{"@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":"7a2ba895-3f0e-439d-b13f-f4f614515046","@language":"en"}],"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2019-10-08","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1910-08-26","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0383965\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" \/Best Ccspy\nClassified Ads I Cent Per word\n<\u2022$\nEight Pages\u201450c Per Month\nVOL.9\nWIN MOST PRIZES\nCarry Off All Except One at\nVancouver\n8EST DISPLAY\nSEEN AT COAST\nList of Honors Includes Silver\nCup and Seven\nDiplomas\nThe remarkable strides that have\nbeen made during the past few years in\nthe development of the unparalleled\nmineral wealth that lies in pine-covered\nmountains of Bast and WeBt Kootenay\nIs very clearly shown by the success\nof the exhibit sent to the Vancouver\nlair by the Nelson board of trade. As\nannounced yesterday, Nelson carried off\nthe silver cup, presented by the directors of the exhibition for the best mineral display and, with the exception of\na ribbon of merit won by the Portland\ncanal district, gained all the other\nprizes offered ln the mining section of\nthe exhibition.\nLong List of Honors\nThe Nelson specimens were under tbe\ncharge of E. W. Widdowson and William\nBurnham. To a representative of The\n\u25a0Dally Newa yesterday Mr. Widdowson\ngave the following list of successes In\naddition ^ the silver cup mentioned\nabove:\nDiploma for best display of gold ores\n\u2014The Summit Qoid Mines, Limited,\nSheep Creek.\nDiploma for best display of free milling gold ores\u2014Nugget Gold Mines Limited, Sheep Creek.\nDiploma for best display of silver-\nlead ores\u2014The Kootenay Silver-Lead\nMines, limited (The Highland mine at\nAir^worth.)\n,   ,'pploma for sine ores\u2014The Lucky\nJin* Mining & Development Co., Ltd.\nDiploma for copper ores\u2014The Eureka\nMines, Limited.\nDiploma for asbestos\u2014The Asbestos\ngroup, Poplar, B.C.\nCertificate of merit, molybdenum\nores\u2014The Devlin group at Sheep Creek\nowned by A. B. Poole and J. O. Devlin.\nMr. Widdowson Bald that the management of the exhibition set aside the\n-whole of one end of a large ibalcony\nand that the ores were displayed on\n\u2022tables decorated In an effective manner\nIn blue and red. setting off the samples\nin striking relief. The space occupied\nwas 3 feet by 8 feet, %\nGiant Specimen from Perrier\nIn the centre of the display was placed the large specimens, the largest\ncoming from the Perrier mine. This\nweighed about 500 pounds. Another\npiece of ore from the St. Eugene weighed 300 pounds. Big specimens from\n-the Arlington, Athabasca and California, were also shown In the centre of\n\u2022Ihe table.\nRich Copper Ore Amazes\nAt one end were grouped the samples\nfrom Uie Ymlr district, 'that from the\nCaitDornla attracting much, attention\nand being the cause of a great.deal of\ncomment owing to the heavy percentage\nof copper ln It. Specimens of free silver ore from the Yankee Girl and of\ngold bearing ore from the Dundee and\nHunter V mines were all displayed Jn\nthis collection.\nSheep Creek Excites Interest\nAt the other end of the table was the\nSheep Creek exhibit and it was before\n\u25a0this that 'the greatest crowd was always congregated. On the second day\nthe crowd was so Immense that a third\niman had to be engaged to assist in\nlooking after the exhibit The fame of\nthe camp and Its wonderful possibilities seemed to nave spread, said Mr.\nWiddowson, among miners and laymen\nalike. Thousands of questions were asked concerning tihe ore, the mines and\nthe camp generally. In the centre of\nthe Sheep creek exhibit was a magni-\nflcen display of free milling ores from\nthe Suinimit mine, which carried off\nfirst prize, the Nugget, the Mother Lode\nthe Queen, the Emerald, the Golden\n. fawn, the Golden Belle, tbe Clyde-Belt\ngroup, the Kootenay Belle, the Altkens\ngroup, the Galena Lady, the Pipe Dream\nthe Searchlight, the Bonanza, the Echo,\ntiie Joint group and some dozen other\nproperties, all representative of the\nSheep creek mines.\nGood Galena Exhibit\nAmong the samples of galena ore\nthose from the Highland mine at Ainsworth showed In greatest prominence.\nFrom this property was sent a large\nblock of crude ore and arranged about\nit were 13 bottles showing the different\ngrades of concentrates from the Highland mill. The other mines exhibiting\nfine galena specimens were the St.\nEugene, the Lucky Jim, the Hath, the\nPayne, tbe Whitewater and a number of\nother properties In the Slocan country*\nRare Minerals\nOft the other' side of the table were\nshown the special hoard of trade ex-\nhWlt a list of whloh has already, been\npublished. On each side of this were\n\u25a0Displayed specimens of rare minerals\nsuch as (molybdenite, antimony and as-\noestos.   The as-bestos exhibited from\n(Continued on Page Four.)\nNELSON a C,  FRIDAY  MORNING*  AUGUST  26, 1910\nNO III\nCEMENTS TO\nIADS BENEFIT\nSteep  Grades\nNearly 0*7!\nSigns of\n\u25a0ted\u2014Road Work\nSeason\u2014'\u25a0\nitumn.\n(Special to The Dally N\u00abws.)\nWANETA, Aug. 25\u2014A. E. Gallupe\nhas gone to Nelson, having heen appointed foreman of the gang which ls\nto repair the Molly Gibson wagon road.\nConstable Fraser was down from\nYmir last Friday.\nMrs. McLauchlan entertained a number of young people at an enjoyable\nparty on Sunday last.\niMrs. Fred Adle jr., returned from\nNelson last week with her two little\ndaughters.\nWork on Power Plant.\nIt is expected that work will be\nstarted this fail on the big power plant\nto be erected on the Pend d'Oreille\nriver.\nThe greater part of1 the season's government road work haB been completed.\nFollowing the new survey the steep\ngrades on the old road at 4-mile creek\nhave been eliminated, while at the upper end of the valley settlers will derive benefit from the improvements on\nthe wagon road between Eaton's Gulch\nand the mouth of the Salmon river.\nThe robins have gathered into large\nflocks, a sure sign of the near approach of autumn. Magpies, blue jays,\nand even tbe smaller hawks are busy\nthese days feeding on the numerous\ngrasshoppers.\nMr. Kennedy held his usual triweekly church service here last evening.\nThe chief of the United States hy-\ndrographic survey, accompanied by an\nofficer- of the forest service, passed\nthrough the valley last week.\nThe timber fire at Fish creek Ib\nmaking headway again,\nKAISER WILLIAM\nGIVES GOOD ADVICE\nAdvises Young Counts to Work\u2014Are\nNow Prosperous In British\nColumbia.\nBERLIN, Aug. 26\u2014A speech delivered by Emperor William, ten years ago\nat the private unveiling of a memorial\nto Countess Alvensleben Is published\ntoday for the first time. Tbe kaiser\naddressed the sons of the countess seriously and told them that all members\nof thetr family had a giddy vein. It\nwould be necessary for them, however,\nto make their own way in tbe world as\ntheir financial circumstances were not\nsuch that they could take life easily.\nThe young counts thus admonished\nemigrated to Canada where they are\nnow prosperous under the firm name\nof Alvo von Alvensleben of Vancouver\nand Victoria. The emperor takes great\nInterest ln the firm and rejoices In the\nBuccess of his protegees.\nPENTICTON AS\nDIVISIONAL POINT\nPasses   Bylaw   Granting   Twenty-Five\nThousand Dollars to Kettle Valley\nRailway\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 25\u2014Penticton\nelectorate has almost unanimously passed a bylaw granting $25,000 to tbe Kettle Valley railway. The measure was\npassed on an understanding with President Warren that the town would be\na divisional point and extensive yards\nand car shops would be constructed\nthere. The railway has been given the\nright to run along Centre street to\nthe waterfront where the depot and\nwharf will be placed.\nARRE8TED FOR MURDER.\nJACKSON, Ky., Aug. 25\u2014Charged\nwith murder, John Davidson and Hacker Coombs were today arrested and\nJasen Deaton declared a fugitive from\n[Justice following the verdict of the\ncoroner's jury which investigated the\nassassination of John Abner, noted\nfeudist last Monday.\nDEFENCE BILL REALIZES\nLORD KITCHENER'S IDEA\nMELBOURNE, Aug. 25\u2014The Defence\nbill is unanimously praised as the best\nmeasure of tbe kind ever presented to\nthe Australian parliament. Universal\nsatisfaction is expressed at the establishment of efficient defence measures.\nIt Ib agreed that the bill realizes the\ncondition of affairs Lord Kitchener contemplates.\nNIOBE PAID OFF.\nLONDON, Aug. 25\u2014The Canadian\ncruiser Nlobe will be paid off at Devon-\nport on September 5 and re-commtsBion-\ned on the following day, preparatory to\nher departure for Halifax, later. A\nfirst-class petty officer, one of the best\nshots at Sheerness is her gunner'B\nmate.\nDARING BURGLARIES AT BRANDON\nBRANDON, Aug. 25\u2014Burglars visited five places of business here last\nnight, but the prizes were all small, except on McLean Piano company's premises, where unable to break open the\nsafe they removed It bodily, having a\nwagon handy apparently. The. safe\nwhich weighed shout a quarter of a\nton, only contained about $70. The\nonly das Is th\u00bbj\nNEW INSPECTOR\nOF\nOffice Created Under Liquor\nLicense Act\nALSO INSPECTOR OF\nPROVINCIAL POLICE\nInspector of Electrical Energy\nAlso Appointed\u2014To Adjust *\nTimber Assessments\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nVICTORIA, Aug. 25\u2014The appointment has .been decided* upon of Chief\nConstable Colin S. Campbell, for many\nyears past In charge of the provincial\nipollce service with ihead'Quarters at\nVancouver, and a member of the provincial constabulary for the past 19 years,\nto fill the new office created under\nthe recently adopted liquor license and\nregulation act of inspector cf licensed\npremises, In addition to which the new\nappointee will fill the office of Inspector\nof provincial police which office has\n\u2022been vacant since the resignation of J.\nH. McMuIlin to accept the appointment\nas government agent at Prince Rupert.\nInspector Campbell will assume the duties of his new position on Sept, 1.\nWill Meet Lumbermen\nArrangements have been made by\nHon, Mr. Bowser in his capacity as\n\u2022minister of finance to meet' the representative lumber-men of this province\nand more especially those of Vancouver\nIsland In this city on Sept. 6, the sub-\njeot for consideration being the question of assessments ln respect of which\nconsiderable dissatisfaction has been expressed by the representative men of\nthe trade. The meeting will he in the\nnature of a conference with a view to\nthe adjustment of the timber assessments upon a basis satisfactory to the\nprovince and to the interested industry..\nInspector of Energy\nDr. D. P. Roberta, chief electrical engineer of the city of London, Ont., has\nibeen appointed by the govenment of\nBitish Columbia to fill the highly important office of provincial inspector of\nelectrical energy created by the legislation of last session The appointee Is\nrated one of the foremost men in his\nprofession in the Dominion and his selec\ntion was made upon the strong recommendation of Hon. Adam Beck, chairman of the hydro-electric power com-\nmission and of both the consulting engineers and the chief engineer of that\nauthoritative commission. Mr. Roberts\nwill leave at once for Victoria and it is\nexpected will arrive In time to enter\nupon his new duties by Sept. 1.\nALLEGED   BRITISH  SPY\nSAID TO BE OFFICER\nEMDEN, Germany, Aug. 25\u2014Brandon\nand Trench the alleged British spies\nwho were arrested at Brokum, August\n22, charged with taking photographs of\nGerman fortifications will be taken to\nLelpsic for immediate trial. Brandon\nIb believed to be an officer and numerous drawings of fortifications and topographs were found in his possession\nafter his arrest. The arrested men decline to communicate with the attorney engaged for their defense by the\nBritish vice consul here and have asked that counsel for them be sent for\nfrom London,\nSASKATCHEWAN\nADOPTS BOY SCOUTS\nAddress From Hero of Mafeking Makes\nImpression\u2014Boy Scout Council\nFormed\nREGINA, Aug. 25\u2014An enthusiastic\nreception was accorded today to Lieut..\nCen. Sir Robert P. s. Baden-Powell and\n.the Boy Scouts movement has arrived\nin Regina to stay. Gen. Baden-Powell\nspent the greater portion of the morning\nat the Royal Northwest Mounted Police\n\u2022barracks and In driving around and seeing various points of Interest ln the\nolty. \u2022 He was the guest of honor at a\nluncheon given under the auspices of\nthe Greater Regina club, at the Kings\nhotel at which over 200 sat down. During a half hour speech the hero of Mafeking briefly outlined the scope and\nIdeate of the Boy steout movement\nwhloh so appealed to those present\nthat before the gathering broke up a\nlocal provisional committee of five was\nappointed with a view to encouraging\nthe movement. Through the following\nproposed council of Boy Scouts for Saskatchewan It ts hoped to popularize the\nIdea and make it thoroughly provincial\nin character: Lieut-Col. Frank Ford,\nRegina; Lieut-Col F. J. Gwynne Gren-\n'fell; his honor Jtidge Farrell, ilooso.\nmin; Major H Tuxfrod Moose Jaw;\nMajor H. A. Cheson, Saskatoon; Hon.\nSenator Prince, Battleford; Capt. E. S.\nShannon, Prince Albert; hie honor\nJudge Rimmer, Areola; William Simp-\n\u00aboo, Yorkton; LleutCol. Gordon Baker,\nRegina. . Following the luncheon the\nteneral addressed a crawled puMlq\nTWELVE KILLED IN\nGRAND TRUNK WRECK\nEngine Crashes Into   Car   Filled With\nSleeping Passengers\u2014Burned Be*\nyond Recognition.\nFLINT, Mich;, Aug. 25\u2014In a rear end\ncollision between passenger trains Nos.\n4 and 14, both1 east bound on the Grand\nTrunk railway, two miles east of Durand late last, night, eight passengers\nare known to have been killed, three\nwere probably., fatally injured and five\nwere seriously hurt. It was reported\nearly today' that four passengers are\nstill missing.,\nLeading Train 8topped.\nTrain No. 14 stopped to repair a defective brake when No. 4 crashed into\nthe sleeper of the standing train. The\nengine of No, 4 ploughed half way\nthrough the sleeper, crushing to death\nsome of the sleeping passengers. The\nwreckage caught fire and others of the\npassengers were burned or scalded. It\nis said there were 18 passengers on the\nIll-fated car when the forward train\nstopped. A brakeman was sent back\nto signal the train following, but the\nexplosion of the torpedo which was\nplaced on the .track as a warning was\nheard too late by the engineer of No. 4\nto stop his train.\nIdentification Impossible.\nAs fast as they were recovered from\nthe ruins of the burned sleeper the\nbodies of the dead were taken to Durand. Some of the injured were taken\nto the'1 village and others were brought\nto the hoBpital in the city. The dmd\nbodies recovered during tho night lire\ntwo unidentified, one about fifty years\nold, and the other about sixty and six\npassengers whose bodies were so badly\nscalded and burned as to make identification difficult if not impossible,\nEdmonton Man Injured.\nThe following are at Hurley hospital\nvery badly injured: Bert Mitchell, Wattle Creek, engineer of train No, 14,\nhead crushed .condition critical; Mrs.\nLester Splltz, Chicago, aged 28, s**;t!p\nwound and bruises; Arthur Watc, Edmonton, Alberta, aged 35, face >.f.d\nhands burned; Mrs. Kate McBean, (hi-\ncago, aged 63, right leg fractured; Mrs.\nLester Dochler, Livestock, aged 14,\nfractured leg and bruises. Vho Injm-\ned who were taken to the hospital ut\nDurand and Geo. Nelson, Battle Creek,\nfireman on No. 4, badly -s::aldel will\nprobably die; Clinton A. Davoy, Montreal, probably fatally scalded. Mrs. M.\nStovltry, Dubuque. .Ohio., em \u00bbni badly bruised; Bert MHchell, of Port Huron, engineer on train, injured about\nhead. The body of one of the two dead\nwomen may be that of Mrs. Davis, mother of Clinton A. Davis of Montreal,\nwho was injure I, one of the hodles corresponds to Mrs. Davis description as\nto size. Mrs. Davis was an Invalid,\ntravelling with hir s m a*id a nurso.\nCharles Spencer, if battle Creek, engineer Is stated to have been badly injured. His name does not appear on\nthe list glve.i 'nit I'V Uie I'.ilroati\nofficials as being taken to a hospital at\neither Durand or Flint.\nTwelve Dead.\nDETROIT, Aug. 25\u2014The Detroit Journal estimates the number of dead In\nlast night's wreck on the Grand Trunk\nrailroad near Durand as 12, and gives\nas a list of dead, Mrs. Davis, 226 Stanley street, Montreal; Mrs. Lucy E. Gilpin, 643 East 45th street, Chicago;\nthree unidentified women, an unidentified man, small child, and five bodies\nbelieved to be ln the wreck.\nAccident at Ga-'t\nGALT, Ont., Aug. 25\u2014John H. Hur-\nloutt, C.P.R. engineer, wa\u00bb instantly\nkilled here last night at 7 o'clock Hur-\nloutt was running freight No. 5 going\neast and stopped at Gait for orders.\nWhen he tried to start the train he\nfound he could not do so as the engine\nhad stopped on the dead centre. Tho\nyard engine was brought up to give the\ntrain a start, but on account of the projecting pilots the two engines could\nnot be coupled up. A big tie was then\nplaced in a horizontal position between\nthem. Then the engine was started.\nThe pressure broke -the tie and one of\nthe flying pieces struck Engineer Hur-\nloutt on the side of the head.\nGave Proper Signals.\nMONTREAL, Ail*?. 25.\u2014A further official\nstatement regarding the train wreck \u00abt\nDurand,' Michigan, last night, shows as\na result of preliminary Investigation, that\nthe flagman went back a little over halt\na mile and gave the proper signals to\nstop the New Yuri* train. It was a clear\nnight, and around the station at Durand\ncould be seen plainly where the Montreal\ntrain stood, The flagman gave stop signals\nwith his red lamp until the approaching\ntrain exploded the two torpedoes which\nhe had put on the track, and the flagman\nhad to get off tho traca to keep from\nbeing run over. Further investigation '*\u2022\nbeing made as to why the New Ifork train\ndid not respond to the signals. Markers\non the rear of the Montreal train were\nproperly displayed, and after the accident\noccurred the one on the left hand side\nwas found un one side sitting upright and\nstill burning. The conductor, who was\nstanding on the rear of the Montreal train,\nheard the torpedoes explode and saw hi*\"\nflagman giving the drop signal. There were\nalso passengers on the Montreal train who\nwere standing on the ground and heard\nthe torpedoes explode and saw the drop\nsignal. Passenger*' on both trains, otner\nthan those on the Pullman Nebrasca, sustained a few slight injuries but nothing of\na serious nature, and only slight damage\nwas done to equipment other than the\nsleeper.\nEDMONTON  PAIR.\nEDMONTON, Aug. 25\u2014Twenty thousand people saw the second day 0f the\nEdmonton exhibition. Th& attendance\nis double that of the record of a single\nday of any previous exhibition held\nhere. The racing afforded excellent\n ' .-,TAe Taud6T1l1* Pwfonnsaai was\nWILL ALLOW FIRES\nTO BURN OUT\nOrdered Not to Risk Life to\nSave Timber\nMOST EXPENSIVE\nBLAZE EVER KNOWN\nAppalling Loss of Life Takes\nHeart Out of Foresters-\nFinding the Dead\nSPOKANE, Aug. 26\u2014The mystery of\nthe bodies being found in St. Joe county, Idaho, probably will be cleared up\ntoday when the Chicago, Milwaukee &\nPuget Sound road runs its first passenger train to Avery. One hundred and\nsix men living In the St. Joe valley are\nmissing. Twenty-two bodies, supposed\nto be of settlers were found yeBterday.\nSeveral dayB ago twenty bodies were\ndiscovered, scattered over an area of\nover a mile and It was assumed they\nwere forest employees, Supervisor\nWeigle,. Including them in his list of\ndead employees. Last night, however,\nhe declared they were not rangers, of\nthe number of dead rangers the total\nIs 142. This is without taking into\naccount the 185 rangers imprisoned on\nthe head waters of the St. Joe. The\nappalling loss of life among the forest\nemployees has taken tbe heart out of\nthe survivors of the foresters and an\norder has been issued not to risk life\nto save timber.\nAllowed to Burn Out.\nThe'little fires are being extinguished\nbut the great fires to fight which\nmight result In more loss of life will\nbe allowed to burn themselves*1 out until the rains extinguish them, in the\nCoeur d'Alene mining country the fires\nbave exhausted their full force as tbey\nhave in the Pend d'Oreille valley and\nin the Clearwater\" country. Jn the\nthickest timber of the Coeur d'Alene\nnatural forest, however, the flames\nare hungry and active as ever. Xo\nlumbermen or forester will give nn\nestimate of the timber losses, even after the fires are out it will be difficult\nto reckon them. It Is believed, however, that the present fires are the\nmost expensive the United States has\never known. A prominent railroad\nbuilder estimated the loss of the Chicago, Milwaukee and Puget Sound railroad at $2,500,000. The Spokane olism-\nber of commerce has begun the raising\nof a large relief fund.\nCondition  Hopeless.\nThere are 180 men surrounded in\nthe mountains between Loio Pasa and\nSt. Mary's and Major Fenn has sent\nthree guides to pilot them out. Conditions In the Clearwater reserve are\nhopeless and Major Fenn has received\ninstructions from the forestery headquarters at Missoula to recall all the\nfire fighters from the interior of the\nstricken region and set them to work\non the outskirts of the fire zone. The\nmessage said \"Save the lives of the\nmen and let the timber go.\"\nForty-six Burned.\nSPOKANE, Aug. 25\u2014Sixty-five laborers arrived from the St. Joe country\ntoday anrt reported that 46 of their comrades were burned to death on Big\ncreek last Saturday, all of the men\nwere recruited in (Missoula.\nLUMBERMEN ARE\nNOW OPTIMISTIC\nLatest Crop Reports From Prairies Indicate Good Demand In Fall,\nSays W. A. Anstie.\n\"The prospects for a' good demand\nfor lumber from the prairies this fall,\"\nsaid W. A. Anstie, secretary of the\nMountain Lumbermen's Manufacturers'\nassociation last nlgbt, \"have been\ngreatly Improved by the latest crop\nreports. The latest information on\ntbls question Indicates that the totnl\nwheat production will be approximately 101,000,000 bushels as against about\n120,000,000  bushels  last  year.\n\"Of course the area of land under\ncultivation this year is greater than in\nl!i0!t hut I think that on the whole the\ndemand for lumber this fall will be\ncomparatively good. Th\u00a9 output and\nsales for the first six months of this\nyear were the greatest in the history\nof our organization and I anticipate\nthat the year's results will be highly\nsatisfactory.\"\nMr. Anstie has just returned from a\ntrip to Vancouver and stated last night\nthat although the air at tbe coast, was\nheavy with smoke, the bush fires there,\nas in Kootenay, had done very little\ndamage to merchantable timber.\nPOOR GUARDIANS PLEASED\nWITH EMIGRATION RESULTS\nYARMOUTH, Aug. 25\u2014The guardians are informed that those who emigrated to Canada are doing well and\nearning two dollars weekly. Tha board\nhas decided to contlni\nWEALTH LUMBERMAN\nDIES AT PORTLAND\nDeceased Was Relative of A. H. Kelly\nand Owner of Kootenay Timber\nLands\nA. H. Kelly returned to the city last\nnight from Portland, Ore., where he\nwas called by the news of the sudden\ndeath of his nephew, David U Kelly,\na well known lumberman ln the Columbia river metropolis. The late Mr. Kelly\nwas the owner of 4*000 acres of first\nclass timber land ln East Kootenay and\nalso had extensive holdings of timber\nIn other parts of this province and In\nOregon and Washington.\n\u2022The late Mr. D. L. Kelly was born In\nBlissvflle, Sunbury county. New Brunswick ln 1862. In 1889 he left New\nBrunswick for Stillwater, Minn., where\nhe engaged in the logging, timber, mining and real estate business. He came\nto the coast ln 1901 and bought timber\nlands in British Columbia, Washington\nand Oregon. With his brother, F. G.\nKelly, he opened in 1902 a logging camp\nat Knappa, Ore., which he continued until his death'.\nMr. Kelly leaves a widow residing at\nPortland and three (brothers, John B.,\nof Woodlnvllle, Wash; l-\\ B., of War-\nrenton, Ore., and T. Q. residing at Clifton, Ore. He left three sisters. Miss\nLouise S Kelly of St. John N.B., Mrs.\nT. B Roberts and Mrs N. J Dibble both\nof Bllssvllle, N.B.\nThe late Mr. Kelly was well and favorably known to the timber and logging Interests of British Columbia and\n\u25a0the west generally. The body has been\nshipped to Blissville, accompanied iby\nthe widow and the deceased's two brothers, T. Gt, and F. G. Kelly. Mr. Kelly\nleaves a large estate, consisting of\ntimber lands, real estate and other property\nDEATH FOLLOWS\nKICK IN MATCH\nFeud    Between   Football   Teams\u2014One\nPlayer Dead, Another Probably\nFatally Injured,\nHATCHLEY, Ont., Aug. 25\u2014Residents here are greatly wrought up\nover the death yesterday morning of J.\nSavage, the son of George Savage of\nhere, and. the seriouB condition of a,\nyoung man named' Robinson. Both'\nyoung men figured in a football match\nat a picnic held at Morriswoods on\nFriday last between Harley and Hatch-\nley. There was an old time feud between the players and Savage was severely kicked by one of the Harley team,\nsuccumbing to his injuries yesterday.\nRobinson waB kicked by the same\nplayer and has slight chances of recovery. The county authorities commenced an investigation today into\nthe affair.\nm\nTO SEND EXHIBIT\nTO OLD COUNTRY\nEntire   Display   at   Vancouver   Apple\nShow May be Shipped to\nVancouver\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 25\u2014Promoters of\nthe national apple show are considering\nthe suggestion to send the entire exhibit to the old country as a, standing display. Should the plan be favored the\nprovincial authorities will be asked to\nassist. The management has received\nn letter from Garcia, Jacobs and company, large fruit merchants of London,\nstating that one of the firm will be\npresent at the coming show especially\nto look Into British Columbia as a\nsource of old country supply.