{"@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":"e42bf369-3a85-421a-b052-317e3392d255","@language":"en"}],"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2019-09-29","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1909-07-21","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0383493\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" 8\nPaoet\u2014Saticribe for PA\nTke Newt. Per Moitk j\\Kl\nt JMlu $fc:\nfROVl'\n^W\n.      ,_xXa__\t\nNCI**** V\nine Dally News CbulfleJ Ads.\nire Winers. Try One, per word\nfefl\nIc\nVOLS\nNELSON  a, C  WEDNESDAY   MORNING.  JUIA   21,   I9W\nNO. . 8\nmms day\nWinnipeg Marksman Wins\nBig Honors at Bisley\nRICRARDSON TO THE FORE\nMANY OTHER DOMINION RIFLEMEN MAKE HIGH SCORE8 AND\nTAKE BIG PERCENTAGE OF\nPRIZE MONEY AND TROPHIES-\nFULL LIST OF SCORES\nBISLEY, July 20\u2014Yesterday's hero\nat Bisley was a Canadian, though not a\nmember of the Canadian team. Sergt.\nBlackburn of the 90th Rifles, Winnipeg,\nwon the Prince of Wales' prize, next\nto the King's prize the most valuab-e\nindividual prize offered at Bisley.\nSergt. Blackburn Is here shooting on\nhis own accord, and yesterday's work\nmeans that not only wilt he cover bis\nexpenses but he will go home with a\nneat little sum in his pocket, the Prince\nof Wales' prize being \u00a3100. In addition he received a badge as a niomenlo\nof the occasion. Blackburn put on a\nnice 34 at 300 yards and followed this\nup with a possible at 600 yards, one of\nthe most difficult feats a rifleman can\nperform. This made his tota, 84. Another western man was right at his\nheels, Capt. Forrest of Vancouver, who\nfinished ln third place with a score of\n83, and won \u00a315. Capt. Forrest put on\na score of 34 at the short range and followed it up with 49 at 600 yards, his\nInner being on his seventh shot. Ihe\nPrince of Wales is only open to winners\not N.R.A. or affiliated association cadets and tbis left three members of\nthe Canadian team, Goughean, Jones\nand Marsden, Ineligible.\nThe total scores of the remainder of\nthe team and unattached Canadians\nwere as follows:\nSergt. Blackburn, Winnipeg, 84; Capt.\nForrest, Vancouver, 83; Lieut. Morris,\nBowmanville, 80; Lieut. Mortimer, Ottawa, 80; Sergt. Russe.l, Ottawa, 80;\nSergt. Mitchell, Hamilton, 79; Sergt.\nStack, Truro, 79; Sergt. Smith, Ottawa,\n79; Sergt. Freeborn, Hamilton, 78;\nCorp. Mdlnnle, Edmonton, 78; Capt.\nMcVittle, Toronto, 78; Lieut. Smith,\nChatham, 77; Corp. Sprlnks, 75; Sergt.\nKe..y, Toronto 77; Sergt.-major Crelgn-\nton, Toronto, 75; Sergt-major Hugglna,\nToronto, 75; Sergt. Bayles, Toronto, 74;\nSergt. Kerr, Toronto, 74; Sergt. Richardson, Victoria, 73; Corp. Copping,\nMontreal, 72,\nBesides Sergt. Blackburn and Capt.\nForrest, the other Canadian winners\nIn this match were Lieut. Morris, 21st;\nLieut. Mortimer, 24th, and Sergt, Russell, 27th, each winning \u00a33; Sergt. Mitchell, 40th; Sergt. Stack, 51st and Sergt.\nSmith, 53rd, each winning \u00a32. It Is\ninteresting to note in connection with\nthe win of Sergt Blackburn that he used\nthe Lee-Enfield rifle.\nThe prize winners in the Alexandra\nmatch were: Sergt. Smith 17th and\nLieut. Smith, 23rd. each winning \u00a320;\nSergt. MItcbeL, 52nd, Capt. McVittle\n52nd, Capt. Forrest 106th, Sergt. Free-\nhorn 144th, each winning \u00a33.\nIn addition to winning the Prince of\nWales' competition, Blackburn wa3 also\nposted as winning the M.M.G., an un-\nsquadded competition for seven shots\n. at 1000 yards, with unlimited entries,\nwhich closed yesterday. The first prize\nis a silver cup valued' at \u00a315 and \u00a35\nIn cash. Altogether it was a memorable\nday for Sergt. Blackburn. Lieut Mortimer was 6th in the competition, winning \u00a31. \t\nBISLEY, July 20\u2014In the Secretary'of\nState for War competition today, 500\nyards, ten shots each, Capt. Forrest,\nVancouver, made 48 points out of a\nposstole 50, and Sergt. Richardson, Victoria, 47. First prize in this competition Is \u00a3202.\nIn the first stage of the King's prize\ncompetition, which opened today at 600\nyards, eeven shots each, Sergt. Bayles,\nCorp. A. Sprlnks, Toronto, and Lieut.\nMortimer and Sergt, Russell of Ottawa,\neach made possibles. The scores of\nthe other Canadians were: Copnlng, 26;\nCrelghton, 32; Forrest, 29; Freaborn,\n33; Goughson, 30; Hugglns, 33; Jones.\n32; Keily, 32; Kerr, 33; Mclnnes. 29;\nMcVittle, 33; Marsden, 30; Mltche.l, 33;\nMorris, 33; Richardson 31; Lieut. Smith\n34; Sergt. Smith, 31; Corp. Sprlnks, 29;\nStack, 31; Blackburn, 34; major Brown,\n31.\nSergt. Richardson of Victoria with a\ntotal score of 167, won first prize In\nthe all comers' aggregate, a challenga\ncup valued at \u00a3250 and a gold medal\nThe ah comera' aggregate is made up\nfrom scores ln the Alexandra. Dally\nGraphic, Dally Telegraph and Granhlc\ncompetitions, Richardson in the 64th\nplace fn the Alexandra competition also\nwon \u00a34, white Corp. Sprlnks, Toronto,\nCorp. Mclnnes. Edmonton and Sergt.\nMarsden, Winnipeg. In 187th. 2-Wth and\n273rd places respectively, each won \u00a32.\nTi the Dally Graphic competition\nfSSL't. Smith, Ottawa, won first prize,\na* silver cup, valued at \u00a352; Sergt.\nRichardson In 9tli place In the Graphic\nc<X .petition, won \u00a35. In the all comers'\naggregate Lieut. Smith. Sergt. Smith,\nCapt. .Forrest, Corp. Mclnnes, Sergt.\nFreeborn, and Sergt. Mitchell in 3rd,\n6th, 22nd. 25th, 27th and 43rd places\nrespectively each won a bronze medal.\nSergt. Smith In 90th place in the Alexandra Martin competition, won  \u00a3165.\nCol. Cross, secretary of the National\nRifle association has had several In*\nqutrie-s from Canada regarding the Empire Day challenge cup and In com*\npllance therewith he announces the following results: H.M.S. Pembroke team\nwith a score of 3258, came first: second,\nLancaster regiment, 2623; third, H.M.S.\nExcellent, 386.   One hundred and eighty\nteams competed.\nWalter WlnanB, American horseman\nand revolver afoot, broke the world's\nrecord at the running target during the\nrifle shooting competition today. Mr.\nWlnans during the Olympic games last\nyear broke the world's record at shooting at a moving target.\nA.V\/NTREAL, Ju.y 20\u2014The Canadians\nat Bisley are making a wonderful record this year. The team has won- the\nthree big team prizes offered open to\ncolonial teams, the Mackinnon, the\nKolapore and the Jubilee trophies and\nthe Individual members are setting a\ngreat pace. Sergt Blackburn of Winnipeg won the Prince of Wales' prize\nof \u00a3100, In the competition of that\nname, next to the King's prize, the most\nvaluable prize offered at Bisley for individuals. Today Sergt Richardson\ncame to the front by winning the all\ncomers' aggregate, a challenge cup\nvalued at \u00a3260, and-a goid meda*.\nSergt. Smith of Ottawa also got into\nths limelight by shooting off*, and winning tfhe Daily Graphic cup valued at\n\u00a352 10c, for which he was tied with 20\nothers. Sergt. Bayles of Toronto won\nthe Wimbledon cup valued at \u00a325, and\nSergt, Blackburn of Winnipeg the\nB.M.M.C. cup, worth \u00a315. Six members of the team won bronze medals In\nthe all comers' aggregate. In addition\nthe money winnings have heen very\nheavy. The team has so far won more\nsilverware than any other two that ever\nrepresented Canada and the meeting is\nonly Just started.\nHAS CHASE AFTER HORSE\nCONSTABLE     WILSON     CAPTURES\n8T0LEN ANIMAL\nLCvATES    CRESTON   MAN'S     PROPERTY AT BONNER'8 FERRY\nProvincial constable J. Wilson of\nCreston was notified on July 15 by\nThomas McCreath of that city that he\nhad on the previous day hired out a\nhorse valued at $160, to a man who\ngave the name of McDonald. Since\nletting the man take the horse he had\nseen nothing of either McDonald or the\nanimal and had therefore grown bus-\npiclous When constable Wilson was\nInformed of the case it was after 5\no'clock and only about five minutes -betore the departure of the train for Bno-\nner's Ferry and the states.\nRapidly concluding that if the man\nhad stolen the horse he must have attempted, to get away by way of th-*\nroad to Bonner's Ferry, the officer toM\nMr. McCreath to take another horse\nand ride to Bonner's Ferry, making Inquiries for McDonald and the horse on\nthe way, while he himself jumped on\nthe train and booked for Bonner's Ferry.\nAs a result of inquiries made there he\nlearned a horse answering the description of the one stolen ilium Mr. McCreath had been bought bv a livery\nman there for $40 from McDonaid who\nhad stated that he had ridden from\nsomewhere near Golden and that he\nwas hard up and required money to\ntake him to Seattle. By bringing pressure to bear upon the livery man constable Wilson succeeded In getting back\nthe stolen horse much to the delight\nof Its owner.\nHe then proceeded to attempt to\nget a trace of McDonald, with, how-\never, little success, as tbe man appeared, after having sold the horse, to have\nvanished completely. Feeling sure that\nthe horse thief had got away by train\nconstable Wilson made Inquiries a\nSand Point and Newport, Idaho, and\nfrom there went to Spokane and Harrington and Odessa, Wash., as he had\nheard that a man answering the description of McDonald had lateiy joined\na travelling show company playing\nthere. This turned out, however, tn h\"\na false scent and constable Wilson\ntherefore was compelled to return without his prisoner and waB In Nelson\nyesterday for the purpose ofi handing\nin a report of the circumstances. Mr.\nMcCreath Is congratulating himself on\nhaving been fortunate enough to regain\nhis horse as had it not heen for the\nenergy and detective ability displayed\nby constable Wilson it is likeiy that\nine stolen animal would never have\nbeen found.\nFIERCE FIGHTING IN MOROCCO\nBig Battle Between 6000 Moors and\n2000 Spanish and French\nIViELILLA, July 20\u2014The attack hy\nMoorish tribesmen made on the Spanish forces here last Saturday afternoon\nwas .executed under cover of a feint\non the front against the Spanish flank\nThe first charge was repulsed but in\nthe evening a more violent assault was\nmade for the purpose of capturing the\nSpanish battery. The Moors displayed\ngreat courage and skill during the engagement. They rushed in small squads\nand many of the tribesmen succeeded\nin breaking through- the barbed wire\nentrenchments where they fell at the\nmouths of the cannon after hand to\nhand fighting. It was 3 o'clock on Sunday morning before the Moors finally\nretired. The Moors numbered 6000,\nwhile the French and Spanish forces\nnumbered 2000 men. General Marina,\ncommander of the Spanish forces in\nMorocco; was In the thick of the fight\nto encourage his men who fought heroically. Capt. Gulterth and major Roya\nwere both killed while defending a\nbattery. The Moors bore off several\nbodies with the intention of burning\nthem, hut the Spaniards made a charge\nand rescued the 'bodies.\nMADRID, July 20\u2014King Alfonso and\npremier Maura are hastily returning to\nthe capital flrpm San Sebastian In connection with the sending of reinforcements to Melllla where heavy fighting\nhas been going on between the Moors\nrind Spanish. The Spanish government\nIs exercising the strictest censorship\nover the telegrams from Nelllla and\nalso the outgoing press dispatches relating to the situation ln Morocco.\nUNITE_CANADA\nProf. Shortt's Exhortation\nto Canadian Club\nPROBLEM OE IMMIGRATION\nBELIEVES FEWER BUT BETTER\nSETTLERS WOULD IN LONG\nRUN PROVE OF ADVANTAGE TO\nCOUNTRY \u2014 DUTY OF CANADIANS TO WORK TOGETHER\nThose who attended yesterday's\nluncheon of the Canadian club given\nin honor of Prof. 'Adam Shortt, chairman or the Dominion civil service\ncommission, were rewarded by hearing a most interesting and at the same\ntime a most thoughtful address. Mr.\nShortt's Bubject was \"Canadian\nUnity,\" and he dealt with his topic\nIn a way that not only held the attention of his auditors throughout, but\nalso gave each something In regard to\nCanada's futul'e upon which to reflect.\nThere was a fair attendance, despite\nthe fact that the luncheon hour had,\nowing to the exigencies of hotel operation, to be deferred until 2 o'clock\ninstead of taking place nt 1 o'clock\nas usual. In the absence of the president, Judge Forin, the chair was occupied by G. O. Buchanan of Kaslo,\nvice president. After the courses had\nbeen served Mr. Buchanan Introduced\nMr. Shortt by reading a letter from\nJudge Forin, regretting his Inability\nto be present and paying his tribute\nto Mr, Shortt's work and ills worth as\na public man.\nMr. Shortt In his address spoke of\nthe work of development that was going on throughout this vast country.\nThlB was taking place ln a way hitherto unknown. Other countries, including the United States, had had their\nbeginnings In compact communities\nfrom which settlement had spread out\nIn different directions. Canada's immense area, on the other hand, was\npractically being developed simultaneously from the Atlantic to the Pacific.\nAs, a result It was difficult to secure\nthe unity which was so essential to\nthe country's welfare.\nEspecially was this so because of\nthe large number of foreign immigrants who had entered the country\nduring the past few years. These\nwere coining In numbers that were out\nof all proportion to the Anglo-Saxon\nand French Canadian population of\nthe country.\nThese newcomers. It was true, were\nIn a plastic state on arriving In this\ncountry. If taken ln hand at once\ntheir course might be directed along\nchannels which would redound to\nCanada's benefit, but if this work were\nnot taken up properly the newcomer\nwas likely to drop back into old associations and look at matters as he did\nln his native land, where he hud been\nused to being ruled by the iron hand\nof authority. In the United States the\neffect of the influx of so many foreigners had been to a certain extent counteracted by the fact thut New Engenders had blazed the trails throughout the country and the foreigners, on\narriving, found Anglo-Saxon institutions established.\nThe danger from foreign Immigration was lessened when the newcomers settled on the land. In the United\nStates many foreigners had settled in\ncities and In communities and were\nperpetuating European ideas In the\nnew land. These people were not being digested by the nation and were\na source of weakness to It. Like conditions would produce like results In\nCanada. In passing, he would like to\nemphasize the necessity for retaining\nthe land for settlement instead of\nhanding It over to corporations, and of\nretaining control of the forests, the\nmines and the water courses for the\npublic benefit.\nPersonally he thought there was\ntoo much hurry to settle the country.\nThis was due largely to selfish desire\nfor material advantage. There were\nthose who wanted to sell land, farm\nImplements, provisions, clothes, etc.,\nand who were anxious to see settlers\ncoming ln to provide markets for\nthese. This was not the correct, way\nto build up the country. People\nshould look, to the future as well as\nto immediate results. Fewer settlers\nand of a better class would better\nserve Canada's Interests fn the long\nrun.\nThe work of co-ordinating the Canada of today was a difficult task. Even\nIn a province there were many localities with widely divergent Interests.\nHow much more was this so in regard,\nto the Dominion. Canadians had a\ngreat work ahead of them In developing a united country. In this connection he would like to refer to the\npower of the press, not only of tbe\nnewspapers, but also of books, magazines and other publications. But\nupon the newspapers particularly did\na heavy duty fall. Complaint might\nbe made that the newspapers were not\naccurate or that they did not exhibit\nthe breadth of view on public questions that it was in the interests of\nCanada they Bhould. This was due to\nthe fact that the profession was not\non a proper footing in this country,\nand the teason for this was thnt sal\naries In It were not sufficient to attract young men to it as a llfework.\nMany there were who entered the\nprofession only to leave it later for\nsomething better. In newspaper work\nas In so many other things, materialism had entered In and men employed\nin the business office were, ln many\ncases, fairly welt paid, while reporters,\neditorial writers, etc., on whose work\nCanada's future, to a large extent, depended were not getting their due.\nMuch also depended upon those In\ncharge of the education of the rising\ngeneration. Tbe very hest minds possible should be employed In this\nwork. This was out of question at\nthe present time, owing to tiie comparatively poor salaries paid teachers.\nThis was a matter which should he\ntaken up generally. Sufficiently attractive salaries should be given to\nteachers to Induce men and women,\nparticularly the former, to make a life-\nwork of it.\nIn closing Mr, Shortt said that Canada's future was Indeed bright if only\nCanadians would discharge their duty\nnnd at the same time prove themselves worthy of their country.\nDr. Arthur, on behalf of the Canadian club, conveyed to Mr. Shortt the\nthanks of the members In which every\none present heartily and cordially concurred.\nFORTIFY PRINCE RUPERT\nPARTY  OF   NAVAL  AND  MILITARY\nMEN   INVESTIGATING\nSCHEME TO ESTABLISH CHAIN OF\nHEAVILY ARMED FORTS\nVICTORIA, July 2J0\u2014The steamer\nPrincess Royal, which reached port\ntills morning, brought among her passengers Gen. W. D. Otter, inspector\ngeneral of the Canadian forces; Col.\nR. W. Rutherford, Capt. II. T. Hughes,\nRoyal Engineers; Lieut. Heycock of\nH. M. S. Shearwater and Capt. Hay\nof the Indian army, a party sent to\nlocate a chain of fortifications to he\nestablished as defenses as Prince Rupert. The scheme is to establish a\nchain of forts with batteries of six and\n10-inch disappearing guns, with auxiliary anil-torpedo batteries of quick\nfliers at the outer channel through\nwhich vessels must pass to reach\nPrince Rupert. The officers will make\na number of maps and will submit reports with their recommendations to\nOttawa.\nGREAT GOLUjmCOVERY\nRICH   STRIKE    MADE    ON    NORTH\nFORK   SUMMIT   CREEK\nPROSPECTORS   ARE   RUSHING   TO\nSCENE  FROM  SALMO\n(Special  to The  Dully News. J\nSALMO, July 20\u2014A gold discovery\nwhicli Is fraught with the greatest Importance to this district has lately\nbeen made on the north fork of Summit creek. It appears that for some\ntime the prospectors who mude the\nstrike kept the discovery dark, but\nnow that the news has leaked out\nevery prospector in Samo Is rushing\nto the scene. Gold is being panned\nright along on the creek and is averaging from $1(1 to $20 per pan. Salmo\nis the nearest point for provisions, as\nit lies about 18 miles to the northeast\nof the new discoveries.\nASSISTANCE   PROMISED\nHon. Mr. Pugsley Will Help Vancouver Port Improvements\nVANCOUVER, July 20\u2014Hon. Dr.\nPugsley was given a royal reception\nat North Vancouver today, where\nluncheon was served. Speeches were\nmade by tne minister and Hon. W.\nTemplemnn, George H. Cowan, Hon.\nF. L. Carter-Cotton, mayors of cities,\nand others. Assistance was virtually\nguaranteed In developing the port on\nboth sides of the inlet. A liberal banquet Is now ln progress at tlie Hotel\nVancouver. Hon. Mr. Pugsley will\ntake up the Indian reserve questions\nwhile at the coast.\nLAING   IS  SORE\nDisappointed Because Vancouver Club\nFails to Send Crew to St. Catherines\n(Special to Tlie Daily News.)\nVANCOUVER. July 20 \u2014 Charlie\nLalng, single sculler of the Vancouver\nrowing club, is so much disappointed\nby the failurue of the organization to\nsend crews for the Canadian Henley\nthat he has decided to make the trip at\nhis own expense. His entry was wired\nyesterday and Lalng left this evening\nfor St. Satherlnes with his own shell.\nHe will also row at Detroit.\nHeavy Crops In West\nWASHINGTON, July 20\u2014A cry for\nhelp to harvest the season's bounteous\ncrops Is coming from the west to the\nofficials of the department of commerce\nand labor, whose functions are In part\nto find employment wherever possible\nfor the throngs of aliens who come to\nthis country. Fifty thousand able bodied\nmen are wanted by the farmers of tbe\nweBt according to representative statements from Missouri and other states.\nThey state tbat the crop situation all\nthrough the west is splendid.\nEarly Crops\nWINNIPEG, July 20\u2014 D. C. Pell, inspector of the Credit Fonder, returned\nlast night from a visit to his farm at\nHoniewood in the Carman district and\nstates that he will commence tomorrow\nharvesting a 300 acre field of barley,\nwhich Is so ripe that It Is Impossible\nto delay the cutting any longer.\nA SUDDEN FALL\nClemenceau Ministry Down\nand Out\nALL FRANCE ASTOUNDED\nFOR THREE YEaRS MASTER OF\nHIS COUNTRY CLEMENCEAU\nBECOMES PREY OF POLITICAL\nENEMIES THROUGH FATAL TAC*\nTICAL BLUNDER.\nPARIS, July 20\u2014The Clemenceau\ncabinet fell suddenly tonight under\ndramatic circumstances at the conclusion of a violent donate over the\nnaval scandals, extending over several days. M. Delcasse, chairman of\nthe investigation committee, led the\nattack upon the naval administration,\nespecially during the incumbency of\nM, Pelletan and M. Thomson, formerly ministers of marine. But M, Pick-\nard, who succeeded M. Thomson, had\npromised In the name of the government to complete a series of reforms,\nboth In the administration of tlie department and the methods of construction, and the chamber was ready\nto vote confidence in the government\nwhen an incident occurred which\nchanged a majority into a minority.\nPremier Clemenceau, who always lias\nbeen an adversary ol M, Delcasse,\nsmarting under the criticisms and\ndoubtless over confident of a majority\nwhicli on July 13 upon the general policies of the government was 182,\ntaunted the ex-minister of foreign affairs, who was thrown overboard by\nthe Rouvler inlnistery at the dictation\nof Germany during the crisis of 1005,\nwith having led France to humiliation\nat Algeclras.\nTlie spectre of that character of\nFrance's foreign history for which\nDelcasse was sacrificed, was a fatal\nerror. Instantly there was an uproar\nof dissent from both sides of the chamber. Delcasse threw the taunt hack\nin Olemenceau's face with bitter\nwords, declaring, amid cheers, that\nFrance had gone to Algeciras in the\ninterests of each. Hot words. Were\nhanded back and forth, It was a\nveritable duel between two enemies.\nM. Delcasse Intimated that Clemenceau had Inspired articles In the foreign press during the crisis, but the\nlatter emphatically denied this imputation. The premier seemed, for the\nfirst time in his parliamentary career,\nto lose his hold. Finally M, Delcasse.\nas he was entering upon an explanation of the situation of 1005, drew himself up proudly and suid: \"I shall say\nnothing further on that subject, 1 have\nnothing to fear. Nothing in the past,\nnothing lu our common memories of\n26 years' embarrassment. If I look\nhack I see that 1 have left something\nin the ruins. Then, turning directly\nto M. Clemenceau, he suid: \"You\nwere president of tiie naval investigation commission of 11)04. Your unsparing attack upon every government\nduring 25 years seemed sufficient\nguarantee that you would find the root\nof the evil. What were tlie results\nI ask?\" M. Clemenceau, now evidently in a rage, tried to parry the thrust\nby returning to the charges. \"Your\npolicy, as foreign minister,\" he shouted, \"led us to the greatest humiliation\nFrance has experienced In 20 years.\"\nAnother storm of hostile cries arose,\nbut the premier tried to assume his\nold cynical air. \"Oh, no false indignation, I pray you,\" he exclaimed.\n\"You brought us to the verge of a\nwar without military preparations.\"\nAgain the tumult was redoubled.