly history of British Columbia. There\nbave been some pioneers in this field,\nbut much yet remains to be done. Rev.\nfather Morlce in his \"History of the\nNorthern Interior\" did valuable work\nIn this direction and we now have before us an entertaining and Instructive\nwork by M. S. Wade, the editor of the\nInland Sentinel, of Kamloops .dealing\nwith the history of southern British\nColumbia and particularly of the city\nof Kamloops, formerly Fort Thompson.\nDr. Wade contributes a valuable addition to the scant store of records of\nearly British Columbia history and hi.,\nwork should meet with the warmest\nwelcome from all those who seek to\nknow something of the early history of\nthis province. Dr. Wade's long rest:\ndence in the Interior and his close acquaintance with the old-timers peculiarly fitted him for work of this character. This new work Is entitled \"The\nThompson Country,\" and copies can bo\nordered through the Inland Sentinel,\nKamloops, B. C.\nGovernor Hugi.es of New York state\nhas just signed a bill which makes it a\nmisdemeanor, punishable with a.fine of\n$500 to 11000, for any railroad over 80'\nI was cured of Bronchitis and Asthma by\nMINAKD'S   LINIMENT.\nMRS.   A.   LIVINGSTON-..\nLot 5 ,P.E.I.\nI was eurud of a severe a act*.of rheumatism by MI-MAUD'S LINIMENT.\nMalione Bay JOHN MA RED.\nI   wns  cured  of a sever-   sprained   leg\nby MINARD'S LINIMENT.\nJOSHUA A. WTNAOIIT.\n'Bildgowater.\nmiles in length to require or permit any\nemployee in the operation department\nto remain on duty over sixteen hour,\nconsecutively ,or to go back to work\nafter a sixteen-hour stretch without a\nten-hour rest. The bill is the result ot\nthe recent Investigation of a railroad\nwreck which showed that a train crew\nand switchmen had been working for\nlong hours and were physically unable\nto perform their duties.\nFor  fresh  milk or cream   ring  tin  the\nDominion Dairy, plione OIK-. 57 12\nTHE DANDY DIXIE MINSTRELS.\nIs a real colored minstrel variety\nshow, lt Is the real thing and has set\na standard for Simon pure, old Negro\nminstrelsy that pots it in a class by Itself. It has no competitors for it Is absolutely alone, unrivalled and unequalled, and this expression is shared by the\ndramatic writers in all the cities where\nthe Dandy Lixie Minstrels have thus far\npresented their inimitable performance.\nThe New York Herald for Instance, declares that It Is unquestionably the best\nNegro minstrel ever seen ln thla country; the New Orleans Pica une declare\nHome for Sale\nWe are offering the finest located\nhouse In the city for sale.\nCall and see us at once for particulars. Beautiful grounds. The only situation. We guarantee the most desirable one of its kind ln the city.\nThe latest fittings In electric light,\ngas light, gas stove, bathroom, etc.\nNewly decorated throughout. Stops to\nthe water's edge. Situated on the car\nline.\nBoating, bathing, fishing to be had at\nyour door.\nChicken house, chicken run, large\nwood and coal shed.\nThe most perfect home Imaginable.\nFour lots, all In lawn and garden.\nPrice $3600\nTOYE & CO.\nFRUIT LAND, REAL ESTATI\n' ,. Baker St. Nelson, B. C.\nWeWillBtlf1\n2000 international    78\n100 B, C. Copper  18.26\nWe Will Sell\n100 B. C. Copper 19.25\n200 Dominion Copeer .$6.25\n2000 Sullivan  11\nBorn,   in this cl.y,   on June\nwife of W. II. Hon re, a son.\nto   the\nKeep Mmtrd't Lin.im.nt in the J\nIN THE MATTER OF \"THE PLANS\nCANCELLATION ACT, 10OC,\"\nAnd In the Mutter of tho Townsite of\nRobson. part of Lot Three Hundred and\nOno (301). Group One (1), Kootenay, of\nRecord In the Land Registry Offlco\nat Nelson ns \"G28.\"\nTAiKE NOTICE that on the 26th day of\nJuly A.D., J9iil, at the hour of 10:30\no'clock in the forenoon, at the Court House\nin the Cl.y nf Nelson, In the Province of\nBritish Columbia, \u00abpp .cation will be made\nto tlie Judge of the -County Court of West\nKootenay, Uy the Columbia and Western\nRailway ami Navigation Company for nn\norder tlmi the plan of Uie aiid townste\nof Robson, of record nt NtJJB&n, lii the Province of British Column!- as \"ffiJff' ho canceled, and that the app'leant may enjoy\nthe (finds comprised within the wild l-wn-\nslte free from any easements or rli.li s of\nany person to open nny land or lanes,\nstreet or streets, square nr squares, park\nor parks across, within or upon said lnnds,\nDated nt the City of Nelson, in tlie Province of British Columbia, ill's _7tli day of\nJune,   A.D.,  _W7.\nMACDONALD A HALL,\nAgents   for   Luiiffheod.   Bennett.   Allison,\nTayr.u- nnd    MeL:i\\vs,    Solicitors   nnd\nAgitata for  the Colimibln \u25a0Hid   Kootenny   Navigation   Company,  Applicants.\nTo   MARTIN   McMARTINS,   ESQ.,\nnnd\nTo MESSRS.  R.  BELL A COMPANY.\n59 26\n\u2022VV_r*VVVV\\V_^VVVVV%VVi*fcVVV*-J\n< A Week of Fun\nJ The 25,000.Club   of.   Leth-\n5 bridge extends a hea'rty in-\n5 vltatlon to every reader of\nj this paper to attend the big\nJ STREET  CARNIVAL  from\ni July 8-13.   Ten shows at 15c\nj and 25c.   Four free.\nGEO. H. PLAYLE\nShorthand Reporter\nArbitration!, examination!, commissi'ma,\nate.,   rtoorled.    Member   National   Shorthand Report-re' association,\nBoi KB Nelion, B.C\nWANTED\nActive local agents for both Hist and\nWest Kootenny by one of Canada's\nleading life Insurance, companies Liberal\narrmngements made. Attdre-s. insurance,\nDaily   News. 17-B\nA. }. DRISCOLL\nGentlemen's Clothing, Ladles Skirts Cleaned, Repaired  and   Prea_ed.\nAgent for the Crown Tailoring Co., of\nToronto, Canada; Suits $15 to $30.\nBaker St,, Nelson, Opposite Queen'i Hotel\nNELSON, B.C.\nJOSEPH RYAN\nRANCH   AND   FRUIT   LANDS,   IRON\nORB,   COAL LANDS\nBOO Million  Feet  Standing Timber\nBox 803 Cranbrook, B.C.\nSee Your Grocer  Olves  You\n'AImVG'S\nCanned  Meat!\nCOMBS!   COMBS!   COMBS!\n. .\u25a0 - \u25a0 i \u25a0 \u25a0 .\u25a0 -\n-'.   The largest and best assortment   yre  bave\n-   evershow, - Have a look at our 50c. Combs\nj; J. WALKER\n' . Jeweller and Optician, Baker St.\n'Phone 333 Box 157\nry\nJuly ?, Tuesday,.-Canners' Day.\nJury 10, Wednesday, __it__ens' Day,\nJuly-11,-Thursday,^Ranchers' Day.\nJuly 12th, Friday, Americans' Day.\nWednesday and Friday Afternoons proclaimed\nCivic Half-Holidays\nGood races nnd attractions In the after-\nnoons.   Biisebitll and attractions at night.\nThe Woiseley Silver Band In a.tendance.\nReduced Passenger Rates\nEntries for races close June 29.    Other\nentries close July 5.\nOFFICE, HERALD BLOCK\nI. S. G. Van Wart, Pks. E. L. Richardson, Mgr.\nIf a Referendum was taken on \"which\nis the best \"Packet Tea?\" there\nwould be a unanimous\nvote for\nKootenay Engineering Works\nFOUNDERS AND MACHIMSTS\nMANUFACTURERS OF THE CRAWFORD AERIAL TRAMWAY\nRepairing and Jobbing a Spec alty\nS-MtnwU- Work, Casting!, Builders' Material and Mining and Hill Machinery.\nPHONE 204.\nOf Ice and Works\u2014Foot of Park Street\nB. O. TRAVIS\nMANAGER.\nNBLSON, B. a\nTho Rich. Mci\nROBERTSONS\nDUNDEE\nWHISKY\n .J.\nTHE DAILY  NEWS, NELSON,  B. C FRIDAY, IUNE  28,  1907\nDOMINION DAY CELEBRATION\nFoot Ball\nCoal Creek, Champions tf Crow's Nest Pass\nvs. Nelson, Champions of West Kootenay\nCRICKET, Trail vs. Nelson\nBASE BALL      CALEDONIAN SPORTS\nLACROSSE, Nelson vs. Vancouver\nTWO GALA DAYS\nPony Races and Lawn Tennis\nMusic by Nelson Oity Band\nSpecial Rates on All Railways\nIlluminated Launch Races\nFIREWORKS      LOG ROLLING CONTESTS\nPARADE      GUN CLUB TOURNAMENT\nFIREMENS' TOURNAMENT\nNelson, B. G, July I st and 2nd\nAdmission to Grounds,  Morning 25c,   Grand  Stand  Free.       Afternoon 50c, Grand  Stand  25c.\nrO_ SUMMER HOLIDAYS\nCLOSING EXAMINATIONS AT ST. JOSEPH'S SCHOOL YESTERDAY\nLIST   OP  PRIZE  WINNERS   AND   OF\nTHOSE PROMOTED\nSt. Jtseph'e school cfoaed yesterday for\n.tlie summer holidays. The pupils assembled nt 2 p.m. and Rev. Father Althoft presided and dispersed the testmonbila cf\ngood conduct and appl.cntlC-1, the premt-\nums in vntious classes nrd also tlie gold\nim .iais for speeVif competition.\nTlio distribution wus prefaced by an\naddress to the pupils, Rev. Father Alt huff\ncommending and congrn tula ting the prize\nwinners and giving wirds of kind and helpful encouragement to the less fortunate\nbut-often more praisewor.hy, pitient and\nindustrious ploddder. He laid particular\nstress on the Importance and necessity of\nkeeping up a keen and constant competition, more especially In the go d medal\ncontests. Finally, in announcing the holidays he reminded the -children thnt although dispensed from the usual school\nmeetings and smdies, there was no cessation from their duties to God; and not\nto forget that during vacation as well as\nschool days they must depo:t themselves\nin n manner credltabre to themselves, their\nI .iren.s, their city and the school in which\nthoy wero educated.\nPRIZE LIST\nFirst Preparatory Class\u2014Florence Lean.\n1st; Geoigie Hart, 2nd; Douglas Lennie,\nRomeo and Antonio 'Nadeau good progress.\nSecond Prepartory Class\u2014Johanna Cho-\nfiuc:te, 1st; Pauline Anderson, 2nd; Bertha\nSwedberg, Cyiil Hodge, Henrleta Sturgeon,\ngood progress,\nFirst Primer CMsa-Syd. Deilreau, 1st;\n-Jessie Mooney, 2nd; Anthony Sornilon,\nClifford   McKlnnon,   good  p -ogress.\nSec-end Primer Class\u2014June Ink, 1st; Ursula Hlnton, Snd; Mary Wall, Clurencu\nLyonnals, Good progress. Major Pinto,\npenmanship; Margaret Wall, deportment;\nLlzzio McKlnnon, Chris.ian doctr.ne.\nJunior III Grade\u2014Charlie Madden, 1st;\nMaggie Greyerblehl, 2nd.\nSenior III Grade \u2014 Elsie Gris-jeJ'o, 1st;\nStella Lyonnals, John O'Genskl, equti] 2nd;\nIrene Nnd. .in, spetlllng; Har..Id Plato,\ndrawing; John O'Genskl, Christian doctrine.\nIV Grade\u2014Annie Carlson, 1st; Minnie\nAnderson, 2nd; Frank O'Gen.kle. Chils-\ntlati doctrine; Alfred Bowles, Do'phln hay-\nannaise, equn. In dm wing; Annie Carlson,\n1st junior drawing class, Elsie Grlzzelle,\n2nd;  Wanda Hooper, good pi'OgrSss.\nJunior V Grade\u2014Marguerite Hlnton, It;\nBernardino Bosquet, _nd; H-zel Lund, penmanship;  Fred Grant; good prog ess\nSenior V Grade\u2014Edith Lund, 1st; Margaret Harwood, 2nd.\nSenior VI Grade-Ruth S anton, 1st; Eva\nBourke,  2nd,\nJunior VII Grade-Leo McKlnnon, 1st;\nKiln Madden, Snd.\nMusic Class-Ida Julien, 2nd prize, senior\nB grnde; Ruth Stanton, 1st prize, sen'or A.\nGrade; Laura Thorp, 2nd price, senior A,\nOaae; Hazel Lund, lBt p ize, intermediate\nGrade; Lola Bennett, 2nd prise, Intermediate Grade.\nSunday school\u2014Jessie Jlyland, proflsl-\n- ency; Leo Deslreau, Wilfrid Audet, Cha Ho\nScanlan, good attendance, 9 \u25a0\nSPECIAL COMPETITION PRIZES\nGold   medal   for Chrlst'an  doctrne,  donated  by   Rt.   Rev,   Bishop   Don en will.\u2014\nWon   by   Leo.  McKlnnon,  2nd   Margaret\nHarwood.\nGold meda) for complete attendance at\nSunday _chool, donated by Rev. J. Aliho;.\u2014\nWon by Sadie Madden.\nGold medal for Sorlpure history, do-\ni-rited by Rev. J. Althoff-Won by Minna\nHlnton; 2nd Alfred Bowles.\nGold medal for deportment, donated by\nRev. Mother Prnv*ne|..l, St. Joseph's, Belli ngha m\u2014Won by fin eel Lund.\nGold medal for ge era. proficiency, do-\nmuted by Sisters of St. Joseph\u2014Won by\nRuth  Slim ton.\n' Geld medal fo- mu le, donated by A A.\nPerrier-Won by Ed'*1.. Lund.\nGold medal for drawing, donated by S's-\nters of S;. Jourpli\u2014Won by Eva Ma.qulB.\nPROMOTION LI3T\nFrom 1st preparatory to grade 1\u2014Flcr-\nneeo Lena, Mary Madden, Ella Donaldson,\nDouglns Lennle, Geo gto Hart, Fmnklo\nArnold, L*-u's Choque.te, Thomas Morrison.\nGrade 1 to gnde 2\u2014Johanna Clioquette.\nPauline Anderson, Bertha Swedberg, Hen-\nrlole Sturgeon, Alberta O'Malley, Annie\nO'GenBkl, Rose O'Genskt, Edna Lean, Josh\nWhite, Rosle Jin_-|ulm\u00abu, Cyril Hodge, Wllllnm Shaolu'in, Wllfrla Audet, Robert\nMooitoy Romeo Nadeau, Antonio Nadeau.\nGrade 2 to grade 3\u2014Bessi, Mooney, Rosle\nClioquette, Dora Ink, Rose1 Ann Mooney,\nK. Ii> Strachan, Isabella Oni-tot, Edna Malone,   ItOBlo   Mngllo,   Byd.   Deslreau,   An-\nThe past is dead.   We live in the present\n\"Progress Brand\"\nClothing\nfor progressive men who want\u2014not\nthe clothing that was best 20 years\nago \u2014but the clothing THAT IS\nBEST TODAY. Do you wear\n\"PROGRESS BRAND\"?\nJ. H. WALLACE\nthony Scanlan, Clifford McJCInnon, John\nO'Malley, Liulger Clioquette, Arthur Choi\nquette, i\nGrade 3 to Junior 4\u2014June Ink, Ursula\nHlnton. Mary Wall, Margaret.Walt, L*_zle\nMcKlnnon, Jessie Hyland, Maudie Ivans,\nLizzie Swedberg, Major Plato, Clarence\nLyonnals, Howie Bosquet, Henry Swedberg.\nJunior 4 to Senior 4\u2014Charlie Madden,\nMnggle Greycrblehl, Knthlcen McBride,\nLouis Jacquim.n, Norben Clioquette, Joseph Clioquette,\nSenior 4 to Jim'or .-.Elsie Grltzclle,\nStel.'a Dyonnais, John O'Genskl, Wanda-\nHooper, Janet Adle, Laura Foley, Rene\nNnd. mi. Lillle Howies, Margaret McDonald,  Elmer Anderson. -\nSenior 6 to Junior 6\u2014Anna. Carlson, Minnie And. .son, Frank O'Genskl, Alfred\nBowles, _Vid!c Madden, Crawford Fennel),\nDofphln   Lyonnals. |\nJunior G to Senior 6\u2014Marguerite Hlnlon,\nBernndino H squet, Hazel Lund, James\nMoBrlde, Fred Grant.\nSenior 6 to Jun'or 7\u2014Edith Lund, Margaret  Harwood, Minna Hlnton.\nSenior 7 to Junior 8-Ruth StAtUon, Eva\nBurke, Eva Marquis.\nJunior S to Senior S-l\/o McKlnnon, Ella\nMadden. Lola Bennett, Ida Jul'en, Agnes\nHarwood, Josie MeH* ide.\nCOLIC  AND DIARRHOEA\nPains In tlie stomach, colic and diarrhoea\narc quickly relieved by the use of Chum-\nbermin'a Coi.ic, Cholera and Diarrhoea\nRemedy. For sale by all druggists and\ndealers.\nTreat your friends right. A full line of\nholiday goods nnd fancy groceries at the\nBell Trading company's store.\nM qard'i Liniment used by PI|ytiolatii\nLAUNDRY BURNED.\nWoman and Five Children Cremated ln\nQuick Blaze.\nOttawa, June 27.\u2014Fire started In a\nsteam laundry at Arnprior thla morning\nat 2 o'clock and so quickly burned the\nbuilding that one woman and four children were burned to death. The husband\nrushed out to get gome water to put out\nthe fire, which he thought was a small\none but a gasoline explosion ensued and\nthe family waa loat In the flames. The\nname of the family la Armatrong and\nthe husband waa manager of the laundry. $1000 damage waa done before the\nflre waa subdued.\t\nGIN PILLS\nCURB 13\nKidney Troubles\n..:\/ Dltf\u2014rent Viirlotlog of\nAING'S\nBABYS-\nFor\nfs\nu se\u2014an d\nevery toilet\npurpose as\ngood a soap\nas \"Baby's\nOwn\" cannot\nbe bought for as little\nmoney. w.\nAlb.rtgo.pl U_ Mfr... Monlml.\nBeware of imitations and substitute*\naccepi none but tie genuine \" Baby's\nOwn.\"\nYour (ood ii more deUdoui\nwhen you use WINDSOR, lhe\npure, fine TABLE SALT, lu\nuvour il u <telig__ ul u it is lasting.\nHOUSTON SCHOOL\nCANNON  HILL.   SPOKANE,   WASH.\nProtestant Board] vg School for Boys\nPrcparefl thoroughly for best colloges,\nuniversities, scientific -.In ol_,.nd for business.\nAll masters are spccfnlst-i, experienced\ncolfege graduates and give thorough Individual instruction.\nHealthful location and mild climate. Athletic sports In charge of special Inst rue tors.\nHome comforts and constant supervision\nfor boarding pupils. Limited number of\nvacancies. Cata.'ague Bent upon request.\nEDGAR P. STRONG. A.M., Head Master\nNelson's    pfeasuro-iovlng    publlo    spends\nmuch time -on the lake and for\nRowboats, Canoes and Launches\nthe finest lot ever offered for sale or hire\nIn B.C., are at Lindsay's Boathuusc, foot\nof Josephine atreet.