\nGREAT EXHIBITION TO BE\nHELD AT ST. JOHN\nST. JOHN, Aug. 25\u2014The greatest exhibition \"that has ever been held in the\nMaritime provinces will open at St.\nJohn on Sept. 5,\" and continue until\nSept. 15.\nThis is the Dominion exhibition for\n1910 for which there is a federal grant\nof $50,000 besides provincial and civic\ngrants. St. John has had splendid exhibitions before, the first being held\nthe year after tiie opening of the Crystal Palace in Lcudon. But this year's\nevent is In a class of its own. The\ngrounds have 'been enlarged to embrace\n20 acres. The number of buildings iias\nbeen increased and some of the old\nones enlarged. The new cattle barn,\nwith stalls for 500 animals has no superior on the continent. It is built on\na gentle slope, giving a perfect drainage, has water at every stall and Is\nlighted at night by electricity throughout. As there are entries for several\nhundred cattle even this great barn Is\nnot large enough and other quarters\nare to be provided for 200 animals.\nDRUGGIST  HELD ON\nCHARGE OF MANSLAUGHTER\nQU1NCY, Mass., Aug. 25\u2014Paul Smith\na druggist, is held to a charge of manslaughter, a prescription for the two\nyear old Ruth Kelly called for sugar\nof milk, but after death, boraclc acid\nwas found in the child's stomach] It\nIs supposed lt was put ln the prescription by mistake.\nSTOCK CLOSING PRICE8.\nNEW; YORK, Aug. 2&-Wall Btreet\nQuestion Under Discussion by\nGeneral Conference\nDIVERGENT VIEWS ON\nBASIS OF UNION\nChancellor Burwash Moves for\nApproval of Terms\u2014Dr.\nPatten Opposes\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nVIC'iutiiA, Aug. 25\u2014The debate on\nchurch union opened at the Methodist\ngeneral conference tonight. From the\ntrend of the discussion which has been\nadjourned it is evident that while the\nideal desired is favored by a great majority of the delegates, there Is a\nwidespread divergence of opinion as\nto the basis upon which it snould be\nconsummated. The discussion arose\ntn rough presentation ot the report of\nthe committee on church union which\nhas had the consideration of the proposed basis of union under advisement\nfor some time past.    ,\nRecommends Adoption.\nChancellor N. S. Burwash of Victoria university, who is chairman of\nthe committee moved the adoption of\nthe first recommendation as follows:\nYour committee recommend that the\ngeneral conference declare Its approval of- these documents agreed upon by\nthe joint committee of the churches\nwhich it is proposed to unite, as a basis\nupon which the Methodist, Presbyterian\nand Congregational churches may unite.\nSpeaking to his motion Chancellor\nBurwash said he supposed all the delegates were familiar with the terms of\nthe basis of union. The church seemed\nnow to have arrived at almost the final\npoint of a chain of providential circumstances in which in his opinion the\nhand or' God was clearly visible. The\nchurch in Canada by a peculiar combination of circumstances was ln the\nforefront of the movement. in the\nspiritual life the churches were drawing together. Why Canada occupied an\nadvanced position was because here\nthe people were laying the foundations\nand building the structure of a new nation. This was true of nowhere else.\nNow upon the Methodist church here\nlay the responsibility of taking the\nnext step in the great movement the\nQuestion before the conference was that\nof the fundamental principles upon\nwhich the basis of union should rest.\nUnion In the Air.\nThe motiton was seconded by J. A.\nM, Aiken's of Winnipeg, who, speaking\nas a lawyer said he believed that the\nbasis had been drawn with accuracy.\nThe church should bear in mind that\nthere was a spirit of union in the air. ,\nIn this respect he quoted the confederation of Canada, South Africa, Australia and the general proposals for an\nimperial confederation which he trusted would ere long be consummated.\nOpposed to Terms.\nThe most striking speech of the evening was delivered by the Rev. Dr. W.\ntM. Patten of the Wesleyan theological\ncollege Montreal. While in sympathy\nwith the aim he stated he was opposed\nto the proposed basis of union. It was\nthe basis and not the aim which was\nbefore the conference. The position\nwhich .Methodism occupied was that\nshe must ask for a better means of doing God's work than she now had.\nMethodism had been high and strict in\nits doctrines, and efficient in its results. It was the most spectacular of\nnil the churches as well as the most\nevangelical and ethical. These attributes of the church would be weakened\nnot strengthened by union on tbe HneB\nproposed. In this basis there were no\nstrict rules of conduct. It proposed a\nweaker faith than that of Methodism\non themes which were the very marrow of Methodism's faith and teachings. It dogmatised on things which\nthe Methodist church had seen fit to\nleave untouched. Theologically speaking the basis was weaker than the\none which Methodism now had. If the\nnew basis became operative it would\nbe held with no amount of conviction\nand with little respect, and he wus\nafraid with some degree of shame. It\ncould only be looked upon as a concession to human weakness. Any such\npolicy was something new to Methodism. Was his church to throw away\nthe efficient instrument it had in exchange for that which would guide no\nman's conscience. In the proposed\nbasis any doctrine could be changed\nevery two years. Methodism said that\nthe doctrines of the church were 'in-\nchangeable. The basis made revolutionary changes in minister's positions.\nIf Methodism acquiesced in shackling\nthe free and responsible actions of her\nministers then she could not look to\nthe grent masses of her people to do\nthe work that has been done in the\npast. The polity of the basis touched\ntbe most vital part of Methodism in\nweakening the sense of responsibility\nin her ministers, curtailing thsir initiative and putting an end to aggressive\nactivity, hence the problem was a car-\ntlcularly Berlous one to the Me\n PAGE TWO\nCfie Bail? J&etos\".\nFRIDAY \u201e...>tw,v. AU6U8T M\n\u2022rT\n*2\ni\n*odj\n'tt\ntt\n'\"0\nThe School Holidays\nAre about over. Almost every boy will need some new\nclothing. Parents will study their interests best by having\ntheir boys outfitted here before the opening of school.\nrib\nrib\nrib\nBoys' 2 and 3 Piece Softs\nRegular, $2.50, sale price  $1.75\nRegular $3.60, sale price  2.50\nRegular $4.00, sale price  2.75\nRegular $4.50, sale price  3.25\nRegular $5.00, sale price   3.50\nRegular $5.50, sale price   4.00\nRegular $6 and $6.50, Bale price  4.50\nRegular $7 and $7.50, sale price.. 5.50\nRegular $8 and $8.50, sale price.., 6.00\nRegular $9 and $9.50, sale price,... 7.00\nRegular $12, sale price   9.00\nBoys' Knee Pants\nRegular 75c, sale price . 50\nRegular $1. sale price  75\nRegular $1.25 and $1.50, sale price 1.00\nRegular $1.75 and $2, sale price .. 1.25\nBoy's wash suits naif price from.. .50\nBoy's wash blouses, half .price from  .25\nBoy's Strong Stockings from 20\nBoy's wash shirt waists . .50c. and 75o\nBoy's two piece Flannel Suits, regular\n$4.50 for ' $2.25\nBoy's Two Piece Khaki Suits regular\n$3.00, for   2.25\nJ. H. WALLACE Speaker Street\nRetiring from Business Clearance Sale\nW\n\u00a3\u00a7\u00a7;\u00a7\u00a7\u00a7\u00a7\u2022\u00a7\u2022\u00a7\u00a7\u00a7\u2022\u00a7\u25a0\u00a7=\u00a7\u25a0*!\u2022.;\nGERMANS SWARM!\nINTO PALESTINE\nGradually     Monopolizing    Trade    and\nAbsorbing Most of the\nLand.\nJERUSALEM, Aup. 25\u2014It is an open\nsecret here in Palestine that the Germans during the last fifty or sixty years\nhave planted themselves firmly.In the\nrealms of the Ishraaelites, and are\ngradually monopolizing the trade and\nabsorbing much of tbe land.\nTbe steady and persistent German\ninflux Into the Holy Land is the result\nof a well meditated plan of campaign,\ncleverly organized by Influential syndicates composed of great financiers,\nprinces, manufacturers, military officers, and last, hut not least, the em- '\nperor, who presides over the meeting\nof the principal syndicate a huis clos!\nThe migration began In the early\nfifties of the nineteenth century on a\nvery small scale, when a body of Germans calling themselves Templars left\ntheir native land for Palestine. They\nwere plentifully supplied with means,\nbut came presumably on a pilgrimage\nto the Holy Land. Not to provoke the\nsuspicions of the Ottoman government, which at that time looked upon\nall foreigners as spies and enemies of\nTurkey, they settled in Haifa, and at\nonce each member of the party began\nto establish a home for himself, buying\nland and building his own house, acting even as his own carpenter and\nblacksmith. In less than three years\na colony of 200 Well built houses, of\nEuropean style, graced the slopes ot\niMount Oarmel. Once firmly rooted\nthere little by little they branched out\nto Jaffa, Jerusalem and other places.\nFever of Expansion.\nEach German was, bb it were, inoculated with the fever of expansion, and\nattracted from the fatherland many of\ntheir compatriots, who were equally\nactuated by the same principle of German Imperialism. InMhe year 1882 the\nGerman proprietors could be counted by\nthousands, and then these established\nTeutons, with almost heroic tenacity\nand concentration of purpose, endeavored to open up a market for manu- ,\nfactures, and find an outlet for articles ;\nof German production. Inducements of\nall sorts, unheard of facilities, cheap\nprices and long credits were offered\nto merchants, that hy all means their\npatronage might be secured.\nDuring all this time one commercial\ntraveler after another appeared upon\ntbe scene; some of them remained as\ncommission agents in Haifa, Jaffa and\nJerusalem, and very Bhortly became\nimportant personages, to whom tbe\nmerchants looked up as saviours, because they offered their wares at very\nlow prices -and were willing to wait\nlong for payments. The ico broken, the\nEmperor Frederick's visit Boon followed, and this event greatly raised eGr-\nman prestige and brought about a\nmore friendly feeling between Turkey\nand Germany,\nWilliam II. and Abdul Hamld,\nWhen his msijesty William II. ascended the throne he prosecuted the policy\not his father with a determination that\nalmost amounted to mania. He lavished\nfavor upon favor, and made promises\nof all kinds to big \"cher et tres grand\nami,\" Abdul Hamid. which diplomatically created for his subjects ln Palestine a formidable stronghold, and this\nbecame still more Impregnable when\nthe Emperor and Empress paid their\nvisit, to Jerusalem In 1898,\nTbe Germans made all possible capital out of thts wave of enthusiasm ln\ntheir favor. Immense tracts of property\nvera acquired In all parts of the country. From Haifa to Tiberias, from Tt-\naarlm to Sated, from Bated to Daraas-\nSfrora Damascus to Nat-Ions, from\nMt to Jswssjis-., tha mighty la-\nfluence of Germany may be felt by any\nobservant traveler.\nOnly recently, immense churches and\ncolossal fortress-like institutions have\nbeen erected in Jerusalem, inaugurated\nand dedicated not long ago by Prince\nand Princess Eltel Freidrich. The Institutions and establishments of other\nnations dwindle into Insignificance\nwhen compared with those of Germany.\nIt is a well known fact, and has become a truism here, that there is noth- \\\ning too difficult for Germany to obtain\nfrom the Ottoman government. |\nFrom the highest to the lowest, the '\nofficials cringe before the German consul, in contradistinction to some other\ndiplomatic agents, who are trifled with\nby the authorities on important points\nuntil the matter is referred to Constantinople, and this means consider\nable loss of time in a country where\npostal communication is irregular and\ntelegrams are som etimes longer en\nroute than letters.\nTo Conquer Palestine.\nIt is evident that Germany is endeavoring by every meanB to strengthen\nher position lu the east. If, for instance, she perceives that a foreign\nsubject possesses a parcel of land of\nstrategic importance, she will not rest\nuntil, by importunity or persuasion, or\nother means, she has obtained possession of it.\nThe Germans flock in on every side;\ntheir manner of entrance is original,\nand proves that behind this emigration\nthere is a clever chess player directing\nthe movements of the pawns. Many\ncome as tourists, others as pedestrians\ncalling themselves globe trotters; but\nthe greatest number remains In the\ncountry. If they are well-to-do, they\nat once buy property, cultivate It, and\nbuild houses upon it. If poor, the\n\"Templar CaBsee,\" powerfully subven-\ntioned by political syndicates, advances\nmoney, with ihe command; \"Be fruitful\nand multiply and replenish the earth\nand subdue it.\" Indeed, fn prollflcness\ntbe German transcends the Jew, at\nleast in Palestine.\nThe German post office officials,\nschool masters, archeologists, geologists, topogrnphists, etc., are all military men and invariably stanch imperialists. In the German schools most\nof the reading books are histories of\nwars, studiously prepared to inflame\nthe young Teuton with the fire of\nChauvinistic patriotism.\nThe Germans are a compact body\npolitic of great power, whose ambition\nappears to be to conquer Palestine in\none way or another, but by all means\nto do it!    \t\nACCIDENT AT AINSWORTH.\nCap   Explodes   Blowing   Away   Part  of\nMan's Hand.\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nAINSWORTH, Aug. 25\u2014What might\nhave been a very fatal accident today\nresulted only in seriously injuring the\nleft hand of Robert Sheridan. While\nplacing the explosive detonator cap on\nbis fuse, before shooting, the cap exploded, tearing the centre of the hand\nand fingers very badly, almost blowing\none of the fingers off. It was Immediately bandaged and Mr. Sheridan left\ntonight for Kaslo to have It tended ty\nthe doctor.\nGeorge Morrison, an old timer in the\ncamp, Is back again renewing acquaintances.\nJames Kayton of Waneta, arrived on\nTuesday night on the SS. Kokanee.\nMany Improvements are being i\u00bbnde\nIn our little town at present *-I. Grey-\nerich is building a new sidewalk nJong\nthe front and side ot his store and\nhaving considerable work done mi the\nfoundation of the warehouse. L. B.\nLuther has charge ot the work.\nIf your liver Is siusgtsh and out of teas,\nand you fset dull, bilious, constipated, take\na dose of Chamberlain's Btetnaek and\nliver Tablets toaight before retinas asm\nyen will last all light In the msntn*.\nnombfoa stawasu sad **atm%.\nHe\nthat the bowels be kept regular. Neglect means sickness.\nSluggish bowels are quickly\nregulated by\nBeecham's\nPills\nSold everywhere, In Boxei as cents.\nMade In British Columbia ..\nRUBBER STAMPS\nSeals, Stencils Dog Tags,\nBrass Signs, Steel S amps\nVANCOUVER 8TENCIL & SEAL CO.\nP.O. Box 793, Vancouver, B.C.\nto those on the Nelson column, representing Individual gallantries, such as\nJohn Davis forcing the North-West\nPassage; Drake, first navigator rounding the Horn; the famous game of\nDrake at Plymouth; Sir Richard Gren-\nvile and the Revenge; Raleigh's offer\nto King James; death of Blake; Lord\nSandwich blown up with his flagship;\nBenbow's bravery, Admiral Byng's famous record; and the exploit of the\nMonmouth.\nMarble Beats would be placed along\nthe east, west and north walls, and\nthe whole of the present asphalt\npaving would be taken up and fine\naxed granite paving, grey and red,\ndesigned to suit the square, substituted. Shrubs in tubs would be dotted\nabout the square, and water plants\nplaced in the fountains. The statues\nat present in the square, which commemorate military heroes, would be\nremoved to the Horse Guards.\nREBUILDING OF\nTRAFALGAR_8QUARE\nWould   Make   it   Noble   Memorial   in\nHeart of Empire to King\nEdward.\nMany distinguished and representative men have been enrolled on the\ncommittee which ls to meet in London\nto erect In the heart of the empire a\nworthy memorial in honor of King\nEdward. Among these, are the Duke\nof Fife, Lord RothBchild, Lord Al-\nverstone, Sir Ernest Cassel, Sir James\nGilder, Sir Herbert Tree, the governor and deputy governor of the\nBank of England, the Archbishop of\nCanterbury, the president of the\nRoyal College of Physicians, the president of the Royal College of Surgeons, the president of the Royal\nAcademy, the president of the Law\nSociety, the president ot the Chamber of Shipping, the Chief Rabbi, and\nLord Iveagh.\nTrafalgar Square.\nPerhaps the most interesting of all\nthe suggestions that have yet been\nmade with regard to the form of the\nmemorial, says the London Observer,\nis that of Mr. William Woodward, one\nof the foremost. English architects,\nwho considers that Trafalgar Square\nshould he re-built and re-named after\nKing Edward.\n\"I shall not die contented,\" Mr.\nWoodward remarked on one occasion,\n\"unless I see this gloomy asphalted\nwaste, with its two squirts, made worthy of its description as the finest site\nin- Europe.\" Now Is the opportunity, |\nhe thinks and we publish a plan\nshowing how he proposes that the\nsquare should be laid out.\nThe main Idea is to form fn th'e\nsquare In stone and bronze, a complete\nnaval history of Great Britain. ThuB,\non each Bide of the four great piers\u2014\nnorth, south, east and west\u2014would be\nplaced sculptural groups, representing\nrespectively the naval victories of the\nsixteenth, seventeenth and eighteenth\ncenturies, culminating in 1805 with\nTrafalgar.\nThe Nelson column would, of course,\nremain untouched. The larger piers\non the east, and west walls would be\nadorned by minor groups and the\nsmaiier piers by bronze electric lamp\nstandards, the intervening space being\nfilled with wrought iron railings with\ngilded spearheads.\nThe Great Harry.\nThe present fountains would be replaced by others of better design. In\nihe centre of the fountain to the east\nwould be placed a bronze group of\nNeptune and sea gods, emblematic of\nthe four oceans, and In that to the\nwest a bronze group of Britannia and\nmermaids, emblematic of the four\nmembers of the United Kingdom.\nThe entrance to the Tube station at\nthe southeast part of the square would\nbe covered by a circular domed temple\nof pierced wrought iron work and a\ncorresponding temple would be placed\nnt the southwest corner, under the\ndome being a drinking fountain. One\nof the domes would be terminated by\na model ln Iron of the Great Harry\nand the other by one ot the Victory.\nRemoved, too, like the present fountains, would be the awkward flight\nof steps at the northeast and northwest angles of the square. The an-\ngleB would be squared and the terrace\nbalustrade carried across; and In the\ncentre of the nofth 'front would be a\ngrand staircase equal in length to the\nportico of the National Gallery.  ;\nUpon the two main piers of the\nstaircase allegorical figures standing\non gilded globes would be placed, one\nwith palms, representing Peace, the\nother with laurels, representing Honor.\nOa the side walls of this stalrcaie\nwacM    he brows   oa-vralleff, similar\nCASTE'S HOLD ON INDIA.\nWestern    Innovations   Loosen    't*   In\nMany Respects,\nThe Hindus will not roach water\nwhich has not been drawn by their\nown people, and they must in*, cat\nfood cooked in water supplied by deferent caste. This fact for a Ions time\nhindered the use of the water works\nwhich the English have introduced into some of the cities, but by a Bpecial\ndispensation granted by >he BrahT-rs\nthey are now raising the ban as to\nwater on tap. This is tending to modify caste.\nAnother is the railways nnd tramways. At first the Brahmins ami uth-\nerB of the higher castes wanted cars\nof their own. They could not get\nthem, and now all muBt travel together. The schools of the government admit pupils of all castes, und\nthe Brahmin boys now sit .vith boys\nof the scavenger caste.\nThe Brahmins have also changed,\ncertain caste rules as to drink. The\nstores are full ot new things from\nabroad, and these are desired by all\ncastes in common. It ls allowable now\nto use patent medicines and soda water without losing one's soul. A man\nis not damned if he buys ice made\nby a foreigner, and he can eat soda\ncrackers, without being polluted. It\nis the same with ginger ale and other\nsoft drinks.\nIt is different as to meats. The\nflesh of the cow is sacred, and any\nHindu who would eat tbe liquid extract ot beef would be damned, and a\nham sandwich is a passport to hell.\nA Hindu will not defile himself by\neven uttering the word for steak.\nREGULATIONS AS TO\nMARKING OF FRWT\nBoxes Must be Indelibly Marked With\nName and Address and Grade of\nContents\nIn addition to the sections of the Dominion governanejat fruit regi'liUim*.,\npublished a few days ago J. G. Bunyan,\nDominion fruit inspector, has received\na copy of clause 320, which deals with\nthe marking of fruit. These regulations are as follows:\nEvery person who by himself or\nthrough the agency of another person\npacks fruit in a closed package intended\nfor sale shall cause the package to bo\nmarked in a plain and indelible manner\nIn letters not less than half an inch\nin length, before it is taken from the\npremises where it -is packed.\n(a) With the initials of his Christian\nnames and his full surname and address\nor, iu the case of a firm or corporation,\nwith) tiie firm or corporate name and\naddress.\n(h) With t(ho name of the variety or\nvarieties and\n(c) With a designation ot the grade\nof fruit, which shall Include one of the\nfollowing marks, viz., Fancy, No. 1, No,\n2, No. 3.\nSuch marks may he accompanied by\nany designation of grade or brand lt\nthat designation or brand Is not inconsistent with or marked more conspicuously than the one of the said four\nmarks which. Is used on the said package.\nMlnard'i  Liniment  Curea  O litem cer\nMINING NEWS\nRossland Man Describes Conditions in\nSkeena River Country\u2014Predicts\nBig Boom\u2014Freighting Costly\nJames Dyer, proprietor of Uie Centre\nStar hotel at Rossland has Just returned from a visit to Hazelton and the\nSkeena river country. Although ib\u00a9 was\naway for something like tour 'months\nhe did not -see much of the country as\nhe was busy at work, all the time on\nthe claims -which belong to his partner\nTom Stevenson and hlmselw, Tom\nStevenson used to work in the- mines\nat Rossland and has been in the Oml-\nneca country about two years. There\nare, says Mr. Dyer, the -makings or a\nrich country there. The ore is rich,\ntho ledges are solid and go down apparently. It will be, a great country\nand there is destined to ibe a great\n'boom as soon as the railway gets in.\nBut at present everything Is very ibigh\nFreight is $60 a ton on the boat from\nPrince -Rupert up th\u00a9 Skeena river.\nLiving Ib very high also, although potatoes, cabbage and other roots can be\ngrown- There was no land cleared yet\nso far as he saw. He did not visit the\nBulkley valley, but his opinion is tbat\nthere will be a great boom there as\nsoon as people could get It. He met in\nthat district many Rosslanders. His\npartner and he sold five claims and\nhave retained tour.\nMake Strike\nFrank Guindon, the principal owner\nin the Guindon group on the west aide\nof Moyle lake, has made a lucky strike\nwithin the last week. He now has\nabout 18 inches of ore In an open cut\nwhich be Is driving on one of the\nclaims. This open cut Is in about 25\nfeet.\nCoal Shipments\nThe Hosmer Mines, Limited, are now\nshipping 300 tons of coal dally to Nelson. Coke to the amount of 200 tons\ndaily is being shipped to Trail.\nMinard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria.\naomy\/m&M^wt&xnm&WMsywv&im'sii\nWESTERN CANADA'S GREATEST SCHOOL\nO __L__L   41? t.        - Vancouver. B.C.\n\u25a0jPfott'ijiinv   r* j- spR\u00b0TT. ba-\n* Manager\nBuSiaeSS    IflStltute Send for Catalogue.\nBest equipped school west of Toronto.   Ten chances tor every student.\nThe*e is No Limit\ni   to the possibilities ol newspaper advertising.   The amount you did\nlast year 6bo\\ild be no criterion lor this year.\nIf it Paid Yot*\nlaat year it Is reasonable to assume that if you do more and do\nbetter your business will  increase In proportion.\n\u25a0 I\nYoti Cannot Afford to be  \\\nSilent\nwhile others who are your competitors, are talking In each Issue *t(\nThe News.\nThe Nelson Daily News\nIs read by nearly everyone living IB tie Kootenay, and the Boundary\nand those who are not now doing so soon will be. It Is the only\ndally paper published in the Interior of British Columbia, It It\nnewsy bright and up to date ln every respect sad Is essentially a\nhome paper.   It* resultB to advertisers are positive and plentiful.\nfiettet Tty It!\n; ,, \u25a0(.-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 ,,,,,...,\u25a0\u25a0...,\nSPOKANE INTERSTATE\n-   n-m> m^ w \u25a0> mmm____a______________tj_a0_______m______^^n****,\\*ww\"\u25a0'\u2022VWa-'\nOCT-3I29.-I9ICV\nto aEtTHcnrm wiraiAnoNAi*\nDPPir FARMING EXPOSITION)\n. At\u00a9CONGRESS,-\n'  *1N SPOKANE THB SAME WEEKi,        \/\n-THE ARROPLANE.rTiOHT^\nTHt MILITARY INDIAN BATTLE NIGHT SHOW i\n\"aiETJOSEPH and the BflTTLE.OF ,\nmCLMHWATH-r {\nA $' 20.OOO.OO RACE PROGRAM)\nrERUU^SFMODSITAIiANMHDiSa*\n^loaooMovviaBESi-iOTroRTHisrAJRAMDRrreW\nf.     ll3T\u00bbvT\\Tvr*Tr,tNT>nii\\\u00bbj-*v-nJi>i-w\u00ab-\u00bb\\   \u2022\nIt\n'REDUCED RAltMBOf R\u00abTBSV\n'SEND TO B.H. OOSGBOVE. SECY F0R PRIZE U3T8AM0'\nINFORMATION.\n\u2022gJ\n**************\nGEM THEATRE\nTONIGHT\u2014FRIDAY\nOverture, Orchestra\nMOTION  PICTURES.\nHiB First Valentine,\niove Drops.\n* The Common Enemy,\nThe Thread of Destiny.\nDoors open at 7 p.m.; show starts\nat 7:16, Bits and 9:16.