\n\"Yes,\" he shouted above the roar, \"the\nwhole world knew that the ministers\nof war and the navy, when the question was put to them, replied that\nFrance was not ready. 1 have not\nhumiliated France; Delcasse has done\nthat.\"\nTlie scene when the premier took\nIlls seat was indescribable. Amid tlie\nwildest excitement the vote was taken\nand when It was announced thnt the\ngovernment had been defeatd, 212 to\n170, M. Clemenceau clapped his hat on\nhis head, pulling It far down over his\neyes, and stalked out of the chamber,\nfollowed by the other ministers 'n\ntoken that he Intended to resign. M.\nClemenceau went immediately to the\nElysees palace and told the story to\nPresident Fnllleres, who seemed stupl-\nfled at the incident which caused tho\nfall of the cabinet, but he accepted the\nresignation of the premier nnd the\nministers.\nThere is but one feeling in Parts\ntonight\u2014astonishment that an old\nparliamentary warhorse like Clemenceau should have committed political\nsuicide by his awkwardness In recalling the Algeciras spectre upon the\neve of adjournment, when the government was assured of a majority on\nthe naval question. The premier's action drove about 50 members of the\nrepublican \"bloc\" Into a combination\nwith the right and extreme left, unhorsing the man whose ministry has\nbeen the longest in the history of the\nthird republic and who for three years\nhas been ahsolute master in Fr&ice.\nMore than 00 members of the majority, enough to have saved the day,\nwere absent, visiting their parliamentary confreres of Sweden, when   the\nvote was taken. Many times during\nhis ministry M. Clemenceau apparently was on the eve of defeat, as many\nstrong combinations, especially by the\nenemies of Income lax, were formed\nto accomplish ids downfall und ouen\nthere was secret opposition In the\nranks of the majority. But when the\ndcelsive moment came the rebels\nnever dared to brave Clemenceau's\nwhip.\nThe fall of the cabinet was so unexpected that the political world Is\ncompletely at sea as to who will be\nClemenceau's successor at the head of\nthe government. President Fallleres\nwill consult with the president of the\nchamber tomorrow In accordance with\ntne usual custom.\nThe name of Leon Bourgois, formerly premier and formerly minister of\nforeign affairs, is most frequently\nmentioned, but his age and health are\nagainst him. M. Brtatid, minister of\njustice; M. Polncaro, former minister\nofi finance; M. Mlllerand, former minister of commerce; M. Plchen, minister of foreign affairs; M. Barthot, minister of public works, anu M. Delcasse\nare also mentioned in the order\nnamed. The socialists are naturally\noverjoyed at Clemenceau's downfall.\nM, Jaures, the socialist leader in the\nchamber, said: \"With Clemenceau\ndisappears the most dangerous man In\nthe republic.\"\nTELLS OFJTHABASCA\nLATE   RESIDENT GIVES   INTERESTING  INFORMATION ;\nIS   CONVINCED   NORTHERN   COUNTRY   WILL  GO  AHEAD   FAST\nJohn Simpson, lately of Athabasca\nLanding, is in town on his way to Grand\nForks, where he has 27 acres of fruit\nland requiring his attention. Mr, Simpson has been in Athabasca Landing\n\u25a0nearly a year and dining that time he\nobtained a great deal of information\nconcerning the country north of Edmonton. At the Landing there are five\nstores, a -urge hotel, a newspaper and\na branch of the Imperial baink. The\nhotel, the bank and newspaper are the\nmost northerly to be found In America\neust of me Rockies. Athabasca Landing Is 105 miles north of Edmonton by\nstage and Is on the southern bank of\nthe Athabasca river which is navigable\nfor steamboats, the steamer Northland\nSun having a course of about 250 miles\nup and down the river. It is expected\nthat tlie Canadian Northern railway will\nsoon be extended northward to ihe\nLanding.\nMr. Simpson frequently met British\nColumbians in the north. Tommy Gallon of Nelson was In the Imperial hank\nthere until he was sent, to Golden a\nshort time ago. and H. lT. Box of Neison, took his place. F. C. Campbell,\nfor nine years mining recorder at Trout\nLake was in the Landing for some time\nwhile on his way to St. John, on the\nPeace river. St. John is in British Columbia nnd Mr. Campbell Is io be the\nPooh-Bah of nor'tHieastern British Columbia, being a justice of the pence,\nmining recorder, gold commissioner,\nland agent, etc. Provincial constable\nMcVlcar went with him. Mr, Campbell\nmissed Ihe Hudson's Bay steamer at\nPeace river crossing by 12 hours and\nhad to cunvp there and wait a month\nfor the next boar. The district of which\nhe will have charge is one of the most\nvaluable in British Columbia, being rich\nin prairie land, hard coal. gold, sliver.\nload, furs, timber, etc. The Slimmer\ntime Is from a month to six weeks\nlonger than in Edmonton, the leaves\ncoming out on the trees about three\nweeks earlier and the fall of the leaves\ntaking place about three weeks later In\nSt. John than at Edmonton.\nIt Is too early to go there now. however, as It costs nine cents per pound\nto have groceries taken from Edmonton\nto St. John. It Is expected that a branch\nwill be built from the nviin Une of the\nG.T.P. to the head of navigation on the\nPeace river and this will place the entire Peace river country within easy\nreach ofl Prince Rupert. The P*1-1\nriver Is navigable from Fort Vermilion.\nAlberta to Hudson's Hope, B.C., a distance of 600 miles. If n branch of the\nG.T.P. were built to Hudson's Hope,\neverything produced in the Peace river\ncountry would go west to the mining\ncamps of northern British Columbia or\nto the ocean\nMr Simpson also met Harry Waugh.\none of the pioneers of the Slocan. and\nLot Wllley. also an old timer In the\nSlocan. Mr, Waugh made a fortune in\nthe Klondike and he has now struck a\nwonderfully rich proposition on Pe-1!\nriver, to which he is taking an outfit\nthat cost him $20,000 Mr. Wllley kern*\nan hotel at Rear lake and was twice\nburned out there. He afterwards lived\nin Kaslo. He is quite nrosperous, having some valuable cattle and horses.\nWHITE PLAGUE\nImportant Scientific Discovery Made\nby Two Paris Doctors\nPARIS, July 20\u2014Drs, Calnniete and\nCuerin announced in the Fourth Academy of Science last night 'the discovery\nof an easy method for the determination of whether tuberculosis in individual cases Is of- boverino or human origin. They proved thnt the bnclili In\ntuberculosis of human origin did not\naffect cattle by a series of experiments\namong which was the Inoceulntlon of a\ngoat with germs from tubercular po-\nHents nt the sanitarium al Sancarlc\nLake. N.Y. The goat nractlcally was\nunaffected and continued to give nourishment to Its young, the health of\nwhich was in no way affected. Another\ngoat wns Inocculated with a culture\ntaken from a boy suffering from tuber*\ncitlosis and this Inocculation resulted\nfatally. From tills the doctors were\nable to conclude that the boy's infection was not of human origin but resulted from mf-k takrfn Worn tubar-\ncutosis cattle.\nBIG INCREASE\nBank Deposits for June are\nFar Ahead of May\nFIGURES SHOW PROGRESS\nBANK STATEMENTS INDICATE EX-\nTRAORDINARY ACTIVITY IN\nCANADA \u2014 INLAND REVENUE\nSTATISTICS\u2014LESS SPIRITS BEING CONSUMED\nOTTAWA, July 20.-The bank statement\nfor .lime is encouraging ns -showing greater business activity and Increased accommodations tin- the needs of Canada. Deposits in Canada for June hud Increased\nover May by $12,000,000. Call loans in\nCanada show un inoreusd uf |\/,003,000. Call\nan-] current loans outside of Canada show\na decrease of approximately tll,000,0u0, thus\nIndicating thut the hank.-* are withdrawing\nmoney from the New York market to\nmeet the Knowing demands of Canadian\nbusiness. Some comparisons from the reports uf May und June, unit), aro as lot-\nlows:\nNotes in olrculatlort, May, jeS,S93: .Inn-.*,\n$70,170,-101.\nDemand deposits payable in ' inuada,\nMay, (261,010,284: June, (226,480,408.\nDeposits payable after nuiiee In Canada,\nMay,   tUft-SU-llT;   June.   $4135,178,470.\nDeposItH outside Canada, May, (711,409,038;\nJune, (09,240,984.\nTotal liabilities, Mav, JS(il,(CT,llt; June,\n(870,192,322.\nCall loans in Canada, May, S\u00ab< 771,298;\nJune, (52,(117,096.\nCall loans outside Canada, May, (124,-\n(877,955; June, $115,254,868.\nCurrent loans lu Uatiada, May, (528,31:1,1-11;\nJ um*. (585.212,209.\nCurrent loans outs'de Canada, May $W,-\n487,619;  June.  $38,403,17.\nTotal assets, Mav, $1,044,020,533! June $1,-\n033,271.018,\nOTTAWA, July 20.-Canftda'fl tiaile for\nJune shows an Increase of $0,628,898 as\ncompared with the -same month last year,\nand an increase for Litre** months or the\nfiscal year of R0,Wi*i,K24 as eompurcd with\nthe  corresponding  period  of  last  year.\nOTTAWA. July 20.-The people of Canada are drinking less spirits than they\nused to, but the consumption of beer per\ncapita is Increasing. This is the puinorl\nof a statement prepared hy tho inland\nrevenue department as to the consumption\nof articles which pay excise duty. For\nInstance, while the per capita consumntlon\nof spirits lu 1906 was 0,841 of a gallon, it\nwas only 0.806 in the last fiscal year. On\nIhe other hand, the cnnsnmptlori* of beer.\nWhich was 5.848 gallons per head in MM,\nIncreased lust year to 5.820 gallons. Tln-\nconsumptton of wine also ahowa a decrease from 0.091 in 1906 to 0.085 last v3ar\nTobacco continues to grow in popularity*\nin 1806 the consumption was l'.ttt pounda\nper head, last  year It was 7.910 pounds.\nOTTAWA. 'July 20.-Thfl flty council of\nSaskatoon  has applied for -a board of enn-\nMAJORITY REDUCED \"    ]\nGovernment Candidate in St. John, N.B.\nBeaten by 50 Votes\nST. JOHN. July 20-One of the most\nhotly contested bye-elections ever held\nin the dominion, resulted today In tbe\nelection of A. IP. Bentley as opposition\nmember of the provincial legislature.\nIt was n close margin, however, us J.\nS. Mosher, tlie Hazen government candidate was beaten only by 50 vote*;.\nThe county hits been liberal for 17\nyears and at ihe last general election\nelected James Lowell and Hon. h. a.\nMoKeown, both liberals, by 413 and 367\nrespectively so that today's result shown\na big cut down. The election bus been\nhard fought aud it has been a round\nof speeches night after night for two\nweeks or more. The vote in today's\nelection was Bentley 1075. Mosher, 1025.\nTennis Championship\nNEW YORK, July 20\u2014Dates are announced Tor the English-American international tie tennis matches for the\nDavis challenge cup us follows: Sunday.\nSept. 11, nnd Monday, Tuesday and\nWednesday, Sept. IU, 14 15. The courts\nof the Germantown cricket club at\nPhiladelphia are to he the scene of the\nmatches.\nYang-Shi-Sang's Successor\nSHANGHAI. July 20\u2014Ttiaii Pang, former viceroy of Nanking, who has been\nappointed viceroy of the Chili province\nin succession to the late Yang-Shl-Satlg,\npassed through this city today on Bil-j\nway to Tien Tain from Nanking. Tin\npeople of the southern provinces regret\ntbe loss of Ttian Fang, whom they regarded as a very able officer.\nGood Trap Shooting\nBUFFALO, July 20\u2014The interstate\nassociation's fourth eastern handicap\nBhool opened here today under ideal\nweather conditions. W, F. Clark of\nBoston, an amateur, and W, It Crosby,\nof Fulton, a professional, made scores\nof 75 out of a possible 75 in five events\nof 15 targets ouch.\nBoiler Burst\nCOLOGNE, July 20\u2014The holler of the\ntourist steamer Buttenberg blew up yesterday near Rolamlseck, a port on the\nRhine. One stoker was killed and five\nmembers of the crew severely hurt.\nSeveral passengers were Injured but\nnone of them so far as known, were\nfrom America.\nBig Atchison Deal\nNEW YORK, July TO.-Kuhn Ueb & Co.\nhave purchased about ten million preferred  stock  of   the   Atchison   Topoko   antl\nBan tn    Fo    Hullrnnd   company   from   the\nUnion 1'aclflc railroad, it Is understood\nthat Kubn Loeb & Co. acted in the transaction as managers of a syndicate which\nincluded a number of financial institution:-.\n MOB TWO\n,-u M'.t\u00a3m mi*, m __\n\u00bb     Kin \u00bb-a.,   ,,nfl :\u2022:      ____\\\n\u25a0__a\nDnsKENNEDr&KENNEDY\nSUCCESSOR* TO\nDrs. Kennedy & Herman\nSPECIAL NOTICE.\nOwing to Dr. Ker-\ngan being deceasei!,\nDr, J. D. Kennedy,\nMedical Director,\nhas asnoci-ited with\nhim Dr. Kennedy Jr.\nwho haa been, with\nxhe firm for several\nyears, so hereafter\nbusiness will conducted under the\nname of\nDa a  KENNEDY\n4 KENNEDY\nNERVOUS DEBILITY\nThousands of young and middle aged men are annually swept\nto n premature --rave through KARIVY INDlSCKBTIuN-j,\nEXCESSES AND BLOOD DISEASES. If Jou have tny of the\nfollowing symptoms consult us before It is too late. Are you\nnervous sad wealt, despondent and gloomy, specks before the\neyes, with dart circles under tbem, weak back, kidneys irritable, palpitation of the heart, bashful, dreams and losses, sedl-\nhnent in urine, pimples on tbe face, eyes sunken, hollow cheeks\ncareworn expression, poor memory, lifeless, distrustful, lack\nenergy aid strength, tired mornings, restless nights, changeable moods, weak tnaiiiisod, premature decay, bone pains, half\nloose, sore throat etc.\nBLOOD POISONS flrt-SHH\nprevalentnoTmost serious diseases.       They sap the very life\nblood of the victim, and unless entirely eradicated from the\nsystem may aflecttlir future generation.    Beware of Mercury.    It only suppresses the\nsymptoms-OUK NEW METHOD cures them.\nOUR NEW METHOD TREATMENT **1o**\u00ab *-\u2022*\u2022\u00bb* cure 7\u00b0\u00bb. mid makes\nman ofyou Under its influence tht.* braiu becomes ective, the blood puTihed so that all\npimples, lilotches, and itlcers disappear, the nerves become stiouR as steel, so thnt nervousness twshftilt-essanddeRpondencyvnnish, the eye becomes bright, the luce lull snU\nclear, energy returns to the body, and the morsl, physical, and vital systems are invig-\noraftol all drains cease-no more vital waste from the system. Dont let quacks and fakirs\nrob you of your hard earned dollars.  Ws will ours f oil \u00bbr ns pay.\nnr Anrn   No matter who has treated you. write for an honest opinion Free\nRfc.ADfc.ri   ol Charge   BOOKS l'RER-\"The Golden Monitor\" (illustrated)\nQuit-lit-n List for Hem* Treatment Ssnl an Nsqusst.\nDrsKENNEDT&KENNEDY\nCoi. Michigan Ava. and Griswold St,\nDETROIT, MICH\nREMEMBER!\nThat Kootenaiy Fruit is the very best and that\n'KooS' JAMS\nare made from Uie choicest of these fruits.\nWatch  for our  Raspberry, Apricot, Etc., Etc.,\nKootenay Jam Co., Ltd.\nNELSON :\u00bb: B. C.\nIt Takes TWO-Arc You\nOne of Them?\nIf, of the two people it takes to\nmake a bargain, you are ONE, how\nmuch would it be worth to you to\nfind the other one. Would it be\nworth the cost of a classified ad ?\nWould it be worth the cost of a small\n\u2014but determined\u2014\"campaign of want\nadvertising ?\"\nThe \"other one\" necessary to\n\"make a bargain\" is found, in nine\ncases out of ten, through advertising\n\u2014 often through want advertising,\nand, in this city, USUALLY through\nwant advertising in THIS newspaper.\n\"The other one\" watches the\nwant ads. pretty closely \u2014but, of\ncourse, has to be convinced. If your\noffer is \"right,\" that will be an easy\ntask.\nOne cent a word will tell your story\nto readers ot\n\"THE DAILY NEWS\"\nA  ten-word classified advertisement\n' costs oniy 40 cents for six Insertions,,\nwlien paid In advance.\nW\\ *\u25a0\n\u2014.\nSON FIRE\nThe oldest Insurance Office In the world\nrOUNDIDA.D. 1710       , '      M-tiiHWNAM 1910\n\u25a0 Home Or nett London. Engiand , ;,,,,.; .. 1?l,\niterate. n.VLa%Uc**mtn*Hama_o*i\nBOUNDABY. CR&.K&TEB-SLDEFEAT\nCASTLEGAR   TEAM\nCONCLUDE   .SERIES   BY   .PLAYING\nNELSON  ELEVEN.TOD\/^Y\nIn tlie -second*\"-cri'eltet 'match of the\ntournament played yesterday afternoon\ntbe Grand Forks team was again victorious, defeating the Castiegar team\nby five wickets '^Ad ,91 , runs. Today\nthe Boundary team-will try conclusions\nwith the'Nelson, eleven.\nYesterday's, game iy(tb Castiegar was\ncommenced shortly alter 10 o'clock in\ncon tinned tine weather, with a fast\nwicket. Castiegar having won Ihe toss\nwent In fjrs'c to bat, opening their innings with Shaud and Rielly to the 'bowling of W. 3. P-burson arid CV Pearson,\nwho had charge of the ball during the\nentire innings.\nFrom the first hall delivered by C,\nPearson, Sha'nd was out to a neat catch\niby W. J. Pearson, having to his- credit\n'die only run which had been scored.\nLaurie Joined Rielly,and at the close\nol' tha innings the tally showed him to\nhave the largest * score of the Castiegar\nbatsmen, followed closely by Foxlee,\nwhile of the Grand Forks howlers C.\nPearson carried off the laurels, securing 5 wickets flor 17 runs, or an average\nof 3.4.\nThe innings closed at 2:4.\"). Castiegar\nhaving scored 45 runs.\nGrand Fonts opened their innings immediately, sending in Longhurst and\nCaniribell. while Critch took first over\nfrom the Cedar street end and Laurie\ndelivered from the Hall street end.\nLaurie secured a wicket in his Iirst\nover, Lohgliur's't playing on to him when\nonly three runs had heen scored.\nMiller joined Campbell and opened\nbv putting C'rltch to leg for 4. Foxlee\nhere relieved Grltcli but the change did\nnet have any effect on Uie Grand Forks\n\u25a0batsmen, the score being taken to 40\nbefore O.impbell was bowled by Criich\nand I'^xlec having again taken charge\nof tlie ball at the Cedar street end,\ncaught and howled Miller.\nTo Attwood felt the credit of having\nscored the most runs during the match\nwhile llnrreH's not out score of 2ft was\nfroi by faultless cricket, and Mahon's\n24 was secured bv free hitting, he having to his credit two (Vs. a four, two 's\nami four singles. Miller, who scored\n23; showed good form while ni the\nwicket.\nOG the Castiegar bowlers Critch taking two wickets for thirty runs, had\nthe best average.\nAppended are the aooi'es, [bowling]\nanalysis and order in which the wickets fell:\nCAST I.KHAR.\nRltnn-1 6. W. .1, PearsGii If. u, Pearson... 1\nRlollv \u25a0_\u25a0. Crimiuiell b'. Wl J. p.*ar.\u00ab**n \"\nLawrle  run   nut H\n11. Millet' h. p. Pearson  '\nPoxli-e c. t-onshiipi. i>, w. \u25a0(. .Peai*Hhn..ia\nT,. Mill0* h. C, Pearson  \"\nCliltcli rim out     '\nIliti-fl.*li|   nm   out    \"\nJfinktns b. C,  renrson ,, \\\n\u25a0Farmer riot   out    *'\nNm-miui   b. C.   Peurstiii   M\nLab bye\nTotal\nRAND   FORKS.\nLonglnirM   b;   Lawrle   \t\nCampbell Ik Orltch \t\nK. Miller c. ami l\u00bb. Foxlee ....\nMahon ,e. Ci'Ucfi ii.  Foxlee ,...\nfitlrwell   n\"i   out   \t\nAtwoofl l>. Cidtch \t\n0, Pearson not out\t\nByi\n1.1'iJ  1 >.v\n:ul\n. .136\nTin* roll-.wlni*; rid  not ba*,!    \\V, .1.  PjBtti\nsop, Bower, Orey and Sheppiml.\nnmvLixi: analysis.\nCASTLECIATt.\nrwiwli-r                        i'-.   W.   O. M, Avi\n\\V. J.   Pearson     '24     2      11 0 1*J.\nt*. epurson  it    \u2022\"\u25a0     (fl-4 - '\u25a0'\u2022\u25a0\nQRAND   FORKS.\nHjnyjer                        |[-   w*   \u00b0- M-   Av'\n(Mtrli    id     -     tl \" '\u2022\u25a0\ntawflli     RO      1     1. 1 M.\nPurine    4S      2    IS I 3_.\n11. Mlllei\n1.\nI\n1     IT     ia     20i    \u201e     H     11     42     41       45\nc,H \\Nl>   FORKS.\nPremier   McBride   Trustee\nOTTAWA, July 20\u2014Premier Mc\nBride of British Columbia, has.\nagreed to act as western trustee,\nof   the   Minto   lacrosse   cup,\nW.EOpSDA.Y,<j,'.\u201e.y ,\\ JULY 21\n__   a set of officers jtklUtAl _..\n%gement was vestefd In Flanagan and\nhe ran It according, to. his own. ideas.\nThis  year,  however,  there  has  been\nfriction and his resignation Is\" the ~re-\nsuit.\nHas  Better of Fight\nALBANY, July 20-**-B6bby: Crtithers\nhad the better of a ten round bout with\nCharlie Hoffman of New York before\ntiie Myers athletic club.\nhad the second finger of his left hand\nbroken In stopping a liner from Deln-\nhan's bat, MuUhewson has been New\nYork's consistent winner this season\nand lias not been defeated since, May\n24. The big pitcher had to leave the\nEntile at once and a surgeon who attended to his injured 'finger reported\nthat it would beat h'as't rVo'weeks before he coiud twirl again, Manager\nMctlraw was hanking heavily on Mat*\nthewson in the series wlth,Chteago to\nstart on Thursd.iy.\nWins in  Seventh '\nMFMPHI13, .inly 2n\u2014Eugene    Simms\nof Sloamore, Ills., knocked Rattling llm*\nels of Baltimore out iasi nigh! -in the\nseventh round at the Phoenix club.\nLangford Will Fight Ketchell\nSAX FRANCISCO, July 20 \u2014'Willis\nBrlttj manager of Stanley Ketchell. received a wire last night from ills Naw\nYork representative to the effect that\nZingaris at Philadelphia\nPHILADELPHIA. July 20\u2014The Zin-\ngal'l cricke'ters of Toronto were coni-\npelled to follow on for their second\nInnings today in their mutch wiih the\nRilinont eleven and scored 21 runs for\nfour wickets, Up to lunch time. Tn\ntheir first Innings yesterday the Pliila-\nddlphiahB scored 171 and ihe Canadians\nSensational bowling by King and Cornish enabled the Belmont club eleven\nto retire the Toronto cricketers fpr tt\ntotal of only \u00bbl runs In the first innings .yestorday. Belmont went to ha't\nfirst and scored 171 runs. Cragar scoring 59 before being retired.und Melville\ncarrying his bat Tor a total of 20 runs.\nThe visitors scored Til for a total of\nlour wickets but the remaining six\nbatsmen were retired without scoring\nun additional run, King bowled the last\nthree me-n to face him with three consecutive   balls.\nWorld's Record for Rifle\nWAKEFIELD, Mass.. July 20\u2014A new\nworld's record for rifle shooting was\nmade .yesterday at the Wakefield range,\nit 1\u00bb claimed, by midshipman Andrew\nN. Dennis, U.S.N. of the naval team,\nwho scored :t:iri nut of a possible 450\nThis exceeds by two points the now\nrecord oft Cnp't. 13. N, Eddy of the 8th\nnational guards made at Camp Perry,\nOhio, on Thursday.\nMatthcwson Has Mishap\nNEW YORK, July' 20\u2014New York's\nchances fpr the National league pennant received -a serious set back thu\nlaftefttpoia when In the seventh Innings,\not the game with St. Louis, Christie\nSain Langford has decided to accept\nthe terms of ihe Nevada promoters for\na match on Labor day with the middleweight e.liampion at Ely. Langford\nhad until last night refused to acoept\ntiie offer of,Tex Hall and il Is presumed\nthai tbe \"fighter finally decided thai\n$5000 was ample remuneration for thp\nchance of.,fighting for the title.\nIn Ten Stubborn Rounds,\nNEW YORK, July 21)\u2014Harry Stone\nof New York defeated Joe Seiger of\nDenver hist night, in ten stubborn rounds\nat the Uayrord athletic club of Brooklyn,\nFlanagan Resigns\nTORONTO, Jul,y 20\u2014Thpiuas C. Flanagan has resigned from'the Irish Canadian athletic club. Ihe club he founded and of which he has -been life arid\nsoul since its Inception. Flanagan start-\ned the club in 1907 and ran ft practically single handed.   While the ciub\nSETTLING DIFFERENCES       ,\nBritish Columbia and Dominion to\nAdjudicate Claims\nH. A. Maclean, deputy attorney general has: returned from Ottawa where\nlie has beeii takiiig tip with the, department of, justice some matters'at Issue\nbetween British Columbia and tlie federal authorities, says the Victoria Colonist. ' '     -   .\nBy mutual cpiiserit the two, governments agreed to submit a series' of.\ntptestions with regard, to jurisdiction\nover the fisheries, the reversionary interest In Irtdlnn reserves and water\nrights hi, the railway belt to the, supreme court of Canada, It was originally intended to get \"an opinion from\nthe full court here; but the latter refused to consider the questions submitted\nin this manner: the list as prepared\nby, 1116 'provincial authorities was sub-\n_\nThe \"Caihbra\"\nfor Comfort...\nBerlin, Ont.\nM 2 (or 25c. you can *i\nthis shape In Elk Bran* I\nnaned\"DAKOTA.