\ni   HOTEL DIRECTORY\nPHOENIX\nCanned Mc-nts to Choose From\n, HOTBL BALMORAL,. EBQpNIX, B.C.-\nThe leading; hotel of Boundary^ lading\nmining camp. Strictly flrat etas*, et-*--*-\ntrully located, John A, McMa_ter, Proprietor.\nHOTBI_    BROOKLYN,    FHOENIX-THE\nonly up to date hotel in Phoenix. Now\nfrom cellar to roof. Best samp'e rooms\nln the Boundary. Bath room ln connection. Sleum heat. Opposite Great Northern depot.   Jas. Marsbnlf, Proprietor.\nYMIR\nWALDORF HOTEL, YMIR, B.C.-HEAD-\nquarters for Mining and Commercial\nmen. Most comfortable hotel in the district. Sample rooms tn connection. Geo.\nColeman, proprietor.\nGRAND FORKS\nHOTEL  PROVINCE,   GRAND  FOHK_V-\nThe headquarters for tourlslB. Satisfaction guaranteed. Emll Larson {late of\nNelaon) Proprietor.\nHOTEL VALHALLA, NEWLY APPOINT-\ned. Best rooms In the olty. Sample\nrooma In connection, hot and cold 'baths,\ndining room and liquors of the best.\n'Bus meets ati trains. Proprietor, Soren\nNelson, formerly of Neison, B.C.\nARROWHEAD\nTHB UNION HOTEL, ARi- i'UHAO-\nSpeclul attention given to commercial\nmen and tourists. First class sample\nrooms. Finest Bcencry In British Columbia, overlooking Upper Arrow lake. W.\nJ. Llglitburne, Proprietor.\nOutlet Hotel, Proctor\nAn Ideal location for fishermen arid tourist-, good tnmdy beach tat bathing; all\nboats stop at tho hotel .special attention to\nladles and children. \"\nG. A J. SNOW, Proprietors\nCLUB HOTEL\nSTURGEON A GRANT. Proprietors\nThe  BIG SCHOONER of Beer or  halt\nand  half, 10 cents.    The  only  g'ass  of\nBeer in Nelson.\nHotel  accommodations* s:eond  to  none\nIn  British   Columbia.    Rales  fl   per  day.\nSpecial rates to monthly boarders.\nSherbrooke House\nNELSON,   B.C.\nOne ml..utu's walk fr_m C.P.R. rtatfon.\nCuisine unexcelKd; $1 rooms, well heated\nand venllhited.\nBOYBR  BROS.,   Proprietors.\nMADDEN HOUSE\nBAKBR  ST.,   NET SON,. B.C.\nDo you need a comfortable home? If so\ntry the Madden House, Well furnished\nrooms, lighted with electricity; with batha:\nfirst class board. In the bar you will find\nall the best domestic and Imported liquors\nand cigars.\nTHOMAS MADDEN, Proprietor\nEOYAL HOTEL\nTELEPHONE 62   '\nMRS.   WM.   ROBERTS,   Proprietress\nThe best meals that can be provided In\nthis market, cooked under the supervision\nof the proprietress, who 19 a favorite\ncaterer,\nNice airy rooms, new'y furnished; bath\nfor guests.\nThe best wines, liquors and olgars can\nbe obtained at the bar.\nTERMS: U AND $1.50 PER DAY\nCOR.   STANLEY   AND  SILICA  STS.\nCars Pass the Door\nLAKEVfEW HOTEL\nOOR.  HALL AND VERNON STS.\nOEORO- HAI-USON, Proprietor\nTwo blocks from City Whorf.  The best\ndollar a duy house In Ne son.\nNO CHINESE EMPLOYED\nKOOTENAY HOTEL\nMRS. MALLETTE, Proprietress\nA home for everybody.    Every oonvel-\nence given.to the travelling pubic. \u25a0 \u2022ctrle\nPiano.   Cuisine unexecuted.   Ratea u per\nduy.\nBARTLETT   HOTTSP\nTht but Ha day house la\ntown.     A   -fitWi.  Horn:\nG. W. BABHiETT - tap.\nKooterjay\nFruit Lands\nBurton City and Fire\nValley Fruit and Farm\nLands are the be t sellers\nnow.\n15 months ago I purchased from original locators about 5000 acres of\nFruit Lands near Burton\nCity. Since then I have\nbeen getting the titles\nand having them subdivided into 10,15 and 20\nacre blocks. One month\nago I began to advertise\nthem and have disposed\nof nine 15 acre blocks and\ntwenty-one 20 ac. blocks,\naveraging more than one\nblock per day.\nThe reasons why Burton City lands sell so\nreadily are as follows:\n1\u2014The r.ind hae a good surface loam wilh\na clny subsoil.\n2\u2014It la free from atones.\n3\u2014 It Is nearly level and has a f-entle\nslope, none of It being more than 100 feet\nabove the lake.\nt\u2014The public know I can furnish a good\ntitle at once.\n6\u2014They know I have had A wide experience In fruit lands und am prepared\nto prove any statements mentioned here.\n6\u2014Because I am a prac.lcal fruit grower.\nliAvlng over \u201e00 fruit trees on my home\nfarm, and buyers get the benefit of my\nexperience.\n7\u20141 am also prepared to c_nr land, plant\ntt and care for It until such time ns my\ncustomers ure  prepared  lo Hike  It over.\nA   SNAP\none improved 20 acre\nfruit farm for sale fronting on the lake.has a nice\nbeech and in a good locality, 2 1-2 miles n0rth\nof Burton City. 5 acres\ncleared and ploughed, 175\nfruit trees, a nice creek\nruns through the property\nsoil is good and no waste\nland. Daily boat service.\nThis is one of the prettiest places on the Arrow\nLakes and will make a\nnice home in the heart of\nthe fruit growing district.\nPrice $100 per acre, 10\nper cent, down, balance\ncan be arranged\nJ. E. ANNABLE\nNELSON, E 0.\nNELSON CAFE\nFirst Class Meals.   Furnished rooms\nin connection.   Open day and nigftt.\nFirst-Glass Luqch\nFrom 12 nooi\nto _ i. mi\n8PECIAL\nAtutt txxxit tm Itil ,.m.\nBaker St. Phone 275\nA. AUDET, Prop.\nNelson Steam Laundry\nP.O. Box 48.    Tttephone 146\nAll kinds and  ail co'ors of Ladles' and\nGcnta'  Clothing\nCLI9ANED AND  DYED\nFlannel-, Blankets, Curtains, Si ks, etc.,\na specialty.\nGloves  renovated  to  Took  like  new.\nSteam Carpet Gleaning\nYour  patnmagc  solicited,\nPAUL mtOH, Prop.\nCOAL! WOOD I\nWe now have a stock\nof GALT COAL\nPhone 265\nYAIE-KOOTEN.Y   ICE, FRUIT\nFUEl & POM TRY CO., ITD.\nntfloo: K.I, Oor. Baker A Ward BU.\nCANADIAN   _\nK^Pa-_?_fi.<:\n\u2022:aILW*Y CO.\nS mmer Excursion\nBates East\nFROM NELSON\n$52.50\nto Winnipeir,   Fort Arthur. St. Pau\nDuluth, Sioux Oity\nSt. Louis $60 00\nOhicaifo $64 Oi\nToronto $78 60\nOttawa $8266\nMontreal $84 00\nSt John $94 00\nHalifax $10180\nBoston $86 60\nNow  York $10000\nTickets on sale Jul; 3, 4. 6,\nAuk 8, 9,10; Sept 11,12,13\nFirtt-Class Round Trip 90 Days limit\nCorreipondlng reduction, (rom all Koo:e-\nnny points. Ticket* available tor luke\nroute Including meal, and berths on Inke\natenmers. Through rates quoted to \"any\nstation in Ontario, Quebec or Maritime\nprovinces on application.\nJ, & CARTER,       \u25a0.-J. COY-l,\nD.P.A., Kelson.   A.Q.P.A., VUMMTM\nAtlantic S. S. Sailings\nC.P.R.    ROYAL   MAIL   STEAMSHIPS\nMONTREAL A QUEBEC TO LIVERPOOL\nEmp. Britnin.June & L. CliampIain.July \u2022\nEmp. Ireland..July 12L.  Erie   July -0\nEmpresses sali* from Quebec\nALLAN LINE\nIonian  June M Virginian  July 6\nTunisian   ....July   12 Victorian  ....Juy 1-\nDOMINION   LINE\nCanada     July   ii Ottawa    July   13\nATLANTIC   TRANSPORT   LINE\nMinneapolis  jyiy 5\nAMERICAN  MNR\nNew York ....July 6St.  Louis  ....July 11\nRSD BTAR LTNF\nVnderland  ....July 6 Kroonlaud ....Juy 13\nCUNARD   LINE\nCarmanla   ....July  2 Umbria  July \u00ab\nWHITE BTAR   MNft\nArabic    July  4 Republic   ....July   13\n-r-PTTrV--\"*!   t iNT\nLa  Tourraine..July 4 La Provence..July 11\nHAMBURG-AMERICAN  LINE\nKaiser in Aug. Victoria  duty 11\nKatav-t   July 13\nv   i.th OBRMAN-U-OYD\nPrincess Irene  July 13\nNeckar July 20\nIf you are going to Europe call or write\nus for partlculara\nAll cunuiiontal rates and sailings on a***\nillcatlon. If you are oontenplatlnf taking\nn ocean voyage drop tu a line an* wt\nrill be pleased te furnlih you wit* Cull la*\normatlon  promptly.\nT. I. CARTER,   W. P. F. CUlfMlNC-i,\nD.P.A. Nalaaa      au. A*t, WIraii***\nSynopsis of Canadian\nHomeBtead Regulations\nANY available Dominion Lands within tbe\nRalfwny Belt of Bii l_h Columbia may be\nliomesteaded toy any persons who is tbe\nHole head of a family, or any male over\n18 years of age, to the extent uf one-quarter section of 1-0 acres, more or less.\nEntry must be made personally nt the\nlocal land office for tlie district in which\nUie land is Bltuate,\nThe homesteader is required to perform\nthe conditions connected therewith under\none of tlie following pfons:\n1. At least six months' residence upon\nand cultivation of the land In each year\nfor three years.\n2. If the fa.her (or mother, if the father\nIs deceased) of the hoaem-teader resales\nupon a farm In the vicinity of u%\u00bb land\nentered for, 'he requirements as 00 resldenoe may bo satisfied by such p_r\u00abon\nresiding with the father or mother.\n... If the seller has his permanent residence upon farming land owned by him In\nthe vicinity or hln homestead, th. requirements as to resldenoe may be satisfied by\nresidence  upon the said land.\nSix months'.notice In writing shou'd be\ngiven to the Commissioner of Don.ltf.on\nLands at Ottawa of intention to apply for\npatent.\nCoal hinds may bo purchased ,.t (Id an\nacre for soft conl and (_0 for anthracite.\nNot more than :t-0 acres can be acquired\nby one Individual or company. Royalty\nat the rate of 10 cents per ton of -OJ0\npounds shall bo collec ed on lhe gross output. D.   A.   CORY.\nDeputy  Minister  of tha   Interior.\nN.B.\u2014'Unauthorised publication of tins\nadvertisement will not be pnld fur.\nSpokane and Return\n$880\nAccount annual convention of the Baptist Young People's Union. On sale July\n2 and 3.    Etna, limit July Iff.\nTO ,\nSeattle and Return\n$22.30\nAccount International Christian Endeavor Convention. Ou sale July 8 and 9. Return  limit  July  2_rd.\nFor further Information call on or nd-\ndress.\nW. A. ROSS. H. E. DOULOAS,\nA.O.P.A., BeatU.. C.P.A.. city.\n^>S-\n THE DAILY  NEWS,  NELSON,  B. C FRIDAY, JUNE 28,   J907\nt\nBBBBBBBBBBB 9 BBOtwwwwwwBwBA\n{ Prospectors', Lumbermen's, Miners'\nJ        and all Campers' Supplies\nj\nt\nB\nrENTB In all bIkb and weight*.\nRUBBERS and OIL SKIN  CLOTHliN.\nOVERALLS and  JUMPERS.\nUNDERWEAR at all prices\nHUDSON'S BAY BLANKETS and CAN\nOVERALLS  and   JUMPER.S\nSOX, MITTS, etc., etc.\nGROCERIES   AND   PROVISIONS\nBAT,  FLOUR and FEED.\nIn all these lines wa otter exoel\u2014-t Quality  at  very  re-unable  pricea.\nThe Hudson's Bay Stores\nj NELSON, B. C. j\n*\u2022\u2022*#**#\u2022** \u00bb *\u00bb\u2022*OBOBwOBBBBi\nA good place to buy & Fruit Ranch or\nReal Estate in Nelson is at T. G.\nPROCTER'S OFFICE, Madden\nBlock, the oldest established\nfirm in Nelson\nImperial Bank of Canada\nHEAD  OFFICE, TORONTO\nCAPITAL PAID.UP \t\n.D R. WILKIE, President.\n..\u00bb*,_0,0_      REST   X.7_,-(l\nHON. ROBT. JA. FRAY, Vice-President.\nBranches in British Columbia\nARROWHEAD, GOLDEN, NELSON, HH'VE-STOKE,\nCRANBROOK, VANCOUVER VICTORIA.\nSAVINGS  DEPARTNEMT\nDeposits receive, and interest al!owtd nt blghest current rate from dnte of opening\nof   account   and   compounded   quarterly.\nNelson Branch\nJ M. Lay, Manager\nThe Canadian Bank\nof Commerce\nCAPITAL PAID  UP\n \u00bbl\u00bb.\u00bb,\u00ab\u00abl     REST\nHEAD OFFICE, TORONTO\nB .E. WALKER. President ALKX. I.A1HD, General Manuger\nBRANCHES THROUGiHOUT CANADA A^D IN THE\nUNITED   STATES   AND   ENGLAND.\nA general banking 1>u_lno__ tranwictcd. Accounts may be opened and conducted\nby mall with all tranche, of tbis bank.\nSAVINGS  BANK   DEPARTMENT\nDeposit, of |1 and upwards received, interest allowed at current rates and paid\nqunrterly. Tbe depositor Is subject to no deluy wbatever In the withdrawal of the\nwhole or any portion of the deposit.\nJ. L Buchan, Manager.\nNelson Branch\nBANK of MONTREAL\nESTABLISHED 1817\nCAPITAL,   ALL  PAID  UP   \u00bbH._\u00bb.U_      REST  81,000,000\nH-'AD   OFFICE   MONTREAL\nRt. Hon. Lord Strathcona and Mount Royal.  G.   C.  M.  G.   Hon.   President.\n\u25a0 Hon.  Sir   George   Drummond,   K.C.M.G., President.\nE. S.  Clouston, Vice-President  and  Gene ral .-.wager.\nBranches in British Columbia.\nArmstrong,   Enderby,   Greenwood,   Kelow na.   Nelson*,   New   Denver,   Nicola,   New\nWestminster,   Rossland,    Summerland,   V    ancouver,    Vernon,   Victoria,   Chil.iwaek.\nNelson Branch :   L. B DeVeber, Manager\nWe Will Buy All Or Any Part\n6000 International  Coal   | .77\n2000 Diamond Coal  G7\n2000 Albena Coat, free   32%\n6000 Sullivan  10\n_. B. MIGHTON & CO.\nMINING _  INVESTMENT BBOKEKS\n*_osa\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPublished at  Nelson  Every Morning  Ex*\ncapt Monday,  by\nF.  J.   DEANE\nSUBSCRIPTION  RATES\nDally,   per year,  by mall   $5.00\nDaily, per month, by carrier  60\nAll Subscriptions Payable in Advance.      i\nWHOLESALE SLANDER.\nDr. Sproule, M. P., Is not satisfied with\nthe petty slanders of the tory muck-rakers. He net-eves in engaging in a campaign of wholesale slander. He commenced in Vancouver with a vulgar and\nwholly Indefensible attack upon Roman\nCatholicism In general and upon sir Wilfrid Laurler and Hon. W. H. Fielding,\nminister of finance, ln particular. The\nforce ,tf any, of his abuse of Mr. Fielding ls minimised by the fact that the\nfinance minister was not guHty of the\nhorrible charge preferred against him,\nof paying a visit to hla holiness, the\npope. Men not steeped In religions fanaticism will\/possibly not be able to find\nany great fault in a man, who takes\noccasion of a visit to Rome to pay\nhis respects to the pope, but in Dr.\nSproule's eyes thlB is an offense that deserves the severest censure. It appears\nthat not withstanding Dr. 8prouIe's\nabuse of Mr. Fielding and of the pope,\nthe former did not accompany Bir Wilfrid Laurler on his visit to the Vatican\nand consequently did not merit Dr.\nSproule's vulgar abuse.\nBut to vilify the Roman Catholics of\nCanada and to sneer at the head of that\nchurch Is not sufficient for this tory\nlieutenant of Mr. Borden. He must vilify the whole French Canadian race. In\nan interview he gave out atCalgary, on\nhis way home from Vancouver, Dr.\nSproule indulged in a bitter tirade of\nabuse of French Canadians, without the\nslightest cause or Justification. He\nmade no explicit charges .simply resorting to the now favorite tory method of\nindulging In wholesale slandar of men\nwhose politics they do not like. If Dr.\nSproule expresses the honest views of\nthe leader of the coneervatlve party, R.\nL. Borden, In denouncing the entire\nFrench Canadian people as grafters; it\nis the plain duty of R. L. Borden to\nmake a chief plank ln his platform at\nthe next general elections the disfnui-\nchisement of the people of Quebec. But\nIt will be found that Mr. Borden will\ngo down into the province of Quebec and\nFRUIT LANDS\nDo you .want good fruit lands?    Let ub know your wants\u2014we can Hill\nyour requirements ln landa.   Prices and terms,\nCLAYTON   & CLAYTON\nREAL ESTATE\nOffice:   Griffin Block,   Upstairs.\nFRUIT LANDS\nAre Your Glasses Right?\nThe glasses that were Just right a few\nyears ago may be al. wrong today.\nDon't Injure your eyes by wearing an\nold correction. It will cost you nothing to\nhave a new test.\nDOUGLASS, The Optician and Watchmaker\nJONES BLOOK     B AKBT STREET\nClarion Records\nThe new disc record, 10 Inch,  \u201ec.     Every record a gem.\nWe hnve also Just received a fresh lot of EDISON GOLD MOULDED RE\nCORDS, 40c. each.\nFLOWER HORNS  for all cylinder machines 13.50. $4 and 14.50 each.\nWo carry EDISON PHONOGRAPHS, $15, $_ nnd !_ each.\nCOLUMBIA (disc) GRAPHOPHONES, tl\u00bb, t_, !_ and |50 each.\nWe are Always pleased to have you come in to try over these record* or hear\nthe machines.\nthat it ls the very hest colored minstrel\norganization that has ever appeared id\nthe Crescent oity. The .Dallas Daily.\nTimes-Herald in reviewing the first performance in that city said: \"The house;\n.waa packed, theapplause was vociferous\n(rom the start.