\nADMISSION\n10c\nMM\u00bb>\u00bb MM^\nThe Yale-Columbia Lumber Co., Ltd\nROUGH AND DRESSED LUMBER\nAlso lath, shingles, sash, doors, etc.   Specifications made up and estimates given.\nSLABS SLABS SLABS\nMust dispose of our stock of slabs to make room. Special prices\nwhile they last: $2.75 per cord; $2.60 per cord in lots of 5 cords; $2.40\nper cord In lots of 10 cords. Get your supply now. Prompt delivery\nguaranteed.\nWatch Nelson Grow\nSome of the Reasons\nfor Its Progress ...\n1. Irrult Industry\n(a) Ranches coming Into bearing.\n(n) Active interest ln sale ot\nfruit lands, over 100 Inquiries having been received hy this bureau\nalone.\n2. Lumbering Industry\nSplendid sales expected for Ibis\nyear.\n3. Mining Industry\n(a) Progress geing made all\nover tbe district\n(b) Sheep Creek District promisee to rank as one of tbe greatest\nfree milling mining camps In the\nworld.\n(c) Barly operation ot new line\nsmelter.\n4. Manufacturing Industry\n(a) Large extensions now being made hy two of Nelson's largest factories,\n(b) Free sites and other Inducement, offered by corporation\nct city at Nelson.\n(c) This bureau 1s In receipt\nof a number of Inquiries from\npersons desiring to establish factories here.\n5   Building Industry\n(a) Extension and completion\not Tramway system.\n(b) Extension and completion\nof new C.P.K. wharf, costing |80,-\n000.\n(c) Factory extensions.\n(d) New residences along tbe\nTramway extension.\n(e) Several new \" business\nblocks contemplated.\n6. Business Centre.\nWholesale and distributing for\nKootenay district\n7. Residential Centre and Tourist\nResort\n(a) Nelson Is a city of homes.\n(b) Fishing, shooting and boating. C.P.R. Is now constructing a\nTourist Hotel at Balfour, near\nNeison, to be ready for tola season.\nFurther InfonnatieB, partiouMWly as to Inducement* offered new in,-\ndUBtrlea will be cheerfully supplied by\nTHE SECNtTARY\nPublicity Commute., Board of Trad.\n FRIDAY    AUGUST 26\nChe Sail? J&tuW.\nw\nPAGE THREE\nCOWAtfS\nPERFECTION\nCOCOA\n(MAPLE LEAF LABIO\nGive the children Cowan's Perfection Cocoa and drink it yourself.\nIt is the best beverage for young\nand old. 153\nTHE COWAN CO.. LIMITED. \u25a0 TORONTO.\nFresh from the Plantations\nThe air tight lead packets hold captive all the natural fragrance,\nthe rich flavor and unequalled strength ot\nBLUE RIBBON\nTEA\nIt is also perfectly protected from the mixed odors of the grocery\nstore, so readily absorbed by tea ln open chests.\nJust get a pound from your grocer today.\nCut This Out and Mail to\nThe Daily News Classified Advertising\nDepartment\nts\nDate    1910..\nPlease Insert tbe- following advertisement ln The Dally News\nfor   consecutive Insertions, for which t enclose the\nsum of  ....cents.\nName ...*'..\nAddress\n(Write Advertisement Here.)\nRates\u2014One **ent per word per Insertion.   But no ad accepted\nat less than 25c,   Six insertions for four cents per word..   Cash\n\u25a0 must accompany order.\nrecollections of\nEarly wireless\nAt First Many Believed Ho Was Trying\nto Communicate With Departed Spirits\nMy earliest experiment in wireless\ntelegraphy was made ln the grounds ot\nmy father's bouse in Italy, over a-distance of about 200 yards, writes signal*\nMarconi In London Answers.\nI was somewhat hampered in my pre--\nparations for .making this Initial expert-\nimeot at establishing comlmunicaUon between two points without wires by the\nfact -that an old and unuch respected servant on my father's estate viewed the\n-whole proceeding with considerable disfavor and was firmly convinced tbat it\n'was la some way or other an4 attempt\non my part to get Into communication\nwith the departed spirits. He prayed\nof tne earnestly to relinquish any terrible designs and even presumed so far\naa to remove stealthily at night a, part\nof an Installation I had set up near his\nhouse.\nThe First Message\n(Fortunately, however, my inothe**,\n-who, always took the greatest interest\nln all my experiments, bravely championed my cause and through her in*\nfluenoo the old retainer waa persuaded\nto let one carry out my work wlthoutl\nhindrance, though he -never ceased'to\n-warn me that lt must quite inevitably\nend tn some dreadful disaster. ,\nflor quite \u00ab ooialderabhi period I was\nunable 'to effect a transmission even\nacross so narn&w a space as the top of\na little table; but after several years of\n, incessant toll at the age of 24 I at last\nsucceeded In sending a message from\nthe station In the garden to my father's\nhouse. Of course the distance covered\nwas only a few yards but it was a red\nletter day in my career for with that\nfirst triumphant [message wireless telegraphy became a practically accomplished fact.\nWhen I came to London after having\npatented my system I gave a demonstration of it to the general postofflce offl-\n1. clal3 at their Invitation.\n\"    The demonstration attracted sio>me at -\nI', tention and I received a great many\nletters on the subject from people all\nover, the country, most of whom were\nat -pains to prove to me that I had embarked on an enterprise Inevitably doom\ned to failure.   One of these letters I\ny remember very well.   I forgot all about\nlt ait the moment, but lt was recalled\nto my recollection in a rather singular\nway several years later,\nLearning by Experience\nTbe letter came from a gentleman\nwho was engaged In business up ln the\n.north of England and he wrote to me to\n' say that he was not a scientist but a\npractical man of affairs and a*\" such,\nhe could plainly see 'that however Interesting my ideas were from a scientific\npoint of view they were useless from a\n, commercial standpoint as lt would very\n.clearly he Impossible ever to rely upon\ntbe accuracy oft messages sent by such\na means aa I proposed. Several years ;\nlater the writer of the letter was on\nboard a shipwrecked Teasel tbe crew,.\nimt fMtoogeri of whloh were aavtd\nowing to the fact that they were able to\nsend a wireless message across the\nocean for help, which reached a ship\n, more than 100 miles away. The writer\nof the letter wrote afterwards -to tell\nme of this and to recall to my mind the\n. letter he had written some 12 year*-\npreviously when my system of wlrelea-j\ntelegraphy waa In Ms infancy.\nOne of the most Interesting landmarks ln the history of wireless tele-\n. graphy's progress occurred eight years\nago when the first press interview ever\nconducted by wireless took place between a reporter at our signalling station at Niton, In the Isle of Wight and\nmyself, then a passenger on hoard the\nAmerican liner Philadelphia.\nNiton was \"rung up\" when the Philadelphia was 80 miles from port and I\nshall never forget the general wonderment the ease with which we were\nable to eommunicate caused among ail\non board. For in those days, wireless\ntelegraphy being In its comparative Infancy was considered far more marvellous taran it is now. I must say, .by the\nway, that although the general public\nseemer doubtful of my ever ibelng aible\nto establish a practicable system of\n, wireless telegraphy, British scientists\u2014\nand notably the late Lord Kelvin\u2014gave\nime much encouragement during the\nearly stages of the development of my\nsystem.\nEight Hours' Incantation\nIn establishing wlrelesB stations in\ndifferent parts of the world we have encountered all sorts of difficulties.\nIn China for example our workers\nwere regarded aa agents of the evil\nspirit and prayers were offered by the\npriests for our destruction.,   One memorable morning a Cliinaman arrived\nwhere we were at work and began walking round and round some of the men ;\nmuttering    strange   incantations.    Of\ncourse, It would not have heen policy to |\nhave interfered with- the man ibut he j\nwas a terrible nuisance and hampered j\nour   operations   considerably.   Every\nnow and then one ot our men would\n\u25a0stop work and swear at the gigantic\nChinaman, who at last dropped to the\nground completely tired out after he\nhad been walking around in a narrow\ncircle for over eight hours\nOne of the most difficult stations we\never erected was at Clifden, a place\nin .the west of Ireland. When the engineers arrived at the point selected for\nthe station, two of them suddenly sank\nup to their waists In. the boggy land\nand were extricated with considerable\ndifficulty from their most unpleasant\nand rather dangerous position.\n, It was a difficult matter to get a se\ncure holding for the tall iron mast in\nsuch soil and was only accomplished\nafter many months of very arduous and\ntrying work,\n\"Wireless Weather\"\nIn the early days of wireless telegraphy I think many people had a no-\n. tlon that the sending of messages tn\nsome way or other affected -the weather.\nI received at any rate a great many\nletters on the subject\u2014especially during\n.the wet summer of 1902.   Some of my\ncorrespondents asked me to desist from\nmy operations; one lady\u2014a proprietress\n, oc a .boarding house at the seaside\u2014declared that she had been simply ruined\nby   what she described, as   \"wireless\nweather.\"\nColeman\nImportant Sale\not\nBuilding\nLots\nIn tbe\nEUCHARIST CONGRESS\nHONORS MONTREAL\nFirst    Held In North   America\u2014Dignitaries of Roman Catholic Church\nFrom Many Lands.\nOn .September 3, the first Ruchurist\ncongress ot the Roman Catholic church\never held on this continent will aaaenv\nhie In Montreal, and for nine Jays will\ndeliberate on problems ot the church.\nFrom a clerical point of view ;;he event\nwill be the most Important iu the history of Montreal. From'all parts of the\nworld will come delegates aad vieti\nors, and there can be little doubt\nthat thousauds of visitors .lr-iwti by\nthe prospect of a gorgeous spectacle\nwill attend. To calculate the mere\nnumbers is very difficult, but already\naccommodation has been arranged In\nthe religious institutions of tbe city\nfor two thousand prieBts. Other thousands will go to the hotels or be\nbilleted upon the faithful. Preparations are being made to receive about\n50,000 visitors.\nMany Distinguished Churchmen.\nEvery important and devout Roman Catholic in the country, lay and\necclesiastical, will be Invited to attend. From Rome wilt come Cardinal Vannutelli, the representative of\nthe Pope, and from Ireland, Cardinal\nLogue will come. This cultured priest\npaid a visit to New York a year or so\nago, and on his departure hundreds of\nhis faith fell on their knees to receive\nhis blessing. Cardinal Logue Is acknowledged to be probably the most distinguished English-Bpeaklng Roman Catholic in the world. The mere enumeration of the cardinals, archbishops and\nbishops who will attend would fill a\nnewspaper column, and the opportunity\nto merely see so many distinguished\nchurchmen Bhould draw the curious\nand the pious from all parts of the\ncountry. When they are to be seen\nIn the performance of some of the\nmoBt impressive ceremonies of tbeir\nchurch, the background, probably the\nmost famouB fortress of Roman Catholicism outside of Italy, the occasion\nmay well be considered as one of tbe\nmoBt memorable In modern church history.\nA Citadel of Roman Catholicism.\nMontreal naturally is deeply conscious of the compliment done her\nby the selection ot that city as the\nscene of the twenty-second congress.\nWith the exception ot 1893, when it\nwas held in Jerusalem, the fathers\nof the church had never ventured away\nfrom Europe, t was felt, therefore,\nthat the time had come when \/some\nspecial recognition of American Roman\nCatholicism should be made. Here\nthere were conflicting claims. On the\none hand stood the vast Roman Cath-\nolio population of the United States,\noutnumbering the similar population ot\nL\nTownsite of\nColeman, Alberta\nSituated in Famous Crow's\nNest Coal Fields\nHeadquarters of the  Gigantic\nCollieries of the  International\nCoal and Coke Co., Ltd,\nMessrs. Stewart Williams &\nCo., of Victoria having been\nduly instructed by the Internationa] Coal & Coke Co., Ltd.\nwill sell by public auction at\nVictoria, B.C. on Monday and\nTuesday, tbe 19th and 20th September, 1910, the remainder of\nthe company's real estate holdings In the City of Coleman,\nAlberta, comprising some three\nhundred eligible business and\nresidential sites, located In this\nthriving Industrial centre.\nPor further and full particulars, plans, maps, ihotographs,\netc, apply to the Auctioneer,\nStewart Williams\n637 Fort Street, Victoria, B.C.\nCanada by probably ten to one. On the\nother hand, there was to be considered\nthe fact that in Canada dwell the\nstrongest of all adherents to the Roman Catholic faith, namely, the French-\nCanadians. A little investigation showed that the Roman Catholics of the\nUnited States would have no objection\nto the choice of Montreal, and this\nfact was laid before the Pontiff by\nArchbishop Bruchesl, with the result\nthat 'Montreal was honored.\nSome Impressive Features.\nThe first, three days of the congress will be occupied by the ceremonial of -welcoming the distinguished prelates, the moat important of\nthese preliminaries occurring on\nSaturday, September 3, when Cardinal Vannutelli, the Papal Legate, arrives. He will land on the nonse-\ncours wharf, where Malsonneuve\ngave thanks to the Virgin for his\nvictories, and where many another\nancient worthy made triumphal entry to the city. The official opening\nwill take place on Tuesday in St.\nJames' Cathedral, and on the following day there will be a great civic\nreception to Cardinal Vannutelli In\nthe city hall. Two of the most Impressive features of the congress will\nbe the muss sung at midnight on\nThursday in the churches of Notre\nDame, and the pontifical High Mass\non Friday in the' open air at the altar specialty built at the foot of\nMount Royal.\nTwo Great Churches.\nIn Notre Dame and St. James' Montreal has two churches not unworthy of the traditions of the congress.\nThe latter, as 1b well known, Is an\nexact reproduction, one-third size,\nof St. Peter's at Rome. Notre Dame\nIs the largest and finest church on\nthis continent, and is classed among\nthe most imposing in the world. It\nhas a seating capacity of 15,000 and\non the occasion of its far-famed Lenten (services not fewer than, 20,000\nworshippers are present. The church\nwas built from plans drawn by\n.TameB O'Donneli, the famous Irish\narchitect, and its acoustic properties\nare probably unmatched among the\nworld's great cathedrals. In Its nine\nchapels and altars are to be found\npriceless relics and paintings, while\ntbe great altar Is a masterpiece of\nByzantine art. The congress will be\ndivided into French and English\nsections for the hearing and discussion of papers by Bome of tbe most\neminent lay and clerical scholars of\nthe church.\nRUSSIA PLACES ORDER FOR\nARTILLERY IN FRANCE\n8T. PETERSBURG, Aug. 25\u2014The\nminister of war haB placed an ord<*r\nfor artillery amounting to 11,450,000\nwith the OreuBot works in France.\nMany members of the Duma are displeased that the contract will go to\nFrance, as the application was voted\nwith the understanding that It w-juld\nbe expended in Russia.  \u25a0\u25a0\nMinard's Lintmsnt Cur* Dlpthtrla.\nFRUIT LANDS\nSalmon River Valley subdivision in tracts of from 5 to\n30 acres. The choicest fruit\nla d ln the Kootenays.\nI Townsite Lots\nIn Salmon Rapids townsite,\nthe coming industrial centre of\nsouthern British Columbia.\nNow Is the time to buy these\nwhile they are cheap, at from\n$75 to S1S0.\nImproved Fruit\nRanches\nWe have some of the best\nand oldest revenue producing\norchards on the Kootenay and\nArrow lakes at prices which\n. cannot rail to attract.\nI limber Lands\nIn large or small blocks at\nfrom SI to $8 per acre Including\nland and timber. We know\nthat we have the best timber\nInvestments now offering In the\nprovince.    Easy terms.\nj Agricultural Lands\nIn blocks of from 640 to 10,-\n000 acres at from $2.50 to \u00a525\nI per acre, on easy terms of pay-\nf     ment.\nCall or write for our 'lata.\nIf you want to Invest either in\nland or timber, we cannot fall\nto interest you as we have propositions in all sizes at prices\n. which cannot be approached.\nP. J. Gleazer & Co.\nThe Corporation of Uie City of Nelson\nNotice of Rules and Regulations governing the use of water by the in*\nhabitants of the City of Nelson and\nlocalities adjacent thereto.\n1. These regulations shall come into\nforce on the 13th day of August, M0, and\nremain in force until further notice.\n2. The hours between which water may\nbe used for any of the purposes following\nuiiall be as follows:\n(a) For the sprinkling of lawns and\ngardens, between the hours of 6 o'clock\np.m. and 9 o'clock p.m.\n(b) For the sprinkling of streets, alleys and sidewalks, between the hours\nof 7 o'clock a.m. and 9 o'clock a.m.\nAnd no person shall use water for any\nor all of such purposes beyond the time\nand outside the said hours.\n3. No person shall, with a lawn sprinkler or otherwise, water any adjoining or\nother premises to or than that for which\nhe has paid the regular garden or lawn\nrate.\n(4) All water used for any of the above\npurposes shall be used by garden hose or\nlawn sprinklers only.\n(5) When any alarm of Are has been\nsounded and during the continuance of any\nnre within the corporate limits of the city\nof Nelson, or during the progress of any\ntire in any of the localities adjacent thereto, any person using water for any of the\npurposes mentioned In paragraph 2 hereof\nshall at once cease using same until such\ntime as the tire has been extinguished.\nC. Any person guilty of an Infraction or\nviolation of any of the foregoing regulations shall, ln addition to all other penalties Imposed hy bylaw or statutes, be\nliable to have his water supply cut off\nwithout notice.\nBy Order,\nW.  E. WASSON,\n100-tf.  City Clerk.\nPrices\nAre Advancing\nOn the Arm\nWe have several choices, Fruit\nranches with lake frontage for sale\non the Arm. Also unimproved\nfruit land which we will be pleased to show intending purchasers.\nSee our list of residences for\nsale before buying.\nHUNTER &\nANNABLE\nWard St.\nBox 28\nWATER NOTICE.\nNotice Is hereby given that an application will be made under Part V. of the'\n\"Water Act, 1909,\" to obtain a license ln\nthe Nelson, B.C., Mining Division of West\nKootenay District,\n(a) .The name, address and occupation\nof the applicant: H. R, Kltto, Kokanee,\nB.C.,   rancher.\nlb> The name of the lake, stream or\nsource (if unnamed, the description ls):\nSmall unnamed creek flowing In southerly\ndirection in  Lot 780.\n(c)   The point of diversion:    About 1,000\nfeet from high water mark-\nId)   The quantity of water applied for\n(In cubic feet per second): One cubic foot.\n(e) The character of the proposed works:\nDitch, pipe or flume.\n(f) The premises on which the water is\nto bo used; Lot 189.\n(g) The purposes for which the water\nIs to be used:   Irrigation and domestic.\n(h) If for Irrigation describe the land\nto be Irrigated, giving acreage: Lot It'J,\ncontaining I'W acres.\n(1) If the water is to be used for power\nor mining purposes, describe the place\nwhere the water Is to be returned to some\nnatural   channel,  and   the   difference   be<\n(j) Area of crown land Intended to be\noccupied by the proposed works:   None.\n(k) This notice was posted on the 9th\nday of August, 1919, and application will\nbe made to the commissioner on the 10th\nday of September, 1010.\n(1) Give the names and addresses of any\nriparian proprietors or licensees who or\nwhose lands are likely to be affected by tbe\nproposed works, either above or below tbe\noutlet: Crown lands above, none below.\nNOTE\u2014One cubic foot per second is equivalent to 35.71 miners' Inches.\nH. R. KITTO.\n18-6-10-30.        P.O. Address, Kokanee, B.C.\nWhen  In   Need\nPhone, day 85, night 262.\nSTANDARD   FURNITURE   COMPANY'S\nUNDERTAKING PARLORS, 308 Baker, St\nWATER ACT 1909. -**r\nBy direction of the board of Investigation\nnotice Is hereby given that the board will\nproceed to adujdicate upon claims to\nwater on the following streams and tributaries thereto In the Nelson water district, under authority of Part 3 of tbe\nWater Act, 1909:\nTrail creek, lake stream or Cambridge\ncreek, Ryan creek, Rock creek, .Blue\nGrouse gulch, Brewery gulch, Uorge\ngulch, Nigger creek, Tiger creek, Daniel\nGulch, East Mill stream. West Mill stream,\nStoney creek, Grass Springs, Violin lake,\nMurphy creek, Topping gulch, and their\ntributaries.\nA meeting for the purposes of adjudication will be held at Trail at 10 o'clock a.m.\non or about the 3rd day of Ooctober, 1910.\nW. S. DUtiWlix,\nIB-f-10-J Chief Water Commissioner.\nWATER NOTICE.\nNotice is hereby given that an application will be made under Part V. of the\n\"Water Act, 1909,\" to obtain a license in.\nthe Nelson Division of West Kootenay\nDistrict.\n(a) The name, address and occupation\nof the applicant: A. Cameron, Balfour,\nrancher.\n(b) The name of the lake, stream or\nsource (If unnamed, the description Is):\nSmall creek, unnamed, running through\napplicant's land.\n(0) The point of diversion: Where It\nenters my land.\n(d) The quantity of water applied for\n(In cubic feet per second): Eight Inches\n(e) The character of the proposed works;\nPipe.\n(f) The premises on which the water is\nto be used: Lot L. 7618 G. I.\n(g) The purposes for which the water\nis to be used:    Irrigation.\n(h) If for irrigation describe the land\nintended to be irrigated, giving acreage:\nAgricultural land; 40 acres.\n(i) Area of Crown lands Intended to be\noccupied   by  the proposed works:    None.\n(J) This notice was posted on the 3rd\nday' of August, 1910, and application will\nbe made to the Commissioner on the Srd\nday  of  September, 1910.\n(1) Give the names and addresses of any\nriparian proprietors or licensees who or\nwhose lands are likely to be affected by\nthe proposed works, either above or below\nthe outlet:   None,\nNOTE\u2014One cubic foot per second is equivalent to 35.71 miners' Inches.\nA. CAMERON.\nBalfour, B.C.\nWATER NOTICE.\nNotice is hereby given that an application will be made under Part V. of the\n\"Water Act, 1909,\" to obtain a license ln\nthe Ymir Division of West Kootenay District.\n(a) The name, address and occupation\nof the applicant: A. Bremner, hotel-\nkeeper, Sheep Creek,\n(b) The name of the lake, stream or\nsource (If unnamed, the description Is):\nUnnamed spring 1500 feet from my property.\n(d) The quantity of water applied for\n(In cubic feet per second): One-fifth of a\ncubic foot.\n(e) The character of the proposed works:\nDam and flume.\n<f) The premises on which the water Is\nto be used: Camp view, mineral land.\nSheep Creek hotel.\n\u25a0   (g)   The purposes for which  the water\nIs to he used:   Domestic.\n(h) Area of Crown land Intended to be\noccupied by the proposed works:   None.\n(I) This notice was posted on the 6th\nday of August, 1010, and application will\nbe made to the Commissioner on the 12th\nday of August, 1910.\n(j)  Give\nrlparla-\nthe names and addresses of any\nproprietors or licensees who or\nwhose land.\" are likely to be affected by\nthe proposed works, either above or below\nthe outlet: O, P, Wells, Nelson; James\nRyan, Vancouver.\nNOTE\u2014One cubic foot per second Is equivalent to 35.71 miners'  Inches.\nA.   BREMNER,\nSheep Creek, B.C.\nWATER ACT 1909.\nBy direction of the Board of Investigation notice ls hereby given that the Board\nwill proceed to adjudicate upon claims to\nwater on the following creek and tributaries thereto in the Nelson Water District,\nunder authority of Part 3 of the Water\nAct, 1909.\nSHEEP CREEK AND ITS TRIBUTARIES\nA meeting for purposes of adjudication\nwill be held in the City of Nelson at IU\no'clock a. m. on or about the tithe day of\nOctober, 1910. W.  S.  DREWKY,\nChief Water Commissioner\nWATER  NOTICE.\nNotice Is hereby given that an application will be made under Part V. of the\n\"Water Act. 1909,\" to obtain a license In\nthe Ymlr Division of Proctor District.\n(a) The name, address and occupation\nOf the applicant:   11. J.  Bookham.\n(b) The name of the lake, stream or\nsource:   Narrows Creek,    '\n(c) The point of diversion: About halt\na mile south of B. C. S. railway, situated\non Lot 306 C, W. K. district.\n(d) The quantity of water applied for\nIn cubic feet per second):  ,18.\n(e) The character of the proposed works:\nDitching and flumlng.\n(f) The premises on which the water is\nto be used:   Agricultural land.\n(g) The purposes for which tho water\nis to be used!   Domestic nnd Irrigation.\n(h) If for irrigation describe the land\nintended to be Irrigated, giving acreage:\nSub-division Bl on Lot 306,  .6 acres.\n(I) This notice was posted on tho 3rd\nday of August, 1910, and application will\nbe made to the Commissioner on the 3rd\nday of September, 1910.\n(j) Give the names and addresses of any\nriparian proprietors or licensees who or\nwhose lands are likely to be affected by\nthe proposed works, either above or below\nthe outlet: Hareourt and Rolph, Dr.\nMajor, W. and H. Haig-Smellle, H. Swain,\nJ. D. Lawson, Dr. Ileadley, D. A. Boyd,\nJ.  P. Bourne.\nNOTE\u2014uiiu cubic foot per second ls equivalent  to 35.71 miners'  Inches.\nH.  J. BOOKHAM,\nProctor, B.C.\nR.  S.  BRBRETON.\nFuneral Director and Embalmer.\nThe best equipped undertaking parlors in\nthe Kootenays, with experienced attendance\navailable at all hours.\nStandard furniture Co.\nNELSON. B.C.\nWe attend to your\nPLUMBING\npromptly and well\nB. C. Plumbing ft Heating Go.\nVictoria Street, near Opera house.\nTelephone 181\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR RENEWAL OF LIQUOR LICENSE\nNotice Is hereby given that I, John Brean,\nof Ymir, B.C., intend to apply to the\nSuperintendent of Provincial Police, at the\nexpiration of one month from the date\nhereof, for a renewal of my retail liquor\nlicense for tho premises known as Cosmopolitan Hotel, situate at Ymlr, B. C.\nJOHN BREAN,\nYmir, B. C.\nDated at Ymlr, 10th August, 1910.\nNOTICE.