\" io\u00ab|\nAN INEXPENSIVE WAY\n'-    ,\"     \u25a0 \u25a0 \u2022 \u25a0\nThe reader of a liawspap.: will readily agree that It Is necessary for a merchant, with toy pretension\nof asressiveness, to advertise. Merchants are also aware ot this fact. Therefore It would seem that It Is\nBlmply a question as to what form the advertising will follow.\nNewspaper Advertising is the Most Inexpensive Way and Brings\nlarger Direct Results than Any Other Form of Advertising\nThe Daily News\nhas an average daily circulation of 3,000 copies distribute-? on the day of publication In the cities of Nelson,\nRossland, the Boundary country, the Slocan Valley and East Kootenay district,: covering tbe line of the C.\nP. R. from Plncher Creek, Alberta, to Midway, B. C, and there is not in B. C. a more progressive section of\ncountry than that In which'The Daily News circulates; the varied Industries consisting,of farming, fruit\ngrowing, lumbering, metalliferous mining, coal mining, and smelting, malting it an extremely favorable field\nfor advertising articles of every description suitable for a purchasing public engaged la the above mentioned industries. m\nKootenay's Publicity Medium\nWill Place Your Story in Ihe Hands of 3000 Subscribers Every\nDay at the Rate of 2-3 of a Cent, per Inch per 100 Circulation\nMr. Advertiser yon cannot circularize or personally canvas the field for that ainoun, bo be progressiva,,\nand use the means and resources at your hand to increase your bllBlness. ,. .,.\nFor advertising rates or further information phone H4 or address   News   Publishing  Company, Limited,\nP. O, Drawer Ilia, Nelson, B. C. ,-,,\nOFFICE OF THE NEW8 PUBLISHING CO., LTD., NELSON, B. C.\ni  *. '1   *y.\"!.i  \"<|l f    si       \t\nmltted'lo ihe OttaSa department, but\nneither the deputy minister nor the\nacting minister would consent to pass\nJfM J|l.l'snieiiit.ln_t)ie\u201e.aliBenco-ot.Hon.\nA. B, Aylesworth, who Is at present ln\nEurope. No further action 'will be taken\nlint!], his return'-nbtrat Ott.-1'r~\u2014\u2014\nWhen the,questions.,,as. drafted ,are\nflavor these are decided, the successful\nparty will do all in .'its power to faclll.\ntate the other's appeal to the privy conn-\noil; In order to set ft final ruling pn \u25a0\nthe.Vexeq.lsBJles;,; \u25a0\u25a0      (>';j!'''ijV\"\nI ,,;\u2022 8ifteen..,KIU.e4i    r.-|\nI.AOR'ENbEEtf. pVllsnlj,' 'lily; '.(ilsi-..\nloan miners were killed by an explosion\nof fire damp In a mine at Mansfield todav.\nMany otlier workmen were taken from\nUie mine unconselona nnd taken ru the\nliuspltal fort treiKtmont. >' V '{__    - : ,_H\nBefore You Buy\nAny New Sealers\nJoy woiild Ukp.you to Investigate the\nlatest fnfprovenienl on the' old fashioned Crb'-wiV Jar. THe-l top- of the\nsealer is ground so as to form a ridge\nwhich presses into tlie center of the\nrubbfer,, making a Jaa- ptartectlv air\ntight, so that you may be sure of vour\nfruit being perfectly preserved. They\ncan be bought at      '\nJoy's Cash Grocery\nCorner of Josephine and Mill Streets.\nJoy W..i; meet You at, (he Door..\nP. O. Box 037. Telephone 19\nGentlemen can be sure of getting a smart, up-to-date suit at\nC  Holloway Tht Mot\nFit, style and workmanship ot\nthe best.\nCleaning, pressing and  repairing on shortest notice.\n507 BAKER STREET\nLate Toye, Taylor & McQuarrle\n'\",'Phone,ti\nLadies' Tailoring\nKootenay fruit Lands\nWe have for sale ln the old\ntried and proven districts of\nTarryb and Thrums, a number of\n10, 15 and. 25-acre lots that we\nare orterlng on easy terms. When\nyou are buying It always pays to\nbuy tbe best., Tills is especially >\ntrue when you are buying fruit\nland. You cannot afford, to experiment tn untried districts. Profit by the experience ot others.\nPor full particulars apply to\ngeo. Gn McLaren,\n606% Baker Bt, Nelson.\nThe new oilfields of Alberta\npresent, the best opportunity\nfor investment in  Canada to-\n.. day.        a*   \u25a0\u25a0'\n'      Oil   is a heceaslty  and we-\n' have'.abundance of It.    There\"\nare    fortunes for those   ;whp\nhelp supply this demand.   We\nhave \"Information that wliriu-\ntei'est jro'ii;   Ask foY'tt.\\'\nPisuhcr Greek Oil C%\nDrawer    749, Plncher   Creek..:\n:-..,), Alberta u       id   n I\nThe Question Is\nAre, you satisfied that your\npresent tailoring .-.arrangements-\ncould not be Improved upon?   ,\nla Other Words\nAre you receiving a perfect service? \u25a0     \"      ' ' 1\"\nCall and Ste Us\nAnd we'll do the business.\nDave Small & Co.\n-. Expert Tailors.\nOpposite Hudson Bay Storea.\nBaker Bt.        Phone 349. ___.\nFOR SALE\nAt a Sacrifice\n, Thiee choice building lots in\n.Fairview, .only, one block from\n. school. ,Qulte level, no clearing.\n..une of the choicest locations ln\nv Falrvle'w fo-^a residence., Thls'qf-\n\\ feris gopd for two days on.ly, price,\n1*9^0, cash. , Fiul particulars ot... ,\n;::'':;R.;'4.;*STBEJL\u00ab-;ri:\nHudson's Bay Block Nelson\n WEDNESDAY     JULY 21\n\u00a9he IpitttB ilenwu\ng>\u20acg^ Cop*j\nPAOI THRU\nki\n<A..l.i.,l,dJ.i\n\u25a0nu. ,Ii iiiiA ttr%\na demagogue, but he evolves the\npymifmrr\u00bb\"Tjtit\u00ab^*,furit',eTbiveg--iteeir'*\nto his own mind; \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0*and because reason-\nso profound as Balfour's does not\nChange, neither ddes his devotion to a\njiause tliat jte fca| once'espoused. *Ai\nI The tariff reform movement now in\nprogress in Great Britain is tlie greatest tl'lumpb of Balfour's reason and\nconscientious advocacy. Thai movement is pre-eminently an evolution\u2014\nmentally to Balfour; fiscally to the\nnation. It is not attributable to a re-\njjantatjoijjof ,-h|s> faith* ^n free .trade. He\nstill \"believes\"In'universal free'irade;\nbut the prophecy of the apostle of\nfree trade has \u25a0B'eerTflirsined. No other'\nnationsliave adopted the faith; 'they\nare all unbelievers; and Balfour sees\ntbat a hundred or two more years\nmust roll uway before tlie world's\nconversion. We have not tree trade\ntoday, but unilateral free trade; and\nthe startling spectacle strikes home\nto the heart of Balfour\u2014the spectacle\nof the United Kingdom pending the\ngreat 'Consummation, offering herself\nand her children up as a sacrifice\nupon tlie altar of a purely altruistic\nIdeal. This was never intended; and\nthis cannot be. Hence Richmond\ntakes the field to save his country.\nBalfour first publicly advocated tariff reform In 1880; and he lias advanced by three stages to his present\nposition. First he asked for an \"Instrument of Negotiation\" to secure\nfrom competitive nations for British\nmanufactures abroad terms equal to\nthose accorded by Great Britain to\ntlte manufactures of those naiions.\nThis was a very skilful proposal, It\nwas not protection: It might even result In universal lining free trade; but\nIf it became an instrument ot retaliation, BalfOUr could claim that it had\nbeen east and forged not by Great\nBritain but by the other nations them-\nsellves. He next advanced to Great\nBritain's own need for ia tariff for\nrevenue purposes; anil Mien to the\nneed of her Industries to a protection,\nnot against fair competition but\nagainst tho glutting of the home markets with surplus overproductions\nfrom tartff-walled nations in which\nthese Identical goods are sold at\ndouble the juice at which they are\nvended retail in the industrial centres\nof Great, Britain.\nHis plan was to carry these reforms before initiating the subsidiary\npolicy of* reclprocative preferences,\nindeed it was not so much a subsidiary issue as a corollary; and his\nmethod of procedure was both logical\nand diplomatic. But Chamberlain\nfrom 100a with all the zeal and frenzy\nof a new convert forced the -question\nA  Happy   Hoftie\ntp be had on a BRITISH COLUMBIA\nFARM irt the British; Co umbia Southern,\nColumbia and Kootenay, and Columbia\nand Western Railway Companies' Land\nGrants. Farm Lands eminently suited for\nthe raising of\nFrUit, Grain or Stock\nmay be purchased in these Grants at low\nfigures for cash, or on Easy Terms, from the\nCanadian   Pacific    Railway\nTimber Lands of the highest character,\nsituated in these Grants, are offered tof sale\nin blocks of from 640 acres upwards.\nGood Shipping  Facilities\nEasy  Transportation\nFor Maps, Application Forms, Regulations and Literature apply to\nJ.   S.   DENNIS\nAsst. to 2nd Vice-President\nNo. 100 9th Ave. West,\nCalgary, Albertd.\nTown Lots for Sale in Nelson\nROUGH and\nDRESSED\nLUMBER\nDoors, Windows, Mouldings, Shinnies, Turned Works and Brackets.   Complete and up to date stock always on band.   Mall orders promptly attended to.\nA. Q. LAMBERT <* CO.\nARTHUR J %MES BALFOUR\nSOME      GLIMPSES      OF      JOSEPH\nCHAMBERLAIN   ALSO\nCOAST   PUBLICATION   HAS   INTERESTING  ARTICLE\nMr, Balfour cannot, like Lord Rosebery, he described us ti meteoric light\nflashing occasionally across the political firmament, says Brain Thompson,\nM. A., in the B. C. Saturday night. He\nis a fixed and permanent radiance in\nthe political thought of tho nation, in\nthe concentrated w|sdoni of the parliament he adorns, and in the empire\nPilose unity and settled governance he\nis steadily promoting.\nBalfour's career has been equally it\nsurprise to his personal friends and a\ndisappointment to his political foes.;\nHe was a contemporary at Eton with\nihpn .l,ike Rosebery, Lord Randolph\nChtirchill, Lord \"Minto and Lord\n\u25a0TSpher; ;blit though each of these surpassed him t in brilliancy in their\n'\u2022\u2022school and college days, and after-\n\u25a0wards In various capacities attained\nto high rank and position in the state,\nyet he has transcended their combined\nachievements and for the past. HO years\nhas stood upon a pinnacle, of fame in\nthe eyes of tlie world\u00bb*.to which none\nof his earlier rivals were capable of\nattaining. ?\nHe hjj.fi been Reader 6f the Iiouse of\ncommons   toy   a ^longer   continuous\nperiod than any\"statesman since the\n.great reform act of 1832;  and today,\n'though he is in  the  dark shades of\nopposition to the existing government,\n: It Is a universally admitted fact wltlt-\n, in  and  without  the   walls of  parliament that intellectually    he    is    unrivalled,  absolutely   unapproached,  by\nany of his contemporaries; and that as\na man endowed with the highest faculties ; of statesmanship,, there Is no one\n: of the present   generation   and only\ntwo   of   the.. past\u2014Beaconsfield ,'tinB;\n\u25a0 Gladstone\u2014who can'-'be. Tanked   with\n\\iiim. j '\u2022*'\u2022' JHH\n-  j Mr. Balfoin; has uot, as many of his\nopponents once   .Mid; \"been   dandled\n'; into political .eminence by his aristo-\n\u25a0 cratlc uncle, tlie Tate Marquis of Salisbury. He was drawn Into politics almost reluctantly, and ho has risen to\n\u25a0fame hi\" the force.-,.qf his own -jCh-arac---]\nter aft'd the' d{ifyido.ir! of, his -owtt;\ntalents\u2014talent-*1*' which ' If   he    hfid-\n' -chosen to devote them to his favorite\n'studies of literature    and    philosophy\n.would    undoubtedly    hnve   'produced\n. works of such surpassing power thati\nthr-ii would have become for all time\n\" cltuWcB of tiie  English  tongue.    But\n. as fn the case of Gladstone\u2014a circumstance which Lord Macaulay earnestly\n\u25a0 '.hoijtfj would not occur\u2014he was divert\ned by the current of irresistible events\n\u25a0 from the. fields in    which    his Intel-\n;   lecjual   .gifts   would have, fpund their.\n'    loftiest and moat    congenial   employment,    into-- the.-   somewhat    turgid\nwaters of political life and   the fre-\nj' quent   maelstroms    of   political   fac-\n\u25a0 tions. Still though literature may ,re-\n, ' gret the diversion, we cannot deplore\nI .it as.a catastrophe; for what the\n.;.  world has possibly lost ln Its scholar\nship, the British 'empire has gained in\nIts power and prestige by the primary\ndedication to it of tlie talents of Arthur Balfour.\nBalfour did not, however, forsake\nliterature any more than did Gladstone. It has been his solace in sorrow, his recreation in leisure, and being the fountain of his Inspiration it\nhas supplied his armour for the day\nof hattle. Many a head has fallen\nwith the sweep of his Socratic sword;\nand still out of the filled up remnants,\nof his time, he has given to the world;\nof thought several works of inestimable value upon the problems\nthat confront us all in this epoch-of\nemergence from tlie thraldom of do-g-j\n.ma .-inta-.tUe..glorious. liberty ....of. free;\nthought, free reason and free faith, .\nThe possession of the philosophic\ntemperament whicli is not aggressive\nbut retiring, even diffident, brought\nhim when first lie entered parliament\nmuch scorn and derision; and when\non the fall of Gladstone in 1880 over\nhis first Irish home rule bill, nnd the\nreturn'\" of the conservative party to\npower it was announced that Mr. Balfour, Who was then 38, had heen appointed chief secretary for Ireland,\nthe consternation that prevailed\namong Lord Salisbury's own followers\nwns only equalled in intensity by the\nexultant joy of tlte , Gladstonites and\nnationalists. Physically and mentally\n\u2022he appeared uniitterMor the task;, and\nthe Irish party, led by the astute >Par-\n\u2022nell, and at that time the most turbulent and pertinacious band that: had\nafter sat in the Iiouse of commons,\nconfidently predicted that they would\nsoon break him. as they had broken\nfar more stalwart men, like a butterfly on the wheel of irreconcilable tactics. But alas for splenetic prophjecy!\nThe attitude that had acquired for him\nthe sobriquet of \"Balfour the debo-\nnaire,\" and such derisive and scornful\nepithets as \"The Silk-Skinned Sybarite,\" tbe \"Palsied Masher,\" the \"Scented Popinjay,\" the \"Hothouse Flower\"\nrandUhe-\"Lisping Hawthorn-bird.\"-, was\n-.quitikly. 'transformed Into a cool, calm\nand resolute demeanor against which\nthe bombs'of virulence were as ineffectual as - pistol shots against a\ngranite  fortification.\nWithin two years not only had he\ndisappointed the confident expectations of the Irish party, but he had\nsmashed their combinations; had re-\n^gtocejl 'hiw jtfnd^or\/ler in\" the distracted,.\n\u00abAunt3y.\u00a3tfg hfs;frqVhmia aud 'tfohi.\nwill; and in parliament by repelling '\nevery attack, vile, virulent and vindicative it's it may have been, he had\nrisen to' the' acknowledged position of\none of the foremost parliamentary debaters of the time. The derision, Ihe\nsneer of contempt, quickly turned\nInto the venom of thwarted rancor.\nNow he became \"Base, bloody and\nbrutal Balfour,\" and likened to 'Hello-\ngabalus,\" the Roman voluptuary who\nwas in the habit ot rjectipe rating his\nehergies; in Jf-'-fcath- of children's :blood.-\nBalfdhr was not however, only a\nttistigatorV v\/Th'o; -series of land' pur,\nchase acts pa'ssed' by' h'lm between\n1887 and 1903 has, .resulted in the\ntranefQrmatiotf.ol,Ireland. . Landlordism and Gladstone's' Impracticable\nscheme of dual ownership, have well\nnigh   disappeared;   and   it   only   re\nmains to apply the principle of com-\nTlulbToTfTttr \"3\"1W f6baicItrnTTts\"1h\"(5V-'\n^er.rto^complptely aryilhilaf^ jtjie nyqat\nruthless' system drMarifl tenure eVef\nsanctioned by a civilized country. But\nhe did not stop there.' Allotments of\nland, on whicli clean . and . healthy\ncottages were built, were, given to\nlaborers all over the country. Through*\nout the west, where the worst of,Ireland's poverty and the most enchanting of her, scenery existed side by\nside, lie ameliorated the condition of\nthe people by establishing many, rural\nIndustries that still flourish; and 'to\ncrown all by a magnificently conceived and splendidly executed, system he taught the Inhabitants of the\nwestern seaboard the treasures of the\nAtlantic that lapped their shores.\nThese people had previously never\ndreamt of (tlie- wealth of the ocean;\nbut today they are one of the largest\nshippers of fish Into the, great centres\nand cities of the United Kingdom,\nthe transportation of these ..and'.other\nproducts being not only facilitated but\nrendered possible by , light.. railways,\nnew roads and river-canals constructed\nunder Balfour's beneficent policy of\nresurrecting Ireland not by outside\naid or periodic doles but by vitalizing\nthe forces within herself. He is Ireland's greatest benefactor since Henry\nG'rattan.\n* We must pass over many Interest\ning periods and events in Mr. Balfour's career\u2014the Jameson raid, the\nSouth African qanifiOlKJli -M$ tf-e frequent clouds of war that rose oil Ulff\nhorizon of eastern Europe and tile\nOrient which he dispelled with a diplomatic touch.\nBalfour Is conHpleiious for his consistency. This Is not ntM'-ihutahlc to\nunprogressiveness, for he is always\nadvancing; but to the fact that before' lie adopts, or gives his sanction\nto, any project he thinks It out in accordance with his philosophic temperament. Ho has not, therefore, like\nChamberlain, spent years of his life In\nrecanting or in advocating what earlier years were spent in denouncing.\nHe Is not a man of impulse, passion\nor narrow partyJsm, He Is cosmopolitan; versatile as diversified humanity;\nand therefore able to adapt himself to\never-varying conultlons. Reason, conviction and expediency form the triple\nforce of his advocacy. And what is\nthat advocacy? It is irresistible; it Is\nmatchless; it Is unrivalled among\nstatesmen of the present day and generation, it may not at first convince,\nbut it gains an entrance into the mind,\nand It will eventually compel conviction; because In speaking he does, not\nproclaim as an oracle, or declaim as\nof colonial preferences into the fore-\nTfBlit \"\"onlivTOtir 'altogether' oT'tne\" \"tStSV\nthat a national tariff had neither been\ncarried nor had the necessity for in|\nifttfany ^jttape been proved, or ajlmlt|\ntpdV He'itctuany'y-csigned front !Balf\nfour's government in 1901! in order to?\nforce forward the preferential branch.'\nof the agitation; and Uie consequence?\nwas that tariff reform, in globo, passed1.\nIn the eyes of the people from an inl\ndustrlal policy necessary to themselves Into an imperializing scheme Inl\nvjillch^yjey wdro to'hiake, \"a, sac-ftftce-j\nWorthy'' or1 thfe cause:1' The-'citdse \"waff\nImperial unity dissevered altogether.'\nffbm national necessity, m this way\"\nthe ugliest spect of the reform'propft-\nganda was presented lo view\u2014the\ntaxation of (pod stuffs\u2014while the\nbright .amir -.alluring aspect\u2014tlie revival of fradi, the* augmentation of\nemployment, and the Increase of\nwages-jgras* \u25a0;completely ohscurdd.\nIt may seeifi like a paradox\u2014it may\ninvolve tlie demolition of an idol\u2014but\nit is absolutely true lo say that Chamberlain was a greater retarder of tar-\nlit reform than all the free trade*\nforces. Had It not been lor his Im-\npetuousneaa, Balfour at the present\ntime would be at the head of a tariff-\nimposing government, and reciprocal\npreferences within the empire would\nbe an accomplished fact. How futile,\nhow absurd, how Incongruous to talk,\nas so many people do, of \"Balfour's\nconversion to ChamberlainlsmH' Balfour was the making of Chamberlain\u2014\nthe means of lifting him from the\ncategory oi' social ami local demagogues and of wanton Iconoclasts Into\ntho ranks of genuine siatcsmen; but\nChamberlain betrayed the Ingrained\npropensity pf the former character\nwhen after becoming infected wku\nthe larger patriotism\u2014the greater and\ngrander Ideas of Balfour\u2014incontinently \"he rushed ahead of his chief and\nurged one of ttha manifest effects of\nIds chief's pollicy (which he had had\nno part in moulding and which indeed\nlie hud sternly opposed and ridiculed\nin ids earlier years) as a tiling apart\nfrom that policy, as a thing transcending that policy, and as a thing of his\nown origination, instead of standing\nshoulder to shoulder with his chief in\ncarrying the primary cause\u2014national\ntariff reform\u2014content to know that\nthe subsidiary result\u2014preferential tar-\niffs\u2014was certain to-eiisue. Whether\nit was vanity, or e^qtism or tiie infatuation of a newly converted zealot that\nImpelled him, I will not say, but his\naction con never receive a more generous name than folly.\nChambeilainism, as such, is dead;\nwhile    Balfourism     has     transmuted\n'W'W T      0       \u2022 The Leading\nWeir S Shoe Store\n. . Great. .\nBargain Sale\nOf Ladies' Oxfords\nCommencing Thursday\nWhen we say bargains, you can rely on getting bargains\nsuch as have never been offered to you in Nelson before.\nBelow are just a few of the many lines we are sacrificing. See\nour windows for prices.\nLadies' Patent Kid Welted Oxford?, ?egular$4-50\nSale Price $2.75\nLadies'  Kid Oxfords, hand turn\nsoles, regular $3.00\nSale Price $1.65\nLadies' Chocolate Kid Oxfords, turn soles,\nregular price $3.00 '\nSale Price $1,50\n\u25a0 Ladies'- White Canvas j?hoesy $2.50 and $3.00\n$ale Price $1.50\nJVf-Pfl'c   Box Caif, leather lined, double\nITlvll 5   SQleSi blucher cut, regular price\n$4.5;0\nSale Price $2.95\nRemember, we have no old stock\nto offer you. All our goods are new\nand up-to-date.\nUp to-Date Exclusive Shoe Store, Baker Street'\nNelson, B. *.. \"J\nN.B.\u2014Special attention to mail orders.\nChamberlain's \"sacrifice worthy of the\neaotfe* jtftb\"'tmr -aaiuisittdtf tfnrgsnrl\nra^Q. ior ,-a coppej;. c.ain\" . ev#w. ...tlniq\nGreat Britain concedes preferences to\nh*r over-sea sister nations; and so\nwith spurious imperialism replaced\nby genuine .statesmanshiy, Igaifoiir\nnow hea^a the rfipidly advancing hosts\nof tlie .nation to -the. imminent- goal\nwlicre their national wen-being -md\nthe empire's stability converge and\ni*neet together.\n\/Balfour lias proved himself a matching leader. To lead a coalition, and\ntfcen to Yuse ltd diverse elements into\na- liom^geneouB party,'is \"'tjin ftcfile-re-\ninent never \u25a0 previously ' accomplished\nin the history of parliament. Neither\nBteaconsfield, nor Gladstone.' rior'SabV\nb'ury could have accomplished it.\nGladstone and. Salisbury among their\ncolleagues wetje masters, arid, tyrapts;\nwhile Beaconsfleld was an - oracle:,\nwhose nod was \"tlie nod of Jupiter.\nBalfour by irresistible intellectualism\ninoculates his followers not wifli personal ideas or himself hut with ihe\nlofty, statesmanlike, and prescient\nconceptions that lilt his own soul. His\nmind pervades his colleagues, but the\ntransfusion is so imperceptible, tliat\nthe idea of mastery on his part or of\nsubordinate servility or constrained\nacquiescence on their part is completely effaced. Each one moves and\nspeaks In union, and each one is an\nequal coadjutor of the other. To the\nimpartial observer, to Hie world, and\nto history, the source of tlie pbwfer\nand coherency of the unionist party\ndTulflg the past 2D years must be obvious.\nA dissertation on Balfour as a\nphilosopher would take tne beyond the\nlimits of this article; but this I will\nsay: No man ever read one of Balfour's works without an ennobled feeling, a stronger grasp of tiie mysterious relationship between himself and\nthe other phenomena of creation, and\nbetween himself and the eternal'; and\nnto man laid down one of his works\nwithout a desire to return to it again\noi'\"to pursue the thoughts inspired by\nit. in after years.