\" All the old time darky\nsongs were suug and all the old time\ndarky dances with new Ume frills were\ngiven by the light stepping sons of Af-\nrlcanus. Burnt cork mlnlstrelsy ls \u201e1\nright, but these minstrels' tfhd vere'*\nmade black by the brush of. nature, are\nclose to flrst place as amusement and\nfun creators.\"\nThe Dandy Dixie minstrels will appear\nat Sherman's opera house on Monday\nevening.\nWAGES GO UP .\nHarked Feature of Labor Statistics of\nPast Month.\nOttawa, June 27.\u2014The reports to the\nlabor department show that the number\nof labor disputes during May were 49,\nan Increase of 12 over the corresponding,\nmonth of 1900. The loss in working days\nwas approximately 88,130, as compared\nwith 45,676 ln May last year. The ln-i\ncrease ls largely due to the strike of the\ncoal miners of the west and the long:\nshoremen ln Montreal. There were\nabout 411 Arms and 11,697 employees affected by the various disputes.\n\u2022 There was a marked upward tendency\nIn wages In nearly all lines of Industry\nduring the month. The number of new\nagreements with respect to wages re.\nported to the department was considerably ln excess of that reported during\nthe corresponding period ln any previous year since 1903. Nearly all new\nagreements were on the basis of higher\nwage schedules. In a majority of cases\nthis increase was obtained as a result,\nof amicable negotiations aud without\nfriction between the employer and employees. During May there were 287\npeople injured in industrial accidents,\nOf these 91 were fatal and 190 resnlted\nln serious Injuries. Railway accidents\nwere responsible for 20 fatalities and\n30 injured.\nBorn,  In this cliy, on June 20,  to the\nwife of W. H. Hon re, a son.\nWCt  THOMSON Bookseller and Stationei\n\u00ab   VI*    1 llV7iMwV\/l\u00ab Baker Street, Nelion Phone 34\nask the French Canadian people to vote\nfor him and his party, although one ot\nhts chief lieutenants has told the people\nof .the west that they are hopelesBly corrupt\nIt Is astonishing that a long career\nin parliament uaa not taught Dr. Sproule\nthe worse than folly of attempting to\nstir up racial and religious strife.\nMen of his stamp are a curse to Canadian public Ute.\nEDITORIAL NOTES.\nThe legal qulhhllngs in connection\nwith the Elmmerson-Crockett trial may'\nbe unaviodahle, or absolutely necessary\nin the interests of Justice, but the general public, which ls deeply Interested in\nthe speedy disposal of this suit will not\nregard in any very kindly spirit delays\nthat must result in keeping this malodorous case alive Indefinitely. Every*\none hoped and expected that Mr. Emmerson would push the case vigorously\nand that tne falsity of the charges of\nImmorality on bis part would be quickly\nexposed. It will be entirely unsatisfactory If by some juggling with the law\nthe case never does get tried out. Whatever the outcome may be, the desirable end ts that the case should be disposed of speedily.\nIt ts unfortunately only too true that\nvery Utile serious effort bas so far been\nmade to secure permanent record of the\nearly history of British Columbia. There\nhave been some pioneers in this field,\nbut much yet remains to be done. Rev.\nfather Morice In his \"History of the\nNorthern Interior\" did valuable work\nIn this direction and we now have before us an entertaining and Instructive\nwork hy M. S. Wade, the editor of the\nInland Sentinel, of Kamloops .dealing\nwith the history of southern British\nColumbia and particularly of the city\nof Kamloops, formerly Fort Thompson.\nDr. Wade contributes a valuable addl?\n'tlon to the scant store of records of\nearly British Columbia history and hla\nwork should meet with the warmest\nwelcome from all those who seek to\nknow something of the early history of\nthis province. Dr. Wade's long residence in the Interior and his close acquaintance with the old-timers peculiarly fitted him for work of this character. This new work Is entitled \"The\nThompson Country,\" and copies can be\nordered through the Inland Sentinel,\nKamloops, B. C.\nGovernor Hugnes of New York state\nhag just signed a bill which makes It a\nmisdemeanor, punishable with a.fine.Of\n$-00 to $1000, for any railroad over 60'\nI waB cured of Bronchitis and AsUima by\nMINARD'S   LINIMENT.\nMRS.   A.   LIVINGSTONE.\nLot 5 ,P.B.I.\nI was cured of a severe a nek of rheumatism by  MINARD'S LINIMENT.\nMahone Bay JOHN MA RED.\nI  was  cured  of a severe sprained  leg\nby  MINARD'S  LINIMENT.\nJOSHUA A. WYNAOHT.\n\u25a0Brldgowater.\nmiles in length to require or permit any\nemployee in the operation department\nto remain on duty over sixteen hour_\nconsecutively ,or to go back to work\nafter a slxteen-hour stretch without a\nten-hour rest. The bill Ib the result of\nthe recent Investigation of a.railroad\nwreck which showed that a train crew\nand switchmen had been working for\nlong hours and were physically unable\nto perform their duties.\nFor ft-oBli  milk or cream  ring un  the\nDominion Dairy, phono 0189. .7 12\nTHE DANDY DIXIE MINSTRELS.\nIs a real colored minstrel variety\nshow. It Is the real thing and has set\na standard for Simon pure, old Negro\nminstrelsy that puts it in a class by itself. It has no competitors for it Is absolutely alone, unrivalled and unequalled, and this expression is shared by the\ndramatic writers ln all the cities where\nthe Dandy Dixie Minstrels have thus far\npresented their Inimitable performance.\nThe New York Herald for instance, de-,\nclares that It is unquestionably the best\nNegro minstrel ever seen In this country; the New Orleans Picaune declare\nHome for Sale\nWe are offering the finest located\nhouse lb the city for sale,\nCall and see us at once for particulars. Beautiful grounds. The only situation. We guarantee the most desirable one of Ub kind in the city,\nThe latest, attings ln electric light,\ngas light, gas store, bathroom, etc.\nNewly, decorated throughout. Stops to\nthe water's edge. Situated on. the car\nline.\nBoating, bathing, Bshlng to be had at\nyour door.\nChicken house, chicken run, large\nwood and coal shed.\nThe most perfect home imaginable.\nFour lots, all in lawn and garden.\nPrice $3600\nTOYE & CO.\nFRUIT LAND, REAL ESTATI\n.'; Baker St. Nelson, B. C.\nWe Will BUT '\n2000 International   79\n100 B. C. Copper  |8.26\n\"\"\"\u25a0\nWe Will Sell\n100 B. C. Copper ... $9.25\n200 Dominion Copeer .|6.25\n2000 Sullivan 11\nKtep Minard't Liiyrmnt in the houM\nIN THE   MATTER   OP    \"THE  PLANS\nCANCELLATION  ACT, _90_,\"\nAnd in the Matter ot tho Townsite of\nRobson, part of Lot Throe Hiindted and\nOno (_01), Group One (1), Kootenay, of\nRecord in tlie Land Registry Orrico\nat Nelson ub \"620.\"\nTAiKE NOTICE that on lhe 25th dny of\nJuly A.D., 1!M, nt tho hour of 10:36\no'clock in the forenoon, at the Court House\nin tlio Cl.y of Nefrton, in tlie I .ovince of\nBritish Columbia, \u00abpp Icatlot. will be mode\nto the Judge of tiie -County Court of West\nKootenny, by tho Columbia, nnd Western\nRailwny and Nnvlgntifin Compnny Tor an\norder thnt the plan of the sild towns't-c\nof Robson. of reeoul nt Nelson, in the Province of Brltl-h Columbia ns '\u25a0___\" bo can-\ncoifed, und that tlio iipp'lcant mny enjoy\ntho lands oumpil-cd within tlie snld t-.wn-\nsite free from any easements or rlgb h of\nany person to open any hind or lanes,\nstreut or streets, square or s<,im.f>-, park\nor piirks ..cross, within or upon aa!d lands.\nDated nt the Clly of Nelson, in tbo Province of British Columbia, ill's -.th day of\nJune,  A.D.. 1901.\nMACDONALD __ HALL.\nAgents   for   Lougheed,   Bcnnott.   Allison,\nTiiy.Vr  und    McL-WH,    Solicitors  and\nAgents for  the Columbia .Mid   Kooto-\nnuy   Nnvigntlon  Company.  Applicants.\nTo   MARTIN   McMARTINS.   ESQ.,\nand\nTo MESSRS. R. BELL A COMPANY.\n\u2022%***\\%VVV%%%VVV\u00bb>\\*V*>.'VVVV%\u00bb\nA Week of Fun\n> The 25,000.Club   of.   Leth-\ni bridge extends a heart.  In-\n! vltatlon to ev0ry reader of\n| this paper-to attend the big    i\nI BTREET  CARNIVAL  from    ]\ni July 8-13.  Ten shows at 15c    1\n[ and 26c. .Four free.         ...  J\nIVMMW\u00ab\u00abtWMMViW\u00abMI|\nGEO. H. PLAYLE\nShorthand Reporter\nArbitrations, examinations, commission.,\neto,.  ..sported.    Member National  Shorthand Report-**-' association.\nBoi BS Nelson, B.0\nWANTED\nActive local agents for both Eist and\nWest Kootenay by ope of Canada's\nleading life Insurance companies Liberal\narrmngements made, Addrex*. Insurance,\nDally   News, 17-8\nA. J. DRISCOLL\nGentlemen's Clothing, Ladles Skirts Cleaned, Repaired nnd Pressed.\nAgent for the Crown Tailoring Co., of\nToronto, Canada; Suits (16 to $30.\nBaker St., Nelson, Opposite Que_n'a Hotel\nNELBON, B.C.\nJOSEPH RYAN\nRANCH   AND   FRUIT   LANDB,   IKON\nORB,   COAL LANDS\nHO Million Feet Btnntllng Timber\nBoi _3 Cranbrook, B.U.\nSee Your Grocer Gives You\nAING'S\nConned  Meats\nCOMBS!   COMBS!   COMBS!\n., The largest and best assortment   yre  have\never-show, Have a look at our 50c. Combs\n' . Jeweller and Optician; 'Baker St.\n'Phone 333 Box 157\nJuly 9, Tuesday, Farmers' Day.\nJufy 10, Wednesduy, <_t_ens' Day.\nJuly 11, Thursday, Ranchers' Day.\nJuly 12lli, Friday, Am-leans\" Day.\nWednesday and Friday Afternoons proclaimed\nCivic Half-Holidays\nGood races and attractions In the afternoons.   Baseball and attractions ait night.\nThe WoIseJey Silver Band In a.tendance.\nReduced Passenger Rates\nEntries for races close June 29.    Other\nentries close July 6. -\nOFFICE, HERALD BLOCK\nI. S. G. Van Wart, Pks. E. L. RicfunJion, Mp.\nIf a Referendum was taken on \"which\nis the best \"Packet Tea?\" there\nwould be a unanimous\nvote for\nKootenay Engineering Works\nFOUNDERS AND MACHIMSTS\nMANUFACTURERS OF THE CRAWFORD AERIAL TRAM WAT\nRepairing and Jobbing a Spec alty\nSbeetmetal Work, Castings, Builders' Material and Mining and Mill Machinery.\nPHONE 104.\nOtflce and Works\u2014Foot of Park Street\nB. O. TRAVIS\nMANAGER.\nNBLSON, B. a\nTh,- Ri.l>. Mi-li-u I\nROBERTSON'S\nDUNDEE\nWHISKY\n fK-\nTHE  DAILY  NEWS,  NELSON, B. C, FRIDAY, JUNE  28,   1907\nDOMINION DAY CELEBRATION\nFoot Ball\nCoal Creek, Champions of Crow's Nest Pass\nvs. Nelson, Champions of West Kootenay\nCRICKET, Trail vs. Nelson\nBASE BALL      CALEDONIAN SPORTS\nLACROSSE, Nelson vs. Vancouver\nTWO GALA DAYS\nPony Races and Lawn Tennis\nMusic by Nelson City Band\nSpecial Rates on All Railways\nIlluminated Launch Races\nFIREWORKS      LOG ROLLING CONTESTS\nPARADE      GUN CLUB TOURNAMENT\nFIREMENS' TOURNAMENT\nNelson, B. C, July I &t and 2nd\nAdmission to Grounds, Morning 25c,   Grand  Stand  Free.       Afternoon 50c,  Grand  Stand   25c\n-OR SUMMER HOLIDAYS\nCLOSING EXAMINATIONS AT ST. JOSEPH'S SCHOOL YESTERDAY\nLIST   OP   PRIZE  WINNERS   AND   OF\nTHOSE PROMOTED\nSt. Jceeph'a school cfosed yegterdwy for\n.tlio Hummer holidays. The pupils assembled \u00bbt 2 p.m. ond Rev. Father Althoff presided nnd dispersed the test'monbils cf\ngood conduct and application, the premiums in vnilous classes a* & also tlie gold\nmedals for -pee-i. competition.\nTlio distribution wus prefaced by an\naddress lo the pupils, Rev. Father Althoff\ncommending and congratulating the prise\nwinners and giving w.'rds of kind nnd helpful encouragement to the less fortunate\nbut often more pr_.l-_t-_.tr.hy. p.Uent nnd\nindustrious plod-dor. He laid particular\nstress on the ii_po t-ince and necessity of\nkeeping up a keen and constant competition, more especially in the god mi.lit I\n(\u25a0out. _is. Finally, in announcing the holidays he reminded the -children that al-\nthongli dispensed from .the usual school\nmeetings and studies, there wa? no ces-\n.-tion from their duties to Ood; and not\nto forget that during vacation as well us\nschool days they must dcpo;t themselves\nIn -i innnner creditable to themselves, their\nparents, tluir city and the school In which\n. thoy were educated.\nPRIZE LIST\nFirst Preparatory Class\u2014Florence Lean,\n1st; Oeorgie Hart, 2nd; Douglas Lennle,\nHomco nnd Anton'o -Nadeau good progress.\nSecond Prepnrtory -Class-Johanna Cho-\nfiue:te, 1st; Pauline Anderson, 2nd; Bertha\nSwedberg, Cyill Hodge, Henrleta Sturgeon,\ngood progress.\niPirst Primer CM.s-Syd. Deslreau. 1st;\nBessie Mooney, 2nd; Anthony Sconlon,\nClifford   McKlnnon,   good  p-ogress.\nSecond Primer Class\u2014June Ink, 1st; Ursula Hlnton, 2nd; Mary Wall, Clarence\nLyonnals, Oood progress*. Major Plato,\npenmanship; Margaret Wall, deportment;\nLizzie McKlnnon, Chris.Ian doctr.ne.\nJunior III Grade\u2014Charlie Madden, 1st;\nMnggie Qreyerblebl, 2nd,\nSenior III Grade \u2014 Elsie Grlisar'e, 1st;\nStella Lyonnals, John O'Gonski, cqu.il 2nd;\nIrene Nadcn-u, spell ling; Har M Plato,\ndrawing; John O'Genskl, Christian doctrine.\nIV Grade\u2014Annie CWrlson. 1st; Minnie\nAnderson, 2nd; Frank O'Genskie, Chils-\ntlati doctrine; Alfred BowleB, Do'phln L\u00bby-\nunnalBe, equal1 in drawing; Annie Carlson,\n1st Junior drawing class, Elsie GrlKelle,\n2nd; Wanda Hooper, good p.ogrs.._.\nJunior V Grade\u2014Mnrguerite Hlnton, 1 t;\nBernardlne Bosquet, 2nd; H.i_el Lund, penmanship; Fred Grant,  good piog ess\nSenior V Grade\u2014Edith Lund, let; Margaret Harwood, 2nd.\nSenior VI Grade-Ruth 8 anton, 1st; Evn\nBourke, 2nd.\nJunior VII Grade\u2014Leo McKlnnon, 1st;\nKiln Madden, 2nd.\nMusic ClaBs\u2014Ida Julien, 2nd prize, senior\nB grade; Ruth Stanton, 1st prize, sen'or A.\nGrade; Laura Thorp, 2nd pr'-se, senior A.\nGadc; Hazel Lund, 1st p lie, intermediate\nGrade; Lola Bennett, 2nd pr'ze, Intermediate Grade.\nSunday   school\u2014Jessie   Hyland,   proflsl-\n- ency; Leo Deslreau, Wilfrid Audet, Cha He\nScanlan, good attendance, 4\nSPECIAL COMPETITION PRIZES\nGold modal for Chrlst'an doctr ne, donated hy Rt. Rev. Bishop Don enwlll.\u2014\nWon by Leo. McKlnnon, 2nd Margaret\nIt-arwood.\nGold mednt for complete attendance at\nSunday ..chool, donated by Rev. J. Allho.f\u2014\nWon  by Sadie Madden.\nGold medal for Scrip:ure history, do-\nrmtcd by Rev. J. Althoff\u2014Won by Minna\nHlnton; 2nd Alfred Bowles,\nGold medal -for deportment, donated by\nRev, Mother Prnv'nd -1, St. Joseph's, Bei-\nllngham\u2014Won by Hazel Luml.\nGold modnl for go era. proficiency, donated by Sister- of St, Joseph\u2014Won by\nRuth Stanton.\nGold metal fo* mu Ic, donated by A A.\nPerr.er-Won by Ed'h Lund.\nGold medal for drawing, donated by S's-\nters of S;. Jooepli-Won by Eva Maquis.\nPROMOTION LIST\nFrom 1st preparatory to fcrade 1\u2014Flcr-\nnece Lean, Mary Madden, Ella Donaldson,\nDouglas Lennle, Geo. glo Hart, Fmnklo\nArnold, Uu'- Choquette, Thomas* Morrison.\nGrade 1 to (rode 3-Johanna Choquette, ,\nPaulino Anderson, Bertha Swedberg, Henrietta Sturgeon', Alberta O'Malley, Annie\nO'Genskl, Rose O'Genskl, Edna Lean, foal>\nWhite, Itiislit jEiL-iulmet), Cyril Hodge, Wllllnm 8lri._h..ii, Wilfrid Audet, Robert\nMooney Romeo Nadeau, Antonio Nadeau.\nGrade 2 to grade _--Iu__l- Mooney, Rosio\nChoquette, DoM Ink\/-Rose'Ann Mooney,\nRule Strachan, Isabella Cartel; Edna Mi_-\nloue,   Uosle   Magllo,   Uyd.   Deslreau,   An-\nTlie past is dead.   We live in the present,\n\"Progress Brand\"\nClothing\nfor progressive men who want\u2014not\nthe clothing that was best 20 years\nago \u2014but the clothing THAT IS\nBEST TODAY. Do you wear\n\"PROGRESS BRAND\"?\nJ. H. WALLACE\nthony  Scanlan,   Clifford  McKlnnon.  John\nO'Malley, Ludfrer Clioquette, Arthur Choi\nque, to. .\nGrade 3 to Junior 4\u2014June Ink, Ursula\nHlnton, Mary Wall, Margaret. Wait, L*_zle\nMcKlnnon, Jessie Hyland, Maud le Ivans,\nLizzie Swedberg, Major Plato, Clarence\nLyonnalB, Howie Hoequot, Henry Swedberg.