\nNotice is hereby given that we, the undersigned, Intend, thirty duys after the\ndate hereof, to apply to the Board of\nLicense Commissioners of the city of Nelson for the transfer of the liquor license\nnow held by us for the Manhattan Saloon\nIn the said city to John Svoboda and John\nMlnerlk.\nDated this 2nd day of August, 1910.\nJOHN SVOBODA.\n91-lm. ERIK  O.   NKLSON.\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nMaternity Branch\nPatients are now received at the following rates:\nPrivate ward patients, week....$20.00\nSemi-private ward patients, week 15.00\nAddress applications  to matron at\nhospital.\nCarpet Cleaning\nion PER SQUARE YARD.\nWork called for and delivered promptly.\nClothes ot all kinds cleaned, renovated,\ndyed and repaired.\nGent's Suita Cleaned and Pressed, 75c to\n12; dyed, |3.\nLadies' Skirts Cleaned, 91; Dyed, IS.\nGloves Cleaned, 26c to 60c.\nSpeolal rates for hotels, restaurants and\nsteamers.\nFamily and plain washing; mangling\nwork. 26o dozen; rough dry, 35c dozen.\nNelson Stum Laundry\n601-003  VERNON   BTREET.\nTelephone 146. PAUL NIPOU, Prop.\nNOTICE.\nIn the  matter of nn   application  for tho\nIssue  of a duplicate of  Certiiicate of\nTitle to Lots 6, G, 7, and the Westerly\n6 acres of Lot 4, being part of Lot i',hh).\nGroup 1, Map S3', Kootenay District.\nNotice Is hereby given that it is my intention to Issue at the  expiration of one\nmonth   after  tho  llrst   publication hereof\na duplicate of tho Certificate of Title to\nthe above mentioned lund in the name of\nThomas Hardinge Going, whloh Certiiicate\nis dated the 4th of August, 1999, aud numbered 110S7A.\nSAMUEL R. ROE,\nDistrict Registrar.\nLand Registry Offlco, Nelson, B.C.\nAugust 9, 1010.\nWATER  NOTICE.\nNotice Is hereby given that an application will be made under Part V of the\n\"Water Act, 1909,\" to obtain a license In\nthe Ymir division of Kootenay district.\n(a) The name, address and occupation\nof the nppllcunl: Milton B. Williams,\nrancher,   Fruitvale,   B.C,\n(b) The name of the lake, stream or\nsource (If unnamed, the description Is):\nUnnamed stream rising on Block 294,\nFruitvale.\nd*) The point of diversion: About son\nyards north from S. W. corner of Block\n264, Fruitvale, about 15 feet from west line.\nId) The quantity of water upplied for\n(in  cubic  feet  per second)  .50. |\n(o) The character of the proposed works:\nPipe line.\nIf) The promises on which the water\nin to ho used (describe same): Blocks 1S4\nand 1ST,,  Fruitvale.\n(g) Tho purposes for which the water\nIs to be used: Irrigation and domestic,\nmore probably  for domestic purposes,\n(h) If for irrigation describe tlio land\nIntended to be irrigated, giving acreage:\nBlock 184,  Fruitvale, It) acres.\ntil This notice was posted en tlio 18th\nday of August, 1910, nnd application will\nbe made to the Commissioner on tho\nlat.h day of September, 1910.\n(j) Give tho names and addresses of any\nriparian proprietors or licensees who or\nwhoso lands are likely to be affected by\nthe proposed works, either above or below\nthe outlet:    None.\nNOTE\u2014Ono cubic font per second is equivalent to 35.71 miners'  Inches.\nM.   B.   WILLIAMS,\n19-S-10-13. Fruitvale, B.C.\nTENDERS WANTED\nIn the County Court of West Kootenay,\nHolden at Nelson.\nIn the Matter of the Estate of Minnie\nWilliams, Deceased.\nTenders will be received by the undersigned until noon of the 8th day of September, 1910, for the purchase of the following described property, namely, Lot\n\"H\" of Sub-dlvlsfon of Lot 625, Group 1,\nKootenay district, Map 09311., being In the\ntown of Creston.\nThe highest or any tender not necessarily\naccepted.\nS. P. TUCK.,\nOfficial Administrator.\nAdministering the Estate of Minnie\nWilliams, Deceased.\nDated thla 23rd day of August. 1910.\n108-14\nWATER NOTICE.\nNotice Is hereby given that an application  will be   made   under  Part   V  of  the\n\"Water* Act, 1909,\" to obtain a license in\nthe Ymir division of Kootenay district.\n(a) The name, address and occupation\nof the applicant: Hugh Donnon, Itenata,\nB.C., rancher.\n(b) The name of the lake, stream or\nsource (If unnamed, the description Is;:\nBowman creek, Lower Arrow lake.\n(c) The point of diversion: About 1*\u00a3\nmiles above the mouth of Bowman creek.\n(d) The quantity of water npplled for\n(in cubic feet per second)   Two cubic feet.\n(0) The character of tho proposed works:\nFlume or pipe line.\n(f) The premises on which the water\nIs to be used (describe same): Sub-lots IU\nand IS of Lot 7150.\n(g) The purposes for which the water\nIs to be   used;    Irrigation   and   domestic.\n(h) If for irrigation describe the land\nintended to be Irrigated, giving acreage:\nSub-lot 12 in Lot 7159, 305, 90 acres) sub-lot\n18 in Lot 7159, 154, 84 acres.\n(1) Thts notice was posted on the 16th\nday of August, 1910, and application will\nbe made to the Commissioner on the\n10th dny of September, 1910.\n(J) Give the names and addresses of any\nriparian proprietors or licensees who or\nwhose lands are likely to be affected by\nthe proposed works, either above or below\nthe outlet:    None.\nNOTE\u2014One cubic foot per second Is equivalent to 36.71 miners' Inches,\nHUGH DONNAN,\n19-6-10-30. Renata, B.C.\n r    PAGE FOUR\n%ht Bail;) Jlrtos.\nFRIDAY AUGUST &\n%ht Bail? jletos.\nPttbUihed at Neison Every Morning\nExcept Monday, by\nNew*  Publish!no  Company,  Limited\nIW.   O.  FOSTER Manager\nFRIDAY, AUGUST 26.\nCOMPULSORY    MILITARY   SERVICE\nIN SOUTH AFRICA ANO\nAUSTRALIA.\nIn Australia, ruled by a Labor party\nministry, In New Zealand where state\nsocialism has been further incorporated\ninto legislation than in any other country, In South Africa where a Boer ministry Is In power, compulsory military\ntraining is either Introduced already or\nis about to be Introduced. For this\nthere are good reasons lu each case\napart from genera] considerations that\napply equally In other Countries.\nIn Australia, a small population finds\nItself In possession of a continent. It\nmay have to defend this continent\nagainst Germany or against China or\nJapan, it has no neighboring population of ninety million English speaking\npeople. Xew Zealand Is in the same\nboat.\nSouth Africa has also to face the\npossibility of some naval combination\nthat would enable Germany to land\ntroops and to attempt to win there the\nfield for colonization she desires.\nSouth Africa has thousands of square\nmiles, at present little occupied, which\nare suitable for settlement by the\nwhite race.\nThe oriental peril Is less felt there\nthan In Australia but it exists. In\naddition there is a black population\noutnumbering the white by twenty to\none and including millions of men for\nevery hundred thousand whites. What\nthe future holds out with regard to\nthe relations between these two races\nno one can say. A -scattered, unarmed minority in the midst of a sea of\nsemi-barbarians would occupy a perilous position.\nWILL THE G. T. P. BEAT THE C. N.\nR. TO VANCOUVER?\nWhen the C. N. R. contract was ratified by the legislature of British Columbia, & G. T. P. man remarked that\nhis company would probably win the\nrace to Vancouver despite the contract,\nby reason of the greater resources at\nits disposal.\nFor the C. N. R. to reach Vancouver\nthe construction was necessary of some\nfive hundred miles ln this province and\nsome two hundred miles ln Alberta.\nThe G. T. P. would have to build only\nfrom Fort George In addition to tbe\nmain line already under construction.\nBut now we are toid.that the C. N,\nR. will have Its line into Vancouver a\nyear ahead of contract time: that Ib,\nin 1913. And Collingwood Schreiber\nasserts tbat if the G. T. P. is not allowed to use Oriental tabor lt cannot get\nIts main line finished in 1914.\nIt begins to look as though the C.\nN. R. might be running into Vancouver\nnot only beforv the G, T. P. enters the\nsame city bnt even before the G. T.\nP. Is running through trains Into Prince\nRupert Indeed If the G. T. P. cannot\nfinish its road ln 1914 the C. N. R. may\nbe running transcontinental trains from\nocean to ocean before they are in operation upon the line that once loudly\nannounced its intention to do great\nthings ln the way ot record railway\nconstruction.\nThe G. T. P. will build to Vancouver.\nOf that there is no doubt. But If it\nIs going to fulfill the boast that it will\nget there before the C. N. It. it will\nhave to hurry.\nOIL FOR LOCOMOTIVES IN TIMBER DISTRICTS.\nThe report of the chief fire warden\nfor July Ib an Interesting document,\npartly because of the information given\nSchool Boys and w\u00ab \u00ab\u2022 '***** f\u00b0r \"\u2022\u2022 *\u2022\u2022* with*wry\n_______        '\u25a0_. ___[__   ' complete line ot school supplies   and\nSchool Girls      ^   \u25a0\nWe have secured this year an exceptionally good selection of novelties for sohool use that combine usefulness, convenience   and attrac-\n' tlyeneBS.\nIn the staple lines, such as scribblers, note books, blank drawing\nbooks, drawing instruments, text books, etc, we have all the newest\nthings going\u2014and the best values we can honestly give In all lines.\nThomson's for School  Books and Supplies.\nw. o. Thomson rr.\nNelson, l.C.\nBookseller and Stationer\nand partly because of the suggestion\nmade tbat locomotives running through\nforest districts should be required to\nuse oil for fuel. t\nPossibly this suggestion Ib made because a similar practice is followed in\nthe Adirondacks and elsewhere, during\nthe* season when fires are prevalent or\nare easily started. Conditions here,\nhowever, differ in one important respect.\nIn the Adirondacks and in Southern\nCalifornia, the railways are near\nsources of supply and tbe oil is cheap.\nHere we are at a long distance from\noil wells and pipe lines. Oil piped from\nthe wells ls vastly cheaper than oil that\nhas to be brought in in tanks. Even\nso the latter may be less costly than\nforest fires.\nA still safer method of hauling trains\nthan the use of oil as fuel is the use\nof electricity as a motive power. It\nhas been suggested from time to time\nthat \"the railways ln this part of the\ncountry might find it cheaper to operate with electricity than with steam.\nIf the cost of forest fires started by\nlocomotives be included In the account, the balance would perhaps be\ndecisively In favor of the proposal.\nWhile considering the advisability of\nrequiring engines to use oil, the possibility of the use of electric power as\nan alternative should be considered.\nMeanwhile effective regulations governing the use of coal should be devised\nand enforced,\u2014Buch regulations, for Instance, aB would ensure the use of\nscreens in smoke stacks and the frequent inspection of engines along the\nline by authorized officers.\nTEN YEARS AGO\nExtracts From The  Nelson  Daily Tribune of- Aug 25 1900\nThe Le Rol No. 2 mine at Rohsland\nis now shipping regularly. The mine wil\nship for the first month 35DO tons. Later\nthe output will approximate 10,000 tons\nmomtioly.\nThe Indian motto of the Rocky Mourn-\ntafln Rangers, \"Kloshe Nanttoh,'' has\nbeen Interpreted to mean \"look out\" or\n\"look sharp.\" lt Is a common expression In the Chinook tongue and is generally considered quite apt for a regimental motto. The Rangers is the only\nregiment In the Canadian service to\nhave an Indian, expression on 'the regimental badge.\nDr. Armstrong, the well known Nelson veterinary, has just returned from a\nshooting trip In the vicinity of Say-\nward. While hunting for a spring he\ndiscovered what he at first took U> be\nwater but which on closer examination\nproved to be an oily substance exuding\nfrom the rockB. He secured a sample\nof the ledge and was engaged in gett-\nIng a''little of the oil when he was unexpectedly interrupted by the appearance of a large cinnamon bear who\nJumped the claim and proceeded to\ntake a much more lively lmlereet tn th*\ndoctor Hian that gentleman did dn the\ncoal. From the japeciimens -secured by\nthe doctor in his flight we should say\nthat they would show a high perceniag^\nof coal. Dr. Armstrong, me are told,\nintends to return shortly to the scene\nof the discovery with an. expert and a\nRocky Mountain Gatiing gun: and hopes\nto be able to locate the claim.\nBe sura and take a bottm of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy\nwith you when Btarting on your trip this\nsummer. It cannot be obtained on board\nthe trains or steamers. Changes of water\nand climate often cause sudden attacks of\ndiarrhoea, and it Is best to be prepared.\nSold by all druggists and dealers.\nMinard's Linament Cures Sprains\n\u25a0 \u25a0\nAre You Going to Decorate\nAnd Show Honor to Canada's First Citizen\nSir Wilfrid Laurier\nOf course you are, and to enable you to do so properly we specially\nordered and have received today red, white and blue striped cotton.\nRed Bunting.\nWhite Bunting.\nBlue  Bunting\nGreen Bunting\nPrices right.. Stock limited.   Make your selection at once.\nThe Hudson's Bay Stores\ni>IMHMMMMMIMtMMM<*\u00bb\u00bbM<HH\u00abH\u00abH<M>MMMM\u00ab\u00bb\nt bought a horse with a supposedly incurable ringbone for 130. Cured him with\n11.00 worth of MINARD'S LINIMENT and\nsold him for J8&.00. Profit on Liniment, $54.\nMOI8E DEROSCE.\nHotel Keeper, St. Phillipe. Que.\nPRINCESSES WHO\nNEVER MARRY\nLeopold's Daughter   Waited   Long for\nLouis Bonaparte\u2014Victoria\nRemained Single.\nPrincess Clementine of .Belgium, who is\nnow at the Moncarliere palace, near Turin,\npreparing for her marriage with Prince\nLouts Bonaparte, has waited long lor this\nday. Just what -reasons her father, the\nlate King Leopold of Belgium, may have\nhad for refusing his consent to a marriage\nthat was in every way appropriate and\neven desirable, were never known to Uie\nworld.\nWanted High Life.\nThere was so little reasonableness In his\nobstinacy that many take refuge in the explanation so frequently heard In his lifetime that he enjoyed too much his freedom in Paris, which was the result of his\ngood understanding with the Republican\nauthorities, to jeopardize that by any\nunion with the Bonnpartes.\nif he were --waiting from the Princess\nClementine the same sort of conduct shown\nhim by his other daughters, he was mistaken. She remained faithful to her lover,\nbut obedient to her father. She made none\nof the scandals connected with her other\nsisters and awaited her father's death to\ncarry into effect the wishes so long delayed.\nReasons of State.\n. Princess Victoria, sister of .the present\nKing .of Enj-lond, Is another royal princess who has never married. Prince Napoleon, son of the Emperor of France and\nthe unfortunate Empress Eugenie, lived in\n\u2022his youth near the premises. They Jell in\nlove. Both mothers were In favor of the\nmatch, nnd even Queen Victoria's sympathy was won for the scheme.  -\nBut there were reasons of state why the\nmarriage should not take place. The\nPrince Napoleon was a refugee from\nFrance, He was, like his parents, in banishment. In spite of the strong support\nof his suit, It was decided that the marriage could not take place. Germany could\nnot be made distrustful of England's loyalty by such a union.\nIn the disappointment of the refusal.\nPrince Napoleon demanded that he be allowed to go at once into the world. Me\nwent to South Africa and fell before the\nassegais of the Zulus.\nRosebery  Next.\nThe Princess Victoria put on mourning\nJust as if she were a widow and spent\nmuch of her time with the Empress\nEugene. Then, after a while, she came to\n,be friendly with Rosebery, who attracted\nJut Intellect rather than her heart,\nIt appeared after a time, that this match\nmlpht be suitable, and the princess was\nnot averse to It Her father, then Prince\njot Wales, favored the union and Queen\nVictoria wns not averse to It; but here the\npresent queen mother intervened.\nShe refused to allow such a mesalliance\nwith a commoner.   Her will prevailed and\na  second  time the  Princess  Victoria saw\nJier marriage set aside for reasons of state.\nA Balkan Romance.\nThe romance of the third unmarried\nprincess has all the color of the Balkan\nregion from which she springs. This is\nthe Princess Xenia of Montenegro, the\nsister  of the present queen  of  Italy.\nHer romance is mixed up with the gypsies, the fortune tellers of the old world\nland In which she dwells. Once a blind\nprophet seized her hand, went into an\necxtacy and foretold her fate.\n\"That is the hand of a princess,\" he Is\nsaid to have told the young woman who\nnnd given him no hit of her identity.\n\"Listen well to me, for although I am\n.blind, I can see a crown In the air. A\nman brings It to you, nnd I can see that\nbe Is laying It at your feet, but do not\n.touch it. 1 can see blood there on it. Do\njiot touch it.\"\nFulfillment.\n\"Wait, I see a second crown. It is glorious and brilliant. It gleams as none other\nJn the world. That Is coming to you, too.\n.Walt for It.   It is pure, It is radiant,\"\nThe first suitor for the hand of the Prin-\nceta Xenla wns Alexander of Servla. The\npeople of the country were opposed to him,\nso was the Princess Nicholas, and above\nall the Princess Xenia would have none ot\nhim. So he went back to Servla, married\n.Draga, and met his fate. That seemed tne\nfulfillment of the first part of the blind\njirophefrl warning. So Princess Xenia 18\nawaiting the king with the shining crown.\nMETHODISM AND\nCHURCH UNION\n(Continued  from   Page   One.)\nchurch which was essentfiUty a church\nof the masses.\nWhen the discuss'on was adjourned\ntho Rev. Dr. J, Cooper Had the lloor.\nAT THE THEATRES\nOne of the best theatrical events of the\nseason will be -The Burgomaster,\" which\ncomes to the opera house next Thursday\nheaded by that clever comedian, Gus C.\nWeinburgj tho original Peter Stuyvesant,\nmayor ot New Amsterdam. It ls a well\nknown fact that the music of \"The Burgomaster\" Ib far superior to any of Plxley\nand Luder*s other musical events. One\nmillion copies of the \"Tall of the Kangaroo\" were sold the first season It waa\nproduced.\nAn entire change of pictures will be\nshown at the Gem tonight, the feature\nsubject of which Is a beautiful Bfograph\ndrama entitled, \"The Bread of Westing.\"\nThe other pictures which will be shown\nare as follows: \"The Cannon Enemy,\"\n\"Love Drops,\" and \"His First Valentine.\"\nA splendid program Is billed at the\nEmpire theatre thts evening and includes\na most Interesting film, \"The Mystery of\nTemple Court.\" Other subjects are, \"The\nWreath,\" \"Physical Culture,\" and a beautiful tceate picture, \"The Storm.\"\nKOOTENAY ORES\nWIN MOST PRIZES\n(Continued from  Page One.)\nthe Afibestol claim at Poplar was one\nof the biggest attractions ln the mineral department of the exhibition. People were so interested ln the ore that\na great part of It became broken up\nand scattered about the place.\nZinc and Copper\n.   The   showing of zinc ores by   the\nLucky Jim -mine at Kaslo was also -*he\nmeans of attracting .auch attention.\nAiraong the copper ores the specimens from the Eureka mine on Eagle\ncreek were by far -the best. Prom this\nproperty both sulphide and carbonate\nores were exhibited.\nWill Attract Capital\n\"We had,\" said Mr. Widdowson,\n\"such a great number ot enquiries from\nmining men and the general public concerning the samples1 exhibited and the\niproperties from which they came and\nthe exhibit cannot fail to result tn the\nbringing in of a great deal of new capital to this part of-the country. The\nexhibit as a whole was, I was told by\na number of people the best ever seen\ntn Vancouver. Us only serious competitor wts the Portland Canal district,\nthe exhibit from which was confined almost entirely to galena ores with a few\nspecimens of copper. As I mentioned\n'before the Nelson exhibit carried off\nevery prize with the exception of that\nwon by the Portland Canal \"people.\nNe'son Missed Chance\n\"As for the fair generally, it was a\ngreat success. It occurred to me, how-\nerfer, that Nelson would have done\nvery well to have seat an apple exhibit as the pomologlcal display at the\nexhibition was very poor. Only some\n20 feet vrere taken up by the fruit display. Flowers were shown In abundance and far exceeded in beauty anything I have yet seen at Nelson.'\nThe -main part of the Nelson exhibit\nsent to Vancouver was left on display\nat the Vancouver mining exchange and\na portion of it was sent to the Dominion\nmining exchange on Hastings street. A\npart of each specimen of the board of\ntirade exhibit which carried off the silver cup, was presented to the Vancouver museum the directors of which\nhave made arrangements to give it pro-\nmlnence In the (mining section and have\nordered special tables for it.\nMr. Widdowson speaks in the highest\nterms of the courteous and thoughtful\nmanner In which he and Mr. Burnham\nwere treated by the management of the\nexhibition and states that J. J. Miller,\npresident, James Roy, trjjiager, together with the directors of the exhibition, afforded them every assistance\npossible ln arranging the display. The\njudge ln the mineral section was Prof.\nH. Odium, a well known mineralogist.\nMAN ROCKEFELLER\nFEARS THE MOST\nEnglish Capitalist Has Given Standard\nOH Something to Think About\nin Mexico.\nOne of the most tremendous financial\nilghts of recent years is now being waged\nover the control of Mexican oil between\nSir Weetman Pearson (lately created LonX\nCowdray) and Mr. Henry Clay Pierce, of\nthe Waters-Pierce Oil company, a company\nihat Is under the control of Rockefellers\nStandard Oil TruBt. . ,    ,:,\nSpeoial interest has been aroused in the\nfight owing to \"ihe extraordinary tactics\nof the Rockefellers during l*>rd Cowdray's\nrecent visit to New York.\nNo Booner had he arrived than his hotel\nwas surrounded by seven detectives, who\n.watched every exit night and day. As soon\nas Lord Cowdray appeared' outulde, two\nof the detectives started in pursuit, whilst\nanother whipped out a notebook, noted the\ntime and other details of his departure,\nand then rushed off to the telephone.\nIf Lord Cowdray spoke to any one or\nhad guests at luncheon or dinner, their\nnames and the hour of their arrive! and\ndeparture were carefully noted, and every\nnight a long telegram In code\u2014presumably\na narrative of his lordship's doings\u2014was\ndespatched to Mr. Piore in Mexico.\nHow tho Trouble Started.\nSome of the American newspapers got\nquite excited about the affair, and published long articles on the movements of the\ndetectives; Lord Cowdray, however, refused to make any alteration in plans, and\n.when someone asked him if he was annoyed, he replied calmly: \"It ia best not to\nspeak of things of that sort.\"\nThe great fight may be said to nave\ncommenced only within the last year or\ntwo, but of course the foundation of all\nthe troitble began when the great Urltish\ncontractor commenced to take a special\ninterest in Mexican affairs.\nHe has long been convinced that Mexico\nIs the country of tho future, and the\n.financial value of the contracts he has\nundertaken there is a staggering record\nof millions.\nAmong them are the drainage ayBtem ot\nthe Valley of Mexico; the Vera Cruz port\nworks, which gave MexIco\"s chief port a\nsafe and commodious harbor Instead of an\nopen and dangerous roadstead; The Te-\n\"hauntepec railway, together' with the port\nworks at the terminal of -the railway at\nPuerto Mexico and Sallna Crus; the drainage of the city of Vera Crus and the building of its water works system; and many\nother Imposing public works.\nSo far, of course, the Rockefeller companies found little or no fault with the\noperations of the British contractor. All\nthey wanted was to have the monopoly of\nthe Bupply of oil in Mexico*\nWhen,   however,   the J-'ngllshman   com-\nThe Man\nWho Wires\nYour House\nfor electricity piacea at '\/our command a hundred comforta and conveniences.\nTHLL US TO SEND HTM\nIf you are inclined to delay Jasteoms\nand see how the wiring* will enable\nyou to do almost anything from curl-\nluff milady's hair to doing all the\nspring   housecleanlng,    That should\ndecide you if you live in this an.\nfc   P. MANHART.\nsH.\n****************************\nNelson, B.C.\nAug. 27-30\nVisit of\nSir\nWilfrid\nLaurier\nPremier of Canada\nThe Canadian Pacific\nand Great Northern Railway Companies will issue\nRound Trip Tickets\nat Faiv and One\nThird\nFrom all points in the\nKotenays. Good going\nto Nelson Aug. 26 to 29,\ngood returning Aug. ,29\nto 31.\nFor further particulars\napply to C.P.R. local\nagent.\nmenced acquiring oil fields and building\n.rellneries, Mr. Pierce and Mr. Rockefeller\n\u2022began to feel nervous. They bombarded\nLord Cowdray with telegrams urging bim\nto join forces with them, but this .Lord\nCowdray refused to do.\nA War Cheat of Millions.\nThen began the tremendous struggle that\nIs still proceeding. The American out of\nthe former, gigantic profits had accumulated a war chest running-Into millions.\nMr. Pierce's net profits In Mexico during\nthe period of his monopoly were nearly\n\u00a52,099,909 a year. Lord Cowdray has now\nannexed 60 per cent of the Mexican business, and lie .has in his employ about\nevery member of the Pierce company\nwhom he thought It worth hia while to\ntake over.\nA strenuous campaign was conducted,\ntoo, in the press, and a \"literary bureau\"\nsupplied articles and pamphlets \"slating\"\nLord Cowdray and his works.\n(Lord Cowdray, on tbe other hand, took\nas his motto: \"Say nothing but saw wood,\"\nand when somebody pressed him for Information about the great fight, he replied\n-rather tartly: \"I new talk air-out ray\n.business, talking Is a sign of weakness.\"\nWhich was a beautiful smack at the Rockefeller chatterers.\nLord Cowdray Ib another of those tremendously quiet and Irresistible forces\nwho bave been called, \"Men about whom\nthere are no stories,\" But there comes to\nmind a little incident connected with one\nof his greatest works.