\nOf Balfour as an orittbr T have* oilly\nspace for a few words. \u25a0 Its basin is\neverywhere reason. It haa. none Qt tlie\nrecklessness and puerile assertlveness\nOf Lord- Randolph Churchill,, his earliest colleague and rrstwhilo-chief: it\nhas none of the intolerant narrowness\nand bitter acerbating retort of Chain*\nBerlaln; It has none of the -oracular\nmajesty and pungent epigram of\nBeaconsfleld; it as none of those\ntranscending appeals of Gladstone\nwhich carried both him and his audience away in a whirlwind of words\nand phrases\u2014brilliant dazzling words,\nand electrical phrases of passion and\nemotion\u2014when he denounced1 some\nwrong, portrayed some horror, sought\nfor the chastisement of some aggressor or for the amelioration of\nsome injustice, or when he roused the\nnation to The urgency of some reform\nor to some retributive or pacific action\nIn tlie cause of common humanity. . \u2022\n* Balfour states his case with the\nprecision of a mathematician. He lays\nout IiIb premises;- tnnd by force of logical reason he le-a'ds to tiie inevitable\nconclusion. His language is philosophic\nrather than picturesque; ii is precise\nput not pedantic; it Is cultured bill\nnot critical: It is tlie steady rosistle-i.s\n[low of a deep, broad 'river limn-the\ngulch rippling rush of the shallow\nstream. With an analytic and dialectic\nskill which neither Gladstone, nor\npeacoiiBfleld, nor Chamberlain possessed, he ruthlessly destroys--tlie argumentative forts of bis antagonists.\nand then erects his 'own\u2014grander,\ngreater aud more enduring than those\nhe has.. demolished, livery time he\nleaves his audience with the idea ilia.\nast lie spake they saw anew and with\na clearer vision; and that their reason and better comprehension bad\nbeen strengthened by following bis\ndemonstration; and when ultimately\nitc secures J* conviction it is every\ntime the conviction of reason, which\nis immutable, and not the conclusion\nof impulse or passion, which is\nephemeral.\nHis address in the house of commons on the occasion of Gladstone's\ndeath, and on tbe occasion of Queen\nVictoria's deottl are incomparable\nmasterpieces of that panegyric elo-\ntjuence for which Greece has been\nrivalled only by the Ciceronian sublimity of Home. Pathos blended with\neulogy, and sorrow assuaged by tlie\nmemory of noble lives and glorious\nachievements enthralled the listeners\nwhose hearts responded to every sentiment, and whose spontaneous impulse, when he had closed, was to\nmourn not for the dead who had gone\nto their reward but for the nation that\nhad been bereft of such sublime examples of greatness, and goodness and\nvirtue.\nNo oiip can read Balfour's college\naddresses, and those delivered at\nscientific and great national congresses wit bout feeling they are\nDemosthenic in their philosophic comprehensiveness, and Ciccroiiie in the\nbeauty of their thought, and the\nsublimity of their language. On such\noccasions he reaches the highest point\nof true eio(|uenc<-.\nThis is tiie tribute nnd the impartial ' judgment of an Irishman who.\nhowever, differs from Balfour on Ire*\n\u25a0land's need of, and right to, an elective\n\"autonomous parliament.\nHOTELDIRECIOEY\nThe\nWard Street\"'\nNelson, B. C,\n(Drop In ud Bample the newest Importation\nKing William IV.\n(v.o. p.) Scotch Whiskey\nThis whiskey Ib guaranteed 60 yeari\nold -betore bottlnd at Leith, Scotland.\nRtmems-er we aerie nothing bat tke\n.beit liqders, wln-H,  whlskeyi  beer.*'\nanfl cigars on the market.       _     \u25a0\nYOUNG 4 BOYD,  ProprUtort,\nPetroslno Murder\nKOMI-:, July 20\u2014J. R. Crowley. A. Bj\nSimon and A. V. Vachris, three American detectives, left here today on their\nway hack to the United States after\nmaking investigations of the murder of\nLieut. Joseph Petroslno, the chief ofl\nthe Italian bureau of the New York\npolice force, who was assassinated at\nPa-ot-ino, Sicily, last March, The detectives were assisted by the Italian\npolice -and it Is understood an important report on the case will he made\nwhen they' reach New York.\nSilver King Hotel\nBaker St\u2122-*, Nelson.\nRegular Hoarders, $6.00 per week.\nRates 11.25, per day.\n\u25a0et* 25 Cent Meel in the City.\nWM. NEUENDORF, Prop.\nNelson Hotel Bar\nBaker Street, Nelson, B. C.\nINK  AND WARD, Props.\nTry a \"GIN RICKEY\"\nMade from California limes, specially\nimported.\nFor a cool, satisfying smoke\nTry  \"A Savannah\" Cigar\nBartlett House\nG. W. BARTLETT, PROP.\nThe best $1.00 a day house lu town,\nA Miner's Home.\nKootenay Hotel\nMRS.  MALLETTE, Proprietrau.\nA heme (or everybody.    Every convenience given to the travelling public.\nElectric    piano.     Culslmt   unexcelled.\nRates tl per day.\nSherbrooke House\nNELSON, B. C'\nOne minute's walk trom O. P. R. its-\nUsa.   Cuisine uneicelled;   well heats'\nand Tentllated.\nBOYEB BROS., Proprietors.\nMInard's Liniment cures Diphtheria\nRainier Beer Is the Best Beer.\nEmpire Hotel\n(Late   Sunnysfde.)\ntaker Street, Nelaon.\nThe house is thoroughly   r-tmodellt-1\nthroughout.   Clean rooma.\nWeekly Boarders 16.00.\nRates |1.00 per day \u25a0\u25a0\nTemperance   house;   home   comforti;\nbest took io the city.\nMRS. J. E. HARRIS, Proprletreti.\nAthabasca Saloon\nCor, Baker and Kootenay Sts,\nNoted    house,  lor  Uig  Beer,    best\nbrands of Wines and Liquors and Union\nCigars in stock. i\nIVENS  &   PHILBERT,   PROPS.     \u25a0\nNtLSON CAfE\nLARGE  COMMODIOUS    DINING\nROOM\nPROMPT      AND     COURTEOUS\nSERVICE.\nMEALS SERVED  AT ALL\nHOURS\nELEGANTLY   FURNISHED\n_ROOMSJN  CONNECTION\nA. AUDET, Proprietor\nl'lionci l'Tj.\nHotel Outlet ____< *\u25a0**--\nGreatly enlarged, new furnishings,\nmodern conveniences .large balconies,\ndancing pavilion, new row boats.\nFl\u00abhing,     Boating,   Bathing,   Sandy\nBeach    .The best place to spend your\nvacation.    Write or wire for rooms\nG. A L. SNOW, PROPS.\nROSSLAND.\nTHE HOFFMAN ANNEX, ROSSLAND.\nB. O.\u2014Green & Smith, Prop*. Centrally\nlocated. European and Aim-ncati plan.\nCommercial traveller, a will find light,\nconi tor table su.iiiple rooms, a ipei-iai am-\nlog room and excellent at-uommodutioni\nat The Hot I'm an. Baths, bowling alley,\niteam laundry. \u25a0*\nPHOENIX\nBOTBL BROOKLYN, PHOKNIX. \u25a0 G.~\nThe only up to date hotel In Pho-tnla.\nNew trom cellar to roof. Beet ea-aplt\nrooma In the Boundary. Bath room la\neonnectloa. Steaai heat. Oppoelte Ureal\nNorthern depot    Janee MarehaU, prop.\nARROWHEAD.\n1X9 UNION HOTEL, ABROWHBAD-.\nIpeclal attention j-ivca to eommerclat\n\u25a0ten and tourlit*-. First elaas sample\nrooms. Flnert scenery In British Columbia, ererlooking Upper Arrow la*--*-. W,\nJ. Lixhtburns, proprietor.\nGRAND FORKS, B.C.\nPROVINCE HOTEL-CInir.ii Forks, B. G\u201e\nts tho nt-nest antl best appuinit-il hotel\nIn the Interior of British ColnnitJtu, .mil\noffers to the tnivelllny put-Ik' the best\naccommodation ohtaliuiblt-. Tlir- building\nIs all newly funiit-l'-j-l thrimglioui itmt Is\nthe only tire proof hotel in tin.* city, E.\nLarsen. Proprietor.\nCOMAPLIX\nQUEEN'S HOTEL - Comaplhc, Crl'ef\nyoung, Prop'. ETSit of wines, littttors Riid\ncigars. Travellers io Fish Greek will\nfind excellent accommodation at this\nhotel. SaraflUl renin i\u00bbr commorcinl\ntravellers Is IU x r>5, one uf tiie lartfost\nin   tlie   Kootenai's,-\n\\tt'.\nW\nd'^M^f^P^\nthe F.Ccllner Electric Co.\n\u25a0LBCTRICAL CONTRACTORS\nOffice\u2014Cor. Jossphtne aud Vistorlt,.\nPhone A. 89.\nArmature Winding and Klsetrieal\nRepairs. Light and Power Plants\nInstalled Complete, also Telephones,\nHotel Annunciators, Electric Sigus,\nAutomatic Fire Alarms, Hone.\nWiring, ud Th* Apple Automatle\nBparker.\nPrompt Service and Special Attention (Inn to all work.\n\u25a0M t:\\ ,Y3 I: I\n Mas pour\n\u00a9he fPaUg Slew**\nWEDNESDAY\nJULY 21\nIIHIIIIIflllllllMIMIHMMIIIIIMIMIHI\nThe Hudson's Bay Stores\n11\ni <\nSpecial Clearance Sale\nOf Hurley's and Burt's High\nGrade American Boots\nThe excellent quality o\" tii ese goods Is well known but, lor many\npeople, they come a little too high, and consequently they are not moving uff our shelves as last as til ey should. However, we imported them\nto se.l and if we cannot get wit at they are worth, they must go for\nwhat wo can get. For the balance ot this montli we offer them at\nabout what they cost:\nLadies' Hoots, all styles, in Black and Chocolate Vicl Kid.. Tan Calf\nand Brown and Grey Suede.\nRegular Price $6, now offered at $4,50\nRegular Price $5.50, now offered at.4.00\nHurley's American boots for men, Patent and Velour Calf Blucner\nRegular Price, $7, now offered at $5.50\nPatent nieucher, Regular price $4.50, now offered at ..\nPlain Patent Laced, regular price, $5.50, now offered at ..\n.$2.95\n.$4.00\nThis Is a genuine clearance sale and had best be taken .\nof at once and while we have all sizes.\n* ************ ***********\u2014\u00bb\u2022**\u2022***********\nImperial Bank of Canada\nHEAD OFFICE, TORONTO\nCapital   Authorized    $10,000,000\nCapital Paid Up   $5,000,000     Raserve $5,000,000\nD. R. WILKIE, President HON. ROBT. JAFFRAY, VlcePres.\nBRANCHES IN BRITISH COLUMBIA:\nArrowhead, Cranbrook, Fernie, Golden, Kamloops, Michel, Moyle, Nelson,\nRevelstoke, Vancouver and Victoria.\nSAVINGS DEPARTMENT\nInterest allowed on deposits at current rate from date of deposit.\nNELSON BRANCH J- \"*>\u2022 LAY, Manager.\nCanadian Bank of Commerce\nA Branch of This\nBank Has Been\nOpened at Nakusp\nBuy a Ranch At or Near Procter\nTiie prettiest spot on Kootenay lake. Three boats dally. No ice\nin the winter. Communication never stopped. We have improved places\nfor sa.e at $2000 up.   Apply\nPrOCter & BladtWOOd  509 Ward Street, Nelson, B. c.\nNew Picture\nPost Cards\nThe Picture Post Card ban taken Its\nbonnet off; in fact It has brought Its\ntrunk along and settled down to stay.\nIt's no longer regarded as a passing craze or fad, but aa a nece*-\nIt so often takes tin\nom It.\nplace of a letter tbat you wouldn't be witlr-\nWe have just received a particularly Tine selection of new subjects\nin Comics, Fancy Cards and Greetings  and   Birthday  Cards.\nALSO our Triple Nelson View Card gives a mognlElcent panoramic\nview of Nelson from Ibe C.P.R. yards and smelter to the shipyards and\na beautiful view of tbe lake and surrounding hills. Price 10c. each,\n;: for 25c.\nOur other cards range In pr'ci? from 2 for 5c. \"co 50c, apiece.\nW.   O.  THOMSON \u00bb\u00a3*\nBookseller and Stationer\nmis \u00a9atia $tw\u00bb*\nPublished at Nelson Every Morning\nExcept Monday, by\nNewt Publishing Company, Limited\nW. O. McMORRIS   Manager\n__w*m_\n(UNION\nBANK Of MONTREAL\n(Ettatllahta 1117)\nC..IUI Ail fall li,... .r.14,40-,0*-*.    B**t     IH.WMN\nHCAD OFFICE MONTREAL ____\n\u25a0I. Han. Lara \u2022tratli-ona and Mount Royal, G. C. M.. \u2022. Hon. FroaKen*\nHan, tlr. George Orummonel, K. C. **. G\u201e Preeioant\n\u2022Ir Edward S. Clouaton, Bart, Vice Preeldent and Gen. Manager.\n\u25a0RANCHES IN \u00bb\u00abITI\u00bbH COLUMBIA\nArmatrona, Endaray, Greenwood,   Kelowna,   Nolwii,   New   Denver,\nHI*.laTNVwW.etrnlnet.r, Reeelaaa,  \u00abun,me-lan\u00ab,  Vaneaavar.  Vtrmm,\nVictoria, ChlllawacK, Heem-r.\nNELSON MANCH L. \u25a0. DEVISE**, *taa\u201et.\nThe Royal Bank of Canada\nINCORPORATED IMt,\nCapital $4,6oc,ooo     Reserve $5,300,000\nSavings Bank Accounts Solicited\nWe issue Money Orders and Travellers' Cheques on\npoints throughout the world.\nNaleon Branch , *\u2022 *\u2022 NETHERBY, Manager\nM1GHTON & CAVANAUGH\nBROKERS\nDrawer 1087.\nNEL80N, B. C.\nPhone 110\nSUBJECT TO CONFIRMATION\nWE WILL BUY WE WILL SELL\n200 11. 0. Copper *\"*-*B\nWOO Canadian N. W. Oil Offer\n31)00 Diamond Vale Coal 08\n1000 International Coal SO\n2000 Royal Collieries    -2614\nvms_____ ir,u\n2000 American Canadian Oil % .15\n10 Consolidated Smelters ....94.00\n1500 Eva Gold Mines   Bid\n1000 International Coal     -83M-\n1000 Nugget Gold Mines  Bid\n2000 Rambler-Cariboo     .W_\nQUESTION OP DEFENCE\nIn the course of tlie1 discussion on1\nCanadian contribution to tlie imperial\nnavy, tbe manner in whlbH tbe dominion lias discharged lis duty in regard\nto tlie maintenance of the defences\nat Esqulmalt and Halifax-has naturally\ncome In for some discussion: Particularly has criticism been directed at the\ngovernment for tbe course which it\nhas pursued in regard to Esquimau\nAnyone who knows anything of tbe\nEsqulmalt of the old days und of the\nmanner in which tlie defences there\nare being maintained at tlie present\ntime cannot but agree that this criticism is justified!,\nAmong tbe papers  to refer to tbe\npresent  conditions   at  Esqulmalt  was\nTlie Toronto News and for so doing- it\nwus recently taken to task by The Winnipeg Free  Press,  defeuder-in-chief of\nthe government in the west, as foliows:\n\"Inspector general  Lake  reports to\nthe mllltla council that the fortresses\nand  works at   Halifax  nnd  Esquimau\nare. In both cases. In u thoroughly efficient condition, with the exception of\none of; the auxiliary butteries at the\nlatter    place,  where  the    foundations\nshow signs of subsidence.   Tbis la being carefully watched, and under present conditions, is or little importance.\nTho armament  mounted In both  fortresses ftnd1 the electric light Installations are in good condition and we.;\ncared lor in every way;'   But The Toronto  News, which  has been clamorously    proclaiming that the guns   ut\nEsqulmalt    were being destroyed    by\nrust, keeps on pounding its war drbm.\"\nTin- Free Press apparently considers\nthat sir  Percy  Lake's statement that\nthe fortresses nnd works at bold Esquimau and Halifax are in a \"thoroughly\nefficient condition\" with the exception\nof- a minor weakness In- one of the forts\nat tlie former place meets all criticisms.\nWhat sir Percy says may lie very true,\nTor the works and fortresses at Esquimau are In exactly the same \"thoroughly  efficient  condition\" as  they  were\nleft a few years ago by the imperla.\ntroops on their withdrawal.   Not a bit\nof new work has been undertaken since\nthen.    Even guns which were on the\nground ready for mounting when the\nBritishers   withdrew have  never  been\nplaced in position. In addition the place\nIs so very much undermanned tliat In\ncase of un emergency U would be an\nalmost hopeless undertaking to attempt\nits defence.    These  are facts known\nto every person living at the coust.\nBut if any answer to The Free Press\nwere required it is furnished by the\nstatement made the other day by The\nVancouver World, a paper which assumes to speuk for tbe liberal party in\nthis province, in discussing the question of the formation of a volunteer\nnaval reseve. As showing the necessity\nof such a body The World said: \"Now\nthat Esquimau and its fortifications belong to the past, the need of a defensive force of citizens trained in the\narts and practice of methods of naval\nwarfare ts greater than It ever was.\"\nWhat wili The Free PreBB have to\nsay to The World for expressing tha\nview that Esqulmalt and Its defences\nare a thing of the past when It is trying to convince its readers that the\nfortress is being maintained ln Hirst\nclass shape.\nEDITORIAL  NOTES\nft is1 apparently far less of a trick\nto upset a government in France than\niii Canada..\nReporters and editors throughout\nGanada> wiii' sincereiy regret that Mr.\nA'dami Shortt is not their paymaster.\nIt? Is said that the dominion government- proposes to fortify Prince Rupert,\nit Is io be* hoped: tbat it maken a better job of it than it has of maintaining\ntlie Esqulmalt defences.\nCanada is doing particularly well at\nBisley this year, whicli shows that the\nencouragement given to> rifle shooting\nin this country is now 'bearing fruit.\nThe offforts in tbis direction, however,\nshould be increased, not diminished.\nZlngari's. Tour\nPHILADELPHIA, Pa\u201e July 20\u2014Tho\nBelmont Cricket club, eleven defeated\nthe Toronto Zingari. cricketers In the\nsecond innings of their match today\nat Blmwood without tbe loss of u\nwicket by the score of 225 to 224.\nCut to Pieces\n\u25a0 VANCOUVER, July 20\u2014To. be cut\nto pieces by the propeller of the tug\nEvergreen in Seymour Inlet at an\nearly hour lust We-lnesdliiy morning\nwas tiie terribe fate of George Sid-\ndell of Vancouver, according to advices received this morning from tbe\nnortli at the camp of NeweMi and Cunningham,\nKorean* Tramway TnoubJ-et-\n\"SEOUL, Korea, July 20-\u2014Tiie Korean\nemployees of the electric street railway\nsystem* in Seoul; went om strike today.\nThe property was recently transferred\nby tlie American company which built\nthe line, to a Japanese syndicate, Tli3\nstrikers-, threaten' to stuum- tbe offices\nMInard's Liniment. Go., TUmti-.*-l.\nGents.--1 cured a viihiulili-  hunting Jos\nof   mange   with   MINARD'S   MN1MENT\nlifter several vetorjnarleq luni trwuui htm\nwithout doing any permanent good.\nVuuro, &<-,,\nWDI'.PRID  G-AGNE,\nProp, nr a rami Centra. Hotel;, Buiummoitd-\nvllH*.   -V..!*-;.  3.  '0*1.\nMOTOR BOAT SUPPLIES\nThe largest and best assortment In\nthe irttrrlor of B. C.\nDry batteries, lubricating oils and\ngreases, spark colls, spark plugs, magnetos, primary and secondary cable,\nheadlights, life buoys and fenders,\nsteering wheels, deck fittings, gasoline\nfittings, carburetters, anchors, tiller\nrope, switches, horns and whistles,\ncotton waste, carbide, bilge pumps,\nvolt and ammeeters, storage batteries,\nreverse gears, propeller wheels, and\neverything used on a motor boat.\nMail orders promptly atended to.\nPrices right. Agents for Barber\nEngines.\nE. D. MESSENGER CO.\n606 Stanley Street P. O. BoBx 172\nTel. 44.\nFOR  SALE\nCHEAP\nTwo bear cubs. Undress\ne months' old. Ad-\nA. Longhurst\nof, the BynxH-catn and ere only held in*\ncheck by a strong, force of solditers:\nWANETA  NEWS\nNew  Ranching  District  Is  Flourishing\n\u2014Crops Are Above Average\n(ftpflctal to The Dally News.)\nWANETIA',, .Inly 20.--Thifl is the moul\nfavoruhle season tlie vallby lias seen for\nu number of years, tini recent ptontlous\nrains having1 improved the crops In sen-\nera), while fruits of -dl kinds1 are promising t\u00bb in- u ibumper crop, EUrowbeirlett\nare being shipped UiIh year in Quantity\nand of Al quality.\n\u25a0Black un<l other kinds \"f bears have\nbeen seen recently and1 Have been Uie\nsource of some exciting adventures.\nThe service behl last* night at th*' ranch\nof Relth Brothers iby Rev. Gohorn; missionary ot the Church of Kntrlinid. wus\nvery well iittcrnled and greatly appreciated;\nTbe hay Imrvost is now genera.! and the\ncrop this year promises te he nttove tbe\naverage.\nFrultvale Note*\nfSn-fhil to The Daily News.)\nFRUlTVAliE, July 20.\u2014At the annual\npicnic held by the union Sunday school in\nthe piirk on the 15th about 100 people were\npresent. Refreshments were proVied by\nthe Indies and there were games for the\nchildren,\nThere Is every prospect nf n bountiful\ncrop this year, the recent mlns Having Increased  the growth  wonderfully.\nA petition ts twing circulated calling upon the government to build a b'rf-Stec '\u25a0'\u2022\nmiles below Trull. Such n bridge would\nmid materially to tbe advantages*- of the\nsurrounding district,\nArthur Mean*,; hardware merchant, is\naway nt the fair at Semite for u couple\nof weeks.\nCharles Archibald, with \u00bb gang nf men.\nis busy nn the government road b'ettveea\nFridtval and Sni'ward.\nKING OF PORTUGAL\nRumored That He Is to -Marry Daughter\no>f English Duke\nLISBON', July 2(1\u2014King Manuel fs to\nmake a trip abroad in 'the autumn und\nIt is understood that the visit' is to\narrange a marriage between Km majesty and princess Alexandra, daughter ofi the duke of Fife.\nWar Clouds Gathering-\nBUENOS AYRES. July 20\u2014The Argentine government has sent a passport\nto the Bolivllan minister here ordering\nhim to leave Buenos Ay res within 24\nhours. The government has also telegraphed Senor Fonieca. Argentine minister to Bolivia to leave Lapar immediately.\nCERTIFICATE    OP    IMPROVEMENTS.\n\u00bbt. Anthony,  St. Elmo and Gold Qmttz\nMineral Claims,   situate    in the Nels-Wi\nMining Division of West Kootenay Dls*\ntrfet.\nWhere located;\u2014About four miles from\nNelson, east of Cottonwood creek,\nTAKE NOTICE tnat I, P. C. Green, acting ns fluent for Thomas J. Scanlan,\nFree Miner's Certificate B.16028, and W11-'\nHam Maher, ?ree Miner's Certificate No.\nB.1-S236, intend- sixty days from date hereof, to apply to the Mining Recorder for\nCertificates of improvements, for the\npurpose of obtaining Crown Grants of the\nabove claims,\nAnd further tnke notice that action, under section 37. must-.be commenced liefoie\nthe Issuance of such Certificate of improvements.\nDnted this seventeenth day of June, A.\nD.  1908.\nF. C. OBBEN,\nIT-g-OO-sw, Nelson, D. C.\nCERTIFICATE OP IMPROVEMENTS.\nMobecsn, Pathfinder and Early Bird Mineral Claims, situate In tbe Trout Lake\nMining Division of West Kootenay District.\nWhere located: About one mtle from\nend on tbe east side of Gatnor Creek,\nabout live miles from Its mouth.\nTake notice that I, Charles M. Oliver,\nof Vancouveer, B. C, Specinl Free Miner's Certificate No. 4012, intend, sixty\ndays from date hereof, to apply to the\nMining Recorder for a Certificate of Improvements, for tbe purpose of obtaining\nCrown Grants of the above claims.\nAnd further take notice that notion, un-\nd'er section 37, must be commenced before\nthe Issuance of such CertUicate of Improvements.\nl~)Hto6 thla ZTt thday of May. A. D. 190D.\n26-8W. CHARLES M. OLIVER.\nCERTIFICATE OF IMPROVEMENTS.\nColumbia, Edward D., Nevada, Wilfred D.\nFr. and Bella Devlin Fr. Mineral Claims.\nsituate-- tn   the  Nelson   Mining   Division\nof West Kootenay  District.\nWhere located\u2014North of Sheep Creek,\nabout ten miles from Salmo.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, F. C. Green, acting as agent for Wm. WrJiIIc Free Miner's* certificate B. K-.W9; Harry Amas.\nFree Miner's certificate B. 15,100 and\nAlexander Pool, Free Miner's Certillcate\nNo, B! 117,70s, Intend, sixty days from date\nhereof, to apply to the Mining Recorder\nfor Certificates of Improvements, for the\npurpose of obtaining Crown Grants of tlie\nabove claims.\nAtid' further tnke notice that action under section Iff, must he commenced before\nthe issuance of such Certificates of improvement'-!.\nDated' this* 2ltll day of February* A. D.\nim.\nP. C. GREEN,\nNelson, B. v..\nCERTIFICATE    OF    IMPROVSMBNTa\nLulu   Fractional   Mineral   CIMm,   situate\nin the-Nelson Mining Hdvlsibn of West\nKootenay Dlt-'.rict.\nWhere located: On Pawn Creek, about\n12 miles- from Salmo;\nTAKE NOTICE' Uiat* I, V. C. Green, acting as agent for G*eoi MMfthews, Free\nMiner's Certilc.ite Nb< BICi-HBi Intend., sisty\ndays from date hereof, to npnly to the\nMining* Recorder for a Certificate of Improvements., for tlie purpose of obtaining\na Crown Grant of the allovs- claim.\nAmi farther tnke notice-that action-, under section 31', must- he commenced' bvtore\ntlie Issuance of such   Certillcate of Improvements.\nDated this 1st* day of April; A. Di WW.\nF.  G.  UREEN,\nVMM-8w. Nelson, li. G.\nCERTIFICATE   OF   IMPROVEMENTS.\nEldorado   Mineral   Claim,   situate   in   the\nNelson  Mining  Division  of  West  Kootenay   District.\nWhere located\u2014On Sheep Crek, about\neleven mites from Salmo*\nTAKE NOTICE that. I, IP.' C. Gream acting ns agent for Hi M; Billing-*, Free\nMiner's Certificate R: 15,511, Thos; Bwi-\nnett, Fi'efr -Miner's \u25a0\u25a0 Cent lien te B: 16*809 and-\nGus. Schwinke, Free Miner's CBtttitloate\nNo. 15,551, Intend, sixty days from date\nhereof, to-apply to the Mining Rftcorder\nfor a Certificate\u25a0 of*'Improvement!)-, for the-\npurpose of obtaining a Crown Grunt ot\nthe above claim.\nAnd further take notice that action under section ST, must be commenced before\nthe issuance of such Cent lira to- of lm-\nBrovements.\n\u2022Dated tills 6th day of February, A. D*\n194)9.\nF. C. 0R3EN,\nU-2-tW-Sw. Nelson. B. C.\nthence west 80 chains, thence south 80\nchains, thence east 80 chains to point of\ncommencement, containing 048 acres more\nor less.\nHARRIET M. BUflTIN.\nWM. FEENEY, Agent.\nMarch 31st, 1909.\nNBLSON  LAND DISTRICT,    DISTRICT\nOF VEST KOOTENAY.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, R. W. Nlfftn, of\nSalmo-, B. C, occupation miner, intends\nto apply for permission to purchase the\nfollowing described lands:\nCommencing Bt a post planted about\none and a halt miles east of the S. E.