\nJunior 4 to Senior 4\u2014Charlie Mndden,\nMaggie Greyerbiehl, Kathleen McBride,\nLouis Jacquimen, Norbon Choquette, Joseph Choquette.\nSenior 4 to Jnn \"or 5-K1 ie GrluoIIe,\nStel.'n Lyonnals, John O'Genskl. Wanda\nHooper, Janet Adie, Laura Foley, Rene\nNadcnu, 1,1111.* Bowles, Margaret McDonald,  Elmer Anderson. -\nSenior 5 to Junior fl\u2014Anna. Carlson, Minnie. Anderson, -.rank O'Genski, Alfred\nHowies, -*.id!c Mndden, Crawford Fennel),\nDolphin  Lyonnals.        |\nJunior _ to Senior 6\u2014 Marguerite Hlruon.\nBernndlne Bcsquet, Hazel Lund, James\nMoBrlde,  Fred Grant.\nSenior ii to Jun'or 7\u2014Edith Lund, Margaret  Harwood, Minna  Hlnton.\nSenior 7 to Junior It\u2014Ruth Stnn:on, Eva\nBurke. Eva Marquis,\nJunior _ to Senior S - Leo McKlnnon, Ella\nMndden, Lola Bennett, Ida Jul'en, Agnes\nHarwood, Josie  Melt Ide.\nBABYJ-i\n\"DEFFNCEl\nCOLIC  AND DIARRHOEA\nPains In the stomach, colic and diarrhoea\narc quickly relieved by the use of Cham-\nberlnln's Col.ic, Cholera and Diarrhoea\nRemedy, For sale by ail druggists and\ndealers,\nTreat your friends right. A full line of\nholiday goods nnd fancy groceries at the\nBell Trad ng company's store.\nM qard'i Liniment used by Pf|y\u00abiu)ii)f\nLAUNDRY  BURNED.\nWoman and Five Children Cremated ln\nQuick Blaze.\nOttawa, June 27.\u2014Fire started In a\nsteam laundry at Arnprior this morning\nat 2 o'clock antl so quickly burned the\nDultdlng that one woman and four children were burned to death. The husband\nrushed out to get some water to put out\nthe flre, which he thought was a -mall\none but a gasoline explosion ensued and\nthe family was lost In the flames. The\nname of the family Is Armstrong and\nthe husband was manager of the laundry. $1000 damage waa done before the\nflre was subdued.\t\nGIN PILLS\nCURB 13\nKidney Troubles\nDlff'creut  Vurlotloa of\nTAING'S\nCunnod Minis to Choose From\nBaby's\nn se\u2014an d\nevery toilet\npurpose as\ngood a soap\nas \"Baby's\nOwn\" cannot\nbe bought for as little\nmoney. 1-07\nAlbert So.p. Ltd. Mfr... Montr..!.\nBeware of imitations and substitutes\naccept tune but the genuine \" Baby's\nOwn.\"\nYour food 11 more tJ-iciotu\nwtien you uie WINDSOR, the\npure, (ne TABLE SALT,   lu\nuvour it u delightful u it is biting.\niH\nHOUSTON SCHOOL\nCANNON  HILL,   SPOKANE,   WASH.\nProtestant Boarding School for Boys\nPrepare* thoroughly for hest colleges,\nuniversities, scientific schcoteaiid for business.\nAll masters nre sped'ait-ls, experienced\neolfege graduates and give thorough individual Instruction.\nHealthful location and mltd climate. Athletic sports in charge of special Instructors.\nHome comforts nnd constant supervision\nfor boarding pupils. Limited number of\nvacancies. Catn.'ogue sent upon request.\n.\u2022.DC-Alt F. STRONG. A.M., Head Master\nNelson'B    pfcasurc-lovlng    public   spends\nmuch time-on the lake und for\nRowboats, Canoes and launches\nthe finest lot ever offered for salo or hire\nIn B.C., are at Lindsay's Boathouse, foot\nof Josephine itreet.\nHOTEL DIRECTORY\nPHOENIX\nHOTBL BAUCO-lAlv TOJBNIX, B.C.-\nThe leading hotel of Boundary''- .\"-ding\nmining camp. Strictly first cfaiw, -\u00ab\u2022\u00bb\u25a0-\ntnilly loomed, John A, McMnster, Proprietor.\nHOTEL   BROOKLYN,   PHOENIX\u2014THE\nonly up to date hotel in Phoenix. Now\nfrom cellar to roof. Best samp'e rooms\nin the Boundary. Bath room in connection. Steam heat. Opposite Great Northern depot.   Jas.  M;irsl__ir, Proprietor.\nYMIR\nWALDORF HOTEL, YMIR, B.C.-HEAD-\nquarters for Mining and Commercial\nmen. Most comfortable hotel in the district. Sample rooms In connection. Geo.\nColeman, proprietor.\nGRAND FORKS\nHOTEL  PROVINCE,   GRAND   PORK%-\nThe headquatiters for tourist. Satisfaction guaranteed. Emil Larson (late of\nNelson) Proprietor.\nHOTEL VALHALLA, NEWLY AFPOINT-\ned. Best rooms in the City, Sample\nrooms in connection, hot and cold -baths,\ndining room and liquors of the hest.\n'Bus meets an trains. Proprietor, Soren\nNelson, formerly of Nelson, B.C.\nARROWHEAD\nTHE UNION HOTEL, ARl i'IiBAO-\nSpecial attention given to commercial\nmen and tourists. First class sample\nrooms. Finest scenery In British Columbia, overlooking Upper Arrow lake, W.\nJ, Llghtburne, Proprietor,\nOutlet Hotel, Proctor\nAn Ideal location for fishermen arid tourists; good -firmly beach for -bathing; all\nboats stop at the hotel .special attention to\nladles and children.\nG. & J. SNOW, Proprietors\nCLUB HOTEL\nSTURGEON A GRANT. Proprietors\nThe  BIG SCHOONER of Beer or halt\nnnd  half, 10 cents.    The  only g'ass  of\nBeer in Nelson.\nHotel   accommodation-' s.cond   to   none\nin  British   Columbia.    Ruled  tl   p.r  day.\nSpecial rates to monthly boarders.\nSherbrooke House\nNELSON,   B.C.\nOne mi. lit-*., walk frum C.P.R. station.\nCuisine unexcelled; $1 rooms, well heated\nnnd ventilated.\nBOYER  BROS.,   Proprietors.\nMADDEN HOUSE\nBAKBR ST., NET SON,. B.C.\nDo you need n comfortable home? If ao\ntry the Madden House, Well furn-shed\nrooms, lighted with electricity; with hatha;\nfirst class board. In the bar you will find\nall the best domestic and Imported liquors\nand cigars.\nTHOMAS MADDEN, Proprietor\nE0YAL hotel\nTELEPHONE _3\nMRS.    WM.   ROBERTS,   Proprietress\nThe best meals that can be provided in\nthis market, cooked under the supervision\nof the proprietress, who Is a favorite\ncaterer.\nNice ulry rooms, newly furnished; bath\nfor guests.\nThe -best wines, liquors and cigars can\nbe obtained at the bar.\nTERMS: Jl AND 11.50 PER DAY\nCOR.   STANLEY   AND   SILICA   STS.\nCars Pass the Door\nLAKEWEW HOTEL\nCOR.  HALL AND VERNON 8*1*8.\na_0_0_ HARRISON, Proprietor\nTwo 1)lo-kn from City Wharf.  The belt\ndollar a duy house In Ne nun.\nNO CHINESE EMPLOYED\nKOOTENAY HOTEL\nMRS. MALLETTK, Proprietress\nA  home  for  everybody.    Every convel-\nence given .to the travelling pub... _9\u00abctrtc\nPiano.   Cuisine uuexceilled.   Rates $1 per\nday.\nBARTLETT  H0TTSF\nTbt best 11. a day home In\ntown.      A   Miner's   Von*.\n0. W. BASTW-IT - Pr.p.1\nKootenay\nFruit Lands\nBurton City and Fire\nValley Fruit and Farm\nLands are the be t sellers\nnow.\n15 months ago I purchased from original locators about 5000 acres of\nFruit Lands near Burton\nCity. Since then I have\nbeen getting the titles\nand having them sub\ndivided into 10,15 and 20\nacre blocks. One month\nago I began to advertise\nthem and have disposed\nof nine 15 acre blocks and\ntwenty-one 20 ac. blocks,\naveraging more than one\nblock per day.\nThe reasons why Bur\nton  City   lands  sell so\nreadily are as follows:\n1\u2014The hnd hue a good surface loam wilh\na ctny s\u2014\u2014oil.\n2\u2014It Is free from atones.\n3\u2014It Is nearly level and lias n gentle\nslope, none of It being more than 100 feet\nabove the lake.\n4\u2014The public know I can furnish a good\ntitla at once.\n.-They know I have had ft wide experience In fruit lands und am pruparcd\nto prove any slutenunts  mentioned here.\n6\u2014Because I am a prac.lcal fruit grower,\nhaving over _0O frull trees on my home\nfarm, and buyers get Ihe benefit of my\nexperience.\n7\u20141 am also prepared to c_ftr land, plant\nIt and care for It until such time ns my\ncustomers  are  prepared   to Hike  It over.\nA   SNAP\none improved 20 acre\nfruit farm for sale fronting on the lake.has a nice\nbeech and in a good locality, 2 1-2 miles north\nof Burton City. 5 acres\ncleared and ploughed, 175\nfruit tree?, a nice creek\nruns through the property\nsoil is good and no waste\nland. Daily boat service.\nThis is one of the prettiest p!aces on the Arrow\nLakes and will make a\nnice home in the heart of\nthe fruit growing district.\nPrice $100 per acre, 10\nper cent, down, balance\ncan be arranged\nJ. E. ANNABLE\nNELSON, B. 0.\nNELSON CAFE\nFirst Class Meats.   Furnished rooms\nla connection,   open daj and night.\nFirst-Class Lun-ch\nfrom 13 noos\nto 2 ., m.\nSPECIAL\nauttr nun torn I t. I \u00bb _.\nBaker St.\nPhone 275\nA. AUDET, Prop.\nNelson Steam Laundry\nP.O. Box 18.    Telephone 146\nAll  kinds and all co'urs of Ladles' nnd\nGents'  Clothing\nCLEANED AND D-TED\n.\"mmi. 1., Blanket-, Curtnlns, Si Its. lta,\na specialty.\nGloves  renovated  to  look  like  new.\nSteam Carpet Cleaning\nYour patronage solicited.\nPAUL HIFOtr, Prop.\nCOAL! W00D1\nWe now have a stock\nof GALT COAL\nPhone 265\nYALE-K00T-N.Y  ICE, FRUIT\nFUEl & POM TRY CO., ITD.\nnttlee: NI. Car. Baker A Ward 8U.\nCANADIAN\n^.Pacifi.c:\niAlLW-Y CO.\nS mmer Excursion\nBates East\nFROM NELSON\n$52.50\nto Winnipeg:,  Port  Arthur. St. Pau\nDuluth, Sioux Oity\nSt. Louis $0000\nChicago $04 Oi\nToronto $78 60\nOttawa $8266\nMontreal $84 00\nSt John $94 00\nHalifax $10180\nBoston $8550\nNow  ?ork $10000\nTickets on sale July 3, 4. i,\nAug 8, 9,10; Sept 11,12,13\nFirst-Class Rouijd Trip 90 Days limit\nCorresponding reductions from all Koo:e-\nnay points. Tickets avallabfe for lake\nroute Including meala and berths on lake\n\u25a0_t.nin.-N. Through nil.'- ciuoted to*any\nstation In Ontario, Quebea or Maritime\nprovinces on application.\nJ. 8. CARTER,      _0.M. OOYLI.\nD.P.A., NeUon.  A.Q.P.A., VU-ioaT\u00ab\nAtlantic S. S. Sailings\nC.P.R.   ROYAL   MAIL   STEAMSHIPS\nMONTREAL A QUEBEC TO LIVERFOl_I_\nEmp. Bilt-.iii.Jime M,, Ch ampin In. July |\nEmp. Ireland..July 1_L. Erie   July  _0\nEmpre_ses salt from Quebec.\nALLAN LINE\nIonian  June 9 Virginian  July 5\nTunisian   ....July   1_ Victorian  ....Juy  lit\nDOMINION   LINE\nCanada    July   ti Ottawa    July   IJ\nATLANTIC   TRANSPORT   UNE\nMinneapolis  July 5\nAMERICAN  LTNB\nNew York ....July 6 St. Louis  ....July 11\nRED STAR LINB\nVaderland  ....July 6 Kroonland ....Ju'y 1_\nCUNARD   LINE\nCarmania  ....July _ Umbrla  jU!y 8\nWHITE STAR   UNE\nArabic    July 4 Republic   ....July   ]_\n\"rPT*lV*\"TT   I 'VT\nLa Tournainc.July 4 La Provence..July 11\nHAMBORG-AM1-RICAN LINE\nKalseriu Aug. Victoria   July 11\nItatiiv-i   July  13\nv \u00bbHTH GERMAN-LLOYD\nPrincess Irene   July 13\nNeckar July 20\nIf you .ire going to Europe call or write\nus for particulars\nAll i-iriiin-ntal rates and sailings OB ap-\nillcatlon. If jrou are contemplating taking\n.n ocean voyage drop us a llns \u00ab*_< we\n-rill be pleased ts furnish you witli (nil t_.\normatlon  promptly.\nT. B. CARTER,   W. P. F. CTJMMINO*,\nD.P.A. KslsA-i      Qta. Act, Wlnmlpsfl\nSynopsis of Canadian\nHomestead Regulations\nANY available Dominion Lnnds within the\nRailway Belt of Btt Ish Columbia mny be\nhomeateaded by any persons who is  the\nsole head   of a   f.imliy,   or any male over\nis yeara of age, to the extent of one-quarter section of li_> acrea, more or leaf*.\nEntry must he made personally at the\nlocal land office for the district In which\n(he land Is situate,\nThe homesteader is required to perform\nthe condition, connected therewith Under\none of the following p.'ans:\n1. At least alx months' resilience upon\nand cultivation of the land In eaeh year\nfor three years.\n2. If the fa.her <or mother, If the father\nIs deceased) of the ho_em-teiuler resides\nupon a farm In the vicinity of _*_, hind\nentered for. the requirements as 90 H si-\ndence may bo satisfied by such person\nresiding with the father or mother.\n3. If tlie se.tler lias his permanent residence upon farming land owned by him In\nthe vicinity of his homestead, the requirements .'is to residence may be satisfied by\nresidence upon the  sa'd land.\nSix months'-notice in writing shou'rl bo\ngiven to the Commission tr of Domliflon\nLands at Otmwa of Intention lo apply for\npatent.\nCoal tanxjs may be purchased .it .10 an\nacre for soft coal and (20 for anthracite.\nNot more than 3-0 ncres can be acquired\nby one Individual or company. Royalty\nat the rate of 10 cents per ton of HOW\npounds shall be collec ed on the gross output D. A.  CORY,\nDeputy   Minister   of the   Interior.\nN.B.-Unauthorized publication of tins\nadvertisement will not  be pnid tor.\nSpokane and Return\n$880\nAccount annual convention of the Baptist Young People's llalon. On sale July\n3 ami 3.   I'liiat limit Jul)' 10.\nTO ,\nSeattle and Return\n$22.30\nAccount International Christian Endeavor Convention. On aule July 8 nnd 9. lie-\nturn  limit July  -3rd.\nFor further information call on or address.\nW. A. ROSS, H. E. DOUI.-TM8,\nA.U.P.A., B-fttUe. C.P.A., city.\nJ*\n\"V*\n**-,\n THE  DAILY  NEWS,  NELSON,  B. C   FRIDAY, JUNE 28,   1907\nTWENTY YEARS LEADER\nLAURIER'S LONG  LEADERSHIP  IN\nCANADIAN1   LIBERALISJM.\nPARTIAL  REVIEW   OP   INCIDENTS\nIN NOTABLE CAREER.\nOu the 23rd of thla month, laat Sunday sir Wilfrid Laurler had been leader\nof the liberal party in Canada for a\nperiod of twenty years. The Montreal\nHerald commemorates this event by publishing a vp*ry interesting review of the\nleader's work during thoee years. Prom\nthe Herald's admirable story we take\nthe following excerpts;\n\"Twenty years ago on Sunday ,-that\nIs to say on June 23,1887, the announcement was made to the liberal members\nabout to leave Ottawa on prorogation of\nthe house, that Mr. Laurier felt bound,\nmuch against his own wish and Judgement, to bow to the wish of the liberal\ncaucus, and accept the leadership lhat\nhad been unanimously tendered him on\nJune 7th. Sir Wilfrid Laurler, therefore,\ntoday completes twenty years of service\nas leader of the liberal party, exactly 9\nul which were spent in opposition. It\nwill probably come as somewhat of a\nsurprise tliat he has been so long In the\nharness, but there is the record.\n\"The success of the Laurier leadership, however, did not grow over-night.\nIt-took a long time. In Ontario there\nwas a long period during which the moit\nfriendly were honestly doubtful whether\na French Canadian Catholic leader\ncould command the loyal support of tlie\nparty that had received its gospel from\nUeorge Brown. The \"musket\" speech\nwas instantly and insistently paraded.\nAnd If ln Ontario there was a suspicion,\nwhich political leadership couldn't last,\nin Quebec there was a suspicion which\npolitical opponents found it expedient\nio intensify, that it wouldn't be allowed to continue, at all events past stage\nof success at a general election. After\nthat, Quebec liberals were told, some\none else would lead, and Laurier be relegated to a secondary station.\nForeknowledge of all this, we may\nbe sure, was in Mr. Laurler's mind during the eventful fortnight which he spent\nin urging resistence to the decision ol\nthe caucus. It was on the seventh of\nJune, 1887, upon motion of sir Richard\nCartwrlght and Mr. Mills, that Mr. Laurler was elected leader of the liberal\nparty. It was not until the 23rd of June\nand even then only with great reluctance and after trying In every way to\nbe allowed his assent to the resolution\nof caucus to be made known.\n\"But if he knew his difficulty, the\nknowlodge did not lead him to run away\nfrom It. On the contrary, he proceede'l\nalmost at once to make a personal test\nof Ontario's feelings towards him. He\naddressed a series of meetings, many of\nthem in the open air. He caught on.\nHis syle was different from anything\nOntario had known, but Ontario Hked\nit. Ontario conservatives went to hit'\nmeetings out of curiosity ,and came back\nwith a secret liking for the attarctlve\npersonality. He did not hurt their feelings, and they patronizingly compared\nhim, to his advantage, with sir Richard\nCartwrlght, who struck hard blows on\nprinciple, and who liked \"to hear the\nJackals yelp.