\nThe {Mexican government arranged a contract with him for a protecting breakwater and harbor at Vera Curs, where the\ndamage done by storms had for years been\nIncalculable. The contract price waa about\n\u25a0five millions sterling, and lt took Ave yean-\nto complete.\nSoon after its completion the great contractor happened to visit Vera Curs wltn\na party of friends, A tremendous storm\nwas raging. Outside terrific seas were\nsending volumes of Bpray over the newly\niconstructed note. . The waves roared and\ncrashed and the wind1 was a cyclone. But\nInside the harbor all was still, aud craft\nof every nationality and sice were lying\nplacidly at anchor.\nLord Cowdray left the others and stood\nalone for some time on the great wall.\nWhen he returned he said with an air of\ncomplete satisfaction: \"This ls the proudest moment of my life. It may be conceit,\nibut I honestly feel that It I had to begin\nthat work again from the .vary beginning\n\u2022I would not alter the position of a single\nstone.\" \u2022\u00ab\u2022 j .,   j*,\nIn bujdna a cough medicine, don't be\nafraid to get Chamberlain's Cough Remedy.\nThere is no danger from It, and relief Is\nsure to follow. Especially recommended)\nfor coughs, oolds and whooping cough.\nSold by all druggists and dealers.\nImperial Bank of Canada\nHEAO OFFICE: TORONTO\nCapital Authorized 110,000,000\nCapital Subscribed I 6,675,000\nCapital Paid Up 15,330,000      Reserve Fund 15,330\/100\nD. R. WILKIE, President   HON. ROBERT JAFFRAY, Vice-President\nBRANCHES IN BRITISH COLUMBIA:\nArrowhead, Chaee, Cranbrook, Fernie, Golden, Kamloops, Michel, New\nMichel, Moyie, Neleon, Revelstoke, Vancouver   and   Victoria.\nSAVINS3 DEPARTMENT\nInterest allowed on deposits at current rate from date of deposit.\nNELSON BRANCH J. M. LAY, Manager\nCanadian Bank of Commerce\nPAID UP CAPITAL,...110,000,000       RESERVE  96,000,000\nDRAFTS ON   FOREIGN  COUNTRIES\nArrangement* have recently heen   completed,   under   whloh   the\nbranches ot this bank are able to tuue Drafts on the principal points\nIn the following countries:\nFinland > Ireland\nFormosa Italy\nFrance  \u25ba\" I Japan\nFr'ch Cochin-China Java\nAutria-Hungary\nBelgium\nBrazil\nCeylon\nChina\nCrete\nDenmark\nEgypt\nFaroe Islands\nNo Delay In Issuing,\nNELSON BRANCH\nGermany\nGreat Britain\nGreece\nHolland\nIceland\nIndia\nRussia\nServla\nSlam\nSouth Africa\nManchuria Straits Settlement\nMexico Sweden\nNorway Switzerland\nPersia Turkey\nPhilllpine Islands    west Indies\nRoumanla and elsewhere.\nFull Particulars on Application\nJ. L. BUCHAN, Manager\nBANK Of MONTREAL\nEstablished .817\nCapital All Paid Up... .$14,400,000        Reet    \u00bb12,000,000\nHEAD OFFICE: MONTREAL\nRt Hon, Lord Strathcona and M ount Royal, Q.C.M.G., Hon. President.\nR. B. Angus, President\nSir Edward S. Clsuaton, Bart., Vice-President and Gen. Manager.\n' BRANCHES IN BRITISH COLUMBIA:\nArmstrong, Chilliwack, Clove rdale, Enderby, Greenwood, Hosmer,\nKelowna, Merritt, Neleon, New Denver, Nicola, New .Westminster, .Pentlcton, Prince Rupert, Rossland, 8 Jmmerland, Vancouver, Vernon, Victoria\nNELSON BRANCH L. B. DEVEBER, Manager   '. '\nThe Royal Bank of Canada\nIncorporated 1859\nCapital Paid,Up   ....... 5,000,000\nReserve and Undivided Preflte    5,028,000\nTotal Assets  07,000,000\nHEAD OFFICE: MONTREAL\nH. 8. HOLT, President. E. L. PEASE, Vice-President and Cen. Manager\nOne hundred and fifteen Branches In Canada and Newfoundland.\nEleven Agencies ln Cuba; Nassau, Bahamas; San Juan, Porto Rico;\nNew York City, 68 William Btreet\nBusiness accounts carried upon favorable term.. Savings department\nat all branches.   Correspondence solicited.\nNELSON BRANCH A. B. NETHERBY, Manager.\nCLEANING AND PRESSING\nSuits Called for and Delivered\nA. J. DRISCOLL\nPN.w MS\u2014Baker street, opposite ths\na*'jr'JrrrMlirj)i#M t\u00a3\nI Sterling Silver Novelties I\ng We have a neat, up-to-date assortment in the sterling silver novelty\n*\u20ac line. Cigar and cigarette cases from $5 to $15, match boxes and stamp\njf boxes from $1.50 to $4, cigar cutters from $1 to $2, manicure and em-\nj|   broidery scissors from $1.25 to $3, pencils from $1.50 to $3, all kinds\nfinoividual manicure pieces from 50c to $150, emory bags with sterling\ntops 25c, thimbles from 25c to $1.\nA Word About the Eyes\nDo not delay if your eyes need attention, and consult me at once,\nas you cannot afford to trifle with your eyes. I come in contact with\npeople who have to use powerful magnifying glasses to read with.\nWhat is the cause of that? It is pure and simple negligence. Are you\nin a position to neglect your eyes the same way P Are you satisfied tn\nlet your eyes get to such a state that nothing can be done for them ?\nOr are you going to have your eyes properly attended to, so as to preserve them the same way as you would preserve any other part of your\nbody ?   Don't wait, but do it now.\nFine watch repairing our specialty; Mail orders receive our prompt\nattention.\nJ. J. Walker.> \u25a0\u25a0*** *\nGraduate Optician aad Jeweler\n FRIDAY  AUGUST M\n%ht Bail*? j|rtM,\nPAGE FIVE\nHOTEL AkRIVALSOFAUAY\nThe Hume\ni*************************-\nHUME-Mrs. and Mrs. B. J. W\u00ab5\u00ab\"!'\n?.  A   A   BtonEdBon, W. Dunn,   R. A.\n\u00a9h^ftSte^?a\n5HTS; w A. BurgeSB, WinnlPMl \u25a0>\u2022<\"\ngi^GolLf\u2022l.TAj (Davidson 1'ggnt.i\nw H. Sawyer, Montreal: C. M. rf\u00abe\"-\nMoscow; Lillian Boyd, Anaconda; J. W.\nConnors, Golden.\nSTHAHKOONA-R. W. Southern, Mr.\n\u2022and Mrs. McLean Fraser, city; J. Daly, u\nA. Campbell, Spokane; A. H. Kelly, city;\nH. R. Norden, Hedley; W. B. Harris,\nVancouver; J. Solner, Austin; Mrs. *\\\nToreson, Marcus; Mr. and Mrs. Hayter,\nRead, John A. Wood, Montreal; Mrs. w.\nRaleigh Kerr, Black Lake; Mlsa H. Ard\nMaokenale, Ottawa; Mr. and Mrs, J, w.\nAnderson, Lindsay.\n>**********4************t*e\nQueen's Hotel\nBaker Street\nA. LAPOINTE, Proprietor\n.Rates: |1.M to 12.00 per day.\nHeal Tickets, $7.00 per week.\nBusiness men's loach, 860.\nI >*************************f\nQUEENS\u2014R. Langford, Kootenay Bay;\nA. Clark, Ymir; T. Corklll, Salmo; T.\nWheatley, Spokane; J. Wilson, Greenwood\nB. Maine, H. Lepp, J. Birmont, Saskatchewan; T. Abriel, Nakusp; R. Westgate,\nVancouver.\n**,**********************', ,\nMadden House\nThos. Madden, Prop.. Baker St.\nWell tarnished rooms with bath\nBest Board ts the City .\nA Comfortable Home\nI *******f *******************\nMADDEN-JD. O'Nell, Slocan; W. Heason\nSaskatoon; W. Soales, Trail; R. Walton,\nProctor; M. Byrne, Bayonne mine.\n*********************,****;\n11\nTremont House\nBaker St, Nelson.\nMalone oV Treglllus, Prop.\nEuropean Plan, 60c. up ..\nAmerican Flan, $1.25 and $1.60\nHeals, ISO.\nSpecial Ratea per Month.\n**************************.. ,\nTHBHONT-A.  KenaM,  Koch;  R.  McMillan, J, Terry, Sandon; A. Purdy,Crawford Bay; J. Tralnor, D. Currle, olty; J.\nBourget, Silverton; J. Halifax, Calgary.\n2************************** \u2022\nThe Klondyke Hotel i I\nVernon 8treet , \\\n1 *\nHeadquarters for miners, smel-   \\ \\\ntermen, loggers, railroad men. . <,\nRates: $1.00 per day up.       ])\nNEL80N **% JOHNSON, Props.   '*\nKILONDYKB\u2014F. Drenletrla, C. Antolnl,\nCastlegar; T. Parson, Ymlr; S. Manson,\nD. Bird, F. Muntuek, Cranbrook.\n***************************l\nGrand Central Hotel\nOPP08ITE POSTOFFICE\n;     American and European .Flans.   \\ '\n*>. A, ERICKSON\n0*********I *tl************* *\nGRAND CENTRAL- Q. Bashury, A.\nCollins, A. Shepard, Idaho; P. Johnson,\nKaBlo; A. Donate, Molly Gibson: 1. McLeod. Molly Gibson; G. Sherld, Crawford\nBay; C. Roberts, Sheep creek; J. McLeod,\nSalmo; F. Lucas, Needles; W, Calder,\nG. Davis, Edgewood; P. Frounce, city.\nS \u2014\u25a0\u2014\nNelson Cafe\nLarge and Commodious Dining\n, Room\nPrompt and Courteous Service.\nMeals Served at all Hour.\nElegantly furnished rooms In\nconnection; $1 . day and up\nA. AUDIT, Proprietor\nBest on the\nContinent\nTbat Is what authorities say\nregarding the medicinal qualities of the waters at Halcyon\nHot Springs.\nTho Sanitarium Is now under\nnew management and baa been\nremodelled from top to 'bottom\nand now offers \u00a9very facility\nfor tho comfort and convenience of patrons.\nRates $12 and $15 per week\nor $2 per day and upwards.\nHALCYON HOT SPRINGS\nSANITARIUM\nWM. BOYD. Proprietor\nHalcyon, Arrow Lakes,  B. C.\nFrancisco; D. Lean, city; P. Guseppe, Lt,\nGrier, B. Grler, Grand Forks; J. Lewis,\nF. (Smith, J. Dow, D. Wilson, Marcus.\nUfrcvicw Hotel   j\nCorner Halt and Vernon Streets\nB. L. GRIFFITH, Prop.\nTwo blocks from city wharf.\n. The best dollar a day bouse ln\n\\ ,     Nelson.\nAll White Help\n\u2666\u2666\u2666\u00bbM\u00ab*M\u00bb*\u00bb**\u00ab*\u00bbt\u00bbMM\u00ab*\u00bb*>\nNBU30N-F. Tlrik, Vancouver: W. Bom,\nPhoenix; J. Falrfacts, F. Fall-facts, San\n4**************** *********.$\nLAKBVB2W-^I. Conway, H. Flldge,\nMacleod.\nSHEBBROOKiEJ-J. Wilson, H. O'Nell,\nM. Uatlynyk, city; J. Patterson, H. Lang-\nley, Ainsworth; A. Wolossyon, Fernie; W.\nWoiszeurckt, O. Mottryusz, Fernie.\nCLUB-J. Lewis, W. Atornzl, Grand\nForks; D. Smith, Koch; C. Schwartz,\nGrand Forks; G. King, city.\nTREMONT-J. Hickey, Bayonne; C.Barrett, J, Olson, Eholt; J. Gustafson, Revelstoke.\nBARTLETT-^D. Wilson, J. Moffctt, J.\nRyan, Salmo; F. Miller, Silverton.\nSILVER KLNG-J. Turner, T. Hughes,\nC. BoBtock, W. Jones.\nROYAL-H. Svoboda, J. Ferguson, w,\nFerguson, c. Grizzelle, city.\nKOOTENAY-A. Gabriel, J. Gordon,\nSpokane,\nSPORTING NEWS\nHundred in Nine Seconds\nNEW LONDON, Oonn., Aug. 25\u2014Representative Williams of Berkley school,\nNerw York, covered 100 yards Jn 9 seconds flat yesterday in an exhibition at\nNyantic according to time -reports.\nMiners Win\nLKTHBRIDGE, Aug. 25\u2014<The MJnerB\ntook the first game of the concluding\naeries here this evening, score 3-4. The\ngjaime was featureless other than a\ndouble play unassisted iby Mackin in the\n7th, which, spoiled the chances of the\nBerry Pickers.\n' Calgary Wins from Edmonton\nCALGARY. Aug. 25\u2014Stanrldge twon the\ngame for Calgary tonight In.the first\nof the series against Edmonton by a\nscore of 7-2. Dollar, Edmonton's crack\ntwirler, was batted out of the box ln tbe\nfirst, allowing six runs on six runs and\ntwo passes. Houston was put In the\nbox in tbe second and finished the\ngame. Smith and Stanrldge beat out\nhome runs and Stanrldge also lined a\nthree bagger. Edmonton put over two\nIn the seventh but could squeeze In no\nmore. Stanrldge held them down to\nseven bits. The game was errorless except for a wild pitch, by Houston In the\nseventh which allowed Kellackey to\ntake second. Great Interest was taken\nin the game; 500 fang were present.\nCRANBROOK TO\nKOOTENAY BAY\nGreat Northern Surveyors Looking for\nNew Route\u2014Road Completed to\nPilot Bay.\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nKOOTENAY BAT, Aug. 26.-The new\ngovernment road between Kootenay Bay\nand Pilot Bay has been completed as far\naa French Bay and continued as a trail\nto Parker & Co.'s farm. The work reflects\nhigh credit on Mr. Luther, foreman of the\nconstruction gang. It Is expected that the\nroad will be widened to road dimensions\nthis fall, and continued to Pilot Bay. Next\nseason the northern extension to Bluebell\nIs anticipated. The*, entire road, some\neight or nine miles, will, when completed,\nbe one of the most picturesque and charm-\ning lake shore drives In America.\nNew Route.\nReport comes from Crawford Bay that\na party of Great Northern surveyors are\nout endeavoring to find a feasible route\nover \"the divide\" for a railway from\nCranbrook or Marysville to Kootenay Bay.\nIf sucli can be found It will reduce the\n'distance between Cranbrook and Nelson\nsome 70 or 8\u00bb mileB as compared with the\npresent Kootenay Landing route.\nIn spite of the unuBually dry season\nyoung orchards are looking well, Mr.\nLangford has a two-year-old peach tree\nwith eight beautiful red ripe peaohes hanging on Its slender stem. Peaches should\ndo well here because of practical Immunity from late spring and early fall frosts,\ndue to the proximity of so large a body\nof water. Lake front lands appear to be\nspecially favored tn this respect.\nT. H, Langton Is justly proud of his\nfine new motor launch that he constructed\na short time ag*o.\nErie Baker, one of Nelson's Boy Scouts,\nis spending his holidays with his parents\nat Wensleydale Ranch.\nGeorge Noyce, Jr., of Winnipeg, Is visiting his father, George Noyes, our respected\npostmaster. He and Mr. Langton spent a\ncouple of days on an expedition to the\nglacier at the head of Coffee creek. They\nreport ah abundance and great variety or\nwild fruit and flowers right up to the line\nof perpetual snow, and the glacier Itself,\nwith Its clear blue ice, a most beautiful\nsight. '\nMr. Langford leaves tomorrow for Grand\nForks to harvest his fruit crop. He estimates from ^000 to 2,6000 IfflXes of fruit on\nhis 10-acre orchard. Mrs. Langford so-\nDompanlM him.\nDOUBT EXPRESSED\nAS TO LIGHTING\nArrangements Not Complete for Illuminating Streets for Laurier Reception\u2014Big Display of Fireworks.\nA number of men belonging to the\ncity light department were at work\nyesterday upon the Illuminated signs\not welcome which are to greet Sir Wilfrid Laurler as he is driven up Baker\nstreet tomorrow night and were practically completed by nightfall.\nWhat About Ward Street?\nDoubt was expressed yesterday as to\nwhat the reception committee Intend to\ndo towards Illuminating Ward and Silica Btreets along which the premier\nwill be driven to L. B. DeVeber's residence at the corner ot Carbonate and\nHendryx streets. Neither has anything yet been done to light up Stanley\nstreet, which will be on the line of\nroute to the rink for the speech which\nSir Wilfrid is to deliver on Monday\nnight. Nor does it appear that the arrangements for illuminating Baker\nstreet are at all adequate,\nFtreworkks Galore,\nFrank Walsh, \u00abVho has been arranging for the fireworks display, stated\nyesterday that a number of rockets and\nsome ao candle crackers would be Bet\noff on the C. P. R. flats directly the\ntrain, carrying visiting party, reaches\na point about a mile from the depot.\nThe Liberal reception committee who\nmeet the premier at Robson will call\nhis attention to these and a few moments later Sir Wilfrid will reach Nelson and will be greeted with the\nsounds of church bells pealing out a\nwelcome, the strains of the city band,\nmore fireworks and a reception committee composed of the mayor, the\npresident of the board of trade and\nother citizens.\nLarge red Roman candles will be\nset off at points along Baker, Ward and\nSilica streets aB the premier's carriage\nIs driven uptown. There will also be\na fireworks .display when Sir Wilfrid\nleaves on Tuesday morning. Sergt.\niMarkham of the R. M. R. will be in\ncharge of thiB part of the program.\nThe streets outside the Hume hotel\nwere yeBterday decorated by a number\nof shrubs being placed on the sidewalk\nIn readtnesB for the reception of tbe\nmany visitors expected in town tomorrow, Sunday and Monday.\nTHREE MONTHS'TRIP\nIN THE NORTHLAND\nFrank   Oliver's   Five   Thousand   Mile\nTrip In Country North of\nEdmonton,\nLike a tale of tha old days of the Hudson's Bay company In the far northern\nwilds of Canada, reads the story of the\ntrip recently undertaken and successfully\ncarried out by Hon. Frank Oliver, the\nminister of the interior, who, some three\nmonths ago, at Edmonton, Alta., packed\na few belongings and set out, accompanied\nonly toy his secretary, Mr. Forbes, to follow the trail made famous by the poems\nof Service for a distance of 5,000 miles.\nSitting in his office, Mr. Oliver kindly\nagreed to recount his experiences, and\ngave In detail the story of his travels with\nenlightening comment upon the characteristics of the rugged country uirough which\nhe paused.\n\"I wanted to see lt for myself,\" is the\nsentence which gave one the best Idea of\nthe minister's Idea in going so far out of\n(he beaten track. \"I had read much of\nthiB north country and I had talked with\nmany men about it\u2014but I wanted to sea\nit for myself.\n\"Settlers are pouring into the western\nprairies.\" continued the minister, \"and the\nquestion arises: 'What has'Canada to offer the world after the prairies have been\ntilled up?' I'\nTo find out what Canada has to offer\nfurther north, and to establish ln his own\nmind at least Just what distance from-the\npresent places of settlement the1 frigid\nblasts of Arctic wind gave warning\nthat further progress must not be made,\nthis practical statesman set out upon his\nlong journey, travelling on rough wagons,\nover rougher roads, shooting the rapids of\nthe swift streams in a frail canoe, at times\ntaking advantage of the better accommodation and speed offered by the river steam\nboats, and again learning the true westerners experience and \"hitting the trail\"\non foot,\nIn Arctic Circle.\nInside the Arctic circle, TOO miles or\nwhich country the minister covered, the\ncustom Is to sleep during the hours of extreme heat and to work only at \"night,\"\nas that time of day Is called when the\nsun falls somewhat of Its nercenesfl. Ntgm\nproper was not experienced by the wanuer-\ners after they had crossed the Arctic 'circle. ,\n\"I have never felt the heat Stronger than\nwhen on the portage crossing the Hocky\nmountains,\" said Mr. Oliver. \"We slept\nln tents, which, of course, made it warmer. On this portage and on the upper\nPorcupine river we were bothered somewhat by mosquitoes, but they were not\nso bad this summer as they have been.\n\"All the way from (Edmonton to Fort\nMacpherson the country, along the rivers\nat least. Is level and forested. There is\nno prairie. On the upper part or the\nAthabasca river the banks are from 100 to\n200 feet In length, and the country Is well\nwooded. There ls a considerable amount\nof spruce of good size, but the timber is\nchiefly poplar. The country had \u25a0 at one\ntime been altogether under spruce,\nbut fires have wrought havoc in It. The\nexplanation of these fires is that all freight\nfor the north country goes down the\nAthabasca river and the men who steer the\nscows down river walk back along the\nbanks. They are careless with their camp\n(Ires and the result is a continual danger\n.of further destruction by Are. Along the\nriver where the banks are high the soil\nand climate conditions are perfectly good\nfor agriculture. So far as Port McMurray,\nconditions are entirely good for agriculture, judging from what I saw myself and\nfrom what people told me,\"\nBASEBALL GAMES\n'    National League\nWan Lost P.c\nChicago    76     35     .684\nPittsburg  66    43    .605\nNew York  62     47     .568\nPhiladelphia 67    54    .513\nCincinnati   66    58    .491\nSt Louis   45     69     .394\nBrooklyn    44     68     .392\nBoston      42     74     .362\nAt Pittsburg\u2014Pittsburg 4, Brooklyn\n3; Leifield, Phillips and Gibson; Bell\nand Bergen..\nAt Chicago\u2014Chicago 6 New York 1;\nCole and Kling; Wiltse,' Crandall and\nMyers. ...\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nAt fit. Louis\u2014St. Loul\u00bb 1, Boston 2;\nWillis, Harmon and Bresnahan;  Mat-\ntern and Ralrddn.\nAt Cincinnati\u2014Cincinnati 2, Philadelphia 7; Suggs, Benton and McLean;\nMoren and Dooin.\nAmerican Leio'is\nWon Lost P.C.\nPhiladelphia  79    35    .692\nBoston   .-  68     48     .586\nNew York 66     50     .568\nDetroit     65     51     .560\nCleveland     50    64    .438\nWashington     51     66     .435\nChicago     45     68     .398\nSt. Louis   35     77     .312\nAt Boston\u2014Cleveland 4, Boston 7;\nMitchell, Harkne&g and Landsmith\nWood, Klelnow and Carrlgan.\n\u2022 At Washington\u2014Washington 2, Detroit 3; Groom, and Fmlth, Works and\nCasey.\nAt New York\u2014Chicago 4, New York\n8; Lang, Scott and Sullivan; Hughes\nand Crlger.\nAt Philadelphia\u2014St. Louis 9. Philadelphia 6; Llnke. Bailey and Stephens;\nPlank, Morgan, Dygert, Atkins and\nThomas.\nNorthwestern League\nWon Lost P.C.\nSpokane  77     51     ,601\nVancouver     70     58     .551\nTacoma    62     G4     .492\nSeattle    45     SI     .357\nAt Vancouver\u2014JTaeoma 4,  Vancouver 6.\nAt Spokane\u2014Spokane 7, Seattle 3.\nEae-ern   League\n.   Newark 5, Montreal 2,\nProvidence 0, Rochester 9.\nBaltimore 5, Buffalo 2.\nJersey-City 5, Toronto 3.\nTwilight League\nCalgary 7, Edmonton 2.\nSaskatoon 3, Lethbrldge 4.\nWinnipeg 7, Brandon 3.\t\n\"\"\" WATER NOTICE.\nNotice Is hereby given that an application will be made under Part V. of the\n\"Water Act, 1909,\" to obtain a license in\nthe Nelson division    of   West  Kootenay\n(a) The name, address and occupation\nof the applicant: R. Bourke, Kokanee P.O.,\nfruit rancher.\n(b) The name'of the lake, stream or\nsource: Unnamed stream Intersecting west\nline of Lot 1. Block A., Subdivision of\n4216B., I.W., Kootenay.\n\u25a0 (o) The point of diversion: At the above\n(d)' The quantity of water, applied for:\nOne cubic foot per second.\n(e) The character of the proposed worKs:\nDitch, dam, flume,\n(f) The premises on which the water is\nto be used: Lot 1 of Block A., Subdivision\nof 4218 G.I., West Kootenay.\n(g) The purposes for which the water Is\nto be used:   Irrigation. ~ \u2022.   '\".'\u00ab\u00ab\n<h) If for irrigation describe the land Intended to be irrigated, giving acreage: Lot\n1 of Block A., Subdivision of 4216B, West\nKootenay; about 15 acres.\n(1) Area of Crown land intended to be\noccupied by the proposed works:   None.\n(J) This notice was posted on the 30th\nday of July, 1910, and application will be\nmade to the commissioner on the Srd day\n0f:AU\"\"\"V1910- ROWLAND BOUHKB,\nKokanee, B.C.\nWATER NOTICE.\nNotice Is hereby given that an application will be made under Part V. of the\n\"Water Act, 1909,\" to obtain a license In\ntbe Nelson division of West Kootenay\ndistrict, ja t.\n(a) The name, address and occupation\nof the applicant is William Johnston, P.O.\nbox 13, Nelson, B.C., machinist.\n(b) The name of the lake, stream or\nsource:   Ward Creek.\n(c) The point of diversion: About 26\nfeet below G.N.R. track.\n(d) The quantity of water applied for\n(tn cubic feet per second)    .056 per second.\n(e) The character of the proposed works:\nopen ditch at present ln use, to be piped\nwithin one year from date of license.\n(f) The premises on which the water is\nto be used: South half of Lot 235, subdivision of Lot 304, Group 1, Kootenay district.\n(!*\u25a0) The purposes for which the water Is\nto be used;   irrigation.\n(h) If for Irrigation describe the land intended to be irrigated, giving acreage:\nSouth half of Lot No. 335, about one acre.\n(I) This notice was posted on the 30th\nday of July, 1910, and application will be\nmade to the Commissioner on the 1st day\nof September, 1910.\n(J) Give the names and addresses If any\nriparian proprietors or licensees who or\nwhose lands are likely to be affected by\nthe proposed works, either above or below\nthe outlet: C.P.R. lands and road reserved between G. N. railway \u25a0 track and\nCottonwood Creek.\nWILLIAM JOHNSTON,\nP.O.Box 13, Nelson, B.C.\nWATER NOTICE.\nNotice Is hereby given that an application will be made under Fart V. of the\n\"Water Act, 1909,\"'to obtain a license in\nthe Nelson division of West Kootenay district.\n(a) The name, address and occupation\nof the applicant: G. T. Robinson, Granite\nP.O., fruit rancher.\n(b) The name of the lake, stream or\nsource: Eagle creek,\n(c) The point of diversion: 200 feet up\nstream from Lot 6684 G. I.\n(d) The quantity of water applied for:\nOne-tenth of cubic foot per second.\n(e) The character ot the proposed works:\nDam, ditch and flume.\n(f) The premises on which the water\nis to be used: South haH ot Lot i>550.\nGroup 1, ..West Kootenay.\n(gj The purposes for which the water Is\nto be used:   Irrigation.\n(h) If for irrigation describe the land\nIntended to be irrigated, giving acreage:\nSouth half Lot 5550, Group 1, West Kootenay, 24.625 acres.\n(1) Area of Crown land Intended to be\noccupied by the proposed works: None.\n(j) This notice was posted on the 4th\nday of August, 1910, and application will\nbe made to the Commissioner on the lOtu\nday  of August. 1910.\n(k) Give the names and addresses of\nany riparian proprietors or licensees who\nor whose lands are likely to be affected\nby the proposed works, either above or\nbelow the outlet: E. Grllla, Granite P.O.\nG. T. ROBINSON,\nGranite P.O.\nWATER NOTICE.\nNotice Is hereby given that an application will be made under Part V. of the\n\"Water Act, 1909,\" to obtain a license lithe Nelson DlvlBlon of West Kootenay District.\n(a) The name, address and occupation or\nthe applicant: John W. Moore, Slocan\nJunction, B.C.\n<b) The name of ths lake, stream or\nsource Is Rover Creek.\n(o) The point of diversion, BOO feet more\nor less east of the.east boundary of Lot\n8873.\n(d) The quantity of water applied for:\nTwo euble feet per second.\n(e) The character of the proposed works:\nDam and pipes.\n(f) The premises on which the water i8\nto be used:  Lots 8172 and Mft,\na (g> The^purposes for whloh the water la\nto bo vied:  irritation.\n(hi If for Irrigation, describe the lands\nto be Irrigated,. giving acreage: Portions\nof Lots 8872 and 9929; acreage 338.19.\n(1) This notice was posted on tbe 8th\nday of August, 1910, and application will be\nmade to the commissioner on the 10th day\nof September, 1910.\n(J) Give the names and addresses of any\nriparian proprietors or licensees who or\nwhose lands are likely to be affected by\nthe proposed works either above or below\nthe outlet: J. E. Annable, Nelson, B.C.\nJOHN, W. MOOKE,\n:an Junction, P. O.,\nSlocan Junction, B.C.\nWATER NOTICE.\nNotice ls hereby given that an application will be made under Part V. of the\n\"Water Act, 1909,\" to obtain a license in\nthe Nelson division of West Kootenay district.\n(a) The name, address and occupation\nof the applicant: John Polak, Fernie,\nB.C., miner.\n(b) The name of the lake, stream or\nsource:   McCormlck Creek.