\ncorner of T. L. No. 27825, on the International Bo-tmdary Line, thence north 40\nchains, thence east 40 chains, thence south\n40 chains, thence west 40 chains to the\npoint of commencement, containing 16D\nacres more or less.\nR. W. NIFFIN.\nWM. FEENEY, Agent.\nMarch 30, 1909*.\nNELSON    LAND  DIBTR1CT,   DISTRICT\nOF WEST KOOTENAY.\nTAKE   NOTICE   that   I,   R.   T.   Browner Nelson,   B.  C, occupation traveller,\nintends  to apply for permission to pur-\nchose the following described lands:\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nN. W. corner of J. C. Burgess' application to purchase, on South Fork o Sal-\nmonRiver, thence west 40 chains, thence\nnorth UO chains, thence east 40 chains,\ntheiwe south 60 chnins to point of commencement, containing 248 acres more\nor i'\u00abss.\nR. T. BROWN.\nWM. FET3NEY, Agent,\nMarch 19th.  1909. Jt-t-WMtw\nNELSON   LAND   DISTH.CT,   DISTRICT\nOF WEStr RCOiBNAY.\nTAKE NOTICE Ut*:t I. Peter Henry Siemens   of   Renata.   B.   (\".,   occupation\nRancher, Intends to apply- for permission\nto purchase the following described; lands:\nCommencing at a poet planted about 2<J\nfeet from the middle fork: of Dog Creek\nabout six  miles front the Arrow  babe*\nmarked \"Peter Henry Siemens N. E. corner; thence west 20 chains;- tlience soutn\n20 chains;   thence east 20' chains;   thence-\nnorth 20 chains to the point of commencement containing 40 acres mure or less.\nDated Feb. 8th, 1909.\nPETER HENRY SIEMENS,\n17-2-09-8w. Locator.\nN-BLSON   LAND   DISTRICT,   DISTRICT'\nOF WEST KOOTENAY.\nTAKB NOTICE that II Mrs*. William-\nMcintosh, of Salmo, R. C, occupation-\nmarried woman, Intends* to apply for*\npermission to purchase the following described lands:\nCommencing at a point at the N. W.\ncorner of J. A. Benson's application to*\npurchase nnd about one milfe west' of the-\nS. W. corner of P. R; No. 853,' thence west\n80 chains thence south' 20 chains* thence-\neast 80 chains, thence north 20 chains to*\npoint of commencement, containing 1W*\nacres more or less.\nMRS. WILLIAM1 McINTOSHi\nWM: FEENEY, Agent:\nMarch ISth, 1809. \u25a0M-TO-8W\nNELSON   LAND   DISTRICT,   DISTRICT'\nOF WEST kootenay:\nTAKE NOTIOE that    IJ Henry Gage-of\nVancouver,   B.C.',. occupation  Stotskman,\nIntend to apply for permission to purchase*\nthe following described lands:\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nN. E. corner of Lot 8649'and marked Henry\nGage's  N.   W.  corner post,   thence- fl**-\nchains East, thence 40 chains South, thence\nW  chains   East,   thence 20 chains  South*\nthence 70 chains West,   thence 40 chains;\nNorth to point of commencement- co-italn-\nIng 80 acres, more or lesB.\nHENRY GAGE,\nHIRAM'B: LANDI&\nDated May, 1st., 1909. Agert\nK-5-09-8W.\nRainier  Beer is the Best- ET\u00abr,\nNELSON   LAND   DISTRICT,    DISTRICT\nOF WEST KOOTENAY.\nTAKE NOTICE that- Il Hitrnleti Ml Bustla\nof'Sftlmo, B. C, occupation married w**\nman, Intends to apply for permission to\npnrehnse the fnltowlk-ig desorlbed liind-j.-.\nCommencing at a post plan-led about) 40\nchains- north of th* N, E. corner or If.\nI,. No, 2M2i>, north of the international\nBoundary   Line,   ift-ence  norlih   SO chains,\nNELBON   I AND   DISTRICT,   DISTRICT\nOF  WEST   KOOTENAY,\nTAKE NOTICE thut I, Mtnn'e-Mftgoam of\nPittsburg, Pa., occupation married woman, intend to apply for permission to\npurchase   the   following   described   lands:\nCommencing nt n pohi planted at the S.\nW. corner of Lot 8281. then north to-Si E.\ncorner or Lot 1)281 thenco west to Rend\nd'Oreiile River,' tlience easterly along\nthe Pend d'Oreiile River to the point, ot\ncommencement, containing tu acres more\nor less. 4\nMINNIE  MAGOON.\nB.   C.   AFt-T.ECK,  Agent;\nJune ir.th, 1909. _\nNELSGN   LAND   DISTRICT,   DISTRICT' |\nOF WEST KOOTENAY,\nTAKE NOTICE that I, N. C. Donaldson,\nof Salmo, B.  C, occupation miner,  In-\ntends to apply for permission to purchase I\nthe rollowlng described lands:\nCommencing at a post planted about &\u25a0\nchains south of the & B. corner of P. B.\nNo. 847, on the South Fork of Salmon\nRiver thence north 80 chains, thence east\n48 chains, thence south 80 chains, thenoe*\nwest   40   chains to   point   of   commence-\n\u2022\u00bb-\u2022>'. \u25a0=\u00bb\"\"\u2022\"\"\u2022* -^TdSSaiM!:\nWM: PEENEY,  Agent.\nMarch \"Oth. llWfc 3-4-KMw |\n^MMti\nHENRYS4\u2014i\nGarden Tools\nSpraying Materials\nBee Supplies\nFruit ana ornamental trees\n\u2014borne grown, hardy, tested\nand proven. Our trees do\nnot have to be fumigated.\nThey aro grown ln the only\npart ol tbe continent not In-\ntested with the San Jo\u00abe\nscale.\n157 Page dialogue Free\nM. J. HENRY\nGreenhouses and seedhousea\n301(1 Westminster road, Vancouver; Branch  Nursery, S.\nVancouver,\nVnurseries\nGut Glass\nBon. Bon Wish\nNew Arrivals\nIn Cut Glass\nWe have-* jiist piuce<t in stock il number ot fancy pieces oC Cut\nCuss which are much more handsome than unythtng we have ever\nshown. We will be rfellgb ted to have you Home in and look them\nover.\nC. P. R. Creel Lodge\nSLOCAN JUNCTION, B.C.\nThe best tlshlug in British Column-\nbla.\nSplendid accommodations.\nA beautiful spot to spend a week's\nvacation.\nJ. KELLEY, In Charge\nWeak Eyes Are a Handicap\nwn.ch rwman or woman can afford tn be afflicted with. Our Graduate Optician is always at your service to adv iso you as ta proper treatment of your\neyes a-nd will fit you with glasses whi ch will give you entire comfort and\nsatisfaction,\nDoes Your Watch Need Repair\nOur repair department Is given th e sume carerul consideration as the\nrest ot our establishment and you nre assured ot the best attention being\ngiven to any work you may entrust to our care.\nJ. J. Walker *____*<___\nGraduate Optician and Jeweler\n p-\nWEDNESDAY\nJULY 21\nt)M *******\nAt the\nStore of Quality\nWHOLESALE AND RETAIL\nGROCERS, Etc.\n, New goods; the very latest .\nKootenay Strawberry jam\nIndividual aiie, each 10c.\nIn 1 Ib. gla\u00aba, each 25c.\n.In 5 Ib. tins, each  Me.\nNew Potatoes, 6 lb\u00bb. (or   26c.\nNew vegetables ol all kinds.\nChoice Navel Oranges and all\nkinds ot fresh Kootenay fruit.\nQua.lty and prices guaranteed\nA. S. HORSWILL\n;    Phone 10. B\u00ab M-\n411 *************** *******\na*************************!\n* i\n* Hotel Ailen\nRossland, B. C.\nEVERYTHING\nUP-TO-DATE *\nB. Tompkins __ I\nA *\n***********************+***\nHOTEL ARRIVALS OM DAY\nTtic Hume\nCuropean\nCafe Open 8-3\" a.m to Midnight\nHUME\u2014S. J. Qorman, .Marblehead* a.\nG. flatter, Buffalo; J. Balfour, Calgary*,\n3, S. Alrhoart, \u00ab. B. Squires, Alnsworth;\nJ. A. Macdonald. F. W. Northeote. Toronto- J. A. Benson, Salmo: T. A. Sullivan Buffalo; 1). McBean, Little Valley;\nC. Lewiaton, Queen mine; J. M. Burins,\nE, Shury, Spokane; S. Neelands, J. Fleishman, W. J. Stlrton, Vancouver; J. r.\nPierce and wife, ymlr; 0. Hertz, England;\nDr. J. M. Adams, Seattle; H. S. deCamD.\nL. deCamp New York; P, T. Bforey and\nwife, Belton; C. Qulnn, Armstrong: \"\u25a0\nDawson, Guelphj C. Blrce, Phoenix; Miss\nBull, Plncher Creek; T. S. Saty and wife,\nAlma.\nSTRATHCONA\u2014W. Hunter, Silverton;\nE. w. Stoner, B. I. Jamelsonett, Port\nHill; MIsh 1. Wilson, Belmont; Miss' L.\nSutherland, Miss c. Sutherland, Aylesbury, G. Johnson, Trom  Lake.\nQueen's Hotel\n\u25a0ami sretn\nA. LAPOINTE, Proprlator.\nRates 11.60 to $2.00 far -toy.\nSpecial rates to city boardtn.\nQUEENS\u2014Mrs. RuBsell, Lardeau: A. C.\nCowan, Vancouver; J. G. Whiten C. H.\nMiller, H. Foxlee, R. Ryler, Robson; J. T,\nLawrle and wife, Castiegar; J Wainwright\nand wite, Crescent Valley; W. Coffee ami\nwife, Edmonton; p. pope, Kenora; Mrs.\nWelti) nnd children, Moyle; Mrs. C. Me-\nLain, Spokane.\nGrand Central Hotel\norrostTc ron ornci\nAnerlui Hi Eirueai niu\nJ. A- CRICMON\nGRAND OENTRAL-TL Milton, G. McLean, G. Stall. Slocan; Q. MoLenii, Ymir;\nG. tt, Bremner, |), Win ton, R. Dewar.\nSalmo; R. R. Rose, Syrlnga Creek; K. K.\nBjerkness, Mirror Luke; a. Smith, A.\nUluhi, Sandon; .1, Pnul, Paulson; A. Ham-\nmill, Calgary.\nSHERBROOKE-B. Stephenson, H. FOS-\nsette, Westley; N. McLeod, M. 'McLeod,\nD. S. MeLeod, Vancouver; J. St. Clair,\nSlocan; R. J. Thompson, P. W. Grant,\nW. Grunt. Revelstoke; F. Richard, J,\nCabamme, G. Hnllrock. Spokane; R. J.\nBeawnly, J. Beswaty, Hosmer.\nSILVER KINO-F. W. Harford. Grand\nForks; E. Everelt, W. Mnlone, Green-\nwnod.\nNTLSON-.T.  Pitt, S.  Rny,  Silverton;  F.\nStanley, A. Stanley, Porcupine; E. K.\nSmith, A. ErlckBon, Marcus; J. L. Jones,\nF.  Adam. Colorndo,\nBARTTvETT-E. Warner, W. Miller,\nWinnipeg; J. Howe, Mart-den.\n\u2022S&he f&aUy $lew\u00bb-\nJp\u00a5)\\\nTremont House\nBaker St., N-lao\u00bb\nKaliM k Tr-glllM, Frew.\nEntopeaa Plan, 90e. n;\nimtrtoanPlan.il.\"* aad IIJ*\nMeals, Mo.\nSPECIAL BATES PER MONTH\nTREMONT-T. Williamson, H. W. McKenna, Rosebery; J. I>. Mulholland, M.\nL, CaUlerwood, Salmo; N. Fedak, Shleltfa;\nA. B. Webb, Arrow Park; T. II. NlellolB,\nEholt.\nUkeview Hotel\nCon -r Hall ail Vernon Btnei\nN. MALLETTE, Praprlator.\nI vo blocks (rom city wkir!.\nThe beat dollar * day bom* Is\n.NelBOO.\nAll White Help.\nTjAKBVIBW-F. Sludloy, J. SicUutohi\nW. clllls, Marblehead.\nMadden House\nThnj. Madden. Prop,\nW\u00abll Famished Rooms WllO Bath\nBest Board In the Clti\nA COKFORTABLB HOB\nMADDEN-J. Wllley, J. Mclntyre, Rln-\nciin, R. Wolmsley, Gerrard; R. Halcrow,\nfiitciiwood; J. 1... Ingle, Vancouver.\nfhe Klondyke Hotel\nVERNON STKK1T\nHeadQMrteri (or mlneri, nsttt-n\nmen, lotftn ind railroad mat\nRatai: |1.H per day \u2022\u00bb.\nM1L80N It JOHNSON, Proff.\nKLONDYKE\u2014A. Polmqulst, Sandon; W.\nBrlce C. F. Cnmpbell, RosHlanil; J. Smith\nH. Ollnger, Trail.\nThe Royal Hotel\nMrs. L. V. Roberts, Proprietress\nCor. Stanley and Silica Sta.\nFinest 25c meal In tbe Kootenay.\nRegular Boarders 16 per week.\nRates, |1 and 11.50 per day.\nROYAI\/-J. Haney,\nE. Million. Brandon;\nreal. ,\nKOOTENAY\u2014H.   Patterson.  (.\na.  Posllt,  P. Sailor, h. Ongan\nMureus.\nBASEBALL   RESULTS.\n\u2014       \u00ab*&\nNorthwestern League\nW.     L.      P.C.\nSeattle     Bit       33       .641\nSpokane    50      42      .5411\nAberdeen    4!)      42      ,538\nPortland       12       411       ,477\nVancouver  \u2014.     41!      51      .457\nTacoma     25      112      .2111\nAt  Spokane\u2014 R.  II.  E.\nPortland    I)    II     1\nSpokane   \u2014  2     2     2\nBatteries\u2014Wright and Ostdlek; Chi-\niitiult and Murray.\nAt Vancouver- K.  H.  K.\nTacoma    3     8     0\nVancouver     (I     4     1\nBatteries \u2014 Newlln and Conrad;\nErlckson and Brooks.\nAt Aberdeen\u2014Seattle 1. Aberdeen 1).\nBatteries\u2014Miller. French, Shea and\nOuster;  Ovltz nnd O'Brien.\nCoast League\nW.      h. P.C.\nSan  Francisco     73      37 .6114\nLos Angeles     63       411 .578\nPortland    : 56      47 .541\nSacramento   52      52 .501)\nOakland   42      lill .380\nVernon    311      71 .330\nAt Vernon\u2014                       It. H.  E.\nSacramento    2 n    2\nVernon     tl 2     1\nBatteries\u2014Fitzgerald and Graham;\nKuleigh und Hogan.\nAt Oakland\u2014                      li. H.  E.\nOakland     7 !l     0\nSan   Francisco     0 1     3\nBatteries\u2014Wlggs    and   C.    Lewis;\nWillis nnd Berry. *\u25a0 \u2022\nAt Portland\u2014                     R. H.  E.\nLos Angeles   -  3 0     1\nPortland    4 8    3\nBatteries\u2014Nagle ami Orendorff:\nGroney and Armbruster.\nNational League\nW.     h.      P.C.\nPittsburg    50      22      .718\nChicago   ..,'. 51       28       .040\nNew York    45      32      .584\nCinclnnall    44       37       .543\nPhiladelphia    45      43      .511\nSt.   Louis     32       45       .410\nBrooklyn     28      52      .350\nBoston     23       56       .201\nAt Philadelphia\u2014 R. H. E.\nPhiladelphia    3   10     1\nPittsburg     (I     4     1\nBatterleB\u2014Corrldon and Dooln;\nPhillips and Gibson.\nAt Boslon\u2014 R.  H.  E.\nCincinnati    2     7     (I\nBoston     1     7     3\nBatteries\u2014Rowan and McLean; Ferguson and Smith.\nAt Brooklyn\u2014 R.  H.  E.\nChicago   5    8     1\nBrooklyn   6   lo    2\nBatterleB\u2014 Pfelster. Iligglnbotham\nund Archer; Hunter, Mclntyre nnd\nBergen.\nAt New York\u2014 R.  H.  E.\nSt.   Louis     4   10     3\nNew York     3   10    3\nBatteries\u2014Saloe and Phelps; Mitt-\nthewson, Crondall and Meyer.\nTRUNKS\nJust arrived, a carload of\nTrunks, Suit Cases and Bags.\nWithout a doubt tbe beat assortment ever displayed in tho\nKootenays. In order to make\nroom we will sel* at greatly\nreduced prices for the next two\nweeks.    Prices on:\nTrunks    $3.03 to $60.00\nSuitCases 2.50 to   40.00\nBags 1*50 to   35.00\nCome and have a look round\nand see up to date goods.      ,\nJ. M. LUDWIG\nHarness and Saddlery\nWholesale and Retail Trunks and Bags\nHall Street.\n! Pend de O'Rellle river to the S. W. corner\nof Lot MSI, thence north 21 -chaina mow\nor leas to the N. W. corner of Lo* 9284,\nthence east 20 chains to point of commencement, containing 1GQ acres more or\nless.\nROBERT   BOBINSON.\nFRANK  MURCH.   Afient.\nDated June 5th, 1905. 18-H-09\u2014Bw.\nAmerican  League.\nW.     L.      P.C.\nDetroit     62       30       .634\nPhiladelphia   48      M      \u25a0\u00bb\u2022>**\nBoston    48       36       .571\nCleveland    4t!       35       .568\nNew  York     37       45       .451\nChicago    37       45       .451\nSt.  Louis  35       4!)       .417\nWashington   -*      55      -304\nAt Detroit\u2014 R*  H. E.\nDetroit     1     5     4\nNew York  6     ii     -\nBatteries\u2014Donovan and Schmidt;\nWarliop and Kleinow.\nAt St. Louis\u2014 R*   H.   E.\nSt.   Louis     1>     6     \u00ab\nPhiladelphia     %     a     \u00b0\nBatteries\u2014Pelty, Bailey and Stephens; Morgan and Livingstone.\nAt Chicago\u2014 R*  H.  E.\nChicago     \u2022\u25a0     J     J\nWashington     -1     \"'     *\nBatteries \u2014 White and Sullivan;\nWitherup. Altrock and Street.\nAt Cleveland\u2014 R.  H. E.\nCleveland     0     6     3\nBoston   4   10     1\nBatteries\u2014Fulkenburg. Sutton and\nEasterly; Wood and Donohue.\nEastern League\nW.      U      P.C.\nRochester    47      31      .603\nProvidence    40      38       .513\nNewark    30      39      .500\nBuffalo     41       42       .494\nBaltimore    '30       41       .488\nMontreal    38       42       .475\nToronto    38       411       .46!)\nJersey City     37       43       .403\nAt Montreal\u2014 R.  H.  E.\nJersey  City     8   13\nMontreal  3     5     2\nBatteries \u2014 Smith and Winters;\nMltchel. Minot and Ryan.\nSecond game\u2014 R.  H. E.\nJersey City   6     0     1\nMontreal     3   1-*     \u25a0>\nBatteries\u2014Sutton and Ryan; Egan\nund Starnigal.\nAt  Toronto\u2014 R-   H.  E\nNewark    U   15     3\nToronto   10   1ft    tl\nBatteries\u2014Mueller and Crisp; Pfeif-\nrer and Mitchell.\nAt Rochester\u2014 R.  H. E.\nBaltimore     2     8     1\nRochester    8   13    2\nBatteries-\u2014A tiki tl a and Byers; Chap-\npelle and Erwin.\nAt Buffalo\u2014 U.   H.   E.\nProvidence   \u25a0 0     4     i\nBuffallo     1     \u00ab     1\nBatteries\u2014Lafitte and Fitzgerald;\nKissinger and McAllister.\nMInard's Liniment Cures Colds, Etc.\nRainier Beer is the Best Beer.\nCERTIFICATE OF IMPROVEMENTS.\nAlps Minernl Claim, twnnte In tiie Slocan\nMining Division of West Kootenay District.\nWhere located\u2014On Coat Mountain, near\nNew Denver.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, Frank C. Green,\nacting na ngent for W. R. Will, Free\nMiner's Certillcate No. B. 21.5711, intend,\nsixty days from dale hereof, to apply to\nthe Mining Recorder for a Certitlcate o(\nImprovements, for the purpose of obtaining a Crown Grant of the above mineral\nclaim.\nAnd further take notice thnt action, under section 37, must be commenced before\nthe issuance of such Certillcate of Improvement a.\nDated this lClh day of December, A. D.\nIMS.\nFRANK C. GREEN,\nU-2-fKMw, Nelson,   B. V\nCERTIFICATE    OF    IMPROVEMENTS-\nNOTICE.\nCayote, Nugget nnd Bonanza minernl\nclaims, situate hi the Nelson Mining Division of Kootenay  District.\nWhere located\u2014Op Sheep Creek, about 11\nmiles from Salmo, B. C.\nTake Notice that I. F. C. Green, acting\nas npent for George Matthews, Free Miner's Certificate Nn. B.16,446, intend, sixty\ndavs from date hereof, to apply to the\nMining Recorder for Certlllcates of Improvements, for the purpose of obtaining\nCrown Grants o,* the above claims.\nAnd further tnke notice thnt action under Section :C7, must be commenced before\nthe Issuance of such Certlllcates of Improvements.\nDated this 38th day of January, A. D.,\n1909.\nP. C. GREEN,\nM-l-OMw. Nelson, B. C.\nNELSON LAND DISTRICT. DISTRICT\n....OF WEST KOOTENAY.\nTAKE NOTICE thai Margaret E. Adie of\nWaneta, B. C. occupation married woman, intends to apply for permission to\npurchase the following descrihed lands!\nCommencing at a post planted at south\neast corner of Lot 719:' tlience soutli lo tin;\nnorth bank of the Salmon liver, tlience following tin* north hank of tn> Salmon river\nto its mouth, thence following the north\nbank of the Pen D'Oreiile river to the\nsoutli West corner of Lot 1102, thence ensl\n40 chains lo place of commencement, containing tit) acres more or less.\nMARGARET E. APIR.\nBy W. 3. WHITE.\nDatea April Mtli, 1908,\nNELSON  LAND  DISTRICT,.   DISTRICT\nOF .WEST KOOTENAY.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, J. A.  Dewar, of\nNelson, B. C, occupation lumherman.\nIntends to npply for permission to purchase the following described lands:\nCommencing at a post plantetf about m\nchains north of the S. W. corner of R. T.\nBrown's application to purchase on the\nSouth Fork of Salmon River, thence\nwest GO chains, thence north 60 chains,\nthence east 60 chains, thenco sWuth 60\nchains to point of commencement, containing 360 acres more or less.\nJ.  A.  DEWAR.\nWM. FEENEY, Agent.\nApril 1st, 1909.\nfam\n~U_q    a-f^\n__i' suks:',\nCOLUMBIA\nDOUBLE-DISC\nRECORDS\nFit Any Machine\nCost Hoc\nItisn'tputtingittoostrons\nto say that no other records\nare worth considering 1 Call\nin and hear them!  Get a\nW* G. Thomson\nSole Agent, Nelson, B.C.\nWmma..O__JlS**~- ~.^r\nCERTIEIt'ATE OK IMPROVEMENTS\nHumming   Bird  Mineral Claim,  situate  In\nLardo   Mining   Division   of   West   Kootenay   District,\nWhere  lOCftOtl)    On  Gold   Gulch, and  being nn  extension of the \"Imperial   Limited\"  on   mis*,  side.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, T. J. Beatty, for\nmyself (and n* agent for Josluh Coote, F.\nM, C No. RSH902, and A. W. Sullivan P.\nM. C,\" No. IlfflJTOO) F. M. C. No. BftWH. Intend, sixty days from date hereof, to apply to the Mining Recorder for a Certificate of Improvements, t\u00b0f the purpose\nof obtaining ft Crown Grant of the above\nclaim.\nAnd further take notice thnt action, under s-eciloii '17, must be commenced before the issuance of such Certificate of\n1 ni pro vein e nt:i.\nDated this 10lh day of .Tune, A. D. 1909,\nT. J.  BEATTY.\n13-6-09-8W.\nNELSON  T.*NT> mRTRK-T,    DISTRICT\nOP WEST KOOTENAY.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, Ethel McCllsh, occupation married woman, Intends to apply for  permission   to  purchase   the   following described lands:     \/\nCommencing at a post planted about 1\nmile east and half a mile north of the\nS. E. corner of T. L. No. 27S'ii, about to\nchains north of the International Boundary Line, thence north 80 chains, thence\nwest SO chains, thence soutii 80 chains.\nthence east so chains to point of commencement containing IHO acres more or\nless.\nETHEL McCLISH.\nWM. FEENEY, Agent.\nMarch   30th,  1909,\nNELSON   LAND   DISTRICT,    DISTRICT\nCP WEST  KOOTENAY.\nTAKE    NOTICE    that    I,    Constance   B.\nMawdsley, of Nelson. B. C, occupation\nmnrrled woman, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:\nCommencing at a post planted about 10\nchains north of the S. E, corner of Lot\n2410, on the Soutii Fork of Salmon River,\nthence north 30 chains, thence east 40\nchains, thence couth 30 chains, thence\nwest 40 chains to point of commencement,\ncontaining 120 acres more or less.\nCONSTANCE   B.  MAWDSLEY.\nWM. FEENEY,  Agent.\nApril  Snd, 1909.\nNELSON    LAND   DISTRICT.   DISTRICT\nOF WEST  KOOTENAY.\nTAKE NOTICE that I. Wm. Mcintosh, of\nSalmo, H. C, occupation lumberman.\nIntends to apply for permission to purchase  the- following described lands:\nCommencing nt a post planted at the\nS. IS. Coiner of Rheta Bennett's application to purchase, on South Fork of Salmon River, ihence south 40 chains, thence\neast 4il chains, thence north 40 chains,\nthence west to chains to point or commencement, containing 1G0 acres more or\nless.\nWM.   MclNTOSH.\nWM. FEENEY, Agent.\nMarch  20th,   1909. 3-i-lXI-8w\nNELSON   LAND   DISTRICT,   DISTRICT\nOF WEST KOOTENAY.\nTAKE NOTICE that I Robert Robinson,\nof   NelBon,   B.   C,   occupation   carpenter,\nIntend   to   apply  for   permission  to   purchase the   following described   lands;\u2014\nCommencing at a post planted about 20\nchains west of the N. E. corner of Lot\n9284, thenco north 20 chains more or less\nto tbe south bank of the Salmon river,\nthence along south hank of Salmon river\nto Its junction with the Pend de O'Rellle\nriver, thence along the north bank of the\nNBLSON    LAND   DISTRICT.    DISTRICT\nOF WEBT KOOTENAY.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, J,  A.  Benson, of\nSalmo.   B.   C.i   occupation    rancher,    Intends to apply for premlsslon to purchase\nthe following described lands;\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nS. W. corner of P, R. No. 8M, on Salmon River, thence west, 80 chains, thence\nsouth 20 chains, ihence east sO chains,\nthence north 'io chains to point of commencement, containing 1WJ acres more or\nless.\nJ. A. BENSON.\nWM.FE'ENii-Y, Agent.\nMarch  23d.  1909. 3-4-uU-HW\nNBLSON   LAND   DISTRICT,   DISTRICT\nOF WEST KOOTENAY.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, Rheta Bennett, of\nSalmo, B. C, occupation spinster, Intel.ds to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:\nConmenclng at a post planted about\n10 chains north of the S. E. corner of N.\nC. Doi aldaon's application to purchase,\non the South Fork of Salmon River,\nthence south 20 chains, thence east 40\nuhalns, thence north 'JO chains, thence\nwest 40 cliiilns to point of commencement,\ncontaining 91 acres more or less.\nRHETA  BENNETT.\nWM.   FEENEY,   Agent.\nMarch  20th,   ,960. 3-4-U9-8W\nNBLSON   LAND   DISTRICT.   DISTRICT\nOF WEST KOOTENAY,\nTAKE NOTrCE that  I,  Sidney Leary.  of\nBurton. I). C ..occupation rancher, Intend to make application to purchase the\nfollowing descrihed  lands:\nCommencing at a post planted about\n3 chnins due north from the S. W. corner\nof Lot 870, up Mosquito creek, and marked S. L., N. E. corner, thence west 40\nchains, thence south SO chains, thence\nenst 40 chains, thence north SO chains to\npoint of commencement.\nStaked June 12,  1909.\n-.7.(,0_S\\v. SIDNEY   LEARY.\nNELSON    LAND   DISTRICT,   DISTRICT\nOF  WEST KOOTENAY.\nTAKE   NOTICE   that   I.    Sarah   Waldle,\nof Nelson, B. C, occupation married\nwoman, intends to apply for permission\nto purchase the following described\nlands:\nCommencing at a post planted at tin\nN. W. Corner of Wm. Waldle's application to purchase, about one mile and a\nhalf from the N. W. corner of Lot 9375,\nthence west 80 chains, thence south so\nchains, thence east 80 chains, thence\nnorth 80 chains to point of commencement, containing 640 acres more or less.\nSARAH VVALDIE.\nWM,   FEENEY,   Agent.\nMarch  ISth, 1909. 3-4-iU-Xw\nNELSON   LAND   DISTRICT,   DISTRICT\nOF WEST KOOTENAY.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, Oscar Kirpatrlck,\nof Nelson, B. C, occupation clerk, intend to apply for permission to purchas\nthe following described lands:-\nCommenctug at a post planted at the\nS. E. corner of Lot 9282, thence north 20\nchains, thence cast 80 chains, thence\nsoutii 20 chains more or Icbs to the nortli\nbank of the Salmon river, thence following river hank 20 chains more or less to\npoint of commencement, containing 40\nacrea more or less.