\" There was no real enthusiasm .however, until, at a meeting\nln Muskoka, someone was foolinsh\nenough to interrupt just at the moment\nwhen the spell of the orator lay heaviest upon his audience. With a single\nphrase he drove the crowd into an outburst of cheering\u2014and Ontario has been\ncheering ever since.\n\"But tbere was harder work than that\nto face. Opposition to the government\nln Miose early dayB took two forms, one\nof them was the propaganda looking to\nunrestricted reciprocity with the United\nStates, and of this sir Richard Cart-\nwright was the leader; Uie other was\na movement against the French language .against separate schools .against\nine Jesuit Order ,and of this Mr. D'Alton\nMcCarthy was the leader. Mr. Laurier\ncould do Utile more than apply himself to holding the liberal party together. He and his party accepted sir Richard Cartwright's trade policy, but it soon\nbecame known that Mr. Blake was\nagainst it, and Mr .Blake's prestige with\nthe liberal party was not a thing to he\ndissipated by the first rays of the morning sun. Mr. McCarthy's activity, on\nthe other hand, constituted a realization of Mr. Laurler's early apprehension\nfor every word spoken at a McCarthy\nmeeting militated against the success of\na French and Catholic leader.\n\"Fortunately, the religious Issue had to\nbe faced In good time, while the elections of 1891 were still far off.    Mr.\nMw-Mer. now in power in Quebec, had\nperformed a surgical operation in politics by putting through a drastic settlement of the century-old Jesuits, estates I\ndispute,  from   which   his  predecessor. I\nhad all carefully steered clear.   Mr. McCarthy and his followers in the house\nand in the country demanded that the\nmeasure be disallowed by the federal iu\nthority.   The liberal leader, obliged to\ntake sides, decided that the Quebec legislature had acted within lta power, and\nthat there was no case for intervention.\nHe made a fine speech at Ottawa, but\nthe atmosphere of  parliament   is   not\nthat of the hustings, and Mr. McCarthy\nw< s cerrying the flrery cro-s through Oa-\n.arlo.    Mr. Laurler decided to follow.\nHe seems to have had from the first a\nclear perception that the only possible\nanswer to racial and religious distrust\nwas to face it.    amaHer-souled politicians advised him then, as they havo\nadvised him since, to bow before It, to\nrun away from It, to do anything but\nface it.   When he proposed going to Toronto to answer Mr. McCarthy, his Judgment was endorsed by none of the older\nand but a handful of the younger men\namongst the parity leaders there.    His\nInstinct was right, however.    The old\npavilion In the   Horticultural   Gardens\nwas packed to the roof, and the majority\nwere friendly.   Down on the floor there\nwas an organized opposition, composed\nof a couple of hundred men who wer.\ndetermined to spoil the speech.    They\nhooted at everything and at   nothing.\nThey hooted once too   often, for that\nonce the tall, supple figure straightened\nout, the long right arm was   raised In\ntense dramatic protest .and   the rich,\ngold-toned voice, with a touch of passion In it, demanded to know why one\nshould be hls&ed for having the courage\nof his convictions. Cheering broke Ioobo;\nthe hooters cheered; they kept on cheering till the end of the speech. Doubting\nliberals plucked up courage. The Laurler leadership was taking hold.\n'Mt was during this great election if\n1891 that Mr. Laurier became in reality\na national figure. 'A new face,' a Toronto paper observed, had caught the\neye of the Canadian   people,   wherever\nllcltude for hla warmth and comfort avail\nto pull lilm through the ordeal. In the\nsummer ot -896, fine though the weather\nWas, the strain upon the man upon whom\nall eyes were turned waa tremendous. He\nwas wanted everywhere and, putting himself in the hands of hla friends, he cheerfully essayed the tmposs'b'e. In Ontario\nhis meetings were Roman triumphs, their\nsuccess being all* the more notable when\ncompared with the relative fa!lu;o of sir\nCharles Tapper's tour In some respects\nnothing has ever been seen In this country\nA B\\\nSIR WILFRID LAURIER\nthey might be, from Sydney,to Esquimau. And a handsome face it was a]\nit looked out from the photographs ot\nthose days, where alone nineteen in\nevery twenty had any chance to see .t.\nIt was a face that made strong appeal\nto the youth of the dominion, one tha.\nprovided inspiration for the hosts of\nyounger liberals who, after the party\nhad been thirteen yeara In opposition,\nwere coming into their share of the\nlighting. 'That grand young man,' was\nwhat Hon. S. H. Blake called him, and\nof those who knew the 'young man\" b>\nhis pictures hardly one in a.thousanl\nstopped to think, before joining in the\nroof-raising cheer .that the original wa.\na hearty young fell w who wa? just turning fifty. There is no doubt the Laurier\nportraits did make a deep impression,\nand that Impression was among Un\nmost curious political developments of\nour time. Sir John Thompson, It will h\u00b0.\nrecalled, was a great figure In that campaign. The other sir John purposely pul\nhim forward. He had a beautiful, belllike voice that it was a delight to listen\nto, he was an attractive speaker, a great\ndebater .and he had brought to the government its single Increase of reputation; but his face was not familiar to\nthe people in the way Laurler's was.\nNeither was any other save only sir J hn\nMacdonald's and that, nearly all had\ncome to realize, was being seen for the\nlast time. The curious phase of the\nbusiness was that while all Canada was\nlooking at the Laurier face and marking the Laurler name on the tablets of\nmemory, Laurler, the man was sticking\nclose to Quebec, where he was no newcomer. The tacticians of the party\nthought best to leave the Ontario part\nof the work to sir Richard Oartwright,\nand while the old lion did his work like\na Hon, there was a good deal of disappointment that the 'grand young man'\ndid not show himself oftener.\n\"After the election, Laurier began to\nlead. Mr. Blake's way of leading was\nto do all the work himself. The Laurler way was to keep a lot of others\nat work. There was plenty of work to\ngo round, ahd there was plenty of willing, capable workers. The new leader\ndrilled a corps of the hardest flghtera\nparliament has ever seen. Paterson, McMullen. Lister. Mulock .Edgar, Davies,\nPraser. Landerkln. Sutherland, and, late\nbut fateful acquisition, Tarte, they kept\nthe government on the griddle for five\ndesperale yeara. At the flrst sir John\nMacdonald was there; but sir John had\nflung his last challenge, had won his\nlast fight, and the winning had exhausted his strength. He died; and when he\nwaa gone the eyes of the country were\nconcentrated upon the countenance of\nthe 'grand young man,' who led the opposition. The others tried one after\nanother in the seat sir John Macdonald\nhad left vacant, but the public wouli\nnot take them seriously. Sir John Abbott and sir John Thompson came, and\nwere claimed by death. Sir Mackenzie\nBowell was put ,as he supposed, in the\npost of honor, to find himself in a nest\nof traitors. Sir Charles Tupper came\nback from England, but the people\nwould have no patience with him. The\nparty In office was not in power, and Its\nleaders were without authority even In\ntheir own house. They could put off the\nevil day, but defeat was Inevitable.\nIn the campaign of ISM Mr. I\/uirle. did\nthe hnnlest work of his life, Never phy-\n-icnlly robust, the Inconvenience,of travelling nmountf d In hla case to real dl .tress.\nLuckily the elections of IRK were held in\nthe -minnicr. Trnvelllhig In winter he\nil-Mids above all things.' Those who have\ncharge of the nnrangements on such oc-\newione know that only the greatest no\nlo equal sir Charles .'upper's performance\nHe knew how old he was, and knew, too.\nthat he wns swimming against the cur eut,\nbut how lie did swim No one who saw It\ncan ever forget how he stood for three\nmora: hours before a hostile Toronto audience, and with whnt serene cont mpt\nfor Interruption he bilked \u00bbliout tariffs,\nand railways and tlie Chigneoto ship projects and a flcaen other ihlnga, whl.e organized bands k pi nak'ng f< r ills views on\nManitoba, Even the ranks of Tuscany\ncould not forbear to cheer In Liuier's\nCASe it was one leng prolonged exultant\ncheer from end to end . f his meet tigs*\nHut ll was in Quebec thai he had to\nwork without ap irlng himself Quebec had\nnot yet been captured The candidates\nthought they could do It, but knew it wria\nuphill work Every man of them fort that\nthe presence of the premier !n his ild'ng\nwas needed tn tp the sealo When the list\nof demands was complete the Impossibility\nof satisfying them was evident, .ind tho\ntired warrior wus glad of the demonstration As nomination approached however,\ntho tvuul!da:e_ became Insistent. So the\nparly managers fell ban-!, on tlio expedient of having the leader show himself\nIn three or tour counties ever day. On\nnomination day he spoke at St. Rose, then\nat St. Buslache- got hack lo S'. Jerome \u00bbt\nnight and wtu-u those who had It In hand\nto put him on tim train for Montroat, went\nio look, they found him asleep on lhe aialr-\nCfllse. Nature seta Its llm'ts. Next morning\nthey brought him into Montreal, a doct- r\nmet him at the station and guve him a\ntreatment for Ilia overworked throat, and\nthen out with him 'igain to two or three\nmore counties, I; was do .perate work, the\nsupreme struggle of his l.te time, but lt\ntold mightily.\nThose who watched Ihe telegraphic bulletins coming In that nigh: In June rc-\nmember how it told. \"A gain in Quebec,\"\n\"another gain in Quebec,\" \"a sure majority\nin Quebes,\" \"a Mudslide In Quebec.\" Such\nwas the comment nt the side of every\ntelegraph Ins rument tn Canada. It \"had\nbeen freely prophesied. Mr. Tarte had\npledged It. Commeclul travel.lers work ng\nbuck from the terra incogn.ta of Quebec,\nheld expressed their apprehension of lt.\nBut whoever believed It wns set .down as\nmerely an Irreclaimable grit. Now it had\ncome and Laurler and the liberal party\nrode Into power on the crest of the wave.\nII liad taken n'ne yt-ars, to tile day to\nJustify the faith of those who bei eved him\ncapable of leading the l.beral party to\nvictory.\nThut was 11 years ago and 1\/iu lor nnd\nthe liberal party ure still in p wer. Indeed, It ia now u postulate of pol.tiea\nIn Mils country that the conservative party\ncannot hope to succeed \u00bbo long as sir\nWilfrid  Liuurler remains In public life.\nIu Incidents, the .-..ml period i.ns not\nbean much like the first. Perhaps becnuac\nhe has been very busy, as the head of\nthe nation muat he; peihaps because men's\neyes have been fixed miwe .\".ten on far\noff field-; perhaps because of lac h'a opponents hnve not gone in for the close In\nfighting of former daya; whatever the reason or reasons, the Laurler method of\nloading lias not been of late years whnt\nIt used to be. If he were to tour Ontnr'o\nnow a new genera.Ion of voters would go\nto   see and  hear   him   for  the   fi-ist   time.\nPerhaps he has forgotten tliat. Perhaps\nhe does not need to remember, Hie. whoNt\nlife la lived In public view, his every ao.\ntion Is submitted to imlveraal inspection,\nWhy expdln what Is alreudy patent to all.\nAt all events, what Is certain Is that\nthe prestige it the lead.r lias grown very\nst{<uil;y from the hour of his coming to\noffice, and tha. today he Is In a ciflsa by\nhimself, without a peer aid wl.hout a rival. That seems to be In keeping with an\n\u2022apparently inevitable tmdency In the\nworkings  of Bri Ish  parllnmeniury  insti\ntutions. The people have ey_B for only one\nman at a time, and so long aa he cui Justify reasonable expeotat'ons he can command the loyalty of the nines. Juat as\nPeel, Palmeraton, Glads.one and Salisbury\nwere supreme each in hla turn, In England; Juat as Pnpineau, I. ifi-nta'ne and\nCartler were supreme each In hla turn in\nQuebec; Just aa sir John Macdonald was\nsupreme In the new dominion, ao Is Bir\nW.ifrld Laurier supreme in Canada today.\nPolltoal prestige Is a tree of slow g ow.-h\nbut the growth Is sure and st'ady. In\nthe present case, for examp.'e, the p.'eatlge\nof Laurler throve upon the adh.slon of\n.nen like Mowat nnd M Us and Davies, and\nIt haa thriven upon their departu.e. Each\naccession of a strong man to his counsels\nhas brought him strength, as in ihe else\nof Fielding and Aiyleswoth; ea_h departure of a strong nu.ii from his counsels,\nob In the casea of Slfton and F.tzpa.f-'ck\nand Blair and Tarte nnd Mulock, has left\nhim revealed aB the one man -.round whom\nthe fates may move, but whom the fates\nreave untouched,\nThe Erst access of prestige came with\nthe preferential ti-rirf and the trip to England in the jubilee year, which followed.\nIt is ninusing io look back upon It but\nthere we e devoted folllcwera of sir Char.eB\nTupper who, after tlie elections of 1895\nwouM ff.av.ly affirm that Mr, Luu ler wa.\nnot pe;scn_ gratu in England nnd tha\nof a surety the fina-nees of the country and\nultimately Its general pospurlty must Buffer In consequence. We were soon to hear\nthe end of that. Mr, I_iurcr went to Eug-\nlaiid ln the summer of 1897 wl h the p.ef-\nerential p-llcy In his pocket; he captured\ninsluntly the Imaglnut'on of lhe alow moving British masses; he nlmoa divided the\nhonors of the oemst- n wth the queen her-\na.lf; he came back covered with deco a-\ntlons, designed to express the admiration\nand gniitl ude of tho British peoplte.\nEVERY MAN HIS OWN DOUTOlt\nThe average man cannot afford to employ a physician for every alight ailment\nor Injury that may occur In his family,\nnor can he afford to neglect them, as so\nalight an Injury na the -crutch of a pin\nhas be.n known to anise the losi of a\nlimb. Hence every man muat from necessity be his own doctor for this class\nof ailments, Success often depends upon\nprompt treatment, which can only be had\nwhen suitable medicines are kept at hand.\nChamberlain'** Remedies have been In the\nmarket for many years and enjoy a good\nreputation.\nChamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea   Remedy  for   bowel   camp alnts.\nChambcrlulns Cough Remedy for coughs,\ncolds, croup uud whooping cough.\nChamberlain's Pain Btxlm, an aiitia.ptle-\nllulment for cuts, bru'ses, burns, sprains,\nswelling-, lame back and rheumatic pains.\nChai_-.erfu.ir. s Stomach and Liver Tablets, for constipation, biliousness and stomach troubles.\nChamberlain's Salve for disease* of the\n-kin.\nOne bottle of ench of these five preparations costs but tl.26. For aale by all drug-\ngists  and dealers.\nMlnirtTl llninwi.* Lumberman*! Friend\nBISON-The comfort col*\nf larforallyoarwear.siii edtoany\ntie hut largo -mf)'*. IM In-hot at\nback,   -finchesatfionU\nLINEN\nCOLLARS\nCa\u00abtlo Brand cellars are made of\nIititm linen, because no lesser\nf ibilocan dofy wash-day u.ago.\nCut by expert- to braai bound\njKittornn and doublo-stltchcd to\nk_'\"> them . hn-iuly and uiska\nL almost wearproof.\nHiiniu stylo In Elk brand Is\nlarmona. ' WW\nDemand the Brand\nSBB*> pi*.\n2rl\nShoe Polish\nDon't be deceived by imitations. It means long life\nto your shoes to be sure\nof 2 in I\nBlack Kid Jl colon,\ntt ill   de-en,\n10c. ud  23b\nDa:nty, Appetising Dishes\nTAING'S\nWhy Pay Duty?