\n(c) The point of diversion: 1500 feet\nfrom Salmon river.\n(d) The quantity of water applied for\n(ln cubic feet per second): One cubic foot.\n<e) The character of the proposed works:\nDitch flume or pipe.\n(f) The premises on whloh the water Is\nto be used: 40 acres ot southwest part of\nLot 9283.\n(g) The purposes for which the water\nIs to be used: Irrigation and domestic.\n(h) If for Irrigation describe the land\nto be Irrigated, giving acreage: 40 acres.\n(1) This notice was posted on the 1st\nday of August, 1910, and application will\nbe made to the commissioner on the 1st\nday of September, 1910.\nJOHN POLAK,\nFernie, B.C.\nWATER NOTICE.\nNotice ls hereby given that an application will be made under Part V. of the\n\"Water Act, 19U9,\" to obtain a license in\nthe Nelson, B.C., Mining Division of West\nKootenay District\n(a) The name, address and occupation\nof the applicant Is: Thomas A. Wheildon,\nSlocan Junotlon P. O., rancher.\n(b) The name of the lake, stream or\nsource (if unnamed, the description Ib):\nA small unnamed stream flowing through\nLot 2088, Group 1.\n(c) The point of diversion, on the north\nboundary of Lot 9088, about 15 chains west\nfrom the northeast corner thereof,\n(d) The quantity of water applied for\nOne-quarter cubic foot per second.\ne) The character of the proposed works:\nDam and pipe.\n(f) The premises on which the water is\nto be used; Part ot Lot 2088, Group 1, West\nKootenay. district.\n(g) The purposes for which the water\nls to be used:   Irrigation purposes,\n(h) If for Irrigation describe the land\nIntended to be irrigated, giving acreage:\nPart of Lot 2088, Group 1, thirty (30) acres.\n(1) Area of Crown land intended to be\noccupied by the proposed works:   None.\n(1) This notice was posted on the 15th\nday of August, 1910, and application will\nbe made to the Commissioner on the 17th\nday of September, 1910.\nIk) Give the names and addresses ot\nany riparian proprietors who or whose\nlBnds are likely to be affected by the proposed works, either above or below the\noutlet:   None.\nTHOMAS A. WHEILDON,\nSlocan Junction P. O., B.C\nCERTIFICATE   OF THE    REGI8XRA\nTION OF AN EXTRA-PROVINCIAL COMPANY.\nCompanies Act, 1897.\nI HEREBY CERTIFY\" that the \"Salmon\nRiver Valley Land Company,\" an extra-\nprovincial company, has been registered\nas a company under the \"Campanles Act,\n1897,\" to carry out or effect all or any or\nthe objects of the Company to which legislative authority of the Legislature of\nBritish Columbia extends.\nThs head office of the Company Is situate at St. Paul, Ramsey county, Minnesota.\nThe amount of the capital of the Company is One Hundred Thousand Dollars,\ndivided into One Thousand shares of One\nHundred Dollars each.\nThe head office of the Company ln this\nprovince ls situate at Nelson, and Edmund\nCarlyon Wragge, barrlster-at-law, whose\naddress is Nelson aforesaid, is the attorney\nfor the Company. Not empowered to issue\nand transfer stock.\nThe time of the existence of the Company ls thirty years, from th* 1st day of\nJanuary, A.D. 1910.\nThe Company Is limited.\nGiven under my hand and Seal of Office\nat Victoria, Province of British Columbia,\nthis thirteenth day of June, one tbousnnd\nnine hundred and ten.\n[L.S.] J. P. McLEOD,\nActing Registrar of\nJoint Stock Companies.\nThe objects for which this Company has\nbeen established and registered are:\nTo buy and sell real estate and personal\nproperty, to acquire, purchase, hold, mortgage, lease, sell, convey, and operate coal,\ntimber and other lands of any and all\nkinds and descriptions whatsoever* to buy,\nhold, sell, transfer, dispose of and guarantee payment of notes, bonds, stocks,\nmortgages, and to act as agents for corporations and Individuals, to loan money\non real estate or personal security, to borrow money, to mortgage any or all of its\nreal estate or personal property, and to do\nevery and all things convenient, proper or\nrequisite for the carrying out of the objects and purposes ln these articles set\nforth in the fullest and broadest sense.\nNELSON   LAND   DISTRICT,    DISTRICT\nOF WEST KOOTENAY.\nTake notice that H. S. Ewing, of Cecil,\nOregon, occupation farmer, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described  lands:\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nnorthwest corner of surveyed Lot No. 97SO,\nor about midway of south line runnlnp\neast and west of Lot 9789, thence west\nnorth twenty (20) chains, containing eighty\n(80) acres more or less.\nH. S. OWING.\nAug. 8, 1910. 103\nforty (40) chains, thence south twenty (20)\nchains, thence east forty (40) chains, thence\nNELSON   LAND   DISTRICT,   DISTRICT\nOF WEST KOOTJ-JNAY, B.C.\nTake notice that Byron WHber Dutcher,\nof Seattle, Wash., occupation school teacher, Intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:\nCommencing at a post planted near the\nsoutheast corner of surveyed Lot No.\n7448, thence north 60 chains, thence east\n20 chains, thence south 60 chains, thence\nwest 20 chains to point of commencement,\ncontaining 120 acres more or less.\nBYRON WILBER DUTCHEK,\nWM.  WASHBURN,  Agent.\nMay 26, 1910. 18-6-10-G0d.\nKASLO LAND DISTRICT, DISTRICT OF\nWEST  KOOTENAY.\nTake notice that Edward James Grant,\nof Slocan, occupation carpenter. Intends\nto apply for permission to purchase the\nfollowing described land: '\nCommencing at a post Dlanted at the\nsouthwest corner of Lot3812, thence west\nalong north line of 3811 20 chains, insnco\nnorth 20 chains, thence -east 20 chains,\nthence south 20 chains along wast Una of\nLot 3810 to noiitt of commencement, and\ncontaining 40 acres, more or less.\nEDWARD JAMES GRANT.\nSlocan, March 17, 1910.\nNEILSON \u2022 LAND DISTRICT,-- DISTRICT\nOF WEST KOOTENAY.\nTake notice that I, Charles Ehlers, of\nRossland, B.C., occupation, rancher, intend\nto apply for permission to purchase the\nfollowing described lands:\nLadies' and\nChildren's Sweaters\nWe have now\nour first arrivals of\nladies', misses' and\nchildren's sweaters\non view.\njj These] very popular garments are\nperhaps prettier\nthan ever this season, and fashion\ndecrees they will\nbe very largely\nworn. Their smart appearance, light\nweight and warmth make them very\nacceptable for cool days.\nWe have them in white, red, grey,\nbrown, blue and mixtures.\nLadies'from $2.50 to $8.75\nMisses' from $2.00\nChildren's from $1.00 to $1.65\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nS. W. corner of Lot 9764, thence west 90\nchains, thence north 20 chains, thence east\n90 chains, thence south 20 chains to point\nof commencement, containing 40 acres, more\nor less.\nCHARLES EHLERS.\nJuly 53,  1910.\nTake notice that I, Walter S. Rlblet, of\nNelson, B.C., occupation, farmer, intend\nto apply for permission to purchase the\nfollowing described lands:\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nintersection of the eastern boundary of\nLot 303, Group 1, Kootenay district, with\nthe southerly shore of Kootenay river;\nthence southerly following the said eastern\nboundary of Lot 303 to its Intersection with\nthe western Bhore of Kootenay river, a\ndistance of 10 chains more or less; thence\nnortheasterly following tho slnuouslties of\nthe shore of said river eight chains more\nor less to whero tt bends westerly; thence\nwesterly following the slnuouslties of said\nshore to the point of beginning, containing\nthree acres more or less.\nWALTER  SUTHERLAND  RIBLET.\nAug. 19, 1910.\nNELSON   LAND   DISTRICT,   DISTKlul'\nOF WEST KOOTENAY.\nTake notice that I, Lloyd Affleck, of\nNelson, B.C., occupation surveyors assistant, Intend to apply for permission to\npurchase the following described lands:\nCommencing at a post planted about 19\nchains south of the N.E. corner Lot 9'i8&\nG. I. West Kootenay, thence south 40\nchains, thence east 12 chains more or less,\nthence north 40 chains, thence west 12\nchains more or less, to point of commencement, containing 43 acres more or\nless.\nLLOYD AFFLECK,\nDated Sth day of June, 1910.        7-7-10-Sw.\nTako notice that I, ID. H. McDanlels, of\nNelson, B.C., occupation rancher, intend\nto apply for permission to purchase the\nfollowing  described lands;\nCommencing at a post planted about one-\nhalf a mile east and 1*4 miles north of\nthe N.E. corner of T. L. No. 18709, thence\nwest 80 chains, thence north 40 chains,\nthence east 80 chains, thence south 40\nchains, to point of commencement, containing 330 acres more or less.\nE,   H,   MoDANJHLrB.\nJune 28, 1910. C-7-ltF-S\nKOOTENAY LAND DISTRICT, DIVISION\nOF NELSON.\nTake notice that Frank, F. Siemens, ot\nRenata, B.C., occupation rancher, intends to apply for permission to purchase\nthe following described lands:\nCommencing at a post planted about l'i\nmiles north and 1 mile east of the N.E.\ncorner of S, L. 33 of L. 6817, thence 40\nchains north, thence 80 chains west, thence\n40 chains south, thence 80 chains east to\nthe place of commencement, containing 3*90\nacres, more or less, and covering former\npre-emptions Nos. 916 and 919.\nDated llth June, 1919.\nFRANK F.  SIEMENS,\n23-6-10-60 J. J. C. FERNAU, Agent\nNELSON  LAND   DISTRICT,   DISTRICT\nOF WEST KOOTENAY.\nTake notice that Willaim B. Ross, of\nSalmo, occupation clerk, Intend to apply\nfor permission to purchase the following\ndescribed land:\nCommencing at a post planted on Deer\ncreek, about one mile In a northerly direction from Sheep creek, running 40 chains\nnorth, thence 40 chains west, thence 40\nchains south, thence 40 chains east to the\npoint of commencement, containing lt>u\nacres more or less.\nWILLIAM  B.  B. K^dS,\nJ. IilN-DGOW, -Agent.\nJuly 18, 1910.\nKOOTENAY LAND DISTRICT, DIVISION\nOF WEST KOOTENAY.\nSixty days after date I intend to apply\nto the Commissioner of Lands und Works,\nVictoria, to purchase 40 awes 0f land, described as follows:\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nnortheast corner of Lot 7632 G, I., and\nrunning east 20 chains, thenco south 20\nchains, thenco wost 20 chains to the east\nboundary of Lot 7632, thence north to\nplace of beginning.\nJuno 19, 1919.\nNELLIE  C.   ANNABLE,\n23-7-10-60(1, Music teacher, Nelson.\nMr. Househtrnter,\nLook These Over\n$1000\u2014A four-room house and one lot in Fairview, has water and electric light and furnished, ready for occupation. Cash $300, balance $15 per month.\n$2100\u2014A six-room house and two corner lots on Stanley street, splendid garden and fruit trees. Possession can be given Immediately.   Cash $800, balance easy payments.\n$3000\u2014A splendid five-room cottage and three corner lots in garden,\nfruit trees and lawn.   Situate on Hall street near tramline, two\nfire places and all conveniences.   ThiB   is a   snap and we can\n. recommend it as a good buy.    Terms    can be arranged to suit\npurchaser.\nWe have a large list and if you are looking for a home you should\ncertainly look it over before buying,\nMcQUARRIEl&   ROBERTSON*\n411 WARD STRUT\nAjents\nNILION, i.O.\n %^ Cb^\nPACE SIX\nCfie Baft? JUhy*.\nFRIDAY     AUGUST 2\u00bb\nAre You In Quest of the\nImpossible?\n?\nAre You Looking for Bargains So Sure and Such Money Makers That You\nCan Never Find Them ?\nBIjSINES* DIRECTOKY\nAUCTIONEERS\nOHAS.   A.   WATERMAN  &   CO.-P.   O.\nBox 225. \t\nW. CUTLER, LICENSED AUCTIONEER,\nBox 474. \t\nPUBLISHERS AND PRINTER8\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LTD.-\nPubllshers of The Dally Newa; subscrlp.\ntlon t<i per year by carrier; IS per year\nby mat). Commercial Job printing of all\nkind, neatly and promptly executed. 2111\nBaker street, Nelaon, B.C., Pbune 144.\nHAIRDRESSINQ   AND   MANICURING\nMMeTkATHLeSTnO^ H AIRDRESS-\nIng and manicuring parlors. Room \u00ab,\nK. W. C. block. \t\nHere's a Legitimate\nBargain for You\nif you will act quickly\nFour lots one block from car line, ln\nwell kept, fully bearing orchard.\nComfortable Modern Home, hot water\nheated, modern conveniences.\nBusiness has called owner away from\ntown and he has Instructed us to make\nthis special offer for a quick sale.\nThis offer Is saving you money as the\nproperty wilt readily sell at an Increase\nof $4(H) or $501) as soon as tbe cars are\nrunning.  Which will be in a few weeks\nThe whole property Is In Al condition and the price is only $2800; $1000\ncash, 'balance arranged.\nThe fruit on this property will more\nthan.'pay for ihe interest.\nHow Long Have You\nBeen Paying Rent?\nYou can own a home in a few years\nwith no more effort than it takes to\npay for the rent receipt you get each\nmonth.\nYou must not miss this opportunity.\nCall and see us and we will tell you\nmore about this rent saving opportunity.\nA small cash payment and $15 per\nmonth will secure for you a home close\nin, no hills, good garden lot. Price $1250.\nYou can get particulars of other\nhouses from us by calling.\nThe Western Canada Investment Co.\nP. O. Box 1042\nHouses for Sale or Rent,\nterms to suit all pockets.\nBaker Street Nelion, B. C.\nPrices and    \u25a0 Fruit Lands and Bearing Orchards'\nTerms to suit\nDON'T TELL ME!\nI_know soap wen the wrapper's\noff.\"\nI been takin' in washin' fer 15\nyears\u2014I oughter know.\nJest take it from me\u2014there aint\nnothin' '11 give yo' as much all-\nround satisfaction as\nWhite Swan Soap\nYours soapily,\nANN NONYMOUS\n.     COLLECTION AGENCIES\nW. CUTLER-COLLECTIONS OP ALL\nkinds. Returns promptly made. Reference* given. Office 313 Baker street.\nNelson, B.C.\nBOOKBINDING AND RULING\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LTD.-\nAll klnus of oitlce forms ruled and punched for loose leaf binders. Tne must complete boos. uiiiUuig equipment in the interior of Btiusti Cummoia. U9 natter\nstreet, Nelsun, li.u, P.u. drawer 1UU,\nPhone iu.\nPOR   SALE\nAT\nABARQAIN\nOne One Horsepower Motor\nOne Half Horsepower Rotor\n. Can be inspected at any time.\nApply\nTHE DAILY NEWS\n-    Nelson, B.C.\nFOR SALE\nFOR SALE\u20141 can Mil you rrom 10 acres\nto a half section of sxcelientt fruit land\nin the famous Kaslo district, direct from\nlocator at locator's price. H. L. Lindsay,\nLindsay's boat house, Nelson, B.C.    an-tf.\nFOR SALE-TWO \u00bb-acre tracts Al fruit\nland.   Easy terms.   Apply at Belle Vue\nfarm, 48 Creek Road or at Silver King\nhotel. \u00abK\u00bb\nCONTRACTORS AND  BUILDERb\nJOHlTmJRNl\u00a3sASH^^\nlice Fitting Factory. Brick and Lime\nfor sale. Oftlce and factory: Carbonate\nBtreet, Nelson, B.C. Larue quantity of\nshavings, suitable for stable bedding, can\nbe had for hauling away.\nPRIVATE  MATERNITY   HOME\nNICE LOCALITY AND HOME COM-\nforts. 1* or -terms and particulars write\nP. O. Box 193,  Nelson, B.C.\nBOOK-KEEPING.\nW.   HERON,   BOOK-KEEPING,   AUDIT-\ning, Collections.. Phone B403, P.O. box 131.\nMUSIC.\nPIANO AND THEORY^MRS. STARMKK\nSmith, Box, 910. Pupils prepared for local\nexaminations by the Associated Board of\nthe Royal Academy of Music, and the\nRoyal College of Music, London, England.\nWHEN HAVING YOUR PIANO TUNED,\nhave it done by reliable men, backed by\na reliable ilrm. Messrs, Wm. and A. K.\nKllby, the authorized tuners of the Mason\n& Risch Co., for B.C., are now residents\nof this town, and are open to take orders,\nwhich if left at the Mason ft Risch agency\noffice, or at 806 Stanley Btreet, will be\npromptly attended to.\nH. TREBY HEALE (LATE OF THE\nSavoy Opera company, London, England),\nbegs to announce that he will be prepared to receive pupils In singing and\nvoice production In Nelson aurlng the\ncoming season. For terms and particulars apply to H. Treby Heale, care The\nDally News. W\nFOR SALE\u2014Good land in blocks of 8 to\n20 acres eaoh; very best soil, overlook*\nIng lake; plenty of good water. Three\nmiles from Kaslo on good wagon road.\nEasy terms.   A. J. Curie, Kaslo, B.C.\nS8-26\nWANT AP. RATES.\nRates for Want Ads. in The\nDaily News are as follows: One\ncent per word per Insertion or\nfour cents per word per week or\nfifteen cents per word per\nmonth. -\nIn the case of persons not having a regular monthly account\nwith The News, cash must accompany the order. No departure from thla rule will be\nmade. Want Ada. phoned to\nthe office are accepted only under the above conditions.\nCopy for Want Ads. should be\ndelivered to The Dally Newa\noffice either personally or by\nletter to make certain of correct\ninsertions.\nFOR SALE\u2014A first class  team of oxen,\nwell broken; ln excellent condition.   Apply F. E. Oborne, Robson, B.C. .        101-15\nFOR SALE\u2014Have one of the best mineral\nland and timber propositions in province.\nNew oountry through which railroad will\nbe building within a year. Want to meet\nman who can finance development syndicate or company to handle same. Address\nM. J., News Office. 103-13\nFOR SALE-Small launch.  Geo. H. Playle,\n405 Baker street, or phone. _.,____      \"__\nFOR SALE\u2014Cabin cruiser, length 31 feet,\nbeam 8 feet, cabin 13 feet long with 5 feet\n6 inches head - room. Has toilet; roomy\ncookpit; 20 horse power Barker engine;\nspeed 10 miles per hour. Upholstered\nthroughout. Good sea-boat, and comfortable. Price (1600, Apply J.' Clark,\nNelaon P. O. _      105-0\nFOR SALE\u2014One team good horses; both\ngo single In spring   wagon.     Will  sell\nseparate.     Apply    to    Albert   Laviolette,\nPostofflce, Nelson, or at Silver King hotel.\n108-tf.\nFOR SALE-Good team of horses and\nharness. Weight about 2500 pounds. Price\n$300.   Apply Clark Marshall, Burton, B-C.\nFOR SALE\u2014No. 4 Underwood typewriter,\ngood aB new, used seven months.   Any\nreasonable offer considered.   Apply Box Al.,\nNews office. 109-6\nUPHOLSTERED FOR\nWEARY TOURISTS\nLovely Switzerland  ts a  Sand-Papered\nParadise for the Visiting .\nPedestrian\nt When the European goes away for\nsnraimer Biolidays hie is apt to go to\nHwltzerland to one of the many Bad-\nens or <U> the* seaside. Tbe latter resorts are by no means as popular as\nwith us\u2014-nor are they so attractive so\nCar as I have seen them. But we have\nnothlng like Switzerland\u2014that la not\nin eastern America, In the Alps, tiie\nholiday maker may walk, drive, boat\nor climb. And all these forms of tll-\n\u25a0veraton divide into many branches. Tc\ntbe 'pedestrian, Switzerland is a care\nfully prepared and even sand-papered\nparadise. All sorts of walks have been\nmade through the woods, up the mountain sIopesi down the' de*ap valleys,\nalone flie tumlbling rivers and the green\nAlpine lakes; and every one of them is\ncarefiully Indicated by sign 'boards at\neach point of possible doubt. All\nabound tn magnificent views and at\neach, view of the second class so to\n\u25a0sneak there will be a bench or a pavil-\nton, -while if the view be first class\nthen a -restaurant or hotel will command\nit, where you can eat, drink and rest\nwMle you enjoy it.\nThey know that mo hungry or thirsty\nmortal can appreciate the finest natural (beauty. The Rockies may be higher\nthan the Alps; but 1 doubt If they are\nanything like a\u00bb well upholstered.\nBut the Danger's There\nAlpine climbing Is a sport apart\u2014as\ndangerous as aviation in its superlative detgree\u2014and the streets of most\nAlpine resorts are picturesque with men\nand women costumed for Indulgence in\nit in some measure. When you see\nthem with, steel shod alpenstocks and\nhiob nailed boote they are probably going tto do nothing more dangerous than\n\u25a0 tfwnp &v* or ten milee along a mountain oath; hot when you see Ice axes\nt tip with their Alpenstocks then\n\" 'nam. I atood behind a\n7 at .UttrJ-en and wateh-\nguides roped together and slowly cutt- j\nIng their way iirp the ley side of Elger.\nThe guide In front first carefuly cut a\nfoothold in the Ice, then he stepped into j\nlt and cut another. When he had thus\nimade progress of a foot or two, ihe stooi\nstill and the others advanced one by\none tn his footsteps. It looked very\nslow and very tedious, but, I suppose\nthe joy of reaching the top would repay\nit all.\nBut-this is only one feature of the\ngreat playground of the Alps. You am\ndo a lot of mountaineering by railway,\nclimbing right up into the skies while\nseated comfortably In the carriage of\nyour \"rack-and-plnlon\" or funicular, You\ncan reach the region of eternal snow\nin this fashion without adding a heart\n'beat and get out and snowball your\nfriends In midsummer. Or you can\ntake boat trips on the lakes or baths\nin them, play tennis on courts that ore\nclose to the courts of heaven, play golf\non links that are shaded by mountain\nranges or go into the casinos and listen\nto the music or lose your money at the\ntables.\nTaking the Cure\nIf you go to \"take the cure\" at some\npopular bath you have a much different\ntime. We went over one day and walked\nabout good old Baden-Baden, from which\nthe gambler has been banished and all\nelse that might disturb the placidity of\na patient. Everything ls soothing as a\nsweet dream. The schloes sleeps on\nIts hill top in the midst of a garden of\nspreading trees and dense shade. The\ntwo public \"baths\" are buildings as solid\nas, say, customs houses and as quiet as\na peaceful cemetery. The river ripples\nIts way down a series of shallow falls\nopposite a row of palatial hotels, and\nwould lull Insomnia Itself into a doze.\nThe paths are carefully -marked, showing which of them are level and which\nclimb a bit, so that no invalid may he\ninadvertently decoyed into taking too\ntrying a walk. The (band plays drowsily\nat the Trinlthall or In the gardens and\nthe encircling mountains shut out the\nrough winds. It is a \"land where it Ib\n, always afternoon.\" Here come people\nI usually whose holidays are unlimited,\neither at the bidding of falling health\nor by the permission of unfailing\nwealth.        \u25a0,,,,,<\nMISS O. HAVILAND PUKDY, GRADU-\naie of Mount Allison Conservatory ol\nMusic, Sackvllle, New Brunswick. Teacher of Piano, 1'ipeorgan, Harmony, History of Music, eta. Studio, 600 Cedar\nstreet. 103-tf.\nMIBS U. E. FLETCHER, TEACHER OF\nthe \"Schumann Bystem\" of music. For\nparticulars apply Silica street. lOtt-i)\nHISS S. L. MoCONNON HAS RE-\nsumed her classes In Pianoforte at her\nstudio, No. 612 Mill street. 109-6\nHOUSE AND SIGN  PAINTERS\nHARTMAN & BENNETT, house and sign\npainters, paper hangers and decorators.\nShop, Stanley St., next door to B, C.\nTelephone office, Nelson, B.C.\nASSAYERS\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, ASSAYER (PRO-\nvlnalat) Metallurgical Chemist. Charges:\nGold, Silver, Copper or Lead, |1, each;\nGold-Silver, |1.5U; Silver-Lead, |1.U; Zlno,\n$2; Sllver-Lead-Zlnc, $3; Uold, Stiver-\nCopper or Lead, \u00a52.50. Accurate assays;\ncareful sampling, and prompt attention.\nP. O. Box A1108, Nelson, B.C.\nOLD CASTLE\nOF WINDSOR\nKing  George Contemplates Alterations\nIn Many Parts Before Taking up\nOfficial  Residence There\nLONDON, Aug. 26\u2014Before King\nGeorge and Queen Mary take tip their\nresidence at Windsor Castle certain alterations and rearrangements of the\nprivate- apartments will be necessary.\nThese apartments which are never open\nto the public are situated on the east\nand south sides of the Grand Quadrangle and are connected by a corridor\nover 500 feet in length.\nMany thousands of pounds were spent\non 'the royal rooms when King Edward\ncame to the throne In order to bring\nthe palace more In accord with modern\nrequirements and a sum was voted\nby .parliament for the purpose. When\nKing George was staying recently at\nFrogmore House'he spent several hours\ngoing over the private apartmenits but\nhis majesty and Queen Mary are to pay\nanother visit before any definite Instructions are given.\nRooms Unfurnished\nVery few structural alterations are\nnecessary after the work carried out by\nthe lord chamberlain's department during the past ten years but a rearrangement of the furniture and ornaments\nwill have to be effected. All the personal property of King Edward. anJ\nQueen Alexandra will be moved to Sand\nringham, otherwise It would become the\nproperty of the crown. When this Is\ndone the rooms will he refurnished to\nsuit the taste of their majesties.\nIt will of course be necessary to pro-'\nvide Additional accommodation for the\nchildren of the King and Queen. Tne\nsuite of rooms in the Chester tower\nhaa been set aside for the younger\nprinces and here a nursery and sohool\nroom have been fitted up with, kitchen'\nand every other convenience and a special staff of servants will look after\ntbe welfare of Uie children. These\nroom* were used by Princes* Henry of ,\ntMrtt-enberre children and adjoin* thf I\nVictoria tower, whloh tarred N *\u2014\u2122 '\nASSAYERS' SUPPLIES\nTHE B. C. ASSAY AND CHEMICAL\nSUPPLY COMPANY, LIMITED, Vancouver, B. C, Assayers' Supplies,\nChemical und Phyglcul Apparatus, Balances and Weights of precision, etc.,\nSole Agents In British Columbia for the\nMorgan Crucible Company, London, England; F. W. Braun, Los Angeles; the\nBraun-Knecht-Heimann Company, San\nFrancisco; the J. T. Baker Chemical company's Analyzed C. P. Acids .and Chemicals; Way's Pocket Smelters; write for\npamphlet describing these smelters, complete assay outfits furnished at Bliort\nnotice.\nNOTICE  OF APPLICATION   FOR  RENEWAL OF LIQUOR LICENSE\nNotice is hereby given that I, William\nDowling, of Ymlr, B.C., intend to apply\nto the Superintendent of Provincial Police,\nat the expiration of one month from the\ndate hereof, for a renewal of my retail\nliquor license for the premises known as\nthe Miller House, situate at Ymlr, B.C.\nWILLIAM DOWLING,\nYmlr, B.C.\nDated at Ymir, 15th August, 1910.     102-28\nFOR SALE\u2014I have for sale my breeding\npen of Buff Leghorns of eight hens\nand rooster. Also a few standard bred\nrose and single comb Rhode Island Red\nCockerels, May hatched. 1 am also open\nto buy any quantities of pullets. Apply\nto Thos. Standing, Grand View Ranch, or\nDrawer 1093, Nelson. 109-6\nFOR BALE\u2014Desirable and conveniently\narranged residence, in good repair, containing seven rooms and bath, etc. Open\nfire place, furnace and modern conveniences. Large garden with lawn, fruit\ntrees (20), hedge, etc. Furnished. Good\nlocation, half mile from postofflce. For\nfurther Information apply to F. B. Lys,\nGriffin block, over Dominion Express com-\npany. ,    ... .  