\nOSCAR   KIRKPATR'ICK,\nFRA'NK   MURCH,   Agent.\nDated   June 6th,  1909. IS-ti-OlMw.\nNELSON  LAND   DISTRICT,    DISTRICT\nOF  WEST  KOOTENAY.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, W. F, MnwOsley,\nof Nelson, B, C,, oCCUpaHon a^ ageiu.\n'lU&hilB, 10 fl\u00bbp!y for permission to purchase tlie following  described lands;\nCommencing at a post planted about 10\nchains north of the S E. corner of Win.\nMcintosh's application to purchase on\nSouth Fork of Salmon River, thence north\nGO chains, thence east fin chains, thence\nsouth f-0 chains, thence west 60 chains to\npoint of commencement, containing 3no\nacres more or less,\nW. ft MAWDSLEY.\nWM,  FEENEY,   Agent.\nApril 2nd. 190-X\nEagle Block\nBaker Street\nShop Early To-day\nHelng Wednesday we have to rii> a whole day's business in four\nhours. So \u00bbs \u00ab special Inducement for you to come down town and\ndo your shopping early we will offer for today*. s\n90X1001*1 to 12 o'Clock Only\n600 Yards 15c.\nColored Zephyrs\n10c. Per Yard\nThese are In pink Mid blue spot or stripe patterns on white\ngrounds and very pretty. All are this season's new goods that regularly sell at 16c Come between l) o'clock and 1,2 o'clook lhls morning and you can buy all you wam at 10c. a yard.\nI Re\nRemember this offev is for th la jiior.nliig pijly, so don't miss It.\nNELSON   LAND   DISTRICT,    DISTRICT\nOF -.VEST KOOTENAY.\nTAKE   N'Gft'E that   1.   Sidney   Leary,  or\nBurton, n. (,'\u201e Occupation Logger, intend to apply fur permls-don tlie purciiase\ntlie following described hinds:\nCommencing at a post planted about tt\nchains North of the S. \\\\. corner of Lot\no, thence West to chains' thenaa South\nso chains; thenoe East 4U chains' thence\nNorth so chains lo point of commencement, containing 310 acres more or leaa.\nSIDNEY  LKAltY.\nDated Feb. Both, 1909. H-MS-itw.\nNELSON   fiAND   DISTRICT,    LISTR-KM\"\nOF  WEST  KOOTENAY.\nTAKE  NOTICE tliat  I, John  Waldbeser,\nof Snlmo, B. C., occupation miner, in'-'\ntendn to apply for permission to pu re I iris-a\nthe following described   lands:\nCommvuclnfr at a post planted about 1\nmile eat' of the 8. B. corner of T. L No.\n27825, on fhe International Houndury Line,\nthence north SO chains, thence eust W\nchains, thet.ee south SO chains, thence west\n40 chains to point of commencement, con-\ntabling 320 sites more or less.\nJOHN WALDBESER\nWM.  FEENEY,  Afient\nMareh  SOth.  1ftl9.\nNELSON   LAND   DISTK''.\"r,   DlBTRlCT\nOF WEST KOOTENAY,\nTAKE NOTICE that I. Jat?.\u00bb fchrkee,,  of\nSalmo, B, C, occupation rdway agent,\nIntends to apply for permlafljwi to purchase the following described jasvfo;\nCommencing at a post platu-'d- ar the\nN. -W. corner of T. L No. 37536, oil' Smith\nFork of Salmon River, thenco wVSit m\nchains, thence north 40 chains, In-Jnce\neast sti chains, tlience south 4o chains' i.->\npoint of commencement, containing aw\nacres more or leBs.\n\u2022IAS,   DfRKEK.\nWM, FEENEY, Agent.\nMarch ISth, 1009. 8-4-0\u00bb-8w\nNELSON   LAND~*DlS'fiTri;T.    .*I.STIt ICT\nOF WEST KOOTENAY.\nTAKE  NOTICE that   I,   Wm.   Waltlle,  of\nNelson, H. <'., occupation miner, intends to apply for permission to purchase\nthe rollowlng described lands:\nCommencing at a post planted about -t'1\nclutflns west of the N, -A. corner of Lot\n9275, on Salmon Itiver, thence west W\nchains, thence south SO chains, thence\neast SO chains, tlience north mi chains to\npoint of commencement, containing IHO\nacres  more or  less.\nWM.   WALUIK.\nWM.   FEEN43Y,   Audit.\nMarch 15th, 1000. 3-4-OU-Kw\nTAKE NOTICE that 1. Leslie W. Sprangejl\noi   Erie,   B   C\\,  ace*.'patlon   Itookkeeper,!\nIntends to apply tor pei uission lo purchase!\nthe following deaerioed   ands:\nCommencing at a post Planted at the j\nE.  comer  of   Lot  71\u00bb2j  tt enco    North    I\nchains:   thence  East   40     \u25a0bains;    thenco!\nSouth tie chains; thence ft . n 40 chains ai_\\\npoint   of   commencemeui     -.Itainlng\nacreB more or less.\nLESLIE W. \u00a3   'itANGE,\nWill. CONNOLLY, Agent.\nApril 21, 1909. 29-I-U9-8W.I\nTAKE NiVJtOE thnt I, .1, G. Burgess,\nSalmo,   B.    v'\u201e occupation   merchant,   ln-*|\nii-mls   (n  npply*'   tor    permission   to   piir-l\nchase  the   folloWl-ny: described  lauds;\nC'ommenclna -n a* i*\u00bbst planted at the)\nN ,K. corner of Jennie' Floss* application\ntion to purchase, on South Fork of SnI-l\nmon River, thence west -111 chains, thencJ\nnorth -to cliiii ns, thence east 'ti chains J\nthence south 4ii chnins to point of comT\nmencement, containing 100 ucres more on\nless.\nJ. C.   BURGESS,1\nWM.   FEENEY. Agent.\nMarch   IDlll,   1909 3-4-U9-8\nPrices\nThat Talk\nIn\nBrassBeds\nGenuine\nEng'ish Lacquered\nBrass Bed, regular price $160 Sale  Price $100\nBrass Bed, regular price    On Sale   Price      70\nBrags Hod, regular price     SO    Sale   Price      65\nBrass Bed, regular Price     7fi Sale price     60\nBrass Bed, regular price    4fi Sale price     33\nBrass Bed, regular Prieo    ns Sale   price      30\nA genu\nMaion A Rltch Planoi\nOstermoor Mattress\nStandard Furniture Co.\nComplete House Furnishers\n \u25a0 >et*m:ma\n$5a ccp^i\nWEDNESDAY     JULY 21\n\\\n\u25a0\nTOYE, TAYLOR (Sb McftUAIUUE\n.\nFOR. SALE\nXo. 1\u2014A modern. S-ioomed frame\ndwelling, has bath, hot and cold water,\nelectric light and gas. good lawn, walks,\nwoodsheds; only 3 1-2 blocks from post\noffice, no hills, one level lot. Price\n$3600.    Terms to suit purchaser.\nNo. 2\u2014A well built Iiouse. containing\nnine bedrooms, Silica street. A snap\nat $4200. We can arrange satisfactory\nterms.\nNo.;!\u2014A cosy cottage, 7 rooms; every\nmodern convenience. Three lots. Price\n$2200.   Terms arranged.\nFOR BLENT\ncottage, 5 rooms.\nEdgewood! avenue;\nx|18.00 per month.\n. F.tirnisheii   house, Victoria street,\nrooms;    $;I5 per month.   To Sept. i.\nLOTS\nGood;'building lots, within a mile of\npostofflce. $50 per lot; $10 cash and $i0\nper month.\nTOYE,  TAYLOR (Sb McQUARRIE\nPROFESSIONAL CARDS |\nC. Eg* \\J     WIMam NaltfaM\nEGG % HALDANE\nARCHITECTS.\nNelson and Fernle, B. C.\nMem. Archt lnit, Canada, and B.\nAuo. Archt. . .\nOffice\u2014Room 14, K. W. C.    block\nP. O. Boi 161, Nelaon [L,\nS,S,|WtER\nillNINfl ENGINEER\nNBLSON, W8V U\nReal Estate and Fire Insurance\nNelson, B. C.\nWM. &.DBESTEL4\nA. M. Can. Soc. C. _\nDOMINION AND BRITISH COLUMBIA\nLAND gURYEYOR.\t\nMining Work a Specialty\nOftlce: Boom 10, K. W. C. B.ocfc\nP. 0. Doi 134.        > .\nBaker St., Nelson, B. C.\n19, J. fl. HOLMES\nCIVIL ENGINEER AND   MINE;  SURVEYOR\/PROVINCIAL LAND\nSURVEYOR, KASLO, B. 0.\nTen years' experience ln   the Kootenays.  Honor graduate 1891, Royal Military College of Canada, Kingston.\nA. L. MoOtJLLOOH\nHYDRAULIC ENGINEER\nPROVINCIAL LAND\/SURVEYOR\nf,: '    * p.! o. uox 4i.   \u25a0  <\nOffice Phone B86; Incidence Phone B74\nOffice:, over McDermld & McHardy\nBaker Street     Nelson, B; 0.\n'\u25a0.-   i I\nPUBLItHSRS AND  PRINTERS  :\nNEWS TUBLlSBWa COMPANY, LTD.-\nPubUtlieri ol _ BsJlr N\u00abw\u00ab: subicrtp-\nUSo IMS pen year by earner: KM par year\nby mall. Commercial Job printing .of all\nkinds neatly and promptly executed. _\nBaker street,.Nelson, B. C. Pnoas '\"\nting ,o(\nKUtejL\nHAIRDRESSINQ  AND   MANICURING\nitlsX KATHLEEN NOAH, halrdresslng\nana manicuring parlors. Room 38, '\u25a0_ w,\nC. block.     ,.; * j\nI.\nCOLLECTION   AGENCIES,\nW. CUTLER-COLLECTIONS Of ALfa\nkinds. KtHurua promptly mude. Heler-\nencc-B given, unlce liu Baker street,\nNelson, B. C.\nBOOKBINDING AND RULING\nNEWS PUBLISHINQ COMPANY, LTD.-\nAU kinds of ottlce forms ruled and punch-\nad lor loose leaf binders. Tbe moat complete book- binding equipment ln the to*\ntenor ol British Columbia. 218 Baker St.,\nNelson, B. ___, p. o. drawer lilt. Phone in\ntt: _\u2014\n______\nTali\nCLASSIFIED ADS.\u2014One eent\nlour when paid ln advance.\n155\nthan 26c. f\nmora,   six inaertlon-i tot tha jrtte til\nad taken for leu than 16a\nT\"\n=4=\nr MVW\nWANTEO-MI8CELLANEOU8     <\nWANTED\u2014Men and.women id learn -barber trade ln eight-weeks: tools free;\n\u2022secured over 10,000 poflltiot-N lor graduates\nlast year: unable-to supply the demand;\ngraduate! earn .115. to $26 weekly; catalogue tree. Moler system Colleges, At63\nFront Ave., Spokane, j.     .}.\nWANTED-A reliable and energetic nifln\nwith some knowledge of the fruit bupi*\nm-ss to .repFflsenk us.Jn Nelaon und adjacent territory. A permanent position\nfor the right man on liberal terms. Stone\n& Wellington, the Fouthlll Nurseries, To.\nronto, Ontario.     fia~ai\nWANTED\u2014Anyone   requiring   first   claas\ncarpenters,    communicate    wltli   P    rx\nBox lOOfi. __^_\nUS-12\nWANTED\u2014Teachers wishing schools and\ntrustees    wanting     teacliera    apply    to\nFraser & Hardle, B, C. Teachers' Bureau,\nBoundary Falls, B. C, Box 20. 71-a\nAuction Sale of Land\nft (f_ ffV    tiT s*^ ' '' *-v ' '1\nSituated at Thrums, twar Neison\n  \u25a0 \"L .\u25a0-\u25a0     _*\u25a0_,'\u25a0\u25a0,,,  \u201e        \u25a0   \u2022    \u2014  \u25a0    r-\n=40 Acres 40=\nTo be sold at Public Auction on\nOn Tuesday, July 27th, 1909\nTills valilab,e parcel of land, containing In all about 40 acres,\nlias been sub-divided into IU acre blocks. Tbis land Is of tne finest\nquality of fruit land In the Kootenays and Is free of stones and\nstunins and is all land\nUpset Price $50.00 per Acre\nTERMS\u2014.One-quarter cash, balance 6, 12 and 18 months; 7 per\ncent   interest. \/\nTITLE\u2014Absolutely clear title.\nWii'i be sold bv me at the office of George Horstead, o-pcra\nhouse block, Nelson, B.C. at 3 P.m. on July 21Lh, 1900.\nChas. A. Waterman & Co.\nAuctioneers\nST CHARLES\nEVAPORATED\nCREAM\nFor many things in cookery, St. Charles Cream\nis an essential.   It is as good as the best milk\nor cream for any purpose.    For many purposes\nit is much better.   It gives to coffee,'\nfor instance, a flavor which even the\nbest of ordinary cream cannot approach, and it aids in bringing out\nthe delicate aroma of chocolate and\ncocoa.   l-'or confection and ice cream\nit is unexcelled,   For invalids and\ninfants it is indispensable. It never\ncurdles.   It strengthens the strong.\nIf only pure water is added, it will agree with\nfhe most delicate stomach.\nSold by best grocers everywhere. .\nfj^ST.CHARLES COWPEWSINfc CO..        ln\u00abcr\u00aboll,Ont.\nTHE  NEWS' DAILY PATTERN\nF.C.Green.    P. P. Burden.   A. H. Green\nGreen Brothers & Burden\n'\u25a0\u25a0'  CiVlft'ENGINSSERS !\nDominion and.'.-British Columbia Land\nj<-Surveyors .\\\\     ;\nP. O. Box 145', ^hane B261\nCor. Victoria and Kootenay Sts.\n. -\\NBl$ON, B. Q,.\\\\ :\nGEO.H. PLAyt\u00a3\n?   ' * ACCOUNTANT\nMining   accounts   kept,   Statements\nprepared, Auditing- -, -'\nOffice Over Boyal Bank, Nelion, B. C.\nA88AYERS\nM, W.   WIDDOWSON,   ABBAYfiR   (PRO-\nvlnclal) Metallurgical Chemist. Charges\nGold, Silver, Copper or Lead, tl -won;\nGold-Silver, *LW: Silver-Lead, 11.60 aaa\n13; Silver-Lead-Zlnc, $3; Gold, Silver-Copper or Lead, $2.60. Accurate awn: ear*\nhi sampling, and prompt attention, p.o,\nBoa Alios, Nelaon. B- C. '\nASSAYERS' SUPPLIES\nB.C. ASSAY & CHEMICAL SUPPLY CO.,\nLtd.. Vancouver, B.C. Acentt ln Brltlab\nColumbia (or the Morgan Crucible Com*\npaiiy, London, linglani*!: F. W. Braun,\nLoi Anaalea and San rraselaco; Baker\nand Adamiou'a C.P. Adda and ChemlQala;\nWajr'a Pocket Smelters. Write for information about these emeltera, Invaluable to the prospector, assayer or miner,\nComplete assay outfits furnished at ahort\nnotice. '   ' )\nDRUGS  AND  ASSAYERS'  SUPPLIES\nWholesale and Retail\nWM. R-uTHSRPOIUb, -DHUfiOIST. Pre-\nseriuiiuiis umefully tilled, only beut\niiiedlclnea used. Largest drug stock.\nFresh stock of lime Juice In 25c, 40c and\nSue bottles. Toilet soup, big assortment.\nNew sponges and pertumes. i i Spraying\nmaterials as below: Insect powder, Red\nMite Killer for poultry houses, Whale\nOil neap. Quassia Chips, * Tobacco' ex.\ntract, Bordeaux Mixture and , pat is\n[Green.   Mall orders filled promptly.\nHARTMAN & BENNETT\nHouse, and Sign Painters, Paper\nHangers and Decorators. Shop: Cor.\nner Stanley and Victoria'etreeta, Nelson, B. C.    \u25a0\nH. 0 bLAOK:\nB. C. LAND SCltVfiYpR\nOltlce:   Onr Royal Dink\nP.O. Boi 147 Nelson, B.C.\nPercy B._BroWne\nEXPERT  PIANO 'TUNER\nOrganist S. Saviour's Church. Pupils\nfor Pianoforte. Address, ca-re postofflce, Nelson,\nNEWS OF THE DOMINION\n. MONTREAL,' July 20\u2014According to\na, new. directory published today Mon-\ntrpai's population is now close to half\na million.\nHAMILTON, July 20 \u2014 Tlie Slater\nshop store mi King street, owned. by.\nJ. W. nridgett. *a8 damaged to the extent of $15,001) by fire.last night. Tha\nloss is covered by insurance.  *\nTORONTO. July 20\u2014Tho Ontario department oE game and fishprles hit*;\nplaced a fast yacht on Musltoka lake,\nwhose duty it will be to njiprchend violators of the provincial 'fishery laws.\nVANCOUVER, July 20 \u2014 When the\nBlue Funnel liner Toucer anils ibis\nweek for the United Kingdom via Vile\norient she will take with her tiie first\nshipment of Vancouver flour to Europe\nby way nf the Suez canal, This consists ot 75 tons shipped by the Vancouver Milling & Grain company to Liverpool. The shipment of Vancouver'flour\n.. to ..England began last.winter and tha\nmilling company sent 500 ions during\nthe winter months to Liverpool by way\n\u2022of Sape Horn In the French around-the-\nworld vessels which have siiice' mopped\nthe Vancouver call; The races' oifeivd\nby tho Blue Funnel line are*a.'B'ufficlent\ninducement to ibe shippers.to send a\ntrial consignment via tho( Suez and it\nmay be the forerunrterbf ft steady trade\nby 'that route. The'Jebzii line will\ncharter two more steamers this season\nespecially for the carriage of northwest\nwheat from here to-Mexico.\n.iwTORIA. July 20\u2014John Oreenwall-\na carpenter, was found dead in a shack\nat GU Alfoid street, today. The caUBe\nIs thought to have boi'ti heart failure.\nHp hud been dead several daya when\nfound.\nOTTAWA, July JJO\u2014The bodies of th.*\n(wo sisters. Jennie and Dorothy .Green,\nwho were drowned in lake Deschenes at\nAyimer. Que.. last Wednesday, while\nout boating with some young mon, were\nrecovered today near Britannia,\nTORONTO. July, 20\u2014According to the\nstatement of Donald Sutherland, director of the bureau of colonization, the.\nrural population of Ontario decreased\n14.991 and tbe population of the cities.'\nvillages and.-towns, increased 5b'7,008\nduring the past 25 years.\nLADIES WORK APRON\nParis Pattern No. 2767\nAll Seams Allowed\nThis work apron is developed in\ngreen and white striped gingham and\nis distinctly practical, affording a com-\nprete protection to tiie dresB. Tlie\ngraduated ruffles or brelelles, give\nbreadth to the shoulders, which is desirable. The skirt portion is gathered\nfrom the side front seams and attached\nto a narrow belt of the material, fastening with button and buttonhole and\nthp lower edge is finished with a narrow ruffle. The pattern is in four sizes\n\u2014'A2. 36, 40 and 42 inches bust measure.\nFor 'Ad bust, the apron requires 4 H-4\nyards of material 27 inches wide or\n'A 1-2 yards :!B Inches wide.\nems may be secured through The\nNews.   Price 10c.\nfatter\nDaf,y N<\nSixth Anniversary '\nROME, July Ltl.-Todny was the alxtH ail;\nniversary ot the death of Pope Leo XJ.rT.\nand ii funeral itiiish wasH-jit! at Saored\ncollpgo In tlie prc'sence \u00abf I'on-j Plus and\nthe high dlfrn'atiirles of Hip .\u25a0liurcli.\nMONEY TO LOAN\nOn Improved City or Toym\nReal Estaie\n^'r'ng in your ttlnips and epecl-\n.^cation'-, and w*,>v*in figure on\nthent. I   '.\u201e .\". [ LA       ..;\nThe Great West | i\nPermanent; loan Company\n.WINNIPEG, MAN[] '\n.HUGH W. ROBERTSON\nAgent\n419  Ward   St. Nelson,  B.C.\nE. K. STRACHAN\nPlumber, Steam and Hot Water Heating, Copp Stoves and Ranges ,..\nYou   Must   Ca\u00ab   And\n\u25a0ee the new designs In the Sunbeam\nand Silver Queen Ranges\nP. O. Box 667.  Phont MS.\n813 Baker Street NELSON\nLADIES CAN  MAKE MONEY\nby idling to their friends Bwirt Embrold*\nerlea, trimmngi, blouoM, cQitumes, hand.\nkerchiefs. sDlendid noveltleB, offered by\nHrnt-eltiBi Swlis factory. Gooda sent by\nreturn, free of oliarge, no po-stage nor\nduty, no trouble wltb cuatomi house, 26\npercent commission, payment by relm-\nours-im-ent on receipt of goods. Write for\n\u2022ainples to Za Q. 2187, Rudolf Moose, Bt.\nChill, Switzerland.\nGRADUATE NURSE\nMRS.  McTAVISH.  ROOM 1,  -322 BAKER\nStreet.\nWANTED-Persons interested in Western\nMining Stocks to write to me for Prices,\netc., before buying or selling elsewhere;\nWeekly Market Report sent to till Clients.\nArthur A. Hale, M.ning Broker, ilossland,\nBritish Columbia. ._\u2022' lt-%6\nWANTED-James Will, shoemuKer, will\ncommence bus.ness, Behnsen SL, l*ah'-\nview. Shoes ot al 1 kinds repaired at\nmoderate charges. Next house to Fair-\nview Dairy. ,  ^6\nnilwnTmrSyT^\n*!, n iLOVft MintStf.\n\\VAN^Er^JLath,*Uer, tullyman, sawmill\nmen, log ear loadein, (-nwy(*ra, swampers,\n2 men to clear land, lumber- pliers,^ sole,\npopt -ind log fijittarfl, teamsters, vftroad\nmen. loaders, engineer, 2rtd or 3rd'\u25a0'class,\nsetter,   river arlvert,MEb'lt fpr- bpusi^work.\nTHE WORKINGMANS EMPLOYMENT\nAND REAL ESTATE AGENCY.\nWANTED\u2014AH kinds of lumberjacks; post-\nmakers, section men, extra gang-men,,\ndragsuwman, men to contract ,to cut and\npeel cedar for shingle mill, on waitress-\nfor Allan House. Rossland, one for Halcyon Hot Springs, one for Nakusp, one-\nfor city, girl for family.*'\nFOR RENT\nFOR RfcNT-Summer cottage,  with  garden, on north side of lake.   Unfurnished\nrooms.    Apply to BrydgeB,  Blakemore *\u2022\nCameron,  Limited, Imperial Bank block.\n. a-tf.\nWANTED-Two    good\nmontli  to  good   men.\nHume Hotel. -  \u25a0 \u25a0\nagents,\nAljplj-\n(f!00   per\nRoom \u25a0 24,\n72-tf.\nFOR  RENT\u2014Nice large   iroiu    room in*\nprivate family; all modern conven-enceB,'\ncentral 'location;   no   children.     92   per'\nmonth.   Apply P.:Q. Box-jUi. 41-tf.\nWANTED\u2014Situation   as   general  help.by\nthoroughly  experienced  girl.    Apply'. H.\nU.,  Dally News.  Nelson. .;Ti-6\nWANTED\u2014 Experienced  linomen,- 40 cents\nan hour.   Apply,  Depew, Mucdutiuld and\nMcLean Co., Fernie., \u2022 ;      78-10\nTEACHER1 WANTED-Male Principal, for\nE Untie school. Applications to lie in by\n1st August, duties' to commence after\nsummer holidays. State \u00a3xperience--tind\nreferences. Apply secretary Hume School\nBoard, P. O. Drawer 1100, Nelson.*     J.16-4\nTENDERS WAN'TED--for cutting, 50 to t\u00bb\n..cords 4-f.t. wood ner;\u25a0month. - Wood to be\ndelivered to the conipreasor, Lucky ,Jitp,\nmine, Bear J-Oke, B. C. Address box 447,\nKaalo', B.'C.   \" ' '  *>      '71-8\nWANT131>-Ten good axemen, also a fe.w\nlahorers.    Apply   Patrick   Lumber  copi-\nfiany, Nelson or Slocan City.\nWANTED-At\nHotel.\nonce, ..porter, ...at    Royal.\nWAITED\u2014Wot if for man and learn. , Apply W. J. itcKlm, Gliutham- St?., PJiono\nA120,  Fairview. '      \u25a0 7B-G\nAVANTED-Sct    office    furniture.-\ndescription to P. O. box Tii*!.\nWrite\nmr.\nWANTED-Launoh and boat \u25a0hp\u00abi.*.   State\nprice, A- B. C, Daily Ne\\vs.    j      j 77-3\nWANTED\u2014Raspberries* ,7 .cents ilb.;, red\ncurrants,  ii cents lb.; black currants. 3\ncents lb., delivered at Kootenay Jam company's factory, Nek-ton, \u25a0  \u25a0 * T7-tf.\nWANTED-Boy   oi\ntrain*,   Apply -Mrt\nnews  agent on   dally\nB., Strutiicoua hotel.\nPRIVATE  MATERNITY  HOME\nNICE    LOCALITY    AND   -HOIIE   CUM-\nforts.    For terms and particulars  write\nP. p. Box 103, Nelson, B. U.\nPRODUCE\n\u2022tARKBT a CO., WHOLE8ALI1 OBAr.\n\u00abJ In Butter, Iw, ch<K\u00bb\u00ab, Produce *nd\nFruit.   Houston Block,  Josephine  streit.\nNelson, B. C.\nCAN THE I. C. S. REALLY\nBETTER YOUR SALARY?\nThat we can enable tbe average\nworker to increase' hla earnlnga ia a\nfact that has been proved by 17 years\nof succesB In so doing. From an \"experiment\" with one course of instruction the I.C.S. hns grown to be the,\nlargest educational institution in the\nworld with 208 courses and a million\nstudents enrolled, i\nSpecial window display and discount\non courses.   Local office: 413 Josephine\nR. LAWRENCE,  Rep..\nPhone B251 Mox 741\n5-fe\nMALCOLM & RUTCgART\nGENERAL BLACK8MITHS\nAND  WHEELWRIGHTS\nAll kinds of Studebaker Wagone In\n\u25a0took.\nP. O. Box 153. \"total* til.\nHALL ST., NELSON. B. a\n' \u25a0\nPublic Stenogpher\nMl BOtr Bt. Nilaoi. BC. Wone 178\nRainier Beer it the Best Beer,\nUindsay's\nDancing Pavilion\nEagles' Band Every Tuesday Night\nWilkinson's Orchestra every Wed. Night\nWilkinson's Orchestra every Fri. Night\nWilkinson's Orchestra every Sat. Night\nMonday and Thursday music,..je]ec-\ntric piano. Ojtf*n to public or for engagement to private1 parties.\nThis floating pavilion has just enough\nspring to make It. the best, dnncing\nfloor in the west\nBo-it and Liumcli Livery.    Refrefili-\nmenta aerved.  excellent dancing music\nFoot of Josephine Street\nGROCERIES\nL    MACDONALD ft: CO.-WHOI-HBAM\nwocere aaa Rrovlaloa Mercaante-lM-\nportari of Tsm, Gotten, Rpicee. Dried\nFruits, staple and Fancy Grocerlei, Tobaccos, Clgort, Butter, Egga, Cheese aad\nPacking House Products. Office and\nwarehouse, corner of Front and Hall\nStreets.   P. Q, Box 1085.   Telephone 28.\n\\VANTKT>\u2014 Pleasing woman for news and\nlunch   aland,   C. ,P.   K. Btation     ADHly\nWis. B., Straihconii hotel. . 77-8\nAVANTED\u2014Experienced' dining  room  girl\nat once, wages |30.    Apply Halcyon Sot\nSprings, Halycon,  13. C. 77-6\nWANTED\u2014Sleady,    sober    teamster\nranch, hauling cord wood, one team;\nmonth ami hoard, no Sunday work.       '\nWANTED-A   good   man   for   leal  fatate\nand Insurance business.   Must he a business getter.   Apply box 684, NelSon,  B. C.\nFOIt RENT\u2014Furnished six roomed house\nwith-garden.   Apply 423 Observatory St.\nor P.* O. box 6011.\nFOR SALE-12 bore shot gun, In excellent state of preservation, hammer gun,\n115.   C. A. P., Daily News. 6\u00bb-tf.\nFOR. .RENT\u2014Two five-roomed cottages;\nail and 313 Latimer street. All\" modern1\nconveniences. Apply at the premises du*\nring the. day. Allrcd Bunker, room 33,\nK.  W. ,0. bloc)-, -\nFOR RENT-Comfortable furnished room,\nman and wife prefwred.   611 Carbonate\n*_\u25a0  72-tf.\nFOR RENT-Two furnished roomffi ^usq <_f\n. -alttlng iooijv,pd both, all;-on one flat.\n312 Vernon street.,, f! \u25a0 i_\u00a3\nFOR   RENT-Two   nicely   furnished   betf-\nrooms, with use of bath.   603 Mill St.\nFOR   RENT-fo* gentlemen,   fffomfl   wltli\n- board.   Ayply pp7;Vnrbunate St,r      76-tf.\nl*\\m ' RENf-Furnisrtod\nCarney block. - \u25a0\nFAR   RENT\u2014Two   nicely   furnished   bedrooms,   with   use  of  bath,   no 'children.\nApply 109 jjall Mines .Road. 77-ti\nFO-R    RE^-Housel \"\nSilica street.\nipkeeplug    rooms,\nFOR RBr-rt'-Nlfely ftirnlshed rooms, Willi\nuse of bath.   CIS Victoria street.       78-6.\nFOR  ' RENT \u2014Furnished     housekeeping\nrooms.    Apply   Carney   block. 78-ft\nWANTED\u2014Hy mnn and Wife: .work. Wlfo\nas cook, man as laborer, used to horses.\nAddress M.. Dally News.        . . 78-U\nLIQUORS\nI.    F1RQUBON    tt    CO.-WHOLK8ALB\nMll Commission Mercbante-Importen\naad Wholeaale Dealers In Wlnee, Liquori\nand Cigars. Kootenay agent* for Pabit\nMilwaukee Beer. Agents tor the Bruns-\nwtok-Balke-Collender Co., Billiard and\nPool Tables and Supplies, Bar Fixtures,\nCigar Counters, Bowling Alleys, etc.\nPrice* and sped flea t!ons on application.\nOffice and retail department, Vernon\nSt, Nelson, two doors east of poatoffice.\nTelephone a\u00bb.   p. O. Box 1020.