\nWhy should you\u2014a\nCanadian\u2014give the preference to an imported ammunition\nto the detriment of your ownpurse,\nwithout any improvement in\nquality?\nDominion Ammunition\nis made in Canada by Canadians\nfrom the best materials and by the\nbest workmen. Its quality has\nbeen proved beyond doubt.\nThe price is lower because\nthere is no duty to pay.\nThis trademark guarantees\nquality,\nMMMON CAiT-lME CO., ltd., MntK-\nPROFESSIONAL CARDS\nMUKPHY & FISHER\nOTTAWA\nBarrister-, Solicitors, eto,\nParliamen.ary,   Departmental  and  Patent\nOffice   Agent,    practice    before   Hallway Commission.\nCHARLES MURPHY  HAROLD FISHBK\nA. L. McCULLOOH\nHYDRAULIC   ENGINEER\nPROVINCIAL LAJ.D SURVEYOR\nP.  O. Box 41\nOffice Phone B86      Realdcnce Phone Bit\nOffice: Over McDermld and MeHardr\nBaker Street Nelaon, B.C.\nE. STANLEY MITTEN\nARCHITECT\nCORESPONDBNCB   SOLICITED\nAddress:  70 Hastings  St.  W., Vancouver,\nB.C.     Phone 24\nS. S. FOWLER\nMINING ENGINEER\nNEI-SON, B. C.\nH. 0. BLACK\nB.  C,  LAND  SURVEYOR\nOtflce: M-ra Block        _\nP. 0. Box 147 Nelson, B.C.\nW. J. H. HOLMES\nCIVIL ENGINEER A MINE SURVEYOR\nPROVINCIAL LAND SURVEYOR\nKASLO, B.C.\nTen years eipnlenoe ln the Kootenays.\nHonor graduate, 1V.U, Royal* Mlllt.try College of Canada,  Kings.on.\nFREDERIC f>. CLEMENT\nCIVIL ENGINEER\nDOMINION   AND   PROVINCIAL   LAND\nSURVEYOR\nAgent (or obtaining Crown Grants, mine\nsurveying, etc.\nRoom A., K.W.C. Block\nP.O. Box 1 Nelson, B.C.\nP. C. Green    P. P. Burden    A. H. Green\nOreen Brothers & Burden\nCIVIL  ENGINEERS\nDominion and British Columbia I\/tnd\nSurveyors\nP.O. Box 145 Phone -IB\nCor.  Victoria and Kootenay Sts,\nNELSON, B.C.\nAll Aboard\nfor Coleman\nJuly 1st, 1907\nSCHEDULE  OF SPECIAL\nTRAIN FOR COLEMAN'S\nBIG CELEBRATION . . .\nFARES TRAIN\nRETURN -EAVES-\n|3.15 Craabrook  6:    8. m.\n12.80 Fort Steele 5:25 a.m.\n12.80 Mayook 5:36 a. m.\n$2.60 Wardner 6:55 a. m.\n$2.36 Jalfray  6:20 a. m.\n$1.95 Elko I'M a. ra.\n$1.70 Morrlssey  7:20 a. m.\n$1.55 0okato 7:30 a. m.\n$1.60 Fernle  1:*\u00bb *\u2022 m-\n$1.25 Hosmer 8:05 a.m.\n$1.00 Sparwood 8:80 a. m.\n.85 Michel  8:60 a. in.\n.40 Crow's Nest 9:40 a. m.\nArrives Coleman ....10:05 a. m.\nReturning train leaves Coleman at 11\np. m.\nB. M. STITT\nSECRETARY   SPORTS  COM-l\u00bbTT_E.\nJAMES MALOOr.M\nQ_N1-IAL BLACKSMITH\nSTUD-BAKER   WAGONS   FOR   SALB.\nHa.l St., Nolson,  B.C.\nPhone 221 P.O. Boi IU\n\u25a0_. \u25a0 **.\n.._\u25a0<*\u2022\nTHE DAILY NEWS CLASSIFIED ADS.\nThe best and cheapest means c_ reaching the people of the Kootenaya. A small\nadvertisement In these columns wlil bring big results..       .\nRATES\u2014One cent per wo.d ger Issue; six Insertions for the price of four la paid\nIn advance.\nClassified ads. win be received for laser .Ion until 9 o'clook' on the evening previous   to  publication.    Phone  14_. ^^^^___________\nFOR 8ALE\nPOR SALE\u2014Two lots on the best residential portion of Silica street west, near\nFalls street. . Also 6-room bouse on Car.\nbonate street with afii modern conveniences\nand garden with number of fruit trees.\nOne of the best locations In the ci y. Ap*\nply to J. O. Palenaude. 99-tt\nFOR SALE\u2014Ifason ond Rlsch Pta&o, near*\nly new; price 1260. App.y Standard Far*\nnlture Co. 42-tf\nFOR SALE\u2014Ten new Winchester repeating rifles, -5-70, high power, sighted to\n1000 yards, price .12 delivered . Six Colts,\nM. SpecWl, 33, SS, and _4 cal., new with any\nlength of barre.l, price $6, delivered. Two\n17-foot canoes, p-ddles, etc., capac! y four\nmen, new; p Ice 113 eaeh, both, f_6. Sport--\nmens' Exchange, Nauwlgewauk, N.-B. 69-6\nFOR   SALE-Hotel  with  old  established\ntrade, in prosperous Koctenay town. Particulars   apply  to   Peterson   Bros.,   Trail.\nA bargain, 64-6\nFOR SALE\u2014A piano, tuned and In perfect\ncondition,  very  aultabe  tor  beginners;\ntM,   on   easy  terms,    Geo.   G.   McLaren,\nBaker Street. V>*4\nFOR SALE\u2014Two waterwhee's, aa lo'lows:\nNo. 2 Pelton wnterwheel. San Francisco;\nNo.  S Tuthlll  waterwheel,   Oakland  Iron\nWorks, Oakland, Cal.   Apply Dally News.\nFOR SALE\u2014Oood ranch  horse, $75; one\nnew Centrifugal pump, for 11-2 Inch pip?.\n$50;   20th   Century  Smith  Grubber   Stump\nPuller.   J.E.A., Care Dally News.      48-tt\nFOR SALE-Cucumber and tomato plants.\nF. H. Black, Nelson. 36-tt\nFOR SALE-Hotel in best location In Nelson; the beat known hotel In thr Kootenaya; |1 and up; with a private residence\nattached and up to date; lot -20x60, Apply\nP.O. Box 246. _B-tf\nFOR SALE-Four timber claims on north\nfork of Kettle river.   Appy Snyder and\nGreer,  Grand  Forks,  B.C. 28-tf\nFOR SALE-Old paper- suitable for wrapping parci-tH.   The Dally News.\nFOR RENT\nFOR   RENT\u2014Furnished  rooma   on  Blllca\nSt. .opposite English church. H-6\nFOR RENT\u2014Furnished front room In private  family,  close In  on car  line,  no\nother roomers or children; modern conveniences,   CD., Dally News,\nFOR RENT\u2014Four unfurnished rooms In\nbest block in Baker St., together or separate, suitable for offices or resldenoe.\nR.F., Daily News.\nWHOLESALE HOUSES\nPRODUCE\nBTARKET ft CO., WHOLESALE DEAL-\ners In But.er, Eggs, Clues-, Produce and\nFruit. Houston Brock, Josephine street,\nNelson, B.C.\nGROCERIES\nA. MACDONALD & CO.-WHOLESALE\nGrocers and Provision Merchants\u2014importers of Teas, Coffees, Spleen, Dried\nFruits, Staple and Fancy Groceries, Tobaccos, Cigars, Butter, Eggs, Cheese and\nPacking HouBe Products. Office nnd\nwarehouse, corner of Front tnd Halt\nStreets.    P.O.   Box 1096.    Telephone  2H.\nCAMP   AND   MINERS'    FURNISHINGS\nA. MACDONALD A CO.\u2014WHOLESALE\nJobbers In Blankets, Underwear, M.tts,\nGlove.., Boots, Rubbers, Overalls, Jumpers, Mackinaw- and Oilskin Clothlrg,\nCamp and Miners' Sundries. Office nnd\nWarehouse corner of Front and Halt\nstr\u00abets.   P.O. Box 1005.   Telephone 38.\nASSAYERS'  SUPPLIES\nTHB B.C. ASSAY ft CHEMICAL SUPPLY\nCo., Ltd., Vancouver, B.C.\u2014Importers\nand Dealers ln Assayers' Supplies. Sole\nagents In British Columbia for the celebrated Batteraea Crucible, Scorl lers and\nMuff ts nnd Wm. Alnsworth ft Co.'s fine\nBalances, Chemlcnl and pliy-Vcat Apparatus, C.P. Adds and Chemical Pfa-\ntlnum, Sodium and Potassium Cyf-nlde,\nQuicksilver, Carbonate ond Bicarbonate\nof Soda, Borax, Borax Glass, Sliver, Free\nLead and Litharge.\nMINING AND MILLING MACHINERY\nWASHINGTON MACHINERY ft SUPPLY\nCo.\u2014Dealers In Engines, Band nnd Circular Sawmll a, Atkins' Saws, Wood and\nIron Pulleys, Leyner Compressors and\nDrills, Pumps and Hoists. Prompt attention. Reasonable prices. C-iirteous\ntreatment,   Spokane, Wash.\nLIQUORS\nSWEETEST\nOranges\nIN TOW*\n__.-\u2022-__ AT\nJo|V IM Broeery\nt* A am. at JoMpktM ul Wart Mfc\nS*f wm urt \/\u00ab*.*\u2022 door.\n3. FERGUSON ft CO., WHOLBSALK\nand Commission Merchants\u2014Importers\nand Wholesale Dealers in Wines, Liquors\nand Clgara. Kootenny agents for Pabst\nMilwaukee Beer. Agents for the Bruns-\nwlck-Balke-Collender Co., Blritary nnd\nPool Tables and Supplies, Bar Fixture..,\nCigar Counters, Bowling Alleys, etc.\nPrices and speclf'oatlons on application.\nOffice and retail department, Vernon\nSt., Nelaon, two doors east of poatoftlce.\nTelephone 2C0.   P.O. Box 1020.\nNOI ICE\nHELP WANTED\nNJCLSON EMPLOYMENT AGENC1\nJ. H, LOVE, Manager\nWANTED\u2014Cook, *tti)0; \u25a0Hboreis, cookee\nmachine miners, muckers, lumber pliers,\npole and shingle bolt cutters, girls for\nhousewrk, waitresses, sawyers, swampers.\nteamstera, women cooks, carpen.era.\nWAlNlT_-D-<Agent* In eaoh towr**; can\nmake HO a day; handle the frost proof,\ngold sign Fetters and house numbers. The\nmoat durable, attractive nnd e al'y appled\nletters made for window transoms, glass\nsigns and for numbering houses. They are\nthe only sign letters that can be applied\nby anyone. Guaranteed to hist ten y. ars,\nproof against frost or water. Rob- r'gttt\ngiven to one agent In each town. W.lte\nfor sample outfit and terms to A. McLeod\nand Co., Blalrmore, Alta. 672.\nWIANTED\u2014Boy, -apply  the  Nelson   News\nDepot. G_-3\nWANTBD\u2014Girl for general housework at\nPhoenix, small family, wagea flO.   App y\nMrs.  E.  W. Monk, S Ilea street. 58-3\nWANTED\u2014Girl for housework. Apply Mra\nHarry Wright,   silica St. 67-tf\nWIANTED\u2014At once, a sohool teacher, female, or girl of 16, for summer ho.ldays on\na fruit ranch, near Nelson; I'ghi duties;\nremuneration. Address C. F.. Procter,\nB. C. 67-3\nWANTED\u2014Experkneed  stenographer. Apply Toye and Co.,  Baker street 'Nelson,\nB.C.\nWANTBD\u2014Experienced dining room glrf;\nwages  |30  per  month.    Apply  Hn cymi\nHot Springs. 60-1-\nWANTED\u2014Men and women to learn the\n1 barber trade. Situations or locations furnished. Wag s while learning. Puriiculnrs\nfree. Morer Barber College, 260 Carroll St.,\nVancouver, B.C. 65-_\nWorklngman's Employment Bureau\nWANTED\u2014Four women cooks, $46 to 176,\nmiddle aged woman, family of two; 10 gen-\/\nearl servants, chambermaids, waitresses,'\nbrldgemen, $_.75 to %t; railway c.nstruc Ion\nmen, firemen, loggers, teamsters, ml.'I m n.\nminers, deck hands, men cooks, |76 to 990.\nPositions wanted by first class woman\ncook, wants camp, 175, Is used to the work;\nengineer and blacksmiths. W. Parker,\nphone 283.\nWANTED - MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED\u2014Sltuatlon on fruit ranch bv experienced  man   tmarried.)    Wife  to   do\nhousekeeping duties.   App'y M. E., Dally\nNews. 51-6\nWANTBD\u2014River steamboat, stern wheeler\ngood power, between 30 and 40 ft. fong,\nand wide beam.   Box IN, Daily News. 44-tf\nWANTED-Men and women to learn barber trade In eight weaks; tools free. Graduates tarn $15 to $26 weekly; help seour.\npositions; secured over 10,000 last year fr\nour graduates In U.S. Catalogue, dee.\nMoler System Colleges, 403, Front avenue.\nSpokane, Wash. 263\nMISCELLANEOUS\nRAFFLE  for a talking parrot.   Tickets\non aale at Mrs. Morris' candy store, on\nBaker afreet, and at the Royal hotel. 61-tf\nBOATS\nMUULINS' STEEL ROWBOATS ARE\nnew In Nelson, but they are rapidly winning the reputation they hava long held\nIn the states. Elegance, ease, indtatruc-\ntlblllty when combined are a sufiicient\nreason for popularity, Call and see the\nboat that was taken 24 mllea in one day\nwith one pair of oars. Occupant oame\nback amlllng, but damp, aa lt rained all\nthe way. A splendid boot, but a rotten day waa the verdict Hurt and Co.\nhave these boats for sate or for hire.\n-8SAYER3\nE ,W. WIDDOWSON, CHEMIST ANU\nAssayer, Nelson, B.C.-Go d, Silver, L ati\nor Copper, tl -_h; Qold-Sllver, fl-i);\nSilver-Lead, 11.50; line, 12; Oo d-S.Wer,\nwith Lead or Copper, $2.60. Samples arriving by express or __i: will receive\nprompt attention. P. O. Drawer, 1106\nPhone A07.\n_ Is hereto, given that ao days after\n4aU t Intend to apply to the _<\u2014u ..:\nLicense Commissioners for the Ymlr district for a transfer of the license held\nby me for the Tmlr Hotel, to Patrl' k Daly\nand James B. Bremner of Tmlr. B.C,\nTmlr, B.C., June 17th, HOT.\nJ. W. MA8TERS0N.\nFOR SALE CHEAP\nBOILER\nOne 60-inch diameter by 16 ft 8 111.\nlong under-red, return multi-tubular\nboiler, in fair condition. Eighty-two\n2Vi-In. tubes 21-3 z 21-6 In. steam\ndome. Boiler la good for te _lng to\n150 lba. per square inch and a working\npressure of 80 to so lba Mountings\nconsist ot safety valve, stop valve, water gauges, try cocks, sludge cock and\ncheck valve, set of Ore bars and bearem.\nENGINE\nOne 9-ln. diameter z 14-In, stroke\nhigh pressure, variable cut-off expansion, valve engine, with governor. Fly\nwheel and belt pulley are not those\noriginally supplied with the engine, but\nare suitable for ordinary requirements.\nEngine has been used to drive electric\nlight at th* smelter and Is in food cou-\n41 tlon.\nFEED HEATER\nOne vertical multi-tubular exhaust\nsteam heated feed-water heater, 4 ft.\nhigh, 10Vi in. diameter, with openings\nfor I-inch exhaust pipes. Corrugated\ncopper tubes Inside, through which the\nfeed water passes. Stop valve, <_\u00bb'<i\ntook and safety valve.  Apply to\nTHB HALL MINING AND BMBLTIN-\n00., LTD., NELSON, A Q.\n^m*Aa^\n ...\nTHE  DAILY  NEWS,  NELSON,  B, G,  FRIDAY, JUNE  28,   1907\n* *#\n#     GET THE MONEY SAVING HABIT\n*#\nIT'S WORTH WHILE\nCASH IS KING QUALITY IS QUEEN\nOn July 2nd we will open our\ndoors as a CASH STORE\nThe amount of money tost to the m er chant each year through bad debts ond\nHems forgotten to te charged atong with collecting of outstanding occounta\nwould, If saved, go a long way toward reducing the cost of groceries find\nprovisions ln Nelson, but*fnder the CREDIT SYSTEM of doing business these\nlooses are unavoidable and must be paid'for by the CASH CUSTOMER and\nthe CREDIT CUSTOMER who p-iyB promptly.\nIn adopting the CASH SYSTEM these undeslrabte features will be eliminated,\nour operating expenses wll'be' re-duced And as a natural result we will be\nIn a posl.Ion to make you a saving of from 6 to 10 per cent n your groeerles\neach month.\nIn making this announcement to the general public we fe'l that our efforts\nto conduct our business on more up-to-date tines will be duly Appreciated and\nto achieve our alms we ask tha assistance and co-operation of our many friends\nand customers.\nfc\nm\nm\n\u25a0\u25a0-*\na.\n4*\n$\n*\nROBERT M. HOOD & COMPANY\nCash Grocers\u2014\nPhone (0\nK. XV. C. Block, Baker Street\nNelson, B. C.\nfc\ni>ei_\u00ab\u00bba.\u00ab-._ ._....\u25a0\u25a0..\np TITr \u2022 T I I I I I I  ~\nGrand Central Hotel\nopposite post ornc-\nAmerican and European Plan\nj. A. IRICKSON\nORAND CBNTRAiL-C. Rowe, Detroit;\nII. Burns, Moyle; H. J. Wright, Ainswo th;\nRev. W. Hansen, Alberta; R. Purdon, Winnipeg; J. BZ. Sargent, New Westinltis e.;\nT. N-aylor, Kaslo.\nLAKEVIEW\u2014F. Moore, Blue Bc|l mine;\nH. MornBtcad and wife, Kaslo; F, D.\n-Brewer, Lethbrldge.\nMADDEN\u2014J. O'Connor, Bradford; Miss\nMackay, Moyle; J. D. Young, Vancouver;\nMra. J. E. Shay, Halcyon; J. Harnett,\nGreenwood.\nTHE QUEER'S\nBAKER STRHI\nMRS. E. C. CUBK, Proprl-lreii\nli-ie Md Ctnfert-Me Belroon. n. First-\nclass Olilii Hmm.   Bite* $2.00 Pir Da.\nQUEBNS-E. J. Cook, Lethbrldge; B.\nMcLeod, Vancouver; J. W. Bennett, C: os-\nton; J. U. Clubine, Iron Rive-; Mrs. Q.\nMcBean, Orand F.rks; T. H. Moon, Winnipeg.\nNELSON-O. A. Riley, Seattle; J. Beef.\nPortland; J. Bush, Ross Peak; L. W.\nHumphrey and wife, Vancouver; M. Davis,\nInnlsfall; W. R. Smyth, T. F. Glenn, T.\nNebly, Winnipeg.\nl.r.MH-H'-H'H'Il'M-M'lllllII\nTHE HUME\n\"In the Heart of tie City\"  \"\nEuropean or American Plan\nNELSON, B. C\n\u2022H ItH'HIHlHllHHMH.l\nHUM- - B. Smith. H. Church, Moose\nJaw; D. It. Cameron, Calgary; C. P. Caldwell, Kaslo; It. I. Klrkwood, Slocan; J. A.\nPaulsen, Kitchener; E, B. Fleurry, Hamilton; M. N. M- rr son. Saskatoon; E. A.\nHarvey, Vlcorla; A. B. MoKIm, Orand\nForks.\nBA-T-ETT . W. P.\" Edwards, United\nmine; J. Wilght, ItosebPry; C. R-id, P,\nSmith, C'nml.rook.\nCLUB-F Sykes, B. B-.-mlnli, P<rt Hope;\nJ. Murphy, T. Latham, Vancouver.\n\u25a0t,,-,,. ,|, ,-,\u201e.IH4 II11I *.. I *1 M11 \"M-M*\nIVitronlzeil  by Bart Orey\nHotel Strathcona\nBest Located Hotel In Nelson\nApartments Elegant Cuisine Choicest\nCivility and Cleaitlness\nSupervised by Proprietor snd Wife\n>       ICI ON PARLE FRANCA18.\n\u00bbI.M..I.\u00bbW-W'M'\u00bb-l''tl4<4\u00bbl1'\u00bbW1**l'\nSTRATHCONA-J. T. Fife, Vancouver;\nT. A. Robbley nnd wife, London; J L..\nEvans, A. Harris, Winnipeg; C. F. Hooper\nB. -N. White. Spokane; W. Andersm, Cascade; D. McKay Remit-,, Toronto; J, Gil-\n_cBple,   Qu'Appelle.