109-4\nFOR SALE\u2014Newly calved milk cow.   Apply 524 Innis street. 103-6\nHELP WANTCO\nNEL80I^EM^OTMEW^^\nC. F. Hutton, Manager\nWANTED\u2014Railroad   laborers,   $2.60   day;\nblacksmith, teamsters, bushmen, dogger,\nlumber pliers (contract), sawmill laborers,\nwaitresses, chambermaid.\ni Help of all Kinds\nPromptly Furnished\nHOTEL DIRECTOk,\nSilver King Hotel\nBaker Street, Nelson, B.C.\nHegular Boarders, 16 per week.\nRates: 11.26 per day.\nBest 25 Cent Meal In the City\nWM. NEUENDORF, Prop.\nNelson Hotel Bar\nBaker Street, Nelson, B. C\nINK * WARD, Propa.\nTry * \"QIN RICKEY**\nI Made (ram California Limes, specially\n'* Imported\nFor a cool, satisfying smoke\nTry'a Savannah Cigar\nThe Royal Hotel\nMrs. L. V. Roberts, Proprietress\nCor. Stanley and Silica Sts.\nRates fl.00 and f 1.60 per day.\nTHE WORKWOMEN'S EMPLOYMENT\nAND REAL ESTATE AGENCY.\nWANTED\u2014Men to skid poles; swampers;\nlaborers for sawmill and bush; Better;\nblacksmith; men to out cordwood; post,\npole and shingle bolt makers; woman cook,\n160; chambermaid; girls for family work.\nW. Parker, 312 Baker Street, Phone m.\nW.   Parker,  JO**  Baker  Street,   Phono 293.\nWANTED\u2014MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED\u2014Men and women to learn barber trade in eight weeks: tools free;\nseoured over 10,000 positions for graduates\nlast year; unable to supply, the demand;\ngraduates earn 116 to $25 weekly; Catalogue free. Moler Bystem Colleges, 403\nFront Ave., Spokane, Wash.\nWANTED\u2014Mais    teacher     for    Cascade\nschool, salary (85 per month.   Duties to\ncommence after summer vacation.   G. li.\nMcDonald, Cascade, B.C- g-tf.,\nWANTED-PIums, all varieties.    Must be\nslightly under-ripe.   The Kootenay Jam\nCo., Ltd.   W\nWANTED\u2014Two St. Bernard pups, bitches.\nWrite to K, L. Kerr, Greenwood, B.C.\nluo-w\nKootenay Hotel\nMRS. MALLETTE, Proprietress.\nA home for everybody.   Every convenience given to tbe travelling publlo.\nElectric   piano.     Cuisine   unexcelled.\nRates $1 per day.'\nSherbrooke House\nNelson, B. C.\nOne minute's walk from C.P.R., station. Cuisine unexcelled;  well heated\nand ventilated.\nBOYER  BROS.,  Proprietors\nEmpire Temperance Hotel\n(Under entire new management)\nBaker Street, Nelson, B.C.\nThe   house   thoroughly   remodelled\nthroughout.   Clean rooms, home comforts.   Rates f 1 per day up.  Best cook\nin the city.\nJ. OPEN8HAW, Prop.\nLOST.\nLOST\u2014Large    white   cow, last  seen on\nGranite Road, going' west. Reward.   1>.\nIrving, Granite road. 111-6\nBOARD AND LODGING\nCOMFORTABLE    BOARD    AND    RES1-\ndence   for young  lady.    Very  moderate\ncharge.    Company   desired.    Address   M.,\nBox 315 postofflce. , 107-6\nOBSTETRICS\nMRS. KENNT will be pleased to receive\nmaternity patients at her home. Excellent testimonials. 224 Observatory street.\nP. O. Box 173, telephone A64.\nPROCLAMATION   OF   PUBLIC   HOLIDAY.\nI hereby proclaim the afternoon of Monday, tlio 29th instant, a public half holt-\nday ln honor of the visit to our city of the\nRt. Hon. Sir Wilfrid Laurler, premier of\nCanada, and I would request all citizens\nto duly observe the same.\nHAROLD SELOUS,\n111-3 Mayor.\ncommand a fine view ot! the Long Walk\nand of Windsor Forest. There qould\nhardly be a 'more ideal spot for children\nThe rooms are lofty' and from every\nwindow can be seen & magnificent\nstrotch of beautiful woodland scenery.\nJust below the castle towards Frogmore is a cricket ground with a handsome pavilion which was constructed\non the instructions of the late King for\nthe wise of his Grandchildren. Tbe\nPrince of Wales and Prince Albert have\noften taken part in most interesting and\nexciting games on thla -delightful pitch\n\u25a0ind in tbe near future their younger\n' brothers will follow suit\nAt Frogmore Now\nFor the time 'being the King and\nQueen will stay at Frogonore <when the\noottrt is In residence at Windsor but\n:tfee princes will have.full access to tbe\ncastle grounds, a8 the two residences\nare very near each othier. Their majesties are very fond lot XTrogtnore -\"-d\nU Is here that their children In the last\nttw* years have been chiefly taooght up.\ntbe King and Queen <**\u2022 * keen\n'it ln their ohUdMtra. ttf*\u00ab Md\nNOTICE TO CONTRACTORS.\nErickson School.\nSEALED TENDERS, superscribed \"Tender for Erickson School,\" will be received\nby the Honorable the Minister of Public\nWorks up to and Including Wednesday,\nthe 7th September, 1910, for the erection\nand completion of a small one-room frame\nschool building at Erickson, In the Ymlr\nElectoral District.\nPlans, Specifications, Contract, and Forms\nof Tender may be Been on and after the\n20th day of August, 1910, at the offices ot\nthe Government Agent, Nelson; W. H.\nKemp, Esq., Erickson; and the Department of Public Works, Victoria.\nEach proposal must be accompanied by\nan accepted bank cheque or certificate of\ndeposit on a chartered bank of Canada,\nmade payable to the Honorable the Minister of Public Works, for ,a sum equivalent to 10 per cent ot the amount of the\ntender, which shall be forfeited if the party\ntendering decline to enter Into contract\nwhen called upon to do so, or If he fall\nto complete the work contracted for. The\ncheques or certificates of deposit of unsuccessful tenderers will be returned to\nthem upon the execution of the contract.\nTenders will not be considered unless\nmade out on the forms supplied, signed\nwith the actual signature of the tenderer,\nand enclosed ln the envelopes furnished.\nThe lowest or any tender not necessarily\naccepted.\nF. C. GAMBLE,\nPublic Works Engineer.\nDepartment of Public Works,\nVictoria, B.C., 15th August, 1910.       107\nWANTED\u2014First   class   chambermaid   for\nup-to-date   hotel.    Apply  Leland  Hotel,\nKamloops, B.C. 101-13\nWANTED\u2014At once, bush foreman, thoroughly acquainted with building and operating timber shutea (dry.) References\nneeded as to former experience. State\nwages. Good proBpectB for steady experienced man. Apply Lumber Syndicate,\nPentlcton, B.C. 102-9\nWANTED\u2014Immediately,   by   Scotch  lady,\nposition   as   housekeeper   or   companion\nhelp.   Apply box 663, Nelson! 107-4\nWANTED\u2014Position aa office man, bookkeeper, salesman or construction foreman. Married man desiring to .locate In\nB.C. State full particulars if Interested.\nU. 8, Bartmess, Beauaejour, Man.       103-6\nWANTED\u2014Probationers.     A   few   vacancies In Fernie Hospital Training school.\nApply to Lady Superintendent, Fernie, B.C.\n108-8\nWANTED-To borrow $3,000 on good Nelson\nreal estate.   Apply Si., Daily News.    108-6\nWANTED\u2014A   first   class   dressmaker,   at\nonce.   Apply to Jeff, Davis & Co., Grand\nForks, B.C. 109-5\nWANTED\u2014Second   hand    pool    table,   in\ngood condition.   State price.    Write box\n385, Nelson, B.C. 109-3\nWANTED\u2014A lady to clerk in ladies' furnishing store.    Address P.   O.   box 832,\nNelson, B.C. 109-5\nWANTED\u2014Fruit growers! Advertiser,\nwith first class knowledge of fruit culture\ndesires position on fruit farm. Highest\nreferences. Age 42. 67 Queen street, Little*\nhampton, Sussex, England. lvJ-9\nWANTED\u2014Man   and  wife   as   cook   and\nCookee. Apply, The Hastings (B.B.) Exploration Syndicate, Ltd., 424 Victoria St.,\nolty. 110-6\nWANTED\u2014A girl   going   to   high school\nwould like a home where she could work\nfor her board.   Address box 130, Phoenix,\nB.C. 110-3\nWANTED\u2014All employees of labor to send\ntheir requirements to the United Agencies\noffice, 218 Baker street, Box 232, Phone mm.\n111-tf,\nBartlett House\nG. W. BARTLETT, Prop.\nThe best fl.00 a day bouse in town.\nA Miner's Home\nHotel Castlegar\nCASTLEGAR  JUNCTION\nAll nioaern. Good Picnic Grounds.\nThe Nelson-Rossland train stops here,\nfor luncheon.\nW. H. GAGE, Prop.\n(Formerly C.P.R. Agent)\nHOTEL   OUTLET\nPKOCTOR\nTOURIST   RESORT   OF   KOOTENAY\nWrite or wire for rooms. ?\u25a0\nQ. & L. SNOW, Proprietors. '\nROSSLAND\nTHE HOFFMAN ANNEX, ROSSLAND,\nB.C.\u2014Green &. Smith, Props. Centrally\nlocated. European and American plan.\nCommercial travellers will Und light,\ncomfortable sample rooms, a special dining room and excellent accommodations\nat the Hodman, Baths, bowling alley*\nsteam laundry.\nPHOENIX\nHOTEL BROOKLYN, PHOENIX, B. C-\nThe only up-to-date hotel in Phoenix.\nNew from cellar to roof. Best sample\nrooms in the Boundary. Bath room. In\nconnection. Steam heat. Opposite Great\nNorthern depot.   James Marshall, Prop.\nARROWHEAD\nTHB UNION HOTEL, AHROWHKAD.\u2014-\nSpeolal attention given to commercial\nmen and tourists. First olass sample\nrooms. Finest scenery ln British Columbia, overlooking Upper Arrow lake. W.\nJ. Llghtburne, proprietor.\n\"\"\" GRAND FORKS, B. C.\nPROVINCE HOTEL, GRAND FORKS,\nB.C.\u2014Is the newest and best appointed\nhotel In the interior of British Columbia,\nand offers to the travelling publlo the\nbest accommodation obtainable. The\nbuilding Is all newly furnished throughout, and is the only tire proof hotel in\nthe city.   E. Larsen, proprietor.\nNOTICE.\nIn tbe matter of Chapter M of the But-\niflh Columbia Statutes, uio, and of tbe appraisement and apportionment thereunder.\nAU persons, or their assignees, who did\nwork or supplied material, including goods\nor merchandise in connection .with the actual construction of the grade of the Midway ft Vernon Railway, between Midway\nand Rook Creek, are requested to send In\na detailed statement of their olaims verified by affidavit or statutory declaration te\ntbe undersigned. R. F. GREEN,\nSecretary for Valuators.\nP. O. Box til Victoria. B. O\nhappy aa when Joining the younger children ln their games bn the Froguiore\ngrounds,     ..    ..\nWhen the digestion is all right, the action of the bowels regular, there Is \u00bb \"\"--\ntural craving \u00bbnd relish for food. When\nthie is lacking you may know that you\nneed a dote of Chamberlain's Stomach and\nLiver Tablets. Tbey strengthen the digestive ortans, Improve the appetite end regu-\nftuSTtoW Sold by all druggists and\ni Uttfwtm Oat** OttsW lt%\nFOR    RENT \u2014 Furnished     housekeeping\nrooms.   Apply, Carney block. 32-tf.\nFOR RENT\u2014Comfortably furnished room,\nwith use ot batb.   Apply 205 Silica Btreet.\nTi-XX.\nFOR RENT\u2014Housekeeping rooms, Baker\nstreet, near C.P.R. station.   Apply J. W.\nGallagher, 102 Baker street. 72-tf.\nFOR RENT\u2014FurnlBhed rooms; table board\nIf required.   Very central.    614 Victoria\nStreet. \"-6\nFOR    RENT-Cottage.\nGosnell, brewery.\nFOR RENT\u2014Modern 6-room house, down\ntown.   Gas and hot water.   Rent IS.  Inquire at W. Q. Thomson's bookstore. 107-tt.\nFOR RENT-Cottage, 3 rooms, furnished;\nsuit bachelors or young married people.\nTen minutes' from postoflloe.   Box 861.\nFOR     RENT \u2014 Furnished     housekeeping\nrooms, and bedrooms.    706  Hall Btreet,\nbetween Baker and Viotoria. 100-tf.\nFOR   RENT\u2014Four   rooms,\nmonthly.     No   children.\nNews.\nfurnished,  110\nApply   Dally\nWATER NOTICE.\nTake notice that I, Ida J. Dawson, \u00a9t\nNelson, B.C., Intend to apply, SO days from\ndate, to the Water Commissioner for a\nwater license to take one-fifth of a cubic\nfoot of water from an unnamed stream\nflowing out of Qarrlty Creek, to be used\nfor irrigation purposes on Block I of Lot\n7087.\nIDA J. DAWSON.\nNelson, B.C., July \u00bb, ISM.\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR RENEWAL OF LIQUOR LICENSE\nNotice ls hereby given that we, Oeorge\nWalker and Hugh Jones, Intend to apply\nto the Superintendent of Provincial Police,\nat the expiration of one month from tbe\ndate hereof, for a renewal of pur retail\nliquor license for the premises known as\n\u2022\"\u2022 \u00bb\u2022*- Ko**a- feoBT'-AISaS:0-\nBOOHWNXa\nTJataa at In*, this 2* 4a* of Asnst,\nYMIR\nYMIR HOTEL, YMIR. RC.-MOST MOD-\nern and up-tu-duio hotel ln Ymlr\u2014located\ndirectly   opposite   depot\u2014 Beat accommodation possible\u2014Dining room In oonneotlon.   J. B. Bremner, proprietor.\nPRODUCE\nSTARKEY & CO., WHOLESALE DEAL-\ners ln Butter, EggB, Cheese, Produce and\nFruit, Houston Blook, Josephine Btreet,\nNelson, B.C.\nGROCERIES\nA. MACDONALD & CO.-WHOLESALE\nGrocers and Provision Merchants\u2014lin- \u2022\nporters of Teas, coffees, Splcea, Dried\nFruits, Staple and Fancy Groceries, Tobaccos, Cigars, Butter, Egga, Cheese and\nPacking House Products. Office and\nwarehouse, corner of Front and Hall\nstreet*-,   P. O. Box 1095.    Telephone 2S.\nMINERS' FURNISHINGS\nA. MACDONALD ft CO.-WHOLESALE\nJobbers ln Blankets, Underwear, Mitts,\nGloves, Boots, Rubbers, Overalls, Jumpers and Miners' Sundries. Office and\nwarehouse, corner of Front and Hall\nstreets.   P. O. Box 1003.   Telephone ai.\nMINING MACHINERY\nWASHINGTON MACHINERY & SUPPLY\nCo.\u2014Dealers In Engines, Band and Circular sawmills, Atkins' Saws, Wood and\nIron Pulleys, Leyner Compressors and.\nDrills, Pumps and Hoists, Prompt attention. Reasonable prices, ' Courteous\ntreatment   Spokane, Wash.\nNOTICE.\nNotice ls hereby given that I, the undersigned, Intend, thirty days after the date\nhereof, to apply to the Superintendent of\nProvincial Police for a transfer nt the\nliquor license now held by me for the Grove\nhotel, Fairview, Ymlr district, to William\nGosnell.\nDated this 16th day of August, 1010.\n108-lm. N. MALLETTE.\nWATER LICENCE.\nNotice ls hereby given that I, Charles\nEhlers, rancher, of Rossland, B.C., Intend\nto apply to the Water Commissioner at\nNelson, B.C., for a record of one-half a\noublo. foot of water out of McCormlck\noreek. for the purpose of irrigation on Lot\n*\u00bbV-\"*- aw'8&BLUw*mi\n_J__^______\\__\\^^^^~\n 'f'-fi'-WlfS.\n<-    FRIDAY AUGUST M\n%\\yt Bail}* $.tm*\nGood Things\nYes  coming and going again  as\nquick ah they come; -that is why we\nalways have In stock\nFRESH GROCERIES\n,      The stock never stays ln our store\nlong enough to become old, stale.\n\u2022mouldy or musty.   Our patrons often carry it away before we can\nPlace it on show.\nTO ARRIVE\nPeaches   for preserving, $1.36   per\norate.   Order now,\nJoy's lash Grocery\nComer ot Josephbu and Mill Btraet.\nP., O. Box 637 Telsphon* 1*\n,...,,,,,....,.'.....,.*..\u00bb*\nCHERRIES\nOrders taken (or our own\ngrown Royal Anne Cherries,\nwhich are now at their best for\ntable purposes,\n$3.50 per Crate\nLunch Room Toa Room\nPrompt Attention\nDainty Service\nIce Cream      Ice Cream Sodas\nCornwell & Co.\nBaken and Confectioners\nNelson, *. O.\nCity Rhone 401.\nFairview Phone 351.\nOwn Your Own Home\nTou cannot plant seeds today and\npick the flowers tomorrow. Twenty\ncents a day or $6 a month will start\nyou In the right way to acquire a home\nby our Plan.\nMake a start, save some of your income each month. Others are doing so,\nand your savings combined with the\nothers will buy you a home in the shortest time and at the least cost. Contracts non-forfeltable after six months\ndues hare been paid, 6 per cent allowed\non your savings.   ..-..\"..\nLoans may be repaid wholly or In\npart at any time and the Interest proportionately reduced. No drawings.\nNot a lottery. Every person treated\nalike. I shall be pleased to supply all\nliterature and answer air questions.\nWrite or call.\nR. J. STEEL, Secretary\nHudson's Bay Block\nPLUMBING & HEATING\nCopp's  Stoves  and   Ranges.\nTile and Soil Pipe always on\nhand.\nE. K. STRACHAN\nPLUMBER. Etc\n'3*3 Baker St., Nelson, B.C.\nPROFESSIONAL CARDS\nF. C. Green   P. P. Burden  A. H. Green\nGreen Brothers & Burden\nCIVIL ENGINEERS\nDominion and British Columbia Land\nSurveyors\nP. O. Box 1082 Phone B264\n616 Ward St., Nelson, B.O.\nA. R. Heyland, C. E\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\nTwelve years In the Kootenays\n\u25a0ex 475 Kaslo, West Kootenay\nA. I.. MoOULLOOB\nHydraulic Engineer\nProvincial Land Surveyor\nP. O. Box 41\nOffice Pbone B86; residence Phone B74.\nOftlce: Over McDermld ft McBardy\nBaker Street, Nelson, B.C.\nPiano Instruction\nMr. I. 0. Johnson ot the Arcade Is\nprepared to accept a limited number ol\npupils tor tuition on tbe above Instrument. For terms apply P.O. box 348,\nOr at 211 Silica street\nPhone B352\nBox 835\nWaters & Pascoe\nCarpenters and Builders\nConcrete, brick and stone work. Shop\nnext city ball\nMISmm HUBHEM.T.G.1\nGraduate ot the Toronto Conservatory\net music and pupil ot J. S. A. Tripp,\nwill open a studio tor piano Instruction\non Sept. 1. For further particulars apply at this otfloe M-tf\nOne Continual\nRound of Pleasure\nIf ^ou Use Johnson's Shaving Cream\nTHE CONVENIENT PACKAGE .\nTHE QUICK SMOOTH LATHER\nTHE HEALING PROPERTIES\nThese three combined malts this preparation the most pop-Mar on\nthe market.\nIf You Shave Yourself\nDrop In and let ne show you our assortment ot shavers' goods.\nGILLETTE 8AFETV RAZORS\nAUTOSTROP SAFETY RAZORS\nEVER-READY  RAZORS\nStraight Razors\nWe have them in many different makes and styles.\nOUR OWN RAZOR\nWe guarantee this rasor In every respect.\nWe have it ta three different widths. ,\u201e\u201e_\nWe cheerfully refund your money it not satisfactory.\nOnly $1.50 Each\nThis Is an exceptional offer and you should take advantage ot It.\nRazor Strops, from 60c. to 13.00.\nLather Brushes, from 15c. to (5,00,\nToilet Lotions.\nToilet Powders.\nStyptic  Pencils.\nFace Massages. (\nHair Tonics.\nBrilllantlnes.\nEverything In the Toilet Line to suit everybody.\nLADIES OR GENTLEMEN\nWe can please you at every turn.\nWe can convince you that our stock Is the very best.\nWe appreciate your patronage and are always pleased to serve you.\nLook Up Your Toilet Wants\nWe will be pleased to show you through our well assorted stock\nYou will find It to your advantage to deal here.\nPhone us. Write US. Call on us Personally\nWe are Nelson's Leading Druggists We Never Sleep\nPoole Drug Co. Ltd.\nBaker Street       :\u2022:       Phone 25 Day and Night\nOpen from 7.30 a.m. to 12 p.m.\nin^'.lr.  T\\*ftli l|'ll| ii |l\/ti||l |\nRtB\nLamb Chops for\nBreakfast\nwhen nicely broiled, makes an\nIdeal dish; ibut too often what\nIs called lamb ls only ln the\nname.   Now, If you want i*eaJ\nspring lamb chops, taken from\nnice, young, tender, Juicy lambkins, and not aged muttons, you\ncan always be assured of getting the real thing at\nP. Burns (8b Co.\nLtd.\n1 ^SmatT^S\n[K\nMETALS\nNEW YORK, Aug. 26.-Sllver, 62%; standard  cornier, 12.35 A 12.40;  firmer.\n\u25a0liOlCDON, Aug. 25.--9l.ver, M-fc, lead, ilia\nUs 3d. ' .\t\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\n(Additional local newi note* on page 8.)\nThe temperature ln the city yeaterday\nranged between 37 and 67 degrees.\nThe public notice of the proclamation by\nMayor Ueloue ot a half holiday next Monday, on the occaeion ot the visit of Sir\nWilfrid Ijaurler, appears In today's issue\nof The Dally Newa.\nActing on the suggestion of The Dally\nNews of Aug. 23, concerning the working\n(.-\u25a0ass and publicity, A. M. Oliver will open\na discussion on this subject at the regular\ntfoclaliBt meeting at Miners' Union hall tonight. The speaker will deal with tne\nquestion from an economic standpoint. The\n\u25a0meeting will be open to the publlo.\nJohn Slmpsoa, eharged with being drunk\non Baker Btreet on Wednesday night, was\nsentenced in the city police court yesterday morning by Police Magistrate William\nIrvine to TO days in the provincial Jail.\nThe case of C. McEchern, held on a charge\nof having obtained money by false pretences, was adjourned until this morning.\nMaBehern has employed H. C. Jftall tor\nhis defence and the olty authorities will be\nrepresented  by A.  M. Johnson.\nT. Underwood, of Calgary and manager\nof the Diamond Coal company near .Leth-\nbrldge, is staying at the Strathcona. Mr.\n\u2022Underwood stated yesterday that he was\nIn British Columbia on purely private business but that he hoped to commence shipping coal to Nelson In the near future. The\nDiamond coal mines have been producing\nfor some time, selling the greater part ot\nthe coal to Alberta and Saskatchewan. A\nUrge new plant with a capacity of l,ww\ntons a day. has, however, Just been installed, and Mr, Underwood expects to\nmake a big extension in the business of\nthe company shortly. The seal Is similar\nln quality to the mines at Gelt.\n;. Try Mlnsrs Liniment for Bunions.,\nSewing done,  114 Victoria street      IQL-i\nRoyal Hotel, here's your home for the\nwinter.   Best hoard In the city. 206\nB. C. United Agencies. Licensed Auctioneers, Real Estate and Employment\nagents. Office, 218 Baker street. Box \u25a0ita,\n(Phone 391. Ul-tt.\nA fast launch to Ferndale from Astley\nor Bltord's landing every tine Sunday.\nMorning trip at 9 o'clock, afternoon 2 and\n3.30 o'clock; last return trip leave Ferndale at 7 p.m.\nThe Ladles' Aid of tha Church of Mary\nImmaculate will hold a lawn social, In\naid of St. Joseph's sohool, on Thursday\nafternoon and evening, Aug. 26, They will\nserve ice cream, cake, sandwiches, tea and\ncoffee, peaches and cream. Don't miss\nlt. 108-3\n11 have Just received from the factories\nof Munro & Mcintosh Carriage company,\nAlexandria, Ont., one carload of democrats,\ndelivery wagons, buggies, buckboards and\ncarts, which I now have for sale. D. Grant,\nblacksmith and horseshoer, Vernon street.\n\u20222-tf.\nDavenport Cafe. Meals served at all\nhours. Wilkinson's orchestra in attendance every evening. Moore & Roberts,\nproprietors. Popular 'prices. Best attention. 10S-6\nFor Labor Day, Sept. E, the Canadian\nPacific Railway will authorise a rate of\nfare and one-third for the round trip.\nTickets will be on sale Sept. 2 to 5 Inclusive, final return limit Sept. 7, 1910. For\nfull particulars'apply to nearest Canadian\nPacific ticket agency. IW\nWhen the ttomaeh falls to perform its\nfunctions, the bowels become deranged, the\nliver and the kidneys congested, causing\nnumerous diseases. Ths stomach and liver\nmust be restored to a healthy condition\nand Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver\nTablets can be depended upon to do it.\nBuy to take and most effective, sold by\nall druggists and dealers.\nLindsay's large fleet ot launches are for\nhire by the hour or day at reasonable\nprice. The Dauntless, Matchless and Fearless are in charge ef capable men. The\nRestless, Peerless and  Wireless are tor\nparties to run themselves. For prices and\nfurther particulars call phone A1B or Lindsay's boat house.  \u00ab.tf.\nPISHING WATER.\nBoats for hire on pool at Slocan Junction, most famous Ashing water of British\nColumbia. Fly fishing par excellence. Try\ngrasshoppers for the big fellows. All conveniences at C.P.R. Creel Lodge. J.\nKtlley, lodge keeper. 91-tf.\nLOCALMARKETS\ni . NELSON, Aug. 25.\nFOODSTUl'-ra.\nLake of Woods, *per bag 2.00\nRoyal Household   , 2.00\nPurity Flour   '.....2.(10\nGold Drop Flour  1.90\nRobin Hood Flour  2.00\nDAIRY   PRODUCE,\nButter, creamer)', per lb...    ,35\nButter, bulk, per lb 34\nButter, dairy, per lb,  30\nCheese, Canadian, per ib , ai\nCheese, Swiss, per lb 33\nEggs, feflh, per doz to\nEgga, case, per doz 30\nVEGETABLES.\nOld potatoes, per bag 1.25\nNew Potatoes, per lb U3\nCabbage, per .lb  06\nTomatoes, fresh, per lb 15\nLettuce, per lb ,  .15\nRadishes,  per  bunch    .02%\nCalifornia Onions, per bunch  ,.   ,ts%\nDry Onions, per lb 05-\nFRUITS.\nRed Currants,. per lb  10\nWhite Currants, per lb 10\nBlack Currants, per lb.    .15\nuranges, per uuz do to o0\nBananas, per dos ......  40 to.60\nLemons, per dot 25 to .40\nPlums, per lb 15\nCherries, per lb  .u%\nRed Raspberries, per lb 15\nApples, per lb 99%\nHoney, comb, per lb 25\nHoney, l-lb. Jars  36\nApprloots, per lb 15\nMEAT.\nBeef, wholesale 11 to ,n%\nPork,  wholesale   17 to .17*4\nMutton, wholesale  16 to .17\nVeal, wholesale  ,,..14 to ,16\nBeef, retail   12*4 to .25\nPork,  retail   18 to .23\nMutton, retail 15 to .26\nVeal, retail   15 to ,23\nHams,  retail   23 to .28\nBacon, retail 24 to ,30\nLard, retail 23 to .23\nFowl,  retail   , 20 to .22\nChickens, retail  28 to .30\nSausages, retail  15 to .18\nWESTERN FLOAT\n(By R. T. Lowery.)\nThe tax rate in Femie is 20 mills.\n!Vhe rate of taxation in Kelowna ls\n23 1-2 mills.\nA moving picture show ia to be established at Michel.\nThe Grand Forks brass band has been\nreorganized.\nSenator McLaren's sawmill near Blairmore will be rebuilt.\nIn Fernie :ttie Grand theatre l8 now\nopen on Sunday nights.\nThere are over 23,000 names on the\nvoters' Hat in Vancouver.\nVennon will -borrow money to extend\nHs arc lighting system.\nSeveral blind pigs are doing business\nIn South Fort George.\nBlairmore' has been connected with\nMedicine Hat toy telephone.\nIn the Yukon a new paystreak has\nbeen struck on Quartz creek.     -\nA. H,  Goldman hag started a first\n' Case restaurant In Kelowna.\nAi Johnston Is building a 30 roomed\nhotel in South Fort George.     '\nFort George now has telephone con-\n. nectlon with Blaokwater crossing.\nNew Michel Is to have a maccaronl\nfactory that will employ 20 hands.\nIn Kelowna five people were fined\nfor riding bicycles on the sidewalks.\nFor committing arson in Rjuipe G. T.\nWilliams was sentenced to ten years In\njail.\nThe Bluebell mine on Kootenay lake,\nwill reopen with a full force next month.\nfltie hay and vegetable cnops around\nFort George are excellent this summer.\nIndications of petroleum have been\nfound between Abbostford and Mntsqul,\nThe editor of the Cumberland Islander is confined to his bed with a\nbroken leg.\nThe Gold Digger newspaper at Nome\nhaa been closed by the United StateB\nmarshal.\nAt Trail on labor day $300 in prizes\nwill be given for a Tock drilling contest.\nThe Pentlcton Herald is now run by\na stock company, with a capital of $10,\n000.    \u2022\nT W. Stirling of Kelowna. haa, owing\nto iil health, gone to Europe on a long\nvacation,\nA .bridge is to be built across the Columbia river at Marble, that will cost\n7300,000.