\nMINERS' FURNISHINGS\nA. MACDONALD & CO.,- WHOLESALE\nJobbers In BlanketB, \"Underwear, Mlttg,\nGloves, Boots, Rubbers, Overalls, Jumpers, Mackinuws and Oilskin Clothing,\nCamp and Miners' Sundries. Office and\nWarehouse corner of Front and Hall Sts.\nP. O. Box 1093.   Telephone 28.\nMINING MACHINERY\nWASHINGTON MACHINERY & SUPPL1\nCo.\u2014Dealers In Engines, Band and Circular Sawmills, Atkins' Saws, Wood and\nIron Pulleys, Leyner Compreesors and\nDrills, Pumps and Hotels. Prompt attention. Reasonable prices. Courteous\ntreatment.    Spokane, Wash.\nSHERIFF'S SALE\nBv virtue of n Warrant of Execution Is-\nsued out of the County Court of West\nKootenay, holden at Nelson, in an action\nwhereof A. Macdonald of Nelson, B. C\u201e\nIs' Plaintiff, and P. A. Pulley of Edge-\nwood. B. C\u201e Is Defendant, I have eel-fed\nand taken in Execution all the right, title\nand Interest ot tlie said P. A. Pulley in\nthe Edgewood Lumber Company Syndicate of Nelson and Edgewood. And I\nshall sell tlie said interest of the sa'd P.\nA. Pullfly at public auction at my ortice\nIn the Court House In the City of Nelson\non Thursday, the 28nd day-of July, 1909,\nat the hour of 11 o'clock ln the forenoon.\nTerms of.euii-, cash.\nIntending inircliasers will Satisfy tfiem-\nBelveR as to the interest of the said defendant in the tibrbve named -syndicate.\npatea at NelBon. B. 'C.   \u25a0,w*-  T\"*\"   10r\n&\u00ab\n'13th July. IBM.\n8. P. TUCK.\nSheriff of -South Kootenay.\n.sont.tqJ>tB..ftrcbil,evtH, and must reach\nn on or  before Thursday, 22nd July,\nNOTICE TO CONTRACTORS\nTenders are requested for the erection\nof new banking premises for the Imperial\nBank of Canada,  at Cranbrook.\nAll  lenders   to  he sealed  and endorsed\n.and.\nther\n1909.\nThe successful tenderer will be required\nto deposit with the architects a Knilsfae-\ntory bond for 10 per cent, on tlie it-mount\nof his contract.\nThe lowest or any tender not necessarily\naccepted. ,\nPlans ant|\" specifications may bo obtained on application to The Manager, Imperial Bank of Canada, Cranbrook, B. 0.,\nor from the architects,\nMESSRS. HODGSON & BATES,\nDominion Building,\n74.6 Calgary, Alta.\nDISSOLUTION   OF  PARTNERSHIP\nNotice Is hereby given that the partnership heretofore subsisting between us as\nreal estate, insurance and financial agents\niu the city of Nelson has this day been\ndissolved by mutual consent,\nAll debts owing to tlie said partnership\nare to be paid to E, B. McDermld at Nelson .aforesaid and all claims against tho\nsaid partnership are to be presented to\nthe said E. B. McDermld by whom the\nsame will be settled.'\nDated at Nelson, B. C, this 2nd day of\nJuly, 1909. O\nli    ~ B. KoDERCMID,\n\u25a0..   . CHAS. F. Hc-HARDY.\nWitness: E. A. 'Crease. M-X\u00ab\nLOST\nLOST\u2014Adrift from Read's Landing, Arrow Lakes, on the night of the 7th of\nJuly, a lli-foot Peterboro canoe, painted\ngreen on outside and name \"LH\" oalnted\non bow, with ono pair of new ores-hi rowlocks and one paddle marked A, A good\nreward will be offered to the person\nfinding same and adv sing undersigned.\nAny person found in possession 'after the\nexpiration of this notice will be prosecuted. C* Eekford Damlll, Sunny-side,\nRead's Landing, Nakusp, Arrow Lake.\n70-10\nFOR SALE\nFOR SALE\u2014Several blocKS of choice fruit\nlands, very.easy to Clear, in Kaslo district, on Kootenay iak\u00ab. Lake frontage-\nand bench lands; prices ranging from 99\nto $20 per acre. Ureatest snap. eve*r offered in Truit lands in thiB famous fruit\ndistrict. Fur further particulars apply at\nLindsay's boat house, foot of Josephine-\nstreet, Nelson, B. C. 24*tf..\nFOR SALE-US^ acres of fruit land for\nsule, only 13 miles from Nelson, up-\nKootenay lake. Price and terms reasonable. Or will exchange for city property.\nAddress P. O. Box 40 Nelson. &l-tf.\nFOR   SALE-200  shares   In   Golden    Zone\nmine ut Hedley, $16,   Big profit assured\nin   reasonable   time.    Box   M.   A.,   Dally\nNews. B7.ii,\nFOR SALE\u2014Man or woman. My South.\nAfrican Veteran Bounty Laiid Certificate, issued by the department of the\ninterior, Ottawa: good for 320' acres ofi\nany 'Dominion land upen for; entry In\nAlberta, Saskatchewan or Manitoba. Any\nperson over the age of 18 years, man or\nwoman, can acquire this- land with this\ncertificate. For Immediate sale'$800. Write\nor wire, L. E. Telford, 131 Shuter street,.\nTJoronto, Ontario. >: 58-26\nFOR SALE\u201412-bore hammer shot gun, in-\nexcellent condition; $15, sacrifice.   Owner    leaving    district.     M.   U.  It.,    Daily\nNews. fil-tf.\nIN    THE    SUPREME     COURT    OF\nBRITISH  COLUMBIA\nIN   THE   MATTER   OF  \"THE   WINDING-UP ACT\"\n\u2014and\u2014\nIN    THE     MATTER    OF    THE     LA\nPLATA   MINES   COMPANY,   LIMITED\n(Non-persona) Liability.)\nNotice is hereby given that pursuant lo\nthe older of the Honorable Mr. Justice\nIrving,: herein, dated the I Bill dny of\nFebruary, 1000, all cml'tur*- of the above-\nnamed company are ien,ylrpd,',ph or before\nthe 2ist day of August. lMfl; to win! \"heir\nnames and addresses, and the particulars\nuf their debts or claims, and the nnnies\nnnd addresses of their solicitors, if any.\ntn William Howard Bullock-Webster, of\nNelson, B. C\u201e the official HaiidiiLor uf\nthe said company, and. If so \u25a0 m-ulred hy\nsaid liquidator by notice in writing from\nhim, aie by the'r sdllciturs reamred to\neome In and prove their said debts and\nclaims at the offloe of the district registrar\nof this Court at Nelson,! U. C, at sucir\ntime a.s shall be specified In stub police,\nand in. default thereof they Will fee ex-,\neluded-from the benefit of anydistrlbtitlon;\nmade before such debts arc. proved,\nMonday, the 'Mb day of Augusl-, lflOfl,\nat tho office of the said district registrar\nIs nppolnted for hearing and adjudicating\nupon said claims.\nAnd further take notice tha,t by\" order\nnf the Honorable Mr. Justice Clement\nherein dated tlie (lib day nf October. 1908,\nWilliam Howard ntdlock-Wt-hster of Nelson:, B. C, was appointed official llfiulda-\ntor of the nbove-named company.  '...\t\nDated tho 20th day ot July, IBD9,     .\nT. M. BOWMAN*. ,\nDistrict \"RcBlfitrnr.\nFOR SALE-200 x 120 feet ground, oaual\nto 8 city lots, facing Hoover street,\ncleared and grabbed, ready for clow.\n$350 will handle this, balance $650, vour\nown terms.   Address box 206, NcJson.\n: 63-tt,\nMILL PLANT FOR SALE--Want to sell\nor exchange for lumber, outfit of saw-\nmill' machinery, capacity 30,000 feet dally,\non Kootenay lake. Address P, O. Box\n!W7, Victoria, B. C,     , '\u25a0 64-U\nFOR   SALE-Complete -Set   of   household\nfurniture,-  For particulars apply corner\nChatham   and   Elm   street!',   Fuirviaw.\n\u25a0 ,  :  , \u25a0 _^^_____ ____\nJ^OR SALE-12 acres laud.. 2 1*2 cleared,\nplapted lu bearing apple trees, 1-2 acre\natrawbertle; water piper through clearing;\n3 miles from town on wagon road. Price\n$1,260, one-third cash. Address \"Land.\"\nDaiU* Ne\\ys.   .  .       , 86-12\nFOR SALE-Fine dry kindling In bundles.\nAsk your dealer about them.\nNOTICE.\n\"Water Act, 1909;\"\nApplications Will be received by the undersigned up to and, including Saturday,\nthe fourteenth day nf AugUBt next, from\nCivil and - Hydraulic engineers, for tho\n\"position of Chief Water Commissioner\nunder the above Act. Applicants' to * state\nbfieily <|Ua1lflcatlons and dute when services would be available.\nSalary,: $234) per month.\n! FRED. X FULTON,\n; Ch'ef Commissioner of Lands.\niLan'ds Deportment,    , , \u25a0   ...     tM ,_\nVictoria, B.C., 12th-Silly, \u25a0i\u00ab09. ;   -ISM*\n..    .\"\u25a0\u25a0\u2022    |   '\/      ',   m     \u25a0>    BOH\u00ab4l(l I-    '   ''\"'\nFOR SALE-At Nelson Brick. Works, In\nlarge or small quantities, the finest.'and\nhardest common brick In British Columbia. Apply William Hancock, Nelson\nBrick Works. 71**\nFOR  SALE\u2014South   African   Sorlp,   direct\nfrom* veteran;   J530: * Apply   \"Veteran,\"\nDaily News. 199\niROR -BALE-ThoroUghbred   Bull   Terrier\n'flips.'  Apply Robt; Falrolouih,   P.   O.\nFOR SALE^-Ton MW Timothy and clover.\nWhat offers?   J. Gourney, Willow Point,\nB. C. 74.6.\nFOR' SAliE-T.wn' gtiod oowhi both in calf,\nprice $66 and $75,   Apply Mrs.'Fournler,\nCntwfdrd' \u25a0BaV, B,< C, 1 74-B-\nFOR SALE\u2014Incubator, 3 brooder, 2 brood-\n*er '-coups,-bono cutter, corn mill, also\nyoung chickens, ducks and 1-ycur old\nliens.    Apply P. .0.  box 712, city.        7|h\nBOATS FOR SALK-Anotber consignment\ndue   from 'Peterboro;   stock   too   large;*\nsell   some    nt    bargain    prleos,     W.   J.\nAstley, City Boat House.     7f.-Hf\nFOR SALE-Blaek Minorca,. Whlto Wyandotte, and   Barred Rock yearling hens.\nAlso  unrelated ,trio   Pekln ducks.    Apply\nto M. B. Edwards, Hume Addltjon.      7\u00ab-3\n:FOR SALE-Good work  lmrse; \u25a0 Including\nharness and   wagon;   weight   10001   prloa\n$125.   Apply to Tom. Quccoll, Perry Siding.\nIB. C.  77-4\n-FOR SAJ^E\u2014flood yoke oxeiii true, welt\nbroken to all work.   Pf|co reasonable,\n-M. H. McWhlnney, Kootenajr, Bay,. -B. G.\nfefcto-^\n___m_______\n 15  VJUl\nWEDNESDAY-;.\n::\u2014;-. -'UfcY-21\t\n\u00a3_______]\nr'j.M,}.'\nKootenay Coffee Co.\ndealer! la til grades, and. vali-\neUea ot\nTeas and Coffee\nrom'-tb ot* 2ffi 'ito -cc-ik*).''\n. Tl>\u00ab belt, 1ft tfleMhousehold luxuries at moderate prices.\nFresh roasted coffee at 35\u00ab to\n800-per i67\"'\nTeas, all grades and Tarietles,\n\u2022t |2.to-,(!6cp>rm     I.   ,,,!   \u25a0\u2022\nPure ground and whole spices.\nBaking powder, cocoa, cream tartar, baking soda (larorlng extracts.\nKootenay Coffee Co.\n3 OS Baker Street\nii *\n\u2022 ii\"- -< \u25a0 i'\nYou Are No Doubt Proud of\nas an\nn\nBEST EQUIPPED UNDBRTARiNU\nANDj EMBALMING PARLORS IN THB\nKOOTENAY.\nfy. J.  BOYLE, UNDERTAKER.\nNlglA Fhons 252. Day Phona 86.\nStandard Furniture Co.\nNELSON, B. C.\nLADIES-ATTENTION!\nLadles' Muslin Blouses from fl.oi)\nJto    ..$3.00\nLadles' Net Blouses from JB.bO\nito :,...\u2022(.>,a;',..., ...'...f'O.oo\nliadles' Silk Petticoat*. from^liiW\nTto  \u00bb9.00\nLadles' Ready-to-wear Skirts\nfrom'J6.00 t6\"    ST .-**8.t\u00bb\nHosiery *fom 85c to 11.00 a pair\nFancr *3ottars from 76c to Jz.oo\n^acs.i. uniu !   \t\nButtons made on short notice.\nCall and examine goods before\nbuying at Mr. and Mrs. \u25a0B'lint'a\n612 Baker street. **,.\u00a3* a    i-\nWe have some first-class\nMINING PROPERTIES\nFOR. SALE\nwith good showings In the heart\not the Sheep-Creek.\"district.   -..-\nMake lnqiimea about them.-'\nPleused, to^aiisweryour coires-\/\npondence.\nA. LONGHURST\n. , \u25a0  Real 'Estate Agent\n8ALMO I.,   , B. C.\n|Q   -Many people believe you when- ,yoii cell them    the size of   the\nSpeckled Beauty you landed\nMany others have their doubts,\nDid II Ever Occur To You\nThat you can verify your rfs fi stbiV with one of our nrilnue Cameras.\nj[ l8:-alfl9 a nice companion to take along with you. It always brings\nbacVpleasant memories of that Rood time. It keeps before you familiar faces that perhaps might be forgotten,    :,.:,.*::.-;*::.\u25a0.';:..''\"\u00ab:. .-'A'\nXm May flavfe a Oi\n_f%. |   %ttm Hi   M\n\"'iis'lt'lri'-giiod workih-ii'ordcf?-\nAre J'our Jieg^itly^s clpar? ,   ' .\nDo your print's come but as you ^ouldjjke them?\nDo you find any trouble in developing? -;\nI P9 r t\nLet Us Help You\n\u25a0   ,.*;\n\\_\n'\u25a0\u25a0\u00bbtrl\n(?*t\nPAHIIVII-   A\nMETALS\nNew York,: July\nytlc copper,\nLflnilon, Ji\nm W.;-' **-V\nMljjfltai\u2014Closing iiiiotiitl'-m- on tho N'tuv\nYOfk'-.cui-b'iiiul Spokam* i*xi.-lian-*f, lopoil-\n'\u25a0il-by.\"Wi-khtori & CuvumiiJi*:h.\n* B10.   Aalceil.\n.7.23      7.50\n85,00    105.00\n__%      .04%\nW'_PW\n6_m y)>nw,.\n\u2022&\u25a0\u25a0    m\n.04%      .00%\n.OHi      .0214\n20.-\u2014Silver, a; Electrolytic copper, 12% io 12ft, steady.\nluly 20.\u2014S.lver, 23%;  Lead,   \u00a312\nIS- C. Copper \t\nCun. Con. Smeltera\nGertie\nM..ft\nJ'-_y%\nLucky Calumet  ....\nMl mil ii lu Copper \t\nMonitor  33\nNaboli  02'4\nCom   Paul   03%\nHelm-leer   03%\nRambler Carlhoo   io\nHex  '.. OSVi\nSntiwtilKH-   ...     ,t)5**\nSnowstorm     1.53\nSicwart  15\nTamarack  A:  Chesapeake   ...    n%\n\u00bb'\u2022-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.\u2022\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0 :.\nCarpet Gleaning\nBeating carpeto by hand spoils the texture and does not remove the dirt.\nOut up-to-date. Steam Olfs\"!\"* Process\n\u2022removes all the Impurities' and;lestores the\ngoods to original .colors.   \u25a0\n,i    lOoiPEH SQUAB.-* YARD.\nWd>* called tor and delivered promptly.\nCl\u00ab to-. oTal* kliiils-cIealtMI.-renovated,\ndyed and repaired. ,,     .\nG\u00bb t\u00ab- Sulta cleaned and pressed,^ to\n*2a* fi'likSf..\u00ab\u00ab*. H.0OI 4V-A.0O. ,\nSSl88f,&%&   BestVuran'i.\n\u00abnd   teamen\t\n>n Steam Laundry\nKootenay Lake\nj        \"-Maternity -irinth I .\u00a3        (\nPatients are now received at tne foi-\nlonrlig ratei: \u201e .,     ..\n.Private ward patlenta, week ....(20.00\nSemfprlvate ward patlenta, week $15.00\nAddress   applications   to  matron at\nWo know the Camera Business.'; Wlile experience In this iine en\nables lis to tell you all ab-oiit your ciraera.r,; \\W-have jllst .rece.iyed-a  '\nTresh supply of Film and Plate Cameras;, Drop In ana have a look' oWr -'\u2022\nour stock.   It will surprise you.    Our cameras are -universal; 'tlfey are~\";\nmade to take any make of film.    The slze^ are as cbllpws-3 1-4x4 l-4i'\nf3 1-4x6 1-8, 4x5, 2,l:4x3sl-l,,5x7,  , '     '*\u00ab '\u25a0'\u25a0'   '  '   ';\nOur cameras are a combination   of  mechanical   genius,   pei-fect  In\u25a0':}\nevery detail.   Our supplies are without doubt Ihe best'on tthe.market.\nPATRONIZE THE STORE THAT PLEA8ES B'HIAjnSaMAH\n. ..BUY TH E GOODS TH AT SATIS I^Y1'' ' \u00b0\nWE SUGOEST, OTHERS TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR SUGGESTIONS\nTiir i Tii-- \u2022'': \u25a0*\u2022 _______________^^^^^ \u25a0   '- >'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0       BjJL\nPdole Drug Co. Ltd.\nNelson's Leading Druggists\n* i \"'  -        - \u2022\u25a0>.,?' ;' '- *  *   * '     : ':\u25a0 i\nPhone 25\nI n)\nDay or Night\nPhone 25\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAV\nRoyal Arch Chapter\nsemhle Uiis evening.\nTho   temperature   yest -i\nr,t*3'Ggff*\"i& nntl; H^ rteffrees.\nay   varied  be-\n\u00bb\u00bbM m\u00bbM\u00bb 4 I \u2666 MMMMMtlHMlM'\n5^\u00abi\u00bb-*^.i^Brt\nMa-iri    .'Lake   Erie.\n-From MONTREAL\nAND QUEBEC LIV-\n\u25a0May 7.-   ..Empreits of Ireland.\n- I>ahe *Oh\u00abmplaln...\n,.Empress of Britain..\n....Lake Manitoba\t\n. Emprese of Ireland..\n.. \u201e..Lake Erie...,. .\n. Empress of Britain..\nMay.lo-.\nMay 21-.\nMay!29...\nJun* 4..\nJun* 11!\nJune 18\nirll 14\nIM\n-  , 30L\n..A-pt.ua\n.April 29\n..May 1\n..May 12\n..May 21\n..May 29\n.June 4\nSSly\" -?:.-..K\u2122\u2122..V-o?*Ir^landV..\"jSRS iS\nFor further lnfoi-matlon regarding rates,\n\u25a0h'es ot aalllng, etc., apply\nA. TIDMCS. -C. _ *.. Nelson, B. C.\nW. 0. ANNABUE, O.P.A- Montreal P. (i.\n'      CLBANINO AND PRBS8INQ\nlulu called for and delivered\n1 .A. J. DRISCOUL\n\u25a0Won* 3B5\u2014Baker street, oppoalt* the\nOufBn'o   Hnto'        __________\n'NOTICE\nAH .persons; are forbidden to pick up or\nin any. way intorrere with' 1i>bs adrift on\nthe JCpotenay 'hike, and West Ami thereof, the' said logs Wiir the property of-\nthe undersigned, or logs Over whieh: wo\nhave, .fiQOttQl- \u25a0       '       . i'   \u25a0 ,.\nA-hVotfti'1 falling 'tff-Tefcoghlie this ndtlc*\nwill be prosecuted according to law,\nTHE   YALE-COLTTMBIA ..LUMBER   CO-.\nAN EPONOMICAL TEA\nTea Belling at 25c or 30c a pound Is not really cheap, but la extravagantly dear.\nBecause so much of It le usually required that the cost per cup li\ni; .... actually, vorjp than if a good tea ilk* Blue Ribbon were used.\n- \u25a0''   \"   X pound of Blue Ribbon Tea will tpake 260 cups of good rich tea,\nao, even at 50c a pound you would get four or five cups tor one cent\nNot a very dear drink, Is It?\ny ' r.-* jnd as far ^aYO'r.-there Ib Blmply pn oomnar-wm hatwetQ Blae Rib-\n\u25a0% '\u25a0-    bem and -the -\"\"cheap\" teaa.\nJust try a pound, and aaa.\nThe Order uf Owls will hold tholr regn-\nlav tnr*>etlrig    t\\\\\\s \u25a0 Dvenlng-i-ln   li*nUeiuiiy\nTlie Indies of the Maccabees hold their\n,re*jii|8*j-. meeUiia, th|-*;,eyfiiina   li| \\1_   K.\not p. imii.\nThis afternoon being n half holiday It\nIsHOpeil'that there will ue* a--bjg uiifn-j-\niince nt tin* cricket iniiti-h Ih-hvi-ch the\nUranfl-ForKs und'Ncln-.ni STSvWffl:   *    '\u2022\nTlit bachelors' bull will lie held In Lindsay's hual house on Friday -ffvenlng and\nnut this evening as^^rcvloiiBly iiin^tiiieed.\nWllklnsun'HV ivj-ulat- '\u25a0 WeMni-siliu- wyenlng\ndance will, ihercfon*, take place as usnal\nthis Evening.\n'Thp Einnli-e is putting on Its usual mid-\n,week program1 and offers a first class program nfvery flneifllms. Incidents in tlie\n.Iffft of Charlotte Corday, tlie famous and\nhistoric French woman, ar- pi-btrayed.\nThis'is a very fine hand colored film. oC\n\u2022HlilendUl merit. \"The Mamlhon Race\" is\nV? fi^e dramatlr f-tit^Jevi In wliich is ln-\ntrojloced a first class race event. \"The\nBrave Little Drummer -Boy\" is a very stlr-\nFing:war picture nnd Is an exeentlonullv\ngood, sttbjpct. \"A* Sure Knmigh Tnmltler''\nIs a very comical film ami abounds In\nmany mirth provoking Incidents, -A\nmatinee p'ilj ha __S\\ this \u00abl'|ernonn enin-\n\u25a0mendng at \u2022-'.30. THnight-Jfi.'Lustpn V'l'1.\nsing 'Ave ifnFle\" from faviitprni Rustl-\ncaila] \u201e   ,\ni  Ko.-.i.-n ;.. omvit\nj   ,;-\u201eUan*fion Quotations\n. iMflon, July 20.~niose.\n\u2022Ainalgamntf-rt  -\"opper -...'...:.\nAnaconda    i\t\nAalchlson   \t\nAtchison  I'td...\t\nBaltimore X* Ohio \t\nQ. P. R\t\nChesapeake & Ohio    Slw\nQhloagovft Great AVeStern      IVi\nChicngo, Milwaukee ti. S-. T'aul 10-H'i\nChicago. Milwaukee ft Sti  Paul   1'lM..   87\nErie     :!T-\\\n(Or'e 1st Pfd    64%\nErie  2nd   Pf-l-'    I4\n'f.r;lllil T'lll'k       $\u00a5&\nIllinois  Central     130%\nLouisville & Nnshville    IjM\nMissouri.   Kansas &  'l'e_\\$      ;\"'\"'i\nNew   Vo-k   Central   ....!  IM-jj\nNnl-fblk  .*:\u2022  u'esv*i*'i       W\nNofrotk ft WesVem pim  lfo\nOntnHo  ft   Wratel-n     \u25a0\"<\nPennsylvania     71\nReading  '   8\"\nHroilliern  NttTwhy    32\nSouthern Railwny PW  1-\naouthern  Pacific   137-ii\nUnion   Pacific     IHW-A\nUnion PaHlfW   Pfd  Hfl\nTidied   StHtea   Hte-ol      12%\nITn ted   States   St'-'t'l   I'l'd.,  IW^\nwabtish   at8-!\nWahash  Pfd       6S\nBur Silver, steady, 2Hl6tl epi' ounce.\n\u25a0S4*---\nfl5i\n. l'!3%\n. 11)1%\nGtoMEN!\nWHO KNOW\nto\nGetting!Tight down\nthp bottom of things, we'll\nt*;i> this:\nWe  Have  too  Many\nHot Weather Suits\nIt's our time for clearin\nami iget&ng in order for\naeasoni\n; out tilings\nthe coming\nThe Prices Will Do It\n$6.50, $8.50, $10, $12\nInvestigate antl you'll gel in to 'the saving line yourself.\nAthletic\nSHOW HERE FRIDAY\nColonia Opera Company Will Appear\nIn Opera House\nAll reports indicate that tlie lovers of\nmusic and of the lighter vein of comedy\nwill find plenty to attract them In the\nengagement at the nperil house on Pi-lday\nevening next of the Colonial Opera enai-\npany. This orgiini\/.:iiiMii, Which is heralded as the bftfftflual lia83\\irlBiu1fl\\M(l\n, will ]\nThe. Shaw Girl\nlay.   \"The BHdV 01\nneed in Boston inn\nus run there as v\nVhica-to, Philade!|ili\nand (ither-i'.of the li\nIs an eutei-tiitiuucm\nealcahtted Lo apius'e\naway whlstlitm* its\n\u25a0hands of tha Colon,\nnot to suffer in tin\nwith tlui .original\nthose who Will appG.\ncast are Adele Oswi\nKssie lliinoii. Mali-\nber'tsn\ni stnaii and   tunafjil\n,-r was'urlg'nally nro-\n\u25a0 had a1 most prosper-\n\u2022ell an, In Nqjv Voi-U.\na. Tiirnnto, Jroaireal\ni-i-c utistent citits.    Il\nimilt solelv on lines\nand send fiie anilitni-\n!'ii-'tin-i -ill*-. In lh']\nil rompauy il is an id\nleast  In  CO ill pup soli\ninotluctlun. Among\nir permaiii'tuly in llffl\nId, Nelll? V. Nichols,\n.lordan. K. Coii Al-\nicker  Woods,  Hurry Watson,\nUnderwear\nTest It and see what 'great comfort\nyou have been missing, sleeveless and\nshort legged drawers,in gauje, nainsook\nand Balbriggan, at all prices.\nFrom 50c to $2.00\nHardly think you cun confront us with an underwear want fli-n\n\u25a0 cannot supply.\nNothing is more dressy thuna\nlight summer vest aud think of\nthe conirort and Immense rihge\nin all the .ending shades at\n'\u25a0) $lv50, $1.75, $2.00\n$2.50, $3.00, $3.50\nIF YOUR  HOT\nWe Know Our Business\nCOME TO US\nEmory & Walley\nThe Hub Famishing House\nKrank i>. N'-Mtmti and Frank l-'rench, ,\nthe Hiwlf of this exceptional cast Is ah :i\ntraetlv.- and talutittfl chdrus, nntl M\nscenlr and tnccliauical eiiviionineni cm\nplete and in perfect order. \"The Sho\nGirl.\" Is short, Is a Swagger show wl\na bewliderlng micve\u00bbsion or musical hi\nand dtimedy that never lags. As a flua\ncinl nnd artistic success It ranks *-'*!\u25a0\nanything produeed in recent years.\nChildren Must Have Pure Milk.\nThe period ,,r growth, viK, clilldhood. I\ntin* human Ijoitia is the period when ll\nseeds of eltbor health or stieagth nr dl\nHOSE and weiikie-ss til rough lite are sow\nAt  Ihla I\nof  Vltllj   itllliOltilOC*,      >\nfor children i\n\u25a0 In exact pn\ns    ullil    0!\nThe milk. In\ncreai\nv   flu\n1    un- -ii\nturn -mile.\nbj   diif-i   or\ndirt,\nmil  a\nWllOlSI\nsome as\nVll-Il   il    l.-l'l\nt|ie i\nlirynn\nn's palls\nAdvt-li.\nJAPAN   AND  KOREA\nIto   States   that   Situation\nKorea  is  Hopeful\n1,   July   aO-T-I-'Viiiee   [tu,   until\nKorea and regarded\nof Junanuse elder\nfrom Seoul today a\nUUUSUUl honor-; al\nof the emperor, T\nhonor occupied the h\nI'oail station when\nrived. Prince im <\nlined with troops d\nwhere lie reitorlOd ti\nHo said that the si\nhopeful ami that lh\nexpect\nc|v,-. I\n\u25a0\\|.i*\n\u25a0rial guni:i\ninie outside tin*\ne prince's train\nive   (hrougli   sti\neinjieror,  I'r\ntin\nIk  ii ml\nlid pack -ne i\nall  times felhthle\ndid\nnvehiinn\nChhde\nTheir\nvillK fi\"il-\nsing com-\noxford\nwill im\ni   milk   on,-,, n\u201e,i  fresli\n\u25a0om   the sunny   pnstiiVi\nOn   (lllutlnu   these   i\naid. V\nif not\nrd  Km\ni)]&MCl1   lo\nrecent  mi\nhe Judleiii\ns   ao   alis\ncllangd tu\nnr. The i\nlillshed tn\nRainier Beer is the  Best  Beer,\n... -   -\nll     \u00ab!\u25a0\nw\nWEDNE8DAY & THURSDAY\n,   \u25a0   Commencing at 7;?,0\n'Charlotte     Corday..\nhand colored.\nBeautiful'\nI\nA  S.ure   Enough  Tumbler.\nThj'MaraWon' Rfice..,.'    \u201e,*$'\nBrave   Little  Drtlrnmer-Boy.\n\u25a0 E. Lupton will sWg \"kWMarie\"\nMatinee Today, 2 3u\"to '5 30 p.'m,\nAdmission:   10  and  15- C\u00abnta\u2014\n:\u25a0\nLATEST    MOVING. PICTURES\nPROGRAM\nMONDAY   and   TUESDAY\nRed  Man and Child.    This is a\nsplendid Hiograph  Hllm of Uidiitiii\nlife in the early days.  '\nGuilty Conscience... Comic.\nJohn's  New Suit..   Comic. - \u25a0\nLaughing  Gas..   Very  funny.\nBaby Elephants, Lions and Tigers  I\n' Conffi ami liavn a gdbtj liiugli..\nAdults  15c;   Children, 10c.\nu \/\nJOHIN   BURINS\nCONTRACTOR  ANO\" BUILDER\nSash,  poor and  Office    Fitting\nFactory.   Brick and Litre for tale\nOffice   and   Factory\nCarbonate Street,       Nelson, B. C.\nLarge     quantities   of.   shavings,\nsuitable for stable bedding can be\nhad for hauling away,     t        \u25a0\u2022* . ,-*\n\u2022i     I V i '\u25a0(\nStr. \"Creston'\nleaves Elford's boathonse for\nFER1NWOOD PARK\n:   (Opposltp  Five-mile Point\nSUNDAYS\nat 10.30 a.m., 2 and 3.30 p.m.\n\"A-Delightful Sail.\"\n50c Return\nWest Kootenay Butcher Co\nG. G.  PETERS,  Man.\nOur stock of fresh and salted meats\nIs unsurpassed In the city. Give ub\nft trial order, It will be followed by\nothers. Fish twice a week from the\nRoast.