\n-SIIBRinROOICI-\u2014J. Nprmnl.er, Blocan;\nM. T-ertok, Edmonton; J. Morrlst, Midway;\nj, Thomson. O.. Blair, Rossland,\nItOYA1_-Mls\u201e   Bell,   Kaslo;   W.   Block,\n-'.C-iuibrook; J. F. Mllfson and wife, Grand\nForks; H. Anderson, Rossland.\nKOOTENAY-R. J. McAuly, Winnipeg;\nD. Maher, Fernle; B. McGregor, Alberta;\nN. Amcdsinn, Wlnlaw; J. Clnna, Nakuap;\nJ, Bourne, J. Duncan, Vancouver.\nNELSON'S NEWS OF THE DAY\nThe next county court sittings will be\nheld on Monday, July 22.\nThe municipal court of revision will be\nheld nt the city hall tomorrow morning\ncommencing at 10 o'clock.\nA. R. Poole of tho Poole-Longhurat Co.,\nLtd., who has been suffferlng from an attack of rheumatism, has gone to Halcyon\nHot Springs for a few days.\nTliore will be a meeting of the raunch\nclub tonight at the court house after the\nmeeting there of the exhibition directors,\nto consider ways and means of providing\nhousing accommodations for the mairy now\ncraft thai, have come lo this port ths season.\nFred Hume, who will retire from the\nHume botel on Sunday night said yesterday thnt lie had not so'd bis mncal cabinet or the stuffed' heads, which ndorn tbo\nhotel lobby. For the present the mineral\ncolfectlon, the finest In the province, nnd\ntho stuffed beads will be left where they\nure.\nBefore his honor Judge Forin In chambers yesterday, Hall moved In ie Robson\ntownaUe, to cancel existing pun registered. The bearing wns made returnable\nJuly 35, the applieat'on to re duly advor-\ntlsd meanwhile. In Coleman vs. Edgar,\nHnnnington for plaintiff, i btalucd -in order for payment out of moneys In court.\nA meeting of the Nelson exhibition directors wilt be held In the court house this\nevening at 8 o'clock, when Ihe special prl*.\nlist for the f.-ilr will be taken up and a\ndeputation of-focal flower growers will be\nheard on the advisab llty of amending\nsome of the exhibition rules regarding\nfloral exhibits.\nTen Wllffey tables were ordered1 yesterday from the Nelson Iron Works by the\nCanadian Metal company, Ihe order being\nonly part of a much larger one previously\ngiven for these machines. The tables are\nof the same construction as those exhibited by the Nelson Iron Wcrks at tho fair\nlast year, and which excited so much favorable comment' from mining and smelting men at that time.\nRev. E. H. Shanks,has returned from\nassisting in the Baptist evanget'cal mission at Revelstoke. He says the new building for the Bap 1st church at Robs in is\nvery* nearly completed and work Willi be\ncommenced on the new church at P.octer\nnext week. The church at Robson will\nserve for a good Bised population, steadily\nIncreasing, who but for this m'saion would\nbe without church  Btrvic s of amy kind.\nAn alarm of fire was phoned to head-\nquarlern at 10:.- yesterday morning but It\nproved to be a false alarm. Some men\nworking on the roof of the Nelson hotel\nsaw aome smoke coming up from Taylor\nand McQunrrle's tailor Bhop, they were\ntoo high to sea the chimney and Imnglned\nthe p'ace was ablaae. They shouted flre\nand some one In J. E. Anna! I '_ office\nphoned to hendquar.ers. The brigade cams\nalong smartly and laid out some hose before It was ascertained that the f re was\nwhero It  should be\u2014In  the stove.\nV\nDaA Corsets\nThey are the smartest models known to the Corset\nManufacturer's art, science\nand sense having achieved\na wonderful triumph.\n, -rices note from $1.00 to |6._,\nWIU Improve Your Flgnre.\nhave to see that customers nre not subjected to the loss and annoyance such na\nwas occasioned The Dally News yesterday.\nThe blunder meant a straight cash loss of\nupwards of 950 to this paper, bes'des annoyance to hundreds uf subscribers in out-\nsldo towns who look for their paper regu-\niaiy.\nThe Sisters of St. Jrsepli lender grateful\nthanks to al) who assisted In making their\nconcert on Wednesday evo I g such a\ndecided success. They especially thank\nD. J. Rob. r son it,nd company for tho use\nof pVino, and the Standard Fur, Iture\ncompany for tab'oh and rug, iind most cordially do they thank tho ch'fd en's parents for the pains they have taken to provide n_.<\u25a0--.icy costumes and other outfits\nfor the little enterialners. The Sste s say\nand with good reason, that Ihey are proud\nof their pupils nnd they cong atulate tbem\n\u25a0nnd the'r parents on the talents and ability they have displayed.\nThe excellent band concert given by the\ncity band at the Ward street stand last\nnight was thoroughly enjoyid Ly a large\naudience. The band divided tho honors\nof the evening wl.h a couple of peripatetic\nvendors of patent medicine, who held forth\non the virtues of tie healing stuff soM,\nwhenever the muslcl-ins stopped playing,\nand who did a good trade. The evening\nwas a warm one and tlie brill'antly light--.!\nstreets, the moonlight and the c owds made\nnn inu rest Ing scene for a coup'e of hours.\nThe band haa steadily Improved _n Its playing this Inst mon ii nnd the weekly concerts on Ward street and out at the rake\nfront park on Sunday afternoons have become very populnr ond dcaervedly so.\nOwing to a stupid blunder on the part\nof the man in charge ait the city's Bonn niton power plant, power was cut off between 3 und 4 o'clock yesterday morning\nwith the result lhat The Dally News pyint\ncame to a standstill and It was found impossible to catch the early morning' mails.\nThis, will explain to outsld aub,c.lb_r_\nwhy they received no papers y\u00abu rd_y.\nMayor Ulllett and elty electrician Smith\ntook the mutter up promptly, explained\nthat the blunder was perpetrated by the\nirnn In charge at Bonnlngton, who switched .off the pqw r wlthtut notifying anyone, nnd premised that hereafter the power\nservico shall be regular. If the city hope\nto make a success of selling power It will\nAt 10:30 yesterday morning one of a team\nof horses belonging, It is- Bald, to tho West\nTransfer compnny, backed off the city\nwharf, near the.sawmlfl branch and wont\ndown Into the |_Jte, The other horse\nmanaged to hold his fcotlng and wns not\nd ngged over. All efforta to induce the\nhorse In the water t swim out and around\nthe end of tbe wharf, proved unavailing\narid flnaily W. J. Astley was appealed to.\nMr, Astley promptly brought his big open\n-lunch around to the Bcene and the hiirs.\nwas HteraNy towed around the wharf and\nlanded nt Ast ley's boat house. Tho owners thought it W-s al| up with the anlm'U\nas he practically gave up the struggle\nwhite in the water. Once on dry land again\nhowever, the horse w ke up, sh ok himself\nnnd apparently was none tho worse for\nhis ducking.\nDO NOT NEGLECT THE CHILDREN\nAt this season of the year the first unnatural weakness of the child's bowels\nshould hava Immediate attention. The\nbest thing that onn be given is Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera ond Diarrhoea Remedy foltowed'by castor oil as directed with\neach bottle of the remedy. For sale by\nall druggists and dealers.\nJlik for MlMrd'i and t*k* no ctfpr\nBIX DAYS' 8TRDH1T CARNJVAL.\nThe 25,000 club Of trfthbrlOge have ar\nranged with the hefss Cwnlvar Company to show far six dsp commencing\nwith July 8th to lath, In Lethbrldge\nThlB company la without doubt the premier canrlval show on the road and carries 200 people, who require ten cars to\nremove their equipment. The small\nsum of fifteen and twenty-five cents la\nthe admission charged to the shows of\nwhloh'there are ten In number and also\nfour free shows dally. This concern carries two braas bands, a merry-go-round\nand a ferrla wheel, the whole Insuring\na week of good fun at Lethbrldge. This\nIs certainly an opportunity for the citizens of southern Alberta to enjoy themselves by taking In a good show ai a\nmoderate cost. There will be two per*\nformances dally one In the afternoon\nand one In the evening.\n'CALaARY PAIR.\nPromises to be Largest Exhibition Ever\nHeld In West\u2014July 9 to 12 Inclusive.\nThe Calgary fair to be held July 9.to\n12 both inclusive, will no doubt, be the\nlargest exhibition ever held in the west\nEighteen thousand dollars Is being expended in new building* which will be\nIn first-class shape by the opening day.\nThe prize list is a liberal one, and the\nracing program will attract large numbers from all portions or the west. Entries for tbe latter close June 29, other\nentries on the 5th of July.\nThe Wolaeley silver band will be in\nattendance, in addition to professor Nar-\nkle's trained animals, Mr. Squires, the\njuggler, and it Ib expected a balloon i_-\ncenslon will be made each .afternoon.\nLeague base ball games will be played\nat night, and special attractions will also\nbe seen.\nThe fixed dates are Tuesday July 9\n\"Farmers; Day,\" Wednesday, July 10,\n\"Citizen's Day,\" Thursday, July 11,\n\"Ranchers' Day,\" and Friday, July 12.\n\"American's Day.\"\nWednesday and Friday afternoons are\nproclaimed civic hatf holidays.\nReduced passenger rates ar announced\nby the C, P, R.\nDRANK FROM WRONG BOTTLE.\nTook Cyanide of Potassium Instead of\nWhiskey\u2014Died Few Hours Later.\nRochester, N. Y., June 27.\u2014Peter and\nDavid Mouid, of 3717 'Warren street,\nPhiladelphia ,en 'route to Geneva, N. Y.,\non the Black Diamond express last night,\naccepted a drink, of whiskey from Leo\nL. King, who boarded the train at Wll-\nkeabane. The three men finished tbe\nbottle, and King produced a second one.\nPeter Morad took the flrst drink out It,\nwhen King discovered that he-had given\nMorad a bottle containing cyanide of\npotassium, Morad immediately collapsed and when the train reached Geneva\nwas hurried to the hospital where he\ndied ln a few hours. King waB arrested\nat Geneva. At the station he said he\nhad secured the poison for himself, that\nhe Intended to end hla life on account\nof family troubles.\nThe C.P.R. will run two special excursion'- to Nelson on Dominion day, one from\nRossVmd, leaving that city at 7:30 a.m. and\n'leaving Nelson In the evening at 8:30 and\ntht] other from Kaslo and way points, the\nMoyle leaving at 7:30 a.m., nnd leaving\nNc.'-bii at 9.p.m. for the home trip. The\nround trip from Rossland will be 9--.0 und\nfrom  Koala 11.60,      j\nWANTED\u20142 boys for week or month, goo.1\nwages.   Apply Mes-cnger off.ee. _9-_\nfrom July 8th to 13th at the\nLethbrldge 25,000 Club\nSTREET CARNIVAL. Two\nhundred performers and two\nbrass bands will give fourteen shows daily.\nEverybody welcome.\n# vv*_^*vvv*v vi%\u00bbv\u00bb*v\u00bb v*v\u00bb\u00bb*v-vv\u00bb i\nH.\nE WADE\nMINE8\nSAMPLING REPRESENTATIVE\nBOX 719      Nf.LSON, B.\nCorporation of the Gil} of Nelson\nNOTICI- la hereby given that the first\nannual sitting of the Court of Revision for\nthe purpose of hearing complaints against\nhe assessment for the year 1N7, will be\nHeld In the Council Chamber, City Hall,\nNelson, on Friday, the 28th day of June,\n'1 at 10 o'clock.\nW. E. WAfaSON. City Clerk.\n-<-_wm, B.C., Har 21st. INT.\n\"COMPANIES ACT, 1W_\"\nNOTICB Is hereby given -that James R,\nUunii-x, Merchant) and PosUnaeter at\nE_rle, B.C., haB been appointed the new\nattorney of the Cordon Mining and Milling Company, Limited, In p ace of Joseph\nHarrison,- whose appointment has been\nrevoked;\nDated the Twentieth day of March, one\nthousand nine hundred and seven.\nB.  Y. WOOTTON,\nRegistrar of Joint Stock Companies\nWest Kootetay Butcher Co,\nWholesale and  Retail Dealers In\nFRESH    AND    SAI\/TBD    MEATS\nNothing but fresh and wholesome meats\nand supplies kept In atock.\nMalf orders receive careful*attention.\nE. C. TRAVES, MANAGER.\nMcEAT & BAHAL\nSuccessors to D. A. Munro\nHorse SHii-Hg-. Carriage Work and central  ll!at-K*mlthlns.  ,.\nV P.O. Box 1\u201e.  T-epftOD? AI94\nWtrt Street Ne_-!, _*_\u2022\nqgARING SALE OF\nBOYS' WASH SUITS\nOver fifty Boys' Wash suits and Dresses go on sale tills morning at, In many cases only a fraction of their original price. The reason for this ls evident. The extremely cold weather has Interfered very much with the sale of these goods and as we will undoubtedly get plenty of warmer\nweather we would rather reduce prices now than later on In the season.\nBOYS'  STRIPPED GAIJTEA SUITS regular J1.76, sale price, JI.25. **\nBOYS' PLAIN AND FANCY WASH SUITS, regular price-- and |3, sale price each, \u00bb._6 to ft.\nNew White and Colored Parasols\nThe very newest designs nnd colors are here, for your selection. They come ln White Linen\nCream Silk, In plain and ruffled colored Gloria Silk as well as Pure silk. In fact everything that\nls new awaits you here.   Come.  Prices, J2.50, J3, ,|3.50, to J7.50 each.\nMEAGHER & CO.\nAgents for Standard Patterns  >|f Madden Block, Baker and Ward Sts\nNelson-Made\nICE CREAM\nWe manufacture our I c e\nCream daily from pure materials\nand guarantee lt to he\nPURE, FRESH\nAND CLEAN\nWholesale and retail mall orders will receive prompt attention. k       .\u2022\u25a0'.'\nChoquette Bros*\nBAKEH STREBT PHONE 258\n2jWHnnnnwwnffnjniH!inifnrrtHn,r\u00bbj\nBusin.cs\nInstitute, Id.\n386 Hastings St. W. Vancouver\nBookkeeping, Gregg and^ Pitman Shorthand, Telegraphy' and\nEngineering.\nEIGHT TEACHERS.\n45 TYPEWRITERS.\nI Courses by:.mall.\nRespectable   lodging   secured\nfor strangers.\nR. J. SPROTT, B. A., Principal.\n-TUitiliH-miUU'1**1\" \"\"\"\u25a0**\"\" mt-J-i-J-.\n1\nONE NIGHT ONLY\nMONDAY.  JULY 1\nTip Bandy Dixie Minstrels\nDirection of Voelk.l und Nolan, the Bar-\nnum and Bnlley of real negro mlnatretsy.\nWatch for the .parade Monday,\nPrices 50c., 76c. and U.\nScats on sale at Itutlierford's Saturday.\nFOR_SALE\nSix-roomed house and one lot; modern; centrally located; a bargain;\n$1900; terms.\nEight lots, not far from High School;\na choice location for residence; snap at\n$800; terms.\nSix lots on Latimer street, just outside city limits; only $500; terms.\nSix-roomed bouse and two lots in\nBogustown; building new and plastered.\nPrice $1100.\nNine lots In Bogustown, nearly all\ncleared and under cultivation. Only\n$2300; terms.\nR. J. STEEL\nWest Transfer Co.\nPflONE  33\nGeneral   Teamsters   and Dealers  In  Coat\nand Wood\nDl-trlbutlnff   \u00abd  Porwnrdlng  Agent*.\nnff.p.  Rakflr St.. CTnrner ot Josephine.\nS50 Rev-yard\nWill be paid for the recovery ot the\nbody of Charlie I .\u00ab*, who was drown. I\nIn the Slocan River on May 29.\nKWONU WINU CHONO.\n\u25a06\nE CURED MEATS\nwe handle are of the best; They are lean, thoroughly smoked and cured\nCanadian goods, put up In clean firm sacks, each weighing about 100 lbs.\nJUST THE THING FOR THE HI US\nMediumjHanis Heavy Hams, Wide Bacon and Dry Salt Bacon.   Pure lard,\nAll Sizes\nP.  BURNS & CO.,Limited\nNBLSON,     KASLO,     ROSSLAND and   BOUNDARY.\nFRUITVALE  |\nIMPROVED RANCH\nWe are offeriug a well improved nnd bearing fruit ranch at Kaslo.\nIf you are looking for au investment this is a snap.\nGet particulars quick.\nKootenay Land & Investment Co.\nFIWIT LANDS AND REAL ESTATE.\nWARD STREET. Phone 117.   P. O. Box 413, NELSON B. C.\nFOR SALE\nResidence, 6 rooms ami bath; every convenience'!   central   location,  $228..\nResidence, 7 rooms and bath; all conveniences; 1  1-2 lots;  term*, given, I'-Si..\nB0 foot cornea, easy of acOecSB; few minutes walk from jiost offlee or action. On_\nOf the best resldentl'i. sites.\nCO feet on Latimer street; fenced and cultivated, $1-0. Also business properly,\nfactory   sltta,   land,   etc.\n-ET. _B. JLTZS\nReal Estate Agent\nSTEWART,  O. C.   NO.  .  