\nMany new seaimB of coal have been\ndiscovered in -the Bulkley valley this\nIn Greenwood the new postoffice\nwill be built on the site of the Pioneer\nhotel.\nThe collieries at Michel and Fernie\nar\u00a9 now producing over 5500 tons of\ncoal daily,\nAutomobiles can now be driven up the\nElk river road a distance of 50 miles\nfrom Fernie.\nThe Kelowfta Courier is over six\nyears old and the people of that city\nare justly proud of H.\nAn J9ngiii*h, company Is expending\n$10,000,000 upon, its mining property al\nCoal Creek, near Dawson,\nThe Kaslo Kootenaian is now using a\npatent Inside, although that excellent\noffice towns a monollne.\nHeavy rains last month damaged the\nroads and bridges in the southern Yukon to the extent of $25,000.\nThe White Horse Star wftB late last\nweek and says that the reason was be-\ncausp it did aot get ont earlier.\nMOTOR BOAT SUPPLIES\nLargest and but assorted Block ln the\nInterior cf B.C.\nSpark colls, spark plugs, switches, primary and secondary cable, magnetos, storage batteries, dry batteries, headlights,\ncarbide, deck fittings, steering wheels,\ntiller rope, anchors, lift buoys, fenders,\nSchebler carbureters, check valves, gaso*\nline fittings, copper tubing, stuffing boxes,\ncouplings, rsvsrss gears, propeller wheels,\nbilge pumps, lubricating olli and grease,\noil and grease cups, battery connectors,\nboat hooks, priming cops, motor boat\nhorns, volt and ammeters, metal polish,\n\u25a0peed Indicators, oil cans, gasoline engines\n-marine and stationary.\nMall orders promptly attended to. Priest\nright.   C^llprwrits.\nTHOMAS BABOBKT,\nIt: Stanley  St.,  pnone 44.  Kelson.  B.C.\nPAGE (SEVEN\nm\nG to MEN!\nFit\nReform\nFall Suits\nWe announce the first arrivals of our Fall Suits. We\ndon't care if you are ready to buy or not. We want our\nsplendid clothes to have a chance to make an impression\non you. It is certainly the finest clothing we have had.\nIf there was better, we would have it. Every suit guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction. Come in and see for\nyourselt.\nThis store has established a reputation for\nhaving the\nBest Things\nIn Toggery\nWe're entitled to it,\ntoo. Our Fall Goods\nare now arriving, and\nthere are a whole lot of\nthings we want you to\nsee.\nCome to See What's New\nOur patrons always look to us for the New Things.\nWe furnish them, too, as soon as they appear on the\nmarket.\nEmory & Wattey\n<<\nTHE HUB\"\nFOR. SALE\nThere has been placed In our hands for sale, 100 acres ot fruit land in\nthe Creston district, along the Canadian Pacific railway, and government\nWagon road. The land ls about two and a half miles west of Kitchener, and\nIs surrounded by Improved ranches and fruit farms. There Is about GO per\ncent of the land level, and free from stone, the balance rolling bills. The\nsoil Is a sandy loam with clay sub-soil, and abundance of water.\nPrice, |40 per acre. Very reasonable terms. This is an ideal block for subdividing. \t\nPOR 8ALE IN HUME ADDITION\nFour-roomed house, newly painted and papered Inside, basement full size\nof house, four lots cleared and fenced, bearing fruit trees and small fruits,\nchicken house 12 x42, city water In house, and creek running beside property.\nPifeteen minutes' walk from post office. Price lltiOO, (300 cash, balance $lb\nper month.\nWE WANT AN OFFER\nFor 76 acres ot fruit land, situated along tne Blocan river, adjoining\nWinlaw. This tract ls sub-divided In three 20-acre blocks, and one 16-acre\nblock, with small clearing, and 30 bearing trees. There Is plenty of water\navailable, and the land easy to clear. Close to depot, school, and postofflce.\nWe will sell this en bloc or sub-dl visions.\nFor particulars, Inquire ot\nSTUBBS (8b PITTS : Real Estate\n608 Baker Street Opposite Queen's Hotel\nThe Klondike has produced $150,0(10.-\n000 worth of gold nearly all from placers\nwithin 300 miles of Dawson.\nIn Fainbanlts, Alaska, this summer,\nCuba*, had to be burned tn rooms in order to get relief from mosquitoes.\nCharles Dundee died In a Rossland\ntrain last week. He discovered the\nDundee mine in the Ymlr district.\nJoe Knox was fined $100 and costs\nfor starting a bush fire near Sumas,\nwithout a permit.   He was clearing land\nAt. the Idltarod placer diggings, in\nAlaska, carpenter are paid $1.50 an\nhour. Meals are $l and wood $35 a\ncord.\nThe Herald is the name of a paper\nthat Is being started at South Port\nUeorge by J. B. Danlell of the Quesnel\nObserver.\nHarry Gordon died In North Vancouver last week. He was the oldest inhabitant, having lived ln that section for\n4o years.\nJ, J. Donovan Is the first, paid fire\nchief of North Vancouver. The salary ts\n$80 & month. In a short time four paid\nliremen will be appointed.\nThe Orand TrunkjPaelftc railway will\nreach Tete Jaune Cache within a year.\nAt present 2500 men and 800 teams are\nworking on this railway west of McLeod river.\n(There Is 91 feet of ore in the No.\n5 tunnel, ot the Lucky Jim mine in the\nSknu. Dr. Kllborne and Tom Roadley\nmissed a million when tbey Hold thll'\nproperty for a small gum a few years\nago. the career of the Lucky\" Jim\nproves what can be done by persistent\ndevelopment.\nCharles J. Loewen has returned to\nVancouver from a long visit to Europe.\nWhile atbrond he secured a large amount\nof capital for Investment in British Columbia.\nKaslo is making history. The bars in\nthat town close at ]1 p.m. Saturday\nlight and all Sunday can be seen a\nstream of strangers malting for the lake\nSir Richard Musgrave Is coming from\nEngland to hunt big game in British\nColumbia. Several years ago he caught\nARCADE\nThe latest and most up to ditto\npictures only shown. Latest >nb*\u00bb\njects.   No repeaters.\nA fine Imp Comedy entitled\nIn Summertime\nThe Lame Woman.\nGood Doggie and others.\nWilkinson's Orchestra.\nAdmission\n10c\nYour Watch\nNeeds Cleaning\nWould the C.P.R. or G.N.R. allow an\nengine out of their yard without clean.\ning and oiling Bame? Well hardly.\nTbey must he absoutely clean and properly oiled to run perfectly. How about\nyour watch? Is It dean? Is It properly oiled. Remember lt'a much more\ndelicate, requires more attention to\nmake it run accurately than an engine.\nCome to us with It, we are experts in\nwatch repair work.\nOnt of town customers solicited, with\nprompt attention,\nE. \u00a3. ROBINSON\nWatchmaker and J.wslar\ntit 1-2 Baker Street.    NELSON, I.O.\nOpposite anver King Hotel\n**?*$\nWe Lose Money\nand so do you If yon don't get that\ntrunk, suit case, or travelling hag\nhere. We are not the kind of con*\ncern that is always selling below\ncost and making money by doing\nit.\nOur Trunks, Bngs, etc., are honestly made and sold at honest\nprices. Buy here and get satlsfae*\ntion and wear out of your purchase.\nTrunks and bags repaired.\nJ. M. LUDWIG\nHall Street. Nelson,  B.C.\nPhons A65\nFASCINATING HAIR\nWomen  Who Use   Parisian\nSage Have It and Keep It\nYou never saw a beautiful woman wno\ndidn't have beautiful hair. The chanrft\nof a beautiful woman Hes In her tmir.\nMany women do not realize -the attra*-\nlions they possess because they do not\ngive proper attention to tho hair.\nThe women oi\nParis are famed\nfor their beauty,\nnot because their\nfacial features are\nsuperior to those\nof other women,\nhut because they\nknow how to keep\nyoung by supplying vigor, lustre\nand strength to\nthe hair.\nUp to three years\nago Parisian Sago\ncould hardly he\nobtained In Canada, But now this\ndelightful hair restorer can be bad\nin every storo In Canada. The Poolo Drug\ncompany sell it In Nelson for 50 cento a\nlarge bottle, and they guarantee it to grow\nbeautiful, luxuriant hair; to turn dull, lite-\nless hair into lustrous hair; to stop falling\nhair; to stop Itching of tho scalp. Understand, the Poolo Drug company will ghro\nyou your money hack If It tails. Made\nonly in Canada by Glroux Mfg. Co., Fort\nErie, Ont. Tho girl wlflh Uie Auburn hair\nIs ono every bottle.\na 72 pound salmon. This Is the largest\nsalmon ever caught ln this province\nwith a hook and line.\nihe wagon road between Kaslo and\nTnree forks is being repaired . It will\nsoon be aa lively as it was when Bo*.\nWoods and .lack Wren drove tihe fast\nstages over that, rout\u00a9 and dodged the\nore Learns from tho Mountain Chief aud\nWashington mines.\nMlnlard Liniment Cures Distemper.\nWe Will Bay\n10,000  Humbler    |   .22\n2,000 Diamond Coal 51\n3000  Diamond  Vale    06\n20 Great West Permanent.,..Offer\n3 Scrip  650.00\nWe Will Sell\n60 Pad tic Exploration  BH\n2500 Protland Canal  $ .35\n2000 McGlllrtray    27\n10 Consolidated Smelters  69.00\n2000  Royal  Collieries 25\nE. B. McDERMID\nBaker Street NdwmCB. C\n PAGE EIGHT\n%\\yt Bail;-) #etos.\nFRIDAY\nAUGUST 2t\nFruit Lands\nWe have a choice selection of\nimproved and unimproved proper,\nties In blocks ot 6 acres upwards\nand from $10 an acre upwards.\n$1500 cash will handle an 8-acre\nranch containing 160 11 year old\ntrees, 100 8-year old trees, etc A\ngoing concern.\nCroasdaile, Mawdsley\n&Co.\nBox \u00abM Baiter St, Nelaon.\nHoover Street*\nOn Car Line\nHouse containing. five rooms and\nhath; electrlo light, city water, large\ncellar.\nCorner lot, 75x120 feet, fruit trees,\nchicken house, etc. To be sold, on easy\nterms to reliable person.\nP. B. UYS, Real Estate Agent\nGriffin Block, over Dom. Express Co.\nNOTICE\nAugust la tbe best month to get ln\njour coal supply for the coming winter\nand GALT is the best coal tor the pur-\nPose.\nW. P. TIERNEY\nGeneral Salea Agent, Nelson, B.C.\nCars shipped to all points.\nMeet This Question\naa If you were face\nto face with us.\nOur\nPhotos\nare the kind that all\nsorts of people like to\nsee. We know how a\nperson should be posed\nto look tbe best.\nSome people say\nthey do not take a\ngood photograph, but\nthose people have not\nbeen here and follow\ned our advice. L\u00abt\nus take your photograph and your face\nwill please. \/\nCampbell's\nArt\nGallery\n715 Baker St      PHONE 46\n'Next Door to Kootenay Steam\nLaundry\nNelson Opera House\nOat Night Only\nThursday. Sept   1st\nW. P. Cullen presents Plxley &\nlanders'  comic opera triumph\nThe....\nBurgomaster\nGate C. Weinburg as Peter von\n. Stuyvesant.\nIs it possible?    Why the idea!\nWith over Imlf a 100 people including the famous original\nKangaroo Girls\nPRICES:   Down  $2  and   $1.50;\nup,  1.50 snd SI;   gallery,  50c.\nPlan at Poole's Wednesday.\nfruit Jars\nScram Quarts   $1.60\nSoram pints  1.25\nMason quarts  1.25\nMason iplnts   l.oo\nWe have tops for Scram jars\nboth sizes, 20c. dosen, also tops for\nEconomy jars.\nC. A. Benedict\nGrocer\nta-taeptntondSffia. Phom7\nNEISON, B.C\nMotor Boat\nInsurance\nWe can Insure your gasoline\nlaunch against accident and\nfire while on the Kootenay lake\nor waters tributary thereto.\nThe rates are very reasonable\nand we shall be pleased to furnish you with all particulars\non application.\n.\nH. & N. BIRD\nNelson, B. C.\nREFRIGERATORS\nSelling Below\nCost\nWe have a few of the above left to\nclear. Will sell at prices never before heard of. It will pay you to call\nand inspect these. No reserve; all\nmust. go.   Get your pick.\nJ. It Ashdown Hardware\nCo., Lid.\nNelson Branch   ::   NELSON, B.C.\nTHE\nEMPIRE\nTONIGHT\nDon't miss the\nMystery of Temple Court\nA Pine Program\nChildren  10c., Adults lie.\nTHE SEMAPHORE CIGAR STORE AND\nBILLIARD PARLORS\nTo make room for new bums, we are\ncompelled to sacrifice while they last\nSemaphore Specials and LamorlUai, three\ntor 25 cents or JUS per box. Our specialty this week Balled Havanas. Something\nnew.   Just out   Give them a trial.\nNtLSON NEWS Of THE DAY\n(Additional local newa notes on  page l.j\nR. J. Westgate, business manager or\nThe Regina West was a visitor to tne city\nyesterday.\nJ. W. Connors and J. C. Green of Golden,\ndelegates to the Liberal convention tomorrow, aro guests at the Hume.\nThe Scandinavian Aid and Fellowship\nsociety will meet t'-nlght at 8 o clock at\nOddfellowB'   hall.\nMiss M. Ard. Bird, ot Ottawa, secretary\nof the Canadian Red Cross society, is at\nthe Strathcona.\nLorne A. Campbell, manager ot the\n\"West Kootenay Power and I*I|*:nt company, came In last night from Spokane,\nand Is a guest at the Strathcona.\nHiss Lillian Boyd, a sister of W. ~j.\nBoyd of Nelson, reached the city last\nnight from her home at Anaconda, Mont.,\nand registered at the Hume. Miss Boyd\nwill spend a short vacation here.\nA meeting of the Nelson Liberal association will be held this evening ln the\nLiberal committee rooms, for the purpose\nof electing delegates *o the district convention which is to be held In the fcagles'\nhall tomorrow at 11 a.m.\nMr. asd Mrs. Hay ter Read of Montreal,\naccompanied by Mrs. W. Raleigh Kerr or\nBlack Lake, reached Nelson last night and\nare staying at the Strathcona. Mr. Hayter\nRead is manager of the C.P.R. hotels and\nIntMda to go up to Balfour today for the\n\u25a0UipeM of K>ofiln* over the site of the\ntourist  hotel   there  and  of  making' final\narmngements  for its  construction.\nT A Love, editor of the Phoenix Pioneer, reached the city last n't''\"*-J1\"*}\nregistered at the Hume. Mr. -uove.went\naway a short Ume ago on a trip east,box.\non reaching Toronto received the :news ot\nthe big lire ln the B01\"^^,,, ykP was\ndestroyed his office and plant. He was\nconsequently compelled to return west immediately.\nC W. Barrlnger, president of the State\nNational Bank of Marcs Wash has\nwritten to W. B. Farris stating that ne\nhas been appointed on a committee, presumably by the citizens uf Marcus, to act\ninl co-operation with the Nelson board in\nthe matter of the opening up of the Columbia river. Mr. Barrlnger Is expec ed\nto arrive in the city In time to attend tiie\nconference with  Sir Wilfrid Laurier.\nAs it Is anticipated that the hotels during the Visit of Sir Wilfrid Laurler and\nparty and of the Columbia river delegations from Portland. Spokane and east and\nWest Kootenay, will be overcrowded, person*- In the city having rooms which they\nare willing to let for the accommodation\nof visitors are requested to send In- thelr\nnames to E. K. Beeston at the board or\ntrade rooms. Mr. Beeston will then inform people inquiring for rooms where\nthey may be obtained.\nA. A. Richardson of Vancouver, adjuster of fire losses, Is registered at the\nHume. Mr. Richardson leaves this morning for Salmo, where he will, adjust the\nlosses of the Kootenay shingle mill which\noccurred during the recent forest Ares.\nAbout the beginning of next week he wil\nmeet John L. Retailed* of Kaslo and\nsettle up the question of the extent of the\nloss Incurred by the Deep Mines, Limited,\nIn the fire at \"Whitewater some weeks ago.\nWhile here Mr. Rlcliafdson Will also meet\nR. S. Lennle and adjust the losses at tne\nSilver King mine.,\nLIGHTS  WENT OUT;\nPICKPOCKET MADEt ESCAPE\nST. CATHERINES, Ont.,'Aug. SKi.-Oon-\nstable Book of Grimsby, who has been\nheld responsible for the escape of a pickpocket at Grimsby on Aug* 10 last, after\nhe had been captured and handed over l>y\na couple of St. Catherines butchers, states\nthat he has sent Un his resignation to\nJudge Carman. His honor Is not at home,\nbut an Investigation will be opened as soon\nas he returns from Muskoka. Book states\nthat when the pickpocket was handed\nover to him he brought him Into Manager\n\u25a0Wylle's office. 'While he was there with\nthe prisoner the lights went out and the\npickpocket bolted out of the office.\nDysentery is a osngerous disease but can\nbe cured. Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera\nand Diarrhoea Remedy has been successfully used In Blue aWenOmot dysentery.\nIt has.never been known to fall.   It is\nequally valuable for children and adults,\nand when reduced with water and sweetened, It la pleasant to take. Sold by all\ndruggists and dealers.\nWINNIPEG MAN WINS\nBORDEN MATCH\nGood Shooting at Ottawa\u2014With Unfavorable  Conditions\u2014English  Cadets Beat Canadians'\nOTTAWA, Aug. 25 \u2014 Unfavorable\nweather conditions prevailed at today's\nDominion Rifle association meet. Heat\nand humidity were as trying as on Wednesday and winds swept across the\nrange making it difficult to find the targets. Nevertheless the Bhooting was\npractically a** good ag on the corresponding day last year. The western\nmarksmen figured more prominently ln\nwinings than on any other day since\nthe meet opened\nA lance corporal of the 90th regiment\nWinnipeg, won the Harold Borden\nmatch and the team prize in the same\nmatch was captured by the HOth team.\nWestern men figured quite prominently\nin winnings at all the matches. Car-\nmichael of Alberta who has been finding\nthe targets right along, now stands ln\nfourth place in the Grand Aggregate,\nthe winner of which gets the governor\ngeneral's prize.\nEnglish Cadets Win\nThe matches between ten visiting\nEnglish cadets and ten Canadians resulted in a win for the visitors who\nmade 606 at the 200 and 500 yard ranges\nThe Canadians were 37 points hehlnd\nwith a score of 569. Cadet Robb of\nEton, a 15 year old lad, made the highest score, 67 out of a possible 70. His\nremarkable score under such conditions was the cause of a great deal of\nfavorable comment.\nSome remarkaibly good Bhooting was\ndone in the extra series, five shots at\n200 yards, which wus the concluding\nevent today.   Thirty-one possibles made\nCLOCKS\nA WORD TO THE WISE\nHave you a good clock?\nWe have a very fine assortment of mantle clocks, prices\nfrom $5 to $45.. Our special\nts a flue black enamel mantle\nclock, with gilt columns and\n.fancy dial; strikes the hour\nand naif hour on double\nstraight tubes, giving a most\npleasing effect, almost the\nsame sound as a chime. Price\n$12.50 to $14.\nWe now have the largest\nstock of clocks we -have ever\nhad on hand and we can guarantee them to he the best.\nSee us, you will agree with\nus as to the value we can\ngive you ln clocks.\n1,0. PATENAUDE,\nMANUFACTURING JEWELER,\nWATCHMAKER AND OPTICIAN\nln this match, got $5.90 each. The best\ntarget was that of Pte. Adams of the\n95th regiment. Other western prize\n'Winners were Mr. Paruss of Medicine\nHat, Sergt Marsden, 9th and Sergt. Hart\n95th.\nBurland match, seven shots at 1000\nyards, possible 35 $20; Sergt. Armstrong, 35; $18, Major Elliott, 34; $15,\nSergt. Cuthens, Q.B.M. $34; Sergt .Oregon, H.C.Q.A.,, $14.\nWestern winners of lesser amounts:\nCapt. Forrest; $10, Capt. Schlatter, 6th,\nMr. Wlllbank, Vancouver; Pte, Barbton,\n95th; Pte. Cubblns, 90th; Sergs. Slniims,\n12th; $5 each, Pte. Humphrey, 6th;\nSergt. Voughlll, 6th;; Lieut. Morris. 18th\nPte. Wiltse, 95th; Pte. Auld, 90th; Pte.\nBonshor, 95th; Mr Prauss, Medicine\nHat; Pte. Simpson, 102nd; Capt. McHarg, D.C.O.R.; Corp. Birch, 5th; Major\nSmith, 9th; Pte Kidd, 95th\nThe leaders at present In the Grand\nAggregate are as follows: Lieut. Morris,\n46th, 271; Col.-Sergt. \"Freeborn 13th,\n268; Pte. Baillio, G.Q.F.G.. Ottawa. 264;\nQ. M. S. Bayles, 10th R.G., Toronto,\n264; Sergt. Carmicbaei, Alberta, 262;\nPte. Clifford 10th R.G., Toronto, 262;\nSergt. Mitchell, 13th, 262; Lieut Forrester, Canadian Engineers, Ottawa,\n262; Sergt. Moagrove, British Columbia,\n261; Sergt. Chamberlain Alberta, 261;\nCorp. Knubley, Third Vice, 261; Major\nweatheitbee, Nova Scotia. 261; Staff-\nSergt. Armstrong, 13th 261; Sergt. Mortimer C.A.S.C, 261; Capt S B Dela-\nronde, Ottawa, 261; Pte. Meiklejohn,\n3rd. Ottawa, 261; Sergt, G. Russell,\nti.U.F.F. Ottawa, 260; Sergt. Guthaus,\n43rd, Ottawa 260; Major Ross, 2nd\nDragoons, 260; Capt. Simmons, Nova\nScotia, 260; Sergt. Martin Alberta, 260;\nSergt. Smith, O.G.F.G., Ottawa, 259;\nCorp. Regan,'Alberta, 269; Sergt. Hall.\nG.U.F.G., Ottawa, 258; Sergt. McNeill,\n4thi F.C.E., 258; Corp. Messervey, Nova\nScotia, 258; Sergt. Hunter, British Columbia, 258; Corp Dow, Q.O.R., Toronto, 257; S. S. Graham 48th, Toronto,\n267; Sergt. Heathill British Columbia,\n267; Corp. Hope, Third Vice, 257.\nCoates match was ten shots each at\n600 and 800 yards for teams of six men\nfrom any one corps, possible 600 points.\nThe winners were: Cup and $60, 91st\nHighlanders, Hamilton, score 637; team.\nMajor McLaren 92, Capt. Hlllen 90,\nSergt. Garson 87, Sergt. Stcddart 87,\nsergt. Neal 63, Pte. Slesson 88; $48\neach cash.\nU.C.O.R., Vancouver, score 536; team\nCapt. Colster, 89; Lieut. Miles, 85; Sergt\nYouhill 81; Capt McHarg, 93; Sergt.\nMoscrip, 89; Sergt, Hunter 89, next in\norder, $38. Royal Canadian regiment,\nscore 635, $24; G.G.F.G., Ottawa. 518,\n$18; Third Vies, Montreal, score 617;\nR.. Montreal, score 609.\nHarold L. Borden\u2014Range 600 yards,\npeven rounds, special target, no extraneous aids to Bight. The first prize\nwas distributed among three competitors, who made possibles .each getting\n$17.67. Lieut. Driver, 9th; Pte. Gorden,\n91st, Capt. Spearllng, 53rd; $12, Sergt.\nMoscrop, 6th D.G.O.R.; Pte. Andrew,\n9th,  $8.40;   Mr.  Wlllbank, Vancouver,\nYou Cannot Afford\nto miss this opportunity of securing one of the prettiest homes In Nelson at a bargain price. The home Is situated In a most desirable residential district within a few yards of the street car line and contains\nseven rooms. It Is well finished and np to date in every detail, with\ngrounds in first class shape. Must he sold at once. Terms quarter\naash, balance to suit,  Price $3000\nCall and see us we shall he pleased to \"how tt to you.\nE. B. McDERMID\nBaku Strtc\nNelion. B.\"C.\nHere Are a\nFew Snaps\nin goods which you need every day\nRamsay's Sodas, 2 Ib. tins....SOc\nPerrln's Sodas, 2 lb. tins......30c.\nRoyal Salad Dressing % pte..30c.\nRoyal Salad Dressing, pts SOc.\nTuxedo Baking Powder, 16 oz..20c.\nPHONS 824.\nStewart (8b Co.\nIf lt'a from SUwsrt's It's good.\nDINNER SETS\nWe are offering the biggest bar.\ngains ln specially Imported dinner\nsets ever known in the Kootenays.\nThese goods are of the finest Austrian manufacture. We were lucky\nln securing a number of these\nsets at a remarkably low price and\nwe are offering the people of Net*\nson the benefit Call and see\nthese sets. They are worth look*\nlug over even If you don't purchase\nMUNRO & NELSON\nCHINA HALL\n821 Baker St P.O. Box BU\nDo Not Buy Your\nDinnerware\nwithout looking at our stock. We have\na complete stock of Dinner-wares, China\nGlassware. Graniteware. Furniture,\nStoves and Ranges..\nOLD CURIOSITY SHOP\n613, 615, 517 Josephine St.\nKOOTENAY     LAND    DISTRICT,     DISTRICT, NELSON, B.C.\nTake notice that William Uosnell of\nNelson, occupation merchant, Intends to\napply for permission to purchase the following described lands:\nCommencing at a post planted about one\nmile west of Kokanee Siding, thence 10\nchains south, thence 40 chains east, thence\n10 chains north, thence 40 chains to place\nof commencement, containing 40 acres more\nor less.\nWILLIAM  GOSNELL.\nBy J. HUBBARD, Agent.\nJuly 13, 1910. 23-7-10-GOd.\nita\nm%\nPte. Warden, D.C.O.R.; Capt. rorrest,\n6th, CO.A.; Pte. Smith 9th 16 each.\nSergt. Whitehead, 0th; Lieut. Durand,\n90th; Capt. Andrews, 9th; Lieut. Blackburn, 9th; Sergt. Davidson 9th; Corp.\nFotherhill, 6th; Col.-Sergt'. Marsden,\n9th; Q. M. 8. Kennedy, 60th; Pte. Kerr,\n12th, |4 each.\nIMPERIAL SENATE MAY\nHAVE SOME DRAWBACKS\nLONDON, Aug. 25\u2014Joslah Wedge-\nwood, M. P., president ot the English\nleague for the taxation of land values\nhas been speaking In Staffordshire on\nthe subject of an imperial senate. He\nsays how nice lt would be to unite India and.the colonies ln one great senate. When those representatives undertake to legislate for the English\npeople and- Impose taxes upon them,\nwhile the English public have no voice\nln the government ot colonies, the gilt\ncomes off gingerbread. He thinks that\nthe scheme of embodying federation\nof the empire by members of the house\nof lords one Out It would he very dangerous to fight\nScratch Food\nThis Is a mixture of the beat of four\nvarieties ot grain, with a percentage of\nsunflower teed and clam sheila. Specially adapted for those who have \u2022mall\nflocks and cannot handle straight sacks\nof each variety.\nThe Brackman-Ker\nling Co.. Ltd.\nPeaches $1.35\nFancy, Crawfords and Elbertas, 210 of these are already sold. We would -\nlike to have you order as we expect every box will be sold during the next\nfew days.\nBELL TRADING CO.      Nelson, B. C.\nWe have in stock a full line of\nFruit Pickers, Step, Extension and  Plain\nLadders\nat right prices\nNELSON HARDWARE CO.\nPhone IS 602\n\u25a0'HILTON\nwi Mires\nFruit  Baskets\nWe have Just received a shipment of\nAPPLE BASKETS\nCLOTHES BASKETS\nCLOTHES HAMPERS\nBest Quality Price Low.\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co., Limited\nNEL8QN, a C.\nWholesale\nReUO\nTO BONTH\nVaNCOUVEI\nTHE STORE OF QUALITY\nNo Exaggeration\nSimply Plain Facts. B:st\nGoods, Right Prices for\nGroceries, Provisions,\nFruits, Etc.\nSea Pearl Sardines are good 2 tlna.t .25\nSt. Ivela Meats in glass, each 45\nCross & Blackwell fish pastes In\nglass   20\nBlue Label and Heints Tomato Catsup, three for  1.00\nOur own blend tea. Imperial. 3 lbs.\nfor  1.00\nTry our Special Coffee, Its good,\nS lbs. for   1.00'\nCrawford Peaches are coming, watch\nmy prices.\nP. O. Box 54    A. S. HorSWill    Phone  10\n\"^>^^&EB\nThe Convenience of a\nSelf-Filling\nFountain Pen\nadded to the reliability of the feed and the superiority of the action of\nthe gold nib in Waterman's Ideal Fountain pen, may now for the\nfirst time be had In the New Ideal Self Filling Pen. It's a rare combination of convenience and service and Is bound to prove immensely popular\nNew stock just received.   Let us tit one to your hand.  For sale at\nCanada Drug & Book Co., Ltd. *nm\nNelsoa's Kodak Supply Htest\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1910_08_26","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0383965","@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":"1910-08-26 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1910-08-26 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\/1.0383965"}