\nWatch and\nJewelry Repair\nThui wi* nre turning nut our work to\nthe rutin satisfaction of our patrons\nis proved by the dully increase In the\nnuinher of repulvs we handler If you\nlire not satisfied pivr us a trial.\nAtl\nmuilPi\n.Milk     pi\nw  prlci\nnptly executed and  at\nE. \u00a3. ROBINSON\nWatchmaker  and Jeweler\n117  1-2  Baker Street.      NHLSON. B.C.\nOpposite Silver King Hotel\nThis Is the Season\nof tlie year when everyone prefer-}\npoultry and the lighter meats. We can\nsupply you with anything you wink iu\nthis line and our prices are reasonable\nand the Roods are of the best quality\nonly. What about cold chicken or tin1-\nkey for that picnic luiu'lieon. or some\nsliced boiled hum, siloed -is thin as a\nwafer ontflur pntent sllcer.\nP. Burns & Co.\nCANADA'S GREATEST WESTERN SCHOOL !i\nBUSINESS ,\nINSTITUTE\nVahcouver, B. C.   ;.;\nTlie best wiulpped ichool West ol R. J. SPROTT, b! A., Mir,'\nToronto. Bend tor catalogue.\nrott Shaw\n**4r***l*fr*.-fr.&\u00ab.>.*'.4.&ir&~&******\n$1200 Will buy a neat, well-built summer cottage on Kootenay Lake,\ntwo miles from Nelson. It is well furnished and all ready to move\ninto.   An ideal summer home.\n$200   Cash and $25 per month will buy a neat five-roomed cottage on\nMill Street.   Entirely modern and up-to-date\nWe Will Buy\nWc Will Sell\n.8525.00\n2000 Kootenay Ice & Fuel $ . 09\n200 Canadian Marconi   1.00\n1000 American Canadian Oil 14'A\n1000 Canadian  North-West  Oil ii'\/.\n1000 Royal Collieries 25\n1 coo I international Coal 76\nI       .\nMcDERMID & McHAPDY   baker street, nelson\n\"'. '.-.,.    '*.:,.,'     I  \u25a0'*\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\"\u2022\u2022'.\u25a0..\u25a0.\u25a0\u2022 . 1\n. \u25a0 I   \u25a0> o\n.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0:.:\u25a0 I    \u25a0'.!     '   ' . IOi.lf-0-' !\nI South African Scrip\t\n300 Diamond Vale\t\n100 Kootenay Jam\t\n5' 0 Nugget\t\n200 B. C. Copper       7.50\n15 Consolidated  Smelters     96.50\n5 Shares Great West Permanent for $430\n(calls amounting to $265 to pay)\n. 1 2\n.00\n\u2022\u00bb'\n!\n,70\n1\n\u25a0fc^fl***^*\/.^ .-*'.. __* :*____\u00a3_]$:?.\n r   \u00bbAOE EIGHT\n\u00a9lie ittUs Sta**\nWEDNESDAY   JULY H     *\nIt Witt Pay You\nTO LOOK INTO THIS\nONE-QUARTER MILE LAKE\nFRONTAGE\n60 acres close to Nelaon. 46\nacres beat land of which 12 acres\nare cleared. 6 acres In bearing\norchard. Apples, cherries and\npears, mainly apples. Two and\none-halt acres In bearing strawberries. 4-roomed modern cottage\non property. One-quarter mile\nlake frontage.   Come and see us.\nH. E. Croasdoile\n(Sk Co.\nResidence for Sale\nCotniainlng parlor, dining room,\npantry, two bedrooms, bath, verandah on two sides. Corner lot\n75x120 feet, $1650.\nAcreage\nSeveral one and two acre block*\nnear shipyards. $225 to $450 per\nacre,   Terms given.\nf, B. LYS 315 Baker Street\nUnequalled tor general use\nGALT COAL\nCars shipped to all railway points\nW. P. TIERNEY, Gen. Sales Agt.\nNELSON, B. C.     Box 823\nNelson Opera House\nORE NIGHT ONLY\nFRIDAY, JULY 23rd\nThe largest and most expensive\nmusical attraction ever in Nelson.\nThe Big Review of 1909\nThe Show Girl\nMetropolitan Caste of\n40 People 40\nBroadway Show Girls\nEnglish Pony Ballet\nDoors Open nt 0 p.m.; Curtain 9:30\nPrices:   50c, 75c, $1, $1.50\nSale at opera  house Thursday\nmorning.\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\nTlie Fraternal Order of Eagles meet thi\nW. Hunter, M. P. I'., of Silverton, ia at\nthe Strathcona.\nJ. .1. Shallcrosa of Victoria Is among the\nvisitors to the city.\nArthur Mann, druggist, of Glrand Porks,\nspent yesterday In tiie city.\nJ. S. Alrhenrt, or the fi'ghlander mine,\nAlnsworth, Is at the Hume.\nDr. J. M. Adams of Seattle reached the\ncity by the Spokane train lam evening.\nT. S. McPherson of Victoria sppnt yesterday in the city and h>ft last nigh' for\nthe coast.\nSam J. Gorman of Marblehead reached\nthe city by the Kokanee yesterday morning and is a guest at the Hume.\nW, A. Anstie. secretary of Hie Mountain Lumber Manufacturers' association,\nreturned from the coast last night.\nProf. Adam Shortt. chairman of the\nCivil -service commission^ who has been\nhere an the Rtiest of the Canadian club,\nleaves this morning for the east,\nJohn Thompson, one of the pioneer mining men of Kootenay, who has spent Hie\nlast few years In Alaska and on the roast,\nis paying Nelson a short visit.\nDr. Tj. K. Borden has moved his offices\nfrom over the bank io tin* more commodious suite lately occupied by Bgg & Hal-\nilnne in   the Wood-Vallance block.\nThe city hand played notne very Interesting selections last evening in the stand\non Front street whicli were taken advantage of by a very largo number* of citizens.\nOn Sunday afternoon next Rev, F. H.\nGfr&ham will conduct a Church of England\nservice at Willow Point at 3 p. in. If the\nweather is fine tlie service will lie he'd In\nthe open nir nt West's park instead of ln\nthe school house.\nAt the meeting of the Ladles of the\nMaccabees In ihe K. of p. hall this evening there will be several cand'dntcs for\nInitiation. It is, therefore, hoped that as\nmany officers and members as possible\nwill he in attendance.\nThe members of the Castiegar cricket\nteam came In on the Rossland passenger\ntrain yesterday, arriving at 13.10 p. m.,\nbeing met by the secretary, E. Lutnon,\nand other members of the Nelson team\nln addition to many members of the Grand\nForks eleven.\nThe following Is the program at the\nArcade theatre tonight and tomorrow\ncommencing at 7.30: -'The Midnight Express,\" a splendid picture, 1000 feet long;\n\"The Acrobatic Maid.\" \"Mother-ln-Law\nBeats AH Records,\" \"The Deacon'*-* Love\nletter,\" and \"A Village Quarrel.\" Miss\n\u2022\u25a0\u2014\u2022\u2014**\u2014 -\u00ab\u00ab\u2022* will ling an Illustrated song en-\nKEEP KOOL\nDRINK MORTON'S RASPBERRY\nVINEGAR\nA tlt'Ue In a glass of cold water\nmakes a delightful drink.\n65c- far Large Bottle\nC. A. Benedict\nGrocer\nC\u00ab.lese**'ine and Silica. Phone 7\nNEISON, B. C.\n* hi *\n$400 Cash\nAnd the balance In monthly\n!     payments will purchase a six    X\nroomed house and basement;    f\n\u2022*\u00bb     hath  room and sewer connae-    J\ntion.\nThis property ts well situat-   J\ned; no hills to climb.\nPor particulars apply to\nH. & N. BIRD\nNelson, B. C.\nMmtmmamm\nTENTS!\nWe have In Btock a full line of lie above ln all sizes made up\nespecially for ub of the very bes t material and workmanship, ready to\nBet up. Call In and get prices of camper's supplies before purchasing\nelsewhere. Our stock Is comp.e te and It Is always a pleasure to show\nthe goods.\nThe J. H. Ashdown Hardware\nCo., Ltd.\nNelson Branch      .*.      Nelson, B. C.\nWHOLESALE RETAIL\nFOR SALE\n18 work horses, from 3000\n3300 lbs.\nNELSON  TRANSFER  CO.\nIn* used by ibe provincial government as\nii guide whin considering future legislation.\nling the warm weather there will he no\nmatinee on Wednesday, i\nAnother launch was added to Nelson's '\nlarge and last growing fleet yesterday\nwhen ilu? \"Valkyrie,\" which has been\nbuilt by Ihe Kootiniij- Boat nnd llolor\neompany for George P. Wells. The launch\nis of the hunting cabin Btyle nnd will ho\nin readlnesB to make her Initial trie on\nSunday.\nTht* team thm will represent thin city\nin the cricket match with Grand Forks\ncommencing at iu.;hi \u00ab. m. today will he\ncomposed of the following players: A.\nH. coppen, A. Btubbs, G. Wilkinson, A.\n(*. Butler, W. A. Wilkinson, J. Leach,\n.1. D. Kerr, I. G. Johnson, A. Treglllus,\nJ. Hacking and W. J. Rhead, with E.\nLiinton and A. E.  Uouson us reserves.\nOwing to the fact that the early flower\n.season Is practically over rose.*- no looter\nlielng at their best, while the later varieties, SUCh as Asters that will ship well\nare not yet ready, and nlso to the fact\ntliat small fruits with the exceotion of\nraspberrleH will Ik* exhausted hy that time\nIt has heen decided by the hoard of trade\nnot to exhibit at the Reglna fair, |\nA well and closely contested tennis\nmatch was played yesterday morning between doubles representing Grand Forks\nand Harrop. Martin Burrell, ht, p., and\nW. S. Longhurst played for Grand Forks\nand Harrop was represented by the 'brother**- D. V. h. and E. H. h, Johnson. The\nfirst set was won hy Harrop, fi-:.-. the second by Grand Forks, li-l, and ihe deciding\nset by Harrop, 11-4. The victory wus largely due to Ihe services of the elder Johnson\nand to the somewhat faulty services of\nMr. Longhurst for Grand Forks. Mr.\nBurrell played an excellent game, some of\nIlia underhand drives proving particularly \u25a0\neffective,\nThe semi-annual meeting of the Mountain Lumber Manufacturers' association\nWill he held In Nelson on Friday:, July 80.\nAmong the matters under discussion will\nhe general market conditions, the reports\nfor the half year and tho case of the lumbermen before the timber commission.\nThis timber commission in composed of\nHon. F. J. Fullon, A. S. Goodeve, M. P.,\nand A. C. Flumerfelt of Victoria and\nWill probably si* lu Vancouver, Victoria, ,\nNelson, Cranbrook and Revelstoke some\ntime early in August.' The recommendations made by ihe timber commission will ,\nEgg & Haldane, architects, hnve, In\ntheir Nelson office, practical!y completed\nplans for the new Y. M. C. A. building\nfn th's city, while in their Fernje office\nthey have recently prepared plan's for a\n$5,600 house for G. G. Moffatt, a $2,500\nhouse for A. On minings B. C. L. S., and\na J2.1000 one for A, Whlmster, the contracts for which have all been let for construction in Fernie.\nI Among the visitors to the offices of the\nboard of trade during the past few days\nare the names of F. E. Scotland and T.\nP. Riley of Snn Francisco, Ash Kennedy\nof Winnipeg, president of the Locomotive\nEngineers' Union throughout Canada, Kf-\nfie Kennedy of D-ryuen, Ont., P. A. O'Far-\nI rell and Thomas C. Shotwell of New York,\nIX.  L.  Van  Wyck of Vancouver, S.   W.\nI Dafoe of Ottawa and P. A. Graves of\nMontreal.\nThe final shipment of (lowers was made\n' this morning by \"the board of trade to the\nBrandon fair, consigned to Percy Cove,\nwho hns had charge of tlie exhibit there,\nwhile a very good shipment also went forward on the Kuskanook yesterday morning. Among those who contributed to the\ncollection were \\V. J. Jarvls of the uro-\nvlncial gaol, W. F. Roberts of the Nelson\nCoke & Gas company, 3, L. Buchan manager of the Canadian Bank of Commerce,\nH. R. Jorand, land registrar, Mrs. w.\nRutherford, Mrs. H. Bird and Mrs, R. M.\nBird, to whom the publicity board are Indebted for many favors of late,\n, At the regular meeting of Queen City\nRebekah lodge No. lti, I, O. O. F., held lust\nevening, the recently elected officers were\nduly Installed. The Installation ceremonies\nwere conducted by D. D. G,M. Miss\nGussie Langford assisted by the 'following\ngrand officers: Grand Marshall, Miss\nPrances Bacon*.; G. R. S., Sirs. James\nBulger: G. F. B\u201e Mrs. J. F. Kilby; G. T.,\nMISS G. Irving. The following officers\nwere Installed: Noble Grand, M'ss Clara\nMunhart; Vice Grand. Mrs. H. O. B. McDonald; recording secretary. Miss Gussie\nLangford; financial secretary. Miss G.\nJohnstone; treasurer, Miss Mary Motion.\nThere will undoubtedly tie a large attendance nt the Sunday school Picnic\nwhich lakes place at Proctor today. The\nsteamer Moyie will leave the city wharf\nat 9 a. m. and again nt 1.80 p. m\u201e return-\nin-- from Proctor at 7. 30 p. m. Boats will\nhe carried free of charge so as to give\nanglers an opportunity of taking advantage of the good fishing around proctor.\nIn addition to tin* large number of excursionists  who will  go from Nelson It  is\nLand for Sale\n400 acres, Pass Creek.\n840 acres, Cottonwood creek, two\nmiles (rom city limits.\n205  acres,  Columbia  RlTer, OM\nmile weBt of Westley.\n118 acres, sub-divided, eight miles\nwest or city.\n126 acres, Slocan River, at Kocb'i\nSiding.\nEnquire at tbe\nCabinet Cigar Store\n0. % MATTKIW,\nA Beautiful Home\nMr, T. W. Heine has instructed\nme to offer tor quick sale his house\nantl three lots on Mill street.\nThe house has hall, parlor, dining room, kitchen, bathroom,\nthree bedrooms, a closet in each,\npantries, full basement, concrete\nfoundations,  full   plumbing.\nThe lots are laid out in lawn\nand garden, an abundance of small\nfruit  and  vegetables.\nThe view is one of the hest ln\nthe city and cannot be shut off;\nno hills to climb.\nThe owner Is leaving town on\nshort notice and must sell; $1000\ncash nnd the balance over two or\nthree years will take the property.\nHUGH W.ROBERTSON\nWart Street        NdsM, B.C\nBig\nClearing Sale\nAll articles of value being sacrificed to make room for our new (all\nstock. Never ln the history of our business have we had such a sale.\nIt is up to you to take advantage of it\nCome In and see, the articles will do the rest.\nA child's mug at 25c,   How is thai?\nJ. O. PATENAUDE\nM-ANUFACTUKINa -IWILM, WATCHMAKM AND OPTICIAN.\n\u2014\nWe Have It\nWe can quote you the best\nprices on Chinaware ln the city.\nBesides we carry a most extensive stock of second band articles\nof all descriptions.\nIf you want anything come In\nand look over our stock.\nChina Hall\nMUNRO & NELSON\nPhone A261. P. O. Box 581\nexpected thnt a number of residents aloiiR\nthe lake will be In attendance at the picnic.\nThe Bums-Johnson f'Kbt pictures were\nrepeated Inst evening at tho opera liousts\nbefore  a  large nndlence.\nWallace Dafoe of the press galley, Ot-\ntnwn, where he represents several Important outside papers, is spending* a day or\nso in Nelson,: being at present a guest at\nthe Hume.\nOwing to nn error In Sunday Morning's\nDaily News it whs slated that the production of the First Thought mine nt\nOrient, Wash., wns tii.OW.OW tor last month.\nTills should, of course, have read \"$5,000,000\nlast year.\" The amount for Hie previous\nyenr, 1907. was (400,000.\nConstable McLean came in last evening\nfrom Cranbrook bringing with him a prisoner named Tex Cooper to tho provincial\ngaol here to await trial nt the next nsBlzes\non a charge of having, along with a man\nnamed Stickler, effected a diamond swindle. It appears tluit the two men offered\n\u25a0the diamond for sale for $75 showing the\ngenuine stone to the prospective purchaser,\nafterwards replacing It with a glarss one.\nTheir victim, however, soon learned of\ntheir action and notified the police, the\nresult being their arrest very shortly after\nand their subsequent trial at Cranbrook,\nwhere Stickler was sentenced to three\nyears' Imprisonment in the New Wes\u00bb-\nminster penitentiary mid Cooper committed to tbe assizes.\nCROW'S   NEST   MINES\nCoal Miners in District 18 Are All at\nWork Again\n(Special to Tbe Dally News.)\nThe Fernie club nre laying out a splendid bowling green on <\u00a3eir lot opposite\nthe conl company's offices; the work of\nfencing and grading the property commenced today. H. W. Herchmer has\nkindly offered the use of hla beauHlUl\nlnwns to the Bowling club for the season as the new grounds will not be ready\nfor use until next year.\nWilliam Powell, president District IH,\nU. M. W. of A\"\u201e and International Organizer James, returned to Fernle this\nmorning from Hillcreflt mines, and report\nthat the men at that point have returned\nto work. All the mines In District 18 are\nnow in operation thanks to the sound\njudgment and energetic action of President Powell. A long period of uninterrupted prosperity is now confidently looked\nforward to in this district.\nThe general committee of the Fernle\ndistrict fire relief fund held their weekly\nmeeting last night and about fifteen applicants for a shine of the relief funds,\nwho bave not as yet received any assistance, [personally presented their claims.\nThese cases will be considered nt the next\nmeeting of the committee .und it is \"\u25a0I\"\"*\nexpected that a final decision will lie arrived nt ns to tbe disposal of all claims\nthnt are now In. , \u25a0\n\u25a0Kilns Rodgers of Toronto, president or\nthe Crow's Nest Pass Coal company, arrived In town this mqrnltof on a trip ot\nInspection of the company's property.\nThe funeral of the late Captain Lucy\nHorwood of tbe Salvation Army, who died\non Bundav morning us a result of an accident, will tnke place tomorrow afternoon,\nthe remains being sent to London, Ont,,\nfor Interment. ,\nThe ba'nquet to be given hy the board\nof trade on the evening of August 2 to\nrommenorate the relni'lding of the city\nsince the disastrous fire of last year is\nan assured success, the Invitations to officers of kindred boards In other cities\nhaving been in most cases jcceUtea. Blab-\norate preparations for the entertainment\nof the guests have been made and the\nevent is likely to be a memorable one in\nthis city.\t\nApprove Stock Increase\nNKW YORK, July 20,-The stockholders\nof the Deleware Lacknwanna and Western\nrailroad held n special meeting .today nnd\napproved the directors1 recent stock increase of 13,067,000, also the gtogkdt-rtdwafl\nof 16 par rent. There were 4*7.000 shares\nvoted  at  the  meeting out ,_t a total oi^\nJust Received\nPart of a bankrupt stock. Japanese\nCups, Saucers and Plates. One bund*\nred dozen to choose from and values\nnever betore equalled,' less than half\nprice.\nOld Curiosity Shop\nSummer Breakfasts\nWheat Cereals are summer favorites.\nWe put up \"B & K\" Wheat OTaket\nIn 2-lb. packages aud 50-lb. boxes.\nCanadian Flakes In 6-I.b. packages\n(premium) and Rolled Wheat la 84b.\nbags.\nYour grocer has them or can get them-\nThe Brackman-Kcr\nMilling Co., Ltd.\nOur\nWednesday\nSpecial\nILL HEALTHJS CAUSE\nSIR  ROBERT HART WILL NOT  RETURN TO CHINA\nMR. CHAMBERLAIN'S HEALTH AND\nOTHER  LONDON  NEW3\nLONDON, July 20\u2014Sir Robert Hart,\nwho has spent a year's leave of absence\nIn England, the first vacation he has\ntaken in more than 20 years, has practically decided to retire from the position of director general of Chinese\ncustoms on account of ill hea-th. He\nhas suffered from Insomnia and other\ncomplaints for a long time. Sir Robert\nBradon, sir Robert Hart's brother-in-\nlaw who, as deputy inspector general,\nhas been managing the Chinese customs during his superior's absence, has\nnot the support of the British commercial bodies and It is considered likely\nhere that a camaign will -be made to\nsupplace him.\nLONDON, Jujy 20\u2014The Times, dls-\ncussing tlie new United States tariff,\nfears it will be very inconvenient for\nCanada, but says that Canada is hy no\nmeans  without defence.\nLONDON, July 20\u2014The government\nis experiencing great difficulty in forcing tlie budget through the house of\ncommons. After sitting until six o'clock\non Tuesday morning. The aded house\nreassembled this afternoon and at midnight It looked as though there would\nbe another all night session. Angry\nand acriminous scenes were witnessed\nthe \u2022opposition strongly protesting\nagainst the constant application of the\nclosure, Mr. Balfour described the\ngovernment's action as little short of\na public scandal. David Lloyd-George,\nchancellor of the exchequer, was present.\nLONDON, July 20\u2014The success of\nseveral suffragettes in obtaining Ire-*\nlease from prison yesterday by carrying\nin gout a \"hunger strike\" has caused\nall of the BUffragettes in Holloway gaol\nto adopt this means of securing their\nfreedom. Miss Elsie Mackenzie was\n\u2022discharged from prison today in a critical condition, having gone without food\nfor 161 hours.\nLONDON, July 20\u2014The condition of\nJoseph Chamberlain who has been in\nill-health for some time past, continues\nto improve gradually according to a\nstatement issued by his son, Austin\nChambermin, today. Yesterday king\nEdward paid a long visit to Mr. Chamberlain at his London residence.\nLONDON, July 20-Mt Is understood\nthat very strong letters have been\nsent from the colonial office to the\nBritish ambassador at Tokio pointing\nout that Mr. Preston's advocacy for\ndirect trading relations between Canada and Japan without intermediary of\nforeign middlemen, has had a very disturbing effect in commercial circles In\nthe Orient. These representations\nhave been. It is believed, submitted to\nOttawa as complaints against Mr.\nPreston, naming trade Interests aB of\ngreater importance than the general\ninterests of foreigners in the east.\nLONDON, July 20.\u2014The G.T.P. railway loan of $10,000,000 Is oversubscribed already.\nLONDON, July 20\u2014\"It Is stated,\"\nsayB The; Morning Post, \"that the\nOrand Trunk Pacific band issue was\noversubscribed before 3 o'clock, but\nIf that ts so there must have heen a\ngreat deal of 'faking' before the\nlist opened yesterday morning.\"\nIjONDON, July 20. \u2014 Rosa Nouchette,\nCarey, the novelist, died last night. She\nbegan her career as a novelist In 1888. her\nworks Including \"Robert Orde's Atonement,\" \"Not Like Other Girls,\" \"Other\nPeople'B Lives,\" and \"The Highway of\nFate.\"\nTo Clear Fruit for the Half-Day\nSPECIAL PRICES\nRaspberries    2 for 25c.\nGooseberries    3 for 25c.\nCurrants    3 for 25c.\nBELL TRADING CO.\nFor Cool Kitchens\nUse the BLUE FLAME WICKLESS OIL STOVE\nThese stoves bum ordinary coal oil, hut have no wicks. Absolutely\nodorless, clean and safe. A child can use one. Call and let us show\nyou.   We have all sizes, with or without oven.\nMail orders promptly attended to.\n-\u00bb-\"63' Nelson Hardware Co. \u25a0**\u25a0\u25a0\u2022-*\nHAMILTON\nWINN IKS\nHAMMOCKS\nWe bave undoubtedly tbe nicest assortment ot Hammocks ever shown in\nNelson.\nLOWEST PRICES.\nHIGHEST QUALITY\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co., Limited\nNELSON, a 0.\nWholesale\nRetail\nT010NTS\nVANC0UVH\nINK!      INK!\nINK!\n\"F\u00bbyramid\"\nWriting  Ink\nLASTING AS  THE  PYRAMIDS\nGuaranteed Clwmlcal Proof Water Proof, Frost Proof.   Absolutely\npermanent and  unchangeable.\nSee Our Window\nCanada Drug & Book Co., Ud.\n81\nNelson's Leading Pharmecy\nWe originate\nOthers try to imitate\n.:   I\nSETTLEMENT NEAR\nInternational Bankers Completing Plans\nFor Big Chinese Railway Loan\nUK KIN, July 20.\u2014On accounl of the\nfailure of the negotiations ut the recent\nmeetings of the International bankers In\nLondon and Pnris an attempt Ib being\nmade at Pekln to quickly clone the Hankow railway loan by Increasing the\namount bo as to give America equal participation and not reduce the original allotment to the other three powers, Grent\nBritain, Prance and Germany. This arrangement was wired to the foreign board\non Saturday and the four, days' negotiations ended with the consultations of foreign banekrs today when the financiers\nelgn bankers today when the financiers\nIng that the above settlements be accepted.\nChang Chltung, the grand councillor. Is\nnot yet committed to this plan, taut all\nthe  other Chinese olTlcinls view the arrangement   favorably.    At   tho   American    -\nlegation the statement was mude today 'w\nthat an early settlement of the loan difficulty was expected.\nWANTS CANADIAN TRADE\nBusiness Magnates in Germany Realize\nDominion's Commercial Future\nM3KL1N, July 20.-Qermany Is striving\nwith might and main to secure firmer commercial foothold In Canada. The efforts\nof the German government are backed\nwith the greatest enthusiasm by mer-\nchantB and commercial magnates ana.\nscarcely a day pa-SBes without the attention of traders and exporters being drawn,.\nthrough the press, to Canada as a nam\nfor 'German, enterprise,\nMinard'a Liniment curt. Distemper..\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1909_07_21","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0383493","@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. : News Publishing Co.","@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":"1909-07-21 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1909-07-21 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\/1.0383493"}