CO.   R.M.U,\nCOMPANY ORDKUS   HY CAPT.   1.ORN10\nUntil further orders tlie members \u00bbf\nNo. 2 Co., R.M.R., Wl.l meet fur dii.l every\nFriday evening at _ o'clock, lt Is ne.e--\ncary that every member of the company\nat.end this drill if be wi.he-s to qualify as\na membor of No. 2 Co. Ri le assoel.it'on.\nRecruit class every Wednesday evening\nal tl o'olock.\nLORNE STEWART,  Cuplaln.\nNo. 2 Co., R.M.U.\nANcw Consignment\nJuat arrived. The very latest In\nEmbroidery and Silks, Ratt-O\nand BaaketwaN\nDIRECT FROM THE) ORIENT\nKwong Wing Chons\nftont St, oorner Josephine St\nWmtAreWeMebe.\nWhtAreWe\/.ebe?\nW_RE\/lE-__CA-5E\n(H_i(__Ml|\nIS\/.E_EkV\nFOR SALE\n170 acres, SO ncres cultivated and In crop,\ntlood water HUppry; good lot* Qat)ln_- slied-\n\u25a0uiil stables; a team; seveml head ot cattle; a flock of i*b cU. ns; some Implement-\n\u25a0iiiil  tools; f-000 cash.\nGEO. G. McLARKN,\nBAKER STREET WEST\n THE DAILY  NIJWS, NELSON, B. C FRIDAY, JUNE 28,   W\nFOR QUICK SALB\n800 acres near Kooten*. _u_ni. A\nwason-road will be built thranih the land\nthis eeaaon. Clearing light, good water.\nPrloe 18 per aore.\nH E Ornr-sdaile ft tie\nOffice next door Can. Bank of Commerce\nPhone 247 Baker S. Nelson, B.C.\nGait Coal\nMined at\nLETHBRIDGE, ALTA.\nWe are now in a position to ship this\nwell-Known coal ln car lots to all railway and steamboat points.\n\u25a0\u2014r. 3?. TIEJIMS. _B\"_r\naeneral Sales Agent Box Ol.  Nelaon, B.C.\nA HOT\nPROPOSITION\nHow to be comfortable\nduring the summer season\nis always an important\nand \"burning question.\"\nThe only solution is\u2014\n\"wear thin clothes.\"\nWe have two piece suits gotten\nup expressly for a man's suT-m-r\nmer comfort at reasonable priees.\nUnderwear In ba.*brlB\"f*an from 502.\nper garment. Light French nnd\nEnglish Natural Wool at U aml\n$1.-6 per garment.\nCome In for a look and say In\nthe language of Beau Brummet,\n\"No clothing becomes mine that\ndoee not become me.\"\nEmory & Walley\nThe Hub Furnishing House.\nPEIOF W METALS\nNew York, June 27\u2014Silver, fiT 1-8; lend,\n$5.75; elec.roljilc copper, 23 @ 22 1-.; casting copper, 22 1-8.\nLondon, June 27\u2014Lead, \u00a319 16s.; silver,\n30 7-S.\nCOPPF-R STOCKS\n(Reporled by McDermld & MeHardy)\nNew   York,  June 27\u2014The   following  are\ntoday's opening quotations for the stocks\nmentioned:\nAskfd   Bid\nGranby    130     120\nDominion Copper    0%     5%\nB.  C. Copper     9        8%\nNELSON'S NEWS OF THE DAY\nHenry Ewert has nearly recovered from\nhis recent Accident and he expect* to be\nable to leave the) hcspltaJ today.\nJ3yron N. White of Spokane, came down\nfrom visiting the Slocan ye terday .'ind\nwill pay the Queen Victoria a visit this\nmorning,\nMembers of No. 2 Co., R.M.R. are reminded of the weekly drill ut the nrmory\ntonight and the fact lhat Col. Holmes will\nbe here on his annual Inspection trip on\nJuly 9.   ..\nTh\u00a9 prizes for the several celebration\nevents, on view In Fred Irvine nnd com-\nl_i-iy's windows, attract a great deal of\natep. ion. They have been caofuly selected and ii-ilce on unusual y att.active\ntil. play.\nThe decoration committee spec'atty ask\nthnt citizens decorate for the Dominion day\ncelebration. With a little care the decora-\nton can be so arranged as tocome In handy\nnt fair time. Bunting -should be everywhere\" in evidence next week.\nA _iulot wedding took plnce last evening\nat the residence of the bride's mother,\nCarbonnte street, when Charles Henry\nRewell was man led to Miss Lucy Hazel-\ntine Btrd, by the Rev, J. T. Ferguson.\nThe newly married coupfe left on their\nhoneymoon tr'p on the Spokane train at\n12:30 this morning.\nThe city public school will cloie this\ni-tfti-ri ooi, for the long summer holidays,\n(jwing to the ract lhat the en ranee exit ml nna lions wlil be In pT*ogre*\u00ab this afternoon there will be no formal cl'a'ng exercises, oh Is usuafly the case. The entrance exnmlnatlons will close th's afternoon and tlie paper, will be sent to the\nconst, the result being announced In about\na. month's time. There are HI pup'ls writing for the entrance examination of wh m\nTHK 8T0HK UF QUALITY\nSUMMER\nDRINKS\nWe have a fine line of all of the best\nknown varieties\nLIME JUICB\nLEMON SQUASH '.\nRASPBERRY VINEGAR\nCHAMPAGNE  CIDER\nC. _ B. FRUIT SYRUP\nHIER'S ROOT UEER\nMASON'S  BOTANIC   BEER\nSee Page 5 for Other Ad.\nHob t. M. Hood & Co.\nGROCERIES  AND  PROVISIONS\nK.W.C. BLOCK NELSON, B.C,\nPHONE 10\n20-AGRE\nBLOCKS\nWe have for sale four\n20-acre blocks of good\nfruit land faciug on the\nSlocan River between\nSlocan Junction and Slocan City. Good railway\nfacilities, plenty of water,\nReasonable Price, Easy\nTerms.\nE&M.BIRD\nJJBLSOH. B.0.\n\u2022\u00ab*\u00ab\u00bb\u00ab.\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab.*<\"0<\"<X\u00bbo<-******\u2022*(- A*t\u00ab**M-et^-m\u00ab*t-*t'-c*M. \u00ab\u2022\u2022**-*,.\u2022\nt\n***** ************** ***************************\nSummer Goods :\nSCREEN DOORS\nSCREEN WINDOWS        <\nRBPRIOERATORS\nICE CREAM FREEZERS\nGARDEN TOOLS \u2022\nGARDEN HOSE\nLAWN RAKES\nCULTIVATORS\nEverything required tor summ\ner comfort tnd use.\nI\nSOUVENIRS\nI\ns\n.)0..)\u00bb-)0\u00bb)0\u00bb>0.->0->\u00bb->0\u00bb)\u00bb\u00bb>0\u00bb>0.\u00bb.\u00bb\u00ab->0\">0\"\u00bb0\u00ab)0..>0..>0->0\">0\">\u00bb\">0\u00ab>0..>0.t\nOur Btock of SOUVENIRS hits been\ngreatly Increased, and we are now showing a larger variety than ever before.\nWe have over forty different dealgni\nIn SPOONS besldee BROOCHES, BELT\nFINS, BELT BUCKLES, BRACELETS,\nSCARF PINS. COLLAR PINS,'HAT\nPINS, OUFP LINKS, ASH TRAYS, and\nCALANDBE-.\nOur new enamelled COIN\nBROOCHES are most beautiful.\nJ.O.PATENAUDE\nWMM-Tinie JEWUU\nl-TICIM\nHORSES ARRIVED\n\\ Come ind select your team.  Tiiey are all\nfor sale. ,\nNELSON TRANSFER  CO.\nTbe J. H. Ashdown Hardware Co., Ltd. j\nNBLSON BRANCH 1\n\u2666Ml MtM.MlMHM. \u2022\u2022.\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666.\u2666M.O.MMMM.M\n22 are Nolson scholars. Tlie li'gli school\nexaminations will cominenince next Tuesday morning at 9 o'clock.\nOwing to the celebrn ion dnys next week\nthere will he no half holiday on Thu sday.\nYestc-rduy'-s half h.l!day waa we I obseived\nthere being many bo;iitlng nnd picnic parties but. beyond the evening concert, no\npublic -en tor tain mom of any kind. A week\nfrom next Thu; sday should see a def.nite\nprogram ftr the afternoon.\nAn Authority on the subject said yesterday that in order to move the m'neral output of the interior and supply the smelters\nWith coke and con., the railway companies\nwou'd liftve to uslt the coal people to\nnearly double their output or as an alternative the C.P.R. would be compelled\nto eflutp their line from Procter to M dway\nincluding tho Trail-Rossland branch, electrically. At present the Boundary smelters cannot run nil -their furnace, and\nthis coming winter willl see a repetition\nof last year's troubles over the fue. question, only on a larger s_ale, unless some\ndefinite steps are taken at once.\nA practice pricket match was played on\nthe recreation grounds yesterday afternoon between the capta'n nnd vlce-cup._in\nteams. Rev. F. H. Graham captained the\nlater and A. H. Coppen the former. Cop-\npen's side won by the n:irrow margin of\n4 runs. Only one innings was played. The\ncricketers f'nd fault with the arrangement\nfor their match with Trail on July 1 and\n2. They say there is not room for cricket\nand baseball at the one time \"nd that on\nthe second dny their match is delayed in\nthe official program to too late an hour,\nTrail was wirtd yesterday that tlie match\nwas off and thnt another date worn! be\nfixed later. The trouble comp Ettned ot\ndocs not appear to be very difficult of solution mid Prefl S.arkcy, who Is In charge\nof all cricket matches, should be able to\narrange matters sail _ f actor i:y today,\nExpert piano tuner and regula.or Jas,.\nRi Mulr. Strictest attention to all details\nLeave orders at Standard Furniture Co.'a\noffifce.\nLATEST PAPER COMBINE\n\u25a0Milwaukee, June, 27\u2014The Evening Wisconsin t-tlay says: \"If p esent plana are\nimUured the manufactunrs of p'int and\nother classes of paper tn Wisconsin, embracing some 25 large mil \u00bb, will shotly\nform one of the largest own'ng and operating paper mnnu'iictuing synd'cai.e. tn\nthe country. The plnn means n manufacturing   and   owning  cojnpiry   _lml:ar  to\nWe can  furnish  your  house or offlco\ncomplete.\nNow li the time of year to put In a\nWe have five different iliee to tele, from\nStandard Furniture Co.\nFUNERAL DIRECTORS\nAOENT8  FOR MASON-RIBUH PIANOS, MARSHALL SANITARY MATTRESS, QU>UE-WERNICKE BOOKCASE AND OFFICK f URN-TURK.\nthe International Harvester company and\nwill not be a 'sales comblnfitlon,\" like the\nlate Gcncml Paper company, which sur-\nrendtred Its charter because of federal\nobjection. A lage majority of the piper\nmills which fomerly were part of the General Paper compiiny nro said to bt In-\nteres.ed In the proposed organ Eaton.\"\nSANDBAGCHNO  AT FERNIE.\nElko Man Relieved of His- Cash\u2014Severe Electrical Storm.\n(Special  to The Daily News)\nFernle, June 27.\u2014One of the most severe electrical storms of the season visited this section last night and the lightning tnat played over the town for more\nthan two hours struck and set flre to\nthe bush towards the top of mount Fernie, which biased for nearly half an\nhour until extinguished by the heavy\nrain accompanying the storm .\nHis lortlshlp bishop Dart of the\ndiocese of British Columbia, arrived by\nthe C. P. R. express last night and held\na confirmation service In Christ's church\nat 8 o'clock, served candidates present-\nlog themselves for the sacred rites,\n\u25a0Last night a man from Elko, who had\nvisited this town to attend the circus,\nwas way laid and sandbagged and relieved of $35. He reported the matter to\nthe police but refused to give his name.\nThe lte'1 Trading company nnncunce that\ntheir store will be closed all day Dominion\n_ny. Month.'y orders will be bo ked on\nFriday and Saturday.\n10 DATS 8ALE OF\nDINNER SETS\n100 piece $23 Dinner Set for  SIS\n97 piece $15  Dinner Set for  10\nWe Invite you to Inspect our JAPANESE\nCHINAWARB\nTHE OLD CURIOSITY SHOP\nChina Hall\nWe have a large, varied and\nuseful stock of\nCroeltwy, CUnwin, brtl|iaw_rt,\nUmp CmA, Eto,\nand at reasonable prices. Come\nand inspect.    Second Hand\nGoods of all kinds cheap.\nMunro A Nelson, Props,   Phone AMI.\nTHB CORRECT TMll-O IN MENS\nOXFORD-  AT\nTHE ROYAL\n*. ANDREW* 00.\nAgents for 8'ater Slioes.\nBUTTERMILK\nFRESH CREAM\nICE CREAM\nDOUBLE\nJERSEY BUTTERMILK\nIs x de Ighttul summer bever. go\nLOCAL FRESH CREAM\nalways on hand\nHAZE-WOOD    ICE    CREAM\nBurpasses all others by far In\nquality\nS. H- SEANEY\nPhone _o6    Baker St.\nIs It Hard to find what You Want?\nCome In and look over our ll st of houses and lota.   We have ner. r*y 70\non our lists, and some real snaps.  Our business Is to heFp you to locate;\nwe can do It.   -Just told another today and added five new ones to our\nlist. j\nONE OP THEM\u2014S-room cottage. 2 lots, 6 fruit trees, bearing, $860,\nANOTIIEK-4-room  house, _ lots, 29 bearing trees, $2000- terms.\nWOLVERTON  & CO, BAKER ST.\nmmJ\nA SNAP\n400 acres of fine land\nin Pass Creek Valley\nENQUIRE\nCabinet Oigar Store\nO...H-n_EW,.np.l-*\u00abt*lt\nRanchmen,  lumbermen,   miners,  prsopec-\ntors and others, try\nThe Red Crow Drug Store\nfor a good foot powder, a good corn oure,\na good diarrhoea mixture, a good fruit\nsalt, or a good lime fruit Juice,\nBaker St., near Josephine, Nelaon. B.C.\nThe Sign of the Fish\nWt. ull everything the IWhtr-\nman needs, strict attention p\u00abu\nto nail ordera.\nE. 5UTCUFFE, Raker St\nTOBACCONIST\nMining Property For Sale\nWe wish to make a quick sale of tlie\nViking group consisting of the *'N\u00abw\nViking\" and \"New Phoenix\" mtfteral\nclaims on Springer Creek, Slocan Lake\nDistrict.   For particulars apply\nmm*\nricDermid & MeHardy\n___:\nHouse\nand 25 Lots\nfor Sale\nDo you want to have a home Just on\nthe outskirts of the city limits, that Ib\nmodern ln every respect, conmauds a\nsplendid view of the lake, only 1 block\nfrom the car Une, no hills to climb and\nHounds, 25 lots, that are exceptionally\nadapted for a fruit ranch and garden.\nAll this oan be bought for the price rl\nwhat lt would cost to build the house\nFull particulars, apply to\nRice Cake\nOne cup of white sugar, one of\nB. & K. Rice Flour\nfive, eggs,  one  tc-nspoonful  essence;  beat\n20 minutes and bake half an hour In a moderate oven. -. Tour grocer  has the  Bice\n.Flour In ten pound sacks.     '\nThe Braekman-KerMilling Co., Ltd.\nNOT FOR SATURDAY ONLY\nTHREE GENUINE BARGAINS\nBUT   WHILE Sardines In dl, Potted Meats, Chloken,      tip.     to_\\fX\\\nTHEY  LAST      tme. Turkey, Davies* Pork and Beans     *J\\*t vdCIl\n!_____\u25a0\nper oan .....\nWhat we advertise we guarantee the q _illty of.\nf-tq_ -_\u00bbt  AM)   _\u25a0__ MATE\nI.O.\nTHE BELL TRADING CO.\nLIME JUICE\nThe best hot weather drimk.   Quart bottle 40c.\nSEASONABLE GOODS\nSticky Fly Paper, Fly Poison, Insect Powder & Powder Guns\nWm. Rutherford, Druggist, Nelson, B. C.\nDID YOU BVBR\nstop to consider the advantages of owning your own home? We have a list of desirable Improved residence prop, rites In and adjoining tho city, which are offered\nclif-ip and on easy terms. For Instance: 5-room cottage, 3 improved lots, with bearing fruit trees, $U00; 6-room cottnge, one lot, 11000; --room house, 2 Improved Iota,\n(.000, and several others of equal value and low price.  Call and got i--rtk.t_.r_.\nTwo Good Business Propositions\nwell located, with Improved tola, for sale cheap and on easy terms. Either of these\na profitable  Investment.\nFRUIT LANDS, TIMBER LANDS, MINING PHOPBItTT.\nMcMorris & Horstead\nnEAI. ESTATE\nCUSTOMS BROKERS\nFIRE INSURANCH\n1 Screen Doors and Windows I\n3 Warm weather is heie and with it the dreadlul flies \u00a3'.\nI WHY NOT guard against them by using our patent ft\n* Screen Ooors and Windows. 9-\n1 All Sizes Md Ml Prices |!\n1        \u2014 i\nJ Nelson Hardware Company |\n.S P.O. Ml Ut       IMP LEMON-) AMD IBB-   HOUU. NBLSON, B.l    5\n* l\nLAWN\nMOWERS\nIf you require a LAWN Mo Wi R thi\nseason we would like to sell you a\nWOOOYATT\nMore of these sold in Canada than any othei\nWood Vallance Hardware Co., ltd.\nW_0__8ALB\nLaunches. Boats, and Canoes for Hire and Sale\nThe fsstest launch for hire on the lake, extm roomy, safe and comfortable, always goes. We swear by homemade and Peterboro boats, the beat In tbe world!\ngood for ten years or more.  The very tin est assortment in\" the west,\nt THB CITY BOATHOUSB, ADJOINING THB CITY WHARP.\nW. J. ASTLEY Proprietor\nDECORATE\nCELEBRATE\nJuly 1st and 2nd\nFLAGS, all slaea and prices, 10o.\nper dosan to $2S eaoh. '\nTIS8UB   PAPER   DECORATIONS,\nIn new and varied designs.\nFIREWORKS,  CAUSION  CRACKERS\nSWAGGER AND TORPEDO CANB3 I\nOH1NESB LANTERNS.\nG-ABS   LANTERNS. :\nHORNS.\n, _21p0ON PATRIOTIC COLORS.\n>'\nCasffiU Dtb| ft Book Co., Limited\nDruggists, Stationers, Seedsmen\nCor. Ward and Baker Sts.\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1907_06_28","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0382535","@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":"1907-06-28 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1907-06-28 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\/1.0382535"}